Daily News, Volume 1, Number 129, Franklin, Johnson County, 19 July 1880 — Page 2
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4
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DAILY NEWS
B. P. BEAUCHAMP, Editor and Proprietor.
Publication Office, corner Fifth and Main Street*
stored the Poet Office at Terre Hante, Indiana, as second-claas matter.
MONDAY. JULY 19, 1880.
FOR PRESIDENT
UNITED STATES,
JA3IES A. GARFIELD.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT,
CHESTER A. ARTHUR.
STATE TICKET.
For Governor,
ALBERT G, POUTER. For Lien tenant Governor, THOMAS HA SWA.
For Secretary of State, EMANCEL & HAWN. For Auditor of State, EDWARD II. WOLFE, For Treasurer of State,
ROSWELL 8. HILL, For Attorney Genera], DANIEL P. BALDWIN, For Jadgcsof gupreme Conrt, BYHON K. ELLIOT. Third District. WILLIAM A. WOODS, Fifth District.
For Clerk Supreme Conrt, DANIEL ROY8E, For Reporter Snpreme Court,
FRANCIS M. DICE,
For Superintendent Pnbllc Instruction, JOHN M. BLOSS.
For Congress,
ROBERT B. F. PEIRCE.
"Vigo County Ticket.
For Clerk,
MERRILL N. SMITH. For Treasurer, CENTENARY A. RAY.
For Sheriff.
JACKSON STEPP.
For Commissioner, Third District, JOHN DEBAUN. For Coroner,
DR. JAMES T. LAUGHEAD. For Senator, FRANCIS V. BICHOWSKY.
For Representatives, WILLIAM n. MELRATH. DICK T. MORGAN.
For Surveyor,
GEORGE HARRIS.
NOT
a
Ci
Democratic paper or speaker of
Indiana has undertaken to defend the decision of the Supreme Court defeating the amendments. They liopo to avoid the infamy of it by ignoring it.
NRAE THOUSAND dollars a year, besides quarters and forage, ia what the Government pays Geuernl Hancock. It is certain that lie will not suffer his candidacy to iterfere with the drawing of his pay and re Hons.
iFjk. Tanner had been sensible while young and got him a good wife.he would to-day be eating three square meals, instead of trying to fatteu himself on ice water to a gaping crowd of doctors in New York.
THE commission appointed by the Secretary of tlie Treasury to investigate the charges relative to fraudulent discoloring of West India sugars, has made its report. From this it appears the frauds have been even more extensive than charged. Sugars designed for export to this country have regularly been colored so asxo grade Jow and escape paymgiu of the praper ctisUm duties.
THE most powerful elevator in the "World has been completed in the Washington Monument. It Is constructed to carry ten tons to a height of five hundred feet It is arranged so as to run twenty feet above the top of the stone work. During the progress of th5 work upon the monument it will be used to deliyer material to the builders until the monument is completed, when it will be turned into a passenger elevator.
IRISH distress has so far moderated that no further contributions are needed. There is still a good deal of suffering in several parts of Western Ireland, but this it is thought can be relieved with the means at hand. An ovidence of the gratitude of the people for the magnificent contributions from this country is found in the fact that in various western counties the Fourth of Julv was celebrated.
TIIK late E^ttsxiS dtscloses the fact that a large number of illegal voters haye been enrolled on the poll lists in this State, particularly in the river and border, counties, as many enumerators have used the lists to ascertain if omissions had occurred in the enumeration. Investigation proved that many voters on these lists never resided its the State, while others, enrolled as voters, according to the testimony of their mothers, were underlie age of twenty-one. ...i
1
With
0f
".. —i.u.i—""".
JAMRS A. GAHFIXIJO is the sectional candidate for the Presidency of the United States. Winflfcld Scott Hancock is the national candidate, the Union candidate. —Citmnnati K**ptirrr.
According to Denyscratic teachings Abraham Lincoln. U. S- Grant and R. B. Hayes were only •sectional" candidates,
while
James Buchanan. Jefferson Davis, Wade Hampton, et al., represented national issues. Human slavery was national—human freedom sectional.
slavery abolished by the patriotism
"sectional" soldiers, now come "State lights" and freedom to use tissue ballots, the shot gun, black snake whips, and the bloodhound. and "Winfleld Scott Ilan-
cock is
the National candidate** to head
ihe great nxmy.—Taier-OceafL
k!
I
F"«w:T*.nw* l.'i c-.: :r- ••"•'•vr 7^ *?*far«pp JT
,V"™-LB7THB
OF ACCEPTAHCB.
