Newspaper Page Text
TIIK STEEL COBBLER.
Of Ml HI X I’AIKN OK M1IORM A MlNUTK.
MB.blnr.Txrn Thrm On! n« II ilirj
llurrrl HluTM or T«mnlo < «n».
(Krom llii t Now York Hun.]
A cobbler take* lmlf ft day to pole nnd
heel ft |Niir of shoos. In Crow Hill pcn-
itontiary ft few hundreds of men and
women start with the raw material, nnd
torn out 8,800 pain* of hIiooh in ten
hours, or more than six pairs of b1ioo« a
minute. The men nnd women have lit
tle to do with it, Miiohincn do the work,
nnd need only to he fed, started, and
stopped; all the flue and iugenionn work
of building ft Imautiful fthoe Hiey do, one
part ftt a time nnd one machine to each
part. For instance, the first, mnohino
ente the solos out of the leather. It In
nothing bnt n punch fitted with n knife
the BhnjKj of ft shoo Hole. Different
steed knives cut out anything from a
hftliy’s to n plantation darky's size. Cut- ,
ting out the nolo leave* the shoots of
leather in tatters. The biggcht tftttors
are used for heels; the smallest mako
fuel. Iicnther Bcrapft mako na good a
furnace fire oh coni does. Tho next
mnehine splits a thin idico of tho upper
stirfiice of the solo n little way from tho
edge all Around, bo that it lookB as if a
thin shoot hud boon pasted on to tho
sole, leaving the edges unposted. Under
this loose edge a mnohino presses a little
gutter or channel in which tho nailing
or sowing is done, nnd afterward hidden
hy pasting tho loose edge over it when
the npi»er is attached.
At tho same moment convicts nro cut
ting uppers out of dressed calfskin.
They lay patterns on the skins nnd thus
ent tho needed sizes. This is done hy
hand, lmt tho linings nro sowed to the
npi>ers, nnd the buttonhole's nro put
through both leather nnd lining by uuv
chinery. The buttonoholoR are stitchei.
by nutomntio machines, consisting of
n sowing machino having uuder tho
these persons work for the contractors,
was asked what he thought of the effect
of Hiioh snrrouudings upon tho youths
of good morals. He replied Hint thore
used to lie a general feeling that, the ar
rangement was improper and dungcrous,
bnt it bos proved not so. Outside free
lntar has been employed in Crow Hill
eleven or twelvo yoars, and of nil tho
hundred* who havo thus come daily to
llio prison not one has ever been sent
there as a prisoner. Tho outsiders do
not have anything to do with the prison-
A SUNDAY StfKMON.
It 1(1. ATI V K. VALI'K OF UKNI'KOMITY
AND 1.1 II Rl< A MTV.
A FrwNirlklna Note* From Hrreher'x Sim.
Hnr Tnlk.
“That was the Wall fltreet of those
days,” said Mr, Beecher as he read his
text Hunday, commenting upon the
passage, “And ho fell among thieves."
The sermon fronted of the relative value
of generosity and liborality. Mr. Beech
They nit apart, nnd never, nuder cr *'* I'*" aormon
It iB right for ono to fsel tho influence
of nation, of family, of profession and of
Hocitil oiroles, bnt it is wrong to neglect
nil outside of it, as if the claims of lm-
mnnity on na wore confined in tho rat if
The Frrulilcitl (Jive* Advice in IMrmlirr* | # ,i nenrness of uersons to US ”
Hhn With I* Knur the I'nlll l.nl FIsUI. 01 lno persons lo us.
'Of nil facile gnioes in Christian
nny clrourastftnoos, speak a word to the
oonvieU.
I'llti lilMK*Klli!f CLUIt
(From tho Detroit Free I’ross.I
“What wo want," quietly began Bro
ther Gardner as tho meeting opened,
"nm s rresident who rcproacntH do luu-
jnrity of do peoplo not only in number,
hut iu sentiment. How shall we git
him ? Let mo gin yon do"programmo:
1. Make a ring of fifty men who havo
corrupt plans to ho furthered hy n I’resi-
denshnl enndydate.
2. De ring buys a Bartin nnmtar of
liewspaperH to mannfaekturo n foolin’.
3. Mouey am UBod to git do right
Hurt o’ delegates to oonvonshnna.
4. If dn delegates onu’t git n higher
price liy goin’ ober to do odder mnn,
dey stick to doir oaudydftto an’ pull
him frew wid a groat hurrah an’ sot him
up fur do jtooplo to worship.
