Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 9 September 1886 — Page 7
•Jtw.
Vv
as®
Stomach and Liver
REGULATOR A
—CURES—
CONSTIPATION
•Torpid Urer. Indigertion, Weai bam, KKal»rla,JUwOjitiM. ft pltation of the Htirt. when uitlsg fi *i indigestion or deranged conditfcn of the itooi h, «ick Headache or JHigraia* Pi) «nd Female Complaint*. ^%gi^oN^/moNr,4 FBICS: $1.00 per Bottta 6 Bottles, $5J 9
sbns fo* cntcojjua, nun.
p. J. CHENEY & CC MannFg Chemists, Prop'rs TOLEDO,
The best and surest Remedy for Core of all diseases caused by any derangement of tho Liver, KidneyB, Stomach and Bowels.
Dyspepsia, Si$k Headache, Constipation, Bilious Complaints and Malaria of all kinds yield readily to the beneficent influence of
It is pleasant to the taste, tones up the system, restores and preserves health. It is purely Vegetable, and cannot fail to prove beneficial, both to old and young.
As a Blood Purifier it is superior to alt others. Sold everywhere at fcl.00 a bottle
SCOTT'S
EMULSION
OF PDRI COB LITER OIL
Almost as Palatable as Milk.
Tho cnly preparation of COD LIVER OIL that can bo taken readily and tolerated for along time hj delicate stomachs.
AND AS A REMEDY FOB COXSPMPTIOW •SCItOFVJIiOUS AFFECTIONS, ANAEMIA, C&T JJIUII DEBILITY, COUGHS AND THBOAT AFFEt'IlOftS, and all WASTING D1S0BPEBS OF 'CHILDREN
'ts
marvellous in Its results!
Prescribed and endorsed by tho beat fbysiciana In the countries of the world. For Snle by all Dmg|(li(a. 4SrSend for Pamphlet on Wasting Diseases. Address, SCOTT «fe BOWNlUlew To fork.
ASTHMA
A
CURED
& SINGLE TRIAL era-i vinc^s th« -most skeptical!
(GERMAN ASTHMA CURE&SSft.,
I most violent attack insures comfortable sleep 1 (effects cures where all other remedies fail.S
No waiting for results. It* action isl immediate, direct and certnin, and at cure is effected in alt DURABLE CASESj "It permanently cured me. Refer to me at any time." I
Boii. R. Lott. St. Paul,
iifnn.1
'I am entirely restored to hcatth by German Asthma! Cure.' Th». J-'uion, Hamilton, OJiio.l "German Asthma Cure ii all you claim for it. It aererl fails.1' Prof. K. Vnn pingtrtin, Grrenville, S. C.I "My physician recommended German Asthma Cure. Itl cured me." Mr*. M. Trti i'-k, Lcmduiiderrfi. OAio.ff
Tlioiuaada of liaillar Ipttm on file. Aik any druggist! aliiiut It. I German AstJnim Cure is rold by all drng-l frists at 50c.
andS i. or «?nt by mall on recelptl
of price. Trial packairj free to any address fori stamp. K.SCW1FFM A S. St-Pmil.Mlnn.|
BHHHMBKHHI
CIVIL.
MECHANICAL AND MINING ENGINEERING at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Troy. .V. 1". The oldest engin•eering school in America. Next term begins September 15th. The Pegister for 1886 contain? a list ot the graduates for the past 61 years, with their positions also course of stndy, requirement?. expense*, etc. Candidates from a distance, or those living in distant states, by special examinations at their homes, or at snoh schools as they may be attending, may determine the question of admission without visiting Troy, For register and full Information, address
Davit* M. Obkknk, Director.
THE WONDERFUL
LUBORS £SA&
Library, Smoking, Recliniiift and Invalid Chair Combined.
1UBUB.O JT:
OMSUMPTION.
3 a positive remody above disease b/ Itt o**u:lsof c&seioi ine worst kind and ot font jrh&ve beencarecLlndeed,«.ostron«TMinrf*ub
t* Ihavo use thao^aii •Caodiatrha^ebecncarea.
hwfever
AHUTWU I**VU
In Us rtlScacyltiint I will toad TWO EOTTLKS fttHK, toretborxvltha VA WrABT.ETEB.YTISS on this 1U«M* toanvsuflerer. Oivee«!TMi»«nd P- 0.«ddr lfcUT- A. New Tor*.
