Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 24, Number 1, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 July 1893 — Page 2

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WOMAN AND HOME.

WHAT AN EMINENT PHYSICIAN SAYS ABOUT WRINKLES-

Birds In Cagrea—The Value of Good

eir studying and reading and progress haven't learned yet how to take care, lodge issues, how to let things go on trust. They lack the saving serenity,

Sren

ayety and repose which nuns, little chiland big dogs possess to a remarkable degree. Women begin to get wrinkled when they begin to abuse their eyes. They trim their eyelashes and eyebrows, they use chemicals to color their hair and clean the scalp, they use different preparations to briahten or whiten their complexions, they neglect to get eyeglasses, they read and sew in poor light, and the result is injury to the sight. Squinting follows, and, there! you have a crop of wrinkles about the eyes. "Nine women in every ten talk with their faces. They frown and scowl when they ought to use adjectives. Their hypocrisy shows itself in the parallel lines across the forehead. Their insincerity and lost teeth are indicated by the curves about the mouth. The bad habit of biting their lips, chewing gum and candy and working their mouths unnecessarily bring on the indelible liniirt years before their time. "Proper protection for the eyes in and out of doors will unquestionably retard wrinkles. I would advise the girl who hopes to be a young old lady to wear a big hat or carry a small umbrella whenever she Is facing a storm, blazing sunlight or dust, to do no more night work than is necessary, and then to wear a proofreader's green shade and to close her eyes against all fierce or dazzling lights. "Women who fret, women who nag, women who have nerves, women who get run down with church work, dressmaking, hired girls and society have plenty of wrinkles. As I said before, there is no help for wrinkles but to get fat, and to delay them teach the girls to be merry, cheery, serene and quiet. That is tho way to make youth last and tho face wear."

About Hanging Birdcage*.

No one who cares much to watch birds in the fields and thickets likes to see birds in oages. The keeping of birds, however, is always justified for those who are confined to the house by sickness or infirmity. To guch persons the singing of a bird is a powerful bond with nature.

Since birds are to bo kept for human delight, it is only fair that all thoughtful caro should be bestowed upon them. We can Assume that no one would intentionally do them any harm. Tho risk is that they may suffer from want of thought. Just a word, then, may be Raid on their behalf.

The keeper of the pet canary is careful to hang its cage high above the reach of the house cat. Thin is a necessary precaution, if we admit the necessity of having the cat in the room at all.

But does tho fond possessor of the bird consider hyw c^ffereut the conditions of life at that height and at "a point say two feet lower? If she will step upon a chair and remain there a few minutes, she will find the temperature high, tho air foul and a headache the result.

It. is not necessary to explain here how it happens that the upper layers of air in nil our living rooms become unfit for human breathing. It is even less fit for the breath ing of any song bird.

The writer once had a chance to observe tho influence of atmosphere upou these singers. A friend of his kept 33 canaries J» one cage. The cage was hung at a safe height while eats were about, but in their absence it was sometimes lowered to the level of the window sill. The result always a deafening noise of uproarious glee.

The good lady of tho house always attributed this outburst to their seeing the birds in the orchard and hearing song?through the open window. This would explain it in jvavt, but a greater part wr.s lurely due to their being brought suddenly Into a current of pure, fresh air.

Another thing that should he taken into account in the Haging of ft cage is the fact that song birds differ greatly iu their habit of perching. Most of them pcrch low, but some warblers may be heard singing from the tops of tall trees. This difference of habit is rarely referred to in books on the oars of birds.—Youth's Companion.

The Value of Good W**t In Brcadtnakiiig.

