Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 21, Number 27, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 December 1890 — Page 2
SYNOPSIS.
CiiAiTr.H 1 In a recruiting office In the "Queen City" Lieut. Fred Lane, lh».A.,n«ive« two letter#—one informing
Ih'Iow,
Mm of h(»
promotion to the rank of captain, the otber a brief i»otc from Mabel Vincent, Cmaitjsk 2.—Gordon Noel, nontenant In Lane's »valr" regiment. succeed*. through wheedling the wife of hi* colonel. In being appointed to the vacancy canned by t-ane pn motion. lie I* disliked by til* brother officiint, an he ha* in the past several time* dodged active service In Indian campaign*.
Chaitrm .%—« apt. Uoe la desperately In love with Mabel Vincent. He pre part* to turn the recruiting over to hi* successor.
Ciiaiteb 4.- I .leut. Noel arrive* to take cliurtf' of the recruiting office. ne I* handsome and «ftrt?c«ble and aucceeds in cr sting the lnit»rc*Mon ihat he ha* been a very gallant officer and don# brave *ervlce on the plain* It is discovered that a clerk named Tain tor lias club titled Home of the fund# of recruiting office (for* tug Lane's nam.) and dcciunjx-ii. Noel professes an enttausla-ilc friendship
for
i«»»c.
CiiaitkrS.—l.wne write* to Mabel's father, askln nfrml**|on to pay hlsaddrewwsto her. Hit* Wgrnnt.*!. Vincent I* on the brink of financial dl*a*t r. l-nne pmircr* his services.
Cff Ai-Ticn Tl»« transfer of the recruiting officer to Noel i* made by Iune, who ha* orders to return to hi* regiment In the west. Ijitic tntik' the deficit In the accounts out of hi# own pocket.
Ch itkr 7. furnishes to Mr Vincent tin- money which wive* the latter from ruin. lw fore Ume xturix fur the went MnbK promises to marry him. The engagement is to be kept wrti't at her parent#' mi next.
Ohaitkk h.—Noel succeeds In makinghim«tf a octal favorite by tellm* falsestoriesof bl* own bravery. lie heroine* acquainted with ttie Vlments and I* Invited to their it iiw! tw.eanwr »f his professed friendship for I tnc.
CHAPTER IX
He wrote long Utter# to her. Only a abort distance from the Arizona bonier, with the blno range of the Santa Cutarina shutting ont the sunset skies, with wind anil cactus and Spanish bayonet on over}' side, the old post of Fort Graham stood in the desert like a mud colored oasts. All the quarters, all the store houses, stables, corrals and barracks were built of the native adobe and though whitewash had been liberally applied, especially about the hoines of the oflh-ors. and the loug Venetian blinds at their front windows had been painted the coolest of deep greens, and dear running water sparkled through the ocequias that bordered the parade, it could not bo denied that at its best Graham was an arid and forbidden station. so far as one could judge by appearances. Trees, verdure, turf were itotus almost unknown within a day's march of the flag staff but in Die old times when the Navajoea were the terror of the wide southwest, and even the Comunchos sometimes carried their raids across the Kio Bravo del Norte—the Rio Grande of today—the post had been "located* where it might afford protection to the "Porty-Nlners" and to the pioneers of the prairies the trans-continental trail led past its very gates, and many a time Wid ift the miner and the emigrant thanked God and the general government that the old fort was placed just where it was, for Indian pursuers drew rein wheu once in sight of its dingy walls and no from year to year for more than thrice a decade the flag was raised at sunrise, the post was always garrisoned. and now, with the Southern Pacific piercing the range but a short distance
and landing stores and for*
ago at the quartermaster's depot within four miles of the corrals, it became easier to maintain a force of cavalry at Graham and one of the troops there stationixl was Lane's new command, the relict of the late lamented Curran, "the Devil's own D."
