The Middle Georgia argus. (Indian Springs, Ga.) 18??-1893, June 16, 1881, Image 4

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O’ THE WISP. * Will o’ the ■winp, will o’ the wisp, Show me your lantern true 1 [her the meadow and over the hil’, Gladly I’ll follow you. “ Never I’ll murmur, nor aek for reef. And ever I’ll be your friend, If you'll only give me the pot of gold • That Ilea at your journey’s end.” And after the light went the brave little boy, Trudging along to bold; And thinking of all the fine thing* he’d buy With the wonderful pot of gold: “ A horse, and a house, and a full-rigged ship, And a ton of peppermint drops, And all the marbles there are in the world, And all the new kind* of tops.” Will o’ the wisp, will o’ the wisp, Flew down at last in a swamp; He put out his lantern and vanished away In the evening chill and damp. And the poor little boy went shivering home, Wet and tired and cold. He had come, alas 1 to his journey But where was the pot of gold 7 A Savory Meal In India. Squatting in the center of various piles of delicacies sits the vendor. And curi ous are these sweets. Milky cream and coarse brown sugar are their chief in gredients. No attempt is made at decor ation. In fact the native would not ap preciate anything which savored of deli cacy. His cookery is always strong. Horrid garlic, greasy ghi, or clarified butter—condiments at which the Euro pean would sicken —are the choicest of their culinary efforts. The quantity of sweets a strong man consumes borders on the marvelous. The reason is of easy account. A Hindoo, by his religion, is forbidden to eat meat, and the most nourishing food they can obtain is sac charine matter. A sweetmeat called “jelabi” is in high esteem. This is made in imitation of a hollow coil of rope and filled with treacle. A mouthful to a ten der stomach is provocative of cholora or biliousness for at least a month. But the English schoolboy has been known to compete with the Hindoo in such gas tronomic feats; for one boy has been known at a sitting to eat twelve solid pounds. Tho doctors prophesied of him immediate death, but he smiled sickly and thought a glass of milk would sc him all right. In all great native feasts confectionary takes an important place. First, as the guests arrange themselves, is handed round in a silver tray the attar, a scent procured from the rose. This is rubbed into the clothes of tho guests. Then follow the pan and betel. This is the nut of the areca pounded, and with lime enclosed in large, green, succulent leaves. It is an appetizer, and eaten just in the same manner as a European would drink, just before dinner, sherry and bitters. The taste is acid, but withal pleasant, and the lime brightly reddens the lips. This is greatly admired by the native. Then follow rice, sugar and milk, and pound upon pound of the coarsest lollj pops. Not a word is spoken during the feast. Each man is bent upon his meal, and those who wish to highly honor their guest tie around their stomach, before sitting down, a tender thread. When this breaks tho gentleman think* he lias satisfied his appetite. As when in olden times in Europe a lady thought she paid a compliment to her host when she said she had been so drunk as to for get how she reached home, so a native of a certain caste thinks he is courteous when he says the repast was so good as to cause severe indigestion. It is not an uncommon thing after a grand feast for at least two or three people to die of over-gorging; and then another feast has to be given, at which, probably, some more die. Thus is death’s sickle not permitted to rust. A sweetmeat shop is a frequented place, not only by the younger members of the community, but by the sage and hoary. But noth ing can bo bought without wrangling. Though a man may buy a pound of the self-same article for ten years running, he would each time try to reduce the price, and the seller, knowing this pecu liarity, invariably asks double the real price.