Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 September 1878 — Page 3
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-!cE *K iSiJ. on? ts8? »Uii
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"WAITING FOR LUCK.
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Ho! ye win are listless and mftpin? Bit dl'mally twirling four thumbs^| And gloomily waiting and watching'
For something that that never tomes .*fi Ton might just as well, foolish mortals, lDxpcct you'll by lightning be struck
Ofio will happen as soon a* the other! ,V Don't stand around waiting for luck.
There's a say log-a good and atruo one— {Take courage yon poor one who del res With ft stout Heart so bravely) that "HeaYen
Will help those who first help them* selves And you'll find, if you wish a good fortune,
f'
A pretty good way Is to tuck
1
Up your shirt sleeves and start out and And it Don't sit around waiting for luck. :.
lou may ine and mope on forever—' Find fault and deplore your hard fate— But you'd better remember the proverb
And act en it ere it's too late: You may pout and grumble forever— Jasi so long you will find you are stuok In the mire of sloth and abasement—
Den't gitunund waiting for luck.
There is wealth to be had—go and seek it And With It get honor and fame By the sweat of yeur brow you can gain them.
And carve for yourself a proud name
5
But to do this takes tact and ambition, Persistency, hope—and some pluck. Are you ready?—then lose not a moment!
Don't sit aroand waiting for luck.
.LUNATIC LOGIC.
From tho Boston Ilerald.
*'I h&vasUulied this moon question," said a lanaticone day,f-' "And to make a steadier moonshine I hit upen a way. 'Tls the san that makes the changes from the big moon to the small, And sometimes we are £orced to go without a moon at all. Well, then, what can be plainer?—not the nose upon your face!— That the sun should bo abolished and cheese put in its place. That will make our moonshines steady, with full moon every night— I deny the irredeemable currency lunatics of all sorts and kinds, wherever found, to prove 1 am not right!"
RONDEAU*
ryjFrom
French of Carl Rive, 1014-1088.
I love thee still, nor Time in flight .1 Can dull the vows I made that night I loved thee, then, so strong and true,
And now I pledge that love anew The coming year. (God make it bright) 4. Not Jr thy beauty do I plight
My only troth not for the sight *r Of e^es that lival heaven's blue— '/v.* at
1
l0T«thee
EXPRESS-IONS.
Blest is the Man who is not found
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Upon the paths of sin. But with the drivers at the pools He, solid, standeth in. _~7 7
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In all the gambler's crooked ways^fj.. He taketh no delight, But betteth on the Shady Ilorse »s"i'
Against the Favorite.—rToledo Blado,
'Tls netfair to call those fools 1^'™* Who do not know there tricks •, ''•'Twas always thus in Mutual pool* .., On racoor politics.—[New York Express. 1 -,9t !,!
THE YELLOW FEVER.
TUB EXPKRIENCKS OF A SUFFERER WHO
HAD IT—riOW THE D1SSASK CAME W I TO HIM AND L« Fit From the Detroit News
It Is six weeks or rather more since I lounged into the billiatd room of the St. Charles hotel, and looked at the flying ivory spheres as they were being manipulated by two local crack players, was about turning around to sit down, when something like a criket ball stiuck me on the back, and 1 felt a terrible decrease in vitality. I sink into the chair A dull, but overmastering pain shoots through my head my limbs tremble, stare with pertinacity at the game, however, My favorite player makes an apparently impossible shot The spectators hum applause. An enthusiastic, -all swarthy iaced Creole pounds his stick on the floor. My head becomes oppressed j., with ajoad of pain, and cold chills shoot ,u up my back.
v#,srfA"Where do you live?' asks the swarthy Voti face. I looked half vacantly in his face and gurgled, "No. Bai Mane street"
ni}i **j! wit iml Stifr Mt
SH# H*
The billiard room crowded a moment before is empty, j* During every half lucid moment in the next four days, when my stout, imperious, kind-hearted Irish nurse gave me, at excruciatingly long intervals, a spoonful of ice-water, and sometimes apiece of ice the size of a haxel nut, I raved and cursed at my landlad v.
