Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 29, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 January 1893 — Page 7
I
For Old and Young.
Tntt's liver Pills act Itlndly on the child, tli© delicate female or infirm •old a#e, es upon the vigorous man.
glvetone to tho weak stomach, bowels, liidueys and bladder. To these organ*) their strengthening' qualities are wondcrfn!, eanMing them toyar'form their function* as in youth
Sold Everywhere.
Office, 140 to 144 Washington St., N.JJT.
•^VFATPEOPUE,,^ jf can get I SPEEDY* LASTING (can stay thin.
RESULTS, lktbeettb
thin.
SPECIFIC CO., Boatan, Kan.
HOTEL G'LENHAM
NEW YORK
Fifth ave., between 21st and 22nd streets, KUKOI'KAN l'LAK, Central to all point* of interest, principal stores and places of anuiHoment. Desirable single re im, 81.00.
N. P. UAKKV, Proprietor.
LA 1)1 ES AND GENTLEMEN
Who want any eleanlngand coloring to ihelr satisfaction should call on
H. F. REINERS,
Practical Dyer and Itenovator, NO. CC5 WAUSAII AVKNUK.
HARRISON SMITH
Manufacturer and dealer hi
OK AM, KINDS.
WILL PAY THE HIGHEST CASH PRICE FOR DEAD HOGS
At my factory on the Island, southwest of the city, oltlce No. L! south Hecond street.
TERIUO HAUTE, INI).
JYW. A. W. LOOMIS,
DENTIST.
2010 north Ot.li st. Torre Haute, I ml. 1 square from KlectrSc Car Line.
JACOB 1). EARLY,
LAWYEE
Room 1, ucli Mock, Sixth and Main streets
W
0. JENKINS, M. D.
Oillce, 1-1 South Seventh Street, telephone, •10. residence, •!,! north Klfth street, telephone I7 t. utl!e hours: i» a. m. to p. m. 7 to Sp, ill. A I. residence until until S a. in., 12 to I p. ill., to I'./II.
akITIEICIAL
TEETH.
on. v. (i. I5LKI»SOK-IH:NTIST. With ft)years practice In dentistry, I can guarantee llrst-cluss work. special pains taken in mending old plates, '1 colli ex traded without pain.
S'-J7Vi Alain street, near Ninth.
SENTHA L, A. 13.
.lustlee of the Pence and Attorney at Lltw, 2ft south ard at root-. Tcrrc Haute, I »d.
T)li. L. H. BARTHOLOMEW,
DENTIST.
Removed to (.71 Main st. T'rre Haute, Ind
H. GARRETT, Custom'Harness Maker. Track Work and Repairing a Specialty. t» smuli (ih, roar P. .r. Kaufman's Grocery
"£SAAC
BALL,
FUNERAL DIRECTOR.
Cor. Third and Cherry Sts., Tor re Haute, lno Is prepared to execute all orders In his :in. with ueatness and dispute)
KuibitUnIng a Specialty,
JSJISBIT
McMINN,
UNDERTAKERS,
103 NORTH FOURTH STREET, All calls will rc-celve the most careful attention. Open day and night.
1(. W. VAN VAIJZAH,
Du.
Successor to
RICHARDSON VAN VALZAH,
IDEISTTIST.
Office—Southwest corner Fifth and Mali Streets, over National atate ilan* tentrane« ou Fifth streeU
J. NUGENT. T. M. 11AURETT.
JS^UGENT & CO., PLUMBING and GAS
FITTING
A 4 dealer lu
Gas Fixtures, Globoe and Engineer'» Supplies. S6d Ohio 8tr»et, Terra Hnute, InC
TXOTEL RICHMOND
JLX
EUROPEAN.
E. A. FROST, Propr.
Formerly manager Sherwood House, Kvautvllle, Ind., late Mangr. Hotel Grace, Chleugo. KnuiUK 15c, $1.00, $1.30 lr Day.
