Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 13, Number 50, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 9 June 1883 — Page 2
§8SsS:®is?
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
TERRE HAUTE, JUNE 9, 1883
TWO EDITIONS
Of tills Paper are published. tlie FIRST EDITION, on Thursday Evening, h« a huge circulation in the surrounding towns, where it Lc sold by newsboys
MenU.
Sbe SECOND EDITION, on Saturday Evening, goes Into the hands oOiewly every celling person in the city, and the fanners of this Immediate vicinity. $ •very Week's lame is, In fact,
TWO NEWSPAPERS,
Is which all Advertisements appear for TELE PRICE OF ONE ISSUE.
CURRENT QOSSIP.
A
family in Troy, N. Y., has peti fcioned the courts to change their name from Ryan to Millington "because the name Ryan, owing to the notoriety of one Patrick Ryan, more commonly known as 'Paddy' Ryan, seriously injures yonr petitioners,displaces them in good society and desirable social inter course on the part of the community of Troy, in which your petitioners reside, •ad also injures Matthew T. Ryan in his business, and otherwise harms them and their family, much to their present annoyance and grievance." This seems to be a staggering blow at the imputation of Shakespeare that one name was as good as another. In fact, it appears nowadays that there is very much in a name, and since Mr. Paddy Ryan has come to this pass, he will probably see the necessity of posting over his saloon the less plebeian appellation of Patrichio Ie Rlsnico.
A beautiful young lady went to aNew York dentist, the other day, and insisted on having her really fine teeth pulled out and false ones put in their place. "I protested," said the dentist, "that it would be foolish, silly, senseless but she said no, she would have them cut, and if I would not do it, some other dentist would. 'My teeth are not fashionable,' said she 'they are too long, and short little board teeth like corn kernels are all the fashion now, and no one admires my moutb, and I will have tfaem.' So I made her teeth, and they oest her just 9300. She couldn't see any one for two weeks after I pulled out her own. They were the upper ones only, apd I made them up with gold plates f^r a handsome young fellow who had his own teeth knocked out in abase ball game. The worst of it is that he is in love with this very girl whose teeth he wears, and she knows they are hers. Just ponder on that."
Bishop Bowman does not believe that spirits upset chairs and move tables, but he is not able to account for many experiences. "We are much nearer the spirit world than we think, perhaps," he says, "and the spirits of the departed dead, 1 am convinced, have a certain influence over cur minds. When on the Rod Sea I made it a practice to pray every night and morning for my wife, from whom I was absent, and who was at the time an invalid. One evening 1 knelt down as usual and tried to pray for her, but found I could not do it. This worried me very much, but I attributed my incapacity to nervousnoss. On the following morning I again tried to pray for Mrs. liowman, experiencing the same difficulty. At length the thought occured to me. Your wife may be dead.' On my arrival at Rome 1 found a letter conveying the news that Mrs. Bowman had died on the same even lug that I found myself unable to to pray for her."
The "broom- drill" is increasing in popularity as a means of raising money for churches and Sunday school. The The sight of a company of pretty girls handling brooms after the manner in which the militia handle muskets is one calculated to bring forth rapturous applause from spectators. Yet on a recent evening In a fashionable Methodist church in New York the trustees were tilled with holy indignation when the delighted spectators of a broom drill raised a cloud of dust from the pew carpets by thumping their boot heels thereon. One trustee told the applanders to desist, and reminded them that they were not in a circus, but in the house of jfod. The incident calls to mind the case of the four-year-old youngster who, oil being UktHi to church for the first time, began to clap his hands and stamp bis feet in approval of the organ voluntary.
His mother told him not to do
that, for that was the way he had seen doys do at the circus, and that this was not the circus, but a church. The youngster replied, "Weil, ma, I don't «*x« it's circus music, anyhow." If those who provide church entertainment sue satisfied to introduce into their sanctuaries such worldly shows as "broom drills," tbdy should not be dkealiafted if the people who have paid to m^etbe fun are pleased to applaud in a worldly manner.
