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DAILY ENQUIRER-SUN, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 2, 1SSH.
The
Moonshiner Who Had His Hopes
Sadly Blasted.
„ (|i«. MooiiftHiiipr "ns "iiuimI mid Uuu In
,I,H Hnnntiilii norms. < lives ami llc lls—An
K\IiI1iivii1Im« Stimulant to Uls Henri- lie Ills-
pH. a tel llisiriliutes.
reduction would be not only rt due recog
nition of public sentiment and a measure
of justice to consumers, but one conducive
to the general industrial prosperity, and
which, though it may be temporarily in
convenient, would be ultimately beneficial
to the special Interests affected by such re
duction.
“The promise made by the. commission,
openly ratifli d by both the. great political
organizations, was not kept. Every effort
to secure the ‘'substantial reduction"’ then
promised has thus far been defeated The
average rate of duties upon imports for
than for the ysars immediately prei
ugh
_ — „ „ _ tedi;
The amount of illicit distilling of the av- the revision of the tariff which followe
ii-.uic mountaineer’s favorite beverage—! the ccifimissioner's
, ,'rli whisky—has greatly increased among
ip.- mountains since the beginning of a
democratic regime, writes an Asheville. N.
I , correspondent to the New York Su: .
I Hiring the last presidential campaign dem
ocratic orators everywhere among these
report. Whatever rea
son existed in 1882 for a reduction of the
tariff has not spent its force. The poor
people can hear no better now than then
the burden of unnecessary taxation. Con
gress is no more likely now than then to
witstand the temptation of an overflowing
hilh woke the eehoe,s in denunciation of treasury. The annual expenditures
die internal revenue laws, and In manv in- — > 1 — — 1 l '-— *•’**
stances were equally denunciatory of the
.Ulcers themselves. Thus the moonshiner
ivius wooed and won. And when the liies-
vnre flashed along the wires that n demo
cratic president was elected, and the
country printing offices had set up and
mailed it with the other news of the week,
it was taken by horseback, by muleback,
ami by hand into the mountain highways
and byways, and reaching the hands of
the highland distiller, he read with delight
the glad tidings and was thrilled by the
thoughts of the liberty that now would be
his. The months rolled by, and the moun
taineers who could not read were told of
the new president’s inauguration. The
tires that had been out, perhaps, for years
were again kindled under the picturesque
structures far up among the mountain
dells and gorges and eaves, where
is horn sparkling dewdrop of the
illicit variety, and the curling
smoke went up from a thousand little val
leys. The vigilence of government offi
cials began to be better rewarded than
pensions have Increased from $28,000,000 to
#ii5,(Xi0,000; for rivers and harbors from #tl.-
000,000, in lSTIi, to #13 000,000 in 1885. The |
total ordinary expenditures have increased
from #131,000.000 in 1870 to #208.000,000
in 18S5. and the river and pension bills now
pending before congress, and which have
passed either the house or the senate, call >
for expenditures which could not he made
except by adding to the present burden of j
taxation. Meanwhile our commerce is de
clining. Since the revision of 1883 our
foreign trade has decreased #200,000,000. I
The farmer is losing the foreign market fi r
his grain, and the manufacturer, burdened
with taxes upon his materials, cannot send I
his surplus product abroad. No steamship !
subsidies,however lavish, can surmount the i
obstacles which our tariff laws oppose to '
foreign trade. We believe that extrava
gance in public expenditures should be i
checked, that commerce should be encour-
aged, and that no tax should lie laid upon
the people which the government does not I
need.
Because it tends to secure these objects :
u
A
V
U
THE WITNESSES.
formerly, and scores of defendants' were I we believe that the present Morrison bill
bound over at the commissioners’ court to
make their appearance at the circuit court.
It is remarkable how open and how gen
eral these violations immediately grew. A
United States deputy marshal who for
rears has been in the service recently told
Vour correspondent that the violations
have been more numerous and easily dis
covered than ever before. On
one occasion when the officer was
passing through a rather remote section of
the highland backwoods lie chanced to
follow a somewhat unfrequented road, and
found a small distillery on a little brook
not fifty yards from the wav, and in full
view of passers-by. The establishment was
in full operation, and a huge, good-natured
highlander was presiding over it, endeav
oring to coax the evaporating maize into
exhilarating stimulant
dear to the mountaineer’s heart. He
was instantly arrested, and in his astonish
ment he only observed:
“Then I reckon, cap’ll, hit’s a mistake
about a dimicrat president bein’ ’lected?”
