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THE BUM JOURNAL
HAMILTON, GEORGIA.
__ ■■■■■ ■— "'T
05TK DAV.
ST LYDIA V. nIN MAN.
00-nl-liy, dwr dy. givxt-liy I
And let ina wreiuw with Immortelle*
Tlie moment* eweet, tti.t fly
On wlurm iif love, end murk with white
Tim bourn wherein no cloud* of pain
lime dimmed the dear uull|(lit.
F*pwoll, nweet dey, farewell I
E'en now the evening curfew i>oiil
From memory’* tolling bell;
1 ett and count them " they fall,
And grieve, and digit, yet nolle that they
Are ever |>a*t recall.
floinl-by, dear day, good-by!
I .Ike thowe fond one* I’ve loved end loet,
That In ihwlli'a cluap doth lie
With flowera abloom upon oaeli brow—-
Kaeh tender bloom a pnvimiH hour,
Thou aeeniat unto me now.
Farewell, aweet day, farewell 1
And go where aleep they that arc gone,
For, after all, ’tin well;
I would not call back one dead fare;
1 would not live thine lioura again,
Nor e'en thv lova retrace.
■ T '
An Anecdote of (Hailstone.
The nmii is more interesting than any
of the parts lie lias been called to play;
but we. come to understand the man bet
ter by seeing bow be shapes and molds
these parts. As an orator, liis conspiciouß
merits, beside his striking countenance,
dignified action, and a voice full, rich,
and admirably modulated, are fertility
And readiness. He seems to have always
at command an inexhaustible store of
ideas, reasons, illustrations, whatever bo
the subject which he iH required to deal
with. Of nil great English speakers,
orobably no one, not even William Pitt,
tas been so independent of preparation.
Even Fox, swift and rushing ns bo was,
was great only in reply, when his feelings
were heated by the atmosphere of battle,
whereas Mr. Gladstone is just as ani
mated and forcible in an opening, or ina
ourely ornamental and uncontentious
..arangue, as in themidstof parliamentary
itrife. Of the many anecdotes that are
current illustrating bis wonderful power
of rising to an occasion, ono may be given
which lias the merit of being true. On
the afternoon when be was to make an
important motion in the House of Com
mons, a friend, happening to call on him
between two and three o’clock, found
him just sitting down to make some notes
of the coming speech. Ho laid aside bis
pen and talked for a while, then jotted
down a few heads on paper, went down
to the House before four o’clock, found
himself drawn into a preliminary contro
versy of a very trying nature, in which
be bail to repel so many questions aud
attacks that it was past six before ho rose
to make the great speech. He then dis
covered that, as he hod left his eye
glasses at homo, his notes were practi
cally useless, put them quietly buck into
bis coat pocket, and delivered with no aid
to his memory, and upon that one hour’s
preparation, a powerful argument inter
spersed with pussmies of wonderful pas
sion ami pathos, which lasted for three
hours, and will always rank amongst his
finest efforts.— Scribner's Manazine.
Saturn's Rings.
Wo had a view of Saturn a few evenings
since through tho lino telescope in Mr.
Sengrnvo’s private observatory, that will
long l>e remembered for its exceeding
beauty. Tho night is rarely favorable
for star-gazing, tho definition perfect and
the atmosphere serene. The pietiu'o is
one of surpassing loveliness, the most
suberb telescopic scene in the heavens.
Tl,o orb is resplendent in coloring, bluish
at the poles, pale yellow elsewhere,
crossed by two creamy central belts, and
flocked with spots "that suggest light
scudding clouds. There is no appear
nneo of a flattened disc, but the rounded
outlines of a sphere, seeming about the
size of the full moon, stand out in bold
relief against the azure blackness of the
skv. Around this softly glowing center
extend the wondrous rings, opening wide
their encircling arms and cradling tho
planet in their protecting embrace. Every
detail of tho complex ring system is
sharply defined and vividly painted on
the celestial canvas. Tho outer and tho
inner rings, the dusky ring, the space
between the outer and inner rings and
even the division in the outer ring are
plainly visible, while six of the eight
moons dot the dark sky with ixiints of
golden glow. Tho six moons we see—
one of them is larger than Mercury—
circle around tlieir primary within an
extreme span of four million miles. The
beautiful rings lie within tho path of the
nearest moon and span a space of about
one hundred and seventy-six thousand
piiles. Tho narrow dark space between tho
inner and outer rings, is seventeen hun
dred miles broad, and the dusky or third
ring extends nine thousand miles within
tho inner or second ring.— Providence
Journal.
