Newspaper Page Text
DAILY ENQUIRER • SUN : COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY MORNING JUNK 13, 1886.
A Lady the Unsuspecting Victim of a Swin
dling Advertisement.
R)n* Relate* the Details of tin (Imiiiistanrc Unit
Othm !*) Profit by Her Kxpe-rl«'ti»••• V Letter
f rom Europe Dhes » I'oop nf I.oiiiIoii Sorlet)--
Mninro »*• r«in*»ennlnr* >Vhnf 1 lt«* Doctor Sny*
of Frills In tlir Melt llnoin.
It is t hp purpose of the K.vgt'im?f»-St'N to make*
rxs interesting and instructive -is possible, the
corner devoted to Woman’s Work and World.
To this end we would lx* glad to have the ladies
tv’io Tool s.tdispisel, contribu e t » jtH mIu me.
We publish communications this morning from
MOine of the ladies, giving their own views and
also the opinions expressed by others. Suc h ar- I
tides are apprec iated atel will always find a [
place. They cannot, however, lx; received later
tban Thursday to secure insertion the following
Sunday. Our lady reader-* are earnestly solicited
to aid us in this department
Who l« Ui BUmr fbr It ?
'r the Enqnirer-rtun.]
We have All heard time after time that—
“The hand that rocks the cradlu
Is the hand that rales the world.’’
However true this may be, there is no question
at the well being of* society and the prenerva-
n of everything worth living for is largely in
urge of the women. Whatever wrong or vio-
| nee is done we may lx; sure is done against
•heir protest. They are hampered in the pursuit
■ i*' the good they v.-oul 1 gladly do, and in their
•dorts to stay the evils they would gladly pre
vent. by the.sentiment of affection, which is
much the* stronger in what it is the custom to
call the weaker sox. Woman will exert her ut
most influence to dissuade the man or the child
die Lives from evil; although when the crime is
• unmitted. the folly |K*rpetrated,or the evil habit
formed, .die becomes accessory alter the foot, by
hilling the olfurme, shielding the offender, and
striving te make other-, believe, what shu does
•lot believe herself, that the culprit is not to
blame; or at ail” rate not so much to blame r
all. Women are zealous advocates and most
zealous when the weakness of the plea they
they mak'/is even ab'-urdly apparent to oth r
\ i n*l h-r
Duinj (irepnlears Kxperienee u
For the Knquirer-Sun. j
Hhai.k, Ai.a., Juno 11 J wo
•space in the woman’s dcp.trtin
1 hing which may lx 1 the means of saving some
other woman the loss and disappointment which
has lately befallen me. It all came of an adver
tisement one i saw in a Farmers Journal.
Nearly every paper I so« . though, has one or
more like it, and I suppose evi rybody who reads
the newspapers carefully has seen t
particular one that caused my grief
•way.
“Wantkd Youdg IjA<lieH to work
vassing
$2 tx> $lu pt
small
some-
. The
M this
i make In
;«ppy who
the woma
> nione
tasilv
vn homes
quired in ad vane
rnaile. Fascinating employment.’’
Now, that was tempting, tifld it tempted me.
For two or three months 1 hesitated and consid
ered whether I should answer the advertisement
or not. At last, however, I yielded and said I
would. I wanted to know, anyhow, what the
business was, even if I never did the work, what
ever it might be. So I wrote to the “Decorative
Art Co.” though everybody said I had txdter not.
Jn one week I received the answer to my letter in
(he shape of two little pink circulars which de
scribed the work. It was painting on silk and
velvet scraps for crazy quilts. The circulars said
that the Decorative Art Company would send me
the scraps, paint, pens, Ac., for doing the work,
with a book of directions, and when I had done
jt I was to send it back to them, and they would
send me by registered letter the money due me.
