Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 28, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 July 1880 — Page 3
3
COMMUNION Wim THE DKAl.
How pare at hrftrt and ound In head. With what Uivlne affection bold, ShouM be the man whose thought woull hold An hour's communion with the dead ! In vain shalt thoa, or any, call Tin spirits from their golden dar, Except, like them, thou too cauitt aay, "My spirit is at peace with all." They haunt the Mlence of the breast, lmaioatlouHcalm and fair. The memory liKd a cloudlet air, Tlie cousc'teuco as a sea at rt: Eat when the heart la full of din. And doubt besl-.ie the portal wait, They can but listen at the let, Sud htiir the houe thOid Jar within. From Tennyson's "In Mernoriam." CONCKKXIXO WOMKN. It U a terrible thing to be obliged to lovo by contract. True modesty protects a woman bettci than her garments. Man is creation's master-piece. 15ut who says so? .Man! Our happiness is but an unhappiness inure or less consoled. The qreut are only great because wo are on our knee.-. Let us rise! To love is to admire with the heart; to admire is to love with the mind. "All or nothing,." is the mottoof Love. All and nothing is the motto of Hymen. A woman who pretends to laugh at love is like the child who sings at night when he is afraid. Women, cats and birds are the creatures that waste the most time on their toilettes." Charles 2sodier. Did you ever see a woman bootblack in America? I doubt it, that is on the j-trects, for, sa 1 to say, a good deal of the t-hoe polishing nobody wears boots any more within doors is done by women. The "Woman's Journal says, with apparent satisfaction: "The cooks at Wellesley Collegeare men; the professors are women." from this the only deduction to be drawn is that the "Wcllctley folks have a higher regard lor their stomachs than for their heads. A representative of the Chicago Alliance, experienced considerable change of opinion of the women in politics when ho heard a lady delegate to the Werkingman's Convenin that city relate as a sm:irt trick that .-he had brought about the defeat of a State Senator by bribery. A new French novel devotes considerable pace to American life, assuring its readers that in the States west of the Mississippi the ladies of the highest fashion habitually retire to the Kooky Mountains to hunt grizzly bears and that they adorn themselves with necklaces of the claws of those animals as trophies of their prowess. It also informs its readers that Ohio girls ride wild hoises, wear high boots, and hunt rattlesnakes, while the heiress in Minnesota works in the harvest field, and as a bride invites the welding guests to remain to ''assist'' at an -apple-paring frolic. French Wit, AYisdoiu and Wickedne. Love is a duel with pins. "Woman is th Sunday of man. Coquettes are the quacks of love. Marriage is often but ennui for two. The profession of woman is very hard. The heart has reasons that reason docs not understand. As soon as we have learned how to live we must die. When one writes of woman he must reserve the right to laugh athis ideas of the day before." A. Iiicard. t "There will always remain something to be said of women a long as there is one on the earth.'' IJouiSers. The future of society is in the hands of the motaers. If the world has lost through woman, she alone can save it. The beginning and the decline of love manifest themselves in the embarrassment that one feels in the tete-a-tete. The highest mark of esteem a woman can give a man is to ask his friendship; and the most signal proof of her indifference is to oiler him hers. To protect one's self againt the storms of passion, marriage with a good woman is a harbor in the tempest; but with a bad woman it proves a tempest in the harbor. The world is divided into two armies. Men make offensive war, women defensive. But the struggle ditfers from other battles instead of destroying, it multiplies the combatants. Pleasantries Concerning the Fair Sex. A SLAVE OF DUTY. I Iii J not caue shade of pain To orerprirt-ad that faca so fair; Ah! no! dear pirl, nur would I deieu To add a mit qd to your care. I would not hare that lovely hue Of feature clouded by a frown. But duty bid me iay to yon. Tour back hair' all a-coming dowu! Vassar College girls like to go a fishing and it is a mighiy ungallant fish that won't coma right up and be caught by such fair hands. A dealer in hosiery in Chicago marked a pair of stockings: "Only $10,000," and more than one hundred ladies stopped at the window