Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 October 1884 — Page 7
Stomach and Liver
RECDLATORA
—euass—
CONSTIPATION
gsg^js^aaaaajga
The only medidae ia the world that wfll lr CURB
Kv«ir
CONSTIPATION.
met: aiOOpor Settle 6 Bottles, $&00. SSMD torn aacoiaas, MAM. V*. J. CHENEY 4b CO.,
Mannfg CheeUsts, Frop*rs, TOLBDO, O.
DR. DAVID
KENNEDY'!
V*«//
0
AREMEDY
fftro* Care of Xltoejr and £inr
DALTO",
CM.
plaLnU, Constipation, and all diwdei alisin? from an impure state of the BLOOD. To women who suffer from any of the illspaei Bar to their aez it ia an unfailing friend* A Druggists. One Dollar bottle, or address 2 Para penned jr,
Bondout, N. Y-
THE NARROW ESCAPE
Of a MamohusettsEngineer—Timely Warning of Mr- John Spencer, Baggagemaster of (he
S* &•
Sleep after fat gue, and health after disease, are twe of tbe expeiieaoee known to m*n Fourteen yean ia along me in which to suffer, yet Mr. Peter Lawler, of Dattoo, Mass., bai led a miserable life for that period through the pretence of atone in his bladder. That he sought in *11 directions for a enre is an almost aap -rfl i-nss-atement. He did obtain temporary relief. but nothing more. Last January he called on r. David Kennedy, of ttoodout, N. who said, after examination,: "Mr Lawlor, you have stone in the bladder. We will flrst try DR. DAVID KENNEDY'S FAVORITE RSMEDY before risking an operation." A few days later the following letter passed through the Bondout postoiflce:
OALTON,
Mass*, February 8.
Dear Dr. Kennedy—The day after loamo home 1 i-assed t^o gravel stonep, and am dolug nicely now.
PBTER LAWLER.
Dr. Kennedy now has the stones at bis office, and tbey are sufficiently formidable to justify the claim that KENNEDY'S FAVORITE KEMEDY is theleadingspecific for ooe in tti« bladdtr. In bis letter Mr. Lflwler mentions that FAVORITE REMEDY al*o cured him of rheumatism. The subjoined certificate tells is own story:
OLP BKRKSHIRB MILLS,
DALTOM,
MASS.,
April i7,1889$
Mr. Peter Lawier has been a resident of this town or the past seventeen years, and inonr employ for fifteen, and in all these years be has beeu a good a'd respected citisen of thctown and community. He has had some chronic dUease to our knowledge for most of the time, -ut now niultns to be, nd is, appareut good hcaith.
CHAS. O. BROWN,
President.
DALTON,
Mass., June 9, 1884
Dr. Kennedy Dear Friend Thinking rou might like to hear again from an old
Sinland
avant, 1 am going to write you. It is now a half years since first I went to see you. As I eld you then I was troubled with Kidney Dise se for about fifteen years, and bad seven of the best doc orsto be found: hut I received ooly temporary relief until I visited you and commenced taking your "Favorite Remedy." I continue taking the Remedy according to your directions, and now consider myself a
TCeli
man- Very
gratefully yours, PETfcR LAWLER. Our letter of April 27.1883, htilds good as' far as Mr. Lawler's testimony is concerned regarding his health. GHA8. O. BROWN.
June 9,1884.
TIME TABLE.
This table is reckoned on Ihe now standard ninetieth meridian time vshicb is ten minutes slower tfran Terre Haate time.
The Lnuqwrt Division.—Trains leave for tne north at 6:00 a and 8:35 m. Trains arrive from the north at 11:40 in ana 7:46 pm.