CatawrH-
ELY'S
[CREAM BALM
Gives Relief at onoe and curat
SOLD IN HEAD
CATARRH
HAY FEVEB
Not a Liquid, SnMff |or Powder, Free from Injurious Drug* and Offensive odor*.
-EEVER
A particle is applied into eaoh nostril an agreeable. P-lce SO cents at Druggists by registered, 60cts. Circulars free. ELY BRO Druggists, Owego, N- Y.
fffpF'
*f
His Interes'ing: Persona! Memoirs Written fur ihe Recent Old "v Settlers' Meeting,
Containing: a Poem Commemorating a Sad Event.
D. S. DANALDSON'S. REMINISCENCfcS.
Paper Prepared by Him for the Old Set- $ 1 tiers' Meeting^' $ '-Recently, Oapt. Jas. Hook infcimated to me that I was old enough to say something on this occasion, the Old Folks' meeting! and I suppose anything about early oecurrenoe itt- -Indiana is expected. lean go back to 1833, 63 years since, and if anything I ofPer is acceptable, I shall be gratified, if otherwise. you may charge the
faux pas
(fox
paw) to Capt. Hook. I CAME TO INDIAtfA tJT 1883, entering the state at King's ferry, Clark county, and travelled on horseback through Bloomington, Putnamville, Greencastle, Kussellville, Bockville, Covington, Lafayette, and to Logansport looking for a favorable point to locate and sell dry goods, calico, ladies hose, suspenders &c. Ai Covington, I saw a merchant (Hawkins) shut up his store, shoulder a hoe and oome out to work on the road. I asked him if he could not do better to attend hi3 store and pay his assessment, $1.25, to the road fund. He said, no—saving $1.25 by handling his hoe on the road was better than keeping his store open, where only 50cts might be made. I concluded not to locate at Covington!
On my road to Logan I passed acornfield, corn then in tassel, which was being devoured by hundreds of black and gray squirrels. The fence, and outside corn rows were literally covered, eaoh stalk had one or more squirrels, and from the vast numbers hard at work, I presume no corn was gathered in that field.
In the woods south of Logan, about 4 in the afternoon, two men overtook me, comirg up quickly, one on each side of me. The one on the right threw his leg on his horse's neck, as I thought, to dismount and hold my horse while the other might go through my clothing. I was terribly alarmed,but did not squeal, or show my fear. No harm resulted. They, like myself, were looking for favorable locations, and that .night Ye three y*
SliEPT ON THE FLOOR OF A CABIN by the roadside, having our saddles for pillows and saddle blankets for covering. Our supper was a tough parboiled rooster, cornpone and salt. We left early enough to take breakfast at Logan, where I met a man standing against a wall, quivering like a leaf in a whirlwind. He had shaking ague, great shakes at that, and as I thought something about my health I gave Logan, at the mouth of Eel, a wide berth.
I came back to Bockville and tarried a year. There I found Gen. Patterson, who might have been U. S. Senator in the place of Hannegan, had he made a few promises Gen. Howard, who was Tyler's Envoy to Texas in 1841, who died with yellow fever taken at Galveston Jos. A. Wright, who was governor, M. C., U. S. Senator and Minister to Berlin, with whom and others I often played marbles up stairs in the cotirt house. Joseph could plump the middle man 4 times in 5 trials! Judge Wm. P. Bryant was also a citizen there.
At Bockville I had a foot race with Math. Noel who was a large man with much adipose and rotundity, on abet of a quart of logwood malaga to be used by the marble playing club. I was 15 inches ahead at the outcome when Matthew gave me a push that sent me topsy turvy heels over head in the grass, and he claimed the bet. I also remember
Doctors Tuley, Lowe, Leonard and Allen, no, and Mark Meacham, Cameron, Mc Campbell, Baldwin, Sunderland, Sill, Grant, Slavens and Jno. G. Davis who was reported the best circuit court clerk in the state. With one or two exceptions all these have gone to their long homes.
MY FRIEND, COL. TOM NELSON
was not then there, he meandered thitherwards some years later when young and fresh looking, which induced a member of the bar to attempt bulldozing proces9 with him. The member retired from the arena with his eyes in mourning and scarlet node, and ever afterwards Col. Tom was considered a regular Kentucky anthropophagi and moved gracefully in his orbit without a madicum of friction. It is not safe to attack Kentuck without being loaded with brass knucks and a bowie knife in your boot.
