Terre Haute Daily Gazette, Volume 3, Number 114, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 October 1872 — Page 3

The DAILY GAZETTE

IS

published every *fter-

noon, except Sunday, and. sold by the curriers at 15c per week. By mail $1® Per year S for 6 months 82.50 for 3 months. Tae WEEKLY GAZETTE

IS

issued every Thurs­

day, and contains all the best natter or the seven daily issues. The

WEEKLY

GAZITI-^K

SOMETHING ABOUT HEAD DRESSES.

The Time for a Change of Fashion -H ints far Ladies. A writer in an English magazine, discoursing on head dresses, protests against some of the prevailing fashions, and adds

For out door wear nothing in the world can be so beautiful and convenient as the short black or white veil worn bj* the Milanese and other Italian women, The Milanese is a black veil, about two feet square, and, of course, of many different qualities it is worn in many styles sometimes it covers the entire face and head, and shades the neck completely at others it is caught up in order to show the hair, in massive braids and plaits. Sometimes it seems all on the top of the head sometimes all at the back of it, with a spray of jessamine behind the ear. Indeed, individual taste could hardly have better scope than in these little veils. We are struck at Milan by the extreme beauty and grace of the women, some of them with hair powdered white, others with their native dark tresses—but all veiled. The same woman in a veil and a bonnet is hardly to be recognized in the first place she will, perhaps, look stately and most graceful, while in the second, and no flow of folds to enhance the easy movements of the throat—no softening shadow of delicate patterns around the shoulders, she will appear stiff anu uninteresting. The explanation is not far to seek. Everybody lias not the unspeakable charm of carriage and action of a really graceful woman, any more than everybody has a beautiful face, but there are some fashions and dresses which undoubtedly add grace, as there are others which add piquancy, etc. Long folds always lend a smoothness, an undulating flow, to the body anything that fills up and furnishes the sides of the face adds softness and roundness to even the fairest. Something rather full and lofty on the top of the head is generally an improvement, as so many heads are flat or uneven at the top. This light and manageable Italian veil has all sorts of merits, as it can be gathered in any number of forms, and when the lace is mingled with a flower or a broad riband, it is, perhaps, the most entirely satisfactory head dress that can be found.

For winter wear, (he nearest approach to beauty would be a hood. The round hoods worn in Watteau's time, of black silk, or other material, lined with a color, often crowned with a saucy little shepherdess hat, proved beyond everything becoming to the face. A still more picturesque hood is the Russian bctschlik, which is drawn over the hat a little way, and, crossing under the chin, falls in two embroidered ends behind. The ears may be exposed or not well chosen color adds wonderfully to the beauty of the face the hood preserves from cold—there are no red tips to noses and ears in this at once coquettish and comfortable hood, and were it general iti England there would soon be no more influenzas and redeyes. The only objection that could at present be urged against the baschlik is that it conceals the "back hair," but a little hair may be coaxed forward with wonderfully good effect, and even the golden haired need not fear that their locks will shine unseen. Surely the chignon is of less consequence than a red nose! And besides this, an objection which was not considered throughout as many centuries of head dressing can hardly be all important now. The entire display of hats in the public streets is a very recent fashion.

It is a great fault in the bonnets of the present day that they are—and look—so temporary. We are not going to urge ladies to spend less money on them we are hardly so visionary as that!—but we do say that when a couple of guineas are spent every month or so on a new construction of most unmeaning tints and spangles (intrinsically worth less than a third of that money), something better might be got for a very little more, and something whieh would last more than a very little longer. A wired edifice of tulle and velvet (two materials that, from their contrast do not easily mix well), trimmed with a mass of valueless blonde, a spray of tiusel, and perhaps a bird's nest in an impossible position at oOe side, or something else equally bad in taste, c. g., moths, beetles, lizards, mice, etc., can never be a beautiful object and, when stuck at the top of a tall chignon, fails to soften or set off the face, and yet it has cost two pounds! WThy not spend money once in the season, or twice if you like, and have a graceful head dress of the lace or some other rare material or else some cap of definite shape, ornamented with real jewels, filigree, or embroidery

A "bonnet," which after all is to occupy the place of liouor, might then be a work of art in itself, and could be made really to suit the countenance, which a formless tuft of flu fit, requiring to be fastened on with hairpins can never be.

