Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 September 1883 — Page 3

mm "WILL convince you ti|

1U I the wonderful curative fV I!• I properties combined in HOOD'S SARSAPABILLA, if the remarkable cures that have been effected by its use fail to impress upon your mind this repeatedly proven fact? Thousands are using it, and all declare that §f I it Is a aiedt cine possess-W

81 1

ins

a!?

even more than we claim 101 it. My friend, if you are sick or in that condition that you cannot call yourself either sick or well, go and get a bottle of HOODS SABSAPARILLA, and realize yourself how this medicine bits the right spot, and puts' all the machinery of your body into walking order.

ana realize jvu^u **v"

CONVINCE

From the Registrar of Deeds ^or Middlesex County, Northern District.

LOWELL, MASS*

MESSRS. C. I. HOOD & Co.: Gentlemen-? It affords me much pleasure to recommend* HOOD'S SARSAPAKILLA. My health has been such that for some years past I have been obliged to take a tonic of some kind in the spring, and have never found anything that nit my wants as your Sarsaparilla. It tones «p my system, purifies my blood, sharpens my appetite, and seems to make liMpectIu^5TtH0MrS0N.

One of our prominent business men said te OS the other day: "In the spring my wife got all run tie wr. and could not eat anything passing your store I saw a pile of HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA in the window, and I got a bottle. After she had been taking it a weelt she had a rousing appetite, and it did her everything. She took three bottles, and it was the best three dollars I ever invested."

Hood's Sarsaparilla*

Sold by all druggists. Price $1 a bottle^ •r six bottles for 85. C. I. HOOD & C(j| 4potheca.iics. Lowell, Mass.

AN OPEN

AMONG THE LADIES

The brilliant, fascinatin tints of Complexion for whici ladies strive are chiefly artificial, and all who will take the trouble may seenre them. These roseate, bewitching hues follow the use of Hasan's Magnolia Balm—a delicate, harmless and always reliable article. Sold by all druggists.

The Magnolia Balm conceals every blemish, removes Sallowness, Tan, Redness, Eruptions, all evidences of excitement and every imperfection.

Its effects are immediate and so natural that no human being can detect its application.

$200 A YEAR

CAN BE SAVED IN THE LIVING- EXPENSES OF THE

FAMILY

by the use of REX MAGNUS, the Bumiston Food Preservative. It preserves Meat, fish Milk, Cream, JSggs and all kinds of Animal Food fresh and sweet for weeks, even in the hottest weath r. This can be proved by the testimonials of hundreds who have ried it. You can prove it for yourself for 60 cents. Yoa will find that this is an article which will save yon a great deal of money.

NO SOURED MILK NO SPOILED MEAT. NO STALE EGGS

It will keep them fresh and sweet for many days and docs not impart the slight est foreign taste to the articles treated. It is so simple in operation .hat a child can foliow the rections, is as harmless as salt and costs only a fraction of a cent to a pound of mettt, flsh, butter or cheese or to a quart of milk. This is no humbug it is endorsed by such men as Prof- Bam'l W. Johnson ot Yale College. Sold by druggists and grocers. Sample pounds sent pre-paid by mail or express (as we prefer) on receipt of price. Name your express office. Vinandine brand for meat Ocean Wave for fish and sea food: 8now Flake formilk, butter and cheese Anti-Ferment, Anti-Fly Anti Mold, 50c per lb. each. Pearl, for cream Queen for eggs, and Avua-Vitle for fluid extracts, $1 per lb. each.