and cried out: ''Dear mc! how cheap I'll ask my husband to buy them I" A stone-cutter received the following epitaph from a German to be cut upon the tombstone of his wife: "Mine vife Susan is dead, if she had lived till nex' Friday phe'd been dead shust two vceks. As a tree falls so must it Stan," The New Orleans Picayune calls attention to the fact that the Maud Mullers in tableaux all want to wear pretty dresses, and fancy tocking3 and shoes forgetting that it was Maud's 4feet so bare and her tattered gown' that attracted the Judge. John Deirner of San Francisco had a truthful wife. She told him that if he didn't come back with work by 6 o' clock she would kill herself. John gave her an hour over the time, and then found her dead. She was what you might call a martyr to truth. The ladies this year .carry their parasols when spread with . the handle almost horizontally resting over the shoulder. This arrangement makes the thing adapted to raking the tall man's eye out on one side, while it tears the ear of the short man on the other. Give it all the room it wanU. A Baltimore heiress fixed herself up as a homely woman of middle age and got into a street car in which were four of her suitors, and as one of them wanted to get off, he got up and let her have his seat, and she didn't notice but what he went to ride on the platform, and of course she accepted him when he proposed. Some men are born to luck. Miss Howard, an English lady, has been appointed doctor to the Countess Li, as also management of a hospital establishment at Pekin, by the foreign residents. Countess Li supplies all the medicine for the patients, is a good friend to animals, and on being asked by Miss Howard whether it was true she supported 100 cats, replied, "Alas! I have now only seventy." Young ladies, you should all go to Eeirut. Ths L,c jat .lrtc;X a hois ;uilrvad Lere
and they dividehe cars into halves, reserving one for women and calling it the Harem, and compelling the men to remain in the other part, no matter how numerous they may be. Think of the blis of having half a horse-car for one's sole use while a dozen men dance about on the platform, sit on the top of the car and swear in good Syrian. A composition by a little girl of nine years: "The boss is a very niee animal, lie has four legs, one fastened to each corner, and one face; two eyes and one body; two ears and one tail. The hoss can run fast. Oh, the boss is a very nice animal, indeed. Well, when the hoss gets up in the morning he don't have to wash, his face nor comb his hair, and when he goes to bed he don't have to say his prayers. Oh, dear; I wish I was a hoss." The Caune of Women's Headaches. New York Herald. One of our English contemporaries has wisely been devotingsome thought and space to the common and very distressing fact that a great many English women sutfer from headache. The same trouble prevails in America, and men, no matter how selfish they may be, are deeply concerned about it, for a wife with a headache can not be companionable, the best of sweethearts with a headache is sure to be unreasonable, while a lady who has neither husband nor other special cavalier to engross her attention can ruin the piece of mind of every one she meets while she has a headache of perceptible size. No amount of masculine grumbling is likely to chance all this, but women themselves might change it if they would comprehend the causes of the malady and then apply their nimble wits to the work of prevention or cure. The trouble is that all American women who have headaches live indoors, where the best air is never good and the worst is poison, and they have none of the exercise which saves men from the popular feminine malady. "Were a strong man to cat breakfast at any ordinary American table and then sit down at a work table or machine, or even move about briskly trom one room to another, he would have a splitting headache before noon, and the chatter of his innocent children would seem to be the jargon of fiends. The midday meal would increase his wretchedness, and by dusk he would be stretched in misery upon his bed, with one hand mopping his forhead with ice water while the other would threaten with a club or pL-tol any one who dared to enter the room or make a noise outside. There is no reason why women should not suffer just as severely for similar transgressions of physical law. True, indoor life is compulsory for a large portion of every day, but special physical exercise in a well-aired room is within