Newspaper Page Text
Don't Fail to Call Uo
i )
V ho has bpec.nl Barg iins in Various
Lines of Goods.
ft&JC iirSL litlPO!' IJ 0 fl fl fl
; , L Y 3 S.
fjfl ’r
fYVBSWivOj _______ S PA fin TO I Ol CTI' £ I Ul
'
—ALSO—
tiihDlf'AKK mminsnu Ur nr A|,|, » t . * KINH^
•
Farmers’ Tools, Wagon and Buggy Ma
terial, Blacksmith’s Tools, Hinges
Locks, Bolts, D <ors and Sash.
—everything in the—
HARDWARE LINE,
COOK STOVES, STOVE PIPE,
AND W00DWARE,
---AI.SO--
DOMESTIC SEWING MACHINES.
TOOCOA, CA.
STOMIMGEH
wi w 1 a AMOS
A
he Piai
emini !•••
b ,yh h .;e;; ,n ,he art <>r piano
riifinu.ar r.unnp containing m a wonderful decree,
tin •u qualities ot a perfect piano.
FAULT!.I JON F,
I’Ein r-CT ACTION,
U i iJjr.ME 1H R ABILITY.
i;l GA »< | |\ RESIGN' nr.d FINISH
nd uriiv:'] idorsod by lead Inc musician
1 uiu.sicftl i>
the kni employed •rinls a «i!d the skill of
« *; i 1 theft constniction, also
loti pericuce alio to say, these pianos
firnt 3 in every r l»ect
jVJ 95,000 IN USE.
SHONINGER
ORGAWS
Are tho Loading Organs of the World.
Because they are the best.
Tli nurm f voicing, prompt speech, quick-
nefsrt een, m il rull nod organ-like tone has
won lot i horn the highest praise and admiration
<■•1 .'di *.v Iiaycuecn and heard them.
wfdeh I hoy contain many valnah'e improvements
ere evclus' ’C features. Folding Pedal?
Tim Bouudii Boards, Book ( Insets and •
nilioenl p
Chime of Swiss Bolls
cr tingilie most hut moijious effects, and which
«-ui be used with or without tho feeds. These in-
M " "”<u have taken Medals and First Premium
wherever exhibited. Agents wanted in territory
net, Send already for provided fur.
Catalogue to
B. SHONINGER CO,,
80 Fifth Ave., New York.
F act odes New n liven. Conn.
A a CD from Ohl o. Here is a
port trait of Mr. Garri-
son. ion, of Salem, Ohio,
$20 He writes Was at work on a fnrtn for
[*! W&S50 a month ; 1 now have on agency
P* for E. C. Alien A Co's albums and publl-
rt utions and often make J8U80 a day.” day
A (Signed ) W 11. CtAKR18 ox
Willinm i Kline, Harrisburg, Pa.,
H writes: “I have never kciowfi
anything Yesterday to sell like your a ibu ll m
k 1 took orders enough to
pay me over iSSS.’i.” TV. J. El¬
more, ke Bangor, Me., writes •I
tak an order for your albt um at
aln ______lost every house I visit. Mr
.... ^>i profit or a is often si A as I muchas day’s work." Jfi»S O
I Others g e
/we p have are doing quite as w^il;
tracts not space to give ex¬
from their letters. Every
one \v. f> takes hold of this jrraml ml business r piles up grand protlts.
Shall we start YOU _ in this business
reader V Write to us and 1c all about it for yourself We
are start in pr manv y; we will start you if vou don't delay until
another gets alu ad of you in your part of the country. If you
take hold vc u will be able to pick up gold fast. IjuT*
On account of a forced manufacturers sale Itit»,000 ten
dollar l*hot»i£rapii Albums iiVcto be sold to the
people for each. Bound in Koval Crimson Silk Vel vet
world. Plush. Cbanningly Largest Sfce, decorated insides. Handsomest albums in the the
(«reft test bargains ever known. Agents
wanted. Liberal terms. Big money for agents. Anyone
become a successful agent. Sells itself on sight—little or no
talking necessary. Wierever shown, every one wants to pur¬
chase. before known. Agents take thousands of orders with rapidity never
Great profits await every worker. Agents arc
making fortunes. Ladies make as much as men. You, reader,
can do as well as any one. Full information and terms f ji'ee,
trt those who write for same, with particulars and terms for our
Family should Bibles, Books and Periodicals. After you know all,
you conclude to go no thrther, why no harm is done.
Address E. C. ALLEN & CO., AUGCbTA, Mains.
w • R . BRUGE,
One of the Oldest Mercantile Houses in Toccoa,
Here you cun find bargains
STAPLE I)R\ GOODS.
Boots, Shoes Provisions of all
Kinds. BACON, FLOUR, FEED. ALSO THE BEST VARIETIES
A .. F® UTILIZERS.
'Double 7Dcfc Tfi/ocD, loccoa , Georgia.
