Newspaper Page Text
JL
SOUTHERN’ .NOTES.
IXTEE8<TIX< 3'A'ir.- f i 1 1.
POgXTS JX THE gf
GENERAL PROGRESS AND * RREN
WHICH ARE HAPPENING M A
K >.\ S AND DIXON'S LIN*
Charleston S. C.. city count i
* vh.it
rited VkferPtErident Morton to
Charleston.
A bili making General Rol hcrtE. Lee s
birthday a legal UoT ' passed the Vir
finis hi Monday.
The bill to incorporate the Washington defeated
Arid Mount Vernon railway was
’n the Virginia legislature Monday.
A heavy rain and hail storm swept
Alabama Monday afternoon. IN.....
stones at Livingston measured ( ven
inches round.
W. H. Harris' distillery burned at
Louisville Wednesday afternoon. 7 . -
$100,000. covered by insurance. Tii
Mgjbt by t part of the roof being
blown in and striking a whisky barrel.
He pipe bunted and the liquor was
thrown out into the furnace.
The secretary of the navy, on Tuesday,
made the first payment, amounting tr
*57 800, to the Richmond Locomotive
Machine works, of Richmond, Va„ for
work done on the machinery designed being foi
the battle ship, “Texas,” which is
built at Norfolk. This is the first large
payment of money that the navy depart
ment has made to the south since the war
.jsssksjs? Savannah Tuesday. March 25th.
■ t on
1890 The association will make excut
dons to Havana, Jacksonville, Sanford
and Tampa. Fla., and will visit the sub
Tropical exposition at Jacksonville. They
will also make a trip up the St. John's ri
d *J*
Adiapatch of Monday from Binning
ham, Ala., says: As the day of his exe
cution draws near, Dick Hanes grow?
very nervous, but he seems to lie making
a desperate effort to control his emotions.
He sleeps very little now, and eats but
little. Hi? face is very pule, and there i
y frightened will look in down his eyes. completely It is ex
pected he break or
hi'gallows.
A dispatch from Birmingliam. AJa.,
says Another arrest lias been made in
Hie celebrated Dtck Hawes murder case.
W ill Roebuck, a negro hack driver was
arrested Ttadwta suspicion of being
the who helped carry the bodies of
Mr?. wes and Irene from the cottage
to the lake, half a mile away. The evi
dence against Roebuck Is all circura
stautial, but is said to be rather strong,
and his sudden flight from the city was
suspicious.
Majority and piinorifv reports were
made by the legislative committee up
pointed to examine the office of the Htnta
Treasurer of Mississippi. TUp reports do
not differ materially. They express the
Opinion that where Treasurer Hemingway
W credited with $105,550 paid out by him
for coupons in 1870, and for which no
credft can be found on his general books,
It will be found that the State owes him
mote than $2,000.
Thm was a joint meetiug-of the stock
hohlert and directors of all the street car
companies nesday, for in the Nashville, of Tenn., formally on Wed¬ rati¬
consolidation purpose of the different
fying the and organization
of street the ear United companies Electric the Street Railway
company, which will hereafter assume
control of all the lines. The company
will control fifty miles of electric railway,
which will all he in operation in thirty
lays, with one fare city. from all points to
>11 other points in the
BODY SNATCHERS FOILED.
HI JIFF. LOUISVILLE PHYSICIANS DETECTED
r IN A GRAVE BOB11KRT.
Aidispatch from Louisville, Ky., says
midnight lira; the Monday storm was night, at its height after
a party of grave
robbers in Northern cemetery, at New
Albany, were surprised in the act of des¬
ecrating the resting place of the dead, and
one of them was killed. Three others
fifth were arrested and placed in jail, but the
three escaped. Louisville The party consisted of
Blackburn and physicians—Dr. J. T.
Dr. W. E. Grant, and an
other whoso name is unknown, and col¬
ored assistants. They had gone over to
steal the bodies of Thomas Johnson and
Edward Pearce, which were buried last
Sunday, and had deliberately planned the
affair. They were betrayed, however, hy
a boy whom they had employed to
out the graves they wanted, aud as
as they begun operations, they were or¬
dered to hold up their hands. Instead ol
oln-ying they ran, and a volley was fired.
One colered man was killed, and one
caped. toW The three physicians were cap
WARM WEATHER.
TWO OF THE WARMEST DATS RTFR
KNOWN FOR FEBRUARY.
Weather reports from the south-Atlan
tie and east gulf states indicate that
of the warmestperiods of which there
anv record during the month of
ary. occurred over that section
and Wednesday. Following are
nmximc -i fcmy.i ratures or Tuesday
-elected stations. With their relation
the highest temperature ever
during February, viz: Washington
seventy-two Wilmington. degrees, six degrees
twelve degrees seventy-eight
grees. Ya., below;
seventy-eight below; degrees, three
grees degrees, Lynchburg, Ya.,
1 two degrees
AuSqffa. degrees Ga., eighty-four degrees,
two; above; Charlotte. \.
\ *nty-eight degrees, two degrees
Atlanta, Ga., seventy nx degree?,
degree degryes, above; Montgomery, Ala.,
eighty one degrees, degree below;
The • a., highest recorded one degree
February, Washing temperature
at
degrees—occurred in 1874
CLOSED AT LAST.
AFTER REPEATED EFFORTS TO
D1FFERENCS THE MILI.S SHUT DOWN.
The A dispatch from Nashua, N. Ii..
operatives of Nashua
mills manifested their determination
hold out agaiust the reduction on
in the most decisive manner on
Under Treasurer Armory's
given posted ultimatum, final the help were to
a that day. opportunity tliis to return
wqrk gard on the mills' If was
were to be closed.
employes failed to respond to the
-ad after a brief wait the mills were
Awn indefinitely. The operatives
leaving town in large numbers by
I'Sia
A ROUSING WELCOME
TO BF. GIVEN THE COSFF.DERATF,
BANS ASSOCIATION.
Chattanooga, At a nia-s meeting Tem.., of the citizen.-of
held Tuesday onfedtlate night.
it was decided to give the >
veterans association, whi'd meets there
io-iu’y a rousing welcome, and a com
ndtte* of leading citizens, of old soldi;
of both armies, was appointed to
ebar^ofthe JUjL management of the affair,
indications, from letters received
thcmwill parts „f the country, are that
i* ail immense crowd iu at
t iidavse.
