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About North Georgia times. (Spring Place, Ga.) 1879-1891 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1889)
. - m x 1 m ifm «■ * •*' : ?■" _— w the Utes Celebrate Their » Festival. Barbaric Costumes, Queer Mu¬ sic, Grotesque Movements. The army post at Fort Da Chesne, Utah, says the New York World, ia sup¬ plied with six companies of tToops, whose chief care ia to keep a watchful "aye on the Ute Indians and regulate th/ngs on the reservation. According to an old Ute tradition, the bears at this season of the year hold high car¬ nival all by themselves up in some se¬ cluded place in the mountains, where there ia no snow. For many generations the famous “Bear Dance" has been sa¬ credly observed by the Utes, following as nearly as possible what the bears are supposed to do. They find a good level piece of ground, which is prepared by the bucks a few days before this chief ‘ festival of Tho year takes place, and unite in clear¬ ing nearly an ac:e. They build a high brush fence around it, forming a sort of pen—ionly leaving one opsning, which is faithfully guarded by two braves, and it takes a good deal of influence for outsiders to be allowed to enter this en osii re. Then a flagstaff is erected, on which is a white flag with two hugo beam painted black, typical of the dsncc. When tho day comes on which the dance is to commence, tho Indians come from all over the reservation—old and young, some on ponies, some are tho proud possessors of wagons and a great many walk. There are hundreds par¬ ticipating in the dauce, while on the outside of this pen are to be seen many Indians on ponies watching the perform¬ ance. This dance lasts a week always including one Sunday, which is dedi¬ cated to Shc-Nob (God). The squaws -are many of them arrayed in buckskin dresses, the waste and sleeves being most elaborately beaded in different colored beads. Tho bottoms of these dresses are finished off with a buckskin fringe. The skirts are long on the sides and short in tho back, so that their handsomely beaded anklets and mocca sins are often displayed. With thdee suits arc worn beaded girdles or wide leather bolts, ornamented with brass¬ headed tacks, and suspended from the belts are worn beaded bags or cases, and at the back, fastened to the skirt, aro silk ot cotton bandanna hand t? prevent soilin^the ':'id J^^AHcoraT Their hair is worn mbse and hanging over their shoulders. The men aro gay with bright-colored calico shirts and sorno wear buckskin legging. All wear something on their necks, such as wampum or a beaded necklace, or tho chest is covered with a breastplate of wampum. They all wear feathers of every description in the hair, and many have their braids wrapped with pieces of fur, bright-colored rib¬ bon, beaded ornaments and all sorts of things. One old fellow sported on his head a Chinese red feat her-duster. Tho Indians all print their fucci. One had a dark blue nose and chin, with yellow cheeks and rod stripes. Another had his face painted black, with one yellow eye and a red one. No two, in fact, were painted alike. The second chief of tho Utes was made Master of Ceremonies, but there were two or three Floor Managers, as it were, whose duty it was to go around before each dance and point with a stick to tho squaws whose turn it was to dance. The squaws wero seated on ono side, forming a semi-circle, and tho bucks wore on the other side. The musicians, ten or twelvo m numbor, formed the or¬ chestra, making a circle around a large wooden box or an old tin pan turned upside down. Each one had a stick about two and a half feet long, with notchos cut iu it on one side resembling a saw; ono end of those sticks rested on the box or tin pan; with the right hand they nibbed these notched sticks with a round piece of wood forcibly and rapid¬ ly, producing a very singular noise, and when accompanied by the voices of the musicians singing a sort of a savage chant, ono can easily imagine the whole utterly devoid of musical sounds. When the music, so