Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 June 1878 — Page 4
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Tb« UAILY GAZETTE is published every afternoon except Sunday, and
by the earrier at 300 p®' fortnight, by mail, $8.00 per year $4.00 for six months, $2.00 for three months. THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is issued
every
Thursday, and contains all the
best matter of 'the six daily issues. THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is the largest paper printed in Terre Haute, and is sold for: One copy per year $1.60 E1X months, 76c three months. 40c. All subscriptions l&ust be paid in advance. No paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option cf the proprietor. A failure to notify a discontinuance at the end of the year will be considered a new engagement.
Address all letters, WM, C- BALL & CO. GAZETTE, Ten Haute, Ind.
DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET.
For Criminal Ju^ge, THOMAS B. LONG. For Criminal Prosecutor,
ALBERT J. KELLEY. For Auditor, ANDREW GRIMES.
For Treasurer,
NEWTON- ROGERS. For Sheriff, LOUIS HAV.
For Recorder, 1
JOSEPH PHILLIPS. For Corener, I1ENRY EHltENHARDT.
For CommisBioBers,
First District—JOHN W. WILSON Second District—JNO. 8. JORDO For Representatives,
I. N. KESTER.
ROBERT VAN VALZAH. For Surveyor, TULLY SIMMONS.
OE MCC RATIC STATE TICKET FOR 1878
For Secretary of State,
JOHN SHANKLlN.of Vandcilmrgta Co. For Auditor of State, MAHLOM D. MA If SON, of Montgomery Ce
For Treasurer of State,
WILLIAM FLEMING, of Allen County. For Attorney-General, THOSFW. WOOLEN, ef Johnson County.
For Superlntcmlentof Public Instruction. JAMES H. SMART, of Allen County.
THURSDAY. JUNE 6, 1878.
CONGRESS will adjourn on the 17th of *h»8 month.
THE fifty million 4)$ per
V"
cent-
bonds,
which the syndicate contracted for, have been taken. Within a year it is reasonable to hope the whole public debt will be refunded, and the highest rate of interest that the public debt will bear, will be per cent.
NEWS corces from Washington that Willard's hotel will be closed immediate, ly after the adjournment of Congress, and the furniture sold at auction. It ig not 6tated whether this means a permanent stoppage of that famous tavern which has been the scene*of political strife for years, or is merely the firs1 6tep in anew garniture.
-^DISPATCHES from Rome report Pope Leo as 6ick in body and distressed in mind with the machinations of riva factions in the church,and the manifold responsibilities of his place at the head of the Catholic hierarchy. It is so strange news as to be incredible. So far as the world has been able^to j^dge,. he has gone about his great work with energy and marked ability,
POTTER'S committee will make and *"4 keep things lively during the summer months. What it will accomplish cannot be fully predicted now. It i6 not im*ii probable, however, that it may implicate
Sherman, Noyes and others of the visiting Republicaa statesmen in bargains of BO base a nature as to necessitate their retirement trom public life. As to President Hayes we do not believe that any fraudulent bargain can be brought to his door. His conduct has been so clear and clean and hi*h, since his induction into the Presidential cffice, that we are loth to believe him guilty of any crookedness in securing the place. He has been so fair he has yielded so little to the clamor of the 6talwartstatesmen of his party he Lv has bren so indifferent about
V'.. conciliating the men, who would retaliate upon him for his slights by ruining him if there was anything in his record that could be used to accomplish that purpose as to induce the belief that, however it may be with others, he himselt is free from all taint of fraud.
But one thing will be accomplished The returning board system of manipulating politics will be made so obnoxious that it will forever after be impossible for *ny cabal or combination cf men to re new the disgraceful scenes enacted in Louisiana, South Carolina and Florida less than two years ago. In this work the committee will not laker in vain.~^
THE FOURTH OF JULY.
tm
Pursuant to the call published in the GAZETTE of Tuesday there was a meet ing at the court house last night to make arr ngemei.ts for a celebration on the Fourth of July. As it was hoped it would be, the meeting wa* a large one. For particulars of the Droccedings the reader is referred to the .local columns of the GAZETTE. I will be seen that committees have been appointed and all the preliminary ground ri work of a business organization perfect ^d. The size cf the meeting itself, and
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the evident determination of those who were present to work, gave promise that nothing would be lefi undone which could in anyway contribute td the success of the occasion. There is, therefore, in this happy inauguration of the enterprise, assurance that Terre Haute will this year celebrate the nation's natal day with a grandeur hitherto unattempted. With our two military companies, and their gatlingguns, and a battery that will be here, and companies from other places that will be invited to participate and will probably accept, the military display will be on a scale not witnessed since the close of the great conflict. Our merchants have not hitherto "been backward to come forward," and the GAZETTE promises in their name now, that they will surpass all former efforts, BO that the civic display will be equal to that of the military.
