Newspaper Page Text
and Western
V*
J RAILWAY.
of this road are run by Central
I
<9L r
CARD IN EFFECT NOY. 14, 1880,
t ■eager trains on this road will run
., —^ m follows i
• fttt India Fast Mall.
SfUUtt botr*. MUDOT.
. 8 88 pat Lv.......Savannah Ar 11 66 am
1009am Ur .......Wajroross......JLv. 916 am
19 90 pm Lv.....Jacksonville.....Lv 7 00 am
4 150pm 40|aa,Iiv.......Sanford.....;Xv Air.Tampa 115 am
.......Lv 800pm
HantSteamship Una.
Fri, Tues.. Bun.,
.p m
Thors., Bat
Mon... .p m
Mon....a Thars., Sat
* m
Pu llman buffet ears Nsw York to Tampa and
Tampa to Washington.
Maw Orlaana Exprata.
• I3S& ......Savannah......Lv ....Jesap........Ar 618pm 7 58 pa
84 am Lv. Blaolufenar.......Ar 5 S3 pm
190 am Ar. ■ ■Wfcross. .....Lv 5 06 pm
HII am Ar. ..Callahan.. Lv 2 47 pm
H nooo Ar Jacksonville Lv 2 05 pm
TOO am I.v Jaekfoo villa. Ar 7 86 pa
Lv......Callahan.. Ar 9 67 pm
lit’.. • Wayoross......Ar 4 40 pm
.... Homer fills ..... Lv 9 66 pa
n if am Lv ........Dapont....:..Lv 9 40pm
04 Lv .......Valdosta....... Lv 2 66 pa
_Lv..... f ig FU* Ar.....Thomaaville.....Lv Quitman.......Lv 2 145 28 pa
pm
jHlilin ll84pa Ar......Bainbridg At....Chattahoochee....Lv e..... Lv 1126 1 1 80~am an
Tiipm Ar.... ...-Albany........Lv 10 30 am
Pullman buffet o*ra to and from Jaokson
Vtu# and New York, to and from Jackeonville
*and New Orleans via P< nsacola, to and from
* Jacksonville and Louisville via Thomasville,
Atlanta and Nashville, and Jacksonville to CKi*
Mnnati via Jcsup.
East Florida Express.
1 80 pm Lv. Savannah. . .Ar 11 65 am
8 20 pm Lv. .. .Josttp.. . .Lv 10 21 am
8 21 pm Lv. Blackshctr .. Lv 9 34 am
• • •• 840 __Wa cross.......L 15
_ pm Ar. y v 9 am
pm Ar.......0'Italian.......Lv 7 33 am
pm Ar.....Jacksonvi le.....Lv 7 00 am
If fm 00 pm Lv ......Jacksonville.....Ar 8 55 am
5 41 pm Lv Callahan........Ar 8 11am
if, 8 7 46 68 pm Lv.....Humemlle......Lv Lv.......Waycrosa.......Ar 6 6 67 10 tm
100 pm Ar.......Dupont........Lv am
pm 4 55 am
8 20 pm Ly ..... Lake City ...... Ar 10 15 am
8 66 pm Lv .... Gainesville......Ar 10 05 am
7 20 pm Lv ......Live Oak......Ar 6 40 am
10 0 01 10 pm Lv.......Dup Lv ..Valdosta.......Lv int........Ar 4 60ara 06am
pm 4
10 84 pm Lv......Quitinftn Lv 8 85 am
11 26 pm Ar Thomasville.....Lv 2 50 am
12 50 am Ar........Camilla Lv 1 39 am
1 65 am Ar Albany Lv 12 60 am
Pullman buffet ears in and from Jack son
villa and Bt. Lunin vis Thontasvf lc and Albany.
Omoinnatti Montgomery, Nashville and Evansville, ana
to Juckriottvilie via J< sup. ■
Pullman sleeping cars to and from Bartow
and Montgomery via O tines ville.
Albany Express.
8 45 pm Lv. ,. . S tvannah. Ar 6 10 am
|1 26 pm Lv. .....Jcanp ... Lv 8 20 am
1 90am Ar.. . Wuycro-s.. Lv 11 80 pm
125 am Ar.. ...Callahan .. Lv 9 05 pm
6 16 am Ar.. ..Jacksonville. ...Lv 8 15pm
8 15 pm Lv.. ..Jacksonville.....Ar 6 15 am
9 05 pm Lv.. . ..OiUohsn. Ar 6 25 am
2 00 am Lv . ,... WayrroKtt Ar 11 20 ptu
8 20 am Ar.. ., ..Dupont......Lv 10 00 pm
640 am Ar . .. Live O t k ,.I.v 7 20pin
10 05 am Ar.. . G tiiicsvillo......I.v 3 55 pm
(015 am Ar. .. .Lake City Lv 3 20 pm
8 6 27 45 am Lv....., I.v . .Valdosta.......Lv Dupont ......Ar 9 35 80 pm
am 8 pm
6 10 am Lv.......Q ii’m m.......Lv 7 55 pm
7 15 am Ar......Tiiotnaivillo......Lv 7 00 pm
11 10 am Ar........A lmny........Lv 4 00 pm
fet Slops »Kc$ at log all to ill tr stations. Ptillm’n bnf
cuts to nml from Ja kson vflle and
Washington, XiOnisviil'.iitud and to nml frtun Jacksonville
and Ir ui«vi le via ’J'iiontasville
and Mann Montgomery. buffer Pul man buffet cars and
boudoir <• irs via Waycross, Albany
and Macon, and via Wnycrosa, Jcanp and
Mocon.between J.ictsirivtllo nml Cincinnati.
Also, till p -h. i conches bctw<oii Jack¬
sonville and Cli'ilta * >* n.
ThomasvilJj Exprcss.
6 15 am Lv.......Way roue......Ar 7 00 pm
7 837amLv...... 88 am Lv........Dupont........Lv Vdl a'a.......Lv 6 20 15pm pm
4
9 15 am Lv.......Q tumm.......Lv S‘80 pm
10 25 am Ar......T o n *v llo......Lv 2 15 pm
Stupa at all regular a id flag toncioua.
Jesup Express.
8 46 pm Lv......H iv.tntta.lt......Ar 8 80 am
8 10 pm Ar Jesup Lv 6 25 am
Btopsat Ticket* all irgn ar nml ting aim ions.
sold and *!ei p ng cat berths • cured
at the Fffaseitgcr .Station
. W3I. 1’. HARDER,
Gon’1. Pass. Agl
M. A. FLEMING Surw*. int<. ud-mt.
East Tennessee, Virginia 8 Georgia i, I*
13. 1*87.
