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About Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893 | View Entire Issue (April 4, 1884)
THE VALLEY OF TEAES. FECM “ OntiLTIXE,'’ A ROXAXCE IX YEKSS. If I climb to the mountain of gladness, And bask in the sunshine of bliss, If unheeding all sorrow and sadness, Forgetting the good that I miss, I look out from my uplands of being Across the broad reach of the year I grow tenderly sober at seeing The shadowy Valley of Tears. It Is never quite lost to my risen, Though often beyond it I see The green slopes of the summit’s elysian That wait with their blessings for me; And though often I long for the freedom That yonder eternally reigns I remember that each has liis Edom Before the glad Canaan he gains. When my heart with tumultuous throbbing Takes up the sad burdens of men, ; J go down amid sighing and sobbing, And walk tire dim valley again • A sober, sepulchral procession We make as we journey albng, With a grief l'or our only possession, A funereal dirge for our song. There are willows above us low bending, That weep with us over our woe ; And the mist of the mountain descending, Bedews all the way as we go. In the dark of our dubious grieving We walk as if stars had gone ont, And our souls were grown sick of believing The morrow were more than a doubt. There are hearts with their hunger pathetic That walk in the Valley of Tears ; There are souls, in their sadness, ascetic, That linger and grieve through the years. There are loves that come silently hither To seek for some treasure of cost, And that mourn, as a bairn for its mither, The wonderful love that is lost. There are many who wait and who wander Within the dim valley with me, And who yearn for the mountain-tops yonder The sunlight and gladness to see ; But a stranger I look in their faces, And strangers they look into mine ; And as strangers we group for the places Where sunlight and gladness may shine. For who walks in the vallrj so lonely Goes there in liis sorrow alone; And who gives friendly greeting gives only For bread to the hungry a stone. They may touch us whose yesterday’s tender Made loving and living supreme ; But our grieving refuses surrender, And friendship was only a dream. I am far up the mountains of being j The mists of the morning below In their beauty shut out from my seeing The valley where soon I must go: But I know, though the sun of my hoping May shine with a gladness that cheers, That I soon shall be wearily groping My way in the Vallev of Tears. You may smile on the summits of gladness Who never have wept at then- base ; But in time with the garment of sadness You elosely will cover your face ; And unknown of the many who wander, Unknowing, as they are unknown, You shall grdpe from the radiance yonder, Across the dark valley, alone. Amid pitiful sobbing and sighing, Where willows and cypresses bend; You shall walk where the shadows are lying, And sec not a sign of the end a You shall know, by the twilight unbroken When morn on the mountain appears. You have come, without warning or token, At length to the Valley of Tears. AN EASTERN JUGGLER. BY A TRAVELER. While traveling through India, be¬ tween Surat Ad Nagpofe, my body ser¬ vant one day informed me that a great juggler and snake charmer wished to have the honor of showing me some¬ thing of his wonderful skill. ‘“What can he do?” I asked. “Almost everything that is marvelous, I’ve been told,” was the answer I re¬ ceived. “Admit him.” My servant withdrew, and returned with* a small, withered old man, about whom I saw nothing very remarkable except bis eyes, which were small, black and piercing, and seemed to have light¬ ning imprisoned in them. I do not know that the man could see in the dark like a cat, but there was at times that peculiar fiery appearance of the balls which is so of ten observed in night prowling animals. He wore a white vest, Turkish trou¬ sers, a sort of crimson petticeat worked with strange devices, a turban of many colors, and red morocco shoes, pointed and turned up at the toes. His arms nnd neck were bare, and with tlxe excep¬ tion of a couple of heavy gold rings in his ears, he displayed judged no extraneous be rising or¬ naments. Bis age I to of sixty, and his short mustache was almost white. He made a low salam, and then appeared to wait to be ad dressed. “Your name?” said I, in Hindoo stance. “Paunjar, your excellency.” “I am told you