Next day the doctor decides I am afiicted with pis tax is (I don't know whether I have spelled it right.) It is bleeding from the mouth, tongue and gums. My tongu%is swollen, and there are raw fissures in it and also in my gums, and streams of blood issuing all the time, After a while my nose contributes a bloody stream, and I faintly ask Mrs. Delaney if I am going to bleed to death "No no danger of that. Bleeding is a good sign," she says. I swallow lime water and calcined magnesia, which, I am informed, prevent* black'vomit My eyes,which have been aching terribly, now become fiercely inflamed and seem to be ready to start out of my head. ToIkifc ward evening I aign to my nurse to hand me a small mirror which is hanging against the wall. She refuses. I insist.
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She persists. -become exasperated and jump out of bed, and wjth a firm step walk up to the wall,ascend the chair and take it down. *Yer so purty, Vc must sfeft yerself," 1, says Mrs. Delaney, sarcastically.
I can but inadequately describe the'ex-
pressiod of ray face/ It was never a goqd looking countenance* But thin— thia is the face of a demon! forehead Is corrugated my 'eye* are- glaring and bloodshot my. swollen Ups arid cracked
teeth set fast, imA exprosfcing murder and destructiveness, area combination and a form indeed to give the world assurance of a fiend!. "1 r4T,-
4,If
have
»ti11 tftl
Not these alone my praise inyite 'Thy simple self it is. Ah! might I strive fore'er with Words, too |ow
And poor this pleasing task to dol Come darkness, precious, or come light, I love thee still I V' fit I .. f*
r:culiar
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On tlie fouth day I suffer indiscribable torfure. and rtiy mifid fs lilted up with frenzy and horrible imaginings. The central delusion is that I am condemned to whirl, in the same manner as the waterwheel, over a measureless chasm, for just one million years. Phantasmagoria, in the form of endless processions of men women and beasts, each looking and leering at me, and mocking my sufferings pass along in endless array. I know il is the result of opium given to deaden the terricle torture of ray abdomen, but the drug does not succeed in mitigating it to any extent. The pains, which in the first stages had been somewhat obtuse now become acute, and I shout aloud in intolerable agony. The pain in mv head feels as though there was an iron frame on it, which was crushing in the bones till my tortured eyes seem bound to jump out of their sockets. The bloody dis charge at my mouth and nos^ continues, and a glance at the miror on a chair at my bedside sho.vs that my features have acquired a striking resemblance to an enraged yellow gorrilla.
ye git the bloody sweat yer gone," said Mrs. Delaney, with charming synj pathy.y^.
I learn from her that a fatal symptom of yellow jack is a universal bleeding from the pores of the skin, and that when this makes its appearance the patient may as well'throw up the sponge. I tell her boastfully that blood sweat or black vomit have no terrors for me. I would just as soon have both of them together She says''Shut up," but 9ays it softly and'endeavors to arrange the sheet in which my tortured form is partially en wrapped. The contact ofihe mere cloth on my abdomen makes me shriek with agony. I rise from the bed frantically and approach the window, and my burning eyes are saluted by a funeral procession,-preceded by a hearse with nodding plumes. Shocked, in spite of a recklessness born of fierce pain, I lie down again, but no position gives comfort. The fiery heat which consumes my abdomen is supplemented with hor rible pains in my loins, thighs, calves, knees and ancles, and even toes, which feel as though scraped by a raz3r and then jgt.awed by a dog's sharp teeth. The pain in my head becomes more intense, and so does the agony in every part cf my body. No position gives ease. My stomach and bowels having a burning heat, as though scalded by boling water or burnt by coals of fir$, and I shriek and blaspheme and curse my nurse and landlady for^not adequately assuaving my thirst I lie on my back or sicfe, with kneees drawn up, and objurgate God and man. Then there slowly comes change. My 6kin, which, during the first three days, was hot and dry, and afterwards, on the fourth day, slightly moist, now presptres freely. Worn out I lie gasping and groaning, and still afflicted with pain and thirst. The doctor is summoned, and comes with his brown, genteel assistant, and says he rather thinks he will be all right in a few days. He locks pleased and so does his assistant. Mrs. Delaney is cool and unmov ed. As night approaches she lights the gas (the light does not hurt my eyes at all) and lets down the curtains, arid, seeing that I am tolerably quite, asks if she can leave me for half an hour groan assent, while my heart jumps with expectation. ow or never. I rise with difficulty and peer round for the water pitcher. Curses on her, she has taken it away? 'fall back in profound despair. In the silence of the night I hear the noisy exclamations of the card-player in. the little coffee bouse on the corner across the way. A wild idea crosses my brain, and I deliberately slide out of bed and lay prone on the carpel.. Then I rolled slowly towards the door, tacking around the table and mv nurses chair so as to sav* exertion. Then I turn the handle and the door opens toward me. No fear of being disepvered! I and mj nurse are the only occupants of the house, and she is out I am attired in a simple costume, contisting of only one linen garment, while around my neck is a cloth stained with blood from my mouth. I decend the stairs which lead to the side door in the piimitive manner of a child of ten months, and unlock the door leading to the side of the house.
