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UHDEB THE CHESNUT BOUGHS
There’s a lad to-night far out at sea
He may never be home again,
But, whether or not he comet back to me,
My heart it his own, as whe*
We were side by side on a day long fled,
When I heard his eager vows,
And blnshed at the tender worde he said
Under the chestnut boughs.
They tell me a'sailor’s heart is bound
By bonds that break at a breath;
Others, perhaps, such love have found.
But his will be mine till death.
And whether ha sleeps beneath the wave
Or over the crest he plows,
I mnst always be true to the pledge I gav
Under the chestnut boughs.
It would grieve me lees if the news were
brought
That he died in a far-off sea,
Than if, sitting alone to-night, I thought
He could ever be false to me.
The lowland in winter garb is clad,
Bnow covers the mountain brows;
No longer I stand beside my lad
Under the chestnut boughs.
Bat I feel that my love will oome back some
day
From over the stormy sea,
As loyal end true as when going away,
He whispered farewell to me.
My heart goes ont by the foam-flnokcd shore
And never a doubt allows;
We shall sorely stand, as we stood before,
Under the chestnut boughs.
Lydia Mackey.
AN EPISODE OF THE REVOLUTION ART WAU
In 1781 South Carolina was completely
overrun lis hold quiet by Uio British. Lord Cornwal¬
had defeated Gatos possession of Charleston,
ajid Dokalb at Cam
dtn, . driven - .___ Manon to . the .. of ,
^ ,°f- swamps
r e eo > f < ? at cr ie f ? r< '°
wid established l his heiulquaritire , in tho
Waxhaws, on the borders of North Coro
Jfnia, while Tarieton had Ins on the
Hanging Rock Oreok, about thirty miles
north of Camden. Davie alone was left
with a small force on the left bank of
tlio Catawba, making occasional sorties
to harass the outposts of the British.
Lancaster County was one of the
! 10 Wings or rebels,
The Wings had , always made Lancaster
tot» hot for the Tories, and had ruth
lessly driven them out of the county to
seek t 'mpanionship and sympathy
wherever ilioy might find it But the
advent of tho British turned tho tide of
war completely, Tarleton’s and now the Tories,
with aid, drove the Whigs
from Lancaster, some across the Catawba
to join Davie, and some to tho Pedee hi
join Marion.
Charles Mackey, as the loader of the
rebels, had made himself very obuox- j
ions to the Tories, and they impatiently
awaited time of ’
a vengeance.
He was a man of medium size, very
active splendid ami energetic, a line horseman, a
shot, hot-headed, impulsive,
often running unnecessary risks, and
doing dare-devil deeds. No work wan
too hazardous for him.
of Lydia good Mackey, his wife, was a woman
faeafud common-sense kwl with a clear
flue judgment, in aooIn„w
famTlv AwXjuf™ °ot two or ’three'children °"n^
from them for several weeks. Their
homB wiih not m or a thun two mwl »» tuiif
!?*, :, h ,j l 7 e i very well
intense on necomif of his wife’s twv-nll.r
condition that ho could no longer re
main in doubt about It. Ho he cautiously
mmlc his way home, whore ho unwisely
loiteml for a week, and during this time
he had t he temerity to enter Tarieton s
lines more than once m search of lnfor
mat ion which would be valuable to bia
country s defenders.
Charles Mackey s house was a double
log cabin, with cultivated patches of
cvk:
rear was a kitolien-gardan of half an
acre or more, extending back to a large
huckleberry impenetrable swamp, which was almotit
to man or beast This
swamp covered an area of ten or fifteen
acres ami was surrounded by a quag
mire from ten to thirty feet wide, thus
"v an island. It was
'-■mi ttissook to
•uj of mould
’ ’ing six
*aok
wain’s, with the hope of capturing him
too. But he was not at home. Then he
was compelled to pilot them to James
tried by court-martiai, .te,°pS”iW and sentenced K"
was
,nj Tho next „ “» day Mrs Mackey not know
ing what had happened, gathered^ some
fnnt and eggs, and.with a basket well
filled, she made terwayto Colonel
farletori s camp. Hucksters were read
lly admitted when they had such luxuries
to dispose oh
On getting within the lines she in
qnired the which way to shown Colonel Tarleton’s
marquee, was to her. The
colonel was on parade, but a young of
ficer, who was writing, ankod her to be
seated. After he had finished, be said,
“You have something for sale, I pre
sumo.”
