Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 March 1891 — Page 3
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TBE GREAT WORLD'S FAIR.
THE CHEAT EXPMITIOX I» WELL TSOKB WAY.
Chicago, March
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1 embarrassing. Tbe peuny-wia© and pound-fool iah bickering of the Fifty-first congress was tbe source of their trouble.
TH« United States commissioner reports that Mexico is enthusiastic over the part she intends taking in the exposition. A water-color sketch of the exhibit has been submitted to the Mexican governwent. It represents the history of Mexioo from the A tecs to the present time, and is a history of tho hnman race in this country, la short the plan is to era on the edge of tbe lake an artificial iron luti covered with soil, and on the top of this hill the «ast!e of Chapuliepec, which will constitute the main building of the 4 exhibit This hill will be surrounded with a canal in which the Indians will move in their canoes. All tbe water life of Mexico is to be represented. At the b*M of the hill buildings will be erected showing tke different stages ot civilfcution here. The governor of Missouri has recmsnoiMtded an appropriation of $160,-
I
not
been generally known, the officiate of the a&Uoaal communion hava beea for the past two weeks in an unsettled condition of mind. Tbeir position was certainly
For awhita it looked as if tbey were not «Q]y going to be deprived of their salaries, bat left without money to pay ordinary office expenses. This too at a time when everything was working harmoniously. For a time the forebodings were bad. Tbe officials could not afford to spend their time for a paltry sum that would not more than pay expends. They, above all men, know the status of the exposition and its requiremeats. For them to resiftn it would practically kill the fair. Thus matters bung for days. At last they held a meet"gyeayilung looked even worse .be same storv was reported by all. seetned to lack everything only courage and seal. They were men, who, in this dark hour, stood by tbe exposition and decided to stand by it, and, if need be, pay the expenses themselves. But the darkest hour is just before dawn. Before the expiration of congress, the senate conference committee caved its honor by appropriating $95,500 for the Colombian commission and board of lady managers. This news brought rays of relief to all, and tbe rooms and offices that were about to be vacated are as usual occupied with busy workers. This amount makeo ample provision for the commission for the ensuing year. It is expected the next congress will be more libers). The work of the exposition will now progress smoothly, the commission and directory working harmoniously. Although there is not uiach stir being made, still there is more work being executed than at any time
et. There are about 500 men at work in perk. Although sketches of the
buildings have be»m accepted by tbe board of eoutrol, still the drawings will be complete for sixty uays. They
are trying to out-do the world, and it is a hard matter to get anything definitely decided upon. Once the spring opens the progress of the work will be surprising, as there is a small army now quietly Mh preparing to have everything in readiness
j, (ken. iP. A recent dispatch from Berlin states that tho merchants of that place have decided to make an extensive exhibit at tbe lair.
Tbey
will ask their minister of
commerce to appoint an imperial commissioner to obtain all information, and provide for the conveyance of all German -exhibits. Measures are being taken by tbe people of Norway to secure an exhibit of antiquites for tho exposition, to illustrate the Icelandic discovery of America.
state this association is in no way connected with the lady managers of the exposition. Tbey have been organized for two years. Their object is to builu a permanent pavillioo, also a Btntueof Queen Isabella. The membership fee is $1. Their plans were to increase their members into the tens of thousands and thereby raise funds. This plan has failed. They can only pay expenses. They now propose to raise the money from the contributions of the rich meuibera. They are working with a real. But their existence is not necessary and they and their money will probably merge into Woman's department of the exposition,
Honduras is also awakening. Her lending citiseaa consider this the great opportunity for their country to intorm the world of the unknown advantages to be had In that clime.
