North Georgia times. (Spring Place, Ga.) 1879-1891, December 09, 1886, Image 4

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    Hints in Mnral Decoration.
ibo, Young for that houaeke per*, and old one*,
matter, often find the deco¬
ration of wails and ceiling a hard nut to
crack, even when the house ia their own
and a moderate expenditure of money
quite within their reach for the purpose.
But when the apartments are rented, says
aa Eastern exchange, with the prospect
of a flitting to some others at no very re¬
mote question period, staring one in the face, the
what to do with the bl mk white
walls is a puzzler. It is worse still when
an atrocious attempt at decoration, resulting in an
combination of colors, had been
made.
To the young housekeeper who has all
her furnishings yet to buy the solution is
comparatively bo simple. She will, if she
wise, determine the color or effect
which she wishes to carry out, and will
then proceed with an eye single to that
idea. The walls will be dealt with first,
and the carpet and hangings and up hol
stery selected with reference to it. W1 here
economy is the object, distemper may
bo resorted to, or flatted oil paint, which
on account of the readiness with which
it lends itself to thorough cleansing with
voap and water, is recommended as pre¬
ferable to distemper. Having settled
upon either one or the other, the ques¬
tion of tint sugests itself. Here the
situation or the room, its size and height,
enter in. Shall it be light or dark in
lone, What is a positive or a broken color?
the color of the wood-vyork ?
These are questions which each one must
ask and answer for herself; but it is
safe, in our climate, to decide upon a
warm rathei than a cold tint, of a medi¬
um than depth of tone and a broken rifther
guard a is positive color. Another safe¬
to make the walls lighter than
ihc wood-work, and the golden rule to
have the coloring to become lighter as it
ascends must not be lost siuht of. Thus,
if the frieze it strong and deep in color¬
ing the walls must be much darker, and
the carpet or other floor covering darker
still. It is better to lean toward harmo¬
ny of analogy than to contrasts when
dealing if with not large of herself. surfaces, especially
one is sure
He Did Not Walk.
Jabe Mathis, of the Thirteenth Geor¬
gia, was a good soldier, but one day
when the Confederates were retreating
from threw tho*gory his field of the Gettysburg Jabe
inusk-1 on ground, seated
liimsclf by the roadside, and exclaimed
with much vehemence:
“I’ll be dashed if 1 walk another step!
I’m broken down! I can’t do it!” And
Jabe was the picture of despair.
“Get up, man,” exclaimcfi his Captain,
“don’t you know the Yankees are fol¬
lowing us ? They’ll git you, sure!”
“Can’t I’ll help it,” said Jabe, “I’m done
for. not walk another step!”
The Confederate passed along over the
crest of the hill, and lost sight of poor,
dejected/Jabe. njoment
In a there was a fresh rattle of
Sudden!}' musketiy and a renewed crash of shells.
Jabe appeared on the crest of
the followi/l hill inoving by like a hurricane, and
a cloud of dust. As he dash¬
ed past his Captain that officer yelled:
“Hijlo ! Jabe; thought you wasn’t
going to walk anymore.”
‘’Thunder!” replied Jabe, as he hit the
dust rith renewed vigor, “you don’t
call tiis wnlking, do you.
Mean Temperature.
“fins man stole up to my door and
stoliiuy barometer, officer.”
'It ‘pnrometer—phwats tells the weather, that, sah?” if
hei's you see;
in-j/ument t a low barometric depression, the
records the mean temperature
/■-Mane temperature, is it? Och, an
thin the tlmfe was joostiiied in staling
climate. itibecause he was disgoosted with the
The temperature has been mane
traVs enubgh to make a harness maker lave
of his work behind him. Ha! ha!”
lie I)ld i-ing.
“Pat McClure 1”
“That's me, sir.”
“OhargcX) with disorderly conduct.”
“How sG. sir?”
They cotbplain that you alarm the
neighborhoocfuvherc carrying you are working at
a horbnt a new building.”
“Yes, sir, I sing; but it’s t a quiet
Sunday-school that?’\ liivlody, sir.”
“AVliat’s
“Still there’s mdr-tar follow.”
Asked to It* a Census.
