Semi-weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 June 1897 — Page 7

I

r'.

1

WOMAN "MD HOME.

MtSSSCHBSLE, WHOSE BUST ADORNS A NEW YORK BUILDING.

Feed*II* Tocuij Children—The HI Bred, ImpartrnMe Woman The Telitale faoe—Smelling Salts and Wrinkles—Vat tie of Chickens' Feet.

On the front of a new building on Irv ?ng place, near Nineteenth street, Cupids ere to be seen as vrell as the granite bust of a woman. The bust is a portrait. The gr ^'lipids are chubby, like those drawn in red I for. heads of chapters in books of the eight renth century. The bust of the woman is heroic, with a pride in the eyes seen In ri historical figures. |i It is the portrait of Miss Pauline Schoi fj lile, who is a competent critic of portraits flnbe {die is the owner of a photograph gal

Jery, Ksd it was eculptnrod by Fernando

3Iixz»A&, whose artistic education was se IJ Yerfe. He has naada Uiis portrait with ex

BT7BT

OF

:h

PAULINE 8CHEIBLS.

Ijuisite fidelity, so that the model is not flattered or reproduced in impersonal elegance. It is an original figure and emblematic of the art of the building.

The tm&dlng has no portico or cornice. Of pressed bride and granite, fire stories in height, with, a double line of bay windows, having at each side a column, it is an apartment bouse, evidently, but is independent of all schools of ornament in architecture.

Miss Paulino Scheible is the owner of the building, where her bust, under a bay window, figures as a caryatid. The Cupids nre the architect's expression of the lore which presides over the destinies of happy homes. In all the corners of the windows, invisible fsom the street, are symbolical devices. At the top the lineof embroidered stone is sot conventional. It represents a rope. "The.rope," Mr, Grewoy said, "isindic»tive of the strength by which the building is bound."

There are to be balconies at the bay win dotos and potted plants which the archl tect is to select and bind himself to change and keep in order and in harmony with the building always. There has been no idea like this put into praotice anywhere. -Mr. Greweysays it is an American idea, Perhaps the portrait of an owner on the front of a building is not so much a novelty. On the facade of Bicbard Watson Gilder's former house on East Fifteenth street are medallions of his two children. Oliver the Barber, who was minister to Louis XI, bad at Tours, in France, .a palace which offered to passersby the spectacle of its owner on horseback in Carrara marble in a niohe. But the Irving place house is nevertheless, even in the special characteristic of its portrait, original.

Miss Scheible smiled pleasantly at the comment which this originality had provoked. "I haven't heard anybody say it was vanity, and yet it was a splendid occasion to make the criticism," she said.— New York Journal.

Feeding Young Children.

Of the many elements of caution that during the first year of life contribute to the good health of the child, care in feeding is -the most important, perhaps more important than all the other elements combined.

In considering, as we shall, one kind of food only we do not desire to ignore the fact that there are other foods whioh have in many cases proved valuable and upon which children have been successfully reared. Sterilized milk is, however, now recognised as the best artificial food for children,, and where we can obtain the best it is manifestly unwise cither to consider or to use an inferior article, even though it may have intrinsio worth.

The general insufficiency of the breast milk of the mothers of the present generation and the tremendous drain that lactation makes upon the average woman put the natural food of infants in many cases out of the question. It is universally ac knowledged that good breast milk is superior to any other food for an infant, but we must at the same time recognize that not one mother in ten can or ought to nurse her child for more than the first few weeks of its life. Therefore artificial food must be discussed not as a mere substitute, but as the general rather than the exceptional food for infants. J3eforo the discovery of sterilized milk many a mother, at the risk of her own health and in spite of the fact that her milk was insufficient for the demands of the child, still persisted in nursing it rather than incur the perplexities and dangers of the old system of bottle feeding. Now, however, with the use of sterilized milk, there is no longer danger of any sort, and perplexities may, by an exact system of feeding, be reduced to a minimum.

