Newspaper Page Text
GLASS-EATING.
■Men who Pretend to to Chew
and Swallow Glass.
A Probable Explanation of tho Manner in
which it i3 Dane.
No matter how absurd anything is>
the great majority of people are willing,
if they cannot understand it, to accept
any explanation offered and be satisfied
with k. This has been especially true of
the alleged glass-eating, which has uow
become a regular “profession” with a
number of men—a woman has never yet
tried it. The feat originated in Phila¬
delphia, where, it seems, a negro appear¬
ed to develop a peculiar fancy for lamp
chimneys and other kinds of glass as an
article of diet. The doctors advertised
the thing quite extensively at the time
by declaring that the man would surely
die. lie did not, however, to
amazement, and still continues to
credulous people into the belief that he
consumes “fused sand.” His pose as
“original and only” glass-eater was
spoiled by the appearance of
othev applicants for glass-eating glory,
and now a dime museum is poor
that cannot support one of these
ostriches.” They are the legitimate
cessors of the sword-swallowers
eaters of fire, who were at one time
standard “wonder” at circuses and
seums. The sword-swallower is
to educate his throat so as to allow a
eign substance to remain in it for an
definite period. That this is a
task let any one who believes to the
trary run even his finger down his
and mark the result. The fire -
toughens his mouth with
washes, and then uses for fire
substances, which produce a great
of flame with but little heat. But
does this glass-eater dispose of his
lunch, which, if taken into his stomach,
would produce the same effect as a
of lancets or a dose of cyanide of
sium—a most agonizing death?
dered glass has long been used as a
ereign but cruel remedy for
cats, dogs, &c. Now, if the stomach
a dog or cat, which so easily
bones and other hard substances,
dispose of a lit’tle powdered glass,
then, do the interior organs of
colored “professor” at a
dime museum stand the strain of a
more or less, meals of this kind a
The most obvious answer to this is
the eater of glass never eats glass, in
although those who witness the
spectacle knd are afforded the
nity of exploring the dark recesses of
Ethiopian’^ gullet, mai«4i^_unab!c to
Ttriten. M peterstnnA ?*■ what as he a d(
-l c
medical rifah whoseccTt 1 5ca’te is
on the bills, of the manner in which
performer disposes of his dyspeptic
is ludicrous in the extreme when one
gins to think of the absurdity of it.
says: “From a personal examination
the man’s stomach, I have found that
gastric juices and alkalies
therein are just what will dissolve
iron or stone.” Any one who has
bled in chemistry knows that the
ment is a bare-faced—-romance. In
about the only acid that will
glass—hydrofluoric—is so powerful
•hould it get into this pretentious
vidual’s interior it would eat its way
in less time than it takes to record
fact. But the man really does
glass—not bites out of tumblers, but
glass such as lamp chimneys are
of—into his mouth, and, with a pinch
salt, probably to take off the
freshness of his meal, and a glaas of
to tvash it down, chews it up and appar¬
ently swallows it. At any rata, the
does not remain iu the performer’s
as an examination by the writer’s
proved. And it was real every-day glass,
as several pieces taken from the
just as he was on the point of
them are now in the reporter’s
book—that is, if the sharp
have not cut their way out. So thLs
proves one theory, that the alleged glass
“as a clever imitation, manufactured
of gelatine, clarified and made brittle, to
represent the real article. The gelatine
would, of course, do the man no harm;
hut would, in fact, prove rather nour¬
ishing. Another theory is that the per¬
former had previously been a sword
swallower, thereby having made his
throat so callous that the glass would not
cut it on its passage to the stomach; but
this does not explain how it is digested.
From all this, knowing that the glass
does not stay in his mouth, and being
equally certain that it cannot go into the
stomach, there is but one conclusion to
be drawn—that the glass is intercepted
before reaching its destination. But how
can this be done? Y'ery easily. The
sword-swallower educates his throat to
allow the presence of the sword; the
glass-eater prepares his to receive a tube
of some description, which probably has
a strainer in the end to allow the water
which he drinks to filter through, hut
retains the glass until such time as he
can dispose of it without being observed.