“Where’s President?’’
“Mr. Cleveland is enVaged, sir.”
“Thashso? Well, taust sliee him.
P’rtic'l’r business.”
“You’re after a consulship, I suppose?”
“No, shir. I want to be a census.”
“A what?”
“Census. I see the shenshus embraced
seventeen million women List year.
Want to be a shenshus, sir. Musht see
President."
NO Difference.
“It's *,, s verv v hard on the lne nnnr poor man man—
-
forced , to , work , in . , heat or cold, storm or
sunshine.”
“I don’t think so.”
“You don’t. Look at the luxuries the
rich man enjoys, there s the full grate in
winter, ice when it’s warm-”
“Well, the poor man has his ice, as
Jacaocsf
“Certainly; only the rich man has his
• in summer, and the poor man gets his in
winter”
. Trying • to do ~ T~*r* business without rr— adver- .
tisingis like winking at a girl in the
----
’ A Ilorrtble Form
Of malarial disease Is dumb ague. Constant
drowsiness, sleep Interrupted by a chill, sue
««* * —“t “ a ,““
exhaustlne sweat. A sensation as of numbness
froro com, but no shaking invariably attends eradicates it. Hostet- it.
Stomach
■HiMlo the ** 4 oai#b 6 tii\ate form of miasma,
fe-s-7 conquer it with quinine is as
->» *
^Kth m/SfyA disorders of of every tbs liver, kind
j§SS£igj|jHy derangement a
the saffron tint which the skin
Boo ■h diseases. For this symtom, as
hitters Is a oertain reme
^Bion, dyspepsia, and rheumatlsm
of the kidneys
by this fine alterative.
SCIJEKTIFIC
is or as
To the Editor of the Scientific American:
mil von permit v* to make known to the
the facte we have learned during the
human poet 9 years, Kidneys concerning disorders of the
and the organs which dis¬
eased conducting Kidneys so entity break downf You
are unprejudiced a Scientific in favor paper, and are
is needless to except medical of Tbuth. H
“ Code ” say, no Journal of
for standing obvious would admit these facts,
very reasons.
; B. H. WARNER d CO.,
Proprietors of “Warner’s Safe Cure.”
That we may emphasize and clearly ex
plain general the health, relation the kidneys sustain to the
and how much is dependent
upon speaking, them, take we propose, metaphorically
to one from the human body,
place it in the wash-bowl before us, and ex¬
amine it for the public benefit
You will imagine that we have before us a
body ing, about shaped like a bean, smooth and glisten¬
four inches in length, two in width,
and one in thickness. It ordinarily weighs
in the adult male about five ounces, but is
somewhat lighter in the female. A small
organ? you say. But understand, the body
of the average size man contains about fen
quarts through of these blood, of which erery drop passes
be called, filters or sewers, as they may
many times a day as often as
through lution in the heart, making a complete revo¬
three minutes. From the blood
they separate the waste material, working
away waking, steadily tireless night and day. sleeping and fully or
as the heart itsolf,
of as much vital importance; removing im¬
purities from sixty-five gallons of blood each
hour, or about forty-nine barrels each day,
or that 9,135 hogsheads a Fear! What a wonder
the kidneys cau last any length of time
under this prodigious strain, treated and
neglected as they are!
Wo slice this delhate organ epen length¬
wise with our kuife, and will roughly de¬
scribe its interior.
We find it to be of a reddish-brown color,
soft and easily torn; filled with hundreds of
little tubes, snort and threa l-like, starting
from the arteries, ending in a little tuft about
midway of from the outside opeuin? into a
cavity the pelvis considerable roughly speaking, size, which is called
or, a sac, which
is for the purpose of holding the water to
further undergo purification before it passes
down from here into the ureters, and so on
to the outside of the body. These little tubes
are the filters which do their work auto¬
matically, of the and right here is where the dis¬
ease Doing kidney first begins. which
the vast amount of work
they are in obliged to, from the cold, slightest irreg¬
living, ularity from our hatdts, from thousand from high
stimulants or a and
one other causes which occur every day, they
become somewhat weakened in tueir nerve
fori e.
