About North Georgia citizen. (Dalton, Ga.) 1868-1924 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 27, 1892)
for Infants and Children* “CastorJ a is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me.” H. A. Archi:It, 31. D., 111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. “The use of ‘Castoria’ is so universal and its merits so well known that it seems a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the intelligent families who do not keep Castoria within easy reach.” „ ' _ Carlos Martyr, D. I).. New York City. Late Pastor Bloomingdale Beformed Church. Castoria cures Colic, Constipation, , Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di gestion. Without injurious medication. “ For several years I have recommended your ‘ Castoria, ’ and shall always continue to do so as it has invariably produced beneficial results." Edwin F. Pardbr, M. D., “The Winthrop,” 125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City. m Thb Ckntaur Company, 77 Murray Street, New York. A H. Warner, President. L. S. Colvek, Vice-President. C. R. Oaskill, Cashief. Fourth National Bank, OF CHATTAJstOOG-A. CAPITA^ $200,000, SURPLUS, $37,000 A thorized State Depository. AGENTS OF CHEQUE BANK, LONDON. CHECKS for TRAVELERS OOCD in all PARTS of the WORLD Safety Deposit Vaults Free of Charge to Customers. Directors J. H. Warner, D. J. Chandler, J. H. Vandeman, L. S. Colyar, W. L. Ma"ill, Lewis Shepherd, Gordon Lee, J. S. Bell, T. A. Snow, Xisbet Wingfield, C. D. Clark, Z. C. Patten, J. C. Griffiss, F. M. Gardenhire and C. R. Gaskill. April 1, 1890—ly. The Old Reliable Hardware House ■OF- T. A. & S. E. BERRY. EVERYTHING IX THE Hardware Liue Necessary for Building and Repairs. We have in store, and are receiving daily the i.argest Stock of HARDWARE. AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS, WAGONS, BUGGIES, &c., Ever brought to Dalton. Please call and be convinced that our prices will compare with the lowest Special Inducements to Country Merchants. T. A. & S. E. BERRY, Hamilton Street, - DALTON, GA. Jan.l, 1890. r m Dalton Female College, Dalton, Georgia. .✓ FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 6, 1892. Entire expenses for Ten Months, including tuition in college classes, board, lights, fuel, wash ing and service, SI GO. Prof. Henri Scceli.ek will have charge of Music Department. 31us Fannie <1. Lester will preside in the Preparatory Department. The Literary School and the School of Art are supplied with competent teachers. The new boarding department will be completed by August 15th. gffp-For further information address, CL .J. o L It, President, .July 7, 1892. CHATTANOOGA MONUMENTAL COMPANY, KILLIJVN, BAKED; & CiOLVAKD, Proprietors, Manufacturers of Foreign and American IVLavfole Monuments. Tablets anti all Cemetery Work Neatly Executed. CHATTANOOGA, TENN 21 West Montgomery Avenue June 15,1892-ly W, 0. PEEPLES GROCERY CO., EXCLUSIVE WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Groceries, Canned Goods, Tobacco^ Cigars* Southern Hotel Bld’g. 9°9-937 Chestnut and ?4-26 Carter Sts,, Ch.attariOOQ:a 5 Tennessse. 31ay 12 1892-ly 1 Beautiful Goo* TYEP AT TH‘ iLLMRI STOKE ONE MILLION LADIES ARE DAILY RECOMMENDING PERFECTION QTTfyn ADJUSTABLE DIIUIj It expands across the Ball and Joints. This makes it Tie BEST FITTIH&.HICEST J. & J. B. GRAVES 85 HAMILTON ST., DALTON, GEORGIA. An elegant assortment of • MILLINERY STRAW GOODS In store and. eonstantly'receiying consisting of Straw Bonnets CHILDREN’S HATS, Trimmed and untrimmed. Seek and Sash Ribbons, Velvet Ribbons, Neck Ties, Bonnet Silks, Satins, Velvets and Crapes, Flowers, Feathers, Ornaments, Etc «.? 00< ^ s were bong t of the-i^rgest and best importing houses in Baltimore - and N ew York sold at very low prices for caia 1 - COMFORTABLE SHOE IN THE WOED. PRICES, S2, S2.5C, S3, S3.50.1 CONSOLIDATED SHOE CO, Manufacturers, Lynn, - - Mass. Shoes made to measure- C3?