Daily News, Volume 2, Number 52, Franklin, Johnson County, 19 October 1880 — Page 3
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Inton Depot—'Tenth and Miewisnt HI#.. to all flrsin* r*e«Ht 1- & SI. L.. T. B.4tB.K. (to Worth•wpriu), aitrt freight#. Ttmr fiv« minst*-* fawer than Tun* Hant#: tim*.
KXKLAKATTOS Of RZPKRXXCK MARK*. fry daj. AH other train* daily exrtpt Simj—,. *P»rlw «ar» daily. except Hanl*ji. Ht*ep\*pi 'Keelfrihajf chair car. I'nJon tim«\ nhl*h I" fl** mJnoUfn fa*t«*r than city
MT#i»«-ko IVf.rla ... ., lltit Mliiftoti,.... Kenknk. f'hlcaKo..,. Milwaukee St. Paul
Arrive. Terre Hantc I^re. Danville ]li)lpU«IOII.,.
lime.
VA XI)ALIA LINE. (Leave going Ea#»f.l
f#'*-Fa*i Lin*-... ,: *i«l Aer **»I)M Kx.
Mali ami Ac-.
1:40 am A :4I ni a:~fi j) T®t» ru
Arrive from Ka-t.
^I'ariSc Ex. Mall Train "•otFaat E* IrvlUriapol!"
I r35 am 3:55 a ro 2j)Q oi 7:00
A*f I3W JJOiUK W«r«t.
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-*»».:[« K* VI i.II Trilrt .10:08 am -Ks-t R*: 2:36
Arrive from \V»i,j
Liu'1. 1:38 am Mail #(. A-: 8 S0aiu "MKi.v Ei
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TKBRi: It Al'TK A UKiANSPORT. Lojpu.-«|«rt Uiv. of Yandalla. !.••»» for Northeast.) Mall Train .Mijcpd Train (Arrive from Northeast.)
Ml Train !*e«i Train TfcltUKIl Al'TK Jt KVANSVILLE«T.ear*- for Somh.i »nN«»hvllte K* «B*^ww Krctjrhf anil Art tAfrivt? from South, »K«»t»*rri Kx **-'hU-a(» Kx. I»rflj(hl «ftl Acc
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UllOAOOIA KASTKKN ILLINOfS. (Leave for North.) 31 and Im ago Kx Ianvlll* Ac:c »».\a*hvlHe and rhieajfo Kx (Arriv* from North, 'IVrr»« Haute Ac*1 'hkit(o anil Terre Maud- Kx ••CMIUKO and Niuhvillo E*
(Hlltariila 15.80 p.m Ar ».«3 -1
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3:10 ni 10:?0
.1) :10 am 5:35 4 :'jfl am
ILLISOIH MIDLAND ItAILWA Y. Lmitc for Northwe*,.
P. oria Mall and Kx .............. 0:SJ ft Ih-cstnr l'»*K*nger 4:07 pm (Arrive from Northwest.| J'enria Mall und Kx Slffpm IntUanapnUn Paneenjfcr—
1:10
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nilwnukrf. trrtii Uaj l,hie, L* ri»tca«f»,. *.«* lum An. Milwaukee lt.15a.ni ,UU*|
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'./» i. .10.00 'Ureen Bay 8.«0 9.00c.® I Milwaukee 11 {ft a.m »v 9.00 (ireen Bay SJO1" a a a 1 0
Mt, raul 3«l»»n»poIla IJnf. L*-. rhieajro. 10.0ft a.m Ar. s». Panl fSJ
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W. H. STKNNBKT. Oeu'l Pa«s. Ax't, (JMcagO.
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l,v. Ohlca«o— 0.10ft,m i$ v, .Ws^
Ar. Milwaukee 13,:t3p.m OconoWi'C., f.43 10.10
,w.io .«r ^10 10 ft.w. 0.(f .. IM*
St. Paul,,. «k00 a.m Milwaukee It.flft p.m Oco«om*c. IJKia.iu IaCjw**., T.08 St Paul 1.85 p.ui U. CARPRSTRR,
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Qtn, P*»*. and Tkt. Ag't. Milwaukee.
