The times-journal. (Eastman, Ga.) 1888-1974, August 23, 1889, Image 3

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ARRIS FISHER, *• D., Physician, Surgeon and icconelMr. Office at Eastman Drug Store, next i floor to post office. Residence, corner Fifth avenue and Church street. Eastman, Ga., Jan. 11, 1889. ly tues J AS. R. MOOD, M. D Physician and Surgeon. Office in basement rear of Masonic | 1. > hr,-, formerly occupied by Dr, < I . , 1 / - imer. Rfjjith nci* south silicon oiirt I If C IHH S(ilia r e. to (Jgl* Hi 1 J yt. AY. L. SMITH, | Dsntist, i j HAYV'KINSVILLE, - GEORGIA. ! ! Office in Pulaski House. lg-l- 88 -ly tues I I IV It. T. F. ROBINSON, ORAL SURGEON IDZEIsTTIST, EASTMAN, GEORGIA. Office over Sol Henman & Hro.’s store. July 16-1 y J ^eLACY & BISHOP, Attorneys at Law, EASTMAN, GEORGIA. Will practice in all the court, of the Statv. Attention given to Convey ancin<r V, Examination ; *7 of Titles to Land. !• urni.-hing r\ ; A t>.-ti <icO < >1 f Tit!,, Jnh, bxecu L’YPCH tors, Trustees, Fartncnihtps,Collection.'. and all other Contracts, Criminal Caw branches of practice. Office at Court House. 2 - 1-1 v tues E. 4 SMITH, Attorney at Law, K A ST M A N . GEORGIA. Office over store of E. J. Peacock A Co. 7-51 y tile #. L. Cl-A RK K. ROUT. It. NORMAN. ^ 1 LA It K .V NOIOI AN, J Attorneys at Law AIT. VERY ON, GA., will practice in all State and Federal Courts. miv.ao. *s-|y A PIANO FREE! Yes, We Mean It. (JIVE IT AW AI TO ADVERTISE 01 It BUSINESS. Write and Learn I\vktiolt.ar 8 i 10c We sell J loT 10 cents ^SriTjnPor ip $1.25. _____ ____ CaRilugiir of over 8,000 jiieres to select from. A great saving to parents wlio are giving Ilieir Datigli jers a musical education. \ NKM J Guitars, Banjos, Boxes iiiisatnl Music DEEAKTURK sold on small mon¬ thly payments. Catalogue* free. tOitoANiri from $25 upward in price. price. •Pianos, from $185 ttpward in If you wisL lo save money • and liave a musical Jtorne, call on or address THE GEORGIA MISK HOUSE. K. I). IRVINE, Mulberry Street, Miiuon, Ga. gj&~ I'he enterprising Music House the " my24-1y of South. J. r,. shea. MERCHANT TAILOR, MACON, OKOKGIA. aprl-ly TEACOCK A NASH. FEED. LIVERY AND SALE S'TABLES. First class teams. Open day and night. Rates reasonable. Special attention irivoti th« commercial travel. I,FMR UK CITY, GEORGIA apr 23 wiytu T. H. Davis, hintttY, I'EElt AM) SALE STABLES. Now Supply of Stock. Hacks, lltc. 1,111 RER CITY, GA. March 14, 0 mo. tu Eastman Barber Shop EASTMAN b.t. First-class in all Appointments ISAAC NIXON, Barber. Superior facilities, best workmanship aud stood com pan v always found in our shop. Jan. II ’89 MASON. EASHIO \A /f/./: BA HU Eli. Fourth Avenue near Postoffice. 1 -hi-tlimn, <Ia. First Class in Every Respect. Ticket. ID shaves. |l.0O. Single shave, 15c. fri Mar. 22 C-mo G. W. ETHRIDGE & CO. DEALERS IN Fine Whiskies, . W1116S, LlC., 416 POPLAR St.. MACON, GA. We make a specialty of the JUG TRADE i All orders by mail receive prompt attention. mar 12-ly tu Take a Rest, Excursion tickets at low rates be *old to all Summer Resorts tl Ut the country Hallway by the East Tennessee.\ irg; •>»* Gc r$i --- ' Fast train semee with ' - Nv Gen. Piss it Ticket Agt. Why Is It That people linger continual along always tired com¬ feel¬ plaining about that Pc' ing? One bottle of Recto's luviLR and Blood Maker will eutireH remove thU feelinff, give them a good appetite and regulate digestion. Druggists. Hekrman A Ukrbman, ! 9 AW 25'-.. ■ WSggp^ Cen 9 r ft 9 Raifroatl OF GEORGIA. 90th Meridian Time.) SCHEDULE IN effect march 3 1, 1899. kol -r daily TRAINS—MACON TO ATLAN TA , v in aeon 9 05 am. Mopm. 640 pm. 13 jo a m .-\r Atlanta i 10 pm. 5 4 5 pm. 1040 P *»_•_ 17°^. a ___ m ;TUis train Stops Tonly at Barnysville, Griffin and East Point. TWO FAST TRAINS PA1LV Columbua Between Macon and Montgomery via ynd Union Sp rings. Lv Macon.......... . 3 25 a m 9 35 am Ar.Columbus...... . 7 25 a m 2 40 p m ) r Union Springs. • 9 35 am 447 P ra Ar Montgomery. .. .1135 am “ 4S P ra DOCIILE DAILY Sf. K VIC E To Savannah and Jacksonvi lie: 15 p m Arwacon.................... 10 45 a m 11 630 am Lv Savannah.................. 230 pm Ar Jac ksonv ille. ............. 710 am 12 00 am 'I.. ThiVma-vvUe and Jacksonville via Albany. I.v Macon........... • J6 45 P m 2 '6&& a m Ar Albany.......... 110 45 p ra p trv ar Thomasvillc..... p m Ar Jacksonville..... ■7 o a m This train dots not stop between Macon and Fort V alley. and Augu sta vi a Milien : Between Macon 1 ,v Miicun 10 45 a m ii i; id pm Ar Milien 2 40 p in S p m Ar Augusta 4 30 P m 35 a m __ |*o Columbus and Birmingham : Lv Macon....... n ban 2 9 35 a rJ .\r Columbus = 2 40 a m at Birmingham .210 3 To Milledtfcviile and Eatonton. Lv Ma con........ '■1045 a m « ledgevillc. • 245 pm . 4 15 p ni Aium als maj.i Atlanta ..030 am ioopm ei.-pm 11 oO p ni .‘ mopm S A jb un y 6 iopm 40 a in. . savannah 1 20 p 111 3 15 a m. - nonton *1 20 p m ♦Daily except Sunday. SOLID TRAINS are run to and from Macon and C'olmn bus Union Springs, Montgomery. Alba nv. Savannah and Atlanta. Sleeping cats on night trains. Passengers for Thomaston take either 0:0.") a m, or 1 :40 pm train, i’assengeis for Carrollton take either 3:30ainor 9:05 a in train. Passengers for Perry take either U :35 a m or b ‘.d.» p m train. Passengers for Fort Gaines, Buena Vis¬ ta. Blakely and Clayton should take 10:05 a til train. Passengers for By 1 vaniu, Wrightsville and Bandersville take 10:45 a in train. the “cexthal” is the only line from Macon making Depot con nection in Union Passenger at Atlanta with through trains for the northeast and northwest. It is the line to je 1 v upon speed, safety and comfort. Therefore look to your interest and nse it when yon travel. For further information relative to died tiles, routes, ticket rates, etc., write or call uoon J. A. Ekgi.ekth, Agent Keceiv’g Depot, Macon, Ga. ji Brown, City Ticket Ag't Hotel Lanier, Macon, Ga. T. Hook, Ticket Ag’t Cen’l Pass, pe’t, -Macon,Ga. P. K. T. Charltok, G. A. apllfi If Savannah, Ga. SCI IE 1H LE —AND— FREIGHT SERVICE I» effect June. 10,1889, via the GEOBLIA SOUTHERN anti FLORIDA RAILROAD. Suwanee River Route to Florida Standard Time name as Macon city time. GOING SOUTH. GOINIi NORTH. Lv M aeon...... 4 00 pmjLv. Valdosta 5 15 am ,» Maconjun. 