Steam Heat, Centrally Ideated, two block* from r. O. and Auditorium, opp. the ue« Ulster Building. N. AV. Cor State and VanHuren—CHICAGO
ft* y\ lU^ vy-.'-r.
'V*
648WABA§liAVu
Established 1881. Incorporated ISS*
QLIFT & WILLIAMS CO..
Successor* to Cllft, Williams A Co. J. H. WH.UAHH, Pnwldent. J. M. Clift,t&sc'y and Tr**»
XA.2trrAcnnun» or
Sash, Doors, Blinds, eu
AND
okalxrs
IN
LUMBER, LATE SHINGLES GLASS, PAINTS, OILS
AND BUILDERS' HARDWARK. Mulberry street,rwrner Jtb.
A tfUOD RiLbUuVJh].
Howard Fielding's Vision of New Year's Repentance.
Be Vows Not to JL'e to His Wife and Dreams That the Vow Keeps Tally on Him for a Week.
ICOPYHIGHT, 1892.1
January L.—I am a #ood resolution, and this Ls my..diary. Perhaps you sneer at uie, reader, because I am out of fashion in these advanced days, when the essence of all adequate reform is supposed to be squirted under a sinner's pelt by means of a hypodermic syringe and a large fee. Perhaps- you say: "The difficulty of repentance is a matter of natural distribution. I have all the disposition to reform, and my neighbors all the need of it. Such being the case, how can any of us be better?" A man named Howdy Fielding came near falling into a similar error
P/
l1
Mi
WHAT MACDE FOUND IN TUB DESK.
but, by diligent search, he at last diseovered a flaw concealed in his moral haracter. And so, this very afternoon, as he sat idly scribbling on a sheet of that fine, expensive paper which he uses for his writings—in order that the stationer at least may have an interest in them—he put down these words: "I will never lie to my wife again." That is how I came into existence.
Just then his wife approached with the intention of telling him a story about the family in the second flat. Those people are as uninteresting a- if llowell.s and not nature had created them but tlie story was to be in threw volumes, with an appendix and copious notes, because she thought that he was at work and wished to assist him, as my other woman would. Also, she looked over his shoulder, so that if he happened to be writing anything he ould immediately Vie"clisgusted with it and not be able to finish it before rent lav. But he had already folded mc up *nd now he thrust me into his pocket, saying: "That goes for one year. If I cannot be great, at least I will be eccentric." Well, he seems to be in earnest but I would not bet a dollar that I im alive to-morrow. .January 2.—I may have a chance for m.y life. Fiolding isn't much of a, family liar, as liars go in New York. lie is a man who would brush the chalk dust off his clothes very carefully after he had been playing billiards, but i,inless his wife asked him he would not tell her that business had detained him down town. Comparatively speaking, I call that truthfulness. On the whole, he is a fair sample of the husband made up out of American goods which, whiio they ave deficient in style, will wear better on the average patience. In tho matter of lying, it is true that the foreigner is not so inventive as the American. While .your slow-going European is grinding out a single lie your smart New Yorker will get up three but whereas the New Yorker will tell his three lies to one wife, the foreigner will make his one lie do for four, some of them in Berlin, perhaps, and others in lloboken, so that he will be still one point ahead in the estimation of the father of iles wMch shows that thrift is better than a vivid imagination.
Hut I digress. Fielding did not come home to dinner this evening. When he came in, about ten o'clock, he was chewing a new kind of gum which imparts an unrecognizable flavor to a man's explanations. He said that it was good for the digestion. Well, so it Is it enables a man to digest a wine supper without causing his wife any pain. I do not call that a*lie. Maude said it was a pity that a man should spend one dollar for a dinner at a restaurant when there was a good one waiting for him at home. "But, my dear," said he, "I took a very cheap dinner. It cost me only ten cents. I am not going to spend any more money unnecessarily." He stated the exact facts about the dinner. It was very cheap, though abounding in luxury. We shook dice for it with Tom Freeman and st uck him. His onl,y expense was ten cents for the waiter. If he gets caught for the next one that will not be spending money unnecessarily. He simply will have to spend it if the dice am against him.
