Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 34, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 February 1893 — Page 3

1 PACKAGE A

PROF-HARRIS1!^

PASTILLES

FOR THE CURE

eosomstu

$

v.*& $

Makes an every-day convrnlenca of an eld-time luxury. Pure attd wnoiesoir.e. Prepared with scrupulous-care. Higher award at ail Pure Food Eipositwns. Each package makes two fa^ge pies. Avoid imi'v' nns an.I insist on having the

NONE SUCH brand.

MEKllE? I'* i**rncuse, N. Y.

Breaking liown.

Many men in middle life break down. They attribute it to over work*and br&in trouble.

Nonsense! All that ails them is, that they eat too *much.

There are two foes that lie in wait for t-he average man. These are

Stuffing and guzzling. When you are sick. Cut short your rations. And take the Laxative Gum Drops.

The finest things in the world for dyspepsia. They do nor. act violently.

They are gentle and mild. Small boxes co«t ten cents, tlio'large size twenty-five cents.

They will do the work. All druggists.

SyJvaii Rum«'dv Co.,

To

THE

Peorin, II1-.

CONSUMPTION

SURELY CURED.

EniTon—Please inform your read­

ers that I lwtvo positive remedy for the nbovo namoil disease. By its timely use thousands of liopoless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy free to any of your readers who have consumption if they will Bend me their express and post office address. Respectfully, T. A. Slocum, M.O.,

No. 183 Pearl Street, New York.

It fares Cough*, Colds, Sore Throat, Cronp.'Whoeping Cough, Broaohitia »nd Asthma. Aacruiioenra to Consumption In firat F'ajw »nd aurn relief In bdvanood stages. I'w at our*. TousrlUnaothc r.xoollcni effect after taking tho firot doso. Boil by *«-/irhM* L*r{« Bottle*, AOewu wad 11.00. It Ci"V# lultueasa.

FREE TRIAL

OF

WEAK MEN

CVITALLY WEAK), lUi»»ot.r te etout application to builn.tf or utmlr *«vor« tttntal tirnlu or frief SKXl'At, XTKSSES In mtdiil«!lf«,er rlclom ti*bluttntracta! In rents. MICI IT II Ell ARKTtCTiaSTO KKRTOI'9 DKRILITY or VVCAiV mCW kxhutstioji, Wisma wkakkrss, it?OLl NTART L0SSK8 «lth KAHLf UKCAT la *Ot!S« and B1P1)1.1 AHKDt l.skof vim. vljror, «rd tiitnsth.irlih«rxo*l orjiof Impalrml »n.l w-M*cned pr*ni*tur»lT In approachta* old »f». WHEN WE SAY CURE.V.&SK'KSG In m*n_r Hinn«nd tMat«d*ndeor«d to put IwslT# rtara. *TS v*rs

rr*r»t»ol

SJMllotit

to

la

tx

Prof.

Harris'

IV ©SOLUBLE KKDICATEV PASTILLES A

TDIAL*,off"d*r»wiuABSonrtstT

in, yoaot

rtuut,

or old.

(ntfcrtcc tr*n UiU

iroabl* aho«li»«pdth»lr »»e»o

fnnriift

that

n*y

know

tb«

tra*

mil mm *nd pniKN mvdlelac

tondltlta

to

U«u«tl la Ki* Terk (alter 11

«S«t prompt nra.

rrtrt

*15 a «t»oM io e»r»d »r

at St. Loalt), offtr

tbt

Mitbraud PmUII*Tr«aUR«a(.

THE HARRIS REMEDY«0,, Mfg. Chemist*. 99 BSESXAN STREET, HKW YORK.

CSTABU 187ft «HC0RJ»»«e »0 CAPITAL 985.OOO

LADIES, TDRIT

I)r. DeLnc's Periodical Pills.

FROM PARIS, FRANCE.

Act* only on tho menstrual system and positively on mi suppression of the mensus from coltls, shock, etc. A safe reliable monthly modlcliMS warranted to roll eve price 13, three for I&. The American Pill and Medicine Co., proprietors, Spender, Iowa. Sold and *cnt ov mall npon receipt of price, and by

Kolss, drosftist, corner Ttiird and Main st w?l?, Torre IiruUs Ind.

ORATKPtTL-4JOMFRTINO.

Epps's Cocoa

BKK A

FAST—SITr

ER.