“For sale by CARTWRIGHT BROS., Dalton. Sept. 8,1892 -3in. Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat ent business conducted for Moderate Fees. “ d W« d . e L^?^? lg , OT P\ oto - with descrip- advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is seesnred. A Pamphlet, “How to Obtain Patents » with t^£^. d i£to£, yoi,r 8tBte - COMt y- M C.A.SNOW&CO. ° W| Pat **t ornea, ivashirotor, d. e When death hath closed the ej-es of one Whose heart heat ever for our good, How sad to know their setting sun Was dimmed by us—misunderstood! ’Tis then we feel the pain we gave A parent, friend or neighbor good. And grief overwhelms us like a wave— Too late, too late—misunderstood! Oh, could we but live o’er the past And weave our web of life once more. Glad rays of sunshine would we cast Where doubt and darkness reigned be fore! Hope is not dead—the Present lives— Let us redeem it as we should; The flower that’s crushed more fragrance gives Than had it lived—misunderstood! But One there is who never fails To read the heart of man aright. Though tossed on life’s tempestuous gales, God will sustain us by his might. Let all our aims in life he pure— Men may misjudge—still cling to good. At last the victory shall be sure. And we shall then be—understood! —John Imre. A Brigand’s Courtship. It is said that the captain of a rob ber band who desires a wife does bis courting after this style: Casting bis eye on some fair village maiden, be descends upon the occasion of a dance on the green, and mingling with the dancers manages to dance with the fan- one himself. Then be charms her with bis grace and the beauty of his dancing, whispers love messages in her terrified ears—for well she knows with whom she is dancing— and circling ever nearer and nearer to the outer edge of the company be suddenly gives a whistle, and his men appear in a moment and dasb^ off with the prize, the leader covering then - retreat by a fusillade of fire arms which the villagers dare not return, being too much cowed by the bandit’s daring. Honorable marriage by a captured priest who is held in readiness is of fered to the girl, who dare not refuse to become the brigand’s bride, know ing she can never return to her home below the mountains. It is said that tbes,e marriages are exceptionally happy, and that the men love their abducted prizes with constant af fection, and that the villages from which they are stolen are forever after safe from fire and rapine at the bands of the band.—Detroit Free Press. _ A Great Scheme. A human phase of city life down town, whose verbal brilliancy disap pears when be puts himself on pa per, owing to the badness of bis spelling, thinks be lias bit upon a de vice for relieving the embarrassment of all who are as sensitive in regard to this failing as be is. Here is the scheme in bis own words: ‘ ‘Talley rand says that speech is the art of concealing thought. By the same token writing should be the art of concealing bad spelling. What we bad spellers need is a system of pen manship upon a basis of radical re form. Let teachers be sent out who will teach ns to write a pleasing band, but in which poor spelling can not be detected- I have no time to work out a system, but it ought to be easy and very profitable. For in stance, why not have ‘e’ and I’ writ- n alike hi words in which they oc cur together, with the dot midway over them ? Big money is waiting for somebody who will work out the com plete scheme.”