Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893, August 29, 1884, Image 3
THE SIREN. The nigh; ,s drear and lonely, and it seems to never end, As onward toward an unknown Bea, my weary ' " steps I bend; And I would fall beside the way, it seems so very long, If ’twere not for the haunting strains of a delusive song. There is a cruel Siren ever singing unto me, Of a bright and happy future, and of things that are to he. And her songs they are enchanting, as beneath a pallid moon, She chants of bounteous harvests and a golden-freighted June. And she has sung those songs to me through all the weary years; And I have watched and waited long in hopeful, silent tears, Awatching and awaiting for the happy things to be, That this cruel, cruel, Siren sings so constantly to me. But still tho night grows darker, and the moon stemB on the waue, As o'er my rough and dreary way still falls that mocking strain, And still I struggle onward toward a distant, unknown sea, ! While ibis deceitful Siren Binge of things that ! are to be. 1 Thomas B. Foed. ! 1 MADGE. | j * It was a very poorly furnished room in a cottage home; a small cottage, one of many, all small, “hands” mean and scantily j furnished, and the lived there, j This one was Morgan’s cottage, and it ] was Jack Morgan himself and his sister Madge who were seated at breakfast, lingering, as was possible only tall, on well- Sun- j day morning. S' was a j formed, strikingly handsome girl of 19, j \ as she sat facing her brother, who was some five years older ; and upon her ; face was an eager, troubled look, while i he was sullen and downcast. Yonng ; been as they were, they had seen better days; ! educated up to three years pro- j vious to that June morning, and then been thrown suddenly upon their own ; resources. jack fought his way, sullen and re sentful, making few friends and seeking none. Madge was the braver of the two, meeting their reverses with quiet . courage, and bringing energy, trust and cheerfulness to the mean cottage home. Just one week had elapsed since an aunt, from whom they never hoped for aid, had left them each a hundred pounds, and Jack had resolved to try his fortune in Canada, while Madge put hers aside for a rainy day. “I’ll stay here until you are sure of success, Jack,'. she said, when he urged her to join him, “and keep a home for you in case that you need one.” “Do you call this hole a home?” he asked bitterly, and she only smiled and answered; “A shelter, then.” But she was not smiling when she sat at the Sunday breakfast, eating little, brooding sadly, until suddenly she cried: “Jack, we must do something. Think what we owe Tom King.” “Owe him J I believe we have paid him ever/ jiingr,” said Jack, sbi “Know; ’ * 1 , J but we can never pay him what we still owe him.” “Bah ! Don’t be sentimental, Madge.” “Common gratitude is not sentiment alone, Jack. Jack,” she repeated. “can you forget who came to us in that sore need, paid doctor and butcher and then buried our mother beside father in the cemetery!” forget,” her brother “And do you re plied, almost angrily, “how we worked and saved, starved and perished, until every shilling of the money was in Tom King’s pocket again ?” “I know ! 