Newspaper Page Text
AT CHRISTMAS TIME.
At Christmas time last year
So many friends that are now gone were
here!
So many hopc-s were glowing then unspoken,
So many faiths were strong that now lie
broken.
And loving hearts that trusted without fear.
At Christmas tirao last year.
At Christmas time this year
So many of us find the world so drear
And bai i en desert wherein blooms no rose
With mountain peaks surrounding it, whose
snows
Have chilled our hearts, and turned life's
foliage sere
At Christmas time this year.
At Christmas time next year
Who knows what changing, fortunes may be
near?
Take courage, then! For night shall turn to
day,
From brightening skies the clouds must roll
away.
And faith and hope and love shall all be here
At Christmas time next year!
Helen M. Winslow.
A CHRISTMAS FAN.
ELL! it is "finished at
% '/a last. Isn’t it a beauty?”
The speaker a
7 pretty and bright
f looking girl of eight¬
een, pushed away her
palette, rose from her seat and standing
in the midst of the room, held up with
a graceful pose a fan of silk and mother
of-pearl, exquisitely painted.
“Indeed, Eva, it is your masterpiece ”
said an elderly girl, tall and handsom
she took the fan c,
as and examined it.
A pleased smile lit the pale face of a
lady who reclined in a rocking-chair,
engaged in the certainly not artistic work
of darning linen—fine old linen which
told plainly enough that the owners had
known “better times.”
“I will take it at once to Monsieur
Fouquerein,” Eva said, turning to a mir
ror, and beginning to adjust the pretty,
gold-brown curls above her smooth fore
beadi “It wants only three days to
Christmas, and he was anxious to get all
my work in time. The rest I can finish
to-morrow."
And enveloped in a thick veil and man
tie, she left the house in which they had
lodgings, and tripped lightly down the !
street to the store of a dealer in •‘fancy
and artistic work, ’ in a fashionable busi- I
ness quarter of the city.
It was Christmas Eve, and the snow
was falling without, as Airs. Belton sat
in her cozy dressing-room, looking over |
a quantity of dainty articles, useful or j
ornamental, which stewed the table be- j I
fore her
Opposite her sat handsome :
a young
lady, with a magazine lying open in her
lap, idly looking on, and occasionally i
seemed making a rather sarcastic remark, which j
not at all to disturb the elder I .
lady—her aunt.
‘A terrible bore, this business of pre¬
senting Christmas gifts,’’ Airs. Belton said,
as she selected and laid aside several arti¬
cles. “Such a strain upon one’s purse,
where one must give; and one cannot
well avoid it without an appearance of
being mean or stingy.”
“Fortunately, you have a way of escap- j
iug both alternatives,” said the young i
lady, laughing, “You give what costs j
you nothing, and so save both purse and 1
reputation. ”
“I do as others do; and consider it a
very commendable course to give away
what you don’t care to keep, and avoid
unnecessary expense. Now, here is this
lovely handkerchief, in an expensive and !
useless fancy box—a Christmas present I
irom Mrs, Jerrold. I happen to know :
that it was purchased for Airs. .Terrold !
herself, who, having more handkerchiefs \
than she knows what to do with, lias
kindly bestowed this upon me. Well, it i
shall go further. I will give it to that j
pretty Alarie Lessing, who sends me flow- i
ers, and wno, being probably not so well
provided with costly gifts, will know¬
how to value it.” |
il tf )
h •’ / j
/ |
■ f s [
i
M ^8® !
r J !
q i
i* i
rfhi7 i
t |
“What will you give Airs. Herrick?
She has been very assiduous in taking
you out in that elegant new carriage of ,
hers, when you were so ill. She will ex- !
pert some acknowledgment.
“That is true. I have been thinking
of it, but can find nothing here exactly
suitable,” glancing over the table, “As
for her kindness, the obligation is really
not on my side. She is pushing her way
up, and it was to her advantage my be
ing seen in her carriage. Nevertheless, I
must send her a Christmas token.”
