Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 45, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 May 1893 — Page 2
WOMAN AM) HOME.
WHAT ELECTRICITY HAS DONE IN THE KITCHEN AND LAUNDRY.
Artificial Aid* to Beauty—Why Southern Girls Are Liked—A Learned Irish Woman—Admiration For American Babies.
Mrs. Eustis and Her Daughter*.
The stories of the use of electricity in the household, If practically realized, will do more than all the dreams of co-operative kitchens in solving the problem of housework. If electricity could be introduced into the household as a motor to turn the washing machine in which heavy clothes are washed, to turn the wringer and the mangle and accomplish many minor tasks, it would be a genuine blessing. There is already a device for grinding the morning coffee. A little slide start# the motor, and when the coffee is ground and falls into the coffeepot, a weight turns off the motor .automatically.
Meat may be chopped, fruit juice pressed ont, an ice cream freezer turned or cream extracted in an instant from milk by various other devices of which electricity is the moving power. There are baking ovens, heating stoves, saucepans, broilers, griddles, sadirons and various other utenfils which may be attached to any electric light wire. The voltage inthe case of these household appliances is from 50 to 110. The •ovens, which posSess many advantages over an oven heated by gas or kerosene, are lined with asbestus, so that there is no radiation of heat into the room.
The heat is applied at the top and bottom of the oven alike and may be controlled by a switch on the outside. There is a thermometer attached to the oven showing the exact degrees of heat, and there is a piece of plate glass in the oven doer so that the cooking
may
be watched and the heat grad
uated'\f it is going on too rapidly. The greatest objection to the oven is that it cannot be opened during the cooking, .and therefore meats cannot be basted as they certainly should bo. There is no special gain in lime. A 12-pound turkey requires 2 hours and 45 minutes a 6-pound roast of beef about an hour and a half if it is roasted rare. Pies of various kinds may lie cooked in from 80 to 40 minutes, and it seems probable that this oven would prove more valuable- for pastry baking and other cases when an Intense heat is required than for general UHO in the kitchen.
The great advantage of such an oven over one heated by gas or kerosene is that there is no odor and no smoke. The averag? kerosene stovo is liable to smoke unless it is watched wiiii the most scrupulous care, and nothing i-s more destructive and disagreeable than the all pervading, penetrating «nd greasy soot from this smoke.
A pancake griddle, a coi»eepot or teapot may bo attached to a wire separately. 1 her^ are also broilers which broil the meat without smoke and in so rapid a manner ns to recommend tbom to all good cooks who know the value of intense and rapid heat in broiling. It i.« not likely that these kitchen utensils will take the place of the range, but they may be valuable
JUS
an adjunct.
A teakettle which will heat water rapidly at night or a chafing dish which will make a little appetising dish for supper will be very useful in tho summer, when it is desirable to dispense with the heat of the .kitchen range for at least apart of the day.
Flatirons heated by an electric wire would do away with the misery of a hot laundry in sultry weather and enable the worker to accomplish hertasksln on easier .and a more sattftta«f? Kmitnefr *TheT -saucepan heated by electricity wilt he especially valuable in the sickroom and nursery, to take tho plncoof the disagrt.uible gas saucepans.—New York Tribune.
Artificial Aid* to Beauty.
One may bo disposed to forgive tho woman who has been beautiful if, in her desperate attempts to retain her beauty, she paints and powders and chooses to moke of herself a thing of borrowed shreds and patches. But when women toll us—as some of them do tell us now and then—that men likon woman to caricature her own womanhood that they prefer—it comes to that! —imitatiou beauty to tho real article, they require of us a faith too great, for ordinary human nature. To be told, as I was told a little time ago—and by a lady—that men do not caro for women unless they paint and powder, is to have too strong a strain placed upon one's natural civility. That this sumo informant was guilty of a perhaps pardonable feminine exaggeration when she declared hat, nowadays, all women used both paint and powder, I am assured.
