Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 April 1879 — Page 3
OUR CHILDREN.
What Shall Wc do With llirm.
Frcfoundly Philosophical View of the Subject.
Mot two Hours but Five Hunnred Years Required to Discuss it.
rs. L. 9. Soule's Essay Before tlic Horticultural Society.
fEsea^ read by Mrs. L. S. Soule at the meeting of the Horticultural Society February 6th, 1879, as part ot the regular discussion on the same subject, and pub lished by request.)
Mr. President, and members of the Terre Hauie Horticultural Society! Ti.is question, '•What shall We do with our children?" makes me think ot* the ques tion one mother asked of another who had been fortunate or successful in training a large family of boys to be useful and noble men. ''What shall I do to make my sons obedient?" The reply was, "If you had asked me before they •were two years old I could have told you."
At first thought there seems to be depth 10 the reply which further inquiry does not warrant. AH these questions pertaining to our humanity are so far, reaching in every direction that it is difficult to set metes and bounds to them. Nearly every father and mother who really do try to train their children, find that they have more or less of their own dispositions, idioeyncracies, passians and fancies to encounter and overcome in them and feeling this, they are usually more lenient towards tendencies they should lirmly and lovingly restrain in them, than if they did not know that the blame for wrong-doing was not wholly nvith the little ones.
I once knew a mother whose little fouryears old boy was very vicious and cruel to his little baby brother, and could not be trusted alone with him for a moment, •without trying to strike or pinch him, pull his ears and nose, and get his eyes out by some means. The mother was often remonstrated with for not severely punishing him, and compelling him to stop hisrcruelty. But her answer invariably was, "I cannot punish him for what I am guiity of. lie only acts just as I felt before he was born. He is not to blame." This is one of the keys which must eventually unlock the prison doois of the thief, incendiary and murderer. Begin the reform with the fathers and mothers. Dry up the fountain, and the turbulent stream will cease.
If our question read, "What shall we do with our great-grandfathers and greatgrandmothers?" we might prevent at least some of the present difficulties by entertaining the law of the "survival of the fittest but inasmuch as that law •was not enforced, "What shall we do •with our children?" is in order and we must meet the question where we .are, though we cannot ignore any of the steps by which we have reached it.
One stubborn fact is this that half of us at least, came to these United States in much the same manner as Gerritt Smith took his medicine when in the Insane Assylum. When the time came, he would go to the door of his room, look out into the hall and say, "I protest and then submissively take it. So our mothers said "I protest," and our fathers said "I protest," (all too late), and we are simply living because our forefathers had not the heart to strangle us, living and having an influence, for good or otherwise.
And as home is where our children are born, live and grow, should we not concentrate our influence where the very first and surest advantage can be taken of the good material there is to work on. and the surest prospect of throwing out the evil as fast as it shows itself in the unfolding of the tender bud which we all so long and hope to see burst forth into immortal bloom and fruit?
As the mother has many months of training of her children before the father can participate with her, except by hi» sympathy with, or indifference to her most trying and difficult position, we quite, naturally look to the mother as we praise or blame her children. And as the kind, loving Father of us all never requires a sweet fruit from the root bitterness, or figs of thistles, neither will he require of the mother any fruits with the materials for which her surroundings fail to supply her. The father is responsible for her surroundings, as provider, protector and worthy or unworthy most-wor6hipful master of the clitv.ate she lives in, whether it be salubrious or sunnv, tending to the unfolding of love, joy and peace in the dearest spot on earth, or to adverse winds, angry waves, storms and passions. The father chooses the mother, builds her cage, appropriates her songs, and not unfrequently expects her to find all her wants supplied and nature satisfied in cleaning her own cage, rearing her young and flapping her wings—all for what? Because she feels so honored by his preference and bewilderingly happy in his presence? Alas, no but simply because he requires it., of her! Thi» is what she is made for!
While she is willing to do alt these things and more, yet this view of the -question has had more to do with degrading the holy and wonderful office of motherhood, destroying home influence and training for boys (and girls too), than all other influences combined. Let the fathers look to it then if they would keep their children obedient, loving and appreciative, that they surround the mothers with an atmosphere of loving kindlies?. and maintain an abiding, tender -consideration, for the imcomprihensible .burdens they have to bear. The subtle -chain which binds us to our homes is not broken by geographical distance whether of continent or ocean and yet the dis--tawce is not so great from Maine to-Cali
4
'f
fornia as from one end of the family dis ser.sion-table to the other. But the source or fountain of all these life-dfficulties 1.1 hidden far back under the mountain of ages, and it may take ages to remove all the accumulated debris of ages yet nevertheless, the command has gone forth that we love one another That the husband is to lave his wife (aa though he ever thought of anything else!) The wife to love and obey her hufband, (as though she ever didn't.) Parents to love their children and provoke them not to wrath lest they be discouraged. Who would suppose for a moment that parents would reed to be reminded of a duty which, if discharged would only bring them unspeakable pleasure!