A curious case of infantile hallucination has been developed a New Haven. Conn. Mary Wiggins, an eight-year-old *rl, has been in an orphan asylum In ffbat city during the past six week*, her father paying for her sftpport there. She toJd that she bed beeu stolen by a colored w»»h the day before. This was known to have been Itafweai5'since her where•hoots were known the time, and she ftd not leave the asylum. She told ber etory again and again In urinates* detail, and the sfearpest atd most rigid examination did (\mtvm ber. it fa* fortunate that ber story was known to bo untrue, otherwise great injas&k* might haw been doo* any colored man •rt- Jt Wt *. ,r 'Si
who might have been near her at that time. The delusion is phenomenal, and suggests the exercise of the greatest care in accepting the testimony of children, even where some ground exists for an alarming story. Love of the marvelous is so strong in javenile Kinds, and exaggeration is so natural that little matters are magnified into serious ones. Not that children are deliberately deceit* ful, but that they unconsciously give a false coloring to what they tell when excited. Unable te weigh the import of what they declare, they are apt to convey an erroneous impression, and unless allowance be made and descrimination be exercised, great and irreparable harm may be done to innocent parties.
A Baltimore divorce case lately fixed the names of an actor and an actress in the public mind. He was truthfully described as-a handsome young chap, and she was as accurately acoorded marked beauty. Two womea in the theater read their names on the bills, and were at once all of a flutter. The actress came on the stage first, made up projerly, but to the temporary destruction of every vestige of beauty, as a wrinkled old woman. The women were amazed. But they waited for the actor with murmured anticipation of satisfaction He toddled out with every bit of his blooming youth cleverly covered by artificial old age. "Good Heavens!" ejaculated one of the women "to think of those two old creaturesgetting frisky." "I'll never believe the papers again," said the other.
Said General Slocum the other day: "When 1 was transferred from the eastern to the western army I felt angry, but it was the best thing that ever happened to me. I passed away from the field of controversy and fiction to the field of hearty co-operation and victory. I saw General Sheridan when he was sent from the western to the eastern army. How he did swear! Said he: Just as I have got my division well drilled and all seasoned, to go away off yonder, where jnothing turns out right!' But he found the change became his glory. We can't always tell."
TWO PROHECIES.
WHAT THE SPIRITS OF CUSTER AND GARFIELD REVEALED TO A ST. LOUIS MEDIUM.
A Mrs. Sawyer has caused a stir in spiritualistic circles at St. Louis by her alleged materializing powers. At a recent seance which was attended by many newspaper reporters and othor skeptics, the spirits of General Custer and President Garfield appeared at the entrance to the cabinet. The former wrote upon a slate the following message: "I warn the Government that the worst Indian war that has occurred in the history of the country will begin in the latter part of September. The plot has already been formed, and the matter is being secretly talked of in all the tribes from Arizona to British Columbia. Indians in the Indian Territory will be incited to join the rebellion, and the Government will find it necessary to call for volunteers to crush it. If the Government dees not take the necessary precautions all the frontier settlers will be murdered. A number of whites will join the Indians, and are now aiding in arranging the details of the conspiracy. Again, I warn the country, for the sake of the women and babes who will be murdered if they are not protected.
Custkr."
The spirit of Garfield was also in a prophesying humor, as witness the following written upon the same slate in a handwriting which was recognized by several present as that of the murdered President:
I was the delight of the interviewer on earth, but now I should have a rest. The vanities of politics were my ruin. How unutterably small they look to me now! The newspapers are responsible for my death, because they fomented the quarrel that brought it about. Guiteau was the victim of a mastering delusion, and acted from an irresistible imulse. I have not seen him on this side. wander always in a state of bliss. There is no trouble here for the spirits of the good. Arthur will be the next Republican candidate for the Presidency. Both candidates will come from New York. Conkling will take no part whatever in the next campaign. Arthur will not not get a united Republican support, and the country will go Democratic. Blaine is the greatest of living Americans, and would be elected, but his partv is ungrateful and will not nominate him. Mexico will beannexed to the United States by a peaceful arrangement in 181*3. The American government should beware of the railroad power, lest it should destroy the liberties of the people. The government should own the railroads, as it does the rivers and the lakes. I often visit the White House to wander through the rooms and the beautiful grounds. Spiritualism Is the true religion, and it is the on.y true interpretation of Christianity. Still, It is best for those on earth not to know all.
