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THE WATCH OH CHRISTMAS EVE.
'Close by the cliimnoy, on Christmas Kvo,
* - Ttfcl*
ny forma;
I the
Are huddled two I
The rafters creak and the windows shrink,
And the night 1-j wild with storms.
•Tls a lonely watch, for the specter doubt
Has entered n childish brea9t,
And faith to night must be lost In sight,
And the spirit laid at rest.
“Are you sure he’ll come?” says a tiny voice;
“Oh, say you are certain quite;
Oh, what could we do if it shouldn't be true,
And nobody eamo to-night?”
etcr f
But the sweeter tones of a childish trust
llrcak In on the othor's doubt:
”Oh, never you fear, you’ll soe him here
When the midnight bells ring out.”
•Perhaps they have told us a story, though,
You see wo're such little boys;
I should feel so bad,1 thought thoy had,
That I’d hate the Christinas toys.
l)o you think he’ll care for the wind and ratn-
Thov say he’s getting old—
With that heavy paok on his poor hump-back,
And tbe night Is so very co Ii
“1 toll you the reindeer brings him boro,
And the load of toys Is light:
Ills cost Is warm, and he laughs at the storm;
I know lie'll ooino to night.
There never can ho a doubt, I say,
oh, never a oausa to fear;
Our wxteh we'll keep whtlo theothers sloop,
And we're sure to see him here.”
lint the mlnutos drag, and the small heads
droop,
When soft through the parlor door
Two shadows creep, whllo tbe blight eyes
sleep,
For the hold night watch Is o'er.
They cram the stockings with loads of toys,
And then, with stealthy tread,
They lift each form In Its night-gown warm
And put the watchers to bod.
Convalescence and Ita Trials.
Tlio curl3' part of convalescence U oft
en a trying lime to the feeblo invalid,
The friends about you have heretofore
been so quiet and anxious and tearful,
fearing you were slipping nway from
them into tlio shadows of the great un
known, that now, tlio crisis past, tlioir
ligbt-bcnrtodnoss, their bustle and talk,
their slight relaxing of attention, is too
sudden a change, and seems toyour fee
ble and weakened senses much tike care
lessness, indifference ami lack of heart.
Tho only troublo is, thov do not quito
comprehend how feeblo and 111 and
nervous you still are.
Sometimes in this first part of conva
lescence that patient who has hereto
fore boon nuiot as a mouse, grows ull at
opco •‘totieny” and hard to suit. Tho
nerves woro at first perhaps too weak
to rebel; now thoy aro jaded and sore,
and no ono hut those who havo had ex
perience can understand how trilling ft
thing will hurt and jangle tliom.
Something similar to theso expe
riences is often felt by the young and
rather feeble mother in tho trying after-
days. When thoso about her are re
joicing that "the worst is over," it often
seems to her that the worst has ins', ar
rived, and she lies with strength spent
and nervos nt oneo weak and tense, and
weighted down with such varied and
accumulated discomforts as it seems to
lior site cannot onduro. and often, un
fortunately, with no ono about her who
possesses tlio wisdom to understand
tho miseries of her case. Under theso
conditions all bustle should be strictly
prohibited; visits to her and the little
stranger doforrod; and all exertion and
anxiety on her part carofully guarded
Against. What sho craves is rest, quiet
nnd soothing influences, nnd these she
•hould have.
With convalescence comes an effort
to return to the ordinary habits of life,
among which is the habit of eating. At
this stago the nurso re piires not a little
discretion nnd tact. Sometimes tho np-
potitc is fcoblo; sometimes it is rapa
cious, nnd requires curbing and re
straint. In tho lattor caso it is inju
dicious nnd cruel to bring within sight
of the convalescent things which enuuot
bo allowed, or to bring hoapod-up
plates of goodies and oxpoet solf-cou-
trol. Tho bolter way is to bring into
the sick-room at each meal only what is
permitted.
When the appetlto is feeble, nnd it is
desirable that it bo gently coaxed, it is
quil»' as dosirablo that tlio plates should
not lie overloaded as beforo; an over
flowing cup or piled-up platter will
often produce tho opposite, effect from
that desired, and turn what was before
only indifference to food, into absoluto
loathing of it. It is better, too, not to
harrass the patient with questions as to
what would bo preferred, but rather
make trial of this and that which seems
suitable; often something coming unex
pectedly will relish much bolter with
tlio sick than what is foreknown.
Also it is desirable that the dishes, or
somo ono of them, shall have an agree
able and appetizing -moll. This may
Boom foolish and unimportant, but It is
not. It scarcely need be said that eaeV
articlo should bo prepared so as not
only to have an agreeable taste, but an
ngroenblo look also; that the dishes, if
not new, should at least bo froo from
nicks or cracks; that tho knives and
silver should be shining, and the nap
kins clean and white.—Country (lenllc■
The Horse Dodged.
