Newspaper Page Text
T J ARRIS FISHER, M. !».,
Physician, Surgeon and Accoucheur.
Office at Eastman Drug Store, next
door to post office. Residence, corner
Fifth avenue and Church street.
Eastman, Ga., .Ian. 11, 1889. ly tuts
J AS. R. MOOD, M. U.
Physician and Surgeon.
Office in basement rear of Masonic
Lodge, formerly occupied by Dr. * - T.
Latir iter. Ke-Jdf'iice south siiioot'f dee 'oiirt 10 |
House Square. to
j jit. \v. L. SMITH,
Dantist, j i
IIA WKIXSV1ELE GEORGIA.
1
Office in Pulaski ilow-c.
12-1-88-1 y tiles
K. T. F. ROBINSON,
OKA l, SI RUKON
idelsttist, .
EASTMAN, GEORGIA.
Office over Sol ilerrnran A: Bro.’s
store. july 19-1 >
j y l.ACY & BISHOP,
Attorneys at Law,
EASTMAN, GEORGIA.
Will practice in all the courts of the
State. Attention given to Convey¬
ancing, Examination of Title** to Land.
Furnishing Abstract* of Title. Execu¬
tors. Trustees, Partnerships,( olh*etions.
Contracts, Criminal Caw and all other
branches of practice. Office at Court
I louse. 2-1-1 y tues
A. SMITH,
Attorney at Law,
EASTMAN, GEORGIA.
Office over store of E..I. Peacock &
Co. 7-.'i | v tucs
. I,. CI.ARK K. ROUT. R. NORM VX
i LA l{ lv A NO KM AN,
Attorneys at Law
MT. VERNON, GA..
will practice in all Slate and Federal
< oiirts. HOV.2S), ’88-1 v
1
N N 5 _i gre~ cr
A PIANO FREE!
Yes, We Mean It.
LIVE IT i \\ A V TO A D V EliTISE
Oi l: BENIN ESS.
WltlTI AND IiKVRN I’ABTB'ILARS
^ fj We sell Music for 10 cents
t Solti elsewhere lor 40cents
to $1.25.
Nentl for Eaialoguc of over .’{,01(0
l>i«'cex to sidci'l from. A great saving
1<> parents *jjo are giving llieir llaug!i
lei s a niiisicul etlucalioi I.
A 'SEW T Giiilars. Banjos, Yi<
lies amt JI ii.xic Boxes
DET Vim RE sold on
small mon
tidy pay incuts. Culalogiie« tree.
Organs, front tt])\varil upward in in price. price.
Pianos, from 4is. r >
If you wish to save money and
itave a musical home, call on or
atddress
THE GEOHGIA MIS1C HOUSE.
1-:. I). IRVINE,
Mulberry Street, Macon, Ga.
Tlie enterprising Mii-ic House
of till’ Sunlit. my24-1 y
A. L. SHEA,
MERCHANT TAILOR,
MACON, G KOIUi IA.
nprt-ly
PEACOCK A NASH,
FEED. 1 ^ FRY AND SALE
/ TABLES.
First class teams. Open day ami niiilit.
Hates reasonable. Special attention
‘riven the eommereial travel.
T.l M HER CITY, GEORGIA
apr23 wiytu
T. H. Davis,
j.n 1 : 1 ; r. VKKU a v /> s.i i.v
STABLES.
■New Supply «•!' Stin k. Hacks, Ktc.
1.1 MBHU Cl I Y. GA.
March I t, fi 1110. tu
Eastman Barber Shop
EASTMAN ti a.
First-class in all Appointments
is A At NINON. Barbkb.
Superior facilities, best
and good o iinpanv always found in our
' Jan. II’80
shop.
s MIL MASON.
rjsino v a mi: n A il it eh.
Fourth Avenue near Fostoffiee.
Kastman, <la.
First Class in Ex'ery Respect.
Ticket. HI shave-, u .00. Single shave.
I.V.
Mar. JJ fi-mo fri
(i. \Y. I’.j 1IR1DGE &('«.
1*KAI.KR-S IN
Fine Whiskies,
WinQC W liicbs Ftp LIU«
416 rori.AHSt., .MACON. GA.
Wo make :t specialty of the
JUG TRADE
gW Al! orders Ty mail receive
prompt attenliou. mar 12-ly tu
Take a Ho^t.
Excnrsa ticket* es will be sold to
all Summer Rest Railwas r by
the East Tennes •ee.Virgi il- Cteorgi*
cing Ju! flit, gw ciore
Octobc ;>» st - Pu
Last c w ith man ca¬
ls \V \\ • RKNN.
Gen. Pass. 9t Tic :kcl Airt
Why Is It
That people linger along always 1 feel- om
plaining about that coutinunl tired
Ing? One l-oitle of M Btao’s “c<hh> entirely l’i -
ntriEU and BtoOt) aker will
remove this feeling, give them a good
appetite and regulate Hkrkmaa' digestion. <'rue-ci-'
Htmutis je
t
WL
Cattt'ftl Railroad
OF GEORGIA.
(90tli Meridian Time.)
SCHEDL'I.E IN EFFECT MAltCH 31, 1889.
FOUR DAILF TRAINS—MACON TO ATLANTA.
t7o irm."" ________ ( j
J .. „-'on 5 MO pm. H'M""' !3 3“ ;t m
;
Ar Arhinu - 1 to Jto'ps” pm. 545 .nlv pm. "at 104o Barnysvillv. pm. :j Griftin I
This train
and K.ist Point. ;
TWO FAST TRAIN'S DAILY
Between Macon ami Montgomery via Columbus
vnd Union Springs. _ __ I
Lv Macon......... i 25 a m 9 35 a 111
Ar.Columbus 7 a in i 40 p m
Ar Biii'.n Springs 35 a ,n 4 47 p m
Ar Montgomery. 1 *35 am <M5P ni
^
DOUBLE DAILY SE KY I( E
To Savannah and Jacksonv ille
Ar.Macon.... 10 45 a m 11 iS p in
I.v Savannah .. 2 30 p m 6 30 a m
Ar k-mnillc 710am 1.100 am
.oTHo—ana/^mc 1,^
Lv Macon ;6 4S p m 1005 a m
..... .
Ar Albany..... | jo 45 p m 2 25 5 P ni
ar Thomasville 5 26 p m
Ar Jacksonville 7 a m
This train does not stop between Mat :on and
Fort Between Valley. and Augusta Milieu :
Macon via
i.v Mat on. 10 45 a in n 15 p m
Ar MiHen. 1 4,1 p m 3 10 p m
Ar August: 4 3<> P 'n 6 35 a m
I ii Columbus and Birmingham :
Lv Macon..... 2 9 35 :i m
at Columbus / -• *' 3 ^ 40 :t m
Ar Birmingham 2 . 10 p 5
To MiUedgeville and Eaton to
Lv Macon........................... .*u» 45 a m
a 1 Milledgevillc.................... ... 2 45 p m
at Eaton ton....................... 4 >5 P m
arrival^ from
Atlanta. .030 a m 1 00 p m 615pm II OO p ID
Columbus 5 10 j> m ji 10 pm S
\lbany... .nnah 6 10 p m I 3 15 40 a a m. in.
20 p m
Katonton *1 20 p m
♦Dailv except Sunday.