1 know ! But think how kind he was—how he helped you and me to get our situations in the mills, and how delicately he made the loans of money, And now, oh, Jack, I must do something.” ? If Tom King “What can you do chose to lose his money in speculating, h “T m C„7rrS-: therei. Amt -NoChe"*.;™^ “ ? No ;j sue answerea, 1 h.,o nave mr my "Vnoble fortune. Don’t be a fool, Bin isiaage was tool the in morning, tne sense while ne meant. All through while she she put the house in order, dressed in her quiet mourning for church, even through the service there, she was thinking of what she owed Tom King. When her mother, crushed by tbe death of her husband, unable to" meet the change from comfort to poverty, sank down prostrated; when Jack, unable to work, was cursing fortune, Tom King came, as their father’s friend, and kept them from starvation. Madge’s thought- heart glowed as she remembered how ful he was about sparing her trouble in everv sTe, wav. He was considerably older than and a grave, reserved man, whom she regarded with the affectionate respect she would have given her father, but with that same reverence she loved him deeply. And when the whole town knew that Tom King lay in tne New town hospital, sick and pennile.s8, the whole noble, grateful heart of Madge Morgan went out to him. Many stories reached her. He had wbI* a fortune and lost; he had invested in mines, and tbe mines had failed and ruined him; he had been engaged, according to the Fewtown gossips, in a dozen different speculations, winning vast sHms only to lose them. But one broad, indisputa ble fact remained, if all the rest were false- he was lying in the hospital sick the from the excitement that had put last stroke npon his ill luck. Dinner over Madge put on her bon net again. **» * Ih. h«Fiui * ‘oniyYgrDn't not be put answered off by her, Jack’s bat soni she would looks, and went on her errand. Here, upon a low, iron cot-bed, pale and emaciated, but evidently on the road to recovery, Tom King lay, when Madge Morgan came up to the ward with a nurse, her face so grave and ten¬ der that the strong will and patient en¬ durance of its usual expression were lost in the pure womanly sympathy that rested there. “My friend!” she said, taking the wasted hand extended to her, and Tom King wondered if ever two words held so much as those two. “Why, Madge!” he said, presently, looking into her eyes misty with tears, “do not feel so badly. I’m gaining every day. The doctor says he will have me on my feet hi ft week, and I in going abroad again.” “Again. When you have been so un¬ fortunate there ?” “Eh? Oh, I see 1” he said, with an odd look in his eyes; “you’ve been read¬ ing the papers. Unlucky, wasn’t I f” “Tes. But, Tom—I came to tell yon. —” the words came slowly—“I have some money that—that is of no use tc me. It will start yob again, I——” “You want nm to take it ?” “You can borrow ir, n anxious not to hurt liis pride, “and some day—when you are rich—you can return it. ” “Yes ! I see ! Have you got it with you ?” “I thought I would bring it with me,” she said, her face Hushed with pleasure, “and here it is.” He opened the envelope and took it out, one note, just as the lawyer had sent it to her. Tom King laid it on the broad palm of his hand and stroked it tenderly. “All your wealth, Madge ?” be asked. “Not while I have these,” and she held up Jier hands. “I am so glad, though, that I have it.” He lay very quiet, looking steadily at the note for some minutes; then he be gan to speak, his eyes still fixed on the money, his voice steady but monoto nous, as if he were reading a story there. “When I went away, nearly three years ago,” lie said, “I went to see if I could not shake myself free I from could a dream I had. I dreamed that win the love of a child, a mere slip of a girl, who was forced into premature wo manhood by trouble. She was utterly unconscious of my love, but I knew I could not hide it it I staved beside her. Out of her sight, far from the sound of her voice, the dream, instead of fading, became clearer, more vivid. Day well, and night I dreamed, but I worked as I put what money 1 had into in vest ments that promised well—but there, I will not