Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 September 1884 — Page 7
tue owy KMW ttr Epileptic Flu.' tn i^lll IWllfMI ~. WeskaeM it latfantty rcUeree nod cures. Oeeaa (gtod andqutskens slngglah circulation. STsnte ®esgertBt of disessa ud saves slctoess. On*
r„
•gly •wt«(e*ewistacoonio4odMra** FllintnalSS $ Dolls, Cutmncies and Scalds. IrfPennanentlj ml promptly euros paralyais. Yes,ltL»actaarnilngsnd healthful Aperient. Kills Scrofela and KlngsBvfl. twin brothers. Changes bad breath to good, remoy.
tag
the cause.* Boats billon. tendencies and makes clear complexion. Equalled by none tntbe delirium of fever. charming resolvent and a matchless laxative. It drives Sick Headache like the wind.
Contains no drastic cathartic or opiates. Be-
CTHE BBHT]
ST. JOSEPH, BIO.
For testimonials and circulars send stamp-
ARE YOU CONSTIPATED?
If you are bilious, dyspeptic or constipated, a few bottles of
Hops and Malt Bitters
Tbe Hup l'lastcr will cure Back Acne, and all other paius instantly. 2i ctB. only, at druggists. fV'
Wheat is now qtioted at sixty-live cents per bushol at Ltgansport. Tnid is Hhe lowest mark reached lor a score of years.
Durkee'ri Salad Dressing.—A readymade rich and delicious dressing lor all salads of meat, tiali or vegetables. Cheaper and infinitely better than ttomemade. (Jarivalled as a sauce.
I Dean Bradley, vector of Christ church, Madison, has resigned on account ot the health 01 his wife.
Solid comfort" can be realized by those suffering irom alt forms of Scrofula if they will take Hood's Sarsaparilla and be curedu :.
General Butler will be at Ft. Wayne "October 1st, to address the Northern Indiana fair.'
"ROUGH ON PAIN" PLASTER Porous and strengthening, improved, the best for backaohe, pains in cheat or side, rheumatism, .Neuralgia. 25c. Druggists or mail.
President Smart has ordered two microscopes for Purdue university to cost $285.
E O E O E N A I O N
Children slow in development, puny, -Icrawuy and delicate, use "Wells' Health Renewer."
Work on the insane aaylum building at
Loganspurt is being pushed rapidly forward.
When the aoaip
I'flOJT. PkUL
BIDE
HES
tteres the brain of morbid fancies. Promptly ewes Jthemnatlsm by renting it. Restores llfe-gftrtjtg properties to the blood. Is guaranteed to cnrsaU nervous disorders. pTTiellable when all opiates CalL. Refreshes the mind and invigorates the body. Saras dyspepsia or money refunded.
GBQBOMlQla
Diseases of tbe blood own It a conqueror. X» toned la writing by over fifty thousand teadlnfcltfr seas,clergymen and physicians la U.S.snd Europe
BrForsale%yaUlenlliigdrngglsta.tl«.(«»
He Br. J. iicliiM Meal Go., Propneicn,
Omaka
will
jtcure you as they have many others. An occasional use of Hops and Malt Bitters
gives
tone to the blood, strengthens* ^the nerves#and, promotes perfect digestion! }Do not be pe rsuad ed to try something else, said to be just as good, but get the genuine. For sale by all dealers.
HOPS & MALT BITTERS CO.,
DETROIT, MICH.
2
If the it'Stinioay ot thousand* .of the leBt houa*fc«poni in our land is to be believed,-there not any flavoring extracts in ttte market worm half so much as Dr. Price's Special Flavoring*. 1'aey meed no reeommendiittous from us. Let ,Dr. Prions Vaniiih, Leuion, or Neqialine Flavors once be used,' and taey will always boused. ""i
The universal -verdJCt, "Tha Hop plaster is the best poruus plaiter ever Jmude." Otiiy 2ft ote.
Claret was ustd to extiqguish
a
fire at
J[ls«ion San Jose, Cat., owing to a lack of water.
is
annoyed with dan
druff, Glenn's sulphur dean will be found infallible. Hill's Hair Dye, black or brown, 50 cents.
Two hundred inventions have been accomplished by women during the past year.
Tftcse unhappy persona who suffer frou nervousness and dyspepsia should use Carter's Little Nerve Pills, whloh are made expressly for sleepless, nervous, dyspeptic sufferers: Price 35 oents, ali druggists.
Sardine paoking business on the ooast of Maine is oeaslng to ho profitable.
