Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 14, Number 19, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 November 1883 — Page 3
Mr
A PAPER FOR THE PBOPLE.
?An Hoar Too Late.
:,s?
ly mot Had a gypsy, my fortune relate Come of her predictions, it may be,
Vy mother when I was a baby rpay. erpre_ /Accomplished my checkered fate. Vhie Aujrtir with cards and pretenses B/ Should by burrrtnjf her crime expiate, •F War she said she would wager her tenses ST Luck will find me an hour 109 late.
My unoie was one of the wealthy! O, BO unlike bis nephew in alii lut lately become *0 unbealthly rTtost bis gold he would part wtth on cali ill bis wealth he intended to leave me
By his will, he would promptly dictate 3h myself and a Notary. It grieves me, That we came—just un hour too late. Kow my luck, to be sure, had appeared* MLS* When in humble deportment 1 stood "For the chief of my nation—endeared
A eappltunt for office and—food. •Well, besa'rt, "you are truly deserving Juet that office— the best in the State ,. •n my honor, it's really unnerving
That you came here—an hour too late!"
2^ good: duty,
Full of love for a maiden of fceauty, .Who was amiable, wealths', and bough my fhyness postponed my 1 proposed just as soon a* 1 could. She. with lovinR demeanor and sweetness,
Asked my reason for being so slow— Hy engagement took place here with neat* ness—
How provoking—an hour ago. —Translate! from the Danish.
rather
'.1
A PEIfiNDLY SACRIFICE
|jf "Well, Telford, now that it's all over what »pe vmi going to do?" •••Ah, trrat's the mischief! If the
Squire was like many :i father I've known, tbore would be fewer difficulties an tlie way." "Bad business, this marrying'. I shall be hi no hurry to slip ray head in aocli a •noose."
The speaker was a tall, feaadsome Man of eight and twenty, though by the andoubted indications of slightwrinkles here and there upon his fair, coinpla-aent-looking countenance, yon would have presumed that he was much older.
His blonde hair curled in short ringlets over a brow as clear and white as a woman's his long mustache almost hid
J?
from view the reddest lips a man ever ssessed,
while
violet eyes of the deep-
1 hue, and a round, dimpled chin mpluted the charm of a face which beauty of a single one of these features
would
have
sufficiently
endowed
with extraordinary attractiveness. He was a man such as a certain class of women would have worshiped as a hero—a
Veritable
Cupid in a scarlet
•oat, for this Adonis
was-a
soldier in
her Majesty's- Forty-seventh, and had aeen such service as*many a havdened veteran would scarcely care to pass through. His companion, Capt. Telford, was exactly his opposite in manner, Mgure, and general appearance. He was of
portly
stature,
build,
but
shorter in
much heitvicr than the
dragoon, not as good a one at a livebarred gate, or across -country on a nimble hunter.
He was the elder of the t,vyo by some ten or twelve years, but appeared much younger his honest, fresh-looking face {'flowed with the health and vitality of a ad of 18. No marks of dissipation, of late hours, of endless champagne suppers marred tne rugged beauty of a face on which manliness and .simplicity shone trom every feature. Hut it, wore a somewhat anxious and troubled expression :t.s hcjconiided to his friend the results of a two years' service in India. They were sitting in a private room at the Waterloo, their feet extended in •areless case and manly fashion to the back of a huge arm-chair before them let the Captain tell his own story: ••You sec, it was rather sudden," he said, after a long pause, during which the blue wreaths from liw cigar curled into innumerable clouds misty color and floated out through the open window. "My father always gave me to anderstand that he wanted the pleasure of picking nut the future mistress of Darlington Court himself, I, the person most seriously concerned in the •matter was'to do notning but marry her,
We she fair or ugly,good-natured orotherwise. Well, lie was very kind, snot me •ut with tut Kighiy-lirst Dragoons when they went with Wediuiiton lo the l'cnin aula in short, ournuttcit me to cut out my •wn line of life when he would much rather I'd have remained at bome. •The eldest son,' he used to say, 'has mothing to do but to enjoy himself, and leave soldering to the younger son, if tliere be any if not, to tne younger son «f some other family.* But, bless you. I •never could bo idle, so here I am. Capa in of a in a a a 'em —as you'll find anywhere.
