Daily News, Volume 2, Number 9, Franklin, Johnson County, 30 August 1880 — Page 2

DAILY NEWS

E. P.

BEAUCHA31P.

Entered at the Poet Office at Terre Haute, Indiana, as «ccond-cla»* matter.

MONDAY, AUGUST 30, 1880.

J*

FOR PRESIDENT

UNITED STATES,

JAMES A. GARFIELD.

FOR VICE PRESIDENT,

CHESTER A. ARTHUR.

STATE TICKET.

For Governor,

ALUEfiT O. PORTER. For Lieutenant Governor, THOMAS HANNA.

For Secretary of State,

EMANUEL R. HAWN,

For Auditor of State, EDWARD H. WOLFE, For Treaaurer of State

ROSWELL 8. HILL. For Attorney General. DANIEL P. BALDWIN. For Judges of Supreme Court, BYRON K. ELLIOT, Third District. WILLIAM A. WOODS, Fifth District,

For Clerk Supreme Court, DANIEL ROY8E. For Reporter Supreme Court,

FRANCIS M. DICE,

For Superintendent Public Instruction, JOHN M, BLOSS.

For Congress,

ROBERT B. F. PEIRCE.

Yigo County Ticket.

For Clerk,

MERRILL N. SMITH. For Treasurer. CENTENARY A. BAY.

For Sheriff,

JACKSON 8TEPP.

4g|

For Commissioner, Third District, JOHN DEBAUN, For Coroner.

DR. JAMES T. LAuGIIEAD. For Senator. FRANCIS V. BIOHOWSKY.

For Representatives, WI LLtAM H. ME LRATH.

DICK T. MORGAN. For Surveyor. GEORGE HARRIS.

THE NEWS HAS THE LARGEST DAILY CIRCULATION IN THE CITY. «*!WBWWWBS- .-I... L— )'..l.-I.J ll'JI

WHY THE SOUTH IS SOLID FOR HANCOCK.

the

i' •—if..-*!. ^lHoi^felttf 'JU'^'.L Awis: !«-.,*»-

E*Mtor ahd Proprietot^

fnblicstioo Offlce. corner Fifth and JfiSnSTrttU

Look

rowly

1

Consider what Jm and Jufkson tmild do were my alive. THESITA RE THE SAME PRINCIPLES FOR WHICH THEY FOUGHT FOUR TEARS. Remember the mm who poured fourth their life-blood on Virginia's soil, and do not abandon them now. Remember that npon your vote depends the success of the Democratic ticket,—[Wade Hampton, at Staunton, Ytt., July 5MJ. ».M. 11

The Brewers and Mais tors are at Lftgerheatls. ,. I

Abbe Lftinu, Pure Ilyacinthc's assistant, was married yesterday at Pari!, Poire Hya.* cinthe officiating. un,.m— 'jl.hil.U-. ii 'ii'

George Howard, a young lawyer of New York, was murdered last night while protecting two young ladies who wore being followed by roughs.

OUR Waukesha letter contains an aiial 'ysls of the water of Waukesha springs, whith demonstrates that the Magnetic springs of this city fcontaln many more medicinal qualities. •HHlM!l..t'..! r.J'U...' ... J'JMU.!ll,

The Russian vessel, Saint Anne ha» arrived hert louring the admiral who will command the Russian portion of the European Hem which is concentrating here for ft demonstration in Turkish waters.

THE Democrats of New York have arrived at the conclusion that a division in their ranks means the defeat of Hancock and English. On Saturday the Demo cratle Si,ate Convention met la New York city to consider the feasibility of calling a *tate convention some time during Septemler. The meeting it is understood, resulted in uniting the two old factions of the Democratic party in that state, and

Tammany faction will call a coaven tion to appoint delegates, on the 8th day of September,

The Hitti Tammany members of the committee opposed the calling of a state convention special to 0$ Ititor Gemn says that the parW that favored the conveotioa had the vigorom assistance of several prom inent Democrat*, who, for two years, have either acted ojK»nly with the Kelly wing, or hate shown their sympathy with it. These men have lately gained the title of "pacificatoRf among the Democrats they haw avowed to bring "harmony" Into the distracted party council*. It if *u*]ectKl they intend to make their bodies the bridge over which KeHcy may pass to she camp of the "regular" Demoracy.

g"

^-Tgrisr pr*^

SATI0HA1 DI8A8TKB.