VANDBBVOOBT.
IfSS&ift lis Journal gives a report of tl made at that place )j| Hon dervoort who, according to the report
"delivered one of the best speeches of the campaign, talking on the leading issues, especisll the tariff queaOffiv end paying
a beautiful tribute to the eoidiere, living and
dead. The ^og^ff» ,P^d to overflowing." it is a pity "Hon. Pani .jVanderboort" did not devote at least a lew mitfutes to a discussion of what he knovfl about holding office, doing no workasd drawing the pay. It is
a
United
subject on which he
he is one of the best posted tseh in the United States. For several yew* he held a position in the railway mail seivice of the
States,
with headquarters it
or St. Paul, just which is ..not
now remembered. £ift tl*t make# no difference. It waa at Sfcejir thq^ojgier. "Hon. Paul Vandervoort" was an appointee of the lateJPostui aster Key, who had a latal facility for surrounding himself with rascals of hig|| and lo* Well, this fellow Vandervoort-—excuse us, "Hon. Paul Vandervoort," in some way attracted the attention ot Judge Gresham when he was placed at the bead of the postoffice department. Now Judge Gresham has anihnb|r Peculiarities and one of them tM|t is honest, after Cleveland's fluifoa taI.Je wont either steal himself or let anybody else under him steal if he knows it and cah help it.
When he came to observe "Hon. Paul Vandervoort" and his goings in and comings out he tound that he wai drawing his pay with regularity and promptitude, and for full time but "that he was devoting jutt about one flay a month to doing the work of his offlee. He was nqt only doing that then but had been doing the same way for several years. Thts struck Postmaster General Gresham, it struck every honest man in the count wheu the facta were known, si being j»i utterly unendurable piece of rascalitj and lie at.once had the "Hon. Paul Vai dervoort" stricken from the pay rolls hia country.
When he was hit
course.
acr
Bird8
mm
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25,1884.
0fprey|pt
Vandervoort" breed miy%l#i on to do that. He screamed, and tbei threatened, and then he begged am whined and plead to get hack into 41 office where he could be tfcoi^dofefij1 nothing. He went around to Qranc Axmy reunions—it was at army reunion he spent most of his time before when li was in office and getting pay
sfoi
Paul Vande:
The plain matter of fact is that *tlfe presence of this fellow on the Stump anywhere is in an insult to' honest men. He look from the government, through a series of months, pay for work he did not perform. In morals there is not one particle of difference between that and bis breaking into the treasmy vaults and iobbing the government ot equal amount. He ought to be hissed out of the state. Away with him.
THE DEATH OF SAMUEL 8. •. EAJRLT. It is impossible to exaggerate the shock given to the community as the report ran from white lips to startled eais throughout the city last evening that Samuel S. Early was dead. The falling shades of evening seemed to typify the sorrowful event. The news appe&red to be incredible. People aoubted its accuracy. He had been seen about the sheets all day in the pursuit of his ordinary avocations and in rather better health and spirits than usual, though he has not been in robust health for some time. Many said: "It is impossible
saw him only a little while ago
lNo,
1'
"Why,
or,
spirits*" To one and all the news
as a dreadful
"I
talked with him and thought I had
never
known him more cheerful or in
better
came
shock. His
awful errand
the eager messenger of death never performed more swiftly,
or in
future,
away to
give
greater emphasis to the truth of all time that in the midst of lift we are in death. One day, one very instant of time in the full maturity of mental
powers,
with
high hopes and prospects and plans for the
and the
|that the
next
.vital
instaut the
whole fabric of existence cureless ruin. What ft sad commentary on lite it ^s! What a mailing demonstration of the truth from which there
is
an eecape
forcee
I
are a fceble, flick-
tiht
WKR
when one's tiuw to go has come, than suddenly to go, 'iliff pailiteiAj, with no sad leave-taxtngS, tfb witnettipg of grief it is iohpoiilMi to assuage In thoee one loves, no sttuggl? with death, through weary hours of pain, no contemplation.of hopeSi and»mbi^OM^aod plana for the fliture, Heeding only time and-health to complete, ftllitag Unfinished- Ihto an open grave. AU lhes#were •par^^tdtholijian who was yesterd|jr round about among us and now hafceeme Into his iaheritance of iinmortalitt.^
The lips thatjWjere wont to intefest and and instruct all4he circle^his apjuaintance are dumb'
to4$atfc
in tte diinds of
there lives,
to
crane,