Good breast milk agrees with all children, and all except those essentially diseased thrive upon it. Good sterilized milk, properly prepared, proves its similarity to mother's milk in nothing so much as in the fact that it, too, agrees with all children of whatever ago or condition, unless they are so acutely ill that all milk must for a time be abandoned. In such rare eases a change to water, barley water, gum arabio water or beef juice for a time long enough to clear the intestinal tract of the collection of microbes is all that is necessary—24 to 48 hours are usually sufficient. The feeding of the sterilized milk may then be gradually resumed by using in the barley water a very small quantity of the milk, increasing it by a spoonful at each feeding until the average proportion of milk and water is again attained.

The 111 Bred, Importunate Wouuvn. There is no surer sign of ill breeding thnn the persistency of the importunate visitor who will not take "No" for an answer. There are women so constituted that they cannot be content when, on coming to seo friend or acquaintance, they ere told that the ladies are "not receiving" or particularly engaged. Any one at nil acquainted with such affairs knows that social usage is governed.by good reasons and not by arbitrary moods. In this respect men are better bred than women, be!n& wITiing to observe social conventions. A caller on learning that the ladies "beg to be excused" should accept the statement at its faoe value. Yet women who ough| to know better often persist in catechising the waitress at the door, wishing to know the reasons for being denied entrance and sometimes endeavoring to force their way in with the statement: "Oh, she'll see me, I am sure. Mrs. is at home to me.'* list here tbey shew their lack of social training. In many houses tho waitress is supposed to be a person of some mental capacity. She is expected tc know her mistress' intimates who are at liberty to some in when they choose. But the importunate visitor is never included in this privileged group. .She is weiooaae to oexae on "at

home" daysor take lier chances during calling houra That should be enough for her. But the badge of her tribe is persistency asd assurance that at all hours she can intrude into the domestic life of the house and bring the mistress down stairs from her nursety or where she is superintending some sickroom or regulating different departments of the household. If it should happen that a visitor who has some really important reason for getting speech of the lady of the .house is met with the statement that the lady is particularly engaged, she is not without resource—her remedy is at hand.

On the hall table of almost every house there is provision for writing a message that demands immediate attention. An ornamental writing pad and pencils are ordinarily kept within reach of the front door. The visitor may then scribble her message, and, if time presses, dispatch it up stairs to receive a reply. But unless she is a visitor from some distant city she need not expect that much short of "battle, murder and sudden death" will bring her hostess down stairs.

In short, society protects itself by such devices. The morning hours are sacred to business, study and domestic routine. Certain hours are set apart to receive visitors —generally from 4 to 6—although some women receive guests as early as 3 in the afternoon. If the hostess is not receiving, be content to deposit your visiting cards with address plainly marked, and soften the disappointment by the reflection that you now have time to return others' calls in the same neighborhood.—Philadelphia Times.

The Telltale Face.

The faces of the women one passes in the street form a curious and too often a saddening Btory. One woman purses up her lips, another screws her eyes into unnaturalness, while a third will wrinkle up her forehead and eyebrows until she looks absolutely ngly. The trick is an unconscions one, but It is none the less a trick and a bad one. There is no reason why a woman should look forbidding and bad tempered just because she is annoyed about something. Deep seated trouble has a way of writing itself upon the face whether we will or not. Sickness, too, has its own handwriting and will not be concealed by art. But the ftown caused by superficial troubles should not be entertained by the face for an instant. We should strive to look as pleasant as possible for the sake of others A corresponding cheerfulness of temperament will inevitably result and always to the sweetening of our nature.

We cannot afford fo go about with gloomy faces. To depress others is not for us. Our work is to cheer, to raise up, to comfort, but we shall never do this unless we cultivate a pleasant demeanor and the cheerful temper inseparable from it. This brings us to that question of worry. Can we put it more stropgly than to say that is a duty to put care, worry,-fretfulness, behind onef The habit must be learned, or we shall not "grow straight in the strength of our spirit and live out our life ns the light," as Swinburne so well puts it. "It is-difflcult to do that," says some one. We all know that It is very bard, but women are not afraid of difficulties. The more diffioulfc the right thing is to do the greater reasor for doing it. All we need is to make the first effort. Strength will be born which will increase at each subsequent attempt, and we 6hall conquer in the end. Salvation for women lle§i in this, not to be overcome by troubles, but to overcome them.—Exchange.