Bho replied that she had eggs and
fruit. He them.' glndly She took what frankly she had and
paid for declared
that her bahkefc of fruit was ouly a pre*
text to get to Colonel Tarloton ; that she
was anxious to importance.* see him in person on busi
ness of great She then ex
plained toLirn the capture of her line
band, and that she wished to got him
released if he were still alive, for she did
not know but what they had bung e him
Xo'r * ii ^ rjAi
told her that the colonel was on
parade, and won Id not return for two
hours—not till he came in for his mid-'
day meal. Mrs. Mackey was a comely
woman of superior intelligence, and she
soon interested the young officer in her
sad condition. He expressed for her the
deepest sympathy ; told her that her
husband was near by under guard ; that
ho had been tried and sentenced to death
as a spy ; that he was to be hung at sun
rise to-morrow; and that he feared there
was no hopes of reprieve, as the evi
dence given against him by Tories was
of the most positive kind. Ho told her
that Colonel Tarieton was as erne] end j
unfeeling would as he was brave, and that ho
promise her anything to get rid
of her. but would fulfill nothing,
“However, said lie, “1 will prepare
the necessary document for your hus
band’s release, tilling in the blanks so
that it will only be signature.' necessary to get
Colonel Tarleton’s But I
must again frankly say that this is
almost hopeless."
It was evident to the most superficial
observer that Mrs. Mackey would soon
bocomo a mother, and this probably lmd
something of to the do in brave enlisting the officer. kindly At j
sympathy o’clock Tarieton young ! j
twelve Colonel rode up,
dismounted, and entered tho adjoining j
tent. As he passed “Yon along, wait the young ! j
offleer said: must till lit
dines. brought Another and charger he will then he j
forth, when comes out i
40 , '“““A . y ™ cftn approach .... him, ami
no ^ rill thou.
At tho expected time tho toll, boyish
looking, clean-shaved, handsomo young
Tarieton came ont of his tent, and as ho ‘
neared his charger ho was confronted by
the heroic made Lydia Mackey, the object who of in a few
words known her visit,
..... Ilfl < J n iokly answered .... that ho was in a
great . hurry, and could not at that time
«t“P to con.id*r he, cm* Sb« nid the
morrow morning, and that lie alone had
u>«i»*.tt»~™i™ “Very well good life .......... when I
my woman ;
return later in the clay 1 will inquire
before he could throw his riel it let?
He turned her with scowl, *■*»: and
upon a
«he implored himto grant her request.
He was groaUy discomfited and angri
y said he would inquire into the ease on
his return lie then dragged attempted him again down to
mount when she a ,
becond time, begging him in eloquent
t^rma to spare tlie life of her husband.
“Hut tut, with my good “Do woman 1 ” know said wlmt. he,
boiling doing? rage. Begone you t I’ll attend
you we
nl 0 nct U am?’n third time Lyiba Mackey i
jBrktHl him to the ground. Holding by
. u . I „..i' H Honblviril and falliniz on JS her
me Btld my nll i„,rn bate,, or give
mo tlie life of mv husband, for I shall
n6V er let you go till yon kill me or sign
tliis document”—which she drew from
larleton tremblwt, KLK3 was ns pale as a
ocurpae, and turning to the young offi- j
oer, wlioHtood near l>y, intently watching
the scene, he said, “Captain, where i”
‘his woman’s Unshami?”
■’*< answered, “Under guard in yon- ;
■
Mm to be brought here.” before And
Mackov stood the
'Mr,” said he, “you
’—•ring arms ;
A PLEASANT PICTURE.
the i.over ami the hurjiand as
—ifT.*""-'’"**
You grow unusually amiable and kind;
you are earnest in your search of friends ;
yoU shake hands with your office-boy as
,f he wereyonr second cousin. Yon joke
cheerfully with the stout washerwoman
and give her a shilling overchange and
insist upon her keeping it. and grow
quite merry at the recollection of it.
You tap your hackman on the shoulder
very familiarly and tell him he is a
capital fellow, and don’t allow him to
whip his horses, except when driving to
the post office ; yon ask after the health
of his wife. He says he has no wife—
whereupon you think him a very miser
able man and give him a dollar, by way
Of consolation.
You think all the editorials in the
morning papers are remarkably well
written, whether upon your side or upon
another. Yon think the stock market
h f. avcry chBerfl !‘ look - ™ th frie-of
wh,ch y L m ar,! a iar * e holder-down to
^verity-five. 4 Yon Mrs Hemans wonder why you
“Td before, or
Steddart, r or any of the rest,
Yon ^ ve a twlr to y0 " r
, fin f rB “ y< f Kaunt< f a on « th , e street
-
and say—but not so loud as to . be over
^ J 3 &! etrSelly
one-half ttH well as you love Madge. You
feel quite sure he never did. You can
hardlv conceive how it is that Madge
] ltw not been seized before now by scores
of enamored men and borne off, like the
,Sabine women in Roman history. You
chuckle over your future like a boy who
has found a guinea in groping for six
pences. Yon read over the marriage
service, thinking of the time when yon
will take her hand and slip the ring
upon her finger and repeat after the
clergyman: “For richer, for poorer, for
better, for worse 1“—a great deal of
“worse” there will he about it, you
think!
