Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 12, Number 22, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 November 1881 — Page 3
TERKE HAUTE, IND.
A Paper for the People.
M0DEI4 HOME JOURNAL.
ENTERTAINING, INSTRUCTIVE AND NEWSY.
BRIGHT, CLEAN AND PURE.
THE TWELFTH YEAR*,'
if -t
WHEKE IT IS SOLD.
Mt ubbo „Chrt«man. ill* A. Buchanan .Juuson, Ind K. Mcl I my —.Maxv e, Iud c. Uirkrwon .Bseleyvllle, In«l JooT, *l.»0osk«y YOangstown, In UWliy 1WI1WII .......
MoiniuUek
1ou|h
.X(hin
NKVVSBOYH
250
^KU- IT 1N THIS CftV»
swsispi
wmm
ilisfil
vp
-x jf
The Mall has,-a record of success seldom attained by a Western wWltly paper. Ten years of Increasing popularity proves its worth. Encouraged toy the extraordinary succens which has attended Its publication the pnbllstoer has perfected arrangements by which for the coming year The Mall will be more than ever welcome in the home circle. In thin day of trashy and Impure literature it should be a pleasure to nil goodpeople to help in extending the circulation of such a paper as the
SATURDAY'EVENING MAIL
tttriy*' TERMS:
One year Six month*........ ...... Three months .....—
..Opera ....P.O,
wm
EVENING
SATURDAY
«2 60 100 GO
Mall and office subscriptions will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration of time. AddreM P. WESTFALL,
Publisher Saturday Evening Mall, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
era Hon* Lobby
K. CJot«:Ke S. R. Baker ...~ ^rove liaute House [llchiirii )'Hrlen..... National House Walsh & HtnlUi... 681 Main street AlODltt) it!«ittU(l...i oip.Jth ai^ La ayp)^?.®' fom«rh Hnarrow Cor. 12th and Poplw Mrs! Kllwibeth McCutchoon...ll34 E. Poplar st Sberltl ct e.iy MuiiSLn' nil h'»iii itii-.!.! "8,l|}11tvari inii
.Opp. Post Office srre Hi
Sr^ar.!=r=3ES»'ftS
John 'V. Hanna.... J. K. IdUllfllOH T. M. Robertson Co... Fositor M. Maris Joseph istomus Clias. L»*e Donii!o Chew
at to on I
Oreencastle, Ind Brazil, Ind Annapolis Ind .... Kulghtsvillelnd
Charleston, Ills Sand ford, Iud
M. Cmuioway ....... Bugene, Ind Wra. Hunt Montezuma, Iud Andrew
II.
Cooper
.,ron.V
Incl
A. Vaitfoyk .Scotland, Ills W. U. i'nniiell 5£e| Frank A, Gwin.. ...c..«CJttrHsle, Ind U. V. Wllwon Casey, Ills 1m Peer J1"} Johtt Lnvorly .....Cory, Ind John W. Mlunlck New Goshen, Ind Elinor IIitch
..!• orroU, II'h
uv
Jatlicw Howell Bloomlngdale, Ind JOH. A. Wright ...Catlin, Ind Grant .stiles Robiuson, Ills H. A. 1'ittli Waveland, Ind W .tawda '. I. K.»:nks Fero-sv Ue, Iud .T. W. Hover «.Vermillion, lib Frank Bond Oaktown. Iud Johnnlo IMashmutt... Bhelourne, Ind T. I.. Jones rtalrieton, Iud ff iu. J. lurt*» .Bridgeton, Ind Harry fc. lMnkl*y.. Bowling Or«ep. Ind Eruust Owen V# ml'rili Pontius iHluor.. ...... Martinsville,III* Wm Nieliel*. Deunison. I1U John A. 'Jl*rk Livingston, Ills I. H. Itry.in „.... oentervitle. Iud Harve
fiH*
Ovft.'» Klsstidr rSd K. DnvU Blulf, Ind 0 Jaolrhuvn Darlington,Ind Sirs. Kttt»
.Hunters, Ind
0 fc'. Vlnrriswn Worthlngtoi*, Ind David Mlddlmnns^ .......Olay Uty, Iud Pal«n«»r Howard. ..........Paxtou, Ind John Ira l»ong ................Marts, Ind terpen»ur ijt«uuuu, Ind lnv»l Prairie Cr»»e*, lud Win Kmn-ttl Pimento, Ind
Ustin.tr Uloomtlold, Ind
li i. SinUh. Bellmore, Ind ii lit Kails Cioverland. Ind Omrtnny WUhlte ^......Hutsonvllle, Ills Ottlo
Dflvets
^.Nowraan, 111"
John li strong Harmony, Ind
ntMHI I .4XT TO
1
iN kSS MEN
yHE SATURDAY
E
VENIN^» iM:AIL
t)fc^ Tf) PRES8
N SATURDAY,
bo
tl^Tsiiu/TflTS MAtl
rt IXTY SURROUNDING T0WK8.
