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HIGH-HEELED SHOES.
A Fruitful Source of Rack-Acho and
Kindred Ills.
“Back-ache," says a prominent New
York pliysiciaD, “is very common among
women; more than two-thirds of them
suffer from it. But there is one kind of
this trouble, caused by a prevailing
fashion, which women ought not to al
low themselves to suffer from.
“ A few years ago a fashionable young
lady called upon me, saying that her
back was very lame and had been so
for a considerable time; the pain had
lately so greatly increased that she had
become frightened about herself. She
had been obliged to shorten her
promenades, so she said, was almost in
capable of dancing, and her life was
gradually becoming a burden. She had
‘ tried everything,’ and taken medicine
all the time, but—and then she broke
down in such a way that I began to sus
pect hysteria.
“ She looked tired, and her face bore
an expression of pain and despondency
which was not compatible with her
years—she was about 23—nor her evi
dences of constitutional force, which I
judged to bo strong. I confess I was
at a loss to account for her trouble, and
close questioning gave me no indication
for treatment. I at last prescribed a
tonic—on general principles—and asked
her to call in about a week. When she
appeared again, a glance sufficed to show
that she was no better, and I was much
puzzled as I saw her walk up and down
the office in nervous excitement, ex
claiming that she would nover get well,
she knew she wouldn’t, etc. As I looked,
a certain peculiarity in her w r alk led me
to think that there might be some spinal
trouble, and I commenced a cross-exam
ination, which she brought to a sudden
dose by saying: * Why, doctor, several
of my friends are suffering just as I am,
but they are not yet so worn out with
the pain; we cannot all have spinal com
plaints, can we ?’
“I thought it impossible, of course,
and the interview ended by my asking
her to call again on the next day, and
bring one of her friends with her," when
I would make another effort to discover
the real cause of her trouble. I had, in
fact, made up my mind that some pecul
iarity in dress was at the root of the
difficulty. The ladies called, and had
hardly traversed the office before I ob
served in patient No. 2 the same idiosyn
crasy in walking that I had seen in the
first patient. I was not long in discover
ing that the real difficulty lay in the
high and tapering heels of my patients’
gaiters. Closer examination revealed
the fact that there w T as a difference in
the height of the boot heels of the two
ladies, and I found that my first patient,
who was the greater sufferer, was the
one whose gaiters possessed the higher
heels. There was nothing to do but to
prescribe slippers and woolen stockings
for a week, to be followed by the wear
ing of shoes having low, broad heels.
“All signs of lameness disappeared
within eleven days, and my lirst patient
of this kind, together with many who
have followed her, regained their health
and strength. There are many phys
iological reasons why undue eleva
tion of the heel must cause trouble. It
will suffice to say that it tends to throw
t<n nmil tiliD VA/utivuto Ut llio ivltQUlQHlfll
cavity, and the muscles, nerves
and cords, more or less connect
ed with, or surrounding the back, are
subjected to unusual strain in resisting
the forward impulse. Of course, in such
eases, lame back is not of itself a disease,
but only the indication of a deep-seated
trouble, wiiich is sometimes difficult to
deal with. Ladies should be warned
that this fashion in heels is certain to
bring them —sooner or later—great
trouble.”
Capturing an Englishman.
“ Once I was filling an engagement at
a London theater,” said J. K. Emmet,
the actor; “ a gentleman with buttoned
kids and hair parted in the middle oc
cupied a private box. He coolly sur
veyed me tltrough his eyeglass. I was
feeling pretty good, and was acting with
more than usual freedom. The audience
roared with laughter, but not a muscle
of his face moved. He stared at me
like a Gorgon. I was nettled, and I de
termined to capture him. I did my
best, but there he sat partially turned
toward me in the easiest of positions with
the coldest of faces. You could fairly
rend on his features : 4 Well, upon my
soul, 1 expected somethiner pretty bad 1
you know, but this is perfectly exec
rable. ’ I lost my guard, and made no
secret of my effort to capture him. The
audience dropped on it, and became
deeply interested. I warbled ‘ Wilhel
mina Strauss,’ and filled it to the brim
with grotesqueness, but the fellow sat
there like a stone statue entirely un
moved. Apparently nothing would fetch
him. And so the performance progressed,
the audience watching the man in the
box more than it did me. At last I made
an impression. It was in the act where
I pranced around the stage with a little
child astraddle my shoulders. A faint
smile overspread the man’s face. He
raised his gloved hands and languidly
elapped them twice. The audience
screamed with delight, and from that
time until the close of the performance
I had every soul in the house with me.