Through all your heart cleaves to that
sweet image of the beloved Madge as
light cleaves to day, Tho weeks leap
with a bound and the months only grow
long wheu you approach that day which
is to make her yours. There are no
flowers rare enough to make bouquets
for her; diamonds aro too dim for her
to wear; pearls are tame.
- And after marriage—the weeks
nre even shorter than before. You won
’k:r why on earth all the single men in
the world do not rush tumultuously to
the altar. Yon look upou them all as a
traveled man will look upon Homo con
ceiled Dutch boor who has never been
beyond the limits of his cabbage-gar
den. Married men, on the contrary, you
regard as fellow-voyagers, and look upon
their wives—ugly as they may bo—as
better than none.
You Mush a little at first, telling your
butcher what “your wifo” would like;
.Y <m bargain with the grocer for sugars
and toes and wonder if ho knows you are
a married man. You practice your new
toll wa y him ?f talk that upon “your your wife” offioe-boy; expects yon
you
homo to dinner—and are astonished that
hi lout not stare to near you say it.
'•'« shilling hand to him is for “self
before or ever Wlli 1x3 80
nappy again.
come back to look at it, wondering if
cannot z.Ti.iit.isrWx' neip tmuKing uiat every 1 ', js tnira
1 ' 4 ; eha “^"you' B thTnk°it
^JtolVwm J plaoing towteh ( l You
jt 1H temptation in tlie way of
men t o put Madge’s little
jters outside the chamber'-door at
Your home, when it is entered, is just
what it should be—quiet, small, with
everything she she wishes, The and nothing
more than wishes. sun strikes
i »..........-rtf ?*■■.%
tbc Hbrar'y i«' V stooke*l X a'chann' and
Maiige- that btessed wife-is there
n.lmniiur ^ end trivimz ^ffiledi life to it all Jl To \
»offering yon class with the infernal tor
Dues of the Inquisition. You grow
twain of heart and purpose. Smiles
..eem made for -—•*** marriage, and you won- !
. . ...... i
-
Finger Nails,
Our finger nails grow out about three
times a year. Thoy should be trimmed
with the scissors once a week, not so
close ns to leave no room for the dirt to
gather, for then they do not protect the
ends of the fingers, IIS WHS designed by
nature ; besides, if trimmed too close at
the corners, there is danger of their
—•ring into tho flesh, causing-incou-
1 -mnetimes great pain.
- tlw ends of the
••moved by any
• a soft '•mped piece
;
;
I nr o poems.
lb. Favorite* of I.iueoln and Oar
Held.
e£«
“« while** h r“ sus? z
1 ftrt iat, writes that, engaged in
, painting Lincoln’s picture at the White
House, he was alone one evening with
; the President in his room, when he said:
“There is a poem which has been a
; great favorite with me for years, which
j waa first shown to me when a young
i man by a friend, and which I afterward
Baw and cut from a newspaper and
i learned by heart. I would," he con
tinued, “give a great deal to know who
ascertain." wrote it, but have never been able to
Hero is the poem :
j oh, whi should this hviiut or mortal
be proud?
Oh, Liksssirimfle.tins why should tbs spirit meteor.sfsst-flyir of mortal be proud? cloud.
g
from'ufs toL r.itCn tCVgrave.
l^etaTrb.iJS?*’ the
Andth#young and th* old, and th# low and
B ,, lU to du , t , nd i ^ am die .
Th. Infant a mother attended and loved,
The mother tint infant's -flection who proved,
The huaband that mother and infant who blessed.
Each, all, ara away to their dwellings of rest.
Tha maid on whosa aheek, on whosa brow, In whoa*
: lions beauty and pleasure—har triumphs are by;
And the memory of those who loved her and praised
Are alike from the minds of tha living erased.
The band of the Xing that the acepter hath borne.
The brow of the priest that tha miter hath worn.
The eye of the sage and tha heart of tha brave
A re hidden and loat in tha depth of the (rave.
The peasant, whose lot was to sow and to raap;
The herdsman, who climbed with hla goats up the
eteep; wandered
The beggar, who In aearch of hi* bread,
Have fadad away like tha graae that wa tread.
