Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 92, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 April 1885 — Page 7
THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY SENTINEL THURSDAY MORNING A V It I L 2 1885.
A LOS DOS JlYSTEHY.
F0U5DKO OJT FACT. hr Jeph Hatten, Author of Cijtle," Ete.J I. AT Til C Z. I wai strolling into the Zojlogical Gardens in a niocd Friday afternoon to listen to lctt:re en Snakes.' Corgratulate ce, eld chap!'' exclaimed :n impassive voice at the pates, end I turned io find Ilegzy Gardner at my elbow. 'Can't atay now just olT to the lawyer'!,'1 he laid es he bailed a passing hansom. "What ia it all about, Iltg-y ?" "I am going ta be x&arried. She'a the o?e!iSt woman in the world! Came aad lunch with r.ie at the club to morrow, and and then 3 horce to ruy mother's you'll see her tbere." is bis hansom drove of! I looked after my bright, cheery, lucky friend, just entering life with a newly-inherited fortune. Reg7 GarJrer wes a typical young Englishman, broal-ehccldered, atard v, fair-haired, graytjed, and teaming with health. 6nakct, aa I suppose you Vnow, decline to acoept food which they bare not killed IheraselTes. The serpent mind teems to ob tain nana lied satisfaction from the terrors of its victims. Neither the anaconda nor the common boa kills its ducks and rabbits, CoYt and guinea-pigs at once. They are like wicked lawyers who keep their clients about them, pretending tbat Ihey never mean to iwallcw them, estates and all. Now and then, long before the fatal blow is struck, the victims discover their danger, and then It is dreadful to watch their terror develop and grow into madness. The melancholy cries of a couple of fowls could be heard in ti e serpent hoee at the Zx. The crowd of lookers-on were breathless watching the fluttering o! a dove which one cf the serpents bad just seized and the death sonies of a rabbit which the rattlesnake, fokerf up by the keeper, had kindly bitten. J'itLfal tregedies were being enacted in every cage. Oathetcoreof tcience people go Fridays to teethe reptiles fed. Trofessor Huxley dees not lecture in the bnaze-house; he would probably say tone bitter things to' the morbid audiences which collect there. I was about to seek the Intellectual refuge of the lecture room, when thj face of a woman arrested my attention. It was a cold, cruel, beautiful countenance, classic in its severity, with blue eves, and lips that had no red in them. The noja came down in a straight line from the low forehead, and was chiseled at the nostrils. The mouth was rather a contradition to the other part of the face. It was sensual, yet without a touch of the generality that gometimes med. lies tne sjnsoal si much that we only cail it sensuous. Madame's eyes were not Icokir.g at me. They were fixed on the anaconda, which bed jest uncurled ifself, end was siding toward a couple of fowls that weie rematiDg before it. Suddenly, from an exoretsion of inten expectation, the cold, crael face was lighted up with anger. ULe nt-xt moment a fan was dashed azainst the glass to urg the birds into the jaws of Ibe err.ent. HaJ&me was tired of waiting for the end. A. thrill of indigaatioa ran through me. -This s ao place for ltd'ea," I said a'oui in the keeper, tbat ?ho might hear me; but ibe continued an unrm?ainedand aclive ally of tbe ferment, intent upon forcing the taeic destiny of the imprisoned birds. Then, all cf a sudden, tbere was a hu-ried luovement of the snake, a flutter of feathers, and an expiring cry. Tne anaconda had begun to fetd. Madame pave a little eigh of eatisfaction, srd, casting a frigid glance at ine, moved away. Then I found she was not alone. Her cavalier was a foreigner, who looked like a laded personage matriculating for Tnesuad. 31y thoughts, however, were not of him, hut cf her, aa I strolled home, wondering at the combination of angel and demon which is sometimes found in female beauty, I called ihis lady "Adrastia," as the repemblance to an Indian picture of the goddess flashed upon me. Ä bead full of etrange beauty, the hair a cluster of writhing seroenta. a faea of loyely forbiddingness, with the agony of jo cijcui o kwui iu it, uu yei auout me jaouth the calm, cruel, teatb like expression cf a Nemesis. The two faces were like and unlike; and the living one took the place of , xne other in my mind, eclipsing the picture, jet recalling shadowy reminiscences of it. Adrastia never looked so clad when the victims she slew deeerved the death it was xierdutyto provide as did this lady in the Xondon snake-house when the anaconda awceped down upon its living food. Clytemnestra might have worn a similar expression when she murdered Agamemnon; and yet I called the woman of the Zjo Adjastia, and I pave