Daily News, Volume 2, Number 119, Franklin, Johnson County, 7 January 1881 — Page 3
S
ILY SEWS
AT. JANUARY 7. 1881.
I ESLc« Bnllrtin.
tke Mclb Ml (furrier Delivery Carrier* U*t« for Mttk
IAJ5T. ©eUrery. CW tar®' ea«t— 7(fi •n..itot}aKi SO a a.. «OQa
Iroad ........ «Uti«U
SI
tlltia.. 115pa
etatioaaoat ?:0»aa..isa»akdt fit *aa.. 3 30 pa Kaaa^CfclcagD sad •'rt» HUaoui .11 SO a a fieuiucky 4it pa Soil* a&4 thro aaat ... 4 30 a «l« Mid ittlipH 9t ,11* Railroad ... t£*!*aa. MlaaewaUaad *afa ... 4U pm
*»p» IS pa IS pa lipa •11 pa
WEST.
»aod tkrw'weat TSO a a.MOJadt
jim
Vaadalla JUL u4
rrm llliaoi mis aagi tkre'
meat
(NI
*y alalia** oa YuHS'lroad 4 t» pa fad lUlitu nl.A 4»*
iC.KH TSSaa INii
Minaeaota, WijcwiU Korthern l)UB«ii —... TNia
ff
fMtt,
1*00 pa £15 pa IDib *0&aa 4 00a a 10 00 p$ .10 90 pa
law*, Michtfu] jSeata. Wlacaanii f«ra Ililoet*. Mort Mid atationa •f'•fan*wort KJl., «S9pi fl.ea Inmaaapell*. Deea^Spriajfield KK.... 7 A on ToMo, Wabaab em RR.. cut Daavflle.
rc#*i
MM T.
1M
a
r» Ohio. Northern Indi Micbijfaa and Canada,.. a MOUTH. WtJle, Vlaeeaaea aad y&QU>n rli tad 8«ill*rtn(ihro"
W a a 30 a a
illiact* aatl Weatera
UOrtsndi 12 «4 1#00*I4!
flap and iUtUm#oa K. A It —...... *tti« lift cod a tat lea a oa X. itlt. 4 30 a la llMaoia and Western
ickjr
4 J*
ff
'fimtkf 7 00a at nffloti and ataeioaa oa I. «. ICE 490 pa
12 Wui.l! 4 00 a n.
HACK Lrsrs*.
elon.rralrif (.'r#ek,(ir»y» a and l*ai rbanka,Tue#d*y, •rttday and Haildrdaj. ... 7 a a M, lad., Toeaday and HatSy.y 4 90 pa
TOO a 5. 00 pa.
tcfyjr»a dtrjded lata «erea Carrier DUtrietn* Di»TRicT -Fred Trlsr, Carder. Vi ald« of Main botwera *nd *th norta from X&>a city !ia!t«. tactudii.fi Ul#» b«lw?en 7th and Stk aad to th« ail. in 4th and Mb «trecta alta.lik. ttk ar.d ir««ta. iKirth of ad aT«ao«. i«m» Dtarwor-Joha Kap|«ahria«r, Carrier #ouU» kid* of Mj'i *tr«et. k«tweea ath ami ti all territory bnweeu 4tln aad atraeta
In the city limit*, tartndiof t« tU alky
id
aad 4to atreeti aad to tb# alter fHrtween
-A
7th tree la alao 7tb atr«et aaata of Dea citflimlu. aa Diaraicr Ja»«* Joha»«a, Carrier, laoutb aid* of Main utrfrt, froa tb« river tn IHwt. and all i*rr!tory af the alley b« and 4lh atraata aoatb to cit/ llalta. jJwm Dirrmttt Frank Btbiat. Carrier, "nartb »!df of Mala atrval, rraa tke