wish to show me some wonders.” “If your excellency wills.” “Well, what can you do?” He suddenly produced—from where I did not see and cannot tell—a large ball of twine, which he appeared to toss into my lap, keeping hold of one end, so that it unrolled the whole distance between him Mid me, at least ten feet, sayiDg, as he did so: “Will your excellency please examine what you see?” “Now, I honestly aver that I saw that ball of twine when*he threw it as plainly I ever saw anything in my life—saw jt come toward* me, saw it unroll,’and apparently drop into my lap, so that I brought my knees quickly together hand to catch it—and yet, when I put my down to take it, and looked down for it, it was not there—nothing was there— and at the same instant I perceiwed end the his juggler balancing it on the of Unger. “Pshaw!” said I; “you deceived me by making me believe you threy it to¬ ward me.” “Does your excellency think I have it?” he asked; and before I could answer, I saw, in the place of the ball, a large, beautiful rose, which he was balancing-bv the stem, and yet he had not altered his position and scarcely stirred a firger. I began to be astonished. While yet I looked, I saw in his right hand a large cup, and in his left the rose. He stepped forward a few feet, laid the rose down on the ground, and placed the cup over it. Here, it will be observed, there table, was no machinery to assist him—no with its false top, concealed apartments, the and confederate perhaps to effect change, as we see similar tricks per¬ formed in a place fitted up by the magi* cian for the purpose—but only my day, own quarters, iu the full, bright light of with¬ with myself sharply watching him in five feet, and my attendants grouped around almost as near. Having covered the rose with the cup, as I would be willing to make oath—Ibr I saw the rose distinctly, as the hollow vessel, held by the top, went slowly down over it—the conjurer resumed his former place, android; enough “Wii* your Excellency be kind under it ?” to lift the cup and see what is Of course I would have wagered a heavy sum that the rose was still there for one thing—because, expecting some trick, I had kept my eye on it to the last moment, and was certain there was no possibility of its being removed after the hand had let go of the cup at the top. forward, I complied with his request, stepped and raised the cup, but in¬ stantly dropped it and bounded back with a cry of terror, for there instead of the red rose was one of the little, green, deadly serpents of India, coiled up and ready for a spring, with its small, glit¬ tering eyes fixed intently on mine. Snakes of any kind are my horror, and this one not only horrified me, but all of my attendants, who, with cries of alarm, enlarged the circle very rapidly, for they knew its bite to be fatal. “No more such tricks as these, con¬ jurer !” said I, sternly. “It is perfectly harmless, your excel¬ lency,” grinned the old man, walking up to it, lifting it by the neck, putting to head into his mouth, and allowing it is run down his throat. I shuddered, and half believed the juggler devil himself. possessed of the devil, if not a He next produced a tube that looked like brass, about two feet long and half an inch in diameter, and next the ball of twine again. Where these things came from, or went to, I could not tell. They seemed to be in his hands when he wanted them; but I never observed his hands passing near his dress, neither when they ap¬ peared or disappeared. When I looked for the cup that I had lifted from the snake, it was gone, and yet neither my¬ self nor any of my attendants had ,«een this wonderful man pick it up ! lit was indeed jugglery, if not magic, ol tbe most unquestionable kind! Through the brass tube the conjurer now passed one end of the twine, which he put between his teeth. He then placed the tube between his lips, threw back his head, and held it perpendicu¬ larly with the ball of twine on the upper end. Then suddenly this ball began to turn, and turn rapidly, and gradually grow smaller till it entirely disappeared, off’ as if the twine/ had been run on a reel. What turned it or where it went to no one could see. The juggler then set the tube the other end up, and a new ball began to form on the top but apparently of rib¬ bon half an inch in width and of differ¬ ent colors. These rolled up as if on a bobin till they formed a wheel of two or three inches