4 05 pm " Mineola. 5 30 si Sofkee...... 4 19 pm 1 “ liuhira... am ss Avondale... 4 30 pm; “ Cecil.... am i* \V r ellston... .4 44 pin j “ Adel... »• Bonaire.... 4 5® pmi pm! u “ Sparks Lenox.......7 .. “ Kathleen. 507 13 at * 4 Tivola. 5 18 pin “ Eldorado.. 727 ai “ Grovania. 530 pm. ,k Tilton.......74221 Chula’ “ Elko..... • • • .b 5 47 pm! “ “ In ha. 7 57 au “ iTnadilla .. 07 pm i a 6 12 an • ..620pm! pinehurst Ashburn.. Sycamore.. S S 22 at “ I'indlay. • ..6 28 pin! in! “ Dakota... 8 30 am “ Vienna. . .6 40 p 43 am ‘‘ Bieh wood .649 pm “ Arabi.. S 55 am . Wenona,. “ Cordele.. ..733pm! . .722 pm. ” Cordele... .() 07 am 3 \*enpna. “ •“ pmj Arabi.... *7 47 “ Hichwood.. 935 •> Dakota., .8 01 pm “ \'ienna. 9 S4 . pm[ Findlay s* A^ hhur, ‘ . .S 14 “ y 54 Syciu^prc 8 at pin! •* Piiiclmrst.. 1602 an i • 831 I Unadilla 10 14 am i Inaha..... ..8 pm oi.nj * k Eiko... 10 2 k Chula.... 47 q am Ti i'tojf ,.y 07 pmi (irovaniu ...jo 3S am ... Ti vol 4 Eldorado. y^opia, a .10 53 am * i/itiox.... Kathleon .11 03 am Sparks 10 00 pmj ** Bonaire. 11 11 am Adel.... •/ “ Wellstem. pm “ ,1005pm ,11 24 *» Cecil....... 10 at p?n “ Avondale ::u pin “ Ilaliir- 10 30 pmj a Sofkee.... pm Minec Ola.:. .1051 [»m Din!Ar ** Macon iisiicpn }un..J2 00 m Ar. Valdosta. .“ 151 1245 pin Passenger trains tirrive and tiepart from Union Depot daily. Height re ceived and delivered at Central railroad warehouse. Macon daily Focal freight train ietive.- daily at ti o’clock a. in., and arrives at 8:30 o’clock p. m. For further information apply to A. C. Knapp, Traffic .Manager, Macon. Ga. wm THE EAST TENNESSEE. VIR¬ GINIA AND GEORGIA RAILWAY. BRUNSWICK, JESl’P. MACON. ATLANTA. RO M E, < H ATTA NOOG A. —only LISE DOUBLE DAILY SLEEPING CAR SERVICE —BETWEEN— CINCINNATI and JACKSONVILLE -tjOI.in TRAINS I5KNWEEN— 1 11 ATTANOOGA AND .} acksonville —CIOSEI.Y CONNECTING WITH— DOUBLE DAILY’ trains, —WITH— PULLMAN SLEEPING OARS —TO AND USOU — MJ-'MPlIIri. cn’f N.V'HVII.Ll KANSAS “ THE B EST. AND —AND— KNOX VILLE. WASH INGTON, NEW YORK AND THE EAST. THE SHORT LINE BETWEEN Atlanta and Jacksonville. Atlanta and Savannah, Atlanta and Brunswick. Atlanta and Macon. Atlanta anil Rome. or. Rates, Time Card- and other iu ■''ToTTBStion. apply to agents of the EAST TENN., VA. A GA. RY. B. W. 5VRENN. Gen. Pass, and Ticket Agent. Knc'Xvju.e. H. HARDW ICK. A>-t. Geu. Pass. Agent, At I-iNIa. 1 T. D. LOYAL, Ticket Agent, Eastman, Ga. HEV. Dll. TALjIAGE. ! ; the Brooklyn otine’S sun- ! | Subject—‘ the Nation’s ; ‘ Jim H sen ness C urse.” (Preached al Helena. Montana.) Tkat “Who s?cic aU fhtseF —IT King?, | to, 10 . i : SrffiSftaastta JJIUtSSttiSIf X i “ IS SR i of seventy slain Prince*. As tho baskets ^'tatot^^rS^ewiJadSS I sajsw:tsar suss ■loath which strong drink has wrought u -Inything^'We statistics that the me'so fact.that lardeu^l fifty m’nler thousand tW Sraleriaim seems to ma^no positive im pression on the public mind. Suffice it to «“* intemperance has slam an m J 5 ^? e vnvS P SmtW. P Tnd e tt uato* sf >f Gods loyal faunly, and at the t h« gat* of of ■ here are two heaps of the slain; and at the loor of the legislative hall there are two leaps of the slaimand at the door of the iniversity there aW two heaps of the slain; •_nd at the gate of ‘ this nation there two are ieap 3 of the slain. tVLan I look upon he desolation I am almost fran ic with the scone, while I ■ry out; "Who slew all theso>" I can answer hat question in half a minute. The ruinis ors of Christ who have given offered no warning, ihe courts of iaw that have the licen >urc, the women who give strong drink on New Year's i y, the fathers and mothers vho hays rum on tlie sideboard, the hundreds if thousands of Christian men and women in he land v.ho are stolid iu their indifference >n this subject—they slew all these! 1 propose in this discourse to tell you what I think are the sorrows and the doom of tho irunkard, so that you to whom I speak may lot come to torment. Some one says: “You had hotter let those lUbjeets alone. 1 ' Why, my brethren, they would we would bo glad to let them alone if let us alone: but when I have in my pocket low four requests saying: “Pray for my linn hand, pray for my son, pray for my brother, pray for my lrieud. who is the captive of strong drink,” I reply, we are ready to let liat question alone when It is blocking willing to let us done; but when it keepingmultituilea stands up the way to heaven, and away rom Christ and heaven. J dare not be silent, est the Lord require their blood at my liands. I think the subject has been kenfc back very much by the merriment drink. people I used make to >ver thru;* slain by strong these things, having >e very merry over ludicrous. There ft :een sense.of tho was some¬ thing very grotesque in tho gait of a drunk¬ ard. It is not so now; for I saw in one of tho streets of Philadelphia ft sight There that changed che whole subject to me. was a young nan being led home. Ho was very much in oxicabod—ho was raving with intoxica¬ tion. Two young men were leading din along. The boys hooted in the itreet, men laughed, women sneered; out .vhere 1 he happened went in—it to be very the near door the of door his was author's house. I saw him go up stairs. I ieard him shouting, Iiis hooting am blasphem¬ ing, He had lost hat, and tho merri¬ ment increased with tho mob until he came co the door, and as ♦be door was heard onenod his nofjier came out. When I her cry hat tob* >aii the comedy Ijsee out of the walking scene, hnce that time »V&£C tiW a man hrough the street, reeling, and ^one, and it is a tragedy of tears groans and heartbreaks. Nivcr make any fun around me about t*ia grotoequoness of a irunkard. A lew for his home! The first auffaring of tlie drunkwd is in the loss of his good name. God lias so ar¬ ranged it that no man ever loses his good iiame hatred except through and all his the own assaults act. of All devils the of men cannot destroy a man’s good name if he industrious really maintains and Ills integrity. and Christian, If a man God is after him. pure Although lie bo bom¬ Looks foi’ may barded twenty or thirty years, his integ¬ rity is never lost and ins good name is never sacrificed. No forco on earth or in hell can capture such a Gibraltar. But