Newspaper Page Text
MYSTERIOUS OFFICERS.
t Bemlntacenoe et the fltefo of Pe«
ter.bnrg
Last February, Chicago while inJYirginia, Timex, 1 says
k writer in the met
with a gentleman who was in the ar¬
tillery service during almost the whole
»f the war, being at first in field service
tnd then shut up iu mortar batteries at
different places. When Petersburg was
Invested, he, a sergeaut, and his brother,
Situated s lieutenant, were old in a mortar battery
near the Blandford ceme¬
principal tery, his brother duty being fire in chairge. Federal Their
was to at the
batteries and draw their fire. When the
Confederates made a demonstration they
had bombproof* to tun into, of course;
but one can’t stay in a bomb proof and
fire a mortar at the same time, and, as
might familiar be with supposed, pyrotechnic they displays became more
- than
they cared for. There was oag Union
them battery trouble in particular that they always.gave fired
whenever at it,
It was known ns the “railroad iron” bat¬
tery, anffwas very heavily armed. More¬
over, the gunners therein had the exact
range of the Blandford battery, which
was twice too large, and it rarely re¬
quired Confederates more than ten minutes to run the
into their bomb proof.- It
was in this Blandford battery that one
of the most curious and at the time
mysterious events of the War occurred.
“One night,” says Sergeant Eggleston,
“we were working there in the battery
firing away in different directions, but
railroad-iron taking care to keep our and hands off the
shells they battery, around, watching occasionally the
as flew
jumping would light into in the bomb place, proof when when fine- one
our two
looking men whom we all took for gen¬
eral officers, suddenly walked into the
works. We could not tell their exact
rank, because they wore white waistcoats
and coats, but they officers. looked They as walked though
they were rank him
up to George, addressed as lieuten¬
ant, as though they knew him, and said
that firing, they had and come hoped out that to see he some would mor¬
tar ac¬
commodate them if it was not inconven¬
ient. George replied that he would bo
happy lino, to turning show them tojme, anything said, 'Touch in that
and up
the railroad-iron battery, Joe.’ Well I
wished that those two chaps thought had that stayed it
in their tents; but I
would not bo very long before bomb¬ they
would be glad to get into the
proof, and that the rest of us could go
in then also. So I commenced to touch
up that railroad-iron place. In less than
three minutes we had waked up the hor¬
net’s nest, and they were raining shells
into us at a terrific rate.
“Those fellows over there seemed to
know that the occasion was an unusual
one, and they could were determined to give
us ail that we ask for. The sheila
were dropped bursting into all our around battery and like hail¬ roll¬
stones, us,
ing around like footballs; but there
stood those two officers and George,
leaning up against a piece of timber and
talking as coolly as if they were leaning
on a fence a thousand miles away from a
piece of artillery. A timber shell came along
and cut that piece of in two, and
scattered splinters all over thoplace; but
all that they did was to lean against a
fresh place and go on talking. I don’t
believe that either one of the three even
winked. I came to the conclusion that
they liked that thing better than I did,
and I told one of the gunuers to shift
his gun around [and play| I shifted on something another,
else, and and pretty gradually soon died down. I
the fire
knew that George would stand there and
be shot at till tho crack of doom before
he would suggest anything about bomb
proofs, and the other chaps didn’t want
to say anything unless he fifteen did. minutes Well,
they talked on for ten or
after the fire died down, and then said
that they would like to go oujtothe skir¬
mish line and see what was going on
there, if ho would show them the way.
He told them to go out of tho battery
on a certain side and follow the path;
they could not miss the skirmish jiue.
They left after expressing their thanks
for our kindness, but they did not say
what their names were, and George was
too polite to ask them.
* ‘ ‘Now the funny part of it comes in.
The next day George tried to find out
who they wcje, but none of our officers
had been out there. The fact is, I don’t
believe that any of our officers had any
white clothes to wear, and if George
had only thought a minute he might have
known that none of them Would be
rooming around could at night in to see and mortar get
firing; thev "that. stay But he could camp find
enough who of those though not
out men were, every
effort was made, as the thing began to
get mysterious. twoyearsago,orlonger,George
“About
was on an Ohio river steamboat talk
ing to a man in the saloon, when a gen
tleman came up and said: ‘Are you not
the lieutenant who was in command of a
mortar battery near Blandford cemetery
at Petersburg?' ‘Yes.’ he answered,
‘And don’t you remember two officers
coming - to your battery one night and
saying that they had come out and to have sec
some mortar firing?’ ‘Yes; I
been looking for them ever since.’
