Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 31, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 21 January 1893 — Page 7
CUBE CONSTIPATION.
To enjoy health one ibOQld have restalnr ovacnations every iwon four bourn. Tbo evils, both, mental ana physical, reuniting from
HABITUAL CONSTIPATION
mro many and serious. For the core of this common trouble. Tutt's Liver Xillfl have trained a popularity nnpar* •IJeied. Elegantly angar coattd.
SOLD EVERYWHERE, FAT PEOPLE SPEEDY & LASTING
can stay
RESULTS. EKTEEETTE SPECIFIC CO. I Boaton, Min.
HOTEL GLEN HAM,
Fifth ave., between M'P'tXT' VORT^T 21st and 22nd streets, C. VV I \JXVIV KUUOPKAN PLAN. CenlraJ to all points of interest, principal stores find places of amusement- Desirable single ri. im, $1.00.
N. P. B4RKV, Proprietor
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN
Who want, any cieanlni?and coloring to their satisfaction should call on
H. F. REINERS
Practical Dyer and Renovator, NO. 005 WABSAII AVENUE. Gentlemen's Suits and Overcoats cleaned and finished within twenty-four hours.
HARRISON SMITH
Manufacturer and dealer In
or AT.1. KINDS.
WILL PAY THE HIGHEST CASH PRICE FOR DEAD HOGS
At my factory on the Island, southwest of the city, ofllce No. 18 south Second street.
TEKKE HAUTE, INI).
£)E. G. W. LOOMIS, DEUTIST. "2010 north Otli st.. Terre Haute, Ind. 1 square from Electric Cur Line.
JACOB D. EARLY,
LAWYEE
Uoom I, Hcach IJloc.k, .Sixth uiul Main street!
C). JENKINS, M. D.
-O/Hce, 11 South Seventh Street, telephone, '•»(), residence, l"il north l-'lfth si reel, telephone IT.'!. tilee hours: ti a in. 2 to I p. in. 7 to 8 •ni. A I residence uiu.il until S a. m., 12 to I m., lo II p. in.
A1
KTIFIOIAL TEETH. ]If. F. 1UjKI)SUV.— IKNTI hT. With Jiii years prneikv In dentistry, gun run
1 caii
Special piiho Teeth extrue I
Ihsl-el ss work.
taken In mendingoid plates, ed without pair.. tt"% Atuin Mire?!. near Ninth.
JfUCLStyXTHA L, A
.iui.liee ol't lie IYiu'o ti ml AI torney at Law, 2(1 south Jtrd street. Terre Iluute, Ind.
j~)H. L. H. ISAllTHOLOMEW,
DENTIST.
Homoved to 071 Main st. Torre llunle, Ind
J.
LI. GAJUUfiTT, Custom Harness Maker. Track Work ami Repairing a Specialty. hiiai 7lit. ry.ir 1'. J. Kaufman's Grooerj
'fSAAC BALL,
FUNERAL DIRECTOR.
Vor. Third and Cherry Hts., Terre Haute, In Is prepared to execute all orders In hn -u with neatness and dispatel
Knilialmlng a Specialty.
J^ISBIT & McMINN,
UNDERTAKERS,
1IM NORTH FOURTH STHKKT, •AU'CHlls will receive the jnost careful attention. Open day and DlgM.
1^11. R. W. VAN VALZAH, .1 Successor to RICHARDSON A VAN VALZAH,
IDEnSTTIST.
Office—Southwest ooruer Fifth and Man Btreet*, over National Htate Ban* teutrane* on Fifth street.
J. NEMKNT. T. M. BARRETT. •jS^UGENT & CO.,
PLUMBING and GAS FITTING A 4 denier in Oae Fixtures, Globee aud Engineer**
Supplies.
SUA Ohio Street. Terrn Hnutc, Inl
TEL RICHMOND EUROPEAN. E. A. FROST, Propr. Formerly mutineer Sherwood House, Kv«n. vitle, Ind.. late Munrr. Hotel Uraee. Chicago,
KftflinK «*c, fl.OO, $1.50 Per Iay. Ste«tm iltft Cent rally lxcale1, two block* from P. O. ami Auditorium, opp. the ne* Lester Hulldlnit.
W.Cor .stitte nnd Vjinltnren—CHIC ACiO
$
648WABA§HI,AVE.
