The Middle Georgia argus. (Indian Springs, Ga.) 18??-1893, January 27, 1881, Image 4

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GOSSIP FOR THE LADIES. Her Rival. ‘ The belle ? ” ’Tia hard to say, and yet There is a Cuban here— “ Handsome?” Well, yes. “ Her style ? ” Brunette— Tbe darling of her sphere. I’ve \ratohed her, and she never moves But some man walks close by; And yet there’s no one whom she loves Or hates— “ The reason why ? ” Just wait a little, ma cherie ; “ fier manners ? ” Neither grave Nor gay. “ The golden mean,” you say; And yet the women rave— “ln praise ? ” Ah, no I One seldom hears Her lauded by their lips; And yet the sweet silence that she wears Their malice doth eclipse. “ Brilliant? ” At times. This nut-brown maid Hhines brightest when she meets Her match. Thus conflict oft, ’fis said, Inspires the doughtiest feats. “ nor style of beaux ? ” Both young and old Yield fealty to her sway; Blonde beauty, with his beard of gold, And ugliness in gray. Last night we sat ’neath the summer moon, And her breath was like the rose; And odors as sweet as buds in June Follow her where she goes. “ I love her ? " Truly, that I do. ’Tis not long since i spoko My love. I don’t mind this to you— It ended all In smoke; What, crying? “nate her? ” Then I fear I’ve carried the jest too far; No rival is she of yours, my dear— And her name is Just —Cigar 1 —Scribner's. An Expensive Accident. At a fashionable dinner party a lady guest was so unfortunate as to break a plate belonging to a set of French china. The lady insisted on either mending or replacing it, but finding both impossible she was obliged to send abroad and du plicate the entire set of 200 pieces. tj A Fraud. An unmarried Englishman, visiting our fair city of Boston, saw a handsome ly dressed young lady on the street and was told that she was the daughter of a wealthy merchant. He became acquaint ed, and the girl knowing the woman who watched the interests of an elegant house whose owners were at the sea shore, was permitted by her to receive him there. She also gave him dinners there, hiring waiters. She told him that her parents were in Europe. He that cut after sl© fashion of an out-door jacket, coijpng to the knees. This re-v form in di&ss will probaby never be fol lowed by ySnglish ladies, though they seem stro;sgly interested in it. Until then American ladies will not exercise their minds about it. • \Voman’ Work. Women frequently complain that men do not know liow r hard they are obliged to work. The many little things they are required to do are quite as taxing upon them, they rightly say, as the larger la bors of the masculine sex. The Rev. Thomas K. Beecher says something on this subject which all women will ap preciate. “ All men,” remarks this dis- , tinguished gentleman, “ought to go to the woods and do their own washing and general work, such as sweeping, house keeping and dish-washing. The work of women is not spoken of sensibly by men till they have done it themselves. Gentlemen readers, it is easy to talk, but just try it on a very medest scale once, and you will honor working women more than ever. Do as I have done— do a wash of six pieces, and then re member that a woman turns off 200 pieces a day. Look at your watch and see how long it takes you. Look at your soap and see how much you have used. Look at your white clothes, handkerchiefs and towels and see what you have done, and never again speak harshly of or to a woman on washing day, nor of laundry work as if it were unskillful labor. Try it. A sympa thetic gentleman, having washed two pieces, will never change his shirt again without a glow of reverence and grati tude. She did this. A similar and sal utary consciousness will come over him who darns his own socks, patches his own trousers, splices his suspenders and washes his dishes. Look not every man upon his own things, but every man also upon the work of a woman. Such an experience in the woods will go far toward * settling he woman question, by teaching us tbit we are all members of one another, and there must be no schism.” Stark Mad on a Plaque. There is a pretty mad woman on the west side. We do not mean on the west side of the woman, but on the west side of the raging Milwaukee river. The woman is mad on both sides—not on both sides of the river, but on both sides of