Newspaper Page Text
QUAINT ADD CURIOUS.
Twins aged ninety years are living in
Wixom, Mich.
An autopsy on a Wisconsin man a
few days ago revealed fire jsckknives
in his stomach.
In York County, Penn., a party of
tramps recently emptied a water tank
and converted it into a bedroom.
An Iowa girl. Flora Losk, shot a man
dead for serenading her grandfather on
the occasion of his latest marriage.
At Williamsport, Md., is a maple
tree that has a full crop of green leaves,
while every one of its neighbors is dry
and leafless.
A (mart little Pennsylvania girl living
near the Maryland „ , . lice has trapped . ,
enough fur-bearing animals to buy her
self a nice gold watch.
Hi Sevier Oounty, Ark., Nathan Can
non, aged 88, undertook to kick a dog.
The dog dodged and Mr. Sevier was
picked up with a broken leg and wrist.
With a record of having buried
1300 persons, George L. Moore, an aged
undertaker of GuthrieviUe, Penn., has
at last been laid under the soil him
(elf.
A thief stole a pair of shoes from t
policeman at Sedalia, Mo., the othei
night, and the ‘ cop’’ didn’t even stop
snoring while the thief was untying
t fof nn.
Marcel Bernier recently died at his
home at New Aukura Prairie, Washing¬
ton, aged 69. He was the first white
child born in Washington, then Oregon
Territory.
One hundred and sixty-seven bears
were killed in Maine last year. Too
State paid out $835. or $5 per head
bounty. Over $1000 was paid &9 bounty
tor killing crows.
A meteor of great illuminating power
passed over Forkston, Penn., the other
night, and in a minute thereafter a
heavy report was heard, and the earth
•hook perceptibly.
At East Lyons, la., a goose died very
auddenly. On cutting it open a silver
thimble was found in its throat. It is
thought the fowl choked to death while
trying to swallow it.
A petrified moccasin was unearthed
at Pendleton, Ore., by somo laborers
who were digging for the foundation
of a bask building. It was sent to thr
Smithsonian Institution.
The belle at a recent dog feast on an
Indian reservation in Dakota wore a
jacket trimmed with teeth from 150
elks, which she herself had slain. She
is the granddaughter of tho chief of the
tribe.
An espalier pear tree at Pollet,
France, was planted in 1583, and is
now the oldest in Europe. It spreads
100 feet, its stem is three feet through,
and it still bears 3000 to 4000 pears
yearly.
A petrified apple was discovered re¬
cently at Harrington, Me., by somo
boys. It had changed to tho color ot
marble. The stem and bloss im were
apparently as perfect as when the fruit
fell from the tree.
Shearing Geese.
A curious case came before an En¬
glish court for adjudication recently,
eays Galen Wilson, in the American Ag
rieulturut. A poulterer was charged
with cruelty to 48 live geese by pluck
iog them of their feathers,and the own¬
er of the geese was charge! with procur¬
ing the commission of the offence. Th<
proceedings were taken by the Society
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Ani¬
mals. A witness swore that “after the
geese were plucked their skins turned s
purple color and they seemed to be in
pain. They walked about with theii
becks up and shrank when touched.’’
The practice was shown by defendants
to be very prevalent, and tho society
asked for a nominal fine, to put a stop
to it. The defendants said it was the
custom of the district to pluck the
feathers every six weeks, and if
they were stopped from doing
se many people would discontinue
keeping geese, as much more money
was realized by the sale of tho feathers
than by the geese. The court imposed
a fine of eighteen shillings each upon
the defendants, and expressed the hope
that it would be a warning to other
people. Plucking live gocse and ducks
prevails all over the United States. It
is a barbarous proceeding and the birds
are justified in “getting their backs up’’
at the cruel practice. Should such cases
be prosecuted, doubtless the courts of
this country would decide as did tho
court in question. There is a species of
lsrge water-fowl whose habitat in win¬
ter is the open lakes of the interior, and
their feathers aro so firmly set that they
cannot be plucked. Shearing is re¬
sorted to, and many housewives have
beds made of these feathers which al¬
most equal those of eider down, as the
■tiff, troublesome quill-ends are absent.