THE HUMISTON FOOD PRESERVING CO,

78 Kilby street, paston, Mam.

The Wonderful Effioty of

DR. SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS

Bw been BO frequently and satisfactorily pxnen

Mm

It seems almost superfluous to say anything' awn in their favor. The lmmwm and constantly increasing demand for them, bolli In this and foreign countries, is the beat evidence of tbeir value. Their kale to-day in the United States ia far greater thca i-X? other cathartio medicine. This demand i* "jot spasmodic, it to regular and steady. It la not to-day or yesterday, it ia an Increase that has been Gteadily growing lor the last thirty-five years. Whs* aw the reasons for this great and growing demand Dr. Sckeack'i IHaadrake Pills contain no mercury. and yet they act with wonderful effect upon the liter. They cleaase the stomach and bowels ot all tfritating matter, whieh. if domd to remain, poisons the blood, and brings on Malaria, Chills and Fever, and many other diseases. They give health and strength to the digestive arcana. They create appetite and give vigor to the whole wtem. Thej are in fact the medicine of aS others which should be caken in times like the present, when mWarialand tiler epidemics are raging, as they prepare thesysto resist attacks of disease of erery character. 7r. Schenek'a Hssirske Pflls are sold by all towglsts at 86c. per box, or sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of pries. Dr. Sellenck's BMk Can—ptt—, Ltr* sr Csaplalst and Dyspepsia, in or German, is sent Itme to all. Address Dr. J. H. 8CHKNCK «e MN, FUlaMfhia,

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MAMMOTH SPRINGS.

The First of the Great Wonders Wonderland.

in

Boiling Water Bubbling From Mountain of its Own Creation.

Fishing Extraordinary—The Hotel and Its Location.

NO. VI. AT HOME,Sept. 1,1883.

THB MAMMOTH HOT SPRINGS. Approached from thenoiththe Mam" moth Hot Springe are the fir9t great attraction in the Park. Here the subterranean fire or, according to the better and more generally accepted hypothesis, the chemical decomposition of various minerals tar down under the surface of the sarth, is heating vast quantities of water. Through innumerable fissures of their own creating these waters, hissing hot, are forced to the surface and boil and bubble like veritable witches' caldron6. Much calcareous matter is held in solution inthe water, and thus each of these springs becomes a mound builder. Flowing away from the vent of the spring a thin deposit of lime is laid wherever the water runs. The result is a succession of terraces rising one above the other. When the water is flowing over the surface the formation i9 of a light brown color, interspersed with many other fanes, and is quite hard to the touch. Left for a time without moisture, for the capricious water is coustanlly changing the direction of its course as it builds up the barrier about the spring's mouth, this formation turns as white as driven snow and stands out above the level plain a huge bulk ol seeming marble. Any substance, a bottle or a pine cone, for example, for these are the things which tourists either have witu them or can find in the neighborhood, laid where the water falls upon them, are coated in a day or two with a frost-work of limestone.

THE LEVEL PLATEAU

where the hotel stands, surrounded by bills and mountains on every side, a few hundred yards to the south being the terraces where the springs are now in active operation, was itself in time past the center of operations for the springs. Worn away by the rains which washed it into the Gardiner river, flowing by only a short distance to the east, a space of several acres has become now as level as a parade ground. But the earth has the gritty appearance of marble dust and has a hollow sound to the tread indicative of caverns beneath the surface. Every now and then one comes to a large hole, like a half-filled cellar of some ancient house of which this is the only trace left, and it is not uncommon to find hot air coming up through a tiny hole beside some pebble. One of these hot air vents is only a few feet distant from the corner of the hole. Mr. Hobart, vice-president of the Park Improvement Company, and, therefore, one of the owners ol the hotel, says that a short time before 8»r arrival a minister was there. He waa sauntering about the place and happened to pass right over this torrid air vent. He felt its warm breath and stopped to investigate. Putting his hand down be ascertained what it was. Looking then at the hotel and again at this natural register of the earth's own furnace, chucked his thumb in the direction of the hotel and upwards, indicative of his belief that the whole massive structure would be blown skywards sometime. And so it may sometime, just as sometime or another absolutely fire-proof hotels do catch on tire. But the chances of any particular individual being there when'anything of the kind does happen is so slight that it is not worth while being taken into account.

THE TERRACES.

