Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 November 1884 — Page 7

if it were possible

to get the testimony of the multitude who have used HOOD'S SARSAPAKII.LA for debility, languor, lassitude, and that general feeling of stupidity, weariness and exhaustion which vejy one feels during this season, we should be -able to present to our readers such an overwhelming mass of commendatory messages, that the few who have not tried it would do so at once. It is a positive fact, and has been so effectually demon strated that no one to-day denies it, that Hood's Sarsaparilla contains more real medcinal value than any article before the people-

'What

A

DEAC0T, MASS.

MESSRS.C.I. HOOD & Co.,

Lowell, Mass.: Dear Sirs—I have suffered from kidney com-

Jfan Did

Plaint and biliousness for fifteen yars. Have tried everything and never got

%0%tfb any good. Last January, before I commenced tak"Ki/lw fn

ing

HOOD'S

jltft/tt'j/

SAKSAPARitr

IjA

everything I ate bloated me au up, pain in my

Votn/piumt

chest and arms, headache and dizzy. I could not

get up Without, feeling weary and all fagged out. Many mornings I was obliged to lie down on the lounge. To do any work seemed almost impossible. Have taken two bottles. The backache, dizziness, pain in my chest and arras, and that feeling of intense weariness are all gone. I can eat anything and It does not press me at all. Feel just like work in fact, like a new man. Can heartily recommend HOOD'S

SARSAPARILLA,

and hope all who desire to know anything about it will come to me and ask what I

Uli

«kO!B. ^comJEN

HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA "Works through the blood, regulating, toning and invigorating

all the functions of the body.

Sold by druggists. Priw $1, or six for $5. C. I. HOOD & CO.. Lowell, Mass.

A S

1

•w

0

E S

AUD15EASES0HHE

LIVER

KIDNEYS

STOMACH

ANO

B0WEL9J

ALl DRUGGISTS

cxrsiEs

fryKpspala, ©©coral Detulity, Janadioo, Haljitnojl Comstipa" tion, X.ivar Ccimplodaat, Sicls

Hea/laoXao. Disco,oc.d Ki&auys, Efco., Etc. it contains only 'koFurcat rrngg, among wbich may b3 enumerated rSICSi.? ASS BASI tUTO B2P3IS3, ITA1TD2A22, EUCP.U, CSM, Sis, it sleanses the system U.-oroughly, and aa PUKIF.TEil OF THE BLOOD

Is Uaoqnaled.

it i6 not an intoxicating beverage, nor can ,t oe «snl aa such, by reason of its Cethartlc

Properties.

?HI€JKX ir A3i£ BITTERS CO. Solo Proprietors, ST. LC'liSS AMD KANSAS CITY.

§he §-.izeiit-

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6,1884

The export of frozen mutton from Ne*v Zealand to Great Britain this year will anionnt to more than a half a Mior, sheep, although the freight charges are rery high.

'•100 Doses One Dollar" is true only ot SloecTe Sarsapa1.ilia, and .t is aa unannworsbls argument as to reugtli and economv.

A. Jeffry. of Hallyille, 11!.. er-tors ft hog at the Chicago fat stock show o? which h^ claims the weight is 1,400 pounds, making it the largest hog ever raised.

Look sharp when your skin breaks out in pimples, and use Glenn's SuipSur SOfip.

Hill's Hair Dye, black or brown, 50 cts.

Mian Florence Marryatt. a daughter of the noveEist, and herself the author of several agreeable novels, has come to this country with an intention of lecturing.

As a Cure for Sore Throat and Conghs "Brown's Bronchial Troches" have been (thoroughly tested, and maintain their good reputation.

That weak back or pain in the side or hips yon will find immediately relieved when a Hop Plaster is applied. It strengthens the4 muw !es, giving the ability to hard work withou'tit suflcring Take none but this, sure.s

CIn Germany a man dare not cut down

thj

trees on his own land without consent of the proper authorities, so zealous is the government in preserving the forests.

Garter's Littlo Liver Pills are free from all erude and irritating matter. Concentrated medicine only very small •ery easy to take: no pain no griping, no purging.

New Mexico produces and sends abroad more carpet wools than does any «ther territory or any ether state in the Union. Its clip this year went above five million pounds.

The market is flooded with cheap, inferior baking powders, and adulteration is extensively practiced. The public are advised to ask for Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder that has stood the test of years, and is sai'c, economical and nutritions. The purer the articles that eompose^our daily food, the better they are $er health.