Shearing , geese and ducks could be
made to supersede plucking.
THE KANGAROO.
An Animal Found Only in Australasia
—Some of Its Habits.
There are various kinds of the kanga¬
roo, which ispeculiar to Australasia. First
in the list stands the fine forest kanga
park grounds. It freqnenting is of light the
grayish-brown open a
color. They often con¬
gregate in flocks of fifty or more, but
are fours, more which frequently is accounted seen in threes and
for by the
quarrelsome disposition of the males,
who when worsted in battle with split
ears and lacerated hides retire from the
main flock and are followed by two or
three sympathizing does. The kangaroo
conceals itself dining the day and comes
out through the night. Its food is the
broad, sweet-leafed grass which takes its
name. It also browses on herbs and the
tendrils of young gum trees. The ani
mal is quite docile and the young one
« veiy easily tamed and domesticated.
It is not unusual in the country districts ■
to see the kangaroo about the house
dividing home with the the honors pet animal of a of white civilization man’s
—the dog.
The kangaroo has been used as food.
The flesh is rathor coarse grained and
tough, but is full of rich, brown gravy.
Its tail has an unusual amount of glu¬
tinous matter and makes a most excel¬
lent “ox"-tail soup. The physical power
of the “boomali”—the male animal—
is very considerable. When hunted it
invariably hole. seeks refuge in some lake or
water Here it will stand in about
four feet of water, and dexterously ply¬
ing sailant its powerful dogs until arms they will duck half its as¬
are or
wholly drowned. Should it be brought
to bay away from the water, its aim is
to (dutch the dog in its short and mus¬
cular forearms, and with the cutting
daw of its hind leg rip its enemy’sbody
open. The wallaby, from its remarkable
beauty comparison and with symmetry, the other bears species the same
as
does the beautiful gazelle with the var¬
ious classes of its kiud. The height of
this graceful little animal, when erect,
does not exceed fifteen inches, but
the color of the fur is not so
agreeable chocolate to the eye indefinite as its form, brown being
of a
cast. The flesh of the wallaby does not
possess the same juicy richness as that
of the two mentioned species, but is
nevertheless of an extremely delicate
character. This description with in the of kanga
ro is lift only dells, met with most
secluded overgrown scrub
and eorpsewood, but always rivulet. on the banks
or well-furred in the vicinity skin of of the some wallaby is The
more
valuable than all other kangaroo skins
for the manufacture the folds of which large the sleeping tired
rugs, in of
huntsman wraps himself at night and
bids d<•fiance to cold and wot.
One wbffid imagine that the kangaroo
rat is so called fre in some resemblanoe
to lihel the ordinary this*little rodent, marsupial. but this name It fre¬ is
a on
quents rabbit, tlw and open in parks, all its and formation is as large is as
a a
miniature representation of the more
noble forest kangaroo.
The Teacher Let That Boy Alone.
It is universally has admitted penchant that for bngs the
small boy who n
and insects and There reptiles is is tho of worst this va¬
riety of boy. one sort
in Atlanta who is an ornament to his
peculiar order of small boy. He spends
his afternoons and all of his spare time,
of which foraging ho seems in to have a good for bugs sup¬
and ply, lizards. in Every the morning country he takes
in
his pockets to school the result of liis last
raid. Monday the specimens of insect
iferous and reptilian life that lie can
fish up from the depths of his trousers
pockets are many and varied, and awful
to touch and look at. Last week the
teacher took an inventory pockets, of the bugs
and beasts found in his or that
escaped therefrom and terrified the other
children—and the teacher.
