Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 24, Number 14, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 30 September 1893 — Page 6

6

life

Ill

I

WOMAN AND HOME.

'WIVES SHOULD HAVE TACT, AND EVERMORE HAVE TACT.

Bensitlvcnessof Children—Shartng Domestic Problem*—A Woman In a Hotel. Girls Need Care—A "Woman'* Cry—Al•i d&vways Ores* For Dinner.

"xiV J^t'A wife may combine the personal appearance of the lamented Helen of Troy, the Intellectual attainments of the extremely intellectual Minerva and the wifely devotion of the renowned Penelope, bat unless she kids to these unfailing tact they will profit her nothing, or, as Mme. de

Stael tersely pat it, "It is the woman who possesses more tact than love who retains the devotion of a man." Fortunately tact can be acquired. One woman whose school was an unhappy, "nagging" first marriage, &: and who is potting what she learned there into practice in a gloriously successful second one, tells how she manages. "First, above all things," she says, "I have interested myself in those things which interest my husband. That does not mean that I ply him with questions, but I. ks have always been a good listener. I learned years ago that when a man wants to tell anything he will do so without questioning, and that nothing annoys him more than to be urped to tell when he doesn't want to. Another important thing is that

I never contradict bim. I simply acquiesce,

i-y and then afterward use my own judgment in the matter and do as I think best. Then I regard it as a positive duty to make myself as attractive in bis eyes as I possibly can. It is a comparatively easy thing to catch a husband, but an entirely different matter to keep him, and nothing disgusts a man sooner than to learn that the girl who charmed him by her daintiness and attractiveness has developed into a wife who affects wrappers and curl papers. And lastly, I do not let a simple division of opinion increase to such proportions that a divorce looms up in the distance."

Tact is so strong in this woman that she can, although possessed of exquisite taste, smile approval upon her husband's carbuncle cuff buttons rather than destroy the pleasure he takes in them. Her expression of forul pride would undergo no change should her spouse appear in an orange and pink tie. To keep him satisfied with himself is the first step toward making him satified with his wife, she has discovered.

There was as much tact as love in the method one little woman took to bring her clubmau of a husband back to her. It was his cheerful custom to gooff to his club, sending her a bunch of flowers and a note by way of peace offering. By and by this grew monotonous to her. One night she felt that, tears and reproaches having all proved futile, she would try another way. Impulsively she wrote on the back of his note, "All your flowers for a sight of your dear face," and sent it to him. That bit of tactful flattery accomplished what all the tears of Nlobe and all the curtain lectures of Mrs. Caudle would have failed to do.

Flattery is the load.of men. The women, who can show appreciation of their society, their judgment and their tastes, and who can bo serenely obvious of their whims and crotchets, will succeed in "managing" their husbands.—New York World.

Sensitiveness of Children.

5 In our visits in many places and in many families we have perhaps observed nothing more often and with more regret than the want of appreciation which prevails toward tho sensitiveness of little children. As a rule we flud them, even in what would be termed well regulated homes, treated as though they had no feelings whatever, no tender little hearts and no trials and disappointments worth considering. Nor do many of the kindest of parents consider how surely they are leavlug happy or unhappy impressions, by their conduct on the minds of tho little ones, which will be indelible.

Few parents treat their children with the courtesy they deserve and would like. Children are ordered instead of asked to do all sorts of things for their parents and are seldom thanked for their errands or rewarded by a kindly smile of appreciation. They are spoken to in harsh tones, and when they retort in the same way they are reproved for impoliteness.

There is nothing truer than this—that like begets like that a pleasant smile and a kindly tone will develop a pleasant smile and kindly tone that courteous, polite words and manner from mother and father will engender courteous, polite words and manners in the children that kindly consideration in the trials and disappointments of children, which to them are as great as those which their elders are bearing, Is far better than a rude disregard of them and making light of them, as though they were of no account.

This objectionable manner toward children, which is so common, is oftentimes remembered by them through long lives and prejudices them toward many persons, no matter how eminent they may bo or how highly thought of in society.—Chicago Standard.

Sharing: Domestic Problem*.

A graduate and teacher in a woman's college who has lately left tho professor's chair for the smaller but equally busy sphere of home life has endeavored toassist In solving the vexed question of domestic service by carrying on a little experiment In her own household.