—Hew York Times. Judge Kershaw’s Experience. Camden, S. C„ March 30, 1802. Dear Sir:—I should be ungrateful if I delayed longer to say a good word for the Electropoise. I commenced its use about two years ago, at a time when my health was very seriously impaired,and still con- tinuejts use, although in much better condition. It is an excellent remedy for insomnia and other nervous disorders. Its operation is genlle and almost im perceptible except in results, which I be lieve are always beneficial, if instruc tions are followed. It inspires confi dence in those who use it, and gives the invalid the same kindly comfort ex perienced by tlie presence of a trusted medical friend, and 1 shall never be without it in the future. My experience lias been with both the pocketand stand ard instruments, and so far as I have ob served their effect is much the same. I sincerely recommend its use to invalids. Yours truly, J. B. Kershaw. For all information &e., address At lantic Electropoise Co., Atlanta, Ga. A Xew York dentist says that the filling of teeth with gold has grown to such proportions that about 83,000,000 of gold is consumed in this way every year, and that this consumption should enter into all calculations as to the sup ply of the precious metal. Office of ,T. R. Gilmore, Dealer in Pure Drugs, Medicines, Chemicals, etc., De Leon. Tex., June 7, 1801.—Messrs. Lipp- man Bros., Savannah Ga.—Gents: Mr A. M. Ramsey, one of my customers, has been using your P. P. P. for catarrh says he had not breathed through his right nostril for ten years until he began to use P. P. P.: had not quite used two bot tles when he began breathing through right nostril and feels like a now man. Tells me ho had no idea of ever bein well again, hut now thinks he will get well and make money yet. I know him to he a reliable citizen and well known all over this country. Mr. Ramsey says lie will sign any certificate containing within facts for publication at his place. Yours respectfully, J. R. Gilmore, The silver wedding of the King and Queen of Greece, which will occur on Oct. 27, will be a quiet and unostenta tious affair. The only relatives of royal rank now expected to attend are the czarowitz and Crown Prince of Denmark. Mr. J. C. Jones, of Fulton, Ark., says of “About ten years ago I con- =J=M ^^ traoted a severe case of blood poison. Leading physicians prescribed medicine after medicine, which I took without any relief. I also tried mercu rial and potash remedies, with unsuc- RHEUMATISM cessful results, but which brought on an attack of mercurial rheumatism that made my life one of agony. After suf- ering for* years I gave up ail remedies and commenced using S. S. S. After taking several bottles, I was entirely cured and able to resume work. _ ■ggjgj is the greatest medicine for blood poisoning to-day on tbo market.” Treatise on Blood aU’skin Diseases mailed free. Swift Speodto Co.. Atlanta, Ga. GATJRANTEES Best Work, Lo-west Prices, Thorough Satisfaction. Place a Trial Order and be Convinced. JOHN BLACK & CO. -WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ALL 5KIH DI5EA5E5 Physicians endorse P. P. P. as a splendid combination, and prescribe it with great satisfacti:ri»vto’ tho cures of all forms and stages of Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Syphilis, Sypfiilitio Rheumatism, Scrofu lous Dicers and Sores, Glandular Swellings, Rheumatism, Malaria, old Chronic Ulcers that have resisted all treatment. Catarrh, CURES MS PfllSOI Skin Diseases, Eczema, Chronic Female Complaints, Mercurial Poison, Tetter, Scald Head, Etc., Etc. P. P. Pi is a powerful tonic, and an ex cellent appetizer, building up the system rapidly. Ladies whose systems are poisoned and whose blood is in an impure condition due P.P.P.M CURES [ALARM to menstrual irregularities are peculiarly benefited by the wonderful tonic and blood cleansing properties of P. P.,P., Prickly Ash, Poke Hoot and Potassium. LIPPMAN BROS., Druggists; Proprietors, Lippman’s Block, SAVANNAH, GA. Cheap Medicines. RETAILED AT WHOLESALE RATES. Hardware, -:- Machinery Agricultural Implements, WAGONS AND BUGGIES, SASH, DOORS, Blinds, Brick and Plumbing Supplies. First Door South of National Bank, DALTON, -:- GEORGIA.. L. BUCHHOLZ, ~:~ DALTON, GEORGIA. ZR.IE STATJ ZULlsTT, AND FRUITS. July 30, 1891-ly Hafley’s Music House. PIANOS OIRGrAAISrS. THE CHEAPEST HOUSE IN TELE SOUTH! BECAUSE: 1. Mr. Hatley buys all his Goods direct from the fac tories, cutting off the middle mau’s slice. 