It is strange that even yet false reports
IlK regard tag tbe exposition are being pub* Ushedi in some of oar papers. By reading them a person would gather the imI ptvsaion that there was nothing being dou* and that the fair was practically abandoned. The facts are everything Is in
pwt*. immense a $15,000,000 enterprise,
organising
adopting plans,
accepting designs for the great buildt, ha* all M«n accomplished in about
aud inw» one quarter of the time it required the same work to be done in organising oth**r exoeaiUoiw. Tbe tabor feature isytt at.gK settled. The directory will agree to an
eight-how day and a system of arbitrslion, but that ia the limit. The Trad« a and lAbor Assembly is endeavoring to have the co-operation of labor unions in the different states strive to have the World's Fair work done at union wages and anion hours,
Tke governor general of Cuba Has appointed a Worlds Fair commission of thirty citisens. He says lie will peiwmally visit the exposition and secure the construction of a govemmeat building.
hill now in the Illinois legislature for an appropriation of $30,090 for premiums to the ulinois live stock^nen who will exhibit at the fair. Is all there is a total amount of $4,527,000 propo^d annronriatioas for the fair, beveral of pasted both hoo«* are A signed by the go\-ernor and are already
1
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ft
A mm* against General OoleecoU, and two ewt a««in«t Jack Ro*h for MsanH and battew have been atridcea dooketa ofthe dnaait
Safcerfbe forth* New®.
LIBRARY NOTES.
THZKE is A library exclusively women in Turin. Fimrv-oxx large and valuable libraries were sold in London last year.
Hsa. Avsrvx
THE London libraries all have a small stationer's shop connected with them, where tbe various conveniences for writing are supplied.
SENATOR DAWKS
MONEYED AMERICANS.
JAV GOULD goes to bed every night at ten o'clock, does not drink tea or coffee, eats with great regularity and takes admirable care of his health, but the pace has told upon him, nevertheless.
Joits JACOB ASTOB is endowed with six feet of solid physique, an imperturbable fund of good nature, excellent health, and is booked for an inheritance that cannot fall short of $100,000,000.
THE late Captain J. B. Thomas, of Boston, was probably the richest man in New England. He left an estate worth over §25,000,000, a large share of which had been acquired by real estate investment in San Francisco and Brooklyn.
JAV GOULD'S daily income is said to be about $7,500. But this is rather small compared to Rockefeller, who is supposed to receive $18,000 daily, or Astor, who gets $28,000 doily, or even Cornelius Vanderbilt, who has to get along with $15,000 every twenty-four hours.
IT
is an old saying that a Scotchman "ne'er goes bock again" to the land of his birth. And in tho case of David Jacks, the California millionaire, one can easily understand why it should be so when he can ride twenty miles on a straight line on his Monterey estate and
LLESNV CLAY FKICK, owner of the mine near Scottdale, Pa., where over one hundred and ten miners were killed recently, was the bookkeeper of a flouring mill twenty years ago. It is stated that he now controls eight thousand of the thirteen thousand evens in the Connellsville region and the coke market of this country.
NOTES FOR UNCLE SAM THE first sugar cane cultivated in ine United States was near New Orleans in 1751.
FARM hands in the United States, taking the country as a whole, occupy only 389 acres in every 1,000.
FOUTV-FIVE THOUSAND immigrants arrived from Sweden and Norway to the United States last year.
STATISTICS show that the birth-rate in the United States is declining. This is the worst baby show the country has overbad.
TUK number of Indians in the United States who can read English is stated to be over twenty-three thousand the number who can read Indian languages is over ten thousand.
FROM
the returns for 1800, the depart
ment of agriculture estimates the number of farm animals as follows: Milch cows, 16,019,091 other cattle, 36,873,648 sheep, 43,431,186 hogs, 50,625,106. In the latter there was a decrease of 3 per cent., while the value has decreased 57 cents per head.
IT
has been estimated that
MMXlHiMMMi
Connix has given fire
hundred volumes to tho railway employes* reading-room in Long Island city.
is much Interested in
a project for a free circulating library in Washington. Mr. Wanamaker has also heartily approved the scheme.
Gs the Nieolayevkiy railroad pnnlic libraries will be established in three points, at the stations of St. Petersburg, Bologoye and Tver, where railroad employes will be supplied with books to read.
