Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 15, Number 34, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 February 1885 — Page 3

E A I

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

ft EVER GO BACKON A FRIEND.

Many a friend on life's journey Cheers as by words that arc Kind Many a one hers oar burden,

Wlille we plod weary behind Many a friend smiles to scatter Horrow's dark clouds ihat descend So, tben, take care and rememuer, "Never go back on a friend."

Mnny a friend has uplifted Us from dark poverty's ways Many a friend will come to aid us,

Often when no man wi 1 lend Help to our straggles be sure, then, "Never go back on a friend,

Many a friend gives us shelter, Often a morsel of bread Many a one will remember

Us wheta We lie eoid and dead Many a friend will speak kindly. And our sweet memory defend ThM be the motto of friendship— •'Never go back on a friend." Cherish the friendship forever, ,«

Joy to your life it will lend This be your motto, to never, $ "Never go back on a friend." -[William H. Nevil.

HE CAME TO ASK.

6.

I

He came to ask for something? Yes! A trifle! He could not express Himself exactly so he "told

Sometime. You wondered what delayed You see 1 know it's Childishness To stand here blushing at my drees But—but It was a foolishness

That I have been trying to evade, He came to fcsk I TWM very simple can't you guess It has a "y" ana "e" and "s."

He fto resolved, I can't dissuade,!* Him any longer. I'm afraid, I'm here, m«mma,ne»rT too nfessf* He came to ask.

A Thanksgiving Party.

(it

It was a neat, comfortable kitchen, though wholly lacking in ornament. The floor was as white as sand and willing hands could make it, and was well matched-by angular wooden chairs, which had become almost grastly from repeated scrubbings.

The brass knobs on the dresser, and even the pendulum of the loud-tickfng old clock shone like barnished gold, reflecting the beams of firelight which brightened the dusky room.

The tea-kettle sang merrily, and Aunt Esther passant to ana fro, preparing the evening meal, and watching from the return of her husband from the woodUit.

A little girl stood bv the western Window, trying to read by the fast-fading light. Her delicate face, long, shining curls and dainty apparel, formed a bright oontrast to the plain room. •'What are you looking for in the aljnanac, my child You'll injure your OtfAg "I am trying to find when Thanksgiving is but I can't see any longer." "You'll be more apt to tind it in the last paper, Lucy but I can tell you: it's a week from next Thursday." "Ob goody! so soon We'll have one of those big turkeys, and a jolly time, won't *e?" ..

4

"I'm afraid not, dear what put that into your little head "Why, aunt, yon told me when I first eame that those turkeys were for Thanksgiving. I've thought of it ever

"'"Oh, yes, I did tell you so, Luoy, but I meant that we raise them to sell for "Thanksgiving. We have not kept the day since we were first married your uncle doesn't care for such things. I missed it sadly at first, for we always kept the holidays when I was a girl at home, but I've got used to it now, after all these years.,r "I don't think I coold," ventured the child, looking solemnly through the twilight at th« turkeys, comfortably settled for the night on tho bare limbs of the old apple tree. "Well, don't shed any tears yet, Lucy

If you can get Uncle Jerry to consent, I'll do my part. Better not speak of it till after supper." she added in a whisjier. as she heara her husband's footsteps Sit the door. ,, 80, with what patience she should commaud, Lucy waited till the supper twas1cleared away, and they were gathered around the orackllng wood-fire,

Aunt Esther with her knitting and Uncle Jerry with bis paper. Lucy was his only sister's child. She was spending several months with him, while her parents traveled in the South, hoping to benefit her mother's health. Two brothers and one sister were at college, and were to spend their Christmas holidays at the farm-house. This was the first time Lucy had been so long from home, and occasionally she suffered from homesickness ana now, with the fear that the loved holiday was to be slighted, an attack of that dread malady !wa* certainly imminent. She felt her rourage ebbing away, and hopelessly sat very still, looking straight into the "fire, till all tho curling, writhing flames melted into oue broad sheet of bright mistiness, and then—there were two big .tears on her rosy cheeks.

