The Savannah tribune. (Savannah [Ga.]) 1876-1960, December 15, 1888, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

powcr ®who wallowed tl-.r ..1.-51 only h’-> heal i tv < ' visible, with all tho pationco and r perseverance of a faithful old ox. The I others followed him—the stronger ones I in front and and the weaker ones bring- I ing up tho rear. There were thirty- Ksevcn in the band and by tho time they Bid walked in tho same line they ®ft itjan open, well-beaten trail. Tho Bunter approached within a few yards ■f them. They wero greatly alarmed Bhen they saw him and made a few Buds in various directions; iut see- struggles were in vain they' Submitted to what seemed Bl impending fate, nnd fell Bin rear of their file-lea ler. This been the golden opportune y hunter, who could and would th< m all down in their tracks " b le stand. Bnt such was not 1 ■’ B>f our friend. 11 > saw in 'in - ban 1 a menu . Ca&J ,®.t wh.,t mil threatc:- i '■ Ve : -r l.t -.1 a-'. I .. -..h-’s .* tlk ! ' -t ilk- ’ ■ ft- SL g|. 1 / B & mX* Jb’ MF HL ' ■ ■' ~• 1B S'" . ■ ■■'''• * ■ w W'; ' c? m v,; v 1 { l/1 ‘ ' mET tho MmSSSwI ov,, telious an 1 laborious ;J ’ ... t _ reu - t| lo J OP;1 ; . b.t by wai,<W an 1 leali:-.i -9HHKI d. • animals’ ah 'a 1, the ]>a<-.. ■BBH were a'do 'to follow slowly. "" ' they reached tho trail of tho elk heEh a nd following after nino days of tedious and .painful traveling, tho party arrived at\ i ranch between the lipper falls of* Yellowstone and Yellowstohc Lake, on the Mb feiug River, which was kept by a ■ J /uaw man” and his wite, where they ■ enabled to lodge ai4 tv<'’•«,('♦ham- Kltfves and their stock, ind wSeuso th y F final.y reach u their hoxea in safety. - The band of elk passed oa down the r river, and our tourists never saw them Magais; but they have doubtlcas long ere this all fallen a prey to tho ruthless War that is constantly being wagp4 against them by hunters white and ra.d.-~• [Har per’s Magarino. £ll for a ‘V’/.. fJ ' ’ ' LX'' ||.- '■ -, y ; : tf > gsF ;.t » • HL ■P* t'.n'- ■t «'. <-il>l6 ail ,'r ,?-KUU-' tl'C' »ni’> 1 tl!0 aw * of tlie Kl<? part • Bfv, -,ts; lid. o’!. r, Rrnprror Ll.h.-'iil Ilk -iru.-C’ '■’ B* in wi.D:?. t-’.o ■hr’. i l v. !.:rh !'.<■ ,: Aft II t».o ' VW*#',? « •.■■■:, r.- ■■■ , it z--r. I. . B (:■. Si scarce y fi pl a |Kv . ■■ ■to:' K His most valuable. gg -y'„i ■"'■/■•-?7:’i : -'Vi'<H ■ i t - ! ' 1 ’ 11 * *b H ‘ ’•■'• •' 1 ! if Lit V ■ . " ‘ -, W t<> i U -'■.■ d ’.'. ■ H JrM phrases, and hid v.i.l then pasi . partly written by Hhti partly by the scribes of ■bet." ■Points for Tool-Workers. 2 steel firm has sent out a IlllJdesigned for tool-workers, an 1 it ■tins so much that is good that wo B f ß nt ont^ro , aa follows: Bk’t forgot to specify the purpose fthsteol ordered is to bo used. «» J’ !®L‘" ’’ ■■' ' 'A hJtdened and bro Ken piece much finer than that of the bar taken from. If the grain be as coarinb arior coarser than, the original ba?, the used (whatever it may have been) ™ too high to refine the steel in hard ening. Don’t decide the quality of any bar of steel by the appearance of its grain. The coarseness or fineness depends much more on the heat at which it left I the hammer or rolls than on its quality. * Don’t try to harden any bar of steel ! without first removing the scale from it. You will certainly be disappointed il you do, as the outside is likely to bi soft enough to silo easily. Don’t try to harden the large tools in a small bath or still water. Von Moltko in Battle. Whenever anybody arrived with tid ings of the fight wo clustered around to hear the news, Gon. von Moltko un folding a map meanwhile and explain ing the situation. This done, tho chief of tho staff, while awaiting the next re port, would either return to a seat that had been mado for him with gome knapsacks, or would occupy tho time walking about, kicking clods of dirt or small stones here and there, his hands clasped behind his back, his face pale and thoughtful. He was then nearly 70 years old, but because of his emaci ated figure, tho deep wrinkles in his face, and crow’s-feet about his eyes, he looked even older, his appearance be ing suggestive of the practice of church asceticisms rather than of his well known ardent devotion to the military profession.