her. Now you understand. This w oman had a plaque. If you don’t know what that is you are not smart. A plaque is a platter made of wood or china, or something on Which is painted a picture in oil, and the plaque is put upon a mantel or an easel to be admired. This lady had one of them, real bad. That is, the plaque was not bad, but the lady had it considerable. It was the most beautiful thing she ever saw, and would stand and gaze upon it for hours at a time, and when she went to bed and left it she did so with regret. She would have slept with that plaque if she had not been otherwise engaged. The world seemed to revolve around that plaque, and ;the only thing the lady worried about was that she could not take it with her when she went to heaven. The other mormng the serv ant girl ui't iisi platter in the closet which she kept for state occasions, told the girl to take that platter with the picture on, and then went on pinning her hair with hairpins, and finally went down to breakfast. As she was pouring out the coffee she thought she detected an odor of sanctity and fried chromo, and she looked at the meat plate and turned pale. There was lier wooden plaque, full of boiling grease and floating sausage, and through the grease she could see her beautiful oil painting struggling up under difficulties. There was a commingling of Alpine scenery and links of sausage that the artist Dever intended, and the lady took the plaque in her hand and went to the kitchen, where she brained the cook. There was nothing else to do. Ladies who have plaques, and any lady is liable to have them, as they are said to be catching, should watch the cook. — Peck'B Sun. How a Woman Reads a Newspaper. According to Mrs. Gertrude Garrison this is how she does it; “She takes it up hurriedly and begins to scan it over rapidly, as though she was hunting some particular thing, but she is not. She is merely taking in the obscure paragraphs, which, she believes, were put in the out of-the-way places for the sake of keep ing her from seeing them. As she fin ishes each one her countenance bright ens with the comfortable reflection that she has outwitted the editor and the whole race of men, for she cherishes a vague belief that newspapers are the en emies of her sex, and editors her chief oppressors. She never reads the head lines, and the huge telegraph heads she never sees. She is greedy for local news, and devours it with the keenest relish. Marriages and deaths are always interesting reading to her, and adver tisements are exciting and stimu lating. She cares but little for printed jokes unless they reflect ridicule upon the men, and then she delights in them and never forgets them. She pays particular attention to anything inclosed in quotation marks, and considers it lather better authority than anything first-handed. The columns in which the editor airs his opinions, in leaded hifa lutin, she rarely reads. Views are of no importance in her estimation, but facts are everything. She generally reads the poetry. She doesn’t always care for it, but makes a practice of reading it, because she thinks she ought to. She reads stories, and sketches, and para graphs indiscriminately, and believes every word of them. Finally, after she has read all she intends to, she lays the paper down with an air of disappoint ment, and a half-contemptuous gesture, which says very plainly that she thinks all newspapers miserable failures, but is certain that if she had a chance she could make the only perfect newspaper the world had ever seen. [Cairo, (111.) Radical Republican.] What We Know About It. . “What do you know about St. Jacobs Oil?” said one of our oldest subscribers. This was a fair question, and we answer, that we are reliably informed, that a gen tleman of this city who has suffered un told agony, and spent a mint of money to get relief from Rheumatism, in des peration bought- same .and tried it, ariW declares 'that it is the best remedy ioT Rheumatism he ever heard of. ~ Ants. The agricultural ant is a pattern of neatness, t The most minute particles of dirt are' carefully removed, and the whole body frequently and thoroughly cleaned especially after eating and sleep ing. They assist each other in the gen eral cleansing, and the attitude c,£ the ant under operation is one of intense satisfaction,-a pei-fect picture of