We confess we are unable to see why, when jewels, furs and l:ice of real value are worn on every other part of the person, the head and crown of all should be decorated with only the most worthless stuff. The .artificial flowers iu bonnets and hats are generally detestable (indeed, artificial flowers, except when quite dtceptive, should never be worn,) and all who can afford it should wear real flowers. The large and gaudy iusects that craw! over them are cheap and nasty to t'.ie last degree. The blonde, when once soiled, is of no further use, and the feathers are dyed aud mutilated scraps from the commonest fowls—a sight detestable to any one loving either aft or nature. IJven the veils now worn are wo«th nothing-^raw edged morsftls pf cheap wet tightly bound over tljo nose to rui^-of eyelashes of any j?pgth p*

'it-

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Address all letters, HUDSON & ROSE, GAZETTE, Terro Haute, Ind.

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KS- s. M. PETTENGILL, & Co., 87 Park Row, New York,are our sole agents in that city, and are authorized to contract for advertising at our lowest rates.

beauty the whole head dress is, in fact, a mass of rubbish. The same money spent in fewer and better ornaments would make ladies' heads appear less trivial, less obviously temporary than they do now. But before women put sensible, not to say beautiful, things outside their heads, they will have to put a little more inside them. At present the bonnets and the brains they cover are not unfit companions.

The greatest want in the present age is men and women, healthy in mind and body. The continued headaches, weaknesses, nervousness, and varying ailments which afflict women are generally the result of imperfect action of the stomach and other vital organs.

WALKER'S CALIFORNIA BITTERS,

J.

WALKER

Proprietor. It il.

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MEDICAL

ft GREAT MEDICAL DI8CQVERY.

.UI I.LIONS Hear Testimony to tho Wonderful Cunltive Effects of DR. WALKER'S CALIFORNIA

VINEGAR BITTERS

MCDONALD

a Co.. Druggists

autl Gen. Ag'U, &%n Fraucisco, Cat., end 32 and 31 Commerce St, S.Y. Vinpsar Bitters arenot a vile Fancy I»rlnli Made of nr llitrii, WJiisky, I'r««f Spirits nntl Kf itinp I,5 u«rs doctored, spiced and sweetened to please the taste, called "Tonics," "Appetizers," "Restorers,"' *o., that lead the tippler on to drunkenness and ruin, but are a true Medicine, madefrotn the Native Roots and Herbs ol' California, Tree from all Alcoholic StiitiiUants. They are the (iREAT r.I.OOD 1'1'KiFIEK a en! A 1.IFJ- (aVIXtl I'iUXl'IPX.iE,a perfect Renovator and Invigorator ol the System, carrying off all poisonous matter and restoring the blood to a healthy condition. No person can take these Bitters according to directions and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and the vital organs wasted beyond tliepolntof repair.

They area pen tie PnrgatlTC as well as a Tonic, possessing also, the peculiar merit ot acting as a powerful ascent, in relieving Congestion or inflammation of the Liver, and all the Visceral Organs.

FOlt ki:.UA i.E whetner in young or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood or at the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters have no eqnal.

For Inflammatory aud Chronic Rheumatism and «»nt, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Rill

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DYSPEPSIA OK INDIGESTION Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness ol the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad taste in the Mouth, Billious Attacks, Palpitation of the Heart, Inllamation o.t the Lungs, Pain in the region of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the offsprings of Dyspepsia.

They invigorate the Stomach and stimulate the torpid liver and bowels, which render them of unequalled efficacy in cleansing the blood of all impurities, and imparting new life and vigor to the whole system.

FOR SKIN DISEASES, Eruptions, Tetter, Salt Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules. Boils, Carbuncles, Ring Worms, Scald Head, Sore Eyes, Erysiplas,Itch,Scurfs,

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Cleanse the Vitiated blood whenever you find its impurities bursting through, theskin in Pimples, Eruptions or Sores, cleanse it when you find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins cleanse it when it is foul, and your feelings will teli you when. Keep the blood pure and the health ol the system will follow.

