Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 18 November 1880 — Page 3

A 1TERT.

To upend thf Ion*, warm daya

MUent baaide the ailent-flowing atreamsi.— To nee, not gaz\ To hear, not lUtea, thought* exchanged for dreams.

Rco clouds that slowly pane,

'trailing thoir ahadowa o'er Uie far faint down, And ripening grans, While y»:t the meadows wear their xUu-ry crown.

To hear the breezes sigh

#001 in the silver leaves like railing rain, I'nu&c nnd go by, JHred wund'rciin o'er tliesolitary plain.

Hen. far from all affright,

Mhy vor-oreuturea play hour after hour. And night t»y night The white moon broaden like a hemlock flow'r

Thus lost to human things,

To blend at last with Nature, and to bnr What »oug»he sings Low to herself whou there is no one near.

MAROAHETL. WOODS.

THE HKK AT THE ALTAR.

AduHky bee, with its gossamer wing* Fluttering wft in the Hummer air, Came, through the chapel window low, To fchc Khrinc, where, the priest, in his r»be* of «now,

Was breathing tlie Consecration prayer.

Humming itaduloet hymn of prulte, Balancing bright on its gauzy wings, The bee hung over the altar-stone Over the rnlnaUire marble throne

Which bore tho weight of the King of kings.

(Hose to the sacrificial hand Of the fulryoung priost the creature drew. As though In the Host and tne sacred Wine JtMsented tho sweetness of buds divine,

Heavenly honey, celestial dew!

Hieri on mine ear 11 whisper fell, Breathed I)y the Hpirlt: "O sweet, sweet Flower! Wall may the bee fly closc to thee, I ail red by the SCOP of thy purity,

Drawn by thy beauty's wondrous power.

"Flowerof flowers! Thine odors rare Ravish the soul with a rapture new. Ix! ere the lights of the altar wane. »r« the Host and the Chalice are lifted agaiu, Draw near, like the ler, O sons of men!

For His Hear?, and Its honey are all for you." —The Catholic World.

IF I COULD KNOW.

"If I could know," I said, Weeping beside my dead, •"Know all about the llfo lleyond this mortal strife.

Then 1 might bear to give Thee up, dear heart, and live As ono who only waits The opening of barred gates."

Just then a lily bell From out the ileiui and fell 1 took it In ray own— I thought how it had grown.

From senseless bulb and root, A slonddr, fragile shoot, Until, with sudden power, II burst to bud, to flower!

Hut how? N ay, who can know ust how the lilies grow? A ml, were tho socrets ours, ®ay, would It change the flowers?

And If we knew what Ilea ./ Beyond these earthly skies, Knew all, past doubt, what then? Would wo be better men?

THOUGHTS OF A LOVER.

Asleep or waking, visions of your face, With all itoquletgrace And eoll perfection, all the calm surprise And passionless great beauty of your eyes, Forever mark my spirits loneliness In all my dreams or you in ev'ry place.

Ah, sweet, you yen did not and you can not guess How much your love could bless My whole poor lire that is so sad and strange How ouc more word its bitterness would change! »t wherefore should I moan for my despair Hiucc, If I could, 1 would not love you less?

The very thought of you makes sweet the air With perfumes ricli and rare The bare fields blossom Into garden bow'r* The snu shines forth as in departed hours, And all the summer land is red and white With that delicious flower whose name you bear! O d*ar imaginingsof day and night,*

Ye vanish soon from sight.

Yet, with your fleeting fancies, mitt* to show How sweetjpr than all other things below, How goodly, great, and gracious love must bo, That with athought ean bring so nanch de"Bht!

•TO"?

An old lady visiting the Antiquarian Museum in Edinburgh the other day, on invpecting the old weapons very earnest ly, and failing to find what site was ap parent!)* looking for, asked a visitor if he eould tell her wHereabouts they kept the Axe of the Apostles.

A polite scoundrel in brought up before the police court Just as the presiding magistrate is about to begin his questioning, the prisoner says, affably, to the policeman "Wears his years well, the judge does. Doesn't look a day older than he did when we were introduced to each other, ten years ago."

