Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 January 1881 — Page 7

gd Year 8 before the Public,

THE CEWJIIIWE

DR. c. McLANE'S

LIYER PILLS

not recommended as a remedy for all '.he ilia that fiesfc 5* heir to," but Ir. affections of the Liver, and in all Bilions Complaints, Dyspepsia, /uid He*dache, or diseases or tha/ cbarartor. th.vf stand without a rival.

AGUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can b« used preparatory to, or after taking quinine. As ft simple purgative they are unequaled.

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. fhc genuine are never sugar-coated. Each box has a red-wax veal on the lid, with the impression, McIjlNE'8LIVER PILL. Eacn wrapper iSfo the signatures of C.

McLawe nn«pB|KMi*8

Preptrftd from fruUe

Bsoe.

fl&T Insist upon having the genuine .On, C. McLAlife'S LIVER PILLS, prepared by

FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa~ the market being full of imitations of the name

MoLtine,

spelled differently

*Hit samo pronunciation.

tropical ftOdpiftOU.

Is the Best and Most Agreeable Preparation in the World.

For Constipation, BlliousneM, Headache, Torpid Mirer, Hemorrhoids, Indisposition, and all Disorders arising: from an obstructed state of tbe system.

Ladles and children, and thou who dislike taking pills and nauseous medicines, are especially pleased with Its agreeable qualities.

KOPIC-FRUIT LAXATIVB may be used In nil cases that need the aid of a purgative, cathartic, or aperient medicine, and whllelt produces the same result as the agents named, It Is entirely free from the usual objection* common to tli em. Pocked in broaMd Ua boxes osly.

Price 25 cts. Large boxes 6oc.

Soldby

all fir^t-class

'A Compound Tincture of the most valuable remedies known to the medical profession, prepared upon strictly pharmaceuticaljrlnolples. if®jx experience of twentr-fiVe years proves It to be greatest Antidoto to Malaria and all other Ague toes known to tho world. only

absolute met tor

all Afffectlou of the

•ys. In Liver Complaint, Dyvpepein, aordoraof the Bowels, and all AtTecthe Throat and Lhdhi,it is

*quaiiy

m, while as a remedy for complaints peculiar phe female sex it has no equal

NOT A BEVERAGE Btft an old reliable IXonaehold Kenedy, Jhgroughly adapted to assist nature*. supplies tone to the stomach, relnvigorates the "ions, and pro-

Bigestive organs, etimnlatoe the Inotkig a regular actios of the bowels, Mio of the body to perform its allotted work bny and without interruption. ^4ts highest corammnijfciona opmo from thoee who Bags nsed it longest ant ksow^ it best. llowhera so popular as In Lanoiietott-, Pa., where OMbeen in use for more than a quarter ef a century. fflgily commended cut a. General Tonio tna Appetiser. Sold byJDrnggista everywhere. .THE ME88ENCKR OF HEALTH m. large staed paper descriptive of disease, Hs origin and cure, will bo mailed free to any address oa •ppliott^n to

THE MldHLER HERB BITTERS CO. Lancaster, Pa. 8V We strongly recommend to mothers Prof, rker's l'lcnnant Worm Syrup. It norat e, is easy to take, and no after-physio is require# "0,25 ccnr«.

Piirss

AS AN ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE,

are incpjoaparablo. They stimulate the TOIlPIPl^IVEit,Invigorate the NERVOUS SYSTEM, Rive tone to the DIGESTIVE O ROANS, create perfect digestion Rnd regular tr avement of the bowels*

AS AMI-MALARIAL

They hare no equal acting aa a preventive andcurofor Bilious, Remittent, Intermittent. Typhoid Fevers, and Fever and Aguo. Upon the healthy action of the tetomach and Liver depends, almost wholly, the health of tho human race,

DYSPEPSIA.

It Is for he euro of this disease and its at^feant*. SICK-HEADACHE, ifiSitVOU8NESS, DilSPONDllNCY, d(»5 B^TPA'ITON, FILES, &o., that these SSIlnhavo gained such a wide reputation. Uo romody was ever disooverod that acti BO speedily and gently on tha digosttve orgftnw, givtoR them tone and vigor to asBimilato~foot?. This accomplished, the fTEliV-Ca are

BBASId,

tho BRAIN

ggUlUSHED, and the BODY KOStJST. Try tJbiia Remedy fAirly and you Will gain Vigorous Body, Pure Blood, Btrcng iJerves, and a Cheerful mind,

Price 25f. 33 Murray Sr N. Y.