• fi. Den eaoli side starta out an’ proves
dat do enndydate of de odder party am
menu, low-lived an’ dishonest.
(5. By de use of lies, money, bulldozin’
an’ frauds of do mennest diaoripahun,
one of do oandydatoe am finally 'leetod,
an’ ho goea to do Whitt) House an’ bo(h
np’dar' ns do representative of do groat
majority of American freemen.
“Of all do mean and contemptible
things about do American tiashnu ns a
race am a Prcsidonshul campaign. Wo
Ait
*1 *
Y v
# *
r.
needlo a little plate which turns exnotly lie,deceive, bribe, flatter, oppress, nn’ if
dis anooooda wo swing onr hats an’ hur
rah an’ call do attouahun of do world to
our grand system of guv'meut. From
de nominaahun of a constable to de
countin' of do electoral wote fur l’rosi-
dont we indulge in all dat am moan an’
low-lived, an' yit, wo slant our hats ober
our earn an' talk about freedom of do
press, freedom of do ballot, an’ a repub
lican form of guv’meut dat onto Linos do
hull world 1
“Sir Isaac Walpole, if you am gwino
to take an aetivo part in do cornin’ cam
paign, prepar’ yersolf now hy throwin’
to do winds all ycr religun I
“l’iokles Smith, resolve to become a
liar 1 .fudge Cadaver, git yor tongue
In accordance with tho outlines of the
buttonhole, and stoi>s when tho hutton-
holo is finished. Ono man feodR several
machines, starts them, and does not
toueh them whilo they aro nt work. Af
ter this tho soles and uppers come into
tho hands of one Bet of oouviebj, the
iv 1 asters and taokorn on, who pnt the two
:*"together with a very few small tanks.
' rheao people all work like lightning,
but are slow ticsido the machinery.
Tho soles and upinirs are firmly joined
in aevoral ways. One machine puts in
brass screws and bites them off exactly
at the right distance between tho nppor
and tho under surface of the leather; an
other drives in an iron screw with a
nicety; auothor aewa tho parts together : liniliered lip to talk slander 1 Giveadam
with wax thread, the thread passiug
through a heated metal horn, which
keeps it soft and warm; yet another im
itates hand sowing with yollow thread,
leaving an extended sole, which is after
ward I levelled to look protty. The
merit of this mnehine is that the shoes it
Jones, see if you canuot tit yourself t<
be a fust-class bulldozor 1 Trustee roll
back, 1 look to yon to bribe sieb men as
can’t bo frightened 1 Lord NoIhou Hint's,
stand forth an’ tell me dat ye nm pre
par’d to write ahusivo newspaper articles
fur so much money |>or rod 1 Wayilown
sews are pliable and easy to the foot, 1 Be boo, you am detailed to hire free-born
This doos its
and bring n good prico.
’ work in eleven seconds.
The heels are made separately, nnd
whou finished havo nil the nails project
ing half an inch from tho bottom of tho
■ lower sheet of leather. A convict puts
one of these heels into n metal cup in a
press of grant power, nnd over Hint lie
nvds a shoe in tho right posit ion. Then
down comes a grout bar and squeezes
the heel aud shoe together, driving every
• other nail all the way in aud leaving
every other nail sticking u little way
“ ont. He takes the shoo out, puts u
• pretty heel tap on, puts the slice hack,
• submits it to tho pressure, ami then with-
draws it, and finds the tap firmly nailed,
, with the nails not quite through the tap,
which presents n smooth, unbroken un
der Bcrvioe. The heel-shaving machines
present to tho heel a sot of rapidly re
volving knives, shaped to make a
... straight heel or n guttered one, or even
n lady's French heel. Another machine
' cuts tho front of tho heel scpiare, and
another trims aud smooths the edge of I
tho solo. Tho edge of tho solo ami tho !
sides of the heel are blackened and tho i
t edge is pnt undoi a hot iron about the i
size of a fat ohestnnt. This iron mov
to and fro with incredible rapidity, i
imitation of the motions of the cobhlo
who used to do tho work by hand. A
.. large Iron, also heated by a gas jet, does
the same thing fur the heel, and does it
nnaer biicIi pressure that cracks nnd uu- j
. cveunessos in the heel aro smoothed |
• over, filled up, aud concealed.
