Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 14, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 September 1894 — Page 6
11
OMAN AND HOME.
REVIEW OF THE PROGRES8 MADE IN WOMAN'S EDUCATION, i, f« »-jut-*". When You Are HoateM—"Ghost" Parties.
Cruelty In the Kitchen How Child
Should Sit—Paper Htuidkerohlefii—Women and Newspaper Work.
It was 163 years after Harvard college was founded before any provision was made by Massachusetts for the eduoation of girls, and publio schools were established in Boston for boys 135 years before girls were admitted to' 'learn reading and writing for apart of the year." When Mrs. Willard in 1821 submitted to the New York legislature the first plan for the higher education of girls ever proposed in the United States, she was careful to state that she wished to produce no "college bred females," and that there were to be no "ex hlbitions" in h«r school, since "publio speaking forms no part of female education."
As late as 1884, when Mary Lyon requested the Massachusetts legislature for slight state aid for a school for women, she was met with great opposition, and a learned doctor of divinity, after arguing that the education of women had not been suooessful, said "You see bow this method has utterly failed. Let this page of Divine Providence be attentively considered in relation to this matter." It was not until 1837 that Mount Holyoke seminary was opened, and it was 10 years before Latin was a regular study in its course and 40 years before the French language became a regular study in that sohool.
The brother of Lucy Stone entered a New England college where she, being a woman, was refused admittance and in 1843 was compelled to journey to then faroff Oberlin, the only college which admitted women. And even there, when she graduated at the head of her class, she was given the honor of a commencement essay only on condition that it should be read by a man, as it was not considered proper for a young woman to appear upon the platform—a condition yrhich she properly refused to accept.
As late as 1866 the Inauguration of Miss Johnston as principal of the state normal school at Framingham was regarded as a doubtful experiment. Medical schools were practically closed to women at the time of the war. In 1845 Elizabeth Blackwell applied to 12 medical schools in succession for admission, only to be excluded until received at a small school in Geneva, N. Y., by a vote of the students. The schools which admitted them were not of the higher grade, and in 1860 it was estimated that only about 800 women in the United States had managed to "graduate somewhere in medicine."
Graduation, however, did not produce recognition in the profession. Most of the medical societies refused to permit consultations with women as physicians, and at the beginning of the war women were practically excluded from the practice of medicine to any substantial extent. Harvard and ipost of the other colleges, although founded and sustained by funds to which women as well as men had contributed, Still kept up the sign, "Private way, dangerous passing." Women were practioally excluded from all business vocations. Their employment in professional or business offices was unknown, and it was regarded as improper, if not impossible, for a woman to become a stenographer or a telegraph operator or even to keep a country postoflice.
It was very rare that one was employed in any clerical occupation even in the departments at Washington or in the departments of any state government. Gainful pursuits, in which they believed themselves to be competent, were closed to them, 'yiey asked in vain for an opportunity to competo with men in these occupations on fair terms or on any terms.—Josiah H. Benton Before Soldiers' Club of Wellesley, Mass.
When Ton Are Hostess.
There are homes in which you are always conscious of your bounden duty to conform to rules. You feel that y?u must get up to a 6 o'clook breakfast when you have been accustomed to Indulge in morning naps until 9. You cannot don your wraps and saunter out to enjoy an hour or %vto in an art gallery or a library of rare books, where one wants to invite one's own soul for companionship, without your too solicitous hostess urging you to wait till she has ordered luncheon so that she may "go with you and tell you all about them."
There aro homes where the rules are not flexible because the makers of them are oast Iron people, but there are others whero they lack elasticity simply from the family's want of tact in pleasing those wliom they are anxious to please.
The really hospitable house is tho one whore the guest has been asked to come in order tha't she may bo given an unusual pleasure, and where, for the time being, all the uncomfortable requirements of her individual home aro set aside for a boheniian freedom and unaccountability,
The young married hostess may chapron without monopolizing tho callers of hor girl guests. She sees these callers frequently in general society, and on* many occasions for a chat, while tho visitor, of whom they are also old friends, is only in town for a brief stay and often groans inwardly at having to sit in enforced silence while her hospitable hostess rattles ajvay the precious moments.