LADY LAWYERS.*

The female millenium appears to be dawning. There are women doctors clerks, and jury-men, and soon there will be woman lawyers. Before they attempt to speak they should use SOZODONT to

Jistined

ive beauty to ttjefr mouth which are to com[Yhfte their success as orators.

Female Lawyers will stick to their Uents, like 8r Aurora's GLOBto wood.

TWO 8FIDKR&.

Two spider*— *0 the story 1 Upon a living bent, Entered a meeting house one day, And hopefully were heard to My, "Here we shall have at least fair play.

With nothing to prevent."

Each chose his place and went to work. The light webs grew apace One on the sofa spun hi* thread, Hut shortly came the sexton dread, And swept him off, and so, half dead.

He f"ught another place.

"I'll fry the pulpit next," said he "There surely is a prue The desk appears so neat and clean I'm sure uo spider there has been. Ucsides, how often have I seen

The pastor brushing flies."

He tried the pulpit, but alas His hopes proved visionary With dusting brush the sexton came, And spoiled his geometric game, Nor gave him time nor space to claim

The right of sanctuary.

At length, half-starved and weak and lean, Me sought his former neighbor, Who now had grown so sleek and round. He weighed the fraction of a pound. And looked as if the art he'd fonnd

Of living without labor.

"How is it, friend," he asked, "that 1 Kndure such thumpsand knocks, While you have grown so very gross?" 'Tis plain," he answered "not a lese I've met since first I spun across

The contribution box."

«~[Early Day*.

MAGNOLIA'S LOYERS.

BY SHIRLEY BROWK.

Magnolia Vaue, was a dark-haired tropical-eyed young beauty who had come up from an orange farm in Florida to spend a season in New York with her aunt. "YOH see, Aunt Pen. I don't know anything at all," frankly acknowledged Miss Vane, "about people, and manners, and customs, you know. Of course I've had a governess and learned whole pages of ancient, and exercise books, and all that sort of thing, but there isn't any society ut Orange Glade, and I'm a perfect barbarian."

Apparently, however, beautiful young barbarians in white silk and pearls suited the New Yorkers, for Miss Magnolia Vane became the fashion at once. "Don't flirt, my dear," said Aunt Penfield, gravely. "You must remember that you are an engaged young lady." "Am I flirting?" said Magnolia, lifting the black velvet eyebrows that were arched so perfectly. "Dear Aunt, you must tell me these things, for I know so little about society and its manners."

And Magnolia took refuge behing'her ignorance with the most charming con-, fldence in the world.

Major Brabazon, tho fiance of this bewitching "belle sauvage," took matters very coolly. The match had been made up between his mother, a handsome old despot in point lace, diamonds, and a Roman nose, and Magnolia's father, a domineering Southerner who believed that marriages in Floridian families, like royal alliances, should be arranged while the parties were yet ^n their cradles. "Yong people, my dear madam," said he, sententiously, to Mrs. Brabaaon, "have no experience of their own. It is only right that we should give them the benefit of ours." 80, when Major Brabazon came to Orange Glade, Magnolia looked out at him from beneath her dark, drooping

lashes, thinking how handsome he was, and secretly wondering what he thought of her. She supposed, of coarse, she must be in love with him—people always were in love with the men they married, weren't they? And when she leard that he had obtained leave of abence from his regiment, and was to pend the winter also in New York, she was rather gratified than otherwise. "Of course he'll take me to the opera, .ind all that sort of thing," said she.

But Major Brabazon did not trouble himself especially to make the winter agreeable to the young lady, from Orange Glade. "These early engagements area confounded nuisance," said the Major. "Miss Vane is a pretty little girl enough—but how do I know that I may not see some one whom I like better? And if I once begin systematically to devote myself to her shrine, she'll expect too much of me. I 'may see fit to break off tho match yet."

While in her turn Magnolia was solemnly considering the situation. "Aunt Pen," said she, "when my uncle was engaged to you, how did he behave?" "He was devoted to me," said Aunt Pen, with a little natural pride. "Did he ever take you out?" questioned Magnolia. "Everywhere 1"

70a

of me!"

•6,

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1

"And haunt you like a shadow at balla and partiea?" "Of course he did."

Magnolia shook her head. "Thatisn't like Miles Brabaion at all," said the. "I think," very slowly, "he takes too much for granted." "My dear!" remonstrated Mrs. Pes. field.

