Newspaper Page Text
ODDS AND ENDS.
There are twenty-four Rortlands in
this country.
4,732 rooks were published in Eng
land last year.
Mouldy and uuventilated cellars will
spoil butter or milk.
The West is now supplying New York
with hotel furniture.
Athens, Ga.. expects to become the
Cottonopolis of the South.
Claremont, N. H., still rings “the
■curfew” at 9 o'clock.
In dkicago there are 3,777 saloons, or
1 to every 35 families.
Robins with mushrooms is the latest
dish in Florida hotels.
Bell Telephone stock earned 17 per
cent, dividend last quarter.
A narrow gauge railroad is being built
to the top of Pike’s Peak.
There are 330 colleges and universi¬
ties in the United States.
Fence cutting lias been made a felony
by the Texas Legislature.
In Australia people never boast of be¬
longing to an “old family.”
Dakota has 775 post offices, an in¬
crease of 167 during the year.
Illinois has 255,741 farms, Ohio 247,-
189 and New York 241,058.
The papers of Texas think that a di¬
vision of the State is inevitable.
There are now residing iu the United
States nearly a thousand Japanese.
The manufacture of needles and pins
is one of the industries iu Germany.
The City Clerk of New York gets
about §75,000 a year out of his office.
The Savannah. Ga., cottou exchange
does a business of $35,000,000 annually.
Archibald Forbes, the newspaper D.
correspondent, has been made an LL.
A woman has been elected president
■of the Indiana Bee Keepers’ Association.
Germany has increased its l>eat crop -
in ten years from 3,000,000 to 8,500,000
tons.
An Englishman sold three Hereford
cows to an American breeder for $3,400
eac lj
San Francisco will put up buildings
costing $1,000,000 for her world’s fair in
1887.
In France there are now 4,575 miles
■of navigable rivers and 2,900 miles of
canals.
During the Ohio Valley flood eggs
retailed there as high as 75 cents a
dozen.
William H. Vanderbilt’s art gallery
contains 176 oil paintings, 111 by French
artists.
Europe and British India consume
about 150,000 gallons of toilet perfumes
annually.
London policemen are not allowed to
carry revolvers lest they might use them
carelessly.
Men aged 21 to 65 may be seen play¬
ing marbles in the streets of Angel’s
Camp, Cal.
6,000 boys and 2,000 girls under thir
teen years of age aie employed in Chi
cago factories.
A woman of 77 years in Belfast, Me.,
is sumg a man of 79 for $3,000 damages
TAfeg breach of promise.
A mechanic of Kittery, Me., has dis¬
covered a process by which he welds
copper as securely as iron.
The Kentucky House prohibiting of Representa¬ bicyclists
tives passed a bill
from using the public roads.
Germany and Russia.
A recent revival or extension of friend¬
ly relations between Germany and Rus¬
sia has probably not been recorded in
any formal document. Official and semi¬
official journals discontinue for the time
their notices of concentrations of troops
on the western frontier of Russia, and
they rather hint than assert that Russia
has explicitly or practically joined the
alliance to which Germany, Austria, and
to a certain extent Italy, are parties. It
is not yet known whether the new com¬
bination is heartily approved at Vienna;
but there is no doubt that a cordial un¬
derstanding with Austria is an essential
element in Prince Bismarck’s foreign
policy. His main object is the main¬
tenance of peace, which is only liable to
be disturbed by concert between France
and either Austria or Russia. The great¬
est diplomatic triumph of his life was the
neutralization of one of the two Imperial
Powers by the aid of the other daring
the French war of 1870. Austria, which
was then held in check by fear of a Rus¬
sian attack, is now united with Germany
by ties of friendship founded originally
on a common distrust of Russia. It was
only when Prince Gortchakoff openly
■courted a French alliance that Prince
Bismarck formed a close union with
Austria. As long as it lasts Germany
has little need to fear a French war of
retaliation, while Austria is guaranteed
against Panslavonic intrigues and
secured in the possession of Bosnia and
Herzegovina. It was a master-stroke
of policy to find in the against Austrian jealousy
of Russia a security the danger
of French resentment.— New York
Hour
The Egyptian Malidi.
