Daily News, Volume 2, Number 145, Franklin, Johnson County, 7 February 1881 — Page 3

FEBRUARY 1 1881.

%|&DO\V

JA»a.

*jfytdknr.it* t"^. .i#i »».«:•»''•••« top, *, "4«pp«*«»«jr

Vttij axfcip and a hop. affd br, "Mr fi!:oibJ! ti«r««W» to **»!.

"4«P

if

iluU ww*.*'

Ve su *J«*.-1C.

"kuaomet.otf* !1 atOppSng*. ptUktrtB. MMtita* to 60. perpetual bopptoc. p»«w«t1

on

years Ago A well-born left bis own country

j. -_toeer faishion on the western .5 |lhe United State*, in a small f'called Fort Dearborn. Hq fi the Indians, lived man tall] |iw, and saw spring up abou lily of veHow-cOinpiejrionec le eloiat, a bright, band w«a separated in inmncy Croi mother, and sent io France

WfiH received by his father' 'educated to all £he manne bf a wealthy Parisian. r*|5ad till he grew to manhood, highly, educated .and wonted ttty refinements of life as haq n|/prince of the reigqiiig, house*

Mnty-one he returned to Fori then no knger known by it4 Hine, ftbere*' he became tii4 .s

ftiid tKe most perfect gentle* rapidly Inmaaitig sommu» clotfifiM were always ordere4 hls horxes arid carriage! rant tni

ft

yn

7

most costly and elegant ever seen his mounters an beauty were the adoration .* tuitl ^He envy of the beau rati the wide country for whi had just become the metro, wimcourtea by all who wishe 'aboutlhem tba.anyatkucixcl^ society, for the Indian trading «jnd gained a vast fortune, ana *ge mother dying bad caused to memory?

Id

although |t$ft wearin

ig pteel» and drinkging mre lorVtoeea* other people drank water, #'to aettl# into qmt* a domestic por ypi»^bufiband. A daughter

to nlm, upon whom be Uviahep jted love, and for Urbom mi the moeft ambitious dveama. If": ias Ins fpnng-tlme the joo| tad fttfeer befflUM vtnw&ely rec 'Jtodabstracted. He tboklor wee}:!

J3§8 a^pa|bta

ds ikmify."' Xt" was known tnfct 1 ,theM, daw and nights son s* town, Sthougfa a wa ti& long afterward, tfc it them in aimless moody real the dpen Frairie, •f four or five years this lnetplicat le %vm cowKBid blnu Hilu?«oufi» noood*. and became enraged I im (toX&rnlng it. Then one 1 d*y wheiK^e pnUHf stretch id iiifb a

mAt if 9olden

mystery aid

fcrand Uilfchw were almoet one,- he •W

tJrtlre^ leHving 'liia youbg "f

\«ihe strangeneM of his takin PmnTttW nl#«3rrT7fW.~TIRlB lie »(Viutl, mtn? ngnin to his family, ai»d as if lie had n6| left ithptMh fori a live no oxptanatioh^of bf« conduct,

anotlier y^a», antll after qwf a yott^g with the spring am§

%sa,

lived as so as any

lHtn|Boup|i\ctii

EMnvnce, with a rettirri two \-e^w f. This time he remained with bis ily only a ftw weeks, and the SlYnnjat lewtneMi and uxxxliuww never left ^while he remained. ,er his ovxt difRppeacpnce he nev(w ned/artd nothing #ar heard of htm years. Then, after mnny yeah^ ng which his wife had obtained a and married a prominent busiman of the city, he wit* twwurd from far beyond the w««t«rn living with his mother's tribe, a ie ssrvage life, and in blankiett^ |er« and war paint* declaring bimmppier than he had ever been in ^sian broadcloth end clove* of the mt (exquisite fit The daughter took stepfather's name, and, grown to ^Aproanbuod, married, and then divorced mist&tu!, whoee name te fo common %tliat western city, that it might be ke Sniith, Jonoa, or Brown without £Hing its dignity in the least. }ffcmie yeara ago, certain tribes of westnIndiana sent a deputation to urge ielr wrongs neon tlie Grtsat Father at feebinglon. Tbetr Wsader and apefltee

f*was

choeen te cause of his superior commanding intelligence, and beof his perfect ^command of the ingtvage in which the Great Father tathea bin ideal. This, Indian leader, had b«»en educated in France, through the western town, now \wn to be a famous aivd popoloo# city, during hi» stay herein, sought out daughter. She refilled to tee him, is said ftur beuer mason than .^nger for his desertion of her mother. *hom, by the wsjr, he had left with all is fortune. For every spring when the eaJrth ptereed Utrongh and with ehsrp ro«mg blades bf esheal gnMi, and the golden mists 4 recn low like drmtne upon U» wide mines«he, too, is poaseeeed of a strange en rest, a yearning, and a pain, that she