A GOOD THING.
We don't know who the author of this punning parallel is, but it is the cleverest thing of the kind we have seen:
OLD SHOKS.
How much a man is tike old shoes! For instance both soul may lose Both have been tanned: both are made tight By cobblers both get left ard. right: Both need a mate to he complete, And both are matte to go on fort. h?y both need heeling, oft are sold, »nd both In time all turn to mold. With shoes the last ts flrrt: with men The flrrt shall be last and when The shoes wear oat HwgrTe mended new: When men wear oat they're men-dead, too. They both are trod upon, and both if tread on other*, nothing loath. and both Incline
Will tread on other*, nothtr BrXh have their tie*, and boL When polished in tl» world to shine And bouShpegoat-and would you chose To be a roan or be hi* shoes?
worhs wfthoutsbnse. Boston Herald, r" I beard the other day a Curioas to stance of the difficulty of very young children to realise the aeose of woni. A tody taught ber child to say "amen" after grace. For a day%or two, all went well bat the child** mind had been working, and surprised ber mother bv solemnly saying "Amen, a-women." I wonder bow many children under five coald give a reasonable explanation of the word amen.
TERftE HAUTE SATURDAY EVEJSITNYi MATT
TORTURE IN THE EAST. HOW CAPTAIN RIVIERE AND HIS HEN SUFFERED DEATH CHINESE
METHODS OF TORTURE. A cable dispatch gives the frightful intelligence that Captain Riviere, the commander of the French forces occupy ing Fort Hanoi, in Cochin China, being captured in a skirmish with the Annam ites, with fifteen of his men, was executed on the following day with the rest of the prisoners. The Paris Gaulols claims that the unfortunate men suffered death from impalement, a mode of death so cruel and revolting that, in case the report ot the Gaulois should be confirmed, this outrage would doubtless call down on its infamous perpetrators the indignation of the whole civilized world. The Impaling
of persons sentenced to death
for great crimes has been practiced in the East for many centuries. In Tur key, where this punishment was most frequently inflicted, assassins, whose crimes were of an aggravated character, were always .condemned to die on the pole and the traveler who penetrates into the interior of Asia Minor, will now and then, even in our times, ride slender posts erected along the road on which the skeletons of the unfortunates are hanging who have been pot to death in this norrible manner.
Saint Edine, in his Dictionnaire de la Penaltie, describes the manner in which this punishment is inflicted as follows: "The unfortunate man who is to suffer death by impalement is laid flat on the ground, face downward. His handa are tied on his back, and one of the executioner's assistants sits down on his back, so that the victim cannot move. A second assistant holds the culprit's head firmly to the ground, and a third assistant seizes his legs, which he holds so that be cannot move them. The executioner now approaches with the instrument of death, a long stake or pole, which he pushes into the body from behind. The pole tapers almost to a point, but is rounded off somewhat at the end, so that it will not penetrate the entrails all at once. The executionef pushes this pole into the flesh as far as he can with his hands, whereupon a fourth assistant drives it in still further with a mallet. Now the pole, which has peneof the doomed
man, is set upright into the ground, and the victim is left to die upon it. The weight of the body presses it further down upon the stake every moment, and the point finally protrudes from the breast or side of the culprit. Some of those upon whom this horrible punishment has been inflicted died quickly, and their suffering was over, but others are said to have suffered untold agony for hours and even days before death put an end to their torments."
