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SOCIAL LIFE IN MEXICO.
Manner in which a Mexican
Damsel is Wooed.
Young Hen "Hake the Bear,” and then
“Toss the Tstsnnamiquilitxtli ”
We will now pry into the social life
of the City of Mexico by entering one
of the great window-barred private
dwellings, and its quadrangular patio
filled with the pelan dogs, cate and
other incumbrances of the forty fami¬
lies that occupy the stories. These
families embrace every stratum of
society, from the poor Indian, without
the comfort of shoes and stockings, to
the rich scion of a long tine of ances¬
try, stretching away back of Cortez
toward the general deluge. Extremes
meet, but then the world is round,
and a strong weakness in Mexican
character is found in the desire of the
rich to draw near to the poor, and vice
versa. There may be small-pox in
reserve for the one and kicks for the
other, but these do not contract the de¬
sire for natural enjoyment in looking
down on or up at each other in their
respective stations. To the contact
thus brought about may be attributed
the natural politeness and grace in
which the peasantry excel, and their
subservience to the caste distinctions,
which the name of representative gov¬
ernment has not sensibly affected.
With the wealthier classes the mode
of living is patterned after that of
Spain. The morning repast consists
of coffee and bread, the latter being
slightly bitter and flavored to taste with
eggs, grease or sugar. The noon
meal called breakfast, usually consists
of soup and several courses of meat,
vegetables, fruits and dulces or
sweets. Our pies are unknown to the
Mexican palate, but it delights in
dulces, including the peloncillo, which
resembles maple sugar in color and
flavor. Between six and seven in the
afternoon comes the comida, or din¬
ner, which is not near so elaborate a
meal as the breakfast. To the ladies
of this class is denied the freedom of
action permitted in the United States.
Unlike our Yassar College beauty, the
Mexican senorita, with bewitching
black eyes and long raven hair, is
barred out of society by her mother,
who even insists on accompanying
her to church. But where there is a
will there is a way, and this is how it
is done in Mexico: The young man
“makes the bear;” that is, he walks up
and down like a caged bear in front of
her window. Behind the cruel bars
of the window aforesaid sits the young
lady, engaged at her embroidery or at
her guitar, or it may be at her fan,
into which, by indescribable graceful
movements, she throws all the passion,
the inspiration, the fire of love’s young
dream. Their eyes meet for the first
time and both hang their heads; they
meet again and their faces are illumi¬
nated with smiles conveying all the
language of speech. The third time
that this meeting occurs generally
opens a conversation by signs which,
in an advanced stage, may lead to
tossing the tetennamiquilltztli, the
Aztec word for kiss, with a smacking
pronunciation like the concluding
notes of the nightingale’s song. This
may be continued for mouths, the
poor bird pining in the cage, until the
attention of the parents of the young
lady is attracted, who then make in¬
quiries as to the status and anteced¬
ents of the young man, and if these
are up to their standard, they invite
him to call. He calls frequently after
that, paying most attention to the
maiden, poking reserved politeness
with just a littlo love at the senorita
and putting himself in line with the
family peculiarities. These prelimi¬
naries successfully carried through,
matrimonial arrangements are speedi¬
ly consummated, and relatives hunted
up all over the Republic to attend the
nuptials. The ties of kindred are
very strong in Mexico, and next to
them, perhaps, come the bonds of
adoption. No Mexican will hesitate
to visit a contagion-stricken friend, or
to adopt the orphan where the parents
moved in his social scale. .The latter
beautiful trait of character draws to
its support all the strength of consan¬
guinity, and the foster father at bis
death makes his adopted son or
ter a sharer with the other children
his possession. As a general
with the exception of cases of
there is no friction in the
family, and all pull together for
common good .—Galveston News.
“Just One.”
Grandma—“Clara, do you think
your mother would approve of your
sitting up so late?”
Clara—“Why, grandma, It was only
half-past ten when Frank left last
evening.”