The plan is that of bringing together Into closer harmony mistress and servants, of establishing common interest and of holding up nu ideal of mutual helpfulness. The basis of the system is household co-op-eration and the sharing of responsibilities. At the beginning of each month a certain sum of money is set aside for the table and kitchen expense*, exclusive at fuel, rent and wages. The amount of the sum is confided to the cook, an intelligent Irish girl. Once a week the mistress and the cook sit down together and plan the menu for the week as accurately as possible. After that the cook take* full charge of'the marketing as well as the preparing of tho food for the table. At the end of the month the mistress pays all the bills, and if any balance remain* she divides it equally between the cook and herself. The more the eodtc is able to economise in making her purchases the larger will be her reward at the end of the month.

The success of the plan is almost a sar prise to it# originator, who has watched with pleasure the mental growth of the cook under the responsibility of her positioa. Although such a scheme would depend in a great measure upon the intelligence of the servant* It* operation would certainly attract mdre intelligent girts to household

Ikict*

tnerdal Advwrtber.

A Woaaast la a B«tal

A woman in a hotel maybe is the aatan of alive wire to that piece aha aaj cott* termand more orders Ln 15 mtnutea than a

man could think of in an- hour: she may press the button for every namable thing from a buttonhook to the mucilage pot and the directory or a chair in the office artft sever tip the boy she may get excitedly over what she puts under tho pillow, and she is always in trouble over the wash list, bat she doesn't set the sheet-s on fire smoking in bed, and she doesn't polish her boots with the extra towels she insists upon, nor play football with the furniture in her gay moods.

If she lives all over the house, so much the better for that house. A pretty woman scribbling at the library table or reading in front of the fire is a vast sight more interesting than empty chairs at angles. And while she can set by the ears every boy and clerk with her mail, her cards and her callers—whom she is "in" to and whom she is "out" to—yet she apologizes so prettily one could but be glad she made the mistake.

She doesn't spend as much money as a man, and she makes the chambermaid pack her trunks, but she pays her billsafter a slight difference as to details. She is never so "dead broke" at the end of her visit but that she can settle the bill without giving security, and if you do succeed in pleasing her she will sing the praises of that hotel from here to the Golden Gate.

Only bear with her little caprices and discount a dollar on her bill, and that one well suited woman will send you more custom than any two men working ^commission.—Boston Traveller. fife--V .J*®*#-

Girl* Need Care.

It is much to be regretted that more care is not given to girls in the transition period between childhood and early womanhood, when there is no settled purpose and the craving for enjoyment is inordinately strong.

The thoughtful, motherly girl, whose spare time is absorbed by family problems, thestudious girl, the musical girl—in short, the girl whose mind takes any special intellectual trend or is engaged by fad even —is comparatively safe, but the aimless girl, or the girl with misdirected activity of mind and body, is constantly in danger.

Through her love of the sensational she makes herself conspicuous by her loud dress and louder manner and accepts the hundred and one doubtful attentions men pay to women they do not respect.

She accepts their invitations to dinners, theaters, theater parties and bills of suspicious character, where she dances away the fever of unrest, together with her reputation, and does it not because she has any love of real wrongdoing, but because she has no stability of character, and the craving for amusement must be satisfied.

Such girls should be the special care of all women with a

Bpark

of womanliness in

them. A word in season, a kindly act, a few friendly (not patronizing) attentions, go far in bringing a frivolous, thoughtful girl to a better knowledge of herself, in forming a truer conception of thedignity of womanhood.—Donahoe's Magazine.

A Woman's Cry.

There te ft certain woman in this town, cynical, mocking, aggressive, independent. She prides herself on meeting the knocks and blows of fate with an undisturbed demeanor. She is strong and self reliant and seldom gives way to any emotion. Her pen brings her bread and butter. Well, this woman wrote a song, and another woman, a well known composer, set it to music, I heard the song played for the first time the other morning. It's a simple enough ballad, with a homely, old fashioned sentiment pervading it—a perfume of lilacs and clover fields, as it were—and the composer had caught the spirit of the woods in her bars of plaintive melody.