Had she confined herself to the statement that a very large number of women are indebted for what they call their charms to anything but nature, she would have delivered herself of an utterance on the literal veracity of which she might safely have staked, as our transatlantic cousins have it, her "bottom dollar." The lady of fashiou may not be aware that she is guilty of ft reversion to savagery when she calls in artificial aids to tho help of her natural attractions, but she is. Among savage peoples it is an almost general custom to revert to such auxiliaries.—All the Year Round.
Why Southern Girls Arc Liked. There's a vast difference in northern and southern girls. Did you ever stop to consider it? Southern girls are so much more attractive to men than we are. I don't just understand why it Is. But every once in awhile some Ixmisville or Memphis or Virginia girl conies up hero and fairly walks away with every eligible man she meets. She Is usually prettier, but rarely as stylish as her northern sister. The former caros more for prettines* than styte, though, and wears more dainty little curls and bows and bangles and gewgaws than a northern girl would don in lifetime. It isn't exactly good form, we think, but she doesn't know that, and if she did, she wouldn't care, for "the boys like it," and then her voice is so soft, and her southern pronunciation is simply delicious.
Her maimers are charming, but rather gushing, never coldly conventional nor indifferent as ours often are. And she does make such a fuss over the men. She exerts herself so to plwwe them and lays herself out to be charming to every man that orace along be he old or young, rich or
poor,
married or unmarried. And they all swear by the sowthem girl. From grandpupa ilown to the Ik tie freshman she capO** all the masculine hearts. Her southern Mood gists hex a spontaneous enjoy-
J""1* «wn*uiu» «»1
,^-,1-. uuohUsr that refreshes man becaui it's justwhat he Urn* to find to a Ncw*-Rocord.
LwaWMMi Irt*h Woman.
Bdw*rd H»n«oa. to M. tt.
S S
It tvrtoe
edition ol
So beat edited books ever delivered to th
world. Mis. Grierson was a lady possessed of singular erudition and had an elcgance of taste and solidity of judgment which justly rendered her one of the most wonderful, as well as amiable, of her sex. Prefixed to this edition of Tacitus is a dedication to Lord Carteret by Mrs. Grierson in most elegant Letinity."
This eulogium is quoted by Dr. Dibdin in bis book on the Greek and Latin classics, and a note is added respecting Mrs. Grierson's son, a young man of extraordinary attainments, who died at the age of 27, and who received the highest commendation from Dr.,Johnson. For his mother's sake this young man was appointed king's printer in Dublin. According to one account, Mrs. Grierson was a native of Kilkenny, the child of poor parents, and indebted for her instruction to the parish clergyman. Considering her attainments and circumstances, she must have been a most remarkable genius and deserves a fuller record than so brief a note as this. It is stated that she was not SO years of age when she died in 1733.
Admiration For American Babies. It is now American babies who are commending themselves to foreign eyes. An English woman visiting this country writes home for publication: "You could not imagine anything more quaintly delightful than American small children and babies. They, up to 4, wear the dearest little close caps of all colors, but generally white—the queerest, prettiest clothes—all just touching the ground. It is easy to see where Kate Greenaway got her models for her quaint pictures. They are exactly here. Then the baby carriages—nothing approaching our clumsy perambulators. They are all of either bent wood or good wickerwork, yellowish white, like bamboo, and open work all around, on perfect springs, and most of them rock up and down when not being wheeled and have fixed, large parasols overhead in all colors and pretty devices. "Half lying under this bright shade is a round faced, pale, very pretty, piquant baby with unusually dark eyes, with an expression in them as ii there was nothing they didn't know a tiny white silk cap on its tiny head rings secured to its wrists by a ribbon on its fat fingers the daintiest white pillows, white fancy coverlets over its little body, and an air of cushions and coziness about it. Such is the American baby." This is very delightful, even though it sounds as if the American baby were a species newly discovered by intrepid explorers.
