Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Volume 7, Number 46, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 June 1876 — Page 7
L— j- ... fCBlUSB'S ACCSNT.
Goethe and ScMler worked co-opera-'threly onder the influence of their kind 3 friend, Dnke Karl August, in Weiiner, anc?
Ifflaad was creating a new school in Mannheim. It was there that Schiller's ("Bobbers" first saw the light of day, «od that Iffland, in the character of Moor, achieved a triumph which revolutionized the entire theatre. The pnblic was fran-1
Dut if you will leave the manuscript with ,ne I will read the other acts, and see whether anything can be done with it Early next morning Schiller was aroused 'rom slumber in his miserable garret by voud knocking, and on opening the door,
:jVolf
flew into his arms, exclaiming, 'Schiller, that's a great play of yours it ,Vas your confounded Suabian accent that ipoiledit all." Poor Schiller! He was •ery fond of reading, and, it is said, in-
1
ended once to enter the profession, a tep from which he was only prevented his friends, who showed him the utter mpossibility of success with such an accent. Frau von Kalb, a great friend of lis, tells the following story of him. lie lsually gave her everything to peruse eforo ho placed it in the hands of the rinters. One day he read a couple of jets of "Don Carlos'' to her. In the middle of his reading she burst out laughing, rith the exclamation, "Schiller, that's the rorst thing you have ever written." In [isgust he threw the manuscript on the I ioor and left the room. She took it up, ead it herself and was in ecstacy. "It I ras that awful Sehwaebisclie accent."— \\facmil!an's Magazine.
AMONG TUB SIIAKKS.
A large lifeboat, crossing the bar of the iian Juan River, upset, precipitating the irew, consisting of two officers (white) tod ten colored men, into the water, the 'oat being turned upside down. "I felt," ays the narrator, "that my life was not forth half an hour's purchase. The coxwain to the boat, a weakly black man, ose alongside of me after the plunge.
Ie was in great terror, and I felt that if he sharks did not harm him he could carcely reach the shore without help so encouraged him by telling him I would wim by him, and give him a hand if he elt tired. '.No tired, massa neber live be tired look at dein round us.' I elt that he was as close to the truth as •ossible, for we were literally in the cenre of a shoal of sharks, whoso black riangular (ins we conld see on all sides ailing round us. As the beach was quite lose we fir-st endeavored to inakp that, but oon discovered that the current was so trong that we made no headway and we /ere fonvd to turn toward the boat, .'hieli was
l.'O
Considering the foolhardy rashness of he negroes in bathing it is surprising
IOW
comparatively few accidents happen. 'Dire for sixpence, massa," intoJthe water I vhe'W sharks* hav# beext neen the same morning. However, he will never ven-
W
TJ
in after dark. Shirks, like many ther
fish, bite
and
tic with excitement and Schiller woke up1 mony, arsenic, and anything else as the next morning to find himself a great man. When he heard of the enormous Success of his play, he escaped from the 'tyranny of Prince Charles school, and walked from Stuttgart to Mannheim in midwinter in a light Summer suit.
When there he handed lxis second play, "Love and Intrigue," to the management. Intendant von Dahlberg appointed the three stage managers, headed by Wolf, to hear it read by the author. After the reading of the second act they all shook their heads, and Wolf took Schiller aside and asked whether he was sure that he was the man who had written the Rob'bers." Schiller looked at him with large ,3yes, and upon Wolfs explanation that fate could hardly credit that the author of he "Robbers" conld bo guilty of such ,rash as he had just now read. "Is it 'really so bad?" Schiller asked with »deep jigh. "Very bad indeed, Herr Schiller
yards away, drifting out to
ea, turned upside down, with the rest ftlie crew astride on her keel. There as nothing, however, for it but to switn her, and, aided by the strong current, re soon shortened the distance. All this ime the sharks were around us, making, fancied, smaller circles, and once or I wice I thought I felt something touch I ly fe'et with a rush, as "these horrid rates do before they bite. If ft toss my pagination it was not a 'great -stretch, .owever, for we had not got twenty yards head of the spot when my companion hrieked, tji^ew up his arms anci disappeared beneath the waves. A rush of lack lias and their sudden disappearance inder the water was the last thing I reaembered until I found myself alongside lur ship in the sternsheets of the cutter ?hich had been Sent to the rescue."