There is no power so potent to quicken the good and overcome the evil as the power of love. A little cloud, no larger than the winking of an indifferent father's eye, can obscure the home suhshine tor a week. So also, one sympathetic, loring glance of the same eye may make a sunlight fo effulgent as to warm and quicken an almost despairing heart, and clear awav even the mist of doubt which is the mistiest mist of all. But we only delay victory byskirmishing instead of obeying the command to love one another and thus fight the good fight earnestly. While on the one hand we deplore the degradation we see and flee from the volcanic disturbances around us,—and there are the elements for a successful volcano in every human heart—vet the active irruptions of fire and smoke are not so fatal to domestic peace as the smouldering, subterranean fires of indifference. It has been my fortune, or misfortune (as I shall make use of the knowlege) to look right into the craters of these different volca noes, and.while the active, blazing vol cano might act as a warning beacon, the inactive, sleeping yolcanic forces of in difference are like sunken rocks making ship wreck. I have many times seen the full grown boy with quivering lips and eyes dimmed with the tears his boyish pride forbade to fall, come to his mother for sympathy because some small pleasure had been denied him by his father, with this piteous, aggrieved complaint, "Father don't care, O father don't care!" A bitter wail indeed for a loving mother to hear! And in seven houses out of ten where our boys are pluming for flight, it is the indifference to their real needs, which they feel, that decides the hour of their departure. We are proud when we scale mountains, or walk the ocean's floor, explore the deep caverns and bring to light knowledge gold, silver, precious stones and yet we have here a higher mount to climb, deeper depth to explore than any of these. We must surmount the height of indifference with the greater heights of love and while we explore the deeps of our human love, we shall find in our chil dren fresh young lives and aspirations jewels more precious than all gold and ilver, diamonds more rare than were ever brought from ocean's depths to grace the coronet of a king.
What shall we do with our children? Don't let us answer this question with ccld calculation as though they' were stocks or stones, but as if they were our boys, my boys, with tender yearning hearts and immortal souls.
Some one made the remark that it would take two hours to discuss this ques tion. I think it will take five hundred years, with Joseph Cook to help! There are questions and conditions on every side to be settled, before we can make any progress with it to much profit. So far, in treating it, we have been meandering on the banks of the stream of life, whose turbid waters we scarce dare try to analyze because the current has hitherto flowed in sullen silence, making deeper and wider channels until almost the whole of life is emjittered with a false pride and shame and an unnatural and perverted view of life and its uses and duties. The boat man who guides ourselves and children across this dangerous stream ia Ignorance. And who is to blame that both parents and children are born blind, we cannot determine but whether they shall have their eyes opened it does concern us and them to know: To hear young girls and boys talk of life and what they intend to do, we almost forget that it was the Lord of Hosts that set us in families and if he did it was families without children. I hear little boys say they are going to be married as soon as they are big, and tUey are going to have lots of children too. Every young girl fourteen years old saying I ne\er intend to have any children. It we could let the girls have their own sweet way, this question would soon be settled, and according to their understanding of the subject, all the trouble, shame and disgrace would be done away with. Where do our children get such exalted ideas of liie, its duties, responsibilities, sorrows and joys? Is it any wonder that so many of our babies live but a day—an hour, when every drop of blood which flows into their hearts is impregnated with a piosonous, angry protest—a bitterness compared with which every other emotion is sweet? Is it any wonder that children are selfish, ungrateful, disobedient, when the mother has denied them every purifying, beautifying quality, defrauded them of the very essence of a well-bal anced, rounded, harmonious life, which is love? It makes a world-wide difference in the constitution, development and happiness of the child whether it came by invitation, welcomed joyfully, or bysufferance, received indifferently, or under protest received with aversion. Excuse me if I speak plainly on the subject. I cannot feel that this question, or the results of even a superficial discussion of it, will 4 cease when this^ society moves to adjourn, but think it reaches on indefinitely. I understand that these children who are now occupying our best attention, are to be discussed with, reference to ail ^heir interests, as the future fathers and mothers of homes, the founders and leaders of society, the framers of our laws, the defenders of our nation's honor, the pillars of our churches, and the pride and glory of the whole earth
Vtl|
L. S. SOULE.
Perorition of the Spartan uncle's lecture to his scap~«jraci nephew: "Finally, sirrah, you should endeavor to understand that it is infinitely better, instead of making pledges you always break, to make r.o promises at all—and keep them."^*
•aMMKJ'lrO'T, ft
vf
l?m.
