Newspaper Page Text
The Toys of 0»r Boyhood.
Thel>o rr, 1 „„ nt y i laV e a very
‘
STn^rwere vonnV" , .BTmsefl us
We ea’i lianlly
♦h£ ta/nrfo!is f the old-time Onr' toys for sale m
V S tmnVi) »«<• chiMrcn wo«\<l
i 1 « their noses at '<]..•
I*.I tovs that amused their tai’iiers
X* ,]i’s •o ' with its painted win
Aims .nd and red r roof that lifted *lduo up will, a
Iin.gr <W « with n coat and a
, -
.enden v t i and .damage
figure'lwilt , is V1 ,„ wi q,
cwonkw » on the churn
jmltcni wc tiswl • to knock < them in end
T 5?e , i I Dm «ril,J will. U«* dcphald
tow ’ and the Unguroo. and fasten
all n ups. l,v W-kinn b the roof with
Ui r,*nk,.n Willi there the wooden slice., tl'
wiJ was
clrnd on his baek and
pasteloiir V tV.ird I r«t • , *nd the siv.tted >„ eliina
i T’nil w(Xk]( ,,,
* ,l l'lw the horse tliat was mouuted on
’ ;id constant! t fiev beeame
l u,. v tl.c/tot un
glued how rapidly Jcpitude tered into
old we and h ; but we en
i IV'.m TVMMMwiou of likcse mcmHtroHi
* ’ in il Ihfiuwht them tike perfection of
l lurty’ Wi treasured r these
tThmiestJ ai dm id kinud omanl
Xaifmoreiui vbdii-ved tha ofThem^t we got lmn'thr a «-<»t
joynient -o.,, oirt of tl„. modern
,
«r ............. ........
nI had picturca
T)ie little flat -Wwiks fihut,
in Ln-ardSt^tS.t r .I f.twi vt lltw hihI rX.g ifroon 1 ’nml' of A w“
«
a something or either that did something
■else e.piallv absurd. Wlmt treasures
ithis linen paged literatiure seemed to our
wusopliisticak-dminds; aud it exasperates
w-«l ™
the ^oung folks. Thm m hw figo (»f pro
/rr/.ii K«ui mwl liixiirv but wooiicktioii fun' whet lit tier
get more out of self
# "%!I tov !’^Inll nistol that earricK Imiuimd u real like* hull
Angers’ will
all his off, than Ids p.edeee
got out oi the primitive popgun that dw
charged ianu!r nothing more dangerous than a
paper wad. unit
_
Why He Dhln’l Vole.
The following Knglisli is on iinreportcd exami¬
nation, says an paper, tlmt funk
place before one of tho commissioners
appointed to inquire into a cor tain elec¬
tion petition: name?”
“What is your
“George .Jones."
“Well, what do you know-of this?”
“On the day of the election 1 went to
the ‘Spotted Dog.’ ”
"What did you do thore?"
“I sisi’d a niiui."
“Well, wlmt did he do?”
"He gave me five shillings, nml said iis
how I whs to vote for Mr. X.”
you vote for Mr. X.?”
“Well, did you vote for Mr. X.?”
“No, sir."
“Wlmt did you do then ?“
“Wont on the 1 1’ig mid Whistle.’”
“Well—Hr ere ?“
"There 1 see d another man.”
“What did he do ?"
“He gave me five shillings, ftnd said I
was to vote for Mr. X."
“And did you vote?"
“No, sir.”'
"What did you do then?"
“1 went on to the ‘Red Lion.’”
“And-there?”
“There 1 see’d ft man, too.”
“And did ho give you live shillings
and tell you to vote for Mr. X.?”
“He did.”
“And did you?"
“No, Hir." admission,
“Why, fifteen on your shillings own to vote for you
obtained one
of the candidates. Did you not vote at
all?”
“No, sir.”
“Why not?”
“Because 1 ain’t got no vote; it’s my
fattier, George .lorn's, who’s an ('lector. ’
Collapse oi commissioner.
Caught In a Bern- Trap.
Alniut a week ago a resident of Antoine
street who has discovered a line wooil-pile at the
buck of his lot that some per¬
son was helping himself in the most lib¬
eral manner. Instead of loading a stick
with powder, or of posting himself to
watch, he set a large bear t rap where ho
thought it would do the most good.
Nothing camo midnight of it of the the first second night, grout hut
soon after a
noise was hoard at tho wood pile, and
the citizen roused out of Vied to find tliat
lie hod a victim. It was a colored mail
about 40 years old, and he was taking on
in tho most energetic manner. Nothing
was said until the jaws of the trap were
sprung back and his leg pulled out.
Then he sat down on a log and coolly
observed:
“I reckon you is kinder curus to know
how 1 cum to be eotchcd iu dat trap ?”