Our neighbors, therefore, of Paris and Marshall and Rockville and Brazil and Sullivan and Robinson, and all points between a«d even beyond may know by this token that they are invited to attend. The big pot will be put in the little one for their benefit and in their behalf. They will be welcome to the Prairie City as her guests.
STARVATION.
First and {premost we should frown down the grumblers who reraember prosperity in the past and look forward to Elysium, but never admit that the present is endurable. Melancholy is the normal condition of chronic grumblers. Complaints eternal emenate from them., By a curious circumstance the ills which they deplcVe—and fcr the most part they are imaginary—are never the result of their own individual folly. Some outside cause is to be blamed. Somebody has robbed them or wronged them. But especially are they fond ot making a scape goat of the government. Whenever they have been more than ordinarily shiftless and improvident, and are reaping a harvest of want from a sowing of idleness, then they come out strong as patriots and statesmen. They point to themselves and their condition with pride, as illustrations in point of how utterly worthless bed law9 can make men. Why they will not see their own responsibility why Providence permits them to deceive themselves !ies hidden with many mysteries. With no earthly excuse for such distorted views except their own diseased fancies, they protest the more, the more they then: 6elve sought to be protested against. One ot the evils of their way of looking at life lies in the fact that they appear to be getting the very worst of everything that is going. They really do not, to be sure, but appear to and, after all, the way anything seems to one is the way it is.
Whether any one of the thousand things that, go to make up life shall be pleasureable or'-E^pain-ful depends upon the way in which people shall look at it. If a predetermination exists to be dissatisfied then nothing can be pleasing,, just as nothing appears in its natural colors when looked at by jaundiced eyes. It cannot therefore but be a matter of mild regret to .healthful people to see the discontented on«s fret ting their lives away when they might just as easily be taking things at their best as at their worst. It seems so utter ly senseless to be rubbing the back Of events the wrong way, when it is a pleasing process to reverse the operation.
Of course so long as they give vent to their biliousness in private, it is the exercise of an inalienable privilege guaranteed in the constitution. And as a question before the law people have as u.uch right to be miserable as to be happy, even in public. But public complaints are a nuisance. For example if some well fed individual announces in the privacy of his closet, speaking to the walls, that he is starving, no one but himself need know that he is mentally afflicted. But announcements in public that people are starving by wholesale, when it is so notoiiosly at variance with the facts, is apt to advertise the mental affliction to which reference has already been made. As a matter ef fact the people are very comfortably well off now. Perhaps ten years hence they will look back to the present as a time when they were very happy. But whether they are exactly as well-to-do njw as they were last year or the year before, this is certain viz: that their condition will be made more tolerable by a habit of cheerulncss in contemplating it. while they will only make themselves more miserable by gloating over fancied misfortunes. In this connection and as being apropos to the subject in hand, we reprint from the New York Graphic an article which gave some sound reaso.is for a belief that a genuine revival of prosperity has begun.
The revival of foreign immigration. For the first time in five or six years the tide of foreign immigration has set in toward this port. This is an unmistakably sign of prosperity. 2 The undei current of the stock exchange is buoyant. No bear movement has been successful iince the passage of the MI tr bill. Every downward movement has been almost instantly followed bv an upward movement. 3. Railroad bnilding has been resumed, more especially in the west. This, of course, has already reacted on the iron industries of Pennsylvania, and the increased activity there will, in time, produce an increased activity in the New England mills. 4. The prosperity of the far west is phenomenal. Nothing similar has been
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THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
known before. The harvests promise great abundance—the tide of settlement is flowing rapidly. New lands are being brought under cultivation, feeders t« the great trunk lines of railroad are being constructed, and the demand for manufactured products it sure to be large. 5. Our foreign commerce is steadily increasing. This it another excellent condition of returning prosperity."