when it is saidof a mau, “Ho drinks,” and it cau be proved, then what employer wants him for workman? what store wants him tor a clerk? what church wants him for a member? who will trust him? what dying man would appoint him hifc executor? He may liavo beau forty years in building Letters up of his reputation—it goes down. raojpimeudation, the backing up of business Anns, a brilliant ancestry cannot save him. Hie world shies the off. Why? It “fie is drinks; whispered lie drinks.” all through That community, blasts him. When loses a man his reputation for sobriety he might as weil be at the bottom of the sea. There are men here who have their good name as their only capital. You are God, now achieving by your right own livelihood, Now under look there your is own doubt anu out that no of your soliriety. in Do not create any sus¬ picion by by going odor aud out of breath, immoral by places, >r any of your or anv lav-* of vruTi* ov<* ,)• hv jv y i'”nn<yi*»J fit*®' ot your cU»«k- You caunot afford to do it, for when jour good ii bias name tad is with your the only reputation capital, and of that taking strong drink, all is inebriate gone. suffers is Another lose which the that of self respect. Just as soon as a man wakes up and find that ho Is the captive ot strong drink he feels demeaned, I do not are how reckless ho aots. Re may Fay, “I lon’t care;'’ lie does «are. He cannot look n Hire man in tho eye, unless it is with positive toroeof resoluttoii.Tnree-fourihe of his nature s destroyed; his self respect gone; lie says things he would not other to so sny; he does things he would not otherwise do. When a nan is nine-tanths gone with strong drink, the first thing he wants to do is to persuade you rhat he caa stop any time he wants to. II<" annot. The fiiiilisunes have bound him hand and foot, and shorn his locks, and put out his ires, and are making him grind in I the will mill of a great horror. He cannot stop. Is prove it. He knows that his course bringing dis¬ grace and ruin upon himself. He loves him ...|f If he could stop he would. Ho knows his course is bringing ruin upon bis family. Ha loves thorn, lie would stop if he couhi. He canuot. Perhaps he could three months or a year ago; not now. Just ask him to stop tor a month. He cannot; he knows he cannot, so lie does not try. 1 had a friend who for fifteen years was going down under this evil habit. He hail largo meaus. He had given thousands of dollars to Bible societies and reformatory institutions of all sorts. He was very genial and very gener¬ ous and very lovable, and whenever he talked about tills evil habit he would say: “I cau stop any tlmo.” But he kept going on, going on, down, down, down His family would *ny; “I wish you would stop.” “Why,” if lie would reply, “I can stop any time I want to.” After a while he had delirium tremens: he had it twice; and vet alter that he said: “I could stop at anytime if I wanted to." He is dead now. What killed him? Rum! Rum! And vet among tue last utterances was: “I can stop at any time.” He did uot Stop it, Vsxnuse he could not stop it. Oh, there is a point in inebriation beyond which, if a man goes, he cannot stop! One of these victims said to a Christian man: Bir. if I wero told that I couldn’t g®t a drink until to-morrow ni»ht un¬ less I had all my fingers cut off. I would riay: ‘Bring the hatchet aud cut them off now." ! I have a dear friend in Phila¬ delphia. whose nephew came to about him ono his day. and when he was exhorted evii habit, said: “Uncle. 1 can't £ive it up. If there stood a fsmnoo, and it was loaded, aud a glass of wine i.at ou vho mouth of that cannon, and I knew that you would fire it off just as 1 earn® up and took the gl*.ss, I would start, for I must have it.’ Oh, it tf a sad thing and for a man to up in ?lm life feal that he is a captive. He says* ‘T could have got rid of this once, but I can’t bow. I might have ived an boaovable life and died a 'Kristian death; but ttiere u n® hope for me now; there is. no eeoape for me. Dead, but not buried. I am a walking corpse. I am an apfMu ation of whnt I cue® was. I am a I'agod immortal, beating against tha wiras of my cage in this direction and in that direc rion: tearing against tho cage until there is E'ioovk on the wires and blood upon my soul, yet not able to get out. Destroyed, without remedy !*’ 1 go further and say that the inebriate Buffers from the loss of his usefulness Do you Who not recognise the fact that many drmk of only those are cow eaptiros of strong a little while ago ware foremost in the churches and in reformatory institutions? Do you not know that sometimes they knelt in the family circle* Do you not know that they prayed in public, and some of them ca*ri®d smnnd the holy wine on sacramental days" CJh. yes. they abx>d iu the m?y front rank, but they gradually fell away Ana now what do you suppose is the feeling of such a * man as that when he thinks of his dishonored vows and the dishonored sacrament—when he thinks of what b® might have been and of what he is now? Do such men laugh and *eem verv marry? Ah, there is, down in the depths Do of tbefr souL a wry heavy weight. not wonder that they sometimes see strange hous- things, and act very roughly jn the hold. You would not blame them at all if vou knew what they suffer. Do not tell such He knows there is. He is there now! I go on, and say that the inebriate suffei from the loss of physical health. Tho older men in the congregation may remember that some years ago Dr. Sewell went through thi country and electrified tho people by bis lec¬ tures. in which h» showed the effects of alc > hoi on the human stomach He had seven or eight diagram of by which he showed the tie*. devastation strong arm* upon pcysi cal system. There were thousands of people that turned back from that ulcarous sketch savaspststias* SKSfgStSS**"' " " “ s £^ 6 ° 1 vrith “|urpiUowT h WhaTgrom“ d b£ t«r E’SrKS’&lS In, attendants their soundiuS through the ni^hWJhe^ kMger oomes^ up a moment for as soon as the keeper is gone, thg begm^aui Oh U«L oM.od. Help. Take them off metoitake them oS m«! OU - GodauJ then they shriek, and rave and they .Ur pluck out their hair by hahdsful, and bit nails into the ..nick, and than they gioau, .ind they shriek, and tlmy blaspuemc, and they ask the keopers to kill them. “Stab me. Smother me. Strangle me. Take the devils off me!'’ Oh, it is no fancy sketch. That thing in is going <>n in hospitals, aye, it is going on some of the finest this continent. residences It of went every last neighborhood night whije on on you slept, and I tell you further that this in going to bo the death that some of you will die, i know it. I see it coming. Again: the inebriate suffers through the loss of his home. I do not care how much lie loves his wife and children, if this passion he will for strong drink lias mastered him, do the most outrageous things, and if he touid not get drink in an^ other way, he would sell his family into eternal bondage. How many homes have been broken up iu that wav, no one but God knows. Oh, is’there anything that will so destroy a man for this life and damn him for the life tli cat is to come? I hate that strong drink. With all the concentrated energies of my soul, I hate it. Do you tell me that a man can bo happy when he knows that he is breaking children his wife’s heart and Why, clothing his with rags? there are on tho streets of our cities to-iay little children, barofooteJ, „ , patch uu combed aud unkempt; want on every If their fado.1 dress and on every wrinkle of ilieir prematurely old countenances, Who would have boon in churches to-day, and as well clad as you are, but for tho'fact that rum destroyed ilieir parents and drove them into the grave. Oh, rum! thou foe of God, thou destroyer of homca, thou recruiting officer of the pit, I abhor theo! and Ufc that ^th? ineb?uTsuffe“rs from the loss of the soul. The Bible intimates that iu tho future world, if wo are unforgivou here, our bad passions and appetites, uurestraiuod, will go along with us and make our torment there. So that I suppose when an inebriate wakes up lu tilts l°st world lie will foal an in hnito thirst clawing on him. Now, down in the world, although he may have been very poor, lie could beg- or he could steal five cents with which to gel that which would slake his thirst for a little while; but in eternity, where is tho rum to come from? Dives could not get one drop of water. From what chalice drunkard of eternal Urea will tho hot No lips • if the drain his draught? one to brew it. No one to mix it. No one to pour it. No one to fetch it. Millions of worlds then for the dregs which tho young man just now slung on the saw-dusted floor of the restaurant. Millions .j • ‘ worlds now’ for the rind thrown OUt /TSCJ fche punch bowl of an earthly banquet. Dives'Lifed for water. The inebriate exasperating, cries for rum. Oh, tne dec*;', exhaustiug, drunkard hell! everlasting' Why, thirst fiend of the iu if a cam© up to earth for some infernal work in a grogshop, and should go back taking on its wing just in one drop lost of that for which the inebriate tho world longs, what ex¬ citement it would make there. Put that ono drop from off the floml’s wing on the tip of the tongue liquid of brightness the destroyed just inebriate; touch let the it, let the drop be very small if it only have in it the smack of alcoholic drink, tet that drop just touch the lost ine nriAte in The lost world, “That and ho would spring w his feet and cry: is ram! aba! that is rumP’ and it would wake up the echoes of the damned: “Give me mm! Give me rum! Give me rum!” Iu the future world, I do not believe that it will be the absence of God that will make tha drunkard’s sorrow'; Ido not believe that n will bo the absence of light; I do holiness; not believe that it will bo the nl> sencc of 1 think it will be the ab¬ sence ot strong drink. Oh! “look not upon tho wine whan it is red, when it moreth it¬ self aright in the cup, for at the last, IWxftotU like a serpent and it stingeth like an adder.” But I want in conclusion to say one thing personal, for I do not like a sermon that lias IF • personalities in it. Perhaps this has not had that fault already. I want to say to those who are the victims of strong drink, that while I declare tlmt was a point beyond which a maw could net stop, I waxvt to tell you fchat while a man cannot stop in his own strength, the Lord Goo, by His grace, can help bim to stop at any time. Years ago I was in a room iu New' York where there were many men who had been reclaimed from drunkenness. I heard their testimony, and for tbe first time in my life there flashed out a. truth 1 never understood. They paid: tried “We were victims of strong drink. We to give it up, but always failed; Christ, but somehow, Ha Ji** since we gave our hoarts to taken care of us.” I believe that the time will soon come when the grace of God •will show its power hero not only to save man’s soul, but his body, and reconstruct, purify, elevate and redeem it. I verily believe that, although you fool grappling at tha roots of your tongues will an almost omnipotent thirst, iNyou God He will this help moment by give His grace, your heart to you, chance. to conquer. Try it. It is your last I have looked otf upon the desolation. Sit¬ ting under my ministry there are and, people judging in awful peril from strong drink, is from ordinary circumstances, there not one ohanco in five thousand that they will get deny of it?. I see men in this congre¬ gation of whom I must make the remark, that if they do not change their course, within ten years they will, as to their bqdi?s. lie down in drunkards’ graves; and ^ to their souls, liedovrn in a drunkard’s perdition. I know that it is an awful thing to say, but I can’t help saying it. Oh, beware! You have not yet been captured. Beware! As ye open the door of your wine closet to-day, may thAfc decanter flash out upon you. Beware! and when you pour the beverage into the glass, in the foam at the top, in white letters, let them be spoiled out to your soul: “Beware!” When the book* of judg¬ ment are open, and ten million drunkards com® 1 ip to get their doom, I want you to bear w itness that I, to-day, in the fear of God, and in the love for your soul, told you with all affaotiou. and with ah kindness, to be war a of that which has already exortad its influent-a upon your family, blowing out soma of its lights—a premonition of the blackness of darknes .3 forever. Oh. if