At this moment a servant entered with
TRrOGLFTHORPE ECHO, tEXlMm 0A., FRIDAY, De 6 eMBF rm\).
a small parcel it* her hand, which she
1 lauded the young lady.
The latter received it eagerly,but after
glancing at the address, passed it, with
a disappointed air, to her aunt.
‘■Forme? and in the Major’s handwrit¬
ing. ’ said Mrs. Belton, with a slight
flush on her rather faded cheek.
She had been a handsome woman, and
was still so when “gotten up to be seen
I :ln d the gallant Major, to whom her hand
was pledged, was twenty years her
senior.
jm a
S,
'v4^41§*i ' C3fc*
L-. J&
“Really,” she added, as she unsealed
the parcel and drew forth an elegant fan,
“I must say that the Major displays a
great taste in his selection of presents.
! What il love ty design, and how exquis
i lte lj painted! And yet I am disappointed,
! ^ or ^ ^ lal ^ ^°P c d it was something for
you, Eulalie, from Neil. My dear,” with
a solemn shake of the head, “I begin to
fear that you will never succeed there!”
“But I will succeed !” the girl replied,
with a sudden, sharp decision of voice
and expression. “You will see!”
“I hope so; for,as you know,my heart
is set upon this match. Neil Gordon is
not rich, but between you there will be
enough; and in other respects he is the
safest match that I know of—and that is
what you most need, Eulalie. If you
will be a little less open in your encour
ment of him, and we can keep him out
of the way of that Maynard girl—”
“I don’t believe there was anything in
it,” interrupted Eulalie, hastily, “I
don’t think he cared for her—a girl who
makes her living by painting and music.”
“The Maynards arc of good family,
though poor, and these girls are well
educated and ladylike. Neil thinks it
nobler in them to prefer not to lie de¬
pendent upon their relatives. Eva iu
dced ’ let mc a ' ssure yoU ’ is a rival not t0
be despiscd; and if 1 had any idea of
h °' V thiugs ,night turu out ’ 1 would
ncvcr llavc en S a S ed ller to P aint those
water-color sketches last summer. To
think of Neil going with her always to
select views and act as escort and pro¬
tector 1”
“It, was her artfulness, and I believe
th ° y have ,noved to town P ur P oseI Y to
thrOW themselves in his way!” said Miss
Eula!le ’ sliar ply
“No, they arc too proud for that; but
I have taken care to put him on an en¬
tirely false trail. And he is not likely
to renew his search, since I informed him
of what I heard from Wilkins—that
Miss Maynard is shortly to marry that
clever young country parson, Mr. Boyd.
Of course, I did not consider it necessary
to mention that the prospective bride is
Laura, and not Eva.”
The loquacious lady paused in her dis¬
course to renew her examination of the
fan—the Christmas offering of the gal¬
lant Major. it
3ff MS
r ■
m w if h£?/2' &
'SK & B™' 1
- r 7
1 AVI)at a pity that his judgment did
11 e qual his (aste, and prompt him to
s< ?^ ec *' something more appropriate to my
a " e - J his is too light and youthful for
me: and it strikes me now that it would
he thf ’ very thing for Mrs. Herrick.”
‘But if tiie Alajor should see her with
it JU
“Nonsense! lie could only see it on a
close scrutiny, and then would not rec
ognize it. Really it has come just at the
right time!”
“Certainly. How Providence does
provide!” laughed Eulalie, satircally.
And before an hour had passed, the
fan, with an elegant little note from Mrs.
Belton, was in the hands of Airs. Her
rick.
“It’s perfectly lovely!” said that lady,
admiringly. “But what am I to do with
so many Jans? I have already a score of
them for which I have no use. This one,
I know, is from Fouquerein’s, for I saw it
yesterday, and noticed these tiny initials,
E. L. M.,’ among the heartsease. I will
take it there, and exchange it for that
lovely bonbonier*? to give to Airs. Di¬
J.aneey. li Airs. Belton ever sees it
again, she will imagine it a duplicate „
Later on that Christmas Eve a hand
some young man entered the fashionable
emporium of M.Fouquerem,and inquired
for something appropriate as a Christmas
gift for a lady.