in diameter, when the performer seemed to toss ribbon and tube over his shoulder, and that was the last I saw of either. He next reproduced what appeared to be the same cup that I had lifted from th6 snake, showed something that looked like an egg, advanced the same as before, and placed the latter on the ground and the former over it, and again requested me to raise it, which I declined to do, fearing 1 should see an¬ other serpent or something equally hor¬ rifying. “Will any one lift the cup ?” he said, turning to the others. No one volunteered to do so, but all rather drew back. At this he took np the cup himself and appeared to throw it into the air, and there sat in its place a beautiful dove, which flew up and alighted on his shoulder. He took it in his hand, mut¬ tered over some unintelligible words, seemed to cram it into his mouth and that was the last I ever saw of that also. He performed some other tricks simi¬ lar to these and concluded with the mys¬ terious bag. This bag—which somehow came into his hands, as did all the other things he used, in a manner unknown to myself— was from two to three feet long and about a foot wide. It looked as if it had been used to hold some kind of flour, and I certainly saw something like the dust of flour fly from it when be turned it inside out and beat it across his hands. He turned it back again and tied up the mouth of it with a string, muttering a low incantation all the time. This done, he threw it on the ground and stamped on it, treading it all out flat with his feet. He then stepped all back a few paces, and requested us to fix our eyes on it. We did so; and alter a lapse of perhaps swell thirty itke seconds, blad¬ we saw it begin to up, a der when t*ing expanded with wind. It continued to sweu, till every part be came distended, and it appeared as round and solid as if filled with sand. Its solidity, however, juggler was only appar eat—for when the went np and placed his foot immediately on it it yielded to back, the pressure, but sprung or rounded out, as soon as that was re moved. He then jumped on it with lioth l,,t-a 8„.«»ed it dl,o.t«a tot He then went away again, and the bag, being left to itself as before, again he gan to rise or inflate, but this time as if some animal like a cat were inside of it. Tn in fact tact I i could couia see see where wi ere there mere anneared appeared to be .egs; and then, to my utter amaze ment, I may almost say horror, it began to move toward me, as if impelled by the nnkrmcn Rrimcthinc’ in it > I 1 ao do not nor think tau-a I x am am a a coward—mv cowara mv worst enemy has never accused me of being one, at least—but I confess that on this occasion my nerves would not let me remain passive, and I retreated from the advancing mystery, and informed the magician that I had seen occult enough to sat¬ isfy me of his wonderful powers. At this he smiled grimly, and walked up to the bag and trod it down again, picked it up and beat it with his right hand across his left, caused it to unac¬ countably disappear from my sight, and then made his concluding salam. How these wonders w’ere performed— by what art, power or magic—I do not and never expect to know. I have con¬ versed with many persons who have seen quite as strange and unnatural tilings, but never heard anyone give any expla¬ nation that I considered at all satisfac¬ tory. I simply relate what I saw, but scarcely expect any one to credit my statement, well received knowing such that marvels I myseif would not have as facts on the testimony of the most reli¬ able friend in the world. “If your excellency wills, I shall now have the honor of showing you how I charm yvild serpents,” said the necro Eiuhcer. I had heard-something of seeing this singular it power and was desirous of dis¬ played. Accordingly myself field, and attend¬ ants all repaired to tin open at no great distance, where after some search, Paunjar disegved a hole in which he said he doubted not there was a snake. “But before I call him forth,” he pro¬ ceeded, “I must be assured that some one of suffieient courage will sta$d ready to cut him down when I give th^ signal, otherwise, should he prove to be a cobra de capello, my life would be sacrificed.” “I will myself undertake the bus¬ iness,” said I, drawing my sword. The man hesitated, evidently fearing to insult- me by a doubt, and* yet not eager to risk his life on the strength of my nerves, after the display