January 5?.—"Howdy, who is that?" Maude is holding up a photograph about 'ho sixe of four postage stamps. A "harming face it is, though nobody •vould think so who judged by the way it affects you. Maude. She is younger than you: it ,vns by several years when that little camera caught her prettiness. Come. Howdy, talk right up like a man. Who is she? And why have you her picture your vest pocket, my son? "Oh. I don't know." says Howdy. "I forgot ii was there."
That's the truth, at least. If you *»adn't forgotten it, it wouldn't bet here. Kot on your life. You know that Maude always goes through your pockets. Well, it can't be helped. She is holding »fc right under your nose. Corae. old fellow, you can't pretend not to reeognize it now. -That? Oh, that's Myrtie L«xketised to know her in Cambridge when I va* a freshman." '"Howdy, did you ev*r care for hr-t rcrv much?"
her?"
Yes, yoti left 'it down town tin a store on Broadway. "Well," says Maude, "be sure to bring it home to-morrow. And you can bring those other things at tho same time."
She mentions the other things. Howard! I am shocked. So you have been playing this game right along, and your o.Tice is stocked with phantom purchases. every one of which accounts for some deficit in your accounts? It's a pretty slick trick but suppsoe Maude should go over there the same day?
January 5.—Nothing very bad to-day. Howdy came home late. Cash didn't tally by nine dollars. He said that he had a very unexpected call for money. So he had. He raised Jim O'Brien five dollar -. in tho last jack pot, and nothing in the world was ever more unexpected than the "call." Howdy stood pat on an ace full and Jim held up a queen and drew as many more of them as are ever found in a gentleman's game. I think 1 will pass this story to Maude without making a fuss, for it was a very hard case.
January 6.—Maude has been over to the office. She took two gripsacks to bring home the things which Howdy has been buying—in his mind—during the past month. He was out, but his desk was unlocked. She went through the drawers. She did not find any of the things she was looking for, but she turned up four packs of cards, a hundred celluloid poker chips and a few other things which interested her so much that she was still engaged in examining them when Howard arrived. He told the truth that time, and I think he felt better afterwards. He made his peace by giving Maude a sum of money equal to the value of the alleged articles and sending her out to ^buy hem. When they met again she had nineteen bundles for him to carry, and not one of them contained any of the things he had pretended to buy. She had just got into the stores, and had shopped just as any woman does, with the eye of reason closed, and the voice of meraorv still. But the things suited her all right, or if they didn't, she kept oniet. ft strikes me that they are about square.
January 7.—II.owdy says his wat'-b is the jeweler's. That's right: Goldstein a jeweler: but you might think, looking at his sign, that he was a pawnbroker.
January 8. It is Sunday. Maude looks in upon him, napping. "Get up. Howdy," said she. "and go to church with me." "But. my dear," said a'sleepy voice, "think how hard I worked last evening."
So he did. poor fellow. He walked fiftv-seven miles—around a biiliard table. He falls asleep. She shakes him. "Wake up. wake up. wake up."
We21, I'm rcallj- awake this time. Maude is leaning over my shoulder and crying into my ear. ""What's this you've written on the paper?" she asks. "I will neverlie to my wife again. Oh, Howdy, have you—" "Never," say "It's only a memorandum of a story I shall write."
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, JANUARY 7, 1892
Lie, if you want to, my son. Say no. Pll let yon off on a question like that. The man who can explain sueh a matter to his wife hasn't1 been born yet. If you admit that yon did care for Myrtie once your wife will be grieved^. If you say that you never did you'll ieel mean and traitorous to a memory that lies in yonr heart like a rose that has opened while all the other posies in the bouquet have withered because they were full' blown too soon. But it is the part of generosity, Howard, my boy. to suffer even shame that your wife may be relieved in her mind. ,.s "Gare for
said lie. "Not espe
cially. Come, you're not jealous of a girl who lived so long ago—who trotted down the side of Ararat with Noah and me, after the rain. You know I've half a trunk full of pictures downstairs in the janitors burglar-proof storage room, where tramps crawl in to sleep on cold nights."