Mrs. Kustls and Her Daughters. Mrs. James B. Eustis, who will dispense American hospitality at our embassy in Paris, was known in her youth as pretty Miss Buckner of New Orleans. She was charmingly attractive as a girl and is even now a handsome, well preserved woman of medium size with soft brown eyes arfcl a clear, fresh skin. Her manners are extremely amiable, being a happy combination of southern warmth and dignity. Mrs. Eustis is weaithy in her own right, having inherited a largo fortune from her father, who built one of the great New Orleans houses.
One of Mrs. Eustis' daughters married a nephew of Mr. Corcoran, the famous Washington philanthropist, while the other, known as Mile. Titine, will probably make her debut during her father's mission to France. If graceful and handsome woman can contribute anything to the success of our new Parisian embassy, Mr. Eustis should be able to create a most agreeable impression. The women of^ his family on both sides are more than ordmarily attract* ive and will naturally reflect luster on the American women at. home and abroad.— American Woman.
Tho Cnroful Frenchwoman's Method. When the great Parisian designers cater to tho caprice of careful dressers of taste and artistic instinct, they make up a doll figure, fashioned as near the outline of the woman theyvaro designing for as possible, and with tho same proportions and coloring. On this replica in miniature they actually make the dress, complete and perfect in every detail. Then my lady fair comes in and criticises the result, suggests a change here and alteration there possibly rejects the whole design, and another is mado to suit her fancy. Then when the gown comes homo there are no misunderstandings or disappointments.
Foreign women, who havo the reputation of being more careful and exact dressers than wo because they have much less money to spend on dress than American women squander, insist on seeing the perfect design. The American, with implicit faith that every Parisian must be right, accepts what tho* gods of tho modes provide with no murmur or criticism, and thus we earn the reputation of lack of individuality in dress.—New \ork Sun.
The Artistic Work of a Dressmaker. I once saw an artistic little French dressmaker take an odd, ungainly looking girl, with no figure nor color, and out of her very oddness create a charm. For material she chose a sort of soft clinging stuff—a dull green, but a green with more blue than yellow in It, tho only kind brunettes can wear. She fairly made the dress on tho girl, draping it skillfully to hide the deficiencies of the figure and softening it against the face with velvet of tho same .shade as the gown. Then by subtle touches of dull gold and Indian red in a quaint passementerie she seized and heightened a southern, Spanish note In the girl's appearance and made one forget tho formless waist by a scarf that went round it, from which dangled rare oriental looking ornaments in the same reds and golds. The girl suggested some sort of barbaric princess and had one of the chief characteristics of beauty—the being able to attract and flx the attention.—-Kath-erlne de Forest in Harper's Bazar.
Why Women Are Prematurely Old.
Do you know why so many of the women of America look prematurely aged and careworn and are a prey to.aJl sorts of nervous diseases that make them unfit for society and change them from pleasant companions to frietty, irritable invalids whom no one likes to have aroundf Well, if you don't, we will give you the answer. It is because they do not get sufficient sleep.
A woman will plead that she hasn't time to H© down for a few minutes to the daytime, and she will infringe upon the hours of the night, which should be given to lound, healthy sleep, in order to finish some piece of work that could just as well be completed on the morrow. She will rush and hurry all day long, and then, when the household is hushed in slumber at night, she will sit up to read the daily paper, thinking that she will not hare to jsay for the minutes she is stealing from the health giving sleep that comes before midnight.— Philadelphia Times.
and Milk For Invalids.
The use of milk and a* diet or nn aid in building up
a
patient Is often
a
trial
to the nurse. Many paSiests will take milk nUghti? warm. «r «ren hot, and digwt St rwdily. when ctld mil- It, i» «w excellent plan to rinse the mo«th witV. the hn„-
cold, cool or hot water, as preferred, before and after drinking milk. The taste left in tho mouth of many persons after a drink of milk, especially a small quantity, often causes a patient to dislike it. The secret of success in giving milk'and eggs to those who would rather not take them is to prepare them in different waya For a delicate stomach the white of the egg, well beaten, added to hot or cold milk, sweetened to taste, will often prove tempting when even the sight of the yolk with milk is unpleasr ant. After a time a little of the yolk may be used, the white of the egg being added last and not stirred into the milk, but left at the top of the glass for ornament.— Nurse.
