Newspaper Page Text
Sayaunali, Florida and
RAILWAY.
Standard f All trains of this road are ran by Central
Timo.]
TIME GAUD IN EFFECT MAY 15, 1887.
Passenger follows: trains on this road will ran daily
as
W«t India Fail Mall.
BEAD down. read trr.
7 06 a m Lv.....Savannah. Ar 12 06 p m
12 30pm Lv....Jacksonville .
4 40 Lv......Hanford.. ..Lv 7 00am
9 00 p m . .Lv 115 a m
p m Ar Tampa. -Lv 8 00am
Plant Staamshlp Una.
Thurs. Monday and I \ T Lv.. .Tampa.. m .Ar , | t Thnrs and
Tuesday ...pm Bun.. .pm
and' Ar. .Key West..Lv j Wod. and
Friday, Wednes.and .p m 8>t.. ,.p m
Bat Ar.. Havana.. Lv : Wed. and
a m Bat...ndou
and ^®JJ*h*n Tampa. Buffet Oars to and from New York
New Orleans Express.
7 06 am Lv .Bavann&li . Ar 7 58 pra
8 42 am Lv . ..Jesup.. . Ar 6 10 pra
9 60 am Ar .Wayorosw L v 5 0 5 pra
11 26 am Ar Callahan. Lv 2 47 pm
12 noon Ar .....Jacksonville Lv 2 05 pm
7 00 am Lv..., Jacksonville Ar 7 35 pm
iO 15am Lv.... ..WayCross . Ar 4 40 pm
12 04 pm Lv..., ..Valdosta.. Lv 2 5G pm
12 34 pm Lv... Quitman.. Lv 2 28 pm
1 22 pm Ar..,. Thomasvillo Lv 1 45 pm
8 35 pm Ar.... . BtiuhiiUtfc. Lv H 25 am
4 04 pm Ar 7.7TChattahoochee... .Lv 11 30 am
Pullman buffet e*r« to ami from Jackson¬
ville and New York, to and from Waycross and
New Orleans via Ponsacula.
East Florida Exprass.
1 30 pm Lv Savannah Ar 12 00 am
8 40 20 pm Lr Waycross . .Jesup. Lv Lv 10 32 23 am
4 pm Ar 9 am
785 pm Ar.....Jacksonville Lv 7 00 alii
4 15 p m Lv.. Jacksonville Ar 9 45 am
*7 20 pm Lv.......Waycross .Ar 0 35 am
8 81 pm Ar.......Dupont Lv 5 30 am
8 25 pm I,v.... Lake City......Ar 10 45 am
8 45 pm Lv.... (laiuiMvitlo Ar 10 80 am
6 55 pm Lv.... .Live Q.ik......Ar 7 10 am
8 40 pm Lv.......Dupont . Ar 5 25 am
10 55 pm Ar.....Thoiuasvill Lv 3 25 am
1 22 am Ar .. Albanv Lv 1 25 am
Pullman buffet cara to and from Jackson¬
ville aiul Ht. Louis via Thotuasviile and Albany,
Montgomery, Nashville.
Albany Express.
7 85 pm Lv.... . ..Savannah. . .Ar 610 am
10 05 pm Lv.... .... Jesup ... Lv 3 20 am
12 40 am Ar.... . Waycross.. Lv 12 10 am
6 30 am Ar..., ..Jacksonville. ...Lv 9 00pm
9 00 pm Lv......Jacksonville Ar 5 30 am
1 05 am Lv .... .Waycross......Ar 11 8 * pm
2 30 am Ar........Dupont. ..Lv 10 05 pm
7 10 am Ar ... .. Live 0.ik.......J.v 6 55 pm j
10 30 am Ar.... . Oaiii( »vilto ......L v 5 45 pm
10 45 Min Ar . .. liftko City......Lv'~8 25 pm
2 55 am Lv. Ti”. Dupont . .7777. Ar — jf'Sft pm
6 30 am Ar. ,.Tli"iim*ville.......Lv 7 00 pin
11 40 am Ar. • ...Albany........Lv 4 (X) put
fet Htops sleeping at *11 regular Mfatimis. Jacksonville Pullman buf¬
cars to ami from and
Havannah, ami to nnd from Bartow and Bav
a m in 1 1 via G ainuhVillo,
Jesup Express.
8 45 pm Lv..., Hivaunau... ... Ar 8 30 am
6 10 pm Ar.... . . JcHIll)..... ... Lv 5 25 am
Stops at all regular and flag stations.
WM, (ii'ii’l. 1*. HARDEE,’
Pas*. Art.
B. G. FLEMING, Bupcrintuidont
East Tennessee, Virginia k Georgia fl’y
m 1 (GEORGIA DIVISION.)
IMS CARD IN EFFECT MARCH 13, 1W.
NORTHWARD.
Leave Atlanta..,,........... 10 30 pm 1 (H> p rn
Arrive Rome........................... 1 45 a m 4 00 i> m
Leave Rome............................. 1 60 a m 4 05 p m
f"}ve Dalton ........................ 5 i£ p “
okkaTIcenNebaw route-east.
Leave Chattanooga... a in 9 15 pic
Arrive Knoxville...... 1 1 10 a it
“ Bristol................ 7 5 45 a n >
“ Roanoke............. a m 12 35 pm
“ Natural Bridge... a m 2 02 p in
" “ Luray................. a m 6 08 p m
Harrisburg....... Hagerstown....... n'n 10 00 p m
" l 20 a >’
” “ Philadelphia.... New York............. ni 4 7 45 0l» a in
9 pm u di
Leave Koauoke........- 2 20 am 12 30 3
Arrive Lynchburg..... 4 3d a a 2 : -0 n.c.=.«e
” Washington.... 12 00 n’n 9 40
" Baltimore....... I 27 pa 11 35 m
“ Philadelphia. 3 47 pa 3 00 m
" New York 6 20 pa 6 20 s ui
......
*
Arrive bravo Lynchburg. Burkvlllo-.......... 6 45 arc 8 5 06 27 p m
9 20 a xr pra
” •* Petereburg.......... Norfolk.............. 11 2 25 15 a n 10 7 00 15 p in
p u: p m
Leave Hagerstown. ....... 12 60 n n...............
Arrive Baltimore.............. 8 45 p li ...............
“ 1'hiladelphla.......... 7 49 p m...............
” New York....... 10 35 pn
.............
VIA MKmTWm AND CHARLESTON K. It.