Kxmld die rsUtv»r than crmfv**. Hien nature lather as site

Kxmld die r«ttv»r than crmrcss.

ib«* wonld t}ev« p^teta(9£%*i

—A eom«f&»aenf asks, is the metliod of ft*eding cdttpp in the Twinler?* Wt4o#H«Bicfiy tto*. One jnun might prtfiw to take thf, ox in hit (lap and fWHi htm with Spooiu Others twoaid bring him into*the ^arnd lei Itim sit at tl»e table with tbe oW ifeika. Tastes dider in maU»rs of (his id»

-kij:

f*

Color* Q*d ihfir Origin.

-late In the thirteenth "century oil

Wion a^ Vienna cotstakw the earliest aothefttic/' paintltig, executed in 1297. Ultramarine, produced by grinding into fine powder the beautiful mineral, lapis laanitf found

hi

Ke

l»k w*jr, ••. 4,.

HftjrJr haocbed op bl» knaca: tim annablnjr Amy," irHJ rcflccUoua Ilka Umm» 'trade for which I m*M jji'l b* wiso twmble-tow.

mmdDtlobasad,

ggntalobatiad isorkln* aod stoppta* %*o max* mooejr, 3 to mafcafeouer. to 4o tootliiag but

tye ftuffan Paufoa.

tf»e moontaioous por­

tions of northern Persia, came into use in-the eleventh century, and four or five hundred years latefwas introduced into Europe. In 1S28 nltratfmrine wa» produce*! artificially by synthetical process in France, aim as ute as 1847 sold for forty dollars per pound, bat now, such has been the advancement in these arts, it is bought for thirty cents per

mnd, and used very extensively. Boluglaa^ slsicate of isoda, came into use as a vehicle for paints in l$t2 Anaboe colors, lakes qf a lieautifuJ red, violet, and 4he bjlter color* itlttk. riinbow were introduced in 1860^ but they are not permanent colors on exposure. In 1875 the manufacture of Gerniaii onaline oils wtd* dminen|-ed, a chemical aim-, jJOunUj, which promises to achieve SUCCESS'.'

r-'

Tltough little is known of the actual iHfgtMning of tliese iAdcustiies, it istin-1 terming to uote their lines of progress, from the ^nBFTrom wHSfTlhey^^ra-j diateti. In the south of Asia, more par-j rttidtflr ib ladis, tlie gefms /ol |the chemical atts hsd their drigii. By amny chantfvls to the east, they found their® way into China, and westward by several| channels to the southern ports of the Black Sea,-and tbrotuh the line of the Red Sea to Egypt. From Egypt, as an, independent center, they were carried! along the Mediterranean coast, the Greeks and Venetians receiving their information from this source, and-in thej twelfth.! ihlrte«n^ and:foartt5eiith cen-j turies tlie Arab knowledge in these arta spread from Spain to Franc^, and fromj Ffance to Bohemia, Germkny rfntf Eng-f land, thence through' She world, the linfiH becoming too intricate to follow.

A Partridge and Jiar Chick..,, 11

When spending a few holidays in th«j Highlands last summer I was fitness of] a somewhat peculiar incident Accom^ panying the worthy farmer, with whomj I was steyfeg, to the bayfleld one morn lug, the reapers discovered a partrid ^ttwg on helr egg| right, in the ,way their scythes. As they could not proj i-ced without her being removed, thq firnner gently lifted lifcrand placed th eggs one by one in his hut, to can Uten^to a plaqe of safely the .poor bi meanwhile being in great distress, watching every movepient with fluttert aflfftoftfrt arid palpitating heart, thhik-

{«g,

no doubt, we intended robbing herj .No sooner had site B^jjn the lasl egi •wfely removed, than, with a cry of del light, she flew on to his shoulder, and leaping down on the hflt containing her eggs, carefully spread her feathers, and moiained .fitting, upon them till they were placed out of all danger under on4 of th^ hayricks. On going to see howf rihe fared in her' fiew an^de'in the fevenftug, we were greatly her surrounded by a

lJWhenetor

a

BfRKMlt# l#ihft fto#n.

