Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 11, Number 49, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 June 1881 — Page 2

THE MAIL

A Paper for the People.

TERRE HAUTE, JUNE 4, 1881

TWO EDITIONS -3T

Of this Paper are published. The FIRST EDITION,on Thursday Evening, has a large circulation In the surrounding town*, where It I* sold by newsboy* and agent*. The SECOND EDITION, on Saturday Evening, goes into the hands of^nearly every reading person In the city, and the farmecs of this Immediate vicinity. Every Week's Iasoe is, in fact,

TWO NEWSPAPERS,

In which all Advertisement* appear for THE PRICE OF ONE ISSUE.

A

CLOHE

estimate baa been made that

a New England family of six eats 1,092 pies per annum.

PBOPLK hereabouts who know little of the sect will be surprised to hear of meeting of thirty thousand Dunkards at Ashland, Ohio, next week.

Dowx in Mexico laborers recently worked for 18% cents a day, but now they have reached the high rate of 43 cents a day under the influence of the railroad boom.

PASTOR IJKOOKMAN, of a Montreal Haptist church said "the doctrine of eternal punishment is a libel on God." He lost no time in resigni ug after making this declaration.

IN Southern California they have a Nihilistic way of doing things. When they want to wipe out a whisky ranch they put a bomb under it and blow it out of the country.

A

TKMPKRANCK

lecture Is found in a

•ingle paragraph in the New York Herald, which says that four-fifths of the bodies that reach the Morgue in that city are sent there by whisky.

TIIK centennial building, contributed by the state of Pennsylvania at the 1876 exhibition, cost $40,000. It was sold the other day at auction for $500—the most astonishing shrinkage on record.

A CHICAGO paper says that a mau who marries a girl with a good musical voice will have more cause for misery and jealousy than the one who marries for boauty. With both a man has no chance at all.

THKRK is a good text for Bob Ingersoll in this—that only 37? years ago peoplo were burned at tho stake for possessing a copy of the Bible, and now tho demand is so great that over 300,000 copies wore sold in New York in a single day. ___

AT a Cincinnati wedding lately the organist entertained the audienco awaiting tho bridal pair by a series of voluntaries, the last of which unluckily was, "Trust her not, she is fooling thee," at which he was hard at work as the bridal procession walked tip the aisle.

WHEN it isn't one thing it's auothor. Just now the popular craze is a two cent stamp and a one cent blue stamp on a white envelope. This is especially the correct thing where young ladies and gentlemen correspond. The blending of the colors, red, white and blue, means union.

WITHIN the last decade seven of the great public men whose fame filled Europe for a couple of generations have died—Napoleon III, Mazzlni, Thiers, Victor Emanuel, l'ius IX, Alexander II and Beaconstleld. (fortschakort, Bismarck and Gladstone are still in harness, but their age will scarcely carry them to 1SJX).

ON

Wednesday last the new tcmperauce l*tw went into effect in Nebaska. It requires that there shall be no screens, no shades, no blinds no curtains, no obstacle at ail between the public and gin mill. That the "keen sunlight of publicity" shall show tip every man who drinks, and there shall be no sneaking •round back doors.

"GATH"says that on the first occasion that he ever met Conkliug, he took pains to inform him that he never had slept with a man in his life and never would. He was describing going to conventions at an early period, and the attempts of different men to sleep with him, and how he would take a billiard table tirst or get out on a roaf.

THK Washington correspondent of the Milwaukee Sentinel has It front one who called at the White House a few nights since, that the President was found In his room with his head bowed and his hands supporting it. Looking up. he said, with a feeling of despondency and almost despair, "My Ood, what does any man want to be President of the United States for?'*'

T«K admirer of two girls at Waupaca, Oregon, could not choose between them, and neither was willing to relinquish her claims In favor of the other. They therefore agreed to decide the question by the IOMS of coin, and the tossing was done, carrfully and fairly, in the presence of an invited company. The lo#er accepted her luck uncomplainingly. and is to be ftmrt bridesntaid at the wedding. A somewhat similar case had a different termination at Bowerton. Mich. The girls In this instance were sisters, *nd they were willing to divide the lover between them. In order to carry out that idea they have started for Utah, where they will practice polygamy but the harmonious sisters have exacted a solemn vow from the man never to hare more than two wives.

