Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 September 1880 — Page 3

THE DAMBOY® MISTAKE.

Of course it waa a din, For him to stick a pin In the chair Where his parent often sat, Hat he didn't think of that—

Pidnt care.

On the cuhslon, soft and fat, Ijay his father'# Sunday hat, And he knew That he'd never atop to look For the tiny, pointed hook

BUcking through.

So behind the lonnge he got, For lie thought he'd rather not Be around Whan the parent raised the hat And npon the pin-point sat—

Judgment sound.

Then he heard his father's step And another, but he kept Like a mouse. The new parson, sure as fate, Moved into the placo of late,

Houls to rouse.

Host, from chair removing hat Bade him seat himself in that. And he did. From inspired lips there fell Earnest words and curding yell

All unbid.

Now that boy haa lost his vim, And a seat that Just suite him Must be very soft And he wears a weary frown, But you'll note he don't sit down,

Very oft.

SATISFIED.

Wot hero! Not here! Not where the sparkling water Fade Into mocking sounds as wc draw near: Whore in the wilderness cach footstep falters—

I shall bq satisfied—but oh, not here!

Not here, where every dream of bliss deceives us, Where the worn spirit never/gains its goal Where haunted ever by the thoughts that grieve us,

Across us floods of bitter memory roll.

There is a land where every pulse is thrilling With rapture earth's sojourners may not know, "Where licazcn'B repose the weary heart is stilling, .And peacefully life's tirao-tossod currents flow. Far out of sight, while yet the flesh enfolds us,

Lies the fair country where our hearts abidc And of its bliss is naught more wondrous told us

Than these few words, "I shall be satisfled." Satisfied! Satisfied! the spirit's yearning

For sweet companionship with kindred minds? The silent love that her meets no return ing,

The inspiration that no language finds-

Shall they bo satisfied? Tho soul's vague longing— The aching void which nothing earthly fills? Oh, what desires upon my soul are thronging,

As I look upwards to the heavenly IIIIIB!

Thither my weak and Avcary steps are tend lng: Savior and Lord, with Thy frail child abide! Guide ine toward home, whore all my wan derings ending

I shall see Thee and then "be satisfied."

LOOK OUTDAR!

I licahs de alarm f'm de number one box Listen sinnahs, listen! Hark how earnis'ly the angels knocks

De fire is hot an' hissin'.

Angel's tappin' on de conscience bell, Hcah it, hcah it bangin'! It's a gre't big fire dey's a-habbin' in hell

Dat's why do 'larm bell's clangin'.

Afire dat de ingines nebber git around Sinnahs br'ilin', fryin Wliar de Babcok 'string'shers can't be found

An' dey ain't no use o' tryin'.

Flames is a-burnin' up higher an' higher— Surprising oh, surprisin' You has an interest in dat fire,

An'de flames is still a-risin'.

Jump when you hcah dat warnin' chime Jnmp up, sinnahs, jump up! Do your do in berry quick time

Now is de time to jump up.

BELLAIRE—HAIR.

A charming young girl in Bellaire Was in trouble about her front hair If arranged in a bang

It never would hang

At all straight, but waved wild in the

air

So she heated an iron red-hot, And went in for a frizz on the spot. She will never look cute,

But by purchasing ute

Is as likely to fool folks as not,

THE RULING PASSION.

She chucked him under the chin, and then I saw him seize her hand The light from her diamond ring it flashed

Like a star supremely grand. I heard him whisper of love and truth,,. But she turned away her head, And told the beautiful, smiling youth

She'd rather have cream instead.

"TEARS, IDLE TEAR

She wept, and she wept, and she wept, As she sat with her head in a wimple, "Why this grief?" I exclaimed, as I stept

To her aid and her answer was simple:

"They said I could make either side In my cheek, a most beautiful.dimple If I cut out a piece and I tried

And it isn't a dim—it's a PIM—P'LE!

Very handsome mother-of-pearl brooches and ear-rings, carved in cameo heads •with settings or fine gold, are among toe fresh devices for rendering womankind attractive.

•. ..

-tr,

SOWG er PAmrnre.