Tho venerable animnl that draws tho
coach of Dr. Hreckcnridge, of Norwich,
fell down in Main street, Tuesday after
noon, throwing Dr. Ureckenridge over
tho dashboard. The doctor picked him
self up, and walking to the side of tho
ancient brute, sternly said: “Blast you,
1 prom sod you I’d beat 3’ou if you didn't
slop stumbling down; now I’m going to
ilo it.” Tlio doctor went off and got a
club. He marched up t > tho animal
swinging the stick. The horse squinted
at him. The club was lifted and came
down with a swoop. Tho horse saw it
coming and dodged. Ho wasn't there
when the club struck. The doctor was.
lie thinks his kneo-nan will get well in
abo.it two weeks.—A r <
Dan.
\'ew London (Conn.)
—A house-keoper of forty years’ ex
perience (jives the following directions
for preparing corned beef for tho table:
If dinner is at six o’clock, put on a
piece that weighs eight pounds at one
o’clock, and let it boil gcntlv until it is
time to serve it. If dinner is at twelve
or one o'clock, tho beef should be put
on to boil as early as seven o’clock. If
boiled for this length of time, anil gen
tly, it will be very tender and have a line
flavor. —N Y. Post.
FOREIGN GOSSIP.
—The Hungarians have a national
dance—“the esards’’—intended to rep
resent “tho unquiet course of true
love.” We have never seen tho dance,
but presume the greater part of it con
sists of an elderly gentleman kicking a
young mo,n off the front stoop.— liur-
linaton Hawkcve.
—The population of Nevada County
California, is increasing steadily. One
woman there gave birth recently to her
tweutiety child. /_
—England's national debt was £839,-
000,000 in lair. To-day it is £703,000,-
000.
—A new underground railway Is pro
posed for Paris, to cost about $30,000,-
000. The central station is to bo at tho
I’nlnci? do la Bourse. In all, tbe lines
will bo twenty-four miles.
—The Emperor of Austria’s brother,
Charles liouis, has for tho first time
been elected Burgomaster of Arstctton.
His forester and tbe village bootmaker
are elected on tho Council.
—Cremation has established a firm
foothold in Italy. At a convention just
hold in Modena there woro representa
tives of twenty-seven cremation socio-
ties established in different Italian citios.
—The famous Garden Gully United
Mine, at Sandhurst, Australia, has de
clared its 2001,h dividend. The profits
distributed by this company amount to
$3,900,000. Tho product in tho last
twelve years has been twolvo tons of
gold.
—When tho Queen goes to Balmoral
sho goes by special train, commanded
by special servants. The trip thoro nnd
back is said to cost tho snug sum of
£2,500. Other members of tho royal
family, howovor, travel in “saloon car
riages” by an ordinary train at first-
class fares.
—At a conference of nut anil bolt
makers at Darlaston, England, a short
time ago, it was stated that numbers of
women worked in tho forges making
nuts and bolts. They worked with tho
men, and frequently labored sovonlcon
hours a day. It was decided to bring
tho mattor before Parliament.
—Fifty years ago tho name of Parnell
was ns prominent in Parliament ns it
is to-day. In 1831 was published “The
People’s Book," containing an anno
tated list of the two British Houses of
Parliament. It thus deaoribos Mr. C. S.
Parnell’s great-unolo, Sir Henry Parnell,
Afterward Ixml Congloton: “lie Is an
able, industrious, liberal nnd efficient
member of Parliament. It was upon
bis motion for a committee of inquiry
into the civil list that the Wellington
Cabinot was broken up.”
—Several members of n boat club at
Frankfort-on-the-Main recently resolved
to row to Mayonco by night. It was
just 10 o'clock when they seated them-
sclvos in their boat, grasped their oars,
and bado their friends on sboro fare
well. They pullotl rigorously all night,
greatly enjoying tho healthful oxorciso,
tho gloom ana quiet, anil tho weird
beauty of tlio rivor. Their own chagrin
and the wild delight of their friends
may bo imagined wlum they found at
sunrise that thoy had forgotten to weigh
auohor, and wore still fast to tlio float
from which thoy embarked. They are
now known to nil Frankfort as “tho ex
plorers.”
—The great ball at Hatfield, Lord
Salisbury’s seat, for tlio corning of ago
of his son, Lord Cranborno, proved a
strange and interesting experience to
Loudon socioty, which mustored in great
force and was more Amorioan than
English in its character. Tho ladies
got themselves up in cloaks and furs of
various kinds, as if for adventure. Tlio
men went in thick boots or galoshes,
and carried their pumps in their pock
ets. Hatfield disputes with Burghloy,
the Marquis of Exoter’s seat, tho dis
tinction of being tho best house in Eng
land. A largo temporary iron building
was put up in front of the houso for
supper, the marble hall was ilovoted to
tea, and the danoing took place in tho
gallery.
A Man to Tie To.