1

"He lias new once alluded to out engagement since I hare bees in town," said Magnolia, biting her lip. "In fact he rather avoids me than otherwise! Do

know, aunt, I think he's tired

rr

"Noniafl®, my love I" But while Major Brabaion was dowly making up his mind whether he would majrry Mi»„y*ne or not, there was anf?* sm­

A-4.*

«m TKKttK HAUTE WgMKLY GAZETTS

other young gentleman engaged in the same social problem—Wayne Clifford, a handsome young artist, with only his profession to depend on. "Little girl," said Uncle Penfield, patting Magnolia's cheek one day as they came home together from a morning concert, "take care." "Take care of what, Uncle Pen?" innocently demanded Magnolia. "Of Wayne Clifford!" returned the old gentlemen. •Is he regarded as dangerous in any *ray?" solemnly questioned the girl. "But you may be dangerous to him!"

MAenolia looked up at her uncle, with & shy, sudden glance, like a frieghtened aird—and in that one glance the shrewd old fentieman read the whole story. "Whew—-w—wi" he thought, "I am toe late, .veti—it serves that conceited puppy Brabazon right. That's all I have to say.'*

Just about that time Major Brabazon went to Boston the tram of a popular contralto singer, with whose yellow tresses and china-blue eyei he had fallen desperately in love. But the contralto singer had found a Bostonian with a longer pedigree, a deeper purse, and more settled intentions in the matrimonial line than Miles Brabazon possessed, and frowned ominiously upon him.

He returned, heartily disgusted and disenchanted, to New York. "After all," he decided,'"there is no one half so beautiful and winning as Magnolia Vane. I'll marry her at oncc and we'll dreain away our honeymoon ou the banks of the St. Lawrence River or under the roar of Niagara Falls. Let me see—it's a week to-night since I left New York. I roallv suppose I ought to have told her I was going away —but, fortunately, nhe isn't exacting."

And he ordered the hackman to drive to No. Lexington aveuue,where Mrs. Penfiehl resided. "Yes, sir, she's at home," said the solemn footman, looking rather curiously at Maior Brabazon. "But—I think 3he's engaged, sir. Mrs. Penfield. don't ooubt, however—" 'She'll see me," said Major Brabazon, imperiously, and the footman gave up the argument a* hopeless. 'Please to walk in «ir," said he. And accordingly, Major Brabazon walked in.

Uncle Penfield was reading tho sveuing paper cozily in his own particular corner by the lamp. And in the middlo of the room sat Magnolia Vane, tfith the young artist bending tenderly Dver her hand. "What does this mean?" shortly demanded Major Brabazon, advancing into the apartment with a lowering cloud upon his brow.

Mian Vane rose, and made a sweeping courtesy. 'It means,' said she,

Mthat

am $n-

vaged!" 'To me?" "No to this gentlemau,* laying her hand lightly on Mr. Clifford's arm.

'But," cried out Major Brabazon, in a stifled voice, "you are promised to

"Oh, yes, that was in 'the old times," •aid the heiress of Orange Glade, with sublime indifference. "I have changed my mind on a good many subject since then."

Ladies are always privileged to change their minds," said Wayne Clifford, with a bow that was tniely ChesterfieMian.

Major Miles Brabazon had played fast and loose too long with the tropical beauty. And he never fiad realized how deeply he was in love with her until she was beyond his reach.

Miss Vane went back to Florida in the spring a bride, but with the wrone bridegroom. "Mamma," said she. to her ^c&tldali^ ad parent, "so long as I am happy, what does it matter whether my name is Smith or Jones. Brabazon or Clifford?' "But, my dear," groaned Mrs. Yanc "has all been planned since vou were ten years old." "One must take these ciikift Iiufe own hands sometimes." said Mr. Wayne

*i "Keep Dark."

