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HINDOO CHARACTERISTICS.
• Jawpaaar—Swells «n«
Noise* at India.
Some of the most striking peculiarities
of the Hindoos are exhibited in the fol¬
lowing extracts from a Bombay letter to
the New York Sun:
I could stand it no longer, and I sent
for Mughy Gan, the chief servant of the
house, and a Hindoo.
“Mughy Gan,” I said, “the jampan
nies are too dirty. I want you to wash
them.”
“Wash the jampannies?” exclaimed
the man, in an astonished tone.
“Yes," I answered. “They must have
a bath. You must attend to it, so that
it will be well done.”
“Very well, Mem Sahib, it shall be
done at once,” was the answer.
He was in the court yard a few min
utee later.
“Seis Lok,” he was saying to the
housekeeper, “Seis Lok, some soap I
want 1”
“Soap? Some soap?” exclaimed the
old woman. “Why! what docs Mughy
Gan want some soap for? What for,
Mughy Gan?”
“To wash the dandies it is wanted,
most excellent Seis Lok 1”
“Oh, to wash the dandies! Did you
ever hear of such a thing before?”
Of course, Mughy Gau had never heard
of washing a jampanny, and no one else
had ever heard of it. A jampanny, or,
as the Hindoos say, a dandy, is a Sikh
who carries ladies about in jampans in
the hills. They are merry fellows, as
full of fun as children; and, work¬
ing in this way during the summer, they
retire to their mountain home with the
coming of winter, there to enjoy a dolce
far niente life of several months. They
are greasy and dirty, nnd 1 made arrange¬
ments for their cleanliness after having
endured them a fortnight.
By and by, when I went out to be car¬
ried for my afternoon excursion, I found
cfour on the veranda, their faces
shining with soap and broad grins, and
wearing the shamefaced expression of a
little boy wlio is conscious of new boots,
and longs yet half fears to hear them re¬
marked upon. *
“Bravo 1” I said to Mughy Gan by way
of commendation.
“Yes—washed!” he said hesitatingly.
“But, M’s’hip, you cannot keep them so.
Such will always be dirty 1"
Verily. The gospel of cleanliness is
not for India. I)o I begin to argue? I
am told that “a virtue of Guatama
Buddha was his dirty facet” And yet a
bath is a Hindoo's frequent practice.
But the use of mustard oil overbalances
all ablutions. A native always polishes
his skin with mustard oil before bathing.
“It prevents the water from entering the
blood through the skin,” Gauga tells me.
It makes the presence of a nativo any¬
thing but agreeable, fer tho annointing
having greatly diminished the power of
the water, tho sun’s action upon tho cu¬
taneous surface is such that the smell has
actually the effect of injuring the health
of Europeans who have to inhale it for
many hours daily in the katchcrries and
courts of law.
If you say to one of these objectiona¬
ble-smelling parties, “You would do
well to take a bath!” he will answer
spitefully:
“I am a Hindoo!” This, being inter¬
preted, mcana that the man scrupulously
observes the many washings that his law
enjoins. But those washings are some
thing like the mumbling of a formal
prayer. Indeed, the high-enste Hindoo
may not, like the Pharisee of old, eat
except he wash.
But I was disappointed in tho jam
pannies. 1 thought a clean jampanny
would be a real dandy, in the English
sense of the word, and that a clean
jampanny would smell sweet, espe¬
cially as 1 hail taken care that their gar¬
ments came direct from the laundry.
But, alas, they smell as Sikhs usually
do. There was the odor of ghee—the
common ingredient of diet among the
natives, and nothing is more self assert
ing of nastiness. Another sniff? Gar
lie! Native cookery is nothing without
°
ghee, garlic and mustard oil. Another
sniff! I think of thc smell of grooms,
and I get near thc truth. The boys had
been bathed at the stublcs where the
saiscs had tainted the air, and thc new¬
ly-laundered garments with the smoke
that arises in the stable yard from the
burning of the stable sweeping, a duty
of the sais that our gardners would
esteem sinful. But again—sniff! sniff!
The hookah! Now, a hookah is not a
nargbilch, a meerschaum, or a dudecn,
but it is a pipe with a reed stem and a
bowl that is made of a coarse vcllow pot
tery. And the tobacco is fearful. It is
rank and coarse, and Is steeped in black
molasses with sundry other herbs. The
smoke is abominable. Of course, the
dandies had taken a smoke after bathing,
and in India, when men smoke, they
squat down together, four, ten, or more
in a circle, and the hookah is slowly
passed around from mouth to mouth,
with the bowl resting on the ground.