Above the level of the plateau the ter races rise to a height of something over two hundred feet. Upon the various levels and sprinkled here and there over the surface are springs. The principal ones are on the top. In front ef the ter races and at tne edge of the plateau rises an isolated abaft of limestone fiftvfive feet in height and twenty feet in diameter at the base. It is evidently the cooe of an extinct geyser, the orifice of which is visible at the tep. Time hat worn its surface away and chipped and hacked at it with relentless persistence and has greatly reduoed its bulk, but it stands out prominently still, an object of curious wonder. It has been named the Liberty Cap. Near it is a oone of similar formation but of inferior dimensions, whioh is oalled the Giant's Thumb.

THE LIMPID POOLS.

From these two cones the way leading up to the terraces where the springs are in active operation is not difficult. You must walk around or step over numerous rills of hot water and pass by the low scalloped rims of limpid and steaming pools. The brilliancy and variety of the coloring matter about the pools, as well as well as the delicacy and beauty ot the formations, are indescribably wonderful Terrace after terrace is thus surmounted. some of these eight or ten feet high and several yards in.width others ara mere ledges. On each of these levels the water collects in a long tier of nearly semi-circular basins, of different diameters, lying close together. The higher terraces present an imposing appearance, th3 oontour of their sealleped margins at onoe suggesting frozen waterfalls. Over the rims of the basins on the topmost level tne water gently pours until it finds it way into tne reservoirs next below, repeating this process till the bottom of the hill Is reached, where the water flows together and by several channels finds its way to the Gardiner river.

KXQUIBITK COLORS.

The deposits which result from evaporation at the margin of each basin are exquisite in form and eolor. The rims are fretted with delicate frost-work, and the ouUide of eaoh bowl is adorned with

a bonev comb pattern, while the spaces between the curves are often filled with glistening stalactites. The coatinar of the sides of the basins and pools takes on every delicate and vivid tint, rich cream and salmon colors predominating, but then deepening near the edsres into brilliant shades ot red, brown, green and yellow. The largest springs, supplying most of the water to the tiers of bowls on each ot the terraces, are situated on a broad, level space covering some acres at the top of the hill. One has a basin which must be forty feet in length by twenty-five in width. The water, so Winser says, is a turquoise Hue. Turquoise was a color I was not "up on" and this was something new, so turquoise blue it was. At any rate it was beautiful and being perfectly translucent the mos'i microscopic fretting deep down upon the sides and bottoms of the pools is plainly visible. This is a characteristic of the hot spring and geyser water everywhere in the Park. It is clear aB crystal. In these pools the water bubbles up at one or two places near the center and is

In several places beneath the crust the rush and GURGLE OF FLOWING WATER is distinctly heard. Along the channels where the warm water runs, a species of fungus growth appears of various colors, yellow, green, red. white and brown, and washed by the flowing waters into streaming filaments they are very pretty.

The brincipal spring of this group has been named Cleopatra. It ranks in beauty among its mates as the star-eyed Egyptian sorceress did among the Langtry's of the ancient time, rbe calcareous deposit of these springs covers an aiea of about three square miles. Of this, the recent deposits, on which the springs are at presenY found, occupy sometbirg less than 200 acres. Alon&the bank of the Gardiner river, near fthich the most active springs once were and from which they are now nearly a mile distant, there are still many small springs. Over the intervening space, among the sinter, as the old formation of the springs is called, stand many dead pine trees,

FISHING EXTRAORDINARY. At this place a feat can be accomplished which seems almost incredible. 1 he Gardiner river is filled with fine trout. At a point not far from the hotel a spring of boiling hot water has formed a pool near the river bank. Standing there one can catch a trout and, without moving a step or taking it off the hook, fling it back of him and dip it into a boiling caldron where it will be cooked in less than five minutes. This, I am aware, is a pretty large fish story to tell in Indiana but it is a fact, nevertheless. There, within fifteen feet of one another is a boiling pool of water and a stream out of which hundreds of trout are caught daily. This is one of the least of tbe many wonderful things in the Park.