He was passing tho City Hall on the
Michigan avenue sido at two o’clock
yesterday afternoon when ho struck an
Icy spot.
Usual result.
Tho ice slipped under him (on arils
Woodward avenue, and lie slipped
ahead towards Grisw o’d street.
It has been figured that only one man
in 3,256,807 can save lilmsclf under
such circumstances.
Ho clawed—lie wobbled—ho went
down.
Hat to tho right—cane to tho loft-
legs all over—pavement unhurt.
Usual number of boys around.—usual
yells of delight, together with at least
fifty sarcastic inquiries as to whether I10
intended to have his photograph taken
then or w ait till some dark night
A few feet away a lone man stood
loaning against a post. His oars began
to work, liis faoo grow red, and it was
plain that ho wanted to yell right out.
But something restrain'd him. Tho
victim arose, picked up his hat and cane,
and with a benign expression on his
face walked up to thO man at tlio post
and said:
“Mr. Brown, did you sco mo tum
ble?”
“Yes, sir.”
“And you want to laugh?’’
“N-no, sir.”
"Yes, you do! Don’t lio about it, for
I’ve been right there myself! You want
to laugh, and yet you know that 1 hold
a mortgage on your houso and lot and
an foreclose. Now, then, I'll extend
tho time a full year, aud you go ahead
and laugh all you want to!”
“But, sir
“Shut up! Laugh, sir—laugh! Good
day!”
Tho citizen walked away with a limp,
gazing straight bofore him, and tlio man
at the post let go anil laughed until a
policeman eamo along and rubbed snow
on the back of his neck.
That’s tho kind of people there aro in
Detroit. Thoy don't slip up and claw
around and take a drop without expect
ing to make the world brighter and bet
ter for some poor mortal.—Detroit Fret
Press.
—Tho Irish Lambs, a Montreal socie
ty, took offence at tho manner in which
Y.
the Irishmen of tho New York shanties
were put on the stage, in the play of
“Squatter Sovereignty,” and sent word
to the theater that they would whip tho
eutiro company if a reformation was
not made. On the following night tho
aotors appeared in evening dress, with
faces clean and hair neatly brushed.-—
N. Y. Sun.
—On tho day that a divorce was
granted to Mrs. Perkins, a Kansas
■woman, she was lying dead in the
house and the body of her husband was
banging to tho limb of a tree ono dy
ing of heart-disease and the other com
muting suicido.—Denver Tribune,
A Queer Profession.
Stepping from a Randolph street car.
lost evening, an elderly man slipped,
dropped a bundle, and about fifty pecul
iar tools were scattered about the street
1 hat s a jimmy,” said a bystander,
referring to one of the instruments and
the remark, coupled with the suspicious
character of the articles, induced a re-
J’orter to interview tho man as soon :u
lie had gathered bis bundle again.
“Why, I’m simply a safe-opener,”
saul the stranger, “that’s all. You
might think I was a cracksman, but I
ain’t Never heard of it? Why, they’re
in every big town. There's five of ’em
hero in Chicago and many in tho coun
try. Sort of a doctor, you might say.
You sco, when a man's’out of order he
sends for a physician, nnd you’ve got
born doctors nnd cow doctors nnd all
kind of doctors, nnd I’m asafo doctor.”
And tho old man laughed and tied un
liis bundle
“A safe,” lio continued, “is lika
anything else. It’s liable to got out ol
sorts, and all the safe-makers iiavc men
to put them to rights again. Some one
•nay change tho combination and for
get the new one, or a bolt breaks, or n
time-lock gets out of order, or thieves
trv to blow the thing open, or—but it
all comes to one point. Thoy cannot
open tho sa r e, nnd so they send for mo,
and I go with my tools. ‘ 1 look nt the
safe just as a doctor looks at a sick
man, find out where tho trouble is and
go to work at it. I’ve boon at it over
thirty years. I've got about a hundred
different tools, and they differ In weight
front loss than ono ounce up to twenty
or thirty pounds. Sometimes 1 start
out to ilo ft job in tho country with two
or three hundred pounds of tools. Yes,
safe openers from Chicago go all over
tho \\ est. I've been out to Denver my
self to open one, and I know a m:in
that went from Now York to Mexico to
open a bank-safe. There's a safe-
factory at Omaha now, nnd ono up at
St. Paul, and they cut in on the trade a
little, but not much. There's plenty of
work, and its a special branch of’tho
business, keeping men busy nil tlio
timo. I've got over a dozen safes in
town now 11 attend to, and two or
three outside. Sometimes 1 can open
ono in a few minutes, ami again I havo
to work hard for several days bofore it
opens. Tho hardest job I ever bad was
up at Dcs Moines. It took me eight
days, nnd then 1 had to break the safe
all to pieces. l’eoplo don’t under
stand the combination business. Thoy
should change tho combination at
least every three months, for it
wears out quickly. Then when they do
change, they should remember it, or
there will be trouble. More than half
of my work comes from peoplo forget
ting tlio combination. Thoy don’t
want to write it out for fear some ono
would get it, so they commit it to mem
ory and got it mixed. I once had a
ease at Sigourney, Iowa, where a bank
er forgot, and you ought to see tho
depositors around that bank when 1 got
there. It had been closed for two days
beenuso tlio cash nnd books were in
that safe, and thoy thought it was a
case of ‘break.’ 1 went at it and it was
a‘break.’ for it took mo two days to
get tbe door oil': then wo found that no
om> knew the right combination at all.
