Daily News, Volume 2, Number 144, Franklin, Johnson County, 5 February 1881 — Page 3
•.
UI.Y ilf
UIIDAY. FEBRUARY 5. 1881.
A LIFE'S RBGBBT.
book Una 1 eklonniw# ibe otter day. iicii on tmanttng do* all faqr lon« JhilstwMMdmoimMilimMjr -lorp, my lovt- JMMlj-CMloviwfbatme!' •.! ^|lw»lH»ra«nM«W8trv«r b» ^f "kr«, my kve, h*4 yott
lortd be* me I'*
J/ W0f4»,«n4 nimpi* bat O bow mack
Jm
singer It&s uid kctbat
UUUf loach!
1. JwlMUKSastoryofdMuiore""test. bright hottest
blighted
mad
trae lore ortnwd,
in Uic wlifcspered rnclcxJy, *, my love, bad you IOVMS hot mar* a sorrow tUe key may be "love, joy lore,bad yen loved but
DM
f4hat inuH, io»i tonkins mut agaii to tJw iwsii&iwAe m#Ctly, MiYe, my love,
r*
it twSievoln what poet* barcasid Jtifam thai nr* Nrofccti and itvn that ar«Ji*d j*«=» weiio«rf*TMl will utandtn tl»Hi cmtrw.
I heart* metal rin$ l!is Ue nr«»r*«. -tlw.-y vibr«ut Mill to Uutt melody, Hove, my Jove, hud yen loved hot mer nr.* b» well btll wlut trotlM tt b«, "love, oiy lotsa, had yotf lotfed iwtt i*«-* ^ito#*ftrW roHnOn,*»i'ltl«mil hy. m|- rtrciim* Vdtiiwb am! r.."«tflr« dh* ft it with
r.
.ln,
!taa
0
ytMi
loved but tn-
1 might have Iwett, Uut tt eamioi h?J ftt, "iovf, my kiVf. imd r"tJ Sovert btn
Romance in Stanley's Life. uehi are few men to whom life nhotiUi irently be so pieaigmt a« to Mr.
Stanley there are few, however.
ymvhom it mems to be so hitter. All fcgland i« rtwulv to do him honor he %. pa
been overwhelmed with praise and 1 jbngratnlMtions the Queen ho« received Parliament has thanked him the ^oigreat journals for which he has hit? explorations have amply •7arded him. But he iiS sullen, moroae, j»*^pcontented and savage. .*|Mr. SUtnley hu« had a romance it "u\(ui
unhappily for hirn, and this has fired him to the heart. Before he |ijnt upon his second expedition to kiHca, he met and fell madly in love njfifh the charndng daughter of a wealthy J^izen of Jewish extracticn, whose name f, perhaps, best known in connection fth the motion of an extensive bnf mfortuiinte opera house. Mr. Stanley's passion was deep and violent, but ne I 4\as told that he must watt, and that iin i' .^mediate mnrriage w«a out of the fjuestion. lie was anxious to win ev^n reater fume und fortune and lay them ^vwthe feet of his belovetl. "it was at this moment that the second
Iricanxtx^uJlitum. wait. Lnjtioatd l^,kimi ovyo^nit'x Jbr rh
Istinction aild rewiml, Shd hi^eau mbraced the i)«rilf)u® coaiitiferfbn.f rThroti(zhoil tlWimble tWl0tei4Hle ourney thiroutthout the jungles of Afriamid all his toils, danger*, sick new, Jul disamxiiitUnentg, he wtut sustained the tliought of his love, and by the the reward tan the ap^juise of tho world or tlie riches of Solcond«. Me gave the name of the 5ntm^1ffdy"tothc WKWt"ts*mit1fnl lftke ixthat/lie hMCQvere|, aa. he jawo It sft«r-
ftnfMcnt ho[»o of receiving jili ich was dearer to him ill
tytirt'ti) thie hfchdwJtne lioAfTn M'hich Ixtx luide a part of ilia exnlora^on—rthe oMty 4Hc«.! ^t iffitfth,' w»e mffici of
Cbhgo wai rouiia the great deed "was accomplished »iad Stwiley returnied ."With a pwnd and "happy heart to t^te ^fcoaatl ?At Z»n«lhw a pack of letters was awaiting him, and he hastened to them hoping to find some messages