“ ‘Well, tarn one of them; I am Gen.
—, of the Union army at that time, and
my companion was Gen.-—, also of the
Union army.’ ‘I am Eggleston, very glad to ‘but meet if
you,’said Lieutenant
I had known who vou were at that time,
you would not be talking to reply. me now.’ ‘We
‘So I knew, then,’was the
did start out to see mortar firing, intended! just
as I told you; and we also to
go on to the skirmish line But
we got into the wrong battery. You re
member that our skirmish line ran up to
what was a marsh when we first get to
Petersburg, and that it really pointed
behind your line. Well, we got to tho
end of our line at *“
dried up, and after we had wandered
around there fora while, confused by
the shells flying in different directions,
we suddenly found We ourselves in the right ditch at
vour battery. sat there
for almost two hours, wondering what
we could do ; wo could hear every word
that vour men said. Had we been
in uniform wo should have knew gono that right in
and surrendered; but we our
white clothes would be taken as dis
fested euises, and that we would have been ar
as spies. ‘Undoubtedly,’ said
Lieutenant E. ‘So we concluded to go
in Bn d pretend that we were all right,
but without telling our names. After
*e got ont of your battery we went back
— ——
to our lines easily enough, While we
were standing getting there bearings talking to you we
were our so as nij^ht to get
back. I hare thought of that a
thousand times, and wondered, if I
would ever meet that lieutenant who
made us stand under the fire of onr own
batteries for half an hour without saying
a word about bomb-proofs. And as soon
as 1 heard your voice I thought that 1
recognized the one that said, “Touch up
the railroad-iron battery, Joe. ’ *■
Teaching the Young Idea How to Cook.
For some time the Olivet Industrial
School, of New York, has been teaching
housekeeping kindergarten play and cookery little in a scholars. sort of
to its
Now, for the larger pupils, all necessary
appliances them have been procured in to dealing give
with the practical experience domestic life, and
problems do of reality what they
they learn to' in
have been singing about and making be¬
lieve to do. The New York Time*
reports of a recent public exhibition of
tho cooking class, at the schdol build
Ing: Twenty-five ranged
from girls, whoso marched agc 3 the
ten to fifteen years, into
vided cooking-class -with kitchen room, which was and long pro¬
wooden tables, a while the range cooking
uten¬
sils were hanging around the walls and
in cupboards. The little cooks made a
pretty picture, wearing the uniform of
tho school, which consists of a long
buff linen apron bound with red and the
monogram ‘K. G.’ (kitchen shoulder, garden) and em¬
broidered upon the right
jaunty little muslin caps. A bright, clear
tiro was burning in the rango; a sponge
of bread, whose whiteness and lightness
would have delighted the heart of the
most fastidious housewife, stood ready
for further preparation upon a snowy
wooden table, having been the prepared pupils. Then the
evening before by one of
began the real cooking of the dinner to
the accompaniment of cheery, simple
songs. Deft little hands kneaded tho
bread and made it into snowy biscuits.
Others prepared vegetables, meat and
custards. All the time tho sweet voices
of the children joined in songs like the
following:
If potatoes you would boll,
Cooking girls, cooking girls, spoil,
And potatoes would not
You Cooking girls, cooking wide girls.
must open your eyes.
Get potatoes of one size,
Cooking girls, cooking girls. thin,
Then you pare them very
For the meal Is next the skin,
Cover them with water cold, told,
Fray Cooking remember what you’re girls.
girls, cooking
On a raised platform a dinner-table,
arranged for eight guests, was served by
littlo waiting girls with the most perfect
skill and dispatch, the different courses
being served, dishes removed, etc.,with¬
out a single accident or exhibition of
awkwardness. The songs accompanying with useful
this exercise were replete with charming
hints, and were sung a
gusto.
We Just are just little waiting girls—
little waiting girls.
We set the table
The best we’re able.
We pass the tray like this
We pass the tray like tha
We try to hold it,
Always hold it,
Very, very flat.
