Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 27, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 December 1892 — Page 7

Tuft's Pills

Regulate The Bowels.

Ccstireness denogea the tvholo system ciGd bejjet* diseases, saclt as

Sick Headaciie9

Dyspepsia, Fevers, Kidney Diseases, Bilious Colic, Malaria, etc. Tnft'a Pill* nrrodueoreg-nlorbabitof body and good digeiicion, without Kbicb, no one can enjoy good facoiui.

Sold Everywhere*

OK AM. KINDS.

WILL PAY THE HIGHEST CASH PRICE FOR DEAD HOGS At my factory on the Island, southwest of tin city, ofllce No. 13 south Second street,

TEUHK HAUTE, IND.

J)R. G. W. LOOMIS, ZD^EInTTISO?- I 2(H0 north Oth at. Terre Haute, Ind. 1 square from Electric Car Lino.

JACOB D. EAIILY,

LAWYER

Room 1, Reach Hlock, Blxth and Main streets

yy O. JENKINS, M. 1). Oflloe, II Houth Hevunth Hi root, telephone, 40, realileneo, -15-1 north Fifth street, telephone 178. mice liourtt: 0 ii. in. 'J to I p. m. 7 to p. in. At rwldorictt until until S h. in., 12 to 1 p. in., lotip. in.

A RTIFICIAL TEETH. XX. UK. v. (i. 111. KI ISO

JpELSE NTH A L, A. B. Justice of the Pence uiul Attorney alLaw, 20 south 3rd street. Terro Haute, ind.

22) li. L. H. BARTHOLOMEW,

DENTIST.

Komoved to (171 Main st. Terre Tlaute, Inrt

H. GARRETT,

t) Custom Harness Maker. Track Work and Hepalrtng a Specialty, aa south 7th. roar 1*. J. Kaufman's Grocery

JSAAO BALL, FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Cor. Third and Cherry Sts,, Terro Haute, Jno Id prepared to execute all order* in his on with neatness anddlspatcl

Kintalinlug a Specialty,

J^ISBIT & MoMINN,

UNDERTAKERS,

KW NORTH FOURTH STREET, All calls will rccclvo the most careful attention. Open day and night.

T^B. B. W. VAN VALZAH, JL Successor to RICHARDSON A VAN VALZAH,

DE33STTXST.

Office—Southwest corner Fifth and Mui Streets, over National tttate (.entrant* on Fifth street.

J. NUOKNT.

T.

wsmm 'V*

HOFFMAN'S HARMLESS HEADACHE POWDERS are ti rnouUorpcrtliSAattiady *ad -«periuH-qii»* by aa upal ihrart.i. tt»id lo tb« mutt

KM'i «ubmiti»4 tba

hijtir. mgdicftt *u Iboritjr. mrlwiMl m4 pr»oosn«il p«rfeotly btrrali-*.. TboaMOfti ttaw tunt vi (Mr Tlrtu««. and eotta tir.-d from Headaohes ,r they will o*» Uofl«ja3 rtrader*. A TRIAL WILL C0MWIH&

We will send yon the marrelotig French Preparation

{'A IJTIJOSaWill Restore

K— I) KN TI ST.

With 80 years practice in dentistry, 1 can gun ran Ice IliHt-cl»ss work, ^pechil ualtu taken In meiidlngold plates, leeth extract' «d without tmln. 827)4 Alain atroot, nanr Ninth.

M. BARRETT.

^q-UGENT fe CO.,

PLUMBING and GA8 FITTING A 1 dealer In Qas Fixtures, Olobes anJ Kosrineer'i

Supplies.

ses Ohio Street. Terrs Haute, lad

XTOTEL RICHMOND JLL

EUROPEAN.

E. A. FROST, Propr. Formerly manwrer Sherwood Housc-tJiN-an** vtlle, Ind., late Mangr. Hotel Grace, Chft^go.

Rooms 7«c, $100. fl.30 Per Day. Steam Heat, Centrally Ixcated, two bltfck/* from P. a and Auditorium, opp. theybejr loiter Building. N. W. Cor State and VauBnr*n-~CHICAG©

WABASH, AVE.