In my travels up and down the Wabash every one advised me against Terre Haute saying "you will die there in less than 30 days, but when I arrived here in July '35 and saw the plessant surroundings, the broad prairie, Britton's Garden and Strawberry Hill, I thought this a nice place to live and not a very bad place to die. In settling here I had a partner, who indulged in melons,berries attd fruit, like was his want in Kentucky one night he took a chill and by noon the next day ke had sold out to me, bought horses, saddles and bridles for himself and wife, and that evening crossed the river and lodged with S. B. Goodwin beyond Maxville. He made straight streak for Missouri much alarmed and demoralized.
I conclude this narrative with a sad catastrophe which occurred at my dwelling some 50 years ago, and was then recorded in verse as an epic poem or episode. The facts of which are as follows:
During the spring of 1836 the steamer Indian arrived here on board of which the captain had two South American [Guinea pigs] as a present for a lady here, just married and located on lot 294 Third street, then called Market street. The pets were carefully domiciled and attended. One long summer Sunday, astray dorg entered the yard and killed one of the pigs which shooked and saddened the household. Mrs. Col. Fontaine, a handsome and witty Irish lady, happened in and offered consolation, suggesting that some thing ought to be written upon the sad occasion and that the writer hereof should wear crape on his left leg for 36 days. The pet was decently buried under a rose bush, according to the ritual of our ohurch and the following lines produced:
Elegy upon the death of a pet, by the deceased, in last agonies: About the yard I roamed at will,
My nest beneath some boards/^ And every day I ate my fill Of early Torks and gourds. One summer day I left my nest
To taste the silk worm tree, u.' When in my path I meta cur Thats arled and barked at me. At first he viewed my glossy coat,
Awhile he growled and then He made an awful lunge at me, Adtore my abdomen! I went to tas'e the silk-worm tree
That grew beside the pale, That fiendish dog he hated me Uei cue I had no tail! Such gaping wounds I stdly knew
Would be the death of me,] So I aat down and with my toe I write my L. E. G. Cut down in yoath I make my grave
Among the fragrant roseq, And leave my corses on the dogs."1. Till time forever closes.^,.. I 1 a a a it
Of bacon, bread or jelly cake' And daily nmy they have a fit Of griping, racking
no word tntu inymes .with "jelly
cake" the'author leaves a blank which the intelligent reader may supply to suit his or her own taste.]
Bye bye to thee my mistress dear Receive my dying wishes Should Dorg or Purp come near your door
Assail with your dishes. Beat him with your bright bread tray, Attack him with your tongs, To compensate in some small way
For all my woeful wrongs. May every dorg in Christendom And all the cars be pounded Then taken to the riverside
And in a batch be drownded! On the next lot Jas Gibbons had a patch of white mulberry sprouts,
mvlticaulis,
moras
intending to raise silk
worms and make a fortune in the cocoon business. But like the tulip craze in Holland, 200 years ago, the cocoon craze went out in smoke. The next spring Gibbon's white mulberry (the food for silk worms) was cut down and burnt, to make room for cabbage and squash, more susbtantial articles of food for the family."
The moral of the foregoing is "Don't run after strange things." Where eer we go, whatever we do
Bad luck will overhaul us, JH Better had I never seen,4 The Morur Multicaulis.
CYRUS G. LUCE,
fc
.7
The Nominee for Governor of Michigan. Michigan Bepublicans have met in convention, under the Presidency of Austin Blair, the popular war governor of the state, and have begun the campaign with vim. The first name on the ticket was placed here by. acclamation, no other man than Cyrus G. Luce being voted for as candidate for the nomination to the governo rship
By speech and pen and personal attendance in gatherings of farmers he lias done much to develop the interests of agriculture. Outside of this, he is the owner of interests in other branches of business, which he cultivates with remarkable ability.
The candidaie for governor of Michigan has had a large experience in the politios of his state, having been a member of both branches of the Legislature repeatedly, and holding some active position in connection with various state boards almost continuously. nomination is generally approved by members of his party throughout Michigan
THE Agricultural Society offers a 35 silver cup for a bicycle oontest at thO county fair, Tuesday, September 14.
-.•»••.•• ••.-:•"•
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
I had married not far from the Potomac and Shenandoah September, 1838, during an annular eclipse of the sun, and have been eclipsed ever since, my other half being the better one of the two, so my neighbors say, with whom I'll have no quarrel.
MORTUARY REPORT.
