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ACROSS THE PLAINS,
The plains wen wids and vast and drear,
Hi* mountain peaks seemed cool and near,
Hie inn hang low toward the west,
Uo aear," we sighed, “arc wc to rest."
flat Journeying through the closing day,
Oor feet are weary of the way,
Far, far before our aching sight
The plains lin in the waning light.
The mountain peaks that seemed so near
And bald oar rest forever there,
Are far across, the desert lands.
We vainly cry with lifted hands :
Oh hills, that stand against the sky,
We may not reach you ere we die;
Otir hearta are broken with the pain,
For rest and peace wo may not gsin.
C'pon the plain* we faint and fall,
Our face* toward the nionntains tall;
Our palm* are clasped, hut not to pray,
80 die we with the dying day.
■ "V
HORRORS OF DRUNKENNESS
■ PHENOMENA OF AliOOHOh
USED BBAINS
We were four. We sat talking iu the
lobby of a Denver hotel. It waa 11 p.
m. The talk was languishing, when the
wide (loon qpeuing to tho street were
thrown apart violently, and a tall, beuv-
R» hnilt man walked in. IIis soft hat
tilted backward on his bend. His
step was uncertain. He wan drunk.
We recognised him as Dalton, a minor
from the Snowy Range. Seeing the
group sitting around a table, he came
toward ns, and with a drunken smile,
said, " Howda, boya ?” Tbon, before we
conld greet him, ho turned away, saying
carelessly, " It is oat night for me. 1
may as well go see the creature." En
tering the elevator, he disappoaro 1.
Wondering whnt Dalton meant by
"oat night," I asked one of my oom-
jmniona the meaning of the phrase. He
replied. " A phantom cat comes to Dal
ton during the night following his third
day of hard drinking. It ia a warning
to him to put on the brakes."
" Tell me of it" I said.
Complying, be said: " Dalton sprees.
He drinks at long intervals, and never
in moderation. When the wild desire
for alcohol assails him, resistance is
seemingly impossible. He turns bis
mines over to his foreman and oomea to
Denver. He drinks exoesaively the first
day, still more the second, and he turns
himself loose on the third. He is a
heavy and very powerful man, and oan
drink an enormous quantity of whiskey
before snooumbing to it. I have known
him to drink forty glasses of liquor in
one day, six of them before breakfast.
By the end of the third day Dalton is
very nervous. Boon after he falls into
his first drnuken sleep on the third night
ke always dreamt that he comes into
hit room; that a noise, as though some
thing scratching on the eorpet under his
bed, attracts his attention ; that looking
under the bed, he sees a large yellow
tomcat, with a bristling tail as big as a
rolling pin. The cat ia tearing the car
pet with ita sharp claws. Indifferent to
eats, or dogs, or any animal that walks
on earth, he undresses and gets into bed.
Instantly he is smitten with paralysis.
He oannot move. His brain works
without friotion and is wonderfully dear.
His vision in penetrative. Ho can boo
through the bed, and sees the oat on the
floor in the comer. His dear sight
pierces through the disguise of the crea
ture and he realizes that it ia an eye-de
stroying, flesh-eating devil. He knows
that "the fiend will come out from under
the bed and jump upon the footl>ourd.
Standing there with arched book and
swelling tail, the creature will utter
frightful'ories prepartory to leaping, witb
distended claws, on his faee and tearing
ont his eyes. Dalton becomes afraid of
the oat. He tries to call for help. He
strives to move. His efforts are vain
The oat leaps to the footboard, and
glares at him with distended fiery eyes.
Again he straggles to throw off the par.
alysis. He cannot move. The oat,
with a horrid cry, springs on his up
turned face. Under tne spur of this su
preme horror he rallies, and, with an
exhaustive effort be awakens. He is un
nerved. He trembles like a timid woman.
His heart beats quickly. It takes
three or four days of perfect rest and
solitnde to restore his nervous system.
He drinks no more for months.”
"Does he know, while suffering from
this alooholie nightmare that it ia
nightmare ?"