As the plnylng proceeded I looked at the woman who wrote the words. To my amazement I saw tears running down the cheeks of that cynical, worldly creature, and when the song was finished the room was perfectly still save for the terrible deep sobs that came from Mme. Mockery, who had thrown herself face down in the sofa pillow and was weeping out the repressed torrent of years. Do you know, I believe it was the best thing that could have happened to her? Women ought to cry once in awhile. It's the best escape valve I know, except profanity, and custom forbids us that vent yet.—Becky Sharpe in New York Recorder.

Always Dress For Dinner.

Take a bath before dinner it will be appetizing, refreshing and refining. Dress for dinner it is a good example for the little folks and a compliment that is due the hostess. These are among the amenities that distinguish dining from feeding. Some husbands and brothers will not dress for dinner, and it is dangerous to try to coerce them.

Women make the rules and regulations of social life, and while it is not advisable to make the lords do whaWthey don't wish to do it is very easy to maKe them uncomfortable. Reform will come of itself. Teach tho children to dress for dinner. Watch the special sales and buy Charles a pair of 59 cent patent leathers and a $3.77 Eton suit, with an extra pair of trousers. Sacrifice the train of a pompadour silk and make Catharine a Josephine slip without sleeves.

For a dime a week those blessed children will tub and make a dinner toilet with speed and grace. Some evening daughter will startVo her unconventional sire by exclaiming, "Ob, papa, you don't look nice!" That will be the wife's hour of triumph, and the next night papa will put on afresh collar and another coat. In a week or so he will be tamer.—New York World.

The Modern Girl.

It is tolerably certain that whatever may be the character of the young woman of the future, whether she devote herself to politics or cooking, spend her surplus energies upon baseball or embroider}-, one quality she will not possess—she is not likely to be helpless. Perhaps it is a charm that she already lacks, for certainly In the days when the gentle Sophia compelled poor, broken armed Tom Jones to support her sinking but uninjured form and wait until her feminine emotions were calmed before the bone could be set women were not as they are now. The modern girl prides herself upon .being equal to an emergency, upon her sense and strength rite can pull a bent and walk her 10 or 15 miles she finds her own sex entertaining, and she can bear discomfort* equably accordingly in her summer vacation it is not surprising that sh* should camp out—it is a sign of the times*—Philadel phia ledger.

S A Bole of XNMneetie Eeo»«m)r. first point of all to he decided definitely is how much of the family income abouki be spent for shelter. It I* not unusual to leave the settling of this Important point to chance, to a pretty house suddenly found to the location of friends. No one want* the remembrance of hi* and hear first home to he clouded with bluer or sad memories of financial disaster, and the first •tap to pwmt this is carefully to gauge one's needs by one's tncoxae. It would not be poatibl* to sajr definitely how many dollar* ought to be spent, but rule that is saDi Is not to use more thaa one-fourth of

fSH®

the farsfly b»w«-ic isr MOUJK-.T ut er to spend even a lesser* if possible. Having settled the am.—used for rent or interest, the real cornerstone of a home has been laid.—Ladies' Homo Journal it Is "Well to Remember

That Monday is the best day of all the week to wash, if one can, especially in warm weather.

That the sooner clothes are washed after being soiled the easier they wash. That a white soap, free from rosin, is best to wash clothing with, as they do not turn fellow if laid away for a time, and it leaves no unpleasant odor.

That cheap soap is dear in the end. That soft water is decidedly the best for washing.

That if we cannot get it ammonia or borax is a great help, better than washing powder.

That if Monday proves a stormy day the white clothes, after washing, should be put into clean water and wait for the hanging until fair weather.

That calicoes and flannels Bhould not be washed until fair weather.—Good Housekeeping.

1

Interior Decoration.'

There are theories and theories about house furnishing. One that its evolver calls "a sort of impressionist theory" is that the value of your materials is really of no consequence, as the satisfactory result comes from "the decorative effects of color, contrast, general mass and form." To the person tnuch given to changing his fireside, whether at home or abroad, this is a convenient theory, as rugs, hangings and good photographs are easily rolled up and taken from place to place, and the number of breakable objects is somewhat reduced. In the right place a beautiful rug upon a wall is as decorative and capable of giving as much pleasure after its kind as is a good picture.—St. Louis Republic^.,

fi£&| When You Sign Your Name. When a woman signs her name, she gives the reader more or less ancient history. A gentlewoman, who is married, who i3 modest, who is happy and who loves her husband^signs herself Mary A. Brown. If she doesn't love her husband, if she is not modest,- she signs—herself Mary Aggressive Brown. A woman who has missed the opportunities of education signs herself Mrs. Brown. Ignorant girls use "Miss" in signing their letters. Mannish girls, who like to be considered good fellows, use initials, as M. A. Brown, with or without the title. Childish women take the whole world into their confidence and use their pet name, as Mamie Brown.—Boston Herald.

