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SAVANNAH
CHURCH DHIECTBRY
Smit Z>m Ba|rtM (tank, *M
Broad street, near Alice. W. L. P,
Weston, nestor. Sunday esrricM at ioso
a m ana 7:30 p m. Sunday morning
prayers at 6 o’clock- Sunday-ecbool a
z o'clock. Jaa.B*mirriA wporintandent
St. PbHilp’a i a L chareh, law
street, near Farm. Rev. M. B. Salter,
piwtor. Sunday services at 11 a m, 3
and 8 pm. Bunday morning prayers at
5 o’clock. Sunday-school at 1p m. Mr.
” iggina, superintendent
St. Sfcphes’s Episcopal church,
Habersham street, Rev. J. J. Andrews
rector. Sunday services at 11 a m and
7:30 pm. Sunday-school at 3:30 o’clock.
O- Campflald, superintendent
First Bryan Baptist church, Bryan
street, near Fann. Rev. U. L. Houston
pastor. Sunday services at 11 a m and
8p m Bunday morning prayers at 5
o'dodt. Sunday-school atBpm. Wil
. Bam Rivers, superintendent
Asbury Chapel M. E. church 1
Gwinnett street near West Broad. Rev
O. K. Wright, M. D. D. D., pastor. Bun*
day services at 11 a m, 8 and Bpm. Sun
day-school at 9 a m.
First Baptist church, Franklyn Sq.,
fronting on Montgomery street. Rev,
George Gibbons, pastor. Sunday ser
vices at 11 am, 3 and 8 p m. Sunday
morning prayers at 5 o’clock, Sunday
school at 3 o’clock. 0. L. DeLemotta, su
perintendent
St. James Tabernacle A.M.E.Church,
tP *he Old Fort, near Randolph street
Rev. E. Lowrey, pastor. Sunday ser
vices at 11 a m, 3 and 8 pm. Sunday
morning prayers at 6 o’clock. Sunday
school at 9 a m. H. Hamburg, superin
tendent
Second Baptist church, cor. Hous*
ton, State and P esident streets. Rev.
Alexander Ellis, pastor. Bunday ser
vices at 11 am and 8 pm. Sunday morn
ing prayer? at 5 o'clock. Sunday-school
at 3 j> m.
Congregational church, cor. fay*
lor and Habersham streets. Rev. Dana
Sherrill, pastor. Sunday services at 11
am, 3 and 8 pm. Sunday-school at 9
am. Professor S. B. Morse, superin
tendent.
First Bryan Baptist church, cor.
West Broad and Walburg streets. Rev.
A. Harris, pastor. Services at 11 a m
and 8 pm. Sunday morning prayers at
5:30 o’clock. Sunday-school at 3 pm.
L. Bing, superintendent.
Andrews Chapel C. M. E. church,
street, near Farm. Rev. M. Walker,
pastor. Bunday services at 11 a m, 3
and 8 pm. Sunday morning prayers at
5 o’clock. Sunday-school at 9a m. Mr.
Bayfield, Superintendent,
Bethlehem Baptist church, near
I .oral Grove. Rev. John Nesbit, pastor
Sund >y services at 11 a m and 8 pm.
Sunday morning prayers at 5 o’clock,
Sunday-school at 3 pm. W. C. Ford,
superintendent.
East Savannah Congregational
church, East Savannah. Rev. J. H.
Stephens, pastor. Sunday services at 11
am, 3 and 8 pm. Sunday-school at 9
a tn.
Little Bothel A. M. E. church, East
Broad street, near Coast Line R. R.
Junction. Bunday services at 11 am, 3
and 8 p_m. -Sunday morning prayers at
5 o'clock. Sunday-school at 9 a m. Rev.
John Whiteker, pastor.
Pilgrim Congregational church,
Woodville, two and a half miles from
Savannah, on the Augusta and Louisville
road. Rev. J. H. H. Sengstacke, pastor,
Sunday services at 11 a m and 8 pm.
Sunday-school at 10:30 a m. Communion
services on the first Sunday in the
month at 11 a m. Monthly prayer meet
ing every fourth Sunday at 11 a m.
Weekly prayer meetings every Thursday
night at 8 o'clock. Business meetings
of the church on the fourth Tuesday of
ev«s o' clock p in.
First African Baptist church, cor.
Harris and Price streets. Rev. James
Habersham, pastor. Sunday morning
services at Ila m and 8 pm. Sunday
morning prayers at 5 o’clock. Sunday
school at 3 p m.
nd ependint Presbyterian church,
W eat Broad Street, opposite Minis. Sun
day services at 11 a m and 8 pm. Sun
day-school at 3 o’clock. J. G. Williams,
Superintendent.
Bober.sville Sunday School and
Bible Class, Lumber Street Lane, be
tween Sims and Walker streets, near
West Bonndry. Exercises every Bun
day afternoon at 3 o’clock. Sunday
school workers are cordially invited, and
parents in the neighborhood are earnest
ly reQ-cestad to have their children at
tend. Contributions of Sunday-school
literature respectfully solicited.
The Seamen’s Bethel church, Mont
gomery street, near Congress, fronting
the Square. Rev. R. Webb, pastor. All
are invited to attend, regardless of
race, color, or previous condition of ser
vitude. Services at 11 am, 3 and 8 pm.
Sunday-school at 9 a m.
Union Baptist church, Isle of Hope,
Rev. Q. Frazier, pastor. Sunday ser
vices at 11 am and 8 p m. Sunday
morning prayers at 5:30 o’clock. Sun
day-school at 1 o'clock p m. James
A. Sykes, superintendent.
Covers Lane B. 11, 5. 3., Lovers
Lane, east of the 8. F. A W. Fa 1-
way. Sunday-school every Sunday
morning at 9 o’clock, Simuel Butler,
81 per in tec dent; Moses Coston, Secre
tary*
St. Augustine Mission Church,
O >mer B >lton and West Broad streets.
Sunday sen iesat 6 o’clock p. m. Frf
diy evening services at 8 o'clock. Sun
day-school every Sunday morning at 9
o’clock. C. L Brown, 8 iperintendent,
Rev. J. J. Andrews, Rector-
Taylors, A. M. E. church, on the
Oguchu canal, at Telfair's. Rev. H.
M- Miller, pastor. Sunday services
at 11 a. m. and 7:30 P. M. Sunday morn
ing prayers at 5:30 o’clock. Sunday,
school at 10 o’clock a. m. F. Stephen’s
superintendent.
The Sand Fly A, M. E. church,
on the Isle of Hope Railroad. Rev. G
H. Green, pastor. Sunday services at
11 a. m. Regular communion the fourth
Sui'day in each month.
ADVERTISE
YOUR WANTS IN THE ECHO.
tj If you want help.
