Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 45, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 May 1893 — Page 3
Mop Plaster
Apply one you don't have to suffer—the relief begins at once. Pain-killing, soothing, stimulating and strengthening properties combined. Clean, sweet, quickestcoring plaster known.
Both sides of ttomsmta® piaster rijow our signature. Hop Plaster Co., Boston, Proprietors. Enterprising med-lclne-dealer* everywhere sell it.
My Back Aches
ALL THE I0MF0RTS !0F HOME
includes the great tcmpcrance drink
Hires'^
New Life to the Old Folks, Pleasure to the Parents, Health to the Children. Good for All—€ood All the Time.
S5 cent package make* Five gallon*, fleiure&ad get A -fits
HARRISON SMITH
Manufacturer and dealer in
I IT
OK AL1, KINDS.
WILL PAY THE HIGHEST CASH PRICE FOR DEAD HOGS
At mv fiKdry.on the Island, southwest of the city, office No. 13 south Second street. TE It HA UTE, INI).
£)R. G, W. L06MIS, 3DJS3TTIST.
20-10 north 0th sf, Terre Haute, Ind. 1 square from Electric Cur Line.
0. JENKINS, M. D.
Odlcc, 11 South Seventh Htrect, telephone, 40. resldeneo, (J52 Ohio street, telephone 17 i. Office hours: 0 a. in. 2 to 1 p. m.: 7 to 8p. in. Al rusldenco until until 8a. in., 12 to I p. in., to is p. in.
A
BTIFICIAL TEETH. XX Dft. F. U. HLKI)S0K--1K\TIST.
With 30 year* practice in dentistry, I cau Kuaranleo tlrst-elfisn work. Special pains taken in mending old plates. Teeth extract ed without piiln. 8'i7 Main street, near Ninth.
T)R. L. H. BARTHOLOMEW,
DENTIST, jh
Hernovod to 671 Main sL Terre Haute, Ind.
H. GARRETT,
O Custom Harness Maker. Track Work and Repairing a Specialty. 23 south 7th. rear P. J-. ivaufmau's Grocery
fctfeglf tf?K* Hvw
Best aid to the Amateur, the Artist, and to those fond of a beautiful II 3J Cotoral Pietums given with a year's siibseription for only 64. OO. Coiupleto instructions and designs given for
ART iSSS?
INTERCHANGE
Embroidery, Wood Carving, China Painting. Modeling, Oil, AVntor tuul Mineral Color rnhit ins. and every branch of Homo Decoration, No homo is eomjilofc© without this beautifully illustrated pn.Ui.
Kvervoiie who #0:11 .'. direct to our offiee lor one war',* subscription will get I'roo, nis it S'reiusniw, a copy ofour exquisite wutor-color lue-simile *4 JTlie I rrnlintr I*lncV' sis® £7x23 inches— v,l:irh has never Ixxrn sold for loss than $iO. and which mak«i a most beautiful ^ift for nny otwusion. ivuKi lo copy of tho Magazine, with 3 {'olorod Pietsnres, stmt for 30c. 6-Voc. Tin A: tNTEHCMAXQE CO., 9 Doitwsscs St.,
CASTER'S 1TTLE IVER
PILLS.
H,
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CURE
Rett U«»d*ch» and reUm*.\U tbo trouble® tnc£ dent to a bilious state of tho system, suoh #3 Dlala*#*, N*u*o», after r*!lac. Pain la the Sldo. &o. While their most royyurkablo SQCCMM hM boon shown in catisg
SICK
Bca&iefc*, ytt Darter's Little ZJhrar PlHa km equally vtiUAblo tn Constipation, entity pra* \xaUug Uil**onoyln«conipl*tnt,-whs a cvrr*« "»114taordej»wll««oa»^b^tiB3«U{« tJsa lirrr «jd it^ulato tho botPela. Etna it
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CARTER mVDICtKK CO., H»w Yortt-
SMALL MIL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PH6E
SOME VULGARITIES.
MANY LITTLE THINGS THAT MAKE PEOPLE OBNOXIOUS.