E. n». SHMI’SOTXT &
TOCCOA) GEORGIA-
iittstiitiii fes
And Machinery Supplies, Also, Repairs All Kinds of Machinery.
FBBBLE 88 EKGKHE 8 ,
BOTH PORTABLE & TRACTION
GEISER SEPARATORS
Farmers and others in want of either Engines or Separators, will
SAVE MONEY by using the above machines. 1 am also prepared
to give Lowest Prices and Best Terms on the celebrated
«1ESTEY 0RGANS.I>
Cardwell Hydraulic Cotton Presses, Corn and Saw Mills, Syrup
Mills and Ey. porators. Will haye in by early Spring a Full Stock of
White Sewing Machines_
McCormick Reapers, Mowers and Self-Binders
Which need only a trial their Superiority. Call and see me be-
ore you buy. DuDlicate parts of machinery constantly on hand.
TOCCOA MARBLE WORKS.
7he Undersigned is Prepared to Furnish If A11BLE.
GrntsM Mstgauts
POT v% Zxj r$£ ' i SI plainest Of All and Kinds lowest and prices, Styles from to the the
up All
JXZXf m 'st elaborate and costly. work
Rh delivered, set up and satisfaction guar
It} ■fi antecd. Call at my yard, examine
t '-i samples and ’earn prices I efore vur
^ chasing elsewhere. Address,
L. P. COOK,
TOCCOA, GA.
I—Sf
UT/Ttl Sewing Machine.
a. Mill II A A D\1 KM CO O.VJ.UU. ~ f\(\
W X- m I? Each Machine has a drop leaf,
“ fancy cover, two large drawers,
jr\ -j i of with Attachments, nickel rings, and a full set
r - Machine equal to any Sin-
get sold from $40 to
S60 by Canvassers. A trial in your home be-
fore payment is^asked. Buy direct of the Manu-
facturers and save agents’ profits besides getting
certificates of warrantee for five years. Send for
testimonials to Co-oper&tive Sewing Machine
Co., 269 S. nth St., Philadelphia, Pa.
<PWE PAY FREIGHT.'**
We have a remedy that will CURE CATARRH.
BRONCHITIS and ASTHMA. Our faith is so
strong that we will send treatment on trlai;
Send for Treatise and full particulars. Address,
The Hall Chemical Co,| 3860 Falrmount Av,, Phila. ( Pa
or Mil Sicta
CAN be CURED.
mail a f
■ also, a treatise on Epilepsy. DON
SUFFER ANY LONGER! Give Post OS
Address, fice, State and County, and Age plainly.
THE H ALL CHEMICAL Philadelphia, CO., Pa.
3860 Falrmount Avenue,
LEWIS DAVIS,
ITfOI'NEY AT LAW
TCCC0A CITY, GA.,
Will prnctic ■ in the coun.ie, of It,her-
•ham ami II,bn;, of the .Nb.rthwes.ern
Circuit, and Prankl an 1 Banks of the
West ra Circuit. Prompt attention will
Thf be g'von to all lmsit.css cntmctorl to him
ini colie turn of debts w 11 have snt c.'
attention.
money!
Se » 5 nrt E »<!(Tn m
agent for the c hen p-
nnwit*' on’"el
t 98
nn» cent stampa
flampleone compleL? set of family scales, togetl Ter^ahou^ **’4
brt which we offer great inducements to Age househoi/iarticles
Scales are accurately fitted nts an<J others
and adjusted an.! ara wp nt«d
in every respect, and are only offered at this pi >rice forth<
dollar to encourage cash order agents from and our others mammoth to handle circular our poods. < ..t*tet*
we will m c 01
____
^ V - ’ ” ^^ _
1 ,..it -J
(y I H
UlMESf THE a 3?“ W!
-r
Nfw HOMf 5IWIN6. mmHrOKfiM
CH -JTcAOa. '- v 23 UNION /vTtANTA.Gfl^CAl- SQUARE NY ” n UCtSCS = .
:
FT.LOUIS.MU nAU AST[:x
-
J*. A. fi)/A7J7n\
BLACKSMITtfiNG 5
H 0 nSE-SK 0 EiN 6 5
Manufacturing and Repairing
WAGONS, BUGGIES
—AND—
F«RR! IMPLEMENTS
Of all kinds.
J lRRETT & SOM.
rocco.v. OEOROIA.
SUNSET!
Slowly on all attainment or defeat
The day dies oat far in the darkening west ;
leaving the earth, its golden stage complete,
To muse an hour away, then sink to rest;
Dark earth—the heavens yet touched with
sunset glow;
Brightness above, and hushed, submissive
calm below.
Hushed is the world of toil. In every place
A wealth of healing silentness doth lie,
Or sounds more still than silence fill the space
Beneath that far infinity of sky;
And softly shines the evening star on one
Whose day lies spent, a chronicle of things
Undone,
Even regret, in this calm air and mild,
Bears little of its wonted anguish deep:
One long drawn breath of sorrow, as the
child
Preludes a sad, sweet sinking into sleep, ~
Then peace. Night registers defeat again;
But what was I, that I should struggle and
attain?