Smelling Salts and Wrinkle*. Women who wish to retain their beauty of face should beware of the smelling bottle. The dangers to beauty which lie hidden in the seemingly harmless bottle of salts were brought vividly to the mind of a young matron recently by observing a near friend who was considerably older than herself. Almost from day to day she noticed that her friend's face was becoming .wrinkled, that the wrinkles were in unusual places, and that they tended to produce a most undesirable expression. She pondered over this rtiatter for a number of days, wondering what could be causing the change and whether she ought not to speak to her friend aboyt it.

It was during this agitation that the explanation Cached over her. She and her friend were sitting in front of a wood flrc, talking. The fire lit up their faces and brought out strangely every shadow that was made by an inequality of the skin. From time to'time, as they talked, the friend raised her smelling bottle to her nose and inhaidd its pungent odor.

All the unbecoming lines iu her friend's face suddenly deepened.

her friend's expression completely, for they were the result of a sudden screwing up of her face because of the pungent odors of the hartshorn in the bottle. Then it came to her mind that there, were some women among her younger acquaintances whose faces were beginning to show those same curious lines about the eyes, nose and mouth, and she knew that these women were also addicted to the use of smelling sails. "My!" she exclaimed to her friend. "Don't ever use those horrid salts again." "And why not?" asked her ostonished friend. "Because they are making you hideous and wrinkling yoi!r face all up. What do you use them for anyway?" "Because I have a constant headache." "And do they cure you?" "Iso."—New York Sim.

Value of Cluckcns' Feet.

In a recent talk at Pratt institute, Brooklyn, on Frenoh cooking Miss Parloa pointed out several instances of its economy that will be new to many housekeepers. One of them was the use of the head and feet of chickens, parts always thrown away by the American cook. In particular are the feet of ohickens prized by the French housekeeper, fact so well appreciated by the Parisian poulterer that sous a pair is the market price for them. A practical demonstration of their treatment was given. A pair cut off at the usual joint was plunged for a minute perhaps in boiling water, then taken out and with a sharp kitchen knife quickly skinned, the tough, wrinkled cuticle peeling off almost like A glove. Tho toe nails were then cut off, and tho feet, thus entirely clean, wero ready for use. They should le boiled Bix or eight hours in a pint of water to a pair. They arc very rich in gelatinous matter, and the stock made from them is a cheap and strongly flavored base for soups, gravies and sauces of various kinds. In France they are sometimes roasted crisp after being cleaned and served with a bit of garnish as an esteemed course. "Pigs' feet and calves' feet arc not disdained in cooking," says Miss Parloa. "Why should these be?"

Clever Ci$rpet Beating.

The old time carpet beating is not the easiest or the best method of carpet cleaning by any sans. It is hard for the carpet and hard for the back. It is much better to lay sticks of wood across a grassy place in the yard, where the wind will carry the dust over these sticks, and sweep it several times, throw it back and move the wood, then turn the carpct over, clean off the grease spots or other soiled places that may be discovered with soap and hot water, using a large flamie! cloth for the purpose.

Veil*.

The wearing uf veils has been supposed always to be detrimental only so far as the eyesight of the wearer is concerned, but an English physician gives to them a much wider soope of evil than this one field. Not only premature blindness, but headache, vertigo, nausea and various oth(Jieorders follow in the wake of their use.

All veils are bad, but those with black spots are the wont, and women are earnestly urged to forego them.

Paper and States'*

Paper and strings are great requisites 1b a house, and a tidy girl will keep a store of these ready for any requirement. When parcels come from chops, she should, take the brown papa*, fold it carefully and put in a box, and the same with tiww or white paper, which should have a different box.

