Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 July 1880 — Page 7

CURE PILES.

TUTT'S PILLS

CUPS FEVSs? AMD

fil:"

'5',

W

*si"*•»,-»» *H.'* *4&r- S

4$ Years before the Public*

THE CEWJUIWE DR. C. McLANE'S LITER PILLS

t»re not recommended as a remedv for all the ills that flesh is heir to," out ir. affections of the Liver, and in all Biliou* Complaints, Dyspepsia, and Sick Headache, or diseases of that character, t&ey stand without a rival.

AGUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used preparatory to, or after taking quinine. A* a simple purgative they are unequaled-

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar-coated. Each box has a red-wax seal on the lid, with the impression, McLANE'8LIVER

T^ILL,

Each wrapper bears the signa­

tures of C. McLawb and Fleming Bros.

•tstf

Insist upon having the genuine

DiTc. McLANE'S LIVER PILLS, prepared by FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of the name

MclMne,

Bpelled differentlv

Sut samo pronunciation.

INVALIDS

AHD OTHEBS 8EEKIHG

HEALTH,

STRENGTH MB ENERGY,

WITHOUT THE U8K OF DRUGS, ARE REVESTED. TO SEND FOR THE ELECTRIC REVIEW, AN ILLUSTRATED JOUR-

JUL, WHICH IS PUBLISHED FOR FREE DISTRIBUTION.

ITc»l

TREATS upon HEALTH, HTGIBHE, and PhyrtCulture, and i* a complote encyclopedia of .-oformatlon for inralidi and tnote who auner from Nervou*. Exhausting and Painful DUaaae*. ErerJ mipjeci that bears upon health and human happiness, receives attention In lta pages: and the many questions asked by suffering invalids, who hav« dispMred of a cure, are answered, and vain able information volunteered to all who are in need of medical advice.

The subject of Electria Belt! umi Medicine, and (be hundred and one questions of vital importaooe to suffering humanity, are duly oonaidered and ezplatoed.

YOUNC MEN

And others who srfTer from nervosa and Physical Debility, Losa of Manly Vigor, Prsmature Exhaustion and the many gloomv ooosequenoee of early indiscretion, etc., are especially benefited by consulting ita contents.

The ELECTEIC REVIEW exposes the uwnJtigaUd frauds practiced by quacks and medical impostors who profess to "practioe medicine," and points out the only safe, simple, and effective road to Health. Vigor ana Bedily Energy.

Send your address oil postal eard for a copy, MM information worth thousand* will be sent you. Address, the publishers,

PillVFRMACHER 0ALVANIC CO.,

cor.

Eiann

& vwe stkeets, Cincinnati,a

TUTT'S PILLS

INDORSED

BY

PHYS'SIAWS, CLERGYMEN AND THE AFFLICTED EVERYWHERE.

THE GREATEST

TRIUMPH OF THE ABE. TOTTS' PILLS

Dit. TUTT hna succeeded in combining in these pills the horetofo-« antagonistic qualities of a STRENGTHlira. PURGATIVE, and a FuBunriMO Toxic.

CURE SICK HEADACHE. TUTr8iLLS CURE DYSPEPSIA.

Their flret apparent effect is to increase tho appetite by causing the food to properly assimilate. Thus the system is nourished, and by their tonic action on he digestive organs, regular and healthy o» vacnaticna are produced.

TUTT'S P'LlS

CURE CONSTIPATION.

TUTT'S PILLS

The rapidity with Trhirh PERSONS TAKE ON FLESH while under the influence of these pills, indicates their aaaptabllity to nourish tho body, hence their efficacy in curing nervous debility, melancholy, dyspepsia, wasting

A3Uf.

TUTT'SPILLS

CUiic BILIOUS COLIC.

TUTTSP1LLS

of

^urf 0:W_C',inolatrt.

CURE TORPID LIVER.

TUTT'S~P!LLS

the in'isclee,s!ug»

gishness of the liver, chronic constipation, and imparting health & ftreagth to the system. Sold everyw here.

rarrs ptLis

IB

Price 85 centA. Offioe

53 Murray ^troet# NEW YOUK.

^.PAin APPETITE.

WARNER'S

BITTEiRS

la eliminating tbe imparities of the blood, the natural and neceaetar result is the cure of MroF nlMWind othtr Skla Ernptloni A Mmmci Including Caneer*. Uleen, and other-sores.

It Is the best BHMMI Portlier, and stimulates every function to more healthful action, and thus a benefit in all diseases.

