Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 November 1883 — Page 6
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fit
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SHft'
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I owe my
(Restoration
to Health
and Beauty
to the
CUTlCURJi
REMEDIES TwMmislsl of a
H'uftvw. Hotiiiltoiin^ chln^ Torrurts, '?-c.oftii«.
T\isrr«i uincj mJ fcruiti »nH, li
Salt tth uio, mid In taut tie Huwon cuied by the CCTICCKA
Reniudieu.
C'alicurn Hcsolvein, the new! blood purifier, c'eansea the blooJ ana ptrsifl ation of lrapurutps and poiaouou^ elciuauts, ana tbun removes the cau.-e.
Cutlcura, the great Skin f'ure, instantly Inflammation. clam the
aliay* itching an s£uu Miia simIp, heals and retrtores tlie hair.
Uijasr*,. *nl So/es,
Gnlkura .Soap, an exqviieit" Skin Bean titler an.! Toil, iit-qui-l u, prep .rid from Cuiiourn, is inditpeosab.-e in tient.njr akin li*easi's, .Baby Htunors. Skin t-mis lies, Sunburn,~ ».nd ltou^b, Cutti'yed or Greasy Skin.
Cuticur- II emedien, are absolutely pure aiid tn oij r«j.w ttioini Purifiers and iski-i Beauiiflerr-, fiee from niefcuij", arseuici, lead, ZUJC, or any other mineral or vegetable psititon v/tiai-oever.
It IV-i uld require-this entire paper to do Justice to ft de^crip ion of :hecures performed by ii*-, cut.cura rteolvent internally, anl Curteuni S«M| txr rahliy. liczema o* (lie i'«lni» of the l'.:»Dd3 and of ttis i-nd- tie l3iiurur. ver dillit-ulc to treat aad kuu.1 roii^Mereu inciaubln (.mull p4ctip.
t'f
S jld bv ail druggisu*.
1ft
frv
1
Weald (Ic:it!a, with lost of hair without numite IIUJKI.-. co»*r.l wiili cmidniff and «c.aiv rub ious «:speciit!J ot etirdren ana indole, wain of wi'Udi siiicc li".r i. »d bea ol »n». 1 rhinx, IJUI inn# and bc-ily tf-rturi-s lhat b'.tiled even rel«t rroiu or unary r^incdies. 8".ANT-.l Hifi lmie» SIB magic..
P*oi'ia.iN, l-pro-«y. and other frightful J* i'm "f isRlii di-eases, Ktr.ilul- uS ulcers, old ijor.'h, and disoliajgrng wounds, each and hli »T WIIKIH hitva been spodly, peinianentjy and ettouonnanily cured oy the Cuucura Remedies when piiyMCians hospitals and at oilier remedies failed, »s p.oveo by a vast number of sworn testimonials In our po-iercMon', which we. will cheerfully mall to aay address- ...
CUTICURA,
50 cents
RfiSi/I.VKNT, $ COAP, 26 WUtfl. POTTKK DKOG AND CHEMICAL Co., Boston. Mass.
Send for "How to Cure Skin diseases.''
ere A I B*PVPor Koush» Chapped C#Eii iP% UI I 1 and Ureapy tsklu, BidcK neidn, Pimpicb and skin Blemishes use C'u icura Soap.
SANFORD S RADICAL CURE.
Head Colds, Watery Discharges from the Nose and Eyes, Ringing noises in the Head Nervo Headache and fever instantly relieved.
Choking mucus dislodged, 'membrane cleansed and healed, breath sweetened, smell, taste ai^d hearing restored, and ?'vages checked.
Coueh, Broncbllii, dropping* int^ .be throat, P.-sln- in the Obes*, Dvspepbia, Warning ot lirougth- and Flesh, Loss of Sleep, etc. fured.
One bottle Radical cure, one box Cata rrh-8l'-*olvort and on* Dr. San ford's Inhaler, lu one p? ckasre, of all druggists, |1. Ask for Hao ford's'K.tdical Cure, a pure distillation of Witch Hazel. Am. Pine, Ca. Fir, Murigold, Clover Blossoms, etc. Potter Drue »nd Chemical f'rt.. Boston.
