Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 October 1878 — Page 3

FOR THE LADIES.

J*

"SO

at one of Their Sex saw on the Cars.

a Variety of Reflections oncerning Suffering Women and Insufferable iMen. y,|

tumes arc Duly Considered (I Matters A roand the 'ouse Keceive Attention.

•"i 'j.t/5-

-I

K'l

GOING WE8T.

you ask how far west? To Effingsir, on business, and to remain only rt time certainly not long enough How the advice of our late whitephilosopher. yes I am aware that all you men been there time and again, and, fore, don Jt expect you to be at all ested in what 1 am going to say. I riting this tor the ladies, to whom a this sort is not an every day affair, I wish to be strictly confidential, ir, be so kind as to turn to the next where you will find an account of on. O. B. Blank's financial policy, 1, like every other expositiou of this rkably lucid question, is highly enning and instructive, besides being like the others) the only one b\ the country can possibly be eaved. w, ladies, that interruption over, I roceed with .my remarks, if yoiji

ERNING FEMININE DIEFICULTIES. usekeeping grows monotonous at doesn't it? Week after week, and after month, an endless succesbreakfasts, dinners and suppers, nly lime enough between fol us to and 6ew the buttons on. Yes, ost patient and domestic .woman of is apt to find it wearisome at times et there are worse thing* in the by far. One of the worse things obliged to drop everything and ewhere when you are not prepargo. And the necessity by some is always sure to arise just at that ular time when, like Miss Flora imsy, you have nothing to wear, rhaps it may at that trying season present when summer clothes, seen their best days, begin to look ei out of place, and yet it is n?t time for the advent of a fall ward-

Or it may be you have but just to "do" your hair the new way has not yet learned to stay properrepeat, to be obliged to go on a under f#th circumstances is hat trying even to the sweetest r. certainly a great drawback to a n's enjoyrtient not to feel conscious well-dressed. Having that conness one can then put asideall of attire and leave the mityi pecfree to attend to other things, sure of\ our sympathy wtien that the situation included 'all ove mentioned disagreeables when,

I STARTED WESTWARD hort stay at Effiingham, Illinois." tering the car, however, I found S. of the M. :E. church, a friend rmer pastor, was also enroute few-, me place. So 'putting aside.-ipj inces as best I'could, I determined the most of his edifying fcorivrfir-t while he was with us. "j.'J en the conductor presented hitp^ elder introduced him to us as so-and-so, and after he had Ion informed us that his friend, the ictor, was a most excellent man in member too of that very good class pie often referred to as

M-

fci

THE SALT OF THE EARTH. .. confess I looked after the man cuand I found myself w&ndering liy how Barnum happened teMtof*s summer. If this convicts me haritableness I must plead, the deearly education. The dictionary, ied was printed before railroads 0 well-known as they are now, and word conductor, and the names of rious other railroad officials, were iren as synonyms of' saint" as un* rlly they should have been.

Ijigh time the book was revised, en Terre Haute and Marshall the as joined by another of his friends, he presented as Bro. B., an elder-sant-faced farmer. I soon disd, without being told, that this an belonged to the "salt of the also. Would you like to know found it out? In speaking of his called her mother, and showed th great satisfaction,

A PATENT PIE-LIFTER taking home to her, so that she ot burn her hands' when she took om the oven. If "mother" is a woman, and I feel sure she is, is wife, she will hereafter show preciaiion of his thoughifulness by his pet pie so nice that it will melt in hi? mouth, and by aliving him two pieces. swiftly the train carried us along, into the little stations, disposing of its but den of passengers, rea. fresh installment of each, and out again. Whirling past farmso rapidly as to allow us only a before they vanished in the dis-

But a glimpse sometimes reveals in the telling, would fill a volume, were pervaded by such an air of omfort, surrounced by their well&rds, trim fences, and sightly out gs, as to afford satisfaction to the stranger. Others were so lacking signs of industry and thrift as to 1 feeling of discomfort, merely to them.

A DESPONDENT FEMALE. he door of one hqu6e near the ood a carelessly-clad, listless-look-man, which about her in the yard a brood of unwashed, disheveled, es. An air of neglect hung over premises. I knew as well as I to, though not a word was said, strange man near me, who sat out on the scene as I did, in his ts blamed the woman very severe he appearance of things, and felt und pity for the brother man' who

belonged thefe. But I silently reseated his discussion for I knew that a woman, no matter what her pocition is, lores the beautiful and will surround herself with pretty things as naturally as flower seeks the sunlight, unless nature has been thwarted in some way. A woman utterly careless of her own appearance and her surroundings, is as unnatural an object aea distorted tree. And I dj not always blame her. The sin of such a condition of things may lie at another door.

