Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 16, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 October 1894 — Page 7
WOMAN AND HOME.
USE OF THE FOILS BY FAIR LADIES itf THE OLDEN DAYS AND THE NEW.
The Good Old Core—The Baby's Diet. Victoria and Her Horses—Turkish Women—American Womanhood—The Trained
Kane—Women and Tobaceo,
"Tho best fencing which I have seen in many days? was by a yonng Fifth avenue Avoiuan, whoso father is a prominent bank cr. When I first spoke to her parents about frying her lessons, they objected seriously. It was unladylike and 'dangerous.' 'The young woman and myself overcame their prejudices, howover, and I was soon teach ing the banker's daughter the use of the foils. When she first came to me she was not particularly graceful, although she had ridden horseback a good deal, had danced and rowed. But today she is marvel. She has the strength of a man in hor arms. Her shoulders and chest are larger she breathes and walks better, and she is as graceful as a Josephine."
The speaker was a French fencing mas ter who had taught the graceful art to many women of the fashionahle Parisian faubourgs and crossed swords with some of the best fighters of his time. "You would be surprised," he said, "to know how many New York society wpm en take lessons in fencing. I could name them by the score. Every one of them who indulges in the exercise and practices it methodically is a stronger woman for it. I know nothing better for siok nerves. It teaches them to be brave too. I have pu pils who could defend themselves well against the prize man of a German uni versity corps or the fighting member of tho editorial staff of a Paris newspaper. Fencing for women has come to stay.
Tho conversation naturally led up to dueling and encounters between women, which have not been so rare as one might think in this world, where the members of the gentler sex havo long been protected from tho necessity of fighting their own battles. "You, of course," continued the maiter d'armes, have seen the famous picture of E. Bayard, or a copy, representing a duel bctwew two women. But did you know that the idea for this picture was suggest ed by a duel between an American woman and a Frenchwoman? Such was the case. "It was in 1886. Miss Shelley, on American girl, met Mme. Astie de Valsayre, tho advocate of woman's rights in France. Tho young American, patriotic as most of them are, declared that the women doctors of France were far less skilled than the American women who had taken up the study of medrtsine. One word brought on another until the American at last called tho Frenchwoman an 'idiot.' This was too much for the Gallic blood of Mmc. de Valsayre, who, it may bo remembered, wore men's clothes in tho streets of Paris, despite tho protests of the police. A challenge followed. ''As tho American knew nothing of the use of foils, her antagonist gave her two weeks for practice. The contest took place near Waterloo. Despite the ominous name—ominous for the Frenchwoman— the American girl was defeated and carfled her hand in a sling for some time. Tho incident created a great sensation at the time, and the painting by Bayard was the result. The picture has probably done more than the preaching of masters to eneourago tho practice of fencing among women. "But duels among women have not been rare in the past. Under Louis XIII two women of the highest aristocracy, the Marquise de Merles and the Countess do Pulignac, had a duel with pistols in the Bois de Boulogne. The cause was the gallant Duke de Richelieu. "The notorious Mme. d'Aubigny, better known as Mile, de Maupin, was challenged by three cavaliers, who took her to be a man. She put nil three horsde combat. ''A diplomatiij duel was that in which the Oountess Lodiska "frautmannsdortf, a born Pole, was engaged. It was a tragic affair indeed. A rival of her husband published an article which attempted to make the latter ridiculous. The count—it was soon after his marriage in 1834—discovered soon afterward that a certain Baron Rapp was the author of the artiole and called him out on the field of honor. A friend of the baron, with the count's permission, represented the former in the contest and killed Count Trautmannsdorff. Tho count's second then called Baron Rapp himself to account, and in such a manner that the exasperated baron drew his sword and stabbed the second. What was his mortification and chagrin, however, when he discovered that the brave second was tho Countess Trautmannsdorff. wife of the dead prinoipal! Tho countess died from tho effects of the wound, and the baron ended his own life from shame. "--New York Tribune.
The Good Old Care.
When you are very tired and utterly despondent, when you want to cry your heart out and the tears will not come, do not go homo and Ho flat on your back or take exercise or tea or indulge in cheerful conversation with tho hope of getting rested and happy. Sometimes those remedies work, but quite often they don't Try instead the never failing cure that was yours in the good old days when tired of play and half afraid of the coming dark you crept into your mother's arms and heard her sing a lullaby.