TUESDAYS STORM
r a JAMA DONE IX TEX *EK. on
AX KEN
A Johnsonv ille, Tenn., dispatch
ne of the tie id most destr
pt :ow i.
d at lit f o’clock T dav. a<
bv btning, thuml anu
Tw. nans of the Nashville
md tit. Louis railroad bridgt
me&see river, were enti ICt
ished. Several buildings were blown
down, AUteiegTaphcomiiHimcatmuwestoEL^iB but no loss of life is yet reported,
sonviiie is ut off.
tie debris ,» the bridge
The news from Hopkinsville, Kv., says:
One of the most violent and destructive
storms ever known in southern Kentucky
a c rer this section Tuesday morning. doing ;
! destroying several houses and ;
j great injur? to property. In the city of i
! Bellevue, a village south ail of their that contents, city, six j
| tobacco barns, with
were destroyed, and a dozen house ■h were
»i* n- and blown down. The wind
j blew From a jjerfeet Dayton, cyclone Ohio.—A over the city. kwil ,
,
j electric storm, with heavy rain, flooded
! th** rivers h* Tuesday. The reprops
I aBf d ler\ s were slashed out, and a ten
' inch natural gas mam was torn away.
The water of the creek shot into the air
like a geyser and a column of gas re
sembling black smoke, aascended two
hundred feet, terrifying the pjople
A special to the St Louis fe«( /In¬
j j jmteh says portion a terrible of hurricane northern swept Texas
nv< r il
! .....rt house unroofed, the Santa ™ib
I ! r: <1 lmll,lln , '.I'f." 1 ^T>mlvd l,,own ,low and "; twin 7’ -
j • N 8® . , r
' 1,1 %
'“? " l', ' ‘ ,
> , i, r ;,i‘ .
bridges of the Cincinnati, Hamilton and
’ „ railroad.. .Considerabledamage railroad j
tl ls h ,, CI1 ,i on „ to property
aj j ( , v( . r Indiana bv heavy raini
j,, i ut !iauatvolis and vieinity. ‘
six thkocoii the west.
Dispatches of Wednesday say: At Wa
j pr town, NVig., the most vicious snow
rtorm j„ two year* raged Tuesday and
W ednesday nights The snow was ae
eomtianied with a fierce wind from tin
n „ r(h The roads are drifted badly and
th e railroads are blocked to some extent
Af Mason City. Iowa, a blizzard set
Wednesday ■ overing the entire northern
Hrk portion “ of the state. The thermometer
s ero, and ail trains are delayed,
At Cambridge, Ind., a cloudburst on
Monday night caused Martcndale crock,
ur that place, to rise so quickly that a wo
woman and three children wen
drowned. They belonged to a party ot
gypsies cncimpcd near the stream. At
Carbondale, III., Monday night, the place
was visited by the heaviest rainfall Ibat
has occurred for the last 15 years. It rained
incessantly until noon Wednesday.
A severe rain storm, accompanied by*
thunder and lightning, began at Anna,
Hi., Monday evening and lasted until
noon Wednesday. The flooded. streams It were hie
swollen ana the lands
been snowing and blowing at Ash
hind, Oshkosh, 'Vis., ever since Saturday night
At Wis., within less than hal
an hour, three inches of snow had fallen,
and it was with the greatest difficulty
that street the cars operated. the The The Storm effect i
tiv fur worst of year,
yvill be keenly felt in the lumber camps,
where the suow is already so deep that
logging operations w ere carried on witi
i/rent difficulty.
A STARTLING CONFESSION
A RUSSIAN EXILE SAYS HE WAS 7N A PLOT
TO KILL THE CZAIt.
A J'ionetr Frets special from Pierre, N.
D.,sbvr: A mail felt from a scaffold at the
electric light works at that place Tuesday
night and broke both thighs. He though:
he was about to die, and made a confess¬
ion. He is an exile from Russia, being
implicated in a plot to blow up the CZal
two years ago, and gave the names of sev¬
eral high Russian official* w ho were alsc
concerned, lie has important documents
in his possession to substantiate his iisver
tions, aud has promised further develop¬
ments.
BOSTON S LEGISLATURE.
KICKING AGAINST THIS ENACTMENT Ol
*l PROHIBITORY LAW.
The A liquor dispatch from Boston. legislature Mass., says:
committee of the re.
ported enacting on Thursday unanimously against and
a straight prohibitory law,
also against reduesng the high license fee
of $1,500 to $500. The same committee
reported it expedient to appoint workings a com
mission to investigate the of the
license laws of other states and countries,
BUYING KAOLIN.
boston expn ai.istk Gunner. 8,800 acuh
OF KAOLIN HNIl IN SOUTH CAROLINA.
'lhe lunnij'aehirrrn' Reronl reports that
Boston capitalists have bought 8,300
seres of and m Lexington county S. C
Professor Hitchcock, of Dartmouth col
legr says the tract is one great body ol
kaolin. A large pottery works
making white tableware will be erected,
———--
HIS BONDSMEN LIABLE.
TUI. DECISION UENDKHKD .N defaclikb
tatl’s cask.
The court of appeals fit Louisville. Kv..
on Thursday, decided that the bondsmen
of Defaulting Treasure! James W. Tats
are liable, but his case must be tried lie
fore a jury and fully made out. The de
fnleatioB has been reduced by credits from
Tates immertv to aliout $15 (KKi.
White Hair on Young Heads.
Ladi< says; a Si. Louis hair-dressei,
do not blond the hail so much as for¬
merly, but now that white hair has be
:*ome lashionnble in Laris the constant
question is. “How can l make my hair
perfectly white.' Ladies do not seem to
nv ish to wait for time to bleach their
locks, but would like, like Marie An¬
toinette, to turn white in a single night.
As there is no picparation which is safe
to use. I invariably discourage such ut
rempts. 1 know i, fashionable woman
who went to Europe a few veaisi ago, and
while there spent several weeks ut Vichy,
die health resort. She vvas persuaded hy
» coiffeur there to make use of a won
derful wash, which he assured her would
obliterate the few brown hairs left on her
h' ci. Ihe high price he asked wn?