Some shoe uppers have eyelet holes iu- 1
.stead of buttonholes. There is a ma-
(> chiue in tho prison for doing this work, i
, It has two steel rods close to one another, \
..and whilo one punches tho holes tho
other inserts the evicts, which run down
-a little gutter, right side up, exactly into |
place to fix into the punctures in the i
'leather, nnd to havo tin ir edges squeezed
over by the rod and the piece that fits
’ 'upon it. Twenty years ago shoemak
ing machinery performed only half of
thin work aud did that roughly. Now
,the shoes mado in Crow Hill prison are
*ncli as most persons wear, and nro lu
all respects shapely, presentable, aud
.well finished. Some of them retail for
St or a pair.
« In tills prison, side by side with tiio
scum of humanity, reputable men and
jgjiJs aro employed. Thore aro probably
Jwo hundred girls in tho female prison,
.who live in Brooklyu, come every morn
ing, aud are free to go homo whenever
patriots to carry torches an’ hurrah fur
| liberty nt no much a torch I Dat’s ull.
Let us pnrooed to bizuess.”
AStOtm TIIK MHTUKVKti.
Homo nmiitflur writers iu London
wrote a set of poems upon a given sul>-
joct: “ Mrs. Brown Among tho ri’.s-
tlietos.’’ The following versos warn the
prizo:
1 Hhyn to Mrs. 'Arils, ns wo sot a-'aving ton,
"1 wonder v% lint in 'oven's iiiiiuo tlioso'oro
Ini'sthctos 1m) !"
" I.or tiles* ycr ’art," *tio «sy* to mo, “ I *oo»
'em ov ry dsy,
Wtioro l geos out u-charing, only Jo*t aoroM
(Uo w»y."
And thou slid soys ns 'ow slio’d lake mothers
lint hli'isod night.
I Bo, when no'd took * dro|> of aomclltiuk 'ot to
pnt ns rigid,
\Ye started on our visit, nnd was huslv red la
in style.
i And snw a lanky follow with a Imwful gashley
a mile,
! Who says, " Aro you con-tumult? do you hover
expo- — no, in religious experience, tlioro
is uo grace like that of hating. It is
called justice sometimes—standing for
the right; it is called a proper discrimi
nation of character nnd conduct; it is
called nil sorts of things; hut tho Lord
knows and tho devil knows that it is
right down good hating that is exorcised
hy calling themselves Christians.”
“Tho good Hnmaritan is admired hy
nil sects and races—and occasionally is
Imitated.”
“A habit of gonerosity is like oil on
machinery, and ronkos life smooth; and
them is more in it to teaoh man to
love mnn than in all the preaching in tho
world.”
“There nro a thousand things that
might gradually bo better for the inter
pretation of truth in its largor sphere;
but, after all, an act of kindnoss brings
God’s angels nearer to man than almost
sny other form of teaching.”
"I recollect that tho most painful
times in my lifo, nnd the least profitable,
wore when folks wore tnlkiug religion to
me. Oh 1 I did dread a pious man who
was always talking religion, and I made
np my mind that if I ever got pion*-
which I never cx poo ted—that I would
never boro people with religion. There
isn’t a man, woman or child that, can say
I ever ‘talked shop’ to thorn personally,
of my own accord, or that have over
found me unwilling to talk religion when
they wanted to talk it. 1 never push
religion on anybody.”
“Liberality endeavors to do more
than a transient kiiuluoss. It 1h study
ing how to do a kindness in sncli a way
that it shall bo a wholesale one and not j
a retail one. It looks along tho line ot I
' probabilities nnd nees where mischiefs
will ho likely to occur, or where benefits
will ho likely to lie appreciated or need-
oil, and undertakes, by organization, to
| extend a kindness down through-tho
! generations. ’’
j “Generosity works hy sight, liberality
1 works hy faith, and, like ourselves, they
work tatter when they have both sight
j and faith.”
“It is good to relieve one orphau, but
it in tatter to establish nil institution
that will rcliove ten thousand; it is a
much higher manifestation of truo love
and honovolonoe. ”
“Lot not litarality oheat generosity;
let not generosity scoff at litarality; lot
them go into nu alliance one with the
i other.”
"Don’t do your good through commit-
1 (cos if you can do it personally; the face
of the giver is tatter than the thing
given often; but if you can do some
thing through a committee besides what
you do jHjrsonally do that."
“It is the selfishness of riches that is
its bane; it is the laying np for one’s
Holf; bnt he that with constant, propoi
I regard for his own household, yet has an
ambition to go beyond that, aud hy his
life and in it to mako men ou every side
<>t him happy, how heroic is such a man
and such a life I”
"Tho man who lives for himself will
have the privilege of being hiB own
mourner when he dies.”
Slaking a (Jiktu.
