Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 February 1887 — Page 3

0*^

That Tired Feeling

The warm weather has a debilitating effect, •specially upon those who are within door* most of the time. The peculiar, yet common, •omplaint known as "that tired leeling," is the result. This feeling can be entirely overcome by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, which gives new life and strength to all the functions of- the body. "I could not sleep had no appetite. I took Hood's Sarsaparilla and soon began to sleep soundty could get up without that tired and languid feeling and my appetite Improved." R. A. SANFOBD, Kent, Ohio.

Strengthen the System

Hood's Sarsaparilla is characterized by three peculiarities: 1st, the combination of remedial agents 2d, the proportion 3d, the process of securing the active medicinal qualities. The result is a medicine of unusual strength, effecting enres hitherto unknown. Send lor COOK containing additional evidence. "Hood's Sarsaparilla tones up my system, purifies my blooa, sharpens my appetite, and seems to make me over." J. P. THOMPSON, Register of Deeds, Lowell, Mass. "Hood's Sarsaparilla beats all others, and is worth its weight in gold." I. BAKBINGTON,, ISO Bank Street, New York City.

Hood's Sarsaparilla

Sold by all druggists. $l six for $5. Made only by 0.1. HOOD 6 CO., Lowell, Mass.

BOO Doses One Dollar.

TIME TABLfc.

Mituadard minutes

i"his table Is reokoned on the new ninetieth meridian time, which la teo dower than Terre Haute ticue.

THK VAHDAIJA.—Trains leave for the east at 7:15 A. M. 12:55 p. M. 3:33 r. M. 1:80 A. M. 1:51 A. M. For the West at 1:43 A. M., 12:30 A. M. 10:18 A. M. aad 2:13 P. M. Trains arrive from East at 1:30 A. M., 12:13 A. M., 10 12 A. M., 2:05 P. H. and £45 p. ll. Arrive from Wost 1:20 A. M. 1:43 A. 19:40 p. M. and 2:13 p. M.

THK LOOANSPOKT DIVISION.—Trains leave for the north at 6:00 A. M, and 3:15 p. M. Trains arrive from the north at 12:30 p. K. and 8:00 M.

I. & ST. L.—Trains leave for the East at 13:22 A 7:30 A. M. 1:37 P.M. 3:47 P. n. For the West •t r.08 a. m. 10.08 a. m.: 8.15 p. ra. 3:05 p. M.

THK K. & T. H.—Trains leave for the south at 5:00 A. M. 10-05 p. if. 3:20 p. M. Trains arrive from the south at 4:50 A. M. 10:00 P: v. and 12:30 p. M.

Tax ILLINOIS MXDI^AND.—Trains leave for the Northwest 6:20 A. M. arrives from the Northwest 5:03 p. M.

E. & I., T. H. & WOBTHIHOTOH.—Trains leave at 8:00 A. u. and 3:25 p. M. arrive at 9:10 a. m. and 8:*5 p. so.

CHICAGO & EABTKRW II.MNOIB: —Trains leave tor the North at 4.65 a, m. 10.05 a. m. 10.35 p. m. and 3.27 p. m. arrive from the North at 3.30 a. us. 10.03a. m.: 3.15 p. m. and 10.00 p. m.

The best and surest Remedy for Cure of ail diseases caused by any derangement of the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels. [Jyspeps'a, Sick Headache, Constipation, Billon? Complaints and Malaria of all kinds yield .dily tc the beneficent influence of

I

It is pleasant to the taste, tones up the system, restores and preserves health. Ii is purely Vegetable, and cannot foil to prove beneficial, both to old and young.

As a Blood Purifier it is superior to all others. Sold everywhere at $1.00 a bottle.

& -i A

Winter Exposure Causes Coughs. Colds, Pleurisy, Rheumatism, Pneumonia 'Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache and other ailments, f»r which Benson's Capcine

Plasters are admitted to be the bent remedy known. They relieve and enre in a few honrs when no other application i9 of the least benefit, Endorsed by 5,000 Physicians and Druggists. Bewbre of imitations nnder similar sounding nam £8, such as "Capsicum," "Capsicln" or "Capsicine-" Ask for Benson's and tike no others. Examine carefully when you buy. All I druggists. SEABURY & JONSON, Proprietors, New York

I THURSDAY, FE8RUARY 3, 1887

New York high society is daintly 'styled "japonicadom."

