Newspaper Page Text
d Western
* RAILWAY.
*" "**
mil OARD IN EFFECT MAY 16, 1887.
ufoSpws***” kin * on ro * <1 run daily
WMt India Fast Mall.
Xiun DOWN. MUD UP,
Plant Sttamship Una.
Thurs..,.pmf Monday and! . Lr...Tampa...Ar _ Thnra an1
Tuesday and, 8un...pm Wed. and
Friday..p m \ Ar . -- K °y _ West..Lv . _ 84 ..p m
Wednea.aiul I Ar.. Havana.. Lv Wed. . and
Sat 1 .....a m .Sat...noon
____
_ Pullman Buffet Cars
land Tampa. to and from New York
Mtw Orleans Exprm.
7 08 am Lv. ..Savannah ...Ar 7 68 pm
8 49 am Lv. .....Jeaup.. ...Ar 6 16 pm
> 60 am Ar. ..Way cross. 05 pm
U 20 am Ar. ..Callahan.. .. Lv 2 47 pm
19 noon Ar Jacksonville ________Lv 2 06 pm
7 00 attvLv..... Jackwouvi.le......Ar 7 35 pm
IMS am Lv .. Wavo. o.,s t..Ar 4 40 pra
19 04 .
pm Lv ..Valdosta.. . .Lv 2 56 pm
19 84 pm Lv Quitman.. Lv 2 28 pm
^ 22 ..
pm Ar Thotnoaville Lv ) -15 pm
.
86 pm Ar Btiimridge. ...____ .. Lv 11 25 am
,
04 _
4 pm Ar.... Cnattahoocheo.... Lv 1130 am
Pullman buffet curs to ami imni Jackson¬
ville and New York, to and from Waycross aud
Hew Orleans via Pensacola.
East Florida Express.
1 80 pm Lv......Sav.tnnah.......Ar 12 06 am
8 20 pm Lv........Jeaup........Lv 10 32 am
4 40 pm Ar......Wa yuroas.......Lv 9 ‘23 am
7 36 pm Ar.....Jaokaonvi us Lv 7 00 am
4 16 p m L v...... Jacksonville Ar i) 45 am
*7l»0 pm Lv.......Waycrosa.......Ar 6 35 am
8 81 pm Ar....... Dupont....... Lv 5 3 ) am
_ CityT.....A
8 26 pra Lv..... L&ke r 10 45 am
4 a - .....Live .... GaiutiHville O.tk......Ar Ar 10 7 30 10 am am
8 40 pm Lv.......Dupont Ar 5 25 am
10 86 pm Ar.....ThomaHviil *.....Lv 3 25 tin
1 22 am Ar Abttuy Lv 1 25 am
Pullman buffet cars to and from Jackson¬
ville and St. Louis via Tliomasville aud Albany,
Montgomery, Nashville.
Albany Exprass.
7 85 pm Lv.......Savannah......Ar 6 10 am
10 05 pm Lv Jeeup . Lv 3 20 am
12 40 am Ar..... Way cross...... .Lv 12 10 am
5 80 am Ar......Jacksonville. ...Lv 9 00 pm
000 pm Lv ......Jacksonville.....Ar 5 30 am
1 06 am Lv Waycrtms. .. Ar 11 3 > t>m
2 80 am Ar Dunoni.. ..Lv Id (,5 pm
7 10 am Ar . .. Livt 0 ik.......: v 6 55 pm
1 0 80 im At'.. , OdiiuHvillf..... Lv 8 45 pm
10 46 urn At',. . , .Ln he City......Lv 3 25 pm
2 65 am Lv..... ... Tin pout. . At : 1( 35 pm
6 80 am Ar...... Tlioi )h viile. • •Lv 7 00 urn
11 40 am Ar.......A I 1 i V , .... Lv 100pm
fet Stops sleeping at ail h. Pullman Imf
ch '
S avannah, it ml to h .. n tow mill Sit
annuli vm Onil sv ll .
Thomasvilie Express.
10 6 05 26 a tn Lv......Way homus'ilb*..., mss......Ar 7 00 p m
a m A .....I Lv 2 15 p in
Uiops at ull regular ami Hug -hum n-.
WM. P. HAltDEE,
llcu'i, 1 ’ush. A. 1 *,
it. Q. FLEMING, Supe’t. ten dent..
R/TTTSTFl'WT O
RAIL AND WESTERN I
It O A n.
TY TY ROUTE.
fifty Milt Shorter Than any Other
Moute Between Wayoroee
and A lbany.
Oa and after 8undajr, Novambsr llik, 1881
pasaaafwr trains will run as follows ; j
FOB TUB WIST, NORTH AND SOUTH.
_ Brmnswtch..............lv , , Mall. Express.
Pjlss’ Marsh............lv 600 am 7 60 pm
J*n«ica................lv *6 27 am »8 16 pm
6 64 am 8 48 pm
Hoboksn Wavnasvills.............J T 7 82 am 9 23 pm
.............lv 8 20 am 10 27 pm
Boblaltsi vllls............lv 8 41 am*10 46 pm
Wayoross ...............ar 9 06 am 11 16 pm
Savannah, Callahan................ar via 8. V AW.. ar 11 55 am 6~T0ara
Jacksonville.............ar 11 26 am 5 25 am
12 00 m 6 15 am
Jacksonville, £*b»k*n................lv via 8. f. A W lv 7 00 am 8 15 pm
®* 7 83 am 9 05 pra
T *n"*b....... -. - ..... It 7 06 am 1 80 pm
Psarson................. Wajcross via B A W.....lv 10 00 am ll 80 pm
It n jg tm 13 48
A}*Pfha................lv Tj..................lv 12 2 08 80 P m 8 1 53 11 am
................!▼ *18 pm am
Willingham.............lv pm 8 28 am
2 44 pm
Davi* Alba ................... iv 1 00 pm
n y.................. gr 8 25 pm 4 45 am
fiakely, Columbus...............ar via C. R. R ..... ar 7 20~pm .....