In this case I knew intuitively just what the trouble was. I felt as certain as shough I had been there, to see that "he" was in the habit of going off in the morning without leaving stove-wood chopped to get dinner with and that he invariably grumbled when the flour gave out, and wondered what in the world 6he could want with so much sugar and coffee. %-w

A MEAN MAN**'*

He didn't believe in new chesses or bonnets, and wouldn't hitch up "lis horses and take the family to church on Sunda) morning because the "poor creatures worked hard and were tired just as if shedidn,t work hard and wasn't tired too, and longing, all the more intently, to hear about the beaut and rest of the Hereafter from having missed them 60 completely here.

But instead he lounged in the house and read a borrowed newspaper, and when he was done carried it home to neighbor A. and staid awhile. He always thought the house would do well enough without paint, the floor without carpet, and the yard without anew fence. He uped the money

irom

the butter and

eggs his wife sent to town to pay the taxes with, instead of getting the pink calico she wanted for the little girls' dresses.

Ue never brouqhther home a pie litter, or afiything tlse, to show his care for her, but he never, never failed to bring a huge plug of tobacco for himself. And so, after awhile she "gave upT" and that is the reason why she stood idly at the door, with an ache in her heart no doubt, watching happier people go by in the train. A good husband with a poor wife is a very rare 6ight.

I arrived in Effingham in due time, met my friends at the depot, enjoyed a short stay among them, transacted the business which called me there, and came home.

CoNCkRKING TOII.ETS.

And now I suppose if I were one of the strong minded sisterhood, I should say that I did not, alter all, feel the need ot the new dress which I sighed for when I started, but that I enjoyed mvself just as well without it and I sbould proceed to along lecture on the waste of time spent in arranging the toilet, the frivolities of dress, etc. But as I donot aspire to a position among those, ahem, well—thought—of females Ishall just attend to nay own affairs and be truthful. (Now if I Have made it appear that I consider anybody lacking in either of these particulars^ It fit the fault of the language, $hp'awkwardness of some of our idioms, yoif know, is a common cause of complaint,- and I could not arrange that sentence ah other way though I tried to The'fact is there never has been a time in the memory of that oftquoted ini vidual the "oldest inhabitant" when

FEMINIZE FASHIONS.

were so sensible as they are at present. Now ladiel you see the prudence of my asking the gentlemen in' the beginning rtot to Vead lihis "article. They would dispiUejthis faci ,if'Only from force of habit.. To prove it, hoy ever, I need only to call 'attention to, a few of the styles how in vogue. The long thick cloak,.so plain and simple in cat and finish, and yet sn elegant and comfortable, which has blessed us fdr the last two winters. May its shadow never grow shorter*or its weight lighter. So shall its genta warmth save many a woman from that dread scourge, consumption. And theri the modest, English walking-bat that satisfies one's ideas of the fitness of thing which are always outraged when a woman tries to cover and protect ber head with a bunch of fiowfers and a hummingbird. Long may its graceful peak relieve long-suffering eyes.

And last, btrt not least, the long atgh-ed-for lon^-needed walking dress. Not of necessity with a "cutaway" coat, which, being loose, flaps franticittywhen the wind blows not inevitably With the ubiquitous "sash," placed either so low on the skirt as to impede locomotion, or else so high as to be stiff and ungraceful, and, in either case, always seeming just ready to drop off. Neither of these necessarily, but short, my sisters, 6hort enough to emancipate us from the slavfery cf dirt. For, have we not all our lives, at least since we ceased to be school-girls, been obliged to choose between carrying home, on our skirts, the filth of the streets, ot else lose the use of our hands

GRATITUDE TO AH INVENTOR. By the way, who was the inventor o* this dress His name should be sought Out and made known, in order that it may be held in grateful remembrance by all our sex: for, certainly, when the Czar of Russia struck the shackles from his millions of serfs, he did no more for the ultimate good of the race than this man has done. If I knew certainly that the walking dress was not a mere season's whim, but a fixed fact, and had come to stay, I should be pretty sure that the milenium is not far off. For is not cleanliness classed next to Godliness

HINT CONCERNING STOVE PIPES. And, now, if any of you have still to wrestle witn that annually recurring problem in domestic economy, than which none is-more difficult of pleasant solution, the putting up of stoves and if perchance, the erstwhile shining sheet of sine come forth from its summer hidingplace so discolored by dampness as to defy soap and water, or even the wonderworking kerosene, let me whisper in your ear: Fret not thyself because of it, nor yet still further vex the good man with complaints, what time he is coaxing the refractory stove pipe into place, but send to the drug store and get «orae muriatic acid. One application of this wUl make the zinc as bright as the domestic sky ought to be and is—not, as a usual thin) on such occasions.