Grandma—“Clara, your grandma
happened to be awake just as Frank
•was leaving, and didn’t she bear him
say. ‘Now, Clara, just one,’ and didn’t
the clock strike immediately?”
-
PEARLS OP TMOUailT,
Dq not allow yourself to loee temper
or to speak excitedly.
He that lies down with the dogs
muBt rise with the fleas.
The purse strings are the most com*
mon ties of friendship.
Never take a crooked path when you
can take a straight one.
He that will have no trouble In this
world must not be born in it
A man cannot have an idea of per>
faction in another which he was never
sensible of in himself.
%
He who strives after a long and
pleasant term of life must seek to at¬
tain continual equanimity.
Innocence is like a flower, which
withers when touched, and blooms
not again, though watered with
tears.
Life’s real heroes and heroines are
those who bear their own burdens
bravely and give a helping hand to
those around them.
“Wealth*” says Dr. Holmes, “is a
steep hill which the father climbs slow
ly, and which the son often tumbles
down precipitately.”
Men of genius are often dull and in
ertin society; as the blazing meteor,
when it descends to the earth, is only
a stone.— Longfellow.
Man was formed with an under¬
standing for the attainment of know¬
ledge; and happy is he who is em¬
ployed in the pursuit of it.— Q. Home.
Fishing Fancies.
The American fisherman who comes
home without fish, or with a string
bought on the market, has probably
paid too little attention to the things
which in other countries are believed
to determine a fisherman’s luck.
The Swedish anglers say that if a
woman strides across the rod no trout
will be caught that day. The fisher¬
men at Preston Pans, if on their way
they meet a pig, at once turn back and
defer their embarkation; the evil bodes
111 for their fishery. In the Orkneys
fishermen on going to sea would con¬
sider themselves exposed to imminent
danger if by accident they turned their
boat in opposition to the. sun’s course.
It is also thought a bad omen to turn
the prow of a boat toward the shore.
They believe that for anyone to say
“Good luck” to them when starting is
ominous; also that pins found in a
church and made in hooks get the best
fish. Tackle, they say, stolen from a
friend or a neighbor, will secure better
fortune than that bought with money
—a species of larceny more profitable
to the fisherman than comfortable to
his friends. The Cornish fishermen
have a superstition that if a white hare
frequents the quays at night a storm
will arise. Sneezing, a potent omen
in ancient days,had its portent for good
or evil among seamen. A sneeze on
the left side at the moment of embark¬
ing prognosticated evil, while a for.
tunate sneeze on the right side insured
a favorable voyage.
Not (Jnite Ready.
A negro and his family living on
the Decatur division of the Louisville
& Nashville railroad recently attempt¬
ed one of the most sensational swin¬
dles of the day. There are ten chil¬
dren in the family, and the husband
and wife find it hard work to feed so
many mouths. At a family council
It was finally decided that one of the
children should sit down on the rail¬
road track and be run over by a pas¬
senger train. The parents would then
sue the company for damages, with
which the remaining youngsters could
be fed, clothed and educated. One of
the boys was so much struck with the
project that he volunteered to sacrifice
himself for the good of the others.
Shortly before the train was due
he took his place on tho track and
waited. The train came thundering
along. The little chap held the fort.
He was true grit until the engine got
within a few feet of him, when he
gave an unearthly yell, and with a
bound into mid-air made tracks. The
authorities investigated the matter and
the above facts all came out .—Atlanta
Constitution.
Cemetery Plants.
Two herbaceous plants that are
equally hardy, and also beautifully
painted with white and green, and
equally eligible for painting on a
grave, are: First, the variegated day
lily, Funkia albo marginata, which,
tike the Kerria, prefers not to be ex¬
posed to the hottest sun, and is unex¬
celled by any plant in the lovely
markings and the graceful Acanthus¬
like display of the leaves; and, sec¬
ond, the Star of Bethlehem, Ornitho
galum umbellatum, also lily-like, and
common in gardens, with profusion of
pure white star-shaped flowers, boldly
held up to sun or wind from II
o’clock until 3 o’clock. It fears noth¬
ing, grows anywhere, and is always
neat and tidy the summer through.—
Pick’s Magazine.