Uncle Jerry, who, underneath his hard exterior, had a really kind heart, was watching her over his paper, and saw the tears, the sly, quick brush of two fllttle white hands, and a brave effort to ..keep back a sob which was struggling to escape. Homesick 1" be thought "and no wonder, with two dull old folks like us and for a moment he wanted to take her in bis arms and aoothe her as her father would but he had so long represented all tender ways, that he could not manifest his sympathy. But something must be done. Rising abruptly, he took a pan from the dresser and started for the cellar, spying: ••Esther, hold the light for me: I want some o* them fall applea they won't keep long."

By this time a share of the fruit bad disappeared, Lucy had regained her gooa spirits, and, with new courage, exclaimed: "Uncle Jerry, can't we have Thanksgiving this year? I'd like to." "Nonsense, child. What wonld it amount to "Why, we'd have a Jolly time. We always did at home." "Yes a big dinner one day and the doctor the next." "It never made me rick—never in the "world." "But what's the good, anyhow "Mamma thinks It's good, and she's always right. Jnst last year papa thought we'd better not have a dinner, for mamma wasnt strong, and we were ,ao disappointed—I was, anywny-and mamma put her arm around me and said: 'We'll all help and do the best we can, for we mustn't miss keening a holiday. When my boys and girls have left home and gone cut into the world, I w*nt them to nave the remembrance of a happy ohlldhood and a pleasant home to help them over the hard places1 they will find. It will make them better am and women, I'm sore so order the lurkey, papa.' I remember It all, Uncle

Jerry, 'cause I thought mamma was going to cry, her voice trembled so, and I believe 1 should have cried myself is she hadn't said 'turkey.'" '•She never bad many good winw to member,' said Uncle Jerry, thinking of their bard, orphaned lite. "Perhaps that is why she wanted her children to be always happy," suggested Aunt Bather," "Y*s, she said so once," continued Lucy, picking apple-seeds out of a core "and I tbink, Uncle Jerry, if yon bad some little boys and girls, yon *eel different about it. But I your little girl this year won't yon do it for me? She was almost frightened a» she looked np and met his stern, white faop. "It is your bedtime now, Lucy, interrupted her sunt. "Well think it over till morning." And Lucy was glad to retire to the adjoining room, wondering what she "'could have Mid to make Uncle Jerry look eo—so dreadful

An hour later Jerry Winters broke tho silence, which was becoming oppressive: "I suppose we must-do something, or the child will be homesick." "Yes," asserted his wife. "Don't see bow I can step cboppin' a day, with tbat contract on my hands, and Jake and Steve have both begged off for Thanksgiving. I wish there were no such days. I suppose nothing less than a tnrkey will satisfy tbat child?" "No but we can well afford it. Wh» is going to have our money after we are gone We may as well make the obild bappy, and have a good time once in our lives." "She might be happy, anyhow. It seems a waste to.me, I muBt confess.' "Well, Jerry, we never wasted very much that way and it strikes me that if we bad bad more holidays, and had made the old farmhouse more congenial tc a yoong, lively spirit, we would have had our son with us in our old age." "Esther I" "I know we haven't mentioned him for years, Jeremiah but, for all tbat, neither of us baa lived a day without thinking of him." "Well, I did my duty by him, if ever a father did by his child." "We did what we thought was for his beat good but I fear we made some mistakes." "He was wild as a young colt noth ing could tame him!'» The father spoke impatiently and scowled hard, lest his face might show the love and longing iu bis heart.

He was full of life and fiery, too and, instead of guiding him gently in traces which could not gall, we bound him, as it were, so tightly

that He

ters

broke the

and disappeared.

fet­

We

wanted him

to be old ana steady, and his young: spirit could not be subdued. 1 see it all now. There were no companions for him, no 'jolly times,' as Luoy

savs,

and

nothing about the old farm worth staying for." No answer but a smothered groan. "There, Jerry, I ain't blaming you more than I do myself. We were wrong,, and the boy was wrong, too. If we only knew where to find him, we might make it all right before we die. Til warrant he has longed to return, but pride and fear have kept him back. He can't know how we long for blm, for he never knew how much we loved him we never told him!" ,f "Oh, Esther!" "Well, father. I won't say any more. All these thoughts have been crowded down in my heart so long tbat I had to speak, and I think It'll do us good, after all."

