Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 12, Number 33, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 February 1882 — Page 7
M" 1
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
FARMER WHITE.
BY EUGENE J. HALL..
You may talk o' the Joys o' the farmer An' envy his free, easy life, Yoa may sit at his bountiful table
An' praise his industrious wife. Bf you cliopjMxl in the woods in the winter, Or follered the fu/rer all day
With a team of unruly young oxen An' feet heavy loaded Et ron held the old pi
with clay:
low, I'm thin kin'
You'd sing in a different way.
You may dream of the golden-eyed daisies, An' lilies that wear such a charm, But it gives me a heap o' hard labor
To keep 'em from spllin' my farm. You may pictur' the skies in theirsplendor, The landscape bo full of repose, But I never get time to look at 'om,
Except when it rains or it snows. Yeu may sing o' the song birds o' summer I'll tend to the havrks an' crows.
You may writ* of the beauties o'natur',
An'
dwell on the pleasure o' toil the good things we have on our table All have to be dug from the soil An* our beautlfal brlglitlgolden butter,
Peihaps you may never have lurned, Makes a heap o* hard work fo* the wlna«, Ilhez to be cheerfully churned An* the eheeeas, so plump In the pantry,
All have to be lined and turned.
When I oome from the hayfleld 1» maimer, With stars gleanlm'over my head, When I milk by the light my 1a*tern,
And wearily erawl Into bed. When I think o'the work o' the morrsr, An' worry fur fear It might rain, When I hear the loud roar of the thunder,
An* wife she begins to complain— Then ltaeemsMiftlfe wasa burden, With-nothing to hope far or gai«.
A Day at a Depot.
Chatty Brooks in Arthurs' Magazine. We woke early, Lottie and I. We were at a little village hotel a dozen miles from the nearest railroad. We had been visiting some of Lottie's relatives and the hotel keeper's strapping son had promised to carry us in _is light little spring-wagon across the country in timo for the early morning train at Marshfield depot. Just as the dock in the bare, cold hall clanged three, wo woke Lottie to toll her of our dream. Wo had dreamed that the snow lay on the ground to the depth of fiftoon inches, liaising tho corner of the blind, Lottie rubbed her sleepy eyes open aud reported that the dream was only one of tho delusions of the night, that tho moon peeped out from tho edge of a brownixh-grey cloud, that the stars twinkled, aud the horizon's edge showed •ery faintly the dawn of the morning.
Wo hardly waltod for a cup of hot ooffee, in our hasto. lest wo should miss the train the boy «rove fast, sometimes furiously in going down tho hills, and just as wo came in sight of the walking factories of the busy eity of Marshlield, the train that we hoped to catch steamed out of tho dopot, curved around the suburban hills, and was gone.
A day at a strange depot was bofore us. Tho next train would not learo before five thirty. We looked at each Either in amazement. There was no twlnklo of thooyea, no relaxation of the muscles of the mouth—we just started at each other. The great overgrown young lionifaco was the lirst one to break the silence. "Wuw thing might a' happened," ho said in his way of administering conso-latloifl*»8ui.-e enough, that was crude good sonso. The boy was right. •'One timo 'bout two year ago," he continued, "I driv an olo man aorost tho country to take tho keers to lioraeoaburg, Pennsylvanieo. He wont to the IMttsburgh dopot, over there jining them meetin' hyuse stoeplea, an just as ho got onto the koors an' they started, his foot kind o' slipped an' he wont nuder, an' tho wheels cut'im in two. Oh it was awful His wife was on tho train coming from another place, an' sho did carry on powerful, powerful There's luck in overything, misses if wo take it so, an' who knowB but this hlndrauoo moans suthin'. I'm ono o' tho in folks that bolievos whatever is ight. So stop in liore mises, an'warm yorselvps," and his heavy-mittened hand twisted at the great brassy knob, and he nshomi ns into tho waiting-room at the dop«t. Wo thanked him for his homely ehoer, paid hiiu, and saw him mount his little wagon, wrap himself in the surplus robes and "give string as he called it, to tho jadod beast that had brought us across tho rough country roads at his best speed. "Yes, a 'wuas thing might a' happouod,'" said Lottie, as we stowed our baggage into a cornur, took oil our veils and stood by the glawing lire.