(Tilcatalogued Lapses of Good Breeding Committed by Otherwise Eminently Delightful Acquaintances—Women arc the
Chief Offenders,
By vulgarity we generally mean certain conventional solecisms which the world has agreed to consider "bad form" and worthy of social reprobation. These are of the kind best expressed by a struggle with one's h's a hazy understanding of one's persons, moods and tenses difficulties over adverbs and a general hash of prepositions too gr^at familiarity with the blade
Another form of vulgarity is the habit of contradiction. Certain people are, as it were, cursed with this propensity as with a disease they cannot shake off. You state the simplest fact, known to you as well as you know tho alphabet. Your otherwise minded interlocuter contradicts, objects, reads differently. If you area novice and easily caught, you quite seriously, quite conscientiously, state your reasons and prove mathematically that you are right. Your contradictious friend, unable to controvert, closes the discussion by saying loftily, "I do not agree with you."
Some of this kind will not even allow you to agree with them. If they make a statement and you back it up. they incontinently turn rouud on you and rend you. "No. I did not metuithat at all," they say in a displeased manner. They do not state explicitly wkafc they did mean. All they maintain is they did not mean what you do. Is ftot thAt a vulgarity worse than a few gold-warming pans plaltered over the breasfeandneck?
Another of the same kidney volunteers advice unasked. This kind knows better than you do on all matters under heaven. You area young mother, and she is a childless wife, but she can give you instructions how to manage yourself and your baby, which for aplomb, if not for accuracy, would make her appear as a mother iu Israel at the very least. When associated with this kind, your soul is not your own, nor your body, nor your life. You are schooled and drilled and lectured and arranged till not JUS much free will is left, you as would serve a 2-year-old in nursing its doll. You are with your superior, and whether you like it or not you must practically acknowledge the fact.
Again, a vulgarity that a great many worthy people commit—people whose h's iuid syntax are impeccable—is in a certain coarse and callous want of sympathy with what you say to them that is even more rasping than contradiction, more annoying than interference. You tell them a pitiful story of some one for whose woes you claim their sympathy. They answer you and cap your account by something that has happened cither .to themscitlp or to their friends or something thai they have heard of in the vague.
Now, how docs it Help your poor sweet protege in hv-r troubles to be told of some one else In the f&roff distr.r.cewho has gone through a like melancholy experience? Does thinking on tho frosty Caucasus cool your fever? Dots the misfortune of A. make the misery "of B. less painful to your sympathies? What good does it do yon when you want a kindly voice to echo your reflected sorrow to have a hard, unsympathetic reference to some other person's affair?, some one whom perhaps you do act know, or knowing do not like?
This, too, is one of the unnoted vulgarities of life, as Is also that grayer offense of maklnij you regret a confidence. It is always wrong and not quite straight to retail to a third person the doings of a friend. Sometimes, however, the heart gets overburdened and seeks a sympathetic bosom into which to pour the overflow. Say that it is a love affair which is less wise than passionateless circumspect than whole hearted—a love affair whereof cool reason can see the flaws, but wherein the principal actors see only the beauty-—you deprecate and deplore, but you sympathise all the same—you have no hard feeling of oensure, nothing but soft and tender regret.
You tell the story to your friend, asking for sympathy
tor
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ft
one's knife in
eating, or, worse still, seme disgusting personal habit which brings into the drawing room and before folk tricks and feats of manipulation which should never be seen by eyes other than one's own.
Of these things and their congeners we make great account—also of what we mean by "unsuitable dress"—L eM diamonds in the morning and feathers in the hair for a home supper, huge gold ornaments, plastered like miniature warming pans over the neck and bodice a superfluity of bracelets and a vulgar,because ostentatious,display of rings storing colors inartistically matched and obtrusive patterns not even beautiful in the outline. These are'the things at which the cultured snitl and look upon the perpetrators thereof as beyond the pale of consideration. But there are other forms of vulgarity which escape notice, which are yet inlinitely more damaging as revelations of character and breeding than these solecisms against conventional good taste.