SOLID TRAINS
arc run to and from Macon and Colum
Ims, Cnion Springs, Montgomery, Alba¬
ny, Savannah and Atlanta. Sleeping
cars on night trains.
Passengers for Thoniaston take cither
9;0ii a in, or 1:40 pm train. Pu-.*miig<*rs
for Carrollton take either lii.iOamor
b :05 a m train. Passengers for Perry
take cither 9:35 a m or fi :-h> p m train.
Passengers for Fort Gaines. Buena \ i-
ra. Blakely and Clayton should take
10:05 a iii train. Passengers Sandersville for Syl
vania, WrigliUviile and
take 10:15a iii train.
THE “ CENTRAL’’
i- tile only line from Macon makingcon¬
nection in Fnion Passenger Depot at
Atlanta with through trains for the
northeast and northwest, it is tin* line
to rely upon speed, safety and comtort.
Therefore look to your interest and use
it when you travel.
For further information relative, to
schedules, routes, ticket rates, etc.,
write or call uoon
J. A- Endi.kkth, Agent Ga¬
Heceiv'g Depot, Macon,
il. Bkcavn. City Ticket Ag't
Hole! Lanier, Macon, Ga.
,1. T. Hook, Ticket Ag’t
Cen’l I’a-s. Dc't, Mncon.Ga.
E. T. Charlton, G. !’. A.
#pll<> 0 Savaniiali, Ga.
rASSENGKKSCHEDULE
—AND—
FRKKllIT (SERVICE
In (‘lli'i.’t .June. H*», 1880, vi.i the
GEORGIA SOUTHERN anil FLORIDA
RAll.KOAD.
Suwanee River Route to Florida
Standard Time same as Macon city time.
(HHSii sol I II. GOtNt: NORTH.
I v Min too pm Lv. A a 1 dost a 5 15 am
Mat on J tin. 4 05 pm k * M iiu-ola. 5 36 am
Sofkee 4 19 pm ‘* Hahira... 54 am
.. \ vondalt 4 3° P'» “ Cecil.... oy am
.» Wcllston 4 44 “ Adel... - 49 am
Bonaire 4 5 s ?■ 54 am
“ Kathleen 5 °7 ,s 13 am
“ Tivala......5 Tilton 27 am
>.* (irovania. 5 3Dpm “ 42 am
♦» |;jko 5 47 1’"' “ Ch ul:U 57 i ,,n
“ ruAibUa D07 pm •* Inaha. 12 am
•• Pinehurst .,620 pm •* S> . camort X 22 am
“ Findlay. .6 io pm. ■ Ash burn. X 30 am
“ Vienna. 6 40 p m; ** Dafcofa. . z 43 * m
“ Richwood. 6 49 pm \V raW 55 ani
Cordele.. . .7 22 pin* *' Cordele... enona. 07 I9 am
Wenona.. 7 33 P ,n “ am
“ Arnbi...... ! 47 Pm! “ H u h wood 935 :un
** Dak tit a 01 pm | 4 * N’ienna. 9 44 «•»
. Findlay..
Ashhurn ,S 14 pm , “ 9 54
Svcamore S 23 pm I ** Pinehurst.. 10 02 an
. l nadjlla
a Inaha.. .. 8 31 pm ** 10 14 an
* Chula 8 47 pm “ Klko. 10 29 am
Tift on 907 pm) *• Grovania 10 38 am
. Tivola...
‘ Eldorado 925 pm! .lo 53 am
Lenox... 940 pm •* Kathleen 11 03 am
* Sparks... 10 00 pm! “ Bonaire. h 11 am
4 del..... 1005pm! ** Wellstou. .11 24 pm
*» Cecil.,.,, 10 23 pm| “ Avondale. 11 37 pm
Hahira. it> 36 pm “ Sofkee... H 40 pm
'• Mineola. 10 41 pin. ** macon pin..12 on m
Ar. Valdosta 11 15 pm; Ar Macon 12 45 pm
J’us-enger trains arrive and depart
from Fnion Depot daily. Freiglit re¬
ceived and delivered at Central railroad
warehouse. daily
Local freight train leave- Macon
at 0 o'clock a. in., and arrives daily at
S aid o’clock p. 111.
For further information apply to
A, 1 , Knacp, Traffic Manager,
Macon. Ga.
wm.
TUB j:AST TENNESSEE, YIU
GINIA AND UEORUIA
RAILWAY.
)
-VIA
BIU'N'SW 1‘ K. JESl'P.
MACON'. ATLANTA. CHATTANOOGA.
ROME,
—only line _
I1IVUR1 nut n 1.1- V lHII Y 81 EE - FIX'D CAR
-
SERVILE
-BE 1 W EKN
n\( 1\\ ..... \TI VXD J Vt KSOXVILLE
_SOUP TRAINS benween—
CHATTANOOGA AND v - n
JAI KM’.N' ll.l.r.
—CI.UWMA i OWE! ,TIN 1 • WITH—
DOUBLE DAILY TRAIN'S,
—with—
1 l I.1.MA5 Y ei XTPIVP *"■ ’■ 1 * < t PS ' '
_to and FROM_
MEMPHIS. NASHVILLE. KANSAS
[ * ■ CITY AX'D THE WEST.
—AND—
KVOXVIl.LE, AVArill INGTON,
NEW YORK
AND THE east.
TIIE SHORT LINE BETWEEN
Atlanta and Jacksonville.
Atlanta and Savannah.
Atlanta and Brunswick.
Atlanta and Macon.
Atlanta and Rome.
For, Rates. Time Cards and other in
formation, apply to agents
of the
EAST TENN.. VA. & GA. KV.
B. W. WRENS,
Gen. Pass, and Ticket Affont.
Knoxville.
S. H. HARIiWICE.
Asst. Gen. Fas ~ . Agent,
A l'LANTa.
T. D. LOYAL, Ticket Agent,
Eaaiuxs, Ga.
_
DR. TALMAGE.
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN¬
DAY SERMON.
,. now t0 Conqitor.”—(Preached at
Lake Maxiukuckee, Ind.)
Text: “When shall I awake? I will seek
it yet again. 1 ' —Prov. xxiii., 35.
With an insight into human nature such as
no other man ever reached. Solomon, in my
text, sketches the mental operations of one
who. having stuped aside from the wish path for of
rectitude, desires to return. Vi ith a
something better, he said: “When shall I
awake? When shall I come out of this horrid
nightmare of iniquity?” But. seized upon by
uneradicted habit, and forced down hill bv
his passions, he cries out: “1 will seek it yet
again. I will try it once more.”
Our libraries are adorned with an elegant
literature addressed to young men, perils pointing of iifo
out to them all the dangers and
—complete maps of the voyage, showing all
the rocks, the quicksands, the shoals. But
^ has already astray. How is he to
he gone "comparatively
get back? That is a field un¬
touched. I propose to address myself to such.
There are those in this audience who, with
every passion of their agonized soul, are
ready to hear such a discussion. They com¬
pare themselves with what they were ten
years ago, nud cry out from the bondage in
which they are incarcerated. Now, if there
be any here. come with an earnest
purpose, yet feeling they nre and that beyond the
the pak* of Christian hardly sympathy, be expected address
sermon can to
them, then, at this moment, I give them my
right hand, and call them brother. Look
up. There is glorious 1 and triumphant Gospel hope
for you vet. sound the trumpet of
deliverance. The church is ready hierarchs to spread
a banquet at your return, and tilts
of heaven to‘fall into line of bannered pro¬
cession at the news of your emancipation.