of timidity I had this already made. I thought I read all in the man’s face, and I said, very positively : “Never fear, good sir! I will cut down whatever you bring up this time, be it snake or devil!” “My life is at your exeeilency’s mercy,” bowed the man, with a show of humility. “Remember the signal! When I raise my hand above my Lead, may the blow be swift, sure and deadly !” He then gave his whole attention to the business before him. Putting an in¬ strument. not unlike a small flageolet, to his lips, he began to play a shrill, monotonous, keeping disagreeable sort of tune-, his eyes riveted upon the hole in the ground; and soon after, to my utter astonishment, though I should have been prepared for anything, I saw the ugly head of the hooded snake, the dread cobra de capello, the most poison¬ ous of all deadly reptiles, come slowly forth, with its spectacled eyes* fixed stead¬ ily upon the strange musician, who began to retreat backward slowly, a step at a time, the snake following him. When at length in this manner he had drawn the hideous creature some ten or fifteen feet from its hole, he suddenly squatted down and began to play more loudly and shrilly. At this the serpent raised itself on its tail, as when about to make commenced its deadly spring, motion, and actually a dancing in time with the mnsie, which was continued ior about a minute, when the charmer gave me the signal to strike. JGuardedlv and stealthily I advanced nfear cutting enough ! • the; blow, and then struck the reptile in two, and sending its head fly¬ ing to some distance. I never took life with better satisfaction. Whatever deception there might Lave been about the juggler’s tricks, there was certainly skin none still about possession. the snake, for I have its in my I gave the man a couple of gold mohnrs, and he went away perfectly satisfied, wishing good my excellency any quantity of luck. I was perfectly satisfied, too, and would not have missed seeing what t did that day for ten times the amount I paid. •A large ring around each eye gives this fearful seipent the appearance of looking through a pair of spectacles; and it unlike also has a hood for its misshapen head, not a monk's cowl, from which it takes its name. Some Close Figuring. Early one afternoon recently a colored man halted a pedestrian on Monroe avenue and asked for a cash contribu¬ tion, “tip explaining: de water lias froze at de house up, de fiah has gone out, dar’s nnflin’ to eat, an’ de ole woman am cryin’ wid de cold as if her heart would break.” He got a quarter, and half an hour afterward he was in the corridor of the post office and saying, in the presence of his first benefactor : “Up at de house de water has froze up, de fiah has gone out, dar’s nuffin’ to eat, an’ de ole woman has gone to bed to keep warm.” The story was next told at the corner of Jefferson avenue and Griswold street, and it ended up with ; “An’ de ole woman has gone ober to a naybor’s to keep from freezin’. ” About ten o’clock the man entered an insurance office in which tbe gentleman is employed, and asked for ten cents, saying : help fare to “I wants it to pay my Chatham.” “See here, sir ! Ton are the man who said the water had frozen up, the fire was out, there was nothing to eat, and your old woman was crying in the cold. Why do you tell a different story now ?” “Well, sah, I reckon I kin explain all about it In de fust place, de ole woman cried. I reckoned on her keepin’ datup about half an hour, an’ den it was safe to say she’d gone to bed. I gine her twenty minutes to lie dar, an’ den I reckoned on her gwine to de na I sir’s. In de cose of half an hour de nayliors probably sot her up to leave me an’ skip fur Chatham, an’ now I’m axin’ fur money to follow on an’ try an’ prewail a pon her to return as soon as dis bliz zurd has passed ober .”