Impalement, horrible as it is, 1r not the cruelest punishment inflicted in oriental countries. Particularly the Chinese and the inhabitants of Annam, Cochin China and Siam seem to have exhausted all their powers of invention in devising new and insufferable torments for criminals or persons who had incurred the hatred of the rulers of those coun tries. In China rebels and traitors are litterally cut into a thousand pieces. The executioner who is to carry out this dreadful sentence fastens the prisoner, who is tied hand and foot with a chain tof a post and makes an incision over the of his victim. He pulls the sk forehead over the eyes of the su that he can no longer see. Alan with small knives is now plai the executioner, who shakes them up several times and then takes them up, one by one. On each knife is written the name of a part of the human body, which the fiend who takes the instrument of torture from the basket, proceeds to lacerate slowly. Little pieces of flesh and shin are cut from the struggling wretoh, and when the executioner has cut and slashed one part, in bis opinion, sufficiently, he takes another kwife from the basket and proceeds as before, until at last all the knives have been taken from the basket. But while the yictim sufferers horrible torments the executioner operates on him with such skill that no vital parts sre touched, and death does not come to the relief of the sufferer. And when all the numbers of this terrible lottery of knives are drawn, the bleeding body of the ufortunate man is thrown to ravenous dogs, who, more merciful than their masters, soon put an end to the agonies of the doomed man.
of the rer. so basket beside
Another punishment, said to have been inflicted in China on great criminals, consisted in being 'Brushed to death." The instrument employed in this torture was a wire brush, with which the executioner brushed or rather scraped ofl the flesh of the culprit, a proceeding which naturally consumer a great deal of time. The tormentor, with consummate skill, brush«d around all great veins and arteries prevent the victim from bleeding to dtoth, and kept him alive for along time.
In Sl8m the death penally was inflicted on rebels by having ihem trampled to death by elephants. Others had a small cocoanut forced Intk their mouth, so that they had to ste rvc
Other horrible punishments have been inflicted by Oriental desjptt, and many of them have taken paripcslsr pains to the pains, changing the mode of torment with everjf sufferer. But
vai tb the above instances Will what cruelties are pi countries.
luffice to show iced in those
BOW "10 BE itOBODY: It Is easy to be notOdy, and we will tell you how to do it. So to the drink-ing-saloon to spend yf leisure time. You need not arink mtch now—only a little beer or some ot time play dominoes, thing rise to killU.ii be sure not to read an you read anything, 1 novel of the day. Thi yonr stomach full and yourself games, and in a nobody, unless you drunkard or a pro: either of which is There any num hanging about uate and be
drink. Meankers, orsoroethat yon will useful books. If it be the dime on, keeping ur head empty time-killing you will be
pla
few
"My kamda were *eab$. Thejf kaxe better the* Ihaxe wring Dr. Renmn" Noble, Selma N.
ONE SUFFEi Iff can and writes J« -urn, HI. "I will Nernme eared me of fits*" fLflO.
yon. barn
I turn out a oal gambler, than nobody, yonng men
ns just ready to "ies.
reef with little dry ami rm \for 30
year*, from
Cure."
A.
M.
fruly 3,
SOUL HAPPY. suffering soul to Corbin, of Washr. Samaritan will cure all cases
"Mather Swaj Infallible, tic for feverish coostlpation.
AN ECCENTRIC MAN.
A WAYNE COUNTY PHYSICIAN MAKES THE ARRANGEMENTS FOR HIS FUNERAL AND FOOTS THE
BILLS.
I)r. S. 3. Ford, formerly of Richmond, this State, and latterly of Hagerstown, Wayne county, who died recently, had accumulated quite a competency by notably close and careful business habits, but be was reguarded "square" in his transactions, even when most exacting, and when he came to die the traits that had marked his course through life characterized his preparations for the grand finale. He thought then as he always belived before, that it one wanted a thing done well he had better do it himself, and he not only dictated the arrangements for his funeral, but negowith the parties who were to carry them out in detail. After fixing on the accustomed preliminaries, and having agreed to pay Rev. Mr. Shackelford, of the Methodist church, $25, and Rev. Mr. Warbington, of the Christian church, |15, for conducting the funeral servioe, he sent for the station agent to negotiate special rates foi taking his friends, including a Masonic escort, and a brass band, together with his remains, to West Sonora. He was informed that when twenty or more went, excursion rates would be procured, i. e., fl.40 for the round trip, and if fifty or more, $1 a head would do it. He at once accepted the latter terms, and bought and paid for 110 tickets. Later it occured to him that his friends would have to hustle around inconveniently early to get his remains to the Chicago train, passing Hagerstown at 4:21 in the morning, in order to make connection in the c^ty with the Little Miami train for Sonora, and he again summoned the station agent to know what a special train would cost. The agent communicated with Superintendent John F. Miller, who agreed to send an engine, baggage car and coach for |50in addition to the regular fair, and the dying man at first consented to the proposition, but he, on reflections, concluded that, while he had a baggage car almost entirely to himself, his 110 mourning friends would be too much crowded in one coach, and asked since he was patronizing the road to the amount of $160, that Mr Miller send two coaches. Had it been for the purpose of going to the races or even a camp-meeting $20 more would have been asked, but the big-hearted superintendent could not hold out against a dying request, and it was a go. Mr. Miller not ouly sent the two coaches, but three. That perfected arrangements as far as Sonora, and there he engaged and paid for the entertakiment of the entire company at the best inn in the town, and then he felt resigned. Everything, even to the funeral wreaths, had been provided, and he awaited the grim monster's coming.
