Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Volume 8, Number 13, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 November 1876 — Page 2

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feehh) (gazette.

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Local rioti.-ex,

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BEST AS IT IS.

I said, i' 1 might go back again To the very liouraud plum of my birth Might have mv I if ,' whatever I chose,

And live It in any part of the earth.

Put perfect sunshine into in sky, Banish the shadow of sorrow and doubt Have a I my hatmiiuMs multin led,

And all mv suffer ngs stricken out.

ff I could have Known in th« years now gone The best that a woman comes to know Could have had whatever will make her blest,

Or whatever she th nks will make licr so

Have gained the highest and purest bliss That the bridal wreath ami ing enclose And choien tile one out of all the wor d,

Th 11 might, or could, or would, have chose

And if this had been, and I stood to-night By my children, lying asleep in their ho ls, And couU1 count in my pravers fora rosary,

The shinning row of their golden beads

Yea! I said, if a miracle such us this Could bo wrong nvj at my biddingstill I would choose to have my past as it is,

And to lot my future come as it will,

I would not make the path I have tro.l More plc/'.sunt, or even, more straight or wide JTor change my course the breadth of a hair, •This way or that, to cither side.

Mr past 18 mine, and I take it al'. Its weakness—its follv if you please: Nay, even my sins, If you come to that,

May have been my helps, not hindrances.

If 1 saved my body from the Haines Becnuse that once I had burned my hand Or kept myself fom a greater sin.

By doing a less —you will understand—

It was better I suffered a litt'c pain, Better I sinned for a little line. If the smarting warned mo hack from death,

And he sting of death withhold from crime.

Who knows its strength by trial will know, What strength must bo sot against a sin And how temptation is overcomo,

He has learned who has folt its power within.

And who knows how a life ut the last may show? Why look at tho moon from whrre wo stind? Opaque uneven, you say though it shines

A lumnlotw sphere, complete and grand.

So let my pait stand Just as it stands. And let me now, aal mar, grow old am what I am, and my life for me la the best—or it had not been. I hold. —[PhebeCary.

The Welkin Rings.

Our Uncle Samuel on the Subject of "Rebel Claims.

He stands by the constitution which prohibits their Payment.

If Elected the Constitution and Amendments will be Enforced.

A Great radical Bugaboo the Underpinning Knocked Away, ...

with

The Rebel Claims Business.

SJ&fttkl. J. TILDEX MAKES A PLAIN AND "ff" EXPLICIT DECLARATION.

New York, Oct. a^.^-The following Communication was received to-day by Mr. Hewitt,.chairman of the National Democratic committee, and explains itself" sua i"guti To HON. ABRAM S. HEWITTS uiw 1

SIR —I have received your letter informing me that .Republicans high in authority are publicly representing that the "South desire, not without hope," to obtain payjtftont for losses by thev lata wtu\ -and to have "provisions rabde for the rebel debt and for losses of slaves." As the payment of such losses and claims was not deemed important enough to deserve the notice of either convention at the time it was held, you also ask me to state my views in regaad to their recognition by the Government. Though disposed myself to abide by the issue as made up already, I have no hesitation to comply with your request.

THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT

of the Constitution expressly provides as follows: "The validity of the public debt of the United States authorized by law, including debts incurred for the payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing the insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned, but neither the United States nor any State shall assume or pay anv debt or obligation incurred in aid of the insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for loss or emancipation of any slaves, but all lufch debts, obligations and claimsjshall be hud illegal and void."

UNIVERSALLY AGREED TO.

This amendment has been repeatedly approved and agreed to by the Democratic State conventions of the South. It was unanimously adopted as a part of the plat­

form of the Democratic National Convention at St. Louis on the

MR. TILDEN'S POSITION.

passage,

ment I stated that the colored people are bound by the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth constitutional amendments that they had joined with National Conventions in the nomination of candidates and in the declaration of the principles and purposes which form an authentic acceptance of the results of the war, as embodied in the last three amendments to the organic law of the Federal Union, and that they had by the suffrages of all their voters at the last national election completed the proof that now they only seek to share with us and maintain the comrroi

local

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and 5 cents each sursequont assertion, and all notices charged for full rates between the dash rule*.

