Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 17, Number 5, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 July 1886 — Page 4

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THE MAIL.

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A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE."

P. S. WESTFALL, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.

BUBSCHIMON PHICK,

$2.00

Of this Paper arc published. The FIRST EDITION on Thursday Evening has a large circulation in the surrounding towns, where it is sold by newsboyB and agent*. The SECOND EDITION, on Saturday After noon, goes Into the hands of nearly every reading person in the city, and the farmers of this Immediate vicinity.

Every Week's Issue is, in fact, TWO N EWSPA PERS, in which all Advertisements appear for the price of ONE PAPER.

Advertisements first appearing In the Saturday Issue go in the Thursday edition of next week without extra charge.

IF the magazine which Miss Cleveland ia to edit does not attain success it will not be for the lack of free advertising.

TIIK grand old man steps down but he does not stop out. lie will bo heard from frequently as the parliamentary procession moves along.

ALHANY, N. Ym has had a big time this week celebrating her two-hundredth anniversary. Next to New York, Albany is tho oldest city in the union. But there sire a great many youngor cities that are much larger and livelier.

^FIT.

BKWHKK has no time to talk home rule nonsense to John Hull just now. JIo is too busy taking in the British j^tiincas for his lecture. Mr. Beechor will talk homo rulo some other time, when there is a more opportune occasion.

KDWAHI) ('. Z. JUIJMON, hotter known .as "Ned Buntline," whoso tales of adventure havo thrilled thousands of boyish hearts and interested many more J,housands of older grown, and whoso

life has boon aromanco, died last Saturday at ills home in Stamford, N. Y., of heart disease, at the ago of sixty-four years.

TicKitKhas boon found a now substance -called saccharin, which is said to be 230 times sweeter than sugar. It is product of coal tar and is largely used in tho hospitals of Berlin. At its present cost of production it is much higher than sugar hut it is cheaper in proportion to its sweetening power, and it is probable that now methods of production will be discovered which will greatly reduce its •ooat. The development of this new Mweotener will bo watched with intorost.

A r.vnrY of prominent New Yorkers are making a trip to Mauch (.'hunk, Pa., by the way of tho Pennsylvania canal. They havo fitted up a canal boat with awnings, curtains, etc., and with a cook and servants are very comfortably quartered, whatever the weather may chance to be. No doubt the party is having "dead loads of rim" and at much loss expense than many others aro undergoing for less pleasure on a grander scale. An original excursion of this kind if often more interesting and pleasant than those of the regulation pattern.

TIIK terrible drouth in Colorado has caused groat suffering. Whore farmers havo undertaken to cultivate the soil without irrigation tho crops have burned up. Tho water in the streams has been lried up in many places and the sto 'k perished from thirst. The great ditch monopolies ajro guarding their ditches* with armed men, while the ranchmen, armed and organised, declare that unless relief IH xoon given, they will cut the the canals. Tho great stock ranges are leooming brown and much apprehension is felt.

Mu*. KKORIK. teacher of household von«my and hygiene in tho Kansas Agricultural college, has discovered a new prtwHww of canning fruit which promise* to work a revolution in that industry. The process is simply to heat the fruit bailing hot, put it in jars, and tie col ton lint ling over the mouth, first putting on apiece of white paper to keep ihc batting from becoming soaked with the juice. .1 tvt one thickness of batting i*\i*ed ami it is tied down with strong twine, Tli" experiment was tried with live kinds of fruit, including tomatoes, and was successful in every case, not a particle of mold forming in the cans.

They are making very good progress now with the trial of the anarchists in Chicago. Judge Gary gave the lawyers plenty of rope while they were getting a jury, but now he proposes to have no more foolishness and the evidence is going in like hot shot and very solid shot at that. The prisoners are not half so jolly, and the a flair has lest the pienieky character which it had at the beginning. The coil# are being drawn close and hard around some of the defendants at least and the prosecuting attortKMr f" the state says the evidence •will embrace all of them before he is through. There is no intimation as ret what the nature of the defense will be.

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YBAK.

PUBLICATION OFFICE,

Xos. 20 and 22 South Fifth Street, Printing Houxe Square.

