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Parent Issue
Day
11
Month
January
Year
1895
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

"The Fast Mail." The attraction at the Grand opera house next Monday evening will be Lincoln J. Carter's great scenic melodrama, "The Fast Mail." It has been one of the greatest successes known to the stage for years. It has a story of thrilling interest, and the scenic and other mechanical effects are said to be marvelous. There is a represenlation of an engine room on a Mississippi steamboat, with the furnaces under the boilers in active operation. A very realistic train of cars shoots across the stage, and the Niágara Falls scène is one of the most elabórate and daring things ever undertaken in the drama. It is described as a beautiful, vivid and accurate representation of that stupendous marvel of nature. The Falls are shovvn by moonlight, with the roaring and plunging waters, and the mist that rises from the seething current. One of the most prominent of the play's features is the complete freight train of fourteen cars, with an illuminated caboose, drawn by a practical locomotive. The play itself has tnrilling situations in abundance, plenty of humor to lighten its tone and give it an agreeable flavor throughout. Seats are now on sale. THE RENOWNED CHEMIST, W. H. Morse, M. D., F. B. S. Sc, also Editor of the Westfield Leader, of New Jersey, Prof. Morse, who is also author of a medical work entitled "New Therapeutical Agents," writes: Peru-na, manufactured by The Pe-runa Drug Manufacturing Company of Columbus, Ohio, has commended itself to medical men and their patients as a specific for la grippe and its sequéis. It fully approves itself for this purpose, and is remedial for all bronchial troubles. lts action is both local and constitutional, and it is entirely harmless. The distinction accorded to it belongs to no other remedy of which we know. Prok. W. H. Morse. Westfleld, N. J., Deo. 28, 1882. No matter at what part of the mucous membrane the irritation of acute catarrh is located, Pe-ru-na is the only remedy that will, underall circumstances, effect a cure. In acute catarrh the dose of Pe-ru-na is a teaspoonful every two hours during the day, which will invariably effect a cure in from seven to ten days. In chronic catarrh Peru-na should be taken, a teaspoonful before each meal and at bedtime. This dose should be gradually increased to two tablespoonfuls at each dose. If not cured by end of one month, write Dr. Hartman. Answer f ree. Every one should have a free copy of the latest book on catarrh. Sent free to any address by The Pe-ru-na Drug Manufacturing Company of Columbus, Ohio. The taxes come in slowly and tiearly half the taxes of Sylvan were not paid in by the ioth of January; after which the 4 per cent. may be added.

Article

Subjects
Ann Arbor Argus
Old News