She drew nearer and laid her bead on hiii/sboulder, while tears rolled down her wrinkled cheeks, and thus they sat far into the night.

The next day, among the families of the neighboring farmhouses, there was but one topic or conversation the invitation to spend Thanksgiving with Jeremiah Winters.

The eventful day eame at last. Lucy, with a dozen girls and boys, made the 1 afters ring with their glad shouts Down stairs, the best room was filled with the hum of elderly voioee recounting "old times," while in the sittingroom the young people were eating apiles and counting the seeds, with mnch lest and laughter, sly glances and

In the kitchen along table was loaded with good things, while Aunt Esther, with plenty of help, was completing the preparations for dinner.

Uncle Jerry excitedly went from room to room, trying to appear as if this sort of thing was of common occurrence in his hous«. For the first time in her life, his wife had asserted her right to entertain her friends, and now he felt glad tbatbhe bad persevered. He was sur-

Se

riced to flud what pleasant neighbors had. It was night, and the merrymaking was at its height. The walls echoed leughter and song, and from every window lights gleamed far out into the darkness.

From the village depot, five miles away, a traveler was walking over the lonely road, as if eager to join the joyous party but when at length he came in sight of the many light?, he stopped in amazement. Nearer and nearer he came, till through the unshaded windows he saw the friendly scene within. With a glad smile on bis. face he turned away, and, standing in the deep shadow of a pine, he watched long and patiently.

At last, after a host of thanks and pleasant "farewells," all was still, and only three sat in the deserted rooms.

A hush fell over them, and they looked thoughtfully Into the flickering fire. Lucy, climbing on.her uncle's knee, thanked him so prettily for the day's pleasure tbat he bent and kissed her. Then, holding out his hand to his wife, he said: "This little lady has thanked me, but we both ought to thank you. It has been a pleasant day to me."

This was a great deal for this man to say and they were silent again, but each one happy through making others glad.

Then the door opened, and a stranger entered. He was tall and heavily bearded but a mother's eyes will know her own, and, with a «ry which expressed the yearning af years, "My boy!" she was folded In hia strong embrace, while about them both were clasped the father's trembling arma. No one knew Low long they aat together—the long-separ-ated family once more united. LOOT, with wide-open eyes, enjoyed to the utmost this crowning excitement, mneh pleased with the tall cousin of whom she had never heard. "Oh, John, why did you stay away so long ventured the mother. "I came back once, five years ago, and saw yen and father through the window. But, knowing I deserved no welcome, I feared to enter. To-night I should have entered at all events but when I saw

?ater,sitting

BlBlilr

rou with your frienda about yon, and, here with clasped hands, I felt aura of a welcome—sure that you bad forgiven the past, and fait only pity for your wavward son. Now I mean to cancel the Buffering of the past by mak ing the future happy." "Now, Uncle Jerry, I told yon so! Thanksgiving oan amount to a great deal sometimes!" and the merry laugh which followed waa not lew hearty because it broke through tears of Joy.

USING THE BROOM.

Often carpets are worn more rapidly by the unscrupulous use of the broom than by any other meane. If the good man of the bouse coming in from the dusty street chooses, instead of going round to the kitohen door, to walk straight through the sitting-room, something like half a dozen grayish spots will mark his footsteps across the carpet. ,v,

Up jumps the housewife, brings the broom, and vigorously "persuades" the dust clear out through the kitchen, perhaps a passage also, finally ejecting it at an onUnde door. Returning, she sits down at her sewing, and soon detects herself scattering a few shreds and small cuttings on the carpet They are too insignificant for the rag-bag, so the broom ia again called in requisition— this time to do the duty of fingers.