rirar to
aad afl territory wont «f ih* alloy b« aad Ilk «tr««ta, aad aartk t« lb« city ra DtaTKUT -J*raak M. MiUa, Carrier. north #ld»t of Main atrrct, fraa 7tb to tb«
I, l«tw««n Hb and ioth »tr««tn. and all rv frota tb* alter batwaaa'tkaad gthctrMt* th* Vandalia RK, north ta 1W arenae, aad rrlmry north of tba VaadolU RR., cut roet to city Hmtta. l)r»Ta«*t -Jahn R. By«r«, Carrier. *nnth aide of Main, brtweea ith and Ttb :%a, frotn tba all#y between OH »ad 7tb atrceu. the old cana), *o«th Uemiac, aad all tory^aat on t'of^lar «treit aad nontktaclty limit*, tvarra l»iaraurr -L«ala Bafaaa, Jr.,Carri«r, ath »id« of Main street from 7tk aaat to city ta. iartudtng tb* north aide of Main, eaat of
at bed t» rity limit#, aad all territoty wee* linth atreet. aaat to ctty ISmita from Po on tke aoutb to the Vandalia RR. tracl
line* earb carrier I* «bH#ed U» *H*tnt a dJ*tan«e back a yard* teatcd to ptai* bo*pa in taeir ft
tl
McCtala, Auxiliary Carrier, wkoae duly
rH,
aake extra eoilectl and delirery trip* aau vx *«»!*», ie nail ta collected fr 'trrat letterboxi* en eteaet from let ta 19ih raeta.aertkoa4tb to try, peuth oa 4tli to and aonth on let btriar, and OfiVo at reel Wtt^a I at aad ftth. #y,w««kday butwa^w 8li 10a m.b«twe«n »4d iO.SO a m. b^t«rf»a and m, votHwilon l«dn('e to r»plar air«et an tke 4, and «aat t« tStii.and nft^ti to I'nlon Depot] een 1 aad 8:3M a«JM»ri» 4:*and 5:80 and between A:W aHa KiWpa. Allotber are toiWwd fn»» twfc* par- da*, between i«raof«:a and lO CHtamaac between 4 3Q
Jiw m. ire foar daltverte* a wa'.1 p«r day In ifea part of tke ei»r: at Tt*30 aad H:» a tt. ,T_ alw a aelltetgr at
8:00
p,
•a«k baataeae konaee aa deaire It, wboee mt bnelnee* t« located betweea aad Ttk Ma and nut w«m ib»n one aqttare freta Mate,
Hwndaj. th* Poat Ofltee la )bpea freta ta 10 bck a a. aad peraana dealrlnf tkeir taatl csaa at be wlaiiew deaifaattd by ike aaaberaf
Artier. r?dle?tkM« oret taa eatir* elty i* a»ad 4:10 aid b.M a. aad a«aia la
Um
baa
jurt of the ctty between ft aad e'efoek pa i?»of boxea bare been placed oa every ear Main ttreet to enableperttwareaidiag sear (aft tbemaeltaa af tke frtqaeai toUactioa tb^rean with a *ery abart walk, i« attentioa of tke public l« eatied ta tke (taat
M!