I'linl. and the purchaser departed, rclig
inakuig : aroy toll..wing dally his instructions and
? a b application. Not only
c r ‘. ,w ", ha »' b'llvc French have,
but the white . natr s- well, and the rit.
i-oii!s lady saved a small amount ol' het
hevelure by throwing the treacherous
bottle :! of the window. But, I assure
for 1 'hi, vanity is not onlv seen in women.
weighing <>niy last week a great fat butcher.
about two hundred and fifty
pounds, came into my establishment to
purchase a mask, one'of those, used by
| ladies to beautify and whiten the skin,
^'l " rt ? b c ‘ ora Kautltlf ?,! “ d and P ur<h:! »*'; ,on " c,! ‘ thc ^
‘
d , cream, aftei f
'-''‘•Miy inqumug into the modus oper
I >»««“»« *he results to follow. It would
j t.- \ med m( ' "»»» bad bt
i i a W’‘"^ , <>ue thC of his f T , own OU8 L beefsteaks ,° Ia Mon,M to b hi: ' d
'
' under , lu? arm with
n> ,f !* V rc 0
1 : i ' "."f 1 .' vhlc ' h , W8S to t'lumge
' ,,,J1 u, ,nu , ' :,il Adorn?.
HOl'SEHOLB MATTERS.
TO PREPAKK MACCABOltl.
Maccaroni is a preparation nourishing of
gluten of flour, almost as as
meat. It can be prepared with cheese,
with t>eef tea. with bottled tomatoes, or
ritli fruit. Put a quarter of a jK>und of
on to boil in a saucepan of boiling
\ i)r water and cook for fifteen or twenty
minutes. Drain it and serve hot with a
a little butter. That is one way. Grate
sow ic cheese over it while it is hot, that
1 nother. A third is to put the macca
roai into a linking dish, strew cheese
througfa it and a few bread rruraba on
the top and bake to a light brown. Serve
in the dish. That is maccaroni ail gnitin.
There are three well-known sizes of the
little hollow stalks of flour paste: the
largest size is called maccaroni. another
size is spehetta and the smallest of all
j s vermicella, used as ••noodles” are for
soup. Spcghctti is ccoken with licef tea
and makes a very rick dish. Put it on
essence which it absorbs, making a good
dish. Bottled tomatoes added to either
the combination or the plain maccaroni
make a very appetitizing dish. Cooked
as at first directed and added to stewed
or canned fruits, it is also good; that is
with apples, peaches or j»ears, but not
with red fruits, such »3 cranberries or
plumbs, as they would he too acid.—
Washington Star.
SOCBCES OF nllTIlR AU1 1.x WINTKR.
-»>• ~~ - <
house in winter, when nature s own dis
i n f ectan ts, the frost and snow, are pun
lying the outside air. Next to the plumb
ing, which may at any time become a
source of danger to hcaith if not continu
ally looked after, the furnace claims eg
aveln «e workman who is set to cleaning
chimneys and furnaces can hardly be ex¬
aggemted. In the majority of cases he
seems to regard his duties stovepipe, as purely heater per
functory. Tapping the
pipes and different parts of the heater
with a poker will soon tell whether the
work has been done properly, The coid
air box of the heater is one of the most
fruitful sources of foul air. In many cases
the furnace it set so that the cold-air box
opens into the cellar or basement kitchen
j ns tead of outdoors, as it should. Thus
th( , unwholesome warm air of the lower
^ of the h ladcn with the cooking
o{ ^ kitche u forced into the
upper part , of ,,. the house, , , to be , breathed , .
OVT
Not only should the furnace have a
cold-air box opening outdoors, hut there
should he no crack or opening through
which the air of the basement can become
mixed with that from outdoors. The spot
where the cold-air box opens outdoors
should he as far removed as possible from
the kitchen cesspool, or any source from
which impure air may come. It is doubly
necessary in winter, when the house can¬
not, be so freely ventilated as in summer,
to look after all parts of the premises,
where debris of vegetables or refuse of
the kitchen may engender source of dis
# ise. The practice of keeping the gar¬
bage pail in the kitchen under the sink,
as is sometimes done in careless house¬
holds, cannot he too severely censured.
RKCTFF.8.
Beef Loaf—Two pounds of raw, lean
beef, one cupful of rolled crackers, half
teaspoonful of salt, two eggs; chop all
together, form into a long loaf, cover the
top with small pieces of butter and bake
one hour.
Cup Cake—The whites of four eggs
well beaten, one cupful of white sugar,
half a cupful of butter, half a cupful of
sweet milk, two cupfuls of flour, one
tablespoonful of cream of tartar and
half a teaspoonful of soda.
Wheat Bread—Sift two quart? of flour
and four teaspoonfuls of baking-power
and a teaspoouful of salt ; stir up to a
soft dough, with cold sweet milk or
water; knead hut little, mold and hake
immediately. This bread is easily di¬
gested.
Seed Cookies—One cupful of butter,
three cupfuls of sugar, two eggs, one cup¬
ful of cream, eight cupfuls of flour, two
and one-half teaspoonfuls of baking
powder, one teaspoonful of caraway
seed; roll out, cut, and sift with sugar;
bake in a quick oven.
Eggs and Cream-Hard boil ten eggs,
slice them in rings in the bottom of n
baking dish, sprinkle m some cracket
crumbs, then place a thick layer of
egg, add pieces of butter, salt and pep
per, and sprinkle more cracker
thinly over them; continue this until
the egg is used; sprinkle cracker
last, add pieces of butter, and pour
the whole half a pint of cream; place
the oven to brown; serve with any
| °* ‘'°M meat for lunch.
English Rolled
pastry should be prepared With
and sifted suet instead of lard or butter
but otherwise in the same manner as
pastrv , Uoll jam or ,] , m , served fruit £
a thin shcet . s , yor thifik j /
fruit . and thcn oommtnpil at on gide
,, , ... •' 11 ' 1 lhe fruit is
i within the paste; pinch together
at
cuds and tie up in a strong cotton
j I tliTu drop into a not of boiling g
Serve wiih sweet sauce.
Cottage Pudding—One cupful
| i su 8' lu - one cupful tablespoonful of of butter,
cupfuls ,mp of flour, sweet milk,
I “ably stiff batter, or enough to make
one half
: oi soda, one teasiioonful of cream of
tar sitfed with the flour, one
of salt. Rub the butter anti suc;ar
gether, beat in the yolks, then the
and soda, the salt and the beaten
alternately with the flour. Bake in a
Ured mold; turn out upon a dish; cut
slices aud cat with liquid sauce.
Krtcsson's Tlifee Purposes.