Several articles were placed before
him, one of which seemed instantly to
take his fancy. Ir was a fan of silk and
mother-of-peari, painted in water-colors;
and as be closely examined jt, his eye de-
t'cetcd, half-hidden amid blue forgtt-me
nots, the tiny initials, E. L. M.
At once before his vision rose a sweet,
fair face, with brown eyes, and golden
brown hair shading a pure, white fore¬
head.
How often, in the summer past, they
had walked together amid fields and
woods, and on the bank of that lovely
river whose beauties she had so skillfully
sketched!
Then, when he w r eut back to visit her
in her rural home she and her family had
disappeared—swallowed up in the big
city to which they had gone—and not to
be found or heard of, until there came to
him, from his uncle’s widow, the intelli¬
gence of her approaching marriage with
the young clergyman, of whom he had
been somewhat jealous, even though lie
had, as he fancied, good reason to be¬
lieve that his own sentiments were un¬
derstood and reciprocated by the fair
girl, who, indeed, had never ceased to
think of him, despite his apparent for¬
getfulness of her.
“Do you know who painted this fan?"
Mr. Neil Gordon asked of the polite pro¬
prietor, Mons. Fouquerein.
’ Certainly monsieur knew; but he was
unfortunately under obligations not to
reveal the name or address of the artist.
“Could the lady paint another such as
this—say in time for a New Year’s gift?”
“I presume so, monsieur. If monsieur
desire, I can at once send an order for a
duplicate."
And he obsequiously took the gentle¬
man’s address
“IIow soon can you send it?” the lat¬
ter inquired.
“At once; in fifteen minutes; so soon
as my office boy returns, if that w r ill suit
monsieur.”
The gentleman left the shop, and se¬
cured the first messenger boy he chanced
to meet.
For a pecuniary consideration this
youth agreed to follow M. Fouquerein’s
office boy, take the address of the house
to which he should go, and immediately
inform Mr. Neil Gordon thereof, at the
latter’s residence.
It was a simple plot, but, as it proved,
effective.
It was barely 8 o'clock when Eva May
nard came in from a walk—one of the
long and lonely walks to which she was
accustomed when her day’s work was
over. She found the little tea table laid
and a small parcels for herself, with a
note, lying upon the table.
“It is my mother-of-pearl fan,” slit
said, after glancing over the note.
“Mons. Fouquerein has a customer who
•wants both this and a duplicate, to be
ready for New Year’s. I was sure it
would be liked, and now I think I shall
soon get plenty of custom.”
An hour after, when her mother had
retired, and she sat reading aloud, while
Laura sewed on what looked like a piece
of bridal trousseau, there came a ring at
the front door bell.
The girl whose business it was to wait
on Mrs. Sutton’s lodgers, hastened to
answer the summons, and immediately
appeared in Mrs. Maynard’s rooms.
“A gentleman to see you, Miss Eva:
and here’s his card, mum.”
Laura glanced at the card in Eva's hand,
and their at the blushing face of her
sister; and well posted in such delicate
matters, slipped out of the room as the
visitor entered.
“It is Air. Gordon, mamma,” she
answered, to her mother’s inquiry, “I
knew he would come some day, though
Eva doubted it. ”
And when, an hour later, Eva came,
j radiant yet subdued, it needed but one
! glance at her face to know what kind of
! an interview she had had with the lover
she had deemed so forgetful.
Airs. Belton learned in time, to her
great vexation, that had she been more
appreciative of the Atajor’s Christmas
present, her late husband’s nephew had
probably never married “that Alaynard
girl,” who, as Airs. Neil Gordon, was
now so much admired in society.