Tho hours did not drag. We tucked ourselves up comfortably and rested, and watched the comers and goers: studied the facos bought dailies, and read the latest nows watched tho trim littlo misses and tho babies wondered at tho mistakes made by women who wear their best clothos when they go journeying in the cars, and, tlnallv, for lack of something botter to do, wosllontly condemned smoking as a dreadful nuisance, and footod up the cost of half-a-doaen good cigars a day for a yoar— for two years ten yoars, twenty, forty, fifty, and seventy-five yoars.
Meutal arithmetic is good discipline for a mind at ease, and with nothiug to do.
The down-train camo along, and away went tlit* crowd that had surged to and fro: tho straight woman, with a dare and a banter In her austere countenance tho woman loaded down with queer packs tho woman carrying tho fiddle and loading the dog for her boy the woman whoso elegant ^ress so dragged along in tho dust and tilth the old couple who had "rid" since Monday, and would not get home for two more days the bride and the groom who carried the tooth-picks the poor woman whose young ones were "death on ap-ple-butter and the family whose number represented lire generations— all gone, and quiet reigned.
No, not all gone. A trim, neat littlo girl, about eighteen years of age, in a nice grey vrray, with a veil twisted around her hat neatly gloved and shod —two signs of a lady born and bred—sat on one of the seats near a window. She -was pretty and modest, and had a sweet •way of looking down. Her eves did not rove, and search, and seek, after the irivolous fashion of so many young women's roaming, fussy, tell-tale eyes. Ah, what a pityl and what a rosrtless spirit do such eyee indimto.
Stark and |straight, on the end of one of the seats, sat a maiden lady clutching a cheap, new imiUtion-morocco satchel, so new and shlney that it smelt Htoro-y, and had never been dedicated to any use. The expression on her face was ferocity a get-away-or-I'll-bito-you expression. She held the bag with a grab that would have chocked it to death had it been a voung kit tec.
Poor woman we thought, in her girl-1 IkhhI slit* had been motherless, or or-1 phaneti. or a bound child, and all her! kwiyUusk was turned i« bitterness. She had iM-on robhrd of the rights of the
foorthis
*"*r 4 5~"
blessed season of childhood those beautiful impressions are made. Another woman waited at the depot at Marshfield that day. A slight little oreatureshe was, about thirty-five years of age, neatly yet very plainly clad. Her small hands held each other in her lap, quite as your own hand would hold the odly true and failhful band you kdew in all the world a hand that you ha/l tried and trusted—did not want to part with.
Her face, under the plain black walk-ing-hat, told only one tale, and that was of sorrow. But every "heart knoweth its own bitterness," we thought, and we did not intrude. If we did know her story it would only trouble us let her take it to one who is ever ready to hear the cry of the burdened heart and thinking this we looked out of the window, away, away to the beautiful home in the distance, with the poplars standing straight as sentinels in the sloping background.
There was a gentle hand laid on our arm. We looked aro-ond. The little woman of whom we were thinking stood there:
You look like a kind woman," she said. "I feel so badly that, if I don't intrude, I'd like to talk a little with you. Will you please allow me?'' and her fingers tightened on our arm. "Why, bless you, childfctay whatever you wi9h, if it will do you any good. Sit right down here," we answered.