1 spring caini the name dls

ihey got- the nap

of. their wings they disappeared, and h»v# fmbabfee»*hi» time gone th|B way oTaU fleiii. w: .i iLttfi '•/.

9§rm** Wmt. 11

edu welM take*

a,

is always

The Extinction of Specie*.

The extinction of many animals that ve known to have formerly existed on file eartlv is a wi^ect wiiich can not very easily be explained, Fays the

Science Mmtklg,

v(F timm

it

like the mechan «, daugl(torsgo 4

pers. To effect this object, the

when uoout fourteen years 6f age, gojes through the ociremony of conflrmatioai, Is placed byw Jwtfeftte with a ooantry gentleman, or in a large family, where sh^ remainspne or two yeaia,filling what may be termed the jKJstof? servant, pr doing the work of one. This Is li'rokfcu ft port as lin apprenticeship In domestic economy. She^ differs from^ a pervjint, however, in tbia-HLhat ghe receives no wages on the contrary, her pa rents,often ^ay for the care feiken of her, as well as Wr Nothing. This is the first step in her education as housekeeper. PbeniQxkpasses, on the same conditions, into the kitchen of a rifh private family, or into that of a hot«l tf good repute." Hcte alio has contftjjt&of Uie expenditure of the servant^ pfoved in it, and assists peraoiwHyW^the coolting, but

addressed as

Mipx,

and. i# treated by the familv with deference and conshYoVntlon. ManV dattjjiiters of rich familit^s receive similar tramng, With thls'di fferonoe, however—tlint Uie? receive it in a principal mansion or royal palace. There is a reigi\ing Qtuyn in Gennany at the present tiwtctlio was educated in this way. Consequently the wom*n tn Germany are perfect models of economy.

Tbx Complkxioh.—It will, «io doubt, oe of great interest to many ladies to know that "magnesia," fan article used by many as a toilet powder in the firm belief that it is harmless,) hi pronoiuiced bv chemists to be very injurious to the skin. Used for any length of time it drit« the cuticle, and cause* the face to become "rough" and "scaly." For the benefit of those who may have been induced to use magnesia we append the following simple but efficacious remedy: Otte oonee glycerine, one-half ounce cologne spirits, wx and one-half ounces o^anM flower water. Apply to the filce morning and night, As a toilet powder almost a m*ce«Nty, and as many of the preparations in the market domain magnesia, as well as other imnrious ingredients, ladies would do weU to apply the following simple and convindng te«t before. tKing. To a tejisuocknful of the suspected powder add the kdee of a lemon, mix slishtly, and if efierveecence «mkws (m iiowder is daafrerous«, and its wc should avoided, aa it will ultimately injure the skin, and destroy the b«auty of the complexion.

WiyWtsr master*?

r"~ ,0|

They may relieve, but they eai^t cure that Uu»e banc Tor the kidneys are the trouble, and you want a remedy to act directly oa their secretions, to purify aad restore their healthy condition. KklneyWort has thai specific action—aad at ube •am* time it regulates the b»weis perfectly. Doat wail loget sick. bitntajMCk' •n to day. aod at» youmlf Either Huaid or dry for sale at the drogid^k.^

A a

Popular

while the nnmber of

them ik greater than at first sight would be suppcM^tl. Various species no doubt undergo gradual extinction by changes whrclt ?tepri

of their accustomed

IfCIO OV7VIU IV U4V VM% «JUUS imes.

food but others seem to die out from unknown cai period, a coi»i mals haye been swept* off the British islands, amotty which are the bear, the wolf, the Irish elk, etc. In America, during the comparatively short period of Its history, various species have vanished, and others are following them. The beaver, formerly so generally spread over the whole of this country*, is now only to be found in remotest regions. The deer and moose are disappearing in the same manner. The bison is very much diminished in numbers, and mnst ere long become extinguished. The mastodon, a creature of enormous balk, has totally disappeared, although along with the skeletons of them which have been discovered, there are evidences of their having lived on food derived from plants which arestill existing. In other parts of the world, the dodo and the, mok have perished within the last few centuries and the apteryx is undergoing the same fato,

During the historic

i^iderable number of ani-

Wedding Stopped at the Altar.