Established 18S1. Incorporated I88L QLIFT fc WILLIAMS CO.,
Successors to CI 1ft, WUUamii Co. J. H. WIMJAMS, President.
J. M. Cun, 8ee*y and Tre** jSAKurAcrrcRtKa or
Sash, Doors, Blinds, etc
AS» OKAUUtS tX
LCUKER, LATH, SHINGLES
PAINTS, OILS
lass,
AND HUItDERS' HARDWARF. Mn!hwr»y utrwst, corner 8:h.
YVOiiTH MILLIONS.
Valuable Idea and the Cash.
Who Got
Howard Fielding Tells a Story Which 1* Pointed at People Who Would Like to Go to Work for Themselves —A Needed Lesson.
[COPTKXGHT, 1893.1
This story is addressed to that man (if any such there be) who would like to quit working for somebody else and begin to make a little money for himself, by waj* of variety. I do not mean to insinuate that he eares more for his interests than for those of his employer, for that were treason, but only that his poor, weak human heart will sometimes long for a change, especially on those days when he is docked for getting to the shop five minutes late by a clock that is ten minutes fast and then asked to work four hours overtime without extra pay.
It is not my story oh, dear, no. It is the story of an unsuccessful man who cannot pay his rent promptly by check on the first of the month who has to get along with the aid of all the modern conveniences who bu^s furniture and pie and Chinese laundry tickets on the installment plan. He opened his heart to me with these words: "I was born poor and honest, but have succeeded in eliminating one of these microbes from my system, and I understand that people do not have it twice. Poverty, however, is like malaria. You may have it as many times as you want to. I am slow to make up ray mind, but one day I decided that I would like to be rich. I did not ask to be too confounded rich, you know, but to have just so much that my friends would attribute it to treason and piracy. and enemies to 'bull luck' and stupidity. "Just about that time an idea came to me. I was at dinner in a place where the bill of fare cries beans, beans, iind the customer is never satisfied. I had ordered coffee, and was about to partake of something which looked like a piece of the Missouri river on the breaking up of a hard winter. TJien the inspiration hit me. I do not know whether it came out of the coffee, but the stuff looked as if it might contain almost anything. I paused with the cup half way between a cracked saucer and a broken spirit, and gazed at that idea for about fifteen minutes. "It was the mental picture of an article the like of which could be sold t: forty thousand people in New York cil.y alone, in a single year, for three times the cost of manufacture. I set down the cup, and drew from my pocket a number of envelopes containing bills. On the venerable back of the oldest of these 1 figured my in»ome as it would be a year from that day, when the idea should be fairly in operation. I went over the process several times, because I did not wish to lose a dollar by careless arithmetic. The sight of the great and glorious total filled my heart full of joy and peace that when, an hour inter, the bouncer threw me out the place, in the avowed belief that I was blind drunk, I gave hira a quarter for his courtesy, and readily promised not to come back any more."
What was it, .Johnny," said I "a patent lightning rod?" "No," he replied, "nor it wasn't something which will be indispensable to every traveling man when we all learn to fly. It was good stuff, and forty thousand were sold right here. Rut wait till 1 tell you about it. 1 needed •apital to begin with. My own savings wouldn't start the business, and my credit, wouldn't start water down hill. The sum required was not large. In addition to what I had. about one thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine dollars and fifty cents, making two thousand iu all, would do at a pinch. It looked easy to raise that amount. Although you would never suspect it, I haven considerable acquaintance among really wealthy men. There's old Israel Hopkins. I once did him a considerable service in a political way. It was when he lived in Rutland, Vt., and he told me I could have anything I wanted when the democrats carried the state. I went to see him at his office in this city. He
tef'ii.
PAkACA.
it
I 1'liOMIsr'Tl NOT TO RETURN.