An Austrian dealer in wild animals
writing from Kassala to friends in Vi
enna, gives some information about the
Mahdi, whom he knows personally, and
with whom he has frequently transacted
business, the Mahdi himself having for
years dealt in wild beasts for the differ
ent zoological gardens. He is described
by the writer as a very cunning impos
tor, and as an instance, it is related that
a short time ago he suddenly appeared
with a number of warts on his right
cheek, these having been artificially pro¬
duced with the rid of a German called
Sehandorper, formerly a clown and
afterward a hair-dresser, now in the ser¬
vice of the Mahdi. The reason was that
the legends about the expected Mahdi
speak of him as having such marks.
Like the beasts he formerly dealt in, the
Mahdi sleeps during the day and trans¬
its business daring the right.
Home Again.— Tbe English had a
sentimental affection for Jumbo, and
Barnum now proposes to send that
animal back with a wife and baby. The
mothers and the children of England
will flock with their shillings and their
buns to visit the interesting family.
IT WAS NOT SO YEKY FUNNY.
flip Fnilier of the llati Bov Thinks Tlierris
Nio Humor in l*rol'annii«n.
A Western paper desiring to be very
funny, published the following among
its Humorous notes:
“Now I lav me down to sleep:
I pray the Lord my soul to keep;
If I should die Ik-fore I wake,
I pray the Lord my soul to take;
This I ask for Jesus sake.”
Geo Peck, iu Peek’s Sun.
In reply Peck says: The writer of this
wishes that lie may have written some¬
thing, sometime, that was as pure, and
touching, and simple as the sweet words
above credited to him by a too smart
funny man. The funny man no doubt
laughed heartily when he did the above,
and thought he had expressed himself
about us in a plain manner, but if he
had ever had a iittle child of his own
to come to his knee at twilight, rest its
eurlv head in his lap, and lisp that
precious little prayer, and bid papa
good-night, and as he listened to the
patter of the little bare feet on the stairs,
feel that before morning the Lord would
take the little soul, and find on the
morrow that such had been the ease,
the man would never have published
the little prayer and credited it thus for
fun. Though that simple prayer is in¬
tended for little children, there have
been grown men on their death bed,
who wanted to pray, and never having
been prayerful in their lives, they could
only repeat that little child’s prayer,
from the memory of their childhood,
and even that, repeated with all tin
spirit and despair of a man at the end oi
life’s journey, has seemed to them to be
full of heartbroken effectual supplication the to fines the
Saviour, and as as
oratorical effort of a Beecher.
Three for Six Shillings.
A Northern man who remains in a
Southern town over twenty-four hours
j without encountering the colored man
who is canvassing for subscriptions tc
erect a new church building may con
skier himself lucky. There is hardly a
j neighborhood in which the colored
people haven t more churches than they
can maintain, but the work of canvass¬
ing never lets up for a day.
One day at Birmingham a colored boy
dropped down upon half a dozen of us at
the Nixon House and explained that his
church building had been blown away
by a cyclone. We chipped in a quarter
apiece and sent him off, but in the after¬
noon he overhauled us down town and
wanted as much more. In the evening,
as we reached the depot, he was there
with a third demand.
“See here,” said one of the givers,
“aren’t yon going it pretty strong ?”
“How, sail ?”
“Why, this is the third time you’ve
asked us to chip in for that church build¬
ing,” sail De fust two bits
• Oh, no, no, !
was fur de building, kase we want a
place to meet in. De nex’ two was to
put in de winders’ an’ benches, an’ dis
las’ will be scrumpshuslv used to pay de
preacher an’ buy de hymn books.”
“And next time you meet us you’ll
want another quarter for something
else ?”
“Zactlv, sah. We orter have a bell on
dat build'in’ jist as soon as we kin raise
de funds to buy it! I’se bin sort o’ axin
you wid a restin’ spell between, so as not
to kick up a fiustrashun.”— Detroit
Free Press.