We ask the especial attention of the I ArUpnr'a letter ble letter and of thinking
readers of the NEWS to 1 of acceptance. It is an will command the atten men of all parties
In a few days we hope to Ind tithe to lay before our readers a critical review of
Ever since this great and
uesow
SOME journals are discussing the qi tion whether Gen. Hancock will be all ed to take office if he is elected President.
There will be no trouble, on. that score.— Gazette. Not the least. "The only "trouble" will be in getting elected. There may be some difficulty in that direction, but certainly none in being allowed to take the office, if elected.
The cheap pluck the Democratic party all over the country is showing by the repeated assertion, that if Gen. Hancock is elected he will take the office, is very amusing. It is a very courageous party and yet it inverably makes the statement that Mr. Tilden via* elected, and still he did not take possession of the White House. The time for the exibition of this pluck .on part of the Demo cartic pa ty, was the fourth day of March about three years ago, and not almost four years thereafter.
It looks very much like the cowardly sol dier, who, after having run from the battle field, is always thereafter profuse in describing the feats of heroism and individual valor which he performed in the heat of the action. While'he fancies he is deceiving his listeners, the rest of the world is laughing at him.
As a matter of course, if General Han cock is elected, he will have no "trouble taking the office. We will uddertake, with the assistance of Captain Friend's company of Cadets, to seat General Hancock in the White Hou&e, if he is elected, against all the opposition that will be brought against him from any and all sec tions of the government. There is not a man in America who will, or who dare raise his hand to resist the lawfully elect ed President in taking possession of the office.
There has never been any resistance to a lawfully-elected President taking his seat. Every Intelligent Democrat in the land knows that Mr. Tilden was not elected at the last Presidential contest. They know the result of that election was in dispute. That both parties claimed the presidency, and there was an honest difference of opinion among the intelligent men of both parties as to which of the two candidates had really carried a majority of the electoral votes. Under this state of case, the Electoral Commission was created and organized, purposely to settle this question. It was advocated and favored by the leaders of both parties. It was composed of the ablest minds in the United States. It was not a party measure, but a tribunal brought into existence for the express purpose of settling this very question—who was elected Presi dent, 8. J. Tilden or Ii. B. Hayes? The whole matter was submitted to this tribunal. Not one single question in relation to it was left unsubmitted# A thorough and exhaustive examination was had, and the Commission by a vote of 8 to 7 decided that Mr. Hayes was lawfully and legally elected President of these United States. The beU men of the country everywhere acquiesced in this decision, and the Republican candidate took possession of the White House.
perplexing
question was so fortunately settled, there liauc been a number of excitable and factious politicians scattered ail over tliQ country who are delighted toa^fert that if Hancock is elected he will take his seatthereby meaning that Tilden was elected and he did not get his seat. The bravado of such fellows is only equaled by thir ignorance of the facts of the case, and their pluck can only be estimated by the heroism of their action, when, in their judgment, the moment to strike had arrived.
SKXATOK JONES, of Florida, freely admits the possibility of the Republicans carrying that State, and electing the next United States Senator. But this depends upon the fact whether a fair election can be had in that State. If it can, the Republicans will earry it, but we have not a particle of faith that this can be done. The bulldozer is abroad, and with his wide brim hat,peaked goatee and longhair, he will shoot down the Republican voter or drive him from the polls. Nothing is more certain than this, unless a st5p is put to it by the strong arm of the general government.
THE Democratic demand, according to their own phrasing of tt is "home rule, a free ballot, and the subordination of the military to the civil power.Etthmgt.
The case would have been clearer if they had stated that their methods to accomplish these demanda^rere, "to shoot niggers," stuff ballot-boxes, and elect a Major General of the regular army to "subordinate the civil ^ower."—Inter-
The delicious ignorance that General Hancock Manifests of political affairs does
not discourage the Democratic gentlemen who are pursuing him with the buzxing in their heads bnt they have to
gentle Presidency have to
keep guard over his utterance?, and are in that stale of delicate apprehension so long i}©yed* enjoyed by the Republicans when they accepted military leadership and pretended that they thought there was divine inspiration in it.
It has been nearly three days since
anybody announced a new in fallible cure for rheumatilfcij and all billions complaints and malarial diseases. Conie,
rare for rheumatil
rouse Don't let this
up, some of yon.
Mi world tumble into its grave for want af a new medicine. Flv around and paste anew label on the old bottle.
