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TRAINING A BOY.
A REVIEW OP THE YOUNGSTER FROM
13 TO *0 YEARS OP AGE.
Aad a tompsHssn Between Him and ihr
Boyaf Forty Years A«e~A Plea lar the
Boy of To-Day.
[M. Quad in Detroit Free Piece.]
•1 have a boy 17 years of age. Noth¬
for ing around the house ia good enough
him and he ia oontinually threaten¬
ing to ran away. I do not know what
to do with him. Do yon ?”
Thus writes a father whose letter ia
dated from a town in Indiana. His l>oy
is probably no worse than (he average
lad of that age. Has the father ever got
right down to hardpan to discover
whether the fault lies with him or with
the son ? Has be made a study of the
b o y to learn how he ahould be handled ?
When a man buys a horse he grants
himself a certain length of time to learn
the animal's natnre, whims aud tricks.
Isn't it of as much importance to study
a nearly boy ? all While fathers no seek two to boys are alike, the
principle. They boss govern on order
same settles and
and imagine that the case.
Now, to begin with, a l>oy from 13 to
20 years of age is a queer animal to
handle. He is full of the most absurd
whims and notions and false ideas. You
may partly convince him of this by
argument, but von can't make an im¬
pression by soolding or pounding. I be¬
lieve the 1 letter way is to let his mania
wear itself out, like fever. The boy of
of forty to-day, years ago wasn’t as bad a a the boy
but it may be explained that
he hadn’t tho chance to be. Where
women had only one new bonnet a year
Bt the outside, and men sat in the village
church in their shirt sleeves, what boy
of 18 would have dared ask for collar
and necktie ? To have wan ted better
clothes would have been to exhibit base
ingratitude. To have refused to wear
cowhide boots and black them with lard
nnil lampblack would havo been to ac¬
cept the alternative and go barefoot.
Clothes were made at home, aud after
any fashion. If shirts had a collar of
tho same material it was something to bo
proud over; Tho boys’ fediugs were
not to be consulted in such cases, and it
was rarely another that one lad would criticise
What wore. Pride iu a boy
would have licen denounced almost as a
crime, and a “tanning” would havo cer¬
tainly But followed. the
years have made a great
change. We seek to govern onr children
in a different way, aud fiiBhion is con¬
sulted iu every corner of the laud. We
expect more of our boys than was
cxjieoted of ns, and we cultivate prido
instead of crushing it. If we have a son
from 13 to 20 years of age we realize
that ho must lie kept on an equal foot¬
ing with his hoy friends iu the matter
of personal appearance or he wilt feci
degraded. Show mo a boy of 16, iu
village or city, whoso family lie havo any
social standing, who can coaxed or
bribed to wear n pair of pant® patched
at the knee. He will argue that the
wholo town will stop business to gaze at
that patch. If one of his boots is out at
the too, that settles the case with him.
If there’s a rip in his coat, or a button
off, he can’t take a minute’s comfort on
the street.
The boy of to-day has got all these
whims, and you must consult them and
liear with him. No matter what tailor
measures him, yon can expect a com¬
plaint that his pants are too long or too
short—too tight or too baggy. He
didn’t want “no snch coat,” aud the vest
doesn’t fit him within a mile. His neck¬
tie doesn’t suit; his collars are horrid,
aud the complaint will iuuludo even his
bootlegs. Pound him if you will, but
you will only make him hate you. Ar¬
gument anil reason will smooth over
most of his troubles, lias tho Indiana
father tried that method ? If a man
doesn’t vote onr ticket or attend our
church—if lie believes the world to be
fiat instead of rouud—if he drinks too
mneh—if lie scouts at standard facts in
science knock him or down natural philosophy, with do him wo
or argue ?
Don’t we give him three times the show
that we do a boy, whose false notions
will disappear with ago ? Egotism
should bo scorched until a blister effects
a cure, but the parent who seeks to
crush tho natural pride The in a boy is play¬
ing a dangerous makes game. find same natural
pride that him so depended much fault
with his clothes must bo on
to keep him out of degrading company
aud unlit associations. Pound it into
him that anything is good enough for
him and lie will find it easy to wear old
clothes aud train with loafers.
Have you as a man walked the streets
dead-broke for a single day ? You felt
cheap might and ashamed of yourself. A boy
not feel it quito so keenly, but he
feels it suflicieutly to mortify his pride.
I don’t say that you should hand ont
dollar after dollar to your son and take
no heed how lie spends it, but mingle
common sense with the transaction.
