Daily News, Volume 2, Number 143, Franklin, Johnson County, 4 February 1881 — Page 3

MLY NEffS

4T

I,

A'

FEBHUART 4. 1881.

THE SCHOOL BOY. bio) a b*x for boob* and Iblnc*. ft* fete ball and hH tmtx

6

|ool»d the brt«ht«rf and beat of kings bfct tj-rw rtrair bat. |!c4 htm Into a nOirkjr train ^ut»pof btaytwngcompe#**, #*n aa tboagfc It were dot* aod rain /Hlfn* oar «rw wit

umn.

tn hi* Innocent fi«e to »ee f.p\ of a ftomrwfa! h«*rt

Morn

:,J'

only iiboattferftfh!* b*t with glee, "wowkrod when tliejr would Matt. lot that h« |or«d not lutntoftw, ie boy wiw Wader au4 kind: i| w« a world that was all before,

wnainfM bebtad.

^4 ot bU flattering heart«« c.yi4. %t child was loyal *b1 tra# ,, *je parvaU IOM tt*»4ove that to old, children the love that to new. racametoknowthjUloralaafloww, only growetb down •carorlj' apoke for (he irpace of *a boot, drove back tbroagb tb» town.

SECRET LOVE.

Matt love,» bidden lovw, A love mt»i *ban the light. Ice tnUem' gold, to often told lit the watctm

of

the nl*bt.

unilng o'er the wcrct #tolfe, b« grasp, the claap, tbe Mas, worked the mingling o' tbe mlnda, se otietusw o" the wish. ilit from UiLi sacred treasury enahrlnea a saint, tbe loveliness partial eye can paint. and wisbw, hopes and fear*. May crowd and cloud tbe brain,

BV(r

TOOre

jn ihy heart'* oore

fcat Image most retn&ia.

Husband# Clfthulug Cue Wife, monotony which has hung over A town of Kinsale for Konie time, fie

Irifh Times,

1ms Ixtrn dispelled

,# S iippearance, ono :norning recently,

tionyearneven

whose absence for the last ve placed him beyond the of the wife he then behind with two children to tide *s ^the difficulties of that long space J\ Inc. After the lfijme of y^ira she ,ii the hope of ever seeing his face in the .iesh, and married unother, „»fter Home time, left her a

Struck with the familiarity of his •Jess she looked inquiringly at him, failed to recognise her long lost V? »and, Gallagher. "Don't you know \ry 7" said he. It was then his titled image flashed into her

,v

„y. and she coolly replied, "Wishn. *k1, it is time I should forget you. ^as told you were twice married, y," said he. Here the third and last tuul interposed by asking—"And

I ask how many wives had you you left her f1 "Asmany its 1 liked." lie reply and then, as if to estabchum, he asked where his two iren were. "One is d^»d and the ris married," was the reply. Seei^b&t Rhe little disposed to give wr third and liest husband for one had deserted her in his vouthftil jest days, the now comer is said to shown the tempting bait of a check 1250, but money would not purchase and neither money nor any other Jicement will put asunder those led together nearly a quarter of a •Jljnry sinw-

Tht

mht Habits of Arils. Rev, II, MrOook, of Philivdelphia, the neatness of the agricultural observe*I in txmfinement at any The most minute particles of dirt ireftilly mnoved, and the whole is frequently and thoroughly ed, espeemlly «Rer fating and sleej*They aasitft eaeh othcr ln the gencleansing, and the attitude of the under operation is one of intense like that of a family dog scntt lunl, a perfect picture of kr surrender and case. Mr. has seen an ant kneel down f--jf*«

another, and thrust forward the ^1 untWr Uie fatre of the other, and .wotiaido^, jjxpressing quite plainly vire to Ih cleanedthe other ant this and went to work.

UK'S tiifc? is cx*nl)inetl with acio feats*, in which thm ants ex»pins atout clinging in a liu-kable fitfldon to blades of grass, jetirutts the dleansing ant hangn |h ard twm the gram, snd to her Jgnt operated upon elpfps reaching rand ttp with great ngiuty to submit er friend's bflleek Evitfently ntoi?»'floitf

the te'

-two*!

Ibr Wiish-

Mr. MeCbok has observed nuwt ly the whole of thm procej^se^ that with ante as much «& the human kind, an Hrtifieiai eonimhice« greater aUeutiou to perappeamucc.

