Newspaper Page Text
DAILY ENQUIRER • SUN, COLUMBUS. GEORGIA. SUNDAY MORNING. MAY :’.n. issij.
tin HUD'S l’I» \ V KiL
BV -U.K i: M. EDDY.
e knelt with her sweet hands folded:
h. r fair little head bowed low:
v» b,:e dead vines tupped r*i the window
And the air \v:i- thick with snow.
Without, earth dumb with winter;
Within, hearts dumb with care:
.\n<l up through the leaden silence
wciIlly the baby’s prayer.
• iMe-sall whom I love, dear father,
And help me be good,” she said,
Tlu n stirred by a sudden fancy,
she lifted the shining head.
n : d she cateh on the frozen maple
mum 1 hint of the April green,
(the breath of the woodland blossoms
The drifts of the snow between.
• The beautit\il tree,” she whispered,
• Where the orioles used to sing;
Thee are tire d of the cold white winter,
(>ii: help them to grow in spring;
And the flowers that 1 loved to gather,
Lord, bring them again in May;
The dear little violets, sleeping
Down deep in the ground to-day.”
Ah. earth may be chill with snowflakes,
And hearts may be cold with care,
Hut wastes of a frozen silence
Are crossed by the baby’s prayer,
And tlie lips that were dumb with sorrow
in jubilant hope may sing:
j ,,r when earth is wrapped in winter,
In the heart of the Lord ’tis spring.
I went to tlic window. “No, it is impossi-
' as the wiiul«<\\ showed the- nearest
j house to be s* parated from us by the gar
den and street which ran at the bottom of
it. beside; the whole length of another
garden and rambling old orchard.
| “Is it possible,*’ feeling as if I saw a
j glimmer of light on the question, “that
■ any of your household walk in their slet n?
We hear this quite ! ;te; and it might nt
possible—people have done such strange
things in sleep.
I ‘‘Indeed, no,’’ she said. »‘I am afraid
1 that will not du us an explanation. We
; have just now on!v oik- old servant whom
I have known all my life, and 1 never
knew of her doing such a tiling. Besides
site is not musical,“ smiling as she said it.
“I can answer for my aunt and myself, and
—for full assurance—our piano is not vet
unlocked. J have the key,” touching her
watch chain. ‘I have been too occupied
with my aunt to touch it as yet.
”lt is more than 1 can understand,” said
J rising. “It must be accounted for by
some kind of echo. 1 will write to my
friend Thompson about it. I am staying
in his house for a week or two, as you may
know. 1 called because I wished you to
understand how gladly I would put a stop
to wii.it anfiovs you were I able.’
hie gave me her hand on leaving, and I
•s one of those faces which
beautiful as you know them
HEAR THE WITNESSES.
MYSTERIOUS MUSIC.
I’d «m Household Words.
()i*e very hot summer, Thompson, my
<dd school friend, offered to lend me his
| 10 use for a month. Circumstances—more
plainly* my means—would not allow me to
,rr. abroad, I dislike the seaside, and never
there for pleasure, so I gladly accepted
his oiler, and leaving my hot and dusty
moms and oflice to my landlady’s merev, I
went down to the quiet old cathedral to\Vn
for a month of country air.
Thompson’s house stands in the Close,
at some little distance from the dwellings
inhabited by Canons and Dean, in those
H-date precincts.
It is very old, and was evidently built as
one large house, but for many years it has
been divided. Thompson lets the other
nail’. His own part has the larger
half of a beautiful, old-fashioned garden
it the back, and on the first day after my
arrival, I did nothing, I fear, but wander
up and down the shady lawn, and give
myself up to the pleasure of having ab
solutely nothing which must be done in
that dav.
Bui the next morning after breakfast, 1
started on a ioiig expedition in search of
interesting church architecture, in which
I knew the neighborhood was rich, and
about which I am an enthusiast—natural,
perhaps, as I am an architect. But mine
is not only professional interest; in any
ease 1 must have felt the charm of the “old
records of the past,” contained in Early
English, Decorated, and Perpendicular
arches and pillars for those to whom these
words arc more then names.