Bull Grease Butter.
Mr. Low’s bill prohibiting the manu¬
facture and sale of oleomargarine and
regulating the sale of milk provoked
a long discussion iu the New York State
Senate. An amendment was moved
prohibiting the use of glucose or starch
refuse in feeding cattle, which was lost,
the vote being a tie. On motion of Mr.
Low the use of fermented food for cattle
was prohibited by an amendment to the
bill. Senator Kiernan presented a me¬
morial from the manufacturers of oleo¬
margarine, protesting against the pas¬
sage of the bill prohibiting the manufac¬
ture of oleomargarine. Mr. Daggett
made ineffectual efforts to amend the
bill. Mr. Low moved that the bill go
into effect June 1, 1884, which was
adopted without dissent. On motion oi
Mr. Gilbert the penalty for the manu¬
facture of oleomargarine was reduced to
between the limits of $100 and $500 in¬
stead of from $500 to $1,000. The bill
was then passed. Ayes, 25, noes, 4;
Messrs. Murphy, Nelson, Plunkett and
Daggett voting in the negative.
With a Club. —Ward Lamon, when
Marshal of the District of Columbia, ac¬
cidentally found himself ia a street fight,
and, in restoring peace, he struck one of
the belligerents with his fist, a weapon
with which he was notoriously familiar.
The blow was a harder one than Lamon
intended, for the fellow was knocked
senseless, taken up unconscious, and
lay for some hours on the border of life
and death. Lamon was alarmed, and
the next morning reported the affair to
the President. Ward,” said
“I am astonished at you,
Mr. Lincoln; “you ought to have known
better. Hereafter when you have to hit
a man, use a club and not your fist,”
Angbt. —Laura Johnson, a Milwaukee
„j r [ became so indignant on reading a
letter from her betrothed, in which he
esc ressed the desire to break off the en
e ment, that she tried to snatch the
engagement ring from her finger, but it
was go firmly fixed that she could not
rem0 ve it. Seeing a hatchet near by,
g jj e q ien deliberately chopped the finger
0 g- an( ] gen t it, with the ring attached,
; to tbe faithless lover,
Oh, no, you don’t “laugh and grow
fat.” That idea is all wrong. The sen¬
tence should be reversed. You grow
fat and laugh. When you fat Hp you
have something to laugh for. And
other people have something to laugh
at. Especially when yon try to button
your shoes in a railway car.— Burling¬
ton Hawkege.
The Hornellsville Times sagely re.
marks, evidently after a sad experience,
j that “it will presently be necessary to
pass a law prohibiting the manufacture
H nd sale of roller skates except for pur
j p,, S es of war. It cannot lie doubted
j that an armv provided with this means
I of locomotion would be invincible. ’
EMORY’S LITTLE CATHARTIC P1LL&
V Si are tbe BEST EVER IWADE four Emory's *W Co*llvene«», Little Cathartic Indigestion. 1’illB, followed Headache. by
One good dose of three or
pill every night for a week or two, makes the human machinery run as regular
1 as clock work: they purify th. blood and put new life in a broken-down body.
Purely Vegetable,'Harmleee. by and Pleasant, Medicine Infallible, Dealers at the 15 youngestchild Cta. may take
them. Sold all Druggists a Box, or by mail.
STANDARD CURE CO„ Proprietors, 197 Pearl St„ N. Y.
Emory's Uttlo Cafhartio are more than is claimed: they prove to be the
best Pill ever used hero. Worth twice the money asked.—W. IV. H. Gobeb,
Harmony Grove, Ga.-Emory’s Little Cathartio aro tlio most popular of all
EMORY’S LITTLE the Cathartics.—W m. Bishop, Mills Bakkr, Hirer, N. C.-My aged mother used one
CATHARTIC PILLS box with wonderful results.—N. W. Locust Grove, Ohio.-1 recommend
are prepared from them.— John Collins. M. D., unexcelled.—Mas. Athens, Texas.-They Elizabeth are excellent —H. Bknson,
MAY APPLP. Jackson, Miss.-They are Keysxb. Moberlv. Mo.