You have trouble*—your feelings are injured, your husband is unkind, your wife frets you, your home is not pleasant, your friends do not treat yon fairly, and things in general move unpleasantly. Well what of it? Keep it to yourself. A smouldering fire can be found and extinguished oat when coals are scattered, you can't pick them up! Bury your sorrow. Ine place for sad and nispntin^ thingi is under the ground. A cut finger is not benefited by pulling off the plaster and exposing it to somebody's eye. Charity covereth a multitude of Things thus covered are cured without a scar but once pub* liahed and confided to meddling friends, there is no end to the trouble wey may cause. Keep it to yourself. Troubles are transient, and when a sorrow is healed and paMed, what [a comfort it is to say—"Ho one ever knew it until it was ovet." ________

He w» informed that a lad^had all ed to see him in his absence. A lady, he mused aloud,' *1*^7. Upon an aocurate description pie suddenly brightened up and added, "Oh, dot vas no lady dot Tea Ocean.

II

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I

WS-

*i *yjLf"

Willard Hotel Lottery 1 Fint'Clw futiilti Sotil Fu SE 1,964 Cash Prizes and 1,416 Property

Print Amounting to $369,860-

Tnis drawing will take place at Lonia rille, Ky., December 31. 1880, amiei authority of a Special Act of tv Kcntunk) Legislature, ana will be ander the control of the following disinterested commissioners apiointed by the Act: lion. KobertMallory, late M. C., of Oldham county L. M. Flourney, President of tne

Louisville Car Roof Company Hon. H. P. Whittaker.of Covington Henry Clay, Ji., late Prosecuting Attorney of the Louisville Cily Court, and G. A. Winston, of the law flixa of I. & J. Caldwell A Winston, of Louisville.

LIST OF PRIZES.

The Willard Hotel with all MM Mfl It* furniture and fixture*

Quarters, 2 dollars.

Responsible agents wanted at all important points. For circulars giving full information and for tickets, address

W. C. D. WHIPH,

Willard Hotel, Louisville, Ky.

The Hotel Is now open and will be ran by the undersigned untif it is ready to be trans' ferred to the lucky winner. The public are invited to stop with me, and Ree the tv for thrm«PiVPK. W. C. D. W

EMORY'S

TANDARD

In Uie City of Louisville, on

Tuesday November 30th, 1880.

These drawings occur monthly uuder pro visions of en act of the general Assembly of Kentucky. Incorporating the Newport Printing and NewspapeK.'o., approvedApri 9,1878. MTThi* la a apcrial act, aa4f hti never keen repealed.

The United States Circuit Coftrt on March 11 rendered the following decisions: lst^-Tliat the Commonwealth Distribution Company is legal. 2nd—Its drawings are fair.

The company has now ou hand a large reserve ftfnd. Read the list of prices for th® n.

November Drawing

1 Prize ..#30,000 1 Prize 10.000 1 Prize 6000 10 Prizes Jl ,000 eacli 10,000 •20 Prizes *500 (. 10,000 100 Prizes »100 10,000 20& Prizes »50 10,000 «00 Prizes |20 12,000 1,000 Prizes »10 10,000 9 Prizes #100 Approximate

Prizes 2,700 9 Prizes -00 Approximate Prizes 1,800 9 ^rizes 10» Approximate

Prizes '4 90C

1,960 Prizes®. $112,400 Whole Tickets, $2. Half Tickets, «1. 27 rickets, $50. 55 Tickets, WOO.

lleralt Money or liank Draft in Ixstter, or send by Kxprcas. DON'T atexn BY RKOIHTKKED LKTTKU OR POMTOKFI^B OKDEB. Orders of 2*.00and upwaixl, by Express, can be sent at onr expense. R. ii. HO A RDM AN, Courier-Journal Building, Louisv' 'le, Ky., or at No^07 and S09 Broadway New York.

EllFiKlMIIOI!

OB. Brut, or Still, for flrlac Stiutei. 500 iba- and from 95.00 Clab anoald bare one.