The impression seems to have been
so-called ought to receive the favorable at
tention of congress. By putting wool, salt,
fish, hemp, lumber, aiid other articli a
upon the free list, and by making a rea
sonable reduction of the duty on certain
manufactured products, it secures a rea
sonable reduction in the revenues, a need
ed relief to the consumer, and a living
chance for certain important indurtries,
notv too heavily handicapped by the tax
upon their rnw material. If enacted we
believe it would promote domestic indus
try and foreign trade alike, and do much
toward closing the long period of business
stagnation and idleness of labor which
the war tariff has so signally failed to pre
vent. We respectfully remind our repre
sentatives in congress that while the bill
touches very lightly the protected inter-
England, the important in
dustries which it relieves will be quick to
feel and to recognize its benefits, and that j
the consumers in whose interest it is fram
ed comprise the entire body of voters. It
appears to be in its main features quite in
harmony with the recently expressed
A Crippled Confederate Says:
I only weighed 128 pounds when T commenced
GUINN’S PIONEER, and non weigh 117 pounds.
I could hardly walk with a stick to support me,
and now walk long distances without help. Its
benefit to me is beyond calculation.
I). RUFUS BOSTICK.
Cotton Buyer, .Macon, Ga.
Mr. A. H. Bramblett, Hardware Mer
chant of Forsyth, Ga., Say3 :
It acted like a charm, on my .general health,
consider it a fine tonic 1 weigh more than I
have for 25 years. Respectfttlly.
A. If. BRAMBLETT.
Mr. W. F. Jones, Macon, Says:
My wife has regained her strength and in
creased 10 pounds in weight. We recommend
GUINN’S PIONEER as the Qest tonic.
W. F. JONES.
RELIEF.
FORTY YEARS A SUFI ERFR FROM
CATA RRH
Wonderful to Relate.
For Forty Ykara l have been a victim to CA
TARRH three-fourths of the time a su Merer from
KXCIU’CIATINU PAINS A CHOUS MV FORKI1KAD and
my NOHTitiLs. The discharges were so offensive
that 1 hesitate to mention it except for the good
it may d«* sonu other sufferer. I have spent a
young fortune from my hard earnings during my
Forty years of suffering to obtain relief from the
doctors. I have tried patent medicines-every
one I could learn of from the four corners of me
earth, with no relief. And at last r *7 years of
age' have met with a remedy that has cured me
entirely made me a new man. I weighed 128
pounds and now weigh Ltd. I used thirteen bot
tles of the medicine, and the only regret I have is
that, being in the humble walk of life. I may not
have tin influence to prevail on all catarrh suf
ferers to use what has cured me GUINN'S PIO
NEER BLOOD KEN EWER.
HENRY ( IIEVER.
Mi. Henry C'hever, writei of the above, former
lv of Crawford county, now of Macon, Ga., mer
iis the confidence of all interested in catarrh.
W. A. 1IUFF, Kx-Mayorof Macon.
Doetor’9
Certiftcate---Ca$e
Poison.
of Blood
Ilmra us,'ll (iriNN’S PIONEKR Ht.OOI' RE-
NEWER in several cases of cutaneous diseases
of long standing with the most satisfactory re
sults. Have seen the happiest results follow its
use in syphilis of the worst form, and believe it to
he the best alterative in line.
J. T. KLUH, M. D., Grillin, Ga.
A Voice from the Lone Star State.
(U'lNN'S I'lONKKK HI,non KKNEWER lias
cured one of my children of the worst cases of
scrofula l ever saw. Her skin is as clear as mine,
and the doctors sa.v it is a perf'ecct cure in their
opinion
J.C. REEDY,
Real Estate Agent
FOE- S.A.LIE.
$2250. One vacant lot on First avenue, front!off
the market.
800. ’, Acre Lot, Store House and Shop c*
street car line.
6000. ('orm-r Sixth avenue and Eighth street—
acre lot, Stoic House, 21x05 feet wave
in m.-e, wagon yard, stalls and out house*?
to accommodate 100 head stock. Wilt
sell or rent. Rest locality in city. Cull
and see. Terms easy.
1 , Acre Lot, 8 room House, 2 room kitcU
•*n. -m First avenue, between Fourteenth
and Fifteenth streets. Good well water
and water works on place. Termseasy.
