Bloomington Telephone, Volume 7, Number 30, Bloomington, Monroe County, 24 November 1883 — Page 3

Bloomington Telephone BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA. WALTER a BRADFUTE, - - Pcbusheb.

WOMAN GOSSIP. Flirting Jst for Wmm. Ahl there's a wondrous magio In the sluice of woman's eye. . Jkh! there's a wondrous power In the depth of a woman's stun. 'With her ssighs and with her glances, &5d hr coyly winning ways, "Win the ernel charmer tease xa TBI my heart is all abiace. And when all ay fond soul's fired By the lightning of her eyes, And my madly throbbing pulses Leap to meet her trembling sighs, Then, with erlmson corals pouting, Careless qcite the wrong they've done, Does the darling hombrig whisper, "Pshaw! I'm flirting justkforfun." Boston Post. A Demoralized XHtde. "1 want to get a pair of driying gloves," said a consequential looking duck, entering a genVs furnishing store and addressing a lady attendant. "Buckskin?" asked the polite saleswoman. "Qh, no!" replied the impetuous customer, "I want something that will match the color of my skin." "Oh, you do?" returned the lady quickly, taking down a box from the helf; "try a pair of these calf-skins!" The donghhead has never since patronized a store where there are women Attendants. 3e Modem "Romeo and jMliet." They stood beneath the twinkling tars, and, though it was nearing the noon of night, the young man hung on to the girl and the gate as if nothing earthly would drive him away. "Goodnight, dear love," he said for "the hundredth and seventy-seventh time. "Good night, sweetheart," came the aoft answer of the girl. "And you love me?" "And I love yon." "Then, again, my own, farewell. ''Good night, good night, parting is ;such sweet sorrow, that I will say good night until it be to-morrow.1 " "Not much you wont," said the old gentleman, sticking his head out of the window. "It's half-past 12 now, and I'll be darned if Pm going to have you "two young spoons hanging oyer that gate all day long saying 'good night' until it be to-morrow. Young man, .you .go home, and, Mary, you come and 4jo to bed." Cincinnati Traveler. Vsefml Mint. If you are to spend the evening out in company or at an entertainment, it is good policy to take a nap, or at least thorough rest during the afternoon. -Care like this, which seems to be but "trifling, to preserve the health, really makes a great difference in the aggreigate of one's life. Keep a dish of Indian meal on the toilet stand near the soap, and rub the meal freely on the hands after soaping them for washing. It will surprise you, ;if you have not tried it, to find how it will cleanse and soften the skin, and .prevent chapping. It is better not to put woolen carpets in the closets, as, being dark and quiet, moths and other vermins are more apt 3o collect. Straw-matting or oil-cloth is much more easily kept in order. .'Even heavy brown wrapping-paper is not a bad substitute for a carpet in closets but little used. Make a small square bag of flannel, leaving one end partly open. In this 3ut all the remnants of soap as the pieces become too small to handle -easily. When the bag is. filled, baste up the opening, and it makes a good -bath-tub arrangement: Mary Win chester, in Good Cheer. The Work Toung Girls Might Do. I wish it were in my power to. perxsaude young girls,who wonder what they shall do to earn their living, that it is really better to choose some business "that is the line of woman's natural work. "There is a great deal of repugnance at -the thought of being a servant, but a girl is no less a servant to a man who owns the shop where she stands all day ibehind the counter than she is where he waits upon the table-or cooks the dinner in a pleasant house; and to my mind there would not be a minute's question between the two ways of going out to service.' The wages are better, ?the home is better, the freedom and liberty are double in one way what they are in the other. .If, instead of :sham service that is given by ignorant 4Knd really over-paid servants to-day, sen ,-sible New England girls who are anxaous to be taking- care of themselves and earning good wages would fit themselves at the cooking schools, or any way they found available, they would Slot long wait fox employment, and -would be valued immensely by their employers. When one realizes how bard it is to find good women for every kind of work in our houses, and what priqes many rich people are more than waling to pay if they are well-suited, it is a wonder more girls are not ready to seize the chances. It is because such work has been almost always so care