There were several varieties of bee¬
tles, pigeons with broken wings, English
sparrows, butterflies, devilhorses, slugs,
snails, earth-worms, lizards, a damp snake and or
two and an occasional frog,
cold One day and he slyly opened the in flap his
i hard, if his resolute pocket, effort then to make went his on teacher
think lie was studying. After awhile
the teacher noticed a grasshopper hop¬ desk
ping agilely from desk to
amid the titter and a tee-kee of the
scholars. A chase was begun, when an¬
other grasshopper was seen, then an¬
other. and they were /everywhere sticking hop¬
ping all over feel tho room, little apd giris’ _ hair,
their sharp in the
frightening them italf to oath.
“Come here 1” shouted the teaoher to
tho tender lover of insects, as Bhe
reached for a ferule. “Give »e your
hand, sir.”
Tho naturalis held out his hand as
if he was a martyr to science, The
teacher was about to seizo it when she
caught sight of two green eyes that
Hashed at her from the that boy’s seemed hand and a
sharp forked tongue to dart
into her face. The boy had a snake
coiled around his arm. He was not
feruled and the teacher has not felt well
since .—Atlanta (O’a.) Journal.
Dr. McGJynn will spend the coming summer
in a lectur* tour through Great Britain and
Ireland.
Prepare for Spring
Now is the lima to attend to your personal condi¬
tion in preparation for the change to spring Bea¬
con. It you Uave not “wintered well," it you are
tired out from overwork, if your blood hae become
impure from cloae confinement in badly ventilated
office* or shops, yon should take Hood's Sarsaparilla
at once. It will purify and -viisUs* you blood,
create a good .ppetlt*, and give you wdasl. system
ton. and etrength.
"For a ftnt-dsM sprjag nwdiotoe my wife and I
think very highly ot Hoed’* Sarsapulll*. We both
took It last spring. It did us s grsst dsai ad good
and w* felt better through the hot weather than
ever before It cured ray wife of rick hea d a c h e,
from which the ha* suffered a great deal, and re¬
lieved me of adiasy, tired feeling. I think every
one ought to take eomethlng to purify the blood be¬
fore the hot weather cornea on, and we shall ear.
tatnly take Hood's Sanaparllia this spring.’’—
1. H. Fuses, Sap*. Granite Ry. Co., Oomoord, X. XL
Hood's Sarsaparilla
•tu aft hy *u dregs baa. fl| rixfergL Frsputosgfiy
t HOOD a 00, A j conasttea UmM, Mae*
L.r
i^ s “ e&u.
There lived in
few years ago a woman who managed this
jy- baby-in-the-bureiui question most skillul
To begin with,the baby,as well as the
bureau, was her own. Her method was
to remove the - wo upper drawers, " and
seating the child jn the lower drawer,
gently slide it shut and turn the key.
The child _ then sat up of its own accord,
and with its head in the space vacated by
the upper drawers, crowed merrily away
for hours. Not imfrequently, the mother
thus left the child to .attend to he? duties
in another room, or even to go on shop¬
ping expeditions requiring an hour or
two. Confined in this improvised cradle,
the child was not always quiet, but it
could neither harm inseH nor any of the
objects knew. about it, and this the mother
Hark! to the sound of humanity’s wails!
Millions of people with aches and with ails.
Headaches and numors, a merciless flood,
Weakness of lungs and disorders of blood.
Yet there’a a helper that (tertainly saves,
1 bousands of people Pierced from premature graves.
The remedy Is Dr. Golden Medical
Discovenr. It cures coughs, relieves asthma,
checks bronchitis, purities the Wood, heals
sores, eruptions *° and unsightly pimples and is
adteorteredll r ^All drMgig trotn
Sags’* Catarrft Be* ed”* Of d/ggtgfe UBe **
fast Strange color. to What say, the color that inns is not a
a curious language ours is?
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
taking F. J. Hall’s CHENEY Catarrh CO.. Cure. Props., Toledo.
& O.
Cheney We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
for the last 16 years, and beileve him
perfectly honorable in all business transact¬
ions and financially able to carry out any obli¬
Weer gation made & Tun by their Wholesale firm. Druggists, Tole¬
do, O. ax.