What is the result? Con gestlon or stoppage
of the current of blood in the small blood
vessels surrounding them, which become
blocked; these deli, ate membranes are irri¬
tated; inflammation is set up, then pus is
formed, which collects in the pelvis or sa-;
the tubes are at first partially, and soon are
totally unable distending to do their work. The pelvic
sac goes on with th s corruption,
pressing upon the blood vessels. Alt this
time, remember, the blood, which is entering
the kidneys to be filtered, is passing through
this terrtble, disgusting pus, for it'cannot
take any other route!
Stop realize and the think of it for a moment! Do
you cessity, of having importance, the kidneys nay the vital ne¬
in order? Can
you expect when they nre dist-ased or ob
structed, no matter how little, that you can
have pure Hood and escape discus:/ It
would be ju.t as reasonable to expect, if a
countless pest-house were set across liroakwuy and
thou an Is were compelled to go
through contagion its and pesti disease, enti&l doors, an escape from
as for one to expect
the blood to esca|ie pollution when con tantly
running through a diseased kidney.
Now, what is the result? Why, that the
blood takes up and deposits this poison as it
sweeps along inio every organ, into every
inch of muscle, tissue, llesb and bone, from
your head to your feet. And whenever, from
hereditary bidy intlueuce or otherwise, some part
of the is weaker than another, a count¬
less train of distas ‘s is established, such as
there consumption delicate in weak stomach; lungs, dyspepsia whore
is a nervousness, in¬
sanity, who paralysis or heart disease in those
have weak ner.es.
The heart must soon feel the effects of the
poison, in right as action. it repiires It pure blood its to stroke keep iu it
increases
number and force to com; ensata for the
natural stimulus wanting, in its endeavor to
crowd the impure blood through this ob¬
struction, causing pain, palpitation, or aa
out-of-breath feeling. Unnatural a<t t this
forced labor is, the heart must soon falter,
becoming it suddenly w.aker and weaker death until one day
stops, and from appaient
“heart disease” is the verdi t.
But the medical profession, learned and
dignified, call these diseases by high sounding
names, treat them alone, and patients die,
for the arteries are carry mu slow death to
the affected part, constantly adding fuel
kidneys brought from these suppurating, pus-laden
which here in our wash-bowl are
very have putrefaction itself, and which should
been cured first.
But this is not all the kidneys have to do;
for you must remember that each adult takes
about seven pounds of nourishment every
twenty-four hours to supply the waste of the
body which is constantly taken. going on, a waste
equal to the quantity This, too, the
kidneys have to separate from (he blood with
all other de'ompo ing matter.
But you say: “My kidneys Mi-taken are all right. I
have no pain in the back.” man!
People die of kidney disease of so bad a char¬
acter that the organs are rotten, and yet
they have never there had a pain nor an
ache!
Why? Because the disease of begins, kidney, as we
have shown, in the interior the
where there are few of nervesof Why feeling this to is con¬
vey the sensation pain. so
wo may never know.
When you consider their great work, the
dolicacy of their structure, the ease with
which they are deranged, can you wonder at
the ill-health of our men and women! Health
and long Ufa cannot be expected when so vi¬
tal an organ is impaired. No wonder some
writers say we are degenerating. Don’t you
seo the great, the extreme importance of
keeping this machinery in working order?
Could the finest engine do even a fractional
pft _ t of this work- without attention from
the engineer? Don’t you see how dangerous
this bidden disease is? It is lurking about
us constantly, without giving any indication
of ^S n s c k e j nfu , physicians themselves cannot detect
times, for the kidneys any'means have can
net be examined by we at
ouVcommand. Even an analysis of the water,
2 SS“£.s; kitneys fairlv broken down.
the are
Then look out for them, as disease, no mat
ter where situated, to per cent, as shown
by after-death examinations, has its origin
in the breaking do wn of t heso secreting tubes
in the interior valsn of^ the kidney. desire lone life
As you health, as suffering, yon give these
free from sickse-s and
Warner’s Safe CJhre, for as it becomes wonderful year af
ter year better known its cures
and its power over t he kidneys, has done and
l* doing more to increase th3 average dura
S. 0 harmless but
gpB , ifl0i raUd but certain, ener
j c and agreea- de to the taste.