Throat diseases commence with a Oough, Cold, or Sore Throat. "Brown's Bronchial Troohes" trive immediate relief. Sold only in boxes. Price 25 cts.

The Rnssian bang, now style, only suits long-faced girls.

With t*eth all stained, and loose, I thought That nothing could be begged or bought To cure them and I cried, in pain, "O, would that they were good again!'* At last, lot songs of praiee go round, A cure in SOZUDONT I found I

In Russia they soak their potatoes preliminary to frying.

Sangamon county, 111., has just paid a wolf bounty, the first in twenty yea re.

HOHSFORD'S AClD~PHOSPHATE

Gives Satisfactory Results.

Dr. O. W. Weeks, Marion, O., says: Its use is followed by results satisfactory both to patient and physician.

BO NOT MISS READING THE ILLUSTRATED ARTICLES IN THE GAZETTE. ALL THE LEADING PRESENT EVENTS ARE TREATED BESIDES THE AMUSE KENT THERE IS MUCH INSTRUCTION.

HONORABLE MEN.

"But Brutus is an honorable Wan," said Marc Anthony in his funeral oration oyer Caesar's dead body, according to the short-hand report of his speech made by the late Wm. Shakespeare. All Brutus had done was to walk up to the great Caesar as if he was going to shake hands with him and inquire after hie health and then stick a knife into him and turn it around.C3As Brutus was an honorable man so piso may be Galled honorable men the three legislators elected by the Republicans and the one legislator eleoted by the Democrats who are voting daily for

our

esteemed towns­

man, Captain J. H. Allen, for United States Senator. These four men were explicitly pledged or if not that exactly in evsry instance at least by the strongest and most binding implication,£to vote, thtee of them with the Republicans and the fourth with the Democrats for Senator. Not one of them could have come within a thousand miles of election except on this understanding. Does any one suppose that Wesley Glover, tor instance, to single him out as our own home contribution to the political muddle, could have been elected to the legislature if he had not been nominated by the Republicans, made his canvas? as a Republican with the other candidates of thqt party and been voted for by the Republicans?.Does any one suppose that the Republican party would have permitted him to remain on its tic tat as its nominee if it had been und J-stood that he would, as soon as elected, kick over the ladder by which he had climbed into the Legislature and organize a party of his own out of the wreck he had made!? Viewed in the light of his present cotiduot, was not his election secured by th most glaring fraud and has he not played a confidence game of the meanest sort on his friends and supporters?

What is true of him is equally true of Cate and Robinson and Mackev, with this additional consideration in the case of the latter, that he is no more entitled to a seat in the Indiana Legislature than he is to a seat in the British parliament. On the 4th day of November, 1884, he voted in Tennessee. This the record shows, and he dar$ not deny it nnder oath for fear of being sent to the penitentiary for perjury. On the 2nd day of November, 1886, ho voted here in Indiana and was voted for as a candidate for the Legislature. Residence in the state for two years previous to a given election is required to make a voter eligible. He had not been a resident of the state for the two veara previous to the last election. Had he left Tennessee the very day he voted there on November 4th, 1884, and reached Indiana on the evening of the same day, and he did not do this, he woulci still have come short two days of being either a legal voter or eligible for election to office in this state on the 2nd day ut November, 1886. If his vote had been challenged on election day and he had sworn that he had been a resident of the state for the two yeiirs previous be would have committed perjury.

In morals, though not in law, he committed perjury as it is, for a voter in offering his ballot practically asserts his legal right to vote. His continued presence in the Legislature is a shame and a disgrace which cannot be too quickly ended by his ignominious expulsion. It also might be worth the while of the criminal authorities to examine the oath of office he took when he assumed his seat, with the form of which we are unfamiliar, and his other stejps in walking into an office he could not! hold and in voting when he was clearly not entitled to vote to see if comewhere in his crooked career an indictment for perjury will not lie and his eligibility to a cell in the penitentiary be established beyond all question.

TELEPHONE SUITS.

