Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 30 August 1883 — Page 7
NEVER FAILS.
•'Yon claim too mnch for SAMARITAM JFEBVINK," says a skeptic. "How can one medicine be a specific for Epilepgy. Dyspepsia, I Alcoholism,
Opinm Eating, Bbenmatumi
SpermatorrhtB, or Seminal Weakness, and fifty other complaints?" We claim it a tpedfie, simply, because the virus of all diseases arises from the blood. Its Nervine, Resolvent, Alterative and Laxative properties meet all the conditions herein referred to. It's known world wide&i
It quiets and composes the patient—not by the introduction of opiates and drastic cathartics, but by the restoration of activity to the stomach and nervons system, whereby the brain is relieved of morbid fancies, which are created by the causes above referred to.
To Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary men, Merchants, Bankers,Ladies and all those whose sedentary employment causes nervous prostration, irregularities of the blood, stomach, bowels 01 kidneys or who require a nerve tonic, appetizei or stimulant,SAMAHITAX NEKviNEisinvaluable Thousands proclaim it the most wonderful i* Vigo rant that over sustained the sinking system yy §1.50. Sold by all Druggists. The DR. S. A. RICiniOXT) MED. CO.,Propr's
St Joseph, Me. (44)
For testimonials and circulars send stamp.
TOBACCO CHEWERS
A REWARD
Of 8555 CASHi 1*000Imported Novelty Pocket Knives and 5,000pounds of the Great
ZOO-ZOO
CHEWING TOBACCO TO BE GIVEN AWAY!
U| CW1
M'
8 an
be given in rotation, the largest i—^ turned will receive the first reward, 8100 Cash, second highest, 890« and so on down to a lOct plug of ZOO-ZOO tobacco. These Christmas and New Tear rewards will be distributed between December 26th and January 1st Chew this delightful tobacco. the best ever made. Save the tags and send them by mail, between December 16th and 25th, to tha
WILSON & McOALLAY TOBACCO CO. MIDUIiETOWN. OHIO. PT Cat address oat and paste on Envelope* This is THE FINEST POUND PLUG EVER MADE.
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR ZOO-ZOO. Br*lusidt ou bavin# it and you will use no othec
OLD
MADE
NEW
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t,
MAKES
ELECTRIC
Scouring
I
POLISH
I Beat In the World.
t".
Looking Glasses
TIjn
ASK
YOUR
BEMCNT&CO.
.Wholesale Agenrs
TmX
DR.
BYE!
(BEFORE-AN® AFTER 'flettiic Appliance* are sent on 30 Days' Trial* to MEN 0H2LY,
WHO
?t
Y3U5K1 BR 0L9,
are Buttering
from
NBRVOUSTDEBnarr.
Lpsi VITALITY. LACK o* NEBYTJ
ORCH Am
•IOOR, W ASTINO WEAKNESSES, and 11 THOFE diseases
t* PiraowAl NATCIUE resuitinpt frem ASTTSES and 5*1 *CQi once for Illustrated 1'amjvliK't tree. Address tOlTAIfi MIT CO.. IWWOHftll, MICH.
TIRED ALL OVER.
What Rested and Refreshed a Weary Man in Memphis.
"No, it never amounted to an acute pain, but continued to i.c :t dull weary ache in the snuli of my back."' write* Mr. Jame* Thomas, of No. 59 Madison street' Memphis, Tenn. his was an ola experience, nud life bec»:ne dult music. I was tired ail over, with pain in the lower limb?, and a habit of lnyiog awake of nights. Receutljr I tried one of Benson's Capcine Porous Plastera and was decidedly relieved within twenty-four hours. It may have been Providence that did the work, but 1 give the credit to Ben -n'e porous plaster Mr. Thomas' rever ential idea docs hiui credit, but Providence works by agents, and among them Benson's
blaster ranas first as an external remedy, acta quickly in relief- and healing, and renders life better worth living. Prioe 25 oente. Look in the mi 'die of the plaster for h« word Capcine. Ask your physician about it. SEABntY & JOHNSON,
Chemists, New York.
(SSp FWEE1 I5
JPREUABLE SELF-CURE
A fttvorita nrei
plain sealed envelope/Vee. )ru£giata can filllSi WAUD A CO.. Uofcfeaa. Ma-
TO THE SOLDIERS
T. s. Huatoe. SON or OKU. M. C. HUJTTKR, Has an office In WashituAon City for procuring pensions. All suQden who entrust their business to
Washlnato 3. All soSe him will receive prompt
1
attention and honorable treatment. Address, P. O. Bos 351, Washington, D,
», .^c, j.'MrsK us***-
WOMAN AND HOME.