her, in my imagination, a fitting headdress of enakes and serpentj. II. IN MAYKAIR. Tall Jfall swarmed with cabs and car liages. It ww in the height of the London season. We bad lunched cozily at the club. J forgot Adrastia under the influence cf the JiefornVs dry champagne and Reggy's gush about Sirs. Trentham. For the lady who had won the young fellow's heart and faiicy was a widow. I reminded Reggy that a certain character in fiction bad uttered a warning concerning widows which had passed into a proverb. He simply said, with the blood jushing into his face. '"Dickens is a vulgar nob!" and then, as quickly, "I beg Dickens' Tcon. old boy, and yours;" and we drove ctT to Mayair. Ketfgy was bard hit. I did not attempt to chalf hiru about his passion, so onto! keeping with the the present tone of society, which never goes into raptures over anything. 'We met her at Homburg, and afterwards at Como," said Reggy's aristocratic yet amiable and pleasant mother; 4 se was traveling with rer uncle, Count de Tourier." "It is a rather a ahcrt engagement," I replied. but we live in a rapid aga." "I hope he will be happy," repined his mother, but I thought there was something of doubt in the way she gave expression ta Jier bores. Our conversation, recetsarüy brie', was interrupted by the arrival o! Reggj's betrotted Urs. Trentham. There was movement cf curiosity among the people. Mrs. Gardner rose from the tea-table to receiye the latent caller with especial honor. Regy Jooked at me triumphantly as he said, 'Come and be introduced." I advanced as one in a dream. I was under a spell. I pulled myself together as well as 1 ccnld. "Ihis is my oldest and best friend. Marie." laid Repey; "he hopes, though your newest, to be also your best friend." She Icoked me straight in tie face, and keld eut he hand. It seemed to me as if Iser manner was a challenge as if ahe said, "We are deadly enemies, but you must psy lomage to me!" What she really did say was, -I hope so, Reggy." 2Jrs. Trentham was Adrastia! The knot of golden hair which fell in a cluster from ner Donnet and rested upon her neck was, to mv mind, a tanglement of snakes. The clcquenc of the serpent waa on her tongue, and aha held my friend in her fascinations
as completely as the er pent holds the bird that eventually drtps from the tree into the expetnt jaws. Reg) Gardner was t3 marry the -son an with the anakehousa. IIL . DQWJf I.f BERKSHIRE, Two years bad paaed. The honeymoon had long ince been forgotten, or remembered only to be thought of as too many wared moons recalled with wonder. Yet tbey were happy as the world goes. They bad their little tin's, and Regy had nioia tLan ence been jealous, but not of the Count Tourier, her "uncle," of caurse. The idea of euch an aoturdity ba-i never entered the honest eoal of Iteggy Gardner. Sirs. Trentham Drought him no money. Her first bnstand had I quandered it in gaming and speculation. Reggy had plenty, and he felt pioui to settle a nandsome sum on bis wife, acd to allow her for pin monev tbe income of a Duchess. The will which he made in her favor was worthy of hi3 most generous impulses. 'If we do have a little misunderstanding row and then," he said to me, while we toak a noonday rest in the stubblea at his princly place cown in Rerkhire, "that's the common lot. and it gives zest to the fun of making up." He wouldn't for the world have acknowledged that ne was nnhappy; and ahe had a peculiar power over him which could charm him into any mood he desired, if her occasional bursts of ill-temper or indiscretion of manner toward other men were thunderclouds in his domestio life, her smiles were tnmmer, her acted affection were sunshine, fche knew that I saw through it all. I visited them rarely, and only after all for Relay's take. They lived in a curious way, cont tally traveling, coming in town onlr t jt a month In the season, and going to Berkshire for the 1st of September. Rpggy's mother kept her own state in town. Two mothers-in-law, she would say, couU rot be expected to get on well together, and Kelpy's wife preferred to have her ovn mother with her. and eo between the diar old lady of Mayfair and her son there hid grown up an estrangement which Mrs. Gardner, junior, promoted with insidious persistence. Count Tourier had latterly been a lara visiter at Reggy's, owing to misunderctaEdings with the bead of the house; but he often wrote to his "dear niece," and made a special jourrey now and then to aee her. "No, 1 dor t knew where the Count lives or how," Eaid Reg?y one evening at the end of our week a shooting when we were smoking after dinner. "He is. as you eay, rather a mvetery. Marie's mother is Italian, you know, on her father's side, and the Count belongs to that branch of