Cy EDITIONS EACH WEEK» *f*r
CHAma* ON if FOR BOTH, /f
1
UiE MAI LIS THB
MBWtM I
rjHiB ADVERTISERS,
KCAl^h
18 A PA FEB
6K TtTB HOUSEHOLD.
Twkkty
thousand bbadebs.
Taking Rpnc* «^nat« of GLASS, PA1KT8. ULL8 lheuatobcroi mdeatoalatail|t—ooaa ji
aver«®s—i«u«of the SATURDAY
DR. C. W. BENSON, OF BALTIXORI, MD, inventor and proprietors of the celebrated Celery and Chamamlle Pills. These pills are
Paralysis, Sleeplessness, will cure any case.no If properly used. The, only for those special diseases. They contain no opium, morphine or quinine, ana are not a purgative, but regulate the bowels and cure constipation by coring or "removing the cause of It. They have a charming effect upon the skin, and a lovely quieting effect upon
ter and give power, force and bnoyance to the nerves, and in that way increase mental power, endurance and brilliancy of mind. Nobody that has a nervous system should neglect to take them two or three months in each year, as a nerve food, if for no other reason.
Sold by alldrngglsts, Price, 50 cents a box. Depot, 106 North Eutaw St., Baltimore Md. By mail, two boxes for Si, or 6 boxes for 82.50, to any address,
DR. C. W. BENSON'S
SKIN CURE
Warranted to Cure
iOZCMA, TITTERS, HUMORS, INFLAMMATION, MILK CRUST, ALL ROUGH SOALY IRUPTIONS, DISBA8E8 OP HAIR AND 80ALP, SCROPULAULOfRS, PIMPLK8 A TENDER ITOHINCSanaUpartoofUM body. It tMkoatho skin wblto, mA and smooth removes
ten
and flrockles, and ia tho B3HT toilet
drcMlag In THB WOELD. ZOegsaUjr poS up, two bottloa in on* podkaeo, oonstetiac of bott Internal and oztornal treatment. All first class druggists have tt. tl.porpaOksc*!
frflyn-Yr rfti &, I: li !i si W& .'V
Consamptioa—Bronchitis—AathmaWEHE
Fellows' Compound Sysup useless in nil other diseases the benefit which it undoubtedly yields lu Connsuinption and other diseases of the Hcsplrntory Organs wonld vindicate Its cilnlra to tlie attention of every medical practitioner. From the statiMtics of England and America it is fair estimate that one tenth of the entire deaths is caused by Consumption alone. If the Syrup is used perseveringly It subdues the tendency to Con*unu^tlon,un"d In
raltiny
In that of the Inventor, it has effected a cure, Indigestion and Wabltual Costivonees al-
tKCft
most always arlso from the weakness of the
nerve» ana muscles of the stomach and bowels. In such oases, Fellows' Compound Svrtip of Hopophosphites has proven itself of the greatest service. The evacuations soon become copious and heathy.
TliisHvrup will oure Pulmonary Consumption in the tirst stage, and will give great relief and prolong life in the second and third. It will cure Asthma, Bronchitis, Laryngitis, Coughs, it will cure all diseases originating from want of Muscular Action and Nervous Force.
Pnblic Speakers nat Stagers. Will find this Syrup of inestimable value. Adosesliould be taken before speaking or singing.