A Fascinating Washington GirlCanadian Houswives—Over8erioue Children.
Care of Kooms---H.itchen Progrress—» Clara Belle's Fashion flints---The First Woman in Camp.
Denver News. KM I June 30 was a day of jollification at Carbonate, Col., being the advent of the first I wagon, the first woman and the first board from the mill. It would have been interesting to the reader to witness the electrifying effect on the men in the camp when word was passed along the line that a woman was coming. Long before she was within a mile of the camp knots of men were gathered here and there watching, looking in the direction from whence the wagon was to come. As she hove in sight each one gathered around his camp, as when an alarm had been sounded in a prairie dog town. When within a few yards of the outside habitation the woman alighted and accompanied by her husband proceeded to the county clerk's office. [It had been advertised that the donation of a town lot would be given the first woman who came in.] Curious eyes were watching her every step as sh9 approached the clerk's quarters. But the crowd which had gathered around the office for mail receded respectfully each side of the entrance. As she passed in, Col. Ferguson serenely loomed up, and, sailing out among tho boys, agitated a reception.
Seized by the inspiration, a hundred hats were removed from1 heads of noble structure and design—siluriated somewhat, perhaps— and a hundred horny palms passed over the unkempt locks to smooth them down vests were pulled down, and a hundred pair ofeyei ran down the respective owners' "digging clothes," proudly inspecting the inevitable "ball stitch" which rejoined the dismembered seam or held in place the patch of conspicuous dimensions. By a look of common consent the colonel was the man selected to make the reception speech. Uneasily plumiug lus moustache with carbonate-stained fingers, the colonel approached her, and, followed by the uncovered heads, he inadvertently yanked a frog ,from his throat and began. "Respected madam," and a hundred heads nodded assent. Appealing again to his moustache for the needed inspiration the colonel resumed again: "Respected madam— the most illuminating spectre of this most fascinating occasion And a hundred heads bobbed serenely again in assent. Pluming again the source of inspiration the halting colonel staggered on: "Footprints of thine, which have first fallen on our carboniferous soil, we welcome thee. Mercury in her aerial flights trails through the starry architraves of heaven to trail over the Silurian outcrops of Garfield county, which has become sacred to us from toil, vicissitudes, and privations. It is ours by right of discovery and you are wel* come. "We are conversant with your sex and some of us have been victimized. We have learned to love and cherish in memory the tiny fingers which were rubbed over our biscuits in other days, and we languish for the same. The delicacy of sewing on buttons (thimbleless) is ours and our toil-stained robes bear the traces of the Silurian outcrop. For months we have been here surrounded by the beautiful crystalian pearls^of. heaven, which have banked about and around*us7and our only solace has been the chirp of tho camp bird and the weird wailing of the metauiorphic blasts. We have long anticipated the daisy, struggling through the snowy depths to comfort us, as the day drew near when we laid by our snow shoes on the limestone ledges, but this occasion is most sublime, undreamed of and unprecedented in the history of our new country. Thou hast come upon us like a perfume-freighted breath of the gentle spring time, and thou art the shrine to which we bow and bring tribute, and in behalf of these, my partners in the struggle, who stand before you with uncovered head, some of them glistening like burnished discs in the Silurian sonlight, heads which have been robbed of capillary traces from inevitable contact, I again say, welcome." The Fascinatlon'of Simplicity, Cleanliness and Health. Washington Capital.
I saw a girl come into a street car the other day, though, who had, I was ready to bet, made her own dress, and how nice she did look. She was one of these clean, trim girls you see now and then. She was about 18 yoars old, and to begin with, looked well-fed, healthy and strong. She looked as though she had a good sensible mother at home. Her face and neck and ears and her hair were clean—absolutely clean. How seldom you see that. There was no powder, no paint on her smooth, round cheek, or firm, dimpled chin none on the moist, red lips, none on the shelltinted, but not too small ears none on the handsomely set neck—rather proud behind, perhaps, but running mighty prettily up into the tightly corded hair.