To make a shocking noise
Is always very bad; break dish
To knock a dish or a
Is very, very bad.
The last feature of tho exhibition con¬
sisted in tho whole company being in¬
vited to inspect and taste (the dinner
which had been cooked by tho children,
who were a grave-faced, demure set of
little cooks, who throughout seemed
much impressed with the serious respon¬
sibility resting upon them. On ono of
the long woodon tables was spread the
dinner. It consisted of bean soup,
breaded chops, potatoes, spinach baked with
egg dressing, and’a puffy biscuit, custard des¬ to
perfection, golden for
sert. The most skeptical must have
boon convinced by this sight, proof, smell which and
oqually appealed to the delicious
that the dinner wa 3 a success.
A Cowboy’s ^ Life,
A cowboy writes from Hat Creek,
Wyoming, to the New York Sun: The
life of a cowboy is not all-sunshine;
neither is it all six shooters and bowie
knives as some of our Eastern friends
suppose. In the spring, when work bc
gins, which'is from the loth, of May to
tho last of November, there is>a continual
rush and excitement. The life has its
fascinations, like many other vocations,
and you find some who make their mark
at other professions following this life,
Early rising is one of its chief character
istics. After the cook rouses his camp
and breakfast is over the night herder
rounds up his horses, and every
one catches his horse and prepares for
the day’s work. One the general boys divide foreman
gives the orders, and up
into bunches, according to the drives
and the locality of the river country. and all They its
drive a main creek or
tributaries for a certain distance up and
down, and all meet at a designated
place, where the cattle are worked per
haps by ten or twolve different outfits.
Somotimes one and sometimes two
round ups are made in one day. Some
very amusing incidents take place. The
tenderfoot who is unlucky enough to be
unhorsed is an object of mirth for a
whole day, and he, of course, thinks
that the cowboy has no sympathy for
fallen man; but here he is wrong, for a
larger hearted lot of fellows it is hard to
find. Being used to dangers, they laugh
where ah average man would tremble
and turn pale. When the season’s work
is over Cheyenne majority or some neighboring of the boys
town catches the
until their pockets get light. Then the
ranch is their place until spring.
-—-
Photographing a Pistol Shot
Some remarkable photographs , of pis- .
a
tol bullet in its flight, under the illunuu
ationof an electric spark, have been
secured by Professor E. Mach, of Prague.
Ho which has also photographed the Bunsen air streams burner
one may see over a
placed in sunshine, and haseven obtained
pictures of waves of sound, these lust
being made visible by a method in which
advantage is taken of the irregular refrai
tion of light by the waves set in vibru
tion by sound. Although these expen
ments may not have any practical value,
they aro interesting as showing the great
degree of perfection to which the photo
nr.phic art has been carried.
'' a SI3
with""
V«« York i
.?
t & Sl+m, IMS
ass w 12
The above chapters, Mr. Editor, I find in a
nook recently published by on anonymous
«uthor. I have read a deal of sarcasmfis. »ny
•anjasm lay, but I never read anything eqsjfeo the
herein contained I suspect the
experience short, portrayed is a personal one; in
the author intimates as much on page
31. Let me give you a synopsis:
“Malaria" as it states, is the cloak with
which superficial physicians cover up a mul¬
titude of ill feelings which they do not under¬
stand, It and do not much care to investigate.
is also a cover Jor such diseases as they
cannot cure. When they advise their pa¬
tient to travel or that ho has over¬
worked and needs rest and is prolstbiy suf¬
fering from malaria, it is a eonfessiou of ig¬
abroad. norance or The of change inability. The patient goes
is tonic and for a time
lie feels better. Comes home. Ficklo appe¬
tite, frequent headaches, severooolds,crttmps,
general sleeplessness, irritability, tired feelings, and
unflinoss for busmess are succeeded
m due time by alarming attacks of rhetima
. tism which flits about his body regardless of
ail human feelmga
It is mus.-ulor'—in his hack. Articular,—
in his joints. Inflammatory, my! how he
fears it will fly to his heart! Now off he
goes to the springs. The doctor sends him
there, tie does of coiiran, to get well: at the same time
not ready want him to die on ids
'lands!
That would hurt his business!