00
if the
•Id gentlVttiMa wishes to even things by reserving the .choice of my wife to himself. littie blame to him. I say." "Oh you sly dog!" put in the other. ••You may well declare that when you're married already." „, "And there's where tho'trouble coin OS in." admitted tfce Captain,candidly. "If he hadn't treated me* so well I could just march home—" "And a forced march it would be. interrupted the blonde dragoon. "No joking—as I said, I could j«« start for home without the least em bapraiment, and say, 'Here's nay wife, father, and bad luck to you if you don't happen to fanoy But after aU hit kindness to me «n't the heart to tell him, and ve /A ppose it mutt soon come to ^hat 4 Captain leaned his head upoilt hir .-mi as he concluded, and signed as if In much perplexity and doubt.
Garry Worthing ton blew a mouthful of smoke clear across the room, as If in direct aim at aa empty wineglass, laughed heartily, and stud: ••Just cheer tip, old follow, and let us see if we can't make the best of the affair. And first tell me if your worthy parent has any one in view. If not, ft will be easy sailing towards an explanation. If so, then nay the Lord help you. Rich, fori never can. Which way isitr r"Why, the wrong way of course." returned Telford. "Ever since a distant relative of my mother's died and left bis daughter some £80.000 he has set his heart upon her, and naturally thinks I'll do the same. £ut she's not my style, and—" ••Can't bepow."
UJ!
"And wouldn't be if it were possible. No tall, black-eyed brunette for me?, Garry. They're treacherous as a cat, and "Have as many lives," said Worthington with a chuckle.*
Unmindful of this second interruption the Captain proceeded: "And this especial one I always disliked. She may nave changed, though I don't think time could bring much improvement to her "More apt to bring wrinkles." "You're the last one to say so. They're coming thick and fast upon your face," laughed. Telford goodnaturedly. "Never mind. Mine are like gray hairs—honorable. I got'em in the service." "Of dark-eyed girls with sonny eurls and lips o'erfiung with roses," sang the Captain in a deep, aonorous voice., "Well, I doubt if one be any harder than the other. Fact is, a military life fiT'first-rate discipline for one who commits matrimony—you still continue under orders, and a greater' number, too, than a dozen Colonels to a regiment could give you in the course of a year." "Ah, but my life is so very different!" said the Captain complacently. "Certainly—only three months married. Your time is to come," replied his friend with an air of commiseration "They first pull the wool over your eyes—that's during the engagement, for if they didn't so many good fellows like yourself would never be drawn in the way they are. Then they drive lightly the first few months. I dare say she hasn't given you one order yet, has sheP No? I thought not you're in too much of a hurry to wait for 'em—but after the year's up. whizz! how they drive! Whizz—buzz! scratch gravel lively. If you don't, some other fellow will and in a twinkle you're deserted, the reins drop looselv on your neck, and you look up to see Number Two running away with your rig, on which vour wife sits calmly with ribbons in one hand and whip in the other." "It won't be so in my case," said Telford, snappishly. "Did I hint at such a thing?" asked Garry. "Bless him—how he caught me up, too quick as a wink." Then there was complete silence, uutil Telford looked up and said with a half-im-ploring, half-qui**ical«xpression on his sunburnt face:
4*Oh.