The naivete of the child, combined with
the acting, had been too much for him,
and had brought him down.”
Joan of Arc.
It has been strongly doubted whether
Joan of Arc ever suffered the punish
ment that has made her a martyr, though
details of her execution and last mo
ments grace the civio records of Rouen.
Several books have been published dis
oussing the question. A Belgian lawyer
is the author of one of these. He con
tends that the historians—who have
done nothing but copy each other in the
narratives of her death—err exceedingly
in saying that it took place on the last
day of May. 1473, the fact being that
she was alive and well many years after
that date. There are good grounds, too,
for believing that the pretty story of
Abelard and Heloise is a pure fiction.
His Little Mistake.
Merimee, in his “Letters to Panizzi,”
tells a good story of Mrs. Caroline Nor
ton and Lord Suffolk, whom she had
l >antered at a charity fair to purchase
some trifle at an exorbitant price.
. _ * 7°** know,” said his Lordship,
defending himself feebly, “that I am
the prodigal son?”
“No,” was the answer; “1 thought
you ware the fatted call,"
Some of A. Ward’s Pranks.
I do not remember to have ever seen
xny notice of Artemus’ happy use of
pantomime in his humorous moods
among his friends and associates. There
was an unapproachable eloquence some
times in it. He had a way of making
quotation marks in the air with his left
and right forefingers on occasion that
was irresistibly funny. Once he was
engaged to fill an evening in the lecture
course of a popular literary institution
of a New England city. During the
lecture an individual who occupied a
seat on one of the front benches seemed
determined to resist the speaker's efforts
to make him laugh. Artemus soon dis
covered both the listener and his inten
tion and concentrated all his powers on
him. For a long time it seemed as if
the man had the best of it, but by-and
by one of Browne’s queer conceits took
effect. The obstinate fellow gave way,
and laughed and kicked like a delighted
school-boy. Artemus celebrated his
victory by coolly announcing to his
audience : “Ladies and gentlemen, this
will terminate the first act, and we will
drop the curtain for a few moments ;
while the scenery is being arranged for
the next act the lecturer will take occa
sion to ‘go out to see a man,’” and
with perfect sang froid he left the plat
form for the ante-room, where he quietly
refreshed himself with—weak tea and a
cracker, and gleefully told the story of
his contest.
Half a dozen of his associates were
sitting one day in his room at the vil
lage hotel where he boarded, when an
old woman drove up to the store oppo
site with a pair of donkeys—a jack and
jenny—hitched to a little wagon. Jack
was the noisiest brute in the country.
He had a voice worse than the handle of
a town-pump on a frosty morning, and
was proud of it. In a minute his tail
rose to a horizontal, his nose ttas thrust
forward, his lips parted and the beast
blew his infernal blast. A second and
third time it was repeated. Artemus
quietly thought “that that thing might
be fixed,” and disappeared from the
room. He went over and appeared to
make a careful inspection of the fore
wheels of the wagon, the harness and
the hitch-up, and came back, saying that
the donkey was all right; the brute must
have made a mistake about something.
Presently there were indications of a
movement on Jack’s part; the neck was
extended, the lips curled and the tai)
rose—to the pivotal point and no furth
er. The trumpet didn’t sound. Jack
thought there was a mistake somewhere
—hesitated—reilected —and tried again.
The front part, some of it, was all right;
but the equilibrium could not be
reached. Alter a time another attempt
was made and failed. Jack turned his
head around to ascertain the cause of
the failure, but couldn’t see any. The
fifth vain attempt to bray was followed
by a spiteful kick at Jenny, but it did
n’t cut the matter. At last lie gave it
up and stood at the store door, the most
neglected-looking, discontented donkey
in existence. Meantime, Artemus en
joyed the fun and discharged a rattling
fusilode of pungent humor that kept the
party in a roar and made the whole
affair one of the most ludicrous that I
ever experienced. Artemus had at
tached a heavy stone to the donkey’s
tail, leaving just play enough to the
cord to allow the beast to get his tail
nearly up to “concert pitch.”—ltemin
tscenoes in the Portland Press.
Chinese Version of the Prodigal Son.
