Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 28, Number 3, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 July 1897 — Page 6

ART IX CORNSTALKS.

PICTURES IN HAY, OATS, BROOM CORN.

01.1

RYE AND

Italatry In Tobacco and Decorations In Cotton—Trimming* In Strawberry Tine*. "Oat of the Strong Comes Forth SweetntM"—The Nashville Exposition.

[Special Correspondence.]

NASHVILLE, Jnly 12.—If tbe captions incline to den that agriculture can be a decorative art, let tbem come to Tennessee's centennial fair, see it and be conquered. Tbe seeing M?ill embrace tbe most various things, more variously used—transformed, one had better say —for example, cornstalks. Time out of mind they have been held the nnsightliest litter, bat here is a summer pagoda with walls of cornstalk lattice trim enough, dainty enough to serve as a b^jver for Titania, queen of all the fairies. It has a thatch of corn tassels and finial of ear corn cut across into inch rounds, which are wired into shape. The same cross sections of ear corn, with an ornamental nail head through the center, stud the pillars between the lattice, which are paneled delicately with the stalks. There is a carpet of plaited shucks—Tennessee knows them not as busks—thick and yielding as velvet. There is a cornstalk table also, and cornstalk sofas upholstered with shucks. Everything in the place indeed was once some part of the maize plant. A dozen people can stand in the pagoda. Half that number can sit at ease. Tbe framework, of course, is of wood.

The pagoda stands in a bay under one tower of the Agricultural building. The walls, dome and ceiling repeat their own story of earth fruits made beautiful to the eye. Flowers of the corn rosettes grow upon vines with leaves of shack which clamber and twine intricately to the highest heights. The dome is fringed with millet clusters alternating with southern moss. Red ears and yellow and white, split lengthwise, form panels that are symphonies of gorgeous color.

They are less wonderful, however, than the corn pictures in the great central dome. Ono is an eagle half spread.

THE AGRICULTURAL BUILDING.

with a s^rcll in its beak. It. is 50 feet at l.-ast. nlmvt* your head, so gets the finish of distance if not its enchantment. Seen thus it takes the closest scrutiny to detect that nil its color gradations, the emphasized pinion feathers, the long hackles and ferocious claws are shaped from corn in the ear. The head and scroll are in white corn, the hackle in Btrawberry red, which in the wings runs

to the scarlet and dull brownish crimson of the genuine "red ear." In another place, high up above the crowds, other red ears come tumbling out from a big basket, also formed of corn.

There is a harvest scene, too, done in hay, oats and rye, but it is clumsy and far from deserving the space it fills. None of these, however, is half so well worth mention as are the curtains of cotton latticework aud fringes of gray nioss which drop from so many of the interior roof divisions. The effect of them, gently swaying in gentler airs, is indescribably light aud grateful. A little lower there is yet more elaborate fringing of oats ami millet heads. Their gold and greenish gold mc!t admirably into the yellow brown of the clear pine background. Here or there you see arches, sdmped apparently of grain in the ear and richly ornamented with its clustered heads. Kveti the humble broom sedge, pest of southern grass lands, is here turned to decorative account. One bay is thatched with it all the way up. The harsh stalks have been so far brought into subjugation as to lie in even, orderly rows all over the great round. The lying thus embodies a] charming suggestion for country home builders. The sedge grows wild everywhere throughout the south. It may be had for the cutting and, treated after this fashion, would form a mos artistic thatch for outhouses or summer booses, not to mention the hiding of ugly iuterior spaces. "Tobacco is an Indiau weed that from the devil did proceed." Peter

darky pelliug a tobacco worm from a

Cartwright was fond of quoting that business they do is easy to see. Nearly old distich back in the days when he I all the newspapers and magazines tbat was evangelising iu Teunessee. Possi- are not used in kindling fires come to bly he would quote it agaiu could his them at last, and iu such quantities that shade revisit the state, but here in the there area score oar more of great wholetobacco exhibit he would find none to

1

echo his view. Tobacco is king of a profitable business handling tbe "street handsome space and fills it in the hand- stock," as it is called. aomest kingly fashion. It is displayed There is little enough money for the in all forms, after every manner of use. individual pickers, however. Many of But that is not anything like as satisfy- tbem are Italians nnable to speak a ing to the consciousness as tbe way in word of English. Whole families are which it shows itself as full of beauty, engaged at work, fishing with books The tower of tbe bay devoted to it runs for scraps of paper and clothing. Many np to a great height, and all the space of them wear clothing and even shoes is lined and seamed and quartered with which have been literally "picked oat fringes of strips—that tobacco leaves

tobacco plant. A mighty lifelike picture that—even to Coffee's hat and Master Worm's defiantly raised head. The supporting columns are covered with plug tobacco or else tbe plain leaf applied flat They have lines of the tobacco rope down tbe corners and hiding tbe divisions of tbe surface.