Yeast is a ferment, but all ferments are jpot yeast. Truo yeast yields only carbon, dioxide and aleohoj, and those are driven fff by the heat in baking and leave the bread free from taint of any kind, "Lear"salt raising*' and numerous other ferments used iu breadm&king yield nitrogen and hydrogen gases, but these always leave trace* of their putrefactive character in the farcad, Also Uiey are the cause of the ftoarsev rough crumb, the pale, flinty looking crust, the flat, sour loaf, the other disappointing kinds of bread that often tor* lent the

bread

llu

makers who use these "tads-

Pure yeast produces sweet, natty flavored bread. From the facs that "compressed yeast" is the purest yeast scientific research has yet discovered, and that it is impossible nv mechanical skill to crowd a greater iuumber of yeast germs into a given space th.ui are crowded into a cake of it, it seems inrs that this form of ferment is the best known today for breadmakiug purpose*.

In compressed yeast fermentation it is the decornportion of the st^r^h In the flour that produces the gas that* ends or lighter* the dough, in all other raisings it is the gluten that suffers. And as starch is tho most plentiful and least valuable ports of the flour economical food cooridtrr »Vt *1)0*5M indues the nse of y« -.. e./.

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The Mother'# Sntore-Onr InfloeDce on Children—Athletic* For GirJa— Dismal Outlook For a Working Woman.

An eminent New York physician has pome very interesting things to say on the subject of wrinkles. The only approach to a cure in his opinion is fat. "Fat women are not only better looking but younger looking than their slim sisters," says this wise man. "Take any two women who can be induced to tell their age and the fatter one will look at least six years younger than her scrawny friend. The advice I should give a thin woman for Wrinkles would be a two word sentence— 'Get fat/ And if a fat girl should ask for advice I should tell her to keep quiet. jWomen in our country wear themselves out. They are either jerking or worrying or squinting and fussing the whole time, and there's no need for it. It doesn't do any good. "American husbands are the best In the world, and yet their wives and sisters look as miserable as though they were neglected and abused. The fact is that with all

quart of wetting in the preparation of their bread dough, and I have never succeeded in making the choicest quality of bread ce:t when I used those proportions.

Bread frequently has a yeasty smell rr taste when a smaller quantity is used, bu: I have never been able to detect the faint' est odor or flavor of it in bread where JUJ ounce of good compressed yeast was used to each quart of wetting and the other conditions essential to breadmaking were also complied,with.-—Mrs. Emma P. Ewing in Indianapolis News.

J"1'

The Mother'# Nature.

Sacrifice appears to be the predominating element in a mother's nature. She is willing to deprive herself of actual necessities for the

mkeof

giving to her children,

and when taxed by others with the too great self denial will plead as her excuse that it is for the children.

Parents save and skimp themselves of many comforts, they toil from morning until nkjbt, with but one object in view—the future happiness of the sons and daughters God has given them, and in how many cases does their sacrifice result in fostering in the hearts and minds of those for whom they slave a selfishness that causes them to accept all that is done for them as their due and complain because greater favors are not in the power of the parents to bestow?

We know how the great mother heart has no boundary in its loving desires and earnest wishes for life's best gifts to be showered upon the children that lisp her name, but, after all, is this continual subjugation of self the best training for those that are in time to be turned loose upon the world and fight there the battle for daily bread and earthly preference?

The children who have been accustomed to get all that they desired, even though they crippled the purse of father and mother in the accomplishment of their wishes, will find that the great world is not so willing to bend to their slightest whim, and strangers are not prone to give up the best places and greatest good to them as mother and father have always done.

Life will be much harder for them if they have been spoiled at home, and the selfish nature which has been encouraged there will materially work against them when they come in contact with all sorts and conditions of men. Remember this, all ye dear, kind hearted fathers and mothers, when you next feel tempted to forego some personal benefit and plead that the sacrifice is made for tho sake of xhe children.—New York Commercial Advertiser.

Our Influence on Children.

It is not what we exhort them to be, but what wo ourselves are, that really influences their characters. Of what use to say, "Be sincere, be truthful," if, for instance, the child to whom wo speak heard us receive a visitor with a cordial, "How glad I am to see you I",and sees us listen to her with smiling attention and then hears us say after our door has closed behind the departing guest: "Oh, what a bore that woman is! I'm glad that infliction's over with I" To preach sincerity while we act falsely—surely it were better not to preach at all than to mock thus at our own "counsel of perfection."