“A man, he two sons. Son speakee
to father; father got money ; give some
he; father he take it all riglitee. I just
now give you half. He gives him half ;
he go long way—likee me come China to
New York. No be careful of money,
use too much ; money all gone ; he velly
hungly. He went to man. He wantee
work, he say; all right; lie tell him
ieedee pigs. He givee pigs beans ;he
eutee with pigs himself. He just now
talkee ‘ My father he lich man—muehee
money. What for me stay here hungry?
i want to go back and see my father. " I
say to him, I velly bad. He knows I
bad. Emperor (God) see I bad. No be
son, me be coolie.’ He go back; hugee
way, father see him. He takee him on
tlie neck. Son say, ‘ I velly bad. 1 just
now no be your son. His father talkee
to boy and say, ‘ Gettee handsome coat;
gives he ring, gives he shoes; bring fat
cow—kille cow, give him to eat. ’ They
velly glad. Ho alleo samee dead, just
now come back alive ; he lost; he get
back. Number one son come. He hear
music; he tellee coolie, ‘ What for
rnakee music ?’ He say, 4 Your brother
come back; your father velly glad he ug
sick ; he killee fat cow.’ Number one
son velly angly. Father he comes out;
he say, ‘ No, no be angly.’ Number one
son say, ‘I stay all time by father; never
make© him angly. My father never
killee one fat cow for me. My brother
he velly had ; he use money too muehee;
he have fat cow and music.’ Father
say, • You no sabee ; he just dead ; he
now comes to life; he lost; now comee
back.’ They make® music.”
An Enemy to Singing Birds.
The crow is exterminating the sine;-
iug birds of New England, few are the
nests that escape his vigilant search,
and fewer still the young birds that do
not go to satisfy his ravenous appetite
and fill his capacious maw. 1 ha?e
watched and cursed them for years. I
have seen them pounce upon the nest of
the lark and of the plover; I have seen
them leaving the nest of the robin with
the young in their beaks. For several
years I watched the return of a pair of
robins to an old apple tree near my
house, where they had built their nest
and reared their young. One morning
I heard the piercing cry of the old birds,
foreboding danger and distress. I ran
to the window just in time to see a crow
fly from the tree with a young robin in
his mouth. In less than five minutes
the crow returned, dived into the tree,
and this time the last of my half-grown
pet robins was borne away.—Manches
ter Mirror.
The Point Well Taken.
“I object, your Honor, to this witness’
testimony.” “Upon what ground?”
said the Judge. “My point is, your
Honor, that evidence from a person oc
cupying the professional position of the
witness is unreliable.” “ What did I
understand the witness to say his occupa
tion was?” asked the Judge. “Washington
correspondent of a New York daily pa
per,” was the reply. “Ah!” said the
Judge, “the point is well taken; the
court sustains your objection, Mr. Coke
fttone.”
A GREAT REVELATION.
Some Valuable Thoughts Concerning
Human Happiness and Timely Sug
gestions About Securiiig It.
Sjnop*ii of a Lcctnre Delivered by Dr
Obi*. Craig. Before the Metropoli
tan Mcienttfle Association.
“The public speaker of the present day la
bors under difficulties of which the speakers of
the last century never dreamed, for while the
audiences of the past received what was said
without question, those of the present day are
usually the mental equals or superiors of the
ones who address them. Rev. Dr. Tyng, of
New York, when a theological student, supplied
a church in a neighboring town, and on his waj
to preach one morning, met an aged colored
man. ‘Well, Uncle, do you ever go to hear tho
young preacher?’ asked the unfledged Doctor,
“No, Massa,’ replied the negro, ‘dis chile don’t
let none o’ dem students practis on him.’ The
darkey had began to think. The free and inde
pendent thought of this ago accepts statements
only where they are proven to be truth, while
the development of mental power seems equally
great in every other department of life. The
valuable inventions of the day are counted by
thousands. The increase of scientific study is
universal. The spirit of inquiry iu all fields is
so marked as to cause
COMMENT ON EVERY SIDE,
while people 6eom investigating and advancing
jn every direction which can help them morally,
mentally or physically. This is specially true of
the human body and everything which concerns
it, and the truths which the people have found,
even in the last fifty years are simply marvelous.