She still owns the Christmas fan, but
lias never painted its duplicate.
Said the Turkey to the Pumpkin.
TIP ■
C
I; ■ )
%
i.
A
—
T
_
“They’re keeping us for Christmas.
Let’s travel.”
The Traveler’s Christmas.
“The drummer’s life is not what it’s
erac t e ,i up to be,” remarked Sample
ease. “What do you suppose I made
my Christmas dinner on this year?”
“Couldn’t guess,” replied his friend.
“On wheels.”
“Don’t try to stuff me,” cried the gob
bier, indignantly.
SCIENTIFIC A NO INDUSTRIAL.
A scientist slates that medical science
is keeping alive unhealthy people to breed
unhealthy children.
Sir William Gull say* that when fagged
out by professional work lie recruits his
strength hv eating raisins, and not by
drinking wine or brandy.
Tiie disinfecting power of aminal gas
is such that when introduced into sewage
it very quickly destroys the microbes of
putrafaction and of many diseases.
Hollow bricks are, coming into vefv
general use in building. They crush st
80,000 pounds and cost one-third less
than the ordinary form, while making
the walls proof against fire, moisture and
frost.
While the use of electricity in London
for illumination is steadily increasing, the
ttse of gas is also rapidly on the increase,
the demand for the latter for heating and
cooking being greatly in excess of former
years.
A planter in South Carolina has suc¬
ceeded in propagating the male cotton
plant by itself, until he now can raise
cotton seed without the lint or cotton.
The gain appears t > be in the increased
yield of seed.
It is known that the bellows were used
in Egypt in the time of Tothmes HI.,
one of the Pharaohs 1490 B. C. From a
picture on a tomb of that date bellows
made of leather bags, worked by men
standing upon them, are shown.
The two sides of the face are by no
mean? alike. As a rule, the want of
symmetry is confined to the upper part of
the face. Among other singular eccen¬
tricities is the fact that the right ear is
almost invariably higher than the left.
Fish-meat does not contain more phos¬
phorous than ordinary butcher’s meat.
The benefit which brain-workers are said
to derive from a diet, of fish should there¬
fore he ascribed, not to the phosphorus,
but to Ihe greater digestibility of the
fish.
An electric bell-buoy is proposed, one
of its chief attributes being that the
action of salt water produces a current
sufficiently strong to riug a bell. A
secondary bell, to be rung in rough
weather, is also an attachment to the
buoy.
The manufacture of sugar by the diffu¬
sion process in Louisiana lias resulted in
a great increase of output. Moreover,
there is already growing up a more
scientific agriculture, a better knowledge
of the problems of sugar manufacture, a
more scientific method in the sugar
house, and the introduction of improved
machinery.
A Dutch physician declares that a
close connection exists between the exer¬
cise of mental faculties and disorders of
the nose. lie says that, if it were genet
ally known how many cases of chronic
headache, of inability to learn or to per¬
form mental work, where duo to chronic
disease of the nose, many of them would
be easily cured.
Extralite is the name of a new ex¬
plosive patented by Rudolph Ericsson, a
young Swede. It is claimed by its in¬
ventor to be not only of great power, but
also to be absolutely harmless when not
properly confined in an air tight and
rigid receptacle. The extralite is an in
nocent-looking granulated substance of
about the color and general appearance
of coarse corn-meal.
The Eleklrotechnuche Echo is responsi¬
ble for the following explanation of why
oaks are more frequently struck by
lightning than beech trees. The leaves
of the beech tree are, it seems, covered
with a fine down, which is a better con¬
ductor of electricity than the smooth
leaves of the oak. According to the
same journal, experiments with dis¬
charges from influence machines tend to
confirm this theory.
In the new process of making white
lead the ore as it comes from the mine is
volatilized and oxidized by tins air, the
fumes are condensed in a slightly acid
liquor, and the resulting sludge is washed
anil dried for the market without having
been touched by the men. Quickness of
manufacture, starting with ore and not
with the purified metal, and avoidance
of danger to the workmen, are among
the advantages of the new system.
