The sunny South. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1875-1907, February 16, 1878, Image 7

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(Continued from 5th page.) young men dressed in clothes of different bright colors, long plumes in their hats, and quivers full of arrows swung over their shoulders. With their long bows in their handB, they joked merrily. “Here’s Fitzhooth 1” cried out one as Robert approached. “I would wend my way home without a shot were it not that the High Cel larer has promised a cask of wine to the next best shot.” The Abbot heard this speech and scowled. He knew well how great was Robert’s skill with the long-bow. It did not reassure him to see in Robert’s eap a long white plume that he had won last Easter, at a long-bow match, or to mark the silver bugle swung from around his neck that he had gained the Candlemas before at a trial of archery. One of the judges of the shooting was the sheriff of Nottinghamshire, a great crony of the Abbot, and a mean, envious man. The Abbot beckoned him to his side, and whispered to him he must be sure and give Guy of Gisborne the prize. “The varlet Fitz- hooth is too puffed up now in conceit, he will be unbearable if he wins to-day.” The sheriff readily promised he would see to it, and the covetous Abbot felt easy about the purse of gold. When the shooting began, there were various degrees of skill displayed. Guy of Gisborne and Fitzhooth came last of all. All eyes were turned on Gisborne as he stepped forward, fitted his arrow carefully to the bowstring, took steady aim, and shot. The arrow hit the centre spot of the target, and shouts of admiration rose from the crowd. “It is not worth your while to try varlet,’ said the Sheriff to Fitzhooth. “By our Lady’s help, I’ll see what lean do,” said Robert, carelessly, in reply. He took de liberate aim and his arrow flew with gr-at force, striking Gisborne’s arrow on its head (where it still stuck in the target), and splitting it in two, entering the same spot Gisborne’s arrow had gone in. Loud cheers rose from the crowd, for Robert was a general favorite. The judges de cided the prize was between the two last arch ers, and they must make another trial to decide the matter. Again Guy, of Gisborne’s arrow, entered the black spot, and again Robert Fitz- hooth’s arrow cleft Gisborne’s, and also went to the centre of the target. One of the judges now proposed that the gold should be divided between the two archers; but to this the Abbot objected, and with taunting words sought to anger Fitzhooth, thus hoping to unsteady his hand; but Robert saw his design and kept his temper cool. The peasantry were teasing Gis borne, so that by the time they made their third trial he was excited and eager. This caused a little tremor in his aim, and his arrow swerved a little and stuck in the target a little to the one side of the centre spot. Robert, with great care, selected an arrow from his quiver, took a longer aim, drew his bow-string tightly back, and his arrow entered the centre of the target with such force it almost went up to its head. The Sher iff of Nottinghamshire ran hastily forward, drew out the arrows, and declared Guy the vic tor. The crowd hissed their indignation; the other j udges tried to expostulate against such injustice, and Robert Fitzhooth no longer re straining his temper said, boldly, they were try ing to cheat him of his rightfully won prize. The Abbot turned to one of his soldiers: “Take that varlet, Fitzhooth,” he said. “Put him in the black-hole; we’ll see, by our Lady, if a day or two under-ground, without bread or water, and twenty stripes when he comes OHt will not put a more civil tongue in his head. He will hardly, soon again, beard his betters !” The soldier hesitated, the crowd of peasants looked very sullen. " Arrest him.'I saysaid the Abbot, whose rage now knew no liounds. “ Away with him to the lowest dungeon.” Near Robert Fitzhooth was a stout oak cud gel. As the soldiers came up he caught this up in his hand and used it with right good earn est. One man