The Middle Georgia argus. (Indian Springs, Ga.) 18??-1893, May 05, 1881, Image 4
The American and English Cabinets.
In both the United States and En
gland, the Cabinet, as a body, is unknown
to the constitution, and is not officially
recognized by the law. The name “Cab
inet ” never occurs in formal documents;
it has gradually come into use, from the
fact that in England the King’s advisers
were wont to meet and consult him in
his private cabinet.
Each Cabinet officer, however, is offi
cially recognized in both America and
England—not as a Cabinet officer, but
as the chief of one of the great depart
ments of the executive administration.
In this country, such an officer is
known as ‘ ‘ Secretary ” —the Secretary
of State, of the Interior, and so on. In
England, the title of Secretary is used
for the five highest administrative offi
cers, those of Foreign Affairs, Home
Affairs, the Colonies, India, and War.
The office corresponding to our Secre
taryship of the Treasury, on the other
hand, is in England divided between
two high officials—the First Lord of the
Treasury, and the Chancellor of the Ex
chequer ; the officer known to us as the
Secretary of the Navy is called in En
gland the First Lord of the Admiralty.
In England, moreover, there are sev
eral Cabinet officers unknown to our own
Cabinet. These are, the Lcrd High
Chancellor, the President of the Board
of Trade, the Chancellor of the Duchy
of Lancaster, the President of the Coun
cil, and the Lord Privy Seal.
In the United States, the members of
the Cabinet are nominated by the Presi
dent, and are approved or confirmed
by the Senate. The President can also
remove any one of them at any lime.
But in England, the Cabinet is really
selected by the Prime Minister, subject
to the approval of the Queen; and,
though he can remove them, the English
Cabinet usually comes iu and goes out
of office in a body.
There are other notable differences
between the two Cabinets. In the United
States, no Cabinet officer can sit in
either house of Congress. In England,
no man can sit in the Cabinet who is
not a member of either the Commons or
the Lords.
With us, the Cabinet officer has two,
and only two, functions—as the chief of
an executive department, and as an ad
viser of the President on matters of gen
eral policy. With the English, the
Cabinet officer adds a third function to
these two; for he is a Parliamentary
leader, and in the Commons or Lords
defends either the policy of his own de
partment, or the general policy of the
Ministry of which he is a member.
While in the mother country a Cabinet
always goes out of power in a body when
the House of Commons casts a vote ad
verse to its proceedings, in the United
States the position of the Cabinet, as a
whole, is quite unaffected by any vote of
either or both houses of Congress.
Each English Cabinet officer lias his
own rank and dignity, while the Ameri
can Secretaries are officially equal. The
salaries of llieso officers, moreover, differ
widely in tho two countries. Our Sec
retaries get SB,OOO a year. ,The English
Prime Minister receives $25,000 a year;
so do the Chancellor of the Exchequer
and the five Secretaries of State. The
Lord High Chancellor has $50,000 a
year, and a pension, when he retires, of
SIO,OOO a year for life. The lowest sal
ary received by an English Cabinet
member is SIO,OOO, which is the sum re
ceived by the President of the Council,
the Lord Privy Seal, the President of
the Board of Trade, and the Chancellor
of the Duchy of Lancaster.
From these differences some idea may
be derived of the contrasts which appear
between the institutions of the ancient
monarchy of England and our own still
youthful republic.
Stanley, the Explorer.
Stanley, the explorer has been heard
from. In a letter dated at the mouth of
the September 13, he says that
he has done much work, and proposes
to do much more, for establishing trade
and civilization in Africa. After equip
ping one expedition on the East Coast,
reconstructing another, exploring sev
eral districts, he has come via the Medi
terranean, to the West Coast, intrusted
with an important mission by the Inter
national Society, of which the King of
the Belgians is the head. He adds:
hfc.“l am charged to open-and keep
open, if possible—all such districts and
countries as I may explore for the com
mercial world. The mission is supported
by a philanthropic society which num
bers noble minded men of several na
tions. It is not a religious society, but
my instructions are entirely of that
spirit. No violence must be used, and
■wherever rejected the mission must
withdraw to seek another field. We
have abundant means, and, therefore,
we are to purchase the very atmosphere,
if any demands be made upon us, rather
than violently oppose them. A year’s
trial will demonstrate whether progress
can lie made and tolerance be granted
under this new system. In some regions
experience tells me the plan may work
wonders. God grant it success everv
where! I have fifteen Europeans and
about two hundred natives with me. It
is too early yet to say much of them;
but most of the natives seem not worth
their rations. However, patience! We
shall see what time will make of us all,
and how it will mold us all anew for the
good work.”