Setting aside minor inventions,
distinct purposes arc apparent in
s >n's labors; first, to improve the
^ ^ ° f i,S ft
next, to diseover some
, changing T oao:n ' ca the l aud mode , cfticlent of method
motion we
] ' !ir tnto the mode of motion we
power; third, to force ihe great,
- tim « nations into declaring the
Hec.tral ground, hy making naval
lau ' too destructive a pastime to he
dulged in, and equalizing the
of the struggle between" the greater
the ! ser States. On the
men; of this last purpose
in Ericsson's judgment, the future of
native Sweden. Too weak to hold k * “
“
owa existimrVon _:, t . al . ’- . ,■" rcat
! unuet of" tiri ,' ons lu ’ r 9 n v s
houe '
defence l i« ' neutralizing .
d .■ fa , ‘ aors , " f numbers
^tn u l>y '7, the efforts of
genius
Love of country
"po Ericsson a supreme passion.
ttuseontrohng sentiment, in the traits
' auc.-trT ‘ ' SlfthT ml’i h "T - U n ^ S aud C
j e n, o acquired his during the
| « *F“t ,n Scandinavian
jc hnd tne secret of that
of specialized
wmch has placed him in the very
! rank o( constructive engineers.—
A new hotel on 1’ifth avenue
lwenty-nmtb . street. New York, is to
ten stones in height.
CURRENT NEWS.
COKDRS8RD FROM THE TEI.S
ORAI’ll AMD CARLE.
! THING* Til AT HAPPEN FROM DAT TO DAT
THROUGHOUT THE WORLD, CULLED
' PROM VARIOUS SOUKCfi*.
>
The German government proposes to
j intrduce new laws against socialism,
j ■ American donations to the French land
j league received during the last fortnight,
a sum of $50,500.
. The appointment of General Cbineella
j j to he governor gcncral of Culm, is u ffl
j eislly announced.
Th „ ^ OB Tueadav .^tiruied the
oomination of diaries' W. Childs, a*
M Mnikm, A!a .
\ The French government has accepted
the invitation of Germany to take part in
.he German labor conference at Berlin.
j Th e vo,e socialwts in the recent
! * , eet ; > OD » ', ** compared with
the ** “ 18S5 ’ Sh °™
I * « am of 50<, ’ <05 vote < *'
George Dowell, of Chillicothe, Mo., set
i gun trap for a thief. Mrs. Dowell did
aot know the trap had been set and
walked into it and was killed.
Alfred Wolf, deputy commissioner of
: nternal revenue at Richmond, Va., com¬
mitted suicide Monday by jumping in the
1 river ut iSmithtield, isle, of Wight. His
i mind was affected.
In executive session on Monday the seu
«te decided to make an inquiry into the
methods bv which newspajuTs secure
their information concerning proceedings
in executive session.
The schedule committee of the Ameri¬
can association met at Philadelphia on
Monday, and arranged a schedule which
will lie submitted to the association at
their meeting at Syracuse, March 10th.
The order granted enjoining the Cotton
Oil trust"from disposing of proiiertv by
transferring it to the American Cotton
Oil company of New Jersey, was vacated
an Monday by Judge Wallace, of the
United States court in New York.
Two masked men entered the store
of W. C. Henderson, at Berwyn, Indian
covered Territory TucsSay with night. One of them
the clerk h revolver, while
the other jewelry dumped and into sacks and a large
amount of money, moun
ted their horses with their booty and es¬
caped.
At New York, on Wednesday, Brokei
Pell, under $20,000 liail on the charge ol
grand larceny, in connection with the re¬
cent surrendered wrecking of Lenox his Hill Imnk, wa?
by one of bondsmen, and
was agnin taken into custody, pending
his endeavor to secure other security.
A AVir'.i Paris correspondent says that
Dorn Pedro is unwilling to dismiss his
imperial suite. He has, therefore, resol¬
ved to endeavor to come to terms with
the Brazilian government, to renounce tin.
crown and to return to Brazil and live as
a private person.
A Providence, R. I., dispatch says;
The state prohibitionists on Wednesday
put in nomination the following ticket
Governor, Rev. John Larry; lieutenant
governor, Joshua C. Brown; secreturv ol
state, John W. Mooney; attorney-general,
John T. Blodgett; general treasurer John
John P. Hazard.
A dispatch of Tuesday,from Baltimore,
Md., says: A. Brchme & Co., importers,
German street; H. I’. Towles & Co., fur¬
nishing Welsh, goods, Baltimore street; and S.
A. notions, Lexington street; filed
deeds of trust for the benefit of their
creditors. The bonds filed are respect¬
ively $24,000, $40,000 and $1,000.
H. A Eppleshcimer, dispatch from Kansas City of the says: Pink¬ C.
detective manager
erton agency in that city, to
which was entrusted the task of captur¬
ing Frederick A. Walton, the absconding
agent of the Pacific Express company at
Dallas, Texas, received a dispatch on
Sunday from St. Johns, N. B., stating
that Waltou had been arrested, W alton
stole $85,000 of the company’s money.
Only $7,000 was found ou his person,
liis offense U not extraditable.
A Four-Year-Old’s Protest.
old A boy Chicago gentleman has a four-year
who is an inveterate gum-cliewer.
The boy’s name is John, and he thinks it
is a great hardship to put aside his gum
when he goes to lied at night, lie is in¬
clined very much to rebel against such
discipline. A few Sundays ago he went
to the cemetery with his parents. Pass¬
ing a pasture along the track, little John
saw cud. a cow lying down and chewing het
He at once exhibited wild alarm
and excitedly exclaimed: “Oh, ma, look
there! That cow has gone to bed chew¬
ing her gum, and you won't let little
John do that." One evening John's
elder brother and sister were discussing
anatomy and looking over a physiological
work. Jol\n was particularly interested
in the pictures of sections of the human
being. the After they bad got through he
took book, and, pointing to the
lungs, heart, 1 ver, and arm, a log and
other dissevered members of the human
frame, he inquired: "Docs it take all
these to make a bov?”—[Chicago
Herald.
Weak Hearts.
The number of people w ho imagim
that they have heart disease is astonish
ing, says physician's a well known local physician,
and the observation is borne
out by the complaints of people who cer¬
tainly look like anything but the posses¬
sors of weak hearts. People who some¬
times feel a little faint think that their
little collapses are due to weak heart,
when they are due only to the failure of
the fainter to make connections with din¬
ner. Not two people in ten really know
w here their heart is located. The great
number of people believe it is up about
under the left nipple, when it is really in
the centre of the body, and almost at tlu;
bottom of the breast bone. If actors on
the stage really put their hands on thu
surface above the cardiac apparatus when
they said, "sit still, me heart, sit still,”
they would seem rather to indicate that
they were suffering with the stomachache,
—[St. Louis Star-Sayings.