1 would get three dollars' worth of work the first
installment. But on the last page of the little !
circular it said that, “As a guarantee of good
faith on my part and to pay jk (stage,” I must j
send one dollar. Now that 1 did not like, and '
thought 1 would rather not send the dollar, and
Melon said, “Now you m irk my words, you are 1
going to lose that money, for tin whole t hing is a
swindle. You might as well throw it away at
once.” That wasjust what I was afraid of my- I
self, that it was a swindle, but I wanted to try it, 1
and I said nothing more about it then. Hut the 1
jnext day, without letting anybody know, I wrote J
the letter to the “Art Co.” and sent the dollar, '
and paid ten cents to have it registered, too. Then
for one week 1 was very busy finishing all the |
odd jobs of work which I bad on hand that 1 i
might lie tYee to give all my time to the ‘fnsoina- ;
ling employment,’ when the time came. And
another thing, too, Mr. Editor, I will not deny. •
Like the silly milk-maid, I read alxmt in. McOuf- j
ley’s Third Reader a long time ago, who counted
her chickens before they were hatched, I made
out in my mind a long list of things I intended to J
buy with the money l was going to make. Hut l 1
•will not tell what it was I was going to get, for it
-floes not matter now.
Wall, at the end of another week (for my letter I
•was sent to Boston) I received an open envelope j
of coarse brown paper, and in it was one small ,
piece of cheap greeu velvet with the outline of a
bunch (cluster they called ltd of wild roses !
.stamped upon it, all painted in natural colors on
it. That was the model and a little book of di
rect ions telling how t\> do the work. Then there
was another little pink circular, audit said if I j
wanted paint and pens to paint the piece of vel- ,
vet I cound send them the money and they !
would sell all those things to me cheap, and if I
learned to paint well 1 might soon be making any
amount of money by doing such work for my !
friends. Just think of that! and they had prom
ised to semi me three dollars wort h of work to do
for them, it was dreadful, dreadful, and I did
feel bad. Solon, 1 knew, wanted to say. ‘I told
you so. but lie was atYaid. I was so, so put out.
lie only looked disgusted and said. ‘Yes Yankee
swinders, just as I expected.’ Once I made up
niv mind to write to the “ \rt t 'o.. and tell it just
what I thought of the whole thing, but finding
sure that 1 would only lie laugludat by those
wicked men, 1 didn’t do it. Instead. 1 will t.-li !
i he readers of your paper of the scandalous wav-
in which I've liecn treated. The little book of
directions and the velvet piece were worth about
twenty-five cents, hut are of no usi to me. for if '
I wanted paint to do that kind of work
J would never send to that piace to get it. So I
won't engage in that ‘fast nut mg employment'
al present Neither will 1 get a new hat this
summer, but will trim up m\ old last summers I
straw with pink lawn; and I've decided, too, 1bat '
1 won t get a new blue nun's veiling trimmed |
with ere tin l;u-«; wouldn't that In* sweet.' but -
will wear my Mime old whitt - t really does look 1
well if it did only cost ten cents per yard
papers, but I don’t
long time in-fore
such advcrtiseiuen
Very t rulv
ions for the ladie
ud I think \ou
run Is making tlui
Mill
•ad i
i tin
and 1 think it ’
caught again
be
•c-peetfully.
daisy <;ki:i-:m.i;af
June in.
column i
tha
the Enquirer
teiest to the column, but a
vuto letter just received t'n
frieiul, now traveling in F.i
readers an idea of London *■
she says:
"A rospiTtablc Mat us in i
ra-
or pretei
andtuk<
give sour
si. He has th
ml will get 1
•n merely to
the world, w
calls
e children
upper. If
>r is asked
a rant will
down on
■ this pro-
P r ' -
e-uliy. I
in spite
Knglan.
• fast, beautiful
of high life hard G
’under this descriptic
drum will be inacee;
different. Should tin
nor rich, thev will tin
limb.
the fn
\ ill ha
vril.
the “friskv m:
Idlv -
tin
i lor i
•tab-
tattons to the old i
nouses. Heauty, if accompanied by sc
i gain admission to any portal,
m fed so disposed you can use this, if not
t to the waste • basket. In either case it
- satisfactory to yours. SARAH.