SEE the notice of Francis Lodge A. O. U. W., in this issue. For a short lime longer members will be received for $7.55. After that the cost will be $12.05. All interested should avail themselves of this opportunity without delay.

BALDWIN.

Some of Hie Experience# on a Journey to Australia.

From Terre Haute to the Sandwich Islands.

Some Grains of Fact Intermingled With Much Fancy.

Honolulu, Sandwich Islands, Oct. 8. On Pacific Mai) Steamship, "City of Sidney." "Write to os occasionally Baldwin, and if your letters are not too long, nor too insip'd, we will publish them occasionally when news is dull."

Such were your parting words Mr. Editor. I had tried for years to make myself notorious. Now, I thought, is the golden opportunity. I will make myself famous as a newspaper writer, true you had £iven me no credentials and lead pencils, as is the usual custom, but you had given me permission to consider myself a "special correspondent of the Terre Haute GAZETTE," and if I did not at once become a bright and shining light in modern literature that would be my own fault. I went home to my four Gtory brown stone front that I am going to build when my wife gets her money from England, and I told my spouse in glowing words the briliiant future that awaited me. Her response was, "Oh you are su^i a big fool."

But my wife never did appreciate my inborn talent, I went to Chicago to the National Printing Company, the only place where you can get fine printing done in Chicago, (charge McConnel 50 cents a line for the above notice) and I got out several thousand cards, as follows 'it cwwi'/s. S. BALDWIN,

S. E. T. H. G.

which means, "Special Embassador Terre Haute GAZETTE." On the road to San Francisco several ordinary mortals tried to converse with me, but I snubbed all but an intellectual damsel with goggles on, who was also an S. E. (Special Embassador) for the "Jersey City Telephone," and between us we managed to make everybody else feel how small they were in our presence. When I ai rived in 'Frisco, (all the residents call "Frisky," but that is owing to their exuberance of spirits,) I went to the Palace Hotel and spoke to the big diamond with a small man, usually called a hotel and throwing down my card with all* the grandeur I was capable of, said in my aeepest, basest tone: what rates can you give me. He glanced carelessly at the card, then said, wijh that pleasant, winning way all hotel clerks have, "what in hell does Seth G. mean?" The cuss6ed fool had not noticed the periods but read the S. E. T. H. G. as Seth G. I fairly withered him by my scathing reply, as I informed him, S. E. T. H. G. "meant SrEClAX EMBASSADOR 'GAZETTE.

TERRE HAUTE

•'Oh the duce it doe^ said he. "Five dollars a day are Over rates to you." The usual rate is only $4: a day, and I could not understand such peculiar kindness. So I laboied with this misguided diamond pin veneered with a man, to make him vnd$rstand my importance.

I Explained to him that the "GAZETTE," was "the paper" of Terre Haute, and after three houi 8 of talk, during which the clerk fainted several.times I at last got in for Ij^o a day.

We sailed September 2nd at noon just before sailing, a man came to me and said, "I understand you area newspaper man," yes, said: 1, swelling up instantly with importance, I am proyd to say I am. Said he, "I recogiiized you'at once by your "intellectual look, votir high, forehead, oy the nervous, abstracted iookof geniuslthat sets enthrowed on

four

brow." Here I swooned, 9nd when came to my senses my pocket book and dollar store diamand pin -(war rented genuine alaska) was gone, since then I've not said much, I've beattoo sea sick. I threjw up every thing I had eaten for a week, threw my boots Overboard, would have thrown up my Australian engagement, but I could not swim to shore, and had not enough money to get home if I had landed. Now I am well, eat once a day, (all the time), and expect the voyage will do* me good. We will reach Honolula to-day or to-mor-row. It is twenty-one hundred miles from 'Frisco, I will mail this there. Now don't cut out all these brilliant scintillations in this letter and make it as diill as vour paper usually is. jjiii,

S. S. BAUJWIN, Spiritual Exposer.

"STREET FLIRTATIONS."

An Ounce of Prevention Sug--ge&ted as a Remedial Agent.