If you want a cook. g
jg a If you want a waiter. on g-
g If you want a laborer. - 3
£ £ If yon want a situation. 2 “•
S oo H you want to sell a horse. F x
jy If you want to lend money. 2
If you want to rent a store.
No matter what yon want, whether to buy
•T se'l. Fe sure and advertise your wants in
the ECHO, office 5 Jefferson street, comer
Of Bay Lane.
U 20 CENTS, POSTPAID.
A. TREATISE
OM THS
Horse and His Diseases.
lodei of OfcOMA, which fives th*»
■nuptomt, Osoas and the Tn at ment of each. A
Table tla principal umm! tor the Horse,
ViCh the ordinary Goae, and «nti4of« when a
SKwnn. A Table w»tb an i Bmriag of the Horse’s
Toatb st dffermit agea. with rvias for telling the are.
A vs-’j .b!e c<4reeUoii of KvcMpls and much cUi« r vai*
«aNa tn formation. tuu-paxe sent to any eddr-s*.
Sib* United MUIm or Canada for 25 cents.
RaTBS. Fits Copts*. fl.w; Ton Copies,
KOBSB BOOK COMPA-ITT,
a IM AewMwrS St., Jte.r FerJk.
M, Maud fatal liUfiy.
dowtßnrnncDENT’fl Ornes, I
Savannah, Jan. I’, 1883. |
fAN AND AFTER THURSDAY, Janoaw
v/ 18, 1883, passenger trains on this road
will ran as follows:
FAST MAIL-DAILY.
Ia Savannah 1140 am
Lv Jesup 125 p m
Lv Waycross 8 00 p m
Ar Callahan 4 45pm
Ar Jacksonville 5 25pm
Ar Live Oak 7 05pm
Ar New Branford 8 50pm
Ar Valdosta 5 30pm
Ar Quitman 518 pm
Ar Thomasville 7 25pm
Ar Albany ..1100p m
Lv Albany 4 40 am
Lv Thomasville 8 15 a m
Lv Quitman 9 20 a m
Lv Valdosta 9 59 am
Lv New Branford 6 15 a m
Lv Live Oak 8 05am
Lv Jacksonville 9 30 a m
Lv Callahan 1015 a m
Lv Waycross 12 10 p m
4r Jesup 155 pm
Ar Savannah 3 40pm
Between Savannah and Waycross this
(rain slope only at Fleming, Johnston’s,
I esup and Blackshear. Between Waycross
and Jacksonville stops only at Folkston and
Callahan. Between Waycross and Albany
stops only at telegraph stations and on sig
nal at regular sta ions.
Pullman Drawing Room Cars daily be
tween Savannah and Jacksonville.
Pullman Sleeping Cars between Thomas
ville and Montgomery daily.
This train connects at New Bradford with
steamer Caddo Belle, leaving for Cedar Key
and Suwannee river points every Tuesday
and Friday nornings.
ALBANY & NEW ORLEANS EXPRESS.-
DAILY.
Lv Savannah 4 00pm
Lv Jesup 6 30 p m
Ar Waycross 8 05pm
Ar Callahan 10 32 p m
Ar Jacksonville 1115 p m
Lv Dupont 12 30 a m
Ar Thomasville 6 45am
Ar Bainbridge sam
Ar Albany - 15 a m
Lv Albany 4 40 p in
Lv Bainbridge 4 30pm
Lv Thomasville 8 55pm
Ar Dupont 12 10 a in
Ar Waycross 1 <55 a m
Lv Jacksonville 10 40 p m
Lv Callahan 11 35 p m
Lv Waycross 2 20 pm
Ar Jessup 4 20 a in
Ar Savannah 7 0C a m
Pullman Palace Sleepers between Savan
nah and Thomasville daily.
Pullman Drawing Room Cars from Savan
nah to Jacksonville daily.
Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars from Jack
sonville to Washington, and from Jackson
rille to Savannah daily on this train.
Connection at Albany doub’e daily with
passenger trains both way’s on Southwestern
Railroad to and from Macon. Eufaula, Mont
gomery, Mobile, New Orleans, etc.
J kCKSt>NVILLE EXPRESS.—DAILY.
Lv Savannah 11 00 p m
Leave Jesup 300 am
I.eave 'Waycross 4 40 p m
Arrive Callahan 6 45 a m
Arrive Jacksonville 7 50pm
leave Jacksonville 5 40 p m
Leave Callahan 6 40 pm
Lv Waycross 9 35 p m
Arrive Jesup 11 25 p m
Arrive Savannah 4 30 a m
Pullman Palace Sleeping Oars on this
train daily from Washington to Jacksonville,
Savannah to Jacksonville, between Cincin
nati and Jacksonville via Jesup, and Chi
cago and Jacksonville via Albany.
Passengers leaving Macon at 8 00 p m con
nect at Jesup with this train for Florida
daily.
Passengers from Florida by this train con
nect at Jesup with train arriving at Macon
at 700 am daily, making connections for
pointe West and Northwest.
Passengers for Brunswick take this train,
arriving at Brunswick at 535 a m daily.
Leave Brunswick 830 p m. Arrive Savan
nah 4 30 a ni.
Passengers from Savannah for Gainesville,
Oila’’ Keys and Florida Transit Road (ex
tent Fernandina) take this train.
Passengers for the Florida Southern Rail
road via Jacksonville make close connection
at Palatka.
Main steamer- leave Bainbridge for Apa
lachicola every Sunday, and for Columbus
every Saturday.
Connection at Savannah daily with Charles
ton and Savannah Railway for all pointe
North and East.
Connection at Savannah daily with Cen
tral Railroad for points West and Northwest.
Close connection at Jacksonville daily
fdnr.dayt excepted) for Green Cove Springs
St Auuust ne, Palatka, Enterprise, Sanford
and all landings on St. John’s River.
Trains on B. and A. R. R. le ive junction,
going West, at 12 2J p m, and for Brunswick
at 3 43p m daily, except Run >’<?.»•. 1
Through tickets sold and sleeping berth
accommodations secured at Bren a Ticket
Office, 22 Bull street, and nt the Company’s
Depbt, foot of Liberty street. Tickets also
on sale at Leve <fc Alden’s Tourist Offices.
A new restaurant and lunch counter haa
been opened in the station at Waycross, and
abundant time will be allowed for meals by
all passenger trains.
J. S. TYSON, JAS. L. TAYLOR,
Master Transp’n Gen'l Pass. Agt.
R. G. FLEMING, Superintendent.,
RAILROADS.
Weston and Savannah Bailway Company.
Savannah, Ga., Jan. 15, 1883.
/COMMENCING MONDAY, January 15,
vJ at 730 a m, and until further notice,
trains will arrive and depart as follows:
Going North—Trains 47 and 45.