HAT

TOTT'S

ETdYE

u)

«rav ll.ua on Whv.kkhs ch*np^1

Black a

a C.LOsav

&i t-ie- ..::i of t:• OIK. It na-

part* a \itur«! Oo.or, r. -i! -eta trat-ttiftously. Sold by i-int5iyexi)rvs^o'j receipt of tgl. Office, S3 Murray St., Mew York'

A.W.SPAIKM.D.

Omc«corner Sixth fautl Ohio street (Shannon's Bioek.t Rosidencc south Thlnl street.

To rf. Wf.nto Incl.

Agknts VVANTKP VOR KMITK'S riblk OICOXAh'YASD Hoi.max's

new

Pictorial Bibles.

Rdthvss,

for circnl r.is,

a.J.

jilt:delpshia.

F^'man

A REALIST ICARTIT

The

Wonderful Acoomplishments of a 'Frisco PaintSlinger. From the Man Francisco Post. "Do you—ahem!—do you ever print any art items in your paper?" asked a rather seedy-looking man with longhair, a slouch hat, and paint on his fingers, softly edging into the

Po«Vn

flthat

Druggists.

inner sanct­

um the other day. The managing editor glancing savagely up from his noonday sandwich, and after evident,y repressing a desire to add the long-haired party to his viands, replied in the affirmative. "Because," continued the young man, scowling critically at a cheap chromo on the wall, "because I thought if you cared to record the progress of real aesthetic art culture on this coast you might send your art critic around to my studio to take some notes." "Might, eh V" said the editor, between chews. "Yes, sir. For instance, there's mammoth winter-storm landscape I'v just finished for Mj. Mudd, the bonanza king. It's called 'A Hailstorm in the Adirondacks,' and a visitor who sat down near it the other day caught a sore throat in less than fifteen minutes. The illusion is so perfect, you understand. Why, I had to put in the finishing touches with my ulster and arctic overshoes on." "Don't say "Fact, sir and then there's a little animal gem I did for General Glerkins the other day—portrait of his Scotch terrier, Snap. The morning it was done a cat got into the studio, and the minute it saw that picture it went through the windowsash like a ten-inch shell. "Did, eh "Y«s and the oddest thing about it was that when I next looked at the canvas the dog's hair was standing up all along its back like a porcupine. Now, how do you account for that -. "Dunno." "It ust- beats me. When the Governor examined the work he insisted on my painting on a post with the dog chained to it. Said he didn't know what might happen." "Good scheme," growled the Presidfcntmaker. "I don't do much in the animal line, though," continued the artist, thoughtfully

is, not since last summer. I

painted a California pole-cat for an English tourist, from the skin of one he killed by mistake for a grizzly up in the oothills. And, if you'll take my word for it, the day I finished its business end, fthe health officials came down, fumigated the place, and arrested me for maintaina nuisance." "Did, eh "Absurd, wasn't it: I did a setter dog for the same man, and shipped it to him at Liverpool. But, it seems, the fleas got into the box, and bit so many holes in the canvas that he threw it back on my hands." "Too bad." "Wasn't it, though? My beat hold, however, is water views. You know George Bromley, and how abstracted he is sometimes. Well, George dropped in one morning, and brought up before an eight-by-twelvc view of the San Joaquin river, with a boat tied to the bank in the foreground. I'm blessed if George didn't absent-mindedly take off his coat and step clear through the canvas trying to jump into tho beat—thought he'd go out rowing, you know." "No. I don't know." "Speaking about that picture reminds me of a mean trick that was played on me by Dobber, whose studio is right next to mine. lie was so envious of my large orders that the night before that painting was to be delivered he climbed over the transom and smeared out the rope that anchored the boat I speak of to the shore. Tho next morning the skiff was gonefloated off down stream, you see." "I do—do I?" "It took four days to paint it in again —dead loss, you see although I believe the purchaser did agree to pay me §25 extra in case it came back on the next tide. Pretty square of him, now, wasn't it?" "Have they carried out that journeyman with the small-pox said the editor, winking at the foreman, who had come in just then to swear for copy.