Yea, if dirtiness is a featnre of India,
quite os much so is that much-vaunted
Indian perfume. Some one once said
me: “Most people connect the idea
India with certain perfumes.” True.
We know tho sweet scent of boxes,
laid and carved, of ebony or sandalwood.
Then attar of roses is familiar, aud
dian calico has a peculiar smell, and
5’
from this far-of! Ian «• In our daily life
we find ; ‘the smell of India” in the plains,
and less distinctly among the hills. It is
not a distinct scent like the resinous air
of a Canadian pine wood, but it has
characteristics hard to get hold of. The
spicy breezes of Ceylon, or the real smell
of Araby the blest, are quite different.
It is a part of the country, and I can no
more describe it than I can an Indian
bazaar. It is not the scent of flowers or
plants, though to the general fund they
add their delicate aroma. It is in the
dust, or else the dust flavors it. A dust
storm can be smelt as far off as it can be
seen. An Indian wood always exhales a
fine breath; and perchance I might
of mangoes, deodars, oranges, kakains,
and of the cver-wcli rose-time,
Nothing is done in India without
noise, and in the cities it is perfectly ap¬
palling. The roar, the howl, the chat¬
ter, the rush, the bustle aro mingled so
intimately that you feel that you are in¬
truding on Bedlam. You can scarcely
hear yourself speak sometimes, and you
look on the hubbub with fear aud tiena¬
bling, finding no occasion for the uproar.
A congregation of natives is worse than
any swarm oi Italians, and as one sees
the frantic gesticulations, the imagination
is of a violent quarrel rather than of the
amicable bawling that the scene really is.
What are they talking about? Money or
women —nothing else commanding such
a chorus. The tones are shrill and the
delivery is rapid, the “O!” “0!” of the
vocative case being the invariable form
of speech.
Man Targets.
A new industry has been started at
Rock Island (111.) armory and arsenal.
It is the manufacture of man targets for
use in the regular army. These targets
are made of steel and as near the form of
an average-sized man as can be outlined
with steel. They are made in three posi¬
tions—upright, at the front, then in the
position of firing with arms raised as if
holding a musket. Colonel Flagler, the
commandant, himself invented the ma¬
chine that works the steel to the proper
shape. The steel frame is covered with
cloth in such a manner that at a distance
the resemblance of a man is marked—
and what is important, it can be told
just in what part the “man” is hit—arm,
leg, breast, stomach, neck, shoulder or
head. Four hundred of these steel tar¬
gets aro being made, requiring the use
of 108.000 pounds of steel.
In the target practice they will be
placed in squads, in platoons, in compa¬
nies, and the various other forms in
which soldiers move in the opening of
an engagement. The practice will com¬
mence at a range of two hundred and
fifty to three hundred yards, and then
be gradually increased to long distances.
The targets will be sent to military posts
at which such practice can be best carried
on. The only drawback to the effective¬
ness of this practice is in the fact thvt
the steel-man targets cannot tire back; it
they could, tho soldiers who arc firing at
them might not be so expert. Remem¬
ber Andrew Jackson’s friends bogged
him to practice, saying that “Dickinson
was practicing daily, and could hit a
pullet in the head at so many paces every
time.”
“Docs the pullet have a pistol in his
band to fire back?” asked Jackson.
“No,” was the reply of the astonished
friend.
“Then I don’t care how much ho
practices." And Jackson killed Dickin¬
son in the duel. — Cincinnati Enquirer.
Edible Seaweed.
Botanists class all sorts of the flower
leas plants that grow in the water, and
that are commonly called seaweed, un¬
der the general term of alga:. There aro
a great variety of these plants. Some of
them are like particles of dust; others
spread out to a size and strength to com¬
pare with hawsers, though they don’t
look much like hawsers.
j There are many curious and interest¬ and
in 8 things to be told of seaweeds,
| thc number of people who would make
118t " d V of such vegetation would be much
j frteater j cct would than S it ivo is na,nes if writersonthesub- lo thc !’ la nts
" hi<:h could bc remembered without an
intimate knowledge of Latin. Thus to
begin with the smallest plants, it is as¬
serted that the Red Sea got its name
from the prodigious quantity of a small
red plant that spreads over the water
under certain circumstances. A much
more commorl variety of the marine
| P' ants found in great quantities
around tho coast of the British Islands,
In the streets of Edinburgh you will sec
the venders going up and down crying,
'Dulse and tankle,’ They carry great
hunches of the dull red leaves, which
af c sold for food. They are on sale in
this country to a limited extent, and
th e taste is not at all bad. Usually you
will find a multitude of minute shell fish
clinging to the under side of the leaf,and
these give a flavor to the leaf that is
greatly liked. The leaves lire caton
either raw or cooked as greens or in
soups. They are also used in place of
tobacco. The smoke of a cigar rolled
from dulse leaves is pleasant and health¬
ful.— New York Sun.