There was a county clerk out at Boone,
Iowa, who looked up his olfico Satur
day, after setting a now combination,
and when bo tried to opon the safe on
Monday ho could not. 1 got thoro
Wednesday and found a hundred farm
ers in town and tho poor clerk in tho
hands of tlio men on iiis bond. Thoy
•ill wanted to know whore tho sum of
$30,000 was. It took mo threo davs,
Brother Gardner’s Opinion of “Bloo.l,”
“ What I am gwino to remark,” ob
served the old man as Elder Tools
quietly dropped o'l' to dream of tho
cane-lields of the olden timo, “am to
Jo effeck dat ilis club iloan’ keer two
cents wlieilder a member’s gran’ladder
was hung for wakin' up a policeman
asleep on his I eat, or sot in do halls of
Congress wid his hat on his car an’ liis
fame floatin’ ol or ebory county in de
and. It am not do itonl gran’faildor
but do libiu’ member dat we haitodo
wid. If Bruddo.' Shin’s groat uncle
was King of the Cannibal Islands dat
iloan’ help Sai/iuol to pay his rent or
buy his 'tnturs. Whalebone Itowkor
may trace h s blood buck to an Emper
or who owned 10,001) mules, but Whale
bone will pay a I ne of three dollars cil
ery time Imspits on do stove, same as
do res’■ of you. Boomerang Johnson
could no doubt establish do fact dat
be uni di'niondeil from a household
which could pay a m lk-bill widout hav
in’ to pawn de sido board, but it am
tieb ithc’css snrt'n dat Brudder John
son won’t have any pancakes grow cold
011 It’s table ills winter.
“Judge a man ns you find him,' an’
ili an’t torgit dat de son of a Senator
kin display all do meanness expected of
de sm of a mnv’et. If dar am any
tneml er in din club who wants Ids line
age traced back six or aoben thousan’
y’nrn to sec whether his i'clnshuns took
fu-t or second cabin passage in de ark,
or wan s Ids blood strained to see if it
am blue or red, let him go abend; but
at d ■ same time I feel it my ilootv to
warn all s'ch pussotis dat it am fur
cheaper to buy a ton-ccnt gimlet nil’
hire a live cent hoc to bore u bole in de
lop 1 f 3 er head an’ let do wnnity blow
itself ol'. Do Seek rotary will now call
de roll an’ make out a list of sicli mem
bers as want to trace (loir blood back to
Ham."
The roll was called, nnd not one
member of the 1C4 present responded.
— Pr e eilmy* of Limekiln Club, in De
troit /'Vre /’ • ■*
At ■ Roll Tim*.
Commander J. B. Coghlan, U. S. N.,
writes to us from the Navy Yard nt
Mare Islaud,) Cal.: |Au enforced resi
dence of two years in California made
me tho subject of most painful attacks
of rbcumntism. Consultation upon my
caso by emiuout Naval aud other sur
geons failed to afford mo tbe slightest
relief. Dr. Hoyle recommended to mo
8t. Jacobs Oil, the happy result of tlio
nso of which was my complete aud
wonderful cure.— Wasfvngton (Z>. C.)
Army <t Navy Register,
Tukuk is a man at Luray, Vt., who
becamo convinced, when young, that
kissing was wickou, beenuso Christ was
betrayed with a kiss. He resolved
never to kiss anybody. Ho lias boon
married twenty years, nnd is the father
of eleven children, but has never kissed
his wife qtypno of his offspring.
Till habit of running over boots or i-hoes
corrected wit’i Lyon’s Patent Heel Siilleiierr.
- There are nearly 1,200 bakerios it
New I ork. In one first-class establish
uent a two hundred horse-power en
s' 110 furnishes tho steam; the e is a nri
liino that l eafs 200 eg s in (w nt\
minutes; the (lour is kept in bins, am
bread is piled into tnmll bills, c.ri
linn ('tliom
HkxsicAit’s peptoniced beef tonle, the on!
mm
f beef containing Its entire nutri
Vm. It contains blood-making,
ng an-i life-sustaining properties
ila, narrow
preparatioj
-tout prof
force geuori
ovalnabls for Indigestion, djipopala, nervous
prostration, and all forma of'general debility |
tlio, in all enfeebled eonditiona, whether the
, result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over-
but 1 finally succeeded, and you ought . work or acute disease, particularly If resulting
to sco that clerk’s fnco brighten up f frotu pulmonary complaint*. Caswell, Uaamrd
when the money was found untouched. I * 0®. proprietor* New York. Sold by druggists.