fell like an ox; tho others gave back; Robert snatched the purse from the pole where it hung, and before the throng recovered from their astonishment, was out of sight, hid den by the woods near by. All was confusion, for the man who had fallen was really killed quite dead by the blow on the head from the stout cudgel, and would surely never breathe again. The Abbot ordered the Sheriff of Nottingham shire to get his men to horse and arrest ltobt. Fitzhooth. “Bring him back alive or dead,” said the infuriated Abbot, “and the purse of gold he has with him shall be yours.” Robert Fitzhooth hurried from the archery Ground, taking a path toward Barnesdale wood. As almost every one had gone to the target shooting in the whole country around, he did not meet a single person on his way. Just be fore he came to the wood there was a little cot tage near the road, and a little flower-garden in front and a young girl was watering her rose bushes. “Come in, Robert,” she said, pleasantly. “You are surely dressed for a holiday ?” “I’ve been "to the shooting-match at St. Mary’s and got into trouble, but I cannot tarry to tell thee, Maid Marian, about it. 1 want you to take this purse of gold to my uncle to-mor row. Do it with great secrecy. No one must know anything about it I cannot take time to say more. Good bye !” Then he hurried on, and she watched him enter the woods. As soon as he was out of sight Maid Marian drew the leaves and mold gently back from the root of a rose-bush, made a small hole, put into it the purse of gold and then covered it with mold and leaves so nicely no one would seethe earth had been disturbed. She then took up her gourd and went on water ing her flowers. As soon as Fitzhooth entered the wood, he changed his course and went across Barnesdale wood. He had not gone far, when he met three men. He knew them to be the King’s men, who were always on the watch to see that no one 'killed a deer without permission. King Richard waoeo fond of hunting, that many of the forests, he claimed as his own, and no one dared shoot a deer, without his leave, for be was so afraid for the sake of the venison, that some of the common people might kill game, that his laws were very severe against any who did so. Often they were hanged, or else their hands would be cut off, or -their eyes put out as a punishment for killing a -single deer. The three men were forresters, ap pointed to keep watch in Barnesdale-wood, and catch any man who was daring enough to brave ■the chanoe of discovery. It was almost dark, so Robert Fitzhooth pulled his hood over his eyes, and tried to hurry on. Bat they stopped him to question him. “Who are you?” they said. “And where are 7 °“I 8 am 8 fiobin Hood,” he answered readily. •‘‘And I am in a hurry to get home to look after •fiome-oattle.” “How comes it, said one of the King s men, “you wear a how and a horn ?” “I went to the Archery Meeting to-day at St. Marvs,” said Fitzhooth, but as he had called himself Robin Hood, we will hereafter call him so too. “There was a fight, he continued, “which spoiled all the fun, and as I had a herd •of cattle to aee to at heme, which I’m going to take to market tomorrow, I did not terry, but mm making baste to got borne. Pnthee, sirs! let ‘?iToi Robin Hood," they said kindly •enough; for he had replied to titein .so glibly, 'they did not doubt but that all was right. [Th a ifo*resters, anxious to meet some one who oould tell them stare of the melee st Sfc Msrys, trotted on briskly. Just as they SMS Up to Maid Marian’s cottage, the Sheriff of Notting hamshire with his men, had ridden up to the house, and asked the girl if any one had passed that way. “Yes, sir,” she answered slowly. “Speak up,” said the Sheriff, with an angry oath. “I’ll burn down the cottage and roast thy grandsire like a pig, if you do not tell all you know. What kind of a person was it passed this way ?” “He was tall and pleasant looking,” said the girl timidly. “Did he have a white plume in his hood?” asked one of the forresters. “For we met such an one in the wood, and he gave his