There was a strange scene at Cincinnati recently. A respectable and intelligent youuglady was engaged to be mar-j ried, and made the discovery that nerj affianced was in tlie bnbit of drinking, and told liim what she "had learned, lie promised never to drink again, and she forgave him.

The wedding day was subsequently set. and all went well until the mortrung appointed for the performance of thej ceremony. During the interval he uiadej lija usual visits, and though he drank at times, his betrothed never learned of, his faithlessnesses until it was nearly} too Iftte to punish him for it.

They were standing side by side, and, a momenruiOfft Hoiud \iave found themj man and wife)*'lie it he 'turned toward her and fci|*t*M jlalffbrtialh spoke of whisky. Wheh mefrMnta^pronouiicedl the usual question to her the response! came'faintly, "No." In surprise the qtiestion whs again asked, and this time the response was clear and decisive "No."

Site then turned,.to ber lover, accused hhft df drinki^fe reminded him of promise to her, and said that a liian who wouhl break a promise so solemnly made c«)iild not l»e relied upon, and she feared to trust her future to such a man. ExjpoBtolattonsl&'rid entatiaties were ali in vain^and that little "Yes" still remaina unsaid.

A

surprised to sef nuineroup and in­

teresting family. This abot}t the farm all the remained hy "trer, and tluit she would feed But »la*l pttm made qad havoc" among her chicks, only seven oat of the twentif thr^.w^ich.were hatched .coming to matanty

BhREWD &.S3MWMAK.—A

populflgl

minister had just finished an exhortation strongly recommending the support of a meritorious institution. The congregation warntimencras, and the chapdl was crowded to excess. The discourse being finished, the'plRtrttas about being handed round to the respective pew£, i\'ben' the preacher made this shoft address to the waiting congregation :-r"From the sympathy I have witnessed in yottr countenances, ahd the strtct attention you haVe honored me ^ith, there in one thing that lam afraid ol', that aortie of you may be inclined to gi^e

Now. it is my duty to inforfa

too much. you that" justice th should always be srtMity therefore, as you will immediately waited unon in ipectiv# pew% wish tohave it.tfiorqww Understood tbat no person shall thirik

will al ouFH*

IwttihgaBlythingHnto the plate wife vafiSTw his debts." We need npt add that thlv produt^d a most oyer-floir-

Vmntatiok ot Bbiwida.—•Blva died

Q*TA*t01 species

it ibe principsl tree, poeed to have been n*ou

tin-

_uuuits have been

lauts have been found d7 The seeds are sui:ht

on the island. The Bermuda red ced^r

oriunally brougi the cedar wax-wing,

America

bi^d ^whi^b .makes the trip in tweir four hours. The Island is twentymiles loug, and kix hundred miles Cape Hatterss. There is no brook or stream oa the island, and no part is over two hundred and fifty feet above the level of the sea. The temperature is about 72 dag. from May to November. Tb« cool season is in February ana March, when the temperature is about 50 deg., when the flowers are mostly found. There are no clouds, no rain, from July to September, and all is p'/Tcbed and bare. Part of the Wand ias subsided far below the level of the sea. The trunks of old cedars are found in the inn rub lands. It during/the coo& season that the fine potatoes are raised that find their way to northern markets in April.

—A corresjondent gives the following description of San Rosso re, a stock form near Fisa, which belongs to the King of Italv. He says that the stables contain some 800 maree and stallions, mostly thoroughbred, or pure Arab. Among irther norfees. there is the Arab stallion which King Victor Emmanuel rode at the battle of Palestro, and a black which was the favorite charger of the present King: There, are 200 camels kept on the farm as substitute* for draught horses, and the correspondent says that they do the work very well, and are not at all affected by the climate, though it is colder than that to which they are accustomed. There is a royal residence upon tlie property which extends to the sea shore, and it was hew that the late King often came to *hoot and hunt, tasting off all State ttiqnctte, and leading the life of a hardy tarmer.

—Round tlie coast of the island of Ceylon in the Indian Ocean, may h* found musical fish. Their song—if it am be called a song—« not one sustained, nor like a binTa, but a multitude of tiny, soft, sweet sound* each clear and distinct

in

itaelA something like the

vibrations of a wineglass when its rtrn is robbed by a moistened finger. In the harbor of Bombay them Ss another apectes of fish, producing a sound tike an JBotfcn harp.

