The Middle Georgia argus. (Indian Springs, Ga.) 18??-1893, November 17, 1881, Image 4

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Dead Leave* and Their Uses. We very naturally admire growing leaves, and cannot help a feeling of sad ness when they wither and fall. A cas ual look at the fallen leaves gives us the idea that their work is done, and that therefore He who has wonderfully created them permitted them to decay. But those who give more than a passing look find that, though their ornamental life is over, their useful life is but be ginning. You pause perhaps, and for a moment wonder how dead leates are utilized ; but so many varities are used that it would be impossible to name them all, so we will only refer to the most common. Of these it is only fair to state that many of them are not allowed to wither on the tree, the reason being to preserve a larger amount of the es sence of the leaf. For example, the leaves of the tea plant are allowed to grow to a certain stage, and are then gathered and dried quickly in the sun.. Of course, every one knows that the death of a leaf is usually caused by the drying up of the sap, on which it depends for nourishment; so that by forcing the leaves to d:e more quickly than they naturally would, more of the taste or es sence of the leaf is retained. And so dead tea leaves are of use to provide Dr. Johnson’s favorite beverage, “ tea.” Of course, there are many different kinds of tea, but they are not under our consid eration ; sufficient is it if you consider that that most common of all commodi ties is simply dead leaves. Next, let us take tobacco, as being an article in common use. This plant is a native of America, and is supposed to have been first brought to England by Sir Walter Raleigh, who taught his coun trymen to smoke it. The leaves only are used, and great care is taken in its cultivation to bring these to perfection, and the drying and preparing for use is a long and difficult process ; but no one looking at a cigar or the usual tobacco can for a moment doubt its being any thing but dead leaves. It would be a long and difficult task to name all the dead leaves which are used by herbalists and doctors ; blit many of the more simple kinds of the class of leaves knqwn as herbs are of great use m cookery, such as thyme, mint, sage, etc. Having mentioned these individual leaves, you will probably say these are very few ; not a hundredth part of the leaves there are, and granting them to be a hundredth part, what becomes of the ninety-nine kinds left ? Many leaves are allowed to drop off the trees and decay to a certain extent, and are then used for manure to enrich the ground, that it mav bring forth more leaves, which all in their turn will also decay. Then, again, it is an acknowledged fact that the decayed vegetation of centuries —in fact, whole forests which have died and been replaced—go to form a large proportion of our coal. llow Hottenstein Has iseat. “ How do you dink de cotton pisness vill come oud dis year, Misder Hoffeu strin ? ’’ said Herman as he dusted off a shoe box, and arranged an overcoat on a pile of clothing. “ Veil, dot vasa pisness,” replied Hof - fenstcin, “vat I don’t like to exbress myself aboud, und ven efer I dink uf de money vat I advanced, und vat I nefer get aay more, I gets so mad dot I feel I viil die righd avay mid de aboplexy. De first dime dot I vent in de cotton pisness, I keep a leedle sdore in de gountry, und —nefer mind hanging up dose bants, Herman, de Hies vas too bad. If you hang upsomeding vite dey vill speck plack, und if you hang up someding plack dey vill speck vite—l dink dat no von can svindle me, but I vas misdaken. Herman, dake my advice, und if you have a sdore in de gountry don’t advance noding on de cotton crop. I vas svin dled dat vav.” “Who vos it svindled you, Misder Hoffensteiu?” “It vas a nigger, Herman, und his name vas Isam. My gr-r-aeious, efi. ry von says he vos de best nigger in de whole gountry around, und I advanced him cloding, shoes, brovisions, und a dollar und a half musket for vich I charged him only nine dollars, und he vas to let me buy all of de cotton vot he makes. Von dey I dell him if he gets de first cotton of de season in he vill get a bremium on it, und lie says he vil haf dree