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15y RESJAMIS W. KEY. •
VOL. XII.
|mU*pnuUnt.
P»V.i*hed every Saturday Morning
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first appearance of advertisement.
Address nil letters to The Luvi-kin InLe
jpendlnT, or B. \v. key,
1'roprictor.
tMA’il/i’O:* E. lUTi’Li;
Attorney At Law,
Office wilhl’E VBODY & BRANNON
CQLI7ME1CS. HA*
\Vi!l practice in Stewart Superior
Court.
Columbus, Ga , August 4 b If
E. G. SIMMONS,
ATTORNEY AT E.VW,
AMERICU3, GA.
Will j'Va tiro in all the counties o!
This Judicial Circuit, iu the
Court of the Stn*e of Georgia,
in the District Court <>f the United
Jritates, mid in all other courts by
Bpi-einl .contract. j nly 23-81.
J,Et>Nn>iJ4 LESTER,
At tonic / at Law,
Cusseta, Georgia
Will practice iu the Courts of (hr
Clmltahoochre Circuit bmI in Stew¬
art Superior Court. Special atten¬
tion given to collections.
Cttssefa, Ga., May 5, 13 ~3.
“MESS LLTTIjEJ1)1II\.”
Savannah Weekly News
OFOCrOBFP* 13-It, 1883,
VTIH contain thu opening chapters of a new
rvrial, by Miss Ei.uamiu M. Jones, of North
Carolina, eutith-1
‘MISS LITTLE JOHN 7 .”
The plot of this iuterovting story runs
smoothly along in an even channel of quiet
interest, aud the reader becomes so much
in !ov« with the pure, unselfish character of
MimLittl-jotiU that he forgets to look for
startling evwits and becomes wholly uoblu uhsorti
•d in the development of the purpos¬
es and plans of the heroine.
The Savannah Weekly News is a mam¬
moth sheet, contains H pages ot reading mat
ter, comprising all the news of the week,
(Hpcciitl attention being given to the Geor
gin, Florida aud Souih Carolina.) Telegraph
ic Dispatches up to the hour of going to
press, Agricultural Items, Original Serials,
«tc. -
In addition to a first-olnss newspaper, we
offer to each yearly subscriber a copy ot auy
of the published novels of the Mouninu
News Subscription—Weekly, Lnm.uiY/rse. $2 Daily
a year ;
News, $10, in advance. through Local
Subscriptions can be sect
Agents aud Postmasters, or di-ect to
J. H- ESTILL.
3 -'Vl.ITAKUR Stbekt, SwannaH.
No Moi-e Eye-glasses.
J\'o jl&
M )P3 Wjy Eyes!
MITCHELL’S
EYE SALVE,
A certain, safe and effective remedy
for
Sore, Wear and In¬
flamed Eyes,
Producing Long sightedness, and
Restoring the Sight of the Old.
Cures Tear DropR, Grannlantion,
IStye Tumors, Red Eyes, Matted
efficacious when used iu other mala
dies, such ns Titters, Fever
Tumors, Salt Rheum,
wherever ittn-imtuKfiun extwfPRiliCH
ELL’S SALVE may be used to
vantage. Sold bv all DruggistR
25 cents. Mar. lUth 1883.
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER. 20, 1883.
PECK’o BAD BOY AND HIS
t-A.
‘Well, I see you have got another
black eye,’said the grocery man to
the bad boy , as be chthe in with a
kerosene 'can, and eat down by a
peach basket white the groceiyman
drew the kerosene. ‘How did you
get it ? Have a tight, or did your
pa knock you down with a chair?’
‘Got it trying to lie an angel,’ said
tho bad boy, as lie fumbled around
the mOs+jnito bal‘ over tile basket of
peaches, to see if there wasn’t a
I place where a peach might fall out.
You know that, blind woman that
grinds the hand organ down on the
corner. Well, a person would think
that a poor h'ind woman, who has to
support herself and five children
grinding out the aw fulest music ever
was, would be the last person in the
world to have tricks played on her,
but this morning I found a couple ot
dudes dropping lczengers in the ci¬
gar box that is on her organ for pen¬
nies, tire first time they dropped in
cue ihu old-lady smiled, and took it
out and eat it, and w asn’t very mad,
’cause I thought ths dudes Vonld
■ urprise her by dropping in a five
dol’ar gold piece for a nickel, and
m ike her feel good. But the next
time they dropped in a cayenne pep
per l:iZ”iig<T, and they got behind a
peanut stand to see how it worked,
kite bit it, and then she opened her
month nu'l plowed cold wind on her
parched tongue, 4nd 1 almost luffed
at first, .she made such a Lee, Im*
when I set* the tears begin to pout
out of he • poor old blind eyes, and
roll down her withered cheeks, and
she took the Comal* of her apron and
wq tad the tears away, as she stopped
i right, in the midst of ‘Annie. Laurie,’
and the organ drew a long breath,
and when l looked at those two
dudes luffing at her, I got. crazy.