XOlUNfr
For the relief and pre vention, the lnstaat it is ''applied, of Rheumatism,
Neuralgio, Bciatica, Coughs
r^Y%y'Qo\&z, Weak Back, Stomech "^^and Bowels, Shooting Pains ^Numbness, Hystpria, Fe-
male
Pains, Palpitation,
'/yWr!\ •s. Dvspepsia. Liver Complaint /E LE CTRI c\\ Bilious Fever, Malariatti and Epidemics, use Oollins, "fcASTE" Plnsltois (ai Electric Bat' terv combined laugh at pain.
wilh a Porous F1 aster) asc,. everywhere
and
In chronic dyspepsia and liver conr pl«int. and in obronic constipation and other obstinate diseases. Host cite r's S'omach Bitters in bevond all comparison the best remedy h*tc\n be laken. As a means of restoring the st eneth and vital cnnw of portions who are sinking under the debilitating effects of »)nfut disorde-a, this stain mrd vegetable invlgorrnt i« confessedly unequaled. For *nle by ail Druggists and Dealers gennH"
DR. FELIX LE BRUN'Ss
Gr
and
A tiwmanteed Cure for Gonorrhea and fcii-ft, K»fe, pleasaut aud reliable. No bad r£ from its use. Does not iuterfero with bu-imsN» or diet. Price $2 per box, or "three boxes tor $5. W rltten guarantees issued by every duly aathorlzed agent to refund the moosy if three boxes fail to enre. Sent postage prepaid on receipt of price. r:.
5
Address C. F. ZimtiBMAN, Druggist, Bole agent. Orner Thirty--t£ ana Main street#,
Terre Haste.
BOEUEMAFS BOOTS ire the b?st. Try him. Store third doo? south of Oeio on east side of 4th. Don't buy till you see his stock,
£v
.m
s- r» a trr-
e#fr tl
U-JUfr'tfc/ I I'O-'i 3 i. it cX a J«
H£NRY IRVING,
^4fc **. "," i*-:
1
ter ami miJi r.icum «»u lUe tars,
Bw n«1 ide»«»t face.
The Great English Actor. Henry Irving has arrived at Sew York and is to make a professional tour in this country. His genias as an actor, his irreproachable character and social standing have dlevated the histrionio art and helped to bring about a recognition of its essential dignity. a to near Glastonbury, Somersetshire, England, February 0, 1338. His full name is John Henry Broadrib Irving. He was educated at a private academy in Loodon, with a view of his engaging in commercial pursuits. In pursuance of this intention, upon his removal from school he wan placed in the office of an East India merohant but his bias towards the stage was so strong within him that while still young he broke away from business 'and committed himself to the vicissitude* of the actor's career. His first appearacce before the public was in 1856, at Sunderland, in the North of England, where be essayed the part of Orleans in "Richelieu." The next year be became very popular in the Theatre Royal, Edinburg, where he did responsible bustness. Two years and a half with a company including such performers as miss Cushman, Hiss Helen Faucit, Messrs. Yandenhoff, Robson, Charles Matthews the younger, Benjamin Webster and Wright, proved invaluable to the young aspirant, who, in 1859, appeared in the Princess' Theatre, London. His brief engagement there was succeeded by bis appearance in Manchester, whjre he played Hamlet. By 1£66 he bad earned a high position in ITis profession, and made bis appearance on the boards of the St. James Theatre, London, in various important parts. In 1868and 1869 he acted in the new Queen's and Drury Lane Theatres, in the same metropolis, with still increasing reputation. Engagements at the Yaudeville ai.d Lyceum theatres followed. In the last named house his personation of Mathias in "The Bells" gave him a reputation equal to the greatest ever earned on the stage, and his place in the forefront of contemporary actors has been maintained ever since. This was in November, 1871, a date memorable in the annals of triumphant acting. His undertaking was to depict, in the language of the London Times, "the concluding hours of a life passed in a constant effort to preserve a cheerful exterior with a conscience tortured tiU it has become a monomania." A subsequent notable success was his part of Charles I, in Mr. W. J. Willis' "Charles the First," which was performed on consecutive nights for more than half a year. Air. Irvinz's Richelieu, Macbeth, Philip iu Tennyson's "Queen Mary," Richard III, his assumption of the two parts of Lesurques and Dubosc in $lr. Charles Reade's "Lyon's Mail," and bis Louis the Eleventh are known, by name at least, to all readers of the newspapers, Hamlet, especially, commanded great attention from scholarly critics, and Mr. Irving's personation of this difficult character will b« given probably greater attention .than any other in ilia wide range of parts during his visit to Amer ioa. Since 1878 he haa been manager of the Lyoeium Theatre, London, which is described as a perfect temple of the jlrama.