Next come in the little ones with their after-school lunch of crackers and gingerbread. Of course, crumbs are dropped upon the carpet, and forth again oomes the omnipotent broom. So it goes. I have known a woman "brash out" a toom five times in an afternoon.

A great improvement on this old fashion is to have alight carpet brush and small japanned dustpan hung away in some convenient corner then when duster litter calls for removal it can be taken up on the spot with almost .no offense to the carpet, and without the trouble of draging it through one or two rooms. The brush should have along handle for those to whom it is a fatigue to stoop. Threads and bite of cloth and paper should be picked np by the hand if the carpet is considered worth preserving as long as possible.

"MtJiiBSl Mules! Kentucky Mules!" Better cure your mules of distemper before you talk about selling tbem. Give the whole drove Day's Horse and Cattle Powder. Price 25 cents per package of one pound full weight.

A CURE FOR NERVOUS HEADACHE. The Physicians and Surgeons' Inspector says a solution of the bi-sulpbate of carbon is a spectic for certain kinds of headache, particularly those of a nervous nature. A wide mouthed, glass-stop-pered bottle is half filled with cotton or a fine sponge, and upon this two or three drams of the solution are poured. When occasion for its use occurs the mouth of the bottle is to be applied to the temple or as near as possible to the the seat of the pain, so closely that none of the valuable vapor may escape, and letained there four or five minutes or longer. For a minute or so nothing is felt, tben comes a sense of tingling, which In a few minutes—three or four usually—becomes rather severe, but which subsides almost immediately if the bottle be removed, and any redness of the skin 'bat may occur will also iickly subside. It may be applied, if necessary, several times a day, and it generally acts like magic, giving immediate relief.

ITS thousands of cures are the best advertisement for Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy.

TO KEEP qELLARS FROM FREEZINO. A cheap and very effective way to raise the temperature in 0 cellar tbat is dangerously near the freezing point is to set one or more common kerosene lamps on the c«ilar bottom, during the daytime, when not wanted for lighting the rooms above. We have all noticed how much warmer a living room is in the evening, when the lamps are burning than in the daytime with the same amount of fire in the stove and furnaces. All the beat in a burning lamn is retained in the apartment. Twenty five cents' worth of kerosene will throw out a surprising amount of heat, and in many cases it would be the cheapest means for keeping a cellar from freezing during the passage of an extra cold wave. Cold waves may spoil a winter's store of vegetables, which in many instances might be saved by this simple expedient. Cellars tbat are properly protected from frost by tight underpinning, and if needed, banks of leaves or evergreen boughs, or even banking up with snow, rarely freeze during the coldest weather in winter, but sometimes an unusual cold snap, or a long con tinued period of cold, may endanger the potatoes and other stores even in pretty tight cellars, especially if plenty of fires are not kept burning in the rooms above.

"OH, II WAS PITIFUL!" Of course it was! He tried one remedy after another, and finally gave up and died, when his life might have been saved by taking Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medloal Discovery"—the great "Consumption Cure"—which, if promptly employed, will soon subdue all threatening symptoms, such as cough, labored breathing, nignt-sweats, spitting of blood, etc., aad restoring waning atrength and hope, effectually stop the poor coneumptive's tapid progress graveward. Ia it not worth trying? All druggists.

I

SOME WEDDING SUPERSTITIONS In Sweden, a bride must carry bread in her pocket, and as many pieces of it as she can throw away, just so much trouble does she cast from her but it is no luck to gather the pieces. Should the bride lose her slipper, tben she will lose all troubles, only in this case the person who picks it up will gain riches. The Manxmen put salt in their pockets^ and Ike Italians "blessed" charm*. The Romans were very euperstltious about marrying in May or February tbey avoided all celebration days, and the Calends, Nones, and tho Ides of every month. The day of the week on which tho 14th of May fell, was considered unlucky in many pans of "merry old England," and in the Orkney Islands a bride •electa her wedding day so that ita evening may have a growing moon and a flowing tide. In Scotland the last da

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL

iy

of the year ia thought to. be lucky, and if the moon ahould happen to be full at any time when a wedding takes place, the bride'a cup of happiness is expected to be alwaya full. In Perthshire the courle wbo have had their banns published at the end of one, and are married at the beginning of another, quarter of 1 year, can expect nothing bat ends.