—Detroit Free evm. ________ CaBtaumimoKe r 'a —A nrioairo Chicago eomoanv oo pa y are building machines for cons 1 f various waste products into compact blocks for use as fuel. Sawdusts, hav arc pressed into moulds so - tlj at 400 to 900 cnbic feet *he loose material are compacted into iess n y* cubic feet of blocks of convenient size and form to be used as fuel. _ T . ___ iuuia t . ... ^x-vrrsnos fffiow trial in .wsia beasts destroy about 4,000 Lttman i.ves annually. OUR ANff-SlORS' NERVE. The Secret of Their UnitruM he Aeqiiired. Visor Explained «ind How if o«» ab)ut tke sturdy There was something that lallenees vigor of former generations c and tiie admiration of every epicures-those man, woman child. They were no ancient lathers. They lived simply, diftlealt.es and that sucjesstuhy would met and overcome and generation. liave discouraged this age The rigors of the frontier were threatened supplemented tneir by the savages: wild beasts enterprise \et and poverty bravely was encountered a common eom- and patiion. they things and laid the founda¬ resisted all thine tions of a land whose blessings we now enjoy. lth Their constitutions were strong: their hea unsurpassed and yet they were forced to ex¬ pose themselves eon inually. good 'lhere adequate certainly must have been some and cause for all this and lor ilie physical su¬ periority of that age over the present. It is well known to everyone conversant with the history of that time that Certain home compounds of strengthening qualities were used almost universally evils by those pio neersL The malarial and exposures to which they were subjected neeesitated this. When their bodies become chilled by cold or debilitated by the damp mists of a new by coun¬ try they were forced to counteract it the use of il'ajt, grPidote-. dV.c'tors Medicines wars few in those and almost unknown. Hence the preparations above referred to. From among the number, all of which were compounded upon fotlnd the samq be gbr.eral efficient: princi¬ ple. one WSs to popular more than and. lienee far well more known through the ail the rest. It was Middle and Western .States, and was ac¬ knowledged as the best preparation for 111a larial disorders and general debility then* known. The recipe for compounding this valuable article ivas ha ided down froAii one family and ce ic r.J ion to another, used Wfts known to the Harrison family, and is as the basis and general formula for the present “Tippecanoe,” the name bemg suggested by tbe battle in which General Harrison was engaged. The manufacturer have thoroughly investigated this sub.ect in its minutest details, and are certain that for mal-asstmilation of food, dyspepsia, tired feelings, general debility, prostrations, in the blood, ma¬ larial disorders and humors nothing can exceed in value “Tippecanoe, forefathers which was the medicine of our and seems destined to be the most popular preparation of the day. “Tippecanoe” is prepared ami given to the public by Messrs. H. H. Warner &• Co., of Rochester, N. Y., proprietors of the famous Warner’s Safe Cure, which is now the most extensively used of any American medicine. The well known standing of this house is a sufficient guarantee of tbe purity and power of this preparation which seeks to banish one of the greatest banes of the nine¬ teenth century—mal-assimiiatiou of food. Any one who experiences trouble of digestion; wtio leels less vigor than formerly; whose system has unquestionably necessity “run down,” and who realizes tonic, cannot the all’ora of some permit strengthening continue. It to such symptoms to the fanner finds that life threshing machine does not sera rule the grain from the straw he realizes that (Hnuetlniig is wrong unil trios to repair the machine. vVhen the food does not sustain the life; when it fails to make blood; when it causes the energy to depart and ambition to die; it is a certain sign that something is wrong and that the human machine needs repairing. It is not a ques¬ tion of choice; it is a matter of duty. You must attend to your health or your sickness, and nothing will sooner overcome these evils than “Tippecanoe,” the medic.lie ot the past, a -afeguard for the present and a.guarantee of health for tbe future. English Criminals. An English paper says that penal servitude is, os now carried out in Eng¬ land, a very dreadful punishment indeed. From the dock tbe convict is carried away in the prison van, and on his ar¬ rival at the jail the heavy gates are him. shut to, with a horrible sound, behind He is thnifft into a narrow ceil, there to remain without i tely companionsks(p hearinjg for human nine •liet; teaMfe -.iteihe* Seai ever a ol, warder’s, fefl on coarse rilU fite is sealed far thirty-six weeks, after that he will probably be sent to*another establishment where the discipline is somewhat less severe. The nine months’ solitary confinement of a five years' convict is hard to bear. About five feet from the floor is a peep¬ hole. The warder can look in at any moment, and the dread of this