And the hair I It was of a light chestnut brown and glistened with specks of old gold, as the sun shone on it, and there was not a smear of oil or pomatum or cosmetic on it there was not a spear astray about it, and not a pin to be seen it. the girl came in and took her seat, she cast an easy unembarrassed glance around the car, from a wdll opened gray eye, bright with the inimitable sight of "good condition," such as yoo see in fome handsome young athletes who are "in training." There were no tags and ends, fringes furbelows or fluttering ribbons about her closely fitting, but easy suit of tweed, and as she drew off one glove to look in her purse for a small coin of fare, I noticed that the gloves were not new, but neither were they old they were simply well kept, like the owner, and their owner's hand, which was a •olid hand, with plenty of muscles between the tendons, and with strong but supple fingers. It would have looked equally pretty fashioning a pie in a home kitchen, or folding a bandage in a hospital It was a hand that suggested at the same time womanliness and work, and I was sorry when it found a 5 cent piece and had been regloved. One foot was thrust out a little upon the slats of the car floor—a foot in a good walking bout that might hare splashed through a rain storm without fear of damp stockings—and an eminently sensible boot on a two and onehalf foot, with a high instep, a email round heel, and a pretty broad tread.
The giri was a picture from head so foot as •he sat erect, disdaining the support of the back of he seat, but devoid of all appearance of stiffness. Perhaps the whole outfit to be seen, from hat to boots, did not cost $40 bat I hare seen plenty of outfits costing more than tea times or even twenty times I that, which did not look one-tenth or even I one-twentieth as welL If our girls only knew I the beauty of mere simplicity, cleanliness
and health, and their fascination.
J1"
1
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THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
IV* Infallible B«la
Chicago Time*. 1 We read a great deal now of arbitrary rales laid down Cor dressing, and adapting colors to compfexion, which would be most unsafe for any but artistic eye* u» adopt literally. It is little use to say a blonde should wear this combination and a brunette that, when fifty different oomplexional varieties exist between. Few people are really either blonde or brunette, and the loveliest tints and combinations of nature, as well as the ugliest, lie between. For example, the people who have brunette hair and eyes and pore white—not pale—complexion, pernapij the most distinguished type of all, can wear every range of color except bright scarlet or deep yellow but they look best in quiet tints. There is really no infallible rule for the less definite people but to try on till they find the things that suit them.
French Canadian House Wives, and Their }£ork. Chicago Times. $
A word about this French-Canadian housewife, though she dessrves chapters: "I have drifted of late into some of the most desolate and poverty-stricken collections of wretched huts which the mind can conceive—which, indeed, it is next to impossible for an American to conceive at all—hamlets where the men, with gaunt, burnt faces, long, matted hair, forms twisted in middle age as with us at 80, by reason of privation, exposure, and unsettled hopelessness, and clothes altogether indescribable in their meanness, appear to the vision like specters from some raft of a "Medusa." But even here I saw no woman, young or old, who was not neat in her personal appearance, painfully clean to the care of her home and apparently in the habit of doing three-fourths of all the work that was done. The amount of labor that this poor but contented creature performs is nothing less than marvelous.
Premising that before the age of 35 she :'B usually the mother of from six to twelvo children—most French-CaAdian girls art married before they are 18—let us consider her work for a moment: She has, first of all, the care of hsr children, which is not a slight 1 thing, even though they are the most careful and self-reliant of all the world's urching {then she does all of her cooking, baking her bread out in the sun in a stone oven built neai the house she does all the washing and mending of clothes she does all her own sewing and knitting, and, in some parts, spinning she keeps all the money of the household, and makes all the purchases she scrubs the front steps and all the floors of the living rooms in her house every day, and she whitewashes the outside of her house once a fortnight or so if they have a cow she milks and cares for it and then (we have dealt thus far only with the incidental occupations by which spare moments are filled up) she works all day in the field with the spade, hoe or rake. If she is near salt water, she also salts down barrels of tom-cod and flounders for the family's winter use. If she lives near a town she also goes in with the horse and chaurette to the market, and knits while she is not selling^ "produce^ou two days of the week.
The race 'does not anywhere afford a more snperb spectacle of industry than this woman presents. And with all that she manages to keep, if not a fresh, at least a bright £nd cherry look upon her face she dresses herself for church well and tastefully, and carries her good clothes as if she was' accustomed to nothing else and .her children, particularly the girls, are models of cleanliness and good order. This, bear in mind, ts as true of the poorest and most isolated hamlets as It is of the well-to-do surburban villages.