Cement should never be disturbed af¬
ter commencing to set. Jr should be
kept moist and wet until hard. Cold re¬
tards, heat quickens settingBrick or
stone should be wet or moist, or cement
will not adhere well. Portland cement
requires less water than natural or
American cements. It sets in from three
to twelve hours. It must be kept dry,
or it will become lumpy and spoiled, ft
need never be used pure, but should al¬
ways be mixed with sand.
Flower Worship in Persia.
In ancient times plant-worship was
universal in the East, and it seems that
even in our own times a system of flower
worship is kept up in various parts ot
Persia and India. A recent traveler in
India gives the following description of
flower-worship as practiced by the Per
sions in Bombay: “A true Persian in
flowing robe of blue and on his head a
sheepskin hat, black, glossy, curly—the
fleece of Kar-Kal—would saunter in and
stand and meditate over every
flower he saw, and always as if half in
vision; and when the vision was fulfilled
and the ideal flower he was seeking
found he would spread his mat and sit
before it until the setting of the sun, and
then pray before it and then fold up his
mat again and go home. And the next
night, and night after night until that
particular flower faded away lie would
return to sit and bring his friends in
ever-increasing troops to it and f it and
play the guitar or lute before it, and they
would altogether pray there, and after
prayer still sit beforeit sipping herbet and
talking the most hilarious and shocking
scandal late into the moonlight, and so
again and again every evening until the
flower died. Sometimes, by way of
grand final, the whole company would
suddenly arise before the flower and sere¬
nade it, together with an ode from Hafiz
and depart.’’— Lippincott. - ’
How fo Get a Good Salary.
Tha Nashville Christian Advocate,
says: Business “Recently College, this a stiulnnt city, of Joining’s
sccnml a po¬
sition in a large house in New Orleans on
a salary of .$1,200 per annum, andanother
one got the a place in Birmingham at $1,500,”
and Nashville American states that
still another one got a good position in
Texas at, $1,800. This school is consid¬
ered one of the most practical institutions
of this kind in the world. It has had
students from 18 States and territories,
afterwards. nearly every one gating good positions
Sklf-fohof.tfut.ness in love for others
has a foremost place in our ideal of char¬
acter, and our deep homage, as represent¬
ing does the true end of humanity, Who
those upbraid himself for Ins slowness in
ing mirror sympathies which are as a multiply¬
to the joys of life, reflecting
them in endless play?
Probably the early nice of mankind
" ere not much superior to other animal
life, and in the absence of books and
other implements were entirely destitute
oi means except what nature furnished,
yet they no doubt lived as happily as their
posterity do.
*Tis 8iul to see a woman growing old before
her time
All broken-down and hopeless when life
should hold ifs prime;
She feels herself a burden when a blessing
she should bo
Ami Jongs for death to bring her release from
If misery. these
fer from diseases poor, discouraged women who suf¬
only know that pecuU&v U> women could
the health could ho regained by
use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription,
how eagerly they would hasten to avail them¬
selves it. Every of it. woman They who ought is to still know healthy it, and ought try
to he told about the wonderful virtue in this
guard medicine, and understand that, it is a safe¬
against the terrible diseases common to
her sox. It, in guaranteed to give satisfaction
or money paid for it will ho refunded.
Cleanse the liver, stomach, bowels and
whole system by using Dr. Pierce’s Pellets.
tive Busy people are generally long lived. Ac¬
exercise of brain and muscle, provided it
be not excessive, is the life of life.
Entitled fo the Heat.
All are entitled to the best that th eir money
will buy, so every family should have, at once
a bottle of the best family remedy, Syrup of
Figs, to cleanse the system when cost ive or bil¬
ious. For sale in 50c. and SI bottles by all
leading druggists.