PRItrH MOUTHS

Should have pretty teeth in tbem, but it is not unusual to see between rosy Hps, teeth discolored and decaying through neglect. This disfiguring defect should be repaired without delay, by nsing fragrant SQZODONT, which removes every par-tick) of tartar from the teeth and renders tbem snowy white. This admirable aid to beauty ia perfectly harmless and exhales a moat delightful aroma, and lain every reapectpreferable to the ordinary tooth paates and powders. Try it and see for yourself. 7-4t

AMMONIA.

^mmnnia is cheaper than soap and deans everything it touches. A few dropa in a kettle that is hard to clean makes grease and stickiness fade away and robs the work of all ita terrors. Let it atand ten minutes before attempting to scrape off and every corner will be olean. It cleana the sink and penetrates into the drain pipe. Spots, finger-marks on paint disappear under ita magical influence, and it is equally effective on floor and oilcloth, though it must be used with care on the latter or it will injure the polish. There is nothing to eqnal it in cleaning the silverware, and it gives a higher polish and keeps clean longer than anything else. If the silver be only slightly tarnished put two tablespoons of ammonia into a qqart of hot water, brush the tarnished articles with it and dry with a chamois. If badly discolored, they may need a little whiting

Erush

revious to the washing. An old nailgoea into the cracks to polish and brighten. 'For fine muslin or delicate laceitis invaluable, and it cleans without rubbing the finest fabrics. Put a few drops into your sponge-bath In hot weather, and you will be astonished at the reault, as it imparts coolness to the skin. Use it to clean hair brushes, and to wash any hair or feathers to be used for beds or pillows. When employed in anything that ia not especially soiled use the waste-water afterward for the house plants that are taken down from their usual position and immersed in the tub of water. Amonia is a fertilizer, and helps to keep healchy the plants it nourishes. In every way, in fact, ammonia is the housekeeper's friend.

MAST of the bitters and quack nostrums of the day are also advertised for consumption on the plan that the only thing tbat the "stuff" won't cure Is the avaricious, ignoble greed of the proprietor. Don't be deceived. The beat rem

It has cured many cases where physicians had given up hope. a

2

EXPLODED HYGIENIC NOTION. [Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph.] Among exploded ideas is the notin that cold beds and cold rooms are conducive to health. The old time farmer who sits by the fire regaling a small audience with stories illustrating the endurance of a past gendratlon, and assumes tbat he is the last of a hardier race than that which takes his place, through ignorance, or lack of systematic observation is unable to recall»he frightfal death roll that attested the practices he refers to. It is true a Highlander may sleep on a mountain side with hoar frost making his bed, but that sort of ruggednessis attended with penalties as certain as those which follow the man who swallows poison. The difference is they are longer deferred. The people who place so much stress upon the practices and habits of fifty years ago, assuming that what was regarded as "hardening" processes were healthy' compared with the practices and habits indulged in to-day, are apt to forget that one great factor in the favor of the past generation was 'the enforced sobriety and simple living. There is much less danger from the system that is sometimes termed "coddling" of children—the care and forethought that provides warmed or well-aired sleeping apartments, warm beds, with every means to retire and drsss without experiencing a chill, than the indifference to personal comfort and health which in timea past permitted, or drove, boys and girls to comfortless, fireless rooms, under the pretense of making them healthier and hardier. Experience and careful observation teadfcfea, us a greater fallacy never misled the world than this "hardening process.