bales a veek before any von else. \ell, it vasn’t long ven von day lsam, mit a wagon und a couple uf mules, brings dree bales of cotton to my sdore, do first uf de year. A couple uf de bales veighed eight hundred mid de oder nine hundred. I knew de cotton vould bring dwenty cents a bound, so I gif Isam den cents for it, und shust as soon as I buy it Levy Colien offers me fifteen cents, but I only vinks at him und ask him if he dinks I vas more greener as a grass hopper. My gr-r-acious, Herman, vot you dink, after I shipped de cotton I found out dere vas a couple of old cook stoves in von bale, und aboud seex hundred bounds uf an old vorn oud saw mill in de odors, und Isam vas in Arkan sas, de tief. Ven de beople found it oud dey all laughed und said it vas a shoke, und I got so mad dot I didn’t sell dot cotton to Levy Cohen for fifteen cents, dot I vos in bed a veek mit der rliuematism. Herman, l don’t vant nod ing more to do mit der cotton pisness.” —W. O. Times. A Modest Request. ** Darling, wake up and stop snoring,” said a Detroit woman to her husband. “Eh? Whazza matter now?” he asked as he half raised up in bed. “Won’t you please stop snoring? If you only knew how homesick it made me I’m sure you would.” “ Homesick ! How the deuce can my innocent snore make you homesick ?” “ Why, you know, darling, that the home on the coast from which you took me, a joyous bride, was only a half a mile from a fog-horn, and every time you snore it remiuds me so of home that I just can’t stand it. Please lay on your side and have some little respect for my feelings.” And then the brute spread himself out on his back and in five minutes had her bathed in tears as visions of the old home crept upon her. By contracting a severe Cough and Cold, I compelled to give up my daily work and keep to the house. A neighbor recommended me to try * bottle of Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup ; it was procured and used ; to my astonishment relief was instantaneous. Enw. W. Clayton, Waverly, Md. Why Is It 1 Why is it that a drunken man has such a fancy for the railroad track? He will go miles out of his way to find one, and rarely misses the object of his search, even on the darkest night. When found he is invariably seized with an uncon trollable desire to take a nap there. There must be something peculiarly soothing in the contact of the cold iron rail as he fits the back of his neck to it, and adjusts his body between the ties in preparation for slumber. And frequently it is the last, long sleep that he takes. But what draws him there? Sober men wander about for hours sometimes, hunt ing the depot in daylight, but the inebri ate can strike a railroad track in two minutes when it is as dark as tophet. And he generally gets there ahead of the train, too, though the ♦rain retali ates by getting a head of him before the deal is over. A Holyoke, Mass., exchange alludes to the cure of D. 0. Judd, Esq., U. S. Supervisor of Postal Card Manufactory, who was cured by St. Jacob’s Oil of rheumatism and neuralgia. —Br idgeport (Conn.) Standard. Chocolate budding. Mix one quart; r pound chocolate and three table spoonfuls flour with one cup of milk smooth, add one-quarter pound fresh butter, melted, and cook all till it loosens from the pot. Add one egg, stir all together, and let it cool. In the mean time mix the yolks of seven eggs with one-quarter pound powdered sugar, add iug first the cold dough, then the beaten w hites of seven eggs and a little pounded vanilla. Put the whole into a buttered form and let it cook tw r o hours. For the sauce take one-quarter quart cream, one quarter quart milk ; cook both with one quarter pound sugar and a little extract vanilla. Add to the mixture three yolks of eggs to which have been added one teaspoonful corn starch and a little cold milk, and let the whole cook for a few minutes, stirring all the time. MB. CrEOBGE UKAKE, 48 IWK Street), Indianapolis, lud., suffered terribly with ‘water’ rheumatism. Housed St. Ja cobs Oil and was entirely cured.