NERVOUS DEBILITY
UBAVM APBCIPIC MMIICWE TKADC
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liah E*m«dy, An uorf idling \ire for fediln fipemaiortlH*. lmpoteucy, and all Dt»eaie»that fallow a.* a i»e-
MfMt TAIIItlbuT: uiwAfTII TAIIM. «f rnlTeml LMiltniit Pal* la th« Dtnee*a of Xi*ton. Piematnre O5o Afe. |6il faMjr oiher Dl*e*»e« that lead to lawMilty or which we pry one. urthc AtHrClfle ^snttelae I* «oM by at! Drujc«W«» fl act package, or *4* package* ftr i. y«t freeSy w8 of Um dr«Min«
TAB KiAY MKOIC»K CO Na. 3 Mechaalee' Block, Dsnwrr. Mica. 8oWia T»mEaaU and by all Dtttjogliu every wh«re.
COAL OFFICE.
K. S. Wbeat i* nfep«i«d to furnish &!i jrnulw of ctvti sad wood—both mt\ And h^rxi coaI diemp the chenpeat. To itfvomraodifr hb frtend« «od th« (t»d« geoenUr he hm 6 ulephone placed in hi» o»c«, so lh«i orden c*n be iccetwi or •eot/roin mr p*n of the city. *nd receiy* Ifae «wi» fttteeUon it left *t the omc«. Thinkfttjr the PObHc for pwt he fn»ar*nlnr« to i** pmmpt la supply inK them wllh the of coiJ l» U»
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DANVILLE ROUTE.
.Chicago & Eastern Illinois Eairoad,
l,«avr. Trrre Hante... Arrin*. l)»n*lll« UM)pi!#tun
MOUTH.
7.83 a.ra. lO.'ift p.m ...10.30 l.aOa.m ,...11.3#'
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... 4.00 7.00 ... 10.00 night 1&.43 p.in ., 1.35 p. m. 6.00 a.m
4.80 a.m H.85 p.m 1.10 U..VJ p.tn 11.00 7.33 «.ao 3.M 7.R0 i."o ».05
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1«.85 K..V a. in H.55 ».f*» fl.iK* 8.1i. Ui.35
Chicago & Northwestern R.R.
HEAR l«VR. %x vol KKCAUi. (Iru you reeall. a* *iu ng «a'l am! lone, v^fi' 3 THtfjbw}' -it t\tow* ^rtTattinuiO nigblA -. Wtit our uml jcsorkwa-* Inw Rft FJU* on. a«b»*'» tbc wr/ IIWI orerhan^lnjj} beiifbt»t •. S A ho«h wa oit ih»* earth.~aud there came naogbt To brenfc lbs [M-act-fit! «are wneo a ja.r
Of lovnp. ^i*n»l but save t»" th^UKhi
To oth»*r otH-~ that gladly"lihjrered there. We bt aeatb the overtiail^iii'Z To feel and drink the gk»r of the night:
Then leaaicj ckwie. each heart to alher upoVe And claimv«l iu otru. Nmeatli the ll^bt That funded all the world wilh sold: Tb»* «j U.ua: nnknown
Met iu that p.-.rfeet joy, eo new, «»old Toj'tber met in deep ecxtatie Ymteni jrieMed. th«». my king, my pru**'. !*Bpre«ie imrretider of my -ois! thine. AIM aaidL ah' ne\er more I«« baaqaet tea*-t Alone tby #onl will fare, hnt *np with roin*-. Oh royal hour! thai held in wait for me The knowledge of thy lore ?o mrone and true. That heard thy roioe low wtii^por tenderly,-^ "Ah ihi*. -ah this if lore.—I love but you." Ble« hear! all Mnetiflad and a 3^ "WhteH «aw lhy kl«* In "perfect rple dreet."* Warm on ray lip*, while folded nrajr thy heart Iu thy trm^jJa«plngI f'»«rid my rest.
THE MARKED ARM.
Click! IntlWtleiul of the night a *harp sound awakened Mre. Halifout Xhe room was dark. Not even a gleam of moon or star lignt fell through the curtains of the windows. It was a atrange sound, indeed, bnt nhe saw nothing, heard nothing more. She sat up, leaning on her left elbow, and put out her right hand and touched her husband's shoulder. He lay upon his pillow, fast asleep, an.J did not awaken at her touch. "It must have been a dream," said Mrs. Halifont and her yomjg head —she was only a bride of one year— nestled down again closer to her husband's arm, and she slept again.