Xri

15 to

Marehtng

ofuisineci.wuk'1

Hire yon rfp prptia, kulatfi or urinary for-1 ipbrfnf, lot the «fi Itencete, bloo llHrormn«t lYou will leu red if yout |HOPB

SivUiVUU

One br ck residence on Green street...„|1&,00 One brick residence on Green street.... 15,00 Two cash prizes, each S,000 10,00 Two cash prises, each 4,000 4,00 Five cash prises, each l,000~ 5,00 Five cash prizes, each 500 2,60 Fifty caah prizes.each 100 5,00 One hundred cash prizes, each 60 5,00 Five hundred casta prizes, each 20 10,00 One set of bar funiture 1,00 One tin* piano 60 One handsome silver tea set 10 400 boxes old Bourbon wiiisky,30 14,40 10 baskets Champagne, 85 3,50 Five hundred cash prizes, eaph 10„ 6,00 400 boxes fine wines, 30 12,00 200 boxes Robertson Co. whisky,90 0,00 400 boxes Havana cigars, 10 4,00 Five hundred cash prizes, each 10.. 5,00 whole Tickets, 8 dollars. Halves, 4 dollars.

If you are ply weak as ifow spirited, tt kit ft ma a a lllfo. It ha •saved hu Idrods.

E

A NEVER-FAILING REMEDY For Chills and Fever, Bilious and Intermittent Fevers, Dumb Ague, and all Malarial Diseases.

top takln 1'oUonons Drugs I tup tliking deaf-prodacing Qnialntl Slop taking boae-destroyinf Mercury 1 Stop taking dangerous Poisons! Standard a ro oontains no QUIBIM!. Standard COM contains Mercury Standard Cure contains no Poisons! Standard Cure it pleasant to take!

PRICK 50 CENTS PER BOX. Standard Cur** Nassau st.N.Y.

For sale bv Hobinaon Sherburu nnd (J rov a and Lowery, Tone Haute.

th

Popular Monthly Drawing OF THE

Commonwealth Distribution C*. AT NKACAVJLEY'S TIIEATEIT

tojapOA). Every I'rice

List of Small Cannon. Addreaa, J.H.J OHN3TON, Ureat Western Gun Workv lltteburgti. p». N. B.—Oar New Una and KerolrerTuat for 18B0, now ready. Bent

ffifa

E I O W 1

Humphrey!" Homeopathic Specifics PIOTM from ample experienee aa entire aaeeaaa. Simple. Prompt. Bilelent, and Bailable, the/ are Ihe tmJy medicines adapted to popular aae. 'At. aoa. cwai

FfTera, Coa#ee»loa, InHaaiMatioaa, J5 lWirai.Wom rerer. Worw Colie. .* S. Crviai Cell#, or Teeth ihc of Iafaata, 35 4. Diarrhea of CWldrea or.admlifc •.»

BeadaAee. gek neadaebea. Tertian a IrianeU, BUloaa atemaefc,

er Palatal Perieda, to* pfofaaa Perloda,

aa.Oaatb. Plfflealt Breathln*. naea Mryalpelu. Braptlona, ••••••••«. Rhea matte PaLna, J6 Pefer aad A aae. ChUl. revar, Agaee, 9B Slae, BUad ar BUedlac, atarrk. aeate ar chroaic liiftiaa,

tkei

if Dteeaaa. VaMlltr. ffcaiwuiiiihn 10 eakMMTWeMlaa the Bed.» fllw Heart. Klptiatloa._ tW

««Mai«HMi,«aatkf tha Oaaa.

THE PTMI XIIOINW 1 Qnuun'i Powia wn aaridnr. Impeawey, aa«

miu dVSlTtyraDa rwMaaatheeaetiy. to* aMrtoee mjvmt* ta tw«otj ailautM. the SIW KN0LAXP MI9MUI. IwetlTt^."/•#!«»«* a-w Vonoa.Maea.

,A",

//if

ruyoama^ of krttOtitBffOV tttetl work, to tore brain nerne uo IwMta, *se Hop B. Iraffnint from say Initios it you nro marycraajr, sntferinjr from ing on a bed «Jck-

eaMdby the rtraia at your duties aroid ctizimlBcUfcBd use Hop Bitters.

It yoa sn young utdl discretion or dusipal rlcd or lingir, aid orl poor health or isaavtahl nets, my on Hop]

Bitters. nanMadidls annually out some form of Kidney .diacaje tfct mjirht bare bejen prercnted by a tlinoly osoof

Whoerw you are, wbraevar you frei Uut your aystam needs clcanaing, toning: or stimulating without Moiftotnu, toko Hop Blttera.