He was fifty-six years of age and left a wife, his third, but twenty one years old. He married her when she was but eighteen, and alwavs treated her more like a daughter than a wife, having known her irom childhood. Between her and a son bv a former wife he he divided the bulk of his pile, but he left $5,000 to be distributed in sums of from $200 to $500 between those of bis old sweethearts who are now widows and old modos and need JHTe also left $150 for the hired girl, tore up $4,000 worth oi notes against people who could not pay them, and to a party to whom he had sold a $700 home on which he bad but paid $125 and seemingly could not pay the balance, he was equally kind, providing that he should have the house on the payment of $25 more to the widow.
THINGS WORTH KNOWING.
To beat the whites of eggs quickly, put in a pinch of salt. The cooler the eggs the quicker they will froth. Salt cools and also freshens them.
Beeswax and salt will make rusty flatIrons as smooth as glass. If you wish to pour boiling hot liquid into a glass jar or tumbler, it can be safoly done by putting a spoon in the dish before you pour, ijut a draught of cold air must not reach it.
Roasted coffee is one oi the most powerful disinfectants, not only rendering animal and vegetable effluvia harmless, but really destroying them.
An attack of indigestion caused by eating nuts, will be immediately relieved and cured oy the simple remedy, salt. Medical men recommend that salt should be used wSth nuts, especially when eaten at night.
The unpleasant odor left on the breath after eating onions is entirely removed by a cup or strong coffee and the coffee being prepared while the onions are being cooked counteracts the smell.
Tough meat may be made as tender as any by the addition of a little vinegar to the water when it is put on to boil.
The reason why cabbage emits such a disagreeable smell when boiling is because the process dissolves the essential oil. The water ahould be changed when the cabbagc is half-cooked, and it will thus acquire greater sweetness.
On coming out of a warm room or hall, to walk home on a cold or damp night, do not indulge In too much conversation, however agreeable your escort maybe. Breath through the nose, and keep the meuth ahut as much as possible.
It will rest you wonderfully to change yoot seat in the room occasionally if you have along day's sewing to do.
It soothes and cools a feverish patient to bathe him with warm water, in which a little saleratus has been dissolved.
Cream cures sunburn on come complexions, lemon juice on others, and cold water soita still others better.
In caring for furniture remember to keep water away from everything soluble therein oil from everything porous alcohol from varnish, and marble.
==========5 V4SF
A book agent named Joe Smyrk, W as to an a 4 He says as a cure, ..up St. Jacobs Oil is sure, At all times to get in its work. A lightning-rod man in St. Paul From a house bad a serious fall, Though battered and braised, He said when be used St. Jacobs Oil—"It simply beats all."
Well Rewarded.
A liberal rewajrd will be paid to any parly who will prod ace a case of liver, Kidney or Stomach complaints thai Elcctric Bittern will not speedily care. Bring then akWfL it will oostyoa nothing for the medicine wit falls to care, wad yea will be well rewarded for year trouble betides. All Blood dtoswe, BUioames, Jaandiee, Constipation, and general debility are quickly cared. Satisfaction teed or moaer refunded. Price only botUeifw sale by Cook A Bell
eoarmn Soentspe-r and Qolkk A Co.