Northward.
Gave Atlanta......... eeaeseeeasssstv P~ HEsas 1 00 j) m
ArrlTe Rome...... 1 4 00 p m
Leave Rome...... 1 P 4 0 1 ]> 111
Arrive Dalton......... P 6 27 p m
Arrive Ch.itanooga............ P 7 00 pm
(inkAT KkNNhSAW ROUTE— BAHT.
Leave t battauooga..... * 9 15 pn,
Arrive Knoxville....... PW 1 10 a u
” Bristol.............. 5 45 a ir
” Roanoke........... 2 12 35 p m
“ Natural Bridge. » 2 02 pra
“ Luray.......... B» m 6 03 pra
” Hagerstown...... 3 10 00 p ra
" Harrisburg...... •VW l 20 a n
“ “ Philadelphia-.. New York........ tn 4 45 a m
7 00 a nt
Leave Roanoke 2 20 am 12 30 it'll
Arrive Lynchburg -.............. 4 88 a n 2 30 p m
” * Washington................... 12 00 n’n 9 40 p ra
Baltimore. 1 27 pn 11 36 p m
•• Philadelphia 8 47 pn 3 00 a m
-.
” New York 6 20 pn 6 20 a ui
.........
Leave Lynchburg... 6 45 e xr 3 05 p in
► rrire Burkvillo-.................... 9 20 an 6 27 p m
' : . Norfolk... Petersburg .................... 11 16 a n 7 15 pnt
••aaoeaeeoeoaoaaeeeeeo 2 26 pn 10 00 p in
Leave Hagerstown. .. 12 50 n’n
Arrive Haltimnre 3 45 pn
•» hhil New ^delphift- .......... 7 49 pm
^ 1 O f* ••«•••••••••••••••••• 10 35 pit
VfA MEMPHIS AND criARLKSTO^T l ;:
^1 l^ertTChattanooga.................. Memphis 9 25 a m 7 10 p in
vs ................... 9 15 pm 6 10 am
Arrive Little Rock....... 12 55 pra
VU K.C. F. a A Q. R. R.
Leave iferapbla........ 10 45 a m
Arrive Kansas a City............................... • 5 20 a ra
VIA C ikCINNATl SOUTHERN R’Y
Chauonooga. _
UaV* 8 40 a in 7 10pm
Arrive I^uiBVlUe...«« .............. 8 45 pm 6 iO a ra
S:ate= Agrive Cincinnati........ i 7 09 pm C 50 am
i 6 60 a m 6 50 pra
I 7 45 a m 6 40 p in
N. C. A 8 ten.
1 29 p m 11 50 p m
Arrive LouUTille...... 7 00 pm 6 20 a m
......... 2 26 am 2 20 pm
AlriveBt. 10 50 an 7 05 a in
Lou la................ 7 40 am 8 00 pin
MB Wewefs b°0p- leave as follows: Atlanta at
|b *• n»- for CincinnaU. altcrnatlu«
IlMtt Boudoir (aleepor leaving at 10:30 p m.
MS for Qpaopancr at 8 o’clock); Rome at 7:i5 p.
iftoo ftv York VteLynchburg; via Shenanhoah Chattanooga at
a. m. for Washington Valley; via
burn OhotiaaoMaat 7:10 .p. m. lor Kuai
i ba tu mo og a at 709 p. a for Utile Rock.
L" "" 1 ** - "TliWP^DtiD.
No. 16 . No. 18.
ataeMwge • team 3 45 pm
9 20 am 7 06 pm
■«*»■ — «A- 9foam 7 20pm
8 20 pm 1 10 am
S 2* pm 1 SO am
tr -— —7 86 pm p* f**» 6 16 am
rasa 111 96 pm i$iz
iwmmm an. ml 1 46 am
m 6 46 am
■
m m Ml
>■< m
2 .
ae
,•
p
PRETTY SHOP GIRLS.
An Interest! ng Sight on Lower
Broadway When They are Out in
Force,
[From New York Letter.]
It is a pleasure to walk up Broadway
from Chambers to Bleeckei street any
bright afternoon from 5.30 to 6 o’clock.
Nearly dtfchin every those one limits of the big buildings
has factories on
ovenr floor, where hundreds and thou¬
sands of girls are employed in making
clothing, fancy boxes underwear, neckties, cloaks,
and other articles of luxury
and necessity. ; Pretty much all of them
are between the ages of 14 and 25. By
the time they are 25 they are either mar¬
ried or swept away.no one knows where.
Most of these faotories dose at 5.30 and
tho girls hurnr on their wraps and start
for home, and great numbers of them
live in Brooklyn and New Jersey, where
board in New and York, lodging is much cheaper walk than
and so they down
handsome Broadway to the of ferries. They are as
a set girls as can i>e found
anywhere. Like nearly all American
women, they have the knack of dressing
becomingly, shown and their trim and shapely
figures They are off to good advantage.
do not look discern tent, if their
bright and cheerful faces are any crite¬
rion, and they chatter merrily os they
have pass along two or three at a time. They
the independent bearing of girls
who know they earn their own living
and are not dependent on any man for
support. Some of the prettiest are ac¬
companied of olerks by young men—perhaps some
the who have taken a fancy to
them. Nearly all of them have been
pupils the in the public schools. They read
newspapers and can talk cleverly.
A vast amount of rot is printed about
them, but in point of fact they are as
jolly and be contented found a lot of young women
as can elsewhere in the world.
There is a great outcry on the part of
theatrical, short-haired and atmospheric
philanthropists, and at timos, because fac¬
tory employment shop and girls do not give up their
week homes as servants
in uptown families. The girl knows
what she is about. Hie bedraggled
maid of all work, nagged by a silly mis¬
tress, abused bv a horde of snappy chil¬
dren, and saddled with a thousand cares,
has one night out a week, when she has
an coaoliman opjiortunity hostler. to lie courted by the
or The working girl
is her own mistress absolutely from the
time she loaves the factory at 6 o’clock
in the the following evening until slio returns at 8
absolute, morning. Her indepen¬
dence is and during her hours
freedom she is as much a lady as the
wife of the President. She visits hor
friends and receives the calls of men
who are by no means to be despised in
the matrimonial market. A great and
welcome change has come over publio
opinion respecting faith and women to who have out the in
courage, the world and make energy go
themselves the ar¬
biters of their own futures instead «f
moping friends and at home, trial a burden their relatives. to their
a to
That workingwomen command in many
instances the highest respect cannot be
denied by any man who 1ms an intimate
knowledge of New York life. There are
ladies of high culture, finished accom¬
plishments in and many boarding-houses graces of mind and
person the of New
York who are the popular loaders of lit¬
tle social circles despite the fact that
There they are grades employed of labor, during and tho day.
are women
have learned to look the world in the
face and fight for tho l>est fields.