U» walk, anu par* yard* are earaeetly
place bo*p« in their frt»ai doom or Is
other eontenteat place* aa will fdrllitate
Wtber i»tt**ntent tlace«aawi put delivery of wail. C*rrt*r« lait taafef than 80 eeoew^i for aa aaawer t« a t. a»d after waltta* ttiat lottf aad rvceirtaf ajrer, he AMI retata tk« »a!T
V»tll
lj. Carrter* are
wee aext 4*
•Htg*4
to be praapt, and to
**hfw»»rkqnlckly.bataader »oeireoaaUaeea f^allta ar dtaedkrttWt*,un4 imediately reparted ta th* Pwl Maeter
»»ch *)M«M .. Par-
las arew«r«e4t)Hil aaleaitkeTWay «rtnj| (be diaf,, twrlar* will a»i4a8r«r bnt titer «fl
b*
I
lijed t* tiatt* rtfcjaaam it"
Uentle Women
Who wmnt glosaj. luxariant
jd v«r¥ irfSM* or aban^aat,
^atiful iiftir most nso \X0VTH K4TEA1E0N. Thl* Want, cheap article always mkm the Hair grow torn? m& rist, keeps tt from falling tut, arrests and caret Krairemove dandruff and makes the Hair gifts* it a curling ^adeiiey aad keeptag It to 4»y desired pxrftto&. Boaahealtfcy Hair to the am
Ojr TSE 8H0RE.,Kmm
jyymns an ttrngoMea toad, vtUi caretai feet, Tbroucto
vmar
hours tfcey I
The ototidren mat Ctootty, aa If at pli^, Tb* rreee. frwy e^araa Make mustc to b« bay
And Skiaa tb* card. liuhe tb« children know Upon tb* abort How, In niS aaa. wind* blow
Audi Mfowa roar: Bow ships ouwt aaxi cdiacbaao% And Milan drown This btewed tanonuw* la abiidboodra «n«a. BeaMe aaoth«r aaa
Tkeae oWWtren atattxL From aiJ tU fean atiU
O
.ttttatl ,t»00aal IJOia
IQSDaa lt»p «l»pm INIS
MM Ufa' weal. ., 4 IS pa fi Hd et*tia*» tnti en irSUeA Vlac*-tmeeKH.ll St a at id atatieaa llitaeia ^«»d Raitraad,, 7 SS a a aa Toledo. Wabaak wra RR. weat af DaaI t«ta..ttNfi
ItORTH.
J», 111., {tkre* jx*aek) TMia.MN pa ^e tod auiiena as |E. T.
trtm
Oa
eUMuod'i laotL
mitthtr
of Life,
O periknatldes, Where atorma are alwaya rtP» Aad Death aMdoat
Vkhll aoftlf oa tht land Where chifcfttood Ua(«ra Boiklin« Sta flomee of aaad
Wttb raty Saieri FbrddMrw (boold not kiar Your racta* wild. or aoa—wtwae ey«a are
Tour tfcte dcflled, Vor mark, vtth heetrta that bleed. How (roala
go
denrn:
fbia IwBoraooe lodtecd la o£i!dbood'ecPiwn.
—Boato* POoC
FRO* FIRST TO LIST. "Tillim the worst at once, Iootor.'*
Even If I had nol seeo the mah'« face, I should have felt tare from the voice that it wan no time for falsehood ox evasion. Yet there waa really no need for either. Mr. Eliery waa nnneceesartlv alarmed. The lady, his wife's sister, hail been taken with a succession of fainting flta, the reiiult of fatigue from the lone ionrney to Colorado Springs. She had been thrown from a carriage «ix week* before, her brother-in-law told me, and sustained an injury to the h«ad. and the trip had been undertaken by the advice of her New York phyftician, who considered an immediate change necessary. 1 was glad to assure him that there was no a anger, and that she needed only complete rent, yet I waa not sorry that he urged me to see her the next day, and still the next He was exceedingly anxious about her until, in the course of two or three weeks, she began to make rapid nrogruas towards recovery. At the ena of a month he made arrangements to return East, leaving her in the little hotel to which they had oome on the night of their arrival—the house which was the neare.it approach to a home that 1 had found stnre the beginning of ray professional existence, twelve years before. "I would like to feel thatahe is nominally in your care, lr. .leaks,1' her brother said to me before lu* went away. ••She will *tay several months. I hope, at»l shall oome for her when she thinks best to return home."
She waa a most lovely and interesting woman not young, for the hair which had been cut short after the accident waa just torn*Hod with gm\\ Yet a physician's eye could easily detect the faH that there was something wrong in pirttuai nature, which reacted on the physical, that ia spite of Colorado
the spiritual liyi air and sunshine and her determination to grow well and strong and happy, it was a struggle against great odds. 1 said a physician's e?e, yet with me it had become a lover's also. Agnes Kingdon was the only woman, except my mother, for whom 1 had ever cared, and from the llrot I realised the utter hopelessness of my affection. I could not ignore the unreasoning, intuitive knowledge. I felt sure that she had lived through the arreatest experience of a woman life, that it had made her proraaturely old. that it had saddened and repressed naturally buoyant and happv nature, yet that hers »f* a fidelity unto dt a'jt. Unreaaonab y, helplessly, only loved her the more for this Wlief.