Boos do not usually want more than
one queen. In fact, they will not have
more than one anlcHH the swar& has
grown so largo as to crowd tho liivo and
they aro going to found a coloqy, or
“swarm,” oh it is called; in which case
each family will need a Bovorcigri. As
Boon sb it is clear to tho wiseacres that
it will ta necessary to bcih1 off a swarm,
tho lroes go to work to make a queen. A
worker maggot, or if thoro happens to
ta none iu the hive, a worker egg, is se
lected near the edge of tho comb. Two
colls next loor to tho ono in which (his
maggot iB nro cleared out, aud the di-
riding walls are cut down, no that tlitco
ordinary cells aro turned into one, Tho
food which tho worker worm has taon I
feeding on is removed, and the .little
•roaturo is supplied with anew kind of j
f kxI—a royal jelly. Change of food, a
larger room, and a different position—
the queen’s cell Inuigs down instead of
being horizontal -these three changes of
treatment turn tho tao that is develop
ing from n worker into a queen. Him is
iifferent iu her outer shape, different in
ilmost all her organs, and different in
overy single instinct. There is nothing
else in nature that seems to mo more
wonderful tliiiu this.
For four that one queen may not Como
out nil right, tho provident little eren-
tureH iiKiiully stnrt two or three queen-
Tells nt once, it is curious to watch tho
firnt queen nn sho comes out. Him
moves up and down the combs, looking
for other queen-cells, and if she finds
one, silo falls upon it. in tho greatest ex
citement, nnd stings her rival to death.
Sometimes, by accident, two now queens
come out. at tho snrao time; then it is
wonderful to see the bees. They dear
a space niul bring tho two rival quouiiA
together, niul stand lmek to watch tho
fight. And it is a royal fight indeed; n
fight to the death, for they never give
up till one or tho other is fatally stung.
The victor is then accepted as sover
eign.—St, Nicholas Jor Juno,
TIIK IlOItHR DIM TOIL
Wo have hoard of n “euro nil," bnt whon a
I father la tnldiiR a bottlo of modlolno for tho
| simmer ooiaplsint to hut family in tho country
bis liorr.oIiiih n sudden attack of cho'cra from
( ivor-feeding, is jr; ?. n tlm contents o the hol
lo ami l**oou r< stored, an iviih a e*«o wo Imvo
j Just In aid of. I)r. Rigger's Southern R'-in-
! nly should certainly relievo men of dlnr-
! rhioa, dysentery nnd children teething. This,
! with » hottle ot Taylor'* l liernkeo Remedy of
| fhvri-t (tnm and Mulleii the stlinu-
I Istlug eipeetoruiit principle of the sweet gum
with tIn) demulornt h sling one of tho mullein,
I for the euro of croup, wlmoplng rough, cold*
and consumption, presents a little mkiiioinr
Clir.HT no hoUKeliold xlinuld hr without for tho
»prt dy rrlii f of sndih n nml dangerous atls'k*
pf tho lung* and Imiwi Ih. A*k your drnggh mr
them. Manufneluied hy Walter A. Taylor,
prop;tutor Taylor’* Premium Cologne, Atlanta,
FOR CURING CHILLS AND FEVER
AND
Removing tho Distressing Effects of Malaria,
AYER’S AGUE CURE
HAS BEEN FOUND 80
NEARLY INFALLIBLE.
THAT
We Authorize Dealers to Return the Money,
If the medicine is taken according to directions, without benefiting the patient
PREPARED BY
DR. J. C. AYER & CO., Analytical Chemists, LOWELL, MASS.
Bold by nil Druggists. I'rl'« fl, six buttles for |u.
"Tins ring, which I would ask you to
accept of me, is emblematic of mv lovo
for you; it has no end.” “Thank you
very much, Mr. B.; it curiously ro*em-
blew my lovo for you; it has no tagiu-
•'Uough on Tiiollmelip."
111htn■ 11. n lief fur neural;,ia, h.ulluirhr, fare-
ache. Ark fur “ltmigji mi I iMithaeh ." 15.V l!Se.
Wntin thoro Is much light tho shnde
is dee poet.
Pino's Remedy for Catarrh is a certain euro
for that very ohnuxlona disease.
Gnu always tins tirno enough if ono
will apply it well.
G-ITT^IST AWAYI
~ The "I.Tl-n K WOMnull"
•time keeper
Farmer*, mrchai.t t, 1*1*1'
Ilnntlnff C'lawl TltrR
„ i* •!nitrite r cheap p.v.but*
r. li.i; ir I lur of th' time of tltf
lib kel rate, he ml li t rrw!«D»
I'ttv r*">'
w . nw|»H‘ct
Iht.lrra. fin. Iv (InUht <1, • leftillll
pint “if. w»t». A fe»in
Vlminirrnpli «*f tl.
