Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 20, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 November 1892 — Page 7
mmm
Tntt's Pills
will save tbo dyspeptic from ntmmy -day* of misery* and enable nlm to eat whatever be wlihet. Th«y prevent
Sick Headaelie^
nse the food to assimilate and not 1 tbo body* givo keen appetite* an
Develop Flesk
and solid mnscle. Elegantly sngaf •oated. Price* 3Sets, per box. SOLD EVEETWUEBE.
Wo will tend yon the marvelous Vwencbr Preparation CALTHOS free, and a legal guarantee that CALTU03 will Restore ronr Uealtli* StrencUi and Vigor.
Gte *7 and pay if satisfied. Addreea
JPELSENTHAL, A B.
Justice of the Pcace and Attorney
H. GARRETT,
JDiEHsTTIST.
Offloo—South west oorher Fifth and Malx Streets, ovor national atate Han* teutrauot on Fifth street.
J.NUUKNT. T. M. BARRETT.
]N^UGENT & CO.,
PLVMJ3IJHG and GAS FITTING A 4 denier iu
(&as
Fixtures, Otloboo and augine^'" Supplies. flOft Ohio Street. Terre II an to, In{t
TTOTEL RICHMOND
-LJ EUROPEAN.
E. A. FROST, Propr.
Formerly manager Sherwood House. Evansvllle, Ind., late Mnugr. Hole I Urace, Chicago,
Itoouu 7Bo, $1.00, $1.50 P«r Day. Steam Heat, Centrally Ijocatcd, two blocks from l\ o. and Auditorium, opp. the new IjOkUt HutUling. N. W. Cor State and VauBureu—CHICAGO
Established 1861. Incorporated 1888,
QLIFT A WILLIAMS CO., Successor* to Cllft, Williams A Co. J. H. Wn.UAjrs, President.
J. M. Curt, secV and Trea*.
KANUTAcrrmaaa or
Sash, Doors, Blinds, etc
AND DBALKBS IW
LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES
GLASS, PAINTS, OILS
AND BUILDERS' HARDWAKK. Mulberry street* norner Mb.
mm
1
ft
HOFFMAN'S HARMLESS HEADACHE POWDERS are r«to 11 »f ptrtiiuo (itsdf u*l ctperiiaiflUtti bjr ia cipert cb«m3«t, U«ie4 In tb« moti m* rens cum an submitted to Um bittern medical aatborJtj. «&• dorMKl and |maoQ parfitt* ly h&rmlnK. TboawMi aov *ttot to their rlrioM, aod bom nocd tuffor from Hftadichf they will om JJoObmb'* row* der». A TRIAL WILL CONVINCE
VON MOHL CO.,
8«l« Aaierleaa A|«U, Ciadaaatl, 8U*. Plaaae mcptlon thli paper.
J)R. G. W. LOOMIS, ZDZEICTTIST. 2040 north 9th st. Terre Haute, Ind. 1 Hquare from Electric Car Line.
JACOB D. EARLY, LAWYER Boom 1, Beach Block, Sixth and Main streets
O. JENKINS, M. D.
Office. 14 Mouth Seventh Street, telephone, 40, residence, 454 north Fifth street, telephone 178. Office hours: 8 iw in. 2 to4 p. m.: 7 to8p. m. At resldenco until until 8 a. m., 12 to 1 p. ru., lot) p.m.
A
RTIFICIAL TEETH. -LJL DK. F. G. BLED80E-DKNTIST. With 80 years practloe In dentistry, I can guarantee Host-class work. Special pains taken in mending old plates. Teeth extracted without pain. 827J4 Main street, near Ninth.
At Law,
26 south 8rd street. Terre Haute, Ind.
J)R. L. H. BARTHOLOMEW,
•DENTIST.
Removed to 071 Main st. Terre Haute, Ind
t) Custom Harness Maker. Track Work and Repairing a Specialty. *3
iuut,h(7th.
roar P. J. ICaufman'sJOrocery
JSAAO BALL, FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Oor. Third and Cherry St*., Terre Haute^ Ind Jjt prepared to execute all orders li» his lint with neatness anddlspatol 'Embalming a Specialty.
2q"ISBIT & MoMIN^,
UNDERTAKERS,
103 NokTii FOURTHSTREET, All calls will receive the most careful air tontlou. Open day and night.
jm R. W. VAN YALZAH, JL/ Successor to RICHARDSON A VAN VALZAH,
MAxN OF JiAoiliU^.