— The Californian. A Hot-Water River. The great Sutro tunnel, cut to relieve the celebrated (Jomstock mines at Vir ginia City, Nevada, of the vast quantities of hot water wliich is encountered in them, affords an outlet to 12,000 tons every twenty-four hours, or about 3,000,- 000 gallons. Some of the w ater, as it finds its way into the mines, has a tem perature of 195 degrees, while four miles from the mouth of the tunnel the tem perature ranges from 130 to 135 degrees. To obviate the inconvenience which would arise from the vapor such a vast quantity of water would give off, the flow is conducted through the entire tun nel, four miles, in a tight flume made of pine. At the point of exit the water has lost but seven degrees of heat. Sixty feet below the mouth of the tunnel the hot water utilized for turning machinery belonging to the company, from whence it is carried off by a tunnel 1,100 feet in length, which serves as a water-way. Leaving the waste-wav tunnel, the water flows to the Carson River, a mile and a half distant. This hot water is being utilized for many purposes. The boys have arranged several pools where they indulge in hot baths. The miners and others use it for laundry purposes, and arrangements are being made whereby a thousand acres belonging to the com pany are being irrigated. It is proposed to conduct the hot water through iron pipes, beneath the surface of the soil, near the t roots of thousands of fruit trees which are to be planted, and in a similar manner give the necessary warmth to a number of hot-houses to be used for the propagation of early fruits and vegetables. How to Save Lamp Chimneys, A Deipsic journal, which makes a specialty of matters relating to glass gives a method which it asserts will pre vent chimneys from cracking. The treatment will not only render lamp chimneys, tumblers, and like articles more durable, but may be applied with advantage to crockery, stoneware, porce lain, etc. The chimneys, tumblers, etc are put into a pot filled with cold water, to which some common table salt has been added. The water is well boiled over a fire, and then allowed to cool slowly. When the articles are taken out and washed, they will be found to resist afterward any sudden changes of temperatime. The process is simply one of annealing, and the slower the cooling part of it is conducted the more effective will be the work. Natural philosophy—eating when you’re hungry. Nature’s Big Gas Tanks Bradford, Pa., and neighboring places are lighted and heated by natural gas. In 1875 an oil company was sinking a well in a high hill west of Bradford. At the depth of several hundred feet they struck a vein of gas. No oil was found. The force of the gas was such that when it was ignited a pillar of fire more than fifty feet high was formed. The roar of the gas could be heard for a mile and more. This burned for months. The heat was such that grass and foliage grew in the depth of winter as luxuri antly for hundreds of feet around as it did in the summer. Strawberries ripened near this weh in February. The well had been burning for a long time before the feasibility of utilizing it , was thought of. A belt of dry territory, but yielding vast volumes of gas, was subsequently found to exist in the vi cinity of the original gas well. A com pany was formed to carry the gas into the city. It is now distributed all over the place by pipes. A gas-pipe, with jets attached, is run into the parlor and kitchen stoves. The supply of gas is controlled by a stopcock on the pipe. When a fire is wanted a lighted match is thrown into the stove and the gas turned on. The fire is started at once. The gas possesses great heating qualities, and apartments are warmed as quickly and as well by it as by coal. Gas for illu minating purposes is conducted into the house the same as artificial gas is taken in. At first the light was not brilliant and steady, owing to impurities. Processes for refining it were invented, and now the natural illuminator is unsurpassed by the finest manufactured gas. It is so cheap that people seldom turn out their lights. It burns day and night in stores hotels, private houses and streets. Con sumers pay by the month instead of by the thousand. Gas-wells have come to be more valuable than oil wells, and the sudden phenomenal appearance of oil in some of the principal wells in the gas belt has created consternation