Apliouia, or the Loss of Voice, Is usually cured by ft doson. We have known cases where a single dose has been effectual. •S. JACOB, M. D., St. John, N. B., writes: "I had occasion to use your Syrup In a case of Aphonia which would not yield to regular treatment it proved'to be all thatyou clai|ned for it, having scted with expedition and entire satisfaction/' oc®*Do not bo deceived by remedies bearing atrimilar name no other preparation is a substitute for this, under any circumstances.
|THE ONLY MEDICIWE
IX EITHER 1.1 (J 1'ID Ott DBI FOBX Tbat Acts nt the s«uao time «a
TBI IITSM, TBttOWMU, An tamMMXt. I WHY ARK WE 81
•t, "V
confirmed,
as
OK?
B*ca*M aUoto then gnat organ* to btam* or torpid, and jscteAoM JtircKt Mo tk* Hood 1 (Xai should fx txptiltd naticraEy.
ID N E W O WILL SURELY CURE [KIDNEY DISEASE*,
LIVER COMPLAINTS,
[PILES, c^nrtPATibx, tuxm WURE«. rKXALR WKAKKEMJ*, A*© NSRVOrs |»y«w«iiV/nM actio* tkm orgmt a*d
I rofcrtaff UWrpwwr to Uktv* dim*. Whj «itVN' Vtlllo** »*(u u4 IWkyIs—iimte* wit* Plies, [WliT fri#Vt«»«d ow dUorierrt KUacjvl
VI) t|kn itmn or ikl k»tKfc«l Ci*KDXET.WOB1W r&iiei in Mti It It put op la Dry T«ni*M* F«n% teBl *WcJ mkM IBM4Mml iltolallfdirwiWiTCiMW I Mri) fw tfcowt U«t «mum«tmOBf It I gW-twiqr^tn f— I OCT I* Ofr TdftK DBTGOI&T. JTUC SUM
WILLS, RlCElEDSOH I (trill (*ml tJ* dry 1 II
W.tt*Ctarr. WiLuiAm CLIFT & WILLIAMS. XAVtrrACTOKKin or
Sash,Doors,
ILU1BEK, LATH. SHINGLES
DrTT
npnui innwadv
1 1
EVKN1NO MAIL pertz««d by owr| mnet,uonwr2fi»t^ Thowmd IVcrl* I
«AKUn AKIk
TKRRE KAUrK. IND
ALL80BT8.
We cannot be robbed of time, becaoso it is always hours. The losses of cattle by the depredations of British Indians upon Montana ranges are very great
Arizona has 55 stamp-mills of from 2 to 80 stamps each, aggregating 385 stamps. Of the entire number only oqo mill is run by water power.
It is announced that the Adams House, Boston, is to be taken down, and that a large and fashionable hotel is to be erected on its site.
Norfolk is probably the only oouniy in Canada which has still in harness an official who was in the public service in 1814.
The line betweefi Nevada and Utah is being constantly crossed and recrossed by parties of railroad surveyors. There is a sharp rivalry in order to secure advantageous routes.
Galusha Southmayd, of Campton, N. EL, has died a martyr to the belief that a box and a half of mandrake pills, taken at one dose, would relieve pain in the stomach.
Los Angeles county, Cal., claims 6,500,000 grape vines bearing, and 8,000,000 planted last winter and 60,000 bearing orange trees, and 100,000 to begin next year.
The acme* of politeness was reached by a Nevada miniug superintendent who posted a placard reading: "Please don't fall down the shaft. —Detroit Free-Press.
Travelers in Germany report that within twenty years there lias been great improvement in the character of the hotels, and in the food and clothing of the people.
Virginia has now 4,854 public schools, and has gained 15,000 in attendance since last year. She has a school population of 314,827 white and 240,980 colored, and the value of her school property is $1,177,544.86.
Two of tbe crew of a Gloucester fishing vessel were lost in a fog last July while attending their trawls on Grana Banks. One day recently they arrive^ home, having been picked up 6~ outward bound ship and taken to rope. $ is claimed that Accom Northampton counties, in Vit' have the best soil for peaches known in this .country. The peach trees living and bearing now which were planted in 1816.