THE Boston public library has just come into possession of two diaries of John Brown. They were presented through, W. P. Garrison, of New York city, by Mrs. Sarah A. McKim, of Orange, N. J., tbe mother qf the architect of the new library building.«
LrBRARiAX
SPOFFORD
tliinks that
within three years he will be able to move the National library into the new building going up in Washington for the pwpo®*.. Tfc# aetr Structure will have a greater storage capacity for books than the British museum, it is stated.
THE library left by the late George Bancroft is reputed to te one of the best private collections of books in the country. It contains about -twelve thousand volumes, among whteh are many works in foreign languages, and every book in the collection has a value apart from its selling price.
25,000,000
bushels of oysters are opened -annually in the United States, representing an accumulation of shells amounting to not less than £43,500,000 cubic feet, which if spread out would cover a space of more than 450,000 yards square to a depthofthrecieet.
WIT AND WISDOM.
BKOKKN* hearts are never dangerous aa long as dinner tastes good. CAXCS are the only signs of support some well-dressed young men show.
A CYXIC, brethren, am a man who doan' 'spise de wort' half much as de wort* 'spises him.
No J.AYFVKR has any excuse for going hungry the statutes have lots of provisions in them.
It is a mistake to call labor a cum. The most worthless men are those who have nothing to do. ft issoeaigF to be a pr«Huisin$r sort of a man. Bat it is so difficult to be a fulfilling swwt of a man.
IT may be regarded aa corroborative proof that* man does not like a slippery pavement when he*adown on it. "IF yon wish to appear well in socte ty»w said Talleyrand, "yon most consent to be taught many things which you know already,"
MAXT persons do by permitting their feelings to be stirred, and then letting- then subside again without an effort in the direction of that which excited them. Even? experienoe of that sort helps to blunt tbe moral Moat and promote ha degTtda»
Miss Carolina Row.
Miss Caroline B. Le Bow, whose Clevei oook, "English as She is Taught," wa£ made famous by Mark Twain, has been obliged to drop much of her literary work on account of serious trouble with her eyes.
Tlio Bird* and Mrs. Miller. Every year when the grass begins to green and the willow "pussies" are soft and downy and the buds swell on the ••mvqnv irswf winter being past with its fur and feathers, and the milliners' windows abloom with dandelions and lilacs, that no more birds will be worn. This spring the rumor, which naturally will have facts to back it until next autumn's openings, takes the form of a statement that Mrs. Olive Thorne Miller is sending out uncounted thousands of total abstinence pledges binding tho signers to touch not, admire not, put not into their bonnets the carcasses of dead warblers. Applications for these pledges come to her in consequence from all parts of the country. Mrs, Miller loves birds, but she is a busy woman and is putting no tracts into circulation.
l»nncr«i»tic Juicc itntl Koti**. She was slight and blonde and grayfeyed. "I got up." she said, "four times last night and lit the gas because I couldn't sleep without satisfying myself as to certain questions. "First, I couldn't remember the constituents of the pancreatic juice exactly. "Then I wasn't sure of more than three oUt of four muscles that lie iu the groove of a certain bone. "Then, just aa I was dropping off nicely to sleep, I asked myself if could swear to the chemical composition of fatcelL"
She was young, she wore ft pretty hat, but things began to get gruesome and interesting. "No, I don't get the janitor to clean bones for me and 1 don't bury them in backyards you can't be sure of getting a perfect skeleton. Our subjects come from Betlevue and they are not those of good muscular men commonly. The proper way is to go td a dealer the best bones come from Paris, 'imported,' like our Eiuiter bonnets. There they get well-developed French peasants in tbe hospitals and their skeletons have a reputation.'* ,*
You have to look very hard at the great glowing rose in her buttonhole to keep yourself well anchored to sweetness and light while you sit next a girl medical student in a horse car."
