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A CRACKSMAN’S CHAT.
WBA* HI
HATH ABOUT
FKMNION.
,111* 1*110-
flaw a Bmlir ftn In*® ■ H®*»® al Nlrtl
And Gala Oat Again.
The Lonely Yon up Man In Cities.
"Whet is the prime quality in your
bnsiness ?”
"Nerve—nothing else.”
"What is the best method ?"
"Boldness. Many a job have I done
right before the eyes of people; done it
just as thongh it was the regular thing
and I was just whore I ought to bo. I
have had my pal taking things out of a
house w hen a oouplo of cops wero walk
ing by, and stood with a pencil in my
hand, koeping tally of the things. They
thought it was allright, as I looked right
at them. I tell you a fellow wants to
keep perfectly cool and know what ho
is doing, and what he is going to do
every time.
"The right kind of men are somehow
lacking. They are either too timid or
too rough. It wants a fine man, a real
Damascus blade, to do a neat job. There
are plenty of opportunities, if there wore
only the men to fill them. But I was
speaking abont chances. The people
are asleep; yon are awake. They are
timid; you are perfectly cool. You know
just what they will do if they wake
np. Thoy don’t know how many nro in
the house, nor where you are. Most
people are oowards in the night. With
out any odds you oould got the best of
them, but in the night with the bug-
t>ear and the reality of a burglar in the
house—and thoy have spent all the years
of their lives in working up a dreadful
fellow in their imagination—in such
a plight a man’s house is liko a foreign
land to him, and ho is a perfect stranger
to tho situation in his own home."
"How do you feel when you aro alone
in a house at tho dead of night and
running suoh terrible risks ?"
“There, now, you have got as much
nonsense into that question as they
usually do. In the first place, midnight
is not the nsnal hour when a house is
worked. Things are not so quiot
generally ns they aro two hours later.
And then, if it were midnight, what of
it ? Midnight exoept to cowards is no
different from any other hour, only as it
is a great deal safer for those like us.
Alone in a house ? It is a little shaky
at times, but generally safe enough; but
that isn’t the way a house is generally
worked. There Bhould be two, and
three are better. Terrible risks? We
don’t think of it in that light. There is
something fascinating abont tho risk,
and it isn’t considered objectionable.
What do we think ? How do we feel ?
Now, look here, there isn’t much time
nor occasion for thinking aiul feeling
outside of the job to be done. Your
sentimental chaps don’t want to be
prowling about nights on Any of these
delicate ’rackets, ’ The man who is go
ing to stop in a bedroom of a strange
house at two o’olock at night to consult
his feelings had better keep out ot the
bedroom. Tho man who proposes to
enter this profession will want to run
very slow on the thinking and feeling
line, particularly,when he is on duty.”
"How does an operator feel when he
is confronted by some inmate ?’’
"Iu the first place he feels that some
thing must be done pretty quick. Dodge
’em if you can, but no fooling anyhow, j
Do anything short of killing, if neces-
sary. Tho women are the hardest to i
handle, except a man who wakes up cool '
with his weapons handy. The funniest
experience I ever had was when I went |
into a bedroom one night where there
was one man asleep. I was at the
bureau drawers, and looking into the
glass I saw him sit bolt upright and look
at me. I turned pretty quick, you may
believe, but he never stirred nor spoke.
I didn’t move after turning round, but
looked at him and he at me. I very
soon saw that ho was not awake. I
gathered up the swag and walkod round
the bod. to the door, but his eyes wore
on me all tho while. I got out of the
room safely, and he never spoke or after
ward made any disturbance. I didn't
stay much longer in that house."—
Boston Herald.
Meeting Trouble.
A TRUE FAIRY STORY.
"It’s the easiest thing in the world to
got married,” said the lecturer advocat
ing matrimony for young men, in an up
town hall; "it’s as easy as rolling off a
log, os the saying it. Ministers kill him
that it is his dnty; moralists upbraid
him because ho does not get a wife;
philosophers argue that the foundation
of the State is tho family; friends point
out to him the happy life of many per
sons. The young man has no protec
tion against all this opposition, and, if
ho is a right-minded person, he will not
try to oppose such logic. If he is of
proper age, is matured in liis judgment,
can support a wife, and is reasonably in
dustrious, be ought to be married before
twenty-five. Bntthere ore many lees for
tunate young men in this oity who
never speak to a decent woman from
one yoor's end to another. Some are en
gaged in shops where only men are em
ployed; others in offices which never
liuvo a female visitor. Their homes ore
iu lonely furnished rooms, with meals at
restaurants. These poor fellows actually
pino for refined female society. One
whose loneliness has conio to my notice
lives iu Harlem."
