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J. It. MAG ILL - - • • EuiTon.
knLir« '1 Di ptrooul cUsa matter at tUc I’wtl Offict,
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Th« Chicago Morniup News, comment
ing on ilit protest of Senator Kuulis
agsimtt the policy of President Cleveland,
lit* the fallowing:
It has boon llit cry of the democratic
party for years that the republicans ware
TJiaki ig use of official patronage for the
role and only purpose of continuing it
self in pawer. that selections for official
position* wire made w;tlioot regard to
qualifications, and *hat die ability to set
up 1 *sMemes and manipulate conventions
wa* regarded as a better endow ment for
effioe than fitness or rapacity. Pledgrs
were repeatedly made by' the democrats
that if they wne placed in power all this
would be changed, ji.d that ability would
ranV h gi.cr than party zeal ; that honesty
would outweigh party service, and that
Alness would tal.e the place of partisan
ardor in the eiccutive department of the
government. A democratic president was
chosen, and at once the "hungry and
thirsty” partisans demand of him exactly
the things thty have condemned in the re
publicans, and they complain because
honesty, ability and fitness are made qual
ifications for office rather than party zeal,
service and activity. The democratic party
is estopped from making complaints or
threats against the president for carrying
cat, in good faith, the promises the party
has made at all its nominating conventions
for the last twenty 3 tars. The President
will he deaf to all the demands of those
who would kill the goose that lays its
golden egg. The only way to a contin
uance of power for the democratic party
lies along the conservative course the pres
ident is pursuing, and any variation from
that path will lead into ttie wilderness of
defeat. The president is wiser than his
critics.
There is no accounting for tnstea, but a
distinguished Philadelphia physician goes
little ahead of anything yet seen in this
country. For sometime past he has been
wearing shoes so peculiarly lustrous in
their blackness that his friends wondered
if he used some magical blacking or util
ized the muscles of some extraordinary '
bootblack. All acquaintance recent!}' ask
ed the physician how it was that his shoes
retained such a strange lustre in all sort of
weather. The reply was startling. The
shoes were made of human leather, the j
skin of a colored man. The physician
stated that he had worn this pair of shoes j
seven months. The leather was soft and ,
pliable and moro enduring than calf skin. !
Further questioning elicited the informa
tion that human skins are tanned in large i
quantities in Pennsylvania and made into
shoes, match safes, cigar cases, and cases
for surgical instruments. The skins are
obtained from the bodies of the subjects
dissected in the medical colleges.
The famous Bartholdi Statue of Lib- 1
ci ty is now being loaded on a French j
transport for shipment to litis country.
When it is pronounced the largest
statue in t ie world, a very indefinite
idea is given of its vast size. Forty \
persons can stand within its head. A
six foot man standing on the level of
its lips onlv reaches its eyebrows. It
weighs 440,000 pounds. When placed ;
in position it will loom up 305 feet
above tide water. The great French
sculptor, P> irtholdi has devoted eight
y ears of hi» life to this work. Os his
own free will he presented it to the
Flitted States, and Bedloe • Island,
Now York harbor, was selected bv
tirneral Sherman ns the best place for
its location. Ti>c pedestal fund has
boon dragging s’owlv along, hot. tlt o
New York" World has already raised
about $40,000 of the money, and the
remainder will be raised in some way.
The rumor comes from Washington that
President Cleveland desires to signalize his
administration by the acquisition of Cuba.
It is thought that the island will naturally
emue to the United Slates without costing
11* a dollar. K*en non it i> said that a se
cret agent of the Spanish government is in
this country charged with the business of
HM-eitnining the President's views with
inference to Cuba. Spain desires if possi
ble to sell Cuba. If she cannot sell, she
desires to transfer tha island to the Cnited
States, upon the guaranty that she will not
he required to indemnify Americans for
estates confiscated ill Cuba several years
ago, over wlitth there has been so much
controversy. Within the past few weeks
<ur newspapers have printed numerous
letters and articles concerning Cuba, and
it is possible that there is something m the
air.
The Governors of Ohio, North Carolina,
Delaware and Rhode Island have no veto
power, the popular assembly desiring to
retain all law-making power. In almost
all of the .States a two-thirds vote is neces
sary to overrule the veto of the Governor.
Kentucky is the only one which has chang
ed the vote from two-thirds to a majority
•f the whole. In Indiana. Kentucky, New
Jersey. Alabama. Arkansas. Vermont.