A Boy’s Composition.
The following composition, written by
a young hopeful in Onondaga comity,
wiut read before a Teachers Institute
by a grave and reverend LL.D., whose
sense of the ludicrous is so keen that he
fairly shook and gasped in his efforts to
suppress unseemly mirth until he fin
ished :
MEAT MARKET.
Meat Market is a place where there
is things to sell. There is most trade
in the morning and evening, as they
butcher their things in the afternoon.
There is two Meat Market in this place ;
we trade to both. Meat Markets are
very useful; if it was not for Meat
Market we should have to butcher our
own tilings. I think all these things
tihow the providence of God.
Anna Dickinson uses thin English
pajH'r, with her monogram artistically
*ngruved in the corner.
The Feet of Chinese Women.
An American missionary, Miss Nor
wood, of Hwatow, lias lately described
how the mao of the foot is reduced in
Chinese women. The binding of the
feet is not begun till the child Ims learned
to walk anil do various things. The
bandages are specially manufactured,
and are about two inches wide and two
yards long for the first year, five
yards long for subsequent years. The
end of the strip is laid on the inside of
the foot at the instep, then carried over
the toes, under the foot and round the
heel, the toes being thus drawn toward
and over the sole, while a bulge is pro
duced on the instep and a deep indenta
tion in the sole. The indentation, it is
considered, should measure about an
inch and a half from the part of the foot
that rests on the ground up tothe instep.
Successive layers of bandages aroused
till the strip is all used, and the end is
then sewn tightly down. The foot is so
squeezed upward that, in walking, only
the ball of the great toe touches the
ground. Large quantities of powdered
alum aro used to prevent ulceration and
lessen the offensive odor. After a month
the foot is put in hot water to soak some
time; then the bandage is carefully un
wound, much dead cuticle coming off
with it. Ulcers and other sores aro often
found on the foot; frequently, too, a
large pieco of flesh sloughs off the sole,
and one or two toes may even drop off,
in which case the woman feels afterward
repaid by having smaller and more deli
cate feet. Each time the bandage is
taken off the foot is kneaded, to make
the joints more flexible, and is then
bound up again as quickly as possible
with a fresh bandage, which is drawn
more tightly. During the first year the
pain is so intense that the sufferer can do
nothing, and for about two years the foot
aches continually, and is the seat of a
pain which is like the pricking of sharp
needles. With continued rigorous bind
ing the foot in two years becomes dead
and ceases to ache, and the whole log,
from tlio knee downward, becomes
shrunk, so as to be little more than skin
and bone. When once formed, the
“golden lily.” as tlio Chinese lady calls
her delicate little foot, can never recover
ts orginial shape.— London Times.
The “Ticker” fn Wall Street.
Then T went to a broker whom I had
met at tlio Union Club, and told him
what I wanted to learn He kindly took
hold of the tape which continually
streams out from tlio “ticker,” as the
little wheel of fortune is called, which
constantly records iho rise and deelino
of stocks, and tried to explain all about
it.
I found it impossible to get interested.
There wero about 200 different names
of stocks on the list. These were
represented l>y one, two, or three let
ters, or figures, or some sort of abrevi
nted word that I could not understand
or distinguish, and 1 was constantly get
ting confused.
Around this “ticker’ gathered and
grouped a knot of eager, nervous, and
anxious men. Ten, fifteen, or twenty at
a time would clutch at the tape, as it
streamed out with its endless lines of
quotations, and mutter to themselves,
jabber nt each other, swear like pirates,
drop the tape, and dash nway. Others
would dart in, clutch the tape, swear or
chuckle, as their fortunes went, wheel
about, give orders to their broker to buy
or sell, us they prophesied the future of
tho market; and so it went on all day,
from 10 till 3 o’clock, when the battle
was ended by the fall of the hammer in
tho Block Exchange.
When I tell you that, there are more
than f>,ooo of these “tickers,” or indi
cators, you can form some idea of the
magnitude of tho business. If we give
ten men to each “ticker,” you have tho
spectacle of 50,000 stalwart men stand
ing there holding up n little dotted
string, waiting, hollow-eyed, and anxious,
on the smiles of fickle fortune. To this
50,000 you may add 2,000 brokers. You
must give each broker at least live clerks,
office boys, and messengers, which swell
tho list to 10,000. To this 02,000 you
can safely add 200,000 speculators on the
outside. So you have n total engaged in
this gambling of more than 250,000.