As the weeks went on and *he grew no stronger, she became a little anxious about herself, and finally jrpoke to me it bout it. I could make but one answer:
Tell me nothing that you do not with to. Mhs Kingdom but in my opinion voura is mor^ of a mental than a bodily lit—a trouble which no physician can reach or cure." .She grew very pale tt* I spoke, bnt, with the frankne*.i which was one of her greatest charms, replied, without a moment's hesitation:
You are probably right. Dr. Jenks. A* your patient I have no right to deeeiv* you. I have no wish to do so. I am doing my best, however."
She tried hard to *mile. The white lip* quivered, the delicate face never looked #o patient or heroic. Instinctively I caught her hands.
You have my sympathy." I exclaimed, 'I wish I could help you wi«hr«v-./,
I do not know what else I might hive said had she not turned away from me, a«d Wore §h« saw what I felt was in my face, "t believe you I thank you,' she said. and. without another word, weot out of the room.
Jt waa ftve months before her brother came for her. It waa nlain thai he expected to find her much better than $be i^gUlr was. "•Her letters have jfiven us ao ide* that the waa ao be aald to n»e. *'yel would not be like her to complain.'* ••Of eottne, aa her brother,*' I began, with antne emb^rnwwment, **yoo underauuid that what is troubling her mentally ha? much to do with her physical condition. She has far honored me with her confide wee that I know—'J •Cturae hitu! he awittemt tinder hta breath, apr-oiglsur "P *»d p^Rg the Hoor. not «l«^ to excitement he might be saying to© mtieh. he ha# been killine her iaehei for p«tt aad yeawra. He w«w»d ha OMfe
"^SpA hte by my grsep upon his shoulder. "Toa «ns telling me.
more
Be did not «ay what there waa no steed, In that moment he road my heart aa she bad never done. S
If she could have loved a man worthy of her," he went cm "if she could love you, Jenks but he mercifully fore bore to add another word.
Something went out of my life with their departure —something that the years could never restore. But it had never been mine—never could be and that consciousness helped me admewhat to bear its Um Two years later I was thankful for an opjiortunitv to set my face eastward once more, thinking less, however, of the friends I was to meet than
of
fectual
her whom in all probability I
should never see again. Sydney Meredith, my old college dbtun. had changed more in the tea jrearsthat had elapsed since oar last meeting than any member of onr claaa, whose reunion we had met to celebrate. It seemed natural to be sitting again ia
hyaical
North Middle, lookcurling covered with
No. 82 of the Old ing at each other through smoke acroas the table books and papers, pipes aad cigars. The literature belonged to a younger generation of students, in whoee apartments we were temporarily located. The pipes and cigars we had added to ve a little present life to the old room, aunted by countless ghoeta of a dead and gone past.
Sydney waa as handsome a fellow as six feet of height, a corresponding breadth of chest, a fine complexion and a mass of coal-black curly-hair could make him. We agreed that he was the ornament of our class in a
sense as truly as in an intelone. He was a good-natured
fellow, too easy-going, 'full of fun, prone to see the beat in Everybody and everything, and his popularity waa immense. He graduated with high honors, and was a lawyer with a successful and growing practice when we met four ye.irs later but here, at the end of ten more, was the mere suggestion of his old self. The brilliant eyes and teeth were there, though the lips smiled less often, the hair was thinner and straighter than in the old college days, cut it was not the physical change that was so plainly marked. The spiritual was transformed, and not for the better. He had become cynical, skeptical, reserved, and at times even morose—a disappointment and a puzzle to all his Menus. He spoke of it himself I had hoped he would grow confidential, as our talk wore on toward midnight. That had tfben the old fashion.