How really ignorant some cultured and suppos
ably scientific people were only a few years ago,
as compared with the present day, may be bet
ter understood from a few illustrative facts. A
prominent writer prepared an elaborate essay to
prove that steamships could never cross tho
Atlantic, and his pamphlet was issued just in
time to be carried by tlie first steamer that went
to England. People once believed that the
heart was tho seat of life and health, ft is now
known that this organ is only, a pump, simply
keeping in motion wh it other anl more impor
tant organs of the body ha ve created and trans
formed. It was once supposed that if a person
felt a pain in the hack, the liver was deranged;
if a pain came in the lower chest the lungs were
affected and consumption was near; it is now
known that a pain in the back indicates diseased
kidneys, while troubles in the lower chest arise
from a disordered liver, and not imperfect
lungs. A severe paiu in the head was once
thought to come from some partial derange
ment of the brain; it is now known that tumbles
in other parts of the body and away from th*
head, cause headaches, and that only by remov
ing the cause can the pain be cured. It is a
matter of
PRIVATE HISTORY
that Gen. Washington was bled to death. His
last illness was slight, and caused principally
by weariness. A physician was called who
‘bled him copiously.’ Strange to say the pa
tient became no better. Another Doctor was
called, who again took away a largo amount of
tho vital fluid. Thus in succession four phy
sicians drew away the life of a great man who
was intended by nature for an old age, and
who prematurely died—murdered by malprac
tice—bled to death. That was the age of med
ical bleeding!”
The speaker then graphically described an
other period which came upon' the people, in
which they assigned the origin of all diseases to
the stomach, and after showing the falsity of
this theory, and that the kidneys and liver were
the cause of disease, and that many people are
suffering from kidney and liver troubles to-day
who do not know it, but who should know it
and attend to them at once, com,inn A&..
‘‘Let us iook at this matter a jpn?*lkmore
closely. The human body is the most, perfect
and yet tho most delicate of all created things.
It is capable of the greatest results and it is
liable to the greatest disorders. The slightest
causes sometimes seem to throw its delicate ma
chinery out of order while the most simplo and
common-sense care restores and keeps them in
perfect condition. When it is remembered that
the amount of happiness or miserv wo arc to
have in this world is dependent upon a perfect
body. Is it not strange that simple precautions
and care are not exercised? This is one of tho
most vital questions of life. People may avoid
it for the present, but there is certain to come
a time in every one’s experience when it must
be faced.
“And here pardon mo for relating a little
personal experience. In the year 1870 I found
myself losing both in strength and health. I
could assign no causo for the decline, but it con
tinued, until finally I called to my aid two
prominent physicians. After treating me for
some tune they declared I was suffering from
Bright’s disease of the kidneys, and that they
could do nothing more for me. At this time I
was so weak I could not raise mv head from
the pillow and I
FAINTED REPEATEDLY.
My heart beat so rapidly it was with difficulty I
could sleep. My lungs were also badly involved;
I could retain nothing upon my stomach, while
the most intense pains in my back and bowels
caused me to long for death as a relief. It was
at this criticaljuncture that a physical longing
which I felt (and which I most firmly believe
was an inspiration) caused me to send for the
leaves of a plant I had once known in medical
practice. After great difficulty lat last secured
them and began their use in the form of tea. I
noticed a lessening of the pain at once; I began
to mend rapidly; in five weeks I was able to be
about and in two months I became perfectly well
and have so continued to this day. It was only
natural that such a result should have caused
me to investigate most thoroughly. I carefully
examined fields in medicine never before explor
ed. I sought the cause of physical order and dis
order, happiness and pain, and I found the kid
neys and liver to be the governors, whose mo
tions regulate the entire system.”
After deocribing at length the offices of the
kidneys and liver, and their important part in
m life, the Doctor went on to sav:
“Having found this great truth, I saw clearly
the cause of my recoverv. The simple vegetable
leaf I had used was a food and restorer to my
well-nigh exhausted kidneys and liver, ibfiuil
come to them when their life was nearlv gone
and by its simple, yet powerful influence had
purified, strengthened and restored them, and
saved me from death. Realizing the great
benefit winch a knowledge of this ti lth would
give to the world I began, in a modest wav. to
treat those afflicted, and in every case I found
the same
HAPPY RESULTS
which I had experienced. Not only this, but
many, who were not conscious of any physical
trouble bnt who, at my suggestion, began the
use of the remedy which had saved my life,
found their health steadily improving and their
strength continually increasing. So universal,
where used, was this true, that I determined
the entire world should share in its results, and
I therefore placed the formula for its prepara
tion in the hands of Mr. H. H. Warner, of
Rochester, N. Y., a gentleman whom I had cored
of a severe kidney disease, and who, by reason
of his personal worth, high standing and lib
erality in endowing the Astronomical Observa
tory and other public enterprises, has beeome
known and popular to the entire country. This
gentleman at once began the manufacture of
the remedy on a most extensive scale, and to
day, Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, the
pure remedy that saved mv life is kuown and
used in all parts of the continent.
