Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 November 1880 — Page 7
r,r
UNLIKE PILLS
AH*,
RPVIPW,!'ami
OS PER CENT. PURE. (Patented.)
WNKIIT POWDERED. 1IIGHX1Y 1'ERFITMKD.
Tlio stronireiit and pprwit Lvo aitido. Will
SThominute*)
uho ti jioundB of tho liest I'crftuacd Hard Soar au witliont hoiliiiK* boRt wnter-tfoftcncr made. Tho tet (llNinlcctaiit. Tho following aro nomo of the ndvnn !*».'•( phtainnd by using liowib' 83 Per C'.'ut. I'owJermi lij'6:
I-* £+,- "$ fTpmr-y^
the uxnal Pn rgatiTe*, i« pleasant to take. Anil wiil prMV*t our* noit potent ftii'i harml?** S^ateiM S«auTal«r and Cleaaacr list IM vol) nnn^fi tilt inn t»r«»il lit tu )i il)llc notice. Kor CoiwUp» UUllHUUiwoii
KllioantiMK, Ilradsfhf, Pile*, and Oil iiiMrr-U anting rom ait 'Mtrwted ttate 0/ the fyiten, it In in'-i'mpar»hlr tli« fat rurativeextant. Avoid oiUfttii.un nm«t i,» jfUlHiie tlin articlo c»i W for.
TKOPfOFRCIT LAXATIVE i» put up in iicmwd tin oiilr. i'i ic« fio eeutN. A«k your .ru taint fur DCuttiptivt tli1 r*t, or mlclreM the aprloior, J. K. HBTIf KlU.YfiTON.
I'urk Flftcp, Sew York,
EifORi PutcHAsut^ AMY FORM
OF 8O-CALLED
ELECTRIC BELT.
-ii.r,rApplmnc») rc t.«Tkrtu, i-iircVprvr)ni,Chron-ic »nd Hpccml Di«wuse«, wild to the I'ULVKKM A(!HEft GA1/VANI0 CO., N»*w V»u k, N. Y., CincHtiqat^O.. ur Han Krnnctoco, f.ul., for their Free Pamphlet t»nI "ThnKloetrie
you will snve lime,health
md money. The J'. O. Co. arc I he mity di'Alprn In OonJii)» Kloctric Arnllonitoar
Ycarabefore the Public*
E E N I N E O O if ii a I
OR. C. McLANE'S MVEll FILLS
are not recommended .'is a remedy for nil the ills tfint ll*h is Iwir to," hut ir. uffeetioMS of the Liver, ami in all Complaints, Dyspepsia, ami Hit'* Hoiwijch{\ or diseases of that character. tiey staud without a rival/
ACUE AND FE £K. Jin better cathartic can be used premratory to, or after taking tjnininp. AH simple purgative they are uncqualcd.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
fho genuine! are never sugar-coated. Kucli box lias a red-wax seal on the lid, v»'ith the impression, McLANE'S LI VKIi 'I LL. Each wrapper bears the signa--u row of (Mr LANK and 1'LKMINO 15 HOP. a{^~ Insist upon having the genuine
H. ". McLANE'S L1VEK PILLS, prepared by
FLEMING BKOS., Pittsburgh, Pa., Ihf! market being full of imitations of Ihe omiKi
JtlcLane,
\if. SJIUK.'
spelled dillerentU-
pronunciation.
THE READY FAMILY SOAP MAKER
LEWIS' LYE
First. Itispackedlnanlroncsnwlt!a ullit or romovab!o lid, caatly taken oil' ipavJnff tliocotitonts exposed, ttwii-e-
Bavlnx Ui\ tronbl', aiinoyanco, asnl danger (from flying jiarticles). n. witt other Lyea. wh.!ch, txdna solid In the cans, must tx broken with a hammer to get the Lye out.
Mccond. It betaifr a fine inowder, you can remove the fid and i«iur out all the con. tents, being alwaya ready foi use.
Third. A. teaapoonfnl or more can be naad, ns In water-noftenlnfr. scrubbiiir, etc., and tho lid returned to ihe can, and thereby savo the balanoa of content With other Lyea nil must bo dlssol at onco and used In a abort time,
nto.
__ ived or th«
Btrenjftli ia prone. Fourth. A'^Bolutepuri'i/. Free from all adulterations.
Fifth. Tho best Soap can be macK ia from ten to twenty minntes with this Lye. Sixth. No 1'ailu^o is io««iblo hi making: 8oap 'itk this Lye when the iimjle Jirectiona given are followoa.