constant supervision induces in sensitive prison¬ ers nervous anxiety, in such cases the most severe part of the punishment in¬ flicted on them. The period of allowed solitary confinement at an end, they are and to work in gangs, under a strict pur¬ posely vexatious discipline. ~ Burning Billiard Balls. The Naehrichten, contained a leading the following Hamburg paper, recently bil¬ ; “During the progress of a game of liards in the Barweick Hotel, in Ham¬ burg, a few days ago, a number of the guests were very mncli frightened when the balls in hitting exploded and set fire to the billiard cloth. The landlord had provided a ’set of these balls as a substi¬ tute until his ivory set could be turned. The substituted balls consisted of hard rubber with a smooth coating, appa¬ rently celluloid, and they have been handed to a chemist for a thorough ex¬ amination, as scraped when applied off portions lighted of the smooth coating to a match blazed up quickly like gun-cot ton. Tbe landlord of the hotel intends bringing a suit against the seller of these balls.” • - A Lccki Bot.—a little chap who fell on the pavement in front of a Woodward avenue grocery the other day and broke a jug, jumped np and called out to a boy on the corner: “Isn’t that boss ?” t “Why, didn’t yon break the jug?” “Of course I did, but it was empty. I’d only hull waited five minutes I’d have lost a gallon of ’lasses by the break¬ ing. Bet your boots I’m ailus lucky!”— Detroit Free Preen A Nondescript.— A wealthy Boston man thought his son was too much of a him genius to be kept at home, and he sent father, to in Germany describing to be educated. The the result, says : The boy was too mnch of an American to become a first-class German, aud he got too much German in him ever to be¬ come a first-class American, so ne set¬ tled down into bein’ a sort of nonde¬ script. the horse DOCTOR. • >. We have heard of a “enre all,” !mt when a father i* takintt a Pottle of medicine for the «u®tner complaint to hm family In the country to- and iaaoon restored, aa wan a '-use we have j Mthekrdof p r . Rigger’s Sonthem Betn td y ahonld certainly relieve, men of tliar rhcea, gaenteiy^and . hiWre-n teething. Tbiih with a Iwttle of Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gnm and Mullein, combining the atimn !atil| K expectorant principle of the sweet gum with the demulcent healing one of the mullein, for the cure of cronp. whooping congh, coida and consumption, i,resents a little MJJjjrjst chest no household should Uj without forth. speedy relief of sudden and datigwons attacks of te.e hmga and bow. K Ask v< jrdrnggJ*- lt#-, for Man't*a.’tnred I t Wtdter K-. jv. prep uetor Taylor's Rreimcm t :ognt, .Yiai.:a, Exploratton of Hew Guinea. * * * “In connection with the Wnl tham Watch Company, it may be stated that when the proprietofsof the Age desired to present M r. te. E. Morrison (the explorejof New Guinea) with areliablechronometer, acting upon the advice of Mr. K. L. J. Ellery, the GovemmentAstronomer, however,procured two Waltham watches were, for Mr. Morrison instead. These were kept at the Melbourne Observatory for a niglit,and thoroughly by and Mr. carefully Ellery, at and end were that pronounced be better suited for Mr. of time, to Morrison’s requinements than any chro-| Aye.l _ nometer,"—Ext. Irom the Melbourne, Over 125,000,000 bushels of wheat are availa¬ ble for export. Halil llcndff, when yMi have tried everythingrlso and failed, try our Carbolineaud be happy; it will prove its merits. One dollar a bottle, and sold by all druggists. Mr. Gladstone attained his 7J.1 birthday a sbqrt time ago. v - • A'o Rent liny ar fttarlit. in the fall of 1875 tm sufferings wore »-.n hie. 1 Was swollen to such proportions that I ft ami my limbs would blunt,. I had the test medical talent, obtainable, and at the worst stage of my illness, when my husband and many friends had given me up to die,the late Br. John Woodbury made a thorough examination of my water, and pronounced my Bright’s ease disease, acute kidney disense ( bordering on and accompanied by gravel, Hunt’s ami recommended the immediate use oi most terrible Remedy. At this time I was suffering head, and pain in my back, limbs, and could find no rest day or night for woe ks, kind and I was growing weaker daily until this physician ordered me to take Hunt’s Remedy. Before taking half of one bottle 1 commenced to improve, and after taking six eight bot ties was entirely cured. 