I^ave Chattanooga 9 25 ft m 7 Id p m
Arrive Memphis 9 15 p m 6 10 M m
Arrive Little Rock„......... ..... 12 55 p m
Via k. c. f. a. S g. r. \Z
Leave Memphis.......... ........ 10 45 ft m
Arrive Kansas City..... ......... s 20 am
Via Cincinn ati sotiTfmt - n r -- v“ -
Lciive Chattanooga.. _____ 8 40 a m 7 10 p ur
Arrive I^uisville..... 6 45 p m li 40 a ui
Arrive Cincinnati..... *****•••#•••••» 7 0o p m (i 50 hid
Arrive Chicago... . ..................... 6 50 «ill If.
Arrive Ht Louis. 7 45 ft Cl ii J-lilil! 40 n
VIA N. C. & 8. L. K’Y.
S.oftTO Chattanooga........ ___ .... 1 20 pm 11 50 p m
Arrive Naxhvllle............. ...... 5a p “ *90
Arrive Iftmlaville......... ......10 o o o!>
Arrive Chicago............ ::::::“"IS, M ft n S“JS 7 a in
Arrive Ht. Ixmia.............. 1
Pullman ^ Sleepers leave as follows: Atlanta at
10:30 p. m. and 1:00 p m. for Cincinnati. Hlicrnuting
with Mann Boudoir (sleeper leaving at 10:30 p m.
5?«fe is open for occupancy at 8 o’clock); Rome at 7':»5 p.
ChaitaiuH.g* Sts
Lynchburg; at 9:80 a. in. for Washington via
City; Chattanooga Chattanooga 7;lo at 7:10 ,p m. lor Kaunas
at p. m. for Little Rock.
SOUTH BOUND.
Leave Atlanta............. No. U>. ml | No. 18.
Arrive 6 00 S 3 4 5 P m
Macon.............. 9 20 * ml 7 05 pm
Leave Macon............... 9 3> * m 7 20 pm
Arrive Jesup................. 8 20 C.P.Z.— m HS
Leave Jesup .............. 8 20
Arrive Way crows........... 4 m S 00 a m
Arrlvo ualfahan-...... C 67 m 5 25 a m
Arrive JftcksonviUe., 7 35 — m| 6 15 am
Leave Arrive Waycnwe..................... Tbomaeville.................. 7 58 p ml C 15 a m
11 25 p m 10 25 a m
Arrive Lesve Jeaup .................. 8 85 p m 1 45 ti
Brunswick........... 6 35 pm 5 45 a
Arrive LeaveJesup Savannah.............. ..................... 6 LG p m 3 20 a
Arrive 7 68pm 6 1*
(’har^stou..............
Pullman Buffet Bleeping Cara, alternating with
RSrjK Leighton sleepiu* leave Macon
flatty tor Bruuewick. care at ?ap p. m
Gen;i *. W. WRHNW.
Base, and Ticket AgL, Atlanta. Knoxville. Tr«*u
I* J. KLUR A.IO. P. A.. Ga.
Entirely Too Previous.
The secretiury of tho Limo Kiln Club
announced a communication from Grif¬
fin, Ga., signed by nixtoou colored resi¬
dents of the place, offering tho Lime
Kiln Club a lot in which to bury the
Rev. Penstock at his death. The presi¬
dent was about to instruct the secretary
to return the thanks of the club and ac¬
cept the kind offer, when Penstock spnuig
to his feet and exclaimed:
“Mirer President, 1 protest I I look
npon dat communication im a deliberate
insult I”
“Shoo l Brudder Penstock, what’s de
matter?”
“Dat communication are de matter.
gah!”
M Do«i you want to be buried iu Grif
flnf”
"No, *ah 1”
'*Doftn you want to aocept de lot ?”
**No, sahl” Penstock.
•*¥«:y well, Brudder De
offer mar hev bin a lee tie too previous,
but I ar satisfied dat it was made with
da dindest intenshuun. We will answer
dat You can’t accept, on account of a
previous engagement. ” — Detroit Free
by the shobe.
A Pleasant Little Pen Picture toy
M. Quad.
One day, when the ocean was at rest,
and its waters slieened and sparkled un¬
der the summer sun, an old man walked
upon the sandy shore and sat down in
the shade of a rock, to be alone by him¬
self. Above him was the blue canopy
through have which the eyes of living jnen
never penetrated—at his feet the
waters which lmd rolled across a world
to lap at the sandy shores of a ooati
nent.
And there was a lapping, arid a lap
ping, and a grieving, and a sobbing as
the waters laved the sand and fell back
to break into patches of foam and go
swirling along the shore, never to rest. I
And the old man fell in a revery, and he [
whispered to himself i .
“It is.liko the life of nohild—sunshine,
tears, griefs, complaints, He, like the
ocean, may The seem pulses to sleep, but there is
no rest. never cease their
throbbing—the until heart never stops beating
death oomes.”
Then a cloud rose slowly out of the
sea and climbed into the heavens, and
the wuters fretted and foamed and dash
od about. Along the sands the lapping |
ami grieving changed to an angry rush
to reach a higher point, and the great
patches of foam wliich floated awav were
no longer of snowy white. And the old !
m, )‘ u it w is .b^l like ><,r ^ the : life of a man toil, trou- * I
ble, sorrow, adverse struggles. He is the
T* e on " ,n<, h changing ocean
oi life is flinging . its tide, and . lie, like
the shore, must be solid and steadfast.”
Ami again the sky cleared, the vexed
waters were smoothed by the hand of
peace, and the summer sun tipped eaoh I
wavelet with nn edge of gold. And along
the sand there was a lapping and a lap
ping, and the waters sobbed andgneved
again as they fell back to rest for a mo
ment. 1 lien the foam-<lrifts were as
$« it bore them And the old
whispered: away. man
“It is like the last days of an old man
—one who has been ennobled by faith—
strengthened by love—purified by fov
givencss. His sun of life goes down in
a blaze of glory; his pulse sinks to rest
as the vexed waters have grown quiet;
the lapping of the waters are the whis¬
pers of the dead; the sobbing and the
grieving are the tears of those who will
never see him more <m earth.”
Ami as he closed his eyes and slept, at
seemed to sleep, a child came down to
the shore to look with wondering eyes
upon the calm and glorious sea—to place !
its hand confidingly upon that of him I
who felt it not—to whisper in the ear ol i
him who heard no sound:
“And the foam-drifts—-white and pure,
and without taint, are the souls of those
who have lived in the faith ami died pure
in heart, drifting into the placid ocean
of the great and grand hereafter.”
Satisfied.
Did you look under the bed?” inquired
ii wife of her husband, after be had
turned out the light uutl got fairly set¬
tled for a night’s nst.
