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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
A bill has been passed by the Neva
da Assembly imposing a fine of |20 on
any person who treats another in a sa¬
loon. The bill does not prevent any
number of persons from going into a
saloon and drinking together, but re¬
quires that each man shall pay for his
own drink.
Next to Baltimore Philadelphia pays
fv 'and eats more choice sea food than
any city in the Union. The cooking
in Baltimore and Philadelphia Is dis¬
tinctively American, and the best of
its kind, while in New York a species
of Franco-American kitchen supplies
the tables of restaurants and clubs.
Anting the many prize offers of the
French Academy of Sciences is a sum
equivalent to about $20,000 which was
left by Breant in 1849, and is still un¬
awarded. It is to be given to the per¬
son who shall find an effective remedy
for the Asiatic cholera, or shall indi¬
cate with absolute certainty its causes.
A German forest-keeper has pub¬
lished in the Leipsic Journal a cure
for hydrophobia, which lie has used
many times in fifty years with invari¬
able success. The bite must be bathed
with warm vinegar and water as soon
as possible, and when this has dried,
a few drops of muriatic acid poured
upon the wound will destroy the
poison in the saliva and insure the
patient’s safety.
Soap trees similar to those growing
in China and Japan are said to flour¬
ish in Florida. They are prolific bear¬
ers of a berry about the size of a mar¬
ble, which may be used as a substitute
for soap just as they are taken from
the trees. In Florida, however, they
are usually boiled down and cast into
bars. It is thought they may be made
to grow on Northern farms after a
little acclimatization.
The law of Kansas sentences a mur¬
derer to death, but the sentence does
not take effect unless, at the expira¬
tion of one year, the Governor signs
the death warrant, when, if that is not
done, the prisoner is confined under a
life sentence. No governor has ever
been elected who would sign a death
warrant, and for this reason there are
now abont thirty death-sentenced pris¬
oners in the penitentiary at Leaven¬
worth.
“San Francisco,” says an inhabitant,
“lias not been a clean city from its
foundation. There is Oriental dirt and
Occidental dirt. It has come to be a
foreign city. Merchandise fills the
sidewalks, and in many places crowds
pedestrians into the street. Offal is
thrown there. Tho six months’ trade
winds of summer and the six months’
showers are the two sanitary agents
which keep watch and ward over the
city.”
Tho California orange-growers have
discovered a new process for removing
all substances that injure the appear¬
ance of their fruit. They put a half
bushel or so of dry sawdust in a bar¬
rel and then pour in two or three
boxes of oranges, and turn slowly with
a crank. The fruit comes out as clean
and bright as a gold dollar. One man
can clean about eighty boxes a day,
while washing ten boxes is a good
day’B work.
A Mr. Crawford, who is a member
of the Chicago Trades and Labor As¬
sembly, has made complaint to that
organization against the action of a
barber shop owner in that city, who
reduced his employees’ wages 10 per
cent, just before he proceeded to ex¬
pend $8,000 in “unnecessary display
In his simp, even to the extent of im¬
bedding 400 solid silver dollars in the
tiles of the floor to add to the gliiter
ing show.” Mr. Crawford says
wants to see the barbers
for the purpose of opposing
steps.
The wax plant is now grown on
large scale in Algeria, and its
is gradually finding its way into
markets of the world. The process
separating the wax is simple. The
fruit, inclosed in a bag of coarse cloth,
is plunged into boiling water, on
surface tho substance soon floats.
wax is of the same chemical
tion as boeswax, and is likely to
largely used in place of it. It is
that theso wax plants may be
growing wild in Pennsylvania and
Carolines.
In the heart of Wyoming
is a mountain of solid hematite
with 600 feet of it aboveground,
than a mile wide, and over two
in length; a bed of lignite coal
enough to warm the world for
turies; eight lakes of solid soda,
of them over 600 acres in extent
not less than thirty feet in
and a petroleum basin which contains
more oil than Pennsylvania and West
Virginia combined, from which in
places the oil is cozing in natural wells
at the rate of two barrels a day. At
least, so says the Butte ( Montana} In¬
ter-Mountain.