With Stanley’s experience and tact,
and the large means at his disposal, there
is every reason to be hoped that civili
zation may soon penetrate some of the
most benighted region of the dark con
tinent.
Cold and Magnetism.
An investigation, conducted in the
physical laboratory of Harvard Univers
ity, has led to the discovery of the re
markable fact that intense cold can de
prive magnetized steel bars of nearly all
the magnetism that may have been im
parted to them. The intense cold was
produced by solid carbonic acid. Tliis
tact has an important bearing upon ob
servations of the magnetic condition of
the earth, taken in high latitudes; for
what appear to be daily and yearly
changes in the earth’s magnetism may
be due in large part to conditions of
temperature, which affect the magnets
used iu the observations. It also must
be concluded that the molecular condi
tion of steel is changed by great cold.—
Boston Advertiser.
Many people afflicted with phthisis pulmo
nalis (Consumption) use Dr. Bull's Cough Syr
up with very great benetit a fid relief. Price 25
cents a bottle.
Mr. Warner on the Donkey.
The best way of getting about Cairo
and its environs is on the donkey. It is
cheap and exhilarating. The donkey is
easily mounted and easily got off from;
not seldom he will weaken in his hind legs
and let his rider to the ground —a sink
ing operation which destroys your con
fidence in life itself. Sometimes he
stumbles and sends the rider over his
head. But the good donkey never does
either. He is the best animal of liis
size and appearance living. He has the
two qualities of our greatest general,
patience and obstinancy. The good
donkey is easy as a rocking-chair, sure
footed as a chamois; lie can thread any
crowd and stand patiently dozing in any
noisy thoroughfare for hours.* To ride
him is only a slight compromise of one’s
independence in One is so
near the ground, and so absent-mindedly
can be gaze at what is around him, that
he forgets that there is anything under
him. When the donkey, in the excite
ment of company on the open street and
stimulated by the whacks and cries of
his driver, breaks into the rush of a gal
lop, there is so much flying of legs and
such a general flutter that the rider fan
cies he is getting over the ground at an
awful rate, running a break-neck race;
but it does not appear so to an observer.
The rider has the feeling of the swift
locomotion of the Arab steed without its
danger or expense. Besides, a long
legged man, with a cork hat and a flying
linen “duster,” tearing madly along on
an animal as big as a sheep, is an amus
ing spectacle.— My Winter on the Nile.
[Battle Creek, (Mich.) Daily Journal.]
Upon being spoken to concerning St.
Jacobs Oil, our fellow townsman Mr-
Theodore Wakelee. said: I had been
suffering with rheumatism, and obtain,
ed the greatest relief from the use of St.
Jacobs Oil. It has also been used in my
family for some time, and has never
been found to fail in giving promt relief.
Engagement broken: An lowa paper
tells of tw r o lovers who were permanently
separated by the interposition of a “cold
cloud of realism.” Being freely inter
preted this means probably that they
were not kindred souls. The circum
stance recalls the instance of a romantic
young lady why had a very fine head of
hair. One evening, when her affianced
stood gazing very inquisitively at it in
the midnight, she said, with much feel
ing: “John, arc you thinking that each
one of these hairs is like a golden cord,
binding you to happiness?” “Well,
no,” he answered, mechanically, “I was
thinking what a nice mosquito net they
would make.”— Brooklyn Eagle. _
(S .uth Bend Evening Register.)
When certain powers are claimed for
an article, and everybody testifies that
it does more than is claimed for it, to
gainsay its worth is useless. This is the
substance of the St. Jocobs Oil record.
Ancient Methods.
How unreasonable some girls are \
Felicia asked her brother to buy the
Science Monthly for her, because it had
an article on “ Ancient Methods of Flir
tation ;” then when he brought it home,
said lie was horrid, and mean because it
turned out to be on “Ancient Methods
of Filtration.”