Tho visitor, like tho editor, can stand a good deal of letting alone. Of course, if. she Ixi what is calied a "born sightseer," ono who must be taken from tho crown of the t,Uerty statue to tho roof garden crushes, she will n"t want to bo let alone or to let any one else alone.
T-o be ^different abqut a guest's enjoyment is the grossest evklonei of 111 breeding and callous feeling after extending an invitation, but far too few people understand the exquisite spirit of hospitality underlying the greeting of the Spanish hostess when sho so graciously says, "The house is yours, senorit®."—New York Herald. _______ "OhMt" Parties. "Of course you have been asked to one or two of Mrs. A.'s ghost parties?" said a clever woman of the world to one of the acknowledged social leaders at a well known suburb. "I have been asked there to dine once or twice.'' answered tho gwat lady, "but novcT hefttti of ftoy splrituftl manlfosto* tlons at her house. What do you meant" "But #d you go Wtere at all? persisted tho other. "No. It so happened I was engaged both times she asked me," returned Mrs. ——, rather surprised at tho catechism. ••Well, no ono else has been there cither, although sho has asked every one of not® in tho place." exclaimed her Interlocutor triumphantly, "and that is why I owl her functions ghost' parties, as they aw only the shadows of the substanoe, tbedinn^ ltaelf being purely Imaginary. Why,
-t?
woman has gained the reputation for entertaining and has received no end of dinner invitations on absolutely nothing at all! I have suspected her tactics for some time, and now I am quite sure that what I assert is quite true—that in nine oases out of ten her dinners are purely Imaginary She has a clever way of finding out vrhc is engaged, to whom, and then she asks people whom she knows oannot oome to h» house, and so scores to her social account, with no other outlay than her crested paper and daintn/ seal. And I fancy she is not tho only one either who has discovered this very eoonomloal way of returning or compelling soolal obligations."—New York Tribune.
Cruelty In the Kitchen.
Ignorance is very busy among those who handle fish, and though every one knows how to destroy a fish at onoe by a blow at the back of the bead oarelesaness often forgets to see it done. Fish suffer in the air after they are landed as we should suffer if our heads were under water, because their gills, through whioh they breathe, cannot act without the pressure of the water going through them. We under water cannot breathe in the same fashion as they do, and thus we struggle till death releases us. So do the, fish on land.
We are often willfully and ignorantly cruel in our way of killing lobsters and crabs. To kill crabs properly they should before boiling be thrust through with a sharp steel, right through the mouth and body at one blow. Then they are dead directly.
The eel tribe suffers terribly. So difficult is it apparently to kill eels that people have ceased to kill them at all. If their heads were cut off before they were otherwise handled, they would not suffer pain. Terrapin also should be mercifully killed before being cdoked.
When a lobster is required for boiling or broiling, insert a narrow bladed knife into the third joint of the tail, severing th spinal cord, which will oause instant death. It is certainly cruel to put them into the water alive, especially if it is not boiling, as they then suffer a slow, linger ing death.—London Animal World.
How a Child Should Sit.
In sitting the child must be provided with a comfortable chair, adapted to his size and height, writes Elizabeth Robinson Scovil on ''The Physical Culture of Children" in Ladles' Home Journal. He 6hould be made to sit well back in it, and not on the edge, when he has to oocupy it for any length of time. The baok should, if possible, give support to the small of the baok as well as the shoulders. In working at a desk it should be of such a height that he can easily see his work when sitting erect by bending his head, instead of inclining the body at the hip joints. The upright position helps to expand the ohest and keep the shoulders in their proper place. Its use soon becomes habitual if it is insisted upon.
In walking the heel should not be brought down too firmly. Apart of the weight of the body belongs upon the toes, and when a due proportion is thrown there it gives an elasticity to the gait which is lost when it is not properly distributed. Walking with the heels raised from the ground is a good exercise, although a fatiguing one. Hopping on each foot alternately is another. Dancing is a valuable accomplishment for children. The consciousness of being able to danoe well gives ease and self possession to many a young man and woman who would otherwise be bashful and awkward. Little people usually delight in the rhythmical motion, and if it is not combined with late hours it does them nothing but good.