Gray Hairs.

How often a handsome woman of 85 or 40 will watch some young bud of 18 with envy and shiver when the little peachblow beauty says to a companion: "Oh, I'm sure I don't act like a child. Why, I feel like an old lady of 85." Then the foolish matron will retire into the dressing room perhaps, take a jaundiced look at a few gray hairs that adorn her royal head and possibly shed a tear or two. Foolish woman! If the writer were a man and you were single. I'd choose you at any time in preference to the flighty, bread and butter beauty whom you so envy. Gray hairs are never unbecoming.—New York Time8. rip® IS I

Paris Shopgirls.

A Paris shopgirl ordinarily begins at a salary of from $5 to 88 per month. Besides she invariably has a commission on her sales varying from one-half to 1 per cent, according to her success. Many receive as high as $80 a month in salary and make much more in commissions. Retail selling is the great business of all Paris, but the better places are hard to get and require almost as much pushing and influence as to obtain a government position in America. The most attractive girls will always stand the best chance at the first, and many keep their places on the strength of their good looks.—Paris Letter.

An Athletic Empress.

The empress of Austria, when she was enjoying life incognito as "Sirs. Nicholson" at Cromer, used to put the athletic girl to the blush. She had an energetic habit of rising at 5 o'clock in the morning. Then she was rowed out to sea, where she would plunge from the boat and swim awhile. Returning to shore, she would mount her horse, and about 11 o'clock would return home for luncheon and a rest. About 5 o'clock in the afternoon ^he would either ride again or indulge in along walk.

The Cold Bath.

Xlady physician, speaking of the cold bath, says, "A cold dip before breakfast Is a genuine elixir for the aging woman, a prime disinfectant for the ailing woman, a balm for the woman who weeps, a sedative for the woman with nerves, a tranquilizer for the woman with a temper, the very best everyday physic for the all around woman, and a prime cosmetic for the ugly woman."

If a bay window is curtained at all, ft should be with double curtains at each sash, so that there is no effect of scrimping. The most usual protection, however, is silk run on upper and lower rods, and this answers every purpose of shade and concealment of the room from the street.

Dinner bells are out of date. At school and in cheap boarding house* the hungry multitude Is rung up, but in the polite world a servant goes through the house, raps on the doors and In forms the inmates the rooms that "dinner is served.**

It is the eastern 1st Russia lor each lady present at a big dinner to smoke a tiny cigarette between each course. This is supposed to assist digestion, beside* removing the flavor of the previous fare from the palat-

Said a wise little woman to me feot long ago: "For the first six years of my child's life I taught him bat very little, what and bow to eat and to tell the

I consider the time well speak"

'.'|3§p8!

TERKE SATJTE SATTJRDAY EVENING MAILT SEPTEMBER 30,1893.

K|

Working Girls' Purchasing Clubs.

A peculiar phase of London east end life is the formation by working girls of clubs for purchasing various articles of attire. For instance, 10 or 13 or more girls working in the same factory will constitute themselves into a club for corsets. Enough money is contributed weekly tyermit of the acquisition of one pair of corsets, lots being cast to decide upon the possessor. These east end girls have expensive tastes in the way of stays, giving from 5 shillings to 12 shillings sixpence per pair, and in many cases insisting upon having them made to order. A favorite cfesetiere has just finished with a club of 24 members, who paid 8 shillings sixpence a pair. Clubs are also constituted for buying hats, drapery goods, etc. A certain advantage in these clubs is that the members have no inducement to outvie one another in extravagance.

CHILI)liri-\ COLUMN.

Tho Circus.

Loud rim tho noisy cries ef mirth. The Rates aro open. Pray, walk in! The price is but a single pin.

And thia is the greatest show on earth.

Upon the sofa back astride Here 6it3 the famous Signor Dick. He gives his fiery steed a flick

And straight is off. A reckless ridel ^s

Then landing with a sadden thump" Upon the ground, the bra\4 signor Gives, over SO books or more.