Srvcuth. Ono can of t-hte Tordered Lye Is p|ual to twenty poiuida of bal Soda or Waahinv Koda.
KiRhth. One can of tWs
Lye
ENinrfi.Potaali.or
xrill paponlfy on-i
-uud more of Krtase tlisn an other Concentrated ye. llall SaiHinitlSr. This Lye la 2-5 po» oent strong*^ tha» *i«y otiier Lye cr l^otat-h.
Tenth. Ono to two teaepoonfula will uoftca a tpb of the hardest water. ... j:ioventH. Ono toa^poonfivl will ihoroug'hjy .Sitikm.DrainB. or OlowK suvnlnablo for killinir Rcochsp, Mfrc, Rats, e«c.
Tlio BEST arUclu for WAUHINS
XIXXJS.
*F
A^rtTFACTtTlKD
OSLV HT I'
IT.Iewis & levies Co.
g.mT.ADELPK3u^
PERMANENTLY CURES
KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS,! Constipation arid Piles.
OK. K. Ii. CI.AUK, South ilcro.Tt., raya, I I "Inmu.ch of K'ln.XF.V TItoriSLES lthaal acted lite eburro. It 'to«n:iri! ranny very I badeiwcKofrtU'S, and ban noicr fatted t*| act pffick-t.tlj.*'
XKi.s«N
v\i cican.:.
C.
8.
Oo»p3alnt."
«f Kt. vu,
I ail a, It la of prlccbw vr.!tc. After nUUcn I I yearn OT crcot auCTerlnz from PTLEN arid CM* I tlvcae** It completely curc«l •!!."
HOC.VilOX, ofCcr.»U!r«, any*, '"one| I paeliorohaHiTono irom.r» for mo iu completely cwriuff
A aevvre s:td Kidney]
WHY?
RT HAS
WONDERFUL POWER
BECAUSE IT A0T8 ON THE I.IYKR,T!IE llOWKLS AND KI»-| NOjfs AT TIII: SAME TIME.
Because It cleanses the system of the poisonous humors that dovelopo InKldnoyand Urinary diseases, Bfi-1 lousness, Jaundice, Constipation, Piles, .or In Rheumatism, Nouralglaj and Female disorders.
KIDX KY-WOIiT Is si dry vegetable eom-1 ponedaud csu be «c*t by mail prepaid. One package will make hi\ ijts of med trine.
TH.'g' IT NOW Iluy It at the IVrnzcfata. Price, 41.OA. WELLS, EICHAS3S0H & CC, Prcpiitan, 3
Bnrlinctea, Vt.
i, v.
-w-
-.no t-, v» ^r» t».* .- MOM. T*
BOI1 INCKKSOUJ.
(ii* Karly I7nbr!i«t--UM It«-cor»I a Lawyer and a Soldier, Etc. (James Red path in San Fraacitco Chronicle.] Ilobert G. Ingereoll was born in the western part of New York. His father moved when he was very young into Ohio, and then into Illinois—both of them at that time regions almost wholly uninhabited. Bobert'e early years were passed face to face with the unsubdued forests atid prairies, and this life strengthencd his habit of independent thought and utterance, and gave him a physical that can endure without breaking, extreme and continuous toil when he chooses to test it.
He soon left home—when he was a mere boy—and wandered abodt the West a good deal, working at different places, and finally lie got an education as a lawyer. lie soon became famous in his district—he lived in Peoria, Illinois—as a lawyer of unmatched eloquence and influence with juries. It is doubtful whether he has an equal as a jury lawyer in the country today. Certainly ho has no equal in the West.
Stories aro told in Illinois of his power over juries that rival the strongest illustrations of the influence of eloquence in any of the annals of the English or American bar. It is a. very tough case that he can not carry.
Ingersoll never was a believer either in his father's faith—old school Presbyterianistn—or in the inspiration of the bible. He was a free-thinker from his earliest boyhood. Before he was ten years old ho had constant discussions with his father, in which he argued against his faJ: r's creed. His father was Presbyterian minister. The theory that it was his father's sternness that made him an infidel is not correct, although the austerity of an old-style Presbyterian household, especially on Sundays, undoubtedly intensified his natural unbelief in any form of faith that causes a man to seek anywhere but in his own heart or, in nature for any truth, either scientific or religious or ethical. Colonel Ingersoll's brother used to speak o'f Robert's talks with his father, when both of them were little lxjys. The old clergyman once got a little angry at his son's inborn infidelity but when the boy'said: "Well, father, if you want me to lie you may make me pretend to believe like you but if you want me to be honest I must talk as I do," the wise father preferred to have a sincere child rather than a hypocrite.