Cotton? Well, cotton seems formed more for use than ornament, yet is here made to serve

purposes

of excellent

beauty. In one space a big heart is shaped of it with a golden legend below which makes the whole read "Heart of the South." Bales of it, too, conjoin with painted canvas to give a realistic wharf scene from Mobile. A little later tbe yellow blooms and fleece white bolls will be added charms of tbe grounds. There is a fair sized cotton patch growing finely right beside tbe building's main entrance.

Close in tbat neighborhood there is also a showing of strawberry vines ornamentally planted. They have been set pyramidwiee in tbe borders, and in spite of the elevation and cramped root space have flowered and fruited excellently. The big lush, green leaves, too, flutter about tbe standard which supports them and give it tbe seeming of some curiof* shrub. "See that! It ought to be forbidden bylaw," said one irate producer. "First thing you know the to^u folks will have taken pattern by those clumps and be raising in their back yards all the berries they want."

There is a farmyard whith is almost too realistic. After two or three visits one grows sympathetic with the turkey cock, which stands always in full strut. The guinea, poised on one faot, becomes likewise painful to view, and the weeny calf turns into a ghost of hunger unappeased. The wild birds on beyond in cases, as is proper with all stuffed creatures, awaken no such scruples. They are so palpably stuffed, so purely and wholly conventionalized—turned to decorative ends—one forgets that they ever lived.

No categoric setting forth of this thing or that gives the faintest idea of what has been achieved. Throughon the whole b: building beauty has been wrought from things of use. It is Samson's riddle over again, "Out of the strong has come forth sweetness."

MARTHA MCCULLOCH WILLIAMS.

HOWTHE OTHER HALF LIVES

Thousand* of People Earn a Living Itngpickcra In the I'M Cities. [Spe rial Correspondence.]

NEW YOP.K, July 12.—Country boy? who used to' aril a few cents for Christ mas or Fourth of July by collecting and selling rags have very little conception of the importance of the ragpicking industry. Tin peddlers still buy rags for tinware, but since the process of making paper from wood pulp was invented old newspajare worth only a small fraction of a cent per pound and aro not worth taking in a peddler's cart and paying freight upon, but in the city, where larfce quantities are dealt in, all kinds of rubbish has a value. In a great newspaper office, for instance, refuse i.1divided into "white waste"—paper not priuted upon, which goes back to the manufacturer in exchange for new, and is therefore worth 2 or 3 cents a pound —"black waste," or printed paper, worth not much over $2 a ton, and miscellaneous waste.

Even at such small prices there are people who make a living by picking paper and refuse out of ash barrels and

RACriCKKRS AT WORK «lN* THE DUMPS, at the "dumps," where low land is being filled in by the deposit of rubbish. In New York especially there are several thousand pickers. Tbe volume of

sale and jobbing houses which do a

*f

halved bv palling out the midrib. The have is when from half a doasea to a fringes run down to a fn« of cluster- score or more work together on the ed tobacco lentes, spread flat and nailed damps and pass tbe time in song ot with tiny br.t«s headed n*ik Tbe! story as they work. Often the ash friese is bonk-red with tv ist ropes of dumps cure at the edge of the city in fcrihticco which ai*o form the panels of open spaces, with green trees in sight wall*. and the blue sky overhead, and then.

In the uppermost of them, fairly far- for a little time in ftn© weather, even a ins the entrance, yon

a

the ragbag." Tbe merriest time they

tobacco rsgpicker'a life wemsnot so bad.

HjuT0!t

A GLIMPSE OF THE SEETHING AMERICAN DESERT.

It Seems to Be Hotter Than Any Other Place on Earth—The Terrible Death Valley—Mammoth Tank—Mr. Ober's Letter

From Southern California.

[Special Correspondence.]

SAN BBRXAKDIXO, Cal., July 7.— "Hot! Well, I should exclaim!" remarked tbe switch tender at Barston as I swung off thu train for an observation while the engine wet its thirsty whistle. "Hot? Say, hell ain't a patch alongside this here place. We'd go there if we could to cool off!"