Another WOMB'S Thoaghts on This Inpertaat Qaestlos.

1.

To the Editor of the GAZETTE: The terrible scourge now passing through the cities of the south should teach them to take every known precaution to prevent such another fearful visitation, if at some future time it should return, as we are lead from the experience of the past, to fear. Sanitary regulations should be strictly enforced "from this day forward." If this had been done since its last disastrous visit, how many would have been spared the lift-long sorrow of bereavement—how many would now be living, who, are numbered with the dead.

I have read two excellent articles one in the Mail, And the other in your paper, deprecating the wide extent of the evil of that very immodest and unladylike pastime, called •STREET FLIRTATIOK and warning young girls, by citing cases, of the terrible results which sometimes follow the indulgence of it but not one word has been said about preventing the evil, by placing a safeguard around those, still innocent, that they may be kept from falling into- this permiscious prac-

tice, which robs all who indulge in it, of that purity and freshness which form the charm of youth.

Now, perhaps, the reader will wonder what has all that has gone before to do with street flirtation. Have patience, dear reader, and I will try to make it plain. We know that this evil is among us, and is spreading its baneful influence all around.

No doubt many will continue a practice which to them seems harmless while others, after reading these articles themselves, and hearing others, perhaps mothers and fathers, comment upon them and deprecate this evil, will have their eyes effectually opened to* see the danger befowe them. We hope there may be many such in our fair City. But to insure safety in the future for our girls still guiltless, and to those not yet in the bloom of girlhood, precaution must be taken to prevent its ravages among them and mothers, it rests with you to keep them safe from harm.

Keep a strict guard over the sacred portals of your home, and allow none but the best to enter there, of either sex, as associates for your daughters.

Find out the habits and associations of the young men who enjoy the society of your older ones, and if found wanting, forbid their visits.

r? A:

-*Vf .7 .1

I am afraid there is A SPIRIT OF DISOBEDIENCE at least that is the old fashion name for it—among the children in many families. The governing power seems to be in the wrong hands too often, and when such is the case, the judgement of the parent is lightly considered. I think that selfishness is fostered, unwittingly perhaps by the parent, for I have noticed the mother ready to give up every privilege tor her child, while she in turn seemed to consider it a hardship to deny herself occasionally, to give a pleasure to her mother.

A MODEL FAMILY.

HTI

I have in my mind a family, the mother of which is engaged in duties, which take her from home five days out of the seven. She is often without help save that her children can jgive her as such assistance as is needed, when each member of the family is absent from eight in the morning until four in the afternoon, cannot be obtained at all times. I asked her one day how she managed to get along, knowing that the trust-worthy person who had been ig charge, had been obliged to leave, fot it seemed a marvel to me how it could be done. She told me that each one, from the oldest to the youngest, was assigned some duty, morn ings and evenings, and such duty was aU ways performed by each when health permitted. Hence, there was no clash' ing of work no Shirking from tasks as might have been if no division of them had been made for, in the latter case the 6elf-denying or most conscientious would have been obliged to do double duty, or some of the work would have been left undone.

It is not only when this assistance is made necessary, by circumstances, that this system and division of work, is em ployed but it kept up at all tlnies With the difference of lighter tasks 'for each, Here let me add. that the pleasures of home, the music, the reading, and the pleasant games are shared alike by all motheir and father faking part in each. What is this system ana sharing of home duties? The result is this: A family sufficient unto itself whose children love their homes better th&n any spot beside, Whose love for their parents speaks in every action, and where a mother's and a father's love enriches all. I predict for these young girls a bright future—a future found only in

TRJUK WOMANHOOD.

Their bright facets always attract me, so fresh and innpeent, yet with a look of earnestness upon them which tells me that life for them has a purpose. Many will recognize the home picture, and I hope my friend will pardon the liberty, if she, tbo, sees depicted, what I, as well as Others, have so often admired,—the beauty other well-ordered home.

Mothers, is not this a true picture of many homes, and may not many more be made such? You cah place no better safeguard around your daughters than this. Some mothers have said and still will sav, "It is ersier to do a thing than to teach my children.*' That is, in many cases, true but is not this World a school, and should yon, as mothers, shrink from vour duty as the best teachers of the precious ones God has given you? Make possible for them a future replete With all that makes life a blessing a future found only in true womanhood. "E."