Rave the lights turned low or put out. Lio down on the divan, with your head among the pillows, and listen. Do not let your musician play you stirring strains. Make her avoid classical selections. Make hor play all the simple, old ballads that you like. Make her play old fashioned hymns. By and by tears will be trickling down your cheeks, which you will mop silently with your handkerchief. A big lump will come into your throat as the musio moans, "Could you come back to me, Douglass!" The fact that you never had a Douglass or any one else to call back will not lessen your grief. You will feel your heart breaking over ''AnnieLaurie you will sob over "Tho Queen's Maries." There will bo a perfect rain of tears when the music drifts into tho sweet Sunday strains. You will be dimly conscious that crying spoils your complexion, but you may solace yourself even then by the thought that tears will not prove so destructive of beauty as tho drawn, strained look of one who cannot ciy.
When it is all over and you have cried silently until you can cry no more, you will be surprised to find how cheerful you are growing. You will soon want something to eat—tears are great appetizers— and then you will go to lied and sleep a cheerful, healthy sleep. In the morning the tiredness will be gone.—New York World.
The Baby's Diet
The Indiscriminate diet allowed children by their mothers Is a most prolific cause of «tomacb and bowel complaint
im
Fat instance, in the most of families children not over 9 years of age, or as soon as they are able, aro allowed to sit at the table and indulgo in all the kinds of food that may be thereon—hot rolls, hot buttered cakes, sausage, fish, ham, cucumbers, new potatoes and all other vegetables, pastry of all kinds, preserve*, cheese, sweetmeats and fruit—not one of which is fit for a very young child to eat unless especially prepared for it. It is a marvel if the digestive organs
#do
not break down
under a diet that will make a grunting, gout ridden creature of a grown man if persisted in.
Mothers would save themselves muoh care and suffering, perhaps heartache, if they would have a little tnore care about what they let their little ones eat. There is a fearful mortality of children between the years of 8 and 6 and mostly in bowel complaints. A professional man of over 40 years' standing said to me the other day that there is muoh more sickness among t,he very young now than there was a third of a century ago, and he is of the opinion that the mothers are to blame, prynarily because they are so careless of what their little ones eat. Irregular eating interferes with healthy digestion in a child even more than it does with a grown person, yet mothers let their children "piece" at all hours of the day and oat quantities of candy and fruit between times, and then say that it is tho will or ordering of Providence when death steps in. Providence has enough to bear without shoving off on it the burdens of our own witting carelessness.—Detroit Free Press.
Victoria and Her Horses.
AH the queen's horses at Windsor castle are white or gray. All that draw the royal carriages from Buckingham palace, London, are prancing bays. She keeps about GO horses at Windsor alone, having besides tho grays a large number of saddle horses and some bays for the carriages of the ladies in waiting and for other retainers not members of the royal family. The horses are sloek and fat, not very high, but stooky, and weigh 1,000 to 1,100 pounds apiece. They are fed chiefly on cracked corn and hay and are too fat for good driving, but the queen prefers gentle horses and does not care for speed.
Every day when she is at Windsor she rides in the magnificent park adjoining the castle. No matter what the weather is, she takes her drive. All the horses not otherwise used are driven daily for exercise. They do not have box stalls, but the stalls are twico tho usual width, and the horses aro tied with long chains so that they havo much freedom. The divisions between the stalls are quite low, and the ventilation is perfect. The horses are bedded with clean straw day and night. The hay is not let down from an upper floor, but is placed in the mangers by hand. Everything about the stable is scrupulously clean, and the place is as free from odor as a lady's boudoir. The royal carriages are very roomy and heavy. They would not bo worn out in a lifetime even if put to constant use. The harness room is an exhibition of itself. One could hardly believe that tho harnesses were not new, they were so clean and glistening. The trimmings are of brass. Neither the queen's horses nor carriages are ever sold. When the horses are past their prime, they are shot, and the old carriages are kept until they fall to pieces.—Philadelphia Ledger.
Turkish Women.