He swore ho had tlio right combination,
but wlien wo got at it 1 showed him he
was mis! akeii. Tlio old timo safes aro
easy enough to open, but some of theso
now ones—tho ‘burglar boxes,’ as wo
call them—arc enough to wear a man
out. If a bolt is broken wo drill
through anil rniso it, but some
times wo have to destroy tho whole
door before wo got in. L can open any
safe in Chicago in forty-eight hours at
tho utmost, and many of them in two or
three hours. Yes, sir, tlio burglars oc
casionally t ry to blow 0110 opon nail leave
the work for mo to complete, destroying
tho safe so that it won’t work. I had a
caso down nt Springfield several years
ago where tho burglars left off work
when thoy might havo got about $40,000
if they had sept at it half an hour
longer. Tlic3' had all but one bolt open
when they either gnvo up work or woro
frightened away. Time locks aro not
much protection against burglars. They
are principally designed to provent dis
honest bank officials, cashiers, etc.,
from opening tlio doors when thoy havo
no rigid to do so. A cracksman can
deal as quickly with a time-lock safe as
any other, nnd there is a good deal of
trouble when the clock inside runs
down or gets out of order. Then you
have to bore and drill away tlio door,
nnd it’s a job, I toll you. I don’t like
’em for that, though many of them are
in use just now. Yes, I’ve had thieves
try to get mo to work, but I never did.
I knocked one fellow down. Ho got
acquainted with mo and it was six
months before I know what he was up
to. He used to talk a great deal about
my work nnd my tools and what safes
1 had worked on, an l finally he pro
posed to open a safe upon Madison
street. No, sir. I’ll eat honest bread
or 1 won’t eat any. And thero’s an
other tiling about the sumo subject.
You never hoard of a man in my lino
doing any burglar work, not one. Tho
only thing approaching it was in that
Northampton bank-robb ry, and then
the safe man that was in the job was an
agent of a firm, nnd knew all about, the
safe, but I10 wasn't a workman, like me.
No, wages ain’t what they ought to lie.
Only $3 a day. It’s little enough for
men that can do the work, but it’s tho
rate, and -o there’s no use of complain
ing. 1 can get throe meals a day with
it until they put me in the little safe
under the erround.— Chicago Times.
That llasbanil of Mine
Is throe times tbe mnn ho wus before be
bewail using Wells’ Health lteiiewer. ft,
Don’tDikinturHouse. “Rough on Rats."
Clears out rats, mice, Touches, bed-bugs. 15c.
WiitMon'n XI i-ii rat gin King'-
Tills t) one of the hist remedies for Neuralgia
ever Invcntel. A lady who tried many othir
things without roliif, tiled Ncu>-I;'a Kb g and was
cured.
A Cnse Not lleyonil Help.
I I'. M 11 Hlnoda’e, Kenawee, III , tdvhos us ol a
renarkaWe cure of C)Eauinotl)r. lie ttys: "s
neighbor's wife wes uttseked with violent lungdii
tire, and pioeuunced beyond Iltlpl.om quick Con
sumption. As a list to ort tin (i-jilly was pur-
eusded to trr I)/ 'Via Hall's Balsam lor tbe l.unga.
To tlio ftstoniibmont >f ul', by the tlnco she ha.i
un d one-li. It dir. -n bottles Min wm «b)Ut tbo ho nc
doln; lior own wcilr, I taiv her at ter worst and
ha t no idea she oil'd imover,”
— A Cincinnatian who was excused
from jury service by swearing that his
wife was sick, lied about it a< lie knew
she was perfectly well when ho left
home in tho morning; but ho was horri
fied, on bis return at noon, to find her
dying.
Christmas ea
gest
ike,
stocking takes tho
THEGREATGERMAN
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and pains.
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Hold by ull Druggists nod
Dealers*. Directions In II
lungiingcs.
The Charles A. Vogeter Co,
(Bucceisors lo A. VOGEl.EH k CO.)
Haltluiui'p, Bid., U. 8. A.
• t the Hf.it Hi>d F.ib
..I Jiiblea. Prices r-d
National Publishing Co., Atlanta, (in
HEALTH IS WEALTH
Dm. 0
•p«ci*e fci
M „)l
Wbit's Inn in lun TamiVWBBV; >
tur*
Bmch wit oonlmins w,onth's Irmimsmt. On* AmlUri
hoi er «li boiss tor Sv» dollars; ssi
rscslpt sf pries. W# gu.rmntm* sm
su«. Wit* sms* srdsr rsesivtd by . . _
sompsslsd -Ilk «.s dollars, ws will #«*d Iks Mto
• ; ssat by mall prspald ee
is aim Win It smrs sa;
id by «s too tls koddt, at
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LOOK
at the teims we offer. Salary aid commission to the
eight men. J. II. CHAKUKK.S A CO.,
Atlanta, Un.