The re]>ortcr saw this oelihato, and
got from him his story: Ho whs living in
a furnished room and boarding at restau
rants. After two years of thiH life he
bognn to wish for somo refined female
society, and accordingly engaged board
iu a fashionable boarding-house in East
Seventeenth street. Ho was somewhat
surprised by the greed with which his
week's board wns demanded in advance
and almost snatched out of his hands,
but comforted himself with a glimpse
of a golden-haired head through a half-
opened door.
Tho young man had stipulated for a
fire iu his room, but on going up nt night
found it us oold as a barn. He called
for the landlady, aud, after repeated^
trials, succeeded iu gaining her attention.
In an injured tone she promised to raise
a little tiro in tho room. In half an
hour or so, during which tho young man
grow warm from inward heat, a frowzy
and slatternly servant-girl came in with
a bang, threw somo kindling-wood on
the hearth, lit it, put on a little coal,
aud went away, taking tho coal-bnoket
with her. He started after her to secure
the bucket, but too late, and he heard
the golden-hatred beauty say: “What’s
tho matter with thnt galoot up-stairs ?’’
"Oh, ho wants fire, bad luck to him.’
"Well, ho must bo a gilly. Carry
him up tho kitchen Btovo.”
Slowly and sadly the young man in
search of refined fernalo society pulled
on his overcoat, walked down to the
street, hired an express wagon, helped
to put his trunk on, and quit tho house
just iu time to hoar the golden-haired
young woman remark: "Well, I knew
that fellow was a fraud when I first saw
him."
He went to his old “furnished room."
It had not been let. It was warm and
comfortable, and ho heard the cheery
laugh of the landlady aud her delighted
remark: “I expected you back, but not
quite so soon.” That was his Inst at
tempt to find refined female society. The
young man said there wero sixty such
isolated fellows iu his block.—New York
Sun.
In a large and beautiful out)® lived tb r se
listers. The two oldest war® handsome and
proud, and th®lr names wot® Mary Maud and
Maud Marian. Tb® youngest wu neither
handsome nor proud, and her nam wae
Trlste. Trlste, as you know, means sad or
alllloted, and this Trist® was named for her
condition. She bad ono® had a prettier name
—Rosabel, In fact,—but everybody now called
her Trist® the Sad. She stayed In a small
room, without windows, at the very top of
the caitl®, as far away as she oould possibly
get from the sln-rlngand laughing, end music
and nil the good times thnt were continually
going on In the gardens and rooms below,
where her sisters lived. Here In this little
dark room, when It was morning, poor T. Iste
would alway s sny. “Would God It wero o> en
lug!’’ and when it was evening shn won!' 1
always say, “Would Ood It were morning..
and tiic.-e two remarks were all the iewnrkj
A Story of an KleplianL
Never meet trouble half-way
Numbers of people really make them
selves ill by going out to meet disaster
and misfortune—in other words, by
fancying all sorts of bad things are about
to happen to them.
As a rule, not a tithe of these terrible
eventualities ever occur, aud all the
shrinking apprehension is undergone for
nothing.
A man, especially a family man and a
father, ought always to prepare for the
worst—for instance, by insuring his life.
But this is no reason for his getting up
every morning and fancying he is going
to die before noon I
If people always lived within then
means, always had a little put by, and
never let the future worry then, unduly,
they would lead far happier lives than at
present seems to be the oase.
Sympathetic.—A Georgia editor grate
fully says : “A kind neighbor learning
that we had rather a homely breakfast
Wednesday morning sent us a large dish
of nioely browned chitterlings. Jove
and the ancient gods are said to have
lived upon nectar and ambroeia, but if
the mighty Thunderer never tasted
browned chitterlings he and Juno, Nep
tune, et al, missed fhe nicest dish that
ever tickled the palate of the dwellers nf
high Olympus."
*&.'£&.. I I i
There is a beautiful story of au old
elephant engaged in a battle on the
plains of India. He was a standard-
bearer, and carried on his huge back the
royal ensign, the rallying point of tho
Poona host. At the beginning of the
fight ho lost bis master. The "mahout,’’
or driver, had just given him tho word
to bait, when ho received a fatal wound,
and fell to tho ground, where he lay un
der a heap of slain. Tho obedient ele
phant stood still while the battle closed
around him and the standard be carried,
lie never stirred a foot, refusing to ad
vance or retire, as the oonfliot became
hotter and fiercer, until the Mahrattas,
seeing the standard still flying steadily
in its place, refused to believe that they
wero being beaten, and rallied again and
again round the colors. And all this
while, amid the din of battle, the patient
animal stood straining its ears to oatch
the sound of that voice it would never
hear again. At length the tide of con
quest left the field deserted. Mahrattas
swept on iu pursuit of the Hying foo, but
the elephant, like a rock, stood there,
with the dead and dying around, and
the ensign waving in its place. For
three days aud nights it remained whore
its master had given the command to
halt. No bribe or threat oould move it,
They then sent to a village, 100 miles
away, and brought the mahout’s little
sou. Tho noble hero seemed then to
remember bow the driver bad sometimes
given bis authority to tho little child,
and immediately, with all tho shattered
trappings clinging as ho went, paoed
quietly aud slowly away.