ONE MORE UNFORTUNATE. Ind.JournaL unie Berniee, an only daughter, and once the petted child of a wealthy gentleman of Indiana, some years since took the -downward road to rain. She had been well educated and carefully nurtured, but the tempter came and she fell. She was beautiful and accomplished. Like many such, she lied from the sight of her old friends and playmates, and sought to hide her shame in a large city. She went to Louisville, passed through tbe usual gradations from flaunting viee'to abject misery, until her home was among the lowest and vilest. Tbe other night she was beaten to death by a ruffian. To a reporter, one man who saw something of the crime, said:

The night was dark, and, although I looked hard, could only see three dark forms. One of the men seemed to catch the girl about the waist and then throw her down, muffling her face as she fell. Then I saw the men beat her heard her low, muffled groans and gasping cries for mercy, but the beating continued. Then the woman ceased to groan, and the blows souaded, as they fell so thick on her body, like blows on a sand bag. Then one of the men dragged the woman to the front of the alley, and I saw no more of them, and went"shivering back to bed. I knew a terrible crime had been committed."

The reporter, continuing his search for information, found the home where this wretched girl lived, and he thus describes it: 'r

v*

VJ

"Entering a narrow little ball leading out of Market street, the floor of which is covered with filth that gives forth a sickening stench, and going up a dirty, foul-smelling old staircase, the reporter knocked at a door at the head of the staircase. A withered, toothless old hag, black enough and wierd-looking enough to suggest ideas of an infernal region, opened the door, and invited him to come in. The room was less than fourteen feet square, and in it ten people lived. Six children, hungry-looking and in rags, were playing on the floor, aftd one was munehing a bone which he had found In the gutter. Some dead animal in the room or near it gave forth an unbearable stench. "After some hesitation the old woman agreed to take the reporter through the house, and, leading the way through a dark, damp, narrow little hallway, knocked at a door of a room at the end of it. It was opened by a white girl, thin and white-faced, with great blue circles under her eyes. In the room were six colored men and their women, and the whole crowd lived together in this room day and night. One window afforded all the ventilation, the air being so thick and close as to be stifling. Several other rooms on the saute lioor were visited and the same things seen. In all were crowds of men and women—in many of them white women. There were dirt and poverty and sickness everywhere.

Passing by one. door, the reporter opened it to enter, but the old hag dragged him back, whispering in a frightened way that the man within had the smallpox, and the rest of the people who were with him were also supposed to have It. In tho brief glance that was had a man was seen lying on thelwd. his face swollen and broken out with eruptions. Going up two flights of stairs, tho third story of the house was reached. ^11 hero was dirtier mid more horrible than below. It seemed, coming from the bright, warm sunshine without, to this fetid, rotting hole, as though it were the creation of a perverted imagination. There were rooms small and dfrty, reeking with filth of all imaginable descriptions children with their white, wan faces, looking as though they had never seen the sunlight crowds of both sexes and wlors, drinking and singing wild, drunken songs sick and haggard faces were there, too, and forms that had once seen fairer homes. "In another room a woman was found itig sick, and all the neople in the neighboring rooms rushed to tho door as the reporter approached, warning hat the woman had tho smallpox. The utter wretchedness and horrible, ghastly surroundings their rooms so small

of these people, and so filthy, with

no furniture and no food, and nothing to le sera but misery and vice, cannot lie understood by the good people who sit in their comfortable homes and hear nothing of tho way some of our people live. "This house contains about forty rooms, in which live sixty-three families, numbering about five hundred souls, and among them all Barnie Cassidy was well known. The room of the murdered girl was shown by Sallie Yates. It was a dark, dingy, foulsmelling little hole. A few dirty quilts tIn-own on the floor served her forabed, and no other articlo of furniture was in the room. Into this hole she was thrown on Tuesday night, by the men who committed the*murdor,and from it they removed her to the city hospital. And it was among negroes and the lowest class of whites that Annie Berniee, once the ictted child of a wealthy gentleman, ived, and by some among them, in a tilthv alle\\ was at length stamped to death, after being ejected from the kitchen of a colored prostitute."