Ir* rmblwit IL-pnhllmn
Inti A* You like. 1 hef*
firs «•“( w" want I .UOO
_ ton re. tV-remt fall
|h, k AO.! th* Utile Wonriet Time Keeper
mull wH.» order a M-ltr*. •b“t'ly I* »'
ft«rt.-.l. Hemem’s r thl* It A free pr. trni.
TIIK MONITOR’S CIGGY.
No I’rl/r llf.nev lor Tbein-ll.it A.it .tinniint
ot (iri.tel.il Itee.iKiiUl.iu.
•’Itniigli nn I tell."
“ltnugli on Itch" cures huumr*. eruption*,
ing worm, tetU r, salt rheum, rhilhlaitiH.
Goon bchnvi.ir is tho luxt tost of, vir
tue and amiability. \
The ehniiee ronrnrlmiiHuf igimrant men have
aomdimeK Imiiiglit di.T.'puU' not only on tIn ir
own worlhh <-> meilieiueKtliut deserve no credit,
hut a.itiH-lin» *, with miieli injli liee, on renlA)
rclial'lu pr. pat .dinns, bmlie* itlmultl not lie*t-
tato sliout Mm. 1’iTikliain's Vegetahlo iioni-
ponml. for llii* remedy ha* been tried, proven
and praiaed for year*.
Jbnnir—"What is A dude?” “Well,
x dtido is a fid cent man iu a CO-dollur
suit of clothes.”
Pretty W.until.
I,ndieH who would retain fieHlmoR* amt vivac
ity. Try "Wells' Health Uenowor."
Onk woman’s four <s ant.lhor woman’s
kplioro.—Hartford Sunday Journal,
lontnullv Kill ted.
Mrs, Ann I.icoir, of Notv Orleans, Is.,
writes: “ 1 have n s hi who Ims boon slolwfor
twoyoais; ho has boon a t tided liy onr load
lug physicians, hut a I to in purposo. Tliia
morning ho Itml tils umul *| ell of coughing
sod wa* s giv.it ly | rust fitted In consoquonru
ilmt death simnu d lmudnenf. Wo had in'tli(>
boti-e a I»>tlto of Dr. Win. Hall’s Balsam for
lno Dungs, purehnse.l liy my husband, who
loliced your udvartisoinout. Wo adtniiiis-
wed it. anil he was instantly relieved."
A man can do what ho ought to do;
when ho nays ho cannot ho will uoL
I.ilc Preserver.
If you aro losing your grip on life, try “Wells
Health ltcnewer.” Goes direct to weak spots.
Thu Wall street version of nn old say
ing is “Tho man who speculates is lost.”
Iliiltl llcn«lii»
when you havo trittl ovorvthinp cIbo nnd
failed try our Carbollno and l>o happy; it will
pr* vo its morits. Ono dollar a uottlo, and
told by all druggist*
XSirCSXTlTX SUES
For Female ('omplalnt«nnd
iWrikncMfii no rommon to
onr brot frnmln populntloD*
II will cure euAlrvlj th« wornl form cf FcmtUe C«>»
plalntH, all Orarlan trvut'lcA, InflAJunmllon »n<t T'lrrrn*
Mo«, Falling atut Pl*plnorinrnf«, nn»l tho oont«*<|urnt
SptiiRl Wt'itHnrAH. ami 1* inrUtmlnrlT Rilaptuil to tha
L'lmntfo of Llfo,
It will ill iolv* Arp? expel tumor* from tho titrmn
mrly hln«-» of riov. lopmciit. Tho touiicru Y to cAiirrrout
hutnotN ihcro laoltevttHl Ytiry HprotiUr by lt« u»o.
It rcmoYr* falttlniwrt, flatnlcnff, d»'At.r«»YA *11 rr»vfrvf
or AtliuularilN, Mul rcl!“ViA w««oinr<Mi of tho St una. h,
.1 euro* I:l"»tlriR, IlFRilAchf*. Norton* I'roatrRtion.