her family. At Milan he is an authority, I believe, iu chemical ic:cDce." "You don't like him, I fear." "Like him? I hate him!" Mrs. Gardner entered the room on the word. "My dear, I thought you had gone to b?d," said Reggy. Sbe tad been listenirg to our conversation. "I have come to amoke a cigaret with you, if yen don't mind," was the answer. Her suspicions had been confirmed (for our conversation was a long one) that her Strangs it flceoce over her husdand was in danger cf weakening; that his confidence in her was on the wane; that her hideous secret, whatever it was, might be oozing out. ' By all means delighted," said Reggy, and f he tat down by his sidc.a superb-loo&iog won an, if you did not examine her face critically for indications of feminine g9ntlenes?. During my acqaintance with her neither she nor I had ever alludf d to the incident at the Zoo, though she keew it wai constantly in my mind. 8ne had great penetrating powers, and sbe was, like a woman, constantly on tbe watch. Reggy only saw her Z reat blue eyes, her faultless, classical features, hr wealth of hair, her tall, graceful figure, lithe and sinuous a3 a serpent. From the first he had been enamored of her beadty, anl he was not in the habit of looking behind the mask of what are called perfect features, nor did he understand that a face to be tru'y beautiful mutt in some measure reflect a pure soul. One part of that connersatien wnicn she overheard (not that Reggv ever suspected, her of listening) referred to his will, about which I had male an inquiry, since he had only lately told me I was one of his trustees. It is possible she had misinterpreted something he had taid about altering it. I think of these and other things now which, under otber circumstances, I might have forgotten.
IV. ' IK MOÜRMNQ." I had left Berkshire for London, and my eervant was packing my traps for Norway, Reggy and his wife having, as I understood, started for the Mediterranean, when I received a telegram from Reggy's mether: "Flease come at once; I fear my poor boy is dying." It was from Berkshire, so she was there. I had only been in London three days. I hurried down by the next train. Mrs. Gardner had been sent for only that morning. Bhe thought I was there The Count had come and a local physician was in attendance. A London doctor of great eminence arrived with us. We were both teo late. Regay Gardner was dead. He had been taken ill the day I came away, and had gradually grown worse. The end had been intensely painful. His wife was with him to the last. She had attended him nipht and day. He had died in ner arms. Now she was inconsolaole, they said, and would not see any one. The doctors called the fatal malady which had carried bim off "inflammation cf the heart." Thty did not dream what grim satire there was in tte verdict. At my request the London physician examined the remains of the medicine which had been administered to Reggy, and made other inquiries, but everything, he told me confidentially, tended to confirm the correctneesjl the certificate of death which the other medical attendant had signed. He di8cncsed the case for me. making the story of Reggy's death appear perfectly natural; and a week afterwards thev carried the boy who had accosted me that Friday outside the Zio to the family vault in the little Berkshire cturcb. A codicil bad been made to the will tl eiecond day cf the poor lad's il!nes3 excluding my trusteeship, and appointing the widow sole executrix. "And now good-by :" said Adrastia, when all was over and we were alone, face to face. " VTe never liked each other; there is now no further cause to dissemble our hatred' ' Mrs. Gardner," I answered, "I thankyou for your frankness. Let me follow your example. I charge yon with the murder of the tov we have just burled!" She stepped a psce backward, but her face neither chanced in color nor expression. "The day may come when I shall reiterate that declaration before an earthly jude " She swept across the floor in a long train cf rustling crape. She w.n dressed in deep mourning. Looking defiantly at me as she laid her hand upon the bell-pull, she rang a quick, firm peal. It was answered by a sleet Italian servitor. She pointed toward me es Ehe addressed him. "This centleman is leavln? n- nMa carriage round for the railway station at The door bein? cloned mm in mha, in- - O uu EXIUi 1 OUT mallCfl Ontrnn niir HllaUnn mnA your enmity overrides your manners. I despifie and defy yoa!" jxii we samt, ana killed tuat uuhsppy
boy, and watched over hia last agonies with the same cruel eatisfaction that chilled my blood in the serpent house. I am sure of it. Have I proved it? Mo; not yet. At present Refgy Gardner's death ia one ot the mysteries of London.