— N. Y. Spirit of the' Times. Opposition. A certain amount of opposition is a great help to a man ; kites rise against the wind and not with the wind ; even a hard wind is better than none. No man ever worked his passage anywhere in a dead calm. Let no man wax pale, there fore,because of opposition ; opposition is what lie wants and must have, to be good for anything. Hardship is the native soil of manhood and self-reliance. He who can not abide the storm without flinching lies down by the wayside to be over looked or forgotten. Almost Young Again. My nv thes was ffi cted a Iona; lime with neuralgia, and n dull hsavy inactive condi lion < f the whole system; her.cache, nervous prostration, and was almost helpless. No physicians or medlciuss did her any good. Three month* ago she began to use Hop Bitters with such good effect that she setms and fetls young again, although over seventy years old. The great advantage in raising willow trees for fuel and shelter consists in the fact that they grow during a longer period in each year than any other trees. Willows are the first to put out leaves in the spring, and they continue to grow till heavy frosts occur in the fall. Willows grow finely in spite of a rirntrae* ’ 1 “Golden Medical Discovery” (Trade maik registered) is not oniy a sovereign remedy lor consumption, but also for consumptive night-sweats, bronchitis, coughs, spitting of blood, weak lungs, shortness of breath, and kindred affections of the throat and chest. By druggists. When Mr. Reed, one of the English Commissioners, was in Manitoba, he was asked what he thought of the coun try. He answered that he was an En glish farmer, and his thoughts were those of the lamb in the presence of tho butcher. Get Out Doors. The close confinement of ail factoryfjwoik gives the operatives palled tacts, poor appe tites, languid, miserab e feeling*, poor blood, inactive liver, kidneys and urinary troubles, and ail the phys cians vnd medical men in the wcrl i cannot help them unless they get out of doors or u*e Hop Bitters, the purest and t esf. remedy, ©specially for such CUS3S, having abundance of health, sunshioe and rosy c >eeks m them. They cost but a trifle See another column.[Christian Register. A Toad Fight. I always keep a number of toads in my orchid-house for the purpose of de stroying vermin. The other morning, whiie watching two males, I was highly amused at seeing them have a regular set-to fight. They went at each other other in a regular scientific manner, sparring and boxing with their fore paws and butting with their heads. After a while they seemed to get tired, coolly sat down and viewed each oiher with great complacency. From my earliest days I have been in the habit of watch ing the ways of toads, and never saw them fight before.— Dr. Patterson. Unlike other cathartics, Dr. Pierce’s “Pel lets ” do not render the bowels costive after operation, but. on the contrary, establish a per manently healthy action. Being entirely vege table no particular care is requned while using them. By druggists. The person who labors simply to kill time and get his wages, has an irksome task before him, but he who labors with a view to enhancing his employer’s inter ests, finds employment pleasant.— Bill Nyc, Reslorc*! from a North Greece, N. Y., April 25, 1880. Dr. It. Y. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y.: Bear Sir — I feel it my duty to write and thank you for what your “Goluen Medical Discovery” and “Favorite Prescription” have done for my daughter. It is now five weeks since she began their use. She is more fleshy, has more color in her face, no headache, and' is in other ways greatly improved. Yours trnlv, Mrs. MARCELLA MYERS. A letter preserved in the JNew York Historical Society has the following sentence in it : “My son’s wife is lately dead, and is very much lamented by all who knew her; I could have wished, had it pleased God, that his mother-in-law, who is riper for the other world, had gone before her.” Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. Sahara Not Below Sea Level. The curious cosmograpliic error has has long prevailed that the surface of the great Desert of Sahara, in Africa, was depressed below the ocean level. Some have seriously suggested that a canal be cut from the Atlantic or the Mediterran* ean, by which the desert might be filled with water, anew sea formed, inter communication facilitated, and com merce increased with the interior. Dr. Lenz has recently lectured in Paris dn his journey from Morocco to Timbuctoo. He. says the great desert is actually a plateau about 1,000 feet above the level of the ocean, and that nowhere is there such a depression as formerly imagined. The fossils found are fresh water kinds, so that the Sahara is not the bottom of a dried up sea. The timid who have ap prehended that the revolving earth fiiight be thrown out of balance by thd placing of a broad, deep sea on the sur face of the great desert, may calm their fears. The name Milwaukee is derived from an Indian name Malm-ali-Waut, signi fying a council ground. Notice. From the 10th of October. 1881, to the Ist of July, 1882, genuine Rock Spring Water will be supplied te cus tomers by Ellis & Cos., of Bailey Springs, Ala., at the following rates: Ten gallons in anti-corrosive Can. .$5.00 Same can refilled at 4.00 Five gallons in anti-corrosive can.. 3,25 Same can refilled at 2.50 Nine gallons in glass bottles 7.50 Reasonable freight and express rates are given by all railroads. This water has been known for nearly fifty years as a sure cure for Dyspepsia, a sure cure for diseases of the Kidney and Bladder, a sure cure for all curable cases of Dropsy, a sure cure for Scrofulous cases of the Bones or Skin, and a certain de stroyer of the terrible thirst for intoxi eating drink that overcomes so many worthy resolutions. Deprive a drunk ard of his dram for three days and meanwhile give him plenty of Rock Spring Water, and he Won’t want the whisky. Don’t you think it’s worth trying? If you do, drop a postal to Ellis & Cos. It will cost only a cent* No man can go to heaven on another man’s goodness. Every ticket of ad mission into paradise is marked “Not transferable,” or, in the language of the colored thinker, “No gentleman ad mitted unless he comes himself.” Man is like a musical instrument—he is-worthless unless in tune. At times the system needs the strengthening ef fects of a tonic; the blood needs rein* forcemedt, and the vital energies stimu lant. Iran in various forms has been in use for pears, aud no better combination of it with other vitalizers than Dr. Har* ter’slron Tonic is known in this country. It is a safe and reliable remedy in Dys pepsia, General Debility, Want of Vital ity, and the usual disorders attendant upon a prostrated condition.—Burling ton (Iowa) Gazette. “Jack Russell,” the celebrated hunt ing parson of Devonshire, England, is eighty-six years old, and since 1814, when as a young freshman at Oxford he saw his first wild red deer killed at Ex moor, to the present hour, lie has never missed an opening day of the hunting season. He often after a hunt rides fifty miles to his home. Men and women that pursue sedentary occu pations need to take Kidney-Wort. “There’s always room at the top” said the customer when he saw the way the grocer filled the measure with potatoes.— Steubenville Herald. Pure Cod Lived Oil made from selected livers, on the sea-shore, by Caswell, Hazard A Cos. t Now York. It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer if to all others. Physicians have decided it superior to any of the other oils in market. Bed-Baza, Boaefcea. rats, oata, mi°e, ants, flies, insects, cleared cit by “Bough on Bats.’' 15c., druggists. HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE fs the BEST SALVE for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Bheum, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all kinds of Skin Eruptions, Freckles and Pimples (Jet HENRY’S CARBOLIC SALVE, as all others are counterfeits. Price 25 cents. *>R. OREEN’S OXYREN.ATEIT BITTERS Is the best remedy for Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Malaria Indigestion and Diseases of the Blood, Kidneys, Livo r , Skin, etc. DURNO’S CATARRH SNUFF cures all affections of the mucuous membrane of the head and thi*>nt. DTI. MOTT’S LIVER PILLS are the best Cathartic Regulators. CSS* Gabbikli) and Family, elegant engraving, 19x24. Sent for 24 fstamps.) Sheeny & Cos., 33 Barclay at., N. V. (Thif Engrsriug represent* the Longs in • healthy data.) A STAMM) REMiM IN MANY HOMES. For Concha Colds, Croup, Bronchitis and all other affection* of the Throat and LOGS, it atanda unrivaled nd utUrly beyond all competition IN CONSUMPTIVE CASES approsche* so near a specific that “ Ninety-five” per cent, are permanently eared, whore the direction# are strictly complied with. There is no chemical or othsr in gredients to harm the young or old. AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL. IT CONTAIN* N9 OPIUM IN ANY FORM. J. N. HARRIS A CO., Proprietors, CISCINNfATI, O. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Go TO French girls if von want instruc tions how to get even with a faithless lover A n exchange tells of how ono o-irl was j it‘Hl bv a young man who yielded to the temptations of a very large marriage portion. She laid her plans well. On the eve of the betrothal while the affianced pair were feasting and mak ing merrv, she sent a letter to the bride* elect announcing that she had poisoned all the food which furnished forth the banquet. The grim statement was read aloud at the table and naturally caused a panic. The financee and her mother were carried out in hysterics, and doc tors were summoned from far and near. One of the dishes was analyzed and found to contain no trace of poison, and after further experiment the company realized that they had been made the victims of a practical joke. But the sight of working emetics and stomach pumps cooled the young mans passion for his second anu wealthier love. COMFORT BY THE WAY. On- The small boy's idea of genuine \ ( I/! comfort and happiness was to be V ] If pitched into a pond of ice Cream wiiose [ ifi If shores were made of sponge cake. 1 .'I i Hi s misery was the absence of these I lr l\ I pleasant substances. That boy simply i If: i* I represents humanity. Com fort is ap |/ J f 1 predated, by contrast —we enjoy a 111 i ' a thing in proportion to our conception f/li all; of the disadvantages of our depriva iV | tion thereof. This applies to material I l! things as well as to immaterial Cor>- j v -|f siderations. The icicle, whose ap- I BP pearance in the wintry cold and Id $ bleakness sends the shiver of discom ry I I fort through the observer, would sug- I l i notions of the coolest comfort in .* I | •> II hot and sultry days of the Summer k ,11l season. And in both seasons —that r fr in which the icicle flourishes best I I and in the one wherein its absence is I I conspicuous—that most uncomlorta | ble and torturing disease, rhenma nflil It tisra, plentifully abounds, causing lj |r J pain arid agony to myriads of people. M | And yet it need hot pe tnus anlictive \j if sufferers would only use St. Jacobs W t Oil, the surest, safest and speediest YliAit remedy in the whole world for the ali eradication and cure of rheumatism I 1 7 | and all painful ailments. The follow y {! big from the U ochester (Ind.) Sentinel ' / shows how some people attend to their f -!J rheumatism: “ Yhfcri a young hus- I'Jff baud had gone from home, hfld with m| i fond solicitude telegraphed his little h\ I J wife—‘What have you for breakfast, J. / Il l and how’s the baby?’ he received the u W brief,practical and suggestive reply— ij M ‘Buckwheat cakes and the measles.’ |] We have the report of a <jase in our 7I midst, not where measles was in the f bill of fare, but where sciatic l helvhia- I tism confined Mr. J. Dawson, the well known Eoch ester druggist, to his room for a long period. It was stated J to our reporter in the follow ing Words: ‘The senior member of this firm was J | attacked with sciatic rheumatism 111 about December 10th last, and for four weeks succeeding Feb. loth, could S scarcely leave his room. He used St. Jacobs Oil, and is now able to be at hisplaceof business,feelingnotmuch the worse for his recent affliction. _ The inference is convincing, The I run which St. Jacobs Oil is having , is, we say, m,pr ectdented, and the ar tide is "rapidly displacing all other 1 rheumatic remedies as fast as its vir -—e tue.s become known. “Edgar T. Taige, Esq., druggist, {I writes us from Chicopee Falls,” says Y the Springfield (Mass.) I\qmblic-an, f| “that Mr. Albert Guenther, under Wild’s Hotel, has used that rennirka (l7 5, ble remedy, St. Jacobs Oil, fora severe VV ease of rheumatism, and it cured hifii las if by magic.” DiBULLS COUGH SYRUP KOSTfIJEIft &ITt?RS One o! I lie Iloasonable Platan res Of life, a properly c-ookad meal, fiords litt'e or co present enjoyment, and u uch tudse qaent torture to a cor firmed dy-pep ic. But when the chronic indigestion is combatted with Hostetter’s Scratch B tters, the food is ea'ea with relish, and most, mportant of all, is assimilated hy and nourishes the system. Use this grand tonic and corrective r lso to remedy constipation, billiousces, rheuna tism, fever and a.