Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 February 1881 — Page 3

4

CLEOPATRA.

The following poem, was written by W. W. Btorv, the American Sculptor. Tlie poem," which originally appeared in ".Blackwood's, prt«uB*« in a startling, ma fascinating wny the doctrine of Metempsychosis:

Here Chairman, take my bracelet*, They bear witli a purple fitatn My nrm* turn over my pillows—

That over the garden blow. I dreamed I wan with my Anthony, And in hi* arms I lay Ah me! the vision has vanished—

Its music has died away— Thcflnme andtho perfume have perished,

As this spiced aromatic pastille That wound the blue smoke of Its odor In now but an ashy hill—' Scatter upon me rose leaves,

They cool me after my sleep, And with sandal odors fan me Till into my veins they creep Reach down the lute and play me

A melancholy tnne, To rhyme with the dream that has vanished

And thcslumberlHg afternoon.

Theie, drowsing In uolden sunlight, Loiters the slow, smooth Nile Thro' slender papyri that cover

The sleeping crocodile. The lotus lolls on the water, And opens its heart of gold, And over its broad leaf pavetnent

Never a ripple is rolled. The twilight breeze Is too la«y Those feathery palms to wave, And yon little cloud Is as motionless

As stone above a grave.

Ah me! this llfeloss nature Oppresses my heart, and brain I Oh, for a storm and thunder,

For lightning and wild, fleroe rain! Fling down the lute—I hate ltl Tftko rather hlsbucklor and sword, And crash them and clash them together

Tlli this sleeping world Is stirred! Hark! te my Indian beauty— My cockatoo, creamy white, With roses under his feathers—

That flashes across the light. Look! listen! as backward and forwa»d To his hoop.'ofjgold he clings, How ho trembles, with crest uplifted.

And shrieks as he madly swings! Oh, eoekatoo, shriek for Anthony! Cry "Gome, njy love, come home!" Shriek ••Anthony! Anthonyl Anthony!'

Till he hears you even In Rome!

There—leave me, and gtake from my chamber That wretched little gazelle, With Its bright black eyes, so meaningless,

Ana its silly, tingling boll! Tnko him—my nerves he vexee— The thing without blood or brain— Or, by the'.body of Isls,

J'11 snap his thin neck in twain!

Ieave me to gaze on the landscape Mistily stretching away, Whero the afternoon's opaline tremors

O'er the mountains quivering play Till the fierce splendor of sunset Pours from the west Its Are, And melted as in a crusclble, ______

Their earthly forms expire. And the bald blear skull of the desert With glowing mountains Is orowned, That, burning like molten Jewels,

Circle Its temples round. 1 will lie and dream of the post time, /Eons of thought away, And through the Jungle*of memory

Loosen my fancy to play When a smooth and velvety tiger, Rlbbei with yellow and black, Supple and cushion-footed

I wandered, where rever thetrook Of a human creature had rustled The silence of mighty woods, And, fierce In a tyrannous froodom,

I know but tho law of my moods. ... The elephant, trumpeting, started $ Whon he heard my footsteps near,«. And the spotted glrafl* fled wildly

In ayellow cloud of fear. I sucked in the noontide splendor Quivering along tho glailo, Or, yawning, pantlng'and dreaming,

Baslced In the tamarisk shade, .• Till I heard my wild mate roaring, As the shadow of sleep wasgone $ Then I roused and roared In answer,

And uuslieathod from my cushioned feet My curving claws, aud stretched me,

And wandered my mate to me. We toyed In the amber moonlight, Upon the warm flat sand, And struck at each other our1 massive arms

How powerful ho was, and grand!

His yellow eyes flashed fiercely As ho crouched and gazed at me, And his quivering tall, llko aiserpent,

Twitched, curvtngjnervously. Then like a storm ho seized me, "/& With a wild, triumphant cry, And we met as two clonds In heaven

When the thunders before them fly. We grappled and struggled together, For his love, like his rage, -was rude* And his teeth in the swelling folds o# my neck ,,•!" 1 jf

At in ottr play, drew blooA.W Often another suitor— Fori was flexile and fair— Fought tor me in the moonlight,

While lay crouching there, Till his blood was drained by the deaert And, ruffled with triumph and pewer, He licked me and lay beside me

To breathe him a Vast half hoar. Then down teithe fountain we loitered, Where the antelopes came to drink Like a bolt we sprang upon them,

Ere they had time to shrink. We drank their blood and crushed them And tore them limb from limb,

"W

1

1

And the hungriest lion doubted Kre he disputed with him.