“No,” was the blunt response.
Well, suppose there’s a man there?”
raid the aiarmed woman.
“T don’t want to see him if there is,”
was the answer.
“Well, act up and look; I sliall-not
let you rest until you do,
I It* knew her of old, and after fum
b'.'ntf around, found a match, lit it and
looked under the bed. Then lie threw
11 match away, got into bed and whis
port u: dear, there is
“My a man under the
bed.”
“Ob, get out!” was the quick response.
“You can’t fool me. I know better.”
Then she turned over, perfectly satis¬
fied, and went to sleep. She had ac¬
complished her object .—Elmira Gazette*
RUNSWIO
AND WESTERN
RA1JLRO AD.
TY TY ROUTE.
Wifty Mil** Bhortsr Than any Other
Jaculc Between Wayoroee
and Albany.
Ob and after Sunday, November lltk, 1881
paueaf** trains will run aa follow*;
FOB THE W18T, NORTH AND SOUTH.
Mail. Xxpreae.
B amwlok.............. It 600 am 7 10 pm
Jamaica................lv Pylee’ Marsh ............ lv *6 27 am *8 16 pm
6 54 am 8 48 pm
w V ne,Tiil ®............. lT 7 82 am 9 2s pm
»r“*H«duii............ ................8 in-i-ituJS 20 am 10 27 pm
u
Wnycroee...............ar 9 06 am 1116 pm
8*vahu*h, via B. T 4W., VW -- ar 11 65 am 0 10 am
Callahan ................ ar 1126 am 6 25 Am
Jackeonrill*. ............ ar 12 00 m 6 15 am
»M&j»*fflreift"*.'S¥T» ballahan........ It _ 7 tjfiri 88 am 9 is 05.pm pm
Savannah...,........... It 7 06 am 180pm
Waycrose ria'D A Vf. .... It 10 00~am lllOpm
Pearson................. It II15 am 12 48 am
It 12 80 pm 1 53 am
Ty Sumner............. Ty.................. It 2 03 pm 8 ll am
It 218pm 8 28 am
Willingham............. It 2 44 pm ........
Davis................... It 8 00 pm .
Alban y.,.....’*r 8 25 pm 4 45 am
i I Blakely, Tia C. R. R.....ar 720 pni
Oolumbai.. er _______1 65 pm
Macon...... ........ar 8 24 pm 9 04 am
. itlusta..... ------------------ar 12 16 am 1 06 pa
Marietta, via W. A A......ar 1 24 am 2 36 pm
i Okattaioojfi,.. Loaiavdle, L ..........ar 6 55 am 7 07 pm
i via AN.... ar 6 40 pm 6 80 am
| CiBomnati, viaCin. Bo... ar 6 45 pm 6 40 am
FROM THE WEST, NORTH AND SOUTH.
Cincinnati viaOin Bo lv ?SS 7 55 am lin n *
I via W. * A.. It 9 05 pm 8 05 * □
Marietta................lv 1 2$ am 12 68 rm
I Atlanta, via 0. R. R....... It 226am 2 00 pm
Mason ................... IV 6 15 am 6 10 pm
i Columbus......... ...... lv... -j*..... 11 30 am
lla ksly........... ....... lv 7 20 am ........
Albany, via RAW ... lv BSStss
Devi*...... lv
Willingham. • ♦ • lv am
Inmner.... '«••••»«•a >m im
Tr Ty......
Alapaha.... It
F'ssrson... It 1 am
*!7 oro ”v::r^:xr: ar 8 am
tavannan, vlafl.I.AW.. nr am
Oallahan,...... Jacksonville... ar T 6 pm am
Dm
Jacksonville, vis 8 FA W. T75T ■■■III I I t
Savannah........... Callshsn............ ***• * 85S :f 84frptn- 9 8 05 15 pm pm
Waycross, Wi B A W. ..It i06pm 3 16 sib
Rehlstterville....... . lv 182 pm *8 41 am
Hoboken............ It 6 61 pm *8 56 am
Waysesvlll*......... .It • 56 pm 4 U am
Jamaica... . lv 7 88 pm 5 85 am
Pyles* Marik...... .lv 8 00 pm *6 05 sm
Brunswick......... . ar 8 28 pm 6 40 sm
•Stop Pnrchsse on ffipnaki tiokrU st the station, u4
uti
extra fere collected npon the train.
The mail train atop* st *11 B. A W. stations.
Connections made st Wsverom to snd from
all Railway. point* on Bsvsnnsh, Florid* A Westers
Pullman Palace Bleeping snd Mann Boudoir
•leeping Express. ests upon Jacksonville sad Oineinnsti
Firs t-o lew •ar th rough between Brunswick
snd Atlanta. F. W. AffGIEB, pfI7 A. G. P. A.
J. A. MoDUFFIE, __ Q.
A A QAMUa T. ». * Q, M.
AGRICULTURAL.
TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
A Point or two of Grafting.
An Old Grafter, says in the New York
Tribune: It matters little how. the graft its
is set if only the cut which exposes
wood and the line between bark and
wood is made smoothly, so that it can at
some point at least come into close con
tact with the same line or face on the
stock, for this line is the only one on
which sew growth is made. The con
tact must be close and held firmly either
by a tie or by the natural pressure of a
cleft stock. The wax used to cover
every part of the wound closely and com
free pletejy water tight, must not have any
fat oc oil to soak out and clog^the
circulation from cell to cell, and the for
mat ion of new ones to effect the desired
union. The grafts must be of sound
wood, fresh and plump. Cherry and
plum (which must be grafted early to
secure the winter success) are usually kept through
in compact moss, roasted saw
dust or mould, to secure them from in
jury they by winter winds and frosts by which
arerliable to suffer,
The stock should be cut back, so that
the grafts may be set either near the col
lar or near a main branch, in order to it*
having The a sufficiently copious supply of
sap. more we cut back the *moro
young wood we are likely to grow, and
the longer wo are likely to wait for fruit
ing. I? we set near the extremity of a
healthy Hut branch we see the fruit sooner,
have less of it and smaller specimens,
because of the scantier supply of sap so
far out from the roots. And there is risk
in setting shoSu arnfti very earlv on small ex
much tcrior to receive . of the the graft when dry ing too
sap it arrives,
Grafts must be kept entirely J dormant un
ti , set the 1)uds not 8la rtHng in the
lea st. They must neither be swelled
with -<>'• *"“* •»
■
Farm and Garden Notes.
Good drainage is essential to a good
garden;
Cauliflower is a delicious vegetable,
not as well known outside our large cities
as it should be.