Click! This time the sound did not arouse Mrs. Halifont. It was her husband who awakened. He did not pause to listen, but gra*jed the revolver beneath his pillow and jumped out of bed at once. In an alcove in the next room itood a safe which contained valuables. It was not one of the wonderful new safes which defy fire and burglars, but in old one that had bwu in the family along while. Mr. Halifont knew on the instant that some one wa« opening this safe.
A man of courage, a man who never hesitated in the race of danger one, *oo,.who had a warm regard for his '.vorldly possessions, Mr. Halifont strode at once into the room where he j»ew housebreakers were at work, and, running in the dark against a powerful man, tackled him at once.
The light of a lantern flashed across the room. There were two more men. Three against one.
The sound of blow's, struggling, and the report of a pistol, aroused Ihe young wife once more. Amid her terror she had the good sense to light the gas. It shone upon a spectacle of horror. Her husband weltering in his blood, wrestling with a gigantic man. whose features were concea'ed by a mask of black crape a man, the upper part of whose body was slothed only in a knitted woolen shirt of some dark color, with sleeves thaf loft his great arm bare. On the right on^ the one which clutched Mr. Halifont's throat, was a red mark or brand, a scar, a birthmark. It would have been im,x»Bible tor Mrs. Hai font, even tn cuimer moment, to tell what it ^as but It indelibly impressed itself upon her mind, HH she bravely cast herself into the struggle, and fought with all her might to drag the horrible hand from her husbands throat, screaming all the while for aid.
A .blow, a kitjc would have silenced her. .^he burglar must have known thai, but there are very bad men who could not use violence toward a woman to save theirjown lives. This man could not. His companions had flown with theiij booty and help might arrived at any moment. With a great effort he wrencned himself from the clutch of .his'Victim and let go his throat, and sped away. It was not too soon. Assistance arrived, now that it was too late but Mr% Halifont did not live to tell the story. He was mortally wounded. His young wife watched by"his bedside until lie breathed his last, then dropped beside the bed senseless.
For weeks she raved in wild delirium of* ihe murderous hand, of the great muscular arm with the scar upon it, and callod upon them all to save her husband's life but she was young, and had *. fine constitution. After a while her aOalth returned, and at last her mind •^gained its consciousness.
She removed, from the citv and took up her abode in a country place, with a favorite sister for a companion. She had resolved, as all widows who had loved their husbands d" at first, to remain
Mo*r forever. And. indeed, though many men would gladly have tempted one so young, beautiful and wealthy to change her mind on this point, she iieemed to care less for any of them than for the kitten which purred upon net knee or the little black-and-tAn ternoi which ran by her aide along the garden paths. She was nineteen when her husband was murdered at thirty-two she was still true to his mentor)-.
For many years a fino house upon the neighboring estate had been empty, but. now there came to take possession of it a gentleman not yet forty. A widower with plenty of money and no children •, a handsome man, well built and stalwart with magnificent black hair, and eyes that were like diamonds. Spanish cvee indeed, he called himself a Span*ard, and his speech betrayed a foreign «ccent
The dark eyes and the blue oYies met, a few neighborly''Wk were exchanged, a call followed soon. Mrs. Halifont felta new emotion creeping into her heart, ohe f«lfr pleaded and flattered by this imngers admiration. Then she knew, he was loved, ana rejoiced, and io discovered that she herself loved again.
At first she was angTy with herself then sfte wept over h*r inconsistency, hot at last she yielded utterly. Since she had loved, she could never pride heiself on beinfc jhithfal again, anil ao Slst^Sto ^e sweet wSrtls that, despite herself, made her happy, and promised to marry Co?. Humphries.
When a widow doea marry a second tjmeehegenerally contrive* to makes fool o£ herself.
Mia. Halifont had certainly not dont as nsolishty as tome widows do. 81*# had neither chosen a little bo* nftr a titled Iwiiam without money enough to keep himself in maccaroni. Ker fbtare husband was older than herse*4 And too rich to be inspected of any tat*«itlon of being a fortune-hunter hat, after all, no tne knew hhn. He came into the neighborhood without letters of introto any ooe»sod whether be
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U~:B fortune b*f trade or came to it by aeritance remained a mystery. T!icre were those who shrugged their JiouUlers, and declared that Mrs. Halifont would regret not having chosen some one of whom more was known— some retired merchant, some gentleman of fortune, whose fat her had been known to her friends. Nothing lo be sure, could be said against this Spaniard or Cubian with the English name but. who knew anything in his favor
Ifoweverriro one said this to Mrs. Halifont, and if any one had, words never changed a woman's fancy yet. Mrs. Halifont believed in Col. Humphries, and meant to marry him.