Say farewefl, aad let me go: Shatter every I All the fatare can bestow

Will I welcome now. And if this fair band I touch 1 have worshipped overmuch,

It was my mistake—and so, Say farewell, aad let me go.

ay. Murmur no regret, Stay your teardrops ere'they now—

Do not waste them yet They might pour as pours the rain, And not wash away your pain—

I have tried them and 1 know— Say farewell, and let me go.

Say farewell, and let me go, Think me not untrueTruth as truth is, pven so

Am I true to you 1 If the ghost of love may stay Where my fond heart dies to-day,

I am with you always—so, Say farewell, and let me go.

From Chamber's Journal. THE DEAR DEAD FACE.

The war I refer to was not one of those which we have lately had upon our own hands, but that whioh a few years ago raged so long, so fiercely, between the northern and the southern states of America. It was my fortune to serve on the medical staff with a portion of the northern army during most of that terrible struggle and it is needless to SAy that many personal incidents came under my notice, which will never leave my memory. Not oue of them, however, made so painful an impression upon me as that which I am about to describe.

Toward noon on the day after one of the fiercest figths of all the war, a young soldier was brought in from the battlefield, where by some mischance he had been overlooked and abandoned, while comrades of his far less grievously wounded than he, had been sheltered and tended before nightfall. The poor fellow had lain all night and during the long scorching hours of the morning, amid heaps of dead, both men and horses, suffering from the loss of an arm, and other wounds. An army surgeon is not as a rule a man prone to undue sentiment or to feminine softness at the sight of physical suffering and I am not conscious of any weakness that makes me an exception in this particular. There was, however,in this youth's expression of countenance something which struck me irresistibly, and with the strong glance of his large, bright eye, fixed my attention and awakened my eager interest. He was a slender youth, tall, yet gracefully made, with a head which, as the novelists phrase it, would bring ecstacy to the soul of a sculptor and every feature molded to thr true type of manly beauty. A single glance gave me this summary outline of my patient before I had time to ascertain the nature or extent of his injuries. A very brief examination soon told me that the life which for hours had been ebbing so painfully away was well nigh spent and he must have read the awful truth in my face, for he whispered to me faintly and sadly as I rose: "Is there, then, no hope?"

Alas! there was no hope but I had not speech to tell him so for something was rising into my throat and choking me, and a moisture in my eyes was blinding me and the only reply I could give him was a shake of my head. The brave spirit which had nerved him through the fight had kept him up till now but now, when the dismal truth had broken upon him, there passed over his pallid face a look of mingled disappointment and resignation which it was painful beyond expression to witness. I lost no time in giving him such surgical aid as his desperate condition called for and his waning strength could bear. I had hardly done so when an unexpected voice addressed him: "My own dear boy! my brave, heroic boy!"

The tone was of cheery encouragement, yet feebly disguising the woe of a breaking heart for it was his mother's voice that spoke, and her lips that kissed his fevered brow. Gently she turned back his disordered and blood-stained locks, dissembling with evident effort the mother's anguish, lest she should add another sorrow to (the pangs of his dying hour. "My mother lie cried, wuh almost frantic delight. "Is it you, my mother? How came you here? Is it you, or am I dreaming?" and as he spoke he threw his only remaining arm around her neck and kissed her with all the rapture of a child. "Thank Godl" he continued in snatches, as his failing strength allowed him—"thank God for this blessed joy, that I see your face onoe more, my mother. All last night, as I lay amid the dreadful sights around me, I prayed one prayer in all my pain, and only one. I prayed that I might look once m^ge upon your face, my sweetest mother, once more h?ar your voice. I seemed to pray in vain, yet still I prayed." "My poor, poor boy," she said "a curse upon the hand that has brought you to this!" and her tears at length broke from her control.

To the amazement of all, there appeared to be something in this exclamation of his mother that stimulated the dying youth to a final effort of speech and motion. He half raised himself from his bed, and with that unaccountable energy which sometimes marks the dosing moments of life, he said:

0

"JTo, no! don't Bay that. Don't say accurst. Yon know not the words you are speaking. Oh!" he cried, after a moment's pause, "how shall I tell her

fine TffglCB HAtmS WEEKLY GAZETTR

the horrible talv? How cast I smite her down with such a Wow, at such an hour?" and he fell bafck exhausted upon his pillow. The effort had been too much for him,. and for some moments we doubted if the spirit had not fled. It was only a passing weakness, however, and before long he rallied again. Again he spoke, but with a kind of dreamj half consciousness at one moment gas ing into his mother's eyes, at anothe) seemingly forgetful of her presence.