The A 1'. H.—Trains leave for the south at4:10am 6:09 am 2*20 pm and 6:20 m. Trains arrive from the south at
U)*60 am ll:tt S:l7 and 9:15 pm. Svnday AecraniMaiioB Train—For the sou: hat 3:00 m, and arrive from the south at 1:20
The
Illinois Midland—Train
leaves for
the Nortnwest at 6:20 am arrives from the Northwest «t 5 OSpu. Terre Haate Werthlngtea-Trains leave for the eJou.-heast a: 6:*Jfi a and 2:46
PCkiea«e
& BaiUra 111 la -Trains leave
tor theSorth a* 8:15a 2.20p and 11:60 pm arrive from north at 10:1# a m, 5:15 and 4.00 a m.
The Vandalla—Trains leave lor the Rast at l:25am*.12 55p m: fctOp and 7:00 am. For the Weet at 1:17 a m, 10:07 a and 2. It pm. Trains arrive from east at 1.19 a m: 10 a m, 2:00 and 7:0 ni. Arrive from West 1 «17 a m, 12:40 tnd l:« m.
I. L..—Trains »ave tor the East at 8:18 a m: 6:58 a 11:08 m. For the Wert at 1:18 a 10$8 a :10 p.m.
A POSITIVE:
Cure without edt cine. Patented tober 16.1879. Oobox will eureOne
most obstinate oaae In tour days or lees the Allan's Soluble Medicated Boogiea No nauseous doses of eubebs, eopaiba or oil af sandal wood that are certain to prod use dyspepsia, oy destroying the coating of the stomaoh. Price |UW. Sold by all druggists, or mailed on receipt of nrloe. For farther particular. s»ne tor circular
PO. Box 1,538. C-ALLAN C688 John et. New York.
CURE
Ml aadphyalctt
VMkHM, uttSWMll
rhitkuu it win llhi'W »trUl IMlft it IS CR
IttdlaaSai,
•raajr
mm*
PFOR TRIAL
•fas
I Continued from BtxiiPae.
toritj, and the money requisite for the redemption ol the 4 per cents will be in tbe Treason- «8P£ *%P .beforelhoee obligaboBebe^T^lj^ik. bo» in my band a statistical abstract of tbe reoort of tbe Treasurer of tbe United States First it tells how mucb has been collected tiom the people during tbe last year then it tells how much has been paid out dur ing the last yesr, anj hew much that am oust is per capid for every man woman and child in the country Listen to it: For the year ending June 30, 1883 there was collected from the people and paid into tbe Treasury It says that is $7.64 per capita for every man, woman and child in the United States. It says that tbe Government paid out $265,408,187.54, and that wss $4.89 per capita or every man, woman and child in the country. There was collected, over and above the ordinary expenses of the Government, $13.',87$,444.41. Now, my farmer triends and my laboring men, when you sit down to your family board in the morning and ooupt your wife and children assembled there, for every one of them the Government col. lec ted $7.64, and paid out $4 89 per capita, take $4.89 from $7*14 and you have $2.75, collected by this government from every man, woman and ehild more than the requirements of the Government need. Does any oce here want to con tinue that? [Voices, "No."] Let us see how much it is to the voter. The rule is, that tor every five of the population yon have one voter. Then for every voter it is$38.20oolkcted by this Government $24.25 paid out $24 25 from $38.20 leaves $12 75 that the Government has collected per capita from every voter in this land more th.n the needs of tbe Government require- The Democratic party wants to stop that. It is in iavor of the policy recommended by the President, that no more money shall be collected from the people than the requirements cf the Government need, economically administered. Why, my friends, tbe Republican speaker, and, I expect, my distinguished competitor, will tell as 1 nave already stated, that he wants a continuance of tat iff taxation for tbe benefit of the American laborer. If this present tariff taxation is in the interes's oi the American laborer, I want him to tell you why the rolling mill at Indianapolis is idle I want him to tell me why the car-works at Jeffersonrille are silent I want him to tell you why 25,000 men are idle at Ginqiunati to-day, and why
FOUB THOUSAND MR* ARB IDLE at Jeffersonville and New Albany, why 8,000 men ia the Hocking Valley are out of work why 100,000 men are idle in Massachusetts why 50,000 men are idle in Michigan, Why, out 848 blast furnaces in the United states only 136 are in operation.. I want him to tell you why so many men are standing idle on the street corners.