TKRKK HAUTE, JULY 24, 1886,

TWO EDITIONS

1

•EITIIKU Senator Logan is not concerned about his presidential boom or else ho doesn't expect much help for it from Ohio. The way In which ho piled into Ilalstcwl and the Commercial Gazette in the Senate the other day, showed that •••Black Jack" is as good a tighter as he over was. Mr. Halstead waked up tho wrong passenger when ho tried to bull«dozo Logan.

Now we should like to know the real truth with respect to that celebrated Russian, Count Tolstoi. It has all along been reported that he gave away his great wealth and became a poor man in order to carry out his ideas of serving his feilow-men. It is now said, however, that in one of his late articles the count says it is silly to give away one's property aimlessly, and that it is only necessary to give people one's personal labor. His ideas as to the bliss of beggary .nd the impossibility of salvation for the rich are entirely forgotten, and the author lepeatedly expresses his satisfaction at having "saved himself," although he has retained his wealth. Either Count Tolstoi is very inconsistent himself or his readers and critics must singularly misunderstand him, as to this last doctrine it is just the opposite of what he has been represented as teaching and indeed practicing himself, jv

AT the national conference of charities and correction at St. Paul, ex-President Hayes spoke strongly for industrial education of the young. The tendency of rccent years has been to concentration of population in the large cities, where it is hard to make a living unless one has a special training in some line of work. No system of education is complete, Mr. Hayes argued, which does not give the child the capacity to make an honest living by the labor of its own hand. "The use of tools," he said, "concentrates and trains the mind, and I believe that it furnishes better intellectual training of the powers of memory and of judgment than any other agency we can use." His suggestion that instruction in skilled labor for one or two hours a day should be given during the whole school life of boys and girls, is worthy of serious consideration by parents and teachers. It is undoubtedly true that many a criminal would not have become such if he or she had boon brought up to an honest trade.

TIIK kind of extradition that we want with England is one which will enable us to get back from Canada our defaulting officors, embezzling cashiers, boodle aldermen, forgers and rascals in general. Tho present status of affairs has long been a public scandal. The miserable swindler who has ruined stockholders and depositors and squandered the earnings of tho poor, is now able to jump on the train and, in tha course of a singlo night's ride, placo himsolf beyond the reach of the law. Tliore can be no justification of, or excuso for such a stato of affairs. There seems to be no good reason why the law betweon nations should not bo such that a citizen of a country ?ould bo followed anvwhero and arrested in order to answer for any crime with which ho may be charged. What interest has tho United States in protecting the defaulters and swindlers of any other country? or what bonefit does any other country gain by protecting ours? Put extradition on a footing of common sense and reason and a swindler will not bo able to escape the penalty of his crimes simply by crossing the boundary line betwoon one country and another.

Mn. IIKNKY WATTKRSON is writing sorno very readable letters from England which contain sensible suggestions to tho people of this country. In his last letter he comments on tho conduct of certain Americans in England. He says that, at the best, an American is considered a mero nobody in that country, whore a duke ranks a marquis, a marquis an earl, an earl a viscount, a viscount a baron, a baron a baronet and a baronet a knight, the rest of the people being an "indistinguishable mass of the untitled and unwashed, who come hist at tablo and are snubbed by the servants." No self-respecting Amorican, says Watterson, can be easy or happy in such a society. And yet some of our women aro so supremely silly that they go angling about for a titled husband for their daughters, making themselves contemptible and ridiculous in their melancholly flunkeyism. "I would have such a mothor whippet! at the cart's tail," declares the irate editor, and his indignation is justifiable. And when these marriages are mado they are apt to be wretched ones, and these vulgar aristocrats are frequently coarse, base and selfish, after the manner of Sartoris, who has blighted the life of one good American girl. Tho truth is, Americans have no business with England or with Englishmen. Pitiable indeed is the citizen of this country who is not able to see that our institutions are infinitely noble and better than those of the feudal, aristocracy-ridden nations of the old world. There is nothing there for ns to imitate or to pattern after. America is the best of the earth.