“ Well, yes,”
“ Has you bin miasiu’ any wood?”
“About half a cord.”
“Well, dat wood was tooken by my
Hex’ doali naybur, an' it went agin hi*
conscience so much dat be axed me to
bring back what hi* hadn't burned, 1
toti u it olnir Leah on lie sled, an’ was
pilin’ it back when dat Vox-trap jumped
fur us* an’ gin me sieh a shock dat I
•peeks to tremble fur a hull week.”
"Weil, you con go, but the next time
yon come you may find a spring gun de¬
fending the wood-pile.”
“Dar wcwY b<> no ucx’ time, sail.”
"I think 5 vou’ll had it cheaper to buy
yortk wood. ’
"Looks dat way, nek—looks 'anotty dat
way, though I tink I’ll hole on till 1
knew whether you he* d* only b’ar-tnip
in dis ward, or whether dor am a sort o’
p'ocque-craae «a’ oVs rv family iuu stock- Dree
m' up to cotcli a nigger 1 ”—Detroit
Press.
The Gold Cois w the Wohi.u,— The
rari* Bourse estimates the total stix'k of
eold in the world in use as com, or ns
^SoO.^wi^h 0 !^
i’ ju, Su Wio d'jy ftftv Frsri(v> ftgfiO -
miSl «d the
“ Otter na
/ ______•**,,_ varvinu from
«8S800ll in the case of Holland, to
1147,744,000 in Spain.
The Grain C rops of 18S2.
% the Inf' et figuring of the A grim!.
ttiruJ iitureaw at WaHhington it is re
l at ,ort< 1.635,«*),n00 ‘ (1 fll< ’ <k,r " T’ himlieto, 1 ', 0 ! «k 1 the yiehl
of SIO.OOO.CXAJ bnsliels. Ihese
cstiiusies may lie accepted as_ probably
not hw from the ainoiuiLs which »ill be
hhoyRi by the official and final returns,
aud Couriering ik,! results the are fears highly which encovaging. freely
were,
expressed for the corn crop in the early
of last summer it spprMrf from the
AgrculturallJurowie datato have been
evceptionnllv good. Up to 18i9 this the
maximum yield a Indian ■com m
' v,lll,rv « w,r f <1 “ tl,at ^
1,547 901,000 imsheis. T Last year s
«as
>>v the above .-stiniate, exceeds tlutl
of 1879 by 87,000.000 budhels, aud falk
•'mlv alxmt 207,(09,000-tuifler the crop d£
' ly ^\ ].* ^diesdike pr«hcl.«i
winch the Ifrreld made as early-w
August 2 that the estiinritcs then made
,,f th( ' probable yield of die enni would
have ” to be revn ■ «1 and enlarged. Ttie
h wheat f*\ crop pla^-s tat a f W
1 >hh]k> than 1 h mor<? tliat tlia <crf i tlmt 1879-and #>f 1^/8, BO.OOOjIkK) M),JK)0,M 0
more
more than th*t<tf 1880. I lie past ye ar
tinrefore, be memorable in «io
agricultural anuids of the country as-enc
of fniitfuls.^ms, fiUmgno <<xid and ony^ir gUd
owl ‘ )u "‘ 1 ,,,lt with
sJi?5Jr^ar“«rsr^3E
K'-nemliv, so th«*, thore oa now no ua>
nimtakabh? menftoe of a hArd winter, flmh
an that of 1880-81/in wl, dh on Decern
l '" r 29 the tL-rttl,l ° W * w « f hfty-nui:
degrees below was registered . hi
Moutarm) to mm ttie eroi. piosjs'cts i>
»-!»« u,iW year.— tom^Xofk JEraid.
..........*........
Hi, po(;t „l
ri5^Ti , "-a^5ss:
^ iiunnin 1 \ A more darintr, ^i a -more in
* , Dor.lmuf,-. , and a more ong.nal , mind . t it ..
! ,1,,t been Hu fat' of J.iuope to see
l; *‘
<1* “ i"' 1 *
*1^1 C H'xfi U«
. ot find fiim wiUna ti.e limits
ot our Coiivi nuoiuu iimouerijM ni .eteenlh ecntnn- (Cin ry
He delighted in battle, yet confess,d
frequently that it was not the bubills
reputation, but a soldier s grave which
lie sought at t ne cannon s month, llo
went forth to liaf lle clad m Ins newest
aud brightest uniform, mounted on Ins
famous white charter, mid waving his
white cap in tho iur. Hkobclcil was a
wonderful military artist. Ho must
have studied 11m soldier closely to have
ae,pored HO accurate a knowledge of h,s
heart, On one occasion at tho third
battle iiflMcvi.il. hornet Ins roops fly
n.g piimc-strieken hack to the camp.