"OUR COMMON SCHOOLS." In another column ot *hl6 issue of the GAZETTE will be found a reply of Dr. N W. Whitney to the strictures of this pa.
per on his first article about the public schools. Dr. Whitney now seems to have a grievance against this paper because of an alleged change of the manu
script of his former article, which charge he intimates was made in this office without his knowlege or consent. If the Dr. means by this insinuation that his article was mutilated cr anything added to, or subtracted from it,which changed in anyway its meaning, we most emphatica.ly contra-, diet him, and challenge him to his proofs. The article went through several hands while in the office, and there is abundant evidence to refute any 6uch assertion, but we apprehend he does not make the charge seriously, for we notice that he does not specify any such alteration, or give any amended statement of his position, as a person would who had been placed before the community in a false light. It would be a source ot mild gratification to learn from the Dr, that the whole of his first article was a mistake,—a travesty on his real yiews, a woeful perversion of his sentiments, of which he was now ashamed. But he must prove the mistake to have arisen some where else than here for it must be re-asserted with emphasis, that as it was sent to the office, it was published, line for line and word for word. No. That statement is too sweeping. A partial plea of quality must be entered to his soft impeachment. Ecventric spelling, in a few instances, wa3 brought into conformity with the accepted form, and a similar labor cf love was performed in reference to peculiar grammatical construction and other little lapses from 'rules laid down by scientists," but for this we should have been thanked and not denounced by the Dr. as, perhaps, he will agree when he comes to read his present article, on which no such missionary effort has been expended.
One ojection and but one the Dr* urges against the schools is, in our estimation, a valid criticism. Too much has been crowed into the course of study, and it has been ex'.Cnded father than there is any warrant for doing is in law or justice. The GAZETTE and t'-e Dr., both being bachelors and childless (the last w«rd is. perhaps, unnecessary) ought undoubtedly to be taxed to give a plain and substantial English education to the children of their less fortunate neighbors. But when it comes to being forced to assist in paying tuition fees for clas«ical education, and instruction in higher mathematics, and rhetoric,- and logic, and book keeping, and drawing, and painting and a'stronomy, and mental and moial philosophy, and geology ahd other ologies and sophjes, too numerous to mention, then if the Doqtor, in the chaste but expressive language of the streett chooses to kick," the GAZETTE will view the spectacle with romplacercy. As Mr. Eccles, who had a chronic thirst and was always penniless, rmarked when he saw his grandchild sleeping in its cradle with a gold necklace on, "this"—the pay ment of taxes by bachelors to furnish other peoples children ornamental educations—"this is 'ard.",
But this point excepted, our medical correspondent is"generally and uniquely in erfor. His remarks about one room school houses seem utterly trivial- Most of our school houses are not built on lots that have been donated, and it would be foolish beyond all expression to have any system of schools based on hopes of do nations. Aside fiom that, there are many, advantages in large school houses a,id a concentration of pupils in one building, controlled by a corps of teachers acting together under a principal, over any system of single room chools. In this connection the Dr. refers to some self evident fact, but does not state what that fact is, and whatever it is we feel pretty certain that it will prove to be no fact at all.
In the matter of the Dr's. illustration drawn from the girl of fifteen summers, with an arm full of books, who stood abashed, when, *as he says, he asked "what was the rule for cesignate dollars from cents in simple interest," he will excuse us if we suggest that without an explanation of the question no person of any age or sex could tell what it was he wished to know. The fault—to adapt a famous saying of one Cassius to the situation—the* fault Jear Dr. was not in the girl, but in yourself that you received no answer. His remarks on female teachers are incoherent and, to uk, incomprehensible.
Women are the natural teachers of the human race up to a point as tar advanced as we believe the school curriculum should reach. The faculty of teaching is a part of the instinct of motherhood. It coexists with the love which impels a mother to instruct ber offspring and the patience which continues to the end. It the Dr. can fancy a man teaching a room in the primary grade of the public .schools, he can imagine a condition el thifl" which-we should be inclined to
view with alarm both oa.vthe teacher' and the pupils' account. ,*j He adduce* the fact that women are paid less than men to prove their smaller capacity and efficiency We. should prove from the same deplorable fact that fewer avenues of labor are open to women than to men, and that men regulate the salaries that are paid. The tendency ot the times is not towards the employment of fewer women as teachers but to the payment of men's wages to them when they do men's work.
The Dr. makes some other points, but it does not occur to us that they require comment.
•j A SHARP LETTER.