4FSR BARtmt*.—Beside car wheels minor articles, barrehi am now beide of pa|m* They are tuanu&c~ of atrtiw pul|\ run into a mold in the sha|e of one half of a bar-

being (tul^ec^Hl to a powerftil ilic pressor^ §iwf l» tJNfu pit into m, #&M$w tritiiiii»l^tenly, tghbf dried Tl«e e^tjhr are

The advantage ttvige barI. •Over woeden onea are 1 mum, and tlwa prevft^U«R i"r

Eoui white in transit tliey 4# .more than"on^hifd (it*

barrels..

HCaUi|iiif^

4

'rW»

from ^aal«

A friend aajra, "I remember an amusftit

story

my miner used to tell."

He was cntting, some thirty years a«o, in PfiiUdelphht. One day rthe

iiuriog me dull season an elderly Quaker tame into the store with some cloth which he wished to hare cot into a coat

My father toid him he would cut it for jidouax. "Well," said the Quaker, "thee may cut it but48 Hie tailors "sometimes cabbage cloth, as thee calls it, I shall stay t«ml natch whUe tjiee cuts it really keep me so. "Ilsee is welcome to all thee can steal without my catching thee," said t|ie •Quaker, c&nfide&t in ha own shrewdness.

The cutting'-board was oiosd against window, between which and the board were some'eight inches of

siacet

My father, laying off the coat, left a good vest pattern, which he chalked in various shapes, and after he had cut All the pieces, he called the Quaker's attention to something in the room, and •with iris shears probed -the "cabbage" from the board between it and the window, when it dropped quietly to the Iloof. He rolled tin the job. pujptiag in alt thee scraps, and handed it to the Quaker, "I suppose you're satisfied that yon have all you» cloth?" asked my father. "Yea,

I'm

bona fide

\vr. With her widowhood hard came, and drove her to seek in the workhouse, where her "edge of the treatment of the sick •ed for her the josition of assistant in the liOHpitid. In the process |me a widower named Joint*.*

Mly, oi of the beat shoe limkyr.period, was placed under bereave. much did he appreciate her genianner and kindness, that as soon as ijfumed home he proposed and was Jted. thus making tie third husband, »the oest of the three. For the lnt years and more, come weal come lieir domicile was uniformly happy closely attended to hia trade, ex* vat election tiroes, when ors.tors .running scarce, and Mary was jiy successful as a midwife. All on smoothly till the morning reId to, when a stranger walked in, "Iwdd: "Well, Mary, how do you get

»me

satisfied. Thee's. welcome

to all tbee's stolen." When the Quaker had gone, father toek the "cabbage" from under the ta hie, and cut a vent from it for himself.

Not long after he was standing in tin

He oalled to him and invited him into tlte store. "How did your coat fit?" asked my £dher. "Very well thee is a good cutter." "Thank you. How ao you like my asked my father, throwing opei. his coat and showing the "cabbaged" gurment "It's a nice vest. Where did you ge' thejploth It's like mine." "It was yours you gave it to me, yor remember." "No, I don't remember." "You said I was welcome to all I ftf cabbaged.'" "Y 6ft." "Well, I 'cabbaged' this." "Thee did?" "I certainly did."

The quaker scratched his head a moment, and then reached out his hau which my father took. 'Thee is a good cutter," he said, ami lie added as he turned to go, "and thee is too smart for me, but thee is welcome to the vest"

—J—U—L 1 III

Effect of Salt on Wheat.

In an interesting series of experiments recently made on the farm of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, the manurial value of salt was unmistakably indicated. An acre of wheat dressed with three hundred pounds of common salt yielded thirty-nine bushels of grain, with a proportionate amount of straw, while an adjoining acre, unmanured, produced onlv twenty-nine bushels per acre, with the straw imperfectly developed. The entire cost of the crop is not stated, but this experiment shows that the additional ten bushels resulting from the sale were produced at a cost of thirty cents each. In another case a

and afterward ploughed before seeding. On the 1st and 2nd of September wheat was sown at tho rate of two bushels to the acre. The crop when harvested, yielded, according to the estimate of the owner, Mr. John Parke, not less than forty bushels of grain to the acre, with a luxuriant growth of slraw. From these and many similar cases the inference seems to be that salt is a snecific fbr the wheat crop, imparting solidity to the grain and firmness to the straw. But it must not be concluded that equally good results will always follow the application of salt.

Buddhists.