Of the character of the citizen removed from our midft is almost too,.soon ,tp speak. The shock' of hie- death is too sharp and the feelihg of personal bereave t^eht too strofig't^jMlEiit of due. cobsideration. In all the private rslations life In4ila faaily^
fei
the Democrats would not keep that surplus long. And when they had got4 tenridofit ly payitg it out for debts! they would be careful not to accumulate another surplus^and tte way they .^woulddo^ that^g would be by lowering tte taxes, {07 they hold that the "sovereignest" place in all the universe for money to 1e kept is in tlie pockets of the people who earned it. And they cry woe, a thousand times woe to the party or the policy which unnecessarily and for no good purpose, or only fof the pomp and paradeof crowded vaults, takes Jheseidollars out of their pockets.,
When the Democrats were in power Wiare was no money in the treasury This is uttered is a reproach against them by Republican orators from thousands of platforms They glory in the fact: It W&3 what they intended it is what they intend to be the case when they come in powdtagain.'^i
The governmem has no golden garden. Money in the treasury vaults has not grqwa there. It was earned by the people and it was taken from their pockets. If it ifi piled up in the treasury vaults it is not in the pockets ot the people. If it is in the pockets of the people it is not in the treasury vaults. We prefer to leave every cent not absolutely needed for the conduct of the government economically administered in the posseseicn of the people #ho earned it believing it is theirs ot right, and believing they prefer to hear Ujingle, each his sh^re iu his own pocket, than to hear about the shining pile off there at Washington where thieves* abound." The
GAZBTTK
xv
to-day,
OijiimainS
,hht
nqnt
Ben and
an£%1111ive
for
many',
ftkn
kindly inspiring ^Elec
tions of thjs goodly gecdeman,. his. strict integritjt,^ ifis: flde instincts^inhis large learning and his gentle maaUcn. Death, the'destr^r#, has ndf- taken and cannot taKe thei^aWay. Here, where lie passed mcst of4iii life tnd Where he teil asleep, will remain a recollection. of those attributes of a Cbxistian gentkman which made him a conspicuous citizen and which make death a great public loss. 'i"
Of the grief into which his immediate family were plunged only those can guess Who hire looked ihtb en open grave where ^11, that was mortal of one loved anS Ioat Was laid" «way to rNp The awful sU^cpocsl of the event Jidda an incalpvlaUe fetienslty to the poignaacjf of their sorro^. "Words are worthless either to mitigl^ or to measure their loss. Tears must flow and time ?Uone can heal wounds of the sdul.
hnsbMdi father,)am
asrfiend heWaj iho^h in a wideir cirCt* he -A'^fchblair wh6 never studied ^u^ect vhich he did hot thorovgbifttihaster or tofeoh ilpon any topic
Whtehrhe(v
wort
unperformed—and' exposed iiiiioreiiieat and urged them to take up his light., 1 worked for a whilfc but Gresham remained obdurate an then the genuini itoldiferr, Who bavelfcs little love and a large a loathing for dead beats as othei peoplle have, sat down on him and hii grievance. 4 3 "i 1Ef
For a time then Hon voori" subsided and the country had in dulged the pleasing hope that he hai settled down to work at some honest employment and was earning Litf bread like an honost man by the h^eat of his face But it was a mistake. "Hon. Pan] Van dervoort" is a lily ot the valley. He toili not, nei'her does he spin, and if, perai venture, by the svieat of his jaw he can eclipse Solomon'in all history Ijfe wfli| do it. He is alter another sinecure no'W by the old political road. He is on the stump and—well, Blaine's virtue is not cithe Spartan Gresham sort and the Hon. Paul has hopes, of that the reader may be bound, that he will be taken care of in the sweet buy-and-buy.
did hot illumihate
and adorn. His scholarship waa bot profound an^accut^. ln his favoriti Ittudiei he wksa a recognized 'anthoriti ana'his dictum was taken" as law* 4 ripe scholar and a courteous gentltiaaii is dead.
'GOVBRKOK POBTXB is right/absolutely right, when he says, as he did last night 'that |f the Democrats came Info pbwe^ the surplus in the treasury vaults wpulcj hol%i&ftn there long. That is true! (t would be paid qp the public debt, and be paid instanter, for it does not seen^ to be sound flnahcial seiise Torv-a nation any more tlian^or in individual to be paying interest on utstaodin^ ddblfl whlle the treasttrt vaulta are so lull of money that more Vaults have to be built:
knows no gentle
man who can better and more appetizing, ly describe grfcfllpiie of money in a bank vault than Governor Porter. But he paints the pietute too eloquently. *He makes the people who earned tt and from whom it was taken in taxes wish they had it back in their own pockets, or, that not being powiMa, Out no more be taken from them for the purpoie of awplliag the gntterlng heap.