The Need of Genuine Fan. Lilian Whiting in Inter Ocean. One occasionally meets representatives of that unfortunate class, people who cannot, take a joke, the solemn, careworn, anxious people, who provoke the almost irresistible desire to invito them to a boat ride and upset the boat just where the water is of the right depth for comfortable duqking—persom who remind me of an elderly lady whom in our childhood we occasionally met, whose frequent questioning was, "Child what makes you so frivolous and so merry? Why dont you just sit down and grieve, grieve and grieveF We believe the one characteristic or commodity our busy nervous, anxious Americans dre most in heed of is genuine fan, an occasional regulur abandon of. nonsense, and we know of but few classes of people who mora strongly appeal to our sympathies than those poor unfortunates who can't take a joke. "Isn't it strange," queried a friend but ye#» terday, "that the children of the Rev. Blank cry because they are so homesick, when the other children have such glorious fun "No," was the reply, "those poor little children do not know how to enjoy themselves, and they have never been allowed to play much for fear of soiling their clothes." We ponder a moment over that dialogue, and find ourselves wondering if one of the reasons why ministers' children have acquired a universal reputation €or waywardness may not be owing to tfee- fact that their natural love of fun and frolic and noise has been forever suppressed (not so much by ttte fathers, for the most partial study of the ministerial brotherhood reveals the fact that they are generally fond of fun and jokes), but the mothers, the wives of the ministers, impressed with the dignity of their position, sometimes assume an almost unnatural solemnity and dignity, hoping thereby to preserve the clerical equilibium of the family, sometimes crowd out the fun" and frolic, genuine wit, humor, and fun being as essential to the development of symmetrical characters as prayer.
Do my words seem unnecessary to you, beloved philanthropists, who are mourning over the lack of earnestness, and apathy of your fellow beings? We think this apathy and indifference is the result of selfish care, selfish aggrandizement, not the result of cheerfulness and genuineness.
ISpw Beslgnsfor Wearing the Hair. Clara Belle in Cincinnati Enquirer. We have here in New York a society of hair dressers. They meet once a month, and each time consider new designs for arranging women's hair. They have just made up their minds how we ghall wear our locks, real and assumed, during the fall season. They have agreed upon three styles, and I am able to translate their directions into language that any woman can follow herself. No. 1: Have the hair wet about three inches deep from the forehead, and pnt it in paper, ao as to make large, soft curia—what we call at present Langtry curls—or use a false piece to take the place of your own hair. Waive the hair on temple with a curling tongs. The rest of the coiffure is made of curled hair, wave and curls, with a ring at the end. No. 2: Divide the front hair about three inches from the forehead, from one ear to the other. Take hair-pins and twist the hair round the pins instead of putting out and in, as we generally crimp the hair, and in turning the hair round the pins it will exactly give the desired front coiffure. Tie all the ends of the hair on top of the head, and add two or three Dieces'pf natural waved
natr wren tne enas curiea. «a a: jace a long, false switch and make a small braid, curl the end of it, and mix one with the other and let the end fall behind the ear. Tour own hair may be turned in a soft French twist.
Evenings at Home.
The Signal We visited once In a large family where* it was the duty of each sister in turn to provide the evening's occupation, and there was a pleasant rivalry between them as to whose evening should be the most enjoyable Th* brothers entered fully ^into the spirit of the simple home entertainments, and were as loth to be obliged to spend an evening away from home as their sisters and parents were to have them absent. Every one spoke of this family as an uncommonly united one, for each and every member showed such a strong attachment for the home to which each one contributed so much pleasure. ...... —1
Care ot Booms.
Cor. Ladies' Floral Cabinet. It is no economy to do with less than three brooms, one made of fine short broom-corn for the parlor and bed-rooms, a larger one for the more frequent uses and an old one for the kitchen and walks. A whisk-broom for corners and furniture upholstered in worsted, wooden skewers to remove the dirt from the corners of the door-sills and steps, a featherduster for books, pictures and ornaments, a short handled brush made of bristlos to brush the backs of picture-frames, window-blinds and screens—though this can be done with a whisk-broom if both cannot be afforded— will be found necessary weopons of warfare in the contest with dust and dirt. Bags made of canton-flannel, fuzzy side out, and with a draw-string to be tied over the broom to dust walls and hard wood floors are very useful, as too much wiping with ,a damp cloth will injure the lustre of the wood. Chamois skins make the best dusters for furniture and can be bought for 80 cents, and with careful washing will last for years. They should be washed in cold *ater with soap rinsed, in clear water, and hung in the shade. Before they are entirely dry they can be rubbed and pulled till they are soft again. Squares of cheap, soft, gray linen or old fabric, with all raw edges hemmed, are the next best, and these should be washed every week after the Friday's sweeping. *WQ have everything now to work with, except covers for the large pieces of furniture which cannot be removed before sweeping. Old sheets can be used, or squares can be made of cheap calico or unbleached muslin, and kept for this purpose. There should be one large enough to cover a piano or a bed.