The society for promoting the use of
Boman letters in place of the German
is fast extending in Germany,
^Minting the fieei
A Wavne county farmer has succeeded
la earning 4 place in history along with
the Connecticut man who invented
wooden nutmegs. He lives between
Detroit and Dearborn, on Michigan ave
nu# t in a vine-covered cottage back a
little way from the road. On the front
fence appears the sign “White clover
honey.” with Back of the house is an airy
apiary . all the modern inventions for
the care of bees, and nearly fifty hives
sound with the cheerful humming of the
busy honey makers.
A representative of the Free Frets,
quite by accident, called at the house
end found no one fct home, and whilf'
sitting himself by an old well curb refreshing
with cool water from an old
oaken bucket, his attention was called to
the action of the bees. The cottage is
surrounded with roses in full bloom, but
these bees did not as bees used to do,
“ Gather honey all the day
From every opening flower,”
but instead were swarming around a
large flying tray which stood near by, and
were back and forth to their hives.
In this tray was half an inch of a sticky
mass that looked like syrup. Little
sticks were strewn over this substance,
and on these the bees were alighting,
and, after taking some, flew back to the
hives. ^
“What do you want o’ them bees?”
The intruder started up nnd )
barefooted lad standing before him^wc
“What are the bees taking f” we
asked.
“What do you want to know for? Dad
said we wasn’t to tell any one anything
about it.”
“I’ll give you a quarter if you will,”
said the reporter, now thoroughly inter¬
ested.
“Well, I dunno what it is. Dad gets
it from town in a bar’l. Here’s what he
gits it in,” pointing to a large cask.
On the end of the barrel was the sten •
cil mark: “200 lbs. grape sugar from
Michigan “Is that Grape glucose Sugar the Manufactoqf?'
bees are getting?”
“It’s something that dad gets out of
that bar’l, that’s all I know about it.”
The inquiring unmistakable visitor tasted it. There
to was it. an gum drop flavor
“We had hard work to get the bees
used to it. Dad put in a lot of syrup at
first, but tho bees take it straight now.”
“How long does it take to fill a hive?”
“Not near so long as it does when
they have to gather the honey from
flowers. We’ve taken out a lot this year
already.”
The boy brought out of the house a
box of glucose honey which looked as
clear and inviting as though the sweets
had been distilled from the purest
flowers.
“Do you eat it?” the boy was asked.
“Sometimes. It ain’t so good as the
other kind, but it’s just as good to sell.
Say, don’t you never give mo away to
dad, or he’ll skin me ."—Detroit Free
Press.
Mexico’s National Drink.
What the Napa valley is to San Fran,
cisqp, tho" Orange the Western county reservoir dairy region to Ohio, to New or
York city, arc Los Llanos de Apam to
the city of Mexico—the principal differ¬
ence being that maguey is milked in lieu
of cows and pulque is the product.
Some idea of the magnitude of this kind
of agriculture that may be derived from the
fact two special pulque trains run
daily into the capital city with tho same
regularity metropolitan that milk trains come into our
cities, yielding the railroad
a revenue of $1,000 a day freightage.
The legend runs that somewhere about
the year DD0 a Toltec Indian, whose
name wasPapantzin.was first to discover
that the juice of the agave Americana
might be distilled into a beverage fit for
the gods. Desiring to bring the new
blessing into royal favor, he commis¬
sioned his only daughter, Xoahiti (signi¬
bearer fying “the the Flower king. of This Anahua ’), as "cup
to ancient Hebe,
we are told, was young and beautiful,
and the monarch not only drank and
maiden. praised the And pulque, but married the
to this day the beverage
of old “Pap”—as no doubt his dutiful
descendants called him for short—is the
universal drink of the lower classes of
Mexico, and no doubt it is one of the
most healthful beverages in the world.