IHiring the late war Ingersoll raised a regiment of cavalry and commanded it, and was assigned the Western department. lie was in the battle of Shiloh and several other engagements. On one occasion he was ordered to gtiard a ford, with instructions to delay an advancing army of the rebels as long as possible, in order that our army might make certain counter-movements. He held his position as long as he could do it, but the enemy came up in such overwhelming force that he had no course left but to give the order to retreat—every man a? best he could to save himself. It was devil take the hiudmost. As Colonel Ingersoll was galloping away with his men as fast its their horses could get over the ground, his horse stumbled in a lane and threw him. .lust as he fell several balls struck the logs near him, and on looking up he saw two or three rebels raising their carbines at him. with characteristic quickness and presence of mind he shouted at the top of his voice: "Hold on there! Don't make fools of yourselves! I've been doing nothing else for the last five minutes but wishing for a good chance to recognize your -Confederacy 1"
A Sonthern^ifficer ordered the meii to stop, and they all laughed at the unknown Yankee's impudence, and then they took him prisoner. At that time he was little known outside of Illinois and Indiana.
As he is one of the wittiest and best talkers in America, iu private as well as on the stump, lie was soon a great favorite and Forrest, whose command captured him, treated hint vitlv the greatest consideration, once telling him that he would get him exchanged the first chance that ollered, because he was getting so popular that lie began to be afraid he would take his own men away from him. He was not exchanged, I believe, but paroled and sent home. This ended his military history. Ingersoll said of his career: "I was not fit to be a soldier I never saw our men fire but 1 thought of the widows and orphans they would make, and wished they would miss!"
Ingersoll's talk is fully equal to his oratory, and sometimes it is vastly better, except in his great passages greater in pathos, in rare insight, in poetical imagery and in delicate fancies.
He is as swift as lightning in repartee, keen and also kind in his wit, unless he
is talking of religious dogmas, and then
wound, and no woman is quicker to respond to the gentlest breath of pathos. He left criminal practice because "it wore on him so much," as his wife expressed it. When he had an uncertain murder case on hand it absorbed him, all his sympathies were enlisted he could not sleep nor do any thing else until his client was safe. This absorption is almost suicidal to au emotional nature, especially if it is a large nature. "His talk, is full of phrases that would 11*4 conceeded gems in anybody's writings.
'J THE IUEAI.
his sarcasm is merciless and meant to ?^ect of envy of all horse fancier* in
He was once speaking of a sanguine man. "Show him an egg," he said, "and instantly the air is full of feathers." He is always getting off bright sayings like this. Then, again, he will use phrases that would not be tolerated in Boston society. You constantly wonder whether it was Burns, or Shakspeare, or Babelais, or Voltaire who had the greatest influence on the formation of his char icter.
"Take the elevator," is inscribed on the fence of an Iowa meadow. A curious traveler who climed the fence discovered in abont ten seconds that the elevator is of a dark brindle color, with a curl in the middle of his forehead.—[Ex. j?!~ s."
V*
T»-
T\ J-t vf, -, .** #!S® ,,•«., 4 Jjf ,«
I think the song that's sweetest Is the one that's never sting 'l'hat lies at the heart of a singer
Too Era. mortal tongue, And someti.T.rs in flic siience Between the d!»y and night, He fancies that iti measures
Bid farewell to the light.
A picture that is fairer v. Than all that have a part Among the masterpieces T*
In the marble halls of art, .c Is the one that haunts the painter', In all his golden dreams And to the painter only
A real picture seems. .,*
The noblest, grandest poem
rv
Lies not in blue aAd gold Among the treasured volumes That rosewood bookshelves hold But in bright, glowing visions,
It comes to the poet's brain, t' And when he tries to grasp it,
Our houses, our horses, our yachts, our .hunting, racing and provisions are the very best on earth. No French or Spanish vineyard can produce fruit like unto our hothouse grapes no Italian gardens can vie with those of Chatsworth.
Then a rich Englishman has the cream of everything in our delicious country, as the natural outcome of the power which ia vested in him. He may buy a seat in parliament, and he is to the manner born a deputy lieutenant and magistrate of his country. He may also choose his own place in our civil and military services.