A member of the New York PhoDetio
Club writes to this able and influential
paper, asking us to “drop the final ue
in words so ending, and spell dialog,
epilog, etc." Well, wo kick. Weave
willing to drop the ua to a limited ex
tent, but when the New York language
club asks ns to spell glue, gl, wo pro
test.
Goon Vegetables will only come
from good seeds. One cannot afford to
sow doubtful seeds. Those of ascertain
age or without IaViles and of doubtful
source, should bo burned and a fresh
stock ordered.
•he ever tnnile.
Oiioo mi Kvll Rye linil lookH hnrd upon
Trlste and iiuulo lior ugly and (lolortned Hio
had bunches and swellings, sho was lliepy
and trembling, and her face—well, If you
looked at It onco you did not care to look
Spain. As for tho achos and pains that
dulled and crlscrossed and y.lgzagod through
her, one would not suppose that a llttlo thin
body like hors could muko room for so many.
So Trlste stayed in hot- dark room, and
made her morning and her ovenlng remark
day nftcr day, while Mary Maud nnd Maud
Marian wont to the balls and tho tournaments
and tho leasts. Whenovor the loonds of
mirth and muaio from below where loud
enough to reach Trlste’s room nt tho top or
the castle, she would throw her face Into her
bunds and weep, and the wcoplug and the
making her two remnrks were all the amuso-
nionts sho hnd.
lint after a while something wonderful
happened. Ono morn Ing as Trlste was sitting In
her room wishing It wah evening, sho hoard a
new sound. It was not the mirth nnd muslo,
It was not tho clumsy-footed servant hrlng-
Ing up the dreadtul gruels, It was something
coming up tho wlndlng-stnlrs with a rap
tnpptng noise. Tho taps came on, and Anally
Trlste’s door opened and a llttlo, old, bent-
over woman with a walking-stick eatno In.
Tho little old woman's face was white and
wrinkled, her hair wns whlto as snow, hut
eyos wero black and so vory bright that thoy
Ut up a space around her like a couple of
candles and made Trlste’s dark room unit®
light. The llttlo old woman tapped throe
times on the lloor with her walking stick and
looked round the room. "1 am your god
mother," sho said, when she saw Trlste up In
tho oornor; “you don't remember mo, hut I
remember you; I dldn t forgot you, my jioor
child."
“Oh, would God tt were evening 1" said
Trlsie, trying to b® soolablo, nnd meaning,
perhaps, "Good-morning,” or “How do you
do/" or something llko that.
“Hark yo, goddaughter," said the god
mother, “do you want tc> go to the tourna
ment with your sisters: Do you want to sit
down at the feasts? Do you want to have
the bravo young knights and prlncos, with
their snow-whtto plumes ami thnlr oonl-bluok
chargers, como riding to woo you as they
como to woo your slHtors? l>o you want to
sing? Do you want to laugh? Do you want
to da not?" w«i« ®*«
Then Trlste put hor head Into her hands
and began to ory by wny of varying tho so-
olablllty.
" Stop your orylng, goddaughter," sidd-lho
godmother, tapping her three taps on the
floor again, and as Trlsto ralsod her hcuil she
tliono upon hor with hor bountiful eyes nnd
dried up tho tears, and while her oyes were
shining she went on talking:
"I was your godmother when you were
ehrlstonod Itosabol. When the Kvll Kyestruck
you and cursed you. and you were turned
tnt • Triste the Had. I did not desert you like
the others. 1 have boon wandering over the
world ever sluoo to tlnd the Fairy that oould
take oir tho ourso of that Kvll Kye. 1 have
wandered, wandered—oh, how 1 havo wan-
do mil I was liaud-omc, and straight as a
poplar tree; I am old and crooked, hut I do
not onre,—I have found tho Fairy. It ran
from mo, It How, It hid, It wont up nnd down,
It wns never thorn when 1 put my hand on It,
—hut I got It at last." And the godmother
tapped hor threo taps, and laughed three
morr.v laughs, that rail round tho wrinkles in
her luco like streaus of quicksilver. " I
found it, I pul It Into a home and corked It
down tight; I havo brought It to you.”