rent deal of talk, and it may justly
lorn talk, about the duty of women
e happy. Hut if tin- home is not
fault is it? Not- in one case in a
safely Is- said is the blame with
If n man makes his home simply a
convenience where he may take his meals, and
probably sulk or growl over them, whose fault is
it? If his house is simply a lodging place of last
resort, to which he must repair when ho is shut
out everywhere elsQ, whose fault is that? And if
while he is in his home, he is evidently there un
der constraint. pro-occupied with matters abroad,
and fidgeting to be gone -who is to blame for
that? Not certainly the woman, who, forgetful
of past, and even of habitual disoppointment,
has looked forward with hope for his return to
enliven her solitude, and to make care a pleasure
by dividing it with her. Soctety rests upon the
basis of the family compact. The rioters, de
bauchees, the “ba<I subjects” in a community are
not the men who love their homes. The youth
who wander into evil paths and practices are
not the persons who value the society of their
sisters, women kinsfolk and other amiable wo
men. But evil-doers, young and old, are those
who do not confess and fend the influence of
true women, who form the conservative element
in society.
I merely throw out these thoughts for the con
sideration of the men, though I am afraid they
will never see it . if put in the woman’s depart
ment. XIE.
Fruits in Fever*.
In answer to the question propounded by the
I' NQi’iriKii-SuN, I must candidly say that there is
mi old standing prejudice against the use of
fruits as food in the sick room, because of the
root>ed opinion that they are not nourishing, and
that weak digestions require some strong ex
tracts of meat. Exi»erience both old and new
does not sustain this impression. Dr. Tanner, it
will be remembered, took his first bite, after his
long fast, into a ripe peach and continued to eat
peach and watermelon until his digestive powers
were able to tackle the quantities of beefsteak
which their strengening tone craved. The food
or the stimulus to food came certainly in that
ease from tin ripe fruit Whether we begin man’s
history with the Harden of Eden, or with the as
cent from a monkey ancestry, on either limb of
liis ancestral t ree he found a fruit diet. It was
all that primitive man had to feed on until the
various Frometheuses in his history bail taught
him the use of (Ire and flesh, unless we believe
that he ate his fish and elk steak raw. The prej
udice against fruits is derived from experience
in eating unripe fruits, or in partaking too freely
of ripe ones, together with a multitude of other
dishes. Too many acids spoil the feast.
A ripe peach is the most grateful anti digesti
ble of all fruits. Taken by ltnelf it may be eaten
at any time of the day. In the morning or at
noon it serves, with some other fruits as the best
appetizer fur foods to follow. In cases of illuest
when anything solid is hurtful, the fruit juice
merely, and not the fibre, should lx* taken. This
■ especially applies to pears and grapes. The pear
under the microscope shows little uiscs or wheels
I of pure silica. These point out at once its uses
ana its disadvantages. There are constitutions
which require to have the “gentle scouring” of
their digestive apparatus, which this fruit gives:
but in cases where the slight irritation produced
i by its juice would be hurtful, all can see the rea
son wliv. Drapes, American grapes at least, are
so solidly jellied over their seeds that their me-
1 clmnienl uses as a fever food are also clear to see.
A very good variation in grain? diet can he had in
the prepared grape juice, for which this column
gave a recipe the other day. Apples baked or
i -craped raw an* refreshing. Melons are digesti
ble or not, as they are taken with other food, or
according to the year, as some food experts say.
The sugar of the cantaloupe seems to have more
of a fermenting quality in some summers than in
others. No doubt this greatly depends upon the
fact that cantaloupe melons are seldom eaten by
themselves, usually with coffee and cream and
griddle cakes.fish or meat, corn fritters or broiled
tomatoes or else late at night with other fruit af
ter another supper. No wonder the ready aid of
soda-mint, that household companion, is called
m to counteract such a conglomerate. Author
ities say that potat*ws combine well with fnr.t
diet, as rice dot s, and lxitl. better than the oilier
less -lurefiy vegetables.
When fi uit is eaten by itself it is quite as likely
to add to the patient's real strength as the most
stimulating f>f the meat essences ami extracts
served up to them as soups. Hospitals already
act upon those facts, and furnish fresh and stew
ed fruits for food, as well as for ^unitary reguiu-
t'on. The orange conies when tin peach bus
gone. In threatened pneumonia eat plenty of
Kr:l|«-■ T ’l: Iiim-ih'k. :
Hero’s Good Proof.
The annexed testimonial from a well-
known citizen of higfh character is tin*
most convincing argument that can l>e
given as to the value and meriLs of (’ali-
saya Tonic as the great Southern Remedy :
Atlanta, Ua., September 1st.'
