Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 33, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 February 1893 — Page 3

I

Horn

CONDENSED

t\\T)C^

f\eat

Makes an every-day convenience of an old-tirne luxury. Pure and wholesome. Prepared with scrupulous care. Highesf award at all Pure Food Expositions. Each package makes two large pies. Avoid imitations—and insist on having the

NONE

Such

brand.

MERRELL & SOUI E. Syracuse, N. Y.

It Cured Him.

There are three excretory organs They are all connected.

They are the skir:, the kidneys and the lungs. Whatever effects one, affects all three. lieid's German Cough and Kidney Cure ministers to both the kidneys and lungs.

It is the bcsfc thing in the world for kidney trouble. Here is the proof.

Andulasia, III, Aug. 3rd

Lines,

W1892

Sylvan Remedy Co. Gentlemen:—I can recom rocnd Iieid's Gentian Cough and Kidney Cure for kidney and bladder complaint. 1 was severely afflicted and less than one twenty five cent bottle curei me.

Arm

Pat ker.

JUST THE THING.

This Is nn expression the traveling public generally uso when they llwl Hoinethlnu that (ft exactly what they want. This expression applies (llreet.lv to the Wisconsin Central

which Is now admitted hy all to be "The Route" Trom Chicago to St. Paul, Minlieapolls, Ashland, UuluUi and all points In the Northwest. Their double dally service and tine equipment oilers Inducement whleh cannot, be surpassed.

This Is the only line running both through I'ulltrmn First. (Tass and Tourist Hleepcrs from

ChlenRO

to raeilleCoast Points without

change. For full In format ion address your nearest ticket agent or

C. POND,

ftcri. Cass, and Tkt, Agt., Chlcngo, 111 lixtf.

MEN

Wo will send you tlio mnrvolntift Krcnch Preparation CALTHOS «•«*«•. anil ft legal gnnriuitoo that CAIiTItOS will Hc*tor' jour HenUli, StrpHKtli and Vigor.

Cue it and /V if satisfied. AMro*«

VON MOHLCO.,

Sole Amirtfan AjprnU, 'tnrlnnall, Ohio. inonU«-n thN pap«»r.

EPILEPSY OR FITS

Can this disease be cured? Most physicians Bay No—/say, Yos all forma and the worst cases. After 80 years study and ciporlment I have tho remedy.—Epilepsy la cured by It

curedfoundsub­

not

dued by opiates—tho old, treacherous, qnack treatment. Do not despair, Forget past impositions on your purse, past outrages on your confidence, past failures. Look forward, not backward. My remedy Is of

to-day.

Valuable work on tho subject, and

largo bottle of the remedy—sent free lor trial. Mention Post-Ofllce and Express address. frof. W. IL PRBKE, F. I)., 4 Codor St., New York.

fREE TRIAL

CUR£.

1 package

PROEHARRIS1

PflSTILLfS'

FOR THE CURE OF

WEAK MEM

(VITALLY WEAKK M»J« by to eta* application to bmlnpjs or ntndr vr« nkiiUI itmla or (tilrr tSKXl'At KXrfcS^K til wKlalallfr.M'vleltftui hablUpotitraeted In rc»»h, lifSTAtf IICU *101*8TO

'NT*Rt

KKRVOt'S BKHIklTYor

VVkHli nlCil KXHtV STIlW V.ISTINU HK*liSKS», ISTOU

MmKSwtthiUKt.V PHVY InYOIXt) aod 9tlt»-

PI.K MiKUi Ue* of vim, vl^v-r.nHJMttns'.h.whtuctunlorfmij lmr*!rcJ i-'MU'tW lu Bj-proachini olit »««. UfUCIl U#c CAV nunc from kt*owl«»t*« nflCH WE OMI bunc»t

RSKMSNST RKSIXIS

In re»r.T thnmnnrt t»»ttre»tod*mtoor*.l In p**t twelvejrMr*, AufvWtncoofour f*ltb la Prof, Harris* 580LTTBLB MEDICATED PASTILLES