more freely at night in
act, riharky waters, where the fish are ,hy
bathing is comparatively free
'roiri danger during
the
jnterpd
day, cannot? be
after nightfall without rery great
hiki the -more" especially that at night just y0U
I iharks will, like trout, prowl ahdat sliailow water barely sufficient to Cover them, rlie writer recollects at Colon two stokers af the mail steamer Tyne taking forecastle 'leave one night. The ship was warped alongside the wharf and these two. men crept along one of the hawsers, hand over foot, to reach the wharf. The first got over safely, but the second slipped and fell into the water. Not at all frightened, in a low voice he told his companion to lower him a rope from the wharf, but he had scarcely spoken when lie disappeared and did not rise again.
A shark's stomach to a sailor is a matter of extreme interest. "Let's see what's Inside of him," is Jack's first thought when the monster lies dead on the deck though Jack is invariably disappointed of tading treMure.
TOOT1 fE35g&£$~'—
TUE ABT OF PO IS OX I NO IN THE
REIGIi OF LOUIS.XIV.
To stave off bankruptcy, kings and ministers had recourse to strange expedients. Even Louis XIV. was sad ly pinched for want of money and, since alchemy was the order of the day, he caught a batch of alchemists and sent them to the Bastile to work under Government surveillance. They were allowed as much sulpnur, anti
they wanted, and they were expected to give gold in return. Hence one of the most notable discoveries of that time of course'the police found no 'gold, but they found (what they had long suspected) that these seekers for the philosopher's stone were poisoners, and that their customers were to be found in the very highest ranks of .society. Arsenic, which is often said to kill by accumulation of many small doses, was incapable of detection in those days, when post-mortems were unknown and thus poiidre de succession became a favorite way of getting rid of any one who stood between a man or woman and the estate or the human being whom they coveted. We have all heard of the Brinvilliers. Yoisin was a plebeian imitator of hers, doing for the common people what the other did for the noblesse, to which she herself belonged. The humbler artist did her work in just as artistic stylo as did the marchioness.
A butcher in St. Antoine "administers correction" to his gad-about wife she goes off straight to Yoisin and quietly buys packets of powder, which make her in a few weeks a frolicsome widow.
A carpenter, dying, leaves a little money mother and son can't agree about it tho mother goes toVoisin and gets a powder, but before she has come for the next the son has been there too. Yoisin keeps them both in hand, determined that whoever pays her highest shall win the mother gains the day.
Besides poisoning, Yoisin was ready for every other kind of villainy. She and a mid-wife named Lepere are stated to have procured abortion in 10,000 cases, and the number of new-born-children burned by Voisin in her magical rites is reckoned at
2,500.
The
whole story is so horrible that, were it not legally attested in these archives, one co ild not credit it it is worse tlian the worst of the foul dreams of witches.
The confessions of Yoisin and her accomplices were made long before they were tortured, yet one would fain hope that some of the revolting details were due to a diseased, imagination. Spiritualism is contemptible enough we may be thankful that it is only contemptible jvhen we read of the methods which, those wretches used to call up the Devil and to win from him for their dupes "the flying dollar," which was no sooner spent than it found its way back to its owner's pocket.
To drape a room in black cloth, and on a black altar, lighted with black candles,to slay a new-born babe,while a priest (for priests were found to lend themselves to the work) went through a vile travesty the Mass, was one of the least horrible of the ceremonies some are too bad even to hint at. It' is a little consolation that Yoisin, who had made 100,000 crowns, and was leaving France under a false name, was caught, tried, and at last burned (February
1G80.)
She supped gaily the nicht before, and sang parodies on the Church hymns "gave her soul to the Devil in good style," (gentimeut,) as Madame de Sevigne has it. But all Yoisin's clients were not, butchers' and carpenters' wives and lewd young women of the biiser sort who had "got into trouble." Mario Mancini, Countess of Soissons. was convicted of having gone to her in order to get rid of La Yallicro, her successful rival in Louis XIV.'s affo ,:tions. There1 was no doubt about it the proofs are on record: The order was issued to arrest the Countess, but Louis told the Duke of Bouillon to give her a hint, and she escaped. Nor was she the only one who escaped for there was such an epidemic of poisoning that the Magistrate de la Beynie hesitated to go on with his inquiries h© found they were likely to compromise very exalted personages, indeed. In a very short time he had
1-17
prisoners on his
hands, and he questions "whether it is for God's glory and the King's interest, i. e., the interest of the State, or even of justice, to publish abroad such terrible and enormous crimes."— Frazer's Magazine.
