Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 September 1880 — Page 3
YESTERDAY.
I.
But yesterday I looked away
O'er^mppy lands where sunshine lay In golden blots, Inlaid with spots Of shade and wild forget-me-nots.
My head was fair With flaxen hair,
And fragrant breezes, faint and rare, And warm with drouth From oat the south, Blew all my curls ftcrossmy mouth.
And cool and sweet. My naked feet
Found dewy pathways through the wheat, And out again, Where down the lane The dust wax dimpled with the rfeili.
H.
But yesterday I heard the lay
Of summer birds, when I, as they With breast and wing -All quivering With life and love, could only sing.
My head was leant Where with it blent
A maiden's o'er her iustrument And all the night, From vale to height, We filled with echoes of delight.
And all our dreams Were lit with gleams
Of that lost land of reedy streams Along whose brim Forever nwim Pan's lilies, laughing upat him.
JI.
Bui yesterday! 0, Blooms of May,
And summer iyse:», wliore away? O, lips of red, On kisses fed, Where have thy liups and laughter Hod.
My hend is bowed As in a cloud
(. snow—"O, Age!" I cry aiOiul, "Take back your tears And doubts and fearn, And render up my youthful years!"
And, Yesterday I kneel and pray
That He who gives and takes away, Will hold for me Some part of thee To gladden all eternity.
J.
W. Riley.
A SKELETON POEM.
Boy, School -Joy, ltule.
Round Looks -Found, Crook?,
Pin Ends -Thin,
Bends.
Chair, Where. "Rare!" '-Swear!!"
Quick, SticK -Thick,
Lick. Growl, Scowl, Howl! Vowl!
-Burlington. Ilawhcye.
•DOWN. BY THE SEA."
I stood by her side whon the tide came in, With its creeping kiss and its wailing moan I held her fast was sho mine to win?
Might I call her, in some days, my own?
I look in the depths of her haeel eye« Closo to our feet crept the restless sea In the tender tones that fond hearts prlee,
I told how fair she was to me.
I praised the graoe Of her queenly head, The flashing waves sung low and sweet— The bright eyes shone at the words I said,
While the light foam nestled about her leet. praised the sheen of her chestnut hair: Never a word she said to me, But closer she crept to my side, down there,
By the restless, tossing, moaning sea.
"Could sho be mine?" As I held her fast, I asked tlio driver he spoke me fair And sa'1' "he would aell me, first and last,
F-r a hundrod dollars the chestnut mare."
—Burdclte, in Burlington Hawkeye.
A BIT OF WISE NONSENSE!
The mountain and the squirrel Had a quarrel, *... And former called the latter Little Prig Bun replied: "You are doubtless very big But all sorts of things and wealher
Must bOjtakcn in together, To make up a year And a sphere. .Tf/, .* And I think it no disgrace To occupy my place. If I'm notso largo as you, You are not so small as I,
1
And not half so spry. e1'*' I'll not deny you make ,r-v 3A very pretty squirrel track Talents differ all Is well and wisely put If I cannot carry forests on my back, Neither can you crack a nut."
—Emerxm.
r, ^4
trsjg
THE WATERMELON.
si $ in
come to the mortal as he sits Upon a dry goods box and sips The nectar from thy Juicy lips— Cvj Oome to the youngster as he flits
Across the high and peaked fenoe And moves with ecstasy Intense Thy charms from off the native vipe, And thou art terrible!
O August-born monstruity! & Incarnate oolioosity! Beneath thy emerald bosom glow
Like glittering bubbles in the wine, The lurid fires of deadly woe, And from thy fascinations grow The pain, the cramp, the pang, the throe— And all we foar or dream or know
Of agony is thine.
—Eogene? Field."
Carton* Facto Abont LooomotiTe*. He's been in the dumps because his locomotive has been off' for three or four days/' said a railroad man at the union depot the other day, as he pointed to an engineer who looked as sour as any dyspeptic. "How off?"
Go and ask him." It took a quarter of an hour and a cigar to clear the cloud from the engineer's face, and then in reply to the query he said:
It is a queer thing. There's my engine, one of the best on the road, in perfect order, only twelve years old, and able to run or pull with the best of them. A month ago I hadn't the least bit of trouble in making time, no matter how the track was or the weight of the train. She was ready at the word, held her steam beautifully, and she seemed to understand every word I said. To-day she is down in the round-house, growling and sputtering and acting as if she wanted to pick a fuss with a gravel-pit.