•*l?y tbnjotigh knowledpe of the natnr&l laws which guvero ttas operations of dl«»lion and nutrition, and by a careful application nf the fine pmjM»rti* of ureH-«»iectiid i'acoa, Mr Kpps ha# provided oor br^akfiwi !j»hl«w with a delicately flavored beveraK* bieh n»ay save u* many heavy doctors" M!K It If by the judiehMis nse of pach arUHrji of d!#t that a conatitttUoo may b« |»d. urttlr tmlll wp until Mmn^r ervowRta to ne*i*t ery tendency to diwe«ite. nndml* of Rob*nuUadics are. a^ntns around n* ready to ..'Jack wherever there •..« weak point. We •iiav t«*pi shaft far ke*ptn® .njricSvca well fortl(J«d with pure Wood and a no he a *. 2 ot ii\

M«dr *imply with tootling water or milk. soM only in baif-pwnd tlna. hy grocer*. 1*. 1 *1.^1 thu»: jAMISS ItPjh* A C1. llnnnxKi»athlo ChemUta. IxBdon, Kn*.

HPii

i' li I

PEETTY WOMEN.

How Thoy May Preserve Their Many Charms.

Lillian Russell Imparts Some Secrets from the Storehouse of tier Experience Concerning the Cultivation of Feminine Beauty—Stage Mako-Up.

[COPYRIGHT,

The make-up ox an actress Or any other woman who wishes to please the eye is more to be found in daily habits than in the rouge pot and the powder box. Good health, a "proper amount of

1

LILLIAN RUSS2LL.

exercise, cleanliness and good living are the secrets of beauty, not lotions nor powders nor pastes nor paints.

After a woman has *nadc. herself to a certain extent beautiful by becoming clean, sweet and healthy, then it is time to come forth with the lotions by which the finishing touches are given.

For the stage it is necessary to put on paint and powder, because the footlights have a peculiar effect upon the skin, rendering it white and ghastly and utterly destroying the natural tints.", It is, therefore, actually obligatory to use make-up, but it is not necessary nor advisable to put on one-half as much as is generally used by actresses, particularly those in the choruses and doing the minor rolls.

In my own case I can say that I use everything of this kind most sparingly, and that I have recourse to paint and powder only for supplying the high lights, so to speak, of the face. That I am very fortunate in heing gifted with just the complexion for the stage I will not deny, but I am equally sure that I can givo points to others, even in cases where I do not have to follow them myself. Before going upon the stage I rub my face and hands with a very thin solution of cold cream, and then I very lightly powder my hands, nose and forehead with "lily white," leaving the rest of my face its natural color, which is a healthy white—neither ghastly white nor sallow. I rouge my cheeks, chin, tips of ears, and at length finish by rubbing a handful of it in the palm of my ihands. My hair is my own, and so I am ready for the stage without bleach or further rnake-\ip.

But there are other women, and sometimes extremely pretty ones, too, who are of that very unfortunate style of beauty which does not light up well and which becomes very ghtistly and haggard under the rays of sunlight a^.d gas. To such women paint and powder are necessary if they wi-.h to do themselves justice.

Women with very large, dark eyes are examples of what I mean. Such women are beauties. Their eyes arc full of expression. They visually have a finely evil Grecian nose and chin and in complexion they are perfect. As you talk with them in the boudoir they impress you svs women so exquisitely lovely that you wonder how it is that they have not gained reputations as profes sional beauties. So far so good.

The next time you see your lovely, interesting Grecian beauty it is at a bail, and as your eyes fall upon her in a crowd of women you are startled at tho change. She looks almost haggard. Her lovely eyes have circles under them, her nose and chin look pinched and her skin looks as delicate as though she were in the last stages of consumption. She does not compare in beauty with the blue-eyed women, who, with irregular noses, perhaps, and without a particle of expression, yet manage to light up well and look healthy and happy.

Dark-eyed women must rouge to relieve the pallor of their complexion, and they must powder a little under the eyes or they will look haggard.

As I said, the principal factors of a woman's beauty are her daily habits, and unless these are correct she cannot possibly remedy the effect by artDaily exercise makes a woman round and keeps her in a state of good development It is by this that she gets good shoulders and it develops the bust better than anything

else

-*.*

can do it I

am In the habit of taking daily walks, exercising, both in,the house and out, and moving my arms about so that

I

get a great deal of exercise. If I were to rise in the/ morning, dress lazily, bathe carelessly and lie upon my couch until time lor rehearsal or the theater lam sure that I should soon become• flabby, unmuscalar and shapeless. Yet I have seen society women and actresses doing this s&mejthiug and complaining that they are unfortunate In being neithershapely nor rosy.