Barony Tells How Some
prised, for he thought
to New York to see
Big
Men
Pose for Their Pictures.
Garfield Looked Over His Sboolder—Jay Gould Is Perfectly Natural—Aator, Webb and Others Before the Camera.
OOP TRIG BT. 1HK2.1
Napoleon Sarony, a far cap on his Iron-gray hair Lillian Russell, radiant as a*star, selecting photographs at the coanter. A silvery laugh, the rich rustle of a dress, the rumble of an elevator, a faint odor of lingering perfume, and the famous photographer is alone. "How do rich men pose? Not so well as she who has just gone out. Ah,' me! ah me! To have all like her to photograph, a photographer's work would be a kaleidoscopic paradise It Is harder to pose a man than a woman —that is, it is harder for a man to do it. When I pose a man I always watch for his strong characteristics. See that picture over on the wall, that painting of a strong-faced bearded man, with a black felt hat? That was taken from
SECRETARY BAYARD REMINDS ONE OF AX ORATOR.
the best photograph James A. Garfield ever had taken. Garfield came in here one day to me, and 1 watched him and watched him until I thought I had caught his characteristic attitude. 1 took him so. Then he arose, big bodled, firm and strong, and started toward the door. As he neared it he turned half round, put his hat on just as he would if he had been leaving his office, and said: 'Good-by.' As he looked over his shoulder the-lines and all came up so strong that said: Wait stop where you arel I must take another picture and it must be the pose you have now/
Was
that
sur
tiQ
posing was
all ovor. But when the photograph was given him he saw it "Secretary of S^tate Bayard had almost a similar experience. You see, when a man jmes in to pose to me I engage hin varied conversation to get at his different moods and actions. vVell, t^je secretary came one day, and as Wj sat and chatted, his right hand ca»jie up several times toward his chest ttnd outward, and it struck me that was lust the gesture he would make addressing the senate, so long the scene of his jntellectual activity. And 1 caught him juwt that way. He was a little uncertain
being
the
1
his individuality In
bJOCk
JAY OOTJLD ASStTOSS A TIOIT.
•r*
648 WAB A§ HI, AVE.
THE WORK OF THE
Excelsior Steaui vc Work
Iu cleaning and coloring Ladles' and Gentlemen1* Wear, cannot be surpassed any city in the country, FYrty»flve vea«i' practical -weporSenw? i«i the "buslntjw! should bo sufRclont guarantee. 8atl«faction given iu all branch©# of the bnairxws.
H. F. REINERS, ^88 Main Street
couldn't catch
sam® wa?'
•Why,' he said, 'I could almost *,_ear Deldware senator's sonorous voi^C again, and as I looked at the photo-
-A£TURAL
POSi-
ghraph I seemed to sit once'.more in the diplomatic gallery"of the senate.' "Rich men are men of character, and each one has some strong individual points that stand out clearly. One will come and stand chatting with his hands always behind him. Another will gesticulate vigorously. Another will carry his hands in his vest. Another will carry his head very high. That reminds me of Robert I. Stuart, the rich sugar roan, who came to be posed one day. Ho kept raising his head too high. '^1 'You must twa veryWnccessful man,* 1 said. 'I am, sir,* he replied, curtly. Then 1 said: 'What do you keep your head so high for? When you do that you raise the physical part of your head at the expense of the intellectual.' :-r* "When, following the hint, he dropped his chin and thus wa» taken, he admitted it was the best likeness he ever had. "Probably Jay Gould is one of the easiest men to pose. He Is perfectly natural. He tikes a bust of three-quar-ter view. I cannot conceive of conditions being such its to lift Mr. Gould out of his naturalness. So when be comes here he walks* as it wera right into the month of the camera, tarries a moment, loaves his impress there and goes out again. Then you have Jay Gould and you can depend upon it. "•Quite such a man was William As* tor, very unaffected, very simple, •warjl easy* Ko doubt this caxnc fmci his ex*