Anything out of gear?" Not a thing. She's been looked over twice, and we can't find the least excuse for her conduct. She'll get over it in a ilay or two, perhaps. If she don't we'll punish her.' "IIow?"
Put her before a freight or stock train. I'vo seen it tried a dozen times, and it most always worked well. Here who irf now, bright as anew dollar and as handsome as a picture, and I'll bet $f0 there isn't the least thing out of order. She's simply sulking, the same as a child or a woman, and I know what started it. Three weeks :igo, while on my run in with the night express, she just wanted to light right out for all she was worth. She took the bit like a running horse, and if I hadn't choked her ofFsheM have beaten schedule time by forty minutes.
She acted mad right away, and in running twenty miles she gave me more trouble than I ever had with her in a race of three hundred. She lost steam, tried to foam over, choked her pipes, and when I wanted more steam she'd slide on her drives. She went right back on me that night, and has been sulking evei since."
Do all engines do this?" Not all, but many of them. Some folks laugh at us and call it superstition, but they never lived in an engine cab."
Tlio JHarriago of Great Men. Robert Burns married a farm girl, with whom he fell in love while they worked together in a plowed field.
Milton married the daughter of a country squire, and lived with her but a time. He was an austere literary recluse, while she was a rosy, romping country lass, who could not endure the restraint imposed upon her so they separated. Subsequently, however, she returned, and they lived tolerably happy.
Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were cousins, a rare example in the long line of Enlish mouarchs, wherein the martial vows were sacredly observed, and sincere affections existed.
Shakespeare loved and wedded a farmer's daughter. Washington married a woman with two children. It is enough to say she was worthy of him, and they lived as married people should live—in perfect harmony witn each other.
John Adams married the daughter of a Presbyterian clergyman. Her father objected on account of John being a lawyer.
John Howard, the great philanthropist, married his nurse. She was alto* geter beneath him in social life and intellectual capacity, and, besides this, was fifty-two years old, while he was but twenty.five. He wouldn't take "No" for an answer, and they were married and lived happily until she died, which occured two years afterward.
Peter the Great, of Russia, married a peasant. She made an excellent wife and a sagacious empress.
Humboldt married a poer girl because he loved her. Of course they were happy.
It is not generally known that Andrew Jackson married a lady whose husband was still living. She was an uneducated but amiable woman, and was most devoutly attached to the old warrior and statesman.
John C. Calhoun married Jhis cousin, and their children, fortunately, were neither diseased or idiotic but they did not evince the talent of the great State's rights advocate.
benjamin Franklin Another Infidel.
&'
[Cor. Inter Ocean,]
As Col. R. G. Ingersoll appears to be trying to appropriate our old and esteemed friend, Benjamin Franklin, as a recruit for his infidel doctrine, as he has also endeavored to do in the case of England's greatest writer, Shakspeare, let me call his attention to the following epitaph, written for himself by himself. It is not any more conclusive than Shakepeare's epitaph, however:
IJlBt iiiii
The body of
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, Printer, Lies here, food for worms, -y Like the cover of an old book, Its contents torn out and stripped
Of its lettering and gilding.* ut-? But it will i( As he believed) -j ?.'
Appear again, in a New and more beautiful Edition, corrected and
Amended by
THE
AUTHOB. i-
UGHTS AMD 8BADE8.
v'The gloomiest day hath gleams of light. The darkest wave hath bright foam near it And twinkles through the cloudiest night
Some solitary star co cheer it.
The gloomiest tool is not all gloom The saddest heur is n«t all sadneM ,s,..Ajid sweetly, o'er the darkest doom
There shines some lingering beam of gladness.
-^iDespair is never quite despair, v'. Nor life, nor death, the future cloaca And round the shadowy brow of care
Will hope and fancy twine their roses. --—^iMrs. Hemaav 3I&8
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE
PICKED-UP PARTICLES.
Men whe drink usually suck seed— cardamon seed. The New York Herald speaks of a "respectable forger."
We hand folks over to God's mercy, but show none ourselves. The Steubenville Herald says that the musical age is the op-era.