name as Robin Hood.” “That is not the man I am hunting,” said the Sheriff for he had no wish to follow so good an aroher into the thick woods so nearly at night fall, so bidding good bye to the King’s men, he gave np the chase. Bat Robert Fitzhooth was now an outlaw and no longer called himself anght bat Robin Hood. How he gathered to himself a band of merry men, I will tell yon in good time, of all their merry days in the forests of Sherwood and Barnesdale. (TO BE CONTINUED.) RELIGIOUS DEPARTMENT. \on-Sectarian—All Churches and all Creeds. The Baptist Record has closed its first year. “Rock of Ages," by Top lady, was first pub- ed lishin 1770. The Bibliotheca Sacra has reached its forty- eighth year. The Mission Society of the M. E. Church was organized in 1819. The American Bible Society received fer the month of November $32,737.52. Wm. Tracy, D. D., of Boston, and forty years misstonary to India, is dead. Bro. R. C. Buckner, of the Texas Baptist, is about to bnild a publishing honse. The First Baptist Church, Richmond, Va., is 97 years old and has 824 members. The Baptist honse of worship at Winch ‘or, Va., was recently sold for debt. Arrangements are in progress looking toward the consolidation of the two American Tract So cieties at New York and Boston. The Scandinavian Baptist churches in Dakotah have organized a missionary association, repre senting a membership of 205. There is a report from London that the Jews intend to buy Syria and Palestine, and emigrate thither under a British protectorate The first convert in Surinam, Dutch Guiana, was baptized by a Moravian missionary, one hundred years ago. Now, the mission numbers 22,130. A Baptist Union has been organized at Port Elizabeth, South Africa. They have seven min isters laboring in that colony, some with con siderable success. A call has been sent out for holding a National Convention of all Israelites, who are now willing to accept Jesus Christ as the promised Messiah of the world. The German Lutheran Synod of Maryland has been refused admission to the Union of the West, a body composed of Lutherans and Re formed Germans. The Baptists of South Australia are making promising efforts to establish a chapel building fund. A leading member has already subsribed five hundred ponDds.. Mrs. Minerva Miner, of New London, Conn., has just given $1,000 to the Genesee Conference of the M. E. Church, for the benefit of superan- uated preachers, widows and orphans. It is rumored that Rev. J. B. Simmons, D. D., has accepted the Secretaryship of the American Bible Union, and that he will discharge its du ties in connection with his pastorate. Elder W. O. Bailey has resigned the pastorate of the church at Henderson, Texas, and removed to Overton. He has accepted the position ot corresponding editor of the Texas Baptist Herald. The Deerfield Presbyterian church,Presbytery of Athens, Ohio, was burned Oct. 8. Sixty days afterward the congregation were worshipping in a beautiful edifice, 56x38 feet, with a slate roof. Rev. Dr. A. H. Clapp resigned his position as one of the Secretaries of the American Home Missionary Society, in order to enable it to make a needful reduction in the expense of manage ment. The Presbyterian missionaries in Japan, rep resenting three denominations, have formed a union. Sweden and Switzerland contribute the largest number of new members to the Mormcn Church. The Baptists, of London, have organized a mission to enter upon and occupy the Congo territory opened up by Stanley. “ Einangelist’ is the title given the great j church-debt payer, Mr. Kimball, by the Ad- i cance. The Reform Episcopal Church is gathering a ! few congregations in different parts of Canada. I In India there are now 900 missionaries and ordained natives exclusive of Burmah and Cey lon. Visitors to the great crater at Petersburg have to pay two bits to go into it. Time brings chan ges. A few years ago there was a day when thousands of men would have given forty acres of land and a mule to get in it.