“Yes,” my companion answered, “he
knows it. But he also knows that if he
Joes not awaken, and so prevent tlie yel
low tomoat from getting in his work the
at will kill him. He is in deadly fear
of this eat, though he knows it is but an
alcoholio phantom. And underneath
his dread of the cat lies the fear of
death resulting from alooholism. The
cat is only a faint shadow cast by the
approaching jimjams, that stalk spectre-
like in the vestibule of his brain.”
"The warnings some drinking men re-
eeivs are very strange,” said the oldest
of onr parly. "I know several men who
are aprsers, who have warnings, gener
ally risiona more or less horrible, but in.
fhe same, when they approach
the wall behind which the jimjams lurk.
Probably the most striking case is tha.
of a gentleman who inherited his dis-
eased craving for alcohoL He will not
drink, it may be, for a year. Then he
will put hia business into such a shape
that he can leave it for a few days and
deliberately get drunk. For two days
he devotes his energies to getting drnr.k
and staying drunk. He is not of the
least trouble to Birr one when he is
drinking. He ahuts himself up in his
room, And drinks alone. In two days he
wW drink s gallon of the beet sour mash
Bourbon whisky money oar buy. He
alwaye begins drinking in the evening.
The third evening he goes to bed in e
beestly state of intoxioation. At about
midnight hia vision oomes to him. Ha
dreams that he went to bed, end alept
soundly until awakened by e hard,
white, flickering light He line awake
wondering what oauaea the light, and
bean a load knook on his bedroom door.
'Gome ini’ he ories. The door is
thrown wide open end a man who has
been freshly flayed stalks in. The
flayed man smiles in a ghastly manner,
and nods in friendly recognition. The
flesh ie gone from hia month. His teeth
grin mockingly. He stations himself
opposite the bed and leans against the
wall, his shoulders making a bloody
mark where he leans. His lidleas eyes
roll and his tongue lolls. The bedroom
door remains open. My friend looks oat
of the door and into the street There
ho sees a long column of flayed men
marching rapidly down the road. Strag
glers drop out from tho oolumn and en
ter Lila room. When ten men have
entered, his l>edroom door closes. The
flayed men, who oro oovered with fresh
blood, walk silently around the room
looking at him. They point their
bloody fingers at him. At a signal
from the man who first entered they all
march out. Presently they return, each
(tarrying a flayed and bloody oorpse.
The blood has dried on the live men
while they were absent, and it flakes
from them as they re-enter the room
with their ghastly burdens. This
corpses are plaosd on the floor in a row,
sido by side. At a signal from the
leader of tho skinless horrors, they
straddlo tho dead bodies, and bending
over, grasp them around the waists.
Then straightening up, with the legs of
the dead men between their own, they
inovo around tho room in a weird dance,
now advancing, now retreating, then
circling around tho bed, and always
leering aud grinning at my friend. After
desperate efforts he awakens, and the
vision disappears. It ia hia warning to
quit drinking, and he heeds it, toa"
Then spokd an ex-Confederate artil
lery officer : "Most sprees have visions,
all of them horrible, that are nature’s*
warnings to them to quit drinking. Bat
there is another class of illusions arising
from an unwise use of aloohol, whioh I
Mispoct are much more oommon than ia
ocncFRlly known. The men who auffer
from theso illusions are apt to conceal
their troubles, being ashamed to confide
them to their most intimate friends. I
know of two coses that may interest yon.
They are queer manifestations of
alooholie disturbances of tho brain."
We gathered closely around the table,
and all of us, os one man, demanded
the stories. The ex-Con federate officer
said: "Johnson was raised ou tho
Boa Islands. Ho married shortly before
the war. He entered the Army of Vir
ginia. His wife, to whom he was de
voted, died shortly aftei lie left her.
After the surrender Johnson oameWest.
He is a well-educated, courageous
gentleman. I will *»11 you of the vision
that invariably arises Iwfore him if he
drinks at. all. I will tell it in tho first
person, just aa ho told it to me. Im
agine that Johnson is talking : 'When
ever I drink, I mu haunted hv a visin'’
tlmt arises before me aa soon us 1 am
asleep. It is this : My wife ia by my
sido, her soft baud lovingly slipped in
mine. Wo aro walking np an oyster shell
path toward our tiea Island home.