*-v, ...»
j?
.&&&
.%**
The Galaxy, or Milky Way. The luminaus zone which encircles the heavens was called, on account of its peculiar brightness, by the Greeks, Galakatos, the Galaxy, and by Jfche Romans, Via Lactea, the Milky Ivay. Passing Uke a stream across the firmament, here growing narroweraifcl there spreading, at one point divided and at another seeming to flow with an increased and united volume, it became known in Chinese annals as the Celestial river. The less civiltzed aborigines of Mexico, who regard this band of light as the path bv which the spirits of the departed braves reached the "happy hunting grounds," named ittheRiverof Souls. But, although the Galaxy in every age has given rise to wonder and admiration &ndlid& been viewed with equal interest by the learned and ignorant, still the cause of this permanent bow of the nightly sky long remained a mystery. The fertile imagination of the Greek philosophers, the long-continued observations of the Arabian astronomers, and the careful scrutiny of the heavens which followed the revival of learning, alike failed to make known the real source of the beautiful phenomenon. This was among the revelations of the telescope, and yet Galileo and others had scanfaed the starry dome 'more than half a century with his "eye of the mind" before Milton, with an approximation to scientific truth, could speak of the "broad and ample load whose dust is gold and pavement stars." This silvery belt is visible W. S. CLIFT, at all seasons of the year, but in latitudes north of the equator is most conspicuous during the summer and autumn months. It is Drighter in the southern hemisphere than the northern, though in each it varies both in breadth and brilliancy. When examining this zone of stars with his powerful reflector, the elder Herechel was lead to the conclusion that not Jess than fifty thousand of these self-luimnous bodies were included
in a breadth of two degrees, and that.T
one hundred and sixteen thousand
uniformity, in others patches of them are succeeded by intervals in which few are seen, while in some placfes, as the Coal Sack in the Southern Cross and the dark spot" in the j|orthern constellation of that name, tli^ are looked for in ain. Not only the Milky Way, but tht heavens in its vicinity, appear more thickly set with stars than other por tious of the celestial canopy, but whethei this is actually the case or owing to the position from which they are viewed cannot be determined. Every one is familiar with the fact that if he looks towards the horizon when rain is falling, the drops appear more numerous than hen Be directs his view to some distance above it, though the number reaching the surface in each instance is the same. It is, therefore, possible that if the earth occupied a different position 'n space the stars in another the her.vens would become and that this "band of brilliants' ing to an an|)arent and not to a real proximity of the stellar suns. While the stars in the galaxy whose blended light alone is perceived by the unaided eye, are so thickly strewn as to defy every effort to ascertain their number, they are but apart of the shinning orbs which roll through space. These a moderate computation places at one hundred millions, and every increase in the range of the telescope enlarges the amount. If each of these self-lumi-nous bodies, like our nearest star, the sun, is a center around which ap many opaque globes revolve as are now known to derive their light and heat from the ruler of the day, the multitudes of worlds reaches a number which the human intellect fails to grasp. It is when engaged in such contemplations that man is made aware of his finite powers by his inability to comprehend the infinitey while at the same time he obtains enlarged views of the wisdom and power of Him "who created and govwns&ll,"
The Stinging Tree.
Though the tropical scrubs of Queensland are very luxuriant and beautiful, they are not without their dangerous drawbacks, for there is one plant Rowing in them that is really deadly in its eflects—that is to say, deadly in the same way that one would apply the term to fire as, if a certain portion of one's body is burnt by the stinging tree, death will be the result. It would be as safe to pass through fires as to fall into one of these trees. They are found growing from two and three inches high to ten and fifteen feet in the old ones the stem is whitish, and red berries usually grow on the top. It emitsa peculiar, disagreeable smell, but is best known by its leaf, which is nearly rouud having anoint on the top, and is jagged all around the edge like the nettle. All the leaves are large—some larger than a saucer, "Sometimes," says a traveler, "while shooting turkeys in the scrubs, I have entirely forgotten the stinging tree till warned of its close proximity by its smell, aud I have then found myself in a little forest of them. 1 was only stung once, and that was very lightly. Its effects are curious. It leaves no mark, but the pain ia maddening, and for montlis afterward the part, when touched, is tender in rainy weather, or when it gets wet in washing, etc. I have seen a man who treats ordinary pain lightly roll on the ground in agony after being stung and I haye known a horse so completely mad after getting into a grove of the trees that he rushed open mouthed at every one who approached him, and had to be shot ia tho scrub. Dogs when stun will rush about, whining piteously* bitting pieces from the affected part. The small stinging trees, a few inches high, are as dangerous aft any, being so hard to see, and seriously imperilling one's ankles. The scrub is usually frnnd growing among palm trees.