That silver tubes can be worn in the
throat we all know from the numerous
instances in which they have been used
in surgical operations. Meanwhile glas -
eating is becoming one of the crowded
and it behooves the mao a-
gers of dime miiwims to be oa the hoftk
for some new dietetical curiosity. Glas»
eating is already a “chestnut.”— Boston.
Transcript.
lie Holds the Fence.
Several weeks Detroiter _ , .,
ago a pur
chased a piece of land in the west end of
Ute countv. After the purchase had
been completed he eno-aTed ° a surveyor’* ',1
services p to see if ... he had been cheated .
The discovery was made that al.ne-ience
was over on his land eight inches. When
he went to the owner of the adjoining
property with the statement the man re¬
plied :
“Stranger, the row about that fence
began twenty-eight years ago. It wa»
then bve^t , . ,, hehne , • and a. ho + two __.
over
men ht and fit unt 1 one was killed a
the other crippled. After a while it was
moved a foot, and then the other owners
fit and fit until the lawyers got the two
farms. The fence was then moved an
other foot, and the two new owners spent
half the year in jawing each other and
the other half in lawing. One died and
the other got sold out on a mortgage, and
6:1
when I got this farm the . fence . moved a
was
over another foot. Then I fit ana fit,
and two years ago was kicked in the rib»
and laid ur> for three months Durin*
that time the fence waa moved to
present lint. So it’s still on your land*
“Yes."
“Well, Is’posethe proper thing is a
row. If you’ll go out by the barn with
your revolver I’ll come out and hunt
you with the shot-gun. If you git the
drop on me don’t let go, because I shall
Ttook ,, „
the Detroiter some Hme to eon
viace the farmer that he didn’t care for
eight inches of land, and that he wouldn’t
have the fence moved for fiftv dollars,
and when he had succeeded the old man
drew a long breath of relief and replied:
“That’s kind o’ you, and it leaves my
boys a chance to fit and fit after I’m
gone. I hope you aint cornin’ out hero
to live alongside o’ me!”
“No.”
“Glad on’t. If you lease, git some
man who’ll want them other eight inch¬
es. The boys and l is lonesome for ex¬
citement.”— Detroit Free Press.
A Feline’s Fright.
Last week iu connection with a study
of the carnivora, says a Denver scientist,
I obtained a cat from an acquaintance at
a dinner and carefully dissected m a
room above our stable. When I had fin¬
ished the cat was, as may be supposed,
hardly recognized. I cleaned the scal¬
pels, placed them in the case, and took
them to the house. No sooner had I put
them down than I observed our own cat
«ro and sniff all around the oese with a
peculiar look of intense wonder. I tooK
the instruments a-BLv and thought no
more about it; but a short time after I
returned to the remains of the dissected
cat in order to prepare the skeleton,
when I saw our eat standing at a distance
of of .w about R a w foot from r the dissect.on, r *• and 1
presenting an appearance of most help¬
less terror. She was trembling from head
to foot, and in such a condition of evi
dent horror that my presence had no of
fect upon her. After some moments she
noticed me, and then darted awav
a scared look such as I had never before
seen. She did not return to the house
that day, a thing quite unusual, but on
the next day she returned and entered
the house with a fearful caution, as
though realizing the probability that she
herself might become a victim to science )
and her whole conduct was changed.
This suggests that the country custom of
using dead birds, weasels,etc., as a scare
to the like is not entirely unreasonable,
and it would be interesting to know
whether others have noticed similar ef¬
fects.
A Defective Education,
“This edication they fill hoys up with
now days don’t seem ter ’mount ter much
much fer ord’nary use,” said a Dakota
settler.
“What makes you think so ?” asked a
friend.
“Why, there’s that boy uv mine—sent
him ’way ter school fer pretty nigh two
years and he aint capab’l uv taking right
holt uv ev’ry day bus’ness yet.”
“What has lie failed in ?”