A QUKim Persian custom is thus de¬
scribed by a Persian student nowin this
country, Yarvo M. Veesnn. In a lecture
ho told how the Persian youth was al¬
lowed to take one kiss from his future
wife on tho eve before their marriage,
provided he could find her iu a dark
room full of other ladies. The l&diee
were silent and sympathetic when he
told how, although ho was engaged for
three years, ho never got one kiss in all
that time.
RTJ1TSWIO
AND WESTERN
RAILROAD.
TY TT ROUTE.
r*.?v Shorter Than any Other
>tween Wayoroee
and Albany,
Ox and after Sunday, November 15ik, 188<
patsenfor train* will ran a* follow*;
FOB THE WB6T, NORTH AND SOUTH.
Brunswick... Mail. Express.
Marsh .It 6 00 am 7 60 pm
Pyle*’ , . lv *6 27 am *8 16 pm
Jamaioa ..... . lv 6 64 am 8 48 pra
Wayn**ville.. .It 7 82 am 9 28 pm
Hoboken...., .lx 8 20am 16 27 pm
Sohlattervill*............lv _ ,, 8 41 am*10 46 pm
........................ar 9 05 am 11 16 pm
S tvannah, via 8. I AW.. ar 11 65 am 6 10 am
Callahan................ar 11 26 am 6 25 am
Jask* onvill*..... .„... ar 12 00 m 6 15 am
JsoksonrlUe, via S. F. A W^lv 7 00 am 8 15 pm
Callahan................ It 7 83 am 9 05 pm
Savan nah .............. It 7 06 am 180 pm
Wsycro** via B A YFI. —' It 10 00 am ll 80 pm
P« r *oo................. It 1115 am 12 48 am
Al»p*ha................ Ty.................. It 12 80 pm 1 53 am
It 2 03 pm 8 11 am
D*ri*...................ly Willingham ............. It 2 44 pm ........
8 00 pm ........
*> b »°y........ a r 9 28 pm 4 45 am
Columbx*.......... Blakely, ria C. R. R *r 7 20 pm
Macon............. ar 1 55 pm
Atlanta............. lr P m 9 04 am
w lri ar 1® am 1 06 pra
'► ,„. . w A . A . I 84
ou ...... ar am 2 86 pm
.i."r^LVNv:::^ « isis
L r
Ciasiunati, via Cm. 8o... ar 6 45 pm 6 40 six
FROM THE WEST, NORTH AND SOUTH.
Oiaelnnsti, , . Mail. Expre**.
via Oin. So.... lv 7 65 am 6 10 nm
Chattanooga, Louisville, via viaW. LA N.....ar 7 60 am 140 era
«kA.. lv 905 pm 8 05 aiu
Marietta ................lv 1 28 am 12 58 pin
Atlanta, ria a B. B.......lv 2 25 am 2 00 pm
Blakaly,................. ............... v.... ... 11 SO am
lv 7 20 am .
Albany, Daria.............. via B AW.. lv ns
Willingham.,....... omShC:
•umner.. • • IlfiSMISS mu
Ty Ty.. • ••••MS*
Alapsha.,... lv SIS
Pssrson.... lv
Wsycros*....,,.. ar
•avannsh, Osilobon....... via8. V.AW. . or ®OM
Jacksonville.... nr
ar
OallohaS... Jacksonville, ria BFAW. S58 oo
Savannah.. *•o v • a s*« e**a e o*(o
Wajoroea, via BA W..... Jv ssss^soetoioo 8 IS am
BetOsMsrvma ......... . lv
WajwSHilk........ Hoboken......... lv SRI
sssst lv It pm 4 Horn
Jamaica Fylsrf Hexik lv 83pm 185 are
......... lv
Bm&AWtlkoo*........... it • 40
•Stop Fnrcbaae on BiflteL tidkete at the station,
»4 save
Mira fare oollooted upon tbs train.
The mail train steps at all & 8 W. stations,
Ooaneotioas mads at Wayaross to and from
IsjUg, *11 points Savannah, Florida 8 Wsetsrs
Pnlhtton Pol*4M Blosplsg and Mann Bondoir
rioeptog saw npon JneksoavUIs sad OinoinnaU
A. 4. tfiSSia V * 11.0
.•
TEMPERANCE.
- The Bell is Ringing.
With lungs of firs sad ribs efsSasL
Low-whiapering valve and bumming wheel.
See showers of flame and clouds of smoke;
Look out, the warning bell is ringing.
Now all aboard,” now off again;
No drones can reach the moving train.
Look out, the danger bell is ringing.
Take baed, the engine of reform
Halts not in sunshine nor in storm,
Behind T ,^a*f r behold ®ed° i a’B the eong tottering the mass thrones axe singing.
And ad&eed multitude of drones ;
The bell at progress now is ringing.
The slave has doffed his yoke and chain
The drinker will not drink again,
Glad news the harnessed li ghtning 1 ! bring.
Oppression We casts its scourge away.
see the dawn of a bright day.
The golden bells of heaven are ringing.
—Geo. W. Bungay in Temperance Advocate.
The Pope on Total Abstinence.
aygra? « u o? grass:
To our venerable brother John Ireland
Bishop Pope. of St. Paul, Minn., Leo XIII, ,
♦ tolic benediction. BmmntK-Health and apos¬
The admirable works of
piety dren and in charity by which our faithful chil¬
the United States labor to promote
not only their own temporal and eternal wel¬
fare but also that of their fellow citizens, and
which you have recently related to us, give to
all us exceeding have great consolation. And above
and we zeal, by rejoiced to learn with what energy
means of various excellent
olic sociations, Total Abstinence and especially through the Cath¬
destructive vice of intemperance. Union, you combat the
well known to how For it is
able is the injury us both to ruinous, faith how deplor¬
thatis and to morals
to be reared from intemperance in
drink. Nor can we sufficiently praise the
prelates the Plenary of the United Council States who recently in
of Baltimore with
weightiest claring it to words be condemned this abuse, de¬
and fruitful a perpetual to all incentive to Bin
a root evils, plunging the
families of the intemperate into the direst
ruin, and drawing numberless souls down to
everlasting that the faithful perdition; who yielded declaring moreover
intemperance became to this vice of
non-Catholics, and great thereby hindrance a scandal to
a to the
propagation Hence of the true religion.
we esteem worthy of all commen¬
dation the noble resolve of your pious associ
tions, stain totally by which they pledge themselves to ab¬
from every kind of intoxicating
drink. Nor can it at all be doubted that this
determination is the proper and the truly
efficacious remedy for this very great evil;
and that so much the more strongly will all
be induced to put this bridle upon appetite by
how much the greater are the dignity and in¬
fluence of those who give the example. But
greatest of all in this matter should be the
zeal of priests, who, as they are called, to in¬
struct the people in the work of life, and to
mold them to Christian morality, should also,
and above all, walk before them in the prac¬
tice of virtue. Let pastors, therefore, do
their best to drive the plague of intemperance
from the fold of Christ by assiduous preach¬
ing models and exhortation, and to shine before all
as of abstinence, that so the many
calamities with which this vice threatens
both church and State may by their strenuous
endeavors be averted.