the reach of almost every woman and so is a brisk walk in garments not so tight as to prevent free respiration. There, i3 very little complaint of headache at summer resorts, where windows are always open and games and excursions continually tempt women who do not value complexion more than health. Girls who ride, row, sail and shoot seldom .have headaches; neither do those unfortunate enough to be compelled to hoc potatoes or play Maud Müller in hay llelds. Let women of all social grades remember that the human machine must have reasonable treatment and be kept at work or play to keep it from rusting; then headaches will be rare enough to be interesting. Woman's True Source of Strength. Nineteenth Century. The strength of women lies in their heart. It shows itself in their strong love and instinctive perception of right and wrcng. Intellectual courage is rarely one of their virtues. As a rule, they are inclined to be restless and excitable, allowing their judgments and action? to be swayed by quick emotions of all kinds, but, above all, it is in their hopefulness and their endurance that they find their chief power. Who is the last person to give up hope in the case of a member of the familj I who has apparently gone altogether to the bad? What mother or sister with deep and ardent love for such will ever cease to cherish hope or to endure suffering on their account? The patience of women is proverbial, and their whole lives are bound up in their affections. Few people will deny that love in one form or another makes up the beauty of life to woman. It enters, into all she does. Any work outside her immediate circle is undertaken most often from pure desire to help some one else to know semething of the mysterious happiness of love.Unlike men, women chiefly look for personal intercourse with those for whom they are working. If their interest lies among the poor, they are desirous of sympathetic personal acquaintance with them; and very little good work of a lasting kind has been done by women without their own influence of love being brought to bear on the individual case. The Charms of Mature Women. Youth and beauty are always sure of a hearing; but some writers come out with a few words of admiration for maturer charms, in the following language: The man who meets and loves the woman of twenty-five is truly fortunate in meeting and loving her. At that age she seldom deceives. She may not have she is not likely to have then her first sentimental experience, but such an experience, at such an age, is more than sentimental, and rarely ever fleeting. She looks at the youths she imagines she was enamored with between sixteen or eighteen, or often twenty-one, and they are more than indifferent or repellaüt to her they are ridiculous, and she, as she then was, is ridiculous to herself. She can not but be grateful to destiny tha: her sympathies and affections have been reserved for a worthy object and a higher end. At twentv-five, if ever, a woman knows and estimates lierself. She is less liable to emotional or mental mistakes. She is tar surer of her future, because she feels that her fate is, to a certain extent, in her own hands. Not only is she lovelier, but more lovable, broader and stronger than she has been, but her wedded happiness and powers of endurance are in a manner guaranteed. The Effect of Club Lire In England. J London Spectator. -There i no doubt that the standard of comfort and luxury in England has been considerably raised during even the last quarter of a century, and there is no doubt that our club life has had much to do with this. Two shillings a day which is said to be the average expenditure on alcoholic drinks of those members who use the coffeeroom of the London Clubs, speaks ot a moderation in drinking which would have astonished our grandfathers and even our fathers. In fact Englishmenhave a tendency home of their clubs, and paradoxical as it may sound, the home influences of the club are considerable. On the other hand, club life has a tendency to make men, and especially young men, intellectually subservient to what is called ''society," over particular and exigeant at home, to prefer club luxuries to family comfort, and to develope into selfish and fastidious old bachelors, instead of becoming self-denying fathers of families. But after all. Pall Mall is not Utopia, and no institution in this world is perfect.
He becometh poor that dealeth with a slack hand, hut the hand of the diligent maketh
TO-DAY'S LESSON".