A MILLION AND A HAU
of men are idle in the United States today. I want to tell you why poor men ate suffering for tbe necessaries of life it this tariff is in the interest of the manufacturer or the laborer that is employed therein. I am in tavor of manufactures. I take as much pride as any man in the manufactures ot the countrj. I would do nothing to injore, but everything to help them. But I say here what I nave already said all over the Slate of Indiana, and as I intend to keep on saying until the 4th day of November, that while I am in favor of manufacturing, yet I am also in favor of reducine the tariff of necessaries of life so as to give the man that works in these establishments, whose
PERSONAL TOIL HAS MADE THXM what they are, a living chance in the af lairs ot life [Applause.] The Democratic party sayb correct tbe tariff and reduce the rt venue. We say take off the 68 cents tax upon svgar and put it upon the diamond of the millionaire, that is taxed only 10 per cent. [Cheers.] We say let it go on tbe porcelain ware of the aristocrat, and take lrom the plain, white stone cups and saucers ot the laboring man. [Cheers.] We say tjke the 64 per cent off tbe salt that tbe farmer is to use to salt his caftle and put upoa his table, and put it upon the wines and luxuries of these men who live in palaoes, who drive a coach of four with liveried servants on its steps, who reside in cottages
AT LONG BRANCH
in the summer, Ihe wide oceaa standing not between them and pleasure. [Cheers.J We say reduce the tariff to the just needs of the Government that the laboring and producing class msy have the benefit, end that the necessaries of lite may be lessened in cost to them, and let those men who have made immense fortunes by connection with rings and monopolies take a turn at the crank awhile themselves, acd let the laboring man and producing classes have a rest. Mr. Blaiiie comes before the country with his letter of acoeptance. He points with pride and says that since the Republican party obtained control of the Government there has been an increase in the wealth of the country of f80,000,000,000. He piles up thia great mo.umeDt ot cellars and then calls upon the people to bthold it. He siys it has beeu accumulated ualer the control ot the Republican patty. I care not what he calls it, the statement is not oorreet. He may call it $40,000,000,000 or $50,000,000,000. There is a question more pertinent than tLe amount ot it. It is the question as to who has got it. [Caeers.] The census of the United States snows there were 2,737,000 laborers employed in the manufactories in tbe United ttiates that there was paid them $947,000,000, an average of $346 each per year, or less than $1 a day. hen the iabotiug men did not get it. They got lees than $1,000,000,000 ot the $30,000,000,000, that Blaine boasts labor made every dollar of. It is labor that dears away the forests aad makes our farms. It is labor that constructs our railways, plows the ground and sews the wheat. It is labor that takes the clay and molds it into brick aad erects the magnificent piles that line aithei side of your streets. It you had this whole $80,000,000,000 that Blaine boasts of, you could not boy a loaf of bread without labor having first teen performed upon it Thia increase of wealth com«s principally from increase of railway bonds, ot stocks in mines, of stocks in the
MONOPOmS OF TUB GOOTTRBY. Who hat gpt if J*y Gould has got it
POINT TO THE IDLEMEN
standing ou all the street corners in all the cities over tbe Union, and say why tbe Republican party has done all these for you, why do you want a change? They told you four years ago that business meetings were being held in New York, Chicago, Boson and St. Louis, passing resolutions in favor of continuing the Republican party in control of the Government. They told you that tbe very prospect of Democratic suocess filled the business men of the country with alarm. Well, there have been some business meetings held this year in New York, Chicago, Cincinnati, St. Louis and .'inston, but these meetings were generally composed of widows snd laboring men around the closed doors of bmken banks, and silent manufactories. [Cheers A voice—"Hit them again." Now, my fellow citizens and distinguished competitor, who is a representative of the party, who is in favor of tbe laboring people of the country, and 1 think that his record