What is it when two young people "Bpoon" before folk?v Engaged, they are embarrassing newly married, intolerable. They speak in whispers, flirt, with their eyes, hold each other's hands, give sly caresses in the fond belief that no one sees. The converse of this is the vulgarity of those who quarrel and snap and jangle before folk. And of these the worst sinners are the hopelessly lost who turn to the by stander and ask him for his advocacy, his sympathy, his verdict. Better a knife playing about the tongue and lips than this horrible lapse of good breeding—this selfish want of consideration for others. To be sure, that knife is not pleasant to look at, but it is a thousand times less objectionable than the jarring of two ill yoked people who do not care to control themselves in society, and who try to drag in the unoffending neutral and force him to take sides in an affair that does not concern him.
your poor girl's trouble.
You are met by stem oond carnation—by the knowledge that you have given this censor a handle against the one you love and would protect and gain all men's sympathy for her sorrow, "i our friend refuses to see the sorrow—to accept tho extenuating circumstAncea—to believe in the tragic sincerity of this foolish choice.
And she or he makes yon regret that you have opened your heart and so far given away the one yon would defend. That, too. Is Among the moral vulgarities which do not pass under the name assigned to defective grammar and flashy dress. But when we consider the question fairly and from a higher standpoint than that of mere convention we sh*li come to the conclusion that these thing* are signs of a lower state of bwdiog than difficulties with one's h's or a too free use of case's knifu.—London Queen.
It is ft mistake to believe that children can do as tmtch work as grown people, and that the metre hours they study the more they Icarn.
'V^i
FOR LITTLE GIRLS.
The Present Styles For Children Are Very Beautiful and Attractive. Whether it be called empire' or greenaway, whether it be adapted from the quaintness of the English idea or the fancifulness of the French, the present style of dress for little girls is very fascinating and furnishes, like the dresses of their elders, a happy variety for selection.
Every material and every mode in fashionable vogue for gowns is used for these women of the future. But the prettiest child's dress of the season is the "clover dress" of white china silk with
FASCINATING IN FORM AND TINT, clover blossoms scattered all over it, growing thicker and closer toward the edge, where they form a solid border. The dress has most exaggerated puffs on the shoulders and full ruffles over those, tte whole tied up, empire fashion, across the front with a bow of green velvet ribbon. Some of the daintiest children'] gowns are of white dotted muslins mad' up with very lacey embroidery and many headings threaded with bebe ribbons of color. Plainer white lawn dresses have a bit of color introduced by making them up sailor fashion with Btriped blue and white or pink and white linen lawn. Ginghams.of striped or corded weave have shoulder frills or sleeve flounces of the plain color seen in the stripe, finished with brier stitchings of white or with white embroidery.
A pretty school dress for a little girl is checked crepon in gobelin blue with a check of red, with a double roll collar showing a shot silk yoke of red and blue taffeta. And little men, too, are allowed to wear all manner of dainty frills and furbelows in fine needlework in their dainty blouses, which have collars and cuffs of colored embroidery and of colored linen in palo blue and pink and scarlet. These, with the ties and sashes of colored silk, give an air of dainty prettiness to the little plain suits of wool or serge, of pique or seersucker, which form the summer attire of young gentlemen not yet past tho age of long curls.
Almond Jumbles.
One pound of sugar, a half pound of butter, 1 pound of almonds blanched and chopped fine, 2 eggs and flour enough to mix it stiff. Roll this thin and moisten the top of each one with the white of an egg and sprinkle with sugar. Bake quickly.
Pretty Sash Curtains.
Sash curtains of bolting cloth, embellished with delicate hand painted effects, soften the light of the swell reception room. The curtains are drawn tight across the window, some graceful designs springing up from the lower part of the cloth. The popular French flower-de-luce, with its graceful, long leaves purple hearted wisteria, wild roses and sprays of trumpet vine are given a chance to display their painted charms against the gauzy background.
EJTK
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL. APRIL 29,1893,
I
Soup.
For a quart of soup take 8 large teaspoonfuls of meafcextract and mix well in a cup of boiling water and add enough water to make a quart. Then add 5 hard boiled eggs, chop fine and season with pepper and salt.
Hang Pictures In tho Right Way. Don't hang your pictures with the top extending out from the wall, but let both pictures and furniture fall back flat against the wall as much as possible, leaving the greatest possible amount of Bpace in the center of the room. Every apartment should convey tho feeling of use rather than the ide& that it is a room for the exhibition of furniture.
A Pretty Tea Gown.