What can ho want more? Nothing which makes life enjoyable and safe is withheld from him, and he practically holds our laws between the leaves of his check book. Not one of them is ever likely to give him the smallest inconvenience if he will pay the market price for what he wants.
In France any brilliant journalist or poet or painter, any actor, and still more certainly any actress, would have very much the best of him in a discussion. In Germany his money would not raise him at all in the social scale, and would be absolutely of no account compared with Hoffahigkeit by birth or acquired military rank. He would be spoken of curtly as "Plutus," the moneyed man, when spoken of at all, and he together with his concerns, would be dismissed as an unsavory topic for the consideration of gentlemen.
The idea of making him the Kight Honoratye Apollo Plutus, and a baronet or baron, would never enter into the head of anybody. However, the rich men who rule us, and who are very long headed fellows, commonly so manage electioneering and other business familiar to them that the sort of politician they poke forward is never likely t« set the Thames on lire.
Alwent Minded. (Hartford Courant.] I
One of the most amusing cases of ab sent-mindedaees of which we have heard for some time, occurred in this city a few dayB ago. A prominent and very successful business man, whose place of business is in the fourth ward, being requested by a lady friend of his, who is a stranger in the city, to go with her to the postoffice, where everything was made satisfactory. Our man of affaire had hired a small boy to hold his horse, until he would transact his business in the postoffice.
After satlnfymg tlie clerk as "to" his identity of the lady, he took the mail out of the box and hurried back to his place X)f business on, foot, leaving the small boy still guarding the horse. Arriving at his office he proceeded to digest the contents of the numerous letters, and then with characteristic promptness answered those that needed replies, and started back to the postoffice. As he approached the latter place he noticed, standing at the side-walk, a horse that struck him as being remarkably like his own elegant roadster.
He wondered who could be the fortunate possessor of an .inimn.1 so completely resembling the one that was the pride of his heart, and immediately the thought that he would like to secure this one, and thus be able to turn out with a
ra
K^
team that would make him the
the country, took possession of him. The more closely he approached, the more striking became the resemblance, and the more anxions he became to purchase, until his memory was startled from its slumber by the piping voice of the small boy who held the horse inquiring: "Mister, are you pretty near ready to take your horse?"
There that faithful youngster had been standing in the broiling sun for an hour or more holding that horse, while its owner was entirely oblivious to the fact that he had driven it there that day. The feelings of that business man may be imagined, but not described. It may reasonably be supposed that if kicking himself would do any good, he would not be able to sit comfortably for a week.
There area great many church choir •sngers who receive a good fat salary hem- that will never get a chance to sing in the angel chorus.—[New Haven Register.
True repentance has a double aspect it looks upon things past with a weeping eye, and upon the future with a watchful eye.—[South.
s,
fcili Tlillitii iiAl/lii \VEEKLY GAZETTE.
t,
He finds his effort vain.
A fairy hand from dreamland' Beckons us here and there, -,f And when we try to clasp it,
It vanishes into air. And thus our fair ideal Floats away just before, And we with longing spirits
Reich for it evermore. —[Burlington Hawkeye."
"The Most Convenient Spot" for Rich Men. [London Truth.] All real power in England is in the hands of a plutocracy, and there is no imaginable reas-.m why a rich English^ man should desire reforms. Materially speaking, the British islands are the most convenient spot in the world, considered as the residence of a rich man.
'V* '.iVj, -v J..--' -.
satisfaction Sugar Coaled. Large boxes, containing tiO Pills,
25
all Druggist?. Beware of counterfeits and imitalior.s. The genuine niannfactnred only by John C. west & Co., "The Pill Makers," 181 and 183 W. Madison street, Chicago, IllAFree trial Package sent by mail prepaid receipt of three cent stamp.
sJ'
'LADY LAWYEKS.
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 JSOZODONT to give beauty to their mouth which ar#uistined to complete their success as orators.