Total
&
The Death Roll at the City GemeW Series in August.^ 5 c1 (JS5!5
The following is the cemetery report for August: WOODLAWN CEMETERY. 2—Christiana Boethel, 65 years, chronic asthma, 527 north Twelfth. 2—Anna B. Zimmerman, 56 years, canoer of bowels, 622 north Thirteenth. 4—Wm. Engles, 2 years, soarlet fever, south Third. 6—M. B. Hunley, 6 yfefitff. dropS^, 681 Eagle. 7—George M. Early, 57 years, congestion of lungs ahd bowels, 332 north Third. 7—Mary C. Webber, 15 years, 127 north Third. 13—Elizabeth Duncan, 40 years, puerpereal fever, 710 south Second. 13—Arthur P. Hoff, 2 years, summer complaint, Thirteenth and Main. 14—John E. Kelsheimer, 73 years, heart disease, 659 north Fourth. 17—Clara Yoges, 3 years, 1207 Mulberry. 17—-Katie T. Hollis, 2 years, congestion, 214 north Fourth. 17—Blanche Lee, 1 month, indigestion, 622 Swan. 18—Blanche Hudson, 21 days, north Second. 20—Dainty Bussell, 1 month, north Second.. 22—Jessie Duncan, 15 days, 701 south Second. 22—Daniel K. Conover, 38 years, congestion, Harrison township. 23—Kate JSaenglen, 25 years, typhoid fever, 642 south Thirteenth. 26—Jessie Thompson, 2 years, dysentery, 1601 south Fourteenth. 27—Henry H. Phelan, 75 years, 662 Elm. 30—Eleanor Story, 85 years, old age, 825 north Seventh. 30—Olida Pape, 1 year, 1515 south Thirteenth and-a-half. 31—Baby Tucker, stillborn, 1424 south Center. City 21 Elsewhere....... 1
22
•M HIGHLAND LAWN CEMETERY. 4—Edna Alexander, 5 months, cholera infantum, north Third. 4—Pearl Alexander, 5 months, cholera infantum, north Third. 9—George B. Hatson, 23 years, ty phoid fever, 937 south First. 12—Moody Medsker, 2 years, 706 north Second. 13—Augustin H. Ambrose, 27 years, St. Anthony's Hospital. 14—Eddie Thompson, 13 days, pneumonia, 9173^ Main. 16—Mary L. Danforth, 7 years, cerebral meningitis. 16—Charles H. Bussell, 5 months, dysentery, 102 Vine. 16—Angie B. Samuels, 37 years, 1033 south Center. 16—Mary E. King, 52 years, St. Anthony's Hospital. 18—Baby Madrell, premature birth, 833 Walnut. 19—Bertie Krangleiter, 3 months, Lafayette road. 20—Jane Jarred, 1 year, Harrison township.^ 24—Sarah C. Wilson, 44 years, cancer of womb, 1108 south Thirteenth. 24—Baby Smith, premature birth, 115 Walnut. 25—James Lee, 44 years, 1536 Spruce. 25—W. H- Brown, 46 years, abscess of lung, north Sixth. 28—Albertina Lewellyn, 1 year, Swan street. 30—Harry E. Thompson, 4 months, 1404 Third avenue. City 17 Elsewhere 2
Total 19 At Woodlawn 22 At Highland Lawn 19
Total. .41
KOLITICAL POINTERS.
What Is Going On All Around the Political Field. In convention at Springfield, Illinois Bepublicans nominated John B. Tanner, of Clay county, for Treasurer of State.
Henry Bohl, of Marietta, O., has been chosen chairman of the Democratic executive committee of Ohio.
A. C. Harris has been nominated for Congress by the Bepublicans of the 7th Indiana (Indianapolis) district. The Democratic convention will be held Saturday.
S. M. Stockslager, Assistant Commissioner of the General Land Office, has finally withdrawn from the contest in the 3d Indiana (New Albany) district.
Judge John D. Stewart has been nominated for Congress by the Democrats in the 5th Georgia district.
W. D. Lindsey, of Vermillion county, 111., has been nominated for Congress by the Democrats in that district.
A Washington dispatch represents Senator Voorhees as denying point blank that he would give up the Senatorship to become vioe-President.
THE CHARLES TONCITY MARSHAL.