2. He pays no residence rents, and employs no Sales men, giving these savings to customers. 3. He has thus knocked the bottom out of signment” system, and has introduced the BEST GQODS at LOWEST PRICES. Augusta, Ga., ( Evening News, Jan. 20, 1892.) Some years ago the Evening News,pa discussing electricity as a healing agent, alluded to the Electropoise, and so pheno menal and wonderful have been its cares that the reputation of the little instru- ‘wait and wonder” what to do, but sit right down and write fer terms mentis now ecAgjjg all over the country. and price's to ” W. C. HAFLEY, ’’ U — c *“ ^ March 3,1892—ly. 816 Georgia Avenue, Chattanooga, Tenn. IRON PIPE Arm FITTINGS, , Brass Goods For Steam & Water HOSE, Belting and Packing Lead Pipe & Sheet Lead, Bath Tubs, WASH STANDS, SINKS' Gas Fixtures, PUMPS AND HYDRAULIC[ MACHINERY. Agents for The J. H. McGowan & Co, STEAM PUMPS. Estimates furnished on Steam and Hot Water Heating. The R. Whigham Plumbing Co., SANITARY PLUMBERS, Gras and. Steam Fitters, Shop and Salesroom No. 720 Market St. Chattanooga, Tenn. 626 Market Str. Dr. John Bull’s Worm Destroyers taste good and quickly remove worms from children or grown people, restoring the weak and puny to robust health. Try them. No other worm medicine is so safe and sure. Price 20 cents at drug stores, or sent by mail by John D. Park & Sons Co., 175 and 177 Sycamore, Str. Cxnciunati, O. jy. A mammoth cheese will be exhibited at the World’s fair by Perth, Out. It is to be “7 feet high and 9 feet in diameter, and will require for its mak- ing the milk of 600 cows for days. ’ ’ If the hair is falling out, or turnin" pray, requiring a stimulant with nourish” lng aiul coloring food, Hall’s Vegetable Sicilian Hair Renewer is just the specific The trans-siberian railway extends to a length of nearly 5,000 miles, and it is expected to cost 8200,000,000. three Hall’s Hnir Renewer S7 C * Ayer’s Hair Vigor 65c. | Sozodont 5 oc * Viola Cream, box 33 c * Hunyadi Water 25c. Fellow’s Hypophosphites g<jc. Mexican Mustang Liniment 18c. Pain Killer 18, 38 and 76c. Bradfiekl s Female Regulator 68c. Castor Oil, Baker's pint 25c. Pear’s Soap 9c. S. S. S % . . . . 59 and 99c. Hood’s S irsaparilla 75c. Hoyt’s Cologne . . . . i7 c * Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. ...... 69c. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery . . . 69c. Pc-ru-na - - . 73 c - Warner's Safe Cure I . . 85c. California Syrup of Figs 34c. Ely’s Cream Balm 34 c - Chichester’s Pennyroyal Pills $1.67 Brown's Iron Bitters 71c. Shiloh’s Catarrh Cure 35c. | Shiloh’s Consumption Cure 34c. McElree’s Wine Cardui . , . . f . 73c. Castoria 25c. Injection G 73 c - P. P. P 68c. Powers and Wcightman’s Morphine . . . 37c. Everything else in proportion.*©!* Express charges are usually 25 cents per package under five pounds. Address JAC03S' PHARMACY, ATLANTA, GA. Cor. Marietta & Peachtree Sts. W. & A. Railroad. BATTLBPIBLDS LINE AND Nashville, Chat’nooga&St. L.Ry. Lookout Mountain Route. TO THE WEST. No. 2 N No. 4 A.M. P.M. P. M. i Lv Atlanta, 8 10 1 35 7 45 i Ar Kingston, 10 27 3 44 9 49 DALTON, 11 56 I\M. 5 22 11 11 Tunnel Hill, 12 11 5 37 Ringgold, 12 26 5 52 A.M. Chattanooga, 1 25 6 50 12 35 Stevenson, 3 14 2 25 Nashville, 7 30 6 05 MY REMEDIES For Catarrh and Lung Troubles, Are Without nn Eqnnl ou the Continent I N Consumption in incurable cases life