City Items inserted one time only, 25 cents per line. City news insoried 50 cents a line, one insertion.

self-government,

have

THFCALAMITIES TO INDIVIDUALS

which were inflicted by the late war are for the most part irreparable. The Government cannot recall to life the thousands of our youths who went to untimely graves, nor compensate the sufferings or sorrow of their relatives or friends. It cannot readjust between individuals the burdens of taxation hitherto borne or of debts incurred to sustain the Government which are yet to be paid. It cannot apportion among our citizens damages or losses incident to military operation or resulting in every variety of form from its measures for maintaining its own existence. It has no safe general rule but to let

BYGONES BE BYGONES,

to turn -fron\ the dead past, to a new and better future, and on that basis assure peace, repohciliation and fraternity between all auctions, classes and races of our people, to the end, that all the springs of our preductive industries may be quickened, and new prosperity created in which the evils of the past 6hall be forgotten Very respecttully yours,

wm

28th

rights

SAMUEL J. TILDEN.

ORTHODOX ODDITIES.

Palestine is to have a railroad, and the cry will soon be: "All aboard for Jerusalem Passengers for Moab and the DeaJ Sea will please remain in the forward car."—New York Commrcial.

One of the youngsters who was fond of Bible stories swallowed a bottle of paregoric because it was nice. They gave him a powerful emetic, and he thus described the sequel to his brother: "Budgy, I was a whay-al, a regular whay-al. 1 didn't fro up Jonah, but I frew up lots oj tiyer fings."

That littie item now skipping around about Me. Toomns having joined the Methodist church, turns out to be very much of a barren ideality.—[Columbus Ga.) Enquirer.

Congressman Thompson, of Gloucester, Massachusetts, is afflicted with stammering. When1 he was told that the Old South Church had been sold, he remarked that it didn't do "for the All m-mighty to own a cor-corner lot ii Boston."

Whether Tannage barks in the pulpit like a poodle taught to perform comic tricks, or whether he unexpectedly tries to bite the legs of unsuspecting newspa per' proprietors who have incautiously trusted him, he deserves pity rather than indignation, since he is only following the dictates of his curious and happily nearly unique nature—[N. Y. Times.

A Tennessee paper has discovered that rum costs the country $200,000,000 and the clergy $2,000,000, whereat a pro.fane cotemporary cries for the abolishment of the latter on the ground of economy.

The profane out West are chueklin: over the fact that the North field ban! robbers all attended Sunday school when children. Cole Younger, in response to a written inquiry on the subjecti is reported to have answered on a postal card, "I am proud to say to you that we were raised by religious parents, and attended Sunday school regularly in our boyhood. I also had charee of a Bible class while in Texas Dallas county. Christianity. I and endorse it pursued.',

^"7

of June,

and was declared by that platform to be 'Universally accepted as a final settlement of controversies that engendered the civil war."

1

My onw position on this subject had been previously declared on many occasions and particularly in my first annual

January

5, 1875.

In that docu­

of American

in fraternal union

under the old flag, with one Constitution and one destinv." I declared at the same time: "Thequestions settled by the war are never to be reopened the adaption of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments to the Federal Constitution closed one great era in our politics. It marked the strug gles that grew out of that system Ther.e

been accepted in good faith

by all political organizations and the peo pie of all sections. They close the dbap ter thev are and must be final. All par ties hereafter must accept and stand up on them and henceforth our politics arcto turn upon questions of the present and future, and not upon those of the settled and final past." Should I be elected President, the provision" of the I'our teenth Amendment will, so far as depends on mc, be MAINTAINED, EXECUTED AND ENFORC­

ED,

in pcrfect and absolute good faith. No rebel debt will be assumed or paid. No claim for the emancipation of anv slave will be allowed. No clajm for any loss or damage incurred by disloyal persons arising from the late war, whether cover ed by the Fourteenth Amendment or not, will be recognized or paid. The cotton tax will not be refunded. I shall deem it my duty to veto every bill pro viding for the assumption or payment of any such debts, losses, damages, claims or for the refunding of any such tax. The danger to the Nationol Treasury is not from the claims of persons who aided the rebellion, but from claims of persons residing in the Southern States, or having property in those States, who were, or pretended to be, or who for the sake of aiding their claims, now pretend to have been, loyal to the government of the Union. Such claims, even of loyal persons, where they are from acts causcd by the operation of the war, have been disowned by the public law of civilized nations, condemned by the adjudication of the Supreme Court of the Unitted States, and only find any status by the force of the specific legislaiton of Congress. These claims have become stale and on- often tainted with fraud. They are nearly always owned in whole or in part by claim agents, by speculators or lobbyists, who have no' equity against the tax-pay-ers or public. They should, in all cases, be scrutinized with iealous care.