With regard to baths I cannot say too much. I aaa gifted with such a fine constitution that

I could easily take aa

icy plunge each morning, but singers, you know, have dclicate throats, and so I do not dare to go one-half so far as I

feel I

have

1893.1

Making up for the stage is a distinct branch of the actress' art. It varies so greatly in individual cases that only the most general rules can be laid down. And these are rules which every woman would do well to heed, even though she does not belong to the theatrical profession and has no intention of ever joining it." Oliver endell Holmes says thdft the training of a wellbred woman should begin three generations before she is born. And to this I would add that the training of a beautiful woman should begin when she is a child and be continued all the days of her life.

"TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENr^MAIlTFEBRIJARY 11, 1893.

could safely go. It is actually

necessary for a. woman who wants to

a nice skin to take a bath every day, and beside this she should sponge her neck and arms with alcohol and keep her face and hands *soft ,with vaseline and cold cream. -1 tjj?.

In the spring it is a good thing to wash the face with strawberry juice, and lemon, juice is excellent at all times of the year for removing freckles and sunburn. lama firm believer in old time remedies for minor ills. I think that herb teas induce sleep and regulate the system better than drugs.

I think, too, that a woman gets a great deal of beneficial exercise and so makes herself prettier by aiding herself in her toilet. For instance, she gets exercise for her arms by dressing her own hair and by buttoning her boots she gets exercise for her wrists, and thereby suppleness. I make it a practice of doing all these things myself unless hurried, and think I am the better for it.

It is never safe for a woman to negiect the cultivation of beauty. I am an emphatic believer in the corset, and I do not think that a woman who goes without one during a part of the day can expect her figure to retain the shapeliness which is the standard of beauty to-day.

This is recognized even by artists. When I was approached, on the subject of the Montana statue I was told that my figure was just right for a model of Liberty, and nothing at all was said about the corset, although^ I have always worn one.

A woman should wear always shoes that fit the, feet snugly and well. She should get plenty of sleep. She should eat all she can hold of easily digested food, and she should be constantly in a state which is known nowadays as "well groomed." All theso things she must do if she wants to be a pretty woman.

1

Then, if she is an actress, slie need only bring out the high lights of her face before she goes behind the footlights. And if she is a society woman she has but to rub her cheeks into rosiness, bite her lips into redness and lighten up the shadows of her face, and she will be beautiful without the veneer of enamel and the fresco of rouge pot and powder, too often maxle necessary by bad grooming.

I have read in tho newspapers that sweet-voiced Minnie Hauk does not believe in water for the toilet, that the incomparable Patti has not washed her face for ten years, and that lovely Jennie Lind bathed in water preserved from the melting of April snow. But when I read these things I sprinkle them with a great many grains of doubt, for I do not believe that a beautiful and talented woman can hold her own in the eyes of the public without attention to the laws of hygiene and common sense.

HIS MISAPPREHENSION.

It Was the Hired Girl and Not His Daugh ter—Therefore He Wept.

He was carefully shaving around the wart on his neck as the warm sunlight of the autumn morn streamed through the window, when his wife rushed ex citedly into the apartment. She was striking rather than handsome, arrayed in a flowing morning a running start, then, buckling on its armor, backing gown with a rent in the back. Her eyes were staring wildly and her face was pale. "John—" tri

A responsive thrill passed through his frame. ,* she's gone."

He turned quickly. Forebodings filled his breast and his lips turned ghastly white. "The hired girl, John, that ungrateful—"

Her voice was getting beyond her control. '•—wretch that wp paid a month in advance."

Struggling for breath he sank upon the trunk and groaned. "Mary," he gasped, clutching convulsively at his throat, as if to assist his labored' respiration, "the girl's eloped."

She glared at him ferociously. "How do you know?" she depaanded. "Heard her leave the house by a rope ladder and fall into a man's arms outside." "And why—"

She was almost shrieking. "—didn't you stop her?" "Mary—" The solemn sadness of his look was touching. "—I never dreamed it was the hired girL I thought it was daughter Julia, and I held my breath for fear of spoiling it all."

Sitting together in the warm sunlight of the autumn morn, they wept.—Detroit Tribune.