Som bow I tell as though that poor
old woman was mv ma, and before I
knew it, 1 jumped right in amongst
those dudes, and knocked one ol
thorn through the peanut stand on
the hot chestnut roaster, and 1 kick¬
ed the other where it hurt, and ho
ran, and the other one said, ‘What,
you got to do about the old woman,
don’! you know—’ and I said she
was a friend of mine', ’cause she was
blind, and then the Italian hit me in
the eye with a hard peach, and a po
liceman came along and the dude
told him I was a terror, and tLe po
.'iceman jerked my coal-collar off, but
when I tul i him what it was all abi ut,
he gave me back my ccat col'ar and
chased the dude, and the old lady
thanked me with her trembling lips,
that were smarting from the luzeu
gor, and I went homo to get my col¬
lar sewed on, and pa was going to
taka it out of my hide. I guess if I
hadn’t told him about the blind wo
man, he would have been kicking me
jet. Sometimes I think it don't pay
to be too darned good. For instance,
uow in this row, ail the friend I've
got is this blin 1 woman, and she, will
not know me when she sees rite. Tho
two dudes and the Italian will lay
for me, and the policeman will, very
likely, be told by the "dude that it
was me who filed tho h Z-.-nger in
there, and I’ve got to wear this black
eye for two weeks, just for having a
heart in "me, Do you think it pays
to.be good, or didn’t you ever try it?'
‘You bet it pays,’ said the grocery
mats, as he stuck the nozzle of the
kerosene can into a potato, an(f ripp¬
ed off the mosquito bar and told the
boy to help himself to peaches. ‘You
have got a friend in me, and you can
call on me for a certificate of charac¬
ter at any tiino. A boy that protects
the poor and unfortunate is a thor¬
oughbred, if he does get a black eye
occasionally. But I don't see how
it is that the minister is down on
you so. Ho was in hero this morn¬
ing to get trusted for a number three
mackerel, and be said bo would walk
aronnd a block any time, rather than
meet you, because yon asked so
ma uy questions that he couldn’t an
-» * Jim zr
•
'Oil, I only wanted to got a little
on yachting. He is paid a sal
ftry to , e “ 1, 8 Ut '' n hla congregation,
,lUl1 110 always wauls us to ask quoa
lions, but lately he has turned me
A Weekly Newspaper, Published ia the Political. Social and Agricultural Interests of Stewart County.
a why with ;i soft answer. I asked
him if he did not think Mount Ara¬
rat would have been a boss place to
hunt, jus 1 after Gapt‘,NWii had turn¬
ed all tho game loo e, and ti e water
»ai high so yon ootild sneak right up
on to elephants, and VigeW; and c.hip
manks, and fox squirt els, and ths
minister, who bad born telling pa
what, a boss time he had 'ost \vin‘er
hunting deer up in Michigan, got
> ft' u led, and told pa he had better
dismiss mq with n boot. I don’t
kuow as it would be auy more harm
to hunt detr on Mount Ar’thit, About
2 310 years B. C-, than it would
now, though they might have had a
game law that wou'tl protect the
game, on account of there being on¬
ly a limited supply. But I suppose
the game would have been very poor,
'cause it lmd been shut up in the ark
a long thus without any food, and
the eap.ain of the ark full of bug
juice.’
‘Hold on now, boy, don’t bo bear¬
ing false witness against thy ncigli
bor,’ said the grocery man, horrified
by the remarks of the boy. ‘There
is no record that Noah lmd anything
to drink on tlia ark. Give N^ah his
due, whatever you do.’ *
‘ ATI!, may bo you aro light, but
us I understand it, ho had a terrible
appetite for intoxicating fluid on
shore, and one would suppose-if he
didn’t have a ba’f on the yacht, he
wbuld have strapped a couple of jugs
on the mules when they went aboard,
and he must Luve known it was go¬
ing to be a long find tedious cruise,
and very louesoino, aud if he had
anything stimulating ou board he
took a nip occasionally. Aud you
couhk’t. blame hi*!*. Everybody’s ap¬
petite is better when sailing, aud
Noah hud to run the boat night and
day, and it wouldn’t be strange if he
spKttsd the main hi ace. By Jingo, I
should think that Noah would have
got sick of a tm lingerie, and been
mighty glad when he struck the top
of the mountain and turned them
lose, and when the water went down
and the animals went sliding down
bill, falling over each other to find a
good place to nibble grass, it must
have been a picuic to Noah. But
what do you suppose the li'Jb? found
to eat ? They live ou meat, an 1 a?