We hear not infreouently. tlie age of a creed and the number of its believers used as an argument for its truth. The Roman Catholics are much addicted to this sort of logic, and some of the Protestant seets try to lord it over others for a similar reason. But if age and the number of believers only be taken into account, the Buddhist faith has more to commend it than any Christian form of worship. It ht\s existed nearly 2,500 years, and its adherents are estimated in round numbers at 460,000,000—more than one-third of the whole human 3 ce. Originating in Hindostan, it now has little hold there except among the Nep mmlese but it is jfonemlly held in Ceylon and throughout the Entire Eastern peninsula, it dividea China with the hvsteins of Confucius and Lttotse, claiming perhajw two-thiriis of the people it prevails in Japan—though not the established religion it is the creed of Thibet, north of the Himalayas, in the form of Lamaism, and is the religion of the Mongolians of Central Asia it extends to the northern part of Siberia and into Swedish Lapland. Only within the last IS years has anything trustworthy been known of Rttddhkm in Europe. Eugene Bumouf publication (1844) of his "Introduction to the History of Buddhism" was the beginning of anything like correct information on tbe subject among the Western nations. So much has been translated from the Sanscrit sacred books, and so much written on them recently, that Buddhism is am we!? understood at present as many of th» mom modern creeds

A large portion ci the area o! Bahama Islanla is devoted to the culti vation of pineapples. As many as 1,500,-1 000 of the Amit have been collected ftom single acre at one crop. The pineapples of New Providence are superior to any other variety, and often attain enor* motts ske. One, grown in Pembrokeshire .weighing 10| pounds, and mesisuring 10jt inche» bnghtj, exclusive of the stock and crown^nd £2 laches in circumference, was serred op at the coronation banqnei of George lv„ and since then the Unproved mwles or cnlttvation havt sfreatly increased the arse and quality of the fruit. There it an enormous demand for the Bahama pineapple both in Europe and America,and anew industry has lately sprung in the islands in preserving the fruit in tins. Onet»ct«r. 4i SmuM alone exports annnaily I.OOi* J00 tins valued at ^0^0(X

jloor, with the vest on, when he n| he",ill "neTO flnd'it, for "wiien a

Keep ciear of the man who doee not value his own character. He who smiles at another's mtetwkc forgets his own ignorance.

Politeness is money, which enriches not him who receives it, bat him who dispense# it

The conscience has to do, not with fitness or expediency or advantage, but with right and wrong.

Deliberate with caution, but act with decision and yield with jgfticioosnees, or oppose with firmness.

If I might control the literature of the household, says Bacon, I would guarantee the well-bcfing of the church and state.

We never know the true value of friends. While they live we are too sensitive to their faults when we have lost them we only see their virtues.

The happiness of your life depends upon the quality of your thoughts, there* fore guard accordingly, and take care that you entertain no notions unsuitable to virtue and unreasonable to uature.

Mind is a Jewel brighter than the evening star1—the boHy a leaden weight upon the soul. The "one is a spiritual spark in the universe of God the other a weary weight that binds us to earth. "No man," said Flavel, "hath a velvet cross and it is true now as it was then. Put he that sends the, cross knows its weight, and ever gives the strength that is needful to bear it, and the grace to be profited by it

It is such a piece of good luck to he natural. It is the good gift which the fairy godmother bnngs to her prime favorites in the cradle. If a man have

3

l'he best books for us are not always those which the wise recommend, but often those which meet our peculiar wants, and the natural thirst of* our minds, and which therefore awaken inT terest and rivet thought

The happiness of life is made np of minute fractions—the little, soon forgotten, charities of a kiss, a kind look, a heartfelt compliment in the disguise of a playful rail lory, and the countless other infinitesimals of pleasant thought and feeling.

Pride is as loud a beggar as want, and a great deal more saucv. When you have bought one fine thing, you must buy ten more, that your appearance may be till of a pieee but it is easier to suppress the first desire tha«)( to satisfy all fiiat follow it.

Genuine neighborly love knows no distinction of persons. It is like the sun. which does not ask on what it slusli shine, or what it shall warm but shines and warms by the verv laws of its own being. So there is nothing hidden from light and heat

Let men tremble to win the hand of woman, unless they win it with the utmost passion of her heart Else it may be their miserable fortune, when some mightier touch than their own may have awakened all her sensibilities, to be reproached for -aim content, the marble image of happiness, which will ha»"e to be imposed warm reality.

Resisting Temptation.