.So far as God may help me, I propose to
show what are the obstacles of your return.
and then how you are to surmount those
obstacles. The first difficulty in the way of
your return is the force of moral gravitation.
Just as there is a natural law which brings
down to the earth anything you throw into the
air, so there is a corresponding is moral gravi¬
tation. In other words, it easier to go
down than it is to go up; it is easier to do
wrong than it is to do right. Call to mind
the comrades of your boyhood of them days— bad—
some of them good, some
which most affix ted you? Call to mind the
anecdotes that you have heard in the last
five or ten years—some of them are pure
and somo of them impure. Which the
more easily sticks ' to yopr memory!
During the years of your life you have
formed certain courses of conduct—some of
them good, some of them bad. To which
style of habit did you the more easily
yield? Ah, my friends, we have to take but
a moment of self-inspection souls to find force out of
that there is in all our a
moral gravitation: but that gravitation
may bo the resisted. Just ar you hold may pit up
from earth something and it in your
hand toward Iveaveu, just so, by the power
of God’s grace, a sou! /ajlen may be lifted
toward peace, toward pardon, toward heaven.
Force of moral gravitation iu every one of
us, but power iu God’s grace to overcome that
force of moral gravitation. Hie of return
is The the next thing of evil j|i habit, way I know your there
power are
those who say it is very easy believe fur them to give
up evil habits. I do not them Here
is a man given to intoxication. He knows \ it
is disgracing his family, destroying mind his prop- soul.
ertv, 'ruining him, body, and
’ being ini intelligent
If that man, man,
and loving his family, could easily
give up that habit, would he
not do so? The fact that lie daps uot give It
it up proves that it is hard to give It up. the
is a very easy thing to sail down stream,
tide carrying you with great force; it but sup
pose you turn the boat up stream, is bo easy
then to row it? As long as we yield to the
avil inclinations ip our hearts, and our bad
habits, we are nailing down stream: put but boat tho in
moment we try to turn, Niagara, we our mid try to
the rapids just above Take given to tho
row habit’of up stream. a limn of do,
(liii)g tobacco, as most you
and let him rt&olve to stop, and he finds it
very difficult. Twent v sevffli ycais ago I quit
that habit, and I would as soon dare to put
rnv right hand in the fire as once to indulge
in it. Why? Because it was such a
terrific struggle to got over it. Now,
let a man bo advised by his physi
nan to fcivp jtl' tlie use of tobacco.
He goes around not kppwipg tvhat to do
with himself. He cannot add up a Hue of
figures He cannot sleep nights, It seems
as if the world had turned upside down. He
feels his business going to ruin. Where he
was kind and obliging )ip is scolding and
fretful. The composure that characterized
him has given way to a fretful restlessness,
and he has become a complete fidget. What
power is it tliat has rolled a wave of woe
over the earth and sluikni a pprteut iu tho
heavens'' He has tried to stop smoking or
chewing’ After a while he says, doesn’t "1 am under- going
to do as I please. The doctor
stand my case, i'm going hack to roy old
holiit.” And he returns. Everything business assumes to
its usual composure. His seems
brighten, the world becomes an attractive
place to live in. His children, seeing the
difference, hail the return of their
father's genial disposition. Wliat wave
of color has dashed blue into the sky, and
greenness into the mountain foliage, and the
glow of sapphire into the sunset* What and en
chantaaent has lifted a world of beauty
joy on his soul? He has gone back to to
r -.
Oh, the fact is, as we all know in our own
experience, obey that it, habit it does is a not taskmaster; chastise as
long as we find to us: ho
but let us resist, and wo aud we hound ar« with
iashed with scorpion whips the track of
.hip cable, and thrown into
bone-breaking Juggernauts! During fire the above war
* if 1812 there was a ship set on just
Niagara Falls, and then, cut loose from its
moorings, it came oil down through the night have
and tossed over the falls. It was said to
been a scene brilliant thousands beyond of all description. of
Wei], there are men oirmre rapids
evil habit, poming down through the
and through the awful night of temptation
toward the eternal plunge. Ob! how hard it
is to arrest them, God only can arrest them.
Suppose a man after five, or ten, or twenty Why,
years of evil doing, resolves to do right i
ail the forces of darkness are allied He against down
him. He cannot sleep midnight nights. and gets ‘"God
on his knees ill the cries,
help me!” He bites his lip. He grinds his
teeth. He clenches his fist in his dotermina
tion to keep his purpose. He flare not look
at the bottles in the window of a wine store.
It was one long, bitter, exhaustive, hand to
h*nd light, with inflamed, tantalizing and
merciless habit. When bethinks lie is en
tireiy free, the old inclinations with their pounce muzzles upon
him like a pack of hounds
tearing away at the flanks of one poor rein
* leer. In Paris there is a sculptured repre
sentation of Bacchus, the god of revelry. He
is riding on a panther at full leap. Oh, how
suggestive! Let every one who is speeding
on bad ways understand he is not riding a
docile and well-broken steed, but he is riding
a monster, wild and bloodthirsty, going at a
death leap.
How many there are who resolve on a bet
ter life anti say: "When shall I awake?”
But, seized on by their old habits, cry: “I
will try it once more; I will seek it yet
again”’ Years ago there were some Prince
ton students who were skating, and the ice
was ver y thin, and some one warned the
company back from the air hole, and finally
warned them entirely to leave the place.
But one young man with bravado, after all
the rest had stopped, cried out: “One round
more!" He swept around and went down,
! and was brought out a corpse. My trtends,
j there men losing are thousands their souls and in tens that of way. thousands It is the of
;
| one r* mnd more.
I return I have from also evil to say practices, that if a society man wants repulses to
i
I him. Desiring to reform, he says: "Now I
will shake off my old associates, and I will
i gad Christian tfat companionship.” Sabbath And he day. ap
pears at church door some
and the usher greets him with a look, as
much as tosay: "Why, you here? You are
the last man V ever expected right down to se by. at church
Come, take this seat the d *• *r
| Instead of here. saying: Come: “Goodmorning; 1 w-ili lam glad
you are give ’Well. you a
j first rate seat, right up bv discouraged, the pulpit."
the prodigal, not yet aud Christian enters
the prayer meoting some man.
with more zeal tn an common sbusg. sacs
j Glad to see you The dviug thief was
saved, and I suppose there is mercy for you.”
i i^.Sta&t^Wsdi^lt^r^d’he^'S notoJSte h di‘*Hm^4
fuRv hphv som? aDmt resp^tabL retorSS
t:.n. he sides highlv
roan he used to know going down the street.
and immediately the respectable man has an
I errand down some other street! Well, the
prodigal, W of Christimi wishing to return, takes the some hand mem
a association bv or
of dissipation, and instead of giving him a
’TSSg&fi wi"il the face.
to striking a man in
good, houest handshaking 'Sometimes, when
you have felt the need of encouragement, and
Christian man has taken you heartily
by the hand, have you not felt that thrilling
through every fibre of your body, nund and
soul, an encouragement that vra^ just what
you needed’ You do not kn o w an y thing
it this n-ii—■ 7““- knoM- when a mrH
tries to return from evil courses of conduct,
he runs against repulsions innumerable. We
say of some man, he lives a block or two
from the church, or half a mile from the
church. There are peoplp in our crowded cit¬
ies who live a thousand miles from the church.
