Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 33, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 February 1893 — Page 7
li:
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[BLOOD PURIFIER]
IN THE WORLD.
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WHY
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FOUL, OFFENSIVE BREATH^
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STRONG AND HEALTHY.
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Send 3 2-cent stamps to A. P. Ordwav & Co., Boston, Mass., for bes medical work published
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THE
cent, outtlt only SI. Hooks on credit. Freight, pa id. Ad. (1LOBK IUHLK PUP.LIH1IING CO. 723 Chestnut 8t.., Phi la., Pa., or 358 Dearborn fSL, Chicago, 111.
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Giving passengers the privilege of part of a dav's stopover at tho World's Fair city. Three dally trains between Terre Haute and Chicago equipped with the latest modern built Pullman sleepers, elegant, ladles and smoking coaches, and the veiy best of dining and parlor ears
WOtNO NORTH.
No. 11, Chicago Limited0 5:10 a.m. No. 2, Chicago Mall and Express 12:10 p. m. No. 50, Wntseka Accommodation 8:20 p. in. No. I, Chicago Kx press* 10:15 p. in.
Trains marked thus run dally. All other trains dally except Sunday. No. 0 (limited) solid vestibuled has sleeping, parlor and dtnlng cars to Chicago.
No. I has sleeping earn to Chicago. Tickets and sleeping car accommodations at cltv ticket otllce, (£10 Wabash avenue. Telephone "No. 22. Union depot otllce Tenth and Chestnut, telephone No. M,
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SI
WHERE DOLLARS ARE MADE
The llue oft hcCQUKKN CRESCENT ROUTE through KENTUCKY. TENNESSEE, ALABAMA, MISSISSIPPI, aud LOUISIANA OFFERS OBEATER OPPORTUNITIES TO
QTTimrni—17T3 O JELi JL _JL JLjJQijLvO}
MANUFACTURERS &GENERAL BUSINESS ENTERPRISE
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'I'HK: WOMAN OF FASHION.
Must We Adopt the Hoop Sldrt Once More?,
What the Indication* Arc—More 1830 Developments and More of the Parplfl a, Bage—New Fads from Parla—
A VUltlnjj Costume.
[COPraiGHT. 1893L1
Yes, we're coming to it! You needn't
7ow
and declare with such vehemence, my young friend, that you will never don a hoop skirt, no matter what the rest of humanity does. You needn't be quite so positive about it, for the chances are that if all the women about trou are arrayed in inflated skirts, looking very imposing and puffed up, you will not have the courage to cling to pour slender, close-fitting one, or even
VISITING COSTUME.
your gathered ope that looks so in* significant beside tho others. And il would require a considerable amount of bravado, I assure you, to stand thus alone, a unique, scant figure, almost swallowed up by the bulging gowns ol tho women all about you. If you should happen to glance in a tall mirror at the time, I have not the slightest doubt that you would instantly repair to youi dressmaker and order a gown cut with the very biggest flare that could be properly worn.
And, as I started to tell you, we are •earing tho hoop skirt rapidly. Address just from Paris has three reeds at the back—the lowest one very large indeed. The sido panels are made on the stiffest crinoline, and the little ruffles on the skirt are all well wired.
Does it lie within our power to prerent the advent of the hoop? Most certainly. Did we not rise up and declare such positive war against the em« pire that it was relegated to the domain of the ballroom and the parlor only and forbidden to walk forth in the light oJ day? And as we gained the victory then and subdued the empire, so does it lie within our power to bring a crusade against the hoopslcirt and declare that under no conditions shall It £ain admittance into our land. But the movement must be upheld, and the effort must be decided and united or our cause is hopeless.
From Paris comes news this week ol sleeves and ribbon trimmings. Sleeves still continue to grow, although falling away from the shoulder and expanding, liko the skirts, lower down. Precautions regarding them come also. Don't forget that you desire, above all things, to retain some semblance of grace in your robing. Don't wear an immense sleeve if you are not slender enough to stand it, but keep the proportions well in hand and make your sleeves of a dark shade in velvet. This will help considerably to remove the otherwise ludicrous effect -of a large figure amplified by immense puffs. Ribbon opce more trims everything. It is aearly always of velvet, though not necessarily, so, and is put in as many diver-
A PRETTY BVESTING QOWST.
slfied ways as it was last summer. II looks pretty laid on /the skirt several Inches above the feather trimming or ruche at the edge in long, narrow St. Andrews crosses that come up to the knees. The crosses are caught down with two short loops. With this trimming on the skirt the bodice is almost covered by broad ribbon that crosses in front, reaching from the sleeve on one tide to the waist line on the other, and headed by large bows.
