Newspaper Page Text
FASIIIONABLE HAIR.
A CHAPTER ABOUT HAIR GOOD* ANI1
WliRKK THEY COME FROM.
French Hair I(itinera who Grow Uennlnr
Crop*.
"ITninRU lmir goods are worn more
row than thoy over were,” said n denier
who does a .. gebnsinoss in such articles.
“All class'* of IndieR wear them—young,
middlo-agod and old—some for use, lmt
more for ornament. Mon wear wigs
only when they cannot help it. Women
wear fnlsc hair to add to their charms.
Bbort hnlr is in demand now, in tlio
form of Lisbon and sea-foam waves nud
frizzes, and tho favorite color is chest
nut-brown. Tho golden shade, so much
in fashion . few years ago, has fulleu CD
per cent, in price,”
“Where does tho supply of nrtifle.ini
iinir come from?” “Nearly all from
France and Germany, with a little from
other parts of tho Continent and Eng
land. The largest quantity and Ixist
quality is from France. Tt. is not the
hair of dead persons, ns many imagine,
but comes from the heads of living peas
ant girls. It, is gat tiered by peddlers,
wtio l>ny it for a triflo a silk handker
chief, or some other trifle which pleases
the fancy. There nro in Franco regular
‘hair-raisers,’ that is, girls who Imve
their lmir out for sale every four years.”
“What is the most expensive kind of
hair?” “Natural silver white like Ibis
is worth &1H or $2(1 an ounce; so you see
it is worth more Hum ils weight in gold.
Bleached white hair is worth only $1 an
mneo. Natural hair of ordinary shades
RAM WARD DEAD AT 70.
A Con*|»lraoiifi ritfiirr In Nnrlnl find I'olitU
nil lilfr.
It is said of tho late notable Ham
Ward that after his house in New York
failed, in 1847, through a heavy specula
tion in wheat Ward found himself a poor
man. After drifting around for n time,
ho war, seized with tho gold fovor. ami
went to California as one of tho MDers.
There, with cx-Govcmor l’rieo, of New
Jersey, ho established a mercantile and
auction house, and rapidly accumulated
a largo fortune. This ho lost in a lire,
and then he tried liis hand at mining,
but with poor success. Discouraged
and disgusted with civilization, it is said
that he took refuge among tho Indians,
and inught them to cook dog so lucionsly
that thoy elected him eliiof of tho tribe,
llo lived in Mexico, Europe and this
country. He went to Washington, and
there ho found an occupation entirely
congenial to liin nature, no became a
lobbyist, and was so successful and |>op-
nlur that ho was known as tho “King of
1 the Lobby," Ho lived in Washington
for many years, and gavo innumerable
dinners, tho reputation of which spread
1 over tho land. It was his profession to
win Congressmen over by those dinners
and by IiIh flno liquors, of which nono
had so lino n judgment, no had a fac
ility of bringing onotnioH together at
these dinners and sending them away
friends. Ho ato very sparingly himself
and t heroin wnn tho secret of his good
health.
Though ho received a great deal of
money at Washington, he never saved
any of it, nnd lie remained a poor roan
is worth from #."> to g'Jll a pound, except | until 1881. Then ho mot Mr. James II.
the hair collected by ragpickers, which | Koono, who hid recently came on to New
brings only from #1 to ff:t, Tho value j York from Caltfornia. Ho bcennio Mr
of different colors of hair depends on the
fashion. Yellow hair not golden is al
most useless to us.”
“I BUp|»Mo there have been great im
provrments made ill your art in Into
years ?” "Yes, indeed. You could tell
uu old-fashioned wig a mile <dl', but now
I can make a wig that will defy detec
tion. A great many top-pieces oro worn
by men, like this."
Hero tho lmir dealer, greatly to tho
surprise of the reporter, lifted up what
was to all iippenrsneo the natural hair
on tho top of his head, and diselosod n
cranium as bare as a billiard hull.
"I suppose you sell a good many light-
colored waves to dark-haired ladies?”
“Ah, yon may ace many a pretty blonde
on tho street with black eyes, which she
cannot hide, nnd hlnck hair, which she
can. Fashion rules all. Just now tho
color is medium brown, but there are
constant changes in stylo, enough to
keep one ‘on tho go’ all tho time.”