~
AW
»
[From the New York Tribune.}
There never was a time when sympa
a»y, benevolence and philanthropy were
bo active as now; bnt life is still foil of
situations which seem incapable of Alle¬
viation. Take the case of drunkards’
drunkards wives, and especially the wives of those
tality under who the develop influence a ruffianly bnt
would seetn surprising, when of liquor. It
siders one con¬
tiie suffering of these poor wo¬
man, that there ore not more cases of
husband-murder. But the victims of
wife-beatere rarely seek revenge, and as
a rale they encourage their tyrants by a
submissiveness which is the despair oi
magistrates day and philanthropists. Not a
passes bnt a score of trampled wives
refuse to testify against their brutal
perjure husbands, and some of them will even
themselves rather than assist
the law in punishing the crimes com
mitted against them. A very startling
instance of this tendency in the case of
the poor woman whose eyes were delib¬
erately band, put who out evidently by her fiendish hus¬
yet would not have
informed against him but for the action
of her neighbors. And what a flood of
light class is thrown on the lives of a whole
of women by the remark of one on
these neighbor* that she did Dot inter
fere before, because she thought
MoOarron “was only giving his wife an
ordinary and Justice beating.” Every policeman
knows that wife-beating is
really aa common in a certain grade of
soojety probably aa nearly this remark all indicates, and
these men of expe¬
rience would say that it ia hopeless to
try to stop it, because the victims nearly
always take the part of their oppressors,
in the end.
This fact, for it is a fact, ia really the
knotty point in the problem. Nor is the
explanation simple, but many sided.
There is the question of love, which
with woman is often very masterful.
The wife-beater may be “a decent man
when sober,” as the atrooions scoundrel,
MoOarron, is said to have been. Then
he is usually the bread-winner. The
wife, if she has children, dreads the in¬
tervention of the law, beoauaeif her hus¬
band is “sent up” she and her children
must starve. Again, if she testifies
against her brute, she knows that when
ho is released he will avenge himself on
her. Of ootirse the first natural ques¬
tion is, why do women not secure di¬
vorces from such husbands ? There are
many encumbered reasons. with Many children of them that are they so
would not know how to support them¬
selves. As to the inventing penalties method which is of
will protect women, the
doubtful possibility. Whipping would
dearly express the render view of society, relations no
doubt, but would it the
between man and wife any tenderer? If
a man is brute enough to beat a woman,
and the woman is so situated that she
oannot or will uot deliver herself from
the torment, it Is very difficult to effect
a reform. Sooiety might undertake to
divorce such couples arbitrarily, by mak¬ as it
does indirectly in many States
ing a felon of the wife-beater, and mak¬
ing felony ground for divorce; but then
it deprives the wife of the means of sup¬
port, and this tends to deter many vic¬
tims from seeking redress. It is indeed
a very diffioult problem, and tints far
no State or Nation has succeeded in
solving it satisfactorily, though certain¬
ly it is a question whioh ought of things to be
settled, since the existing state
is a disgrace to civilization.
The Mormon Protest,
Ho Salt Lake Tribune, in an editorial
article, said; “What means this pro¬
test? Why is il neoessary? In what
spirit it is it offered ? However disguised,
is a demand that vital laws be suspend¬
ed because stubborn men who have
violated laws thirty years desire to do
business at the old stand, prompted by
a determination to live snperior and in
defiance of the Jaws. Whatever the
wording of the protest, its intention is
to pursue the track whioh debases home,
teaches peoplo to give only subordinate
foalty to their country—not the will oi
tho masses or sensible men in organiza¬
tion, but by oommand of foreign-bom
priests, who lor thirty years have been
teaching 1 reason. Nothing more insolent
was ever perpetrated. They affeot to
accept tho laws, and only object to the
way they are executed. They have
preaobod decisions defiance of the Supreme Court
for years. Any law that con¬
victs they protest against. The object
is to oompel diversion in favor of two
per they cent, of polygamists. Equivocate
as that may please, the fact remains
they are determined to act regard
loss of laws. It always will be so, nntil
the country yields, admits its impotenoy,
or law by breakers asserting its anthority oowa these
into anbmiasion.”