Jovo and aflbction from the mistress ^Cldssoul. A fatal blow struck him. ^)no of the let tore eontuined the intellijgWKHi thftt Mis* Alice had beejj ^married stn eml months. j• Froiu that nionu'nt ST,i'Tfl«'y was e)uUK*^d man. Hi* IMVt vr^ ivholly lost. His nattirul good huplo« 5»nd buoyane)' of spirit gave pkice to fiong tits of melancholv, alternated with lent ombwrsttr of -petnlenee**iuid
PKer. ,r hk, liowitv«r, f»a Mr 1ft *teo (nd love (Ufidr. He hftd ejtpepicneed a jruvlotiBdl#rttt|olntn^ntjbut it^yad not wMtiulfd hhif. P(«|iC'Ing tobe Fon t^w islAiid, (Jf tir^te, li« sit from his 'I Window Qr)#k »!»aids?ii it* |H iof the tmpoidfe a»d ,a| onee ffeJt that hls fate #os Nntk1. Sne?Wal)Out fifteen ye«i* old. audi Mr. Stanley has siiKKj deolnml tliut never* before nor since has he beheld so swt?et and beautlfnl a creature*^-He «t once aought out the Artierit^n Gortsrtl ami revealetl to iui the state of his heart. The Consul, ho had himself married a Gn*ek lad*, j£mde him not despair took him forth* ith to the house of his inamorata and presented -him to her mother, who was a widow. Stan lev could speak no Greek the mother no £ngli*h: the Consul was the interpreter. He did his work so I well that at the end of half an hour the maiden was aent for. Stanley was for* ydden even to touch her hand but he invented with her with his eyes, and thev soon understood each other well.
At the end of the week he was *n ae*
young
once a day, always in the presence ol Iter mother. On the day before the Iveddittj: he had Iwn nermittcd for tl»e lr4 Uuic to take her iinnd and to imprfnt u|Ki» it a chaste salute.
The luorubtg Of the wedding alff^ed tan ley was dressed for the ceremony
VM I
deed of wttie-
ent, binding Stanley to »o much a yew to the mother, mnch to each wother, tuwl somoch to his wife, ami to Jr' plank down the first installment# on the spot. In vail* Stanley #irpi«Unedi%nt he wa» worth nothing, couW not |j*y brothers kok«d dagjrer*, the interfrownwl. suad the sreiw doatd by fthe arrival of tlie Oonsal, who with dildculty got Stanhsv out of the dutches of his tormenttm? and sliipixHl him Off
Athetai. lie did not ae»jkus beantiftd ^Sfeeian makiett a^aift.
Tt«e followt
»-il
kttffr was recentY
hv* 6ovI h» wnrle
to
nt
»****9?
in *dw
9*
laod dojr. want pttppjt hope
•I are weU like am. I go ro adhool
4
rem
WBW
and have reoeea. ttt lMdaff tot a dog. send K\m an aoeo as yoo *11,, f^d mx k»v* to yon fur dtriw*kH0»fli «p ^Itoydog.
the most beioyful woman the North- p™
tahty. The gubernatorial
the center of the culture and fashions of the northwest, and Miss Mason was at the head of the society of the. Wolverine metropolis. fi ^i|6n:as di$chargirigr the duties of first lady of the state, Major I^ewis Case was at West Point, ihiring bis vacation he vibited his home !?diro«fn much into the society of'the brilliant Emily. He was younger than .fcbe, and if he was smitten by ner beauty and accomplishments, he never sumiuond the courage to propose.
The sudden death of Governor Mason and tbe'bneaking np of the Mason homestead, and the reverse that followejtl, obliged ^liss "Mason to look about for means of sapport She was a girl of proud, indeiendent spirit, and with the remains of property she purchased in Fairfi
er
a market farm In Fairfax county, Va.. and began business like a practical woman. She developed energy and commercial foresight, and soon enjoyed abundant prosperity. She supported herself and iier orph.tncd nieces in elegant style, worked hard, and acquired a competence.