—[Gen. Sheridan, in Scrib> ncr’s. Disappearance of the Red Fish. According to tho Walla Walla (Wash ington Territory) Journal, tho red fish have for the first time in sixteen years disappeared from Wallowa Lake, and the packers arc idle in consequence. The fish are identical with the “blue black” salmon of tho Columbia, and have been accustomed to making the lake their breeding grounds, where they swarmed in immense numbers. Likovmany other fi h, they change ccloi t the breeding season. Tho blue black is”one of the finest species of salmon, I I its utter extermination seems to be i a matter oil only a short time. Thterestiiig to Scientists. Mbs Buyker Hill—Doyou have mud Indi m Summer in Colorado? 31 jor Wo liter—Yes, wo have a great deal more InMian Summer than you d< here in “I is go J” \ nijio In iiuu , Fumigation. The punctured letter is a thing of the past. All of the fumigating stations have been discontinued. Charlie Green, * who was at the station at the Ninety nine-mile post on the Savannah r yElprida and Western Railroad, three miles below Waycross, Ga., came into the city. There were five men at his station. They have been given thirty days’ leave of absence and pay. They handled from 18,000 to 22,000 letters per day, and 7,000 newspapers and periodicals. Each letter had to be punctured and smoked in the sulphur fumes for four hours. Then the letters had to be assorted and forwarded. Every letter had to be han dled twice. The sulphur fumes did not agree with the postal clerks, and their health was affected, but not seriously. They had a colored boy who went into the fumigating cars and scraped together the letters from the wire screens. About ten pounds of sulphur were burned at one time in a car, of which there were ’ three. The clerks do not see that they come out ahead, as they would have had forty-two days off had they been on their i regular railway routes. — Charleston, 8. ■ C., News and Courier. She Was Not that Kind. They were holding an auction of smuggled goods at the custom house, and the auctioneer was crying for bids on a shawl worth a couple of dollars, when a woman on the outskirts of the ! crowd called out: “I bid four dollars!’ “Third and last call and gone !” ex claimed the auctioneer’ “Comeand get it, madam.” She pushed her way in, saw what if Was, and backed out with the remark: “That’s no silk dress.” “Nobody said it was, madam.” “But that’s what I came for. They told me that silk dresses were going for four dollars apiece, and I like to have killed myself running to get here. Four dollars for a shawl I” “How much will you bid?” “Thirty cents, sir, and not a penny more I” “Stand back, please.” “Oh, yes ! Because I won’t go about with my feet on the ground and a four dollar shawl on my back, it’s stand back, if you please ! I’ll stand back, sir, but I’m not that kind of woman. I believe in consistency.” “But you wanted a silk dress,” sug gested one of the crowd. “And wasn’t I going to mortgage the house and lot to buy the bonnet to go with it I” she retorted. Shakespeare’s autograph is worth about SSOO. and Lord Bacon’s may be for $25, which leads the New York to remark that Lord Bacon evidently rite Shakespeare’s autograph. ~ ■ Cure of Pneumonia. Hess Road, Niagara Co., N. Y., I March 24, 1886. f About a year ago I was taken with a severe pain in both lungs. I was first attacked with a violent chill, then a dreadful pain and then a cough accompanied by considerable fever. It looked very much like a bad attack of pneumo nia. A friend of mine procured five Allcock’s Plasters. One he put under each arm, one under each shoulder blade, and one on my chest close around my throat. In a few hours the cough ceased, the pain gradually abated and T broke out in a profuse perspiration. I fell into a profound sleep, and the next day was almost well. I wore the Plasters eight