Lv 5avannah............ 415 pm 7 30am
Ar Charleston 9 30pm 100 pm
Lv Charleston 830 pm 1140 am
Ar Florence 120 am 4 20pin
Lv Wilmington 640 am 9 30pm
Ar We1d0n........ 1250 pm 406 am
Ar Petersburg 3 10 p m 710 a m
A r Richmond 440 p m 822 a m
Ar Washington 940 pm 130 pm
Ar 8a1tim0re............11 40pm 200 pm
Ar Philadelphia 330 a m 630 p m
Ar New York 650 a m 935 p m
Coming South—Trains 48 and 42.
Lv Charleston 600 a m 325 p m
Ar Savannah 1110 am 9 20pm
Passengers by 415 p m train connect a\
Charleston Junction with trains to all points
North and East via Richmond and all rail
line, or Weldon and Bay Line; by 7 30 a m
train to all pointe North via Richmond.
For Augusta, Beaufort and Port Royal.
Lv Savannah 730 a m 415 p m
Ar Yemassee 10 05 a m 640 p m
Lv Yemassee 1010 am 640 pm
Ar Beaufort 8 00pm
Ar Port Royal 8 15 p m
Ar Augusta 3 25 p m
Lv Augusta 100 pm
Lv Port R0ya1...... 6 00 a m
Lv Beaafort 6 20 a m
Ar Yem ssee 610 pm 815 am
Lv Yemassee 640 pm 8 43am
Ar Savannah 920 p m 1110 a m
A firsUclass dining oar attached to all
trains, affording passengers a fine meal at
swe-il expense.
Pallman Prdace Sleepers through from Sa
vannah to Washington and New York.
For tickets, etc., apply to William Bren,
ticket agent, 22 Bull street, and at Charles
ton and Savannah Railway Ticket Office a,
the Savannah, Florida and Western Railway
depot. G. S. GADSDEN, Supt
8. C. BorurroK, G. P. A.
£MHT TENNESSEE, VIRGINIA aN*
GA. R’Y.—The Great Southern Trnnj
Line between all Principal Southern Citief
for Freight and Passengers. Shortest, direct
and most comfortable route to all Eastern
and Virginia Cities. Only direct route to
the Watering Places and Resorts of East
Tennessee and Virginia. The Great Emigrant
route to Texas and the Northwest, via its
Memphis and Charleston Division, and to
all pointe in Southern and Central Texas
via Calera or Meridian, and New Orleans.
Through Sleeping cars from Memphis to
New York, via Roanoke and the new Shen
andoah Valley Line; also through Sleepers
to New Orleans, via Roanoke, connecting
with line to New York. Georgia Division
now open through from Brunswick to
Dallas, via Macon and Atlanta, and will b«
epen through to Chattanooga, via Rome, at
an early day. Waycross Line to Florida and
Its Georgia connections. Pamphlets free oa
annbnation to Gen. Pass. Agt. Atlanta. Gt*
D&BUTTS
DISPENSARY.
XsUtliihei IM7 st 12 X. Sth Stmt, W. LOOT, ».
THE Phrticiua in charge ot this old and veil known
inatitution are regular graduatea in medicine and
surgery. Years of Experience in the treatment ot
Chronic Disease* have made their •kill and ability
to much superior to that ot the ordinary practitioner,
that they have acquired a national reputation through
their treatment of complicated case*.
oeaa, without using Mercury or Poisonous Medicines.
YOUNG MEN <“><l those of middle ago who are
■NMafelMlMlauirenne from tl.e thfCU ot a
diseaae Hurt unflta Its netuna for buaiuesa or marriage,
permanently cured, ai moderate expense.
l-l« tt wstiisl M be anwareU by patieal* deuriau Ireaueenl
mailed free ta any addrea* an auptwatSM.
*ss4 lev* aM»e<Mng<e their Wruurr. 1I h set a
< tyimww tainetlyeoeMeaiial ted .heuid ba addreaaed
*• nun », >ai*w«b at’ »*.,
BUSINESS NOTICES.
ATTENTION EVERYBODY.
The star still shines, and the queen still lives
Madane Smith, the queen and star of fortune tell
era, is still located at 908 Perry street, and if too
have had aloes, worried about yonr easiness, or
your heart is sad in regard to your lover s treatment
to you, call on Madame Smith, who will tell yon the
past, present and future as true as gospel, and re
veal It to yon so plain that yon, like the many
thousands, will contradict her being a human being
on earth. She has no superior, and her equal has
never been in the known quarters of the globe.
Residence 909 Perry street, fourth door from West
Broad street. sept 96-tf
HELP ONE ANOTHER,
Our subscribers and readers will please kindly rea
our advertisements and buy from the merchant
and business men who are advertising with us
Don't patronize men who win not advertise in a col
ored man’s paper for the colored man’s trade. Let
our people prove that we have rights which they
are bound to respect, when It comes down to busi
ness principles.
TO THE PUBLIC.
I have removed my Shaving, Hair Cutting and
Tonsorlal Saloon to 36 Whitaker street, second door
from State street, where it will afford me great
pleasure in giving ample satisfaction to my custom
ers, friends and the public in general. Respectfully
oct T-tf J. JEFFERSON, Proprietor.
Bibles, Hymn Books, Books for Min
■ isters, Books for Bible Students,
Books for Superintendents, Books for Teachers,
Books for Sunday Schools, you should send to the
General Book Agency of J. 11. Brown. Give us a
trial. Agent for Rubber Name Stamps and Outfits;
price $1 by mail, postpaid: Send for Catalogue.
Address letters and send orders to J. H. BROWN,
General Book Agent, 139 Congress street, f-avan
nan, Ga.
A LIVE BARBER.
Mr. Jas. Carey, the barber on Bryan street, be
tween Jefferson and Market Square, continues to
turn out first-class shaved men at 10 cents each, and
no questions asked. Give him a trial and you will
not regret it
For Photographs and Ferrotypes go to Ryan's
Photograph Parlors, 139 X Congress St.
PRIVATE SCHOOL.
My School will be re-opened Monday, Octobers-
It is earnestly hoped parents will again lake advan
tage of the private school system and send their
children. Terms reasonable, satisfaction guar
anteed. Residence and school cor. South Broad
street lane and Montgomery.
septll-3mo MOSES L. JACKSON, Principal.
THESE ARE CUT AND DRIED
FACTS.
Bring your Job Printing right along to the Echo
office, 5 Jefferson street, corner of Bay lane. It is
the cheapest and best place in the city at which to
get your work done quickly. Patronize this enter
prise ; it is owned and managed by colored men.
Notice to Subscribers.
Subscribers of the ECHO finding a
cros-mark on the margin of their
paper to-day will please renew or settle
up the balance due. We would esteem
such an act as one of great kindness on
the part of those who are so willingly
assisting us to push the good work
along.
If you fail to receive yonr paper notify us a
once.