In one of Dickens' novels there is a character whose life and surroundings remind one of Annie Berniee. Of the thousands who have read it, few suspect that it is a fact, not fiction-—that it hardly does justice to actual scenes occurring frequently In all large cities. The novelist has no occasion for invention. He needs only to lie a faithful painter of real life. ,.r,

The bagnios of Chicago, Cincinnati and Louisville are constantly recruited from the small towns of Indiana and adjoining States. When a poor, deluded girl notice* the averted faces of her former companions, and knows that scandal is busy with her name, her first impulse is to fly to a large city. Here are gilded and richly furnished mansions and smooth-tongued bawds to make their first entry on a life of shame easy and gradaal. The end is evtr the same, differing not much from that of poor Annie Berniee, the representative of thousands. It is said that the ranks of the abandoned women in largo cities are mainly recruited from the country, and not from the dtks, where the borrorsof their condition are better known. It would seem that here Is afield for practical Christianity and benevolence, which is poorly worked. Nothing is gained by suppressing fact*. Tbe career of a young girl driven by shame or slander to seek refuge in a large city Is too well known to be novel. A picture of it

XERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EV-hJlSTING MAIL.

cannot be too highly, cplorefl. When a case like that of AnnfejBernice by accident happens to attnn attention for a day, it is a great|Bista}Ce|to pass |t lightly by, for there a##*-eonst*nt]y hundreds like her, dazed and helpless bj their first fall, contemplating the flft step which led to her horrible filthy alley. How strange around all such stories af this even pots brackets.

THE HOUR, referring to,the tnresby Col. Ingersoll in well says: "The weakness of of religion and its ministers is have nothing to offer in pi they try to break down. Ev is a social force, the centre tional or benevolent enterp and ministers are organized regular array, but Ingersoll fidel backers are mere guer very men who cheered Inger echo last Sunday are glad to |see their wives go to church and their children to Sunday schol." It doe^ seem a little singular that men should be vociferously applaudiug sentiments that are subversive of their best interests, and up holding a man who would take away from them what little right to rest they have. Looking at it merely from physical point of view, the' Saljlmth institution is a blessing that

ntlecYork, critics

Of what church educa-

Priests

his tn-

1 to the

the,]*

boring

men cannot by any means affojB to lose. Break down our Sunday laws|gnd you break down the only harrie tects the laboring man from 1 pel led to work seven days in Why will men who cry out Sunday laws be so blind to th alas well as moral and religion

at comweek. ilnst the physieterest?

THAT this is an era of pe4|sand of reconciliation has another eraleuce in the fact that a son of the late

Secretary

of War Stanton has lately married the daughter of Mrs. Philips, tbe woman whom Oeueral Butler Ship Island for insulting Union soldiers in New Orleans.

ITis not difficult to foresee |hat the changes of one word in the New1 Testament by the late revisers mu|j£ lead to an immense amount of discussion. The word "hades" is substituted far hell in a number of places. Writiiw' of the new version and this change, ihe New York Times says: "It is asserted that the substitution of the untranslated Greek word 'hades' for 'hell,'in certain passages, do^s not affect doctrines of the cxistanoe of hell, for we still find the word? 'Hell' in the texts which are relied upottifcjy those who hold the doctrine of endleife' future punishment. But will not the formal recognition toy the revisers of 'haded,' a locality hitherto unknown to Protestant reader strengthen the theory of a future intermediate state? If 'hades' is not hell —as the revisers have decided that it is not—neither can we assume 'that it is heaven. What, then, is that hades'— tho place of departed spirits-^which is neither heaven nor hell? Manifestly it must IK* that intermediate state recognized by the Church of Rome and called purgatory. It does not follow that the Roman doctrine of purgatory, with its apparatus of purifying" flames and its temporary tortures, is true, but is quite possible that the theory there is a place where the souls of the dead are imprisoned until the judgement day will be materially strengthened by the introduction of the word 'hades' into tho revised Testament."

SWEET GIRL GRADUATES. St. Louis (i lobe-Democrat. But the happiest of the children that will take leave from school this month will be those that are singled out for graduation, as it is called, and the happiest of the graduates will lie the girl graduates. For by that grand and mysterious ceremony the school girl changes suddenly into a young lady. It is to her what presentation to the (Jueen is to the young English lady who is about to enter society. Henceforth she will assume a dignity" to which she has .until then been a stranger. Then there are for her the other accidental enjoyments. She will appear before the public in brilliant array—almost resembling the bridal costume that expects her in the future. And she will read a sentimental "essay," or recite a sentimental "piece," or warble forth a sentimental song and the foremost of them all will read a sentimental valedictory. Nor is that all. There will le bouquets, if not from some blushing youth and admirer, at least from some relative or kind friend. Nay, there is still more. There is a carriage to take her to and from the hall where tho mysterious ceremony of graduation is performed. And as she descends from the carriage, as well as when she re-en-ters it, a crowd of blushing youths and unblushing young men will gaze upon her with admiring eyes.