Better for a few days. Returns. After a
while neuralgia transfixes him. He bloats;
walk; cannot breathe; has pneumonia; cannot
very nervous cannot and sleep irritable, on his left is pale side, atfd’ is {retail; tmthf
lias frequent chills and fevers; ;
about him to becomes everytlung
seems go wrong; sus¬
picious; know what musters is killing up strength him! and demands to
“Great heaven?” he cries, “why have you
Kept “Because,’ mo so long in ignorance?’’
said the doctor “I read your
fate live years ago. I thought brat to keep
you comfortable and ignorant- of the facte."
He dismisses his doctor, but too late!
His fortune has all gone to fees.
But him, what becotnes of him?
The other day a woll known Wall street
banker said to mo, “it is really astonishing
how general Bright’s disease is becoming.
Two of my personal friends ore now dying
of it. But it is not meuraole, I am certain,
for my uepbew was recently cured when his
physicians fhe said recovery was impossible,
case seems to me to be a wonderful one."
This gentleman formerly represented his gov¬
ernment in a foreign country. Ha knows,
appreciates and declares tho value of that
preparation, Danish because Vico-Consul bis nephew, who is a
son of Kchmidt, was nro
nouuoed incurable, when the remedy', War¬
ner’s safe cure, was begun. “Yes," sail his
father, ing tho "I was very skeptical, but since tak¬
I remedy, tho boy is well.”
regret to note that ex-President Arthur is
said to be a victim of this terrible disease.
He ought to live but the probabilities aro
that him, since authorized remedies cannot cure
his physicians will not advise him to
save -lone, his by the life, as so many thousands have
use of Warner’s safe cure, which
Gen. Cbristiabscn, at Drexel, Morgan &
remedv.” Co.’s, told mo he regarded “as a wonderful
Well, I suspect the hero of the book cured
himself by tlie same means. The internal
evidence points very strongly to this conclu¬
sion.
1 cannot close my notice of this book bet*
ler “If, than by friend, quoting his advice to his readers?
iny you have such an experi¬
ence as I have portrayed, do not put your
trust in physicians to the exclusion of other
remedial agoncies. They have no monop-plj
over diseases and I personally know that nutny
of them are so very ‘conscientious’ tiiat tlioy
would far prefer that their patients shouldgo
to heaven direct from their powerless hands
than that they should bo saved to earth- by
the use of any ‘unauthorized’ means."
And that the author’s condemnation is too
true, how many thousands duped, and K
rescued, as lie was. can personally testify?
lu a Dream.
An exchange tolls of a theological pro¬
bationer who was being examined at the
sessions of the Central Methodist Con¬
ference at Huntington, Pa., lately, and
He was greatly worried by tho questions.
was lawyer rooming temporarily with a
young In and a Methodist preacher.
his sleep the Btudent began to answer
Imaginary topics. Thereupon questions on theological
the preacher
suggested lawyer, the formal questions to the
who propounded them to the
sleeper. The latter passed his strange
examination with great credit, but on
the following day made a bad faUttra
when tho same questions were asked by
the authorized examiners.
The Hotel Vendome, of Boston, is
unsurpassed iu location and appoint
ini'tiis Tourists wishing to stop at a
hotel which offers the comforts of their
own homes should not fail to visit it.
Sands of Gold.
Mr. Bob Paul, of township No. 10,
Cabarrus county, N. G., went to the
Charlotte Mint for the purpose of having
his gold dost coined, and told his tale;
“On my farm is an old gold pit that
was tradition dug by an English miner, as
The says, during the Revolutionary
miner war. took same $15,000 authority says that this
and being satisfied from with this his pit wealth in gold, he
abandoned the pit and went back home,
leaving the mine lull of rich ore. Tho
people of the neighborhood worked the
different times, but it was
finally neglected and forgotten. Weeds
grow up around it, and the reins parfc'r
?P fhe excavation. During the
winter I was troubled with the mud
“J m J T 81 ®* an “ 8t the suggestion
wen ** ^hauled gravel three from cart the
pitnole 8c8t ^ refJ A. over * bo
A ,,4 *i a _f, ay f
.