&

1* W tt?

That was a lifo to live for! Higiw Not this weak, human life. With its frivolous, bloodless passions,

Its poor and petty strife! Come to my arms, my here, .?». The shadows of twilight grow, And the tiger's anclen fierceness

In my veins begins to flow. Come not cringing to sue me I Take me with triumph and power I As a warrior that storms a fortress!

I will not eringe or oower. ^.? 0»me as you oame in the deaert Ere we were women and men, When the tiger passions were in as,

v""

And^love as you loved mo then! A' ft

LET US KOKGET.

Let

for jet. What mattcM it that

Once reign«d

a

They ure hot where I have lain. Open the lattice wider, A gtiaze on ray bosom throw, And let me Inhale the'odors

o'«f happy

realms of

—{J.

long

1

ago,

And talked of love, and let our voice* low, And ruled for tome brief hoars What if we tung, or laughed,«rroyally?

It has availed

wept may bef

not anything,and so

Let it go by that we may Better know How poor a thing is lost to you aad me. Hut yesterday I kissed your lips, and yet Did thrill you not enough to shake

From your drenched lids—an4thedew

no regret.

Mined with

Your kiss shot back, with sharp breaths failing you And so to-day, while our worn eyes are wet

With all this waste of tears, let us forget

I

W. Riley in Indianapolis

Journal.

THEN AND NOW.

Pass the butter gently, Mabel, Shore it lightly through the air In the corner of the dish, love,

Tou will find a nut-brown hair. What fond mem'ries

it

awakens.

Of the days when we were wed, When upon my good coat collar Oft was laid your little headl Lovingly

stroked those tresses

In

the happv days gone by

Now strike tnem every In the butter or the pie.meal-time

ONLY A FARE.

MARY KYLE DALLAS.

"Fare, ma'am," said the conductor. The passengers took no notice. 6he was a shabby-looking old woman, in rather rusty-looking black, with a frayed lace scarf around her neck, and an oldfnshioned, heavily worked lace veil fastened about her bonnet-brim. "Fare!" repeated the conductor.

The passenger looked at him, dipped her hand into her pocket, rummaged in a queer little reticule she carried, and after exhausting all the patience of which a car conductor is supposed to be possessed, said, slowly: "I haven't got a penny: I suppose I've lost the change, or else I've had my pi an I go in to

iS

street, too." There was a pause. The conductor looked at the passenger and hesitated. It was a damp, misty evening. The streets were ankle-deep with mire. It was three miles to street, and the car was not half full. It seemed only oommon humanity to permit an old woman to ride to her destination, whether she had her fare or not. But there on the platform, staring through the glass door, our conductor saw the face of a car spy— a spotter, the men call him—who was •watching him with eager, green eyes, anxious to catch him tripping.

Poor as his place was, twenty men were waiting for it. His receipts must tally with the number of passengers recorded on the dial provided by the company for that purpose, or off went his head on Saturday night. Still he could not put the old woman off his car only one alternative remained—he could pay her fare.

Now, a fare on the road was only five cents, but 6 o'clock was coming and he was hungry, and the supper he woulcl have just time to snatch before his evening trips began would cost him ten cents —five cents for bread and cheese, fivo cents for a cup of coffee. He gave up one of these if he paid that old woman's fare. You see there was another old woman whom he called granny to be cared for, and clothes of some sort must be worn, and there were no pennies to spare. But it was the memory of old granny that arose in his heart as he dropped in the coin, touched the bell and nodded "all right" to his passengers and, as he stepped from his car to take his brief rest, he handed the old woman to the curbstone, and saw her safe upon her way.

1

"No, I don't want anything but the coffee," he said, waving away the restaurant keeper's boy, as he pressed the basket of rolls and sandwiches upon him. "Take that stuff away."