—Mary Colborne-Veel, in the Atlantic.
---—--
All’s Well That Ends Well,
BY HELEN FORREST GRAVES.
“Old folks will be old folks,” said
Myra Manton, “and the best plan is to
let’em have their own way.”
“Oh, yes, I know,” said Leona, clasp-
ing her hands. “But that old Leghorn
hat, with the crown like a stove-pipe and
the front like a wash-hands basin! Who
could tolerate that? And everybody’
‘”“8^ »he.. she "
comes into church.”
Lct .'“ lau « h - shrmvrlly remarked
„ “ri?- “M, be "ill™* folk, should
lau ,? h at m ? ,f 1 , worth thirty thousand
dollars and owned the Bliven Mills into
the bargain.”
Myra Manton was “hired help” at the
Bliven Farm—a stout New Englander of
fifty summers, with hair cut short, no
visible waist, and snapping black eyes.
Leona was old Mrs. Biiven’s niece—a
slim gW ot ^ ,, th . b3l5am ,: ok
com plexitui, dreamy gray eyes, and teeth
white and even as small pearls,
In the eves of James Bliven, the old
lady’s son, Leona was fairest of all created
bein S s - Even Myra Manton allowed
“that she was sorter nice to look at!” As
for Mrs. Bliven herself, she expressed no
opinion whatever; Mrs. Bliven was not a
person who talked much.
“She’s come to make me a visit,” said
3Irs. Bliven one day to Myra. “I sup-
if she suits me, I shall ask her to
stay for good and all.”
“If you don’t., I suppose Jim will,”
said Myra, with a shrewd twinkle of her
eyes.
“As it happens, I’m the mistress of
this house,” said Mrs. Bliven. 4 ‘Well,
we’ll see how she suits.”
And neither Myra the solid, nor Leona
the sylphlike, knew, as they sat on the
sunshiny doorstep, slicing great, red-
hearted peaches to dry for winter use,
that Mrs. Bliven, from the garret window
above, where she was looking over her
balls of carpet-rags, could distinctly hear
every word they uttered.
“Myra,” said Leona, as she replenished
her pan from the great bushel basket,
“I’m going to tell you something.”
“Tell ahead!” succinctly retorted
Myra.
“I’ve got such an idea!”
*;What is it?”
“Well, one of my schoolmates at Han-
over Hall hacl a grandmother. Aud her
grandmother had just such a Noah’s Ark
of a bonnet as Aunt Bliven.”
“Humph!” said Myra, peeling dili-
gently away
“And she and her sister took a pair of
big shears and snipped it up into little
bits and made the grandmother believe
that the rats did it.”
“Must hive been a credulous old cree-
tur,” observed Myra.
“Oh, no; but it was really such a neat
job. Don’t you think, Mvra, we might
dispose of the old Leghorn hat in some
such way?”
“No, I don’t!” said Myra, spearing a
peach on the end of her knife and begin-
ning artistically to remove its pink-velvet
jacket.
Leona sighed, and went on with her
■work, Myra MatttOn paused to call her
froliesOme little terrier off from a brood
of half-grown turkey poults who were
foraging around the barn door.
“I do wish,” she said, curtly,
Cappen John Jackson hadn’t seut me that
plaguey beast to take care on till he come
back from + hat voyage to Fayal. If he
hurts any of the fowls, I expect Mi's,
Bliven'll murder me.”
“Myra,” said Leona, “are you really
engaged to Captain John Jackson?”
•‘Get out!” said Myra, with a Sheepish
smile. “I dunno whether I be or not.”
The next day Leoua came into her
aunt’s room with a pretty black-and-
white straw bonnet, trimmed with a jet
dagger and loops innumerable of black
ribbon.
“Look, Aunt Bliven!” said she.
“What’s that?” said the old woman,
turning her spectacle glasses full on the
girl
'I T , ve , been trimming , bonnet for
a
you .”
•'You might have staved yourself the
trouble,” sharply spoke the matron.
‘•But don’t you like it?” pleaded
Leona, who was beginning to tremble all
over.
r's very nice, I dare say, but I'm
very well suited already with what I've
got —■ L ”
'But. Aunt Bliven—”
“ ’Tain't worth while to discuss the
matter,” said Mrs. Bliven, drily. “I
calculate I’m old enough to choose for
myself what I’ll wear and what I won’t!"
Leona shrank into herself like the
leaves of a sensitive plant; she crept.
back to her bedroom with the rejected
triumph of home made millinery, and
had a good cry over it.
Presently she heard her aunt calling:
“Myra! Myra!”
She ran out.
“Oh, Aunt Bliven. I had forgotten to
tell you. Myra had a telegram from her
sister up at Portland, and she had to rim
to catch the 10 o’clock train, Her sis-
ter's husband has had an accident, and I
promised her I'd explain it to you. She'll
be back as soon as they possibly can
spare her. aud I’m to do the housework
while she is gone.”