lessly and badly done, that it has fall

en into disrepute, and the doers of it have taken such low rank. Nobody takes the trouble to fit herself properly, but women trust to being taught and finding out their duties after they as sume such positions, not before Sara O. Jewett, in Boston Congregationalist. A. ' Hew Theory of Xiove. What is all this finery for? Does it make men admire us, or love us? Have fine feathers really anything to do with fascinating these male birds? Sentiment is beyond me, anyhow. A journalistic friend assured me that sympathy was the great inciter of love. He said that the Rev. Dr. Buckley told him of having met, in an asylum, two beau tiful and accomplished women, who were teachers in the institution and wives of deaf and dumb men. They might have had their pick, to a reason able extent, from among men with full faculties, and yet they had chosen husbands who never Had and never could speak or hear a word. The two matches had proved so agreeable tat a young heiress of the neighborhood was betrothed to a third pupil. Dr. Buckley had convinced himself that sympathy in these instances begot love. The Rev. Dr. Newman was in the party, 'and my friend quotes him as dissenting from that theory and saying, "A woman invariably has an ideal man in her mind for a husband. She doesn't often find his counterpart in reality. Now, what is it that usually disillusionizes her? It is the man's talk. He looks like a very commonplace mortal. Now a deaf mute doesn't let himself down in this way. His methods of conversation are so laborious that he doesn't resort to them unless he has something to say. He remains a hero in the estimation of the woman whom he impresses favorably by his person, and she falls in love with him for good and all." So we had better Btop dressing care fully and hold our tongues in case this theory is sound and reversible as to sexes. Clara Belle, in Cincinnati Enquirer. Southern Women. History will never detail the sacrifice and heroic courage of Southern women. No matter as to the right or wrong of the cause they believe it was right. The blow fell upon the family household early and with full force. In Virginia seven out of ten families were without men folks at home within three months from the first battle. Father and sons went together. The wife and mother gave all she had, then turned to face f ortner anxieties, mere were thousands of women in the Old Dominion who had never laced their shoes or combed their hair. The slave was at hand to obey every nod. These women sent their husbands and sons to ..the front and then faced the question of food supply. In many cases the slaves ran away. When this occurred the women went into the fields and put in such crops as they could. Where the slaves remained the mistress was forced to act as her own manager and over seer, and resume all responsibility. There are plenty of Federal troopers still living who found educated and cultured Southern women wielding hoes and holding plows in the cornfield within six months of the opening of the war. It was tne ooutnern women more than the Provost Marshals who checked desertion and made the offense odious The Confederate who left the front without leave found no welcome outside of his own family. He who came home by authority, and with a wound to attest his bravery in action, was a hero until duty compelled his return, No man ever saw a night so wild that a Southern woman would not face it to carry news to Confederate soldiers. Every woman was a scout and a spy. If the mother could not go the daugh ter was sent. If there was no daughter a dispatch or message was hurried ,aff by a negro or a signal was made. They came, to accurately estimate thd strength of the marching columns, to identify one make of gun from another in the batteries, and where scouts and spies could not go the women could. It was the women who saved Mosby again and again. It was a woman who told Gen. Jackson the exact strength of the Federal force at Fort Royal before he fell upon it in carrying out his valley campaign. It was a woman who told Early just how Sheridan's army was distributed at Cedar Creek, and there was scarcely a battle on Virginia's soil with which women had not something to do as the bearers of information. Once enlisted in the cause they did not know, what despair was. They sent their beddhur to the hospitals, their provisions to the army, and their jew elry to the buyer of Confederate arms in Europe. When the Confederate Government could not furnish rations, the Confederate women did. I have asked hundreds of Confeder ate soldiers how they made a start after the war, and in nearly every in stance the answer began with; "Well, my wife, you know" His wife had been the power to brace him ud for the new start in life. His