“I am aware a prejudice exists toward pro
prietary medicines, and that such prejudice is
too often well-founded, but the value oi a pure
remedy is no less because it is a proprietary
medicine. A justifiable prejudice exists toward
Suaek doctors, but is it right that this prejudice
lould extend towards all the Doctors who are
earnestly and intelligently trying to do their
duty? Because Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver
Cure saved my life before it became a proprie
tary medicine, is it reasonable to suppose that
it will not core others and keep still more from
sickness now that it is sold with a Government
stamp on the wrapper? Such a theory would
be childish.' 1 f
The Doctor then paid some
to American science, and closed his lecture as
'““How to restore the he,lth when I>roken .nd
how to keep the body perfect and fiee troy
disease must ever beman s o ■ ■
That one of the greatest revelations of the
d.“La. bee?to Meertammg to
true seat of health to be in the kidneys and
liver, all scientists now admit, and lean but
feel that the discovery which I hai e been pe
mitted to make, and which I have desenbedto
vou. is destined to prove the greatest, best and
most reliable friend to those who suffer aud
long for happinoss, as well as to those who de*
sire to keep the joys they now possess.
Statistics of Color Blindness.
The report of the committee appointed
by the Ophthalmological Society of Lon
don to collect statistics of cases of color
blindness, presents many features of
special interest. The Secretary of the
committee, Dr. Brailey, with the assist
ance of sixteen colleagues, has examined
18 088 persons of all classes, of whom
1 657 were females. It is at on ?e curi
ous and suggestive to find that, while the
average percentage of color defects
among men is 4.76, and 3.5 for very pro
nounced defects, it falls in woman to the
low figure of 0.4. This, if true, remarks
the London Lancet , would seem to sug
gest anew sphere of labor for women.
If women are comparatively free from
color blindness, they are so far specially
indicated for many of the less laborious
occupations in which good color percep
tion is desirable or absolutely indispens
able. It is satisfactory to find that these
last statistics confirm, in the main,[those
collected by the late Dr. George Wilson,
of Edinburgh, nearly thirty years ago.
This is especially noticeable as regards
the comparative frequency of color de
fects among members of the Society of
Friends, particularly among the poorer
section of them. Though the members
of the Ophthalmological Society seem
either not to have known the fact or to
have forgotten it, Dr. Wilson found a
considerable number of cases of color
blindness among the members of the
Society of Friends, and he was of opin
ion that this was not an accidental cir
cumstance. He believed that
the largest proportion ox cases of color
blindness would, on extended examina
tion, be found among tlie less-accom
plished male Friends in tliejlarger cities.
—Scientific American.
The theory that a submerged body
can be raised by firing cannon over it
was recently proved in Chicago. A
plumber named Leonard had jumped
oft’ the wharf and drowned himself, and
his friends got out the artillery and raised
him by firing over the spot where he
liad gone down. He thought it was a
water pipe bursting.
We learn that Ellis & C >.. proprietors
of Bailey Spring*, are making prepara
tions to ca'.ei'Uia 11 unusually large
number of vt.iiti.rs tub aUirimei. They
are receiving communications from all
over the South inquiring rales and con
tracts for board. This is only their due,
for not only are they successful hotel
keepers, but their (dace is in every
way worthy of patronage. It is one of
the coolest, shadiest, breeziest places in
the South ; the locality and surround
tigs are delightful; tho buildings are
roomy, airy, and conveniently arranged:
the accommodations, fare and attention
are first class, and Shoal Creek is the
most romantic stream aud the best fish
ing water you ever saw. Add to this
the unrivalled power of the old Bock
Spring in tlie cure of dropsy, scrofula,
dyspepsia and diseases of the’blood, skin
and kidneys, and the sum of attractions
is irresistible. If you have ever been
there you know this it true. If you
have not, try it just once. You will
never regret it. Address Ellis & Cos.,
Bailey Springs, Ala.