may be prolonged by their use; and ill people who are of consumptive families, may prevent the disease from coming on for years by using these Remedies. Please read what they have clone: Dai.tox, Ga., September 27, 18§p. About a year ago my wife was taken worse with an old lung trouble, and I called in two of the best doctors in North Georgia. Thev both said her case was a hopeless one—that she had consumption of lungs and bowels. As a last hope I commenced the use of Dr. S. J. Mc- Knight’s medicine for chronic lung troubles and in about thirty days her bowels were con trolled and her cough was stopped and she spit up but very little : and she is now in as good or better health than she has had for years. F. M. Pearce. Catoosa Springs, June 17,1889. .1 was treated for lung troubles in New York City, Cincinnati, Ohio, Louisville, Kv., Nash ville Chattanooga and Atlanta, and'at last I took Dr. S. J. MclCnight’s remedies for chronic iung diseases and received more benefit from them than fi om the treatment of all the noted physicians in the above named cities. W. A. Griffin. McHenrv, Gordon Cq., Ga., .Tune 20,1889. When I went to Dr. S. J. JTcknight over two years ago, I had an old lung trouble, was very nervous, had constipation and dyspepsia, my - eet were always cold, and I took cold very easy; was constantly spitting up blood and corruption lrom lungs; bad been examined by five doctors, and had censtilted as many more, and all con sidered my case a hopeless one. I was very weak,but 1 gained between 35 and 49 pounds in four months and am now in better health than in years. In ten days my appetite" was good, slept well, free from neivousness, mv feet were warm, and I did not take cold. I believe my life was seved bv his remedies. C. H. Barrett. My Remedies for Female Troubles have not failed in but one or two cases in four years curing cases of from one to eight years standing’ I am yours, etc., s. j. Mcknight, NEW DRUG STORE. DALTON, GA, Through Oar Service. NORTH BOUND, Train No. 2—Has Pullman parlor chair car At lanta to Nashville, through without change.— Elegant day coach Atlanta to Memphis without change. Train No. 4—Has Pullman sleeping car Atlan ta to Nashville and St. Louis without change. Also, Pullman sleeping car Atlanta to Chatts- nooga. Passengers can remain in car till 7 am. fiE^’Close connection made in Union Depot at Nashville for all points North and Northwest. TO THE SOUTHEAST. Lv Nashville Ar Stevenson Chattanooga., Tunnel Hill, DALTON, Calhoun, Kingston, ,,, Rome Cartersville, Marietta Atlanta so 1 No 9 No. 5 A. M. P.M. A.M. 7 30 9 05 11 25 12 31 P.M. A.M. 12 51 2 12 7 50 2 25 9 02 2 42 3 34 9 19 3 28 4 H 10 Od 4 XI 4 50 10 50 2 35 9 20 4 34 5 10 11 15 P.M. 5 44 6 09 12 21 6 40 7 00 1 15 MOTHERS’! FRIEND” ! Mothers Makss Ohfld Birth £agy. | Shortens Labor, % Lessens Pain, | Endorsed by the Leading Physicians. • Pools to “Mothers” mailed J'ltIJK • BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. S ATLANTA, GA. « SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS • F“For sale by S. J. McKnight, Dalton, Ga. “Modesty is the graced tue of maturity; bashfuW!?' charm of vivacious youth ” and less a young man takes advaS^' opportunities of entering Wfil retain “an air of which is in reality the ual intercourse with the world'' verly). As long ago as 1570 wrote that “if a young *±2** be bashfull and soon him a babishe and ill brought-^ thyng.” Deficient social eduSti^ “m«' or ? a ““ eofb “ h X2°" Habit also predisposes to it \ mere indisposition to exert one’s sek indulged in for too long a tie ? eventually result in confinS’S fulness- This indifferent^ due to a want of sympathy S* surroundings, or may have its r^ 6 m unalloyed selfishness-for bashful men are extremely 0r w ^ due to vanity.