And we most earnestly beseech Almighty
God that, in this important matter, He may
counsels, graciously and favor your desires, direct your
assist your endeavors; and as
testimony a pledge of the divine protection, and as a
of our paternal affection, we most
lovingly bestow upon you, venerable brother,
and upon all your associates in this holy
league, Given the apostolic benediction.
day of March, at Rome, from St. Peter’s, this 27th
in the year 18S7, in the tenth
year of our Pontificate.
Leo XIII., Pope.
Temperance Men and. Astossina
There is this to be said, almost always and
everywhere, in favor of the friends of tem¬
perance, radical—they whether observe they the be conservative or
laws and they con¬
demn assassination. Occasionally some hot¬
head has tried to blow up a saloon, yet it mar
.justly lie affirmed that no man ever lost his
life at their hands because he disagreed with
them. All the violence and all the murder
done in these eases have been done by the
advocates of the alcoholic beverage, and the
drink has nerved them to such brutal cow¬
ardice as perhaps no man in his sober senses
was The ever law guilty of of.
alcohol is bad within as well as
without the courts. The murder of Dr. Had¬
dock at Sioux City,la, would have put to the
blush a professional assassin. It was cow¬
shot ardly to tho last degree, the Doctor being
in the back of his head by a man in am¬
bush. There was no doubt as to the guilty
man; yet the whisky party of Sioux City were
tho wholly in sympathy with him and packed
jury box to suit themselves. Tne jury
wore during permitted to mingle with the publio
the progress of the trial, were made
drunk by the friends of the accused, *«d
gave out their von lict unofficially before they
began their deliberations. One man, politely
mentioned by the lriends of the assassin as
‘•rn old crank,” refused to acquiesce in their
discharged; judgment and the probably jury disagreed and were
and that is the last le¬
gal action that will be taken in the case.
The latest assassination of a Prohibitionist
occurred at Haverhill, prohibition Ohio, and is as good
an argument for as might be pre
r 'litcxi. Dr. W. T. Northup hod incurred 1 the
enmity of Thomas McCov, a saloon keeper.
McCoy headed him off and McCoy’s two sons
opened! Th fire defended upon Northup with shotguns.
> doctor himself with his pocket
knife and injured the old man so that he may
dio. victim Young would Pierson McCoy, although fearing that his
escape, he had been
flrtyj at eight times, three loads having taken
effect, says an account, “ran up to the doctor
and placing tho gun almost against his breast
fired both barrel-, tho loads passing entirely
through tho doctor’s ltody ana tearing out the
heart. One would think there could be but
one sentiment regarding such cowardly u»
sussination as that; yet—can it be believed i
—tho account sa ys public opinion is divided,
and in sympathy again, “the liquor element in the town is'
with MeCoy, who they think has
Iteen persecuted.’’ The persecution consisted
in arrest of McCoy on the doctor’s complaint
for violation of the local temperance law. He
was a believer in law and sobriety and he
tried to have them observed, and for that he
^, 8 K; l r.'d^ h ' 6s ’ pitTtb “ w<raldw
Tin're liave boon a good many such cases.
They have become too numerous. Their effect
will be to create a feeling in behalf of temper
i 1 anee as a means to good living and individual
safety before that it. Tho may eventually sweep everything
practice nothing temperance wrong. They people must preach be ana
t 'Cted. These assassinations must pro
cease or
there will be such a storm about the ears of
those who are in sympathy with them that
they New will York wish they had never been born.—
Graphic.
Corn. Select varieties sure to mature
tn a short season. Mixing the seed of
several kinds, ripening at near the same
time, certainly increases the crop. Plant
early, tion and near or far apart, in propor¬
to the richness of the land, but not
too close.—Roots. It will not do to de¬
lay sowing parsnips. If it comes hot
they glee will burn up. Sugar-beets, man
and carrots will bear sowing later,
but the crop is hurt, (let as long a sea¬
son for roots os possible. Oj clean
ground where flat culture is a^lmissible, lrat
there are many weeds all kinds of
roots should bo sowe 1 on rolled ridges,
over ed in plenty May of manure. Potatoes plant¬
be safely cut generally do well; they may
to two or three eyes to the
set—Soiling and crops. In some localities
oats peas may be sowed. Use any
leafy Marrowfat kina of oats, and if the soil is rich,
good peas. They give twioe os
a crop as Canada pits, though
those are best on poor soil. | Sow oora
in drills; os a stand-by sweet oorn is the
beet. One bushel to the acre will give
best results on rich land, and never pat
oariA Repeat on sowings. other—you waste yoar iim*.
POPULAR SCIENCE.
A compound of common salt, alum,
■oluble glass and tungstate of soda is suc¬
for cessfully the extinction used in Austria and Switzerland
of fires.
cooled Preliminary while tests have shown that iron
ity passing a strong through current it of electric
was was increased
tility. fully one-half in tensile strength and duc¬
M. Lacombe, a Frenchman, has suc¬
ceeded in taking long-distance photo¬
graphs by fixing a telescope in front of
the objective of the camera. The apparatus
promises usefulness to tourists and other
amateurs.
French physicians claim to have found
berculosis out by experiments upon rabbits that tu¬
may be cured by the administra¬
tion of tannin. Over fifty cases of phthisis
have been treated by giving tannin in
doses of from two to four grams daily,
and improvement was perceptible in two
weeks, the patients increasing in weight.
Professor Davidson says that the Lick
telescope fainter will unvail stars of one-degree
by the magnitude than can be detected
instruments now in use. This
would be no small gain. A correspond¬
ingly increased power ought to add to
our planet knowledge of Mars, which is the
of most immediate interest to ob¬
servers on this globe.