So you have, Howard? And they can stay there, or the tramps may elope •with them for all you care. They're of a later era. This one you abstracted the other day when you were looking for old manuscripts, and it touched tli vulcanized rubber pumping apparatus which keeps your blood in circulation and which you call a heart when you converse with your physician. Perhaps you do not cherish her memory. You may be too selfish. Perhaps it is the freshman you like to bring to mind by looking at this sweet, innocent face— the freshman who has been nearly twenty years in the grave which Care digs for our youth. lut at least you remember who it was that taught him in those dangerous days how good a thing is purity for boys and girls alike. And it does you credit. But don't at tempt to explain your sentiments to Maude. Lie, if you want to: say you never cared for that girl.
January 4.—I have found out why Fielding lies—admitting, for the sake of argument, that he does lie—about his
Cash.
Maude chases him up awfully
close. She does it for his good, just as his grandmother used to spank him with a slipper. But it hurts. No man with a soul above pawnbroking can keep track of his money in New York. It is such an expensive place. One has to drop a nickel in the slot every time he draws his breath. It is evening, and the frugal oil lamp is lighted in the parlor but the gas meter has not heard about it. The meter cannot stop to consider trifles. "Howdy," says Maude, "did you get your cheek from Colddeck and Cinchplayer to-day for that story?" "Yes, my dear." "Twenty-five dollars?" "Twenty. 1 owed them five." "What for?" "For my I. O. U. That's all I know about it." "Well, say twenty," she continues. "Mere's sixteen and, allowing one far lunch, cigars and car fare, tha,t leaves three. Where is it?" "I have been needing a new necktie for a long time," says-Howard, in desperation.
So 'you have, my boy, but you didn't buy one. "Where is the neclctie?" asks the relentless pursuer. "I left it down town."
Howxitn
A WONDERFUL TALE.
AN ALMOST UNPARALLELED CASE OF SUFFERING.:
Extricated From a Pit of Abject Darkness and Despair—Emerged Again Into the Sunlight^ Saved! •-••.-•'j
The best writers during all the ages have with eloquent pens, depicted the awful mental suffering of hopelessness and darkest despair. Dante, De Quincy and others painted in never to be forgotten shades of sombre blackness the mind utterly devoid of hope, wretched with lost courage, despondent, disheartened. "K .-
But in real life we have never heard a more heart-felt tale of suffering, mental and physical, than that told us by a most estimable lady, Mrs. J. P. Swift, who lives at 2789 Washington street, Boston, Mass, "Four years ago," she said, "I was in a position of complete physical and nervous .prostration, had but little appetite, severe indigestion, stomach distended with gas, constipation, palpitation of the heart, sleeplessness, pain in the back of the neck and base of the brain, and was so nervous and despondent that life was a burden. "As a result of this condition, other weaknesses peculiar to my sex, fell upon ine, until I was utterly wretched. "After much medical treatment-and constant failure, I was induced to try Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. It was in a faint-hearted way and with little hope, but I soon began to sleep better, my digestion improved, the pain in the head became less severe and I gradually gained strength until I felt as if I had been extricated from a pit of abject darkness and despair and emerged into the sun-light! "Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy saved me! Very many of my friends to whom I have recommended the remedy, can atte3t to similar results in their own cases. "Itis truly a wonderful medicine and might well be called the "Woman's Friend.'
It is a fact that the sick are despairing. How many thousands of sufferers there are who, from repeated failures to (ind relief, lack courago, become despondent and almost lose all hope of ever'getting anything to cure them!
Aud yet if they will use this remarkable medicine, which is purely vegetable aud harmless and can be procured at any druggist's, how soon will their jeloom and despair be turned to hope uidjoy! Mrs. Swift has recommended it to a'great many of her friends who have been cured, and it will cure you if you use it.
It is by no means a simple patent medicine but is the marvelous discovery of a specialist eminent in the treatment of nervous and chronic diseases, Dr. Greene, of 35 West 14th street, New York. The doctor also gives to all the 'j/iFivllego of consulting him free of charge, and any who desire can call upon him or write him a description of the case.