Messrs. Westmoreland Brow., (tents. 1
got from you a bottle of t’nlisaya Tonic for j
my little daughter, who had been prow-'
trated with fever, and wax very weak, and
had no appetite. She had not used more ;
than hair the bottle lie fore she had an ex
cellent appetite, and regained her strength 1
with astonishing rapidity. 1 imlicve it to
he an excellent tonic.
Yours truly, CHARLIE F. HOKE.
Westmoreland’s Calisaya 'Tonic, the
great Southern Remedy, is now put up in
square umber colored (mart bottles, with
luautiful lithographic label, and a red ;
metal cap over the cork, with the follow
in'.: imprint in top of cap: “Westmore- ;
land’s Calisaya Tonic. Westmoreland
Bros. Sole Proprietors, Greenville, S, C.”
Sold by all druggists at J’l.OO per bottle.
Uranium A Carson, Wholesale Agents,
i 'ohmtbiis. I .a. jell dlw
The publishing house of Henj. l\. Tucker
of Boston, have issued, for the lirst time
in English, the famous Russian novel,
•What's to be Done?” by N. vi. Tcherny-
chewsky. The surname of this author is
right, when you know howto pronounce
it; but t lie given part seems to be N. (i.
\ituhin. Debilitated 'b n.
You are allowed a free trial of thirty
days of the use of Dr. Dye’s Celebrated
Voltaic Belt with Electric Suspensory Ap
pliances, for the speedy relief and perma
nent cure of Nervous Debility, loss of Vital
ity and Manhood, and all kindred troubles.
Also for many other diseases. Complete
restoration to health, vigor and manhood
guaranteed. No risk is incurred. Ulus*-
trated pamphlet, with full information,
terms, etc., mailed free by addressing Vol
taic Belt Co., Marshall. Mich.
deel^tu,th,sat,se& wly
it Depends.
Whether or not a congressional district
is a close one depends upon upon who is
, running for congress. There are some
men unpopular enough in their party to
, throw the victory completely into the
hands of the enemy.
IIIIimI, IIIop<IIiik iiikI Itching, Posi
tively < nre«l hy I’nticiira.
i A WARM HATH with Ct’TKruA Soap, an ex
quisite Skin Benutiflcr, and a single application
I of Ccticcra. the great Skin Cure, will instantly
i allay the intense itching of the most aggravated
case of Itching Piles. 'This treatment, combined
with small (loses of CrTici’RA Rhsolvlnt, the
new Hlood Purifier, three times per day. to regu
late and strengthen the bowels, overcome consti
pation and r«*mo\c the cause, will cure Blind,
Bleeding and Itching Piles when all other reim-
| dies and even physicians fail.
imiiing i*ili:n.
I was taken h>r the first time in my life with
Blind Piles, . ■•■evere that ! could hardly keep on
my feet. I u«ed various remedies for three week-,
when the dEeti.-* took the form of Itching I i
and growing w orse. By ad\ice of an old gentle
man I tried the Ccticcka. On - application re
lieved th<* itching, and I was -o#»n cured. I
wish to tell the \orld that in rases of Itching
Pile* the price of 11n-(’CTierux is of no account
From an unsolicited quarter,
funcord, N. II. or KIHBY. !
m in vd i»n,i;s.
of
1
J
m
Opposite Rankin House, Columbus. Ga
first put them
i’ha llr..MKmi;>
. .e market, ami
. Itching Piles that huve been
my siargeatiou, of tin w i- rcu:
F N. MAH TIN
V Id, I’ll vr HI! t I Ulf.
demand f<
(JLLJN.S
J Imve tiied
h -m all tha
hem in this s<
11 iggston, < i
SI'I.I MHI) SATISl’ArriON.
(’t'TicuH \ Rkmkdius have given splendid satis
faction to those of my customers who have had
occasion to us<- them.
HENRY HERMANN, Druggist.
Quincy, 111.
Cuticura Remkdieh are a positive cure for
every form of Skin and Hlood Diseases, from
Pimples to Scrofula. Sold everywhere. Price:
Ccticuha, 50c; Soap. 25c; Resolvent fl. Pre
pared by the Potter Drug and Chemical Co.,
Boston, Mass.