Truly ,it was a bloody field," he said. "I had been in several hard-fought fights before, but they were all children's passtime compared with that of yesterday. No sooner had we come in right of the enemy

a

than the ringing

voice of the general was heard: "At them, my boys, and do your iuty!"

What happened after that I know not 'Know not," do I say? Oh, would it were true that I knew not! Begrimed with dust, each man was confronted with his own individual foe, and if there be fighting among fiends, then surely did our fighting resemble theirs. I was myself wounded when a fair-haired man bore down upon me from the opposing line, if line it could then be called, and I received his headlong onset with a terrific bayonet thrust, and as he fell 1 thought of Cain, and of that deed which has made the riBme of Cain a name oj malediction forever. jknow not why. but I felt myself ^compelled to halt ii the midst of the melee to kneel beud that fair-haired man and look at him. I turned him over, and looked upon his face—his dear, dead face. Ah! mother, it was—it was—it was my brother's face, and my own arm had slain him!"

The scene at that moment it would not be easy to describe. In an instant the Jweeping mother's tears were dry and her face became passionless as marble. My own emotion, which {L have already acknowledged, I took no pains to conceal. Rough, hard-favored soldiers standing by listened with bated breath to this more than tragic narrative, while big tear-drops welled from their eyes unchecked and undisguised. "Yes," helcontinuec^oliloquising, "my own |arm had slain him. Dear, darling brother Fred! I laid my face upon his, and it was cold—that face which in our boyhood seemed but the mirror of my own: ever near me—at home, at school, at meal, at play—which laughed when I was glad, $nd wept when I was sorrow ful. Oh, would we both had died in those fresh bright days of innocence kissed his pallid lips I looked into his eyes, but in them was no responsive glance. He was dead. I had slain him! The very thought was a burning madness in my brain. heeded not the carnage around me. I thought not of my own wounds. I even knew not when my arm was gone. Oh, the arm that had done such a deed deserved to perish Forgive me, O my brother! How gladly would I give my life to bring back thine again! Stay, friends do not shut out the blessed light. Let in the light. Fred, sweet brother, put up your sword, and let us play with flowers once more upon this pleasant grass."

And so he passed away—to join his brother, let us hope, in a land where bloom the flowers that never fade, where strifes and wars are unknown, and where the mysteries and misunderstandings of our present state are dispelled by the light that never dies.

Reverence for the childless mother's grief, as well as the many-voiced call of duty, prevented my making at that moment the inquiries which thronged my mind both as to the history of this strangely sorrow-smitten family, and the means by which the poor mother had come to know of her son's condition and whereabouts. I have often since tried to trace her but the search has always been rui tless. They certainly belonged to the better class of society and I think it likewise certain that they were southerners. The younger brother—which took him to be—whose sad narrative is here given, had probably resided for some time in the north, and becoming imbued with the sentiments and opinions which charged the atmosphere around him, found himself eventually in the ranks. In a Word, I look upon the whole episode as one of those awful coincidences of fate which are generally thought to take place only in the pages of romance, but which a wide experience has taught me to believe are by no means infrequent among the unrecorded

realities of life.

4 1

Called on the Wrong Man.

A

New Hampshire lad broke a car ftrindow on the Concord Railroad the other day, and put his back against the broken pane in order to conceal it when the conductor passed through the car. The

next moment he turned with a smile of satisfaction to

a man in the seat be­

hind him, saying: "Don't tell on me. "Ah! but

I am the Superintendent

the road,"

answered

Ho In the

"Only twenty!"

rgB made

ed "Geor ie me pro:

of

his

ance.