MEN WE DON'T TVANT TO MEET.
The man who, having by an accident been thrown once in your company, makes bold to bawl your name out, and to shake your hand profusely, when you pass him in the street.
The man who never meets you without trying to borrow money. The man who wears a white hat in the Winter, smokes a pipe when walkr ing, and accosts you as "old fellow"
are
hoping to make a good
impression on some well-dressed lady fiiends. The man who, with a look of urgent business, when you are in a hurry, takes you by the buttonhole to tell you a bad joke.
And, to finish with, the man who, you draw back slightly to appreciate a picture, coolly comes and stands in front of you, and then receding, also, treads on your toes. -t
IT
1
is at the approach of extreme danger when a hollow puppet can do nothing that power falls into the mighty hands of nature, of the spirit giant bor who listens only to himself and knows nothing of compacts. Schilier,
THE TEKRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
Heavy Failures
f, I
JS
"We Plank the Money Down and take Every Bargain Offered. Most Fearful Slaughter
Yet Made.
Mechanics! Farmes! ... Can You Cash,
In times like these it is tlie only thing enables us to live.
Immense ot, Sprague Prints, 4 cents. The above are the best Prints made, only they area little dark in colors.
The balance of our entire stock of best prints will be sold as follows: .ntire Stock Sprague Prints 5cts. Intire Stock Pacific Prints 5cts. •ntire stock Merrimac Prints 5cts. Entire Stock Cocheco Prints 5cts.
Why Pay country stores and credit house 8 and lO cents a yard for these same prints and then not have half the quantity to select 1 rom.*
Wide Percales,
Down to 8 and lO cents per Yard.
Also just received from New York, where they were bought at a big sacrifice for cash, big lot,
Suits and Parasols, Dress Goods and White Goods, Black Silks and Grenadines.
Cassimero and Cottonades, Table Linens, Towels, Napkins.
Bed Spreads, Tickings, Shirtings, Sheetings, Muslins, &c., &c Clarks'O. N. T. Spool Cotton, 5 cents.
Bales, lleav^- B/o Muslin, 6, 7, £tnd Sc White Muslin 6. 7, 8, 9 and 10 ^cents 'leal Heavy Ginghams, S and cents. Big Lot De L^incs, 11c. Handsome Dress Goods, 15, iS, and 20c. Big lot Grenadines
12,
15, 20, and 25c.
Plain White Swisses, 15c. Verv Handsome Shawls, $1.25.
nwMfr i.-utr
hi
a
*V
*.
that
We carriedover no ladies last year: all new styles. Suits worth $3.50, for $2.00, $5.00, for $3.03. $S.oo for $5.03. Sun Shades, 25, 30,35,40, 50, Silk Parasols at all prices, styles.
Remember we have the largest stock.
Carpets, Oil Cloths, Mats^Windqw shades, etc
At muclTtoWef prices than was ever offered in Terre Haute. Please bear in mind that all the best Prints, Spring Styies, 5c a yard .ONLY
xt~f
.& nH kl
7^.. *'V ^'"5: FT
"4 W .* a
**•,'
1
-ii,
rf
and
and latest
I -O .5 "U
All Down In Price!
"s* ri tI-
i.-f jrsw.
1 4
STER-BROTHERS.
?i
'.'1 rM j.i '.=• W
FOSRER BROTHERS, Terre Haute FOSTER BROTHERS, Fort Wayne,' FOSTER BiarHESS, Grand Rapids, FOSTER BROTHERS, New York.