•Kr .'
MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS
TUTT'S PILLS!
NOTED DIVINE SAYS
THEY ARE WORTH THEIR
WEIGHT in COLD READ WHAT HE SAYS:
DR. TxrrrDeai SIR 7or ten yean I bare been a martyr to Plloa. LastSpri to me I used
worth thoir weight in gold. REV. B. L. SIMPSON, Lontaville, Ky.
A TORPID LIVER
Is the fruitful source of many diseases, such as Dyspepsia, Sick Headache,Cost!veness,Dysentery, Rllious Fever, Ague and Fever, Jaundice, Plles,Rbeu(natism,KIaneyComplalntlCoIieletc.
TC'-vjiu exert a powerful influence on the LI ver,«.i1 will with certainty relieve that important organ from disease, and restore its normal functions.
The rapidity with which persons take on flesh, while under the influence of these pills, of itself Indicates their adaptability to nourish the body, hence their efficacy in curing nervous debility, vspepsia, wasting of the muscles, sluggishness or the 11 ver.chronfc const! paUon, and Imparting health and strength to the system.
CONSTIPATION.
Only with regularity of the bowels can$«-rfect health be enjoyed. When the constipation Is ot 8 PILLS ml, one
recent date, a ainple dose of _. will suffice, but if it hiis become habituu
S•ill
Hhould be taken pvery night, gradually lexst-n the frequency of the doa« until a regular jiailj movement i« oMfiined, which will soon follow.
Sold Everywhere, 25 Cents. OFFICE, 35 HUBSAY ST., NEW TORT
DR. RICE,
37 Court
Place,
A r*gniarty educated
a&d
POWDER
Abso'.utely Dare—made from Grape Cream of Tartar, Imported exclusively for this Powder from the Wine district of France Always uniform and wholesome. Sold only in cans by all IQrocers. A pouud can mailed to any address, postage paid, on re celpt of 60 aonts. ROYAL BAKING :POWDER CO.. 161 Dnane St., JNew York. Most cheap nowders contain alum dangerous to health avoid their, especially |when offered loose or in bulk.
Sick Hcadachei
CARTERS
OH
fEVERsASHE
ERADICATES ALL MALARIAL
DISEASES SYSTEM. J.C. MCHARBSOMaProgta
APPLICATION FOB LICENSE. NOTICE is hereby given that I will apply to tbe Board of Commissioners of Vigo County, Indiana, at taelr June term, for a licotiee to sell "intoxicating liqtlors," in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises, for ene year. My nlace of business and the premises whereon said liquors ars to be drank, are located on the west end of lot No. one hundred and eighteen (118) In Rose's subdibision of i7 and 32-ICO acres off the east sid* of the west halt of teotion twentj-twn (22), township twelve north, raoare nine (9) west, sonthside of chestnut sifuet between Tentfc and E eventh streets, iu Terre Haute, ia Harrison township lu Vlgo.Coausy. Indiana.
TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
LOUISVILLE, KY.,
qualified phyafoUa aai Uu
:l, a* hU procure wiU prove.
Spermatorrhea and Impotency,
*3
tin result of teir-abuie iu youth, sexual ejcwca in raatuftsr foar*. or oilier caumi, »ud producing aorne of the f«llowiaj effaces: NVivouaoew, ikdioal F.miulnoa, (night fn:i «i.M by dreams), DlmneM of Sight, Defective Memory. Phy. ticsi Docay, Plmpluon Pace, .Aversion tit Society of Femalei, Coafuikm of Idea*, I.ois of Sexual Power, rendering marriage Improper or unbnmr, an thoroughly and permanently cured.
SYPHIXJ IS
po^tlvely cared and en-
from the «ysum Gonorrhea,
GLEET.