A Millionaire’s Sudden llenlli.
A sensation was caused when Samuel
r. Burt, ouo of Milwaukee’s wealthiest
and liest-known citizous, dropped dead.
Mr. Burt died very suddenly at 8 o’clock
in tho morning while on n business trip
to Metropolitan, a mining town in tho
northern part of Michigan. Accom
panied by liis wife, he wont to Metro
politan a few days ago on matters re
lating to his large mining business, and
JiiH death, without a symptom of illness
or warning, was a great shock to those
around. Loss than a year ago Mr.
Burt’s first wifo died from apoplexy.
Her large property, amounting to $100,-
■100, was left to him.
On March 20 Mr. Burt created a great
sensation in social circles by quietly
marrying Miss Elizabeth Thompson, n
pretty young Scotchwoman, who had for
several years been a servant in his
family. Tho muticr was the talk of tho
town for days, but, owing to Mr. Burt’s
social standing and great wealth, tho lit
tle scandal was allowed to simmer
awhile and dio out altogether. A few
days ago Mr. Burt iflul his bride re
turned from an extended bridal tour, and
tho young wifo lias now changed her
orange blossoms for woods of mourning,
There are many unusual features about
tho ease. Mr. Burt was preparing to
move into a palatial residence that he
had just completed at a cost of several
hundred thousand dollars. It is said to
be one of the most artistic residences in
the country, and Mr. Burt and his bride
would have moved into il immediately
upon their return from Michigan. The
bride of a few weeks is left a fortune es
timated to bo more than §1,000,000,
Keene's boon companion, nnd was ad
j milted to a share in his H|>eeulntions,
and from tlimn he renlized a fortune esti-
I muled at half a million dollars. When
1 Koono was taken seriously sick, Ward
; nursed him and took him to Long
, Branch and other places for liiH health.
11c now resumed his course of dinner
1 giving in New York. He gave dinners
lo Oscar Wilde, Mrs. Langtry, and
other celebrities. He was a member of
the New York Club, and wus often seen
there. Within a year ho lost tho greater
part of his lust fortune in unfortunate
: speculations, aud, as a result, in the full
I iio left for Europe rather suddenly. lie
I said ho wanted to go whore ho could
( live cheaply, and that ho did not intend
to return. He died iu Loudon at the
ago of seventy a ears.
Wiping Out il Kegiment,
Aliy time during tho war, lifter tho be
ginning of 180,8, it would have been
hard to find a regiment in tho field num
bering its full complement of ono thou-
1 sand men. There were many having a
strength of not more than three hun
dred and fifty or four hundred, particu
larly on tho Confederate sido. In vari
ous sevore encounters regiments were
decimated, and iu some oases lost half
their strength, blit it was rarely that a
body was so completely wiped out that
thore was nothing to rally on. At the
battle of Flonsant Hills, La., a Toxas
cavalry regiment, numbering three hun
dred and forty-eight men, were seen
forming for a chargo against a Fedoral
brigado of infantry. Tho latter had
good cover and were fresh. The cavalry
had to dash across a field to reach tho
line, and before thoy camo tho oom-
mnuder of tho brigado passed along be
hind his two lines and ordered his men
to hold their tire until tho word was
given. Each pair were instructed to
fire at one cavalryman—or, rather, one
at tho man and jthe other at tho horse.
The c.ivalrjMnndo tho charge iu one
line, but it was so much shorter than
the front of tho brigade that three tires
could bo concentrated. Tho Confed
erates camo forward with a dash and a
yell, keeping a pretty oven front until
. they were within ono hundred feet of
| the line when all tho muskets rang out
together. One volley was enough.
| That regiment was so nearly blotted off
the face of tho earth that only four of
; ils members returned to the Confederate
i linos. Over two hundred horsos were
killed outright, nnd at least another
! hundred wounded. There were not ten
wounded men to pick up. Every Fed*
! oral had a dead aim and a close target,
1 -M. Quad.
AX ATT til HltlCAL <JUOT 111 OX.