[All the Year Round.]

The Winter wind is vailing, sad and low, Across the lake and hrough the rustling sedge The splendor of the golden after-glow

Gleams through the blackness of the great yew h«!ge And this I read on earth and in the sky— •'We ought to be together, you and I."

Rapt through its rozy changes into dark, I ades all the west and through the shadowy trees, And in tho silent uplands of the park,

Creeps the soft sighing of the rising breeze It does but echo to my weary sigh, "We ought to be together, you and I."

My hand is lonely for your clasping, dear, My ear is tired, waiting for your call I want your strength to help, your laugh to cneer,

Heart, soul, and senses need you, one and all, I droop without your full frank sympathy— We ought to lie together, you and I.

We want each other RO, to comprehend The dream, the hope, things planned, or seen, or wrought Companion, comforter, and guide, and friend,

As mnch as love asks love,

TOGETHER. LITTLE RELICS.

doen

need thought.

thought

Life is so short, so fast the lone hours fly— We ought to be together, you and I.

THE CAPTURE OF FIVE POINTS.

The

DtfllvalUei

Which W«rt Over*

come—Then and Now.

[George Alfred Townsend.]

Twenty years ago we used to hear a good deal about the Five Points of New York, otherwise a place down in the swampy quarter of the city near the Tombs prison, where the desperately poor and criminal lived. There had once been a pond at this spot, and the marshy ground was occupied by wretched people, who in other countries Lad been accustomed to live amid disease. In time tho Five Points became almost unsafe at midday for a respectably dressed person to go through, and the police were frequently murdered there. There was not a school or a Protestant churoh among the 50,000 people living in that dense district. It was believed that there were underground passages connecting the different blocks of houses through which thieves and murderers escaped Nearly every house in the neighborhood was a low brothel, and almost every store was a rum shop. Yet with the usual indifference of New York to what it need not touch, the people on the high streets surrounding this loathsome place made no effort whatever to improve the condition or even to legislate upon its crimes.

The Methodist women of this town were the first to advance iato the Five Points. They had a home missionaiy society here to which they gave their attention before the day when a woman must needs put on

a

tilk

dress to be seen in her kitchen. They got a preacher out of the Methodist conference who was not afraid of bad smells or bad men, and he took a little room at the Five Points, surrounded himself with the women of this society and called on the native Five Pointers to come in to worship on Sunday morning. It looked like a small branch of hell when the church opened. The boys began to turn somersaults and fight in the church. The Sunday-school seemed to be a combination of newsboys and the young fellows Fagin had taught to steal. The pioneers perse vored, and :n a little while the Five Points began to have a certain orderly side.

Another great difficulty was the general poverty, which seemed to drive the {jeople into filth}' occupations, and those who reformed were in danger of starving. The Methodist women and their preachers gave a hundred hands occupation with needle-work. The preacher, to show that he had come to stay, moved right into the Five Points with his own family, to grow up there and be an example or a resistance. Among the porsons who helped build a public hall on tho spot was John B. Gough, who raised $5,000 for the mission. It bought out an old brewery for $16,000, an old building which had become a place of violence and crime with its dark, winding passage ways and damp rooms and universal squalor. This old building at the center of the Five Points was pulled down, and Bishop Janes thirty years ago laid the corner-stone of a mission house still standing.

The moment the newspapers gave this building attention wealth came forward to help it out, and one person bequeathed $22,000. In the course of time the improvements of the city were let loose upon the Five Points, broad streets, and many of them wei-e graded right through tho center, and to-day a man can walk anywhere there and hardly know that he is in a bad quarter. Another institution in the same locality claims to have iurnished 5,000,000 meals to the poor, and gotten thousands ctf them employment.

Afraid of Virginias.

'Uncle Bill's" New York Letter.] Now that John McCullough is no longer in view as Virginius, but only as his broken self, tho publication of truths about him is not followed by his managers' hot denials. Only a year ago, when I wrote casually of Ins faltering step and imperfect memory as observed in acting, editors were found obliging enough to print a lying contradiction. Along at that time the members of his company became aware of his condition.