Stilctnre, Orchitis, Hernia, (or Buplure),
Pile* and other prirnto dlseaxes quickly cured. It la jetr-evident that a pby sician who pay« special attention to a certain class of disease.), and treating thocatnds annually, acquires great skill. Physicians knowing this fact often recommend persons to ray can When It in Inconvenient to visit the city fbr treatment, mediclncs ean be sent privately and snhiy by mall or express noywhere.
Cures Guaranteed in all Case* personally or by letter If* and InriteC Charge* rua*oaaole and corrcapoodanca itrtctiy coadd«aUAl
PRIVATE COUNSELOR Of 200 pages, tto an7 address, sceurely sealed, for thirty (30) centi. ShinM be read by all. Address as above, Offlm hours from a A. il. to a P. M. Sundays, 2 to 1 p. lb
LANDS LANDS!
Kansas to the front
The Leading Wheat State in the Union in 1878, and the Fourth Corn State—The
Great Kansas Harvest of 1878 was soldi for the "Golden
Belt."
The celebrated Grain Belt of country, in the limestone section of Central Kansas, traversed by the Kansas Pacific.
The following statements are taken from the report of the Kansas State Board of Agriculture for 1878: •A/UITAT' I Kansas rises from WW IlLn I the Eleventh Wheat State in 1877 to the First Wheat State in the Union in 1S7S, producing 26,5x8,958 bushels winter wheat, and 5.796403 ishels spring wheat total, 32,315.361 Bushels Wheat, with only one-eighth of the State under cultivation. The organized 'counties lying in the Golden Wheat Belt of the Kansas Pacific produced 13,335.324 bushels, or over 41 per cent, and, including unreporting counties, fully 14,000.000 bushels, or 45 per cent, of the entire ield of Wheat in the State, averaging 25 bushels to the acre, while the average for '.he State was 17 bushels per acre. PflDM Kansas, the Fourth Corn uunn State in the Union in 1878, predu^ed 89,324.971 bushels of Corn. Of which the Golden Grain Belt counties produced 27,399,055 bushels, or 41 per cent, nearly one-third of the entire yield of the State, with an equally grand showing in all other departments of agriculture.
The foregoing facts 6how conclusively why 29 percent of the increase in population in the State during the past four years and 40 per cent of the increase in population during tne past year and 43 per cent of the increased acreage of wheat in the State in 1878, belonged to the "Golden Belt."
A Farm for Everybody.—62 500 farms —5,000,000 acres—for sale by Kansas Pacific—the best land in America, at from $2 to $6 per acre, one-quarter off for cash, or on 6 or 11 years credit at 7 per cent interest. It don't take much money to buy a farm on the Kansas Pacific $26 to $80 will secure 80 acres on credit, or $120 to $360 in cash will buy it outright
Send to S. J. Gilmore, Land Commissioner, Salina. Kae., for the "Kansas Pacific Homestead," a publication which tells about Lands, Homesteads, Pre-emp tion, Soil, Climute, Products, Stock raising, Schools, Wages, Land Explorers' Tickets, Rates, etc. It is mailed free to all applicants.
Read all you can gather about Kansas, and when you decide to start, be sure and start right by locating along the KANSAS PACIFIC RAILWAY.
T. F. OAKES,
I
Positively Cured by tuese Little Fills. They also 7°liovei TV.stifw from Dyyje'-I si a. Indigestion audi 'I'IIO Hearty Eating. I A perfi'ct remedy for! Dizziness, N.tisea,l Irows: noss.Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated} Tongue, Pttia In the 1 Side, Ac. They regu-l late the Bov/elt %nd 1 prevent Constipation I and Piles. The small*I Only one pill a daw. I
est and easiest to take. Only •10 in a vial. Purely Vegetable Sold by all Druggists.
CARTER MEDICINE CO., Prep'rs, Erie,
Gen'l Superintendent.
KANSAS CUT, MO.
.*'?••* 9 ii
'•'J
&)'
it,' fK" :4s
-*wircv •/.* ri ±\,
of
Price 25 cents. I
Pa.
give Vials by mall for one di
FEBRIFUGE'
if
SSRi I
Hfflft
»US.
Wit I
if :,'
1
WALTER IT.
5 .' S 0 .1 V'' ,«-.•» i»
."
m,* if
Mower.
3
-DEALERS IN-
E A I E
A RICH OPENING.