Above all, let us not deceive ourselves into thinking that these little ones who surround us do not understand what we really are. They could not put it into words perhaps, but they know—they feel. I look back now across the intervening years and reconsider tho verdicts of my childhood, and I believe that there was not one of those verdicts which tho judgment of my riper years would not con firm. Those men and women who seemed to me then high minded and true and noble—I know thom now for souls of whom the world was not worthy. Those whom I then perceived to be easy going, careless of tho higher law, living to please themselves—I might judge thom more leniently now, knowing how human it is to err—but the lacks and qualities that my childish eyes discerned were really there. I did not deceive myself.

There is no truth in the world more solemn than that our own lives are the gospel of our children—a gospel that outweighs a thousandfold any teaching with which our lips may contradict it. Thus, indeed, are the sins of the fathers visited upon the children, since we instruct them by what we are and fashion their characters by the ceaseless and strenuous lesson of our daily lives.—Louise Chandler Moulton in Childhood.

Athletics For Girls.

There are many pretty feats of skill and strength which are as safe for girls to undertake as riding or skating or rowing, but» which axu also be as open to accident as any of these three. That is no reason for not attempting them, for every pleasure in life Is shadowed by a danger, but every girl reader would do well to make a little promise to herself never to undertake anything but light gymnastics until she knows that her muscles are evenly aud well developed for her age and her weight, and then only under the direction of an experienced person. The traveling rings and feats on the horizontal bar and many similar feats should be put on this list in every girl's mental notebook.

Jumping is not particularly desirable for girls, although for a strong girl who ha* been well trained in athletics the risk is not great. Except in the gymnasium her dress prevents a girl from jumping well, and under any circumstances it is perhaps the least desirable form of exercise for her. This is of course jumping from a height, or a running long jump, in which it is necessary to alight properly or the whole system receives a shock. liven in dropping from the rings or the horizontal bar, if you alight on your toes—that is, with the heels not touching—with your knees bent, yon will quickly see what a great advantage it gives you to know the right way of doing such things, because yon will not feel the least jar as you rise easily to your full height after it

When a girl has had sufficient practice in light gymnastics, she will find it of great use to begin work on the horizontal ladders, hanging by her hands from the rangs of the ladder above a mattress and carrying herself backward or forward in different ways across the room.—Mrs. Arthur Brooks in Harper's Young People

A

pretext©? to any of this other

a:* UUts* wins for 900 fusses :«r t. puiaiiou of being tfee tml i* in I he ttOW QM OS* the West cinjBpre^cd to each

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DUmal Oallook For a Working Woman. "What's the matter, May?" said one woman to another who was sitting gloomily in a reading room with a magazine and a bit of paper before her. 'Tv© just discovered," replied May, looktag up from the article on hygiene that *he was reading, "teas I can now be a clean person, much less a healthy or a beautiful one." "What! What do yon mean?" gasped May's friend. "My dear," said May,

"1 1 the

thority this excellent axticL- the inlawing 8&st«taent p«s«adai&* woman with ateadAathmr can Istepe to ksep & and wiilsa&t a Isalff tesshfeg xo&rates Tkafe la famae a ska i&iormwd fisfct mm of

my nails should consume half an hour a day and of my teeth another half hour. "Then I must sleep 10 hours and exercise in the open air for one hour each day. I must spend three-quarters of an hour at breaMast and lunches and an hour acd a baif(W dinner. And not less than three hours recreation is commanded. If you area mathematician you will see that 19 hours out of the 24 are thus consumed. Then facial massages and Turkish baths are recommended, and these, with my sewing, would take up the few remaining hours. "And fate compels me to work nine hours a da- for a living and to devote one hour to get -li.if to and from my work. So that the days will have to be at least 29 hours long before I can be even clean and healthy. Heaven only knows how much longer they would need to be if one aimed to -be beautiful and intelligent!"—New York World. pig ti

