Daily News, Volume 2, Number 25, Franklin, Johnson County, 17 September 1880 — Page 3

«m

I LI NEWS

FRrDA"Y, SEPT. IT. 1880.

Railroad ®une ®ablf.

\II,It.\Ik I'DIK BI.K.

p'ariffiiHy irr»-u-d to date,) Jn f)«|K»t Teniti »iui «"Siettnnt St*., in a]) £«xr«-|,i I. & ,«si. 1,.. T. .1. & S. £. Worth J, an I frt'iurlit-. Tun-. five minute* f*s»i*r icrrc llauie iiiih-.

ZXPI.ANATIOX or REfhlSKN-CE VAKKS, Sry «lny. All otiier truiiir liilv except Snn tParlor car* dally. oxci-pt Sunday. Sleepiihi^' liKir'-nr. I iimn hepof time jffc Svn uiiimtr* faiii*r fltan ritv time.

AN1ML1A LINK (Leave going iiasii

Lute 1:40 am And Acc ... .3:40 pm ijy Ex ^Vtpn &ud Acc. T:i*)am (Arrive from East) tiflc Ex ivSam SYain t* :V am MUEx 2 «u

Tjiolin Acc 7:00 vl ive vo'u West) jeific

Ej

sTrnin, kt Ex Line and Are

.... ft.OO .... 0.00

1:32 am .10:08 a jji 2 :'-SJ .. 1:88 am 8:60 am

(Arrive from West)

jjr Kk 8:85 pm TEKKK HA.UTK & LOGAN'SPORT. Uigmmport Dlv. of Vandalla. (U-tivc for Northeast) Train 6:30 am (id Train 4:00 pm (Arrive fmm Northeast a Train 1:15 pm ed Traill 5:i»p ra

TEH RE »IAi TK AJSVANSVILLK. (Leave for Month) .-•hvtjfc. Ex fnd Acc (Arrive from South)

Ex

mJ

ICjiante Acc ^oandTcrrc Hnuie Ex Jcago ami NttshvUI.- Ex

Bxpreaa .1 (Arrive from East.) dkoxprenH ..ew York Bxpr««»

vnapotlaand

York Kx

ariapoiii1 and Maltoon Acc

VK*

,*«/ Terr« Huuio **. Iftnvillp

4:30 am 2:40 5:00 am x! :4» pin tl):45 pin 4 :45 ni

Jca^oKi fpil 4nd Acc C1IIOAOO A EASTERN ILLINOIS. (Leave for North) 15S and Chicago Ex ivllle Acc artliviHc and Chicag° Kx

-M

.. X:lv in pin ..11:10 ant .. 5 :&•> .. 4:20 am

(Arrive from North)

ILLINOIS MIDL.VND RAILWAY. (I.cnvi- for N*or:hwei»t) fia Mail and Ex •jftor l,«i«*fnfl'er ft.1, (Arrivo from Norlhwcat)

Mini an.i lix jwilin Part«cnfer

a

llv"" ri. A

G:3T am 4:07

9:20 ji in 1:1»

HOITTIIEASTERN, (to Worthington.

1

(Doiioi. Main and Firnt Stu.J (Lwivc for Sontheamt)

irmmodation 7:00 a ni «rPI (Arrive from Bouthuaitt) |mmodat.ion 3:00pm

INDIANAPOLIS* ST. LOUI8. H^Deiioi., Sixth and Tippecanoe St».] (Leave going Kant) »w York BxproMH. ,.ikna|oii* and Muttoon Acc

.. :25 am .. «:I3 a in 8:10 pin .. 10 V? a ,. 1 a ra .. 6:35 ,. 1 :JW a ,.10:.*4 a in .. :-JT a .. 1:38. ,, y:11 am

Maltoon Acc.... ..

$ (Li-avc going Wcxt.) |ew York Kx 'Ex aTiapolirt and Miittoon Acc....... 'j (Arrivt: from Went) 'Jew

S:0M in

DAKVILLE KOUTE. iicajo I Easters Illinois Railroad.

NORTH.