His Blunder Rectified by the Police Here— A Brilliant Official. Some time since the police here had the three Cross boys in jail on suspicion of the larceny of a scale beam at Charleston, 111. They wrote to the city marshal at Charleston and that brilliant official answered that they were not wanted there. Then they were turned loose. Soon afterward a letter came here from Wilson & Steigman at Charleston complaining about this same robbery and the police wrote to the firm telling them of the information they had received from the Charleston city marshal. The firm answered that the burglary had been speedily reported to that official and they couldn't understand why he had differently reported. The police traced the business up and found the scale beam at Indianapolis yesterday, turning it oyer to the firm. Joe Gross was arrested and was turned over to be [taken to Charleston.
SULLIVAN.
1
A&rc."
-3
Two Terre Haute Prlnteis pt for Thefts ,|
The boys did some tall swearing when told they were suspeqted but when the money was found they wilted and con fessed to stealing the money. They gave their names as Thomas E. Lawton and Thomas H. Prouse and said they had been employed on the Daily Express at Terre Haute. They now languish in jail.
Miss Lizzie Wakefield, our accommodating deputy P. M., returned this evening from Kentucky where she has been visiting for some weeks.
Mr. C. B. Hinkle, auditor of the I. & S. road, reports business on that road in a flourishing condition. The rolling stock of the road is being taxed to its utmost to fill the demand even after the extensive additions that have been made recently by the purchase of new locomotives and cars. Since the new passenger train has been put on the passenger business has increased very largely, the traveling public being loud in their praises of the excellent accommodations afforded by the road. The road under the efficient management of P. H. Blue is fast coming to thafront as a first class road.
The Fair.
Y.S BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG. The managers of the Vigo county fair have engaged to exhibit on the grounds during the fair the "Battle of Gettysburg." It will be in a large tent, 200 feet in circumference, and is pronounced a perfect reproduction of the great painting exhibited in Chicago.
J. A. Marshall, the musio dealer, has secured 25 feet square at the fair, to be fitted up in beautiful style, and will add some novel features which will be very agreeable to visitors.
The Keyes Manufacturing Company, which has not shown at the fair for years, intend exhibiting a large line of their best work in wagons, phaetons, sulkies, etc.
In a Shroud.
Theouore Frank made a request before he died that he be buried in a shroud, like his father. This is the good old idea of the Israelites, who for many years and still in some parts of the country, not only placed a winding sheet about the corpses of their dead but used the simplest and plainest pine boxes for coffins. The symbolism is beautiful for it was meant to show that in death rich and poor, high or low, are equal. Ic would be a great good thing if we could all go back to this old custom.
APPLICATION FOB LICENSE. Notice is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo county, Indiana, at their September term, 18S6, for*a license to sell spirituous, vinous and malt liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises for a pariod of one year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank is located, commencing T9S feet west of a point 1075 feet Bouth of the northeast corner of the northwest quarter of section 33, township 12, north range 0- west, running thence north 105 feet, thence aorth GO degrees, west 945 feet to the east side of the vlnoenDea road, thence southwestwardly along the east side of said road to a point due west of the point of beginning, thence east to the.place of Beginning, in Harrison township*
VlgO county, state of Indiana. CORNELIUS CALLAHAN.
Mitw Elise Hudson returns next, week from Louisville,
•I-S:b'% ski.
in Jail
Good Bupiness on the I. & t. S. Rail way—Sundry Notes.
SULLIVAN, Ind., Sept. 1, 1886.—[GAZETTE special]—Sheriff Wilier is fast earning a reputation as a first class detective. Yesterday two tramp printers were in Shelburn and visiting one of the saloons succeeded in making a sneak on a ten dollar bill from some one in the saloon. They were arrested and searched and as nothing could be found they were set at liberty. Mr. Willis learning of it met them at the depot in Sullivan took them in custody and after a diligent search found the bill under the hem at the bottom of one of their pants legs.
fa*
OFFICER CLINE RESIGNS.
He Wants the Railroads to Him and Not the City.
Boss
OffioerJohn Cline resigned on the 30th of last month, although nothing was said About it at police headquarters until this morning, when the police commissioners met to act on the same. They accepted the resignation, promoted Supernumerary Rollins to the vacancy and put Emmet Hall on in Bollins' place. Cline was a Bepublican member, and was stationed at the Union depot. Half of his salary was paid by the city and half by the railroad companies.' His duty was to make the trains and when there was nothing else to patrol two squares on either side of the depot. Cline was a regular member of the force. He said he objected to being bossed by both George Lickert, the railroad official at the depot, and Superintendent of Police Lawlor. If he was going to be bossed by the latter he was going to quit As the city paid half his salary the city was half his boss, and Cline had nothing to do but to step down and out. The business of the police department has been carried in just the same since he left as before he left. Cline was one of the witnesses against Lawlor and Vandever in the police investigation some time ago. He was once ran for City Marshal on the Bepublican ticket, and was beaten by John Kidd. The depot job is the easiest in the department and every man on the force would like to get it.