An easy going old dragoon was Cor* ran, and for years before his retirement it was an open soetvt that his first sergeant "ran the troop" to suit himself and that the captain never permitted his subalterns to interfere. A mow? independent. devil-may-care, and occasionally drunken lot of troopers were rarely gathered in one such organisation, and while steady and reliable men on getting their di^hnrjecs at the end 5f their term of enlistment would refuse to "take on* apuu in troop, but would go over to CapU or perhaps to a company at a»)oth«'r station, all the «csuip« and rollicking characters in the nsgiment would drift over into "D" and be welcomed by the choice spirits therein assembled. And this was the gang that CapL Lane was now expected to bring op with a nuad tarn and transform into dutiful •oldiers. Obedient to the colonel's behest, he had stopped orer a couple of days at hcadijuarters, had had a most cordial gre-eting frcan txvxj ofScw at the ptMt had called on all the ladies—not omitting his Mr defame**—and then bad hastened on Graham asd his skew and trying dotiea
Erery day, as he was wktrkd farther front, tb| hex whom he eo d#-
eA ^rillin^ eArmy Romance of
C$esferr\ {frontier1.
By 6flPT. GHflRL.ES KING, U. S. fl.
[Copyrighted by J. B. Lippincott Company. Philadelphia, tod pablitncd through *pccial arrangement wiLb the American Pre** Association
rotedly loved, he wrote long letters to her, fiUed with—only lovers know what all. And his heart leaped with joy that topmost in the little packet of letters awaiting him at the adjutant's office when he reached his prat was a dainty billet addressed to him in her beloved hand. Until he could get his quarters in habitable condition the new troop commander was the guest ot Capt. and Mrs, Nash and he could hardly wait for the close of that amiable onn's welcoming address to retch u".»room and devour every word of that most precious missive. She bad written—bless her!— the very day after he left, and a sweet, womanly letter it was—so shy and half timid, yet so full of faith and pride in him. Every one at Graham remarked on the wonderful change for the better that had come over Lane since he went east. Never had they seen him so joyous, so blithe in manner. He seemed to walk on air his eyes beamed on every one liiB face seemed "almost to have a halo round it," said Mrs. Nash, and neither she nor any woman in garrison had the faintest doubt as to the explanation of it all. Love had wrought the change, and being loved had intensified and prolonged it. Every man, every woman in garrison was his friend, and the happy fellow would gladly have taken dozens of them into his confidence and told them all about it, and talked by the hour of her.
But there were reasons, Mrs. Vincent had said, why it was most desirable that there should be no announcement of the engagement as yet. What these were she did not explain to Mabel herself, but assured her that it was her father's wish as well. Lane had rushed to the great jewelry house of Van Loo & Laing, and the diamond solitaire that flashed among the leaves of the exquisite rosebud he smilingly handed her that night was one to make any woman gasp with delight. Could anything on earth be rich enough, pure enough, fair enough to lavish on her, his peerless queen
She had held forth her soft white hand and let him slip it on the engagement finger, and then bend the knee like knight of old and kiss it fervently. She reveled in it, rejoiced in it, but, heeding her mother's advice, stowfnl it away where none could see it, in the secret drawer of her desk, and Lane was perfectly satisfied. "I will tell you the reason some day," Mrs. Vincent had said to him, "but not just now, for I might be doing wrong and he had protested tkat she need never tell him. What cared he 'so long as Mabel's love was his, and they understood each other as they did
And so, while people at Graham plied him with questions and insinuations and side remarks about the "girl he left behind him" in the east, he kept faithfully to the agreement, and though the whole garrison knew he wrote to her every day and took long rides alone that he might think of her, doubtless, and though every one knew that those diainty missives that came so often for Capt. Lane were written by Miss Mabel Vincent, never once did he admit the existence of an engagement—never once until long afterwards.