?t .andh^fi'orLpf
I^tid tbe^Se
branch near L bv ’ and ‘canned out’ to*the *old
, , . 05 r tj,™ wen Sd »
Sd the pounced pit «>t a
b us b e l of the ore [£ tt ’ to dnst
a mortar and ob ned gold to the
amonn t 0 j 3125 ”
After heiaing the 8tory and 8eei wealthy J tho
$500 in gold, Mr. Eli Hinson, a
citizen o! Mecklenburg county, offered
Mr. Paul 350 a and bffiffiel for the 2,000
bushels of the sand hole. gravel The lying offer at the
mouth 0 f pit was
promp ti y refused The story about the
E 0 Mj s hman is said to be true bv a
Dwstor 90 years old, who live# near ” Mr,
p anb Experts have modern gone to the
arld ft | a u sa pp]y 0 i mao
will be put in. m ■
-
A stole a ring from _ a . ,
tame raven
mac in Milwaukee. She had
ting upon a bench while washing and
tho raven carried it off to some ferret
Uuiiog place. The woman brough
ugauibt the qwiaer ot the bir^, r
value d the iWc^dtiiiit lost ring. he m " 3
TAW -
.
,, In the Nation.
S&r^S'.' - At l ___
“Bill Arp," in a letter from the In*
m country ssys I made a little^up
in the Indian Nation among the
iws and Cfiickasaws. I found &
itth town, with about 1,000 in¬
habitants, most of them akin to Indians,
and many of the white people from
Georgia. A very intelligent Baptist
minister, who has been living theme
thirty-six years, told me all about things
and told me that no white man could
occupy any lands in the Nation unless
he had a license to trade or had inter¬
married with the Indians. He showed
me his own house and grounds, and
when I asked him how he acquired the
right, to my great surprise he answered:
“Why, I married an Indian 1" He had !
children mid grandchildren, and they
impressed me with their fine forms and
beautiful eyes and hair. My landlord
was an wife old Georgian, and bis educated
Indian was a splendid specimen of
a wife and mother. The childrenwero
well mannered and smart and handsome.
Another gentleman told me be was
teaching a school at one of the missions.
He was on elderly gentleman, and they
called him doctor, and as he was very
Communicative I ventured, to ask him if
the grandchildren of these inter-mar¬
riages of whites with Indians were
healthy and vigorous. He smiled at me
and said: “Well, yes, I think so—mine
are.” Shortly afterward bis Indian wife
came into the store, and was introduced.
That night the is Rev, Dr. Wright called
on me. He a fnll-blooded Chock taw,
-—a Presbyterian minister of gentle man¬
ners and fine intelligence. Here are the
Cherokees, and Oreeks^ and Choctaws
and Chieksawas in this Territory, and
they all live in good, fifed comfortable
houses, end have sohools churches,
and many of them would ornament any
society however cultivated. There are
no distilleries in the Nation, no saloons,
1)0 gambling honses, and when a dis¬
turber of the pnbliopeaoe intrudes him¬
self there he is promptiy suppressed and
expelled. They have a better govern¬
ment to-day than any in the State.
When a white man wants to be a trader
in any of their towns he has got to get a
recommendation from ten leading citi¬
zens, and then his petition goes to the
governor or ohief, and if it is approved
by him it is sent to Washington City to
be approved by the Secretary of the
Interior.
tool) Reward.
The former proprietor of Dr.Sage’s Catarrh
Remedy, offer in all for American years made a standing, public for
newspapers of <500
a case of catarrh that he could not cure. The
present Ail druggists proprietors soil have the renewed Remedy, this together offer.
the
with the “Douche," aud all other appliances
advised to be used in connection with it. No
catarrh patient is longer able to say “I can¬
not be cured.” You get <500 iu case of
failure. t
_ _
Conversation:—The idlo man’s buoinoss and
tho business man’s recreation.
Dr. Freckles, M. Hutchinson, Pimples, Salt Rheum cured. Ad’ss
110 Clark St., Chicago, IU.
■, --- A
If your lisnds cannot be usefully employed,
attend to the cultivation of your mind.
An Only Dnnfbter Cured of Consumption.
When death was hourly expected from Con¬
sumption, all remedies having failed and Dr.
H. James was experimenting, he accidentally
made a preparation of Indian Hemp, which
cured bis only child, and now gives this recipe
on receipt of stamps to pay expenses. the Hemp
also cures night sweats, nausea at stom¬
ach, and will break a fresh cold in 34 hours.