The lives of Turkish women are dull and monotonous in the extreme but, Friday being the day they go to mosque or to visit their cemeteries, they often take that opportunity to look at the soldiers passing by. On the Bechiktache road you see numbers of them squatted on the curbstone, where they remain for hours, chatting and looking about them. They make pretty picture en masse, with their bright dresses of every hue—harmony of color is unknown in Turkey—and they carry parasols, which are also always of tho gayest colors.
They must be much attached to their parasols, for you never see them—even as late as 8 or 9 o'clock at night—but they have their parasols open, getting shade from something. It cannot be the sun. No flatterer could call Turkish women either pretty or elegant, for they are simply mass of clothing, without any shape. They have very large feet, clad in white cotton stockings, and they walk badly, so that their charms—no doubt they have many—only become known on acquaintance. Tho "yashmak" is a very becoming addition to their attire. It makes the plainest woman look nice.
You sometimes get rather a shock when is taken off, so many women bear the traces of smallpox. Their bills for cosmetics must often be a little startling. Hands, feet, hair, eyes and complexion are generally 'improved," according to their ideas. To see tho soles of their feet, tho nails and palms of their hands, dyed brown with henna is tho reverse of pretty, and the "beauty" of orange colored hair I fail to perceive. They always tell Franks that only In Turkey do you see beautiful women.—Chambers'Journal.
American Womanhood.
The name of American girl was once a popular synonym for "nerves," ill health and all the ailments engendered by want of exercise, foolish diet and irregular habits of life. When contrasted with the English girl, whose outdoor life made her tho picture of abounding health and rosy cheeked energy, she suffered in the comparison. A generation has sufficed to effect a complete change, and our English cousins no longer hold a monopoly of outdoor sports. Where 80 years ago tho girl who went boating and fishing, climbing trees and jumping fences with her brothera was looked upon as a tomboy and regarded with severe disapproval, the reverso is now the case.
Outdoor life, delight in action, the spirit of sport, have taken hold of American womanhood. Girls of strong, active physique, erect carriage and energetic spirit, delighting in tennis, riding, boating, walking, aro now the rule. The feeble indoor do nothing is the exception, and the result is a tall, vigorous race, with free step and cheeks aglow with the ruddy color of physical health and energy. Walk along the avenues of any large city at the fashionable hours, and the procession of bright, animated girlhood which passes before one's eyes gives ample proof of summer activity. All over the country, where there are men and money to start a club and create a sporting interest, the women also have their share of advantages and in not a few cases their fair share also of the work in setting the organization on foot. There are few country clubs, hunt cluhs, tennis clubs or other sporting clubs throughout the Union, which have not a lady membership.—Fortnightly Review^
The Trained Norse*
The trained nurse who finds hcTself in a sickroom, v.'here the patient cannot be disturbed by the sweeping, keeps the carpeted floor wholesome and free from dust
6 TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, OCTOBER 13,1894.
Army Circles.
Capt. Geo. H. Davenport of Bernards ton Mass., is a most popular and widely known man, especially in Grand Army circles. He is Pension Agent and everybody knows him. He is best known to the whole country through his discovery of "Davenport's Silver Pomade," probably the best article of its kind in the or S
by wiping it over with a cloth wrung from warm water in which a few drops of ammonia have been put. Upholstered furniture, if such is in tho room, is also treated in this way and all dust taken off without bein# redistributed through tho atmosphere.
Wheu a professional nurse arrives to take charge of a case of scarlet fever that is to be treated at home, she begs for a room with a bare floor. If this is not to bo had, she accepts tho carpet, but banishes rugs, every hanging thing, even the drapery of a dressing table, and all clothing in wardrobe or adjoining closets. A velvet picture frame is not tolerated, nor lsja plush cushion. All upholstered furniture is banished. One or two wicker or oane chairs, whose stiffness may be eased by the watcher by linen oovered cushions, are permitted, and thus stripped for tho fight with infection the room is taken possession of. The method of treatment in this disease now almost universally resorted to—that of keeping the skin of the patient oiled and constantly wiped off with soft cloths that aro promptly burned—reduoes materially the chanoes of infection' as well as adds enormously to the comfort of the patient. The amelioration in an actual attack of scarlet fever and the minimum of risk to those exposed to it are two pronounced advances in tho history of the alleviation of tho disease.—New York Times.