among owners and consumers. For years the gas has flowed from w r ells in unremit ting volume. That oil was not to be found there it was thought had been con clusively settled. — Philadelphia Tele graph. Tennessee Marble. Mr. John J. Craig, of Knoxville, Tenn., says that the United States Gov ernment is now working successfully a quarry of white stone in the immediate vicinity of that city which is pronounced by competent judges to be superior to anything of the kind found elsewhere in the United States for building and all out-door purposes. It is a highly crys tallized limestone marble—and asit comes from the hammer or chisel is almost per fectly white; when polished it shows a faint pinkish blush, most delicate and beautiful; long exposure to the atmos phere seems to whiten and harden it, a sort of glass-like enamel forming over its surface and rendering it almost im pervious to dampness and stains of any kind. A column of this marble, which has been standing in Knoxville more than thirty years, and which has never been touched with brush or soap, is as white and clean to-dav 4 as it was the day it was first exposed to the storms and sunshine of our fickle clinfhte. The text ure and working quality of the marble is unsurpassed. It is neither too Sard nor too soft, but exactly soft enouc. to allow the sculptor to work it without force and trace on it the finest lines of finished form, and vet hard enough to retain these lines in all their original delicacy, unimpaired by wind or rain, for generations to come. The quantity of the marble is unlimited. Knoxville is surrounded by whole mountains of it. Facilities for transportation are now good and daily growing better. Oar loads are being daily shipped to all sec tions of the country, and the absence of capital alon prevents the quarrying of it from soon developing into one cf the most important industries in that singu larly favored but as yet almost unknown section.— Scientific American. Used to Suck ’Em. A young college student was visiting his grandmother, and at the breakfast table he took an egg, and, holding it up, asked her if she knew the scientific way of obtaining the contents without breaking the shell ? She replied that she did not. “ Well, ” said he, ‘ ‘ you take the spher oidal body in your sinister band, and, with a diminutive pointed instrument held in the dexter hand, puncture the apex ; then, in the same manner, make an orifice in the base ; place either ex tremity to your labials, and endeavor to draw in your breath; a vacuum is cre ated, and the contents of the egg are discharged into your mouth. ” il Ea !” said the old lady, “when I was a girl we used to make a pin-hole in each end and suck ’em.” The wish often falls warm upon my lllart that I may learn nothing here that I cannot continue in the other world; that I may do nothing here but deeds that will bear fruit in heaven. Woman’s Wisdom. “Bhc insists that it is more import ance, that her family shall be kept in full health, than that she should have all the fashionable dresses and styles of the times. She therefore sees to it, that each member of her family is supplied with enough Hop Bitters, at the first appearance of auy symptoms of ill hea' h, to prevent a fit ‘of sickness with its attendant expense, care and anxiety. All women should exercise their wisdom in this way.’ —New Haven Palladium. • From the most remote ages the hat -has been an emblem of liberty, and has embellished the coins of manv nations. Asa covering for the head it dates back to the time of ancient Greece. Eleven hundred years ago the quality and style of the hat worn bespoke the rank and taste of the wearer. It being the most conspicuous article of dress, and sur mounting all the rest, it was natural that the beau monde should give to it special care and attention. That it still bears like significance is evident from the great demand for the Dunlap hat, which a dis criminating public has accepted as the standard of the present day. IfTon Feel Despondent and weary of life, do not give up; it is not trouble that causes such feelings, but disor dered kidneys or liver which Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure will invigorate, restore and thus bring you happiness once more. New Cure for Crime. An idea, not exactly new, but now re ceiving new attention among scientists, is deserving of notice. The theory has been advanced that murders and such crimes are not the fruit of devilish dis position, of revenge or of hate. They are simply the natural results of some abnormal condition of the brain. The undue growth of the bone in the region of the medulla oblongata presses upon the brain and drives the innocent man to innocently seize an ax and blamelessly chop his wife’s head open. It is her mis fortune, not his fault. The post mortem examination of the brains of a number of murderers shows in a majority of cases some tumor, malformation, or softening of the brain. The brains of assassins are usually larger than the average. Suicides in almost every case show soft ening of the brain in one or more lobes. The radical believers in this theory argue that this being the case, hanging is not the remedy for crime. Murderers are to be pitied, not punished, and placed un der medical treatment, instead of hanged. At least, while the theory is not yet gen erally accepted, they hold that a con victed murderer should be given to them to experiment on, cut a section out of his skull bone and try to mold his brain into new shape. However this may be, in places where hanging is still in vogue, where the choice is between confinement under medical treatment and turning the crim inal loose on the community, the de cision should not be one long to con sider.—Pittsburg Telegraph. Cnrions Reminiscences. How strange it must seem to many of our readers to be informed that the United States Court was once occupied trying a woman for the crime of being scold. The prisoner was the notorious Arm Boyal. She was tried at Washing ton in 1829, the following being an ex tract from the indictment: “ The said Ann did annoy and disturb the good people of the United States by her open, public and common scolding to the com mon nuisance of the good citizens of the United States and to the evil example of others. ” The prisoner’s counsel pleaded in her defense that the English statute, which punished common scolds with ducking, was obsolete and hence the in dictment could not be maintained. Judge Cranch, however, held that the offense was not obsolete, and added that all cor rect legal authorities decided that being a common scold to the nuisance of the neighborhood is an indictable offense. The judge thereupon fined Mrs. Royal $lO, and ordered her to give security for good behavior and to stand committed until the above-mentioned security should be maintained. This is the only instance of the kind I have ever heard of in the history of our country, and hence I give it as a legal curiosity. An other bit of antiquity is found in the fol lowing extract from army orders a half century ago: “Cadet R. E. Lee, pro moted to brevet second lieutenant artil lery, July 1, 1829.” How little could any one have imagined the part which this cadet was yet to play in the bloody work of internecine strife!— The Hermit in Troy Times. Things that will wear are not to be had cheap. Whether it be a fabric or a principle, if it is to endure; it must cost something. Glitter, tinsel, brilliant col oring, may all be had without much ex pense ; but if we would have strength, firmness and permanence, we must pay for them. Woman’s Wisdom. “She insists that it is more import ance, that her family shall be kept in full health, than that she should have all the fashionable dresses and styles of the times. She therefore sees to it, that each member of her family is supplied with enough Hop Bitters, at the first appearance of any symptoms of ill health, to prevent a fit of sickness with its attendant expense, caie and anxiety. All women should exercise their wisdom in this way.”