muscular surrender and ease. An ant lias been seen to kneel down before another, and thrust forward the head under the face of the other, and lie motionless, express ing the desire to be cleaned; the other ant understood this and went to work. Sometimes this is combined with acrobatic feats, in which these ants excel, jumping about and clinging remarkable fash ion to blades of grass. Sometimes the cleansing ant hangs downward from the grass, and to her the ant operated upon clings, reaching over and up with great agility to submit to her friend’s offices. Evidently moisture from the mouth is used for washing. [Keokuk Constitution.] Every Time. A man, or even a piece oc machinery that does its work right every time, is we think, very correctly judged “valua ble.” And cer ainlv none the less val uable is any article designed to relieve the ills of mankind, and which does so every time. Mess. Jones, Cook & Cos., Bay State Brewery, Boston, Mass , write: We have used St, Jacobs Oil among our men and lind that it helps them “every time.” We therefore heartily recom mend it as a pain-healing liniment. The Vienna correspondent of the Lon don Globe writes as "follows: “Last night Miss Kellogg was singing the part of “Philine” in Mignon, where, in the second act, she has to open several bil lets. One of these missives proved to be an eloquent letter of eight pages from a marquis who had long been in love with her, in which he once more pressed his suit in burning accents. This pretty ruse was crowned with success, and now it is an open secret that the great American artiste has given her hand and heart to the lover who has wooed her ever since the early spring. ” Guilty of Wrong. Borne people have a fashion of confusing excellent remedies with the large mass of “ patent medicines,” and in this they are guilty of a wrong. There are some adver tised remedies fully worth all that is asked for them, and oue at least we know of—Hop Bitters. The writer has had oc casion to use the Bitters in just such a climate as we have most of the year in Bay City, and has always found them to be first-class and reliable, doing all that is claimed for them.—Tribune. The Roman Forum has now been completely excavated, with the excep tion of a small portion at the entrance near the Capitol. The shape proves ir regular, being broad on me Capitol side and narrow toward the palace of the Caesars. __ \ fcher'*, oafe KidMfctl Liver( ’art v,?s me. By all id .a* Jfcy iU How Thunder Showers Come l. T p. In order to convey a more definite idea of our theory we will choose a MEtaixi locality which may serve the purpose of a diagram to our demonstration, and this locality shall be the region of West river. This river takes its rise among the for ests near the summit of the Green mount ains, at a height of some 2,000 feet above the level of the sea, and, flowing southerly forty or fifty miles, empties into the Connecticut river about two miles north from the southern boundary of the State. During a hot summer day the sides of the deep valley of this river reek with intense heat, and cause a flow of moist air upward toward the summit the mountain region, from the valley of the Connecticut, and also from the sea. This moist air, meeting with the general cur rent from the southwest, piles up an im mense mass of cumulous cloud of many square miles in extent. So long as the intense heat prevails this cloud increases in size, grows blacker with its dense va por, and casts a gloomy, lurid glafe-wer the face of nature, darker than that of any eclipse. The vapor, pushed by the ascending currents of heated air, at tains a great height above the sea, where the temperature is very low. But final ly, at that hour of the afternoon when the heat begins to decline, the accumu lated vapors, no longer augmented or sustained by heated air from the valleys below, fall in rain. —Popular Science Monthly. A Fish Story. Asa gentleman was fishing in the mill-dam below Winchester, Va., he ac cidentally threw his line across a strong white duck, which, suddenly turning round, twisted the gut around her own neck, and fixed the hook of the dropper fly in her breast. Thus entangled and hooked, she soon broke off the gut above the dropper, and sailed down the stream with the end of the fly trailing behind her. She had not proceeded far before a