Indeed, the trousseau was prepared \3ii the wedding day fixed all was ready, and Ida Halifont believed herself to he very happy woman. She oncc mor* built rustlffs in the air. Her old sorrow seemed to fade away in the distance. She was a girl again.
Ar last twenty-four hours lav between her and her wedding day." She wad busy in her sewing-room on this last Jay, finishing some ruffles in lace and ribbon, and singing softly' to herself, when suddenly ftfe house was filled with cries. .?t/
An old man servant, whilfe cutting tlie grass upon the lawn, had wounded nimself seriously. The doctor was sent for at once, but he way not at home, and meanwnile poor Zebede% .was bleeding to deatl
Suddenly Ida Halifont remembered that Col. Humphries had said that he understood wounds as weU :ts though he had been bred a surgeon. Without this it would have been natural for her to call upon one who was soon to be her protector, in a moment of anxiety. She would call him herself, thaf there might be no delay, and siexing her garden hat, jhe ran along a little path that led t.yir ground to that of Col. Humphries, climbing a low fence to save time which would have "been lost in reaching a gyte, and so gained the rear of the dwelling of which to-morrow she would be mistress.
She thought herself terrified and distressed. She felt rather injured that stich an unpleasant thing as the wounding of poor Zebedee should have happened on the eve of her wedding-day. Ten minutes after she thought of herself at that moment as utterly at ease, wondrously happy, for, as she reached those windows, and peeped half timidly through the curtains, a thing happened that, all she had ever suffered appeared as nothing.
The room, the window of which she hail approached, was one that opened out on a conservatory. She saw Col. Humphries busy with some rare plan Is lie had just set out to the warm sunshine that fell through the elass. He hud taken off his coat and rolled up his sleeves. Now he left the conservatory, and coming forward proceeded to wash his hands in a basin of water that had been set ready for him. He was close to Ida Halifont. He did not see her, but she could have reached out her hand and touched oim.
Why did. she not speak and call him by name Why did she sink down upon her hands, and tremble like an aspen leaf? Alas! the awful reason was this: Upon that arm which she was about to give the right to clasp her in tenuerest embrace, she saw a terrible mark—a mark she had seen once before. She knew its sliape, and size, and color. Her eyes had been riveted upon it as the sinewy hand, at the wrist of whi«?h it ended*, grasped her dyiug husband's throat. She had learned it off by heart she could not be deceived. Though years had tolled away, that horribly marked arm was not to bo forgotten or mistaken for anyother."
Then the two stood htaring at each other. He made no denial he only looked down at the red mark upon,his arm and cursed it aloud. "How dared vou to make love to me?" she gasped. "Vou "Because I loved you," he said. "Woman, if I had not fallen in love with you that night, I would have killed you also.. It was risking my life to spare you, with your screams calling men to hunt, m® ilown "Oh, if you had but killed me then! she moaned. "Well, I am at your mercy now," he said. ,-y:''
She answered: "Yon canjfeiMii I wish you would. 1 pray yon do It. You killed my usband. The murderer of my litis. band must be brought to justice, and I-4* yesterday, nay, an hour a$ro—I loved you I O God, pity me! liAve loved this man, this thief, who came' In the night to rob my husband, and wh» mot1 deredhim." ,**She remembered saying this. After* ward a strong drowsiness overcame her. She seemed to let go her tlOld upon the world. She faintly recognized thft Ifcct that Col. Humphries knelt at her feet and kissed her hands. Then there were blank hours, and strange^ wild dreamy and she awakened in the 'twilifcht ana found herself bound fast to a ic&ftt arm cnalr, long cords about her arms fythg her hands and confining her feet*.
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Suddenly Col. Humphries felt Himself grasped by a hand, that, small as it was, had the fierce touch of a tiger's claw. The fingers closed over that red mark— a white face came close to his. •'You are my husband's murderer!"' hissed a voice in his ear.
1
So her servants found bw .bttt shf was the only living beinf In the arreat Louse. Col. Humphries and his two black servants vanished no one know whither.