T. H. NeltM at CudN.
CAMDKH, StgptT'* IT.—[IfnnanapoUa Jounrnal.]—Thejtfon. TBowae H. Neleon addreeeed altnTthdlenoe of probn* bly five hundred «f X^mmd^n on Tuesday aifht. Many ladies Were present. ColNeWnftadea splendid speech, treet*ng the tariff question rather Hilly, 'and 1 *as rsoelveti with the greatest eaiuaii
.j a p. Ji v.
am
tateln"tOb^ Look for Joy-Tot ., lover toaLato to Xond.
Eeadera ofttawtlionie^ "Hooeeol Seven Qmblee" wlllrecafttn® pathos with which poOt Clifford Pynebeon, who had beea nanatly l«nprisonwl alnce his eariy maaliood aaid, alter his release: "My life Is gone, and when lsttf Mtftpmesst Obi give me my happlaMa." B*t that could only be done la part, as gleams of warm sonshine oeeaslunjally fall across the gloom of Xew England antoinn day.
In a letter to Messrs. Hiscox ft Co., Mr. L. Titns, of Pennington, X. J., says: "I have snflmd untold misery from childhood from chronic disease of the bowel* and dlarhesa, accompanied toy *reai pain. I sought relief at the .hands of physicians of every school and ifted trery
patent atod domestic
remedy under the SUB I have at last found in PABKarSTeNlC Aeomplete speelflcpreventlve and cure, AS your invaluable medicine which did for me what nothing else oonld do, is entitled to the credit of my
eheeflnl£
fact." no lntrodue
ttonto the people of Jersey City, adds: "Thetestimonial of Mr. Titus is genuine and voluntary: only he does not adequately portray the suflering he has endured for many yean. He is my brother-in-law, and I know the case well. He Is now "perfectly free from his old troubles, SUJd enjoys health life, ascribing It all to PAbKBB'8 IfRIC. ui nequalled asanlnvlgorant: stimulates all the org*B« cares ailments of the liver, kidneys* and all diseases of the blood.
"JU Besdache and relieve an the trookke tenttoa-blioas ststeof thejrrstea,raehasDla-
»»SW»sse1m hssn shown Ineartf
ACHE
fhstlMrels where we care it while
^»gsws?jar Hbersdonpt.. ..
*c5e&a!dttle Liver Pills are iwynaa^inA •ry easy to take. One or two pflls mahwa dose. qrar«sMcttyi vegetable nd donot gijpeor ^rtteir genUe actiou plesseaH^o em. A vials at cents five forM. Sold
^1 •v jfilv"ls |i| twism«v»«nwt s»»«» drujgisla ergywhsre, oc sent by r^ilTEB JOSDICINE CO., Kew York,
(TTER
Feeble Grow. Strong.
When Qbstelter's Stomach Bitters is used 0 promote assimilation of the food an enrich the blood. Indigestion, the chief obstacle it an acquisition of strength by the wea^, is an allmena which infallibly succumbs to the action of this peerless corrective. Loss of desh and appetite, failure to sleep, and growing evidence of preuaatnre decay, are speedily counteracted by the great invigorant, which braces np the physical energies and fortifies the constitution against disease. For saie by all Druggists and Dealers nerally.
3scMe ApfNssess sss ssat ss 90 I MM HiY, YtllMt MtVUlOl, wlminaiaa
jmamm GMSBSb SDMtf nllsC lit SSMBlSlS tSSIS. «Sts«niiuiis!nm(alIantsanaimsa %K332s&a&esssss: 2& •1H MTU, MSMJWI.
WfEAIC, UHPEVELQPED-PABTS
THCHUMAK BOOT fikEkowa»i
For two month* in the year Henry Ward B#ohar"oafff preaibh. IaAigaat and Beifeiiler IM1 takee hia^vaaatien and enduree this oaiet of the hay-fever. A man with hay fever Isn't accountable for his aetions. He ia flrantio with snuffing, sneezing and headache. Every nerve in his skull thrills with distress, and his head ie a fountain ot tenia. He lives only to fly frosa "seaside to inehn-tain-top in aearoh of relief. This form of catarrh (hay fever) Ely's Cream Balm will cure. Plaoed in the nostrils it penetrates and soothes the affeoted parte at onoe, restores the impaired seasee and ereatea healthy seerettons. Yon cannot ran aw«r from hay fever, but you can drlve w|hm you by using Ely's Cream Balm. "Yankee" Robinson, the lately deceased eircus man, waa the originator of the circus street parade, it ie elaimed.