1000. 1 Acre land, 6 room House, kitchen and
servant house, on Frst avenue between
Seventh and Eighth streets.
1100. 115 Acres Land three miles east of city,
_ r ,-,, 60 acies w( od In ml..HI, | fc,
1600. Four non House and Lot in Northern
remedy.
thankful for having tried the
WM. L. PARKS, Dallas, Texas.
Savannah. Ga., January 20. 1886.
GUINNS PIONEER BLOOD REN EWER has
nade several cures of blood poison and rlieuina-
ism among my customer*'. 1 most heartily
ecommemi it to* sufferer* from these afllictions.
C. II. HILLMAN, Druggist.
New Orleans. La., Jan. 16. 1886.
I have been cured sound ami well of a bad case
of blood poison l.iv the use of fifteen bottles of
GUINN'S PIONEER RLOOl) RENEW EH. I
will sound its praise forever.
JACOB KRUTE.
I am acquainted with the above case, and most
heartily attest it.
EUGENE MAY. Druggist,
Canal Street.
rather common that a democratic admin- | views of some of our leading congressmen,
Guinn’s Pioneer Blood Renewer
Cures till blood and SkinjDiscases. Rheumatism, Scrofula, Old Sores.
A PERFECT SPRING MEDICINE.
PRICE. PER BOTTLE $i.oo. LARGE SIZE, $1.75.
ESSAY ON BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES MAILED FREE.
istrati-.il meant immediate abolition of the
internal revenue laws. But these unlet
tered sons of tbe mountains who are the
manufacturers of illicit whisky are not of
the worst type of criminals. They believe
that they have a right to do as they choose
with their own, and hence distill their
corn instead of hauling it over almost im
passable roads fifty or a hundred miles
away to market. The moonshiner calls in
his neighbors, and with their aid and that
of bis wife and sons and daughters there is
soon built the rude structure now so eom-
r.:nn in this mountain section and popular
ly called a “blockade still-house." The
1 salt is: pounded into a powder by means
of a mortar and pestle, which is operated
by the water in the brook always hard by
every still. A beam like tin old-fashioned
well sweep is arranged on the bank of the
stream and poised on a fulcrum. On the
end of the beam furthest from the brook
is the mortar, large enough to hold several
bushels of malt, and into this falls the huge
pestle, a three or four feet section of a
tree's trunk some eight inches in diameter.
On the other end of a beam is a bucket,
sufficiently large to hold water enough to
be heavier than the pestle, and this, be
ing in position to eaten the dimiu-
tive waterfall, gently presses downward
when full, and bearing the pestle aloft,
sinks until it rests upon the inclined plane,
where the water pours out and the pestle
Calls, only to be pulled up again as the
bucket takes in water anew. This is the
sort of pestle thut will beat and pound
away whether the rnonshiner be with it or l
not, in fear of tbe coming of the officer of n w
the law. has hied himself away among the
higher hills. When a sufficient number of
gallons of whisky have been made to justi
fy a trip to market, the muscular moon
shiner and his force carry the precious
fluid by the jugful to his humble home far
down the mountain side, where tbe road
begins. Into the canvas-covered wag
ons the kegs are rolled, and down
the mountain go the oxen or the
mules, carrying into the pale of civilization
the highlander’s tribute to commerce.
Away across the Blue mountains, the
boundary line between the Carolinas, this
freight is borne until driver and team are
amid the cotton fields of the Palmetto
‘date, where the thirsty planter hails with
gladness the moonshine wagon, while the
gay and festive villager, oppressed by local
option views, extends the heartiest wel
come to the contents of the kegs, and eon- ‘
Uders the dispenser of the dew n veritable ■
alchemist, whose magical distillation
flings over tbe commonplace of life the
glamour of gilt edge.
The moonshiner thus distills and dis- j
tributes until some revenue official over-,
takes him in his traffic. Then a trial at
court, and, if he is convicted, a term at
Albany# but if he is acquitted, as fop lack
of sufficient evidence he is likely to be,
the moonshiner returns to his remote
habitation, and, far up among the pro-
t(sting mountains, kindles again the fires
whose embers are scarcely cold. Hu lives ‘
with smail crops and a large family, with
little information and many wants, with
the least of ambitions and the soundest
of appetites, until he passes away and
sleeps with his fathers under the shadow
“f the mountains where he first saw the
light, and where his uneventful days have
been spent.
and we ask them to weigh the matter
carefully before putting themselves under
the necessity of explaining to their con
stituents a tote against the consideration
of the bill.