you could only hear this mom ant, Intemperance, with drunk¬ ard's bone?, drumming on the head the wine cask the Dead March of immortal souls, ■aethinks the very glanoe of a wine cup would make you shudder, and the color of the liquor would make you think of the blood of the soul, and the‘foam on the tqp of th® cup would remind you of the froth on tbe maniac's lip, and you would go home from this sendee and kneel down and pray God that, rather than your children should become captives of this evil habit, veu would like to carry them out some bright spring day the to last the ceme¬ aieep, tery and put them away to until at the call of the south wind th® flowers would come up all over the grave—sweot prophecies of the resurrection. God has a balm for such a wound but what flower of comfort ever grew on the Wasted hcat'h of * drunkard's sepulcher? CalifoMi ia’ M ml Sprintrs. The mud springs or volcanoes of Cali fornia are in the southern part of t.ie State, in the valley of the Gila River. The country there is principally au alka¬ line desert, and it was supposed that the land was once submerged by the sea. The mud springs or volcanoes are in a circular area of about half an acre, de pressed several feet below the surround ing land, and supposed to be the bed ot = left by the retreating gulf. i salt lake Here there are numerous little coves, :hree or four feet in height, of soft earth, from which there is a constant discharge ,f carbonic and hydrosulphuric acid gas. These coves, after a time, sink into the earth and new ones are thrown up The tmall volcanoes are very hot. their tem¬ perature standing at 125 degrees in the ,'inimer time. FARM AND GARDEN. A CHEAP PLAXT PROTECTOR. To keep bugs away from melons, fro«t from tender plants, the sun from rauli flower, etc., cut barrel hoops into pieces 16 inches long, crossing them in the center and fastening together with a small wire nail. Then cover this frame w jtli itoht muffin, leaving ° an inch at ° the end of each stick exposed, so they h{ , ,- ms!ie a i u(0 the ground, thus d,.™ el tecwi.cio« to tto gtoooj . ......... ....... ble ’ t ’ au be ad j ustod to * greater or less “ desircd — AmeriCan A JricuU ' turist. RAISING TURKEYS. An unknown writer advises those .,„.„ goiagW it „, a sea - more “ to raise - such -“ as at maturity ^r-% will weigh twelve or fourteen pounds that such aa bring down the scalev at the six pound notch only. You will hnve to chate the young turks just about so much an h . n l might as well make tli trou e :.s profitable as posdble. Plymouth Rock hens make good foster moihers for young turkeys an 1 ducks, as they are too lazy to go far from the hack door. They will also cover a great number of oggs, are g >od-natured anil uot easily disturbed, and arc ever¬ lasting gutters when once broody—henco not apt to leave their nods before the hatching- is accomplished. Nine turk’s eggs are enough to set under one hen. ART IN BEB-KEEriNO. At a convention of apiarists iu Indiana, a paper was read on “Tho Bide of Bee-keeping," in the essayist said a great many are judged mainly by their appearance, and honey is one of those articles. are a few simple 11 primary rules for . honey for the which . . paring mar A (■. may J be well to note. First, ’ honey s-liQultl be carefully stmined through . two . thicknesses . , , ot some kind thin cloth before bottling or shipe. becond, . , flint away m any c.ear ^ j arS should bfi l, = C 1 for P acka S 0S - as common glass makes the clear, golden yellow „ i. „„ ol the , honey ,, , , r i look a „ nni ,, ,, i,i .dy, lT green id i yellow. “ Third, plain, neat labels, wuh the of the producer, . name kind of honey, ’ etc. It would bo xveil lor honey producers to heed these sug ’ geslions, experiments with CAUiuoE PLANTS. I have cotne to tlie conclusion this season that eabbagu plants may bo set in the open ground, to advantage, much earlier than is customary. In the latter part of .March, the ground being iu fine condition and pi a ant weather prevail¬ ing for some time, 1 took a few plants from u i .o':! ferns and set them out. Jn a few days a hard fre i < time; mer cury going down to twenty-four Fahrenheit. % plants i - i, precedentcdly dry weather, for tho set? son, followed their planting. The earliest ones had tho benefit of nil tho moisture that departing winter left in the soil. Jn my first regular planting of early cabbage this season, I tested care¬ fully the relative value of small and , large plants. Under equal conditions as to soil, moisture, time of planting, etc., J put out a quantity of fine, stocky plants averaging six inches in height. Beside them I sr h i equit quan.ity of small plants, none more than three inches high. At this writing all are flourishing, but if there is any choice between them it is certainly in favor of the piece set'with the smaller plants.— American Agriculturist. wnr cows siiocuj i;e ealtbd. We have always tnainunned that cows should be given a stated allow¬ ance of salt at regular intervals, if they were not salted by tint hotter plan— haring salt placed where they could have free access to it at all times. Tbit has been urged iu order tint tin cows might have what they wanted and not take enough at one li ne to disarrange their digestive organ An/ one who has given attention to tlie matter of calling dairy caws, knows Dnt they are b-tter for having suit, and hiving it regularly. Now the Am ricaa Dairy man tells ui whr wc salt thrm: As soon as the food enters tha stom¬ ach the natural tendency is for fermen¬ tation to begin, and there arises a con¬ test between tlris tendency and the di¬ gestive poweis. Aud if these powers are vigorous and the process of fermen¬ tation is checked or intercepted, tlicn no bad results will foilow; tlie food will be digested and salt will not be needed, though at any time thin wi.l assist iu the process oi digestion. Suit keeps food from decaying until it, can be di gested and assimilated, and prolongs the time to allow ill digestive organs to complete their work. And if food V taken in excess, as often happens when stock is i 1 pasture, salt given frequent* ly will be of muth advantage, And further, salt is a preventive of worms. When fermentation sets iu the con li ti ms presented 