—Index Appeal. In Italy the Wesleyan Methodists from Eng land have 1,300 communicants who, not long since, were Roman Catholics. The American Methodists have, in different places, nine con gregations, made up of former Romanites. Fourteen thousand clergymen of the Church of England have signed a protest against the proposition to allow Dissenting ministers to bury the dead with religious services in the church yards, and a thousand others have joined the society of “The Holy Cross” for the purpose of establishing the confessional in the Estab lished churches. The General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church convenes in our city in May next. This assembly will bring into ouf midst some of the most brilliant ministers and lay men of the South. We shall meet them when they come with a cordial welcome and entertain them while they stay with an unstinted hospi tality. Rev. Dr. Leftwich, of this city, has been preaching some strong sermons against dancing, and has taken as he should take bold ground. Onr own experience and observation of this vice in the past has produced in onr minds the most decided opinions as to its pernicions and irreli gious tendencies. It is worldliness gone to seed, and cannot coexist with the spirit of Chris tianity. If a man stands on the ground yon can never charge him with electricity. He mast be insulated. When a man stands with the world yon can never fill him with the graces of the spirit He too most be insulated. God help Dr. Leftwich! THE BIBLE DOCTRINE OF HELL. If some-of onr would-be thinkers and speak ers are not careful, they will tall into infidelity in discussing hell. At present they have pro fessed to be attempting to show what the Bible teaches upon the snbjeot, but it is to be feared that some have been so hasty and extreme in the formation and expression of their opinions that when they come to a more deliberate examina tion of the Scriptures, they will find themselves compelled to reject the Word of God or abandon their views. When men have so fonnd them selves, they' have very generally become skepti cal ; so egotistical and self-assnred is depravity. There is one speech of tbe Savior which ought to pnt this question at rest forever. It is his speech ever Copernanm : “And thou Copernauui which art exalted unto heaven shalt be bronght down to bell: for if the mighty works, which have been done in thee, had been done in Sodom, it would have remained until this day. Bat I say unto yon, that it shall be more toler able for the land of Sodom in the day of judg ment than for thee.” One school of theorists Bay God is too merci ful to literally barn human beings of his own creation. May be they know, but history re cords that he burnt Sodom. Well then, say they, we can love no such God ; we will worship the God of Nature. It is competent to suggest to them that the God of Nature burned Hercu laneum and Pompeii with literal fire. Another school say the fire is figurative, and the body will not be punished, but only the soul. The argument applies with equal force upon the body being saved in heaven. St Paul distinctly asserts that the body shall be resurrected unto life eternal. Another scripture speaking of the resurrection says, “they that have done good to the resurrection of life and they that have done evil to the resurrection of damnation. Can a soul be resurrected ? If the body is resurrected and the soul is punished, how is it possible to prevent the punishment being communicated to the body V If you affect the mind in this life it very frequently affects the body ; and vice versa. Could the soul be punished in the torment and the body not be punished ? Let the long standing scientific theories of the inti mate and mutual relations of the physical and metaphysical confirm what revelation alleges. Another class say it is not eternal and declare that eternal punishment antagonizes the justice of God. It is pertinent to remark that finite minds of exceedingly limited observation are not competent to sit in judgment upon God’s acts. The question is not is it just but is it re vealed? If the punishment of the wicked is