Ilorses need extra care and plenty of
time to eat in when first put to farm
work in the spring.
r l lie thorough use of currycomb and
brush on horses and cows that are shed¬
ding their coats will puy.
Plant. Lima beans on the poorest soil
you have, supply no manure and stop the
growth of vines at the top of the poles by
successive pinchings.
Cows that kick or draw milk from
their udders should be sent to the
butcher. Remedies to prevent such vices
arc but not only useless as permanent cures,
also troublesome to apply.
When sheep are hurdled on small areas
it should not be overlooked that in
addition to the profit they telly give the
animals distribute the n^fimre evenly,
pressing it into the soil with their hoofs,
which is quite an item if the expense of
hauling manure be considered.
Whenever sheep are afflicted with ticks
or other animals with vermin, it indicates
a low condition of the system, caused
either by the vermin in the first place, or
l>y improper feeding. The better the
condition of the animals the less liability
to attack. They will not improve until
relieved, and the longer this be delayed
the more difficult it will become.
The deeper the preparation of the soil
the deeper will the roots penetrate, thus
advancing permitting closer to moisture, as well as
of the growth of a large pro¬
portion of those rootlets that collect food.
It the soil be shallow and the subsoil hard
the roots will spread nearer the surface,
thus rendering them not only more liable
to from being drought. winter killed, but also to damage
The supposition that young sows aiv
better for breeding purposes than those
two or three years old has (lone much to
impair the vigor of swine. The custom
of using young sows grew out of the loss
of young pigs by pressure from the heavy
dams, but a large breeding sow should
not be fat and heavy. A sow over two
years old will give more milk than
younger one, and, as a rule, she will pro¬
duce stronger pigs.
r i , n he reason poultry , Klucu mi i at , home,
though young, is not us tender as that
bought is at the market, is that the formei
generally * not killed until wanted, and
eaten 4 • still 4.11 • igid • i - 1li i death, i while
\ lcn - is i w 1 4
that bought at the poulterer's has been
killed at least hours—more often days,
Poultry ought to be killed several davs
Vi".; ,W,,| ,,t on,,, nnd,
with, a few tuts of charcoal in it, hung in
a cool place.
The V hereditary V ,.V l iw ,>f trnnsmi^mi *ransniission oJ
. and , health 1 holds , strongly
Mgoi . as in the
vegetable as in the animal kingdom, ac
cording to exneriment. E. S Goff se
looted seeds from a feeble tomato plant, ’
an 1 also . l .. r,. .ami a .. i IichIiIi., in.... plant i ol the same
variety. A row- oi feeble plants atul a row
of healthy plants were the result. Sue
fTSaive experiment s show ed the same dif
fere nee ,* Seeds from an imimin... m, ‘ m | ur e »r or green <r,wn
tomato , produced . , leeblo , . . plants.
.
The easiest and surest wnv to destroy
Canada thistles is to give‘mi absolute
summer fallow, by wliteh no "iccn ----------- tlunjr
is allow-ed to appear above tho surface.
Shallow plowing once iu two w eeks dur¬
ing one season’s growth will do this. If
there be rocks, stumps, ete., all these
places must he hoed thoroughly at each
should plowing. send If the remaining weak roots
up tops the next season, a
thorough those cultivation iu corn will kill out
remaining. plant The prevention of anv
green from making leaves for one
whole season will totally eradicate it.
Doscciuling Wells.
M. Grcbaut rtad a pstper recently be¬
fore the Paris Bioliflrb al Society nil “The
prevention of accicbnls by sulYocation
while descending wells.” After referring
to the cause oi the suffocation, namely,
carbonic acid gas and the well known
expedient the of first lowering an animal into
well, he gave the following directions
for ventilation: A etc cpipe ten or
twelve feet longer than the well is deep
is to be secured by wires in the axis of
the well; a grate on which a fire can be
built i9 then to Ik? placed around this
pipe at the level of the ground, and a
second pipe, larger than the first, is then
to be placed upon the grate, with the
first pipe inside, and on the grate and be
tw*eii the pipes a fire is to be built. The
inner pipe being heated, a current is cre¬
ated; resulting in the ascent of the im¬
pure air of the well and its replacement
by fresh air from without.
• The world is the great tempter; but at
the same time it is the great monitor. It
stimulates our pride by its pomp and
show, goads its fleeting honors and prizes; it
men to the race, and inspires them
with covetousness and rapacity, but, on
the other hand, it is the great memento
and evidence of its own vanfly, and of
the emptiness of everything it offers to us.
It is the great saddener, the great warner,
the great prophet.
TEMPERANCE,
Sl*ns of Prosperity.
Where spades grow bright
Ana idle swords grow dull:
Where jells are empty,
And where barns are full;
Where field-paths are
With frequent feet outworn,
, . Law courtyards weedy.
Where Silent, doctors and forlorn; foot
And where farmers it, ride:
Where age abounds,
.And youth is multiplied;
-Are " k re poisonous drinks
Phas ed from every place;
Where opium's curse *
N o longer leaves a trace—
Where there signs are
A They happy clearly indicate
And well-ruled people
a state.
—From the Chinese.
“Sin Against the Strength of Youth.”
Unless one positively sees the thing done,
the young child’s glass filled as a tiling of
co urse, the father or the mother sitting by
than unconcernedly, otherwise or peradventure rather eager
that the child shall become
acquainted social custom with and the use of wines as a part of
one sees it done, it eminence—unless, is difficult believe we say,
parents foolish to that
so and so short-sighted can be
in the world, or that Providence will intrust
tosuch the tender little souls and bodies that
“•7 «« beet loing, to tarnish even although unconsciously,
MM ar and destroy.—Harper’s
•" Prohibition Does Prohibit,”
According of Iowa, to it the testimony of the Gover¬
nor appears that Prohibition docs
•“•ceualiy mghty. out of and .satisfactorily prohibit in
hint®, and is the ninety-nine countie* of that
expected from partially the enfored in the sections
means that the general statement. This
abolition in rural regions the practical
of the liquor traffic can be main¬
tained, but that in the cities and larger
towns, the notably along the Mississippi River,
law is more or less a dead letter. This
seems to be the general experience with pro¬
hibitory legislation. It is the stray that
comes from Kansas, Maine, and Rhode Isl¬
the and, latter and was the experience of Michigan. In
State the result of the recent elec¬
tion seems to have brought about a general
determination to revive the local option law,
and this will result in confining the liquor
traffic practically to less than a dozen coun
«*»• 110 out in of Georgia, 137 under a local option law,
hibition, counties have declared for Pro¬
one of these being Fulton, in which
Atlanta, the largest city in the State, is situ¬
ated. The local option feature of the Illinois
license law also woiks well, having resulted
in a large curtailment of the bar-room busi¬
ness in the country .—Philadelphia Tele¬
graph.