There was a young,new actress, Viola Allen, playing Virginia for him. Doubtless you have seen him in the great scene of the tragedy where to save his daughter from dishonor he stabs her to death, and maybe you had the willowy, ingenuous and truthful Viola for the Virginia. On realizing the mental disturbance of the tragedian her confidence became altogether a matter of simulation. She knew that night after night he was distraught and unreasonable in the subsequent mad passages of the play, and why might he not use the knife on her in earnest# The spoke to the stage manager on the subject and refused to be pooh-poohed. "Pshaw," he said, "the knife is too dull to out you, anyhow." "But it's got a point,'' the nervous girl replied, "and he could jab it right into me if he tried. You know how strong he is, and sometimes he act* as if he thought tho play was reality. No, sir, I won't keep the part if Mr. McCullough doesn't use a wooden knife."

The role is a peculiarly hard one to get well acted, because juvenility and skill are both requisite, and the manager did not like to let Viola go so it was explained to McCullough, as adroitly as possible, that she was senselessly nervous, and that a painted wooden blade would humor her without doing any harm. He acquiesced, bat it is said that he received in this incident his first intimation that his reason was being distrusted.

Des Moines Mail: Some young men were never cut out to wear plug-hats, and if they insist on wearing them it will endanger tha future of the plug-hat tra$t

TliiL TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

[Mary Hunt McCaleb.] ~"T

Only a baby's picture, With dimpled shoulders bare Large blue eyes softly beaming,

And rings of golden hair.

Only a faded relic, All wrinkled, soiled and torn 'Tis but a tiny stocking

My little girl had worn.

Only a knot of ribbon. More precious far than pearls It slipped just as you see it,

One evening from her curls.

Only hor broken playthings— Little dishes and bier doU Her pretty cups of silver—

You see I keep them all

Onlv a little slipper That my pretty darling wore The first time that she tottered

Across the chamber floor.

Why do I keep and love them. When so many years have fledf Don't you know? They were my baby's,

And the little one is dead.

WEEVILS IN THE WEED.

Ravages

of a

New Tobacco Pent-

Cigarettes aud the Fair Sex.

[Chicago Herald.]

Cigarettes have fallen into discredit with the fair sex First, because the dudes have almost monopolized that commodity of smokers' materials and secondly, becaose cigarettes are known to be a favorite haunt of the tobacco-worm or weovil. This remarkable animal—to begin in true circus style—small as it is, has proved to be a veritable fiend. Local dealers have observed two lands of tobacco weevil One i» about half the size of a fly, has a sharp-pointed head, a hard shell back, small wings, and is of a dark brown color. The second class, which infects old, dry plug tobacco is nearly white. Whether it is identical with the the brown weevil has not yet been determined. Both have the same proclivities for perforating tobacco, Ihus ruining the stock, of course. Between The weevil and the dude cigarettes have had their day with the ladies. "Has the we9vil appeared here to any extent?" asked the reporter of a well-known dealer. "Bless you, yes," was the answer. The gentleman thon took from his desk a cigar carefully wrapped up in tissue paper. "This," he said, "is one of a sample box of very fine imported cigars which we recently received. When wo opened the box a dense cloud of fine dust was emitted ^that nearly stifled the porter who was unpacking the cigars." The cigar shown to the reporter was full of round holes the size of the head of a large pin, and when the cigar was tapped with a finger the brown dust into which the pernicious insect had converted the filler covered tho paper. "Cigarettes, however," continued the dealer, "and fine brands of imported cigars and tobacco are preferred by the insect. I believe that it came originally to this country in that shape. The domestic tobacco worm, which in very wet seasons destroys the giean plant, and is sometimes found in a bulk of dry leaves, is quite another thing. It is so large that it can easily be detected, and its ravages among manufactured goods are entirely unknown. These new-fashioned marauders infest whole stores and destroy goods by the wholesale. The only remedy that I know of is frequent examination of the goods, which, however, is impossible in the box trade, and scrupulous cleanliness. I have tried insect powder, wan-anted to kill everything in the line of bugs and insects, but this little pest seems to eat the stuff with the same avidity as it does tobacco. After I first noticed the weevil I gathered a few of them and put them into a glass bottle together with a plentiful supply of insect powder. A few days later I removod th« stopper after a good shaking up, and thon the littlo pests took to their wings and soared away. Why they should breed in cigarettes more than in tobacco is a thing that I can't explain, but the fact is that they will 6eriously attack domestic goods if they are allowed to increase."

Substitutes for India Rnbber.

[American Queen.]