The first real tidings that the Graham jieople had of her came in a letter from headquarters. Mrs. Iliggs had had such a long, charming letter from Mr. Noel that she called in several of her cronies and read it all to them and that very evening one of the number, unable to bear the burden of so much information, shifted it from her mental shoulders by writing it all to Mrs. Nash. Perhaps the best plan will be to read the extract which referred to Lane exactly as Mr. Noel wrote it: "By tins time I presume Fred Lane is bnsily engaged with his new troop. I served with them in the Sioux campaign and they never gave me any trouble at all. So. too, in the Geronimo chase a while ago, when Maj. Brace picked me out to go ahead by night from Carriato's I asked for a detachment from troop, and the men seemed to appreciate it I knew they would follow wherever I would tead, and would stand by me through thick and thin. If Lane starts in right Tve no doubt they will do just as well for him bnt I expect he is feeling mighty blue at having to rejoin just now. Yon know Pve always been a warm friend of hie, and it hurt me to see him so unwilling to go back. No one seemed to know him very well in society, and it's very queer, for this was his old home—and I was never more delightfully welcomed anywhere the people are charming. Bnt Lane had held himself aloof a good deal, and fellows at the club say he didn't "run with the tight set,' Then, if all accounts be true, be had had hard luck in several ways. Pm told that he lost money in a big wheat speculation, and everybody says he totally lost Ills heart. 1 tell yon this is confidence because I know you are a devoted friend of his—as indeed yon are of all in the dear old regiment—but he was much embarrassed when it came to taming over the funds. There was quite a heavy shortage, which he had to mate up at a time when it was probably moat inrcnrenient As to the other km, it tsnt to he wondered at. She Is a beautiful and most charming girt, aad many a man, fancy, has laid his beerf at her feet. It is said* however, that Lamfe loss is the heavier in this case because— well, I fear It will come to aothing. A young lady told me yesterday that them wa« .something back of sH—Ihat she* Mte Vtaoent, was deeply hi tow wiA a Mr. Roariter, of Maw Tort, aad hm4
been for over a year, and they were to have been married this coning September, hut that the gentleman learned that her father had been nearly swamped in speculation and had not a penny to give her. My informant went to school with Miss Vincent and knows her intimately, and she says that Mr. Roasiter dmply threw her over a short time ago, and that it was through pique and exasperation and to hide her heartbreak from the world that Mabel Vincent began to show such pleasure in Lane's devotions. She led him on, so her lady friends say and now Mr. Bosmter has found ont that old Vincent was sharper and shrewder than any one supposed, and made instead of losing a pile, and now he 4s suing to be taken back, and they say that she is so much in love with the fellow that the chances are all in his favor. This is why I feel such sorrow and anxiety for Lane. "Well, I led the german at a lovely party at the Prendergasts" last night. Miss Vincent was there, looking like a peach blossom, and we danced together a great deal. When it came time to break up I believe half the people in the rooms came to say good ni^'ht to me &nd to tell me they had nevergesa so delightful a german^—'everything so depends on the leader.* 1 have invitations for something or other for every night for the next fortnight and yet 1 so often long for the old regiment and the true friends 1 had to leave. It did me a world of good last night to meet old Col. Gray, of the retired list, whose home is here, but he commanded the th infantry in the Sioux campaign, and when he saw me he threw his arms around my neck and hugged me before the whole throng of people. Give my love to our chief, islways, and believe me, dear, true friend of mine. Yoiir.-. most affectionately, "Gobdon Noel."
Condensed, edited by feminine hands, and accented here and there as suited the writer's mood, this was the letter which formed the basis of the one received by Mrs. Nash. Lane by this time was cozily ensconced in his quarters, and was giving all his time to the improvement of affairs about his troop's barracks, kitchens and stables, to drill and target practice, and to company duties generally. His days knew no relaxation from labor, from reveille until "retreat" at sunset, and then came the delicious evenings in which he could write to her, and read a chapter or two of some favorite work before going early to bed. After the first week he seldom left his house after 8 o'clock, and the garrison had therefore ample opportunity to discuss his affairs. Some color was lent to the story of nis having lost money in speculation by a letter received from 'Jheyeuue, written to the new major of .he th infantry, who had recently joined by promotion from Fort Russell, near that thriving town. The writer said that Lane of the Eleventh cavalry had sold his property there for fifteen" thousand dollars about the end of June, and he had bought it for twenty-five hundred only nine years before. He could have got eighteen thousand just as well by waiting a few days, but he wanted the money at once,
No one, of course, could ask tlje capjf {fever
tain any direct questions about his affairs of either heart or pocket, but Lane was puzzled to account for some of the remarks that were made to him—the interrogatories about the methods of speculation, the tentatives as to chances of "making a good thing" in that way, and the sharp and scrutinizing glances that accompanied the queries. The sweet, sympathetic, semi-confidential manner, the inviting way in which the ladies spoke to him of his present loneliness and their hopes that soon he would bring to them a charming wife to share their exile and bless his army home—all this, too, seomed odd to him but, as he had never been in love nor engaged before, he did not know but that it was "always the way with them," and so let it pass.