_
MALARIA ““““^"“poison ?ne™pfi^r™ of any kind. m p e 0 Endorsed df : v thy^n^ by phys mians Emory's and ^^mgtistsevmywtmv^ Standard Cure Pills, ot
Quinine by 25 Conte Box.
mail. a
WIT AM) WISDOM.
Heard on the lake: “Can’t that, girl
skate?” “I think not.” “Then you’d
Letter escort somebody else.” “But
what shall I do with her?” “Oh, just
let her slide. ”
“I reckon I’ll stop with you a few
days,” said a dead beat to a hotel
keeper. “I reckon not,” said the land¬
lord. Nor did the man stop, He had
reckoned without his host.
Mrs. Julia A. Moore, better known
as “ the sweet singer of Michigan,” has
given up poetry and gone into the grist
mill business. Everything points to
prosperous year in this country.—
Lowell Citizen.
The old Russian bands did not go
tooting and hammering around with
horns and drums, as is the fashion of
this day, but they played sweet music,
sad and slow, upon the gudok, the gns
ley, and the balalaika.
He recently led No. 7to the altar, and
when asked for the ring replied: “.Lar¬
son, I’ve hooked on tosix of’em without
a ring, and we kin git along this time,
I’ll try and remember it in the future,
though .”—Salt Lake Tribune.
“May I ask for the loan of a dollar?”
timidly inquired an impecunious ac¬
quaintance of Blobson. “You may, sir,”
was the frigid reply, “and if you hear
anything from that one I lent you last
Tuesday, I wish you’d let me know by
telephone.”
“Ah 1” exclaimed Fogg, as he entered
the store of a man who never advertises,
“do you know I always like to come in
here ?” “Do you ?” asked tbe delighted “it’s
shopkeeper. “Yes,” said Fogg,
such a relief to get out of the crowd, you
know.”
Fortune's favors are unequally dis¬
tributed in this world. Thomas Nast
gets $10,000 a year for sketches that are
not printed, while the man who Bends
poetry to the newspapers, without hope
or reward, gets back neither his manu¬
script nor his stamp.
The fate of Henry Villard is proving a
warning to other reporters, and all over
the land reporters are taking a solemn
obligation to remain in the profession
they have chosen, and not become rail¬
road magnates, dabbling in millions of
dollars’ worth of stock.
Dakota is almost ready for admission
into the Union. Her politicians are call¬
ing each other liars, the Governor has
been charged with bribery, two Epis¬
copal dioceses have been created Henry
Villard has smashed all to pieces, and
tbe snow is seven feet on a dead level.
.Unprepossessing old bachelor— “And
wiiy do you Mabel think ?” I Miss ought Mabel to get (aged mar¬
ried, Miss
twelve)—“Oh, you look as though you
needed somebody to take care of you
and— Oh, goodness, you didn’t think I
said that to lead you on, did you?”—
Life.
A Lowell (Mass.) man, with fifty
hens has netted in one year $3.20 from
each hen. At this rate, were a man like
Vanderbilt or Gould to sell off $20,000,
000 worth of non-paying stocks, and buy
80,000,000 hens, his annual income from
this investment alone would be
$250,000,000.
A seeker after information wants to
know “ when two young men call on a
young lady which should be the first to
go?” We have seen the time when we
and the other fellow could have gone
away together and the girl wouldn't
have cared which one got out of the door
first.— Salem Sunbeam.
An English scientist has discovered
that there is three cents’ worth of gold
in every ton of sea water. This is not
much, to be sure, hut a young man
would acquire wealth mono rapidly by
extracting the gold from sea water than
by purchasing tickets in a Southern lot¬
tery .—Norristown Herald.
Mr. J. R. Randall tells the story of
a black soldier who ran away at Mur
freesboro battle, and was asked if he
thought any one would have missed him
had he been killed. “ No,” he replied,
“ they don’t miss white men, much less
niggers; but I would have missed my¬
self, and that’s the pint with me.”