Djipepila, Weatae»ofthe Uomaeh, ConaUpnUeii, DlariMM, General DebitItjr, etc-, are cured by the Mb Bittern. It is unebuued as an Appettnr and Rerular Tonic.

It Is a medicine which shoald be in every family, and which, wherever used will save payment of many doctors' bills.

Bottles of two sites price* SO eema and IL

SAt tlVCH 1(10^ "ire If

I I I

'Yc*

WWARNER'S Safe Remedie«are •old by Druggbta & Dealers in Med* ioine everywhere.

if

S \l I N

E

Wli* ltd!

SAN fii? I H,H. Warner 4 Co., proprietor*, boohbbteb,h.y. jgflrflead for Pamphlst 1 Tertlmoalals..

A Pleasant Place.

For persons desiring to leave Terre Haute for a few days or even weeks a place near at hand affords the attractions to be found at Grand Haven. The air is always cool and bracing, the surf bathing in the lake is splended, the fishing ana boating not to be excelled anywhere. And when yon are there you can find in Cutler House one of the best hotels in the country, complete in all its appointments and with charges as low as $ 10 a week. Go to Grand Haven this summer- and try it.

Keep your bowels and kidneys in healthy stateby the use of Kidney Wor

OREGON.

.-/fry

W-

A Trip to That Far-off Land by an Indianian.

Extracts From a Letter Written to *Mr. Wm. Byers by Mr. Vail Morgan.

The following is an extract from a let U*r received by one of our citizens, Mr Wm. Byers, from a friend who is travel ing in Oregon:

On my way out here I Btoppod in Astoria. It is a lively little town. The princial businesses lumbering and fishing think I am safe in saying that from the time I entered the mouth of the Columbia river until I reached Portland, I saw as manys or 600 fishing boats. Portl&iid is the only city that Oregon jean claim. It has a population of about 10. 000 and is quite a thriving place, but noth ing to compare with Terre Haute. I have t)een up the Willamette valley on thewest side as far as it goes, and then crossed over to the east side and went up to the last town on the O. & C. R. R- and then came back to Portland: I can safely say that the good fanning land is bodies and that there ia a larger of worthless land than the old web-footers want to own up to. The great brag state of the Union for raising wheat is a grand mistake. There lias,been much more said for Oregon than there is good ground for. When lhavc gone out among the farmers here, I have failed to find one who did not want to sell out, and I have not talked with a single one who is not tired of the rain. We have always heard a great deal about the fine climate of this country. 1 have not been sick in ten years until I came out here, and I have liad three chills which I am not rid of yet, and the sorest throat I ever had. Throat diseases are prevalent here. The sun has not shone hree hours at a time since I thave been here. It rained so much last wheat harvest that the wheat was struck with rust and a great portion of it lost entirely. I do not believe the flour will make good bread, for I have, not seen a good mess of bread since I have been here. Farmers lay in tlieir supplies in September and October, nnd then hole up for the winter that is, until the first of April. They say it rains almost continually during that time, and the roads are so muddy that they cannot get out at all. Just to tell the truth about this country, it was good when the land was new, but they liave to plow in mud and water, and the end of it is the ground is about played out, and they are playing out fast on their wheat crops, and that is the principal crop raised, as they do not raise corn. Wheat, oats and barley are about all they raise. They complain of bard times as much as you ever heard it talked of, and I will tell you something else, they do not know what it is to buy or sell anything imder ten cents, no matter what the article is. The people are indolent here. I have been in about five or six counties which they claim as their best, and in about thirty-five or forty little towns, and with a few exceptions they do not seem to be doing much. Salem, the capital of the State, is a nice little town, probably as large as Sullivan in your adjoining county, but no larger. To sum it all up Oregon is not half what it is cracked up t© be, and flic whole matter of it is that it is so far out here that people pick up and move without coming to see the country, and most of them are obliged to stay. It is in the human family, if they get worsted in a move like coming here, to want to see some one else bitten as badly as themselves, so they send back word that it is the garden spot of the world and lead others to move hero. I could tell you much more if I had the space. Very respectfully,

Vall Morgan.

GEN. HANCOCK AT GETTYSBURG.

I H(

THE STORY OF THE SURGEON WHO DRESSED HIS WOUND IN THE THIRD DAY'S FIGHT.