SR is Mil perdavat home. Ba'.nplee worth S3!
13 ID V/Mfras. Addrooo Sruuo-i ti Oo_ Portland. Ms.
SOLDI natch makers. By mail 25c. jC.’ireularfc
"tree. j.S. BWCfr jcCo.. Dej
ADDT0I1MME
01 uhu o lb*m! he m reNt men 118 of limit I UK retfu l ar i 11 out hi>
nroflfs iroin lnveaimei.ti» offiotofiuiftor more dcallncln
GRAIN. PROVISIONS & STOCKS
*11111. IWII'»rito BUM I • ,1 v nos IS1I.V pun "
Club .1 luuiMiniT'holder* hnek their money in tirofih ...
•mat three month*. *tlll leaving original Mmiutif making
money in Club, <>r returned on denmnu. Noire*, flUeneh.
KxpbuiniorvnmilunjM’nt free. |{chflblecoriT8!>ondClit«
valued everywhere. Address It. K. Kfndali, & Co.,
Coni’u Melds.. HI t'.'J La fca’.lo Hi., (’meago. ill.
THE BEST
MAGAZINE.
A CATALOGUE
JUST ISSUED CONTAINING
400 ILLUSTRATIONS
AND PRICER OF
, WATCHES, JEM
AND SILVERWRAi
Will be sent to any address npoo application to
J.P. STEVENS ft GO.,
JEWELERS,
DemoreRt’a Illustrated Monthly.
Sold bp ail newsdealers and PMnsMrra
Sosid lw.nl, mils f.,r a apeclsurn mpy Id
W. IKXXIXUS Isr.nOHKtor, 1‘ubUahar. IV
K. Mtto lit., ksw Yark.
IV The New Volume (19) commence!
with November. Send FIFTY CENTS
for three months; ff will satisfy you that
you can subscribe Two Dollars Jot a yeas
and get ten times its value.
9 70 A WF.F.K. 112 a day at homo easily made.
4) I fiConUr outfit free. Address True AUo. Auvusto. MB
ATLANTA. - - OEOROaA.
COTCON FUTURES
$10 I
sliowihfj how rapid
jnonty is made.
Sjpecnlating iu
“FtmmK8’’ by in-
$100
$500
HUE'S IMPROVED CIRCULAR IAW MILLS *
A $8 RING l”.hi fit) Cvs.
To introduce s’ r pic koral i ft r rltow
their qu/ilhy, J’*. cn.i :b • degini
GOLD • r I ATTJ», llJAVY H A ft t*
KING on rcct ip*' • y: r-u.l n.l.LcSs
o i io person* v< ii tb’i*U wil Huy Oi
I'Usrnd propaid in," Agent's Ou.fit
(bslaplgar; !cs);inf i.i l ; I-.-.l,price
vS T * This lying n,t ,.irrr dicr o so- ure future
quick, f. D. Hrvr.’K’ , |!)x 127, p i.:..: >. N Y
_ Prices Lew. Workman-
s* ship First-Class. _
Hun facttrod It SALIM IRON 770210. SALIM. V. 0.
OPIUM HABIT
AND DRUNKENNESS.
Positively, speedily and permnnently cured by
lilt. KEEf.EV'S HOLD HEM K.nlEH, containing
l-’or terms, puinpii
lets and proofs, mUlress,
Wi ItELLAMY, Ilf. It.,
7 l-'J llroasl tot., Atlanta, Un.
wcitw *ne*wr
ELASTIC TRUSS
I Ua ft Pod differing from *1) oth«i«,
!l cnpihtop*. wilh 8«lf* Art bull nf
Hall In ctntrr. fel«ptdl Udlrtoall
(toriMona of tbe bo<1r, white |h«
lUlhn IWanprMBMkMktbf
I atuUfiMdart *a amiwm Wou Id
With lb* Flager, With ll(ht
piosiurc tho llirnlali h«M Mcurvl*
tight, toA k rmdloo! curectrUlu. ills mny, dtfobte
;>. Boot by ia*ll. Circulars fra*.
Cayand alg_
l'.vi chMp.
Eli'JLESTON TBCSS CO.. Chlcozo. UL
C. B. C.
an ntediifrtoi Colloga, Newmk,
NVriltt foi CHlnlogiif,
MILL and FACTORY SUPPLIES
OF ALL mrs. BELTING! HOSE an ff
PACKING, OILS, PUKP3 ALL SXND8,
IRON PIPE, FITTINGS, BRASS GOODS,
STEAM GAUGES, ENGINE GOVERNORS,
&o. Send for Prlco List. W. H. DIL
LINGHAM tc 00., 113 Main Street, LOUIS
VILLE, KY.
ENCINES«S=»*S
write Tm AULTMAlf to TATLOU CO. liauoflolj, O.