Dr.Guillassee of the French navy, in a
paper has given on typhoid fever, says: “Coffee
after having us dispensed unhoped-for satisfaction;
it, wc find, to our
great surprise, that its action is as prompt
as it is decisive, No sooner have our
patientstakenafew tablespoons of it than
their features become relaxed, and they
come to their senses. The next day the
improvement is such that we are tempted
to look upon coffee as a specific against
typhoid fever.
The vibrations of even severe earth¬
quakes, says Professor G. II. Darwin, are
very short. Brick and stone chimneys
will be shattered by one of a quarter of
an indi. As a rule, the disturbance
originates from one and a half to seven
miles below the surface, and very rarely
at steeply greater sloping depths. Earthquakes occur on
shores, and are most fre¬
quent in winter, when the changes jn
barometric pressure are greatest. The
moon, also, probably has some influence.
The weight of the air and of the tides
act upon the situation as a trigger upon
a gun. The internal heat of ihe earth
is doubtless the moving cause, and the
gradual its manifestation. uneven shrinkage of the surface
The extreme delicacy of the sense of
smell in man has been shown by a series
of Fisher interesting and experiments by Messrs.
Penzoldt. In an empty room
of some two hundred and thirty cubic
small metres capacity, and tightly closed, a
be quantity detected of the particular substance
to was thoroughly mixed
with the air, and the observer then ad¬
mitted. Among the different substances
which were tested in this manner, it was
found that the very smallest amount re¬
cognizable was .01 of a milligram of mer¬
captan. This quantity diffused through
the room sufficed to make its distinctive
character appreciable in the small volume
of air coming in contact with the nerves
of the nose, from which it was estimated
that the 1,400,000,000 part of a milligram
of this substance was recognizable—an
infinitesimal quantity, passing conception,
but which science declares to be a fact.
Celluloid.
- e Iron Age gives an account, pre¬
pared by Prof. Sadtler, of the University
of Pennsylvania, of the development
and method of the manufacture of cel¬
luloid. Alexander Parkes, an Englishman
invented this remarkable substance in
183;>, but after twelve years quit making
it because of difiiculties in manipulation,
although he made a fine display at th«
Paris Exposition of 1867. Daniel 8pill,
also of England, began experiments two
years after Parkes, but a patent of his
for “pyoxyline” dissolving the nitrated wood-fibre or
in alcohol and camphor .was
decided by Judge Blatchford in a suit
brought against the Celluloid Manufactur¬
ing Company to be valueless. No further
progress was made until the Hyatt Bros,
of Albany, N. Y., discovered that gum
camphor, when finely divided, mixed
with the nitrated fibre and then heated,
is a perfect solvent, giving a homogene¬
ous and plastic mass. American patents
of 1870 and 1874 are substantially iden¬
tical with those now in use in England.
In France, there is only one factory, and
there is none elsewhere on the continent,
one in Hanover having been given up on
account of the explosive nature of the
stuff, In this country, pure cellulose is
commonly obtained from paper makers,
in ihe form of tissue paper, in wide rolls;
this, after being nitrated by a bath of
mixed nitric and sulphuric acids, is thor¬
oughly washed and partially dried.
Camphor is then added, and the whole is
ground together and thoroughly mixed.
At this stage coloring matter may be put
in. A little alcohol increases the plastic¬
ity of the mass, which is then treated for
some time to a powerful hydraulic pres
sur •. Then comes breaking up the cakes
and feeding the fragments between heated
rolls by which the amalgamation of the
whole is completed. Its perfect plasticity
allows it to be rolled into sheets, drawn
into tubes, or molded into any desired
shape.
A Profitable Voyage.
The old-time sea captains of Boston
were a remarkable r$ce, and many of
them were eminent for business as well as
nautical qualities. Captain De Wolf,
who died in Dorchester a few years since
at the age of 92, was a member of the
noted De Wolf family of Bristol, R. I.,
and made in 1804 a very remarkable voy¬
age to the Northwest coast in the ship
Juno, a craft of 220 tons burden. Here,
after a profitable barter trade with the
Indians, he shipped his furs to his owners
and sold his vessel to an agent of the
Russian Government. Then in a craft of
twenty-five tons he made a perilous voy¬
age of 2,500 miles to the Chinese coast,
and thence overland to St. Petersburg, a
journey through China and Siberia of 6,500
miles. He was the first American that
ever passed through the latter territory,
and his history of the whole trip reads
like an exciting romance. After a three
yea is’absence ne arrived at home, and
was gratified to find that the handsome
sum of f 100,000 was placed to the credit
of that wonderful voyage .—Boston Budget.
The Tallp.
The varieties of the tulip are mourner
able; and the florist's lists include many
hundreds. In the East, before the 300
oped years of its Eurojican cultivation had devel¬
go’.d and susceptibility to these changes,
scarlet were its insignia of color,
and the poets gave to the fieTy splendor
the language of love. On the banks of
the Bosphorus, it is said, the tulip repre¬
sents those inconstancy which as well as ardor; and
grow wild in the fields of
Byzantium, with “petals fiery red and
centers black as though burnt, n say to
the captive beauty that she has kindled a
heart with undying fervor .—Hem Jerk
Post.
With Eradicated
repeated and powerful doers of quinine,
cnilla and fever, in aome one ef its veriona
forms, springs into active existence again,
often without Uto slightest apparent perfora¬
tion. To extinguish the amolderlr g embers of
this obstinate and recondite malady, no lew
that to subdue it when it rsges fiercely la the
system. Host otter's Stomach Bitters is all suf¬
ficient. Whenr every resource of the pharma
copoeia has bopn exhausted against it in vain,
the Bitters conquer it—will remove every lin
will °* J** “kw®* the Bitten .
the protect those brought within the influence
atmospheric poi «on that begets materiel
its attack*. Disorders of the
stomach, plamts liver bdi and bowels, are among the com
to apprehended from the use of mi
!*“* ***5^ b ^, water. the Bitter*. These are Rheumatism, both cured and
sypatioa and renal complaints eon
yield to Us
Base-ball Kina Mike Kelly of the “Bostons*
received a $600 watch from his admirers.
“I Love Her Better thus Lilt.”
bring Wcl'. then, why don’t you do something to
back the rose* to ner cheeks and the
light to her eyes t Den t you see she is suffer^
weakness? tr.g from nervous A bottle debility, Ur. the Pierce's resu t “Favorite of female
ot
and Prescription” life will brighten those pale cheeks
s> nd new through that wasting form.
If you lo\o her. take heed.
000,000 Cjueen Victoria has offered the sum of $&,
for the great Cape diamond.