Take it wheu sick as a cure, and never let
a month tro by if you need it, without taking bid
• bottles as a preventive, that the
s.w.'&tZi'KsrA't: {ji Co. ss
e5S i ng . H. H Warnkr &
If the young man ,who insists on steal¬
he ing will kisses doesnlt find himself abandon behind the practice, the bare
soon
of wedlock.
Relief ie immediate and a cure sure. Pieo’i
Remedy for Catarrh. SOr.
K French Flower Form.
There is on the maritime foot-hill*, la .
the department of Var, a. fiower farm of i |
about seventeen acres, belonging to Mme.
de Rostaiog. It is about 2,000 feet above j
baps i«.„ twenty «* miles from the coast. „«d p., The |
calcareous soil naturally thin and j
was
poor, and the olive trees which had
occupied the ground for a century
or more previous to 188fc yielded
but scanty and unsatisfactory re
turns, and the land was regard
c(l as practically worthless. In 1881 the
proprietress caused the ground to be j
cleared and prepared for flower culture, j
It was dus to the depth of four feet, and
the larger stones removed. In the :
autumn of 1881, 45,000 tufts of violets,
and 140,000 roots of the white jasmine
were planted. The following spring the
remainder of the ground was planted
with roses, geraniums, tuberoses, and
jonquils, and a laboratory erected for the
manufacture of perfumes. The location
proved to have been well chosen, the
flower plants grew vigorously and strong,
and in 1885 (the fourth year after plant¬
ing) the flower farm of Seillans, which
had previously yielded a rental of $115 a
year, produced (according to the state¬
ment of the proprietress) perfumes valued
at $43,154, and giving a net profit of
$7,707.86. Of course the plants and
shrubs at Seillans have not yet reached
their full productive capacity, but the
resuits of the fourth year illustrate suffi¬
ciently liow lucrative flower farming may
become, in favorable locations, and
under good management.— Washington
Post.
Lamps of Angels.
The author of “Camp-Life on the
Satpura Range” relates this conversation
which he had with an English friend of
his and a Mohammedan native of India
It is interesting as shown the superstition
of tiie Hindoos and the poetic charactci
of their fancy:
As we neared the camp a most beauti¬
ful meteor sailed slowly down from the
starry sky, like a ball of fire, which di¬
vided and fell in a fiery stream. All
present looked at it with silent astonish¬
ment for a few seconds, then I laugh¬
ingly turned and said to Nusseer
Khan:
“One of the angels has dropped his
lamp, eh, Nusseer Khan?”
“It must be so, my lord — who
. knows?”
Seeing iny friend somewhat puzzled at
Ihe remarks, I explained that the Mo¬
hammedans have an idea th^t the stars
are the lamps of the angels guarding the
gates of heaven, and that a shooting star
is a lamp carelessly dropped.
“The idea is pretty,” he rejoined,
“but surely they aro not so ignorant in
these days ns to believe it?”
“Why not? The lower classes in more
civilized countries believe things quite
as absurd. Of course, the educated
Hindoos know better, but the illiterate
believe anything that is put into their
heads.”
Fashions in Tombstones.
There are fashions in tombstones, but
they change slowly. The styles of the
present do not differ much from those of
twenty years ago, but a difference is
noticed in those set up fifty or more
years ago. There were never columns
in those days. As now, the cheaper
stones were plain slabs. One of the ex¬
pensive shapes, which always marked a
distinguished grave, was a marble slab
laid horizontally on four marble columns,
making a sort of a table. The inscrip¬
tion was carved on the top, which al¬
lowed plenty of space for verses, which
no we IT regulated gravestone of the first
part of the century could do without.
These verses, which read so quaintly now,
were always written by the pastor. It was
his duty when one of his parishioners
died to oomposo a suitable stanza, and
the ministers were always paid for them
—a thing that few periodicals even o j
those days would have done. In olden
times nothing but brownstone and ;
sandstone was used. The carving was
crude, and one of the requirements of
fashion was that every,slab should have
a human face carved over the inscrip¬
tion. The stylish gravestone to have j
now is a monument .—New York Mail and
Express.
lne Deet-biters or ihe World.