Connecticut, and West Virginia the veto
power is very weak, being set aside by a
majority of the whole number elected te
the Legislature. Nebraska and Maryland
require only a threc-lifili vote.
l\ S. Senator Sand ford, of California,
attributes the cure of Gen. Grant to use
of clover tea for the past four weeks.
Among the numerous letters received by
Mrs. Grant suggesting various remedies,
clover tea was urged by the majority of
writers, and this so influenced her that she
finally insisted on giving it a trial at once.
The doctors smd that they had no objec
tions, although they had no faith in it
whatever. They gave it a trial of one
week or ten days and then dropped it.
Mrs. Grant and the rutnily. however, con
tinued to give it to the General without
the knowledge of the doctors, and have
kept it up ever since. Ilia improvement
was noticeable from the day he began lak
i The noisiest celebration to which New
York haa been trialed for many years will
come off in October, when it is expected
that a hln*t oflsoJoo pounds of dyna
mite will send the Inst remaining acre of
solid rock at Hell Gate flying heavenward.
One hundred and twenty inen are at work
day and night honey-combing the rock
1 with innumcraM* holes that are to receive
1 the deadly dynamite preparatory to the
ttunl blast. The entire work at t! is point
'covers nine acres, and when the dynamite
! is fired it is expected thnt the obstructing
rocks will be thrown high in the air.
Russia is a country without any national
| system of elementary education. A small
class of the people arc very highly edu
cated, while the masses are left in absolute
ignorance. The vast extent of territory
and the smallness of the communities in
crease the difficulties in the way of general
education. The people appear to he apa
thetic. The ruling classes fear that they
will lose'their grip if the inas-es learn to
read and think for themselves.
■ ■ ■■
The Southern Baptist Convention
convened in Augusta mi the Gilt, with
Rev. P. H. Moll ns Moderator. 400
j of the 700 delegates front the different
States were present, the others expected
I by the morrow. The convention ser
! nion was preached by l)r. .T. L. M. j
Curry, of Richmond, Va. The reli
| gioua and secular press were fully rep- ■
resented. The Convention decided
against female representation.
i John L. Stovall, book keeper of the
Georgia Chemical Works, Augusta, has
j been indicted for embezzlement. Mis de
falcation amounts to over $50,000. Ue
has ruined his uncle General Stovall, one
! of the most prominent men of the city,
j Augusta seems to be in a bad way with
! defaulters and the like.
Rev, Sant Jones has been challenged by
J. 1). Shaw an ex-minister, and now ag
nostic ®r infidel lecturer and editor, to aj
series of dehates on the subject of revealed |
religion at Waco, Texas. It is not known j
whether the challenge will be accepted.
President Cleveland visited the battle j
field of Gottysh irg on Monday. 1 hree
pistol shots were fired as the train np- :
preached Mount Hope Maryland, which
gave rise to a rumor that the President
was shot at.
If President Cleveland were lo make
a "clean sweep ’ of tit a hund cd t lion
sand office-holder# for political consul
erations, lie would falsify the pledges
on which he Bought the votes ol tho
people aud was elected.
The new postal card paper, under the
contract of ISSS, will he h delicate pink in
lieu of the cards now issued. Thelvxtuie
of the paper is al*o said to I e improved.
| The size will be the same ns now in use.
i Some person sends to a New \ork
(journal a four column article which cn
jdeavors to prove that Gen. Grant is the
ntan-ciyld referred to in the twelfth chap
ter of the lh>ok of Revelations.
In one of the cwloicd coiirolics in thi*
city, something of a turmoil has late’.'
been ra se 1 O'er the movement on part o!
some of the member* to a <1 vision ol die
inembor>hip on tUe c loi ine. Tie pro
ject is one of t c most remarkable that
we have vet heard of, its aim being to
i separate ti e blackskins from the mulat*
toes, the ebon hued desiring to hive a
congregation all to themselves, aud the
mulattoes expressing a smil.tr des re en
their own part. Ihe subject was di.--
cussed in a congregational meeting a day
or so ago. and while each part}’ was wil
ling for a dt' sion, the terms could not be
agreed upon. The minister is a llack
skinned divine, and naturally inough, the
blackskins laid claim to him. in addition
to the church and church furniture.
Another trouble itas the fact that some ol
the blackskinned men had mulatto wives,
and some es the blackskittncd women had
mulatto husbands, and htw to apportion
them in the proposed division was a sub
ject that created a good deal of unsatis
factory discussion, lhis difficulty seems
to be inauimountable, but botii factions
arc determined upon * division, and it is
believed that the Synod will have to be
called upon to act ns a board of arbitra
tion. — Charlotte C ) Observer.