THE MAMMOTH SPRINGS HOTEL. On a level plateau surrounded by monntains and within a few hundred yards ot the Mammoth Springs, tbe Yellowstone National Park Improvement Company,"of whioh in a future letter I shall have considerable to say, is building and now has almost finished a splendid hotel. It is a frame structure in a modified Queen Anne style, three stories high and ot tremendous length. When finished it can easily accommodate seven hundred guests and on a pinoh a thousand could find food and shelter within its walls. Along its frontage and at the ends wide piazzas stretch their hospitable shelter, inviting to seats and repose within full view ot the changing wonders of mountains and springs and river. Its corridors are wide and run from end to end of tbe building, swelling into broad areas at intervals admirably adapted for pleasurable uses. The office is in the center, an open area above it extending to the topmost story. All this part of the building is now lighted by electricity, whioh was not quite ready when we were there. The dining room is an immense affair and the kitchen, presided over by a Delmonico cook, eould feed a regiment ot kings. An elevator is centrally located and eaoh story is reaohed by several broad staircases. The parlors are on tbe seoond floor and furnished in keeping with the elegant appointments of the whole hotel. On tho lower floor the heads of bnffalo, of elk and antelopes look down upon the guests from dozens of points of observation on the walls. Bat it is needless to continue this ^description. The hotel is the counterpart in size, in finish, in its equipment and in all its appointments of the biggest and the best hotels at Saratoga or Long Branch, or at any of the most popular mountain or sea resorts anywhere in the land. You are in the heart of the Rocky Mountains, in the wiliest and most wonderful region of the world, but you are sheltered and fed

r? A

AT THE BOILING POINT, 1

which is at this altitude somewhere about 190 degrees, Farenheit, instead of 212 as at the level of the sea. Near the edges of the pools the water is not so hot and alter it has flowed in a thin veil over a wide expanse of terrace exposed to the wind it is cooled considerably. Around tho hoU test pools, in many cases, there are strung along the rim, like beads on a necklace, a row of nodules as large as hazel nuts and hard as adamant. The play of the waters as they seethe up from the cavernous tbroats of the pools and undulate iq miniature waves is wonderful. The rtys of light are refracted by the agitation upon the surface and are resolved itto all the colors of the prism.

rairly

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THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

boiled and

then baked by the boiling water flowing by and tbe deposit formed about them. In places where the water has ceased for a few years to flow, new pines have come up, rooted in these heaps of limestone and flourishing on the cold victuals in which their predecessors were boiled.

MEDICINAL PROPERTIES.

Medicinally considered the waters of the Hot Springs have not yet been tested and no complete analysis of the waters has yet been made. But many persons afflicted with the rheumatism have bathed in many of the large pools of warm water to be found in the vicinity, and have apparently been benefited. So general was this belief in the healing properties of tbe springs that tbe management of tbe hotel have had uo difficulty in obtaining all the mechanics they needed to prosecute the work on the building this season, and this notwithstanding there was a great demand for men at Livingston and other towns near by in Montana, at from one to two dollars a day more compensation than was being paid in the Park. All the men found the bathing so delightful and beneficial for rheumatic and kindred ailments With whioh the exposure incident to their occupation had afflicted them that they preferred to stay at the springs and bathe in its waters the season through.

-cv ~H ft -tf* 9 C*-

as well as you could ba anywhere, and around you, in the midst of nature at its wildest, are all the comforts and the luxuries which cultivated taste can suggest or money supply. Within sight of the hotel, amonc the pines which cover Mount Evarts, only a very few years ago, tbe man from whom the mountain was named was found in *starving condition. In an exploring party that went through the Park in 1870, under the lead of Governor Washburn, of which Lieutenant Doane and an escort of soldiers were a part, a soldier by the name of Evarts was a member. Straying «ff from tbe rest he was lost in the mountains, and for nearly forty days was without any food, save the roots of the wild thistle and irraas-boppers au natural. He was found at last by his companions, almost starved, with a grass-hopper clutched in his hands, and on the mountain which now bears bis name. He was restored to life, and should be now revisit tbe scene of his unwilling and nearly disastrous fast, he could feast himself royally within sight of the hills where stones were the chief response to bis piteous need of bread.