On my return that evening 1 found
Thompson’s good housekeeper—he is not
married—rather anxious at my late hours,
and excited at the arrival of new tenants
next door* They had been expected ap-
rontlv for some days, and Mrs. Morse was
most anxious that they should prove as
quiet ami inoffensive as the last tenant, n
deaf and paraiylitic old lady, “who never
annoyed master nor mein the lean, ar.d
sue was there before J came—fourteen
years ago last May, that is.”
All this ami much more of her fears and
anxieties lest the new neighbors shot.it*
give noisy parties and. keep iate hours,
“as they diet next door where 1 lived last,
which was why I left, for their noise was
dreadful,” Mrs. Morse told me, as she
held in her Hand the the toast which she
had brought in for my tea, and which, in
her abstraction she forgot to set down.
Not until she had at last shut the door
ni't'-r her good natured gossip, and 1 had
found the tmist decidedly cold, din 1 re
member tii.it i haul hoard a pi.u.n t::e
night before, as I sat and smoked, appa
rently played next door I accounted for
it ' v invm : ning that some one must hm -
«i;rived tin ;i sooner than Mr.*,. Morse
knew.
She told me tin next morning lbat the
r.i w neighbors were only a young lads’ and
beruimt. and on hearing thi-* 1 mo-1 mu
w ssfuDy calmed her fears lhe night be-
J raring the next week I spent most of
my days in sketching an early English
• hurc.ii near, which 1 had discovered will’
Ri t al pit... .arc; and in the evenings vi oin o
n.riiv a pipe while listening to lh - pi.mo
i-• :■ door. Generally 1 am uniea-v.iimoiy
i. r iPul win ti I am obliged to list, n i
oliicr peoples pianos against my wil';
tle.-re is something very trying i.i living
obliged to submit, without rcmoiistni'i.- .
to Leal* whatever they may he moved to
play, or, worse still, to practice.
Bui this was different. It was, I thought
a woman’s touch, and she pla,\ed vel!-
•YDifcGy old airs and .sonatas of Corelli. I
-t;i. \ t;iy loud of the old musicians, and
tl.« iv. was in this pla>ing of them some
thing very gentle and soothing.
One evening, at the end of that we. I:. I
found, on coming in, a note, which i open
ed. an’:I read in great surprise:
“MissEthel Mayne would be very great
ly obliged if Mr. Wyndham would not al
low his piano It> be used at so iate a?i horn .
Miss Mayne asks this for tin sake of her
aunt, an invalid, who is greatly disturbed
Mr. Thompson and got i:i a
the following characteristic
thought b
seem more
better.
i wrote t
day or tw
inge:
“Dear Wyndham—You must have been
asleep. People next door, too. Novel
heard any piano, and I have lived there
fourteen years. The man who was there
before me is dead, so J can’t send you to
him for information. Li lad I don’t hear
it. Can’t hear music. Delighted that you
like the country. Yours, E. T.”
I called at the end of the week, to tell
Miss Mavnc the result of my letter. The
aunt was better and downstairs; tlvy gave
me afternoon tea, and I came away think
ing that the mystery, as still it wiU, had at
least obtained for me two very pleasant
acquaintances.
But the unexplained music did not pass
from my mind; especially’ as I heard it
still, though not every evening. I am a
believer in what' are loosely termed
ghosts, and one day when Mrs. Morse was
in a talkative mood, as she took away my
I tea, ] brought her conversation round to
; tin subject of haunted houses, hoping that
i if there were any tradition belonging to
f Thompson's house she would mention it.
After many’ stories which she took pains
to say she “should not think of believing,”
! she said. “This looks a likely house for
such stories, hut 1 have never heard, nor
look to hear or see anything, but some
people are so sillya There was a sill v girl
we had here, a housemaid, always fancy
ing she heard music at night, near her
room—she slept down stairs—and at last
she left through it, though 1 couldn’t tell
master such a tale, but had to tell him
something more sensible. Such nonsense!
J used to tell her she dreamed of what her
head was full of. for she was all for music
—wonderfully fond of it. Why’ couldn’t
she mind her work and sleep at night
without dreams, as all honest people
should?”
“With this last moral sentiment Mrs.