Where was it somebody was telling
tho Jester about a good old preacher
somewhere down in Ohio, who loved Ids
pipe and cigar far better than he did tho
man who always keeps awake through
tho hymns and goes to sleep during tho
sermon? Ono day tho committee of
brethren camo to remonstrate with flio
parson for about tho hundredth time,
beseeching and commanding him to
abandon the wicked and filthy habit of
smoking. “ If,” they told him, “ you
cau give us ono passage of scripture, ono
ino from the Bible that justifies you in
the uso of tobaecc, we will let you smoko
iu peuce and uover approach you on tho
subject again.”
“ H*m,”Baid tho old man, “you menu
that, do you ?”
“indeed, mo do mean it, and wo will
• abide by wlmt we say,” said the eom-
ttjitU-'.,
“ Then,” said the parson, brightening
up, “how does Revelation xxii. 11,
strike you—‘ He which is filthy, lot him
be filthy still ?’ ” And they turned away
and were speechless.—Ifawk-Nue.
Despoiling tho Forests.
Tho Northwestern Lumberman says:
‘‘The great pine forests of Michigan,
Wisconsin, and Minnesota nro beginning
to show tho signs of exhaustion. There
is a shortage of production this year in
these States footing up about 000,000,-
000 feet. The average of ‘first quality’
lumber lias run down from 12 per cent,
ten years ago to 2 per cent, last year,
showing tho rapid deterioration of stock
which is brought to tho mills. Tho
qu dity of the logs is much poorer than
ever before, as many havo been put iu
from land oneo cut over, nnd new laud
has been cleared of everything that will
make >v cull board. Tho improvident
lumberman, who in the past cut only
the choice pine aud left tho remainder to
be devastated by fire, now saws down
his trees close to the root to save an ax
kerf, scrapes the ground with a fine-
tooth rake to get every log that will
make passable mill culls, and will dis
charge a foreman that leaves on the
ground a log six inches in diameter.”
A THRILLING EPISODE.
A tarnmmlie Engineer’, lii.tlnrt■ llrw he
Snxrd A TT- In nn" llnw lie Wared Ill.ii.elf.
On one of tho darkest an 1 stormiest nights
of the recent unusual winter, the expnss of
one of the leading New York railroads wns
moving westward from Albany. Tho angina s
headlight threw a strong reflection in advance,
hut the storm was so blinding it was almost
Impossible to distinguish anything even at a
short distance. Under such circumstances in
stinct necessarily tnkes the place of sight. All
seemed to lie going well, when, in an
Instant, the engineer reversed his engine, ap
plied the air brakee, and enme to a full step.
\Vhy he did so he eould not tell any more than
any of us can account for the dread of com
ing disaster and death, and to tho wondering
Inquiry of his fireman, lie simply said: “I
feel that something's wrong.” BeUing a
lantern he swung himself down from the
call nnd went forward ro inveatigato.
Everything appeared to lie right, and he was
iilxmttn return to liis engine when his eye
i might sight of a | • ’iilinr appearance at the
Joint of tlio rail next to him. Brushing the
accumulated snow nwny, he looked a moment,
mnl then uttered nn exclamation of horror.
The mils on both sides Unit Is-en liniriiked and
would Imve turned over tlio instant tho engine
I-lu lled diem What inspired tills" attoinjit
nt train wrecking unknown, lmt it was pre
sumed the confederates of some prisonem who
were oil the train hoped, ill the confusion of
an accident, to deliver their friends.
Engineer John Donohue, of Albany, to
whose wonderful instinct was due tho salva
tion of the train, when asked by tlio writer
why ho stopped his engine, said: |
‘q enn’t tell why. 1 only know I fell some- ,
thing was wrong.”
“Do you Imve tlir«o feelings often when ’
Upon the road;" emit billed the writer.
1 “No, very oldoin, although for the past j
twenty years I have lieen in a condition to |
fool apprenlieiision at almost anything."
“How is llmtf”
“Why, I Imve I a victim of ono of tho
worst enses of d.vs|N>|isin over known. ! have J
not been confined to my lied, ns like thousands
of others, I am compelled to work wbethni j
able or not. Indeed, when it flint. liegau 1
had only a loss‘of nppotlito, a faint feeling
that would not go away and a bail taste III the j
tnouth, lmt 1 finally go! those terrible craving I
nnd gnawing feelings Hint make life so un- I
bearable and are known as general debility."