Katsbllshed 1811. lncorpormt«d ISA

QLIFT & WILLIAMS COn

Snceewora to aiO, Wimaws Oow President. M. Outrr, See*y and Trees

J. H. WiM-lA**^Pr«dde«t.

KAyxnrjtorciucM or

Sash, Doors, Blinds, etc

A!tO OKA VMM IX

LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES

GLASS, PAINTS, 0£L8

AND BUILDERS* HARDWARE. Mulberry street. «on»er ftf*.

*1". ,t

FUii, i'JtiJB UN VVOitilii?.

1

Howard Pleldlngr Dleclosos Some of Eds Christmas Flana

Some Cnlcjnc a* Appropriate Presents for I'eaplo Whom We All Know— A Most Excellent Exercise'

In Generosity.

{COPYRIGHT, 1802.1

In this charitable season, when the nch, who need nothing, get so many presents, while the poor, who need everything, get an advance of two dollars on their rent, I often take an hoar to think of the great gifts I would .make if I had wealth. I generally wrap a piece of cloth around the clapper of otlr hell so that people with bilLs can amuse themselves without annojiug others, and then I sit with half-shut eyes and make everybody happy—in my mind. Afterward I go out anil buy a present for

Maude—something

CALTHOS

freo. and legal guarantee that

your

Ural Lb, Ktrcnfth and Vigor. Use it and pay if satisfied. AMrw. VON MOHL CO.. S«l« Awrleaa Agnate, Clachaall, Ofcto.

Plgtw mention thin p»r*r.

HARRISON SMITH

Manufacturer and dealer In

(M

TOSSING TIIE EDUCATKD QUARTER.

two inches in height and so thifi that he must depend for his comfort entirely upon the upholsterer.

I am liberal, you see, in real life but when I fall to dreaming there is really no limit to my generosity. I give to all the people who do not deserve it,: and this requires a great wad of money. I bestow gold pieces upon our janitor, and the surprise kills him, and He dies very, very hard. This is one of my pleasantest fancies. The last time I gave him anything in reality it was a half dollar, and I remember chasing him down three flights of stairs in order to borrow thirty cents of it back to pay the iceman. But in the Christmas season of my dreams there i3 no currency except red gold, and the bejrgar on Park row by night no longer blesses me for a plugged Canadian dime.

I go to my tailor and forgive him and settle his little bill. And when he recovers consciousness I order three hundred dollars' worth of pantaloons, paying cash in advance. They are all made from one "measure," and as soon as they are done I summon ^thirty poor men, as miscellaneous in their deformity as a company of stage soldiers. Then each man selects the pair of pantaloons which comes nearest tp fitting him, aijd some of them go away quite happy.

That is the object of such an institution as Christmas—to make people happy—and somehow the undeserving liave a capacity for enjoyment which is rarely found among the good. Take my friend Jimraie, for instance. I know what .limmic would like for a Christmas present, and he shall have it —when my dream comes true. What Jimmie wants is a perpetual two-dollar loan. A lump of money would afford him no permanent satisfaction he would probably lend it to some other poor sinner, and never get it back. He couldn't understand wealth, but he knows what it is to want two "cases," and to get them and spend them, and then want them twico as hard the next day. will have a machine built for Jimmie, and at any hour of the day or night he shall be able to drop a tale of woe into the slot and get two sinkers. I have comparatively little knowledge of machines, but I think that a machine can be built strong enough to take in one of Jimmie's stories without getting seriously out of order. Perhaps it can also receive his promise to p!iy without fail on the following Saturday and never start a rivet but I shall not ask the mechanic who makes it to guaranteethe machine in case Jimmie should bring back the money. He always 'means to do it, bless him, and it does

PLKASK RJX« THK BELL.

his heart good to feel the honest, manly det*rminatioc to prove his gratitude by prompt payment. But the first time he does it the sua and moon will fall out .of the sky. If the machine worked without the story and the promise it woxtld be of no we to him so they shall "be essential, because wish to make him happy, as he hasn't bpen heretofore, itn afraid for, after all, you know, it isn't real good fun to be a borrower when- people are stingy with their money.