The Swiss Gewerbe-blatt thus discusses the subject of a substitute for India rubber. In the first place, such a substitute must be cheaper than the real India rubber. There are many kii of material that fulfill this requirement. Sulphur if one of the things that is unattacked by acids, alkalies and salts. Its great brittleness gives place to a softness, pliability, and elasticity similar to rubber if it is poured into cold water while melted. (It melts twice at different temperatures, and it is only after this second melting that it possesses this elasticity.) It remains soft enough to be moulded for several days, and these qualities it retains permanently if it is mixed with more or lass linseed oil varnish before it is poured into the water.

There is no doubt that sulphur is of importance in making artificial substitute for India rubber, and no less so as a substitute for gutta-percha. The first thing is to endeavor to discover some permanently elastic substance which shall destroy that crystalline structure which makes the sulphur brittle, and renders it impossible for it to return to this condition. Next after sulphur, alumina soap deserves consideration, for it is likewise a tenacious substance that can be stretched, and it undergoes many curious changes when melted with thick linseed varnish and resin. Jingler has, in fact, patented a composition of sulphur, copal, oil of turpentine and albumen. Although substitutes for gutta-percha may be obtained with the aid of some of these substances, it will always be difficult to imitate the elasticity of India rubber, so that its substitutes will find use only where its elastic property does not come into prominence.

Generous.

[Exchange.]

Smith—Jones refuses to pay a little debt he owes me, aud I want you to bring suit against him for the money.

Lawyer All right but lawyers, you know, always expect something in the way of a retainer.

Smith—Certainly how much will it bo? Lawyer—About $50, I guess. Smith—Fifty dollars? Why, Jones only owes me $85.

Lawyer—O, well, call it $25 then.

Where the Road Porks.

[lie Current.]

The mind should separate the true aim of the bell-regi-'ar from the aim of the "spotter" or detec.: I ve. There the road forka. The "spotter" is after a criminal and not only is he after one criminal, but after any criminal and to him, therefore, every man is to be suspected. The spotter suspects he aids and breeds su -picion the register prevents suspicion. An employe should desire all possible. reasonable and gratuitous counterchecks, whereby his honesty may be confirmed,

Spring Without Blossoms.

Py

neb eon, who had been un

.nstly imprisoned since lits eany manhood said, after hisreleuse: "My life is gone, and where Is my happiness? Oh! give me my happiness." But that could only he done in part, as gleams of warm sunshine ocoa all 'all across the gloom of a New England antnmn day.

In a letter to Messrs. Hiscox & Co.. Mr. L. II. Titus, of Pennington, N. J., says: "I have suffered untold misery from childhood rom chronic disease of the bowels and diarhoca, accompanied by ereat pain. I sought relief at the hands of physicians of every school and used every patent and domestic remedy under the

sud

in PARKtR'8

I have at last found

TONIC

a complete specificl

preventive and care. As your invaluabemedlclne which did for me what nothing else could do, is entitled to the credit of my getting back my happy days, I cheerfully and gratefully acknowledge the fact."

Mr. E. 8. Wells, who needs no lntrodcu tion to the people of Jersey City, adds: "The testimonial of Mr. Titus is gennine and voluntary only he does not adequately portray the suffering he has endured for many years. Ue is my brother-in-law, and I know the case well. He is now perfectly free from his old troubles, aDd enjoys health and life, ascribing it all to PARKEK'9 TOMC.

Unequalled as an lnvigorant: stimulates all the organs cures ailments of the liver, kidneys, and all diseases of the blood.

Hay Fever.

From Col. C. il. Mackey, 33d Iowa Infantry:

uTo

persons afflicted with

Catarrh, I would state that I have derived more benefit from Ely's Cream Balm than anything else have ever tried. I have now been using it for three months and am experiencing no trouble from catarrh whatever. 1 have been a sufferer for twenty year6.—C. Mackey, Sigourney, Feb. 22,1882.

General Butler will lie sixty-six years of age Nov. ?.

A woman's beauty is never lOBt So long as her sweet smile remains— So long as gleam her teeth like frost. And her soft lip the ruby stains And SOZODONT, with m-agic power, Bestows on her this priceless dower.

A New Jersey farmer is raising a successful crop of cotton.

At certain seasons of the year nearly every person suffers to a greater or less extent from impurity of the blood, biliousness, &c., &c. This should be remedied as soon as discovered, otherwise serious results may follow. Sherman's "Prickly Ash Bitters', will effectually remove all taint of disease and restore you to healthy

Alexander M. Sullivan's family are to be made the beneficiaries of a £10,000 subscription lund.