Morse and the tea things clattered away
together. What she had said was odd, I
thought. Certainly I was more than half
inclined to account for that piano as some
thing supernatural, but I could not call
next door and sa.v so. It would seem rid
iculous, and 1 should certainly’ run the
risk of being laughed at.
A few day’s later my holiday came to an
end, and 1 left the lovely country with
very pleasant memories of Thompson’s
old* and, as I began to believe, haunted
house. It did not pass away from my
memory’ daring the busy winter duys—
neither did the sweet face of Miss Ethel
Mayne.
Ten .years have gone since then. Some
success as an architect has come to ine,
and 1 am married.
Last year, by' one of those strange
chances which come in some men’s lives,
Thompson had a very large estate left him
in tin. north of Prance. Me went over to
make arrangements for selling it, but
liked the situation so much that be has set
tled there, and L ha*ve bought his old
house. 1 have thrown both houses into
one. and made several changes since the
da.vs when 1 first know it. Amongst oth
er.-;, we use as a drawing room a lagre room
a: the Duck overlooking the garden, which
Thompson used as a lumber room, l think.
My wife and 1 hope to spend many’
summer months there.
Our slay this year had nearly come to in
end. when on one Sunday evening I stayed
up very lute, smoking. Before 1 went up
slab's 1 ri m u.bored that my wife wanted
a book brought up, and 1 went* into Ui.;
drawing-room to fetch it. There was no
light in the loom hut the red glow of the
tire we had enjoyed that chill.v evening,
: nd ! was bending over the table to try and
k, when a slight movement
Ir
rsa
A Crippled Confederate Says:
I only weighed 12S pound* when I conunenct d
G FINN'S PIONEER, and now weigh II'.' Rounds.
I could hardly walk with u stick to support n e,
and now walk loner distances without h**ip. Its
benefit to me is beyond calculation.
Ii. IU’ ITS HOST I ( lx,
( 'olt"n Buyer. Macon (la.
Mr. A. II. Brnmblett. Hardware Mer
chant o' Forsyth, Ga., Says:
It acted like a charm, on my .general health,
consider ii a tine tome I weigh mere than I
have for .!'• years. Rc-pict fiiily,
A. II. IIRAM I’.LLTT.
i
Mr. W. F. Jones. Macon. Says:
My wife has regained Dr strength and in
creased 10 pounds :n weight. We recommend
GUINN'S PI ON KlClt as the best ionic.
W. U. JONES.
j5j Xj r .E IE -
FORTY YF.AR- A HU ITU BEK FROM
CATARRH!
Wonderful to Refute.
v-.ve bc.Mi a Victim to < A-
• of the \ uue a sutl'eivr from
u’iiosh vy |.()iu it\i> and
u'hnrges were so otlciiHivc
for t he good
duel
ha'
er h!life
AU"- 1
ed patent
from t»n f
f. And ;>t
ruing
pci
the
earth, v ah no
agei have nt. t v
entiiely made me -a new man. I weighed 12s
pounds and nm\ weigh i Hi. I used thirtien hot-
th:s of the medit ine. aud tlie only regict I have is
that, being in tin bntnoie walk of life. I may not
have the inlinenee to prevail «m all catarrh suf-
fe.-rs to use what has • er,-d m* t.FINN'S PIO
NEER iI LOOP KLNFAVLR.
11 INKY t HEYI'.R.
Doctor's Cer1iflcate---Caso of Blood
Poison.
sec--. Have »(-fP the happic-t result- Ibi’nw
u- in -vphilis the woi** p mii. and >• »i**\e it
l.c the be-I alterath e m n-e.
J. r F.I.UI- M. i>.. t oiinn. (in
A Voice from the Lone Star State.
(i FINN'S PIONEER HLOuB REN I AVER has
•tired one of my children of the worst case* of
-crofXila 1 ever saw. Her skin is as clear as mine,
tnd the (le ctors .-uy it i- a perfecct euro in iheir
pinion. I am thankl'nl for Ir.ving tried the
remedy. \VM. !. PARKS. D-illas, Texas.