Address Craddock & Cb., 1 03 J Race street,
Ffaiiadeiphia, Pa. , naming this paper.
Yonr character cannot be essentially injured,
except hy your own acts.
Urnirn’s IJitl* Joke.
raid “Why, Jones Brown, how short your coat is,’’
Wittily replied: ono day “Yos; to his friend Brown, who
but it will ha long
enough before I get another. ” Some men spend
so much for medicines that neither heal nor
angels’ help them, visits—-few that new clothes between. is with them Infernal like
and far
fevers, weakness of tho lungs, shortness of
breath and lingering coughs, soon yield to tho
magic influence of that rojmi remedy, Dr. R.
V. PierceV “ Golden Medic al Discovery.”
it Tho is annexed value of to._ an autegraiSi deponds upon what
Fob bYKTKF.su, indjoestion, depression ot
spirits forms, also and general Wiility in tlieir various
as a preventive against fever and
ague and other-imenitittent fevers, tho “Fern>
Phospliorated well, Hazzaivl Elixir & of Oalisaya,” made by Cas¬
Druggists, is the best Co., tonic New :and York, for and patients sold by/ill
rcoov
ering from fever or othor sickness it has no equal.
Franklin: —-*—,—‘
An investment in knowledge always
pays the best interest.
Stricture of tba urethra in its worst forms,
speedily cured by our new and improved
methods. Pamphlet, references and terms,
twe threo-eent stamps. Wurld’s Dispensary
Medical Association,<503 Main street, Buffalo,
A. Y.
_______
The Russian platinum mines are said to be
tho most valuable in the world.
MR. S. K. CHASE,
Of Chase's Market, Lowell,
Mass., is frequently called upon
for information in regard to his
m wonderful cure by the use of .
Aver’$ Sarsaparilla.
o» .j J J He his testimonial assures all is inquirers strictly true. that
? Here it is:—
From my infancy I was afflicted with
Scrofula*. The doctors pronounced my
L_. case incurable, and were of the opinion
' ex that Consumption, induced by scrofulous
' poison in the blood, would terminate my
life. About five years ago. I had become .
j! so debilitated impossibility. that to I do a day’s work wa,
1 an when was completely dis¬
couraged, a friend advised me to
L- try Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. I bought one
bottle, took the Sarsaparilla regularly, and
r began to improve at once. Conti»uing
the treatment, I was permanently cured—
taking less than one dozen bottles in all.
- The virulent sores, whjch had eaten
-, .through peek in number of places,
I my a
rapidly healed, and my strength gradually
increased, until I became a vig s man,
%■< AT as I am Provision to-day. —S. Dealer, K. Chase, 253 Merrimack iI.M.
m sV, Lowell, Mass,
Prepared hy Dr.J. Q. M Ayer J Hi Co., . arsaparilla,
& LOT . SoM by Droggtat.. Price «1; .« bottle., *4.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac
Thompson’s lye Water. Druggist s sail it. 25c
“The Mite’y Dollar"-That made op of church
ejection pe nnies. ’./■
ihuhhtriic*
When yon visit or Ioavh New York cHf, »**» btnm
dollars, MB elegant SI and rooms, upward fitted per up day. at Ktiropnao a coat of ono pop). mtijpo Kl»
Cicero: To live ioiag n is
slowly.
A tlroat Benefactor «f Women. *
Lydia £. I’inkham of Lynn, Mass., is often
spoken of as the great benefactor of women
and frequently, receives letters like the one
we quoto from, . written by a lady in San
Francisco. She says: ‘‘lam takingyonr Veg¬
etable Compound and find groat benefit from
it It has done me more ffood than all the
Doctors Mrs. T. of Vincennes, Ind.,writes: ,
“Having taken H bottles of your Vegetable
Compound and cured by its use, I feel‘very
anxious that every woman afflicted with
Womb Disease should make use of it An¬
other lady In Birmingham, Mich., w»ssuf¬
fering from weakness and displacement. Sho
says:. “I began taking your'Compound and
it helped the World me so its soon, I feel like proclaiming
to great virtues as a healing
agent for women.” __ _ ____
BOSTON’S PALATIAL HOTEL
The Vendome.