A very' charming tea gown can be mado of French challis for summer wear. The accompanying cut offers a good suggestion for combinations of col-
MAJDE OF FBESCB CHALLIS.
or and materiaL The long robe front is of pink china crape or surah, and the challis is cream color with a design of pink and green foliage.
Total
A,
band of Per
sian braid forms the collar and armlets, holding the fullness of the sleeves above the elbo w. The total cost should not exceed the following estimate: 13 yards challis, at 80o.. $600 yards crape, at75c 4 50 {& Tarda jtersiaa trimming, at flSc.- SI lAttassete. SCO
Sdays.$3LSQ. TAB
•, i.
3
CHILDREN'S COLUMN.
TIio Little Dasccr.
Here is a lively little fellow who trill dance as long and as often as you please. Take an old kid glove and cut off the fingers. Then sew upon the body of the glove any bits of bright silk or cloth to look like a jacket and hide the doubled up fingers. Make two mittens and two little socks
with ftuffed toes, remembering to stuff one sock higher thun the other, as the forefinger isshorter than your middle finger, and the li jtle dancer must of course have legs of th: same size. After dressing up the glove to your satisfaction, paint a face on the back of the wrist with water colors, mixing a little gum with them if the colors will not "lay," and then the little dancer is ready to darce as long as you like.—St. Louis Republic.
Two Little Girls' Lofty Home.
On the very top of a mountain near Constantinople there live two little girls. Their chubby brown feet are unprotected even in chilly March weather, but they don't seem to mind it, for they are just as healthy and happy as the well dressed little European girls in Pera, whose parents would be horrified at the mere mention of bare feet. These mountain children are orphans, and their cheeks have the color of the small red flower that ^rows among the sparse vegetation on the ragged side of the height. They live with their father, who is a Greek, and-their house is little moro than a pile of yellow rock, with an Elzevir vegetable patch in the yard.
The father serves visitors—who climb 100 feet from the end of the carriage road—with good §iick Turlsish coffee in cups about the size oi^an English walnut shell. Of course you gave him something, and if you have any lcfye in your heart for the sweet morning glory of childhood and any spare coins in your pocket you will give the youngsters some of the coins. They will take your hand, jaise it to their lips and then touch it to tneir foreheads. They are grave, serious ftfted young people, with large, wonderinrfblue eyes. That is perhaps because they »nnot understand a word you say. And is perhhps because they have contemplated so long the impressive view from their humble eyrie.—Cor. New York Advertiser
1* American Boys In Paris. I remember some years ago that an American woman s^ttlejl hi one of the neighboring streets with her tliree boys, who were of an age not to conveniently stayd b£lng caged within the narrow walls of a Parisian apartment, and they went out to play in the street as they had been accustomed in America. To keep themselves in trim they ftkight With each other after they had vainly challenged boys of the neighborhood, and .the stones they threw oftentimes took the wrong direction and damaged doors and panes of glass. The ringing of doorbells, too, become so obnoxious that the peop'e of the street went to the commissaii de police of their quarter and compluiafd. 'i Lie mother, who was politely asked to jkeep her boys indoors, laughed at tho interference of her neighbors and said that her*nerves forbade her doing any such thing, and declared that aa the street was a public thoroughfare she would send out her boys to play whenever their noise disturbed her. The boys of course also laughed in the face of Parisian urban regulations and oontinued their pranks. But the French police signified to the woman on governmental paper that within a certain time she must leave the house or be locked up. She, indignant at tho want of freedom in European cities, went back with her boys to America.—Paris Cor. Brooklyn Eagle.
What Jamie Wanted.
Jamie's father had taken him in to see the baby. "There, my son," he said, "is a little sister for you. Won't she bo a nice present?" "Yes," replied Jamie, "she's nice enough, but I reckon I'd rather have a goat."—Chicago Tribune.
A Model and Student,
Miss Dottie Coxe, the little 8-year-old girl who posed as Velasquez's "Infanta of Spain" at the recent tableaux vivants for the benefit of the New York Decorative Art society, is a pretty, chubby faced little damsel with short, fluffy locks and an ador-
able smile She not only poses in tableaux a* entertainments, but also as a model for artists. She has thus assisted F. S. Church, Miss Maud Humphrey, L. C. Earle, Granville Smith, Frands Jones, J. Barclay, T. W. Wood, Mr. Van Laer, Verplan Birney, W. T. Smedley, Amy Kelogg, Walter Safcerlee, Katherine Pyle and Mr. Walker. She is herself studying art with W. J. Whittemore.—New York World.