7.50

a.m.

lloopeattm... Watacka

Peoria

Burllhgton..,. Keokuk. ..... Chicago... Milwaukee St. Paul

10.50 p.m

...10.35 ... 11.88 12,40 p.tn

1.20 a.m 2.44 3.40 7.40 12.05 M.

8 8 0

... 7.50

k'

... 7.45 4.00

11,

a.m

7.00

12.00 ntghl 12.45 p.m i.35 p.m. 0.00 a.in SOt'TII. 4.20 a.m 5.80 p.m 1.50 11.50 p.m

T«rr« Hatitft.. Danville Ilooponton..., W alavka l'ooria Burlington. .. Hook uk....... Chicago.... ,, Milwaukee St. Paul ... ..

S.20

1,25

11.(0

1«.85 8.55 n.m 8.55 4.H0 0.00 3.15 12.85

7.35 2.80 8.36 7.50

1.00

6.05

iicago & Northwestern R. R.

"v

rulfhirnia UHi.

ChU'ngo... p.m I Ar. C. iUuffi... ».80a.m tt.15 1 7.25p.tn

.'irmikee, Wrem Hay A: l^ihe Mnjterlor -f iJne. *.Chicago,.,. #.W*.m ",...10.00 r,

Ar. Milwaukee H.lft *.m 12.46 p.m Ar. Urccn Bay 8.00

,,..10.(10 .... #.00p.m

Milwaukee 11.55 a.tn Grevn Ray 5.40 Kaoanaba, 10,54 p.m

Ml. Paul ft ,18lnnr*polla Mil*. t.Chicago.... 10.00a.m I Ar.St,Paul.... C.00*.m 1» ™.... 8.00p.m| LWp.m

U. 8TBNN8TT, Gcn'l Paao. Ag't, Chicago.

Milwaukee & St, Paul

Mnf,

....10.10a.m Ar.Mllwattk®®, 14.86p.m ....10.10 IVonomc.. 2.46 "i ,i.. 10.10 L»Cro*m».. 1M0 .. .10.10 fl.Q0*.ta .... 9.00pm lilTwantetHS.ll.86p.tn »,00 Oconom'c., 1-28 a.to ... 9.00

44

UCnw««.. 7.C8

.... 0.00 St. Paul.... 1.25p A. V. H. CARPKNTKR, Geo. P*a«. and Tkt. Ag t. Mllwankok

WM. DREUSI0KE|

liRPENTER ANlfBl

Mfc»nfiw« «rer of Drcnaicke's

Patenf RofVigcratoIre, I Vot. Niuth and Sjrcamow 81#,. 1 TBRRK IfAUTK. INT). ,r'"' ——--——i—-i

w. P- HOCTOR,

AKD OAS FITTER

Ail work done ii the.best sty'« Offide under PBATUTE CITY BAKK. *S ., 8otttli8ixlbSU««lM

L-ilULai1*

JOS. H. BRIQOS,

'Produce and CommlsstoB

.MEBCHAJfT.-S?

4 1

Ontftof

Fourth »inl

TEKKK HAUTE. INDIANA

NO TIME LIKE THE OLD TIME.

by o. w. uouMaa.

There to no time lUce the old time, when you and

were young,

But, oh! the «weet, aftweet violet*.

There la no friend like ttae ald friend, who has shared our mornl.Tic days! No greeting like bis welcome, no homage like bis praise! Fame the centleag flower, with gaudy '.crown of gold But friendship is ibe breathing rose, with sweets in

every fold.

There is no love like the old, love that we oonrted in our pride Though onr leaves are falling, falling, and we are fading side by side There are blfiosoms all ground us with the colors of the dawn, And we live In borrowed sunshine when the light of day is gone. There are no times like the old times—they shay never be forgot! There Is no place like the old place—keep green the dear old spot! There are no Mends like the old friends—may

Heaven prolong their lives!

There are no loves like the old loves—God bless our loving wives.

Causes of Consumption.