From the New York sun. iDr. Alexander N. Dougherty, of Newark, was Medical Director of the Second Corps when it was commanded by Gen. Hancock. He is a Republican, and was Postmaster of Newark under Grant's first administration. He will however, vote for Hancock. He said yesterday: "When Gen. Hancock succeeded Gen. Couch as a commander of the old Second Corps, I became his Mcdical Director. At the battle of Gettysburg he commanded the First, Second and Third Corps, one-half of the army. In the third day's light at Gettysburg he was wounded, and I was sent.for. I found him lying on the hill slope, under a tree,'and facing the enemy. There was a deep, wide gash in his leg, near the groin, in the wound were wood splinters and a tenpenny nail. Gen. Hancock was anxious to know what the rebels were using in their shells. He thought he had been wounded by splinters from one of the enemies shells. We put him in an ambulance, and I* lay down beside him. Then we drove through a hot fire to my hospital. Afterward I discovered that a bullet had lodged in his thigh, carrying with it wood and wood and splinters and the tenpenny nail. "As he lay in the hospital in great pain, I, at his dictation, wrote his first dispatch to Gen. Meade announcing the victory won at Gettysburg, adding to the dispatch that the defeat would be turned into a rout. He was calm, patient and heroic. He is entitled with Meade to the honor of the victory at Gettysburg, and Meade would say so if he was alive. On the (night of the second day's battle a council of war war was held It was proposed to fall back and establish a line of battle at Pipe Creek, but Hancock opposed it He argued that the- army of the Potomac had made its last retreat, and should fight or die on the line where the battle was begun. Gen Meade finally coincided with Hancock, and the result that that great victoiy crippled the rebels so that thev never recovered from it Hancock will be the next President Several of my Republican friends have assured me they will vote for him. We don't want any President who accepts bribes or perjures himself, or who has even the suspicion of a taint about him"

LINCOLN IN RICHMOND.

Gen. G. F. Shirley in July Atlantic,

After his interview with Judge Campbell, ihe president being about to return to the Wabash, I took him and Admiral Porter in my carriage. An immense'eoncourse of colored people thronged the streets, accompanied and followed the carriage, calling on the president with the wildest exclamations of delight. He was the Moses, the Mes&iah to the slaves of the South. Hundreds of colored women tossed their hands high in air, Jand then bent down to the ground, weepingjfor joy Some shouted songs' of deliverance and sang the old plantation refrains, which prophesied the coming of a deliverer from bondage. ''God bless you, Father

Abraham," went up from a thousand throats. Those only who have seen the paryoxysmaf enthusiasm of ^a religious meeting of the slaves can form any adequate conception of the way in which the tears and smiles 'and shouts of these emanciapated people evinced the frenzy of their gratitude to their deliverer. He looked at it all attentively, with a face expressive only of pathetic wonder. Occasionly his sadness would altetnatp with one of his peculiar smiles, and he would remark, on the great proportion of those whose color indicated a mixed lineage from the white masttr and the blacklslave ahd that reminded him of some little story of his life in Kentucky, which would smilingly tell and then his face would relapse again into the sad expression which all will remember who saw him during the last few weeks of, the re hellion. Perhaps it was a presentiment of his impending fate.

I accompanied hift- to the ship, bade him farewell, and left him to see his face no more. Not lone after the bullet of the assassin arrested the beatings of one of the kindest hearts that ever throbbed in human bosom.

The Paris Figaro has lately told a terr ble story of headsman's revenge.Fourteen years ago the murder Avinain was conde mned to death When on the morning of his execution,, Monsieur du Paris" ientered his cell for the purpose of making the usual preparation for conveyin him to the scaffold, the culprit receive him with an outburst of abuse, couched in the foulest imaginable language, to which the "executor of high works" lisened impassively apparently paying no attention to the torrent of insults and imprecations that flowed from Avinain's lips. Arrived upon the scaffold however, he bound his patient" to the plank, and then deliberately lowered the death-dealing knife to within a few inches of the murderer's neck examined its edge, raised again to its usual height and finally loosened the catch, with the customary result. As the re mains of the decapitated assassin were being re moved from the scaffold, one of the flic ian present observed to the executioner that he had not performed his task aspuickly as usual. "No," replied the latter, with an indescribable smile "I let him wait a little." Experience had taught the practical lieadsmenjhow dire is the agony of the last few moments preceding the dreadful passage from life to death so mindful of the wrong" inflicted upon him by the doomed man's insults he avenged the outrage with hideous com pletcness by "letting him wait a little.'

HE|W0N IHE BET.