Noted Women and Their Fathers,

Jane Taylor, a name now almost forgotten, was encouraged by her father to choose literature as a profession, receiving at his hands the most careful training not only in this, but in his own—that of engraving. It is pathetic to read of Mary Russell Mitford slaving at her desk to provide the means wherewith to satisfy her father's insatiate love of gambling. Mercifully deluded with the belief that he was the embodiment of all human virtues, he was to her always the most benign and affectionate and devoted of men, when in reality he had plunged his family into one disaster after another. Maria Edgeworth and her father were not only f»u^ friends, but literary coworkers. He was extremely proud of her talent and of the fact that she had inherited his own tastes and wished to engage in a pursuit in which they could and did follow together.

They were joint authors of a book on "Practical Education" and another on "Irish Bulls."—Chicago Inter Ocean.

A Defect In Gowns.

"It is very noticeable," says aNew York slubman, "that nine-tenths of the women jvho pass our windows wear their skirts too short in front- It is the rarest thing in the world to see an evenly cut and hung iostume, or one that does not 'hitch up' ingracefully when the wearer is walking." "I have noticed that," said the woman to jvhom he was speaking. "One reason is nat the belt of a dress has a tendency to work up in front and to sag behind. Very lew dressmakers allow for this. An another is that the fore breadths of the skirt being scanty, they are apt to draw up on ihe hips. It is very odd, but a dress that is quite long enough in front when it is new becomes almost invariably too short after a few weeks' wear. So now I have all my gowns made so that they can be lengthened couple of inches in the front breadths."

Citron Cake.

One-half cupful of butter, 1% cupfuls of sugar, 8 eggs, otoe-balf cupful of milk, 2 scant cupfuls of flour, 6 ounces of citron, 1% teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Oeam the butter and add the sugar one-half at a time, then the eggs well beaten, with the exception of the white of one, which reserve for frosting then add tho milk gradually, then tb« flour, containing the baking powder stir and lastly add citron cut in fine pieces. Bake in a well buttered pan in a moderate oven about one-half hour.

gome Rare Relies Owned by Women.

Mrs. French Sheldon, the explorer, has a slipper belonging to the khedive of Egypt. Mrs. Livermore treasures a time worn Bible which came over on the Mayflower. Mme, Eva Alberti has a gem which once belonged to Ethan Allen. Mrs. Lillian Frances Mentor, who is of Scotch descent, values an old fashioned pipe which came down in her family from Wycliffe. Louise Chandler Moulton possesses one of the few autograph letters of Tennyson in existence.

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MA 11^" JULY 1,1S93.

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Harmonious Dressing.

To dress in harmony with the complexion comes naturally to some women by others it has been or can bo acquired. A brunette generally looks well in cream color, for she has reproduced the tinting of her skin in her dress. Women who have florid complexions look well in various shades of plum and heliotrope, also in certain shades of dove gray, for to a trained eye this color has a tinge of pink which harmonizes with the flesh of the face. Blonds look fairer and younger in dead black, like' that of wool goods or velvets, while brunettes require the sheen of satin or gloss of silk iu order to wear black to advantage. A woman who has a neutral tinted complexion, with eyes of blue gray, is never more becomingly dressed than in the blue shades in which gray is mixed.—Exchange.

Informality Is Best.

1

The best regulated households are not those conducted by absolute rule. It is ever so much homier to let things happen once in awhile and to enjoy them. It is all very well to have set hours for meals and adhere to them in general, but a little impromptu spread when the morning or afternoon is half over will be enjoyed more than the most elaborate set repast and will keep good natured and merry a party that might have come to blows before the orthodox time for eating. I once saw a very frosty piece of English reserve broken into cordiality and friendship over a big plate of hot waffles bought from a flying "Jenny Lind" bakery in the street and sent up the lift into a 5-story flat.—Boston Herald.

Up and Down Stairs.