Bring yonr Job Printing right along to the Echo
office, 5 Jefferson street.
After you are through reading yonr paper send It
to some friend in the country, the favor will, no
doubt, be highly appreciated.
Have yonr invitations, cards, tickets and bills
printed at the Ecuo office. It is the cheapest and
best place in the city.
Price of The Echo only five cents per cony at
Estill’s news depot, under the Screven House
every Sunday morning the year round.
o Should any of our subscribers fail to receive their
papers regularly, they will confer quite a favor up
n us by giving notice of the same at once.
Do $o Yourself
—AND—
ENCOURAGE OTHERS
TO DO LIKEWISE I
SUBSCRIBE FOR
THE SAVANNAH
Weekly Echo!
A LIVE, INDEPENDENT REPUB
UCAH JOURNAL
Published, Edited and Managed
by Colored Men.
THE ECHO is issued every
Sunday Morning the year
round at 82 per year, or 81.25
for six months, strictly in ad
vance. The paper will be de
livered regularly at your resi
dence by mail or carrier with
out extra charge. As an ad
vertising medium among all
classes THE ECHO is second
to none in the State. For
further particulars or informa
tion call at or .address the
CHO office, 5 Jefferson Street,
corner of Bay Lane, Savannah,
Ga.
IFT.TfT unmiOß
crmst;! Sax XUvtffS. ,
Certain women in Burmah have beanls
like the Skye terrier.
Brotherhoods for building bridges
existed in France in the twelfth cen
tury. •
Savon, the French word for soap, is
ascribed to Savona, the place at whicb-it
was first manufactured.
The raw skins of cattle were usually
suspended on stakes, and used instead of
kettles to boil meat in Great Britain.
The czar of Russia wields a sceptre
over thirty-eight different nationalities
each speaking a language of its own.
The idea that silks and ribbons are
boiled in oil has no foundation in fact,
and probably originated in some shop
keeper’s mind as a device whereby to
sell his goods.
A German physician who has exam
ined the ears of 5,905 school children
says that in the majority of cases is
which children appear to be inattentive
they are simply deaf.
The King of Dahomey, on state oc
casions, puts a finely clad official under i
gorgeous umbrella and directs him to
take his royal compliments to his friend
the ocean. This done, the official i»
tossed to the sharks.
It was an ancient Irish belief that hu
man hair should never be burnt, only
buried, because at the resurrection the
former owner of the hair will come tc
seek it; and that it ought not to be
thrown away, “lest some bird should
find it ind carry it off, causing the own
er’s head to ache all the time the bird
was busy working the hair into the nest.”
A thousand years ago glass was formed
into ewers by some Asiatic people; iron
could be hammered into the most beau
tiful and thinest of bowls, and tne Per
sians made metal peacocks with spread
ing tails; wood carving was as well un
derstood in Japan 1,200 years since as at
almost any later period; sculptures in
marble were as perfect then as now; and
the manufacture of porcelain in Chinn
was as thoroughly understood and as
successfully practiced then as recently.
The Dutch taxes in the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries are exceedingly
onerous. Bread was taxed when the
corn came from the mill, and again when
the loaves came from the oven. There
were taxes on butter, fish and fruit,while
the duties levied on meat, salt, beer,
wine and spirits was as high as 100 per
cent. Rents paid a tax of twenty five
per cent.; in fact, there was scarcely
anything that escaped taxation except
that which depleted the country of its
capital—the speculations of its merchants
in the public funds of other nations.
By many individuals in many coun
tries an oath is regarded very lightly.
To them it is just as easy to swear as to
sneeze, and in many instances easier. In
the Eastern nations, among the Moham
medans, an extraordinary sanctity is at
tached to a solemn asseveration, and the
belief in punishment hereafter to a per
jurer is carried to a degree of fanaticism.
When a Hindoo or a Burmese swears, he
implicates not himself alone, but all his
kindred to the seventh degree, all hia
personal acquaintances, and all his pos
terity. When he, through lapse oT
memory, perjures himself, all these arc
condemned to “ten kinds of punishment
and five attacks of enemies.” Should
the perjury be of a more serious form,
the ‘‘earth will open and swallow tlistn
all up. - ’ Should he knowingly make a
false oath, all his friends and acquaint
ances will be precipitated into eighty
great hells and one hundred and twenty
small ones.
HEALTH HINTS.
Thoroughwort tea is good for headache.
Pimples are caused by improper diet.
Cosmetics only injure.
A medical Englishman prescribes a
sAit/ug isUrtftiun ot enromic acid for warts.
Vaseline is good for chapped hands.
Borax in the water whitens and softens
them.
To avoid getting too stout, eat lean
meat and few vegetables. Do not use
much sugar or butter.
As a remedy for bee stings a corre
spondent of the Sheffield (England) Inde
pendent says : “ When a person is stung
by a bee or wasp let him take a little
common whiting, mix it with cold water
into a paste and apply it to the part af
fected. In a few minutes the pain will
cease. ”
Sassafras is recommended for ivy poi
soning. A tea made of the bark of red
sassafras, sweetened to the taste, may be
taken internally, while cloths soaked in
the cold tea are applied to the irritable
parts. — Dr. Foote's Health Monthly.
A Mexican Hacienda.
Much, says a correspondent of the In
dianapolis Journal, has been said and
written about the extent and possibilities
of these Mexican haciendas, but probably
few people realize the enormous extent of
some of them. In the Central and
Northern States of Mexico are found es
tates large enough to hide many a princi
pality of Europe or States like our own lit
tle “Rhody.” A million and a half of acres
—of this fruitful soil which bears every
thing grown in both temperate and tropi
cal zones, and produces two crops a year
—is a neat little farm, by no means to be
“despised,” as the immortal Sairy Gamp
said of “vittals.” The famous Solado
ranch, for example, contains over six
hundred square miles, ft lies partly in
the States of Nuevo Leon, Coahulia,
Zacatecas and San Luis Potosi, on the
highway to the city of Mexico, and on
the line of the Mexican Central railway.
It is at at an elevation of 4,000 feet, on
the famous central table-lands of the re
public. Its bounderies extend more
than one hundred miles from north to
south. Chains of mountains, how rich
in mineral wealth no man knows, traverse
it, and flourishing farms and mining
towns are met with at frequent intervals.
The fact is, all Mexico is owned by a
comparatively few individuals, which is
the reason why there is such a wide dis
tinction of caste and so little progress in
agriculture and manufactures. Generally
the proprietor of these vast estates enjoys
life abroad or in the city of Mexico, and
his peons living on the land take about
as much interest in the cultivation
thereof as would negro slaves without
an overseer.
Water Fowls as Barometers.
Ina new book called “The Fowler in
Ireland” Sir Ralph Payne Galwert states
that the movement of the water fowl in
dicate approaching changes in the weath
er more surely than any barometer. Thus,
if ducks fly but a short way after a shot, a
violent gale may be confidently expected.