FIN, TAPE, and other WORMS, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are effectual ly dest royed aud removed. For full dtiectioLis, read carefully the circular around each bottle, printed iu four languages—English, German, trench HudSpauish.

J. "WALKER, Proprietor.

B, H. & CO., Druggists and Gen. Aganta, Sao Fiaucisco, Cal., and 32 and 3-1 Comrne.ee Street. New York. OtSuSOLI) BY ALL DRUGGISTS & DEALERS.

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The Platform of the Liberal Republican Reform Tarty. The Administration now in power has rendered itself guilty of a wanton disregard of the laws of the land and of powers not granted by the Constitution.

It has acted as if the laws had binding force only for those wJ'- are governed, and not for those whe govern. It has thus struck a blow at the fundamental principles of constitutional government and the liberties of the Citizens.

The President of the United States has openly used the powers and opportunities of his high office for the promotion of personal ends.

He has kept notoriously corrupt and unworthy men in places of power and responsibility, to the detriment of the public interest.

He has used the public service of the government as a machinery of corruption and personal influence, and interfered with tyranical arrogance, in the political affairs of States and municipalities.

He has rewarded with influential and lucrative offices, men who had acquired his favor by valuable presents, thus stim ulating the demoralization of our polit ical life by his conspicuous example.

He has shown himself deplorably tin equal to the tasks imposed upou him by the necessities of the country, and culpably careless of the responsibility of his high office.

The partisans of the administration assuming to be the Republican party ancl controlling its organization, have attempted to justify such wrongs and palliate such abuses to the end of maintaining partisan ascendancy.

They have stood in the way of necessary investigations aud indispensable re form, pretending that no serious fault could be found with the present admiuistratiou of public affairs.

Thus seeking to blind the eyes of the people. They have kept alive the passions and resentments of the late civil war, to use them for their own advantage.

They have resorted to arbitrary meas ures iu direct conflict with the organic Jaw, instead of appealing to the better instincts and the latent patriotism of the Southern people by restoring to them those rights, the enjoyment of which is indispensable for a successful administration ot their local affairs, aud would tend to move a patriotic and hopeful national feeling.

They have degraded themselves and the name of their party, once justly entitled to the confidence of the nation, by a base sycophancy to the dispencer of executive power patronage unworthy of Republican freemen, they have sought silence 'the voice of just criticism, and stifle the moral sense of the people and to subjugate public opinion by tyrannical party discipline.

They are striving to maintain themselves in authority tor selfish ends, by an unscrupulous use of the power which rightfully belongs to the people, and should be employed only in the service of the country.

Believing that an organization thus led and controlled can no longer Ibe of service to the best interests of the republic, we have resolved to make an independent appeal to the soberjudgment, conscience and patriotism of the American people.

We, the Liberal Republicans of the United States, in National Convention assembled at Cincinnati, proclaim the principles as essential to a just government 1. We recognize the equality of all before the law, and hold that it is the duty of the Government iu its dealings with the people to mete out equal and exact justice to all, of whatever nativity, race, color or persuation, religious or political. 2. We pledge ourselves to maintain the Union of these States, emancipation and enfranchisement, and to oppose any reopening of the questions settled by the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments of the Constitution. 3. We demand the immediate and absolute removal of all disabilities imposed on account of the rebellion, which was finally subdued seven years ago, believing that universal amnesty will result in complete pacification in all sections of the country. 4. That local self-government, with impartial suffrage will guard the rights of all citizens more securely than any centralized power. The public welfare requires the supremacy of the civil over the military authority aud the freedom of person under the protection of the habeas corpus. We demand for the individual the largest liberty coutistent with public order, for the State self-government, and for the nation a return to the method of peace and the constitutional limitations of power. 5. The civil service of the Government has become a mere instrument of partisan tyranny and personal ambition, and an object of selfish greed. It is a scandal and reproach on free institutions, and breeds demoralization, dangerous to the prosperity of Republican government. 6. We therefore regard a thorough reform of the civil service as one of the most pressing necessities of the hour that honesty, capacity and fidelity constitute the only' valid claims to public employment that offices of the Government cease to be a matter of arbitrary favoritism and patronage, and that public stations become again a post of honor. To this end it is imperatively required that no President shall be a candidate for re-election.