The French cu sine boosts no fewer than six
hundred distinct modes of dressing eggs,
SI Oil Howard. 8100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded dis¬
ease that science ho been able to cure in all
its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s (latarrh
cure medical is the only positive cure now known to
the fraternity. Catarrh being a con¬
stitutional disease, Hall’s CaotrrU requires a constitutional
treatment. Cure is laken in¬
ternally, acting directly upon the blood and
mucus surfaces of tin* system, thereby de¬
stroying tho foundation < f the disease, and
giving t in* patient assisting st l ength,by building up the
constitut ion and nature in doing it*
work. The proprietors have so much faith in
its curative powers, that they offer <)ne lhm
dred Dollars for anv case that i fails to cure.
Send for list,of F. testimonials. IENEY Address,
flSSTSold by .1. Druggists, 1 75c. & CO., Toledo, O.
Smoke the best “'I'ansiU’s 1 * 1111011 ” Cigar.
Tlie Finest; on F.artfi.
Tho Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton It. R. Is
th© only lino running I hid man’s Perfected
Safety Yostibuled Trains, with Chair, Parlor,
cinnati, Sleeping Jndianapoffs and Dining Oar atul .service OUicngo. between and is ('in- tho
Only Dine running Cincinnati, Through Reclining Chair
Cars between Keokuk and. andHprmg- Hleeping
lleld. Hi.,and Combination Peoria, III., Chair the
Car Cincinnati to and Only Di¬
rect Dine between Cincinnati, Dayton, Dima,
Toledo, Detroit,the bake Regions and Canndt.
The road to ono of tho oldest in the State of
Ohio and the only lino entering Cinciimnti
over twenty-five miles of double track, and
from its past record can more than as sure lh
patrons speed, comfort and. safely. Tickets on
sale everywhere, and see that the/ read C. II.
<fe I)., eitb *r in or out of Cincinnati, Indian¬
apolis or Toledo. K Ticket O. McCOR.MiUK, Cun
era> Passenger and Agent.
”I.lH'.V Him. hi.”
Hark ! the sound of manvvolcos,
Jubilant in gladdest song,
And full many a hear; rojuicer
As tho chorus flouts along:
“Hail the Queen of all Tobaccos!"
How the happy voices blond,
“Finest and puro-t among her follows—
Man’s staunch ami true friend.”
Orrirftn. tlio Fiirndlae of Fiiriii-r^.
Wild, equable climate, certain and abundant
crop*. Beet fruit, grain, grass ami stock coun¬
try in tho world. Full information free. Ad
cIiVsh Orejr. Im’igra’tn Board, Portland. Ore.
The Plain Truth
Is that I/ood's Sarsaparilla hog curod thousands of
people who suffered severely with rheumatism. It
neutralize* the Jactio acid in tho blood, which
couses those terrible pains and aches, and also vi¬
talizes and enriches the blood, thus preventing the
recurrence of the disease. These facto warrant u*
In urging you, if you suffer with rheumatism, to
give Hood’s Sarsaparilla a trial.
"Having been troubled with inflammatory rheu
matisin for many years, my favorable attention
was called to Hood’s .Sarsaparilla by an advcrtlse
i»e»\t of cure* it had effected. 1 hav* now used
three bottles ot Hood’s Harsaparllla and < an already
testify to beneficial results. 1 highly recommend
it as a great 1 blood puritter.”—J. U. Araita, West
JJJoomfle >ld, N. y.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Hold by all druggists. 41; six for g5. Prepared oal*
by C. I. HOOD CO., ApotUecarlet, Cowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
BUSINESS
COLLEGE,
» NASHVILLE, f ENN.
pying gojd poeHloits, many oi them re
salaries rangli.B from SVOOto #t.-
500 per annum, ror circulars, adarewg .
It. W. JKSiJVlNOSf Prtn* ;
Ely’s Cream Balm __ f"
rjCotig H
vA TAPfl^ 0 i !
IH write TO CORK SPLOinHEA
COLD IN HEAD f- ** * tS
r
QUICKf.Y.