at Seyne,

I have ever respected have known the right, I condemn the wrong

in

•ffiiazYf) AiymflM CTXQVH aaaax aHi

NURSERY NONSENSE

"Papa" said a clergyman's lire-year-old boy the other day, "was John Calvin a Democrat ora Republican?" ,'Why^ny con?" Because. I heard you tell Mr.— what Calvin said about election." That boy will be found in Congress some day —Milwaukee News. •«*, J?-

Byron wrote, "How sweet to hear the watch dog's honest bark." From «hich we infer that Byron never attended a midnight sociable in a farmer's melon patch.

Always discourage your infant son's efforts to crawl up on the side of his crib and crow. Mr. Darwin's theory of nat ural selection will tcach you that such efforts are but the rudimentary tokens of your child's inclination to inflict himself upon his country as a

stump-speaker.—

[Brooklyn Argus. A little girl having been instructed that the angels were clothed in white, surprised her parents by the remark, after a re cent shower, followed by fleecy clouds that the angels were hanging out their clothes to dry.

A national dolls' fair is to be held_ Boston in December. We should think it would be rather a doll-arous affair.

A boy was gnawing away at some water melon rinds, and a passer asked why he was eating these rinds. The answer was conclusive: "Coz some other feller 'has eaten the core!"

A Stafford (Ct.) Republican family has a little bright-eyes who has a knowl edge of the political situation. Being on a visit the other evening with her mamma, at her uncle's, she said, "Please, I want to go to bed," to which her mother repli ed ," Well, wait till uncle has prayers." 'Uncle have prayersf'exclamed the child.

Why, I thought he was a Democrat!" General Newton's little daughter, only three years old, touched off the dynamite in the Hell Gates mines. Bless our soul, if little Miss Newton blows up things so thoroughly when she is only three years old, what will she do when she is mother-in-law?

A little boy, six years old, and a little girl, eight, were looking at the clouds one beautiful summer evening, watching their fmtastic shapes, when the boy exclaimed "Oh,Minnie, I see a dog in the sky." "Well), Willie," replied the sister, "it must be a sky terrier." ,'That's where the boys fit for college said the Professor to Mrs Partington pointing to a school-house. "Did t.hey?" said the old lady, with animation. "Then, if they fit for college before they went, they did't flight afterward?" "Yes," said he, smiling and favoring the mceit, "but the fight was with the heac, not with the hands." "Butted, did they?' said the old lady.

A pleasant social gathering at the residence of a prominent citizen on Brooklyn Heights was interrupted tne other evening by the fitful squalling of a chiid. Alter the hostess had left the room, an old lady sy.'npathizingly remarked: Poor little reatur', I s'pose it's got the buolic."

SELECTED SHARPES.

A Patterson man last night at 12 o'clock was standing with his ear against a telegraph pole, listening to the music made by the invisible fingers of the wind striking across the wires. Said he, enthusiastically, "Why, lean hear a perfect harmony. "Yes, said the other, "and if you had another drink you could hear the melody."—[N.Y.Herald.

We never knew exactly where all the Smiths came from till we observed in a Boston paper yesterday that there is a Smith Manufacturing Company there.

Thirteen cents and a toothpick were found in a Washington Monument donation box on the Centennial grounds. And now there can be no further excuse for not vigorously pushing the work forward at once. The man who deposited the toothpick should not be permitted to want for the necessaries of life the coming win-ter.-Morristown Herald.

A Danburv man wh.» staid up until 2 a. m. to watch for Vulcan was find $1 and costs by the police justice in the morning. He says this country is no place for science. :v.

A Freafeh translator is Wd to have translated the poet's exclamation, "Hail, horrors! hail!" into "How do you do, horrors! How do you do!" This is no worse than the German's translation of Shakespeare's," A hail, Macbeth!" into "Alle Hagelj Macbeth!"

Cuzzlem bruised his no9e by tumbling over a pile of stones in a dark ally, last night, and is going to bring suit against the city for alley-money. "Ohio Returns, said John Henry— "well, I'm glad of it. Wonder if she had a pleasant time.