Genesis 111., 1-15 he Fall and the Frorafaed I5y Rev. David J. Kurrell. EXPLANATORY. Verse 1. Now the serpent was more subtile than any beast of the field which the Lord Godj had made. And he sa-d unto the woman, "i ea, hath God said. Ye shall not oat of every tree of the garden?" The serpent here referred to was undoubtedly a real serpent, but it was so occupied and used by the devil that it is scarcely an hyper bole to say that it was the devil himself. He took porsession of it, controlled its movements, and spoke through it. In Kv. xii., 19 the devil is called the old serpent. It is a notable fact that among tne various traditions of the fall, which are related among heathen nations, the serpent generally takes the part of the seducer. There is a natural reason for this. "The serpent is proverbial for its craft and cunning, (Matt, xx , 1C.) Its movements are noiseless and sly; it hides, and coils itself up, so as not to be seen; and its attack is sudden and unexpected. One specie is said to hide itself in the sand in a path, leaving only a part of its head exposed, and then to spring out suddenly upon the passerby." The tempter begins by calling in question the Word of God. Doubt is the beginning of error, and unbelief is the source and fountain of every sin. Thi devil's word's, "Hath God indeed said,'' etc., were intended as a hint that there might have been some mistake about it. They cast a doubt upon God's wisdom and love. 2. And the woman said unto tjie serpent We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden; 3. But of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God hath said. Ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it lest ye die. The only safe plan is to flee from temptation, or if it be forced upon us, to resist from the start. Eve began by parleying with the tempter; whosoever pursues that course will come off second best. It is not necessary to suppose that the fruit of the forbidden tree vas poisonous or otherwise noxious in itself. The object in view was a trial of man's character, and for that purpose any tree would answer. The harm lay not in the tree, but in the sin of destroying the divine command, "Ye shall not eat of it.'" 4. And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die. These words of Satan are seeminglj-true. Physical death did not at once fall upon our first parents when they ate the forbidden fruit. But the death threatened was a more dreadful death than that of the body. "There la a death whose Jiangs Outlire this fleeting brealb; -Oh, what eternal horror hang Abont the second death!" The moment our first parents sinned they, and all their descendants, passed under the sentence of spiritual and eternal death, from which there is no deliverance except by faith in tho atoning sacrifice of Jesus. See llomans v., 12, also vU 2:5, 1 Cor. xv., 21. 5. For God doth know that in the dav ve eat thereof, then your eyes.shall be opened; and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil. It is also true that Adam and Eve by eating of the tree acquired an experiment?l knowledge of good and evil; but oh, how much better if they and their descendants han naver come into possession of this dearly-bought knowledge 1 The word translated "gods" is Elohim and the reference is to the one true God. "The tempter hero appeals to a desire of the hu man heart which has manifested itself in all ages, the ambition to bo like God (2 Thes. ii., C. And when the woman Eaw that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant te the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat, and gave also unto her husband with her, and he did oat. Here is the threefold sin oT sensuality, pleasure and ambition "the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life." The same threefold temptation may be observed in the conflict of Christ with Satan in the wilderness. How simply and briefly it is told; "And they did eat; "but what an end!ess tale of sorrow is wrapped up in those words! 7. And the eyes of them both wereopened, and they knew that they were naked ; and they sewed rig leaves together, and made themselves aprons. "There is here a terrible irony. They had expected to be as God, knowing good and evil, but the knowledge to which they attained was a knowledge of their own shame. 