1 This was nearly years ago, and have had no return ot tile disia-e. 1 have rec mmiended Hunt's Remedy to others in similar eases, and it has never tailed to cure. 1 have also used it for sick headache, and found in it a sure relief. 1 ihink it the best medicine made, and cheer* lully recommend it to till. Alits. w. H. STILSON, No. lti Tyler St., Boston, Mwks. April 18,J888. , „ ^ \V>II Known IHiin. limits ILenuuy having been recommended to me for kidney and liver complaints, I pur¬ chased some at the “People's Drug Store’* and used it in my family, and found it to be a very valuable medicine, and I gladly recom¬ mend it highly to my friends, knowing it to t>e beneficial to those troubled w ith kidney or liver disease. Respectfully KUSHA yours, NOYSR, April , 14,_J883. 68 (1 irit.. So. Boston, Mass. A 1-ftNt illffpl ifaeturer. I have used Hunt’s Ke luedy tor the kidney health complaint, bv it* and, having i been fully restored to Daily X recommend use, con it testify to its value. to some one of my friends, all of whom I know have been bene* fited by its u fso. Gratefully, MaJiteii, GKO. P. COX Muss., April 28, 1888. Gnm Arabic has gone up in price. El Mitluli stuck it op. A « are nf l’ni-iiiiionla. Mr. D. H. Banmby, ot Owi>go, N. Y., says that his daughter was takqu with a violent cold which terminated with pneumonia, and ull tlio best physicians gavo tho c.-uo u|) and said she could live but a few hours at most. She was in this condition whan a friend re¬ commended T>r. Win. Hall’s Balsam for tbe Lungs, and advise ! her to try it. She ac¬ cepted it as a last ic nrt, and was surprise,1 to fin 1 that, it produced a marked change for tbe better, and by jxjrscvering a permanent cure u as effected. mu, ofinued #2,000,000. fruit product 1 of California in wip th j of Hie NmliweiO’ Is the title of a Tourists’ Guide issued by the Chicago, Milwaukee anil wtirthy St. I’aul Railway. It is a handsome book well of tlio enter¬ prising Tourists management and of this great travelers railway should sys fi in. summer send to Milwaukee, A. V. H. Carpenter, Wis., General 1’ussenger Agent, and secure a copy. Shipbuilding on the Clyde i« minimally dull at present. At dawn of womanhood, cr in change ol life, Samarium Ravine is the ladies’ friend He hath r'ehes sufficient who hath enough to he charitable. __ From N. Hampton, Nervine N. H., cured Mra. TnrltoD| 1 writes: ‘'Samaritan my son* Tlicrr are 7.000 bakers in Burin, with a de¬ mand for 4,000. Headache in immediately relieved by the use of Biso n Remedy for Catarrh. The corn production of lllinoiM in 18(5,583,- 588 brtnhelH. I S UWFAILIWO AM> 1NFALLIHLK <AEVtH FAILS?> Z IN CirniNII •/ - w ftp ile.pt In Flit, Spanns, ■ Falling Sickness, Convul¬ sions, St. Vitus Dance, Alcoholism, Opium Eating, Seminal Weakness, Im potency, Syphilis, Scrofula, and all . Nervous and Blood Diseases.'. K¥“T<j Clergymen, Rankers, Lawyers, Ladies Literary Men, Merchants, employment ami Nervous all whose sedentary tration, Irregularities of causes the blood, stomach, Frus¬ tonltqappcticcror bowels or Kidneys, or whs require a nerve invaluable. stimulant, Samaritan S'trv irie Is J fTHEJuREATj ———U i tl? Thousands 1 proclaim wonderful it the Jnvigor- most y ai.Uhat eiereusUin- rllCDHIC „—,—,—.—.— n ed sinking system. L If Cflf[V[C| J 1 a M- l.-L 1 l A T *1.50 at Druggists. TheDR S. a Richmond iK<].'iniia;i<i.-n MEDICAL CO .Sole Pro pritRors. St. Joteph, Mo. Lhas. N. C’rittenton. Agent. New York, fkl iiRMLL SpjrkaiuMiHS 1 9J RE. ytupi r. n PHC3 v A re ^ tmmmmmmmg ....... Ul ly ) «tS> r , wHirr// . I A BOLLS § V, Ml Three Particular Points. ’ Point the First. —Brown’s Iron Bittkrk is not an intoxicating com¬ pound. It is a tonic medicine, not a drink. It is a skillfully compounded be sold preparation made to restore strength and health j not a beverage to in bar-rooms and taverns. Point the Second .— Brown s Iron Bitters is free from infants everything injurious. The most delicate ladies and the most enfeebled may use it with,perfect safety and with great advantage. • While it is powerful in its remedial agency, it is gentle in its operation, restoring wasted strength and imparting robust health in the most efficient manner. • Point the Third .— Brown’s Iron Bitters is made by the Brown ffon Chemical weff-ktiowri Company of to Baltimore, f^e Business a !ong-esti.Wi.s^cu world and hoqse general t wbyisg community.. repptpt is tne There is no risk in buying such a medicine. G _ -J VS M 3 • itl at CELEBRATED PilTON ENGIKE FIRST PRIZE MEDAL on ^oiiiblucit Fur hi ami Southern Exposition, Louis Cihcjulahs. 