Sawing Made Easy.
a fj The Hew Improve*
■OVUM LICRTMNfl
SAW
fl tbo cluaput and t»t
IA boy sliMeo yi-mro old
can tow lego/tuf and ease.
Sms on test trial. Send
rlUBetrawd Oataloruc —
culoro. 'SffiVrfM'JgggSK
B«r0o..l<»Randolph I
Soud on* 3d iiimp tor Holiday Uaht Land, with
Cbroino ('oveii,
Mend tvro 3ei. stamps for tho Pictorial Pansy for l mo.
Nrad three 8el« stamp* for Cbristmao No. Our Little
Men nud Worn. n.
W«n<l eight art. stumps for Hohdsy Wide Awoke, |.»0
To D. Lot ti tor & Co., Pub’s, 32 l’t nnkl’i.i it?! hosloM^*'
EVERY MAN
Ciliuulil ITndn nlunil llJe Owt
Condition
when suffering from dlseaie of mind o
body caused Ly ImpiU'leiit haliii^, et
cesses, overwork or derangement of lb*
fHculties, reGiIimg in Neivous LtM>ility
1 bysjral Pj ostr'Uion or
PBIJmUHK
On receipt of four 3o. stamps we will send our nev
book, 112 psges, 8vo., “The l-au «»f l.lff* »n«'
llfnlfho” * series uf leciutHS, hii«I giving lnv»!usbU
information to MAHUIKD _ND BINdLK MEN. Ad-in-s.
MEDICAL AND 6UIIOICAL INSTITUTE, U7 Ii. 1Mb Ht.
New York. Name ibis puper.
T tJW*E0
vesting sums from
$10 to $1,000.
«sF n 11 Information
and explanatory
/K<« /\AA circulars mniled free
^lyV/V/ on application.
BEMAnf.K COBRKSTVVWiaS WANTED.
DIO. F. W0LFFE- & CO.,
^JSWS m IXlt VRHRI: •-»•
CONSUMPTION.
... .mi.— fnr tl.s nbnre fl RCAMi OV IW
dbavs * iwrslllve rwmetl.v for the above
thoiistili^M of cahch of the waf*i kind and of 1 np
tnnding liawtecneuird. lnfed, soMyjj•«
stnndlno Imve teen cured.
w'lUia'VAlV^'HL^fhKlV 1 ,^ “
•WWraST'lSi .WI^ iUwTor*.
MASON ft HAMLIN
ORGANS
«•«VIPETITION I
nrecertainly best, havingbewn
’ Kaa>«-.v IfHKA
£
sod pc reed at -------
r WOKI.IPN l«lll MTRIA-
tonrisisiou.1 tor SIXTKKX YKARtoi no
other American Organ having been font: J equal at
any. Alooi’lieAPKNT. Hiyle 100;3'i octuves;
aunlcient compiiMnand power, with best quality, for
popular, Bftcred nud neculnr njuslo in NOhooiN or
nimlllps, nt only S«'J. ONI-. ill'tollKH* «TII-
».K toTklsKN at tw. fcw, S<n,#tOB,*1M.
lo SSUO nml upward. Vie larger tlyli* are trliollg
unrivalled by am; ch,Tr\(l: pan*. Also for easy
payments. XKW Itol-lStTHATKI) 4.ATA
Uui
nr. riiEi:.
PIANOS
This Company hnverorampneert
ifact '
themamifaeimuof ItPRItlHT
Ull tMl O'lANON, introduc
ing Important hn/n ovtnnrnU; adding -o power alia
henuty of tone nud liurnblllty. [lift
hminpnne i/unrlir a* natch iuother I'ianos. II.l.UH-
THATfiU enter I,A Its, with full particulars,
MAHON ,t HAM 1,1 N “'‘“AN AND W-
Aflo co., liil Tremont Hi.. IP'ston- -15 K. Uthtoi-
N. York : HU Wabaah Ave Ciilc-uiro.
A SURE CTTRE for Epilepsy or Fils In 21 hours. Free
to poor. I)ii. KHBSHiH Arsrnnl BTLouts,Mg
PATENTS
S66
A WEEK In your oven town. Terras and
M outfit ft oo. A cl ill’s H JlaUgttJi Oa.I'orUaml.Mt
Alec
k Sift.
and lofsIB-
Fpilsptte
Fit*. Convul
sions. St. Vitus Patios.
Inohollsm,Opium Rmt-
ig, Scrofula mud all
•rvous and Blood Dts-
ws. To Olorgjrmm,
wyara, Literary Man,,
erchsnls, Bsuksrm,
idles ana oil whooB*
Bedentsrjr smploymsnS
causes Nervous Prootro-
tioD, Irregulsritieo of
the blood, stommoh.
bowels or Kiuneys, of
who require *
lb NtVEtfAlLM. ^
^RVlHb
proclaim It the maX
Wi-nilertul InvigormBk
that ever onelmioad Uw
sinking system. VOS
sale by mil Druggtste.