shows that he is very much the friend of tbe laboring man. I find, sit, that when tbe bill to land $650,000,000 of the national debt at 3 per cent that be offered an amendment to strike out and insert 3)£ per cent. The bill did not pass. [Ap lause.] I find that when tne bill was Mfore tbe House of Congress to fund $400,000,000 of national bonds at 3 per cent interests that that my friend voted ia favor of striking out the 3 and inserting 3)£ per cent He waa very solicitous about the poor bondholder. He did not want him to be compelled to take 3 per cent more, and when the provision in the bill before the House that these 3 per cent bonds should be the only bonds which Natiooal Banks should deposit ua pledge tor their circulation, he waxed hot against it. He wss afraid that'tbe poor, starving Natiooal Banks Would not have a chance. [Cheers When the bill waa pending before Congress providing.that the cos? ot prepar-
The speaker tben read from the record to ah«/W that Calkins was in favor of raising the standing army of the United States to 50,000 men in order to suppress laborers in their efforts to better their condition. His attitude in defending a sysiem which has utterly destroyed American shipping was reviewed as was also his position in opposition to a correction of abuses of the tariff which everybody admits to be abuses. His duplicity on the temper ance question was scathingly criticised. In deluding he contrasted Cleveland and JSlaiae to the immense disadvantage of tne latter.
Mr. Calkins.
Major W. W. Carter, the Internal Revenue Collector of this district, introduced Msjor W. Calkins and when he appeared he was loudly cheered. He said he supposed tbe crowd wanted to see the next Governor of Iudiana. Major Calkins voice is in very bad shape from continuous speaking and he spoke with a painful effort. He said he would put in no time abusing any one, as his competitor bad. He said the battle ol 1884 waa a great one and was far the protection of American industry. He said the Democratic party had a false and deceitful position on tbe tariff question. This country would only be in a safe condition when the Solid South was broken up. It was a standing menasce to tbe safety of the country. [A voice "Blaine will break it up. "J
He charged that forty-two Democrats combined in the last House to defeat tbe Mexican pension bill and said the Demf ocratic party was not in sympathy with the soldiers. He entered into a lesgttv argument on the tariff question, lie aaid that when the Democratic paiiy went out of power they left an empty treasury ana now. tbe Republicans had four hundred millions of dollars in the treasury. The Democrats wanted to turn them out because they i^ad that surplus. his remarks were frequently cheered.
fclaiiiiif 8peeeli by Governor Gray. Mr FKLLOW-CITIZENS—My
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
as got
IliwiAa
it.
Vote for us once more and
we mm hue this Spsat nxNa^uf^ laniffe^HSt yo# fabbting will^et lets thin ft a day while you sire at it. Now. when we tried to talk about these things lour jean ago, we could not get the attention wthe people, like Republican speakers stood before the people and said, "Why, farmers, yon are getting a dollar and thirty cents a bushel for your wheat why, laboiing manyou are petting good wages, times are prosperous, you had better let well enough alone. The Republican party has done all this why do you want a change? Why don't they say to-day, farmer, you are getting 70 cents tor your wheat laboring man, you are getting 75 to 80 cents a day why don't they point to the idlelmanafactoriea all over the country? why don't they
Kcent
I of these ds by the
Secretary, and should not exceed in any case enc-fouith of 1 per cent, he voted against that. He had forgotten that poor John Sherman had made
SBVBBAL MILLIONS OF DOLLABS in disposinr of National bonds, and he was afraid that tbe (Secretary of tbe Treasury would not have a good enough thing at one-quarter of 1 per cent for preparing and advertising and disposing ot the bonds, and when the proposition was before Congress to psy cut all the ftold and silver in tbe T.uaeury, which was there tor redemption purposes, amounting to over $50,000,000, he voted against that. That is tbe reason my distinpuisbsd competitor boasts that there is 1400,000,000 surplus in tbe Treasury, cheers] and I supiiose he intends to keep ft tbnre.