License in the National Capital.
The American, of Washington, mention*
that the “Guardian League’’ of that city
recently saloons employed a man to visit some of the
and pool-rooms, and ascertain how
many minors were in them. It says:
‘ ‘The count was made during six consecutive
nights. The man who did the counting is
behaved to be entirely reliable, and the figures
which he furnishes are startling. Tuesday
night he visited seven of places, and found
girls. twenty-seven Some minors, whom seven were
of them were drinking and some
were drunk. Wednesday night five places
of were whom visited, and nine minors were found,
three were girls. Most of them were
under the influence of liquor. Thurelay
night five places were visited and thirteen
minors found, of whom three were girls.
and Friday thirty-one night seven places were visited
minors found, of whom live
were visited, girls. Saturday night eight places were
and eighty-six minors were found,
all of whom w’ere drinking and playing pool,
cards^and crap except eight. Sunday night
four places were visited, and one hundred
and two minors were found, mast of whom
were visited, drinking thirty-six; and playing pool. Total places
total number of minors
found, eighteen two hundred and sixty-eight, of whom
The national were girls.” •
jurisdiction of capital Congress. is under the exclusivo
With such a state
of things as the above extract shows 1U COll
nectiou with the liquor saloons of Washing¬
ton, District it is obvious that, at least so far as the
of Columbia is concerned, the drink
question is an important, urgent national
question. destroyers of Those manhood demoralizing and girlhood saloons, the the
are
nation s saloons.—National Advocate.
It Docs Not Pay.
It docs not to have i>ay the mother and
children of twenty families dressed in rags
and starved into the semblance of emaciated
smi th«- eeows, saloon-keoper's nnd living in hovels, dress in order satin, that
wife may in
and, her children grow fat ami hearty, ami
li \ e in a bay-w indow parlor. It does not pay
to have ten smart, intelligent boys turned
into hoodlums and thieves to enable one man
to end an easy life by selling them liquor.
It does not pay. to give one man, for a trifle,
a Ikenso to sell liquor, and then spend an
enormous amount on the trial of T im Mc¬
committing Laughlin for buying that liquor and then
murder under its influence. It
does not jmy to have one thousand homes
hells blasted, ruined, defiled nnd turned . into
of disorder and misery, in order that
one wholesale liquor dealer may amass a for
tune.
; It does not pay to keep six thousand men
i the penitentiaries and hospitals, and ono
thousand in the lunatic asylums, at tho ex
penseof the honest, industrious taxpayers, in
j order that a few rich capitalists may grow
i richer by the manufacture of whisky. A
I ^“on keeper sold a drinking man one pint
j killed his son-in-law; and his apprehen
^ 1 rum,
Ithecountymorethanonethousanddollars— sion, confinement in jail, execution, etc., cost
I w Inch temperate men had to earn by the
sweat of their brow. It does not pay! The
los; sustained by society, morally and finan
cir.Ily, the sorrow and suffering, the misery
and au ‘ wlmt destitution, is infinitelygreater produced and consideration augmented,
timn all else, the destruction of soul and body,
til-'inevitable result of using and trailicing
in intoxicating liquors—these all attest the
! truthfulness of the verdict—it does not pavl
I binder, it honest does pay to lead a temperate life;
; to ho an and upright citizen; to exert
a pure and holy influence upon mankind and
1 to honor God by a righteous use of aU Hia
tt if ft \ v « ******* W f° r own
j ' 72 mi ,ul s 8 sake, sake ’ ^ ld for the 8ake of 8uflferm « h “
j the i nan unclean ity, “touch thing.” not, —Saratoga taste not, Eagle. handle not,
A Woman’s Statistics.
“A Woman” thus writes to the Fort Worth
(Texas) Gazette: “My homeless friend, you
say you have for years longed for the free,
independent life of the farmer, but have
never been able to get euough money togel her
to buy a farm. 'But that is just where you
are m is ta k en. For several years you have
been drinking a good improved farm at the
rate of 100 square feet a gulp. Figure it out
yourself. An acre of land contains 43,500
square feet. Estimating land at 643.50 par
acre, you will see that is just one mill per
re foot and oue.cent for ten square feet.
Now, pour down tlie fiery dose and imagine
you in five are of swallowing friends a strawberry patch. Call
down your and have them help
you prolonged gulp a 500-foot garden. Get on a
spree and se© how long it requires
to swallow a pasture large euough to teed a
oow—twenty cowa”
Temperance News and Motes.
Tlie Danish temperance movement hais now
an army of 35,000 total abstainers.
Tea drinkers drinkers are increasing decreasing. in England,
while liquor are
Governor Martin says Kansas would to-day
give luu,t/v.j majority for prohibition if again
submitted to the p»pular vote.
Mr Jolm Tylt>T% ^ of Tyler ^
for the ninth time U>m elec-tod grand worthy
patriarch &tote of Virginia, «>f the Sons of Temperance of the
The latest estimates placed Belgi um at the
head of The tlie beer-drinking countries of Eu¬
tenths rope. consumption per capita is six
in excess of that of Germany.
Fifty-two years a*?o Atlrinsoh, N. H.,
aboli>he«l the grog-snop, and for the last ten
Years not a cent has been paid out for pauper
support. ,
The sum of 6700,000.000 is spent annuity for
alcohol by the 15,000,000 drinkers of this
country, and the sum of fcikHJ.OOO, by the
8,000,003 Ireland. drinkers of Great Britain and
The great advance in the rum power daring
the last few years in Egypt is indicated in
some recent statistical reports from Cairo.
They show that in that city there are now
open over there 400 liquor saloons where a few
yeare ago was not oue.
A Noted Frenchman.
Of On. Boulanger’, penonsd The appear.
he ance entered a corespondent the aaya: clearly moment how
room one saw
mistaken his is the common conception of
personality. He is a short man, rather*
stoutly built, with face, brown above hair, d , things, brown
beard rather a red
quiet His mother looking almost English to commonplacenere. his
was an Lewes, England.- woman,
aunt is living at He
wore the ordinary French civilian’s dress
of black frock coat and trousers, with
only the single red spot in his button¬
hole. In manners Qen. Boulanger is not
more striking than in appearance, He
speaks slowly, like most soldiers , but
without gesture and without much force
either of voice or language. Gen. Bou¬
langer has fought his way from grade to
grade and from decoration to decoration.