Garry, if you
would only get me out of the difficulty by falling in iove with tiiis confounded brunette, and marrying her yourself!" "My dear fellow," returned the other, speaking soberly, though his eyes twinkled with the merriment he was endeavoring to suppress, "I would make any sacrilice for a friend but that—don't ask me. To give up my freedom and merge my identity into that of a woman who probably hasn't more than two ideas in her head—the one, to get all the money she can get out of me, and the other, to spend it as fast as possible—no, thank you, Rich. You are admirable for these quaint little suggestions, bat as a practical man you're a failure." Ki. "You'll come down with me, though, as you promised, won't youP" "On, yes, I'll stand by you to that extent. ButrwbAre will you leave your wife?" "At an uacle of her'snear Richmond. She will stay there till 1 can straighten things." l*hen, having finished their cigars they rose to leave, and proceeding down the marble steps to the street they separated—the Captain to make arrangements for the journey on the moiTow, and the Lieutenant to meet a party of friends in Hyde Park.
They both met the next morning at the station, and having taken tneir seats in the -carriage were soon whirling on toward their destination. It was only a two hours' ride, and as they approached its end the Captain grew nervous and excited. "Oh, cheer upl" cried Garry, slapping him on the shoulder. "Don't get so red in the face its evident you ve had but little experience in this line." "What d'ye mean nowP" demanded the other, shortly. •*I mean that you've never been married before," returned Garry soothingly as, their station reached at last, he has tilr pushed his friend out of the carriage, followkig in more leisurely style himself.
Telford's own drag with his groom were there waiting for him. pn through green lanes and down by golden fields tliey drove, Garty enjoying ihe loveliness of that scenery which at any other time would hold innumerable charms for Telford himself. Ten minutes later aad they were standing in the drawing roots at Darlington Court.
The old Squire, a hale, hearty man of 60, was there te welcome him. The Captain's mother, a tall, aristocraticlooking dame, languidly arose from the depths of an easy* -chair to receive her son's affectionate salutation. A small, graceful figure turned from a distant window at Mrs. Telford's bidding, and was presented to tne two gentlemen.
Great drops of perspiration stood upon the Captain's forehead, and a faint flush came over his face as he murmured a few indistinct words. A flush, too, came stealing on the voung girl's brow as she noted his embarrassment and restraint. Without one word to him she addressed herself to Garrv, who hastened to lead her back to her former retreat, that his friend might recover himself in the more congenial atmosphere of his parents.
I don't believe Rich thought they'd have the girl on hand, or he would never have come down," said Garry to himself. "But Til do my best to keep her out of his way." So, agreeable to this resolution, he endeavored to entertain Miss Sevan in his own charming, pecb liar wav, and certainly he appeared to succeed, for glands? ov«*r at them half an hour later, saw iat they were sitting at no rreat disuse from each othet. .tml /ting like two old friends.
Three *1. during which, more fort .«• sa\- friend titan for any parti. .. ar .n r. he tocifc .1 the young !»JyV society, the Lieu count devoted himself to her, much to the Squire's annoyance and regret. he ejnttainwfd
IhcV
"Hans s:
day, "thai away with the £80,000—and the right under your very nose."
A
•we
yon% fellow will
walk
TEKRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING- MAIL.
After awhile Garry began to ask himself whether his marked attention to the heiress was wholly prompted by his devotion to Dick, or any growing interest he might feel in her himself. She was handsome, not a doubt of that,* and then the money! W W IKj rf1VilSfe.
Garry did not really thinlt thateighty thousand pounds would be a sufficient inducement for the loss of his freedom, but then It would go along
ways
toward
consoling him and. as Telford's situation did not permit him to avail himself of such a means of consolation, why should be refuse what fate had apparently designed for him?
So, day by day, he gradually infused ardor into his advances, and his more merry, laughing thoughtful and tender
eyes grew strangely der when she lingered
by, until the Captain began to see, even more closely than Garty himself, in what direction the wind was, and joyfully awaited the time when histfriend's engagement should put an end to his sinpenaft. ..ll land Alice Bevan—what^aid^she to the devotion of a very different individual from the one she well knew had been intended for her?