A widow at the West, intend! succeed her husband in the ma ment of a hotel, advertises that hotel will bo kept by the widow former landlord, Mr. Brown, wh last summer on a new and impj plan."
v*
The firemen of Canton, O., rec cents an hour for the lime they ar duty. Tliis is noble. The firemati wouldn't risk his life saving othe| pie's chairs and feather beds for 40 an hour has no enthusiasm in his ture.
necessary implements, and will be lift* ble to be called up in case of invasion or civil war.
Important works of embellishment are now being made in Jibe Cour da Murier, at the Palais des Beaux-Arts. Tho busts of all the former professor* and directors of the school will laced on pedestals on each side enri Regnault's monument those Baltard, Dubois and David Leroy afft already set up.
pli lie
Congressman Cox writes to the fork Sun fuom Constantinople: ''J rear the Turkish Empire is winndw or the handsomest young lady to ado the Sultan's place as anew wife, mother of the Sulta.i selects from the bevy of beauties gathered from 'silken SamarcAnd to cedared Lebanon.1 of the singular laws of royal marri here is that the wife becomes the slate,, when married, to his Majesty. Whyr Becauso the Crown Prince, or future Sultan, must be a born slave himself, and thus less in rank than the free people of tbe realm he governs.
According to the London World, the first cause of the animosities between regiments has always been difficult to trace but the "bad blood" circulates through generations of recruits. There are two distinguished corps in her majesty's service whose men never lose an opportunity of pummeling each other when an opportunity offers itself, and the only reason which can be assigned for tliis is a tradition tbat some officers of the one had been insulted by an officer of the other at the siege of Quebec.
A mule with artificial ears was an attraction at Ktioxville. Tonn., recently. The Chronicle says the old kicker had the misfortuno to be raised in :i North Carolina family in which a feud existed, and the spite of one party against the other was visited upon the innocent brute bv clipping his ears close to his head. The artificial ears were made of calfskin, crisped in the shape of natural ones, and so attached to the bridle as to (lap quite well.
Six months ago Bichburg, Allegany county, N Y., was a quiet little village of 100 inhabitants now it has a population of 2,000 railroads have appeared, and there are banks, hotels ana stores. All this eomes from striking oil last spring, and, despite the efforts of the other fields to rate tbe Allegany field as wildcat territory, the prospects of Richbunj are very flattering. Tbe village willsoon be incorporated.
A curious mass of insects has been discovered by hunters near Eugene, Ore. They say that every bosh, tree and shrub is completely covered, and stripped of every vestige of foliage by thousand! of caterpillars of all sizes under an inch and a half long. A hunter passing along the trail soon wears a ooat of these insects, and his gun is covered with them.
Edward Naud, a well-known and sncceesful business man oi Los Angeles ooonty, CaL. was sorting wool, eome of which bad been clipped from scabby sheep, and was consequently pobonous. After handling this infected wool he tooebed a portion of his person which was bleeding, inoculating himself with the poison, and died of its effects.
TERKE HATJTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.
The Spanish government is about carry out a project of fonning military colonies in Cuba, composed of officers and men whose terms of service have expired. They will receive grants of land and money for tho purchase pf ^notion on my park and I would be in
students now there are 1,400 schools, with nearly 6,000 students, and nearly 57,000 students have received the benefits of the classes. Last year there were 169,000 examples of students* work examined, all being offered in competition for the government prizes. During the year $415,000 was paid to art schools and classes, and 887,880 pupils received instruction in elementary drawing.
The Secretary of the State of Michigan estimates, 'from reports of correspondents from 624 towns, that the wheat raised in that State this year will aggregate 18,085,920 bushels, or an average of 10 and 15-100 bushels on an acreage of 1,781,865. His returns also show for corn an acreage of about 101 per cent., for oats 104 per cent., barley 93 per cent, and for hay 103 per cent, of the acreage, in 1880. The yield of corn per acre is estimated at 80 per cent of the yield in 1880, indicating a total product Of 36,519,773 bushels of ears. The yield of oats per acrfe is reported at 34 bushels, ihdicating a total yield of 35,045,386 bushels. Barley is estimated at 22 and 9-10 bushels, and hay at 1 and 2-10 tons per acre.