The saint who enjoyed the communion of heaven,
Tlie sinner whe dared to remain unforgiven,
The wi*fl and mingled the foolish, their the guilty in ana the duet. ju*t,
llnve quietly bone*
fir* the multitude goee, like the lower or tho weed
That withers away to let others succeed ;
H > the multitude tome*, even tho^e we behold,
To repeat every tale that has often been toid.
For we are the same our father* hitve been;
We *ee the tame alfhte our father* have *een—
We drink the same ntream and view the aame bud,
And run the same course eur father* have run.
Th* thought* w* ar* thluklng our fathers would
think;
From the d*ath we are *hrinklnf eur father* would
shrink;
To the l fo we are olinging they bird also would ding;
But It apeedn for us all, like a on the wing.
They loved, hut the story we cannot unfold;
They scorned, but the heart of the haughty is cold;
They grieved, but no wail from their slumbers will
come;
They joyed, hut the tongue of their gladness is
dumb.
They died, ay! they died; and we things that aro
walk how, the turf that ties
Who on over their hr w,
Who make in their dwelling a transient abode,
Meet tho things that they met on their pilgrimage
road.
Y>a! hop© and denpondenoy, pleasure and pain,
W r e mingle together In sunshine and rain;
And the smiles and the tear*, the song and the dirge,
Btill follow each other, like surge upon surge.
'Tis the wink of an eye, 'tls the draught of a
breatl
From the blossom of health to the paloneea of
death, gilded
From the saloon to the bier and tho
shroud—
O, why should the cpirit of mortal be proud?
Garfield’s favorite poem, which we
give below, has a lofty tone not unlike
that of Lincoln’s. It would be a dull
soul who could read it without taking
inspiration and comfort from it:
HO 1 BEARERS OF LIFE’S HARVEST.
Ho! reapers of life’s harvest,
Why atand with rusted blado
Until the alght draws ’round thee
And day begin* to fade?
Why stand ye idle, waiting
For reapers more to oome?
The golden morn ie pasting;
Why sit ye idle, dumb ?
Thrust In your sharpened sickle.
And gather in the grain;
The night is will fast approaching.
And noon come again.
The Master oalls for reaper*.
And shall He call in v&ln?
Shall sheaves He there ungather*
And waste upon the plain ?
Mount np the height* of wisdom.
And crush each error low;
Keen back no words of knowledge
That human heart* ehouid know.
Bu faithful to thy mission,
In service of thy Lord,
And Shall then be a thy golden chaplet
• just reward.
1 . ^ ^ , "•
A Washington letter says: General
Logan’s little gramlson, lA)g*n Tucker,
one of those odd, wise little children
who are always surprising their elders
with some unforeseen speech. Thisfave
year-old mite was perched on friends the knees the ,
<>f <«>«/ G^f, ral Wns |
other day, and the gentleman producing
, k d ( f wr at his mother, who shook
her head and signalled for him not to
take the gift, and then glanced at his
grandfather, who gave him a stem look
and another meaning nod. The Logan
blood rose in the little namesake then,
and grasping the new coin the harder, he
put up his head and said in a tone of
argument and entreaty: “Why. grandpa, small
he don’t want any office i” The
1 k>v won the case that time, and the little
group were convulsed at the innocent
proof 1 of the way iniquity underlies
* political city. i
everything ii • in it:. this
,
'
Four barrels of water of tlie Great i
Salt lake will leave, after evaporation,
-riv a barrel of salt.
..rfll. i
^.ox-Pork. old mess, 17.50^17.83X.
A Song dear. 95^.
k-ANTA—C lear rib sides 10; sugar-cured
as lit,. Lard, tierces, refined, lOJf.
UTU STOCK.
aTLANTA—W e qnote drov'd medium mule#
to li.^t hands 15 to 15*% hands
16 h&nds 145<«160. Plug horse*
suite in prioe from good medinra 125
#165.
CINCINNATI—Hoes, eommon and light 5.50
#6.^5; packing And Metal &5i*#7.50.
A HUNTER’S STORY.