Jr. Rollin K. Gregg, of Buffalo, New Vorfc, is confident that he lia.s solved lie my*lory of consumption. Regular ph.viriatis will be apt to say that he has mistaken a condition for a cause nevertheless we ore inclined to think that good may come from the emphasis he lays upon that condition, since it

In such cases of consumption as are :hnracterized in their earlier stages by an absence of profuse expectoration, Dr. Gregg would attribute the beginning of the disease to a loss of albumen through some othef" 6rgan or organs, the shriveled blood corpuscles lodging the lungs, starting tubercles there antl setting up a dry cough, with the resultaiit irritation of'the mucous membrane and outpouring of mucuo8. From this point of view, hope for the th

there is but one source of cousutiiptive in any stage of the disease, and that is through the healing of the mucous membranes and the stopping of the waste of albumen. Bv this means in the earlier stages of the disease—with all who have not inherited the most feeble constitutions—there is much hope from judicious treatment.

Whatever may ue the primary cause of consumption, it is pretty evident that the mucous discharge which attends the disease and finds relief in expectoration is to be repressed rather than encouraged and to do this must radically change the usual treatment of the disease, at its early stages.

Care of House Plants.

In many households no sitting-room is regarded as complete without plants in the sunniest window. They are the only representative® of Summer life w« are permitted to see for many month#, and to keep them in a flourishing condition is an art worth studying. Plante are often killed bv kindness, but much more frequently by neglect They are fed and watered too often during a quidt time of rest They are subjected to violent transition, and especially to excessive befit Chills are fatal to their beauty.

Air and light are essential but the air that plants like best is that which we have breathed and charged with carbonic add. They feed on it retaining the carbon if they are growing in ftell light, and thus their company is, physically an well aswrtheticaily. beneficial to the human occupants. Water is another eeseii* ti&l. The dry air of our boated ramfe makes evaporation rapid. The water should be freelv given, so as to W*k every particle or the soil but the drainage —excepting forcallaa and other aqtaUids —mu«t be free, and no more urab&r should be given until the pot and soil Veorae noticeably dry

ering and sodden soil area most and common ruin of room-plants. other food than good, sweet, well-aireo •oil and pure water should be used til growth and bloom are expanding, when some diluted liquor fertifb&er onse a week greatly improves the volume anil color of foliage atid flowers *f the light is good. A few drops of ammonia added to the water may occasionally 1m with a good

.. •..? *«. •_

I

When the bods of ApriJUbtagponml and binds of aprlng-tUllWWpg lK The garden's brightwt glories |i^^ummer sun are

flowers that

There la po p%oe- like the- old place, where yon and wer*born Where we U0«d^Hr eyeJWs on Ihe splendors of the mom From the broaat utacwarmed us. from the cllnglngarma thai bore, Whet« the deaf eyesgHateaed o'er .ps'that will, look on us no

deems

calculated to work a beneficial change in the customary treatment of the disesise. Dr. Gregg argues that as the loss of albumen from the blood through the mucous membrane of the kidneys in Bright's disease, rapidly and fatally depletes the system,, much more must the more rapid loss of albumen hrongh the mucous membranes of the lungs be serious in all its stages and speedily fatal in its results, if proper measures are not taken to stop such waste before fatal conditions huve arisen. The expectorations of consumptives, and all their other catarrhal or mucuous discharges from whatever organ, are mostly albumen and ft direct loss of so much of this constituent from the blood. It is this wastage which causes the great emaciation characteristic of consumption, and not, he thinks, any figlure of the system to assimilate food And this loss of albumen does mischief not only in robbing the maples of their proper nutrition, but also in throwing the constituents of the blood into disproportion. The loss of one ounce of albumen destroys nearly a pound of blood for all purpose of healthy nutrition, and leaves in the blood a relative excess of 5J- ounces of water, 7 ounces of blood corpuscles, 9 grains of fatty matter,115 grains fibrin, and 41 grains of salts. These elements in excess act as foreign matters in the blood, and disturb the entire economy of the system. Night sweats and dropsy are the result of the excess of water. The blood corpuscles left in excess are decolorized by the watery blood, and are deposited in the capillaries or smallest blood vesels, where they shrivel and become tuberculous corpuscles, so called the fatty matters in excess cause the fatty livers mid other fatty degenerations attending the disease the excess of fibrin causes the adhesion of the pleura to the inner surface of the ribs, the heart, or to each other, often among the most serious of tU a ii/vm t\tirtaflAnO rtf tilnilOT) ftllfl the complications of consumption and finally, the excess of salt« causes calculi, enlargement of the joints, ossifications, and similar morbid developments. "v"*

A western jonrnalifct whose wife ha*" h% £$!$£ just presented him with twins, and whv for this reason, was compelled to neglett his paper for one day, wrote, the day! after, the following ^exc use: "We were unable th issue our paper yesterday, in consequence pf the arrival bf two extra males." "Beware of the woman," says the Elmira Advertiser,?who- cariiesj^kjJfe in her stocking.*' Yes, yes, but Kow are we to discover if she carries a knife in her stocking?