No living actor has a more oorreot understanding of the principles of art, and his success marks an epoch in the history of the British stago.
W Civil Rights
Courirt Journal. Ihe blacks ara fi6t altogethei losers by unfairness. If bad negroes are hanged and bad white men escape, the colored race is the best off, as it gets rid ot its worst elements, while (be white suffer by preserving wh^te criminals. If a black man cannot go to a white man's hotel, a black hotel-keeper gttsallthe colored custom, and white laodlord loses all that goes to the black one.
THK Rev. Mr. Cooper, of Chatham, Canada, who is here the guest of bis father-in-law. Mr. A. C. Hart well aud vtho officiated last Sundsy at St. Stephen's church has received a telegram extending his vacation until next week. He has kindly offered to officiate again next Suaday in oase Rev. Mr. Morrell, of Vincennes, who was invited some time ago, is unible to come.
Powliag Hall.
Mr. Frank Keating said this morning itwas true that he would take possession of Dowling Hall on a lease after May 1st next'providing the place was not sold re that time, and that he intended to run it as a first class theatre if ne socured possession of it. Mr. Keating said James Myers had nothing mote to do with the negotiations, but that a gentleman from St. Louis would ciated with him in the business..,..
INCEST.
A Revolting Case on Trial the Circuit Court.
An
Unnatural Crime Charged Against a Brother and Sister.
From Friday's Daily.
The rial of a most remarkable case in the cripainal annals of Yigo county was finally begun in the Circuit Court this morning before Special Judge Mack'and a jury. It is a case of incest, where a brother and sister, both intelligent and the girl uncommonly good-looking, are charged with having had sexual intercourse wilh each other. The hideousness of the crime would of itself attract a great deal of interest, but the positions and favorable appearance of the" parties in this case adds largely to the general interest. A. jury, alter much tuimoil, was selected yesterday evening and an adjournment had until this morning. The names of the twelve jurors who are to try tbe case are: Jas: H. Garrett, Donald McPhersoB, Phillip Webster, Oliver MC Nutt, John McGee, Oliver Gunn, Moses Ellingsworth, Willis Watt, Wm. S. Har-
fsaac
er, Thos. F.Elliott, Jeiemiah Cruse and C. Myer. Deputy Prosecutor Taylor, in his open, ing statement to the jury this morning, said they expected to prove that the parties charged in the indictment had committed incest on the 6th of March, 1882, at the house of James Stultz in Nevins township. Stultz was at the time dying, and did die shortly afterward. He had married a sister ot the prisoner's, and they had gone over to his house on Sunday evening, the 6th ot March, 1882, for thi purpose of Bittiog up along with other relatives at his dying bedside. Charles Markin was at that time, and Is still, married to a daughter ot the deceased James Stultz It is claimed by the prosecution that late that night Malinda came over to the bed where her brother Charles was sleeping, in a room adjoining that in wbich the dying man was that she was beard to say "Charley, I'm coming to bed with youthat she did get in bed with him, and that the crime as charged was committed then and there. The prosecution al^o claimed that they could prove certain acts tending to show that such iatirracy between the two existed previous to the time charged
The opening statement for the defense was made by Ed. Pugh, who lidiculed the charge, declaring it preposterous and absurd that they could have committed such a thing, even had they so desired it, with nine persons within twenty-feet ol them, a lamp burning all the while, and a uan dytng fifteen feet away. He stattd that the defense would prove conclusively that the charge^was a gross and famous slander.
Both attorneys ^wandered considerably out ol the way at' times and showed a disposition to argue the matter to the jury but the court checked them wilh the remark that they could preserve their comments for the regular argu oient.
Etta Reed was the first witness on the staDd. The court ruled- that the proseoution could rot prove any conduct on the part of the defendants until the 6th of March, and the witness did not testify to any material point. Mrs. Phoebe Lawsoa, of Fontanel, swore she heard Malinda say "Charley, I'm coming to bed with you" and that subsequently she heard the two in the commission of the act charged.
The attorneys in the case are Taylor, Hamill and J. G. McNutt for the state, and Davis & Davis and Pugh & Pugh for the defense. The eourt room was crowdcd.