“Well, pretty important p’int now 1
tell you. When he come back I give
him a mid’lin’ good boss and told him
ter see what he could make ov it and I’ll
be hanged ef he didn’t trade a couple uv
times and come here with an old plug uv
ahoss that wus a colt ’bout thirty-five
years J a^ro. ^ He couldn’t tell nothin’by J
lookin’ at its teeth you see. I’ll be
busted ef I don’t b’lieve ^ vou could shove
& iioSv. onto thnt boy with fnlsft teeth
fixed up by one uv these ’ere dentist
sharksl”— Estelline (Dakota) Dell.
An African Prodigy.
The Hamburg Zoological garden hat
received a full-grown specimen of the
Canis pictus, or spotted wild dog, ol f
central Africa. The creature is a native
of the western Transvaal, a«d in ap¬
pearance an astonishing hybrid between
a hound and half a dozen other animals.
He has a size and general form of a deer¬
hound, the tail of a fox, the black snout
of a hyena, and the spots and stripes of
a leopard. His voice is a sort of
coughing howl, and he pace* his cage
all day long with the restlessness of a
THE THIRTEEN CLUB.
The s,or * of a Xcw York Co “ W '
_ There three , rather , clubs , , .
are unique in
New York; that, judging by their recent
growth, will in time become quite cele
brated. One is the Thirteen club which
meets at dinner at 7:13 o’clock on the 18th
of each month, to disprove the popular
superstition that one of every thirteen
who sit down to a table will die before
the year is out. The club started several
years ago with thirteen at a table, but so
popular have their dinners become by
reason of the feast of wit and wisdom,
not their to dinner say the viands week provided, the that Brigh- at
next at
ton Beach hotel, Coney Island, thirteen
tables, each seating thirteen, will be pro
'ideo. There arc thirteen courses on the
menu, ; thirteen at table, ,; thirteen mtrodLd speeches
made aml tho numb( is in
every possible way and shape. Not be
mg able to make the menu card in the
shape of the numeral, the Thenecrol- suggestive
form of a coffin is adopted.
ogv of the club effectually explodes the
theory of the fatality of the number and
the clnb is gaini „g recruits every dinner
and will have a headquarters and take d:
place among social clubs next sraspi. cM>,
The club is the Twilight
which meets «it dinner every removed^ fori.iifflit,
and aftcr , he cloth has been
cusses the leading questions of the day,
pro tions and of the con., speakers, according who to the are genmmy pr*J§«*
; speakers prevents the chty from evef be
ing a mutual admiration society, and con
\ sequently its dinners have become yerj
attractive to a large class who enjoy this
; species of intellectual sparing. The
other club is i eilst known of the three:
indeed, though with a larger member
snip than either, little is known ot it out
side of its members. It is known as the
“ club, and the badge of member
ship—a peanut—must be uoinon e\cry
occasion as an ornament or amulet, in
metal, jewelry or carved wood.. Any
member accosting another who cannot
display the badge can call on him
dinner for as many of the club as hft likes.
It may be the call may be made in thu
middle of the night and the challenged
party aroused from his slumbers; or it
r^L^the demand may be m*de m
the breakers of Coney Island or Long
Branch—no matter when or where, if the
counterfeit peanut is not produced the
penalty is established. The result is that
many of the members carry their emblem
of membership attached to a string
around the neck, and wear it night aroused and
day. The gentleman who was
from his slumbers wore his this way.
The The Hon. Hon. Jacob Jacob Hess, Hess, of of the the subway. subway.