< un Consumption Be Cured?
Read wlmt Mr. William C. Digges, a merchant
of Bowling Green, Va., writes under dale of
April 14th, 1881. He says: I firmly believe that
Allen's Lung Balsam will and has cured con
sumption if taken iu time and proper care be
taken of the Patient both in suitable food and
clothing. Six years ago my mother was attacked
with pneumonia. The attending physician,
“some time after,” told me that the disease had
settled on her Lungs and that she had the con
sumption. Not believing that a permanent
cure could he effected, but thinking I might be
able to get an expectorant not containing
opium, which would afford some relief, I en
quired of a druggist at Richmond, Va., if he
had any medicine not containing opium, that
was a good expectorant. He then recom
mended Allen’s I.ung Balsam which I pur
chased and induced my mother to try. Before
she had taken the first bottle, the improvement
iu her condition was so marked that I purchased
three more bottles. The attending physician
seeing the beneficial effects, recommended its
continued use. and in about twelve months her
lungs were pronounced cured. Upon my re
commendation many others who had the con
sumption have been cured. I think you can
claim for your medicine, the following: Ex
pectoration without irritation, and healing of
the lungs, hv keeping them free from foreign
substances, thus arresting and curing this dread
disease. Mr. Digges says he writes because ha
wants it known that Allen's Lung Balsam is
doiag good.
Aii overdressed ui Da ay.
[.London Telegraph.]
An old lady named Keylar, aged sev
enty, had come from Cbeshunt to Liver
pool street by rail and was proceeding
to Broad-street Station (North London
Railway), on her way to Chalk Farm,
where she was to visit a relative. When
she had ascended the station stairs she
had a fainting of the heart and expired
before a doctor could be fetched. That
her death was accelerated by her being
over-weighed with clothing, may be
judged from the fact that she had on
two chemises, two pairs of stockings,
two pairs flannel drawers, two flannel
petticoats, a pair of flannel linen stays,
four thick petticoats, two skirts, four
jackets, two crossovers, a thick woolen
shawl, a fur boa, two caps and a bonnet
and boots.
The Greatest Blessing.
A simple, pure, harmless remedy, that
cures every time, and prevents disease
by keeping the blood pure, stomach reg
ular, kidneys and liver active, is the
greatest blessing ever conferred upon
man. Hop Bitters is that remedy, and
its proprietors are being blessed by
thousands who have been saved anil
cured by it. Will you try it ? See an
other column.—Eagle.
(Stella Basblef, Yassar ’Bl, has just
been relating some astounding astronom
ical facts and figures.) A. Dullston
Sloeman (“never went in for that sort of
thing, you know”) —“I see how one can
find out how large and how far away the
stars are, but— by Jove! I don’t quite see
how they ever found out their names.—
Columbia Spectator.
“Aon I 100 Wo*t (nhMilatiagl; Am,
a.* an old practitioner , that Warner’s Safe Kid
ney and Liver Cure is among the most valuable
discoveries of the 19th century. I cannot say
too much in its behalf.
[Signed] J. H. Connelly, M.D.
Fitts burg. Pa., 6th April, 1380.”
Discoveries by Accident.
Valuable discoveries have been made
and valuable inventions suggested by the
veriest accidents. An alchemist, while
seeking to discover a mixture of earths
that would make the most durable cru
cibles, one day found that he had made
porcelain. The power of lenses, as ap
plied to the telescope, was discovered by
a watchmaker’s apprentice. While hold
ing spectacle-glasses between his thumb
and finger, he was startled at the sud
denly enlarged appearance of a neigh
boring church spire. The art of etching
upon glass was discovered by a Nurem
burg glass-cutter. By accident a few
drops of aqua fortis fell upon his spec
tacles. He noticed that the glass be
came corroded and softened where the
acid touched it. That was hint enough.
He drew* figures upon glass with varnish,
applied the corroding fluid, then cut
away the glass around the drawing
When the varnish was removed the
figures appeared raised upon a dark
ground. Mezzotint owed its invention
to the simple accident of the gun barrel
of a sentry becoming rusted with dew.