!
Wholesale by Brannon & Carson and City Drug Store.
Kiiraiina us a HusIuvsh.
New England Farmer.
Some of the daily newspapers are ven
turing their ignorance by recommending
that the labor difficulties would be settled
if the discontented mechanic would take
up the business of agriculture and “become
the contented owner of a farm.” This isa
renewal of the principle in force half a
century ago, when the dull boy was kept
on the farm, and the bright intellect fitted
for a profession, But now it takes a mighty
smart man to make money at farming.
Ttie average mechanic lias not the brains
and experience to successfully carry on
a large farm in the eastern
or middle states, while in the far
west the low prices of the few staple
crops that arc grown would make the me
chanic farmer more disoonted than ever.
If the mechanic will rough it in the far
west, and be contented while he is learn
ing to farm it and while the country is de
veloping around him, well and good, but
most of them are not made of that kind of
stuff. We are reminded of a remark of a
master mechanic in a large foundry, who
had worked his way up to a good salary
and then left it to go to farming, only to
return to tbe shop in disgust, for as he
snid. “I am smart enough to make a living
comotives, but 1 find I can’t run
a farm.
All Kit1crpri*itig. Reliable House.
Brannon & Carson can always lie relied
upon, not only to carry in stock the best of
everything, but to secure the Agency for
such' articles as have well-known merit,
and are popular with the people, thereby
sustaining the reputation of being always
enterprising', and ever reliable. Having
secured the Agency for tbe celebrated Dr.
King’s New Discovery for Consumption,
will sell it on a positive guarantee. It will
surely cure any and every affection of
Throat, Bungs and Cla st, and to show our
confidence, we invite you to call and get a |
PHI'S CARMINATIVE,
The Best Medicine on Earth fo
Children.
All infallible specific for Flatulent Colic, Diar
rhea, Coughs, Teething, Cholera Infantum, Chol
era Morbus, and all diseases incident to children.
Give it a trial. 25 cents per bottle. For sale at
CITY DRUG STORE.
feb21-tf
Trial Untile.* fre
eou&w
lie
Most.
CAPITAL PRIZE, - $150,000.
“TIV do heicby certify that we supervise the nr-
ran ye meat foi all tin Monthly and Quarterly
Drawings of The Louisiana State Lottery Com
pany, and in person manage and control the
Drawings themselves, and that the some are coiv-
ducted with honesty, fairness, and in good faith
totem d all parties, and we authorize the Company
to use this certificate, with facsimiles of our nig
natures attached, to its advertisements."
and heroes are nevei
-N. Y. Tribune.
TU< the
M./M
Ha,
■pay all Urines draw
teries which may he pr>
.1. 11. i»*m
.1. w. li si.imi rii, !*»•
A. llALIHYI.V. Pits.
nte<
< omini*4*1011 <>rM.f.
- w
s and Hankers will
jouisiami Slate Lot-
' at our Couliters.
La. Nnt'l Hank
. Stnli* N 11UI H*li
.O. V'tUI Bank
U
WOMEN
seeking Health.
Strength and En
ergy, should avoid
Drugs,Secret Med
icines, etc., and
send for “The Re
view,” or “Health
and Strength Re-
M , !im:i)i:M'i;ii
(hvr Hull'
Million Ili'lril'iiU'd
Louisiana State Lottery Comp'y.
pnBiggers
H uc kleberrY
ifcjORDIAL
1800. Five small Houses and Lots. Will sell o
suit purchaser.
300 or 100 acres Land three miles fYom city
Will sell or exchange for city property tli c best
Farm in the county. Rented for 18 bales cotton
net.
Als several small farms and valuable ci ty prop
erty. ( a 11 and see me. Will be glad to show
proper! v.
One flue Buggy and Harness.
(J. O. REEDY,
Real Estate Agent, No.io 12th St.
MORRISON TARIEF BILL.
bnIi»rM*iI liy Hie Miiv.ui'huM'tts Iteforiu I.eutrue.