An Iowa editor has been married but
nine weeks, and now liis bride wants a
divorce. She probably supposed that
being an editor he would make over sev¬
eral millions to her as pin money, but
on this calculation she made a mistake
Iowa is a comparatively young State,
and some of the editors there are not
very well fixed yet.
Yours Truly. —A bright Chicago boy
who wanted Government employment of
went to Colonel Morrison with a note
introduction and commendation from
Mayor Carter Harrison. Tlie Illinois
Representative read it and said be was
sorry, but his quota of appointments had
been filled long ago. “Better try some
one else,” he added, “But, Colonel, this
letter is addressed to you,” pleaded retorted the
boy. “Well, I can’t help it,”
Morrison, gruffly, and turned away with¬
out another word; and so did the boy.
Two days later Mayor Harrison received
from his young friend a note thus
worded: “Dear Sir—Colonel Morrison
says your letter isn’t worths continental
Yours truly,” etc.
A Newspaper Woman’s Will. —The
will of the late Mrs. Anna Ottendorfer,
the owner of the New York Stoats
Zeitung newspaper disposes of an estate
variouslv valued at from $2.500,0)0 to
$3 000,000. Her family is well provided
for and a large amount is given for
charitable institutions. Among all the
employees of the Sfduts /eitung who
I have devoted their exclusive time, at¬
tention and service to the paper the sum
of 825.000 is to lie divided. An addi¬
tional $25,000 is .given to employees on
the paper by name.
THE BEST
OF ALL
LINIMENTS
! FOR MAN AND BEAST.
■ Fov more than a third of a century the
■Mexican ■ Slu^tna- l.iaimriit linsbcen
■ known to millions nil over the world lie
■ the only sale reliance for the relief of
I accidents and pain. It is a medicine
■ above in ice and praise—the best of Its
bind. For every form of external pain
(ho
MEXICAN
Mustang It Liniment tie is without muscle an equal.
penetrates sit and to
the very l>onc—making the contimi
aneo of pain and inflammation impos¬
sible. Its clFedS upon Human Flush ami
the Bruto Creation arc equally womler
ful. The Mexican
MUSTANG
Liniment is needed l»y pomohody in
every house. Every day brings Id news burn of
the agony of mi awful sen or
subdued, of rkieumntio martyrs re¬
stored, or a VAluuIde horse or ox
saved by the healing powi v of this
UNIM£NT
xvliicli speedily cures sucli ailments of
till) HUMAN FLUSH :i
Rhoumati^m, (Swellings, MlfT
Joints, C ontracted Wusdes, Hums
mid Scalds, Cuts, llruhtes an«l
Sprains, PoisonoiM Jlitc* mid
Stings, Stiflbess, Lameness, Old
Sores, Ulcers, Frostbites, Chilblains.
Sore JYIpp lee. Caked Jlreast, and
indeed every form, of external dis¬
ease. It heals without sears.
For the Brute Creation it cures
Sprains, Swlnisy* Stiff Joints,
Founder, Harness Sores, Hoot Illn¬
esses, Foot Hot, Screw Worm. Wind- Scab,
Hollow Horn, Scratches,
galls, Spavin, Thrush, Kvfl, ICingbone,
Old Sores, Poll Film upon
the Sight and every other ailment
to Which the occupant* liable. of the
Stable and Stock Yard are
Tho'Mexican Mustang Liniment
always cures and never disappoints;
and it is, positively,
THE PEST
or ALL
U 1 IMEMTS
POP, MAN OK BEAST.
%
/
ONE
vf 93 9
*
;-Ma clu n g
i c
i '(r
*5 : ,
os
| \ "Lu 2'jJsli m fl tor*
•, f 1 5t f
ivir CO
j j i
m.
■o CTO
I P^INEVEFd <j *AS gQUA 1 r 0UT0F NEVER ORDER.
mo -
PWHSs r \
/ 30 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK
0 «.AN(j ^V.A/V> GA
I CL. MASS.