limited the reward of the blest is also. And just at this point it is profitable to revert to the idea that these folks who would explain away hell never attempt to explain away heaven. The inference is strong that they are afraid there is a hell and are trying to erect a theory upon which a guilty conscience can rest peacef ully. Further, tney would never make the argument if they were sure they were right. That they suppose there is a necessity for their assertions is no small evidence towards the impeaching of their sincerity. Dry up the Dead Sea where once proud Sodom stood before you explain away the fire. Climb over the battlements of Heaven and go hold a burning glass over the Fountain of Eter nal Life until you evaporate up its flood before you eliminate eternity from the doom of the damned. Happy tidings lor nervous sufferers, and these wno have been dosed, drugged audquacked. l’ulveruiacher’s Electric Belts effectually cure premature debility, weak ness and decay. Book and Journal, with information worth thousands, mailed free. Address Pulveumacher OalvAnic Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Atlanta Branch B.I’.AYBSTftSONS' LOUISVILLE, KY. PLOWWORKS. We have opened a large Warehouse in Atlanta, G-a., for the sale and diatribution of onr Plows, Cultivators, Stocks, Blades, Etc. In the States of North and South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, and Alabama. We shall aeU our Plows in Ala bama at Louisville Prices, free of Freight. We want a live, responsible merchant in each place to represent ns. Send for catalogue. B. F. AVERY A SONS, |ATLANTA, GEORGIA. 139-81 MONTE PICKENS, PBlCHASiM MINT SUMY SOfawFPlCE, Atlanta, Geo. For the convenience of those in the country, will pur chase from the very smallest article up—at 5 percent, under SlOO ; A 1- J per cent. over. Cash must accom pany orders. Goou facilities for purchasing cheap. fi®“Special attention given to the purchasing of music, musical instruments and strings. IKSTABLMUBD H A LARGE EIGHT-PAGE RELIGIOUS AND FAMILY JOURNAL. Delivered l»y Mall, postage paid, at *8.00 a year. THE MOST WIDELY CIRCULATED BAPTIST NEWSPAPER IN THE COTTON STATES. ♦ ATTRACTIONS FOR 1878! The Index, under the careful direction of Rev. D, F.. BUTLER, Man aging Editor, assisted by his able associates, rivals the best religions periodicals of the conti nent in the variety of its (^original matter, the scope of its religious and secular intelligence, and the completeness of its several departments. Its features are embraced in this ample arrange ment. SPIRIT OF THE RELIGIOUS PRESS—con taining the very cream of thought in the relig ions papers of the world. pLTVING PULPIT—filled each week by a Sermon from one of our ablest Ministers. OUR CORRESPONDENTS — discussing living questions of the day, denomi national and secular. BAPTIST NEWS AND NOTES—presenting a birds-eye view of our denomination at work. GENERAL DENOMINATIONAL NEWS—giv ing condensed accounts of all important events transpiring in the Christian world. SECULAR NEWS—posting our readers on all matters of interest occurring in the secular world. SUNDAY-SCHOOL—containing expositions of the International Lessons, and discussion of Sunday-school topics. FARM AND HOUSEHOLD—embracing many facts and hints valuable to farmers, and fur nishing matter for fireside reading, interesting to old and young. #®“For sample copies, address Jas. P. Harrison & Co. Drawer 24, Atlanta, Ua. -ri.t.VJ? hw*. OH 8*lM»M«BT*TIOK,” • THYSFI F hook f°r everybody. Prioe $1, sent by 1 * * ■ V.*-. . mail. Fifty original prescriptions,either one of which is worth ten times the price of the book. Go “ awarded the anther. The Boston Herald says: The Science of Life is. beyond all comparison, the most extraordinary work on Physiology ever pub lished. An Illustrated Pampr.let. sent 11 C A I nut*. Address DR. W. H. PARKER. MtAL No. 4 Bulfincb Street. Boston, Mass — ~ 137-ly THYSELF YV A \ T KTI~. To make a permanent engagement 1 .