MONGOLIAN MIGRATION. The Chinese question is perhaps a more important one than we are in the habit of thinking it. In the current number of the North American Review, Prof. E. W. Gilliam presents some rather surprising facts and figures in connection with the subject. He stated that since the powers of Christendom opened China to commercial Intercourse, the Chinese have developed a migratory disposition, and are establishing themselves in the trade centers of the world. There are 300,000 in the Malay Archipelago and 1,500,000 in Siam. Sine® 1800200,000 have entered Chill and Peru. There are 130,000 in Cuba, 50,000 in Australia and more than three times thai number in the 1'nited States, mostly in the Pacific Coast States and Territories. Hie cause of this migration he says is not political oppression, nor, altogether, the pressure of over-population, as there are large districts in the Chinese Empire susceptible of cultivation which are very thinly settled. It is the desire of the Chinaman to better his condition, and he naturally turns toward this country, because It

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TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING

offers the greatest contrast to his own in the rewards of labor. The principal objections to the coming of the Chinese into this country are (1) that it introduces the feature of absentee landlordism by exporting the earnings of labor. During the past twenty-five years about §200,000,000 have thus gone out of the United States. (2) The Chinese are such cheap livers that they can work for smaller wages than American laborers can afford to do, and in order to compete with them Americans must come down to their way of living.

Mr. Gilliam argues that homogeneity of population is desirable and that we already have as many diverse elements as we are well able to assimilate. He believes that the three great races of mankind, the white, black and yellow, should develop within themselves. There is much food for thought in the article.

PERSONAL AND PECULIAR.

visitors and

The poet Saxe sees up rarely leaves his room. Rev. E. P. Hammond is holding a a series of meetings in Christiana, Norway. -.ajj

George Alfred Townsend says he has written an average of 30,000 words every week for nearly twenty-five years.

A prize of §100 offered by a New York illustrated paper for the best idea for a cartoon, was won by Daniel Tansliaw, a Brooklyn street-car conductor. I

The monument for the grave of Josh Billings, the humorist, which will be placed in the cemetery at Lanesborough, Mass., will bear only the inscription, "Josh Billings."

The Christian Register says that Col. R. G. Ingersoll would be admitted to active membership in any Unitarian church without any examination whatever as to his opinions.

The late Charles Marsh, of Boston, carried about three hundred thousand dollars of life insurance. Of this §100,000 was in tho Equitable Life, of which he was one of the oldest policy holders.

The Hon. John A. Bingham, of Steubenville, Ohio, says he is not a candidate for Congress, but he never opposes the will of the people. The convention will probably nominate him on the first ballot.

A Maino groom who could talk no French and a French bride who could speak no English were married the other day in Lowell, Me. They both had understood the unspoked language of courtship.

Dr. Samuel S. Adams devotes seven columns of tho Journal of the American Medical Association to exposing the dangers of kissing. Few people will wade through so much literature to be frightened out of such a luxury. $

3

Horatio Seymour's monument, just completed in Forest Hill Cemeiwy, Utica, consists of a great boulder which the ex-Governor himself selected for the purpose. It has been carved into the form of a sarcophagus.

It appears that Mr. Graham did not go through the Niagara whirlpool for pure glory after all. He will now exhibit his red cask and himself for a consideration to the curious thousands who will be interested in seeing how they look.

No native Illinois man is doing service on the Chicago anarchist jury—but the entiro dozen were born in pretty fair localities. Three were born in New York, three in Ohio, and one each in Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Indiana and Nova Scotia.

In tho "Long Run" Miss Cleveland in a touching love scene has the following striking sentence concerning her hero, who is walking with his inamorata: "He felt the magnetism of this conjectural passion at his side, and many wavelets of emotion played upon him as they walked."

PRESIDENTIAI. POSSIBILITIES.

Buffalo Courier (Dem.): There are symptoms of an attempt to start a Republican Presidential boom for E. B. Washburne.

New York Sun (Dem.): The Cleveland boom is here in plain sight. Any one can see it, though we believe that Mr. Holman was the first statesman to report it publicly.

Baltimore Herald (Dem.): President Cleveland is on record against a second term, but a little pledge like that is not likely to stand in the way of his own ambition.

LeavenworthTitnes(Rep.): The Democrats are spending a great many sleepless nights because Blaine, as a great leader, happens to open his mouth occasionally on matters of public moment.

Minneapolis Tribune (Rep.): Mr. Cleveland is acting with reference to 1888. The party will not want him, and yet it will hardly dare to reject him. Mr. Cleveland is altogether likely to secure a renominatlon.

New York Graphic (Ind.): Hie rumor that Murat Hat stead will manage the Tribune and boom Sherman while Whitelaw Retd goes to the Senate is said to be unreliable. For some reason or other we have suspected this.