Augusta Chronicle: The manipula
tion of men to form juries has, in
some localities, become a tine art. In
this way justice is too often impossi
ble, and if the criminal have money or
influence enough, lie tnav reasonably
except to escape punishment altogether
or eise be let off tenderly.
It is about time to have reform in
the jury system. This is presumed to
be the age of reform, and nowhere is it
more imperatively demanded than in
the temple of -To-dice, so called.
General Grout is not doing 60 well, j
Toombs duba Atlanta the Capital of the
I South.”
In 1823 Lexington, G»., was known is!
Great Falls.
Oglethorpe county R to Lave a $20,000
court house.
General McDowell died iu San Fran
cisco on the 4th.
No child was ever born to a President in
the White House.
Three negro pri-oner? have escaped
from the Talbot jail.
Some of the Texans criticise Bill Arp's
lectures quite harshly.
John H. Coker, of Dougherty county,
lost 14 J hogs by cholera in three weeks.
I One of Precedent Cleveland's sisters has
been a missionary in Ceylon fur thirty
years.
The Republic in postmaster of Cld
cb'/o lias been deplttced by a good Dem
ocrat.
A s< k n uro committed auk; *e by
hanging, in Oglethorpe county last
Tuesday.
The Supreme L"dg- K'iight< of Honor
meets in St. Louis, Mo.. Tuesday next
| May 12th.
It is said that tnore cotton has been
| planted in Burke county than in any of the
| past ten years.
California raise L in 18SJ, a bushel of
wheat for every man, woman and child in
i the United States.
A build mg was dost roved by lire in j
Brooklyn, N. Y . on the sth, and 30 per
sons lost their lives.
Mr. Meshtck Bonz, of Gordon county.
! died from tho effect of a bee sting on top
of his head on the 4ib.
In the plague stricken town of Plymouth. |
Pa., 11 funerals took place in 24 hours.
The epidemic is abating.
A strong effort will be made to move
j the court home from Lexington to Craw- ;
i ford in Oglethorpe county.
11 ml fell to a depth of IS inches in Surry
j county, Va., on tho lstinst., and in some
plac s di ifted to a depth of four feet.
Cons derablc interest is manifested with
regard to the holiness meeting that will be
gin in the Hartwell Methodist Church next
Sum! t}'.
L. D. Clotfelder, on the line of Clarke
and Oconee counties, had to kill a mule !
afflicted with hydrophobia. It was bitten
by a rabid dog.
The beat acre of the farm is the garden,
and the one that } - ields the greatest profits
when properly managed, and, withal, the
acre we rarely meet.
They arc trying the experiment of var I
dilution for cholera in Portugal. The \i- j
rus of cholera is used after the manner of
small pox inoculation.
S. B. Harris, a book agent, of Min
j ncapolis. Minn., has mysteriously dis
! appeared from Athens, and fears are
I entertained of his suicide.
A petrified bahy was recently discovered
|in Texas, and a lately married editor is
: wondering "how the thing kept quiet long
| enough to become petrified."
‘ Henry O. Flipper, the colored cadet who
made so inncli trouble at \\ e-t Point, now
I holds a commission in the Mexican army
and gets along very well with the "Greas
ers.”
In Macon Friday of last week an engin
eer shot his wife smt then committed sui
j cide. The wife was badly wounded but
will recover. He was old, snd she was
| young and fair, and frail.
The late Col. I’ostwiek, of California,
kdd one of his mines for $150.0'0 ju*t he'
foie Ids d.ath. His estate is probably
worth a millionjand Mrs. Charlie Rcase.
of Aih<ns is I- is only chi d.
An "ex soldier” writes to tho Boston
Hoi aid that as late as a mouth ago he saw
skeletons on the field of Seven P ties, sup
posed to be those of South Carolina sol
do is who fell in l at tie there.
A girl with three aims is one o r the at
tractions in New Orleans. The young
; ladv should be very popular as she can
put one arm around a fellow’s neck, while
sho sews on buttons with the other two.
A min or carp w as caught near Pacolet.
j Spartanburg co nry. S. C., measuring
234 inches in length and 17 inches around
the body. It weighed G pounds and 10
j ounces, of which 1 pound ami 2 ounces
i were c-gs.
There is an eld lady living in Athens,
i now 82 years of ay.c, who has never en
tered a church or spoken on the subject of
religion. When this topic is broached
she always gets up and leaves the room.