Apply Halm into eaeli nostril.
ELY BKOS..6* Warren St.. ,V. Y
HEALTH ofCoMr'iCKDVaroaJBATHsin ^^^S^SSiSiSrStS!$ famliyuHe
i'komotkb r aini*ale*of domestic
L|jr- iVCAL * I TU I j or puoiJcpractice Ani«lroiili,hiurwbegiii M* ;
n outflu t
Gilbert’s Cress Linings
In 17 rjtzAiities; name on selvage. Pent in the world. I
BRYANT & STRATTON Business Celled
ft„ok Writ* £re|imu. for CataUtaue shurt mud Hand, full TtclraratthV, InfmruuUimn. *«-. LOUISVILLE. KX
X « I 25 I
Cures Best Cough all Medicine. else Recommended Pleasant by Physicians. the
whore fails. and agreeable to CTS
taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists.
■A
7
GENTS < FOR TUB
CREA1
WA.It BTOKT
SURRY
—o?—
il Eagle s tel
—rr—
777 John Esten Cooke.
A
This thrilling
m m i i historic 8tory,
it which baa been
\§out of which print, and
psjfor thera
has been such a
great demand is
bow issued as a
SfTBSCBIPTION
KOOK, with
many msgnifl
ceat iHwfttra
tious. There haa
* never been a
book ___ Southern more popular
t hroughoTit the State." than “SrBB?
or EAam’aNEST." Many years have passed einco
the thrilling scenes herein recounted of the
deeds of valor of the Confederate Soldier, yet
the interest, by those who fought with A*hby,
Stuart, Johnston, Beauregard, Jackson and Lee,
in the cause for which they bo desperately This and
bravely battled, will never grow less. and
thrilling story pictures not but alone filled joy with historio sorrow,
audalovo sweetly told, ie
incldenta of the great contest between the South
and the North. Here is ft book for the old Kx
Oonfederate, to recall to him the vivid scenes of
the greatest Civil War ever known, to callback
his own campaigns, and tell him of the mighty
Chieftains, dear to the memory of every one who
Wore the Gray, ” welcewe
*' Surry of Eagle’s Nest will find a
in every Southern home. That It may be within
the reach of every one, it ia published at the now
FRIGE OF $2, though a LARGE, handsome volume,
BJUurrruUuY illustrated and elegantly bound.
SOLDOMLY BY SUBSCRIPTION.
As the demand for this old favorjt* boo*
which has Iren out of print so Long, will be large, all
and applications for agencies very numerous,
who<Uwire to act os Agents should write for terms
and quickly occult© choice of territory.
G. W. DELIAN3HAM, Publisher,
33 West 23d 8t., Now York.
???;
■a
worn -■t
SMITH’S BILE BEANS
Acton 1 ho liver mid bile; headache, clour the complexion; costivoness,
euro biliousness, sick
malaria and all liver and stomach disorders.
We are now making small size Hilo Beans,
especially adapted for children and women—
very small and easy to take. Price of either
size 25c per bottle. PHOTO-GRAVURE _ ot , tho ,
A panel size mailed
above picture, ’’Kissing at. 7-17-70, of the on
receipt of 2o stamp. Address the makers
great Anti-Bile Bemedy—’’Bile Beans.'
4. F. SMITH & CO., St. Louis. Nlo.
IjilcOMINIKcSAIITICUSV jykjffllOf FURNITURE (\ -
.
« flN stmv&sj VA LI
I'/f M i
Wo rot a It Atilio lowest srf* A utowA • (Irak*
\ohn!*«nh Sui£?,gSX& riv'tory pricss t yifML /Kfi & ?5*i.V"V FREE
w to
(tend stamp tor Onia- desired. VVwLVT Vs4^Z l\ l Ah FftKB
logae. Marne goods DELIVERY.
leVkiVXO MFC. CO., 145 N. «lh 8t.. PMJada.. P*
P.H^EfySHOTGUH iPf
This Trade
Mark Is on
The Best
i Waterproof
fisu Coat
In the world.