A
The ninn who wants his name kept out of the pajer is just the man who ilon't believe in the virtue of advertising. A.-vk him for a local notice and lie will tell you no one raids the pajper bnt just let him get found flirting with some oilier man's wife, walking off with funds not his own* or trying to hold nn a lamp-, post some dark night, and bell climb seventeen pair of stairs and beg on his bended knees that the item shonld be suppressed. It makes a difference in the minds of a great many men whose ox is cored, when an article is to appear
Xjablic print.
tfmi
frustration
Jtodorsed br the Medical PaofeMloa, and momoMnded brtbeaa far Qyspepshi, Qwtfffcl DeMlitj, Femala DtoaaM. Want at Vltalttf, Ac.
P. Haii'CRODW Stoifon, Tan., •writes: "DR. Hum's IBOK Toxic lias done wonders here,
by the use of
HABTXR'S laoir Tee raised her ftom bci •where she had
.i<p></p>Latll,
passed in review before him in a quar-1 7 7 7 ter of an hour. The countless multitudes of these distant suns are irregularly grouped. Clusters are numerous, especially in the southern part. In certain regions they are strewn with great taei
Library of Universal Knowledge. 21 vols., $10.50. Milman's Gibbon's Reme, 5 vol.. $2.50. STacaulay"? History of England, 3 vols., $1.50. Macanlay*s Life and Letters, 50 cents. MscAnlay Essays and Poem*. 3 vols.. 1.80. Chamber's Cyclopaedia and Eng. Literature, 4 vols., $2.00. Knight's History of England. 4 vol*.. $3. Platarch's Live# of Illustrious Men. 8 vols., $1.50. Oeikle's Life and words of Christ. 5d cents. Young's Bible Concordance, 811,000 references tpreparlnc). Acme L! ry of Biography, 50 cent#. Book of ub}es j£*op. etc.. lilns.. 50 cents. Milton's Complete Poetical Works, 30 ceats. Shakespeare's Complete Works. 75 cents. Works of Dante, translated by Clary, 40 cents. Works of Virgil, trt—'tied by Dryden, 40 eent#. The Koran of Mofcar, ed. by Sale. 36 cents. of Don mnxote. fflos.. 50 cents.
Sights, illcu.. 50 cents, a's Piigrim'4
A
an"? ala*~, 50 ceBl*nfsonCn»soe.Uln*.. SO cents. idsnchaascD JUKI GalHver'i Travels, ilia*.. 50 cents.
TEBHE H^TTTEI, USTIDI^lSr^.
DAUNTLESS BOASTED COFFEE!
Which is, without question, perfectly Pure and Unadulterated, being roasted from
ikai Sweet km ol the kt Bigli Grade Coffees
So delicately mixed in such proper proportions as to produce a Boquet of Aromatic Flavors, making a most delicious and healthy beverage. If you want a delightful and healthy drink, ask your grocer for
HULMAN'S DAUNTLESS ROASTED COFFEE.
I am also packing the various coffees of the best grades separately, under the "DAUNTLESS" brand, which is a guarantee of the excellence, and will be known as DAUNTLESS MOCHA ROASTED ctFFEE.
DAUNTLESS JAVA DAUNTLESS MARACAIBO DAUNTLESS CEYLON DAUNTLESS MEXICAN DAUNTLESS PORTO RICO DAUNTLESS GOLDEN RIO DAUNTLESS RIO DAUNTLESS SANTOS DAUNTLESS LA GU AYR A
Sold only in Pound Packages and each package containing 16 Ounces ofj Pure Coffee. H- HULIvI-A-Xsr,
Remit fay bank draft, money order, registered letter, at by Express, be «»t to postage stamp*.
4*
1
j'
mmMmimS
,*» -, if v« .t Sill
itlisrdlafttotie.
hnirtihi of IRQM and CAUSAYA BARK, e#hitiM itth th
-R/. FORSTER & SOIST,
DEALERS IN
raiture, Mattresses, Parlor and Bedroom Suits,
102 and 104 North Fourth Street,
vJatoss Brown of
OureounttVh&S reqnestec
ns to tender you bis grateful txltdnueiitt far UM great b«aa-
his wltte received firota tho use of yonr
IBOX Toxic. He tells us that, aOer harlnji paid or four hundred dollars doctors' hRls,
trro'
clnes she erer used. She was troubled with «f Ito Wonb, white*. fc., &omirhicb she la much relieved.