Coughing Leads to Consumption. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once.
For Torpid Liver mao Dr. Miles' Pllla.
Catarrh in New England.
Ely's Cream Balm gives satisfaction to every one using it for catarrhal toubles, —G. K. Mellor, Druggist, Worcester, Mass.
I believe Ely's Cream Balm is the best? articlo for catarrh ever offered the pub-lic-—Bush & Co., Druggists, Worcester, Mass.
An article of real merit.—-C. P. Alden, Druggist, Springfield, Mass. Those wto use it speak highly of it.— Geo. A. Hill, Druggist, Springfield, MflGS.
Cream Balm has given satisfactory results. W. P. Draper, Druggist, Springfield, 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 Is unexcelled 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 painless life, try this great remedy and you will never regret it.
Ara you nervous?
Ubb
Dr. Miles* Nervine.
Catarrh Cure.
A elergvman, 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 lungsr Do not wait for the first symptoms of the disease, but get a bottle afld keep it on hand for use the moment it is neejjed. If neglected the tfrippe has a tendency to •bring on pneumonia. All druegists sell the Balsam.
Hereford's Acid Phosphate. Helieves Indigestion, Dyspepsia, eto.
A Woman's Tears.
All men hate to see a woman cry, and in most cases give in to anything she wants as soon as "they see the first tear start. "Women know this weakness in the opposite sex, md some of them, we regret to say,-seem to have their tears on tap, and as soon as they are crossed turn on a waterfall that frightens a man half- out of his wits—at least for a time. But just here we wish to whisper a word of warning to those fair ones, who, like babies, think they will be given the more if they only cry for it. Men are weak, but they are likewise keen to perceive when they are being "worked," to use a little slang that, is so apropos we know it will be pardoned.
If tears are ever ready to start, they will have no more effect on the hard hear tyrant than the water on the proverbial duck's back. If you'are sure you lc-k pretty when you cry, go ahead and cry, but it has been our experience that the "violet eyes suffused in dew" are frauds of the novel writer's conception, Swollen lids and red noses are more truthful, thou less sentimental, and unless the shower comes actually from the heart we would advise keeping tears well in check, for crocodile ones are of no avail, and continuous rainstorms, as we know, do not tend to freshen up the leaves, but sink only unheeded into the ground.—New York Commercial Advertiser.
The Advertising
Of Hood's SaTsaparilla is always within the bounds of reason because it is true it. always appeals t, the sober, common sense of thinking people because it ls true and It is always fully substantiated by endorsements which, in the financial world would be accepted without a moment's hesitation.
For a general family cathartic we confidently recommend Hood's Pills.
Police matrons in Chicago are required to wear a uniform while on duty. This uniform consists of a dress of blue serge, with a tight fitting double breasted basque finished with blue buttons, and a plain skirt made short enough to clear the ground.
A good chocolate frosting is made as follows: Five tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate, with enough cream or milk to wet it, one cupful of sugar aud one egg well beaten. Stir the ingredients over the fire until thoroughly mixed. Flavor with vanilla.
The mother of Charlie Ross still lives, a sorrow stricken woman, whose beautiful hair has been prematurely whitened by her great grief, but who still hopes on with a mother's endless love and faith.
A great many persons, who have found no relief from other treatment, have been cured of rheumatism by Chamberlain's Pain Balm. Do not give up until yc5n have tried it. It is only T0 cents per bottle. For sale by all druggists. Jan.
itaaRaaBBiiiiatimiiiM
WHY DO YOU COUGH
JDo you know that a little Congli! is a dangerous thing 5
DOCTOR
ACKER'S
ENGLISH
REMEDY
Will Stop a Cough at any time: and Cure the worst Cold in: twelve hours. A 25 Cent bottle Smay save you $100 in Doctor's: S bills—may save your life. ASK:
YOUR DRUGGIST FOR IT. IT TASTES GOOD.