When just right it is milk white, thick
and color, ropy, much and resembling consistency. buttermilk
in taste The In¬
dians are passionately fond of'it—the one
solace and comfort in their lives of toil
aud penury—as nature has placed ex¬
haustless fountains of it by the waysides
and in the deserts. Traveling Americans
turn up their noses at the first taste of it,
but generally end by becoming as dili
gent pulque drinkers as was ola Panant
zin himself. —San Francisco Chronicle.
A Chicago girl fell out of a third story
window and killed a dog, which her
brother had Area at four times with a
Flobert rifle and failed to hit. If a
Chicago girl comes down feet first from
anvwhere, she can hit almost any¬
thing.
For Caterpillars.
The appearance of the caterpillar in
over hah of the counties of southwest
Georgia, and in a lew counties of the
east, southeast and middle Georgia is
noted, and the following directions are
given for their destruction :
The worms may be effectually de¬
stroyed The with latter Paris is green recommended or London in pur¬ the
ple. proportion pound
of one to 80 or 90
gallons of water. This mixture should
be thrown in spray upon the infested
plants at the rate ot 25 g lions to one
acre of ground. The Paris green is most
conveniently applied pounds in the flour proportion dusted
of oue pound to 25 of
through a tine cloth over the plants while
wet with dew. The London purple is
equally as etlectual as the Paris green,
and is preferred on account of its cheap¬
ness, and the greater facility with which
it may be applied.
_
The distinguished U. S. Senator from
Indiana, Hon. Daniel W. Voorhees, cer¬
tifies that in a cose of rheumatism in the
back, he obtained instantaneous relief
fiom St. Jacobs Oil. He says it is a re¬
markable remedy.
Somebody has unearthed the fact that
Lord Salisbury is the first bearded prime
minister rince the dark ages.
All the relatives of ex- Vice-President
Wheeler have died during the past ten
years.
rtslplm Upon a Frlendlcii 8>c!
Who, in taking passage in a great trans
Atiantio steamer, does not teel a thri* of ex¬
altation the Storm Over her King magnificent hurl poorer. his ; linst
bsr may elemental
forces, nor pierce her armor, nor stop her
onward course.
But let me describe a scene when, one
morning in mid-ocean, there came an alarm
from the pilot house followed by a cry: “The
ship’s rudder Is lost!” From the confident
expression, The wheelman consternation being helpless came to every direct face. her
to
course, the vessel was at the mercy of wind
and wava
Theca retail had^Voen negligent—ths hang
tags weak, of and suddenly it had dropped deep
into the sea i
Strong and in In intellect, ambition, in physical vigor, in
energy daunted, gigantic tasks mau and commands confronts, un¬
plause for his magnificent achievements. But, ap¬
all unexpectedly, an alarm comes—-the rud¬
der of bis constitution is gone. He has been
careless of its preservation; mental strain,
nervous work, have excitement, destroyed irregular habits, over¬
the action of his kid¬
neys and liver. Tnis would not occur were
Warner’s safe cure used to maintain vigor.
And even now It may restore vitality to those
organs and give back to the man that which
will lead him to the haven of his ambition.—
The Traveler.
WORDS OP WISDOM.
A cheerful face is nearly as good for
an invalid as healthy weather.
Castles without housekeeping are but
bricks and stones—cold and forbidding.
*-il' other knowledge is hurtful to one
.no has not the scieuce of honesty and
good nature. friends
He who has a suspicion that his
aro no better men than his enemies, will
do well to consider how it came about
that he has enemies.
Feelings come and go like light troops but
following the victory of the present; line,
principles, like troops of the are
undisturbed, and stand fast.
A man might as well expect to grow
stronger by always eating, as wiser by
always reading. Too much surcharges
nature, and turns more into disease than
A multitude of eyes will narrowly in¬
spect every part of an eminent man, con¬
sider him nicely in all views, and not be
a little pleased when they have taken
him in the worst and most disadvanta¬
geous lights.
All generous companies of artists, au¬
thors, philanthropists, men of science, are, ad¬
or ought to bo, societies of mutual
miration. A man of genius, or any kind
of superiority, is not debarred from ad¬
miring tho same quality in another, nor
the other from returning his admiration.
Intercourse with persons of decided
virtue and excellence is of great import¬
ance in the formation example of is good powerful; character.
The force of we
are creatures of Imitation, and by neces
rary influence, our habits and tempers are
very much formed on the mode of those
with whom we familiarly associate.