W. TRACT EUSTIS, Manager.
3 TON
U.SYir NOMID WAGON SCALES,
1 Mtes: Iron . Brat*'taro Levers, Steel Beam Bearinn, and
I? E
m pnocr »ud address JONES
OF BINGHAMTON,
Binikaniea, N.Y,
FeuMi’s tech h Coca.
The Great Nerve Remedy,
Cures diseases of the Bbsin and Neevm,
called Neuralgia, Epilepsy, Fainting, Fits,
Paralysis, &o.
It also cures diseases of the Liver, nervous
weakness, loss of nerve power, etc. It is a spe¬
cific for Pyrosis or “Water Brash,” spitting
,blood, loss of appetite, weightof fullness under
left breast and stomach, nausea, flatulence, cos¬
tiveness, dlarrhma, palpitation of the heart,
dizziness, pain in the head, despondency, peev¬
fleet. ishness, irritability, general debility, and cold
Pemberton’s French Wine Coca,
Is the medical wonder of the world. It.is ac¬
complishing groat results for the people, by
restoring health to body and mind, and happi¬
ness to the heart.
There is joy and health for all who use it.
J. S. PEMBERTON & CO.,
Proprietors and Manufacturers,
Atlanta, G».
Sold by all Druggists.
BEST TRUSS EVER USED.
Improved Elastic day. Truss.
Worn Ittvoly night M>d Rapture, Pos.
cure*
NkTROSsI Sont by for ra*il full everywhere. descriptive
M Write
circulars to the
New York Elastic
Truss Company,
744 B’dway, New York
YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED
Vrith your Window Fastener. Tn
Leteebc’s Bnrglar-Proof Sash Lock
all „ bio Iron and cannot be broken. Equal
, In respects to cord* and weights, and at
tenth the Can be applied with one
cost. a screw-driver
by any handy person. SarnpJo complete for tho
AGENTSWANTEO
gaffifflaasaaBBfSih W© want a reliable I^ady or Genttn each town and
BK
PefisionsSSSiSSS
iigMBi fi aaKaa
BOARD, 144 Madison Are., New York, Moderate.
■_____ WITHOUT
btethan^towJS&oSriheBofhscWtS ssissav |A|
A QUESTION ABOUT
Brown s Iron
Bitters MS 1
ANSWERED.
of a WttSS tt
Hint ergo tiiere are nee raorojrop^i^otJra a. ne. the
ba W
important ROWN>Ai foctor^mHUccoMfnl Ofl aasr&s*
It a?sri 'BCj foaud.
ly satisfactory Iron
BROWN’S IRON BITTERS?M=
twiuUehe. or prodtma eonsttpsttm—all BITTERS other iron
medicines do. HROWN’S IRON
cores Dyspepsia, Indigestion, malaria, Biliousness, Weakness,
Chills and Fevers,
Tired Feeliag.Oeneral Debility,Pain in tho
Side, Back sll arI^mbs,Headnche ondNcnraS
gia— lor thods ailments Iron is proscribed daily.
BROWN’S like IRON BiTTERS.nS?^
mfnnto, slowly, VThon si! taken other thorough medicines, it note
hepent ronewed by in-n Tho tho muscles first thonbeoome symptom of
ls energy.
firmer, the the diggstioB effect is improves, ally the bowels sro active.
‘ The iS ,ram,n begin at osn to brighten more rapid the and skin marked. dears
healthy eyee color once ;
np disappear; ; functional comes to the checks; nervousness
1st,nodi! nursing mother, derangements abundant become regu,
* sustenance
» Ritters supplied the tor OM.Y ttm child. Boiaember modioine Brown's Iron
furious. IS J’fiyrfcwwi, and iron that is not in
Drnggik* recommend ft.
Tho Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed rod linos
on wrapper. TAKE NO OTHER
DROPSY
. TREATED FREE!