She had been led to supp&se that Richard Telford only awaited a fitting opportunity, to express his admiration ana love for her. But as the days flew byr and he kept himself wholly aloof from
vh6r,
his shyness and timidity a£
(heir first meeting after so many, many years banished from her mind all ideas of the friendship she might have had for him under other and more propitious circumstances. And so she began by accepting Garry's small gallantries in a spirit of pure coquetry, and ended by loving the handsome dragoon in spite of herself.
Late one pleasant afternoon these two were strolling through a shady lane, pausing every now and then to rest beneath the shelter of some ancient oak, when Garry made his declaration in his oWn peculiar, characteristic way. "Miss Bevan," lie
Degan,
("Butfaow?"
straighten
ing himself up to give his whole attention to the matter, "von will be grieved to know that dear old Rich is in the dev —I mean a fearfully bad scrape, and the only way to extricate him is to—is for him to pull him out ourselves, added Garry, somewhat at loss for an appropriate expression, "Dear me," murmured Miss, Bevan, indifferently. "Yes. You see we both came down together, and he's left a wife in town, and how to break in to the old Squire he's at his wits' end to find out. But you and I could easily help him out that is, of course, if both parties are willing and agreeable, and I can safely answer for one."
"Bv getting married," said Garry, coolly, and then for the first time he glanced at her to see how she was affected by this sudden intelligence.
A look of deep displeasure came over her £aoe, but it vanished the next in stant as Garry seized her little hand in 'both Ins own, and poured forth such an ardent declaration of love and passion as would have moved a far more stony he:irt (than she possessed. "You see." he went on, "it would he such a great kindness to Rich, and an inestimable benefit to myself as well, if you'll only take me. I'm not worth inarch now, but I hope to be and I'll sell out of the regiment, and do anything else you want me to," said Garry, thinking, and with good reason, too, that a man whose wife had £80,000 would take life much more comfortable out of service than in it.
What the Squire said when the lovers finally walked home and announced tbeir engagement, after spending all tbe afternoon hours beneath the sliade of the old oak tree, may be readily imagined.
What the Captain snfd when his friend brought him tlie joyful news may soon be to.d. ••'Garry," he said, "I am ticinkful enough to you for fixing tmu^s up so satisfactorily for inc. |tui.'V*-with roguish light twi»iK inr in hi* iinest eyes—"you remember that you suid at the YVaterloo you were prepared 10 do anything for me but that. Have you considered it all sufficiently?"
Well," returned Garry, laughing himself, though he endeavored' to assume an «asv, indifferent air. "of' what earthly use is a worthies." fellow like me if he can't make a friendly sacrifice oneean a while?"
BabyBellesi
Even the young children at Saratoga are drawn into the whirlpool of dissipation, and dance and dress and flirt to an ex teat thot promises badly for tbeir own future and for that of their parents and country. Children's hops, chil dren's Germans, children's fancy balls and garden parties area regular feature of the season both atSaratogaaud Long Branch, and Newport is now the only watering place from whence details of children's gayeties and dissipation
The
not oome. The folly and
do
wickedness
of these unnatural displays are abundantly evident in the whole after career and development of these unfortunate little ones. At 10 years of age tbe little girl of the day is an incipient coquette, at 14 she is a finished woman of the world, and, as some one has aptly remarket!, "knows hs much as her mother and enioys her knowledge a great deal more.' And this false and hurtful training does not belong to Newport or New York or to any other city or section of our country, but is most largely to be noticed at cosmopolitan assemblages like Saratoga, where East, West, North and South are all represented. What the result will eventually be is a nve and serious question. At present '?ht draw tears from the hardest worthing to see the wholesale destruction of nature's most beautiful work which is going oa.—2/ew York Sun.