Tranks With False Bottoms.
“You would be surprised at the num¬
ber of orders we fill for trunks with
false bottoms,” said a trunk manufac¬
turer.
“For thieves, eh?"
“Sometimes, yes, but nysre frequently
for high-toned day with people. oil-painting A man came of to
me one an a
beautiful woman, and asked me to have
the painting built intd the bottom of a
trunk. Naturally I was curious, and,
as he was talkative, I soon found out
that the painting was of his first wife,
and that his new wife was awfully jeal¬
ous. ‘I don’t like to burn up the old
picture, you see,’ he said, ‘as she is not
dead, and it’s a sign of mighty bad luck
to burn up a picture of a living person.
I suspect if she was dead my present
wife wouldn’t care.’ Well, I built the
picture into the trunk, sent it home to
him, and I suppose everything is lovely,
and the new wife thinks the picture has
been destroyed. A woman came once
and wanted a trunk with a false bottom
arranged, so that she could get at it
easily. We generally the make the openings side,
to false bottoms from under but
she wanted this through the upper side
of the bottom. I asked her how deep
she wanted the false bottom, and she
said, absently, ‘Oh, big enough to hold a
package of letters and a photograph.’
Now, that was a definite order, wasn’t
it?”— San Francisco Chronicle.
The Grandest or Volcanoes.
Many have attempted to scale Co¬
topaxi, the loftiest of active volcanoes,
but the walls are in South America go
steep, and the snow is so deep that assent
Is impossible, even with scaling ladders.
On the south side of Cotopaxi is a great
rock, more than 2,000 Tradition feet high, called that
the “Inca’s Head.” says
it was once the summit of the volcano,
and fell on the - day when Atahuallpa
was strangled by the Spaniards. Those
who have seen Vesuvius can judge of the
grandeur of Cotopaxi feet if they higher, can shooting imagine
a volcano 15,000 covered
forth its fire from with a crest that has by
3,000 feet of snow, a voice
been heard 600 miles.
Bodies of the Dead Twins.
An unusual suit was oommenced in the
Milwaukee mother circuit of court female by twins, Mrs. Joseph which
Fischer,
died at the time of birth. The babes
were perfect in form, with the exception
of being joined by a firm growth #f flesh
at the breast, the union extending from
near the waist to the cheek. They were
taken in charge by the midwife and
placed in aloohol, where they have since
been examined by a great many the physi¬
cians. I he mother c airns that man¬
ner in which the babes have been dis¬
posed of was without her consent aud
against her wishes, their and bodies. brings action for
the recovery of
The only reliable cure for oatarrh is Dr.
Sage’s Oatarrh Bemedy.
_
Alabama and Virginia, the principal
southern their states prodnotion producing in pig 1884 iron, in¬
creased over
1883 nearly decrease seven for per the eent., whole while the
nve rage eleven cent country
was per
The huckleberry of Florida is a little
shrub with a glossy evergreen leaf, small¬
er than the leaf of the northern huckle¬
berry and with a darker shade. It is a
handsome plant, and is said to be very
prolific of fruit ----
Florida has entered the list of
petitors for the northern flower market.
A horticulturist at Tangerine has
ieaUoja cently shipped North 80,000 tuberose bulbs
the
***
never Open TssSr Meath 4
except to put something to eat into it, is aij
excellent motto for the gossip and the safferjw
from catarrh. But while the gosip is for prac¬
ticably one’s incurable, there is no eicuse Catanh. any¬ x>r.
sufferin. longer from , /
Sage's for that Catarrh Bw^edy is an It heais euro the
offensive nleossc. ^ x
diseased membrane, and removes the dull
and depressed sensations which always at¬
tend catarrh. A short trial of this tamable
preparation will make the sufferer feel has a
new being.__
Tour character cannot be essentially injured,
oxeept by your own acts. i
Mark Twain’s latest advertisement is his
assertion that his children are well charming, behaved,
well governed and companionably
and he refers to Mrs. Harriet Beecher Hartford Stowe,
Charles Dudley Warner and his other
neighbors as witnesses. How could brought you expect
them to be otherwise, were they not up
on Bidge’s F ood 1—Exchange.
Conversation:—The idle man’s business and
the business roa n's recreation.