Apiece of white mosquito netting slightly damp, is considered by many the best thing to dust^ painted woodwork wjjth. Nothing now remains to do but to dust the"walls, woodwork and pictures, unless the dust is wiped from the cgrpet with a clean cloth in a mop. A p^ of clean water can be set on a bit of oJd carpet, and the cloth rung out dry as possible, and lightly rubbed over the carpet. All the dust that remains after sweeping will be taken up with the damp cloth. A white cloth is best, as that shows when it, needs rinsing. When the chairs are brought in and ordered restored, the room is clean enough for a prince, and with dusting daily, and occasional brushing with a carpet sweeper or a damp broom, it will keep clean for a long time, unless used more than most parlors are.
Kitchen Progress,
Inter Ocean. Even in the kitchen inventive genius has gained a strong foothold, entirely usurping the primitive methods practiced by otfr grandmothers in the performance of their domestic duties. Mechanical contrivances of all kinds supply what in former years required deftness. Griddles themselves do the cake turning. Eggs are beaten by a crauk the coffee heap is net only roasted and ground by machinery, but the drink made by a clever contrivance that considerately whlstlbs when the beverage is done. A child, nowadays, may successfully fry Saratoga potatoes. An open work basket is set in a pan of fat, with the article to be fried io it The pan is furnished with a high handle with a hook in the middle. The instant the thing to be cookofl has assumed the delicate [den brown appropriate to viands .{poked In this wSy",1 tne basket is lifted and hung upon the hook to drip and dry. There it no marring of the symmetry of outline of the fragile delicacies, no spattering ot grease in the endeavor to fish them out, and there are no last ones to burn while waiting their turn to be taken out. Then the new boiler, which permits the article to be tightly shut in, obviating all danger of depositing it upon the floor or in the fire, but catches every drop of juice that may exude. When the boiler as turned over the juices are turned back upon the meat, which thus bastes itself. To those unsuccessful ones who have not yet arrived at the solution of the problem of how to cook a chop over a quick fire, without burning the fat, these broilers will bring sucqess and relief from their perplexities. Those fond of nicely-shaped griddlecakes will rejoice dver a griddle made with a hinge in the middle. One side has a number of circular depressions into which the batter is dropped. When the cakes are done on the under side, the griddle is simply folded over on itself, which deposits them on their other side on the opposite half of tlie griddle, leaving the empty places ready for more. Then there are ironing boards covered and ready for use, and the various articles, light and serviceable and unbreakable, like buckets and basins and foot-tubs, made of paper inache.
One Acre for Woman's Work Boston Cor. Inter Ocean. A special feature this year in the "Institute" exposition is the "woman's exhibit," for which one acre of space is granted, and which is under charge of an association of the most prominent women of Boston, the president being Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, and the chairman of the executive committee Mrs. H. L. T. Wilcott, the accomplished wife of Colonel Wilcott, of the Hotel Vendome. The. woman's exhibit will include special inventions made by women, nearly all of which are in the line of home comforts, decorations, and artistic work, and it will not include patchwork, pickles, or preserves I So much for the "woman's exhibit
The Expensiveness of Iead-Hea4 Traveling. "Gath" in Philadelphia Times.
The telegraph company takes our money aa if it were sending our messages, which it is not. Although I am often a telegraphic dead head, I pay, like all dead-heads, more than my fair proportion of rates. The most expensive thing in this world is a free ticket it stimulates you to go or do when without it you would stay or rest. I say this with perfect good feeling toward all who extend courtesies to me. Many a hundred dollars I have paid for travel because I could go somewhere for nothing. Travel is the most expensive of honest vices. A man cannot travel manfully even with free transportation at less than 10 a day. A man and wife, with their purahasesL reauire .$26 a day.
ORANGES AND FLORIDA.
Better Than Breezes and Blossoms— Under aNew Flag.