8. And they heard the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day; and Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God amongst the trees of the garden. It is not impossible that the "Voice of the Lord" here referred to was the appalling sound of a tempest. God's voice is oftentimes, in the Scriptures, heard amid mighty thunderings, as in Job xxxvii 4-5. The word "walking" te the same applied in Exodus xixn 19, to the voice of the trumpet, and it is there rendered "sounding long." The word must here be referred not to God but to his voice; his voice walked,'' i. e. sounded forth impressively, in the gardens, in the evening of this eventful day. 9. A.nd the Lord God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou? 10. And he said, I heard thy voice in the garden, and I was afraid, because I was naked; and I hid myself. 11. And he said, Who toid thee that thou wast naked? Hast thou eaten of the tree, whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat? God's questions here were not, of course, asked for information, but to draw from Adam a voluntary confession of his sin. He would thus humble tho sinner and bring him to repentance. 12. And the man said. The woman whom thou gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat. Adam instead of frankly confessing his sin, endeavors to cast the blame on Eve. It is observed that he does not call her Eve, but ''the woman," showing that sin has already cooled his love toward her. Observe also that Adam undertakes to throw a portion of the blame on God himself, 'The woman whom thou gavest me," etc. His defense was both cowardly and insincere, for he knew that he himself was to blame. Read James i., 14. 13. And the Lord God said unto the woman, "What is this that thou hast done? And the woman said, The serpent beguiled me, and I did eat. Eve in like manner tries to shift the responsibility. Uow unwilling we are to lay all tho blame of any transgression on self 1 14. And the Lord God said unto the serpent, because thou hast done this, thou art cursed above all cattle, and above every beast of the field; upon thy belly shalt thou go, and dust thou shalt eat all the days of thy life: Kiddle says: It has been inferred from this verso that before the fall the serpent went erect, perhaps with wings, or had an entirely different form from that which he now wears. Tho Scriptures, however, do not say this, and afford no encouragement for such fancies; and geology has discovered that long before the appearance of man oa earth, the serpen, ex
isted in its preent form. The truth is, that just as death becam a different thing in character after the fall from what it had been before, though the same in nature; just as the rainbow became a glorious token after the flood, though it had always existed; just as circumcision was adopted as the seal of the covenant, though it had existed as a rite long before; just as bread and wine constituted a new and precious sacrament after the institution of the Lord's Supper, though they had long been in use so, after the fall, the serpent's form and attitude became a badge of shame and repulsiveness, and thorr.s and thistles, though they had been created Jong before, became the symbol of man's curse, aad the cause and sign of his weariness and toil. ' 15. And I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel. Here Is the first of the long series of Messianic prophecies. It is called the protevangel, or beginning of tho Gospel. No sooner had Adam sinned than Christ was promised! There was to be a long warfare between Christ, the "seed of the woman,'' and Satan. In this conflict the serpent Satan would inflict much suffering upon the brethren of Christ; this was the "bruising of Hi3 heel." But in the end Christ would obtain complete victory, as a traveler who, bitten in the foot by a serpent, plants his foot upon the reptile's head and crushes it lilessed be God for this assurance of the complete triumph of Jesus over the Evil One!