i)«nnrol r>rlilllf r, 8lo#|ilrMti h(. Iirpio-rlon »nd Indlrco i
lion. That foe IIul of boorlnifdown.r'iiut'tiiff iw-ln, |
And h't.-knrho. i* nl#ayA |s rnikin r.tlf cilird hy uao, ’
(t will nt *11 (Itnrf and Under nil olrruin*lanro* net In j
bArtiDi’ty with the Uwn that govern tho K« inmlo nyMem,
For tho otiro of Kldnoy OittuplalnfA of rlthor nr*, tMi
Oouipountl 1j unauriNifurU, 1’rh u 11 (Hi. ill* buttlo*f e-r 1
No family ihould bo without I.TDIA K. PISKHAkl i
TJVEttriM.fi. They rure oon/ftltwittoti, IdltournrAN ad4 J
torpidity of tho llror. t5 rent* a bo* At all drufrrM*
JAE ARMJR flf Alt DODIS or AOVtSTOUt, I
ONEER I i«ml [T^ARIMG
HEROES I MB| y?tE03.l
Th«* fhrlllln* Adtenturru of all the hnprv-p* plorrr* and f ^htrt*. •
* ith ImliAtm. t»t.tiA«*» aod wild IipaiIa, oicrour whole com.try,
froi-i tho rarlicst tinira t<» th* preafnt. l. v*fl und U’ lo t* r.i« ,
I'lojfA of JkrHofo, l.Ah.-illr, Muulish, Ilonnr, Kenton. ILa Iy, \
C’r.'rKFtt, ft. ■ 11.11' • - ritstrr. W -III.!’' .
Dill, Ooni. Milra uod rro.ik.trcM Indian Thlcfs and *Cort. of j
MIA MM I'd. .1 I II., Il"» III'. I'mla.l'l|ihi», r hi. I...m . i
Fauaaicr White Suliilinr Springs Hotel, j
Fauquier County, Va. ,
30 DAYS’ TRIAL
!%*!&!£ I
(nr.resa.) .anus,)
T^l.ltCTRO VOLTAIC Bl'tiT «nS "»h*r Zl «n;nm
Pi Arri I**. ** »m* >iit en *i !>*)■ I rtnl To MKN
0?fl.v. Yoi NU OK Ol.ll. wl". ftr* ■iffi.rniK tr.im
Niavo.i* Daim.iir, l.'>"T Vitai.it¥, W»»n*n
W***s*,srs, »ml »tl kill'll* I ili*'"i*' * S|HH il, re.
list «n.1 .-nn.i'Ll" r-*t<>r«tliin m llKALTII, Vj;mn
Hasb'hiii oi)A*A*Trrn. NmiJ *t lor lllunrowa
rnniplil*. fn>n. A'ti.rti*
Voltaio Belt Oo., Marslmll, Mich,'
r*ip*rtn*tttrdnrllm In (lie price «*f
VASELINE
(PKTItOI.ltr.il JF.I.I.Y.)
One Ounce bottles rortucod trom 15c. to 10c.
TwoOunco bottles roituccd trom 25c. to 15o.
Five Otinco bottles reduced trom 50c. to 25c.
Ttl* P'ltitl* must tin* Arret'* An, 1m* nrl«in»l fnort,
tint*Ion |., ua, AA ti n lltntAlien), ate wtIIiSmaa.
Chesobrough Manetaeturlmi Co., Now York.
tAfcore's
JVUanlit% Gcu " •
AN OUOANI/.KD HU8INE88 COltMtlNH Y.
25th TSAR. HKND FORCtROPLAIM.
AtiKYTN WAVTKD r„tk.nTr*.i
•« Oi
rd, A it I belt tic Impartial t«
• 91. AO.
Tha fifth no'Aon •»
IllMI.'' t, will o|W*»t .1
uutlor lho aanm iiiai
« faYorildv Rod p iptiUr Snmmnj
17th. IK-M. Itvilllie flonduet d
uo*nt that ha* inAilo Huh II *tnl
hr” forth .maud*. Torm»$l’J"n to $>1.0U !»••!
For part mulart*, addrann (unt I Juno lit It).
K. TI'.NNI.Y .% DO..
National ll dol, Waalnunion, 1>. 0* ^
Red Sulphur Water.
CURES CONSUMPTION.
Fino^t 11 "• «»1 accommodation* in tho mountain*.
Elevation 1,It* u foot ; 1 400 aero* uf loroat and lawn.
Rod Sulphur
Dlniiron (-oiantyi
Sptlngs,
W. Vu.
. ... i'.hrr« fl**" I ■ Au.l
-Ir. tlir Aii'l I'Sr.i'A
1,0.11'tin ft.ftO Ml> Mr .. r i,.> prrranl. to Aarnl*
llAfcl kOKw i'l lli'lsUi'U * '*)*. Ilorlf.rj, * »«■
GOOD NEWS
12 LADIES!
itrai indue
furl'd. NowV yonr t m • !«• *“t up
nrdpva <or our crlnl r t d Trii*
and I'nOrra.nnd mo nr" n hcautu
full.old Hand ot Mm U.iawth na
Tea Not, or llniidi *iiin h«n rtt«al
Pan.rM.YMi Itorp 1 >»nncr S.-t, or I.old Hand M um
1>0C* r'ti’.l Tmli’t Hot, !•* r lull particular* addrnm
Till; (;|(I AT A >11 IJ M AN TKA 4 0.,
F, O. Pox HI ntul V.’Foy .St., Now York.