Entering our house I realize that it lias
been deserted, and an unoocouutable
foeling of dread rolls over me in an ioy
wave at this discovery. Then my wife
speaks, saying, softly, "I am afraid.”
Instantly my mind is Hooded witb the
recollection of a dreadful horror that 1
hud not thought of for years. I remem
ber that we had abandoned tho houao
because it wtis haunted. Our experience,
ns 1 recall it, was that a spirit walked
nightly in the attic, and, after a short
walk, descended the stairs. When the ’
door at the foot of the stairway opened
before the ghost a column of whitish
vapor floated sinuously into the hall;
then, turning to the left, it entered my
room and passed ont of the window.
" ‘Supplemented to this horror was an
other manifestation of rare occurrence
and at highly irregular intervals. This
was a voico accompanied by footsteps.
Sometimes heavy footsteps, at others as
if the infirm stews of acre were tottering
around the honse. Again they crept
along the insido of the partitions. Then
the voioe groaned, ns if in pain. I
knew the voioe to be that of a negro of
hideous aspect and gigantio size, whom
one of my ancestors had scourged to
death. That voioe threatened ns with
direful disasters, and mnue the night
hideous with its ories. It always name
in the gray of the evening, and stayed
all night The reoolieotion of these
horrors, that had escaped my memory,
terrified me. My wife saw that I waa
unnerved, and olnng closely to me,
repeating in trembling tones, "I am
afraid, I am afraid, I am afraid.” I
tried to restore her courage, but I could
not I looked at her. and saw that she,
too, recollected the dreadful tale. We en
deavored to leave the house, but could
not. Then we sought refuge iu the par
lor, and trembling awaited, wo knew
not what. Suddenly a barbaric tune
was beaten on the floor above ns, as
though pounded ont witb a war club
and the voice spoke tauntingly, saying’
"To-night you shall see me.” An irre-
sistible force drew ns to our bedroom.
The column of vapor descended the
stairs and entered it and floated out of
tiie window, Then we sought to oeottpe
from tbs dreaded votes by hiding ln
dark corners; but the voioe tauntingly
nailed ua forth.
•• ’Finally, in despair, we entered the
parlor, and there tho end came. Forth
from the solid wall strode a gigantio
naked negro. Hia flesh was scored aa
though with a whip. Blood marked the
(rail as ho walked. Ho stalked toward
as. With an exultant grin he glared
fiercely at ua Then he slowly stretched
out bis )iand, as though to grasp my
wife’s yellow hair. An overpowering
base and cowardly terror soiled me.
My only fear was that the blaok spectre
would grasp ms instead of my wife.
She olnng to mo with twining aims,
murmuring, "Proteot me 1 Save me I”
Basely I thrust her from ms toward the
outstretched hand of the gigantio black.
She looked at me lovingly, notreprOuob-
fully, and witb a kind, forgiving smile on
her fees, fell dead at my feet. With
ineffable sooru tbe negro pointed hia
horny index Anger at me and said, "A
ooward I The first of hia raoe," and dis
appeared with a crash that always
awakened me.”’
The ex-Oonfederate ceased talking
for an instant while he lit a fresh cigar,
and then he said: "That ia Johnson’s
vision. It never varies a particle, and
he sees it if he drinks so much as one
glare of whisky. Of course you all un
derstand that there is not any ground
for the vision. It is, from beginning to
and, an alooholie phantasm.
“Then there was Wallace,” and the
narrator smiled at his memories "His
was a queer esse of physioal recollec
tion of a flight aud drunken hiding.
Wallace gat drank in town (I am talking
of Northern Alabama), and while drank
got into trouble. Being hard pressed,
he drew hia pistol and killed hia oppo
nent, who waa a worthless creature.
The dead man’s Mends, she worthless
creatures, gathered in an excited crowd.
Wallace, partly sobered, realised his
danger, and resolved to get ont of town
if possible. His horse stood in (boshed.
Walloon kept the crowd off by pistol
shooting, that may have been a tittle
Indiscriminate, until he was mounted.