Purifv Your Blood
When spring approaches, it is very important that
the blood should be purified, as at this season im¬
purities which have been accumulating for months
or even years, are liable to manifest themselves and
seriously affect the health. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is
undoubtedly the best blood purifier. It expels every
taint, drives out scrofulous humors, and gives to the
blood the quality and tone essential to good health.
Kow is the time to take
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
“My daughter suffereti terribly with sAre eye?,
••used by scrofula humor. We were obliged to keep
aer out of school for two years. We had medical
tendance, but she failed to gain relief. At last,
knowing that Hood’s Sarsaparilla had cured my
neither of rheumatism, and believing it must be good
for the blood, I concluded to have my daughter try
it, and it hss entirely cured her.' - CoRSEurs Yeaget..
$12 East Main Street, Marshalltown, Iowa.
Purifies the Blood
••Hood’* Sarsaparilla has cured me of salt rheum,
which I have had for year?. I do think it is a splen¬
did medicine I am 40 years of age and* my skin is
just a> smooth and fair as a piece of glass.'' Mrs
L tUJk Clark. South Norwalk, Conn.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by ail druggists, ft; six for $ Prepared only
hy C. 1. HOOD * CO.. Lowell, Mass
IOO Doses One Dollar
Where Old Men are Needed.
1 Boti a*l ‘.,hat
an for
n« to* watch
'S. m* i. iced at
rr * ive k I by ug
j **! iHt th* fill the
Ss jvcs. An
ii*iii kr * the psaJx
hi limn a
HIT li, is liable o
thinking DOUt imething else,
id tlu mune i> true of mk who
been injured in ICC idents. Thev
3 much li .etter lookout thau any
A young man
who w ill : A telling
i railroad lazy to eat.
•'uch a niiiti is worse than noljodv. A
position of that kind has no future, and
oung man who accents it amounts to
nothing. All the duties of the situation
an Ik* attended to bv an old man or one
partly fill disabled bv accident, and noliody
; an the bill any better.*
Potato Pie.
Cut from a breast or neck of mutton,
or from cold meat. a. much as will V
needed for the family dinner. l»ivi ic
the bones and saw torn, into pieces not
more than three inches ioug. Season
them with pepper and -ait, and lav them
at the Is.ttom of a pie dish, cover them
with parboiled sliced onions; over these
put a hirer of boiled and mashed potu
toes. Continue these alternate lay ers tin
til the dish is full. Pour in a little water
or stock, and smooth the top. which
must be potatoes, with a three-pronged light
fork. Bake the pie till the crust is a
brown ami cri-p. Send to table in the
(Tjsj,
“Like a Cucumber.”
One of the oddest typographical errors
ever made in Boston was in a book of ser
mons bv Dr. Nathaniel Emmons, the
great orthodox divine. The doctor
quotefl the scripture text, ‘--ut him j
down. Why cumbereth lie the ground;’’
The intelligent compositor put it in type, j
‘•Cut him down, like a cucumber, to the
ground.”
I£ow vilely liaa he lost himself who I
has become a slave to 7 t I
exalts him to tile dignity of is Maker!
(h,!d is the friend, the' wife, the god of
the money-monger of the world.
, Inc , I „ rule . ol Him I , Ii»*h.
Ho was a bri jrht, handsome boy of sixteen,
delitfht sunnv-teinijerea, brilliant and engHKitiK;, the
of his parents, the joy of his home, and
the pride of his class. But a shade n fell across
his bright prospects. It bogan with a t rifting
cough: soon came failed, prem mitions of consumption,
iiis strength his cheeks grew hollow, and
he seemed doomed to an early grave. Then a
friend advised Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis
covery. He tried it and was saved.
and strength again returned* school his cheerful voice raug his
out across the playground,
cheeks again grew rosy, his eyes bright, tie is
still "the pride of his class" and he graduates
this year with highest honors.
Chronic Nasal Catarrh positively cured bv
l)r. sage’s Catarrh Remedy. 50 cents, bv drug
®
hates Keep bread, him at least three paces distant who
music and the laugh of a child.
1 have looked over the list of ingredients in
Bull's Sarsaparilla and have no hesitation in
pronouncing well in diseases it a safe which compound It is applicable* that promises
to L.
Y. Yandell, M. D.
Why the is an unkind criticism like a pin? Be¬
cause better the point the more it hurts.
Bradfield's Female Regulator will cure all
SSfSS SltaSSW 8 “ rf’s.W ‘ y
aUdrngglBt?.
A box of Bunch" safety matches free to smokers of
“TansilFa 5c. Cigar.
If afflicted with sore eyes use $>r. Isaac Thomp¬
son's Eye-Water. Druggists sell nt !J5c per bottle.
\Vatdi for ‘ Murray" Buggy adv. next week.
SY%m®Gs jK
¥v*
1 r
y 3
/
All
OjSTXV _ .
Both the method and results when
Syrup and of Figs is taken :itis pleasant
gentlyyet refreshing ® to the taste, V and acts
promptly ,, on the Kidneys, :
Laver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem aches effectually, and dispels colds, head¬
fevers and cures habitual
constipation. only Bjrrup kind of Figs is the
duced, remedy pleasing of its ever pro¬
to the taste and ac¬
ceptable its to the stomach, prompt in
action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy its and excellent agreeable substances,
mend many all qualities CO Di¬
it to and have made it
the most popular reniedy known.
*nd Syrup il of Figs is for sale in 60o
bcttles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure wishes it promptly it for Do any one who
to try not accept
any substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL
UWSYIUE, KY. nets YORK. N Y.
^MOTHERS
LESSENS SSrariMOTHER PAINED T o L | F ° E p b '
J 0 AuMUfUF^i ^ CHILD
B RADFIELO R EGULATOR CO. ATLANTA g an A
*OU> NY ALL OFUGOlSrs.
Ely’s Cream Balm Catarb^
W1I.L CJt'tlK
C fi T A R R H r
| Pile? 6 U t Ml*. 1 p
Applv ¥LY BROS H*lm , M into Vff * mcL Ht noAtrii- .MV n F?
. .
DROPSY
THKATED FREE.