commission, w T as accosted the other day
by a fellow member in the surf at Long
Branch, > but he was thaf prepared, generally h*ying the
| goldett pcanut ^th“ dangles
tlic challenging pnitj cannot produce it
emblem it required by one who has, he w
called on to pay the penalty, and m this
enkhif dinnera°tin/WestUnddiotel!^ tnul’ hdlV.rmnf n vffi'v elaborate
the trainer Shnnt and barker Stic of hon!f™! ITrt-ihl the
new for tucked
his w-liihi ivory acting peanut rn.astcr into ffiHjjwjgtoe mght at a
fistic gnthery«X§id IXigfW SjaHBB»faught
when Pe“ £ «
lengdliiiu
1 becoming cemmou 1 ingfflSma e
imitation is generally J * r¥ worn
as a watch . 1 charm. V
There is quite an ex-citement among the
dudes m the Knickerbocker because
, some tradesman has obtained a list of the
members and forwarded them to the c ub
i address m his business circular. It is
against the rule in the club that its letter
boxes should be used for advertising
purposes, and generally all advertising wholesale;
circulars arc destroyed by the
but in this case the wily tradesman used
square tinted envelopes, such as .ladies
generally slender, use, and the superscription feminine
was in tall, fashionable,
chirography, and the disappointment of
the receivers may have heightened their
sense of club etiquette.— Constitution.
♦ • to----
Sweets For the Sweet
When* a young lady says she has two
strings to her bow, she means that sht
has two beaux to her string.
Alaska women eure babies of and crying holding by
taking them to the sea shore
them in the water until they are silent.
The young lady who can peel a potato
in five seconds is as useful as the young
woman who speaks five languages is or¬
namental.
The principal beauty of the Morman
religion is that the same woman doesn’t
have to get up the entire winter to build
the kitchen fire.
A womay that takes ail the fashion
magazines generally goes to a dressinakei
to learn what is new in the fashions, and
never makes her own dresses.
Many women think they are domestic
if they stay at home to entertain company,
while their husbands think they are as
little domestic at home as abroad.
Ax old widower says: When you pop
the question to a lady, do it with a kind
of laugh, as if you were joking, “f she
accepts you verv good : if she does not,
you could say you were only in fun.
“I THOUGHT. .Miss S., that you hated
that flirty minx: yet you went up and
kissed her,” “So 1 do hate her, and
that is why I did it. Look at the big
frppL'Ipq nn " hr*r U ] r»hln C 'vliere I kkspd S Ilf
P° w,ler ° n ,
-
“IVjiich side of the street do you live
jVlrs Kipplc?'’ usked a counsol, cross
examining a witness. “Oh, either side
sir, if you go one way it's on the right
side: if you go the other way, it’s on the
left,
For the escape from \ the .}sU.m ,.(• of If. il* *»
and debris, which, i. re.a'nerl Would vitiate
the bod ly Bunts ami overthrow health. J hat
Important channel of exit, the bowels, may lot he
kept “at permamently free finm otwtraaion*
which n t only liberate* i.npi.ritie*, but invlK
orates the linmeof tt.e intestinal canal, when
weakened bv const,pal ion or the unwise use cf
violent purgative*. The »tomaeb. liver and
urinarv ori;an, xre likewise reinforced an-l
aroused to healthful action by this beneficent
tonic and corrective, and every organ, fiber.
muscle and nerse experiences a share of 14
invigoraljng influence. Unobjectionable in
flavor, a niowt genial ann wholesome medicinal
•slim ul a nt. an* l owing ua efficacy metly t<* o'ltanic beet
»our e, exclusively, household it w Ihe account r. ul Its
adapted to use, on
ear*-, w,d« stop*and >1* sly avtio:..
The Coquette.
Why is the coquett condemned?
She is an amiable being; her mission is
t° please,
There is nothing small about her.
She does no business at retail. She dis
tributes pleasure at wholesale, while hei
mischief is disposed of in job lots. amid the
She is the enlivening element
heavy formalities of otherwise society. ’twould She stirs be
up the froth where
a solid omelet that is served up to you.
T is the coquette that provides all the
amusement, suggests the riding the party, pri
plans the pic-nic, gives dash to
vate theatricals.
she is the soul of the house, the salt of
the banonet the <mbt!e newer of her
personal presence is felt rather than do
tined everywhere.
She is a blessing to the community at
\ am when JLSj slm enmlovs her time remov
of the
average young man posessed of
The man who has become
the opinion that a woman dare not jilt
him becomes, sometimes, a useful citizen
through the coquctt’s ministrations.