Absolute Truthfulness.
There is nothing that a parent shou fully realize as the fact that in ordi have truthful children she must be lately truthful herself. Little mini qnick to realize the absolute stabllit mother's statement- and are just as to detect flaws in her armor of since well. Do not promise anything that do not mean to carry out. If you answer any of their little questions fully, do not make up some reply thai will later discover to be incorrect, for proceedings will have a tendency to ii fa them a carelessness in regard to own statements that will soon make it, for them to tell falsehoods without a q' of conscience. Remember, the mot the pattern that the little ones will fo®ow therefore make that pattern as nearly perfect as it is possible for you to do.—Philadelphia Times.
A California Pampas Ranch. One of the most striking instances of what a woman can do in this- era of woman's emancipation is the energetic and brainy action of Mrs. H. W. R. Strong, a pampas grower near the town of Whittier, Cal. Mrs. Strong has a ranch of 820 acres on the southern slope of the Puente hills. At one time a treeless mesa, it is now a lovely semitropical estate, covered with orange, walnut, fig, olive and other fruit trees, its cottage embowered in foliage and surrounded by choice flowers.
Four years ago Mrs. Strong deemed to plant pampas grass between her rows of young walnut trees and procured choice stock from Mr. Stewart of Los Angeles. In 1890 she marketed 184,000 plumes in Philadelphia, at from $30 to $85 a thousand. Last year her crop amounted to nearly 300,000 plumes.—Clara Spaulding Brown in Californian.
Putting Down Oilcloth.-
In putting down oilcloth you do not |aclc as you go, as with carpets. Plan outjthe whole room first, putting in a tack herrond there to hold it all in position until ready for the final tacking. It is disagreeable to flt oilcloth, and you will need a very sharp knife to keep it in shape. A good wfur to keep a keen edge is to have a piece of fcne emery paper, and every once in awliilJW the blade of the knife flat on it, drawing it along as if it were an oilstone. Afte^fhe oilcloth is fitted put in as few tacks ^possible. Matting is laid in the same way,but staples will be found better than tacks tp use at the joints to prevent fraying.-4tEx-change. *1
Hygiene In tho Home.
Household hygiene is by no means limited to sanitary dwellings and suitable diet and dress. It extends to the atmosphere of tho home and includes the influence of thoughts and emotions upon the body. It is a physiological fact that gloom or constant fault finding in the family, besides depressing the spirits, actually reacts upon tho vital forccs. Morbid tendencies arc strengthened and incipient diseases are developed in the homes which lack the healthful stimulus of cheer and kindness.—Congregationalist.
Ideal Wife For an Anthor.
Mrs. Marion Crawford is described as being an ideal wife for an author. She is bright, witty and accomplished, full of intelligent sympathy and encouragement for her husband's plans. She is also a devoted mother. She is a slender, fragile looking woman, with a charming rather than a beautiful face, exceedingly mobile and delicately colored.—Chicago Tribune.
A Man Likes to Be Petted.
A man likes to be petted and made much ol He likes to find relaxation in the society of women. If they are bright, gay, light hearted and spontaneous, he will tell all his best stories, be Immensely pleased with himself and incidentally with them and will forget to think "shop" and never talk it.—Chicago News-Record.
To improve the complexion one should keep the pores of the skin open and keep away the chaps. Wash the face and ears with very hot water, then put in sufficient cold water to make it tepid for the body. The face should be washed in hot water at leaat three times a day.
Mrs. Llndley Hoffman Chapio of New York city has a necklace worth the pretty sum of $10,000, which she frequently wears. She Is more fond of jewels possibly than her sister, Mrs. Tremenheere.