WOULDNT CHANCE IT. Ind. Review. The other day Rev. Myron Reed was standing near Major Russell, who is known as one of the largest hearted men who ever huddled a stack of chips, when a red-nosed tramp came along and asked charity. The Major responded with twenty-five cents. "Are you not afraid of being imposed upon "No," answered the Major "I can afford to take that chance." "Why so?" "Wen, when I began business in Kansas Clt-v I didn't know much about cards and in'a little while the boys had cleaned me out. I was soon absolutely destitute. I bad to button my coat up to the neck to hide mv dirty shirt, and soon afterwards I was actually starving. One day I saw a laborer eating his dinner ori~a ing lit pile of lumber, and when he had finished he threw some bread over behind the board pile. I watched until the man went to his work, and then slipped around and ate that bread. If

I

had

asked for it I might have been refused. No, Mr. Reed, I cannot afford to take the chance of refuting some hungry man.n

FROM THE HUB. Hortoo UMw.

4„.

There is perhaps no tonic offered to tbe people that poaseses as much realtintrinsic value as the Hop Bitters. Just at this aeason of the year, when the stomach needsan appetiser, or tbeblaod needs purifying, the cheapest and best remedy is Hop Bitters. An ounce of prevention is worths pound of cure, donH wait nntil you are prostrated by a disease that may take montha for you to recover in.

ROOMS.

ROSE THAT ARE REMEMBERED AS LONG AS LIFE LASTS.

Detroit Free Press.

Intelligence and courtesy not always are combined Often in a wooden house a golden room we find."

It was the fashion, a few years ago, to divide a house, into distinctive rooms. There was a blue room, a green room, a bismarck room and a cardinal room, all the hangings and appurtenances whereof were in keeping with the dedicatory name. Since then the fashion has changed, and Queen Anne rooms, East-lake rooms and rooms of the Renaissance have been the rage. At present rooms with comers seem to bo most popular, some kind friends furnishing the corners with ceramics, bric-a-brac, and articles of vertu, and devoting them to the goddess ruling the house, all of which are perishable, and leave no memory worth fostering.

The rooms that are remembered as long aslife lasts are not frescoed rooms, neither are they filled with the contributions of art They are rooms vocal with the melody of dear voices, though these have long been hushed—rooms where people have lived and 'died, rooms with histories written on the walls, Avhere the homely furniture has stood so long that, should it be removed, its photograph would be affixed to the walls forever sheltering rooms, loving rooms, but we can never forget them. To many a soul the world has been bounded by the dimensions of a single room—its joys shut in, its sorrows shut out.

Splendid rooms have no histories. In a dingy room, with dust-begrimed walls, lay for years the last regalia of Scotland, —the crown with its precious jewelshidden awav in the poorest, plainest room of Edinburgh Castle. It was at last discovered by workmen who were busv making some changes but long before that a pale young student, tutor to a company of noble volunteers, had discovered, in walking to and fro, night after night, that there was a room beneath his which gave back a ghostly echo to his impatient feet, and he had searched for the unseen room, which somehow had grown to have a personality for him, but little he recked of the costly treasure buried there, to be revealed a few years later.

There were rooms in the old inquisition days, which contracted and crushed in their iron embrace the hapless prisoner within their walls. Stay by day he saw them grow narrower, and watched their ponderous bulk encircle him closer, until air and light and life were excluded, and their victim died in horror and was ground to powder. There are still contraating chambers, reared by the inquisitions of self-crushing by slow degrees all the light and beauty out of life and at last closing upon the sordid soul.

It is related of a splendid house in a great metropolis that among rooms of Oriental magnificence is one upon whose plain walls hang a few cheap prints, a rag carpet is upon the floor, some homely pieces of furniture and a child's wicker cradle and wooden rocker are all put in that room. The sated fine lady of the house spends her happiest hours, recalling, among the homely surroundings of her childhood, the vanished blessings that are now her sweetest memories.

