Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 23, Number 32, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 January 1893 — Page 7

To pnrge the bowels does not make them regalur but leaves tbena in worse condition than before. The liver Is the tbe seat of trouble, and

THE REMEDY

mnst met ra it.

Volt's liver

Pills act

di'-cetly on that organ, canlEr free ri' Wor blJe, without which, the bow« «1» are always constipated. Price, 25c.

Sold Everywhere

Mflce3

140 to 144 Washington St., N, Y.

ja^AT PEOPLE,

can gel SPEEDY & LASTING can stay' thin. RESULTS. IETEBETTE thin. SPECIFIC CO.( Boatoa,

MOM.

HOTEL GLENHAM,

Fifth ave., between M"P"\X7" VORK 21st and 22ndstreets, VV I KJE^r% RUKOPKAN PI«A*. .Central to all points of interest, principal Btores and places of amusement. Desirable single ri. im, Sl.OO.

N. P. lUBKY,

Proprietor.

LADIES AND GENTLEMEN

Who want any cleanlngand coloring to their satisfaction should call on

H. F. REINERS,

Practical Dyer and Kenovator, NO. n\r, WAItSAH AVKNUK. Gentlemen's .Suits and Overcoats cleaned and fiiiishtfl within twenty-four hours.

HARRISON SMITH

Manufacturer and dealer In

AND GREASE

Of AI.I. KINDS.

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

TERRE HAUTE, IND.

J^R. G. W. LOOMIS,

DENTIST.

2iW0 north «th st. Terrc Ilaute, Ind. I square from Electric Car Line.

ACOB D. EARLY, LAWYER

'Room i, Bench Mock, Sixth and Main streets

O. -JENKINS, AI. I).

Olllee, II Sou ill Seventh Htreet, telephone, •«, residence. 454 north Fifth street, telephone IT'i. Hiiro hours: 9 a. in. L» to-4 p. in.: 7 to S p. ::ii. At residence until until 8 a. in., 12 to 1 p. ill.. loo Ill,

A

ETIFJCIAL TEETH.

XX Jiii. K. ({. HLKhSOK—DENTIST. With years pnir-llcein dentistry, I can fltMaranlee flrKl-eli.ss work. Special pain* Ink on in meinKlujold plates. 'leeth extracted without. pain."

Main street, near Mntn.

JpELBENTHAL, A. B.

ustlcc yXtlio iyid MternW' tit IiHW, 'JtJ south .lid street. Terro Ilaute, lnd.

Tj It

L. H. UARTHOXJOMEW,

DENTIST.

Removed to 071 Main st. Terro Haute, In 1

H. GAIUvETT,

r?J

Custom Harness Maker.

Track Work and Repairing a Specialty. Kdnth 7tli. roar P. J. Kaufman's Grocery

JSAAC BALL,

N E A I E O

Cor. Third and Cherry Sts.( Terre Haute, lna is prepared to executo all orders li his Uiv with uofttnesfl auddlspatcl

Kinbaltulujr a Specialty.

& McMINN,

UNDERTAKERS,

!(.'! JSOKTll FOURTH STREET, All calls will receive the most careful attention. Open day and night.

IV A N A A

XJ Successor to RICHARDSON & VAN VALZAH,

3DE!3Sra?XST.

Oftlce—Southwest corner Fifth aud Mali Streets, over national State (entranc# on Fifth street.

J. NUGENT.

T. M. ltARRKTT.

Jsq-UGENTV & CO.,

PLUMBING and GAS FlTTINCi A dealer in Oae Fixture, Qlobee and Engineer'*

Suppllee.

SOS Ohio Street. Torre Haoto, Ind

TTOTEL lllCHMONL) JLL EUROPEAN. E. A. FROST, Propr. Former! manager Sherwood House, Evansville, Intl., Into Manser. Hotel Grace, Chicago.

Koom* 75c, $1.00, $1.50 Per Jay. wsteam Ilea Centrally l-ocalcd, two block* from P. O. and Auditorium, op p. the new Lester Building.

*.

W. Cor State sod anBuren—CHICAGO

648WABA§t1./WC.