said that he was entirely at leisure for ten minutes, at the end of which time he would have to catch a train. He •looked at his watch seven hundred and twentv-nine times in the course of that ten minutes. I explained the whole matter to him as well as I eould under these disquieting conditions. Suddenly he jumped up and jammed his hat down upon his head. 'Your idea's a rattling good one, my boy said he, 'What you. want to do is to advertise for a partner. Thera are plenty of suckers to be caught* that way. When you get him sock it to him skin him take hts pelu That's the way to do business. You make money whether the other fellow does or not Put an ad, in all the papers to morrow. I wish you success. Goodby. my boy good-by." "Well, old raan.! won't weary you by these stories. It's the same in every case where one wants to burrow, HI tell you at once how got the^ money. I wont i£ Simon R. Payne. He eouMo'V refuse roe. By the high hump of the Sacred Gnu, I was in a state of mind to
have it out of him by blackmail, if it wouldn't come any other way. Perhaps Simon read it in my glittering eye, for he said at once: 'Johnny, I'm going to do the square thing by you. Then I knew he was going to cheat me When a man opens the conversation that way, you may feel sure that he intends to put a mortgage on your vital organs, and foreclose it in fifteen min utes. I wanted to say: 'Mr, Payne, before you do what you call the square thing by me, I should like a few hours in which to settle up my earthly affairs.' But without waiting for me to reply he continued: 'I'm going to let you have this money without any security, and all I ask is one-half the net profits after my money has been returned, which must be within one year.' "Well, that wasn't very bad. Johnny," said I. "That's what you think," said he, "and I suppose half the business men in the city would agree with you That's the trouble with the whole industrial system robbery is so common that it looks right. Now here was a business in which the idea was everything. If it succeeded at all, old Payne would simply sit in his chair and draw three
HE SPUN DOUBLE EAGT.ES BEFORE IIIM.
or four hundred per cent, on monej \vhich he should have loaned freely, as a matter of friendship or gratitilde, at the least. But here he was offering to take half of the profits for putting in the capital which, by the conditions of his offer, was to be returned to him before got anything. And I was to do all the work." "So you declined his offer?" said I. "Not by a jugful," said Johnny. "I jumped at it. If he had shown the least sign of getting away, I would have followed him one thousand feet straight r.p into the air. rather than lose him. I closed with him. Then he said: 'You won't have to show any money. Just tell the people who take your order for these things that I'm back of you. and it will be all right. It was all right. 1 went to my manufacturer. He agreed to make the things at the price which looked reasonable to me. He guaranteed everything. He promised that I should have the first thousand an}- time —day before yesterday, if I insisted upon it. Thdn I went to make arrangements to have the stuff put on the market. I went to several of the large retailers of goods in that line. They all said that they didn't handle anything unless it came from the regular wholesale houses. They intimated that their souls were not their own, but were obtained from their regular wholesale houses on very hard terms. They advised me to go to the regular wholesale houses and prostrate myself on their thesholds. "I went and prostrated myself. 'You should sell this thing for five dollars,' said the first wholesaler. 'It will cost one dollar and twenty-five cents to make. We will act as your distribucing agent if you will pay the cost of manufacture and distribution, and guarantee us seventy per cent, of the difference between cost and selling price.' I took that proposition home and had the nightmare with it. Then I went to another wholesaler, and got substantially the same reply, after which 1 went home and had substantially the same nightmare. There were only three men on the list, so the retailers said, and I visited the third next day. Then I went to the first and accepted his terms. "The business was now fairly under way. I was devoting my whole tim? to it without salary, and Was supporting myself in some mysterious way which I have never since been able to remember. Rut I know that it left me three hundred dollars in debt. When the first thousand were ready—about a month after the time agreed upon—I went to see the first wholesaler. He said: 'Jones (the second wholesaler) is putting the same thing on the market. You must stop him. I look to you to protect your patent.' 1 did some fine detective work, and found out that R. C. Billings, one of the men I had applied to for money to start the business, had started it himself. I also found that C. J. Mills, another who had refused me, had started the manufacture, and proposed to make his sale through the third wholesaler. "Old Payne said that 1 must have a lawyer. I got one. He secured an injunction restraining Billings from turning out the goods, and then Mills got one restraining us. These legal struggles occupied a year, at the end of which time Payne sued me for two thousand dollars. I had never seen his two thousand dollars, bat he produced a copy of out agreement, which was, in effect, a receipt for me. Then all the people who had trusted me on Payne's account sued me for the money._ At this juncture Billings and Mills combined and w?ra their suit against me. Then they put their goods on the market and thet sold like gold bars. My dreams were more than realized— by others- They are rich men to-day, while 1 am wearing a winter overcoat which would look shabby if the statue of Horace Greeley wore it over his bronze, ready-made pantaloons."
HOWARD FrrruMNG.
"How do you call your dog?"
vtOon'i
call him at all: I whistle?
him."—Harper's Young People.
for
A STRANGE EXPERIENCE.
What Few Persons Would Like to Go
dence.