HopBittars

D. I. C.

aa absolute

(nnd irresistabto cure for Unmkoneas, or oplam. obaeoo.or

nor rro oo^

ATsroato,

DR. SANFORITS

NVI60RAT0R

The Only Vegetable Compound that acts directly upon the Liver, andcuresLiverComplaints.Jaundice, Biliousness, Malaria, Costiveness, Headache. It assists Digestion, Strengthens the System, Regulates the Bowels,Purifies the Blood. A

Book sent free. Address

Dr. Sanford, 162

Broadway,N.Y.

fOB BAXX BV A1.1I SRUOOZST8.

QUA Y'ti SPECIFIC MEDICINE.

TRADE MARK The GreatTRAOK MARK English remedy, an unfailing cure for Hemlnal weakness, rxnatorrhea,» impotency, and all diseases that follow, as a HfME TAKIIIisequence of AFTER TAKIRt. nelf-abuse aa loss of memory, unlveruul lassitude, pain in the back, dimness of YLSon, Premature Old Age, and many other Diseases that lead to Insanity or Consumption and a Premature Grave.

WTFull particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to send free by mall to every one. MThe Specific Medicine is sokl by all drvgglsta at SI per package, or six packages for $5, or will re sent free by lniul on receipt of the money by addressing,

THE GRAY MrcmciNB CO.,

No. 10 Mechanics' Block, Detroit, Micii. •ySold in Terre Haute, wholesale and reail, by Gulick A Berry, and by druggists verywliere.

ITRATE 0FMAGNESI Ul AN ABRttAItt *P££UHT AKD REFRIQERAN7 Tni* woll-kndwii (ircpavatifu! i« liiylilv rffiinimntidc for Dyii'tpiln, Cfteadaclte, Kirkiirm of Ih StOIUIteil. and nil cnm|iamtH*ri»inifiom Avldllj Blliouaiicaa, and Hnlarlul I'eTon. It ciwl the blocd and rjgnlaifa ih bowel*. Ii it a furoril oedicrae for children. br A. ROUKW 3CN8, Cbeiniats, WI Bleeck*r Htreel, Hew York. Sngerior to Hineral WaU/t, Beidllti Powdf/v

Vttft SALIC BY All, UHl'MUIITM.

HOW TO C17UF,

Consumption, coughs

COLD9, ASTHMA, CROUP. All diseaaes of the throat, lungs, aud pul monary Organs.

VSX AOCORDIKO TO DIRECTION*

Allen's Lung Balsam.

C1IVIL,

mechanical, and lTIinin|i Enffineering at theKenR*e]aei Polytechnic Institute. Troy, N. V. Tlieolclest engineering school in American Next term begins September, 16th. Thi Register of 18S0 contains a list of tlie gradu ates for the past 51 years, with their posi ions also, course of study, requirements xpenses, etc. Address.

DAVID M. GRBEN K.Direeto

GREAT WESTERN GUN WORKS,

Pittebnrgh,

3«ad (tamp for CaUloirnc.

Rifles, Shot Ooai, S«TolT*ra,(«iit o-o-d. farsxAminatioa Breeeb-Loadlne Shot Gone, $t8 to 900. Doable Shot Gon».|8to$l50. SingleOona,Uto920. Rlflea,93to 975. Beyolyera. $t to 920. Bena for free lllaitrated Catalogue. OBICAT WK8XFBJJ UUM WORKS, Ftttabnrgb, Pa.

CHICAGO

FEMALE COLLE

Morgan Park (near Cklaace). OolleglaM Departmeata. QradtiaUaa eonra

Preparatory

ANHOOD RESTORED

cureonSeminal Weakness, Loss of Man-

boon and all disorders brought on by discretionon or excess. Any Druggis has theinirredients. Address

DATIDSOH & Tit*.. N Att*Vr

W.H.HALL. IJ. H. BAKTBOIAMKW.

Drs. Bartholomew I Hall/

DENTISTS.

Office 683% Main street, between Flflb and Birth.

MtSSP.

iSTERBROOK

vr -'AWARD

*0.\ SAtf

BV ALL STA^HNBL

il IK*»l»

i&TERSROOK STEEL PEN CO.