There has never heeu a time iu the Jhistory of this country when the future prosperity of our Nation was so bright as it is to. day ,Our commerce is^ .growing like green grass in summer rain, and not one single department of industry or trade can be pointed out that is not flourishing.

at the state of our inland com­

merce, and tell us if any Nation on the globe is in such a prosperous condition. We*are a great people, and especially are we to congratulate ^ourselves in the Western States, for the energy and thrift which the virgin soil produces in our midst. What was the condition of Indiana and Illinois only fifty years ago? What is the condition of of those states to day? Not taking into consideration the wonderful resnlts of the war the prosperity of these states is unparalleled in the history of the world. Is it any wonder that the whole country is aroused at thff present attitude of the Democratic party, and the Indianapolis Journal well says that a clear, decided and unimpeachable victory for Republcan principles will alone avert National disaster. It is announced on every hand that the Democratic "man on horseback" will be inaugurated if elected, to which nobody objects but from the tone.which accompanies the simple words and the character of the men that use it, it means that if in November Hancock stands as Tilden did in 1876. no better, no worse, in honest votes, legal counts and constitu tional methods, then he will be inaugurated President of all this Nation by force, by violence, though it tear the government into pieces. There is nothing more discreditable to the Democratic* party, nothing more characteristic of it, nothing baser than its cry of fraud with reference to Hayes' inauguration. The history ol* it is fresh, and the world knows that patriotic men of all parties united in their desire for some escape from the di lemma in which the country was placed. Both parties joined in the painful work of elaboratihg a plan just to all. Both acquiesced in it. Both \*ere in all honor pledged to abide by it. It saved the country from a great peril it gave the Nation rest. It opened all the avenues of prosperity to all the people. We nar­

grazed civil, war, and we have the bounty and the blessings of lionorable peace And yet, from the day wlieii it was rumored that the Editoffffl Commission had, after most thorough ^nd exhaustive labor, decided in favor of Hfcyes. the Democratic party, with perfidy unexplained, has hovfled "fraud," "fraud." Now it audaciously declares that in a similar emergency it will plunge the country into civil war if not* allowed to seize the presidency. It will determine all doubtful questions. It will brook no discussion. It will not even consider the possibility 6f any peaceful arbitration. It has grown strong enough to throw off all disguises and adopts proper orbit—the bulldozing method of 3ecessia. It has spent three years in training its adherents for this final enforce tneht of a method which has proven wonderfully efficacious air over the South. ItVsuccess there has recommended it arid animated them. The great body of the Democratic party, living in the Southern States, cannot understand' why a weapon ao formidable to timid people there will not answer beret They most certainly intend to try it, unless the people of tile North prevent their madness and its woeful result by a decided. Condemnation at the ballot box this fallr ^Hence, there is real danger of civit war and all itk.hprrors in the near future, happy as the land is to day.

mmmssss^^

1 fV

The 8tstc Commluce remained in session till nearly xnUittigbt. thefe being animated cott«*t otner the queatioa of h&ldla# ttmve&Uro, Finally^ at dear midniirht^ the comj v.-'* me: dotted a* the opening of ihte ok tch tt^on. *tt«l a cai was iwa«.U ^tat« convention at 38. pf «n«a|»porlm«tf II '.n- .. kail*!