The swaying to and fro of a chandelier
in a cathedral suggested to Galileo the
application of the pendulum. The art
of lithographing was perfected through
suggestions made by accident. 4 poor
musician was curious to know whether
music could not be etched upon stone
as well as upon copper. After he had
prepared his slab his mother asked him
to make a memorandum of such clothes
as she proposed to send away to be
washed. Not having pen, ink and paper
convenient, he wrote the list oil the
stone with the etching preparation, in
tending to make a copy of it at leisure.
A few days later, when about to clean
the stone, lie wondered what effect aqua
fortis w r ould have upon it. He applied
the acid, and in a few minutes saw the
writing standing out in relief. The next
step necessary was simply to ink tfio
stone and take off an impression. The
composition of which printing rollers
are made was discovered by a Salopian
printer. Not being able to find the pelt
ball, he inked the type with a piece of
soft glue which had fallen out of a glue
pot. It was such an excellent substi
tute that, after mixing molasses with
the glue to give the proper consistency,
the old pelt-ball w T as entirely discarded.
The shop of a Dublin tobacconist by the
name of Lundy was destroyed by fire.
While he was gazing dolefully into the
smoldering rums he noticed that his
poorer neighbors were gathering the
snuff from the canisters. He tested the
snuff for himself, and discovered that
the fire had largely improved its pun
gency aroma. It was a hint worth prof
iting by. He secured another shop,
built a lot of ovens, subjected the snuff
to a heating process, gave the brand a
particular name, and in a few years be
came rich through an accident which he
at first thought had completely ruined
him.— Woonsocket Patriot
Ale.
Great Britain never “goes back” on
its ale, although these States do. In a
single year the English firm of Bass
paid to railways, canal companies, and
other carriers, the sum of £180,102 for
carriage merely. In malt tax and license
duty the same house pays £236,000 a
year. The yearly revenue of the king
dom derived from duty on alcoholic
drinks amounts to £28,000,000 sterling.
To this sum the house of Bass contrib
utes at the rate of £7BO a day. It has
543,869 casks in stock. The bottle trade
is separate; 100,000,000 labels for bot
tles are issued in a year.
The blue pencil fiend travels with an
opera troupe. — N. O. Picayune
Given up by Doctors.
“Is it posible that Mr. Godfrey is up
and at work, and cured by so simple a
remedy ?”
“I assure you it is true that he is en-
cured, and with nothing but Hop
Bitters; and only ten days ago his doc
tors gave him up and said he must die!”
“Well-a-day ! That is remarkable! I
will go this day and get seme for my
poor George—l know hops are good.”—
Salem Post.
They put a lot of ignoramuses into a
jury box now-a-days, and then attempt
to tickle a man’s vanity by telling him
that he is to be tried by a jury of his
peers. No wonder so many criminals
commit suicide, rather than have such a
stigma cast upon their family name.—
Rochester Herald.
Buy a sample bottle oi Coussens Light
ning Liniment to cure your sprain, or if
you have the rheumatism and need more,
50c. will buy a bottle of regular size. It
is the best liniment in the w r orld for
spavin, ringbone, galls, scratches on
animals. Sample bottle 25c. For sale
by all druggists.
rnumpnant Argument of the Wheels
Rufus Choate once made an argument
of three days to convince a jury that
the car-wheel sold bv the defendant was
radically, intrinsically, and indubitably
different from that patented by the
plaintiff. Webster arose to answer, and
the jurors rustled uneasily in their seats,
settling themselves for another three
days. But he simply tilted the two
models upon the table in the jurors'
sight, fixed his great magnetic eyes upon
the entire twelve at once, and said:
“ Gentlemen of the jury, there are the
wheels ; look at ’em.” Verdict for the
plaintiff on the spot.
Indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration
and all forms Of general debility relieved by
taking Mxxsman’s Pkftonizxd Beet Tonic, the
only preparation of beef oontaining its entire
nutritious properties. It contains blood-mak
ing, force-generating and life-sustaining prop
erties; is invaluable in all enfeebled conditions,
whether the result of exhaustion, nervous pros
tration, overwork, or acute disease, particularly
if resulting from pulmonary complaints, Cas
well, Hazard k Cos., proprietors, New York.
DrBULL’S
COUCH
SYRUP
The Big Words of Science.
Monstrosities of diction are not con
fined to chemical science, but are to be
found in physics as well as metaphysics.