Women and Tobacco, ks&
Our grandmothers were allowed to take a pinch of snuff, and those who are today at middle age well remember how the elder ladies in their youth were allowed this, indulgence. It was perfectly respectable for a woman to take snuff. The habit has fallen into disuse partly because it was not nice and society has put its ban on it, and partly because other habits have taken its place, but the revival of the use of tobacco by women in tho form of smoking threatens to bring back in our own generation many of the disagreeable features which attended the taking of snuff by the dames in the first half of this century.
Mrs. Fredcic Harrison In a delightful sketch points out what the feeling may be about it in English social circles, and her decision, if she reaches any, is that it is a habit that had better not be encouraged. The reasons against it are that it is not a wholesome habit, that It stimulates the nervous system of women to a point be-
j£.
STARTLING G. A. R. STORY.
Capt. Geo. H. Davenport, the Popular and Well-known G. A. JK. Veteran, Relates an Experience. A Leader and Power in Grand
CAPT. GEO. H. DAVENPORT.
4
Capt. Davenport is a most entertaining speaker, and his relation of the following incident will be interesting to everybody. "I had beeu troubled severely for years with heart disease, and the effects of malarial poison contracted in tbearmy. I was so nervous and weak that I was unable to do any hard work for years. "I consulted many doctors but have found no good results from them. I finally used Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, and can say that it has done great things for me. "I have been helped in the heart trouble more than any and all other things I ever used. Ffind that for weakness and nervous excitement it is a great help. "For instance, on Memorial day I addressed the G. A. R., at Northfield, and on the following day at Whateley, I gave an address before their G. A. R., without
any apparent fatigue, which I could not have done belore I used Dr. Greene' Nervura, -t "I have often recommended this won derful cure for disease to my friends and shall be happy to answer auy fur ther inquiries from anyone."
The experience of the gallant captain is the experience of everybody. All who use this great curer of disease, this restorer of health and strength, Dr Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, report that it invariably makes them well.
The weak, nervous ancl ailing should try it on the strength of what everybody who has used it says of its wonderful curative powers. It will cure you.
Why waste time in trying uncertain and untried remedies, when here is a physician's prescription, a discovery made by the greatest living specialist in curing nervous and chronic diseases, Dr. Greene, of 35 Wost 14th St., New York City. If you take thiB medicine you can consider yourself under Dr. Greene's direct professional care, and you can consult him or write to him about your case, freely and without charge. This is a guarantee that this remedy will cure, possessed by no other medicine in the world.,
A
yond what thoy can bear, and thatlt makes them still more the slaves of habit than they were before.
By parity of reasoning, if men smoke cigarettes, women should not bo ostraciz ed if they do tho same, but we cannot help thinking that if women took to cigarettes as men take to cigars there would be a feeling of repulsion with many toward tho other sex which does not now exist. As ono of Mrs. Harrison's characters suggests, women have all they can bear of tho ills of civilization now, and they are not ready for fresh burdens.—Buffalo Herald.
Ft,14 if"" 'f
r'
Confusion as to the choice ofVblood-• purifier is unnecessary. There is but one best Sarsaparilla, and that Is Ayer's. This important fact was recognized at the World's Fair, Chicago, 1893, being the only blood-purifier admitted to be placed on exhibition.
Harmony In Furnishings.
The shops are full of tempting things, hangings, furniture, bric-a-brac, but don't let them tempt you in incongruous profu sion. "I know," once said an artiBt, "when a room has been furnished by growths. There is a harmony and repose in it never seen in an apartment that is done on the instant."
Study the empty corner or the ugly one till you havo got its need perfectly, and then hunt for that in tho shops. Don't buy the thing that catches an impulsive fancy and think it can bo suited to the corner
To remove the constipated liablt, the only safe treatment i« a course of Ayer's Pilln, followed by a laxative diet. Most other cathartics do more barm than good, therefore leading physicians recommend Ayer's Pills, especially as a family Physic
r'
The New Century Guild of Working Women of Philadelphia has a committee on legal protection for working women which furnishes advice, court charges and counsel free to women who work for their living and aro too poor or uninformed of legal methods to recover wages due or money unjustly withheld,
I'M
r"
Body's Pile Suppository
is guaranteed to care Piles and Constipation, or money refunded Send two stamps for circular and free sample to Martin Rudy, registered pharmacist, Lancaster, Pa. No postals answered. For sale by all first-class druggists everywhere. 50 cents per box. E. H. Bindley & Co., wholesale agents, Terre Haute, Ind.