speak of that. Providence was merciful. I am alive, at least-” lie paused there, but a low, sweet voice took up the story. “And the dream will become a real ity,” the voice said, ‘Tho child-womau did not read her own heart, nor unrter stand w^y nothing in her life met or filled the longing there. Not until sharp sorrow came, and she heard of him she loved lying ill and in poverty aud pain, did she understand that he took all the love she could ever know away with him.” “And now, Madge ?” “It shall be as you say. I love yon. I am young and strong, and I think I can be a help and not a burden to you.” “Will you be my wife, Madge ?” “Whenever you will.” “Madge, did you think, mydear, that I was ruined ? Because I was sick and came here to be nursed, people jumped at the conclusion that I lost everything. But I came here simply because I would have the best of and because with cutfoft disinterested #><.—>«.-. kindness *. - that . 1 get the here. I couldn’t, go to you, you know, Madge. Don't believe all you hear or re ad, my dear Madge; I am a rich man still—richer than I ever was—but I mean to keep this,” and his hand closed over the note. “You shall never have jt again, Madge.” answered, «*j am content,” she And even Jack was satisfied, some thing of his sullen temper being lost when he once more found himself on the road to prosperity. Restitution After Many Years. A commercial traveler told a good story a few days since: He said that a prominent merchant whose ways were at times “quito peculiar,” and whore¬ sided not a thousand miles from tho “City of Salt,” walked into the earpet STd of his extensive store one day and »• ot W. S£M»»* then .1 the said o,a to je for a mome nt, and As the clerk began to throw down roll after roll, the woman stopped him a ' said: We cant afford therr^ k) 1 | carpets and we won t have em. Ho. ; on, auntie, replied the mere . “Now which one of these would you j like best? To which the old lady e ! plied: “I tell you I can afford em ; but this one is just lovely. What i the size of your room ? asked the mer ! chant. In answer to this the old man produced envelope from a which were the fig j old upon the ures gmng the dimensmus of room ‘ and handed it to the merchant After ; glancing at it he gave it to his c erh i with instructions to have the parhen ar 1 carpet which had pleased the old lady so rnuen maae up at X the tram upon which the old people were to leave town that afternoon, at the same time telling them that it should not cost them b, cent. Seeing the blank look of astonishment which overspread their faces, the merchant asked: “Am t your names so and so ? “Yes,” they replied. “Dxdn t you keep a tavern at such a time and at such a place?” To which they replied in the j affirmative. And didn t you have a boy at one time nanr-d ----V” “Yes, yes, and we have often wondered | whatever become of t .e little cisa. “Well,” said the merehe t, “I am that boy, and when I tended bar for you I stole money enough from you to carpet j your whole house. Take the carpet and ; *a J nothing more about SiretS it ” They took , 2 tamed ^“ .—Ithaca 3 *-h.”VZ? JoumaL j A party of Eastern capitalists have j united to operate probably the largest cattle ranch in the world. It is in Grant county, N. M., and is about forty miles from east to west and sixty from north to south, comprising about 1,500,000 acres of grazing land. There are now some 16,000 head of cattle on the range and it is intended to increase the bento to SO,000 cattle. THE OPIUM IIABIT. SOMK OF THR ECCENTRICITIES t OPIUM POISON INC. How It la Supposed to Opemte tn Some Ports ot the Far West os told by Bill Nye. I have always had a horror of opiates of all kinds. They are