E N E N N I A
MEMM0RIAL MEDALS.
struck in solid Albatu Plate, equal in appearance,, wear and color, to SOLID SILVER OR GOLD, presenting a varicly ofbeantiful DESIGNS
IX RKLIEF,
These medals are larg-er than a Silver Trade Dollar, being I'Jjjj inch in diameter, handsomely put lip and t-ell readily on sight. Tlic-most vn Ilia bio Souvenir* and
ITIomento* ever issued. GOOD AGENTS WANTED neverv City and Town in the U. S. .'till Canada, to whom exclusive territory wn be given.if desired.
Retail Prices.—For the Albata Silver. 50 cts, Gilt, $i. in fancy box. Usual discount to the Trade.
A complete outfit of magnificent, samples for agents, in satin or velvet-lined morocco case, containing Six Medals, different designs, one gilt, suitable for Jewellers, show-window, etc., sent on receipt ot draft or postoffice Order for $4. or will .ship bv Express C. O. 1).
Descriptive Circular, Price List and one sample sent on receipt of 50 cts, Immense profits. Sells at sight. Correspondence solicted. Information free Extensive fields for enterprise. Address all communications, U. S. MEDALLION CO., 212
Broadway,
P. O. Box 5270 New York.
Prof. I). Meeker's
A I N E S S
0PI UM CURE
It is a tonic altciutivc and nervous seda five. It restores the nervous system, gives energy and strength cures withou fiain or suffering to the patient. Send for paper on Opium Eating. Dr. L. MEEKER, LaPorte, Ind., P. O. Box 475.
$100
InVestod Has Paid a Profit off
A Specimen Copy Free.
The Am. Oilograph Company propose to distribute to xu«iirribOM of tliid paper, a limited number of Specimen pictures FEE£ an advertisement of Oiloeraplii. Send us your name, and those of ten other persons to whom we may mail circulars with 25 cents to pay package mrd forirardln chnrees. mid wc ivill mail you prepaid, a Superk Ebony Cabinet Oilograph of Flowers one of four exqui ite matched pictures -which retail at $2.50 per pair. These chef d'SBuvres of Flower Painting measure 1
PREIUM EXTRA!
To place on exhibition specimens of more elaborate work, and thereby encourage clubs, the names of applicants for the above pictures will be registered in the order received, and TO EVERY TENTH we will forward, free, a copy of our beautiful $3 Oilograph Spring Beauties. This picture measures 12x16 inches and is an exact fac-simile of an oil painting by Mary Spencer, worth $150 Address
and Liquid Ex
tract oi Btef. are cured by using BT. Tonic Elixir aud
Indigent
Liquid Extract of Beef.
are cured by using B. it T. Tonic Elisor and Liquid Extract of Beef, whether brought on by natural causes or the use of injurious medicines.
Diseases
arc cured by usingB. & T. Tonic Elixir and .Liquid Extract ot Beef.
Sissassd Lirer Children's PiMg kidnej^Trtmbles Weakaessss
,%
5 U4
are cured by using B. ft •T. Tonic Flixir, and Liquid Extract of Beef, (except Dirhoea. are cored by using B. ft T. Tlnic Elixir or Liquid Extractor Beef, in male or female are eured br nsing B. ft T. Tonic Elixir and Liquid Extract of Beef
If you do not find this medicine at one drug store, coll at another, snd if it is not on sale in your place, have your druggists order it or send direct to us.
Price SI »00 per bottle. Sint on receipt of
price, ichardsOn ftTnllidye, Cincinnati, O,
No. 39 Zeatucky
$1,700
during tlie past three months, under our improved system of operating in Stoeks Book containing full information sent 011 application. TI:MHKIDCJE IT CO., Hankers nnil llrokers, !12 J{i'o il\viiy,Ne\v York.
$1,200 Profit on $100.
Made any tlaj'in Puis and Calls. Invest, according to vour menus. $10,$50 or $100 in Stock Privileges lias brought, a little fortune to theeareful investor. We show when and how to operate saf«l y. Show with full information SKNT FIIKH. Address all orders by mail or telegraph to
BAXTER & CO.,
Bankers and Brokers, 17 Wall St., X. v.
1876 1876.