And then he was very happy in her letters. They were neither as frequent nor as long as his, but then she had such around of social duties she was in such constant demand there were visitors or parties every night, and endless calls and shopping tours with mother every day, and she was really getting a little rundown. The weather was oppressively warm, and they longed to get away from the city and go to the mountains. It was only a day's ride to the lovely resorts in the Alleghanies, but papa was looking a little thin and worn again, and the doctors had said his heart was affected—not alarmingly or seriously, but mamma oould not bear to leave him, and he declared it utterly impossible to be away from his business a single day. He and Mr. Clark were very hopeful over a now venture they had made, the nature of which she did not thoroughly understand.
But let us take a peep at some of those early letters—not at the answers to his eager questions, not at the shy words olf maiden love that crept in here and there, but at those pages any one might read. "Tuesday night "Such a delightful german as we had last night at the Prendergasts'! Capt Noel led—I have to call him captain, for every one does hero, and if 1 say "Mr.* they want to know why, and it is embarrassing to explain how 1 know. He leads remarkably well, and I was very proud of *our regiment,' sir, when listening to all the nice things nid about him. How 1 wished for a certain other cavalry captain, now so many cruel miles away! Mr. Noel took me out often—and Indeed I was a decided belle—and he told me that he had to lead with Miss Press* dergast, but would ao mach rather danoe with me. "It is almost settled that we go away in August for the entire month. Dr. Post mother most go, and that father raght to go. Of course I go with
fEKR-R HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.
have
"Friday night.
••So many interruptions today, dear Fred! You see what anincoherentthing this is thus far, and now Pm tired out. We a charming time at the Woodrows' dinner last evening. The day had been hot, but their table was set on the lawn under a canopy, and, the walls being raised, we had a delightful breeze from the river. Their place is one of the finest on the heights. I do so wish you could have seen it- Capt. Noel took me in, and was bright and jolly and full Of anecdote. Everybody likes Mm, and I like him mainly because he is such a loyal Mend of yours. He talks so much of you and of all the dangers you have pVuwifl in common and you know how interesting all tbi'a must be to me. Sometimes I wonder that you had so little to eay about him—though you never did talk much about the regiment and never would talk much about yourself. Wednesday evening we had a little theatre part# Regy got it up, and we just filled two adjoining loges. Capt Noel was Fanny Holton's escort^ but he talked most of the time with me—a thing that my escort, Mr. Forbes, did not seem to like but, as ho couldn't and Mr. Noel would, \7bat could I do''" "Sunday evening. •*It is late and I ought to be asleep, but the Jast caller has just gone, and tomorrow there may be no time to write at all, and you are such an exacting, tyrannical, dear old hoy that— Well, there, now, let me tell you of the day. You say anything and everything that I say or do is of interest So, to begin with, yesterday I had a headache, due, I fear, to the late supper Regy gave us as the club after the theatre. Fanny Holton came to toko me for a drive, but I did not feel like going, and begged off. Then 6he told me that Capt. Noel was in the carriage waiting, and that he would be so disappointed. Mother catae in and said the air would do mo good and so we went, and I came back feeling so much brighter. Mr. Noel was very amusing and kept us laughing all the time. Coming home Fanny got out at her house, as she had to dress for dinner, but told the coachman to drive me home and Mr. Noel to the club. He began talking of you the moment she disappeared, end said he so hoped you were going to write regularly to him. Are you? He seems so fond of you but I do not wonder at that. "This morning we went to church, and afterwards Mr. Noel joined and walked home with us, and papa begged him to come into luncheon, which he did. You dear fellow! what have you done to my beloved old daddy, that he is so ardent an admirer of yours? He shook Mr. Noel's hand three times before he would let him go, and begged him to come often he liked to know men, he said, who could so thoroughly appreciate—whom do you think, sir?— Capt. Fred Lane. After he had gone papa spolre of him delighted on two or three occasions. Will they take him away, too, as soon as he is really a paptain?" "Wednesday. "You dear, dear, extravagant fellow! .. "xou a oar, aear, extravagant ibuuwi
1 had suoh exquisite flowery
or such profusion of them. You must have given your florist carte blanche. Nothing that came to me compared with them. My birthday was the cause of quite a little fete iu the family, and I had some lovely presents. Mr. Noel, too, sent a beautiful basket of roses, and it pleased me very much. I want your comrades to like me, and yet I know he did this on your account. Though ho is so thoughtful and delicate and never refers to our engagement I feel that he knows it and it seems better that way, somehow. "You did not answer my questions about him, Fred Didn't you read my letter?"