8 re favorable to the con di ioa of the vrorms in tho intestinal canals, and may possibly be enpendered by th; pro<e*s. Consequently it shou d bearulevilh the stockman to keep salt before their cattle, or v.ithin ea-v reach tvhm they need i;, and the cattle will obey the Ueiuanls of nature, and supply the want as needed. HOG CHOLERA. The- more important facts about hog cholera, which have been definitely de termined Ly the iuvestigarions of Dr. D. E. Sainton, chief of the Bureau of Animal Industry, have been summed up in the valuable work just pubd-hel by the United States Department of Agri¬ culture, and may be stated as follows: 1. The di-ease is a contagious and in fectious one, and may be contracted by a healthy hog from a diseased ono, or from infected premises, and the conta¬ gion may b - carried from farm to farm in various ways. 2. It is a bacterial disease, the germ having been first ac curately figured and desciibcd in 1885, and studied almost constantly since that time. 3. The germ is readily cultivated in various media,is transmissi¬ ble to other animals than hogs, from which it may bo retransmitted to swine and produce a fatal form of the disease. 1. A fatal disea-e similar to hog chol era, which lias been named “swine plague” to distinguish it from the dis¬ ease first met with, was discovered dur ing tho progress of these investigations. It is also a germ disease, widely dis¬ tributed and fatal, an l may exist as a complication in outbreaks of hog chol¬ era. 5. The disease may generally be prevented by isolation of the animals and by cleanliness combined with sim¬ ple measures of disinfection, 6 . Out breaks of hog cholera art to be d ecked by separating the well from lho diseased animals and practising dis¬ infection. 7. Infected premises may be made safe for the admission cf a new herd by disinfecting with lime or other disinfectants and allowing three to six months to elapse after the disease has disappeared. 8 . Medicines liavo not been found to greatly iutlueue* the course of the disease. 9. Inoculation has boon tested in almost every form as a preventative without satisfactory re¬ sults. 10 . ilog cholera is apparently identical with a disease which has re¬ cently been described in various parts of Europe ,—Americin Agriculturist. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Jlilk promotes rapid growth in ducks, as does also lean meat. Don't forget to plant sweet corn, peas and beans for table use at intervals. Millat is one of the best hay crops, and can be sown after tha corn is plant¬ ed. Bee l only in a rich soil, and have it xveil prepared before sowing. if cotgv’s planted or sown to he cut green during the latter part of the sum liter, good care should be taken to have the soil rich and well prepared. One good attendant upon a long suc¬ cession of rainy days in summer is in the opportunty it brings for farmers to read without neglecting their work. Rain every day may he good in the end, hut it is a little embarrassing to farmers, who have their work retarded | and find themselves unable to execute plans based on ordinary weather condi¬ tions. More sheep die in the spring from in¬ digestion than from any other oause whatever, and this is due generally to innutritions food, as straw, poor hay, etc., which they are compelled to eat to sustain life. ^An agti ultural and mechanical fair ^^Kdcnt for its success on balloon *s w. stling matches and other character, may as weil ■■■ti are will come sometime fraud. ^ Vagaries of Etiquette. In Sweden, if you address the poorest person on tho street, you must lift your i hat. The courtesy is insisted same up¬ on if you pass a lady on tho stairway. To place your hand on tlie arm of a lady, in Italy, is a grave and objection¬ able familiarity. In Holland a lady is expected to re tire precipitately if she should enter a store or restaurant where men are con gregated. She waits until tiiey have | transacted their business and departed. I Ladies seldom rise in Spain to receiva a ma o visitor, und they rarely accom¬ pany him to the door. A gentletman does not offer to shako a Spanish lady’s hand. For him to give a lady (even his wife) his arm while out walking, is looked upon as a decide! violation of propriety. If a Spaniard says, when you retire after a visit, “This liouse is entirely at your disposal whenever you may please to favor it,” ho wishes you to know that he regards you as one 0 f the family—uno do nostros (one of us) as they express it. If the words are uo j gpokeu, you can conclude that you are not welcome to call again. In Persia, among the aristocracy, a visit or sends notice au hour or two he¬ fore calling, and gives a day’s notice if ^} 1G v j s jj 0IJe 0 f g rt . ;i t importance. Ho is met by servants before he reaches rite house, and other considerations ar* shown him accordiag to relative rank. Tho left, and not the right, is consid¬ ered the position of honor. No Turk will enter a sitting-room with dirty shoet. Tbe upper classes wear tight fitting shoes, with goloshes over them. Toe latter, which rcceiv* all the dirt and dust ate left outsido tho door. The Turk never washes in dirty water. Water is poured over his hands, tii it when polluted it runs away, j u Syria the people never take off their caps or turbans when entering the p. juse or visitin'; a frieuJ, but they al WBT8 i eave their shoes at tho door, There are no mats or scrapers outside aud the floors inside are covered with expensive rugs, kept very clean in Mos¬ lem houses and use 1 to kneel on while saying prajern. In China grief is associated with a white dre 4 ri, in Ethiopia with brown, in Turkey with violet, in Egypt with yel¬ low. A Bo? With a Head and a Half. A strange freak cf nature ia the form of a dog with a fully forme 1 Lead, and, grown out from one side of the neck, a completely formed bsif head, with the mouth and eyes doted, can be seen at the Vosburg House in Waupaca, Wis. His dogship is a black and tan terrier. To look at the animal from the left side, only the jaws are visible in a sort of a protuberance. On the right side the shape is complete, but the closed eye and mouth, wiih but a slight connection with the vertebia, render the ‘ addi tional’’ head of not much value