Positively Cured with Vecetable
Have cured thousands of cases. Cure pat*«nte pro
aounced hopeless by b**l physicians. ‘days From first
svmptom* disappear; Lm ten at least
all symptoms removed. Send fo r free book
Blais of mlraculous cures. Ten days'
free by m aiL If you order trial, send 10c. in
to pay postage. Da. H. II. & So»s, Atlanta,
SHOW
Wall and Proscription Casas, Gadar Charts.
Furniture, Jewelry Trays, Stools, Cabinet work oi
kinds. Complete outfits for «t ores. Send for Catalogue
ATLANTA SHOW CASS
SOUTHERN PRINTERS* SUPPLY
O czasv IN srocz
Type, Cases. Stands,
Cutter*
and everything used in a pklvting
PUBLISHING HOUSE,
wn us nod HAVE AIOXR V’!
34 West Alabama Street, 1T!.?JTA,
Work For Leisure Hours
j Fancy work in these day* meaus Tar
I more than it did when our grandmothers entirely
I j strained their eyes over bugs with
covered with tx*u j* that were sown
j line silk on the finest possible which still canvas. j
(X'CK»ional spe cimens of re
main as heirlooms or when ••ottomans" j
red with < cr canvas unnatural displayed
i impossible roses, >r si ill more
j dogs anel cat s. For the last few years,
| everything in our houses that good has been honest so
! covered and decorated, , j
| foundations were not easy to find; but
I " 'th it all a great deal of
I beauty has been introduced, and !
i much that was ugly hidden from and slight.
| Even* reason brings new more
! beautiful materials into the market; and
j although of these materials are very t j
some
; expensive, a small quantity like cloth of .
j i gold materials, or cloth goes of a silver, great way. both being These beau- wide j
! tiful glistening fabric- are used as foun
j dations also applique to be richly decorations; embroidered, and in both and;
as i
ways the effect is very rich and elegant. ;
A very pretty and less expensive table
cover can lx* made in scarf shape of a
i l|'ecc of double width velours, the
»**>' purchased to be merely the width of
^ »«'•*• The ends of a thin, embroidered
| ^ '*Tkish towei should be cut off!to lea\e
j a ^Dlc space beyond the embroidery,
| au,i theground between the figures darued the
j "i ( h floss silk of the same color as
| velours, but in a much lighter shade. |
Thus,supposing 'J ‘Wmng the should velours old to be pink: old red and j
11 ' silk be
the handsome effect.^ with the glint of the j
gold thread which is always mixed with
Eastern embroideries, is really sur
l» the n *>"g- " hen the darning is completed
bands should be sewed to the scarf
at a distance of alxtnt half their width
from each cud, and the joining concealed
hy a very narrow- gold braid. Line with
°ld pink sateen; and tasselled fringe on
the ends is a matter of choice. The cost
of this scarf need not lie much. Plioto
g r »ph cases are much prettier than the
»ncient albums, and ingenuity can be ex
etcised ui>o i these useful trifles to almost
8 »y extent,
Tl»«* Voyagt* of LiIV.
Life is beset by evils ant! changes on every
side. From birth to manhood and from inan
hood until old age eternal,vigilance is the price
" e health Thereiaonereniedy that.hassaved
bust health. It is known as Dr. Bull's
pari i»arilla. 11a, and Not it fB thousand a Sarsaparilla doses of that molasses is a Horsa- and j
a
w ater for a dollar, but a concentrated essence
of the best virtues o fsarsaparilla and other al
tertive herb?*. It heals,cur« s where other sarsu
parilla and blood remedies have no more effect
than so much stagnant water. If your
system craves an alterative, if you value life
you do yourself a gieat injustice if you fail to
try this excellent remedy. Demand it of your
druggist and take no other. - Sidney Times.
-------^------
Ii was a Scotchwoman who said that “the
butcher in her town only killed half a beast at
a time."
There is more Catarrh in this section of the
country than all other diseases put together,
and until the last few years was supposed to be
j incurable. pronounced For it a a local great disease, m*ny and years prescribed Doctors
local remedies, and by constantly fading to
with local treatment, pronounced it in
curable. Science has proven catarrh to be a
constitutional disease, and therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure, Toledo, manufactured by K. -J. Cheney & Co.,
the Ohio, is the only constitutional cure t
market. It is taken internally in doses
from 10 d.ops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly
upon the blood and mucus surface of the sys¬
tem. They offer one hundred dollars for any
case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and
testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENEY &
CO Toledo, O.
pw Sold by Druggists, Toe*.
i ____
j know "ben a man lives to ’93, ho Isold enough to
, better than to Ml up with the spirit ot
Get the Best! llr. Bull’s Worm Destroyers
are the best. They taste (paid. They are safe.
They are sure.
Dyspepsia.
The dyspepsia is like the tooth-nclle. no
one sympathises with its miserable posses¬
sor. Even the doctors have fallen in with
the popular heresy that the best way to
sympathize him. When with a dyspeptic dyspepsia, is to rail at
you have every
! man you meet asks you to go to lunch
S with him; every house you pass is a res¬
taurant ; every gale that blows wafts to
your nostrils the odor of ham and eggs;
every newspaper is full of domestic re¬
cipes; with edibles excry of wagon in sort; the street the only is loaded sign
some
you see is “Dinner now ready,” or “Sup
i per Only Fifteen Cents;” why, even the
j | for beggars pennies who with waylay which you, to buy importune “something you
| side, to eat.” however, Dyspepsia and if has humored its complacent
i by long and circumspect fasting. properly
occa
I siona,i during / !? ivcs its these victims a season whensoever of rest,
seasons,
hey occ “ r ’ If beh Qpv .f the dyspeptic to
improve his opportunity. t Hot mince pie
wi , h melted cheese! Ila, there is a dish
that will compensate von for weeks of
torture! Then there is nothing the mat
ter (if we may be pardoned the slang
phrase) with a Welsh rarebit, yet the ban¬
queter should insist on having a nice over¬
done, indigestible pouched egg served
with the rarebit. But we shall—we can
go no farther; it makes the mouth water,
the palate yearn and the heart throb, to
think of these precious boons, and even
in the midst of stomachic paroxysms, we
feel constrained, like old Louis XL, to
plead indulgence, not only for the sins
we have committed, but for the sius
which we hope to have the pleasure of
committing by and by—we regret that we
cannot fix the exact date.
_________
\Yk are firm believers in the maxim
dmt for all right judgment of any man or
thing it i? tueful. nay, essential, to see his
good qualities before pronouncing on his
I bad ones.
** WATfiHEs w
FINE JEWELRY
J. P. STEVENS & BRO..
ATLANTA, OA.