I No one knows what is her belief.
As an experiment to test the truthful
ness of the stones of live frogs having
j been found imbedded in solid rock. Sequin
! in 1822 enclosed a toad in a plaster cover-
J ing, and found the reptile alive and in good
i condition on breaking the shell ten years
, later.
Conyers Solid South : At the Baptist
prayer meeting last \\ ednesday night Rev.
Edgar Jewell stated that lie had for a num
ber of years declined to apply the title
"Rev.” to any minister of the Gospel. He
believes the title to be both irreverent and
out of place. .
Danielsville Monitor : We know of two
children whose mother, though a darkey,
can challenge the world, without fear of
successful competition, as to names. The
first is a girl and is named Myrtie Rosa
Zillah Jennie Vanduzer Pussy Satterfield I
Addie Belle, and the boy i* named Jimmie
John Haxdtine Judge A tkirs Fox Gallo-;
wiv Ficaniun' Blot a.
j We do not. as a rule take much stock
in the rotation in office theory but we
. would again say .that South Georgia in
tends to have a word to say about the
n { *xt gove:nor. She has been fed on the
husks of promises quite long enough.—
Thomatcille Enterprise.
Athens Banner : Mr. Spence, of Jack
son countv, says he has a half acre
iin strawberries, from which will Boon
commence to gather 200 quarts daily.
He vstimates that the gross profit of an
acre of this fruit, properly planted, will be
$375. and savs they beat any other crop
our farmers can grow.
There is u family of negroes living on
Judge Gwynn's place, about 10 miles east
of Tallahas-ce. Fla., who subsi*t a!mo>t»n
--i tirely on rabbits. They have consumed
si ce Jan. 1.182 rabbits. A boy and a
dog are kept busy hunting, while the bal
ance of the family w irl.s the crop to furn
'■ i*h the bread and chillies.
At Cl a wfordville, on Memoiial Day,
flowers we e planted on the grave of a
vv 11 known c lured man—Ait Mi'chell.
••Alt" was iu the < onfederate army from
flr-t to last as a 'anhfii and devoted ser
i vant to some young men from Taliaferro.
His i.sefulues- wa* well known among the
boys, and those who were present <n
; Monday could bu' feel that flowers w ere on
tin- da\ fitting!} offered to the memory of
"Att.”
Out Aj;<; Keeking- Holier
Hartford, Ivy.. March 24, ISSS.
J Dr. John .M. Johnson :
Dear Old Friend—Puffs similar to the
' enclosed (Rev. Jessie 11. Campbell's "Two j
More lmpoitant Cases”) occur almost
weekly in our paper in relation to Swift's
i Specific. I presume upon our old friend
ship to inquire of you in relation to it —its
curative qualities, price and manner of
procuring it. Having lived eight3 - -three
years through the most important part of
the world's history, the prospect of dying
from cancer on tho face is not very con
soling. Let me hear from you at earliest
! convenience.
Very truly your old friend,
HARRISON 1). TAYLOR.
Atl-AKTA, Ga., March 2G, 1885.
Harrison D. Taylor, Esq., Hartford, Ky. :
My Dear Friend—Your very highly es
teemed favor of the 24th irist. renched nit
on tho 25th. You want information in re
gard to tlie celebrated medicine manufact
■ tired here, known as S. S. S. I have
watched with much care the effect of this
madicin-' upon those who have used it, and
! bear willing testimony to its good result
|in a great majority of instances. The
i firm engaged in its manufacture are gen
tlemcn and capialists, and are far above
, falsehood or deception as any men in your
j community. Y'ou may confide implicitly
j in any of tlnur .statements t.,..~i.;-„
i utility. Y'ou can get it at the drug stores
; in Louisville, Evansville or even in Ow
! i-iisboni. Ky.
1 am sorry for you! - affliction, but I be
lieve this medicine will cure yon if per
sisted in. 1 would not stop under one
dozen or more large size bottles, which
can be secured at reasonable cost.
JOHN M. JOHNSON,
72 Marietta streec, Atlanta, On.
Tr«alie« on Blood and Skin Di**a»«ut free
Tur. Swirr erectFiC t.'O.. l»mw»r a. Atlaatn, C»
a warm me.
Tlio UephmU lilorj- Toltl bj One of
C'olG's A{;rnU.