........ 1 55 pm
f * 00 ' 1 .................... 8 24 pm 9 04 am
Atlanta..................ar 12 15 am 1 06 pm
Marietta, via W. A A......ar 1 24 am 2 38 pm *
OhattfB oga....,........ar 6 55 am 7 07 rm
Loniavill# viaL AN.... ar 6 40 pm 6 30 am
Cincinnati, via Cm. 80 ... ar 6 45 pra 6 40 am
FROM THE WEST, NORTH AND SOUTH.
Clasinnatt, Mail. Express.
vis Oin. So.... It 7 55 am I 10 pm
Louis rills, via LA N.....ar 7 60 am 8 40 pm
Chattanooga, via W. A A., lv 9 05 pra 8 05 am
.... 1* 1 28 am 12 68 pm
Atlanta, via a R. R......lv 2 26 am 2 00 pm
!“*** Colnmbus...............l n -.....*............ It 8 15 am 6 10 pm
T .......... n 80 am
..................lv 7 20 am ....... .
Albany, via B A wf.. .... lv n 00 am 1010 pm
Davia..................lv Willingham..............lv 11 26am ....
I® ll 41 am .....
.fyTF* 1 ®?**.................It 12 13 pm 11 18 pm
.................. It 12 82 pm 11 28 pm
E?* .................It 2 11 pm 12 43 < id
r *°®.................. It 3 30 pm 1 43 am
Wayorosa..... ......... ar 4 49 am 8 00 am
BavannaETriafl. f. AW., ar 7 68 pra ll 65 urn
Oallaban. ................ 6 67 pm 5 26 *m
Jacksonville............... 7 35 p m 3 jj am
Jacksonville, Callahan............ via B FA W. lv kO •— CJ»
lv BO © |
Bav annah...... ..... lv ** >m •+> o« ira
Wayeroaa, via BA^ lv ot >m 5* am
ReblatUrville....... lv os Si am |
Hoboken.......... lv Ot pra am j
Waynaaville....... lv OB S am
Jamaica.......... ......It 5
Pylaa’ Marah...... It OB c* am
Brnnawtck........ .... ar Ot o
Purchase •Stop on BignaL
tiokets at tha station, and save
•xtra fare aollactad upon the train.
The mail train stops at all B. A W. stattona
Connections made at Waycross to and from
«ffl |>ointe on Savannah, Florida A Weatero
Pullman Palaoe Bleeping and Mann Boudoir
Express. shaping oara upon Jacksonville and Cincinnati
First-class sar through betwssn Brunswick
and Atlanta. F. W. ANOIEB, A. O. P. A.
J. A. MoDUFFIB. O. P. A.
A. A. QADDIS, f. V. A O. M.
FOB Q00B
PRINTING
—GO TO TKX—
JOURNAL OFFICE
JffELL>8 AUD SEBASTOPOL.
A Notable Locality In the Centre of
New York City.
The particular resort known as Hell’s
Kitchen is a group of tenement houses
on the west sideM*on the New York, in
the vicinity of Thirty-ninth street. The
policemen in the nig^t patrol in the
middle of the street. Otherwise they
would be killed by the bricks and rocks
that are cast at them from the house-,
tops. . Something like nine hundred ar¬
rest® were made in Hell’s Kitchen last
year, and ordinary fights, scuffles, wife
children oeatings and inhuman treatment of
Aliout are thousand obliged to pass unnoticed.
ill-dressed, a dirty squalid, repulsive wretched,
and men and
women and children are crowded into a
few tenements there, and their only am¬
bition apparently is to kill a policeman
on the beat and take an occasional drub¬
bing out of each other. Young thieves
are trained in a most artistic manner,
and if a petty criminal can only get
away from the police and secrete* him¬
self somewhere in the Kitchen it is the
labor of a lifetime to find him. There
are a lot of queer old rookeries in some
of the yards of the tenements, and some
of these are furnished with all sorts of
underground passages and queer dives
and ferret holes. Sebastopol is a block
or two off from Hell’s Kitchen. I went
there once with a police sergeant and
some friends from Cincinnati. They
went to see what the squalor of New
York life was. After they had seen it
they Cincinnati. seemed perfectly satisfied with
visit place My late purpose originally was
to the at night, but tho
polieo would not hear of that, so we
went around between seven and eight
o’clock in the evening. The door of the
first tenement we eame to was black
with people. Half-naked children- lay
sprawling repulsive-looking on the sidewalk, slatternly
and women leaned
out of the windows, and men who were
only the hallways partially dressed lounged about in
and on tho steps. Droves
of dissolute and flirty-looking girls and
three women brawny were gossiping Irishmen in the halls, and
who had just
come in from the gas works diffused the
odor of that useful illuminating agent
odors throughout the place. The variety of
intensity was sickening. something appalling and tho
The inmates stared
at us first and then began to groan, yell
and howl like so many derisive maniacs.
One policeman had been killed and
three badly wounded on that beat dur¬
ing in the month. Many of the tenements
New York are inhabited by
people inmates who, of Hell’s though Kitchen, just as Sebastopol, poor ns the
and Battle Row, are nevertheless cleau
ly and decent in the matter of attire
and personal surroundings. But in
these cesH|K>ols 5 of vice and wickedness
th „ TO f K m t B 8ingle fe , lture tlmt
vates the inmates above the level of tho
brute creation.