We demand a system of Federal taxation which shall not unnecessarily in terfere with the industry of the peopie. and which shall provide the means necessary to pay the expenses of the Government economically administered, the pensions, the interest on the public debt, and a moderate annual reduction of the principal thereof and recognizing that there are in our midst, honest but irreconcilable differences of opinion with regard to the respective systems of protection and free trade, we remit the discussion of the subject to the people in their Congressional Districts, and the decision of Congress thereon wholly free of executive interference or dictation. 8. The public credit must be sacrediy mantained, and we denouuee repudiation in every form and guise. 9. A speedy return to specie payment is demanded alike by the highest considerations of cmmercial morality and honest government. 10. We remember with gratitude the heroism and sacrifices of the soldiers and sailors of the Republic, and no act of ours shall ever detract from their justly earned fame for the full rewards of their patriotism. 11. We are opposed to all further grants of lands to railroads or other corporations. The public domain should beheld sacred to actual settlers. 12. We hold that it is the duty of the Government, iu its intercourse with foreign nations, to cultivate the friendships of peace, by treating with all on fair and equal terms, regarding it alike dishonorable either to demand what is not right or to submit to what is wrong. 13. For the promotion aud success of these vital principles and the support ol the candidates nominated by this Convention we invite and cordially welcome the cooperation of all patriotic citizens without regard to previous political affiliation.

HORACE WHITE,

Chairman Com. on Resolutions.

G. P. THURSTOX,

Secretary.

Mr. Greeley's Acceptance.

CINCINNATI, OHIO,

DEAR SIB

May 3,1S72.

:—The National Convention

of the Liberal Republicans of the United States have instructed the undersigned, President, Vice President^ and Secretaries of the Convention, to inform you that you have been nominated as the candidate of the Liberal Republicans for the Presidency of the United States. We also submit to you the address and resolutions j^ianimously adopted by the Convention. Be pleased to uglify to ue your

acceptance of the platform and the nomination, and believe us Very truly yours,

C. SCHURZ, President. GEO. W. JULIAN, Vice Pres't.

Wit.

E. MCLEAN,

JNO. G. DAVIDSON, J. H. RHODES, Secretaries. HON. HORACE GREEBEY,

New York

MR. GREELEY'S REPLY. NEW YORK,

May

20,1872.

GENTLEMEN: I have chosen not acknowledge your letter of the 3d instant until I could learn how the work of your convention was received in all parts of our great country, and judge whether that work was approved and ratified by the mass of our fellow-citizens. Their response has from day to day reached me through telegrams, letters, and the com ments of journalists, independent of offi cial patronage and indifferent to the smiles or frowns of power. The number and character of these unconstrained, unpur chased, unsolicited utterances, satisfy me that the movement which found expres sion at Cincinnati has received the stamp of public approval and been hailed by a majority of our country as the harbinger of abetter day for the Republic

I do not misinterpret this approval as especially complimentary to myself, nor even to the chivalrous and justly es teemed gentleman with whose name thank your convention for associating mine. I receive and welcome it as spontaneous and deserved tribute to the admirable platform of principles wherein your convention so tersely, so lu cidly, so forcibly, set forth the convictions which impelled and the purposes which guided its coure platform which, casting behind is the wreck and rubbish of worn out con ten tions and bygone feuds, embodies in fit and few words the needs and asperations of to-day. Though thousands stand ready to condemn your every act, hardly a sj'llable of criticism or cavil has been aimed at your platform, of which the substance may be fairly eptomized as follows: 1. All the political rights and franchises which have been acquired through our late bloody convulsion must and shall be guaranteed, maintained, enjoyed re spected evermore.