Established 1881. Ineorpomted 58SS

OLIFT & WILLIAMS CO.,

8u«**iiWH to Cllft, William* A Co. J. H. Wtui**8, President. ,i. M. cun. SWy and Trfcsfc

XAXV^ACTrnttRii or

Sash, Doors, Blinds, etc

AMP DKA1.RRM !j

LI' V/'/£#, LATH, SHiXGLBZ OLA SS, rdlXTS, OILS

A N 8 IT A W A MaUwro* n«rt, rornet 5Mb.

'Huh UU.LU VViliAi iiiLii.

Howard Fielding Discusses the Groat National Malady.

Be Has Given His Mind and Soth I.uiifT* to the Subject, and Hai Evolved Some Important Gen era I Principles—How to Keep Warm.

Icopmic.HT, 189S.1

At this season of the year, when so many of us are suffering from colds and others from the medicines they have taken to get rid of them, I think that a few words from a man who has given deep thought to both these applications may not be out of place. I have had the subject on my mind, my lungs and a good working majority of my other vital organs, for along time.

Boston is supposed to be the headquarters of the cold. Physicians in that.city are supposed to subsist almost entirely upon the east wind. It must be very-nourishing, for the number of

A FEW FARTING ADMONITIONS.

physicians there is as the sands upon the Nantasket beach*. I have seen so many doctors' signs on a single block that I have doubted whether a human being could walk through and preserve his ordinary healtli. New York has a distinct advantage, for whereas in Boston they derive their colds from the east wind, here wo are not dependent upon any particular point of the compass. We have a good deal of fun with our New Jin gland neighbor, but we contimie to set out the cough medicine as a matter of etiquette when an3rbody calls upon us. In Chicago the little breezes blow the bacilli of cold across the city and then the wind shifts and blows them back again from tbe boundless prajrie.,

There are many remedies for a cold. I once looked the subject up in a medical work which devoted ninety-nine pages to it, and the remedies averaged thirteen to the page. The doctor who went through this book with me was more honest than the man who vfarote it, and ho admitted that they were all utterly "no good" except one which nobody had ever tried. This is to abstain from the use of any fluid whatever for seventy-two hours. I am not joking about this it is really so set down. If any man will actually stick to this, it will cure him and if he has been sufficiently wicked in his life he will never have a cold again during the remainder of eternity, nor any fluid either, according to the doctrine I was brought up in. For he is a man better litted to stand a drought than 1 am if he lives through it.

My deduction from this mass of facts is that the secret of the whole matter lies in prevention. I said some of these things to Maude one morning about two weeks ago. She was expressing a fear that she had caught cold. I ventured to suggest that she might have done it on the previous night when she spent some minutes leaning out of a window to see whether a small fire a mile OJ* two up the street was likely to spread to our residence. To tell the truth, I had experienced on that morning some slight premonitions of tho na-

A TRAIN WAS JUST FUU.tNG OUT.

tional malady, and had resolved to take unusual precautions during the day. My friend, the doctor, had cautioned me against certain indiscretions such as going out to my lunch without an overcoat, aud others which he knew that I would commit just the same. A phvsiciau never loses any money bjT giving us good advice except when he neglects to collect the bill for it on the spot.

However, I was thinking of what he had said, when the bell in our flat tinkled twice. This is the postman's ring, and indicates that he has put a letter in the little box in tbe outer hall. This signal Is counterfeited very successfully by people with bills, who employ it to decoy an unwary citizen into a confession that he is at home. If he expects letter with a cheek in it he will very likely ruu downstairs without waiting for his servant to finish black* Vng the stove, and if, at such a time, he Encounters a man who asks him for nineteen dollars he will probably commit assault ani battery, for whteih offcttse. ^upposinf I am on the jvry, he will nevi?r get any

,,.?n

reaJLiy the postman. Accordingly, I went down in a hurry—such a hurry, in fact, that I forgot "the key of the letter box.. It is possible to fish a letter out of such a box with a penknife. Indeed, there are in New York, I am told, some men who live by this occupation alone. I tried the penknife game on the letter in my box, but an honest man has no luck in this town. The vestibule was colder than the place where Lieut. Peary froze his noseT and the wind blew down into my slippers from all points of the compass. But when a man starts to do a little foolish trick like that he will not be ^deterred by the prospect of leaving his large family in destitute circumstances. I broke my penknife, cut my fingers, and undermined my constitution^ but I got that letter. It was a cough medicine circular.