Smallpox? That reminds me of a realistic historical subject I'm engaged on now, entitled 'The Plague in Egypt.' I had completed four of the principal figures, when last Tuesday the janitor, who sleeps in the next room, was taken out to the hospital with the most pronounced case of kprosy you ever saw, and this morning the boy who mixes the paints began to scale off like a slate roof. I really don't know whether to keep on with thejwork or not. How does it strike you "It strikes me that you had better slide," said the unesthetic moldcr of public opinion, gruflly. "Don't care to send the reporter around then?" "No, sir." "Wouldn't care to give an order for a life-size "Guttenberg Discovering the Printing Press,' eh V" "Nary order." "Dwn't want a seven-by-nine group of the staff done in oil or crayon "No," said the editor^ as he began low cring himself into the depths ot a leader on the Roumanian imbroglio, "but if you care to touch up two window-frames,some sk-legs and the lighting editor's black eye for four bits and a lot of comic exchanges OU can sail in." "It's a whack," promptly ejaculated the disciple of esthetic culture, and, borrowing n, cigarette, from the dramatic editor on iiccount, he drifted Oif after his brushes.

Ufa in Creafint ty. Amid the toil of business iu New Orleans pleasure is not npglecled, and a graml promenade concert in connection with the 34th Grand Extraordinary Semi-Annnuid Drawing of the Louisiannn Slate Lottery wsw superintended by Generals G. T. Beauregard, of La., and Jubal A. Earley, of Va., at which prises amounting to over $522,000 were placed in the wheel and fairly distributed. The next drawing takes place January 11th and any one sending $2 to M. A. Dauphin, New Orleans, La., or same person at No. 819 Broadway, New York City, may get $30,000. \V by may it not be the reader?

Wno is selling the best beef at ten cents per pound Davis & Co., 13 south Fourth street Other cuts low in propor-

sifgipislt!

THE DEAD FOXTT.

The poet's little span is done. The poet's work on earth goes on. The Hand that strikes the ringing chords. The thought that clothes itself in words,. That chimes with every varying mood, That gives a friend to sojuude in fiesk or fire, in smileJPr tears. Wakes echoes for all coining years.

The poet's hand and heart are dust. s, The poet's grave lies green and hushed. Ilis music lives, and soars and swells, And shapes the natures where it dwells! Blends with their grief, refines their mirth, Gives of its own pure grace to earth, Shriafft dreams and fancies, and for love Finds vords to speak and strength to prova.

Oh! many a heart struck desolate, And many a life, by bitter fate Left dry and dull, and many a soul Chafing 'gainst circumstance' control. In fret and doubt, the surest balm Finds in the poet's golden calm. Their blessing whom his bower has blest, Haloes the poet's tranquil rest. [All the Year Round.

Fascination of Llie in Homo. [Good Company.] But of course we find it at last, the home waiting for us in the heart of old Rome and our days of vexatious househunting are forgotten in its cosy comfort. And as our sweet, lazy padrona is not long married, she has not had time to make such an overwhelming collection of furniture and bric-a-brac. There are positively only four pictures in the salon, and gilding is represented in two small candelabra and a French clock. If our marble-topped bureaus only had handles to the drawers, and our easy chairs were not so poorly made that we are almost afraid to sit down in them, we should be quite content. As for the daily bread," fresh rolls, milk and butter are delivered at our door every morning dinners come smoking hot from a restaurant in a tin trunk on a man's head. How lie manages to mount safely our seventy-two steps and never tip over the kettles of coals into the soup-tureen, we can't imagine.

With markets giving us fresh fruits, does not it all seem like tho perfection of easy housekeeping? It will be vanity and vexation of spirit in two months, I foresee and we shall change from one restaurant to another to get change of fare, and throw ourselves finally on the tender mercies of our padrona to cook our dinners as we like and relievo us from such an Italian combination aa came only yesterdy—mush and sausages on the same plate.

But the charm of Italian life comes on us even in these early days. It is something, if you must be so prosaic as to enter old Rome by a railway, to find that the depot is put down on the map as a

Eouse-hunting,

art of tho old baths of Diocletian and with hurried glimpses as one goes from street to street, of Trajan's forum, and the fountian of Trevi, and the Tiber, is calculated to stir strangely one's fancy. And the pictur* esqueness of the streets strikes one at once. What with priests and soldiers and the passion of the women for brightness, they are all life and color. Priests in brown, priests in scarlet soldiers with an opulent variety of uniform, and plumes and tassels, and silver braid enough to ruin a modest government.

And the life and variety of the streets is their charm to a northern mind. Even while I write a band sounds in the distance and I see down the long street a troop of gay soldiers. A half nour ago, a vague sonorous chanting rose to our windows, and below wa8 the long line of priests bearing the dead to his home. All in brown robes, barefoot and bearing long wax tapers, their chant, their dark procession, liad in it something weird and impressive.