—Strawberries contain 5J96 per ewlt of tlheir weight ct gtaoote, or giape cherries 10, white currants 6.40, grapes

sugur, chernes oim bot-house

J&S7

I

OPTICIAN AND JEWKJLEg, Main street, Terre Haute.

^ttorhegB at Caw,

McLEAN A SBLDOMRIDGE. Attorneys at Law, 420 Main Street, Terre Haute. Ind.

SL C.

Dati*.

**$•

f.

S. B. Dim. Notary.

DAVJ^J & DAVIS, jr.,, Attorney!? at Law, ^3

23^ South Sixth Sm^t, dver Postcfflce, Terre Haute, Ind.

B.UFF & MORGAN, ATTORNEYS AT-LAW. Office—531 Ohio St., Fred lioss' building.

PS^sictans.

Dr. A. Drake,

VETERINARY jSURGEON,

OFFrcE:—24 north Third street, (Carico'is Stables.) RESTOENCEf—624 Jforth Fifth/ Treats every disease known to horse or cattl iU modecasc co«t. U&£ wet with Urge practis and uniform success.

Vfvrf- Th{r/3rcrrt R^gdy jiucitherliiquidoriyry Farm adf« n.t| the diutie lime on tbodliw&ses of the

1 Liver, Bflisls and Eianeys.)

WHY ARE WE 8ICKTI

comt degoidol lorgtui, cbidpoitcmcrj hut%re!

i,

BOJOrKSTESS, PILES, CQN8TIPATIOX, KtDJTET

COMPlATSTg,

juaKAjfus,

CBXJftAKY

rexAVE w*Arjrpsa,'

ASBt JTEKTOCS D?80IU»EK9, by canting frU ekfion qf Vi&t and I rttforihff tftHr ymHrl0:Uircw (ffiatttmx

Why 8tffer aut iiriintl Why tonaeatod with. Files, ptj/uUimUont I hy rrf^ktene4 OT^t dUonl«rcii Ktanrjx.' .Why eodaro neryons slfk' hfad.tcKtsI

VThy'lJirrt •lwjfih'si nl|ttit*r

tfu

HIDNBY-WOnT

dkirrjoM

I orr rro?T'tm 1m WKLLS, KIC1UKD80N rt«u send rwtto 14Wiawnw

ICATARRIJ

I Etai

rr.

•i£.S2SS!3.f Kld«®rWO»t 1^(4^9 WIM* I pftpoUlaU^utdiavm wM ,« vacy toiueiiblM,'!* |fcl

M*H«QiMll]r «•«•*WMW f***

Wrtjfjrwwm.

xiQtnx) xm

., iy

ir&r 9QW

sr jpwonfX»i

A Vt.

W^S

for eighteea^g^

lAayslas,

pineapples,

on the othet hand, contain 11J3 per cent of cane sugar, apricot* A oranges 4. The «ug»r osoe, when perfectly riw.(wUiiu ISper cent of vo^ur. The joke of

p*

about 14 Jfc'f

bee*

«mtaici

r,fTT^ni

ICATARRH SPECIFIC^

S5.TO

Child's Catarrh Specific^11

w* 4Mb* treat flaw who ha«* triad 4#Mr rearitei wttbeat A £11 Mcnntor snrtlioJ

ffrmrm

D*-"***••'i!&"^?!5sjwurassr.0'

HtteUud

w*«v It MtTH «nrr pmpow

*hm

DYSPEPSIA.

W. S. CLIFT. 5#

*3W' W K':l

Ut [,^1 *-!r: I7

mm Mr

^SAMPLE BOOM

•A

-H'-ii

I*

fc..'-

nth: if

L-nit«

Toinc li

||WINES rAND LIQUORS

I I ef aU kinds at the her. I .*!«,te Mis siti .•

Hwfidml t| THE 08. BARTB MDKIK CO., U. 20 hrtt IMi Stmt, St Mt

J. :B A

i.,ir "i

iofeii 'an

nii'jn

A I N E S I O

iK\

J.'

$ 'ft

iA*#a'r.jj

\,J!

••^vsenr»i ,n!j

HMMRP PARLOR

i«« w4 hiuf~" "'and t- iK-itf hfrj,1

The utook of cigars on hand ta ^llfd the cliuicest breads in the market. R. L. FaifBra, k. Vrf%0 020, Main street.