"I wish," says the wise old physician, "that women generally understood how important it is to their physical welfare that they should go up and down steps as little as practicable and that they should do it properly when at all. By properly I mean slowly, never faster than a walk, and planting the heel firmly on each step. The novel heroine 'tripping lightly down the stalls' looks graceful, but it is a very bad thing for her nevertheless."

A recipe thnt oomes highly recommended as a cure for perspiration of the hands is bathing the hands frequently in water in which white oak bark has been boiled, th« proportion being an ounce of the bark to a of water. It should boil slowly for an hour.

The woman who bortoiro sugar, spice becomes a nuisance that her neighbors •oon abhor. The woman who wishes to wear your hats, yoar jewelry or your evening shoes yon soon learn to dread.

One very pleasant thing to record of the

queen-empress

is that she has ordered her

ooachmen to tvmove the checkrein from all her horses*

A friend writes. *V,sve the covers of jf-r.T a a S •aSORMEOat iise to iwv

Mors woanKt

Whu Opened the Gate?

"Delia, look at that horse again! I do wish tbee'd be more careful about that gate." Mother Folger spoke in the Quaker tongue.

Delia ran down stairs saying: "Now, Mother Folger, I'm sure I shut that Rate. I took special pains to see it was latched?' "But there is the horse, and not a livinc person has been out since thee came in," answered Mother Folger.

Delia ran on through the kitchen and into the yard, where old Octagon was feed-: ing nearer and nearer to the newly washed clothes lying on the srruss. She led him out and shut the gate, dropping the long wooden latch into the catch with a sou id that could be heard.

msm

felll—

"There!" she said. "I know that is shut, and now 111 watch and see." She sat down on the doorstep acd waited. Old Octagon stood a moment or two, then put his head down and went to eating the grass. Pretty soon he began to look at the grass in the yard. Then he walked to the gate, put his head over it, reached the long wooden latch, fumbled at it with his lips till he raised it and the gate yielded to his pressure and swung open, when he walked in to eat of the nice grass again. Then Delia laughed aloud. She called: "Mother folger, Mother Folgerr I know now who opens the gate. It is old Octagon himself. I knew I always took care to shut it tight."—Little Men and Women. 1

Pennies. For the Heathen.

Madge., aged 7, had a listof questions and answers given her by her Sunday school teacher to learn, the first of which was, "What is a missionary?" and the answer, "One sent to teach the heathen." The list was duly learned, and she went to-Sunday school full of importance that she had her lesson perfect. On her return she was asked if she had remembered the answers, and she replied: "Yes, mamma, I only missed the first, and in that I only made a mistake of a penny. I said, Two cents to teach the hsathen' instead of I cent."— Hartford Post. $25,000 in Premiums.

Offered by Liggett fe M^er.i Tobaoc Co., of St. Louis, Mo. The one guessing nearest the number of people who will attend the World's Fair gets $5,000.00. etc. Ten Star Tags entitle you to a guess. Ask your dealer for particulars or send for circular,

A Tot ami His

Dog.

Here is picture of a 0-year-old whose father is an array officer at Fort Clark, Tex. Our little friend's name is Tony Beall. You might think-that the "tot" is an officer, too, from his military "rig," but he is

.y

satisfied at present to wear the uniform and sword without performing the duties. One of these days he may do both.

In the letter which accompanied the picture Tony said it was taken on a very hot day. One look at Chunky is enough to tell us that., See how his tongue hangs out. We can almost see the poor fellowpant. S

The Deathbed of the Danphin.

The dauphin was in bed at 11 when Dumangin came, and with Pelletan's concurrence a bulletin was signed which announced the fatal symptoms of the prince's illness. He did not apparently suffer.

Seeing him quiet, Gomin said to him, "I hope you are not in pain just now." "Oh, yes, I still suffer, but much less the music is so beautiful." Needless to say that there was no music perceptible to other ears in the temple on that day. "Where do you hear it?" asked Gomin. "Up there. Listen, listen." The child raised his hands, his eyes opened wide, he listened eagerly, and then in sudden joy he cried out, ••Through all the voices I heard my mother's."— Prison Life of Marie Antoinette."