ETPhe Voice ef the People. No family Dyes were ever so popular as the Diamond Dyee. They never fail. Tbe black is far superior to logwood. The other colors are brilliant. Wells, Richardson & Co., Burlington, Vt.
Prof. A. H. Sayce has deciphered an Assyrian tablet whloh gives an aeeount ot a transit of Venus 1,800 yesrs B. C.
fAt certain seasons of the year nearly every person suffers to a greater or less extent from impnrity of the Mood, biliousness. *e., Ac. This should be remedied as soon as discovered, Otherwise serious reeulte may follow. Sherman's "Prickly Ash Bitters', will sffectually remove all taint of disease and restore you to health.
Isaao Thompson, known as "the oldest angler in America," died at Therss, N. Y., a fe^r days ago, at the age ot years.
Humor ia the StomaohMuch of the distress and sickness tributed to dyspepsia, ohronie diarrheea and other onuses Is ooeasioned by humor
•&&**
It ie said thst no Indiana man e*n get employment on the government river improvements at the (alia.—[Nsf Albany Ledger. 1
I aa Crued With Toothache 1. And eervee you right tor hnving neglected to use 80Z0D0NT. Had you done so your mouth wonld have been healthy and yonr teeth would have been healthy add your teeth eound. Get the "snag" pnlled out and commence at once ueing 8OZODONT, thereby pieserving ihe balance of your teeth.
"That settles it," said a lawyer who handed a lawyer 910, being his full settlement of a 91,000 estate.—[Camden Post.'
Time is Hoaej-
ve'f
ft
Time' and money will be saved11: keeping Kidney-Wort in the house, is an invaluable remedy for all disorders of the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels and for all diseasee arising from obstructions of these organs. It has cured many obstinate cases after hundreds of dollara had been paid to physicians without obtaining relief. It oures Constipation, Piles, Bitliousness and aH kindred disorders. Keep it by you.
balloon was picked up in
A paper sburgv
Pittsburg with an inscription stating that it was sent up in New York, 444 miles away.
GRCB^VILLK, CT., May 8,1883»
"Was attacked with severe kidney disease. Hunt's [Kidney and Liver] Remedy was advised, and one bottle completely cured me."—Charles H. Alexander, Foreman Dye House, Shetucket Mills. "I will certify to the truth of the above."—John A. Morgan, Druggist, Greenville, Conn.
Hon. Thomas B. Reed, re-elected to congress from Maine, graduated at Bowdoin college in 1880. He was a crack oarsman at college.
833 BANK ST.. Brooklyn, N. Y., I have qeen SICK for sevoitl years witb consumption I tried u»any remedies and doctors. They were useless to help me, ill 1 heard from Dr. D. E. Kremien'e Augsburg Stomach and Blood-puritying Drops aad Breast Tea. After ueing several bottles and packagss, I did get better, and I am well and healthy to-day, and therefore I recommend those remedies to all who are suffering like 1 was. ROSAUSFALOK.
QUUCK A Co., Arents. ,.,fM
Georgia,
One negro in Floyd oonnty, in giving nis tax recently
reported |5
worth of property and ten dogs. Another gave in lour dogs and $2.
Tbe Champion Remedy for Colic in infants, Summer Complaint, Flnx or Cholera Infantum, Dr. Brunker's Car minative Balsam is challenged against any remedy in the United States for Ave hundred dollars. Its reputation is unparalleled. It is perfectly harmless aad pleasant to take, and equally a perfect remedy for adults as a remedy for Dysentry,' Flux, Neuralgia of tbe stomach, Dyspepsia, Cholera Morbus or Asiatic Cholera. For sale druggists.
The famous Dismnl 8wamp is now regarded mainly as a source of juniper—or white cedar—1'or shingles, tubs, pails, and "arms" for telegraph poles.
Why Wokoao.
What makea Floreaton Cologne welcome on every lady's nc fragranoe and
ogne
toilet table is ita rich. flower odor.
It 1s an awkward thing to be rieh man with a daughter. A rieh men with daughter muat give np either hie child or hie coachman .-[Courier-Journal.