A wonderful Paris dress for evening wear, of pale brocade, has gauze draplmn all surround the odcv» of the skirl.
GAUZE COMBINED WITH BERD8. bow. Where the fichu stands apart at the neck one can see a plain velvel yoke, headed by velvet collar. Th« leg-of-mutton sleeves are also velvet and so is the rather short, full cape hanging over the gown, which has short collar cape also, edged yritk sable. The high rolling collar is linec with sable which comes down tht front a little way, giving a soft, warm effect. EVA A. SCHUBERT.
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY" EVENING MAIL, FEBRUARY 4, 189-3.
The drapings are caught with big velvet bows and in each bow nestles a with beautiful green and red pi The gauze drapes itself oyer the sh ders as well, and among the full we see two more of the birds. The will, no doubt, be taken up, an bring back the "bird" craze as strol ever.
The purple fad is still on us. We are completely carried away with it. In fact, if it keeps on the storekeepers will be in despair, for there will be no way of disposing of all the materials that were unfortunately dyed in some other color. Violets are everywhere again, on hats, gowns and muffs. It is a pity they cost so much, but this fact seems to count for little, and to diminish their prevalence no whit. 'Gresat flat felt hats twisted in fantastic shapes, "with purple felt beneath and black above, are covered with nothing but large, drooping clusters of the pretty blossoms. The velvet ones are most graceful and have such a genuine droop to them that they are often mistaken for the real, No matter that the cold weather has brought the real up to six cents each, we see them pinned on muffs and.velvet capes. There's nothing like the effect of a bunch of violets on sealskin or any rich, dark fur. Even though lilies of the valley and fine white blossoms have been declared the order of the day, the violet is just as beloved as ever.
A group of fair women—the three graces were they, surely, clad in their exquisite gowns, with rich satin draperies, firm, and yet soft.
One leaned forward clad in palest yellow, with low-cut, tight-fitting bodice edged by fine gold embroidery, and caught at the waist by a fine golden band. The edge of her dress was magnificently embroidered in deep, glowing yellows, shading into burnished gold. Her puffed sleeves were short and moderate. She wore a great hat with broad front rim rising from her face, adorned with yellow plumes and velvet ribbon.
Listening to her gay conversation sat a maiden, half-Greek and half-empire. She had Greek embroidery at the edge of her satin gown, but she wore also the low, full bodice of the empire, and the high, broad belt. Her shoulder puffs were gauze, with ribbon bands laid over.
And the third smiling maiden was robed in heavy white satin and the Batin was embroidered somewhat like the first, except that it was all creamj white, leaves as well as blossoms. Hei bodice was folded and crossed in front, fastening at the side. An overpowering train fell about her feet in heavy folds.
Listen to this description of a new Btreet dress—dark green camel's hair, of a very fine quality, is the material, and the skirt has three ruffles of velvet to match, standing very far apart. The plain tight-fitting corsage is covered by a loosely-gathered green silk fichu, crossing in front, and caught down a trifle below the waist line by a velvel
HIS FEARS MISPLACED.
Tho Tortuous Path of a Man Who Wai Being Shadowed.
He was going home to his wife and family. It was growing dark. Hia road from the station was a lonely one, and ho was getting along as fast as he could, when he suddenly suspected that a man behind him was following him purposely. The faster he went the faster the man went, until they came to a churchyard. "Now," he said to himself: "I'll find out if he's after me," and he entered the churchyard. The man followed him. Vague visions of revolvers and garroters grew upon him. He made a detour of a splendid mausoleum. Still the man was after liim, round and round. At last he turned and faced the fellow, and asked: "What the dickens do you want? What are you following me for?'^ "Well, sir, do you always go home like this? I am going up to Mr. Fitzcrown's house with a parcel, and the porter at the station told me that if I'd follow you I should find the place, as you live next door. Are you going home at all to-night?"— Melbourne City and Country.