Maude reproached me for my imprudence in exposing myself to the icy blasts of our vestibule. As I was about to depart for the city she put a large silk handkerchief around my neck and turned up my overcoat collar with her own fair hands. She then engaged me conversation for about fifteen minutes, so that when I emerged upon the street my temperature was several degrees above high fever.

As I approached the station a train was just pulling in. I ran madly up the stairs and burst out upon the platform just in time to have the gate shut in my face. The exercise had put me in a perspiration, and that is probably the reason why the next train was very slow in coming, so that I had to stand upon the platform while the wind whistled around me with a noise like the sighing of weeping willows above an early grave. It was also natural that the train should be so erowded that I was obliged to stand in the doorway of the car while other people, whose loss would be of comparatively little account to the community, were inside in comfort and security.

At the door of the building where I have my office I met Mr. Moriarty, who owes me seven dollars and wishes it was more. If his conversation were worth a cent per one thousand words I should get my money back every time I met him. The spot where he buttonholed me this time is the coldest that can be

I ifc--—

A

worse than a

di^greetueat,. •, lo this instance, however, I assured mv^clf by prudent inspection from the window that it was

LITTLE WHISKY AN1 QUININE.

found between the East river and the eightieth parallel of north latitude. More hats blow off there than anywhere else in New York, and if there is an interminable talker in the city it is in that spot I meet him every cold day. I did not dare to entice Moriarty into the building, because he would have gone up to my office with me and I could not afford the price of his exit. He took me into his confidence. I had been there before, and knew that there wras nothing in it. lie related the various mishaps which had prevented his returning the seven dollars. He sketched the combination of circumstances which would enable him to return them in the near future, together with as many more as I could let him have. When I finally purchased release from him and ascended to my office I was so cold that I sat down to work with my overcoat on. Afterward, it got to be so warm that I opened two windows and removed the overcoat.

Presently, when the thin skim ice began to form in my ink bottle, I awoke to the consciousness that I had taken cold, Then I ran over to Brigg's drug store to see if he had anything new in the way of a microbe killer. It was only one hundred yards or a little more, so it seemed hardly worth while to put on my overcoat. On the street the boys were crying an "extra," and I stopped to purchase one. The boy did not have change for a dime, but he said that he could get it in a minute. I waited for those nine pennies white the boy gambled for them, and as the luck was against him, I had to wait a few additional minutes while he "wiped up de street" with the other boy. Although this delay was worth only nine cents to me, it profited my doctor by about nine dollars. Briggs, the druggist, also made something out of it, for by the time I reached his store I felt the need of something exceedingly "searching." The boy behind the soda water fountain prescribed for me ns usual, and 1 went away very sick. "During the afternoon I ran over to Brigg's frequently, and when it was time to go home I had exhausted the products of modern scientific research. Then I went to see a real physician who is not in the drug business, and he recommended the old stand-bys. whisky and quinine. 1 took them. I took the whisky internally and the quinine home to my wife. This morning my brains feel like two pints of dried apples thoroughly moistened in a pail holding one quart and having its cover fastened down. They feel as those apples may just one second before they blow the cover of the pail off.

And thoxfgh I am not in a condition when my thoughts are of any earthly use .to myself or anybody else, I am still dimly conscious of a few ideas. Among them is one which J. hope that my readers will seriously consider, natnely, that fool can get cold in auy clliaat?* while a wise maa can get along on two handkerchiefs a day right here to New York, if the luck is with

HOWARD FIELDING.

4

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL"'JANUARY 26/1898. J,

THE SECRET OF SUCCESS.

GREAT FORTUNES RISING LIKE MONUMENTS-

How Millieriaires Succeed in Piling Up Enormous Wealth—Not Difficult forA-ny-one to Follow Their Example.

It is popularly supposed that a few men like Gould, Yanderbilt and Astor represent the rich men of the country.

This is a great mistake. There are thousands -upon thousands of millionaires, men so rich that they cannot possibly spend the interest upon their vast accumulations. Every city, every town, every community has them it. is they who represent the wealth of our country, on account of their numbers.

Now if so many men succeed, what is the true secret of that success? Two words answer—energy and health.