■’•’UllJa *spa nm||n WORTH WEST —OR
1AK0NEOFTHE
BURLINGTON ROUTE
-—THROUGH TRAINS FROM
ST. LOU 16 AND CHICAGO
—TO—
Kansas City, St. Joseph, Denver. St.
Paul and Minneapolis.
Thc H «*«t I.Joe for nil Point* North nnd
\\ pul and the Pacific Cohn!.
—FOR THE—
NATIONAla EDI’4' W AL ASSfidA.
chtHing UitKtnn Honte” to ^Bnrthftftoii PhuI. L-a-pu* r - .. ur -
ticfcem via the Houlr’* w 1!
haveit cuoioe ol route*. «ithe, via St. L Qia. Pez,,ia
? •“ tbii* » Jem ruus trains direct to
r.tii! rom a » n epojnts.
For further inf¬ ‘tmatio: ■non, pnmphietB, concernin';
ill e tof'Ft rtg, etc . c» 1 ?m or “ddress
HOWARD ELLIOTT,
f»en t Pass. Ast., st. Lottie. He.
lanta, <»«.,
DCklRIVnns# ENGL,SH
rt ^°f CR °^ S diamond
j ^ A-k*iirugii*t a f7r m 'L/fa^l,w* with* v Ll ! dle li *’ A
ft’ 16 "t** a N>x "*- ! "'*ie4
----------
|BrISilll^ | B | Bffl ■;« WHISKEY HAS
TnrrnF>srj I ttbL V lav*er 1 -toekiBU. S. t i„ No t :
llLILlJ -'hrapor. brl
I I liwuu ;;sfT: PIKF. co
N-L ts -. u„„,,
WPy%ll fl( LrFn
f * 1 'mens C03Q ti
■f sic i;
f ' »
/L/.
jr 5 /*
n ng JiQg A.
Jr=z:
J \1 $ L *
m !! \ \V
. : N.
S
ff 7 I •! •;r •*1
111 i
i i VJ!. rtf
o
sa ^
jrr -n t V,
^ j ... X
“MY WIFE IS A TERROR!”
said a mild-tenipered and snarls man and in our spanks hearing,
“ She snaps lior
children, and finds fault continually. Don’t I
can t bear it any longer.” be too
severe sufferings. on her, my She friend has ; you little her realize
her lost former
sweet it all. disposition, Dr. Tierce’s and Favorite ill health Prescription is the cause
of
will make her
As a powerful, invigorating tonic, it lm
. art* strength and to the whole system, and
to the womb its appendages in par
tieular. For overworked, ‘'worn-out,'’
"run-down,” debilitated teachers, milliners,
dressmakers, seamstresses, "shop-girls,”
housekeepers, nursing mothers, and feeble
women generally. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre
scription is the greatest earthly boon, being
tinequaled as an appetizing cordial and re
storative tonic.
As a soothing and strengthening nerv
ine, and “Favorite invaluable Prescription” allaying is and u ri equaled
is ui subdu
ing haustion, nervous prostration, excitability, hysteria, irritability, ex
spasms and
other distressing, nervous symptoms, com
monly attendant disease the upon functional and
organic of womb. It indui-es
refreshing despondency. sleep and relieves mental anxi
ety and
—
CATARRH m * * " m B « a m B a no ™ mutt THK r f how ] head, standing,
*. 0 ong ia per
manently cured by DR SAGE’S CATARRH REMEDY. 50 cento, by druggists.
* maib \iwa CAIN :
i mi8 'j T 5| \ ONE POUND \
i men io~ mm !
*
VtailZ -17C| A Day. !
kbbrhebsbr
■
} A GAIN OF A POUND A DAY IN TIIK
j j CASE OF A MAN WHO HAS BF.COME “ALI. J '
RUN DOWN,” AND HAS BEGI N TO TAKE :
J THAT REMARKABLE FLESH PRODUCER,
iSCOTT’S : { ! :
J Fmulsion : •
; : OF PURE COD LIVER OIL WITH
•
; Hy pophosphites of Lime & Soda f
S IS NOTHING UNUSUAL. THIS FEAT .
1 HAS BEEN PERFORMED OVER AND OVER j
1 ! again. Palatable as milk. En. S
. DORSE!) BY PHYSICIANS. SoLD BY ALL
5 Druggists. Avoid substitutions and
J IMITATIONS. *-*
• —..... ____
*22" •tVfMTttN 5CVCMTV
v
Ue
To cure Biliousness. Sick Headache. Constipation,
Malaria. Liver Complaints, take the sale
and ce rtain remedy. SMITH'S
BILE BEANS
Uw the SMALL SIZE (40 little beans to the bot¬
tle!. They are the most convenient , suit all ages.
Price of either slie, 25 cents per bottle.
KISSING “ a „ll size ot°thD
cents (copper, or stamps).
J. F. SMITH & CO..
Maker, of ' 'Bile Beans, " St. Louis. Mo.
BUSINESS
COLLEGE,
NASHVJLLE, TENN.
This College, though yet In its infancy,
has more than BOO former stuitvnt* occu¬
pying gojd position*, many of them re¬
ceiving salaries ranging from $OUO to $1.
r>00 per annum. For circulars, address
H. W. JEXNINGS, Prtii.
JONES
PAYS THE FREIGHT.
: FSH t- o 1' il \V StecT neon hcttlvm jTraia
i Iron Levers Bearin K s,
Tare Bem^at^B^ain Box
i ‘ Ri i '" r five pii'-" list
I V JUr<Cs> Jftisvi nc' Ur 'aliru, DlIruH«/WToAl ut’:,
I UINCJHAMTO » N, y, f
l£S*S=i“Ss
Iasthmas | by isnll ••ffarsm. tlal URED.pRCC pstksg* ■ IILL
ts Dr K 8 CUIVFS AN, §t. r kBl. Mint-.
----
OPIUM Vi IV 8 Y 8 J. HTKPH KN 8 d
,
i »aag
i 'i
fi fa^SKsSSa m
fi
$ DR. SCHENCK’S
DR. SCHENCK’S M ftHDRfiKE PlLLS DR.SGHENCK’S
Seaweed STANDARD burn, Cure Flatulency, Indigestion, FOR OVER Ctflic,and Sonr HALF Stomach, all A Diseases CENTURY Heart¬ ol* p UlMONlg
the Diarrhoea, Stomach; Oostireness, Inflammation,
Pile*, end Diseas-s of the Bowels;
TONIS (.'onpestion, Biliousness, Jaundice, Nhuwt*, SYRUP
Headache, Giddiness, Nervousness, Wan¬
dering Pains, Malaria, Liver Complaint,
and all Disetvies arising from a Gorged and
as . a i „ osiura Cure , for Sluggish Liver. They clean the mucous Will Cure
co*!e. reduce gorged or congested condl- ......