The Russian Bear ought to grab at least one of England's Mediterranean possessions. Bruin Malt-a would sound so well, you know.

A patrioctic Servian has translated "Yankee Doodle" into his native tongue, and the air is so popular that it bids fair to become the national anthem of that struggling race. It runs as follows: Yengihiatnvitch Dhoodalovitski .camerowtk tetovwnepki Ridingelensk enovi'.ch ponelowdosk: Stuckoreiskeno theateromonk inter his hatovitch' Adensk colladardvosk macharonitovenski

He called at the police office recently and stated that he was in trouble. "A fine young fellow shust as nice as anybody, came up to me on the street and says, How do you does? Long time since I saw you in' Shasta gounty. I says I never was in Shasta gounty.' 'Wh", I dinks I see you dere.' I says,'No I lives near Auburn.' He goes away, and bimeby I meets a chap and he says, 'How you vas since I left you at Auburn?' Then we has a talk and some drinks, and I lend him a hundred dollars until the pank opens, and I dond see him some more:

Vat you thinks?"—Sacramento Record. The Norwhich Bulletin says cider is so ,p this year that farmers are paying le fifty cents a barrel to drink it, and the able-bodied men are making from one to two dollars a day at this rate.

chea] peopi

Don't try to catch a wasp by putting salt on its tail. The pride of housewifery—Heavy ba bies and light bread. "Philadelphia wants a fast mail." Jus as if she hadn't plenty of 'em.

The King of Fiii has gone mad. He always was regarded as Fijity. A New York paper says, "The new Brooklin jail will contain 300 cells." What a rich place for a practical joke.

If Commodore Vanderbilt keeps on living, the chances are that he will bring hisgrey heirs in sorrow to the graye.

^PETTICOAT PLEASANTRIES. Hard-times motto for the ladies: One good turn of an old silk dress desesves another.

Here is the sort of a husband a San Francisco girl advertises for in the Chronicle of this city: "A man with good looks and plenty of money, generous to a fault and easy to manage, who keeps his carriage and will give his wife ano'her who has a good time himself and will let his wife go to the matinee and opera without getting jealous or looking cross, who will give her an open credit at a first-class dry goods store and ask no foolish question about what one does with her pinmoney. A lawyer or leading merchant would do a stockbroker hav ing a seat in the big board would be pre ferred. I would not be unreasonable in case of failure I would be willing to travel for a time in Europe, and as matter of reasonable and prudent buisness precaution. I would have my husband put a first class residence and all the valuable silverware, fun.iture and diamonds in my own uarne, where they woulu be safe fr^n the rmportunate demand cf avaricious creditors.

The following which is suggested to coffee drinkers, is from a tombstone in Connecticut:

Here lies, cut down like unripe fruit, The wife of Deacon Amos SSute She died of drinking too much coffee, ,Anno Dominy eighteen forty An Illinois girl couldn't secure a certificate as school teacher, because she couldn't tell the committee why the hind wheels of a wagon were the largest. All the answer she had was, "Because they are."

A would-be swell, wishing for an excuse to speak to a beautiful woman on the street with whom he was unacquainted, drew his nice white cambric i.andkerchief from his pocket as he approched her, and inquired if she hadn't dropped it. She glanced at the handkerchief, nodded assent, thanked him and marched on, leaving the exquisite to be laughed at by his companions.

Jones ts suing for a divorce from his wife, who has deceived him. He could not help, after discovering her guilt, rating her soundly for it. "The idc-a," she said, bursting into tears, "the idea oftreating me so brutally, when I had giving nysefl so much trouble to keep you from knowing anything of it so as not to worry you. And this is the thanks I get." "Ah'husband, do yon see this beautiful carving? How delicately cut is the

tion so beautifully carved 'Do they miss meat home?' "Yes I see. And here is her name on the footstone: 'G. A. B.'

Yes I guess they miss her—if that was her name! A girl in Hackensack can see with the top of her head and tell what time it is by a watch laid thereon. There used to be an old woman in Belgium who could smell with her right ear, and now comes Adirondack Murry, who can hear with his mouth. He will publish his reminiscense under the title, "What the Keg Told Me."

It is apt to shake a man's confidence in his wife to wake in the early morning and find her on the edge of the bed going through his pockets.—[Fulfon Times.