said lightly: "This is the black vomit, isn't it?" No answer. I repeated the question, and Mrs. Delahey put up her apron, like a true Irish dame, and took .. refuge in tears. "Bab," said I, with a
arid My discolored diking,heart, though I felt singularly PA«^
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Across the narrow street—it is scarcely twelve feet in width—is the one story coffee-house. The saloons of New Orleans are generally called coffee-houses, and a number of them
keeD
the fragrant
decoction of the bean of Yemen always on hand. This coffce-house is simply a tenth rate bar-room frequented principally by "dagos," which generic title takes in all men of Spanish extraction engaged in fishing or bringing fruit or vegetable* to market from points on the river. The landlord, a villainous looking "dago" with a dark, pallid face like a Lascar, is playing cards with three of his customers, with all the heat and noise
to gamblers of the Latin race,
see' them through a stationary wooden
blind, which partially conceals' the shabby bar and the array of bottles and decanters reflected in a* cheap, dirty mirror. I make my way over the pavement on my hands and knees. I pause unobserved under the verandah of the grogfery, and gase with feverish desire at something on the counter. My head burns fiercely with my unwonted exertion. Finally, with supreme effort, I stagger across* the room to the bar, lift the battered pewter ice pitcher to my lips and commence drinking. To my'dying day I will declare that draught the sweetest ever drank by man. The next moment there was a hurried movement Two of the men ran out with a howl of horror. The landlord snatched the pitcher from my lips and his companion seized me in his arms. These "dagos" are not afraid of yellow fever. I caught a sight of a yellow faced demon in the mirror at, the same time and then all was dark.
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I had a relapse,, Ninety-nine doctors out of a hundred will tell you that a relapse .means death. Two weeks to a day after my first attack I felt an over-* powering nausea in my stomach ana my mouth filled. My nurse 6aid not a word but turned deadly pale. As I saw* an inky substanceJiejore^ me i&th^l^asin I
free from pain. "The bhek vomit 'can't kill me." Mrs. Delaney, after a few sobs, strikes a bell on the table twice and slips down to the door. Then comes a clerical looking personage, with Dundreary whiskers and blue eyes, who says that he understands that the brother belongs to the presbyterian faith. The doctor also makes, his appearance and brushes everybody aside, touches my forehead, and assumes a perfunctory appearance of attention. I incline to the belief that these people think that I am a "goner," but I exult in the idea that they are all mistaken. The doctor, being privily advised thereto by the clergyman, tells me that I must die. When? Well, by morning. I don't believe il.^ He reiterates the statement, and I reiterate
my
unbelief. The
clergyman kneels and prays, and the doctor retires. The clergyman follows about' an hour after,, and the two women sit up with me. The vomito continues, and I make a rather sick joke about the cuttle-fish and its black Vomit I am answered by sighs. The assistant appears, and I swallow some medicine.. The long watches of the night pass away, and I am still aliv^ and sensible. The black vomit diminishes in quantity, and by daylight it ceases. The assistant comes about io o'clock, and is met at the door by Mrs. Delaney. "Is it possible!" he ejaccljgtes, and he .forgets his professional quiet tread and walks briskly to mv bed. *:.