TUB DU. to. A. im iDIOM) MEDICAL. CO-
Bale Pngrlef ri, Ht. Jo—pb. Me.
I
m'-fin luorriy to atop thonu _
A time nud tn *i> uava them return agnlu. I tuenn a radl*
culcure. I Luva road* tlio i!Iim*hso of KITS, BI’!.LEP8V
AT FALLING SIOKNi^SA Jlfedcmg study, iwamnlmf
;emcdv euro tbo worst cRsei. li.’-’fliiae other* have
fulicd In ua renron for not now ror<»lvlng a euro. Bond aft
ioHtl*e and f\ Free Bottle of »my infalilbl#
onco for a tiontlse ami i\ Kroo Bottle of »my 1
ftetnody. (ilvo fixproHt nml Post O^lco. It c«»t» yoM
Motblu^ior a trial, and 11
IV. H (*. miOT. HMKearl fit.. Kowlnift.
PubJiobara’ Union, Atlanta, Oa Fifty-two.— 1 ’Ms
Strong's Sanative Pills
FOIl TITIC
r cure lor liver e.mpInlnt.reKnlntlngthW
i. clen
bnwefs, purifytnK the blood, cleansing from mala
rial taint. A perfect cure for sick headache, con
stipation and dyspepsia. Bold by ull feuding drug-
lists. For almanacs with full particulars, address
-,4,
E. Hot.I. A CD., Box S50, New. York.
combination of Pro
toxide of Arnn, Peruvian
liar/i and I'hosphoruain
o palatable form. Por
JJcbility, Loss of Appe
tite, Prostration of Vxtat
Powers it is I ndispensa-
blo.
• a the
IRON TONIC, 1 taka pleasure
la statins 1 that ,1 have been
- - “ted
groatly benefited by il
use. Ministers and Rub 1
lie Speakers will find it
of tne greatest value
where a Tonic is neces
sary. I recommend it
as a reliable remedial
PUR!FIESZ.rZ;“'!°!' OTB '
LODE
Industry, Ill., gaya:-
, “I consider it
a moat excellent remedy for
the debilitated vital forces.
agent, possessing un
doubted nutritive and
restorative properties.
Louisville, A'y., Oct, 2, 1882,
FESPAEZD BY THS DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., 213 H. HAIli EX., ST. LCCI3.
Development of Southern Industries!!
NEW DRESS.
NEW WRITERS,
NEW ARTISTS,
•TV 1342-1883
FULL of NEW LIFE
AND VIGOR FOR
1883.
AGRICULTURIST
— : ~‘s>^ JSkKu
BEST
3 Ob' rHERN
Writers.
S^THE CHEAPEST JOURNAL IN THE WORLD.'tSK
r.iCH nil Iliunhutm. It inntructB nnd cnfcrtniiiN every member of tho fnmily.
it is n. complete auldo for liaidcnin« mid Fruit Crowing, and full
of Valuable Uinta on Cotton und Sugar Culture.
Atno-g Other Soul hem wr.'era nre Dr. A. OF.MLER, fruit iirnl vegetu bio grower, rf Bontb Cnrel
PrM. (' C. C.FOitQKRON, of the Texas Agrlcultiural C'ollepo, l'rof. O. C. KWALLOW Ain pief l
MeJJKVJ)i:. Ti nn., Prof. J. W. BAN BO B ff. Mo., Pr f. J. 1). WARFIELD, Md Unu.T s'nmvm
n l 1). IX V- QtT IfflV nnmum/1 a... .' ,r . . * ' .*’• •’ ^
Oi, cud Dr. II. K. SALMON, ensaged by the Govrrifcirnt in tho inresllaatinn ol impoi lont i.i.r
eabj.vts in l ie Sout.'iern Slctce, who mil contribute die results of their exiicricnco mul rcKcnri
i Carolina,
■ itt
MAN
i cry number.
rar Semi Ntnmp for December Issue—THE GREAT NC AIDER FOR THE SOUTH
t;EKJIAX AGRiCULTURIST, tho only pur y German Agricultural Journal ili thoU.a
Subscription Friee, SI.SO wr arvum, English or Gorman; 4 copies $5.co ; iio»t free Evert-
German f.uvr. r ill'luxas and ih-whereffivough the Booth should have it. 1 CIr
11RER receives a porfect plate cop/ i f IirrnK’s left great ™tnUiv
31 riu-rial of v'hich ih valued at l^i.y,000, undis iwononueed b\ I'w’iin
n a beautiful picture, as well as a gn at eduentm-. ' " l ^
F'.VI'.lfV SUBSCRIBER receive
“IN THE AXE ALOW," the t
and other leading artists an a Deauurut picture, ns well as a great educolor"
i’iegnut premium list with great inducements forclubs sent free on ai-j lication.
ORANGE JUDD CO., No. 751 Broadway, Now York