The Supreme Court of the United States is now engaged in hearing arguments in the great free-for-all telephone suit in which the Bell Company represents the "ine" and the Grjay, the Dolbear, the Molecular, the Clay, theDrawbaugh, the Overland and iothers represent the "outs" who want1 to get ii. This is not to be confused with the case of the United States agairst the Bell Telephone company which is to be tried some time in the future ila Massachusetts before a judge of the United States district court. Thi^i last suit is to determine the question which has been raised that the patent of the Bell company was wrongfully obtained and that it really is not entitle^ to the patent under which for a numjber of years it has been coining money.

The suit before the Supreme Court at the present time is a sort of joint appeal from adverse decisions of lower courts by all the companies which have set up claims to inventions prior to that of Alexa»der Ball or which- assert that th^ir telephones operate ra principles so different from that of Bell that they are entitled to patents. No evidence is to be introduced except such as is contained in the records of the courts from which appeals have been *a&en. But there will be plenty of that. Merely printing the record in ono of these

THE GAZETTE: TERRE HAUTE INDIANA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3

cases cost $10,000. As to the Bell Company the briefs in its case are all bound in Turkish morocco, no meaner binding being found worthy of the legal olaims on whioh this lordly and affluent corporation rests its right to a monopoly of the telephone.

Nine judges, including the chief justice, constitute the Supreme Court, but only seven will sit in this case. Justice Woods is out in California seeking to restore his health and Justice Gray will not act for ttie reason that the Gray family are wrapped from head to foot with coils on coils of Bell telephone wire. Two brothers, two sisters and five cousins hold an aggregate of 902 shares of Bell telephone stock—being clothed, housed and fed, as it were, by "helloes."

Counsel for the litigants in this complex case ask for sixty hours of argument. This means fifteen entire days for Judges of the Supreme Court are a conservative set of old codgers and, having a good thing, propose to save it and not permit themselves to be overworked. For them a working day consists of only four hours, or just half the extremest demand ever made by any body of men. At twelve o'clock the court meets and at 4 o'clock the judges doff their robes and go about resting until noon of the next day. A session furnishes just about enough excitement to keep their livers from getting torpid and to give them an appetite for their toddy and their dinner.

Among the attornies in the case is George F. Edmunds, Senator from Vermont, who appears as one of the counsel for the Drawbaugh telephone company. That the Senate is in session, that the people of Vermont have employed him to represent them there and that he cannot bo in the Senate and the Supreme Court at one and the same time, does not seem to have occurred to him.

THE Evansville Journal is forninst Senator Harrison. It has said all along that he cannot be elected. It is also in favor of the "compromise" so much complained of by chagrined Republicans who wanted Col. Robertson to wholly disregard the decision of the court to which his contest with Senator Green Smith was taken. The GAZETTE has no quarrel whatever with the Journal for either of these positions. It only wishes to point out a fallacy or two whioh lurks in the argument. Rsviswing the case the Journal says:

The three Labor. Republican members who have been voting for Captain Allen declare that they will not vote for Harrison. There is no law compelling them to do BO. No penalty for refusal o&n be enforced against them. Then why keep on the track a candidate who cannot posBioly be elected? It is folly—it it Quixotic—to do BO.

This heroic devotion to Harrison wonld do on the stage, as a mere display of patriotic sentiment, but the masses of the pai' want to realize political results they desire the United States Senate to remain .Republican. General Harrison has no right to sacri fice the interests of the party and country to his vain ambition to secure a second term. His partisans should not uphold him in it. If by the nomination of any other leadiug and capable and more popular Republican the tienatorship can be secured, there ought not to be a moment's hesitation to withdraw Harrison and try some other candidate. This is practical as opposed to sentimental politics this^is national politics instead of mere personal aggrandizement.

Should Democratic Senators be sent up from Indiana and New Jersey the Sena would stand 39 Republicans and 37 Demo crats. Of the former, Riddleberger, of Virginia, is one he is a very uncertain quantity. Like the cross-eyed

maD,

no person can tell

where he will hit. He is altogether unreliable. Then Senator Dawes has just been re-elected by the assistance of Democratic votes in the Massachusetts Legislature, and although he has always been a reliable Republican, he will naturally feel nnder some obligations to the Democrats who helped to elect him, and in close and doubtful oases might feel disposed to repay their favor. He iB an old man and can expect no further official favors.

The prospect is that a Democratic Senator will be elected in New Jersey. It will be perceived, therefore, that the only chance for the Republicans to make themselves independent of all ordinary contingencies is to send a Republican Senator from Indiana. This would make the Senate stand, after the 4th of March, 39 Republicans, 36 Democrats and one uncertain Republican—Riddleber ger."