On seeing him they drew np and saluted.
“Ali, my fine fellows,” he exclaimed,
“you have fought like lions!”
The troops recovered their self-re¬
spect. Seeing tho effect, his words had
produced upon them, Skolieleff pre¬
tended only to have discovered that they
were without their muskets.
“Where are your muskets?” he
-Mii. uf,■<! I (touiitwaunT.) ii ii _ymmWod answer. coUluiand “0ow
al’,is ! wuoh
dogs as you. Come, pick up your frtTt.b
kots, and follow me at once 1” and, pro¬
ceeding in tho direction where the Turk¬
ish lire was thickest, ho put them
through tlloir recruits facings drilling as though they
were raw iu tlio quiet
hack yard of a provincial barrack. When
they hod gone through their evolutions,
he led them against the enemy, and not
one of them thought of running away.
Advice to Young Men.
“Bo somebody on your own account,
my son, and don’t try to get along on tha
reputation of your ancestors,” says Bur
detto. "Nobody Adam’s grandfather knows and nobody and
cares who was,
there is not a man living who dm tell the
name of Brigham Young’s mother-iu
law.” The lecturer urged upon his
hearers the necessity of keeping up with
the every day procession and not pulling
back ill the harness. Hard work never
was known to kill men; it was tho fun
that men bad iii the intervals that killed
them. The fact was, most people had
yet to learn what fun really was. A man
might go to Europe and spend a million
dollars and then recall the fact that he
had u great deal more fun at a picnic
twenty years ago that eost him just six¬
ty-live cents.
Ttie theory that the world owed every
mail ft living was false. The world owed
a man nothing. There was however, a living in
the world for every man, pro¬
viding the man work was willing somebody to work else for
' • It he did not for it,
would earn it and the lazy man “would
get left.” There were greater oppor¬
tunities for workers out West than in the
Eastern cities, but meiij who went out
West to grow up with tho country must
do their own growing. There was no
browsing allowed in might the vigorous intone West
An energetic roan go out years^B*
far West and in two or three
boss himself of a bigger house, « bigger
yard, a bigger barn, aud a liigger mort¬
gage than he could All obtain by ten years’ ought
work in tho East, young men
to marry, and no young men should euvy
old men or rich men. In conclusion, Mr.
Burdette said that a man should do well
whatever he was given to do, aud not
deopise drudgery. The world wants good
idvovelers, teamsters and laborers, but it
doe* not want poor lawyers, poor preach¬
ers, er poor editors.
A Troubled Family.
At a meeting of the Philadelphia
CVnuit v Medical Society a man was ex
hibitod who has not and never tins had
teeth, hair, taste nr smell. Moreover,
the microscope declare* that his skin is '
atwolutely the without jHires. which an omission on >
pal t of Nature has hitherto
been considered fatal. But Mr. Petex
Wendling has lived to be forty-eight
Tears old, has enjoyed uniform bealth.
«>d suffers from the lack of pores only
m hot weather, when ho finds it noces
r ”' 1,K ' e tem jierat ure of hS body.
Ho lives in the little village of Bismarck,
roar L tiauon, and is the father of eight
children, all of whom are free from his
physical pecnliaritiee, barring the fact
‘hr; there isn’t a full set of teeth in the
SAVE THE WATER.
A Mule item ^ny orcioed living «
‘
_.
In telling the readers of-the New
York .Sun how lie supports a family salary, ol
three in good hji style cm $10 a week
aI1 ,| a | wftyg money in the hank,
"John Short" gives this item: And if
a fines r,y one s»i|ijios's limited that Itili cheap living oon- is
one to a of fare it s
ra j 8tftke> There arc aqy number of very
«coeptalj!© adjuncts t® the There, cuisine of ir- a
«,»!» «m o smnU saia**-. for
8 t allC(!) is macaroni arl cheese. I «a
AuniinO the dish m invented for a
klng «, ut even if se it will be focud
veryiiatisiardory abatable ton republican, Ur it
i* dish, aid no mistake, And
chea „ j hay ajicaroni for tfelve
cents, the single po*.nd, or ten cenite by
n, e t uantitv. Ha.f a pound we find
quite enough to ^ at a meal. As for
ebeer.e, we use grateil green, or eapsa
g0(1 ii preferencetto Parmesan, and pav
t wdhe cents a cabe for it. Aeakewili
] Mt n ) X)Ut three pounds of macaroni,
With tl.ose articles and some n W. gravy
Jelllli< , produce an attractive-supper
dirfh for iia three dt an expense cot ex
ceeding eight cents. And I am-sure with no
well-regulated “i Bern will p' quarrel it.