For string get two of the large empty reels which have been used for twist or fine braid. One of these should be for thick string and one for fine, and if they are both kept in the sideboard drawer in the dining room they will always be ready when wanted.

A "packing box" is a blessing in a house. It should hold a store of brown and white paper, string, sealing was, labels and gum. It can be made out of a good sized wooden box eenfc from the grocer's and neatly covered on the outside with art serge and on the inside with sateen the same color.

The Table.

No matter how plain the meal Is to be, it is important that Hie table should be made bright with a few flowers or ferns, that the cloth should be clean and placed on straight, and. that whatever silver and glass are to be used should be polished and arranged neatly, and that this should be the general rule, even if only the family is to sit down to table. Why should the poor family have to endure the sight of a creased, doubtfully clean cloth, all awry, with the necessary articles just thrown on the table?

One feels sure it would blunt the edge of the keenest appetite. If the servant is too busy to pay heed to such details or is beyond all hope of teaching, the mistress or some member of the family should supervise the laying of the cloth, so that it is dose with good taste and method.—Philadelphia Ledger.

Raised Corners.

The raised corners of rooms frequently seen on the stage and always pronounced effective are possible in almost any large room. It is a particularly good way break the somewhat unmanageable expanse of a big country house drawing room. A window should be taken as the inspiration of the corner and fitted with a wide and comfortable seat, running, desired, somewhat beyond its space. A platform perhaps four inohes above the room floor and oblong rather than square stretches out from the window bench, with a low running part way across, the scheme being completed with a tent drsping of Bagdad or other eastern curtains across one end, with ,tbe usual accessories of a corner Moorish stand, hanging Pompeiian lamp, potted plants and cushions.—New York Post.

••rf v" irWood Floors. A caution in washing all wood floors, whether plain or treated, is never to allow the water to run on the boards from a too wet cloth or brush even for a brief time. It will cause streaks on painted floors, and on the plain floors the moisture loosens the fiber of the wood, producing the chipped appearance which every one can recall in the often doused and scrubbed floor of the farm kitchen. -.

When, having occasion to hang out clothes iu winter where a frost is likely to stiffen them and injure the fabric, this can be obviated by putting a handful of coarse salt in the last rinsing water and letting it dissolve before putting in the

Thev dominated arfcicl* under treatment.

The round, shallow "piece's of cork that lit in wide mouthed pickle bottles are excellent to use as scourers of fine carvers. Sandpaper the corks to make them perfectly smooth before using.

Whenever vegetables put up in tin cans are opened and only partly used, do not allow the remainder to stand in the tins, but turn them out into an earthen bowl and put in a cool place.

To remove stubborn stains and marks from paint, sprinkle a little powdered pumice stone upon a cloth wrung out of warm soapsuds and apply to the spots.

An adjustable seat which can befitted across tho bathtub is found at hbuse furnishing shops. Its service does away with the portable footbath.

ODDS AND ENDS.

According to tho London Times' correspondent at Bombay, "the area of which the plague has taken hold forms less than a tenth part of India."

Tho whole of eastern Maine is overrun with tramps, who are committing all sorts of crimes. tr

The town o! Windischmatrei in the Tyrol, a well known tourist resort, has been burned.

New Haven oyster cultivators are feeling' very doubtful of the outcome of the "set" of young oysters obtained on their beds Inst season.

There are nearly 5,000 women printers in England.

Lansing, Mich., attributes the falling off in its number of saloons to the bicycle.

The jubilee procession will for the first time see the queen's carriage fitted with rubbe* tires.

The hardest known wood !s coons wood. It turns the edge of an ax, however well tempered,

The approaching jubilee in England has brought to light a lot of copies of English papers that were printed when Victoria was crowned. Some of these papers are owned in New York, and a few of them are considered valuable by colleotors.

Steamed Coffee.

A housekeeper guards against incompetenoy on the part of the maid with the morning coffee by having it steamed—a process advised by some cooks. It is made in a double boiler, the usual proportions being followed. After the boiling water is added the vessel is set in its hot water kettle and steamed fur 90 minutes. There is no risk that coffee made In this way will be spoiled from standing or overcooking,

The patent offioe of Great Britain not require models.