TBtAi «r»o!?»f tt(Mdaj*trl»l •IRSOLtTKI.Y Fi'JtK, wiw».iiiBMI)| joant or «ld, nff*r)n( from ttilt pmnlml trouble fhoulJ I«D1 thflr *dJr**» »o w« e*n f«rol«! qtiMSIont to b«\a»w»pH. that ra»y know lh« trn« MDdltlea of «th and pirpar* mt-dlelsve la »ft ret a prompt car*. l-Orttril (a S'»» Ynrk for»rt

*r It T**m »t Si. LooU), w« «(T»I

•11 thane* to eai*.l «*l»hr»ut TrMtmwatv THE HARRIS REMfeDYCO., Mfa. Chemists, 6® BKKKStAN STREET, NSW YORK. tSTABt) 1878 IHCORPO 1890.CAPITAL SSS.OOO

LADIES. TK*ST

Dr. DeLue's Periodical Pills.

FROM PARIS. FRANCE.

Act* Qnly on tie menstninl system and posltlvoly cure* suppression of the mensus from eolda, shock, etc. A sale reliable monthlv medicine, warmnted to relieve price & three forfS. The Amertcait P1U and Medicine Co., proprietors, Si*«ncer, Iowa. Sold and sent l\v mall upon receipt of price, and by Geo. Kels*, drupgiat, comer Third ar streets, Terre Haute, Ind.

and Main

GKATKFI7I*—COMFORTING.

Epps's Cocoa

BHKAKrAST—SirrKR.

*By thoiouph knowledge of the natural

UOIl W* WW j»JV|«iww vi Capoa» Mr Epp* has provided onr breakfast table« with a delicately fisrorwi beverage which may *»v® ts* mwny heavy doctors' hills. It by the ]udido«« bm or snch art!ol* of diet that a ccmstltntton may be gr*d lutlly built ap until strong enough to resiit* every tendency to dlwsw, Hanared* of snbIle mal«dl« are floatln* around us mwty to attack whenever ther* a weak point. We may e*«ape many a fat«l shaft by keeping oor*elve« well forUfled with pur* blood aad pmjxTly nourished frame.CJvtl Service t?atetts

Made simply with bolltnc w*t«r or milk. Sold only to h*Tf-|oand Ueuu by grooei*, iaV#MXhwt 'iAMKSKPM COriomapopathic Ch«mUt», Loctlwn. lag,

*,i*

4

A

THE GOSSIP OF GOTHAM.

Inconceivable Difficulties of tho Rapid Transit Problem.

New York aud tlie Western Cities—Uncle Dan Klce—Koujje for Squaws—A Potomac Bath—A Great Opportunity Lost.

(COPYRIGHT. 18S3.1

EW YORK rapid transit problems are difficulties past conception elsewhere.

Since the capital is t« with singular unanimity refused to have anything to do with the under ground

railroad plans everybody turns to the elevateel lines. The problem is nothing less than this: To carry five hundred thousand people back and forth from the business section to the new wards ten miles away beyond the ITurlem, without neglecting the million who still live on Manhattan Island. There must be express trains running forty miles an hour and local trains stopping every half or quarter mile. There must be an east side and a west side system, with fanlike branches across the river. No other city has such a problem. No resident of London, even, must travel ten miles or mOre foi a cheap home.

The elevated lines are doing a magnificent work for the city, but they are overburde ned. When a train draws up at the City Ilall station for a fresh load of passengers, if it is summer the waiting throng use windows as well as doora in their haste to get in. In winter the jam is more decorous—and dangerous. People ^ft-c crushed, beaten, tramped upon. Nothing could be worse, I would say, if it weren't for the Brooklyn bridge.

So long as Jay Gould was alive his name was like a red rag to a bull when mentioned to a good many peo1 otherwise sensible. Perhaps, now that he is dead, the elevated people will be allowed to build express tracks a 1 on he present lines. Express trains are already run on two of them. The same privilege on two others would help, but it would be only a temporary palliative.

Meantime the shameless strikers at Albany are at their old games. One fellow from up-country holds out his Itching palm, after having introduced a bill to reduce the price of an elevenmile ride to three cents. Another wants a five-cent rate from beyond the Harlem, which is more feasible. And the newspaper k\ickers are making all tho trouble they can for the companies. The newspapers of New York are less public-spirited than those of any othei American city.