„ jglLy^keit. ro ftnd lt a m
&!; That is lm’iarous.
saturate it with gravy;
WK0izV'£3\L ,,u» ■„ 0 f butter, mal dust
stSrarSkS
sliced apples; fried sliced tomn
toes^cut ^,. thick, well seasoned, a/kd fried
bro flte wcd Gorman celery; heart
an(1 s terns of cabbage leaves, .cut in
lumps and servedexith drawn Imtter, a
substitute for that delicacy, Bms
sels spioutH; barley currys, fried carrots,
sicsitsss tTsss®
|
M f \ 1 ; | \ f mention
.corned href water. I know many ii
dirow the water they boil the beet
, bw j )U t we u0 uld sooner think .of
' lowing tl.e lieef itself, I l,elic*o.
avny
! W<! , ", 1 - v “ co (1 “ ,,, 'f eight d m cents lots per at
time® , Wflt ‘ r - WI cabbage l 1 WJlolis or > I turnips. ,otttk,es > a, I ' d always
| - aljt «„ U p for dinner; and that corned
| )Cef » flk . r f rom the pot of a boiled
dillIler> , Iluk( . H u delicious bowl. Not
only thaf, but it will keep making you
sonn for three (lavs or so. You will
have much more than you can consume,
g av e it. I tken f when you want a bowl
fake such * quantity
() j nice sour) ne you
j n t ( >ud to usd, and cut and boil an
onion or two ftnd a f vW potatoes or small
ioceg of cabl)ng( , in it) .and there y on
have, at short notice, a uied soup, when
ro )( . rl m;W5()Ucdt And at what ex-
1 ? From one to three cents.
_____—«--------
Gen. (luster’s Beatli.
The Miles City (Montana) Journal
says: \Vo have received communication
a
from Hunley from an old trapper, guide lived
and scout, who for many years has
among the Indians of the Northwest. Ho
claims tlmt Custer died fighting, that he
did not commit suicide, and that the
.Italians did not know him after he. fell, -
As ter there which nre have some new pmnisTn the let¬
never before been pub¬
lished, and ns wc believe the writer to
!>e sincere in what, he‘writes, we publish
herewith a synopsis of the article. He
says: “I have been requested to write
to the Journal what I know of Gon. Cus¬
ter’s death, and my knowledge of William
Cody. In 187(31 was with Gen. Crook,
on Goose Creek, when the Custer fight
occurred. Cody was with Gen. Merritt
on Plat te Fiver somewhere. Cody never
saw the Custer battle-ground. He ene¬
not speak tho Indian language, nor talk
the sign language; that I am sure of.
He joined us with Merritt's command on
Goose Creek, and we met Gen. Terry on
the Rosebud and marelu d in company
to the mouth of Powder River. There
States. Cody left the command aud went to the
He lias been there ever since, I
believe. As a scout and prairie man lie
is seventy-live degrees behind nothing,
I lmve talked to the Sioux about the death
of Custer, and they knew nothing about
him, only that he was killed. There was
no ‘ massacre ’ about the tight. Custer
attacked the camp and got cleaned up
through the cowardice of Reno. Gen.
( ustor was a favorite with all prairie
men ; too good a man to be killed in the
manner in w hich be was. For my part,
1 believe Custer was killed in battle,
lighting like a ‘little devil.’and likely fell
long before the battle ended. ‘Curley,
the only survivor, a Crow Indian, knows
nothing about Ouster’s death. 1 do not
believe there is a man living, red or
white, who knows how Custer died.”
The Persian Way.
a certain Persian eitv having exhaust
^ n u j te f ullds . „iul knowing of no way
to raise more, the Mayor laid the case
before the Governor of the Province
“Have you doubled the tax& ?”
"We ' have.”
“Have you borrowed from the rich f”
“Every dollar that they will load.’*
“Have you issued bonds?”
“We have, but no one will buy them
at any price.” stolen all the echo®
“Itave you
moneys ?'
“Months ago, fflustri oua Rulec.”
"Pawned the eity seal ?’’
“Tee, verily.” the City Hall?*’
“Muii-goged ”
"Yes. five teuiee ovta-.
"It is indeed a serious ease,” utueed
the Govetnov. aa he scratched his ear.
" The only way out of it is to go b am*
ami announce an eiw of reform.”
SunBcrtsa Fruits, Tbbbs, rtc. —That
which has been said on this subject an
ihr the “Orchard aud Garden,” applie*
with equal force here. Select with care,
and order early of the most trustworthy
dealers. There axe new sorts each year.
and the only safe way is to buv well-tested ciily a
few of these, and rely upon
varieties fo r the bulk of the ord er.
“Ii^nutiaus married happens only boated tlmt the together, people
who sire are
>»liile others are stitched together so
firmly that they can never be parted,”
says a newspaper stitch* will philoepher. rip if the tension He for- ie 1
gets that
8uffic;eat ‘
1 —
SJw.m Bn |ter and CSieese.