A Intch Colonial MwltriiltM. in the way of home decoration 1 have taen nothing of late more interesting than an ancient, low-browed Dutch colonial house in the suburbs over whose re-modeling presides the daughter of a man of much money and of many acres, she being shortly to occupy it as a bride. Dormer windows have baea let into the long slanting roof, and de not interfere with its antique aspect and the spirit of its belongings. Tall classic pillars form a porch not unlike those added to so many old houses in Virginia. The wide entrance hall, from which the old straight stairs hare been removed,is paneled in oak and decorated in a heavy red, reaching np to the ceil log. the big, lowMKadded parlor Is a delightful room with its old gold, btoiuw awl creamy
TERKE HAUTE DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1S91.
9SBS9
THE DOINGS OF WOMEN.
Interesting Figure* Sketched from the Metropolis-
£. ug
BiMU *t4 Mr*. Siai»r-UU» Caroline B.
Vm
Row Panci title «Inte»
Md Bmim- 1TM* »M4 Model* Mr*. Purlers. corrawirr
1801,
Wherever one meets her, the woman of the day is an interesting figure. Her hat with its slim ting bows that reach and lean and stretch their arms forwsrd, her high-shouldered ilaeves between" which her head seems helplessly sinking, her cost with its bobbing basques sad hop scant skirt, tight about her hips, flounced to her knees and trained, are one and all worth looking on. At tbe Bray ton Ives sale there was a tall pale woman, highbred and slender. She wore crape and dull silk swathed about her so duskily that in a different and funereal way *ho rivalled Bernhardt in her gauze wrappings. From her close little above which black butterflies ipened and closed their wings over black ^blow-" aways," waved a fluff of straw-colored hair and drooped a heavy, cloud-like vail. The fan-like puffs on her shoulders roso nearly to her ears, but her trailing drm* perl®* lmngt weeping. Her skirts lay penitentially in the dust and the dust gathered thick and gray upon them. Wrapped about with sackcloth and sprinkled with ashes was this swaying Lenten lily. Her lips never moved, her face was quiet, white bnt not unhappy.
At the dog show one evening was a woman with a piquant, irregular face '.it by big, smiling brown eyes. When sh* spoke her words came with a lisp, like & child's. She lifted a pup and held it above her face, and we looked at tbe curly-fared kicker and then at the pinkcheeked, picturesque dog-lover in her frock of chamois cloth and her bonifet decked with pink velvet roses. We saw that the pup had honest eyes of a watery blue and the woman had dimples. She had festoons of narrow gold braid 41 so, catching about tho bottom of her sk|rt a band of pale yellow velvet, perhaps ajfoot wide. The braid was looped in scalpps, and at each point it describel a Louis XIV. knot with bows and endfand jet beads gleaming. The woman wdre a smart jacket also, whose skirts avere slashed in battlements, and abovf the battlements were more festoons [with other knots and ends. There was glittering rosette of gold chains in jfellow metal at her throat, and the pup pawed and snapped at it, attracted like a! baby by the colors.
way is the dtoing froom wU& iu aneiant drawer ss& bSno tllaings. Behind the entrance hall is a great staircase h&li with winding stair and cavernous fireplace Ave feet across, its decorations in bronse and red tunes.
Mr*. TttamtM Bird,
|frs. Bird, to whom Emma Abbottlefi a considerable sum of money, has worked fo&$-ears in the Bethel mission of Flymouth Church. Though she has now moved out of Brooklyn she crosses from New Jersey every week to carry her labors forward. A lady, daughsr of one of Massachusetts'* ex-Qovernors, revisited the Bethel at a little dinner given to tbe Motors' Class a short lime ago, ••Where," said she to Mrs, Bird, "are all the mission women with shawls over their heads and forlorn faces whom we used to know?" "Here," replied Mrs. Bird,
case not
Aboat the narrow rime are puriands of fiak
reuse. The fireplaeeis of elseaic pattern, withoat over-raaatei—iu creamy paint as "aft-
,lthey
grown into these noat, cheerful, welldressed woi£cu.'r U.Oa uuother occasion "Mrs. Alice Free%an PalWr vislteu tho «ctsno of Mrs. p^rd'stabors. "Wb3r,"fai|l she, "I thought you said we weretedfne with poor women these look in every way comfortable."