Among the letters that came from the QueeniCity was one which bore the tremulous superscription of the head of the firm of Vincent, Clark 6s Co. It was brief, but it gave Capt. Lime a thrill of gladness: "It was your timely and thoughtful aid that enabled us to recover so much of our losses. You alone came to our rescue, and I fully appreciate the risk you ran. It will never be forgotten. "Clark will send draft for the entire am't, or deposit to your credit, as you may direct I go to New York and Chicago iu two or three days. Our prospects are flattering."
(fik
"Somewhere upon the unknown shore, Where the stream* of life their waters pour, There sit three sinter*, evermore
Weaving a allken thread."
Lovers of classic paintings are familiar with that famous group, called the "Three Kates.0 Fate seems cruel when it deprives womeo and girla of health. But in Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription tbey find a cure of untold value for ner
vous
Deer Park will doubtless be
the favored spot I wish August were here 1 wish you wen hen I wish—oh, so many things! Tour kttemare audi a delight to me. I wuader if other girls kn anything
IOds
them. Yes, you
*allfcav»tto jiabmmm say birthday but miad, *r. |«m to take the cere of it, or the original wfflM
still
prostration, sick headache, bearingdown pains, bloating, weak stomach, anteverslon, retroversion, snd alt those
ia gmrmOetd to give satisfaction in every case, or iu price (f!) will be refunded.
Making Money Anywkera. Having read Mr. More head's experience plating with gold, silver and nickel, I seat for a plater and have more work, than I can do. It is surprising the spoons, oostors and jewelry that people want plated. The first we#k I ctearod 937.10. and in three weeks$118 85, and my wife has made about a* much 1 have. By sddrmiing W. H. Griffith A Co., Zaoesviile, Ohio, yon can get circulars. A plator only c»t $SL Y«u can. learn to um it in an hour. Gsn plate large or email articles, and can make money anywhere. A. J. Joneun.
Fact* Wort* Kaowla*.
In all diseases of the nasal muoous membrane the remedy u»e4 must be noQ-irritating. The medical profesaton baa been alow to learn this Nothing aaUsfactory can be jwsompltsbed with
Miaffit, powders or syringes be
SSwtbey are *all irritating, do sot thoroughly reach the aflecttf «o rfaew and shontd be abandoned as worm than faiiorss. A multitude of persona who had for year* berne all the worry end
A New Year** Reverie. Twas aNew Year's ere, quit? long ago, And blustry was the weather, When Jess and I est all alona
Before the fire together. ,, The wooden clock ticked alowly oo la measured tones and broken. And all the while we two sat there
Not one of us had spoken. And ss the firelight softly streamed Upon her form so aleader. And played about her slippered feet.
Which rested on the fender, I conk) not help but think and dream Of how I loved her dearly, But lacked the vim to tell her so.
For I was bashful merely.
Just then a noise came to our ears That sounded grim and ghostly. And she was timid, women are (Or I will venture mostly). She hastened quickly to my side
And cried, ''Oh, do net leave me, For left alone in this old place I fear't will sadly grieve me."
My courage soon returned at last, I suddenly grew bolder, And in a choked and faltering voice
I spoke up then and told her: My place was always by her side, That Td forsake her never, But link my troubled heart with hers
And shield her now forever.
I took her gently is ny arms Arid kissed her drooping lashes. Which hid those eyes that shone as bright
As lightning's deepest flmftes. A crimson blush o'erspread h*t face And dyed her pretty dimj.'A Which inada her seem a school girl then.
So sweet she looked and simple.
and many times whan I'm alone And smoking in the gloaming I see the past within the clouds
Which set my thoughts to roaming. The night I won dear Jessie's heart, With deep and tender feeling. And all tho uoiso that frightened her
Was rats between tho ceiling. —P. Parker. Jr
A Complete Collapse
is occasioned in our feelings by derangement of the liver, stomach and boweda. Dr. Pierce's Plea-nut Pallets cure sick and billious headache, bowel complaints, internal fever and costiveuess. They remove all wast« matter, and restore health to body and mind. A dose, ax a laxative, consists of one tiny, sugarcoated Pellet. Cheapest and easiest to take. Bv druggist*, 25 c«*nt« a vial.