A small shark was lately canght off the south coast, and was exhibited at a well known watering place, in a small tent, outside of which was a placard, with the rough sketch of a marine monster, inscribed, *'Man-eating shark. Admission, 2 pence." Two yokels paid their money and stood gazing at the mass of decaying fish. Crowds came and went, but still the yokels stood and waited patiently. Presently they went up to the exhibitor and said: ••When will the man begin?" "What man? Begin what?" queried the ancient mariner. "Why, when will the man begin to eat the shark?" said one yokell "No man ain't going to eat any shark. They ain't fit to eat" said the old sailor. "Well I'm bio wed! Then what do you mean by putting up a notitib thatyou show 'a man eating shark?* on. Bill I thought it was a hum'Qlasgow^Evening Times.
Saved by an Elephant, lid showman" tells the folloWihg Story of his experienco when with a well-known manago-
Ster
an engagement at Smithfield, the exhibition was over," ••I passed into tho menagerie the
WHtchman.
From some
|kras absent from his post, and across the amphitreatre to ifl elephant to give him an apwe were the best of friends, of tho largest elephants I was as good-natured as
I was about half wav when I heard a growl, around, saw to my Horror (ons out of his cage and ap* in a crouching manner, a spring. I thought of a things in a moment, and liem must have regretted perijg so many old, worn-out jokes ©^performance that night. I had i0$Bnt presenco of miiiu to realize jT dangerous situation and to know &t it required the utmost caution to extricate myself from it One hasty
the jaws of the monster. I felt that my only hope was the elephant if 1 could reach him, but he was. chained by the foot and could not reach me. ^"Nearer and nearer came the lion, avihg his tail in a manner that meant s. If I turned mv back he took my eyes from lost. It was a terrible moefided backward swiftly as I nad another fear. I feared tpekward, and I knew if I irould never rise, but that would make a meal for
Betted tbe elephant I saw that understood my movements, and would be balked of his prey, to bring the matter to a then saw that I had but one id that was to rush with all my the elephant I think I must tped twenty feet when I turned,
W the lion jumped thirty, but me. How I completed the not lenow. I only know that iphant's trunk was around my he was lifting me upon his
W: I only knew that a was saved."
Concerning Albums.
An Interesting fact exists concerning pfiotograph albums. Nearly all are made abroad. A manufactory was started in this country, but was transferred to Germany because hand labor was eheaper. Albums are sold at about onethird their former cost The prevailing fashion, or one of them, in albums now is the plush-covered kind. Plush is the most generally employed fabric used for numerous purposes. The keeping of albums has a mania push about it The owner not only fills it with portraits of his intimate friends, but with those of public characters, from the noted criminal to the noted statesman* Autograph albums are American in production, and are offered in endless quantities. Their use is confined chiefly to children, who delight to spoil fair pages with the pot-hooks and hieroglyphics of their companions. If there a time when an impractical man desires to tear and rend his hair it is when be is expected to put bis name in an album under an original poem of one stansa. Album writers usually Or often express themselves in dead or foreign tongues. It fives a kind of classical reputation to the signer. Any one can do it There are many fine phrases in the latter pages of the dictionaries tbat can be made1 to fit anywhere. The yonng man who wrote totrt amt'e made a good exhibition of the average album French. A small dice of a foreign te goes a great ways in an album. ovrnaL
A party of Ko-Klux made their appearance in Warren county, Tenn., at tbe house of one J. Lane, and jgave that rson a severe whipping, with the inaction that unless he made better provision for his family and attend to his own butdness tbey would visit him again.
Fruit Is gold in
a
In I860 there were in Great Britain only nine art schools, with nearly 500
tbe
morning. silver
at noon, and lead at night Look at Adam, who got into trouble by eating an apple after
Septicmiia and Pysmia.
These words became quite familiar to people generally, especially after the formation of the glandular abscess in thelate President's cheek, which fully settled the question that his blood had become poisoned by the absorption of decomposed pus.
Septu5®mia—also written septsemia— is derived from words signifying "putrid" and "blood," and denotes a fever caused by the absorption into the blood of any putrid matter.
One may be thus blood-poisoned by utrid substance from his own body, or the Ixady of some other person, as when a physician, in conducting a postmortem, often takes corrupt matter into his system through some unnoticed cot, or chap, or scratch, or chafe on his finger.