L t him know that you disapprove oi
smoking, chewing, beer-drinking, last- t
ting, gambling and billiards. He wants
money for a score of things which seem
foolish to you, but ho is a boy. If he
has n dollar in his purse ho feels a cer¬
tain pride in the knowledge, and will
waste less than if vou doled him out a
dime at a time. When one boy applies
the term stingy to another it means a
good deal morn than you realize. It
means a boy too mean to associate witb.
If he is stingy he is supposed to bo a
cheat and a liar as well. Give your boy
twenty-live cents for tho Fourth of July
or to go on an excursion in the company
of lads who have been furnished a dollar
apiece and yon can simp your finger nt
all tho comfort lie takes. Ho feels a
neiiHo cially but of inferiority, other respects,*nnd not only finan¬
in all this
degrades reasoned iu him. this Ups ? the Indiana farmer
For way
the last two or three years I have
boon watching a father spoil hia son.
Tho great object seeum to be to keep
the hut hard at work when out ot school.
He is put to digging and hoeing aud
sawing and wheeling, of and an hour of
this work, instead “giviug him an
appetite,'* exhausts edge. II- hire is made and gets don hia his
temper old clot on lies school to and the
knowledge alter looks like hours,
(list lie a scare-crow
annoys and degrades him. He has no
allowance of tnouoy aud ia therefore de¬
prived isn’t allowed of the society visit of other hoys. He
to a circus or a thea¬
tre, Una never boou fiabuig or buuliug,
has no boy-books or amusements, and
his father’s way of addressing him is:
“Now, young I’ll man, you git for that
wood pile or wallop you within an
inch of your life t”
The chances are ten to one that that
boy regards bis father as his mortal
enemy. Before be is 20 years old he will
run away, and his freedom will result in
excesses. If it should so happen that he
does not go to the bad, he will still bear
snch a grudge against his parent as will
make him feel like denying kinship.
There is any amount of weeping and
wailing tho over spoilt boys. If but a tenth
of interest was displayed a little
sooner there wonld be but little use for
reform [schools. It does not detract
from down and tho visit dignity with of his any son—to father to sit
reason
this or that—to argne for or against. It
does not increase that dignity to order a
eon about as if be were a slave—to
sneer at his whims and jeer at his no¬
tions.
Let the Indiana lather refleet a little
and see if he hasn’t been taking the
wrong course. If he is the owner of a
3-year old colt let him answer if he
hasn't taken more pains to consult the
pccentricities boy—if he hasn’t of the animal than of his
had more patience
with the colt’s temper than with his
son's.
WIT AM) WISDOM.
Vassar girls don’t swear, although
they do say: “By gum !”
The early beau catches tho girl, but
he doeB not always hold her.
If yon have a loitering servant, place
nis dinner before him aud send him on
an errand.
Make it n condition that a talker must
know what ho is talking about aud he
will not say much.
If crying babies had any sense they
would never take their mothers to mati¬
nees.— Chicaf/o Sun.
•De ioudes’ talkers ain’t alius do wisest
men. Geeso makes more noise den de
roosters, but da ain’t got nigh 60 much
sense. ,
Er boy.is mo’ mo’ aotive gayly den er man. Er
colt prances den er boss, but
he is do scones’ ter fall oB de bluff an’
kill hiisc’f.
Why is it that a man who whangs an
old copper cent into tho contribution
box generally leans back with a twenty
dodar look of benevolonce?
Evehv piano should have a waterproof
cover. If this cover is kept on while the
young lady amateur is about, the instru¬
ment will last a very long time.
“What is the name of this picture ?”
asked a visitor to a private gallery. “ ‘A
Polioemau on His Beat at Night.’ ”
“Ah, 1 see—a study from still life.”
A market reporter sayB that his sweet¬
heart encouraged him, and ho thought
ot marrying her at once, bnt that a fur¬
ther advance was followed by a decline.
“And what did father say?” asked
Julia eagerly. “Your father says not,”
Henry solemnly rejoined. “Ah, the
connubial knot,’’simpered Julia throngh
her tears.
We heard of a woman who applied for
a situation as car driver. Being asked
if slio could manage mules, scornfnily
replied: “Of course I can; I have had
two husbands.”
A man placed in the window of hie
building the sign “To Wrent.” The peo
pie laughed, and he changed tho sign
to “Two Let.” In this case the wrent
was made worse.