It is said that in the Welsh language an infidel book does not exist. Josh Billings got by "that strange spell, a name."—[Cin. Sat. Night.
The bravest are the tenderest the loving are the daring.—[Bayard Taylor. The largest sponge ever seen in New York has just arrived. It is eight feet in diameter.
A pound of gold now is of about the same value as a pound of silver in the eleventh century.
It is not merely the individual but society that suffers by every idle, every selfish, every unjust man.
A young man who has recently taken a wife says he didn't find it half so hard to get married as to get the furniture.-
Whoever is honorable and candid, honest and courteous, is a true gentleman, whether learned or unlearned, rich or poor.
The Detroit Free Press thinks that mourning should be done in the heart, and that grief should not be turned into a sign board.
We should give as we receive, cheerfully, quickly, and without hesitation for there is no grace in a beneifit that sticks to the fingers.—[Seneca.
An advertisement says: "Save your hair while you have it." Isn't this calculated to discourage emigration to the Indian country?—[Rome Sentinel.
Mrs. Mary Ann Simmons, who is the happy mother of twelve old maid daughters, gives concerts, with the assistance of her remarkable family, in Topeka, Kan.
Colonel Tom Scott, who retired from the presidency of the Pennsylvania railroad—a mau of immense wealth, went to house-keeping in 1847 on fifty dollars a month.
An Eastern paper says that when a Cincinnati belle is asked if there is much refinement and culture in that city she replies: "You jist bet your boots we're a cultured crowd." "What," says an inquisitive young lady, "is the most popular color for a bride?'.' We may be a little particular in such matters, but we should prefer a white one.—[Elmira Telegram.
Julia C. R. Dorr frankly confesses in a recent poem that she has four lovers. There is going to be a great deal of trouble in that locality, even if she marries the whole of them—we can tell her that. —[Elmira Free Press.
Chalk this to the sober Boston Journal: "My dear," said a fond father to a three-year-old, as he entered the nursery, "you nave a little sister baby." "Oh, let me run and tell mamma," was the quick demand of the happy brother.
Emerson says everything good in man leans on something higher. Emerson is right. We have seen a man lean on a telegraph pole, and the only thing good in him was beer. At least," he said it was good.—[Norristown Herald. "You're a fool, Frank," a Deadwood maiden said to her bashful lover "here I've been waiting two hours for you to kiss me, and there you sit just as if dad wouldn't come down in about ten minutes and close the shebang."—[Andrews' Bazaar.
Miss Louise M. Alcott has no regular study, and is indifferent to her surroundings when at work. She uses whatever pen, ink or paper is nearest, composes rapidly, and writes in a free, back-sloping hand, never copying her MS., and rarely going back to make alterations.
Just exactly what a woman wants a watch for is not quite certain. The chain is the only part of the arrangement she ever wears. The watch itself is "run down," mainspring broke, and tucked away in a dressing case most of the time. A woman and a watch are incompatible.
The poet Rogers wrote that— I The very law which molds a tear, And bids it trickle from its source,
That law preserves the earth a sphere, And guides the planets in their course.
Which makes the business of shedding tears a dignified and sublime employment.
A drunkard fled into the woods, near Nashville, Tenn., while wild with delirium tremens,Jdug a grave, and was found lying in it dead. His wife was made frantic by the sight, and she loudly called upon heaven toilet her die too. It happened that, on her way home, lightning struck and killed her.
Only a woman's hair,
1
Binding the now to the past, Only a single thread Too frail to last, Only a woman's hair
Thr reading a tear and a sigh, Only a woman's hair
^4 Found to^lay in the pie.
1
-I —{Steubenville Herald.
Contemporary contains a long article entitled, "Effect of smoking on boys." It is not right to smoke on boys. It imparts a disagreeable odor to their clothes, and when they go home they arouse suspicion in the minds of their mothers which are difficult to eradicate. The effect of smoking on some boys would bq. a rock hurled at the head of the smoker.— [Hartford Times.
After many years' experience and intercourse with our fellow men, we have reached the conclusion that the only men who know how to conduct a newspaper successfully and to public satisfaction, are those gifted beings who never do it They always devote their talents to making shoes^ or selling boards or fish, or laying brick, or building post holes, or some other literary pursuit.—[Hawkeye.