Such transformations are brought ibotR by diselflsh labor.
Aaa»8«,!t i»» yAtie*s«»lii|ti is* Talmage's pArlor s, are excellent examples of the Eastern furnishings. A darkve boy wrought in bronza stands thlploorway carrying candle3. Antique'lrngs cover the couches and lie tbick\ipon the floor. On an easel stands a picture of slave girls in bright draperies, blowing long slender pipes, giving all the spirit of Alma Tadema's "Pastime in Ancient Egypt." A bronze lamp is carried on the back of a crocodile. Another, with drooping yellow petticoats, has for a base a great bronze jar on whose sides are wrought bas-reliefs of the labors of Nile boatmen and fellaheen. On a pedestal is placed the bust in bronze of an Egyptian girl. There are hieroglyphics on a quaint scarf, woveif cf papyrus, that covers a table, and scarabs in a little cup of curios.
WITB
ond
IIIHID',
J. 5. Brown, the paintsr of bootblacks and newsboys, has a wife who is more complaisant on the subject of models than is the case with all artists' spouses. "I think I shall try next," he said the other day, after exhibiting two pictures nearly ready for the spring exhibition, "some of these sentimental girls. My wife saw a pretty one yesterday whom she thought would suit rae." "Does your wife suggest models?" ^"If.she sees a beautiful face she may ask the woman if she won't sit to mo. Oh, I couldn't paint at all if my wife were jealous. Why, sometimes she comes down here and I say: 'My dear, 1 can't let you in. I have a girl here.' Seems a rough thing to say to a woman, doesn't rt? But she understands."
A Suc.ceg»ful Enterju-Ur.
A projtat which a number oE plucky
a Gu'dp and Visitors' Bureau, the first one of illisort in this country, and modeled on the Lady Guides Association in London. The ladies in charge of the undertaking have lately taken a house at 11 West Eighceeuth street, where women who do not wish toJ go to hotels can get rooms, and where Appointments can be madfljiwith dressmakers or toilettes chfigKd. Many women are so little used to leveling and feel so helpless when left to their own resources that probably a new occupation will in time develop itself in every larga city in the rendering of just such serviees in meeting strangers at the depot, securing tickets, directing to hotels and boarding-houses and attending to women's comfort as these women are experimenting with.
1
EUZAESTH DUSTI.V.
Thw S«l*Iitf». orr w*.
It is asserted that the smallest screws known are •'•hose used in the production of watches. Thus, the fourth jewelwheel screw comes very near being invisible to the naked eye, looking, when viewed by a person of ordinary gift of eyesight, like a small speck of dust. With a glass it is seen to be a small but perfect screw, with threads so fine that it would lake 360 of them to wind around the little speck of wire to the distance of half an inch. These minute mechanical atoms are but tho forty-one thousandth of an inch in diameter, and less than th| ten thousandth of an inch in length. A lady's thimble of'the ordinary size, say a No. 7, would hold 160,000 of the little but useful spccks of brass.
net) Tlilnr n» Itiwrk Cat. etmeier informed the memuers" in don Zoological Society at theii ing that there i» sio such thing as a black cat. The blackest .cats appears to be not IO black ^ton has painted it there is no wn of a cat of this kind that has least one tuft of white hair to
brealTfbc monotony Of its color*
P*|M flhrt In
Ethel—When angels come upon earth, mamma, are they in disguise Mamma—Yes, dear, why do you ask
Ethel—Because I heard cousin Frank say to papa thin morning that you were an angel, and papa said that perhaps you were, bnt that you must be one io di»ffuise. "J# )|il« it W*m V»r H»r. r. Tangle—Maria, I'm going to makt it warn for you. rs. Tangle—Yon are a perfect brute 1 I shall go right back to niofciser's——
Mr. Tangle-Now, don"t be too hasty I'm going to buy you a sealskin sacqne.
1m'S Um «r lkl«*l«iiki|i. Mrs. O'Flaherty— Yoar sitter has another child, Pat.