Any man of indomitable energy and perseverence who i9 well can succeed. Ah, there is the rub—who is well.

Men have the energy and ability to succeed, but they do not possess the requisite he&lth—that strength of the nerves, vigor of tbe mind' and endurance and tirelessness which alone mako men succeed.

They feel languid, even weak at times and lack snap and ambition they know they have the necessary ability, but their energies need rousing. In some cases the stomach, liver and bowels are at fault, or possibly the kidneys are out of order. Nine times out of ten, however, it is lack of nerve strength, nerve rigor, and nerve power.

Numberless men who have ample vigor at first break down in health from the excessive strain upon their nervcus and physical systems, as did the wellknown S. W. Nourse, Esq., of Hudson, Mass. He strikes the key note of the difficulty, and his advice, if followed, will put men on the sure road to wealth.

MR. S, W. NOURSE, ESQ.

"From constant worry over busiuess matters," he said, "I suffered from tbe loss of sleep, and.became so nervous that I was entirely unfitted for my business. In fact, I feared insanity. I used Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve reine dy. The eflect was almost magical. 1 could again sleep, mental composure, appetiteand strength returned. Six bottles of this remedy cured me, and I have remained well to this date. I|iave recommended Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy to many of my friends and neighbors, and have yet to learn of a failure to obtain good results."

Nothing more need be said. Get your health aud you will stand every chance of succeeding in life. If you are not well, if you do not feel just right, if you lack the vim, energy and strength to take hold of your work, by all means use the wonderful remedy which restored Mr. Nourse to health and power to work.

You can procure it at/ any druggist's for $1, and we would say also that it is a purely vegetable and harmless remedy, used and fully endorsed by physicians— in fact it is the discovery ofithe eminent physician, Dr. Greene of 35. W. 14th •treet, New York, who has made himself famous throughout th« United States by the marvelous ©tires of nervous and chronic diseases and by giving advice free to those who consult him or write to him.

Coughing Leads to Consumption.

Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once.

Sharp Pains

The pain may be sharp or dull—it makes no difference,—the HOP PLASTER relieves instantly and cures speedily, every pain, ache, strain, inflammation ana weakness. They always do good, never do harm.

Enterprising medicine-dealers sell the genuine goods. Hop Plaster

a

1

mm

Lorenzo Conner, 104 Green street, Albany, N- Y"., says: "I have used Dr. Boll's" Cough Syrnp and find it very beneficial, and can safely recommend it asa good remedy for coughs."

Well Known Women Musicians

Among the brilliant- pianists who are also composers are Mrs. Raymond and Mrs. Place. Miss Morris, Miss Hoyt and the daughter of Mrs. Cruger Pell are unusually superior pianists. Mrs. Charles Dudley Warner is an accomplished player, and the most charming room in her colonial home at Hartford is the music room, with its grand piano many curious souvenirs from foreign Tands.--New York PreSS.

Ail Inexpensive Easy Chair.

The steamer chair is just beginning to be appreciated for house use. For those who live in flats or small rooms it is especially valuable as a lounging place, as it can be put out of the way after the rest hour is over. "When that is not necessary it may be made into an easy chair rich enough for the average sitting room by having cushions for both back and seat made of corduroy, nxobair, plush or velours.—New York Fost»-

To Prevent the Grip

Or any other similar epidemic, the blood and tne whole system should be kept in healthy condition. If you feel worn out or have "that tired feeling" in the morning, do not be guilty to neglect. Give immediate attention to yourself. Take Hood's Sarsaparilla to give strength, purify the blood /ind prevent disease. I Hood's Pills enre liver ills, jaundice iousness, sick headache, constipation.

and

p, Vil-

A Us© for Worn Stockings.

Very pretty little jackets for babies can be made from the legs of silk and woolen stocking when the feet are worn out. The stitches that confine the legs are carefully picked out and the legs joined together down the back of the jacket. The sleeves are cut from the narrower parts and sewed in. The jacket is then edged around with a scalloped edge of worsted or knitting silk, which is started by drawing a single crochet through the edge of the material. A cord and tassel made from the same is run through the neck.—Household.

To Keep the Waist Down.