culled, begins, the squaws whose turn it is tp dance, three abreast and hand in hand tako their places on the ground, after having in¬ vited the bucks by a motion of hand or a tap on the shoulder, the bucks respond¬ ing with alacrity. They form two lines, the squaws on one side and bucks oppo¬ site, and at a given signal take three steps forward and three steps back again, beginning slowly and gradually increasing i! peed until the music ceases, places. and Som t hgiteughingly 1 go to their a man 01 a woman becomes exhausted and falls, causing * great deal of merriment among the MfWPPPWI « - . ■: through some ceremony. wneunenas finished the prostrate dancer quickly arises and is supposed to be cured. The last two days of the dance—Saturday and Sunday—the excitement is. intense and the dancing continues all night Sat¬ urday, winding up at sundown on Sun¬ day. On that day they have a feast, which is provided principally by the traders, employes and the Indian agent, the officers of this post giving coffee, , sugar and flour. It was a weird sight to see them dancing at night by the light of the moon and large bonfires. Professional Rat Catchers. A New York animal dealer tells a Sun reporter that at present inhere are abonl a score of professional catchers in the city. They never do any other business, and they are not very industrious at the queer one they have chosen. Very few rat catchers have traps. Some use an instrument like a long, slender pair of tonga, while other* wear gloves, and trust entirely to their hands. Their mode of working is the simplest thing in the world. They sit down on the floor, which is strewn with some food that rats like. They place near thorn a saucer of water. Bats seem to bo tor¬ mented with a perpetual thirst, and every one of them will take a drink be¬ fore he returns to his hole. While ho is drinking is the catcher’s opportunity. You may have noticed, when you havo been watching a wild rat, that so long os you do not stir the brute will show no ter¬ ror. Frequently he will approach close to your feet, for he cannot recognize,life ia a motionless body; butthe instant you move, be it in ever so slight a degree, he vanishei like a dream. The catcher is as still as death unlit his victim is within a few inches of him, cither with his head turned away, or so occupied in drinking as to see nothing except the water. Then the tongs, or the gloved hand, silently' and stealthily descend, and the rat is lifted from tho floor and dropped into a bag , between the catcher’s knees. If he squeals all his fellows disappear as though the earth had swallowed them, as, indeed, it has. But, however quickly the capture may be made, one or othor of tho rats in the room is tolerably sure to see it and to give the alarm. Then the catcher must begin a new vigil. He never has long to wait, however. A rat must actually view or hear dangor to detect it. Ila is B ■PBFroliH BToast. If no HPB^n^omei _ out of his hole in a fow minutes ta tempt his fate again. A catcher could, and sometimes does, get a 100 or a 153 rats, and clear the premises of the posts in a single night. The Canals of Mars. As to tho nature of the canals, it is still more difficult to suggest any satis¬ factory explanation. Several hypotheses havo been presented, none of which ap¬ pears entirely to meet tho case. I have already remarked that there has not been lacking the suggestion that those curious streaks represent tho lino* of actu.il ar¬ tificial water-courses on Mars. The straight and undeviating course which they pursue might be regarded as lead¬ ing some degree of probability to such a view, but the enormous scale on which" they exist seems to compel the rejection of the hypothesis. It is true that, if we consider only the influence of the forco of gravity on Mars, giants could dwell upon that planet whose mechanical achievements might vastly surpass the greatest performances of our engineers; for a body weighing a ton on the earth would weigh only seven hundred and sixty pounds on M irs, and, on the other hand, a man on Mars possessing relative¬ ly the same activity as one of us might be fifteen feet tall and strong in propor¬ tion. But, even granting the existence cf such a race of Goliahs on our neigh¬ bor world, it is not conceivable that they couid have constructed a system of tre¬ mendous canals over half the surface of their planet, or that they would have done it if they could. Tho canals of Mars are enormously disproportioned in magnitude to the most gigantic inhabit¬ ants that a due regard for the law of gravitation would suffer us to imagine.