Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 14, Number 37, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 March 1884 — Page 3
THE MAIL
A
Paper
ft'
for the PeSRe.
Silhouette.
sir
Obnlmucd from Second Page. The doctor had stepped betford her to "bead. aside the bashes. He stopped short, and stood motionless a moment. Iris back, to her. When he turned there was an alteration in bis face which she •uld not define. The actor was gone the real man looked out for an instant Iroul behind the cartain. "Young Van Cieve lire* in that a in •'Yek, with his wife and child." ',v? "A *bild? Is it a boy?" "Yes the dearest little fellow. Why •4o you ask?"
A smile, or it might have been a nervous contortion, flickered over the fat, amiable face. His tones became exceedingly soft and laxy. "It is with Van Cieve I had business to settle. I have been looking for him a long time. "Then you will oome to the house •with me?''
She would have passed on, bat stopped troubled and frightened, she knew not why. The man had aot heard her he stood slowly stroking his heavy chin, deliberating. Certainly there was nothing dramatic in the stoat figure in its long linen coat, low bat, and boots sunk in the mad—there was not a trace of emotion on the flabby, apathetic features, yet Lncy cowered as though she iad been brought face to face with a naked soul in the crisis of its life. "I have been looking for him a long lime," he repeated, talking to himself. "But there is Otoga. They need me in ©toga."
There was not a sound. Not the fall •fa leaf. Even the incessant sough of the wind through the gorges was still. The world seemod to keep silence. The time comes to every man when the devil •f his life-long appetites and passions rises to face the Goa that 1s in him for a inal struggle.
He looked up at the cabin it was but a step. Ho bad been following Van Cieve for years. He drew his breath quickly once, thrust the bushes aside, and began to climb the rock.
The sun suddenly flashed out a bird fluttered up from the thicket, and perched on a bough close beside hira, sending out a clear trilfof song. He stopped short, a quick, pleased beat coming to his face. "Pretty little thing, bey It knows me, d'y« see? It's watching me."
He waited a moment until the song, •eased, and then nervously adjusted his kat. "I'll go to those poor devils in Otoga. I reckon that's the right thing to do." And turning, he hastily mounted his horse.
Lucy felt that ho was going to his death, and he seemed like an old friend. She ran across the road and put her hands upon the horse's neck. "G™d-bye," she said. "Good-by, MisaCoyt." "I will never tee, you again! God hlesa yon 1"
Me He leoked at her, bewildered. "God? Oh yes. Well, perhaps so." He rode down the road, and the stout igureand flapping linen coat disappeared in the fog.
Four -day* pawed. Dumfort who appeared to be a man of leisure, lounged •bout the cabin, helping with the work, and occasionally bringing news from ©toga, gathered from soase straggler who was flying from the fever. He came in one morning and beckoned Van Cieve out. "There's one of them poor wretches Isllen by the way-side. He's got the •lagne. It's my belief there's not an hour's life In him." "I'll come." Van Cieve hastily gathered some simple remedies he had not hemism enough to leave bis family and sacrifice bis life for his nolghbors, but he was a kindly fellow and could not turn hack from anv dying creature oreeping to his door. The two men went down the mountain together. "I wanted," said Dumport, "to pnll him under a sock. But he said, 'No, let me die out-of-doors.'" "That was a queer notion." "Yes." Dumfort glanced OOcanee at his companion. "He's bean dow« dootorln' In Otoga. Went there voluntarily I beam of him two days ago." After an embarrassed pause he added. "He waats see yon, Thomas. You personally." "Me? Who t« he?" (halting.)
Pumfert lowered his voloa to a quick whUper. "It'a the man that's bea folHrrln'Tonan'your'n, Thomaa."
Van 'Cieve uttered oath, but It •hnkad on hia Hps. "An' ha'a dying? What does he want of me?" "(Jod knowa. I don't." Themenetaod •ilent. "He's been doetnrio* them pore •nuls in Otoga," ventared D«*for», prosentlv.
Still Van Cieve did not nww. Then, with a jerk, he started down hill. "I'll •i to him. Bring thein other niedUinea, numfort."
But when he reached the dying man he saw that it was too late for medicines. Il« kneeled beside him and lifted his bend, tnotloulng Dumfort to stand back •lit of hearii g.