You can believe I hadn't seed it
mjwdfi
rd
Commonwealth Distribution Co.
AT MACAULEY'S TIIEATEK, In the City of Louisville, on
Tuesday, August 31st
These drawings, authorized by the legislature and sustained by all the courts of Kentucky, according to a contract made with the owners of the Frankfort grant, will occur regularly on the lhst day of every month, Sundays or Fridays excepted, for the period of fire years, terminating on June 30,1885.
The United States Circuit Court on March 31 rendered the following decisions: 1st—That the Commonwealth Distribution Company Is legal. 2nd—Its drawings are fair.
The management call attention to the liberal scheme which has met with such popular favor heretofore, and which will again be presented for the
AUGUST DRAWING 1 Prize 180,000 1 Prize 10.000 phta vvin 10 Prlze8$r,b6o ^h.'.'.'.'.VZ.V.' 10,000 20 Prizes $500 10,000 100 Prizes «100 10,000 204 Prizes *50 10,000 000 Prizes 320 12,000 1,000 Prizes $10 10,000 9 Prizes 8300 Approximate
Prizes 2,700 ,9 Prizes 800 Approximate I' Prizes 2 1,800 9 Prizes 100 Approximate
Prizes 900
,960 Prizes®, 8112,300 Whole Tickete, 82. Half Tickets, SI. 27 Tickets, 860. 55 Tickete, 8100.
Remit by Post-Office Money Order, Registered Letter Bank Draft or Express. To insure against mistakes and delays, correspondents will pleaw write their names
Ja
and places of residence plainly,giving! ber of Post-Ofllce box or Street, and County and State.
ber of Post-Ofllce box or Street, and Town,
All communications connected with the strlbution and Orders for Tickets should addressed to R. M. BOARDMAN, Courierrnal Building, Louisv'Me, Ky., or at No.
The Kentucky State Lottery Co are now holding their Drawings every 15 days (twice a month.)
The next Drawing will take place j' '•^,v
AUGUST 31,
"in which there is a chance of getting
LIST OF PRIZES:
1 Prize of 815,000 is .815,000 1 Prize of 5,000 is 5,000 1 Prize of 2,500 is 2,500 1 Prize of 2,000 is 2,000 5 Prizes of 1,000 are 5,000 10 Prizes of 500 are 5,000 In Prizes of 250 are 2,500 20 Prizes of 100 are 2,000 100 Prizes of 50 are 5,000 200 Prizes of 20 are 4,000 500 Prizes of 10 are 5,000 1,000 Prizes of 5 are 5,000 27 Approximation Prizes amounting to 2,700
1,876 Prizes amounting to 860,700
TICKETS, $1.
For full particulars and orders address G. UPINGTON, 599 BROADWAY, N. Y. or
M. J. RICHMOND, COVINGTON, KY.
List of drawings published in the New York World, Herala, Sun, Staats Zeitung, Philadelphia Record, Philadelphia Sunday Dispatch, Pittsburg Dispatch, Cincinnati Inquirer, Cincinnati Commercial and Louisville Commercial. All out-of-town ticket holders are mailed a copy of the officia list a^Jsoon as received.
Defensive Meditation
Ia'a precaution which should never be neg lectea when danger is present, and there fore a course of the Bitters at this season is particularly desirable, especially for the feeble and sickly. As a remedy for biliousness, dyspepsia, nervousness, and bowel complaints, there Is nothing comparable to this wholesome restorative.
For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally.
Western Female Seminar.A
OXFORD, 0.. Mt Holyoke Plan. The 26th year will commence Setpember 1880. Board, Tuition, Fuel and Lights, 1110 per annum. Send for catalogue to
KM
£*£1
JP.'X .*v*fe~'j •'p, *«. J^'-v
y«.-
Drawing
tr—
8PCIFIC MEDICINE.
...3 tor
itop organ
Helen Peabody, Principal
UlAIITfcn
U)CAL
J"51**9 Merjwhera «oaallTa«.