S\*. \vvmi. (;.\. Jamiarv 20. 1ks«L
{FINN’S Pl.'NEEK Rl.onD RENEW 1.11 has
• do-evi ral e ttre-of bloo 1 poison and iheunm-
m among my Giistnnuws. I most heartily
•oininemt it to mi hi rms frem \ licse atllietions.
< . II. HILLMAN. I irnggist.
A Sonth'? r :i:r'‘r' 1 Yankee an d Con-
fe(lc' r at« So ''6 r Te.is What
Hu Kuo.vs About It.
Nkw dm imns. L.\., Jan. lib ISHrt.
I have boon cured -omul and well t fa bad case
of blood poison In the use <T fiPecn bottles of
G FINN'S p[(»M*:i;R RLIHIII REN FAY LR. I
will xmnii its praise*forevei.
JACOB KRtTE.
r,< i
SAMUEL DUNLAP.
filial, heartv. honest, whole-souled
Mr. Hep.rv C'.o-vei. writer » f the above, forn
l.v of Crawford en'.mtv. mvv ef Macon, fin., n
its the ec/Nii-huiee of all inteii -t- d in catat i’ll.
W. A. I1FEF. E\-.Ma.vor of Maeoi
1 am aeijuainted with the above case, and most
heartilv at KM it.
EUGENIO MAY, Druggist,
Canal Street.
Guinn s Pioneer Blood Renewer
Cures iill Blood and SkinlDiscascs. Bliniinnlism, Scrofula, Old Soros.
A PERFECT SDR INC MEDICINE.
PRICE, PER BOTTLE $i.oo. LARGE SIZE, $1.75.
ESSAY OX BLOOD AX1) SKIN DISEASES MAILED FREE.
Wholesale by Brannon A - Carson and City Ding Store.
PITT'S CARMINATIVE,
j The Best Medicine on Earth fo
Children.
j An infallible specific for Flatulent Colic, Plat-
, rhurn, Coughs, Teething. Cholera Infantum.Chok
era Morbus, and all diseases incident to children.
Give it a trial. 25 cents per bottle. For sale at
CITY DRUG STORE.
feb21-tf
pnBigiets
HraLEBEREf
CAPITAL PRIZE, - $150,000.
‘‘It' * tin I'crrbj; c. riijjj Unit m torpor -inn 1h - fir-
ranyciiu ut for 'ill the /fonthlp amt (jinnlcrli/
Drairintfs 01 Tim LonisiuiKi S-ntr fAjttr'f/ t'oni-
pnii.if, anti in pm-son inoini'jn rml coiTrol the
Dra.rimjs tlr oml that • : r some are
ducted mitli honestp, fairnna.'t. and in ipenl faith
t-nrurd nil purlieu, and ire authorise lhe 1 'nwjiui.ii
(n a:nr this ceeti iieitii. with fuc-si in lies ot our s'
nat’ii vs (illticlml. 10 it* >,.! ,'e, iisein, m
Wil
adding close
11 very sure of it- a
ivith :i faee I never
terribly s-id. Slowly
he stood, and
■ it.
I read this note over and over again,
each time with "more ama/.ement. How
could I explain without seeming rude and
brusque, that not only bad I never played
during my stay here*, but that the bouse,
did not even contain a piano? Thompson
is not in the least musical. The more I
thought of it the stranger it appeared. One
thing was certain—-the piano which had
disturbed them must be the same as that
to which I had listened on so many even
ings. At last I decided to call next morn
ing, and explain better than a note could
that J was not to blame. I did so about
12 o’clock next day, and was shown into :
drawing room wearing the uncomfortable
look common to newly arranged rooms
before they had time to receive any marks
of the owner’s characteristics.
In a few moments the door opened and
a tall girl, with dark hair and a sweet
face, came in. She bowed as she rose, and
*aid,
^f r * Wyndham, I believe? J imagine
you have called in answer to my note. I
am sure you will accede to my request. My
aunt is only now recovering from a long
illness, ana the piano keeps her awake at
night.
. ‘T would, of course, instantly discontinue
it,” I said, “if it were in my power; but I
came to explain that 1 have played noth
ing since my coming here; indeed, my
friend has no piano—in fact. Miss Mayne,
* nave thought that 1 was listening to
your playing every night, for I have heard
what must be the same piano.”