1.1 Mil mill,UIIIII1 II II II

5-

Tl»ottly ccn»p»F la tb* 'mM makes ihook*htem ntf hat^ew ivjr fj^ llav«:r, taoetwy cspacl-

A Lifcfi of "Magniilc&tt DistAnces." The enormous extent of the territory over which the Hudson

Bay

,rf.

jar*

Company

carries on ita trade, and throtignout which depots and posts are established, can hanily be comprehended at a merely

Ff

curlsorv ance. •fom Pembina, on the

Makentie, is as great a distance as from Loudon to Mecca the space between the Company's posts at Sanlt Ste. Marie and Fort Simpton, on the Pacific, measures'more than two thousand five hundred geographical miles and from the King's Post to the Peliy Banks is further than from Paris to Samarcand. .The area of the country under its immediate influence is about 4,5o0,000 square miles, or more than one-third greater than the whole extent of Europe.

For purposes of trade, the original chartered territories of the company, and the vast onUyinc circuit of commercial relations, are divided into sections called the Northern, Southern, Montreal, and Western departments. Of these, the Northern department is situated between Hudson Bay and the Rocky Mountains the Southern between James Bay and Canada, including also East Main on the Eastern shore of Hudson Bay the Montreal department comprehends the extfent of the business in the Canadas while the Western comprises the radons west of the Kocky Mountains. These four departments are again divided into fifty-three smaller portions, called districts, each of these Is under the direction of a superintending offiioer, and has a depot fort, to which all the supplies for the district are forwarded, and to wliichall Iters and other produce are i»nt for shipment to England. These districts are again »uldivided into numerous min^r *stabhsl!« menta, tort* pos« outpo^. Over each of tfe^e ttwere i* an tfBeer and ftom torn to forty vtmk, nmhaaics, la~ fcwsre, and servants. Bewd«s,the com* panv ««it5ov» multitudes* ofamsn as voy^*n£nning»«d wtirfciaf tl«* boats oji *a»oei t» patflort^fettttory. i- Th** fori* tint trading of Ute Crtmpanvar* scattered ovter immense ajWct vatyin* tr tv to -hundred miles. A

r""''^

J1 4m'**- -4' A New Torkin**t*t»ofC»::r-anl^a la th« house wutimkm* of the Intmevrnl

#5m**aP

And settled the focus rightly The liftht, thrown back from the mil-rot's face,

Came criimmeriog upward brtarhtly He put the slide with the mite in place, And fixed on the cover tightly.

He turned the instrument up and down, ...4 Till, fcettlnfr a proper eight, he Exclaimed—as he gaaed with a puiakXl frown— "Good gracious!" and "Highty-ttghtyl Tftft sight is enough to alarm the town, -a Amiteisamoiwter mightyJM .r From t'other and of the tube, the mite

Regarded our scientific: To his naked eye, as yoa'il guess, the stght Of a man, was most terrific But reversing the microscope made him quite

The opposite of magnlfio. "One sees the truth through this tube

a tall," Said the Elite, as be squinted through it "Man is not so wondrously big after all, •If the mite-worrd only knew it!" i' *o. r!^5!»

*r

A STORY OF BOIKNCEi^

A fhujOBOpweb sat to his easy dbiit, Looking as gTave as Mlltolti He wore solemn, mysterious air, f1 -j A« to fttnjiAa Biilmm split an A«rlp of£1MS,«asUdc toPrepme ailte taken oat of msBCinott. He took his microscope out of Its oase,

angular.

3 t+r

so

MORAIm ..

Mem.-"Whether a thing is lanrc pr smaU Depends on the way •you view it 1

•JT .If THEHAiR: Ita Orowth, Strtiftli and Color—Pr collar ChoraeterlMlM o( People with Dlffterei*t ,Ori»rt4 Hair, X^tc.