except as a freak, He is regarded as one of the best watch dogs in town. THE “SINGLE TAX.” What the Phrase Means—Lucid Ex¬ planation of the Theory. We hear much now inlays of the ‘sin¬ gle tii\” agitation. There is a “Single Tax” league, which has a oousitleinble membership public throughout interest 'he country; of the meetings in the several ' Single Ta\"nre behl. am! new s¬ papers ami mam br»-:>ks advocating the “Single Tux 1 ' are published or have been (" published. What >- this “single tax all b taxation is. in brief, a proposition that to land, abolish the value of him except It does upon not or 1 . propose that even buildings shall be taxed, but that all the taxation of tho nation, the State, and the municipality shall be laid upon the laud alone, exactly in the same measure, whether it bo built upon or vacant, but in proportion to the value which it jaissesscs from nearness to the e The litres of population Tax” theory or business. is eased “Single upon the doctrine that the land rightfully the be¬ longs to all the people, Tlmt mdividvals ex elusive possession of land by is not right, and that tic separate own¬ ership of land might be merged iut > a sort of joint-stock ownership of the pub lie without injustice, was lino suggested, in England, by the social philosopher, received Herbert Svenoav. The doctrine a much fuller statement in this country at the hands of MV. Henry George, in a book called “Progress and Poverty,” first published in 1871'. Mr. George is accounted the founder of the “Single Tax” system, and is thp head and front of tho agitation. Mr. George and his followers main¬ tain that, under the present system of private ownership of laud, the burden of poverty resting upon the mass of man¬ kind grows heavier as the world makes material progress; that in spite of the increase in the world’s productive minimum }iower, wages alw ays tend to a which will give but a have living. They hold that private ownership of land, with the privilege of holding it for spec ulativo purposes and of forcing up rents as tlie population effect and monopoly indusln advance, of natural Jims to put into h the hamlsofthe lnnd opportunities Tho natural opportunities be¬ owners. ing thus monopolized, laborers are com¬ pelled to compete with each other t * auclian extent, as to force wages down to tho lowest possible point. nil classes of A# they bold that, wage a of laborers depend upon the productive tmd •ullivation of tlie soil, Mv. George his followers maintain tJinfc the true rsmetlv for poverty i* to make the lw».l common h property. not; They however, propose to disturb tho o,v„pni,t.s of land, ao loug as the occuoanta moke full use ox their laud. They propose, on the contrary, to allow the POKSCSSIIVB of the soil to OOU tinue .. to buv end sell and hequeutll ll. •. But they do propose to tut. all the rent bv taxation. T<> do tins would make the oosupwitoftlieland the State. a tenant pay .ur rant to This proposition, tvhlcll was nrst known under the name <>i' “land nation alizatiou,'’ lias siru•■*, by the comnMii oonsant of its advoeates, become know n as the “Single Tax” movement, the efforts of its friends having been direct •d more speeifioallv to tlio aboUtion of all other foruiK ot taxation. I hey hold tlmt the lemovttl of taxation from indus tries in geuoral would stimulate maim fttctlires and ImsinesK, at the wmiu tiieo that it destroyed ' peculation in land, to aiioh an extent that iinmetisely the general incteased pros perity would ho and wages gicatly ra; ed. They hold that the revenue from the Single Tax would lie so hu ge as to enable the government to.nnintiuu schools and colleger, build and operate railroads and telegraphs, and <i . i my things wnioh it does not now engage in.— Youth's Companion. Protection from Lightning. The fatal lightning that stroke much is so fre¬ quent tills season, persons ex posed to thunder storms should take all known precaution against it. In a scien¬ tific paper recently rend before the Royal Meteorological English society, meteurologi-t, ,\!r. J. Y. Symons, F. R. 8 ., tl.e pa¬ tented a large mass of important data mi the phenomena of thunder storms diuaril.v, persons exposed to n thunder storm flee to tbe nearest shelter to escape wetting. Mr. Symons shows that “it a mail is thoroughly wet it is impossible for lightning to kill him.” He refers to a remarkable ptoof of this fact, TTic giant scientific lecturer, Faraday, or.ee demonstrated to his audience at the Itoyal institution, that with all tbe pow¬ erful electrical apparatus at his ill postil it was impoisible for hint to kill a rat whose coat had been si titrated with wa¬ ter. It would be well, therefore, for any person in a severe thunderstorm, and lia¬ ble to a lightning stroke, to allow him self to bo drenched with rain at the ear¬ liest moment possible, and in tbe absence of sufficient rainfall to avail himself oi any other means at hand to wet h.s outi r apparel.—-V. Y. Ikrald, Canada's Wealth. Those who are in the habit of consid eriug Canada as an Arctic aud sterile country, will bo surprised land to learn fitted th t she has one-fourth more wheat cultivation than the w hole Unite I ,states. In 1877 the yield of wheat in our own country was a little over twelve bushels per acre In the rattle els, and averaged twenty-seven hudicls per acie. The climate of Can-sda dot s not hinder, but contributes to the wealth and enterprise of her people. She has more timber of every possible deserip tion than both she and the United Ma-es touid consume in a hundred years. She has more iron and coal than mu :»the V country in the world She bun piobabl) more copper than all other couutrlcta combined, and there is no telling whnt of lies hidden under tic snow and ice her northern districts. Mr. Edison is at work • n what In calls a “far-sighted machine,” by which he expects it will be possible for a mau in New York to see a friend in Boston, Sarah Bernhardt. in coming to Aintrica, »nd vreat will l*- the enthusiasm sroused amongst her admirer*. But, we have our own bright t»tar, Mary Ander¬ son, w'to will continue to bear off the palm 111 the dramatic, d > 0 J.ury Hinton ;h r great tobacco world. This 1* the age of wonder , and tn«- average American citizen is no longer surpri.