Fatting an EJTK In a Bottle.
An egg in a bottle is a great cariosity, and4 will be a wonderful surprise till the secret of its accomplishment la learned. To do this, soak an egg la strong vinegar. In process of time the shell will soften, and yet will resist considerable pressure, so it may be extended lengthwise, and inserted in a moderately wide-mouthed bottle. Waal it by pouring cold water upon it, mid it will soon resume its former shape and hardness.—American Agriculturist
Showed Ilia Gratitude.
Miss Fitx—Jack insisted on me last night. Miss Spitz—Yon don't say had yon tast released him?—Truth.
Antbnto.'
The meet heroic act I know of was that of a little Italian named Antonio, who was sent to the country by a nfission for a fort^ night. A wealthy farmer took him.
This farmer had two children, Ethel and" Johnny. Ethel was 6 years of age and Johnny was 12, Antonio being only 10.
Ethel had been sick for a long time, and on the day I am telling of her mamma hadi
fkeep
her in a hammock in the orchard, and out the sun she threw over it a scaiv let shawl as a sort of awning. Antonio was whittling near her, and Johnny was reading a book.
Now, Mr. Leslie, the children's papa, had a young bull, which he kept in the shed on account of its being very wild. The heat and the flies bothered him so that he at last was so desperate that he broke through the shed door, knocked down the barn gate and headed for the orchard. Seeing the red shawl he darted for it.
Mrs. Leslie was on the veranda with a maiden aunt, and upon seeing what had happened she was struck dumb with terror. Johnnie threw down his book and "ran for his life," but Antonio, brave Antonio, was as calm as can be. He snatched the red shawl from its place and ran out of the orchard, with the bull after him, down tho lane into a meadow where hay was beinj| made, bull following. The haymakers lassoed the infuriated beast and then killed him with their pitchforks. Then turning to Antonio, who had swooned, they tenderly carried him home, where lie soon recovered.
He never went back to the city, not afuer thatl He was adopted by Mrs. Leslies maiden aunt.—Cor. New York Press.
Motiwrs of Naughty Children. Some one pleasantly observes that there is one good ihing about spoiled children-— we never have them in ouy own family. Nevertheless I feel sure that these words will be read by many a mother whose secret, unacknowledged sorrow is a wayward, seemingly incorrigible child, whoso (often inherited) faults are more than mere childish naughtiness.
The words of a little girl recently, "Wasn't I partly good, mamma?" aroused in my mind an earnest desiro to speak a word to the mother of the "bad boy" (and bad girl), for I myself, in the long past childhood, was one of the children of whom long suffering families -despair, and from the depths of my experience I point this warning: Don't, under whatever provocation, let your child see that you think him wholly bad! Scolding and punishment are or course necessary. When you are displeased with him, he must of course be made to feel it, but don't make him despair. "Give a dog a bad name and hang him." Children are canny little mortals, and when they see that we expect the worst they will come up to our expectations, having nothing to lose and everything to gain. One of the most unwise speeches I ever heard was from a woman to her little son, who is, sad to say, a "natural bora/liar:" "Well, you say so, but I can't trustriyou, you're such a little liar. I never call take what you say as true."
The boy is foolish if he wastes truth on that mother.—Housekeepers' Weekly.
Pimples on the
Face cured. Sulphur Bitters will cure the worst caso of skin" disease from a common pjmple on the face to that awful disease scrofula, it is the best medicine to use in all cases of such stubborn and deep-seated disease. Do not delay: use Sulphur Bitters and drive the humor from your blood.
"Women In Governmental AVork. There are (5,105 women employed in department" work in Washington as against 17,036 males. Here is the table:
Fe To
't Male. male. tal. 933 O 9,5 Executive office #23 1 23 11 80 Treasury 2,7:30 1,359 4,089 2,131 101 2,2Ki Navy 1,452 55 1,507 Postoffice 048 159 807 Interior department 4.503 2,304 0,8tJ Department of justice 529 20 655 Department of agriculture.. 366 153 519 Department of labor 40 '9
ft!