Delicate Children, Nursing
Mothers, Overworked Men. and for all diseases
where the tissues are wasting away from the
inability to digest ordinarr food, or from over¬
work of the brain or body, all such should
take 8 cott’s Emumhon of Pare Cod Liver Oil
with Ilypophosphitrs* “I usad the Emulsion
, on a lady who was delicate, and threatened
with Bronchitis. It put her In snch good h> alth
and flesh, that I must say it Is the beat Emul¬
sion I ever used.”—L. P. Waddelx, M. D^
Ungh’s Mil ls, 8. CL
_
Th** d pendent pension bill will go to Con
trets in October again In a new form.
^If ^on have catarrh, use the surest remedy—
Of 0,000,000 women in Brazil only 500,000 can
read and write.
How Pale Yea Arel
Is frec.u ntly the exclamation o£ oni lady to
a’tether. The tact 1- not a pleasant one to
nav ment'on it d, but the act may be a kindly
one, tor s ts the rne address* d to thinking,
health, tppri-es and her of eads the Itor f cr. that reek she :s not therefor. in good
to a rra ori
Pallor Is almost a wvys attendant upon the
fit St stasis of cons impt on. The system is en¬
feebled. and the b ood <s Impoverished. Dr.
! lerce's "Golden M« d cal Discovery” will act
a< a tonic upm the system, niit inrich the im
ovcrlslted blood, ant restore idea to tho
cheek.
honors The King of S am hss conferred the hlghes*
on an Arnoric >n d nt. st.
Something New
And most important. IIal!ett& Co., Portland,
Maine, can fnrn’s > you work that jou < en d »
at t.reat pn>t t and li e st home, whneve jo t
are 1 C’tcd. Either s x all ages. At a P.
i ; and, \ve>*tboro, Maes., wri esus .hat he made
$00 profit in a single day. Every worker can
make from Jt r ito :>J5i«iid upw ards per day. All
! s new'. Caj ital not required; yurt » ti arted
f *e. Full i art'.culars free, tend your ad
dross ai ones.
Fo >D makes Blood and Blood mikes Beauty.
duces Improper li d bio dige id. tinn resulting of food in ne feeling essnrilv of full- pro¬
a
nesf* .n h ■ stomac acidity, heaitburn, sick
heads, h \ and other dyspeptic symptoms. A
cl iselv ci u it el life enuee-t indige.it io i, con
stipntiou.lil outness and loss of appetite. To
remove theso (r mblcs there is no remedy
equal tried and to Prickly proven to Ash be B specific* tters. It has been
a
If yon have tumor, (or tumor symptoms)
Cancer (or cancer symptoms),Scrofula,Erysipe¬
las, Sult-ltlieum, Cnronic weak nesses. Nervous¬
ness or other complaints—Dr. Kilmer’s Fx
ualb Uemkdy will correct and cure.
All Men are not Bad,
Neither are all prepared remedies unrelinb’e.
Tills s proven b - the rasnltg follow ng the use
of IK Harter’s Iron Tonic for Dyspepda.r i»u
;i a i m, scrofula, jav.n lice, torpid liver a id
i n r-t* weakness.
A Wonderful Machine and Offer.
To intro lace them w ; give a vay 1,0.))
opernti’ig Wwh n| Ma lines. No lab >r <r
wasltb ard. Be-t in tho world. If you want
onvwrite Too Nat onal Co., 27 Dey St., N. Y.
OauRtiterai, Wive* and Uolh«r-.
8end for eealeil. 1’nraph!*** Dr. J. on B. FVm Vi u • I>; -e Ut.lci. i.m, free, N.Y
•ecurely ir-h <•.
Relief is 'mnvd‘Mlt‘, an I a cure nure. PIso*?
Rt*m»*dy for O.OaTh. 50 1 .
Biliousness
fa more & mini at this season than any other. Tha
bitter taste, offensive breath, coated tongue, sick
headache, drowslneis, dizziness au I loss of apportta
make the victim miserable, an t disagreeable ti
others Hood's Sarsaparilla combines the best antl
bllious Rmedics of the vegetable kingdom, In such
proportion as to derive their best medicinal effects
without the least dietur tance to the whole system.
This preparation la so well balanced In Its rffo ts
that It brings about a healthy action of tha entire
human organism, restores the appetite, and over
oomea that tired feeling.
Dysoopsia and Malaria
“I had been elck for several years, being troubled
chiefly with dyspepsia and malaria. I had medical
attendance, but only grew worse, until one day la
February my wife brought me a bottle of Hood’a
Sarsaparilla, which seems to have entirely cured me,
as 1 have not boon troubled by any ailment alnca tak¬
ing It.”—J ohn Er8kime, Chillic jthe, Ohio.
“I have taken not quite a bottle of Hood's Sarsa¬
parilla and must say it is one of the best medicines
for giving an appetite and regulating the digestive
organs that I ever heard of. It did me a great deal of
good.’’—Mas. N. A. Stahlet, Canastota, N. Y.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Bold by all druggists. 91; six for Prepare l only
by C. L HOOD * GO., Apothecaries, Lowell. Mesa
IOO Doses One Dollar
■
npICKLYAsH Bitters
l
IT BAPURfUrVfffmBLE PROVUMTION
w. iPRICKCf ^pwcwyASH^i
ii 5ENNA-MANDRAKE-BUCHU
l IHO OTHER EqMAUFEmciOir RIMUiCS
i It has stood the Test of Years,
Jja Curing nil Disease* of the
BLOOD, LIVER, 8T0M
^ 5 ® | j ELS, ACH, Ac. KIDNEYS,: Itrurifi BOW- the
ss
Blood, Cleanses Invigorates and
BITTERS the System.
DYSPEPSIA,CONSTI¬
CURES PATION, JAUNDICE,
ML DISEASES Q BICEHEADACHE.BIL
KIDNEYSl TTVER 1 ^OUS a gS COMPLAINTS, t Ac
STOMACH I It its 1* purely Cathartic a Medicine
AND os proper
DniA/TT dties forbids its use ae a
PUW LLfll beverage. It is pleas
I Mtto the taste, and as
? Bren easily taken by child
AU.DRUGGISTS * nTn as adults.
PRICKLY ASH BITTERS CO
Bole anALtiiSAB Prgwitaoro, I I
Bt.Loms Orrx
LX. i . A
a ttaCtaoSMSon Jtetao»4MnfaM.
C a P c I N E
taMMlMOfAUXO
.Is
Spy Van tn at€4ol4»«riib»« Use meet Practical School Basin-m of Boo- Rda
nr M|.l|alU MO in IC to culara Soldier. No *b 1 fee lielta. nnteso S«n •ucoeesfub- i for cir
■ K. II. GKIJHTON 8 CO., Wasbioftoa, D. o.