so seductive and so still in their operations. They steal through the blood like a wolf on the trail, and they seize upon the heart at last with their white fangs till it is still forever, Up the Laramie there is a cluster of ranches at tho base of tbe Medicine Bow, near the north end of Sheep Moun¬ tain and in sight of the glittering, These eter nal frost of the snowy range, ranches are the homes of yonng men from Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Ohio, and now there are several “younger sons” of Old England, with herds of horses, steers and sheep, worth millions of dollars. These young men are not tho kind of whom the metropoli¬ tan ass writes, saying, “youbetcherlife,” There and calling everybody “pardner.” are many of them college graduates, fur¬ who can brand a wild Maverick or nish the easy gestures for a Strauss waltz. They wear human clothes, talk in tho United States language and have a bank account. This spring they may be wearing chaparaps and swinging a quirt through tho thin nir, and in July they may be at Long Branch or coloring a meerschaum pipe among the Alps. Well, a young man whom wo will call Curtis lived at one of these ranches years ago, and though a quiet, mind your-own-bnsiness fellow, who had ab¬ solutely no enemies among his com¬ panions, he had the misfortune to incur tho wrath of a tramp sheep-herder, who waylaid Curtis one afternoon and shot him dead as he sat in his buggy. Cur¬ tis wasn’t armed. He didn’t dream of trouble till he drove home from town, and as he passed through the gate ot a corral saw the hairy face of the herder and at the samo moment tho flash of a Winchester rifle. That was all. A rancher came into town and tele¬ graphed to Curtis’s father, and then a half dozen citizens went out to help cap¬ ture the herder, who had lied to the sage brush ot the foot-hills. They didn’t get back till toward day¬ break, but they brought the herder with them. I saw him in the gray of the morning lying in a coarse gray blanket on the floor of tho engine-house. He was dead. I asked, ns a reporter, how he came to his death, and they told me—opium! I said, “Did I understand you to say ‘ ropium ?’ ” They said no, it was opium. Tlie murderer had taken poison when ho found that escape was impossible. I was present at the inquest so that I could report the case. There was very little testimony, but all tbe evidence seemed to point to the fact that life was extinct, and a verdict of death by his own hand' was rendered. It was tho first opium work I had ever seen, and it aroused my curiosity Death by opium, xt seems, leaves a dark purple ring around the ixeok. I dia not know this before T-eople who die^., S togetht tricities ol opium-poisoning that I Ji.' t ! . never seen hud down ia the books, bequeath it to medical scienoe. When¬ ever I ruD up against a new scientific discovery I just baud it right over to the public without cost. * who seem to bo likely to form the opium j habit, It is one of the most deadly of narcotics, especially in a new country. High ivrx up i'y, m tl.o the vtnra pure moiiTifftin mounta H aim n.1 mofi- 8 phere this man could not secure enough air to prolong life and he expired. In a land where clear, crisp air and delight ful scenery are abundant he turned hia back upon them both and passed away. Is it not sad to contemplate? Two Danes have undertaken the task of paddling, in a skin-covered canoe, from Alaska to San Francisco, a dis¬ tance of about 2,500 miles. The canoe is 10 feet long, and covered with tho rikits of sea liens. They used to say “crazy as a bed b-g,” but the revised version hath it ‘cruzv as a bed quilt The Prohibitionists of Upton, Iowa, tore down a saloon and set