An Apple-Tree Trunk Bieren Feet Around. Trenton Trne American. A great deal has been said in the newspapers lately about large apple-trees, one Saper stating that there is an apple-tree in 'ew Jersey eight feet in circumference. "We are assured by Mr. Charles Lambert that there is an apple-tree on the farm of Joseph Matthews, situated on the road leading from Lamhertville to Kocktown, Hunterdon County, which is by actual measurement eleven feet and seven inches in circumference. Mr. Lambert measured the tree on Saturday. Who can beat this? Find earth where grows no weed, and you may find a heart where no error grows. Knowles. Horrible to suddenly die with Heart Dia ease. The best cure we know of ia Dr. Graves' HEART REGULATOR. Doctors use it Pamphlet on ymptoma of Heart Disease free. Address F. E. Ingalls, Concord, N. H. Price 50 cents and $1 per bottle. Sold by druggists, and Stewart & Barry, Indianapolis. Ulcerative weaknesses and debilitating humors of females cured by Malt Bitters. Health Is Wealth. It seems strange that any one will suffer from the many derangements brought on by an impure state of tbe blood, when HcoviU's Blood and Liver Syrup will restore perfect health and physical organization. It la indeed a strengthening syrup, pleasant to tke, and has proven itself to be the best blood purifier ever discovered, effectually curing Scrolula, Syphilitic disorders, weakness of the Kidneys, ail Jiervon disorders and Debilltv. It corrects Indigestion. It makes tne old feel young, the young feel gay, and will invariably drlve out of tn.j system the many ills that human flesh f.nd blood are heir to. Price of lanre bottle witn full directions, II. A single bottle will prove to you Its merits a a health renewer, for It nets like a charm, especially when the complaint is of an exhaustive nature, having a tendency to lessen the natural vigor of the brain and nervous system. Remember we keep this excellent Blood and Liver Syrup tor sale at our drug store in Indianapolis, and do most cordially recemmend it to o'.r customers and all good people. Browning fc Sloan, wholesale agents. INYÄLIDS uro OTHEES SKTXTX-a STRENGTH AND ENERGY, WITHOUT THE CSE OF DRUGS, ARE REQUESTED TO SEND FOR THE ELECTRIC REVIEW, AN ILLUSTRATED JOURNAL. WHICH 13 PUBLISHED FOR FREE DISTRIBUTION. IT THE ATS upon HEALTH, HTGIE5E, und Physical Collars, and ia a eomr-Ute encyclopaedia' of information for invalids aud trios, who ander from Ktrvons, Kxhatuting and Painful Diseases. Every subject that bears npon health and human happiness, receive attention in its pages: and the ...any qties- -tions asked by suffering invalids, who hc . spaired of a care, are answered, and valuable infor nion is volunteered to all who are in need of medical advice. Tbe subject of Electric Belt wrnu Medicine, and , the hundred and one questions of vital importance to suffering humanity, are duly considered and explained. YOUNG MEN And others who snffer from Ncrvons and Physical De oility. Loss of Manly Vigor. Premature Exhaustion and the many gloomy consequences of early indiscretion, etc., axe especially benefited by consulting its contents. The ELECTRIC REVIEW exposes the unmitigated frauds practiced by quscks and medical impostors who profess to "practice medicine," and points out the only scfe, simple, and effective road to Health, Vigor and Bodily Energy. tend your address on postal card for s copy, and Information worth thousands will be sent you. Address, the publishers, PULVERMACHER GALVANIC CO.. COR. EIGHTH & VINE STREETS, CINCINNATI, entmniiliin CVDÜ1 IS A CERTAIN REMEDY FOR CONGESTION OF THE LUNGS, Etc., Etc miisO"ws COMPOUND STEÜP of HYFOPHOSPHITES SPEEDILY AND PERMANENTLY CURES: Congestion of the Lungs, Bronchitis, Consumption. Nervous Prostration, Shortness of Bream, Palpitation of tbe Heart, Trembling of the Hamds and limbs, Physical and Mental Depression, Loss of Appetite, Losa of Energy Losa of Memory. It will rapidly Improve tbe weakened functions and organs of the body, which depends for health upon voluntary, semivoluntary and Involuntary nervoua action. It acts with vigor, gentleness and sub tit tr owing to the exalaite harmony of Its Ingredients, akin to pure blood Itself. Ita taste pleasant, and Its effects permanent. DEBILITY. ; Bt. J OHir, N. B. Mr, Jaxxs I. Fellows, Chemist, St. J ohn, N. B. Dear Bib Having used yonr Compound Byrup of Hypophoephlte for some time In my practloe, I have no hesitation In recommending It to my patients who are suffering from general debility, or any disease of the lungs, knowing that, even In casea utterly hopeless, It affords relief, I am, Blr, yours truly, H. G. ADDY, M. D. Sold t j tvll Ernests. $1.50 par Bottle