•iiiKKE HAUTE EXFKE88. 'lUltSDAV MOitMXG, JO.* 1, i&Ji.

JSii

The Night) Xnltat.

No matter how busy one may be, it is quite possible to always find time to attend to one's toiiet at night. One should not simply drop one's clothes and tumble into bed else neither oneself nor the clothes will look attractive in the morning. Eave plenty of hot water and a dash of cologne and give your face a thorough laving. The result will be as refreshing as an hour's sleep. Brush the hair for 20 minutes it will be glossier and thicker for the trouble, and your nerves wlU be soothed by the process. Then, after the exercise, robe yourself in a warm gown and drink a glass of hot milk, weak cocoa or oven hot water, eating a wafer or a bit of toast if you like. When the small supper is finished, you will be ready to go to sleep without any iasoxnnia cure, and in the morning you will waken refreshed and thoroughly in good humor with yourself and your world.

CHILDREN'S COLUMN.

MANY GUARDIANS.

A. lad Who, When a Bahy, Was Adopted hy a South African Masonic Lodce. Upon Master Sydney Frederick Forbes has been conferred, by the lodge of which his father was a foundation member, the title of the' 'youngest Mason in the world." •While the universal constitution of the Masonic order provides that so one shall •join that order until he becomes 21 years of age, lodge Jubilee of Barberton, South Africa, working under the Dutch constitution, performed for him the ceremony of adoption when he was a month old.

The lad was bora Nov. 3, 1888, of English parents. His father, William Forbes, was then secretary of the Barberton Stock Ek change, and is at present file manager of one of the valuable milling properties at Johannesburg.

The small apron used for the ceremony was made from the skin of an African kid for the occasion. It is the chief treasure of Master Sydney's collection of valuables dear to juvenility.

The press of the Transvaal commented at length and enthusiastically upon the

MASTER FOBBES.

unique rite. "On Sunday last," said one of the leading journals, "was performed ixi Masonlo hall a ceremony which, we believe, has never before been witnessed in South Africa, if at all The ceremony in question was no less than the.adoption by Lodge Jubilee, working under the Dutch constitution, of the infant son of one of its foundation members, F. W. Forbes."

By the ceremony of adoption the Infant is admitted as a "Lewis" in Freemasonry, the oaths and obligations being taken on his behalf by the wardens of the lodge as sponsors of the. lodge Itself, and all its members acting in that capacity and undertaking the Masonlo guardianship of the child in much the same way as sponsors at a baptism.

At the age of 21 years the "Lewis" may enter and take part in the working of a lodge without undergoing any of the usual initiatory ceremonies.—St. Louis Republic.

A Uttto Girl'* letter. Dear grandma, I will try to write A very little letter. If 1 don't spell the words all right,

Why, next time I'll do better.

My little rabbit is alive And likes his milk and clover. He likes to see ran very much,

But is afraid of Kover. I've got a dove as whitens snow. I call her Polly Feather. She flies and hops about the yard

In every kind of weather.

I think she likes to see it rain. For then she smooths her jaokst And seems to be

bo

proud and vain

The turkeys make a racket. The hens are picking off she grass And singing very loudly, While onr old peacock struts about

And shows his colors proudly.

ir

I guess 111 close my letter now. I've nothing more to tell. Please answer soon and come to see

Your loving little Nell, —"Posies For Children.'

1

Taste and Smell.

tou think you know the tasto of things, dOnt you? Well, let me tell you that if ife "wfere not for your nose you could not tell A good many things apart, so far as your

:/fca6te

goes. A great deal of what you call the taste of a thing is its smell. You can't 'quite believe this? Prove it for yourselves. The trial makes a capital game. Get mamma or nurse to give you some raw oatmeal, some licorice, chocolate, apple, as many different things as she can think of that do not taste the least bit alike. Then blindfold first one and then the other of your party, and let each one who is blindfolded hold his or her nose very tightly so that it isn't possible to smell things, and then let some one give him or her first one thing and then another to taste It is good fun to give a little prize, perhaps one of your hocky sticks, Jack, or one of your dolls, Polly, to the boy or girl who guesses the most names of the things provided for the game of testing the taste. Tell mamma that this is very good fun for a grown up people's game too.—Jenness Miller Monthly-

A Simple Nut Cracker.