Agricultural and Timber Lands,^ There are thousands of acres of good farming and Hardwood Timber lands in Northern Wisconsin, located on the WISCONSIN CENTRAL LIKES to be bad at very low prices, and upon easy terms.
For descriptive pamphlets, and full information, address Fred'k Abbot, land commissioner WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINBS, Milwaukee, Wis.
Women Working For Support, It is usually forgotten that a woman who earns ISO a month in the industrial world has not her time as well as her money. People gay, "She can board for BO much and dross well on the remainder of the salary," hut this is not the whole of it. There are many little expenses a woman must incur independently of board and clothes. In the first place, she must keep herself up to the standard of health And vigor to be able to perform satisfactorily tho duties for which she is paid. This implies a certain aiftount of recreation, which, with necessary rest, absorbs all tho time she has loft from her regular occupation, so that she must in turn pay for the many little personal services which the home staying woman can often do for herself. Apart from want of time, there is a nerve exhaustion incident to continuous bard work, which lessens the capacity for mental processes, applied to outside issues, which we .call management,
Men who earn a living usually aro not expected to do anything else, but women cannot so easily escape the claims of domesticity. It is always thought that they might do a little more, and unless they take a stand against this expectation they are apt to perish in the attempt to go beyond their strength,—New York Commercial.
'•.JW- '.-The Daughter In the Home. When a dinner or luncheon is given by her parents, sho should be tho one to slip away unobserved to add tho last touches to the table and see if everything is as it should be, to note the temperature of the dining room, to put the name cards at the places assigned and to be accessible in case of emergency, writes Mrs. Burton Kingslandin a thoughtful article on "The Daughter In the Home" in Ladies' Home Journal.
Itis especially the province of tho daughter of the house to take an interest in the adornment of rooms and table. Her mind, relieved of weightier responsibilities, is at leisure to conjuro up dainty and artisric effects which aro always appreciated. The arrangement of tho flowers for tho table naturally devolves upon her unless one have recourse to a florist's services.
Best of all, she can help her mother socially by being"good audglad." A young girl, with her eager, joyous outlook on to life, fuli of the spirit of innocent and friendly hospitality, lavish in the bestowal of smiles and cordial greetings, and with her radiant expression of delighted inter est in everything and everybody, is enough to put a whole roomful in good humor.
The Oldest Postmistress In France. Tho oldest postmistress in the service of tho French government is, our Paris correspondent says, stationed at Nanterre and has been for 33 years at the head of the district office there. She kept at her post during the invasion of the Prussians and tho combats between Versaillists and communists in her immediate neighbor hood. Indeed it may be said that 6lie received the baptism of fire, her postofflce having been many times between the fire of the troops of order and of the federals. As most of the officials of her standing took French leave of their posts, she could not havo been blamed if she had fled too. Sho retires on Sept. 1 on a pension of £40 a year, but it would seem that sho has managed to save a good deal of money out of her salary and the vegetable products of a gardon which, with her dwelling, she bad rent free. Another postmistress who showed fine courage during the invasion was Mile. Dodu, now at the head of the Vincennes postolTico and a chevaliere of the Legion of Honor.—London News.
Flora Gaines Longhead.
The first woman journalist in Colorado was Flora Gaines Longhead. She was only 18 when she reported the upper house of the territorial legislature for the Denver World, during which time she waster ribly afraid that her age would be discovered and her position forfeited because of her youth. The grave and reverend suignors of the legislature became much interested in the pretty young girl who was so quick to catch their every word and idea, and they one day speculated upon her age. The lowest guess put her at SO years and the highest at 24, which, upon being reported to Miss Gaines (as she then was), filled her heart with joy. She now felt sure that her years at loast would not count against her. Since that time sho has made rapid strides in her profession and is now one of the best known women journalists upon the Pacific slope, whither she removed shortly after her marriage.— Chicago Herald.
Hall's Hair Renewer i« pronounced the best preparation made for thickening the growth of the batr and restoring that which is gray to its original color.
If tho.woman who arrives at tho top of a flight of stairs heated and breathless will only take tho precaution to walk up tho stairs with head and spine erect, sho will find herself at her journey's end in afar more pleasant condition of mind and body.