If there were any soundnesfcin tho ata
.1 Mr. P. S. yh„ i. stated
to be an economist of great repute, and
“ ««“»', « i»d.««.», c„ptl,r
of figures, the English people can no
longer boast to be, or be jeered at as
being, the greatest beef-eatera in the
world. According to the economist’s
computation, the aunual consumption of
beef in Europe amounts to 45 pimnds per
head of the population in a year. The
Australians consume 150 pounds a man,
and the Americans 130 pounds, while
the other great continent of Argentine
(from which Mr. Lamas hails) eats level
with Australia. At his rate there must
be a very great number of people In the
world who get along without eating beef
at all. But the calculations arc based on
one which is yet more extraordinary—
namely, that on the whole globe the total
head of cattle is 47,500,000, or about an
ox and a half for every one in Great Bri¬
tain, and none at all for anybody else.
Still, facts are facts and figures are
figures.— St. James' Oasettt.
Specks of Sport.
A *f. not the absent cashier “Our
„ 2“gS ? ^ tl0mi the new8 P a P er
js. ,
ft fertilizer raili.
Fuming with the cook is said to be a
good recipe to make a wife look closely
after the kitchen,
0c r fashion editor, being asked what
were the prettiest things in fall bonnets,
at once answered “girls.”
It makes a difference where you are.
A green grocer in London is one who
“ n * vegetables. In Chicago it is one
1
r, :
side of his best girl, and placed his arm
around her shapely waist.
An Illinois editor defines r. philanthro
possible number with th# greatest possi- ,
ble amount of other people’s money. |
milk “Johnny, this did you f put water in the
“\es Sir.” morning ‘Don’t said the milkman.
4 you know that is
?
wicked, Johnny ?” ,4 But you told me
to V mix wafpr ie with millr muK » uV * OQ es but
- >
t I told i j you to put the . water first and
in
pO.ir tnf, tr the milk into u it. mu Then, you see, we
can tell people we never put water in our
milk”
Not long ago a city missionary in
dive Chicago with dropped into a Clark street
temperance tracts in his hand,
and, accosting a dozen or more loafers
sitting around, remarked: “Gentlemen,
may I ask if you—” He got no further.
With one accord they ranged themselves
in front of the bar and answered in
C S: ^ “ 1 d °‘” H " d °'
arted
On the first night of Congreve’s “Way
of the World,” the audience hissed it
violently. When the uproar was at its
height, and Congreve walked on the stage
addressed the audience. “Is it your
intention to damn this play ?” The cry
was, “Yes, yes! Off, off.” Then I tell
you this play of mine will be a living
(day when you are all dead and damned!”.
And he walked slowly off.
A Chicago woman entered the office
of a loan agency the other day and said:
“I want to raise $1,500 on $3,000 worth
of furniture. What is your lowest rate
of interest ?” “On such loans we gener¬
ally -ask 10 per cent.” “Very well.
Send your examiner up to the house. It
is a speculation with me.” “Going into
business, ma’am?” “Yes, sir. I’m going
to take my three daughters to the SCll
shore, and either marry ’em off or drown
’em!”
At the masquerade ball in Adln last week,!
St. Jacobs Oil took Ihe first prize. Nothing
strange in this, as it is highly prized in every
family xvhere usod—especially in our*.— Bieber,
Cal., Mountain Tribune.
*' Aunty,” said a beautiful girl, «s she list¬
ened to her lover's retreating footsteps, " I
sometimes have a ticklish sensation about my
lips and fser. What can I do for it?” “ 1 don’t
know, my dear, unless you have George shave
off liis mustache!
Mr. Geo. Dentermsn, New York city, suf¬
fered senrly a month with asevere cough, and
having tried several remedies without relief,
finally used Red Star Cough Cure, which, he
eays, proved “speedy and effectual."
A clergyman in Illinois, who hnd been
marying asked by several parties of young folks , was
a brother who called on him how he
*' was I’m getting sailing along. “O. finely." he replied;
right along at the rate of thirteen
knots an honr."
“I am a merchant and planter,” writes Mr.