She leaned over toward us, and talked low. Lottie, divining the situation, engaged the attention of the pretty little girl in the gray wrap in an animated conversation. The ferocious woman attacked a paper of noisy pretsels, and, i» the consumption of them, did one word of ours. We had all
em, did not hear thepri-
cy 'It may be that I am not doing right," said the woman "one minute I feel brave, as a just woman should, and the next instant my heart fails me." "Yes well we said, to reassure her. "Now, you are a stranger," she said. "I want you to judge from your standpoint correotly. You are n#t at all interested. You know nothing about me, not my family nor friends. My husband is a railroad man his wages used to be seventy-five dollars a month, but through great fault of his own they were roduced to thirty-five. Wo have a family of five children. He has been squandering his wages in questionable ways and places, and for nearly two years I have been compelled, obliged by stem necessity, to take in washing to support our children. Sometimes, after he drew his pay, I would not lay my eyes upon him until every penny was gone. We both belong to respectable families but for this I would have left him long ago. I don't want to disgrace them nor our
little ones. I cannot think of makng public—of uncovering the skeleton that is hid in our home. I have not seen Robert for two weeks, and this morning I resolved, at our beggarly breakfast table, to draw his wages today if I possibly oould. The pay-car will come this forenoon. People know I am honest I was born, brought up, married, and have always lived in Marshfield. Am I doing wrong? Tell me what you would do if you were in my place. Is it right for those flaunting brazen-faced creatures, whose feet lead down to destruction, to take the money from my starving babes? Is it right for the saloons and billiard tables to take from a maudlin drunkard the earnings that would clothe his wife and children in the winter, and buy lood and fuel to keep them comfortable, even though their hearts were aching with grief for the weakness of the husband and father? Is it Hghtthat I should toitBtrthe washtub for six shillings a day when I may obtain the money he has earned? Oh, if it were not for the children, I oould not be prevailed upon to touch one cent of his earnings without ho gave it into my hands freely and willingly! "I don't want to do anything unkind or mean, but I have pleaaed with Robert so long to no purpose that my heart is hard, and I fear my love has all died out. I made his home pleasant aud cheerful, kept the children clean, fixed myself up as pretty as I could, made him welcome when ho came home from his work, sought to attract and hold and save him but my efforts were vain. I wonder what is right for me to do! Which way shall I turn
We looked up into the woman's faee, and the answer was very brief: "Go right ahead!" While wo stood there by the window there was a toot, and a rush of wheels, and steam, and the pay car stopped before us.
Men hurriod, with eager liasto, to receive their months' wages. They ran up tho steps, and prosentlyt they came out, glad and excited, each with his welcome remuneration in his trembling hands.
The woman caught her breath, gathered hor shawl closer about her shoulders, looked at us, and we answered back with a smile that was meant to be encouraging. Sho went timidly into the car, and came out, after five minutes, witha very wnite face. As she stepped on the platform, a gentleman followed after, and askea her a few questions rospectfully We watched with interest. He wiped his eyes. We liked the signs of the timos. She came in, and he returned to the car. Her countenance was veiy sad, and wo had little hopes of
MI
A
favorable re
suit. She shook her head mournfully, as she twirled a slip of paper in her fingers, saying: "It's no use they said I mast get Robert's name to this paper."
Just then the geutleman hurried out of the car rushed into the room whispered to the ticket agent beckoned to the baggage-master nailed to tho telegraph operator gave a quick nod and smiio to tho little woman, and they all, moved by one impulse, followed him back into the pay ear.
We presume he found a way to untie the knot in the red tape, or how to cut it, for when the woman and the Q'ffitials oame out, they all wore a look of rejoicingl One was just as glad as aaother.
Sho came right to us with a glow on her ohastened countenance. One poor little worn hand was closed tightly over its treasure. She was nearly sobbing, as she said:
did get it! I did get it 1" When we parted, at the door, ale spoke, more in soliloquy, it seemed, than anything else: "Oh it will buy wood, and flour, and coal, and shoes, and hoods, and meat, and all those things that we need so badIv! I am so glad to get it."
We bade her a cordial good-bye, glad that we had met her, and that she nad opened her heart and told us her story. In our own thoughts we Messed the little woman over and over, as we stood by the window and saw her short, quick steps going down the long street. Wo looked after her as long as we could see the flutter of her thin shawl in the cold, November wind and when we sat down and looked into the glowing bed of snapping anthracite, we were a good deal happier for the satisfactory termination of the incident that bud fallen in pur "way.
Just then Lottie came smiling across the room. We saw something in her face, and this was the revelation "Why, auntie, that*dear little girl in grey has no mother, and this is toe first
time she .has ever been away among strangers. Just her papa and one sister at home and she goes out to work and earns and divides all the nice thiags with her sister who stays ai home and keeps house for the poor old father. She is going to work for a good lady with whom she became acquainted last Summer, at the house where she was visiting. Oh, she is charming! she is low-voiced and so modest, and well-bred that I have fallen in love with her. And, Aunt, I've been wishing that there was some way in which we could make her happy. As this is her first journey, I don't want her to remember to-day as lonely, gloomy and unpleasant." Here Lottie squeezed our hand a little with a "see if you can't study up something that's a good old sweety!"