HJUI I U| Coffoe, Baktaf Powder, Flaaonnc £x trmrti, He., kf uaiple. to familiea. Profit pod. Oatfk tm. Paipla'a Va*va», Bcc
(TRADE MARH
TRADE MARRThe Grea tTRADE MARH English remedy. an unfailing cure
seminal
'liitf weakness, rmatorrhea impotency, ana ail diseases that follow, as a
ilFORE TAKIII,sequence of AFTER TAIIRI. self-abuse as loss of memory, unlve rsa lassitude, pain in the back, dimness of vision, Premature Old Age, and many other Diseases that lead to Insanity or Consumption and a Premature Grave.
VFuU particulars in our pamp let which we desire to send free by mail to every one. WThe Specific Medicine is sold by all druggists at 81 per package, or six packages for 85, or will be sent free by mail on receipt of the money by addressing. $4
The Gray Medicine Co.,
Mechanics' Block. Detroit, Micli. in Terre Haute wholesale and reullck Berry, .and by druggists re.
A Skin of Beauty is a Joy Forever. DR. T. FELIX GOURAUD'S Orienta Cream, or Magical Beautifier
Accept no counterfeit of similar
made. name. The distinguished Dr. L. A. Sayre, said to a lady of the
hau Uon
PRIVATE
ONLY $85 13 *!ops,FTW—Circular
on
15
itat for
3C.
itaaip.
Vi
Choleras
SOB, St. Leoia, Mk
OIVQRCESSH:
Quietly in when granted.
Enclose •UkmpJbr ad vie* HI
a
.•-»
Th# r*«t *t*vT*crr«
0«r.ATr*« Towxn—nr*
Mk
tenai debility, ui
timidity. I mpotosey, SM •th««M(gy, Or* and flfof
Ttroth ii t*Mt) afnmtaa. frto, VH MAW the *W KKOLAND WWlin
ItM. Barton. Maw.
'A
,*H-
XRBS.
-1 .• stitlng mens, ftuv -ftaatopga, )M]pltaloir Tpfrlu, fi"»pHitters." of. "Bead of, srocui aad Hop Bitters, and T»I will oe stro aealihy and happy.' do yon
KtotoS
(a patient:)—
"As you laaics will use them I recommend 'Gourattd't Cream as the least harmful vf all the Skin preparations."
Also Poudre Suotile
removes superfluous hair without injury to the skin. MME. M. B. T. GOURAUD, Sole Prop., 48 Bond St., N. Y. For sale by all druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers.
THEBETTTE STUART INSTITUTE A Day and FAMILY BOARDING SCHOOL for Young Ladles and Children. The course Is comprehensive. The Languages, Musie
iraatmeDt
of all
DVWARH.
•pceialtT. Comipoadanre deiirad
from all
&
partial •uOarjaa
ibiw iaiMH. AMRAU A. S. JOHNSON, M. I).
Lock Box
181,
Battle Craak,
MWH.
.1.
ANHOOD RESTORED
Prescription Free. For the speedy Cure of Seminal Weakness, Loss of Manhood and all disorders brought on by indiscretion or excess. Any Druggist has the ingredients. Address DAVIDSON
UO., NASSAU ST.. N.
-.um~ I"CUO TO MOO.-AII itrkOf a£tcliu*.—SolJ at
froe All
dara' triaJ-/VF(P* frt* if
67th St. tad lOfb Ave. SHEET MUSIC at price. CATALOGUE «f 3,000 CHOIR* piectt
TTLLT
ORGANS
PIANO CO- Rax *058. K.
MANHOOD RESTORED!
A victim of early imprudence, causing nervous debility, premature decay, etc., hawing tried in vain every known remedy, has discovered a simple means of self-cure, -which he will send vrkk to his fellow-sufferers. Address J. II. ^BEVESj^^ChathRm^treet^NewYojJjj
mtmsESFt?otm sswskvc
ACADEMIC
BOH8,
DEPARTMENT, with fon
different courses, leading to degrees and a NORMAL COURSE leading to a diploma. School of design with regular course of instruction leading to graduation and a diploma. Astronomical Observatory, with all the means and appliances for study leading to a degree. Academic year in all department* begins Sept. 28th, 1880. For Catalogue address the Rector,
Thomai Vickers,
r-t-"'"' Cincinnati, Ohio?
MOUNT AUBURN Y0UN8 LADIES' INSTITUTE, n" CINCINNATI.