A Wonder.
nifrginsville, Mo., has a mnthemnticnl
‘A’Oi.der who doosn’t know a letter of the
alphabet other, or one printed figure from U;»
but who is wonderfully strong ou
mental calculations, making them off¬
hand. IIin name is Reuben Fieldy, and
ho is 36 years of age. He claims that
bin gift was given from heaven, and says
it eame suddenly to him when 8 years
old. lie HiiyM the Lord made but one
Fields. Samson, one Solomon, and one Reub
To the one he gave strength,
the other wisdom, and to himself tho
nmtheinntieal instinct. He guards this
instinct with the utmost euro, and will
not answer questions unless he is paid,
fearing that it will be taken from him
should he use it to satisfy idle curiosity.
East Tennessee, Virginia &
Georgia Railway.
GEORGIA DIVISION.
I I ME CARD IN EFFECT JULY 24, 1887.
NORTHWARD.
Lomvo Atlanta............ 7 35 am 1 00 pm
Arrive Rome.............. 10 40 am 4 10 pm
Leave Rome.............. 10 45 am 4 15 pm
A rive-Dalton............ 15 00 m 5 30 pm
Arrive Chattanooga . •. 1 35 pm 7 00 put
SOUiHBOUND.
No. 15. No. 13.
Leovt’ Atlanta...... 6 05 am 7 05 pm
Arrive M icon....... 9 30 am 1015 pm
Leave Macon....... 9 35 am 10 20 pm
Arrive Jenup........ 3 15 pm 8 13 am
L ave Jt sup........ 8 20 pm 3 20 h m
Arrive Wnvcross.... 4 40 pm 4 20 am
A 1 ri.ve Callahan..... 6 59 pm 6 30 am
Arrive Jacksonville.. 7 45 pm 7 25 am
(
Leave WnycfiM"..... 7 20 pm 6 05 am
Arrive Thomasvilie. 10 5o pm 10 24 am
Ii*ave Je*up..... 3 20 pm 3 30 am
Arrive Brunswick 5 35 pm 6 00 am
Leave Jestip...... 6 16 pm 315 am
Airive Savannah.. 7 58 pm 6 10 am
Arrive Charleston. 115 am 12 65 pm
GREAT KENNE 8 AW ROUTE-EAST.
---——
Leavo Arrive Chattanooga......... Knoxville........... onnLU ^
“ Bristol.............. 7K)pm 6 20 am
“ Roanoke............. 13«»m taiepml 02pm j
“ Natural Bridge...... 3 54 am 2
“ Luray............... 750 am 6 03 pm |
“ “ HarrishU’g,......... Htgerstown......... \ 5 SLn I
“ Philadelphia......... 6 50 pm 4 25 am
“ New York........... 9 35 pm 7 10 am
--
Leave Roanoke........ 1 36 am 12 0 in’n
Amve Lynchburg..... 3 45 am 2 40 pm
“ Washington..... 10 45 am 9 40 pm
“ BtHim re....... 12 OOn'u 11 25 pm
“ Philadelphia.... 2 10 pm 3 00 am
*• New York....... 4 50 pm 6 20 am
Leave Lynchburg......... 6 55 am 00 SB
Arrive mkville.......... 9 80 am wft
“ Petersburg......... 1130 am l- BE
“ Norfolk............ 2 25 pm O
Leave Hagarstown...... 12 01 n ’11 2 30 pm
Arrive Baltimore........ 6 24 pm
“ Philadelphia..... 8 20pm
“ New York........ 10 34 pm .-111^:;
VIA MEMPHIS AND CHARLESTON R. R.
Li Hve Chattanooga ! 9 25 «m 7 10 pm
Arrive M ntphis ... , 9 15 pm 6 10 am
Arrive Little Rock ll 55pra
VIA K. C. F. S. A G. R. R.
Leave Mompiua............. City.......... 10 7 40 30ai«
Arrive Kan ean ai* I
VIA CINCINNATI SOUTHERN R’Y. 1
Leave Chattanooga .... 5 0 'am 7 10 pm
Arrive Louisville...... 6 15 pm 6 1)5 am
Arrive Cincinnati...... 6 42 pm 6 40aiu
Arrive Chicago........ 6 50am 6 40 put
Arrive 81 . Louis........ 6 50 am 6 9-bi 0 1
VIA N. C. A 8. L. B Y |
Leave Chattanooga......... 1 40 P m lllo^
Arrive Nashville............ 7 00pm 6 20 am :
Arrive Louisville ............ 2 20 am 2 20pm
Arrive Chicago ............. 10 50 »ni ........ j
Arrive 8f. Louis.......... 6 30 am
at Pullm ____ 1:00 in Sleepers for Chattanooga. leave as follow.: Chattanooga Atlmta j
at 10:00 p. m.. for New York via Sht nandoad ,
Valley. p.m., Chattanooga and
at 9.30 a. m., 10:00 p. ,
m. ( for Washington via Lvnchbu.g. Chati- .
anooga at 7:10 p. m., for Memphis. |
Pullman Buffet Sleeping Cara, leave Atlanta !
doily Leighton for Jacksonville Sleeping Cars at 7.05 have p. Atlanta m. at 10:20 |
^mbsormsDoi. •
useful Knowledge of our duties is the moat
part of philosoph/.
Cleverness is a sort of genius fpr in¬
strumentality. hand. It is the brain of the
sinners, Judged and by juaged profession, there are no
by practice there are
no saints.
Modesty and the dew love the shade.