At Battle Creek* Mich., there are 1,20 women taxpayers. Their property is assessed at f-KiS.290, of which $34,295 is per sooal property. Their total tax amount, to over 412,000.
A woman may justly aspire to that perfection
at
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MA EL, APRIL 29, 1893
Woman's Lovo of Influencing. At last woman's real and abiding passion has been discovered. It is "to influence." Her love of influencing shows itself in a thousand ways. She likes to influence the sinner to mend his ways, the pessimist to become cheerful, the flippant to gprow thoughtful. Sho even likes to Influence Jfwill mend everything and is very easy to
rootos—to make them soft, warm, graceful, habitable. She cannot abide even in a hotel room for a day without making it bright with flowers and homelike with papers and magazines. A man would be quite content so long as it furnished hinj chair and something higher than a c|» for his feet to rest upon.—Chicago Tribfa
IIow Women Defraud Themselves. Women defraud themselves of good I and vigor by compelling themselves tostu movements after they come to years of turity. If they were anywhere near health they could not keep so demure, but nature would break out and tempt them into running up and down stairs, dancing about the house and those quick movements which horrify conventional people, but are the secret of spirits and bright looks. They need to grow a healthier skin, treating it with an emollient nightly to lessen its irritability.—Exchange.
life of which it can truly be said
at her, "Many daughters havs done vifti ously, bat them excellcst them alL"
—V ..
The parlor ia the-showroom tar the out rid" world, bat the fcitchcn and livln looms phi -.M be even b-'t how room en.
wmmmmmssmm.
Keeping Choice Flowers.
A little brown haired woman stood in front of a florist's shop yesterday and discoursed learnedly on the care of flowers. "You see those jonquils?" she said to her companion, a big, burly man. "Well, we used to walk five miles to pick them when I was a girl. It was generally very early in spring, and when we returned home they were frozen stiff. We used to throw them into a pan of warm water and le^ them thaw out and revive. It never hurt them In the slightest. Of course these flowers you see here are kept in cloths and in an ice box at night, and these in the window are 'stock,5 which are sacrificed for a show. But one can keep flowers an indefinite time with a little care. Violets and roses for example—both frail and both expensive—can
water until you wear them. "If ^ou dance all night or do anything where you arc for a great many hours in a gaslighted place, they won't last, but when I have a bouquet for the theater, I wear it next day in the street, picking out the biggest and finest flowers. You must clip a wee bit off the end of each stem at night, then tie loosely together and shower with cold water. Over the whole put a large piece of tissue paper so that all air is excluded. You can leave them in a cool place, the bathtub or the icebox, there is no frost oat the window. You .11 lind that your flowers are as fresh and lovely the next morning as when they were .sent home from the shop."—New York Advertiser.
Viavi. What is it? It means the "Way to Health" and is the greatest specific ever known for woman's ills. Call at room 6, McKeen block, aud find out all about it. Consultation free. Ladies only in attendance.
A Flower Bedroom.
Flower bedrooms, decorated to match certain flowers, are very popular and very lovely. In the best wall paper stores cretonne and paper may be obtained to harmonize in figure and color, and the idea may be carried out also in toilet ware. A very pretty room may be arranged with yellow poppy paper having a satin ground and a dado of cretonne to match. The curtains and bedspread should be of tho cretonne, and all the furniture covered with the same material. The ceiling, paper and woodwork should be of cream white. A carpet composed of varying shades of cream and gray, with pale blue flowers, would be appropriate in such a room.
Wild rose paper and wild rose crctonne, with a dull green carpet in various shades, will make a very cool, effective room. Rose papers can also be matched in yellows, pinks and reds, with which a yellow and white ceiling paper will always harmonize. A very complete room would require the sheets, pillow cases, towels and toilet covers to be embroidered with the chosen flower in colored wash silks.—Demorest's Magazine.