Warding. Kinnan & SUavm. Wholesale
E. H. Druggists, VanHoksks, Toledo, Cashier, O. Toledo National
Hall’s Bank, Catarrh Toledo, Cure O.
lng directly Is taken Int ly, aot
upon the blood and mt urfaces
of the Druggists. system. Price 75o. per hot by
all
No stranger should leave lelty without a
box of “Tansill’s Punch” 6c.
Watch for “Murray” Buggy aftv. next week.
&fcpP|®Gs
K
Bfer'
ONB KJVJOY®
Both the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing of Figs is taken; the it is pleasant
to taste, and acts
gentlyyet Liver and promptly Bowels, on the Kidneys,
cleanses the sys¬
aches tem effectually, and fevers dispels colds, head¬
and cures habitual
constipation. only Syrup kind of Figs is the
duced, remedy pleasing of its ever pro¬
to the taste and ac¬
ceptable its action to and the stomach, prompt in in
truly beneficial its
effects, prepared onlv from the most
healthy its and excellent agreeable substances,
mend many it all and have qualities com¬
to made it
the most popular remedy known.
and Svrup $1 bottles of Figs by is all for leading sale in 50o
fists. Any reliable druggist drag- who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept
•ny substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIO SYRUP CO.
8AH FRANCISCO, CAL
UWSVILLB, a. sew mm, e.r.
J-i .-’'MOTHERS fRIEND”
taw I
S«
Ur! FEVER HAY- ‘fEVfa! im-m
50 Cts.
COLD-HEAD ELY BROTHERS, 60 Warren St., New York.
f A F YOU WISH A /->---- ---
GOOD f ^ SMITH kmSQNF* J vSb
REVOLVER -
purchase one of the cele- Nrc? —
orated SMITH & WESSON
arms. The finest small arms // )]
eVsr manufactured all and the \V
fiHit choice of experts.
Manufactured action, in cslibreR Bafety 32,3 38 Hammer and 44-ieo. less Sin
rle or double aud
Target models. Con«trncfed entirely of bpst qun 1
Ity wrought stock, nteel» they carefully unrivaled inspected for for flnlHli* work¬
manship and are Donotbedeceivedbv
durability nnd nccurncy. which
cheap malleable cast-iron imitation*!
are often sold for the genuine article and are not
onlv unreliable, but dangerous. The SMITH &
WESSON Revolver* are all stamped upon the bar¬
rel# with firm’s name, address and dates of patents
»nd »re guaranteed the genuine perfect article, in every and detail. if In¬
sist upon having supply address rour
dealer cannot you an and Order careful sent to
below will receive prompt furnished attention.
Daearptlveoataloeue SMITH and prices & WESSON, u»wn ap
WRention isils paper. Springfield, Maas.
CHICHEBTEW'6 ENGLISH
wo™,"?. *tk DrotriM m«»M; tor fcoiM, JHsmsi waUd Bras, i, 5 A jl
— »Hh (,i M
Or daagw*.a counterfeit* Send 4c. .
f si Sh Sm t qJfTu.XrihmSs.Pld
i r
Trietary.
Even in buying toilet soaps, said
dealer, you are not always sure that
are getting the worth of your money.
good toilet article should not contain
more than from nine to eighteen per cent,
of water. The unscrupulous manufac¬
turer increases the amount in
ways. In some instances he forces
into the soap as it hardens after the boil¬
ing it undergoes; in other instances
mixes the water by mechanical means into
the soap ; in a third and equally large class
class of cases he introduces sonte powerful
chemical, enables such as Glauber’s salts, which
Lum to introduce as much as sev¬
enty per cent, of water. It is obvious,
therefore, that ten pounds of honest toilef
soap would contain nine pounds if thor
oughly dried, and that ten pounds treated
chemically pounds. would contain less than three
Nor is the wrong confined to
selling innocent the three pounds for nine to the
is affected purchasers. The spurious soap
the genuine. by water five times as much as
In the wash-bowl or bath¬
tub it dissolves visibly before the eye.