He was shot through the chest at Tur
bigo in 1859, he was speared in the hip
at Trai-dan in 1861, he was shot in the
shoulder at Villiers on Nov. 80, 1870,
and hi9 elbow was broken by a ball in
January, 1871.
A Short Inscription.
A certain gentleman had a mother-in
law with whom he did not live on a very
peaceful footing. They were continually
quarreling. Finally she died, and the
son-in-law, a few days afterward, met
Jones, who is somewhat of a literary
character.
. “Suppose you have heard of my mis¬
fortune?” said the distressed son-in-law.
“Yes, I read the news.”
“Well, I vrant you to get mo a nice
epitaph for her, something short.”
“Yes,” replied the friend, “the shorter
the better. How would ‘At Last’ do?”
Admiral Farragut’s noted flag-ship the
“Hartford,” is one of the ships being fit¬
ted out in California.
Clear the Way
Without loss of time, when the intestinal canal
Is blot ked up by reason of constipation,chronic
or temporary. It should be borne in mind that
this ailment is prone to become lasting and ob¬
stinate, and breed other and worse complaints.
Hostet er's Stomach Bitters is the pi ed »e rem¬
edy to remove the obstruction effectual.y, but
Without drench r.^'or weakening the blockad¬
ed bowels, a co:.sequence always to be appre¬
hended from the use of violent laxatives,
which are among the most pernicious of the
cheap nostrums swallowed by the credulouj
and misinformed. The flat of experience, and
of the medical fraternity. Not only as a source
of els. relief liver and and p.-rtuanent stomach, bn! regularity to the f bow¬
as a means « rem¬
edying and proven ing kidney and bladder
troubles, ana fever and ague, it is without a
peer. • •
_
Tue export of wh »at from the Atlantic and
•Pacific ports, is3,000,000 bushels weekly.
For the Ladles.
Laughter is the poor man’* plaster.
Making every burden 1 ght;
Turning sadness imo g a iness.
Darkest l our to Ma> dawn bright.
‘ ’Tie t ie deepest and the description. cheapest
Cure for ills of this
But for those that woman’s heir to.
Use Dr. Pierce's “Favorite Proscription.”
Cures all weakne-sas and irregularitice,“bear- fever,” bloat¬
ing do wn” • *n ations, “internal
ing, di?p acaments, inflammation, morning disease.
sickness and tendency to cancerous
Price reduced to one dollar. By druggists.
Dakot a lead-, all other stales or territories
in the si 7.i ol her Indian popu ation.
Delicate Children, Nursing
Mothers, Overworked Men. and for all disease*
where the tissues are wast ng away from the
inability to digest ord narr food, or from over¬
work of the brain or body, all such should
take Scott’s Emulsion of Pmn Cod Liver Oil
with Hypophoephitcs. “I u*;d the Emulsion
on a lady who was delicate, and threatened
with Bronchitis. It put her in such good health
and flesh, that I must say it is the best Emul¬
sion I ever uned.”—L. P* WADDELL, M. D.,
Hugh’s Mills. S, C.
The most forcible stump orators is the
farmer who-c plow strikes a snag.
Money Makers
Don’t let golden opportunities pass unim¬
proved; tln re are ti in s in the lives of men
when mo. e non <y <nn le n a le rapidly and
easily, than o t.orwire can bo ea ned Portland. by years
if labor. 'Wrile Iia lett Co.,
Maine, who wi 1 send you, fr ee, full particu¬
lar about work iliat you can do and live at
home, wnerever you are located, at a prolit of
at ica.-t from £5 to ?2.‘> i.’a-Iy. Some have made
over SHI in a single day. All is new. You are
started free. Capi'al not required. Either
sex; all ages.
Wratkvbh name or destination is given to
Fever and Akul‘ or otlier intermittent diseases,
it is safe to say that Malaria or a disordered
state of the liver is at fault. Eliminate ti e
impar t vs from thesy-tem and a sure and
piompt cure is the result. Prickly Ash Bit
tvrs is the safest and most effective remedy
for all biliary troubles, kidnuy diseases, and
like comp’aint that lias ever been brought
before the public. A trial is its b.-st recom¬
mendation
_
The trade dollar redemption is at an end,
only one-third bus l.rvn redvr mod.
I Had a Dreadful Cough.
And raided a coneid*’ruble amount of blood and
mutter: besides, 1 wav very thin, and so weak
I cou d scarce y go abou the house. Th ! * was
the < a^e of a man with consumption ar sinq
from liver vomplaint. He rec .vervd his health
completely Di bv tno use of Dr. Pierce’s “Golden
Me. leal cuvery.” Thousands of others bear
similar testimony.
The totn 1 of cuttle, ho."*', and sheep In the
U. B., are 40.000,000, 45.00;),000 and 4S.000.000.
* • * Delicate Diseases, affecting male or
female, however indue ;d. speedily and perma¬
nently cured. Ilia*!rated boik for 10 cents in
Ft* nps. World’s Dispensary Medical Associa¬
tion, 063-Main Street, Buffalo. N. Y.
Thomas Ji ff rson brought tho tomato from
France, knowing it couhl bo grown in America.
Ffom the Tar Heel Country.
Knott. Ilenuesort Ji Co., Hrindleton, N. C.,
writes that Huckleberry Cord is i soils better
with every s=ifisfnct. on for bowel troubles
and children teething, and commend it to
every mother, s he physician of the home.
Posterity vs. Ancestry.
Iti.H no longer questioned, but admitted, that
tlie blood of man is improving. Children of to¬
day are better formed, have b tie muscle and
richer minds than our ancestors. Tue cause of
this 'act is due more to the genera! use of Dr.
Harter’s Iron Tonic 'han any other source.
_ To A Wonderful Machine and Offejr.
introduce i hem w ■ give away l.OJ) Self
operating Washing >ia-lines. No labor or
vrashbuard. Rost, in ;lie world. If you want
one. write The Nut onai (Jo.. 27 Dey Sk. N. Y.
Remedy Best, easiest to nw and cheapest. Piso’s
for (’aturrli. By druggists. 60c.