A most interesting sight to see is that of a young lady with lips like rubies^ and with teeth of pearly whiteness, ana with cheeks that have stolen the deep carnation of the deathless rose, with her mouth full of gingerbread! "What made you quit the East?" said a man in Nevada to a new-comer. "I got into trouble by marrying two wives," was the response. '"Well," said the other, "I came out here because I got. into trouble by marrying only one wife." "And I/' added a bystander, "came here because I got into trouble by siiiiply promising to marry one."

Scene—Teacher with1 reading-class. Boy (reading:) "And as she sailed down the river—" Teacher: "Why are ships called 'she?**' Buy (precociously alive to responsibilities of his sex:) "Because they need men to manage thiein^

A gentleman aIttt^p^ajibth^rfeerotl eman, whom he does not know, at a party: 'This is awfully stupid let's go and get a 1 rt lr nAitli} IlIrA fn /1a

drink.' eply, Why

*1

I would like to do it," was the

reply, "but I can't leave very well." irhy not?" "Why, you see, I am the one who is giving the partjK.'

A school board inspector asked a small pupil of what the surface of the earthconsists, and was promptly answered "Land and water." He varied the question slightly, ,tba( it tflighit. bef impressed oh theboy's mind, and askedr

What then do land and water make?"" To which came the immediate response:® "Mud."

A gentleman who wash so nsto have loSt fiv'6 ex*eellSJ terntinecK to krd&* a tomb: head of each commemorating her vir-^ tues, and wns only deterred from doing so by the expense attending the carry^ ing out of the design, A happy thought struck him, however,and he Arranged ior the louibstone. The five, wives were buried side by side in tlie Same gra yard. This is the happy thought: Christian name of each wife to be on ar small stone—"Emma," "Jane," "Mary,"' "Margaret/' "Elizabeth'S^a hand, cutbn each stone, pointed to a large stone int the centre of the lot, and under eaoh hand, "For epitaph see large stone." "John, what odor is thatf" "Cloves, love." "But that other?" "Allspice, my beloved." "But isn't there anotherr' "Yes, apples, belovedest." "Just one more?" "Raisins, my most belovedest.". "Well, John, if vou'd only just drink a little brandy, now, I think you :wonld make a go»»d mince pie."

It must have been tremendously embarrassing to that nice young man out at. Bowling Green, Ky., who escorted J,he preacher's fair daughter to church Sunday night, and arrived late, to hear the reverend gentleman read from the Bible as the couple marched up the aisle, "My daughter is greviouslv tormented with a devil," which verse occurs iu an aecouftt of a New Testament miracle../The-whole congregation snickferedidi^UuA'iaiild be hard to tell which felt the worst, the preacheir, his thCUgjlileivorilier^opirtQ

ii id

A News Boy's Death-bed. I looked at the boy, whose years numbered fourteen or fifteen, and saw in the white face, hollow cheeks and, the tinearthly bright eyes, the unmistakable marks of that dread disease, which places its victims beyond 411 bope^cohsump-

tion. On the table lay an old Bible, its yellow pages lying open where the mother had finished reading. The boy's mind was wandering. He was too weak to cough, and the.accumulation in his throat could not be.remov.cd,„. "Shine yer boots—shine 'em up fer a nick—morning pnper sir?" came in'feeble JicC^nU,'from{ the pillow. "Paper sir? Morning paperi! All about tlid"-^---.Audthfe suffferer rnkfle an effort to clear his throfttiayJii^h.OCQB/' sioifed something like atfeath rattle. The mother was on her knees at the HbpngP sobbing, and Jacki her other son whonaq brought me to the roonS, w^bjr her sidfe crying. I lifted the wasted frame aiifl moistened the poor boy's parched lipfe and tongue with water from the crackefl