(tliem

-"'i*

useful, Something

we can both use, as an umbrella, or an easy chair suited to a person six feet

There is a man who always makes me pay his fare when we ride together em the elevated road. I am going to give him a bushel of tickets. Of course thing out of you. I do not eocpeet him to deposit any of*

Ay'"'

":TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING A IT*

in the box, but I think it will give iiim pleasure to have his pockets full of them when I step up to the window to bay for him and for myself. He gets a great deal of fun! as it is, by following me up the stairs crying: "Let me get 'em I've got a dime right handy!" He cou|dn't be forced up ahead of me by an hydraulic press. He likes to see me change a bill at the window and receive the handful of strange bogus which the ticket seller always gives, especially if he has previously had the pleasure of rejecting my last dime on the ground that it has been bitten by a mosquito. Then I hold out my hand and take Mulberry bend nickles and flattened bullets and Chinese farthings at a pint and a half to the cent, and fan tan chips and wampum till my pockets bulge out with the worthless stuff. All this the fellow who iiever pays his fare enjoys to a certain extent, but I want him to get even more fun out of it. so I shall give him the tickets. I would like also to do something for the ticket sellers, and I am thinking of giving each of them a quart of brass suspender buttons, which can be readily passed as five-dollar gold pieces by men who have had much practice as they, have.

I shall remember the man who drops in to tell me stories while I am at work. There will be a new chair in my office for him, at Christmas day. it will be stuffed with eider down and upholstered with sticky fly-paper, so that he cannot be led away by generous impulse. I am a very hard worker it is not so hard, I think, for anybody else in this world to work. When I am engaged in finishing something which really must be done two or three days before—but, of course,*! can't, and the Old Boy will be to pay about it—then my legs coil sinuously around those of the chair my tongue hangs out, and buttons fall off my vest. I used to think that nothing could stop me at such times—not even the principles of Engiish grammar. But I had never known McGarrahan and his stories in •those days. He is due here now in five minutes, and at least I must finish what

I have to say about him before he arrives, otherwise I might be led to speak of him unkindly. He doesn't like my office chairs, poor fellow. He shall certainly have a new one at Christmas.

I shall buy 813 umbrellas for my typewriter girL Probably it will not rain on more days than that during the coming year. So she will have an umbrella to take out to lunch whenever she leaves hers at home, with the wind east, the sky overcast and the weather bulletins explicit for a clear day. I shall not tell her that the umbrellas are hers

A HANDFUL OF MULBERRY BEND NTCKEI.8.

she will enjoy them more deeply if she thinks they are mine. I will have one ready every day, and I will request her to bring it back within fifteen minutes. She will, of course, leave it in the restaurant, or lend it to the young man who xvaits for her in the shelter of our doorway on rainy days. She shall not know how many more umbrellas I have, for that would put a damper on her innocent, mirth. No, she shall have just as much fun as in the past, when I had only my wife's umbrella (and forgiving spirit) to depend upon.

There Is a man who lunches with me almost every day, upon whom I would like to bestow some token of my regard-. His front name Is Billy and, judging byj the way he eats, I should say his last! name ought to be Goat, but he travels under an alias. On alternate days I pay for the lunch. That seems no more than fair. On' the other days he matches quarters with me to see who shall pay, and he "sticks" me with a regularity which I hesitate to ascribe to ckaace. I hardly know what to give this friend. It wotdd seem as if so thia&fiy a man could require nothing. If there is anything ho wants, why doesn't he go and match quarters for it? I might give him an invitation to lunch with somebody else, but that would not express my real feelings toward him. "He is an entertaining fellow, and he abstains from paying Ior things on principle and not from meanness. Why should anybody pay for anything when there are '"soft marks'* like me born every minute? I will give him a bottle of old Dr. Manhattan's perpetual appetizer. I will give Kim a quarter with two heads on it and dated odd on one side and even on the other. He fills hi& place in .the economy of nature. Yes, it is certainly In the economy department that his place is found. 1 would remember all such fellows as Billy. They are the men who can be made happy by a present. They can appreciate the advantages of acquiring property in that way. Nature furnished them with this appreciation, and if we others have anything left after tbcy get through, we should give them a part of it. Why should we give to the genctxms man—to -he giver? Do we send our watches to the blacksmith? Certainly not* we send them to the pawnbroker. He knows what to do with them: he has probably had them before. Let us, in like manner, bestow oar Christmas gifts upon th« person who knows how4 to take, who it an expert at it, who takes everything in sight. This will be a good exerciae in gen&tidty, and after you hafts done \t once 5r twice, the real!? deserving may fttard a chance of getting some-

HOWARD Fxsuur«.

ffigfH

An excellent remedy, "Two of my children have been much troubled with neuralgia all winter. They used Salvalion Oil and a few applications produced a complete cure. I consider it an excellent remedy. John H. Jones, Deputy Inspector, Tobacco Warehouse, No. 4, altiraore, Md."