Ourtlalaf BOI wftft PIJBI TXGBTABLKF T011CS, vkkl?
mi
Genuine has above Trade Mark and croaeed ted Has*
an wrapper. Take other. Made only by BJBOWN CHEMICAL CO* BALTIMORE. Mm
fVIGO
I
rd*ntmm
43&3W na
In Spite of Hundreds of New Stalls and Pens, We Will be Crowded for fr'V? Room. md 1 t'V .V .v i. t£i«l
THE EXPECTED 2,000 ENTRIES IM
FINE ART AND MISCELLANEOUS HALLS WiLL TAX OUR GREATEST CAPAC-
ITY.
No Liprs will lie Soli ht this Fair-
Arrangements made fort r!
SPLENDID MUSIC
-r
With Special Features.
NO GAMBLING
3S:i!.
ROM
BITTERS,/
cmtletdj CLEAH8U&
mien THIS BLOOU, Qiklnaiff^ the aetlM «f the Liver aad
Elimtjn.
—OB— -.
Games of Chance
AT THIS FAIB.
There will ba
Entertainment for the People.
of
j" By Noted Horses Every Day.
THE DEMIN6 CUP
Will be raeed for by a number of Thoroughbreds. Three Silver Cups and Liberal Purses for Trotters, Pasers and Runners.
A Day Set Apart for the Children. A Special Exhibit for Them of Shetland Ponies.
The Florists Offer Liberal Premiums to Amateur Gardeners.
The Tlgo Fair Grounds, with their new buildings, asile and half mile tracks, pleasant grove* and fields, good water and shade and railroad facilities, are the best in the state.
Send for
PRKMIUX LIST
to Secretary C. C. Oaky, 936 Wabash avenue. It is of interest to raisers ot live stock, poultry ana farw and garden products, to the housewife and seamstress, to the manufacturer and mechanise
BEMEMBEB THE FAIB OF '86.
NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING.
DAUCHY & [CO..
27 Park Place and 24-26 Murray St., N. Make lowest rates on all newspapers to the li* S. and Canada. Established 186.
SPECIAL OFFER.
Wewlil insert a on»-inch advertisement one month in oar selected !lst of 225 DAILIES AND WEEKLIES covering the U. S., for $260. CUeulatlon 6,980,292 copies per month.
We will Insert a one inch advertisement one mmith in our
POPULAR LOCALLISTS
of 1,130 Daily and Weekly newspapers for 1060. No patent list papers are Included. Send for Catalogue, fartiea contemplating a line of advertising, large or small, are to send for estimate otooaL
4 tl v-i-.-:
tieaistfc*
W|lnl—,«ak«fceahiawth.
Mwmtte-
UJan the teeth, eaaMhealache, or prodaeeeoastipatiM—ALL OTHEB BOH XEDICOE8 DO.,* snd Dwggirts amjwlwtewwimmd Mifjjjjr
Da. If. 8. Jtaoous, d1 Marion, Mam says: "1 noonunand Brown's Ir» Bfttera a Talambla tool*: for enrichinc the blood, and remorins all djspentia
•TBPtaBB.
It does nothoit the teeth."
MB.
WM
IHtitlffWtOtT.1*
W*. Brura, SB 8t. Mary 8t.rNew Orleans, I^L says: Brown's Iron Bitters relieved mains oaw and I heartily ootnmwnd it purifier. M::
ST Wood those nee MB. W. WTMOITAHAH, TnseomMa, Ala.. Burs:
W
I
been troubled from chfldbood with Imput* face—two bottles
we—two bottles of
-am
Mm***
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The Signs of the Times Peint
—TO xn-»
EV."
Banner fair
if
SEPTEMBER s, 14,15, 17.
'•i
v.'3*i
A
IJts, v.
.are attracting ,_v
Famous Herds of Cattle
5
ifl
1
5
V*
5
THE LARGE PURSES 4 PREMIUMS
11
-AND-
Splendid Exhibits of
Horses, Cattle, Sheep & Hogs
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