distin
guished competitor says that I voted tor the fifteenth amendment. Certainly did. 1 voted for it beeause I believed then it right. I have so beQeved it ever since, aad yet I believe it was ri:ht. I voted for it because I ihougat every man, white or colored, high or low, rich or poor, ought to have a free, fair and open chance in the raoe of life. [Cheers.] 1 am |tor that doctrine vet I would weight no man down. I care not how hnmble he is, though his hand is hardened like iron irom daily toil—with cheeks brown as ochre from outdoor labor ia the heaven's sunshine. I want that man to be free and equal before the law, with all the immunities and eges that I possess myself.
My
audience lor voting for the •Sntwl*! lalw mfi
-granted that he la against it,
that be at least* solid igtiist admitting several colored members to their seats in Congress, I stand by my record upon that question. He has called attention to campaign speeoh circulated by the Republican rarty purporting to have been made by me in the city of Richmond in 1866. That speech was written out by a man named Wocds four days after I left town. There were some things in it that I said, and some things that I never said. [Applause.] But, my friends, suppose it waa all true that is in that speech—which it is not—why, it would show that I am a much better man now that I an Democrat than I Was when a Republican [Cheers.] My friends, my distinguished competitor says that he made that speech ia Congress in tavor of a standing army to protect the laboring man. Were it the monopolists of the country that were assaulting the laboring man when he was on a strike? Did you ever hear oi that? Who called for tbe soldiery The laboring man? [Voices—"No."] Did you ever know a body of laboring men in the United State! of America who were on strike calling for soldiers Did you ever hear of such a thing as that? [A voice "NeVer! Hit him again!] Who are the men that called on Governor Hoadly for soldiers? The syndicate that owns the mines—the monopolies. Who got Pinkerton's detectives, with revolvers in their hands, to march THB PATJPKB LABORER INTO THE MINKS of the Hocking Vslley of Ohio, while the American laborer had to step out? When there was a Republican (overnor in Ohio and the miners were on a strike the soldiers were ordered out, and it bang! bang! bang? When, a few weeks ago, they got on a strike. Governor Hoad ly got on the cars and rode all night, aad went down there and saw these men.
He said: "Have you any need of sol diers here?" They said: "No, Governor Host! ley, we will help you keep the peace." And there has been peace there from that day to this. [Applause.] Why, m- competitor says that the rebels destroyed the navy. Why, he can not name five vessels that tbe rebels ever destroyed. He talked about bis vote against the 3
landing bill. I referred that PBWDSNT HATBS VBTOBD. That is what I referred to, and my die. tiaguished competitor voted against it. [Applause.] He says he does not know where tbe Democratic party stands upon the tariff. Why, I told him the Democratic party wss not a free trade party, and that the history of (he country wows that the Democratic party enacted tariff laws sixty years before the Republ party was born. [Applause.] Why, sir. he talks aboat what he would do about sugar ana the necessaries of life. I don't care what my competitor may say. I am talking about the Republican party. I say every item on the tariff bill, the tax upon sugar, upon salt, upon all the necessaries of lira, every item of it was put there by the Republican party, and not one single item by the Democratic party. TCneers.] He wsnts to blame tbe Democratic parfyjor a hat the Republican party did. Why, he said, my countrymen, that we want tax for public purposes. For what else can a tax be levied for? Why the Republican party says for requisite revenue. Can-you tell me tbe difference? [Laaghter.j Why, his platform says they are in favor ot
BBDUCINO THB RBVBNOB