One can scarcely credit it. Yet' it all happened, and in the little town of East North Yarmouth, Maine.
And the lady lives to day to tell the story. Her name is Mrs. H. E. Skillin, and she is well known and highly esteemed.
It seems—but we will let her relate the matter in her own words, just as she gave them to our reporter. "I began at first having trembling feelings of the heart," she said,
It was evident that there was a terrible diseased condition of my nerves 'and system which required immeiJTate attention. I at once began taking Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and and nerve remedy, and have taken four bottles.
MRS. H. E. SKILLIN.
"I now have a good appetite and have grown strong and recovered my oldtime energy and ambition. I do not feel at all nervous. The dull feeling in my head is all gone, and I really feel as well as I have for a number of year4s 'I consider these results remarkablo in the comparatively short time I have been taking the remedy, and I cannot speak too highly of the good that it has done me.
I hope others affected with nervoun or chronic diseases will use Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, for after what it has done in my case, it will surely cure them-"
It b3»ts all what this wonderful remedy will do and we do not wonder that so mauy people regard it as a life and health saver.
We know it to be perfectly harmless and purely vegetable. All druggists lieepit for sale for $1, but it must not be classed with so-called patent medicinei, for it is a physician's prescription, the discovery of the great nerve specialist who is so wonderfully successful in curing chronic or long standing com plaints, Dr. Greene, of 35 W. 14th street, New York. The doctor can be consulted without charge by any and all who require medical advice and treatment, either by visiting his office or writing him about the complaint.
At any rate, use his wonderful medicine. Coughing Leads to Consumption.
Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once.
Miles' Nerve and Liver Pills. Act on anew principle—regulating the liver stomach and Dowels through the nrrw*. A new discovery. Dr. Miles' Pills speedily enre biliousness, bad taste, torpid liver, piles, constipation. Unequaled for men, women and children. Smallest, mildest, surest! 50 doses. 25 ct*. Samples Free at all druggists
%%$%
Hop Plaster
Apply one you don't have to suffer—the relief begins at once. Pain-killing, soothing, stimulating and strengthening properties combined. Clean, sweet, quickestcuring plaster known.
Goth sides of the ocr signature. Boston, Proprietors. interprlslng me
My Back Aches
XULV Z/JL,
SHE CAME OUT OF IT ALL RIGHT, BUT *3fertoDr. Bull's Cough Syrup, the best THE DANGER WAS GREAT.. raroedy for cough a„d cold.
Through In This World—Seemed Almost Like a Miraculous Intervention of Provi
uand
was very bad at times. Any little excitement would make it worse. I became languid, and felt constantly tired and worn, lost all my natural energy and ambition, and was consequently weak and nervous. 'Indeed, I was so nervous at times I could not bepr to hear anyone rock a chair. I had numbness in my right hand so it would teem apparently dead and when it would come to its feeling there would be a deathly feeling at my stomach. I had a dull, tired leeling in my head.
Keep it in the bouse and It, will save you many an anxious moment during the changes of season and weather we
Sore Eyes from Too Much Soap. SSA physician writes: "I think it cruel to allow the faco and eyes to be washed over with soap in the coarse and. rough way in which I have often seen it done. Some nurses seem to take a sort dt morbid delight in its employment in this way. Even to an adult, soap in the eyes is a very painful order.l to go through in the end it iuvariably produces chronic, sometimes acute ophthalmia. In washing children's faces with soap use fine flannel, a sponge or the corner of a towel."
A Mother's Duty in the Homo. No mother has aright to make her house an uncomfortable dwelling place for her children. It is her duty to protect and shield them, not by the force of her command, but by the power of her love. If she should do this she must make their home the most attractive place in the world, to which they come not as slaves driven to their galleys, hut as free children.—New York Tribune.
Rev. Sylvanus Lane
Of the Cincinnati M. E. Conference, makes a good point, when he says: "Wo have for years used Hood's Sarsaparllla In our family of five, and find it fully equal to all that is claimed for it. Some people are greatly prejudiced against patent medicines,^buthow the patent can hurt a medicine and not a ma chine is a mystery of mysteries to me."
Hood's Pills cure liver ills.
Fortunate Little Woman!