His celebrated running jump.

Next comes fair mademoiselle, and lo. With outspread arms and balanco trim, Upen tho bedstead's dizzy rim

She walks the tight rope to and fro. Together then the two perform A hundred feats of skill and strength. Until 'mid loud applause, at length,

Quite out of breath and very warm, Thoy bow and smile and bow again Before an audience spent with mirth. Long live the greatest show on earth.

Fair mademoiselle and all her train.

Always Be Civil.

Civility is a quality that isneverwasted. Its effect upon a little street boy who was not used to it is cleverly shown in the following story from over the sea: It seems that one evening a young lady abruptly turned a street corner and ran against a boy who was small and ragged and freckled. Stopping as soon as she could, she turned to him and said: "I beg your purdon. Indeed I am very sorry." The small, ragged and freckled boy looked up in blank amazement for an instant. Then taking off about three-fourths of a cap. all he had, he bowed very low, smiled until his face became lost in the smile and answered, "You can liev my parding and welcome, miss, and yer may run ag'in me and knock me clean down, an I won't say a word." After tho young lady passed on he turned to a comrade and said, half apologetically, "I never had any one ask my parding before, and it kind o' took me oil my feet."—Xcw York World..

A Game Played by City Girls. An amusing game is played by four girls who stand opposite each other in pairs, each pair clasping hands so that a cross is formed in the center. They sing:

4

Lower a bucket of water, A lady and her daughter She used to wash ln brandy, She used to bo called a dandy. One in a rush, two in a rush, Come under my mulberry bush. One of the players gets within the network formed by the crossed arms, and the song is repeated until all four players are. within a mesh of arms. Then they sing:

Buy a bunch of roses, Five cents apiece Buy a bunch of roses,

Cheap, cheap, cheapl

The four players dance to the music and display especial vivacity as their bounding movement emphasizes the last three words. —New York Advertiser

'?v^ Naming Family Pets.

Every boy and girl has at some time had a pet for which a name had to be found, and all enjoy the pleasure of teaching the pet to answer to his name. But have you ever stopped to notice how few pets are nicely named?

Suppose you have a little Scotch terrier. Do you. not think it would be pretty to name him Sandy or Andy or Bruce or Wally or Campbell or Donald or Mac? And if you had a water spaniel, do you not think he might be called Lake or Paddle or Plunge or Dip? And Paddy, Rory, Moore, Shannon and Tyrone are all good names for an Irish setter, and for the cat family there are such names as Felina, Cat •ap, Malta, Softpaws and Fleece.

In the city of New York there is a man who makes a business' of finding pretty names for valuable pets, and in -no case does he evsr give the same name twice.— New York Ledger.

Might Make Dolly Sick.

"No, Dolly, I doan' dare let you hab any ob dis watermelon. Dey's too much colic in it."—Life.

The Dog and the Monkey*.

Oncc upon a time a number of monkeys went to a great forest to pick up nuts. Their way led them past a woodsman's house, near which lay a large dog seemingly asleep. One day they met a fox and asked him if the dog outside the woodsman's bouse were really alive, "because," they said, **ft never »eeros to more."

The fox said, "I would advise you to let him alone, or you will pay dearly for your experiment-"

But the monkeys would not listen to him. So tho next time they were going to the forest to pick nuts one of them went up to the dog and scratched his nose, which MUAI Mm spring up immediately and rim after the monkeys and bite all those whom he could catch. After this they were always obliged to go to the forest by another way for fear of the dog.—New York Mail sod Express.

Daniel Webster's Childhood.

The childhood of Daniel Webster did not show the man. He was a crying baby and a pale, weak, sickly boy, the slimmest child in the family, but at manhood he had a large, stately frame, a massive head and an iron constitution. The change had been effected by working on his father's farm, indulgingin outdoor sports ai|d Uving a frugal, temperate life. Y"1

So robust and large was his body and so impressive was his walk that the coal heavers of London paused in their work to stare at him as he passed them.

Sydney Smith likened him to "asteeun engine in trousers," adding, "He is a living lie, because no man on earth could be as great as he looked."

Carlyle called him "a parliamentary Hercules" whom "oue would incline at sight to back against the world."