Vast desorts of indifference between them and
ihe house of God. The fact is. wo must keep
our r espoclability, though Christ thousands and tens
of thousands perish. But if there sat with publi¬ the
cans and sinners. comes to
house of God a man with marks of dissipation
upon him, people throw up their hands in
horror, as much as to say: “Isn't it shock¬
ing?” How these dainty, fastidious Chris¬
tians in all our churches are going to get into
heaven I don't know, unless they have an
especial train of cars, cushioned and up¬
holstered, each one a car to himself! They
cannot go with the great herd of publicans and
sinners rs. Oh. ye, who curl your lip of
scum i at the iuiieu, I toil you plai^y, if you
had been surrounded by the same influences,
instead of sitting to-day amid the cultured
and the refined and the Christian, you would
have been a crouching wretch in stable or
ditch, covered with filth and abomination!
It is not because you are naturally any bet¬
ter, but because the mere)' of God has pro¬
tected you. Who are you, that brought Chris¬ up
in Christian circles, and watched by
tian parentage, you should be so hard on tho
fallen.
I think men also are often hindered from
return by the fact that churches are too anx¬
ious about their membership and too rush anxious
about their denomination, and they out
when they see a man about to give up his
sin and return to God, and ask him how he is
going to be baptized, what whether by of sprinkling church
*r by immersion, and kind a
he is goiug to join. Oh, my friends! It is a
poor time to talk about liturgies, Presbyterian Metho¬ catc
hisms, and Episcopal and
dist love-feasts, and baptisteries to a man
ihat is coming out of the darkness of sin into
he glorious light of drowning the Gospel. the Why, it
eminds us of a man in sea, and
i lifeboat puts out for him, and the man in
he boat says to (he man out of tho
>oat: “Now, if I get you ashore,
ire you going to live in my street?”
First get him ashore, and then talk about the
ion-essentials of religion. Who cares what
•hurch he joins, if he only joins Christ and
tarts for heaven? Oh, you ought to aud have,
ay brother, an illumined face ; a
learty grip for every one that tries to turn
rom his evil way! Take hold of the same
mok with him, though his dissipations shake
he book, remembering that he that con
erteth a sinner from the error of his ways
hall save a soul from death, and hide a
multitude of sins.
Now, I have shown you these ob¬
stacles because I want you to under¬
stand I know all the difficulties in tho
vay; but I am now to tell you how
lannibal may scale the Alps aud how
he shackles may be unriveted and
iow the paths First of virtue forsaken brother, may be throw re¬
gained. of all, my frankly
yourself on God. Go to Him, and
•arnestly. ami tell Him these habits you
lave, and ask Him, if there is any help in all
the resources of omnipotent love, to give it
to you. Bo not go with a long “ohs” rigmarole and
people call prayer, made up of
alls'’ aud “forever and forever amons!’’ Go
. o God and cr y for help! help! help! and if
ou cannot cry for help, I jifst look Antietam, and, live,
i remember in the war was at
tnd I went into the hospitals after tho
>attle, and 1 said to a man, “Where
ire you hurt?” Ho mado ijo answer,
•ut held up his arm swollen and simple splintered, fact
saw where he was hurt. The
s, when a man has a, wounded soul, all ho
las to do is to hold it up before a sympathetic not take
Lord and get it healed. It does
my long prayer. Just hold up the wound.
Oh, it is no small thing when a man is nerv¬
ous and weak and exhausted, coming from
his evil ways, to feel that God puts two om¬
nipotent arms around about him and s ays: The
•Young man, 1 will stand by you!
nountaius may depart and the hills be rc
noved, but I will never fail you.” Aud then,
is the soul thinks the news is too good to be
true, and cannot believe it, and looks up in
tod’s face, God lifts His right hand and takes
m oath, an affidavit, saying: "As I live.
-aith the Lord God, I have uc pleasure in the
death of hlut that dieth.”
Blessed be God for such a Gospel as this!
“Cut the slices thin,” said the wife to the
husband, “or there will not be enough to go
all around for the children; cut the slices
thin.” Blessed bo God. there is a full loaf for
every one that wants it; bread enough and
to spare. No thill slices at tlie Lord’s table,
1 remember when the Master Street hos
ntal, in Philadelphia, was opened during will the
var, a telegram came saying: “There bo
liree hundred woqudej men to-night; bo
eady to take care of them;" in an d twenty from my
liurch there went some or
hirty men and women to look after
hese poor wounded fellows. As they
ame, some from one part of the
and, some from another, no ono asked
vhether this inan was from Oregon, or from
Massachusetts, or from Minnesota, or from
Mew York. There was a wounded soldier,
ind the only question was how to take off the
«gs roost geutly, the and put on the bandage,
md administer curdwtl. And when a
xml comes tq God He does not ask where
yon came from or what your ancestry was.
Healing for all your wounds. Pardon for all
your guilt. Comfort for all your troubles,
" Then, also, I counsel if want to
you, bad you associations,
got hack, to quit all your
due unholy intimacy will fill your soul with
moral distemper. In «U the ages of the
-hurcli there has not been an Instance where
4 man kept one evil associate and was re¬
formed. Among the fourteen hundred mill
on of the race not one instance. Go home
to-day, open your desk, take out letter paper,
stamp and envelope, and then write a letter
something like this:
“My old companions: I start this day for
heaven. Until I am persuaded you will join
me in this, farewell.”
Then sign your name, and send the tetter
panions, with the first'post. give heaven, Give up It your is not liad ten com. bad
or up
companions that destroy a man, nor five tied
companions, nor three bad companions,
hut ope, What chance is there for
that young man I saw along the street,
r.ur or five young men with him, halting in
,4, ,nt of a grog shop, urging him to go in, he
resisting, violently resisting, until G.tor a
while they forced ‘ him to in? It
go Vasa
summer iiight and tlie door They was held left cyon, \st,
and I saw the process. him 1
and they put tho cup to drink. his lips, and they
forced down the strong W hat ch&ruM
is there for such a young man?
I counsel you also seek Christian advice
Every Christian man is bound to help you.
First of all, seek God; then seek Christian
counsel. Gather up all the energies of body,
mind and soul, and appealing to God for
success, *1.-? v this day everlasting gambling war
against all drinking habits, Half-and-half all
practices, will all houses nothing; of sin. it must be
work amount to a
Waterloo. Shrink back now and you are
lost. Bush on and you are saved. A Spar
tan general fell at the very moment of vio
tory, but he dipped bis finger in his own
blood and wrote on a rock near which he was
dying, "Sparta has rid conquered.” of Though
your struggle to get sin may seem to
p e almost a death struggle, you can dip your
finger in your own blood and write on the
Rook of Ages, “Victory through our Lord
Jesus Christ.”
Oh, what glorious news it would Vie for
some of thes^ young They men to send home to
their parents. go to the postoffice
everv fetters day or two to see whether there are
any from you. How anxious they are
to hear,
Some one said to a Grecian general:
"What was the proudest moment in your
life?” He thought a moment, and said:
“The proudest moment of my life was when I
sent word home to my parents that I had
gained the victory.” And the proudest and
most brilliant moment in your life will be the
moment when you cau send word to your pa
rents that you have conquered your evil habits
by the grare of God and become eternal victor.