Permanent solution there will be none until one hundred millions are ex* pended. Who has it to spend?

ITnele Dan RJce.

I met Uncle Dan" Rice, the veteran showman, the other day, and was astonished to see what a vigorous and well prese rved old gentleman he is. The day was fiercely cold, but he seemed to enjojr it immensely. "I don't like to hear anyone grumbling about this weather." said he: "think what a thing it is for the crops all over the west. The frost softens tho ground and the snow covers ami protects winter wheat and new seeded mowing iatui."

3*7"

ITnele Dan was nattily dressed, with a neat beaver overcoat and a shiny beaver of the correct style and looked, like anything but an old man, though his beard is white as snow, for he carries himself with the nervous energy of a young business man.

Rouge for Squaws.

An artist who knows Indian l?fe pretty well tells me that the squaws are just as vain of their personal appearance as are white a spend just as much time upon their toilet, it somewhat differently apportioned. Less wash at^d more hair oil, for instance. l)ut the funniest fact he gave me was that face paint, roue* of the cheaper varieties, finds a ready sale among the Indian women. 01 course the fair Minnehahas of the plains are much too civilized to daub their faces with ochre or other cruda and barbaric tints. They get a powdei puff and a box of real Parisian stuff several imitations removed and jab tht stuff on their withered and copperj cheeks by th® aid of a three-cornered bit of mirror filched from the agent'* ash barrel.

We area progressive nation, and th« course of empire can't take its waj westward without hitting the poox Tndtim a whack once in awhile, can IW

New York *nd Chicago.

There was a time when Boston claimeo to be the literary capital of the country. If a book appeared without th« Boston imprint its name was Denfailure, I mean.

Then New York divided the Honors* treUitur more than its share alter a iifc

-(.A "W* -^Stfi

But he won't. ',

Tricks in fcvory Trade.

A well-known publisher said to me the other day: "The book business is in a bad way, at least for the publishers of cheap "books and monthly libraries. The competition is tremendous not alone among publishers but among writers as well. So much matter is submitted for consideration that it is impossible even to read it. I believe that every man, woman and child in the United States has written a book, or believes so, at any rate."' "Is it true that readers do not examine manuscripts?" I afterwards asked an experienced editor. "Yes and no," was the reply. "We read everything worth reading. Slush we can tell at a glance. Writers of stories use queer tests to determine if every word of a manuscript has been read. The old rule was to put a hair between two of the pages along about the middle. I've come across other things, though. We always open and shake a manuscript whether wo read it or not. Sometimes a hair falls out, sometimes ravelings of cotton cloth, sometimes a slip of paper. The newest deposit of this sort I've noticed was a lot of tiny red wafers loosely folded be tween two sheets, but not stuck on. suppose when the author got that manuscript back she—it's always a she—said to herself: "Well, they examined it, anyhow."

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY ETflflNG- MAIi FEBRUARY 4, 1893.

tie, as its way is. Now the country too big for literary circles to arrogai to themselves exclusive privileges. CM cago publishes lots of good books. SJ Louis' imprint is upon the title page one of the best long poems of the y" Prof. Byars' version of the Tannhau: legend. Minneapolis prints admirable society novels. Cincinnati is a headquarters for schoolbook public^ lions.

These reflections are suggested by seeing Hattie Tyng Griswold's clever society novel with a Chicago imprint. Mrs. Griswold is the daughter pf Emm$ Moffett Tyng, well known to readers of eastern periodicals. The mother is one of the prettiest women in New York, with a quiet, domestic kind of ladylike beauty—you know what I mean. The daughter, a bride of a year, is less beautiful but of more striking appearance, with flashing black eyes and black cm-Is and pleasing if irregular features. Born into the "literary set," she comes honestly by her ability.

Newspaper Man's L.uck.

1 hear that John R. Spears is getting! aneasy in his Adirondack home and is likely to set out* ti on another urn alistic globe trotting expedition soon.

Mr. Spears is a good illustration of newspaper luck, which of course, means

opportunity combined with the "lyains to take advantage of it. His letters from Greenland in the Sun and Geographical Magazine made a distinct hit. When he went with Warner Miller to the isthmus he was so lucky as to be shipwrecked, which made a beautiful story. He was on hand when Creede sprang up like a mushroom, and his most recent trip to Death valley and the borax deserts furnished material for an entertaining book brought'out by Rand & McNally, as well as lots of newspaper letters.