Where it is honestly made rival con be
used fifty times, it only lasts ten. If left
by the accident in the water, it dissolves until
There surrounding liquid this is thick suds.
are soaps of sort in the market
which are advertised as first class and sold
who at high prices. Have an eye on the man
calls op you and pretends to give
you last bargains by saying it is the
of the lot, and tempts you with a
quick-falling fume is there, scale of prices. The per¬
and the showy wrapper;
but it is sixty per cent, water, instead of
honest soap.
Queer Patents.
One of the most original patents is an
automatic bath tub, which starts the hot
and cold water at a given moment in the
tains morning to which it has been set, main¬
by graduating exactly the right temperature of it
the flow of water, rings a
bell when all is ready, and, two minutes
later, suddenly drops the sleeper’s pillow
about a foot and turns him out. Among
other odd. inventions are “chicken hop¬
ples,” which walk the chicken right out
of the garden when she tries to scratch;
“the bee moth excluder,” which auto¬
the matically hens shuts up all the beehives when
go to roost; “educational bal¬
loon,” a toy balloon with a map of the
world on its surface; side-hill annihila
tors, ”—stilts to fit on the down hill legs
of a horse when he is ploughing along a
side hill; and of the “hen surpriser,” a
device that drops the newly laid egg
through the bottom of the nest, with in¬
tent to beguile laying and wheedle the hen into
at once another.
Mere Mower Shows.
■ ‘ irowadajs, . , a house orf mourning be
conies, on the day of the funeral, a sort
of floral exhibition. In many instances
the persons indulging in these displays
can ill-afford the expense, as the unpaid
florist and undertaker can testify. It is
well enough to have a floral wTeath or
cross, or a few cut flowers at a funeral.
The other day I attended a funeral, and,
although who had the deceaseu was a poor laborer
worked for a dollar and a half a
clay, the flowers covering his casket must
have cost over a hundred dollars. It
would have been better to have given his
poor widow the money than spent it for
useless flowers. This is an evil that
should be remedied.
Pleasure Is a shadow, but knowledge
is ecstatic in enjoyment, perennial in
fame, unlimited in space, and infinite in
duration. In the performance of its great
offices it fears no danger, spares no ex
pense, looks into the volcano, dives into
the ocean, perforates the earth, wings its
flight into the skies, enriches the globe,
explores distant, sea and land, contemplates th«
examines the minute, compre¬
hends the great, and ascends to the sub¬
lime; there is no place too remote for its
grasp, no sphere too exalted for its reach.
Let a man practice the minor virtues.
IIow much of life is lost in waiting! Let
him not make his fellow-creatures wait.
How many words and promises are prom¬
ises of conversation I Let his be words
of fate.
GOING uuinu WEST N ^i»
-TAKE ONE OF THE
BURLINGTON ROUTE
-THROUGH TRAINS FROM
ST. LOUIS AND CHICAQO
Kansas City, St. Joseph, Denver, St.
Paul and Minneapolis.
The Best Line for all Points Coast. North and
eat an <1 the Pacific
CHEAP LANDS.
Alone the Linos of tho Bill'll li ft (on Route in Ne¬
braska, Kansas. Colorndo, Thorp Wyoming is still and Government Northwest- Land
evil somo the
awaiting he hnd settlement. These Lands are Agricultural among b«tt
to auy whore in the oountry for aud,
Grazing purposes. For pamphlets and other matter,
giving of theBnrliiiffton location nnd full Route particulars, address any Agent
orthehndersigned.
A MAP OF TJEIE UNITED STATES.
showing A large, handsome Map of the United States,
iSioTth and South Dakota, mounted and
suit able for office and home use, nnd issued by the
*‘If II r ling to II Route**’ qri}l bp furnished respon¬
sible parties Free on application to
<.en’l A (rent Burlington Route,
Atlanta, tin.