Boston, May 30.—A public meeting,
under the auspices of the Massachusetts
reform league, in support of the Morrison
tariff bill, was held in the South meeting
nouse to-night. Ex-Congressman Henry L.
f b rce presided, and speeches were made
by Mr. Pierce, B. C. Clark, in behalf of the
I nited States cordage manufacturers;
“ illiam Lloyd Harrison, William F. Jones,
of,the Boston fish bureau ; ex-Mayor Fred
erick O. Prince, Jerome Jones, of Jones,
McDuffee & Stratton, and Joseph S. Roper,
f he speeches were of a practical order,
and were from the business man’s view.
Letters were read from George E. Downes,
who stated the case in favor of free salt,
and John M. Forbes, Leopold Morse,
Charles M. Beach, of Hartford, treasurer
°t the Home Woolen manufacturing com- j
piny, and Roland Hazard, wool manufac- I
turer of Providence. Resolutions were I
adopted stating the attitude of the meet-
ln g as follows:
“Four years ago the tariff commission ap- j
pointed by President Arthur, and consist- i
l n ?tr P rote ctionists exclusively, with Jno. |
Jr Hayes for their chairman, declared in !
h«r report that a substantial reduction of
, ™ duties is demanded, not by a mere
indiscriminate popular clamor, but by the
, conservative opinion of the country,
Deluding that which at former times has
-. etn most strenuous to preserve our na-
onal industrial defenses, and that such a
jjj REGA 1N EPJ gained," a Urge 11-
lustiatod Journal,
L'DICX published entiioly
UMrubA rrt6.t. for their benefit.
Incorporated m 1868 for25 year.** bv the Legisla
ture for Educational and Charitable purposes -
with a capital of $1,060,000 t*> which a reserve
fund of over fViu.uuo has since been added.
By an ovei whelming popular vote its franchise
was: made a part of tin* present State Constitu
tion, adopt' 1 lecemLer 2d, A. J*. 1879.
It* t.iurMi Single iiiinthcr Drawings
will take p. .v ii.uiniih. It w ee, stales ... post
pones. Look at the following distribution:
IPAJ Gre.u I Von I lily
i:\THAiminY\n\ iii \i:ti:hi.i
It treats on health, h vgiene. physical culture,
AM<i im-dieal subjects, and Isa romj.lete en«*y.
v!opa.*diti of information for oiilV«-ring buinani-
In tli
iimwiNfi
Orleans,
tT.icted
exllailrttilikf
j'Tt that o
.nd manage-
No
Dnl la
eultb and bini.au hupni-
u ill its png* s ; anil t to
by ailing persons and Mi-
.aired of a fire are un-
information is volun-
iiH«*d of medical udv lea.
tn-eii published. Ev
il should nave it.
Artuleuij of Music,
Tucbriin. June 15. 1**6.
Under the personal supervision :i
liu-nt of
Gen. G. T. BEAURLGARD, of Louisiana, &
Gen. JUBAL A. EARLY, of Virginia.
cry nick or ailing ;
YOUNG AND MIDDLE AGED MEN,
pnd others who suffer from nervous and phys-
5eald'-bility, exhausted vitality.premature de-
clin«f, etc., rr«-espeeially benefited by consult
ing Its contents. Everything such sulTc-rnrs
wish to know is fully given In Its pages. If In
need of medical aid or counsel, read It before
“ doctoring " or Investing In medicines or appli
ances of any description, ami will save
time, money and disappointment. If using
medicine or medical treatment of any kind,
read it and learn the better way.
THE REVIEW exposes the frauds practiced
bv quacks and medical impostors who profess
to" practice medicine "and points out the only
safe.Simula and effective road to health, vigor
and bodily energy. *
Electric lb Rs and all curative appliances am
treated upon; all about them—which are gen
uine, which are bogus. Belts on thirty days*
trial ?j and other fallacies reviewed. Thou
sands of dollars saved nervous-debility sufferers
and others by the advice given. THE RE
VIEW is now In its ninth year of publication.
Complete specimen covnw fnailed FUKF
•AddreaSt
naming this paper.
Publishers REVIEW,
1164 Broadway, NEW YORK
KiT Apply now or preserve our address
Liijiil.il
Hit Noti.’«
Tr/.u
i-mb*. #2.
LI
Sir,( i.om.
Do 11 ii i •> onl). Halves,
■urn:
1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF 81->0.000
1 GRAND PRIZE OF 50,000
1 GRAND PRIZE OF 20.000 ...
2 LARGE PRIZES OF 10,000
4 LARGE PRIZES OF fi.ooo
20 PRIZES OF 1.000 . . .
50 PRIZES OF 600.
100 PRIZES OF 300
200 PRIZES OF 200
600 PRIZES OF 100
1,000 PRIZES OF 50
A P P O XIM A TIO N PRIZES.