T. S. Williams is another man who has newspaper luck. He's Gov. Flower's private secretary, though only thirty years old.

William E. Barrett, speaker of the Massachusetts legislature, is another. I knew when he was a pink and white boy, and if he's more than thirty-five years old I'm much mistaken. Yet he's been an editor eight years, a speaker three or four, is going to congress soon and, perhaps, the senate later.

Wliat an Opportunity £ost. Wrhen John Quiney Adams was president he used to go down to the Potomac every morning, wijiter or sum-. tnor, for a bath. The fact isn't without precedent,•for besides the swimming match at Fort Hamilton last December, there is the well-known fact that poor men and boys bathe all the year round, morning and evening, in tlie Serpentine in Hyde Park, London, and have lots of fun in it, too.

I met a man lamenting the decadence of the cold batTi habit in modern presidents. He was an amateur photographer. Said he: "If Grover Cleveland would only' do as Adams did, what a snap it would be for us fellows with the hand cameras, eh?"

David Wechsler.

Home Treatment for Colds. There is probably no better means for loosening the grip of a cold, or preventing it from tightening, than the "old woman's remedy" of a hot footbath and hot drinks, such as herb tea In afoot tub or pail one-third full of comfortably warm water, dissolve two spoonfuls of soda and one spoonful

o1

mustard. Soak the feet and ankles in this for twenty minutes, with hot w^vej added from time to time, raising the temperature as high as it can be borne Wrap a heavy blanket around the par tient meanwhile if there is oppressive heat on the head, apply a wet napkin Keep up the treatment for twenty minutes, and, towards the last, when the patient is nearly ready for bed, gives liberal hot draught. Ginger tea is a favorite.

Pure Fiction.

"What kind of fiction does Fleecy write?" "Principally notes lor three months

Judge.

?*VS

Wimi

\..T

For Women Who Board. ie ability to mind one's own business is iost commendable and beautiful virtue, ^3a&! there are some women who board have so few affairs of their own with tb occupy their time that the greater ion of the day, and many hours of the as well, are spent in talking about :does not concern them in the least, ir entire world is encompassed by the alls of the house that holds them, doings and sayings of the inmates ie staple topic of conversation. In the they gather in each other's rooms, th£ conversation opens with a discusof «fc what' hour the next door neigharrived hbme the night before, the ess and income of the new boarders te second, story front, the quarrel besn Mr. att^d Mrs. So-and-so, which, by way, they never would have known agjything about if one of the members had not glued her ear to a convenient crack in the adjoining.door, and many other topics of alike interesting and elevating character.

Now, it is a perfect wonder to busy womhow these ladies find the time for such discourses. Surely the reading of ttrse of standard literature would be a more worthy and instructive pastime, not lead to the mischief that such gosalways results in. Oh, women who take care! Take care, lest your judgit be too harsh and your conclusions too ity. Surface observation tells you nothof the real life pf men or women, and ess you desire the boomerang of your om to recoil upon your own character, vfftch the tongue carefully lest it lead to gi§sip and scandal that has no foundation iiPaetual fact.—-Cincinnati Enquires .•

v'

Sport for Parties.'

One of the variations of a "peanut hunt" is to see who can carry the most peanuts in orie hand from one table to another. A man ought to win this. Forty-two is said to be a good number by those who have trst'd it. Of course the winner is to be rewarded, while the "booby," too, must be consoled.

Another trial for an evening party consists in carrying potatoes from one table to another in a table or teaspoon. The potatoes, which should be round and big, are better put on a table with a polished top. The one who can carry most potatoes from one table to tho other in a given time wins. The tables must be far apart. It is not easy to scoop up the potato, and once secured it is still difficult to retain.—Cincinnati Enquirer.

Fits—All Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Resiorer. No Fits after the first day's use. Marvelous cures, eatise and $2.00 trinl bottle free to Fi cases. Send to Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.

Feminine Luxuries in Itio.