M) ■ to ,S Idlers A llfriia Hand at am
Pensosis
SOLID SILVER 8T^M WIHDiiiH
FULL JEWELLE'J GENTS’ SiZfc
WATCH FOR $12.60.
FDI.l.V or.AI
OPIUM
HABIT
CURED
CDKK <f I' A It ANTKKD.
(ISO. \. Rli.lllFOKD. SI.D.
Druggist Ait'l I’ll Arm ar li 1 1.
1*. O. Uui I'jJ. Coluiubii*, Go
jRANTKI
dA,i only. U.hhIa Aoni I , k.
‘anti don't do
tivon
ynvn nnd clingV"
"I'm quite reiqiectillilo," 1 »ay»,
no hix'Ii thing.''
Tlirn fame a woman in a die** I’d
anliitmcd to wear,
Who look* a* if she’d Just got hup and never
done 'or 'sir,
Aud sigh* and rolls 'or here* about; 1 really
felt distress.d.
1 says, "Ilexcuso me, Miss, Ib somethin!* 'eavy
on yer chest V "
" O rhilingstine!" sho says to mo and give mo j
quito a start,
“You do not lmnderstand the truo develop- !
menti of Hntt;
Your soul is not attoonod to It art's too toohns- !
tutto bliss "
Cut 'ere 1 says to Mrs. H., “ I’ve 'ad enough of ;
this !
It thi'sn ar-' wl\at you call liieithetcs," I says, !
“ they ain't my form !
Too too," I says; "'ere, rurao and 'nvo two
tw"'s of somethiuk warm "
Giroulars.—Ono of our pojiulat .loo-
tors was not. (ting ago much pleased with
a certain aerated water, and, by his us
sidiious recommendations, procured for
it. a celebrity it justly deserved. Tho
doctor acted solely iu the interests of hu
manity generally, nud expected no re
turn. To his surprise, there came one
morning an effusive letter from thb
company, saying that his recommenda
tions hud done thorn so much good that
they “ventured to send him a hundred
—” Here the page eamo to nu end,
“This will never do,” said the doctor;
“it is very kind, but I could not think
of accepting anything." Hero he turned
the page and found tho sentence rau :
“Of our circulars fur distribcuiuu.”
A sub-committee of the House commit- i
1 tee on Naval Affairs reported to tho full |
committee a hill providing for the appro- j
1 printion of the $100,000 for tho relief of j
j tho officers ntul crewsof the United States
sloop of war Cumberland aud United I
I Htates steamer Monitor, engaged in no- !
1 tion with tho Confederate steamer Mer*- !
rimac, in Hampton Roads, on March 8 ■
1 and S), 1802. Representative Harmor, of ;
| Pennsylvania, who prepared tho bill, in j
! bis report accompanying it says:
"The committee, after careful invosfi- |
gation of tho law nud tho fncts iu these j
cases, has taen uusble to find auy an- j
thority for tho payment of prizo money I
in either of them. * * * The evi- i
denoo shows that tho Merrimao was |
neither captured nor destroyed by either i
of ttieee vessels and Ihe claim to prize I
money must ta rejected. But while this ;
is true the evidence presented to the
committee abundantly proves tho most
conspicuous gallantry and devoted pa
triotism, as well as extraordinary ser
vices rendered by the officers and crews
of these ships, which, iu the opinion of
your committee, entitles them to a gen
erous aud grateful recognition by the
country.”
A Look Ahead.— Everything, snys a !
foreign journal, looks cheering for the
Universal Peace Society. Tho Italian
Government has just ordered ten more
sixteen-inch Krupp guns that cat. send j
a solid shot weighing 20,000 pounds !
through any plate armor that hua yet
taen made.
Mixed Ur.—A correspondent writing
to Naturen, states that tho past winter
has been remarkablo for tho differences
In climate otaervod within short dis
tances in Norw. y. For instance, while
At Christiania tho ice was from ten
inches to twelve inches thick last Janu
ary, at Stovanger tho thermometer fell
to freeziug point only onco during the
wholo month.
