Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 13, Number 29, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 January 1883 — Page 2
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THE MAIL
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A PAPER FOR THE PFOPLE.
TERRE HAUTE, JAN. 18, 1883
Winter's Advent.
"Wlntefr ft coming:," says the city belle, As by tho merry Are she sits to bear The wind, that such a story seems to tell
Of woe and sadness with itsmoanlngs drear. But little recks she Winter only brings To her new pleasures, balls and parties gay, Velvets and furs, and other pretty things
On her Ids chilly hand he cannot lay.
1
"Winter la eomlnjr," says the business man, And buttons up hi»overcoat so warm: Then, as he walks, lays many a fertile plan
About his prosperous counting-house or farm. To make more money keen, although his gains
Axe large already, still he wishes more. And of the hardness of the times complains Whilst adding: daily to his ample store. "Winter is coming," shouts the rosy child.
As through the fallen leaves be runs with His bright eyes sparkling and his locks blown wild,
He comes up laughing to his mother's knee To-speak of sledging down the snowy hill, Of snowball battles they will have at school. To plead for skates with which to show his skill
Amongs his playmates on the frozen pool. "Winter is coming in the attic room The white-faced seamstress quick her needle plies With anxious looks she notes the gathering gloom,
And choking back a sob, she sadly sighs, "It is fo hard, this toiling on for bread That I can scarcely eat when it is won. Ah. me 1 I sometimes think I shall be dead
Before the dreary Winter time is done." "'Winter is coming" is the father's moan. He turns upon the couch where be is laid, Looks on his loved ones with a stifled groan,
Then swiftly turns again to hide his head. He has been ill, he knows that work is scant The children they are many, food is dear He can but pray, "May God keep us from want.
Ah, Winter is a king of terrors here. "Winter is coming," and the shivering form Upon the doorstep'up yon dismal street Oatber tbo rags that shield it from the storm
About its frost-nipped bands and numbed feet A city Arab, rude, untaught and wild
A thief, perhaps, who lurks in haunts of crime, And yet of tender years, a human child:
Ah! how he dreads the cold, bleak Winter wind. "Winter is coming," say the great ant' small,
But, oh, with a difference in tbo tone I Welcomed to cosy cottage, home and ball In poorer dwellings greeted witb a moan. Ob, may the King who rides upon tbo wind
Temper tbo blast to those who dread it so May Ho upraise true hearts and hands so kina
To feed His little ones amongst the snow.
.• PANSY, Pansy's home was half way np the mountain side, just above "the glimmer and heat11 of the valley, and back from "the highway's dust" of the mountainroad—a quiet home, truly, for a quiet life.' The gray stone cottage seemed to have thrown over itself a hood and cloak of ivy, and Pansy said the ledges bordered with her name-flowers, on the balconies of her room were the two velvety eyes peering from its face, rows of her favorite flowers bordered the terrace'and bloomed in the urns during all the Warm summorv days.
Her father loved the flower as much as she did it had been her mother's name, and they had seemed to bloom in the midnight darkness of her eyes, and when this little daughter came and the mother's eyes closed, only to opery on "the brightness of another world than ours," this name seemed to pass to the little frail blossom that now had budded into womanhood.
How strangely like, and yet how unlike her mother Pansy was. The features, tlio expression, the small daiftty figure, were all repeated, but instead of the rich chestnut hair, roso-tinted complexion and the velvet eyes, were soft black curls, pale, dusky skin and luminous gray eyes.
Then, too, the bright gayety of her mother was not there. The quiet days the life apart had fostered, the shy temperament of her father, Mr. Merton, seemed to have lost himself i# his books through these vears that Pansy was passing from childhood.
It was only the other day when he saw her coming through the grounds from a ramble in the woods, that he realized that sho was leaving childhood behind, and then he thought how completely she had usurped old Jeanette's place in waiting upon him.
He remeipbcred, too, with a laugh and a sigh, of tho quiet mischief which had prompted her to put on his library table, her last birthday, a week since, a basket of pansics with "16n marked in white flowers. Ho had noticed then that the white band that swept over them had looked ''wondrous soft and small," and almost transparent in its delicacy. Was not his blossom well?