A nut cracker which will be found very serviceable may be made of the flexible branch of a tree—green hiokory, walnut or tough oak wood preferred. Iii the center of the piece of branch selected, which should

be soven or eight inches long and about an inch thick, cut a nichc an inch long and so deep as to leave only a few fibers of wood and the bark intact. This flexible band will remain as a binge to connect the two ends of the branch. Place tho nut to be cracked in the niche and bring the handles together, and the nut will be crushed as neatly as if the cracker was of steel.—Chicago Record.

Bicycles and Sunday Schools. The forty-sixth annual meeting of the Universalist Sabbath School union was field in the Everyday church in Boston recently. The union is composed of 19 schools, in which tbore are 600 officers and teachers and 8.1B8 scholars. Some of the schools showed a falling off in attendance, and there was considerable discussion as to Its probable cause and possihle cure. The fact that scholars were not looked after, the indifference of parents, removals from one part of the oity to another, were all advanced by way of explanation, but the greater part of the blame was laid to the bicycle.—Boston Herald. &||

Cascarets stimulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Never sicken, weaken or snpe.

TerreHaute,

[THEWtaLDS UMSr.fiBA«SF BEST AKBSEHOTI 164 Cars. 4 Trains.^—^£o*waoo*Sou»E

[CAPITAL tNVESTEg^l A 1 E E N S E S

$ 3^oo.ooa^lMHlB5MM7.3c

jRUTHFULUrADTO^TIjEJ

40 Horses in one Wondrous Team, 400 Horses in One Horse Fair. 60 Cages of Wild Beasts.

IBSS

Tar

Twelve champion male and female bareback riders in the most varied kinds of expert and daring riding acts. The New Woman on Horseback, with lady clowns, lady ringmasters and lady object holders.t W

A GREAT, CIRCUS VAUDEVILLE.

Containing male and female magicians, snake charmers, fire kings, jugglers, lightning calculators, Highland dancers, child oracle, and scores of musicians, who perform upon qaaint, curious and ancient and modern musical instruments.

THE GREATEST AERIAL EXHIBITIONS EVER SEEN.

The most renowned mid-air performance in the world. Gloriously thriiliug dives, flights and catches. Alar, the Human Arrow, shot from a huge ancient crossbow away into space.

Mighty New Free Street Parade,

Reproducing the great historical pageant given to Columbus 400 years ago, and containing the magnificent 40-hourse team, at 9 a. m. on day of show. Two performances daily, at 2 and 8 p. m. Doors open an hour earlier. Adrniwion to everything, 60c. Children under 9 years, half price. Reserved seats at regular price and admission tickets at usual advance at Buutin's Drug Company, 600 Wabash avenue.

if 1 N 1 5 5 in to of us if he no el is ha l\ muuenn Uiroif Theodore Murray, profusoly iliustraced, beautiful colored cover. For sale in all book stores', on advance Duly 35 cents.

Made any Length Desired By the

WROUGHT IRON RANGE CO.

Founded 1864. Paid Up Capital SI,000,000, Factories, Salesrooms and Offices:

Washington Avenue, 19th to 20th Streets, ST. LOUIS, MO.

AND

Western Salesrooms and Offices: 1519 Glenarm Street, DENVER, COLORADO,

Home Comfort Ranges received medals and highest awards at uino exposition?, notably Chicago, Xew Orleans, San Francisco and Toronto. Canada. We manufacture and carry a complete stock of Hotel Kanges, Ce.rvlcg Tables. Steam Tables, Boilers, Urns, Plate Warmers and r.ll other kltcr.cn goods. Sole manufacturers of the unequaied "Home Comfort" Hot Air Steel Furnaces. For latest illustrated catalogue and prices write or call at any of our salea rooms.