Send for “How to Cure Skin Diseases.”
KTC I IV Blemishes, Pimples, Blackheads and
* 1 Baby Humors, use CVticvka Soap.
TIRED MCSCLKS Strengthened,
*ain Annihilated, Inflammation sub
dued, and Malarial and Epidemic
Diseases Prevented by that infallible
antidote to pain and inflammation,
the Cuticcra Anti-Pain Plaster.
CAPITAL PRIZE, - $ 150,000.
“ IFe do hereby certify that ire tuipereise the ar-
ramjement for all the Monthly and Quarterly
I>rau>ingu of The Louisiana State Lottery Com
pany, and in person manage and control the
brairings them Helves, ansi that the same arc conr
ducted irith horn sty. fairness, amt in good faith
toicard all parties, and ire authorize the Company
to use this certificate, with facsimiles of our sig
natures attached, to its advertisements.”
Commissioner*.
Wc the undersiyned Banks and Bankers wilt
pay all Prizes drawn in The. Louisiana State. Lot
teries which may be presented at our counters.
.1. II. Pres. Ini. Nat*I Bank
.1. W.HILHUKITi,Pres. State Nat l H*k
A. BALDWIN. |»re*. N. O. Nafl Bank
U
NPRKCKHKNTEII ATTRACTION!
Over Half a Million Distributed
Louisiana State Lottery Comp’y.
Incorporated in into for 2ft years by the Legisla
ture for Educational and Charitable pnrixises— 1
with a capital of $1,000,000 to which a reserve 1
hind of over $ftft0,000 lias since lx*en added.
By an overwhelming popular vote its franchise
was made a part of the present State Constitu
tion, adopted December 2d, A. 1). 1879.
IIm Draml Mingle number Draw Digs
will take place monthly. It never scales or post-
pones. Look at the following distribution:
lb:t<S t.raial Boutlily
AND THE
I
lii tin* Vniih'iuy of Music. New Orleans,
Tuesday, June to,
Under the persona) supervision and manage
ment of
Gen. G. T. BEAUREGARD, of Louisiana, A
Gen. JUBAL A. EARLY, of Virginia.
Giipilal Prize, ),(_>.H).
tin Notice Tickets lire fen Dollars only. ILilvis,
Aft Fifths,#-. I’eutlis. #1.
list op prizes.
1 CAPITAL PRIZE OF $150,000 $150,000
1 (iRAND PRIZE OF 50,000 50,000 !
1 (iRAND PRIZE OF 20,000. . . 20,000 '
2 LARGE PRIZES OF 10,000 20,000 ,
\ LARGE PRIZES OF 5.000 20,000 j
20 PRIZES OF 1,000 20,000 i
50 P R1Z KS <) F 500 25,000 (
ICO PRIZES OF 300 30,000 I
200 PRIZES OF 200 -10 000 j
F00 PRIZES OF 100 00.000
1.000 PRIZES OF .i0 50,000 •
A P POX IM A TI () N PRIZES.
100 Approximation Prizes of $200 $20,000
WILL OFFER TO-DAY,
.A.2STD OOITTinSTXJE XTHSTTIIL SOLD:
_ _ _.. .
At
-4!: ('(‘Ilfs.
2.( h m > Yards 27 inch "White Striped
Muslins, four styles.
Worth
10 Cents.
At
3,000 Yards Satteens, Light and
Worth
ft ('(Ills.
Dark Shades.
9 cents.
At
3()ft Dozen Fancy Dress Buttons.
Worth
ft cents.
20 cents.
At
ft.ooo Yards Eagle Weiss Suitings.
Worth
li cents.
in all the pretty shades.
lft cents.
At
10.000 Yards 4-4 White Domestic.
Worth
lit cents.
equal to Masonville.
10 cents.
At
ftOO Yds Remnants Dress Ginghams
Worth
7-i cents.
lft cents.
At
800 Yards Wool Algiers, Figured
Worth
10 cents.
Dress Goods.
2ft cents.
At
1,000 Yards All Wool Nun's Veil-
Worth
12i cents.
ing, in all colors—acid test.
3*5 cents.
At
1 ,ft( X) Yards Cottonades and Geor-
Worth
122 cents.
gia Plaids.