A woman home from a long residence in Rio Janeiro says that the greatest boon to her from her friends up here was that of a bonnet. "The common people never wear them," she says, "and the grandees get them made to suit their peculiar ideas of headgear, specially and at exorbitant prices. Such a thing as an average bonnet, that my country women have by the dozen almost at home is simply not to be obtained. 1 met a missionary's wife down there when I first reached tho city, and in talking with her of her especial needs she laughed as she said in all earnestness: 'And, oh, a bonnet. If they will put a bonnet in the next box I shall b3 happy,' which may be of value to some other packers of boxes for Rio. "Another felt want to American women 4own there, which, however, cannot be supplied by express, is that of closet facilities. Closets or wardrobes are unknown in tho native houses, and a few h.oks about the wall is the only way to dispone of clothing that cannot be folded. One reason for this is that nothing is ever packed away for any length of time for fear of gathering dampness in that moist climate. Things must be turned over constantly. Brazilian women do not miss these conveniences as we do, however, as their belongings are much fewer, and the amount of apparel tlie American woman of fashion thinks indispensable would amaze a Rio belle."—Her Point of View in New York Times.

A Good Record. *'I have sold Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for ten years," says druggist E. B. Legg, of Vail,

r,\

Ih..

"and have always warranted it and never had a bottle returned. During the past 90 days I have sold twelve dozen, and it has' gi^en perfect satisfaction in every instance." Tt does not dry up a cough but loosens and relieves it. If will cure a severe cold in less time than any other treatment. 50 cent and $1 bottles for sale by all druggists. Peb.

Showing Off.

There is nothing so aggressively unpleasant r.B the tendency some women exb ibit at all times and places to show off. It is a trait not confined to the very young, and is indulged in by rich and poor alike. From observation we are disposed to believe that it is a sort of. fever which cannot be controlled, for women who are usually the most sensible of their sex will, without any apparent cause, be led into it.

It generally attacks them in some public place, such as tho street cars or a ladies1 restaurant, and rages fiercely as long-ns there is any one around to hear them. What their object is will never be discovered, for no one is in the least deceived by it or led to think any more of them for it.

It may be that they use only their "com pany voice," which is employed for tb.benefit of strangers alone, and is so palpably affected that one realizes the instant it is heard that the "gallery" is now being talked at.

This method is usually distinguishable by the use of "cawn't" and "shawn't," which drop into "can't" and "shan't" directly the stranger for whose benefit they have been employed has vanished.

Other women do not go in so much for pronunciation as for facts, and dilate largely on their servants, the plural number always being employed, so as to give the listeners tho idea of a large retinue.—Philadelphia Times.

Very Prt»d»e.

Talk about the precision of the Boston girll A littlejeass side schoolgirl was overhond telling a playmate that she had been seasick. "That is," she added, to correct herself, "I have never been seasick, because I have never been on the sea, you know, but I have been awfully lakesick."—New York Advertiser.

Your rheumatism may be bad w® will admit it to be very bad, and that you have expended a great deal of money for medicines and treatment without receiving much benefit but remember that others have suffered even more, and yet been permanently cured. No case of rheumatism can be so bad that Chamberlain's Pain Balm will not ease the pain and help it, and hundreds of cases that had lone been regarded as incurable have yielded to the aoothfug effects of this *reat Remedy. The prompt relief from pain Is alone worth many times its cost. 50 cent bottles for sale by all druggists.

-s.

r(

The groat value of Hood's Sarsaparilla as a remedy for catarrh is vouched for by thousand» of p%opie whom it has cured.

Appointments of tlie Guest Chamber. However small r.r.d simple may be the chamber which you ledge your pilgrim, its appointments must be scrupulously comfortable. Your guest may bring all necessary articles with him, yet it is your duty to make ready as if he came unequipped for more than a morning call. Prepare for him as if he had started from a quarantined district on a half hour's notice. He will rise up and call you blessed when he finds it unnecessary to confess his total forgetfulness of a button hook or his oversight of a hairbrush.