Mr. O Flaherty—I* it a boy or a girl? "A girt." "HurrooJ Pra ae aunt at last.'*
Wm» S»l Ml*.
When Little courted Mr*. be tue to spoak of her ,aa a ray ef sunshine ooas fBgipto his life. I know it. And no it j* «*jd she frequently taashlm.
MftraJTOML"
"Iwiahyon wouldn't blow quite ao much!" petulantly said tbe rain to tha wind. "Oh, dry tip yourself!" retorted the wind. •Tve had enough out of youl" cried the rain-barrel to the spout. "Yes," contemptuously returned the spout. "If you weren't so full, yon wouldn't slop over the way yon do at every little thins*." "Be still, all of yon!" hiccoughed the whisky bottle. "Cork him!" shrieked the babywagon, holding its tongue. And the meeting adjourned.—Light.
WM N'OW
WE'VE COT
have
The latest deadly weapon drawn on ooor Lo.—N. Herald.
His Chance* Jeopardized.
"My son," said a kind father, "what have you decided to be when you grow up?" "I think, father," said the young lad, a gleam lighting up his eye, "that I should like to be a member of congress."
4'I
am afraid," replied the father, sadly, "that it is even now too late. You have been going to school too long."— Harper's Bazar.
An Apt Illustration.
She (who is a belle)—Pray tell me, Mr. DeRondeau, what do they mean by poetical license?
Mr. DeRondeau (who is a poet)— What! Do you not know? (Suddenly kisses her.)
She (haughtily)—Sir! Mr. DeRondeau—Well, that was only poetical license.—West Shore.
A Knocked-Out Rival.
Miss Blossom—Whar in d' world's yo' been since Chris'mus, Miss Pettigrew? Miss Pettigrew—I done got 'xploded at d' pahty.
Miss Blossom—Sho! Miss Pettigrew—Yft-as. Dat low-down Peters gal gub me a chew ob gum, an' when I bit on to it I foun' hit wuz a torpecto.—Judge.
remlnlno Intuition.
want Clara to see that thing you are mnlringr for her, you'd better put it out of sight, for she'll be up pretty soon. I hear her in the front hall.
Mrs. DeBlank—She won't be up for an hour at least. .She's bidding good-night to Mr. Nicefello.—N. Y. Weekly.
Hand and Foot.
"Papa, what is a chirosophist?"
1
'He's a man who reads chai'acter from your fist." "And what is a chiropodist?'' "He is a man who studies your feet in order to improve your understanding." —Jury.
Saw Hi in and Called Him.
Mrs. Dogood—Did you see the ele phaat while you were in New York? Mrs. Tyger—I didn't but my husband did. At least when wo got home he scrtd one had stepped on hispocketbook. -Puck.
A Case of ••IJnde Drop."
GUS Snobberly—1 suppose you gave up horseback riding on account of youi health.
Dudley Canesucker—Yes, I fell ofl mere and more every day.—Texas Sittings.
Couldn't Hear Himself Think "Oi can't hear mesilf think," said Pat to his romping children, "an' it's mcighty lucky for yez nil that Oi can't, fer Oi was jist thinkin' of killin' yez ii yea didn't make liss noise."—West Shore.
1
& A
At a social gathering in Harlem, a young lady who was an accomplished vocalist was asked several times to sing, bnt refused. "You remind me a singing doll,'' remarked Gus De Smith "yon must be pressed to sing."—Texas Sittings.
The Autocrat of tha 0»a«. ,, Mamma —What's the matter With my two little boys?
Jimmie (fretfully) He wants to play jackstraws, and I say it's just mian for him to always call 'era aftet hisaelf, and I play jimstraws to-day or nothing."—Judge.
An EflWU
She—So you are just from Minneapolis. How did the people out there re ceive your lecture on the "Supreme Qualities of Shakespeare?"
He—Well, when I finished the audience gave three cheers for Bacon,—Life.
Heal Humor.