Vsrai S/rsp." harmless, caiharrestlessness, worm",
Fraxk Williams, Inc "One bottle of Brown's Iron cared me of Dyspepsia."
iSPtif
A SCIENTIFIC DISCOVER Y.
A NEW AND MOST IMPORTANT ^THEORY ON ONE OF THE MOST VITAL QUESTIONS
If anyone had informed Queen Elizabeth in her palmiest days that she could havebeen seated in h6r palace in London and conversed with Sir Walter Raleigh in his North Carolina home receiving a reply from him within an hour's time, she would have deolared it to be a miracle. And yet, had they lived in the present day, this apparant miracle would most readily have been witnessed and not seem at all strange or unnatural The truth is, new principles are coming into existence, and the operation or many laws unknown in 4he past is being fully understood in the present. In no yray does the fact come more forcibly to the mind than in the care and treatment of the human body. Millions of people have died in past ages from scftne insignificant or easily controlled cause which is thoroughly understood now and readily handled. Consumption during the entire psst had been considered an incurable disease. And yet it is demonstrated that it has been and can be cured, even after it has along run. Dr. Felix Oswald has iuat contributed a notable article on this subject to the Popular Science Monthly. He regards consumption as pulmonary scrofula. The impurities of the blood produoe a constant irritation in the lungs, thus destroying their delicate tissues and causing death. His theory shows conclusively that comsumptlon is a blood disease. It has its orignal primftrly In a deranged condition of the kidneys or liver, the only two organs of the body, aside from the lungs, that purify the blood. When the kidneys or liver are diseased they are in a sore of lacerated state which communicates poison to every ounce of blood that passes through them. This poisonous blood circulates through the system and cornea to the lungs, when the poison is deposited, causing decomposition iu the finely formed cells of the luugs. Any diseased part of the body has contaminating power, and yet the blood, which is the life or the system, is brought into direct contact with these poisoned organs, thus carrying contagion to all parts of the body. Bishop Jesse T. Peck, D. D., LL. D., whose death has been so recently regretted, is reported to have died of pneumonia, which medical authorities affirm indicates a diseased condition of the kidneys. It is well known, moreover, that for several years he has been the victim of severe kidney trouble, and the pneumoula which finally terminated his life was only the last result of the previous blood poisoning. The
deadly matter which is left in the lungs by the impure blood clogs up and finally chokes the patient. When this is accomplished rapidly it is called pneumonia or quick consumption when slowly, consumption, but in any event it is the result of impure blood, caused by diseased kidneys and liver.
These are facts of science, and vouched for by all the leading physicians of the day. They show the diserability—nay, the necessity, of keeping these most important organs in perfect condition, not only to insure health, but also to escape death. It has been fully shown, to the satisfaction of nearley every unprejudimlnd, that warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure is the only known remedy that can cure and keep iu heslth the great blood-purifying organs of the body. It acts directly upon these members, healing all ulcers which may have formed in them and placiug them in a condition to purify and not poison the blood. This is no idle statement nor false theory. Mr. W. C. Beach, foreman of the Buffalo, N. Y., Rubber Type Fountry was given up to die by both
{te
)bysicians and friends. For four years nad a terrible cough, accompalned by night Bweats, chills, and all the well known symptoms. He spent a season south and found no relief. He says: "I finally concluded to try Warner's Safe Cure and in three months I gained twenty pounds, recovered my lost onergy ana my heiilth was fully restored." The list could be prolonged indefinitely but enough has bean said to prove to every sufferer from pulmonic troubles that there is no reason to oe discouraged in the least, and that health can be restored. _________________
Daughter*, Wives and Mothers. Dr. Marchisi's Catholicon, a Female Remedy—guarauteed to give satisfaction or money refunded. Will cure Female Diseases. All ovarian troubles, inflammation and ulceration, falling and displacements or bearing down feeling, trregul a rites, barrenness, change of life, leucorrhoea besides many weaknesses from the above, like headache, weakness, sleeplessness, palpitation of theheart, cfrc. For sale by Druggists. Prices $1.00 and $1.50 per Bottle. Send to Dr. J* Marchisi, Utica, N. ,Y., for Pamphlet, free. For sale by Gulick & Co.