In these days of numerous inventions it is impossible to know all the improvements in household arrangements, so if there be anything peculiar in the methods of heating, lighting or ventilating your rooms, be sure to explain th,em. A visitor can experience but one sensation comparable with awakening on a cold morning to the consciousness that he doesn't know how to turn on the heat, and that is, in the quiet of the night arrayed for bed, to find that the light is to be put out by some method entirely unknown to him. One thins mor:. You must tell the stranger within your gates before he retires the hour for breakfast, and, if there is no rising bell, it is well to ask if he desires to be called in the morning.— Good Housekeeping.

Judge Simpson

of

the Superior Court writes: From mental exhaustion, my nervous system became shattered, and I was utterly unable to sleep nights. Sulphur Bitters cured me, and my sleep is now sound, sweet, and refreshing.

A Warning to Matchmakers. It may be questioned whether it is not much more injudicious to urge marriages than to prevent them. In the one case the wretchedness may be much slower in coming, but it is none the less sure and farreaching in its effects. It takes a vast deal of grace for people to live together in harmony the year in and tlie j-ear out, and there must be some natural attraction or something more, than .somebody's whim or convenience to keep things even and preserve that unity and sympathetic consideration that are absolutely necessary to ma1c home lifo worth the living. Therefore, whatever else you do, never urge a marriage. Marriage is one of the things that must be desired, and that ardently by the contracting parties. No one has a right to interfere, and to do so is to multiply sorrows for those whose affairs aro meddled with in this way.—Now York Ledger.

Two Aged Women.

One of the most famous of female centenarians was tho Coufitess of Desmond, who lived to be 145, and died in tho reign of James I from the effects of an accident. This wonderful woman found herself a., the age of 100 so lively and strong as to bo able to take part in a dance, and when sho was 140 she traveled all the way from Bris tol to London—-no trifling journey in those days—in order to attend personally to some business affairs.

Lady Desmond is, however, quite thrown into the shade by a French woman—Maine Prion—who died in Sc. Colombo in June, 1888, it is said, at the wonderful age of 15d. Toward the end of her life she lived exclusively on goats' milk and cheese. Although her body was so shrunk that she weighed only 4G pounds, she retained all her mental faculties to the last.—St. Louis Post-Dis-patch.

Chanfberlain's Eye and Skin :, Ointment. A certain euro for Chronic Sore Eyes, 'fetter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Old Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema, Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipples and Piles. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of cases have been cured by it after all other treatment had failed. 35 cents per bos.

For Torpid Liver aee Dr. Miles' Pllle. Green iVloiinlHin Salve, is unequalled a* a cure for all rheumatic pain/*, Moaknessln the nidi back or any other place, and Is nnescelhd for outs, bruises, corns, etc. It is the uncompromising enemv of palu in whatever form, or wherever manifested, and has never been known to fall In a contest with this dreadful fooof human happiness. If you would live a peaceful and painless life, try this great remedy and you will never regret It.

Are you nervous Use Dr. Miles' Nervine.

Catarrh Cure.

A clergyman, after years of suffering from that loathsome disease Catarrh, and vainly trying every known remedy, at last found a prescription which completely curcd and saved him from death. Any ftullerer from this dreadful disease sending a self-addressed stamped envelope toProf. J. A. Lawrence, 88 Warren street, New York, will receive the recipe free of charge^

A Kerned? for the Grippe Cough. A remedy recommended for patient* afflicted with tbe grippe is Kemp's Bal p&m, which is especially pd*ptea to diseases of the throat aud )u gs Jo not wait for the fipt symptom* of'the disease, bnt get a bottle artd keepiton band for use the moment it is needed. If neglected tbe grippe has a tendency to bring on pneumonia. All drucgists sell the Balsam. Lane's Family Medicine Moves the Bowels Bach day. Most people need to use it.

Heart Disease cored. Dr. Miles' Hew Core.

TJLJESZJE

Phenyo Caffein

FOR HEADACHE or NEURALGIA. It tones tip the Nerves, and thus has a curative action in Headache, Neuralgia or Rheumatism. Money refunded if it does not cure.

Go to druggists for PhenyoCaffein. It is guaranteed to cure Headache and Neuralgia.

Those who have taken PhenyoCaffein for Headache or Neuralgia are unwilling to be without it.