A FRETFUL HOSTESS No hostess is to be more dreaded than the one who frets under her duties. If she is absent-minded at the table and conscious of the blunders in the service, she is an affliction to all about her. Let mistakes go. An easy, attentive bearing is worth all the angel's food and wine and jelly in creation for it is not the essence of the angel itself—that which puts us thoroughly at our ease. Oblivion is an absolute essential after the guests are seated at the table. One must be unconscious of mistakes if they occur. We have known instanoes where an evening has been marred by the obvious anxiety on the part of the ladies that nothing should go amiss. In consequence, everything went wrong. Let us then have frequent entertainments and less expensive ones. ,.fi5,,ir

"OH, I do feel so nice!" said a young girl of nineteen years. "I don't feel as if I had a head or a stomach, or anything." And yet headaches, backaches, stomach aches and many other aches, swellings, sores, etc., troubled her before she took Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla. This remedy restored her to health, as is indicated by clear complexion, smooth skin snd bright eyes. It will relieve all ailments peculiar to. the female life. 2

SA TINGS OF CHILDREN. $

"Father," said a bright lad, "I think I'll be a minister when I grow up." "What puts that idea into your head, my boy?" asked the astonished parent. "Because, dad, I notice that ma always kills a chicken whenever the minister eats here."

Little Pauline had been reproved for some misconduct, and was sitting on a chair by the window looking very dis oonsoiate." Halloo,"said papa, cbanc ins to come in as two big tears were about ready to fall, "look at Pauline! Why, what ia going to happen T" "It has happened," said Pauline solemnly

Mrs. Symperson is auite a young woman, and is the mother of a precocious little girl. There was company at the house a few evenings ago. When bedtime arrived Mrs. S. said: "Come now, Mamie, it's time for you %o go to bed." "I dont want to go to ood"But you must. Don't you know all the little chickens have gone to bed ««Yes but the old hen went to bed with them." ••Good evening, Tommy. Is your slater Clarrissa at borne "Yes, sir she's in the kitchen popping corn for you." "Popping corn for me? Why, now very thoughtful! I like pop corn very much." "Yes, sir. She said ahe was going to not a pan of pop-corn under your nose, snd, ifjxra didn't take the hint, shed give you the shake."

YOU QUESTION

the wonderful testimonials published by tbe Hum's [Kidney and Liver] RnciDy Co*, of Providence, B. L, write to the addresses given enclosing postal or •tamp for reply. Send for their illustrated pamphlet of testimonials, giving wondetfvriearas.

EXCITEMENT UNABATED.

THAT REMARKABLE EXPERIENCE OF A ROCHESTER PHYSICIAN FULLY AUTHENTICATED.

Cleveland, O., Herald.

Yesterday and the day before we copied into cur columns from tbe Rochester, N. Y., Democrat and Chronicle, a remarkable statement, made by J. B. Henion, M. D., a gentleman wbo is well known in this city. In that article Dr. Henion recounted a wonderful experience which befell him, and the next day we published from the same paper a second article, giving an account of the "Excitement in Rochester," cansed by Dr. Henion's statement. It is doubtful if any two articles were ever published which caused greater commotion both among professional people and laymen.

Since the publication of these two articles, having been oeseiged with letters of inquiry, we sent a communication to to Dr. Henion and also to H. H. Warner & Co., asking if any additional proof could be given to us en to the validity of tbe statements published. In answer thereto we have received the following statement letters, which add interest to the entire subject and vertify every statement hitherto made:

ROCHESTER, N. Y.

GENTLEMEN: Your favor is reoeived. The published statement, over my signature, to which yuu refer is true,in every respect, and I owe my life and present health wholly to the power of Warner's Safe Cure, which snatched me from the very brink of the grave. It is not surprising that people should question the statement 1 made, for my recovery was as great a marvel to myself, as to my physicians, and Iriends. -o* J. B. HENION, M. D.

ROCHESTER. N. Y., Jan. 21.

SIRS: Acknowledging your favor duly receivod, we would say: The best prOof we can give you that the statements made by Dr. Henion are entirely true, and would not have been published unless strictly so, is the following testimonial from the best citizens of Rochester, and a card published by Rev. Dr. Foote» which you are at liberty to-use if vou wish. H. H. WARNER & Co.