We recently gave some samples of the
extraordinary and absurd length to
which the names of certain organic
salts had grown, and we may now
add the following choice specimen of
imaginary (from a recently published
paper by* Sir William Thompson) to illus
trate the grand style of modern natural
philosophy. “The stream lines,” says
the distinguished Glasgow physicist,
“ are as represented in the diagram, m
which the region of translational velocity
treater than wave propagational velocity
fs separated from the region of transla
tional velocity less than wa\ e propaga
tional velocity by a cat’s eye border pat
tern of elliptic whirls.” The cunous
mixture of homely simile and abstract
terminology in this passage is highly
ludicrous. ' Its obscurity is, however,
surpassed by Mr. Herbert Spencer’s
famous “Formula of Evolution, which
runs: “ Evolution is a change from an
indefinite, incoherent, homogeneity to a
definite, coherent heterogeneity, through
continuous differentiations and integra
tions,” which written in plain English
by Mr. Kirkman, the mathematician,
means: “Evolution is a change from a
nohowish, untalkaboutable all-likeness
to a somehowisli, and in-general-talka
boutable not-all-likeness, by continuous
somethin g-elsefications and stick togeth
erations.” Asa clever travesty on the
above cacophonous, mystifications of
Mr. Herbert Spencer, which, like the
language of diplomacy, conceals the
meaning it ought to express, we have
Mr. Kirkman’s “Formula of Universal
Change,” which is: “ Change is a peri
choretical synechy of pamparalagmatic
and porroteroporeumatical differentia
tions and integrations.” After such ped
antry as this, the clown in Shakespeare’s
Twelfth Night, who “ did impeticos thy
gratuity,” is absolutely nowhere.—Zon
don Globe.
Good For the Kids.
Doctors now recommend the introduc
tion of a kid or goat into the nursery as
a healthful companion for the children.
The doctors evidently know their little
biz. —Syracuse Herald.
A GOOD FAMILY REMEDY!
STRICTLY PURE
[This engraving represents the Lungs in a healthy state.
What The Doctors Say!
DTt. FLETCHER, of Lexington, Mo., says: “I recom
mend your ‘Balsam’ in preference to any other medi
cine for coughs and colds.”
DR. A. C. JOHNSON, of Mt. Vernon, 111., writes of some
wonderful cures of Consumption in his place by the
use of “Allen’s Lung Balsam.”
DR. J. B. TURNER, Blountsville, Ala., a practicing
physician of twenty-five years, writes: ‘‘lt is the best
preparation for Consumption in the world.”
For all Diseases of Ihe Tliroat. Lnn^snnd
Pulmonary Organs, it will be found a
most exeeilent Itcmefy.
AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EOU ♦L.
IT C6NTA.N3 NO OPIUM iN ANY FORM
J. N. HARRIS & CO., Proprietors,
umt>xvti. o.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
fIOSTITTE^
na. STOMACH Jl
SITTERS
Shooting Chills Down the Back,
Dull pain in the limbs, nausea, biliousness,
are symptoms of approaching f ever and ague.
Use without delay Hostetter’s Stomach Bit
ters, which substitutes for the chilly sensa
tion a genial warmth, regulates the stomach,
and imparts tone to the liver. The bowels,
the stomach and the biliary gland being re
stored to a healthy condition, the disease is
conquered at the’ outset. For sale by all
Druggists and Dealers generally.
elalr Dy® is th SAFES?
id BEST; : acts instants
eouslv, producing the mo
at’jral (hades of Black 01
irown jdoesNOTSTAINth#
KIN, and is easily applied.
'i^isss^ss^ss
ppointed toilet for Lady 01
sntleman. Bold by Drug
ista and applied by Hau
iressers. Depot 93 Wil
iam St., N. Y
C. N. CRITTKNTON, Ag’t,
POBTRAII CO. Fine portraits en
larged from all kinds of small pictures in a neat and
artistic manner. Great inducements to agents. Send for
Catalogue and Price List. EMPIRE PORTRAIT CO.,
No. 78 Genesee St., A üburn, If. Y.
Arkansas Beacon.