“ Snipe, like duck, will rest and feed in
prospect of a disturbance of the elements.
When the gale comes roaring down, per
haps accompanied by rain or sleet, these
birds will rise from their retreat, and
whirl about like dead leaves in the murky
sky.” An arrival of wild swan intimates
a severe frost ; if they leave suddenly as
they came, the weather will turn mild
again. Herons w’ill break away from
their fishing when it is coming on to blow
from a certain quarter, for they dislike
heating homeward in the teeth of the
wind.
Tribunes of the people were first cho
sen at Rome 494 B. C., when the people,
after a conflict with the senate, had re
tired to Mons Sacer. The last tribune
was Rienzi, who in 1354 was assasinated,
after having assumed the position and re
formed many abuses.
More than 2,000,000 visitors attended
the international fisheries exhibit at
London.
Ml ALLIGATOR AS A PET
A nw YOBX TOVWO liADT’S FAVO*-
XTN OOXFAMXOM.
Saurian with Her when
• She Drive* Ont—The Cost of He
naierie Carlo title*.
A New York correspondent of the Chi
cago News write* as follows: Miss Virgie
Rensselaer, a Murray hill lady of many
attractions, possesses a pet that outshines
the pug dog as much as Maud 8. is faster
than a Van Buren street car. It is a
Florida alligator, a year old, and measur
ing three feet from tip to tip. The
creature’s name is“Darlie,”and it occupies
the other half of Miss Rensselaer’s phae
ton seat when she rides out. A strange
Set. for a menagerie owner, let alone a
elicate young lady; still, it is novel and
attracts attention, and its owner evi
dently feels she is in the swim when
thousands of persons stare at her outfit.
“Darlie” was raised by Charles Reiche, a
professional animal importer of this city,
and he sold the thing for $2OO. The
wife of a well-known ex-judge
of the superior court has a
carriage pet in the shape of a beautiful
silver-gray fox, small in size, and very
affectionate. “ Oh, I sell lots of such
pets to fine ladies, ” said Mr. Reiche, as I
stood in the rear of his Chatham street
store teasing a big baboon with my cane.
“ The most expensive one I oversold was
a gazelle to Adelaide Neilson, the En
glish actress. The creature was wonder
fully beautiful and intelligent, and its
eyes were perfectly fascinating. Miss
Neilson gave me $l,OOO for it, and then
I didn’t make any great profit. I make
a business of importing animals, and
supplying menageries and zoological
gardens.”
* “ What is a good, big lion worth ?” 1
asked, thinking of a friend in Chicag
to whom I intend sending a Christmas
present.
“Well, the price varies. I’ve got an
old menagerie lion that has been over
the road a good many years, and you can
have him for $5OO. Then I’ve got a nice,
healthy African, young and sound, that
I will sell you for $2,500, and he's worth
every cent of it. Don’t you want to buy
a pair of elephants? I’ve got the dandy
team, and will let them go for $5,000.
Good tigers are worth from $l,OOO to
$2,000, but there is not much call for
them. They are difficult to manage and
keep, and very dangerous. Perhaps you
would like a rhinoceros. I’ve got just
one, two and a half feet high, and the
only one now alive in captivity, and I’ll
sell him for $3,500, but am not anxious
about it. I love to look at the creature.
There’s a cow antelope over there, and
she is worth $3OO. Next spring she will
be worth $500; so you might sjieculate.”
“ Are giraffes as scarce as the circus
men claim?”
“Yes, they are scarce, and ten times
more delicate than a new-born babe. .
They must be kept in a certain tempera
ture all the time, and a keeper must sleep
with them. They cost from $2,000 for
one fourteen feet high, to $4,000 for one
eighteen feet high. I never keep them
on hand, and only take an order for
them to be delivered a year after. Just
. mug' I am devoting my attention to os
triches, and last week sent six large ones
to Orange county, Florida, for Chariton
Jones, who will begin ostrich farming.
'< got these birds in Nubia, after a great
Ideal of trouble, and think them the tin
iest specimens ever captured. They cost
(mo $6OO each laid down in New York.
Tjhey will be shackled when the farm is
reached, so as to prevent their killing
either animals. They are plucked once a
yf ear when under three years old, and
t/wice a year when five years old
a\nd over. At each plucking every,
Ifird yields feathers worth from $7O to
V9O. By the way, I’ve got a nice
‘ostrich left over, which you can have for
<s4oo. He is warranted to eat fruit cans,
hobpekirts, old boots, and broken
ery?’
“Are those spotted animals leopards?”
“ Yes, a beautiful pair, and I will sell
them for $BOO. That laughing hyena
over there is a young one, very large and
full of tricks, and he is worth $3OO.
Monkeys? Well, yes; I’ve got ’em in all
sizes and conditions. There’s an organ
grinder’s monkey in that top cage ybu
can have for $l2 and he will steal his ■
cost ten times a day if given half a
chance. There is lots of difference in mon
keys, and they range in price from $lO
to $250. That pair in the silver-bar cage
are my personal pets, and I won’t sell
them "for any price. I have had them a
long time, and they are the animals
Henry Ward Beecher described last win
ter in a lecture on evolution. Sea lions
sell all the way from $3OO to $5OO, while
a good buffalo brings $250. Fond of
birds? Well, there are six swans, and
I’ll sell them for $lOO. Nothing in Cen
tral nark to compare with them. If you
are thinking of buying a pet let me call
your attention to this anaconda, thirty
feet in length, weighs 200 pounds, and
sleeps wrapped in two of A. T. Stew
art’s finest ■wool blankets. No trouble
at all to keep him. Put half a dozen
rabbits, pigeons and dogs in the cage oc
casionally. and he’ll manage to live like
a lord. lam asking to-day for thirty
foot anacondas $9OO, and Vanderbilt
can’t hill or bear the market a single
point ” • I
Singing Sand.
A. A. Julien, of New York, and Fl.
C. Bolton, of Connecticut, contributed a
paper to a recent number of Science, rela
tive to a scientific investigation of the
‘Singing Beach” of Manchester, Mass.
The phenomenon which gives rise to the
mme of the beach is confined to the por
tion of sand lying between the water-
Ihe and the loose sand above the reach
ot ordinary high tide. Portions emit
tie sound; but closely contiguous areas
fal to do so, or answer feebly. The
scunding sand is near the surface; at
tie depth or one or two feet it ceases,
pirhaps because of moisture. The sound
is produced by pressure, and may be
likened to a subdued crushing; it is of
lov intensity and pitch, is not me
tallic nor crackling. It occurs
when the sand is pressed by ordinary
■walking, increases with sudden pressure
oi the foot upon the sand, and is per
ceptible upon mere stirring by the hand,
oi even plunging one finger and remov
ing it suddenly. It can be intensified by
diagging wood over the beach.