The Trtala of a Minitter. The Rv. J. P. Arnold, (Baptist) CamJsa, Tenn., in 173 was taken with Bright'a disease, which produced two large abscesses. Ia 1ST 8 another abscess formed which discharged for eighteen months. In two abtc&se2 formd. He then began Warner's Sfe Cure, "which restored me to parfect health." and June lSS-'t, he wrote, "aiy health is as good as ever." Try it! An Old Cashier. New York Tribune.l I met, the other day, the familiar figare ot William Demarest, the old cashier of the Harper Brothers, who has probably personally paid more money to more famous at tilts and authors than any other man in this country. He belonged to the eenial clasa of men who aflect grutfness, but who haven't anything but good nature ia their compositions. Years ago, whea he was active at hia desk in the Franklin Bquare building, he was regarded as the "Tim Linkinwater' of the "Brothers Cheeryble," as the f our original Harper Brothers were called by admiring subordinatea. I used to fancy that Fletcher Harper, the youngeet of the four, enjoyed the browbeating which Da mares t occasionally Indulged in with all the brothers; and I am sure that James Harper, the elder of them, the Mayor as he was called then, liked to tell how their old cashier abused them to their faces. . When he grew old and needed a little rest the Harpers gave Mr. Derrarest a leave of absence and $5.000 to trend In a trip to Europe. They intended It to be a permanent leave, but at the end cf a year the old cashier waa back at hia post again. The brothers, however, ahortlv after retired him cn lull pay. I asked him the other day if he was often at the old baiidioe, when be answered, rather sadly, I thongnt, as if the quettiou brought up recollections, "No, I reyer go there except to draw my money." A Woman's Happy Itelea. Mrs. E. F. DollofT, Haverhill, Mass., August 6, 1331, said she had been cured of inflammation of the bladder by five bottles of Warner's Safe Cure. December 24, 18S1, Mr. Dolleff wrote: "Mrs. Dollotf has never b9eu sick a day from that inflammatory disease since Warner's Safe Cure cared her in lSSl." Cure permanent. The Florida orange crop thia season is reported to be much larger than the packingbox manufacturers anticipated, and the shippers now find it difficult to gel bjxes for their fruit. The fruit is to cheap that it hardly pays to ship to Nortnern markets, and the owners of orange groves are greatly discouraged. The Holstein (Dutch, Fiiesian or Duch) cow, as the Netherlands cow is o:casiona!ly called, is the most uniformly deep milker of any of the distinctive dairy breeds, uniting a great flow of milk wilh lasting qualitles, and milk rich in both fat and casein, 83 well as being the oldest and longest establiihed breed. The Famous Temperance Lecturer, John B. Gcugh, says, January 15, 1335: "For many jeais, Pond's Extract has been my companion in ray extens ve travels in Europe and America. For sore throat, especially when tending to ulceration, I have found it very beneficial. I have found it invaluable also for bmises, chafings, irritation of tbe tkin. etc," It is the people's great lernedy for all sorts of pains and inflammaticn. Sold everywhere, by all respectable druggist?. Be careful to get the geauiue. The First Keen Twinge. As the season advances, the pains and ashes by which rheumatism make8 itself known are experienced after every exposure. It is not claimed that Hood's Sarsaparilla is a specific for rhematiem we doubt if there is, or caa be, such a remedy. Bat the thousands banefited by Hood's Sarsaparilla, warrant us in urging others who suffer from rheumatism to take it before the first keen twinge, "In our experience in producing milk," says the Dairy World, "we have succeeded best by using from sixteen to twenty pounds daily of a feed composed of 100 pounds bran, 50 pounds wheat meal, 50 pounds buckwheat shorts, and 50 pounds corn chop. A ton of this mixture costs, at present prices, $10.75 A bill has been passed by the Connecticut Senate providing a State bounty of ten cents to any person planting, protecting and cultivating elm, maple, tulip, ash, basswocd, oak, black walnut, hickory, apple, pear or cherry trees, cot mere than sixty ff et apart, for three years, along any public highway. Don't hawk, hawk, blow, spit, and disgust everybody with your offensive breath, but nse Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy and end it. Tbe first requisite after one decides to engage in stock-feeding is to f elect a location suitable to the kind of stock he wishes to raue, as to soil, lay of the land, water, etc , as well as proximity to markets. There is hardly a farm, however, upon which stockraising may not be done profitably. At the Iowa Agricultural Callege the relative money values of milk producing foods weighed are given as follows: Corn per 100 pounds, fifty cents; oafjs, sixty cents; barly, fifty-five cents; wheat, sixty-five cants; bran, teenty cents; oil meal, $1.25; clover hay. eighty cents; timothy, fifty cents; potatoes, ten cents. nomford'8 Acid Phosphate, SPECIFIC VIBTCES IX DYSPEPSIA. Dr. A. Jenkins, Great Falls, N. H , says: "I can testify to its seemingly almost specific virtues in cases of dyspepsia, nervousness and morbid vigilance of wakefulness " Special farmers almost always meet with discouraging losfes. Where one confines himself exciniyely to one crop there is sure to be either a bad year or a fall in price. Wbere one is raising stock, grain, cotton and hay there will be always something to fall back upon. Allen's Brain Food, Botanical Extract, positively cures nervous debility and all weakness of general system; either sex. $1; C for $5. Druggists, or by mail from J. H. Allen, 315 First avenue, New York. A Deceived Woman Is tte lidy who uss cosmetics, face lotions, white lead, bwmuih, powders, arsentc, eta, in the belief cf enriching and beautifying the complexion. Jt Is but temporary, and ultimately destroys tbe ekia beyond the power ot nature to restore. Htopit! Stop it now and use only Dr. Hirter's Iron Tonic, which imparts the vigor and lo?eline&sof youth. The removal of Prereswr 3anborn, of New Hampshire, after beinz pronounced iacur&bie by a score ot physician, from Las Vega, N Mex.. to his come, was effected by administering Dr. Barter's Iron Tonic, which has restored him to hit former good health. A Hatband' Greatest Blesafog is a strong, healthful, vigorous wife with a clear. h&ndaome complexion. "These caa all be acauirod by usug Dr. Uaitefs Iron Xpaic.