Philadelphia Press (Rep.) : The ancient Mr. Tilden is fairly in the field as a candidate for the nomination for President in 1888. This indicates that the ivy-clad statesman is enjoying another huge and prosperous run of bad health.

Philadelphia Press (Rep.): The John Griffin Carlisle boom for President continues to trample down the grass In some portions of Kentucky. If it continues in its present course the tar-eyed goddess will have to*torn the hose on it.

The Michigan Knights of Labor have declared for female suffrage. atjis

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WMsSmmM

THE PASSING SHOW,

SHOWS AND SHOW FOLKS.

Haverly's minstrels aro booked to appear at Naylor's opera house one week from next Monday evening. "Caught in a Corner" is the name of M. B. Curtis's new play, to be put on. next season.

In her papers asking for a divorce, Mrs. Alvin Joslin Davis avers that her husband's jewelry is worth §10,000. Alvin, in his advertisements, has always declared that they are worth §100,000.

Charley Hoyt, of "Tin Soldier" and "Rag Baby" fame, has perpetrated an operatic burlesque under the title, "The Maid and the Moonshiner." Edward Solomon arranged the musie, and Lillian Russell will be the Maid when the opera will bo produced, in New York uext month j,

It is said that Miss Anna Pixley will retire from the stage and never play again. This decision is occasioned by the death of her son, at home near Port Hudson, last week. Miss Pixley (Mrs. Robert Fulford)declares she has nothing now to live for, and, being independent, will retire from active life.

At the time that Miss Fay Templeton secured her divorce from Billy West in order to marry a rich New York dude, the Chicago News predicted very confidently that she would be seeking a separation in less than a year. Sure enough, she is already in the courts with a petition. She is treading the path that Alice Oates trod. Who will bo the next husband?

The chestnut protector, a smalt gong worn under the coat where it can be readily sounded when a too old joke is perpetrated, is becoming very popular in country towns and some cities. A lot of young Baltimoreans wore them at a recent performance of "The Mikado," and the puns and gags that were interpolated were met with a steady ringing of the little bells. The effect was excellent, and the next night tho players stuck to the text of the opera more closely. The chestnut gong seems to be a blessing in disguise.

Mr. Thomas W. Keene announces his repertoire for next season. It includes "Richard m.," "Macbeth," "Othello," "Julius Caesar." "The Fool's Revenge," "Richelieu," "The Merchant of Venice,'' "The Wife," "Romeo and Juliet," and "The Lady of Lyons." Mr. Keene is convinced that he has recovered sufficiently from the attack of paralysis which compelled his temporary retirement to withstand the strain of a long season. But a contrary impression has gained ground among professionals.

The Now York correspondent of a Sain Francisco paper writes: "Edwin Booth will no doubt retire from the stage at the end of next season indeed, it is not impossible that he will not play another season, so weary, ill and despondent is he. If he had been left to himself the last five years he would surely have remained in seclusion. He fills engagements only because managers seek him out and bind him to contracts which he feels obliged to keep. His spiritual ailments aro inertia and brooding, and they are not likely to bo cured. He is free from debt and may have in all property about §200,000, the income of which will suffice for his modest requirements. His indifference to money and to most things which the world ranks as pleasures is absolute and definite. A veritable gentleman in the best and highest sense, a genial and delightful companion whom all gentlemen admire and like, he is apt to wound their sensitive pride by his lack of reciprocity. His nature is really solitary, though he enjoys the society of kindred spirits if they come to him it is peculiar, almost unique. Few understand him, and he tries not to be understood. It is strange that the foremost of native tragodians should be so isoloted and exceptional. He is, in brief, the real Hamlet of tho Nineteenth century— the melancholy dreamer of the western world."