Viavi is not a "speedy cure," but it is almost a certain euro for all those ills peculiar to women. A lady will explain it to you without charge, and explain your trouble also, at room G, McKeen block.
How to Mend IJroken Toys.
Of course all the girls own dolls. Maybe' some of the children who read this have outgrown dolls, but have little sisters who still play with them, and who occasionally have the misfortune to break a doll. No doubt there are boys, too, who break their* playthings. Now, here is a glue which
make. From the druggist get half half an ounce of gum acacia and dissolve it in half a cup of boiling water. Add plaster of paris until a thick paste is formed and £hen apply it with a brush to the crippled ces of the toys. I-Iold firmly till dry.—
York Ledger.
earn all you can about Viavi.
The Chafing Dish.
The chafing dish should bo as mucli a irt of the family lifo as is the tea trav that is, of course, in those families where the chief object is to keep tho lords of creation comfortable and happy, and consequently the mental stmshipo undimmed. Many a man who did not want any torwikfast or who was out of sorts with his dinner will fix himself tip a savory mess in this convenient article and be happy again. A good chafing dish can be bought for $3, or a very admirable substitute, a little alcohol lamp, at 75 cents, with an agateware pan set over it. One- of these will look very cozy opposite a smoking urn or coffee pot on the breakfast table.
A Sewing DlanhlneFree.
A $65 Sowing Machine, which we sell at 311 00 to $23.50 will bp placed in your hoaiu use without cost of one-cent to you. Send this advertisement with address to-day to Any AH MFG. Co., !«pt. E. E., Chicago, 111.
AT
I fAKg
PLEASANT
gfSifg
THE NEXT MORNING FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW ANO MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER. My doctor mya it acts gently on tb« atomacb. liver sod kklnera. and is* pleasant laxative. Tbis drink is made from herbs, aad is prepared tat
as easily tea. It is called
LAKE'S MEDIGIHE
AlldrosiriKtas*Hltat50c.ftnd»iapacka*e. If 70a Cannot get it, send roar address for a fret sample. Lose'* Farnilr Medicine move* the bswelt each dar. loonier to be beAlthTtftls is neceawy. Address OBATOK F. WOODWAKDt, LK rot, K.Y.
'•C
When you speak about or even think of spring medicine, how quickly Hood's Sarsaparilla comes into your mind Take it now.
Infection From Pet Animals. "Do I believe that cats and dogs may carry from one house to another contagious diseases? I think the idea simply silly. My little girl likes to fondle pretty kittens,
and I mean to teach her to love dumb animals," said a young mother when a fiiend suggested the letting alone of a visitor, a pretty bundle of gray fur, very much alive and evidently somebody's pet.
The scarlet fever was raging in tho neighborhood, and the mother had most carefully guarded her little girl from exposure
be kept fresh by letting them soak in salt contagion, having for weeks escaped it. Baby and kitty had a fine day together, and when pussy took her leave, straight to the house containing three cases of scarlet fever she went. Baby's subsequent attael of fever WHS not attributed to playing with the gray kitten, though she had no other chance of infection.
During the reign of the influenza a handsome cat, much petted by every member of the family, was fond of sitting upon her master's writing desk. Minette Grey toes continued her attentions to Mr. Clive while he wrestled with an attack of the grip. Before many hours had elapsed after his attack poor pussy's throat became sore and very much inflamed, her eyes red and watery, and violent sneezing alternated with coughing added to her afflictions, proving beyond dispute that disease may be transmitted from tho human being to the lower animal or vice versa.—Philadelphia Brass.
No classical contour of features can look beautiful if clothed in a skin which is marred by subcutaneouy eruptions. No amount of skin doctoring can make a beautiful skin when the disorder lies deeper. Vi&vi will cure the disorder and the skin will then be beautiful. Room 6, McKeen block.
Amusement In Spools.
I have a large collection of empty spools, which I have painted in all bright colors. With them I build houses, bridges and many other designs. Also, by placing pieces of wood through the holes in the spools, I contrive little wagons.—Cor. New York Recorder.