TELLS, T*XAS». JP. A. FATBTCK *«•, JiANtTFACTTjaBD BY
THE DR BARTER HEDZGXSS CO^ tfo. aia KOSTH.KAIK^STBEB^SXaXiCLWk'
J. H. WILLIAMS. J. M. CLIFT
CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO,
MANUFACTURERS OF
SASHES, DOORS, BLINDS, ETC.
AND DEALERS IN
/ni r\jxrt«i
LlElte, S&1M 6S, GlaSS, MltS, OllS 811(1 BlllMe^'
Hardware.
CORNER OF NINTH AND MULBERRY STREETS, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
OF IF1
THE GREAT IMPORTANCE WHICH
Yigo Spice and Coffee Mills, Terre Haute, Ind.
Chambers's Encyclopaedia
15 Vols. Over 13,000 Pages. Price During July, $0.25.
Amohg the wonderful things which have been accomplished for lovers of good books ^Literary Revolution," perhaps the most wonderful is the reproduction of at a merely nominal cost.
Itis a verbatim reprint of the last English edition, in 15 beantifnl volumes, clear nonpareil type. in cloth, for ST.SO^the same printed on finer, heavier paper, wide margins, and Vol. II
handsomely bound in ....... bound in half Russia, gilt top, price 81S.OO. The first ten volumes are ready for delivery, will be ready Joly 10. Th? remaining volumes will be completed by October next.
86.25. An Amazing Offer. $6.25.
The more widely and rapidly these volumes are scattered, the greater is their influence in Inducing other purchasers of this and our many standard publications. Accordingly wc give special terms to earlv subscriber*.
To all. whose orders and money are received daring the month of Jnljr, we will snpplv the 16 volume?, in cloth, for $ft.2S, and in half Rnssia. gilt top. for 913.SO. To any one sending from any place, where we have no special Agent {nsually the leading bookseller of the town), a clnb of five orders, we will allow a commission of 10 percent. The volumes iasned will be sent at oncc by express, and the remaining volumes when completed.
A specimen volume in cloth wiU be sent, postpaid, for SO cents* or in half Russia, gilt top, for #1.00, and mav be returned it once, if not satisfactory. The "JHA*B*B'« E3fcTCtoPi«MA" comprises the first 15 volnmes of onr "Library of Universal Knowledge," and the remaining volumes, complete in themselves, will be sold separately when pub-
"*hcd BOOKS.
hotttea
IBOX Toxic did her more rood than all outer med-
El EI
ROASTED COIFIFrEJiEl
Has of late years acquired as a staple, has naturally suggested the better development of this branch of trade. It is already an established fact that Roasted Coffee can be purchased at a much less expense than the consumer can purchase Green Coffee and roast it. The only question is
DOES THE CONSUMER GET PURE COFFEE
Comparatively few people are aware of the extensive Adulterations to which Roasted Coffee is subjected. The pernicious use of Glucose, Grape Sugar, Gum Arabic. Eggs, &c.,^or the Glazed or So-Called Self-Setting Coffee, is not so much for clarifying and Ruling Coffee, as for Adulteration, hiding defects of poor coffee, and increasing Weight and Bulk. The purchaser of every pound of so-called Glazed of adulteration, the amount
of other injurious matter. People who have used Roasted Coffee are becoming aware of this adulteration, and with a preference FOR Roasted Coffee, are demanding better and purer goods.
In order to meet this demand I have erected a building and fitted up the most modem and improved machinery for roasting coffee, and am enabled to meet and vanquish all competition, by placing hi market,
Consumers decayed eggs
Stories and Ballads, by E. T. Alden, Silas., 50 cents. Acme Library of Modern Classics, 50 cents. American Patriotism, SO cents. Taine's History of English Lite'ratare, 75 cent*. Cecil Book of NaturS History, $1. Pictorial Handy Lexicon, 25 cents. Sayings by author of 8p&rrowgras* Papers, 50 cts. rs. Hetoan's Poetical Works, «S0 cents. K5tto Cyclopedia of Bib. Literotare, Srols., $2.
Roilin's At: Smith's Di
History, 35. of tie Bible, iJlas., 00 cents.
at 1 a&ry
Works of Flavfns Josephus. $2. the U. S.. Hop Geo. H.