1

THB BATHS.

The hotel is supplieg with hot and cold water, from hot and cold springs, bubbling from tbe hills near by. Pools are on tbe hills where one can take a bath and swim in natures own free bath houses. But nearer at hand and close by the hotel are some commodious bath houseB, erect* ed by the hotel, and supplied with water from tbe springs. They were jMst being erected when we were there. A little more dietant, and close by t» spring in the immediate viciuity of the Mammoth Springs, was and is a little frame shunty twice tbe size of a dry goods box. In this bad been put a big wooden bath tub and pipes, conveying boiling and also cold water.

1

COOKING CONKLING.

This little bath house, a few days before our arrival, was the sccne of a come dy-tragedy which I heard of several hundred times during my stay in the Park, and which 1 desire to relieve my memory and conscience ot at once. A few days before our arrival, Roscoe Conkling, who is by-the-by a member of tbe Yellowstone National Park Improvement Company, came out to tbe Park to lend the approval of his presence to its wonders, and, as it were, to notify the geysers that they had his consent to spout. He was accompanied by his wife and several other persons. The guides, drivers and other attendants, all report him »s displaying his lordly superiority all tbe time. He knew more about the whole business, the roads etc. than they did, right off. He came near wrecking the whole party before he even arrived in the Park, by insisting on anigbt ride from the railroad terminus, althoi gh warned of the danger of continuing the journey, and advised to wait at a convenient stopping place over night. Stop he had to, but it was only after a break down, in which ''bull luck" alone saved him and the whole party from htftm. At tbe Springs he determined to take a bath and was escorted to the diminutive bath house I have already mentioned, by the attendant. The boy was a good deal cowed by Roscoe's lordly strut on the way to the house, but be knew his business and was determined to do his duty. Arriving at the house he was proceeding to tell the ex-Senator from New York that one of tbe spouts, which happened then to be open, was boiling water, and that the other one, which happened to be closed, was cold water. But, hoity toity, Lord Roscoe would not listen t? him. The idea of a mere bey telling bim anything. It was not to be rolerated. He waved him off with a grand flourish of his hand. And then this colossal ass proceeded to do just what, ot all men on this earth, one would think he would not do. One would have fancied th#t having jumpvd out of the top window of the senate chamber Into tbe hottest of hot water, the thorniest ot bramble bushes and onto the roughest of rocks, he would never again jump out of anything or into any thing, without a circumspect and thorough examination of tbe place into whioh he was going to light. But, and the reflection is almost a sad one, Roscoe, unlike tbe boy that was kicked by a mule, is not only not as handsome as be was twojears ago, lut hasn't any more sense. He jumped int that tub of boiling water at full longth without first putting his finger in to test its temperature They say that the yell which came from that small bathing shanty loosened its roof and woke the echoes in tbe mountains. It was something awful. And when the first excited rescuer reached the scene, be found Lord Roscoe, as red as a boiled lobster, fuming in the box in a frenzy of heat and wratb. In his excitement be had knocked his shirt into the water and before he could be releaS' ed from bis hot box that intimate garment was placed on a pole and stuck out through a bole to dry in the sun. There it flapped in the breeze for a half hour, a sort of flag of truce, the white banner indicative of surrender. And when he placed it on his person and had donned tbe rest of his attire, it is said he gave reluctant admission to the triumphant small boy, who took him to the bath and who was now on hand with tbe ready "I teld you so," that he would have been a wiser and a cooler man if he had lis tened to his caution and instructions. But this red hot incident spoiled his relish for the Park, and, after a halfhearted stay of one day longer, his so. journ, which was intended to last a oouple of weeks, was brought to an abrupt and ignominious conclusion.