Yes, we did "study up something," humble, but pleasant to remember, and when the train came and the sweet little maiden shook hands and bads us a very feeling good-bye she said in a pretty, bookish, salutatory way: "My dear ladies, I do thank you very, -very much for making this day such an agreeable one. I shall always remember the good dinner eaten from a server on our laps as one of the pleasant events of my girlhood's years. I hope prosperity may ever attend vour paths through life."
The dear young thing! so sweet, pure and good had doubtless read "Children of the Abbey," "Evalind," and "Thaddeus of Warsaw," and her notions of propriety, on state oocasions, was a little stilted. Wo both kissed her heartily with a good-bye that was decidedly western.
Only the woman who cracked pretzels so nofsily, remained. She was pugilistie. She growled if the fire was hot, and she growled if it was low growled if the door was open, and growled if it was was closed indeed, she was not pleased with anything at all. When her train came, she grabbed the empty bag, elutched the bundle of substantial wearing apparel, and boarded the cars like a highwayman, who "meant business."
Thesun was setting behind a bank of olouds thafc boded a snow storm, when our own train glided up to the deppt.
We settled into a good warm seat, homeward beund, not tired or impatient and the homely consolation of the landlord's son in the morning came to us, with truth stamped into the sentence: "A wuss thing might a' happened."
Thh Albany, N. Y., Press and Knickerbocker says: "The largest following we know of to-day is that of St. Jocobs Oil for where St. Jacobs Oil is, there rheumatism is not."
A CARD.
To all who are suffering from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervons weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, Ac., I will •end a recipe that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self-addressed onvolopo to the Rev. Joseph I tun*n, Scfttio nl). New York City. nMm.
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'Swayne's Ointmont" "Swayne's Ointment" "Swayne's Ointment", "Swayne's Ointment" "Swayne's Ointment" "Swayne's Ointment" "Swayne's Ointment"' "Swayne's Ointment" "Swayne's Ointment", "Swayne's Ointment" •'Swayne's Ointment" "Swayne's Ointment", "Swayne's Ointmeut"' "Swayne's Ointment" 'Swayne's Ointment"
Since the days of -Hippocrates no remedy has obtained so boundless confidence -or conferred on mankind so estimable a blessing as Swayne's -Ointment.
"Certainly the bea( -remedy ever In my iractlce." Q. W. Cdfof Vermont
£n,M.
ractlce.
7
D.
"Cures" "Cures" "Cures" "Cures" "Cures" "Cures" "Cures'^ "Cures"
11 cures Tettus, Iteh, 'Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Barbers Itch,
Sores, Scaly, Crusty, Itchs Skin Kruptions -and that terrible ma lady, "Itching Piles."
The symptoms of -which are moisture like perspiration, in tense Itching—parti--cnlarly at night after getting warm, which feels as if pin worms -were crawling in and about the tectum.
"Itching Piles" "Itohlng Piles" "Itching Piles" "Itching Piles" "Itching Piles" "Itching Piles" "Itching Piles" "Itching Piles" "Itching Piles"
The private parts are -often aSectpd. For this or any skin disease Swayne's Oint--ment is superior to any article in the the market.
"All" "All" "All"
"I have suffered years from Itching Piles.consulted many physicians and used many remedies but found no permanent until I used Swayne's Ointment." Geo, Simpson, New Haven, Ct.
"Skin Diseases" "Skin Diseases" "Skin Diseases" "Skin Diseases" "Skin Diseases" "Skin Diseases" "Skin Diseases" "Skin Diseases"
Ask your druggist for it. srSdwiy
TUTT'S PILLS
INDORSED BY
PHYSICIANS, CLERGYMEN. AMD THE AFFUCTtD EVERYWHERE.
THE GREATEST MEDICAL TRIUMPH OF THE ACE.
SYMPTOMS OF A
TORPID LIVER.
Ijo—of appetltgJTaosea. bowels ooattv. Pai a in theiteadTwith a*dnll sensationS the back part, Pain under the shoulder^ blade, fullness after eating, with a disinclination to exertion of body or minfc Irritability of temper. Lowjrpirita. Ij6w of memory, with afeelinii ofhavlnc neclected some duty" weirSiw, Fluti
Skin. Headache. Bestlwii^
ness at night, highly colored Urine. IFTHESEWABirareSABETOHKEBED, SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVELOPED.