Strange Avocations—Singular Ways In Which Some Folks Make a Living. [Chambers' Journal.] Said a witness under cross examination "I am an early caller. I calls different tradesmen at early hours, from 1 till 5:30 in the morning, and that i3 how I get my living." What sort of a living he made is not recorded. A pound a week, we •would say, would be the outside figure, and to earn that he would need to have a couple of score of customers. The early caller's fee is well earned, since but for his intervention his clients would often lose a day's pay, if not thrown out of work altogether, by failing to keep time.

Not so deserving are the "tuppennies," carrying on their vocation in those quarters "of London where pawnbrokers and poor people abound. They are feminine intermediaries between the pawnbrokers

and folks anxious to raise a loan upon their belongings, who, rather than transact such business for themselves, are willing to pay two pence for every parcel, conveyed to everybody's "uncle," or redeemed from his clutches.

There are men in Paris, birds of a feather with the chiffonier, who go from hospital to hospital collecting the linseea plasters that have served the turn of doctor and patient afterward pressing the oil from the linseed, and disposing of the linen, after bleaching it, to ^he paper makers. Othe®ynakei couple' of francs a day by collwH^g old corts, which, being cleaned and pared, fetch, it is said, half a franc per hundred.

A lady resident of the Faubourg St., Germain, is credited witlj earning a good living by hatching red, black and brown ants lor pheasant preservers. One Parisian gets his living by breeding maggots out of the foul meats he buys of the chiffoniers, and fattens them up in tin boxes. Another breeds maggots for the special behoof of the nightingales, and a third boasts of selling between thirty and forty million worms for piscatorial purposes. He owns a'great pit at Montmatre wherein he keeps hia store, Every day his scouts bring him fresh stock, for which he pays them from five to ten cts. per pound and resells them to anglers at double these rates.

Mr. Wells, of Nottingham, has recently started the worm industry there. To keep his farm stocked men and boys go out at night in meadows and pastures and get from two to six thousand worms. Then, they have to be placed in moss to make them tough enough to put on the hook fresh worms,are too tender.

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

1118 PAPER gssr SlgfWR&Stt

RAILROAD TIME TABUS

Union depot Chestnut and Tenth streets. .. {.and than

for all trains except I. A St. L., C. &T. H. and freights. Time five minutes faster Terra Hanto time.

Depot of I. Ht. L., corner Tippecanoe and Sixth streets. Depot of T.H. and S. E., oorner Main and First streets.

Explanation of references: (8) Bleeping Cars attached, (t) Parlor Cars attach daily except Sunday. Daily trains daily, Sundays excepted.

All other

T. H.&I, R. K.-Vandalla Line. (Arrive from the East.) *(S) No. 2 Pacific Express... 1.25 am 4 Mall Train 10.10 *(S)t 6 Fast Express 2.45 8

Indianapolia Acc

Sc

T. IX.

No. 2 Mail Train 12.30 p'in 4 Accommodation 8.00 (Leave for the North.) No. 1 Mail Train 6.00 am 3 Accommodation..., 4.50

INDIANAPOLIS 4c ST. LOI/IS. (Leave for the East.) .„ Accommodation 8.08 am Duy Express 8.10 Now York Express No. 5...._ IM am (Arrive from the Eaat.) Day Express 10.42 am Accommodation —. 6.40 pm New York Express No. 6 1.40 am (Leave for the West.), •Day Express 1.42 am •Accommodation 10.44 •new York Express No. 6 6.44 (Arrive from the West.) Accommodation 8.06 am Day Express 8.08 New York Express No. 6 1.42 am

EVAJtSVILLE & TEBUE HAUTE. (Arrive from the South.) No. 1 Eastern Express 2.55 *(8) 8 Chicago Express 10.45 (Leave for the South.) *(S) No. 2 Nashville Express 4.30 am 4 Express 2.55

CHICAGO A EASTERN ILLINOIS (Arrive from the North.) No. S TerreHaute Acc'n 12.05pm 1 Chicago & T. H. Express... 5.40 pm •(B) 8 Chicago

«Sc

No. 1 Mail & Acc'n 9.87 8 Indianapolis Pass 1.07 pin (Leave for the Northwest.) No. 2 Mall and Acc'n 6.37 am 4 Indianapolis Pass 4.07

TERRE HAUTE & WOHTHI'GT'JI. (Depart for the Southeast.) Mail and Express 7.00 am Accommodation 7.00 pm (Arrive from the Southeast.) Mall and Express 2.30 Accommodation 10.20 am

JEFFERSONTILLE, MADISON & INDIANAPOLIS. (Depart from Indianapolis.) South.Ex. d'y 4.20 am Louis. A Mad. Acc'n d'y 7.10 am Ind. & Mad. Mail 2.50 Evening Ex 6.10 (Arrive.) Ind.dkMad. Mail 10.00 a ni Ind. and Chicago Ex 11.20 am N. Y. & Nia. F. ex. d'y 6.20 L. & Ch. F. L.dy 10.50 pm

Mctteen Cutl et JBand

Is now full, having

Accomplished Musicians, Elegant New Uniform

AND ARE

Ready to take orders for

rancRRABURar

DYSPEPSIA,!