A Fickle Maine GirL

The other day a Lewiston young lady made an agreement with one of her admirers to go out walking that evening. Later she met another, whom she invited to call that same evening. She had forgotten the first. Then when a third one of her beaux made his appearance she agreed to go walking with him. In the evening the first young man came for her. She went, and soon the second arrived, and, being told that she was out, he said that he would go and meet her. When she saw him coming she remembered her engagement, excused herself from the first young man, and walked with the second. They casae to a confectionery store, and she remained outside while he went in after choxlate The third young man came along while she waited, and she graciously promenaded off with him. Now she says she will be more careful of her appointments.—Lewiston Journal.

HUMAN TEETH FAILING.

A Marked Change for the Worse In the Past Century.

The Modern Degeneracy of tho Teeth the Result of Neglect to Properly ,'"iiiiserve the Nervous

Energies.

A comparative examination of the skulls of savage and civilized races shows that the increased brain development of the latter is always accompanied by a marked modification in the form and size of the jaws and teeth. This modification is usually spoken of as a degenerate condition. While it is quite true that decay of the teeth is much more prevalent among highly civilized than among savage peoples, it is open to question whether it be an inevitable concomitant condition. The Greeks had, apparently, nearly solved this problem at the height of their civilization, for it is not until the commencement of the period of their decadence that wc find any marked decay of their teeth. The modern degeneracy of the teeth, therefore, is not to be regarded as directly due to modifications produced by changes in the contour of the face and skull consequent on increased brain development, as some scientific men have contended, but rather a.s the

result

of neglect to

properly conserve the nervous energies necessary for maintaining that balance of physique upon which health or wholeness is primarily dependent. A weakened or diseased condition of any part of the human organism, excepting, of course, such as is produced by mechanical injuries, is always a local expression of a greater or less general decline of systemic vitality. That there has been a steady and rapid deterioration in the quality of human teeth among nearly all the great civilized nations of the earth during the past century, a deterioration especially marked during the past thirty or forty years, no one can deny.

Are we, then, to consider this degeneracy of the teeth as a local indication of a general decline of racial vitality? asks a writer in the New Review. I can see no possibility of avoiding an affirmative answer to such a question, but there are, at the same time, as we shall see, certain peculiar circumstances and conditions attending decay of the teeth Which largely qualify such an affirmative answer. The problem, however, is very grave and demands the most serious consideration. Wc are always prone to overlook the importance of any disease which does not immediately threaten to extinguish life but it would not, I believe, be difficult to show that the sum of physical evils which may be directly traced to decay and loss of the teeth is far greater than any likely to be inflicted by the advent of any contagious or infectious disease. On first thought this may seem a bold statement, but the simple truth is that the foundations are laid and the way prepared for the incoming of many diseases, both contagious and non-contagious, by a degenerate condition of the teeth. A high state of vital ity is the most perfect protection against any form of disease, and this can only be secured and maintained by perfect nutrition. Perfect nutrition results from perfect digestion of food materials, and perfect digestion is an impossibility without perfect mastication. The life of the whole body is poisoned at its fountain springs when food, half masti cated, inadequately moistened with saliva and loaded with the nitro-organ-isms which proliferate in the cavities of decaying teeth is taken into the stomach.

If nature's adaptive powers were not wonderful almost beyond belief thousands of people would speedily die from this sort of self-poisoning as it is, the beginnings of many persistent chronic diseases are established in this way. I am probably considerably within the bounds of my statement when I say that the loss of the masticating teeth before the thirtieth year means a shortening of-the life of the individual of from two to five years. To know the extent to which many of these teeth are lost, even before the fifteenth year, one has only to turn to the, recently published reports of the examination of the teeth of children in the schools and orphan homes of London and elsewhere. If some effective measures are not adopted for combating the ravages of dental decay it looks very much as though another half century would find the poorer classes of English people practically edentulous before the twentieth year.

BOY AND LION.

Remarkable Adventure of a Ten-Tear-Old Boy in the Colorado.Mountains. "The most remarkable adventure I

know of was that of a ten-year-old boy in Colorado," said Rienzi Beauchamp to a Globe-Democrat writer. "A party of us had gone from Pueblo for & week's hunting and fishing along the Arkansas river. "We carried tents and camped out. A man named Britton had his young son with him, a manly little fellow, who could land a trout and bring down an antelope with the best of us. One day he got separated from the party, lost his way, and spent the night in the mountains. 'He had with him a thirty-eight-cali-ber rifle, a good weapon for small game, but in the section where we were camped mountain lions were plentifuL 'His father was well-nigh distracted and we searched all night long for the adventurous youngster without avail. Just at sunup we started to return to camp. "As we descended a ravine we discovered the object of our search sound asleep with his bead pillowed on sun enormous mountain lion, which was curled up as though enjoying a nap. "Three of us approached cautiously

t'do?