Paper Handkerchiefs.
In a paper read before the social science convention by Dr. Brannan of New York on ''Restriction of Communicable Disease" the fact of the use of Japanese paper handkerchiefs by consumptive patients was referred to. These, as can readily be seen, are very sanitary, as they can be burned, and are so cheap apd portable that they can be used lavishly. JBuvJng them by the thousand, their oost is about a cent for four, and as-a consumptive palienjj need only about four a day the tax is trifling.
It is a suggestion that m&f be of value to some mothers that these handkerchiefs should be supplied for the use of ohlldren ?r other members of the family suffering from catarrh.
It has also been pointed out by medical authority that washing handkerchiefs, after such service, with the rest of the household linen was neithor a neat nor a sanitary practice. It was also cited that the ordinary washing did not clcanse them sufficiently, and it was advised to soak them in kerosene first and then wash them separately and thoroughly. The paper handkerchiefs would seem to bo an easy relief from this risk and trouble alike, and their use is suggested. They come in clear white, are soft and agreeable to the gkln and altogether appear to be of exceptional value in this service.
Women and Newspaper Work. Mrs. Margaret Hamilton Welch of New York in a reccnt interesting paper on "Is Newspaper Work a Healthful Occupation For Women f" began by saying that women's work in journalism is not an experi-, ment, having been recognized now for more than 15 years, and she argued that it was no moreunhealthful than any other offlcowork that requires regular hours, and it has not the routine drudgery attached to teaching. It has also the merit of being the only field in which women secure tho salary on theirmerits in competition with men.
The drawback to women's newspapor work sho declared to bo their neglect of the laws of hygiene and the demands of the ordinary appetite. Why is it that the average man at 60 years is upright in form, quick in step, fresh tinted, bright eyed and perhaps gray haired, wh^ women at tho same ago aro apt to be stooping, languid, weak eyed and wrinkled as well as gray and brown. It is because women do not bear in mind so well tho fact that a sound mind must reside in a sound body. While men go out from their office labors to partake of select lunches and regular moals, women are too apt to send out for coffee and sandwiches, loo and caramels, and do not sustain the mind by needed nourishment for the muscular and vital systems.
The Mother-in-law.
On© man was making unkind remarks about his mother-in-law, and the other man was taking it all in. After awbil® he put in his oar. "You haven't any children, have you?" he inquired. "No," was tho reply. "What's that got to do with it?" "Mows than you'll ever know until you have some." "I fail to see It*." "Yes, and so did I at first, and I talked |ust aa you do. Then when the youngsters
1
TERRE HATJTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, SEPTEMBER 29,1894.
oame and began to grow up and to learn who grandma was and to look to her as their beet friend the one to shield them when they needed the parental ipanklng the one to give them pennlea when their parwnts thought they should not have them the one who oame and watched by them when they were sick the one who was always good to them the one, grandma of all the world to the innocent, mlaohievous, all pervading kids, blamed if I didn't forget utterly that she was my mother-in-law, and I got to calling her 'grandma' just as the little ones did, and tSinking about her just as they did, and finally, when the gray haired old angel went to her rest, I grieved with the children and as sincerely as any of them."—• Detroit Free Press. $1
Fading Colors. Jc,:
Some reoent researches of science into the question of the fading of oolors is not without interest to the housewife, opening up as it does a possibility to discriminate in her selection and arrangement of furnishings. An expert has been studying the matter and finds that "fading is brought about by the absorbed rays, each oolor being most powerfully affected by those rays for whioh it possesses the strongest absorption."
Care, then, must be taken In selecting window shades to have them of a oolor not readily absorbed by the hues of the carpets and curtains behind them. The dark green shades are now regarded as the best of protectors and are used in expensive homes for that purpose alone, doing servloe often as a fourth oovering for a window whioh already has sash, curtains and laoe and stuff hangings. Experiments prove, however, that some oolors have a strong absorbing affinity for green light— magneta is one—so to draw a green shade between the sun and a magenta carpet, curtain or chair oovering is to encourage and seoure its rapid fading. This attraction of oolors will have to be included in the curriculum of domestlo science and is one more way by which the oollege bred woman may brlpg her knowledge to bear upon so simple a performance as tho ohoioe of a window shade.