fire to the ruins. No \uiml.cr’ 1 00,000. This is the actually reached this week by the Mason & Hamlin Organ and Piano company in the regular cabinet num¬ bering of their world renowned organs. Having commenced business in isrit, the average number of organs r >ro duced per annum has been 5,000, which is 100 per week for the entire 1,500 weeks of their business career. The Mason A Hasalin organa have been sent to every civilized country, and their sale never was greater than at the present time, averaging from 10,000 to 15,000 organs per annum. —-Bouton Journal. I.ieut. Greeley will probably be promoted to the rank of colonel in the Signal Corps. on ^tc•h. ,, ''Bough on Itch” cures humors, eruptions, /ing-wonn, tetter, ba.lt rheum, chilblains. W. 1). Howelifl, the author, is spending the summer in hia study at Boston. French Grape Brandy, distilled Extract of Water I'epper Camphor 1 .!• V*. ater, combined In Dr. ger and as Fierce’s VompMmd Extract of .Smart-Weed, is the best jo-sithe rerneiy for colic, cholera morbus, dian hext, dys .-ntary or blo<Hy-nux; als » tob:u?ik upuoi’E. levers, and intlainma U>ry attacks. .V) jus. Keep it on hand. Good for man or usa-t From a bushel < f corn or rye there can be obtained almost two gallons of alcohol. I.ire Preserver. Health If yon Leu; are lopingvourgnpon wer. Goes direct life, to weak try W^a spots. A white deer was killed in Florid, one day las. w« <-,a. ‘-Roiinh on Toothache. ’ Ii.„tent rel.t-f f<;r nenraigia. tootha/Jie, face ache. Ask for “Rough on loothache. ’15* 95c. ---- piSS'.'i*w T f 5 hag d.> d.j dorti^ the re.wo, a»d th. oonibw tjt pickers kaa b eeu bofavum# 300. FOR CURING CHILLS AND FEVER AND Removing the Distressing Effects of Malaria, AYER’S AGUE CURE HAS BEEN FOUND SO NEARLY INFALLIBLE, THAT We Authorize Dealers to Return the Money, If the medicine is taken according to directions, without benefiting the patient. PREPARED BY DR. J. C. AYER A CO., Analytical Chemists. LOWELL, MASS. Sold by all Druggists. Price $1, six bottles for $5 ■ r f| v ; - Jf % The fOY A) ■'V"\ PhyBl- Y 1 / Iron _ i clans and N. , l/medlcine only Jfc )1 that[ Vq\purit ( JtT )commend Druggists ro- \\J n-' ' will not blacken Y It as or Injure the teeth. 1116 b6sl ' Try KNOWn\ 'x yl A SURE APPETIZER. BEST TONIC ,v ". Will cure quickly and completely Dyspepsia, Weakness. Malaria, Impure Blood. Chills and Fever, and Neuralgia. m vl* i , yaV-'W, 0 (PURITY/^# INVALUABLE ^ FOR LADIES AND FOR ALL FERSONB WHO LEAD A SEDENTARY LIFE. RELIEVES INDIGESTION OURES DYSPEPSIA. S V It is a sure remedyVY of[ j It strengthens the for diseases z A muscles, tones and. \ the l.lver undWiPURIT ZV Y A/ Invigorates the I Us*. Kidneys. \AV system. si Jt Ti Brown’s Iron Bitters com¬ bines Iron with pure vegetable tonics. It is compounded on thoroughly sci enlific and medicinal principles, and cannot intoxicate. All other preparations of Iron cause headache, and produce constipation. Brown’s Iron Bitters is the ONL Y Iron medicine that is not injurious —its use does not even elacken the teeth. It not only cures the worst cases of Dyspepsia, but insures a hearty ap¬ petite aud good digestion. I ^? ^SeS Vonng Menl-Read _ This, j off Belt and 0 other Electric e b?ate°d Appliances trial on for thirty days, t<> men IZbieH'^oBw (young or °W) afflicted with nervous Zt UmpkierOK tlHba.