’I he godmother drew from undor the tin* ol
tntt.'ied clonk a bottle. In which was a wblte
Fairy, dimpling aud sparkling, and muking
funny little fairy bows and geaturos. The
godmothor laughed her three merry, quick-
silvery laughs again ns sho hold It up und
looked at it. “It Is meek and quiet enough
now," she said. “When a Fairy Is once
ought It gives up. It will perforin its mis
sion. Do us It bids you and It will lake off
the eurso of that Kvll Bye."
'I lie godmothor pressed tho Fairy Into
Trl le’s hand, and before Trlsto bad got ovor
bolng porfeotly dazed at tho gift, tho god-
moi In r wai tapping down the winding-stair
with her walking stick, and Trlste was left
alone with tho botilcd Fatrv.
How long It took hor to get over being
dii/ed; how soon sbo rolensed the Fairy from
the bottle; what It said and what it did, Itrst,
second, and last, we can all put Into fairy
blstor.i for ourselves. However auil what
ever the ways and means, it Is certain that
tho-o frolicsome itohes anti pnlns, which had
made of Trlsto their oxeroise grounds and
camping places, woro routed out, hip and
thigh, little and big. Sho stopped muklug
hor two romarks and lonrned some new ones.
Ami-Im began to tiro of hor room without
windows; nnd she got so crave and strong
that sho would sometimes at night, when the
garden was still and dark, wrap herself all
round nud steal down tho winding stair, to
wn’k under the trees, and to look at the stars
and tho moon.
From looking at the stars and the moon she
wanted to look at tho sun. And one glad
das, light In tho very brightest sunshine,
Tn-te walked boldly Into tho gurdon. The
bil l were singing, tho Bowers wore bloom
ing. ti e lakes, tho treos, the fountains—every
th ng was glorious and wonderful. Sho
walked on with a strange brightness and casi
no--, and so happy sho did not know wheth
er it was the birds she heard singing, or somo
kind o muslo within herself. Sho stopi ed
bosld" u fountain, and as she glanced In, tho
silver water smiled ba k to her with a fresh,
happy face—such a fre 8h, happy face, so
free from those old deformities and marks of
the Evil Kye, that Trlsto cried out for joy;
and yet such a wonderful change It was, slm
did not half believe It was her own rolloction
sho saw in the water.
Sho did not half believe it until the old
godmother came from behind somo shrub
hory. laughing her qoioksllvory laughs last
and loud, and saying, “Ho! ho! ho! HosabfF.
Rosabel!" whenever tilt) got a chance be
tween the Inughs. And Mary Mainland Maud
Marian, who happenod to ho walking In the
garden, hoard tho laughing and came to the
fountain, and when they saw and understood
they prossod Triste In their arms, orylng for
Joy over her, aud calling her their beautiful
llosa.
An I so it was ever afterwards, Mary Maud,
Maud Marian, and Rosabel wore the three
sisters that lived Iu the castle. Trlsto the
8ad wus noyer more heard from. Tho little
room at the trip of tlioea-tlo wns locked up,
and the key lost former, when Rosabel
went up to take a last look nt her old room
she found that tho dear little Fairy hnd de
parted, but on tho deserted bottle Had left its
name,—Dr. H. V. Perce’s Golden Medical
Discovery.
Tho above Is perfectly true la all but the
thin varnish of Its sotting forth, and, indeed,
tho truth in It has considerably crackled and
rubbed off even that thin coating. Do wo
not all know sad alllloted ones, to whom life
Is n curse on account of tat infill nnd deform
ing dig u-o? Restless, discouraged souls, who
6ay In the morning, “Would God it were
evening;” and In the evening, “ Would God
It wero morning;" dragging out their weary
days with no expectation of anything l etter
this side of the grin e.