In every such case a fever Is set ap, and the blood is so changed that it cannot properly fulfil its functions. As microscopic organisms are always present in putrid matter, it ia now supposed by most experts that septicemia is due to the presenco of these organisms. They multiply with inconceivable rapidity, and live by disorganizing'that to which they are attached, or in which they float
Py»mia strictly denotes a state of the blood inwbich pus globules float among the blood corpuscles, virchow denies that there is any such condition, and would have tbe name abandoned. So would some other well-known physicians.
The New York Medical Record says the etymology conveys a wrong idea of the real nature of the disease. Some others would retain the word, but restrict it to an intonser form of septicemia, characterized by chills, profuse perspiration great prostration, vomit*, ing. delirium and sweet breath.— XoutKs Companion.
A Perfeot Oup of Oofiee.
Coffee is the fine issue of Eastern hospitality—the climax of the visit One recognizes, on entering, the sound of the ooffee mortar for in every properly regulated household in the East the coffee is not ground, but pounded to an impalpable powder, having been 'roasted that morning, each day its provision, and pounded the moment it is needed. And no one who has not drank it there and thus can presume to Judge of the beverage. I In England we roast It till it is black, grind it as we would oattlo food, boiling it like malt for bepr, and when wo drink the bitter and unaromatic fluid which remains, say we have taken our coffee. The Eastern coffee-drinker knows all the grade^of berry and preparation as a silk merchant knows tne quality of silk the caffejeo knows that to roast it a shade beyond the point where it breaks crisply under the pestle is to spoil it and when tho slow pulveris iztng is done, each measure goes into copu of boiling water, just one of the tiny
its. little copjier ibrik, receives its dose ig cups full rests an instant on the coals to restore tbe heat lost in the ibrik, and is poured into the eggshell cup, anil so it oame to us, each cup in a gold enameled holder. The rule in thdse lands seems to be that few things are worth doing, but these few are worth doing well, and there is no waste of life or material by over-haste.—PaU MaU Go* zette. ,. g?
*'uJ' How to Make a-Poultioe. iSs tr! Brunton, in Brain, the new London periodical, gives tho following use. ful hints on this subject: The common practice of making poultices by mixng linseed meal with hot water and applying it directly to the skin is quite wrong, because if we do not wisn to burn the patient we must wait until a great portion of tbe heat is lost Tho proper method is to take a flannel bag, the size of the poultice required, to nil this with tbe linseed poultice as hot as it can possibly be made, and to put between this and the skin a second flannel, so there should be at least two thicknesses of flannel between the skin and the poultice itself. Above the poultice should be placed more flannel, or a piece of cotton wool, to prevent it from getting cold. By this method wo are able to apply the linseed meal boiling hot without burning the patient and the heat gradually diffusing through the flannel, affords a grateful sense of relief, which cannot be obtained by other means. There are few ways in which such marked relief is given to abdominal pain, as by the application of a poultice in this manner.
lfr. Hood's Pet Bear.
An official census of the Cbiricabua Apaches shows 586 bocks and 1,341 squaws and children, a total of 1,927. The six hostile bands are supposed to contain 148 bocks, included in the count The tribe has 1.228 horses, 580 cattle, 1,144 sheep, and 662 dogs. ...
AS A CURE FOB 'JPlLEti. Exchange. Kidney-Wort acta first by overcoming in the mfidmt manner all tendency to constipation: tben, by its great tonic and invigorating properties, it restore* to health the debilitated and weakened parte. We have hundreds of certified cures, where all else had failed. Use it and suffer no longer.
Constipation.
1"
John B. Hood owns a bear. He had it ohained in tbe vard near the house. It broke the chain and entered the house, nobody being about tbe premises but Mrs. W. P. Smith. Tbe bear walked into the pantry, emptied two pugar-bowls, sampled the catsup and pickles, took tbe cbeese-box down from tbe shelf and regaled himself with thel contents, took the chimneys off tbe lamps, placed them In a row, and knocked them down like ten-pins.. Bruin then had a picnic of the pies and cakes in the cupboard, showing great partiality to sweet things. He emptied the salt tbe corner of the room, and then amused himself bv pitching the china and delf through the window, and coded his bdftr ana a half of sport by emptying a pail of water on the floor and a bath. He remained in the room till tbe boys returned from work. Considerable fun occurred be fore he was captured, one of the boys getting hit in the eye with an egg thrown by his bearship.—Gudph Jitit-
6
Merroni Debility S
A Core Gnnranteed!