NEW HYBRID VEGETABLE.

The Pea-tato," an Alabama Man's New ami Carious Garden Product. 'Til tell you of a queer experiment a neighbor of mine made with a pea and a potato," said a resident of Sunny South, Ala., recently. "Simpson isn't a farmer, nor a horticulturist, nor yet a 'grafter.' He works in a small foundry in our town and is a coremaker by trade. That fellow is always scheming around witfi one thing and another, trying to invent something. I was looking over his garden fence one day last spring, while Simpson was planting potatoes, and he came up to where 1 was standing, holding a potato in his hand. 'See this potato?* he said. 3 "I said: 'Yes.' 'Well,' said he, 'I'm going to get a pea and force it into the heart of this potato.' Then we will watch and see how it comes up.' "He took a pea out.of his pocket, pushed a hole into the potato xtfith his lead pencil and then pushed the pea into the center.^ Then he took the potato to the center of the garden and planted it. For months I visited that garden daily and watched the growth of that 'pea-tato.' It came up a most remarkable plant. I can hardly describe it to you. It was a commingling of the two, with the potato dominating the pea. The potato plant looked like a feweet potato vine and ran' along the ground, throwing out shoots that took root. The flower of the plant was not the'ordinary cream yellow one of the potato. It was a mixture of the same shape as the daisy, with white, yellow and pink petals of a very pale hue. The fruit of the plant -was muoh liketho ordinary potato, only it was much smaller, with a skin of a cream color. It did not taste much different from the ordinary potato, although there was just a smack of pea soup about it. The plant flourished well enough and did not require much care. Simpson says that next year he will plant several rows in th^t manner, as he seems to jprefer the new kind to the old. I rather think that the new plant is a good one. although some other vegetable might do better."—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.

Overheard In the Coop.

First Turkey—I kick. Second Turkey-1 wouldn't. I'd rather be served in the regular Thanksgiving way than be regarded as a football game.—Leslie's Weekly.

The laws of he8lth are taught in our schools but not in away to be of much practical benefit and are never illustrated by living examples, which in many cases could easily be done. If some scholar who had just contracted a cold was brought before the school, so that all could hear the dry loud cough, and know its significance see the thin white coating on the tongue and later, as the cold aevelopes, see the profuse watery expectoration and thin watery discbarge from the nose, not one of them would ever forget tvhat the first symptoms of a cold were. The scholar should then be given Chamberlain's Cough Remedy freely, that all might see that even a severe cold could be cured in one or two days, or at least greatly mitigated when properly treat ed as soon as the first symptoms appear. For sale by all druggists. Dec.

Catarrh In New England.

Ely's Cream Balm gives satisfaction to every one using it for catarrhal toubles, —G. K. Mellor, Druggist, Worcester, Mfl88«

I believe Ely's Cream Balm is the best article for oatarrh ever offered the public.—Bush A Co., Druggists, Woroester, Mass.

Ao article of real merit.—C. P. Alden, Druggist, Springfield, Mass. Those who use it speak highly of it.— Geo. A. Hill, Druggist, Springfield, Mass.

Cream Balm has given satisfactory results. W. P. Draper, Druggist, Spring, field, Mass. 27-2.

Green Mountain Salve.

Is unequalled as a cure for all rheumatic pains, weakness in the side, back or any other place, and 1b unexoelled for cuts, bruises, corns, etc.- It is the uncompromising enemy of pain in whatever form, or wherever manifested, and has never been known to fall in a contest with this dreadful foe of human happiness. If you would live a peaceful and painlero life, try this great remedy and you will never regret it.

Are yon nervons tJn Dr. Wto*' Mentafc

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. J. A. Lawrence, 88 Warren street, New York, will receive the recipe free of charge.

A Remedy for the Grippe Cough. A remedy recommended for patients afflicted with the grippe is Kemp's Balsam, which, is especially adapted to diseases of the throat and longs. Do not wait for the first symptoms of the disease, bat or neglected the grippe has a tendency bring on pneumonia. Alhdrnggista sell the Balsam.

A Tnillait Prln^AUL

fmm

This is a little Indian princess. She is the daughter of Lone Wolf, a Comanche chief, and is very bright and pretty. Only for her beads and buckskin she wouldn't look so very much unjike any other child.