What paased between them no one bat Cod ever knew. As the sun was setting that day Van Cieve came to the cabin. He was pale and haggard, but he tried to speak cheerfully. ''It was a poor fellow, Dorcas, down in the wooda as died of fever. Dumfort •n' I have buried bitn. But I'd hke von an' Mlsa Coyt to come to thegrave. It'd neem kinder, somehow." He carried the h«bv in his arras, and when they reached the place—it waa a patch of sonny sward, where the birds sang overheadhe said: "Humpty, I wish you'd kneel down on the grave an' say your little
CDtterof
raver. I think he'd know, an' 'd feel it an'—there's another reaaoa •^,. The next week Mlse Coyt received a letter from home, which, with very red ebeeks, ah# told Dorcaa would compel her immediate return home. Mr. Pettlt, •f whom she had told her, had received call, and be asked her to be hia wife, and this would put an end to her experiment of teaching in the Sooth. In dav or two Dumfort drove her back to A&ngdon, and the little family in the oabta returned to their usual quiet routine of life. ttSPv-'-f
Thb merit* of ATitArmiws a specific for Rheumatic and Neuralgic effectiona have been proved over a range •f territory as wide as onr Continent. It •ever fails, no matter what the climate or atmospheric conditions. Here ia significant voice from the North west. Mr. John 8. el wick write* from Harriett Springs. Mich., to say: "Athi-o-rnonoe to doing my wife* sufferer from eevere Rheumatism, a great d«*l of good, note good then anj other medicine ahe has ever taken.*'
i) %n Jf eS-S
THAT STRANGE GEORGIA GIRL.
COAXING THINGS ACROSS THE FLOOR IN SPITE OF THE RESISTANCE OF STRONG MEN.
Bamesville, Oa., Letter.
Miss Lula Hurst, of Cedartown, Ga., has given one of her remarkable entertainments in our town. It waa a performance that she had previously given in public on several occasions, and that has everywhere been witnessed with the greatest astonishment.
Sbe first held the handle of an GCnbrella, while four citizens held cords that were tied to the umbrella, suspending it in the air. In about two minutes the umbrella began to squirm and twist, and soon the staff was wrenched into two parts
and
the umbrella broken to pieces.
Then Mr. Middlebrooks, weighing over two hundred pouade, sat down in chair on the stage. Sbe placed her open bands upjn the back of the chair, and presently the chair began to move, and soon Mr. Middlebrooks was thrown upon the floor. Another chair was then placed upon the stage, and Col. Murphy, of our town, attempted to bold it still. She placed the palm of her bands on the seat of the chair, and soon it began moving across the stage, and finally escaped from Col. Murphy's grasp and fell on the floor. The same feat was repeated with two men, then with three, and finally with five, with the same resnlt each time.
A rod about six feet long was plaeed in the bands of a strong man, who was skeptical as to the powers of Miss Hurst. Soon the rod began to move in spite of all his efforts to keep it still. It hustled him across the stage in a ludicrous manner. After several similar performances with different men, who tried in vain to hold the chairs and rods still, the exercises closed. About 500 of our beat citizens witnessed the performance, and they were convinced that there was no sleight of hand in what Miss Hurst did.
Miss Hurst was born in 1868, in McMinn county, Tenn. When she was a year old her parents removed to Cedar Valley, Polk county, Ga., where they have since resided. She has gone to school but ten months in her life, but was a remarkably apt scholar while in school. She united with the Missionary Baptist Church when she was twelve years old, and is a devout Christian. &be succeeds best in her performances when everything around ber is quiet. She cannot boar unkind treatment on the stage, and her strange powers desert her when the spectators appear to be unfriendly. When exerting her peculiar gifts she aoes not know what is happening around her, and blindly follows the object moving from her. She often has to be caught to prevent her from running off at the front of the stage, or against a wall. She is a brunette with long black hair and brown eyes, weighs 125 pounds, and is a modest girl of retiring disposition.
Her unnatural powers were aeveloped last August. One day she beard a peculiar rattling noise about the head of her bed and told her mother about it. Mrs. Hurst went to the room, heard the noise, and concluded that there were rats inside the bed. She ripped open the bed, but found nothing in it. Miss Hurst became so frightened one night at the noise in her apartment that she left her room and slept elsewhere. A few nights later a young friend of Miss Hurst was spending the night with her, and both of the girls became considerably frightened. Mr. Hurst and bis wife concluded that the t»UBo of the phenomena must inhere 'n their daughter.