Built Her Own Loom. 1
The woman's department of the World's fair ought to have had in it a pieoe of work produced by a Swedish girl now living in Iowa. She oame to Iowa about 15 years ago direct from Sweden, where her father was a loommaker. She was without money, and as she knew more about weaving than about anything else sh^ tried to get weaving to do, but she had ho loom and could not find any one to make one for her. Undaunted by this obstaole, she borrowed an ax, saw and auger and set to work to make her own loom.
She made her own reeds, warping bars and harness. "She made every part of the loom herself, and when it was completed it worked perfectly. It is a neat, thoroughly made loom, on whioh its owner has woven thousands of yards of cloth and carpets, besides towels, tablespreads and several shawls. Its owner has built a neat little house from the proceeds of her work on the loom. She has spun and dyed her own wools and has given an excellent illustration of what a woman can do if she will.—New York Evangelist.
To Help Friendless Girls.
A company of Benedictine nuns have at Bristow, Prince William county, Va., an institution where they educate helpless and friendless girls for housework and other domestic servioe. The girls get a fairly good common eduoation and are then trained for whatever position tbey seem most competent to fill. It is. a fact, understood by most housekeepers of experience, that the maids trained in the convents and orphan asylums by the sisters are, as a rule, well trained. They are taught respectful obedience, and beyond the one requirement of attention to their religious duties they are not enoouraged in any unreasonable complaints against their mistresses. The girls visit the convent constantly, and the sisters usually continue to exercise an excellent influence over them so long as they remain in their peighborhood.
Nursery Curtains/
Nursery curtains are sometimes made a souroe of genuine delight to the young occupants of the room. A set of alphabet ourtains designed for such u§e has 26 letters 4 inches long and 26 animals 7 inches long, for which they stand, exeouted in oream oloth and swan's down on red flannel, the ourtains then lined with coarse oanvas net and edged with fringe. An* other set is the nursery rhyme curtains the figures cut out of cream canton flannel, appliqued on turkey red. These and many other grotesque, artistlo or instructive figured* can be bought In London ready to applique. It is a sugestion to our women's exchanges that they ask for some of these designs for tho holiday tjado.^
A PrettyBedrwMn.
The pretty bedroom in a oountry house belonging to the daughter of the family has a cream matting on the floor, with rugs of white pink and blue In a mixed effect. The white enamel bedstead has counterpane, bolster and oanopy of chintz, with a white ground, on whioh are little bunches of pink and blue flowers, and the dressing table, lounge and chairs are covered and draped with the same material.
New York Correspondent.
A Folding Basket
The suburban householder should have an aid to housekeeping in tho shape of a market basket which will fold up. It is made of wire, and cloth covered, and can be slipped into a packet on the way to town, unfolding its dimensions to hold dainties from the stalls on the way home.
There are several women who own and manage livery stables in western cities, and women farmers and woJnen cattle ranchers are numerous in all western states. There aye also many women engaged in fruit culture.
For a powder case make two rounds of loosely crocheted split zephyr and sew them together over a circular flat bag of powdered starch and orris root in a coarse scrim cover. Run a ribbon through the border and tie.
Lizette Woodworth Reese and Virginia Woodward Cloud of Baltimore aro two young southern women whose poetry and prose have won distinction and give promise of wider appreciation.
In fitting a room with odd chairs, according to aa authority, it is well to remember that while shape and oovering may vary Indefinitely the wood should remain the same.
A King's Daughter has built a $18,000 annex to Bellevua hospital to New York. The cimplfi legend, "In His Name," Is inscribed In the stone walk at the entrance.
Children should ba taught to drink as little as possible while eating.
SOME INSIDE FACTS.
SUCH MATTERS ALWAYS LEAK OUT.
This Time It Carried the Great News Far and Near—Many Families all Over the Lui are Deeply Interested In the Matter.
There are many things in the lives of persons and families which when they are known becom®|maUere of publio interest. People always want to know those things whioh personally concern them, whioh add to their welfare, their looks or their oomfort. Here h» a piece of news which coming from such high authority makes it of more than ordinary interest.