GENERAL BEN. HARRISON ARRAIGNS THE FACULTY OF THE OHIO MED1CAL COLLEGE FOR COMPLICI
TY IN THE RECENT HOR-~+ ROK.
FrOEn The Cincinnati Times, of Saturday Grnnd Hotel, Cincinnati, O., June 1. To the Citizens ol Cincinnati.
I did not suppose, when called th vour city by a message—the most shocking and horrible ever sent to a son—that 1 should have occasion to address you except to thank you for your solicitous kindners and tender sympathy. That burden is heavy upon me this morning.
I can only sav for the children ot your friend thank you, thank you, God keep your precious dead from the barbarous touch of the graye-robber, and you from that taste of hell which comes with the discovery of a father's grave robbed, and the body hanging by the neck like that of a dog, in the pit of a medical college.
But the purpose of this card is not to make my acknwledgments for kindnes* received", but rather to fix, if 1 can, the responsibility for this outrage where it ought ultimately to rest
We have been offered through the press the sympathy of the distinguished men who constitute the faculty ot the Ohio Medical College. I have no satisfactory evidence that any of them knew whose body they had but I have the most convincing evidence that they aie covering the guilty scoundrel. While they consent to occupy this position their^abbhorence is a pretense, and their sympathy is cant and hypocrisy.
Wno can doubt that if the officers of that institution had desired to secut the arrest of the guilty party, it would have been accomplished before night on Thursday. The bodies brought there are purchased and paid for by an officer of the college. The body-snatcher stands before him and takes from his hand the fee for his hellish work. He is not an occasional visitant. He is often there, and it is silly to say he is unknown. After being tumbled like dung into that shoot by the thief, some one inside promptly elevates the body, by a windlass, to the dissecting-ruom. Who did it, gentlemen of the faculty? Your janitor denied that it had been "upon your tables—but the clean incision into the caotid arterv, the thread with which it was ligaturtd, the ir jected veins, prove him a liar. Who made that incision and iojected that body, gentlemen of the faculty? The surgeons who examined his work say he was no bungler. What has your demonstrator of anatomy to say about this? While he lay upon your table, the long white beard, which "the hands of infant grandchildren had often stroked in love was rudely shorn from his face. Huve you" so little care of your college that an nknown and unseen man may do all this? Who took hm. from that table and hung him by the neck in the pit. Was it to hide it from friends or to pass his body into your pickling-vats foi fall use? For a reliable informant state? that an order had gone out to gather bodies against your winter term. Your secretary has said, and I can prove it over his denial, that he thought he could name the man who did it. But he refused my just demand that he should do so. I denounce the man who thinks he knows the guilty party, and will not aid my serch, as the brother of that one who drew my lather by the feet through broken glass and dirt from his honored grave. Have you advised him, gentleman of the faculty, that he ought to tell, or did a change of purpose on this subject come from a conferar.ce with fvou? You profess to '.he public that you are extremely caretuI and solicitous that private graveyards shall not be violated. Do you expect to fos'er a careful spirit in yo'ur grave-robbers'by covering tiiem and pnaking yourselves party to the crime when thei violated your pretended instructions? Wcsld you not give the public better evidence of your sincerity if you repudiated the men'who, in their own wrong, (if it was so.) did this deed I have not the composure to state my case clearly, but I think 1 have said enough. It the faculty would have us believe them clear of a knowing participation in this crime, their conduct must be conformable to reason. The law and the common sense of mankind hold him who conceals the fruit of crime, or aids the escape of the criminal, to partake of the original guilt.
Very truly yours. BKNJAMIM HARRISON.
ST. MARY'S ROBBERIES. To the Editor of the GAZXTTK: Numerous robberies have been committed at St. Marys in the last few weeks which have caused the people to be on the watch. The house and ir.eat house of Lewis A Ivey has keen entered twice and jewelry, clothing, meat and coooked eatables taken. The meat house of Peter Brenrian was recently broken open and robbed of three pieces of meat and a sack of potatoes. Mr. Brennan being a poor man the robbers were charitable in not taking all his meat, or probably left 6ome for another time. A fine horse was stolen from the stable of Hugh D, Roquet which as yet he has been unable to find. The passenger room, ticket-office, and ware room of the I. & St. L. railroad was entered, evidently by having keys for the purpose. After plundering the rooms and finding no money or valuables worth taking, the thief set fire to the building on the inside, but fortunately was discovered about 4 o'clock ih the morning, by a man passing by, who gave alarm in time to save the buildings. It is evident that the robbers live in the vicinitv of St. Mary's, as they seem to know where they will most likely. find what they want. A vigilance committee is about "to be organized to drive out the suspicious parties.