“Wlmt did you dot"
“1 tried physicians until I lieentno dlscfmr
aged. I gave eight, different ones fair tests,
but none of them benefited me. I than tried
proprietary medicines, but. they failed, like
wise. It looked pretty dark for me so for as
any mure peace or enjoyment in this world
w ere concerned and 1 becaino terribly discour
agist."
“You certainly do not look that way now."
"Oh, no, ilukssl, 1 mn in |ierfect health now,"
was the reply, “and I propose to continue so.
My nervousness is entirely gone; I can glren
niglils; the aching numbness has disappeared
the pale, sickly appearance lias given place to
the color of health, mid I have readily putim
Mesh. This is w lmt has lieen accomplished by
means of Warner's TipiieoAnoc. If j can lie
cui-ed after a chronic Illness of nearly a qiiftr
ter of a century I licliovo all sulVering in a
sbnilar manner can lie restored by using the
same great remedy."
Knch is the testimony of a man who could
detect and remove unseen danger on the road,
but could not remove the dangers from within
his own system until brought taco to face with
the great preparut ion ulsive imim-d which did
vi much for him and can ilo as much for all
thoso who require it.
The London Bridge Peddler,
Tho famous deaf and dumb knlok-
knaok poddler who during tho past 14
years attracted so muoh attention on
London Bridge in dead, and the subjcol
of the latest sensation. He died in tho
Southwark Workhouse, near tho south
end of tlio liridgo. Despite his infirmi
ties ho managed to support himself by
his small sales, and, seeming oflloial and
polioo favor by tho gentleness of his de
meanor nnd the intolligonoe of his oon-
rtuot, ho wn« allowed to oconpy the same
post on tlio great thoroughfare from
year to year. Before hts death the
peddler beckoned to tils cot ono of tho
hospital attendants, and terriflod him by
speaking to him. When the attendant
recovered from his astonishment the beg
gar confessed that his dumknoss had
been feigned, ne said ho was a Swiss
gentleman of fortnno and belonged to
one of the best families in the republic.
When a young man ho was betrothed to
a beantiful and accomplished girl. Ho
sras possessed of a most violent temper,
and in a lovers’ quarrel ovor a trifle
ono day ho so wonudod the girl by the
bitterness of his invective that she foil
111, The reproaches of bis friends for his
cruel conduct stung him so that ho be-
oamo melancholy from romorse and loft
home.
Ho then resolved to punish himself.
He vowed to beoome a voluntary exile
(or 20‘years; to earn his own living;
leave his fortune untouched; keep
his relatives and friends ignor
ant of his whereabouts, and go bare
headed and bare-footed in all weathers
daring the entire time, and to listen to
no one and speak to no bnman being
during the 10 last years of his exile, it
he lived to oomploto his vow he meant
to return homo, and use his fortune and
the remainder of his days In making his
betrothed happy, providing she were
alive and unmarried. He had rightly
kept hts vow, “but,” he oriod, before he
expired, “my timo is not quite up, and!
must die before it is. I havo been pun
ished as I deserved.” Investigation, so
tar an it has gone, has proved that the
poddlor’s story Is entirely true, and his
family in Switzerland have been made
acquainted with Ids death.
“Do Tom shad come from the Hudson
ortho Delaware?” asked an impatient
guest of ttie head waiter. “I’m sure
I don’t know, but I’ll ask tho stew
ard, if yon would like to know.”
“Do, fdr I want to find out where my
waiter has gone fishing.”
i‘..lker! S i
Your poor wearied wife losing sleep night af
ter night curbing the little one sulVering from
timt night flend to children A horror to parents,
cTObp, should have a bottle of laylor's Cherokee
Remedy of Sweet Gum A Mullein, an nndonbti d
Cronp preventive, and cure for Cough, ( olds,
Whooping Cough, Consumption, and all lung
and bronchial troubles. Trice 2.Vts and tl.00.
This with Dr. Diggers’ Southern Remedy, an
equally efficacious remedy fori Tamp-Colic, Di-
arrho's, Dysentery, and sliildreti suffering
from the effects of teething presents a little
Mciucivr Curst no household should ba with
out, for the ependy relief of sudden and Uan-
gereiia attacks of the lungs and bowels. Ask
ynnr druggist for them. Manufactured by
Walter A. Taylor, Atlanta, Ga., proprietor Tay
lor'* Premium Cologne.