The Powers of County Superintendents. 'In answer to inquiries as to the powers of a county superintendent in the matter of rules and regulations and a course of study for the district schools, H»n. J. W. Holcombe, Superintendent of Public Instruction, has given the following decision, which is of considerable importance, in that it somewhat enlarges the powers of county superintendents:
The management and control of the schools is conferred by law upon the trustees, and this power involves the right to prescribe a course of study and make rules and regulations. But the trustees also appoint a county superintendent who, in a large departmebt of scheol government, is the representative and agent of the trustees and to Whom their powers are delegated so far as is necessary to successful administration. I think, therefore, that if neither the county board of education nor the trustees individually have taken the necessary action the superintendent may arrange a course of study and direct its enlorcement in the schools, and may make reasonable rules and regnla tions, and the refusal of a teacher to obey the superintendent in this particular would be such "neglect of the business of the schools (Sec. 4,426 S. S.) as would warrant a revocation of his license, or would indicate such incompetence to sucessfully teach (Sec. 4,425) as would warrant a refusal to grant bim another license."
Senator Voorhees.
Senator"D. W. Voorhees will deliver his lecture on "Thomas Jefferson" at Ann Arbor, Mich., to-morrow night. From there he will go to Washington to engage in the Kilbourne—Thompson damage case, as counsel for the plaintiff. This is the second trial in the case. On the former trial the jury rendered a verdict in favor of Kelbouiue for $100 000 damages, and the verdict was set aside by the court on the ground that the damages were excessive.
Alox. Man.
A Terre Hante business man who knows thinks that Alex. Mann's estate will considerably more than pay out and that he will have something left.
A PATENT
i.
681
has just
THE TEHRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZEHT*.
in
Onelot
Infants
and
What Sour
been
-i-V
issued to
be MSb- John B. Deeds and Wm. Mack for a slate and window cleaner.
WE LEAD THE TRADE
NO SHAM
ourea Ooastipatioa, Oolda, Indigestion: But Ciitoria.
Farewell tkea to Morphine Syrup®, Castor Oti and Faragorfe, and HrilCMtorla.
Canf ur Llnlment.-A^A. ••lute ear* far Rkeaaatlaa, Spraiaa, Buu, Gklla, sad sa lutaatuMaa Pahknlisvar.
A Guardian Angel.
Lafayette (Inj.,j Courier: .A Lafayette lady—a model wife and mother— broke her husband of the iloon habit by walking up to the bar beside him and calling for the beer. She broke the awful silence, as tbey walked home, with the remark: "I love you, my husband, and if you are going to hell I'm going right along with yon."
I Republican Hopes. Chicago News. A Missouri tobacco Sign, upon being Derided by a Republican for not Knowing enough to Go in when it Rained, calmly Replied: "That may be Trse, but if I were Nominated for Governor I w*uld be Elected, an Honor which You, being a Republican, can never Hope to Accomplish."
Ben is a Stayec.
Philadelphia Press: Ben Butterworth has accepted the office ot Commissioner of Patfnts. It isn't as good a piace as_ be, being an Ohio man, *ould like, but* a hard winter is coming on, and Butterworth isn't the man to go back on his country in such an emergency. I,
Pure blool helps to make a clear conscience. Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies the blood. Enough said. Send us a big bottle '-^T
The appetite of Lord Coleridge is now receiving attention at Washington. Unfortanately for the institutions of our country.be is too late for a Potomac plavk shad.
Horsford's Acid Phospate At a. Brain Tonic. Dr. J. C. Wilson, Philadelphia, Pa., says: "I have used it as a general tonic, and in particular in the debility and dyspepsia of overworked men, with satistactory results."
The birds are dying by the thousands in Louisiana for want of water.
Ben Hogan seems to be doing some effective work on the Pacific shore.
Pi
or sohools can be made from a ten-cent package of Diamond Dye. Tbey color Silk, Wool or Cotton.
A fashion reporter notes that the fashionable color this year is gray.
-tk r* -A
$ it
V- V-
r/
'\r ji & J*
vV*
M?I *4VJ '-vt J-T" *i n,t
REDUCTION SALE!
.BUT A GENUINE
SLAUGHTER
—OF ALL—
SUMMER GOODS!
ii wil1 p»v anone to como fifty miles to see
Our Extremely Low
Victoria Lawn at 12J£c,8old elsewhere at 16%. Others at 15, li
Prices.