A colpred brother whose eyes wc»*e watery, and who had evidently been imbibing experience whisky, was telling his young friend George that he ought to jine, too. Said George. "I wonld, but de temptation to do wrong is too strong for me." "Whar'syer backbone, dat ye can't rose up and stand temp- i'Tow-n*.: tatiori!" exclaimed brother Peter. I was dat myself once. Right indisycr town I haa a chance to steal a pair of boots—mighty fine ones, too. Nobody was dar to see me, and I reached out my hand and de debbil said take 'em. Den a good spirit whispered for nic to let them boots alone." "An' you 'didn't take 'em!" "No, sah—not much. I took a pa'r o' cheap shoes ofT de shelf, u' I left them boots alone!"

iti cither Llqnid or Drr Form t.he mate lime ou the diaea«es of the

Liver, Boiels anil Kidney

Tki« eamtomd action, viws ii wonderful jvwer to cure all

WHY ARE WE SICK?

BtcauM to* ru'tOff Okm grfc. organ* to bf lt€mud6gimto*

J09. H. BRIGtfb.

Produce and Commission

-lilt

prt

torpid,MdpoimewHshvmiorB

tAtrybn forcrdjnlo tAeMoodCtattbould llMexpttted naturally.

HIUOCrSltBSS. PILES, CONSTIPATIOX, KIDXET COMPLA1XTS. CRESABT DISEASES, FEUAL£ ffE.^OiESS,

AX*

KKKVOrS blSOKDERS,

-y caxringfree Ccfion zf (.'.it? orrjc i* ami I r**terisff tMrpotwrtotArow t&difitm*

Why Saffer Bllloax paias end nchni I Why tonaeated with Flltts, fotwUprtSftni Why fVifhtened orer dlsorderrd Kldnrj!

WJiy eadare wm« or stek hrsdacliesl Why fear* aleeptan slfktal CW KlDNEY-*.VORT

OTlt ta to

ami rrjoke ktatth

Wg7 Tepe«aMeF«wm.

ta

Cart*&* em pfteirmSf or wtikjli taa*+n *ix aim

BpSoSrijltril y«wa.wrr &mmitr»tifA

josr rrotTjCR mtcoem. rracs,*t.e«. W El.LS. B.rCHABn«40t to rropS. fWBi pew! «t* tfry p**-""'** WTttmrw*.

of iiaat

riilnai Wort dm«r I VManttHdi oalabnttttd a* «*U aa ay- ttai

—d aa thai yal a» S*r ftawt tiilm9«M4y, aa4lai

x^tnDAansaur«OKA «r swmaane* TSUI, SUCHAftMOS A CO., h*?*, BwHSa**"*. Tt.

OPIUM

MERCHANT, .\j

Corner Fourth and Oherry streets, I'KH «tK t'Tt. INDMSX

CALL ON

B*sg$j152 #9'68S

a

^4,

CHAg. TALBOTT,"

t\

Main St For

Painting, Pnper-hangiii?, Calsominine Q-lazing, 6co.

at ^oeti's Futuiturc

Ccgal.

IIERIFF'B SALE.

That part of out-lot nnmber seven ff in the city Terrc Haute, commencing at a pq!at on Market street.-one hundred ana twenty (ISA) feet from tbe eou!lwiut comer of w»!d out-lot. and rp.niiiug fhence north fifteen (13) feet on Market street, theucii veet to the raee vrey of canal fonvjmte water, thene^s *outh. we»t along the line of said race w&y. to a point directly TfcFt of the place of beginning, thensc eaHt to the pl&ce 6t beginning, in V!j.'o Conivty, Indiana, and on

SATURDAY, the 12fJi day of February, 1881, bvtweeu the hour* of 10 o'clock a.*.and4o'clock v. M, of *a id, da

jr.

at the ConrtUoaisedoor LtiTerre

Hante, Twill offer the rents and profits of the above (le«rribcd JJcal Estate, together-tv4th all privileges jmt»lpnriMiimces 10 the faire belongin}?. for a terra not exevvtjiing «even years, to the highest: bidder for cttrft. anil upon failure to real.z? a amn to witlify nai.l Esccnfion and c'l^t*. I will then an«l there offer the fee ehnnle in aud to said Real E^Jtate. to the highest bidaer for earth, to sattf-fv the «aoie,

Tin* Srtth day of JanuArj'. JJ5R1.

,.AnKHtV

1IEEIFFS SALE.