Each shine in the open day only to be
exhaled in heaven.
Advice is like snow; the softer it falls,
it the sinks longer it dwells mind. upon, and the deeper
into, the
He whose only claim to the title “gen¬
tleman” is in his clothes, must necessarily
bo careful as to what he wears.
Costly followers are not to be liked;
lest while a man maketh his train
longer, he makes his wings shorter.
The wise prove, and the foolish con¬
fess, by their conduct, that a life of em¬
ployment is the ®ndnessare only life worth living.*
Reason and the great pro
mo^-rs of that harmony and hilarity
which generate friendship and affection.
The aspirations of the race for further
and higher development nerve the arm
which strikes down the barriers of an
ignorant past.
pedient, Nothing since’that but the right can ever be true b« ex¬
can never ex¬
good pediency which would sacrifice a greater
to a less.
(jJrcon Cadets at West Foint.
“Fall in!” the command was, sharply.
You should have seen those green boys
about trying to get in ranks. There were now
100 “beasts,” and they looked like
a herd of Texas steers, though more sub¬
dued. After a while the “beasts,” in¬
cluding my trembling self, were strung
out into a long, wavering line, and a ca¬
det corporal commenced to call the roll
of candidates. Eacli one was instructed
to answer, “Here!” Some who answered,
“Present,” were nipped in the bud, and
taught a lesson iu cadet discipline. One
poor fellow who was rather tardy in re¬
plying to his name, was commanded to
“step out” and answer to his name.”
“ 8 te|) out ” is the West Point slang for
“make haste,” and when the “beast”
actually did step out of rank, he was
surprised at the celerity with which he
was made to step back. The formation
was for dinner, and we were retained
until the battalion of cadets had started.
They marched off, headed by the drum
corps, with all the accuracy and beauty
of a vast machine. Finally our time
came. The plebcs at the head of the
column interpreted the meaning of the
command: “Forward, march,” and the
procession started for the large granite
structure known as the mess hall.
It was like running the gauntlet. One
cadet in the rear of the line hollered at
me in clun a voice of special envy: “Drag in .
your about a jard, mister. I want
to see less slouching among you beasts;
stand up: str. I tried to obey. Each
1 ,e * lls eoat buttoned full up, the
palms , of his hands to the front, and all
the while his toes digging up the gravel
of the area. Philadelphia l imes,
Shoemakers' Secrets.
An . nl.l ... .linenniker , te I, the M. Lotus
Gh T lk„„.ml of n trick or two in shoe
making winch he learned when lie was a
bo\, which appears to he still hidden
miseries to a lot ot the fashionableslioe
makers. One of these concerns not only
the appearance ol the shoe butithc com
fort of the wearer. IIovv many times do
lief you see men’s big toes rising in high re
impressions above the surface of the
upper f Naturally you feel that the
wearer of such a shoe must suffer from
this pressure on his big toe, and he does;
if not immediately, at some time iu the
future. 3 he whole difficulty can be
obviated by providing a depression in
the sole of the shoe into.which the toe
fastening will fit. This piece depression the is obtained and beating by
a on last
the sole around it until it is molded to it.
When the toe is thus cared for there will
be no ingrowing toe-nails and no un
sightiy thing protrusion of the upper. Another
that may he interesting to shoe :
wearers and to shoemakers is this: A
blistered or sore heel caused by a new
shoe may be relieved by taking a small 1
piece of common newspaper, crushing it
in the hand and placing it under the ail¬
ing heel. The bit of paper has the effect
of in a “lift,” and forcing the foot forward
the shoe leaves the heal entirely free
from the counter.
Music in China.
The Chinese plav to-dav just as they
did 2,000 years ago, says II. E. Krehbiel
r l'he art as it was then has been
petrified “by and a fantastic system of mental
philosophy tism.” that an in adamantine considering conserva¬ the
So con¬
dition of the musical 'rt in China to-day
we have an actual sight of what was the
system and practice at the time of Plato.
The refinement in this knowledge of
music is mostly on its metaphysical side,
The Chinese sages could and do publish
doctrine touching music which is golden
doctrine in tho art of to-day, but the
sounds thev produce are a din in which
truces ot order and of melodious sequence
are not discernible except by a very
patient and a very well trained ear. A
barbarism rests on the music still, and to
add to the many paradoxes which the
Chinese hold before us, they concede that
the art of to-dav is a degenerate one,
j )U j speak with pride of one now lost
which flourished at a time when Greeco
was yet shrouded in pre-historic gloom,
A Curious Law Case.
A . law , which , . , , has .
curious case, arisen
out ot the recent earthquake at Diane
Marino, will shortly be decided beforean
Italian Iliano Marino, court. belonging Two adjoining houses at
to two different
families, . . destroyed by the earth
were
quake anil the inhabitants were all killed,
>Vhen the ruins and corpses were re
moved, the sum of 200,000 francs in
gold and bank notes was found among
the debris, .Vs it an as impossible to as
certain to which house the money be¬
longed, and as no member of either fam
jlyNvas saved to decide the matter, the
surviving relatives have brought their
cases before the judges, whose decision
is expected iu Italy with much interest.
— Argonaut.
An Oculist’s Advice.
Kcej) a shade on your gas burner.
Never read or sew directly in front of
the light, window or door.
It is best to let the light fall from
ab ° ve » over the left shoulder.
Never sleep so that ou first awakening
the eyes shall open on the light of a
window.
Never begin to read write or sew for
several minutes after coming from dark-*
Bess to light. the
I)o not use evesiuht :' bv liffht diY so
8Cant * cunt that tnat it H requires reouir{ an m effort effort to to aw
criminate, cloudy whether twilight, moonlight
or on days,
Finally, the moment you areiustinct
j V elv prompted to rub your eyes that
‘
I nw.imr^
Missouri's Mathematical Prodigy
and His Wonderful Work.