Old Mrs. Bliven sniffed discontentedly.
‘'Seems to me people are always havin'
accidents,” said she. 4 ’However,
may go and pick some Lima beaus and
Ua we ^ ^ ave a dish of good,
o, fashioned j succotash. Myra is a good
cook, butshe never could Tr.sinp succo-
cash. ... 111 tGe a-tenxoon we 11 have
_ narnessed
W.xow ^oDy isauj Smith up s ana to tea. drive over to
-c long jt-uows or afternoon were
iymg mew art tne closely mown grass
wnen old Toby was led to the door, and
Mrs. Bliven called loudly to Leona te
bring down her bonnet and shawl.
The girl, who had no especial fancy
for the society of Widow Sally Smith
and her hard voiced daughters, listlessly
obeyed.
But the moment she opened the “best
bedroom” door, where the old lady kept
her choicest treasures, she uttered a shriek
of dismay. There, on the floor, in a se¬
ries of jagged strips and indistinguish¬
able debris, lay Mrs. Blivens’s famous
Leghorn bonnet!
“Goodness me!” cried a shrill voice,
“what's the matter?’’
And Leona became conscious that old
Mrs. Bliven had toiled heavily up the
stairs, and stood close beside her, peering
over her shoulder. Her face grew black
as night.
“Oh, Aunt Bliven,” gasped Leona,
“how could this have happened?”
“I see through it all, plain enough,’’
said Mrs. Bliven. “You needn’t trouble
to tell any lies about it, Leona Parish! ]
heard what you and Myra were talking
about yesterday morning—about the old
lady and the bonnet that was snipped to
pieces and the blame laid on rats. It’s a
very doubt; smart, ingenious plan, I don’t
but somehow it don’t suit me to
have such very smart, ingenious folks
about my premises. So, if you please,
I’ll dispense with the rest of your visit,
The horse and wagon are at the door,
and little Peter will drive you to the de-
pot as soon as ever you've packed your
trunk.”
“But, Aunt Bliven, I never—”
“I told you I’d have no more false¬
hoods,” sternly interrupted the old lady.
4 ‘I don’t know what sort of consciences
you girls have, in this age of the world.
Be s.leat, I say, and obey me. „
And thus, in all the bitterness of un-
merited disgrace, Leona was turned out
of the house, that was beginning to be
unspeakably James dear to her.
Bliven, when he came home,
was thunderstruck.
“Mother, for heaven’s sake,” cried he,
“what is this? The girl has no place to
go to. ”
“Let her go back to the boarding-
school she came from!” said Mrs. Bliven,
sternly. ‘ ‘I’ll have no double-dealers in
this house!”
“I’ll go after her and bring her back.”
“You’ll do as you choose,” said the
old woman; 4 ‘but if Leona’s the girl I
take her to be, she won’t come with
you.”
A sudden wave of despair swept over
James’s soul as he recognized the truth of
these words.
“Mother,” he cried, “you’ll forgive
her! You’ll send for her to return—for
my sake, mother?”
But Mrs. Bliven shook her head.
“No girl that isn’t frank-hearted and
true can have a home here!” she reiter¬
ated.
Yet, in spite of all this, the house
seemed strangely desolately without Le-
ona’s light step and winning smile,
Late at night there was a ldiid knock-
ing at the door. It was Myra Manton,
come l ack.
“Things is all right,” said she. They
was frightened more than they was hurt.
Absalom Atkins always was a coward,
and I ain’t goin’ to spend any more o’ my
time foolin’ with ’em; so I’ve come back.
Was you surprised when you seen Waggy
was gone? puzzled The dog,” in answer to Mrs,
Biiven’s look, ‘that Capped
Jackson left in my charge. When I seen
the mischief he’d done, I jest ketched
him up and left him to Cappen’s sister’s
Mary Ann Jackson, at the cross-roads,
and afterward it occurred to me you
might miss him and worry for fear he was
lost.”
“I never once thought of the dog,”
said Mrs. Bliven, impatiently,
“And the bdrinet?” Said Myra, “I’m
powerfully sorry, but—”
“The bonnet!” said Mrs. Bliven.
“What do you mean, Myra? What are
you talking about?”
“You don’t tell me you never diskiv-
ered it?” cried Myra, bursting into a
laugh. “Well, I do declare. What did
you s’pose done it?”
“Done what?”
“Why, worried that ’ere Leghorn hat
o’ your’n into ribbons! It was Waggy;
that’s who it was! Pups is always mis-
chievous, and I think he’s the worst ]
ever seen. I meant to told Deacon Ship¬
man's boy, that helped me to tote my
satchel to the daypo, to explain it t’ ye,
but we was pretty nigh bein’ left, and
Hurry and fluster driv it all outen my
head.”
“Mi's. Bliven stared at Myra.
“it was the dog, after all, then;” said
she.