At the outbreak of the civil war her :oinfl was one of the most delightful in ail Virginia, and she was enabled dbviDte adonsiderable portion 3f time It literature. Tlie war, however, scattered her fortune to the winds,and left her all but destitute. She was now a fully matured woman, over 40 years of age, strong^ resolute, and energetic. Driven from her home, she went to Richmond and became a nurse in the hospital. The federal prisoners who came under her ministrations were objects of her especial care.
On the close of the war she devoted herself to the education of Southern orphans, and published several works of an educational character. She dwelt in Washington for a while, and her home on Pennsylvania avenue waS the resort of some of the most brilliant men and women in the capital. She occupied a position in one of the government offices lor a time, and everywhere commanded respect'and admiration. She finally took up her residence in Paris.
Many years before this Major Cass had established himself in the French capital, and had become a Frenchman in his tastes and method of life. The two met, and the concealed passion of early years, rekindled in the breast of the old gentleman, led him to offefr Miss Mason his hand and fortune, but she said tlint she had resolved never to marry', and the Major asked her to do him the honor of granting him her friendship. Then until his death, which occurred rather suddenly, Miss Mason was lila companion in the friendship in which the 'French the decline'of life know so well how to associate, and she closed his e^es and look charge «f liis remains. Under the terms of his will
JVIV WlUil V«\'Vj lac^ of Qtfc#*,*tho nelf^xpatiiAtea descendant of Michigan's greatest son. The will of Major Cuss bequeaths to Miss Mason $6,000, three diamond rings, which the testator dearly prized, and makes her the joint executrix or the instrument.
The HabH of Teasing.
Some people carry this habit of teasing to ah excess which renders their society txlions, and their very affection' more a pain than a please re. So soon as they make a new acquaintance they prowl all round him,.sniffing out the vulnerable points" where tftfey may lodge their attacks and fasten their keen, wide teeth, with more or leas cruelty of purixxse. A certain kind of man does this to all the young people thijit come in his xvjiy.
wbreaki:ig
Wfor*, and
intsr|Mreter. Th«y were introduced as the brothers of the bride, and they pro* ^uced a parchment which the interpre* or explained. It
Uwit Cos*. Wft and Hamor.
The T^troit Nat$ gives tbe flowing Popular steak bolder The gridiron, romantic hifctop' of tne fife of the most As a rale, men of letters do not use leauUful dafighter of Michigan, and the postal cards.
thfr
west. Her family were patrician and j,, h®3"8 are better than one, said aU her associations were elevated. In F16 thief, ^she crawled out of the c»b1833. when her lather was secretary of patch. the territorj' of Michigan, she enjoyed] A legal firm in Chicago who do a a political as well as asocial distinction, divorce- busimaw ai}© known as a and 'latav when Michigan was erected o£ dividers." info a state, her brother, Stevens T. 1 The P1iilade»phia mint is still turning Mason, became its? firet governor, and out the big silver doilam, ami the bersfie pre«ilf«l over the household and keener, with his mint and sugar, is still Jifjiensed a liWral and gni
1
cefol hospimansion was
just
as certain older children tease all the little fellows that cannot defend tliemsefv&vand who have to Submit to the rough play of the stronger under pain of WP»*e beCillMig them. a girl is shy and awkward, the teaser seises on every opportunity to put her in difficult and prominent positions, and enjoys nothing so much as the poor victim's uncontrollable couflision and distress. Blushes so deep that the whole face flames, the eyes tilled with lei.rs, nervosa trepidation so intense that the voice fails and the hand tremble*, and the weak hsad wiiiris. while the little self-possession ever to be counted on—little enough at the best—is lost in the angttish of the moment, are pleasures to lum of which we may hone he does ratlise Ihe cruelty involved. He thinks Lndnda a little fool to be so perJurbed abotit nothing, and he may add to this a half kind of notion that it will do her good to accustom her to tilings wbich are now so painful but he woufd scarcely contend that Una teasing was oiuy for the plulanthropic end of doing the flatterea, 'fi^lMed' mrrtc* by
her mw as shying fillies are
broken in taking them up to the shining pool of water by the wayside— by making tkem feel and smefl the long, dark line of log lying in the shadow, and thus proving to their skittish senses that these things were harmless and would not hurt them. He teases because he thinks it fine run to see her poignant distress for so small a matter: much a* l.udnda herself would prolwbly tease
her own dog Tiny by pretending tc thiow the atone while all tlie lime holdiug it in her hand by Trust and the unn of sugar On the quivering Utile bhtrk noee or «a site might team baby brother by making believe to hide from him outside the door, till brought back by a piercing y*JI, for which she would call bun aliule goose, and Idas him fill lie laughed again,
W*jr Wear *te«er«*
They may aafieve. but thev can't cure that lame back for the kidneys are Ike trouble, and you want a remedy to act din?£Uy on their wxtetion#. to purtfv and restore their healthy condition. KiawfWort hw thai ipedlie action—and at the Mune time it regulates the bowels perfeft* iy. Dodt wait to get sick, bitjpet apwl:*gt today, and rare ymirsaff «th liquid or dry for nale at the drojpffeu Bmfk&mt#*
ilqwMfaM.