One of the most wonderful men of
ttie day is living a few miles south of
where HiggmsviDe, Prof. Mo. He is known every¬
as Reuben Fields, and
probably who travels the only man in the oountry
free on railroads and never
has a pass, and don’t bother about the
long and short haul clause. Prof. Fields
is He undoubtedly has education a mathematical wonder.
know no single letter of whatever, does not
a the alphabet, nor
his own name if printed in sixteen-line
pica wood type, bold face. Nor does he
know one figure from another, though
he will solve any problem in mathemat¬
ic given him. The Professor called at
the office of the Globe-Democrat oorres
pondent to-day and entertained him and
his friends for some time. He never
carries a watch, but when asked what
time of day he promptly answered four¬
teen minutes and thirty-four seconds
after 3. Though four watches varied
slightly as to the seconds, the minutes
were all right. When asked on what
day ber, of the week the 23d day of Novem¬
1861, came, he answered, “Satur
of dftjj” similar . He questions answered this and a number
without a moment’s
hesitation. To the question: “What
will thirty-nine pounds of sugar at 13
cents a pound amount to ?” He prompt¬
ly answered, $5! 07, and before those who
question were figuring with him could get the
on paper.
The question: “ What will nineteen
and a half yards of calico at six and
quickly three-quarter cents amount to?” waa
answered—$1.31 |. These were
very easy ones to the Professor, and he
asked for something hard.
The following was given him:
“If I run twenty-seven yards in one
minute, how long will it take to run six
miles?” With very little study came
the answer—3911-9 minutes, or 6 hours,
311-9 minutes.
These problems seemed not to puzzle
him, as the answers came as soon as the
questions were asked. On the following,
however, he required a littlo study,
him. owing, The as he said, to the noise about
Louisiana, question was: “From here
to Mo., it is 169 miles; how
many revolutions does the driving
wheel of an engine, 16 feet in circumfer¬
ence, mnko in a run from this place to
Louisiana?”
The Professor studied a little, mutter¬
billions, ing strings of figures. “Millions,
the mile—53,988 trillions, quadrillions, 352 to
before revolutions,” came the
answer the calculators found out
how many revolutions it made to the
mile. The figures “734” were written
on paper and shown him. He did not
know what they were, and, in fact, he is
ignorant on any other subject than
mathematics, and then the question
must be asked verbally. He is 36 years
G f ftge , and was born in Kentucky. He
claims that his gift was given from
heaven, and says that it came to him
suddenly the Lord when 8 years old. He says
made but one Samson, one
Solomon, and one Reub. Fields. To
the one he gave strength, to the other
wisdom, ami to himself mathematical
instinct. He guards this instinct with
tho utmost cure, and will not answer
questions unless he is ,; paid, fearing ff that
it win bo tilko „ fvoln im s!l<m l (1 e „ a0
it to satisfy idle curiosity. He also was
given the following:
“Alias a certain sum of money; he
goes to a theatre and pavs$l admission,
spo »ds half of what he has left, and
pays 81 to get out; he goes to n second
theatre and pays 81 admission, spends
half lie has left, and pavs $i to get out:
ho goes to a third theatre, pays 81 nil
mission, spends half of what ho has left,
and then pays his last dollar to get out;
how much had he when he s'aitod?”
While one or two of those present
commenced to scratch up lialf-forgotten
a’gebra, the professor was soaring
among the “millions, billions, trillions,
quadrillions,” and then suddenly drop
ped down to $21 before the algebraical
calculators got their paper ready toeom
mence. Before the professor left each
one present knew the day of the week
each one was born on. *fho professor
accepted a dollar with thanks, and
promised another call to-morrow,
Luxurious Lounge.
The “Parsee chair” is announced ns
the successor of the hammock. A sea
shore correspondent who has seen one
describes it as a sort of box or craiilc of
mahogany, sides. with a high back and low
It is covered with Hindu rugs,
and has two large, s ft pillows worked
* n r ' c ^» I urkish embroidery. At each
corner the chair is supported by ropes
which depend from the roof, and which
run through hollow pieces of mahogany,
making and flexible the supports seem like slender
wooden columns. “In the
Harsec chair,’’ it seems, “a lady may
l° u, igc and swing in the most picturesque
attitudes, without suffering that cur
va * urc of the spine which the hammock
entails. ’
A Long Sleep.
. c the _ French ,
10 ° r ni ^ 1 s ® eep o
oom I nc rnal , traveller, Chuffut, vlnch
cieated , such , a sensation 111 London, Eng
ail , < }’ as l |’ s P r;n R,1 »’, 1US 8a,l ,^ een at Completely Wal
Pcll ton l )sc workhouse, ‘ ? a “ 8,an near Liverpool . or Win
.
^toffsky was condition, brought to the workhouse
m a.sleepy and at once went
off into a pleasant doze, which lasted
thiee weeks, when he woke up apparently
much refreshed. On awakening, Win
stoffskv was quite convinced that he had
only taken his usual night’s rest. He had
been fed regularly, and his general con
dition of health was exet l ent.
____________
The Cremation Society of Zurich,
Switzerland, has adopted the Bourry
system, whereby only heated air commu
nicates with the body, which is burned
by the abundance of hot oxygen around
lt . The process ofcr.mation takes an
hour aud a half, und can be seen through
a window in the back of the sarcophagus,
i Theic ; is no smell of tsiokc
Edelweiss, «he Alpine bridal blosom,
i 8 being forced bv a New Jersey florist
an(i *iu |, c a 'fashionable flower the
• com iug winter for trimming wedding
was.