You know how to make some allowances for a fellow, Jenks." I laughed. '*It is something new to have to make allowances ior you, Meredith." "There is need enough now a-days. I have to be introduced to myself every six months, and even then find it hard work to keep up the acquaintance." "I'm not going to beat abuutthe bush, Meredith. Tell me straight, what ia the matter with you. Pve aright to know, and I believe it will be a blessing to you to tell me." "Everything has gone wrong with me, Jenks. and the exasperating thing about ia that I cannot for the life of me see how, or in what way I have been to blame." "Not buakteas, surely, I began. "Oh bother business!' he interrupted, "business isn't everything life. "A man has lived to little purpose if he has not learned that before he is thirty-five," I assented. "I have a fine office," he went on. "countless clients, plenty of money, and—my recollections of the woman I loved.1'
I felt that I had the explanation at last. ••Where is she?" I asked. "Grand Canal, Venice at least 1 heard so the other day —located there for the winter, went abroad a year ago with her married sister and will sti^y there very likely with the family." ••Then, of course, everything is over between you. But it was along engagement to be broken at last.'" "And she broke it, Jenks the most faithful and loving woman I ever conceived of. Read thisP* He took a note from his pocket, tossing it towards me. '•Tell me what it means, for I have never found out." It bore a date of two years previous: "Mr laAR Stoxarin reply to your m«» aafc I can only aay. It will be better for tta both if we never mwt again"AONBS KlftODOX." "Agnes Kiuffdon!'' 1 exclaimed. I had not recognised the writing.
You do not know herf' he aeked, quickly. You wrote to me of her, you know," I answered, evasively, bnt I have ao memory for names."
But tell me what it means," he repeated. absorbed In his first thought. I have studied rhoee few words more than all my oases put together."
What wa* the message?'' I asked. "Oh. of course. I ought to toll yon that. Agnes was thrown from a carriage between two and three years ago, and her bead was badly hart. They sent me word that day, but I cOold not go to the house before the next evening. For a month there was but little change. I went to eee her as often aa I could— every week or ten days. As she could hartUy speak or look at me, twasn't mueh comfort. One day I called and was told by her sister that her husband had taken Agnes to Colorado and had been gone a week. She had left no message aad I could not find that she had any thought of me in leaving Twaan't a pleasant surprise. She was away five month*—aad never wrote to me. One evening I caught a glimpse other at the opera, as the aodienoa was leaving the theater. I mat her brother la a stage the aext day. "Oh yes," he Mid, in answer to my question, "Agne« has been back several weeks." 1 leave
rmy
than I have my right
to know. lie looked at me kivalf. 1 thought ww knew already 1 ahook my head aiWtiy
St
I Ihoqght
And
tmr
he
*4 be added, after akmg I«qw and the same fixed took, "yo« have not told her. «$tb«r.** -i'M 'U' Jf
to judge how jroo would have acted plat*, was hart more than I eaa tell I wrote her a note telling her that in view of the way she hat! left the dUv aad he* silence from that time on, I should wait to hear whether a call frbm me wo«M he welcome. This was her reply. Of wane, I did not go to see her—I have ww mm her itoa."
Aad up to that time." I said. had }oa s&spectcd no change of feeUagf "Nothing. She waa always her own sweet, forviaar and is thinking of b*r since have never beea ah!* feo recall an impatient or aagry word.1"* "Had yoa ever given ber oecaaioo for aavf* was aav verv natural owaetfaai
"ftot that know of. Xou have at* ways found me a pretty good-natured sort of fellow, Jenxs, easy to get along with, haven't you?"
Tell me," I said, ignoring the qnaa!tion, "why you were not married long ago. It ut ten yearn at least since your engagement to Miss Ktngdoa." "Oh, as to that," was his answer, "you know I would never marry unless
I could support my wife in luxury. For along time my practice was not sufficient for that. Then I was in Europe a oouple of years, working np those Government cases—" I "And travelin interrupted, en well on the whole,
Oh, yes, I enjoyed it, certainly.' And after your return?" "Then 1 got into polities, a way beyond mv depth, as soon as I got home ran for Representative that year, though I wasn't elected. But the excitement had a fatal fascination for me —gave me no time to think of anything else."