-ed at anything. If you want to experience that sensation, however, just u-ritetoH. r . J" n eon «fc < o., ]0»iW Main Ht., IHchniond. ' a., an 1 ii**ar what they have got to >ay > f ttic - '";* of ifomf of their agetite. They liavo employ¬ got tn. good* that sell, and anyone out of ment will consult their own infeiest by apply¬ ing to them. Tl»<? Mother's Friend. ti*ed a few week* fore confinement. the pain at»«l m ri;< labor quick *nd comparatively *n«y. i; all DiuMist*. \*i OS CURE por (oWSv/v\?Ti o/\J. wot. BRYANT & STRATTON Business College «„•* Write Krevina. for lotataoue -.hot t niut llaiitl, ftsll /rlrfiravhv.&r. itt- ormation. TYlTn BU viO RVIT.T.F. f liiLL. KY tali What wrought ttie change? Thl* womau’d face Is ruddy \vi h a roseV grace. Her eye is bt igUt, Her heart is light. Ah, A few truly brief ’tie months « goodly sJ her ?ht. chaefc ago Wao pallid and her «M*p v as weak. ‘The end id near For her* 1 feai,*’ T Sighed tell many what n friend wrought who hold the l»«r chauga dear. in her. can 8 he yon told friend, like liad suffered nas untoid by a who, ooinpliva- ner, misery from a tion of female trouble*, that Dr. I'ioreo’s Fa vorffa Frorrrlptiou would f . rtainlv core her. Thte had friend “knew by whereof she shw *pokt\” adviftod for sh* her baen cared the remedy friend to use. Shei onthnsf.ast.ic Mac.' in Its praise. And tells her friend? that Dr. dc erees the universal gratitude oi \v nnao-kind for having given it this infallible, remedy for tts 1 -ecnUnr allmo.itr-. 11 is au n an'eM funded. to give sat¬ isfaction in every oa-o or money r< Dr. ViFToty’s VeUeCs oh> n V/ 0 T 6 Vicaui acht\ cons tipat ion and indijfest; : on. An interesting man has named Ids daugh¬ ters Time and Tide, so that they will wait for no man.___ A pocket ma'ch-s&fo free to smokers -4 “I nutAiU’s Punch” 5c. C igar. iflliefed wit-li sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp* ’s F.yc-\Y alcr.Di ugidists so 1 «t 26c per bottle Weak and Weary Describes the condition of taauy people dottllltatad by tiic warm weather, by disease, or overwork, flood's sarsaparilla Is Just the medicine needed to overcome that tired feeling, to purify and quicken the sluforiaih blood and restore the lost appetite. If you need a good medicine be sure to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla. “My appetite was poor, I could notsleep, had head aoho a great deal, pains 1 n my back, my bowels did not move regularly. Hood’s Sureapartlia lu a abort time did me so much good that I feel like a uew man. My pains aud aches are relieved, my appetite Improved.”—G eo nan F. Jacxjion, Roxbury Station, Conn. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all drugfftets. $1; tlx for $t Propoiod only by C. HOOD A 00., .\poth«oari»#, Lowell. Mau. IOO Doses Ono Dollar Jk-Riend'’ ^MOTHERS xasrfVmp BRAD FI ELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA^ SOLD BY AU DRUGGISTS. ^ . J* y ^|ooi) n 1 VmsMWxX revolver — arm*. Tliotlm^t smsll anus (( VJ' TarKHtmod*b J?‘,i\u“vt“ilull unuiviy qnul- W (\ •nstMi<*t«i «.t din-Htallti; nni in i iirncv. 1). iioU.»il(«vl*inlhT dioAp Often ma moll lien for bltt tilt m Ht-iidii .nui,.« iiuii.-itionM ti« In ho-I wan not U a r t. »! »!. r«h» wiihftrin n nmuf. ad.ln sm an<i <lnt«*s of p*L< pt» lSfi±f r!& ^ prints f rn!*tn*<l n».M-riptivpo;'»ftl*>irti»■ r*»Mtion. SMITH •, 1 WESSON, uik .11 X | BT~ Mm tion thi r ;ii> r. Spriiiifllpld. Him*. THE STORY Of &IERICI. jUSi rySLIailtU. n„.i. l ii..i...«; i H uumetiseiy pcamw every county in tua U. s Apply early if ywu want “ * _(' b\. tlllaaU. aa>. ' ” Icttl/ r» 1 . Yip 1 H pn»ttt 9 FLY E1LLEL M it Won a el*un bwccje glb'rtt will kill u qutart oWV. Yl Molts LuK&ing »r«>und c*r«, diving m cytifi, Laid tickling wortl* and »• uo«e, ttklftt irlftlnK oxj>«aa«. curcti macc at ily send MS centutor 5 v,h««w tu 1’. DUTC^^Lrtt. Albnna, vk. 111 ; / f PAYS .» T« a THE \\ iiuDii FREICHT. Hrui«i, r Iron I »*veiR Htn I JlMiliigit, Hra/M __ Tare Bcatti * a '»«l lioum Mux f«r t&oo. x Y^rverynizoSc/iie. t rt «>ii lliis payn 1 • r i »n>i freo piicAlbt 0 <lin*» / f’jA • r, V lOMfci OF RINGHAIVirON, to' ISINCIIA 1IT« N. V. Im Plantation Engines tefe.g With Belf-Contained RETURN FLUE BOILERS, f 'COTTON FOB GINS DRIVING and MILLS. i- Hill ■'rated t I Address JAMES LEFFEL dt CO. [ hl’IUNGlTEI.ft, l OHIO, or 130 iberty M.. New Vork. Patronize HOME INDUSTRY! r.l V SOI TI! CRN PRINTING INKS KIIOM FRANK J. COHEN, General Agent 23 lti>« Mntn.nm SI., AT1.ANTA, li\. After ALL othcri full, cons ult 320 N. 15th St. ■ 5 PH1LA., FA. Twenty ytat uontlnuoue rrnctico lu the treet ment a/i'! cur<* < f tht* nu Ittl cfttH tH of varly iter, ili'M Yoy In;, lK,th rnlii'l sn'l txidy Mcrilrlne •ijhI trf'rttmoiii ft.; one obsorvati'ju month, hive |)oll-.*-«. «ent sf*‘urelj BealwJ from to »ny tuidroM. H«ok on Spr* iul OtErasre li ce. -G\ CHICHPSTER'S ENGLISH CsiAiA PENNYROYAL PIUS. ll K™» Cro.. wtaumnd *//“" — CfcltkcU. ckcmtual c»., tudlwa »«., 1 -kUtaa. Fa. HARVEST IN TEXAS. p« r 1 < d in flu* w ridiTiii State Cora G it f* i<-r l,u-li‘ l II»y &G j»tr ton. ' ettU ff, p«r r.<i. Ai > *- «-*if i < ri I liu i uu Lm uut htn #*,J Furli-tof ^ t. lar.<ln »[. .r t . TL\4* IMESIMKM' < «. !> >11'ANY, CniHlrann. T. M 4 Valuable , l , i , cnH«tr on (he OPIUM MBIT. Full information <>t ko Kmj t »n>] Hpp*>«iy cure U» (llK fifBlctfd. Ttit.J.C fhjXyAAItpJouorioi . '•Vltcc/nuln liffl,,. m nPniF., . A , s.L, c 0 A9«s;; *.fi t,, t»rO«rp».!ve eDiflentx. All lnt«rwte4 isSKajar bsh. Bl tliOJGiifhy Ly MAIL < irr ■. ft 1 Y Milt ft < elirifC. 437 Main Ht.. fiuffftki, N Y S2S J Ml o. ys L C’O.. the fllrLtaoad. ii, oo pifiifrs's V * a. PEERLESS DYES "7 nr-T. xrauutn. f,n«i WMAe? If Stft'ur« <lar o»»owlu» 19B to ;tp'to‘iL nook of par r- c ont KKf J!. Ji.M.WlfOLMCY.M.U. AUoitttt, tiii. 0 * 1 iCiu WiiiU;Lall bt dow 7 prescribe ar» , i folly only eo> Kig <i u» tho ^WCofNlfl tc 6 datb.^I wB » tt.m r: for tn** rertaiu curu #Wl BBtlfUlw4 , I> Dot M G. H. IN ri R A If AM, If , e*a»< Ui.-urttafe- Am6t«-rd»oi, N. V. ur««ot7 fcyibft We have sold Big ii tor ttSl.iLi 8s. tn a ny y<*am. v-tul it Pat MA riven tbe be*t of 1 2 - 1 - Ciz'J.Y.ns tS prtfon. Nmmjk, Ohio. Jf I). Ii. D Ti CfY^kuYltl.OO. S..ld Lv IJru«t*li. N. C ....................Tu rti fimr, ’B!>.