And it is apt to shake a woman's confidence in her husband to find nothing in those pockets but a lager beer check, a piece of bologna sausage, a variety show ticket and a perfumed notes signed "Ever yours, Julia. "—[Norris Herald.

A young woman tried to cowhide a voung man i.i Sacramento, the other day "He at once caught at her skirts, pulled them over her head, took the cowhide, walked off, and left her to rearrange her skirts and dry her tearful eyes. "If General Newton," wrote John Henry, "thinks his blowing up Hell Gate was such a big performance, let him come out here and see the old woman blow up me." "I am glad that I am once more on terracotta, said a masculine Mrs, Partington as4 he stepped off from a Cunarder at East Boston dock.

Lord Albemarle, who remembered all about such things, says that Qfen Victoria, when seven years old, used «o water her own feet as much as she did the flowers. That is how they came to grow. [Boston Globe.

LITERARY NOTES.

"Hail Hours Among English Antiquities," by Llewellyn Jewitt, is a forthcoming English book-*

A series of lectures'to Oxford graduates on "Old Testament Difficulties," by Dr. Mozley, is soon to be issued.

The October number of the British Quarterly has papers on "The American Centennial" and "American Ecclesiastical Law."

The editor of the Christian Apologist, London, contributes to the October number a paper headed "Jesus is the Christ or else 1"

The concluding volume of Dr.Presse nse't "Early Years of Christianity," as translated by Miss Annie Harwood, is being prepared for the press,

The Theological Review, one of the London quarterlies, contains in the October number a paper on "The Religion of Shakspeare," by E.R. Russell.

A volume of "Songs and Hymns of the Greek Christian Poets," translated into English verses, by the Rev. A. W. Chatfield, is announced by Rivingtons, Londonj

Centennial books have not yet ceased. Messers. Hubbard Brothers, Philadelphia, announce a complete historv of the Centennial Exhibition, illustrated, of 600 pages at 2 S°-

Mr. John Weiss has made a transla tion of Goeth's "West Easterly D«*anwhich will be published by Robei

A Christmas edition of Washington Irving's Bracebridge Hall" is announced ir. London, by Messrs MacMillan, illus trated by Mr Caldecott, whose drawings made the same author's Christmas paper a hit of last season.

The Rev. Dr. Philip Shaffs work on "The Creeds of Christendom," and a book by the Rev. Boyd Carpenter, on •'The Prophets of Christendom: Sketches by Eminent Preachers, are announced by Hod«ler& Sroughton, London.

4

7, *C

Commander Cameron has nearly completed his forthcoming book, "Across Africa." It will be profusely illustrated and embellished with a map taken from Commander Cameron's own notes, and will be published by Messrs. D.ildy, Isbister& Co., London, next month.

A valuable book by an English scholar. Mr. Rawdon Brown, illustrating the social life of England at the time of Shakspear's death, has been waiting

20

1660

yaars

for some publisher bold enough to put it in type. One of the publishing societies has now undertaken the risk.

An interesting volume, in press at Macmillan & Co. s, is that by Mr. James Routledge, called "Chapters iu the History of Popular Progress and of Struggles for the Free Expression of Opinion, chiefly in Relation to the Freedom of the Press, from

to

1820,

with a Brief

Application to Later Times." The main events of the volume are griuped around the American and French Revolutions and the Peace of

1815,

a period

which includes the State trials, the Letters of Junius, the North Briton of John Wilkes, the writings, speeches and trials of Home Tooke. the action and prosecution of Cobbett, and the significant trials of William Hone, which virtually ended the long history of ex officio information and ministerial interference with the courts of law.

FASHION NOTES.

At a recent opening seventy shapes and twenty colers were represented in exhibition of fall and winter hats.

The names of the leading shapes in hat are Brunswick, Lotta, Cavalier, Coaching and the Turban.

A comfortable garment for early autumn is the redingote, made after the manner of a gentleman's overcoat.

Tnere is a rumor that the cuirass is going out to make way for the peplum bodice.

Worth makes black dresses with a mixture of faille and thick silk armure the bodice is cut square and open front, to be worn over a white gauze chemisette.

The fashion inaugurated at the spring races abroad, of combining navy blue with cardinal red, will be continued during the winter.

New styles for winter are disclosing earlier than usual. Fur is to be largely worn for dress trim mings during the forthcoming season.