—Joaquin Miller, in the Californian.
Indians Shopping.
In her book on Manitoba, Miss Fitz
gibbon says: “ I watched some Indiana
shopping, and was astonished to see how
invariably they waived aside inferior
goods and chose such materials as mer
inos at $1.50 to $2 (17s (id to 10s) a yard.
One of the merchants told me it was
useless to offer them anything but the
best. An Indian, who could not speak
English or French, and wanted five
things, divided his money according to
his idea of their relative cost in little
piles on the counter, and, going through
a pantomime descriptive of his wants,
was handed first some silk handker
chiefs. Taking one up he felt it, held
it up to the light, and, throwing it aside,
shook his head vigorously, uttering an
“ Ugh !” of disgust. When shown a
better one, he was doubtful; but, upon
a much superior article being produced,
he took it, and willingly handed over
one pile for it. This, however, was too
much, and when given the change he
put it on one of tho other piles, and pro
ceeded in the same wav to make the
rest of his purchases. * How easily they
could l>e cheated,’ I said to the clerk,
after the Indian had left. ‘ No,’ he re
plied, ‘ not so easily as would appear.’
They generally come in from their
camps in great numbers once a year, to
sell furs and make purchases. They go
to different shops, and on their return
compare uKtes as to the cost and quality
of their goods. Then, if one has paid
more than another, or has been cheated
in quality, he will never enter the shop
again ; and the firm that gives the great
est bargains is most patronized on their
return,”
BREVITIES.
Minister Lowell is working up the
copyright question abroad.
Miss Bernhardt is accompanied by
one of her sons, a very nice young man.
The sharp-ended bayonet scabbard is
to be discarded in the British army.
When a Boston man invites yon to
dinner, and heads a postscript N. 8., he
means “no beans,”
Fivb men were met at different places
near Waco, Tex., by a body of highway
men and all of them were robbed.
The conscience money stmt to the
Chancellor of the English Exchequer
lust year amounted to qver $30,000.
The colporteurs of tho American
Bible Society distributed 10,253 Bibles
in Texas during the last four months.
The construction of the Tennessee
railroads increased the value of the tax
able property of that State $200,000,000.
Thus far this year 4,135 miles of rail
road have been constructed in the United
States, against 3,507 reported in 1679.
The canned goods exporting trade has
acquired such large proportions that it
has become ono of the national inter
ests.
Lewis Irwin displeased his parents,
at Gallipolis, Ohio, and while liis mother
pounded him with a club his father shot
him with a pistol.
A Fall River girl, earning a salary
of $3 a week, lias fallen heiress to $150,-
000. We never noticed it before, birf
she is very pretty.— Boston Post.
In Schely county, Ga., a freedman,
with one mule, this year made twenty
three bales of cotton, weighing over 500
pounds each, and 200 bushels of corn.
One Irish parish priest has called upon
his whole congregation, kneeling to
gether in the chapel, to swear that they
will have nothing to do with tlie murder
of landlords.
A drayman created an alarming sensa
tion in Ottumwa, lowa. He drove his
dray through the town loaded with kegs
of powder, and sat upon them indiffer
ently smoking his pipe.
A boy stole away from a Cincinnati
school and spent the day playing ball,
for which he wns mildly reprimanded by
tho teacher. He immediately retired to
an ante-room and shot himself.
Italy exports cattle, wine and silk to
France. The wine is new and is after
ward mixed with a better quality of
French wine, and tho silk is entirely
raw, for manufacture at Lyons.
In a recent charge tlie Recorder of
Dublin said that of 9,700 dwellings let
in tenements in that city 2,300 houses,
occupied by about 30,000 people, are re
ported unfit for human habitation.
A company of burlesque performers,
called the Merrymakers, is going
through the country with great financial
success. The members are all under 12
years of age, and the star, Corinne Kim
ball, is only 7. The enterprise is of
Boston origin.
A rAa\GBAPn headed “A Lion at
Large,” inserted in the papers by the
managers of a menagerie, though a hoax,
kept the population of a vast area in
Southern London for three days in a state
of terror and alarm, many of them being
afraid to walk tho roads.
A girl in Kentucky struck her cro
quet partner on the head with a mallet;
brain fever set in, and the young man
nearly died. The girl was kept under
arrest until his recovery, and when he
got well she married him, and now lie’s
sorry lie didn’t die.