Peter Sells, upon being interviewed, told a Globe-Democrat reporter: "Circuses have their friends, admirers and patrons in certain localities the same as wholesale houses and other business enterprises. This fact is strongly illustrated in the case of P. T. Barnum. This great showman can fill his canvas in the North and East, but whenever he attempts to show in cities south of Mason and Dixon's line he exhibits to empty seats. He has made several efforts to obtain popularity in the South, but has never yet appeared in a town in that section without losing money. He has frequently given the Southerners the best entertainments that any show in the world could present, but in every instance failed to draw half as large a crowd as inferior circuses do in the same territory. This year he tried Nashville, Tetin., and Richmond, Va., as a feeler, to see what could be done in the South, but he lost money and gave up the idea of including the Southern cities in his route. Barnum is a typical Yankee, and prides himself on that fact, and I cannot account for his failure to please in that section unless it is liecause the inhabitants of the South still retain a prejudice against the Yankee, and refuse to patronize his show on that account.**

Sfter Abandon Old Friend#, If you have a friend who has been constant to vou and stuck to you through antf had fortune, would you *otm good forge

forget him? No, you would not. Well, Pomeroy's Petrollne Plaster, your old friend, has served you many years. Rely on the remedy, it will never leave vou. It is your faithful, constant, steady friend, tried and true, always uniform, never misleading by false pretences. It goes right along, more firmly settled everv year, as the Great Family Remedy of the country. When you ask for it, afwavs see and be sure you get Pomeroy's" Petroline Plasters, in envelopes.

MATT,.

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HARVEST EXCURSIONS. The management of tho Chicago North-Western Railway ovidently has an abiding and steadfast confidence in Central Dakota. Prompted by this confidence this Company has built nearly a thousand miles of railroad within tho limits of the territory, with absolutely nothing in sight as a recompense save tho broad and boundless prairies—yet these same prairies, with an undorlving soil of unsurpassed fertility, havo yielded their increase to the efforts of thousands of sturdy yeomen, each of whom is ready to testify to tho fact that confidence in the productiveness and possibilities of Central Dakota has not been misplaced.

There are a largo number of people throughout the East who would like to see this truly wonderful country but have been deterred from gratifying their desiro by tho expense of the trip. To remove this obstacle and enable all to visit Dakota who have any desiro to do so, tho Chicago A North-Western Railway has arranged to run three Harvest Excursions on August 18th, September 8th, and September 22d, for which tickets can be bought at prices ranging from §10.00 to §15.00 for the round trip from Chicago.

IB BARGAINS!' &

The season is most aptly chosen, being after the harvest, so that its results can be seen at a glance, 'and tho ratos are made so low (loss than one cent per mile), as to bo within easy reach of all. This railroad company is now constructing several new lines of road in Dakota which will open up vast tracts of Government land hitherto unoccupied, and these excursions will enable land-seek-ers to prospect and locate claims in a new Territory along the now lines of railroad. These excursions have but one object in view—to advertise Dakota, to give all interested tangiblo facts in proof of its pre-eminent success as a farming country. To this end the Northwestern Railwav Company has mado the rates so low that all who have any interest in the wonderland can easily afford to make the trip and satisfy themselves.

All information required will be promptly furnished on application to vour nearest ticket agent, or to R„ S. Hair, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, 111.

H. F. SCHMIDT, JOHN BERNHARDT.

HF.

At /re A Case of 24 inch Printed Sateens. Should sell out in a few days.% fJ Choice Stylos.

SCHMIDT & CO., Dealers In

WATCHES, CLOCKS, SILVER and PLATED WARE, FINE JEWELRY,

We Will Sell a Lot of 33 Inch Extra Fine Printed Sateens. Quantity Limited. ... .......

At gc About 3,000 Yards of Extra Fine Printed Lawns, 33 inches wide worth 10c.

At 'T.c Job Lots of Ginghams and Seersuckers. Among this.lot are goods A I reduced from and loc.

The ordinary "land explorer's'1 stopover will be allowed on those tickets, and they will bo good to return any time within 20 days from the date of sale.

Never since Dakota began to attract attention has there been so good an opportunity for tho people to see and form their own estimates of its merits as the ones now offored.

At We own cases of Apron Check Ginghams, about 10,000 yards O bought to job in our Wholesale Department at 7c,.. We otter thom at retail as a leader at 5c.

H0BERG, ROOT & CO.,

Nos. 518 and 520 Wabash Avenue.

OPTICAL GOODS, Ac.

403 Main Street.

JOHN BOSSOM,

PRACTICAL

PLUMBER and GAS FITTER,

And dealer In

Gas Fixtures, Pumps, Pipes, Etc.

Repairs Promptly Attended to. 505 Ohio.

Now

IS THE TIME

To Insure against

Call at

NO. R. HAGER'S

Insurance Office, tfo. 11 Oth.

Fire, Life, Accident and Tornado Insurance.