Josbisrku, lHDioEsnon, depression of spir¬
its and general debility in their various forms,
also as a preventive against fever and ague and
otherintermittent fevers, the “Ferro-Phosphor¬ Caswell,
ated Elixir of Oalisaya,” made sold by by all Drug
Hazard A Oo., New York, and
gists, is the best tonio; end for patients recover
ng from fever or other sickness it has no equal.
Sleep:—The thief that robs us of our time
giving us health in exchange.
A cold in the head causes much discomfort
and annoyance and if of frequent recurrence
often produces serious results. The membrane
of the nasal passages becomes inflamed and
■topped up, an acrid and poisonous virus is
formed, sores form in the head, deafness, and
headache and roaring in the ears ensue
the sufferer finally discovers that he has
Catarrh. This loathsome disease is by many
considered incurable but never fails to Thti yield is
to the power of Ely’s Cream Balm.
an article snuff, of undoubted pleasant, merit, cleanly not and a liquid effi¬
nor a but a
cacious remedy which a child can use. It is
applied into the nostrils where it is absorbed.
It opens the passages, and allays soothes inflammation,
heals all sores, cleanses the mem
branal linings and restores the senses of taste
and thorough smelL treatment It gives instant will oertainly relief; and a
cure.
Price 50c. at druggists or by mail.
Ely Bros, Druggists, Owego, N. Y.
Clouds:—The curtains of light, as sorrows
are of joy.
Don’t take that “cocktail in head," the morning."
If you have a “swelled nauseated
stomach, and unstrung nerves resulting from
the “convivial party last night." cobwebs The sure
and safe way to clear tho from the
brain, recover zest for food, and tone up the
nervons system, is to use Dr. Pierce’s “Pleas¬
ant Purgativ e Pellets." Bold by a ll druggists.
Nothing can constitute good breeding that
has not good nature for its foundation.
Important.
Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central depot.
600 elegant rooms, fitted np at a cost of one million
dollars, vator. Restaurant j 1 and upward supplied per day. with European the best. plan. Horse ears, Ele¬
stages and elevated railroads to all depots. Families
can live better for less money at the Grand Union
Hotel than at anv other first-class hotel in the city.
If von are in a public office, be punctual—at
all events in leaving.
Red Star
l? tradmX^/mamk
fOUGHflUR
Free from Opiates, Emetic* and Poisons.
A PROMPT, SAFE, SURE CURE
4tthma. Quinsy* Pulu* l» Chest* ao« MMr
affection* of hi Throat At Drcbsmti and Lunge, Dl
retes 5© Till Cfirn a Botfrva. TOMLM a mm
CHABLM A. §, ^
C ATARR H I HAY-FEVER. was afflicted for twen
ty years, daring tho months
ELY’S, I with of August Hay-Favor, and September, and triad
J various remedies without re
Anl lle *' 1 WM Induced to try
Aufl ja Ely's Cream Balm : have
if used it with favorable ro
mej recommend suits, and can it eonfldsutly all.
to
r « El Robert W. Towklkt, (ex
Mayor). Elizabeth, N. J.
Cream Balm
HAY-FEYERSiMs l 1 has tation gained wherever an enviable known, ropu
U.SA. ale
Pn °* k XmfTn r itRS^5; 1 ;i?;i. 8 o--i a ” 0E '“
HCV ELY oKUIUaKoi Druggisti, Uwego, rl« Y,
Cancer c l the Tongue.
A Case Resembling That of General Grant
Some ten years ago I had a scrofulous eoro on my
right In hand, and with the old-time treatment It healed
up. March. in 1882, it broke out in my throat, and
concentrated cancer, earing through my cheek to
the top of my left cheek bone and up to the left *£»
I subsisted on liquids, and my tongue was so
gone I could not talk. On October first, 1884, 1 com¬
ing menced places taking stopped Swift's and healing Specific. In a month the eat¬
fearful aperture in cheek has commenced, been dosed and and the
ilrmly knitted together. my A under Up is
new pro¬
gressing, lean and it seems that nature ts supplying a new
understand tongue. talk so that my friends can readily
would refer me^and to Hon. John can also H. eat Traylor, solid 8tate food again. Senator, I
of this district, and to Dr. T. S. Bradfleld. of COMER? LaGrange,
Ga. MRS. MARY L.
Treatise La Orange, Ga., Blood May and 14,1885. Skin Diseases mailed free.
on
i!M?r o co - Dr * w,r * Att “*’ ^
mm BABIT. Burs curs in 10 to
SOdsja. medicine, Sanitarium bv treatment, IS
or express.