Lula was asked on one occasion to sit down on a trunk at one end of the room and soon the noise was heard about the trunk. Soon after pebbles and specimens of iron ore on the mantel began te move about, and some of them would fall off on the floor when sbe would enter the room. Articles of clothing would disappear for two or three days, and then suddenly bo found hanging on a nail or picture in the family room. The dishes and cutlery were greatly disturbed when she went into the dinning-room. She would lie down o* a bed, and soon it would move about the room a* she willed. Or she would think of some tune, going over the note* mentally, and the music would be heard from the head of her bed, as if from some musical instrument.
These and other wonderful performances were noised abroad, and people began to assemble in crowds to witness the Strang* phenomena. The Atlanta Constitution sent a reporter to her home to learn if the reports were true. The reporter waa oonvinoed, wrote an account of the affair, and after much per suasion, prevailed en Mr. Hurst to take his daughter to Atlanta and give a public exhibition of her powers. Threeaueceasful exhibitions wer* given at Atlanta
Lulu Hurataud her parents ar* plain country people, asd they are as tnuah astonished as any one els*. Th*y do not believe that it is th* resalt *f uplritaalittieinfluence*. Spiritualists have written to Mis* Hurst, insisting that her strange powers are the resalt of spiritualieu), bat she treats their letters with contempt. The phenomena,it was said at flrst, were produced by her muacnlar powers, but phyaiciana at Atlanta and elaewhere have 'placed their handa between hers and tn* chair to be moved, so that only the tip* of her fingers touched the chair, but the results were not changed. Othera have held her arm tightly above the elbow, to ascertain if there was muscular action, b«t not any was perceptible.
Some people believe ahe la strongly magnetic, and that the object she touches become magnetised by -her touch, and then repelled from her, on the principle that "like electricity repela like." But a stick placed in a glass bottle, which is a nota-oonductor, will writhe and tvriat in the bottle when she holds it,
The phvstdana of Cedartown eent this certificate to Mr. Hurst without hi* solicitation
Citoartowj*, Feb. 4.18M.
Concerning Mist Hurst, it give* ua pleasure to state that she is a pare, simple child of nature, the embodiment of truth and honor, without guile or deception. Of her wonderful performances, we aaserttfcat she has done and a capable off doing, without physical or muscular power, all that her father, who is an honorable tentiema*. claims.
M. F. Linnnxx, M. TV. E. H. iUcaAMSOX, M. IX, C. H. Harris, M. IX, It. PSTOR, M. I)., W. O. Exolasd, If. I\
3
*r.f
1
WOMAN'S GOOD QUALITIES. Milwaukee Statesman. Whoever Heard of a woman cashier being a defaulter This a peaks Tolnme* in her favor, and many business houses trust their cash to the women, and it ia Mid that "in France that nearly all the railroad ticket and signal clerk* are women, wRo are paid aa much as m*n. They are preferred because of their •obrieiy."
Taw* Ayer*sSsrs*partllain the spring of the year to purify the blood. Invigor
ate
th* system, excite the Uver to action, and restore the healthy tone and vigor ef the whole physical •ecbenisn*.
FOUR WEALTHY WOMEN.
INCLUDING ONE WHO CRIED WHEN SHE HEARD SHE WAS TO BE A PRESIDENT'S BRIDE.
New York Letter in Kanssa City Times. Some of the very rich women of New York have many peculiarities. Mrs. Stewart, for instance, never opens her front windows, and she goes one driving so eeldom that even the neighbors on the adjoining block do not know her. She is a sincere Christian, believing more firmly in the English church than any other, and yet worshiping mor* to suit ber own quiet taste than according to any set tenets of faith. She does not care for her personal appearance and does not dress half so neatly as her servants. She walks out of pleasant afternoons twice or thrice a week, and while always accompanied at a respectful distance by a strong man servant, she looks so commonplace that not one of the multitude are aware that she is the richest widow In the world. Mrs. Stewart always carries goodly sized coins for beggars.