Perhaps the greatest physical compliment he ever received was that paid to his mountain of a head. When Thorwaldsen, the Danish sculptor, saw Webster's bust iu Powers' studio in Rome, he exclaimed, "Oh, a design for Jupiter, I see!"

With difficulty he was made to believe that it was the head of an American.— Youth's Companion.

Identification Was Easy.

Not long ago an accident happened to little Barbara's doll Gladys, which was thereupon sent to a store where surgical attention is given to wounded dolls. When the day came for it to be discharged, cured, Barbara obtained permission to go and get it. Barbara stood on tiptoe before the counter at the store and asked if her doll was mended. "I guess so," said the young woman behind the counter, fumbling over a pile of dolls on a shelf. "But I'm afraid I can't tell which one it is in all this lot." "Oh, you can find her easily enough," said Barbara confidently. "Her name's Gladys." —Chicago Evening Post. »*i

'IIS*' Her Thimble. She hunted in the closet,

y-irij Slio hunted on the stair, She hunted round the doorstep. She hunted everywhere.

rlfi

She hunted through tho twilight. But when the dark had come She paused to wipe licr tears away—

And found'it on her thumb!

His Second Baptism.

"Well, V. illie, how did you like it?" asked the fond mamma when her angel child returned from his first day at the publio school. "Bully!" ejaculated the cherubr with a new light in his eyes. "But, say, ma, don't call me Willie my name's Bill."—Exchange.

To gain strength—Hood's Sarsaparllla. "For steady nerves— Hood's Sarsaparilla For pure blood—Hood's Sarsaparilla.

Bath SandLals.

A fastidious woman with a slender purse fashions her own bath sandals from the Turkish toweling matching her bath robe. A pasteboard sole is modeled nfter that of an ordinary slipper and covered. The high vamps, cut from wigan, are covered inside and out and adorned with a natty red bow.

I suffered from acute inflammation in my nose aud head—for a week at a time I could not see. I used Ely's Cream Balm and lu a few days I was cured. It is wonderful h»»w qni«'k It hHpod me. Mrs. Ueurgiett. Judaou, Hartford, Conn.

Being a sufferer from cbronio catarrh, and having derived great benefit from the use of Ely's Cream Balm, 1 can highly recommend it. Its s*le* are far in excess of all other catarrh remedies. B. Irankfcn, Druggist, Sigourney, Iowra.

Lane's Family Medicine Moves the Bowel*

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PHENYO-CAFFEIN.

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

Tfcey are effectual iu relieving Pain, aud iu curiug Headache or Neuralgia. They are not a cathartic and contain nothing tbat stupefies. They touo up the nerves and tend to prevent returns of Headache aud Neuralgia. They are guaranteed to do all that is claimed for them.

TESTIMONIALS.

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For years I bave been a terrible sufferer from headache some six months ago my pbystciao prescribed PhenyoCaffein, and since then, by their use, I have not bad a severe headache, being able to stop them completely in their In'piency.

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LAOIC*.aik

Vnuafitt tot CkirkMtr gnaiitk IHa•, IN IUMI M4 (trnd JMUIU* MUM.MM

wdti bio* ribbon. Take

oth«r. JUftu4 danftrtnu tvb&UutioruafU imUmUmt, MDros*i«M,«fMa44«b IsituMM tot jxutiettita. (Mttswatab UN "IhUtf Mte*MWUhbrntiua

lc^si2asiE*JIIMmwmmm•uawiswi

iMiDnasu.

TTOTEL KICHMOND JJL

EUROPEAN.

E. A. FROST, Propr.

Formerly manager Hherwood HouMjEvaix. vllle, IDCL, laU» Macgr. Hotel Grace, Chicago. Rooms 75c, $1.00, 1.80

Per Day.

flleam Heat, Centrally Located, two block* from P. O. and Auditorium, opp. the new hmUtr Buildioc. jr. W. Cor State

and VaoBoreu—CHIC A CM)

DEAFNESS

CAVSKB AKD CUBE.

{Scientifically treated by an aurlet of worldwide reputation. DeafntM eradicated and entirely cured, of from 20 to 90 yean' standlog, after alt other treatment* bave failed. Hour Use difficulty is reached and the cause removed, folly explained in circular*, with affidavits ana teeUmouials of cure* from, prominent peopl«,_mailed free.

Ihr. AVTOJrrAJ*£, Taooma, Wash. -.

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