penence with the best society the world over. Such a man is not easily perturbed. Having been long the cynosure of the public's eyes, being stared at by the cold, mechanical eye of the camera does not disturb him. It is nice to take a man like William Astor. He was different from .lay GoUid in one respect. Jay Gould takes a good picture because he seems to be and probably is largely unconscious of the necessity of preparing specially for the photograph. William Astor, on the contrary, entered into the same relation for a moment with his photographeras he would with some distinguished company at which he was to be the chief guest. There he would aim to be thoroughly natural, but at the same time all the accessories of gesture, of repose, of toilet would be carefully attended to. "John Jacob Astor is probably too young yet to have acquired the calmness that the older society men display before the camera, and that is doubtless the reason why he is somewhat difficult to suit. It isn't every photogw rapher that would find it easy to pose this young man, for when the pose doesn't suit him be doesn't hesitate to say so in very emphatic terms. At the same time, however, his nervousness leads him to resent suggestions, which seem to him as reflections on his personal appearance. He is not much given to photograph-taking and is content with one or two poses a .year. "Now, take Ward McAllister." went on Mr. Sarony. "'"There is a type different from the easily taken ones- I have mentioned Peculiar, original enough." "Why?" "Well, the difference is in expression, in the expression entirely Now, if *he could divest himself of the photographic feeling it wouldn't be so hard to get a good picture of the society leader, but in that respect he. is almost like a novice at the camera. He takes a three-quarter head and will not depart from that style. To get him to be natural it is necessary to Interest him in something that will keep his mind entirely off the fact that he is at a photographer's. If a beautiful woman dressed in the latest style should float by within the scope of his vision he would be so interested in her as a possible member of the society he is so particular to note that he would be for the moment absorbed., Then catch him. "Harry Le Grand Cannon is one of the most particular of the Gotham
WARD m'aixister HTCIJOTS
thing un
til later on. Danish minister saw it in Washington
an.d
cam0
f]1
tho
wa£
ot^ers an(3
rERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.
to
A PBOTO-
*1 GRAPHIC POSITION.
swells about his photographs. He is as much exercised over it as some men are over the selection of a bride. He will try half a dozen poses before he is satisfied with one, then probably he *will tait»
leave the very
one he thought*- t7P^ climax of accuracy. He likes to try thS effect on a photograph of & change of attire. He 'has- a very expressive and mobile (countenance, a face whose GBtire look may be radically changed by a different style of collar, or by the peculiar «et of a necktie, or even the presence of a gem or stone in the neckwear may hrvyo rp effect qp the ensemble that wouiu his critical eye at once. Taking his photograph is not a matter of a* few minutes. He makes up his mind to take the best part of a day when he starts out to give a sitting. "There- is no delicacy of pose or attitude in JSTbridge T. Gerry's camera make-up. The bluff old commodore goes at it Jtt* as he
would
tion on deck fc
take a posi
1 aee how
lie prefers a vSusl
kf'dhS'
a
hl,
til
This no doubt im ^mc. tod pair of shoulders preciation of theft *7 a that his firm, decide ,t51
fn
•f» 5* few minutes to It is a matter of bat negative—just get Mr. Gerry's face o* -Well long enough for him a^n't it?' a guess this looks all1 righy
sl
few preliminary hitches
!g
twitch in the corner of It .{
rapidly-vanishing twinkle hi old eye and a salt-air repose. "Oh! I had almost forgotten^ dore Vanderbilt," went on Sorb.
merrv
Tommony, as hed
he took off his fez cap and scrst his scarce locks as if to waken lection. "1 remember how he used V' enjoy having a photograph taken. Mobody ever knew how much he would unbend when he was preparing to be taken. He seemed to esteem it aa much of a piece of fun as would a boy. Then he was so full of individuality In every move and action that it was a delight to take his strong, well-lined face. He had no favorite pose, but always left that to me.. I remember one day the fifth or sixth time that he called on me when I wasn't just satisfied with the pose had secured, So I said to him: "Give me your idea of it, commodore.' "He laid his hand on my%shoulder and said: 'Yon are doing this. f*m not. If it isn't right I'd rather have some one else to blame than myself.'*
1
David Wechsutb.
Idea.
"Oh. mamma, Jack Longacre proposed to me last night and I accepted him." "Are yon sure yon love him, dear?" "Why, mamma, how old-fogey yon are! What in the world has that,got to do with it?"—Life.
WHAT IS TEE MATTER?
TIME A HALT WAS CALLED WEtGO FARTHER.
BEFORE
It is Certainly Moat Dangerau Ground We Are Treading—It
Is
Time We Iioolced
the Matter in the Fact)—And Decided cut What We Had Better Do—Do Not Delay, For Delay May Be Fatal
What is the matter? Why do so many people, like Senator Plumb, Senator Zach Chandler, Congressman Ray and Secretary Windom drop suddenly dead.