Bow H W&/i’^S , M Va h v*edT a,r bi
UJorrfcppottiience Spirit oi 7 the Times)
An unusual adventure which recently oc¬
curred to your correspondent while banting
contains at Brookmere, in this State, is so timely ana
so much that can be made valuable
to all readers, tiiat I venture to reproduce it
entire:
The day was a most inclement one and the
snow ful, but quite deep. Rabbit tracks were plenti¬
of large they principally led i) the direction
a swamp, in which the rabbits
could run without difficulty, but where the
hunter constantly broke through the thin
ice, sinking into the half-frozen mire to his
knees. Notwithstanding these difficulties,
the writer bad persevered, although
a very small bag of game was
the result. While tramping ab ut through
a particularly malarial portion of the
swamp, into a middle-aged rnan suddenly came
and view, carrying a muzzle-loading shotgun
completely loaded down with game of
the finest description. Natural curiosity,
aside from the involuntary envy that in¬
stinctively arose, prompted the writer to en
t r into conversation with the man, with the
following “You’ve resuit:
had fine success, where did you
get all that game'
“Right “It's here, in the swamp.”
especially pretty rough hunting in these parts,
when a man goes up to his waist
every other step."
“ Yes, it’s not very pleasant, but I am used
to it and don't mind it.”
“How long have you hunted hereabouts. ”
“Why, ble&s you, I have lived here most of
my life and hunted up to ten years ago every
year.”
“How does it happen you omitted the last
ten years'”
“Be anse I was scarcely able to move,much
less hunt”
“I don't understand voul”
I “Well, you see, about ten years ago, after
had been tramping around ail day in the
same swamp, I felt quite a pain in ray ankle.
I didn’t mind it very much, but it kept
troubling me for a day or two, and I could
se" that it kept increasing. The next thing I
shoulder knew, 1 felt the same kind of a j am in my
and I found it pained me to move
my arm. This thing kept going on and in¬
creasing, feeling a id though I tried to skake off the
and make myself think it was only a
lit tie temporary tr iuble, I found that it did
not to ache go. Shortly the knees after this I my finally joints became began
at and so
bad that I had to remain in the house most of
the time.”
“Ami did you trace all this to the fact that
you had limited so much in this swamp'”
, I “No, knew I didn’t know what to lay it to, but
that I was in misery. My joints
swelled until it seemed as though all the flesh
1 had deft was bunched at the joints; iny
fingers became ci ooked in’every way, and some of
them double-jointed. In fact, every'
.joint {others in my body seemed to vie with the
to see which could become the largest
and cause me the greatest suffering. In this
Time way several I years passed on, during which
was pretty nearly helpless. I became
so nervous and sensitive that I would sit
bolstered up in the chair a.id call to people
that entered the room not to come near me,
or even touch my chair. While all this was
going on, 1 felt an awful burning heat and
fever, with < ccasional chills running all over
my body, but. especially along my back and
through my shoulders. Then again my blood
seemed to be boiling and my brain to be on
fire.”
“Didn’t ycu try to prevent all thisagonyl”
“Try! doctor i should think I did try. 1 tried
every that came within my roach and
all tiie proprietory medicines I could hear of.
I used washes an I liniments enough to last
me for all time, but the only relief I received
was by injections of morphine. ”
“Well, you talk in a very strange manner
for a man who has tramped around on a day
like this ana in a swamp liko this. How in
the world do you dare to do iti”
“Because 1 am completely well and as
sound as a dollar. It may seem strange,
but it is true, that I was entirely cured; the
rheumatism all driven out of my blood; my
joints reduced to their natural size, and my
strengt h made as great as ever before, by
means of that great and simple remedy, War¬
ner’s .Safe Rheumatic Cure, which I believe
saved my life.”
“ And so you now have no fear of rheumar
tisin
“ Why, no. Even if it should come on, I
remedy.” can easily get rid of it by using the same
The writer turned to leave, as it was grow¬
ing dark, but before I had reached the c ity
described precisely she same symptoms with I had just heard
Impressed came upon me great violence.
with the hunter’s story, I tried the
same all pain remedy, and and within twenty-four hours
inflammation had disappeared.
If any reader is suffering from any manner
of rheumatio or neuralgic troubles and de¬
sires relief let him by all means try this same
great remedy. And it any readers doubt tho
truth of the above incident or its statements,
let them write to A. A. Coates, Brookmere,
N. Y., who was the man with whom the
its writer truth conversed, falsity. and convince themselves J. R. of
or C.
Tlie Card Sharper.
“Yervmanvooker nlavers men of the
expert card sharp could go into a party
^im^teouTffis^e^N^lVd^l wbih vuuuui, uisuiyurj. au. A
^KhLdml^ ‘ , ,
^ ‘nffled
, h the cm c “ ds clam in ^ a number of °
3’ ’ vetj ho3V aCS the
j,is right to cut them and had
by an ° ther P^«; Tlien he dealt them
around one at a time to four players, in¬
ol u ^ ln / ^elf, end the other players,
. k *, ^K !
f >ll j ? t n P el ^.f ar< 8,
9^ j y ^ ' lka 40 , tkls ., . , kan<4, , „
P ay
firat man *
y coa <4 down you, said ., the . second .
man ' au important scowl,
The third wore the expression of a
““ who looks down upon his fellows
M remarked: ‘‘1 d bet everything I
°°®“ win on this.