TH£ sign reads 1, ELEVATOR^ J-* if-

Of course it meas that this is the fisst elevator in Terre Haute. The sscond will be called "B" and so on. A small boy looking at it yesterday from the E. & T. H. track at Main street apparently did not understand this as well as he did grammar. "Elevator A, said he," Oh pshaw! Why didn't they say 'A

tor. But then that wouldn't be right. It ought to be 'An Elevator.' I these fellows don't know much."

&

Absolutely

THE GENUINE

DR.C.MoLANE'8

Celebrated American

WORM SPECIFIC

OR

VERMIFUGE.

SYMPTOMS OF WORMS.

THE

1

...

Add to this THE PRECAUTION OF OCCUPATION. Let every pair of hands in the household, capable of assisting, contribute something to the comfort and pleasure found there. Find something for your girls to do, out of school, and they will not be lead to read trashy novels, or desire to roam the streets as pastime. Lead them into these habits of usefulness so young that they may be intuitive, and be come ah essential part of their lives so that they may fihd a pleasure in making a mother's work lighter by a share in it, as far as their strength will allow. Then will home become what it should always be—a place where is found life's true^, ost satisfying plesures.

Whenever the above symptoms^ are found to exist, DR. C. McLANE'S VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cure.} .T

Consumers shoald bear in mtnd that tbe inooaparable "BoyaF* is sow Ike only Ponder in the market made from pave Q-ape Cream Tartar, tmbortsd •xelasfvely for oow!~.r, dire* from the wine-grewla* diatiiol ef frsnos. AmaW experieaeed housekeaM* writes that althcu^shehasfe wa'f^ psnalei^ foV^^^^ so mveh farther, and works so mack better, that it'seooaomy to ose it. Another says ef* uses the pow ter in pudding, oakes. and all aorta of pastry, wholly without wn, Xm. eld ladv from Ohio writes that ft makes the oaly biscuit her dyspeptic has band can eat. This beoause the best and moat whelsanms1 msfailais are used. Approved by the New York Board of Health, andby such eminent ehemUts as D*. MOTT, Kew York Or. HAYJCB. Boa ion Prof. GENTH, Philadelphia,ete. SeMtatfnlsiaaODly, hy groMnJ

countenance is pale and lead-en-colored, with occasional flushes* or a circumscrit&d spot on one or both cheeks the eyes become difll tile" pupils dilate an azure semicircle *uns 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 pain\ 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.

IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY,]"!. in any form it is an innocent preparation,

not capable of doin^ the slightest

injury to the. most tender tkfant.

The genuine DR. MCLANE'S VERMIFUGE bears the signatures of C. MCLANE and FLEMING BROS op the wrapper. —:0

DR. P. McLANE'S

LIVER PILLS

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 HAdtche, or diseases of that character, they ttjiad without a rivals

MCLAKJC'S Lrvsa PILLS* prepared by fleming Bra.* of Pittsburgh, Pa., the being fall of imitations or the iame

McZMtie,

spelled differently but

au pronunciation^

of health. K«U mj «M

DR.RICE,

Court Place, UXBSVILU, KY,

itorrfcM aai tmepofamifi

a N *.«wyi

OiBftdM «r ISM, um Kmmi rwrmj •mlut I—WMC «r aWtf. J" MBdr ««jr kypHlLII

Stattu*

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guess

THE DAILY

INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL.

Mr. S.R.Baker has been .pointed

agent of the Indianapolis Daily Journal and will herealter deliver the papers. Subscribers will please leave names at the Post office to-mcrrow or early Monday Morning, to insure prompt delivery.

bf

Sick

CARTERS

Eleva­

(aid by aU Druggists.

)M* tw al tote*

Kiri w»i

Chqa FRIVATB OOUKBLOR

QsMbMiafroat •. H. MSP. 1L NdV*. lHJMt

BAKING POWDER

Pure. 7."|

I by th Or.

.. GRAND DISTRIBUTION

-ftS\ St '.t

AND FEVER.

No better cathartic can be used prepatv story to, or after taking Quinine. As a .ample .purgative they are'tin*qualedv^

BEWARE OF IXlTATIom. The genuine are never sugar coated. Each box has a red wax seal on the with the impression Da* MCLANK'S IVKR FILLS. Each wrapper bears tlf^ ^!giH?tti¥e? of C. MCLANE AND FUMING BROS. -Insist upon having the genuine Dr.

I ,/

Coaaamlik DitttMin-'ttqiir,

Legalised by the Commonwealth of Kentucky, supervised by Hon. R. C. Wintersnltb Bx-'tt-Ms.,Gen'lsT. A. Harris, Geo. K. H. Qravj«nd other prominent oltlaens,Zwfil

V1XTH POPULAR DKAWINO

In Public Library ^U.Loulsvllle, Ky^otn H:--

Saturday,

November

30, "1878.