there were only two animals of a
kind, they hud to wait until some
more small animals could be raisec:
before they cotild eat, ’cause if they
i at any animal, that settled it., and
there would never bo tiny of those
animals on earth. Say, don’t you
think those those lions had pietty
good control of their appetite'!, not
to make mince meat of the other an¬
imals ? How do you account for the
fact that all those animals lived
without anything to eat?’
‘Oh, I don’t know. You make me
tired. I don’t wonder tho minister
can’t get along with you. Maybe
Noah took along I rash meat enough
to last tho lh*ns a year, and baled
hay for the elephants arid giraffes and
cattle. Fix it any way you want to
Darned if I know any thing about it,
said the grocery man, as he took a
piece of sand paper and began rub¬
bing the rust off the cheese knife.
‘That’s the way with all of you,’
said the boy, as be took the kerosene
can and started for the door. ‘I
think that, flood was only a spring
freshet, and that the wsrld couldn’t
have been drowned. How did they
know that America was overflowed,
when America was not discovered
till 1492, four thousand years after¬
ward? I am going home and ask
the hired girl shout it. She is a
Catholic, but she knows more about
history than all of you, and she don’t
get mad when I ask her questions.
By gosh, I would have liked to take
a breech-loading shot guu and pad
died along in a skiff np ti Mount
Ararat, just after Noah had run out
the gang plank and let the animals
off. I could have got elephants and
behemoths, and rhinoceroses enough
for a mess, I bet you,’ and the boy
want out with his kerosene aud a
mind well stored with knowledge, as
well as a pistol pocket well stored
with peaches.— Peck’s Sun.
‘I aim to tell the truth.’ ‘Yes,’ in
terruptod an acquaintance, 'and you
sre probably tho worst shot in Eug
laud.'
The Two Misers.
A miser living <b Kufa bad heard
that iu Bassorn there !t a miser
—more miserly than himself,
whom he might go to school, and
from whom he might learn much. Ho
journeyed thither, and presented
himself to the g'l'Sat master as an
humble commence! - in the Art of
Avarice, anxious to learn and under
him to become a student.
'Welcome 1’ said the miseV of Bas
sora.; ‘we will go to market and make
some purchases.’
They went to the bak'd.
‘Has thou good bread ?’
‘Good indeed, my masters, and
fr.sb wild soft as butter.'
‘Mark thi«, friend,’ said the mis<*r
M IJassora to the one of Ivufa, ‘but¬
ter is compared with bread as being
the better of the two; as we can only
consume a small quantity of that, it
will also be the cheaper, and we
shall therefore utit, more wise'y and
more savingly too, in beiug satisfied
with bu Ur.’
They went to the but ter merchant
and asked if he bad any butter.
‘Good, indeed, and Savory and
fresh as the finest olive oil,’ said the
merchant..
‘Mark this, also,’ said the host to
Ilia guest, ‘oil is compared with the
very host, butter, and therefore by
much ought to be preferred t.o tile
latter.
The next went to the oil vender.
‘Have you good oil ?’
‘The very best quality, white and
transparent as Wat<i*,’ was the reply.
‘Mark that,’ said the miser of B-is
sora to the one of Ktifa ; ‘by this
rule water is tho very best. Now at.
home I have a pailful, and more hos¬
pitality Uitffofiith will I eutertain
you.’
And, indeed on their return, noth¬
ing but water did he place before his
guest because they had learned that
water was better than oil, oil better
than butter, and butter better tlidu
biead.
‘God be praised !’ said tliti miser of
Kufr, ‘I hava not journeyed this long
distant in vain!’
Yaukee Wit.
Many years ago a Pittsburg iron
firm purchased a lot of condemned
bombeheUs for old iron. The shells
were not loaded, but in order to melt
them it was necessary that they
should he broke** up.
This was attempted with sledge¬
hammers but the laborers made but
little progress, and it was finally giv
en up as a bud job.