Comic History of the U. S. Health by Exercise. Dr. Geo
prices. Descriptive Coulogue* Clubs
AMERICAN BOOK EXCHANGE,
JOHN B. ALDEN. Manager. TrilMmc CailtfiSg, New f«rt
Fractions of one dollar may
In
E. COIMBCKE. Safe Acest
ffiisullantOW
THE SIMPLEST, LIGHTEST RUN NING. MOST DURABLE AND EASIEST OPERATED
OF ANY
i-'f-'i--
f-ALL OEDEBS:
PROMPTLY FILLED
U. R. JEFFERSj
Dealer in "Wool and Manufacturer
Cloths, Cassimeres, Tweecfs, Flannels, Jeans, Blankets, Stocking Yarns,
Carding and Spinning.
N, 9-—The highest market price in cash, or our own make of goods exchanged for wool.
Terre Haute Banner,
TRI-WEEKLY AND WEEKLY.
Office
21 South Fifth Street.
P. GFROERER. Proprietor.
THE ONLY GERMAN PAPER IN THE CITY OF TERRE HAUTE.
English and German Job Printing
Executed in the best manner.
0. a.
r.
Morton Post, No. 1,
PKPARTMKNT OP INDIANA. TERRE HAUTE.
Headquarters 234 Sontli Third. Regular meetings first and third Thursday evenings, each mouth. £ST"Reading Room open every evening.
Comrades visiting the city wil. always be made welcome. W. E. McLEAN, Com'dr.
JAT CUMMINGS. Adj't. GKO. PLANETT, P. Q. M. Office at Headquarters
CALL AND EXAMINE
THE NEW
Improved Howe.
SEWING- MACHINE
In the Market. For sale at 23 south Sixth street, opposite Post Ofllee.
The Howe Machine Co.
S1500
Reader, if
by the
this great Encyclopaedia
JP
lopkins, ill us., SO cts' H. Taylor, 40 cento.
Health for Women. Ir. Geo. H. Taylor, 85 cents.
1
Library Magazine, 10 cent# a No.. $1 a year. Library Magazines, bound volume*. 00 cent*. Leaves from the Diary of an Old Lawyer. $].
Each of the above bound in cloth. If by malt, extra. Most of the books are also published in fine edttJonrantf fine bindings at higher ae* and Terms to sent free on reqoest.
Terr* Bnte.
T. D. OLINt Agent
TO $6000 A YEAR, or $5 to $90 a day in your own locality. No risk. Women do as well as men. Many make more than the amount stated above, No one can fail to make money fast. Any one qan do
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vg to try the business.
Nothing like it for money making ever offered be ii
fore, business pleasant' and strictly honorable.^ if
on want to kiiow nil about the best us yonr on full pnrtfcnlars and
paying business before the pnbllc, send us yonr
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Samples wortn $5 also free
yv Portland 84m0
SON & CO..
The Teirt Eiutt loiss
IS TIIE OLDEST AND
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It is a First-Class House in every respect
COR. ftEVEKTII & MAVX HTM.
NERVOUS DEBILITY.
ttftAY'ff SPECIFIC MEDICINK TRADE KIARK^ £Q.TRADK MAR I gliah Eemedy,
TRADE MARK
An unfailing enre for Seminal Weakn ess, Spermatorrhea, Impotency. and all Diseases that follow a
...... .. qtiencc of Self-
1
BEFORE TAUBLAbnse as ]os»AFTER TAKiRfl.1 of Memory. I'nlverbal Lassitude, Pain in the Back, Dimness of Vision. Premature O and many other Diseases that lead to Ins, Consumption and a Premature grave. larFtrJ! particular* in onr pamphlet, which we desire to send free by mail to every one. |35The Specific Medicine is sold by all Druggists at $1 per package, or six packages for $5, or will b# sent free sy mail on receipt of the money by addressing
THE CRAY SEOICIXK CO.. So. 9 Mechanics* Block. DETHOIT, Mica. fMd h» Terre Hante and by all Druggists every where.
A MONTH guaranteed. $12 a day at I home made ov the indoatrioas. Capi- 11 tat not repaired we will start yon
Men. women, boys and girls make money faster at work for ns than at anything else. The work is light and
pleasant, and snch as anyone can go right at. All who are wiae, who tee this notice, win send a* their addresses at once and see for themselves. Costlyontfitand terms free now ia the time. Those already *t work are laying up large cams of money, Addraa* TRUEs CO». Aognsta, Me.