Bueklen'» Arnica Halve. The greatest medicine wonder of the world. Warranted to speedily cure Burns Bruises, Cats, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Cancers, Piles, Chilblains, Corns, Tetter Chapped Hands, and all skin eruptions, guaranteed to cure in every instance, or money refunded. 25 cents per box. For sale by Cook A Bell and Gulick & Co. (tf.) v..r
Roagb on Bat*
Clears out rats, mice, roaches, flies, ants, bed-bugs, skunks, chipmunks, gophers. 15c. Druggists.
'.V:
OF
THE DAY.
A
'r-f" 1
t-v
Keek Cssdy Cough Care. Warranted to Cure or money refunded. Coughs, Colds, Hoaiseness, Throat and Lung troubles, (also good for children.) Rock Candy Cough Cure contains the healing properties of pure white Rock Candy with Extracts of Roots and Herbs. Only 25c. Large bottles $1.00 cheapest to by. For sale by Gulick A Co!
Positive Care fer Files,
To the people of this Country we wouia say we have been given the Agency of Dr. Marchisi's Italian Pile Ointment—warranted to Cure or money refunded—Internal, External, Blind, Bleeding or Itching Piles. Price 50c. a Box. For sale by Gulick A Co.
A Ran on a Drag Store. Never was such a rash made for any Stores as is now at Cook & Bell's and Gnlick A Co*s, for a Trial Bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds. All persons nflfected with Asthma, Bronchitis, Hoareenos, Severe Coughs or any affection of the Throat and Lungs, can get a Trial Bottle of this great remedy for 10 cts by calling at the above Drug Stores. Regular slse/fl.00. (5).
Perfect Nncecss.
Those two words have a vast meaning when fully comprehended. A perfect success can be truthfully applied to Dr. Jones' Red Clover Tonic, which cures dyspepsia, biliousness, costiveness, all diseases of the kidneys, liver and bladder. It is a perfect touic and blood purifier it keeps the skin clear and bright, drives away pimples and makes the general health excellent. Price 50 cents, of Gulick A Co. Druggists. (2)
"Bnrbn-Palbs."
Quick, complete cure, all annoying Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Diseases. $1. Druggists.
Griggs* Glycerine Salve. The best on earth can truly be said of Griggs' Glycerine Salve, which is a sure cure for cuts, bruises, scalds, burns, wounds, and all other sores. Will positively cure piles, tetter and all skin eruptions. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Only 25 cents. For sale by Gulick A Co. (tf.)
Testimony From the Press. To those afflicted with lung trouble, hear what W. D. Wilson, of Ottawa (111.) Times says: •'After being disabled for three months with a cough, and lung trouble, often spitting up blood, can testify that I am cured permanently by the use of Dr. B'.gelow's Positive Cure.'' A free trial bottle can be had at Gulick & Go's. Drug store. (2)
A CAKD.
To all who are suffering from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness early decay, loss of manhood, Ac., I will send a recipe that wll cure you FREE OF CHARGE. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary In South America. Send a self addressed envelope to the Rev. Joseph T. Inman, Station D., New York City.
I
MPOBT ANT TO
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Taking Horace Greeley's estimate the number of readers to a family—on s# average—every issue of the HATURDA EVENING MAIL is perused by ove "Ve* ty Thousand P?r J*
-»1883.«-
TX33C
GRAND EVENT OF THE YEAR.
OPENS SEPT. (5th—CLOSES OCT. 6th.
WOVDIKrVL DISPLAY OF
HoonaDimrism Ann
XTailOK&fld XOticfcUtoltlon. of Industry and Art. aPMiaaioir ao cmurvm. J. aVEsMbtton from every Slat* la the Unkm. cklfVC for Of ataaai SMCtftl SffUftStStl Wf tftlUpOfUtlOS ofttliibitttadtkton forftS pftrticatart, iddiw, W"T H* §TEWAETf 8w'f.
-*1883.+-
2% 4wv*vvf
Cincinnati Industrial Exposition-