Some time ago Prof. Virchow
brought together the results of an in¬
quiry into the relative proportions of
the blonde-haired, dark, and mixed
types among the school children of
the German empire. Since then the
inquiry has been extended to Belgium,
Austria, and Switzerland, and em¬
braces nearly eleven million children
in its scope. In a lecture at the Ber¬
lin Academy of Science, Prof. Vir¬
chow now shows that more than 50
per cent, of tho school children of oen
tral Europe belong to the mixed type.
The distribution of the purely blond
type, which contributes something
over 25 per cent., and is associated
with unmixed Teutonic blood, is
rather curious. It is highest in Han¬
over, where it forms 48 per cent, of
the population, but it is very nearly as
high in the extreme east Prussian and
Pomeranian districts, where history
and tradition locate a preponderating
Slavic element, and points to the com¬
pleteness of the gradual industrial
conquest of those regions by the
Teutonic race.
A peculiarly ghastly experiment in
furtherance of the ends of justice, has
been performed in Paris. A chemist
named Kel is charged with having
murdered his female servant, whe
mysteriously disappeared some months
ago, and disposed of her body by burn¬
ing it in a stove. He says that the
stove in question is much too small
to be put to such a purpose. To proye
that it is not so, the prosecution, hav¬
ing had a fac-simile made of the stote,
asked for and obtained an order from
a Juge d’Instruction, which was
sanctioned by the Prefect of Police,
for a dead body from one of the hos¬
pitals. In possession of this corpse,
they proceeded to cut it up into pieces,
and fed the stove, which they had
lighted, with the fragments. The re¬
sult, so far as it went, was in confir¬
mation of the theory of the prosecu¬
tion. In a surprisingly short time the
whole body was consumed, and nothing
remained but a few ashes. It is ob¬
vious, however, that the proof thus
afforded of the possibility of the dis¬
posal of a body in the manner alleged
by the prosecution, can only be
material if the positive links in the
chain of circumstantial evidence
against the prisoner are all of them
thoroughly strong.
Life in Abyssinia.
The majority of houses have a sec¬
ond story, at least a sort of attic, under
the extinguisher roof of thatch, rim¬
ming a circular frame of dried mud or
wood resting on the angles of four
walls of mud and stone, either in
square, or the ground plan taking the
lines of a Greek cross, and tho interior
face is surrounded by a circular outer
wall of the same material. Within,
live the occupants, with their cattle
fowls, dogs, cats and a Noah’s ark of
insects, which the natives foster with
the greatest care by not touching soap
and by using very little water, The
excessive disregard to cleanliness is
quite a mania with the Abyssinians.
It is not from a want of water. There
is plenty; and the famous soap-tree,
called indoed, grows everywhere, the
seeds of which, when carefully dried
in the sun, may bo worked into a good
lather that is very cleansing. An
Ethiopian will tell yon without a
blush that he is necessarily washed at
birth, washes himself on his marriage
morn, and hopes to be washed after
death; that once every year he dips
himself in the river on the festival of
St. John, and every morning he wets
the end of his toga with the moisture
from his mouth and freshens up his
eyes. Whenever he feels hard and unj
comfortable, he will anoint himself
with mutton fat till his head and body
glistens in the sun.
Facts About London.
About 3,000 horses die each week.
About 129,000 paupers infest the
city.
About 11,000 police keep good order.
About 120,000 foreigners live in the
city.
About 10,000 strangers enter the
city each day.
About 9,000 new houses are erected
annually. v.
About 700,000 cats enliven the
moon-light nights.
About 2,000 clergymen hold forth
every Sunday.
About 620 churches give comfort to
tho faithful.
About 125 persons are added to the
population daily.
About 28 miles of now streets are
laid out each year.
About 500,000 dweliings shelter the
population of London.
FOE the fabm ayd home.