How could society fortune! dispose of that
pampered dashing tally son of unlimited possessing a
ho, ice-cream as
sc ts aIld superabundant sentiment in liis
liini composition, if the coquett did not take
under fj her Z win enures 0 * for ji season ?
Ah) p , of life the co
quette is only too rare.
It is not every one that possesses the
ability for such a career. It requires
Ef.“* * «......
gome one attempted to be facetious
when he said a coquette was a rose from
which every admirer plucked a leaf, leav
Wory in^ only the thorns for her husband, but
ySqi,ettc teaches the reverse,
Th e oftener makes a model
wife.idW experience gives her a
knowledge of men. She knows their
Weakness thoroughly and enables her to
w , !1()t , 0 all her husband's foibles
;^k| hoodwink him into accepting her owu
without him discovering he is doing so.
But then if you do not like the co
qiiett, Affile jym will have no dificulty in find
ing a companion of the same mind
as yourself,
Paroxysms of Sense.
q- 11K saloon-keeper Vo should take out a
pi t , s „ guides so many
schooners over the bar.
Wanted— vaccination against water
melons apples, and — string » . beans,
green
^ * 10 wl '* save our bojs? ^
The Kinff of Greece doesn’t want to
sit ; on on his his throne throne any any longer, longer, eh! eh! Been
roller skating? Have seen the girls in
the same way.
But few of us are ashamed to commit
s ' nl) b ut ashamed to repent of trims
though the gates of heaven s
mercy / are always J onen.
A Indian ^ nMne of Yadwi
Przbylin.ska has just been marrietl.
! ^j je f (1( q g b( .t tn . 1J0W that slio has sue
ceeded in „ ettin g rid 0 f the name.
“Papa,” % said a very „L young J woman,
» young gent, (; throws a kiss
*0 *?M a young roplLl lady, wllttt should she do?
it,” the old man.
eoidirtons P.in.osopnY teaches us to accept our
m life as equal to our under
standing, and not to continually growl
U»e pri.ee of admission.
An ol«\ lady, vending a biography of
Charles O’Conor, the alleged father of the
Vcw York ; bar Ua Ve exclaimed- ; V “Poor man!
he had . dreadful , set of children, .,1
a
h If the decollete fashion does not
^ ft , jne 80mcwhere .. uya 1}r0 ther
Talm f „ tho primfttiTO ' fig-leaf will
be ndisi 1 , cnsabl c toi i ct nrt i 0 i 0 .”
A Camfohnian got sick after smoking
ninety . cigars in two hours. It is conjec
tured that some young fellow must have
entered the room with a cigarette.
tiif.uk is only one time in a woman s
life when she. has nothing at all to say,
and that is when she hears that the wo
man across the street has a new silk
dress.
NTo one who has faith and is willing to
work for satisfactory results can sum life
up as a failure. Faith and effort have
made more than one man street com
missioner or constable.
“Is it true you are going, to marry
again?” “Itis very true.” “And whom
do you marry?” “My dead wife’s sister,"
“Is she very handsome?” “No.” “Rich?"
“Not at all.” “Then why have you cho
sen her?” “To tell you the truth, dear
end order to not change mother-in
|. uv
“If ye plaze mum, the cook has
her hand an axes to be excused
a few days, fur it’s most crazy she is
will the pain.’' “Indeed, Rriilget, Ill
do nothing of the sort. I expect to din
tomorrow the Society scveia) piomiiunt im in of
of for the Prevention
Cruelty do to Animals, and the cook must
her work or find another place, pain
or no pain.”