Only wjiat is the matter with thousands upon thousands of others, brain and norve exhaustion from overwork, fret and worry and the cares and anxieties of the pushing and hustling age in which we live, and which finally end in the dread paresis, insanity, heart failure, nervous prostration and sudden death.
Men without number are straining their brains and nervous systems in the mad race after fortune and fame, and exhausting their nervous and physical energies, until sleepless nights, failing power, complete nervous exhaustion, paralysis, insanity or death must be the inevitable end unless help from some source is received.
Thousands of women are overworked exhausted, worn out in the nerve force and power until they feel tired all the time. Clerks, students, mechanics and laborers, from close confinement, long hours, strain upon the nerve, dissipation or other causes, are losing their vitality, and becoming nervous and physical wrecks.
You, reader, are rushing on blindly to sure destruction. You are warqed every day and every hour of your impending doom. How? By those-strange sensations, that dull, dizzy and bad feeling head, that restlessness, irritability and nervousness by those more or less sleepless nights, from which you wake tired and unrefreshed by the weak, trembling, oold limbs, by tbe languor and sense of nervous and physical exhaustion whioh grow upon you more and more. These are danger signals, and not io heed them is the folly of a fool.
ANDREW H. OLNEY, ESQ.
Wb&t is to be done? The answer is plain enough. You are losing your nerve force and poWdf, and running down in strngth, energy and vitality. Whatever will restore this lost strength and vigor to the brain and nerves, will put you again in sound health and strength. This is preoisely what Dr. Greene's Nervura, the great blood, brain and nerve invigoranfc, will do. As a restorer of nerve force, a builder up of nerve power, vigor and energy, this wonderful remedy has no equal in the world. You can have no idea until you try it of its marvelous toning, strengthening and invigorating effects, its beneficial and healthful action as a brain and nerve restorative. It is purely vegetable and perfectly harmless, and can be purchased of any druggist for $.l
Read what it did for Andrew H. Olney, Esq., of Gibson, N. Y. "I was broken down with nervous and physical prostration," he says, "before using Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy and life was a burden. Now life ia a joy, and sleep is a luxury compared to it before taking Nervura. I relish my rood, and my nervousness has left me so has the numbness. I wish I could shout loud enough so all the world could hear, and tell them the good this wonderful medicine has done for me. It has made me from a weak, trembling, nervous, irritable man, to one who feels he Is on the highway to long years of health and happiness through Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy and the blessing 01 God."^
Can yon do better than louse It? Especially as it is not a patent medicine, but the prescription and discovery of the eminent physician, Dr. Greene of 35 West 14th street, New York., the most successful specialist in the cure of nerv-
*3 and chronic diseases in thisoonntry °V Tan be consulted free, personally or He, by lev
'ter.
•Id Lives ase Dr. Miles' Pilla.
Gracn
Kissing Time.
Margery sat in the lane alone, A "shepherd's clock" she blew afeis And "one," she cried, and "two" she cried
As down the petals ftew. "What's o'clock, sweet Margery?" Said Willie at the gate, "Half past kissing time,
So you are just too late." -C&SK ir.
"Half past kissing time?" P'-/ Said Willie, sore, downcast, -4 "I don't believe your clock is right,
It goes a deal too fast."
fc.
And taking her sweet hand in his. And picking up the flow'r, He showed her how to put it back
Exactly half an hoar.
.n't* W•!",*« But that is fifty years ago They both are old folks now
At
They love to saunter down the lane, WTiere first they made their vow. Those quaint old words, they linger still, kv But with a sweeter sound
Tis never "half past kissing time" -While love's true wheels go round, v,
Didn't Break the Bole.
Tom had been kept in at school for talking out loud. "Why did you do it, Tom?" asked his mamma. "Didn't you know that it was against the rules?" "No," said Tom. "Teacher only said I musn't whisper, and I didn't." Exchange.
Only a few women can choose a perfect shade in red, and those are, as a rule, not the women who wear it.
She Is Man's Kqnaf.
Matthew Henry says, in his quaint way, "The woman was made of a rib out of the side of Adam—not made out of his head to rule over him, or out of his feet to be trampled upon by him—but out of his side to be equal with him under his arm to be protected, and near his heart to be beloved."