And yet, whether we call this form of Catarrh bay-fever, rose-fever, hay-cold or rose-cold, Ely's Cream Balin will cure it. This remedy is simple, pleasant and easy of application. Placed in the nostrils it penetrates and soothes the affected parts at once, restores the impaired senses and creates healthy secretions in cases of tho longest standing. You cannot run away frwnhay fever, out you can drive it from you by using Ely's Cream Balm,

Five hundred freight cars could be loaded to their heaviest capacity with the silver dollars (146,187,077 in number) lying idle in the treasury vaults.

Enterprising local agents wanted in this town tor an article that is sure to sell live druggists and grocers preferred. Address Humiston Food Preservative Co., 73 Kilby street, Boston.

STORIES ON THE ROAD,

Commercial Travelers at a Wayside Inn—Something to Put in a Grip-

"Gentlemen, I almost envy you the positions you ftil your experience of the world your knowledge of business, the changing sights yon see, and all that, you know."

This warmly expressed reg et fell from the Hps of an elderly pleasure tourist, last August and was addressed to a semi-circle of oommerclal travelers seated on the porch of tbe Lindell Hotel, St. Louis', Mo. "Yes," responded a New York lepresentativeof the profession "a drummer isn't! without his pleasures, but he runs, his risks too—risks outside the chances oi raiUoad collisions and steamboat explosions.."

What risks, fur instance?'' "This, for instanoe.",8aid Mr. W. D. Franklin, who was then traveling for an Eastern house, and is known to merchants in all parts of the country: "The risk—whioh, indeed, amounts almost to a certainty— of getting tbe dyspepsia from perpetnal chauge of diet and water and from having no fixed hours for eating aod sleeping. 1 myself was an example. I say was, for 1 am all right now." "No discount on your digestion*' broke in a Chicago ury (goods traveler, llguting his cigar atresh. "Not a qnarter per nt. Bat I had to give up traveling for a while. The dyspepsia ruined my paper. Finally I came across an advertisement of PAHKES'S TONIC I tried it and it fixed me up to perfection. There is nothing on earth, .in my opinion, equal to it as a cure for dyspepsia.."

Messrs. fciiscox & Co, of New York, the proprietor, hold a letter from Mr. Frnnslin, stating tnat precis?) fact. FARKCHS' TONIC aids digestion, cures Malarial fevers heartburn, headache, coughs, and colds, and all chronic diseases of tbe liver and kidneys Put a bettte in your valise. Prices, CO c^and 81. Economy in larger siae.

WASHINGTON, D. C.,

1

life

W. C. B.

Beechei'i Bad Head.

For two months in the year Henry Ward Beecher can't preach. In August and September he takes his vacation and endures the onset of the hay fever. And it is, so he say*, something terrible and tremendous. A. man with hay fever isn't accountable for his actions, tie is merely a wild b^ast—frantic with snuffing, sneezing with headache. His eyes are read ana so is his nose. Every nerve in bis skull thrills with distress and his head is a fountain of tears. He lives only to fly from seaside to mountain-top in search of relief.

Do yon wish to be healthy and

strong in all your parts? Use Allen's Brain Food.

It

and

will surely infuse new

new vigor into the whole system

it gives perfection to every part, increases the muscles and strengthens the brain.

Jesse Collins, of North Truro, now in his ninetieth year, ha# read the Boston Journal for forty-flve years. He never complains of lack of sleep.

A CARD.

To all who are suffering, from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, &c., I Will send a recipe that will core you FREE OF CHARGE. The great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self addressed envelope to tne Kav.

JOSKPH

Si

r'•"

May 15th, 1880

Gentlemen—Having been a sufferer for along time from nervous prostration and general debility, 1 was advised to tiy Hop Bitters. 1 have taken one bottle and I have been rapidly getting better ever since, and 1 think it the best medicine I ever used. I am now gaining strength and appetite, which was all gone, and 1 was in despair until 1 tried your Bitters. I am now well, able to go about and do my own work. Before taking it, I was completely prostrated.

MRS. MABY STUART.

Casamicciola is to be rebuilt of wood, Most of the casualties during the recent earthquake were from tbe falling etone wall. Wooden housed are less dangerous.

jProf

Horsford's Baking Powder

maintains Health.