“La f
me, who else did ye suspect?”
cried Myra. “Where’s Leona? I fetched
home some o’ them puce-colored poppy
seeds and a slip o’ rose geranium for her,
caused I knowed—Goodness, what’s the
matter with you, eh? What are you
looking at me that way for?”
By the very earliest morning train
James Bliven went after Leona, with a
letter from his mother imploring her to
return to the farm
“I’m an old woman.” wrote Mrs. Bliven,
“but I ain’t too old to own when I’ve been in
the wrong. Come back, and I’ll guarantee
you and me won’t have any more quarrels.”
Leona came back, and when once again
she crossed the threshold she was James’s
promised wife.
.. Mother will be pleased at the engage¬
ment as I am myself,” said the young
man, rapturously.
And Myra’s kind eves shone a cordial
welcome, and Mrs. Bliven herself came
to meet Leona, wearing the simple straw
bonnet with the jet dagger and the black
ribbon bows.
“It’s dreadful becoming,” said she,
with a complacent glance at the looking-
S lass - “and hereafter I mean to get you
to trim all m J hats for Leona.”—
Saturday Night. _
The Coldest Spot and Coldest Day.
The coldest region in the United
States is the stretch of country on the
northern border from the Minnesota
lakes to the western line of Dakota. At
Pembina, which lies near the forty-
ninth parallel, the lowest temperature
recorded in the great storm of the winter
of 1873 was fifty-six degrees below zero.
This is believed to be the lowest temper¬
ature reached in the United States .—San
Fran ciseoEza miner.
Steel rs Wood.
Steel seems to a great degree to b«
taking to a constantly increasing extent
the place of wood in the construction ol
railway rolling stock. Truck frames,
made of hydraulically pressed steel plate,
are now produced, and it is proposed, by
means of special shapes in which it may
be pressed, to use it in place of wood in
building locomotive cabs, and eventually
fn cars .—Dixie.
The Human Hand.
A large thumb denotes deep thought,
strong will and little general sympathy;
a small and weak thumb denotes vacilla¬
tion and irresoulution. Voltaire had an
enormous thumb. The fingers are “the
instruments of intellectual life ” The
palm The is “the evidence of animal life.”
“useful hand” has the fingers square
and knotty, with the thumb large. The
large thumb shows “capacity for detail.”
8mooth fingers show a sort of mcmentsry
inspiration, culation, which takes the place of cal¬
and a faculty which gives the
power of judging at first sight. The
tion knotty fingers are connected with reflec¬
and order and aptitude for numbers.
The thumb is the most important index
ot character. Mesmerists attach special
value to its operation, and physiologists
have remarked its connection with the
vital forces. It has been said that no
more indubitable sign of the approach
of death can be afforded than the effort
to cover the thumb with the fingers. If
a woman’s thumb be broad, it shows
strength of character. If it is narruw.it
betrays softness of disposition. If the
joints of the fingers are rather laige—
of the knotty type—she is a sensible
woman. If they are pointed and smooth
she is of the artistic, impulsive class.
Enduring Cold.
Austrian Referring to a report current in the
papers to the effect that Queen
Victoria is in the habit of sleeping with
open windows in winter, and that her
apartments at Windsor are so cold that
her attendants and visitors are almost
frozen, a Vienna daily reminds its read-
t the rs of Empress Maria Theresa’s liking for
cold. Her apartments were very
rirely heated. She exposed herself t<>
dtaughts, and her writing table in winter
was so close to the open window that the
snow drifted in upon it. It frequently
happened that the hands of the hair
uresscr tending were partially frozen while at-
to her majesty’s coiffure, and
rliat the ladies surrounding her august
oerson literally trembled from cold.
Kaunitz, one of her ministers, never ap¬
peared before the empress in winter with¬
out being enveloyed in furs to escape
taking cold in her draughty apartments.
A Sehool for Beggars.
„ t , . ... 4l ...
ch-irged with begging, the boys alleged
that a woman trained them and other lads
as their beggars, and that she used to keep
decent clothes and supply 1 hem
with rags to go oUt in. Her own boy, it
is said, was the head of the gang of ju
venile beggars and used to take the
money, which partly went to his mother
and part in refreshments and visits t"
music hulls. The mother of one of the
lads said that she had been to this woman
and warned her that if she heard tliai
her boy’s clothes w r ere kept again she
would lock her up for unlawful posses-
sion. The defendants adhered to their
statement and about, being magistrate supplied said with
mgs, etc.; the that
if it was true the woman really ought to
be prosecuted.
It may be remarked, for the comfort
of honest poverty, that avarice reigns
most in those who have but few good
qualities to recommend them. This is a
weed that will grow only in a barren soil.
THKhuesof sunset make life great;
so the affections make some little web of
cottagfe and fireside populous, impor¬
tant, and fillibg the Main Space in out
history.
“’Mid pleasures and palaces, tho’ we may
roam.