One day ft long, slim yankeo came
along and said :
‘I understand you hate a job for a
man here.’
‘Yes,’ was the reply; ‘we want that
pile of bombs out there broken.’
‘How much will you pay ?’
‘We will give yoii a tip apiece (six
and a quarter cents) if you will agree
to break them all.'
Til. take the contract,’ answerod
the Yankee.
The day was a cold one, and the
thermometer down to zero.
The man immediately went to
work, but disdained to take the largo
sledge-hammer vvhicn was offered
him. The Yankee laid every bomb
out ou tho ground with tho hole up.
He procured- a bucket and filled them
all with water, then, he came into the
l?bu3e, made out his bill, and said he
would call arouud in the morning
for the money.
Every on* was much mystified,but
iu the morning their astonishment
was great.
The water had frozen during the
night, and in the morning a pile of
scrap iron was found, as the feeezing
water had broken every bomb into
at least a dozen pieces .—Frank Les¬
lie’s Magazine.
- ■■ a.« —i-
Jim Smith, who was released from
the i ennessee .State prison
day, is a master mechanic and tool*
i maker, who cun earn $4 a day. He
worked itl tho machine shop 2,83(5
days, and his good behavior cut
years aud eleven months off his term
of ten years for robbery on the high
■ tvay. Deducting (lie cost of his
port, estimated at 18 conts a day,
earned $10,710 91 nut for the
Living within one’s Means.
However limited our means may
be, we shall ha among the number of
truly opulent if we live within
them, and live contentedly. The
perpetual ambition to bh thought
greater than wo are is a source of
contempt, to those abuse tin, of deri¬
sion to those btd'dw, and a continual
discomfort to ourselves. Nor can
the mesh thrown over our circnin¬
stances by the artifices of vanity long
deceive any one—except, perhaps,
few stringers, Who are hardly worth
deceiving. Our means, as well as
our characters, wifi sooner or later
become known, in spitti of any dis¬
guise with which we may attempt to
invest them and the detection in ibe
use of the instruments cf deception
only shows that whatever gifts we
may have, we are at. least deficient in
honesty. The really rich, then, are
not merely pel Sons of large means
relatively with the position they de¬
sire to hold in society. A poor duke
would be a rich urtiz ir, simply be¬
cause in the latter case there are not
the same demands for a large expen¬
diture. The same relation holds
through tf!l classes of society ; so
that a man to become* rich has only
to descend from the pedestal on
which his pride has exalted him and
conform to the usages of less ambi¬
tious men. Of all things iu this wide
world pride is the most expensive,
and every extravagant habit asquir
ed just subtracts a proportionate
puautity of Wealth, and impoverishes
the.person who yields to it. Every
munglms tho secret of becoming rich
who resolves to live, within his
means; and independence is one of
the most effectual safeguards of hon¬
esty.— Illudi.ahd World.
What Melted the ,Ju r y.
Warren Wilhe’m was on trial iu
Hardin county, Kentucky, on Friday
last, and the testimony foreshadow¬
ed his conviction on tho charge of
selling liquor hit bout a government
license!. He took the stand.
‘I don’t deny that I hid tho liquor,’
ho said ; ‘but I didh't sell it.’
‘What did you do with it?’
‘Treated it away. It was about
election time, and Joe Sweet was
running for jailer. It was for Joe,
and he gave me about a gallon and a
half ot juice, and told mo to treat the
boys. You kuow it's fashionable for
candidates t.d pass around the liquor.
I took the liqusr, and it wasn't long
befote it gave out. We were anx¬
ious to elect our victim, and w *5 told
Joo we’d have to have more liquor.
Ho gave mo Votne money, and I went
dov,n to th» mill and got some hq
uor and fetched it up to the boys.
Somebody, I reckon, saw the trans¬
action, and thought as bow I was
selling the liquor, and informed oii
us ; bat. jedge, so help me God, I
never sold a drop of it.* Jest simp'-y
treated it away.’
‘Did you elect your victim ?’ tho
district attorney inquired.
‘Ho got through, and it wan tho li¬
quor that did the work for him.’
‘Not guilty,’ Was the jury’s verdict.
—New York Sun.
Put it Thau. —When ths stranger
remarked that he was from Arkan¬
sas, one of the passengers suddenly
turned and asked :
‘You are, t-h ? Maybe yon are from
Crittenden county ?’
‘I tun that.’
‘Perhaps from James’ Landing?’