Romlforlll'iKtffltH CmbIqkup. Fr-t A.,1- Holton
for A^vflouijie Breech-Loader
.ft
.
,s to $s«.
Wlnrhcstrr 1 5>.h«l IMflrs, , 1 1 1o (12.
IlrfFfti Ion ling Itlfl««, fiJ.06 In SUMS).
H«!Lrutlit»K Uw»l«rri, NUht-l-ptotofl, ceat*
P-rnt ?-•. stamp ft.r ftO-piige Catalogue *r>'i *av« Si p*r
GRIFFITH X SEMPLE, 612 W. Main, Louisville. Ky.
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT
OR. LOBB
•f’dff North Fill rent h Si,, Philadelphia, Pa., for
tho treatment of blood Poisons, Skin Eruption*,
Nervous Complaints, JJriKbt’s Disease, .Stricture*,
Inipotency Ion standing and kindred disease*, u<* matter of how
k or from what cause originating.
l ® r Tim days medicine* furnished by mall CQTC
end for Hook on HFEC’IA is D i »«**»*<*».. itlLbi
„ JOHN F. STRATTON & SON,
43 and it) Walker st. NEW YORK.
importer* end Wholesale Dealers la
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE,
uiouicaa, ViotitiM, t.iitutn*, mm,o*. Arcsrdeeiis, liar*
Ac, hiilSD All liimlis 01 istriugn, etc., etc.
tOU CATALOGUE
DETECTIVES
WunOj.i shrc^'l niffii to set uudrr bmtraation* in Krcrft Berries
v‘*Tk. R«-|.r«*entaLlvoo rtferive the Int'-rn* ilonsl Peteotlre,
(irannmn s Wsrnln/j Astlnat Kra.n'1, 1,'naa-- *N'» Pocket (toller r •!
Net e<i Criminal. Tho»r intereifed I n de<*w:tl ivn huniiitnf, or de*ir>
lnjr m ».* dfieotlv*<. .-i.rt •tnmn f<-r r-‘* rtloul i»m gmt.lnrment tnt
ail. UlUJiKIN UkTKCTIVft. HL UIlaL U). Areadv-.t 'tocioMU.d.
m&m R*» nnd WHISKEY HAB
\fP*m iBI '-Mm IT8cured at, home wnh
R IHB ont ilculars pain. Hook FREE. of p.tr
>■ * * ” sent
A^XANTArGfll 7 7 Office J{. M. WOOLLEY, WhltehAli M. L>., 8U
STIT>V. Book-keej»ing, Business Form*,
ribbe ... .. | , by Dr. TBASK’S Jli. K »Ktic Ointmeit.
' Known over 60 year*. JJmggikto keep it,
niliirn WWlitll will mail you a bottle for 25 cent*.
; 1». JtANSOM, SON A: CO., Buffalo, S'. Y.
------------- -— ---
Scholarship O* and !-* Cm.I.IXH:, **50. Phiiwtlelphia. Write circular. Pa.
positions, for
nPriia&R OPIUM HABIT. Only Certain bu4
2S*7uSJ5i
— dorse I prescribe BiK <J and the foil HR
a-s
1 TO Cares 6 PAYB.^I in specific f this dt?eas*\ tor the certain curt
Z'Jj 0 P-,
lear&o Sttiovuie- 01 G. K.US'Ij HAIIAM. M.
o*u*e Amsterd?»m, N. Y.
We have sold Big G for
m^JUlurs CisaiotiCo. many years, and it h*?
Cinciuaatl.BS --—.given Is the best sf satit*
Ohio. W ^ ‘"h-’b.'dyche ti CO.. III.
m C'hlcago,
Trade flflrk « s 1.00. Bold by Druggist**
A. N. U...... ................Fifty-one, ’83.