Coal-scuttles are now manufactured
of rubber, but when a man gets up iu
the still hours of the niglit to satisfy his
wife’s anxiety about the front door be
ing locked they can stand him on his
head as neatly and effectively as the old
iron ones do.— U a ,v? Ar-yo.
Ao Hospital deeded.
No palatial hospital needed for Hop Bit.-
ters patients, nor large salaried talented
puffers to tell what Hop Bitters will do
or cure, as they tell their own story by
their certain and absolute cures at home.
—New York Independent.
People speak carelessly of “bloated
aristocracy,” as if an aristocrat is always
obese. That is wrong. Some of the
aristocracy of to-day is mighty thin.—
New Orleans Picayune.
“I h** Unds Help
those who help themselves,” and Nature inva
riably helps those who take Warner’s Safe Kid
ney and Liver Cure.
mmmm
HVerlng from general debility to such ao extent the* at r Üb® .uttctMlgtkbnr.
l°n of_U month did not five ate macb relief, bat on the contrary, was fonoW<f by
i Making chllle. Atthletime I began the use of your Ikon Tonic, from which! re
nnd wonderfnl TMnlte. The eld energy returned and I found that my natural force
ted. I here used three bottles of the Tonic. Since using it J have done twice the la
time daring my ilineee, end with double the ease. With the tranquil nerve
peeieoe> eleeraeaeof thought never before enjoyed. If the Tonic baa not done the
I give it the credit, J. P. Watsok.Peetor Christian Church, Troy, O.
('Tike free tfowte Im et
cassvKS;: i
vimn Bmrk, ant l Phet-1
phatee. Mseetofed B
tetih <ke FegefeMe I
IfMeeHM. ifserveo I
•••rg eurysre where f
• To it to da neoeeeery./
■AIIfUTIM 1 TII PH. HAKTEK MEDICINE CO., ■. SISMHTM MAIM STIEIT, ST. IMS*
COTTON WOHMS
CAM BE DESTBOYED AMD CKOPM SAVED BY CSIMU
LONDON PURPLE,
Te*e<! end reoarnmeaded by Profecnr O. V. RLLBY, Jadge W. J. JONES, Jodee J. P. BaILKT, (Be U. 8. Eatenio-
Ugteet Chuoiwhb, A*., u the Bert, Safe*!. Chva|>eL Host Keliable bi.sect.rid* erw seed, costing
(NmSatolOe.pwract'eonly. Ask tout ueare-sl dealer for particulars, er write te
HPJUIMIIWAK*B LOMDOM *( Itfl.K COUPtMT I.’T’D,
o<i Wiur Street, hew York. P. O. Bov 900
Bogkwalteb Engine
Effective, Simple, Durable and Cheap.
Compact, Subatanfial, Economical and Earilv MaoacmA
Guaranteed te work well and five full poorer claimed,
J JSV BItV PI.AMTEB
f W-N Wbp nm • Cotton Gin or Com MiU should Lay* 0 a
BUua powgr is much better and cheaper than hergg pewgt.
3 Hotm Power Engine, ... £^4<#
kAiteee MaxnfacUtrwi for daionpthre pamphlet
Msmam yirm * t„
A Great Enterprise.
The Hop Bitters Manufacturing Com
panv is one of Rochester's greatest bus
iness enterprises, their Rep bitters
have reached a sale beyond ail prece
dent, having from their intrinsic value
found their way into almost every uouse
hold in the land. —Graphic.
Partial records of the live-stock in
terests of Texas show a yearly yield of
something over 400,000. head of cattle.
Eight dollars per head is about the aa
erago price at Sau Antonio,
If the bowels are sluggish and the liver tor
pid use Kidney-Wort.
The complete independence of man
and wife, where property is concerned,
is nowhere carried to such a point as
among the Indians of Central Amer
ica. Every day the husband buys 111s
meals from his wife, who purchases 110 m
him raw material for the table.
Be<l-BuSTM. Bfs:te!i
rats, cats, mice, ants, fli-y. in-e -ts. e'eared out
by “Rough on ltats.’ io .. dr a..
IIEJiZtI S i\l Si UO2.SC ■ k t~> V K
Is the BEST SAI.VE tot i.: tbst-s, tjou-s, Dis?r*
sjaH Kit, 11:11, Tt-iici. ■ it - limits, Chilblains, Corns.