Maj. Wood spent the day in Indianapolis yesterday, went over in the mrrang back at midnight.
MILITARY
The matter of an encampment in August or September, is now a sure thing. Companies from all over Indiana will be present,and it is thought there will be about three thousand soldiers. The term of encampment will probably be one week and each soldier will be paid in an amount t® meet his actual expenses. This will be the best opportunity ever given the military in this state, to see camp life, and it will afford them a chance to show off to the greatest advantages of their proficiency.
We do not know that the place for encampment has been chosen, but as we can probably claim the most pleasant, location, we would suggest somewhere near this city, on the Wabash river Then the soldier boys can find amusements of all kinds, and the best target range and drill grounds in the State. Let us hear from other sections, as all have & right to be heard from.
The Logan Grays turned out fiftv-two strong on the 30th, and gave an exhibition drill, which is spoken of as
The procession, and parade of the military companies, of this city on decoration day" has been pretty generally spoken of by all the city papers but we cannot afford to let. such an event pass by without having something to say ourselves.
The fi/st thing that one would notice us the two companies came marching down Main street was the blue and the gray and it would cause good- chilly sensations to trickle over the body' as the thoughts suggested came flashing over ua. But a very few years has elapsed since they were celebrating their meetings with bullet and blood now they march side by side and meet with a hearty shake of the hand. All honor to the men who thus prove themselves so worthy of the name of Americans.
The marching of the two companies was without doubt very fine. The wheelings by fours was without a single exception perfect, the men in each four keeping well together, but never crowding the guide. The platoons wheelings were at some times as perfect as they could be, but occasionally the guides would get out of place and the line would become uti steady. This was particularly noticed in the rear plattoon of the Light Guards, the guide failing on two occasions to take place promptly in ''left front into line."
The Governor's Guards did some very good marching, and for the time thjey have been organized, give hopes of becoming one of the best drilled and discipl:ned companies in the State. The companies held a re view and dress parade in front of the Normal building, and presented a very military appearance. The handling of the arms by the first company was especially noticed as being very fine. The second company have not had a fair opportunity yet, but will come to the front in a short time, and from the advancement made in the two months they have been together, we would advise the Light Guards to watch out. We do not want to make this column grumble, but we want to say this in regard to the music arrangements. It may be a good thing to have two or three bands and a drtim corps, but when they are compelled to march about a square apart, and each insist on playing different tunes and diff erent" time, we call it utterly abominable. On the 30th the Ringgold band was playing a good marching tu and the boys were getting ilong finely. Pretty soon that drum crowd beg*n to bang away at the rate of forty miles an hour and just as they got fairly at work the rear band gave us a few slices of something entirely different. We are not saying that these musicians did not do gooi playing, but we do say that a sc ldier cannot march by "amaz ing grace,"' "popgoes the weaiii" and "Santa Anna retreat'' a{ one and the same time.
How affecting it is to see two portly old men. their silver haired old heads bowed close to each other, their arms clo»ely entwined across each others back, as they walk along the street, and to think the/ are only jliticiants engaged in the process of cramming icn other with whopping lies.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of a decree and order of sale, issued from the Vigo Circuit Court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of John R. Brownlee, and against JanS Kelly, nee Jane Leveque, and Albert J. Kelly, 1 ain ordered to sell the following described real estate, situated in Vigo County, Indiana, to-wit:
Commencing thirtv (30) feet north of of the southwest ronus, of lot number fifteen (15) in subdivision of one hundred (100) acres off the north end of the northeast quarter of section twenty-two (22), Township twelve (iz) north, range nine (9) west, and running thence north on the east side of Fourteenth (14) street one hundred (roo) feet, thence east to the eastern line of said iot, thence south one hundred (100) feet, and thence west to the place of beginning, and on SATURDAY, the 29th dav of June, 1878, within the legal hours of said day, at the Court H»use door in Terrc Haute, I wilt offer the rents and profits ot the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, anfl upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said order ofsale and cost*, I vvi»l then and there offer the fee simple, in and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same. This 5th day of June. 1878.
GEO.
W.
Pr. fee, $6.00.