Don't you worry about the little woman! Just analyze her a bit before you waste any great amount of-sympathy upon her. That baby mouth wasn't made in vain. Ever see one of those little women stand up in a street car, or carry her own parcels home, or get in or out of a carriage without having half a dozen men run to assist her? And all just because she is a little woman, and has that helpless, imploring look, as if she couldn't stand the least bit of trouble in the world. And every man feels sorry for her and is ready to extend his sympathy and assistance. I've watched her—I've made a study of her tricks and her ways. She just looks at a man out of those appealing eyes and he would walk over redhot plowshares to assist her. When I am born again I want to be one of those meek, helpless, sorrowful eyed little women and be helped to all the good things of life because I look so small and sweet and helpless. Little woman! Little humbug.—Exchange.
A great rnanj' persons, who have found no relief from other treatment, have been curod of rheumatism by Chamberlain's Pain Balm. Do not give up until you have ried it. It is only 60 cents per bottle For sale by all druggists. Jan.
asBiaisaosiiiBon na«aiBtiaRiiaiaiiiHai| DOCTOR
ACKERS
ENGLISH
REMEDY
swill stop a Cough in one night, check a Cold in a day, and CUBE! :Consumption if taken in time.! •IF THE LITTLE ONES HAVE
WHOOPING COUGH OR CROUP Use it Promptly.: A 25 cent bottle may isave their* [lives. Ask
l/^ltMesGOIHl.:
WgV'HVR"HKLS.""""" 1
:Dr. Acker's English PillsCURE: CONSTIPATION. S Small, plcannnt., favorite •with the lnlle». I w. II. HOOKER & CO., 48 West Broadway, N. Y. llllllBMBflliniHIIIIIIIIII OIIIHIIIIIIIIlin
THE POSITIVE CURE.
I ELY BROTHERS. 66 Werren St* New York. Price 60 cte.i
rtmette
.••ju HAVING
i* true:
HOURS
THIS MM
TO USE
IN YOUR HOME
m: HON. Z. AVERY,
ONE or
THK
LARGEST
CONTRACTORS AND BUILO*
KRS IN
NEBRASKA.
HEART DISEASE 30 YEARS.
GSAMD ISLAND, NEB., April 8th, 1893.
Dr JfMu Medical Co/, JEtkhart, Ind, GKHTLXHBN: I had been troubled with
HCART
OISKASE roHTHt LAST so YCARS, and although I was treated by able phyaiciaus and tried many remedies, I grew steadily worse until I WAS COMPLETELY PROSTRATED AND CONFINED TO MY BED WITHOUT ANY HOPE OR RECOVERY. I WOUld haVO very bad sinkn a^ing spells, when my pulse wof-II Ilula stop beating altogether,"^and it was with the greatest difficulty that my circulation could
-"THOUSANDSsS
bring ek to consciousness again. tlon I tried your NEW HEART CURE, and began to improve from the first, and now I am able to do a^gooa day's work fgra man 68 years of age. I give a N is over six months sinco a bottlo in the
While in this condi-
DR. MiILES* NEW HEART C_URE
ALL the
credit for my recovery. It is over six I have taken any, although I keep a house in vase I should need it. I have also used your NERVE AND LIVER PILLS, and thinka great deal of them. Z. AVERY.
Sold on a Positive Guarantee.
DR. MILES' PILLS,50 DOSES25CTS.
^HUMPHREYS' VETERINARY SPECIFICS
For Worses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs, AND POULTRY. 500 Page Book «»n Treatment of Animate and Chart Sent Free. CURES Fevers,Conircgtions,
Inflammation
A.A. Spinal MciiuiKitis, 31 ilk Fover. B.B.—Strains, Lumencs*. Khcuinuiiam* C.C.--Distemper, Nnsnl I)ischargca. D.O.'-Ilots or Grubs, Worms. E.K.»Cnnfrlis, Heaven, Pneumonic.. F.P.—Colic or Gripes, Bellyache. G.G.o-MiscnrrinKc, Hemorrhage*. 11.11.—Urinary and Iiidnuy Diseases. 1.1.••Eruptive Diseases, Mange. J.K.—Disease* of Digestion, Paralysis* Single Bottlo (over GO dosce), .00 Btablo Case, with Specifics, Manual,
Veterinary Cure Oil and Medlcator, $7.00 Jar Veterinary Cure OH, 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., Now York.
WILL C.ROOD'S MAQ1C SCALE the best most perfect simplest Ladles'
LADIES!