Health or
A good pig will often gain a pound
per day until it is eight or ten montlis
old. At this age it will weigh more
than a full-grown man or woman. An
animal making such great increase in
weight must have good digestion; to
insure this the pig most be fed light
food while young, and a portion of it
should be succulent There is no bet¬
ter combination for growing healthy
pork and good fruit than to pasture
pigs in orchards. With the grass and
fallen fruit thus obtained should be
given enough grain to keep the animal
growing. At six or eight months old
pigs designed to be fattened may lie
given as much grain as they can well
digest; but sows for breeding had bet¬
ter be kept growing until their full
size is made.— Cultivator.
Improving »u Orchard.
When an orchard is in a very bad
condition it may be greatly improved
with a moderate outlay, if, after giv¬
ing it a good pruning, the land is
given a heavy dressing of ground
bone and ashe3, or muriate of potash.
When ashes cannot be obtained, mu¬
riate of potash may be male to take
its place. One ton of bone and forty
bushels of wood ashes, or 500 pounds
of muriate of potash should bo applied
to each acre, spreading it broadcast on
the surface. If fruit be tho object,
when the grass is in blossom it should
be rolled down with a heavy roller,
and permitted to remain as a mulch for
the trees. This not only keeps the
ground well covered but it causes tho
grass to come uysthe next spring quite
thin, and thus the grass roots are less¬
ened, giving the roots of the trees a
better chance to grow.
Feeding Calves,
Calves should be fed often and with
reasonable moderation. A little and
often should be the rule. Better calves
can be reared by hand feeding than by
sucking the cows, and the cows are
better for it. The best method of rear¬
ing calves is as follows: As soon as it
Is dried it should be taken from the
cow and put in a comfortable pen by
itself. In three or four hours the cow
is milked and the milk given to the
calf; a little milk is dipped by the
fingers into the month and the fingers
put in the calf's mouth; the head
is coaxed down into tho milk, and
with the fingers in the calf’s mouth
spread a little apart, to permit, the
milk to flow between them, the\calf
will easily suck the milk. After a few
times the calf will learn to drink; it
should be fed every four hours, which
is as long as the cow should go with¬
out milking for tho first four days.
After the fourth day tho milk should
be saved gradually and skimmed, and
the skimmed milk warmod to 99 de
grees for the calf, feeding three times
a day. After two months the calf
should be used to take a very little
cornmeal and bran mixed. Three
quarts of milk at one feed is quite
enough for a calf.— New York Times.
Yield of a Five Acre Farm.
Prof. L. B. Arnold, who lives
within three miie3 of Itochester, owns
and cultivates a iiitie farm of five
acres. These five acres Prof. Ar¬
nold says, could he made to yield
him (so we learn by the New
England Farmer) a good living. Last
year the corn gave him $05; his potato
crop yielded but $35, because the pota¬
toes were scabby. The net proceeds
of 40 hens were $90.99. The acre of
newly-set raspberries gave him $115;
the root crop $60, and the apple crop
$180. Besides all this he adds from
$50 to $75 worth of little incomes
from the garden, fruit crop, bees, etc.
This account does not include cow
food in the form of gras3, fodder,
corn, etc., for summer and winter use,
amounting to enough to keep one cow
half the year. All this makes $600
from the five acres. He keeps hut one
cow wholly on the soiling system,
there being not a rod of pasture on
the place. The cow is a very profit¬
able member of the concern, and if
men with families would realize the
value of such an aminal, and could be¬
lieve that a cow and pasture are not
necessarily inseparable, far more
family cows would be kept. One acre
is in apples—one to two in corn,
manured in part by poultry manure,
one to raspberries, grown chiefly for
drying. It takes about 2J to 3J quarts
of berries for a pound of evaporated
fruit The usual garden crops are
growing in abundance.
Renovating Old Pastures.
A Monroe County, N. Y., farmer
says: “There is a great difference in
the quality of grasses, even the same
kinds, on different soils. The richer
he soil the more nutritious the
grasses. When once a pasture becomes
deteriorated it is hard work to bring
’ back to fertility; still, it can bo done.
When low bushes and weeds have
uade considerable growth I pull these
Curtains and Shades.
When a house is without blinds dark
shades seem to be a necessity, but uglier
hangings Could scarcely be imagined
than the present highly fashionable and
ultra-BBSthetic articles.