Wn. Noli, NOT 667*Central avenue Cincinnati, O., aaya. Having »d l)r D. D. Kremien's Augsburg Brei 11 Tea with goods reeulte. nnd I want exend it to ethere, I would not be witbtu it GUUCK A CoM agents.
An enterprising young lady of llanne county, Arkansas, who is afliietedwith the crazy quilt disease, recently completed quilt containing 36,000 pieces.
Bnterprialng loom agente wanted la this town for an nrtiols that is sure to sell live druggists and grooerapreferred. AAdreee Humieton Food Freeervative
TS Kilby etreet, Boeton.
Iwopoieow*
mm&t
UHh\n
W.OSSSIS, stsuSse •na,Ae.,aa MMMri
swBs»«h»ftaltnsasuMiSlifs»snHa FOB 8TBBHGTH AND TBCE VBDB FLATOB THEY STAKD lUHL
MCMUMO ar me
Prloe Baking Powder Co., cnioaaot iti. •kkoms,iis •MSN* or
Dr. Mot's Crtan Bridag hmiu, —wi—
Dr. Priced toy! hi Teut 0«u
worn •5S5*J* moanML WBHaunuToaooaun
in tbe stomnoh. Several oases, with k|,^pynt irii nir^* smi sihMritiwlnoiSe tbe characteristics of these oomplaints. iwp —us an iMtaatiy nsm aas m*ar «wffK have been cured bv Hood's 8arsanarllln. is wsu-taow* Bop Mr. Oompoowm. nis,
have been cured by Hood's SarsaparlUa. Other curee effected by thle medieiaf Me so wonderful that the slmpleatstato* tent of them affords the beet proof that tcombines rare curative agents and /rhen once used secures the confidence jf the people. a 1
Oaart IMiiii Son Koarist
PAINS
1 tiiWrinslThtirf-T* fresh!
flHrtV-W"1*
1
""—a
HYWSSSIWAWISMDTYAMERNMTASSAADEOASTFYSFCNI »esa*ser8«elor|LM HA*s •'1 •sUsd «a wwelpt of ffOI* ...
p5ats£ PLA8TER
i'lir
QOLD XK2M1» PUB, 1*?. BASJM*8
tmUMGK&
Warranted slwrmily f«W Cocoa, from wUdh the wicwhs 4 Oil has b«sn removed. ItlaettMi timet th* utrmtth
of Coot adanf
with Starch, Arrowroot a Soda?* and is therefore fkr more 1 pnsp» eal. .it deUStous,' wis •trengtheniagi easily digwKfd. ac^' a^mlnbly adapted for in vidian weU as tor persons In health-.
Said by Creesrs eiUf
BAKER CO.,
CatarrH
ta^:
H,JrFeTer
ts a type of catarrh having peculiar symptoms. It la attended by an Inflamed condition of the lining membrane of the nostrils, tear*ucts and throat, affecting the luna An aoria mucus le secreted, the discharge ts accompanla with a pain* ul burning sensation. There are severe spasms of sneezing, frequent attacks of blinding headaclre, a
watery and inflammed state of tbe eres. K!y-« "i"tmBalm is a remedy founded a 1 rnot diagnosis of this disease and can dev ®n*od upon. 50cta atdrarefsts 60 ets man. Sample bottle by mail io cts. E
0Drugi8t8B0S. ,Owego.N.Y.
all
who
jlgjtss^tn^
J*x
PWLCS
PEARLlKt
BEST THING KNOWN von
foshingand Bleaehii|
la Hard
or Soft,
Hot or
Coli
Water.
ATE8 LABOB, TIBOB and
SOAP
AMAg
VOLT, and givee universal satlsniell—. jnlly, rich or poor, ehoald be without tt.
SS* labor-saving, oompound. and al ^vears tbe above symbol, aad name i« 4AMORS PIL«. arw YOK*.
Send Money bv American Express Co. Money Orders. Receipts given. Money refunded ii Orders are lost Sold at all offices of the Co. Payable at 6,500 placea.
Bates: to$5-6c $l0-8c $a0-l0c: lie $40-13c |50-20c-
A
To
Card- 7
are sniftering from errors and
indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loas
of manhood,
I
seaaarscipe that will euro yon,
OHAIGA
will
FREE
This
OF
great remedy was diseov-
ered by a miaaionary In South America. Send sell-addressed cMfelepeto Knv.
Josnrx
T" IXKAV, Station D. Kew York.
na.n.n.sjun,or theo^ial