The bread was out of reach before he felt quite safe, he was so very, very hungry.

At that moment an old woman touched the car-starter upon the arm. "Tell me the name of the conductor on car No. 5?" she said. "There he sits under the shed, drinking some coffee." "That's Varnham—Tom Varnham" replied the starter, rather eagerly, for he had a relative waiting for a place. "If you have any complaint to make, there's the office." But the old woman toddled away.

Oh, the long, long winter, cold and cruel—a winter full of terrible storms of snow and sleet Two drivers on the line were badly frozen. Many died of lung complaints The conductors suffered, too, though not

bo

terribly, and

granny had been sick, and there wfts money to be spent for medicine and nourishing luxuries, and Tom Varnham's old great coat was stolen one night by a thief who made his way into the crowded lodging-house.

After that he went without it, and he often wondered what it would be to be warm, and to sit at a satisfying meal. Life seemed Tery hard, but to give up that poor situation and seek for better was not to bethought of, with granny on his hands.

The passengtyft who iode in car No. 5 often snubbed their conductor, took him to task for the inconveniences they suffered, and abused him at their dinner tables, or as they sat before their warm grates toasting their toe% while he shivered on the car platform. Perhaps the shabby old woman with the worked

jf.

lace veil may have done it also, for she rode in the car very often, though she never found herself again without a fare. "What's the matter?" asked a passenger. "Three cars ahead stopped—some one hurt," replied the other. ."What is it, conductor "Conductor of No. 5 dropped down," was the response. "Some say he's dead."

Tom Varnham lay in the midst of a little crowd, quite senseless and very

pale. r, The men were talking about him. "He's been starvingliimself and freezing, too," said one. "A sick olcl grandmother on his hands and he was a clerk or something, never used to out-of-door work. I've seen this coming for days." "You are the doctor, sir?" asked a shabby old woman, laying her hand on the arm of a gentleman who knelt beside poor Tom. The gentleman looked up. "You said last week that I did notdeserve to be called one, Madam Hover," he said, demurely. "Oh! Dr. Jones! Well, that was when you couldn't cure me of the neuralgia," replied the old lady. "But I want you to do something for me. Have this young man brought to my house he did me a favor once, and do your best for him, and send the bill to me."

The doctor nodded, and when Tom Varnham came to himself he lay in a great, old-fashioned feather bed, in a room he had never seen before, and the old woman whose fare he had paid, rocked to and fro beside his bed. "You are not to talk," she said, waving a black fan at him, "but everything is all right. Your grandmother's board is paid to that rapacious old woman, and you needn't trouble your mind about anything. Go to sleep. You went without your bread and butter to give me a ride once, and 1 shan't forget it, though 1 happen to be a rich old woman instead of a poor one, as you thought me."

Tom listened, found himself incapable of making any remark, and fell asleep again. But hard times were over for the poor fellow. When he was able to work again there was a fine position open for him in a great wholesale house, and he was able to keep a pretty suite of rooms and a servant for old granny, and to live with her, to her great joy. And, moreover, it is well known that old Madam Hover, who has neither relative nor hobby, has made her will, leaving all her great fortune to Tom Varnham. "Don't ask me why," she said to the lawyer. "Perhaps you wouldn't think it much to go hungry on a stormy winter evening for the sake of a poor old woman. I could have called a coach, as I'd only lost my purse,but he didn't know that, and I always remembered just how he looked when he sent that bread away. I've a right to leave my money according to my fancy."

The Fuel of the Future.

The Nautical Gazette makes the following announcement in regard to the use of petroleum as fuel.

We shall soon be able to announce a wonderfnl stride in the mechanical appliances for using liquid fuel for generating steam in both marine and land boilers.

The fh&tter is in the hands of practical men, who will soon demonstrate that they can make from 28 to 30 gallons of crude petroleum, costing from 85 to 90 cents, ao the work of a ton of coal, costing from $4 to $4.25, and without dirt or smoke, and when, as in the case of a large steamer carrying from forty to forty-five men in the fire-room, one man in each will be abundantlv able to keep up a uniform pressure of steam at all times.