DYSPEPSIA
Aad .lt D,» r a. ? of th, THROAT •«■ W"":
. CorraJSw, PURELY VEGETABLE, . n ddo«»<'
strictly RELIABLE,
of DeWilty. For Sal* by all AND A BSC LUTE LY SAFE icine ia the World. gg
Druggists. Price, fl .00 per hot- J tLT 13 Mr ^ by all I) rug cists- Pr* ^
Dr. Schsnck s New Book For Sale L-r all Druggist*. Price 25 eta. perMt!" Ilr ; ^^jj* Cu;•
msul'iT’ Liv r » u,i per box 3 box«s for *5 sent hy on Consumption an
: ; cts.; or ^
Dr.i.H.Schcack him. Phil*. »U. tratKacsl - ail. PhHSkl^' P»- D* J H.Ec-.enek t
a PISO'S REMEDY 1 OR CATARRH.—Best. Easiest to use. Lor j*
Cheapest. lieHef is immediate. A cure is certain.
Cola in the Head it h^s no equal. I
A A
It is an Ointment, of which a small particle is applied to the
nostrils. Price, SQc. Sold by drurgists or sent hy mail.
Ati.iresss. E. T. Hazm.ti.vk, Warren. Fa.
Dr. Fierce's Favorite Prescription is a
by an eyrx^rieiieivr’a'i^l1 orcanS!
and adaued to woman s delicate
tion. It is purely vegetable in its comnorf
tion and perfectly harmless in any condition
t of “ the Favorite system. Prescription |
” is a nosi‘iv«
j cure for the most complicated and ,,hstt
I nate cases of leucorrhea, excessive sunnrl: fl,
menstruation, unnatural womtT i
| sions, prolapsus, or falling of the
j weak back, “ female weakness" antevm I
sion, chronic retroversion, bearing-down sensation.
ntion of congestion, the inflammation and ulcer I
tenderness in womb, inflammation pain wtthi irnd
“ internal heat.” ovaries, accompanied “
It is the only medicine for woman's Decu
liar gists, weaknesses under positive and ailments, sold by ‘iruv’ ttwl
a guarantee from
manufacturers, to give satisfaction in evem
refunded. case, or money See paid for it will be nromDtlv
gunrantee printed on bottle,
wrapper and faithfully carried out for or
many For years. 'an Illustrated
Women, Treatise on Disease*
of lid iwges, (sent sealed in ntoin
I envelope.) to World's enclose Dispexsap.y ten cents in stamm
No. Medical Assod
i ciation, ti63 Main Street, Buffalo
1 N. Y. ’ ’I
£
v a
•■rt
r
..
■ m ri'
flit ■ 1
us m
W. L. DOUCLA
$3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. FOR
BEST IN THE WORLD.
OTHEE SPECIALTIES for GENTLEMEIf,
LADIES, HISSES and BOYS.
None genuine unless mini and price ire
stamped on bottom. Sold everywhere
I*”Send address on postal for valuable is?
formation.
IV. I„ Douzlno. Hrni-lllon. tla»«.
IF YOU WISH A - f^Y*^
REVOLVER 1:1 5 u rn'sson
— ‘‘I
purchase one of the cole- »
brated SMITH ft WESSON S’.
arms. The finest small arms
ever manufactured and the J
first choice of all calibres export*. TH
Manufactured in ;r.\ :#and Hammerieea 44-nu. Siu
ale or double action. Safety and
Titruet models. Constructed entirely insi^ected of best qua
Ity wi out’lit stock, Meet, curefully unrivaled for forwor flnl»1
mansh and they are bedeceiredl
duriibiiii v undnccurncv. l»onot ^hi*
cheap mulleuhlc cn*at-i»on article Imitnlions
a - e often sold for the mcl true and SMITH are n
onlv unreliable, but dangerous, dupon ’flit the ba
WESSON Revolvers are all Rtaia; M data* paten
rels with firm’s name, address and detail. of Il
and sist are {rnnrnnteed having the genuine perfect article, in < xccy and if yw
dealer upon Blip: ly order s-uttoaddr«
cannot you an careful atWOtioa
b**io\v will receive prompt art i \
I ideacTptiveaatalowie at i nri«t«a furnishe mm
l!k “ ton SMITH & WESSON,
f-tf Mention tUI* paper. SprinirW«^d*
F0R Double Sreecti-Loid
>tA
JlrrecU-T.oader*. *< t«
VH nebest er li-alint Rlfl ft, $11 1*» $1 »•
Breech-loading RIRn, *«
SelT-eoekinjt Revolvers, Nlekel-plHt**, $2.00.
Pend ?o. stamp fi r 5*>-par*» Catalogue amt save *5 per
GRIFFITH A SEMPIE, 612 W. Main, Loui«irUle,K
SAFE and SURE MONE
wSn'XtiSfiSlS.'Xfi 'iXulJK* l nffrtuUH M
idhwhi' id d m* you menu buine-* Sixth ''Y
i Mre - (JKO.( . KNOX? 1?>2 Avemu —
New York ( ily. Box, (>2? H
«» *75 tOtWJtl A HONTHean brmsde wortlnj om,a*
horse for u». Fersoos their whole preferret time wn.. to the can
a uu<I nlve employed
Spare few moments may be profitably and cities. B. F.
A vacancies In towns liivtuuoad, Va. |
i-OS & CO., UjJ -'lain St.,
Patent, REK.U AN Pension, A- MONEY. Claim and WMhlng'.on. Land attornstb. D. 0.| ■
«. A. A. 1>. Freeman, JAoney, 10 8 year** 3fc»ml>cr Aas't U. of *>. AUj-ven. t ongrew.| ■
yom$
Stricture- ** Iff ^mEt^rdam, hlHAM.M. *>• n, *•
ixoie
: iw Ca lan lira only Ci»mlal by th» C«. ss
Cine ’ nn " D.'b! DYCHE 4
Ohio. CtilraF 0
Drufia'A '. ,
nit. AftrtV&l.OO . Roll by
.. N. U... ...Tfn,18#;