If l)r. Pierce’s Golden Medioal Discovery
will do what it c’alms to do It is surely a
golden gift to human: y: tlmt it will do ex
actly «hat tt claims hat :! admits of a doubt,
if «*■ take Into ecusldc at Ion the vespn,;- !
bllitj and posit! u o! hs vi.uolior, and Hie i
thousands ot most trustworthy xvltnesuoa to
lu> wonderful pswer iu tUqiy Unilv id uncase®. i
Dr. PI®roe Is well known to tho general pul*-
Hc, not only for his Golden Discovery, but
•iso In oonneotlon with tb® World s Dispen
sary and Invalids’ Hotel at Buffalo, N. Y.: as
author of Tb® People's Common Sense Medi
oal Adviser, and other medical works of great
practical value; and as originator and pro
prietor of several specific remedies, ono of
which, the alterative ‘Tierce's Pleasant Purg
ative Pellets," and his great “Goldon Medical
Discovery" work together as allies In the euro
of certain diseases. lie Is a physician of large
practioe and experience, who. In a rational
and sclentlflo way, has made a life-study of dls-
onse, its causes andoures, under the most fa
vorable circumstances I or such study; aud the
“Discovery" is the reaultof much observation,
experiment and research. He docs not claim
that It will onre everything, or that there aro
not individual eases beyond Its reach; but he
does elaun that It la a iiowerful remedy for
chronic dlseaaos of the liver, blood and lungs,
and that from these as root diseases spring '
many of the m>«t dangerous and painful
tnamdles ol humanity. The list of <11-eases
for which he recommends tl-,0 “Discovery" Is
ne. essarllv large, slnoe it must take In till tho
ah not a und branch* s that spring from these
root diseases, each shoot nnd branch having
I'e particular nnme and manifestation, and
Its ,,articular degree of pain anil danger to
the human system. It takes In thus our con
sumptions, our kidney diseases, our atok-
hendnehes, our heart iPsenses, the whole long,
Inalhsouio list of what are called "bad blood"
diseases, our dyspepsias, dropsies, agues,
asthmas, and many othors, by far too numer
ous to mention.
The Discovery has been tried and proved,
*nd la now solidly established upon its owa
merits. Scarcely a town or village from
which some testimonial of its use and value
has not been received. Many of those testi
fying nay that after having npent hundreds
ofdollnrs upon medicines and physlolans.and
their eases having been pronounced bopeloss,
tho Goldon Medical Discovery has raised
them to health and strongth. It unquestion
ably lias grappled with thousands of “hard
case-" In tho lorm ol disease, und como off
victor, and Dr. l’lercehas the spoils of con-
quo t in Hie way of Increased reputation and
tho thanks and blessing of cured and tejoio-
ing humanity. Dear, hesitating, sink reader,
you are suffering the same kind of Ills from
which thousands of others havo been relieved
by the Golden Medical Discovery, perhaps
it will not euro you. You may be differ
ently constituted from other people!
your system may be constructed on a new
anil original plan, and work on peculiar
methods and principles. But, after all, It Is
nulto probable that you lire made a good
deal llko other folks, and that what will cure
others will, under about the same conditions
cme you. If you uso the Goldon Medlcul
Discovery your name will soon go down on
the tong Hat of the cured and relololng. The
Buddhists have a protiy fable of T troo,
oallod tho red tree of Koumhoum, earh i*af
of which boars in relief a letter, all the letters
sielllng out a pnom to lluddha, and this
vegetable poem bolng beautifully varied
year alter year as tho tree renewed its
foliage, if the vegetable life, whatever It
may lie, from which Hr. Pierce gets th®
wotulorful remedial agent® of his Goldon
Medical Discovery, wore thus to spell out the
relololng of tho-e It hnd blessed, wo should
lift-, e a | ootn to mntoh that of Die rod tree of
KnumlWuim, llko It varying Itself season by
season as new cn-o» and causes of relololng
Dr. Sanford's Liver Invigorator has a repu
tation equal to auy medicine in the world.
What a rich insn uses and gives constitute®
Wts wealth.- Hindoo.
The North American Indians, especially the
Sjmicca trilie, made such frequent use of pe
troleum that for tnsny years it nan only known
St Bcueca Oil. Now it is known as Carbohno,
lbs Wonderful Hair Renuwer.
Ho who earos only for himself in youth will
be very niggard in manhood, and a wretchod
piser in old age.—J, Hawes.
“It quiets tho patient, and ultimately cur
ilni." A lute ecomium on Samaritan Nervine.
It is the sausage manufacturer who makes
otli ends moat.
Mr. Oliver Myers of Iron ton, O., says: Sa
inariian NerviM cured me of general debility.
Give work rather than alms to tie p>>r. Tho
former drives out indolence, the latter indus
try. Cumberland.
How Millionaires are Made.
“Who la the wealthiest man in Oali-
foruia?" asked a reporter of an old
Californian.
"Jim Flood, worth $100,000,000; ho is
,a liberal man and a shrewd one. He
thas built up on Han FrauniBoo Bay a |
View port called Costa City, with mag- 1
nifioent shire-houses and piers from
whioh the wood of those rich oonnties
is shipped direct to Europe and the
world. O'Brien, Flood's partner, is
dead and his fortune distributed,
Mackey, one of the bonanza crowd, is
thought to be worth $60,000,000, nnd
Jim Fair is worth perhaps $40,000,000.”