The Famous Notre Dame.
On the 30th of last January, the sisters
of the most noted Catholic ladies semi¬
nary in the United States, the famous
Notre Dame, at (iovanstown, near Balti¬
more, Md., made public a card, certify¬
ing the to the beneficial Star results attending
use of Red Oough Cure in that
institution. They state that they found
it efficacious alike for relieving coughs,
oppressions tine throat. on the chest and irritation of
Officials of the Boards of
Health of Brooklyn, Baltimore and other
cities have likewise publicly proclaimed
the virtues of this new discovery, which
is entirely free from opiates, poisons and
other objections.
WHAT HE THOUGHT.
He was a Western Senator not used to
fashionable ways, and was a guest at a
Washington ball. Entering a brilliantly
illuminated suite, he suddenly stopped,
baoked toward the door, and in horrified
tones exolfumed:
“My “My stars 1 I’ve made a mistake 1”
dear Senator Blank,” said the
hostess, hurrying toward him, "what’s
the matter? You look ill."
“Oh, nothing, nothing, only I am
suoh a dolt 1 I came very near entering
this apartment by mistake. Please par¬
don me, aud show me the way to the
ball-room.”
“Why, Senator, this is the ball-room.
What did yon think it was ?”
“ The—the ladies’ dressing-room,”
murmured the Senator, mopping the
perspiration 0C*ma from hia brow— Boston
—
RBHAKKAHi.K B8GAPK FROM
>al Experience «t a
Wfe bhiladelpMa UKnown Philadelphia Im*f.
from tke Time?.
The tailoring renurkab'e statement, Wtely
Blade to one of otir reporters, is modelled fbr by
Captain Hai ry Mitchell, residing at NO. 316
Jarvifi First ward, Street; and a prominent Captiwl Republican the of Watch the
I’kiiadBlphia formerly Navy Yard. of Mr, MitdheU
at the devoted
happened to know that we had lately
considerable tone to the investigation of raises
where bodily relief had resulted from the use of
that now tamo us medicine, Brown’s Iron Bitters, front
and Independence meeting the reporter Hail, said; the “I other day tell in of
of can yon
so ithing that may interest yon. I know an
eider! she lv lady down town who told me yesterday jaws
that had been rescued from the very
of death by using Brown’s Iron Bitters. She is
an intima e family acquaintance of mine, and I
knew she had been v.iv sick and was hardly ex¬
pected to live from hour to hour. Her name is
Mrs. Margaret Springfield, and she resides at
No. 812 Pierce street. She is the mother of a
grown-up family of children, and is well-known
in the southern offered section personal ot toe city.” introduction Captain to
Mitche 1 then a
Mr made. . Springfield, accordingly and an met appointment aud ded was to¬
They Springfield’s residence. proco The lady
gether to Mrs.
was not at home, but was found at toe house of
her daughter, coiner of Eighth and Tasker
streets. Mrs. Our Springfield reporter states well-preserved as follows: elderly “j
found a
lady of pleasing manners the and object good of conversa¬ visit,
tional powers. following Learning statement in our the
she made the pres¬
ence of Captain Mitchell and her daughter: *1
can and say that I thought I was on my believed death-bed,
none of my family or friends that
I would recover. People were calling at my
house continually asking about me, and from
day to day I was supposed to be dying. I am
quite well now, and I can say that I consider
my wonderful recovery entirely due to the use
of Brown’s Iron Bitters. I Was bedfast for
three weeks, and for at least five weeks I could
not eat anything. My greatest trouble was ex
cessive toe pains kind in of my malarial side and breast, and I became I had
worst that could symptoms. lift hand, and
so weak I not even my
was oompletely prostrated all over. Ear some
time I really felt more dead than alive. I know
I contracted a very heavy of cold, and it seemed I suffered to
permeate every part mv could system. take
thing lerribly, all. and got In sheer so bad desperation I not I resolved any¬ to
at
try Brown’s Iron Bitters because I had read
about them. I sent for a bottle and commenced
taking it, aud to my great delight relief and astonish¬ I
ment I began to feel a sense of at. once.
continued using i , and it Beamed to drive out
the pains in my breast. I began to gain a little
strength, and my appetite gradually returned.