A LlftaavtagPrcseit. Mr. M. E» AWmu, Hatchlascn, KJUU: 8*ved his life toy a simp'e Trial Bottle of Dr. War* New Dfanwrery, tor Oonncunptkm, which etond him to prccor* taupe bottle thft I completely cored htm, when change of climate and evi fiUtedu Arthma, Branch Severe Oougtm, and all Throat and Lone dtaaiM. It Is guaranteed to earn. Trial Bottle lb cents at OoSek Oirti and Cook A Betim Drag Store. Uuistfas tUft. (1)
How Was Man DistribnIYl on F-rth. This period, long as it aoncars. is very short as compared wifti t.iu myriads of ages of geolog cai development that preceded it. and represents only the last and short tat of the geological periods. Tne question :irises. How has the human nice been able to spread itself over the whole snrfacc of the globe? Is it the product of different and independent origins in the several continents, or have all men sprung from a common cradle, a "mother-re-gion?" On this point students are divided, Agassis holding that men were created, and Carl Vogt that they were developed, at different centers, and Quatrefages and the theologians maintaining the unity of their origin. The fact is left that man, the same in all the essential characteristics of the species, has advanced into all the habitable parts of the globe, and that not recently, and when provided with all the resources that experience and inventive genitrs could put at his disposal, but when still young and ignorant. It was then that, weak and almost naked, having only just got fire and a few rude arms with which to defend itself and procure food, the human race conquered the world and spread itself from within the Arctic Circle to Terra del Fuego, from tbe Samoyed country to Van Diemen's Land, from the North Cape to the Cape of Good Hpjpe. It is this primitive exodus, as certain as it is inconceivable, accepted by science as well as by dogma, that we have to explain, or at least to make probable and that in an age when it is only after the most wonderful discoveries, by the aid of the most powerful machinery for navigation, through the boldest and most adventurous enterprises,'that civilized man has been able to flatter himself that he has at last gone as far as infant man went in an age that is so far removed from us its to baffle all calculations.
We must insist on this point, for it brings into light an obstacle which those who have tried to trace out the connection between widely separated races and to determine the course that had been followed by tribes now separated by oceans and vast expanses have hitherto found insurmountable for, if man is one—to which we are ready to agree—we must assign a single point of departure for his migrations. In these migrations man has gone wherever he could, and, at even spot he has occupied and settled, hs\s acquired characteristics peculiar to the place, and which differentiated from the men settling in other places. Hence the varieties in humau races. Some of these spots seem to have been peculiarly favorable to his advancement, and became centers of civilization. The number of such centers is, however, very limited, and their distribution is significant.— M. G. De Saporta, in Popular Science Monthly ior Heptcmbrr. rn
1
TRIAL proves that bonesty IS the t•est policy lin medicine as well ssinotber things. Ayer's Saisaparilla is a genuine preparation, and unequalled biooa purifier, decidedly superior to all others.
The Best ira to Uroil a fit"aft, IfoWlet us suppose a beefsteak to be cooked by radiant heat, with the least possible -co-operation of convection. To effeot this, our source of heat must be a good radiator. Glowing solids are better radiators than ordinary flames thereflrre coke, or charcoal, or-ordinary coal, after its bituminous matter has done its flaming, should be used, and the steak or chop may he placed in front or above a surface of sucn glowing carbon. In ordinary domestic practice it is placed on a gridiron above the coal, and therefore I will consider this case first. The object to be attained is to raise tbe juices of tbe meat throughout to about the temperature of 180 degrees Fahr. as quickly as possible, in order that the cookery may be completed before the water of these juices shall have had time to evaporate to any considerable extent therefore the meat should be placed as near to the surface of the glowing carbon as possible. But the practical housewife will say that, if placed within two or three inches, some of the fat will be melted and burn.^and then the steak will be smoked. Now, -here we require a little more chemistry. There is smoking and smoking—smoking that produces a detestable flavor, and smoking that does not mischief at all beyond appearances. The flame of an ordinary coal-fire is doe to the distillation and combustion of tarry vapors. If such a flame strikes a comparatively cool surface like that of meat, it will condense and deposit thereon a film of crude coal-tar and coal-naphtha, most nauseous and rather mischievous but, if the flame be that which is caused by the combustion of its own fat, the deposit on a mutton chop will be a little mutton-oil. on a beefsteak a little beef-oil, more or less blackened by mutton-carbon or beef-carbon. But these oils and carbons have no other flavor than than that of cooked mutton and cooked beef therefore they are perfect^ innocent in spite of their guilty black appearances.—Popular Science Monthly.