By this Urns some of the dead man’s
Mends were also mounted. Wallace fled
aud waa hotly pursued. His plantation
was some eight miles the other aide of
the river. The pursuing horsemen out
him off from the bridge by riding up a
aide street. Beelng this he turned hfa
hors# and rods down the river bank at
full gallop. It was quits dork by this
time. After riding abont a mile down
the river bank he sparred his horse into
the stream. His horse carried him
across safely and clambered np the op
posite bank.
"Wallace rode into the heavy forest
at the full gallop. He remembered i|p
more of that night's experienoe. The
next morning he awoke in a darkened
room. He waa tying on a rough, dirty
floor. Staggering to hia feet ho felt
around his unknown quarters until he
found a holt in the floor. A ladder had
been thrust through this opening and
projected a couple of feet above the
floor. He descended tbe ladder and
found bimself in a basement, one side of
whioh opened on a gulch. It was an
abandoned still house. Ho saw the
tracks made by his horse, but tbe horse
waa gone. He did not know where he
was. it was ten o’clock before bo found
a rood he knew, and noon before he
reaohod home. His horse returned
home during the previous night. Ever
after, when Wallace got drank in that
town, be would wake up the next morn
ing in the dark attic of the deserted still
honse. He always turned his horse
loose and had to walk home. When lie
left the country and the old associations
were broken, be quit riding around at
midnight to hide in dirty attics.”
It was growing late. Our party bode
one another good night and wandered
off to bod. Fabnk WitjKBhon.
The Fighting in Egypt.
The London Standard's Cairo corre
spondent says that the latest official ac
counts of the fighting at Toka state that
the Egyptians lost 11 ofiioers and 142
men, besides 6 Turks and several
Greeks. They also lost 1 gnn and 300
rifles. Abont three hundred and forty
of them regained their ship. The Egyp
tians during the fight formed a hollow
square, when a small number of the
enemy locked their shields together and
rushed through the Egyptian line. An
immediate panie among the Egyptians
resulted. It is doubtful if blaek troops
can be spared from Massowah, which is
in ths same critical position as Suakin.
The British gunboat Ranger has been
ordered from Aden to Suable.
A City's People. —Scarcely more than
fifty per cent of the population of
Chicago was born in the United States.
No less than 94,000 of the present in hab
itants of that city have poured in from
the various States of tbe German em
pire. The Bohemians number 12,000;
the Canadians, 15,000; Danes, 3,100;
French, nearly 2,000; Irish, nearly
50,000; Hollanders, nearly 3,300; Itali
ans, 1,400; Norwegians, 5,700; Swedes,
16,000; Poles, 5,700; and 3wiss, 2,000;
with a sprinkling of Russians, Hungari
ans, Spaniards, Portuguese, and men of
almost every other race and nationality
under the sun.
A Boston paper relates that an old
gentleman from the country who visited
(hat oity the other day and had never
been in a large town before, remarked
after making a tour of the business sec-
| tioo : "I don’t like this Boston. There
| igp't snouftb out-of-doors to it.” *
Jr A man does not make new acquaint
ances as be advances through life no will
soon find bimself left alono. A man
sbonld keep his iriendahip in constant
repair. __________
'We alao keep Piso’a Cure for Consumption
In the house.”
Tbe Country Doctor.
"Doctor, he’s awake now."
The old doctor slowly lifts himself,
nnkinks his stiffened joints, kicks his
legs ont to straighten out his trowaere,
shuts his big bone-handled knife, brashes
the shavings from his shiny slothes, and
goes to the bedroom. Ths siok man
slowly turns his head toward tho door
way, smiles sadly, puts out his long,
white, bony hand to him and w his pen
hoarsely;
"Well, doctor f” whioh is a siok man's
favorite form of asking how hia dootor
thinks he is getting along. The old
‘doctor raises the blue paper curtain and
slowly draws s chair close to ths bed.
"Ob, you're looking ever so much
bettor to-day. Wo’ll have you out hoe
ing potatoes in s day or two."
Kind-hearted, warm old doctor 1 Dear
old coward, who never fights disease,
bat surrenders at its flnt approach, end
labors lovingly to smooth ths way to
death 1 Blessed old bungler, who gives
no dying man tho warning that would
turn hia latest hours to business cares
and save hia heirs a world of worrimont,
Harried la Europe.