^ue. For sale by all druggists and dealers gen e rally. To the People,°h f e South. KINGS MOUNTAIN and Its HEROES. A History of the Battle, Get. 7, 1780, and the events which lad to it, after two years spent in preparation, is new published and ready for delivery. The anthor, Ltmax C. Dxapzz, LL. D. has spent 40 years in gather ing materials for this work, whioh abounds in stirring re eitals of adventures and bafr-breadt h escapes, alike inter esting to eld and young. The decendenta of such men as Campbell, Shelby, Sevier, Cleveland, Lacey, 'Williams, Hambright, McDowell, Winston, Hammond, and their officers, now living by the thousands throughout the South, will welcome this permanent record of that glo rious event which turned the tide of the Revolution. The work contains 6l2 pages, on fine paper, beautifully bound, with seven steel portraits of the Heroes, and numerous wood cuts, with index of 5,000 references. Jrice. &4. sent postpaid on receipt of price, or may be had of Agents in every county. PETER G. THOMSON, Publisher, So. 179 Vine street, Cincinnati, O. %* Agents Wanted for unassigned territory. Send jar terms, circulars and sample copy. wyr S Catalsgse fVes. AMress, Slaatfare Y¥ •£* X WaklaUW Amerits* Watsk Qs, JHuburtk, fa. £A MONTH-AGENTS WANTED-0O b** selling articles in the world ; 1 sampleTVs* Y/wfwtJ Address Jay Bronson, Detroit, Hick. In per day at Some, Samples worth 05 free. )w 10 Address Stinson A Cos., Portland, Maine, 3.000 AGENTS WAITED TO FELT, THE LIFE OF GARFIELD! His early life and career as soldier and statesman ; his elec tion and administration j his assassination ; bis heroic struggle tor life; wonderful medical treatment: blooo poisoning; removal to Elberon ; death, etc. Profusely Il lustrated. Splendid portrait of Garfield, bis wife and moth er ; p^e,it, of the shooting; the sick-chau.ber; Guiteauiu his cell; the surgeons arid the Cabinet. The only com fie' and authentic work. There ie a fortune for agents tintin tat field unth this book. Outfit 50e. Speak quick. Address HUBBARD BROS., Publishers, Atlanta, Georgia, MJPIi T si. 's. 8 ., r ssx formerly Bangor, Mf. E‘ NCVCLOPADIA = TIOUETTESBUSINESS Tin. Is the ohespee* tm4 only eomplete m3a r.ll.ble work on Etiqnette M Socml 11 tells how to perform Il the redone dntlee of lilo, end ‘“ iis iaer H wiwirirLmsea* o>e Allmi*i AW Z tSTS&E SSraSSjE wnt. National rubltehing Cos., Philadelphia. P MILL and FACTORY SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS. BELTING, HOSE end PACKING, OILS, PUNPS ALL KINDS, IRON PIPE, FITTINGS BRASS Gooߧ. STEAM GAUGES, ENGINE GOVERNORS, Ac. Send for Price- List. W. ft. DILLINGHAM & CO., 143 Main Street LOUISVILLE, KY. Smb mm mm ± TZAR end expense, to agevto Sit Outfit free. Addroaa I I I P. O. Yicktry, Antmln, We, jtTv* * week In your own town. Toma* end * <<■ { ){ ) free. Add esa 11. Hallktt A Cos., Portleud, Me. 1-LAYN! PIiUSS PL4YS! 11. AYS! For Reading Clubs, for Amateur Theatricals, Temperance piavs Drawing-Room Plays, Fairy Piays, Ethiopian Plays Qu'de Books, Speakers, Pantomimes, Tableaux Lights; Magnesium Lights, Colored Fire, Burnt Cork, Theatnditl Fae preparations, Jarley’s Wax Works, Wigs, Beards, Moustaches, Costumes, Charades and Paper Scenery. New catalogues sent free, containing mil de scription and prices. fcJA.TI U BO• FREJICII A- M)>, AS d-L Uth st.< >MV York. DIVOKCIS* in any State, without publicity. Send stamp for the lHiVj and. It. t-LMS, Chicago. miTVri-X-DL3 use our Faient Roller Com. A llJLix I JultiY position. Obpers soucitko. FRANCIS A LOIITBBI,, Mew York, A NEWBOOKBY MARK TWAIN 1 THE PRINCE ANO THE PAUPER. Agents VV anted! For tetlfls nud territory apply to Southern Publishing l'o.< Box 110, New Orleans, La. From the Cradle t<> theCrave.-A’w AK./ \ elegant engraving, size 19xv4—‘.arfiekl & fairulv TvjtC \ trophic rrenea of hi* life. 22 fine cut* art the one heavy elate. The family group occupies the centre place. • AfiSlfcySd single copies 25c., $6 per hundred—3oo nOO sold in ytlGlKaSrdfi Kew York and Brooklyn in 2 weeks. J. V\ . Shkkiiv & Cos,, Publishers, 33 'Barclay street, N.Y.