TUTT'S FILLB are especially adapted to •urh cmge»,one doae effects nchaehMf* of feeling as to astonish the raflanr,
They SiHweee tbe and cause the body Tak*
mm
Ffcafc. Urns the system Is
irtalKMLaad by ttaeirTMlv Aett«Ha«i ibe aryxoDI(MUTC Contd. Prlee Iwrarflt,
TUTT'S HAIR DYE,
vII aik «3r WsisKinn changed to a Oiosanr iCK by a single npiintlao of ikts Dr*. Xt a aataxal color, .acts
ID
hapfcrt* _.. .53 OT»«jggist»,«w Met by expr*** on nweipt cf Office, 36 Murray St., Mew York. ttrm «r taUaM* taiWmatta* as* & an wmt* riant .J
5*1
.xi/xhL srrj •. rcrrnn TEKRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL
POM
THEGREAT
FOB
RHEUIATISM,
Howralgia, Sciatiaa, Lumbago, Backache, Soreness of ike Chest, Bout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swellings and Sprains, Burns and
Scalds, Genera/ Bodily Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Peuns and Aches.
Ho Preparation en eaitb equal* SR. Jaosw Oh, at a lure, aDd cheap Ex Ureal Bsnsdr. A trial ea tails but ttao comparatively Miliar oetlay of 60 Cento, and every eae »«*er* Jag with pain can have cheap and positive proof 9t ttaclatea.
Directioas in Eleven Languages. SOLD BY ALL DBUGGI8TS AHB DEALERS IS MEDICHJE.
A. VOGEUER & CO., Baltimore,McL, U.S.Am
DR. J. B. MARCHI8I,
(ITICA.N.Y.f
Discoverer of DR. MABCHXSF8
UTERINE CATHOUCON,
A PBIITIVI OURS FOR FEMALE eOWUUIT«. Thla remedy will act in harmony with the FcmoleayBWhiat all times, a*l also immediately upon the abdominal and uterine mascles, and restore them to a healthy and strong condition.
Dr. Marchlsl's Uterine Cathollcon win care fallins of the womb, Lucorrhoea, Chronic Inflammation and Ulceration of the Womb, Incidental Hemorrhage or Flooding, Painful, Suppressed and Irregular Menstruation, Kidney Complaint, Indif aspMiftllT ftds|»ted to the Change oILw. Send for pamphlet frw. All letters of inquiry freely answefea. Address as above.
FOR SALE BY AIXDRUCSGISTS. Price Sl.flOper botfleTBe sure and Dr. Marchljl's Uterine Catbolicon. Take no other. 'Arade supplied by COOK & BELL.
mm
W01 bt nmiM fast to »U applicant!, tad tootutomert withMt •rdirtnr II. It canutint At* colored pUtei, (00 engrarlqp, a boot too pagM, and fnl I daaeHptloat, fries* sad dlraotloaifor plaiting 1600 variattef of Veptsbl* SM Flower Saadi, Plant* lynit Tmt, ale. Invaluable to *11. Sand for M. Addrau, *V X. FEEBY ft CO., Detroit. Mich
W AT¥TEH
PERSONShave
THE
DR.
ilSPSfSSSil
afflicted with PILES to address
me. I a never failing cure, application made by patients without pain or inconvenience. Personal examination or visit not required. Positively no charge for treatment until pcrmantly cured.
For fnll particulars address with stamp. DR. L. VOLKERS, 636 Main st. Torre Haute, Ind.. or Deasison, Ills.
IMPROVED
UNITED STATES SCALES, Wagon. Railroad, Track and others. I will guarantee them the best scales made, and furnish them at prlcesthat defy competition. Btsure and inquire into the merits of this scale before purchasing elsewhere. For oirotlars and full particulars, address
S. J. AUSTIN, Patentee, Terre Haute, Ind.
Scales of all kinds tested and repair* jxomptiy. Shop, corner 4th and GKUick sts
rtheiroldbook
day at home. Samples Address Sun-
$5to$205Tor^„«. sm&Co.. Portland, Maine.