After Fisk was killed and Stokes was
sent to prison Josie Mansfield went to
Europe. There she attracted the atten
tion of a rich lace maker, who married
her. A couple of years ago, says a news
paper correspondent, I was over in
Frauoe, and one day while walking
through the gardens of St. Cloud who
should I encounter but Josie, leaning on
the arm of her husband. He waa a
stout, portly man, muoh the build of
Fisk, and looked to me like a Russian
rather than a Frenchman. Joaie was
elegantly and most richly dressed, but
in plain blaok and laces. Sbe had grown
thinner, had lost the flesh that for a while
made her look gross and sensual, and
was radiantly beautiful. Her husband
ia enormously wealthy, I am told, and is
devoted to her.
Am. tho scholastic scaffolding falls
•s a ruined edifice before one singla
word—Faith.—Napoleon.
The worst kind of borrower Is be who bor
row! with the intention of repaying ; for yon
know to a moral certainty that he intend* to
borrow again.
Fore (Jod Liver ou, from selected liver os
the eee shore, by Caiwell, Hazard A Oo., Hew
York. Absolutely pure and sweet. Patients
who have once taken it prefer it to aU other*.
Phraieiana declare it auparior to all otkar etu
"Bill, you’re lookin’ the worse for
veur 1” “No !” replied Bill, "but I’m s
lent) the worse for tear.”—Ifawkcye,
Lambs' A children’s Boots A Shoe* canuo
ran over if Lyon'a Patent Hael Stiffen art imil
Files! Piles! Pile*.
Sore cure for Blind, Bleeding and Itching
yn© box huff cured worst ohm of 20
years standing. No one need suffer firt min-
utes after using William's Indian Pile Ointment
It absorbs tumors, allays itching, aota aa Doul-
Lce, give* in.tent relief. Prepared only Tor
PUea. itching of private parts. Mailed for SI
Frazier Med. Oo., Cleveland. O.
The boldest faro players in Carson
City, Nov., aro women.
The
have
l V .“wtou WI.ll KinnilltWI
will much conduce to tho directing of the head.
Hr. who receives a good turn should
•ever forget it; ho who does one should
lever n morn her it..
Brides' and bridesmaids’ drease* have sleeve*
that are drawn on over ths kid glov*.
Occasional doses Dr. Bedford's Liver Invipo-
rator will keep the liver in good order, tture.
Modem edaoatton too often oovers tne angers
with rings, and at the same time out* the sinews
at thewTOte. —Sterling.
The United States, in tho last decade,
grow two and a half times as fast ^i\s
let-many, three times as fust ns En
gland and fifteen times as fast as
ranee.
A ((nick Kereverv.
It gives us great pleasure to state that the
merchant who was reported to be at the point
pf death from .an attack of pneumonia, has
entirely recovered by the use of Dr. Wn
Hall’s Balsam for the Lungs. Naturally ht
feels grateful for the bsnefits derived from
using this remedy for the lungs and throat,
and in giving publicity to this statement we
are actuated by motives of public b-i no fac
tion, trusting that others may be benefited in
a similar maimer.
Cloaks for children have the long, high-
shouldered cape, or the long sleeve cape, as in
ormer seasons.
A lazy policeman, like a good pioce of doth,
i known by hia nan.
Carbo-ltn-a.
The gray and bald no more shall grieve,
The signs of coming age,
For Carboline can both retrieve,
And fullest griefs assuage.
Mrs. M. Pilkington, 211 26th St., Brooklyn.
Dr. Elmore's R.-G. That cured me!
Ask a pig to dinner and he will put hie feet
n the table.
Chappe I hands, face pimple* and rough akin
cured by using Juniper Tar Soap, made by Cas
well, Hazard A Co., New York.
For dancing the short skirt is de riguer, none
hut dowagers wearing trained dreaaesat bails.
All pain in the nervous system, wind colic
cramp* Ac., cured by Samaritan Nervine.
Aak a pig to dinner and be will put his feet
on the tabie.