Subscribe for the Arkansas Beacon, a lire
Family Newspaper, s cular and religious,
(not sectarian.) Published weekly at S ar
cy, Ark. An 8-page, 48-column paper, all
home print, large circulation, gives much in
formation about Arkansas. One yr. $1 £0;
8 mos. fl 00 ; 4 mos. 50 cts.
'<feg
SF*-! pis tras. JAY B&ONSON. Dstron, Mick.
Cl V * a * W H kOXH! Tmf orold.
”,t * lamrsko* fewin* jOS&m.
CTS wkkr* or . hwi iid*Ui A kur tl3
M TniCKKJ*. STRESorue* od Ul tJB
CfVIGORATK ib* HAIR M;mn A‘i be huwbuare't.
dirv .hKh ku NYVtR YET "''jßJt-
FAILED. SendOXlY SIX CKXTS to Dr. }. GORZA
ttti Aw lAtt, Hum, Maw. Uw*r A*L .mltAiwm
No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil as a safe,
surk. simple and cheap External Remedy. A trial entails
but the comparatively triftingoutlav of 50 Cents, and every
one suffering with pain can have cheap and positive proof of
its claims. DIRECTIONS I*' ELEVEN I.ASfcl LACES.
SOLD BY ALL DROQGISTS AND DEALERS IN MEDICINE.
A. VOGELER & CO.
Baltimore, Mil., U. S. A.
(&rfQA Week. sl2 a day at home easily made. Costly
tig f Outfit free. Address True & Cos., Augusta, Me.
RAW FU RS.“f g
York, pay highest cash prices toi Beaver, Otter, Raccoon,
Deer Skins and other Furs. Shipments solicited.
BLACK AND TAN GORDONS.
FOR SALE.—Puppies from the following crack bitches:
“FLOSS” and “COUNTESS DANMOUR,” sired
by “ BLACK PRINCE,” be out imported “ FLORA,” by
imported “LINCOLN.” The litters are very large and
healthy. Color black ands red mahogany tan. Mark
ings perfect. Price sls.ooeach.
Address, 11.
Huntsville, Missouri.
PONDS EXTRACT.
Subdue* Inflammation. Control* all Hemorrhage*,
jLcutt and Chroni*. Venous and Mtteoui.
INVALUABLE FOE
Pond’B Extraot la the
mm| only specific for this disease, Cold
Vdldmiila the Head, Ac. Our Catarrh
Cure 175 cents), specially pre
pared to meet serious cases, contains all the curative
propertie# of Pond’s Extract; nr Nasal
Syringe (25 cents), Invaluable for use In catarrhal
aflecUons, is simple and effective.
. Sore Throat and Lunge, Chopped
Hande and Face are greatly benefited by the Ex
traot. Frosted Limbs and Chilblains
are prom ptly relieved, end ultimately cured by Po nd' 8
Extraot.
aarit Is unsafe to use other articles with our directions.
Insist on having POND’S EXTRACT. Refuse all imita
tions and substitutes.
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 Mnstang pene
trates through skin and flesh
to the very hone, driving out
all pain and soreness and
morbid secretions, and restor
ing the afflicted part to sound
and snpple health*
NOTICE!
AS BLUE FLANNEL GARMENTS
Of Inferior Quality of (ilootU
are sold as the “genuine Middlesex,” which are not
marie by that mill, The Middlesex Company, in raster to
protect their customers and the public, give notice, that
hereafter all Clothing made from THE MIDDLESEX
STAN'DAPiD INDIGO BLUE FLANNELS AND YACHT
CLOTHS, (sold hy nil. lending Clothiers,') must bear the
trade mark ticket, furnished by the Selling Agents to
all parties ordering the goods.
WENDELL, FAY & CO.. Selling Agents.
niDm.BVKX COMPANY,
Sand 88 Worth St„ Sew York; 37 Franklin Bt., Boston.
214 Chest not -fit., Philadelphia.
r WHBOB’S OOMOUHL OF
PURE COD LIVER
AKD LIME,^
To One and All.—Are yon sqßering from
a Cough, Cold, Asthma, Bronchitis, or any of the vai ioui
pulmonary troubles that so often end in Consumption? 11
ao, use ‘‘ Wilbor't Pure Cod-Liver Oil and Lime," a safe and
sure remedy. This is no quack preparation, but ia pre
scribed by the medical faculty. Manuf. only by A. B.