Where there is an ugly view to be cov¬
ered the lower pan of the window may
be made out of stained glass, and a thin
silk gauze of bright color should hang
from the upper sash to meet it.
A window without a curtain is like a
picture without a frame. With a neat
carpet, pretty wails and tasteful hang¬
ings a room has an air of refinement
about it, even though the rest of the
fnrnitnre be simple and insufficient
White is to be ignored unless for sum¬
mer use, and even then dust will discolor
it, even if the maid-of-all work does not
leave her finger-marks on Ecru it every time
the panes are wiped off. is a good
shade, as also are pearl, the opal tints
and the first four shades of brown and
olive.
With provision made for three curtains
the window is still unfinished without a
patera brocatelle. curtain, which may plush, be made of
tapestry, damask,
satin, satinet, raw silk or Turcoman. The
latter material is all ready for hanging,
and is a rich-looking and wear-forever
fabric.
Venetian shades are again revived,
and some people are having them put in
their houses in place of inside shutters.
nices. They are under finished with deep wooden cor¬
which they are rolled. These
goods and cost just by about as much as shut¬
ters, are no means as durable.
The blinds are made to order to match
the finish of the room for which they are
intended.
sash Transparencies are no longer used for
curtains, as they soil readily, and
few curtains are a success after the sec¬
ond washing. In their place India silk
is used, as well as silk grenadine and
light the Madras cloths. The silks are by
far best adapted for this purpose, as
tho texture is soft and pliable, and ad¬
mits of being gracefully draped. The
colors are various shades, from green or
blush red, India reds, olive green, copper,
gilt and those bine shades that r.re seen
only in the charming Oriental fabrics.
A Prescription. — The Supreme
Courts of New York and Massachusetts
have settled tho matter as to who owns
a medical prescription. The snbetance
of the dooisiou is, that the physician, in
prescribing, gives the patient a written
order for drags, and their delivery
terminates the operation. The druggist
may, on his own responsibility, renew
the* drags, for he is a merchant, and has
a right to sell drags in any shape. He
is not bound to give a copy of the pre¬
scription, nor even to keep it, though
be usually retains it as a protection in
case of error on the part of dootora
or patients.
An Important Arrest.
The arrest of a suspicious character upon
his genera! appearance, movements or com¬
robbed panionship, traveler, without waiting until he has
a fired a house, or murdered
a shrewd fellow-man, detective. is an Even important function of a
tbe arrest of disease which, more if important checked, is
a not
frequent will blight cough, and destroy loss a human life. The
of appetite, general
aches languor and or pains, debility, pallid skin, and bodily
announce tho approach of
pulmonary arrested and consumption, permanently which is promptly Dr.
cured by
Pierce’s “ Golden Medical Discovery.” Sold
by druggists.
giving Sleep:—Tho health thief that robs us of our time,
us in exchange.
Dr. Freckles, M. Hutchinson, Pimples, Salt Bhctim cured. Ad’ss
110 Clark St., Chicago, Ill.
Clouds:—The curtains of light, as sorrows
are of joy.
An Only Daughter Cured of Contnmptlan.
When death was hourly expected from Con¬
sumption, all remedies having failed and Dr.
made H. James preparation was experimenting, of Indian he Hemp, accidentally which
a
cured his only child, and now gives this recipe
on receipt of stamps to pay expenses. Hemp
also cures night sweats, nausea at the stom¬
ach, and will break a fresh cold in 24 hours.
Address Craddock & Co., 1031 Kaco street,
Philadelphia, Pa., naming this paper.
When yon speak to a person, look him in the
face.
Weak lungs, spitting of blood, consump¬
tion, and kindred affections, cured without
physician. World’s Address Dispensary for treatise, Medical with two
stamps, tion, Buffalo, N. Y. Associa¬
Massachusetts was the first of the thirteen
original colonies to introdnee slavery and Geor¬
gia was the last_
Mznshan’s Peptonized beep tonio, the only
preparation tious of beef containing its entire nutri¬
force properties. It contains blood-making,
invaluable generating for Indigestion, and life-sustaining properties;
prostration, and all forms of dyspepsia, general debility: nervous
also, result in of all enfeebled conditions, whether the
work acute exhaustion, disease, nervous prostration, over¬
from pulmonary or complain particularly ts. Caswell, if Hazard resulting
Co., i A
Proprietors, New York. Sold by druggists.