Meanwhile the Professor had slipped
into . his top /’ coat, ’ and was drawing on
lua gloVfg The me n put down their
cards. The first had three kings and a
pair of queens, the second four aces and
a king, and the third a straight flush,
nine high, an almost invincible hand.
“What's yonrs, Professor?”
~ "'■'nnoian turned up the winning
-'“tit flush.
■ gentlemen,
“u, fairly
-'list,”
’T.
^nor
.-.kAAiein. com
binir’s ‘he s imoi.ir.ng expectorant principle healing
of til- sweet wuh the demulcent
Me of the muticin. for the cure of croup.
wr.tvpmci cotiffh. coitls Airfl congHinprion. F re ”
sent rt little Miwaxi chest r no househo.a
bhoui-11'e wit haul for the speedj relief of sad
dt n rtnd tlnn^erons attacks of ihe Inng^ »«d
Vowel*. A'k vour dru^sist for them. M»nn
: B .'y >er A. Taylor, proprietor T»y
Cologae, Atlanta, Ga.
»n eat; hut on’v men of in
* V.» cat.
I „ 4
run over r
Keocoed iron Deatti.
William J. Coughlin, of Somervflle, Mass.,
•ay*: “In the fall of 18761 was taken with
bleeding of lungs followed by a severe cough.
I lost my appetite and flesh, and was confined
to my bed. In 1877 I was admitted to the
hospital. The doctors said I had a hole in my
lung as big as a half dollar. At one time a
report went around that I was dead. I gave
up hope, but a friend told me of Dr. Wm.
Hall's Balsam for the Lungs. I got a bott’e,
when, to my surprise, I commenced to get
well, and to-day I feel better than for three
years.”
vanity Flattery is a sort of bad money to which onr
gives currency.
A Beautiful Head of Hair,
long, silken in texture, rich chestnut brown,
reac justly hing to the ground; such are the effeots of
the celebrated and widely known Car
boline, tne prince of all Hair Restorers.
For we are the same our fathers have been ;
We view the same sights our fathers have seen ■
We breathe the same air and feel the same sun,
And run the same course our fathers have run.
•‘Gems of the Northwest”
Is the title of a Tourists' Guide issued by thfl
Chicago, handsome Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway. It
is a book well worthy of the enter¬
prising Tourists management of tins great railway sys¬
tem. and summer travelers should
send to A. V. H. Carpenter, General Passenger
Agent, Milwaukee, Wis., and secure & copy.
The virus of aU dis’es arise from the blood
Samaritan Nervine cwree all blood disorders.
The worst kind of borrower Is he who bor¬
rows with the intention of repaying ; for you
know to a moral certainty that he intends to
borrow again.
Dr. J. A. Patmore, of Riley, Ind., truly re
ma ks; “Samaritan Nervine cures epilepsy.’
Although the greatest ootton grower, Texas
plants about 200,000 acres more in corn than in
ootton.
Walk More, anil Strep Soimflly. the Gale
Mr. John 'VV. Cole, Principal or
School, Troy, ’ N. Y., writes N. Y„ us: April 7,1883.
Troy, afflicted several years
“ Having been for
past witn nine s, the cause of which was un¬
known to me for a long time, and my con¬
tinued disability getting to be of so serious
and distressing a chara -ter as to cause great
anxiety with my family and friends, 1 bo
earae satisfied upon clo» investigation that
the cause of my sickness was the disease !
condition of my kidneys and liver. At this
time by accident a friend who had similar
symptoms to mine, informed me of the great
improvement in his health by taking Hunt s
Remedy, and persuaded me to try it. I im¬
mediately commenced taking it, and from
the first bottle began to improve, and its con¬
tinued use affords very encoura ing results.
I can sleep soundly, walk better, am free
from pains, and the severe attacks of head¬
ache irom which I suffered so much have
disappear 'd, and I cheerfully recommend
Hunt’s Remedy for all purposes which it is
advertised. I will add m closing that my
wife has use! it very successfully lor pre¬
venting the attacks of sick headache with
which she had been afflicted from youth.’
Almost Disheartened.