Does the point at the back of your waist persist in curling up when you sit in the car or even in an ordinary chair? If so sew two inches of black elastic on the under side, leaving it the least bit tighter than the dress just- over the whalebone and see how it will hug the top of your skirt.—Exchange.

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 you have tried it. It is only 50 cents per bottle. For sale by all druggists. Jan.

(THE KING!

O A

I COUGH CURES

E DOCTOR

ACKERS

E N I S

REMEDY

Sold in England 1

for

Is. l^d.,

and

in America

S for 25 cents a bottle.

5 IT TASTES GOOD. Dr. Acker's English Pills: Cure Sickness and Headache, jj

Small, pleanant, a favorite with the ladle*. W. H. HOOKER & CO., NEW YORK. Jj,

URt

•••••••••a

THREE

THREE

Co.,

Boston, Proprietors, on both sides of plaster Is

guarantee.

Hop Plaster

HAVING

v-'ITKip Itatl^ornml:IX Jf.

UOVH8 |1.30^

POSITIVE

COX* C. W. OEAJ*.

SUNSTRUCK IN BATTLE! DR. MEDICA"L CO., ELKTIART,

IND.—IMILESsav

DR.

must the Restorative Nervine

and Nerve and Iulver Pills have done me great good. JfOR YEARS I HAVE NOT FKXT AS

WEIJLi AS NOW.

The starting point of my disease was a sunstroke received in battle before Port Hudson, Louisiana, June 14th, 1S63. Up to the time of beginning to take Ir. Miles' fk Remedies I had had a continual distracting pain in my head also, weak spells, and llie past four years I have had to give up everything of an active character, and stay In the house for I I rj months at a time O II Lt could not walk aeross the street. I KNOW YOUR REMEDIES HAVE CURED ME, and that the cure will be permanent. Several of my Mends here are using your remedies, and ail spoat well of them.. Yours truly,

&U MILL I/O |M LUTIHCIIIX EST I 11

THOUSANDS

a using your remedies, and all speak

COL

C. \Y.

DEAN,

National Military Home, Dayton.

O.

DR. MlLE3'NETWTYK is the most certain cure for Headache, Neuralgia, Nervous Prostration, Dizziness, Spasms, Sleeplessness, Dullness, Blues, and Opium. Habit. Contains no opiates Q? dangerous druga.

Sold'on.» Positive Guarantee.

MILES' PI LLS, SO DOSES 25 CTm.

^HUMPHREYS' VETERINARY SPECIFICS

For Worses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs, Hogs,

AND POULTRY.

500 Page Book on Treatment of Animal* and Chart Sent Free. crniEsc Fevers,Contentions, Indainniat Ion A.A.lHpinnl Meiiliiiritls. Milk Fever. 11.H.—Strains, Lameness, itliruiuatisuw C.C.—Distemper, ISasnl Discharges. I).1)..—Hots or (Jvubs, Worms. E.E.'-Conirbs, Heaves, Pneumonia. F.F.—Colic or Gripes, llellyaclio.

Misearriaee, Homoriimffcs.

H.H.—Urinary and Kidney Diseases. I.1.—Eruptive Diseases, Mnuae. J.K.—Diseases of Digestion, Paralysis* Single Bottle (over 50 doses), .60 Stable Caao, with Specifies, Manual,

Veterinary Caro Oil niul Medicator, S7.00 Jar Veterinary Cure Oil, 1.00 Sold by Drogeists or Sent Prepaid an where and in any quantity on Rccnipt of Price.

HUMPHREYS' MEDICINE 00., Corner. William and John New Yortt.

LADfiE!

an 11 IHJ ii Hifi mi

ff WILL C.RSSO'S lit A flIC SCfttE tlialCBl most perfect sltn- & il'. st liiulios'Talloetiiif Systorn in use. OUTIUO.OOOSOM

0iit8nll jMirments worn by Ludlow and Children (Inciudingiind'orgamont8'«i.! sl-.'cvcaj to tit tho form pcrfoitly no trying on or iv.nuSVig. learned. .. TRIAL 8cm! ns (his iiilvirrllsnmpnl mid mi »(Mil«lwn'ljo« (III' MANIC SCAtK