Even if they do not wish to purchase a dollar's worth ot geods. -Wequote only a it 6f the'many
BARGAINS.
and 20, sold elsewhere at 20, 22% and 25.
A beautiful liue ot dotted Swiss 25 per cent, lower than at toy Other place in the city. It will pay to see-them. An elegant line of Hoop Skirts at 25, 35, 45 and 50c each sold elsewhere for double. 2,500 yards Bleached Muslin at 5c, sold elsewhere at 7c. 2^000 yards fine Brown Muslin at 8J^c, sold elsewhere at 5c. 1,500 vards Linen Toweling at 5c, sold elsewhere at 7J^c. 800yards Linen Toweling at 6^,'sold elsewhere at 8J^c. .*
1,000 yards Dress Goods at 5c, sold elsewhere at 10c. Elegani. Dress Plaids at 25c, reduced frrtto 40 and 45c. ..A Elegant Dress Plaids at «^c, sold elsewhere at I2}£c, 4,500 yards all wool filling Brocade at 10c., sold elsewhere at 20c. Our Corsets at 25, 50.6§ aDd 75c, sold elsewhere at 40, 65,75c and $1 00. 1,000 doz. Ladies' Hose at 5,8^, 10, VH% and 15c, cheap at double these prices Come early and bring your relations and your neighbors with you, so that may all see that there really is one store in Terre Haute that sells Dry Goods le3S than the regular prices. The above Bargains can all be found at the
Opera House Block, Second Door East of Fourth:
A. R. JESERICH & SON, Proprietors.
NEWTON ROGERS-
& :V-.
Manufacture to order window and ftoor frames, mouldings, brackets* and casings,
-DEALER IN-
Lumber, Lath, Shingles. Office and lumber yard first and main streets. Planing mills corner of Second and Vine streats. Terre Ikute, Ind.
Children
Witlwmt Morphine or Nsreotin,
What (fires our Children rosy cheeks, What cures their ferers, makes them deepi 'Tia Caatorla.
What eares tWr ooita,
4
Terre Haute, nd
I' A Card. To all who are suffering from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, &c., I will send a recipe that will cure OOuFREE OF CHARGE. The great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self addressed envelope to the REV. JOSEPH T. IN-
MAN, Station i., New York City.
Butler fears that it would be ingratitude if Massachusetts should fail to giye bim another term,
1
t.
.,.
Extreme Tired Feeling.
1
A lady tells us "the first bottle has .dppe my daughter a great deal of good, her food does not distress her now, nor from that, extreme tired feeling which she did before taking Aofril's Sarsaparilla." A second bottle effected a cure. No other preparation coutains such a concentration of vitalizing, enriohing, purifying and invigorating properties as Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Joaquin Miller is .annoyed to think that be is about thirty years older than his step father. ......
IS PHYSICAL PERFECTION WORTH STRIVING F0R? Do you wish to be perfect in mind and body Do you wish to be healthy and strong in all your parts? Use Allen's Brain Food. It will surely infuse new life and new vigor into the whole system it gives perfection to every part, increases tue muscles and strengthens the brain.
The inhabitants of Massachusetts are worth at. average ot fl,500 apiece.
Did 8he Die.
''No she lingered and suffered along, pining away all the time for years, the doetora doing her no good aad at last was cured by this Hop Bitters the papers say so ffloch about." "ladeed! Iadeed I how tnanklul we should be for that medcine,""^
tv
./
C. C. Hazdwell, the Boston journalist left a library of 1(1,000 volumes.
Jaralysis, SIMTears.
"After, having sttffererd for 9 years with paralysis," says Mr. Joseph Yates, of Paierson, N. Jersey,~"I-was cured by Samaritan Nervine." Mr. Yates authorizes this statement. Your druggist kee it, $1.50.
The orange crop of Florida this year is e$t4mt£.d.&t (0Q,0Q0.boxes,
Wm. Noll, No. 067 Central avenue, Cincinnati, O., says. Having used Dr. D. D.Kremien's Augsburz Breast Tea, with good results, and I want to extend it taothew* I would not be without it. GULICK & Co., Agents.
John Quincy Adams drew $425,000 out of the government for a period of sixtynine years in office.
Why Welcome.
What makes Floreston Cologne welcome on every lady's toilet table is its asting fragrance and rich, flower od or
Shall a Couali Crary You Olt?