Professor Shel« m, in the Iowa Bnne■
is says: Cwii to) anyeae W« tdl wh«t ell dairy
ing drifting hear of sorts
ef queer moneUy from lard-cheese
to cotton butter J No man knows what
lie eats if he hu;bSimulation is the
spirit of the u i x wild no end of science
and skill is at ployed what to deceive. A
clever imitatawi w mtu prefer to
produce, and the public are led to de
vonr. The sort >licity of genuineness the is
out of the r umag, as thiergs go in
world. The p iblic mart eat what is
given them, asking no questions,
The oleomargsfme menbave done a tere ;
rible lot«' m^l i. f, aid. offal is the exalt. go<l
whom they delight to honor and
At all points they I aimr.o circumvent the
dairyineii aurl w indie sthe public.
The teste ofl 1 the pr ople cheese is degrades which
by the sham d. miter-and Mm’s stomachs
seems to toe re now
adavs are«epviehres for strange aboim
nations which they ignorantly rather
than innocently gwsJlow. Tins seat -of
thing is 'leading amt them they know net
wlnthetr portmty wi jay the
piper. 5t i ir do longer that wlndh
eomcfii -out pt, but that wliicfe goetk
into theimoutii umjy th«* defiles. Meats and
drink*« kinds are not what they
pretend to be, and there is a goed desd
of “trioke t r re dark” in wkuk passes
for dairy g. Uiis ■Wel Li
fa»yjs’ ? . for To< s ey * grog! have
opening,Aoi^ieol»ddy wWliilk. They have gsren an
_ of the dairy,
men
who «re gro/jing rich out of offal The
law they eutBijphijeutjly like, mil.'the sham lets is, men often sell enough, what
better t£aniEie meal one. Shoddy sells
well ewruj jto be carefully made, and
so the ; aaa s of counterfeit butter and
cheese <i*> i Irish. fir .Mid Dairymen cheese, who make
inferior h no matter
how leal tlT'x goods may be, are ant of
the runni: jkflie r entirely. suited, It only the palate if
of the put it matters not
the article dairyufin Up real or pretended, so eare
less can hgrdl.y “make ends
meet makers' and t it.” But one thing is clear—
the oi really their first-class cheese will
and butter can bold own, and
hold their own against the nefarious
stuff that is made in any and every coun¬
try. A we ding-out process is going on,
and goods which are mere simulations
will tal" tjie place so long occupied by
the products of milk that was spoiled.
If, then, the oleomargarine business, the
melted tallow and other less creditable
things, shall result in bringing about a
thorough reform after in dairy methods, we
shall have reason all to be grateful
to men for whom few of us entertain
feelings that approach public to respect or
affection. But let the have fair
protection, let them know what they
buy; then the dairymen will win—if
they want to; and if they don’t the fault
is their own.
The Indian of fn’.em gtanreand lion hear¬
ing, the theme of the touching ballad, is
gone: biYiTAbo petroleum Uuy discovere:!,
now made into" Carboline, the natural lia r
Restorer, will live fnever.
Enquire)!— “What is tho best way to
tell a horse’s oge ?” Depends on who
owns the beast. If it’s yours, don’t teii
that it’s over eight, i-uyliow.
>*orsIi,” said the practical man, It’s “no
brie-a-brao on the mantel for me. a
imisani t Where’s a man to put his
feet ?”
Ladies A children's boots A shoes esn’t run
over if Lyon’s Pat, Heel Btifleners are used
“Doo-K/Tnder favorable circumstances
live to In thirty years’ old,” circumstances” says an ex¬
change. “Favorable
probably moans a family without boys or
neighbors.
A si e ilic. nml tho only one. tco, for a!
form* iuu! types of r-kin d smso, is known the
world o' er ns Dr. Benson’s Skin Cure. It is
not a nnt() it medicine, but a reliable remedy.
'\1 f:rn hexes of Vr. Henson's Celery and
Chamomi Pills ettred a friend of neuralgia,
whom tie i>rs. Herecouldn't help , I'll send for
some far ../self .''—Clifford Shand, Windsor.
Bcs'iN'grs.—A woman at Kingston,
New Mexico, gets praise for erecting a
log caWn without help. She cut the logs,
them, made the shingles for the
roof, »nd put the structure together. of the
She has a husband who takes care
children.
(lastritic. after
0K8TK1NE should liotik^n before or
meals to insure perfect assuniiation of food.
Gabtrine is in liquid form. Sold by druggists.
Orpheus, when he pSayed, made the
iwks come np; and his power seems to
have descended to a great many of our
popu with lar the singers. rocks You if have want to come to hear cp
you
them.