THE Detroit Free Press publishes the following extract from a book on The Hair, its Growth, Care and treatment," recently published by a medical man in that city •f The people of Paris and London alone use twenty oar loads of other people's hair. Convents usually furnish large amounts for the Frenoh, Spanish and Italian'markets, and it is known to the trade as "ehuroh hair." The prices of h$ir range from five dollars to twenty cents a head, though the finest of golden hair will bring two dollars an ounce, white hair five dcrtlars an ounce. In such cases a heail of hair is worth from twenty-five to fifty dollars. Some nationalities have a peculiar odor in their hair the Chinese hair has a. musky smell, and the odor of violets has been detected in one or two instances. The dealers detect the quality mainly by the touch, can tell whether its color is dyed or bleached, and whether it comes from the living or the dead. As a rule hairgrowers are a degraded race whose riches consist not in their flocks, but in their own fleeces, which they never pin up or comb, but wear in closely-littmg caps. ir«The enormous strength of the hair is Hardly appreciable. A healthy singlo hair will support four ounces. A single head of hair in an audience of 200 people will support the entire audience and the hair of all the people in Detroit would support ,a load which would require 5,000 locomotives to draw, and the hairs of the people of the giobe would support a planet against the gravity of the earth. Samson's hair was evidently a fitting emblem of his strength. fThe shape of the hair, looked at as one would look at the end of a stick of candy, Is an oval in the European and light-haired races, and in the Semitic races more or less

The hair

of the negro is elliptical or kidneyshaped it has no central canal, and will "felt." The European's will not but, although the negro's hair, as a whole, seems coarse, perhaps on ao-count-of its eurliness, a competent observer avers- that the individual hairs of this race are finer than the hairs of the European. VThe curl in the negro's hair is caused by effect, during thousands of years, of a hot sun, whieh has acted upon ^%e#penetu4 §J^ping•^22" .j »f?v *i,'!

Notwithstanding the smallness of a 'single hair, the hair on the heads of the people of Detroit Would make a footwalk 12 inches wide and 600 miles in length. In spite of the contrary opinion, the hair of men is finer than that of women, whether the coarsest male hair is compared with tlie coarsest female hair, or the finest male hair with the finest female hair the finest hair being found amotig civilized Nar tions. The young ^foman with lone, fine golden locks runs her comb through 70 miles of hair in the morning and some even have 90 and 100 mues of it. It is literally true that the hairs of the head are numbered and. on an average, amount of 120,000 to each person having a full and luxuriant growth, black-haired persons having the fewest, flaxen-haired the most. •'Whilst our blondes' are so rich in their wealth of golden tresses, their darker-haired sisters are compelled to be satisfied with fifty, forty—yes, and some red-haired sisters with bat thirtysix—miles of this covering, which St. Paul says is a giory to her. While the first has the more from which to tie true love-knots, Nature- 'has allowed the darker-haired ones to tie theirs the stronger. But the filaments on animals are much more numerous than on man. On th*» Merino sheep there is a combined length of filament equal to the distance a railroad car, at the rate of a mile a minute, would traverse, night and day, in 18,000 years.

Hairs do not, as a rule, penetrate the scalp perpendicularly, hut at" an angle. When the angle of the different hairs is the same, it is possible to give to it the easy sweeps and curves which we generally see it take but if they are by some freak of nature misplaced, we hate the rebellious

4

frizzle-tops1 that

in imt snaceptible to the influence of the brush and oomb." Many a poor mother has half-worried her life out frying to train her Johnny's rebellious locksinto better ways, believing it was Johnny's perversenees of manners that induced such dilapidated-looking headfear, when ft was really non« of Johnny's fault at all, hut simply a freak of asature ra misplacing the radiating ce&ters of his hirsute covering." Sometim wi fowls suffer from a contrariwise placing of the feathers—they run the wrong way. The author's father hadahea whose teg-feathers ran up toward the body, tho*? on the body and neck toward the head. This gave her perpetual "out of aom" look, and she could never fly. The erection of the loir of animals during anger or of human beings la fright, is caused by a c&aage in the skin and the a&gie at which tfce hair entire the header bod v.