To Whom it may Concern: In the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle of December 31, there appeared a statement in the form of a card from Dr. J. B. Henion, of this city, recounting his remarkable recovery from Bright's disease of the kidneys, after several doctors of prominence had given him up, by the use of Warner's Safe Cure. We are personally or by reputation acquainted with Dr. Henion, and we believe he would publish no statement not literally true. We are also personally or by reputation well acquainted with H. H. Warner fc Co., proprietors of that remedy, whose commercial and personal standing in this community are of tbe highest order, and we believe that tbey would not publish any statements which were not literally and strictly true in every particular.

C. R. PARSONS, (Mayor of Rochester.) WM. PURCSLII, (Editor Union and Chronicle.)

W. D. SHUART, (ex-Surrogate Monroe County.) EDWARD A. FROST, (ex-Clerk Monroe County.)

E. B. FENNER, (ex-District Attorney Monroe County.) J. M. DAVY, ex-Member Congress, Rochester.)

JOHN S. MORUAN, (County Judge, Monroe County.) HIRAM SIBLEY, (Capitalist and Seedsman.)

W. C. ROWLEY, (ex-County Judge, Monroe County.) JOHN VAN VOORHIS, (ex-Member of Congress.) To the editor of the Living Church, Chicago, JUs.

There was published in the Rochester Democrat ana Chronicle, of the 31st of December, a statement made by J. B. Henion, M. D., narrating how he bad been cured of Bright's disease of the kidneys, almost in its last stages, by the use of Warner's Safe €ure. I was referred to in that statement, as having recommended and urged Dr. Henion to try the remedy which he did, and was cured. The statement of Dr. Henion is true, so far as it concerns myself, and I believe it to be tru6 in all other respects. He was a .parishoner of mine and I visited him in bis sickness. I urged him to take the medicine and would do the same again to any one who was troubled with a disease of the kidneys and liver.

t,

ISRAEL FOOTE, (D. D.,)

(Late) Rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Rochester, N. Y.

PILLS

25 YEARS IN USE.

The Greatest MedicalTriumgli of the Age!

SYMPTOMS OF

A

TORPID LIVER.

LOMof appetite. Bowels costive, Fain In tbe bead, with a dull aenaatloa in tbe back part, Fain tinder the shoulderblade, Fallnoaa after eating, with a disinclination to exertion of bodr or mind, Irritability of temper, Low spirits, with a feeling of having neglected •om&dntT» Weariness, Dizziness, Fluttering at tho Heart, Dots before the eyes, Headache over the right eye. Restlessness, with Itflil dreams, Highly colored Urine, aad

CONSTIPATION.

TUTT'S PILLS are especially adapted to such cases, one dose effects sacn a

body to Take oa Flenli.thtwtbe nwten nourished, and by their Tonic Action on tbe McMttnOnaahBwolarStoola

TUTTS HAIR DYE.

GRAY HATE or WHISKSBS changed to a GLOSST BLACK by a single application of this DTE. It imparts a natural color, acts

III El IL lito more money right away than anything else In this world. Fortunes await the workers absolutely sore. Atonoeadd«si TRUE dt GO* Augusta, Maine. fUjr

r.r Oi. Car.

of

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thorn dtaeaaes nM aocoemfolly treated Physician' furnished.

ELECTRICITY an* ELECTRIC BA

Operatioas for Pterygium, Strabismus or Cross Ryes. Artfflcial Pupil, Opium Habit, Tape Worms, Hydreoels. Varieeoele, Hernia or Rupture, Epilepsy or Fits. Oil Sore Legs, Old Sores fanywhere upon the body/ Rheumatism, Acute or Chronic, Ocasrtlxss, Syphilis satf Chancroids. 1 '5

Bright's Disease and Billeas Colic, EteT

Consultation free sad invited. Address with stsaip.

TELEGRAPHY ,or 8HORT-HAHB aim and Type-Writing'~/J£A£. Situation* nrnlnhed. Address Valeutlue Bros. ^laaesville,Whk

I

EARN

Ltnrnlsl

rTITCEVESA

An Independent Newspaper of Democratic Principles, but not Controlled by any Set of Politicians or Manipulators Devoted to Collecting and Publishing all the News of the Day in the most Interesting Shape and with the greatest possible Promptness, Accuracy and Impartiality and to the Promotion of Democratic Ideas and Policy in the affairs of Government, Society and Industry.