;um i 1 hii. t- <>l .-Hi.;. K; u, ttni.n, Freckle* ami Pimples
; ,. t ,> C.vkii-H.lO SALVE, as all otheii am
cuUUtmfclm Trice .'Aot-tili.
js-i ; ? kv* oaYgkva ri;: bsttesm
• „ tr- iiu t; fur Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Malaria,
i stti'u aud Lissases of tlie Blood, Kidueys, Liver,
Skin, me.
DURXO’S CATARRH SNOFF cures all affections of th*
luticuous membrane of the head and throat.
DR. MOTT’S LIVER PILLS are the best Cathartic
regulators.
Indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration
and all forms of general debility relieved by
taking Mensman’s Peptonized Beef Tonic, the
only preparation of beef *ontaiuing 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, ( ! a"
well, Hazard k Cos., proprietor*, Now York.
PERBY DAVIES'
sir A safe and s,jRE
REMEDY FOR
l|g| Rheumaiism,
Nouraigte,
I ” Oiat^tisa,^
y Toothache
tMMEiillr Headache.
FOR SALE BY ALL BROGOKTf
f’Y hwK or r.-BTT *rei , !u..r tin b .1.1 t 4
:T, Lt tir, til 3n Tt “‘ *^l
IVj.h, rr,., Hpv. . ,1..... ,r, 1.,., Ni;v,.u YET ■■
Srn.l 0.N1.Y ill ' ■..%!> is f.r J. I 'OZA- jT A:*
Pi If* nft - IHHAEys uqror,
11 k\ NAOU!.\UU4. ILi I,
and fl lv* of th* laic- Di
H mSS t-iSI V&’ S Sharp, of Miaaiaaippi, who „;ic
of T Xe Fl 3 , t f rou 2^*"^ l ßouthm ,t th
JriT Thelma SSS*
Mil M Co.
aud N*w York.
MILL & FACTORY SUPPLIES
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.
YOUNG MFN Le s ra Earn S4O to SI 00 <
I oUilu iiEUi* month. Giiidua'es guaiaritet-d |iavinf
•tEc***. Addi*M VALENTIN'S BROS Jaucvii!*>. Wi
mmmm
(Bndoremd and reeem-t
mended by the medi-1
eel pro/eeeioti, fer B
Jtyep epeia , OenerntS
Debility, Female Hie B
eaeee, Want of Vital- 1
My, Mervoue Droetra- a
tion, and Convalee-W
eenee/romFcrere, Ae/
CELLULOID tfk
SYE-CLASBES. N
Representing the choicest selected Tortoise
Shell and Amber. The lightest, handsomest
and strongest known. Sold by Opticians and
Jewelers. Made by the SPENCER OPTICAL
Iff’O 00.. IS Malden Lane, New Tetk,
Tf vou arc a man sßl3wlf Y Oll * rt ‘
sfilß V of Business,weak- TfjjSay man of let
tsTened by the strain of WgM ters toiling over niid-
SSa voar duties avoid night work, to res
[-3 i t imulants and use Hi tore brain nerve and
S hop Bitters. H waste, use Hop B.
P If vou are young and B suffering from any in-
R| or dissipation ;if you are mar
§3 ”., and or single, old or ■ young, suffering from
§* poor health or languish King on a bed of sick
m ness, rely on HO pB Bitters.
H Whoever you are, Thousands die an
fg whenever you feel fl’ nually fr om some
8 that vo u r system form °f Kld ne y
P needs cle-using, ton-disease that miglft
m or stimulating, IjSR have been prevented
Is w ithout intoricnUng, |§p ft by a t imely use of
p e Hop Hopßltters
£ 2}'"!?/*°dfsease 1 I" 9 ™®"* 1 j s an absolute
% 1 V A 1:< IT HTI and irresistn
■ tb . e s ; 1 /' a Sy IjH II r bie cu r e for
Ifcoirels, blooff, *iHU l drunkenness,
Deer or nen.es 7 , j|| j use of opium)
You will be j niTTmf! tobacco, or
eared if you use 1 (111 If l* nancotkg.
Hop Bitters f fftA
Ifyouaresim- If : i M
t>’y weak and )|j i iin/rn gists. Scndfor B
fow spirited,try 8 : NEVER Circular.
it■ i it may Ii r— * ■ i hop bitters ■
1 r,?:.*tfs;|FAlL
saved hun-{Mj Roe better, M. r, ■
For Two
Generations
The good aud 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 aH other
liniments put together. IVhy ?