And Barston isn't tbe hottest station in the Mohave desert either. Nor is it the biggest settlement, consisting mainly of an eating house, a few shanties and a saloon or two. Its importance lies in the fact that at this point trains for southern California turn off to the south and those for Frisco keep on still westerly. Another fact also—here we set our watches back another hour, as the standard official time changes from mountain to Pacific. From the Colorado river westerly perhaps 250 miles stretches the great Mohave desert, a portion of that vast arid area which guards all the eastern approaches to California, no matter which railroad you take to enter the Golden State.

As morning dawns the beautiful though forbidding forms of the Needles, those sharp spired and multicolored mountains at the crossing of the Colorado, rise against the sky. Once over the muddy and treacherous river, the real desert is entered, and for nearly 200 miles the rails pursue their siuuous course, glistening and blistering in the sun. We call this a desert, and so far as the term goes it is not misapplied, yet it is vastly different from the African Sahara, which I looked upon in Algiers nine years ago—not actually a sea of sand, like that of the dark continent, with only a fertile oasis here and there to enliven its vast expanse. Thi9 American desert is not entirely destitute of vegetation, for we have here several varieties of cactus, areas of sagebrush and the yuccas, with pointed leaves and tall spikes of blossoms. Oases, too, are occasionally seen, as at the infrequent stations, where water from hidden streams or artesian wells has carried life and fertility to this barren waste. As there is nearly always a breeze stirring, life is rendered endurable beneath tbe planted groves and by the side of water coursing through the "acequias."

No, this is not the hottest spot on earth. North from Barston and its sister station of Doggett, from which latter place a line of freight wagons once in awhile ran to it across tho torrid alkali plains, lies the terrible Death valley—a grer.t furnace heated basin, depressed nearly 800 feet below the level of the sea and surrounded by mountains brilliant in coloring, but barren of vegetation.

Only one miserable river runs into it, the poisonous waters of which, so vile that it is known as the Amargosa, or Bitter, are entirely absorbed by the sands of Death valley. Gold has been discovered in the mountains surrounding Death valley, and there are large deposits of soda and borax there, bat the intense heat prevents their successful working. Would be visitors are also de terred by the fate of several prospectors who perished of thirst and the terrible heat. It seemed the irony of fate that water was subsequently discovered close to the spot where tbe last man had fallen by those who were digging their gravtS.

Still, it is said by those in authority that oven Death valley does not hold the record as the hottest place on earth. That unenviable distinction has been fairly won and is held by a station on the Southern Pacifio railway known as Mammoth Tank.

This station has been declared tbe hottest place out of doors, the mercury disporting itself at 128 degrees during the summer season day after day.

There is little else there besides the tank aforementioned and the station keeper. The latter not long sinoe took a respite from his arduous duties of pouring wattr into himself and hunting a shady spot long enough to woo and win tbe belle of a little village up near Indio, on tbe same railroad. The climate of Indio is pretty hot Thermal, tbe station below it, is hotter Volrano Springs, still farther south, is even more so, but Mammoth Tank beats them all for torridity.

Those who have tried it ont here say that a reliable temperature of 100 in the shade is not at all oppressive. I don't know bow that may be, bat I can vouch for the fact tbat yon don't feel the same degree of beat so much here as on the Atlantic coast. A few days ago I had occasion to go to San Jacinto, tonth of here, and to be oat driving all day. It seemed pretty hot, though I had often felt the heat more in other regions, and I was surprised when I returned to the hotel to find tbe temperature that day had reached 106 in the •hade.

Tbe boiel was a wooden structure, and every room was in the western end, so that it was late tbat night before tbe temperature was lowered enough to permit of sleep. Various articles on tbe bureau, such as comb, hairbrush and racor, wow so hot that the handling of them was not pleasant On the train next day I sat behind two ladies, one of whom had a child with her. I overheard considerable of their conversation, but the fragment that particularly struck me was this: "Yes, yesterday was pretty hot But* do yon know, my little Beanie here is a year old oome Sunday, and the day be was born it was 113!" She was a hearty tool woman and Be-rie v-s a emid apparently. Liiry climate nrast be beneficial, even if it is hot.

HBSJI .iJ&ifti&s*.

TERR-E HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, JULY 17, 1897.

HOTTER THAN HADES

Fap A. OBEX.

-WA

One of Mr. Depew's Stories.