45 Session opens Sept. 22. Send for Circular*.
H. MAKE MILLER, Preat. EMMA JPABJf' "MITH, BriKdpal,
MtTTernon Institute,
No. 46 Mi. cf«rnon rMace Baltl morn. h, French and German Boarding and Jay School for Young ladies, Mrs. Mary
English, id day Souu..i .w. .™.~,
I
x.
Jones and Mrs. B. Martland Principals, assisted by Professors Brickenstein, Lanier. Barton, and a large corps of others. The 21st annual term will commence September 20th 1880. Circulars sent on application.
."nun's Dltrrhtn jmedy is a speed* ntl certain cure fa*
DUrrhaaJ)yasntary. and mort e«ec*.uol Preventtri of Cholera and Choftra Morbus. 11 no gecre PreMrtion.asthe Ingredients of which c|,niPO»eJ are nponthe label of each bottle, and it i*
T'osSL'V
TRY
Old Dominion Coffee.
Best in the Market
THE
Indiana University
BLOOIOHGTOH, DfDIANA. liege year begins Sept. 2d, 1880. Tuition i. Contingent fee, $3.50 per term. Both sexes admitted on equal conditions. For Catalogues and other Information, address ROBT, C. FO8TKK, LKXXJSZ.MOSS,
CoU
Free
Secretary. President.
Female Seminary,
425 ft 427 4th Ave., Louisville, Ky
Oldest school in the city. A boarding and day school for yonng ladies and little girls Each nupil receives especial attention from d. The best always the cheapcatalogues, est Fore*, IJNIEF.NOLl Principal
3 &
PROVER
will bo
for a case that Bitters will not or help." "Hop Bitters N np, strengthens cures couUn from the first doee.1 "KIDNEY -NL nary com.''* -of krads r:.-«nen' ocred by liop Liti
strong
"Lttttea, *ot lo be strong, healthy and beautiful? Thaa Hop Bitter*.
VMt
"The greatest apis to a bleod and liver regulator—Hop Bitters.'7
IIop Coroit Ccau the sweetest, safest: and best. Asfc chlldmfe
The HOP PAD Stomach, Liver
•Ctanrrraen, Latr-
Bank"
Sidneys is ijHperi
id TM»«ri I® •J* other*. A era aad Ladies seed Bop Bitters daily." "Hea Bitters has restored to sobriety ami health, perfect wrecks from Intemperance. ttenritomaeh, sick •'AUftche and Olssl. •*, Hop Bitters cures •tv*few doses."
Druggists. D.I.C.Man ahs^trtal and lrrcslstaMe cure for drunkenuosa, «sa& of opium, tobaooo aad and narcotics.
All above sold druggists. Hop Bitten Manr facturlag. ,Bo«*eatarJHv.
Send for.
Removes Tan, Pimples freckles, MothPatches and every blemish on beauty. I a stood the test of SO years, and Issoharm1 ss we taste it to be sure the pre parati on is prop r1y
Circular.
ESTERBRQQK'S
aboard:
fOSSAU
8V ALL
STAT'O^ERS.
IST5RBROOK STSEL PEN 0€K •Works: Camden. 2t. Maw Torfe.
A n* and complcta 3UIDK TO WKHUIQK aoatalnlBK Chapters on A Compatf at Woautf hood. Salection of wife, Evidences
mt Karr»d
Twenty Yoarg'Experiwot
PUTATI
the
h^iSai a* Sbeaietaary yamdla tM Mat la
of
nMMmm,mA
wholwll
tuetnrj
prii-en. Hionnt Hom
at Centennial Exhibition. Matho-
na slick's Sella for Square OniMta. FTBCRT UPHYHTO in ITHW.-H.OOO in u»». Catalog °fJ»rf«Y*lf "nROiX'S. the beat In tie world. AM
VkqiM
vmhw ity. Temperaments, Sterility, Adrica to BP^yawn. Ha hsxl. ih* raaasa, MttflaKwy CstliwVMit, Van aai nsiilhMa
MHIBMIMtt|ADieIATFESSIT,TSD
rim*. Btwal artiea, L'fe Law tfliimin
__
Rijfctt
WMBWI, DIWMWOFxwMsraJ,TIMIRMAAAA WWMS,
It It alao a frivate Medical Adviaer on dleeaate rs aaltiat from Impure aexnal aaaooiationa, and oa aelf-abaia III k*Mt if he (Art atWr Hfh, kssr. M4..
mml
Maiiag BMitiMa itapmpr «r ehkapfy.
fiwtfU. A
book hi
(TMISMMAA4buafMiMMtM.m
|vfr«w ud Mn44raM iWlaa tlut a4«H
vkfem, tgMfMfi iInm ea—s a |mi
4MI W+M*.