-— The Beal Shetland Pony. The real Shetland pony is only thirty or at most for y inches high. Those commonly seen in this country are from the north of Ireland, being bread with the horses there, and are larger than the real Shetland for the genuine pony is d.fficult to rear. The country of which he is a< native is bare, and tho farmer is sharp, and when tho little creatures sur¬ vive tho rigors of the climate and the effect of having but little to eat, the fanner values him so highly he only sells him at a high price. It costs a great deal to ship them, and they die o« the voyage, all of which goes to account for there being so few of them among us .—New York Commercial Advertiser, ' ;; m .y: BMHMMihI -is FOE FOWLS. ? ‘he range allowed fl • - —- hriftier * nd ^P A dose, pent-up fowl place in which to grow ffo c p,:, rule, though very many persons ged to keep their choice small flocks thus stinted as to space, and with the special care such owners are pleased to give their poultry, they do passably well. But to raise chickens on a large scale, we must afford them room to run and grow in. They should in cither case, in hot weather be provided with plenty of shade to which they may resort during the heat of the day. If there are no frees, shrubs or vines around the place that afford this shelter from the heat, a rough lean-to «r low open shed will be a good protection from the burning sun’s rays, and prove a grateful spot for them during the “heated term .”— Farm, Fidd ntd Stock man. THE CLOVER CHOI*. If a crop of clover is desired the land must be rich or it must be enriched for the purpose. If the clover is fed and all the manure, liquid as well as solid, is saved and returned to the land, or it is plowed under as green manure, the soil is made richer in available fertility, but not in potential or actual fertility. This fact should be well understood, as it is tho very basis and foundation of good farming and a useful rotation of crops. And it is of the greatest importance to Southern farmers, who have but little stock to make manure and need a green manuring crop to precede their cotton. Nothing can be better for this purposs than clover, which may be grown at a cost of no more than the value of 200 pounds of the best fertilizer and will add to the available resources of the soil as much fertility as could be secured by an ontlay of $50 to $100 per acre in fer¬ tilizers. But it must not lie forgotten that this supply of fertility is only drawn from tho soil by the clover and then re¬ turned to It, and this process is only a temporary resource.—New York Times. OILMEAL FOB THE DAIRY, Adulteration of oil cake and cake meal has long been a standing source of complaint among English farmers, and the evil has become at la.t so ton as to be sdin fhe,hr^l Wmffw^TOicn jgpTTty of Toreign “ncite, are innoxious, but some are quite otherwise. It seems as if American linseed meal is no better, and the manufacturers can afford to wink at adulteration—naturally committed, it 13 true, by growing weeds with tho flax— because the meal sells for enough to pay for all. In fact, the meal is now the most valuable part of tho product to tho oil mills. Cottonseed cannot bo adul¬ terated, for the reasons that cotton will not grow among weeds and that the seeds of weeds cannot be gathered with the lint, which is picked clean and free from all sorts of “trash.” Thus cottonseed meal should bo used in preference to any other oilmen), as it is pure and realiy far bettor for cows than linseed meal, which gives