There was a long pause. We heard the town clock strike one. The fire was dyingout slowly, "Why don't you say something, Jenks Sydnev asked, impatiently. "Because if I say the only thing I can say—the thing I really Mid truly believe, 1 doubt if yon ever want to hear me speak again, Sydney Meredith." "Goon, h» said.shortly, "it's all right." "I think." 1 said, "that from first to last you have utterly failed to appreciate the woman who was faithful to' yon for so many years. She has always filled a secondary place in your life—"
You do not know how I loved her." That is just what I do know," I said, "you never loved her as well as you loved yourself, and everything you have told me only proves the fact In her greatest need of yon yon failed her the most completely. When it became your turn to feel the slight, the omission, the ignoring—whatever you please to call it—you were disagreeably surprised. What reason had you to expect anything else? You went to see her every week or ten days, you say. Why. for a month it was doubtful whether she lived or died.
Do
you think that she felt
that her life of death mattered much to you?" How did you know?" he asked, quickly.
I had not meant to tell him, yet there was no reason why I should not. "I met her afterwards—in Colorado."
And she told you—" "Nothing. I was her physician. I saw for myself." "And you love her, Jenks?"
The words were a great cry. My face, had told its own story, as it had done once before. "Hopelessly," I answered, "she will never know it. Agnes Kingdon is a woman who will never love twice. She tilled in your life the place of a neglected, disappointed woman, until the position grew intolerable. Don't wonder at what she h:us done. I only wonder she did not do it years before.
The lire had died out. There were only ashes in the grate, as in the live* of these two—a patieut, loving woman, an unappreciative, selfish man.
I did not see Sydney Meredith again for two years, though we corresponded At the end
nougn we egularity. lile makio
with our old irrei of that time, while making a vacation journey through Switzerland, I caught fight of the face of Agnes Kingdon at the window of a
diligcnec,
on tno road
from Charuouni to Geneva. She did not see me. It was just as well so. Three days later I encountered my old frieud Moredith in London
for
Liverpool. "Jenks, old fellow," he said, heartily, "you gave me the lesson of my lilts! !t'» hard to teach an old dog new tricks, but I've done pretty well, I believe, wrote to Agnos Kiu^don the day after our last talk together--1 leave you to imagine what- and I've been writing ever since. This summer I came over to see her—have just left her with her party in Switzerland. I'm a different man from the fellow she loved once I'm hoping that in time she may love me as she did him. You can't say now, as you did once, that I'm all wrong from firxt to last can you, Jenks?"
Somehow, as I recalled the sweet serenity of the face I had seen in the old
diligence,
it seemed to me that al
though the first of her story and of had oeen told me, 1 was no mrire cer* tain than either of them what the taat of it might be.--
Woman's Journal.
Aa lageafoatt Insurance Fraad, NOT long ago a cattle dealer n&med Grunbaum living at Zsolna, in Austria, disappeared. As he was known to be in fair circumstances and good health, it was naturally apprehended that he had fallen a victim, to foul play, and a diligent search was instituted. The result was that in a wood not far from the town a mutilated corpse was found, hi the pockets of the clothes of which were letters addressed to Grunbaum, and which was at once recognised
by
Grun
baum 's wife as the body of her husband. Not very long before
his
disappearance
Grunhanm had insured his IHe for $5,000 in one office and for $2,600 in another and after the funeral these sams were claimed by his widow, to whom eventhing was left by the wilt of the deceased. Before the policies were paid, however, the suspicions of one of the ofBees wen? axdted by some chance inquiries were made, acid finally it waa discovered that Grunbaum was still alive. He was at once arrested and it has been now established that he him«sif murdered a stranger he *o«t to the wood where the body was fonad dressed the corpse in his clothes, putting on himself those of the-dead man, and placed his letters In the pockets of his victim. His wife wa» to a raw the policies payable on the death of her husband, and the two th*n fot*aded to emigrate under another] oameto America.