"Exactly. You're right. It is a mercy wat there's a doien pounds left of me. Bat the greatest mercy of all is that before 1
VUiVU lUVl AU VUM yVBIMVl
•train writes (r. Abraham Orner, of High spire, Dauphin county, Pa. The tonic will render yon the same service. It is not a mere essence of ginger, bat an original omponnd ot powerful curatives. It stlmates, warms, sootnea and tones up the 8tem^.
"isSI!!
MANHOOD,
KIOW THYSELF.
A Book For Every Man, Young, Middle-aged and Old.
THE untold mlPerlesthat result from in discretion in early lite may t-e alleviated and oared. Those who doubt this assertion should purchase the new medical work: published by the Pea body Medical Institute. Boston, entitled THE SCIfcNCE OP LIKE OR, SELF-PRESERVATION. Exhausted Vitality, Nervous aud Physical Debility, Preuiatnie Decline in Man, or Vitality Impaired by the Errors of Youth or too close application to business, may be restored and manbood regained.. 258thedition, revised and enlarged, Just published. It is a standa'd medical work, the best in the English language, written by a physlciau ot great experience, to whom was awarded a gold and jewelled medal by the National Medical Association It contains beautiful and very expeusivengravings. 300 pages, more than 250 iv&lne able prescripiions for all lorms I diseases, acute and cbronio, the result of m»ny years of extensive and successful practice, either one of which is wortn ten times the price of the book. Bound in beautiful Fiench cloth, embossed, full gilt. Price only |1.25 by mall, postpaid, on receipt ot price. Illustrated sample six cents. Send now. THK SCIENCE Of LIFE OB. SKLF-PRISER-
ATI ON.
is beyond all oomparison the most extraordinary work on Physiology ever published. There is nothing whatever that the married or single can eitner require or wish to cnowDat what is fully explained—{London Lancet. THB 8CIKNCK OF LIFE OB, SELF- PEK3KK-
VATIOS.
is a marvel of art and beauty, warranted to be a betier medical book In every sense that can be obtained elsewhere for doutl« the price, or the money will be refunded in every instance.—fAuthor.
N. B.—YOUNG and MIDDLE AGED ME ST can save much time, suflerlnK and expense by reading the Sclenoe of Life, or con ferilng with the Author, who may qe consulted on all diseases requiring skill and experience. Address
Peabcdy Medical InstituteOr, W. H. PARKER. M. D. 4 Bulflnoh Street. Boston, Mass.
HMOISUNACQJAINTFO Y.ITM Q.OIBAPHV OF 1HI» COUN
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By the oentral poeltlon of ito line, oonneoto thtf East and the West by the shortest route, and carries passengers, without change of oara, between Chicago and Kansas City, Council Bluffs .Leavenworth, Atohison. Minneapolis and St. Faal. It connects in Union Depots with aU the principal lines of road between the Atlantic and the Factfla Oceans. Its equipment la unrivaled and magnificent, beinsoomposed of Xoat Comfortable and Beautiful Say Coaches. Magnificent Horton ReoMnlng Chair Cars, PuUman's Prettiest Palace Sleeping Cars, and the Beat line of Dining Cars in the world. Three Trains between Chicago and Missouri Blver Points. Two Trains between Chicago and Minneapolis and St. Paul, Tia the Famous "ALBERT LEA ROUTE."
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lapoll
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Tickets for sale at all principal Ticket Oflloes in the United States and Canada. Baggage checked through and rates of fare always aa low as competitors that offer less advaa^ior detailed information, get the Maps and Folders of the
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,f
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ot
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"PATENTS"
Obtair/ed, aud all other business in the U. S. Patent Office attended to foi MODKBATB
Oor office is opposite the U. 8. Patent Office, and we can obtain Patents in less time than those remote from WASHINGTON.
Send MODEL OR URAWIKO. We advise aa to patentability free of charge and we mate no CHARGE UNLESS WE OBTAIN PATENT.
We refer, here, to the Postmaster, the Superintendent of Money Order Division, and to officials of the U. 8. Patent Office. For circular, advice, terms, and references to actual clients in your own state or county, address c. A. snow & co.,
Opp. Patent Office Washington, D.
BOOKS-500,000
VOLUMES, the choicest literature of the world, 100 Page Catalogue Free. Lowest
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JOHN B. ALDEN, Publisher.
P. O, Box, 1127. 19 Tesey St* It
ill