chance acquaint­

Ceasn Falsehoods ExplodedWashington Special General Francis E. Walker, Superintendent of the Census, says that none of the newspapers making the allegation of a

fradulent enumeration in the South have brought forward anything tangible in support of them. All the statements are based simply on the discrepancy |between the census of 1870 and 1880 in certain localities in South Carolina and Miss. In some counties the increase in population is reported at 150 per cent, over 1870. This, General Walker holds, does not prove that the enumeration recently taken has been fraudulent. The General is inclined to the belief that if the census of 1870 had been properly taken, no great disparity would exist in the showing. He does not hold himself responsible for any errors that may have been made in 1870, as by law h« was not then allowed to appoint enumerators in the Southern 8tates named. As a consequence of this, he says that the United Slates Marshalssome of whom were colored, and others of whom were Northern men, unacquainted with the country—were given the work to do. An investigation of the census returns, he said, has already been commenced, and if in one countv in South Carolina he finds one thousand families returned in the census of 1880 and in that of 1860, but not in that of 1870, he will conclude that the last enumeration was defective, and will abandon the investigation.

An Important Discovery. Scientific men have long sought a sub stitute for mother's milk, that while con taining the elements to develop the bones muscles, and other tissues of infants, should also be agreeable to the taste and easily digested, and the German chemists claim to nave found it in "German Infant Meal," or "Paedotrophine." The milk of a young, healthy mother is of course the highest standard possible. But all mothers are not young and not a few are unhealthy, and many thousands of children are annually starved or poisoned into disease and death by unhealthy, weakly mother's milk, and other thousands are stuffed with all manner of unsuitable substitutes, with the same results. Any one who would furnish a wholesome, pleasant, digestible food for infants, uniform in quality and free from objections, would be a public benefactor, and physicians and thousands of grateful mothers be lieve they have found it in the "German Infant Meal." Sold by all druggists at 50 cents per can.

All Persons who Aspire to beauty

ot personal appearance should not neglect that natural necessity, the hair.' By many it has been neglected until it has grown thin, gray or entirely fallen off. The LONDON HAIR COLOR RESTORER restores nature's losses and imparts a healthy natural color, thickens thin hair, cures dandruff and all itchy eruptions on the scalp, insuring a luxuriant growth of hair, in its natural color. Ask your druggist for London Hair Restorer, universally Used by the fashionable world both at home and abroad. Price, 75 cents. Six bottles. $4. Buntin & •»»«». T^rre Haute.

th

Popular monthly Drawing OF THE

Commonwealth Distribution Co.

AT miCAlJLEY'S THEATEtt, lii the City of Louisville, on

THURSDAY, SEPT. 30 1880.

These drawings, autnorlzed by the legislature of 1878 and sustained by all the courts of Kentucky, occur regularlv on the LAST DAT OF EVERY MONTH, Sundays and Fridays excepted, for the period of Ave years

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.

N. B. This compady has now on hand a large reserve fund. Read tlxe list of prizes for the

SEPTEMBER DRAWING-

1 Prize ......J30,00 1 Prize 10.000 1 Prize 6000 10 Prizes 81,000 each 10,000 20 Prizes 8500 10,000 100 Prizes 8100 10,000 209 Prizes 860 10,000 600 Prizes 820 12,000 1,000 Prizes 810 10,000 9 Prizes 8300 Approximate

Prices 2,700 9 Prizes 8'00 Approximate Prizes 1,800 9 Prizes 100 Approxlmat'n

Prizes 000

1,900 Prizes8, 'A, 8112,300 Whole Tickets, 82. Half Tickets, 81. 27 rickets, 850. 65 Tickets, 8100.

Remit by Post-Offlce Money Order, Registered Letter Bank Draft or Express. To Insure against mistakes and delays, correspondents will please write their names and places of residence plainly, givingn umber of Post-Offlce box or Street, and Town County and State.

All communications connected with the dlsstributlon and Orders for Tickets should be addressed to R. M. BOARDMAN, CourierJournal Building, Louisv* Ue, Ky., or at No 307 and 309 Broadway New York.

Grain Speculation!

GRAIN and PROVISIONS in SMALL or LARGE quantities—• 10 to any amountwrite for circulars.

A. J. Maloy, Broker

125 La SaHe Street, CHICAGO, ILL

Member Chicago Board of Trade. Chicago Open Board of Trade.