—Agent* wanted everywhere. Orders promWly filled. IF Y"OtJ WAMT a Religious and Family Newspaper, subscribe to THE METHODIST DRS. WHEELBR and CURRY Editors. TWO DOLLARS A YEAR- New Subscribers for ISS2 will receive the paper the rest of this year t-,Address U. W. nOUHI.AN, Publisher. Ne. 15 Murray Nt., New York. COTTON ISKING ,0T SF™ SSMSBJ KIK3 OFCOTTON for Cotton Gin use and general plantation purposes, not found in any etfur £njn'nf in the world. Jot Paxnuhlets and Price List apply by mail to IH j AULfMAN & TAYLOR COMPANY, Man sneLit. O HIO ira vm &n*. EMORY’S STANDARD CURE (l PTs B E ’ ?tabU Sugar Coated Pills. gs gJK A tK'—'i*; ing romedy for Fkver and || pTs H y A9CS?Li!4>iotTS’irs3, and all Mai.abial EJ H H Contains no Quinine, Mer cury or Poisons of any kind. TwO-L Sent FitEE. Ad * dress Standard Cure Cos., 11-1 NassaQ t>?„, York City. MFN V T° a would le*r felegeaphv lr V* v 1 v iTICIi f onr months and be certain of a ill?* At km, address VALENTINE BROS., JanesriUe, Wis. 4TfmQ kevolviyra. free. bJ •r—t Ytrt. TTarfcs. glttskfrk. Pa. P mM.ll °PM w, W9&D. 2 . torv of England. | \ Eng. Literature. I Pge feij | 15 l’gs ISmo to Is. I I ISmo vol. hanUgomaiy £ 3 cefokp., v cloth; only bound, for only h cti,. ft j>re<. MANHATTAN BOOK CO , is W, 14th 8t„ N.Y. f.O. Boa | Q Fancy Written CARDS for %6e, ; oo for 90c.; 10k XeU for $1.76 by mail. 0. K. BERCf, Cresoo. in. Ike a Purest and ilts-t Medicine ever Made. AcoB m binatlon ot Hops, Buchu, Pflan dralcso and Dandelion, with all the beet and most c surative properties of all other Bitters, j makeß\the greatest Blood Purifier, Liver Reg u |\a tor, auo Life and Health Restoring Agent ontepMßHEHSfiSsaß'ekrtlL No disease c\sn possibly long exist where Hop k Bitters are usNted,so varied and perfect are tneir y operations, They give ca w li V's sal vigor to the aged and Infirm- Toall wnoeo Employments cause irregulari- j ty of tne i owelsorWk urinary organs, or who re- ; .quire; n 'Tonic and mild'StbnuJ&at, 5 Hop is ai^invaU^® able * Without ntox- Icating. !'2®iSk. Nomaiter ..hatyourfeVcllngs or symptoms { aro what tho disease or nilWOent is use Hop Bib- ters. Don’t wait until you a% re sick but if you i only feel bad or miserable,a bs® t} iem at ouce- | Itmay save yourlife.lt hasa s ay ed hundreds s fSSOO will bo paid for a caßs® they will not a cure or help. Do not suffer U Ol l fct your friends i suffer.b'it use and urge us ® Hop B | Remember, Hop Bitters is n<^^ v de, drugged i drunken nostrum, blit the Medicine ever mad ; the FRIEXU and HOPE” and no person or familyNA should be without th ;m. ESSsae?Ki^ D.i.C.H an ab= ilute and irresistible cure G ol forDrunkenness.useof or.i’un, tobacco narcotics. All sold by dmgplsts. Send B V for Circular. Hop Bitters 31 fg. Cos., Jp j Rochester.N.V and Toronto. Ont. ef a'Sfez?" *• - . wm m l t i>i/nrm‘ft and rrl‘OVl\ ** /• LtLded ov ihetnedi- 1 lcellee/r ffwers^ - */ MgaasaiKaar- —-3-. - i-f-maswaasea l .u j.. —■ ' .. , Gbnxlemen: i. ..... suiiutng from f9no;ul debility to such u.i .. t nty 11 or was exceedinglyiw'' deasoma to n.o. A vacation of a month di 1 not, give me much r<: lief, 1 <,.i t > rnry, v fo J? W u~ increased prostration nnd sinking chilis. At this time lbe,;,,n tho uvo of your l::r*x Tonic, f- • wfnen i r alized almost immediate and wonderful results. 'J ; <o <1 r- returned 11 found that my natural no was not permanently abated. I have used three Imttlosc.f the '! n; -. Kinco u it i hm ? don- twice in bor that I ever did in tho same time during ir.y idne-.-s and vi ; :t doublo the V !i the tranquil no and vigor of body, has come also a clearness of t nought never before enjoyed, ifthe Tonic hr.? not dona u * work, I l:aow not what. I give it theerfoit. .1. P. Watsov. Christian Oar, i, Troy. >■ _ . . . sa’-n. > ~..x ‘.nu-jap... ur Jt -XT. e: jn. r.mpec-jmirgaa3!WßßSWi3C ,iiis— —? < <n§ tturvose trltevtt f a loilic ts lIWCW.WJ'y./ *2 JU t - ’ttjax.x. - haagna; MANUFACTURED BY THE DR. HARTf-R MEDICINE CO., MO. 213 NORTH WAIN STREET, ST. 10 (H* HSASTHMA & CATARRH REMEDY. et ween life anU death with ASTHMA or PHTHIStP bv arciaTni rijd 11* 1 wss compelled during tf.S'"ffive y!r. ef VoylT] bTm to tttoamyekur sth; my sufferings were beyom] description. In despalisl eipertmeuud o end berbe sMdnhatlng tbe medicine thus obtained. I fortunately discover** STUM A or CATARRH,’warranted to relieve the most stubborn case of Asthira ifiicst tie dowu to ren *ud sleep conafc>rt*My. Any person not fall) caWW return the remainder to the proprietor and tfe money will be refimded, er CHARGE. Slionld yonr drti U i.t not keep the remedy, 1 f the price SI .00. tor sale by all Dr.rtsts. Address D. LASGEUe ft*- Jinaeer, 46 Aster Hense OWeea, Hew York City. PETROLEUM JEW^^j^ Used and approved by the leading p | | The most Valuable I wL I^^* Family .at 'm sa from Timllis—uch as §£ A I Fcmsds Ytiar> S, W M Jl I *'?