Pansy had kept her life ouietly folded in her heart. She had always loved this lonely home sho never grew tired of looking over to the rim of the distant hills across the valley, of seeing the landscape glow in the light of "widening morn, in the golden haze of a glimmer's noon, in the starry brilliancy of a winters night, or soften in the moonlight, when the foamy billows of clouds were tossed by the light breath of tho wind, swept onward till the dim valley was disclosed sleeping beneath witli'the river winding through it like a silver, unbounded ribbon.
Mr. Merton entertained very few guests, but a year ago into their seclusion had appeared an old-time friend, a friend of happier days.
Mrs. Ashleigh had come to pass the summer in the valley below,, had taken a quaint old manor house and was going to lead the most tranquil of lives a woman of society could.
She had met and known the Mertons, when they were spending a winter in Rome, immediately after their marriage. In tho passing years she had not lost all knowledge of, nor interest in, the father and child.
Soon after her arrival in the neighborhood, she called upon them, bringing With her her son. A handsome man of twentv-seven or eight, he came into Pansy's life like a bright dream. Dear heart, she had known so little of young life and the intercourse it brings, and Earle Asbleigh was attractive. The stately figure, the clear-cut face, the frank'blue eyes, the rich voice that could be very low and earnest, had each its charm to please.
The first glimpse of Pansy, Earle would never forget She was stepping out from one of the long windows on
miir
the terrace and seemed framed in ivy. Her soft, violet dress floated around her like the mist of her own hills, her pure face was like a fair child on one shoulder nestled a pet bird seemingly caught in her floating hair, and pecking at a trailing spray of blossoms she held np in.one dainty hand....
Those summet days were very lair to little Pansy. There dwelt in them such a subtle charm. It was not often she could be lnred to spend many hdurs away from home, but there were chance meetings, when she wonlH driving her ponies to and fr .ia village, where she was quite a L&dy bountiful among the poorer ones with ii»r gifts of fruit, flowers and bandies of needful things. She wonld often be overtaken by a cavalier figure returning from a day in the woods or tramping off fresh for a day's outing. Then there were frequent stops at Pansywold to leave ft cluster of mountain blossocw, a bright bird's wing, a rare fern, and yet again an evening call, to bring some new song or only to see if the heat of the valley had risen to their height.
Into Pansy's cheek came a rich
§ower,
low never seen before some bright Earle said was made for such pure pale faces, would be twisted with the knot of pansies now. Unconscious* ly, but surely, the untried, girlish heart was learning a sweet new lesson.
Earle hardly realized her deepening interest, for he had been so accustomed to girls, and seeing sweet, winsome faces and ways. la the late summer, among his mother's few guests, there came one to whom his heart owed much allegiance. First at church Pansy saw the exquisite face, and that glance struck her as if a perfume was blown from some flower heavy with sweetness, such rare beauty as this, and she had almost thought her face was fair to him! Mrs. Ashleigh, calling, spoke of her tender interest in this beautiful Geraldine, of her hope at
Ho thought, as he drove slowly down the mountain, of how people had spoken -of tho girl as fading like a flower. His mother, too, had mentioned lately, the frail delicacy of Pansy's beauty. He thought of the winsomd face with a
{ts
hang. It seemed to have gathered all glory in the large eyes, and how pathetic their glance had grown of late.
Could it be—? but no, tie had been, in letter and in spirit, terse to Geraldine.
Eight years had gone by. They had mostly been spent in the far East by Earle and his fair wift?. I-Ie had received an important appointment there soon after his marriage. Only a month ago they had returned to America, and business taking him to the vicinitv of N he resolved to pass the night there, for tho place brought back old memories of the sweet life he had once known in those surroundings.
During the second year of his residence abroad, he had seen, in a Paris paper, the notice of the death of Miss Merton, a young American, the age just Pansy'8. The short obituary was replete with significance that hers was the short life ended.
Knowing her to bo living in France at that time, he did not doubt the little tired heart was at rest.
Just before sunset he found himself on the well-remembered grounds. He must see the familiar scene that held at its happiest hour the gentle life.
Pissing through the shrubbery bv an unfrequented path, he came suddenly upon a low grave covered with ivy. Under the shadow of the leaning cross above rested a basket of Ircsh pansies.
His heart beat thick. Ho eould not think of her here. Ho Bins'- see the place where he remembered her.