The empty bottle of chlorolortn 0n the floor—the fact that ho had feftJittle beItind him, and that he had «l#aya his money in a form that 13ft hitn free to leave the country at any tiwe, ail proved that detection luwt be«i prej^ed for. And he
never meW-wi had
the means to bribe those' who wwer est upon his track.
5
Ida Halifont lived through it all. She lives to*day in the quiet lioii»e~bfesid« tlie river^ ont no one has ierei" hear smile again and from herdwpe^ rfmnhers she often starts in terror, fancying that she iees uplifted menadnrfy tbdve, that cruel, terrible aim marked with the blood red stain. There i§ no hope of happiness for her, for sbe never can for*el that this arm has ako embraced het
A rrralist seated himself in a restan-
nearly an hour employed ifi ^bringing an hoar em dishes to him, he one of them to him. h«v«d aawh antf^^P hill before film and pointed
spread tlie with hi* flnsrer: **Mrs smr—uwvtnir his fin
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%. 0«fwe4l. Oatmcad, now found on almost every gentleman's brenkfaat table, was a few years ago used exclusively b$ th® Scotch ahrl the Irllh. lr. .Tohnsoii alio in his hatretl of the Scotch, lost no Opportunity of saying a hither word agkiust them, defined oats as in Scotland food for Scotclimen, but in Knglantl food for ho^rsra.
1,4Yes,"
answfered af indignant
Scotchman, "where can voh find such men as in Scotland, or such jhorses as in England We have heard pf a shrewd old Scotch mother, who used to make her family eat oatmeal first, saying. "The bairn* who eats the most porriteh, will get tlie most nieat after it." But the bairn who gained the prize ajhvays found himself too full to enjoy thejmeat, It mentioned in a most charming book, the Life and Letters of Lord Macau.y, that Carlyle, catching sight oft Macau lay's face iu repose, remarked, "Well anyone can see that you are an honest, good sort of fellow, made out of oatmeal." If oatmeal can "make" such means Waiter S»*ott, Dr. Chalmers, and Lo^d Macanlav, we may well heap high the pprritch dish, and bribe our children to ei* of it One thing we do know, that id is far better for the blood and brain tha|i cake, confections, and scores of delicacies, on which many pale little petp are fed by their foolishly fond mothers. "The Queen's Own," a regiment of almost giants, recruited froii The Scotch Highlands, are, as Carlyle jsaid of Macamay, "made of oatmeal." So boys who want height and breadth and muscle, and girls who want rosy} cheeks and physical vigor, should tuj-n from hot oread and other indigestible?, to this ffood for Scotchmeu and horses."
(Juslardfor Cake*.-—One pin* milk, four eggs, two cups sugar, and half cup flour boil the milk, and while itJs boiling add sugar, eggs aftdjpujv apd flavor it with lemon. 'Ib CUan J#orW?.—lo nod wash it with suds this destroys the pofish in time. The|r should be Ousted thte spots taken off with a nice oiled cloth, and then rubbed dry with a soft rag.
To Ckon PtarU.—In o&dr to preserve their beautv, they should! be carefully kept from dampness. Apiece of paper torn off and rolled u] soft, ragged edge. cleansethem with.
up so as! to present a is the lest thing to
em with.
Sick Headache Cared.—F|or headache, wet with camphor, a piece of flannel (red), sprinkle with black! pepper, and bind it on the head. Andf I will assure you before it is on long, your headache will be goiie, and you wifli be ready to sing a song. ha!lf pints new sugar, 1 table spoon Dutter, I teaspoon salt, 1 cake yeast (or.better, half cub home-made yeast), mix the flour until a very stifl batter is formed leave in a warm place during the night, aud bakt in the mornings in ring.
BlMg a DUUg' —One and a hi milk, 1 egg, 1 tahlespoon spoon butter, I teiaspoon
Bread Pudding.—Soak the bread in cold water, then squeeze! it very dry, take out the lumps, and add boiling milk, about half a pint to tone pound of soaked bread, beat up two) eggs, sweeten, acid a little nutmeg, and bake the pudding slowly until nrm. If desired, a few raisins may be added to rtbe pudding. This is a very cheap pudding, and a general favorite in the nursery.
Durable Ink for MqrkUig Linen— Dis-
tic and hall an ounce of gum arabic in a gill of rain water. Dip what ever is to be marked in strong pearlash water. When perfectly dry, iron it verv smooth the pear lash water turns it a ttlark color, but washing will efface it. fAfter marking the linen, put it near a fife or in the sun to drv. Red ink for marking linen is made by mixing and redhcirtg to a fine powder half an ounce of vdrmiHion, a drachm of the salt ofstetel, and linseed oil to render it of thq .consistency of black durable ink.
il1*SVeurmg
Flannel.—Put it on at once.