Twilight Time,
Won't yon tell roe a story-a nke cm©, please? For I'se been so lonely all day. With no one bat poor old Nero to teaae.
And be doesnt care anyway.
1W1 me ot fairies that live in the brook Aad down in the ocean, *way deep, When I shot my eyes to see bow they look,
Aad maybe IU then go to deep. -Flavel Scott Mlnea.
fA
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t£ l-'vu*
ni
*, &<-£LC
Rich, Red Blood
As naturally results from taking Hood's Barsaparllla as personal cleanliness results from soap and water. Thlsgreatpuiider thoroughly expels scrofula, salt rheum and all other impurities and builds up every organ of the body. Now Is the time to take it.
The highest praise has been won by Hood's Pills for their easy, yet efficient action. Sold by all druggists. Price 25 cents,
Crib Quilts and Shawls.
Shoulder blankets for children are made of soft, white baby flannel or cashmere, either hand embroidered or edged with buttonholed scallops with three rows of half-inch wide moire ribbon above them, or finished with a hem 3 inches wide, headed with a band of satin ribbon the same width as the hem.
Pretty crib quilts are made of china silk, silkoline or soft, colored cheesecloth, and have the edges bound and the tufting dorse with soft ribbon, or edges buttonholed and the tufting done with soft zephyrs.
Dainty Underwear.
Made in nainsook, flannelette or washing silk in some bright shade contrasting with tho baby ribbon, the yoke and belt consist of madeira embroidery or fancy galloon mother of pearl buttons. This also can be made as a combined petticoat.
Made in llama, nun's veiling or washing silk, enhanced with lace jabots and frillings, tinv tucks on the shoulders, a belt composed of fancy galloon, and rib-
SHSDTER UNDERGARMENTS.
bon in keeping with the clusters drooping from the neck and the waist, and the baby ribbon, which is drawn and knotted round the a-mholes. This dainty garment is made long enough for an under petticoat or could be modified for a breakfast robe. It can also be made in nainsook and embroidery.
The temple of the Sun, at Palmyra, covered a square of
22
yards on each
ride. It was approached by a magnificent avenue over half a mile long, inclosed by rows of columns and statues.
Cure Yourself.
Don't pay large doctor's bills. The best medical book published, one hundred pages, elegant colored plates, will be sent you on receipt of three 2 cent stamps to pay postage. Address A. P. OHDWAY FC Co., Boston, Mass.
Green Mountain Salve,
Is unequalled as a cure for all rheumatic pains, weakness In the side, back or any other pince, and Is unexcelled for cuts, bruises, corns, etc. It Is the uncompromising enemy of pain In whatever form, or wherever manifested, and has never been known to fall in a contest with this dreadful foe of human happiness. If you would live a peaceful and painless life, try this great remedy and you will never regret It.
What is this
anyhow
Xt is the only bow (ring) which cannot be pulled from the watch. To be had only with Jas. Boss Filled and other watch cases stamped with this trade mark. Wi
Ask your jeweler for pamphlet. Keystone Watch Case Co,,
PHILADELPHIA.
ATTOX BARRETT
POWDER
iSUi
Artificial Stone Walks, and Plastering,
Moudy & Coffin,
Leave orders at 1-517 Poplar 9U, 1241 South Fifth St., 901 Main Bt, Terre Haute, Ind
POSITIVE
LOUIS D. VANDERVERE, Ono of the fast known Itaslness noil in Chicago,, representative of the great Bradatreet C-o. HEADACHE, SLEEPLESSNESS, NERVOUS
PROSTRATION.
Dr.