No Sealing! Ne PostpeaeaMtl -.

$115,400in Ca*h Prises!

And Tickets Only $2.00. UNPRECEDENTED SCHEHS

I Ptiae....... 1 Priae 1 Priae 10 Prlaes ILOCO each. 80Prises $500 each 100 Prises (140 eaoh 100 Prises ISO each 100 Pristt ISOeaca ,000Prises «10 each...

Prises fSOOe^eh, approximation prizes 1,7(0 9 Prises $900eaoh, approximation prises 1,800 tf Prises $100each, approximation prisea 90Q 1,000 Prises .$111,400

Whole Tickets, $S. Hal' TlekeK ». *T Tickets, SKI. 5# Tickets, $100. Remit by Po»tofilce money order, retristered letter, bauk draft, or express. Full list ot drawing published in Louisville CourierJournal and New Yor* Herald, and nailed to all icket-holders. For tickets and Information address Commonwealth Distribution Co., or T. J. Commerford, Stec'y, CourierJonrnal Building, Louisville, Ky.

LUXOH ROOMw

tmmmmmmmmmmm'd*

a

DM. C,

Man*. IWM «ii

VMrBarisrloAGoal TS Mrlts aad Sliss.

ti

P«sWvsly

Oensttpatton

and Piles. The small-

CARTER MEDICINE CO* PfSf»r VMS Vials

SUFFERERS

This is the prettiest month of the year when nature puts on her gayest colors and yields to all people the greatest abun- gtUutc,»6 Vine SSKW danoe of fruits and all manners of good only sure ydJg^,t*^fl5ef£iV

things. I™"11 Hill ttftM iA

»Tg»r, syp- f~aay ions of I Western Medical InCiariiuati, by the "cdlea. No ebar/^e ChwgS Hill rates to the poor.

•K .11

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fi

.... 10.C00

10,000 10,00* 10,0U) 15,0001 10,000 10,000

Terre Hante, lnd.:wi...ii»:'«'

HABISOII

Dispersmy,

201 sot ouiR^aUuMt ni.

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BIG BLOW, J-"-)

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of th* fcUMrtnc MMit

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nmmttll. boai Mpftnte Ibr MhHrt {•MM"'' MARRIAGE QUIDL OR SEXUAL PATH0LMY.' sss

entilatioi)

Wiuww,mrat^r84Lak«St., ChicaQojtls.

NOCUItt-NU^tlS

(fell~MI Sai WtKWiktcni Ciiicwo. (W ft- mrp oftO

Biiti, Chronfa1wnl 3no.l»IDI««'»'W. Hrwhuil Weililwat toww MUHrl anJ IM SiiwtlitM^, mtni.

Dr.o. 1 tof cha (trfcrji Srhuol. and i— 9)ka» Km Imat imctfca in tba S»aV». XA* ... InqaMngtraalmapt tdlVbofiM anil-tannl,caH 9

BnJ nfty «nr I JUUMWI^JIAB]

MVS and iwlliaw JWd

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'iimi CWcahr^rflaiwttMlafernitwkji nantotnk.

THIS NKW

BLASTIOTRt^S

nw^i SiH munli fa Jte. la aMfd SaijUs im •feMfr

C«rsd ky

thsse

Utile Pills.

they klM r«li»»« "Itiit i-oo He_.f A perfect remedy tor Piisl ness. 9

For exaosiataji Anhual Flowers, Miaerala, Seeds, it

a a,

ProwstnaasJBad Taste in the Heath, Coaled Tonga* In the Side, Ao. They late tke Bowda prevent

Suable aad iaatruetlons seat by mail on reeetot of tLMi or trlaprese, C. 0.1*. «S6 lathe uwi«t sUuoeeope mm

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l(ict«BMpt «ad Floroocope] Lite In water ... Je. baisoaperfeetllaeB glass, aad oouaterfeit deteoer. Agents wasted everywhsre, exelualve tecrllory free. $10 to $11 a dey ean he aad* by foo4 ajrsstts.

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oacttve men selling our Letter Copyias Book. No press or wa Med aiuupla. jopy worth ft 00, tree. Send stsao for clr xSmt. BXCKL9IOR MAHUFiutl/Biy, ), ii Dearbcrn sttf||.CWeago. ..