Brown’s Iron prostrated Bitters condition appeared required, to be just and, the
thing my believe it 6aved life. Certainly as
I have said, I my
I never took anything in my life that did me so
much good, andlcan certainly say that Brown’s
Iron Bitters brought me to strong life when
everybody thought I was dying.’ ”
Miss Julia Koquemore, trouble, Forsyth, had Go., says:
“I suffered from kidney disagree with no appe¬ I
tite ; the little I did eat i me.
tried many remedies without relief. Brown’s
Iron Bitters restored my health and appetite,
anil increased my weight 20 Mile, pounds.” Ala., T
Mr. Cassa several Campbell, Six with general weak says •
suffered for years v.es.
Doctors said I had consumption, relief. for which I tried they
treated me, without giving experienced the
Brown’s Iron Bitters and most
beneficial results.”
Mr. Albert Gregory, Quincy, Fla., says: “I
tried many remedies for chills and fevers, bnt
nothing ever did me any cheerfully permanent endorse good save this
Brora’s Iron Bitters. I
remedy.”
The heat of discussion often cooks the de¬
bater’s goose.
A BIT OF FAINTING.
“My, but these art works do ran into
money,” remarked a passenger whose
breath smelled like the south aide oi
the Ohio River; “it beats all what fools
some folks make over pictures. When
I was in Chicago I saw a little painting
about a foot square, that was held at $500.
'Spect some simpleton will oome along
and buy it. $500 for a little painting
like that.”
“That’s the way yon talk,” spoke up a
bashful drummer, “but I’ll bet yon’ve
paid four times as muoh money for a
painting not a tenth part aa big.”
“What, me?”
“Yea, you.”
“What kind of a painting ?”
“The one on the end of your nose.”—
Chicago Herald.
suffer dizztoess, headache, 'indigestion lassitude, 1 ,' inflammation inability to of
the eyes, per¬
form mental work and indisposition for bod¬
ily labor, and annoy and disgust your friends
and acquaintances with your nasal twang
and offensive breath and constant efforts to
clean your nose and throat, when relieve Dr. Sage’s
“Catarrh Remedy" will promptly you
of discomfort and suffering, and your friends
of the disgusting and needless inflictions of
your loathesome disease?
It will cost $500,000,000 to complete the
Panama canal.
Now is the time to prevent and cure Birin
Diseases, and to secure a white, soft and beauti¬
ful complexion use “Beeson’s Aromatic Ai.uk
Bui.phur Soap.” 25 cent* by Druggist, or by
mail. Wm. Dreydoppel, P hiladelp hia, Pa.
remember Charity:—A and the service that the receiver should
giver forget.
I Have
been a great sufferer of dry catarrh for many
years and I tried many remedies which helped
me, but I had none which did me so muoh ben¬
efit as Ely’s Dally, Cream Balm, Woodward it completely cured
me.—M. J. 39 Ave., Boston
Highlands, Mass.
Over fifty musical compositions, marches and
songs have been put on the market since Gen¬
eral Grant’s death.
If afflicted with i sore eyes use Sr. ImM
Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell li 26«
The camel is the only bird that we yearn to
hear after listening to a man learning to play
the violin.
Mkxsman’b Peptonized beef tonic, the only
preparation of beet containing its entire nutri¬
tious properties. It contains blood-making,
force generating and life-sustaining properties;
invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous
prostration, and all forms of general debility;
also, in oil enfeebled conditions, whether toe
result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over¬
work or acute disease, particularly if resulting
from Co., Proprietors, pulmonary complaints. New York. Caswell, Sold Hazard A
by druggist*.