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poetry of motion." Too much cannot be said in praise of this organization. The Montgomery Guards are having regular drills and, notwithstanding their well known proficiency in military movements, seem never to tire of making an onward move. This is the kind of a company that ought to be identified with the Indiana legion. Come over Colonel and help us out. |,
Our friends, the Light Infantry, were out in full force (a6 they usually are when called on) on Decoration day, and are spoken of in the highest terms by the metropolitan press. The Light Guards must watch out if they want to be known as companion in arms with this compa-
We are desirous of obtaining the exact number of militia companie) and if possible the number of organized military companies in the 6tate and ask our friends to send us a list of their respective organizations with names ,pj officers and date of organization.
CARICO, Sheriff".
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DANGEROUS
Preyailing Maladies!
When any epidemic disease, such as the cholera, small-pox, or yellow fever, prevails to any great extent in the country the public becomes greatly excited and alarmed, and the papers are filled with treatise upon the subject. Physiology, pathology, and the whole therapeutic and materia medica are exhausted by the learned and the unlearned disciples of Esculapius, in their efforts to stay the fell destroyer. But these are not the only maladies which require care and consideration. There are others prevailing to an alarming extent in thiscountri, which, not partaking of the nature of an epidemic, though often fatal, and well worthy of consideration, and. requiring the skill and experience of the most eminent piactitioners. Among these maladies are diseases of the Respirttfory Organs. and also the diseases of Women. Years ago I was lead to consider that in the whele range of the science of medicine, none present a greater magnitude and Stronger Claims for study and reform than the maladies nmmed. I have not language powerful enough to picture the results and unhappiness I have known womento sufler because their diseases were either not understood by the physicians who treated them, or they did not receive the right treatment, but punishment for the want ot knowledge of those who professed to treat them 'I ruly has it been, and well said: "To heal, means to assist nature to throw off all that disturbs her legitimate labor, and restore her to order." A person who is ignorant of the curative means can not do this. We must first know the cause of disease, and then we must open the way through which nature can expel the Obnoxious intruder that bars her healthful activity. Woman will not arouse from her lethargy to study the first causes. They suffer on and wonder why, and' grow worse and worse. We may take all the medicir.e the world, but if the mind is diseased, and the will too feeble to aid the body to grow into a receptive condition for the remedies to heal and restore us, it is useless for us to buy or use any prescribed formula. If we attempt to cure the sick we must know the nature of the disease we are to expel, and how to direct the vital power which ever lives in and controls us. Disease must be attacked where it originates. The food _it lives upon must be cast out of the s^ftcm, else the labor of the physiciaif is lo6t. Prominent symptoms guide us to a proper knowledge of the disease, but should not be mistaken and treated for the disease itself.
We come now the diseases of the
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Respiratory Organs.
Among the list of these dUeases which affect the human frame, CATARRH is the most prevalent, most offensive, most productive of discomfort and of a variety of distressing and dangerous complications. Jj Jitl
"Fatal Effects of Catarrh. The swallowing of catarrhal secretions derange the functions of the stomach, causing indigestion and loss cf appetite and health. Debility, paleness, lassitude, headache and disturbance of mind soon follow. i™ "Y
Consumption and Death. Catarrhal affections, unchecked by treatment, are prone to extend by continuity of surface along the natural air passages to the lungs, thus causing consumption and death. In this connection it should be remembered that the air which enters the LUNGS of a catarrhal patient is, every breath of it poisoned by exhalation from the foul secretions of the diseased surface. This consideration alone.should be sufficient to induce every person thus afflicted to make early application for relief.
Offensive Breath.
In nine cases out of ten the disgusting odor is caused by CATARRH. Many young ladies and gentlemen are unpopular, avoided by their acquaintances, and their prospects blighted without being aware of the foul exhalations that accompany their breaths, for though the soft bones of the head were decomposing and passing away as thin, milky, or yellow, or greenish discharges, friends feel delicate about mentioning the fact.
Treatment and Cure.
By my treatment a complete and per manent cure of this repulsive disorder can be etfecteJ. This I have demonstrated in thousands of cases representing the dis*:8e in every form and in all its various stages of developement. My applications are made to reach the "diseased parts in the most direct and positive manner, instantaneously penetrat'ng every cell aHd cavity of the head communicating with the nostrils,and subjecting every portion of the membranfc to the healing action of the remedy employed with. the most beneficial result.
F. A. YOX
Moschzisker, ftf. D.,
OFFICE:
Terre Haute House.