“It's nil nonsense to talk nbmit ele
phants Leiti£ brutally handled by their
trainers,” said Mr. A1 Richards, press
agent of tho Cole shows, “and I'll tell
you why : Our trainer deals with them
like children —lie coaxes and promises
and does everything in a kind and hu
mane win* to get them to do tilings.
They have intellects almost as large as
man's, an 1 they not only stop to think
when an order is delivered to them,
hut they tire tuinking all the time, and
there is not a child who gives them a
j peanut that they will not only remera
! her, but do anything that is asked.
| Why, these is I\dio, one of the oldest
elephants we're got. While playing a
rainy vv, ek in St. Loni~ — and, by the
way, we generally do strike wet weath
er —a young lady who visited the show
one day fed Pedro a few cakes; she
came u ain—for ours is a circus that
you cannot take in at a single perform
ance—and again gave him cake. That
afternoon it rained, and the yonng
lady on passing out stopped to greet
the pachyderm. In turning away she
discovered that a depression in the
earth was filled with water, and she
daintily lifted her skirts to pick her
way across. Pedro perceived her pre
dicament at once and leaving the line
in which he was standing wrapped his
trunk around her andcarried her nearly
:30 yards, almost to the door of the
tent. She screamed, of course, but
when he put her down she consoled ;
herself with the remark that it was
! ‘the biggest and warmest hug she evar
! had.' ” —Sf. Louis Republican.
tv lint Yon Want to Know.
Everybody wants an honest answer to
this simple question :—What is the best
medicine to regulate the bowels, cure
costiveness and biliousness, help the di
gestion and give strength to the whole
svstem? People ask ns this every day. j
IWe answer. Parker's Tame. It is pleas-;
xnt to the taste. All the children like it.
Mothers all praise it. It will save a thous- i
and times its cost in every family.— Ed. j
Wfjttr.j .4 r*/.*.
The Mason Cotton-Plotter.
Tue Mason cotton-picker has not
been abandoned. The principle is a
new otic, and time and practical work
in the Seld ore needed to develop aud
apply it to the best advantage. It was
tested last fall from the opening to the
close of the crop, and it will be still
more freel)’ tested this year, and it is
now anticipated thal the machine w ill
be so far perfected this year that it can
be safely placed upon the market for
general use before the gathering of the
;crop of 1886 87. Bradstrcet's has
I given special attention to the subject,
aud it expresses the opinion that the
; machine is nearly ready for common
use.
The peculiarity of the Mason picker
is that it seizes upon the fiber, but pass
es over leaves and bolls. This seed
ing irnpossiblity is accomplished by
the points that seize upon the fiber be
ing placed just beneath the orifice
wiiere they work. The projecting fiber
enters the minute distance between
the points and the surface, and is seized
and separated from the plant. The
stalks, leaves and bolls glide over the
surface without coming in contact with
the points lying immediately below,
and thus escape seizure or injury. The
catching points are placed in stems, or
fingers, which gather the cotton as the
mule draws the picker up and down
the rows, which the machine straddles
While a large number of the stems
enter each plant, they do not jostle or
tear it. The cotton that is gathered,
by a reverse action, is cast into side
receptacles prepared to receive it, and
the stems pass on to do their work in
another plant. An average sized ma
chine Ims from 150 to 175 stems upon
it, so that a sufficient number pass into
each plant to do the work. As far .as
experiments with the last crop went,
which were continued into January, a
little more than one-half of the cotton
was gathered in one passage. By driv
ing up the row again and back, seven
eighths of the cotton that was open
was picked. Its condition was remark
ably good, but when frost had made
the plants brittle the cotton contained
some trash from the leaves which had
fallen upon and adhered to the fiber on
the open bolls. The machine, where
the cotton was well opened, picked 336
UQUUds of seed COlton «n hr.uf or
pounds a day. Os course these trials
showed details where improvement was
HARTWELUHGH SCHOOL,
HARTWELL, HART COUXTY, GA.
l\. L. PARKER, A. 8., Principal
Mrs, M, L, PARKE Hand Miss LOIS CLOUD. Jiscisstants.
Miss EMMA WILSDN, Music,
-*—•»-«
HE SPRING SESSION for ISSS begins MONDAY, JANUARY 12th, and con
tinues six scholastic months.