trout of about a pound and a half took the fly effectually. . Then com menced a struggle as extraordinary as ever was witnessed—a duck at the drop per and a large trout at the 1 end of the fly. Whenever the trout exerted itself the terror of the duck was very conspicu ous ; it fluttered its wings and dragged the fish. When the trout was more qui et the duck evidently gave way, anebsuf fered herself to be drawn under some bushes, where the shortness of the gut did not allow the trout to shelter herself. The duck’s head was frequently drawn under the water. By chance, however, the gut got across a branch which hung downward into the water; and the duck, taking advantage of the purchase which this gave her, dragged her opponent from his hole and obliged him to show his head above water. Then it became a contest of life and death. The trout was in its last agonies, and the duck in a very weak state, when the gut broke and suffered them to depart their own way, No More Hard Times. If you will stop spending so much on fine clothes, rich'food and style, buy good, healthy food, cheaper and bctteivdAyb ing, get nioie real and substantial things of especially f oolkbrnabi t oi "efnp loy mg*'Txpe olive qttiufk doctors or usipg so much, of the medicine that does you only ham, but put yon" trust in that simple, pu?e remedy, Hop Bitters, that cu?vs al ways at a trifling cost, and you wir see good times ai:d have good health—Chsph cle. Oriental Women. As time progiassea, the condition of the women of the Orient rapidly im proves. Japan has taken the lead in this respect, and to-day Japanese women occupy a position and exert an influence that few of them would have dared dream of a quarter of a century ago. China is being taught the lesson, though more slowly than Japan, and women are entering to a limited extent into the world of business and politics. Mer chants of Canton, who would have se cluded their wives with the utmost carA a decade or two a£b, now permit them t' be seen, and, what is more, they allow them to converse with other men. They travel with them on the steamers that navigate the Chinese rivers and waters along the coast, and it is said that some of them have gone so far as to allow their wives to sit with them at the pub lic tables. Similar progress is observ able among the Siamese and other East ern nations. The world still mtsves. To persons in vigorous health, old ag< steals on so gently that it casts no shadow before, but if rheumatic pains give their solemn warning, a bottle of Coussens’ Lightning Liniment will dispel them, as well as cure lame back, sprains, bruises, etc., and is also a remedy for galls, spav in, ringbone on animals. Price 50c, sam ple bottle 25c. For sale by all druggists. Prof. Young, in discussing the sun’s heat, says that, if it were surrounded by a shell of ice one mile in thickness, the inner surface touching the photosphere, it would melt its way out in two hours and thirteen minutes. This will be an interesting exjJriment for our young people to try Spiring the long winter evenings. It Ml cost nothing for the ice, for Venror says there axe going to be oceans ofc it. —Norristown Herald. A CLEAB head and quick action must be pos sessed for steady and successful effort; but who can have such while suffering from cold? Us® Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup and procure immediate relief. __ Yeoettxe In Powder Form is sold by all drug gists and general stores. If yoiican not buy it of them, inclose fifty cent* in postage stamp* for on# package, or one dollar for two packages, and I will send it by return mail. H. B. Ste vens. Boston. Mass. pr BULL’S 00(151 c P * I; .3 . 1 f7 '*syp| Tom Ochiltree and Jem Mace. It was some seven or eight years ago, just after the Cobum-Mace fiasco, and the latter was still in the city. As he was leaning against the bar a number of gentlemen and Tom Ochiltree were dis cussing politics and prize fights in an other part of the room. Mace’s wonder ful expertness in the use of his hands came up, and someone offered to bet a basket of champagne that no man, un less a professional, could get in a blow on Mace’s face. Ochiltree took the bet, and walked deliberately over to Mace and slapped his jaws. "The astonished prize fighter looked at Tom for a moment and then lit out from the shoulder. A mass of red hair, a corpulent body, legs and boots all mingled in indescribable confusion, flew through the door and rolled out over the brick banquette into the street. While sympathetic bell boys and laughing friends were straightening Tom out and patching his fragments to gether, some of the gentlemen explained to Mace the circumstances of the bet. “Oh ! it was that way, was it ? If I’d known it I wouldn’t ’ave cared,” said he, “ an’ I’m bloody glad now I didn’t ’it ’im ’arder.” Tom thought it was a quite sufficiently “ ’ard ’it.” If the blow had struck him anywhere else but on the cheek it would have killed him.