If Grant receives a pension let it be
given in such a way that the first light
mug-rod him man of who comes along can’t
client out any part of tlio princi
pal at least.— Detroit Free Press.
Half dollars of 1827 sell for $1.10.
And yet tlm improvident people who
livid in 1827 spent their half dollars as
fast as they got them, so that they are
now scarcer than defeated candidates.
The London Lancet says “certainly,
animals below the order of man never
commit suicide.” Why, of course not,
they never do anything sufficiently
wicked and disgraceful to drive them to
suicide.
It does not pay for Presidential can¬
didates to fondle clergymen too much.
Blaine now throws down Burcliard and
remarks with the little boy who was
playing with a cat: “I don’t like that
cat; it’s got splinters in its feet.”
“Do you believe in fetishism?” she
asked, as he came back in time for the
second act. “No, indeed,” was the an¬
swer. “Why I noticed do you that ask ?” “Oh, only
ecanse you had just
taken a clove to drive out had spirits.”
Little Brown (confidentially, before
waltz): -‘Wo shan’t got on very well,
I’m afraid ; but it’s not because ‘i can’t
do the step. It’s that having to keep time
with the music puts me out. I
suppose you don’t find it that way with
you?”
Keoruits for the Chinese army are
not accepted unless they can jump clear
across a ditch six feet wide. A Chinese
soldier is no possible good unless obstruction ho can easily
clear every that can
be piueea in his road when he is running
away.
The best thing to give to your enemy
is forgiveness, to an opponent, toler¬
ance; to a friend, your heart; to your
child, a good example; will make to your her proud mother, of
conduct that
you; to yourself, respect; to all men,
charity.
“Is ir cold tip your way? ’’ was asked
of a man some fifty miles north of St.
Paul. “Cold?” “Well, he said, with a it rising
inflection, I should say was.
We li id to give the stove four doses of
quinine yo.torday to keep it from shak¬
ing the lids off.”
One nii'nibcr of the IT. 8. Senate and
two member* oi tho House died during
the refloat*, and two memhera of tho
House resigned.
An Endish doctor has said that per
sons l>orn during the prevalence of
cholera in 1832, 1849, 1854 and 1865
wonld bo exempt KPNP from the scourge now.
The sensation thirty-flve-yenr-old m West Virginia is the
elopement with her of a adopted aged 20, wo
niun son, to
a hom she had acted as a mother for ton
years.
Two ntWDSSD and fifty thousand oop
to* of "Called Bnok" havo licou sold in
Groat Britain, two authorized and six
pirated «diUoii« have been issued in this
country.
—
BLOOD MONEY.
HOW A BROOKLYN SB JRTMAKRR
WAS “PAID” BY A NEW YORK-FIRM.
Facts lor the Rich ta Consider—Three Per¬
sons Lsborlaa from Dan to iUldnlsbt
tor Twenty-Three Ceate a Day,
iFrom the New York Herald.}
A disciple of Schopenhauer who de¬
sires to study human nature in its dreari¬
est and bleakest aspect will do well to
spend an hour Columbia or two on a cold winter
afternoon in stteet, Brooklyn.
True, other localties will reveal to him
more visible squalor and wretchedness,
bnt scarcely in any other will he And
houses more dilapidated, faces more sor¬
rowful, children less frolicsome and beer
saloons less inviting. A few commodi¬
ous houses and one or two grim factories
scattered here and there only avail to
intensify the sadness that seems to lie
like a shroud around this unhappy
locality. The majority and of the buildings
are rickety cottages The majority funereal the tene¬
ment houses. of tenants
are shirtmakers and world-weary artisans,
and the minority a few bandy-legged,
scraggv-looking floor goats. No.
On the first of 83—a gloomy
fenemeut house—lives John Eegea, the
luckless shirtmaker who received from a
New making York firm the shirts princely in fortnight. sum of $7.75
for 291 a
“Yes, 1 am the fool who made the
shirts,” said a low sized, and sad look¬
ing man, as he with nervously hand twitched his
black whiskers one and drew
a chair to bis visitor with the other,
“and sorry I am that I ever undertook
snch a job. Fifteen months ago I oamo
here from Aachen, in Germany, I was
a conductor on the State railway there
for some years, bnt I got a fall one day,
broke my ribs and lost my position,
That nearly broke my heart. I had
buried two children and had only two
left, so I said to my wife, ‘Como, we
have about $150; let us go to America.