Eaison talks enthusiastically of the time when electrical engines will be employed on the Pennsylvania RaBfwt l, and says ha can rwidily obtain a speed of fifty to sixty milea aa hoqr with tan danger of accident than occurs with steam for the rails transmit the merry that moves the train, and the ittstMi! the engine leaves the track to be ia with'
A
wmrm
Dm. HA«TO a laow TOJJIC la a prwpenttoa of Protoxide of Iron, Perartaa Bark aad th phalca.i aaaariatad^wtth the Vegetable Xrranattct Endoraed by the
frTKD8.Hma
DYSPEPSIA.
jr. GL 33
1
Theae great onwn'" the natural dran» ora
of
en rotUe
the avUtuK. i." tlicjr work well, heaitt. will he perfect: If thpy b»«onm cl«sge. dreadful dfee*6C**re aure to follow wltli
TERRIBLE SUFFERING.
BltloaaarM, Headarke, Pyapepaia, JUe«dlee, Ctyiatlpatiou ami PUe«, erKldary 1'OT.vtntat*, Orarel, Ulabrtea, 8^Jlw*-nt la the Trine, *llky or Ropy t'riae af Kheantik Pains and Ackea, are dercloiwd hl«nd la i*oteetn*l with tbe tioinora taat altouid bare beea nxpelled naturally.
KIDNEY-WORT will reatore thebealtby acUon and all thea^ deawoytn* will be baniabed negler* ihem and you will live bat to euffer.
Tbonaaadahave beea cured. Tryltandron will add oc more to the number. Take It and health will ooee more eladdenyotir heart
Why suffer longerfrom the torment of an aching back Why bear such distress from Conatlpattwn and PI tea
Why be so fearful baoauao of disordered urine Ktnm-Woirr will rare yoa. Try a pack aca at oace and be aatteSed.
Jli* a drt§ vf$tlabU compound
yaw.
toeaded by thea for Ihrapepala, «k»a*rat Beblllly. reaale Dliaaae^ Waal af VtUUjjr» Wer^aa* rreitratUa. Cearaleaeeaee flrea Feren aad Ckraale WUIla and w. It aerraa awry pvpoaa whan a Tome to aaceaaiy. 1
W. 8. CLIFT. J. H. WILLIAMS. J. M. CL.Ff
CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO,
MANUFACTURERS OP
SASHES, DOORS, BLINDS, ETC.
DEALERS IN
umber, Lath, Shingles, Glass, Paints, Oils and Builders' Hardware..
CORNER OF NINTH AND MULBERRY STREETS. TJSRRS HAVTE, IND.
JL
sISmtic
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KMC ME CO., 213 hftllfali Stmt, St. Lais.
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A N E S O A N O N
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That Acts at the Same Time on THE LIVER, THE BOWELS, and tho KIDNEYS.
Manufactoier of
Portable and Stationary Engines, Flour. Nan Mill and MINING MACHINERY. HANGERS, PULLEYS. SHAFTING, UPRIGHT AND HORIZONTAL STEAM ENGINE8. |q
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Sixth Street, Terra Hauto, Indiana.
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OPTICIAN AND .TEWELER. U2ti Main street, Tmtt! Haute.
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McLEAN & SEI.D031H1DGE, Attorneys at Law, 420 Main Street. Tpito Huute. Ind.
S. C. Dana. S. B. Dana, Noury. DAVIS it DAVIS. Attorneys at Law, 22k South Sixth Street, over PostcfRce, I Terre Haute, Ind.
Pijnoidano.
Dr. A. Drake,
VET KB IN Alt SUKOEON.
OrrirF:—24 north Third street, (Carico'a Stable*.) ItKsiDEKcas:—82-1 North Fifth. Treata t:*err dlt»'«*e known to karae or rattle at DKMlrrate roat. Uaa met Witk iarfe practira and «»lf«rm an'jeftea.
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