To-Day
iJckmI'b Sarsaparilla stands at the head In the medicine world, admired in prosperity and envied in merit by thousands of would-be competitors. It has alarscer sale than any other medicine. Such succesB could not be won without positive merit.
Hood's Pills cure constipation by restoring peristaltic action of canal.
the Derl8taltic action of the alimentary They are the best family cathartic.
Miles' Nerve and Liver Pills. on anew principle—regulating the liver ach and bowels through tht nerves. A liscovery. Dr. Miles' Pills speedily cure
Act
stomach new discovery. __ biliousness, bad taste, torpid liver, piles, con stlpation. Unequaled for men, women and children. Smallest, mildest, surest! 00 doses, 25 cts. Samples Free at all druggists.
'"J.
Catarrh Cure.
A clergyman, after years of suffering from that loathsome disease Catarrh, and vainly trying every known remedy, at last found a prescription which completely cured and saved him from death. Any sufferer from this dreadful disease sending a self-addressed stamped envelope toProf. A. Lawrence, 88 barren street, New York, will receive the recipe free of charge."
THE king
all te-viv
COUGH CURES
ACURSI
DOCTOR
REMEDY
ENCLISH
Sold in England
1 for Is. lXd., and
in America.
for 85 cents a bottle.
IT TASTES GOOD. Dr. Acker's English PillsCure Sickness and Headache. iS a a a at a a or it INK!
1
(i
For Totj, _____ ::-r dy for the Grippe Congh.
A Be»» ecom mended for patients A remedy 1 he grippe is Kemp's Balaffiicted with specially adapted to dis sam, which Is -,\t and lungs. Do not esses of the thn symptoms of the diswait for the first and keep it op hand ease, but get a botti ,t is, ne^ed. If for nse the moinei has a tendency to neglected the grippe All drnegist* sell bring on neunionia. the Balsam. _**itve.
Xoasiala
«j] rbenmatlc
la unequalled aa a core for'" or any other pelaa, weakoessin the side, bat. rnta, wruisea, place, and in unexcelled for
!«lngenam
corns, etc. tt Is the nncomprom. tvwmjaof pain In whatever form, or vba fall in fe#tel. and bait never been hnown.
n?n, MI^
context *ith this dreadful foeof ha. ful and plnesak. If you would live
a
W. H. BOOKKlt & CO.. KEW YORK-
wa
an
HORSE BLANKETS
are the strongest and best
Chase's
Plush Lap Robes
are the standard. The plush will not shed. All robes have the name Chase either woven in the binding or sewed on the corner
FIRST-CLASS DEALERS WILL SELL NO OTHERS.
LG. CHASE & CO., Boston, Mass.
HUMPHREYS'
VETERINARY SPECIFICS
For Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hcgs,
AND POULTRY.
800Page Book rn Treatment of Animals and Chart Sent Free. cross Fevers,Conaestions,In£anttnatlon A.A.I Spinal Meningitis, Milk Fever. B.B.»-Stralns, Lameness, Rheumatism* C.C.—Distemper, Nasal Discharges. D.D.—Bote or Grubs, Worms.
E.E.™Couglist
w''
JPor Torpid Liver ase Dr. Miles' Pills.
Heaves, Pneumonia.
F.F.—Colfc or Gripes, Bellyache. G.G.—Miscarriage, Hemorrhages. J3.H.~Urinary ana Kidney Diseases. I.I.—Eruptive Diseases, Manse. J.K.—Diseases of Digestion, Paralysis* Single Bottle (over 60 doses), .60 Stable Case, with Speotflcs, Manual,
Veterinary Cure Oil and UedlobUNr, 87.00 Jar Veterinary Cure Oil, 1.00 8old by Druggists or Sent Prepaid anywhere and in any quantity on Reoeipt of Price.
HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE 00., Corner William and John St*., New York.
WEAK MEN
DLE AGED
••«aaa(t.eee«eae**aae»eaaa
QATARR
TO USE
IN YOUR HOME
UMUJT tm* alanf Al.VAH 3SFO.
POWDER
THREE
peso, -nd you
painlera life, try this great ntmedy wUI never regret it.
Will 0, ROOD'S MA0I0 SCALE tho best mosyorfoct simplest Ladles'Tailoring
LADIES!
Sys
tem In use.