— Washington Capital. He Laughs Best Who Laughs Last. The train had started off. A young man rushed breathlessly in. “ Got left, did you ? ” “ Well, ain’t I here ? ” he responded. Then one said he could go across tha bridge and catch it, and an other told him when the next train would go, and made various suggestions. The chap looked at the disappearing train a few seconds, when somebody asked, “Where were you going?” Then the wicked fellow said, “ Oh, I wasn’t going in it, but there was a fellow in the train to whom I promised to pay a bill.” Dk. Wm. Shabswood, of Philadelphia, is giving his time and efforts toward founding a great museum of practical art and applied science in connection with the University of the South at Se wanee, Tenn., owned and controlled by the dioceses of the Episcopal church comprehended in the ten -States lying south and southwest of Virginia and Kentucky. Vegetine. The Barks, Roots and Kerbs From Which Yegetlne in 3fad 11ST POWDER FORM, BOLD FOR 50 Cents a Package- VEGETINE. For Kidney Complaint ard Nervous Debility. Lslxboeo, Mb., Deo. 29, 1877. Ms. Stktkxi: JMar Sir—l had had cnngh-fer eighteen years, when, J commenced taking the Vegetine. I waawery,*ys tem was debilitated byAisease. had the Kidney Com plaint, and was verr bad, lungs sore. _ When I htyj.-MEv-Tue bottle I found it was helpingme ; ‘ elped my cough, and it strengthens me. lam now able to dp my work. Never have found anything like the Vegetine. I know It is everything it is recommended to be. Mas. A. J. PENDLETON. Dr. W. Ross Writes: Scrofula, Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Rheumatism, Weakness. B. R. Stbvess, Boston: I nave been practicing medicine for twenty-fire years, and a a remedy for Scrofula, Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, Rheu.natism, Weakness, and all diseases of the blood, I havetiever found its equal. I have sold Vegetine for se'-er years, and have never had one bottle returned. I wen 14 heartily recommend it to those in need of a blood puridar. Da. W. ROSS, Druggist, Sept. 18, 1878. Wilton, lowa. Vegetine In. Powder Form is sold by all drug cists and general stores. If you can not buy it of them, inclose fifty cents in postage stamps for one package, or one dollar foi two packages, and 1 will send it by return mail. V E GETINE, PREPARED BT H. R. STEVENS. Boston. Mass. I^O^^UBIUITED ftlffEßS Sleep, Appetite and Strength Return when Hosfcetter’s Stomach Bitters is systematically used by a bilious dyspeptic sufferer. Mereover, sinee the brain sympa thizes closely with the stomach and its asso ciate organs, the liver and the bowels, as their derangement is rectified by the action of the Bitters, mental despondency produced by that derangement disappears. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. A GOOD SAW MILL For S9OO. . Our He. 1 Plaatgtima law Mill it designed to bo ru bj •> 10 or IS here* power Agricultural Engine*. With thu power from l,500(to 4,000 Feet of lumber eon ho out iu a<L.y. A product 25 to 50 per cent. Creator than can be cut with any reciprocating aaw mill with came power. The mill* are complete except aaw, and will be put on tne cari in Cincinnati for the low £ric* of *2OO, and warranted in every particular. Saw Lilia of all sizes, Engines, Boilers, Shafting, Searing, Ac. Illustrated circulars iut free. LANE & BODLEY CO., John and Water Sts., Cincinnati, 0. 1 p Jjl jlfpO I WANTED to sell an original illTmi 1 0 1 and novel publication that has no competition. A work of real genuine merit meeting with a ready sale and giving good profit*. Send for circulars and terms to Alex V. Trust, 49 Whitehall st., Atlanta, Ga. No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil as a safe, sure, simple and cheap Externn 1 Remedy. A trial entails but the comparatively trifling outlay of 50 Cents, and every one suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of its Claims. DIRECTIONS IN ELEVEN LANGUAGES. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE. A. VOGELER & CO. Baltimore, Md., V. S. A. Literary Revolution. 3 CENTS each, formerlysl.ooto $1.25 each: I. Mao tuiay’. Life of Frederick the Great. 11. Carlyle'* Life ot Robert Burnt. 111. Lamartine's Life of Mary Queen c! Scots. IV. Thoe. Hughes' Manliness of Chfist. g GTS each, formerly $1 50 each; I. Arnold’s UMRI Asia. 11 Goldsmith’s Vicar of Wakefield. 111. en’a Travels end Surprising For si3 CEM'JffSi Bunyan's Pilgriin’s Progress, nlustrated cata logue sent free. AMERICAN ROOK EXCHANGE, Jehu B. Alden, Manager. Tribune Building, New Tork. BABY CABINET OBGAN—NEW STyle 106- TIIEEE AND A QUARTER OCTAVES, in BLACK WALNUT CASE, decorated with GOLD BRONZE. Length, CO inches; height, C3 in.; depth, 14 in. This r.ovcl style of the MASON & HAMLIN CAB INET ORGANS (ready this month) has sufficient compass and capacity for the performance, with full parts, of Ilymn Tunes, Anthems, Songs, and Popular Sacred and Secular Music generally. It retains to a •wonderful extent, for an instrument so small, the extraordinary excellence, both as to power and quality of tone, which has given the MASON & HAMLIN Cabinet Organs their great reputation and wen for them the HIGHEST DISTINCTIONS at EVERY ONE of the GREAT WORLD’S INDUSTRIAL EX HIBITIONS for THIRTEEN TEARS. Every oxe will.ee fully warranted. CASH PRICE $22; on receipt of which It will be shipped as directed. In ox EECRIPT AXD TRIAL IT DOES KOT SATISFY TEE PURCHASER, IT MAY BE RETURNED AND THE MONEY WILL BE REFUNDED. EICnTY STYLES of Organs are regularly made by the MASON & HAMLIN CO., from the BABY CABINET ORGAN at $22; to large CONCERT OR GANS at S9OO, and upwards. The great majority are at SIOO to S2OO each. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUES, CIRCULARS and PRICE LISTS free. MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN CO., 154 Trvmont St., BOSTON; 45 East 14th St., I,TAT TORK: 149 Wabash Ave.. CHICAGO. For Two Generations The good and staunch old stand-by, MEXICAN MUS TANG LINIMENT, has done more to assuage pain, relieve suffering, and save the lives of men and beasts than all other liniments put together. Why? Because the Mustang pene trates through skin and flesh to the very bone, driving out all pain and soreness and morbid secretions, and restor ing the afflicted part to sound and supple health. Employment— Ale® SALARY Prmonth. All EXPENSES advanced. WAGES promptly paid. 6LOAN ftCOtSOt Veorge St. Cincinnati. O. RUSINESS tl N.I.VER.SITY | h SCND FOR CATALOGUES | -f "f A T*A sag !*?•*• {• g / B i Agents. Outdt Tim Address f. *|> 111 OT vICBERT, Augusta, Mama. irouNG men iraATsp?. “ i .." r ;,ss,* PI S B’B C 0 1 Elb.SSSSff—iw.. BTTQD TGA Q ttffiSSKSfSsSW fil l\p I ji Hit sumers ; largest stock in the coun -1 Ui'Jj AIJ LaUttry: quality and terms the best. Country storekeeper* should call or wtH* THE WELLS TEA CQMfAXI. 1 Fult#a St,, . !• C. Bozt^O, THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO, BACKACHE, GrOUT, SORENESS or THK CHEST, SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINGS AND SPRAINS, FROSTED FEET AND EARS, lOTTHISrSI AND SCALDS, Seaeral Bodily Fains, TOOTH, EAR HEADACHE, AND ALL OTHEB PAINS | AND ACHES. ellatr Dye l> tha gin tud BEST; it acta In a tan ta. jeoualy. producing th. moat Ev rrorit* ippomUd toilet for I.adv oi Gentleman. hy Drag jit and applied bv Halt HhJLckrrTßHTOlf, Ag't. AmilSl Morphine HahltCnred In It gjpi 3141 J® day*. N opt ay till Cared, llllwl Da. J. STuraws, l*banou. Ohio. CELLULOID EYE-CLASSES. * Representing the choicest selected Tortoise- Shell and Amber. The lightest, handsomest, and strongest known. Sold bv Opticians and Jewelers. Made by SPENCER OPTICAL W F’G CO., 13 Maiden Lane. New York. C.QILBERTS STARCH ALL AY3OUT TEXAS. dm i K OH iOR IHK TEXAS num AND FARMER. “ON I.Y 51 PEit YEAR. SIX MONTHS SOc. An Agrlei.hural Journal, giving correct and reliable iniomiation about the wonderful re sources and rapid development of the Em pire State of the Southwest. Address TEXAS PLANTER ft FARMER, -< 110 Market Street, Dallas, Texas. _ IH CENTS a Month. 