Said I: “How in the world did Flood
and O’Brien make snoh fortunes ?"
"Just in this way, my friend," said
Mr. Hyneman, taking np a piece of
paper and a penoil, “Flood and O’Brien
kept a saloon, and the drinks wero 25
cents apiece. Fair and Maokoy woro
miners who for some years did not strike
anything vory rich. Bo thoy gave min
ing stock for the drinks instead of
money. The habit was to walk into the
saloon with three or four friends, ask for
the drinks and drink them, repeat anti
suy to the barkeeper, ‘This is mine,’’
and walk ont. Tho barkeeper made
four marks with a pencil and a fifth
mark across them, signifying $1,25 for
each round. These ronnds would go up
to a pretty high figure, but on a certain
occasion Mackey or Fair would say,
•Well, Flood, we want to make a settle
ment for drinks,’ and they would give
their mining stock at a certain valuation
current at that time which Flood and
O’Brien put into the safe. Behold I
On a certain day metal is struok in pro
digious quantities in the mines that Fair
and Mackey own, and when Flood and
O’Brien open the safe and count the
stock they have it amounts to more than
Fair and Mackey’s, so when the mines
were pouring out their million or two
every week these saloon-keepers, who
had been receiving 25 cents per tlriuk
for watered whisky, started a fortune."
TN SOLITUDE.
I’ltes! Pllea! Pile®.
Hiue *nto fur Blind, Bleeding ami Itching
bux Iirh cured worst cuhos of 20
feats standing. No one need suffer live min-
Iteaafter using William’s Indian pile Ointment.
It absorbs tumors, allays itching, sets as |>oul-
tiee, gives instant relief. Prepared only for
Piles, itching of private parts. Mailed for $1.
I'racier Med. Co., Cleveland. 0._
Tlicro cannot iivo a more uuhappy creature ,
than un ill-natured old man, who is neither
capable of rue iving pleasures, nor sensible of
doing them to othors.—Sir W. Temple.
A ID »n"il>- for loins Die®.me*.
Dr. Hubert Newton, late president of the
Eclectic college, of tho city of Now York, aud
formerly of Cincintta'i, (Milo, used Dr. IVm.
Hall’s Balsam very extensively in his practice,
as ninny of his pnt'.onts, now living and re
stored to health by tho use of this invaluable)
medicine, can amply testify. Ho nlways said
that so good a remedy ought to lie proscribed
freely by every physician as a tovoreign
remedy in nil caw's of lung disrates. It cures
consumption, nnd has no equal for all pec
toral complaints.
Title repentnnee consists In Min heart bolng
broken for sin and broken from sin. Burnt
often repent, ynt never reform ; they resemble
a man traveling In a dangerous path, who fro
quently starts and stops, but never turns aside.
Ptiro Cod Liver Oil, from selected liver on
the sea shore, hv Caswoll, Hazard A Co., New
York. Absolutely pure and sweet. Patients
who havo once taken it prefer it to a’l otliors.
VUvsiuluna declare it suuurior to all other nil®.
Chappo I hands, face pimples nnd rough skin
cured by using Juniper Tar Soap, made by Cas
well. Hazard A Co.. New York.
Affectation is certain deformity ; by forming
themselves on fantastic models tlio young be
gin with living rldieuloo®; and often end in
being vicious.—lllair.
I Julies’ and child ren’s Boots and Shoes cannot
run over If Lyon ■ Patent lleol millers are used.
Great minds, like Heaven, are pleased in doing
good,
Though the ungrateful subject* of their favors
Aro barrel) in return, —ltowe.
Beware of the incipient stages of L’oiisump
tiuu. Take Piso’s Cure iu time.
tfliuw me a people whose trade is dishonest,
tod 1 will show you a people whoso religion is a
t littiu.-l'roude.
An Open
Secret.
The feet Is well understood
that the MEXICAN MUS
TANG LINIMENT Is by fer
the best external known for
man or beast. The reason
why becomes nn “open
secret ” when we explain that
“Mustang” penetrates skin,
flesh and muscle to tho very
bone, removing all disease
and soreness. No other lini
ment does this, hence none
other is so largely used ox
does such worlds of good®
IB UNFAILING
AMI INFALLIBLE
w -SOEVER FHILS^p- .
kiSvtfi*
in critiNQ
IKpileptic Fits,
Spasms, Falling
Sickness, Convul
sion®, «t. Vitus Dance, Alcoholism,
Opium Eating, Seminal Weakness, Im-
potency, Syphilis, Scrofula, and all
Nervous and Blood Diseases.