Every day I have numerous visits from my physicians. Yielding to the general wish, iqy physician has drawn up a formal report of my case, and it lies On my table, and is carefully read by every medicaHman who comes into my room. I am as yellow as a dirty lemon, but I am gaining. I have lost nalt my weight at least, every rib sticks out as plain as a barrel hoop, every section of my vertebrte stands out in bold relief like a walnut, and my legs are like walking 6ticks, but I still live. I have survived the twin events of a relapse and black vomit in yellow fever. "j
FALLEN LEAVES. .',f|
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From Little Johnny's Dtary, in the Argonaut. June 22th.—Sossidges for breckfis, you ot to seen me an Billy et em. If we was let we wude et lots more than we was giv, but I like readin good books, too.
One tifne there was a little boy wich had been giv some money, and he went to Mr. Brily, the butcher, and bot so much sossidge like he wud bust, and he was sick ahed. So his father he said: "lie make him not likem anny mor, seef I dont."
So his father said: "Sammy," cos that was his name, "doo yu
kanow
wot sos
sidges is made out ot?" And Sammy said he dident Then his father said: "Babies!"
And Sammy said: "How crewel!" and his father said. "Offle!" Then Sammy thot a wile reel haipd, like he wude go to sleep, and then he said: "How much sossidges wude our baby make, and wude it make a mile? Cos wen I git wel I mite go to the restyrant and say, 'I can get a mile of sossidges, and if yule cook em reel brown you may hav a bite, I ain't stingy.' "I hav herd fokes say that cats is put in to sossidges, but taint so, its jest the other way, out cats eats rats, to?.
Once a rat was eetin some bugs wich it had foun drownded, and a cat see him doin it. And wen the rat had et em evry little bit up the cat sheet the rat. and wocked away a shakin her hed like sayin: "There, that will t«iecTi you betfer than to eat sech disgustin food, you nassy thing, it makes me sick to my stumack ake for to think of it!"
Uncle Ned says that remines him of a nigger wich he see in Africy. The nigner had kil a other nigger in a fite, and had brot the boddy home, and Uncle Ned ast him was he a goin to eat it. The nigger he was oflL: mad, and he said, the nigger did: "Do you think Ime a disgustin cannible? Ime a goin to giv him to my dog, for to make the dog fat."
Then Uncle Ned said: "O thats how it is, but wot in the wirld do you keep dogs for?'-' If-
,J'I
And the nigger lie said '"Wot do I keep dogs" for I never see sech a fool. Wot does anyb&dy keep dogs fcr but to eat em
Billy he got a lickin to day for throne rocks at a Chiny man, serve him rite, puddin for dinner, and Franky i3 ^ittin a other tooth, and mother is diited like it was a other leg #'!.* j,!?')
July the test.—I was made wosh in ice wotrr cos I di
idertt git up wen I vfoa tole,
but you ot to seen wot a little tiny drop was anuff. Looked like it wude rain, but after it straind a wile it giv it up.
Wen I ast my father did he think it wude rain, so I cude make a sno man out of mad, hedinent say anything for a long wile, but pretty soon h£ looked at my mother and smild and he said, my father did "If it wude ra!n lots
tMfe,
Johriisy fcude
have a pillar of salt." But my mother she said: You must be crazy do you think Ide let him sleep oil sech a thing as that?"
There was a feller wich was silly, and he was a standin in the rode bear heded, and his brother looked out the windo and sed:
Wy dont you come in the house, dont you see its goin for to rain?" Then the sflljMfeller he said: "You have ail ways call me a fool, but wich is the fool now Ide like for to kano, do you spose if I was to com in the house it wudent rain all the same?"