You can get good money as good a capmaker
and the children can get school¬
ing.’” spoke, little Mary, his daughter,
As he
a pretty child of thirteen, and his eight
year-oid son, Hubert, nestled visitor. to his
side and stared timidly here," at resumed the Begen,
“So we came
“and sure enough my wife made plenty
of money at making caps, and I learned
to help her, so that, thank God, we were
a jji e j G keep a roo f over our heads and
our children at school. Bat three
months ago the demand for caps oeased
aud we had to look for other employ¬
ment. Alter some time we heard that a
New York firm would employ us making
shirts. My wife went to the Ann and
’got three shirts to make. We made
them quickly on the sewing machine
which wo bad took brought them from back Germany, and
and my wife asked
for payment. She was advised to wait
until her bill was larger and got eight
dozen more shirts to make.
“She got another woman to help her
in the job, and so, for fourteen mortal
days—from November 26 to December
9—1, my wife and this woman and my
little daughter worked from five o’clock
in the morning until eleven o’clock at
night, and at the end of the time we had
finished 291 shirts. We had three ma¬
chines at work and little Mary was kept
busy picking ont the threads.
“On December 9 .my wife took the
last batch of shirts to the firm and in
sisted on getting paid. She and was found, given a
paybook and some money, to
her horror, that for the 291 shirts she
had only received $7.75. She came
borne, and handed $2.75 of the money
to the woman who had worked with us
and gave mo the remaining $5. I sat
down and made a calculation, and found
that my wife had spent $1.30 on oar fare
? ud ^ ***%
trimming, fort “ 1 8 h t f, so la ‘ ) " that r on r net Profit for a
} ° ou i i J d n0 t ^ he ^ t
g?JgJX . - f
a fortnight and my wife
nearly worked into her grave for three
doll’ars and a half! Twenty-three cents
a day for the labor of three persons 1 I
was heart broken, and said to mvsolf
that it wonld be better to beg in the
streets than make myself and my family
slaves in such a fashion. I felt that the
money was blood money and not wages.
“I took no pains about making the
file dozen I had in the house, bnt started
ont to look for other work. These are
the shirts, and you can imagine whet
onr work must have been.”
Little Mary unrolled a large parcel
and showed a number dandies of spotted shirts,
such as full blown of sporting
proolivities and retired prize fighters
delight in. The fronts were finished,
but the necks, arms and other parts
Were wholiy amorphous. The labor
necessary to make completed garments
of them could be easily imaginedi
“I have done my best to keep my bits
of fnrniture together,” said Regen, as he
saw the reporter glance around the clean
but scantily furnished room, “because
much of it was given to me, by friends,
and the rest^ was bought with hard
earned money. But I owe my landlord
$10 for a month’s rent, and another $10
for two mouths’ hire ot my second sew¬
ing machine, and unless I con get some
kind of a job soon I shall have to part
with everything to keep my children
from day looking starving. My wife has been have out all
for work, and I just
come from the Labor Bureau at Castle
Garden. Neither of us has had any suc¬
cess. There were hundreds at the
bureau anxious to get work, so after
waiting for two hours I came back home.
A gentleman connected York with the German
friend Society in New lias been a t-ruo
to us aud is doing his best to get
me work. Some ladios in Brooklyn also
arc trying to help my wife.
“Wnatever happens I will not put
another stitch in one of those five dozen
shirts, but will take tlu-m back and let
my rascally employer get some other
fo, ' i to make them, if he can. Ah! if he
had only dared to hand me $7.75 for all
out work ho would not have got off so
easily as he did with my wife, I would
j H t least have had the satisfaction of tell
j B g him my opinion of him. If your
j great paper will only let the public know
how some poor men and women are
treated it will do a greater service than
| can easily be imagined. If the rich
only knew how tho poor were too often
treated they wonid raise such a hubbub
; as would compel are." employers to be more
* just than they
A Chbistmas Feast. — Queen Vio
/oria's Christmas “royal baron” of beef
was last year cut from a shorthorn of
her own breading, and weighed over 300
pounds. This huge joint is always
roasted at Windsor Castle, and on Christ¬
mas Eve it is dispatched to Osborne,
where it is placed in the centre of the
sideboard in the Queen’s dining room,
flanked on one side by a woodoock pie
and on the other by a boat’s head, of
which her Majesty receives several at
Christmas from Germany.
te There unreservedly, a Cure for Consumption? yee! If the
We answer Dr. pa¬
tient commences In time the use of
Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery,” alid
exercises proper cate. If allowed to run its
course too long all medicine deceives is powerless patient to
stay it. Dr. Fierce never, a
by holding out a false hope for the sake of
pecuniary gain. The “ Golden Medical Dis¬
covery” has cured thousands of patients when
nothing else seemed to avail. Your drug¬
gist has it, Send two stamps for Dr. Pierce’s
complete treatise on consumption with nu¬
merous testimonials Address World’s Dis¬
pensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
estimated The permanent at 212,000, population and the of transient Washington in town is
It 10,000.