“L there no balm in Gilead ?
Is there no physician there?”
Thanks to D . Pierce, there is a Ualm in his
“Golden Medical Discovery”—a “balm for
every wound" to health, from colds, coughs,
consumption, b onchitis, and all chronic, blood,
lung and liver affections. Of druggists.
Experiments prove that electric lamps claim¬
ing to have 2,000 candle power have only 800.
No investir.e it pays so well as a good educa¬
tion, as is clearly shown by the record of the
Alumni of the Rugby School, Louisville, Ky.
it nas stood with the foremost in preparing
boys for college or business life. The terms are
for catalogue to
A. L. McDonald, Principal,
IlniiKlitern, Wivennnd llotheri.
Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, free
securely sealed. Dr. J. H. Marehisi, Utica, N.y!
^Bronchitis Is cured by frequent small doses ot
~ —
“ *—'* Kart la Where A
Treed.** ■ vela few te
y®V5g» S&SW^itKtSX? and should write to Dr. H&pSS R. V. Pierce,
♦k ^S?~2l N of ’. Y that p tlle class author of patients, of a treatise and de¬ for
scribe your symptoms and sufferings. 1 He ean
Particulars t^y Ur u^ me * * n< * * end T° u full
placed t. 1 ? 0 ^ 8 on ® *">"» t he forehead Paper is soaked good for in vinegar headache. and
, a
Children Starring Te Death
On aecount of their inability to digest food,
will find a most marvelous food and remedy in
Scott’s Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver Oil with
Hypophosphltes. Very palatable and easily
digested. Dr. 8. \V. Cohew, of Waco, Texas,
tu« !?fK°ott 8 L “A have ,?*** your results. Emulsion Jt in not Infan- only
restores r wasted tissues, but gives strength and
aSSS’. 2 ?i?rr““- 1
In Chicago, Ill., enough beer is consumed to
give each inhabitant 730 glasses yearly.
eJF mi H v habit 8 ? ! ,rho of - a ^ intemperance e . tr> ' ln « to break will up experience the bane
great benefit ftom the use of Prickly Ash Bit
Asn rs - Bitters Liquors derange the system. Prickly
will remedy the evil results and
restore the brain, stomach and liver to healthy
action, thereby strengthening the will power,
thoroughly tem and cleansing and toning up the sys¬
purely remove every taint of disease. It is
taste, it a medicine, and while pleasant to the
cannot be used as a beverage by reason
of its cathartic properties.
Sweet clover from is a reliable crop for owners of
apiaries, July until frost.
To Ladies
of Suffering; the painful from disorders functional derangements weaknesses incident or any
to the or
sex. Dr. Pierce’s treatise, illustrated with
wood-cuts and colored plates (160 pages), sug
gcsts sure means of complete self-cure. Sent
for 10 cents in stamps. Address W orld’s Dis¬
pensary Medical A sociation, Buffalo, N.Y.
Miss Minnie E. Folsom, relative of Mrs. Cleve¬
land, is preceptress of Brookings College, Dak.
If afflicted with sore eyes, rise Dr. Thompson’s
Eye-water. All druggists sell it at 25c. a bottle.
Do Not Neglect
That tired feeling, impure blood, distress after eating,
pains In the back, headachs, or similar affections till
some powerful disease obtains a firm foothold, and
recovery Is difficult, perhaps Impossible. Take Hood's
Sarsaparilla, the defender of health, In time to ban
sh all bad feelings and restore you to perfect health.
I “When I took Hood's 8arsapar!lla that heaviness
In my stomach left; the dullness in my head, and the
gloomy, despondent feeling disappeared. I began to
get stronger, my blood gained better circulation, fhe
ooldness In my hands and feet left me, and my kid¬
neys do not bothsr me as before.’’ a. W. Hcu., At¬
torney at Law, MtUersburg, O.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for 95. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD Sc CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Maas.
IOO Doses One Dollar
p.&
rt ^IPRICKa I * S p H RictaYASHB5J^.
f. SENNA-MANDRAKE-BUCHU
! i ’h' \ i Lia anootneb It has Curiag stood cquAuy all the efficient Diseases Test of remedies Years, of the
BLOOD, LIVER, 8T0M
| I ACH, KIDNEYS,BOW
■ ■^ashI^ I ELS, &c. It Purifies the
Blood, Invigorates and
BITTERS Clean ses the Sys tem.
DYSPEPSIA,CONSTI¬
ALLDIStASESCFTHE CURES PATION, JAUNDICE,
LIVER 8ICKHEADACHE,BIL¬
IOUS COMPLAINTS,Ac
KIDNEYS its disappear be at once under
neficial infl uence.
STOMACH It its is purely a Medicine
AND as cathartic proper¬
BOWELS ties forbids its nse as a
beverage. It is pleas¬
I ant to the taste, and as
easily adults. taken by child¬
ALLORUGGISTS ren as
priceTdollar PRICKl Y ASH BITTERS CO
Sole Proprietor*,
St.L otus and Kansa Oitt
mfiiYees THE ORIGINAL
f\«as«wV LITTLE LIVER PILLS.
SIZE BE WARE OF IMITATIONS !
PELLETSl
OOO Always ask for Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, or Littlo
OOO Sugar-coated Granules or Pills.
BEING ENTIRELY YEGETABLE, Dr. Pierce’s Pellets operate without disturbance to the system,
diet, or occupation. Put up iu glass rials, hermetically scaled. Always fresh and reliable. As a
LAXATIVE, ALTERATIVE, or PURGATIVE, these little Pellets give the moat perfect satisfaction.