The number of Americans established
in business in London ‘is greater than
that of the American colony in Paris.
The Parisian Americans are, for the most
part, free from business cares, only a
few artists and literary men being pro
fessionally occupied on tho banks of the
Seine.
Frmxa emblems are not always ap
preciated, The neighbors of a poor fel
low who died erected a tombstone to his
memory and had placed above it the
conventional white dove. Tho widow
looked at it through her tears, and said :
“ It was very thoughtful to put it there.
John was very fond of gunning, and it
was an especially-suitable emblem.”
During the last session of the court
at , Wis., Lawyer Blank lmd been
trying for two long hours to impress
upon the minds of tho jury the facts of
the case. Hearing the dinner-bell, lie
turned to the Judge, and said, “ Had we
better adjourn for dinner, or shall 1
keep right on ? ” Weary and disgusted,
his Honor replied, “ Oh, you keep right
on, keep right on, and we will go to din
ner. ” — Harper's Monthly.
Sometimes, not often, when the days are short,
And pea eful sits the bull-dog by the gate,
Her papa thus a sudden, gloomy snort.
Remarking that the hour is rather late.
I hear the old nun: coming up the hall,
The drowsy murmur of his awful boot;
Grabbing my yellow ulster like a pall
I get a ranting start and off I scoot—
Sometimes.
Sometimes, n*t often, does the faithful dog
Forget to ko>p the seat of my striped pants;
He seems to know when I would be incog.
And never giv es me more than half a chance.
From far-off lays an echo wanders by
That makes a discord in the Christmas chimes—
I take the first street ear I see and try
To think that other fellows have to climb—
Sometimes.
He gracefully accepted: “I assure
you, gentlemen,” said the convict upon
entering the prison, “ that the place has
sought me, and not I the place. My
own affairs really demanded all my time
and attention, and I may truly say that
niv selection to fill this place was an en
tire surprise. Had I consulted my own
interest I should have peremptorily de
clined to serve, but, as I am in the hands
of my friends, I see no other course but
to submit.”
Mr. Pearson, of Pall Mall, London,
lias discovered in a weekly newspaper of
1812 a political ode by Lord Byron not
hitherto known to be his. It will soon
be printed with the poet’s letter referring
to it.
Where the {Smash Was.
Reporter—“l wish to ascertain some
of the the particulars about the recent
accident on your road.”
Superintendent—“ What road?”
Rep.—“ Why, your road?”
Supt.—“l own no road.”
Rep.—“ Are you not the Superinten
dent of the Go-to-Blazes-Smash-and-
Crash Railroad?”
Supt.—“l am. Why didn’t you ask
that before?”
Rep.—" Well, now, about this acci
dent. ’
Supt.—“ What accident?”
Rep.—“ Why, tlio recent accident.
Supt.—“ There has been no recent ac
cident.”
Rep.—“ Why, didn’t a train run off
the track yesterday, smash half a dozen
cars to kindling wood and kill five or six
people ?”
Supt.—“ Where ?”
Rep.—“At Gimlet Falls Station.”
Supt.—“ Where is Gimlet Falls?”
Rep.—“ Where? Don’t you know?”
Supt.—“l am not called upon to
know. Prove to me where Gimlet Falls
is.”
Rep.—“ Well, this is cheek.”
Supt.—“No, it ain’t; it’s business.”—
New York Granitic.
[St. Louis Evening Chr nicle.J
People in Blass Houses, etc.
While it may he proper that those
"living in glass houses should never
throw stones,” we think it eminently
proper that those working in glass houses
should say a "good word” for anything of
benefit to themselves. In this connection
Mr. Isaac Correy, Manager Salem, N. J.,
Glass Works, remarks: lam pleased to
say that I have used the Great Remedy,
St. Jacobs Oil, for Rheumatism, with
excellent results; other members of my
family have also been greatly benefitted.
Lofty Towers.
The crown of William Penn’s hat,
which is to adorn his thirty-six foot
statue surmounting tho lofty tower of tho
new' Philadelphia public buildings, will
be just 535 feet from the pavement. This
is higher than any other tower yet con
structed. Trinity steeple, in New York
City, which seems so imposing with its
height of 284 feet, shrinks into insignifi
cance in comparison with the lofty spire
which is intended to lie the crowning
glory of Penn Square. The highest
tow ers which have yet been constructed
are those of the Cologne Cathedral, which
have at present a height of 524 feet 11
inches, or 10 feet 1 inch below Mr.