DfLRC.
WEST'S Nerve and Brain treatment a speclflo for hysteria, dlsslnep, convulsions, nervous headache, mental depression, loas of memoir, spermatorrhoea, Iru potency, Involuntary emissions, premature old age, caused by over exertion, sell abuse or over Indulgence, which leads to misery, decay and death. One box will cure, recent eases. Each box contains one month's treatment One dollar a box, or six boxes for five dollara j»nt by mall prepaid on receipt of price. We guarantee six boxes to cure any case. With each order received hy us for six boxes, accompanied with five dollar$, we will send the purchaser our written, guarantee tq return tho money If the treatment docs not efltect a cure. Guarantees issued only when the treatment Is ordered direct from us. Address JOHN C. WEST A CO. $
THE GREAT
UNFAILING SPECIFIC SF-jg^ FOR
LITER Gomplaints.
THE SYMPTOMS OF LIVER COMPLAINT are uneasiness and pain in the side, sometimes pain In the shoulder, and is mistaken for rheumatism, the Stomach lsaflfected with loss of appetite and sickness bowels, In general, costive, sometimes alternating with lax the head is troubled with pain, and dull, heavy sensation: considerable loss of memory, with painful sensation of having loft undone something which ought to have been done often oomplaining of weakness, debility and low spirits. Sometimes many of tho above symptoms attend the disease, and at other times very few of them but the Liver Is generally the organ most Involved. REGULATE THE UVER, AND PREVENT Dysyepsla, Constipation, Jaundice, Bilious •'^Attacks, Chills and Fever, Headadbe, 4*0 Oollc, Depression of Spirits, .'t%A Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Piles, etc.
See that you get the Genuine In white pper, with red Z, prepared only by J. H. in&Co. Sold by all Druggist*.
.... you
wrapper, with red Zeilfn fc
UVER
TARAXINE
The Great
Vegetable
Liver
m%s" Corrector."*]^
Xt contain* no Calomel or Mltvsrai ofaw$ kind, ito
Main Ingredient ia the Con-
eontrated Medical Principle of tho TarajHcum or Dandelion, s{
TARAXINE
If aS for all Dlsaaaea arising from tiged Liver, liowcl»f Spleen or Kidnoy*. TARAXINE ui« Cures m:?-
Liver Complaint in all its Stages. TARAXINE Cures Habitual
TARAXINE Never fails to cure Chronic
Ague. Try it.
TARAXINE Cures Dyspepsia and indigestion.
TARAXINE
for Sale by ull Brnggiata and Patent Medieine Dealer*. "(Price, SO
CDs.
and $1.00.
A.KIEFER,,
... 3 Indianapolis, Ind*
pen ated
Moore (Lens Sna
Tho Great MalarialAnHdote. Sold by Druggist*, or Dr. C. MooTe775T5rtlatv3Tst. New York. luvolmtble to overy family*
REED'S
ILT EDGCs
IS A THOROUGH REMEDY
In every case of Fever and Ague, while for Dwordersof the Stomach. Torpidity of the* Liver, Indigestion and disturbances of tbe Animal forces, which debilitate, it has no equivalent and can have no substitute. It should not be confounded with the triturate oompounds of cheap spirits and sMentlal oils often sold under the name of Bitten.
Portable lYInlay Maw Will, With mpmvmtmu ItfwUj MM* it mmIH ntifhIwrhoed ll. li
to rn» Vf miKrr •r wnttrr IM t* Mfllr ta ili« m4 f*r ibmfcis.
It mar op*r*t*4 eiihtr too or Ittrt asd wilt cut mock laator
taa
I'fjfHrt-tton (A MM lw«*r mmI aswtor •if b4»tt nap!*?** aaill* e( larger
IIM* I*«,«• rtafc»tot, tor t**tto
AtmMr.
Mt, iMfcltty Ut *RwUtr u* ut
from
(wit t» Uir»«
Jtejillttf* «tor* \km II
i*it .'-tr t- tijiy tbe ef Urge I' trim '•. i*i«, •«*.. to liUSi'Ui VLOU. IMUUHM, imIUH.