FIR sale: by
J. W. DA RRACOTT.
i IG 0 R 0 U S' H E A LTH^iME 3
HARRIS’ PROF. f cay- acuro Skillful lions, crjtAui" frota and E'-t Kr!PV0rjl temporize OT* ia^ t youthful ‘Aj «li«ei'.8Ci. r phyiicia&4 br-Li free curoerou* DEBILITY, a Indulgctc while work. iiAiwt.- tiC» :o. saiij r-b r *■ nq ; : • ^
cacaoes lurk In jour tj 2
tcm. Avoid pretention* being claim insy.v.l
A Radical Cura cn other by for thc*j j rj
rcai'.fica
re* troubles. Get our free cueu
Jar and trial package *'-l
SPERMATORRHEA learn important fact* bet.r*
...king treatment elaew horn.
Take a remedy that ha* cu: cu:-. 1
JL3STO thon sand •, and doc* net it ! lo¬
^POTENCY. terfere with attention ci to bu'-l*
neia or cauee pain or ■. locf/S*
vesieao*, Found &1 on « It
BZFTecUid for over 6 entiUo rrcd'al rlncif’.'f.
Growing la favor anl t ;
foara U/ uao ha tiiou- tion. Direct application to ti.i
saads of caoea. ifif &f mulcts Its •pc
-idso-t.- i • ■ •
MARK
1 PACKAGE. TP.IAL RATS G» f.ted »■••••* ore flvao i»” ba ,■"? <.
r
f Tho pH’lent bseotnci
SEND ADDRESS jcticr-rfal **tr‘;n#;h rapldij. and
'
- w ,
HARRIS REMEDY CO., R’fg Cks'rWs.
306!4Sorth 10th St., St. Louis, Ho.
Cm Uonth's Thiathut, $3:2 south:,$5 ; 3 mohtik. I?.
xif.'
I ■!.. , Grins, Saw Mills, Etc.
fast
~
A t ; mm
m
\/ Vii /I v
Vx
-m Bl
-r ^~—
PERKINS BROS.
-DEALERS IN
" MACHINERY.
ALL KINDS a
1 1 teg?
kwKfcEd M rw
H m ] M ' ski
4
»“ •
A 1
fa SliS til i .V->m
i«pS i & ■
| I
i
1® $ m.
"• v •/,
v 1a h
..-I
‘ .gLdMBSEN***
The largest doalors in the South in Steam Engines, Boilers, Saw
Mills, Circular Saws, Steam Pumps, Boiler Feeders, Jet Pumps, Steam
Gauges, Whistles, Piping, Wrenches, Shingle Machines, Planing and
b Matching Machines, Water Wheels, Grist and Flouring Mills, Separa
kj tors, Horso Powers, Cotton Gins, Feeders and Condensers, Presses,
I Plows, Brass Goods, Engine Fittings, Belting, Machinery Oil, etc.
Jku" Second-hand Machinery at low figures. Get our prices before
buying.
PER Kims BROS., ATLAUTA, CA.
hii •am,
S. H. MYERS,
(SUCCESSOR TO MYERS & MARCUS)
-lTobbbr iiw
f)i f y G(Ood^, > r otioiid 'arid Sojriefy 5
Boots, Shoes, Hats and Clothing
rriHE undersigned would resnectfullv inform the merchants of Taliafeiro and
1 adjoining < ounties, unequaled that his by FALL that Stock has is now being been brought received, to and this in market. prices
and assortment is any ever
A special feature of my business is the establishment of a
—\Y HOLD S A L K -
BOOT SHOE AND HAT HOUSE
Entirely distinct from my Dry Goods, Notions and oth;r Dmoments In mr
will be found the largest and best selected stock of SHOES and H ATS, I
store and feel satlsfled that it will ba to the latareit of pur
ever brought to Augusta, stock before we purchasing e’sewhara.
chasers to examini our
S. II* MYERS, 286 and 288 Broad St., Augusta, Ga.
Mar-30 ’82-ly _______
Ids}! Ids<!! Id^!!!