The authors review and cite very fully
tte literature of the subject, giving in
fill a description of the singing sands of
tie island of Kaui, one of the Hawaiian
S. That gives a sound as of distant
er when anything of weight is
dragged over it. Dampness prevents the
soiiid. That sand is calcareous. Hugh
Miler cites similar instances at Jabel
Nakous in Arabia Petrea, and Reg Rawan
nek Cabul. Those are silicious sands.
The sounds were a sort of humming. In
Clurchill county, Nevada, a similar phe
nomenon is described with regard to a
sand-hill, as like the sound of telegraph
wkes when wind blows them.
The Meadows of Maryland.
! PRINCE GEORGE’S Co.,
Ms. Mr. Ch£s. G. Addison, of the
stove place states: “I sprained my right
' knee causing intense suffering, and the
uas of crutches for several weeks. I
famd no relief in other remedies and
finally tried the miracle of cure, St. Ja
cobs Oil. In a short time I could bend
my knee—which had been as stiff as an
irin rod—laying aside my crutches and
was able to walk as well as ever.”
Beware of making your moral staple
coisist of the negative virtues. It is
good to abstain and teach others to ab
stain from all that is sinful or hurtful.
But making a business of it tends to
emaciation of character unless one feeds
largely also on the more nutritious diet
of kcttva, sympathetic Immvolmwo»
mowN mcuTOR.
Letter*.
[Rocbetter Democrat and Chronicle].
We published in our local columns yester
day morning a significant letter from a gen
tleman known personally or by reputation to
nearly every person in the land. Wo have
receive! a number of letters pry test ng
again the use of our columns for bueli “pal
pable frauds and misrenresciitatious;” there
fore, to confirm beyond a doubt the authen
ticity of the letter, and the genuineness of
its sentiments, a reporter of this paper was
oommiesioned to ascertain all the possible
facts in the matter. Accordingly he visited
Clifton Springs, saw the author of the letter,
and with the following result:
Dr. Henry Foster, the gentleman In ques
tion, is 63 or 64 yean of age and has an ex
tremely cordial manner. lie presides as su
perintendent over the celebrated sanitarium
which accommodates over five hundred
guests and is unquestionably the leading
health resort of the country. Several years
ago this benevolent man wisely determined
to be his own executor; and, therefore turned
over this magnificent property, worth s3o<>,-
OJO, as a free gift to a board of trustees,
representing the principal evengelical de
nominations. Among the trustees are Bishop
A. C. Coxa, Protestant Episcopal, Buffallo;
Bishop Mathew Simpson, Philadelphia,
Methodist Episcopal; President M. B. An
derson, of th > University of Rochester; Rev.
Dr. Clark, Secretary of the A. B. C. F. M.,
Boston. The Itenevolent purpose of the in
stitution is the care : 1st —of evangelical
missionaries and their families whoso health
has been broken in their work, -’d—of
ministers, of any denomination, in good
standing. 3d—of members of any church
who otherwise would bo unable to secure
such care and treatment. The current ex
penses of the institution are met by the re
ceipt from the hundreds of distinguished
and wealthy people who every year crowd
its utmost capacity. Here conic men and
women who were once in perfect health, but
neglected the first symptoms of disease. The
uncertain pains they felt at first were over
looked until their health became impaired.
They little realized tbe danger before them,
nor how alarming even trifling ailments
might prove. They constitute all classes,
including ministers" and bishops, lawyers,
judges, statesmen, millionaires, journalists,
college professors and officials from all parts
of the land.
Drawing the morning Democrat and
Chronicle from his pocket, the reporter re
marked: “Doctor, that letter of yours, has
created a good deal of talk, and many orour
readers has questioned its authenticity.”
“To what do you refer,” remarked the doc
tor.
“Have you not seen the paper I”
“Yes, but I have not had time to read it
yet."
The reporter thereupon show, d him the
letter, which was as follows:
Clifton Springs Sanitarium Co., >
Clifton Springs, N. Y., Oct. 11,1883. [
Dear Sir: I am using Warner’s Safe Cure,
and 1 regard it as the best remedy for some
forms of kidney disease that we have. lam
watching with great care some cases I am
now treating with it, and I hope for favor
able results.
I wish you might come down yourself, as
I would like very much to talk with you
about your sterling remedy and show you
over our institution.
Yours truly,
[Signed] Henry Foster, M. D.
“I do not see why anybody should be skep
tical concerning that letter,” remarked the
doctor.
“Isn’t it unusual for a physician of your
standing and influence to commend a pro
prietary preparation !
“1 don’t know how it may be with others,but
tn this institution we allow no person to dic
tate to us wbat we shall use. Our purpo-e is
to cure the sick, and for that work we use
anything we know to be valuable. Because
I know W arner’s Safe Cure is a very valua
ble preparation, I commend it. As its power
is manifested under my use, so shall I add to
the completeness of my commendation.’'
“Have you ever analyzed it, doctor?”
“We always analyze before we try any
preparation of which we do not know the
constituents. But analysis, you know, only
gives the elements; it does not give the all im
portant proportions. The remarkable power
of Warner’s Safe Cure undoubtedly consists
in tbe proportions according to which its ele
ments are mixed.” While there may be a
thousand remedies made of the same ele
ments, unless they are put together in proper
iirojxirtions they are worthless as kidney and
liver preparations.
“ I hope some day to meat Mr. Warner per
sonally, and extend fuller congiatulations to
him on the excellence of his preparations. I
have heard much of him as the founder of the
Warner Observatory, and as a man of large
benevolence. The reputed high character of
the man himself gave assurance to me in the
first place that he would not put a remedy
upon the market that was not trustworthy -
and it was a source Of a good deal of gratifi
cation to me to find out by actual experiment
that the remedy itself sustained my impres
sions.”
The conclu-ion reached by Dr. Foster is
precisely the same found by Dr. Dio Lewis
Dr. Robert A. Gunn, ex-Su. geon-General
Gal'agher and others, and proves heyond a
doubt the great efficacy of the remedy which
has awakened so much attention in tho land
an I res ued so many men. women and chil
dren from disease and 'death.
True to Himself.
“ There is one tiling that I cun say,”
remarked the tramp, after he had fin
ished the gratuitous refection, “I have
always been true to myself. Yes, ma'am,
I have lived a consistent life, and I’m
proud of it. I was born dependent —
man at birth is the most dependent of
animals, you know—and I’ve been de
pendent ever since.”