A few more steps and bo stopped suddenly. Sheltered by a mass of greenery, on the borders of the terraec, there where the slanting shadows were falling and tho long lances of light were glancing under the trees, were seated in quiet conversation, two gentlemen. One whose familiar face he knew as Mr. Merton, the other, a dark-haired man of noble presence, a stranger to him, but evidently on most enviable terms with the owner of the estate.
Just then a sweet ringingvoice called out, "no trespass allowed on the children's hour, you must know," and there appeared to Earle's dazzled eyes—a vision, it seemed to him.
Crossing the terrace, a lovely goldenhaired child clinging to her hand, was Pansy, bloomed into a fairer beauty than his thoughts ooald have pictured.
Her supple figure had gained height Mid kept its grace, the flower-like face was flushed with a rcs^ giow, and the starry eyes flashed with joy and happtnessjas the wee maiden at her side sprang with a cry of "Papa" into the outstretched arms of the younger man who, tossing the precious burden, turned with a tray laugh to Pansy, "Eh, bien, little wife, which child is to be granted
N
4 MiiillSl
fansy
calling her by
a near and dear name. She did not see the pallor of the child's face, the look of hopelessness in the great starry eyes.
Pansy's failing health made the excuse for not receiving Earle, when he oame alone, or when he and his fair beauty would stop after a gay gallop over the mountain for a word with Mr. Merton and sweet little Miss Pansy.
The autumn tints were deepening, the summer birds were all flitting and Earle's last memory of Pansy, was as he saw her standing in the village church one late afternoon. There was a baptism of one of Pansy's proteges, and her father had brought her there. How frail the little figure looked above the dark velvet of her dress. Her pale face seemed like a snowdrop in purity. As sho stood by the fount, "a slanting ray of evening light" stole through the strained windows, and one long golden gleam touched the bowed head and dusted the dark curls with sifted gold.
Two days later, after an autumn storm had abated, Earle went for a farewell call to Pansywold, and was informed by the gray-haired servant that Miss Pansy and Mr. Merton had left for New York and were to sail in a week for Europe.
Was her father taking her away "to', brighter light and softer airs" for pleasure or health?
A
Bending to the cross he read—Florence Merton, died in Paris, 188—, aged 17years-.^:
It was the grave of a young cousin of whom Pansy had told him in the bygone time, she was hoping to have reside with her after her education was finished abroad.
It was at Florence's bedside during the long weeks of -her illnosS, that Pansy met the noble physician and man, who later taught her the Cleaning, in all its fullness and completeness, of a love that knew no "unfaith," that trusted "all in all."
In purchasinghcpey avoid that which has dark specks, as they destroy the are flavor of any comb in which they found.
To clean diamonds nicely, wash in soap-suds, rinse in alcohol, and dry in sawdust then brush with a soft brush, and polish with fine tissue paper.
An excellent shampoo is made of salts of tartar, white castile soap, bay rum and lukewarm water. The salts will remove all dandruff, the soap will soften the hair and clean it thoroughty, and bay rum will prevent taking cold.
To wash white flannels without shrinking them,- make a good suds of boiling water, and add a tablespoonful of aqua ammonia, and when scalding hot pour over the flannel. Do not rub on a board, but if convenient use a pounder. Rinse in hot water and wring as dry as possible and hang in the hot sun to dry.
To extract ink from cotton, silk or woolen goods, dip the spots jn spirits of tnrpentine, and let it remain for several hours then rub thoroughly between the hands, and it will all disappear without changing either the color or texture .of the fabric,
To wash lace make a soap-suds of white castile soap and soft water, and while cold dip the lace in and put on the stove to boil. Let it remain until the lace looks clean. Do not rub. After boiling sufficiently rinse thoroughly in' clear, cold water and then dry. When perfectly dry, wet it in milk and let it dry again then dampen and stitch it on a flannel cloth, and put over it a piece .of damp flannel. Steam dry with a hot flat-iron and then pull out.
1 1
1:—
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.
most of the privileges of tSis favored hour?" ?j So Earle knew, now, that in no dark
rave was lying the little form, but was reigning a happy daughter, wife and mother.
He would not intrude where such complete happiness would ill compare with his childless home, desolate in all its splendor, but turning, he sought the little ivy-covered mound again to learn who was the quitl sleeper ne had fancied that he. kne^
1
-r I
For the Family Scrap Book, A little borax in the water cleanses ivory and celluloid hair brushes.
In washing muslins and lawns put a little pulverized borax into the water, and use but little soap.