_
Heart Pains.
Indigestion, Palpitation, Headache, Dropsical Sleeplessness Bwellings, Dizziness, cured by
“\Yoils’ Health Bcnewer.”
A headless ghost is frightening the people of
Ephrata. How wonld it do to put a head on it ?
Mullein v». Cod Liver Oil.
Dr. Quillian, lung the diseases, leading authority Wh ile of Great
Britain, his patients on gained only says: pounds by one tho of
seven
use of cod liver oil, she gained oyer thirteen by
tho use of mullein. The old field mullein mado
Into a tea and combined with sweet gum pre¬
sents in Taylor’s Mullein Cherokee Remedy and effective of Sweet
Gum and a pleasant cure.
for Cr oup, Whooping-Cough, Sold by all druggists Colds and Con¬
sumption. $1.00 bottle. at 25c and
a
This Some is one certainly says, “the smoking if it is conpled car must go.”
true onto an
engine.
A happy weed, combination Jamaica of best grape camphor brandy,
smart water, found in Dr. ginger Pierce’s and Compound
os
Extract of Smart-weed,cures cholera morbus,
diarrhoea, dysentery or bloody-flux, colic or
cramps in stomach,and breaks up colds,fevers
and milammatow attacks.
“The Mito’y Dollar”—That made up of church
collection pennies.
. Lost Faith ia Physicians.
There are innumerable instances when
cures havo been effected by Scovill’s Sarsa¬
parilla, or Blood and Liver Syrup, for all dis¬
eases of the blood, when they had been given
over by tlieir physicians. It is one of (ht
best remedies ever offered to the public, and
as it is prepared with the greatest care, as a
specifl: that for certain diseases, it is no wonder
it should be more effectual than hast¬
ily tions. written and carelessly prepared presrrip
Take this medicine for ail disorders
arising from impure blood. It is indorsed hv
leading professional man.
When a man is in love he fancies every
wrinkle a dimple. ■ ,
Clears ont m2® £&£flies, ants, Drug- bod
bugs, skunks, chipmonks, gophers. 15c.
gists. __
Many New Year resolutions are like some
secrets—“too good to keep.”
The question whether young women shall
-pursue the samo line of studies as their broth¬
ers, seems to find its chief objection in their
different this subject physical finely constitution. handled Arguments both sides on
are on ;
bnt the perfect adaptation of Mrs. Pinkham’s
attending Vegetable Compound the feminine to the organism cure of needs ailments
no
argument; its works are its proof.
Nearly 5 ? 000 patents on clmrns have been is¬
sued in this country alone.
“A (i«(l-«end
/s Elyk Cream Balm,” writes Mrs. 31. A. Jack
son, of Portsmouth, N. H., on May 22, 1882. X
hud Catarrh for threo years! had tried nearly
nil remedies bnt to no purpose. Two or three
times a week my nose would bleed quite freely
end I thought tho sores in it would never heal.
Your Balm 1ms cured me. This preparation is
not a liquid or a snuff, and is easily applied.
Price 50 cents. Sec advertisement.
Wordsworth: Wisdom is ofttimes nearer when
we stoop than when wo soar.
Clmppc 1 hands, face pimples and rough skin
cured by using Juniper Tar Soap, made by Caa
well. Hazard & Co.. New York.
Cicero: To live long it is necessary to live
slowly.
_
“Rough on Corns.”
Ask for Wells’“Rough on Corns. 15c. Quick,
complete cure. Hard or soft corns, warts, bun¬
ions.
I'lavel: Step aside a little oftener to talk with
God and thine own heart..
A Remarkable Cordial.
It is a well known fact that gum camphor is
one of the best remedies for bowel troubles,
and combined in a cordial with peppermint
and the active principle Biggers’ of Huckleberry the huckleberry, Cordial it
presents in Dr.
the GREAT SOUTHERN REMEDY that re¬
stores th<! little one suffering from the effects
of teething, and troubles. cures Diarrhoea, For sale by DysenGry all drug¬
and ail bo >vel
gists at 50 cents a bottle.