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT
DR. LOBB
SLiil North Fifteenth St., PMtidelphl*, Flu, lot
Uie treatment of Blood Poisons, Skin Eruption*
Nervous Complaints, Bright's Disease, Stricture*
Impotency long standing and kindred diseases, no matter of how
OTTen or from what cause originating,
^nd for days medicines furnished by moil rare Tntu
Book on HFECIAIj Diseases.
L Faxquhar'a improved Cotton Planter
Very —“Sills Simple and Perfect in Its Operation; Drop*
fmsi” " vv ihoObeopJt,
/ r
m - ’J/OOTTM
± W PLANTER in exigence.
SE.ND FOR CATALOGUE.
Address, A. B. FAKQLHAK. York, Po.
THE STAR
b^FEED GRINDER
- The Fastest sad Cheapest "ZS
k Grinder made. Grind. 15 to
a bushels per Hour ot Ear small C«rn
dry or damp, «hd all
’ Grain, Write for circular.
.
A STAR MFG. CO.,
Pycw Lexington, Ohio,
out pale. Book of par
I Sb.m.woouj^^ld.; ticol&rs sent 2 dff
\4* 2 y.* OMMItKWfi&hsUat.
0
k -=> A a.
4 3
/
,£L i-f*
y *5/ i *
'4 i* 5 **
m yJi
s
4
5#
tff m
$((p m mrnmgk a
\ -
V*.]
m
•v*-’ • • •• •• * . • ? ......• I' Copyright.*1888,‘ ‘
JEWELS AND LACES.
“ Oh, girl with the jewelled fingers,
Oh, maid with the laces rareT”
What are your jewels and what are your
laces worth to you if, from undergoing the
trying ordeals its devotees, which fashionable and which society im¬
poses on the are enough
to of test the most physical robust, strength and endurance
you break down, lose
your health and become a physical wreck,
as thousands do from such causes ?
Under such circumstances you would
laoes willingly give all your jewels and all your
If to wifi regain lost health. This you can do
you but resort to the use of that
great restorative known as Dr. Pierce’s Fa¬
vorite Prescription. bless toe day it Thousands of grateful
them. women was made known to
For all those derangements, irregularities
and weaknesses peculiar to women, it is the
only remedy, sold by druggists, under a
positive that guarantee it wifi from toe manufact¬
urers, will give be satisfaction in every
case, or money been refunded. This guar¬
antee has printed on the bottle-wrapper
and faithfully carried out for many years.
As an invigorating tonic, it imparts
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets regulate and cleanse the liver,
stomach and Weis. One a dose. Sold by druggists.
The Spirit of Sacrifice.
The spirit of sacrifice cannot be too
has highly _ valued. If presence or absence
always marked the difference be¬
tween the loving, sympathetic, generous
and heroic man, and the cruel, hard, sel¬
fish, and mercenery one. Human nature,
everywhere and always, bow’s in rever¬
ence before the spirit which inspires a
man and to give up pleasure or advantage,
object accept pain or deprivation for some
or person outside of himself. This
it is which has enabled the martyr to suffer
for his principle, and the hero to die in
defense of his country; this it is which
supports and makes possible the loving,
patient and helpful lives of thousands of
men and women who endure hardship
without a murmur, and spend their lives
in joyful devotion to some good cause
they have at heart or to some be¬
loved ones who are dearer to them than
their own private happiness.
You know, that if you had a bent tube,
arm of which was the size of a pipe
and tKe other was big enough to
the ocean, water would stand at the
height in one as in the other. Con¬
troversy equalizes way—and fools and wise men m
same the fools know it.
I lc.os upon a library as a kind of
chemist’s shop, filled with the
of all forms and hues which have
from the union of individual thought
local circumstances or universal
J
L. DOUGLAS’
SHOE a entlemen.
BEST IN THE WORLD. V 1
Other MISSES specialties and for ROYS. GENTLEMEN, LA.