Anotiirr heiress-coachman slopemcnt.
Homo girls do have to bo driven into
love.—Life.
“Itough on Pain” Plaster.
Porous nod strengthening, improved, tho
lie*! for backache, pains in chest or side, rln n-
inqlisin, neuralgia. 25c, Drnggists or mail.
The rifle onco carried by John Brown is
owned by a Hagerstown, Md., man.
Hay Ekvbh is
liar symptoms.
The Hope of the Notion.
Children, slow in development, puny, scrawny
and delicate, use “Wells’ Health lleiiewer.”
The total comber of separato farms in the
| United States is 4,000,000, and their aggregate
i value id 119,000,000,000.
Night Sweats,
Headache, fever, chilli, malaria, dyspepsia,
cured by “Wells’ Health liencwor.” 81.
The Gatling Oun Company at Hartford has
twenty puns neatly finished, ten of them for
the Chinese, and Iho rest supposed to be for
the Egyptians.
Are You Ai rnlil ol l.lgliliilng f
Is tour wife or daar,liter nervous? Conquer all nerve
troubles wall Zoajax. Only remedy lor dread of
lightning ever formulated. 20 yours 1 lost. Keep in
pocket. 2, cents tif mall. Addi-ss
ZOAJAX ( OMVASY. S2 J jhn St., N, w York.
Tho oldest apothecary shop in Ijerlin will
celebrate in lHss its four hundredth anaiver-
snry. The shop was recently sold for I,2u0,000
marks.
l'iso’s Cure for Co.i sumption dees not dry up
a cough ; it removes tlio cauae.
Tire chestnut is for the man who takes
its shell off
a type of ciitarih having pc
It is attended by an inllnii
unlit ion of the lining inenihrime of Urn nos
trils, ti oi -ducts niiri tlirent, affecting the lungs.
All acrid mucus is secreted, the discharge is
accompanied with nluirniiig si nsatinli. Tln rc
are s mi re span ms of Hiicc/ing, frequent nt lacks
of liciidoclie, watery nnd inflamed eves. Ely's
t'lenin Kalin is a remedy founded on a col lect
diagnosis of this disenac and can he depend'd
upon, fit) cts. nt druggists; (10 ots. by mail.
Kiimplc Dottlo by mail 10 cts. Ely Bros., Drug
gists, Owego, N. Y.
It is said there is still outstanding 9(1,9S4,-
000 in fractional currency, tlio most of which
il Inst or destroyed, or in the hands of curios
ity collectors.
Hcpcnti d requests havo induced the proprie
tors of t.ydin E. l’inkham's Vegetable Uiim
pound to send by mail to various lady corres
pondents, large mounted portraits of Mrs.
I’ltiklmm ; nnd now many a household wail is
adorned by the familiar, motherly fuon of lire
MiiHsnclni.setls woman who has ilona so lunch
for all women.
An organization has been formed in North
Carolina for the erection of n home for d s-
ahleil Confederate soldiers of that Htato.
Walk More, nnd Ntcop KouncIlT.
Mr. John W. foie, TnnoI|*l “I ttio Gain
School, Troy, N. Y., writes us:
Turn , N. Y„ April 7, 1883.
“Having boon alllictod for several years
inst wit h Mine s, tho cmiso of which was un
known to me for a long time, aud my <• ui-
tlmied disability getting t > lie of so serious
and distressing a clinrn -ter as to cause groat
unxioty with iny family and friends, I br
came satisfied upon clo u investigation that
the cause of my sickness was the diseased
rendition of my kidneys and liver. At this
tunc by incident a friend who had similar
symptoms to tniuo, informed me of tho great
improvement tn Ills health by Inking Hunts
Remedy, and persuaded mo to try it. I im
mediately commenced taking it, anil from
die flint bottle b gnu to improve, and its con
tinned uso affords very encoura mg results.
I can sloop soundly, walk better, am freo
from pains, nnd the severe attacks of hend
ache from which X sullered so much Imve
disappeared, an I I cheerfully roooiuniond
Hunts Heinedy for nil purposes whiob it Is
advertised. I will add in closing that my
wifo lias uh«1 it very successfully for pro-
venting the attacks of sick h' auacho with
which she had boon alllictod from youth."
Almost IHaliearteneit.