:*:-7 Am Answer Wasted. Call any one bring us a case of Kidney or liver complaint that Electric Bittern will not speedily erne? We aay they can not, aa thousands of cases already permanently cured and-who are dally recommending Hectric Bittern, will prove. Bright* Dlreaso. Diabetes, Weak Baca, or urinary complaint quickly eured. They purify the bleed, regelate the bowels, and act directly on the diseased parts. Every bottle goaianteed. For sale at SOc. a bottle Oook A Bell and UalickA Co. (1)
•sscktcn, Wives ami l«tk«n.
Dr. Marcbisi's Catholicon, a Female Remedy—guaran teed togi ve satisfaction or money refunded. Will cure Female Diseases. All ovarian troubles, irfianfr nation and ulceration, falling and displacements or bearing down feeling, uTegulMites, barrenness, change of lira, leoeorrbosa besides many weaknesses springing from the above, like headache, bloating, spinal weakness, steep! wwnoss, nervous debility, palpitation ofthebeart, Ac. For sale by Druggists. Prices »U» and «1^0 per Bottle. Send to Dr. J. Marchhri, Utiea, N. Y., for Pamphlet, free. For sale fay Qulick A Go.
Better and Cheaggr than Qnisiae
Moore's Pilules
A'°iSgJjSrta"
WALK MORE, AXD SLEEP SOUNDLY. Mr. John W.' Cole, Principal of the Gale School, Troy, N. Y., writes us—
TROT, N. Y., April 7,1883.
"Having been afflicted for several years past with Illness, the cause of which was unknown to me for along time, and my con tinued disability getting to be so serious and distressing a character as to cause great anxiety with my family and friends, I became satisfied upon close investigation that the cause of my sickness was the diseased condition of my kidneys and liver. At this time by accident of a friend who had similar symptoms to mine Informed me of the great improvement In his health by taking Hunt's Remedy, and persuaded me to try it. 1 immediately commenced taking It, and from the first bottle began to Improve, and its continual use affords very encouraging results. I can sleep more soundly, walk better am free from pains, and the severe attacts of headache 'from which 1 suffered so much have disappeared, and I cheerfully recommend Hunt's Remedy for all purposes for which it is advertised. 1 will add in closing that my wife used it very successfully for preventing the attacks of sick headache with which she had been afflicted from youth.
ALMOST DISHEARTENED. A prominent citizen sends us the fol.owlng statement:— "For several years I have been very seriously afflicted with severe pain in the back, which I long supposed to be lumbago or rheumatism of the back. More recently the pains had become more severe, so much so that it was with difficulty that I was able to get out of bed in the morning. I had tried various remedies without any apparent relief. By tbe earnest solicitation of a friend I commenced taking Hunt's Remedy, about three weeks ago, and its Instantaneous benefits are wonderfu',for I have had no pains in my back since taking the first three doses and am relieved from the pains, aches, and exhaustive weakness, the painful symptoms that usually accompany disease of the kidneys. Andl confidently expect to be completely and permantly cured by the use of it, I most cheerfully recommend Hunt's Remedy to all who are afflicted with any kidney or liver disease. William G. Arnold, 'Walnut Street, Providence, R. T. STarch 29,1883.
14,568 Boxes sold in a year by ONE Druggist of
Act Directly on tlie Liver.