What a blessing to those who do light housekeeping, and especially to those business women who are occupied during the day, if our butchers would sell portions of uncooked fowls and small pieces of game, as the markctmen do in Paris!,
Sllkolene is highly recommended by furniture dealers for dusters. It is particularly useful in its softness on high polished woods where nothing harsher should ever bo employed.
A woman woll known in English society for her lovely neck and arms polishes them, so it is said, for half an hour each night with chamois leather.
A Good Appetite
Always accompanies good health, and an absence of appetite is an indication of something wrong. The universal testimony given by those who have'used Hood's SBrsaparilla, as to its merits in restoring tbe appetite, and as a purifier of the blood, constitutes the strongest recommendation that can be urged for any medicine.
Hood's Pills cure all liver ills, biliousness, jaundice, indigestion, sick headaeh. 25c. ____________
Belief In Six Honrs.
Distressing Kidney and Bladder Diseases relieved in six hours by tbe "New Great South American Kidney Cure." This new remedy is a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain In the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary passages in male or female. It relieves retention of water and pain In passing it almost immediately. If you want quick relief this is your remedy. Bold by W. D. Waggoner and all druggists, Terre Haute, Indiana. ______________ Don't Tobacco Spit or Smoke Yonr Life Away is the truthful, startling title of a little book that tells all about No-to-bac,t.he wonderful, harmless
Guaranteed
ijsy
HER COMMON REPLY:
"I DON'T fEEl VERY WELL."
Yon Hear These Words Every Day Spoken By Women You Know.
[ereCIAI. TO OCB t.AI(T BKADEB8.] it's in their mind all the time. It weighs upon them, it crushes them.
41
My sisters,
it
tobacco habiteure. The
cost is trifling and the man who warfts to quit and can't runs no physical or financial risk In using "No-to-bac." Sold by A. F. Miller.
Book at Store or by'mall free. Address
The Sterling Remedy,Co., Indiana Mineral Springs,
They are utterly miserable. I)on"t know the son
vou rea-
Dou't you
know that thfr catise of nearly all your troublewas discovered by a \v an twenty yearsago? Don't you know that from that day to this, thousands have been cuml of the same lifekilling tortures that now afflict you
The words "Women's Complaints represent misery untold, ancl have shortened thousands of beautiful lives.
Lytlia E. Piiikham's
Vegetable Com
pound conies to you with physical salvation nothing like it ever came into the lives of women. It relieves at once, and cures all the miseries that result from displacement and derangement of the womb.
Hear what this woman who-once suffered and is now well says. Can proof be greater
44
All I have to say is, any woman who continues to suffer with any of those lying diseases peculiar to our sex is largely responsible for her own suffering, for if she will only apply to Mrs. Pinkhain, relief will follow at once. This I know absolutely from my own personal experience. Her Vegetable Compound is a miracle. I have seen it cure womb troubles when all the wisest doctors failed.
don't hesitate. Write at once relief is waiting for you." Mits. JENNIE STHEKT, San Francisco, Cal.
Get Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound from your druggist, it. will save you.
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GRATEFUL—COMFORTING.
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Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in half pound tins, by Grocers, labelled thus: JAM.S *PPS & CO., Ltd., Homeopathic Chemists, London, England.
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Wh I taker & Duvall, Attorneys for Plaint IfT J^OTICE TO NON-RESIDENT.
Tbe State of Indiana, Vigo County, in the Vigo Circuit Court. No. 17,559. Ltzxle Johnson vs.
John J. John
son. In divorce. Be It Known that on the 10th day of Sept., 1894, said plaintiff filed an affidavit In due form, showing that said defendant is a non-resident of tbe state of Indiana.
Said non-resident defendant is hereby no-1 fled of the pendency of said action against him, and that the same will stand for trial Nov. 7th, 1894, the same being at the September term of said court in the year 1894. [SEAL] HUGH D. ROQUET, Clerk.
BI-CHLORIDE OF GOLD CURE
For Liauoa. OpiUKand TOBACCO Habits at 106 south Tenth and-a-balf streets. A. H. Brown, solicitor, and Dr. J. T. JLAUUHEAD,
V,
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Medical Director