ROSS,
105 South Adams street, Peoria, IB. Calls special attention to his great sucosss ii the treatment of Cancers, Ulcers, Catarrh, Jronchltls, Consumption, young, middle®ed or men, Buffering from nervous awl
vate diseases of the genlto-uriaary system complicated forms. Send three cent damp for with description of diseases aid over one hundred certificates of cure at tie mast formidable diseases that affllctmob Soman race. Office open day and night. 1 (Aug.Wt
1 RAY'S
SPECIFIC J1EDICIHB.
RADE MASK The GreattRAOK MAUK Englls' remedy. An unfailing cure for Seminal
ilFME TAlIII.&saacq Self Abuse: as loetc
ttKltode, pain in the back, dimness of vLata, premature old age, and many other dlsefcesthat lead to insanity or consumption aid a premeture grave.
Fnll particularsIn our pamphlet, which we did re to send free by mall to every one. The Steeillc Medietas is sold by all druggists at pt* package, or six packages for 15, or will be free by mail on receipt of the money, tv
GRAY MEDICINE (X)_ Rnffaln, K. Y.
fold in Terre Haute, -wholesale aad retail faqOTTLiac A Bmr
ZF W-*« iettd oat II. Emjfthinr: U«S .r-
®tsil8i§P
tesraaaad praaMSlog aM risking ehllls. aiuisUiM alM tlaal lmaa&at* an4 woodorful reaalts. The I have weed thrt
1 IraiaWw.
Diseases of lie Ttiroat and Lsiss.
are annually pi"es«.*rveti fi'uiu seiioiis jncss iv il-s timely and faithful use. i: should' be kept at hand in every household for tiie protection it affords in sudden attacks. In \Vhoophig-cou«?i» and Consumption there is no other remedy so etlicacioiis, soothin i, and helpful.
Low jirices are iiulucenients to try some of tho many mixtures or syrups, made of cheap and ineffective ingredients. now offered, which, as they coutain no curative qualities,'can afford only temporary relief, and are sure to disappoint the patient. Diseases of the throat and lungs demand active and effective treatment and it is dangerous experimenting with unknown and cheap medicines, from the great liability that these diseases may, wYiile So trifled with, become deeplv seated or incurable. Uso Ayeu's
AND SPEBtUTOBRHSA.
A ralaable Plaoovry and Kew Departure fa Madmm Soiaaae, mm entirely Naw and paStlrely eflectira RanMdy lor tha apeedy aad pennaaeat Quve of Seminal HtmlMliiin ana Impotency by the enly trua •ray, tU XMraot Application to tba prisolpaI Seat of the Disease, acting- by Abeorrtlon. and exerting ito speetfleuStiaenoe oa tne Seminal vealoles, ffigoulatorr Bucta,
Theoid (wp ratal bottles of ths 17 illness, and with doe of thought Mr»r bsfor*
Urns daring nj
Chehuy Pkctoual, and you
may confidently expect the best results. It is of acknowledged curative power, and. is as cheap as its careful preparation and: tine ingredients will allow. Eminent! physicians, knowing its composition,. prescribe it. The test of half a century has proven its certainty to euro all pulmonary complaints not already beyoud the reach of human aidr
PREPARED BY DR. J. C. AYER & CO., Practical and Analytical Chemists, Lowell, Mass.
ItU) BY ALL DRUGGISTS 15VBUYWKKRK.
J. P. Waim
toeeredlt.
"-aaswArTsS1it ke /ran Ita4aa
HsaJa**,sM
seAere
*UaFACTOIEI BY THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., U. 313 MMTH MAIN STREET, ST.