—New Haven Palladium. Prof. Tidy, in a paper read before the London Chemical Society, restates, in reply to Dr. Frankland, his firm convic tion that a fairly rapid river, having re ceived sewage in quantity not exceeding one-twentieth of its volume, regains its purity after a run of a few miles, and be comes wholesome and good for drink ing. For the healing of the nations, Tab lets Buckeye Pile Ointment is before the public. We do not mean to say that Piles is a national disease, but it is more common than is generally believed, and Tabler’s Buckeye Pile Ointment will cure every case. Price 50c. For sale by all druggists. Counter Irritation. Uncle Mose and Parson Bledsoe were taking a walk along the beach when they perceived a youthful Zulu disporting hi in self in the surf, who turned out to be Parson Bledsoe’s boy, Abram Lin kum. “ Dat ar boy is gwine to catch cold,” said Old Mose. “Hit’s a warmness he is gwine tar catch. ” “I means a cold in his head.” “And I means a warm ness some whars else.” —Galveston News. Carboline, a deodorized extract of petrole urn, cures baldness. This is a positive fact attested by thousands. No other hair prepar ation in the world will re ally do this. Besides, as now improved it is a delightful dressing. HOW TO SECURE HEALTH. li is strange any one will suffei from derangements brought on by impure blooa, when EO3ADALIS will re store health l. the physical organization. ROSADALI3 i * strengthening syrup, pleasant to take, and the BEST BLOOD PI KIKIER ever discovered, curing Scrofula, Syphilitic disorders, Weakness of the Kidneys, Erysipe las, Malaria, Nervous disorders, Debility, Bilious com plaints and Uiseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys, atomaeh, Skin, etc. BAKER’S PAIN' PANACEA cure* pain in Man and Beasi. WORM SYRUP instantly destroys BEST TRUSS ever need; descriptive circulars free k. T. ELASTIC TRUSS CO., MS Broadway, N. T ikdismtios, dyspepsia. asrvoas prostration and ail forma of general debility relieved by taking i .ENSMAJt’a Piptonlzxd Best Tonio, the only preparation of beef containing it* entire nutrition# properties. It oontains blood-mak rng, force-generating and life-sustaining prop erticg; is invaluable in all eafeebled condition, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous pros tration, overwork, or acute disease, particularlj lf resulting from pulmonary complaints, Cas well, Hazard A Os., proprietors, New York. To remove grease stains from wood: Spread some starch powder over the grease spots, and then go over it with a hot flat-iron till you have drawn the grease; then scrape with a glass or a proper scraper, and repeat the starch powder and hot iron. Ammonia liquor may be used as a finish, if the staich does not take all the grease out. A orfvt many barks have gone down in rivlr at New York, within seven years; 35,000 dogs have been drowned there. ■— PERRY DAVI& Pain-Killer ■ J A SAFE AND SURE ftffj Rheumatism, ■[l I |J| HToothache FOfiSALSBY AbL DBUGGUSTS, PECK’S, the only patented Alt- TIFICUL Uk DRUM*, are Cushioned, Ventilated, Comfort able and and Restore Hearing. Physicians highly recom mend them. ’ For Asthma or Ca tarrh send for IJr. Stinson’s Sure Remedies. Treatise milled free. H. P. K. PECK, Agt., 115 Nassau St., New York DEAF PEOPLS HEAR ATTENTION CINNERS. Scott’s Patent Horse Power The work of four mules done \>y two. Save your horses and mules by obtaining the right to use on your gin or mill or other machinery Scott’s Patent Improvement on Horse Power. This remarkable invention of the undersigned patentee, was patented August 17th, 1880, and is now for the first time offered to the public. It is simple, useful and durable, and takes off of your horses about one-half of the draught of your gin or other machinery, and is so cheap that every man that has machinery will notgrum ble at the price but be perfectly delighted and wonder wbv the world has been so long in discovering it. No humbug, but the pat entee is an old citizen of Benton county, Miss., with liis post-office at Ashlahd, Miss., to whom apply for further information. Only six pieces lumber 2x7 inches, 12 feet long, and three pounds 20 penny nails, re quired to put on above improvement. SAMUEL SCOTT, Patentee. For territorial rights in Mississippi or Alabama, address CALHOON & WALKER, Holly Springs, Miss. 0. r mrm Gentlemen: I was suffering from general debility to such an extent that mv labor was exceed! mrlv hnr r.lized almost immediate and wonderful results. The old energy returned mid I fmmd