‘That's it, exactly.'
‘Then, maybe, yon know my broth¬
er, William Henry Jones, from Penn
Yan,»this State ?’
‘-stranger, pntittbarl' exclaime!
the Arkansas traveler, as he extend¬
ed his hand anil smiled all over.
‘Bust my buttons if I didn’t help
hang your brother for cattle stealing
jist before I left home .’—Arkanmw
Traveler.
ul y wife at the window one
beautiful day stood watching a man
with a monkey, a cart came nlofg
with a broth of a boy, who was driv¬
ing a stout little donkey. To my
wife thou I spoke, by way of a
'There's a relittipn of yours in
carriage.’ To which situ
when tho donkey marriage she spied,
yes! a rein lion by
Terms $1.50 Per > rnnim.
The Real Vlofcib.
The real home is in the country
and it is something more than a
dwelling ; the field anil trees around
it aro part of it, and the views from
it of tho landscape, and of distant
mountains, perhaps- make it unlixe
any other place in the world. The
country home with its fixity of sur
roundings has asu illy some raearu-e
tf permanence, and tho social life
formed there is under live favorable
conditions of old family associations.
Some have tho happy condition of
living in the home of thoir fathers,
and are surrounded with objects ot
precious mciiloi'y, daily mementoes
of parental affection and instruction
The home which it make6 is the best
thing of farm life. There is a ne.ees
sity of permanence, and as there is
no sudden or great accumulation o!
wealth, or large increase, the family
is flee from that discontent which
usually comes with sudden, or great
acquisition. It is one of the com¬
pensations of their coii li'ion that
the farmer’s family is in that ‘fixity
of surroundings’ which favors their
highest culture— Country Gentleman
-♦ a» -
Sensible Admonitions.
Don’t, buy a piano for your daugh
ter9, when your sons need a plow.
Don’t let ymir homes be seeu much
standing at the beer saloon, it don’t
look right.
Don’t, give Hie merchant or print
er a chaneo to dun you, prompt pay¬
ment makes independent men.
Don’t leave to memory what should
bo written, it makes lawsuits.
Don’t become security for him who
waits foi the Sheriff.
Decent, substantial clothing foi
your children, makes them tliiuV
hotter of themselves, and keeps the
doctor away.
Teach your hoys to look np and
forw id, never backward.
Cultivate the habit of giving, but
never give up.
Buy tv farm wagon before a fine
carriage.
Tho signal serv.ce Bureau has r
chitf, 10 second lieutenants, 150 eer
grants, 50 corporals,and 300 privates
In addition to these there are ten
captains and first lieutenants v>br¬
ace regular army officers, tin 1 are de
tailed far some special duty from
which they are babio to be recalled
at any minute. These men a* e scat
tered all over the country at tho dif
fevent stations, of which there art
about 500, one half of them beint
managed by voluntary amateur sav
ants. Included iu the force fife I5(
clerks in the bureau iu Washington,
who receive and arrange the reports
sent in three times a day from all the
stationsj aud who keep a record o<
all that ebneerhs the bureau. Tin
bui’.-au is also publishing a series o!
papers, such as Prof. William For
rel’s ‘Movements of the Atmosphere ’
Onay Taft SI erm in’3 ‘Meteorologica’
anJ Ptysicnl Observatims on thi
Bast Coast of British America,’ Lieu
Duuwoody’s ‘Geographical Distribu
tion of Rainfall in the United States,
and other works that might not bi
published except tlmugli the tuedi
urn of such an institution.
Which is Wossz?— v little girl
came in her night-clothes very early
to her mother one morning, saying .
‘Which is worst, mamma, to tell a
lie or to steal ?’
The mother, taken by surprise, re¬
plied that both were rck bad she
couldn't tell which was the worst.
‘Well,’ said tho little one, ‘I’ve
been tbiuking a good deal about it,
aud I’ve concluded it’s worse to lie
than to steal. If you steal a thing
you cun take it back ‘less you’ve eat¬
en it ; and if you have taten it you
can pay for it. But’—and there was
a look of awe iu the little face—‘a lie
is forever.’
a
For profit don’t keep old fowl 1 ,
year after year, except for extraordi¬
nary niorits. Some few old hens are
famous mothers, and are worth koep
ing on that accouut, sometimes. But
as a rule work them off in two years
or so.
Sampson with nil his muscle never
lifted a mortgage.
NO. 35*
AIMM SALE!