THE BEST REMEDY
Proatate Oland, aad Vrethra. Tho
naa of lU Banedy is attended wltk no pain or lnoonwnienoe, aa4 does not interfere with the ordinary pureultaof lilai It la quickly dissolved and soon alsorbeLpradaoia( aa liimealato soothinK and rostor, attvs met apoa the aemal and aervons oicaaisa. tione wreckedfroai
self-abuse and ex oesses, stopping
drain frees the eysteia, the mtad to laonad mumatr,reetoring
It
In diseases of tli:»
ilX taliO pulmonary organs a safe and reliably remedy is in writable. A KIt's
Chbrky Pectouai. is such a remedy. It is a scieutilio combination of the medicinal principles and curative virtues of the finest drugs, chemicaliv united, of such power t\s to insure tho greatest possible efficiency, and
CHERRY
PECTORAC suits. It strikes at tlie foundation of all pulmonary diseases, afTordin prompt relief and rapid cures, and is adapted to patients of any ago or either se.\. Being very palatable, t! a voungest rbiidren take it readilv. In ordinary Cuiiffiis Colds, Soro Throat. Bronchitis, Imiuettzu, Clergyman's Soro Tiiroat, Asthma, Croup, nnd Catarrh, thp effects «f Ay
removing the XHmaeea
Verroua Debility, Oonftudom of Zdeaa, to Society, etc^ oto., and tho appearance tore old age usually accompanying this
trouble, and reatering pmfoct Sexual Vigor, when tt hae beea dormant for yaara. This mooo of treat•MQt baa stood tho teat la very severe caaea, and is now a preaeoaeod suooeei. Dmga are-toe much prosoribed in theao troubles, aad.as mi la no]
with bat little If about this
you ore annal
oTbusiooEvtrccL^-1
Ftiuulantaand uso Hop Bittero* If you are yourifr and IdUeixlion or jiiod or sin»lo, old or 'oorfcooJili or laufruU!)! ness, rely on Hop
Hav«3root3»pcpaSa, kidney, or nrinaruoot plaint, dlsaa: of tlio etobotceit, btoo f(t*r orrrrvta You will cored if yoo Mop Bittero
ply weak low
otr spirited.
It
Kit's
35
i^r\s'Rac*/cv
TradaMaric
POB $
ma
Ciir.insY
are magical, and multitutles
can boar witThera
[aarpermoaen.^ IsFreparaUon. Fraction! obIgiai^^rguarantee that 14
... rattoa enablaa us to apettfvair guarantee v*l givoaatiaflMtlOB. Durti* the eight years that baa been In gtoaarataae, wo hava thousands of teatt poalalsaa to lla vabMMnd It la oow oonoeded by tbo
Profession to be Ummoet rational meann yat ed of reanhlnf and curing this very prevalent that ta well known to be tho oaose of untoia oaoataoy, and upon wb^n quacks prcywitb ifthTH Htf
I I I II II a I
ra 9, (nfletent to «^«qU pw
rssterwl lefwymfswiwui
HARRIS REMEDY OO. HFU OSHSOL BarfcetasdStfeSts. 8T. LOUIS, Mo.
TO
Weakness, Spermatorrhea, Impotent all follow .uence &rra Tom of memory, nnivsnal
NERVOUS SUFFERERS.
THE GREAT EUROPEAN REMEDY. Br. 1. B. Slmpaon'a S)»eeifle Medi
tint
lead to cjiisumption inaanlty andan early grave. The 8peclll Medicine being used witfc wonderful sooeeas.
Ha«
It is a positive core for Spermatorrhea Feminal weakness, Impotency, and all di» eases resulting from self abuse, as mental anxiety, loeai of memory, painslnbaeit or side, and diseases
Pamphlets sent free to all. Write for them and get full particulars. Price of Specific, II per pMksge, or six packages for $5. Addi^a
*7. B. SIMPSON MEDICINE OONo. 108 Main street, Boftalo, N.Y. Bold in Terre Haute by Osovn & Lomnr.
Ireland
ponuar
BOOK.
and at
The CAUSES and AXBXS of IRISH AGITATION. By JCKStUJVAjt.
CURING ALL DISEASES Arising from Disordered Liver and Impure Blcv cleansing the System from all impurities, thus moving nearly all diseases that afflict map kind
A sure cure for diseases of Lirer and Kldnc also of Rheumatism and Neuralgia. Compound of the cliolast ingredients of tne vegetable ki: dom.
aa
I'vntr
TConnor1,
woute.
RetitbsC.
is give*
poor: the manes nataastMs theresuhiicb.aiui why
the
tunes dMtroytd the pwuisttoa arottrintpd th/r reitefon antaffoai® !.
Uevne the passage of die Coeccida
the
ogee.