The costume proper will be a mixture of wool and silk, as last year. The skirts of walking dresses will re-

pure white stone!" "Yes very pretty." main long. "But, William, you have no taste for 1 All new polonaises are made very art, and you don't enjoy these things as I long, and clinging in front and at the sides do. Just notice this slender column of with the drapery at the back always arimaculate marble, with the touchingques- ranged below the tournure.

Ball dresses of red tulle or crape, and dinner dresses of red faille, have already been introduced in Paris.

Semi masculine costume of cloth, completed by a felt hat with tall crown and broad brim turned up on one side under a long plume, after the fashion of thosi worn by the cavaliers of Louis XIII, ai struggling for favor.

There is talk of a complete revolutioi] in the style of hair dressing hair cu( short in the masculine fashion will com pete with the braids, puffs, coils' curls, &c., of the present mode.

One of the novelties of the winter will be that of trimming the hair, and even the bonnets, with natural flowers.

Cardinal red bonnets are to be seen at all the openings. The tilleul or linden color vies with the gay cardinal red for favor in bonnetfacings and trimmings.

Turban bonnets are realy nothing more than crowns worn far back on the head, with hanging strings.

It is claimed for the Gainsborough bonnet, that it is a faithful copy of the one represented in the famous Gainsborough portrait.

Linen cravat bows, edged with lace are among the novelties. Three-cornered neckerchiefs are to be worn outside of wraps in place of the long lace scarfs.

Embroidery on dresees is the present fancy of rich woman, both abroad and a1 home. "Mother Goose" is the name given by milliners, to crowns having quaint tapering fronts.

Glossy cock's feathers are in demand both for plumes and feather bands. Trimmings of outside wraps are generally plain galloons, broad and narrow are much used.

For neglige toilets, short, tight-fitting wrappers may be worn for more dressy garments are the long, loose ones.

Pleted waists are talked about, and modistes predict for another summer fu waists and .broad belts.

All damask fabrics will continue to be worn, but must be associated with a plain material of the same color.

Dyspepsia Dyspepsia!

That Hydra beaded disorder, with its bad Depsyssion of Spirits. Sick Headache, Sour Stomachs, Scalding Krui Ire Fullness, Loss of Appvaranoo, and neri eating in perfect digestkmal assimilation of

sar/to the support of 1 fectually cured or the 1 GERMAN BITTERS,

Divan, :rt» Bro-

with introductions

thers in December, and notes fron his pen A volume on "The Life and Writings of St. John, by the Rev. Dr. J. M, Macdonald, edited with introduction by Dean Ho'/son, will be published by Hodder& Stoughton, London,

J0HN80N, HOLLO WAT CO., proprietors, Philadelphia. Sold by all druggi"**.

$2500

A TEAR. AGENTS WANTED Owing to the wonderful suc­

cess of our great 50 Book Combination, we have been induced to enlarge it, and now offer a grand Combination Prospectus representing

4

150 Distinct Books!!

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AGENTS WANTED for the STOEY of

CHARLEY ROSS

Written bv his father. These Books beat ihe World, send for circulars, INGRAM 4 SMITH, 731 WALOTT8T*KT, PHIIAOTLPHIA.

OctStm.

Remarkable Letter.

From a Gentleman Known an Honored from the Atlantic to the Pacific Coast.

Messrs*. WEEKS & POTTER, Whole? sale Druggists, Boston, Mass.: Gentle men,—I have for some months felt it duty that I owed to suffering humanity ti write vou, stating the great benefit that have derived from the use of SANFORD' RADICAL CURE FOR CATARRH. FO mpre than 20-years I have been afflicte with this verv troublesome complaint, have tried all the remedies that I couk find, but without material or permanen benefit. Last fall the disease haJ arrive at that state that I must have reliefo die. The entire membranons system hai become so inflamed, and the stomach disordered, that it was a doubtful mattci whether I could go to the Pacific coast, 01

I did go whether 19hould live to com* back or not. I saw an advertisement this medicine, and although being ver incredulous about specifics or nostrums any kind, yet in sheer desperation I triec this, and at once was benefited bv it. Th changes of climate, a chronic "diseaseo the liver, and mv age—over 70—ma prevent tny entire restoration, but th benefit I derive from its daily use is tom nvaluable, and I am hoping to be com pletely cured, and at last arrive at a res pectable old age!