To-Day

Hood's Sarsaparllla stands at the head in the medicine world, admired In prosperity and envied Sn merit by thousands of would-be competitors. It has a larger sale than any other medicine. Such svlccess could not be won with positive merit.

Baby Ruth Clovelaud lives in a nest of whose snowy whiteness she is the central snowdrop. Everything in the nursery of this fortunate young mortal is white the inlaid floor of white pine covered with soft white rugs, the hangings of the windows, and of the dainty white crib, the ivory tinted walls, and even the picture frames all preserve this spotless tint.—Exchange.

-How Little Lillian Knew.

Tommy was sitting on the porch in the shadow of a post one evening. Some one asked who was sitting there, when little Lillian said: "It is Tommy. I know him by his speak."—Exchange. many persons, tvho have other treament, have been cured of rheumatism by Chamberlain's Pain Balm. Do not give up until you hdve tried it. It is only 50 cents per bottle. For sale by all drug-

i»A great found no relief from

swill atop a Cough in one night, check a. Cold in a day, and CUBE IConsumption if taken in time.? :XF THE IlTTZiE ONES HAVE*

Hood's Pills cure constipation by restoring g^^^nop^ra^ nowlnd ing oa stomach or disagrooablo symptoms. I am canal. They are the best family cathartic. dcTail m?r

Everything Is White.

Deo.

Coughing Leads to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once.

JPor Torpid Liver aoe Dr. Miles' Pills

DOCTOR

ACKERS

ENGLISH

REMEDY

WHOOPING COUGH OR CROUP Use it Promptly.: A 25 cent* bottle may iiave their (lives. Ask

S CURB CONSTIPATION. S Small, plcanant, a fsvorlto with the ladles. 5 W. H. HOOKER A 00., West Broadway, N. Y. ••(•••••(••••••••if

HAVING

5

HOt'IlS

1

r, -i

If

MRS. ELVIRA HATCH.

HEART DISEASE 20 YEARS.

Dr. MiUss Medical Co., MUdUxrt, Xnd. Dkab Sns: For 20 years I was troubled with heart disease. Would frequently have falling •pells and smothering at night. Had to sit up or got out of bed to breathe, llad pain in my left

side and back most of the time at last I became dropsical. I was very nervous and nearly worn out. The least excitement would cause me to

THOUSANDS EffiS

with fluttering. For the last fifteen years I could notaleep on my leftside or back until b^gan taking your X«w Bnort Cum. I had not taken it very long until I fblt muoh better, and I can now tleep

able to do all my own housework without any trouble and consider mysalf cured. Elkhart, Ind., 1888. MRS. Eumu HATCH.

It is now four years since I have taken any medicine. Am in better health than 1 havo been

|ssly»!£CURED•••lifemy

Boavi Ctere saved End Tnn/to me a well woman. I am now 82 yean of age, and am able to do a good day'B work.

M«y 2Mb, 1892. MM. ELMIKA HATCH.

Sold on Positive Guarantee.

On.

MILES' PI LLS.60Doses 2SCts.

HUMPHREYS*

VETERINARY SPECIFICS

For

Worses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs. Hogs AND POULTRY, AOOPage Book en Treatment of Animate and Chart Sent Free. ctrras

Foyers,ConeeHtionftjfnflaininntlon A.A.lSMnsI Meniiiffitla, Milk Fever. B.B.—Stralns, Lamoucnn, Rheumatism*

S.C.—Distemper,

Nosnl Discharges.

.D..-Bots or Grubs, Worms. B.B.~Conjrhs, Heaven, Pneumonia. F.F.—Collo or Gripes, Bcllyacbe. G.G.—Miscarriage, Hemorrhages. H.H.—Urinary and Kidney Dlseasos«

i.K.~Dlseascs

.I.—Eruptive Diseases, hlange. of Digestion, Paralysis* Single Bottle (over SO doses), .6# Stable Case, with Specifics, Manual, veterinary Cure Oil and Modlcator, 07.00 Jar Veterinary Cure Oil, 1.00

Sold by Druggists or Sent Prepaid anywhere and in any quantity on Receipt of Price. HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE 00.. Corner William and John Sts., New York.

LADIES!