an undesirable flavor to the butter. CROPS THAT PAY. Mr. James Wilson, under the above head in the Homestead, says in substance that the gradual filling up of all depart¬ ments of rural industry, and the conse¬ quent closer competition, is bringing us rapidly to the lime when profit will only be found in the production of tho best. Light draft horses do not pay. Cows that average ono hundred and fifty pounds of butter do not pay. Steers that sell for three and a half cents fat do not pay. Sheep for wool alone do not pay. Illy kept hogs do not pay. Twenty-fivo bushels an acre of corn does not pay. More than two acres to graze a cow does not pay. Yet, what a propor¬ tion of Iowa farmers get no better re¬ turns. We have farmers who raise 1600 pound draft horses and sell them for $200. We have farmers who get 400 pounds of butter from their cows. We have fanners who sell thirty-months-old steers weighing 1403 pounds, others who make Iambs one hundred pounds at six months old and get six cents a pound; some who graze a cow all summer on one acre, others who get eighty bushels of corn an acre. The former set are hard up; the latter are in easy circum¬ stances. What one does, all may do. But it requires study to reach the top. The horse-breeder must know how to breed; the dairyman must know how to selcc 4 and feed cows. The feeder must reject scrub bulls if he would reach the top in weights and prices. Only the most care¬ ful hog raisers avoid disease. Oaly the man who has' a pasture to plow up gets a big corn-ciop from old land. Oaly the wellrbred mutton-sheep produces the outv hundred-pound lamb. No mortal partment unless h* be as business as the nun preme bench are in I CASK OF BROOD MAKES AND COLTS. While in attendance at a recent far¬ mer’s institute, we heard a paper read by Mr. A. 0. Fox of Dane county, Wis., upon the above subject, says the Farm, Fidd and Stockman. This paper was a narration of his own experience in the care of this valuable class of farm animals. The first requisition in producing colts is a good-looking,, strong and thrifty mare. The time has come when we must have quality. The mare is the key stone, no matter how good the sire. We must look for the prims factor in the mare. She must have nerve and mas cle. While the marc is with foal she must havo an abundance of nourishing food and plenty of exercise. Absolute free¬ dom ia exercise is imperative. Our plan is.to turn out early in the fall. When winter comes we turn out to a pasture of blue grass that has been reserved for this purpose. They usually remain here get¬ ting their full feed uitil the middle of Februiry, their shelter being a skirt of timber. There being but little snow this year, they have not been taken up at all as yet. They are taken from this blue gra?s pasture to large yards, where they are fed corn fodder and straw. Avoid feeding clover hay and rye meal. Give the mare a good, dry, level bed. With this care of the mare we do not lose more than one colt out of 25 a year. When the mares are turned to pasture with their colts, we put them at once into one along the side of which is a railroad. The little fel¬ lows soon become accustomed to the passing trains, and quietly sleep, not - withstanding the roar and screech of the locomotive. At one end of this pasture we build an elevated bridge, over which the colts are obliged to pass with their mothers in.order to obtain water. Our colts fire halter brokcu whilu at the side of their dams, their limbs aro handled, and they are given to understand that any and every part of their bodies is to be subject to their groom. In this way, before our colts are weaned, we have them halter broken, car broken, bridge broken, and under complete control. At weaning time feed them bran, and oats before separating from their dams. Wo feed our colts after weaning, oafs, and rye, or barley (we prefer bar ley), equal weight, and one-third bran in bulk. Wc feed five times daily at first, and then three timas.the size of the feed governed by tho size and temperament of the colt. Let them have free access to water. Weanlings enjoy very much the plea3uro of nibbling the tops of pop¬ lar trees, which may be drawn into theii yards. Worms do not injure them. Theso are not mere theories, but tho practice of a thorough-going, successful horse-raiser. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Give your hens plenty of pure water twieo a day. Accept no bushes without good roots of any nurseryman. If you wont good strong chicks, do not imbreed too closely. Be sure that the garden fences are hen-proof before you-plant Be sure and curry the cows now if you have not done it all winter. Fumigate with sulphur, and then whitewash nests, roosts and walls. The earliest onions grow from sots, the longest keeping onions from seed. The American farmer would bo more healthful to eat less hog and more fruit. Do not have a slop hole whi-ih your chickens can reach if you wish them healthy. Hemove all old bird’s nest 3 from fruit trees. They make good lodging pi aces for vermin. Try and fence off a lot for a calf pas¬ ture; calvc3 dp bettor if they havo a lot by themselves, and do not run with older animals. It would be a good plan to plant some mangle wurtzel beets to feed next winter. They are an excellent milk producing food. One of the best systems of economy on the faTm is that which not only maintains fertility, but keeps it con¬ stantly Increasing i^the soil. s It is absolute cruelty to animals to feed them on one thing the year round. How would one of us like to live all summer on pound cake alone? Don’t forget that ducks lay early in the morning. If they are kept shut up till nine o’clock they will lay in (he poultry house, an d not drop their eggs in their swimming places. As milk ia an animal secretion manu¬ factured by the cow, it must be eviden; that anything which worries, frets or terments the cow, or lenders her uneasy or uncorn foldable, will certainly lessen the quantity and affect the composition of her milk. Jipte to make b!r< _____ ■AL’jijjJA.m. . ilngTTirgninynTaM attempts ana meir fail advancement of science, a certain profes¬ sor, Isaac Lancaster, read a paper before the Buffalo Convention, in which hs pro¬ fessed to give the results of many years’ study birds devoted flight. to the observation of in “In 1876,” said Prof. Lancaster, South “I went to the Gulf coast of resided Florida, below Tampa Bay, and there for five years, continuously engaged in this matter. From Tampa Bay to the Keys,soaring birds are found in profusion. These consist of buzzards, frigate birds, various cranes, gannets, eagles, pelicans, gulls, herons, and oth¬ ers of less importance. The buzzards would habitually rest in the sea breeze thirty along the iuner or bay coast, between and fifty feet above the water, fac¬ ing tbe wind for bours at a time on mo¬ tionless wings. They were birds of from four to six pounds weight, with an equal number of square feet of wing sur¬ face. I watched a score of them on one occasion for fourteen consecutive hours, during made which time not a dozen flaps were float for each bird. If a bird can indefinitely in calm air without using muscular exertion, being for mechanical purposes as rigid as aboard, then a board or metal body of the right shape and po¬ sition ought to be able to do the same the thing. In construction fe it must preserve wing.” essential .tures of the bird’s The professor said that nothing was nec¬ essary to success but a nice imitation of tbe figure of a bird when floating in the a : r. plaint wish and other wasting blood diseases. When you to enrich the and purity the all system generally. ing of weaknoas, When you wish lack to remove fuel¬ bottle weariness, Bitters, of energy, try a of Brown’s Iron and see how greatly known it will benefit you. -It surpasses all remedies as an enricherof the blood, and a perfect regulator of the various bodily functions. Ask your druggist. The breweries in Detroit, Mich., have passed Into the contrdl of a British syndicate. I* It any Wander that Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery outsells all other blood