There axe thiee reasons why women's hair is longer than men's: First, She

r. ."1 *. v^A ft &* i:

'J .?i? I-,- "i" •"W#

n&s & larger supply ox n&ir-iormui^ material for the scalp second, the dtameter of her hair being larger, it is less liable to break third, being usually less engaged in menta! labor or business worry, she has a more constant and evpn supply of blood to the scalp. In 'nations where the hair of the men is! usually worn .Short, the fash km of long' hair in the' male is regarded as a protest against church and State and( against general customs, taste and thought Austria it is made a politicalonenaetqbe sokttired.

The growth of the hair is the most rapid in the young and middle-aged, and in those living an outdoor, active life. At the age of eighty, if a man live so long, and if his hair and beard have been close-trimmed, he has cut off six and a half inches of hair annually, or about thirty feet in alL

The hair is the lefiast destructible part nf the body. The hair of the ancient Thebans is, arfter a lapse of 4,000 yearsj found to have survived the tombs. The Pyramids and the Sphinx are crumbline, but some of the wigs of human hair, exposed to the mold and moisture of their entombed apartments, are less decayed than the monuments themselves. ,,

There are three coloring pigments to the hair--yellow, red and ofack, and all the shades are produced by the mixture of these three colors. In pure golden yellow hair there is only the vellow pigment in red, the red mixed with yellow in dark, the black mixed with red and yellow in the hair of the negro there is as much red pigment as in the reddest hair, arid had not the blacky been most developed—perhaps by the' action of the sun—the hair of all negroes would be as fiery a red as the reddest hair of an Englishman. ,Vi£

There are Fewer yellow or light-hair-ed people than dark-haired—even among the Caucasian race. The blondes are disappearing. A greater proportion'bf light-hairea women live unmarried and die childless than the dark. Dark-haired women have three chances of marriage to two of the light-haired. "Just whpt sort of philosophy induces the sterner sGx to talk so much to ahd of blondes," says the author, "and when it comes to the ose actual business phase of life, to prop to the brunettes, is entirely beyond comprehension." The blonde-haired are most prone to consumption, cancer and cataract, brown-haired least so, brown-haired people are subject to acute rheumatism, heart disease, saltrheum red-haired to pleurisy, pneumonia, ague and neuralgias blonde or light color haired to skin diseaS&s. The blonde or auburn haired are tenderhearted and easily imposed upon, and usually delicate and refined red-haired people are firm in their convictions, great lovers of their country, people and church, like the Scotch, out when their haii^ is coarse and harsh they are brutal and sensual the black-haired are positive and powerful, very good or very bad the brown-haired, as a rule, furnish the philanthropists, the painters, musicians, authors—Homer, Virgil, Raphael, Titian, Handel, Mozart, Tasso, Chaucer, Bums, Keats, Longfellow, Lowell, Whittier, and hosts of others. Several cases of banded grfcen, blue and white and woolly hair are reported the hair of the Cape male IK lucent ,,.,p i» AtHJnt Bcd-Koom Carpets. MtfilrtK —r—"—

I NEED hardly insist on the fact that the old-fashioned plan of covering everv part of the bed-room with carpet-stun, so as to make the carpet hug the wall, is as bad a plan as can possibly be followed. In these days everybody is beginning to recognize this truth, and the change which lias taken place within the last ten vears, in the matter of carpets for bed-rooms, is quite remarkable. In some instances I notice that an extreme change, which is neither wanted nor warranted, haS been instituted that is to,say, instead of the carpet that at one time covered all the surface of the floor with the greatest nicety of adaptation, there is no carpet at all. This extreme change is not at all desirable. It is good to have carpets in every part of the room where the feet must regularly be placed. It is bad to have carpets in any part of the room where the feet are not regularly placed. These two rules govern the whole position, and the most inexperienced housewife can easily remember them. By these rules there should be carpet all around the bed, carpet opposite to the wardrobe or chests of drawers, carpet opposite the washing-stand, carpet opposite the dressing-table, but none under the beds, and none for a space of two or three feet around the room—that is to say, two or three feet from the walls of the room. The carpets that are laid down should be loose from each other, each one should be complete in itself, so that it can be taken up to be shaken with the least trouble, and each one should be arranged to lie close to the floor, so that dust may not easily get underneath