There is an old farmhouse on the prairie where one room is kept locked all the week. On Sunday afternoon a gray-haired woman steals softly to the door, unlocks, it, and spends an hour within. It is "a room in strange contrast to the rest of the house. Pictures hang there an open piano, a well filled bookcase bespeak taste above the dull routine of that household. They all speak of it in hushed voices as "Annie's room." Who was Annie? The bright, joyous girl, who graduated at a distant seminary—the pride of her old mother and father, the iaol of those rough boys who had planned this "golden room" for her when she should come home from school she came home to die, in her sweet, girlish beauty. "Then fell upon the house a sudden gloom,

A shadow on those features fair and thin. And softly from that hushed and darkened room

Two angels issued where but one went In." "Mother's room" is the shrine in many a home, the room where some patient invalid mother sits to receive all the rievances of the family, the doubts that eset older heads, the perplexities of those who have taken her place in tho household, where the children find an atmosphere of peace, in which suffering is made subservient to saintliness.

Oh, the infinite richness of those rooms frescoed with finer pictures thau ever Corregio designed, hallowed by wealth that came from within, and not from without—rooms forever peopled by the dear invisible ones,who once lived and dreamed and suffered in those sacred precincts. "There the forms of the departed

Enter at the open door— The beloved, the true hearted Come to visit us once more. Rooms that are magnetized with love and memory, where walls are of jasper and their doors of pearl. What rooms do they inhabit now Where above the glittering stars is that home "where the many mansions be"? Do they yearn to come back to the earthly rooms they once loved? It was an ignorant old woman who, when her poor, neglected daughter died, listened impatiently to the good minister's grand representation of the home she had gone to, and Ihe celestial room she now occupied, and at last broke in: "I'd just be satisfied to know that she was comfortable among all them fine things."

Well, we shall all know when we bave crossed the antechamber. Hi

There

Is a room—Astutely room,

Now bright with sunlight, now wrapped in gloom But only when we are calm and cold ?.•» I Will that door unclose on it* hluges old.*'

A FRIGHTFUL WARNING. Boston Port. ,^ There lived a man a few weeks since, who, perhaps, regretted that he ever betame a Green backer. Two years ago the ilfc Rev. Mr. Norris, of Guilford, in the fourth Maine congressional district:, de-

Olican

PELL AGAINST A SHARP EDGE. Rockford, Ilia, Re*Met. This t* furnished by Mr. Wm. Will, 1613 Frankford Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.: Some time since I received a severe injury to my back, by falling against the aharo edge of a marble step, the atone ixmX^ung it at least a half-inch, and fmvinff a very painful wound. After a S ply st, Jacobs Oil, and «n pleased to mv that the results exceeded my expeetationa. It speedily allayed all pain and swelling and W«»ntl«««* Mrfectrare. I reallv think it tbe most effirariooa liniment 1 ever used.

msmm.

THE TRUE TEST.

1 1

The Merit of Religion, Government, Persons and Things Must Best Upon a

Cj a)Basis

of Worth.

Some Truths Illustrating This, and Testimony of Value to All Readers.

Christian at Work.

The true test of any religion i« the effect it producer upon the lives of those who profess it. And, indeed, th* test of real merit everywhere muit be the power it ponenes ot accomplishing desirable results. la tt.ii age ot the world men are not jadged by what t&ey claim to be able to do, but by what they can do not by what they are reputed to be, but by what they are. Here is where the religion of our own country rises superior to the faith of Mohammedan or fitadoo lands for while there is much hypocrisy in the church, and far too much worldllness, there is yet an absence of those sensual and brutal elements which characterise the religions of Arabia and th« Ganges.

This principle is equally true in all other departments ot life. Tbe same rule which applies to ersons is equally applicable to things. Un questioned merit must characterize them all, or they cannot bo acceptable, much less popular. The dear and well arranged lecture delivered by Dr. Chas. Craig before the Metropolitan Scientific Association appeared in the columns of this paper a short time sinoe. In this lecture some new troths were brought to light bearing directly upon, and affecting the interests of ths entii'e community. These faets, as stated by the doetor in the lecture, have been discussed in the ooluams of tho religious press to a coasiderableextent lathe past, and that, too, by very prominent personages. A few years ago the Rev. J. E. Rankin, I). of Washington, who is prominently known among the Congregational denominations of the country, published an article upon the same subject which drew forth most bitter replies from prominent physicians, and in response to these articles Dr. Rankin

?ublished

long communications in the New

ork Independent, the Baton Congregationalism and the Chicago Advance reiterating his former statements and strongly emphasizing them. In these articles Dr. Kankin frankly stated be was as strongly convinced of the efficacy of the means used as he was that the Genesee river empties Into Lake Ontario. He further said "I kave known too, of its use in similar c«ses by physicians of the highest character and standing, and I want, in the interest of humanity, to recommend Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure."