It
TM/TFRN
iss^Usl liistla aay haiit, ssJ UstOOpgi^ MM PWu XagnAfl ai4W«si«W. Bei*weUd for$l. Dr. BMUHtsnil piPMinlMtt Nn ICVTvlJtiiHl and tHws^ MHINIkM IbM UN) WiU l«M» MMlUag tUf S^UM(hl aaMhr »..« «.»• u^. a.
a aewa »a
a a. am—«aJsKi|anlia FtaaHaat MM aMfu »si PSRTMI eeM kjr aniefn
SI elra pa fa thea Tarr prmknl twrtla. Ik Ifc I Cmtlft aaU III R..
Hki
I mMH •a' ^TrMHsTpyi iiiwywi 5rMU« S
a»jS6SSS5S2JE«K5
RATE OFMAGN Al AMIIAIU APERIENT AMD RIFRIIIRAIT, Tnl* well-known pruparntion is highly recommends® for Byarepils. Ilendnche, Mlekneaa of IM MeaiSth, Mid all comp/rmil« nrisiiift from Aridlifk Blltauaneaa, and nalnrlal Fevera. It cooli the blood ftii'A r«RUlat«x the bowels, it i.i A fltvorltA medicine for children, i'repared lv A. ROUBHP
Chemists, 281 Bleecher Ktreel, New York. Superior to Kinsral WaUrt, Seidlitz Powders, (•OA SALE BT ALL llBtlBOIWS.
A FREE
Root of nearly 1001 art octavo paves tor tno si iul'ifvsitiablo i-. li. 15. KOOTK.note*.I8«*un
Omea.its of the br
athinu irio»n« Diseases of Men OiM.-*e» of \Vomep» schesnnJ pains HeartTroublo» nivl ngreatvarl^ ty of chronic diseases, with cviuni-e tliii IU mo* eases these diseases are cur able. Bentfor a three cen! Stamp. Address, XURRA JJILLPtrB.CO. No, 129En at. New York Ci...
BOOK,
SUMMIT
STOVE PIPE SHELF
UTENSIL STAND.
IFICVTS WA.NTKJD Per the most convenient article pers. One Ageat made IIOS.CI
is 19 4ays another hi days another |U la 1
Sflbred te Hewtekeep day. Itwi and freight charges to ageosVfM. Far •tn«lanl3aresa J. iTstltPAM 4 N.a 8IMIN1ATI, 4
niESCRIfTION FRB
UWrthespeedTCareof^sialaalWeakasM, liskMd, Prematara Debility, Serroaa CoafWsloa of Ideas, Avanloa ictlre HemoiTf and all Dlsor
IT
Secret Habits aad Bzeessta* the lagredieats. Address,
DR. JAQUE8 C0.71
210 v«t sixth sCononniATi, ofin
NERVOUS DEBILITY.
DUDCVC Vital Weakness and Pwf rlllllll a tration from orer-work
cm
mlEl
•ad pi Been In use 90 years, the most success.
G. L. HARRISON,
efiOCER, DEALER IN FEED.
aerof Sivsiti nJ Svrjes, ^Vill keep dnrlng the summer ce cream at !0 Cents a Dish
JNO. F. REGAN, Insurance Agent*
Has Dome of the best
Fire Companies'
in the oountry. Call onhlm for particulaw
Theoldest engineering school in Amerlcaa Next term begins September, 19th. The Register of 1880 contains a list or the grada atee for the pastM years, with their poal* ions alao, course of study, requirement^ xpenses, etc. Address.
DAVID M. GREENE, Director.
TAII .64TP
til,
9 CaTofwl Plctnr*
IVLL WIL ftt'i 1 ''ly iii^fd.f u*. ".'.riliiecU Is find. Scud iiSKCTMiufkla,*.*
pn Elegant Cards New Chromo, Wv Gilt-Edge, A c., with name. lOGc prlng, E. Wallingford, Ct.