home was in ashes, the farm grown up to briars, and the country overrun with

ouilaws, but the wife's words of hope and encouragement set the returned soldier to work. With any other class of women the South woujd have built up by the inch instead of by the foot. As .they were enthusiasts in war, so also are they heroines in peace. In the real Southern woman's heart there is no hatred of Northerners. There is not even distrust or suspicion. In her parlor may hang portraits through which Sherman's men thrust bayonets, but her pleasantest letters are mailed to and received from friends in the North. The war as a war is buried and forgotten, or, if bitter memories force themselves to the surface, there is no heart-burning for vengeance. Detroit Free Press. CHILDREN'S PREFERENCES. There is very likely no conservatism more difficult jfco deal with than that displayed by the young boy in regard to any change in his apparel. "If I must wear these 'cuffs," said an 8-year-old boy, on Sunday morning, "I am not going to church." The cuffs in question were entirely unobjectionable to the eye of man or woman. They were probably unnoticeable, also; but the boy discovered a morbid dread of ap pearing in them, as they were not a usual addition to his toilet. He confessed in confidence to his mother, as they walked along, that he dreaded the remarks his Sunday-school class would make upon them. How little consideration is shown for the feeling of children. How few parents realize that the child's world, only, as John Brown, of Edinburgh, said, "about three feet high," has its tragedies and comedies, the fear of blighting, adverse criticism. So many times, when garments are chosen, when the question is not of ex penditure but taste, the children them selves might be allowed to choose, within certain limits, what they will have. Who has not seen this sight? When all the happy boys in the neighborhood are wearing knee pants, one small and weary soul appearing in pantaloons the exact counterpart of his father's, and reaching to the heels of bis shoes ! This life is made a burden to him, and then and there is begotten a consciousness of self that will require years of thought and experience and oi resolute care to overcome. The con sciousness of being well and suitably dressed, so dear to the heijrt of woman and so conducive to her ease, is just as consoling to a child, and is no more li able to lead to a morbid fondness fox dress than is the discomfort occasioned by the consciousness that there is some thing wrong about his clothes. New York Post TARRXK& A MAT. Rats are wonderfully clean animals, and they dislike tar more, perhaps, than anything else, for if it once gets on their jackets, they find it most difficult to remove it. Now, I had heard it mentioned that pouring tar down at the entrance of their holes was a good remedy. But these remedies are not effective. The rats may leave their old holes and make fresh ones in other parts o! the house; they don't however, leave the premises for good. I thought I would try another experiment one I had not heard of before. One evening I set a large wire-cage rat-trap, attaching inside a most seductive piece of strongly-smelling cheese, and next morning I found, to my satisfaction that I had succeeded in trapping a very large rat, one of the largest I had ever seen, which, after I had besmeared him with tar, I let loose into his favorite run. The next night I tried again, and succeeded in catching another equally big fellow, and served him in the same manner. I could not follow these two tar-besmeared rats into their numerous runs, to see what would happen; but it is reasonable to assume that they either summoned together all the members of their community, and by their crest fallen appearance gave their eomrades silent indications of the misfortune which liad so suddenly befallen them; or that they frightened their brethren away, for they one and all forsook the place and fled. The experiment was eminently successful. From that day in 1875 till now, my house, ancient though it is, has been entirely free from rats; and I believe that there is no rem' edy equal to this one, if you catch youz rat alive. They never came back to the house again. Chambers' Journal. A MASHER. "Did you ever make a 'mash,' Josh?" said a city swell lad to his country cousin, who knew more about cows than girls. "Gosh! of course I have," he replied. "I make 'em every day." "Do you though?" eagerly asked th dude. "Are they nice?" "Well, I never ate any, but I suppose the COWS like it," was the puzzling answer. "What kind of a mash do you refer to?" "Why, bran mash, of course," said Josh. The city swell went out and put his head under the pump till he oooled off, Ti Dairy.