2ft cents.
At
4,000 Yards li yards wide Colored
worth
2*5 cents.
Oil Cloth.
. _
4o cents.
At
3<>0 Pairs Lisle Thread Gloves, in
worth
2ft cents.
all colors.
7ft cents.
At
2ftO Pairs Misses Shoes, from 2 to 8.
Full)) worth
3ft cents.
6ft cents, i
At
900 Silk Embroidered Corsets.
worth
1
4ft cents.
$1.00. j
At
*500 Bates’ Spreads, Plain and
Full) worth
7ft cents.
Figured.
$1.25.
At
100 Plain and Lace Bound Para-
•worth
$l.fto.
sols.
$4.00.
Above ar
e a Few of the Immense
OFFERED BIT THE
Bargains
Trade Palace,C.P.Gray&Co
At KIR YEN’S
This -I'ntlcman. the .-.-nior
tin- firm nf Sheridan Bros., fivr-c,, an ; -t<
and (l(K'ovat')rs, i.f Atlanta, (4a.. is a
nine vankeo by birth, hut a sinitlu-nu-r in
clioii'i 1 and ad<i|ition. Horn in the i,in-
tun city of Hruvidcnce, H. I.,ai y,
at an early a/e lie turned hie att.-nti .'n'to
art. He is iiy nature an artist, and hi.
vears i if study and tuition in eastern cities
"tive dcvclo[>ed him into one of the forts
most younjf decorators of his time. s.
years aeo lie came south to decorate t:,e
interior of tin-Church of the Ilnai iilute
('oncejition, at Atlanta, and, likinv the
I'Pople and climate, determined to h.eate
soutli of Alason and Dixon's line. sin,,,
then he lias lieen joinisl hy his brothers.
K. 1!. and (-Jeorjn-, and churches and line
dwellings in every principal city of tie
south attest their ability, energy and en
terprise.
".My system,” said Mr. Sheridan during
a recent conversation, “hud lieen fur some
time
OKAIH’AU.Y III/XNINO DOWN.
"I was not sick, in a General sense of
the word, hut my physical strength \va-
ieelitm tiie severe strain I had U-en i i
years jaitling ujion it in the active men
tal labor necessary in the pursuit of v
avocation. While ! have lint what i'-
termed a delicate constitution. ! am la-
no means a robust fellow, and have what
might is- called the 'New Knglaml n, . if
idiysically. For some time past 1 had
been losing yiiri.r, when my attei
was calh-d to 1 mnnirutt’s I-iheumalieCure
as a tonic and strengtiioncr of the sys
tem. I la-gan using it alMiut four week-
ago and since that time have gained eig'it
and a half jKiunds in wciglit. My 1.1,,t
is as pure as spring water and my entire
system revitalized. 1 have no hesitancy
in sayingtliat it is the best general teiii'i
upon the market to-day.”
.irnoE tiiomas iti.i.tm,
now in his three score and ton years, and
one of the most prominent mini in Geor
gia, born and raised near Union Springs.
Ala., where lie amassed quite a fortune
hv strict integrity and honesty, and in
later years connected with the wholesale
drug house of Pemberton, Pullum ik Co.,
of Atlanta, (via., and now a citizen of that
city, said a few days ago in tin-
of a l-ejKjrter:
“My wife had been for ninny years a
constant sufferer from rheumatism. Her
joints were swollen and distorted, great
knots hud formed upon iter hand, >he
could only with great difficulty and pain
manage to walk, and was a constant suf
ferer from this dreadful disease. WV
tried everything we could read or hear
of, ami took advice of eminent practi
tioners without any benefit in the way of
permanent relief. i was induced to try
I iunni>-utt V Ulu lunatic C ure a short tinu-
100
7 ,v>0
$622,00
onlv
Money OvRo
miry U*tt<‘r.
IKMise :ul(li'(
c)r B.
Prizes, amounting to
Appli< atioii for rates to clubs should lx* made
» tin Office of the* Company in New Orleans,
further information write clearly, giving
POSTAL NOILS. Express
• New York Exchange in nrdi*
rrenev hv Express ni our ex-
m. a. i*
\(‘W Orleans. |,h.
I) \ J 1*11 I N.