A Sewing Machine Free.

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A $66 Sowing Machine, which we sell at fll.00 to $23.50 will be placed in your home to use without cost of one-cent to yon. Send this advertisement ^'ith address to-day to Aiatah Mfo.Co., Dept. E. EL, Chicago, Hi.

MEDICIHE

THAT MAKES 600D BLOOD

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Hundreds of people write "It is impossible to describe the good Hoo»r« JSarsapari 11a lias done me." It will be of equal help to you.

A Question About Fireerackcrs.

~Mr. Magruder had forbidden his boya to buy anything on credit, and one day he called the children and said he wanted to know who had had 5 cents' worth of firecrackers charged to him at the toy store.

The older ones promptly said, "I did not," but the two little ones, John and Harry, seemed not so clear in their statements. John said he had bought 5 cents" worth of fit ecrackers with 5 cents Uncle Frank gave him, and one time his mamma gave him 5 cents and he got some firecrackers at the toy store. "Oh, I don't care about that," his father said. "Did you have 5 cents' worth of lirecrackers charged?"

Little Harry eould not stand it any longer. He must make John understand,,so he went right up to him and said, "Johnny,, did you ever get 5 cents' worth of crackerswith a 5 cents nobody never gave you?"— Harper's Young People.

"Peter Piper Picked a Peck of Pickled Peppers," was a line of alliterative nonsense, that th^ children u-ed to say. Nowadays they can practice on the Perfect, Painless Powerful Properties of Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellet-?. It will impress a fact which will be useful to know. These Pellets cure sick headache, bilious attack, indigestion, constipation and all stotnaeb, liver aud bowel troubles. They are tiny, sugar-coated pills, easy to take, and, as a laxntive, one is sufHcent for a case. No more groins and gripes from the drastic remedies! Pierce's Purgative Pellets are as painless as they are perfeot In their effects.

I am an old man and have been a constant sufferer with catarrah for the last ten years. I am entirely cured by the use of Ely's Cream Balm. It Is strange that so simple',a remedy will cure suoh a stubborn disease.—Henry Billings, U. S. Pension Att'y, Washington, D. C.

For eight years I have suffered from catarrh, which affected my eyes and hearing have employed many physicians without relief. I am on my second b,ntie of Ely's Cream Balm, and feel confident of a complete cure. —Mary C. Thompson, Cerro Gordo, 111.

thane's Family Rtedlclne Moves the Dowels itach

day. Most people need to use it.

A Remedy for the Grippe Cough.

A remedy recommended for patieuts afflicted with the grippe is Kemp's Balsam, which is especially adapted to diseases of the throat and lungs. Do not wait for the first symptoms of the disease, but get a bottle and keep it on hand for use the moment it is needed. If neglected the sr^ippe has a tendency to bring on pneumonia. All drueglsts sell the Balsam.

If you Have Headache or Neuralgia, Take Phenyo-Caffein Pills.

They are effectual in relieving Pain, nud in curing Headache or Neuralgia. Thov are not a cathartic and contain nothing that stupefies. They tone up the nerves and tend to prevent 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 Phonyo-Cailein in sick and nervous Headache. Many cases have been cured and not any failures reported. H. L. Ferrer, Belle Voir, N. C.

For years I have been a terriblo su ferer from headache some six months ago my physician prescribed PbenyCaflein, and since then, by their use, I have not bad severe headache, being able to stop them completely in their incipieucy. J. H. Stannard, Concord, N. 11.

You hit the nail on the head, when you pnt Phenyo-Caffein on the market. They are the best thing out for headache, E. P. Jones, M. D„ Orleans, Mass.

One year ago I was one of the greatest sufferers from sick and nervous headache I ever knew. I no more have trouble with sick headache and seldom have even a slight headache. I attribute the great change to your Phenyo CafTeln, a remedy I could not do without if it cost a box. I have tried a dozen or more medicines (warranted to enre) without their even helping me. I can not praise your valuable preparation enough. Frank 8. Schmitt, Seymour, Indiana.