and unnecessary taxation. If there is any inequality in tbe tariff the Republi can party put it there. It theres is any unnecessary taxation, the Republican party made it. It there is a surplus revenue over the wants of the Govern ment, the Republican party put it there. [A voice, "The Democratic war."] Tou have a bigger Democratic war in your hands row than you ever saw before, [Laughter.] Yes, he talks about individual opinions The opinion of tbia man and that man upon the tariff question—I am not talking about that. That has nothing to do with it. Why, the editor of the Chicago Tribune, is be not supporting Biaine Is he not a free trader? He has made free-trade rpeeches. I do not hold tbe Republican party responsible for that. This is a contest between parties. Whatever my distinguished competitor msy say about it, I would rather take his vote than take what be says. [Applause.] He says that 1 said we found the Treasury empty. I say the
TBKAST7BY OUGHT TO BB EMPTY. The people ought not to be taxed for any more money tban the Government needs. He undertakes to tell you, flrst, that there is a surplus, and then he went on to tell you that we owed every dollar of that surplus. [Laughter.] I would like to know what a surplus is. I would like to know if a man has a surplus when he owes every dollar of it [Laughter.] When I sit down to a table to eat and there is more oa the table than 1 can eat what is left is a surplus. But suppose a man has got $100 in his pocket and owes $500, he has not very much surplus has he? [Liughter.] My distinguished competitor says in his published speech that there are $400,000,000 surplus, and now he reads a long list, prepared by a Republican Treasurer, stating that we owe every dollar of it. Why he says, we did this thing to keep the bulls and bears on Wall street straight. One ot tbe greatest bulls I ever knew in Wall street was General Grant, on "Black Friday," and another was John Sherman. [Applause.] Listen to this: 1 say there has not been a panic in Wall street tor the laat sixteen years to which tbe Secretary ot the Treasury has not immediately hurried and there.asdured the stock gambles that he would do everything in his power to relieve the financial dhtrese. Only a tew weeks sgo the Secretary of the Treasury was on the ground and assured the gamblers that he would do everything in his power to relieve the financial embarrassment of the stock gambler a
During tbe panic oi 1878, when poor men's homes were being sold, aad farmen forms weie beinv sold under foreclosure of mortgages to Eastern capitalists, no Secretary of the Treasury came to them and told them he would do everything in his pow°r to allay the financial embarrass ment of the country, the Democratic party, as I have told you, is in favor of revising the tariff it is in favor of reducing the revenue to the needs of the Government it is in flavor, as I have told you, ot reducing the cost of the necemaries of life such as sugar, salt and the clothing of
commonalty of the people, tariff on etothinjr it is
*that
Take the ««n*s
oi aiiff tax upon it, whsa a rich man goes and bays a suit at doth worth $75 he pa|s hat fosfy osttsa pound, bat the poor man's suit is sumo weigh ae much as 'l(e rich man's stilt. Isthatright? Yet my distinguished competitor says that he wants this law to protect the laboring man ha wants to charge him onehundred centa for every fifty cents worth of sugar that begets he wants to charge exhorbitant prices for the (ln* "C and shoes for his family yet it is all in the interest of the laboring man. Every (mce in a while you take up a newspaper and see that some great millionaire monopolist has died worth tea or a hundred million collars. Did yon ever hear of a laboring man dying who was worth $100,000,000? [Applause.] He says, can I find any fault with the appropriation bill passed by the Democratic Con grass. Why, of course I can aot. The Democratic House has to
APPBOPBIATB MONFF .' .'T
to pay the enormous expenses of the Government that is ran by the Repnblican party. Whenever the Democratic party electa the President aad gets possession of the executive and legislative department of the Government, tben it will be time to hold the Democratic party responsible then, and not till then will it be just to hold it responsible. My fellow-citizens, my time is up, what I shall say after this will be on the day after to-morrow. [Prolonged cheer.]
IS THE TIBE TO CURE SKLW H0W01
It is at this season, when tke pores open rreely aad the perspiration is abnndant tna* diuftgnriag honors, humiliating eruptions, itching tortures, salt rheum or eczema, psoriasis, tetter, ring won, iierofola, scrofulous Bores,
baby amors. Abscesses and
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A
IT IS
FACT.