CUBBS CHILLS AND FKVKB, DYSPEPSIA, SICK HBADACHK, BILIOUS COLIC, CONSTIPATION, RHEUMATISM, PILBS. PALPITATION or THI HEART, DIZZINESS, TOBWB LTVEB, COATED TONOCR, BLEEPLESSNJBIS, AND ALL DISEASES or THE LTVKB AND STOMACH. Ir yon do not" feel very well." a single pill at bed-time stimulates the stomach, restores the appetite, Imparts visor to the system.
"DRUGGIST^ ^GEN"£PALZDEAURS
R.E. SELLERS & CO.,
,Pl.
week In your own town. Terms and
pOOsf outfit free. Address H. Hallett & (V., Portland. Malnf.<p></p>TUTTS
PILLS
TORPID BOWELS,
DISORDERED LIVER, and MALARIA,
From these sources arise three-fourths of the diseases of the human raoe. These symptoms indicate their existence: Lou of Appetite, Bowel* costive, Sick llcadaolke, nillneu alter eating, aversion to exertion of body or mina, Eructation of food, Irritability of temper, Low spirit*. A feeling of having neglected some duty, IMuCieig, Fluttering at the Heart, Dots before the eyes, highly colored Urine, CONSTIPATION, and demand the use of a remedy that acts directly on the Liver. As aUver medicine TUTT'S PILLS have no equal. Their action on the Kidneys and Skin is also prompt removing all impurities through tli^bu three scavengers of the system," producing appetite, &onnd digestion, regular stools, a elenr skin and a vigorous body. TTTTT'B PILLS cause no nausea or griping nor interfere with dally work and area perfect
ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA.
HE FEELS LIKE A 1tJEW MAK, "I have had Dyspepsia, with Const!pation.two years, and nave trfpd ten diflV *-i kinds of pills, and TUTT'S arc the first that have done me any good. They have cleaned me ont nicely. My appctiiu lr splendid, food digests readily, and I urn. have natural passages. I feel like a nor. man." W.J. EDWARDS, Palmyra, O. Sold 07ery where,affc. Office, 44 Murray 8t.,N.Y.
TUTTS HAIR DYE.
GRAT HAIB OR WHISKKBS clianfreil irstantly to A ULOssr BLACK by a single plication of this PTE. Sold toy Dru^'in -. or sent by express 011 receipt of 91*
Office, 44 Murray Street, New York. TUTT'S MANUAL OF USEFUL RECEIPTS fT-rr.
RheaDsilin CnnS, ROCHKSTEK,N. Y. Apr. 6. "83 Rheumatic ."i/rup Co-
GKJITS I have been a great sufferer from Rheumatism for six years, and bearing of the success of Rheumatic Syrup I concluded to give it a trial in my own case, and I cheerfully say that have been generally benefitted by Its use. I can walk with entire freedom from pain, and my general health is very much Improved. It Is a plend id remedy for the and debilitated system.
E CHKWTEKPAHK, M. D.
'jpHE SATURDAY EVENIN#
MAIL,
TKRRE HAUTE, IND.'
A Paper for the ^People.
A MODEL HOME JOURNAL.
ENTERTAINING, INSTRUCTIVE AND mswsY.
BRIGHT, CLEAN AND PUHJE.
THE FOURTEENTH YEAR
The Mall has a record of sneoen said an attained by a Western weekly paper. Twelve years of increasing popularity proves lt» worth. Encouraged by the extraordinary sucoeas which has attended its publication the publisher has perfected arrangements by which for the oomlng yeai The Mail will be more than ever welcome in the home circle. In this day of trashy and Impure literature It Should be a pleasure to all good people to help In extending the circulation of such a paper as the ,A SATURDAY EVENING M/TL
TERMS:
One year Six months........ Three monthB
Hotel now being bnllt on the town site. For further paiiiculars, address FR W. S. ALLEN,
SMhrPruffitttj
SYRUP
The Greatest Blood Purifier Known!