Mr. Deri's reputation as a good stoiy teller Is so wt II known tbat it is unnecessary to roinmvnt upon 3t. Probably one of tbe hest stories with which he delights his ondiences is the one involving tbe question of supply and demand and the regulating of prices solely by these two factors. In dispute of this Mr. Dep *v says tbat one day be was walking along a street and assed a German butcher shop. Out of curiosity he entered the place and inquired the price of sausages. "Dwenty cents a bound," replied the butcher. "But," said Mr. Depew, "it seems to me I saw your sign this morning, and it read, 'Fresh sausages, 25 cents a pound.' Why did you roduce your price?" "Oh, dot was all right. I don't got nnne now und I can't sell any. Dot makes me a repudation for selling sbeap, und I don't lose noddings."

According to this, as Mr. Depew says, "There was no demand, as I didn't want any, and there was no supply, as the butcher hadn't any, and yet the price of sausages went down."—Harper's Round Table.

A Shark's

Appetite.

Tbe shark has as good a stomach and appetite fcr brio-a-brae as tbe ostrich or the festive billy goat, even to eating concertinas, as witness the following story told by Able Seaman Rosen us of the brig Motley, ft-cently arrived in New York from New Zealand:

Off Barbados Seaman Rosenus got a pair of sea boots from the ship's cbest and threw his discarded footgear overboard. A shark that was trailing alongside turned over and voraciously swallowed both old bootJ, ono after the other. Rosenus and his mate, Conway, threw the harpoon into tho shark and lugged him aboard. When they cut him open, they found the badly wrecked accordion aforesaid, the two sea boots and a bteyclo saddle with the trademark of 5 Scotch firm.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

After serious illness Hood's Sarsaparilla has wonderful building up power. It

Eealth.

urifles the blood and restores perfect

There Is a Class of People

Who are injured by the use of coffee. Recently there has been placed in all the grocery stores a new preparation called GRAIN-O. made of pure grains, that takes the place of coffee. The most delicate stomach receives it without distress, and but few can tell it from coffee. It does not cost over }4 as much. Children may drink it with great benefit. 15 cts. and 25 cts. per packagc Try it. Ask for GRAIN-O.

Ilellef in Six Hours.

Distressing Kidney and Bladder diseases relieved in six hours by the "New Great South Ameriean 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 aud cure this is your remedy. Sold by all wholesale and retail druggists in Terre Haute, Ind.

Educate Your llowcls Willi Caacarctn. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money.

When the Sea Was Fresh Water.

The ocean was once merely brackisb, and not salt, as it is now. This was when the earth was iu its first youth and before there was any land showing at all or any animal life in the water. At this time the water was gradually cooling from its original state of steam, and the salts were slowly undergoing the change from gases into solids. Then came the appearance of lKnd, and later on rivers, which gradually washed down more aiid more salts, while at the bottom of the ocean itself chemical action was constantly adding more brine to tbe waters. At present it is estimated there are in the world's oceans 7,000,000 cubic miles of salt, and the most astonishing thing about it is tbat if all the salt could be taken out in a moment the level of the water would not drop one single inch.—New York World.

MBS. CURTIS, NEW YORK,

Tells Her Experience With Ovaritis.

A dull, throbbing pain, accompanied by a sense of tenderness and heat low down in the side, with an occasional shooting pain, indicates inflammation.

On examination it will be found that the region of pain shows some swelling. This is the first stage of ovaritis, inflammation of the ovary. If the roof of your house leaks, my sister, you have it fixed at once why not pay the same respect to your own body

Do you live miles away from a doctor Then that is all the more reason why you should at* tend to yourself at once, or you will soon be on the flat o1 your back.

You need

not, you ought not to let yourself go, when one of your own sex holds out the helping hand to you, and will advise yon without money and without price. Write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., and tell her all your symptoms. Her experience in treating female ills is greater than any other living per* •on. Following is proof of what we say:

For nine years I suffered with female weakness in its worst form. I was in bed nearly a year with congestion of the ovaries. I also suffered with falling of the womb, was very weak, tired all the time, had such headaches aa to make me almost wild. Was also troubled with leucorrhoea, and waa bloated so badly that some thought I had dropsy. I have taken several bottles of Lydia EL Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound, and several of her Blood Purifier, and am completely cured. It is a wonder to all that I got welL I shall always owe Mrs. Pinkham a debt of gratitude for her kindness. I would advise all who suffer to take her medicine."—14ML. Anil Ccxxjfc.TkoBderpca, N. Y*

XI J4 J.