TIO.'i ami ITnol •nii-.nt il ynitran

3Q DAYS 1% o"l! iNnu:

return Hwiiliin :sli ilnjv ami nill taml i'Vi i-.nt of »nw montr. At.KNTH WANTKI). ll|.rrrinc'» iriwn, Clr-rulnr* frro. RCOB MAGIC SCALE CO., CHICAGO, ILL'S,

«xh*usted by ailment* (bat could not Befor. After. Low, doanv work. The scrompftnvinf fijj* WeightU4f» lb* JOS Ibi CO Ibt ures show the remit of .1 month#' tr««t- Biut...., 4fl In. 37 In. II la, ment. I nowr feel like anew beinp. Ill* WnUt... 40 In. 49 tu. 11 In. and pain*are all gone. My frtewda are Hip*.... 57 In. 48 In. 9 In. surprised. Will chuorfnlly reply to fnquirlo* with atntrp Inclosed*'1 PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL. llnrmloss. No Starring. Sciul 0 cents In fftmpi for piirllculnr. lo HB. n. W. F. SNYDER, M'VtCKER'S THEATER, CHICAGO, Hi,

POWDER: SIFE CURATIVE BEAUTIFYING. (.2.3.

ChtahAflte** Ettgrlfii'i Plnmond It wind

Original and Only Pennine. •ARC, ftlwajH reliable, LADIES, auk Drugglftt for CMcHwter'a Knattik I)ia-A none Brand In Itc-d and Gold m«Mlllo\ llwieH, sealed with hltiu rllibon. Tuico I no other. Jlrfui* dan$orou» mtbttitutlonn and imitation*. At flruggtat*. or ncn4 4o. in ttampg fur pnrt icnUri, ti'Htlmonl&U anit "Kcllcf for I-ndlco," In If tier, liy return \f Mali. lO.OOO Tr«llmotilnli. f/amf, /'eptr.

Chlrliotcr Ohcmlcnl Co.,Mndl«on Hquart,

Sold by all Local Drugflata. J'ltilado., 1'®.

EATAFraft

ArFEJERj)

Price 50

cte

ozzoijis

COMPLEXION

POINTS

All Druggists junr" a T|MT*t Fan S to re I

E A A A-4k _rfV Aiidh A A i^n A ^ii A A AiA A rtK Ai AiA iftn iti i^

THIS MACHINE

TO USE

IN YOUR HOME

Why wffl roil pay ?S0 to »6S for rewfnjr miwhtnr lhot $« not Ja be wrllh onr Mih-rrmde A I. A11. In «rder lot rod BP- AT tli* BKMI KF.WINO MACHfNK MADE, whleli to bo wffprcfl fit a prlecFA!t IJhl.OH all competitor*, we will. WlTIlOi:T COWXti YOU A CENT, slftff one owr bdt miwhlncf lf» rcmr home eondltloBaHy. Cat wit f.hl» aUvrrflftCtncNti to-day and to a* with utilpplnv direction*, and we will •ciid yoti fiili nlatnl ALVAII MFC. CO., ifcpl. KK, 170 %V. Van I'.tm-n Ht.. CTilonff". Ht-1

ARE YOU TIRED?

Catarrh of the Head and Throat? Asthma? Nervous Debility and Epilepsy? Piles, Fistula, or Cancer? Female Weakness or Disease?

I AM CURING CABKS OF THIS KJJiJD KVJ5JRY DA* -ASH &EMOVIJSG-

Tumors, Moles, Birthlarks and Superfluous Hair

I r, YEARS' EXPERIENCE. CHARGES REAS0XABUE. CONST"LTATION FREE. We.

the otidendjmed, clieerfnlly recommend Dr. Ball as having the ability of doing all tbat he claims, fejiowln«/rw»experience that what he*ajns In hi* journal on ISectro Therapy Miffn-* Sec'vT. H.BavlnjaBaalt J. W.t'aurr, Treais. VandallaR. K-:

TATLOB,

JudgeCircuitConrt Ixvi

S^TeU«8i?l»«»%mk J.E. Woi-rr, J&ltorT, H. JoarnaL

a

PRO*.

HAMMEKS-Y,

C.TAYLOR BALLt M. D. Specialist,

•P Parlomjl 1S a Sixth Stroet, Terre Hnut«, Tnl

Ki-County