Be it ever so humble, there’s no place like
home,” with whose
especially if blessed a wife hours
are not spent in misery caused by those drag¬
ging-down pains arising Pierce’s from Favorite weaknesses pe¬
culiar to her seN. Prescrip¬
brings tion relieves and cures these troubles and
Sold sunshine to tnanjr darkened horn s.
from by druggists tinder of atisfaction a. positive gudrnvtee
manufacturers - ot money
refunded. Read guarantee on bottle-wrapper.
The cleansing, antiseptic and healing quali¬
ties of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy are un¬
equaled.
______
How can we expect that another should keep
our secret when it is more than we can do
ourselves?
_ ___^____
irregularities Bfadfield’s Ifeifiale flegUlator will cure ail
Those or derangements should pectl'iar to
woman. Druggists. suffering Use it. For
sale by all
If afflicted with sore eyes its*- Dr. IpUafc Thotnp
*on’sEye-Water.I r igaist* sel! tit L’5c per bo’tt'e
Eyes Ears Hose
>re all more or less affected by catarrh. The eyes
become inflamed, red and watery, with dull, heavy
pain between them; there are roaring, buzzing
fidises in the eafs, arid sometimes the hearing is
Affected; there is constant disagreeable discharge
ffom the hose, bad breath, and In many cases loss
(it the sense ot smell, All these disagreeable syrnp-
ioms disappear when the disease is cured by Hood’s
Sarsaparilla, which expels from the blood the iiri-
purity from which catarrh arises, tones and restores
the diseased organs to health, aud builds up the
whole system.
N.H.— Be sure to get
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. *1; six for <5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowel!, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
AGENTS Wanted!
LIVING LEADER31 A MASTERLY WORK
Ol
OF Matchless Intern!.
THE WORLD ! Comprising graphic biogra- :
phies of the Men and Women of Greater’ Eminence, I
Wealth and Power, who av© leading! the milo'di^ of man- •
kind inch and distinguished shaping the authors destiny ot >atjoris LEV WALL Pr; P^re>1by ACL,
Hon. S. S. COX. Mus. t HAN K LEfcDIE, JOEi.
CHANDLER HARRIS, and ethers. The most vnlanU-
and chance popular Tor Agents Book published ’ke big in tv. )ty years Liberal A Terms rare
to m ! money
aud etciutiVe territory. Write Ac at once for age ey. Ad¬
dress II. Cs HUlIGiNH ( <> . Atlanta, Ga.
~
VO t’ \VI EL. SAVE MON: I
Tlltte, Rail', Trouble UVATARfW
and will l Ulli: HP^ d
0 QATAR \yus£ R &
Ely’s Cream Balm.
Applv Balm into each nostril
ELY BROS..56 Warren St , N.Y
home KssMsmaKSSsasw:
OPIUM
TJJf A r's
•i y n El" is m Jr . jggo
Comes _ V A s * *■ Science f»^s j«f
Read Stories 1000 I Travel .Charming ■ Weekly Only I
i every 430.000 in terAHTH.ORS|iLLUSTRAl BY THE .Natural and IchhdreKs IcjppuEMEHI For au. $L75
Week AND HISTORY] PKGE r THE
Homes RE _- Family k aye^-
See the large advertisement in a previous issue of this paper. Send for Colored Announcement and Specimen Copies, free.
—4 FREE TO JAN. I, 1890. WITH
To any >'ew Subscriber wiio will cut out and sand us this slip, with name and Post
Office address and St.73, we will send The Youth’s Companion FREE to 1.
GO 1830, HOLIDAY 45 and for XU2IBERS, a Aidrett, full year and from all THE the that ILLUSTRATED YOUTH’# date. This COMPANION, offer WEEKLY includes SUPPLEMENTS. the Beaton, FOUR DOTTRLE Mass. $1.75
How’a This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any ca^e of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
tak'ng HaM’s Catarrh « ure.
F. J. (JHEXEY <fc CO., Props., Toledo, O.
>' e. the undersigned, have known F. ,T.
perfectly Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him
honorable in all business transac¬
tions and financially able to carry out any
obligation made by their firm.
West & Tri al Wholesale Druggists, To e-
Walding, do, O.
Kink an & Marvin, Wholesale
E. H. Druggists. 1'o‘edo, O.
Van Hceskv, Cashier, Toledo National
Bank. Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood and mucus
surfaces of the system. Price 15c. per bottle.
Sold by all Druggists.
"I.iicy Hinton.”
Hark ! the sound of manv voices,
Jubi : aut in gladdest song,
And full many a heart rejoices
As the chorus floats along:
“Hail the Queen of all Tobaccos'."
Huw the happy voices blend,
“Finest an 1 purest among her fellows—
Man’s staunch and true friend.”
Orfjion. tlir Pnindiae ol Ki\rin~r*.
Mild , equable climate, certain and abundant
crops, Best fruit, grain, grass and stock coun-
irv in the world. Full information free. Ad¬
dress Oieg. Im’igra’tn Board, Portland, Ore.