w:
I
rnki&g them in Judge Hilton found it trouble enough to keep the Hebrews out of the Grand Union but he finds She-brews more trouble at the Woman's Hotel.
A man was bragging about how much be could stand, but when a red-nosed aoan standlngby'asked iflie could stand treat, be weakeae^J and was silent.
An agricultural sot:iety offered a pre iniuin for tlie best mode of irrigation, which was" printed "*irr!ftition" by mistake. A farmer aent his wife to claim the prize.
*v/
*f
A schoolmaster thus describes a money' lender: "He serves you in the present tense, he lends in the conditional mood, keeps you in the subjective, and ruins you in*the future."
A henpecked husband said in extennatiou of his wife's raids upon his scalp, "You see, she takes her own hair off so easily she doesn't know how it hurts ,t9 have mine pulled out."
A correspondent wants to know how human skin can be tanned. He must h.we been a remarkably good bov when i*j went to "school, not to have learned that among other branches.
The latest astronomical calculations lilies the sun oOU/HX) miles nearer the .ain than the earlier Ones. At this rate the time will come when a sttneirmk man will be able to strike back.
An appreciative mind can throw a work*, of pathos into a very ordinary fateiiient. "Yes," said she, leaning over the fence, in communion with a neighbor, ".-he is dead.. She died, just as she ol turn up to clean house. It is terri•Je."
'Stylish Mothers.
1
One of the wisest ot uten if ft to pos*' terity this proverb "Bray a fool in & inoptar ^iidlie^*ill hup f'uul siili."' Personal ahdl|c|j5(|i Mty beu]m aie tuthej writer WQO IfeiidJ liiie^ aruund the world oLtlle^ik&wiiicli reads: "There •rs too many styiish mothers." If the writer means to fling a stone at women who speiid theilr materiild life in':1)ecom'iug animate advertisers of ccetly drygoods, who have no consideration for their husbands' pocket-books, who turn over their idjildren to wet-nurses, and incarcerate tliern like so many little lielpless prisoners in nursery rooms, he is right but nosudh eicceptidu is made. The melancholy truth is that there are not enifugh truly Stylish* mothers. A girl uses every art of adornment .n catching a husbjiud. She will watch for her lovef through the window-blinds, and hasten to the mirror, ttitd -add sot no trifle of au ornament to her head or person which ner feminine instinct telh ner will please her adorer. But after marriage, and When She betxmfe|l mother, what a-^Uiange usually
C^BK
over hei: sense of taste! Having seclireu the male prize^ her "foi'tuue Ts made," and the elegant ami tasteful girl of the happy days of courtship, sinks into the ways of the slattern. Why should she uothave been astylish mother? Why cease to employ those little dress-arts which made her captivating before marriage, and which is sure to retain the admiration of a husband Why, in a year or two, give her mate an opportunity to contrast the home-sloven with the taste and simple elegance of the un-r married of her sex? .^Neither velvets,
simplest
Ties, has an eye to the harmony of eol- '!•, and in everything cousults taste. If there be added the old charm of external manner which helped to fertilize love in the heart of the man who asked her in marriage, and with it the genial smile, the tender lookt the delleacv of speeeh, Kiid the shrinking modesty which adorned her maidenhood, the nusband is not at all likely to find companionship in club-rooms and in the society of other females. Count Alfred D'Orsay was considered the best-dressed man of his day, as Benjamin Dirfaeli was the worst, because the flashfest. D'Orsay was celebrated for the marked simplicity of his attire, aud his refusal! to permit a tailor to make for blm any article which would attract attention. He had great taste in harmony of colors, and great abhorrence of that gambler-like idea which we call "loud." Women wOuld do well to imitate the elegant gentleman of Gore House, and then they mi*j* be said to be stylish iu the better sense of the word. There can never be "too mauy stylish mothers" if the beauty of simplicity is made the rule. The effect of real style on offspring ts immense. They grow up iu an atmosphere pf taste, and are refined and exalted in it Mothers never know how many seeds of vulgarity are plauted in ihe hearts of children by slovenly habits. They more or Ices copy maternalpattern.