Penn’s proposed hat. As, however, the
Cologne towers are still unfinished, and
aim at an ultimate altitude of 57G feet 9
inches, tlie Penn Square Tower may
never enjoy tlie distinction of being tlie
highest in the world. The following are
the heights of some of the chief lofty
buildings: Tower of St. Nicholas, at
Hamburg, 473 feet 1 inch; cupola of St.
Peter’s, Rome, 409 feet 2 inches; Ca
thedral spire at Strasburg, 465 feet 11
inches; pyramid of Cheops, 449 feet 5
inches; tower of St. Stephen’s, Vienna,
443 feet 10 inches; tower of St. Martin’s,
Landshnt, 4134 feet 8 inches; Cathedral
spire at Frieburg, 410 feet 1 _ inch;
Cathedral at Antwerp, 404 feet 10 inches;
Cathedral at Florence, 890 feet 5 inches;
St. Paul’s, London, 365 feet 1 inch; ridge
tiles of Cologne Cathedral, 360 feet 3
inches; Cathedral tower at Madgeburg,
339 feet 11 inches; tower of the new
Votive Church at Vienna, 314 feet 11
inches; tower of tlie Ratlihaus at Berlin,
288 feet 8 inches; and the towers of
Notre Dame at Paris, 232 feet 11 inches.
—Philadelphia Press.
[Grand Rapid Times.]
A Builder’s Testimony.
Clias. S. Strickland, Esq., of 0 Boyl
ston Place, Boston, Mass., after relating
his surprising recovery from rheumatism
by St. Jacobs Oil. I cannot find words
to convey my praise and gratitude to
the discoverer of this liniment.
GrandLlther’s Kitchen.
“My grandfather’s kitchen was a
somber room, ceiled and painted brown;
with lmge beams, high dressers, and
yawning fire-place. It had only two
small windows, and was entered by nine
doors. It was in reality the great hall
of the house. What it lacked by day was
light and sunshine. At night, bright
ened by a roaring back-log, it was full of
cheer. Then its beams and ceilings and
simple furnishings were enriched by
shadows, and the pewter dishes upon its
brown dressers shone in the dancing fire
light like silver. The two shelves full of
leather-covered books; the weatlier-wise
almanac hanging from a peg; the cross
legged crane with its hissing tea-kettle;
the brush ; the bellows; the settle in the
corner, and whatever else was there, all
became fire-cliauged, and were mellowed
into the bright scene. This room was by
night the best part of the house. It was
always the true heart of it; the vital cen
ter from which diverged its indwelling
life. It was the place where people
lounged and lingered. Because its small
windows let in a few sunbeams, those
which did come in were all the more
precious. Because it was full of homely
things, and was, as the woman said,
'mast convenient,’ it had inwrought into
it, as a picture, a quaint beauty of adapt
ation. Mellow, brown old kitelien—bow
many costly rooms similate, in tlieir fur
nishing, your inexpensive colors?"
From New England Bygones .”
The Friend of I>e)irate Indies.
Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure i6 the
remedy that will cure the many diseases pecu
liar to women. Headache, neuralgia, disordered
n rves, weakness, mental shocks, and kiudred
ailments are effectually removed by its use.—
The Mother's Magazine,
The Freshmen at Wesleyan University
hired a band of music for §5 to serenade
Presiden Beach. After one tune had
been played the Sophomores paid the
musicians $lO to stop. Such a fight en
sued as had never been known before in
the memory of the college.
Dower and No Bower.
.After the Franeo-Prussian war, a law
was passed, in France forbidding any
officer in the army to marry a woman
unless she had a dot , or dower, which
was to be settled upon her and her chil
dren, and which would yield an income
of at least $250 per annum. The law
also rules that she must be comme it
faut, that is, of respectal te birth and
virtuous conduct. This law was sug
gested by the large number of officers’
wives, widowed in the war, and left
without either money or education to
provide for their children.
Americans condemn, justly, the mer
cenary marriages common in France,
and a universal rule tlxat a girl is un
marriageable without a dot. The poor
est peasant’s daughter knows that she
must have her little sum laid by, before
she can wed, and her plenishing of bed
ding, linen, etc., with which to begin
her humble housekeeping.