Bowel Complaints

A Speedy and Effectual Cure.

PERRY DAVIS' PAIN-KILLER

Bas stood the test of FOBTTTKABS trial Directions \cith eachbotiU,

Chotore

explainwhen we I

married, toat I never would change.

was twoi^ tef «n41 MSMI to kaaif my pTNUMk "?"r~

saa'i DUurrl jmedy is a, speedf certain ease to?.

S3S&«e«rlbad by thejnostanunantphjnrtcJans.

*CIFIC HEDICHTB.

TMN IS ARK The GreatTRAOC English remedy, an unfailing cure for seminal weakness, rmatorrhea impotency, ana all diseases that follow, as a

1

mm.*

A

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self-abase 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. *»"*Full particulars in our pamplet which we desire to send free by mall to every one. ••"The Specific Medicine is sold by all druggists at $1 per package, or «ix packages for $5, or will be sent free by mai on receipt of the money by addressing.

The Gray Medicine Co.,

Mechanics'Block, Detroit, Mich, in Terre Haute wholesale and reulick Berry, and by drngglsts e.

Skin of Baauty is a Joy Forever. DR. T.FELIX GOURAUD'S Orienta Cream, or Magical Beautifler

MMB. M. B. T. GOURAUD, Sole Prop., 48 Bond St., N. Y. For sale by all druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers.

U. 8«£^re*aed or Palntol Period*, tea .too profuse Period*, ronp, Oeugh. Difficult Breathing, on*.

It Rheum, Brralpalas, Eruptions, J5 LheamatUni, Rheumatic Pains, .35 ''ever and Acue. Chill. Fever, Agues, SO 'Ilea. Blind or Bleeding, .80 Catarrh, acute or chronic Influenza, 50 Vhovplna Cough, violent Cougha, .90 leitral Debility. Phjrs'l Weakness, .90 Jdaey Diaeaae, .50

For sale by or sent by the Case, or single THU,druggists,

^HIGHLAND HALL.

[Established by the late EdwardP. Weston LLr.D.

J, 1880. For catalogue, etc., apply Nath'l Butler, Jr., A. M., Principal.

Louisville

Female Stminary,

425 & 427 4th Ave., Louisville, Ky

Oldest school in the city. A boarding and day school for young ladies and little girw Each pupil receives especial attention from Miss Nold. The best is always the cheapest. or catalogues,

Address, ANNIE F. NOLD Principal.

Western Female Seminar.A OXFORD, 0., Mt Holyoke Plan. Tht 86th year will commence Setpember 1880. Board, Tuition, Fuel and Lights, §17C per annum. Send for catalogue to

Mias Helen Peabody, Principal

THEBETTIE STUART INSTITUTE

A Day and FAMILY BOARDING SCHOOL tor Young Ladies and Children. Thecouree is comprehensive. The Languages, Musie Drawing, Painting, Elocution, each Is thoj. oughly taught. For terms address MRS. M. McKEE HOMES, Springfield, 111.

EVJIURIY OF CniGINHATSITI

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Thomas Viekers,

Cincinnati, Ohio*

MOUNT AUBURN Y0UN8 LADIES' INSTITUTE,

CINCINNATI.

45 SoKlon opens Sept. 22. Send for Circular*. H, THAWS MIZZBB, Pre*. TAXX" "MXTH,

DIVORCES SH

and Qnletly In S) 'tt when grantad.

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2 2 iKr*"

ESTERBROSK'S

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Removes Tan, Pim

fes,

iles MothPatches and every blemish on beauty. I a stood the test of SO years, and iss

pre pa rati on is prop 1

Accept no counterfeit of similar The distinguished Dr. L. A. 8a: nguisnea ur. L, A* FCJ

&yre,

said to a lady of the hau tton (a patient:)— "As you ladies will use them I recommend Gouraud's Cream at the least harmful of all the Skin preparations." Also Poudre Subtile removes superfluous hair without injury to the skin.

iCu,

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Proved from ample experience an entire raeoess. Simple, Prompt, Efficient, aad Bailable, they are tho only medicines adapted to popular use. LIST PRMCITAL DOS. CUKF8. PBIC*.