Fooli—One who shows his folly and doesn’t
know it.
_
If afflicted with sore eyes nse Dr. Is&ao
Thompson's Eye Water. Druggists sell it. 25o
Virginia witholding pnnishes their her rations State of Prison tobacco. convicts Two
by days brings the worst to time.
man
“I Den t Want Belief, but Cure,”
is the exclamation of thousands suffering
from catarrh. To all such we say: Catarrh
can be cured by Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy.
It has been done in thousands of cases; why
not in yours) Your danger is in delay. En¬
close a stamp to World’s Dispensary Medical
Association, this disease. Buffalo, N. Y., for pamphlet
on
The camel is the only bird that we yearn to
hear after listening to a man learning to play
tbe violin.
Important.
Union elegant Hotel, opposite fitted Grand Central depot. million
600 rooms, up at a ooetof one
dollars, vator. Restaurant 81 and upward supplied per day. with 'European the beet. Hone plan. Ele¬
stages and elevated railroads to all depots. Families ears,
can live better for lew money at the Grand Union
Hotel than at any other first-cUes hotel in the city.
Wouldn’t David Davis look gay on rollsr
skates.
O YOU WANT A DOC?*** 1
i ■LaMUk SH^Ba#®**** lb* jpihcm. Also Cotsof Boa mieotiontfSr Varakklari
H WyiXS?*****? ef all Unde.
miM ■Eg HsIIm .*£3? ^ for 5?** lb Cents. 1 ** ^
,
132
. j
i| mu If You are Driven Wild
With itching, take the advice
of a friend, (though he calla
t 4 you aside at an evening party
to give it), and rid yourself of
the trouble by the use of
V M Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
A few weeks sinee I was attacked with
«B __ a severe and distressing form of Eczema.
1 ~ i The my body, eruptions causing spread an very intense generally itching over and
I I burning sensation, especially at night,
\ a With great faith in the virtues of Ayer’s
|l Sarsaparilla, having used I commenced less than taking bottles it, and,
y L alter two of
this medicine, am entirely cured. —Henry
p K. Beardsley, of the Hope “Nine,” West
( "i m* n r—’ Philadelphia, Pa.
« S' fe Mr. B, W. Ball, the well known journal
ill[| pH 1st,.writes from Kochcster, N. H.:
Having suffered severely, for some time,
I with Eczema, and failing to find relief
H- from other remedies, I have mado use,
— - I— during the past three months, of Ayer’s
* Sarsaparilla, which has effected a complete
cure. T consider this medicine a magnifi
CopyiighteA cent remedy for all blood diseases.
For all disorders of the Blood, use
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla,
Prepared by Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Bowel), Haas. Sold Vv Druggists. Price St i six bottles, $6.
Marriage and Health,
Pittsburg, Penn., Nov. 5, 1883. Mrs. Lydia
E. Pinkham: “As is frequently the case with
mothers who have reared large families, 1
have been a great sufferer for years from
complaints incident to married life. I have
tried the skill of a number of physicians, and
the virtue of many medicines without relief,
and as an experiment I concluded to try
yours. I can assure you that the benefits j
have derived from it camo not because of any
faith I had in it,'for 1 had but slight hope of
any permanent good. I am not a seeker after
notoriety, but I want to tell you that I have
been wonderfully 1 benefited by your medi¬
cine. am now using my fourth bottle and
it would take but little argument to persuade
me that my health is fully restored. X should
like to widely circulate the fact of its won¬
derful curative powers.” Pheba C. Hoop.
Rest for the Weary!
Health for the Sick!
Men and women arc often worn down in mind
and body by tbe labors and cares of Ufa. Their
nerves give way under the severe pressure, and
the whole system is involved as a consequence.
It is then that
Pemberton’s French Wine Coca
acts as a direct metfns of restoration, giving per
feet health to mind and body, dissipating every
.
feeling of depression and lassitude, and impart¬
ing calmness, energy and happiness.