A tough piece of meat can be mjide tender by letting it cook for several hours in water at simmering heat.
The quality and juices of meats are far better preserved if the meat is wiped with a towel instead of washed.
B^ns and Wh&tiefc^f
1
"It was in Whifcttfer's eai'Ty d%&ys,'* says Robert Coliyor,*"a strange thing happened of which he told me once with great delight. Friends who had a burden of the spirit on them were in the habit of visting the distant meetings then as now, and were the guests of those who were of the best repute and standing. An old man came one day. After supper he got two small volumes out of his saddle-bags and said to the boy: 'Has thee ever seen this book?' The boy had never seen or heard of it, but found these were the poems of Robert Burns. I am not sure that he had ever heard of the poet's name, but he said. 'My delight cannot be told as I read on and on, while they would let me stay by the fire, and Jhen crept down in the gray light of the morning to clutch them again.' The old man came down early, too, and found him reading away for dear life. He was a wise old man, but he must have wandered away from the ancient testimonies of friends, for he said: 'John, thee seems to be much interested in poems. I am going to such a meeting shall call here as 1 return, and will leave them with thee.' This he did, and these great poets of humanity met and clasped hands—the barefooted boy, innocent as the angels, and the grand singer whose sin had slain him in his prime, and whose dust lay under the thistles in St. Michael's church-yard in Dumfries.
"I guess the goose has the advantage of you," said a lady to an inexpert boarder who was carving. "Guess it has mum—in age," was the withering retort.
A man is wiser for bis learning, and the sooner he learns that the only proper way to cure a Cough or Cold, is to use Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup, the better he is. off.
11
.!1 «t?
Makiog Oider.
To make good cider, good, sound, well-ripened, clean apples must be used, and no others. It is better to crush them than to grate thein. "Everything about the mill with which the apples, pomace or cider can come in contact must be clean—perfectly so. The apple juice, when expressed from the pomace, must be filtered so as to take out every particle of apple or other matter which may be floating in it. Cleanly-washed sand is sometimes used, and animal charcoal but probably a mass of perfectly clean cotton, 4r cotton cloth of many thicknesses, will be found to be as good as anything. The cider should be expressed from the pomace as quickly as possible after the apples are crushed, and the juice will be nearly as white as water fif it is immediately filtered. If the pomace is allowed to stand some time after crushing the apples, before pressing, the cider will be colored and not as good.
It is always "put up or shut up" with Ui? umbrella.
Don't
when I
MfiiliSiSSt
dingy or faded things Diamond Dye will They are per-
the ten-cent
makethem good as aew. feet.
GLEAHHTGS.
It is noted as a rare occurrence that robins have' remained all winter\nJ^ttafield, Mass.
Much attention is being given on the Florida reefs to the cultivation of cocoanut groves.
Lord Houghton has bought sixty thousand acres of land in' southern Florida, and means to invest $1,000,000 in a sugar business there.
A man in Thomaston, Me., put an owl in his cellar to kill the rats. The next morning the man fonnd the owl dead and half eaten. This was rough on the owl.
Mr. Jay Gould's son George, having been accused of bestowing diamonds upon Mrs. Langtiy, not only denies it, bnt declares he knows a dozen American ladies who are fairer to see than the British beauty.
They have at one of the leading restaurants in Paris a Chinese cook whose sole and exclusive duty it is to cook rice. It is claimed that he can prepare and serve it in two or three dozen different styles.
Senator-elect Colquitt, of Georgia, is a smooth-faced man, whose hair is brushed behind his ears, while his head is held back somewhat in the manner of Sankey's when the latter is giving out the number of the hymn.
A man named Watson was recently lynched at American Falls, Washington territor3T, for murder. In the absence of trees and telegraph poles, the vigilantes used two two-wheeled roadscrapers for a gallows.
During the past year only 103 persons joined, by confession of faith, the Protestant churches of Springfield, Mass. The churches are eleven in number, and the city contains 35,000 inhabitants.
MahQne wears an immense white sombrero and an immaculate white shirt. He wears no vest, and has an enormous gold chain wandering all over his shirt front. So there is no reason why he shouldn't be mistaken for an Indian doctor.
A man at Elmwood, 111., "covered" an enemy with a revolver while his wife plied a cow-hide. The entertainment lasted until the woman's arm grew aweary. The said enemy had cheated at cards and robbed the said man of about $40.