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 tho afflicted part to sound
and suppie health.
r i k‘peslti. 'immrau
I , t*n yof EcßWind. II Eng. Lltoratur*. I l’r Ini MriotN
{ 3 ."> I’cro 12iuo vola. I Jliuio vol. handsomely VI mftl
Vcloth; ouli bouud, for only 60 ct*. ■ ft-*.
XAN H. ATT AN BOOK CO, II W. 14th St., M.T, P.O. Bn MW
■RSJTY
Pi
il/ES ;m
it (? (t * week In foot own town. T*n# and M
'•P U ‘re*. Add ua B. Eiiurt it C*., /ortkad, Md
S * WASTED for lb* Zetland rMtaiTitit.
il ing Pictorial Book audßlblat. rrtoet reduced 33 pf
.■out. National Publiahipg Cos., Philadelphia,, Pa.
*B79* Wbbk. *l3 a day at horn* suiH made. Ooatiy
dP t Outfit fie*. Address T&oi A 00., Augusta, M*.
$5 to S2o
SLYON & HEAVr #
Monroe,'cor. of Stat3 St., Chicago, ju
send prepaid to any address, their
AND CATALOCUE, f
881, 190 paces, 260 Encravincs off ,
uments, Suits. Caps, Belt*. Porn-ft -j' 1 ’ ■ JWV
Epaulets, Cap Lamps, Stands, Af-aBE
i Major’s Staffs and Hats, Sundry
Outfits, Repairing Materials; also In- Jf Yl
s Instruction and Exercises for Amateur // I
>, and a catalogue of choice Band
CHlllai and .TevviY
AND ALL DISEASES
Csaarnd by Malarial Poison Ing of tk* Bl**4.
A WARRANTED CURB.
\ i id&i 1 .00. ftp *]• t>jr (lU
SOUTHERN STANDARD
COTTON PKESS.
Over Fifteen Hundred in Use.
('mu he operated by hand, horse, steam or
water power without alteration. W;s
awarded the tirst j.rtmium a* Bt. Louis
KrbulMsrul and Vbchanicol Association,
anil L spiral State Fair Association, Austin,
Texas, 18^0.
Trice of Power Press, complete - * sllO
“ “ Hand Power “ ... 100
“ “ Power Irons “ . . . . f.O
“ “ Hand Power Irons “ ... 4t>
Send for circulars. Address
Southern Standard Press Cos.,
MERIDIAN M*Ss.
TANARUS) CONTRASTED EDITIONS OF
- REVISION
' ontamingthe r.ld and new version*, in parallel eol
iinin*. ihebeet and cheapest illustrated edition of the
lev se>l New Testament. Millions of people are waiting
toi it. ito not be deceived by thef'heap.fi.hn publishers of
interior edition*. Nee that the copy you buy contains 100
! flue engravings on steel and wood. This is the only con
t rust• cl edit on. and Agents are coining money selling
! j - AI.KXT.N YVANTAiO. Send for circulars and ex
tra terms.
i Address SAnoal Pci,luhito Cos., Atlanta, Oa.
Cyclopedia War.
, L !^ r * ry ofl niveraal Knowledge
j now completed, large type edition, nearly 4u,000 in
ever v department of huinsui knowledge, about 40 per cent,
j ChAmberij’a Kncyclopoedii*, 10 per cent.
larger than Appleton’s, 20 per cent larger than Johnson’s,
' a mere fraction of their cost. Fifteen Urg* Octavo Vol
nearly 13,000 pagea, complete in cloth binding,
m naif Russia, S2O; in full library marbled
; edge*, $25. Special term*toolub*.
SIO.OOO REWARD tb# months of July and Au
gust. Svnd quick for sp*Wmn'pages and fall paitii’iilajs
io AMERICAN BOOK EXf HANGE,
Jons B. Au>w, Manager, 764 Bn>advray, New York.
BOA RUING. -Suites and single rooms. Mod : ate pri
ces - K '• VOX, 144 Madisou avenue, New York.
JADY Agents waited in every State and County tor
-J Rubber Specialties for Ladies. Quick sales: good
profits. Address
Publishers 1 Union, Atlanta, Ga Twenty-moc^Sl.
iPoiHANTi^ass-sr^
Mt* England CunieriiUory and (ollrge of
Ml .*!(• is seat FREE. Apply to E. TOUBJSE, Bos tec,
iiirts. •