Pemberton’s French Wine Coca
IS TDK GREAT NERVK RESTORER AND 1NVIOORA
tor. Gives health to the nerves and the entire
system Is restored, for the nerves are the life of
man. If they are deranged, all else will be, if
healthy then, health to mind and body follows.
Pemberton’s French Wine Coca
acts specifically upon the nerves, the muscles hot?
and the whole hnman organism. In every
tie there is health and rest and happiness.
For further particulars, send for book on Coca.
J. S. PEMBERTON & CO.,
Sole Proprietors and Manufacturers,
_ATLANTA, GA.
DROPSY
TREATED FREE!
DR. H. H. GREEN,
A Specialist for Eleven Years Past,
Hu treated Dropsy and Us complications with the
most wonderful success; uses vegetable remedies,
entirely harmless. Remove* all symptoms of drops!
In eight to twenty days.
physicians. Cures patients pronounoed hopeless by the best ot
From the first dose the symptoms rapidly disap¬
pear, and in ten days at lent two-thirds of all symp¬
toms are removed.
^Some^majery hnmbu^ without knowing anything
the pulse regular, the urinary organs made to die
charge their fuU duty, deep i* restored, the swelling
all or nearly gone; the strength increased, and appe¬
tite made good. I am constantly curing cases of
long ber of standing, time., and cases th. that patient have been declared tapped a num¬
lire week. Send for 10 days’ nnablo to
end a terms free. Give full history treatment; of directions Name
how long afflicted, swollen case.
sex. bowels how badly and where,
is costive, have legs bunted and dri
water. Send for free pamphlet, containing 1
mouials, Ten days’ questions, etc.
Send treatment furnished free by mail.
7 cents in stamps for postage on msdlohw.
Epilepsy fit. positively H. cured. GREEN,
„ Jon*. . H. Atlanta,Qa. M. D.,
Mention .. „ this Avenue,
paper.
EASY CHILD-BIRTH of was and .. This „id. scientific lessens ever Invaluable tarrt bestowed the skill, not intensity and preparation only upon no shortens more of pain, the la inestimable the mothers truly but, time better a triumph of of labor boon than the
Friend. I 1 all, it greatly diminishes the danger to life of both
will add that Coupled during with long this entreaty obstetneat I I USE I | mother and child. I most earnestly entreat Mothers every
practice (44 years) I have a known it L. female expecting to be confined to use
tail to never
to H. produce a oafe, quick delivery. 1 k MOTHERS FRIEND:’
J. Holmes, H. D., Atlanta, Ga.
Treatise on “Woman” mailed tree.
Brxdfield Rkoulxtor Co., Atlanta.
For sale by all Druggists.
STEAM ENGISIS
AND BOILERS,
Horissntel mad Vetftosl.
Dredfs-Nsst OutfUm
Flour, Mill Powder, Sluts sad KHst
Ire..
YORK M’Ffi CO., York, H
pennyroyal
WiBs
* with L and YOU VOW eischa's Automatic jemr W1LI. ME Burzler-Preof Window BE. HUT Window Made SATISFIES Fsstoner. Holder Sash of MaUee- Lock end Tit
by any handy person. Sample complete for the
AGENTS WANTED
THDRSf (f S P^lfOBfE POWDER
Sna. refect uSeMuHsallty.
BMMggg
WOMEN
Keeding renewed strength, or Who suffer from
infirmities peculiar to their sox, should try
rm
■ BEST TONIC
This medicine combines Iron with pure vegetable
tonics, Women* and and is invaluable all who lead for sedentary Diseases lives. peculiar It En¬ to
riches and Purifies the Bloody Stimulates
the Appetite* Strengthens tho Muscles and
Nerye*-m Clears the complexion, fact, thoroughly and makes Invixorat«&. skin smooth.
the
It does not blacken the teeth, cause headache, of
produce constipation—a 11 other Iron mtdicinti do.