Liquid fuel is the intervening step between ooal and electricity, which will in due season furnish motion for the world. But until we arrive at a thorough knowledge of this subject and of motive power liquid fuel will have had its day and generation, wiping out the last remnant of barbarism, coal.

The firemen of the fnture can wear broadcloth in the fire-room, while the coal-passer will have laid down his "shovel and hoe" to become memories of the past This condition of things is near at hand.

W!"

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE."

A

ri

,r*

Newspaper Men. -i"

Editors do nothing but go to Bhows and eat peanuts, it would appear, from the extravagant idea some have of the craft An unknown voice in the following well chosen words timely remarks: "An editor's business is to write editorials, grind out poetry, sort and^ rewrite communications, listen to all kinds of complaints, offer advice on all subjects, from prescribing for a baby with the colic up to specie resumption, keep a waste basket steal matter, fight other people's battles, take beans, pumpkins andT green wood when he can get them on subscription, work eighteen hours out of twenty-four,always be in a good humor and witty, be alike impervious to flattery and censure and be criticised and dunned by every nincompoop who don't like his paper. Finally to wear out in service, ana at last hear the pleasing plaudit: 'Tis enough. Come up higher.01

A Fall River girl, earning a salary of $3 a week, has fallen, tatoss to $150,000. We never noticed il $lfore, but sne is very pretty.—[E*

Women working for a fair mean business. When they go around collecting autographs they want them written oq bank checks.—{New Organs Picayune. J'

Vi*

DMINI8TKAT0RB LEASE NOTICE

Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an order of the Igo Circuit Court the undersigned, administrator of the estate of Will lam R. Gardner, deceased, will lease on the premises on Saturday the 6th day of March, 1881, for three years the following lftudi

The southweet quarter and the southeast quarter o' the southeast quarter of section 36, township iO north, of range 10 west in Vigo county, Indiana.

TKKMS:—One-half of the yearly rent to be paid every six months the lessor to furnish approved personal security for his performance of the conditions of the lease.

NICHOLASYKAOKB, Administrator HORACB B. JOKBB, Attorney.

APPLICATION FOR LICENSE.

Notice is hereby given that I will apply to te Board of Commissioners of Vigo county Indiana, at the March term for a license to sell Intoxicating liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time with tho privilege of of allowing the same to be drank on my premises for one year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank are located at No. 12 north second street between Main and Cherry streets in the Fourth Ward.

JNKJXBHKRWOOD^l^BroadwajjIL

E

XECUTORS' SALE OF REAL ESTATE

The undersigned. Executors of tho last wi 11 of Chauncey Hose deceased, will on tho 26th. day of February, 1681, at the office of M. S. Durham, No. 6/7% Ohio street, in the city of TerreHaute, sell at private sale the following described Real Estate in the city of Terre Haute, Vigo county and state of Indiana, to

Lots numbered forty-one (41) and forty-elx (46) in Cnaunoey Rose's subdivision of that part of section twenty-two, (22), township twelve 12) north, of rango nine (9) west, which lies eiween Chestnut and the canal and between Eighth street and the canaL

Terms of Sale: LotNo. forty-one, (41), onefdurth of purchase money In two years, onefouith in three years, one-fourth in four sand one-fourth in Ave years, the notes lng seven per cent Interest frem date, ibfe annually. Lot No. forty-six, (46), one- third in one year, one-third In two years, one-third in three years, the notes beating seven per cent Interest from date, payoMe

Ily.

Fibkiiv Nippkbt,)

annually

No. 5 Fast Line 1.40 am 8 Mall and Aoc'n. 8.40 pm •(S)t 1 Day Express....^. 8.10 7 Mall and Acc'n 7.00 am 11 9 Cin. and Louis Express... 1.02 a'm

T. II. St I.—Logansport Division. (Arrive from the North.) No. 2 Mall Train —02.80

I 4 Accommodation 8.00 (Leave for the North.) No. 1 Mall Train 6.0ff am 8 Accommodation 4.60 pm