Hr. F. E. Ha h, Adrian, N. Y.,ssys: *‘My
father was Tory lame with rheumatism. Mow
sr* waacored.” St. Jacobs Oil Price he is fifty no lamer cento than
-
The Woman’s Christian Temperance Union
of Hamburg, N. Y„ has adopted resolutions
land congratulating for having Mrs. drank Frances Folsom Cleve¬
dinner, oold water at a diplo¬
matic and because “she has the
moral heroism to prove loyal to God, the
church and temperanoe.”
▲t Biober, Laasan County, Cal., resides Mr.
Thomas P. Ford, who writes: “I can truth
folly say I have used St- Jacobs Oil in my fam¬
ily toe years, and find It a never falling rem¬
edy for all painful complaints.”
The poMoe of New York Cltjr shops; caused a “dry
keeper Sunday*’ dreseed ny raiding shop the ram and one saloon
his in crape inscribed. black
ribbons, “Closed and Account hung out aplackard Liberty!”
on of the Death of
1
V2
V
From the Artist who Took G. G. floffmaa’s
Photograph.
Hickobt, N. C.
I soa4 you to-day half dozen photographs of G.
8. Hoffman, of Conover, N. C., and I most say that
year medicine has done wonders fir Mr. Hoffiaan.
It seems like raking the dead to life; be looks fat
and hearty now, and they tell me when he com¬
menced yoar medicine he was nothing but skin and
bones. The sore on his breast Is healed over, and
yes can see the one on the forehead Is healing up
from the top. I wish It had been to that I could
have taken It when he was at his worst, but I could
not leavo my efflee, and he lives come distance from
here. Yours Bespectfslly,
A. McIntosh.
This man, G. G. Hoffman, has rben by the ns. of
Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) to his present won¬
derfully improved condition. In a short time hit>
boneless forehead will be fully hesle t, and he will
stand a monument of humanity raised from the
verge of death. Few persons ever recOTet from
*nch a low state, being on a dying bed from tbat
fell destroyer, blood poison, with the bones of bis
forehead rotted and taken ont, SJ^xS Inches, by the
doctors, and given ont to die. From skin and
bones, wrecked by blood poison, to health and
sound flesh, is the work of B. B. B.
Not many snch desperate cases may be found,
bat when ‘hey are they should not despair of re
covery, as B. B. B. will care them.
When this medicine can care such extreme cases,
is it not reasonable that it will care all cases or
blood poison of less violence, as it has done in
thousands of instances ?
The Mayor and Docrors of Conover will
verify tho awfnl condition fi-oni which Mr.
Hoffman was raised. B, B, Co.
A* Lndleo I Those dull
• tired looks and feelings
.
* 6peak Remedy volumes I This
<y corrects all con
*- and ditions, vitality restores brings vigor
SW and
My.o yt,V and back beauty. youthful bloom
~ rj / rropnred *t Dr. Kilmer’sDis- Druggi*}*.
W- _ o’ X <x. J FSNSir.Y, WnKhsmton,N. Y.
OV* X Letters of tnoutrr answered.
* OulUoto Health (Sent Free).
A CO A
r THE ONLY TRUB
IRON
TONIC
mil
the
OR of of Appotito, YOUTH Indigestion,I,nek Drapapaia.Want of
Strsnctb and Tired Feeling ab¬
solutely cured: Bones, receive nt»
. A oles and nerves Enlivens the mind new
Ms force. supplies Brain Power.
csi&l'HsF® end
LADIES oaf# and speedy Gives clear, heal- ON
TONIC a core. attempts at a count erf mt
thy eompleiioh. only add the Frequent popularity of the original. W
aoi tng to theOm«ntAi»AXD Best,
expert meat—gat
■ lm Headache, sample Doae and Dream Book
tiled on receipt of two oentc in poetaga.
THE DR.HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY.
St.Louis. Mo
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
A Great Medical Work for Young
and Middlo-Agod Men.
% &
KNOW THYSELF,
DVBM8HED Jr CAL JNSTITlTI'E, bribe No. PEABODY 4 Bullfinch R1EDI- Sr.,
Beaten, Man. W)l. II. PARKER, M.D.,
Consulting Phy.tdon. Nervous More than one million opiee
•old. Mrematura It treat* Decline. npon and Phveh-nl Debility,
Exhausted Vitality, Impaired
Vigor, and I m purl tie* of the Blood, and the untold
miseries consequent thereon. Contains 3H0 pages,
substantial emboss d bin tin?, full gilt. Warranted
the best popular medical treaties published In the
English language. Price only $1 by mail, postpaid,
and tamplefree conceal if ad la send a plain wrapper. Address IUutirativs
you now. at above.
Name thu paper. *
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE. P ^ or* runic. roa
The best • J Shoe In the
world. Best material,ityllsh, /
perfect flt adl KJongreas, •tries Button Euuala A>/
or Lace Stf toe. /C'/O A
ahy S5 or Shoe. Coats
notblngto examine them VT .nVnJ' -* (U
at your doaler’a. 1 «oud . OJ
Information free i j
how to obtain tbesa (/ 1
celebrated If dealer S3 Shoe* doe* / o’ ^
your ✓
not
thorn. keep
W.L.
DOUGLAS’ SEWEO.^^^^
•2.50 Shoe ejualo $3 Shorn advertised by otbei
Arms. Boy* all wear W. L, Donplao’ S2 Shoe. Be
■ar* stamped of fraud. None genuine unless netne and pries
are on bottom of each Shoe.
W. L. DOUGLAS. Brockton. Hus.
One Agent ( Merchant only) wanted in every town for
4 tflf-'
Yoar last Invoice W antin'* l*uoch” So. cigar*
cam«* tn /retardav. 1 w *» oat of them for half a day
Bnli bad to can on th- l^overn r lor a co>* piny of
militia to pr. vaota riot. Have a res y retailed
over 800.09ft. K, C. Ma.mxv, Lincoln, Neb.
Address R. W. TAX»«ILL Ac <'Q., f’hlcaao.
J.P. STEVENS ft BRO.
JEWELERS. Atlanta, Ga.
load for Cstslsfis,
BU 8 INES 8
TAPEWORM* .JHlVBSK 4 »2lSi P.
. Atlanta. HOCK. O.
U*.
pmsims ms&sm
OPIUM iN*yi
m
SALE OF LOTS!
East Sheffield Land Company.
Beglmtaj Thursday, 9 th lime, 1987 ,
ON THE PROPERTY ADJOINING 8HJSF
! FIELD, ALA.