Mes. Elizabeth Baibd, 74 Farwell Ave„ Milwau¬
kee. “I have Wis., used eays, Brown’s under date Bitters, of Deo. and 36th. it 1884: has been
Iron cured of the
more than a doctor to me. having me
woaknese ladies have in life. Also cured me of Liv¬
er good. Complaint, Has been and beneficial now my complexion to children.” is clear ana
my
Genuine has above trade mark and crossed red lines
on wrapper. Take no other* Made only by
BROWN CHEMICAL CO..BALTIMORE, MD.
Ladles’ Hand Book— useful and attractive, con¬
taining list of prizes for recipes, information about
eoina, etc., given away by all dealers in medicine, or
mailed to any address on receipt of 2c. stamp._
Blair’s Oval Sl.OO: round. SO
dux, eta.
Paynsff Automatic Engines and Saw-Mill
•o-iu. W.*ffwau**oVi , iP/'S2S2S’lE««la. cant-hooks, ri« with complet* Mill,
solid Saw, M ft. baiting,
SONS, fine*, from Manufacturers 3 to SCO H. of P Ail also itjlei Pulleys. Automatic Uadc<» E«; nod
•
’liAftna, Elmira. If. T. box I860.
Pensions
IMMEDIATE RELIEF!
Oordon’s King of^Pain roHercs pain of whatever naj
^ knowu^for fcheumatiam.
remedy wherever Neural*
gia, Headache and Toothache, Burns and Scalds,
Sprains and Brulacs, Diarrhoea Dysentery. Sore
blistc Throat, If Ulcers, Fresh Wounds, will etc. heal Bums In will day thaS no6
r applied, and Bruises a Tho
would 1 require a week by any other method.
remedy Is furnished in powder, with labels, etc., aau $1
is sent by mail, postage paid. It is put up In S0c.,
and $3 packages. The 50c., or trial package, when
reduceu to liquid form, will fill 34 2oz. bottles, which
are worth at retail, $«. Agents can coin jam money money sell¬
ing it. It Is worth ten times i ts cost for burns al one.
Send id postal postal notes notes or or two two cent cent stamps. Address
E. G. RICHARDS, Sole Propri etor, Toledo, Ohio.
QUICK sales, and 800 per ct.
profit made with by men
women our
labor-saving A lady cleared inven¬
tion. An
£70 in one street.
Aftent writes: “Your
Plan* brings money
quickest of any I ever triod.”Ahy week >llh. should man man or A. try woman tvnmatl
money-making making less than *40 per it the beet our
easy business. We guarantee
paying in the land, f 1 samples quick selling hours goods daily. tree Lx*
to pcriencSunuece^^^t^ing^VHt^a^^ any lady or gent wno will devote a few
cure your county
5 TON
JANES WAOON SCALES,
4f I on Levers, Steel Beam Bearing* and
Bran T.r.
■J*
.
:< “N •
Binghamtoa* N. Y.
BEST TRUSS EVER USED.
itivoly msil cures sverywhsre. Rupture.
Sent by lor lull descriptive
Write
circulars to tke
NewYork Elastic
Truss Company,
744 B’dway, Sew Tart
Aoanoke Cot eon Press.
The Best and Cheapest Press
made. Costs less tb&n shelter
over othor presses. Huudreds
is actual use at both steam
and herse power Kins. Bales
faster The than any Kin can in pick. fin
houses new described improvement* in the word*
of their inventors free to *11,
Address Roanokk Ikon and
Wood Works, Chattanooga, Cotton
Tenn.. or Roanoke N.O.
Piikbm Co,, Rloh Square,
o: R. U. AWARE
THAT
Lorillard’s Climax Plug,
aO fr hearing a red tin lay; that LorijlardH
r«S»KSF0R It teaches Mtitchen, NOTHING Ribbon and Arraseen
Embroidery. the Painting.
??B d Lustre and Kensington pit#
l r iKE , a‘:L^„„ i !*^r w po,Uf -'
p 1
iORPHINEA£
BASIL V or RED. BOOK FRKE.
BN. |. C. HOFFMAN. Jeflerson, Wisconsin :
Nervous Debility a&gSS&'aJgR
A. K. »«**••«* * , s, ■'