A prominent citizon sends us tho following
statement:
“ For several yoars I have been very seri
ously afflicted with u severe pain in tho back,
which I long supposed to be lumbago or
rheumatism of the back. More recently the
pains had become more severe, so much so
tbat It was with diflleulty that I was ablo to
get out of bod in the morning. I hail tried
various remedies without any apparent re
lief. By the earnest solicitation of a friend
I commenced taking Hunt’s Remedy, about
throe weeks ago. and its install tan sous bene
fits aro wonderful, for I have had no twins
in my back since taking the first three doses;
and am relieved from the pains, aches and
exhaustive weakness, the gainful symptoms
that usually accompany disease of the Irid-
ieys. Audi confidently expect to be com
pletely aud permanently cured by tho use of
iL 1 most cheerfully recommend Hunt's
Remedy to all who are afflicted with any kid
ney or liver disease.
WILLIAM G. ARNOLD,
Walnut Street, Providence, R. L
March 29, 1883.
A swarm of bees, nine miles long, recently
visited Oaxaoa, Mexico. This was Angering
sweetness, long drawn out."
See Here, Yeaag Nes.
that girl of mine la twice aa handsome since
she commenced using Carboline, the deodor
ized extract of Petroleum, and I would not be
without It for a fortune.
The Kimberly diamond, reoently discovered
at Capetowu, is reportsd to weigh 802 Karats.
“Hough on Pain.”
Cures colic, cramps, diarrhtea: externally for
aches, pains, sprains, he&dacho, neuralgia,
rheumatism. For man or beast. 25 and 60.
KAMII.Y < t’lfrtl. ItOOK EURE.
DU. J (’. IKirniW. JEFFERSON, Wisconsin
Full Faculty,
fill. ul Si
loftun apply
DICKINSON. Prlnrl|iitl.
IS GOOD NEWS
to LADIES!
••nli i t Mulucrmpiitn Hvi»r of-
I. Ncm’H your tint • to yui up
.Mtflil Tni«
CI.rM A bttAllli.
CO.,
Providence,
it. I.
rr) REMEDY
mi l ‘t mli. hundred*
inu* t«»«*»•*.
TARRH Hay Fever
M linml Mon
Cold Hmul Mo«n Non*
Fenmlnd Toilrt Sot. F< r lull pvit nlnm AiMtum
Till-: I* II DAT ADI l(l< AN Tl!\ ID.,
P, O. liot SMf. kl nud \ URHjf St., N«*v* Yorl
Fainter White Sulphur Springs Hotel,
Fauquior County, Va.
Tho fifth noaotin «>f thin f»iv«*nto mid popular Hummni
Roaort. will upon .lun** 17th, Ih*|. It will Im* oondurt-d
unil»*r tlioHftmo mmin«oiiu»ut t h it linn Hindu Hum llotni
a ••Homo” for tli Mi-mmlH. Torms tl’J.nu to * !!.0U
wook. For pmtioulftrn, adtln* <h t nut I tlnno 1 <th).
F. TI:N N KY a*
National Hotel, WaNUiiigtoii, 1>. O.
cum WHiRi all rtsr fails.
Hphu our tihyrup. 'I a-1** *k m I
tin time Hold by driiKi:' dr.
IZttiSsF
AWKVTM WAKTRD mi.imiftj.nm
V I nr. moons or R W 11.11 IVPIAN* *“ <>•"*■ UOtlOK
And SIIKHM <V »»-.-0.(1(111 ...Id A « < ’ nt * 1 " 1 , 1 . 1 •• •* *•
t da. ay-A.nd for Film 7>rm», - wlm.n l int. . C. u»
A. O. WOHTlIIMtTON d. Wl.. Il»rlf.ril, C«»
SOLID SILVER STFWI WINDINB
FULL JEWELLED 0EHTS’ SIZE
WATCH FOR $12.50.
Unu7 L t i l priis'ci: l, 0. B U. ."subjIS **
ln.pnoliuD bnl .rn yurch..ln.
J. P. STUVKNS dk CO-, Jewelors,
Atlanta. Ga-
iEEDS OFDAFffN.