All the political rights and fran chises which have been lost through that convulsion should and must be promptly restored and re-estab lished, so that there shall be henceforth no. proscribed class and no disfran chised caste within the limits of our Union, whose long estranged peopleshall re-unite and fraternize upon the broad basis of universal amnesty with impartial suffrage. 3. That, subject to our solemn constitutional obligation to maintain the equal rights of all citizens, our policy should aim to local self government, and not at centralization that the civil authority should be supreme over the military that the writ of habeas corpus should be jealously upheld as the safeguard of personal freedom that the individual citizens should enjoy the largest liberty consistent with public order and that there shall be no Federal subversion ox the internal polity of the several States and municipalities, but that each shall be left free to enforce the rights and pro jaote the well-being of its inhabitants, by such means as the judgment of its people shall prescribe. 4. That there shall be a real and not merely a stimulated reform in the civil service of the Republic to which end it is indispensable that the chief dispenser of its vast official patronage shall shielded from the main temptation to use his power selfishly, by a rule inexorably forbidding and precluding his re-election. 5. Raising of the revenue, whether by tariff or otherwise, shall be recognized and treated as the peoples' immediate business, to be shaped and directed by them through their representatives in Congress, whose action thereon the President must neither overrule by his veto, attempt to dictate nor presume to punish by bestowing office only on those who agree with him, or withdrawing it from those who do not. 6. That the public lands must be sacredly reserved for occupation aud acquisition by cultivators, and not recklessly squandered on projectors of railroads for which our people have no present use need the premature construction of which is annually plunging us into deeper and deeper abysses of foreign indebtedness. 7. That the achievement of these grand purposes of universal beneficencies is expected and sought at the hands of all who approve them, irrespective of past affiliations. 8. That the public faith must at all hazards be maintained aud the national credit preserved. 0. That the patriotic devotedness and inestimable services of our fellow-citizens who, as soldiers or sailors, upheld the flag and maintained the unity of the Republic, shall ever be gratefully remembered and honorably requited. These propositions, so ably and forcibly presented in the platform of your Convention, have already fixed the attention and commanded the assent of a large msjority of our countrymen, who joyfully adopt them, as I do, as the bases of a true, beneficent national reconstruction—of a new departure from jealousies, strifes, and hates which have no longer adequate motive or even plausible pretext, into an atmosphere of peace, fraternity of mutual good will. In vain do the drill sergeants of decaying organizations flourish menacing by their truncheons and angrily insist that the flies shall be closed and straightened in vain do the whippers-in of parties once vital, because tooted in the vital needs of the hour, prorest against straying and bolting, denounce men nowise their inferiors, as traitors and renegades, and threaten them with infamy and ruin. I am confident that the American people have already made your cause their own, fully resolved that their brave hearts and strong arms shall bear it on to triumph. In this faith, and with the distinct understanding that if. elected, I shall be the President not of a party, but of the whole people, I accept your nomination in the confident trust that the masses of our countrymen, North and South, are eager to clasp hands across the bloody, chasm which has too long divided them, forgetting that they have been enemies, in joyful consciousness that they are and must henceforth remain brethren.

Yours gratefully, HORACE GREELEY.

SADDLES, HARNESS, &Q.

PHILIP HABEL,

Manufacturer of and Wholesale and Retail Dealer in

SADDLES. HARNESS

COLLARS, WHIPS

ALL KINDS OF

FLY. NETS AND SHEETS! AND

FANCY DUSTERS

JOfl 3KAIIS §TKEKT, SEAB SET&STH, East( of Scarfs' Confectionery tsovldwtf tr.RKK HAUTE,

XiAR&E

those deleterious substances which make some preparations dangerous and injurious to the hair, the Vigor can only benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a

HAIR DRESSING,

nothing else can be found so desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it does not soil white cambric, and yet lasts longer on the hair, giving it a rich glossy lustre and a grateful perfume.

PliEPAKED BY

JDR. J. €. AYES CO., Practical and Analytical CSiemistn,

LOWELL, MASS.

PBICE $1.00.

WESTEBN LANDS.

Homestead and Pre-emption.

HAVE compiled a full, con else and complete statemeDt, plainly printed for the information persons, Intending to take up a Homestead pre-emption in this poetry of the West, embracing Iowa, Dakota, and Nebraska and other sections. It explains liow to proceed to secure 160 acres of Rich Farming Land for Nothing, six months before you leave your home, in the most healthful climate. In short it contains ust such instructions as are needed by those intending to make a Home and Fortune in the Free Lands of the West. I will- send one of these printed Guides to any person for 25 cents. The information alone, which, it gives is worth 85 to anybody. Men who came here two and tbr€6 years ago, £tu^ took a farm, are to~day independent.