"'jinidwi -m Todb

To Ruaohai, I 4 5 a in-eti-, vr TIM 111 n. CoittiuisM

•n. Ia harmlsM Iho Human Fatally er Anlraalt. I'ut up In with Ml p.irmit Torforaud Screw Top, rr|ilivs no Fuwder SHk SWEDISH 1N9SCT FOWDKR I* WAltR A N*T«I» teTSMk Ol'CHLT and porfretty eradicate alt Ike Vennia fMk Price, eenu a paeka,fs, |Hi«t paid. AMrw,

JAM. IL JOHNITON, 1M Smlthfleld

St.,I'lttabvrsh.VKK

W. C.—Agents car, mitkr flO a

runners Uarmu"

iv a

altaa

is the Champirn Remedy fbr Cholic In Infarts. Children Teethi^q, 0omnl»i

rlux

W

Ch lera I fnntnm. it Is far "eri ti Snnth ng Svrrp and Safer fir Infants, an**

&

Cure

thfl rt i*es of Summer CompUin*, rh Mrrbus or Asiatia •holera or flux A'ler Tverythlni Ete" Fails Gocd fir Chil reti or Adults' For Sale by ail ilrug"K t*.

Store-Keepers!

60°DS WELL BOUGHT ARE HALF SOLD! Wide-Awake Merchants must dea with

U3-

We havo genuine

bargains for Every .. .Merchant in.r4^ any line

In the United States, and are therefore e*U-

BAE5AIN HOUSE,'

Alsodont forget that we ore the origin at r* and HRADaUAKTEKSfor the "5 and 10 cent Counter Goods." Send for our Prloe List. It will intercut you

I JjT BRGOS*

1

way N.

to a. 'J0D and

]li 8

as

PRESCRIPTION FREE

IfertlieiipeedjrCar**'' ralnal\VeaknuH,LNl IMINM,PrtHitnrelMbllltTi KirtmiMk

IWMfm

HmMiiilnei. of Ideas, A rentes tm Boefet), DefeetiTft Slemnrr, anil all UIMNMS Bkonght on by Serret Hablu and Exreuw. AM§ he I uf red lent*, idilreu,

ictli y8

inyjiit kM the Ingredient!, idilreu,

DR. JAQUES A CO.'

laOWwt Sixth Bt, OISCINflAT^Ogia

Anew and complete 1CIDP TO KM.OCK

..y7// 'oolilnlai Chapter! on A (.ump.- riil Wwu 4 liond, ^Mlection of wife. F.viilct ecu »f Vlrfla & ''.j. 1 *nip«ruD«nU. Adtlcn to Bn

W.V, Aion, ila mmm, (VHt-acy kfat «wtnpw«4

niuk*! CtftWirfrt, C»i I* ir».' Matb Lt'i L»« »r UirMH wil Kwwa UrH«4 %%«•«, awMM rf It 11 Private Medical Advlaer nn itiMUM r» •iltinf from irapiiri! win*] i»ociatioi», and no wlf atuw—Ik* kjfci* wt -eAk—•* *n*r Wft, euauag K*#S»Jj Lmm .ft A BiAalof ai'irrtafw «r fivUf

A Uwh ftt aw* iwnlilafli re*l»r tVal iwnhf'

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CI All nrxaf lnt^liiM.-SiilJ a* nhnl nail fuvlnry price#. IIWHIA Hoaca* at (.mtrnaial Ezhlbitiar. MlUv __ ihek'4 Seal# for ^quarn Urua,

Vprtfthta io A "aerlca.—12,000 in u«c. C«Ui»il 4» p»re»—free. ORCANR. llie bctt in lha wnriJ. Aa 6: •lop nr(aa onlr MA II lnp, f#7—Circular frea. All aaMt 15 dty,' trial—frtiaht f'e* If untalltfar.t«ru. Fact ?Hl at. and 10th Ave. •«IIEET MIIKH) af S price. 'aulnfue af 3,000 choice piacaa ant for 3e. «l«mp.

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Kle^ant Cards New Chromo *J" Gill-Kilge, A c., with natne.l90 lng, E. Walfincford, Ct.

TIM I RATF Mr 9 tietam lai^WI nu. si Very invenlou«. V-Vjjiavcta Ca ''V a

Wood! Woodir

Joseph 324 Main street offesa oards first class seasoned wood bard tj .in lots not less than three

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