Even the balmy air and oraige groves of Florida fail to keep its people full of hoppiness and comfort. Art must help nature everywhere—in the tropics as among the pines of the north. -'And, ohief among the blessings which are adapted to all zones,? writes Dr. J. G. Wallace, of Fort Dade, F1&., "is Parker's Tonic. It seems to have the world for a field, and most of the current diseases yield to its action. I have used it in the case of a delicate and dyspepiic young lady, with the most gratifying results. It seemed to accomplish with ease whBt the usual prescriptions and treatment for that miseiable malady failed wholly to bring about. I am also glad to state that the Tonic has greatly relieved me person* ally of a troublesome atonic condition of the stomach of loog standing. It ts the ideal purifier aod invigorant."
Messrs. Hiscox & Co, call especial attention to the fact that after April 18,1883 the name and st} Is of this preparation will hereafter be simply Parktr's Tonic. The word "Ginger," is dropped, lor the reason that unprincipled dealers are constantly deceiving their patrons by sub stituting interior preparations unaer the nameef Ginger, and as ginger is aa unimportant flavoring ingredient in our Tonic, we are sure that our friends will agree with us as to the propriety ol the change. There will be no change, how ever, in the preparation itself and all bottles remaining in the hands of dealers wrapped under the name tf ''Parker's Ginger Tonic," contain the genuine medicine if the signature of Hisco* & Co., is a to id a
Time to Stop it,
It's ioo had. Sir or Madam, but don't gel frightened. Your hair is falling ofi —that's oertain. A glance in the mirror, or an investigating committee of fingers tell the diemal story. We won't discuss the possible cause. It is enough that Parker'i Hair Balsam used now will prevent further destruction. If your hair somewhat BTAy, too, and crisp Alas, yes. The Balsam will give back the orrginal color, softness and' gloss. Not a dye, not oily, elegantly perfumed, a perfect dressing:
$ A
School Paths.
Brooklyn Eagle: You can generally judge of a man's character by the school ofhis family physician. The selfish man has the all-opath, the domestic man the home-opath, and the milkman invariably the hydro-path.
:i Hood's SarsaparriJla Is designed to meet the wants of those who need a medicine to build them up, giv$ them an appelate, purify their blood, and oil up the machinery ot their bodies. No other article takes hold of the system and hits exactly the spot like Hood's Sarsaparilla. It works like magic, reaching every part of the human body throuqh the blocd, giving to all renewed lite and energy, 1 a bottle six for $5.
The area ol Dakota territory is 96,500. or just four times that of the state ol Ohio. Her population is a quarter of a million, and constantly increasing.
Horaford's Acid Phosphate, W A Valuable Nerve Tonic. Dr. C.C. Olmstead, Milwaukee, Wis says: "I have used it in my practice ten years, and consider it a valuable nerve tonic."
Mr. Fowler and her four-year-old daughter were killed by lightning near Athens, Ala. The baby was found unhurt in its dead mother's arms.
Did She Die?
"No she lingered and suffered along pining away all the time for years, the doctors doing her no good and at last was cured by this Hop Bitters the papers say so much about." "Indeed! Indeed how thankful we should be for that med icine."
Si
sup
Vj'
From the Earl of Airlie's lamons herd of Aberdeen-Angus cattle at Cortachy Castle, a fine lot has been consigned to the far West of America. 4-
My Wife Had Fits.
"For 35 years,'' says our correspondent Henry Clark, of Fairfield, Lanewee Co Mich., "my wife had fits. They would last at out an hour, and sometimes longer Samaiitan Nervine has permanently cured.
The first new bale ot cotton is puitio? in an appearance at various soutnern points.
All who are afflicted with salt rheum, the, scald head, impetigo, or any othiT crnption of the skin,should uso Glenn's Suiphur Soap. 4jT
It is said now that oleomargarine cdbstitutes a prominent element iu ice-cream.
"Rough ou Bats."
CleaTS out rats, mice, roaches, flies, ants, bed bugs, skunks, cbipmuuks, gophers, 15 cents. Druguitts
Mrs. H- tt. Stowe is about to bevin a new story, which will be entitled Orange Blossoms." ,•,
A man suffering from debility and losof appetite took two bottleo of Hood'* Sarsaparilla, gained ten pound: and got well.
Ruiz Zorrilla, the Spanish republican agitator, is now about fifty years old. He is a tall, dark Castilian.
A pint of the finest ink for families or schools can be made from a ten-cent package of Diamond Dye. They color Silk, Wool or Cotton.
Window and Door Screens.