DR. H. H. GREEN,
A Specialist for Eleven Years Past,
H&t treated Dropsy and its complications vegetable with tha
most wonderful success; Removes uses all symptoms remedies, of drops]
entirely harmless. 1
iU physicians- Cnres patieuts^rotiounced hopeless by tho best of
i'ram the first dose diiwp
foms removed. *
are
^ome^na^ery humbug without knowing anythin!:
towalize the merits dtr- of' my of treatment breathing for is yourodi? relieved,
In ten pulse days regular, the the ultr urinary mide to dis¬
the restored, orpans
charge ail nearly their full diitv, the strength sleep is increased, the aarl swelling
tite or made good. gone, I constantly curing appe¬ of
am cases
lonK standing, times, and cases the that patient have been declared tapped unable a num¬ to
ber, live of week. Send for 10 days’ treatment; direction*
and a Give full history of Nam*
terms free. swollen case. and
sex, Is bowels how long costive, afflicted, have how Icrs badly bursted and dripped where;
water. monials, Send question., for free etc. pamphlet, containing testi¬
Ten day*’treatment furnished free by mail.
Send T cents positive^ in stamps for postage ou medichM,
Epilepsy fits „
„ Mention this „ 65 Jones Avenae, Atlanta, Ga.
paper.
Paynss’ Automatic Engine* and Saw-Hill
A. ■ 'Je r
’„ ■ >
1 *!
.......... ............ ....... -
MM IVaoiteranMotoSfl^'SmmtodSsrtin* aeltd baltln*. oant-hook*. rig with oompieta Mill,
a. S»w, 60 ft.
IMMEDIATE RELIEF!
Gordon's Kins of I’nlnrellfvf m:
remedy tuiv, tho moment it Is appllet for
-wherever known
gia. Headache and Temthseit
Throat, blister If Gleero, applied, Fresit and vLoancts, Bruise* will etc. heal Barns will day that not
In a Tlis
would require a week by any other method.
remedy Is furnished In powder; with label*, etc., and
Is sent by mail, postage paid. It is put up insor., #1
and *5 packages. fora, ;Tha 60c., or triul package, when
reduced to liquid will fill 34 10?.. bottles, which
are worth at retail, $6. Agents can coin money sen
tag It It is worth fen times its eqrt for burne nloa*.
Sen id postal notesor two cent stamps. Address
E. G, RICHARDS, Solo Proprietor, Toledo, Ohio.
niiinK U U B U iVfessSis von- our
■*“ war '■■Flan, brings money
mil quickest of any I over $40 tried/* Any mnn or woman
money-maktn« making less business. than per >Ve week nhould it the try best on*
easy in tho land. $1 samples quick guarantee soiling goods free
wyinft lady who few daily* Ex.
to any or gent will devote a hours
cure perience unnecessary:no county. Address, talking. B Hi Merrill Write & quick Co, Chicago and se¬
your
wrmsTHEH • CAT
■» Rioguo and Itfsmrcri
wuii Xt/uecnwoL instructions biIbwork**" 1
tor CR
5? NTAKHKCf M * ......
how toinako Pcwdej , Pinnte, id. Show*
IH MAKS Htamninu Patterns • I'l.OW
or
i®» 2*AT.
wf!i^ndX d ?s^u d e°.^Th?T '.GOO^Psttfi
KVtat ornnm. with materials anf F-rnt,
n^truction Book “
morn
M.
tSOT Msillaun K I
5 „ la. Cm, S
.
igastamaa
T II A II T PRICE! to I rt !■ 1
«
Roanoke Cotton Preaa.
The Beet and Gheapest Preee
made, Ooets lotfs tliau eheltwf
over other presses. Hundred®
in actun.1 use at both fteara
’ and heree pQwer Kins. Buie*
/ faster than any gin can pick,
I jf The aow improvements in gin
M houses described in tho words
B Address of their Boanoke inventors free Iko to all.
flsc ......R aSnp
Pjiess Co., RicJi Square,
ft. U. AWARE
fartltadklaima Plug,
hearing Ro*e Leaf a red floe tin tag ; tfiat Lorllls rd*
____ cats tUstteUlMdw
MORPHINES easily cured.
O B. i. N.*l book free.
C. HQFFWA eflers OB. Wisconsin
. tSl.OOi voand. 60 am,
____ pearITOOTHPOWH
TBORSTM’S
Keeping T*«th Pe rfect w ad O.iM lUailky.
SURECUREK OPIUM SSSSSSU ^
PATENTS
W»higgtoii,. _
WihSzMM D ...
V 8 C OH __
A. N. !7tm4IM«IM4M4«li4t4*M.,l
• -