Ote Oft Told Story
Of the peculiar medicinal merits of Hood's Sarsa¬
parilla Is fully confirmed by the voluntary testi¬
mony of thousands who have tried It. Peculiar in
tb* combination, proportion and preparation of Its
Ingredients. Hood's Sarsaparilla accomplishes cures
where other preparations entirely fall. Peculiar in
the unequaled good name it has made at home,
which is a "tower of strength abroad.” peculiar
in the phenomenal Bales It has attained. Hood’s
BarsapariCa is the most popular medicine before tty,
public to day for purifying the blood, giving strength
and creating aa appetite.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
•old by alt druggists. *i ; six for *3. Prepare t only
by C. L HOOD A CO.. Apothecaries Lowell, Hass
IOO Poses One Dollar
MEMdlRY dihcovuiiy.
Whelly Mnlikesrtlflclal aystems.
%'uJt V-K,! sfsuiv^
I? OTOCKS.-IO Bought, Sold TO 1,000 SFIARES.
tnd Carried on Margin.
Send for our list of Stock Privilkobs.
8. J. PECK A CO,, S3 Bboadwat, N. T.
_
PATENTS I Fstesf pss..
Ham, lawyer, Washington. D. C.
A vretemn, lit. Gooff* MoKena, Ashburn
etomteSamailto ham », K»k, writer. “Will# Stdlerin* with
^,,*^14 (multof jaM mea^ll.). ^
• n,
?u W°f English . -;— - ,.!**,vi"
e w *n
. , ofothin^whlch'ih* denominates
tion of “Th*
Cloiharles.** During the law F**r no J
*“
Carl Otto Schosnrleh, Captain Oriole Yacht
dab, Baltimore, Md., writes: “The Club, dur¬
ing practice cruise, used St. Jacobs Oil and It
cored several cases of sprains and bruise*."
Sold by Dr mrgists and Dealers every where.
You have no doubt read the incident of the
man in the sleeping-car, who, when growled a baby's to
crying disturbed hie slumbers, child's mother?” out
the porter: “Where is that
and how the porter answered: “In the ex¬
press-car, forward. In her coffin.”
11 ■ - .......' M 1 1 1 " " •
.
Daughters, Wives mod Mother*.
Wend for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, fre*
securely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marohlei. Utica. N.Y
The best and wunA Bawdy to* Owe
sll diseases caused by **F derangement of
the Liver, Kidney*, Stomach and Bowels.
Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Ooasttpatloa,
Billons Complaint* and Malaria of all hinds
yield readily toth* beneficent Influence «f
m
iimsiia
It Is pleasant to the taste, tones «p the
system, restores and preserves health.
It is purely Vegetable, and cannot flail to
prove beneficial, both to old and young.
8 a Blood Purifier it Is superior to all
others. Sold sverywherent $1.00 a bottle.
A
THE ONLY TRUE
Or IRON
TONIC
.X Will the jmssmm OR of TOOTH Djspei«l*,W«nt
1 of Strength solutely Appetito, and cured: Indigestion,Luck Tired Bone#, Feeling mu. ab¬ of
oles and nerves receive new
force. Enlivens tk* wind
. and aupplie* Brain Power.
LADIES TONIC a safe and epeedy nFljHfftg cure. Givea a connterfMt- olaar, heal¬
thy complexion. Frequent attempts of tha at original. Do
lng only add to the iiopnlerity OBiQrn ALAND Best.
not experiment—get the
■lok
■ Headache. Sample Dose and In Dream poet Book
am ailed on receipt of two oenta •g«.
THE DR.HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY,
8t.Louis, Mo.
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
A Qrtat Medical Work for Young
and Middle-Aged Mon.
> r#c ysaam
SiiiPL 0r M un ta J
KHOW THYSELF.
T>UBI.ISHEI» by Hie PEABODY MISDI
X CAL INSTITUTE, No. 4 Biillflnch 8l
KflM.n, Dliui. WM. II. PARKER,
Consulting iflivslclan. More than one million ■ opie*
sold. It treats Decline, upon Nervous Exhausted and. Vitality, I’hrslcal Impaired Debility,
Premature and
Vigor, and Impurities of tho Blood, the untold
miseries consequent thereon. Contains 3U0 pages,
substantial emboss d binding, full gilt. Warranted
tho best popular medical treatise published In the
En/lish concealed language. Prion plain only $1 by mall, IUustrativ* postpaid,
and In a wrapper.. Address
tamplefree If you send now. as above.
Name this paver. *
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE. ros
% UEtTLlUXa.
The best WJ Shoo in the rjl P
world. Best {Congress, material,stylish, Button .*p/ r m: iD/
perfect Lace;allBtylP9toc.E(iuais lit Ay •
or £'/q>
any to or fe Shoe. Costs si f hi fa s;
nothiugto atyour dealer’s. examine I tl»ent send AXy ’v'v
. fc
Information free (i? j i
how to obtain thess V/ /
celebrated * ' <b *
if your dealer does
not v/fiEST
keep them. JAHv
W. L. &
DOUGLAS’SEWFD. __ , «= ___ 1 "—
$i.50 Shoe *jnal* M Shoos advertlso^l by otnei
firms. Boys rz*?. wear W. L« DouaIas’ H‘4 »Shoe. Be -
trare of frav None genuine unleu name and price
are itamprd bo! I o \ of each Shoe,
Brockton, Blase.
LOCATE
In a Live Town. Cash bonus puid
all kinds of manufacturing enterprises.
Live men in all kinds of businesses
wanted. Address, Bank of Valley,
Valley, Douplas Co., Nebraska.
JONES
Hm
PAYSthe FREICHT
» Toi W’ason Hcales,
Tr»n I.ertri, Sum ifearingi, Brut
Tmi lum u< Inn Bax tor
*Ytrr ■iitSI’AU. Fur frM pr»*i tUI
mention thU pauer and aUrtm
JOKfS OF BINOHAUT0N. V.
BINGHAMTON. N.
Ono Aftoftl ( Marchant only) wiiiitod in ev«ry town for
WM§m
Yrrnr "Tan*Ul s Punch” given :*!tter ratisf^ctloa
to my cunt unerg thnn any 5c. cigar I have hbndlefl.
1 sell more o. them tiian of all other Lrandg put to¬
gether. They are pronounced equal to tha " bit ”
cigar gold Chau. here. Cnass, Drugglat, Bsn Diego, CaL
a.
Address R. W. TANS I LL <fc CO., Chicago.
mm
have marvelous, the bkhsatio.n of the hour.
uwd them and not one but !• enthusiastic
their wonderful properties. 26 cents ; 5 boxes,
Of Druggists or by mall, postage prepaid. All In¬
valids -hould send account of case, symptoms,
with order and we will Do YOU GOOD.
Dr. WM. M. BAIRD, Washington, N. J.
LEA’S Spring Brangtr Co., E. Tonn.