The London correspondent of the Manchester Guardian says that Herbert Spencer looks well, but protests that his bronzed look is only a temporary consequence of the sea voyage, and that he feels in reality the reverse of benefited by his trip.
A beverage that is said to have taken the place of absinthe to a considerable extent in France has been introduced in New Orleans. It called amel-picon, and is believed to assist digestion, to be aperient and febrifuge, to stimulate agreeably, and to kill with certainty if afforded a full opportunity.
The wife of the late Judge Hardin, one of the foremost men of Kentucky, has been discovered living in hunger and destitution in a room on the fourth floor of an unoccupied rookery in Louisville. Her descent froia dignity and affluence to beggary and destitution is full of sad incidents.
Corken was a Congregational preacher at Salisbury Point, Mass. He was rapidly making a reputation as an orator when a village paper reported one of his sermons, and it was found to be identical with an old discourse by Canon Wilber force. Then he left, tho pulpit and became a physician in Lynn, but with no better luck, for he is now under arrest for malpractice.
A burglar' entered the bed-room of Miss Linda Gilbert in New York. She watched him searching the bureau drawers and finally spoke to him. When he was told that the person whom he was about to rob had done so much for prison reform he begged her pardon and would have sneaked away, but Miss Linda detained him, talked to him, and hnallysent him home with a big basket of food for his hungry wife and gaunt children. Tu the Gersy Lilly. Bi F. (n. g). ude skares cxpccted 1 cf my Alg 2 sea your Buty on the stage
Without deer little qpids dart.left Stickin' in Miblecdin' hart. If freddle—geBhardt words tu 6pcl 4 hav Lerned Mi lessen well, Orltho sum peepil 8a uv mE spel frooT—f-ft-u-T-e. [New York Sun. According to the Yale Record, the two hours' session in German optional produces the following—with the exercise of a little "patience:"
Zwanzig lieb-krank Maedchen wir, 5 Licb-krank alio ganz ungern. Zwaneln Yabre, werden wir
v*
4
"Well, I guess to-morro black them I've blackei to-day." There would good opportunity for crd«ti®£! cy in that hotel.
~fl
Zwanzig lieb-krank Maedcben sein. The two-headed monstrosity known as Millie Christmas has brought a libel suit at Fort Wayne against the business department of Adam Forepaugh's circus. The allegation is that when Millie was exhibiting herself there the Forepaugh people distributed handbills calling her a "revolting and horrid monstrosity."
The farmers of Arkansas are awakening to the advantage of co-operation. One thousand of them living in the region round about Bes Arc have formed a co-operative organization and are advertising for bids for their undivided trade.
A building near the Postofficc in Phenix, A. T., has been injured in a singular way. A gopher, in tunneling, ran his tunnel into the ditch. The water running through this, under the house, caused the foundation to settle several inches, and bad not the cause been discovered the house would shortly have tumbled into the street.
Twenty-three years ago Stillman Pond, of Batavia, N. Y., sold a horse to a farmer in a neighboring town for $125. The farmer did not pay, and the law was resorted to. The case was settled a few days ago. the original amount having became swollen to over $500 by the accumulation of interest Mad the costs.
A down town East paper says that a hotel porter in Portland, Me., "who invariably gets 25 cents for blacking a pair of boots," answered a request for a "shine" tha other afternoon with:
1
The prominent and zens of Denver, tired of tjb* ~r the laws of the Centenni ^ve organized a law and ord sf L' the purpose of ascertains ig »J ''lre any laws in the state if fr*® 'ws to have them enforced a j®" kt^8 no laws, to bring the Sta to a point where it will
In what is claimed I delicate pair of scales in tb* .' cording to the account _SC1' ehtific papers, the beam 1 straw, and together th L^-an,3' which are made of aluni 'ff.3 only fifteen grains. In ibi delicate scale Heretofore
ea^
and pan weighed sixtythe beam being made 0 I" ••of and the instrument I L6 weighing to one thousan This new scale, howevoi ten-thousandth of a grail. A I °f hair one inch long, on *ghed with this wonderful 3 .was found to represent the a imal quantity of one-thi
a
grain. A St. Louis man app led to keep a saloon. The jffioial duty it is to receivc sue *PP refused the request. Th *PP',( plied for a mandamus to tK)0ipel ficial's favorable action, Th6C0 taincd the oflicials's lion to the writ of mandamus, 1 ad of Appeals, before whicll the ultimately taken, has |su9taitl| lower court for the following The right to keep a dradj shop souri is not a legal right,jbut of municipal tolerance the 1* rnsin» power is a discretionary p°*
cense
Court was
asons:
subject to any court whatever,
refuse the saloon
not
u'
can
priviloj^e
fong
leases
to* it
and for any reason it pi® ?es, so as the public good $ kept' t-View.