ihlf' mvnnTnr^t, i&regraarrsaag- ('The Iron Tonic is n\ preparation of Pro- I tojride of Iron, Pern- | vian Burk, ana Phos- I phates, associated I with the Vegetable I A.romatics. It serves I every purpose where I a Tonic *s necessary, f MANUFACTURED 6 1 THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., HO. 213 iiJfITK MAIH STREET, ST. LOUIS. COTTON 17VORJMDS CAN BE DESTROYED AND CROPS SATED BY lsi\(l LONDON PURPLE, WWI ** f ? r ° BSOr C^, V - RILEY - Jodge w. J. JO3TEB, Judge J. F. BAILEY, the U. S. Entomo aS the ® Safest, Cheapest, most RHUble insecticide ever-used, eosling from He. to 10c. per acre only. Ask your nearest dealer for particulars, or write to HEKIKIXOWAIi’S LONDON PURPLE COMPANY L’T’D. 90 Water Street, Jiew York. P. o. 80x 990. is the BEST, CHEAPEST and most ECONOMICAL. ade by BARBAROUX & CO., Louisville, Ky. A W/ES Also, Manufacturers of and Dealers in and MACHINERY of ALL KtNDS^^^ PETROLEUM JELLY jSSCfI Ued and approved by the leading H CHANS of EUROPE and AMERICA. I The most ViiliiiililiifSpflf |S fpv p Family Remedy §|sa|g| H jgifow known. E §P*IS H The Totu* jaa Artlelee from pur* BN vjgft R Torwlioe—-such ae rf # a A. Y m ▼otrypa, busks, T^Jf eha !! 9f“P hfflr HEMORRHOID*, Rte. Also to TASBJNICONFICTIONL CofH Soro Throot, Croup MtdDiphtkwU, to. An arable form of UR. JDTry that fi and fiO of all our good* in* Vaaolme internally. BRAND UAL AT THE FHnABPyiA tTMiemeiTl CE3TTB A BOX. MXTRB MCTAL AT TUB PAjUA ÜBNITilli COLGATE fei** JLV Bookwalter Engine Effective, Simple, Durable and Cheap. HffAj Snbst * D tial, Economical and Easily Managed Guaranteed to work xceU and give full porter claimed. H jMfljßl 15®,*™“ ft Cotton Gin or Corn Mill should hare on*. Btam power is much better and cheaper than horse power. Manufacturers for descriptive pamphlet, '-'-7' JAM LKITKL A <, -J •*- ~ avrUsrAield, Oh I*. The Traveler who Wisily Provides Against the contingency of illness by taking with him llostetter’s Stomach Bitters, has occasion to congratulate himself on his fore sight, when he sees others who have neg lected to do so suffering from someone of the maladies for which it is a remedy and preventive. Among these are fever and ague, biliousness, constipation and rheu matism diseases often attended upon a change of climate or unwonted diet. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. SOUTHERN STANDARD Cotton Press. Over Fifteen Hundred in Use, Can be operated by hand, horse, steam or water power without alteration. Was awarded the first premium at St. Louis Agricultural and Mechanical Association, and Capital State Fair Association, Austin, Texas, 1880. Price oi Power Press, complete - - sllO “ “ Hand Power “ - - - 100 “ “ Power Irons “ - - - - 50 “ “ Hand Power Irons “ ... 46 Send for circulars. Address Southern Standard Press Cos., MERIDIAN MISS. —— r* —* rfcSrofc We will send to any address a HE BIA BEK WATCH, warranted a perfect timekeep with Nickel or Plated Chain, //v 1 'wWk/ heavy Links, charge* prev aid, if in V 2 n receipt of 51.50. Satis (|[ (oi T3 faction gurranteed or money Y 1 Jmß&Si refunded. Address gsl y ai J - W * HAYWOOD, *- ~ New York City, N. Y. LOUISVILLE HYDRAULIC CEMENT, used for Construction of Cisterns, Sewers and Foundations. Address, Western Cement Association Louisville, Ivy. (Ptiftorsed a ad recoin- 1 mended by the tne.tli- ft cal profession, for I Dyspepsia, tfencral n Debility, Female Dis- 1 eases, Want of Vital- gf ity, JVervous Prostra- 1 lion, and Convales-W cencefro u t Few rs.&ej MILL & FACTORY SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS. BELTING, HOSE and PACKING, OILS, PUMPS AU KINDS, IRON PIPE, FITTINGS BRASS GOODS, STEAM GAUGE*’ ENGINE GOVERNORS, &c. Send for Price-list. W. H. DILLINGHAM &CC 143 Main Street, LOUISVILLE, KY. HOP BITTEBS^ (A Medicine, not a Brink.) CONTAINS nors, m e nu, mandrake, DANDELION, And the I'trkst and Best Mkt>icalQi:au- TIEB OF ALL OTUKK BPtTKRS. THEY CURE All Diseases of the Stomach. Rowels. Blood Liver, Kidneys, and Urinary Organs, Ner- ’ vousness, Sleeplessness and especially Female Complaints. SIOOO IN GOLD, Will be paid for a case they will not rare help, or for anything impure or injurious found in them. Ask your druggist