Last season we were unable to supply the demand as last as needed. Please send ia your orders early ami have them fitted to your windows and doors. The flies will be hei soon.
CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO. Cor. Ninth and Mulberiy.
Jh iSMii •w SI
No. 4isJ OHIO STREB1J)
TERRE HAUTE, JNDI^ [Established 1875.) For all Disease the Epe, Ear, BeO
Throat, XiHnffs and all Chronic DisetUtf^
Especially CHRONIC DISEASES of Worn Children Fistula, Piles, Lupus,Cancers,
Habit, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Skin Bisew EASE8 of the STOMACH, LIVF.R, SPLEBM, diseases of the Kidneys M.d Bladder, and alt du the Oenito-Urinary System. ALL N&KVOU6 EASES: Paralysis, C'orea or St. Vitus lance, S| lepsy, Catalepsy, SCROFULA In all its forms, aadl tncee diseases not successful lv treated by tho Physician" aod Deformities of all kinds, ana inatmia furnished.
ELECTRICITY and ELECTRIC
All cases of Ague, Dumb Ague or and Fever, Fistula, Piles, Ulcers and IL
of the Rectum! Lupus, most Cancers, most Ski Maes, Female Diseases generally. Granulated Plcera of the Cornea, Weak and Sore lyes, of the Eye, Kar. Nose, .Throat or Skin fEcsen Spermatorrhoea or "Sseasea peculiar to Men and
Operations f« -»sium, Strabismus or CmArtificial Pup/"Dp -w» Habit, Tape Worms, Hy __ varicocele, Itemia or Rupture,-Epilepsy or Fila, Sore Legs, Old Soro* '•v-»wher« upon the body B1 matism, Acute or O-onorrhcBa. SypnulB Thoncroidi
Brfgfct'a OHIM and Billon Colic, Etc.
^•auitatlon two ud hrriied. Address with
1$
iUTtlY
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This powder flever "varies. A marvel purity, strength and whotesomenesH. More economical than the ordinary kinds and cannot be snltl in competition with the mtftitude of low tes\ short weight, alum, or phosphate powders. Sold only in cans.
ROYAL, BAKING POWDER (JO. lti6 Wall Street N.Y.
PearliNC
THE BEST THING KNOW*
Washingand Bleaching
111
Hard
OT
Soft) Hot or Cold Watetw
8AVB8 LABOR, TIME and SOAP
AMAgj
IN GEY, anct gives universal satismotkHfe Jamiftr, rich or poor, should be without if.
Bold by all Grocers. BEWARE oftaritaticaa it W W of*"*
well designed to mislead. PKAMUfE ONLY SAFE labor-saving compound, VS9TI boare the above symbol, and name
JAMES PILE, NEW lOBK.
A* -«Tu 0QJJ) ll^QAL, PABIS,
BAKER'S
CHOCOLATES
Baier't Premium Chocofatthe
tMi
preparation of plain chocolate for lly use. iSafcer'j
Breakfast
Chrrafr
from which the cxcost of oil has tau remo/ed. easily digested and admiralty r.luptcrt for invalids.
r'k
W
Balxr't Fiorina
"nirilate, as a drink or eaten aa cum. twtn.nery Is a delicious article«higher rrctiininended by tourist!.-' Bakmt l.r invaluable as a diet for cftB» dreu.-
Oermcn Svet Choalata,
most enevlent article lor ftmlBaat.
Sold bj Grocers (rerprtwrfb W. DAKEB OO^ Oorohestvr,
umer's Si*- lc
FREE FOR TRlil
An unfailing and speedy care for
Nervous Debility
and
Weakneaa. Lam
of Vitality and Vigor, er any evil re suit of indtsoration, excess, work, etc... (over tive curatL) E on trial box
125 Clark Street, CHICAGO,
tUYON&HEALY
State Honroe Sts.. Chicago.^ Wlrtte®d prepaid to any iddnitMpi A N A O O E or fSSS, P**m. 210 gngrarfiM 83, Wf
Satt* Caps, Bell*
BpaaM% Ctp-hnm
„aa StaflW and
ITfUta, Saadry Rud KapaHif afco mauds* lartnictlsa and Ir Amataai Band* ao4*
DR. J. P. WORREL, Oculist and Aurist,
805 main Street, Terre Haute, ln Office boon—0 A. M. to 12 A. x. and troiu M, toir.M.
"V s-"t A vs'
3
9
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