Miss Mavne looked incredulous at first,
•hen utterly amazed.
. “I do not understand,” she said. “Can
it »e that we are near enough to hear thh
from any other house?” She rose and
It* me look
tiiu piano, ! saw - I
alight g rtish figure
s! ed I forget it w:tsf
so • moved fl\
seemed In pass me.
Sii*. wi»v« some sort of clinging brown
dress. 1 followed into the ls.i'l, where, I
semu.-d t > see her go. No one w;us thvre.
J i- >u>. d my wife, and together we search
ed Hit house, vainly of course.
1 was not i:i the least alarmed at the
linn* U ; md a slight shock on finding my-
v.not aione as L liad imagined; but after-
\.a«d-'. I«»»• mniiMis, waking or slet ping,
t i •. t 4 h ••»•, will* its [• nible grief, had been
1 if • ua'Sf i tr;< mciy way i couhl to
fun! out wl.at st«>]*_.' 'souhl I»• e uik*. ted
wi‘..l 1 ,ii” houSf, without, howev- r, s.iyir.g
why l wislieii to kn«.\.; fori felt alniosl
as L I should be betraying 1 ei con
fidence if I made I hat sad f.icy a nun ter of
ewiy d.-f/iM»«:•.(■> j afu.-’r.oon t< is and viiTi-
\\h are in London again, for the winter
now, and <**'« day lately I met an oJu lad^ ,
who bud in h r girloood well known tlif
town i:i • £ spv-nd the summer. She
told ii' licit • i.iuy years before, my houat
had had tla .. mt ition of being haumed,
but tl at t»»fi rumor had bra n bushed ii[> by
the ..iiedord. ami Jorgottt n. And she toiu
m*. tbi*» story:
Th** hi:.-- v.'KSMiin! oecupit.d by a yt umg
iuisbun«i and wife. They loven each otiu-r
devotedd\’, but thr husband v is unic:L«on-
ai»ly jea'otis o!‘ :i:s b ’ot.be”. One evening
be aemisw! hi?.il«* of deceiving him an to
he* I*>v«•: she was too wounded t*» answer
Ids bitu-i - v. 1 <r:’s. uml l’< • went out. Two
hours imer he had drowned himself, and
his deal, jh* dy was ^brought tn tin house,
into the very room where his young wife
was i)l.tying while awa.itin.g Ids return. She
lost her senses from that day, anil during .
lh..* re.vi of In i' mercifully short life her ■
n u.sii* was b»*r onl.v apparent consolation. '
•*A*’i(l, v adni-d tlu* landlady, “she is said
to play there still; those who love music ;
can sometimes hear her.” 1
l’ov i.'iy.*..elf tin* thought oft/ir? pojr girl’s
bitterly sadstm’.v will only give an added
inti j vs; t-> tile fuel uevur shall forge* t and
her music both my wife and 1 have listen- '
ed to and loved for long - for my wife first
heard it when she was Ethel Mavne.
We the 'i n d e etoi (j; 1 -t 1 I' <rl:s a,>d llunfo
pa If all lh os d'.iyr in the ! Str
K\. URUARY. IHv'x. \n ‘» Hu»U
.!. IV. i% I UIUFTIL B»»*c*s. Vtule \; 11 *! 4**k
A. 5UMMVIN. f’rcx. V. it. \sif| EPmli
U
MWI-DiMl! VS Ii:\r;!>i.\:
Out Eil! :> lElriLilH 1
Louisiana State Lottery Comp’y. ^
Iii'*or|)<ir,u<-d in !■■«« I>.r 25 ypnn-!>-■'] 1; ’
tiiiv !'ur F. I'.v iiioN il mid ( liaritiiliii- |uirj*«>*-< s - j
with a c..’lit**i •••■*' l.'i'jno* ; n. \ *.t 'Ii ic-ei vt
re b.M | ;m| i. cl.
I;x an u\i i v. In 1.1..11K B'*piuar
v.:is u part of (he [ircv-l
lion, 11**4,|»i >-.l I) ( t.M*ii11■*• r 2d. .v.
fils Fom*', fn?i»a-Jc nun:
■•vili take ,a.ic«* iimutHy. It nr
? <► rii ml
i:\riaE
Fader tin p.