When a person has been cured from & malady that has troubled him for years and the best physicians in the country were powerless to grapple with it. When the patient had suffered for years all the agonies that pen can describe, and then was cured by a remedy, it is no wonder that the patient who has thus been cured would be loud in the praise of that remedy. This is the case of llenry Weston, whose story was told in the Moon several months ago. It will be remembered that Mr. Weston doctored with one of the best specialists in the country and found no relief, and then after a few boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills had been taken he was well. Mr. Weston is so jubilant over his recovery that he never tires of telling his story to others. It was through hitn that Mrs. John Estell, of South Avenue, was induced to try them. She is well acquainted with Mr. Weston, and through his

advice and knowing that he had been cured by

this remedy, she was induced to try them. A Moon reporter called on Mrs. Estell and asked her if the story of her cure was true. She said that she knew of the remarkable cure of Mr. Weston, and she was suffering from the after effects of the grippe and a baa case of indigestion. She doctored with a local physician and received no special benefit. Mr. Weston had urged her to try the pills, and after she had made up her mind that it was useless for her to doctor with the physicians any longer, she decided to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. She went to Amberg fe Murphy'n drug store and asked them about the remedy, stating her case. The druggist told her that they Knew of many cases lilte hers that had been cured by the pills, and they had not the least btt of doubt about her receiving great benefit if she took the medicine. She Dcught a box and in a very short time she was a new woman, the effects of the grippe were all

fer

ane and her stomach which nad troubled for so many years was better. For years she had to eat only the easiest food that could be digested, and many articles of diet that she longed for had to oe let alone. She was troubled with that awful disease of indigestion and the long train of diseases that go with it. She suffered with all of the hor-

Office, No. 5 South Fifth Street.

COKE

COKE

COKE

COKE

CRUSHED

$3.50

CRUSHED

A SPIRITUALIST SPEAKS.

Advice from a Prominent Member of this Society.

She Tells a "Moon" Reporter the Secret of Her Good Health and Happiness.

From the Moon, Battle Creek, Mich.

rors that persons aflccted with that malady are j,l?~

subject to, but after she had taken the pills different from paying out a dollar a visit a short time she found relief and now she

eats everything she desires, and has no fears at all. She eats things now, and has no after pains, or trouble with indigestion, that a few months ago she would not have thought of taking into her stomach no more than she would a dose of poison. To a Moon reporter she said: "The Dr. Williams' Pink Pills made a new woman of me." Mrs. Estell is the picture of health, and says she feels better to-day than she has for years, aud attributes her good health to the use of the remedy that everyone is taking. She cannot say enough in favor of it and never misses a chance to tell her friends of what it has done for her. One to look at her would not think that she had ever had a sick day in her life and she says she feels better than she has for many years.

Mrs. Estell is well-known in this city, her husband owns the Estell cottages on South Avenue, where sh« and her husband reside. The lauy is president of the Ladies' Aid, and she is a prominent worker in the First Society of Spiritualists in this city. She is known in almost every home here and a recommendation that comes from her has weight. When she tells her friends of what this great remedy has done for her and they see the healthy look on her face, they cannot doubt it, no matter how much they might desire. It is certainly a marvel what it has done for her.

To the scribe she said that she thought it

Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Life Awajr. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-Bac, tbe wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, fiOc or II. Cure guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Kemedy Co Chicago or New York.

Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Life Awajr. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-Bac, tbe wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, fiOc or II. Cure guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Kemedy Co Chicago or New York.

Kdnrnte Your Itowels Willi Cttitcnrctft. Cnnily Cnthnrilc, euro constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If O. C. C. fad, druggists refund money.

Kdnrnte Your Itowels Willi Cttitcnrctft. Cnnily Cnthnrilc, euro constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If O. C. C. fad, druggists refund money.

DR. R. W. VAN VALZAH,

Dentist,

•was her duty to her friends to tell them of They are for sale by all druggists, or may be what the Dr. Williams' Pink Pills had had by mail from Dr. Williams' Medicine done for her. She had been cured and when Company, Schenectady, N. Y., for 60 cents •he saw others who were trying their best to

1

Dellvered

$3.50

COARSE...

CRUSHED

Dellvered

$3.50

CRUSHED

Dellvered

$3.50

$3.00

COARSE...

De,lvered*

$3.00

COARSE...

COARSE...

De,lvered

Dellvered

$3.00

De,lvered

$3.00

De,lvered

Equal to Anthracite Coal.

Equal to Anthracite Coal.

Equal to Anthracite Coal.

Equal to Anthracite Coal.

Citizens'Fuel & Gas Co.,

Citizens'Fuel & Gas Co.,

Citizens'Fuel & Gas Co.,

Citizens'Fuel & Gas Co.,

507

Ohio Street.