M<BUJE&GRAYj
The R r**l col lnctlon of thn m 08t t h ri 111 hr pfmonnl «d?«ntTir««,
ciploitaof 8foutf and 8plni, forlorn hopnp.heroic brntnrv, nn-
naotunpnt* and hnir-hrrndth ••ffippt, romnntio Ineliientt.
nnd-to-hnnd atrueghw, perllom journpys, dmlnf rnldnanl
il niDfn during ihnOrrat CMfil war. Nl
(PF.TUOUCUM alRLIeV.)
One Ounco bottles reduced from 15c. to 10c.
Two Ounce bottles reduced trom 25c. to 15c.
Fivo Ounce bottles reduced from 50c. to 25o.
The Iiublld must net Accept »nj lmt cr(«lB»l gnodl
bottled by us, n» tho Imitatlom sre w*rthlnm<.
Chesobrough Manufacturing Co., New York.
OPIUM
HABIT
CURED
Paynes' Automatic
CUltK GUARANTEED.
ill pommunicsti
.Idential. For
certitlcAtns addr
mi A. BKADFOKU, R.D.
Dn1((ist sud Pharmacist,
P. O. Bos 163. Columbus, Us
Engines and Saw-Mill-
E
bold dppds on both nii*rs during'ih«OrV«t CMfil"Wsr. Nl
bookhk<it. MOfUSIlf lflUimUD.uuuon.Hi. AddnW
SUAMMKI. A i i).. Ho. 4Ut. Tuil«ilB_jihl» or St. i-iuia.
ACiriVTS WA\TFI) fkrtki
to I. Author
md C7|prtyval
nt.toAbenU.
d for Krtro TVtYHd. ttc., to
_ . OuUelli
iVed, Authentic Impartial Comi Irta, th* fifil
LOO paire f 1.50. StUs M« unUJire. f>0 p*r
Outfit Fret Freights pnul • md fnr Krtro i pvtua. ate., io
IIAUirORl) PDIILIhlXJNG CO.. Hartford, fossb
ANI> WHISKY HABITS OURKD
IN TMilEK WE8K8.
Fo Pamiddetn, Proofs and Tarm^
Adilnrsa, in confl «nc«, wl*h 3ct,
sump. W. O. BKI.LAMY, M. D., 7H SumI,
Atla.nta, Georgia.
OPIUM
- _ sting t _
Otis. B. P. DIKTKHK IIM, Clevplaud, Ohio.
i and I
Knnd stamp for oar N«vr Book on
Patents. L. BINOHAM, PnU I
* )t l.awyer, Washington, I> O.
Wants to See Him by Daylight,
Tho Boston Advertiser Bays : A so
ciety bello, who usually goes to the
North Shore for tho summer, but this
year Uikos a bolder flight, remarked tho
other evening to her confidential friend:
"I am glad Mr. X. is to be at Mount
Desert when we are this summer. Do
you know, I’ve boon acquainted with
him for threo years, and I never saw
him by daylight, lie used to eome over
A Delaware farmer baa plowed under 40,000
herring, a* a fertilizer.
IteinarKiiblo Km iii'N
John Kuhn, of La/uriKte, ln<L, had a very
narrow emapo from death. This is his own
story: “ Owe ynar ago I was is the last stages
of onooumpthm. Our beat physicians gave
my cau up. I finally got. so low that our
doctor aaid I oould not live twenty-four
hours. My friend then purchased a bottle of
l)r. ffa HalFs Balsam for tho Lungs, which
b-nefited oa - I continued until 1 am now In
l»>rfect health, havi”v used no other
medicine.". -
LYDIA 1. PlMItnt R'S
YeiataMe Comporaii
18 A P08ITIVI CQ11
Per Female Complaint, and
lyffltHMifli io common to
•ur boat female population.
I, will our* ontliwly tho went form of Vemaio Com-
pUlnt,. all Or art an trooblm, Inflammation and Uloora-
tlcn, Vallies and DuplMcmcnt. and the con.«qucn»
PpliuU Weaknefi*, aod It partloulwly Ad*pt*d to tits
CWug* of Lifo.
It will «11mo1f6 ood iixpcl tumor* from tbo uforui In an
wau uiwut OOMU wag .l«T,/ww S.i candarnul
PATENTS
A O WTfTW WATTTRD tm Urn bmft mmA
iac Books And BLIiIm. him rwduo^d It
D—o+nt. Naiiowai. Pppuabimq Oo , AUaaU, Q&.