The Journal is quite right in account ing Senator Riddlebeiyer an uncertain quantity and also in believing that Senator Dawes will not be a party to unseating the Democrat, if one properly accredited should be sent from this stato. The mistake into which the Journal falls is one of simple arithmeticSuppose the Republicans do drop Senator Harrison, and suppose they get a man who, whilo lidding all the Republican strength, is sufficiently popular with the Greenbackers and Labor party as to get all three of the Republican members who are voting for Allen. This will only be 74 votes, and if Robinson's vote, 8lso, is secured, it will foot up only 75, whioh is still one less than enough to elect.

"THntTY-rivB hundred men and girls employed at L. 8. Higgios & Co. 'a carpet manufactory, New York city, struck yesterday morning."—Exchange.

The protective tariff levied, as it is alleged, for the interests of the American workingmen, is 86 per cent on common druggets and 46 per cent on fine Aubusson and Axminster carpets and similarly all through. Aside from the great inequality of taxing highest the carpet which laboring people are most apt to bny, it would seem, from the above it^m, that the tariff does not prevent excessively low wages with attendant strikes. The tariff protects no one but the manufacturer the wage worker is compelled to compete with the world and pay the increased price on necessities besides.

PROM LIFE TO DEATH

is but a moment if rheumatism or neuralgia strikes the heart. These diseases are the most painful and the most dangerous of any to which human kind is liable. They fly from one jpart to another without a moment's warning, and liniments and other outward applications are in themselves dangerous Decause they are liable to drive the disease to some vital organ and cause instant death. Rheumatism and neuralgia are diseases of the blood, andean only be reached by a remedy which wili drive from the blood the dangerous acids. Such a remedy is Atlilophoros. It has been thoroughly tested is a safe, sure cure.

If

Mrs. Cregar, lUi' Main St., Terre Haute, Ind., said: Woiieof the greatest sufferers from rheiVft^nUm that any mortal could be and live. For five days I was com-. pietely prostrated and helpless. Notamus- QON tie or joint was free from the mostexcruciat- I i::g pain. The pain was so intense and I so sensitive I could not even bear the weight of a sheet. I did not know what sleep was for many nights. I suffered in this way for a long time, using many different treatments and medicines, both from physicians and

For liver and kidney diseases, dyspepsia, inligestion, weakness, nervous debility, diseases if women, constipation, headache, impure blood, Ac., Athlophoros Pills are unequoled. 6

CATARRH

HftFEVER

$0*

HAY-FEVER 25,000 FATALHSIS

FEVER, TYPHOID FEVER, INDIGES­

TION,

DYSPEPSIA, SURGICAL lii\

BLOOD

POIS-

ING,

1

friends' advice, but nothing did as much as to give me relief. Finally my husband got a bottle of Athlophoros ana you will no doubt be surprised and some people.. might think it an improbable thing, but it is a fact, as can be testified to by many neighbors who know how sadly I is afflicted, in a few hours and only having taken a few doses of Athlophoros, 1 got up and walked around the room, Athlophoros did for me what doctors and their medicines failed to do, and I am only too glad to let it be known to sufferers from rheumatism.

Every druggist should keep Athlophoros and Athlophoros Pills, but where they cannot be bought of the druggist the Athlophoros Co., 112 Wall St., New York, will .send either (carriage paid) on receipt of regular price, which is $1.00 per bottle for Athlophoros and 50c. for Pills.

TYPHOID

Annually

•••IN THIS

Country.

All Treated With Quinine.

Dr. J. S. Mitchell, of Chicago, In a rl'nical lecture nt the Cook Coantv Hospital, Oct. 7th, 1886, said: "In typioid fever no possible good can resolt from giving

Qalniue, as at tbe best It

can only effect a temporary re iuotfon of temperature and after forty-eight hoars the fovea usnaliy higher than at first.

AC|/|Iir Destroys the Disease 9IVI nl fl£i Germs in

FEVERS,

Malaria, Dyspepsia

NERVOUS DEBILITY.

Lifer, Lm an! KMnev Disease.