Miss Wolfe differs from Mrs. Stewart in this respect. When she meets a beg-
gefore
ar she must know his or ber referencee doing anything of a substantial nature. It is a very difficult matter to fix the age of Miss Wolfe. She is no longer young, and yet she does not look old. She possesses a face of a type which never ages. There is a story about her having loved a brave fellow some yea is ago, and that he passed away before the day agreed upon for the wedding, and when be was buried her heart also was put away in the tomb. It is a pretty romance, all devotion, nothing bnt truth and pureness, and she now devotes her life to charity.
Mrs. Gaelet, like her husband, is of a retiring disposition. For intervals of weeks she will remain closely at home, out to all callers, then agaiu she will bis seen at every place of note in the city. Her jewels are said to be the finest private collection in the country. The Goelets were always a curious family.
But the most sensible and attractive of the rich ladies in New York whom this article has called to mind is Mrs. Marshall O. Roljerts. The widow of a mining king, intelligent, cultured and handsome, she, with $5,000,000 in her own right, numbers her suitors by the dozens. Sometime ago, it will be readily recalled, the gossip said that sbe proposed to enter the White House as the wife of Artbnr and its mistress. According to an-informant of mine, Mrs. Robests, when this story came to ber ears, burst out crying as though her heart would break, pronounced it false and supplemented it with the statement that sbe would never again go to the altar as an expectant bride. She is the center of a circle of brave men and womdfi, does a great deal in aid of literature and art and is well known to the poor of the Five Points and the East Side.
Mn. Pbter Mallbr, 212 W. Twentvfourtb street, New York, says that be suffered six years with rheumatism and found no relief until St. Jacobs Oil, the sovereign remedy, was applied, which cured his completely.
THE SAME TO YOU. Denver Tribune.
That deaf men unconsciously perpetrate good jokes very frequently is borne out by an incident which happened at the St. James Hotel the other day. Dr. Walker the well-known physician and bon vivani. had invited a party of friends up to the bar for a drink. The glasses having been filled, one of the party', proposing to be humorous at the Doctor's expense, raised his glass to bis lips and remarked sottowee, "Here's to you, yWU idiot!" Now Dr. Walker is very hard of hearing, but seeing the apeaker'a lip* moving, he at once surmised he was suggesting a toast. So it was with the utmost urbanity that the Doctor raised his own glass and cordially replied, "The same to you!"
Tkw extraordinary popularity of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is the natural result of its use by intelligent people for over forty years. It baa indisputably proven itself the very best known specific for all colds, coughs, and pulmonary com£laints _____^
CHILDREN'S CHA TTER.
"Oh, mamma!" exclaimed a little girl, who aaw a man with a bald bead, "look at that gentleman with the hair parted all over!"
A little Mr*. Partington, who In this case is not more than nine year* of *ge, asked at reeent church wedding: "Mamma, are all th**e gentlemen with white boutonier* th* gushers?"
A little four-year-old girl did not ohev whan her mother first called her. Ho her mether apoke rather sharply. Then sh* cam* In and said "Mamma, I've b*en very kind to vou to-day, and I don't want you »o speak so large to me."
Mwthnr(to govern***:) "Come, work the children out of this room my doctor is coming: "Oh, mamms, let ns stay here: We want to- Mother: "Well, what do yon want Little daughter: "Why, you know, papa always *avs the doctor lead* you about by th* nose, and w* want to aee him do it."
Good atyle is good seuse. good health, good energy ana good will, but a bottle of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup ia a good benefaction that suffering humanity has already learned to appreciate.
UNTIE THE STRINGS. Said one of the most successful tnerchanta of CleTeland, O., to a lad who was opening a parcel: "Young man, untie the strings do not cut them."
It was the first remark that he had made to a new employe. It waa the first lesson the lad had to learn, and it involved the principles of 'success or failure to his business career. Pointing to a well-dressed man behind the counter, he said: •There ia a man who always whips out his scissors and cuts the strings of the packages in three or four places. He is a good salesman, bnt be will never be anything more. I presume be lives from band to month, and ia more or less in debt. The trouble with him is that he was never taught to save. •'I told the boy jnst now to nntie the strings, not so much for the value of the strings as to teach him that everything in to be saved and nothing wasted. If the idee can be firmly impressed upon the mind of a beginner in life that nothing wae made to be wasted, yo» have laid the foundation of nuecess.'1
LADIES IN AMERICA
long before tbey reach middle age frequently find themselves suffering from some of the complaints and weekneeses peculiar to their sex. For all such Kidney-Wort is greet boon. It induces a health action of the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleensee the system, aiid strengthens and gives new life to all the important organs of the bodv. It is natures greet assutant in establishing and sustaining health* Sold by all draggtsts.