100 Approximation Prizes of 6200
100 “ “ 100
100 “ “ 75
6150,000
.. 50.000
. 20,OOP
20,000
20,000
. 20.000
25,000
. 50,000
. 40,000
. 60,000
.. 50,000
dysentery
CHILDREN TEETHING
Qu + d«
50tPERB0TTLE
2,279 Prizes, amounting to $522,60
Application for rates to clubs should be made
only to the Office of the Company in New Orleans.
For further information write clearly, giving
full address. l»ONTAI. AfOTEK.' Express
Money Orders, or New York Exchange in ordi
nary letter. Currency by Express at our ex
pense; addressed !W. A. li t I I*IIIX,
.\«*u Orleans, !,«.
Or N. A. D.111*111
Washington. It.
Make I*. O. Money Orders payable
and address Hr*n isle red Let ter* to
VEWOUI.F.AVS ViTBONtl, HANK,
my 12 wed K-k v5t Nexv Orleans. La.
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE
I ^OR other City Real Estate, Stocks or Bonds
^ New Dwelling, full % acre lot. On price
asked this property will pay ten per cent clear of
taxes. Why keep vour money in stocks and
bonds that yield little interest and often fails to
pay dividends? Better buy Real Estate and your
income is sure. JOHN BLACKMAR,
wed fri tf Real Estate AgeDH
1 Have. Had Placed in .11) Hands
nytonsrEY to LOCUST
On City Real Estate, Stocks and Bonds.
Also discount first-class notes.
JOHN BLACKMAR,
se wed fr tf Financial Agent for Capitalists.
! vv
DEH1LITY 8#^^ D1.J AY. ail O,
Five Cold and Two ailver Medal*,
awarded in 1885 at tlie Expositions of
New Orleans and Louisville, and the I»«
ventions Exposition of London.
The superiority of Coraline over horn
or whalebone lias now been demonstrated
by over five yeurs’ experience. It is more
durable, more pliable, more comfortable^
and nntr Irrttikt.
Avoid cheap imitations made of varioul
kinds of cord. None are genuine unletf
"Du. Waknbk’s Cobalink” is print#
on inside of steel cover. $
' FDR SALE BY AIL LEADING MERCHANT!.
WARNER BROTHERS,
353 Broadway, New York CiU
Dr. W, W. Bruce & Son,
liysiciaiis aim Surgeons,
firm will devote special at-
iiale Diseases. OlHee over
■lore. Residence at Lindsay
Bruce’s resilience on Rost)
dtf
>33, EXGHA1TGE
FLORIDA LANDS.
Seceril thousand ncres timbered lands for ex-
change fur Columbus city property. Haw mi
men will find ii to their interest to see me in
Kai'i this tract.
TOO.MRS CRAWFORD,
BALL’S
CORSETS,
V c F \! Y r *)RFFT made that c*n heretunm
f.^ktr after three weeki’ wea£ y
PERFECTLY SATISFACTORY
- - .* -, R-id -;s pr.r- refunded by se!lfc»j
r . I \ rt.- t *•:% *s ait 1 pr.oes. Pewarc«f
o. ir..-*: ;.s. N -. e t.* r »uiiie witho it
.:t.iICACO CORSET CQk
J3 Lisper.ard St., New York. .
."A(/ u»--ru> St Chicago, Ui»
EMnaresL.i
Com ; :aLon and li' l
or ward * co
Trial
i.a', I I’.KE. \ddm*j
.OL JJtUXA, MO.
ANTED-A man of temperate and moral
habits, seeking emplo\7nent, to represent
Id established house in his own section.
Sulurv Uj begin H70 per month. References ex-
,cted. American Manufucturirig House. It Bar
ay street New York. myl satlm
I iU 4 IT\ T Its CAUSE and Cure,
1 /1 ji\ 1 ii by one who was deaif
twenty-eight vears. Treated by most of the
noted specialists of the day with no benefit.
Cured himself in three mouths, and since tlieu
hundreds of others by same process. A nlaiu,
simple and successful home treatment. Audre&g
T. >. PAGE, 12b East 26th it., New York City.
uihl-i tu Ui bat Jin