CN
WEDNESDAYS
Ail I*
SATURDAYS
AT
i, T, FORT’S OLD STAND,
—BY—
f. 11. WILLIAMS,
Assignee of
A. T. FORT*
To-day we will begirt
at 11 o’clock, and sell
Diy Goods, Notions,
Clothing, JIats, BodtSj
Bliocs, Etc.
NEXT WEDNESAY:
DitftfSe GOODIJ?
Hosiery, Notion^,
.rn-« 1
CTiOTIlING.
*500X44 imd WiiCflSSl
HARDWARE,
TABLE LINEN, TOWELS. ETO.
4»
W. H. WILLIAMS,
Assignee of
7 . T. Fort.
Sept 29, 1383.
DISEASE CURED.
Wit otjr Medicinh.
A valuable discov* r.v for supplying mag
netism to the human system. Electricity and
Mivuh fern utilzeil as novel’ before for
healing the sid*.
THE .MAUXETON APPLIANCE CO.’S
MAOKKTK! KIDNEYKELT 1
EOll MEN IS
WARRANTED TO CURE o B money
refunded, the following diseases without
med cine: Enin in t> e back, Hyps, Head or
Limbs. Nervous debilities, Lumbago, Gen
ral debility, Kheunmtism,.Paralysis Neural¬
gia. uni disen Seiatn-a, Torpid Diseases Liver, of the Gout, Uidheys, Seminal gpU
Bi s,
Emissions, Impotency, Ashm.i, Heart Dis¬
ease. IndgestioM, Dyssepsia, Heruta Constipation; Rupture, Erysipelas;
Kpilt-psy, Dutu Ague, or Catarrh;
etc.
Wheu auy debility V.tulity, of tho oeneb -.tive Of,*
'..ins occurs. Lost Lack of Nervo
"ource and Vigor’ Wasting Weakness, and
ill tin se Diseases of u personal nature, from
whatever cause, the continuous stream of
Magnetism permeating through the parts,
must restore them to a healthy action,
ihere is lo "listiite about this appliance.
1’0 THE ! ABIES ! If yon nt« afflicted
with Lame Duck. Weakness of the Spine,
it’.filing of the and Womb, Leucorrkbea, Chron¬
ic Inffl imation Ulceration of the Womb;
ucide itil Hefaioirhage or Flooding, Pain¬
ful, Suppressed and Irregular Menstruation,
Barrenness, and change of Life, this is thd
Best For all Appliance and Female Curative Agent known;
ornis of Difficulties it is
unsurpassed by anything before invented;
both as a eftrajive agent and as a source of
power and vitalization.
Price of either Belt with Magnetic In¬
dies, S10, sent by express 0. O. D., and
examination allowed; or by mail ou receipt
if price. In ordering send measure of
.vaist, aud size of shoe Remittance can bd
made iu currency, sent iu letter at our risk.
Tho Magneton Gamtents aro adapted td
ill ages, are Worn over the under c'othing;
not next to the body like the many Galvan*
ic and Eleclfic Humbugs advertised so ex¬
tensively), aud should be taken off at night;
They hold their POWER FOREVER, and
ire worn atnll seasons of the year.
Send stump for the “A ew Departure in
Medical treatment Without Medicine,” with
thousands of testimonials.
THE MAGNETION APPLIANCE CO .
218 State Street, in Clue igo, Ill
Note.—Send due dollar postage stamys
or currency (iu letter at our risk) with size
of shoe usually worn, aud try a pair of our
Magnetic residing Insoles, iu and be convinced of tho
power our other Magnetic Ap*
p'iancos. Positively no cold feet when tbey
are worn, or money refunded.
$1DB DOLLARS A WEEK!
We can guarantee the above amount td
good; active, energetic
AGENTS!
Ladies as well as gentlemen, make a success
in the business. Very little capital required.
Wo have a koiiseliold article os salable as
fiour.
It Sells Itself.
It is used every day iu the family. You dd
net need to explain its norit-s. Thore is a
rich harvest for all who embrace this goldeit
opportunity. It casts you only one cent to
learn what ortr business is. lluy a postal
card and write lo us and we will send yotl
onr prospectus at d full particulars
FREE!
And than wo knhw have yoii Will idea derive mure pout
you any of. Onr ruputuiioii
as i* ulauufautnrteq company docoti is Write hiu-Ii that
we cau -iwt altbi'fi to c. Iona on
a receive postal full aud particulars. hivu your address plainly ati't
UUCKICYEM’F’UCO.
Mur ton, OhW