the
*\te Curse of a Ruined Woman. 'No man will ever prosper who has (he curse of a ruined woman upon him. The murderer of the body van oe tried and executed by the world's law, but the murderer of tlie son! is tried byheaven's Saw and the execution is as sure as divine justice." Aunt Betsey «aid this as she folded the white hands of a beautiful girl, and pot white flowers and green leaves about the marble cold forehead. There wae a tiny babe beside the girl mother. The boose was hushed and there was monrning such as few know. Half giad that mother and child were dead, the rest of the family most perform the last office of burial and bear the fkmilv shame. A ttauated house A rained home!—God the architect and maa the spoiler. The curse Ss there •ad the destroyer cftanot ewar —Mtdiroad ties in England last from twtsnty to thirty yearn bemfl hy the treoeo&t* primap^ ny BethelL, Some of the Katfera wd» Proposed to adept tike plan.
ihrstftess ©trectoni.
i'W'-.'ttmtt' ra fit CAIfc THOMAS.
OPTICIAN AND JEWEC&L 62d Maya street, Tfrre Haute,
^.tlctttens (tt 'f Btflf
MCLEAN & SELDOMRIDGE, Attorneys at Law,
S. C.
1
A German writer
S
DAVIS.
says a young girl is
a fishing net. The eyes are the hook, the smile the bait, the lover the gudgeon, and marriage the butter in which be ss fried.
S.
Dr. A. DrakeVV
VETElM.NAItY SUUGEON,
OFFICE:—24 north Third street, (CaricoV Sntbics.) RESIDENCE634 North Fifth.? ii Treats etvery
diaea*«i,known to horse or cattf
at moderate cost, lias met with large practic and uniform succese^
in either L^nld o¥ Dry Form acts atj the same dwt on thediscascs of the
(Liver, Bowels ai Kitoeys,
This combined action ffitv* us/nderftil pomr to curt Cut disease*. WHY ARE WE SICK?
Beetw*e (rf/fliP great organa to be-1 com* djogqtd or wv/Hd.wid poutonom hvmprt are therefortforced into thebiood Unit should be expelled naturally.
KIOKEY-WORT
la m^oem to tM nf|nt NqtMrti of ftant numbora o^poopto who profef to puwtlMi a KktaeyWort Hw»ly jmprnd,
WELLS, ItlCHABDSO^&fO., rrvfr*, Vt
a»iihn#!n* if |irW»••»
mm
fnftSTme
1MB.
B. DATTO,
jfs"Attorneys at
Rum'S
If-
,420 Mam Street. Terre Haute, IptL.
Notary.
DAYXS & DAVIS.
South Sixth Street, over PostrWce, Terre Haute, Ind.
B.UFF & MORGAN, ATTORNEYS AT-LAW, OtBce—521 Ohio '*•*., Fred Ross' building.
Pijiiairifln! --,v
s-:
CATARRH SPECIFIC,
.whom
L9K..TF
W. S. CLIFT.
'. -1
1
a
,-a.tj
m:t\
bmOUSN£SS» PJl£S, COKSTTPATIOX, KIDXEY OOMPJJIIXXS UKUijaiV
DISEASES, REAIAUE WO^IC^SS,
AKD NERVOUS SISOCOEU3, by causing free aiti(tn dfjUae vriu^J,dktt restoring tfairpOMic'fi (otihtt-
Why Suffer Bilious paint nn«t aciio^f: Why tormented with Pile*, Couxtipr.iioit? Why frightened OTer IIsonierp(t Kiiurj*!