CALL AT 16 SOUTH FOURTH STREET AND EXAMINE THE WORLD'S RENOWNED

HOME COMFORT RANGE.

Now on Exhibition, and will be for the neit fifteen days. We sell ranges for cash or oa time payments and wo sell thebest range ia tho world for less money than you can buy an Imitation Steel Range for. Wc are peddlers but not drummer peddlers and we pre. sent each person with a nice cookbook.

Shipment of Oalt to England.

Kokomo, Ind., May 2D.—Joseph B1 auchard, WANTED who has been in this vicinity all wJcter and spring, buying large timber for an unknown purpose, shipped one train load ye*te,rday, its destination being London, England. where it will be used in building snips and heavy war vessels. The timbers are the largest ever shipped from Indiana, the larger pieces squaring t. iree ieet and elgbty :o one hundred feet lor,^, rcqniriEg three Hat cars to transport on oi them. They *re tho largest timbers ever crossing the ccearj of oak, grown in this and adjoining counties.

li Jumped From Street r»ir Emma Cameron, who Jives at the corner of Sixth end Maple streets, w.xs badiy injured yesterday afternoon, at 5 o'clock i-v jumping off a street car. The patrol wagon tra« called and she was taken to her hone.

'I'M JbiSDAf,

JtT»TE XO.

B63T AMUSEMENT I

I.a00 WONDERS

I QUARTERS^

Bridgeport.Conn

»OUMI OTflCCS:

IKOfmWNBERtt» At LONDON. INS nut or PONT NUDH PARIS FRANCS'. BMIIWIS OfWf. new YORK.CITY

•00 MMtStS

WOSTMltaOjOOa.

too Cages \Hf

CHARIOTS.

1200 PEOPU Empudyed

12 TENTS COVERWff 12 ACHES

70 Horses in One liluc at One Time. 24 Elephants in Three Rings at Oae Tiro*. 100 Acts in Three Rinse, threo stages &nA< one race track.

AND ABOVE THE HEADS OF THE AUDIENCE.

Everything Just" as Advertised.

sp pretenses. No^exaggerations. Never exhibiting on Sunday. Only show endorse clergy, the wise and good everywhere.

No Falsp pretenses. N-a. exaggerations. Never exhibiting on Sunday. Only show endorsed by the clergy, the wise and good everywhere. wV

SPLENDID CHAMPION EQUESTRIAN DISPLAYS.,

THE ONLY TWO COMPLETE MENAGERIES IN THE WORLD.

JOHANNA, The Famous Giantess Gorilla.

Only oae ia captivity in the world. Seven dons ot performing animals* P&ier the small, Giantess nearly nine feet high, and the Orissa. TwinGreatest living hum&a curiosities on eartu. Aaaea tnereto.

A

-e-

advertising cars, and in the circus. Priot

HOME COMFORT

70 to 76 Pearl Street, TORONTO, ONTARIO, CANADA,

^WAMTED,^

Black walnut logs or blocks. High­

est esrh price paid at Highland guaitoi-i factory, or address ff. A- Langton, Box 196, Terre Haute, Ind.

WIOPSEY TO LOAN.

MONBY TO LOAJtf—On good farm lands If suras tl (1,000 or ove- at 8 t» 6% per cent interest. p&rsbl* aua'-tallj. sum* •.' $300 to £.006 at 7 per cent pays-

b!In s^mi-iiaIt. *r-q^lrt°'Of

BKDCKBn & KKlOSr. SUtf Ohio* strset.

SALESMEN

WANTED

M.vif jievr t^icid KD'JU'A cenmry. Vrfta for term. «*3P{: «4e.

,4

lit-

I as the tfasd*?* varan** ftnifta

ttrsr su ajid orra.roentA'.s, Haopes, Bro. TaoMAi. V.cBn» Hemrfei,:

Wwt Cheater. Pa.