Dr. Samuel Jackson, late Professor in Pennsylvania University, says ''While it ma'res a light, sweet, nutritious and palatable bread, it restores che phosphates which bad been separated from the flour, and thus adapts as an aliment for the maintenance of a healthy state of the organization,"

It is rumored that it is intended to call the Marquis of Lome up to the house ot lords by one of his father's minor titles soon after his return troaa Canada.

IS PHYSICAL PERFECTION WORTH STRIVIN6 FOR! Do you wish to be perfect in mind and Dody

T. LMCAK,

Station D-, New York City.

Lancaster, Pa., is proud In the possession of two big (sunflowers, measuring respectively forty-five and forty-nine inches in circumference.

Cured Hy Wife's Weakness. From Evansville, Ind., the home ot our correspondent, Mr. Jno. R. Patterson, comes the following: "Samaritan Nervine cured my wife of a case ot female weakness/' It's an extract from Mr. Patterson' letter. $ 1.50.

A brook trout thirty-two years old is kept in a well by James Sherman, of Lafayette, N. Y. It has lost its and looks aged and faded.

IMPROVEMENT FOR MIND AND BODY. Brown's Bronchial Troches for Coughs and Colds: "I cannot very well do with out them. There is nothing to be compared with them.'!—Rev. O. D. Watkins, Walton, Ind. Price 25 cents a box.

A Frenchman once described the English sport of fox hunting as "A hundred great lools who run alter one little beast."

tyExplicit directions for every use are given with the Diamond Dyes. For dveing Mosses, Grasses, Eggs, Ivory, Hair, Ac. Only 10 cents.

Asher B.JDurand, the oldest American painters, has just celebrated his eightysevenlh birthday.

Honford's Acid Phosphate

is useful in dyspepsia. It gives the stomach tone and imparts vigor to the whole system.

Mrs. H. H. Stoddard, a distinguished pianist of Chicago, is in the city, visiting her sister, Mrs. A. T. Eoopman.'

If you have failed to receive benefit from other preparations, try Hood's Sarsaparilla it is the strongest, the purest, tbe best, the cheapest.

Among the attractions at the Itowa state fair will be Sitting

BUJI

or four other Indians.

Mfej

No. 4x5! OHIO STREET

TERRE HAUTE, INDI4N4

{EtUtbliahed 187&.)

For alt- Disease 1/the Eyef Ear, lit-iv" 7? Throat, Zungt and all Chronit IMmumv

•a®"J,sP«ete:iy CHRONIC DISEASES of Woawi .fa* J® Children Fistula, files, Lupus.C«uo«rs, Oix'jo Habit, Khenmrtism, Neuralgia,

6kin

BASES of the STOMACH,

Disease*.

Livilt,

SPLEEN, IIiti ».

diseases of the Kidneys »r,d Bladder, and all diaett*., the Gcuiio-Urinary "System. ALL KEBVuCtt EASES: Paralysis, C' orea or

6t.

Vitus Dance.

1st

lepsy, Catalepsy„ SCROFULA in all Ma forms, tun those diseases not successfully treated by tte Fbyeician" and Deformities of all kinds, aua rata^f* furnished.

ELECTRICITY and ELECTRIC HA

All cases of Agne, Dumb Ague rj Cbl and Fever, Fiata!*, Piles, Ulcers aod Fiaetarft tbe Realum, Lupue, moat Cancers, most 8kJn Utf eaaes, Femal* Diseases generally, Granulated Lkfr Ulcers of Uie Cornea, Weak and Sore Even, Calms

Bar, Hose, Tbroat or

A REWARD

zoo-zoo

or SA83 CASH, 1,000Imported Novelty Pocfa* Knives and 6,009ponnda ot tbs Oreat

CHEWINC TOBACCO

TO BE GIVEN A WAY!