Jf
The remedial management of those dlca.es peculiar to women ha afforded, a larpe experienee at the World's Ltispcnsary ant Invalids' Hotel, in aJnptlnr remedies for their eure. klanT thouanla l cases have tinnualljr liet'O trvated. Dr. Plerret Kaveri! l'reserlptlM is the result of this extended! experience, and has become Justly celebrated tot ita luaiij and remarkable cures of ail those diruuic diseases aad WEAKNESSES PECULIAR TO FEMALES. Favorit Prescription Is a powerful Restorative Tonic to the entire Frstem. It is a nervine of nnsurfuied eOU-acv, and while It quiets dtvou irritation, it strengthens the enfeebled nervous sviem, thereby restoring It to healthful vlsror. The follo inj: diseases are among th- In whU-h tlie Fa'vurite Prescription lias worked cures .is if by niajrlc. and with a certainty never before attained, vi?: Lraear. Hmt! exeeaalve Bewlnrt painful Bseastruatlswi utaral supper Im t weak barkf pretapaa, er falllB; af the aterwat aatevemtaat rrtv verslaat raring--de WM aeaaatlaat -Draal caageallaa. taflau. auaUaa, um aka-rattaai lateraal kea i ans wprralmi aunai aad alrk ktaiarkti aUHyt sumI aainauf , ar sterility, when not caused by stricture I the neek of the wonib. Vtteo Ute Imtter condition exists we can, by other means, readily remove, the laspedlaaeat t the bearlag af effr!ag (see Invalids' tiuhle Book, sent for one stamp, or the Medical Adviser!. Favorite Prescription is sold ander a aaalttve aruaraatee. For conditions, see wrapper around bottle. DO LIKEWISE.- Mrs. E. F. Morjran, of Sew Castle, Lincoln Co., Maine, sars: Fire years o I was a dreadful sutlerer from uterine troubles. Havin? exhausted the skill of three physicians I was completely discouraged, and bo weak I cotild with difficulty cross the room aloue. 1 bef in takln your Favorite Prescription and using Hie local treatment recommended in vour 'Common Sen Medical Adviser.1 I commenced to improve at once. In three months I was prrfrctl eumU and have had no trouble since. I wrote a letter to mv family paper, briefly mentioning how mv health had been restored, and offering to send tlie full particulars to anv one writing me for them c.Vid en-oino a htamptA rnrelops for reply. I have received over four hundred letters. In reply, I have descriliea my cae aud the treatment nl, ml earnestly advised them to do likewise.' From a (rreat manv I have received second letters of thanks, statin that they had commenced the nse of favorite Prescription, sent for the 'Medical Adviser.' aud applied the local treatment so fully and plalnlv laid doao therein, and were rauch better already, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is sold by ail tlrugjcisu. q 'EVERT INVALID LADT should read "Tlie Peonle'a Pomnion SVna Meriica! Adviser." lp which
over fifty paes are devoted to tlie consideration of lor ILMi Address,
Tho City Railway, Chicago, works 4,760 Horses. Bead: We use exclusively VI hi (tier's Liniment. It will pay all owners of Horses to call or wrlte31. TV. SQUIRES, Snpl. O, C. R. Co. The Express Company works 370 Hones. Bead: I liaye been using Liniment on tu horses of the American and U. S. Express Companies' stables for 24 years. I neyer met any that had one-tenth the merit ot" Whit tier's Liniment. Oar stables are open ; call and see lor yourselves. H. KXIGHT, Rupta Ex. Co. Bead what Graves & Lomis, the largest breeders of Horses in the State of Illinois, have to say: For tblrty years we bave been naln all Kinds or liniment mannlaetnrrd for horn a, and. or all tbe llnlmeais, Wblttlev'a stands at tbe bead ol tbe Hat for Beratenes, Oreased Heel.Ttarnsb, Sprains, Called Spots and Mores of any kind. It will Kl ve all borsemen satisfaction. O KAV KS A- J.OMIS. Tbere Is no remedy on eartb tbat equals rVbltder's liniment for Kbeumatlsm and Plies. It will bavelbesanae efleet npon the tinman. Serofnli, Seald TIead, Catarrh, Pimples or Bloteben on Fare or Body, Old Sores or i'resb Cats, Sold by all Drna glata. or hyllR. H. WHITTIKR 2Q4 Washington St.