Seneca: Enjoy injure present future pleasures in suoh a
way as not to ones.
Best, easiest to use and cheapest. Piso’s
Bemedy for Catarrh. By druggists. 50o.
NO MISTAKE.
Old Bilkins—“Tea, sir-**. I am
made no mistake when I gave my son
an education,”
Old Piikins—“Doin’ well sinoe he
went through college, eh ?”
“Well, I should say ha waa. He’s
just (hat smart now he can make more
in a month than I make in a year.”
“Yon don’t say so ? Well, welll Edi
eation ia a great thing, that’s a fact.
What’s his business?”
“He’s a baseball pitoher."—FtMta.
Oml t
!SR& te'€
will hew
years. The slight of disease cough
any symptoms slighted and death
sere Medical Discov
s&gjSS SSSiS “Golden
the
ggavs, and will cure
if s man have love in his tart he n*y talk
in broken language, but it will be akxjosooe to
those who listen.___
long.
ThoMite’y Dollar"—That made up of church
collection pennies.
Pain and Dread
atte nd the use of most catarrh remedies, Li
quids and snuffs are unpleasant as well ae dan
gerous. Elv’e Cream Balm is and safe, pleasant,
easily applied with the finger, a sore the cure.
It cleanses the nasal passages and bests in¬
flamed membrane, giving relief from the first
application. 50 cents at druggists. 60 cents by
mail Ely Bros., Owego, N.x.
Han is made out of the dust of the sarth, and
some of them are terras ail their lit*.
Young or middle-sgsd men suffering from
g’yrasfw’ara gffg
Medical Association, 663 Main sweet,
Buffalo, N. Y.
_ ___
The wings of a partydo not necessarily make
it angelio. , - ...
1 Ha j®
catarrh from . boyhood , - and *
been troubled with
had considered my case chronic until about
three years ago I procured one bottle of Ely s
Cream Balm, and I oottnt myself sound to-day,
.,li from the Use Of one bottle.—J. 11 Cooley,
Hardware Merchant, Montrose, Pa.
If we can’t inherit & good name, at losat we
can do our best to leave one.
important.
When you visit orWo New Y«lretfoa*relM|gljgt|
JmonHotel, element oppositeGrandOentroldepot. IltUKl at cost of one million
WO rooms. up a Ele¬
dollars, *1 and upward aupplied per day. with European the best. plan. Hone
vator. Restaurant railroads all depots. Families oars,
state* and elevated to the Grand
can live better for lew money at the union
Hotel than at any other first-olasa hotel m oity.
Bleep:—The thief that robs ns of our time
giving os health in exchange.
a . IT <3$UH
*7 TW? feEi l toStos ^ 8 - M -
IMMEDIATE RELIEF I
arasfjrsKfrs ^ailSPl!
Cancer o f the Tongue.
A Com assembling That of Qenaral Grant
righthand, andw^Si the old-taneri’eatta^Ut heated
up. In March, In 1882, It broke eating out through In mr throat, cheek and
concentrated cancer, i i my to
tho top ot my left cheek bone and up to the left rt eye.
I subsisted I coul-t on not liquids, talk. On and October my tongue first, 1884,1 was so far
gone com¬
menced taking Swift’s Specific. In a month the eat¬
ing places stopped and healing has commenced, been closed and and th*
fearful aperture In my cheek
firmly ■esilng, knitted and together. that A nature new Is under supplying Up la pro
It seems a new
ngue. I can talk so that my friends cam readily
understand me.and can also eat solid food again. I
would refer to Hon. John H. S^Bredflef^ Traylor, State J-Grenre, Senator,
etohls district, and toDr. of
Treatise on Bloo^nd^klnbtiea*©* mailed Atlanta, free.