Course of instruction and rates of tuition as follows :
Fouktit Class :—Spelling. Reading, Writing, and Mental Aiithmotic - -_ $L3(k
Third Class: —Elementary Grammar, Arithmetic (through fraction?), Pri
mary Geography - - 7 ~ " s2o^
Second Class :—Analytical English Grammar. Arithmetic. Geography. Com
position, Elementary Algebra. Primary Philosophy - - S3.CK>
Fik T Class Natural Philosophy, Astronomy, Chemistry, Rhetoric,
Logic. Higher Algebra. Geometry, Trigonometry, Surveying, Latin.
ami Greek - - - **•«>
Music : ---------- id.oo
Board per month. $7.00 to SIO.OO.
Each pupil, entitled, will receive his pro rata of the Public School Fund.
No deduction for loss of time except in ca>e of sickness.
One-half the tuition payable in advance, the remainder at the close of the session.
Lessons in Calisthenics free of charge to resular pupils.
Parents are requested to enter their children the first day that they may be classed
and take an even s;art, and a regular attendance is desired, without which pupils re
j ceive but little benefit.
The success of the School for the three years past is gratifying, and we earnestly
ask the co-operation of the patrons and citizens generally in our efforts to make it tho
most popular school in Northeast Georgia.
We would say to those at a distance who are seeking a first-class school, that our?
! offers superior advantages, and the town is as free from immoral influences as anv
place in the State. The County "went prohibition’’ by a large majority a year ago and
1 the results arc very satisfactory.
The friends of the School are invited to be present at the opening.
For further particulars address the undersigned.
M. L. PARKER.
L T EA.L ENanfESAMB CIRCULAR SAt
Improved Southern Fan Mills, Excel Threshers, Athenian and Bill Arp Hor!-
Powers, Bark Mi.is. Cane Mills, Colt’s Celebrated Bower and Lever, and Brooks
Revolving Cotton Press, Iron Fencing. &c.
A1 so, Manufacturers’Agents for Portable Steam Engines, Turbine V n r
Wheels, Cook’s Evaporators, Victor Cane Mills, Combined Threshers and Sfp
arators &c.
Also, a full line of Hancock Inspirators, the Great Boiler Feeder, Kortn’P
Universal Injectors, Steam Jet Pump for raising water, and a full stock of fitticp
of all kinds for Steam Engines, Millstones, Bolting Cloth, and mill findings fur*
isbed at short notice.
For Descriptive Circulars and Price Lists. Address.
9U THOMAS BAILEY. Aft "I-
possible, and some changes were de.
termined upon in the shape of the
framework, the movement of the pick,
ing stems and the movement and com
struction of the elevators which carry
the cotton from the receptacles to the
pgndent bags at the back. The change*
decided upon will effect a largo in.
crease of gathering capacity-, and in
sure the exclusion of trash even in the
last stages of the crop.— Constitution.
Tb« &iglitU of a Billion.
The English billion—a million mil
lions —lias set Sir Henry Bessemer to
calculating. He reckons that a billi< n
seconds have not elapsed since the
world began, ns they would reckon 31,.
678 years, seventeen days, twenty.two
hours, forty-five minutes, five seconds.
A chain of a billion sovereigns would
pass 736 times around the globe, or
lying side by side, each in contact with i
its neighbor, would form about the
earth a golden zone twenty-six feet six
inches wide. This same chain, were
it stretched out straight, would make a
line a fraction over 18,328,455 miles in
extent. For measuring Light, Sir
Henry chose for a unit a single sheet
of paper of about one three-hundred
and thirty-third of an ino-h in thick
ness. A billion of these thin sheets,
pressed out flat and piled vertically
upon eacli other, would attain an alti
tude of 47,348 miles.
TTAT T VEGETABLE
JdxUjij D SICILIAN
Hair Renewer.
Seldom does a popular remedy win such a
etrong hold npon the public confidence as haa
Hall’s Haik Renewek. The cases in which
it has accomplished s complete restoration of
color to tue hair, and vigorous health to the
ecalp, arc innumerable.
Old people like it lor its wonderful power to
restore to their whitening locks their original
color and beauty. Middie-aged people like it
because it prevents them from getting bald,
keeps dandruff away, aud makes the hair
grow thick and strong. Young ladies liko it
as a dressing because it gives the hair a beau
tiful glossy lustre, and enables them to dress
it in whatever form they wish. Thus it is tho
favorite of all, and it has become so simply
because it disappoints no one.
BUCKINGHAM’S DYE
FOR THE WHISKERS
Has become one of the most important popu
lar toilet articles for gentlemen’s use. When
tho beard is gray or naturally of an undo
sirable shade, Buckikokam's Dye is tho
remedy.
z-JSEFAItED BY
R. P. Hall & Co., Nashua, N.B.
Sold by all Druggists.