Take Phenyo-Caffein for Headache. "It does the work." .Why suffer with Headache or Neuralgia, when Phenyo-Caffein is to be Lad at your druggists'

ROSS GORDON,

LAFATETTK, I3fD.

WHOLESALE AGENT FOB INDIANA.

A Healthy Woman Never has the blues. Nor that "don't-care" 6t

14

want-to-be-left-alone" feeling. She is always happy. No painful' female complaints crush out her life. No ovarian troubles, inflammation or ulceration, no spinal weakness, no fainting, no bloating.

She is never melancholy, irritable, excitable, nervous, dizzy, or troubled with sleeplessness and fainting spells.

Have you any of the symptoms named Beware of the beginning of evil.

Lydia E. Pinkhams V&getabh Compound is the sure cure oi the cause. It may be the uterus or womb whatever the cause is the Vegetable

pels the disease and stops pain.

All drug-gists sell it. Address in confidence, Lydia K. Pinkuam Mild.

Co.,

Lynn, Mass.

Lydia, S. Pinkhom's --.0 Liver Pills, 25 cen ts. jr€~'ai

IF VOU WANT INFORMATION ABOUT

Address a lettor or postal card to

thk press

mras)

JOHN

WEDDERBURN,

P.O.Box 463.

company,

Managing Attorney. WASffXK GTON, D. O.

PENSIONS PROCURED FOR

SOLDIERS, WIDOWS, CHILDREN, PARENTS. Also, for Soldiers and Sailors disabled !n tho lino of Survivors of tlio Indian wars of 1832 to 1842. and their widows, nonr entitled. Oldnnd rejected claims a specialty. Thousands entitled to nlphcr rates. Send for new

Ibwb.

outil eucocsaf ul.

No Charge for advice. Kofoa

E A N E S S

ITS CAUSES AND CUKE.

Scientifically 1.rented by'nu nurlst of worldwide reputation. Deafness eradicated nnd entirely cured, of from 20 lo 30 years' standing, after all other treatments have failed. How the difficulty Is reached and the cause removed, fullv explained In circulars, with affidavits and testimonials of cures from prominent people, mailed free.

Dr. A. 1'ONTAIXIC, Tacomn, Wnsli.

CARTERS ITTIS

PILLS

CURE

Slok Hoartaclio antl roliovo all tho troubles fnof« to a bilioua state of iho syfltom, Buoh aa Dizziness, Nausoa, Drowainoes, Distrosa aftoff eating, Pain In tho Sido, ito. Whflo thoir mosft xomarliable Buccesa has been wliown la curing

SICK

Hoaflacho, yet Carter's Little Liver Pitta ai* equally valuablo in Constipation, curing and proventing thifiannoylim complaint.while they ala® correct all disorders or tlie a tomach^sti mulato tho livor and regulate tho bowels. Evenli' they onlj

HEAD

Ac'iothoywonldloalmo8tpri,coloE8totho

3wQ®

Suffer from this dlstreaalng complaint but fortunately t'lolrgoodnesa does notondliere.and thoMi who once try thom will find these little pills vainable In so many ways that they will not bo williag to do without them. But after allsick hes4

ACHE

Is the baao of BO many livoa that here 1B wher« tre make eur great boast. Oar pills cure It while on

Carter's Little Liver PUls are very small and very easy to tako. Ono or two pillB make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or puree, but by thoir gontlc action please all who use them. Invialaat25cents ilvoforfl. Sold by druggists everywhere, or sent by mail.

CARTER MEDICINE CO., New York.

mLPILl. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE

relief and Is no InfaHil Care for Pile#. Prk»$L.

BOX2410,

ABSOLUTELY

IS1oChange of Cars

FROM

ST. LOUIS, TERRE HAUTE INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI,

DAYTON, SPRINGFIELD.

——TO—1—

New York, Boston

TIE-TIE EAST

VIA THE POPULAR

Big4

Lake Shore and NewYork Central

R/OTJTES.

THE—

Shortest & Quickest Line

BETWEEN

EASTrWEST

All trains arrive and Depart from Sixth Street Depot.

Berths in Sleeping Cars BMCVBXI)

THBOtTOH TO

NEW Y0RK & BOSTOiV

EE. SOUTH, Gen. Agt.