^ many whnhood gua: anteed. No risk is incurred ms - 1 « various things without doing any good. I read ot the many wondrous cures of Ely’s Cream Itelm and thought I wonld try onoe more, 15 minutes after Two one weekH application I I commenced watt worn flf , rfu n y helped. I feel entirely ago cured. It in unaig it and now of. the greatest discovery ever known or heard —Vvhamfl Culuk, Farmer, Lee, Masa. Price 50 cents __. Artesian wells were known at Thebes 2,000 years before the Christian era. Hwcel CSnin and Mullein. Very few realize that rn tho exudation they boo clinging to the sweet gum tree there is a powerful in the stimulating old field mullein expectorant mucilaginous principle, and a one that is very healing to the lungs. These two principles presents in Taylor’s Cherokee Rem¬ edy of Sweet Guin and Mullein a pleasant and effective cure for ('roup, Whooping-Cough, druggists Colds and Consumption. Bold by ail at 25c and $1.00 a bottle. A new $50,000 hotel will soon bo built at Pine Bluff, Ark. The c;onflirt Between disease and health h often brief and fatal. Jt is better to bo provided wit.'j cheap and simple remedies for such common disorders as coughs, colds, etc., than to run the risk of contracting a fatal disease through neglect. Iir. Win. Hail s balsam is a sure and safe remedy fur nil diseases of the lungs and chest, if taken in season it is certain to cure, and may save you from that terrihlu disease, consumption. It hag been known and use 1 for many year.-, ari l it is no exaggeration world to ay that it is tlic best remedy in the for coughs, etc. ____ A New York printing prisn maker promises 960,000 to produce a press that will turn out copies per hour. Pretty Women. Ladies who woukl retain,freshness and vlvac Ity. Try “Weila’ Health itenewer.” The English government claims the oondi tion of the people of Ireland is improving in every way. “I do not like thee, Dr. Fell, tell." Tho reason why I cannot It has often been wondered at, the bad odor this oftquoted doctor was in. ’Twos protiaijly because he, l<eing one of the old school di/ct/jrs, ma/le up pill* fu* large a» bul eta, which nothing but an ostrich could bolt without naasca. Henc> the dislike. \)r R. V. Fierce^ “Pleasant Purgative Beliefs” are sugar-coated and no larger than bird shot. they are spocihc A French physician lias written a. long ^de to prove tho beneficial results of eating water cresses. Green Apples! EltPn in the rrmng time, or any other season, . g to a t x ,wel trouble, which can REMEDY, that will certainly cure Cramp Loire, Diarrhoa, Dysentery and restore the little one gradually wasting away from the effect* of teething. For sale by all druggists at 50 cents »Louie. __ aJS ifirSsis’TLisa.'S’SSS.* JwSSsio. • - H E B E 8 T T O N I C That wonderful catholieon known as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound lias given tho lady a world-wide reputation for doing good. It is a living spring of hoalth and strength.__ D in reported that King Theban has mur 475 of h> relatives since ho ascended the ... * rrtla tumors Barillas | of gastronomies] divided wrinkles hard-boiled is to serve chicken salad inside a egg with tbe shell removed. Thousands, yes, millions, of bottles of Car bolino have been sold, and the sale still goes on. If there were no merit in this great nat¬ ural hair renewer do you suppose that the peo¬ ple would still buy, as they continue to do? Pullman cars are to be used on railroads in Brazil. ____ If a eziugh disturbs your sleep, one dose of I’iso’s Cure will give you a night s rest. It is said that Miss Ellen Terry’s vaccination lias cost her quite a financial loss. LYDIA E. PINKIUK’S TeielaUe CompM IS A POSITIVE CUBE 'Pa For Fevnalo Complaint*and Weakneaaes no common to / our befit fern*Iff population. It will onro ®ntlr®lf th*» well form of FomAl« Com* Plan, - Or Arlan trouble, imUmn-Uon and Uloww don, V*. "ne ani tho d ronaoqueul ud 40 ; iCZZuu"' “ " p ” rtll “ u * ,Ir * * t ' i It will dliwolvo and «Tp«l tumom from tho utoru«!n*i» parly ttAtfoof tlovolopn out. Tht> Uinflnncy to