PINK PILLS.
PURE rinR r'«w.
:Dr. Acker's English Pills CURB INDIGESTION.
Small, plennnnt, a faropltc with the ladle*. W n. HOOKER & CO., 48 Wert Broadway, N. Y.
THREE
THREE
THE POSITIVE CURE.
ELY BROTHERS. 68 Warren SL, New Yorlr. Price 60 eta.!
niifr 3ru7iette-
HAVING
7
HOi:BS
{V
DB. In L. CABMEB.
Stricken Down with Heart Disease.
Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. Gentlemen:Ifeel it my duty,
as well
as a
pleasure, to publish, unsolicited, to the world the benefit received from dr. Mrt.cs' RestoRAtivc Remedies. I was stricken, down with Heart
io°i
THOUSANDSrtH
gion of the heart and below lower rib, pain in the arms, shortness of breath,sleeplessness, weakness and general debility. Tho arteries in my neck would throb violently,the throbbing of my heart could be heard across a large room and would shake my whole body.
%I
was so nervous
that
I have taken
three bottles of your New
I
could not hold my hand steady. I have under the treatment of eminent physicians, and have taken gallons of Patent Mo^ieina without the least benefit. A friend recommended your remedies. She was cured by Dr. Miles'remedies.
1,11 fc_ L/
Heart Cure and two bottles 7 Nervine. My pulso is normal, I have no more violent throbbing of the heart,i am a well man. I sincerely recommend every one with symptoms of Heart Disease to take Jh\ Miles' Mcstorafive Remedies and bo aired.
Gypsum City, Kans. L- L. Cakmeb.
Sold on a Positive Guarantee. OR MONEV RETURNED.
^HUMPHREYS' VETERINARYSPECIFICS
For Worses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs, AND POULTRY. S00 Page Cook «n Treatment of Animals and Chart Sent Free. cttreb Fevers,Congestion*,Inflammation A. A. Spinal nieniuflritis, Milk Fever. U.II.—St rains, LameneM, It lieuiuatlsiu. C.C.--Distemper. Nnanl IHachargcs. D.D.»Bots or Grubs, Worms. K.E.—Coiiahs, Heaves, Pneumonia. F.F.—Colic or Grijit'Si llollyacho. G.G.—iUincarrinite. Hemorrhages. H.II.--Urinary ana Kidney Diseases. I.1.—Eruptive Diseases, Mange* J.K.--Diseases of Digestion, Paralysis. Slnglo Bottle (over 50 dosce), .60 Stable Cnsc, with Specifics, Manual,
Veterinary Care Oil and Medleator, $7.00 Jar Veterinary Cure Oil, 1.00 Sold by Druttelsts or Sent Prepaid anywhere and in any quantity on Rccdipt of Price.
HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE 00., Corner William and John Sts., Now York.
LADIE!
WILL C.MOD'S MAGIC SCALE Lliu liost most perfect- filmLudlcs' Tallorlnit Systexitnuse, 0%rr !-.'0,000s«M
C11 ts nil garments worn by Ladies and Children (Inclnding underxarniciHs and sleeves) to tit tho form perfectly notrylngonor'relUltnjf. Kitnlly lcnrn««l. A A nAVQ OH TRIAL. «lilsmlnrilomcntnni!
UH I
23 in.t \f|. M'li'l 1011 llio 31 .Kile SCAI.K
iP W nml INSTRUCTION HOOK, NML Ifitol
hiiIMIciI }iu
run
return llwHIiln .10 l,iv* mi! nc will nTitii.l ovrrv rent or yonr moiiFV. AliKXTS WANTKH. fti-i'iTi-nri'i i»lrn. Clrrulur* free. ROBD MAGIC SCALE CO., CHICAGO, ILL'S.
.(fj:
Hayi-KY,
•^4 flC®(jCf4.