Our 110,000 Sold
Cutsallgarmentsworn by Ladies and Children (including unaorgarments and sl coves) to fit the form por* feotly) no or ratittlng. XSnally learned.
Cuts al 1 Rarmen ts worn ding unaorgarments nnd feotly no trying on or
Snad na tlitn ndvertlnrin«iit and will *«ndjron lk MAGIC 8CALB 1I00K, and IT not tatUfltd yon can.
Mandtryingonandre
DAYS
rclarn It within tOdayi wo will nltaid onrjr «»nt of ronr money. AGKKT8 WANTKD. RrfrrracM *•»". Clrtoltr* fr*«. ROOD MAOIO 80ALE OO., OHIOAOO, ILL'S.
INSTRUCTION !I0
PACKAGE
PROKHARRIS'
PASTILLES
FOR THE CURE PF
WEAK MEN
tadrj «cv«r* nsntal ttralnor grUfj BKXVAb nladlo llfo,or vltloui hablu ooatraetod In youth. AKR VICTIMS TO KKHV0U8 DKDILITT or
(VITALLY WEAK). Ma4o to by to slot* appilc*tlon ia Bualneti or ttndy aev«i BXCRSBKlj la nlad'
KXnAC8TI0N,~WA8TlKfl WBAKN1C88, IK-
VOLUNTiRI LOSSES
wl(h
BABLT DECAY InTODXO
and
MID
look of rim. *l»or, and •irength.wlthioiual organs
Impaired and w«ak«ncd pramaturoly In ap^roaeblnn old
an.
tl/ueil UfC 61V PIIDK w«sruk from knowledito WHEN Ift Ml vlllSCof rftRBANKNT BESVLTS in many thooiand euutraatad and oorsd In pait twalva ytara
Ai arldanea of onr faith In Prof. HarrUf 1T7BIK MEDICATED PASTILLER
TBI a I "«'rut AUSOLUTELT FREE, 1 1 me or or in on a a pmaltot trouble abould i«nd their addreii to wanau furoltb queitlona to bo answered, tbat we may know tbo true condition ofeaeh eoao and preparo nedlelDo to olfeot a prompt cure.
Located In New York (after 1J year* at St. Loola), we offet all a ohaneo to bo eured by tbe oelebrated laitllla Treatment, THE HARRI8 REMEDY OO., MfK. Chemlata. nKSmfA STREET. jnEW TOKK. rRT*B'n'lft76.INC0RFP iag0. CAPITAL »a5.000.
7«/»F OProm 15
harmless horlmipi
'47k* per month_ liy,
remedies
thst
jtire
do
not in-».
the ho^th^"lntorfofo"with ono"« btislncss
or
or
plossuro. It builds up end improves tho general health,clears theHkin and beautifies tho complexion. No wrinkles
llabblnoss follow this troatmcnt.
Endorsed by physicians and leading Bocicty ladies. PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL CONFIDENTIAL. lUrmlme. So Starttnf. Band 9 c«nt» In «U«np» for partlcqlan to OS. 0.*. F. SRTDEB. M'VICKER'8 TSEATEB, CRICA60. ILL
CBIche«t^p,n Enffllnh Plomm4 Brontf.
Oriclnnl and •arc, alwayn reliable, laoies, a«k 0riuxl«t for Chieh*tter gnglith Ma-i moiufBrand In Ke4 and Oold ro»ulllo\ bnxea, waled wlUi bins ribbon. Tube no other. Rtfmt rlangtrmu mib*Utu~ Itom and imllotlmu. At or tent 4c. in ttsimjHi for jmrttenlara, IwrtlfBonlali aod "Belief tor Knillea," «t Utttr, by return Mall. 10.OOO TcrtlmoolaU. ham* Paptr. Chlcbeoter Chectleal Oo^Madlfon H«joare*
Sold by all Local DrugcleU. Fhllada., l's.
THE POSITIVE CURE.
ISLY BHOTHER9, to Vaaw 9L, Key York. Price 50 cte.
AJ.A* O
MACHINE
THIS
FREE
_jl w-eeato*. we *HlC WITMOirr CO«mVC TOU A CKXT. pliwre one of •ar mm*!*#* la r««r home eonditlnwally.
.*»1J??}
a with nkliwliK lrcctioi«. end weflillwaJyoflfell O I W on am Si, CHU*tsh W| I I ly W"/V »V 1 WV
ozzor^i
COMPLEXION
TINTS
Stores.