9/k
gOSHHEKk
9 '
A* an mvigrant,
■ostetiar’a Stom
ach Bitter* haa re
ceived the most pee-
itive endorsement
from emminent
physician*, and has
long oooupted a
hWBist nek »mon|
standard proprietary
re ami i . IU proi*r-
Uas aa aa altaratira of
disordered condition*
of tbe stomach, livoi
andbowoU. amt » pre
ventive of malarial
diseases are no lees
renowned.
For sale by Drug
gists and Dealers to
whom apply for
Hoatettera *’—*
nao for 1884.
I SPECIF10 FOI
Epilepsy,
Spasms, Convul
sions, Falling
Sickness, 8.. Yltu*
Dance, Alcohol
ism, Opium Eat
ing, Syphilliii
Scrofula, Kings
Fvil, Ugly Blood
Diseases, Dyspep
sia, Nervousness,
iek JTeadachs,
rheumatism,
Nervous Weakness, Brain Worry, Blood Sores,
biliousness, Costiveness, Nervous Prostration,
Kidney TroulAss and Irregularities. $1.50.
(temple Teatlmonlnl*.
“Samaritan Nervine Is doing wonders.”
Dr. J. O. McLemoln. Alexander City, Ala.
“I feel It my duty to recorumcud It."
Dr. 1). K. Langhlln, Clvde, Kansas.
"It cured where physicians failed.’’
Rev. J. A. Edlo, Beaver, Pa.
SfT Cwreoendence freely ea»wered.*4l
the Dr. $. A Richmond Med. Co, St. Joseph, Mo.
For lettlmonlffilfl nnd circular* tend Btiunp. (1)
At Pr—lste. C. M. Crlttanton, Ageat, N. T.
ftlHEMltffi
WEEB&
-‘Your Samaritan Nervine cured my eon»
fits," writes Mrs, & JL Psrkhuret, Girard, Kiel
For young
Mt reader*
teiStfSK WIDEAWAKE,, &f.
Addrenn D. LOTH HOP A OO. t Boston, Mass.
fl.
IS DEAD, but his
IISTORY OF TDK UNITED STATES
WILL LIVE FOREVER. For term* and territory f««
the flffil • of this work, apply to
H. D. MCDONALD A OO.. Pabliiborn,
“ “ Ne< ^
P. O. Box 2900, New Origins,
ert,
*, Lffi.
If you are
Interested
In the Inquiry—Which I* the
best liniment for Man and
ISeast?—this Is the answer, at-
KENT. The reason is sim
ple. It penetrates erery sore,
wound, or lameness, to tho
very bone, and drives ont all
Inflammatory and morbid mat',
ter. It “ goes to the root” ot
the trouble, and never fells to
core in double quick time.
LADIES,
Order Bridal Presents, Jewelry, Silverware, as
from
J. P. 8TEVEN8 A CO.,
7aTCsx.ac3aa.
lend tec Catalogue. ATLANTA. aA..
fiTKKI, KNOHAfimiS for X.HANorNcrsp
RBY WOLDS’
Iron WorlMi
D. A. Mulane, Manager,
P. O. Baa MM, lUm (Mhm, U.
< Bgfnolda' CVIabrataS
MTriucBSirs. hum,
I *d4 Han, Power, eieun Kb
, Saga, Milk, and U.nr’a PU«I
si Work, Building Front,,
BlMkaiiilhlae
CHRISTMAS THE YEAR ROUND.
BABY I .A. IN' 13
I Oar Little Men and Women.*.?.
6 Siegel street,
8 Afflnls Wanted* OUTFIT FREE
mn Blill KITTY*
Vaeras Isnriare IsSMte WMe-
tare. ee heiv •• UU betel in Hi* ,
■ tea N* lejnrv. Re,*, rate. J
Brass Abe «£4. l.rlPkp4raJ
WIST" FFtsi pm rmSra*T?L »
m IlH l. 8HITM 8 if., flgeaflas Folailafla UL
TO SPECULATORS.
R. UNDBL0M A CO., N. G. MILLER * CO.
6 A 7 Chamber of U Broadway.
Com more*, Chioago. New York.