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.
NEURALGIA AND SICK HEADACHE. In Anrora, 111., lives Mrs. Wm. Henson. She says: 'lSamaritan Nervine cured me of nenralgia, vertigo and sick headache." ____________ .•
For nkablt 84 tbaks I have been a victim of Catarrh. I have tried many remedies, receiving little or no relief. 1 bought one bottle of Ely's Cream Balm and derived more real benefit from that than all the rest added together. Yon can recommend it as being a safe and valuable medicine.—A. L. Fullhb, Danby, N. Y.
As onb having U8HD Ely's Cream Balm 1 would say it is worth its weight in gold as a cure for Catarrh. One botUe cured me. S. A. Lovbll, Franklin, Pa. (See adv't.)
Carry the News.
If your days of billiousness, when your liver is torpid and your skin yellow, remember you have a never-failing friend in Dr. Jones' Red Clover Tonic, which is nnequaled in purity and efficaciousness. In cases of dyspepsia, costiveness, ague and malaria diseases, and diseases of the bloed and kidneys, its action is prompt and cure Bpeedy. Price 50 cents, of Gulick St Co. 1
Ladies should wear a Hop Plaster over the small of the back, as it cures all pains and aches. 25 cts. at any drug store. All ready to apply.
Griggs* Glycerine Sale. The best on earth, can trnly be said of Griggs' Glyeerine 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. Try the wonderful healer. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Only 25 cents. For sale by Gulick & Co. (tf.)
CONSUMPTION CURED.
An old physician, retired from practice, having had placed in bis hands by an East India missionary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the permanent cure of Consumption, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and all throat and lnng affections, also a positive and radical cure for Nervous Debility and all nervour complaints, after havinsc tested its wonderful curative powers in thousandsof cases, has felt it his duty to make it known to Ids suffering fellows. Actuated by this motlvfand a desire to relieve human suffering, I will send tree of charge, to all who desire it, this receipt, in German, French or English, with full directions for preparing and using. Sent by mail by addressing with stamp, (naming this paper.) W. A. NO
YES,
149 Power's Block, Rochester, N. Y. (eow.)
PILES! PILES!! FILES!!! Sure cure for Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles. One bottle has cured the worst case oi 20 years standing. No one need suffer five minutes after using William's Indian Pile Oiutment. It absorbs tumors, alloys itching, acts as poultice, gives instaut relief. Prepared only for Piles, itching of the private parts, nothing else. Hon. J. M. Coffenbury, of Cleveland, says: "I have used scores of Pile cures, and it affords me pleasure to say that I have never found anything which gives such immediate and permanent relief as Dr. William's Indian Pile Ointment." Sold by druggists and mailed on receipt of price, 81. ,jor sale by Cook & Bell, wholesale druggista
imeni*?
Cutieura Resolve«t, the new blood purifier internally, aad Cutieura and Cutieura Soap, the great akin cures, externally, clear the Complexion, cleanse the Skin and Scalp, and purify the Blood of every spccles of Itching,Scaly, Pimply, Scrofulous, Mercurial, and Cancerous Humors, Fores, Ulcers, Swellings, Tumors, Abscessee, Blood Poisons,Scurvy, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, and all other Torturing Disfigurations, Skin Blemishes and Humors of Childhood, when physicians, hospitals, and all other means
Cutieura Resolvent operates with enerpy kidneys, pores of the slcin, purifvlng tlie system of all humorsand
upon the bowels, liver, diseases arising from Impure blood, inherited weaknesses, and mercurial poisons.
Cullcara. a medicinal Jelly, cle«rs off all external evident** of blood, okm, and akalp humors, eata away dead skin and Mesh, instantly allays itchinjfsand irltations.seftens, soothes and heals. Worth its weight in gold for any itching humor, itching piles, and delicate irritation* of ether sex.