Wii.boe, Chemist, Boston. Sold by all druggists.
PETROLEUM JELLY
U*ed and approved by the leading PHYS- fl
I CIANSof EDEOFEand I
I The most Valuablefl flk m
I Family Remedy t MgjM gf
pll from pwi
ll® VmoHtio each m
MHV M a 1 Pomade Vwoliu*,
|V B k r W r ” tho ▼wHm Cold Cream,
Ilf -^^^^ P wotnrw, arasS *lZS!3Sff6Z]*’
H * B SORES, CUTS, CEELBLAUIS,
TASMSMML
- _ Cough*, Cold*, Sore Throat, Croup and Diphtheria, etc. An agreeable form oftafc*
JSTTry them. 26 and (0 cent fixes of all our goods. ing Vaseline internally.
+r — 2 26 CENTS A BOX.
6BISD MEDAL AT THK rHILAIKLTBU EXrOSlTiyft.l ■—
- MIT WAJb AT Tftl TAKIO UTMiTAtN* COLGATE 4 CQ-E.&
Til 13
GREAT GERMAN
REMEDY
FOR
RHEUMATISM,
NEURALGIA,
SCIATICA,
LUMBAGO,
BACKACHE,
aouT,
SORENESS
or THE
CHEST,
SORETHROAT,
QUINSY,
SWELLINGS
AND
SPRAINS,
FROSTED FEET
AND
EARS,
BTTH.3NTJSI
AND
SCAIjDS^
General Bodily Pains,
I TOOTH, EAR
AND
HEADACHE,
AND
ill OTHEI PHIS
AND
ACHES.
P. O. Box 4580. 16 Weat 14th fit., New York.
mrlu ¥ m tsM T—*££ A A £ h K ireferrwC
! Also SALARY permouth. All EXPENSES
B advanced. WAGES promptly paid. SLOAN
Id Cos. SOO Cieoi'B** St. €ladnn*U. 6
AGENTS WANTED FOR OI K
CENTENNIAL c j£j’ j ®£ and PAN.
J^a Housekeepers cannot afford to and
yjljmw without it. Price 75 cts. also ou*
Domestic CLOTHES Sprinkler,
•v i anew, novel, useful, rapidselling
r— WSr-jffifcJ article. Price 30 cts. A rare op
port unity is here offered Ijr**"**
to make money. Pend for ourlllut
w! ~*~ ''.rated Circiclare and our unusually
.... liberal terms. Domestic Scalb
" Cos., 194 W. sth 6t., Cincinnati, 0
TOOTHACHE. <S c n.7o^W. a nd, £?
f~v r\ n Tear to Agents, and expenses. $6 Outfit
tJ free. Address F. Swaih & Cos., Auguata.Me.
i week In your own town. Terms andss ontfij
♦pOO free. Address H. Hau.bttACo.. Portland. Me
VnilWP M CfU Learn Telegraphy I Earn §4O to sloo*
TUUNU MtN month. Graduates guaranteed pay> n *
offices. Address VALENTINE BROS., Janesville, wis.
PT nn >0 nIT D r(M Consumption is alt#
1o U O UUIt II the best eo ugh medicine.
#% $ vp-bivr OBTAINED
PATEI¥TS INVE i; O ToRs.
by HETLMUX & KANE, Attorneys at Patent Law, 51$
F. Street, Washington, It. C. *M Reiterence* 1 <* r *
tiialtctl and circulars sent on request.
Arabian Nkln-Tightcner o* Toxic remove#
Wrinkles and Crow-feet Marks, giving a youthful appear
ance. Harmless. Sent, packed, for ttft. Mrs. DR. J. C.
DILLINGHAM, Box 3615, New Orleans, La.
Publishers’ Union, Atlanta, Ga„ Seventeen.—SL
CELLULOID
EYE-CLASSES. ”
Representing the choicest selected Tortoise
Shell and Amber. The lightest, handsomest
and strongest known. Sold bv Opticianß and
Jewelers. Made by the SPENCER OPTICAL
M/F'G CO., 13 Maiden Lane, New York.
WEBSTER’S UNABRIDGED.
If you intend sometime to got a copy of Web
ster’s Unabridged Dictionary,
“DO IT NOW.”