Jelt

'lass that stood on the window sill. Hje the cool hand on his brow and hfe mind came backto him. "Oh, Jack. Pm so glad you have come home. I shan't sell any more papers or black any more boots, Jack but don't cry. Mothers been readin' somethin' better'n newspapers to m6, Jack, and I know where I'm goinV GiviB my kit to Tom Jones. I owe him twentv cents. Bring all your money home to. mother, Jack. I wonder if 111 be 'papers' or 'bopts'-uptherciTGooKl-by, mother good-by, Jack. Sen'em shine. Morning—Jim, the 'nefcs-boy, Was dead.Detroit Free Press.

To Boys And Oirtoi^rCr

Always come to the table with cleane fece and hands and combed hair. Bov of poor parents as well as-rioh can ot serve this rule.

When at the table don't comment eating till all the table are waited upoej When at the table don't talk wit food in your mouth, nor engage in troversy with anv one. -•, Food do y«u more good if you are natured while eating.

Take time to masticate your food. To swallow food whole, or nearly so, wash it down the throat, is impolite am injurious to beaitfo.

If obliged to l^ve the table b4fcf«th fiunily have finished their mefi.1, alway ask permission to do w.

Before leaving the table after a m( put your cup in the saucer andtea-spooj into tlie cup. Put Uie knife and lorl into the plate and fold the napkin neat

ly.

again..

Over-wat­

Retire early at night, and, if pwribk get eight hoara" sleep. Very email needthat amount of sleep to pro physical growth and health.' tSTieu yoii caH at a neighb^s always take off your hat on Miterir and do the same at your owxr hooai id impolite to sit down in the hwae your hat oo.^

Show proper wepeif to peopfe than voawenres, fbr by doinf jmm] rain the rwpect of people who are nte and sensible.

When two peop'e are engaged in veitat^ aever to h«ar %feat th. *y, nor break on their convarartk It is very Impottto to do

-i

fm

'An antiseptic agent lms appeared in i^riuaii^v.^h€6ilfrHie statements regarding it is true, is one of the most important yet discovered. It is a double salt: of Donate of pbta&it^fri and sodium, and ft made by dissolvih^fin water equal quantities of boride of potassium, nitrate of sodium, and boracic acid, and evaporating into dryness after filtering. Its cost is about twenty-five cents a pound, and itsu8e in food, etc., does not in the least injuriously effect them, and gives no taste nor sme)l to, substances. It has been extensively employed already by butchers, sausage makers, tanners, etcM but its most important use is at present in the manufacture of butter and cheese from sweet milk.

When butter is make from sweet milk in the ordinary manner, the milk must be kept ver^ cold When the "preserving salt," as it is called in Germany, is used, the milk may be kept at ordinary temperature without souring the remaining sweet milk may be worked up into a superior quality of cheese. If fifteen grains 6f the salt are added fbr each quart of milk, the latter will keep Sweet for at least a week.

Fresh meat, game, etc., may be preserved by dipping it in a solution of orie pound of the saltern sii 'pints of water. When the meat is intended to be kept for along period, it is rubbed well with salt in the proportion of

the powdered one and one-half drachms to each twro pounds of meat In twenty-four hours the impregnation is completed, and it needs only to be dried* Apiece of meat prepared in this manner in January, 1^77,v Ttaistli pferffect g0ft&!fcond?$&tfm JAhtiafy, 1879. For picklhtgjthe meat is prepared the same jnanrier, anditfien placed b^tw.eeu layers o^& mixture of two pounds /of common sal^ .one-half pound ^preserving sail .and ohe-fourth pound of sugar. In this way the largest hams can be mlt,ed in four,days.—I?o«tan Jouhml of Chemislty^.A ai -V-t-i I'ii"!

A toudii^g-j (ftncideijt,', occurred th.e rmqiw of ,gT€^t hospitols ^.y^ui)gm^nwa8 brought 3$j ,by{a fall.from

oti

Ml

raveTrte

ix/FABLE But Firm.—A great man it. iffable in his conversation, generous in his tehiper and immovable in what he has naturally resolved upon. And. as prosperity does, not make him haughty ^nd imperious, so neither does adversity sink him into meanness and dejection for if ever ixe.shows more spirit than ordinary, it is when he is ill used and the world' -v.

i..

to tmmple.^^^P.1^.9rcringe to an em^ror.