3 AND MACHINERY DEPARTMENT I ll VRIMsm IU4, PA* 'll Easy to use. A certain cure. Not expensive. (Jocm ior Three Cola months’treatment lten<l, In one Dirtiness, puck ago. l .So. !«, ilie Heiutache, Hay wJSlya. i ter, Fifty cents. , or FALLING HICKNK83 ft llfnlong ntUdy. 1 warrant remedy to roro the woret caso* Hecfttine others failed l« no reason for not now receiving h cur©. riend onco for n treatise ami ft Frno Bottle of niy Infallible remedy. Give Express and l*oet Oftlce. It coals ?U you "“•UEtffc:" a,.. SOLID SILVER STEM WINDING FULL JEWELLED GENTS’ SIZE WATCH FOR $ 12 . 50 . FUTXY tilJAUANTKKO. Thin nffrr mnd** for GO dnyn only. (Joode nent ly Kspretui L. O. !>., wuljjct M> inspection before purchasing. . .1. I*. STKVKNS A (’O-,.lewder*, I Atluntu* LIFE LOANS AT 4 PER CENT. Principal need never lakeptup. be paid ew ao long; an lntercat No **cufity required for exceptfor Interest, >»( moderate find then only p emvuqtt ersonat. I hcAC loaot *rc FOIc poor LIFE. or torn Send cent# mows, (ot purtlcuUn, ;a - oftlAO. GoAA Mapaaer.lVS VV. frill four Bu Claelanatl. O %V. ItobvrU, r jPo Speculators. filler Co., R. Lindblom & (lo., N. G. k ft and 7 Chamber of i>t* Broadway, If York. Commerce, CUio«*o. Provision Brokers aw Crain and Produce piahtAgi* »» Members York, of Ohioano. all prominent *t. Lodie end MjjwndWfc. New A dUoorerod n for for aCOxb acute ''jij ' chronic chronic $3 ICA. rheumatiam. neoralfti*. gpyK me. j'vnbnuto, /fan cnrwd ■oi'Vt- hop*- 'f' mam ^ ’fi di Purely botanic, Set harmlwi*. ntov l<» 1ri»k. A»k your dr..jp kit to it; U ho d^.^naa whd to as Me it -Ukw not hum else, ICUuore, A' ju\»h A Oo., 1U& Wi|haiu wt., N. 1 4 HHHIFi ES 9 ?i GOOD 12 L ADIES? NEWS A fi t i rent nut inducement* arftr of. furixl. Now'h yourtim* to got up oniori* for our c ojebr.itod Tea* nnd ('oflvcN.nnd secure* host iti i'll t 'old Hand or Mom Rohh Uliin i l« a Set, or IlHiidMouie UeccrAtctl field Dsnrt IfofV Rose Dinner For Sot, «r t»old Hand Mom D e« «r*fcd Toilet Sot. full purtumlnrs sddro** tj »■ THIS Box tilt FAT A 1*1 F HI CAN TKA CO., I>. <i 8W. : i nnd 1« Vasay St,, Now Yrtk, I M FOOTE ’ 8 Original METHODS m n CVCC Mad* New without doc- OF DDPTII nUl I U flL DC or < uird uiHomforlnulvtrim*. witho’toperation nm PMlMfKK rnilflUOVO * nou .Jin wMfi-ont hi If**, Hiift*,HH!r. (IRE! MFPVnilQ VlLil v UUO and »<!’f!f<>' rational rtr tnatnitnl. - : cttuhVH' f El VO CHRONICS!® Klifcfr jlddress Itr. F. B. FOOTE, Ilex 7t»K, TV. V. S'ltj. Paynes’ Automatic Engines and Saw-Mill- 1 nil Mto aflat nn,St<) lu II. I*. uiomittM Fntfin* with MU], it“ M ’i> ioImi haw, f/UU. cant-book*, r< />rn/>)o!o toi «>|a-i 8 itioii, on cars, 10Knioiie oti rUiIm. $h0 U bm. ml for circular JB). IJ. W. AillnilifiliJ FA V \F A MONH, tfim ity/itinfactur to 3 H *r* <>f F. all alno atyb Fulloya, a Jlan^r* Fli- anl biiaftng' M, from 2 >0 : Elmira, N. Y. Box I8.»0. ___ CONSUMPTION l«r t*i» nbore d!, Uvftu I A; I Imre u poNltlre rertiiMly VMM thoimand# ot rumm o C (ho Itidred, wornt fcln<l and of long ■Undtng bare baon cured. so •tronff In my faittt In lUi efflerwy. with VAJ.UAIll.K Hutt I will *on«f TKKATIfllt TWO BQTTL£H thU rtt$K, to gother uuffoier. • (ilve Kcpro.t and P. O. uddretfif. on *uy JJU. T. A. mlfOVV M, m iWlHL.Nnr Y»r AGENTS WANTED at&ok l ing Nf n C , |||p P Ver ' 1 rj<(p ‘ ^ * * knit*, pftjr of * KVflTiV 1 | Vuit | j vaHes/jr work, which of fancy for AGENTS If. V. IIIFTFIMMIS. WANTFD rii Ohio. Oih, vt lriiMl, PATFNTn m S<*nd• *tfiirit> for our New Hook on I H I Lli I * *‘ nf * L- ItINMIA H. Fxtr U out Lawyer, Wunlmiffton, l>. 0. PI 1 MPQ t.VaV,;;;h Sr, • TAIDNHY IV COMI’IiAINTS. I’EItlLINJS, Hoboken, S.mt.u rarriaUy N. J tree. N. II. PEKSIOIISitSSS.aSf YirANTEO I.ADtEH TO TAKE otiR ftrw ’ W Fancy w«jrk ni tiuffir ho; ti**, rnftklA* m city nr country,, riuf ftwl J?IJ to #1 2 wresk, *oo<|* for Kumiutr »r»fi**. Oo.,Hixth 8<*iid lJftc. for Are., Miuplft N. Y. pajticu)urn. Ha<i»'An Mfg. ks iSo \ Ui«h»*M. NPBDK rati: wi. money .‘Sf-lid li*t ftOrflfl«C wantfi*. flUltinfer / in* <:H !»• hIh.^v- A<1 s'm: rARfiruid i•• A WANTFll cteisi to col i-H petto** t "cipr. k r: Tt. s». rnf p«r coni. NATU>”iAr. PcsuiHirwc* <>» . A U<nU. <U ANIi WHTKKY HA HITS rrKF.F II PE II M IK THEEK weeks. »Ukmp. W. C. AiUnta. OdMr#kft. A. N. V.. .....Tbirtfeo ’H4.