To

ROTRSO MSN.

This country is being crossed with numerou Railroads from every direction to Sioux City Iowa. Six Railroads will be made to this cit-y^ within one year. One is already In operation^ connecting us with Chicago and the U. P. Railroad and two more will be completed before us with Dubuque and Mciree more will be completed

spring, connecting us with Dubuque and McGregor, direct. Three more will be completed within a year, connecting us direct with St. Paul, Minn., Yankton, Dakota, and Columbus.

Nebraska, on the U. P. Railroad. The Missouri River gives us the Mountain Trade. Tims it will be seen that no section of country offers such unprecedented advantages for business, speculation and making a fortune, for the country is being populated, and towns and cities are being built, and fortunes made almost beyond belief. Every man who takes a homestead now will" have a railroad market at Ms own door, And any enterprising young man with a small capital can establish himself in a permanent paying business, if he selectB the right location and right branch of trade. Eighteen years residence in the western country, and large portion of the time employed as a Mercantile

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iV O E E I E S

2,000 YARDS PERFECT LAWSM, At 81-5 cents per yard.

2,000 YARDS REST 1400 LAWNS, At 12 1-3 cents per yard.

STRIPED GRENADIMS, Koduccd to 13 1-2 cciits per yard.

STOCK

PERCALES AND PIQUES, At reduced prices.

HAIR VIGOR.

AYER'S

A I I O

For the Renovation of the Hair!

The Great Desideratum of the Age!

A dressing which is at once agreeable, healthy, and effectual for preserving the hair. Faded or gray hair is soon restored to its original color and the gloss ana freshness of youth. Thin hair is thickened, falling hair checked, and baldness often, though not always, cured by its use. Nothing can restore the hair where the follicles are destroyed, or the glands ftrophied or decayed. But such as remain can be saved for usefulness by this application. Instead of fouling the hair with a pasty sediment, it will keep it clean and vigorous. Its occasional use will prevent the hair from falling oft and consequently prevent baldness. Free

from

SUMMER

OP

At 10 cciits per yard.

WASH POPLINS 4& FANCY DRESS GOODS, Of various kinds, reduced to 123,15 and 20 cents per yard.

JAPANESE SUITINGS, Reduced to 15,18, 20 and 40c, from prices 10 to 25c per yd. higher.

LACE POINTS AND JACKETS, To close out.

In order to present stronger attractions than a great reduction on Dress Goods alone would effect, we will, for a short time, make lower prices on every article in stock. Everything will be called into requisition to make our sale populat and induce a speedy clearance.

Agent in this

country, has made me familiar with all the hmnohes of business and the best locations in this country. For one dollar remitted to me I will stive truthful and definite answers to all onesUoHson this subject desired by such persons Tell them the best place to locate, and what business is overcrowded and tranch Is neglect^, Adc^egs,

prints.

TUELL, RIPLEY & DEMING.

Cor. Fiftli and Main Streets, Terre Haute, Ind.

ROBACK'S BITTERS.

Greenbacks are Good,

BUT

Roback's are Better!

ROBACK'S ROBACK'S ROBACK'S

STOMACH STOMACH STOMACH

HITTEHS

S:.

S CURES S S... DYSPEPSIA...R S S..SICK HEADACH..R S S INDIGESTION S S SCROFULA

O

OLD SORES O O COSTIYENESS O

ROBACK'S STOMACH BITTERS.

SOLD EVERYWHERE AND USED BY EVERYBODY,

ERUPTIONS O O REMOVES BILE O

C...RESTORES

AND

C..BROKEN'D6WNV/B C..CONSTITUTIONS..B

AAAAAAAA

The Blood Pills

Are the most active and thorough Pills that have ever been introduced. They act so directly upon the Liver, exciting that organ to such an extent as that the system does not relapse into its former condition, which is too apt to be the case with simply a purgative pill. They are really a

Blood and Liver Pill,

An® in conjunction with the

BLOOD PURIFIER,

Will cure all the aforementioned diseases, and themselves will relieve and cure

Headache, Costiveness, Colic, Cholera Morbus, Indigestion, Pain in the Bowels, Dizziness, etc., etc.