Why sutler trom feminine disordeis when they can be cured for §3 00 a, month? Free consultation with 'ady of large experience at room ti McKeen block. Investigate it. Viavi is the king of remedies for all female disorders, Free consultation with lady at room 5, McKeen block.
The Smart Petticoat.
It Is one of the axioms of good dressing that we should be smartly petticoatcd. A pretty woman without a frou frou is a.walking error. If rustling is a quality of merit and tho correct material beyond ono's reach, a substitute may be found in one of the shot fabrics or the more plebeian alpaca. Take one of the gray greens or a plain black and garnish tho bottom with lot of saucy looking silken frills pinked, or scalloped and you ltave a lightweight., skirt, that is charming.—Kuffalo News.
$555,000 In Premiums,
Offered by Liggett & Myern Tobacco Co., of St. Louis, Mo. The one gpe&alng nearest the number of people who will attend the World's Fair grots $5,000,00. etc. Ten Star Tags entltlg, yon
to
a guess. Ask your dealer forRBttibulftra or send forolroular,
Lane's Family Medicine Moves theMoweln Each day. Most people need to use it.
I have been bothered with catarrh for aijout 'twenty yearn I had lost sense of smell entirely, and 1 bad almost lost, my hearing. My even were getting so dun had to get some 0110 to thread my needle. Now havo my hearing,as well as 1 ever had, a»id I can ,uee to thread a» line a needle ns over I did, my sense of smell is partly restored, and it seems to be improvingall tle time. 1 think there is nothing like Ely's Cream Balm for catarrh. Mrs. E. E. Grimes. Kendrill, Perrv Co., O.
Nop*
Sucb
St CO-
OM
CONDENSED
1 /^eat
Makes an every-day convenience of an old-time luxury. Pure and wholesome. Prepared with .scrupulous care. Highest award at all Pure Fo^3 Expositions. Each package makes two large pies. Avoid Imitations—and insist on having the
NONE SUCH brand.
MERRELL & SOU! -S-facuse, N. Y.
Scientific American
CAVEATS*
TRADE MARK8, DESIGN PATENTS, COPVRIOHT8, etcJ
For information and free Handbook write to MUNN
381 BHOADWAT, NKW Yotur.
Oldest bureau for securing patent* in America. Ererr patent taken oat tojr us is brought before the paulic by a ootloe given free of charge In the
Jwjrfific jtotmnm
Largest worid. sum »b rear:
$Leo«x
momNA.
PCBLLSHXBS,
AMIWI MUNN I.«J
361 Broadway, Slew
York
City.
I^LBCTRO INSTITUTE.
CURED.*
DO YOU WANT TO UK
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—IF SO, TRY—
IN FIVE MINUTES."
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PURE, WHOLESOME, DELICIOUS Better ami Cheaper than Green Fruits.
A.SK YOTJIi GEOCEE.
PHENYO-CAFFEIN.
If you have Headache or Neuralgia, take Phenyo-Caffein Pills.
They are effectual in relieving Pain, and in curing Headache or Neuralgia. They are not a athartlc, and contain nothing that st unifies. They tone up the nerves, and tend to prtjvout returns of Headache and Neuralgia. They are guaranteed to do all that is claimed for them.
TESTIMONIALS.
I have never seen anything act so promptly as Phenyo-Cafl'eln in slot aud nervous Headache. Many eases have been cured, and not any failures reported. 11. L. Furrer, Belle Voir, N. C.
For years I have been a terrible sufferer from headache some six months ago, my physician prescribed Phonyo-Cnffeln, and since then, by their use, I have not hild a t-evere headache, being able to stop them completely In their incipieney, J. H. Stannnrd, Coucord, N. H,
You hit the nail on the head when you put Phenyo-Caticln on the market. They are "-ho best thing out for headache. E. P. Jones, M. I)., Orleans, Mass.