By virttie of an Execution issned from the V^'-i Ctrcnit I'mirt. me directed and delivered, in fuvor of Richnrd P. Irwin, a^iirnu^ of Jnmee McLuhghlin, aud against A. J. Purci H. John Harris and W H. 'ochrt«n. iiei/leviii Bail. I have levied on the fo'lnwins described Real I'state, ^ito .tcd In Vigo Ootmfv Indiana, to-w it:

The ea.'j half (W) WP the cotitb'-aft quarter of jeetion fhirty-ix (-MH township ten ilOi

v.

upon her as the

H. Kh lser, Atty'r. .. 141 w8

RE RIFF'S SALFC.

li. vlrtv nf a Fee Bill, frptiKd from the Vigo! lr* Coti t. Kniif dir eted und vU-iivend. jn favor Wftiigv vV H-li et iil.. unit ngjiiiift Jitne Portttn,\ et i'). I have levj.-d on

1

t-e 'otUiwinjj 'es'

cril" d-Ilea!'f.ijt.-'te, uitnated in Vig County, Iidianti to-vit: -i.ot tiUi ib-r tdnr (4: in Partition of the norlh half (V41 of th north ea»t quarter (J4) of th« couth t't 'M rrrter 1*^1 of «ctlon tbiT'y five i5] north ranjjte fti^iit SJ went in Vigo n:i. wchwu '.ii reeord*{'l of •ail and, a* ei.teriu on, unlet !ook ui.-. ".cord of esid tai:uty, and

In 20iL day of February issti

tiinirn o" ffiid .• i!lite.

AjrtaCTrw. O. S*v. P.

lm

tarn

till o«rei.

I:L:'

Hid

10.

(tVKV

a,

v.

d-iv hi f'uirrt 1! 11•,!!"» »v« 'tft -r t»|« li« t.«i

proilj^ol th uOtsve d« re: lx,d i.» v. (1, all rlv:i i'nd the. i'iiMe be--nslr-if. for•» t»fHi iftf-«#see dinsjvt-ar^v•••A (lie e» «H tmo tiwit fnilnv t'

re il:«* mm snfliclent to «ri«fy x*id at Rill a!»dCti If, illlllt

i-.t

1

I le '.!»»( ll.t ttl? J»-

tde. lit «•»»', i' ll»^1 «4«* ts»-li ti-"fy i--Ii-.: ««.•. '.•..

Kr r. Miwn

SPECIFIC,

S0.BBfl

t.

RmmIL

VlneUwl.lt.

tod. Brr, W. 1. LkryiL AubtHTj.!!!. Mlu K.

have beta

dmrm

i^TTr^crrs?s^"5^,.',|fS£«sss?™

DYSPEPSIA.

Leave

Stpre,,. ,ta.

W. S. CLIFT.

H*

9

By Tfrtms of an Execution issued from tbe Vigo Circuit Court, to me directed and 4el{v«red. in favor of Vigo UncKHippctu So. 17, Independent Order of CM a F»! !•«•«, and sgainet Jainee Hftok. a* principal, and Ipsac Ball and Henry P. Folk, sureties. I have levied on the followtrig described Real Estate, situated in Vigo County, Indiana, to-wit:

J".

STKFPrShe^e.

... O. "i E

1

orth.

range eight 81 we? t. in Vigo (^)Uiily, Indiana, and on SATUKUAV, the 2(ttli day of February, 1881, between the honrcof lOo'eiock

A. SI.

and o'eiock

"M. of said day. at theCo^rT Ilouce door 111 Terre Haute, I will offer the rentu aud profits of the above described Real Ectath. t«cether with all privilege* and appurtenancea to the same belonging1. fort term not exc'-rdinji peveu yt-ars. to tbe hi he#t bidder for cash, and upon, failure to realize a !um «s3k'ient to cati^fy naid Esecmitm and rods. I will then vnd there offer tin* fee »i» in ::»d to st»Nl Ileal Kstnte. to the h'ghert for eush to ftittafv the paine,

ThiK.^d dav of eljnirti'v. ISRI, JAC'KSOJS STEPP bhoriJ. G.

W. «fcT.

BILLIARD PARLOR

A N

SAMPLE ROOM.

lu Handsomest in U'cKiern Indiana.

Finest and Best

WINKS AND LIQUORS

of all kinds at the bar.

Tit- of clffnrs on hand is culled chcircst brands in the market. R. L. FRISBIE,

No. 620, Main street.