7.00

(Leave for the West.)

«(S) No. 2 Pacific Express 1.82 am 4 Mall Train .10.18 *(S) 0 Fast Express 2^0 (Arrive from the West.) *(S) No. 5 Fast Line :...! 1.82 am 8 Mail and Acc 8.50 *(S) 1 Day Express 2.50 (Leave for the East.) *(S) No. 6 Fast Line 1.40 am 2 Mail and Acc'n 3.40 *(8)1 1 Day Express 8.10 7 Mall ana Acc'n 7.00 am

I.—Logans port Division. (Arrive from the North.)

T*

C11 red hy

Nashville Ex... 4.25 am

(Leave for tha North.)

No. 2 T. II. & Chicago Express... 7.40 am 0 Danville Acc'n 3.15pm (S) 4 Nashville fe Chicago Ex 10.55

ILLINOIS MIDLAND. (Arrive from tho Northwest.)

or

hras3

string music

Leave orders nt Scott Gunn's dgar sto 15 Main, iv Sylvester Oweus' 802 Ohio Ktrc

REMOVAL

Dr. J. P. Worrell

Oculist and Atzrist,

removed his office to 656, M.Un street

ffice hours from 9 A. M. to 12 p. and from 2 to 5 p. M.

Gives JEverybodg a Chance to 31ahe Something out of his Investment in the Drawing of

JANUARY 15th. There are no less than 1870 prizes,am'nting Together to $M,804K 1st Prize, *4nd Prize, $5,000. 3rtl Prize9 $2,500.m And Whole Tickets Address all arders to

G.UPINGTON,

Or

599 Broadway, New York,

M. J. RICHMOND, rovington, Kr.

Send for Testimonials aad our book, "Three Millions a Year" Sent free. THE "ONLY" LUNG PAD CO.,

Ey

Dm. HASrat'B Iaoir Toxtc Is a preparation of Protoxide of Iron, Penrvlaa Bart: and tha Pboaphsin, associated with the Vegetable AromaUcs. Indorsed by tli« Medleal Profee^oa, and reeomnMBded by them for DjspeiMla, Vsaeral Deblllir. Veawle Diseases, Waal ef Vitality, JterroBn Froitratloa, Cearaleieenee from Fsrsrs aad Chraale Ckllla Mi Fever. It serves every purpose where a Toxic la nsoaesary.

MmhctoeibiTHE DR. BARTER HEDICME CO.. lo. 213 Hsril llala Stmt, St. tools.

STROLEUM JELLY Used and approved by the leading PHYSICIANS of EUROPE and AMERICA.

r'~oat

Valuable

Fr» «?omedy

own.

ABSORBTIOX Nature's

BORES, CUTS, CHILBLAINS,

SKUT DISEASES, BffEUMATISM.

CATARRH, HEMORRHOIDS, Etc. Also for Cotighf, Coldi, Sore Th»«at, Croup and Diphtheria, etc. 53"Try them. 25 and 50 cent size* of all oar goods.

1.BAMD MEDAL AT THE PHILADELPHIA EXPOSITION.I

SILVER MEDAL AT TUB PABI8 EXPOSITION. COLGATE & CO..N JP:

way

NG0ISUASES, HR0AI DISEASES BREAKING TROUBLES.

TtDuryHBTNT^K^syste^curatlv^^enS

and healing medicines. It

draws from

the diseased parts the poi­

sons that cause death. Thousands teatiffy to its Virtues.

YOU CAN BE mm AND CURES,

Don't despair until you have tried this Sensible, Easily applied and RADICALLY EFFECTUAL Remedy. Sold by Druggists, or sent by mail on receipt of price, $2.00,

Detroit, Itlicb.

lif

3 1 1

T*!mui cr&v

•_ Ye

ftf :Mmtf

v.»

BLOOD.