To MCIHKJAN. one of Mis foremost Hour^ ishing and healthy States
To Buy a FA KM out of the
One Million Acres!
of line Farming lands for .'nl J1 the GUAM) KAI'iD-S & INDIANA It. K. Strong Soils, lteiu'v Markets. Sure Crops, Good 'S"IIOOIH. KallVoii'l I UHK through the center or grand fcttleiiH'iUH all along.
All kinds of jirodut^ts iai.se.il. J'louty of water, timber a.id building materials. I'rice from $4 to $10 per acre one-fourth down, balance on time.
S md for illustrated pamphlet, full
facts and figures, and be couvv. oil. Address W. A. HOW AIM), Comm'r., Grand Kupids, Michigan. 1'. IJ. I.. T'icrce. Sec'y Land lep't.
OILOGUAPHS
If :isi'I i.ili'
Oxl2 inches and
are copies of celebrated works of art at the Luxembourg, reproduced by our new process.
f!i'
AM. OILOGRAPH CO., 1S3 Walnut street: Cincinnati
R. & T. Tonic Elixer
7
D& DUFF
Ats
., Indianapolis, Inij
Ancal*r(n4mteoflMlatM.k*ak«a kanr mm|«d l« tbfftMtilinitiMiorillTMtttltaxiuliln Chroiw to Diaeam U»n 07 atlKr la lndlMiap^,u d() HMrnbo», aM»UoldmH««W know. Cwnltatiow (r«a
Svphilia, QoiMrHioM, Ql*«t, Itrichri, On chifit. Hernia, or Ruptur*.all UHsary OtMiMV and Syphilitio or marcunal afftetiona of t™ throat, akin or bonaa, *r« mm with anpaniWMA »oeee«i, on latest adtaUHa priadphM. 8aMf, Frinteiy. I
Spormatorrheta, 8oxual liability and Impof* oney, tlM nmlt of Betr abu* la joatk, nntlutMl in tutartr jssn, or otksr omn, ud vhleh pialaea «aaa of 111* Mnawlna effoetj: nerrounaM, nmiaal' dabllhr.
DIMNMI *F
ilfbt.
D«F^OUT« MHIT,plmplca
DO-
oa tha
Ita*, pbratoad«nr, »r«rtiun ta*od«tjr oYfaulw, eoofu«wi oridMs, lea of Mzaat po««r, ata., natalac mar|iaM lnsniarwinliinr,*npinuani|foud. Pamphlet (M pataa) nlatiat to tba abnji, aaot la mU tankfm, fcr twopo*t*«« Man. ConmlUUooat ofllo* or bj mall til, aad Iflitd, a mendly talfc or Ma opinion et» naming
WlMB It la iooMT«Blnt» Tlitt tha dtj ter troatauat, etn'oaa baantbT azpraaa or mall aranwhara. OnAabto oaaaa (uarantaat, wb«ra doobt niu it la ftaakly .Matafc Offloa hsan: A.M. t* 1P.M. Baadajf, 11 M. to 1 P. M.
Pamphlat to any add rats, for Two Stamp*. MANHOOD WOMANHOOD
Bent sealed. Xaahood, Womanhood and Tamplb let
MARRIACEp2mail,byCgntaSOfor -mk. 1 ciii
Bealed for 500. Over fifty #«na«rfui p«n pkrturt®, tm life articles on Ue fWIowinf iut^ecU: Who bmij vh« not, why. Propwac® to mmrry. Who marry Mod. Womaahood, Phrsioal dooar.- Tho offeeu of oellbaos wd ezccM.- Who •houldmarnr How life aad htppines»nw$ elnereaaed. Tha PhyiioJofy af E^rod«K5tion,»tjd many mftK 'Thoaa married OP eootemplatinf »arriag««houW readli.
After allh-lonf practiea, I MM"
tnw
fjVTfjlSf
isuml ooovictioa, ft ought to bo read br all Malt thon locked nptnot laid around orl^J^aeiMs wjjthj of re-r©ac\lof. It contains the cream of medical lit«racurdathouffhtn gathered in an extenjlre practfoe,andjwtj fay one who will fira it a careful perucal* tea tUKft
"iStetr, Dr. Duff, KatifSeiy AT»bb«, lall*n»»0lla todiaaa. Cheapest |«odfttide in America*
Dr. Whittier
Still contlnnes to treat old long standing and aevtro cases of VtNERAL DISEASES, «gd rases o£ 8EMINAL EMISSIONS and IMPOTENCV. The Doctor it now occupied with cases whirn hare not met with a cure in other hands—does not court simple and common cases. No matter who hjjre foiled, state your rase call or write. Pamphlet and questions sent by moil free to jny address. A regular graduate of three Medical Colleges, and the longest located in one place of any doctor la America He cures many cases given up by others. THOROUGHNESS af cures, SAFETY of the medicines used and fair charges have brought Wnpatients from every State. Office and address, 617 St. Charles Street. St. Louis. Mo.