As^nta WaMtWl fbr Mm

wmwiut

7%t Orwatttt iwmm KMangspf OMt* 'jtMm,

to wbleU to xldxl, by U»

mm*

Mtbor,

THETKVlfcEIIPlRL

Great Books In On* %1. BrflW^

A

thrilling book Indeed' .' OJJrtM

then w* btn mistaken Uhi AmtrtM

wW«rr«ll."-J*rA. 8»r»«U.

22lS^Bly8$fnejjFi totkovi

I ILL*.TNI

lekitM

Ld£?

Kn»nmr coipi tJKllilT WKAE. mmkmbST 1^ maingfrm aeHdn (f Wfotorwyttar ywertotkwi

iriywiiir ihh*m» ail alfci ImwM tiiiit

"wSto ahwiw mm Um wammw

yz* Jk»t Sti)

a

^o or threte .days,

lurjng ^iich tin^e^Hematrpn read fcqm he Bfblato bim.jtalkediio liim—in, ^hott irledfaa jBwt she (COlild ito fill the place

she icoriliJ ito'fill the placie mother tolihe^ad.,

9 d*y„ he ?vas fest sinkin O as ?ro^^qmck\x, ajpupg m«n, the .pastor (^^.pei^iborpg iBaptipUqiwk- As he tQpk ,.the b^y's .Jmndsaa his, and spoke tb liini*,earnestly of, Christ's4oye#,seve?al aale .fac^s .were quteftg j^rom the ro^s of jeds that lined the ward on either side, listening-..attentively^ jnany of them with eyes wet with tears. it "Lord, Lbelieve!" whispered the .dving man. Then the clergyman knelt. *.'. -'-ive

the

soiil bed-

Ipispqpaiian matron,

two Boman Catholic Sisters of Mercy, and from the beds, of the patients came hearty Methodist amens 1

When- the little-company- rose from their knees andt looked down upon thb calm dead face1, they did not remembelr that they belonged to different sect#. They were all children of one Father, and he was very near.

When, seven men imprisoned in a Pennsylvania coal mine, were rescued after.ifve days' imprisonment^ they were asked if they hoped to escape? "We prayed for~it" was the reverent reply. We prayed together. Some were Protestants, and some Catholics, but when death is as close as that, you only think of God." 1

tn viRilVVt AJ I'' WriTHVing eme. rne worn pRMf tlie

IttwrHIMI

I HmfH/TS (IVV BWiyw® JVttx** UJxti itotM be «epeBtfi *V.

STANDS TO-DAY WITHOUT A RIVAL IN THE WORLD. For the cur® of all kinds of Ague and Chills it baa no equal having stood the t«5t of universal use for thirty

MueflMtarM fcy

The

Rev. T.

!Co.

Mr.JNo.

a Wrlbokn

standing, with

of Keysport, 111,

Jh. Hatter's Fever and Ague

bf

ISTOTIOISrS,

SUBSCRIBE

-FOR T,HE-

DAILY NEWS

PEBJ

THE LARGEST AND

BEST PAPER

ir

FOR THE MONEY

l0l\M iJt ft* *Ji! LIT .TN:*9

PI] II Otii

s"aiia

jd W dSoilMM t'Cbstlroiitat terins T«?e now wt nmt.

9 *4^ **4^ "P A j.

ranteed. $18 a day at

{& MONTH

A°itt WvlUvili moiWttaiter at work for

HIIPpP19nl| ^pleasant and mcb a* anyone can go

or

r-'^r-y .-

tfteOiMMi

illiscellimeoibi vii \jl

years

•Jmw falls to care, not merely removing for a time the symptoms, bat eradicating the cause of the disease, thereby making a permaenct cure. PRICE ONLY 75 CENTS.

CORNER OF NINTH AND MULBERRY STREETS, TERRE HAUTE, IND.