Carpet-stuff for bed rooms sfeotuo be made of fine material closely woven, and not fluffy on the surface. There was a form of Brussels carpet called "tapestrr," which some years ago'was very largely used, tt was as warm as the thickest blanket, and it was almost like wire in fiber in fact, it was tough enough to last half a lifetime, and it was Ute best carpeting for bed-rooms I ever remember.

The advantages of small carpets in the bed-room are many. They cause the footsteps to be noiseless, or comparatively noiseless, they prevent the feet from btieoraing coli while dressing and undressing, thev make the room look pleasant, and when used in the limited manner above suggested they save trouble in cleansing, by preventing dust and dirt from being troddeu into the floor.—Rictouxfom, 3oo Worts.

Wki are T« Wllftww

Because yon have allowed your bowels to become costive, and liver torpid, Use Kidney-Wort to produce a free state of the bowels. and It w3i stimulate the liver topH^aelloa, dea&sr the skin of its yeuowness, cure billion* headache, and cause riew life In the U&od. Druggists have it.

Smith & Burnett

Is certainly tlie clearest place in the city to boy all kinds gwries fruits —s,

-Tt' "*i 0^

.T "I

~SC,

*s

Tie-People's Paper.

75 v|

OF THE PEOPLED FOR THE

/'i tT.

newspaper over 'all other competitors

circulated in the City of Terre Haute.—

THE KEWS is a modern nempaper in the

full sense of the term. It belongs to hvS "'Si-. -4-% that class of papers which is flourishing

most signally in the East and West, and

filling the especial Want of the people of

to-day, viz. a cheap, spicy paper which

furnishes all the news in the most reli-

able form. Many of our people cannot

afford to take the costly city papers,

while others find neither the time nor the

inclination to persuc their lengthy and

indistinct colums printed in small type.

THE NEWS presents in compact shape the

telegraphic and general news, which is

spread out interminably in the metro­

polian journals. Its editorial columns,

while dealing largely with National and

State politics,

fare

a

Ja*

3t$E'

•*r~

-THE TERRE HA1TTE

DAILY NEWS

v,-a'awt

r*

Possesses many advantages as a dally

especiaily devoted, to

city, township and county affairs.^ And

the miscellaneous literary selections are

culled with great care, and with a con^

scientious regard for the instruction and

morals of the community. The sound

and healthful influence of a hearty laugh

is recognized by THE NEWS corps, and

no effort is spared to lay before our pat* :L rons the latest and choicest productions

of the Twaltis and Burdettes of the land.

The city department of the NEWSJS well

looked after. Each day it. .contains a com­

plete record of the events occuring in our -V4 t, fr midst. Scnsationlism in statement and

matter is studiously excluded/ arid our

patrons are able to rely upon the siib-

tantial accuracy ef each and every item'

The NEWS is circulated mpre largely

and in more towns than any other daily &»!>! 't i~ 'ft

1 3

'i*

paper in western Indiana.. The DAILV

JJKWS is the only fearless outspoken anf

eht^tisijbl?' dally west of {IndiannpoliS}

The NBWS has increased her circulation

over one thousand vfithin the last thirty I cf yf* «$,%} .yv Cfij days, and bis now a bona fide circulation

of about 2000. The NEWS can be ordered

througlTthe lfEWS boxes, or direct from

the NEWS office, corner Fifth and Mall!

streets

1. 'if 11^,

urn

i-mpi

y$ ®rMt

SZ. TL. STATJB

a, 4

v-

mm

Livery, Sale and

S«F'-p.wv

rr -"P«

-A

$

FEED STABLE

COB. TOTRD A SRO WALHUT STS.