Rate*, by MM, Totfpaidi

DAILY, psr Yssr DAILY, psr Month ,* "twa

SUNDAY, per Year FTl 00 DAILY and SUNDAY psr Yew ^7 OB WEEKLY, psr Ysar

r-

TJO

All eases of Ague, Conb Ague Okitt •nd Vever, Fistula. Piles, ulcers and Fissafsi ef the Rectum, Lupus, most Oanoera, most «6kin eases, Female Diseases generally. Granulated Lis, Dl«m of the Cornea, Weak and Sore Hyes, CiMldk of the Bye. Bar, Nese, Throat or Skis rEoswmaW Ol Spermatorrhea or diseases peculiar to Me a «nd Teonfer

FOR SALBSYj"

FOUTZ'S

HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS

No Hons* will file of Coua Bors or LTIJTS KBVHB. If Fontt's Powders arc twcd to time, Footas's Powder* will cure and preventHoocaoutaa.

FouU'd Powders 111 prevent

AddreM. THE SUN, Kmv Torh City.

GB ATEFUL—COMFORTTN O.

EPPS'S COCOA

BREAKFAST.

"By a thorough knowledge of the nataral veri tbe operations of dlgeslon, and by a careful applies*

laws"whlcb goverii the operations of dl tion and nutrition, and by a careful appl.__ tl0D0f the fine properties of well-selected liou 01 ine .uuo v* Cocoa, Mr. EpD8 haa provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many a heavy doctow bills. It is by the judicious utse of Mich articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to restot every tendency to disease. Hundreds of suptie meladles are floating around us readyto attack wherever there Is ft weak point, we

A

Homoeopathic Chemists, Loadon, Eng.

ZT~ iSTsFe

HfiTEVER

Druggists, or Of |1 N«W York.

Bend six cents for postage, joeive free.a costly box of g— whloh will help all, of either s«*

1 PRIZE

fW""

S^lit

Pettit's American

COUCH CURB

cmBBusmmm-CMii am S&~ KINKOT Cotwa POUNDED. Equal

^PETTIT'SLarre Slse nettle

•a -i

I) II W'"

GAPK*

JK

Fotite'H Powders wUl increase the quantity of ml* •nd cream twenty per cent., and make the batter Una snd sweet.

FonU's Powders will enre or prevent almost araa* DIBKABK to which Horses and rattls are subject.

FOUT!!'S PoWDKRfi WIU eiTS 8AT1»FAOTW»JI.1

Sold everywhere.

Cleanses tk«

Head. Allays la»-

flamatfton. Heals

the Sores. Re­

store* tts Sense*

of Taste aad

Smell, A qaiek

1 JtPositlve Care,

kY-FEVER

olgood* Sample bottle, bi maillO ete. W BKO»-Prs)ffi»t»,Owen,lC. Sssl rsjftrAgtsfc —^fsslilag oarWrmiti Htmtory. rsMtir—4 Dedsire SstllwelJIieWesW

WiiuwJ*V.WWly*csN

POPHAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC UTH A

JWkM, KMAIMnd O

*. rOPHJJf CO. Props., Phllsddpsls. TV* nai tell to try this nleiidid preparation If yon have difficult breatnlM tro® H^y 1^, pleasant inha.ln. 7 a

1

IK8TA'TLY

nail

T.»,.

DAVID E. TOVTZ, Proprietor,

BALTIMORE,

MD.

f'-fp-

4 1

i-

j&Ktt.

1

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may escape many a fatalt jdiaft bj^keeping Service

elves well fortified with pure bl perly nourished frame."—[Civil sue.

ourselves a pro Gaze

Made"simply with boiling water or milk.

11

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4^?

3*

litiXV

ivvri WI.V SEL1BTBO.

BELIETED. from Asthma, once to the

lie IcVtehlng of the chest, relief in every case. Pot op

aad if*

aat soM kr draggM* everywhere-V.-i