*' Tot Hag Cci.4 Cf3k, iff WQlßtM** ,rgw. r 2S**i%Z#Z.’J* raoxsHSid USBJSICQNFCTOSL ud IhphtJL*ri., Hu An MfTMkbltfgra oft^ TI J "**■ MM4 M Mat asm tf U r fMdg tug ViuwLLu. i*tnu^7* I>iW AIATTIFmiBJPmA iTFOimpfi. 86 CJOTTS A 10^ HRS. LYBIIE. ninu, OF LYNN, MISS. gggg gggggggggggggg Woman can Synxpathizo with Woman. LYDIA E. PINSCHAM’B VEGETABLE COMPOUI7I;. Is^Positiv^ure for all tlioee Painful Complaints and Weßbie* Wll •oeomnoa to our best female populatWs. it will cure ertirely the worst form of FcmaieCom. plaints, all ovarian troubles, Inflammation and llctn Hon, Palling and Displacements, and the consequent Spinal Weakness, and ia particularly adapted to the Change of Life. It will dissolve and expel tulnors from the uterus It an early stag© of development. The tendency to ci cerous humors there is ohecked very speedily by its uss, It removes faintness, flatulency, oestroyaall craving for stimulants, and relieves weakness of fho storuMh. It cures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Ilrostjtttiot, General Debility, Bleeplessness, Depression and Indi gestdon. That feeling of hearing down, causing pain, weight and backache, is always permanently cured by Its u<a It will at all times and under all circumstances ast la harmony with the laws that govern tho female system. For the goto of Kidney Complaints of either set this Compound is unsurpassed. I,TUI A E. I’INKTIAM’S VEGETABLE COM. POUND is prepared at 333 and 335 Western Avense, Lynn, Mass. Price $L Six bottles for $5. Sent by mail in the form of pills, also in the form of lozenges, o receipt of pxdco, 0* r=-* tw - ozuier. Mi f. Pinkharn freely answers an letters of inquiry. Send for paraph let. Address as above. Mention thi* Paper. No family should be without LYDIA E. TTNKHAITJ LIVER PILLS. They euro constipation, biliousna* and torpidity of the liver. 25 cents per box. ag* Sold by all Druggists. “S& An Open Secret. The fact is well understood that the MEXICAN MUS TANG LINIMENT is by far the best external known for man or beast. The reason why becomes an “open secret ” when we explain that “Mustang” penetrates skin, flesh and muscle to the very bone, removing all disease and soreness. No other lini ment does this, hence none other is so largely nsed or does such worlds of good. [Ruts IN ES S ITn iy E RSml 0 fe'l TJId Agpnts wanted for life of President 0f- MQnTID m held. A complete, faithful historT from (Till il!> I! I cradle to grave, by the eminent biogra- UIiAXAUjIU. pher, Col. Con well. Books all ready for de li very. An elegantly illustrated volume. Endorsed edition. Liberal terms. Agents take orders for from 20 toso copies daily. Outsells any other book 10 to 1. Agents never made money so fast. Tiie book sella itself. Experience not neces sary. Failure unknown. All make immense profits. I’rivat* terms free. Geokgk Stinson & Cos., Portland, Maine. One Dollar uSk. yhah. The Best Wtory Pnper In tbe Week 48 column! of or rfna.l end oholcely-seleoted reading matter, printed upon large, plain type. Issued Weekly, and mailed to any address in the United States, postage paid, for One Dollar a "Year. Evfry new subscriber get* A premium. Send for sample copy. Address CHICAGO LEB&EB. Chicago. HE . Publishers’ Union, Atlanta. Ga .t orty-five. ■l. CIV WHI WASTE MONEY I Tonnr mn or <43. w I If Tim wkjit a (,Q.iur!ab4 wouitacba, flowir-t PYC whiekera or a rrowfti of f*an- on ball T'A Vf I O hea-lB or to THICK BN # STFN(rTHXN a tA INVIGORATE ai iMIR anvwfcrre don’t b# LsaSF Try tbe rreat gruTriv-ti fry bmf NE\ER VET Failed. Bnd only hex cknts y> vt. j. gunza- LFZ, box lOty, Boeiuo, Maea. iiewart ail tomtU m. S*Z*’ V J Hoaltl. -*f Woman In tfr® Hopes of tl i- Race.