Cipy I K 1Ml IlCikDJIPUC r M IS U lliir
W lUll IllaflUfl-Ulllg.
7
Bilious Headache, Dizziness, Con
attpatton, Attacks, and Indigestion, all derangements Bilious of the
Btoinach and bowels, are promptly relieved
and permanently cured by the use of Dr.
Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets. In ex
plnnation Pellets ot the remedial variety power of of diseases, these
tt truthfully be said that over their so great a tho
may action upon system is
universal, not a gland or tissue escaping their sanative influence.
Sold by druggists, for 25 cents a vial. Manufactured at tho Chcin
ical Buffalo, Laboratory N. Y. of World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
0 Hflfl m ii
S (Jr? C( cis off ered bythoj) w
Mi ■m 1 11 I
a m tv t
V L e» tf
FOR A CASE OF CATARRH WHICH THEY CAN NOT CURE.
S YMPTOMS OF f^ ATARRH.
Dull, heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal passages, dis¬
charges falling from the bead into the throat, sometimes pro¬
fuse, watery, and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous,
purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are weak, watery, and
inflamed; there is ringing in the ears, deafness, hacking or
coughing to clear the throat, expectoration of offensive matter,
together with scabs from ulcers; the voioe is changed and has
a nasal twang; the breath is offensive; smell and taste are im¬
paired ; there is a sensation of dUzirtess, with mental depression,
a hacking cough and general debility. However, only a few of
the above-named of symptoms are likely to be preset in any one
case. Thousands oases result annually, consmnption, without manifesting and end half of
the above symptoms, In In the
ve. No disease is so common, more deceptive and dangerous,
understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by physicians.
By its mild, soothing, and healing properties,
DR. SAGE’S CATARRH REMEDY
CURBS tot worst casks ok
Catarrh, “Cold in the Held,” Coryzi, Md Catarrhal Headache.
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE.
«**
KIDDBIt’t
i ten cure por
INDIGESTION ___ _ and DYSPEPSIA.
forladJaestlon thatibay hare ever used,
r, DIQBSTYLIN Py* wag taken of that * ee— waa ot not Dyspepsia cured. where
FOR CHOLERA IHFAHTUM.
_ I* ^ILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION.
Vor Summer _ Complaint* and Chronic Diarrhoea,
T.J.DTOlSpfUNftw^tp.lD, s»2ri?iS r »«s‘r.‘r" on -
the , stomach; they all ud dlaonl.ra ot
drusslst for DIOESTYLIN come from Indigestion. A*k
rear (price $1 per large
botUe). Ir he does not have it send one dollar to us
and we will tend a bottle to you, express prepaid.
reliable. ii n 2f Established *® n(1 twenty-five rour money. Our house Is
WM F. KIDDER years. JL* CO.,
- naaaltaeturin* ,* Chemists, 83 Jehn St., N. Y.
pKJrr’s- THOUSANDS
■Tja OOLfl ritt say that
R Ely’s Cream Balm
cured tlicm of
AY-FEVER
Applv Btlm in o each nostril*
__.
M
IT.S a tn IO 0 C CL U u. o J 1 *• J I
o
WiKts Wntnc ALL tint rAILs. q
M P T
Singers and public speak¬
er* will find Piso’s Cure for
Consumption the best medi¬
cine for hoarseness and to
strengthen the voice.
Children will take Piso’s
Cure without objection, be¬
cause its taste is pleasant.
;
Thousands suffer from
a short hacking Cough, who
might be cured by a few
doses of Piso’s Cure.
Sold by druggpsts.
S3 SRI
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best iu Cough Syrup. Sold by Tastes good, Use
time. druggists.
C ON-SUM PT
MARLIN REPEATING
Onaran. RIFLE
teed perfeotly aoT^^rejj BEST IN THE
curate Safe. Made and absolutely ^ WORLDI
la all sixes for
large or small game.
BALLARD
d: A™ r c ‘- ^
DCearllu fire ArniaCo., Xewiluveii, Conn.
Central U ni versity.!
.. ——ii i — i .....
RICHMOND, KY. Next Session opens bep. 14,'87
Full Faculty, thorough instruction, healthy location,
moderate expense. For information and Catalogue
pnlj» *• i. 14 ninmtoaa, 1>. ■>., ,
B PENSIO'iS E. II. C1EI.HTON SiS A CO., W.imIu ngtou, Send BllCCOHsf for D. cir- 111 O. .
MP to 88 a day. Samples worth |1.50, FREE.
dO Brevra°e r Safety ^eln'Holdet^Co., Mich.
rani I I 1 thirty *“™'Jfws; years. Four years airo I was so afflicted with
I | wuiiLUa ni|DCn | I them that I could not walk. I bought two bottles
0 f j> r . pjercos l’leasnnt Purgative Pellets, and took
that T*™ time 0 ™" 11 "™ I ono had ‘Pellet’ no boils, after and have each meal, had till nil since. were I gone. have also Ry
none
been troubled with sick headache. AVhcn I feci it coming on,
1 take one or two ‘Pellets,’ and am relieved of the headache .’ 1
——--
The Best Mrs. C. W. Brown, of Wapahonda, Ohio,
says: “Your ‘Pleasant Purgative Pellets’ aro
Cathartic. without question the beet cathartic ever
sold. for They of are the also a most efficient remedy Them
for torpor liver. We hnvo tised
—---- years in our family, aud keep them In
the house all tho time.”