/mwM

A

Tor the

Tha Toilet

Articles from pure

Ywellne—each as

Pomade Vamttna

Treatment of

Vaseline Cold Cream, Vaseline Camphor tee

WOUNDS, BUEIfS,

revolution

Vaseline Toilet Soaps, are iiftrlor to

imj

*r

mm«

VASELWB CONFECTION^ ?. An Mrreeable form of take rng vaseline internally. V25 CENTS A BOX.

S--

Cure Your Back Ache

And all diseases of the Kidneys, IBladden and Urlnary Organs by wearing the

Improved Excelsior Kidney Pad

IT IS A MARVBLOF HEAL IWO AND IfiLT

Simple, Sensible, Dlreot, Painless and Powerful. It

CURES

where all else falls:

lation

and

A reve­

In medicine. Ab­

sorption or direct application, as opposed to unsatisfactory internal mediolnes. Send for our treatise on Kidney troubles, sent free. Sold by Druggists, or sent by mall on receipt of price,

92.00.

A work of 875 large pages, contalnlnj tlflc information for tne married ant

liarge, 8 Sou thClark St., Chicago, 111. JL/Xl. jfl^e IX. VJJjJLlN:, .—Reliable FkjialePills five dollars a box. A tovereitcn rcmedyfor all Ken in? gularitie

A POSITIVE CURE: WITHOUT MEDICINES.^

I

PATENTED OCTOBER lO, 1S76.

O N E O

No. will cure any case in four da^Q, or less No. 2 vc*!1 cure the Most Obstinate Case, matter ol. now long standing. I

No nauseous doses of Cubebs, Coptuba or 01 of Sandalwood, that are certain to produce dyr pepsia by destroying the coatings of the stony\ ach. No Syringes or Astringent Injections tc i" •produce other serious complications.'**'/}' *7**'".--

Price $1.50. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTf 01 mailed on receipt of Price. 4 For further particulars send to druggist it your city for Circular. J. C. ALLAN CO., ?4? P. O. Box 1,533. No. 83 John St., New YorK *re offer3 Reward for any case they wiL }&re.

tnnrl

'mr'

WE WARM THE I WORLD!

*,»r

A N A S E O A

.5.

^"•^^^eTLancast^r is a" Block Ctaolfboras slowly, yields more heat and makes

leaa ashes than any other coal sold in the market.

quantities ef ten orone hundred bushels, by

G. P. KIMMEL, First and Canal Sts.,

ADDReSS

TIUs is tho Original and Genuine Kidne Pad. Ask for it and take no other. THE "ONLY" LUNG PAD CO., u.

Detroit, micb.

valuable and Helen single of both sexes

on Marriage, Who to Marry, When to Marry the Advantages of Marriage Hints to the newly marrleid on the functions of the organs of Male and Female on Reproduction How to have healthy and lovely Children, a gulde to the

Ailllcted seeking relief information onthe liabilities and diseases that remlerjnarrlagc improper which is indiscretions, excesses, nervous exhaustion, sexual debility, and 1m-

otency, which causing so much common infelicity. Facta vrerybody Pnblished DR. A. O. OLIN. Price fifty cents by mail. Dr. A. Olin's iTT^T? fame has been before the public for the last thirty years, and lie has\.X JLX^Jlie devoted his entire life to the study and practice of treating those diseases of t.'»o generative Organs, and we venture to say that no Physician in Chicago or the United States to-day, has had th« sucessthe'^Scmlnal Weakness or Spermatorrhea producing Sexual Debility, nervous Exhautlon, Prostration of the nervous Forces, General Physical and Mental Indisposition, and the thousand disagreitble symptoms that accompany it together with all Blood impuitics, and Impotkncyfrom any cause. The experience gained in thirty years years'practice In this particular branch of tho of tho Profession warrants the statement that ho stands at the head of tho Medical Fraternity In his treatment of all diseases of the Gencitive Organs. Let none be deferrop from seeking advice because many physicianshave failed. Many an invalid resolved to make the more trial has been asastonished tmd graillcd from iinmeditne benefit from Dr. Olinm' treatment. While there is life there is hope. Physicians all over the country send mo patients after having exhausted t1 eir skill. When practicable I prefer a personal interview, but I cure thousands of persons every year who cannot visit the city. A list of questions to answor will be forwarded to any one desiring then. dress all letters to Dr. E. Osiioiine, Physician T\ 1) A

1

iT X"XT

IE!

:iPf

np

Ilii

'f"*u

Sui?© CllPe.

fi

Sold at the same price, in