Lind
oe oay. i-rier. as.«o ptr
61um6ompounding6o.t
'I
rP
If you arc aH usaa of lett:r3*oi: r"orcn.T.dl ri~!.t vojx. to to'-U ::cnrorja|J wast«, use Hop CI. suffering f: _.m any intton If y.m aro mar-| yoajyr. saJorinjc frouij lnir on a bod of sickBf
on ed tty the etoCi of your tiutlea avoid
if o: itters* Xhonxinda die anruiillj from eonif-
Whoever you arts wheucTcr you feel that yonr sjstcm nwoda cle-vnslnR, ton* lnsr or etlmaUtiag witboutiaitarirtUi'iu/, tftho Hop Bittora.
for.a of Kidney d^c.w tbr.t cjiKut huve bc*ai f.r«Toni(xl by a tioiol uso of
Nopfilttsrs
D. I. C. an alwoluUt •vr.d irrsiiLitabW euro for drankonofls, uso of opiuiu, tobnetfo,or narooUOn.
fto'.abydnnr-
bund tor
Cmmiar.
nop Brrrns B*F*G CO.,
saved nun loeha^rr, !. T. dr?tie* Ultn Out
DR. BUTTS' (Hi&ARr
Treat all Ohronio Diseases,
al reputatloa
and enjoys nutlon-
throagh
the
ourintr of complicated
caaea.
IWPI8CRHTIQW«r EXPOSUWEProdo^ actions of the blood, skin or bonen, treated with »uooeea, withqutufilngMeronryor Poisonous Madtolnes. who ore suiTerlng from the elleoU of a disease that unllts It* vis tms fortraslntne or marriage, permanently cnr«l. a tBEftf fa&'arsa
PftTlBlfT
p«noiMl
coDiulUuon it
pre
•1.
which FREE «nd intlt
Li»t «r (nealieoa to oe u»wared by patianU dcilrlng tn «V rr»
iMnl
mailed rraa to any addreu
on
(and
appllcalloo.
Partona »ffcrla from Kaptaro abould (Bad their *ddreu,\ learn u»llf to Uielr advantag*. It I* net a trua^P Coinmnnir»tion« urict.W conl)lenih1. aud aboold ka addretaad
OB. BUTTS, I® Mortk ttth 8U Bt. £e«U. Ufa.
$5©0 iiew-a'rd
WEeaseor
will pay the above reward for any liver complaint, dyspepaiA, siek
OfOt
ble Liver Pills, where tho directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable and never fall to give satisfaction. Sugar coated. Large boxes, containing 10 pills, 26 cents. For sale by all druggists. Bewaro of counterfeits aud imitation*. Tho genuine manufactured only by JOHN C. WEST A CO., "The Pill Makers. '18l nnd 183 W. Madison street, Chicago. Free trial package sent by mail prepaid on receipt of a 8 cent stamj
DR. CLUtt'S
Liver Cathartic
BEDWING, MINNESOTA
9StB9U BT ALL Bsuoourre.
Sere
IDURING THE PAST TWO YEARS has been sold, through our bouse, over THREE THOUSAND bottles of "CLUMV LIVER CATHARTIC," Wronger evldeaci ild scarcely bi-
Druggists.
LUKCH ROOM.
mito-luLU" Thomtt\
if. P. Able, Cowpref re.
niiouty ,r a» Ceantnet I
of Ea^lWi tt»*W sad MM-rele. It teUt why tht -re
Um'ratt oom.
It ibnrt
Sill,
aad
•c
Art tkt a.--.r oi
leader*. wicbS«*eJse«M their tjves. Cr^msrht* tt foil xne* fewrfn/i. 6f lr-!«i'l ion, T^r pombrbotkofdM diy. Priic,M.MwrC««r.
AttemU
For fail partfeatara. addrea
MARKET GAKDKMEKS AND FLORISTS, rfrea
Wltfccj* we Wt*b to tenthspabtic. Thirty
tu
soch knowledge
the test kind* for Frnil, Flower or Vprctsble crop* (whether for Private or O *a«rlii]r test Ute quality of ail ge«ds and Plants. Our Or«emhoaa«a and Frmm America, ooveritig cpwanb ol lour acres, soiid in glass, employ In* an average at *er*nty mw thrwyhout the year.
PETER HENDERSON & CO.
35 Cortiandt Street, New York.
land waa confi*rai«d the lunu
It -be
rHe and of th« L..
Dalon.
naittrd
VMPR-
i. -»aa
and
Rvtrvwktrr. :-cd1
•r~rr-... r- C. aicOfftt»Y CO.. Clartaaatt, «.
Am
SOctS full
0