INDIANAPOLIS dc ST. LOUIS. (Leave for the East.) Accommodation.. 8.08 am \ay Express 8.10 pm .Jew York Express No. 1.48 am (Arrive from the Ecfst.) Pay Express 10.42 a Accommodation 6.40 pm New York Express No. 6 1.40 a to (Leave for the West.) Day Express 1.42 am Accommodation —....—..10.44 pm »ew York ExpressNo. 6.- 6.44 (Arrive from the West.) Accommodation —...—. 8.06 a Day Express 8.08 New York Express No. 6 ......... 1.42 am

EVAM8V1LLE

Sc

Co. ST. H. A Chicago Express- 7.40 am 6 Danville Acc'n —... 8.15pm (B) 4 Nashville A Chicago Ex.^10.55

w-ij ILLINOIS MIDLAND. (Arrive from the Northwest.) No. 1

Mail A Aoc'n ... 5.07 (Leave for the Northwest.) No. 2 Mail and Acc'n —7.07 am

TERRE HAUTE it TrtrORTHI»GT»N.

i(Depart

v-3

Wkeford MADGB.

IMPROVED FARMS

in lows, Kansas, Nebraska asd Minnesota

FOR SALE!

Great Bargains.

lOyear's time on three-

fourths of the purchase money. Interost 8 per cent. Parties Intending to go West, send for lists. State locality in which lands are desired.

Exeeuto

r8

JOSBPHUS COLLKTT, ^eCUVO™'

Terre Haute, Jan. 27th, 1881.

RAILROAD TIME TABLE.

amnion depot Chestnut and Tenth streets, for all trains except I. A St. L., C. AT. H. and freights. Time nve minutes faster than Terre Haute time.

Depot of I. A St. L., corner Tippecanoe and Sixth streets. Depotof T. H. and S. E., corner Main and Kim streets.

Explanation of references: (S) Sleeping Cars attached, (t) Parlor Cars attached tally except Sunday. Daily. All other '.rainsdally, Sundays excepted.

T. II. I. R. R.-Vandalla£»ine. (Arrive from the East.) nS) No. 2 Pacific Express 1.25 a 4 Mall Train i.

—10.10

*6)t 6 Fast Express 2.45 ~8 Indianapolis Acc 7.00 i," 10 Cin. and Louis Expiess... 2.18 a (Leave for the West.) •(S) No. 2 Pacific Express 1.82 am 4 Mall Train J0.18 •(B) 6 Fast Express 2.50 10 Cin. aud Louis 'Express... 2.25 a !v,v (Arrive from the West.) *(B) No. 5 Fast Line 1.82 a "8 Mail and Ace 8.60 *(S) 1 Day Express 2.50 0 Cin. anu Louis Express...l2J5 a (Leave for the East.)

W.

TERRE HAUTE

(Arrive from the South.)

No. 1 Eastern Express 2.55 •^S) 8 Chicago Express.... —...10.45 (Leave for the South.) •(8) No. 2 Nashville Express.—.— 4.80 a 4 Express 2.55

CHICAGO it EASTERN ILLINOm (Arrive from the North.) No. 5 Terre Haute Acc'n ^.12.05 1 Chicago AT. H. Express... 5.40 pm *S) Chicago A Nashville Ex.* 4.25 a (Leave for the North.)

for the Southeast./

Mail and Express Jr,Kam Accommodation (Arrive from the Southeast.) Mail and Express Accommodation —10 JO am

E1TERSONT1LLE, MADISON A INDIANAPOLIS.' (Depart from Indianapolis.)

South.Ex.dy Louis. A Mad. Acc'n d*y J-l® fnd. A Mad. Mail XvsningEx.^...^. 6.10 (Arrive.) Ind.AMad. Mall

Ind. and Chicago Ex 11.20 a N. Y. ANla. F. ex. d'y L. A Ch. F. L. dy -..10^S

IB DEBILITY

P' VMS1 Weakness and n%

.•-••. .'••••,••..•••..,. -.v .-. ... ,.• ..••• .y- -..•• ..•••. ••:...%• •'-V ••:.•••••".' •. s.. .•»

4*

EMORY'S

TANDARD CURE

A HEVER-FAILIKQ REMEDY For Chills and Fever, BHioasandtn* termittent Fevers Dumb Ague, and all Malarial Diseases.