A l'Je. Cigar in quality, but only a 5c. cigar
in i>ri< e is "Tandlt's Punch."
m M
£vj
T
■j r M iW f*; •- >
•>
AlftM
OiV^ BIVJOYS
Both the method and results when
SyrupofFigs and refreshing is taken; it is pleasant
to the taste, and acts
gentlyyet Liver and promptly Bowels, on the Kidneys,
cleanses the sys¬
tem aches effectually, and fevers dispels colds, head¬
and cures habitual
constipation. Byrup kind of Figs is the
only duced, remedy of its ever pro-
pleasing to the taste and ac-
ceptable ^^ to the 8 ton,ach ; prompt in
ac tl anC4 ^ ru v beneficial in its
ejects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances,
its many excellent qualities com-
mend it to all and have made it
the most popular of Figs remedy is known,
&nd Syrup for sale in 50c
$1 bottleB by all leading drug-
. , A” . 7 t ci ? <I j !J , S g ? • ? . wh if °
nia T *l°t have it. on hand will 1 pro-
Cure wishes it promptly it. for Do any one who
to try not accept
any substitute,
CALIFORNIA FIB SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, N.Y.
^tV*t«TEEf» IV
mm 'A'k *0. %
h
SMITH’S BILE BEANS
Acton the liver and bile; clear the complexion;
cure biliousness, 6ick headache, costiveness,
malaria and all liver and stomach disorders.
We are now making small size Ilile Beans,
especially adapted for children and women—
very (•mall and easy to take. Price of either
sizo” 25b pbr bottlb. PHOtG-GRAVURB .. of ... the
A panel size ,-17-7(1,■ mailed
above picture, “Kfssfhg at the Imi on
rcc eipt of 2c stamp. Address makers or
great Anli-Bile Remedy—“Bile Beans.”
4. F. SMITH & CO., St. Loul*». Wlo.
J^FIELDS
FEMALE
.^regulator /Mm**
MENSTRUATION OR MONTHLY SICKNESS
1? TAKS.W DURING CttfcUGt QF V\»t
BRAW ELD REGUIA TOR CO, A TLA NT A fit
saw BY ALL D9U3G13T*.
... e - -
REVOLVER.'^*«*» AUTOMATmT
taWSIr^Sl 7, Wilh W
Catch, impossibJo to ibtrrw. 39 barrel open when S. di*- As
Charged . New Patent. calibre, rising have
w. c. F. Cartridsre. Do not bvy until you Swift
examined thi* If yon buy a genuine
Double-Action Revolver, yon arfe sure M
have as perfect a Pistol as can be xnnue.
Sent postpaid on receipt «>f price, Sendee,
in stamps flioes. for our 100 page illustrated catalogue of
Guns, Revolvers. Police Goods, etc
John P. Lovell Arms Co., Hfrs., Boston, Mass. |
JONES I
IJI3
PAYS THE FREIGHT.
ij T< ti >\ agon hcslco,
Iroii Tars l.everr Steel Bearings, Brass 1
Ileain *m! Beam Box for-
880.
■ Ever-.- Size scale. For f rec price li.t
f J / \d JONES mention this OF paper BINGHAMTON, afid address
'v w
BINGHAMTO v, N. V.
jpf wmmmmmm riJS BBS MJM and whiskjt hab-
j&S iSf* 111 3W| ITScured at home wiill-
K 7 - sS mill out pain. Book of pur-
■ Cr a R E ’
Bmr n M WOLXI.EY M D
ATLANTA. GaT Office 65i* Whitehall 8L
rm | Up IDIbO ri REMEDY Cheapest. FOR Ii#*lief CATARRH.—Best is immediate. A Easiest is
x to use. cure
.! certain. For Cold in the Head it has no equal.
CATARRH
It is an Ointment, Price, of which Sold a small particle druggists is applied sent
to the nostrils. 60c. by or
by mail. Address, E. T. Hazkltine, Warren, Pa.
BRYANT & STRATTON Business College
teS&r&iHS.V25&XK , 8S3SZi£Z. LOUISVILLE. KY,
FOUND!
THE PLACE TO BUT ALL TOUR
Ftriitm, Carpets, Kits,
SHADES, ETC.,
CHEAPER THAN ANY HOUSE IN THE SOUTH.
Be sure and see our stock and prices
before placing your orders.
tWWRITE US FOR PRICES.
A. J. MILLER & SON,
42 <f- 44 Peachtree >f.. Atlanta, Ca,
HAVE A CAB?
9
v/f ' fir. %
?///,
A XT*
/
V/ w
'»/ /• 7 . -
// /Mr- /
\N / m
When you are addressed as above, your first im¬
pulse is to look at the driver. If the day be stormy
and the driver is a wise man, you will find that he
wears a “ Fish Brand Slicker,” and he will his tell you
that he is as comfortable on the box as passen¬
ger in the cab, and that for his business this coat
is invaluable. When von get once inside a “ Fish
Brand Slicker,” there’s no such thing as weather
for vou. It doesn’t make the snuftest difference
whether it rains, hails, sleets, snows, or blows.