—~Cassdit~~ Locomotive Fog Signal. An improved method of to the drivers of locomotives in think weather has been brought forS Ou the locomotive? self is fixed an electric bell to whi t is attached a contact deric^S operates by means of a movable W which is associated with each siC box. When the engine passes 25 a signal box contact ls made and t£ bell rings, and by the number of beats upon the gong the engine dnver knows whether to proceed o whether to stop. The apparat^ does not intefere with any existS signaling arrangements, and would TUite automatic in action pro- videdthat the signal man attended to his levers just as if the weather was dear.—London Letter. An Anecdote of Whittier, A friend in conversation withM- Whittier, the poet, remarked that he was about to contract to furnish a lot of oak timber for the govern ment gunboats, and asked him if he thought it was in consistence with the peace doctrines of the Quaker de nomination. Without saving anv- thing calculated to decide ‘the ques-' tion the two arrived at their parting' place, when Mr. Whittier, shaking' nis friend’s hand, said, “Moses, if thee, does furnish any of that oak timber thee spoke of, be sure that it. is all sound.”—Philadelphia Inquirer, i Following an Old Instinct. I think that there can be no doubt that the pointer and setter in acting in their characteristic map. ner are following an old instinct connected with an important piece of co-operative pack strategy, al though the peculiarity has been en hanced by human training and selec tion, and the sportsmen with their guns have supplanted and there fore act the part of the dog’s natural comrades in the chase.—Contempo rary Review. completely cured by the Electropoise, and the following interview from such a well known, reliable and prominent man as President William C. Sibley, of the Sibley Mill, must deeply impress, if not entirely convince, all who read it. Mr. Sibley was perfectly willing to gi*® liis testimony to the Evening News about the Electropoise. He said he had been a great sufferer from sciatica for fire years before be began using the Electro poise. For two whole years he had not been free from pain, and at times the sciatic pains had been so severe that he would jump out of bed in his sleep an a wake to find himself on the floor in great agony. He spent much money in the North for special medical treatment, aud was sixty-seven times cauterized with a white-hot iron ou different parts of his body the treatment was almost as terrible as. The sciaticai tself,and when he read that a partner of Gen. Alger, the great republican politician of Detroit, had paid §5,000 and a physicians ex penses out to California as his jovial re ward for cure from sciatica, he deter mined to try the Electropoisei ■ “How long has that been, Mr. Sibley. “A year ago, and you know your=eIt my condition before that time; I come not walk to my office, or even across ine street; I was helpless and had to goia my buggy every where.” . Mr. Sibley’s statements are remar- able, but there is no doubt of their co - rectness, and the cures made by Electropoise are endorsed by 'pH pt>) si cians who examine them. . For all information, Ac., address a- lantic Electropoise Co., Atlanta, Ga. Caligula was stabbed by an o&eet of his guard whom he had frequent ly insulted by giving a vulgar eA pression as the watchword of th. day. X L. I. Thedford’s Liverllnvigorator. For Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sourness of Stomach, Loss of Appetite, Costiveness, Sick and Nervous Headache, Biliousness, Ac. M. A. THEDFORD MEDICINE COMP'I, .x ROME, GA, Nov. 26 1891-ly Train No. 3.