11 One Dollar a Year. IS H THE CHICAGO LEDGER will be sent to any address, postsgfl paid, at the prices named above. Send in your names. Address THE L.KIIOF.It, Chlssgo. IH To Consumptives. L ODER’S EMULSION OF COD LIVER OIL AND Wild Cherry Burk, th* most palatable combination of these renowned remedies extant. An unequaled reme dy for Consumption, Scrofula, all Lung affections, Net* vous Debility, and all wasting diseases. The manner in which the Cod Liver Oil is combined with the Wild Cher ry, enables it to be assimilated by the most delicate stom ach, insures complete digestion of the Oil, tones up the system, relieves cough, causes increase of fiesh and strength. Endorsed by the most eminent physicians. A well-known specialist in Lung affections nas used it iD over two hundred cases, and nays “there Is no combina tion equal to it for Consumption, Scrofula,” etc. Thou sands of sufferers need and desire to take a combination of Cod Liver Oil, but have been unable to do so. They will find that they can take this preparation readily ana with excellent results. Price, One Dollar per Bottle, Six Bottles for Five Dollars. Circulars and valuable in formation to all sufferers sent on fl ee receipt of a descrip tion of case. Address all orders to C. G. A. LODER, Manufacturing Chemist, 539 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. SAVED! SAVED! SAVED! THE MYSTIC SEVEN! Thu only known remedy that wilt radically cure Syphilis or Venereal iHsense, or sny blood taint. Warranted in all eeuee, except those bevond help. Prices, 0* and #lO per box. by mail cr express. All letters strictly confidential. Address W. GILHORE A SOX, Druggists and Chemists, BBiarDiMmCalmt *l>r. O. F- hHOEMAIfEB, the well-known expe S sneed Aural Burgeon, Author and Writer on the above Iseases, msv be consulted by mail er personally at his Sfiice, No Gia Walnut .Street, Kerulinjr, Pm, [la small book seat free. His large and eomplete work ef STB pages on Deafness, Diseases of the Ear and Ton sils, and Catarrh, and their proper treatment; price by mail. NOTE.—No one will question Dr. Shoemaker's standing er skill. If yon are a manKglf you are a vliSSSprjsl mUy of business,weak- esg&v man of let la ened by the strain of tgAF tors toiling over mid- w S your duties avoid WN night work, to res- ■ B stimulants and use gjf tore brain nerve and ■ m Hop Bitters. |3 waste, use Hop B. H If you are young and B suffering from any in- E ■H discretion or dissipa E 8 tion ; it you are mar- HI g£j ried or single, old or B young, suffering from ■ RH poor health or languish 93 mg on a bed of sick- H B ness, rely on HO p & Bitters. I® 1 Whoever you are, rgfea. Thousands die an- ■ whenever you feel /111 i Dually fro in some ■ that your system fonn of Rid nef B needs ton- discaso tiiut be ing or stimulating, |S | have been prevented ■ without intoxicating, Aißmi sit by a timely use of rah take Hop /Ssfefx Hopß liters 1 Bitters. SHMBBB Have you rhjs pepaia, kidney [), |, C. E' ia a i !f ' § is an absolute ■ T HflP Iss , cS?s%| Rill You vrill be ij| niTTT'Rfil tobacco, or H cured if you use : ji IJM I L 111' B narcotics. S Hop Bitters j[ H fRAi M Ifyouaresim-1 i; UU 1 L ‘^|, -ply weak and w kiritlTD r for^B low spirited, try i| I NEVER § Circular. it! It may 'ii( r , >■ 1 hoi* bitters H f,?L e . y t hSA FA iLI „ •-J caved hun- || |. Rochester, N. dreds. sSfl'l qj &Toroato^Oat.^B 4* SAWING M EA9 jHji A boy 16 years old can sawfl (■ ’ 3-loot log in two minut<fl K - tor . Our now portable Monarch l ightning Machine rivuis ail others. SSO cash will to two men who can saw rs fast and easy in ■ way. as one boy 16 years old can with this Warranted. Circulars sent rree. Agents iIQHABCH IrrOSTKIHQ SAW ■ i6z &•.> , ~ r xr <■: 9 |Ud- Pensions ■ ■ I * ti h-i-'ni “/i.Vvv :- x ~M • wk Plays, Magnesium Lights, SE • • u.a: tap l|l§r hugh£s U Send ioj Publishers’ Union, Atlanta, Ga P ' AGENTS WANTED FOR liG’roKXJkMI iHISTORYMroEWORLIr Embtacing full and auth.ntie account# of ' ery uatioa #1 ancient and modern times, and including it history of the rise and fall of the Greek and Roman smp.ro*, the middle ages, tbe crusades, the feudal system, therefor mation, the discovery and settlement of the Nsw World ftc. It’coutains 67* fine historical engravings, and is the most complete History ef the World ever published, •end for specimen pages and extra terms to Agent*. A^reuWmi. Ffut*ut Cos., Pa,