Oh. despise not parental anxiety! The time
will come when vou will have neither father
nor mother, and' you will go around the place
where they used to watch you and find them
gone from the house, and gone from the field.
and gone from the neighborhood. Cry
as loud for forgiveness as you may over the
mound in the churchyard, they will not
answer. Dead! Dead! And then you will
take out the white lock of hair that was cut
from your mother's brow just before they with
buried her. and you will take the cane
which your father used to walk, and you will
think, and think, and wish that you
had done just as they wanted you
to, and would give the world if
you had never thrust a pang through
their dear old hearts. God pity the poor his
young father's man who has brought pity the disgrace on
name! God young mail
who has broken his mother's heart! Better
if he had never been born—better if, m the
first hour of his life,
fffi'^enough "heal ^So
to the heart -f one
*hu has brought P£en“*o awrrmwful
grave, and who wanders about tnrougn to
dismal cemetery, rending the kair, and
wringing the hands, and crying: “Mother!
mother!" Oh. that to-day by all the
memories of the past and by all the hopes
fU M£ P
ur
mothers God be your God forever t
-------
The recommendation that the stndv
01 to- u retained as
part of the crurte* at the Naval Academy
▼*1I be Beeoiutea bv all, sa>sthe New
York Star, who m*alJ the diplomatic en*
tang'.ements of some of our worthv ad
nurais and commo-h res “The lesrai
a t the sea leiny should he not
OR lv con t: xuied^. l u t uroved. ’ 1
_
THE SCORPION.
A Hot-Tempered and Belligerent
Mexican Reptile.
Ha Will Commit Suicide on the
Slightest Provocation.
“If you should ever happen to go
down into lower Mexico,” said L. T.
S;anley, the electrician, “and should
notice that your bed was set up on in¬
verted tin pans, »3 you have seen the
four corners of corn cribs fixed to keep
out the rats, and that the bed had a
sheet stretched above it, running to a
peak at the top like the roof of a house,
don’t say a word but go right in and go
to sleep. If you shouldn’t go to sleep
as soon as you get in, and should hear
something drop on tho sheet roof above
you and roll down and tumble on the
floor at the side of the bed, lie still. By
and by you will hear the sam: drop and
roll and tumble, and it won’t bo long
before it’ll be drop, drop, drop, and
roll, roll, roll, and plink, plink, pliuk
on the floor. Don’t get up. If you do
you might think you were struck by
lightning as soon as you put your foot
on tho floor, for the chances
are that you would step
on a scorpion the first thing, and the
scorp 011 lias a stinger that he carries for
instant and effective use. Scorpions arc
just about as plenty there as flies are up
home. They hide by day and attend to
business at night. The scorpion is a
crab with a snake’s tail, with a spur on
the end of it. It likes to get in bed
with folks, and if it wasn’t for the tin
pans on the bedposts it would climb up
and get in with you that way, and if the
bed wasn’t roofed with the sheet it
would drop on you from the ceiling.
When you get up in the morning you
will be apt to tin 1 a few quarts of dead
scorp’ons lying oa the floor in front of
the bed. They all committed suicide.
After trying to get into the bed with
you a few times, and being tumbled off
the sheet every time, or stopped by the
tin pans, tlioy got mad, and stuck their
stingers in their heads and killed them¬
selves. A scorpion will commit suicide
on the slightest provocation. It has a
temper as hot and as quick as kerosene
on a kitchen tiro. If ono scorpion is
passing by another ono ani happens to
touch it there’s a fight at once, and two
dead scorpions arc the result. Put a
hundred scorpions in an enclosure, and
throw a stick or piece of dirt among
them, and the scorpion that is nearest
to where the stick or dirt falls will turn
and dip his spur into his nearest neigh¬
bor, and in lets than two seconds the
entire hundred will bo mixed up in the
fight. The way th ir stingers and
claws and legs will fly is a sight tp sec.
As long as there is one scqrp.on alive
the fig ht goes on, for if one hap
survive the otucr ninety niff
pitch in and have it out w 1
and the first thing he knows
‘ Jt is a fact that scorp
carans, as tho Mexioaus call thenq^m
at certain seasons of tho year as
numerous, almost, as flies. They are
within the cracks of tho walls, between
the bricks of the tiles on the floor, hid¬
ing inside your garments, darting every¬
where with inconceivable rapidity, their
tails, which holt the sting, ready to fly
up with dangerous effect upon the
slightest provocation. Turn a corner of
a rug or table spread and you disturb a
flourishing colony of them. Shake you
shoes in tho morning and out they tjop.
Throw your bath sponge into the water
and half a dozen of them dart out of its
cool depths, into which they had lain
themselves away during the night. It
is not often that you see one of.
tho mahogany-hued rept lei that
is more than two inches long,
but they sometimes show’ up with
the formidable proportions of a five-inch
length and all that it implies. There is
a smaller variety than tho mahogany
scorpion. This one is yellow, and he is
ten times more vicious aud dangerous.
It is at midday that the bite oy sting of
these venomous little pests ismost feared
as the natives say it is then the most
poisonous. Tae deserted old mines of
Durango are simply scorpion hives, they
having bred and increased there ur dis¬
turbed for centuries. A ftsv yeais ago
the Government took official notice of
thetr deadly presence and placed a boun
ty on them which is paid on the presen
tatron of a scorpions tail and sting at
the office of the government agent.
Many natives carry a brass tube, and in
case ot a bite from a scorpion it is
pressed over the wound, on which
it acts i ke the bleeding cup
of the surgeon and draws the p fisoned
blood out. A hollow key has been used
successfully in the same way. Victims
of the yellow scorpion’s bite have been
known to lie for days in convulsions,
foaming at tho mouth, and with stom
ach an i limbs swollen ai in dropsy.
O.hers sufTet no worse consequences than
they might from an ordinary bee sting,
Brandy taken until stupefaction follows
is a favorite remedy for scorpion bites
in JI xico, and ammonia is also given
with go d results. There is nothing
the Mexican or Texan fears more than
the yellow or black scorpion of Duran
go except the bloating rattlesnake cf the
btaked P.ains, and that is probably the
m0 st deadly reptile of the American
.
cqQunuu.
-
A Vol ley of Knives and Forts.
G ’ B ’ Plum * r ’ ex * chief en * ineer of
a Haytien man-of-war, relates a funny
incident thus chronicled by a New York
^ orter . <YVhen the? J went
a boarl the La Defense Graham seized a
pot, • w1l wh.ch h about peck of .
mess in ,„ a
knives and forks, and stuck it in the
muzzle of a ten-mca. gun, putting the
tampion in after it. That day the ad
miral came aboard, and as the gun was
loaded with blank cartridge they used
it to fire a salute. It was pointed di
nerj? toward it* the town ana a point blank
*- the Grande Cafe. There was a rain
of knives and forks against the build
ing . until .•« they , stucic out from toe w «i ;
lika quiUs on a ^
Annl Dials That Sleep all Sommer.
The winter sleepers are all pretty well
known. But owing to the sstivators
being, for the most part, inhabitants of
tropical countries far removed from the
path of trained observers, we are lest
acquainted with the species practicing
that means of shuuning the heat and
drought of summer. Indeed, at pres
ent only one mammal is known which
does so. This is the tenrec, a hedge
, „ ... so . beast of . , Madagascar, r j which , . ,
g- re
tires to its burrow and sleeps during the
three hottest months of the year—these
months, ,, it muit . be remembered, , corre
spouding to the northern winter. How
ever, it is believed that a Wert African
dormouse .___ is a summer sleeper, , ... though
this species, when brought to England,
hibernates, like its northern cousin,
XT Xo doubt, , , . also, . of . the . sub-Antar- , .
some
tic mammals sleep during the coldest
portion of winter, though a* yet * the
tuco-tuco of . ~ Patagonia and . a gray rat
native to tho Kermedec Islands are about
the only ttvo species of tvliifch this can
be affirmed with certainty.