days afterwards, and have never had any trouble since. William A. Sawyer. The mother of Gen. Boulanger is a Welsh woman who is -trotig and hearty at 85. Shocking Accident. So read the headlines of many a newspaper column, and we peruse with palpitating inter est the details of the catastrophy, and are deeply impressed by the sacrifice of human lives involved. Yet thousand '> of men and wc men are falling victims every year to that ter rible disease, consumption (scrofula of the lungs), and they and their friends are satisfied to believe .he malady incu able. Now, there could be no greater mistake. No earthly power, of cow can re tore - lung that is en tirely wasted, nt Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery will rapidly and surely arrest the ravages of consumption, if taken in time. Do not, therefore, despair until you have tried this wonderful remedy. Mrs. Amelie Rives-Chan ->r, the authoress, is to sail for Paris in Deceit’’- r. The best Cough Medicine nPiso’s Cure for Consumption. Sold ev. . where, 25c Hinr ?«.<-hinfnT>TSTl one? i. a 1i i h |l/I j 11 »iu m Hurts, by VP ft ng qui ti ichlnetx ,i\U 11 :oodi woe- Ac j -p'e can sc® hem. w « ~ rec 4 free to on* >ers-»t ir uwh lo a'.ity,the very >est sewing-machine made in vorid, w h ail the attachment. wUisiav send free a comolr •» of our costlj ana valuable i<t pies. In return wc ask that; a iv what we send, to those w i> r call at your home, and after ntbs arf shall become your o» « perry. This grand machine u de atier the Singer pate< . lich have run out. before ;>at° i1 uu m: it sold tor with uc incuts, and now sell? £.’> if. Best, strongest, most < machine in the world A • No capital required Ph \ brief instructions given. Those who write to us at once can se cure free the best sewing-machine in the world, and the finest lino of works of h»gh art ever shown together in America. TKl'Ed: CO.. i‘j>ox 149. Augusta. Maine* MWrFi'v’c. WU vol WILL S 4VE JIONEY. ■wfcAMBNW Ta '"'- ’Trouble CATARRH BV l,s,M - Ely’s Cream Balm. Halin into each nostril -ffl usaJELY 'BROS..HWunm St.. N. Y. WANTED I ■■ On Nn'nry <>r < oiiiuila.iwti. Nopr-vvma ■ W x*ri<*ncw n*‘c.‘H'.aiv. Ad-irt'>-\ witb sOini*. XTAMMItO KilAsiht <<>«II’ANY. ISO «.ay Ntrret. Knoavllie. Teon w who have used Pieo** VW S'Xduvurjwhvre. au. Ft, ■» to W* » dny. worth tl.anFߣ& C K 1.111-e IV I <ll.l. r th-b . 0 V nrowet.-rSar.-ty KeinH :<t< rUb,H<>lh->. M'ck MMf M Ur«alh..ma aaJ maW - -r-'r wvrtlaa r.r u> ihaa ■■■Mvt a»»• thing «!♦< in tbs w<»rl-1 l ahef s«a < <wtiy ouitll iaaa 1 esuta •»**. l»ua A tv., AugasM., M«uaa. Genteel Qnaeka. “Yea, it pays,” said a big, fat physician, with a name which is known throughout the medi cal world. “I have a practice worth $40,000 a year.” “Women?” “Yes, .you’ve guessed it first time. They pay sl6 every time they come into my office. When one gets on my list I tell you she stays!” and Dr. H laughed long and loud. This is quackery—gilt-edged, gen teel quackery—to keep suffering women pay l4ng tribute year in and year out. and doing tjtem no good. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip- W>n cures the peculiar weaknesses and dig ewes of women. It does not lie to them nor roVthem. AAong the students at Princeton college is one le years old. He is to be a minister. \ - - Delicate Children. Nnrslng Mothers, Overworked Men, and for all dis eases where the tissues are wasting away from the inability to digest ordinary food, or from overwork or the brain or body, all such should take Scott’s Emulsion of Pure <’od Liver Oil with Hypophosphites. “I used the Emulsion on a lady who was delicate, and threatened with Brorchitis. It put her in such good health and flesh, that f must say it is the best Emulsion I ever used.”