The Destructive Custom the J&nnock Indian Tri. A Bannock Indian boji aboiitpwelve years of age, met with iv|horribl|. ueuth at the flouring-mill at Fdrt Haul*ndian
The the maand
Idaho Territory, reoentlj
agency, Idaho Territory^ boy was idling around ihp nw time, and happened to get in chinery, and was badlt crtwi mangled before he could be tak the gearing. He died soon It is the custom of Indians t6 destroy all things connected death of one of their tribe. stance, if one meets deiath kicked by a horse, the animal and if from disease an indiati wickup or lodge, it is bunted. in which this accident ocwjrred by the government at a Cos£ 61 or $8,000, and. was worth that, of money. Between 6 and 7 o'c] the morning of the 6th this mill covered to be on lire, and was s&on entirely consumed, with a large amount of wheat an,d flour belonging to|the Indians. This grain and flour W from $2,000 to $3,000. J\t the there are two tribes of if&ians, noelvH and ShosltOR*/in Aej flour belonged mostly to tbe From the well-known ractfce ans Inch they consider a religi to avenge the death of one of tliliir tribe by fire or killing, it wa4 natural to place the destruction of them ill at the hands of the Bannocks, and tho Sliosbonee losing their property has caused a strong feeling between the two^tribfts. It is- not apprehended that this may lead to any serious trouble between the Indians and yet it may Tribune.
from ward, rn or the or in- ,, bein kille' ,fes in a mill built $7,000 mount ck on as dis-
possibly dqjo.—fiall Lake
Starting a Young Man.
It is related of wealthy Philadelphian who has been dead these many years that a yoitbg man oame io him 6ne day and asked for help to start him |in business. "Do you drink?" asked the millionaire. "Occasionally." "Stop it! Stop it for afdtr, and then come and see me."
Tbe young man broke off the habit at once, and at tbe end of a year again presented himself. "Do you smoke? asked the great man. "Yes, now and then." "Stop it! Stop for a year* and then come and see me."
The young man went away and cut loose fiom the habit, and after worrying through another 12 months once more faced tbe philanthropist "Do TOU chew?" 1 "Yes!" "Stop it! St*p it fot a year and then come and see me."
But the young man never called again. When some one asked why be didn't make one more effort he replied: "Didn't I know what he was driving at? He'd hare told me that as I stopped chewing, drinking and smokiiig, I must have saved enough money to start myself."— Wall Street Ntte$.
IT HAS DONE WONDWiFUL THINGS FOR gm{ So writes a daughter of tj* effeet of Compoand Oxygen on he lady in ber iiixty-ninth whose case, when submitted opinion, we wrote diacou tbe first Treatment had this report was made: remember that when you herVmy mother) your advice,you that you did not thiuk bor ease as hopeful as a majority of your l^lents.io that you cannot always tell in advai&e It has done wonderful thirtag fw
persons of ber buty forenoon.
DBS
te^HaEO!
E S
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatic
Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, 1
Son* Throat, Swelling*. Spralaa, Brul Buraa. Scald* Frost Ultra, ASD ALL OTHER BODILY PAIRS AND ACilfS.1 Sold by DruRgitu aod Dtttars trtrtwbere. Fifty Cecil bottle. Direction* in 1l'L*ng«af6s.
THE CHARLES A. YOGELEIt OO, to A. VOUELKR
CO.)
•4
BaUlMor*, Ud., U. S
4
iTAOSSflbr,
....
'RANK PRATT,
mutter
Importer and Drnler In
ITALIAN MARBLE AND GHAT
MONUMENTS,
Statuary, Yases, &c., & COR. FIFTH AND WALNUT
ST|
TERRE HAUTE, IND,
AGNER & RIPLEY, Importers and worker* of
Beotflh Granite and Itallnu Mnrb|
MONUMENTS,
S A A N S A O No. 418 Cherry St.. bet. 4th find 6lh.( TKHRK HAUTR ITs'l
GAGG,
worth
nand
DEALER IN
ARTISTS' SUPPLIES
PICTURES, FRAMES, MOULDING)
Picture Frames Made to Ordei McKeen'a Block, No. 646 Mnin strei between 6tb and 7tb.