T. N. Humphrey, of Tenn., "and it gives me
and great colds pleasure to say, that for severe coughs
Allen’s Lung Balsam is the best
remedy now offered for sale. I have induced,
many to try it with the best of results.” Price
35c., 60c. and $1 per bottle at Druggists.
Yon Can Learn How to Get Rich
by Portland, send.ng your they address to Hallett & Co..
formation Maine; abont will send you full in¬
work that you can doand live
at home, wherever you are located. Work
adapted and to all ages and both sexes. $6 to S35 a
day earned upwards easily earned. Some have
ever S-'iOin aday. All succeed grandly
All is new. Vnu are started free. Capital not
required. Delay not. All of the above will be
proved to you, and you will Uud yourself on the
rood to a handsome fortune, with a large and
absolutely sure income from the very start
Sixtieth Year.,
The Youth’s Companion celebrates this
year its sixtieth anniversary. It might well
be a ned the “Universal Companion," since
its readers are found in 400 000 families. It Is
so _ ing wisely ■ edited ’■ Fiat - its pages are ns interest-
1o adults as to the young people, Bes des
the best Short and Serial Stories it’contains it’c a
great ion variety Nat iral of History. popular and useful informa
I on Science, Home Arts,
Games and Sports, and is ful y illustrated. 1 1
costs but $1.7o a year, and a subscription t#nt
now ,s credited to Janu iry, 1888.
BROWN’S
a m !**■*
BITTERS
Combining IRON with PL’RK VEGETABLE
tonics, qnicUj and completely cleanses
cud ENRICHES the blood. Quicken*
.USE SXS
injure the teeth, camehcsducho. or produce epn
for recoranH(nd enriching fiSSHUUSSSk the blood, and removing all dyspeptic
symptoms. It does not hurt the teeth.”
Db. R. M. Delzell, Rsyaoldn. Ind., says: " I
hav© prescribed Brown’s Iron Bitters in cases of
anaemia end blood diseases, also when n tonic was
needed, and it has proved thoroughly satisfactory.’*
Mb. War. Byrns, 26 Sfc. Mary St. New Orleans. La.,
says: “Brown’s Iron Bitters relieved me in a case
t»f blood poisoning, and I heartily commend it to
those needing » purifier.”
The Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed red lines
on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by
BROWN CHEMICAL CO., BALTIMORE, MO.
Ladies' Hand Book— useful and attractive, con¬
taining coins, list of prises for recipes information about
nviled etc., to given address away by aII receipt dealers »>f 2c. ia medicine, or
any on stamp.
IHE WANT YOU! tfWE«135S
■ w profitable county Seinry employment to represent us in every
large commission $75 sales per if month and expenses, or a
on preferred. Goods staple.
HASS.
Frink’s Rupture Remedy
wni quickly euro any esse of hernia or rupture.
Explsnat FRlNht ion and test 234 (monials Broadways free. Address
O* New Fork*
PitojonsEBSCagUft
OPIUM hi^Y » ^*‘- T r ^ S° ^y ^ t0a * 1 ^*
Buckingham's Dye for thS Whiskers is cas
llyappied, * n4 col rs brown or black.
will The prompt use of Ayer's lung Cherry Pectoral
often p. event serious troubles.
At a friendly gathering at Holland
House the conversation turned on lore;
Tota Moore compared it to a potato, be¬
cause “it shoots from the eyes.” “Or,
rather,” exclaimed Byron, “because it
comes less by paring. ”
If yon have tumor, (or tumor symptoms)
(or cancer symptoms),ScrofulajEryaipe
laB, balt-Rheum, Chronic weaknesses,Nervous¬
ness or other complaints—Dr. Kilmer’s Fx
**l'l Rsmbdt will correct and cure.
Daughters, Wires and Mothers.
Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, free,
securely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi, Utica. N.Y
_
®™«obtis your old boots and shoes with
--
L-ggg.’iaBaaaffeasRsas :
"DQB’TPAYABIGPBICI!”
cr Pays for a Tear'll subsewr
nXs” Se^SSrVfroSmSJ- iwdiSS&JtSiSiJ
Lawyers’-® Famifr Cy”oDodl®- iparo: , “parTn Law L Cyctop5u!3V
F arm Cyeloprdlit* Sense
en non
Counselor; anielson’a
(Medical)I Boys’ Useful Pa«tli of mesj Five
,*11 Uflit d
Stefet; Hiatory Civil t niversal (both Uiato sides). y of Nations; Fopuia*
War
*ny owe book and paper one rear, subscribed all postpaid, for
§1-15 the l*t only. or Marct Paper Satisfaction ai »oe 6fllc. guaranteed If on before b oka
and h-Mayor Weekly, or money Rocu^t.T^^^ie ref unde l. Reference. Hon. C.
Without PremliiDiiG.ic. a year | KocuOiTllvN.y.
ELY'S CATARRH
~
Ely's Cream ^wmgfiSjyJ K
Halm icorks like
R cured me r n
if catarrh and re
i tored the sense of ihSp
nnell.—E. H. Sher- TO
rood, Banker, Eliza- bit:
ieth, N. J. • HAY-FEVER
A particle is applied into eecti nostril anil is agreeable
circular. louse. Price50 hLY cfcs. by mail or at druggists. Send for
BROTHERS, Druggists, Owego, N. Y.
rz~n 2
a
a S !■> r
- I
ll 3
% lim
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BINGHAMTON. N.V.
THE INVALIDS BENEFACTOR.
Discoverer of Dr. Kilmer’s
^
Ladies * a
**&*£ Each e *W° kind contain* ia also sold 3 separately bottlen.
Female Remedy, (Blood :
Autumn-Leaf and Systom)$l.
I5x t.j (Local Treatm^g 1
V A Anointment,(External *• gQ
fdtrOr the three in Packa£*e$2.0 #
ono 0.
Recovers the “run-down;” bed-ridden’’
or “abamloned." It Kliminstea Humors
nnd Blood Impurities that cause Scrofula,
Cancer, Tumor, pimples and blotches.
Dr. Kilmer treats internal Tumor, Cancer.
’ ou centellard to neglect early symptoms.
I I m-murn/Jl S f ry promptly answered, m
H | i
SOLD BY ALL UitrUilSTS. ;
Salvo CORES DiHMEKS
^0% buveftectua’ly. and InfempcrnnciN ’Ih.’onir ficL not ntiilc ns'ant) £
V® dote fort>ie Alcohol ;»nti
'y remedy Habit and the
on that dares to send trial
bottle* Highly endowed by the me<l
leal profession and prepnred by wpll
known New York phy icians. Son!
tfV* ramps ► ddicss for ilreulnrs "SALVO nnd REMKJ>Y,’* roferene C '*.
w* ' f Ww Vo-V,
i Ion ASTHMA CURED!
I vA German immediate A»thm» Cure never /ails to jrfve
■» relit/ in the worst cases, insures com*
forttble sleep; effects cure* where all others fall. A
fri’oi convinces the mail skeptical. Price 50 ct« and
$1.00. of Druegifits or by mail. Snniple FKI'.K lor
[stamp. DU. R. 8CHIFFM AN. HU Paul, Minn.
FACE, HANDS, FEET,
and all their ImperfectionR, Including FV
JTl ' § S; fluous ,a ‘ H©yp> Hair. 0 Pnic.’it. Birth Hair Marks, and Moles, Scalp, Warts, Super
fc&T Heads, Scars, Pitt Red in gr nnd Nose, their Acne, treatment. Black
Orfl w^srK'ri^’.lrby 1 :^: mvdisTor
Ill- best, esale largest, coolest end safest.light. S e It,
'vlio depot. 155 Fulton St., New York.
A■ ■ V"”'V.VSTKO everywherClreu »r ni .il- ' - ■ -
THBRSTOII'SSTGOTH POWDER
Keeoln* T.otb Perfect and Guina Healthy.
(Eh St«5l IP to SSadnT. Simple, worth *1.M KREB
brnra not uudrr tn« horse'* feet. Addres. ,
425,000
Copies ready Dec. f, of the
Double Christmas Number
of the
Youth’s Coupon
Colored Corer, Twenty Pages, Profuse!/ Illustrated
Mailed to any address for Ten Cents. ■
Free to Jan. I with FREE New $1.75, Subscriptions from will tho include time \sent fhe {ho Companion subscrip¬ at once,
tion is received to Jan, 1, 1887, and a full year from thaJ\date. This
offer includes the Christmas Double Number.