Witycndare nerjTOua or sick Why kare tlecplotn Vet
ctpd njoic ^health
VccetaMoFor*!, ttt tin Of wSicI* moi' i't*
BTtttsmlt Q^visone ^SfmeL—__ M^orTfio^onrcSenccTof thowo that' cannot
S ifrf/T
quMt«
disc ifopVitm Ducoorsr. WELI.S, H1CII4RDSOK CO f&«»T<aa.y OTm-lXOTOX
a A [UP HanusomoHt III Westei'ii luulaim.
if Finest and if
A* pro-
prl«tois of thla o^tobratod roa^edy now jw pai«ltlnllqu)dtona wall a* diy. It la Tny oonocstrftted, lit ic.t up In larto bottles, *tiA (xjtmlly efflolen aa th»* pnt up Aty In tfaeana. Ittavoothe aociiMty crfpwpartntf, biltnjrini^ UdJibon e*Mly t*kan by moat people. Pstoo.fl perbom«.jr,. IiIQUTD AJTD DHY SOLD BY DUTTQOlflTa
*rr^
||w ir.iiji-ji a'vaiair ww m.mm O-K Tltw C««Tlwiww Oom r«v«N uui Cluonle Cfctlla
*®V®r. -Is KTrwcTBry porpoce where a Toteic
DYSPEPSIA.
r'ti\ mrta
portunity to ascertain
claim,
and for
dresses of
will doubtless
by a stamp
to pay
[fhsn all
A
WIM:| iikMLt MQfORS
of all kinds at, the bar.
Tiu1 f»i«w*k of cigars on hand*is cullcd fi Mtu UM." clioicost hratitte in the market.
R. L. FBISBIE,
ii V"2 No 620, Main street.
Permanent Cure1of Catarrh
i-Tp^RTBBN YEAH8 -A.G4-0
CATARRH was considered an incurable disease. I had then suffered' for eighteen y:ears,i I was first attacked by a slight cold, followed with deafness and rmging in the ears, soreness of the throat, disgusting nasal dischargesy weak, inflamed eyes, hawking, rising of vile matter, black and $Qmetin&£$ W9E4ymucus, coughing^ i^with great soreness of the lungs. The liver ana stomach were polluted with J:he diseased matter running from the head. Compelled to resign my pastorate, I compounded my
sixty-seven, I can speak for hours with no difficulty, and never nave had in the whole thirteeen years the slightest return of the disease. REV. T. P. CHILDS,
classes—physicians,
business
I R, g.. Martin. S'art Cart***, P*. A. M. ITI OBaibrMfe K»»t C*»VrVaw, *t«K*? YT. |W{ttanJ«ttctkiuMBiic*tb«C^,^ira A. OetitTT, iWlpjK* Ottae* Co. Kan. W P. Uarj.Wi, C»ii!*hrtebjft*aAr«JCIiteac«k.in.: It.*.Oraarwr, Qileaifo.III. firnJL P.Hooker, DfBawe.O. A. ltebol^M. IVtMla. J«r
ColteresC CleveUttd.O.: Jafc^A. Oallaker. JftSinr. itatla t^., Mfc Itetofrt Kw^a, _Er»e. Pa. Kfv, *tlm8CW»rart. *J. 1 AH, B^"a*«r«la 16r«»u Oa. oeibr.^IbrwR Twm.: T, B.Raad,lit 84-WthBOfejJtd.jV««l«y
AfRrtttfty.O-i Rev. P. K. Rstwll, Ttotwd,It.J.:
IF. MWW..
Child's Catarrh Specific
mv..
L.C.<p></p>J.-^Clfc^Rwpj^l.HrrewHonie.
rrTtr-
lease of Catarrh, no matter how desperate*fi
a* perwmaH*. A full «Utc«e«t of netiud
wSo iia«« b*ea oare4 vriU be aeot oa application. AtWreea Bk.
mtfm/c.
i*
rim I iin if*
ItarticlndtjTffi DIL RUtTBt HEDtCiK^ C(L, Ifc.~3t3 SortilliiB Strut, St. Loois.