In not a few respects, the suspended
an mation of these creatures during the
intense heat of summer is even more re¬
markable than that which obtains when
frost dulls every function of life. Some
m croscopiea! animals—tho wheel ani¬
malcules for example—can bo dried up
into a dust-like substance, and yet ro
v.ve as soon as they get access to water,
the germ on which their vitality de¬
pends being evidently protected in some
manner, not yet clearly understood. In
South America and Africa various rep¬
tiles activate, if not in the minner de¬
scribed, at hast so perfectly that their
summer somnolence is quite comparable
with the winter sleep of the northern
forms. In the llanos or plains of Ve¬
nezuela, the alligator, the land and
fresh water tortoise, the huge boa con¬
tractor, and se vcral of the smaller kind
of serpents lie motionless in the indu¬
rated mud during tho hottest period of
the trop cal summer. But their dor¬
mancy is by no means so perfect as that
of somo liiliernators. A marmot or a
hedgehog when in the depth of its win¬
ter torpidity, may be kicked about like
a ball, and yet, except for a few feeble
respirations, exhibit scarcely any sign
that it it conscious of being despitefully
used.
In Brazil, Australia and the Cape
Colony, lizards, frogs, tortoiies aud in¬
sects pass months of the rain less season
enclosed in hard earth, aud in India,
many species of fishes, during the dry
season and long-continued droughts, live
in a torpid coalition, embedded in the
indurated clay. Dr. Day has, indeed,
put on record instances in which fishes
have survived in this condition for more
than one season, ponds known to have
been dry for several months haying
stjyariqed with scaly inhabitants as soon
it&tlic accumulation of water reloa^d
iimir hardenod beds .—Aew
f il York Diamonds. a number of
iers, though they
^pTTCite that designation—whose busi¬
ness is almost wholly confined to the
police force. They sell jewelry, watches,
clothing, household goods aud other
things upon “the instalment plan” to
members of the “finest.” The business
is a good one, collections arc sure w hen
the monthly pay days come around, and
the expenses of trado are, to those en¬
gaged in this line, much smaller than
are borne by dealers who have store-rent
and clerk-hire to pay. Consequently
ihe merchant who is his own salesman
and clerk, nad whose pockets are liis
store, or who, dealing in bulkier goods
than those he can carry, sells on large
commissions from manufacturers, is very
anxious, when he lias made a profitable
line of acquaintances nnd patrons in tho
force, to retain their good opinion and
confidence. Hence, by reason of a lit¬
tle expose last week, one of these gentry
is at present on the verge of distraction,
liis business is in jewelry, gold watch
chains and watches mainly. During a
month or two past he has been selling a
great many large and heavy watch chains
which were represented as “solid four¬
teen-karat gold,” in several of the up¬
town station houses. One night an
officer in the course of an agitated con¬
versation with a tough citizen got one of
^ esc big chains broken, and the next
day tQok into a iewelcr , s on hu bcat
tQ bc r )aireJ whi!e doia „ the littla
tfc# jcwcler jDnocently remarke d:
„ TWs ^ the heavie3t fille d chain I
ever raw.”
“Filled nothin’ I” ejaculated the
officer, with a snort of contempt;
“that’s solid gold.”
“Oh, no,” persisted the jeweler, “it
is filled with silver. ”
Eventually the indignant policeman
was convinced, much against liis will,
,i lat t p 0 go id c f his chain was really
hardly as thick as an ordinary business
carJ an( j that all the solid interior was
silver. Much more than half of the
entJr e weight of the chain was of the
baser metal.
Young Chinese Oarsnomcn.
I visited prisons, temples, pagodas,
mills, shops, duck-hatchings an 1 every
thing that was of interest, says a Canton
(China) correspondent of the Washing
ton Post. To see the ducks I hired a
boat, managed by three women, and
spent over three hours on the river, I
have had occasion to remark everywhere
in my travels the decent behavior of
women One hardlv exnects much in a
country where little girl babies
sometimes killed or sold into any kind
0 f slavery, because ef the poverty of the
mother. .v tj Here were three women who
_ ttre f r e bom born en on a a boat Doac and ant whose uje whole
ufe is 6pcat on on?i an( j ye t they hai as
much decency and natural modesty a,
jj had received a Sunday school
( , duC ation. A fine strong girl of sixteen
s a t on the deck of the bow vigorously
Uj her oar in front of me and smll
jn „ through a beautiful set of teeth.
§k e wore wide trousers under a kind of
sack or short gown; her feet were bare.
of the large junks, . . T I learned, i a x. had a
A Chiropodist Has His Say
"Year before Inst Ihud two wome n
patrons to one roan,'’ said a chiropodist,
“ But 1 »st ytur, av.it ao far this year,
the falling off in tbs former patronage
lias bean more than one half. But
there has bean no decrease in the num
her of u.y nreie customers. How do I
" yco : ,n ’' jot aii this; Easily. Fashion
" hiID-,g!Tt
a „ d 11 c high, narrow French
heol6 were the fashion in woman’s shoes,
and they are one of the best friends a
] chiropodist ,} can have. They are regu
ar au rapid breeders of corns. No
woman 1,111 without < an wear looking a pair of such shoes
" up a corn doctor.
But tfrr low Rat heel is now- the
fashion. If the rest of tho shoo tits the
foot, the heels arc the natural enemy of
con,s 1,11,1 the chiropodist has to suffer.
It is “ generally be ieved that woman are
more a in v{ \ he ir {eet thnu men are of
theirs, bur my experience lias shown
lliat 'i" lte tlie contrary is the fact.
Men will insist in making their foot
look B:i all> alul any e noe tlmt will do
that is the fashion for them, The nar
row-toed or “toothpick” style of men’s
shoes, worn now as much as ever, will
a p va y S insure tho corn doctor a living,
espee ally if the shoes are patent leather.
A patent leather shoe, for some reason,
will call a corn into being much quicker
than tin ordinary shoe:
The fellow s who don’t have coins are
those who wear roomy toed shoes.
But they musn’t bo too large, a shoo
too large is as bad ns one too small. An
oversized shoe makes corns on the bot¬
tom of the feet, and they are the worst
kind. The lute war was the greatest
oorn-ourer over known. 1 never knew
of a single ease of a soldier in that war
who suffered from corns, and I was all
through it. If a law should he in passed
that no slice should be worn this
country but the pattern army shoe of
the rebellion, the corn doctor’s occupa¬
tion would be gone. ”
The Prince Imperial of Japan.