MiUK Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. Gentlemen: I take pleasure in informing you of tho very beneficial results which have followed the use or DR. MIMES* RCSTORATIVC NERVINE in the case of myself and wife. For a year I was Bubjeot to a distressing pain at the base of the brain and upper portion of tho spinal oord. I p. lost flesh ana was greatly
I I it la IMU Your Nervine was highly recommended to me. My case had been so obstinate that I had no confidence in tho efficacy of any medicine. Yet as a last resort I consented to give it a trial. Much to my surprise, I experienced marked benefit my sleeplessness disappeared my headache was removed my spirits ana general.
afETHOUSANDS
GAINED TWENTY POUNDS. ALL THIS OCCURRED ArTER LEARNED AND WELL KNOWN PHYSICIANS
HAD FAILED, SLY wife is taking tho Nervine with tho bost of results. Louis D. VANDEBVKHO.
Sold on a Positive Guarantee.
DR. MiLES' PI LLS, 50 DOSES25CTS.
.FAT PEOPLE, can get SPEEDY A LASTING can stay] thin. RESULTS, IKTERKTTK thin.
SPECIFIC C0.| Boston, Mau.
EPILEPSY OR FITS
Can this disease be cured? Most physicians say No—Tsay, Tea all forms and tho worst cases. After 80 years Btady and experiment have found tho remedy.—Epilepsy is cured by It cured, not subdued by opiates—the old, treacherous, quack treatment. Do not despair. Forget past impositions on your purse, past outrages on your confidence, past failhres. Look forward, not backward. My remedy is of to-day. Valuablo work on the subject, and largo bottle of tho remedy—sent free for trial. Mention Poat-Ofllco and Express address. Prof. W. H. PEEKE, F. D. A Cedar St., Now York.
1INNIAPOUS CM
Bmwn
DROP
(UIRt "^ABBOTSrOBD STIVtNS POINt
(MAAHA
S A
OSMTFOSH
LINE. *om«WD»Ut
AND BtCOVt 10 RETURN FUUMFORFWNOFT REGARDING THE flNESI'iktllHORUOftTS in
THE GJNORJrtW&T AS-GPOND
WVIf Utl
ANTfOCn tOftlVlUA
CHICAGO. III.
Cenf fkjss. sTrrt Act. WISCONSIN
HOTEL
SAFE COSATIVE BEADTUTOG. 1.2.3.
ClKMfl
RICHMOND
EUROPEAN.
E. A. FROST, Propr
Formerly manager .Sherwood Hon HP. Evans--ville, Ind., late A'langr. Hotel Oruce, Chicago. Rooms 7«c, $1.00, 8I..10 Per Day.
Bteam Heat, Centrally Located, two block» from P. O. and Auditorium, opp. tho new Lester Building. N. W. Cor StMto null V»!ii!»r«n-CtIJCAf)0
Chlcheatcr'n rvSuroaiid Ttrattd.
OrlKhmt lit-.. Only Uenulm,. *rc, ri-itsMf. LAOIKS, OK. l»rusfl»t for Chirh^.ui JUn-/ mnth' if rami Iii Jij.l 7 old nie(«llla\ fouled with hiii, rfbion. Tnlift no other. Hr/utt dunffiiroun rnbttiiutian$ anl Imitation*.
At Drang'*'*- 4cu
Iti inmp» for tnirtlfsldi-n, tf«Uuihal»i "Hclirf TOP I-rnll'.'*,'' In Wier, HR return Mall. 1,00(1 aWh* /'iptr. CItlohr»(ftr (Jiiomtcttl. f^uunre.
Sold bjr *11 Local Drugclau. Philado.,
23 SOUTH SIXTH STUKKT. TKLKPIIONK 38fl.
PLUMBERS' SUPPLIES, FINE CHANDELIERS AND GLOBES.
Special attention given to Hydraulic & Hand Power Elevator Repairs
E A N E S S
1T8 CAUSES AND CIJltK.
Scientifically treated by an aurlut of world wide reputation. Deafness "r^lenfd an
tf
entirely cured, of from 20 to 30 years' stan ding, after all other treatments have failed. How tbf* difficulty is reached and the cause re a in In a it a id a vi an on a of re prominent people, mailed frre.
Dr. A. FONTAINE, TiitomH, AVnsh.
PLUMBERS GASFITTERS
&TARTO
Price 60
OZZOD1S
AH Ihns A*jrmrfist* Fancy Stmt.
POZZOHTS