-I liHUWM;
Orlrn
. I^SO.
*ioii and
Gon. G. T. CE AURfcG iRD, of Louisiana, A
Gen. JUGAL A. EARLY, cf Virginia.
(dip'la! Pri/c, sl ).(?()().
to.) N«d!*•*• Tl< k**W ,n*,. I,.|, D ilbirs *,id\. IL.b.-s
/•'*. Il'u*. M2, )u„i|.s. si.'
1 -• V PITA i. PRIZE OF M
1 ' > uA N11 PRI/'F. t ;F .o.o.fi
1 (.rand of ■ «< <
2 LAKGi: I’RIZAS OF lo.ooo
-HZ 1 ;s (»!•*
Sam Dunlap! Why, every man, woman
and child from the “Great Smoky” to th©
Gulf, and from the Toinhigbce to the At
lantic, will smile back a recognition to the
pleasant countenance we picture.
Born in Connecticut, while yet a young
man, in 1S51, lie came south and located in
this state, first at Fort Valley, and remov
ing from there shortly afterward to Amer
icas, where he first developed his capacity
for a commercial life. After some years
residence here he associated himself in
business with P. II. Oliver, at Albany,
building a large store. At Albany be was
unfortunate enough to lose his wile by a
stroke of lightning, and shortly after re
turned to his first love, Americus, where
the outbreak of the civil war found him.
He enlisted, serving first in the company of
his relative, Capt. I. IL Branham, of Com
pany B of the
MACON VOLFNTKKRH,
and afterward in the cavalry under Major
B. <«. Lockett. The close of the war found
Mr. Dunlap stranded in Macon, but his in
domitable energy soon recuperated his for
tunes, and the firm of Dunlap & Usher,
fancy goods dealers, was well and widely
known until they burned out. Alter this,
for a short time, he was in business at
Home, from where he entered into that for
which he was intended by nature—a sales
man. In this capacity he has been con
nected constantly wit it some of the best
and
MOST WIDELY KNOWN
o< the eastern manufacturing houses. Iu
1871 lie removed with bis family to Atlanta,
and lias been a resident of this city since.
Meeting him on the street during the
week, the roportei was greeted with ft
hearty handshake and earnestt
“How are you, my lad?”
“Pretty well, Sam; Low are you?”
“Sound as a dollar, my boy; although if
] had met you ten days ago I could not
have said as much.”
“Why. how was that been sick?”
“Well, you must know tlmt for the past
ten years 1 have been suffering with kidney
dUeu.se, which cv'ers now and again would
grow bad and give me serious trouble.
About two hi*.ni hs ago 1 began to huvconu
of my bad spr hs, and for the past eight
week- I have I <1*11 suffering some or most
of the
•TORTFRLS OF DANTK’H INFKRNO.’
•1 bav tried all the physicians and medi
cine' that 1 could bear or read of, and their
11:1:111*. as you know, U legion, but until a
•k sin*
:v. 11
Lh* disea.
not a j »1*
1 hat a di-tea 1
the r»*p<
is held undisputed
it. thing, my boy,
disease w Rich some of the
si * iaie- of 1 h* country havo
b* most f.:ta! to humanity,
noon yniir vitals, I tell you.
tin: good humor out of a
d v, bat miraculous dispensation has
.ed in your lx half, .Sum?” queried
•Nothing mil*}
ail*
wide
what is
it ire I v
in a dav
and 1
KG E
2) Pit IZ FAS OF 1 . . .. 20,000
oO PKIZLSOF j00 25.000
100 1 J R17. L8 <) F 300 30.000
200 PRIZES OF 200 •10,000
i COO PRIZED (il ; lOo 60,oo0
1,000 PRIZLS uF 5u 50,000
Al-iMX f.MATKJN PRIZES.
1 100 AMU-oxioiulion Prize 1 - of >200 f.0.000
10,001)
100
75..
>V«*inl«*rful Ciiri**.