Tailoring SyfV*
tC111 In are. Over 120,000 SoM
Cats all garments worn hyl/ullesniid Children (tncladinKundenrarmonts nnri sleeves) to tit tho form perfectly no trylngon or reflttintf. JKu»lly loiirncil. iN
Cats all Kannen tn dinKundenrarmont fectly no trylngoc 30DAYS&'I Q01# nnd INSTRK
TRIAL.- n* (MA
n'Jvt-rlUoment
mid
3 UP iTlUwndyow Che MAGIC 8CALK 1TION IIOOX* nmllf io( nolMlcd you con
Inrn ItwiHiln ftOdit.VR ami wo "III ropunM rffry c*nC of yo«r mnnry. AiiKXTS WANTKD* Itt-fVrMirp* irlvrn, Circular* free. ROOD MAGIC SCALE CO., CHICACO,
Why will jron pay t*50 to for ncwlnu tnnfhlnc tliat I* n«t with onr A J.VA II. In order to l-trwlnci: A'!' OVi'K ('_•" Ttlv^T 8KWISO MACIIINK MADE. wht-h t» fo h~ ofiVrrrt TAR all competitor*, wc will. WITHOUT COSTrXO TOJ? A M' -T. *ir.«» -m- .»fl o»r tx*t mafhlnpn In your*home t,nn4Mmnilj\ »«1 tbl® mlri HlMiocil to-itny and win! fo »i* with xhlpptnc direction*, nnd w- w'i! xjjiI yirr fn\t Mini*. A I. AII MFG. CO., Dept. KK, I TO W. Van n.ir^n fit., CUlrw HI.']
ARE YOU TIRED?
Catarrh of the Head and Throat'? Asthma? Nervous Debility aed Epilepsy? Piles, Fistula, or Cancer? Female Weakness or Disease?
Tpors, Moles, Birth Marks and Superfluous Hair
15 YEA 1LS? EXPERIENCE. CHARGES SEASONABLE. CO.VSULTATIOX FREE. WV. the undersigned, cheerfully recommend Dr. Ball having the ability of doing ail that he claim#, novsi
nzfrnm erperiencc
L. B. Martin, riec'y T. H. Having* Hand
ILIL'S,
lb»., now it ii 168 lbs., ft re-,.
ductfon of 152 lbs., and I feel to much brtter'thftt I w*uM not take $1,000 and be put h&ck where I wits. am both lurprUod Attd proud of the change. I recommend your treatment to all sufferer* from obeitty. Will answer all inquliio* If stamp is Incloied for reply." PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL. lUrralwi, and with BO iturvSnR. inconvenience, or bad clTocU. For psrticulu-i ndrircM, with 6 cenlt In etauipi, 08. 0. W. F. SHYDER. M'VICKES'S 7HEATER, CHICAGO. ILL
Oblcheiterii Enr!!*h Diamond Branfl.
Orlffinffcl An Only i»cn
PfLL$ cnultie. A
GATE, alwnyn reliable.1* LADIES, a*k DrugclNt for Chichtnttr'o English .mom: Jirand In Hed and Gold uietnl!lc\%Ry Ifroxce. nettled with hlik« ribbon, Tnko VSf (no otlii'r. JUfu*e danyerou* tubntUuthtuf and imitations. At DraggUt t, or nend 4c.
In MnmpM for pfirtlcuUrn, tcstimouinln and "Ifellcf for IiWllen«Mfn let(rr by return Mall. 10,000 TVfltlmoninli. Aram« Paper. Chl»he*ter Chcmlcal Co.,Mn«ilnor» Kquam
Sold by all Local Druggist*. I'hll&do., i'g.
ozzora
SiFE CDBATIYE BEADTIFYIHG.
P01P1TS
J.2.3.
AllDrnggiats Fancy to ran.
Tswrs
msBsm
I AM CURING CASES OF THIS KIND EVERY DAY -A3TD JUMOriSO-
that what he says In his journal on "Electro Therapy"
J.
E. w. KKXP,8taKyNormal:D. X. TAYLOR.JudgeCircuitCourtjLKVi HAXMERLY,Kx-Coanty 3, Teller Savings Bank J. JL Wowr, hdltor T. H. Journal. Recorder AIOLPHGAM, to 11 a^ni. :30 to 6 p. to. lo 8 p. m.
W. CKCFT,Treag. Van da Ha It R. PROF.
C.TAYLOR BALL, M. D. Specialist,
Purloi* 15 3. Sixth 8tre«t, Terre If ante, Ind,