* 1,h a cergymau, or a Bihle Reader, to ,n PULTON County, The CELEBRA TKD NEW Centennial Edit on of the HOL Y BIBLE. For de scription, notice editorial in last week’s issue of thin paper. Address at once F. L Horton Co , Publishers & Bookbinders, 60 E. Market St 137 1m Indianapolis, Ind. W ANTED—An agent in every county in the Sooth. Work pleasant and profitable. Address with st SOUTHERN PHOTO. COPYING CO., 127-tf Gainesville, Ga., box 10. Hygienic Institute & Turkish Bath, Loyd street, opposite Markham Honse, Atlanta, Ga. F OR tbe enre of Chronic Diseases, and prevention of all forms of Disease. Treatment embraces, besides the Turkish Bath—the greatest luxury and curative of the age —Medicated and Roman Baths, Electricity, Health Lift, Swedish and Machine movements,am 1 ill the ' iter-Onre Processes, etc., etc. Specialties: Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Paralysis, Dys pepsia. Catarrh, Blood Poisoniug, and diseases of Women and children. Hygienic Board, Directions for Home Treatment. Do not despair without trying this wonderfully success ful treatment. For terms and prescriptions, address in full, JNO. STAINBACK WILSON, M. D., 122-tf Physician in Charge. ST. CLIRE HOTEL, COR. GRACE AND NINTH STREETS, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. The most elevated, central and fashionable location in the city—fronting on the Capitol Square—convenient to all public buildings, Depots and Churches, and immedi ately on tbe Jine of the Street Railway, making it the most desirable Hotel in the city. Fare sUuctly first-class. Board, $2.50 per day. Special rates TO Commercial Agents S HUNTER, DR. E. S. PENDLETON, Proprietors A GENTS, send stamp for specimen “ Popular Medical Monthly.” All want it. DR. DYE, Dunkirk, N. Y. 112- W ANTED TO EXCHANGE.—A gentleman with valuable real estate : n the city of Rome', and fine farming lauds adjacent to the cily, wishes to exchange a part of it for real estate in Atlanta. Apply at this office. 128-4t f-xpenneM paid. Permanent employ* incut, address S. A. GRANT & CO, 2, 4, 6 £ 6 Home St., Ciucixuuui, Q> LAMAR HOUSE, KNOXVILLE, TENN., JOHN 8CIIERF, Proprietor, T HIS HOUSE is located in the centre of tiie city, op posite the Opera Houae, and near the Post Office ahd Telegraph Offico. The rooms are pleasant, table good and charges moderate. Passengers and baggage carriedfree, to and from the depot. 121-tf C 1 ) Oil GOLD PLATED WATCHES. Cheapest in the known world. Sample Watch. Free to Agents. Address, A. Col l i er & Co., Chicago. We THK IMIKY AM) BLPT1ST, ATLANTA, BA. have an arrangement with The Index am Baptist, oy which we offer that excellent religions journal and Tub Sunny South, to new subscribers, for $4.35 per year for the two. The Index and Baptist will also be sent to any of onr readers who are not now subscribers for $2.50 per annum and for 25 cts. additional, a handsome engraved group of two hundred and fifty prominent Georgia Baptist Min isters, both living and dead. will Iw sent as a premium. We are sure our Baptist friends who may accept this offer will prize very highly both the paper and the premium. Address JAS. P. HARRISON & CO.. Publishers. P. O. Drawer24, Atlanta, Ga.. by registered letter, money order ot express. HENDERSON’S COMBINED CATALOGUE OF EVERYTHING FOR THE GARDEN Numbering 175 pages, with Colored Plate. ecu tj rcc to customers of past years, and to all , purcliascrsofourbooks,eitherGartfesiitg/or I Profit.Practical Floriculture orGardeningfor I Pleasure (price¥1.50each, prepaid, bv mail). 1 o others, on receipt of 25c. Plain Planter beed Catalogues, without Plate, free to all. ISUiSBM; 35 Cortlandt Street, New York. RE^lD house, CHATTANOOGA, TENN., (Fronting Union Passenger Depot,) JNO. T. READ & CO., Proprietors. Come to the “Old Reliable” John T. Hagan’s And Get anything You want. All you want can be had at my TWO STORES Nos. 94 and 119 Whitehall street. It is useless for me to try to enumerate,—suf fice it to say, I have the most complete stock of any establishment in Georgia, consisting in part of Toys, Doll Carriages, Boys Wagons, Fire Works—all kinds. Apples, Oranges, Lemons, Mince Meats, Apple, Peach and