Soon after two o'clock yesterda" the sash in the fourth stoiy of a business house On Woodward avenue was raised and a man's head and shoulders appeared in sight. Next he thrust out an arm, and pedestrians saw a small rope in his hand: Twenty men halted in less than a minute. A plank was lying at the curb, and the general line of reasoning was that the plank was to be .drawn up through the window. "You'll break the glass if you tr^ 'it!" shouted one of the fast-grown group. "That cord isn't stout enough!" yelled a third. "Why don't they carry it up by way of the front stairs demanded a man as he flourished his gold-headed cane around and seemed much put out.

The cord came part way down and stopped. Some ten different persons volunteered the information of "more yet," and presently it was lowered so that one of the crowd could grasp it. He pulled down and the man above pulled up, and fbur or five men seized the plank And brought it to the rope. "Lower away I" yelled the man at the rope. "Pull down on it!" cried a dozen, voices.

The man above let out more rope and waved his hand. "He wants it 'over the hitching-post," screamed a boy, and it was carried there. ~'"No he wants it fast to the lamp-post," shouted a man, and it was carried there. "Let—that—rope—alone!" came from the man.

Six men had hold of the plank, ready to boost on it, and three men had hold of the rope. "Do you want the plank asked one. "No!" "Do you want the hitching-post?" "No!" *, 'V "Well, what do you want "I want you to let "that rope alone. I had abet of the eigars that it was long enoygh to touch the walk, and I've won 'em. What's the row down there—somebody dropped dead

The plank was hurled away, cusswords indulged in as toes were trodden on, and in fifteen seconds the crowd had melted away to a squint-eyed boy and an organ-grinder.—Detroit

"'.-

XHJK TERRS HAUTE WEEKLY GAZE1T&"

person to be afflicted with and live, by he use of your Compound Oxygen, I esteem it a pleasure and a duty to send you this statement" Our Treatise on Compound Oxygen, which contains a record of many remarkable cures, sent free. Address Drs. Starkey & Pallen, 1109 & 1111 Girard street, "Philadelphia, Pa..'

Summer Complaint.

It has been a creditable task of German physiologists to go about the solution of this important problem scientifically, and in compounding the "German Infant Meal' (Paedotrophine) they have attained a real triumph in modern science. It is not sufficient merely to furnish baby with the elements contained in mother's milk —cows milk, starch,-sugar, and numberless substances, do that, but they must be supplied in the proper proportions, otherwise they will not nourish the child, and the result is weak muscles, flabby, puffy tissues, soft bones, and a low grade of vitality that falls an easy prey to all manner of infantile diseases, as teething, croup, whooping cough, measles, and the like. Wet nurses are too frequently unhealthy, and at all times careless, unscrupulous and unreliable. •Cows' milk alone is too rich in caseine, and not rich enough in. sugar for young infants and the milk obtainable in cities more unreliable as a single food than nurse's or mother's milk. All of these

objections have been obviated by the ad dition of the elements contained in the "German Infant Meal" to a proportion of cow's milk and water. A still greater ob, jection, if possible, than those mentionedthat pertains to unwholesome mother milk and nearly all of the substitutes, is tlieir unpalatable nature, that infants are prompt to resent by nausea, diarrhoea, restlessness, colics, and costiveness, so that loving mothers are impelled to change the food frequently, often from bad to worse. This objection is also grandly overcome in the "German Infant Meal," a nutritious agreeable, palatable food easily assimilated, and, being always of uniform quality, not liable to the same contingencies. We congratulate mothers upon this new addition to the long list of Infants' food, and think the German Chemists have proved themselves benefactors to the race. Obtainable from all druggists,

N&H0QUININ

CURES ANO AGUE

PHYSICIANSF.F.VERfc

"V

Free Press.,

Neuralgia—A Remarkable Cure.

The following extracts are from a letter received from S. A. Russell, Mesca lero Agency, New Mexico, dated June 5th, 1879:—"I felt satisfied that if the remedy (Compound Oxygen) was really what you claimed it to be. it was just what I wanted for a daughter who had been a sufferer with neuralgia for more than fifteen years. I wrote you for a copy ol your Treatise on Compond Oxygen. After reading this little work, ana the certificates of such men as Judge Kelley, TS. Arthur, and others, I felt that if these were genuine, there must be real merit in the remedy. I thai ordered the remedy sent to my daughter in .Kansas. That was about one year ago, ana since rising the supply then ordered, my daughter has not only not had neuralgia, but considers herself in perfect health. Regarding my daughter as having, through the blessing of God, been permanently cured of as stubborn a oas^ofnem^g^sjtis^^able^orj^

BILLINGS, CLAPP & CO., Chemists, Boston

Dyeing and Scourihg.

By greatly improved facilities I am prepared to d£ all kinds of

Ladies' and Gents

Wear, in cleaning and coloring, at reasonable rates, and invite all wishing anything done in this line to try the old reliable house

H. F. REINER, ^11

•'l 655 MAIN STREET.

ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED AT

U. R. Jeffers',

Dealer In Wool, and Manufacturer of

Cloths, Cassimeres, Tweeds, Flannels, Jeans, Blankets,

Stocking Yarns

Carding and Spinning.

N. B. Thehigfiest market price in cash,

or our own maka of goods exchangsd for wool.

Isi UJUMUUkl

A New, Entertaining and Intensely Dramatic DETECTIVE STORY,

,-.4= -BYEMILE GABOftlAU.

Author of "The Widow Lerouge," "The Mystery of Orcival," "Within an Other People's Money,

The Cllqie of Gold,

For

sale at all

Bookstores, Newstanda,

an

•n all 'Sailroadi. ESTES & LAURIAT

299 to 305 Washington St., Bos ton.

H. HULMAN,

Wholesale Grocer and

U«mt

Dealer

Main street, corner of Fifth. Terre Haute, Ind.

ItafttOM It HUM art CURAT* BAM,

tmh,

raised her frto her where she had lying

tor

man:

mouslyi nrvnnnH

Paedotroph ine" is the cu classic name of a very simple compound known by the more intelligible title of "German Infant Meal," and as its use is becoming universal, and its fclaim as a substitute for mother's milk and a food for growing children are now unquestionable, our readers will thank us ror a brief reminder of its virtues. No one doubts that the milk of a young healthy' mother is the best possible fx)d for infants, and contains precisely the elements in the exact proportions requised to develop young children, but all mothers are not young, and many of them are unhealthy, and all are subject to nervous and mental emotions or diseases that deteriorate the milk. Then they resort to all manner of substitutes, of which arrow root, rice, farina, flour, etc., etc., form part, but as no attention is paid to providing the materials required for the young child it is either stufled or starved, and the delicate little creatures are carried off by hundreds and thousands annually to premature graves, victims of ignorance of the laws of life. The statistics of mortality by summer complaint alone is ap

3D.

say It Is a Perfect Substitute

for tho Riilnhnt/* nninino Superior In no aisagree-

for the sulphate quinine. tonic properties, and produces able effect.

Dose the same as Sulphate Quinine. Sold by all Druggists or sent by mail. Price $1.50 per oz.

A.

ifl: i..

-".v.

..

EaOoned by the Medical Proffcwloo, and recommended by then far IfriUMk, tMMl OeMtttf, FwmI« Oliiwi, Waat el Vitality,

W. P. Rat, CViiK» Jhirtun, An., milt— nut's lsos Tome baa done wonders kere. A who bad been doctored nearly te death

eral

Addr.cs VOLTAIC.BELT„CO««.Marshall. Mioh.

A)

MrSi

fir®

ji'

tor

ser

haa baea eared of ANIi% —1

Great Pi tiiimltm

,rgt

bf Mm

of

llAsnaui's ami T»w«tBSC

wtolch

from

ants shoes all solid Warranted. 25, 30,40, 5G, 60 and 75 cents

misses' cloth tog button, $1.25,150,1.75 and 2.00, ladies* cloth t»

75 and 2.00, mens' fine calf shoes$1.25,1.50,1.75 and 2.00.

Touched bottom at last- come and see at the Boss shoe stored

Office of Dr. M. W, CASE, 933 Arch Street, Fhilod'et, &

CATARRH

quire

rtmtdiai aami known tosofcnot.

r„-. 5 *V

mUmUm

eibold si

EXCURSION TO ST. PAUL

—TIB

Ifclff.M CABBOWS tf TAB IMALAKT *-^1 FOR CATARRH. ASTHMA.

Ufal to demootwte the ralneof CarteUletf Tar. OsweK tori-PfA— xm/

the most healing sod soothing properties we so combined with Wfi» Tree T«r tfiai the mw Meathfng cnnTeria them Into a Jan— shJm to

ao not Wtter, simply

PETROLEUM JELLY

Uaed and approved by tho leading PHYSt CIAH8 of EUROPE and AMEBIC Tr rroat Valuable Fi...../ Remedy ••own.

mill

Coughs, Colds, fore Throst, Group sad Biphlksris, ste. jWttj thsB. 25 sad 50 seat rises «f sU «or goods. eiillBMEDALAT THE PULADELPBIA KZPOMTIOIV.

IllTIB K0AL AT TU PJLKUI KXTOaTlOII.

v.

Ml MM FtoiUitet

James Bcewa of

ooreoanty, has rtquiM Under

jo*

EVILUT, TEXAS. KAXcrKmmp BT OR. BARTER MEDXCI1VE CO.

No. 213 NORTH VAX* 0X&BBX. ST. LOUIS.

OTTOM OUT

-OF-

THUS BOOM

Boots, shoes and'slippers less than Manufacturers prices, ill

his graleM

rledfmenU for the great bea*»

fits his wife reeelred from the use of yr 1mm* Tonic. He teUs as that, after HAVING three or four hundred dollars doctors' blUs, two hoi

iuiw vi lym "itti iiirnwT iiirTTirn mua« i»»w

yoar laox Toi^c did her more mod than all other he was troubled with she Is uuUt relieved #. A. PATBICI AGO*

she erar used.

White*, *ie.,

Corner of Third and Jain

And all points in the

N O A N N O W E S

Vial. & St. L. R. R., and Keokuk Northern Line Packet Co., ..

V...

ON THURSDAY, JULY8th

^5'

ft*

'm-

'i «f v\T

"For rout6 and rates call on or address,

hi*

No. 914 North Eighth Street.

OH 30 DAYS' TRIAL/

WiJ SBND ON 80 DAYS' DR. DT9S CBLXBBATXD KLKCTBO-VOLTAIQ BRLTB, BAXM.Btr8PBKSORI*8, TBtTB8SS, OrniB AFFLMXCBS, to any peraon (young or.old) snflferlnKfrom NERVOUS DI8KA8B8, PRKMATCRKDECAY, LOS# OP TITALIlXate^or to tboaa afflicted wfth RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, PARALYSIS,DYSPEPSIA.LIVBRor KIDNEY TROUBLES, SPINAL AFFECTIONS, RUPTURES, DISEASES OP A DELICATE NATURE or EITUIR krz, AXD KAirr OTBM DISBASU. SPEEDY CUBES GUARANTEED. SEN* FOB ILLUSTRATED rAMPULKT, FRJt£

TRIAL.

CBSES. 8UrPORTER8, aaX 'REMATURE DECAY,

Balsams and OowUalsofl VVNOwWlr I Iwlwf

Mtla (a laVan tn tha fltssaaail siaeia VsahAAd ..... 3 UpOT. iuw• fwiuuu wscu i»gu» mi NMuassnpi |ww. 1

inhaling

or

brmtking

it, and yo« feel its healing

hKt is endorssd by physicians erecTwhere, and highly commended" aoosands, who have used it with perfect attaftctfcm. nblTIUni

lent SatMMfos Alrnya ewutceC* Address, OR. M. W. CASE, 91* Are! St., Pkiladetphls, hk AVOID WORTHLESS IMITATION AND BASE IM^ATORS.^,

Trestmaot of

WOTTJM, BUB—.

SOBM, CTTH, CKllMADre,

|isbas^^

BHZT~

HEXOBXHOnM, Ite. Also for

FOR BARGAINS IN

LoSJ

la Terrible Disease. it» fearful effect#-. corruption rnnning down the throat, weak eyea, dea£ neaa, low of voice, to* of (me

11,

diagui ting odors, nasal

daformltlM, and fitruly consumption. From first to Ordinary treatments are worse than oceleM. If neglected

last it is eror aggreut* Or while a care is pofJiWe, it may rapidly develop into qaick ooaramptlon. The moet thorough, saooeBgfJl Mid pleasant fresfsat Is

This I

etc., Seit Free—

The Toilei

Articles from pare

Tsseline—such Pomade Ysseliaa Vsnline Cold Cream,

Pot AM

Vaseline Camphor loa Vsseline Toilet soaps are sapefier

t* mmj

siadlsr

a

YASKLINE C0NFK7T10N8L An agreeable form of tsl» lag vaseline iatarnaDy. 25 CCTT8 A BOX COLBATE4CO..**

I E

-ViSIT-

J. H. F.I S HR,

At his new stand, 827 Main street Stoves, Qoeensware and Becond-Hand Goods, at

Old Stand, 106 South Fourth St