Female Lawyers will stick to their lients,like
SPALDING'S ULUK
For $3.00 per week can be had LAND & SON'S Dinin.g Hall No. 121 south Fourth street opposite the Market House. The new firm has taken hold of the former Chapman stand and will endeavor to please the public keeping an abundantly supplied table
Ail Persons who Aspire to beauty -of personal appearancc should not neglect that natural necessity, the hair. By many it. has been ,i neglected until it has grown thin, igray or entirely fallen oil'. The'
LO^DOS HAJK COLOR RKSTOREU
restores nature's losses and inv-' parts a healthy natural color,' thickens Ibin hair, cures dandruff and all itchy eruptions on the scalp, insuring a luxuriant growth of hair, in its natural color. Ask your druggist for Lon*' tlon Hair Restorer, universally used by tbe fashionable world both at home and abroad. Price, To cents. Six bottles, $4, Buntiu & Armstrong, Terre Haut
minus
FOR 1880.
Isotlcc is hereby given that tliu tax duplicate for 1880 is now In my hands, and that I am ready to receive the taxes thereon charged. The following shows the rate of taxation on each $100 of taxable property.
For general purposes Toe For E., T. H. & C. It. It. bonds, sinking fund,. 9c For K., T. II. & C. K. Ii. bonds, internal fund :ic For C. & T. H. K. It. bonds, sinking fund Ho For 0. & T. II. U. R. bonds, iutcresf fund "m Forconsolidated bonds,interest and sinking funds For sewer purposes 10c
Total rate on each $100 $1.10 Poll tax for each male resident of the city of the ago of 21*years, and not over to years, sane and not a pauper, 50*1. ,,
N O I E
J.'xiimlne your receipt before leaving the oftice. and sec that it covers all your property.
Tuxes arc due on the loth day of November of each year, and If not paid before the third Monday in April following, ten por cent, penalty is added after which the treasurer or his cleputy is required to call upon every delinquent tax-payer in the city and demand delinquent taxes, and if necessary, tosieze and sell property to make the same, with constable's fees.
The treasurer is responsible for the taxes he eould have collected therefore, tax-pay-ers ought to remember that their tuxes must be paid every year. ,f 7•'t.' nr DIOWEG,
Treasurer City of Terre Haute
Terre Haute, Ind., Nov. If.tli, 1880.
7 E
E L-D E E
ii
Five Hundred Dollars Reward! W v. ill pay tlu above reward for and ease of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sick Headitche, Indigestion, Constipation ofj C'o-tiveness, we cannot cure with West's \Yv lable Liver Pills, when the directions jare strictly complied with. They are purely Vegetable, and never fail to give.. .. ... ....
Machine
IS THE BEST!
IT XLJTI\VSES AU. MANS III L\
ry.
WORK-
-if'
ITS SIMPLICITY UNEXCELLED!
I Its Durability Never Questioned-
Is Elegant in Appearance.
The world challenged to produce its equal.
W. H. FISK,
ocn. Ageni, .south Third, between Ohio and Walnut.
HAVENS' INSURANCE AGENCY
EKtablixIirdin !8t»C.
To the fanners «.f Vigo County:
Do not insure your property with travelng agents. They charge you double what twill cost you to insure in a good, reliable established agency. I represent companies worth over fifty million dollars. 2all beore you are insured.
J. P. RYAN,
Undertaker and proprietor of
Feed and Sale Stable.
Northwest corner Second and Main streets Terre Haute, Ind. First-class boggles and carriages at lowest rates. Is prepared to attend all orders With neatness and dispatch. Special attention given to boarding noraes.
"A
cents. For sale by It aervea every purpose Where a
DYSPEPSIA.!
to wood.
Good ^oard.
Send TorTesti- g&fES & HANLl'Y monialsnndour ,' Tr !r
onr
1
*-AV
TONIC is ueceamry.
tfanfacM by THE DB. HMTEB MEDICINE CO., No. 213 Halt Street,
used and approved by the leading PHYSI C1AIIS of EUROPE and AMERICA oot Valuable
Jemody
0-« 11
&H4MB JIEDiL AT Til KIM:!LA ft ELJ'HEl EXI'OSITI'VV fcU/t'EB IMEUAli AT *IHE PJJUS feSPOBITSOX.
Cuby ""AIJSOJtTIOX (iMalure tvaj
n't
LUNG 0ISLASES.
rf-ROAi
1
l-:E«SES.
«R£Ai^lSS TROUBLES.
tTpmYKS INTO tlie system ciirutlve agents and hea'ing medicines. It IIKAWS Fitost the dlsensetl parts the poisons that cause death. ThousaiidN testify to
HN
Virtue*.
701 CAN WED AKS.U,
Dont despair until you have tried this Sensible. Easily applied and UAIMCAI.I/Y EFPEC'Tt AI, Remedy. Hold by Druggists, or sent by mail ou receiptor prlcc, S'2.00,
n"nLU'
book,T li re !"4. Madison Street. on a a a go I I Sent free.
tm
TEH
BLOOD.