ROBACK'S

Wit.

STOMACH BITTERS

Should be used by convalescents to strengthen .the prostration which always follows acute disease.

Try these medicines, and you will never regret it. Ask your neighbors who have usfed them, and they will say they are GOOD MEDICINES, and you should try them before *oing for a Physician.

X. S. PROP. MEb. CO.,

SoSe Proprietor,

If08. 56 & 58 East Third Street,

CINCINNATI, OHIO.

.-

DANIEL SCOTT

G, Commissioner of Emigration, $0*185. ggop* curry.

EELMBOLD'S COLUMN.HENRY T.HELMBOLD'S

COMPOUND FLUID

EXTRACT CATAWBA

A E I S

Component Parts—Fin id Extract Rbn bard and Fluid Extract Catawba Grape nice.

FOR LIVER COMPLAINTS, JAUNDICE, BILIOUS AFFECTIONS, SICK OR NERVOU HEADACHE, COSTIVENESS, ETC. PURE­

LY VEGETARLE, CONTAINING NO MERCURY, MINERALS, OR DELETERIOU DRUGS.

51

These Pills area pleasant purgative,superceding castor oil, salts, magnesia, etc. There is nothing more acceptable to the stomach. They give toDe, and cause neither nausea nor griping pains. Tliey are composed of the finest xngredxenti. After a few days' use of them, such an invigoration of tho entire system takes place as to appear miraculous to the weak and enervated. H. T. Helm hold's Compound Fluid Extract Catawba Grape Pills are not sugar-coated su-gar-coatca Pills y-ass through the stomach without dissolving, consequently do not produce the desired effect. THE CATAWBA GRAPE PILLS, being pleasant in taste and odor, do not necessitate their being sugar-coated, and are prepared according to rules of Phaimacy auO Chenii try, and are uot Patent Medicines.

IS

IMKX T. IUUUHBOIL'S

Kijflilj {'KiirPKirntctl Compound

Fluid Extract r^arsaparill

Will radically exterminate from the system Scrofula, Syphilis, Fever Sores, Ulcers, Sore Eyes, S(. Legs, Sere Mouth, Sore liead, Bronehlti.s. Skin Diseases, Salt Rheum, Cankerp Runnings from the Ear, White Swellings, Tu mors, Cancerous Affections, Nodes, Rickets, Glandular Swellings, Night Sweats,Rash, Totter, Humors of all kinds, Chronic Rheumatism, Dyspepsin. and all diseases that have been established 1a the system for years.

Being prepared expressly for the above complaints, its biood-purifying properties are greater thai» any other preparation of Sarsaparilla. It give* the Complexion a Clear and Healthy Color and restores the patient to a state ot Healtl' and Purity. For Purifyihg the Blood, Remov lug all Chronic Constitutional Diseases arising from an Impure State of the Blocd, and the onl reliable and effectual known remedy for the cure of Pains and Swellings of the Bones, Ulcerations of the Throat and Lungs, Blotches, Pimples on the Face, Erysipelas and all Scaly Eruptions of the -Skin, and Beautifying the Complexion. Price, #1.50 per Bottle,

3J

HENRY I. HELHBOLD'8

CONCENTRATED

FLUID EXTRACT BTJCHU,

THE GREAT DIUP.ETIC,

has cured every case of Diabetes in which it has been given, Irritation of the Neck of the Bladber and Inflamation of tho Kindeys,Ulceration of the Kidneys and Bladder, Retention of Urine Diseases of the Prostate Gland, Stone in the Bladder, Calculus, Gravel, Brick dust Depmlt and Mucous or Milky Discharges, and for Enfeebled and Delicate Constitutions of both sexes, attended with the lellowing symptoms: Indisposition to Exertion, Loss of Power, Loss of Memory, Difficulty of Breathing, Weak Nerves Trembling, Horror of Disease. Wakefulness Dimness of Vision, Pain In the Back, Hands, Flushing of the Body, Dryness of Skin, Eruption on the Face, Pallid Countenance, Universal Lassitude of the Muscular System, etc.