Leadville, Colorado.—The vast deposits of carbonates of silves at Leadyille, so many miles in extent, are conceded to be the richest ever discovered. They lay in horizontal beds, as coal or gravel, from 1 to ten feet thick and from 8 to 100' feet below the surface, are rained with aid of a pick and shovel, no blasting or deep, expensive shafts being required, as is the case with the narrow, vertical veins of hard silver quartz heretofore found, muscle, energy and daily bread being the onrequisites.
The Best Way There.—At Kansas City or Leavenworth take the Kansas Pacific R'y to Denver, (he Denver, South Park & Pacific R. R. to Webster, 70 miles west of Denver, thence the South Park daily stages 28 miles to Fairplay, 42 miles to Leadville. This, the short line, saves 100 miles staging. Emigrants on Kansas Pacific R'y are carried on Fast Express Passenger Trains. Rates as low as bv any other line. ,,
Colorado.—The great sanitarium and Pleasure Resort of America elevated above the influence of miasma, with pure, tonic and exhiliarating atmosphere its numerous mineral springs, immense deposits of gold and silver and the grand eur, extent and variety of its scenery, offers unequalled attractions for the Pleas ure Seeker, Scientist, Artist, Capitalist the Invalid, the Overworked and the gold and silver seekers. ,J.
Golden Beit Route.—The Kansas Pa ciffc R'y is the only line running entire trains equipped with Pullman Sleeping Palaces and elegant Day and Second Class Coaches to Denver without change of either passengers, baggage or mails, This being the short line and quickest, is therefore the cheapest and best route every respect. *.»»'
Free.—Send to P. B. Groat, Gen Pass. Agt. Kansas Pacific R'y. Kansa City, Mo., for the new "Colorado Tour ist,*' for 1879,
n®w
f*f' "i'# i*.
Southwest Cor., Seventh and Hulman Sts.
Garden City Clipper, Bar-Breaking and Wrought Frame Sulky Plows.' The highly celebrated Dayton Champion Sulky and Walking Plows, together with the Gold Basis Timber Plow, (Hoosier Pattern), Champion, and Climax, Two-H«rse Corn Planters, Campbell and I. & L. Corn Drills. The well known Brown Cultivator, the Carter and Moline-Tongueless Cultivators, Self-Dumping and Hand Lever Horse Hay Rakes, Tiffin Revolving Rake, Double Shovels and Corn Plows of Different Styles, Rolling Coulters, in fact a full and well selected stock all kinds of Agricultural Implements.
Remember the coner, ci/ir
Just Opposite the Idaho Grocery.
0 E S W E A & O
DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF
Farm Implements,
Ohio^St., East ?i(Jp of Public Square,
itt.l „.v
Open and Top Buggies, Spring and Farm Wagons. The] Celebrated Hughes Sulkey Plow. The Hamilton, Fort Wayne, |and Buckeye Breaking Plow, for General Purposes. The Canton, Clipper, and Other Stubble Plows. A full stock of One-Horse Plows, both Right and Left Hand, Double-Shovels, Iron and Wood Beams, Single Shovel Plows. The Buckeye and Osboura Self-Binding Harvester. The Buckeye Table Rake, Dropper and Slower. The. Wheeler Self Rake, DropDerand
cciajeeSiiiiig- 3vCa.c3al3a.es, The Russell, J. Q. Case, and Springfield, Pitts, with steam or horse power.* The Taylor and other first-class Sulkey Hay Rakes. We would call the attention of Farmer* especially to our Bar Plow Cultivator. £2T" A full stock of Repairs always on hand for Machines, either Reapers Threshers sold by u«J'* fi's.-
'•U1K1& at- ai
tffe tr.
ossr sswsf'j in •JI*Z uiKty.x st UNfr'reV* (1*4
1
tW Farmers are most cordially invited to call and examine our stockbjfote purchasing. All of our goods are'Folly Warranted.
JD02tr,!X FOEQ-BTTO CALL,
».*«.* &'m.
9t4l
•XV
!l§
I^pggp
"'Colorado Mine
an 1879 Guide to Leadville," illustrated with the best map published. Enclose postage stamp.
P. B. GOAT,
Gen. Pass. Agent.
KAT ASS., C1YMNO
E. C00RDES & CO..
miscellaneous advertisements.
O A A
The merits of this splendid stove have been thoroughly, and satisfactorily tested during the past six years, and we have no hesitation in recommending it to the public, and assuring them that it is the cleanest^ easiest to manage, and most economical stove in the market.
No. 311 Main street. Third and Fourth.
between
FARMSMHOMES!