C3ff“To Clergymen, Lawyers, Llternry Men,
Merchants, Bankers, Ladles and all whose
sedentary employment causes Nervous Pros
tration, Irregularities of tho blood, stomach,
bowels or Kidneys, or wh® require a nerve
tonic, appetlzeror stimulant, Samaritan Nerv
ine is Invaluable.
t2T“Thou sands
proclaim it the most
wonderful Invlgor-
unt that eversustaln-
ed u sinking system.
$1.50 at Druggists.
TheDR.S.A. RICHMOND
ME DICAL CO., Sola Pro
prietors, St. Joieph, Mo
Chas. N. Crittenton, Agent. Now York. Od
Home Items.
—" All your own fault
If you remain sick when you can
Get hop hitter® that never— Sail.
Tho weakest woman, smallest child, mid
aleluwt invalid can use hop bitters w ith safety
ami great good.
—Old mon t Her Ing around from Rheums
tism, kidney 1 rouble or nny weakness will bo
I most new by usi lg hop hitters.
—My wife ami daughter were made healthy
bv the uso of hop bitters and 1 recommend
tfiem to my pojplo.—Methodist Clergyman.
ARk nny go "1 doctor if hop
Bitter.* nro not ill® best family medicine
On earth.
—Malarial fever. Ague and Biliousness,
will leave every nolghb irhood as soon as hop
bitter.'* arrive.
—“My mother drovo tlie paralysis nn<l
neuralgia all out of her system with hop bit
ters.”—hid. Otwtfjo Sun.
—Keep the kidneys healthy with hop bit-
tors and you need not feir siokno*s.
—Ice water is rendered h irmless and more
refreshing and reviving with hop bitters in
each dt aught.
—Tho vigor of youth for the aged and in
firm in hop hitlers I
—» At the change of life nothing equals
Hop blttl’* to allay all troubles incident
Thereto."
—“Thaliest jierlodieal for ladies to take
monthly and from which they will receive
the greatest benefit is hup bitters.”
—Mothers with sickly, fretful, nursing
children, will cure tho children an I lienolit
them elves by taking hop hitters dolly.
—Thousands die annually from some form
of kidney disease that might have lieon pre
vented by a timely uso of li >p bitters.
—Indigestion, xv. ak stoma li, irrogulari-
tiea of the lioweU, cauuot exist when hop hit
ters are u*.o*l.
A timely ♦ * * uso of hop
Bitters xvill keep a whole fondly* ^
In robust health a year at a little cost.
To produce real genuine sleep and child
like rejxise all night, Dike a little hop hitters
on retiring.
—That indigestion orstomuoh gas at night,
preventing rest and sleep, will disappear by
using hop hitters.
—Paralytic, nervous, tretnu lous old Indie*
are made perfeot’y quiot anil sprightly by
using hop hitters.
jiMM r n iTnaat Fsri?^ft alUSTtN 6*Pfit S5U ***
WHITE/
iiumillq DUHIIH tlUflilWV
1
iSBBBi
(conqueror.)
Baynes’ Automatic Engines and Saw-Milk
OUU I.KADKIt.
We nlTor an St'i In 11. P. mounted Kasln* wan MUI.
60 in. tolid Maw. M ft. bcltins. oaut-hook», r >* complete
for operit inn, on oar», $1,101. J,"*)"!' »‘v t?
But for ctroular |B|. B. V\ . I’A I NK *V
MON*, Miuiufsotur.'iwof •Hntyl; i* Aiuoiiiullel'.n-
«iiiew, from 2 to8H II. P.; aUo PuJteyii, ll»r.*or» «nd
bUaftog, Kliuira, N. Y. 1
Box IHuO®
GOOD NEWS
TO LADIES!
Greatoxt inducement* ever of.
fered. Now’» your timn to up
ordttr* for our celebrated Tciir
end ( oflecN,anil secure a beauti-
tul Gold Band or Mom Bom Chin*
Ten Hk*t, or Handsome Decorated
Gold Bund Mow*ftore Dinner Met. or Gold lljnd Moan
DecrTAtHd Toilet Sot. For full particulars add res*
THE UKBAT ABI Kit H'AN TEA CO.,
P. O. Hoi 2W). 81 and 118 Vawiy t»t.. Now York. .
I miss you, my darling, my darling ;
Tlio embers burn low on the hearth ;
And stilled is the stir of the household
And hushed is the voice of its mirth
The rain plashes fast on tho terrace,
The winds past tho lattices moan ;
The midnight chimes out from the minster
And I am alone.