?°^7C a preparation or Protoxide of Iron. Peruvian Hark and the Vegetable Aroma tics. Endorsed by tho Medical ProunsJon, ami rocon. "Ilty. Female Dlteaaei. Want of Vital* from Fevers ud Cltroulu Chill* mmtt uecets&ry*
ai„.
/mm/c.
St. Lads.
The Toikt
Article* from uura
VtttliEC—SRfh 24 Pomade Vaselioa Vaseline Cold Crcsin,
For the
Treatment of
WOUNDS, BURNS,
SOKES, CUTS, CHILBLAINS,
SKIN DISEAS33, RHEUMATISM,
CATAS&H, HEMORRHOIDS, Etc. Also for CcugkE, Coldc, Soro Tiu-Jat, Croup and Diphtheria, etc, flirTry them. 25 and 55 cent sizes of all cor goods.
Vaselino Camphor
IM
Vaseliao Toilet Boaus, ar* iap«rlor ta ay '«i:aae«k
An agTerablo form of takK, ing Vaadine internally. 23 CENTS
A
BOS.
COLGATE & CO.. 55
V-
tf*
SSwSSSSs
Cure Your Back Ache
Atr! sll diseases of the Kidney Bladder '4's* and I irlnnry Organs by rearing lh«t
Improved bxcJ^r Kidney Pad
IT IS A MAHVKUll' ItKAI.iNfl ANpfH .f
Simple, Sensible, Direct, Painless and Powerful. It '.'URKS where all else fnil«: A UKVRI.ATION and RKVOX.UTION In medicine. Absorption or direct application, na opposed unsatisfactory luternnl medicines. Send for our treatise on Kidney troubles, sent free. Hold by Drumists, or sent by mall on receipt of price, &2.00. ADDRk-S o^^USI^'JATES & iANLBV, ulne Kidnoyi^ul Iv4, Muuisou tflrcv),
A«k for it and Chicago, Ills. take no other.
OUT 30 DAYS'
mr. DYE'S CELEBRATEP ELKCTRO-VOLTAIC BKLTS, BAKDS, BPBPKK80RTS9, TKHBSES, HrrPORTf.ltS. a4 OTHrn ArruiNCES, to any perion (roniiC or oldi (tlflCrlnK fmm NERVOUS DISEASES, rKKM ATl'ltK IttCA Y, Lorn or VITALITY, «tc„ or to tWo affllctnf with RHBtTMATISM. NKURAI/1IA. rAKAI.YSIH,DYSPEPSIA, I.lVEUSfc KtnNKY TKOCBI.KS, fll'INAI. AFP.ECTJONS, RUPTrRES D1SSASE8 OK A DELICATE NATPZJR Of rirntfn 8ft XSD MJNT OTH5B wxrissa. SPEEDY CI.'KKS GCAKANTKED. tSESP/"'ll ILLUUWATXV J»i£K
Adar-1. VOLTAIC BELT-CO., Mareball. hfiirh.
POSITIVE CURE
WITHOUT MEDICINES.
AIM'S SOLUBLE MEDICATED BODGES
PATENTED OCTOBER lO, 1S70.
1ST
Wj.11
Ek?B OX
No. will Cure any case in four days, or less No. 2
cure the Most Obstinate Case, nc-
matter of now long standing. No nauseous doses of Cubebs, Copiuba or & of Sandalwood, that are certain to produce dyrpepsia by destroying the coatings of ihe stoir^ ach. No Syringes or Astringent Injections to produce other serious complications.
Price $1.50. SOLD BY ALL 'ORUQGIFTS or mailed on receipt of Price For further particulars send io druggist in your city for Circular. J. C. ALLAN CO.,
P. O. Box 1,533. No. 33 John St., New YorK V/e offer-Reward for any case they will not cure.
Ouic ixinri Sure Cure.
W. S. CLIFT, J. ir.WILLIAMS. JOHN CLIFT.
-MANUFACTURER^ OF
Sashes* Doors, Blinds &c- &c.
AND DEALERS IN- ...
Lumber, Lath Shingles, Glass, Faints, Oils and Builders Hardware
Corner Mulberry rnd H»n*h, Terre Haute Ind.
A I I
ISf"
»9
am?:-
I
Hrv,