J!*. 8ttwV* «tock ia riy frwh, *ni in jrood con. 4Woo V»«Xl«t*a S« also luw geatleawn, 6ltf

II

fUistellancono

.s/-.—-AT

Si PEOPLE BY THE PEOPLE." jf. K. JEFPEKS, 'I

Is1 Dealer in Wodf and Manufacturer«

Cloths, Cassimores,,

Tweeds, Flannels,

r' .Jeans, Blankets.

Stoekins: Yarns, I Carding and Spinning.

N. B.—Tlio highest market prlco in cash, or ou own make of good? exchanged for wool.

Terre Haute Banner,

TRI-WEEKLY and WEEKLY.

Office 21 South Fifth Street.

P. QFROERER, Proprietor.

THE ONLY GERMAN PAPER IN Tir CITY OP TERRE HAUTE.

English and G-erman Job Printing

Executed hi the best manner.

©. a. ft.

THE SIMPLEST,' LIGHTEST RUN NING. MOST DURABLE AND EASIEST OPERATED

OF ANY

SEWING- MACHINE

In the Market. For sale at 28 south Sixtl street, opposite Post Office.

The Howe Machine Co.

t"4

gsasfc-

10 HTA5i

.&si:

ALL OK.3D3QK.S

PROMPTLY FILLEx

llSi

Morton Post, No. 1,

DKPAUTMKNT OP tNDUNA. TERRE HAUTE*

Headquarters 33V4 South Tliln" Rogular meetings first and thirf Thursday evenings, each mo»tl ^"Reading Koont open ever evening.

Comrade# visiting the city wh always be made welcome. W. E. McLEAN, Com'dr.

JAT CUMMIN08, Adj't, 6*0. PI.ANKTT, P. Q-

M-

at Headquarters

CALL AND EXAMIN1

,,THE NEW

Improved Howe,

T. D. OLIN, Agen.

to A YEAR or $B to 830 a da your own locality. No ri«k. Wo nf do a« well AK men. Many# more than- thfl amounfM Xj 7 »tnted obovo. No one can fall make money fa»»t. Any one can «o the worft. Ton tan mak«f from

50

cent« to 8'^

hotir by flavoring yomr evetiifu?* and «jmre time the bnalnesa. It cost* notfolaa to !ry the Ijti.iineBc Nothing like it for money

mAklng

ever offered be

fore. Bn*lne»# pleasant and utrfclly hoiiorabl«» Rcaden If yott wafattt) know all about the bourn

jroitjcan then H»ak« up AddraM' GEORGE Sf lNSON *9$}M Maine™ —!—U

1 GRAY HPTClPti- MfftfefCNlP. ^ARKrhe Great En-***0* gliah Eemedy,

An unfailing

tnrif for

,, fallow an- a wUfOIC TAKllfi-lbni^ aa lo«« AfTIB TAIIHfi.

of Memory, rnivernal Lai^fltuijc, Pain in th" Back. Dlmtieaa of Vhiton. Preioatare Old Age, acd many oth^r DS»ea?f-s that load to Inwwlty or

d*«ir« Um*d tn-1 if »ail to rr

dmMtis# ju THE fcWAT CO.. S?. S Mechanic*' Blp» k, DUtmtr. Mtrn.

tak* Mop

btoo

tO«

HOP •gWKS »i Ttm«y «a»« our iff*, ft hu land hundred*.

4

Semin­

al Wf:akne*«

I",?

/W

fa "lu all iiMtiftfialS ml *.

SoM to Terre Hatmr aod bjrall Dr^g^^cry where.

I

totttngq it wont,

i&totsand HM »•«*•«*. VHtlk tU» MOP fti ttfoumrm Uoo tf Too Wf

ro

to

ta as ataoMto

Ma curt

SOP vrram jrr« co^

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til