A.. Jfc C Railway

Motion (Route. 2 Through Passonger Trains, Daily 2 BETWEEN CHICAGO and LOUISVILLE, CHICAGO and JACKSONVILLE. Affords the Best, Cheapest, Quick est, most direct, and most desirable Route to all parts of the Great West and .North West, the bouth and South West. Time in effect March 18th, 1883. CHICAGO TIME! NORTH. CHICAGO HAIL. NIGHT EX. Bloomington 11.59 pm 11,02 pm Chicago 9.00 pm 7.00 am SOUTH. LOUISVILLE HAIL. NIGHT EX. Bloomington 5.06 pm 3.27 am Louisville 9.10 pm 7.20 am Two daily through Express trains, without change, connecting closely with the great through lines out of Chicago and Louisville, giving only ONE CHANGE of cars to all the principal towns and cities in the northwest and in the southwest. Unexcelled traveling accommoda tions. No re-checkiug of Baggage. No delay in connections. Less hanges of cars than by any other oute. Sell thaough tickets to all parts of the country. Check baggage through to destination. Time cards, railroad maps, rates, routes, through tickets and through baggage checks, obtained only of CARTER PEKING, Station Ticket Agent, Bloomington, Ind. Murray Ivellar., G. Jr. A., Louisville, Kv. TO THE EAST. TO THE NORTH. TO THE W3ST. TO THE SOUTH VIA THE Ohio & Missiisippi R'y THE Great Through Car mtff AND gjO Fast Time Route! 4 DAILY TRAINS) Cincinnati & t.n I T.ruiiovlllpDAILY StLouis EASTWARD Stations. Acc'm Day Night Leaves, Exp. Exp. Accm. Vinc'nes, 12.57pra, 2.23am, 12,50pm Mitchell, 2.47pm, 2.23am, 3.27pm Seymour, 8.49pm, 4.01am, 5pm. Arrive at Louisville, 6.25pm, 6.20am, 8.23pm Cincinnati, 6.35pm, 6.39am, 8.23pm Accommodation has Day Couches without Change to Cincinnati. Daily Express has Parlor Cars and Day Coaches without chauge to Cincinnati. Dining Cars Seymour to Cincinnati, Night Express has Palace Sleep, ing cars and Day coaches to Cincinnati und Louisville without change. Dining cars Seymour to Cincinnati. Also, Sleeping cars to Washington and Baltimore without change. WESTWARD: Accommodation leaves Sevmour at 10.80am, Mitchell 11.21am," Vinecnnes 2,05 pm, Flora 3.55 pm, arrives at StLouis 7 25 pm. Day Express Waves Seymour at 10 50 am, Mitchell 11 51 am, Viucenius2 05 am, Flora 3 55 am; arrives at StLouis 6 20 pm. Night Express leaves Seymour 10 88 pm, Mitchell 11 47 pm, Viucennes 2 05 am, Flora 3 55 am; arrive at St Louis, 7 10 am. Pacific Express leaves Seymour 2 20 am, Mitchell 3 51 am, Vincennes 6 am, Flora 805 am; arrive at St Louis 11 20 am. Accommodation has day coaches to St Louis without change. Day Express has parlor cars and day coaches to St Louis without change Dining car Cincinnati to . Seymour. Night Express has palpce sleeping cais and day coaches to bt Louis without change. Also palace sleep ing cars to Cairo and New Orleans without change. Pacific Express has pilace sleeping cars and da1 coaches to St Louis without change. At Cincinnati: Direct connection with all lines diverging with through cars for ail joints North, East,SoutheasL At Louisville: Sure connection with through cars for all points South At St Louis: Close connection with through cars for all points West,South East and .Northwest. For reliable information as to rates routes, tiekots, time, etc., apply in person or by letter toli.A. Ureudley. agent Ohio & Mississippi R'y, Mitch ell, lnd., or to T. W. liusseil, travel ing passenger agent, North Vernon, Ind. W. W. Peabody, W. B. Shattuc, Gen. Sup't. GenH Pass. Ayl CINCINNATI, O, H- J-NICHO LS ARCHITECT AND PRACTICAL BUILDER. Plans and Specifications carefully pre- . - ti. i II pared ior dwelling nouses ana puDiia buildings. Also estimations oi build insrs completed throughout. All work finishsd at the time specified. Office in Bee Hive building. t27 $100,000 TO LOAN! All parties desiring loan of money can be accommodated by calling on the undersitrneu. We loan sums from $500 to Ton Thousand Dollars taking first mort gage on real estate as security. Rate of interest depends on amount desired. Give us a call. ROGERS & HENLEY.