Mrs. CharleB |H..'tHeaton, residing at 148 State street,tIMontpelier, Vt., is a most lovely and^accompliehed lady. The family has the very highest social Standing. Her husbandlbas held many offloes of trust in thejolty and in politics* and among tbe|Masonio fraternity stands at the head.^Her .husband's father is president of the "Montpelier Savings Bank and Trust Co., the^largest bank in the olty. Her father is a prominent railroad man. She writes as follows: "Two years ago wejhad'a terrible ex perienoe with La] Grlppe and by overwork in taking care of my children and the results of thejjdisease I was left in a very exhausted condition, in faot was nearly prostrated. I was so weak that upon the leaBt exoitement I would feel nauseated. I was asjnearjnervous prostration as anyone could be. "Someonejreoommended Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and|nerve remedy to me and I immediately began its use. I am happy to say that it completely cured me. I think it is£the best medicine I ever knew of for anyjform of nervous or ohronio disease. I^have reoommended it to many and! shall£do|so ujxm every oocaslon."
This letter is of thejutmost importance to you for it tells you just what to do to be cured. If youtfare nervous, weak, tired, sleepless, if| youjhave headache, indigestion, kidneyjorlllver oomplalnt, poor blood and weakjnerves, you can surely regain yourjhealthjand be as well as you ever were by taking Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy.
Thestrengthening and ou rati ve powers of this remedy are Jwonderfu). Use it and you will be made welljand strong. It is the discovery of Dr. Greene, the most successful specialist in curing nerv oas and ohronio diseases. He can be consulted by all at his office, 35 West 14t street, New York City, frte, personally or by letter.
BlSSlSllS
Ifiprti
The Tale of the Witch of Endor. Of all Bible stories none is more popular with children than the tale of the Witch of Endor. On wet Sunday afternoons the most admired plate in the folio Bible is that which shows Saul falling forward on the earth, and the witch woman shrinking baok in astonishment and awe, and the white bearded, shadowy figure of the prophet rising up from the silence of sheol. The woman of Endor is beloved by controversial infancy, just launched unconsciously on. the stream of Biblical criticism and pleading against the verdict of parent or nurse for the exlstenoe of ghosts and witches. The early syllogism runs thus: .-S
The Biblo isiS'tfef" The Bible says there were a witch and a ghost. $*i$i
Therefore there are ghosts and witohes." We often meet with worse arguments in later life, as when science avers: "I don't take any interest in the question," with the suppressed inferenoe, "therefore there Is nothing In It but nonsense."
Our instructors Jn our infancy, however, met our loglo with pleas more subtle, though not wholly satisfying. Thus: "There were witches, or at least there was a witch, but that was before the coming of the gospel. So now run away and see if you can find a ripe strawberry."
Thus was the daring metaphysioal speculation of infancy diverted into praotioet researches. Or, again, the answer would be, "Saul was a bad man, and therefore the devil was allowed to deceive him in the shapo of Samuel." "But it docs not say anything about the devil, and the ghost's prophecy camo true." "Oh, no doubt that w^s permitted for wise reasons. So, now, run away," ut supra.—Andrew Lang in Contemporary Review.
To Monopolize the Shopping Business. A company has been organized in New York which will try to monopolize the shopping business. It has made on arrangement with the Broadway cable oars, and, it is said, will try to secure the same right on all the other lines, for the use of their front platforms as news and confectionery stands. On each car it will place a uniformed agent, who will sell the things on hand and will also take orders from the passengers for anything that they may want, from "collar buttons to a dress." The passenger has simply to tell the boy •what he wants, and when he boards the car again the commission will be executed. The company proposes to make arrangements with a number of large establishments in the city to fill all orders that it brings in at the lowest possible rates.—New York Times.
The Crater Collapsed.L
The great lake in Kilauea overflowed its banks on July 8, and on the 12th the lava fell 270 feet in 12 hours, causing the banks to fall in on all sides and engulfing about eight acres of the floor of the crater. The falling of the banks was goiug on all day and far into the night and produced a sight indescribably grand. —Honolulu Letter.