Hundreds of letters In oar (copies of which nay be hsd mail] are our authority for
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POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never var es. A marra ol parity, strength, nd wl~ol-soaanea« vel economical tnaa be rdtnary kind a Morctnnotbenold in enmp tl ion with nd ti'uaeof low test* ston weight, alum ih phosphate powders- Soul only in oc
BOTALBA
New York
8uid only in oaas.
TAL AKINO
POWDKS
Co., foe Wall strse
OHIO-INDIANA-MICHIGAN
WABASH •ROUTE I
THB BUSINESS UAH
When he travels wants to go qaML wants W be comfortable, wants to arrive at destination on time, in fact, wants a strictly business trip, and oonsequenttv takee the popular Wabash Boote, feellngthashe Is sure to meet his ongagemeats.aad oontlnuo to prosper and be
THSTOUBim
Has long since chosen «s Wabash as the favorite route to all the summer reeorts of the •airt. North and West, and Winter Resorts at the Smith, as the Company has for years provided better aceoiainodawons ana more ax* tractions than any ot its competitors for this eEass of travel, tourist Tickets can be had at redaoed rates at all principal eOoesof tbe Company.
In search of new home, where bo ean saenre better returns for his labor, should remember that the Wabash Is the most direct route to Arkansas, Texas, Kansas. Nebraska, and all points South. West, and Northwest, aad thaironnd-tripland-explorers'tickets at very low rates an always on sale at the ticket ofBeee. Descriptive advertising matter of Arkansas and Tens sent free to all applicants by addressing the General Passenger Agent. i..
THE INVALID
Will And tne Wabash the most convenient route to.all of the noted-health reaorta of Illinois, Missouri, Arkansas and Texas, and that tbe extensive through ear system and superior accommodations of this popular line will add greatly to his comfort while ea route. Pamphlets descriptive of the many oelebratedmhieral springs of the West and' Bouth sent free on
THK CAPITALIST
Can get the information *e and profitable Investment
to seeura agrical-
agric ir&g,
na«.
F. CHANDLER,
I—alt—inssl Tfcfcstigmt.lt. Isab, Is.
ILLINOIS—IOWA— MISSOURI
UUB
I Established ilsx. I 10iaoiaaatiy Ohifr Vina$tr. •Id established and Borfson Ok at the old number continues^o treat with his usual ekl11 sU private,
WOOSaad special BB. CUikl is
oldest Advertising Physician. files of Papers show aad all
old Residents know. Age and exportsoeo fan-
Weil one ihsiss (with
or without *wit?n«
dreams,) or debility aad loss ot nsi treated scientifically by new methods with never success. fST It mskas no difference wtet who has failed to cure you.
you have takan oc who I
sa and
should consult the celebrated
Dr.Clarke atom
„mm— —wwce. LV The tenfble poisons ad all hnd Mood and ifcln Mssssssot every kind, name and nature completely eradicated. Rimsi
IOT,
that oas horrible disease, If neglected or
call or write. Delays are dangerous. "Procrastination is the thief ef Hms." A written vun^ef euro given 1st
CVSead two stamps for celebrated' onChr—te. Nervous and Delicate Pi its us. Yr~ have an siisasttvs siaiitiastslss which to study your owaeases. Consult |enH^y or^tettta^nree^Cam^ palters private. Yon see no one but the Doctor. Before confiding youreaseconaultPr.OTid
sent everywhere secure from espacMWr—Hsant 9 to 8 Sunday, 9 to IS. Adieee letters: V. A CLARKE, H. A, N* IM VIM IK, UNCI ww
ATi, oma.
THE DAVIS SWING CHURN.
Ihe Keet Pepartar Oan sa the Itekst Beeeuse it maksa the meat batter. Beeeuse no other Cham woitas
has so Boats eri inside. Alsoth ks Matter er.the NeaMttl u'srsjRf Making UtnsSs. tor iCircular*.
I ILLCSTCUTLD
CP-
i. Send for Lit»irated CI
BAND MEN
CATALOGUE
of
BAND INtTRUMKNTf, JJoifarras,