Winter or summer, nothing better can be worn next the skin thah a loose, red woolen flannel shirt "loose," for it has room to move on the skin, thus causing a titillation which draws the blood to the surface and keeps it thtere and, when that is the case, no one dan take a cold "red/' for white flannel fulls up, mats together and becomes tight, stiff, heavy and impervious "woolen," the product of a sheep and not of a gentleman of color, not of cotton wool, because that merely absorbs the moisture from the surface, while woolen flannel conveys it from the skin and deposits it in drops on the outside of the shirt, from which the ordinary cotton shirt absorbs it, and, by its hearer exposure to the exterior air, it is feeon dried without injury to the body. Having1 these prOpertifes, red woolen flannel is worn by sailors even in the midsummer of the hottest countries. Wear a thinner material in summery juLH UJ li-i
We W6uld gttaW the young against the use of ever)' Word that is not strictly proper. TTse no profeue expression, Jlude 16 no sentence that will put to blush the most sensitive. You know not the tendency of habitually using indecent or profane language. It may never be o$literated from your heart. Wh6h yoti np, ym may find at yon* tonktl^ end #pre8trfon which yon womd nof: tide fbr any money. It was urad when quite yotini Good men have beert taken sick and become deliiioas. In these momenta they use the most vile, indecent language Imaginable. When informed of it after their restoration to health, they had J*o* idea of the pain they liad caused. 'They had learned and repeated the «rxfi»wwion*i» chikiliood and, though years had passed since, they had "been iftdeffifly damped upon the heart? "TThfnk of this, yo« who lempi^to use improper language, a«»4 ^Tter dlsgrace youn^elf or your fneads. iiJ-LJA- J.5SS .-JiLi-JU. UJ
John Flnnel, of teaa"** county. Callibnua«r ranch containing 10/100 acres. He recently leased a ranch in Coins* county containing SOOfiOO acne. The two ramhi* berder on the Sacrameato river for thirty-two miles. &
t4tr* urtniawa. "Deacon Wilder. I want you to UOl me how you kept yonndf and family *cD the nast season, when when all the rest of us a^heen ^ick so much, sod have had the doctors visiting us often."* "Bro. Taylor, tfee answer I used Hop Bitteraln time Ilyiii4! and saved the doctor dollar*' worth of HI to work all the timer
cost yen and the aeigJitoora onr^m two hundred dollars splece keep *».
nt tiseyourin«licine b«reaf-l
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Large Type
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A» a portion of the
American eddlttona, oom from wy clear noni whuewlS^^'Xi^raadi abbntOctii durinffliiemonS of October, the lrio« of .tht yolutoe* Santa, gtlt to^
tTANOS TO-BAY WITHOUT A RIVAL IN THE WOtttO. For U»e CUM of all kinds of Ague and Chills it IMLS DO equal having stood the test of universal ase for f/n/w ^ur« iii-tho malarial distrirUi It RSnrlalMt to ears, not marely removing for a time the symptoms, but eradicating the can^e ot tb«,dineap« thereby making a p®rma«w cure PRICTE OXLT Tl) CENTS* ibaafaetarei br The fr. Hurler Vedieine *•.. '«. *1# X, |P*t« Mr4et. SI. UbI*.^
Rrv. F. IlAcrK*Ri*R.&ipt German Protesttni Orphans* Charlec BeeMRoarl. St. Loul«, 4 Ca, wriline April With. 1S/7, says: Dr. HartrSs Fertr nnd Agtm SprriSnip avjM^sitfve mre forL Chillw and Fever: has ncr^r failed witn us."
Mr. Jw0-C. WKi.B0lisnf Keysport, IU., says: "I cured ajlJstle airl of Ague of three years'4 standing, with Dr. Barter Pttfr tmd Aym Spcc&c. after the nost pnyslrlans rafted to benflt her."
Dr. YOUNG BLOOD of Little York. Mo., says: "I have used Dr. Hbrftr'tiFrver tmd Ague Specifit
In my practice, and can heartily recommend it to the nubile."
•••••.
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Wi-
4 iA! 4