Fioi ."^wcnly-fsmr (jobs Koiin, L»fayetie. Hciin inil.. to Live. wboanEesc
-««• tb> JwtD The Is noc is ‘ pe.f.ci niMltb.” .ckvee
the to! j: One ye .- ana i «■, to all appm
ance, t ltba laet sl*g«s ol Conmmpt'on. Oar 1.'it
phyrii'ilc on *f to said my <a» I could «o. not I Snaliy lire tventy-teut got toiow
ts ?* nu r cootor
‘USlmpilj WoT-t(il' , Ifiso^« Balsas then for tbeLiags, pnrehased which a bottle consider¬ oi lie
i
ably hteefited me. 1 continued until 1 took aae
'bottles. 1 am now h pertect health, having «ed
ae ether medicine.'*
HearpsCerkelie Salve.
His the Best Salve for Cota, Braises, Sores, yjj.
f, salt Rheum, Tetter, kinds Chapped id Skin Hands, Erupt),,. Cj,;[_
■euuiw. Coma, and all
freckles and Pimples.
OT3P.
»»vei
11™ Zlnmax Ucfrk*t\.L ko!S fitTind i l«* »iidre«s* will oi »‘ pay c«J» m ^ * \ ^ h '
«*n ae
75L , -le^ IC KrlO. Capit i Hill. WM&inptms,D.q.
™
^ Jf febrile medicine has
^ faikd to ward off
Um oomplatet, when
™Ji Iff/.. taken duly m a pro
fdr fceeiion ma
%m birtflk, Hu mi mis of
j====S phviloians have
- •hardened ail the
4 e oflbieal spec! Rca, and
?now pKwortbe this
fesnaft ms vejretabk? and
taaie for ihltD
fever, a* wtli a« dys¬
pepsia and nprv,.us
aff’Ctions.
biinlhS ter'* Bitter* St the
ipedflt you need f
For tale br all
I>rug^!*;a and Deal 1
er* genenuly
Fob dyspepsia, indigestion, depressions ol
spirits and general debility^ in their various
for ms *, also as a preventative against fever
and ague and other intermittent fevers, the
“ Ferro-Phosphorated Eiixir of Calisaye/' York,
made fey Caswell, Hazard ACo., New
and sold by all Druggists, is the best tonic;
and for patients recovering from fiver or
ether sickness, it has no equal,
No tiongs. No Banner*—** A Nr minor Idyl.”
From a l*rovi lence Merrnant.
}.fn. George II. Da vis, a irnit dealer at 297 West
annater street, bears his grateful testimony to tiio
unequaled excellence of the production of one oi
r.ir me at skillful Providence Pharmacists. Mr
Da vi*. says: Last spring I was very- greatly trou
bled with severe inflammation of the kidneys, and
it became so bad tk&t at times I urinated blood, and
my sufferings were intense, My condition was so
gainful that for a while I was scarcely able to attend
to business, anu the severe pains would come so
suddenly and sr-r .roly that I would be obliged to
i j. ive a custom ;■ whom I might happen to be wait¬
ing upon. During a part of the time I was unable
to walk, and scarcely knew what to do or which way
to look for relief. At this time a friend recom¬
mended Hunt's -Itemed v. I took two bottles of it
cured #
and it took right hold \ my disease and me
very speedily, and I ha» experienced no trouble
with my kidneys since.
“Furthermore, Hunt's Remedy has strengthened
me very much,«.nd since I began to use it I have
been able to attend to business, and am all right
now. I heartily recommend it to alL What it haa
done for me it’will do for you who are afflicted.’’
Suffer^d for Twenty Vear«.
“Hon. Jo.sus a Tcthill, of East .Saginaw, Mich.,
says: “ Count me among the enthusiastic friends
of Hunt’s Remedy. It has proven in my case all
you claim for si. Having suffered for about twenty
years with severe disease eye (which oui
made physicist journey prouoiii^^^^^^^T East toTH^^^^^e 'ti eminent Diseasej, 1)r I
a Yor)^W
#
Haven, of Hantilton, New whose fame in
this spechdty Ah ad heard much, lie Haven exam¬
ined me carefully and simply said: ‘ (io and get
a bottle of Hunt's Remedy and take according to di¬
rections.’ Alter having traveled so far for treat¬
ment. it struckziue as rather funny to be directed
to take a medicine which I might have bought
within a stone sphrow of my of own door; followed but 1 was his
an the doctor’s kands, and course I
sad vice, and righr glad >vas I tliat I did so, for be¬
fore I had taken*T£tint’s Remedy half and a dozen by contin¬ times
l found immense benefit from it,
uing the use of it for a limited time I recovered
from mv trouble entirely, .rugged and rugged am to-,1av, Michiganders. I think,
one of the moat of
The world is indebted medicine, to you, and sir, I lor hope the prumul
g ation of sdeh a you
not go with on f \ mir rcwarl.”