NICHOLS SHEPARD&CO.EatüeM,Iic)L
tJUWIihed ia 14
A"TO'IHI'eLY Tt"R VBLK and inm-lrrtUr mimJ, oin le than one half the araal avar. and ttelt. PORTABLE, TRACTION, and ST RA W-BCRXINO RTEAM-EAtilXEH. with necial fcmt.rr, .r ft, Durability, hactr, Koonomr, and B-aatr entirelr unknown ia other uaJtea. Kfaai-F.wer Out tu and hteam-F.wer vraratnri a ipei-laHr. Four lies of Separator, frma S to 11 hnre-tiower; alol .trie. Improred Mounted Horse-Powpr. SS Year, of Praaperoaa and Coailaaona BaalncM by thW ami-, without caaatc f sane, lacat Ion, or aunace tnent, furuUhc. a strong guarantee for .npwrior good and hoDorabls dealing.
CAUTION !o machines to the wall ; i The wonderful rne. and nonntarltr of oor Tibbato. Machinery has driven othT : hense various maker, are now attempt ing to bnild and palm off inferior and nougrel imitations of Mir iamoa. gooaa. BE NOT DECEIVED tj sach experimental sn! worthies marhinerv. If vn "mv t all, sret the "OUlfcLNAL aad the "GkWXLXE" from a a. CJ" far full partleulars eall on oar dealers, or write to us for llluitrated Circular, which we mail tree. Addro HICH0LS, 8SETAED 4 CO., Batt Creek,
A POSITIVE CURE without medicines:
ALLAH S SOLÜBLE MEDICATED BOUGIES
PATENTED OCTOUEll 1U, 1870.
OÜSTIE BOX No. 1 xv 'ill cure any case in four days, or less. No. 2 will cure the Most Obstinate Case, no matter of hovs long standing. No nauseous doses of Cubebs, Copaiba or Oil of Sandalwood, that are certain to produce dyi pepsia by destroying the coatings of the stomach. No Syringes or Astringent Injections to produce other serious complications. Price $1.50. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS or mailed on receipt of Price. For further particulars send to druggist in your city for Circular. J. C. ALLAN CO., P. O. Box 1,533. No. 83 John St., New York. Ve offer $500 Reward for any case they will not cure. Quick, Safe, and Siire Cure. THE NEW YORK WORLD, FIRST, LAST AND ALL THE TIME . -
HANCOCK AND ENGUSH.
THE WEEKLY WORLD will contsin each and every week tbe fu'Ieat isd mwt complete telegraph lc reports of tlie prozress of the politieavl camtMtlgn from eauch and every Slate In tne Union. These dispatches will be telegraphed from the HetvdqaarteiM of each Democratic State Committee, and will acnrately report the exact progress of tte great fight for ffand old Demo eraticldeaa tinder the lead 01 HANCOCK and ENuLJSH. Every Democrat in the land must keep pouted about what Is being done all over the eountry to secure an overwhelming victory at the polls next November. . MELI OX THE GOOD FIGHT! THE WEEKLY WORLD . Will be sent to your address from now until the end of the campaign for
Or FROM NOW UNTIL MARCH 4, 1881, for
POSTAGE PAID. THE SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD From now till after the campaign tl or from now till the 1st of March, 1SSJ, 11.50. THK T&JtLEJLTS' yV0JKJLiJD LOO nil HOITH, POSTAGE PAID. Address TUB TVORI-Dt 33 ParU.Row, Nor York.
those düe&ses peculiar to Women. Sent, post-paid.
WOBUPS DLSPEXSABT JUDICAL ASSOCIATION, BITFALO, K. Y.
ORIGINAL AND ONLY CENU1NE Tnreshing Machinery and Portabio and Traction Engines. THE STAADAliD at excellence trov7vt (s CrminRaiini Woriil. MATCHLESS ft Grain-Raring, Tlme S.Ting, Perfect Cleaning, kniil . nA Jltwwgh M'orfc. INCOMPARABLE ia pMf .f Material. Prrerrio of Part, Tkonmyh Workmaatlilp, UooHt lisith. aol BtaMtw of Mnd.-l. MARVELOUS tor vatftj tvpWor -wort In mil Unit et Grain, and antrerMl'jr know a ai the only .acceMful Threshes la Flax. Timathr. Clover, aad all other Heed. Mich. ,
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