507

Ohio Street.

507

Ohio Street.

507

Ohio Street.

Gagg's ADT Store

1 A. m.A m.

1 A. m.A m.

1 A. m.A m.

ai?SK8IXTH-

ai?SK

ai?SK

8IXTH

111 1 1

111 1 1

111 1 1

Artists' Supplies. Flower Material. Picture Framing a Specialty.

Artists' Supplies. Flower Material. Picture Framing a Specialty.

Artists' Supplies. Flower Material. Picture Framing a Specialty.

Terre Haute, In!

8IXTH

Terre Haute, In!

Terre Haute, In!

get relief from their maladies by doctoring with the physicians and after taking treatment for months and secured no relief, she believed that it was time for them to try something that wouldicure them. In all the cases that she had recommended this remedy for she had not heard of one that had not been greatly benefited by it. To the reporter she said, "You cannot put it too strong for me. I am overjoyed at the result of my experience with the remedy, and I have not only recommended it to friends in this city, but have written to a number in other places who have taken my advice and bought the pills, with the same remarkable results as I had. It is a remedy that should be in every home."

J. W. Murphy, of the drug firm of Amberg & Murphy, was seen by a Moon representative in regar.l to the case of Airs. Estell. "Yes," said he, "her case was a remarkable one, but only one of many, yes, perhaps hundreds in this city alone. We

never

have any fears about recommending

these pills to our customers. We do not aa a rule guarantee patent remedies, but there is no risk to run in guaranteeing this remedy. No one who has ever taken it can say anything but praise for it and what everyone says must be true."

Mr. Murphy then cited the cases of a number of our prominent citiiens who had been cured by the pills and whose cases had been almost beyona cure so many thought. We have so many calls for these pills aud hear so much about their cures that it becomes an everyday occurrence with us and we do not keep track of the partes who are cured by tliein," he said to the scribe, "but if we kept a list of our patrons on the remedy we could furnish you a long list of persons to interview, «ho hnve not only been made well, but happy also by this medicine."

Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are handy to take and carry. They can be carried in the vest pocket and taken at any time during the day.

The cases of Mrs. Estell and Mr. Weston mentioned in this arliele were treated by doctors for months. Mr. Weston paying out hundreds of dollars to doctors and then given up. lie was cured with a few boxes of Pink Pills. Mrs. Estell only bought two boxes,

a

dollar did she spe nd. This was vastly

fr.om

ft

physician. It is no wonder"thai.peo­

ple are so anxious to tell their friends ol what this remedy will do. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People

are prepared by the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., of Schenectady, N. Y., a firm whose ability and reliability are unquestioned. Pink Pills are not looked upon as a patent medicine, but. as a prescription, naving been uscd*ns such for years in general practice, and thiir "ueeessful results in curing various afllictions made it imperative that they be prepared in quantities to meet the demand of the public, and place (hem in reach of all. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis. St. Vitus' dance, scialica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, and the tired feeling resulting from nervous prostration, all diseases resulting from vitiated humors in the blood, such as scrofula, clironio erysipelas, etc. They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregularities, and all forms of weakness. They build up the blood, and restore the glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks. In men they effect a radical cure in all cases arising from mental worry, overwork, or excesses of whatever nature.

Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves.

box, or six boxes for

JjpKANK D. RICH, M. D.

Office and Kesldencc 216 X. Sixth St. TERItE HAUTE, IND. Diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. llours-fl to 12 a. m., 1:30 to 4 p. m. Sundays 0 to 10 a. m.

GEO. HAUCK & CO.

O A

GEO. HAUCK & CO.

O A

Dealer In all kinds of

Dealer In all kinds of

Telephone 33. Main street.

Telephone 33. Main street.

JOHN M. VOLKERS,

ATTORNEY.

Collections and Notarial Work.

5*2! OHIO STItKKT.

A Handsome Complexion is one ot tbe greatest charm* a woman can possess. POSZOHI'S COMPUCXIOM PJWDEK gives it.

N. HICKMAN,

N. HICKMAN,

U2STJDIE:RT.A-ICIER 1212 Main Street. All calls will receive tbe most careful attention. Open day and night.

U2STJDIE:RT.A-ICIER 1212 Main Street. All calls will receive tbe most careful attention. Open day and night.

The Rosy Freshness a velvety aoftness of the skin is inva^ riably obtained by those who use POJSZOWI'S Complexion Powder.

KEEP YOUR BOWELS STRONG ALL SUMMER 1

/QANDY CATHARTIC

CURE

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