AND DEALERS IN

I'Umber, Lath, SMngles, Glass, Paints, Oils and Builders' -an-e Hardware.

CORNER OF NINTH" AND MULBERRY STREETS. TEUHE HAUTE. IXT)

JE& 1ST

MACHI

lM

'i tJft 1

n«# *rfi ai t-A.

Indian!, ifiJi ..*1 1

The HtirfiMMt In Weetem •.t' -!h.r/1^'«I*

I^iTEI£]N TBAtlS A0O considered an incurable 8iseasc." I had then suffered]

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

ease 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 drug-stores.

of

tooci

BLOOD.

Protoxide of Iron.

PMbtIm

b«mm

/mm/c.

WILLIAM8^ J. M. OLI

ManufacturersOFC^~

SASHES, DOORS, BLIDSIETC

A

SXj

SHOP

ID

~SSSE58«

A N 0 N E

Mftnnfactuicr of

,t I,

t/t

IMrtablo and Stationary Engines, Flour, Saw Mill and

MINilvG MACHINERY, UANOER8, PULbB¥6.-6HAF?ING. UPRIGHT AND HORIZONTAL STEAM ENGINES :4b(uni

'1

I 1

603 N/ Sixth Street, Terre Haute, Indiana.,

HOP BITTERS.

(A Medlolae, aot a Drtek.) ooxTAnra

bops*srenu, matooiiaile, DANPKtlON, kUbtrnw rntamr

a*d B«rpM*rt»o*i.QwA.u.

nxioviu othk* lUnM*.'

wii TBtlEY CXiqGtE

Dlsewesof theStomMh, Llw. KtatWM.infl UrlinirrOrfww,fer-Blwod,BoWrts.

AU

ttv'J|

Fi&wt add Best!

1"

rnHHCoaiMMt

irr

1000

coi.d.

WIU b« they will sot cut* 01 bfip, or for imytnin* tw\mr« *lttjariolu fonadfn 'Ask jroaf 4ni|ir1»t for Hop fttttom and try thorn bofore you sleep. Take a« ether.

I- I

{)!. C.Han abaolote an 4 lrr««Ut!Uo ourof or DraakaauM, ase of opium,loMocft snd nsrcotici. •••MB tmuf.ro* CtBOTM*..

All Am uMbHnnMi.

Hay MMm M%. Co., RocknUr, N. Y.,jf T«rat«,OBl.

Of Catarrh

was first attacked by a slight cold, followed with

deafness an4r i^igiagiin ther ears, soreness of the throat, disgusting nasal discharges*, weak^ inflamed eyes, hawking, rising of vile matter, black and sometimesr bloody mucus, coughing, with great spreness of the lufigs. The live^ and stomach were polluted with the diseaii&d matter

the head. Compelled to resignia*my pastorate, I compounded myi

CATARRH SUFFERERS:

,il|| AAA Gatarrbarcases have applied to me for relief. Many thouflll IIHII sands have received My Specific and are cured. We deem mUUUh it only felr that every one that wlshet should have the opportunity to ascertain whether we are able to accomplish all that we 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 whoa will doubtless respond to any Inquiry by letter, If accompanied by a stamp to pay postage. We have thousands of these certificates fam all classes—physicians, clergymen, ju^iss, merchants, bankers and business men. vy* n^CaoArMff* SL, Kayt .{ A. flSgAcM. Pftmla- P«rtl*r. *.

1$riK .-«»

running

an.d_cured myself. Now at the age of I

M, Mttebtl,

mi

"W

Bark Md ()m Pho»

Vital*

Pawn muI CkrMJc nulla u4 BM0MBIT.

t'-

'^J'W

7r

from

I

a

Pa, B.T Wstch.

Catll'rnta, Hoooutn q»,. Mo

P».j luTT a. iW«fc,jsorti»

C^

sr. r. "»i«

ran*.

r.

J. r.KobtrU,

71

ir C5»^ «.s U. ro*tmac+*li

Uma, O. Ch*r)«* tlkomM, m. M.i Bar. C. W.

A ac7*STT

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effect^jaiy and permanently cure any

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caa. We wosM be glad 10 havaaoy who caa, call •ail if with acsrca of testimonial* from tlHHe"

Troy, Oliio.