^ Jk T K7 AIT ft f Thoroa* P. HnuptoD, Wuh-
A I LK I 9 ■ Ington. D.O. NopiyA«k*d 1
)Atent until obtaiaed. Writ* for luvet>tora* Uu.'da, j
OIIR liKADKH. , ... Mlll
Wn ofT*r an A t» l«» H. P. inounto-1 Knarfna with Mill,
«>‘n. col.d Saw. 5c ft hc'Onk. cant-linek,. ri* c-mplct,
for npcnlion, on cum, $ , I0J. J-nsin- on ok tie. , IIP
Inv H nt for circular |H). II. *V. I’AYNK A-
i-ONs, Manuf.ett r r„ of nil «(jk« AiiKinmllo r.n-
alnc, fmm Jtn3 II II. P.; alan P»II“J», llaniora and
Suftltuif ^lunro N Y Box 1850#
.'Afooce'j
JTtZantas Ga<
AN ORGANIZED BUSINESS COMMUNITY.
26th YEAR. BEND FOB CIRCULARS.'
Coir man Htialnraa Collfgp.
NawArk, New Jersoy. Positions fnr
' graduati'S. National patronsc*. Writa
lor Uuoulara to JJ CULitMANiiGO.
Twooly-ioven. J N4
I V0 I ti ^norai Debilit;
tlon. That fool 1
and backache,
removes fslntneee. fla»*Uenoy. destro/s all crarliur
itlSSl^tirSid roilorc. w.winoM of tho Jtoaw-h,
>atlnur. Headaches, Nervous 1 r ? B T tr ^l °„h
ltv, Sleeplessness, repression and IndlKC^
Dllnff of beaxlnjf down, causin^ps.in, weigh!
.is always perma-noutiy cured bj Its uso.
, in .r. ... ~|L.iim«fanefla art. In
Trust in
nnself.
God, and do not 8tumble
... early statre of development. The tendency to canoerous
from the hotel evenings, and then in tho j h ^ a r 0 ” tl ' r#Uch#ckBdT “ 7 ' ,pe ® < ^ r 7
city 1 met him nt parties, and ho called
in tho eveuing, nnd positively
known him pretty well for ail that time,
and never saw him except by gas-light.
I must seo him in tho daytime, for I’ve
about rondo up my mind to marry him,
and it is best tz> examiuo him iu a!]
lights,”
Ilowover absurd this may seem ou the
face of it, it is ns a matter of fact strictly
trno, both the lady and the gentleman
being pretty well known in fashionable
circles in tho city
It Win ,t Mlhmr. and u*5der .11 olb-um.t.ncM.ctm
harmony with the law. that govern tho tt male ejitcm.
Fo- «».« cur* of Kidney Complaints of either sex, this
Corn pound is unsurpassed. Price $1.00. Bix bottles for $&.00 #
No fxinlly should bo without LIlT^I^ K. PlhKTfASS'3
J JVKK riLLS. They euro constipation, biliousness SJ)4
i torpidity of tho liver. 85 conts a box at all dnifffflsts.
40552
cards, \bc.
Pensions
1arK« pretty ehromo reward, merit, credit
birthday friiaviship, gift and sohoul si
frico list free Fine Art Oc., Warren, Pa.
to S ddlers A Mens S' i
for ( irculxi*. COL. I
HAM AM 1 . Wmehinriii
Brown’s Iron Bitters com
bine# Iron with pure vegetable tonics.
It is compounded on thoroughly sci
entific end medicinal principles, and
cannot intoxicate.
All other preparations of Iron cause
headache, and produce, constipation.
Brown’s Iron Iiittcrs is the
ONLY Iron medicine that
is not injurious — its use does not
even Blacken the teeth.
It not only cures the worst ease a of
Dyspepsia, but insures a hearty ap
petite and good digestion.
Brown’s Iron Bitters is the
Best Liver Regulator — re
moves bile, clears the Skin,
digests tho food, CURES
Belching, Ilcai^mrn, Heat
in the Stomach, etc. i
It is tho best-known remedy foi
female infirmities.
The genuine has above trade marl:
and crossed red lines on wrapper.
Take no other. Ma„e only by
Brown Chemical Co-,
Baltimore, Md