This mornin we had egs and ham for b&ckfess and mv sister for dinner. She dident seem to feel nice, and I ast her how she liked bein marrid to her yung man, and livin in a other hous,» and she dident say nothin, but looked like she was a goin to bust out bawlin. Then my mother she spoke up and said wasent it a brass band, but it wasent cos I ran out for to tee. Wen I cum back my sister She had shet herself up in a bed room up stairs, now Ide like to kanow wots up, if that yung man has been lickin her he
Only last week this audacious chronicler
1 under
better not, no indeed, cos he wil have to go to the bad place wen he- dise, and the ole black feller will say: "Yure so fond of lickin may be you better lick this red hot griddle nex 2 or 3 millipn years wile I mix up some batter for to make me a cake, cos I aint had no breckfiss yet."
Once there was a man lickin his whife, and a little boy ketched him at it, and he said, the little boy did: *Wot do you mean by like that, younotty man, if you dont stop this ihinit there will be litenin!"
But the man done it again, and the little boy he pull off his jacket and said: "Now lie give it to yu, good!" and dubble up his fists, but the man he kep on a licken his whife like he never expeckted to have a other.
Then the little boy he got in a apple tree and said: '•You wicked feller, if I jvas down out of this tree it wude be pizen times for you!"
Then the man he went away to hav a quiet smoke, and wen the woman wich was licked she seen the little boy eitin down out of the tree she cetched him and giv him a ofHe lickin his ownself, and said: '•Thattle be good for yure tung, you sassy brat!"
I spose my father he thot of that this after noon wen I herd him tel my mother it wasent no use to enter fearin tween a man and his wife, let em make it up their own sellufs. But I do like to kano wots come of Uncle Ned.
July the i6d.-—This morning I went strate to Uncle NeJ as soon as ever Igot up and said: "Uncle Ned, taint no use us havin secrits from each other or we cant live together anv more."
Then Uncle Ned he said: "Johnny, I dont want to gather any more, I gethered one yesterday, and Ide like to get rid ofthatn."
Then I said: "Wy dont you tel it to me thei 1 no that yung man has been licken Missy, ces if he ain't-wot for dident she go home last nite, but stade tp our house?"
Uncle Ned he said twassent so, she went home about 3 Oh clock this mornin, cos he went with her, it was all rite and I mussent say no more about it, so I wont.
Chickin for dinner and lots of stuffin, pertickler by me. But I kanow he licked her.
Mary, thats the house maid, has got a new frock made out of my mother's ole dress, Franky, thats the baby, said "La, la, la, la," you never see sech a smart babyl
I kano where there is a baby wich is a heap older than ourn, but not moren halef so big, and it cant wock, and it cant tock, but it can jist discount any body a lookin out of its eyes. It is in a store windo, and is made out of whax.
Fore itfy sister Was married to her yung man,'and went to liv in heruther hous and be: licked, me and her used to pas that windo, and I was for stoppin, but she wude pul me along and say: "Wy, its ben there ever since I was little, only some times wen its close is change, wot can you see to like in that thing, I think thay better wash the na8ty black spots of its nosj.',
Bat the other day we was goin past agin and stopt an looked along wile, and then she said. "O, you darlin, wee sweet, if y«u was alive I wade biyu and jest eat you evry mite up, wot dear little freckles onto its funny nosie!"
Board of ton Prof.
a
Now wot do you think of that? July the 17.—-I was to my sisters hous to day and wile I was into her werk bascuit I foun a letter wich was rote her by her yung man wile she was over to our Hous, time he licked her, and I coppied it in my diry wile she was out. Here it is, xcuse spellin:
My Precious Sweetsweet,—Come home with your Unele Edward. I have told him all, and he says we were neither of us to blame. He wiU hand you this note and I beg you will come back with him to your own
LOVIMDOVIE.
P. S.—Uncle Eidward, fortunately, had some fruit in his pocket, and I must confess that that table cover is orange, as you contended, and not yellow as was suggested by me. So it was all my fault and I freely forgive you, and we'll nev"r, never have another dispute while we live. L. D.