None genuine bottom. unless Sold name everywhere. and price ars
d op
tsrSeud addrese on peetal for valuable
W. L DOUQLAS, Brockton, Mmi,
JONES
p mmm&
860 .
JONES OF BINGHAMTON,
BINGHAMTON, y. y. »
full 100 outfit *|. of SSJWWSs Dr. Merrill's Vegetable C
sole agency, pt. Merrill, 385 Main St. ompeund. Barton. Give
t., Raw.
* *■***? »
CATARRH
edteths
worked, strength “worn-out,” to the whole system. For
“run-down,” _
tated teachers, milliners, debili¬
seamstresses, “shop-girls,” housekeepers, dressmakers,
erally, nursing Dr. mothers, Pierce’s and Favorite feeble women gen¬
is the greatest earthly boon, Prescription being
qualed appetizing une
as an cordial and re¬
storative tome.
•As a soothing and strengthening nervine.
““Favorite Prescription ” a unequaled and
is invaluable in allaying and subduing nerv¬
ous hyst eria, excitability, and other exhaustion, prostration,
symptoms, commonly attendant distressing, nervous
tional and organic disease. upon func¬
freshing sleep It induces re¬
and relieves mental anxiety
and despondency.
An Illustrated Book of 160 pages, treating
of ‘Woman and Her Diseases, and their
Self-cure," receipt sent sealed, in plain en
on of ten cents, in stamps.
Association, Address, World’s Dispensary 1
No. kr
If you have a
er
acute or leading to
CONSUMPTION,
OF PUKE COO I.IYER OIL
AND HYPOPHOSPHITES
OF LIME AND SODA
xs sti»B CTJB.H von nr.
This preparation contains the stimula¬
ting properties of the UtjpophusxIMa
and fine Kortveyiim Cod IAver Oil, Used
by physicians ail the world lime* ever, it la os
palatable as milk. Three a* efllca
cious ae plain Cod Liver Oil. A perfect
Emulsion, better than aliothersmade. For
all forme of Hast luff Diseases, Bronchitis,
Sorofula, CONSUMPTION, and Flesh Producer
as a
there is nothing like SCOTT’S EMULSItM.
profuse It is sold explanation by all Drug-lute. Impudent Letnooueby"
or entreaty
Induce you to accept a substitute.
BUSINESS
yi'' COLLEGE,
NASHVILLE, TENN.,
has This College, than UOO though yet in its Infancy,
more former Undent* occu¬
ceiving pying good position*, many $000 of them re¬
salaries ranging from to $1,-
500 per annum. For circulars, address
H. W. JENNINGS, Prtn,
FORA Doulila Breedi-ymaNt
r», #1 to 250.
TOtOfttev It-Hot Rifle*, >11 to git.
|to**eh.!aa<8taar Rtf*, $2.6* to flt.OO.
Read SeUtoMklug Revolvers, Wekel-pUted, fS.QO,
2c. atamp for fiO-par* Catalogue and save 25 Mr amt.
GRIFFITH A SEMPLE, 512 W. Main, Louisville, If*
SHOW GASES
Will and Prescription 0*a«s, Otdsr Ohssta, Bubs,
rnmitwr., Jevrelr, Trays, Stools. Cabinet work ol *11
kind,. Complst. outfits for etores. Send lor OaUlogn*.
ATLANTA SHOW CASE CO
ATIjANTA, GFA.
S 0UTHERH iS s .;o?x UPPJLY co *
Type, Cases, Stands, Presses ,
AND **«per Cutter«
EVERYTHING USED IN A PRL«tNG QJ»
PUBLISHING HQVJiJjl.
IW Cnll on u. amt SA\I3 HONEY!
34 West h\$m Street, ATLANTA, 61.
BSSSB gMS
OPIUM S“L%i!gi£§
Ovwla
We have sold Big G for
D. R.DYCHE & CCL
A. N. U....... >1.00. Bold by DtoSSffi
....... -Aight, mo.