A prominent citizen sends us the following
statement: seri¬
For several years I have been very
ously afflicted with a severe pain in the back,
which I long supposed back. to be lumbago the or
rheumatism of the More recently
pains had become more severe, so much so
that it was with difficulty that I was able to
get out of bed in the morning. I ha l tried
various remedies without any apparent of friend re¬
lief. By the earnest solicitation a
I commenced taking Hunt’s Remedy, about
three weeks ago. and its instantan 3ous bene¬
fits are wonderful, for I have first had three no doses: pains
in my back since taking the the pains, achas and
and am relieved from
exhaustive weakness, the painful of symptoms the kid¬
that usually accompany disease
neys. Alia I confidently expect to be com¬
pletely and permanently cured by the use of
it. i most cheerfully recommend Hunt’s
Remedy to all who are afllicted with any kid¬
ney or liver disease.
WILLIAM G. ARNOLD, R. L
Walnut Street, Providence,
March 29,1883.
The truest mark of being born with great
qualities is being bom without envy.
Public speakers and singers use Piso’a Cure
for hoarseness and weak lungs.
Poverty destroys pride. It is difficult for an
empty bag to stand upright.
I S VNFAILINQ
AND INFALLIBLE
<15 fails^>JL IN CUhIXG
w ever Epileptic Fits,
Spasms, Falling
Sickness, Convul¬
sions, St. Vitus Dance, Alcoholism,
Opium Eating, Seminal Weakness, Im¬
potence, Syphilis, Scrofula, and all
Nervous and Blood Diseases.
Merchants, CFTo Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary Men,
sedentsry Bankers, Ladies and all whose
Irregularities employment causes Nervous Pros
tration, bowels of the blood, stomach,
tonic, or Kidneys, stimulant, or who Samaritan require a nerve Nerv¬
ine invaluable. appetizeror
jsssa-aslglSl Is j - tt -i
wonderful In vigor
ant that ever sustain- r Hll II C Dll El
aas'ssssr
TheDR.S. A. RICHMOND
MEDICAL CO., Sol# Pro¬
prietors, St. Jostph, Mo.
Cha*. N. Crittenton, Agent, New York. (8)
m PATS for * I.tf« Scholarship in tha
Mtk J9 gl 0 Coleman Hurdne** P-isition^ College*
■ Newark, New for
■ & JO rraduates. National patronage. Write
for Circulars to H. COLEMAN A CO,
CAUTION.
Don’t be persusled to buy old styles; get only
the new improved dust-proof, Catalogue. Patent Regulator
Watches. Send for
J. P. STEVENS WATCH CO.,
ATLANTA. GA.
per coni. National Fubulshing Q<> , Aintnt-i, <>■! .
AC NTS ANT? Cleveland, Oliiu.
0:13. L. F- DiKTURlCHS.
Soldierv and Heirs. Send stamp
w ft . —. ^ Send utaintf for <>or New Book oa
| \ Patents. L. KING’HAM. Pet¬
ti I w ent Lawyer. Washington, D. C.
Cistern Pumrt, Wind Mill Pnmns,
\ v Tube Wvll r P -ii in aud sb' -.vorld. fch- eheuP**t bend
Dd r>rcw TO. * Lockport, N. Y.
«l.i Force Pu aip Co.,
’i SeMaTi:
STAPLE lOTTO V.
7 IN THE WORLD
.•eminma than any other.
L.OOO
ins for 18S4. Price of seed re
. Send for pamphlet.
I>. oy.IER, ( orimh. Mi»«.
r.
SILK “Ill'S INESS>» FISH
.-Araples free; 25 yds. trout color line, a*ic.; 35c.
. - te s -.riru; < !k. black or mixed s,
L. J. .HAKT1.V, Rockville, Conn.
Bensons Why You Feel Badly.'
Because your stomach is not doing its work properly. righting.
Because vour liver is out of order, and wants
Because your blood is thin, and needs iron in it.
Because you are troubled w ith nervous aches and pains.
Because y hi are vexed with languor and debility, Brown's Iron Bitters, which wifi.
AU thesa Rcascms Can be Set Aside by the Use of
Tcne ui> your enfeebled stomach, and help it to digest. *
Refresh your wearied liver and put it in splendid red color. order.
Rurich your watery blood, and g've it a rich
Cairn your worried nerves, and give them restful peace.
Rf, ‘■r 'l -t your whole system and drive debility and languor out.
Considering ‘that any man woo has a dollar may buy of the nearest
rime -•ist a bottle of Bko'.vn’s Iron Bitters, there b no reason why people
sboua coaiaiue to fed badly, just for the fun of it i
o J
CELEBRATED PAXTON ENGINE
FIRST PRIZE MEDAL on Combined For m am
Traction rille, Englues at Southern Oikcdlabs. Exposition, , Louio
Ky., 1883. PP"SEND fob
FOUNDRY AND MACHINERY DEPARTMENT
HARRISBURG CAR MANUFACTURING C0„
UARU1SBURG,,_Zh
Koine Items.