XX.-NOTICE.-XX.
AS BLUE FLANKEL 8ARMEMTS
Of Interior Quality of Goods
are sold as tlie “genuine Middlesex,” which are not
made by that mill. The Middlesex Company, in order
io protect their customer* and the public, give notice
that hereafter all Clothing Did© made from THE MIDDLE¬
SEX STANDARD IN CLUB FLANNELS AND
YACHT CLOTHS, sold bv .11 leading clothiers,must
boar the “SILK parties HANGERS,” ordering the furnished goods. by the Selling
Agents to all
WENDELL, FAY & CO.,
SELLING AGENTS, MIDDLESEX COMPANY, St,
and Worth St., New York; 8? Franklin
Boston; 551-4 Chestnut Su. .Philadelphia*__
TIE SUN HEF.E !$ ITS
PLATFORM:
All tliCworid's news. Every thing that interests me n
and women; good writing in every column; honest anu
fearless comment; absolute independence of part isan
organizations, but unwavering loyalty to true De mo
cratic principk-B Subscription: #«.SO Daily (4 Sunday pages), by (8
mall, &5c. a month, or a year;
pages). !Si.20 per year; Weekly (8 pages), 8M per
year I. W. ENGLAND, Publisher, New York City.
'KSS?- This water-prom Bill material resembles MANtUA fine ieathcr, is used
for roofs, outsido walls of buildings, and inside in place
££&,».^)W.H.FflY g CO/tt 0 ’
^jJjJvyvKB’S HEARD ELIXIR m B
9
et*..st*mr»or fiilvsr. L.A.I,.SUrr>lA<O.S»l$>A$rt*..F*l»ti!»«JlIl
k a i *f A DA Y e s iy mule wit i my splendid outfit ot P c
r ptJ lure Frames. II. B.Wardweli, Aubum,Maine.
YOUNG MEN
employ ment , addre ss 1* . W. ltKA M* A da, O hio.
4% |m Coleman Business College , Newark,
O a WaN.J. Write for Catalogue.
MILL & FAoic. -ePLlES
OF ALL KINDS. Btu I IMG, HOSE
and PACKING, OILS, PUMPS ALL
KINDS, IRON PIPE, FITTINGS,
BRASS GOODS, STEAM GAUGES,
ENGINE GOVERNORS, &c. Sendfor
Price-list W. H. DILLINGHAM & CO
421 Main Street, LOUISVILLE, KY.
“THE BEST IS CHEAPEST.”
ENGINES, TURPQHPRQ iinLOnLllO SAW MILLS,
florsePowers ■ CloserHullers
fSuitedtoall section^.) Write & Taylor for fbee Co., Illus. Pamphlet
and Prices to The Ault man Mansfield, Ohio
REYNOLDS’ IRON WORK
D. A. M DLL AXE, Manager.
P.O. Bo* 1690. • NEW ORLEANS, LA
£?(fiNlis,'Sr'i'AR Manufactory Reynolds* ’mVu’.s.v Celebra Red 1 Horse Platform P COTTQ14 STEAM
V3 M 'wer;
Acr ■ P A N S, Steaa.boati
Steamship sinl Railroad and Car Merge Ir Patent uerk Dredgeboat Specialty. Work, Building Locomolbl Fronts,
a a
Columns, Railings, Bln kEmithrnr and Machine Work iu gen
•ral. G. C. Timpe's Patent made ELEVATCRS.for br the M stores. Orders
•ol><*tted and estimates it:..
CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED)
BR. HALLS
ws
lwBALSAM
HoaraneM, Aoihm*., Diaceioee Croup. Bro&tbtag WhodPlnc
Coach, Orjan*. and It teetkes a.11 keols of too the Mentbr»»i
x*a
of the Lbdcs, InOamed an! peiaoned fey and the
disease, tfgktsees aai preveate tho chest the which sight sweats
Is. Consuncptloa across is Iscarahle aoesmsany malady,
not am
HALL’S BALSAM will ears yea, ovos
thongh profossloBal aid falls.
CONSUMPTION. XnsTe remedySbr the shove disease; bv
bon s positive of of the worst kind and of long Its
u»s t sands cases
stating have been cnreA Indeed, eo strong la my falta
io lit Ticacy, that I wi)\ send TWO BOTTLES FRBM, to¬
gether with a VaLUJlBLS TKEaTIKR ot. this <Usssae,ts
sn/soffexer. PSL €ive T, Express BLQQLMj and P. m O. Pearl adurcas. Bt., New Yerh,
A.
_
e££a wees m your own town. Terms and S5 outfit
?ws free. Ad drees II. Himrr k Do., Portland, Ale.