Washington. D. i\
♦fake I*. O. ♦fnn •>' Orders payalil*
and address Ueyis(4>red l.eiiers to
M AY OK LI. A NS % ilZON^L It UiK.
my 1‘2 wrd m»*wftt Non Orleans. La.
Home Insurance Co,
YORK,
Summer Silks 2o cents;
Pongee Silks 2ft cents;
Foulard Silks 40 cents:
Printed Nun's Veilings lft cents ;
All Wool Buntings 1ft cents;
Linen Lawns 10 cents ;
Linen Drills for Pants 12i cents;
Linen ('.rash Ot cents;
Gotlniiades for Boys’ Wear 8 cents ;
Manilla Checks, new and desirable. 121 cent.-
White Jjinen de India ft cents;
While Plaid Lawns P> cents ;
White Plaid Linen de India 12i cents:
Whitt- Linen Lawns 12L lft and 2c> cents.
Al riloVl.H I HAD I.UST 1'ATVU
in nil ]iutent medicines and nostnim- an i
cousidcrr-<l her cn.-e incuiitlih-.
"The i-rt'cct was magical; tin- pain- !u vc
1 entirely vanished; tin - swi-Iling am! ■!:-
Pirtii-n nf l:cr joints Inn* disap]K‘arcd. and
; tin- dnsca.sc lias lieen, I verily 1 u-ii.■ \c-.
crndicHted from iicr system. she is -n '
i using the medicine as a pm-atiti"iiary
\ me i-ure. and iu-r general good In-ail !i 1 •
j '.eing rcstorcil liy it. 1 can honestly and
I fearlessly recommend JhinnicuU'.- v-
; malic Cure as tin* best medicine for i i t-u-
mutism and Uu-ldnod upon the market
For sale Iiy wholesale and retail ■ irev-
I gists everywhere. Price. SI a ' - tt->•
1 Send to us or your druggist for tiii-y
j and lestory of the AVhit*- Tiger. b M
| Huunieutt sV ('"., ]iropricti>rs, A iantn.
;«m. ^ m:w.
JlfAWr'fjiuld'-
<77 Home
W TTTTOT’T TAR RE D B UTL DI NO P A P E R o »- v
tho weuthei boardiog and fluorn. V* arm iu f 1
ter, cod in euminer. ABSOLUTE PREVENTIVE
ugainst vermin of every kind. Costs nearly notti'- -—
out v about ninety sente a room. Ask dealers f i' c '*
write CHASLES H. CONNER. Manufaeturer *
- toUZSVtLLE.lv’
Soecial Deposit Vault
Casl, Assets, S7,5iW1S EbojI 8al e ai ® ia *
1 NSFRK against loss
I ning and Tornado, at rates gw
as offered by any reliable stock company. The
Lightning clause will Ih inserted in Dwelling i
policies without extra charge.
L. It. CHAPPELL. Agent. I
RHEA S^E^IdYTG-S
«: .isi t i: n > lss i: l.
/ (ELEHR.-YTED in the cure of Dyspepsia,
V Chronic Diarrhoea and Kidney Diseases.
Beautifully situated on the banks ot a crystal
mountain stream, 50 miles north of Chattanooga.
Splendid fishing. Climate unsurpassed. Music
first-class. No mosquitoes, fogs or malaria.
Wc receive new goods daily, thus keeping our stock fresh
complete.
Hoa
asoimhle.
Write for circular.
T. B. GORMAN. Proprietor,
Formerly ofWarm Springs Hotel, N. C
ut.v2v.im _ata»ynw —a—M—toaat
j. A. KIRVEN & CO.
THREEilklLLS
Positive Security Against Fire and Bunn
Hoses lor Kent »l @5.00 Per Ann""
TT, .M. ML’UFA S3. C.isliier.
G hat taken th; pad 0}
neji, Mtomach and Bowel*. A poiiuve
cure fur DjBpejNia, Sick, lleadurhe,
Constipation. lX>se, one to two teaspooiduls.
.0 and Jj cts. No genuine salts sold iu bulk* .
8IMON N. JONES, MsiUfer, LooUrllle, Ky. \
*A. 'l. smTth.
Bradf-rJ. _
Sold by D.--r*isw*
* Fricc^l OV.