for llop Bitters and try them before you sleep. Take no oilier. D i.G.ls an absolute and Irresistible cure for Drunkenness, use of opium, tobacco ana narcotics. mi 1 Send for Cikctlar. ESBsaaa /ill nrovc sold by druggists. Hop Bitter* Mfg. < • , Boehekter, N. 1., & Toronto,Oni. For Two Generations The good and staunch old stand-by, MEXICAN MUS TANG LINIMENT, has done more to assuage pain, relieve suitering, and save the lives of men and beasts than all other liniments put together. Why l Because the Mustang pene trates through skin and flesh to the very hone, driving out all pain and soreness and morbid secretions, and restor ing the afflicted nart to sound and supple health. *{; <9fl Pr day horn*. Sample* worth .l fr* lU WU A (litres* Stinson A Cs., Portland, Mam# i N if, AlVffcJO toi th. Best and Kw.-nt Sell . k. mg Pictorial Rook sod Bibles. Price, reduced 33 yJ ',ot. Xtllonal PublUhing 0., AtlanU, Qi^ jg < “' r A W*bs. *l2 a day at horn* a*tly made, Owiij EAueSALAitY perenonth. All EXPEtUiES udrnnccd. WAUKS promptly paid. SLUAN & to. aQ3 (irorice St. tlaclnnali. *>■ “The Only”™ Cincinnati Artisan, a first-cla** paper, fall of Tiubli Scientific and Mechanical new*. Send 10 centa for sample copies, club and pr. .an rates. Addresa W. P. THOMPSON, Manager, CINCINNATI, J. Pr— ■■ -i t Sewcriktiri l dopes j B a ass 2s==22ss=s=ssss±saßSSS ~ r Arti-rj i hro Ji%o •—l'? month. (Graduate# r*, Address VALENTINE BRO.. JmcifilU, C 5 Y* WASTE MONET t Yourr man or old. -^l^ V? 8 If ton want a l uxuriant motmachs. flowing wbliker* or a growth of hair on bald © v S head* or to THICKEN, HTKCNGTHEN and iv INVIGORATE fn* HAiR anvwoero don't b- hmwhupsod. Try th jrre&t Bmnuh discovert wtnoh has NEVER VET FAILED. Send ONI T HJX CENTS to Dr. J. GONZA LAZ, Bor 16Y.L Boston. Man*. H*wiirs of all imitations, liS2r ’ nil PH I>R. .SHARP’S uqioi UII L\ SANOUINAKIA. This - ff** B tbe Preicription of the late Dr. ■ ■ fci BH %F ■ Sharp, of Mississippi, who iuc , _ . .. , ceasfuily used it in a practice , V?.. T ye^!s . throughout the South in the treating ot Pile*, Fistulaa, Fissures and kindred diseaaw. Wr<mic Dysentery also cured. The formula has been given in the Medical Journals of Mississippi, hence its ieii*> bility. Druggists will supply you. Price SI. Dm. übakp M*scrx*CTDEie Cos., Baltimore and New York. Aft ~r\ A MONTH. A*it* Wan*' 4 C\ (|7sbestß•^lingartfcl•sinth•worid;fc•“• SPO pie free. JAY BHOMHON, D.troit-j^^ CELLULOID <e>4 ;VE-CLASSES. ‘ Representing the choicest selected TortoiH 'hell and Amber. The lightest, hand-offlMl aid atrongeat known. Sold by Optician* nd GweleiH. Made by the SPENCER OPTICAI d’V”Q CO.. 13 Maiden Lane. New Yn>V fiHiprn s iMjp^[ o ?? I . tory of England. lYEng. Literature. 1 l’ge Ifß I I■• l’ge 12mo vols. I Jl2mo vol. handsomely II cute‘l " cloth: only bound, for only 50 rU. * ‘ r MANHATTAN BOOK CO ■ 16 W. ltth St., K.Y. P.O. Borj^ rO those afflicted with chronic diseases (i the liver, kidney, enlarged spleen, rkeh - I matism, chronic diarrhoea and female com- I plaints cured. No charge until cured, il I sired. Correspondence solicited with stanip- I Address DR. J. STOATE, Oxford, Mi"- RUPTURE Selieved and cured without the injury trnsse." nf ' - *, fc f Dr. J. A. BHERMAN’S system. Office 2.M Bro*dwfj Mew York. His book, with photographic liiien- 01 ! b*d cases before and alter cure, mailed for 10c. Ee wr * *f fraudulent Imitator*. For OlAiiiai and Fever _ , AND all diseases Caused by Malarial Poisoning of the Bio** A WARRANTED CURE. t>X lce 81.00. Far ul. b, SI Dr:.-f A WMk Y* ol own town- Term* andP r ; " *ll/ x 9\J fret. Addr*a H P >r* TO EMIGRANTS OR CAPITALISTS. | We hare large bodies of land in McLennan, Limestone Counties. Texas, suitable for colonies- Jr In large bodies very cheap. Send for further Inform* * I to J. E. ELGIN & CO., Waco, Texas. __ Publishers’ Union, Atlanta, Ga Twenty-three.— ?! ' T\ AGENTS WANTED FOR DIBLE REVISION The beat and cheapest illustrated edition of the New Testament. Million* of people are waiting ‘ (B . Do not be deceived by the Cheap John publi*J>B r ‘‘Aj ferior editions. See that the copy you buy centt** fine engrariugs on steel and wood. Agents • 60 ““'“l3Bfc£'*Jfiai,ft£LVKfW*