and Jiver medicines, einco it possesses such superior curative prop¬ er! ies as to warrant Us ramufacturers la sup¬ through plying it druggists) to tho people undor conditions (as they are such doing, other sold as no medicine is under, viz: that it mus cither benefit or cure the patient, or the money paid all diseases for it will arising be promptly returned. It cures from impure blood, from biliousness, deranged “fiver liver, or os com rheum, plaint," tetter, nil skin scrofulous and scalp diseases, d swellings, sait sores a fever-sores, mtnts. hip-Jolnt disease and kindred ait Nasal $S00 Reward for an incurable cose of chronic Catarrh offered by the manufacturers of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. BO cents, by drug¬ gists. sioek Keep a big piece of rock salt where the can get at it any ! line. Catarrh Cared. A clergyman, after disease. years Catarrh, of suffering and vainly from that loathsome remedy, at last found trying every known cured and saved a prescription which completely dread¬ him from death. Any sufferor from this ful disease sending a seif-addressed stamped Wan envelope Ao Prof. J, A. Lawrence, 88 ea St.. N. Y„ will receive the recipe free of charge. A Difficulty Surmounted. It is often very difficult to tell what kind of a laxative to give to a very young child who is suffering from constipation. The only safe, medicine which is at the Bame time fa perfectly Hamburg Figs, effec¬ tive, and pieasaut w take, 35 cents. Dose one Fig. Mack Drug Co., N. Y. Oirgon, flic Pnrndlve of Farmers. Mild, equable fruit, climate, certain and and abundant crops. Rest grain, grass stock country in the world. Full information free. Address Oreg. Im’igr’t’n Board, Portland,Ore. The Mother’s Friend, used before confine¬ ment, lessens pain and makes labor compara¬ tively easy. Sold by all druggists. 'Sims Vigor and Vitality are quickly elven to erory part of the body by Hood's Sarsaparilla. That tired foellug Ited, stomach is overcome, strengthened, tho blood appetite Is purified and vital* restored. M OTHERS’ FRIEN D nausGHILD BIRTH easy IF USED B EFORE CON FINEMENT. BOOK to “Mothers’’ M aii.kicFree. UKAUFLELD REGULATOR CO., ATI.ANTAfiGA. Sold nr all Druggists. % —3 *-! —3 IS YOUR FARM FOR SALE Z If so address Curtis A Wriobt, 233 Urosdwxy, N.Y. ■fa W. L. DOUGLAS m j ‘-S $3 SHOE GENTLEMEN. FOR * Best in the world. Examine his ■A •S.00 GENUINE HAND-SEWED SHOE. •4.00 HAND-SEWED WELT SHOE. •3.80 POLICE AND FARMERS’ SHOE. •S.SO EXTRA VALUE CALF SHOE. •2.ZB WORKINGMAN’S SHOE. •3.00 GOOD-WEAR SHOE. •3.00 wad 91.78 BOYS’ SCHOOL SHOES. All nude in Congress, Button and Lace. W. L. DOUGLAS k *3 & *2 SHOES JSIk*. Best Material. Best Style. Best Ftttlmr. ; inside os liand-tewed shoes, and no tacks or wax thread *o hurt tbe test. Every pair warranted. V--' ehoes. name and deceived price stamped Dealers on them, make and says they profit are his unknown or shoes just as that good, do not not war- be Jf thereby. more on are ranted by anybody - ,, therefore do not he DOUGLAS’ induced to buy shoes and that.have price no reputa tlon. Buy only those that and have W. L. full value name for •h" slainpedou the bottom, you are sure to get by the yoar money. Thousands W. L. DOUGL of dollars AS’ are SHOES. saved annually In this country wearers of . direct If your to deaier Ids factory, wilt not with get the yon price the , kind enclosed, , or style _ nnd yon they wont, wilt , send be . sent yenror^r you by Ar jF ay Cf canIb“re^^L^^COLl'l"s^OES? ndwlith you wear; If not rare, send for an < ordcrJumfll^Aa Be”u < reSl|jMS Elvinj full It: st rue liens hew to get a perfect fit. W,L k BrocktQ] ffiOOD for Old Sports and Young. Either Sex. Prevents and cares 1 to 6 dsys No s'rieture. Send One Dn-lnr to BIF'W. Cl*.. Box 407. ................ la §§;ai ______ Assorted dolors, set... ids, Biue. PlMir' ’ AsSortad Green. Ma- , Assorted As.o^'oo^k colors, Landscape, n ^'i)«i™tioi;^r Flowc-w, ie„ set 1 00 per set...... .. 