J. H. WILLIAMS' J. M. CLI
CUFT, WILLIAMS &C0.,
MANUFACTURERS OFR
SASHES^ DOORS, 'BUNDS, 'ETC.!
AND DEALERS IN
I'Mlier, Lath, Shingles, Glass. Paints, Oils and Builders Hardware.
CORNER OF NINTH AND MULBERRY STREETS. TERRE HAUTE, IND.
J".. C3-- IB 3T A atlat :o
a&ANTlC
A IN E S I 0 A N O N
A N
SAMPLE ROOM,
Ifanofactmcr of
Portii^lc and Stationary Engines, Flour, Ja\ ilill iind
MIXING MACHINERY, HANGERS, PULT,EYJ\"$11 AFT!
602 N. Sixth Street, Terre Haute, Indiana. -e?-
i-
mwummm•
Ptnutar
mm
C,
UPRIGHT AND HORIZONTAL hTEAty E^UIKES
HOP BITTEES?
(A Madiciae, not a
nOPSt BCCHU, MANDRAKE, DANDELION, AUD
*n*
AJTO
and cured myself. Now at the age of|
TO CATARRH SUFFERERS: BO-QUO
Catarrhal cases have applied tu me 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
whether we are
those
who
able
have
respond to any Inquiry bjr letter, if accompanied
postage. We have thousands
jvwrri k,... ., bw*. —. H. I! W»fe. SOTtll
Oi«*e,0a.: CH,lrel*,#*ipff,ft«li«Ck.V.I.t
1
&4t
Troy, Ohio. The treatment is local as well as constitutional, and can not [be obtained at the drug-stores.
W. f4.il. to mat thm wbo tote tried oiher iM«dk» wtlhoat MWeM, We wou5di»c glaH to hav« any 1 at,
of
Rev.
boost treatsnenl
*u&
c.'^l
P*»'T Mrtjjr-A QCJOJ-
Tl«or*XL
OTKKB
bnfrB«.
THEY CUHE All DlMMosof theStomAch. Bowel?. Blood, Liver, Kidnera, end Urln»ryprg»o». Kcr,Tou»nee». 51pepte**nM»nii(i fcppocielly
Femrnle Compiaintil.
8IOOO IN COLD. Will b« p«|d for a CMC they will not help, or
tor
anything impure Or lojuiiof* found in Uu«1,
AiJtyonr drnggM for Hop Ttltt«?r» *nd try them before you tlccp. Titkc no other. f. C. an ebeolute enl trr(**lrtfnireur«) for
DranltenneM, UH of tdbaoco and nurcotic*. MHHBB 8nrs roa Ciitnciita. Hop Mtton M%.
All aWrt IOU hy ArigtfiU, I%« Co., N. T.j^
Out.
to accomplish all that we
this purpose we add a few of the many hundreds of ad
been
successfully treated, almost any of
of these certificates
clergymen, judfj^s, merchants, bankers and
4
tw^iAT
Cult Mjit i.r Rrtirtf, ttl ,. ..Bikrr ffwiut*, 1S|
U»1",
rttte K-bjtiaan, IM. TIMIH* Md.J 'lteirtje^rtr. 5. Mi- K. F.. Hh^alwr, K, J.I
"Trtwfr iwim
n»llrjr HwiimMi 111 If ff«rtirt'flnnrirt firtrrrfttv JWrrir ffwrf- f^rfrn, tad. iir, W. s. fJpMl, Grata Valley-. Xw#i» Co.. Cal,: ieu'l Ifatrebe, Parkernbttjjjit, Lo» Aafeiea, ^L Ttea. J. Baser, CbaapctjgB Oe^ IB. 1.
Partes, WJ»,-,C. A. Htirtbart. J«-tl«. J®. I f* .«• Cal.:
C. ttanaelt. Si. rr«Ki**ilU, Mo, ,"
will effectually and permanently cure any
•d
0-{ i'l.hi*»«* TV«M,I
Ml**F.*Af'".«?w8j«*"*».-1Kxft*'lIeraRiley.#.J.Co..
can only be obtained at
eo«, whh acorn
4r. t». omT.TW,
of UtUimvniil*
f«jo a
Troy,
Oblo.