Quince Batters, Preserves, Jellies, Pickles, Sauces, Flavorings, Raisins, Currents, Citron, Figs, Dates, Prunes, Ac. i tVo. PLAIN CANDIES Crackers] | FANCY AND A very large and complete stock, about 40 different kinds. Come ! Merchants, Hotel and Boardinghouse keepers, and families and get all you want at the two establishments of the “Old Reliable.” JOHN T. HAGAN, 131 Nos. 94 and 119 Whitehall st. DR. WARD’S Seminary for Young Ladies, NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE. Opens its Spring Session, January 21. Its patronage is larger and growing. A lour-story addition of twenty rooms is just completed. Its facilities are very superior. It has weekly lectures by Vanderbilt Professors. Dr. Wm. LeRoy Brown, of Georgia, is uow lecturing. 134-dt Address DR. W. E. WARD. Whisper You’ll Be Mine, Love. The Prettiest Song of the past ten years. Is sung gen erally all over the Union. Hear it once and love it forever. Easy Piano or Organ accompaniments. Send 40 cents to the publishers, LUDDEN HATES, Savannah Georgia. 138-4t ’ 121-tf TOHEALTH THE T tvth MUST BE KEPT lS oRDEtt. im ART/C a * ® ^CiurnnWr.s» DR XSAHFORDSi, .Mat 1MSS08& li FOR DISEASES r VUVERSIDMACH • as — mt ' — 9 —frag**- For Pamphlets address Dr. Sancord, New York. diahhkeaV’S’E' conshbumA g ’ sickheadacheN a mmampumso. ■BILIOUSNESS, [ ADYSPEPSIA. /■ CLEANS THE POMPLEXIOIL'V O UR best agents are clearing from $35 to $40 a week. Agents wanted everywhere. Terms and particulars sent free. Address Shuttles & Sons, Wholesale Jewelry and Novelty Dealers, Atlanta, Ga. 97-ly. FOR SALE. ^ SPANISH SILVER COIN one hundred and twenty years old. Apply at this office. 123-tf A TEAK. Agents wanted. Busi ness legitimate. Particulars free. Addreu J.WOBTH A CO., StXouu, Mo. T. H. ROBERTSON, TTORNEY T LAW, XHRFBEE8B0B0, TENBES8EE. F I REIGN LEGAL BUSINESS PROMPTLY ATTENDED to, and collections made in any part of Tennessee. noHW-tf I T I® GLOVES CLE ANED—Fiiteen cents per pair, A Patent French process. (By mail returned postage : free.) W. M. SCOTT, Gents’ Furnishing Goods Store, 128-lt No. 12 Whitehall st., Atlanta. Ga a Week to Agents. $10 outfit free. E< 3** * P. O. VICKERY, Augusta, Maine. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. J N the whole history of medicine, no preparation has ever performed such marvelous enres. or maintained so wide a reputation, as Avan's Cherey Pectoral, which is recognized as the world’s remedy for all diseases of the throat, and lungs. Its long-continued series of wonderful cures in all climates has made it universally known as a safe and reliable agent to employ. Against ordinary colds, which are the forerunners of more serious disorders, it acts speedily and surely, always relieving suffering, and often saving life. The protection it affords, by its timely use in the throat and lung disorders of children, makes it an invaluable remedy to be kept always on hand in every house. No person can afford to be without it, and those who have once used it never will. From their knowledge of its composition and effects, Physicians use the Cherry Pectoral extensively In their practice, and Clergymen recommend it. It is absoultely certain in its remedial effects, and will always cure where cures are possible. For Sale by all Dealers. 98-ly WIGS—TOUPEES. Established 1S49. Established 1819. A GENTS WANTED Package of Good* free t» every applicant. Star Novelty Co., Cliarlotte. Mich. 124-I3C onr new40-pweillustrated catalogue of Jewelry awfWatchca, with iu.Iruo tions how to make money. Addreu, m. emoxmav. a co.. niiadai* phia, Pa» or Kawaakta Via 134-tf Practical Wig and Toupee Maker. Hairdresser, and Im porter of Human Hair and Hairdressers’ Materials. Wigs and Toupees for ladies and gentlemen a speciality. All kinds of first-class Hair Work, Switches, Curls, In visibles, Saratoga Waves, etc., on band and made to order. 44 East Twelfth Street. New York. Between Broadway and University Place. 137—6m fECTH fexfifAcTgb WISI00T FAIS. BEAUTIFUL SETS OF TEETH INSERTED. DISEASED GUMS CUBED. TEETH FILLED. 137-lm By DR. HOLMES. Mae**,