FOB 8AI.K BY YOCB DBf-OOTST.

Martin Homager, Attorney, 329% Ohio Street.

-\jOTlCETO yON-RKSlDEXT.

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Such

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Makes an every-day convcnietiGi- of an old-time luxury. S'ure and wiwtesome. Prepared with scrupulous care. I*%hcs' award at all Pure Food Expositu-rvs. Each package makes two hr .r? pics. AvniJ Imitations—and insist on ivm& (hi

NONE SUCH I-RAM

MERRELL & SOU' 1"

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PHENYO-CAFFEIN.

in the term,

State of Indiana, County of Vigo, 1 Superior Court of Vigo County, June No. 1,874. Sal lie A. Pucbett r*. Prentice C. Pucketi. In Divorce.

Be It known, that on the 18th day of June, 1888, it was ordered by the Sup^or oourt of VJRO county that the cierk notify by publication *aid Prentice C. PuckettM non-resi-dent defendant of thependency of thinacUon *1^"^defendant to therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action ualptt him and that the name will stand for trial on the 10th day of August, the same being Jane term of «ald court In the year ISPS. 51 (SEAL.J HUGH I). ROQUET, Clerk.

825 to S50

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PURE, WHOLESOME,.DELICIOUS Better aud Cheaper than Green Fruits. A.SK 1TOTT-R G-EOCEE.

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Electro Institue.

Catarrh, Asthma. Tumor, Cancer, MoUs, Superfluous Hairs?

We are curing these onsos- liy seeing them onw or twice a month at our UnMSttue. By means of our Electrical Chart and' Battery We are able to cure over 90 percent, of all ohronlc diseases named below, at home. This is our Specialtyi Home Treatment,

This plan of treatment has-been so perfected! that we can treat diseasesas-weWas though yow wero at our Institute. We donot believe in drugging or tilling the stomach with strong or nauseating medicines, but bv the use of reconetructlvos, hygelne,.and theprojwr use of KlecMcitp, we are able t© enre some H«retofore incurable disease®) such ns

Paralysltt, (some oured otJh*rshelped). Rheumatism, Nenrnliftti, D.vuprpsla or Tndlgestlou, Chrofciu Const) pal Ion

(sure cure), Nervous- Debility. Stxual W«-aknem, Vltar Urinary Complaints, and'most Female Diseases. for copy of Journal on Electro

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of your disease. Wo van then give you full particulars ns to yourcose Always inclose stamp for return reply. Ail letters confldontlah Twenty years' ,.oc-poi'lun«*. Charges reasonable. Address

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ELECTRO INSTITUTE.

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Managing Attorney,

P. O. Box 4684s WAsnrsQTON, D.O.

WFTbta Company ii managed by a combination of tho largest and most influential newspapers in tho United States, for the c.iprwra pnrnwj of protecting their aubacribcra agaittrt tmscnipuloua and incompetent Patent Agents,, and each paper printing this advertisement vouches for the responsifellltyand high standing oft ho Press Claims Company.

,FAT PEOPLE^ SPEEDY & LASTING can stay] RESULTS. wnr***TTK thin.

can get thin.

SFBCiriC

CO., BocKm. Km

DR

K. W. VANVALZAH," Successor to

RICHARDSON A VAN VAL55AI3, IDEHsTTXST. Office—Southwe#t corner Fifth and Mahs Street*, over

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on Fifth street.

JSAAO BALL, FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Cor. Third aud Cherry Hts., Terre Haute, Ind. Im prepared to execute all order* lt» hie Una with neatnee* and dispatel

Embalming a Specialty.

£J-ISBIT & McMINN, UNDERTAKERS, 103 NOK^ll POURTH BTRKKT,

Ail calls will receive the rnoet careful attention. Open day and nlgbL

JpELSENTHAL, A. B. Jnfrt l'-eofthe Peace and Attorney at Law, 1 h*Jrd street- Terre Haute, Ind.

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