—Has Pullman sleeping car St. Louis and Nashville to Atlanta, through without change. Also Pullman sleeping car Chattanoo ga to Atlanta, open for passengers Union at De pot at 9 p, m. Train No. 1—Has Pullman parlor chair car Nashville to Atlanta through without change. Elegant day coach Memphis [to Atlanta tliro’ without change, J!3P“Clo9e connections made in Union Depot at Atlanta for all points South and Southeast. ta^For Tickets and other information, write to or call upon S' Walker, T. A., Union Depot, Atlanta. R, p. Mann, No. 4, Kimball House, “ “ Frank Sevier, T. P„ Union Depot, Chatt. S. E. Howell, T. A., 9th & Market Sts., “ i- L Edmondson, T. P. A., Dalton, Ga. J. IV. Hicks, T. P. a., Charlottee. CH AS. E. HARMAN, - Hen. Pass. Agent, Atlanta, Ga. IXBfijfslT BEAL ESTATE DEALEBS, TBENTON, GA. ILT EDGE, MANUFACTURING, RESI DENCE, MINING AND TIMBER PROPERTY fcfcr“reCors pondence solicited Saye faying Doctors’ Bills B B B e0TANIC BLOOD BALM the great remedy - FOB ALL BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES - ] Has been thoroughly tested by em inent physicians and the people lor 40 years, and never fails to core quickly and permanently SCROFULA, ULCERS, ECZEMA, RHEUMATISM, PIMPLES, ERUPTIONS;, and all maimer of EATING, SPREADING and . RUNNING SORES. Inyarlabjjr cores the most loatliaojae blood diseases if directions are fol lowed: Price tX per bottle, 6 bottles for $5. For sale by druggists. SENT FREE WONDERFUL* CUBES. BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, 6a. The Citizen Printing Office Commercial Print-' ces. and executed ip the 'Office t tnntiug a opcbuibj, au best style and on the best of paper. Reorders solicited and WO A gl give satisfaction both in style ana price. rk guaranteed anaprice. SGETBNER’S M4G«ZIflE an exceptional year. The vear 1S91 has been marked by a advance than any similar i>eriod pine h _ aziue was established. Not enigmas ry and artistic excellence been ^iaintnni « increased, but a corresponding r- ,.‘ (r3Z iD6 made in the sale and influence:of th - - , At the end of 1891 the circulation had more than 140,000. It niaj jnstl .» that the further improvements tor tae - year will be proportionate to these • creased opportunities. For the Next Iear, It is not possible to give, in a bnef account of all the features the material is deficient in neither imp's, nor range of subject. Among the - • treated: The Poor in the World’s Great Cm. ^ It is proposed to publish a series tis upon a scale not before attempted, r r. tie results of special study and work ^ * poor of the great cities. The plan an account of the conditions <>t » ^re- cities (in mvny lands) where tie re. p 3 a- search will be helpful for purposes - son as well as for their own intrmM ^ The elaborate illustrations _will '"rye se i! js the presentation of the subject viviu a- picturesque. Washington Allston. jjjj Unpublished Reminiscences and i foremost among early American P?. . Ajit- nnmber of illustrations will lend auu terest to the articles. Important Moniruis. . The aim of this series of very short arri j*. to describe the signal occasions wnen . cisive event took place, or when si 'me ,-3 perimeut was first shown to be sneces*’ moments as that of the first use <>t tni -'; [fir- cable, the first use of the telegraph phone, the first successful experiment ^ e „ e y. er, the night of the Chicago fire. Jjngntf 1 the moment of the vote on the nupea Andrew Johnson, Ac. Out of Door Papers. ^rol In the early spring will be began a n} 1 seasonable articles, among them l "' in r • ffl oi ! “Small Country Places,” how to JJ- and beautify them, by Samuel I • S ooKi ’- tf “Fishing Lore from an Angler s ><>ie L jfe ^ Dr. Leroy M. Yale. “Mountain Statu u New Zealand,” by Sidney Dickmsom. illn ? in Austria "by Sidney, DlckI £K' tratlpns by Birge Harrison.. “ R aye made from orginial material. S3 0(1» Year; 25c a |isW * CHARGES SCRIBNER’S SONS, rt*" ' 743-745 Broadway, T HE neatest, most artistic Work done in the city can Giiizxb Office