Prof. W. F. Holcombe, M. D., 54 east 25th St, New York, [late Prof, in N. Y. Med. Oollege] writes: "Kaskine is superior to qoinlne in its specific power, and never produces the slightest Injury to the hearing or constitution."

The U. S. Examining Suigeon, Dr. L. R. White, writes: "Kaskine is the beet medicine made." "Every patient St. Francis Hospital, N. Y.. [-treated with Kaskine has been discharged cured."

Bellevue Hospital, N. Y., "Universally successful." 8t Joseph'# Hospital, N. Y.: "Its use is considered indispensable. It acts perfectly."

Kaskine is pleasant to tako and can be used without special medical eooDsel. Send for the great list of testimonials unparalleled in the history of med '.'ine. $1 per bottle. Sold by J. and C. Baur, Terre Haute, Ind., or sent by mail on receipt of price.

THE KASKINE CO., 51 Warren street,

0F INTEREST to MEN.

Manly Vigor, Weakness or Loss of Memory permanently restored by the nee of an entirely new remedy. The Yerba Santa from Spain Spanish Trochees never fail. Our illustrated 32 page book ani testimonials, (sent sealed). Every roan should read it. VON GRAF.F TROCHEE CO., 59 Park Place, New York.

FREE.

KNABE

PIANOFORTES.

UNEQUAtiED FOR

Tone, Touch, Workmanship & Durability.

WILLIAM KVABE A CO..

NOR.204 & 206 West Baltimore St. Baltimore No. 112 Fifth Avenue. New York.

LAWRENCE, OSTROM CO

LL

IS DEATH TO MALARIA, CHILLS and

$J&gr

Ij T-Z-*S

%tM

special |—The pay car came over this .morning and made some of the boys smile. John G. Shryer is having a large lot of wood chopped on his farm and having it hauled to the railroad.— A very strange and peculiar noise was heard passing over this section of the county on Monday, the 24th inst., about 11:50 a. m. It resembled thunder very close to the earth. The sky being cloudless it was a strange phenomena. The sound seemed to pass from south to north. What an envious feeling there must have existed in the breasts of some of the speakers on the negative side of the question at the recent debate in Dennison after hearing Mr. W. Hollenbeck's speech. We felt sorry for you boys. We presume our debating societyh as gone where the woodbine twineth. Mr. Hollenbeck certainly is giving excellent satisfaction as a teacher of our school. It is 6aid he is teaching a night school a little ways east. It is in session once a week.

Stood the Test.

ALLCOOK'S FOROUS PIASTERS have successfully and triumphantly stood the test of many years' use by the public they have never been equaled by unscrupulous imitators who have sought to win apart of the reputation of AiiiiOOCK'S by making a plaster with holes in it and they stand today indorsed by not only the highest medical authories, but by thousands of grateful patients who have proved their efficacy as a household remedy.

Charity begins at home, but it ought not to lie down there and go into a trance.

Keep Your

System in

Tlxe C3-xea/fc ^.ppetizic: r.

This will certifiv that I have examined the Sample of Bello ,f Vu-n Whisky received from Lawrence, Ostrom & Co., and found the eame to lv free from Fusil Oil and all other deleterious euDstences »n strictly nr.*. fh*Vrfti]Jy recommend the same for Family and Medicinal purpose?

Good

There are.18,000 operatives engaged1 in the shirt, cuff and collar trade of! Troy.

SAKE,

permanent and complete are

the cures of bilious and intermittent diseases, made by Prickly Ash Bitters. Dyspepsia, general debility, habitual constipation,liver and kidney complaints are speedily eradicated from the system. It disinfects, cleanses and eliminates all malaria. Health and vigor are obtained more rapidly and permanently by the use of this great natural antidote than by any other remedy heretofore known. As a blood purifier and tonic it brings health, renewed energy and vitality to a worn and diseased body.

"Wounded Knee" is anew postoffice in Shannon county, Dakota.

In Georgian Vsles

the sweetest roses grow. Keep your breath fragrant as the perfumed gales of this enchanting land, and your teeth fair and lustrious as the pearls of the Orient by using Zozodont, that most, charming and wonderful dentifiice which no lady's toilet should be without

St. Ignace, Micb., has a doctor who is also an undertaker.

Did you ever hear a wood lick?

What was it the circular saw?