"My wife for years has been troubled with a disease of the kidneys physicians pronounced it diabetes, but she received no benefit from their treatment. Hunt'9 [Kidney and Liver] Remedy has made a wonderlul change in her condition. Her health is good."—O. M. Hubbell 344 Prospect Avenue, Buffalo, N. ^Y., June 18,

An attendant in the treasury department who can count 4,000 new notes an hour for seven hours a day is considered unusually dexterous.

Fitted out for the Season. Dresses, cloaks, coats, stockings and all garments can be colored successfully with the Diamond Dyes. Fashionable colors. Only 10c. at druggists. Wells, Bichardson'& Co., Burlington, Vt.

Poets are not made, but some maids are poets.

A Card-

To all whe are suffering from errors axd indiscretions of yonth, nervous weaknera, early decay, loss of manhood, Ac., I will send a recipe that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGES. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in Sonth America. Send self-addressed envelope to KEY.JOSBPH T* Isman,Station D.

New York.

Mr. Buck, Mr. Pine, Mr. Wah and Mr Coe are the monosyllabic names of the Republican candidates (or Congress in Connecticut.

The Champion Remedy for Colic in Infants, Summer Complaint, Flux Cholera Infantum, Dr. Brunker's Car minative Balsam is challenged against any remedy in the United States for five hundred dollars. Its reputation is unparalleled. It is perfectly harmless ana pleasant to take, and equally a perfect remedy for adults as a remedy for Dysentry, Fhix, Neuralgia of the stomach, Dyspepsia, Cholera Morbus or Asiatic Cholera. For sale "Mgsiists.

An American who advertised on the fences of Paris was fined fifty dollars for 'annoying the vision of the publie."

Breakfast Cocoa, as a oeverage, is universally conceded superior to all other drinks for the weary man of business or the more robust laborer. The preparations of Walter Baker and_ Co. nave long been the standard of merit in this line, and our readers who purchase "Baker's Breakfast Cocoa'' will find it a most healthful, delioioua and in *izorang beverage.

Texas expects to make $10,000,000 this year in her cattle business.

DURKEE'B SALAD DRESSING & COLD MEAT SAUCE. The finest mayonaise for meat, fish and vegetable salads, and a superb table sauce. It far surpasses any home-made dressing. Everybody likes it.

There are 126,G90 negroes in the state of Florida^

A startling fact. Heart Disease is only inferior in fatality to consumption, do not suffer from it but U9i Dr. Graves Heart Regulator. It has ured thon sands, why not you? $1 at uggiste.

People who have buffalo robes would do well to hold on to thera. They will seon be valuable as curiosities.

Snterprising local aeents wanted la this town for an article that is sure to sell: live druggists and grooers preferred. Address Humiston Food Preservative Co., 72 Kilbv street, Boston.

King Kalakaua is said to be a close student

Why Weloome.

What makes Floreston Cologne welcome on every lady's toilet table is its ngfragraaoa and. rich flower odor."f

STAGE LIFE.

Late in Life to Look for Joy—Ytt Folks Who Are Ultimately Made Uj Never too Late to Mend*

Readers of Hawthorne's "House oi Seven Gables" will recall the pathos with which poor Clifford

of Bits of Other People.

(low Actors and Actresses Spend the

Idle Time Kelilxid the Scones-* Being* from Another

World.

[Chicago News Letter.]

Ant/irs and actriwes are either above oi below tho ordinary world. The successful star is above it the super is below it. They are nevor sure of their individuality. Thoy grow ultimately to be entirely made up of bits of other people, and those people mainly creatures of the brains of drama' ists and vocalists. Their social life is affectation. Then stago affectation is generally tho more gen uine life of the two. Thoy live in a world of rouge and powder, of wigs and costumes, and their own complexions, their own hair, and their every day dress are things they gradu ally grow to feel uncomfortable in.

It is a world of hope and anticipation, and no actor or actress over really knows failure. One round of applause will glorify an even ing that will radiate through a week or a month of less favorable experience. Tht mere attention of an audience will keep thenc excited, even if it is an audience that would go away if it could. One part played for a week in a season will neutralize forty weeks of small and unimportant business. One grand burst of applause will live in tht memory as long as the memory lives. If a character does not go well, the mercurial temperament finds excuse and justification, and glows with the expectation of hitting the public in some other.