HEALTH IS WEALTH.

Dr. E. C. West's Nerve and Brain Treatment, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizziness, Convulsion' Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Ner vous Prostration cansed by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental Depression, Softening of the Brain resulting in Insanity and lead ing to misery, decay and death, Prem ature Old age, Barrenness, .Loss or Power in either sex, Involuntarp Losses and Spermatorahoea caused by over-exertion of the brain, self-abuse i i i i or over-inauigence. Jiaicn oox contains one month's treatment. One dollar a box, or six boxes for five dol lars; sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. We guarantee six boxes to cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied with five dollars, we will send .he purchaser onr written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by H. LINDLEY. Blooming ton, lnd. b a SoTerelfn Kemodjr tat all Complaint peculiar to Mishawaka, Ind. Deo. 1. 1883. Dr. Pekoklx.-?: Dear Sirt Overwork tiam dnna for -m nhtit It does fop many. Desiring to benefit suffering women. I add mv lestimonv tn ih vnlnn of Zoa-Pjiorm. For five years I suffered greatly with Prolapsus, being obliged to use a supporter during all those painful, weary years; but, thanks to your medicine, I wear it no more. I laid it off after using one and a half bott lis. I am not well, but I work all the time. Aid am better than I ever eYnep.tml to be. You may use my letter, and if any one wishes to write me for more Informa tion, give to em my full address. Miss C. Q. .1 ERSEx YliiLK, XU., April 25, 1882. Dear Sir: I am more than nleniied with tha effect of your Zoa-Fliora. in our daughter's case. X am surprised to see how she has improved. She is gaining in weiirht and color. and I think feels better than she ever did; uer nerves ure sieaay, ana me distress in ner chest is entirely gone. I firmly believe that uarnon is an mai nas saved ner lire. I Hit. Willinc vou should iiha mv latter, for T am not afraid to tell what a wonderful cure your medicine is. Yours respectfully. MRS. SARAH HAHDOIiFS. N. 6. This was a case of surmreaslon. From Mrs. John Spltler, io.B wm st, von wayne. ind. I have suffered for sixteen vears with sntui. modlc pain In my head and general nervous debility. Recently I had a severe attack or pain in my head, caused by weakness and nervous exhaustion. I thought I should die. My husband said we would test Zoa-Phorn thoroughly. He gave It to me according to directions fir severe cases, and In less than two hours I had complete relief. 7 advise all ladies who suffer from nervous or sick head-, ncue, or any form of female weakness, to use Zoa-Phora. There is no medicine to com pare with it. way ia, 1S82. Our Pamphlet on 'Diseases of Women and Children,' Sent gbatis. Every women above 15 years of age, especially Mothers should read It. axiuress ncauisiiiix VJ. Sold by Druggists. Kalamazoo, Mich. All letters marked private arc read by Dr. PenoelI. only Sold only by H. Lindley and J. M. b aris. Piles are freauentlv preceded by a r sense of weight in the back, loins and lower part of the abdomen, caus ing the patient to suppose ne lias some attection ot the kidneys or ncign ing organs. At times, symptoms of indigestion are present, as flatukney, uneasiness of the stomach, etc. A moisture, like perspiration, producing a very disagreeable itching, particularly at night after getting warm in bed, is a very common attendant Blind Bleeding and Itching Piles yield at once to the application of Dr. Bosanko's Pile Remedy, which avva directly upou the parts affected, absorbing the Tumor?, allaying the intense itching and effecting a permanent cure, where all other remedies have failed. Do not delav until the drain on the system prodRce? permanent disability, but try it and be cured. Price, 50 cents. Sent prepaid on receipt of price. Address. The Dr. Bosanko Medicine Co., Piqna, Ohio. Sold by Hiram Lindlby, WANT OF FAITH. If H. Lindley's, the Druggist, does not succeed it is not for the want of faith. He has such faith in Dr. Bosanko' s Cough and Lung Syrup as a remedy for Coughs, Colds, Consumption, and Lung affections, that he will give a bottle fi'e.toeaoh and every one who is need of a medicine of this kind. CAUSE OF FAILURE. Want of confidence accounts for half of the business failures of to-day H. Lindley's, the Druggistf is not liable to fail for the want of confidence in Dr. Bosanko's Cough and Lung Syrup, for he gives away a bottle free to all who are suffering with Coughs, Co'ds, Asthma, Con sumption and all adections of the Throat and Lungs. FREE! RELIABLE SELF-CURE. Bioat noted and successful apecbtifcrts'lti the tJ. S. (now retired) for thp cure of Jforvtmm OcMIMv, Coat Manhood, IF!Jmeai1 Jteeav. Sen lu plaliielelciveloioye. Druggists can HI H. Addreai OR. WARD & CO.. tonltlana. Mo, TOSfS INDIAN QpmsLEW Uli Secure Healthy action to the lUlver land relieve allbil' loua trouble. Puwlj Vwtatle; -Ho Cripiag. frist 85. aU Stuggbti