IS
iafti nigh*
"Is that new play you saw funny?** "Oh, immer.M-ly funny! One of the characters falls off a cb&ir and get* kicked by a tntde, and another on* wears some one else's hat."—WestSbore.
SeeaMMl Big t» Bbw#
**That fiahnuuu cheats outrageously In bis weight." "Weil, I suppoae that's because he catches his own Pack. termimm* itebUtettfc
Archibald—You are related to her by aiarriage, are yon Fi^yay—iro I'm her brother by refasak—Peek.
MKOlCAb.
icuRiNGi^V s:
Hundreds and Hundreds ol the vontv
CHRONIC DISEASES.
W. D. RE/I.M. D.,
who has created such a sensation in andaround Louisville, Ky., by on ring diseases that almost baflk'd the medical fraternity ol tfce country.
Dr. Rea has charjre el the clcctriesi and anr gical department of the Gofl'ee Medica? midfinrgical institute of that city.
By special request lie will visit TKBRK HAiJTE.at the
Ifatlonal Hotel, Monday and Taettdny Harrh 30lli And 3int.
RETURNING EVERY MONTH, TO REMAIN TWO DAYS DURING THE YBAR. Dr. Rea has been connected with tho largest hospital* in this country, and h«u no superior in diagnosing: aad treatiug discanes and deformities. He will giyet&O for any COM that he f«nnot tell the disease and where locatwl in five minutes.
Treats all Curable Medical and Surgical diseases, Acute and Chronic.
OATARH H,
Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat and Lungs, Dyspepsia, Hriglit's Disease, Kidneys Diabetes, Liver, Bladder, Chronic aad Fcmal# and Sexual Disease.
EPILEPSY OR FITS CURED.
A Positive Guarantee.
Young or Middle Aged Men 8uflferingfrom Spermatorrhea and impotency,, as the result of self-abuse in youth, or excaw' in mature years, and other causes, producing: some of the following eflfbets, as emission, blotches, debility, nervousness, dixsiness, QMI-
the victim far business or marnu^re arc permanently cured by remedies not injurious. Blood and Skin Diseases,
Syphilis, and complications, as sore throat falling out of the hair, pnln iu the boacs, eruptions, etc., mercury or other injurious drugfe, Gonorrhea, Gleet stricture, and all Urinary and kidney trouble# ara speedily cored by treatment that has never failed.
He undertakes no Incurable cases, bat curco thousands itiven «p to die. Itember tbe date and come early, as his rooms are always crowded wherever he stops. Consultation free. Corre«iondence solicited .Mid confidential. Address,
COFFEE MEDICAL INSTITUTE, No. 520 Fifth
St,
Louisville, Ky.
HOTEL,
GRAND PALACE HOTEL
81 to 103 North Clark St., Chicago. 4 ailnnlcn from Conrl Hoase. BOTH PLANS Weekly,#3.OO. Trnnnleoli, S9e ay
RESTAURANT BY COMPAGNON, )ale tilritgo ('lab, I'hff POPULAR PRIOE8. NEW HOUSEaar* Cut this otU further reference
PKOFTeaHTOM^.
Dr. L. H. Bartholomew, war
DKXTI8T,
liemored to C71 Main ST, Tcaat HAUTC, IMO.
DB. GLOVER
SPECIALTY, •Diaefwefi of tbe RECTUM.
Seventh and l'oplar. Hour*, 10». ai. u4 p. and
6
to 8 p.m.
I. H. O. ROYSE,
INSURANCE. *To. 617 Ohio Street.
LBO. J. WEINSTEIN, M.
Physician
and Surgeon!
Be«ldcnce CM rrhe*tnut Office, 111 sooth Sixth (Saving Bank Raiding} AU calla promptly aarwerea t«J#! oc» 21$
H.V.Caton&CO.,
l*n»rr!ptioa* mrelnily filled tor coaipctest drjjgti-^ day or bight .-1
j- •,*'
648 Lafayette avenue.
DR. R. W. VAN YALZAH,
•i
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