be Riven in rotation, the largest namber of tsgs nturned will receive the flrm reward, BlOO Uaak, •eocnd highest, S90, and so on down to a loci pro* of ZOO-ZOO fottooo. Theee Ohrlistmaa and New Tear rewards will be distributed between Decernber SBth and January 1st Chew this delightful totweoo. the bMteTer Made. Save the tags and send them by mail, between Deoember 1Mb and SBth. totbaw

WILSON 6c HeCALLAT TOBACCO

PVMONAL KATCBS

and three

Mr. Charles S. HattenOacii, 201 N. Pine St., Indianapolis sav*. Brown's Iron Bitters cured him of 'iK-apepsia of five years' standing.

at

6kln

^Eczema*.

Spermatorrhea or -Mseases peculiar to Men and Tex jr a R?*. ?PS f91 Strabismus or Cross Artificial Purf On Habit, Tape Worms, Hydroctl* Varicocele, aernfe or Rapture, Epilepsy or Flta. Bore Logs, Old Sore* /v*Twher® upon tho body R]it% fhancro 'dt^t^

0ID'*Jt

^Knorrbcea, fiypmlia wi

Brtffkt'a WMIM ud Bflloas Code, Kiev

•aitetlon

SM

and

PearliNC

THE BEST THING KNOWN

FOB

Washingand Bleachinf

In Hard or Soft, Ilot or Cold Water. IAVES LABOR, TIME and SOAP AHAZ NGLT, and gives universal satisfaction. N» family, rich or poor, should be without it.

Bold by all Grocers. USWARE of imitation:

Sell

designed to mislead. PKABUNE is tt» NLY SAFE labor-saving compound, and aJ rays boars tho above symbol, and namo ot

JAMES PVLi:, NEW

TOBACCO CHEWERS

.V

IDTIML Address with

JAMEspyle'S

CD.

MIDDLETOWN. OHIO.

BT Cat address oat and paste on EwrienwThis it THE FINEST POUND PLUG EVER MADb. .ASK YOUR DEALER FOR ZOO-ZOO. aVlnalat on bavins it and you wlUuMnoothec..

pflfSW

-AFTER

flactrit Appliances ara sent on 30 Days' Trial-

0 MM ONLY, mm OR OLB* •T? HO are euTTerlng from Naavors

TV

LOS-f VITALITY, LACK

doom, WiarixG WBAKirasa,

,4a

DBBIUTT,

or Kaava Foacs

AM».

mod

all thotc disease*

reenltlng from

ftc.grjuidest

ABVUS

asiV

Mm (unn. Speedy relief and eomr.ete ratu HSALTH,vioos and

II^HOOD

dtseovery of tho Nineteenth Century.

SM4v«iMtorllliiitimttdPuipliiet(na AddfW W1TAH MU «t.. awsmii. BIM.

8500 REWARD!

V7K will myth* abort reward for lay caacef Lhr*r Complaiat* to Hwdadu, Indlgitlua, CoartlpHoii orOmlnnm, icanaotenn wtth Wnfi VagvUbl* Unr PHU, whra Uie dtrtentaM (trietlf comflM with. Tbty partly rcgttaMe, tW nrhU to (tva lattofcction. Sugar Coated. Larffe boix,co»bla( S« pllli,

tS

ctaU, Far Ml* ky an dranbu. Rtwmre

•aterl'Bs and Imllatkmi. Ths |MdH manufactured

of'

011 IT

b*

iHlf C. WEST CO., Ml W. Madiwn 8C, Ci.ln«». *7 Ball prepaid ea rtctipt of a 1 ctnt ttamfe., 5! Address

C. F. ZIMMSBKAIR, DRUGGIST. -.

Bole agent,

CornerJThirteenih and Main

stieetcv

Terre Ha

.YON&HEALY

Stale fcSoarMSta..CM

Saadry Ov*h, a*sl lis abt tadada laatroeMs* aad Anatni Baadfc aada fiiilSsi

ADVERTISING

made tor

•Bttawitb LoSS^So rllatag A^nta,C

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in

wbiebiakri ~MAS, CUosiSift

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