J. P. BARNUM, M. D., AnylilicaJObemiV. 1- ui.» vi!. Ky.

For Sale by Druggists, Wine Merchants, and Grocer* Every 1* r-. Pi ire $1.25 per bottle. If not found at the above, half-dozen hottlep expm :n la boxer willbesentto any address in the United States or Oeuadn. on ?*'•. utofe Hollars.

LAWRENCE, OSTROM & CO .Lorupyjlle. A N

Terre Haute, Indian n.

DENMS0N.

A Strange and Peculiar Sound—What Is it? •DENNISON, III., Jan. 29.—[GAZETTE

CONSUMPTION, .SLEEPLESS­

NESS or

IN SOU Nil, £u

wiand DJFSIM LATION OF FOOD. 10 ^YfcABS OLD

NO PUSEL

1

OIL

LUTE-

"•'I'Y

•V-Tr BE.

A

MANY LAMP CHIMNEYS AKf offered for sale represented as good as the Famous

BUT THEY

ARE NOT!

And like all Counterfeits lack tk| Remarkable LASTING Qualities OF THE GENUINE.

ASK FOR THE

And Insists

HAVING

on can

PatOct. SO, 1883.

The PEARL TOP is

Manufactured ONL¥ by

GEO. A. MACBETH & CO,

PITTSBURGH, PA.

i«awiiw.v

HUiWi PREY'S DR. HUMPHREYS

Book of

'ST OP

8liVcuralgla,

lone.

BRANDBETH'S PILLS cure inflammatory and chronic rheumatism, gout, bilious, remittent and intermittent fevers, diseases of the blood, liver, kidneys and bladder. They stimulate the blood, exite the circulation and give tone to the entire system. Tbey cure by assisting the blood to throw off all impurities. Take one or two pills every night for two weeks.

all Diseases,

Cloth & Cold Binding 114 Pages, with 8tecl En HAII.KD FREE.

PBIHCIFAIi

NOS. CURES KUCE.

1 Fevers, Congestion, Inflammations... .I.ri Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Oolio 2.1 3 C'ryins Colic, or Teething of Infants. .25 4 Diarrhea, of Children or Adults 23 ft Dysentery, Oripinc, Bilious Colic.... .25 6 Cholera Morbus, vomiting .23 7 Coughs, Ould, nronohitis .25

Toothnche, Faceacbe

.23

9jHeadaches, Sick Hcaqache, Vertigc. .25

OMEOPATHIC

lO 13 12 13 14 Iff 16 17 1W 20 24 27 28 30

Dyspepsia, Bilious tstomnch Uf Suppressed or Painful Periods 23 Whites, too Profuse Periods 25 (Jroup, Cougli, Difficult Breathing.... .25 Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Eruptions.. .25 Rheumatism, lllienmatic Pains 25 Fever and Acne. Chills, Malaria .50 Piles, Blind or Bleeding .50 Catarrh, Influenza, ('old in the Head .50 Whooping Cough, Violent Couchs.. .50 General DebHity.PhysicalWeakness .SO Kidney Disease .50 Nervous Debility.... .l.OO Urinary Weakness, Wetting Bed... .50 Diseases of the Heart, Palpit.ition..1 .OO

S E I I S

^CoSSTiyT'JrocfriBtero^inrpnitnnifniTrrecfTptcf price.—Ml'aiiiUKi.s'HKDK m.

Are you

CONSUMPTIVE.

Ind%e«8oul

flto

PARKCR'8 TONIO vrtnout delay. It has cored many of the worst cases and is the beet remedy'far •B affections of the throat and longs, and diseaaas arista* from impure blood and exhaustion. The feeble and atc£ ttotS

•trenffth to the aged andlnflrm. #1 at Druggist*

Jk. CAR1.

To all who are Rufforlng from tho errors an£ (•discretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, lossof manhood, ko., I will send areaipe that will euro you, FREE OF CHARGE. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary In Soutk America, send a solf-addressed envelope totto REV. JosF.pri T. INMAX, Station D, New York Cit^.

Cents od tho dollari Rcmov ed. City Drng Store, 210 Wabash avenue. All patent medKines reduced to 70 cents on the dollar. Other drugs in proportion

DR J. C. CASTO, Proprietor.

TELEGRAPHY^

Write

Learn here and earn good iy. Sitaationaflurnlaked BBOS., Juearilto. Wis.

VALEirriKEB