my

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INSURE AGAINST ACCIDENT. Man's pathway is beset by dangers. Earth, air and see conspire against him. AH the old perils-1' the cyclone, the thunderbolt, the treacherous ice-crust, the rnn-a-way, thfi shinwrenk &o,.. remain. Mod

era civilization has furnished the flying railway taain, the steam boiler, the buzz-saw, fcc, and daily adds to the category. Accident Insurance has become indispensible to every prudent man. The olt and reliable Travelers' Insurance Companay, of Hartford, meeta this want exactly. L. D. Rogers, Agt., 9-23 Bloomington, Ind. FOB SALE. Large House and one acre of ground on 1st street. A Cod House ,nhd six acres of ground in the city limits. . Two Houses and lots on north Bail Road Street. ROGERS & HENLEY, Agte. Hf Below is a partial list of those who carry Life Policies in the New York Life Insurance Company: Dr. J. D. Maxwell, Hon. R. C. Foster, Hon. R. W. Miers, Hon. W. C Duncan, W. B. Hughes, S. E. Carmichael, C. S. Alexander, Rev. A. B. Philput, Prof. E. P. Cole, Prof. S. B. Wylie, V. S. Bradfuts, E. P. Adams, O. H. Wade, Rev. J. A. Bower, C. O. DuBois, See L. D. Rogers, Special Agent, and get one. tf W. B. Baker. S. Neeld. BAKER & NEELD. BtOOHrSTGTOX, - - Int. Having bought the Stock of John P. Smith and greatly increased it, we are now prepared to sell at the very lowest rates any kind of FURNITURE, Call at our store on the north side and look at stock and learn Prices. Bloomington, End., August 25, 1883. 00!( For it is of Great Importance! MATHEWS & TURNER. We have moved into our new room in the new block on West 5 th st with a full scock of new goods in the f urniture line. Every thing that you need is kept by tuem. As we propose to sell them at ibe very lowest cash prices, the citizens of Stanford, Harrodsburg, Ellettsville, and Union ville and the country round for 20 miles are invited to come and see us and leern our prices and we guarantee satisfaction. No trouble to show goods. Billiard Parlor, South side the Square. BLOOMINGTON, IND. o p o

M in U 3 o o

a St 2s . a as o This Parlor is conducted strictli on a moral basis, and the amuse ment-loving people are invited U call and enjoy a game of Pool oc Blliards. W. S. DAUGHERTY, Pkob Walnut Street HOTEL, BLOOMINGTON, IND. Located on the East side of the square. Terms reasonable. Boarders b the day or week. Special inducements to traveling men. WANTED, To buy real estate either in town or countiy. Also have for sale valiuable property. Enquire of EAST & EAST1

if rl- iif ffp Pi 1 s? ffl CHS S mi f l8 & i4 e? TPS jr