I want you, my darling, my darling;
I am tired with care and with fret;
I would nestle in silence beside you,
And all but your presence forget,
In the hush of the happiness given,
To those, who through trusting have grown
To the fullness of .ove In contentment,
But I am alone.
I call you, my darling, my darling,
My voice echoes hack on my lit art.
I rtretch my arms to you in longing,
And lo ! they fall empty, apart.
1 uisper the sweet-words you taught me
Tim words that we only have known,
Till the blank of the dumb air is bitter,
For I ant alone.
I need you, my darling, rov darling,
With its yearning my very heart aches
Tlio loud that divides us weighs liar.!'-;
I shrink from the jar that it makes.
O’d Borrows lise up to be*ot me ;
011 doubts make their spirit their own.
Oh, come through the darkness aud save un.,
For I aiu alone.
WhenFno* mean wenR
• tune enA then hare them leturn meene real
onre. I heve m.de the m.eeee uf PITS. aPIbjrev
remedy. Give Sipreie end Poet Offlee. ooeie. jo»
r JTo Speculators.
R. Undblem & Co.. I. O.Jft<*•,
Now York.
t ani 7 Ohambtr of
Ooinuibrce, ChioA*o. •
Crain and Provision Brokers
Members of ell yromiueut ‘ n
Nriw York. Ohiea*o, bt. Louf i and Milwauk -
Wo have exclusive privsie tolegraph win
Ohio wo an.i New York. Will execute ord«
judgment when requeued. tro' Q hioaso
ln«^particulars, HO. LINDBLOM ACO., U lnoagft
ABERTS WANTED ESHSSMSl
Yt’vriU al kn' tV*re»t variety of fancy vork. for which
ist Stbicet. BOS 1 OX. jlAiiS.
to tlio TWOJIBI.
CM).. 103 Tskmost :
o' A
less cstwxt
tonns
Inflammatory
le cared
w O. Is the nutrtkesl,
iur st »n 1 best tar
AW liVtT. stomtoh, bladder *«vl blotwl
Diseases, end only real "1?!
dinet»v..n>d for »;*ute
r . diseovut
rheumatism
tfuu t. luinbsfo soiet
neurslgU. elo. HMonred liop
li^Bnalit’idWieeend 1?’^
CONSUMPTION,
ekR—all
•r«l levee
of relit-
verrt !•»»»< •! 14 **•
: u k. Aakvouf
ns tot it—
1 have a positive remedy f«.
nae thousands of «»f l‘ <
at kind and of Ions
ho a Irene to wj faltb
, two •10‘m.mrRflMc to-
1*1 Tat*.
Kneytoiiso. A certain cure. ™ ^
FdtVcenU.
CAUTION.
Don't be persuaded to huy old styl«-»; K®t
io new improved dust-proof, Patent Regulator
tho
Watches.
Send lor Catalogui-
J. P. 8TKVKNS WATCH GO.,
ATLANTA, GA.
V VI I ■ Newark. New Jereoy. PoeiUone for
0 w
. rev-TK WANTED fo-the beet end faeteat eeU"
D ft T P HI T &teo f » [SohIm"P.°t-
pU I tfl I w eut Lawyer, Washington, D. Q»
AGENTSWANTF0«¥«, ....
Oilin K. T. 01ETEIUCHW. Cleveland, Ohio.
_ to Soldiers and Heirs.
pensions iTjSWtv. wfa&ygy
— m n ®a r'lstem Pumps, Wind Mill Punt pi,
PUMPS
terjrt^ul.TelJ Koro*. PumpOo.. Lookport, X.Y.
OPIUM
A. N. U •
The Peculiar OA1 Mystery!
fm-catalogue.*
AND WIIISKY HABITS OURED
IN THRES WEEKS.
Pamphlet., Proof.
_ _ Addrma, in confl enc*,
,Ump W. C. BELLAMY. M. D.. 1H Brood Streot.
Atlanta. Georgia. — ■
It = one of the peculiarities of the old-fashiooed
would tell patieiits what they were probing for .ton. They ««
Id do the patients no good to know, and that i •* Y. ^hey
lying a foolish curiosity. In order to keep patten a pntq could not
would write the prescriprioijs in dog-Latiu. so that
wants to digest well. • Or he has a troublesome liver which he wants to
put to rights. ^ ’ • ' - “
read them. All that sort of thing is now over,
he takes.
put to ngnts. So he takes Brown’s Iron Bitters about which there is n
Siystery at all. This is the best preparation of ir °"‘^ It buHds up
dilution with gentle yet efficient tonics,
weaknesses.
feu it.