There! I new he licked her. Sammon for dinner to-day.
The latest lie in behalf of the canine race is a story from Italy. It tells that a sherman went out to drownd his dojg, fill in, and was 'saved by the falith uf feeast. All this time there was a heavy btone about its neck. The author of the story would have rendered his tale more sttractive had lie made the animal present its owner with a purse and some dry clothing, jq nfi j.
Religion is becoming simplified after all. In some of the prominent eastern churches it has already ceased to be considered absolutely necessary for people to appear in full dress at the Wednesday evening prayer meetings.—[ HawkEye*
A voung grocery Clerk who was missing for about two weeks has turned up. He was at a summe resort That is, he had hift usual summe job of retsorting a lot of last season's beans in the attic of the store where he is employed.—[ Wheel ing Leader.
A chap in Arkansas, in the act of r&hv ming a heavy charge into an old musket, was killed by a premature discharge of the piece. The local papers speak of it as a tragical affair, but to us it seems to partake more of the nature of a mellow-ed-rammer.—[Yonkers Gazette.
1
-a
in
When Freedom from the .mountain Mght, Unfurled her banner to the air, Well bet eight cents she never wore
A pull-back dress or—banged her hair— Did she, girls?—[Yonkers Gazette.
On Sunday last lightning entered a Methodist meeting house in Wapping, Conn., and, tearing off a woman's swith, sent it sailing over the pews, a warning to the godly against the unrighteousness of worshiping in false hair.
The London Saturday Review says "very few funnymen have any friends'." What a funny fellow Tilden must be!
Absolutely
to THE GENUINE
DR. C. McLANE'S Celebrated American WORM SPECIFIC
Mr nttt
OR
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VERMIFUGE.
SYMPTOMS OF WORMS.
THE
countenance is pale and lead-en-colored, with occasional flushes, or a circumscribed spot oirone or both cheeks the eyes become dull the pupils dilate an azure semicircle runs along the lower eye-lid the nose is irritated, swells, and sometimes bleeds a swelling of the upper lip occasional headache, with humming or throbbing of the ears an unusual secretion of saliva slimy or furred tongue breath very foul, particularly in the morning appetite variable, sometimes voracious, with a gnawing sensation of the stomach, at others, entirely gone fleeting pains in the stomach occasional nausea and vomiting violent pains throughout the abdomen bowels irregular, at times costive stools slimy, not unfrequently tinged with blood belly Swollen and hard urine turbid respiration occasionally difficult, and accompanied by hiccough cough sometimes dry and convulsive uneasy and disturbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth temper variable, but generally irritable, &c.
Whenever tlie^aBove symptbmsi are found to exist, DR. C. McLANE'S VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cure. .,,
IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY1 in any form it is an innocent preparation, not capable of doing tht slightest injury to the most tender infant.
The genuine DR. MCLANE'S VERMIFUGE bears the signatures of C. MCLANE and FLEMING BROS on tlte wrapper. —JO:—
DR. O. MoLANXTS
LIVER PIL/LS
are not recommended as a remedy for all the ills that flesh is heir to," but in affections of the liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia and Sick Headache, or diseases of that character, they stand without a rival. ?-vw
AGUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used prepaid story to, or after
taking
As a simple purgative they are unsqualed. BEWAME OP IXITAITOJnS.
T.tler, PcrofuU, Uloara,. BolU, 1 I Ml power*. of health. Rtad: «II torn t* -I-»-J. M+tokt, Munfb, O. "ft «wtd. 1*7 child W Eryiip#!»•."—*«.