Fish commission 59 11 70 Interstate commerce com'n 108 .... 1GJ Civil service commission.... 22 .... £.3 Government printing office. 1,665 958 2,623 Government of D. of 1,081 807 1,880 Miscellaneous offices 546 88 031 Judicial branch of gov'm't.. 117 1 118
Total .. 17,030 0,104 23,143 Of these employees about 10,000 come un^ der the civil service rules. In 25 years women have captured 25 per cent of the government positions.
Why She Was Indignant.
An Auburn little girl of Z}{ years' camft home from church a Sunday recently in a highly indignant frame of mind—in fact, she was lofty and would hold no converse with any one.
She took off her bonnet and her tippet as crossly as little Mi$s Muffet ever sat on a tuffet, and then she flirted around the room with a most dignified air. Being sweet of disposition, however, she soon became sugary and lovable as of old, and on inquiry it revealed that at church, where she had gone with a neighbor, she hadn't been treated well. "Fy," said she, "dey had bready butter, and dey woon div me—me (with tears) tiey woon div me none."—Lewiston Journal,
An Uxperlmcnt WoVth Trying.
Here is a little experiment which is well worth showing to your friends. Procure a bit of ordinary camphor and from it break off tiny pieces. Drop these upon the surface of some pure water contained in any kind of vessel, and they will immediately begin to rotate and move about, sometimes continuing to do this for several hours. The water must be quite clean, for if a droj) of oil Or any crease is in it the experiment will not work. But provided that nothing of this sort gets in the little pieces of camphor will twirl about in a manner that is exceedingly funny.
Takes 1000 people to buy Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, at 60 cents a bottle, to make up $500. One failure to cure would take the profit from 4000 sales. Its makers profess to cure "cold in the head," and even chronic catarrh, and if they fail they pay $500 for their over-confi-dence,—
Not in newspaper words but in hard cash! Think of what confidence it takes to put that in the papers—and mean It.
Its makers believe in the remedy. Isn't it worth a trialT Isn't any trial preferable to catarrh
After all, the mild agencies are the best. Perhaps they work more slowly, but they work sorely. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant
Pellets are
an
active agency
but quiet and mild. They're sugar- coated, easy to take, never shock nor derange the system and half their power is the mild way in which their work la done. Smallest, cheapest, easiest to take. One a dose. Twenty-five cents a vial. Of all druggists.
SHE IS ONLY A WOMAN
SOME OF THE "MUSTS" AND A FEW OF THE "MUSTN'TS" ONE MEETS.
Custom Forever Seems to Bar Her From Things She Would So Itluch Like to Do. Tyranny Begins Very Early In Life and
Never Once Relaxes.
It is delightful to be a woman. Perhaps you men don't think so, or perH*ps you do, but no matter how much you db, you know nothing about it from the simple fact that you have never tried it.
Whoever did know what toothache was until he had through an entire winter night sustained a solo in opposition to the neighbor's dog, on the occasion of a throbbing molar in his own mouth—not his wife's?
Now, I never knew just how dreadful beihga woman was till last week, though I have been serving in that capacity for more years than I shall tell you.
I began to feel that there were a few trifling inconveniences attached to the office tit the age of 9 yeai^, when my brother and cousins took to "their native element," the millpond, and I was informed, to my great surprise and indignation,that it was "not the thing for girls."
I have been hearing that same phrase every day since applied to something new and something nice, of course.
If it was not nice, it would be "just tlio thing" for a woman. You men may do everything except steal, and even the law against your doing that has its modifications, for provided you do it on a sufficiently extensive scale and are successful you may even steal.
Now, shoplifting is about the only branch of this profession open to us women, and even that, you know, has its disadvantages.
From the time a girl is old enough to understand that she will one day be a woman she is informed of things by the score that she must do and by the hundred that she mustn't.
In the first place, a woman is made to understand that she must forbear all work or be eternally disgraced.
Work does not mean getting up at daylight, cooking breakfast, washing dishes, making beds, sweeping, dusting, scrubbing, sewing, cooking dinner, washing dishes again, darning stockings, nursing sick folks and babies, cooking supper, washing dishes again and yet again.