Compared to His imperial father, even
at the present day, Prince Ham is much
mure emancipated, and uono of the old
traditions seem to l ave any weight in
regulating his conduct. There was no
precedent to follow in the education of
a Japanese prince in the modern way,
and Prince Burn lias made many laws
for himself. He is a wonderfully bright
and precocious little fellow, and his
small, twinkling black eves are full of
mific liief and sec everything. He is
hardly taller than an American boy of
six years of age, but lie has at times tlio
dignity, the pride of birth, and con¬
sciousness of station and power, of a
man of sixty. His eyes are not slant
ing, nor indeed does one often see in a
Japanese face the wonderful oblique
eyes beloved of the caricaturists. The
peculiarity in ti,o expression being of their
eye is given by the eyelids few studies fast¬
ened in either corner, us if a
had been taken there. This makes it
impossible for them to lift the eyelids
sliis, as ingli through as we which do, and they gives tho narrower tlie
gaze, often pe■•
uliar Oriental look. Ono sees
Japanese with as round, w hin-open eyes
as those of our ra e, and it gives nn
especial beauty to their countenances.
Prince Ham lias the exquisitely is
smooth, fine yellow Hkin beauty that in Japanese one of
tlie points of greatest
children, aud a bright color sometimes
shows in tlie pale yellow of h.s lit'le
cheeks. Ho lias the rank of aoolonel in
the Japanese army, and wears his mi i
tnry nniform and bis cap with the gold
star nil the time, his clothes and white being dark
blue clotii in whiter duck in
summer. He is fond of mkj c, and, when
mounted, tlie miniature coDnel . Gwts
along at a fine gait, giving and
ing tlie military salute as he passes an
officer or a sentry, like a young marti
—[fet. ^Nicholas.
Women Jugglers of India.
1 saw two women jugglers at Joypore,
writes Frank G. Carpenter. They were
briglit, appeared intelligent-looking girls, one bo of
whom almost old enough to
the mother of the other. They did many
wonderful things, one of which was mix¬
ing up sand in water and then putting
the hand into the discolored fluid, they
brought a handful of Mind, which they
filtered lnough their in. fingers The as dry
«s before it went youngest
fo these girls was perhaps fifteen.
She was tall, well-formed and tine-look
ing. She had bracelets on arms and on
feet, and her eyes were as beautiful us
those of a gazel e. One of her tricks was
tlie lifting of a heavy which chair almost by Iter nmkt eye
lids, tlie thought of heavy s
my eyes sore. ’The chair was a
mahogany one, which belonged to tlie
room in which I was staying. She tied
two strong strings to tlie t< p of this and
affixed the ends of these .strings to her
eyes by little round cups, each about
the size of a nickel. These fitted over the
eyeballs and under the lids, and she
bent over while they were so fastened.
Raising herself, she pulled up the cha r
with these strings witli the muscles of
her eyelids and carried it from one side
of the room to the other. It was a hor¬
rible sigiit, and ns she took tlie metal
cups from her eyes they filled with water
,nd she a’most sunk to ti e floor. I told
her tho trickpvas disgusting, and that she
ought never to try it again. Still for all
this and the rest of tlie show tliero girls
were well satisfied with two rupees or
about 70 cents.
Clipped Coins.
Most people who have to handle con
s dernble quantities the of silver money increase must in
have noticed remarkable
the number of clipped the or otherwise exception mu to
tilatcd pieces. It is
find, among a dozen pieces of silver
taken at random, all of the coins as per¬
fect as they came from the mint. Here¬
tofore the clippersffmve confined their
wojk mostly to the halves and quarters;
now they have begun a lively attack
upon tlie standard dollar. The crime of
coin clipping is inevitable, an 1 extreme
ly difficult of detection and. punishment.
The mutilation of a metal currency once
hi gun, proceeds at a rapid gait and in an
increasing ratio. Silver money is espe¬
cially exposed to this danger. Even
when in general circulation, gold coins
represent values so considerable tliat tlie
receiver is apt to examine them carefully
before accepting them. There is, con¬
sequently, a much greater difficulty in
passing them out of the hands of the
clipper without detection.
‘ If I gave you a pound of metal ana
ordered you to make the most out of if,
^ ° *' ''
k11 Jcdoh n j vvtlt-r.
COU rsc,” was the prompt reply, • I d
prefer a pound of steel,” said the jeweler,
“and Fd have it made into hair
for watches. A pcuud of such iprings
would sell for an even ♦’40,000.”—
Buffalo Express.
p* bA.' ’jiuv say that it twisted
tui around the egg nnd carried it f* !..
until it u as hit wilh a stone.
^^ _
„ lie,, hire!
A child who has once taxen Han. bu Fi<r*
;em
for
served fruit Scents. Dose one tig.
Drug Co., N. If.
Be’ginmV z tc manufaeturi
' ATTQN Business College
Pimples, Sore*. Aches nnd Pa hi
VThm a hundred bottles of sarsaparilla or
other pretentious specifics fail to tradicate in¬
born scrofula or contagious blood poison, re¬
member that £, 13. B. (Botanic Blood Balm)
has gained many thousand victories, in a* many
seemingly incurable instances. Send to the
Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga., for “Book of
Wonders,” and ba convinced. It is the only
TRUE BLOOD PURI FI KR.
G. W. Messer. Howell’s X R ads, Ga., writes;
“1 was afflicted niney ars with sores. All the
medicine I could talc, did me no good. I then
toed B. B. B.. and 8 bottles cured me sound.”
Mr*. S. M. Wilson, Round Mountain, Texas,
writes: “A lady friend of mine was troubled
fche with took bumps and bottles pimples of on her B., face and and her neck,
three B. B. skin
got soft and smooth, pimples disappeared, and
litrhealth improved greatly.”
das. L. Bus worth, Atlanta, Ga., writes: “Some
years ago I contracted blooil poison. I had no
appetite, drew my digestion was mined, rheumatism
up my limbs so l could hardly walk, my
throat was cauterized five times. Hot Nprmgi
gave m no benefit, and my hie was one of torture
until 1 gave B. B. B. a trial, and, sutprising as
it may seem, the use of five bottles cured me.”
The world is casting about for cheap
raw material for paper. The discoverer
will be in rare luck while he will bestow
a favor on mankind.
It Don’t Pry
To use unoortain means wlion siilTeriDR from
diseases Qf tlie liver, blood or liinws, suoh as
biliousness, or "liver ooinploint," swellings, skill dis¬
eases, scrofulous Horos or or from
lung scrofula (commonly known as consump¬
tion of the lull :s) when Dr. Pierce's Oolden
Medical Discovery is guaranteed to cure all
those affections, if taken in time, or money
paid for it will by prompt' y refunded.
f'dO offered for an inourab'o ease of Catarrh
ill (be Head, by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's
Remedy.__
An English firm lias just brought out a new
remittee ftnine burner, which can be ext n
guished entirely by a loud noise.
What do you chew ?
“LUCY HINTON!”
H hy?
Because it is the best I cau find.
Who makes it ?
T. C. Williams Co., Richmond, Va.
Who sells it ?
All dealers.
How can I recognize it ?
The name JLucy llinton is on every plug.
Ayour druggist for "Tansill’s Punch.”
Do You
Have that extreme tired feeling, languor, without
appetite or strength, impaired digestion, and a gen¬
eral feeling of misery it Is impossible to describe')
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a wonderful medicine for
creating an appetite, promoting digestion aud ton¬
ing up the whole system, giving .strength and activ¬
ity In place of weakness and debility. Be sure to
get Hood’s.
“I take Hood’s Sarsaparilla every year as u tonic
with most satisfactory results. I recommend
Hood’s Sarsaparilla to all who have that miserable
tired feeling.’’—0.1 'arm glee, 849 Bridge St., Brook¬
lyn, N. Y.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. BOOT) & CO., Apothecaries, I/)well, Mass.