UKNEHAL GRANTS TEETH.
lieaftona for Itellevfog That They Caused tbe LMaeaae from Which He I SaOerlngDr. Frank Abbott, of 22 West Fortieth sheet, General Grant's dentist, has prepared a paper on "The Case of General Graat," which will appear in the Independent Practitioner on Tuesday. Dr. Abbott has held the chair of operative dentistry and dental therapeutics in the New York Collegs of Dentistry for seventeen years. "For, a geed while General Giant has worn a plate with four teeth in front," Dr. Abbott said last night. "He caa t wear it now aad his upj-er lip drops in slightly. His manische hides it. He has teeth enough left to masticate. There are a dozen remaining in the lower ja, and eight upper teeth chiefly on the left side." Dr. Abbott's paper is as fallows: "There have appeared in the medical jourr.als and the daily papers eo many statements in reference to thecaäe of General Grant, the condition of hia teeth, their removal, etc., tbat I am induced to give to the profession, through your column?, the facts, as far as they have come under my observation atd treatment. On November 8, 1SS1, General Grant consulted me in reference to the advieability of having the right npper first molar extracted, stating that he had been suffering for a week or ten days with great pain on that eide of his head and face, and that bis physician, Dr. Fordyce Barker, who Lad advised him to consult nie, and advised the removal of this tooth, as it was, in his opinion, the cause of great Irritation and pain. Upen examination I found the tooth dead. AN ABCTSS at the apex of tbe anterior buccal root. The tooth was considerably projected froai its original position, the neck and perhaps onehalf the length of the root covered with tartar. I agreed with Dr. Barker that this was prcbably the cau?e, in a measure at last, of his neuralgia, aDd advhed him to hive it reli.cved at once, which he did. The relief from localized pain was prompt and highly tatisfaclory to the General, as well as to mvtelf. I made no further examination nf h'ie teeth at that time, as he expressed a desire to make an appointment with me in a few days to have what further done would be found neceuary for the health and comfort cf his mouth, and for tli9 reason that he wished time to recuperate from the distressing pain, alepleesness, etc., from which he Lad been suffering. On the 11th of the seme month 1 a?ain law him, and carefully examined his rema'ning teeth. The first to particularly attract my attention were the second and third molars, back of the place from which I had previously removed the first, namely, the rigit upIr second and third molais, both of which were projected from a quarter to threeeighths of an inch from their original positioas, the neck and roots coaed quite thickly with a dark brown or black tartar. The tickets, in consequence, were almost enentirely ab-orbed, acd the teeth so loose that they might easily have been removed ith the ancient leed forceps. In addition to this, the fecond molar wai very badly decayed, the side broken and the pa!p dea3. The gum around these teeth was highly inflamed, which Inflammation extended to the f-nf of the mouth and back into the faucsj. Finding thsse teeth in so PEPLOn.VIII.E A C0XB1TI0X, and there being no antagonizing teeth, I a 1-v;-ed their immediate removal, believing, a I did then and do now, that they had had n ore or less to do in aggravating at least the dhease which then and which hvl for five months previously existed in his throat Ld upon his tongue. H9 consented, and I at once removed the teeth. I then removed torre cf the tartar from other teeth in his picuth and dlsmiffed him. I a?ain saw him on the 17th of the same month, at which tin 0 I thoroughly cleansed the ramaining tteth and put in tome filling, all that was necessary to do upon the teth remaining in bis mouth. I have previously said tbat I believed the teeth I removed Id have beon n ore or less instrumental in aggravating the disease of his throat and tongue. Hjw long the teeth bad been in the condition generally in which I found them I am unable to say, but presume (and I judge from all the conditions prescribed) tbat it had been for many years. If we take into consideration the highly inflamed condition of