oiuioerotti i Dumon tLereij checked ysr/»l*>o<hiy Uj It* u*o. It remove! falntnoM, flatulency, dootror* all crarlfli or ■tlmniaritw, and relieToa wtuneM of tho •tomauh, It cure* Bloating, Headache*. Jiervoua 1'rostratlon. (lonural Dohlllty, Slneplemneea, Idepreoalon and Indlgee Hon. That feeling of hearing down, cauainK uain.welKut | and bo/: k ache, la a 1 ware permanently cured by Ita u»a It will at all tlmci and under all clreurnetancoe act lo • harmony with tho law* that govern tho Female iyetem. For tho ouroof Kidney Complaint# l'rloofl.00. tilx of bottles either for box, $6.00 thli J Oompourid U unaurpiuiiMja, f Ho family should bo without JLYDJA K. PISKIIAM'A • LIVE It PILLS. They euro constipation, LiUousness and torpidity of tho liver. M cents a box at all drui£&at§. pA V AB RH CREt |, BM , * /•» ,J&?fAMBNV^S < ao8eB _^° Be " ,>aiD ' “ * c fWfever ^ 13 Once. Thorough i r : - L M m Treatment Cure. Not a Lifl* ivill \ uid or Snuff. Ap 0.0 ( A _ ‘ |,, withFJnger. ka^\ hSt^fever t ^ v i 5 .SA.l y (;1tc 11 a Trlal - 60 ce nU at. Drri*gi#ttt. f>i oent* by mad r**»t«rod. s*''°i'‘r'V'v^i^m) l Kns'. l, ’Drntr Ow. N. Y. i lrt s, to, patents! Ifa-wsa IS v£S'I Oii'ti CiUlDb- 1 uatfl obtained. Write lor BRYANT & STRATTQM’S Mo */>§U,<\r■U» y-af y. Yount nwn Uu^ht ; RhorUhand, penmaAiahip. ami a—iatu-a to po* <"*■ VARICOCELE EXTaZZ,. I-Tlnx Affsnt. ren-t SKU.redtsIl j -YOU ARE ' | I A M $ 60.5 TON i I WAGON SCALES. i LIAR r«i4. ivw Pri«« Li«. n^m trej f-rttou hm. i err--. •:' q ”BuSIOuS liut. hu». im a S. Brown’s Iron Bitters is tho Best Liver Itegulator — re¬ moves bile, clears tho skin, digests tho food, CUKES Belching, Heartburn, Heat in tho Stomach, etc. It is tiie best-known remedy for female infirmities. The genuine lias above trade mark and crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by Brown Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md. ^ O 0| PI ||(|# U wrnre.rr ,m.y or oktkn. TION »RoM ttuaUfSHS. ... HABIT Miaa ' a •• «L&-~......... M. «Raf .’.UVf a NTI’K|>. Ml). 1 . BKAIIHIM, M. vUKtlJ f. O Hoi 16S ( oluuibui, (la AGENTS WANTr.ll r„ ib< live. BLAINE & I CLEVELAND HENDRICKS, & lnlVol.be LOGAN, T.W.Khi/11 Id) Vol !,j lloN A. BahIivh. Authorizca. Authentic, Impartial. Complete, of 1SH4 the Outarll />'•»* ana ell Chmirtst. The leading duntiaiifn hooke other* iota 1. MT7Hth thou««fi<i In prret. L*ah vol.. ftOO DUM.II.ftO. 60 percent, to iAifcnt*. Outfit Frte /■•rights pall. Ajjriiit* earn Sin to %'U> a «Uy. Now U th® time to 5 »ke money fMt krnd 1or Extra Term*, Hartford, at once, to = AUTKOKU 1't’DlJhlfINU <•«., « on^ 80LID SILVER 8TEM W1NDINCI FULL JEWELED GENTS’ SIZI WATCH FOR $ 12 . 50 . FULLY OjrAKANTKKIl. Thl. offer m*d. for 60 daya only. Good* sont by KxpreM 0. O. U , aubjoof Vo inspection before purch&ninjt. J. P. HTKVLNH iXi CO., Jenrftler. Atlwrita. La. CLEVELAND S 3 1 “$18 fcufcttis WftfiTF.fi( and HENDRICKS. < om i»li tft-, hire, Official, Frank lllna* f rati ii hy 4 ot. Trlol^tt, «**l»lea Till'* it* laruillf* and frleii'l* frfi of the di*tinxul*M<i eandblttloH Hit IIKHTI Ou •lit Free U> a<‘tii»l 'l'bJa can timers. rmseers. Mpfda) Hoff' I»1 ter terms in* to to those those ordering, order! m from * distanoe. Is tli*i book roll want. U'rltn quick for circulars, or ‘1 60o. for Irru‘puctu*. My ltl u |n<- V l.opn ' ■ rsits 1 mm St Mipm GOOD NE WS ravi?fffirI TO A S SZ S I (.n ntr .t jn'iu« • -im 1 1* owor of fmmd. Now’* four i m • to t up — ordm* lor our t:tu<>! r t ui I (Afl* erul< e— -m« i.Mnuti ful Gold HbiiI <>. M < ms Jtoee Ghina Tea tint, or Hnt.d* >r. Ueccritoa ColdlJ LeocrMt^d hiiTMom llnsn I'fmnor Set, m tjohl Jl.snti Mona Toilet Set. 1*or lull f»»rtj« ui;>r» »<Mrr»s Till. 4- K 1C AT AMLItM AN TEA GO., l\ <>. Ii