Now whilo very few peoplo are afflicted as severely as Dr Craig, or the cases r. Rankin refers to, still it is a lamentable fact that the great majority of people, in all parts of the land, are suffering to a irreater or less extent from ill health and that this lack of health arises from either disordered kidneys or liver. Some additional facts, from tho highest sources, of special interest upon a subject of such importance to the community have therefore been collected bv this paper, and are herewith giren:

Rev. D. W. Bar tine, M. D., D. D., is known in all parts of the land as a prominent aud efficient leader In the Methodist denomination. In speaking upon tbe same subject as shown in his own experience be said "Some few months since I found myself suffering from a kidney difficulty which I knew to be the flit stages of Bright's disease. By tbe use of a reliable test I found that my system was giving off albumen, and insomeiastaooeiia a coagulated state. 1 alao suffered severely from dropsy, particularly about the ankles, together with slight pains about the kidueys. derangement of digestion and zreatdryness of the skin. I h&d -t all times much thirst, and of course this was followed by a gradual failing of strength. That was about the state of things when I commenced using the preparation known as Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. I took about six tablespoonfuls every day for a week, and found all my symptoms decidedly improving. I continued taking tbe remedy until 1 entirely recoverea."

In a communication mil) by Rev. Dr. C. A. Harvey, the well known financial and educational secretary of Howard University, Washington, 0. C., the doctor says: "I have for the past few years been acquaint, ed with the remedy known as Warners (rale Kidney and Liver Cure and with its remarkable curative efficacy in obstinate and so-called incurable cases of Bright's disease which occurred In thla city. In some of these cases, which seemed to be in the last stages and bad been given up by practitioners of both schools, the speedy cures which were wrought by this remedy seemed to be little less than miraculous. I am conviscod that for Bright's disease in all its stages, including those first symptoms of kidney troubles which are so easily overlooked, but are so fraught with dancer, no remedy heretofore discovered can be held for one moment ia comparison with this, and I hope that Warner's Safe Kidney and Lirer Cure may become as widely known as is the existence of the maladies which it will cure."

Rev. A. C. Kendrick, D. D, LL. D., who is Professor of Hebrew and Greek languages in the University of Rochester, N. Y., and who is one of the American revisers of the New Testament, speaking of the effect which Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Care had upon himself, statedmost emphatically that he had received marked benefit from it, and he cordially recommended it to tbe use of others.

Rev. A. Bramley, pastor of tbe Arsenal Street M. S. Church, Watertown, N. Y.. testified in a recent Interview that the first few bottles of Warner's Safe Kidnev and Liver Cure had entirely removed the distinctive features of a se vere kidnev diOculty, and that while he bad aot been able to lie upon his back without great pain for more than five years, be was now not only able to do so. bnt slept soundly, ate heartily aed calls himself a new man.

Rev. A. P. Hill, of 8boeheel, N. C., bavlng beoa troubled with a severs kidney and liver disease for a nsmbtr of yoats, said: "I bave been praying for relief for four years, and I believe I got it in answer to prayer. May God bless the firm who manufacture Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Care. Maay of my friends bave also used it with marked benefit, sadfl hope my testimony in Its behalf may save the liv sand relievo many who are now aeverely suffering from kidney or liver troubles in some of their many and dangerous forms."

Rev. P. F. Marklee, in writing from Montanagomery, Ala., said "I have paid st least one thousand dollars for doctors snd medicine and never roceived any relief until I oommenetd taking Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. 1 am too thankful to express in words tbe benefit this medicine has done my family and myself. I have been to the hot nriass, sulphur spriags and severs! pisses noted for their curati re propertiea. but this great remedy did for me what everything else failed to do—It cured taa.

hope

the Republican party, espoused

the Greenback cause, and began making Greenback speeches. The reverend gentleman's action so displeased the Republican members of his parish that they insisted upon his seeking anew field of spiritual labor. The Baptist conference sent Mr. Norris to Bnrmah as a missionary, where be was lately killed and eaten by the natives.

tbe Good Father may crown the efforts of thvm who are raanufactarlng It, for the noble work tbey are doing."