A BOOK FOR THE MILLION.
Mai
A PrWate Cftinwlortothe Married, or those about 10 urrr, on the ^bysiolofital I nivte'rios and melat^as ot the tcxtial eyateatt Tfth tho
Cuids.
{%teat discoveries in uo climcoor reprodootloa, piomi fllf he complexion, b*. This nn iDterei«t n|f work of two htindrea and tixw pages, with uumercui on^rarlnKS. and contains •alnehil fnfonnajlon for who are married or contemplate ma£ still it IJfhow
that ought to be kept under
sTutera
thut is
IOOI
and key, unl cot '.eft "arcwiuly about the honao. It contii'jti tLj pcrieaco and adrtoo of a phytfoitf whoso ropotatlon li world-wide, and shouM bo In the prt» Tate drawer of every male and female throughout the entiff elnbe. Tt embrnces overTthin- oa the eutgeot of the vent» •tiivo
worth
kiwwuig, and muoh that aol
pubUshcd lu aoy oihfr »*nrk. iient to «.oy o:i«s .'rc« of postage) for Fifty Cents. Addrevi lr. bc*u ii»&ipenaar/ i»o. li K. Eighth atTMli Ot. Louis. Mo.
Noticn to tl.o ttflcted and Unfortunate. Before aj.n!yiti ir. tho nn'oriou^ who adr*rtt*e*«
SDblic
p.tp«V4. ur i.J«ag r.i'Y qun-?* r«»ra''iiwi. peruke
li
utts' wo. Ji, r«o matte*- what jour is or how deplor-* ftblc vour Vt"
Hilts wnaplys douK tt.-euty-aeren tt int^r.ed hv wrr«» of Mo »nr« celebrated rowjloM pc com rf this cmip^ry nad «nd
can
ho I ptr-
•onallT or b\ rou'l inentiotie-1
,r»
&
PP.OLI'q
CHAIN:
®f«J«Ierea 237«.
Paoli's Electro Voltaic Chain Belt
3l7M S Caatlawu Currscicf Elactricity Arotci th» B: ind euros all Diseases ani-ing- from a Loss Vital force, Fits, General and Nervous Pcbi ity,Indigestion, Dyspasia, Nci.-ral^ia, Ithci matism,Xumbago, Kidney Complaints, Fnnt tionai Deranffementa, l'aralysis, Sciatica, In poteney. Epilepsy, Female weakness,
SDini,
Complaint and Exhausted Vital Energy. And will Effect a Permanent Cure After all other Ramedicg have Failed. It is enr dorged by the most eminent Physicians in Europe and America, and thousands that ire wcarlngit and havo been restored to health, ive tboir testimony as to its neat curatiyc powers. Testimonials and circulara forwanroq ?n application on receipt ot six cents postage* kfeply or address PAOLI BELT CO., 12 Union Square, Now York. Say what paper,
Prices 86 and Upwards.
Beware of counterfeits. This is the onlyElectro Voltaio Chain Uclc patented in the U. 5.—and the onlr one endorsed by Leading Phyiicians of New York City and elsewhere.
I'mlmi yi
mil:' T.
Twiih* Sillxir and Z32II:" of lict-f. Ti)i. nunli-iiii!
I IIIIMIIC
anj ••iifiina-
fuil tocur" lR(liRestii:i, c't'iistipnlinH. lty»-
P»|IM».(I"ii(trtr)ii',Ncrvou#iir'?«, IIO!R
KIHOII, .'I'I1
ofStrcncfh nixl
Apnitiitc, liiinz, Liver, jil.iiio'iV, Klrtri' y,. i:uich,
cliili!r'*n*»iHs''fi'»J». All
KITIIHIII
UI-I-IISUG
awl wi.'iiknesKcn IhH meiliriiio will poaitivi ly cure. AlV'a-'ft!' oi 1'ilcs arisir. r:"'In nnlnral Ijy till? ase of Injurlon* micnrtue»»r« ponnunsiitjy curtd.