tbat legion of his month, the rough surfaces of broken teeth, and the tartar covering them, against which that side of the toDgue was almost constantly rubbing, I would ask if I am not justified in concluding ttat the disease from which the Generalis raw suffering has not had sufficient cause fvr Its develepment in the constant irritaats here detcribed, instead of attributing it to the habit of smoking, which eeems to be the prevailing opinion, at least among the laity. I hope tbat this csso may be a solemn warnirg to all those advancing in years against the tolorance of any rough surfaces (sach as are here detcribed) in theirmouths, by which tbe tergne or chtek may be kept in a state of couEtant Irritation." A Notable Arrest. C. II. Oberbeck, Deputy Sheriff. St. Loui3, Mo., in 1352 took Warner's Sife Cure for a very severe kidney and liver complaint; ha had lest seventy-five pounds in weight under tte doctor's care. Five bottles of Warner's Safe Cure arrested and cured the disease, and December, 1SS4. he wrote: "I now weigh 2Q0 pounds and never felt better in my life. I recommend Warner's Safe Cure." - waed herbs m doctoring tho family, and her simple remedies I)II With in most cases. Without the use of herbs, medical science would bo powerlees; Kud yet the tendency cf the times ia to neglect the best of allremedies for thoss powerful medicines that eeriously in3 uro tho system. is a combination of valuable herbs, careIUÜ7 compounded from the formula of a regular Physician, who used this prescription largely in hia private practice with great success. It is not a drink.but a medicine used by many physicians. x-It is invaluable lor lYslErsiA, AJAKF and IA VF. It COMVLAl STS, XKRroVH EXHAUSTION, WEAKNESS, IS DIQESTIQX, de.; and while curing will not hurt the system. Mr. c. J. Rhodes, a well-known Iron nan of Safe Harbor, Pa., writes : fcMy was coaipletelr prorated by fever and fl-as. yninin dJ barkn d d him CO good. I then fnt for Miehlens Herb Bitten &4 ia a short Line the boy was quite welLH "E. A. Echellentrager, Druggist. 717 Bt. Clair Street, Cleveland. O., writes : " I0? k B'tters, I can nsy, and do aar. are prernbd by some of the oldctft aad n)st pronieat ph ywciaa ia our aty." 2IISHLEB HEBB BITTEBS CO 525 Commerce St, Philadelphia.
BiTTiiti
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Hadway's The Cheapest and Be-st Xediclne FOB FAMILY USE l THE WORLD CUKES AND rilK VENTS Ccugta, colds, Soro Throat, Hoarseness, Inflammation, Rheumatism, Neuralgia Hcariacho, Toothacho, Diphtheria, Influenza, Difficult Breathing, It was the first and la the onlr REMEDY lhat instantly stops tie most excrncir Has pains allays Infiarnmation and cures Coafioftions, wnether of the Lungs, Stomach, Bowels or 0 UJ glanda or organs, by one application. In From One to Twenty JKlnutet, No matter now violent or excruciating the palm the Rbenmatlo, Bed-ridden, Infirm. Crippled ferrous, Keuralglc, or prottratcd wlta disease may IU2CT. HADWAY'S READY EELIEI WILL AFFORD INSTANT IA8J. Inflammation of tbe ELldneyt. maammatian a the Bladder, Inflammation of the Lowels, Cone et tlon of the Lungs, Palpitation of the Heart, lfr terlca, Croup, liiphtneria. Catarrh, Infiuenia Kervonsness, SleepleEsneM, Rheumatism, ßclatlot Fains In the Chest, Back or Limbs, Eralscf Sprains, Cold Chills and Ague Chills. The application of tbe UKADV KELIKF t the part or part 'wfcrre tne difficulty or pain ex lets will ancrd e&fte and comfort 't hirty to sixty drops In hail a tumbler Of watft will in a few minutes care Cramps, fipaune, fouj 8 torn ach, Ueartbnrn, Sick Headache, Diarrhea Dysentery, Colic, Wind la the Bowels, and all In tomal pains. Travelers enoald always carry a bottle ot Bad wr'a Ready Kellef with tnem. A few drops lx water will Prevent sickness or pains from chanjt of water. It U better than French Brandy or Bit tors pj a stimulant. M ÄLÄRIÄ, In Its Various Forma, FEVER and AGUE. FIVES and AQÜZZ C2TCd for W cents. Thera b ne t a remedial agent in th4 world that will cn Fever and Ague andallothe Malarious, Btlioct Scarlet, and other Fevers (aided by BADWAY'I FILLS) ao quickly as BADWAVS HEAD I KELIEF. fifty Cents Per Buttle. Bold by all Ores e1ta. DR. RAD WAY'S SarsapariiliaR Eesolvenl. füre blood xnakci cnnd flesa, strong