Uhtolo Agont Prof. W. Hausner, the famous mesmer¬
ist, of Ithaca, N. Y., writes; “Some ten
years ago I suffered untold agony from
ranu RITARRII chronic nasal catarrh. My family pbygi
rnun umaniin. cian gave mo up aa incurable, and said I
must die. My case was such a bad one
that every day, towards sunset, my voice would become so hoarse
I could barely speak above a whisper. In the morning my couch¬
ing and clearing of my throat would almost strangle me. Bv the
uso of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy, in three months, I was a well
man, and the cure has been permanent.”
Hawkingmd Constantly jfEK! 1 'tfcrs
Spitting the S-SiSSt nostrils. I thought atBSKMB nothing &
on< for -Luckily, I advised could be
Dr. Sage s Catarrh Remedy, d L, and I am now a was well man. to I try be
lieve it to be the only sure remedy for catarrh now manufac¬
tured, and one has only to give it a fair trial to experienne
astounding results and a permanent cure.”
Three Bottles I SSSKiS:
Cure bURE Catarrh blTIRRH.J ty.bgr,
IFSStfp™"' * h9ii DOW •Wtwo jnn oi4 «a4 ioua4
f PIE IK THF unilS 1
• Gone where the Woodbind Twin
Bata are amort, but “Rorem oar Bare"
them. Bum, Files, Clean Beetles, out Rata, Moths, Mice, Ant*. Boaohaa, Mosq
Skunks, Bed-bum, weasel, Insects, Gophers, Potato Chipmunks, Buga, 0D«
Musk Rais, Jack B abb i ts, Squirrels. 100 .
HEN LIC
“ Roto* ok Rats’* is a complete p reve nt !*
“Roto* and destroyer of Hen Lice. Mixa&o. boxo
tat Rats” to a pail of whitewash,
keep wash it the well stirred up while applying. White¬
whole Interior of the Hennery; inride
and outside of the neata. The cure la radios.
POTATO For BUSS
Potato liuw, Insects on
Vines, hair Shru'M, Trees, t pound
or box of “Rocom the contents of a 81.00
on Rats” (Agri¬
cultural Size) to be thoroughly
mixed with one to two barrels
of plaster, or what la butter sir.
slacked thorough lime. Much mixing, deper rH J
to completely distribute upon the s L
it plants, trees shrubs poison. when 8pri
wet, on and is quite effective or when mixed damp re
l lime, dusted without wit
its concentrated on moisture. While-i 7
state it is the most acti
and strongest of all Bug Poisons; when mixed
as above is comparatively harmless to nuf
mals or persons, In any quantity they would
take. If preferred to use in liquid form,atable
spoon ful of the full strength “Rotoh on Rats’*
Powder, well shaken, in a keg of water and
applied wbi.sk with broom, a sprinkling will be pot, spray syringo
or Keep it well stirred while round very effective.
all up using. Sold $1 by
Druggists and Storekeepers. 15c., 25c. &
E. 8. Wells, Chemist, Jersey City, N. J.
TREATED ROPSY FREE. 0
DR. H. H. GRKRN Ac SONg
Speotalists for Thirteen Years Past,
treat,«(1 Dropsy and its com plication* with t!
moat wtmdorful attoceas; uso vegetable remniMea, t
tirely hartnloHs. Rntnovo alt aymptoina of Dropoy
eight to twenty days. i
Cure patient* pronounced hopeless by the beet
physicians. From .
the first do me tho symptoms rapidly disappear
and in ten d ays at leant two-thirds of all uymptoma.
te moved. JL
Some may cry humlm# without, knowing anything
about it. lt-mcmbor, it does not cost you anything b
realise the morits of our treat ivient tor ymtreolf. In ten
day. tile difficulty of breathiiiK is relieved, the puls*
retfit.nr, the urinary organa nt.id < to discharge th«pr
full duty, sloop is restored, tho swelling all or neatly
/one, the str pgth increased an 1 appetite made gootv
’Va are constant y curing cases t>t long standing,
tint have been tapped a number.d tinns, and t te pa
i lent declared unable to live a week, (live ful hist ry
ot case. Name sox. 11 >.v long nlfixted, how hafify
swollen and where, are bowels o iitivo, have 1 gs buhtt
ea and dripped water? Send 1. r tree pnniplilet, con¬
taining Ten days’ testimonials, treatment question*, furnished etc
If order trial rend lOdfi :r e by mail.
you in stumps to pay postagBk
Epilepsy (Fite) »’*»* tivelv Cur .1.
II. II, (SKEEN dr MIN*. >1. On.,
Marietta Street, Attn ""S'fiL
J. P. STEVENS ft 3 R 0 ,
JEWELERS. t/anta,
Ga.
Iasi for Catalogue.
GOLDSMITH do SULLIVAN’S
&$u<u,4i'edd /
Fitten Building, Atx.anta, Oa Most practical College
South. Best course at le ist cost. Se nd for catalogue.
BUSINESS
Education a specialty at .HOOKliVS It I If* I \ KM.S
schools 1 NIVKItrtlTV. Vtl.illlu. t.u. Oiih of tile bent
in tlio Oountrv. aSomi tur On culars.
Blair’s Pills/SSIo 1 i?”.*"'
Oval Uox.Kt; mu ml, 1 , l*i I In.
fl v#k It til r^l Habit lllblANK Cured. \ rcuiaenineuton trial.
U ' IlKMKIiVCO , I.nFr.yuttc,I>vL
G 8 l. wm, but In x Jil atS . iotite a'h(!x by*(To !itbi. 8ntv#
■'jr*.
t
U ¥5 Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use
In timo. Sold by drug gists._
l
A. N. tl......... ........Thirty-Five, ’KT.