«> Kliotihl Ill-Ill Olio AnolhSV.
Mr. Norman Hunt, of No. 109 Chestnut
street, Siiringfieltt, Mass., writes April 10,
1880, saying: , , . ...
“Having the affliction caused by kidney
and liver diseases, and after enduring tho
nehos, pains, weakness nnd depression inci
dent thereto until liody n*ul soul were nearly
distracted. I sought for rcliof and a cure
from mv trouble, and was told bv a friend
who bad he ii eur.sl by ft himself, tha* the
best and only sure cure was Hunt’s Remedy,
and ii pm his recommendation I commenced
taking it, and the first few .loses improve 1
iny condition in n very marked manner, and
a continuance of it* u.-o has justified all that
mv friends claimed for it —th it it was a
•nro and l ernlhnent ■ ure for all diseases of
Ihe kidneys and liver. Several of my friends
in Springfield have u ed it with the most
gratifying results, an 1 l feel it my duty ns
well as a pleasure lo me to recommend Hunt’s
Remedy in the highest possible terms."
tin n a fart in rr’s Teslluiiiny.
Mr H. Tv. Paine, manu.acturcr of hi
ness, saddlery, trunk*, valises, etc. No.
477 Main »treei. Springfield, Ma«s.. writes n«
under date of April Id, ,
“Ge .tlem.ni l have used Hunts Remedj.
(hr b st me Heine for dis-ascs of the kidney-,
liver, bladder ami urinary organs, and hay,
rece vo 1 great benottt to my health from its
use and ' find that it will do just what is
claimed for it; it will cure ..ssea-o and y
itorehealth. 1 therefore pronounc; it tie
liest medicine that I have over u-od.
ltOAtou .ml ttbar)' Itul
A bort , pu\ uio-'-'v
Albany railroad
writes April ■,
Remedy, nn l my
such that I an
satisfi.sl tlmt it )v,„ .. • . -
to do, if UDL-ti ttocui'diilii uu ct;Uo»-*<i.
iKI), Thl* m*«1'» fnr SO
pruiaO. U. D., iuIJmUo
la*p*cU«m tmi *ru |»urch**ui*.
J. F. 8TKVKN8 4tt'0-,.lfiwHori,
AUiuitai
V :ENT8 V/ANTFD^ra; , ;, , .'. l , 1 V. 1 ''V;
Hr. K. K DtltTEItlt tl.H. ( l.v.luiiil,
BEST
PATENTS
* ..H.N
NhimI *i*inp fr
I HI Mill A.>1 V
ik in th* IT K.
Writ**
• No 14.
fnr tho roonof
;K oo, ~
Kr«o.
IIP A'VO W»f!**H V If AIIITH
s § i;!'i(r.D in Tjiui:r wkkkh.
Vfi V »r I»i*m|.hl-fs v»(. "fa a« t Ivrniti,
fB ••itlromi m rmifftUiM'O. withJo ut
»un,r tv. ii. til:t.i.*.*n.
nn*ti, O.
AORMTK WANTKII to.*n Thirty.Thr^i
\ « «r« awoiicOl It Wll.n INIMANH hr (Irn». hOIifIB
*n l SIIK.KM •#-70.000 a- lri. AyrttU m*II I «• In U#
• day •y-Srml for b'xtra Tenn*. Sj.*«lnD*n f’lxto «*ir.. to
i. D. W ~
OK i lll.su i ON JU CO.. Hartford. Ubu.
, Atlanta, <>o wgia.
Boston air’
n field. Mini.,
ve u.-vil Hunt
v, idi it lias ! eon
he rfully av that I am
11 d ■ us’t « lint it promise--'
•i h:
Brown’s Iron Bitters com
bines Iron with pure vegetable tonics.
It is compounded on thoroughly sci
entific and medicinal principles, and
cannot intoxicate.
All other preparations of Iron causo
headache, nnd produce constipation.
Brown’s Iron BitG'rs is the
ONLY Iron medicine that
is not injurious — its use doeunot
even slacken the teeth.
It not only cures the worst cases of
Dyspepsia, but insures a hearty ap
petite aud good digestion.
o
Brown’s Iron Bitters is tho
Best Liver Regulator —re
moves bile, clears tho skin,
digests the food, CURLS
Belching, Heartburn, Hoat
in tho Stomach, etc
It is tho best-known remedy for
fcmalo infirmities.
The genuine lias ab. vc trade mark
and crossed red lines on wrapper,
pj 'Take no other. Made only hy
j Brown Chemical Co.
C1 Baltimore, Md.