Please mention this Paper. V
Address PERRY MASON & CO., 45 Tempia Place, Boston, Mass.
-------- ---- • \
-
:
t?
HSB BRk^ Tho tbs JmrrtPFt) FISH SLTt fi
J <rtCPm,&oon AHHorslL
Ey^RTsB.O-P.T /r Jr§
j^OQU^E / fiW
Pi BOTTLE OF
a\<XVM jDRU*$rOR.e
' *■ ft ’T rAKCUFAITH-r
FULLY, vfilA'0* AND
Yoo
¥ ConvTn^ fU
that the Re (%
iTuTOTIE Y/^Of^
COUGHS & COLDS
AlietfsWm&ctlsafu Sois* by druggists
m
J.t4. Harris* Co Vyurto PH opS Cm.O
UNRIVALED 0fcGA3*.>
alogae with lull particulars, mal.crt irt o.
UPRIGHT PIAMO^y
Constructed on the new inethol of rtrJngin-:. •
similar terms, send tot dcnrrlptwe Cniam no
MASON & HAMLIN OflGAN AND PIAN5
Boston. Now York, Oh lcago.
BOOK AGENTS WASTED
PLATFORM ECHOES
er LIVING TRUTHS TOR DEAD AND HEART,
By John B. Gough.
D 7 i Extra Terms and PayErtighlt. Writ» ctrculArt
A. I>. W4>UT«lNttTON * CO., lUrtr».««, Gm.
ATLANTA
ISk ■■ SAW WORKS.
Maoufaotur«r» of and Dealers in
Saws aud Saw-Mill Supplies.
. Repairing a Specialty.
Axtn.l* for L. Powjkk Sc. UomTany'#
f -
, j 29E E2f-Cay Sag
to'
/ Don’t buy a watch until you
’ find out about the latest improve¬
ments. Send for new illustrated
catalogue and price list. J. P.
Stevene, Jeweler, 47 Whitehall
Street. Atlanta, Ga.
JONES
riB
PAYS 5 the Scale*.
Ton Waeou tugi, 11
Iron Levers, el Hew
Tut £c«ta anfl B«m» Bo« wr
the 300. For free
| Etptt Sr*le. price
- mention thi« pitnor »nd nridreafl
BINGHAMTON- JONES Of B5KGK3MTOH* N. f
i
Machine
Portable Horse Power Mftchiuedset to woj L :u SO
Guaranteed to drill f»tster>uid with leaf ?)Ow«*r than
other. Specially adapted to dril in* Wells in earth
rock 20 to 1,000 feet. Farmers and others are mokine
to *40 per i!«r with onr machinery nnd t<'ols
business for Winter or Summer. Wv are the oldest
largeflt Mamifafcturersin for the hURli ous. Send 4cents
Stamps illustrated Patalo^ue II. Addkess,
Pierce Well Excavator t’o.. JVcw York.
*• Rops el to Cui 0ft Horses’ Mines
Osleilri ‘ECLIPSE' II4L PKR
and BRIDLE Cotnbinod* cannot A
be *11 >oea by anr horse. Simple y.j
Halter receipt to of any $1. Soil part of byallSaldlerj, U. S. free, oa Jr *
H irdtraro and Harnes* Doalurs. Jr*.\s
Special Send for discount Price-IA-t to the irade. (VJL tv?
J. C. L.IG1ITHOT7SE,
lt-oche•r»■ »*. V. V.
S?B«S*« SSgHli 5 ® S rlliSa (ireat tnai'sh Gout
Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Box ^I.UUi ioundr oil ct*.
I DATEWTS Patent ZT/J.
bam. Lawyer. Wasam^ton. D. O.
If Best, T*i«o*a Easiest Remedy to Use, for Catarrh and Cheapest. la the
8 CA))iRRH
™J S?5 Also good cor Cold In the Head,
Iifiadacltc. If-v Fever, Jm;. ;>J cents.
•