—L. P. Waddell, M. D., Hugh’s Mills, 8. C. Gov. Beaver is to he marshal of the inaugu ration procession at Washington, D. C. A Remarkable Paper. Tms Youth’s Companion is a welcome visitor weekly in more than 400,000 families, and has won a place in home life obtained by no other publication. It is always safe, pure, instruc tive and entertaining. The wonder is how any family can do without it. Any new subscriber sending $1.75 now, can have The Companion free every week to January 1,1889, and for a full year from that date. Sample copies free. Ad dress The Youth's Companion,Boston, Mass. A Radical Cure for Epileptic Fits. To the Editor— Please inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease which I warrant to cure the worst cases. So strong is my faith in its vir tues that I will send free a sample bottle and valuable treatise to any sufferer who will give me his P O. and Express address. Resp’y, H.G. ROOT. M. C., 183 Pearl St.. New York. An Invaluable Traveling Companion. No person should travel without a box of Hamburg Figs in his his satchel, for they will be found invaluable when change of food and water has brought on an attack, of constipa tion. indigestion, or torpidity of the liver. 25 cents. Dose one Fig. Mack Drug Co., N. Y. The lady teachers of Illinois outnumber the gentlemen many times over. A perfect specific—Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Rem edy. Some of the steamers plying between New York and England, make passage in six days. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son’s Eye water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle. t BWaWKMWHBWHt »XW >lt AW BHjM seW Every reader of this paper who exports to buy anything in the line of Diamonds, fine Jewelry, Silver and Clocks —or who thinks of buj-ing A WATCH Should send illustrated catalogue for 1889, I free- J. P. Stew & Bro., Jewelers, 47 Whitehall St, ATLANTA, GA. Swift's Specific cured me of malignant Blood Poison after I had bo n treated in vain with old so-called remedies of Mercury and Potash. S. S. S. not only cured the Blood Poison, but relieved the Rheuma tism which was caused by the poisonous minerals. * GEO. BOVELL, 2422 3d Avenue, N. Y. Nine years ago Scrofula attacked two of mv chil dren. and they were badly afflicted with the disease, which resisted the treatment of my family phy ieian. 1 was persuaded to use Swift’s Specific by seeing an account of cures in my county paper. The improve ment was apparent from the first few doses, and in a I short time my children were cured, and are still f md and well. JOHN WILLIAMS, Lexington, Va. Swift’s Specific is entirely a vegetable remedy, I and is the only medicine which permanently cures Scrofula, Blood Humors, Cancer and Contagious . Blood Poison. Send for Books on Blood and Skin Diseases, mai ed free. I "HE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta. Ga. ! The Only Printing Ink Works In the South. | HODGE & EVANS, Manufacttf ers of all kinds of Printing Inks, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. ?if nn F,STULA £ I ■ B A 1 Rectal Disease 8 ■ I B I treated by & painless pro* I * cess. No loss of time from ? b ,J * lueßH - Nq knife, ligature £ 2 a Eg ik or caustic. A radical cure F 3 ■■ UK u? ‘r antt,e d in every case u a ■■ I treated. Reference given, i I IH I OR. KO. JACKSON, 42J* &»ui IMM Ire” 7 Whitehall tit.. Atlanta, Ga. \ea positive remedy for the above disease : by its use sands of cases of the worst kind and of longstanding ' v been cured. So strong is my faith in its eftlcacy that will send two bottles free, together with a valuable treatise on th is disease to any sufferer. Give Expreas an 1 I*. O. addruaa T. A. tiLOcCIL AL C.. 181 Pearl St, N. Y BE ft E STI’l) Y. Book-keeping, Business Forma Kl U u Penmanship. Arithmetic, Short-hand, etc., bX thoroughly taught by MAIL. Circulars free. Bryaut’a CoHeue, 467 Main St, Buffalo, N. Y. Kneumiiic Ketnajy Oval Box, round, 14 I'lll,. f We want tn buy several in this locality. Fanwia « < I.is.-. .'. k: ,H , Broadway, N V ratUEM mb toataa Tne iu *n wiiu it Ji invt »t<sd iroui three to five d"Har* ju'n KiibUr U >at, and at hi# lir»t -ft'f Lours experience in a alorm hndl to hit mhtow that it in a protection than a mos quito tivttit>m n t vipY feeu cliaxrined m being y liken in, but also feeds if he d<*s not i«»<A ciou llv like Ao • 1* ” KMH u< t| • •.