Behind the scenes at a {day is fascinating. Around the stage, down in the dressing rooms, in the wings, everywhere there is a suppressed excitement. Restless figures move to and fro about the entrances, and even where one has an act to wait, there is a feverish anxiety that is a constant excitation. Conversation is in snatches and half-whispers. Everybody is interested, not only in his own part, but he will listen over and over again to speeches of others on the stage, and steal out occasionally to see how a scene is going, and find out how far an act has progressed. The character is never wholly laid aside. Mechanical bursts of small talk only point the engrossing subject in mind, and even years of experience never give to an actor or actress the power to throw off between exit and entrance the thought of the play aud the part.

Tiie actor stands and gazes in the glass. He feels that ho is all right, yet he seems al ways to find some little rearra ngement oi his wig, some little dressing of his hair necessary. The actress studies herself all over. To her a pin out of place is annoy a nee, a spot too much of rouge, a trial, the lightest article of dress awry, an agony. It is not the vanity of a woman who is dressed for the ball-room half so much as the anxiety in case some flaw maybe found by the ladies in the audience and commented upon. She knows she is not the Miss Jones of the cast: she is the princess of the play. She will carry on the stage a fan, or handkerchief of tho greatest value, partly from vanity, perhaps, but mainly to try to be in keeping with her character.

Both actors and actresses spend the idle time behind the tc?nes in thinking over the speeches they have just delivered, and the speeches they have yet to deliver, and when pieces only go for a week, there is no nighl they feel that they have not to look out carefully for some line or bit of business. In every new town they go to different scenes catch the audiences. Strong scenes in New York go flat in Chicago points that draw applause in Eoston pass unnoticed in San Francisco, and some bit of business upor which no stress has been laid may, in ont night, become a triumph of acting.

Most actresses do not like to have their admirers behind the scenes. The rouge and powder and paint are too plain and repellent at close quarters, and yet they are all needed before the glare of the foot lights. One can understand how love making must become mechanical on the stage and kiss?s be given at a distance. Indeed, to go close to an actor and actress, and see the groase, paint and false hair, the powder that rubs off on everything it touches, the heavily darkened eyelashes, the wig that is always frowsy when you come close to it, one wonders that the embracing and emotion, the kissing and lovemaking, can be made to appear so real and natural, and yet to be an effective actor or actress one must iiave the freedom that comes from the knowledge that it is all pretense.

And this is the actor's life. Here, amid imaginary ti-ees and rocks, in canvas-walled drawing-rooms, reversible .into garrets in imitation conservatories and within painted castles, he lives and breathes some other being, and a different being in each new play. The actress goes into her dressingroom and dons the robes, real and resplendent, of a princess, and plays the haughty and dignified heroine one week, and falls the next into rags and poverty, and suffers a life-long agony in three hours.

And when they seek the light of day, the more practical mortals, for whose entertainment actors and actresses play, look upon them with curious wonder as upon beings from another world who are more or less out of place in the crowd that bustles in the sunshine. At the hotel table the guests watch the actress as if they were perpetually in expectation of her doing a great emotional sc«ne over her modest breakfast and the actors who fought a duel the night before on the stage, seem to excite a vague dread that they may get up in the dining-room and shoot one another dead. The world always meets them as actors and actresses, forever re minds them of it in social life, and it is no great wonder that, when their own nature has no chance to develop, they should gradually find the stage unrealism saturate them and become second nature.

Tbe Crazy

Quilt,

fD. T. High more.]

Oh, say, can you see by the dawn's early light What you failed to perceive by tha twilight's last gleaming A cranky concern that through the long night

O'er the bed where you slept was so saucily streaming? The silk patches so fair,

Round, three cornered and square, Give proof that the lunatic bed quilt is there. Oh, the crazy v*flt mania triumphantly raves. And the maid, wife and widow are bound as its slaves.

IfMhvilte American: Probably no other Iftfge city in the world hqs so few monu statuv and works at art cj Chloaga

JAMRPYICS

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FOB

Wasfaingand Bleaching In Hard or Sort, Hot or Cold Water*

SAVES I.ABOR, TIME and SOAP AMA* *NGLY, and gives universal eatiAfectloD* jilt illy, rich or poor, should be without it.