THE MARKETS,
NEW YOBi G
Beef cattle, good to prime 1 w 11
Calves, com’n to prime veals G' -iih’ 9JJ
Sheep
Lamos 5 (id
Hogs—Live
Dressed, city 6 <3 tiiz
Flour—Ex. St., good to fancy 4 05 (d 600
West good to choice 4 30 (,i 7 00:
Wheat—No 2. Red 110 (3 Ili 4
No. 2 Wiiite 98 @ 1 Ll [z
Rye—State (a 78
Barley—Two-rowed State... @B2
Corn—Ungrad. West, mixed. 52 @ ' 0
Yellow Southern..... 1.3
Oats —While S ate U @ a >
Mixed We tern. 35 3’
Hay—Med. to pr. Timo thy.. 68 9j
Straw—No. 1, Rye @ ’5
Lard—City Steam @7O
Butter■—State Creamery..... 33 @ :.4
Dairy 26 <« 2-1
West. Im. Creamery :.O @ 3 5
Factory. @ is
Cheese—State Factory 12 @ I2'<f
Skims, 2 O 5
Western 10 @ 11
Eggs—State and Penn 27 1 ' @ 2 s
Potatoes—State bbl 1 25 @1 t-2
BUFFALO.
Steers—Good to Choice 575 @ G 0 )
liambs—Western 425 @ 5 0)
Sheep—Western 350 @4 75
Hogs—Good to choice Yorks, 450 @ f> t
Flour—C’y ground n. process. 750 @8 00
Wheat—No. 1. Hard Duluth.. 1 t t @
Corn—No. 2, Mixed New.... 5 @
Cats —No. 2, Mixed Western. 35 @
Barley—Two-rowed State... 78 @ 80
BOSTON.
Beef —Ex. plate and family.. 12 ;0 @1 0
Hogs —Live
Northern Dressed.... 6 ! 4 @
Pork—Ex. Prime, per bbl. ...11 75 @l2 00
Flour—Winter Wheatpatents @ c 50
Corn —High Mixed 6.">t._,@ <;•;
Oafs —Extra White 4 @ 44
Rye—State 72 @ 75
WATERTOWN (MASS.) CATTLE MARKET
Beef—Extra quality 6 37- @ ZOO
Sheep—Live weight ii'i
Lambs 4"@ 6
Hogs—Northern, d. w....... 6 @
WIILADELPHIA.
Flour—Penn, ex family, good 500 (3)
Wheat—No. 2, Red lU'V@ 1 07« f
Rye—State 60 '@ 65
Corn—State Yellow..' 58 @ 62
Oats—Mixed 34 @
Butter—(r< amery Extra Pa.. 2) @ 3>
Butter— ('nameryErtraPa.. 2J _ 3>
Cheese—N. Y. FnllCream.... 1' 13
WACOBsnn
GERmanremedY
FOR
CURES
Rheumatism, neuralgia, Sciatica,
Lumbago. Backache, Headache, Toothache,
■ore Threat, • wellln**, Spr«in*.BraU«>*
Barn*. Scnld*. Frost Bitea,
AXD ALL OTHBB BODILY PAIBB ABD ACHI*.
Saia b, DruaaUu .ad Dealer. ...owliiri PlAjOaMaaheltb-
Direction* la 11 latpue.
TBl VHAKUU A. VIHIILKB CO. 13
MaaaeA voe*Laa«oo.> mWiora.MA.C.a. A
“ Steam ia a great thing,” remarked a
| French traveler in a railway carriage to
his vis-a-vis. “So it ia,” was the reply.
“ I owe my fortune to it.” “ Monsieur ia
manager of a company?” “No.” “An
engineer, perhapaF’ “No; I have lost a
number of rich relatives by railroad acci
dents.’’
School Teachers.
Mr. H. L. Sofkb, principal of the High
School at Poquonock, Conn., says in rotation
to a matter which ha« given him much anxiety
and pain: “ My wife and I have both used
Hunt’s Remedy, and find it really a superior
article. A year or so ago my kidneys became
weak and sluggish, owing to a severe strain,
and finding relief in Hunt’s Remedy I con
tinued its use until 1 had used four bottles,
when I became well. Since my cure I have
suggested its use to a great number of people,
who I know have been benefited by using it.”
And to substantiate this statement, Mr. H.
S. Clark, assistant superintendent of the
High School, says: “I can certify to the
value of Hunt’s Remedy, having received
great benefit from its use. My troubles com
menced twelve yean ago, when my kidneys
became afflicted with inflammation of the
passages, but the timely use of so valuable a
medicine arrested the disease. I can now
cheerfully recommend it to all Buffering as I
was.” May 31,1883.
Telegraph Item.
Utica, June 9,1888,
Fba:<k W. Hoffman, clerk of the American
District Telegraph Co., says: “Having had
occasion to use a medicine for kidney trouble
with a lame back, I was recommended by one
of our Utica druggists to use Hunt's Remedy,
as he had sold a good deal of it to many of
our leading families here with great success
for kidney, liver and urinary troubles. I
purchased some, and have only used three bot
tles. It has cured me, and I can truly recom
mend Hunt's Remedy to any one in need of
the beet medicine for these complaints.”
Silk culture is on the rapid increase along
the Gulf coast from New Orleans to Mobile.
"Golden Medical Discovery’’
hasbvc-i used with signal success in con
sumption of the lungs, consumptive night
sweats, spitting of blood, shortne-s of breath,
weak lungs, coughs, bronchitis and kindred
affection- of throat and chest. Bold by drug
gists.
Im New Orleans the opera season will open
this week with ‘‘Faust.’’
“ Men must work and women weep,
So runs the world away 1”
But they need not weep so much if they
use Dr. Pierce’s “Favorite Prescription,
i which cures all the painful maladies peculiar
to women. Sold by druggists.
Both shores of Mobile bay are becoming
covered with orange groves.
Health first, riches afterward. All forms
of heart disease, including palpitation, rheu
matism, spasms, bony formation, enlarge
ment, valvular derangements, acute pains in
loft breast, etc., yield to the use of Dr.
Graves’ Heart Regulator. SI per bottle at
. druggists.
Arkansas is becoming a resort for hunters
and fishermen.
The huge, drastic, griping, sickening pills
' are fast being superseded by Dr. Pierce’s
: "Purgative Pellets?’ Sold by druggists.
San Francisco wants orld’s fair in
I 1887.
Ne:hin* Like It.
No medicine has ever been known so effec-
I tual in the cure of all those diseases arising
■ from an impure condition of the blood as
Scoville Sarsaparilla, or Blood and Liver
I Syrup, for the cure of scrofula, white swell
ings, rheumatism, pimples, bl itchei, erup
tions, venereal sores and diseases, consump
tion, goitre, boils, cancers, and all kindred
diseases. No better m ans of securing a
beautiful complexion can be obtained than
by using Scovill’s Bio-4 and Liver Syrup,
which cleanses th • b'ood and gives beauty to
the skin.
Walnut Real Umr itesiorer.