* am, ». o f.,r dru Hptlre' iKl'rgur. AJ. Town., imu-tns .v Possesses many Important Advantages over al) other prepared Foods. BABIES CRY FOR IT. INVALIDS RELISH IT. Makes Plump, Laughing, Healthy Bablefc Regulates the Stomach and Bowels. Sold by Druggists. Msc., 50c., 81.00. WELLS, RICHWDSON I CO., BIHHIHOTW.H. Baby Portraits. A Portfolio of beautiful baby portraits, prlntef on fine plate paper by patent photo process, sent free to Mother of any Baby bom within a vear. Every Mother wants these pictures; Send et onosu Give Baby’s name and age. WELLS, RICHARDSON A CO., Props., Burlington, Vt It’s Easy to Dye WITH j! Superior Xx/J, I ,N ' ZwjpV Strength, Fastness, Beauty,' rUwL. AND v I ) Warranted to color more goods than any other dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant and durable colors. Ask for the Diamond, and taka no other. 36 colors; 10 cents each. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, ¥t. For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, USE DIAMOND PAINTS. ' Gold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only 10 Cents. P® it W I FOR CONSUMPTION! Piso’s Cure is our best selling medi cine. I have a personal knowledge of its beneficial effects, and recommend it. —S. Larry ; Druggist, Allegheny, Pa. FOUR BOOKS LEARNED IN ONE READING. A Year’s Work Bon® in Ten Bays. From the Chaplain of Exeter Collegru and Houghton Syriac Prizeman, Oxford, _ „ Coil. Exon, Oxon , Sept., 1888. Dear Sir: In April, 1885, while thinking of taking orders in September, I suddenly received notice that my ordination examination would be held in a fort night. I had only ten (10) days in which to piepart for the Exam. I should recommend a pear’s prepar ation in the case of anyone so utterly unprepared a* I was; but your System had so strengthened 'mil nat ural memory that I was able to remember anil give the gist of any book after reading it mice. I there fore read Lightfoot, Proctor, Harold Browne, Mosheim, Ac., &c., once, and was successful in every one of the nine papers. The present Bishop of Eden burg knows the facts. Faithfully yours, [Rev.] James Middleton Macdonald [M, A.]. To Prof. A. 1,01 SETT E, 237 Fifth Ave., N.I. F»~This System is taught personally or by cor respondence. Call or address as above for prospectus. joriest FREIGHT ® Ton Wajjon Scales* Ir<’o Levers, Steel Eearings, BraM - Taie Bt*m and Beam Box for s®oo. Brery tire Scale. For free 1 mention thi* paper and address iff 3F : • BINGHAMTON. N. fc, >7* f i where all other reme<iies tail.’-Our K 1 1 method of direct and co-tin AduM t’ Lil'frX \ medication of the whole V \ v "\\(\ \ tor Y system produces same etfect ’I \ -A as a favorable change,o' climate. \V;'.\ A No smoke or disagreeable odor. Xji.lr ILLUSTRATED BOOK giving full y I particularS'freeupon application* COMMON SIN3E CATARRH CURB ~ fi® Slat© £t«» ChlecdT®> lU* CUHEPI very «<« io give im- §8 -s,ins u rss comfort- {23 re all others fail A 3 .1. Price sOc. and >il. Sample FREE KN,St.Pan),D a» SfILESMEIIUI I-ceat stamp. Wages $3 Per Day inanent j. aitten. H. postals an. oro'l Money advauced’for si<.s, advuUslrg. etc, ventenr.—l Manufacturing Co., Cincinnati. Ohio. fIREYOIJMftRRIED?!&S» this society, which pays its members 6250 to $1,O<)O at inurrhtge. Circulars free. N. W. AiCTI'AL EN DOWMENT SOCIETY, Box S-10, Minneapolis,. J!tas. ZY _ rnnnri say Piso’sCure for Con fi BD ATiHfV sumption is ;’ll JEST ViVllv^O,^« W & uYMbxI B Nci.pti. ns. Owner., address Chas. Hite-Smith, la W. Mh-St. .Chattanooga,Tenn. ODIHM UAE2IT painlessly cured in 10 to » rlUttl nftStll Day.. Sanitarium or Home Treatment. Trial Free. No Cure. No Pay. Tbo Humans Remedy Co., La Fayette, lad. COLUKAUU lor Consumptive* and AstUm.t ics. Scud 2c. for it. Du. Baki left, Bouider, Col. A. N. U Fifty, 88. oner the mini who waut» service (not Style) a garment that will keep him dry in the Imrdeat .tonu. it it culled TiiWEK'H FISH BRAND “ SLICK EK," a name Ihmliur to every Cow -b<>y .11 over the land. With lliuu the only perfect Wind and W.n. Coat la "1 ,wer . I In.i <t r. It . A WET HEN