The East Sheffield Land Co. own about 1,200
which acres of immediately land/latd off adjoins into lots the and Sheffield blooks, and
erty the East. prop¬
on
There are three Railroads on the property of
the East Sheffield Co., besides a Street Railroad
running dummy engines, through and extending from
Sheffield to Tuscnmbia, East Sheffield.
and Property Company admirably desire and conveniently sell located, lots
tne to obeap to
aetnal residents, who will have suburban homes
in dost and quick communication with Shef¬
field by street car line. •
Terms of sale, onc&oarth cash, and balance
in one, two and three years, at six per cent.
Okx-half the purchase price returned to all
buyers who improve tho lots bought in twelve
months from date o^ale, and onx-voubth re¬
turned to those who impeove in eighteen months
from date of sale.
Donations of land mnda to Churches, Schools
and Manufacturing enterprises.
For further information, Pamphlet and Map,
write to
EAST SHEFFIELD LAID CO •»
SHEFFIELD, ALA.
PlHi
/V-Sf % i
A 4H|fc
L Vi <“• 4
v
L- %
ilillKrin
The treatment of many thousands of cases
of those chronic weaknesses and distressing
ailments peculiar to females, at the Invalids'
Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y.,
has afforded a vast experience in nicely adapt¬
ing and thoroughly testing remedies for the
cure of woman’s peculiar maladies.
Dr, Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
is the outgrowth, or result, ot this great and
valuable experience. Thousands of testimo¬
cians nials, received who from patients and from physi¬
have tested It in the more aggra¬
vated and obstinate cases which had bnflied
their skill, prove it to be tho most wonderful
suffering remedy ever devised for the relief and cure of
women. It is not recommended as a
“ cure-all," but as a most perfect Specific for
woman’s As peculiar ailments. tonic,
it imparts a powerful, invigorating
strength to tne whole system,
and to the womb and its appendage# In
particular. “run-down,” For debilitated overworked, teachers, ‘'worn-out,” milliners,
dressmakers, keepers, seamstresses, “shop-girls,” house¬
nursing Fierce’s mothers, and feeble women
generally, is the Dr. Favorite Prescription
as an appetizing greatest earthly cordial boon, and restorative being unequaled tonic.
nervine, As a soothing "Favorite and Prescription” strengthening is
une¬
qualed duing and is invaluable in allaying and sub¬
haustion. nervous prostration, excitability, hysteria, irritability, and ex¬
other distressing, symptoms spasms
nervous com¬
monly disease attendant of the upon functional and refreshing organlo
womb. It induces
sleep spondency. and relieves mental anxiety and de¬
Dr. Fierce’s Favorite Prescription
is a legitimate medicine, carefully
compounded physician, and By adapted an experienced and delicate skillful
organization. to woman’s
It is purely vegctablo in its
composition and condition perfectly harmless in its
effects in any of the system. Foe
morning arising, sickness, or stomach, nausea, indigestion, from whatever dys¬
cause weak
pepsia doses, will and kindred symptoms, beneficial. its use, iu small
“Favorite provo Prescription” very is
five for tho most complicated a and post* ob¬
euro
stinate coses of leucorrhea, excessive flowing,
painful prolapsus, menstruation, falling of unnatural the womb, suppressions, back,
“female or wenk
bearing-down weakness, anteversion, chronic retroversion,
inflammation sensations, congestion,
and ulceration of the womb, In¬
flammation, accompanied pain with and “ tenderness heat.” in ovariep,
internal
tlonal A* a action, regulator at that critical and promoter period of of chang* funcr
from scription girlhood ” is to womanhood, “Favorite Pre¬
and produce a perfectly only safe good remedial results. agent, It
can valuable is
equally when taken efficacious for those and disorders and in its derange¬ effect*
ments incident to that inter and most critical
period, known ns “ Tho Change of Life.”
“Favorite Prescription,” when taken
in connection with tho use or Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxative
doses of Dr. Pierce’s Purgative Pellets (Little
Liver Pills), cures Liver, Kidney and Bladder
diseases. Their combined use also removes
blood taints, ana abolishes cancerous and
scrofulous “Favorite humors from the system.
medicine for Prescription” sold drugglste, is tho under only
positive women, guarantee, by from the
a manu¬
facturers, that it will give satisfaction in every
case, has or money will be refunded. This guaran¬
tee been printed on the bottle-wrapper,
and faithfully oarried out for many years.
bottles Large for bottles $5.00. (100 doses) $1.00. or six
For large. Illustrated Treatise on Diseases of
Women (160 pages, paper-covered), send t ten
cents in stamps. Address,
World’s Dispensary Medical Association, (
663 Main SU BUFFALO. N. Y.
O J&uJESL 3L.^a-"W"3»*
Thw Orsot Nursery of
PERGHERGN HORSES.
200 Imported Brood Mares
Of Choicest Families.
LARCE NUMBERS,
All Asos, both Boxes,
If4 STOCK.
■m
jjeil
||g|j|pp2
-
Ob
tar.Nnwtaaa.AtY ^jgp £X
300 to 409*11GPORTED ANNUALLY
from Franca, all recorded with extended pedigree* In the
(Vrcheron Sind Books. The Pcrchoron (s tho only draft
•reed of Franco po*wearing a i-..~ t—» ^~
ppport and endorsement of the French Government,
lend for 120-pago Catalogue, UlUHtratlon* hy ** ;
*»*»**• M. W. DUNHAM,
Wayne. DuPage Co.. Illinolo*
JONES
xxn
Iron Lucn, Steel Hearing!, BraM
Taro S«am and Beam Box Or
seo.
I vary tit* Scale. Por free price Hot
■entice tM« paper and aildreoa
0 19IIS Of S1S9HAM7BN.
BINIU1AMTO.N. N. w.
WEAK Ur. BAIRD’S MEN, WEAK BLOOD WOMEN, GRANdIED Y £Eg<fm in
marvelous, the rkksatios of U»e hour. Thousand*
have used them and not one but 1* enthusiastic ovet
their wonderful properties. 25 cental 5 boxes. SL
Of Drojrrfsta rbould or t y account mall, poetage of prepaid. oymptoma, AU etc., in¬
valids aend YOU ease, GOOD. Address
with order wad we will 1)0 ». J.
Dr. WM. M. BAIRD, Weehington,
LEA’S Spring*, Granger Co., L Tann.
Superior Scenery. natural Mineral Waters. Mountain and Gave
board. Address Convenient, .VI. healthy J. II(T«4I1ES, location. Select. Proprietor. Cheap
ROOT BEER
MEXICAN BB
WAR PENSIONS. ,
&S& 5■ JFJUtt:
SS
■arMRWx bth.
wn 1
. . ..... )ta.
.. ..