Used by persons from the ages of eighteen to twenty-five, and from thirty-five to fifty-flv in the decline or change of life: after confln mentor labor pains bed-wetting in 0 iidr

HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCHU is Diuretic and Blood-Purifying, and Cures all Disease arising from Habits of Dissipation, Excessesan Imprudences in Life, Impurities of the Blood etc., superceding Copaiba in Affections for which it is used, and Syphilitic Affections—in these Diseases used in connection with Helmbold' Rose Wash.

LADIES.

In many Affections peculiar to Ladies, th Extract Buchu is unequalled by any other Remedy, as in Chlorosis or Retention. Irregularity Painfu.ness or Suppression of Customary Evacuations, Ulcerated or Schirrus State of the Uterus, Lcucorrhcea or Whites, Sterility, and for all Complaints Incident to the Sex, whether arising from Indiscretion or Habits of Dissipation. It is prescribed extensively by the most eminent Physicians and Mid wives for

H. T. HELMBOJ

O

SHATTERED....!}

C....

Enfeebled and Del­

icate Constllutions of both sexes and all ages

O

.V-3

ESEdiC-.

BUCHU

CURES DISEASEo ARISING FROM IMPRU-» DENCES, HABITS OF DISSIPATION ETC.,

in all their stages, at little expense, little or no inconvenience, and no exposure. It caus.es a froquent desire, and gives strength to Urinate, thereby removing Obstructions, Preventlngand Curing Strictures of the Urethra, Allaying Pain and Inflammation, so frequent in this class of diseases, and expellihg all Poisonous matter.

KESKY T. HELMBOLD'S

IMPROVED ROSE WASH!

cannot be surpassed as a FACE WASH, and will be found the only specific remedy in every species of CUTANEOUS AFFECTION. It speedily eradicates Pimples, Spots, Scorbutic Dryness, Indurations of the Cutaneous Membrane, etc., dispels Redness and Incipient Inflammation Hives, Rash, Moth Patches, Dryness of Scalp or 81iin, Frost Bites, and all purposes for which Salves or Ointments are used restores the skin to a state of purity and soltness, and insures continued healthy action to the tissues of its vessels,on which depends the agreeable clear ness and vivacity of complexion so much sought and admired. But however valuable as a remedy for existing defects of the skln,H. T. Helmbold's Rose Wash has long sustained its principal claim to unbounded patronage, by possessing qualities which render it a TOILIT APPJiNl)AGE of the most Superlative and Congenial character, cofhbining in ane.'egant formula those prominent requisites, ETY and E KFIC AC Y—t 11 variable acco mpaii?. ments of. its ue—as a Preservative and Refresher of the Comolexioii. It is an excellent Lotion fov dis-* erses of a ttyj bilitic Nature, and as aninjectioD for diseases of the Urinary Organs, arising from ii-ibits of dissipatipn, used in connection with the EXTRACTS BUCHU, SARSAPARILLA and CATAWBA GRAPE PILLS, in such diseases as .recommended, cannot be surpassed. Price, ONE COLLAR PER BOTTLE.

13

Full and explicit directions accompany medicines. Evidences of the most responsible and reliable character furnished on application, with htm dreds of thousands of living witnesses, and up ward of 30,000 unsolicited certificates and recommendatory letters, many of which are from the highest sources, including eminent Physicians, Clergymen, Statesmen, etc. Tho proprietor has never resorted to their publication in the newspapers he does not do this from the fact that his articles rank as

Standard Preparations,

and do not need to be propped up bycertiflcatear,.'

Heisry T. Uelmfcold's Gcanine Preparafijpos. Delivered ts any address- Secure l*orii obser-

ESTABLISHED UPWARD OF TWENTY YEARS. Sold by Druggists everywhere. Addrass letters for,information, in confidence, to HENRY. T. HELMBOLD, Druggist and Chem-

iSOnly

ists Eyeryr/here!

Dra?"

Depots: H. T. HELMBOLD'S Drug ant Chemical warehouse, **0. 5»4 Broadway, New York, or to H. T. iri^iZ^BCLD'S Medical Depo^ 104South Tenth sU-e?t Philadelphia, Pa,

BEWARE OF WimTKRFEITSj A H^STRt T. KEL^BOLD

im

IFEITS,

1

A% lOJ"

3S