AUt/Vi IIU Ull Ul 1UU

MandbtJlJlg

DAYS

yourtovfci

•••••••••a

Dr. Acker's English Fills:

POSITIVE

Send a* this mlT*Hl.rmrnt and will nead you theM AflIC Rl'AI.H HOOK, and If no! •atl*flcri you can

INSTRUCTION IIOl

rrlarn It within SO tiny, nnd wo will rvftanil «t«ry etnt of /oar money. AGKNTH WAXTKI). RclVr«'n'r« (riven. Clrtul»r« rr*#, ROOD MAQIO 80ALE CO., OHIOAOO, ILU'8,

TgSrt ft

fOl^ luunilcsii liorba/Yv\/7l remecllan that do not ln-» Ull# remedies that &o not In-1 jnro the health or interfere with one's business or iloMure, It builds up and improves tho general ealth. clears the skin and beautifies tho complexion, wrinkles or ilabblnoss follow thin treatment, dorocd by physicians and lending society ladles. PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL. ItirnlN*. So Htartlag. 8«ad ctntr In itsmp« for puiIculwt (a DR. 0. W. r. SHYOER, WICKER'S THEATER. CHICA60. ILL

rmmrjum

A CWckcrttrt Engllnh ninmond Braud.

aar*. alwnj« rclUMo. LADICB, UK JB\ Irogrl»t for Chtcheitar't KngUth /J'a-JrvVN imanc Brand In Itcd tod Gold m*ulllo\%Mr Jhftiw, asmlod with blue ribbon. Tnko Yjjr I no other. Hrfutt dangermit tuhititullotu and ImUntioni. At Drnftglii., or Hod Xe*

In iump« for nutleoUM, mtlmonltU ind "lfallof for LadlN," in letter, lr return Mall. 10,000 TwtlmesUli. Namt Kxotr. Ohlche*U!r Chemical Co.,Madlnon Sanata* j»e*X DrugtUu. JPhllada., Pi,

Bold by (11 Local

SAFE CUBATIYE BEAUTIFYIHG.

THREE POZZONTS

THIS MACHINE

TO USE

IN YOUR HOME

rJ

rf

WILL 0.ROOD'S MACHO SGAIE the best tmoRtporf oct simplest Ladles' Tailoring System InilSO. Orrr 1)10,000

SoM

Cuts all garments worn byludiosand Children (Includlnguudorgarraonlaiindslcovos) to fltttie form pe^ fectly no trying on or refitting. Eiinlly Icnrned.

wncrfl*

Price 80

OZZOIJ1S

QMPLEXIO

f.2.3.

AU Druggists i»if I TII1TC Faner Stores, a

A f,A*» A a, a a A W

JN ALRR^ WNWN MY VF* VWCIFV PRW I»I» VT»

an emmpetlUtr*. we will. WITHOt'T roiTPN'O TOlf A CK*T. one •ar ten aurlilcni la

rtrvp

kmc conditionally. Cat Mt tbl«

t#4j«y mt*4 wend t« «M with afcl»pln*')lrcirtlow». and we will a«nd y«a fall oori l" alar*. ALTAR MFC. C0„ rfcpt- EK, 170 W. Van Itnrfe St., mTii mtf ft nMyMvtM

ARE YOU TIRED?

Cal&rrli of tiie Head and Throatt Asthma? Nervous Debility and Epilepsy? Piles, Fistula, or Cancer? Female Weakness «.r Disease?

I AM CUBING CASKS OF THIS KIXD KVKRY DAY -AXD EXMOVISG-

Tumors, Moles, Birth Marks and Superfluous Hair

IS YEARS" EXPEEIEXCE. CHARGES REASONABLE. CONSULTATION FREE. Wc, tUs aaderalffned, cbeerfally recommend Ir. Bail as having the ability of doing all that be rfattna, knotrl at from experience that what be says in bialoarnal on "Electro Therapy" utme: £p" MARTT*, S^VT.rTHftviairiBan*: J. wTVuvrr, Trea*. Vandal la R. R. FRor. E. W. Kxxr, s&a*e Normal D. S. TAYXOB, Judge Circuit t*rart Licvi HAXXKR&T, Ex-Count? Recorder: Anot.ni OAGO, Teller Havings Bank i. EL WOLF*, Editor T. JL JonrnaL

'ISSJSV C.TAYLOR BALL, M. D, Specialist,

(7 U» & 1*. n* 9» $lxtt» IHrtet, Terro lorf.

'£m