FREE Send to MOORE S_
BUS1KESS Atlanta. INfVERSITT, Ga» _
For THustrat^d Circular. 25th year
S724SS:
Aing • GENTS Pictorial WANTED for tike Biblw.Prices Pral.nd TutnlKl)- d 33
B.x>ks and redact
per cent. S- tisAsl Publishing0o„ Atlanta, Ga.
ulfl !h/itable; AiV H 0 C B for all tying w ho businpas wl n wake if spare time devote prof
iJClyonr a good p HILL, you can ». *•
time to jg. MUnBAT BOX78S,
A. combination of J'vo
ffrmrm a toxide Bark, Debility, titc, palcUaMe Prostration and of Iron, Jjoos JPhoopfasrvN form jPcev oj Cj Vi? irw i ’? s k
i aav.j.L.xowHBR.
IRON in statiaE TONIC, that I I taka have pleasure been /nf / f|mt W / / Uidurtry, IU.. Iconaidei eayssr <«
Frea tly benefited by its / U I | II I 3 I /a must excellent .. remedy foi
uae^^Mmiaters ^and nth / :AliUI IWi#/ the debilitated vital torrmo
ol the greatest value /mm/c.
where a Tonic is neces¬
sary. I recommend it
as a reliable remedial
aeent. possessing n n- r
doubted nutritive and !
sectorstive properties.
ieisnS*. Mf„ Ort. 2, l:S2.
TSSDSSS S? X2S DR. HARTER MEDICIKF CO., S3 S. Ma3 D!., SZIQ113-
An Open
Seepeic
The fact is well understoo<l
that the MEXICAN MUS¬
TANG LINIMENT is by far
the best external known for
man or beast. The reason
why becomes an explain “open that
secret” when we
“Mustang” penetrates skin,
flesh ami mnscle to the very
bone, removing all disease
and soreness. No other lini¬
ment does this, hence none •
other is so largely used or
does sack worlds of good.
The Only Watch Factory
■ Ife ‘N THE SOUTH.
Save “Ttiiic the mid- -l ™ . ^LJf Bpsi Patronize gj fj a flWfe Hamt
dleman’sprofits, i*' B tjfo
and buy direct from the 1 '*
J ”, &W f* VJ*^» MAMACTUEER % IJ
Send for Illustrated
^ Price List, describ
f ? ft fc tog new improve.
FACTORY, % meats
31 Whitehall St,
ATLANTA, Ga.
Js^> lllf illll
^ T % r i £ a?
JIS#r' all
URE
jSsUBr pafe NS A ST HOUSE I l!£ G.S
pa—HBL^JW: NERtATfO
EITE NDl
aBSHKniiiuauEiiUS H WHBaMiaaaiiB
HXBSmilf
Wi BE »j
36.W FOR nmm J
^ WHEN
<
w«
Q " —-“'ay «c’
WAITED tru {-'Ills i' ( I A:-;.-, rJiKAK His! W i ye.U }• H^» : y for
or u-ul.-.ra :tddif>b Sii.AS H. JM 3.%?', Hwin
Si t; miarti Block, ( irvo!ii!.<U __
f-F cn Io if) G t 71 fSj
5 CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
.2 Best Use in Cough time, Syrup. Sold by Taste* druggists good. ga
C ON S Cl.MB.TlO
SPE3ATUMS COTTON PLANTER
•A,. AND
GUANO DISTRIBUTOR.
The cho uest am
best. Ope mi farrow*
distribnt. e u an S'
drops e< 4»OR see
corn, peas»etc-, fn «t ariy
distance, any num¬
ber. Covers at same
lime. Frier,. partlcuiws $10.00.
Agents wanted everywhere For full
W. C- SMITH & CC. r
31 South Broad St.. Atlanta, tic.
Opium KitOng, .BcTOTOla J5£er
vous ail debility Nervous and
-ii and
fpQ Elood diseases. To
■af. Clergymen, Literary men, lasmn, Mer
JK"'chants, *§rs dies and Bankers, ali whose T~
•• 2 BE3 e| dentary employment
ttKBjB Sgfig; causes tration, Nervoos I»regofartttea Froa
Sg^ ol bowels the bkxxi, kin stomach, dry s, or
w ^ : -.____, or
vifformnt that ever sustained thesinklngwstenv Fra
sale by ail Drnaytsts- THE DR. 8. A. HICHMOHD
•4 EDI CAR CO-SolePronrietora, St. Joseph. Ko.
OPIUM cared. Marsh, years . Ko HOKI’IIINKHABIT pay established, Btato Quincy, till cured. ease. Mich. 1,000 Tec Dr.
Publisher*’ Union, Atlanta, (*» ......... Tiiihteer^-'S!
$5 to S20