Dr. reus Merit, established. Book free.
Quincy, Mick.
R. U. AWARE
THAT i
Lorillard’s Climax Phg
asBaRiSskraffl^ XffiK bearing a red tin tap; that LasrUlaidV 4,
ratora. Feeders; Cotton Gins and
Condenser also the mod reli¬
able RKJTSSKfSW. In America,
diw. THOH. Covington, CAMP, Ga.
Blair’s Pills. SSRKT
Oval Box, Sl.OOi round, 60 eta.
lAoem
Magnolia Balm
j s a secret aid to beauty, /
Many , lady , , her r fresh¬
a owes
ness to it, who would rather
not tell, and ypu can't tell.
Advertising Cheats!!!
11 It has become so common to begin aa d
article in an elegant, it!nto«ome interesting advertisement, style, that
“ Then run
we avoid all such, the merits of
•‘And simply call attention to
Hon Bitters in as plain, honest terms as P<*»
“ To Induce them people trial, which so proves
“ To give one anything
their value that they will never sns
elm"
« Th* Jimmy so favorably notioed In all
the PBssTfsfst-ismamm papers.
Hop plant, and the proprietors of Hop Bittern
have shown great shrewdness ana ability
“ In compounding a medicine whoee virtues
are so palpable to every one’s observation.
Bid She Die!
ti JfQ I Buffered along, pining
•• She lingered and
away all the time for years.” her good;"
“The doctors doing cured no by this Hop Bitten
VIST'S#"'' “ And at last was
« How thankful we should be for that med¬
icine."
A Daughter’s Misery*
‘ 1 Eleven years our daughter suffered on e
bed of misery, complication of kidney, liver,
“ From • debility,
rheumatictronble and Nervous
“ Under the care of the best physicians,
“ Who gave her disease various names,
“ But no relief, Is restored in good
“ And now. she to us
health by as simple a remedy as Hop before Bitters,
that we had shunned for years using
it. The Parents.
Hf-None genuine without a bunch of green
Hops on the white label. Shun all the vile,
poisonons stuff with “Hop” or “Hops” in their
We Want 8,000 More Book Agents to Sell’
The Personal History of c
U.
40,00000plesAlread1801d,
sajgSac
BROWN'S
IRON
BITTERS
WILL CURE
HEADACHE
INDIGESTION
BILIOUSNESS
DYSPEPSIA
NERVOUS PROSTRATION
MALARIA
CHILLS and FEVERS
TIRED FEELING
GENERAL DEBILITY
PAIN in the BACK & SIDES
IMPURE BLOOD
CONSTIPATION
FEMALE INFIRMITIES
RHEUMATISM
NEURALGIA
KIDNEY AND LIVER
TROUBLES
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS
The Genuine het Trade Mark end crowed Red
Line, on wrapper.
TAKE NO OTHER.
PATENT P&Unt Washington, 88 »AtfnS- 9.0.
liu, Lawyer.
ouicn ■ ^pf?n ^rSg? * mow
mM quickest of uny I ever tried.’’Any should man or woman
money-making making leas thau $40 per weds it the try ben our
easy business. We guarantee* selling goods free
paying in the land. $1 samples Quick daily.Ex¬
to perience anyJady or gent who will talking. devote a Write few hours quick and
unnecessary ;no se¬
cure your county. Address, B U. Merrill A Oo. Chisago
PENNYROYAL 7 ‘CHICHESTER'S
ENGLISH'*
Th# OrlginnS and Only Ctennlne.
■ale "OkluhMtor’M uA always reliable. Beware of WortklcM ImtutloM.
attMMB! EnjtIUh” are the beat made. IndUpeaeahie
MORPHINE.K kasily
cured. book ntn.
OR. J. C. HOFFMAN. Jeflersen. Wiscensls
outfits ior manuiacumu* dies
112
TEDRSTOITS pe° bITOOTH POWDER
K eeping Tellk Purfed and G—» Hmltkr .
OPIUM
Pensions g®i£3S&£
A. N. 0. .Thirty-four, ’8&
? -
weA
Man and Beast.
Mustang Liniment is older than
most men, and used more and
more every year.
1i '
‘
'
:
{x .
11’5/ -. ,’ \ \x‘ :2
fl’, \ , l
hi “I! u RCA“ ~ ~ ‘
L_‘ " _‘ \qu -:~4 \\
Sécure . Territory atongg.