Marriage, says the American, should
be wholly a matter of feeling. He holds
a man unworthy of a good woman’s love
who is not willing to take her for herself
alone, without a penny of dower.
This is very generous and magnan
imous for the husband, but is it the best
way for the girl, or tlie girl’s father to
look at the matter ? The French father,
knowing that his daughter’s dower must
lie furnished, as well as money for his
son’s start in life, is forced to practice
and teach liis children thrift.
There is no nation as habitually econ
omical as the French. The French
girl’s dot is largely the result of her own
saving, and the habits and prudence
thus taught her are a solid capital, bet
ter than money, with which to begin
married life.
Very much the same custom was ob
served by our forefathers. Seventy
years ago, no girl was considered ready
for marriage who had not an “outfit”—
chests of table and bed linen, and under
clothing, sewed and often spun and
woven, by her own hand.
How is it with us now? Our girls, as
rule, grow up like flowers. No hint is
given to them that money, or anything
more gross than love, is necessary for
married life. Their doting parents ac
custom them to luxurious or idle habits,
to elegant dress, to dainty fare ; furnish
them with an expensive trousseau, and,
as they live to the full extent of their
incomes, have not a penny of dower to
give them, to insure them or their chil
dren against misfortune.
There is certainly much to be said on
the French side of this question.—
Youth's Companion.
The "Winter Palace at St. Petersburg.
About 3,000 persons live in tlie "Winter
Palace at St. Petersburg; some of them
have been born, baptized, confirmed,
and married within its walls. There
are families which have even had the
honor of dying out in it; and in St.
Petersburg, a contemporary states, the
story finds common acceptance that
there is a meadow somewhere on its roof
where coivs are put out to grass. Cer
tain it is that there are lingo cisterns on
the roof which in winter have to be kept
from freezing by heating furnaces in the
lofts below. It is said that before the
Russian architectural mind thought of
these furnaces tlie water in the cisterns
was kept in a liquid state during winter
by red-hot cannon-balls, which after
being heated on the roof were dropped
into the water. When one of these
forced its way through tlie lead into a
lady’s apartment, nearly setting fire to
tlie palace, the sytem of heating was
chanced.
Bad habits are easily contracted; so are Colds,
and both are very hard to get rid of. The Colds
are quickly and surely cured by Dr. Bull s
Cough Syrup.
Yege ink is nourishing and strengthening;
purifies he blood; regulates the bowels; quiets
tio non i us system; acts directly upon the se
eretioi s, and arouses the whole system to
action.
Grandfather, confined to the chimney cor
ner bv that old-fashioned ailment, rheumatism,
fights' his battles o’er again, but Bob, a, wide
awake, progressive fellow, interrupts him thus.
“Grandpa, Coussen’s Lightning Liniment heats
the Indians for dislodging an enemy, it will
cure vour rheumatism, and can be bought l
sample bottles for 25c . or one of regular size
for 50c.” For sale by all Druggists.
The Voltaic Belt to., Harnhali, Mich..
Will send their Electro-Voltaic Belt.) to tho
afflicted upon 30 days’ trial, flee their adver
tisement in this paper headed. “On 30 Days
Trial."
Get Lyon’a Patent Heel stiffeners applied to
those new boots before yon run them over.
Malarial fevers can be prevented, also other
miasmatic diseases, by occasionally using vr.
Hanford's Liter Invigorator, the oldest general
Family Medicine, which is recommended as •
cure for all diseases caused by a disorder<.u
liver. Eightv-page book sent free. Adores*
Dr. Sanford. i62 Broadway. New York.
Daughter*. Wives and Mothers.
DR. MARCHISI’S UTERINE CATHOLICON will poi-
Utlj cure Female Weakness, auch as Falling of the
Uterus, Whites, Chronic Inflammation or Ulceration of
the Uterus. Incidental Hemorrhage or Flooding, Painful
Suppressed and Irregular Menstruation, Ac. An old and
reliable remedv. Send postal card for a pamphlet, with
treatment, cures and certificates from physicians and
patients, to HOWARTH A BALLARD, Utica, New Tork.
gold by all Druggists—sl.so per bottle.
Dr. C. E. Shoemaker, the well-known aural
surgeon of Beading, Pa., offers to send by mail
free of charge a valuable little bookou deafness
and diseases of the ear, especially on running
ear and catarrh and their proper treatment—
giving references and testimonials that will
satisfy the most skeptical. Address as above.
Dr BU LL’s
SYRUP I