E. LIEBSCHER’S
BOTTLING WORKS
Corner Jackson and Ellis Streets, AUOUSIA, GA.
I TAKE THE LIBERTY of iniorming the people of Taliaferro and adjoining
1 comities that I have considerably enlarged my business facilities and I am now
iud^at renared to furnish prices“ mv pa»urns with the followin'!-articles at wholeiale and retal
, PACKED AND SHIPPED TO ORDER.
lowest iCE
CINtIHNATI LAGER BEER Ilf 1-4 AND 1-8 KEGS.
popan aND SALT WATER FISH. OYSTERS IN CANS SHELL & BULK
V HAVE also added a BOTTLING prepared EST furnish A BUSHMEN with I to i my rst-class already article ex ten- of
Lsive business, and I am now to you a
P .ttled B r r It is the best in the market and recommended highly for its lead¬
ing qualities, especially so by some of our leading physicians, also by a great num
ber HopLgThaTyou will goods fair trial, nnd .also that you will kindly
give my a
iive me a share of your patronage. I remain, REoPECIFULUY,
E. LIEBSCHER, Augusta, Ga.
83-1 y.
PARSONSSPILLS the entire system in three months. Any
Anri will completely change the blood In
who will take 1 1'UX each night from 1 to 13 weeks, may be restored to soond
person possible. For Female Complaints these Fills have no equal.
health If snrh a thing lie everywhere.
Physicians use them for Uie euro of FIVKK anil KIDNEY diseases. Sold
1 mail for 25c. in stamps. Circulars tree. I. S. JOHNSON A CO.. Boston. Maas.
or by
0 Croup, AHthina, Bronrhitiw,
Ifia, KheusiBtiffin. joIINso.n > a>o
j>V.NK MNJMKM (for internal and External
Vue) v/ili Jn stantaru GUslr relieve tktft* terrible
disease!, and Information will positively that cure will nine canea
out often. save taan»
. jives rmii iron by mail. Don't delay a moment*
Prevention is better fltan cure.
51 ^^^swsm»ssr- /-uonvur i ibfMFNT rncKS lnflucrws. i:i-—line at the I.ntxn Hoarae
i t« i/ig « - l i«n. :
■ t f?i“ F’lii.c.
Not*; c.- j •**! . like ; v.'onl> inf* ; ,1 :s id v.^H-knov.-fi SitvTicis*n 3b«oit.?f-ivp;ire C go .Ottl" F : fbai *rfl» {‘.f Avl'T - fa't Hborrdan's win (.'ondition ».id sold thr.t v<*rv rsAiho In mosfof Thi^ OonditiDu v al»abl«*. Pow f’olfi- th« AXE HENS LAY
94 !
- «..» rOHO l ?f'i
Two -fifths of all TnE newspapers
and periodicals sent through the mails
bv publishers at pound rates are mailed
at New York city. J
• _ ___
__
Hast Tenvf.ssee mAl-bli- Is -e inr for 100
p-roent more th in l’alian u.ai'ble in tLa
itading markets.
In di*eaws oflbc HloodTh*in and kwaes.-Serious bcbuSy,
ImlMitrnry, Berruriaf Or«ule G«jn,»rrb«ra, Kypbllltle a lift
Affertlonv. Scientific treatment; safe and aura
reu-tflioa. fWormitic* Treated. Ca.l or wrfre for list at
tpjf hti«>n*tf» 1>« answered by those d«lrlng treatment by tnaiL
3 ►rviB* suffering from Rupfars should scad Itl«Mtatrma^ their
and learn Minrthisirlolhrir sdnitacr.
ddress Dr. f. L. J.sfl I«sfl»«te, 4 Kb K, Pres't MO Loentt and Physlelas LoaU. In Ck«rf% So.
t rnlrml led. k bur*. st.. St.
SuecuM o In. Uuiu' h^Luuj, L»ut>u>tw4 M I—iw