Merit Wlm».
We desire to say to our citizens, that for years wo have been selling Dr. Kings New Life Pills, Bucklen Arnica Salve and Electric IJitters, and have never handled remedies that sell as well, or that have given such universal satisfaction. We do not hesitate to guarantee them every time, and we stand ready to refund the purchase price, if satisfactory results do not follow their use. These remedios have won their great popularity purely on their merits. J. & C. Baur, Druggist. (1)
Hold It to the Light, man who tells you confidently
The
ju-t what will cure your cold isprescrlb lug Kemp's Balsam this year. In the preparation of this remarkable medicine for coughs and colds no expense is spared to combine only the beat and purest Ingredients. Hold a bottle of Kemp's Balaam to the light and look turough it notice the bright, clear look then compare with other remedies. Price 50c. and fl. Sample bottln frco.
IDU Ladlea Wanted.
And 100 men to call on any druggist for a free trial package of Lane's Family Medicine, the great root and herb remedy, discovered by Dr. Silas Lane while in the Rocky Mountains. For, diseases of the Blood, Liver and Kidneys it Is a positive cure. For constipation and clesriug up of the complexion it doe*
If -bost
wonders. is the spring medicin*Large size package, 50c. At all known. druggists'.
A Hu-baMd'n MIMake.
Hunbnndx too often permit. \vlv 8, and parents their children, to KUffcr from headache, dizziness, neuralgia, sleeplessness, fits and nervousness when by the use of Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine such nerlous results could be prevented. DruggUta everywhere say it gives universal satisfaction, and ha* an Immense sale. Woodworth A Co., of Fort Wayne, Ind. Snow & Co., of Syracuse, N Y. J. C. Wolf, of HIIlMdale, Mich., and hundreds of others Hay "It Is the areate*t seller they ever knew." It contains no opiates. Trial ttottles and a fine bodk on Nervous Diseases, free at all druggists. 5
Ask Your Friends Abwut It. Your distressing cough can be cured. «Ve know it because Kemp's Balsam within the past fww years has cur«d so many coughs and colas in this cotnmu nity. Its remarkable aale has been won entirely by its genuine merit. Ask some friend who has used it what he thinks «f Kemp's Balsam. There is no medicli.o so pure, none so effective. Large bottles 50c snd fl at all druggists'. Sample bottle free. ___________________
Forced Io Leave Horn#.
Over 00 people were forced to leave their homes yesterday to call at their druggist's for a free trial package of Lanes Family Medicine. If your blood is bad, your liver and kidneys out of order, if you are constipated and have a headache and an nasighily
for
complexion,
don't fail to call on any drutnrist to-day
a free sample of this grand remedy. The ladles praise It. Everyone likes it. Large-size twekage 60 cents.
EXIBACT
Tte importance of purifying t!e blood ceanet tie overestimated, for wttboot pore Weod yoo eanaot eajoy good bestth.
At tbis season neatly every oos needs a good aasffldiie to purtfy, vtta&xe, and enrtefe me Mood, aad Bood'sSarsaporflla is worthy jam mnMmcf It It peeatiar to that it gtra«U»eass&at»eildsBptb»>yst4«B,restse aa appetite, aad tones the digestta*, wMle ft ersdfestee disease. OlrjttatrtsL
Hood's SajmptrHlai* sold by aUdrnfglats. Trapared ty C» Hood Co, Lowell, Mas*
IOO Doses One Dollar
warn
.r
Dame Nature la a Good Book-keeper, Shedon't let us stay long in her debt^ before we settle for what we owe her. She given us a few years' grace at the most, but the reckoning surely comes. Have you neglected a cough or allowed your blood to grow impure without heeding the warnings? Be wise in time, and get the world famed Dr. Pierce's Qolden Medical Dtsoovery, which cures as well as promises. As a blood-renova-tor, a lung-healer, and a cure for scrofulous. taints, it towers above all others, as Olympus overtops a mole hill. To warrant a commodity is to be honorable and above deception, and a guarantee is a symbol of honest dealing. You get it wiih every bottle of the "Discovery." By druggist*.