bone am a clear skin. If you would have your flesh Una your bone sound, without caries, and your com Jjexion fair, use ADWAY'S paks apa wtt.t.tai KfrOLYXKX the Great Blood Purifier. tALSE ÄND TRUE. We extract from Dr. Eadway s "Treatise cn Du ease and Its Cure," as follows: List 0! diiPMC cured by DB, BAD WAY'S OABBAFABIIiIiIAZ? BE30LV25IT1 Cnronio skin diseases, carlos of ttr - one, humor of the blood, scrofulous diseases, yyUtlo cars plainta, fever sores, chronic or old u-ers, sal rbeum, rickets, white swelling, scald head, cank ers, glandular swellines, nodes, wasting and de cay of the body, pimples and blotches, tumort dyEpepfila, kidney and bladder diseases, cnrouli ri.eumat.csn ua guis consumption, gravel anC calculous deposits, and varieties of the abort complaints, to which sometimes are given spec ions names. In cases were the system has beer salivated, and murcury has accumulated and be come deposited in the bones, Joints, etc.. causim caries of the bones, rickets, spinal curvatures, con tortlons, white swellings, varicose veins, etc, tht K&rsaparillla will resolve away those deposits auf extermlnat t&i virus ol ths dlseac tswa Vu sysvem. i BREM C0KSTÜÜT10HÄL REMED1 Skin diseases, t a mors, ulcers and sore oral", kinds, particularly chronic diseases of the skis are cured with great certainty by a course of Dz ßADWAY'8 8AB3APAR1LLIAN. We mean obsi 018 cues that have resisted all other treatment SCROFULA whether transmitted from parents or Acquired, t within the curative range 01 the SaKSAPARILLIAN resolvent. It pofteeeaes the same wonderful power in curtst the worst forms of strumous and eruptive dl charges, syphiloid ulcers, tores of the eyes, ears nose, mouth, throat, glands, exterminating thi virus of these chronic lorms of disease from thi blood, bones, joints, and la every part of the an man body where there exists diseased deposits ulcerations, tumors, bard lumps or scrofulous in Cammation. this creat and powerful remedy wlL' exterminate rapidly and permanently. One bottle contains more of tbe active prind pls of medicine than any other pretaratlon X&ken in teasponful doses, while others reouin five or six times as much. ONI DOLLAB PXI BOTTMC Bold bv druuzfrts. DR. KADWAVb REGULATING PILLS uii treat Liver acd Stomach Ksrsedf. fertecuy utteiea, elejantly coated; purrs reijuiate, partly, cleanse aad euenrthet Dr. Eadway'a Iis, for the cure cf all dli orders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys Bladder, Nervous Disease, Loss of Appetite Headache; Constipation, Coetlveness, Indigestion Dyspepsia, Biliousness. Fever, Inflammation e tho Bowels, Flies, and all derangements of tbe In tCTial viscera, Furely vegetable, contalnlnf v mercury, minerals, cr deleterious drugs. Prlco 25 Cents Far Box. Bold by all dmzzlsta. DYSPEPSIA K(lwri SarnapÄrtlllan, aided by Badwayt Fill, It a cure for this complaint It restore strength to the stomach, and make it perform 10 functions. The symptoms of dyspepsia disappear and with them the liability of the system to contract diseases. Take the medicine according ti the directions, and observe what we say la "Fslif and True" respecting diet. 'Read False and Truo." Bend a letter stamp to RADWAT A CO., No. B Warren street. New York. Inlarmatiaa wank thousands will ba tint to yon.
Urn
Relief !
TO THE PUBLIC sarjBa tare and aak for Kadwaya, an ata U ktj vsxiar: H n rat ru to
Beäiction in lte Price of Gas! Notice to Gas Consumers and Others. Your attention is called to the marked reduction in the price o: eas, which took e2evt ou the lit day of March. The Compaay is now furnishing ras to all consumers at fl 80 per 1,000 cub:c feet. This price is certainly within tne reach ot all. for both lighting and rooking purpooee. The convenience and comfort of cooking by ga, especially during the summer months, where a fire is not otherwise required, can only be thoroughly appreciated by those who hare had experienfa ja its useiul application for that purpose. The Company Las told for nsa la this city during the lat four years a large number of gas stores, and ta eatüned from the many testimonials from tu 1 atrocs, that these stove "flUa long ielt want." BTOVE3 AND GAS ENGINES FOR SALS AT COST. n.fiaoHne Stores chanjed to Ois Stares at knall ex pe like.