I/dwell: No man is born into the world whose
work is not born with him.
The Contrast. flower;
As the sable is to ermine; as smut to
as coal to alabaster; as soot to of driven all hair snow,
so is Carboline, the perfection re
newers. to all other oronarations.
The light of the future—Experience
Bad treatment or stricture often compli¬
cates the disease and makes it difficult of
cure. The worst and most inveterate cases
speedily methods. yield Pamphlet, to our references now and and improved
terms
sent for two three-ce.it stamps. World’s
Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N.Y.
A youth he whose suit was rejected author by a pretty
giri says has discovered the of “tire
beautiful’s no.”
PcnesT and BESTOon-LrvzRon,, from selected
livers, on the seashore, by Caswell, Hazard A
Co., N.Y. Absolutely pure and sweet. Patients
who have once taken it prefer it to all others.
Physicians declare it superior to all other oils.
Franklin: An investment in knowledge always
pays the best interest.
■•Bnchn.Fnlba.”
Urinary Quick, Diseases, complete cure, Scalding. all Kidney, Irritation, Bladder and
Stone
Gravel, Catarrh of the Bladder. *1, Druggists.
Confucius: To die well one must first learn
to live well.
Important.
Union Hotel, opposite Jilted Grand Central depot.
dollar®, 1500 olegont #1 add room®,* upward up day. at Kuropoan n cost of one plan. million Ere
mippHed per with tho Horsa
vator. Restaurant lw*st. cars,
Btaga® and elevated railroad® to all depots. Families
enn live better for loss money at the Grand Union
Hotel than at any other first-class hotel in the city.
no object ion) i work sent by ruail; $2 to a day can
bo quietly mado . no oanvKWimg. Please address at
one*, lUiUaM* Mi*. Oo., FhiMolpbia, Fa.. Box 1698.
' HAY-FEVE#.
Far TwenlJ-Svc
V I has* been se
'■woolr afflicted with Hey
Ifc nlFnir. While Buffering
Sj |;nt«*s*ly fe^ I wag induced Balm,
to try r » Cream
HWFEVERf and the effect wee
m reions. It enabled MW«o
perform my pastoral du¬
ties withont the slightest
inconvenience, andhave
escaped a return attack.
TO y&SQ* tiV* __ 1 Z$}J2£%£SSS: Balm fa
est m remedy Qrenm founded a
on & cot
L_kY- If p* rect diagnosis of thte dis
mm n ease and can be depend*
WE WANT 1000 BOOK AGENTS
iortl-.s new book Wild TIUKTY-TUKRE TEAKS A MO NO
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10 to 20 a day. B0TTft.OOO Bold- book Owt for Agent*.
and Solid Merit make It the boomma
CCT'Send for Circulars, Specimen Plate, Extra Terms, etc., fc
A. D. WOUTliUSttYON * OO*. Hartford,Conn.
R. U. AWARE
fjih/f/iri'dftpe. THAT
MbX LorUlard's Clim&a Plug
r bearing a red tin tag; that Lorillard’s
Rose Leaf line cut; that Snuff's Lorillard’s
the Navy best CUppioca. and cheapest, and quality that Lorillard’s considered > .are
PR. X,llVOTTXSff”»
Spinal Misses’Waist, ...............aoo $175
Spinal Spinal Corset Nursing Corset,... 8*5
SpinalAbdomuusICorset, * 75
Recommended by leading physicians. the U. S.'
_ of delivered nriao. Lady tree anywhere Wanted. in
on Dr.Liniaist’sBjiiialCorsstCs.AiaB’wsy, receipt Agents Mew York. _
ALLEN’S
....j ORIENTAL
BALM.
THE GEEAT SKIN
REMEDY.
Removes from tlie
face ell blemishes, snch
as Freckles, Pimples, Moth, and givei Tan
and complexion
to the tho
i! This freshuess of yoath. psirtt, fa
HHSaiiS-i- is not a
prepared from the pm*
scripti.on of a celebrated physician, und is warranted to
contain no lead. SMITH, .....
SMITH, DOOLITTLE Gen. __ * Boston, Mass.