One year ago 1 was one of the greatest sufferers from sick and nervous headache that I ever knew. I no. more have trouble with sick headache, and seldom have even a slight headache. I attribute the great change to vour Plienyo-CatlV'in, a remedy 1 could not do without If It cost So a box. have tried a dozen or more medicines (warranted to cure) without, their even helping me. I cannot praise your valuable preparation enough. Frank 8. Schmltt, Seymour, Ind.
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Chicago.j
PATENTS
Careafs, Trade-marks, Design Patents, Copyrights,
And all Patent busitfen coodaotcd forr MODERATEtfeBBS. Information and advlco given to Inventors withoutCbargo. Address
PRESS CLAIMS COV JOHN WEDDERBURN, Managing Attorney,
P. O. Box 463. WASHINGTON,L. 0.
WHThls Company ia managed by.acombination of tho largest and most Influential newspapers in tho United States, for tho express purpose of protecting their subscribers against unscrupulous and incompetent Patent Agents, and e.icli paper printing this advertisement vouches for tho responsibility and high standing of tho Tress Claims Company.
A BONANZA INVESTMENT.
Everybody Wants to Make Money..
And only FEW do
HO.
UH
Tho rich men In tho
world, for tho mom pnrt hnvt* inn'ti tholr money In MINING. INVKWTMENTrt. AH EVERYBiH)Y KNOW8. Tha mines of Colorndo alone piild to thnlr owners In lh!)2 8&V
000,000.
vVlmt, oil)or. luiKlnowt did
iih
well?
Sone! CnnnequcnMy, wise and Judicious INVESTMENT In thono gold niim'H for benefit of yoiireelves and' famlllPH may plnco you all above WANT, nnd in a pCHlllon to nhnrrt Rome of tho lnx'irlos of this world. Now, then, wo bellcvo that', as mire ax the
HUH
1H to
rise In the mornlngs-of the future, «o nuro Is
BliACK WONDER MINE
liOKtlned to be ono of the sfmUest Bonnnza*. tlint Amorlca ha« yet produced, nnd whether you send
$5.50 and Obtain 10 Shares, or $55, and Obtain 100 Shares, or $550 and Obtain 1000 Shares
Or WHATEVER amount you may desire to Invest, we believe you will many times double your Investment, as the Ktock 1h now gelling for 55 cents per share, par value 81.00.
Investigate this NOW. Don't let this opportunity pass you by. Thlsoffer will remain open only for a short time.
For fall particulars, experts' and superintendents' report*, assays, etc., write to
JOSEPH H. ALLEN, Treas., 244 "Washinjfton Street, Itoston, Mass.
OFF1CKB8
OF THB COMl'A NY
HON'. ANDREW .1. WATERMAN. President, {Ex-Attorn General of Mass., and President of the Pittsfleld National Hank.) E»WAKT C. DAVIS.Vice-i'res. and Gen. Mgr. JIK*KY C. STARK,Hecretary. JOHKI'H H. AUES, Treasurer.
INTERNATIONAL TRUST CO., Transfer Asff-nt. Remember, this mine is In actual operation and during the past month a big itoM strike was made in the lower east tunnc!, lowiyinif thousands of dollar* to the too, which II place the mine on a dividend-payImsls. Sample#of ore assaying from fri.OOf) to #,000 per too, are now on exhibition at the Kostoa office.
CATARRH, ASTHMA? NERVOUS DEBILITY OR IMPOTENCY? FEMALE WEAKNESS OR DISEASES? successfully reyehm' experience,
Si with the follow! Sg dis««e«» can be ircate* with success at
salted to your cure or not. Encloae atamp. CONSLLTATJON FKKr~ Hour*—0 to 11 at* ». m., SsftO «o 5 p. m., 7 to p. m. Monday, Thunday. Saturday.
C. Taylor IkH 11. D. Specialist, I15S. fitli St. Tem Haute.
».ll.,r»u whether o«r .«