It is entirely different from all others, ft
is as clear as water, and as its name indicates
is a perfect Vegetable Hair Restorer. It will
immediately free the head from all dandruff,
I restore gray hair to its natural color, and pro
duce a new growth where it has fallen off. It
I does not in any manner affect the health,
i which sulphur, sugar of lea I and nitrate of
I silver preparations have done. It will change
! light or faded hair in a few days to a beauti
i ful glossy brown. Ask your druggist for it.
Each bottle is warranted. Smith, Kline &
CO., Wholesale Agents, Philadelphia, Pa.,
and C. N. Cbittenton, New York.
Aensxan’s Peptonized beep tonic, the only
i preparation of beef containing its entire niftri
j tious properties. It contains blood-making,
I force generating and life-sustaining properties;
i invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous
■ prostration, and all forms of general debility;
also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the
result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over-
I work or acute disease, particularly if resulting
from pulmonary complaints. C . swell, Hazard A
' Co., Proprietors, New York. Sold by druggists.
I
On Thittv Davs’ Trial.
The Voltaic Belt Co.. Marshall, Mich..wiD
i tend Dr. Dye's Celebrated Electro-Voltiic
Belts and Electric Appliances on trial for
thirty days to men (young or old) who are
afflicted with nervous debility, lost vitality
and kindre I troubles, guar.mtc -in speedy
and complete restoration of health an In a-ily
vigor. Address as above. N. B.—Noriskis
incurred, as thirty d iys’ trial is allowed.
Extreme Tired Feeling.—A lady tells us
"the first bottle has done my daughter a
great d< a! of good, her food does not distress
her now. nor do s she suffer from tha‘ ex
treme tired fedinif which she did before
taking Hood's Sarsnpar Ila.” A second bot
tle effected a cure. No other preparation
contains such a concentration of vitah'.ing,
enri hing. purifying and invigorating prop
erties as Ho-xl's Sai sap irilla. Sold by drug
gists. IUO doses $l.
I was troubled with Chronic Catarrh and
gathering in my head, was very deaf a
times, had discharges from my ears, and was
unable to breathe through my nose. Before
the second 1 Kittle of Ely’s Cream Balm was
exhausted I was cured, and to-dav enjoy
sound health.—C. J. Corbin, 1’23 Chestnut
street, Field Manager, Philadelphia Pub.
House, Penn. (Bee adv't.)
Frazer Axle Grease.
One greasing lasts two weeks; all others two
or three days. Do not be imposed on by the
humbug stuffs offered. AskyourdealerforFra
zer’s, with label on. Saves your horse lab rand
you too. It received firstmedal at the Centen
nial and Paris Expositions. Sold everywhere
Mrs. M. Pilkington, 211 2»ith street, Brook
lyn, says: “I was a rheumatic cripple two
years; helpless for months, when my doctor,
after trying in vain everything else, told me
to get Dr. Elmore's R.-G. That cured me 1
Carbo-lines.
Strike the bosom of old mother earth,
And from her veins unseen
There flows an oil of untold worth
When made into Carboline.
Hood's Sarsaparilla is an extract of the
best remedies of the vegetable kingdom
known as Alteratives and Blood Purifiers.
Straighten your old boots and shoes with
Lyon's Patent Hoel Stiffeners, and wear
again. n
Use St. Patrick’s Salve, and learn its great
value. One trial convinces.
Piso's Cure will cure Coughs, Asthma,
Bronchitis and Consumption. 35 cents.
Danger from Catarrh
Depends upon the amount and extent of the scrofulous
infection. Unquestionably many deaths from con
sumption can tie trnced to neglected catarrh. There is
a tolent distress, protracted coughing spells, the
ey< » weep, the nose discharges copiously, and the
head seems about to split.
In such cases Hood’s Sarsaparilla corrects the ca
tarrh by its direct action in discharging the poison from
the blood through nature’s great outlets, so that
healthy, sound blood reaches the membranes and is
wholesome.
Catarrh in the Head
Is more prevalent than many are aware of, anti how
readily lelief may lie obtained by the use of Hood’s
Sarsaparilla, listen to the following:
I have been a sufferer with catarrh m the head for 15
rears. Never having found any benefit from the well
known remedies, I resolved to try a bottle of Hood's
Sarsaparilla for my catarrh. I would not take any
monied consideration for the good that one bottle did
me.-I. W. Lilits, Chicago, 111., Postal Clerk.
100 Doses OnelDollar
"I have been troubled with that distressing com
plaint, catarrh, and have been rising Hood’s Sarsapa
rilla, and find It one of the best remedies I have ever
taken.—Martin Shield, Chicago, ill.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Sold by drnggists, SI; six for $5. Prepared by C. I.
BAD, BAD, BAD BLOOD.
Some blood is bad because it is poor and weak. Some is bad because
it contains impurities. Some men have such bad blood that the wonder is
it does not poison the mosquitoes who come to bite them.
ni^J h V iC A red C °?° r blood is owing to the iron’which is present
Blood which has not enough iron in it is always unsatisfactory. The per
son in whose veins it circulates cannot be said to enjoy good health r
The efforts of expert chemists to produce a preparation of iron which
can be assimilated with the blood have P resulted £ tfiat perfectpXSon
which is an important part of Brown’s Iron Bitters. It is the only one
which freely enters into the blood. It is the only one which accnmniishc
the desired good.
Weak, poor, thin blood may be made rich and strong, and import
blood may be punfied by the use of that Great Iron Medicine,
Iron outers, g
A-Great-Froblem.
TAKE AIL TSE
Kidney & Liver
Medicines
BLOOD
PUBUTEBS,
Dyspepsia
And Indigestion Cures.
Ague, Fever,
And Bilious Specifics.
Brain & Nerve
Force Bevivers.
Great Health
Be storers.
IN SHORT, TAKE ALL THE BEST qnnll
tlen of all these, and the best qualities of nil
the best Medicines of the World and yon will
find that HOP BITTERS have the best cura
tive qualities aad powers of ail concentrated
tn them, and that they will cure when nny or
all ef these, singly or combined, fail. A thor
ough trial will glvejtosltlve proof ef this.
Thon«h ihaken ta
8 r j j fc every joint »nd fiber
’•nJ “ xzt
the system may yet
be freed from the
malignant vtria with
Hostetter** Stomach
Bitter*. Protect the
system against it with
this beneficent anti
spasmodic, which is
firßme remedy for
iver complaint, con
stipation, dyspepsia,
debility, rheumatism.
S&XtIT
O TEjSnS^" 0 "' 1
r*ATA ddH ELY’S cream balm
rhen applied by the fin
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rill be absorbed, effect
»aily cleansing the heed
>f catarrhal virus, caus
ng healthy secretions,
t allays inflammation,
irotectsthe membrane
>f the nasal passages
rom additional colds,
completely heals the
►ores and restores taste
►nd smell. A few ap
plications relieve. A
.borough (rvafmMl will
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