GENERAL DEALER INJ

than at

toyth1ng el#e. The work Is light afld risht at.

lu..

wlU send

ouce and sec for thetn«elv«

IliBlltlNMlM

jssjhsas&jsa 6

aU oCbcr Bttton,

cattb. exM trtaraBop

tttiUBrfefeaffAsrfh**-

in the most malarial districts.

Or. Harter Xe41elae Co., Ho. 91S K. Main Street, St. Ik»h1b.

says: "I cured a little girl of Ague Specific, after the best physicians tailed

LLttle-!,ork'Mo-8»ysJ:1 h»veused

in my practice, and can heartily recommend it to the public."

MANUFACTURERS OF

SASHES DOORS. BLINDS, ETC.

AND DEALERS IN

Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glass Paints, Oils and Builders' 1-^ Hardware.

TOYS, HOSIERirr ETC.

675 Haul Street. Silen of the Big Stocking.

L-

-^7? Vl a

of three years' to benflt her."

Dr. RarUtts

W. S. OLTFT, J. H. WILLIAMS. J. M. CLIFT

CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO.,

Fever and Ague Speeifis

$500 Reward

OVElt A MILLION OF Prof. (juilmetteN

FRENCH

fads

llavo already been »old In l.nl» country and in France,everyone of which linn Riven perfect sailsfaction. and hac performed cnren every time when used according to directions..

We now aay to the afflcted and doubting' ancs that we will pay the above reward for single case of "Ji

BACK

That the Pad fails to cure. This Great.Remedy will positively and permantly cure Linnbago, Lame back. Sciatica, «ravel, Diabetes, Dropsy, Bright's Disease of the Kidnevs. Incontlnucnce and Retention of the Urine, Inrtamation of the Kidney's Catarrh of the Bladder. High Colored Urine, Pain in the Back, Side or Loins, Nervous Weakness, and in fact all disqrders oX the Bladder and Urinary Organs whether contracted by private disease or otherwise.

LADLES, if you are suffering from Female Weakness. Lencecorrhea, or any disease of the Kidneys, Bladder, or Urinary Organs,

YOII CA1V BE CUREII!

Without swallowing nanaeoos medicines, by pimply wearing

PROF. GUILMETE'S

FRENCH KIDNEY PAD,

WHICH CURBS BY ABSORPTION. Ask yonr druggist for Prof. Gnilmette's French Kidney Pad, andtake no other if he baa not got It, send 2.00 and you will receive the Pad by return mail."

TESTIMONIALS FROM THE PEOPLE. Judge Buchanan, Lawyer. Toledo, O., says: •'One of Prof. Gnilmette's French Kidney Pads cared me of Lnmbago in three weeks' time. My case had been given up by the best Doctors as Incurable. During fill tub time I aoflcrcfu ofltolc agony and large sums of money.

George Vetter. J. P.. Toledo, O., aays: "I goffered for three years with Sciatica and Kidney Disease, and often had to go about on cratches. I was entirely and permantly cured after wearfng Prof. Gnilmette's French Kidney Pad four weeks."

Quire N. Sc*tt, Sylvania. O., writes: "I have been a great sufferer for 15 years with Bright's Disease of the Kidneys. For weeks at a time was nliable to get out of bed took barrels of medicine, but they gave me only temporary relief. I wore two of Prof. Gnilmette's Kidney Pads six weeks, and I now know I am entirely cored."

Mrs. Hcllen Jerome, Toledo, O., aays: "For years I have been confined, a great part of the time to my bed, with Lncomwi and female weakness. I wore one of Gnilmette's Kidney Pad* and was cored in one month."

H. B. Oretti, Wholesale (Irocer, FindJay. O.. wntes:

IjmL,

vrftta: "I

wore

Kidney

when sending is an order

one of the first ones we baa and I re­

ceived more benefit fimn It than anythiog lerer In fact the Pads give better general satisOMML faction than any KW*

Ray A Shoemaker^ •We are workft and are hearing day/

remedy we ever sold. joist#, Hannibal, Mo,, Ifveiy trade in your Pads, from them every

Prof. Gnilmette's French Liter Will positive!/ care Fever and Agae. I

Mi #fli

Pad. Dumb Dya-

Aedrcss •KNCH.PAD Toledo, Ohio.

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