1 Over 1,000,009 Acres for Sale by the WINONA & ST. PETER B.R. CO.
At from $2 to $6 per Acrc, and on liberal terms. These lands lie In the sreat Wheat belt of the North-west, and are equally well adapted to the growth of other grain, vegetables, etc. Tlio climate unsurpassed for hoalthfulnesa.
THEY ARE FREE FROM INCUMBRANCE.
1
Purchaser* of 160 acres will be al» lowed the FULL amount of tbelr fare over the €. & N. W. and W. dc St. -P. Railways.
Circulars, Maps, ctc., containing FULL Iff* FORMATION sent FREE. U. M. Bur chard, Cbas. E. Simmons,
Land Airent, Land Commissioner. MAnsDALt, Gen'l Offices C. & N.-W. MIXH. R'v CO., CmcAoo. ILIA,
If you aro a man of business, weakened by the strain of your duties, avoid stimulants and take
HOP BITTER8.
If yon area man of letters, toiling over your mid- 1 night work, to restore brain and nerve waste, take
HOP BITTERS.
Jt yoa are young, and suffering from any India*. cretlon or dissipation, take
HOP BITTERS./
If you are married or single, old or young, suffer*. ing from poor healtn or languishing on r-id- a bed of sickness, take
HOP BITTERS.n
Whoever you ara.'wherever you are, whomever yoa a feel that your system needs cleansing, toning or stimulating, without intoxicating, take
HOP BITTERS.
Have you dyvpepeia, kidney or urinary complaint,' disease or the stomach, oowdtJblood, liver, or mtnet? You will bs cured if yoa Uka
HOP BITTERS.
It you are simply ailing, are weak and low spU«i ited,tryit! Buy it Insist upon it Your druggist keeps it,
HOP BITTERS. 1
It Dsay save your life. It has saved hundreds.".
22»$!&AKHiBAr CfiUCAdo.IL
Also, Dealer* In Gents' lfnrnlihlnf Goods. Fine (aits made to order a specialty. Bead 8 cent •tamp for oar llluatrmud Cmtaloqu* for 1979. Over 00 engravings of new styTes, with prices. Fnll instructions for taking meature and ordering 1)/ mail or *«Prt?P1l„lpnT of the mamifiictarera, and iav* midaiemsn's profits. W« employ over 100 hands ia oar toetory. If yoa are In the city, call and see the largest house of ths kind ia Chicago. See address above, sent by express ars C. O. !).. vaaining bsfera paying cbargM.
WIAKB
All goods
witli privilege of
ents Wanted
sell.
Delivered In the Brookyn Tabernacle, are h» best efforts In his earnest aggressive and uncomiromising warfare epon hft sin ag4 vice of New ore City On* large tavo volume or 528
lages 16 illustrations. Don't "wsste your ine upon slow selling books, but send at once for full particulars of this the fastost selling book DOT offered to Agents, or to save time send 75 cents for canvassing book and state your choice or township. Address. FOH8HEE& .llcHIKIN, 188 West Fifth Street. Cincinnati, O.
We hsve also the best aa'l cheapest liue of Family Bibles in the market. .Send for terms ot agencT.
Irstantly they bau •ish Pain and Weaktets. rouse ths dormant Muscies into new life, stimulate the Ltv* er and Kidneys, cure
cOUJNff
Dyspepsia, Indigeoticn, Bilious Colic, Cramps and Pains, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica. Weak Spine, WeakmdSore Lung3, Coughs and Colds, Weak Back, Ague aid Liver Pains.
dTTWITDFIIfi FromNervoHS 8 JP JP J!ilU!iII9 Debility-Lost ____ Energy,Manly orcn of lisease, eursdical Institute, S66 ^ine street, Cincinnati, bv the only sure ind reliable remedies. No charge until
Igor, Syphilis, Or anj Ml at the old Western
'1 t,1.
Charges ow. llatl rates the poor.
VVOr __You can make money by selling our Sterling Chemical "Wicks— (fever needs trlmming. Io smoke smell—10 cents each, for 26 nts.« Send stamp for catalogue of Wonde tdl Inventions, staple aad fancy good Persons. Foster A Co.. 125 Clark St., Chicag
O
nnn
r*
s-"'',v I
-v.. r..
'U
1
HAMEd Of residents wanted.
IH111 For 25 names and 25 lUUU cents we will send vbu a 'fine silk .hsndkerable^ every
S S a »-/4««.i -. ,io 3 -«n»
mm
r£:
