Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 August 1880 — Page 7

M.

|5 Year sbefore the Public,

THE CEWAJIWE

DR.C.McLANES

LIVER PILLS

tre not recommended as a remedy for all the ills that flesh is heir to," but it. affections of the Liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia, and Sic* Headache, or diseases of that character, tiey Btand without a rival.

AGUE AND FE^ER.

No better cathartic can be used preparatory to, or after taking quinine. Aa A simple purgative they are unequaled.

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar-coated. Kncli box has a red-wax seal on the lid, with the impression, McLANE'SLlVEIl PILL. Kuch wrapper bears the signatures of 0. MCLANE and FLEMING BROS.

Insist upon having the genuine

I£C\ McLANB'8 LIVER PILLS, prepared by FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, PaM the market being full of Imitations of fho name MclMtie, spelled differently **lt earns pronunciation.

UNLIKE PILLS

Aa4 tho uHunl Purgatives, li pleasant to take^ And will prut-pat once the moat potent and Itsrmlesi Myateni Kiiuvnlor a

I1

that IIM yel

men brought to public notice. For C^onatlpa* lllllomncBi, IlnMlache, Pile*, and Oft aitordcr* arising from rtn obstructed state of the tyi iti* hioompai ably tho 'out curative extant. Avoid imitfttinn* in^jnt on petting the articlr called for.

TR01»IVfr'Rt)IT LAXATIVE it put up In bronzed tin box«* only. Price AO cent*. Auk your druggist fur Descriptive Pamphlet, or address the proprietor. J. E. HETHEBINOTOJf. 36 Park Place, New York.

BEFOREPURCHASING ANY FORM

OF

8O-OALLEO

ELECTRIC BELT,

Br ~m1,or Appliance rtnrttfnteA to nurpNer rous,Chronic and Special UisrtMc, send to tho PUIVERMACHEROALVANIOCO., NVWYork, N.Y., ClnoinnftU,0., OfJBan Frnnciaeo, t:»l., for their Fret Pamphlet and •The Electric Keview," and jrou will save ttmt,htdtk •nd mmty. The P. }. Co. are the only dealers in Genuine Electrtc A rplianoen on he American Continent

The Only Remedy

TIIAT ACTS AT TUB SAJUE TUB ON

THE LIVER, THE BOWELS, and the KIDNEYS.

This combined action gives it wonderful y.ower to cure all diseases.

Why Are We Sick?

Because we allow these great organs to become clogged or torpid, and\ poisonous humors are therefore forccd\ into the blood that should be expelled naturally.

cm

BILIOUSNESS, PILES, CONSTIPATION, KIDNEY COMPLAINTS ^IUNAUY DISEASES, FEMALE WEAK-

NLSSKS,

AND NEHVOIH

DISORDERS,

by causing free action of thtse organsS{ and restoring their power to throw off* disease.

Why Rnffor Billons pains and ache*

IWhy

tormented with Piles, Constipation I Why frightened over disordered Kidneys I Why endure nervous or sick headaches}

Why have sleepless nights

•T* KIDNEY WORT and rrjoke in health. It i$ a dry, vegetable compound and One paekage will make tlx qtief Medicine. Qtt it of ttour Drugqlst, he will order it for i")u. Pricc, $1.00.

WS1L3, EIGHAEICOIT CO., Proprietor*, (Will actkl pot paid.) BnrllnffUiii, vt

ii»JJH£AF£STl

LEWIS' CONDENSED

STTHSCXW PURE! IPs t'rul OO.OO for any Alum or oUicr utfti'tcntHon /buna this I'on vi Ji.

Indorsed by the Brooklyn Board of lloaKli. and by the best chemists la the United Suites.

It IS STRONG KR thirn rxnjr Yeaai Powder In the world.

It NEVER FAILS to intake liatit bread when 'used as cflrcctod. It Is COMMENDED by every housekeeper who h.i3 given it & lair trlaL

It IS an cn tlrely NEWIJTVBJJfTION, without any of the bad qualities of soda or saleratus, yeast or other baking powders.

It has la Itself a tendency to

MI

stain and nourish the

system.

'Good food makes good health and health IB Improved or impaired In proportion asthu food we eat is nutrttioiM or otherwise.

LEWIS'

Bubm

POWSKB always maknc

good food. One can of this Is worth two of any other taking compound.

It makes bread whiter and richer. Store than half the com^alntaof had floor lolae from the uso of common iMtklng powders, whlclx often make the best of flour turn Oat dark bread.

The mo'vt delicate persons e&n eat flood with It without Injury. early every other baking powder la

Adulterated and Is absolutely liijurioua.

Thla

Is made from Refined Grape Cream Wt Tartar, and Is PERPECTLT PURS.

It makes the BEST, lightest, and antritloui BREAD, BISCUIT, CAKE.

CRULLERS.

BUCKWHEAT, INDIAN, AND^ FLANNEL CAKES. A Sfngta trial will pro-re the superiority 0C thlsPowder.

VASUTAOTTNUED OW1T BT

.T.LEWIS &MENZIE8 CO.

to

PlfTT.AroXPHIA. V.

*Jp?j

Feminine Brevities--

Tlic Prince of Wales and Modjeska smoked cigarettes together at a London dinner.

English women have gone so far in gambling as to come to high words over their game.

London Truth praises as the new Amer ican beauty Miss Parsons, who appeared at a recent grand ball.

Mrs. Langtry is no longer called the Jersey Lily. Society has given her another pet name—"'Die Amber Witch."

A Boston man permitted his wife to obtain a divorce from him on the ground of cruelty. She married another man, who paid the first husband $1,000.

Women are sometimes heard wishing fhey were men but the only class of men who desire to change their sex are lawyers. They all want to become fee males. "Doctor," saitl a careful wife to the practitioner, who was cutting open her husband's shirt as he was in a fit of apoplexy, "cut, if you please, along the seam."

Very handsome motlier-of-pcarl brooches and ear-rings, carved in cameo heads, with settings of fine gold, are among the fresh devices for rendering womankind attractive.

Dick told Ills wife when he saw her out walking with her new silk dress that he never before fully realized the force of the novelist's remark of the heroine "that she swept gracefully along."

A pretty girl a French Boo£heel A section of bannana-peel A suddn s^ip, and down she goes—

A vision of embroidered nose! That's all! She admission of women to the State Universities will be one of tho prominent questions to come before the Internation-, al Educational Congress at Brussels this month, which is to be presided over by the Belgian Minister of Public. Works. "Yes, I am to be married, my dear friend. The young lady is pretty and very clever, yet she can not play the piano-forte that is her only failing." "Why, I should call that a blessing. is certainly no fault!" "Hear me through' She can not play the piano-forte, and yet she always insists on playing."

lady in Covington, Ga., who

is worth |20,000, broke with a young man mcnt because he paid buggy to give her a -jjj that a man who wou,\

Bangs are tolerable and bandoline endurable, but a mixture of the two is abomination. Still, there are girls who will not only cut their hair short on their foreheads, but will also fasten the fringe to their skin by bandoline. Any-one meeting such a girl should hurry to the other side of the street immediately there's no knowing what she may do next.

At leap-year picnics, it is said, the girls bear all the expenses and do all the work generally performed by the young men. To see a girl climbing a high tree to put up a swing must be as good as a circus and the young men probably go dowa to the edge of the woods and look at the farmers mowing potatoes or digging gain while the swings are being put up.

Smoke in the Department.

Washington Correspondence Chicago Times Under some administrations smoking is not allowed in the government buildings. Under tho present administration blue cloud of tobacco smoke hovers everywhere, except at the White House, where Mrs. llayes will not permit it. Secretaries Sherman and Schurz are great smokers. General Key is the only cabinet nieinber who does not use tobacco. lie used to be an inveterate user of the weed, but broke himself of JJie habit several years ago. Lot Morrill, who was Secretary Sherman's predecessor, was a great hater of tobacco. He could not even endHre the whiff of a cigar. When he entered the treasury, departmet he isued an order forbidding tobacco smokng in the departments.

Violation of the order was punished with dismissal. Huge placards, bearing this order in large letters, were hung all over the department, during Morrill's time, and the Secretary looked actively after the rigid enforcement of this order. A whiff of tobacco apparently could not enter the huge building without his discovering it. The morning Secretary Sherman entered the building to take possession of it as its ohief he came in puffii^g a huge black cigar. He lazily walked thro&gh the corridors, smoking quietly, finally disappeared in hit .private

and office. Not a word was said by anybody, but Morrill's anti-smoking placards instantly disappeared. Matches were scratched, and, five minutes after Sherman's entrance, the hard-worked clerks were puffing away at cigars all over the building.

A tobacco story is related of Secretary Graham, who was once in charge of the navy department He went up upon the day of his accession, to take charge of the buildipg, smoking a cigar at the time. When he came to enter the building a

6

an engagement commence horse and i'he argued loolifh as to

pay that much for a tew hours' pltasure was not the kind she wanted for a husband. "Mary Adams is a mysterious factory girl in a a njill at Winthrop, Massachu setts. She wears a thick veil while work, or going to and from the mill, talks to no one but her boarding-house keepe and goes to church regularly, but shak lianas with no one. They say she is the daughter of rich Boston parents, who stopped giving her money because she gave it all to tho poor and'labored city missionary.

They aro becoming Anglicized to a fearful extent in Paris. Not only have they adopted the word "alioping"—with one p— and call a wedding breakfast "lonch," but wear "asthetic" gowns in true Miss John Bull style. Anything may be expected after this.

An Oil City maiden, who had just recovered from a two-days' attack of green apple cramps, recited in public the other night that touching poem, "Go Feel What I Have Felt," with such emphasis that it brought tears to the eyes of the green grocer—Derrick. "Mother Stewart," of Qhio, the originator of the Women's Temperance Crusade, is now working in the South. Sha has not met with much encouragement thus far. In Atlanta she has founded women's Tempesance Union under the Presidency of the wife of Governor Colquitt.

•,f

A* "Li 5r** "'K- *v :V*',r"

watchman stopped him. Said he:

Two of the best amateur piano players of Galveston gave the Anvil Chorus the other night at a little sbcial gathering. After the applause had ceased one of the young ladies said it was beautifully rendered. "Yes," said a young man who is not musical, "it brought real tears to my eyes. It reminded me so vividly of the time when I used to work in a blacksmith shop, with a cooper shop next door."

HOTBL clerks do not as a rule bear the reputation of being tho most courteous of the human family. The amount of pro vocation they receive should no doubt be taken into consideration when their shortcomings are noted, still they are at times gratuitously and unnecessarily rude in their intercourse with strangers. A recent visitor from Australia was rather taken aback the other day by the politeness of the elegant individual who presides in the office of the hotel, where he had taken up his quarters. The day after his arrival, which happened to be one of the windiest of the season, he went out for a stroll around the streets of 'Frisco to see the sights and exhibit his linen-covered helmet. He returned to the hotel rubbing his eyes and very much disgusted, and remarked to the clerk: "You have a great deal of dust here in San Francisco." "Y-a-s," drawled the clerk "I suffer from it myself." "Weak eyes," inquired the stranger." "No, sir." "Yourlungs aro affected then?" "Not much," yawned the clerk. "In what way then do you suffer from the dust?" &kcd the somewhat surprised Australian. "By hearing about sixty times an hour every fool who comes in here say "You have a good deal of dust here in San Francisco."—ijan Francisco Neves Letter. '.'

Girl Smokers

From The Indianapolis Journal Yestarday afternoon, while walking on West Maryland street, near Illinois street, a Journal reporter, who has seen humanity in its most unattractive forms and is by no bieans squeamish, saw a sight that fairly sickened him. Two girls were smoking the eldest, about twelve years old had a pipe, and pulled away with the nonchalance of a veteran. The other4 a little girl—and, in spite of the dirt that smirched her face, not bad looking—not more than five years old, was sucking away at cigar stump, fished from the gutter. The perormance of the latter was embellished with a larger diffusion of spit, while she blew out out great clouds of smqjee, and stuck to tho weed with a persistence worthy of a nicer labor.

Eugenie^ Income.

Napoleon III.'s widow derives her rov enue from three sources—the product of .savings and speculations, the insurances upon the Emperor's life, and the real es tate which the Empress bought in her own name when she was on the throne Nominal sales have been made since she came to Chiselhurst, as well as two genuine ones. The Empress disposed of, for a considerable sum, the property in the Rue d' Alba, and the house in which M. Rouher used to live free, at the corner of the Rue d' Elysee. The purchaser of this estate was Baron Hirsch, "the Turkish Railroad King." There are, besides, estates in Spain, Switzerland and Hungary The Hungarian property was acquired in the present year, and is adjacent to the domain of Count Zieby. Under her son's will the Empress acquires properties near Trieste and in Tuscany, as well as houses and grounds in Toulouse.

Five HundredDollars Reward We will pay the above reward for any case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Indigestion, Constipation or Costiveness, we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely Vegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Sugar Coated. Large boxes, containing 80 Puis, 25 cents. For sale by all Druggists. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. The genuine manufactured only by John C. West & Co., '"Die Pill Makers," 181 and 183 W. Madison (Street, Chicago, 111. Free trial package sent by mail prepaid on receipt of a three ent stamp. ,«*

Fits.

All fits are stopped free by Dr. Kline's great nerve restorer, a marvelous medicine for all nerve diseases. Send to 931 Arch street, Philadelphia, Pa.

MB TEKKE tiam-B WEEKLY GAZETTE

4,No

smoking is to be permitted in the build ing." "Oh," said Mr. Graham, tossing away his cigar without explaining who he was. Passing rapidly up to the office he seated himself at his desk and took out afresh cigar from his pocket, deliberately lighted it, and then, instead of revoking the obnoxious order that had met him at the door, he merely wrote out another, directing that from that date there should be smoking in the building. It is the only case on record where an affirmative order of this kind has been made.

National House.? j:

F"»

4,

Mr. B«eeher on Colonel IngwsoU.

"Robert Ingersoll," said Mrt Beecher, at a Plymouth prayer meeting recently, "is not a saint but there is not a man on the continent to whom he would not give his hand. There is not a man on the continent, I suppose, to whom he would not give his hand, after putting it in his pocket and filling it with silver.

I am not personally acquainted with him, but I suppose this to be his disDOsition. And yet he kicks over the New Testament and the whole Bible he sneers at the ministers and unjustly criticises them. But his whole nature couples him with his fellow beings and this marks him as a Christian in that rospect—and that's a main respect. He is cnarged with infidelity. I say that a man who holds to the New Testament, and yet passes by on the other side when men need help and sympathy, is an infidel. He is orthodox for the outside of the Bible, but infidel for the inside. Those who depise their fellow men, and keep aloof from them, are absolutely infidel and men who do this under a Government like oar own is piteously infidel."

FACTS OF FICTION.

Are People Naturally Ylslonary IM IdealT [Harper's Bstaar.]

It is a cariosity of travel that so many travelers, when they are abroad, visit the places and haunts of famous fiction as much as they do those of history and reality, if not even more.

How many people are there who go to Scotland for no other purpose than to follow out the wandering fancies of Walter Scott's immortal music, who tramp over Highlands to the meinory of Rob Roy, see the purple Trossachs for the sake of Roderick Dhu, for whom Flodden Field would be barren of interest had "Marmion" never been written, and who would never see Dryburgh Abbey or the ruins of Melrose, or Kennilworth Castle, but for the phantoms that rise to welcome them at the wand of the Wizard of the North?

How many aro there, again, who would never cross the limits of the Ital ian town that knew the history of Romeo and Juliet if Shakspeare had told nothing of their love whom neither the heath of Fores, nor Birnam Wood nor Dunsinane would ever tempt from the beaten path, liad not the witches met the Thane of Cawdor on that heath had not Macbeth seen those woods moving on his stronghold?

Who of the wandering band has not looked for Lord Steyne's mansion in London as much as for the solid stones of the Duke of Wellington's—does not glance for some reminder of the old Colonel and Clivo Newcombe among the Bluecoat Boys far more thau for any of the real and famous among the long list of those boys?

Aild for whom is not London peopled with the4)eing8 created by the fancy of him whom Lady Bulwer—before his death, in common with the crew who busy themselves in hunting out only his follies and .blemishes since his death— styled the Aristophanes of the Pothouse and the Plutarch of the Pave, but whom the world will know, lohg after his detainers'are forgotten, as the Lord of Laughter and Tears? What is the Court of Chancery to our travelers, but as it gives them Mr. Jarndyce and Miss Flyte? Of whom of all that have en tered the gates of the Marshal-sea do they reckon but little Dorrit? And do thev know the very* house that will presently crack from top to bottom, the man whose moustache goes up and whose nose goes down when he laughs, sitting in the window meanwhile? They walk through

Gamp

T-4 1 Y.AIIFK.-

A QOOD HOTEL.

The National House, under the irfan agement of Heinley & Watson, receives, as it deserves, approbation of the traveling ublic. Ad^AJ its natural advantage of being ceuuauy located and large, is the attraction of a well-known house, an excellent cuisine, good rooms and" low rates.

Cidney Disease of 30 Yeart Standing Cured.

ELK FLAT, OREGON, Jan. 12,1880. The second package ot Kidney-Wort is nearly gone, and I enclose a dollar for another package. I am a woman fiftysix years of age and have been afflicted with Kidney Disease for more than thirty years. Kidney-Wort has done me more good than any other remedy I have- ever taken, and I am sure will cure me.j

MRS. J. T. GALLOWAY.

Bcgraxnmcn find it very convenient to drop into J. H. Chapman's place on south Fifth street and get a really square meal at very moderate cost.

STOP at the St .Clair House, on the cor nerof Second and Main streets. Rates low and accommodations good..

fronl the city Brighton stands to them only for Paul Dombey and "What are the wild waves saying?" the dialect of Yorkshire has no other significance to their ears than that John Browdie spoke it Dover is sacred to Betsy Trotwood and the donkeys Yarmouth means the wreck of Steerforth England and the English are, in fact, only Charles Dickens. Soon they will be following the footsteps of Macleod of Dare, pernaps, or looking up the localities of the next story-writer Who stamps his die with such vigorous action as to impress all hearts with the personality of his fancies or his portraits.

Certainly .this is a great tribute to the power of genius,and to the fact of the existence of genius in the popular writers of fiction. For it is not only persons and places that have thus been made so real, but bygone generations have been infused with such afresh life that they havd become as vivid to us as to-day's, and scenes and times that would have bones otherwise have grown animated and human, and full of vital pith and marrow under their hand.

Does not Hawthorne, in the "Scarlet Letter," and other of his tales, make the people of the old Puritanic era, thkt once had been repulsive to us as ghouls and goblins, creatures of flesh send wood, passions and emotions like our own, so that we can understand them, feel with them, aspire with them, forgive them? Do we not picture to ourselves and realize more clearly the domestic life' of ancient Egyptbetter than all the tomes of history can teach it on reading Theophile Gautier's "Romance of a Mummy?" What should we reck of the barbaric tribes of a little peninsula in the Levant and its rocky islets if Homer had not held up his torch to their struggles? Do we not feel that Homer created Helen? and Bhould we care a straw for all Schliemann's work if* Homer never sung of Achilles and the Xu thus?

An actress seen hugging a minister remarked that she was only trying to embrace Christianity.

The jewel of a servant girl is the one who hangs all her mist rears embroidered underwear on that portion of the line most oonspicuoHi In U» a^ghbors' eye*

.1

—v.. if

fif*

ITANDS TO-DAY WITHOUT A RIVAL IN THE WORLD. For the

Chills and~Fever has' never failed with us."

Dr.

YOUWGBLOOD

Quic

Office

10

cure of all kinds of Agaa and Chills it has I no equal having stood the test of universal nse for tMrtv yean fh the most !tlwTK not merely removing for a time the symptoms, but eradicating the cauaedt the disease, thereby making a permanent cure

Maaafhstand by Tho Dr. Barter MedMas He. *1S V. lata Street. SL Uala. Rev. F. HACXBKITKK,8upt Oo, writing April SOth, 1877, lis and Fever has nevei

In my practice, and can heartily recommend it to the public."

M. WY CASE, 933

of

It does- not require ten mtn-rFOR

utet to demonstrate the value of CartotatC Of

ing si

German Protestant Orphans' Home, 81 Charles Rock Road, 8t Lotda Dr: Harttr't jnvtr and Agu$ Sp«eijte is a poaltlve core fttr

Keynport,.Ill, -ays: -I cured a Tittle girt of Agne of three

ftandlng, with Dr. Hartei's Fevtr and Agvt SptdJU, after (he best physicians fkiled to benilt her."

of Little York, Mo, says: "I have used Dr. Har1*it /fcwr and Aam JSteMc

AND ATTEND THE I

CLEARANCE: SALE

AT LESS THAN COST, to

make room for Fall Stock.

!D- E e.i Too 1 cL

-V fn

7 O S E O

T«r.

T' r~o3t Valuable !?*»..... Remedy own.

#4.— H-.

FE^acUE

SPECIFIC

PRICE! ONLY 75 CENTSL

Corner of Third and Jain1

a POSITIVE CURE

WITHOUT MEDICINES.

ALLAN'S SOLUBLE MEDICATED BOOGIES

PATENTED OCTOBER 16, 187G,

No. will cure any case in four days, or leas. No. 2 Wj.11 cure the Most Obstinate Case, ne matter of now long standing,

No nauseous doses of Cubebs, Copaiba or of Sandalwood, that are certain to produce dye* pepsia by destroying the coatings of the stoizr ach. No Syringes or Astringent Injections to produce other serious complications. T*

Price $1.50. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS ot mailed on receipt of Price. For further particulars send to druggist in your city for Circular. J. C. ALLAN CO.t

P. O. Box 1,533. No. 83 John St., New Ifork. We offer Reward for any case they wiH not cure. a, -t

FE*

Dr.

CURE,

Sure

m-r

Arch Street, Philad'a,

A Hi A I a Terrible Disease. lisfearftaleffect*-

JB HbB corruption running down the throat, weak eyes, deaf Llf /Hi MaBL nw, loss of voice, losk of smell, diwnsting odors, nsssi II 11 deformities, and finally consumpuon. From 4rat to last it is ever aggrar.w s. Ordinary treatments are worse than useless. If neglected while a euro It parilbie-, it may rapidly develop into quick consumption. The most thorough, successful (Ad pleasant treatment is

remedial agent known iotcience. Balsams and CordUU0f» vUllOUMrTIOH. the most healing snd soothing propertlw are to combined with

Vine Tree Tar, that the mere breathing convert* them into a dense raoor. This Is inAoled—taken right to thedlseased parts. Noh»at. JIO hot water, amply inhaling or breathing it. and you feel its healing power m* ODOe. Tfcli treat is endorsed by physicians everywhere, and highly eommendad by ftL I

!n6u«a.nfig, vrho h»»e used It with perfect satia&ction. PULL TBKATM ENT virCBlOT, 6t&, MDl Iltfr— lent. Satistetion Alway.Qasnu.tMd.. Add™., DR. M. W. CASE, 988 Art* St., Philadelphia, ra. AVOID WORTHLESS IMITATfOV* AN0 RASE |M'"rATQRS,-®i

ETROLEUM JELLY

Used and approved by the loading PHYSICIANS of EUROPE and AMERICA.

S0BES, QUTS, CHILBLAIN'S,

SKIN DISEASES, BXEUMATISM,

CATAEBH, HEMORRHOIDS, Etc. Also for Coughs, Colds, Sore Ths oat, Croup and Diphtheria, etc, jCr*Try them. 25 and cent sizes of all oar goods,

0HAND MEDAL AT THE PHILADELPHIA

W^J'HMND OX BO SB. Dtvs ciunuTK Mjcrtu©-VOLTAIC mrs, BAHMjnmraimoB .. OT«K»ArrUAirc»». to an? paraon Ircnam or aid) tnOhrlngrrom XCBVOCS DISEASi

V1 TTv^* to «K*e afflicts? with RHKCHATIgM. WKPBAMUA. PARA I.' faPKBTTBOPB1JM.BPIMAL AFRKCTIOVSL BCFTUMR, DUkASXSOr ADKLlCATl KiTUU Or imita

*A*T OHM* WSBASSS. SWOT CGBEft eCABAKTiED. VOLTAIC. »ELT^CO.. *ara*alI. Mk*.

FTP

CATARRH. ASTHMA^

the most heal- ft #%SiSaeSZSaSTSBa

&

For the

Tho Toilet

Articles from purs

Vaseline—*uch es

Pomade Vasolina

Treatment of

Vaseline Cold Cream, Vaseline Camphor los Vaseline Toilet Soaps, areioparforteaijri'xvfc^ssMa. TAlMCOWnOSS. An agreeable form oi t2k ing Vaseline internally,

WOUNDS, BUBIfS,

25

0ILVEB XBDAL AT THE FAKXS EXPOSITION. COLGATE & CO.. NJP

ON 30 DATS' TRIAL!

U£ja"8

A

BOZ..

RL

sis. DrsnraiA, L1TU HATCH or imin