—“ All your own fault
If you remain sick when you can
Get hop bitters that never—Fail.
—The weakest woman, smallest child, ana
sickest invalid can use hop bitters with safety
and great good.
—Old men tottering around from Rheumar
ism, kidney trouble or any weakness will be
knost new by using hop bitters.
—My wife and daughter were made healthy
by the use of hop bitters and I recommend
tfiem to my people.—Methodist Clergyman.
Ask any good doctor family if hop medicine
Bitters are not the best
On eartn.
—Malarial fever neighborhood ; Ague and Biliousness, hop
will leave every as soon as
bitters arrive.
—“ My mother drove the paralysis with hop and bit¬
neuralgia all out of her system
ters.”— Ed. Oswego Sun.
—Keep the kidneys healthy with hop bit¬
ters and you need not fear siclcnoss.
—Ice water is rendered harmless and more
refreshing and reviving with hop bitters in
each draught.
—The vigor-of youth for the aged and in¬
firm in hop bitters 1
—“ At the change of life nothing equals
Hop bitters to allay all troubles incident
Thereto.”
—“ The best periodical for 2adies to take
monthly and from which they will receive
the greatest benefit is hop bitters.”
—Moihers wilh sickly, fretful, nursing
children, will cure the children au t benefit
them-elves by taking hop bitters daily.
—Thousands die annually from some form
of kidney disease that might have been pre¬
vented by a timely use of hop tetters,
—Indigestion, weak stomach, when irregulari¬ hop bit¬
ties of the bowels, cannot exist
ters are u .o l.
A timely * * * use of hop
Bitters will keep a whole family little
In robust health a year at a cost.
—To produce real genuine sleep and child
like repose all night, take a little hop bitters
on retiring.
—That indigestion or stomach disappear gas at Dighfc,
preventing rest and sleep, will by
ising hop bitters.
—Paralytic, nervous, tremulous old ladies
aro made perfectly quiet and sprightly by
using hop bitters. 7
_____________
c«a wmmwm thousands of c&aea or tho worst kind and of long
irotlior ,ttg6rer with i)^ a VALUABLE 1 j.°£ gSrot'U TH15AT1S15 maillXs..Y.rri on this dltt«aao,tO
x
M.
Paynes’ Automatio Engines and Saw-Mill
tggiia
OUR LEADER. mounted Ena ine with Mill,
We offer an 8 to 10 H. P. oant-hook*, complete
80-in. solid Saw. 60 ft. bating, PAVNfe®& rig
takTSkud n ’for n cSS'ilte W. Auluimitlc En¬
HONS. Manufacturers of nil aim styles Pulleys, Hangers and
gines, from 2 to S'10 HP.: 1830._
blixllug, Elmirs, N . Y. Box
51 MW r. nilRain . mr-an )ustino pres sube.
-
WHITE.
ROILS, l. I
tts&^kc&RSSca.!
To Speculators. Miller & Co.,
It. Lindhlom & Co-, H. 0 .
i end T Chamber of 65 w
Oommerce, OlUongo. New York.
Crain and Provision Broker*
M umbers of *11 prominfnt Produce Esoh.mges la
Hew York, Ohioaso, bt. Louis end Mivrauk a
SSisSiS Br-ass
XX.—NOTICE.—XXi FLANNEL GARMENTS;
AS BLUE Good.
OfTtuferlor Qualify °f
Adonis to *l» parties ordering fay the poods. a cO.,
Wendell, v
f.GOOD | NEWS
TO LAD IES!
Grectebt indneenf-rta ever oft
fered. Now’s your t:m ■ to gnt u9
orders for our celetr ted Tra#
-T- «nd Coli Band t c«,snd secure a beauti«
ftil Gold or Moss Rose Ohio*
"■ , *® B ■***■ Tea Set, or Handsome Dec* r ited
Gold Bund IWoeK Rove Dinner Set, or Gold Band Must
g. O. Box hi aud Si Vesey bt., New York.
(i
I
y» C«r* «*>• 0 h<l re bstv
A ea te Send a? a
SSUT Gi^Svp™™ -r -
*"« Fo «
‘“’‘“’'iSwflwl “o’ROO t"T»P°Li 8V,K.wTork
ill III aMI llHLkKX HAliiTS 1,1. P.hD
! SI I | I B 81 I III Pamphlets. 5H Proofs WEEKS and T»rm«,
y 11 w J Fo
stamp. W. G. ffiS 33 S? m d
j Atlanta, Goorgi*.
| A. N. t'........... ........Eleven ’8i