WMrt' *i 4*1** jtfT

IThe Permanent Cure of Catarrh

THIRTEII1K TBARS Aao

CATARRH was considered an incurable disease.

for eighteen years. I was first attacked by a slight cold, followed with deafness and ringing in the ears, soreness of the throat, disgusting nasal discharges, weak, inflamed eyes, hawking, rising of vile matter, black and sometimes bloody mucus, coughing, with great soreness of the lungs. The liver,and stomach were polluted with the diseased matter running fromj the head. Compelled to resign my pastorate, I compounded my QATARRH

sixty-seven, I can speak for hours with no difficulty, and never have had in the whole thirteeen years the slightest return of the disease. E

HHIHHiHHH

1

J. L.L

3.

Hltdwll

ANTtiaa. CM. fta.X&y, Boater. Ctomptif O*^ 01.

cmrrd

J.

Child'8 Catarrh Specific

»jP^yraoon or Protoxide of Iron. Perarlaa Bark awl the Pboe-^

/mm/e.

*•2,3

•T. H. WILLIAMS.

aer-

CJUTT, WILLIAMS & CO.

^IAXUFACTURERS OF

DOORS, BLINDS, ETC.

AND DEALERS IN

umber, Lath, Shingles, Glass, Paints, Oils and Builders Hardware.

CORNER OF NINTH AND MULBEHRY STREETS. TEKUK IND.

Or. JB .JL

A

ATLA:

MACHIN

602

HOP BITTERS.

(A ModUcine, not a Irlak.}

HOPS, BUCDU, MANDK-AKK, DANDELION, AMD TH* Pn*WIT

AXD

and cured myself. Now at the age ofl

TO CATARRH SUFFERERS:

Catarrhal cases have applied fume for relief. Many thousands have received my Specific and are cured. We deem it only fair that every one that wishes should have the op­

portunity to ascertain whether we are able to accomplish all that

claim, and for this purpose we add a few of the many hundreds of addresses of those who have been successfully treated, almost any of whom will doubtless respond to any inquiry by letter, if accompanied by a stamp to pay postage. We have thousands of these certificates from ail classes—physicians, clergymen, judr 23, merchants, bankers and business'men. ,•-

Bowel. Houc," BodMMer, 5. T.: *i**K. K. Sb«ewij

.. Slwxtrnkrr. Anhlej-,0.,

C. Barneti St. Praodrrille,

Ho,

case of Catarrh, no matter how desperate. It can only be obtained at Troy, Ohio. The treatment is local as well as constitutional, and can not be obtained at the drugstores.

WteatcUteMMiBtRiiaoKwlwItnttMtdMr mcoch Wa woald be g)*d to b*ee susy who can, c»H at 1%uSmtasMracwalty. AIWB atastetaent of melbsd of iMMMtsMttMat aadeoM, w«i «wrcatf teaUmmiaUfrom tb« wim

wlli W west on appikatloau AMnm

effectually and permanently cure any

I

[BLOOD.

•m

f.-

IM'^

St

J. M, GH

JE& JD

SHOP

A I N E S 0 A N O N Manufactmer of

Portable ajitLSiationary Engine! ., Flour, Saw Mill iuu\ MINING MACHINERY, HANGERS, PULLEYS. SHAFTING, UPRIGHT AND HORIZONTAL STEAM ENGINES

N.

Sixth Street, Terre Haute, Indiana.

n«*T M*niCAt QttAU-

TIM OF XU. OT11KK UiT1K«a. E I 1 1 E

All Dloeaaei of tbe Stomach, Bowel*, Illood, Liver. Kldner»,and Urinary Organ*. NerTonaiMMLJSleeiloMne»*and especially y«naie Complaints.

SIOOO !N COLD. Will be p*ld for eww they will not enre or" help, or

tor

anything Impure or Injur!out found in them.

A«k yonr draggUt for Hop Bluer* ami trjr them before you vleep, Tnko, no other. I' C. an abMlnte And IrrectBtlhlecure i.

DrankannaM, u*o of opium, tobacco and Dircotlos. ^•••1 8am ro Cibcui./.*.

All «k«v« laid by

Hop BttUn M%. Co., MtiUr, N. V., A

I

had then suffered I

Troy, OHio

W8

B.T Watch, Robert*, 78 Poctaae«,U r!«* Thorn**,

.tcjt. Me.: Be*. C7W. J. W. Rftey. jt\ Bxgrw*