•"There Is Danyer in tel*y." Sine® 18611 have been a great sufferer from catarrh. I tried Kly^s Cream Balm and to all appearances am cured. Terrible headaches from which I had long suffered are gone.—W. J. Hitchcock, Late Major U. 8. Vol. and A. A. Gen., Buffalo, N. Y.
Ely's Cream Balm has completely cured me of catarrh when everything else has failed. Many acquaintances have used it with excellent results,— Alfred W. Stevens, Caldwell, Ohio.
Price of Cream Balm Is fifty-cents.
It Marks the Boundary Between Mexico and the United State*. Under the direction of the boundary survey commission the old marble monument whioh since 184d has marked the dividing line between the United States and Mexico at the ooast has been brought to the city to be dressed up. For years that monument has been a point of interest and has been visited by thousands of oitizens and strangers. Each has apparently felt that no one would believe he or she had been there if some portion of the slab were not carried away to be offered in eyidenoe on' all occasions.
The result has been that the marble has been ohipped and defaced until its original form is almost lost It is because of all this that the slab was brought to the city. To work out the effaoements the surface would have to be worked down two inches. When redressed, the stone will again be placed in position, but this time it will be protected by a fence of steel pickets. The inolosure will be 12 feet square. The piokets will be 8 feet high, the tops sharply pointed and leaning inward, after the device of some rattraps, so that while it might be possible for an active person to climb in it would require a first class acrobat to climb out over those curving pickets. Besides this a new law makes it a penal offense to mutilate the monuments.
At Tia Juana a similar slab will be erected on the old brick foundation in National avenue, which has long been a landmark there. The Tia Juana monument will be of granite instead of marble, and it will be inclosed with steel piokets, like the one at the coast line.—San Diego Sun.
COST HIM A HAND.
A Philadelphia Man's Invention Blew Up, and He Is Maimed For Life. For a long time Pierson M. Stackhouse, a conveyancer, has been experimenting with afire extinguishing chemical. It is probable that he will give up his idea of revolutionizing such compounds, if not altogether, for a time at least, because disaster overtook him with one terrifio swoop yesterday afternoon.
Stackhouse believed that he solved the problem he had so long studied over, and yesterday afternoon he started out from his house, 2446 North Tenth street, to make a test. He strapped the cylinder to liis back and carried the section of rubber hose in his left hand. His family stood at the door, and a friend, who bad aided him in his experiments, walked close beside him. The inventor intended to see how far the chemical would be thrown, and he fearlessly reached up with his right hand.to turn on the stopcock at the top of the cylinder in order to set the chemical to work.
At that instant there came a terrifio explosion, which scared the wits nearly out of residents of the whole neighborhood. Windows rattled ominously, and orockeryware was demolished in some of the closets of nearby houses. Women and children, with blanched faces, rushed from their homes in terror, thinking that an earthquake or worse had coma
Stackhouse was thrown violently to the sidewalk. The top of the cylinder. had blown off, and his right hand hung' by a few shreds from his wrist. He lay unconscious on the sidewalk as his wifo ran shrieking out to him, and a crowd quickly collected to see what the explosion meant. The inventor was taken to the Episoopal hospital, where it was necessary to amputate the shattered hand at the wrist.—Philadelphia Reo-
I
Piety and Polities.
No brie who has visited the south can eeoape the impression that a deep revolution in opinion is at work there. For several years it has been their habit to hold modest, unheralded meetings, mainly in the rural districts, sometimes weekly, sometimes monthly. They are usually opened with prayer, and it is not unusual after harvest time for the planters to maintain oamp meetings a week together. Speaking begins between 9 and 10 in the morning, and the slow declining sun is still a spectator to thf«e intense congregations. There is even a fine illumining vein of religious fervor in it all. The opening prayer, the political song set to church music, the two hour harangue at a stretch, the patriotic cheers, like strains from anew anthem—these are not the committee bought demonstrations of common campaigns. It i« arising of the people, and in due time the newspapers will make a discovery, for they will hear these people sing, and after that the ballot.— Donahoe's Magazine.