J'lic ptif* JI Ji:i.:.- aipI
Hloo.l
jir!-paml
from raw ln'Vit furnixh"" str"».'.'t!i hivl nniiri'!iinniit rrnf. K. S. WHVIIC, ChffiiUl and I'l i'iiilcnt ol Cinclimuii of I'harmui'}. .«)»: SlEfs.linTmnnwN ,v 11— ,«ril J, i.. (Icnt.-I" li in\' ln-«n m:nli- I.• 11"'' I 'vftli the of \:.nr K. Ar T. Tonic Elivlr !»ud iff flofl. "mini nay ilial it pos 9' ssiv Taldalili1 intrdX'ioal pl-Ofirrilit, rill t)i« I'lili riiitt into Itr O'liiiicwiUiii: r.i-.vo IVHII known »:iii {iMilhc iur!Ii'ln»I vnlue. wlitt cou))i iir*i t-i^ctlior miHt liirm nil exit'iU't'l ratlmrnc nr.il niitritMc mvliriiio. mid nn?. wall suited to ri'lievp miitiv i»iiiip|:mitn hicidM'it to our clinmto." U'wowtfully. Ji. S. \V A YNf-..
IfyoH do not find !!i iiivilirmn at one drug Htorn, oi.ll lit almthrr, itlnl it it isim on xiilt-in ywiirj'l:i«!„ i.ivc yonv driMTKift "jnli-r it ir jseuil dii'oyt tc
Piici'. SLUO ji^r l.oti .- «nt on iccetpt of pric" BICIU£DSCN & TULLI2&2. Clncicuati, a
An
iABfllASE^
pBgCS, & prilw ("iiV.r4&9 to the inAr..M dseesbte oa
GUIDE
tiM iay«ttrice
eft.
be sexnei
its Abu*e+
htest
sciPT'fe of repnniuctln.i, u«.t, t) $err^ H.-JJ b«
out on bmr to preacrvedie hceitti, and eomplfxioo. %i*6
ziwUi faded cawlu^tfie btsui«ss nl Jmi jMeeuaiealkH «. 9 v? \Vuhis(taa
nly ue Jiti-riuc Oiuda la lbs voru. Vri*. \y
IUl'1. TIa
»uth»r fc« oamuitrd "Mrwti
jhnl or snj vfthsnukJaeuarattoiNd In h]*«nri 7££
NOTICE.
Is herctir given to A. 1». Dirkoy, A. ThompMin. II. E. Alcintyre and all oilier parties interested—lTnknown,v That thd. undersigmui will, on th -:27th da^ of llay, A, I). 187(5, sell to the highi'St bidder for c^ioh. one wagon, fortlK- purpose of paying storage and repairs on the same, aucrned on and bef re Oct, lut, 1875, with additional storage csion in all amounting to JIM).
VB6AN A
AILLLI
CONSUMPTION CURED
An old physician, retired from active practice, having had placed in hid hands by an Kmt India Missionary, the formula of a siim .ie Vegetable Remedy for the speedy an? ennanei't mire of Consumption. Bronchitti
tim'a to:
1
atai rh, Asthma, and all throat and lunj affections, also a positive and radical cnr for nervous debility and all nervous coimf! platr^ts. after having thoroug'iiiv f( wonderful rtii aiive powers in Ihottsunds t„.. ras.'a, fi'i-Iii it his duty to make it iicou it his «uflVriuir fellows. Actuated by this nfc tive and a roimcientioua desire t• rt hevii /in mill, suffer ug, he will send (free of ctrHft^ nil v.-ho desire it, this receipt. vrit!i* »ull di
preparing and •ntft-ssfnU/
iia»n r. .Hi nt by return mail b? addressing with s^rnp. namfug rtiis UB.paper.Sr*n»"«.c.w.
MimrceBlock, Y.