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. BestConph Syrup. TuAtPSROixl. Use in lime. Hold by (IrugKlstn.
KIDNEY-WORT
HE GREAT CURE 30& R-H-E-U-M-A-T-i-S-A
1 As it is for all Uio painful dlBoa»es of tho KIDNEYS, LIVER AND BOWELS. It cleanse# the system of the aarld poison that causes tho dreadful suffering whloh only the victims of rheumatism oan ronllzo.
THOUSANDS OF OASES of the worst forms of this torriblo dlfHVWO [have been Quickly relieved, *nd In short
PERFECTLY CURED.
PUICR $1. LIQUID or I1KT, SOLOkjr DKliOOIBTS. I rr.») Dry can be sent tar mall.
WELLS, KICUARDSON & CO., Burlington, Vt
I N E W O
TUTT'S
la compojod of Herbal ..nd Mucilaginous pt at
verv
well
lUbiUiice
£ung«re*peetorat.. the acrid mat* that collect, in the Bronchial
soothing
coating, which
r'1,e^e»
of
all
Ktnvte
mother, a r, about us for an glv. After used up, perhaps
an(j
She was irr spirits, ostration, ge, beside. so dark orld. Tostrength most
After a
,*he haijone
quarter of
'a mite to make calls." Oaf$7eatiae on Compound ports of cases ana iau iafor —tloI1~ free. Add rem Drb.
A
pAlkj»,
1109 and llllGirardttreetjp! liladelpbla,
•iir?
1
|l
rittttlon that cuuftUt* the cough. ltci«a»C|
the
lungs
Imparities,
them
sti cnati»e I
vrhen enfeebled bv dUea«e,lnvffc a a
TUTT'S
1
nervoussysUm. Sllfiht colds often end consumption. Itl»da»Keronston*gl them. Apply the remedy promptly
test Of twenty years warrants tlio a«»crUori_ no remedy hat erer been found that a !_ 1 i— ne Tl ITT' ft felDkf!TilHA*
inflammation,auu v». obstinate
cough. A pV
ea«*»t cordial
eh
dren take it readily. For Croup It Invaluable in atkL»gdtL52^SLi—family.everyinboshouldand
ifiT mggCTLY OH THE "cures Chill* «u*d Fever, Dyspepel Sick Headache, Bilious CaUc,£«•«"tion, Rheumatism, PUes, 1 olplfc the ileart, llMlness. Torpid
l^nalTlrre«rul*rlties.
iver,ra.
ft
you do not
''6
pM stimulates tliestortiM I
A NOTED DIVINE SAYS!1
Tiles Last irrrrintryotir pills 'were reconimen'l I
riSfe'Sfn
their weight ^J^MPSON, IiCHlsrille,
1
would hare been glad if yottcould have witnessed them. At the tM# the commenced taking the Vzyg^K/^ did not think the could live faeble, verv much a victim of extreme nervona witb no special sign of ^{, Life was alm«*t a bunte* to and dreary looked the wh day the is cheerful, with and seeming vitality
Kyi
MILLER'S HOTE
Nos. 37.39, A 41, Wort Twenty-Sixth Htro-
NEW YORK CtTY,
Between Broadway and Sixth Avenue, tfef Madison Park.
A auict. healthy location, convenient 1 j. Home^aw,
'1
the elevated road*
alt parts of the city. I11 the center of retail t.-»de,plac?sof amup
menU,
and the principal noteta and church
PERMANENT OR TRANSIENT GUEHTj Rates:—12^50 to M.00 per day $10.00 to825.ul rJr wfJpk acconl 1 n« to nlze and location o| rnien for famllca or by thl year. 1
Turkish, Eectrle, and Roman B»tb»| Connected with tbe hotel at reduced rates
Dr.E.
P. n/iLLER,
Proprietor.
C. H. HAYNEB. Btwinew Manager. a«OA week.
$7
112 a'day at home easily made
costly Outfit free. Address True & Co gusta, Maine.
1 1