Vou are absolutelv and solidly comfortable. Get
one at once. No danger of of your not buy liking it after¬ other
wards. It is a waste money to any
waterproof coat. They are worthless after a few
weeks of hard usage. Beware of worthless im¬
itations, every garment stamped with the ** Fish
Brand ” Trade Mark. Don’t accept any inferior
coat when you can have the*' Fish Brand Slicker”
delivered without extra cost. Particulais and
illustrated catalogue free.
A. J. TOWER, - Boston, Mass*
WEBSTER
BEST HOLIDAY GIFT
for Pastor, Parent,Teacher, Child, Friend
3000 more Words and nearly
2000 more Engravings than
any ot her American Dict ionary.
It is an invaluable companion in every School
and at every Fireside.
GET THE BEST.
Sold by all Booksellers. Illustrated Pamphlet
with specimen pages, etc., sent free.
(5. A C. MERRIAM & CO., PubTs.Spriu&fiekl, Mass.
I F YOU WISH A /- v .. wfsscwT- ------ _
* (strnk 4 x
REVOLVER _ 1 --- .V «
purchase one of the cele¬
brated SMITH * WESSON
t'ver arms. nikviifactured Tlie finest small and arms the \V (( // \Yx( ,)
first choice of all exjierts.
Manufactured in calibres :fi, 38 and 44-1(0. Sin¬
gle oTdouble action, Safety Hammerless and VT35'
Tatget models. Constructefl entirely of bent qual¬
ity wrought stock, steel, hey carefully disported for work¬
manship aKd 1 are. unrivaled for finish,
durnbility tnalleublc and nccurncy. Do not be deceived by
cheap for the caat-iron article imitationa which
are often sold genuine and are not
onlv unreliable, but dangerous. The SMITH A
WESSON Revolvers are all stamix'd npon the bar¬
rels with firm’s name, address and dates of patents
and are guaranteed having the genuine perfect article, in every aud detail. If In¬
sist upon your
dealer cannot supply you an order sent to address
below will receive prompt and careful attention.
Descrptivecatalogue plicate and prices furnished WESSON, upon ap¬
SMITH &
|yMention this paper._Springfield, Maily
SOUTHERN PRINTERS’ SUPPLY CO.
W WK CARRY IJf STOC*
Type , Cases , Stands, Presses,
T*aper Cutters
AND EVERYTHING USED IN A PRINTING OR
PUBLISHING HOUSE.
WTt all eii us nml SAVE MONEY!.**
34 Wes! Alabama Street. ATM NT!, CL
After all others fail consult
DR. LOBB
3‘E!t North Fifteenth St,, Philadelphia, Pa., foi
the Nervous treatment of Blood Poisons, SXtii Eruptions,
Impotencv Complaints, Bright’* Disease, Strictures,
and kindred diseases, no matter of how
long standing or from what cause originating,
tyTen days medicines furnished by mall CDCC
Send for Book on S FECI AD Diseases. lUEE*
FENHYMYALfinS CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
m red, ribbon. ask Bars Druggist metallic »o4 Take always for boxes, IHamond reliatj'.e. sealed Brand, with Ludlca, blue la ie.L\ ;fi\ A
in pasteboard no other. 4 li pfils \sy
dangerous boxes, pink wrapeera, are
(stamps) tor counterfeit*. Send 4c. V
V* particulars, tettimeniali and
u,t "- b T
-
Lfciehestor Chem’l Co., Hadison S«.. rkila.. Fa,
-----------
£.*&”'SIS
aSufm Unirrllh hTJ A t SEMPLE otIYirLt, 'mw' 512 W. Main, L<?w*vtile, Kyg
OPIUM HABIT.
A Valuable Treatise Givln
full Information of an Easy and Speedy cur e free
the afflicted. Dr. J. C. HoFrMAS,Jeffersou,Wl lsconala.
——
No Present comparable to a Cood
Book, or a subscription to a flrst-
class Magazine like Wide Awake.
f- end l ostal to D. LOTHROP CO., Br«TOS, Mab ., tot
eelect list Boots and prospectus of tbair Magazine*.
I l prescribe presc and ftilly Tally only only en- en-
dorse Big G *> as the he
Corwin specific fortbecertain e certain «ur»
1 T ro umd 5 DATS.^ sot t»l of o. this H.INGRAHAM.M. disease, D.
BtrUt N. Y. (
aaaa e are. Amsterdam,
lira only by th* We have sold Big G Tor
Cbamial Co. many years, and it ba*
turn giveD the best ot aalis-
Ohio. D.’r’ d YCHE k CO..
Chicago. 111.
Trade Bark V SI .00. Bold by Druggists.
-*• - N - L Forty-eight, ’89.