ox :;l and :ia V«a< j tNew York WMII’S SHIMRY, Nashville. Term. Cloaed It* llHIi your with 354 young ladle*. An octiv*,prttjpwwive, oon-i»«ct»nan »• *•<>i. '1 iioug&ndt of parunt* bav*i tV-Mtod it* vain* , and «till it increa*«*. A grand nfiw building with a erinm# room lit f‘-r a nuoon wa» urticted duruiif tbe jour. Opoua iSj-pt. Ifit. Au drwfin. for new catalogue, lilt. Vv . h. WAItll. NORM SS2W& KASILY t 11)1.0. HOOK FI) KK. DR. J. C. HOFF.IIAN, JI.FF. RStlN, Wisconsin. TELkliKAPUY -AUD— RaUrortd Agents’ ltuKine*-H tau UN1VER OPIUM Am) Whisky Habits Cared IN TIIK1.L VVKKKH. For Pamphtot*. Proof* and Terms •ddreM, ia eoBfld*O' 0 a, with 3ct . Bfanip. W. BKL LA.TIY, M. 1) . lirnMl Strait, AtlDDtn, (■*. ii+Zm. CURES VHISE ALL ELSE TAILS. byrvp. b%’druw;ytH. TMUngtxxL U*** In titup. Hold COWSUi 5 TNEJU rZVVZU T'"“ V- W TT7 S r”'” m 1 PATEliTSSr *w;ar, ^® W. 8 Book M. t>. P*i. O.. on , ARFNTft IWAlJTFn jETERICnA. ^ 0 ufevelaud. : 6 j ^ .. f 0 hto. ’*« 1 PS w*rtwuiM.Sfc *«m. Advertising Cheats!!! ‘ It has become bo common to begin an artl cle in an elegant, interesting ptyl “Then run it into some advertisement that we avoid all such, “And simply call attention to the merits o! sible, Hop Bitters in as plain, honest terms as po* “To induce people “To give them one trial, which so proves their value that they will never use anything “The Remedy so favorably notice ! in a! the papers, Religious “Having and secular, is at other medicines. a large sale, and is supplanting “There is no denying the virtues of the Hop plant, shown and the proprietors of Hop Bitters hava great shrewdness and ability * * » “In comiKiunding a malieino whose virtues are so palpable to every one’s observation." Did She Die.’ “No! "She lingered awl suffered long, pining sway all the time for years,’’ “The doctors doing her no good;’’ “And at last was cured by this Hop Bitters tho papers say so much about.” ‘ 1 Indeed! Indeed 1” “How thankful we should be for that medi¬ cine." — A Daughter's Misery. “Eleven years our daughter suffered on a bed of misery, “From a complication and Nervous of kidney, liver,rheu¬ matic troublo debility, “Under “Who the care her disease of the best various physicians, gave names, “But no relief, “And now she is restored to us in gooc health by as simple a remedy ns Hop Bitters, that we had shunned for years before usingit." —The Fa he nts. Father is (Jetting Well. “How “My (laughters much bolter say: father is since ho used Hon Bitters.” “Ho is getting Well after his long suffering from a disease declared incurable." “And we arc segiad that he used your Bit ters.”—A Lady of Utica, N. Y. I^jT None genuine without a bunch of green Hops on the white label Shun all the vile, poisonous III OH I stuff with “Hop” or “Hops ' in their uawe. The OLD RELIABLE FAIRBANKS SCALE, m rijl Thrco and four Ton K uUos at greatly reduced should priocB. Every Cotta Faiudask# i (Jin mid Hunter Write fo* have a Genuine Bualk. prices. FAIRBANKS A CO., New Orleans, La. t Mw i\ ■ r®- —nwwuKB ^1 Wi«h IIone.b and # j - | l.uildcr, Titbit*. FV IlTl [ Irnulntt The bc*t «dl* I ,n * ' ,,Tflr,tlon of ,,l ° ** a - Htran*, within Ix m .ft the reach of cheap. all. Large Price WKtKKUttm J Ag«nii, .Special profit* to yw/ I prions by car 3 loud. Thirty two tliouaand in use sine* •ZggSgZjtt. I I January I at, 18H4. Enclose stamp for olrcu* — lar and terms to Agent*. Address r - - —■ Tim<OBIII.NATION ■111.CO.Springfield,Ok VIRGINIA FEMALE INSTITUTE STAUNTON, VIRGINIA. MRS. GEN. J. E B. STUART, Principal. T Th. next session opens Bept. 11th. lost, with a full enr I>* •uimrior Tflaoh«rn, Ti-rimi moderate for a<1?au t&gua oflWml. Niimlmr of puyila Uumod. Apply for catalogue * to tbe Principal.