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free of charge, on secelpt of

prioe. Bend for Dr/Humphreys* Book on Diaeaae. dkc^, (144 pages), also Illustrated Catalogue, FBBE.

Address, Hiaaiphreys' Homeopathic HMe4. Co.. 100 Fulton St., New York.

ANHOOD RESTORED

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PIANOS

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ORGAN?

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ALL

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U»Lift |V*LAWAWM IT cm*.

It t« alio a Private Bcdloal AdvUer nn diarjaw Mk inlling (ran liepara wtual auooiatfona, and on talf-abuu—tiM UM hu Ik ill« im Ml,| I Turer #»«.. IN aaairing NAMIM T»PW|I «V »I fcv pruti* ui wrtinu rWlM tMU i4«fc wJ «r w*r-

MR OTHER 006 CM KM SI

MI VMIMM. SwtMftM ft* Tfli, Bmm aB pcraTMarffeHnf fVwa RFPT*. irim I lk«M will W*r» auwcihiaf U»

AMMtrtlM

kavttM aB panrwaefhHnf ftwe RFPT»,fctm lk«M will War* auwcihiaf U» 1 to *4 a Tree. tiK

•ft cntfrtlj New and positively R«mtd| for tfafl ipttdy airi perm*

of iwnlnal XmlMionu and Xmpotenoy br th« I Hiit AppttotttM tht prist*p*T 8a»t of tM vUtMfc li wttb no paui fc«oo •«**«& e«, tod dwl 111 ail (b* wdiaary puna!* «t Bf«. Thto «T amum

MM IA WF MI** KM, tod it M» ft

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•MM ibwl HurtpMMtaL PfMilwl MM MfutM Om vfll dvi p»rf»rt ntiAitML iiM WtiMlMM rvoftMlM 10 b« iht wxM nmi «td tf iii iTihii mmIMriaf Ihfc WT pnnlni trotibU. Th*

1 O E

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A FREE

Bonk of nearly lOOlaiM n'Lllvo pam-s tlie licja mi' fva!m»t»5enote«,l# ",i:. K. H. i-'oritf.. vn S*t9 I.i'o, Diswascs of tlio

ATHINK I«UIM DISEASES ot Men of

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STOVE PIPE SHtLF-

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Vital Weakness and Pro* tratlon from orar-work am Is radl oared

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flDlNipady known. Price Kper rial, or 5 rials an® fiffgarial of powder for

$5,

sent post-free»i»»

MANHOOD RESTORED I

A victim of early Imprudence, causing ner*. •ns debility, premature decay, etc., bavingtrled in rain every known remedy, has discovered a simple means of self-cure, which be will send wai to hi* fellow-sufferers. Address J. fl. RBBVBS. 48 Chatham street. Jlew York.

CHICAGO

FEMALE CQLLEGB

XOSMSI Park (near Chieaco). 'latlala Departments, oratfnattag

Fraparatorp

OoUi Xoalat An a specialty. Kmlneat~Pr«f Pall t«ni September for catoi THATBB/resident, ItadiHttNiltOUnis

isssS •«»w

(aiofoa aM PaA.HL,

G. L. HARRISON,

GROCER, DEALER IN EED.

nerof Seventh ani

Papnr Straw,

Will keep daring the summer

ce Cream at 10 Cents a Ofsh

Twenty Yean'Experfeaw ia the trtataaeat of all r«n i— Dmim. luntiWiunaa

PRIVATE:

••mfr T—1 Area all partiM iifirln tnmlii* ttmnVAUnm A. S. JOH MkW, M. D. Utt tar It

I, BaMle Oratli, MiA

IIHI -filTF tffl 9 C?lor*d rictawk

lULLvl HUi it \vtj ine«-nini)a. T'^.'iit^ta tm 9ad.8«ada»»~-*• wtfj, kaflkloXm

UIIHTftl bOCAL AOKJIT3 «*erywhjr« MaallTe%

WAN I til

Coflae. Bairn? Poi.d»r,7"»e»»e traeta, etc., bjr tannic, to faiaHiea, rnSt

pet. Ornmine. fujlrt T»U,giMP,St.foaia. Mm