If you desire a luxurious growth of healthy hair of a natural oolor, nature's crowning ornament of both sexes, use only Hall's Vegetable Sicilian Hair Renewer,
Death Stretched Him.
When John Edward Kelly's illness made him take to his bed at his home in Lambertville, N. J., for the last time six weeks ago, the lad was 6 feet in height and very fleshy. When ho died on Friday last, he had fallen away to a skeleton, but the undertaker found that his stature was 6 feet 2 inches
Tired, Weak, Nervous,
Means impure blood, and overwork or too much strain on brain and body. The only way to cure is to feed the nerves on pn re blood- Thousands of people certify that the best blood purifier, the best tierve tonic and strength builder is Hood's Sarsaparlllft. What it has done fv others It will also do for yon Hood's *"hire*.
Hood's Sarsaparllla cures constipation £\t tKfi
Hood's Sarsaparllla cures constipation
Distressing Kidney and relieved In six hours by the "New Great South American Kidney Cure." This new remedy Is a great surprise on account of its
rpmfldv is a great surprise on aooonntof lu
relieves it almost Quick relief this is your remedy. Sold by W. D. Waggoner and all druggists, Terre Haute, Indian
PlNKHAM'S
Vegetable Compound
Is a positive core for all those painful
Ailments of Women.
It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovariaa troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling and Displacements, of the Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change qf Life. Every time it will curt*
Backache.
It has cured more cases of Leucorrhoea than any remedy the world hasever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development, and checks anytendenoy to cancerous humora. Thac
Bearing-down Feeling
causing pain, weight, and backache, isinstantly relieved and permanently cured by its use. Under all circumstances it acts in harmony with the laws that govern the female .system, and. is as harmless as water. It removes
Irregularityg?
Suppressed or Painful Menstruation^ Weakness of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debility. Also
Dizziness. Faintness,
Extreme Lassitude, "don't care" and "want to be left alone" feeling, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness. flatulency, melancholy, or tho "blues, and baokache. These are sure indications of Female Weakness, some derangement of the Uterus, or
Womb Troubles.
The whole story, however, is told la an illustrated book entitled Guide toHealth," by Mrs. Pinkham. It contains over 90 pages of most importantinformation, which every woman, married or single, should know about herself. Send 2 two-cent stamps for it. For
Kidney Complaints
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Ion
Ail drttgeists sell poull!Tt2b? mail, in form of pills or Lozenges,
Sick Headache, 25c.
Ton
nart
receipt of $1.00. Correspondence freely answered*
address in strictest confidence,
LIDIA E. PINfcHAtt BED. CO,, Lynn, JUlfe
A LADrS TOILET
Is not complete without an ideal
POZZONIS
Combines every element of beauty and purity. It is beautifying, soothing, healing, healthful, and harmless, and when rightly used is invisible. A most delicate and desirable protection I to the face in this climate.
Xnsiit upon having the genuine.
IT 18 FOR SALE EVERYWHERE.
Take Your Annual
And every other Bath at the
Magnetic Artesian At the Foot of Walnut St.
We have the bent Water Butbs in the world. Russian Kiinmpoo, Vapor, xliower, Hot and old itathft. Laive bath tubs. Every room in entirely (teparaied, healed ana ventilated to until he bathers.
CACG'S ART STORE.
Artists' Supplies. Flower Material. Picture Framing a Specialty.
648 Wabash Ave, North Side. TERRE HAUTE, IND.
John N. & Geo. Broadhursf,
DEALERS IN'
BITUMINOUS COAL
MACKHVII.I.K. 1NJ.
order# may be left »t Olty Heal's. oh North Third Kt-reet.
Power & Dailey,
509 Ohio Street.
Olvetbein acallifyou have any kiud of Insurance to place. They will write you in a* go*v1 companies aware represented in th*» Ht.y.
a
bv restoring peristaltic action of the W ^A.W alimentary canal. Attdl'llHV-at-LaW, Belief in 81* Boon.
yjg
2QJ$ Wabash Ave., in McLean's Hnildlnjr.
TKRRK
SKSrttSS r)R I- H.
HA1TTK. IND.
BARTHOLOMEW,
DENTIST
emoved to 871 Main st. Terre Haute, lnd.