0f
Hcllevllli!, Kati.:
""When I beg»n your
treatment 3 mot. "(to I
fxhftnsCdd by &Jlme»u that I could not! Be for After. I .or*, do any work. Tb# ncroinpanving Gp-j Weight 245 lbs J95 Ibi f0 Un nrennnw th«rc»ultof3monthi' treat- Hn»l 48 In. 31 In. 11 In. mant. I now feM like anew being. lllsjWalit...'Iti In. £9 In. 11 In. and paitts ure all g.ino. My frlonil# orojHIpi.... 67 In. 48 In. 0 In. turrriied. Will chearfnlly roply to Inntilrl'U with il&mj) Inclosed." PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL CONFIDENTIAL ItnrmleM. No Slurring. Send 0 conU in atain)ie for particular* to nR. 0. IV. F. SRYDEI, M'VICKER'S THEATER, CHICAGO. ILL
POWDERS SSFE CURATIVE BESOTIFYIHG, f,2.3.
A «.A A A A A AA A A A II,* /UAA AAAAA
This
iAOIli
TO USE
IN YOUR HOftfE
ARE YOU TIRED?
CJilchcater'a EngllRh Tlrmon? ItrnnA.
$
PILLS
Original und Only (icnulnc. earc, nlwnv* rWlnhle. laoics, a«k llrUK*l»t tor (Jhtcheator'B Itnglhh T)ia-„ monS lirand hi Kcd and (Sold nu'UilMiA hoxc». nralod with blue ribbon. Tnko no oilier. Ilr/uie ilanffcrnuf tubtlitutioiuand imitation». At. Drugglittn, nritmd&S. In Mump* for parliculara, lc«llmnntal* and
Itellcf for Ladle*," (ti letter, by fvtura Mnll. 10,000 Tr-ittlfiionlnls, Xamn Paper. !hllio.tcr C'liciuicnl Oo.,Mwll*on Manure.
Hold by all Local Drugglsta. Plilludo.,
i'g,
ft*
^'Pozzorji's
CIMPLEII
gmSOllE F0\.
Pi!
POINTS
a
All DrttpgisU Fancy Stored.
posz:z©:mrs
W by irlll yon pay *50 fo for sowlnir mnrblnr tJi.-it f» he rnr. wlfh ottr hlgh-®-rnd* ALVAII.
Catarrh of tlie Head and Throat? Asthma? Nervous Debility and Epilepsy? files, Fisinla, o"r Cancer? Femalft W»'akw*ss nr Disease?
I AM CURING CASK* OF THIS KIND KVKRY DAY -AXD HKMOVIM
Tumors, Moles, Birth Marks and Superfluous Hair
l.-» YKAUV EXPF/ainXCK. CHABUES REASON ABLE. CONSULTATION FREE. We. the undersigned, tftteerfally recommend Dr. Ball as having the ability of dolnif all that he claim*. kuaw\wi/rrimrperirnce that what he*ay« In hi* journal on "Electro Therapy" U'rue: L. B. Hee'y T. reaving*Ban» J. W. Oatrrr, Treaa. Vandalla R. EL Piur. E. W. Ke*i%«uueNormal: D. N.Taylor, JudgeClrcultCourtjLKviIIamjierlt,Ex-County Reconlei aiiolfh Gagc,Teller,-avings
TINTS
A A
PS* I -1
In order to Inlrodare
Bank J. K. Wourr, Editor T. H. Journal.
C.TAYLOR BALL, M. D. Specialist,
toftp. m. Parlor* 1 i't Sixth Street, Terre Haute, Ind.
41
AT OV.'E
KF.WING MACIIINK MA OK. whirh I. to be rfrcr"'1 nf pr'.n- FM If HE-OWI all competitor*, we will. VVITHOrT 0«Tr\ VOi A CKST. -!ar»our beat mnrhlm-*
In your
home condlfInttnllv. Cut (!ih ndvppt'wi.'iri
to-day and «end l» w« with uhlpplng direction*, nnd wo w"! aend yon 5*II pert nl»r«.
ALVAII MFC. CO., Dept. RK, 170 W. V«tn Hnr-n St, Ill iL my 11 vv 'r'srv