IOO Doses Ono Dollar
hikoic ti. uli-akt.mem'
TULANE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA.
[ Ig inner ly, 1847 1 884. tho University of Loi uisiana.
Its mivRDlngeH i->r pr ciical instruction, and especially ,
in thedis jincs of tils Simt i west,m''* uiioQ'jalMit, rs i he
Ihw Hfeur n it. suptvahumJRMt materials from the grent
< ' I.v Hi'SDitnl with its 700 hed-, d 20,1*00
AnniiMj-y Students h m DaUrUts
gL is daily v» given i,<, hosidtsl-fees t<» pay amt
s|“', instruction iH I In- bed mi<|«* <»f
I Ilf * Nick, ns in no dlier institution. For catalogues
<ir l! n format ion, adiirtss
P. 1‘ror. m i: ( I1AII.I.L, 11 it.,
i «* rawer:’dl, i\i n-Oricuiis, f,«.
JYT " f; " T _ *
Nashville, Tenn. College for Young Ladles,
Is n Hie me len imunng sni 'Ai oi inis section llngnn
\rith pupils, M ilhotit gruuiitlff or I>uildiiic8 of its
own. how hu« H builtliucs Jdo rtoiits, 2U olnoes. 320
piipM* from is chafes, r uIf course in Literature,
pcionre, fullyeyiiippcd A:f, Miisi.’, privileges in Vnnderbuilt l ! ni
vrrsity Cvinuugium, and all modern
conveniences. 1 \ chIhIdruc address President.
lUv. Geo. \\. F. i'mctc, L». !»., Nashville, Teucu
-5
i¥g 8 L L W R H 11 F* R
w ,, ^ UiaiE _ . tf E
■ . 'W “ .
nihtnii-tion. The h«8t bcIidoI lor your daughter in tlie
•Sourli. Arf, Music, Literaly. Scientific nmi Pliono
graphy departments. bTrat-cluss board. lUanonabl*
terms. Apply early to
Rev. C. POPE, Millersburo, Kv.
jillStsii 9 nfl L Plantation Engines
sfil With Self-Contained
JW RETURN FLUE BOILERS,
roil DRIVINCl
ImP i « COTTON GINS and MILLS.
M Illustrated |’» nphlet Free. Address
KWj, Bpfc.J AMES NI'KIM.FIF.I.B, LEFFEL OHIO, d. CO.
110 l.lbcriy Kt-, New York.
BUTCHER’S
i FLY KILLER
WW- Makes a H<i>an sweep. Kvery
(rJfflLk. vjkjf " \ nofH‘, aklpH hard vvordii of and flies. ^5
/ 1 \ se
■ v ■ i curea poaee at trldlntf eipeuae.
/1 1 / xj I fiend 23 ecu fa for ft aheets to
F. DUTCHKit, St AlbeiiS, Vk
Or. Looii After AIJ, others
fall, consult
323 N. 15th St.
9 PHILA., PA.
Twenty ami year#’ dirt’ "f continuous O: awful practice effect* in of the emrly treat
v, destroying both mind and body. Medlctae
and treatment for one month, Five llollnm, Rent «
securely fccaled from observation to any ad<lro«s.
Iteoli on Special Dinranea free.
0k CHICHESTER’S KmJ PENNYROYAL CroMs liiumond ENGLISH PILL8. Brand*
I Th# only reliable pill for a*I« Maf« »r>4
•or<-. I.ndlca, Brand, u«k red I>ni(g|it metallioho*##, for the Dts* 1#4
mnnd io #m
»ttii blue riooou l ake no other. *‘*>.■1 4a.
(stampi) for p#rtlcul*re and “ Belief fa»
Ladle#, H in Utter, by mall. Sami Vmmer.
Chic heater Cheuxkal Ctk, Uadtauu I’hUwda,
way of shnrpeniHF *in«. Make your obi (P f 18 n*w . k«*p
y<»ur new gimiBo. No files. Anyone ran use it , (Joinn>i«
Mons paid agent on all sales in cou• ty wbcthei mad i
by us < r linn 200 rnncliines in use since S«- to oilier laat.
Machines 1 l,S «V in < guaranteed. o., Ilium, Wilt# Tfitn. atonoa
to .1 I*. I tl M fill
$i6 who be matte cau worklmc furuUh
a horte r and g|v « their whole time to the bu« ineM
8p are inome •nU may be prof) 1 a cilia*. My pinployixl mlgo
A few vacancies* In towns and B F JOHN
BON k CO., 1009 Main St.. Richmond, Va. N. B -
J’lfaur ttate »Q arul butinnt experience Sever
mind about tending »fomp/or reply, D. P. J. 4b f>.
WASHINGTON 11 INFORMATION BUREAU,
< Ol,i; A liFKIil.F, l*roprl«-iora.
f)3£ Hiret'l N- W., \Vi«*»hingion. il. C.
Ceuerai information furmniind.
Correspondence solicited.
gnM JKU. MR FJ8 11II S 8 Iterurwl Rial Whlyh*T at home ftato with
EH * * omixi w M.Wto'ii’.I.KY. Ml).
atittiits, tin winumau Bv
M US 1C ART ELOCUTION u>a
(irnrral € ulturr. ) '»Hiodi
Open t » GrrigKAitvp htiifiepU. AH inlrTtfaUMl
WHl Trre-.lvh valuable Information Free,
by addressing K. TOl/'KJfcK. Bostou, Sul
Local A gcnt« AATnntcd
in T wn ani County t< H^Ilour FILTER ar nd COOLER.
Warm, fi t.hj wairi is ta do pure arttl w. iuleftonie and
p > | y cold wiib
.1 ( 1 I.MOTI A NOV 1 *, IfittinHM, flblo.
«OK AN HOUR w,1f
v£*V MEUICA L CO.. U Ichmoad. V*.
IS YOUR FARM FOR SALE ’
If bo addrdM CtJSTifl A Wright, Br.svlw.j. N Y.
^■jL 4 gentBWHiAtfl. SUn C.E.M UMir. wi) n**w art Buflalo, ir-j*
and kamp > Uen. A> SHALL, N V.
I > \ 1 . B« w. t hi 1,1 i.i, i adaipbi*. Pa.
1 .vi.jtriaG.y nnd p i t' ni-, W'r tor ctreuiag.
PEERLESS DYES Arr> th<> HFMT,
fi »u> bt Dci oinm,
who harm Pino’*
Cure for fViTi^unoptirui
l¥ •ay it i« BEST OF A l.l»
BoUl everywhar*.
dor-** I fir^d^rib* Big an<1 fully only an
ii aa tha
____Car## 1# * specific forth* e cena.fi care
1 TO t> UaT 8.^ _ 01 thiB<li*<'aa**. D
f2*iSt Sirtaun- G. H.I>‘»KAHAM. M Y. ,
eAiwe Acaaterdaort, S.
vriov'ff fcy tb4 We have » Id B.g O lot
[“Jl-irt Cisriiil ti D ■ uy and It toM
,WM t. van the beat ml aatia
r- r. r.tv. i ctlDn.
OWO. V 1 JL>. K. DVCHF Chk k ago. CO.. 1JL
Y rad; >#rk *1.00. fvzld by Drugfiats.
\ N.r T r on.-tW.