W. D. Hnvt & Co., Wholesale and Re
tail Druggists of Rome, Ga., say: We have
been selling Dr. King’s New Discovery,
Electric P.itters and Bucklen’s Arnica
Salve for two years. Have never handled
remedies that sell as well, or give such
universal satisfaction. There have been
some wonderful cures effected by these
medicines in this city. Several cases of
pronounced Consumption have been en
tirely cured by the use of a few bottles of
Dr. king’s New Discovery, taken in con
nection with Electric Bitters. We guaran
tee them always.
S >M bv Brannon & Carson. eod&vr
2.27
rnounlinv to
\50
$522,50
dysentery
CHILDREN TEETHING
f ° B BYALL ! DP'TGGISTS
50 tPER BOTTLE
! Application for ifttes to clubs should be made
I only to the ()tllce *»f the('oiupany in N**w Orleans,
j For further infnrmatioi) write clemlv. i<ivi:iu
I Full addre-s. IMIST'AI, NOil s. F.xpre-s
Money Orders, or New York Kx. horo**- in orili-
nary ‘letter, (.’urrcncy by Express at our ex
pense* addressed tf. .4. I)4f
\eu Orlouis. O.h.
Or >1. A. DA 11*11 IN.
Washtng(4»ii. I), i .
Make I*. O. Honey Ortln-s puyiilile
and address K<*^ jvt«*re<l I.elterH to
NFAV Oltl.lWS V VTIO.V 4 1. 114 Mi.
my 12 wed «c*Aw"1 \*a» Orloinx. I.,i.
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE
Have Had I'Lwl in lh ll.imls
act ,01. o.Uprlc ' MONEY TO TO^ATT
On City Real Estate, Stocks and Bonds.
1 TOR other City Real F.slatc, StoF-ks
New DwelliiiK, full
asked 11»iproi>ei*ty will pay ten per cent clear ot
taxes. Why keen your money in '•locks ami
bonds that yield little interest and often fails to
pay dividend.-.’.' Better buv Heal F.-iaie and your , Also discount first-class notes,
income is -tire. JOHN BLACK MA R, JOHN HLAFKAWAR,
wed fri ’.f it* ui IA-tate Ageos ] sc* wed fr tf Financial Agent for Capitalists.
$250'
T &s.wva-jftftfiYss w
u/nu.nt '*SjL' r a i i mvF uki.v. “n "
(4 v u MOV
Or mss* r.
TrU) t'.A-
. . t n:.t A't W M
.01 iSUMA. MO.
\ XTKI» A n,:iM of t.-mperato urifl mon.l
habits, seeking employmunt. to repr.^ent
ii estartlishtsi iKHist* in his own section,
v to bee in h~u pm month. References ex
I just Inil a jrlim-
| that’,sail. About
1 severe attack of
mpletely disabled
mid which devehuicd into
d •chrunio,’ attacking; mo
peeled, and laying mo up,
toitaiini' me for any kind of
•ausin" nit as much suffering
n!d be crowded into a lifo-
liine. After one of my most severe attacks,
and when I liad just sot able to hobble
around. I mot J. SI. IJunnicutt, an old
friend, and he said ho could make a remedy
that
WOIV.D CfRIi ME, AND
by gracious he did.
■1 te.,k two bottles of Hunnicutt’s
Klioumatie Cure, jirepared from roots and
herbs, and 1 have never had a twinge of
rheumatism since. The medicine was not
prepared for sale ul that time, but was
manufactured by Mr. Huunicutt for hia
friends. About six months ago it was de
termined to place it upon the market, and
a ff.rm was organized for that purpose.
Two weeks ago, tn the midst of my suffer
ing, I noted in one of their advertisements
that it was good for kidney troubles also.
I knew it would cure rheumatism, and I
bought half a dozen bottles at once and de
termined to give it a fair show at a kidney
disease of long standing. It may seem ex
travagant, but the first day’s use gave me
relief, and before I had completed taking
one bottle my disagreeable symptoms had
entirely disappeared. I have used two bot
tles up to this time, and I have not felt a
trace of my disease for a week. I believe
it bus cured me completely. That Is a
pretty strong statement, hut I make it hon
estly and sincerely, and am prepared to
verify it in any.manner.”
inh5-d&w6m