The Swift Specific Co., Drawer 8, (3a.,
N. Y., 157 W. 23d St.
fir M.4D ir IN STAPLE GOODS f||PP 11
r n
CASH, sent free on rectipt of the addressee ef as persons (rt
Ad ga w R. UNAWARE] THAT
mmmm Lorillard’s Cllmas Plug,
MOORE’S BUSINESS
UNIVERSITY, praetioal schools in
ths
MORPHINE'S EASILY
CURED. BOOK. FREE.
BN. J. C. HOFFMAN, JefleruM, Wisconsin
cents
STo 1
N. R. BA1UU, Jackson ville. Pi.
Brest Eng nth Qaut aai
Rheumatic Remsty.
« raaasL 60 wtm.
syusm is&sf!
TEXAS LAND
iosa,cheap. Terms assy. J. W.H orn, Marshall, Tel.
PATENTS SSSASamS D. C.
bam. Fataat Lawjrcr. Washington.
Men Think
they know all about Mustang Lin¬
iment. Few do. Not to know is
not to have.
DROPSY
TREATED FREE! asp*
dr. h. h. green, ’
A Specialist for Eleven Years Past
B S and its complications with Mm
s xew; nses afieymptome vegetable remedies: of dropsy
Bemoves
rent? pronounced day*. l«e*elm>brtibs tested
Cure* p* sots
iniivD day* aUsa5**o?tblr2*<*b S3£
tte pulse m«l«.toe urinary «wato to
bar of tones, feend ana tbs patient declared unable to
Ure a week, for lBdaya treatment; of direction*
and term* free. Oire lull badly history swollen case. Name
mx, how Ion* afflicted, how and where.
Is bowel* cortire, hare lefts bunted and dripped
water. Send for free pamphlet, containing teati
m Ten*day»^treaUneDt VMlloevfltiSUSR furnished re^d“* free l!e by mail.
“
Kpilepey poeiti »ljr hTgREKN) Atlanta, M.
66 Jones Avenue. Oft
Mention this paper
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 has Trade Mark and crossed Red
Lines on wrapper. OTHER.
TAKE NO
Fayaur Automatic Engines and Saw-lltt
s
5 TON
ONES WAGON SCALES,
IrwjUwny St**l^
N HlpsSBsSS BiuKhaiaisn, *.*«
ROANOKE
COTTOH PEESS.
over other presses. Handiw
in actual um at both »t«un
aud bavse power *raa. plot.
faster than any Kin IhohaXO can
AddresK RoanoHE
Wood Worjui, C hattano oga,
Tenn.
ASTHWlASURj Jusurescoi
mediate rthtfiiL the curM'wherea'J.othersf worst cases
able sleep; effects vkrpticat.
trial convince* themotl N?SUpat
'o 1 r«K^ OTl,yffil!j
AGENTS WANTED
SKSSvSSwS
OhMUken the lead la ef
the sales of that claM
remedies, and has nf
almost universal sa t i ae»
tw« BROS^
Sgg ui« Stricture. * MURPHY
H vra^hbyths O has won the“s»or renk*
MfruiaiiiM iit. the public the end leading no. Modi
among cine, of the oildoa.
pennyroyal
II Wm ftw. BtwidkrdSilver-w»roC5o. VGDCH. Canvuj.injtoutrii FRBK? Boston.3 PorttadHTM Um»
AG te.vaifs^izincaa8i£igg ENT S gqgBf Wfatte a *
TE 1 SWS pSrlT aOTHfOWDER
Hooplas T ooth Pe rfect and 4 1 pass Healthy.
PonsionsJSirSS?
OPIUiaStes-sHsai
T I EUGRMY assttraaopere Janesville,
VA l -KriTIMt BROW .,
.i' 256% ‘
A. N. U Thirty-nine, >lt,
Many a Lady
is beautiful, all but her skin;
and nobody has ever told
her how easy it is to put
beauty on the skin. Magnolia Beauty
on the skin is
Balm.
-
S
T 3 5, (:TS?
S CURE FOR
.
U MPT I ONI