Sold by alt Grocers. BEWARE ofimltetlflM wall designed to mislead. PEAKTillffl

LAME BACK

Mrd only by

the

is tlM

ONLY SAFE labor-saving compound,JM MM a bears the above symbol- and name

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DR.

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ilTBO are suffering from Nibtooi DkbiutT, W Lost Vitality, Lick or Kuu Fo»o« 13OR, Wastino Weaknesses, and all those dis9MM s. Pkbsokai. Naturb resulting from Abohb ud mi Causes. Speedy relief and complete rest* son of HEAiiTH, Vigor and Manhood OoakajitbSBw '\r*'7andest discovery of the Nineteenth Century, rffat once for Illustrated Pamphlet fro*. AddrM

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HOP

Oils porous plaster is ibsolatcly

ihe best

ever I

PLASTER

mtde, combining the I "fctaea of bops with am3, balsams and exnet*. Its

fiiwer is

wonderful in caring dtaeascs whe^

4her piasters simply relieve. Crick in the Back aa 4eck, Pain in tho SULO or Limbs, Still Joints and Muscle* Sidney Troubles, Rheumatism, Keuralgia, Sore Cheq Affections of tho Heart and Liver, and all pains or acha a an iart cored instantly by the

Bop Piaster. tW

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storm

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Company,

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tyKor constipation, loss of appetitfuid diseases of th towels tako Hawley's Stomach and Liver Fillu. 86 oeat

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IRON

tONIQ

TTlll nnrl/V the BLOOD* roprjlato the LIVE ?EW and KIPNE'/S. and Rp.stokjs Tiik

UUHE'iaj HEAIA-I

and Tired Feclinpr absolutely cured. Bones, muscles aid nerves receive newfoi ee.

Enlivens the mind jnff supplies Brain Pow.ir.

flOppiieS £11*111 rww'lii

A CS Suffering from coniplatutfl 1 En O peculiar to their eex *111 -id in DR. RASTER'S IKON TONIC a safe (pf jeedy euro. Gives a clear. Healthy compiexHjj.

Frequent attempts at counterfeiting onlyaWi the popularity of tVa original. Do aot exptJi, lent—get the OiU«n,_. A1V

tSt.Louis,

Hend your address to Titel Mo., for our "3

Med.O. BOOK."

VirPnf nqflffnl

Core without Afe$$ cine. Patented tober 16, 1879. Oobox will oureOno

POSITIYE:

most obstinate case In four days or less tha

Allan's Soluble Medicated Bougies

No nauseouB do«es or cnbebs, copaiba or ill af sandal wood that are certain to produoe lyspepsia, oy destroying the coating of the jtomach. Price $1.50. Sold by all druggists, "»r mailed on receipt of price. For farther particulars sfne for circular

O. Box 1,533.

J. 0- ALLAN Co. 83 John st.. ue

Hftvlngf sold your excel lent preparation known at Gfox the past year or mori we are pleased to reporj that it nas given entire satisfaction and we do no hesitate to recommend it.

Cure! ia

lTOi DAT8. Qnaraateed not ottue Stricture.

9,

ui Cbamlol 0».

C. Williams A Co, Syracuse, ft.

Sold by Druggists. Price. •!.•«.

and Boll, Agente

and meet with sooeess quires a knowledge of the

TO ADVERTISE

newspapers, and a correctly display©-J advt

value of newspapers, and a correctly display©J advt

To secure such information as will enable you toadvertise|

C0KSULT

JUDICIOUSLY

LORD ss TH01IS

NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING, CHICAGO, Ui5n£^

The GAZETTE will bs found onfile in above office.

tt wa?

eakNervousMBR

Whoe# debility, an^{aUurePto'i*Sora-lir?£ duties properly are oaoaad br

srroas of yoatb. •*.. perfect and laatlag to rslmat heaiu

rsetor&tian to rat and vlnt IHE MAI Naitner ate

*ee«6sfnl

vHfpalsSB

instrnmente._Th is wataoaot Of flblTltf anl

because based on perfect diagBoaia

mw ncd direct Methods and absolute tb«n Mrhn?**. Fall information and Treatise (ree, '-cj.-i ('onsulting Physician of

REMEDYCO, *6W.Wih3t.fcewYeHL.

_alek, SS'-lTCO. MX|H C53WJ

IBTSend two stamps (wOtflnibl free. Call or write. F. D. ClAKKS* *•*00 VMS 0TWMT, CIHCIwMtL O