LAMAR. RANKIN A LAM All, Agents,
Southern Agents, A tlanta, Ga.
| L. ---- I / / ,W. L. »» DOIIGLAS SHOPS,
if. > J f AMKG rf l for gentlemen,are the best tin**
(9 V —7 j 1 a t Glove, Calf Top m wed
X I S •oealnAmer cafortnep be;
»: I ma le In Button, Congress \rut
x .-•? 1 i*ace. etyhrb Medium London Toe.
V 1 I very and durable. Boy
pood no longer; shoe for you can Sent pet by ns
n
mail, 1 Oitage free. Aie.isme foot as directed. State
sue you usually wear. ,md style wanted. I guarantee
a Brockton, ttt and perfect Mnss, satisfaction. Retail dealers TV. Ta. ]>ou&lag,
wanted.
Paynes’ Automatic Engines and Saw-Milk
Waoff©ran8t.» OUR 111 H. P. LEADER. Engine with will,
mounted
t0-5» solid Saw. 50 ft. bolting, cant-book®, rig: complete
Sn.ftnn, Elmira. N. Y. box 1850.
_
A Q P SIS T “■'rivSiMTY
loon ever published, l” YEARS OF
J. Wise, James M. G. Va., Blaine. Who¬
non. fi. from say«: “
ever tokes U up no matter whether he he Mr.Blaine's
friend or enemy , will never, put it down until he
has read the whole. 1 * Agents m»»ko from 8200
THE HENRY HILL rUB. CO., Norwich,Conn.
CONSUMPTION. I havo positive
use thousands a . of remedy ot the for the worst above kind dfaoa*e; and of by it®
cases ion*
standing havo boon cured. Indeed, *o*troncclH my faith
in its efficacy, that I will tend TITO UOTTi.ES FHEB.
to/^etbor with A VALUABLE TREATISE on this disease
to any sufferer. Give exprens nml F O. hddr. as.
PH. T. A. SLOCUM, 181 PrariSt., New York.
^ Farquhar’s Improved Cotton Planter
^ Very Simple and Perfect Unrolled in its Operation; Seed Drop*
I. wfjjK iwuigpgPSsMh «.r Fertlll
i ?er With remarkable reg¬
ularity desired ia any
j!R o.ywwJN. n/a °unt. It am- is
M the Cheapest,
^P:5' l e I=« teBH ^a^^WCOTTON y ..t-Ja B iT roost ^and Reliable Best
PLANTER In existence.
SEND FOR CATALOGUE.
Address, A. B. FAKQUIIAK, York. Pa.
y ear, scripture cards, to., 30c. Art Put, . Oo..W»o-eu.Fa.
N ew Scrap Pictures , 10c. B o ok Co., N assay, N.Y,
VARICOCELE SSTaJSi.
S^i-S8a R s#-‘l3f|*7*" T
f^°?n‘°eSe^‘ ra 'D r m iilJ^Sir r w'Fmh r iiee a ‘^ , h d h""’ s2fr(.l f.o-r arm* Sum. caUmtiS
m ¥ if
< oti!y iron/Gy The A>p--Q\ Physl- clans and '<»
medicine blacken\S\ouRiTY/L/eommend that[_( Jtr Druggists re- x , J .
will not It as \J
Y orinjure the teeth. \^\. .xxy tne best. Try N0Wl\ it \
A 8UBEAPPETIZEB. BEST TONIC K
Will cure quickly and completely Dyspepsia, Weakness,
Malaria, Impure Blood, Chills and Fever,
r and Neuralgia.
o, §1^ )l“i 9. t A
PURITY & m
A
_____ V
l
te' INVALUABLE
FOR LADIES AND FOR AT.T.
PERSONS WHO LEAD A SEDENTARY LIFE.
RELIE VES INDI GESTION OURES DYSPEPSIA.
\ It Is a sure remedy / & /TTn It strengthens the /
Brk lor the diseases Liver and\o\PURITV of j z ( L h-j /invigorates muscles, tones and,
the/
Brown’s Iron Bitters com
bines Iron with pure vegetable tonics.
It is compounded on thoroughly sci¬
entific and medicinal principles, and
cannot intoxicate.
All other preparations of Iron cause
headache, and produce constipation.
Brown’s Iron Bitters is the
ONLY Iron medicine that
is not injurious —its use does not
even olacken the teeth.
It not only cures the worst cases of
Dyspepsia, but insures a hearty ap¬
petite and good digestion.
............ ...........
“Maryland, my Mary]
# * * Pretty Wives.,
Lovely daughters and noble men.” '*
“My farm lies k s rather low and mias¬
matic situation, and
“My wife!”