Cutieura Soap, fragrant with dellcieus flower odors and healing balssms, contains in a modified form all the virtusa of CtrnCITRA, and is Indispensable ia treating skin dliWMO', Infant!!- and birth humors, rough, ehapned, or greasy sklu, black-heads and skin blemishes, and la an exquisite Skin Beautlfler.
The Cuticuba Bnraciis are the only real curatives for diseases of the nUl scalp, and blood, and may be used from nTi
Potter Drug* Chemical Co., Boston.
riTTTTCI RA SOAP. Absolutely pure, UU 11 highly medicinal, indorsed by physic'sna, preperred by tbe elite. Sales, 1881 and 1SH2, 1,000,000 cakes. Sold everywhere.
CATARft
Sanford's Radical Cure,
The Great Balaamle Distillation of Witch Hacel, American Pine, Canadian Fnr, Marljcold, Clover
Blossom, etc.
For the Immediate relief and Permanent Cure of every form of Catarrh, from a Simple Head Cold or Infiuensa to the Loss of Smell. Ta#te and Hearing, Cough, Bronchitis, and Incipient Consumption. Relief In five minutes in any and every case. NcAhihgllkeif. Grateful, fragrant, wholesome. Cure begins from fln& application, and to rapid, radical, permanent, and never failing.
One bottle Radical Cure, one box Catarrhal Sotventa done Dr.Sanford*# Inhaler. In one package, ail drnggtea, for 91. Ask for SAxroEo1* RAOTCArTcOTut. pottkk Dsro and CmntiOALCo., Bnaton.
ForU»ereiwt*nd pruven-
r.OLLfN,P tlen. the Instant It la applied VOLTAIC/ /Of RheomattiTO, N«in»lgJa,
W A rjJr 8datim,Cough*,Cokls.Weak Back, Stomach and Bowels,
pttation, Dywpepia, Uver Complaint, Billions Fever,
,. ,.r.,Vv Malaria, and Electrics, use ^Collins' PlaatM* (an Wectric pi /rtftS Battery combined with a fcASTfc** poro»Pla*4er) and laugh at pain. SSe, everywhere.
npHE SATURDAY EVENING
MAIL,
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
A Paper for the People.
A MODEL HOME JOURNAL.
ENTERTAINING, INSTRUCTIVE ANI NEWSY.
BRIGHT, CLEAN AND PUJiE.
THE FOURTEENTH YEAR
The Mail has a record of sueoon sold attained by a Western weekly paper. Twelve yean of increasing popularity proves its worth. Encouraged by the extraordlaaiy success which haa attended its publication the publisher has perfected arrangements tof which for the ooming year The Mail will Ik more than ever welcome in tbe home circle. In this day of trashy and impure literataw it should be a pleasure to all good people to help In extending the circulation of such a paper as the SATURDAY EyENING MAIL
TERMS:
One year JJ Six months 1 Three months
Mail and offloe subsorir tions will, invariably, be discontinued at expiration of time Address P. S. WESTFALI*,
Publisher Saturday Evening Mail, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
Professional Cards.
B. GLOYER,
{Corner of Eighth and Poplar Streets.]
CALLS PROMPTLY ATTENDED.]} S9-TELEPHONE.
R. W. C. EICHELBERGER,
Oculist aad Anrist.
Room Id, Savings Bank Building. Terre Haute, Ind, 9—12 a. m." Office hours, 2— 5 p. m.
J. RICHARDSON. K. W. VAN VALXAB
EUCHAEDSON & VAK VALZAB
DENTISTS.
Office—Southwest comer Fifth and Main streets, over National State Bank (entmnoe on Fifth street. Communication by Tele* phone.
W. BALLEW,
DENTIST,
4fOee,
4a»X Wain Street, over Bagev •Id confectionery stand. TERRE HAUTE, IND., Oan be found in office night and day
O. LINCOLN, DENTIST
RGAGG,
ar.B.Owrr.
fancy to eld
ice df Cttticcra, small boxes, 30 ots. large boxes. 11. Ccncrq^A Rk8olvkkt,»1. per bottle. Cttticura soAr, 35 eta. CtrrictrsA Shavino Hoap, IS cts. Sold by all druggists.