GRAIN A PROVISION BROKERS
Mmn bets of ell prominent Produce KictkengeeUi New
York, Chicago. St. Louis and Mliwftnkee.
Wohar** eYolufluo prWo Magmpa wire between UfaA-
cago ami New York. Will execute order* oo oor indf-
uicnt when reij'ifstcd. Send for circtilnto ernitAiniag
particular*. ROOT. 1JNDBLOM A UO., Chipe«o. _
0009 HEWS
TO LADIES I
Oroatant tuduceaonle «rs* oA
fered. Now', roartimo tonl ap
tVnU.rw tor our coletx t*d Tens
ned Cnfli-1-N.and roouroabo.oU.
ful Hold Haul or M,,n K«m Chine
To* S,'l, or II,n duoiD* Doc, t ,1*4
Colu a , „ ..oro Dm nor Hot, or Cold Band Moss
Dim, r it,',I Toilet Sot. t\ null pnrtiouUr* addraa.
Til 12 (i It EAT A It IK U| CAN TEA <i>..
P. 0._bo»_3S9. 81 iiu(l i; Veaer at . New York.
PAPERmeenfl toeloot
Butler A Keegan. It offers tho following oampeigs
rate* nt any Piwtotlice ; From Jen. 1 till Botler in in-
augurnted President, $1: Pint Botler voter. I0o ; tin
club of 10 V one nddreea. $1 ; nucooeding clubs of 10 c
multiple* often, one addreae, $2. Kaoh number vigor*
oualy illust rated by Worth Act At once—the bet tie l
on. Make check* to order of and mddrean
VATU UK COLUMBIA, 262 Broedwey. New York.
DR. DICKEY’S
Painless Eye Water
13KLIKVKR AT ONI K. OiMbtoSwAsaJ
J V Ky<w Id * f.w hoars. Olvas HO PAJCR. Th- Heel
Kenedy ia (bo world lor gr.nulatod lids. Pries M
tests Seoul*. Ask lorlt. Have no oiber,
Kl PATENTS
Inscribe your invention, bond *2 (damps for ♦>/>. i» on
1‘attnn. L. IIIKGHAV, ht. »■(.
UllUjfl
.11. It.. Atlanta, Oeorfia.
A UKNTN W ANT LIT for the boat and f.-to«t roll-
ins Pictorial Hooka nnd Hi bins. Prices rodeoed 81
percent. Nation at, ruui.iauiMi (Jo., Ailant*. (!*.
dri DTTililnS H HIHH V HABIT* eared3
V/rHIIH bum. without p.in. Book of partie-
slaoa.nt free. B. kl. WUOLKY, M.D.. AWer*. Os.
A. N. U....... riny.«vo’M3
Sffth YEAR.
3Sth YEAR.
MOORE’S
BUSINESS UNIVERSITY.
AND ENGLISH TRAINING SCHOOL,
BUILDINGS NOS. 26 AND 28 EAST ALABAMA ST.,
ATLANTA, a A.
A STANDARD INSTITUTION. A SCHOOL FOR THE TIMES.
The Business World in Miniature, Htndenta daily on change. No copying
from Books. The science of accounts exemplified by daily transactions between
the students. Actual Business'from the day a Student enters. The largest and
best equipped business school in tbe South, supplied with every facility for qualify-
ing young and middle-aged men for tho duties of active business life, in the shortest
possible time and the least expense, bend for circulars, terms, etc.
Persons wishing to engage in business for themselves, or others,
should first make thorough preparation, aa many have done, by at-
ten ling
Gooduiun’s Nashville or KnoxvUle Business College,
where 103 bunincst, men have applied during the past two years for
temperate anil industrious men, who could keep book* correctly and
trail Knot buxincas generally. The headquarters of
GOODMAN’S
Southern Chain
—or—
BUSINESS
COLLEGES
is located iu the
fim-at building in
NoHhviJlo.
KNOXVILLE is
already the second
link, ami A l l, IN-
TA. M CM I'll 1*1,
or LOUISVILLE,
muy a,>ou be inode
the third link.
For particulars i
ttddfwss
FEANS GOODMAN. YubTill*, T«m., sod nntios tU* pspw,