Oh, no a woman may do all these things from New Year's day to the 81st of December, Sundays and legal holidays included, and still bo respectable in the eyes of all sensible people.
But let her do anything by which to earn the wherewithal for buying herself a decent gown and gloves, and all of you, the very best of you, feel that she has gone just a little beyond the bounds assigned her.
Don't protest against, this, for in your secret souls you know it is true. Su IOSO for instance a woman to be a teacher, nd the more successful she is the worse 1 her in your opinion. You know that yo ire shy of her.
If by her pen she supports hersel all the nice men avoid her, even those whu are far beyond her in the literary world—not from any jealousy. It is just because they don't "care to meet that kind of a woman."
She may be doing this sorely against her will, with many struggles of ninny sorts, in order to take some of the burden from her father's tired sliolders, or to help her mother and sisters, and still you have a feeling against it, the very manliest one among you, and perhaps tho manlier you are the more helpless you liko a woman to be.
There is one exception to this rule, however. A woman may work to make a living when she has a husband who approves her doing so by disapproving most strongly of any manner of labor for himself.
Even then some of you feel a kind of pity for him, and think he might have been a different man, poor fellow, if he had had a different wife.
A woman mustn't vote (I don't know one who wants to), she mustn't whistle, she mustn't be independent, she mustn't smoke, if she will work, she mustn't expect big wages, she mustn't own a temper, and mustn't go across the street after dark, although attended by seven other women, unless there is some pbor little man along to lend respectability .to the party.
These are a fow of the things she must not do. Then the musts—oh, the mustsl She must know how to cook, for the cook may and does leave without warning she must have tact enough tfb "get along" with everybody, from her mother-in-law to her washerwoman she must sing or play whenever asked, regardless of her mood she must always smile, no matter what the state of her head or heart or her temper she must have a faculty for finding everything that's lost, from a bootjack to a collar button she must always be faultlessly dressed in very inexpensive material she must be pretty she must always have her bangs curled, if her hair happen to be straight, and if she be blessed with curly locks she must keep them in some sort of order she must know a little of everything and not much of anything, in order that she may at once be helpful to the male members of the household and patronized by the same individuals she must—but the list is already too long and the biggest must is yet to come.
She must get married or bear through life the profound pity and I had almost said contempt of all men, especially all women and most especially the grass widows and those women who have drunken husbands and six or seven ragged, neglected children.
All this is bad—worse than you can imagine—but, AS I told you, I never reached the climax till last week.
I was going, with a certain man of the family (I won't tell you how he was related to me), to the country.
I had been ready and waiting to start a full half hour, but his cravat wasn't tied or something, and as we hurried into the station the bell of our train began to sound.
That wasn't the only bell there, however. There was a bell skirt, which "dipped," of coarse, and I,was arrayed in it. So, while I was getting myself into shape for running, the train pulled put. Then I heard the words: "If yon had been a man, we would have caught that train."
I realized what it was to be a woman then.—Louisville Courier-Journal.
Bboda Broach ton-
One would never judge from the plain, straightforward face of Rhoda Broughton that she was the author of novels with such sentimental titles as "Cometh Up as a Flower," "Red as a Rose Is She." "Not Wisely, but Too ..Well," and "Goodby, Sweetheart."
Miss Broughton lives just outside of London, at Richmond, with her sister. They live in a quiet, comfortable little home standing back from the road, which commands an extensive view of the river, winding serpentlike through a forest of trees.—Exchange.
BOOT AND BRANCH,
the poison in your blood, however itmay have coino or whatever shape it may bo taking, is cleared away by Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It's a remedy that rousesevery organ into healthful action, purifies and enriches the blood, and through it cleanses and invigorates the whole system. Salt-rheum, Tetter, Eczema, Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Enlarged Glands, and theworst Scrofulous Sores and Swellings, are perfectly and permanently cured by it.
Unlike the ordinary Spring medicines or sarsaparillas, the Discovery works equally well at all seasons. All tho year round and in all cases, it is guaranteed, as no other blood medicine is. If it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. You pay only for the good you get.
Isn't it safe to say that no other blood purifier can be "just as good?"
If it were, wouldn't it be sold so
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^rhlsbouse is reliable. Namo this paper.—Ed.)
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