LAME BACK
3Mi
E«-
Offlce, 19% S. Sixth, opposite P. O. tracting and artificial teeth specialties. A. work warranted. (ddrw-t,tl
DBALBR IK
ARTISTS' SUPPLIES,
PICTURES, FRAMnS, MOUUDINGR
Picture Frames Made to Order.
McK en'a Block, No. 646 Main street bHween rtth and 7th.
SAVE YOUR EYES. Terro Haute Eye Infirmary Dr. U.D. Haley, of New York, late of Trenton, Mo. and Dr. J. E. Dunbar, of St. Louis, late of Winchester, Propriet'rs
will treat all diseases of the Eye. 10 days, rs* of charge, if ample satisfaction is not given Office and rooms, 129 south 3d street, opposite St. Charles Hotel, where one of us can be conraited at all hours during the day. City refferences: J.T. Mualck, druguict, next door post office, N. H. McFerrin, dealer in agrieul turnl implements, west Mde public aqnars Hlrum Main.
wj'
'oultis, grocerman, corner lsi #w
a.
J.
M.
Clim
CLIFT,WILLIAMS & CO,
KASffAcrnMM
Sash,
Doora, Blinds, &c
A.W9 BUUM nr
Lr»ER, LATH, shingl**
GLAHS, PAINTS, OILS
9Mi BIJiLPERH' HARDWARE
Melberry Street, Corner Ninth, l'KRBK UA«TTK. IN»
EIjIT'S
ft
Cream Balm when applied by the finajer into the nostrils, will beab-•orb«-d, affiectnally cleanftins lite bead of catarrhal virus, 1 ranging healthy secretions. It allays infiaination, protects the membrane of the nasal nassMges from additional Id s, completely heals tbe isores and re-
USA. I stores sense of
mmmmm.JrndmkL taste and smell.
HAY-ECYER
xot a Uq«or or
snutn A few applications relieve. A thorouch treatment wiH cure. Agreeable to use. Send for circular. Price J&cenf"*. by mall or at druggist*. ELY'S BKOTIIERH Druggists, Owego, N. Y.
I
pmTT8 AMERICAN COUCH CURE. Cares Ccwwptloo-UM In tl*—. Finest Cqpoa Ccas ComrontoA. —rernSri eyk salve,-
Lam Stoe Bottle*. SO cam. WOm SALS BY ALL DSASJORS.
HOP-
This porous piaster is absolutely Vu bat «rer made, combining tha virtues of hops with gums, twdsams and extracts. Its power is wonderful ia earing Irtare other plasters simply reUoTo. Crick in the Back cad'' Nock, Pain In the Sido or Limbo,
PLASTER
Stiff Joints and UuscA^
Kidney Troohlos, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Bora CheftL Affections of the Heart and Uver, andall pains op In *ny part cured instantly by tho Hop Plotter. CfXlT it Price tt cents or Are fbr |Ul
Mailed on roccipt of price. Sold by all irnsrfrists and country ats(% Bop Piaster Company,
Proprietors, Boston, Una.-
KVFor constipation, loss of appetite and disease* oftht bowete take Eawley'g Stomach and Iirer Pills.
S
GRATEFUL—COMFORTING.
EPPS'S COCOA
BREAKFAST.
By a thorough knowledge of the natim# laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well-select* Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided onr breakff tables with a delicately flavored beven which may save us many heavy docti bills. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gra+ ually built up until strong enough to rcstaf every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around 11s ready Is attack wherever there is a weak point. Wt may escape many a fatal shaft by keeptag ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished frame."—[Civil Servian Gazette.
Hade simply with boiling water or milk Sold in tins only 0£lb. and lb.) by Qrocuaw labeled thus: James t.ppN A Homoeopathic Chemists, London,England.
THS 1MOTGEE & COWARD CD'S ,J BKACTIFrii EFEU-3 LOOMED
S&r&LX.c4.jeur
DX3 VARIETIES® I
uii {.it* CilolCE J2ftrC2. 20 4. 73 10.
Minnesota, North-Dakota, Montana, Washington and Oregon, ALONO THB LINB OF THB ».?
NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD
Tltrongk the Grest Wheat-Belt of Anerlca. j§ A Million acres of tho best afrripultnral, 411 mineral, forest and grating lands ia the United States are now ppen for settlemeiit. go million acres of railroad lands for sale at $2.60 to $4 pr acre, on 5 years time if desired.