to

within fifty yards, drew a bead on the animal, and at a given signal fired. The brute never stirred. "The boy, whom we supposed dead, half rose, rubbed his eyes, and inquired peevishly: 'What are yon fellers tryin*

I killed this yere lion four hours ago."*

^Mr

Fits—All Fits stopped free by Dr. KHue's Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after the first day's use. Marvelous curesl eatise and §2 00 tnnl bottle free toFi cases. Send to Dr. Kline,'931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.

Encouraging If True.

It happened in the orchestra at one of the Washington theaters a few evenings since. Two gentlemen, one aNew Yorker and the other a San Franciscoan, were occupying aisle seats in the center of the house. In front of the latter sat a lady wearing what to the feminine eye was a beautiful creation of frame, ribbons and laces. But it was big. On the top were spreading wings and bows made of a silvery, gauzy, transparent material Just before the curtain was rung up the lady turned and said to the San Francis coan politely: "I beg your pardon, sir, but does my hat obstruct your view of the stage?"

The New Yorker slipped off his seat in a dead faint. Tho San Franciscoan*s brain reeled, and so astonished was he at this unheard of feminine act of generous consideration and regard for their rights and feelings that it was a full minutebefore his vocal organs could be ecutrolled for articulate utterance, -and then he gasped: "Thank—you—madam—very kind— but—but I can see—see through the— the wings! Pray do not—do not disturb your hat!"

The lady smiled sweetly, her escort grinned in unison, and quickly taking out the pins that held the square yard of finery to the prettily arranged brown tresses she deftly removed it and held it in her lap. "They can see better anyway," she whispered to her escort. He nodded acquiescence, for he had probably often been the man in the next row himself.— Washington Star.

We're not waitiug for the bats and moles but fof men aud women who have eyes and use them, who have brains and re.ason! There's* a new world lor them—Buttering aud sickly as thev ara— anew world created from the brain of a skillful- physician—a discovery— the "Golden Medical Discovery." Years ago Dr. Pierce found cut that the stcret all scrofula, bronchial, throat and lung trouble lay—in the beginning least—in impure blood and tho weak tone of the system that the way lo cure these effects was to remove the cau?e, tbat human nature being the sauie, tho same re uits may be look for iu nearly all cases. So confident whs he that the exceptions were uncommon thai he took the risk of giving the medicine ..to those ft didn'r, benefit for nothtug, and tho re suits hhve proved that ho was riizlH.

And "Golden Medical Discovery" is the remedy for tho million! The only guaranteed Liver BloTTd and Lung rem edy. Your money hack if it doesn't help you.

Women Teachers Protest.

The women teachers in tho high school, Oakland, Cal., have sent to the school board the following communication: "Tho salaries of the men who are heads of departments in this school are 20 per cent higher than those of the womou holding the same rank. The work of the latter requires as much mental preparation as the work of the former, and in some cases very much more physical ex ertion and labor. Discrimination in sal aries on account of sex is not in accordance with the spirit of the advanced institutions of learning of the present day, and it is unworthy of so progressive a school department as that of Oakland. Such discrimination is illegal, as being contrary to the letter and spirit of that portion of the school law entitled 'An act to prevent discrimination against fe male teachers,' which reads as follows, 'Females employed as teachers in the public schools of this state shall receive the same compensation as is allowed to male teachers for like services holding the same grade certificates.'"

Pimples on the

Face cured. Sulphur Bitters will cure the worst case of skin disease fiom a common pimple on the face to that aw ful 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 aud drive tho humor from your blood.

She Got Up a Bluah.

A contributor to a Boston paper says that he always thought until recently that the blushing cheeks of

a bride were

a certain indication of either her embarrassment or her abounding health. He was disabused of this opinion by what he saw at a wedding the other day. The wedding party was in the vestibule, all ready to proceed to the altar, awaiting the wedding march. He noticed that the bride was very pale, and the bridesmaid noticed it about the same time and proceeded to take the bride's cheeks be tween her thumbs and fingers and give them a good hard pinching. Under this process they soon showed a good color, whereupon the bridesmaid carefully performed the same operation on herself, and they proceeded with glowing cheeks to the altar.

A Woman's Worthy Charity.