If this statement of mv case can be any service to those afflicted as I hav been, and enable you to bring this remej d. into more general use, especially oH the Pacific coast (where it is much need ed), my object in writing this note will attained. Very truly yours.

PIENRY WELLS. of Wells, Fargo & Co

AURORA, N. Y., June, 1876. It i6 with the greatest pleasure that wi present to the public the hearty endorse ment of Sandford'» Radical Cure for Ca tarrh, by Henry Wells, Esq. of Wells Fargo and Go's Express. The positioi this gentleman has for so many year, occupied in our business world, and es pecially in connection with the develop ment of that golden country, the Pacific coast, has made his name known and ri spected throughout the land. 11 is earnef desire that those who know him, and an sufferers from-this disease, may be indue ed to use it, we trust may be gratified Those who do not know him (and the^ are few) must now feel convinced of th« great value of his remedy. It is beyond all question the most successful ever com pounded for the treatment oi Catarrh. I is prescribed by our best physicians. It i| recommended by our leading apothecar ies, and testimonials from ali parts of hi United States, attest the esteem in whicl it is held Wy the thousands who hav been enabled by its use to escape th. frightful consequences that follow a toi neglect of this prevalent disease.

Sandford's Radical Cure for Catarrl'

(ver

-i

afe, permanent cure for Catarrh form, and is the most perfect rem

devised. It is purely a vegeb ai8tillation. and is applied locally sufflation' and constitutionally by in rnal administration. Locally appliei leif is instantaneous. It soothes, healt nd cleanses the nasal passages of everfeeling of heaviness, obstruction, dulnesi ordiziness. Constitutionally adminisered it renovates the blood, purifies it the acidpoison wstli which it is alway charged in Catarrh, stimulates the stom ach, liver, and^kidneys, perfects digestior makes newblood, and permits the for mation of sound, healthy tissue, and final ly obtains complete control over the dis ease. The remarkable curative poweri when all other remedies utterly fail, 0 SANKORD'S RADICAL CURE, are atteste by thousands who gratefully recommem it to fellow-sufferers. No statement made regarding it that cannot be sub stantiated by the most respectable and re liable references.

Each package contains Dr. Sanford Improved Inhaling Tube, and full direc tions for its use in all cases. Price ii.oc For sale by all Wholesale and Retai Druggists throughout the United Statei WEKKS & POTTER,General Agents an

Collin's Voltaic Plasters.

An Electro-Galvanic Battery, combin ed with the celebrated Medicated Porou Plaster, forming the grandest curativ gent in the world of medicine, and utter surpassing all other Plasters hereto fore in use. They accomplish more ri one week than the old Plasters in whole year. They do not palliate, the, CURB.

Gollins' Voltaic Plasters.

ress as ted

ictations, Oup

appetite. Wan, Wi

ranoo, and nervous Debility, ail indi. in perfect digestkmal assimilation 0 food and thereby lack of nutrition, so neees saryto the support of the body, can be efuse of HOOKLAND'S the favorite prescription of that Kmine&t German Physician, Christopher W. Hoodfland, of Langan-Sai-xa, Germany, the efficiency of which won for him ttmnr marks of destination by the crowned heads and nobility of Europe. It tones tho stomach to health, action, ieguiatas the bowels, arouse* the torpid liver, promotes natural perspiration, invigorates the nerves, and restores all the functions of Nature to vigorons health. The efficacy of this remedy is daily acknowledged by tho subjects of its treatment, who now enjoy robust glowing health. tf OO k?LAXi?$POIXJPIIYLI.IN PILLS are recommended when a brisk purgative js_ required, They operito thoroughly without grin iu g. They are the best Antl-Biiluso ritls extant.

1

For Local Pains, Lameness, Sorenee Weakness, Numbness, and Inflammatio of the Lungs, Liver, Kidneys, Splee Bowels, Bladder, Heart, and Muse' are equal to an army of doctors and acr of plants and shrubs.

Price 25 cents. Sold b^- all Druggis Mailed on receipt of price, 25 cents ft one, 1.25 for six, or $2.25 for twelv carefully wrapped and warranted, WEEKS & POTTER, Properitors Bosto Mass. Oct 1 Weds. Sat. 1

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Bankers and Broke rs, 17 Wall Street,