Ksr Superior natural Mineral Waters. Mountain and Gave
• isssrsK- rsi.'. , ?aia.
gfgKfllUS
MEXICAN WAR PENSIONS.
S5 gSaSfcgBgmg -
flDIIIIA VriWM 9abltCured.TreatmentsentontirlaL HumansRsmkutCo.,L aFayette,Unfl.
Kogfr ftl IPFCPSi
rfe.
~
;
**t-* c OF
SALE y
East s Jafid SaE
Sheffield
Beginning Thursday, 9 th Jut, 1887 , ;
ON THE PROPERTY ADJOINING SKB#
FIKLto, ALA. - /
mssasssss
running dummy engines, and extending from ;
Sheffield to Tuseumbia, through East Sheffield.
Property admirably desire and,conveniently sell cheap located, lota to
and the Company to
actual residents, who will have suburban homM
in field close and quick Une. communication with Shef¬
Terms by etreet of sale, car one-fourth cash, and bale*©*
in one, two and three years, at. six per tent.
Or*-halt the purchase prioe returned to al®
buyers who improve the lots bought i n twe lva
months from date of sale, and okx-foubth re¬
turned to those pho improve in eighteen month*
from date of sale.
Donation! of land made to Churches, Sohoolf
and Manufacturing enterprises. Majv
For further information, Pamphlet and
"““east SHEFFIELD LMD CO..
nKKTIBLW, ALA.
YOU?
'.IS
m
•1
ing, tongue coated, bitter or bad “
mouth. headaches, Irregular appetite, eyesight,“floating ffiainess, 0 **
blurred prostration sp*,
before the eyes, nervous or
haustion, Irritability of temper, hot flualA'.
alternating with chilly sensations, sham,
biting, transient pains here and there, col<R
feet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, o*
disturbed and unrefreshing sleep, constanto
indescribable feeling of dread, or of impend
ft you have all, or any considerable suffering number from
of these symptoms, of you American are maladies—
that most common Torpid Liver, associated
Bilious with Dvspepsla, Dyspepsia, or Indigestion. The more
or has .become, the
com plicated your disease and diveixity of symp¬
greater the number stage it has reaobcfl.
toms. No matter what Medical Dlacovejry
Dr. Pierce* Golden acpording to direct
will subdue it, if taken, of time. If hot
tions for a reasonable multiply length and Consinaiv-
cured, tionof the complications Lungs, 81tin Diseases, Heart Dlseatov
Rheumatism, quite Kidney liable Disease, to set or in otheT and, b'oonpr grave
maladies are fatal termination.
or later, induoe a Medical Dl#j __
Dr. Pierce’s Golden
covery acts powerfully upon the Liver, and
cleanses through the that system great of blood. all blood-taints - purifying and organ,, im¬
purities, from whatever cause arising. It ia
equally and efficacious other excretory in acting organs, upon cleansing, t cm Kid¬
neys, strengthening, and healing their diseases. As
an appetizing, restorative tonic, it V^ildra* promote*
digestion ana nutrition, thereby In malarl.fi district*, up
both flesh wonderful and strength. medicine has gaired great
this afld hills and
celebrity Dumb In curing Fever kindred Ague, diseas C
Fever, Ague, and es. ,
Dr. Pierce’* Golden Med lead Dis¬
covery
CURES ALL HUMORS,.
from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to the*
worst Scrofula. Balt-rheum, “ Fever-sores,” all ,
Scaly or Rough Skin, in short, diseases
caused by bad blood are conquered by this
powerful, purifying, and invigorating mwll
cine. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under
its benign influence. Especially has it mani¬
fested Its potency In curing Tetter, Eczema. Scrof¬
Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, 8ore Eyes, Disease
ulous Sores and Swellings, Goitre, Hip-joint Thick Neck,, ,
“White Swellings,” or ten cents in
and Enlarged Glands. Send
stamps for a large Treatise, with colored
plates, on Skin Diseases, or the same amount
for a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections
“FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE/'
Thoroughlv cleanse it by using Dr. Plerce’l#
Golden Medical Disco very* and good
digestion, a fair skin, health buoyant will be spirits, established. vital!
strength and bodily
CONSUMPTION, Scrofula oftho Lung*, is arrested
which is if the'
and cured by this the remedy, From taken its in
earlier stages of disease. mar
velous power over this terribly fatal disease*
when first offering this now world-famed rem¬
edy to the public, Dr. Pierce thought Cube,” seriously- but
of calling it his “Consumption for
abandoned that name as too restrictive
a medicine whioh, from its wonderful com¬
bination blood-cleansing, of tonic, or anti-bilious, strengthening, pectoral, alterative, and
or unequaled, not only
nutritive properties, is
as % remedy for Consumption, but for all
Chronic Disease* of tho
Liver, Blood, and Lungs.
For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Short¬
ness of Breath, Chronic Nasal Catami, kindred Bron¬
chitis, Asthmm Severe Coughs, and
affections, it is an efficient remedy. Six Bottle*
Sold |3$“ by Druggists, at 81.00, or
Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce’*
bra>k on Consumption. Address,
World’s Dispensary Medical Association,.
663 Main St., BUFFALO, ff. I.
OjCl^sl Xj.
The Groat Nursery ol
PERCHElfl^ HORSES.
200 Imported Brood Mares
Of Choicest Famillea. , t
m LARCENt ffBERS,
All Ages, both hexes.
m W ■3 IN STOCKr
/Qr ,
mM
*=£ ■V?
300 te 400 IMPORTED ANNUALLY
from France, ftll recorded with extended pedigree* In the
Percheron Stud Books. Tho Pcrchrron I# the only draft
treed of France poeeciwlng a stud took that has the
wpport and endorsement of the French Ooremment.
lend bouheu*. for 120-psge Catalogue, tlluRtrstions by Hess
M, w. DUNHAM,
Wayne. DwPaga Co., Illinois*
J.P. STEVENS &BR0.
JEWELERS, Atlanta. Ga.
I«s4 for Catalog**.
BUSINESS
Rdnoation a specialty at MOORE’S BIJ8INB8S
schools UNIVERSITY, in the Country. Atlanta, Mend tin. Circulars, On* of the best
tor
| fill 41 11 ll 7 tiliill'eni'FttKE .* 1 i'dt
A1P Fist top No. 7 Oook Stove for SI 0.00
Pensions to Soldiers A Hours Bond sums
for Circulars COL. L. BINQt
HAM. stt’y. Washington. D. a
Piso’s Remedy for Ostarrh is the
Beet, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest
CATAR R H
;»
A. If. U.............. L.TwmtMwsi >87