Stop taking roiaonous Drags! Stop taking dcaf-prodlucing Quinine! Stop tnftlnc bone-destroying Meeeeifl Stop ta-ktn? daeg«rons Poisons! Standard Cure contains no Quinine! Standard Cnr« contains no Kenwf. Standard Cure contains no Polsoaat Standard Core pleasant to take!

PRICK 50 CENTS PER BOX.

Standard Cur? Co»114 Nassau stN.Y*

PILES

ANAKESIS

Sr.8.8ilstoe'sExt«mlPileBandy Gives tnstsntrelief and 1» an Infallible

CURE FOR ALL KINDS OF PILES.

Bold by DmrgMa everywhere. Price. tlJOO per box pr«M*fbymall. Samples sent/re* to FbrtieUns saasM sufferers, by P.HeasUeater A Co, Box WML jfow York City. Bolemaaareotaren of "AtiaMtr

OR. 8ANF0R

NVIGORATOR

The Only Vegetable Compound that acts directly upon the Liver, andcures Liver Complaints Jaundice, Biliousness, Malaria, Costiveness, Headache. It assists Digestion, Strengthens the System, Regulatesthe Bowels,Purifies the Blood. A Book sent free. Address XV.

Sanford\ 162 Broadway,

won

IAU

j.

Gentle Wo

1

Who want glossy, luxnifamt and wayy tresses of abundant, beautiful Hair must use LYON'S KATHJIRON. This elegant* cheap article always males the Hair now freely and fist, keeps it from fhlttng out, arnvte and cures erayness, remoYes dandruff and itching, makes the Hair strong, giving it a curling tendency ana keeping it in any desired position. Beautiful. healthy Hair is

the

*i, n•*.¥*»?"*' -.1"$ 'B

-J.ws I-....a -t.i

ir»

Dealer in all HindsoJ

1,000 BUSHELS

CHARCOAL'

on hand.

Stove wood and cord wood tmithingcoal In the city. Office 946 Main street,near Railway

VMks •tanpfcvsftM kaakalMwIjr 10* lam wtm Ml tf valoaUt letMbyMM,B.

am

fit. B.

in am in nw wi

•I Wmm. all ah dln—m tlwwMa njr Hill Pifc. Co*

vo

THE WOULD EEH0WNED WHITB (or sale by J.N. Hickman, 901 Main streeV.TEREE HAUTE.^,

I O W 1

Humphnja* Homeopathio Specifics Prorea from aaipto expert•*»«• An entire nooew Marl*, Preagt. ElBelent, aad Rellakle, ther are lb* ooly nM»dlolnes adapted to popular nse. usr nnarAL kos. ctmcs. met.

Fevers. Ooageatton, Inflammations, .3 rorais. Worm fever. Worm Colle, .28 rvlns Colle. or Teething of Iafaau, 35 larrhea of Chlldreo or Adult*. .25

lacba. Cold, Bronchitis, JS jaraleta. Toothache. PaceaelM, .J# leadamee.,Wek IwheMt VerU*o,» ipala. IWUom Stentaeh. J&

nIca.too.Bmtpalas.

ireeee* or PateM Perlede.

etarrb.acute or ehronle 90 rkooplM

Positivk ctraa

.! "t I *,

sore

result of using Kaihairon,

I

Wit lotrt medicines. ALLAN'S SOLUBLE Afibl, Pataatad October It, 1MI

tho

Wi *#1 i-jV I'll) i-i 1

CATSD BOUOIK&. One box. NO. 1 will (rare any ease !n fonr dart, or 1M«. )To. 1 will ears the moat obstinate oase, no iinftsr ©f howlonfrtasdln*

Ho natueoas doses of cube be, copaiba or on QC sandalwood, that are certain to produce dyspepsia by destroytnf the coatings of the stomach. K# eyriafsa or ailtiiarent tatfeettona to prodace ottMt "Pflte |1 j£U0W)LD'bt ALL DBUOOISTa, 4* ^°Ahr^£^feV«d for drcuUr.

P.O.BoxlM. jToTALLAKCO,n JohnBtTMfc MOO reward loraay eeee they will nfll •°re.