There an no store reliable endorsements te be fonad in this land than those above givea, and coming from divines of such prominence tbey prove beyond a doubt tbe value of tbe great remedy of which they spsak. It should also be remembered that Mr. H. V. Warner, the proprietor and maaoteetarer of this remedy wss hlm«elf cared by Its ate after having been

gi

venap to die by several pbystcsaa. Sojrratawaaae for his remarkable cure that be determined tbe world should know of this remedy, and be therefore began its-manufacture- Mr. Warner is also a prominent patron ef other public enterprises and tbe •dencesand by endowing tbe Warner AstroDomical Observatory at Rochester, as well as by his many other public benefactions, has become known to, and reneeted by, tbe entire toad. His standing alone is an ample guarantee of tbe parity and worth of the remedy be makee, hat the thousands of testisaoaials from all parts of Asserica gratefully telling of the relief it bss given, prove It boymd a question. it is attracting gnat sad univewal stteottsa throuanoot the eatire oouatry. Xoc«e factnaa bees more apparent la tbe fast few years than tbatkidaey sad limsr troubles ere alarmingly 1st leasing When, therefore, a remedy ass found which aot only cores tbe wonts* well ss all minor troubles of this nature, but

g£S2f!S5S5Sr5SSrri5ra2S',i?h

^tS^aSeSr^tttod? Tbie is last wtat

bee

1

beea done in thousands of cases In addition 10 flMse above saeetiooed, sad it Is what will be done la tens of thousands of other cum in the n^ae TCI/ liCH

K.

A SIGNIFICANT FAClW The cheapest medicine ia use Thomas' Eclectric Oil, because so very little of it is required to effect a enro. For croup, diphtheria, and diseases «1 the lungs and throat, whether used bathing the chest or throat, for tnkin" internally or inhaling, it is a matchles. compound.

Skin Dlaenaea.

"Swayne's Ointment" Cures the most hiSwavnc'a Ointment" Swayne's Ointment"

veterate cases skin disease, such us totter,salt rhcum^c.il. head, barberV \v\ sores,all crusty sea itching, skin eru tions, and that rii tressing complaint

Qinvnaie nintmpnt''

"Swayne's Ointment '•Swayne's Ointment" "Swayne's Ointment" "Swayne's Ointment" "Swayne's Oiutment" "Swayne's Ointment" "Swayne's Ointmeut" "Swayne's Ointment" "Swayne^ Ointment"

Svayne^s Ointment "Swayne's Ointment" "Swayne'is

Ointment" "cbing piles,then,

"Swayne's Ointment" 1* efltectual euro, no "Swayne's Ointment" f- matter how obsti "Swayne's Ointment" 1 natc or long standi*

Ask for it and take no other. It curt where all else fails. Sold by all prominon druggists.

Weakly and Sickly Persona, Many persons who arc weak and sickly this season of the year arc at a loss to kno what will restore their health. It has latel. been fouud by experienee that the use SpeerV Port Grape Wine is one of the bos re.«torntives knewn. Physicians, clergymen and temperance advocates should eneouniR the uso of Port Urapeanil thus aid the cans of temperaneeaiul niodeation. It Isespociall. recommended to families for its purity, ex qulsito flavor and healthy properties. Medical men certify to its valuable medieinel jnnvers. Ma. Speer has been for years engaged in the raising of grapes and perfecting this wine, and it requires a four years' piwo before it is tit for market.—N. Y. Baptist.

J. J. Baur has imxuired some direct from the vineyards. It is excellent for females, especially for these with nursing Infant*

Mr. Patterson Meant What He Said. The following tribute to a well-known and meritorious preiaratlon will be read with pleasure by all who are suffering from pulmonary complaints themselves, or hav« friends so afflicted.