EO. W. LOOMIS.

VJ DENTIST. Over J. H. Brtggs' store, n. e. cor. 4th and Cherry. Teeth Extracted without pain by the use of Mayo's Vapor or Nitron* Oxide Oas. First class material usrd In plate work. Terre Ilaute,

Ind.

JULIUS F. ERMISCH STEAM DYE H0I SE.

O0O Main Ntrect, McKeen's Hlork. '1 Cleaning and dyeing of all kinds of Indies and (tenia clothing. Gents gannenta ai* neatly repaired. Write for price list.

DIVORCE. The State of Indiana, Vigo County. In the Vigo Circuit Court.

No. 14,451. Ruth Daugherty vs. George Daugherty. In divorce. Be it known, that on the 10th day of July, 1886, said plaintiff filed an affidavit in due form, showing that said defendant is a nonresident of the State of Indiana.

Said non-resident defendant is hereby notified of the pendancy of said action against htm. and that the aame will stand for trial Krputnber 0, MS8, the name being tbe Heptemtar tern of said court, in the year

MERRILL N. SMITH. Clerk.

Tom F. DONHAM, Attorney.

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MID. SUMMER

5 1

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$ -4

rpHE 3 MAIN ADVANTAGE

OKTHK

"Quiek Meal"

STOVE

OVKll AI.L OTHKIIS

Is the Simplicity and Ease with which it can bo Opened, Closed and Regulated. There aro no thumb screws to turn, to burn the Angers with and confuse people. The Patent Lever Valve is a "dead open ami shut," When the little knob Is pushed over the word "open" It. is open, lIt Is pushed over the worn ed" It Is closed and no mistake. No one can use It wrong. The "Single Generator" Stove excels all others in closing, it also closes the gas burners. The "safety tank" attachment does not. only extinguish every light but also closes every burner before I ho tank can be tilled, thus, avoiding teakage In case it Is neglected to relight the stove.

Don't fail to see the "Quick Meal" before buying elsewhere.

C. C. SMITH,

303 Main Street.

pHCENIX FOUNDRY

.. AND I

MACHINE WORKS,

Manufacture and deal In all kinds of

Machinery and Machinery Users Supplies.

Flour Mill Work

OUR SPECIALTY.

Have more patterns, larger experience and capacity, and employ more mechanics than any other similar establishment within seven ty-flve miles of Terre Haute.

Bepair|and Jobbing Work.

Given special attention. Write or call on us and see for yourself.

201 to 236 N. 9th at.,'near Union Depot Terre Haute, Ind.

W. S.CLirr. J. H. WIMJAMS. J. M. Chirr.

QLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO.,

MANUFACTUKKRS OV

Sash, Doors, Blinds, etc.

AND DKAI-KRS IK

TOI^Isr-AJDOS! LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES

GLASS, PAINTS, OILS AND BUILDERS' HARDWARE.

Mulberry street, corner 9th.

Terre Haute, Ind.

Established 1865. Incorporated 1£73.

hr Dr. BEN TOMLIN'S

Medical & Surgical Tnntitute

Corner of Sth and Ohio sta., Tcrn» Hante, Ind. for ALL CHRONIC and HI'KCIAL I18KAHE8, Male and Female, MEDICAL or SURGICAL. Office bourn£9 to 12 I to and 7 to &

A TRIAL TREATMENT FREE in the following diaeaseM, vix: OPIUM, morphine or landannm HAHIT, NERVOUH DI8EAHEH of MEN and WOMEN. FITK or EPELKPHY and HO RE, WEAK ortflEFICIENT KYEK

The following I will TREAT-NO CURE, NO PAY, with a written guarantee, viz, CANCERS, TUMORH, and OLD HOREH, TAPE WORMH, FIHTt'LA, PILEH and ALL IIHEAHEH of the RECTUM, without the KNIFE -orCAUHTICH

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Vy OZONE For Catarrh, Throat and Lung IMaeaaea, and ail Weakening, Wanting and Nervous DL»eaaes, Hleepleanneaa, Debility, Aathtna, Bronchia* and Hay Fevc-r.

We Give 3 Days Trial, Free. DR. BEN TOMLIN, 6th and Ohio street. Terre Haute, Ind. Office hours: 9 to 12 2 to 5 and 7 to 8.

If,

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