8 no Assorted colors, various Decorations, per set 3 75 Wfld Bose, and other Decorations, per set 4 1# Japanese Landscape, My, Ac., per set............. 4 00 50 and Marine, per s-t............. 5 Fall line of White Granite, C. O. and Yellow Ware consisting of Plates, Cups and SaweH, Evers and Basina, Dishes, Bakers, Ac. Full stock of Glassware, such as Tumblers, Goblet-, and Bar Goods, Wines, Ac., Lamp Good* Fixtures, Ac. including Burners, Wicks, Chim¬ neys SSTPrices on application. L* F. BROWN, —importer and jobber of— Earthenware, Glassware, Tinware, US Em* Bay Street, CHARLESTON, 8. C. ; sss SHI WOULD 09325 The world ought t< done for me In tbe cur which was so bad ash bio by the physician went to tie treated. On< me a copy of an silver Swift’s Specific, and 1 relief from tho first fee gradually cured forced sound out o: goon and months since I s -s s no sign of return of s dreadful disease. Au . _ Sable, , . Mich., Dec. Mrs. Arm Botswell. 89, ’38. Send for books on Blood Diseases and Cancer*, mailed free. Tub Swift Specific Co. _Drawer 8. Atlanta, Go, CHICHESTER’S tlXGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS BE2 CHOCS HIAH0N3 B UM. \ reliable Qrigtnnl. Lest, only irvnuinr and / , « pill for sale. Never Fall. C\ £\ A aJ. for HiiChester'» English \ /VK Diamond talllc Brand, sealed *» red me- rib- ' boxes, with blue tfabon. other- At iPruircUt*. All pills In Accept > Jtr jt) board mo boxes, pink wrappers, paste- are danger* a \ •ft* /JT» ey ou« counterfeit. Send 4c. (atampsl for particular* and “KeUeffor Ladle*,”** — Ns letter, by return malL 10,000 tend* raonlali from LADIES who have used them. Name Paper. f’o..]Wnd?«»r»TiSf|..PhHa.*P»a nxr. c. Mile, loading Tetm, College for Young Ladies, Is the school of this seotion. Began 18M with M pupils, without grounds or buildings of its Yu. Now Ijhb 3 buildings* loo rooms, 20 offices, 829 Science, pupils from Art, 18 Mimic, States. privileges Full course in Vanderbuilt in Literature, Uni conveniences. verslty, fully egiiipped For catalogue Gymnasium, ami President. *1) modern Kev. W. F. I>. address Geo. I’bice, B., Nashville, Tenn. Plantation Engines With Self-Contained RETURN FLUE B8ILERS, f COTTON FOR GINS DRIVING and I MILLS. Ulusimctl Pamphlet Free. Address [JAMES I SPRINGFIELD, LEFFEL&Co. OHIO, or 1 10* Liberty St.. New T«*. Road Carls!™* 6 t# »rBuggies! a horse and give their whole time to the business. Spare moments may be profitably employed also. A fewvaoanclesln towns and cities. B. F. JOHN BON A 00., 10» Main St., Richmond,*Va. N. B. PUhh itale aof and (Mlttoi experience. Never mind about tending stamp/or reply. 11. F. J. <• Co. WASHINGTON INFORMATION BUREA0, COLB & DKElilsfi, Proprietors. 932 I Street N. W., Washington, I). C. General information furnished. Correspondence solicited. %£&!£& DETECTIVES Wanted In erery Coantr. Shrewd men to net under instruction* In ear Seoret Service. Experience not necessary. Particular* frees Grannan Detect ire Bureau Co.tf Arcade,Cincinnati.0, WW nsv I EcUa fortune; an opportun ty for people with limited means. Send stamp for particulars, TYLICB. & VO • K* ns »* ( ity, Mo. Blair Dlclll 9 * S Pill* rlllSa Groat Rheumatic English Remedy. Gout and Ov*l Bex. 34 1 round 14 Fill*. A gents "wanted. $1 an hour. 60 new artio-es. Oat’lgu* XX. ami samples free. <J. E. Marshall, Lookport.N. Y. PEERLESS DYES Are Sot>d by the Druggists. BEST. ■ Woo’s Remeuy for Catarrh Is (he B |p| Best. Rosiest to Use, and Cheapest. M It CATARRH tM H! Sold bv T. drustgUto Hoxeltlae, or -Warren, sent by roalL Pa. g|S gg 50C, E. I prescribe and folly on. dorse Big a as certain the only W Onrntn ms, specific (or the cur* I TO § DAYS, wg o’ G.H.ING11AHAM.M.D., this disease. hu m Btrlet ure. Amsterdam, N. Y. lift oat? by the We have sold Big O tor ^Ohi^^ '"MSM^Sark? g V.'lCDYCME^CO..^ tai» SI.00. Sold by Druggist* A. N. U, .... .Twenty-tbree, ’89 TO mow IT. know what 8 8. S. has ofa raaHgnanteancer, bo considered incurs, in Chicago, where I my neighbors gent tisement began taking in regard ft. I got to system, tho poison and I was my is was weK. It now tea 8. S. S. and I magi“: rum-J 16-71? flan) ”adag- \ mfg-mm“; Radium-Em LEWIS“;