Srrofois Cured.
PORT BYKON, Jf.Y. Feb. 20, *«2. Rheumatic I*yrup Cb.: I have been coctoring for three or four years, with different physicians, sor scrofula, as some called it, but found no relief until I commenced taking your fctyrup. After taking it a short time, to my sui help me. a few weeks, I found my* as well as ever. As blood purifier 1 think It has no! equal.
ung 11 a inon nine, nrprlse. it began to Continuing its use eks, I fount! myjwlf *l no!
Mas. WiLtiA* ftrsAso,
Manufactured by RHEUMATIC SYRUP CO., I Plymouth Ave., Rochester, N. Y. laid la Tern Haste by GOLKK 4k CO.
etc. only
ANDRETH
HIRAM 8IBL It CO, CHICAGO, 111, Rocbester.N.Y.
-M
.. Snip
•saw 5ii
I'
... »2 ..... 1
Mail and office subscrlr tions will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration of time. Address P. S. WENTFALL,
Publisher Saturday Evening Mail, TERRE HAUTE, IND
Lands for Sale':
—in—
EAST TENNESSEE.
ON THE CUMBERLAND PLATEAU. Splendid climate. The elevation above sea level being jibout 1800 feet. No Ague or Malaria,. The summer nights invariably w* cool, an abundance of springs of pure free stone water, with an aJmo&t unlimited sopply of wlid or native gratsesand the mild atwl short winter*, make this a desirable seotion for stock raising, especially so for Cattle and Sheep. Soil good, producing Corn, wheat. Tobacco etc. Also Clover, Timothy, Millet and other grasses, but seems especially ndapted to growing Vegetables, Fruits, an# Vines. These lands are surveyed in lots of 100 acres each, and for sale at 18.00 to 95.00 per acre, ji cash, balance in three equal annum yrnents, with Interest at six per cent.
Also town lots for sale in ALLARDT, the coming city of Feutress county, Tennessee, the Cumberland mountains. Tlie fnture health resort for both the North and the South.
About ten thousand acres of these lands have been sold this season to actual settlers. 23 fumllies now there located. We have tore, Postofllee, good school house, which is used also for church.
yrt
.failsafe
llii
ALLARDT, Tenn.'*
'f-jcal-b- j*
AYER'S
Ague Cure
contains an antidote for all malarial disorders which, so far as known, is used in no other remedy. It contains no Quinine, nor any mineral nor deleterious substance whatever, and consequently produces no Injurious effect upon the constitution, but leaves the system as healthy as it was before the attack.
WE WABBAHT AYEB'8 AGUE CUBE to cure every case of Fever and Ague, Intermittent or Chill Fever, Remittent Fever. Dumb Ague, Bilious Fever, aad Liver Complaint oauMd by malaria. In case of failure,. after doe trial, dealers are authorised, by our circular dated July 1st, 1862, to refttnd the money* Dr. J. C. Ayer Jk Co., Lowell,
Hsft
MAN.
80M by an Druggists.
SENT FREE.
To those suffering from the effects of youthful errors, seminal weuknenH, early decay, loSt manhood,etc., I will send a valuable treatise •P'in the above diseases, also directions fer self cure, free. Sendyouraddress io
K. C. Fowler, Mood us, Conn.
TMC
MOST
RELIABLE! FOOD OITHCWMLA
DIETS
M?
fh
Issrslgis Cared. AiKFORTjN.Y.Marcli M, Rheumatic tiyrup Co.'.
Grars—Since Novemi 1882,1 have been a constai sufferer from neuralgia, ai have not known wnat it was to be free from pain until commenced I commence# the use of Rheumotic Byrufk I have felt no pain since nsingthe fourth bottle. I thl it tbe best remedy ever heard of for the blood and for rheumasism and neuralgia.
W. B. CHASX.
SEEDS!