Mrs. Anna Matilda Maulsby, by her will, which has just been presented for probate in Washington, provides for the erection and maintenance of a home for destitute women as a memorial to her mother. She bought a site in a fashionable part of the city and set apart $35,000 for the building and $45,000 as an endowment fund. She also bequeath? $80,000 'to the

Newsboys' and Children's

Aid society for a building to be known as the "George Maulsby Memorial home," in memory of her late husband. —Washington Letter.

Your rhejmatism may be bad we willadmit 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, aad yet been permanently cured. No c»«e 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 lonk been regarded as incurable have yielded to the soothing effects of this freat

Remedy. The

prompt relief from pain Is alone worth many times its cost. 50 cent bottles fosale by all druggists. Feb.

cure

The

worst

cases

Of Skin Disease From a Common Pimple On the Face To that awful Disease Scrofula. Try a bottle To-day.

VIJ IV tP"

Send

S 2-ceut

stamps to A. F. Ordwny & Co.,

Soston, Mass., for best medical work published

JUST THE THING.

,, •......••• i....I fa' I- ,•! Tli is Is i^rex pressi( th travel 1 ng hi generally uso when they tlmi something that is exaet.lv what they want. Tills expression applies directly to.the Wisconsin Central Lines, which is now admitted by all to he "The Route" from Chicago to St. Paul, Minneapolis, Ashland, Duluth and all points In the Northwest. Their double daily service and fine equipment, offers Inducement whleh cannot be surpassed. fc

This is the only lino running both through Pullman First Class aud Tourist, Sloepers from Chicago to PaoiflcCoast Points without change.

For full information address your nearest ticket agent or J,\s. C. Pond,

Gen. Pass, and Tkt. Agt., Chicago, 111. •istf.

E A FKBSS.

ITS CAUSES AND CUKE.

Scientifically treated by an aurlst of worldwide reputation. Deafness eradicated anil

entirely

cuied, of from 20 to 30 years stand­

ing, after all other treatments have failed. How the dlillculty is reached and the cause removed, fully explained in circulars, with allldavlts and testimonials ,of cures from prominent people, mailed free.

Dr. A FONTAINE, Tacoma, AY ash.

CARTERS

feijTUE

IVER PILLS.

CURE

Dick Hoadaoho and relieve all the troubles incf» dent to a bllioua etato of tho system, suoh aa Dizzlnoss, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating. Pain in tho Sido, Ac. While their moaft remarkable succoss has boon shown in curtcg, 4

SICK

Hoaflacho, yet Carter's Littlo Livor Pills ai» equally valuablo In Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying oomplalntwhllo they ate® correct all disorders of tho stomach^timulato tha liver and regulate tho bowel& fiven if they only

HEAD

Aolia they would bo almostpriceless to theva wild on/for from this distressing complaint but fortunately their goodness does notend hcro^and thosa who once try them will find these little pills ^valuable In so many ways that they will vol. bo wit« jiog to do without them. Bat after allsick b«a4

ACHE

Ifl the bane of so m&ny lives that here is where we make our groat boast. Our pills euro it whila others do not.

Carter's Little Liver Pills are very smjdl an* verr easy to take. Oao or two pilta makot uo«o. Thoy are striotly vegetablo and do not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action please all who use them. In vials at 25 cents five for $1. Sold by druggists everywhere, or sent by maiL

CARTER MEDICINE CO., New York:

SUALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE RemedyFree. INSTANT RELIEF. Final carom lOiJayx.INevtir ruturnn: no parse: nosaiYu: no suppository. A victim tried in vain over* rortvdy li«» (Uncovered a "iraple euro, which ho will m*il fr«» U) hi* fellow dufferers. Addrcn

PILES

4.II.RKKr*JfeBox

3t m.New York Cllj-,!».T.

ABSOLUTELY

No Change of Cars

-FROM-

ST. LOUIS, TEHEE HAUTE INDIANAPOLIS, CINCINNATI,

DAYTON, SPEINGFIELD,

-TO-—

New York, Boston

.A.US"ID THE lE-A-S-T VIA THE POPULAR

Big 4

Lake Shore and 5 New York Central

ROUTES.

-THE

Shortest & Quickest Line

BETWEEN

EAST^WEST

All grains arrive aud Depart from Sixth Street Depot.

Berths in Sleeping Cars

BKCtTKED TKROCGH TO

NEW YORK & BOSTOiV

EE. SOUTH, Gen. Agt,