Indianapolis Gas-Light and Cote Co , h. 47 South Pennsjlvania Street. B. 1). FBAY, Secretary. Ii eduction in the Price or Gas! Notice to Gas Consumers and Others, Your attention in called to the marked redaclion in the price ol gaa, wbifh took effect on the IU day of il arch. Tbe Company is now famish lupgBPtoall consumers at 81.80 per 1.C03 cubic lec-t. The price ia certainly within the reach of all, for both lighting and cooking purposes. The tonvenlence and comfort of ( Ouking by pa, esperially during the summer months, where a lira la toi otherwise required, can only be thoroughly rpreciated by those who have had experience ia its ufeful aprlication for that purpose. The Comp any has Fold for cse in this city during the last lour years a large number of gas stoves, and Is fattened, from tbe many testimonials from its patrons, that these stoves "fill a long felt wauL" Stoves and Gas Frgincs for Sala at Cost, AT Electric LiiMiiii and Gas Mini anl niiminailBE Campy. OFFIOE: C8 East Market Stioot. IIENKV DECKER, Sccret.rf. BEE-HIVE '3 rcMielletou Ii S. Huey & Sod, Sannfarlnrors zzi Dealer ia Doors and Sash, Fram8 Lumbar, Shingles, Etc. All Manufactured Work for Exterior and Interior Furnishings. Metal Poison. I nm a corrorfmith by trade, scd during a feries of years my arms (being tare when at work) have atf-oibed a wonderful amount of metal polten. Hatin? a scrofulous tendency iron my youth, the tmall particles of copper and brass would cet into the fores, and by this process tbe roiscu was conveyed into mv blood till my wtole yttem became infected. 1 was trcited with the old remedies of mercury and iodlie potassium. Salivation followed, my teeth are all loose in my bead, my diEcllve organs Oraneed, and I hav a been htlplees in bed for over a year Mthmercurlal rbtumatism. My joints were all swooleii. and I lost the use of my armi and leg, and beta nie helpiefs as an infant. 51y sufieriags became to intense that it was irapctslb'e for me to rest. Tne doctors advised tie logo to the city hospital for treatment. This I could not bear. A friend, who has prored a frien'l Indeed, urscd me to try Swift's rxcinr. beiievm it ould cure me. OLhers discouraged me, but I wcured a few bottle, and have now taken two dozen t-ottles. The first eflect of tee meik ioe was to bring the poison to the surface, and 1 orote out all over in running f ore?. They soon disappeared, ana my tkin cleared off. My knets, which became tw'c their natural sfze, have resumed their usual size, and are supple a of yore. My arms and hands are all right &in. and caa Ufe them without pin. Tbe entile disease fca left all par's of the boly. save two ulcers on my wrlfts, which are healing raridly. I an wear ficm long confinemert. but 1 have the use of all my limbs. This medicine is brlnsinz me ou' of thegreatet trial of my Lie. aLd I can net find words sufficient to express my appreciation of It viitues, and the gratitude 1 feel that 1 ever heard of it. Pftib E. Love, Augusta. Ga. Jan. 0, 18. Malarial Poison. The drouth in Pouthwest (Borgia last epriog dried up tbe wells, end we were compelled to use wjter from the creek ou tae plantation. The result ws tbat all were troubled with chilln and fever. I carried with me several bottle, of Hwiffa Specific, ud as long as I took it I had nerfect health. As oon as I ceased taking it I, like tne rest, W88 afSicteel with chills. When I resumed its ufe. I was all right again. We have used it ia ocrfamllyasan antidote for malaria poison for two or three years, and have never know:i it to fail in a single instance. YV. C. Fcklow. fcuioter Co., Ga.. Sept. 11. 1SSI. Treatise on Blood and ökin Diseases mailed free. TILS 8rYIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, Drawer 3, Atlanta. Ga.
PLAKISG DULL,
A CA KD. To all who are inhering from errors and Indiscretions of youth, nervous weak nesa, early decay, lot of manhood, etc. I will send a receipt that will cum you, YftKJS OF CHARGE. Thli great remedy tru discovere'i by a mlKlonarr In South America. Bend aelf-ad-dreaaed envelope to Kev. Jtfcj&FHrT. LNilAN, & tioa D, Kew-.yort,