I hereby certify that my boy, ten years ago, was taken sick with .typhoid fever, followed by'eonge«tion of the luugs. Dr. Dyer, an eminent physician of this place, stated that ho thought the boy would run down with Quick Consumption. A Mr. Patterson told me that WE'H (\UGH BAIXAM was curing similar cases, and advised mo to purchase it. When I carried It home, my wtfi laughed at me but I knew MK. PATTKIISON MKANT WHAT HKSAin,and I determined to try It. Two bottles cflbctually cured hini, that now he is as tough and healthy as anybody. LYMAN DOLLMAN

HrvrtNOTON, Conn.. Aug. 2!, I860.

NKW HAVKN, Conn., Nov. 18,1S71)..

My children were all seriously troubled) tvith Whooping Cough. We treated them With regularly prescribed medicines, with Honupoputhic Specific, etc., with but little or no relief until we gave them COEti- COl'tJH BALSAM, which immediately assisted nature to restore them to good health. I truly believe it the le*t medicine in the world fo. Whooping Cough. .1. H. POST,

Ag't Charter Ouk Life Ins. Co.

He SnlTered for S5 Years. (U'lr.Koun, Conn.. May ir, 18«N. For thirty-live years I have been tho victim of that terrible disease, I)ys|e|»tia have eonsuited eminent physicians, and tried almost every remedy. My family physician finally told me I could not be cured. The first dose of COE» DYSPEPSIA CUKE helped me, and to-day I consider myself cured, and am ready to afnrin that it Is the most valuable nuxlj cine ever placed l»efore the pnblic.

O. H. RICHARDSON.

PADUCAH, Ky., May 10,1*07.

During a confinement of eleven mouths in Tjibby Prison, I wasattaoked with Tyspepsln in its worst form. For two .veal's 1 have suffered with it. I tried doctors a great many tiuaes without relief. This spring 1 became KO debilitated an to bo unable to walk one square. After taking two doses of COK*i DYSPEPSIA CIJHE I "to of everything on the table, felt no distressnftenvard, and havr an excellent appetite. F.T.(»ILL!LAND, l^ate Lieut. U. H. A

DtTKotr, Mich., June !i, IStlH,

I would like to add one more testimonial to vour list. I have been a victim to Dy*-

Dys­

pepsia for the past five years have tried a great many medicines, ami find relief oi COW'S DYSPEl'SIA CUKE.

PILES! PILES!! PILES!!!

A Snre Cnre Found at Last! No One Need SnfTer. A sure cure for the blind, bleeding, itching and ulcerated piles has been discovered by Dr. Williams (an ludlan remedy), called Dr. Williams' Indian Ointment. A single box has cured the worst chronic enwm of 25 and 80 years' stundlng. No one need nutler five minutes after applying this wonderful soothing medicine. Lotions, instruments and electuaries do more harm than good. Williams' Ointment alwrtrbs tho tumors, allays the In tense itching (particularly at night after get ting warm lii bed), acts nun iwultlcc glvof-, instant and painless relief, ami Is prepared only for plies. Itching of the private |arts and nothing else.

Read what the Hon. J. M, CofTlnbcrry. of Cleveland, says about Dr. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment: "I have used scores of pile cures, and it affords me pleasure to say that I have never found anything which gave such immediate relief as Dr. Williams' India* Pile Ointment."

For sale by all druggists, or mailed on ro eclpt of pricc, #1.00. HENRY A DAVIKS, Prop's,

OJ.KVKLAND, OHIO.'

Agents and Canrssscrs

Make from »3S lo WO per week selling goods for E. G. R1DKOUT A CO.. 10 Barclay Street, New York. Hend for their catalogue and terms. Aug21-lyr.

TAEAXINE

The Great Vegetable Liver Corrector.

Jt contain* no Calomel or Mineral of anf id, iUt Main Ingredient it th* Concentrated Medical Principle of the Tararicutn or

Dandelion•

1^"

TARAXINE

It a Specific for all Jimeaee» arifing from Deranged Liter. Jlotcrl$, Hpleitn

1

or Kidneyt.

TARAXINE Cure* IAver Com' plaint in all its

Stages*

TABAXnrE Cures Habitual Constipation*

TARAXINE Never fails to cure Chronic

Ague. Try it, TARAXINE Cures Dyspepsia and

Indigestion.

TARAXINE

for Bate fry all Druggist* and Patent Medicine Dealert.

JPricef 50 Ct». and $1.00.

A. KIEFER,

Indianapolis, Ind*