SO Million acres of Governments lands opeB to settlers FKKE. Tlic Northern Pacific Country possesses great and rich natural resources ready to be developed into profitable industries.
For maps and pamphlets address and montio®
,htap•pe,
Hi
II ii
SH 5
8§B
Strrnp Toi rin:tn, for imutuuuxtu lnoom.dts livun halcJ.v by mull post-paid to til powt»
I9br 63. 33 5. too IS.-
WE CIVS AWAYJ."ik5™a3
in ire Hoses than nuv.t trtaMK mrntH irrow.and ara tii.i only coucom r.ia'-lnir Si'W'lATi Baaincisa of Hoses. Sixty iiarve H«UNeDfoclUiK)«tlou& 0::r New (initio, r-mnlete
ai 'ie
Trotite
Vi'om,?!1
IP" jp*K** tE"
Fa RHKL
THE DaMCi-F. & COMAR3 CO. Rose «ruwcf»i We3tfc'ave,C Co. Pa
O S
HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS
No Hobbb will die of Coitc. Bots or Lcite T» Yin, if Foute's Powders nro nscd in time. Fontz'S Powder# will euro find prevent Hoe CttoI.k**.
Fonu'g Pttwtler* will prevent Gams
will gitb
Sold everywhere.
til
OHAS. B. LAMBOPN
Land Commissioner N7P. It, R.» St. Paul, MuKt
To reach the above named lands or any .point on tho Northern Pacific R. R. buy your tickcU
cm Paclflo depot at St. Paul and Is tho best tar vou to take. Do not buy tickets unless they real over the Chicago and North-western B'f.
TUnited
HK IMPBOTKD
IS
iw
Fowia
Fontz*s Powders will lncrea*c the quantity of mill and cream twenty per cent., and mnke tho batter Aral and sweet
FouU Powders will enro or prevent almost wrmW Diskask to which Horses and Cattle are subject. Fouti'b Pownrits
BATIBFAOTIOH^ a
DAVID
1
5
X.
FOUTZ, Proprietor, BALTIMORE. XXV
THE BEST HOMES
ron TSN MILLION MOrLB ABB IK
States Scales,
Waaon, Rtock, Coal, Hopper, Dnrraan Battrond track and others, mII «1 «es. The be*timpro»*lHea!e« in tbs world, said at priofstiiat defy competition. ...
Bend for Illustrate rtmilar. Addrsai ITMTXD KTATKH RTATK OX ts Torre Han!*, Ind. Office and works on south Fonrth Street. (Patented M«y 18th, 1M7&— Feb. iXltb, 1WC Two patent* Dec. 30th 1883.) S. J. A l/BTIIt, Patentee.
A HOME DRUGGIST
TESTIFIES.
Popularity at home is not always the best test of merit, but we point proudly to tbe faqi that no other medicine bas won for itself such universal approbation in its own city, state, and country, and among all people, a*
Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
The following letter from one of our best* known Massachusetts Druggists should be of Interest to every sufferer:— 'Eight years ago had an attack of
RHEUMATISM.
Rheumatism, so
vere that I could not more from tbo bed, or dress, without help. 1 tried several remedies without much if any relief, until I took AVer's Sarsaparilla, by tbe use of two bottles of which I was completely cured. Have sold large quantities of your Sama-
Parilla, and it still retains its wonderful popularity. The many notable cures it haa effected in this vicinity convince me that it to the best blood medicine ever offered to tbe public. E. F. Harris."
Blver St, Buckland, Mass., May 13,1882.
SALT RHEUM.
was for over twenty years before his removal to Lowell afflicted with Salt Rheum in its worst form. Its ulcerations actually covered more than half the surface of his body ana limbs. He was entirely cured by A tee's 8axsapabil.la. See certificate in Ayer's Almanac for 1883.
PREPARED BY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass* Sold by all Druggists 1, six bottles for f&
ANDRETHS'^SEED^CATALOGUE
""ARDENERS' COMPANION."
WttTfR fO CKNTS. Tbe mos* uocaptets «ad brifliwatly witwiTkbal flecl Catalasa*(
ILANDRlTH SONS, 8Md Grower*. Look Boi.Phllt.Pfc-
-A**
SH
mm