“Who?” , *
,
“Was a very pretty blonde!”
Twenty years ago became
“Sallow!"
“Hollow-eyed!”
“ Withered and aged!”
Before her time, from
“Malarial vapors, though she made no
particular complaint, not being of the
grumpy kind, yet causing me great uneasi
ness,
“A short time ago I purchased your reaC
edy for one of the children, who had a very
severe attack of biliousness, and it occurred
to me that the remedy might help my wife,
as I found that our little girl upon recovery
had
“Lost I”
Her saQowness, and looked as fresh as a
new blown daisy. Well, the story is soon
told. My wife, to-day, has gained her old
timed beauty with compound interest, and
is now as handsome a matron (if I do say it
myself) as can be found in this county, which
is noted for pretty womem. And 1 have only
Hop Bitters to thank for it.
“The dear creature just looked over my
shoulder, and says, ‘I can flatter equal to
the days of our courtship,’ and that reminds
me there might be more pretty usices if my
brother farmers would do as I have done.”
Hoping you may long be spared to dci good,
I thankfully remain,
G. 1» James,
Beltsville, Prince George Co., Md., 1
May 26,ISS3. &
jgyNone genuine without a bunch of green
Hops on the white label Shun all the vile,
poisonous stuff with “Hop” or “Hops” in
theu- name. ,
■Iwm LTDIA E. PIUKIIAjlfV
?£{ • VeptaMe Caput!
IS A POSITIVE OUSE
PofPeumlo Complaints and
[<sr* f ^Weaknesses no common to
r / <,ur best female population.
It will cure entirely the worst form of Female Com¬
plaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulcera¬
tion, Falling find u.xd Displacements, and tho adapted consequent* to the»
Unioal Change Wchkv.cus., is Lai ticularly
of Life,
It will dissolve an** expel Corners from the uterus In aar
early humors stage there ot development. checked The speedily tendency by its to canoerouo
fa very use.
It reft 0 T 03 faintness, flatulency, destroys all ctavina
or stimulants, and relieve® weakness of the stomach,
euro* lUoAtic/r, Headaches, Nervous prostration.
General Debility, bleoplewmcsM, Depression causing and pain, Ind«5®*r
tion. That f coiing of bearing down, cured by its
and It will backache, at Ml times is always and under permanently nil circumstances act itt
harmony with the laws that govern tho Fcmalo system.
For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sex; this
Oompouad i< unsurpassed. Price $ 1 . 00 . Six bottle*/ .r 86.00,
3Sc family rhould be without LYDIA E. PINXBJM'B
TJTPILLS. They cure consttpation, biliousness aadf
torpidity of tho liver. SB cents a box at all druggists.- ,
Gilbert Mfg Co.s
DRESS LININGS.
(THE NEW FABRIC.)
MEROHANTS AND DRESSMAKERS LIKE A
CLOTH where areat stren.th i. combined with seat 6
utin tini.h They alao, it they want their sitkl to am
intUfftotion, should recommend for Using, the
Sovereign Twills,
Royal Improved Twills, Royal Twills,
Shtin Cable MsrvoUleux Twills, Twills,
Gros Crain Twills,
Satin Cl isEique Twills.
SILESIA Many a silk has been condemned because the common
Y should or a poor w.)st ljn ug hme been used,
ou a]so ask for the
BLACK PRINCE TWILLS,
te
be made to CROCK in the HLIGHTKol DEGREE.
You will find cur initials on each yard, representing?
and % yard®, thus: G.-—--M.--1 ya„ and so
»□ ; all other 3 Leaf good® are an imitation. Look for
the Jotter® O. <fc M. ><n *«2 rage, none others a re genuine.
O. P. DOiCTtlAN, President.
TELEGRAPHY
—AND—
Railroad Agents’ Busine«a
81TY» taught at Atlanta, MOORE’S BUSINESS UNITER.
<j«r. Send for Circular*.
Ul B WIWI Da smai ns, LebaiioS”ohK
CARDS
A ^ N . P-.................. - -..............E°nr. ’ So.
RSH
H&ins?
O-EOH
Brown’s Iron Bitters is the
Best Liver Regulator—re¬
moves bile, clears the skin,
digests the food, CURES
Belching, Heartburn,.Heat
in the Stomach, etc.
It is the best-known remedy for
female infirmities.
The genuine has above trade mark
and crossed red line* on wrapper.
Take no other. Made only by
Brown Chemical Co.,
Baltimore, Md.