See Webster’s Unabridged, page 11G4, giv
ing the name of each sail,—snowing the value of
DEFINITIONS BY IDLEST RAMONS.
The pictures in Webster under the 13 words,
Beef, Boiler, Castle, Column, Eye, Horse,
Moldings, I’hrenology, Ravelin, Ships,
(pages 11(11 and 1219) Steam engine, Tim
bers, define 343 words and terms far better
than they could be defined in words.
Now Edition of WEBSTER, has H
118,000 Words, 3000 Engravings,
4600 NEW WORDS and Meanings,
Biographical Dictionary
of over 9700 Names.
Published by G.& C. MERRlAM,Springfield, Mas*.
OO P* r day at home. Samples worth $5 free
to Addresa Stiksox <fe Cos., Portland, Main.
MILL & FACTORY SUPPUES~
OF ALL KINDS. BELTING, HOSE
and PACKING, OILS, PUMPS ALL
KINDS, IRON PIPE, FITTINGS,
BRASS GOODS, STEAM GAUGES,
ENGINE GOVERNORS, &c. Send for
Price-list. W. H. DILLINGHAM & CO.
143 Main Street, LOUISVILLE, KY,
£l#lP§
S£WD FOR CAT A LO G
If you are a you ni e a
sgr of business,weak- wSSB ni!ul °f.
I ened by the strain of Wf ters toiling over nud
-1 vour duties avoid j£S nigbt work, to res-
I stimulants and use f*f tore brain nerveana
I Hop Bitters. gj waste, use Hop 3.
8 If vou are young and flj suffering from any in-
I discretion or dissipa ■ tion ; if you are mar-
I Hod or single, old or H young, suffering from
I poor health or languish Bing ou a bed of sick-
I ness, rely on Hopßßitters.
Whoever you are, Thousands die an
i n ng d or 1C smufaUng; B|
without intoxicuUug, MB; |by a timely use of
take Hop /&' V Hopßlttors
Bitters. CSBBHHI
nave yon dys
vcpsht, kidney D. I. C.
8 or urinary com- ImS: j s an absolute
| plaint, disease l|fg! __ | and irresista
lof (he stomach, >H| IT jI 1J ole ou re for
I bowels, blood. |[H IJLLI 1 drunkenness.
I liter or nerves J H use of opium,
I You will be niTTmD tobacco, or
I cured it you use flf Ij|| I I 111 narcotics.
| Hop Bitters j tSIIILIW
Ifyeu are sun- 1 ; ; , ,°?‘ a sL.if.Vr
I Fow spirited, try I NEVER || Circular. I
Sit i It may ’ r , * ■ | hop bitters
!!.•*; I FAIL
I saved hun- | Roehcstrr, N. V.
I dreds. |jL & Toronto, Ont.
3 1 i.m.MIMM lll— ■
)i . IV * .N W % !tTED for th. Best and Fastest Bell-
A me Pictorial Book and Bibles. Price* reduced 33 pel
;eut. National Publlihlng Oe., Atlauta, Q^
smm mm mm x YIAII and expen lei to
m M M Agents. Outfit Free. Addr P.
I I I O. VICKERY, Augusta, Maine.
AGEMS W aYtEI) FOR
DIBLE REVISION
The best and cheapest illustrated edition of the Revised
New Testament. Millions of people are waiting for it.
Do not be deceived by the Cheap John publishers of infe
rior editions. Bee that the copy you buy contains 150 fin.
engravings on steel and wood." Agents are coining money
selling this edition. Send for circulars.
Address National. Publishing Cos., Atlanta, Ga.
CHEAPEST
Books
Pliakspeare’s Complete Works
handsomely bound in cloth,
black and gold, only 50 cents.
Taine’s History of English Lit
erature, 1 handsome 12mo vol
ume, cloth, only 50 cents.
Other books equally low.
Full Descriptive Catalogue Free.
MANHATTAN BOOK CO.,
Macaulev’s History of
England, 5 large 12m
vols., cloth, gilt, only
$5.00.
Chambers’ Encyclope
dia, 10 large fivo vol
umes, cloth, 8.320
pages, 4.000 engrav
ings, former pric#
850.00, for only 810-
IN THE
World