nsmatotrkM sal Lisyteyys ttMNMlt »»«l nmmm to m. MtutetoMrWlti'iwm, aijiilw If•lijlia%.W»« udviwl Pl»s— *t IktLVMIn*"!7'
(UtaailtrferMtMl. mMmM F""* OmimatMi fai •& Lir «r br M* i*— w4'"2*
4
nuvATZ ooumEixm Of 1 iimw. ii it*i ~*1r —i"T mSST^SSmM k« r*ul_kT. »n. AMtm
Slok Headaoha
CARTERS
BAKING
Orasumers should bear in mind that the incomparable "Boytl" is now the ofA4"BaklaX Ponder in the market made from pare G'ape Cream Tartar, imported exclusively for this powdT, direof from the wine-gr*wing district of Franoe. An old experienced housekeeper to pay a few pennies more for the "BoyaU" IndslhakH
writes that although she has to pay a few pennies more for the "BoyaL so much farther, and works so much better, that it's economy to use)t. us^s tho powier in pudding, cakes, and all sorts of pastry, wholly without ejonr.' An old ladv from Ohio writes that ft makes the only biscuft her dyspeptlo husband Sum eat. ThC is because the best and most wholesome materials are used. Approved by the New York
Health, and by such eminent chemlitsas Dr. MOTT. New York: [fa. ml Vial t. GENTH, Philadelphia, eto. Sold in .tin cans on ly, by grocers.
8)
Quinine.
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The genuine are never sugar coated.'' Each box has a red wax seal on the Jd, with the impression Dk. MCLANE'S LIVER PILLS.
Each wrapper bears the signatures of C. MCLANE and FLEMING BROS. Insist upon having the genuine Dr.
MCLANE'S LIVER PILLS, prepared by ming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the packet being full of imitations of the yne McLanef spelled differently but pronunciation^
Ja
n. KftiCw. a. «tL£«S *CO., Prop'#, riit»hurirp«. aiu Hr PtyntM md
DR. RICE,
17 Cart Race, LOUlSViU^ KYii ctoXplS S^dMWVtt
'smug#? They also relieve Plstiwfs from Dyspep•ta, IndigHoa and Too lfeartar BatlnSA perfect I uaiedy fcr Ditsinesa, Maaaea, DrowsineesJIad TMte In the MMik, Coated Toagne, Pain la the Side, Ae. They ICMlate the jBowoa and
|mt flVER 1 PIUS.
late'the Boweto and prevent OonstlpattMi
GSBSmhJand
Pll«. Theamall-
•at and eaaieKt to take. Only one pill.* doaat Mint vtal. Purely Vegetable. Price Beam Bold by all Druggists.
CARTER MEDICINE CO.,PtttfnfcM*h.
W.-WrStorp & Co.
paBLX8HEK'8 AQENTS. No. 15 Park «ow Kdw York, ai anthorfzed fo eontrtct fpr ffd«ertislns in our paper
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Another, says aim An
ork
Chicago, Rock inland,
J'T v- ifl
srr
The bestot:meals served 'tof 'W cents, A bottle of line French wine furnished. If desinjd, for an additional IS eents. Furnishing a repaat fit for an emperor. Overland
L^1
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& A11|| •_
11 m* -a** ,4 lia 1
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PACIFIC LR. R.
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Gre*t hort "Llnerand Overland Route making close connection at .Chiosgo, .with
ts,«- ah v. At
'V t..n rM. .V,., I ,,U4 ...» Chicago,t ^d Eas^rnllll., R. R.
Hx" 1 -.it
For all points in Kansas,fcbtorarfo, aVi California. J^This road is th0roi&My equipped with ... *j .?s *, flj
Palace, Day! and Sltepint *%art,
Jo.! J., 1 •. S' Ki,\ 'Sf -'Hia i' :':f' Dining and Restaurant Cart tl
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Gen. Bnpt. A .M.8M1TP, Agt.
In Mm «Mfii of (Mr tM L'TUl 10 IMrtwu)
jiee^ Cto, THE BQTET BUCKET CO. N. HAWKINS, 8«o'y. MSM Msuiii ai.omoAoa
'eating sWentilation
mm
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30.000 pbb.
RICHARDSON, BSYNTOiA CO.,
MAKIVACVVMIM,
84 lake St., Chicago, Ills.
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HRUSSriNG'S WHITE
OsMmted lbrfts anteed free from Suipkurk •BtttHiiwe wtth wtrich-JTot
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it. Largest Ylnegar Works la tbo World. Esab, isC