Ho appetite, Indlgeatlon, Flatulence, Sick Headache, "all ran down,** lo* log fleab, you will find
the remedy you need. They tone op the weak, stomach and build up the flsn'ng energies. {Sufferers from mental or physical overwook will find teller from them. Kieely sugar coated.
SOLD EVERYWHERE
Used munvKsfully 15 years. Lir. Jos. Haas' Hog and Poultry Remedy arrests disease, prevents disease, lncrea#es the tlesh and hastens mal urlty. Price ftLMI, $1 V5, 50c per package. Ask for testimonials. Wend--cent stamp for "Hogology" to Jos. Haas, V. S„ Indianapolls, iud. 80I.K AGENT,
JACOB 13AUK, Druggist, S. E. cor. 7th and Wabash Ave, Terre Haute, Ind. .-"mis tilllc inadrtt wwk fur in, bv Ami* I"***, AiiUln, !*»«, iumI Ilonn, Tfilwlo, Ohio.
it
SwoMt. Ollwsiin"U«lnB«»w«ll. Why noi yim Soi«« f»ni «v»r •100.00 month. Yon miido tb« woili mid ll*» tt him«, wliiffw-f you •«, Kvon be-
rlit*
nnpm »rr p««lly ranilnr frntn ft to iIhv. All urn*. W how you how mid *urt you. Can work In «jwrp dm* nr all I lie llm*. )llg mottoy for worker*. Fhllurv unknown urnou* thorn. NI'W andw»tid«rAil. I'artli'itlm*ftw.
.!• •..link HO I'ortlund, SI nine
Throwing a Switch
tough work In itormy
we»ther,w»d
the twiteh-
m*a cannot bo too well protected if he *»*he» to preserve hl» health. Every railroad man's life Is full of hardship and exposure. The only garment Ihat will fully protect the man him oat in stormy weather I* the Tlsh Brand Slicker." They are light, but atrong as iron, ban* made throughout, ana good for year* ot eervtt». They are worth ten time* their coat, and will jays you many a skkneas. No other anide cf clothlaa will atand the wear and tear. Rubber la frail, wii rip, tear, and let in the wet. Therefore get the rig&t sort of coat. The Fish Brand Slicker
la
the only ono for your purpose. Beware ot worthless Imitations, every garment stamped with the Fish Brand Trade Mark. Don't acwpt «av inferior coat when you can have the Fish Brand Slicker delivered without extra cost. Particulars and illustrated catalogue free. A. J. TOWER, Boston, Maaa.
CARTERS
CURE
fa«v Headache and roller# all the troubles tndk dent to a bilious state of tha ayatsm, nuoh as ShodnsM, Kaasos, Drowidnos^ Distress after eating, Pain in the Slda. *0. While their mosl xttnarkable success has rwen shown in oozing
SICK
«et Garter's little Liver Mis Ml
equally valuable in Constipation, curing and pes-
jirorandregnlatathebowala. BvsalfUwyoaly
"HEAD
AdistbeywoldbeSlmoetprleetesBtothosewhe anffer from thisdistreaalng complaint butforta* sauir their goodneee does notand here,and thee* «booDo*tiTUieiQvtU find thowi littto piliiwlos abSta
aomany ways that thay will not be wll. |tng to do without them. Bat aftar all sick head
ACHE
frstbsbstMof somsayttvss that bare la wbsre womaknotir great boast. Our pllla cure It while
Uttta Liver Pllla are very email sad
very w«y to take. One or two ptUs mskes dose. They aroatrtetfy vegetable aaa do not gripe or purge, bat by tot* gmtlescttoo pleeseslfwho eeethsm. In Vials at 3B cents-, fir* for fl. BOM fcy druggists evscywhsn, ee sent by msIL
CAftTKR KtDtOfME CO., New YOflC.
SHALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE
SURE CURE FOR CATARRH
FOE OVER FIFTY YEAE8 this old Sovereign Remedy has stood the test, and stands to-dar the best known rem«Jy for Catarrh, Cold In the Head and Headache. Persist la it* use, and it will effect a cure, no matter of bow long standing the case may be.
For sale by dragfiats.
IjSrra ttsuours
hucw.
I# mit* «na 1 111 uiil 4.
WNsaawesifaMtle I u44ar*.
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