QoUk. safe aad ste« oore.

PRESCRimDN FRffi

XWr the speedy Cere erteielaal Weakness, Lap 1: Maaheed, rreaatereMlllltf, Herroa

ttabureh.

t)

E. M- SMITH

he best

sSBOOK

C. F. RODERUS.

Mercantile Printer.

.«£ *-»,

f-,t

812 MAIW STRUCT.

Work done promptly, neatly and reasonablaorlces. Please call,

•,

r(h

'i1

('oaek.TtotentInfluensa,.80

VMed.

OHential

N.

Y.

BY ALL

DRUGGISTS.

•.o

Coughii,

enerain«bllinr.Pbr«'LWeakn«M.JO Msey Dletaw, oaa Debility,BDerinarorrhea,

I

S

'A

.:

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JS

p*Qf4*e Pertoda, .35

reH»,boufh. PUDcuH Breathlag, .SB lit Rheum Eruption*, .» .heaiaatUM. lUieamatle I'nlni,

jT

l.uu

eakneee.Wetting the Bed, 90 the Heart,falpltailon, l.uu of

laarv nctheBed.90 O. Dieeaee'ef Uie Heart, falpltatlon, l.ot roraalebydni||Mte,oraentbr the Case.

\'T -u4'

A Skin of Beauty is Joy Foreverr -FELIX GOURAUD'S Cream or Magic Beautiflet"

iff

Removes Tan, Pim-

fes,

les,freck

moth-

.patobes ]and every bl 1 on beauty It has stood tha tost of 85 years, and Is

so harm

less taste It 'A be sure

?reopar

I

Accept no oountorfelt of tilmlls

uuiuc. The distinguished Dr. L. A. Sayre said to a lady,of the hau ntton (a patlent(:— 'As yon ladies will use them I recommend Qourand's Cream' a* the lenst harmful of all the Skin preparations." Also Poudre Subtile removes superfluous hair without injury to the skin.

Mmb.M. B. T. GOURAUD, Bole Proprietor. Bond St., N.\. For salttby alldruggtflts ana fancy goods dealers.

,1

pro or 1

A

as—

leaej, coaiasioa «r Me^sTinlestji fstr, Deibetive liMrr» asflll Dls»M myht en bj teeret HsMta aad Bxcessss. lay 1st kas the Isfredleats. Address,

deaer. Coafhslosi *f idM^^rsrslea 1

idSxci Iddrc

DR. JAQUE8 A Cft..,<p></p>CQ..1_

pw:

JAQUC8

wTm

A m.

m*k jCaumuxidnk

A FREE

Booh rtf octavoow»c»frtneBWljrlOOlMlf Kull

dUease*. *lth

GREAT WESTERN

"V.H*

of

Aluahlo

note*.W

Or. K. it.

FOOT

on Heft

{id*.IMaeaaes*,

Athint or^nn^

of the

tut.

Di»»a«e«oflf»n:Dl»*^**0f^owepj J-*$

sch*» and puns IUaet Troublei ty

of chronic

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eases theae dlsessss are cur abla. Bantfor a three cant AddrMS, MURRAY filS^PVB.'bd. k(V iw"Kant •nuHraat. |r tej^forkWOv

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n^.kT AutiiiiittiAtaMiL US to MOO. Doable 8ho4 Breecb-Losdlo*gbotOuns,fWtoWR uouow BW

John Zimmerman^

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Dr. J. H. Peyton

H«oiMD«lan offloeonthe Corner of Fourth and Ohio, In Dr. Long's old offloe. and solicits the onage of the comes unify. 't

Manhood Restored I

A victim to early imprudence, causing nervous debility, pranuuare. deoajc, etc. having tried in vain every known remedy has discovered a simple means of self cura,,? which he will send run to his fellow-suf-^ fercrs. Addreea J. H. BEEVES, 43 Chatham1' •traet, New York.

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At 205 South Fourth Street 'I «l: sbase Hament crowd, 11 ol desirable goods. Farmers trade par« Uoularly solicited. Buys and sells all kind» r:s oountry produce. Beet plaoe in the city for •otter, eggs, poaitry, lard, Ao. Send order* by telephoK

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