A riiir.osox’iiEit asserts that the reason
why ladies’ teeth decay sooner than the
is because of the friction of
the tongue and swe etness of their )ir<s.
p ro f c;rothr, Brooklyn Boiml of Health,
jayg Red Star Cough Cure is free from opiate*
xnd highly efte acioi:-. Twenty-live cent*,
Sf . eJ1 „ Ml ... court : “ iTlaoncr, how*
U'Rny.J’R.rrals of n-.tiitoes .11-1 youI wyiR
to© I’m koIh- ”WeI"''".if ;! .iitn-is I
“ o. l.,-ure. for o v/m-n
L 1 ' ■
After the most exhaustive . pr/ictfra. nrariira' terts in in
h^pitals and eisev/l,ore, tho (told medal and
oerflficate of highest merit «■ere awarded to
St. Jacobs Oil, as thelr^f I>atn-<mrmit remedy,
at the Calcutta Internalionai I'<xliibition.
.. y,., „ ai(1 R f„Hie,im:.titv ■r'.-.’i !a«ty. "t think
Mary luw «n«.l« niri. r -ry matei. t
*” T
anil, of comw, hecun afford t<» gratify
Her every wiBh*”
Stricture of tile nrethra, however InveteraU
nr . iHnulieuinl from previous bad treatment,
, r ‘ , ecrt ijv and irt-iinaie iitlv rureil by our new
a n ,| ,'enl «if methods. Hook, reference* and
: R , , n . for ten cents in stamp*. World’s
Hi*,,ensure Medics'. V Y Associaliou, G03 Main
- -____________
/,,-alsnd '• » ’ n». aone into 1 tie voicano !>«,
->■• 1 ,. '
For dyppkpnia. indige?tion, d^preiwifon oi
epirlta. general debility in h<*ir various forms.
otherintermlWentfevei«.r/.»’Eerro-Phoephor. „iv, a» a preventive avainri fever and asraeand
»ra.,| Elixir of ralisaya.'imol- by • nswell.Haz.
Kr <| & Co., New York.and sold byalldriurgistp,
j, h,* | K ,.t tonic : sr.d 'or palienw recovering equal.
iri>m fever or ulhtr niutiM it liu ao
‘A ;nor»r)i , fl treatment r< >r ^ rents. Pieo's
j'** muiy ter Catarrh. Sold by druftfiets.
Aheavy growth ot ha ’ r is Produced by tba
^vervdescriptlon of of malarial Ajei’aAgue disorder Cure. yields
to the curative power
silence being Rooil for the wise,how much
setter lor the fnnllrti._
To Con«..imptivee.
Reader, ran you believe that the Creator
Afflicts one-third of mankind wttli a disease
Pierce’s 0 “Golden ' Medical'"Discover")” has
cured hundreds of case* of consumption, and
pronounced ' in curable* Send be
cause one lung ,wa* almost pone. 10
^d'Xuiln^^: Association,
World’s Dispensary Medical «ua
Main street, Buffalo, N. Y.
Sincere blame or praise should be treated
-espectfuily.
. ____ . ...
ana Hil»lwin a D”i.-,'AY.> T iTea 1 ’t 0 d rou"7< 1 °t 110
South this summer and fall than for many
Jm'own publishers of Richmond, have been ex
Pecting and are prepared to meet any reason
*» work for them .his season had better com
munlcate with them at once.__
Lyos’s Patent Metallic Stiffeners prevents
M
------ ----------
If you have Cutting, Scalding: or Stinging
urine
ure.
A srlorious defeat is to be preferred to un
Inglorious victory.
The of Wolnnn
? . 0 5rtbT^J^ill^«WrS3o the bloom , , . of youth , ^S: . ..
ness of tho sex cause to
ato^lie 1 r<il’/iule!l * »T * 1
f on There is but one
remedy which will restore the faded roses and
SSSSS
which ia fairest ami dearest io ait mankind -
the beauty emit lie health of woman,
Happiness that don’t nmko us forget others'
misery is happiness indeed.
T k ^r ^*„
Betwwnd(8e>8ea n t nlrIff MdftlU1
it is better to t„. provided with ebrup .n,i .impin
remedies,for»n ■)icommoncii»oniiTHo«ooui[h<,<-oid«,
* iSS.lt
auroandMreremdyrorahdjHeMeftoftheiunKHund
chl '" t - »m wmn it i» <-«rtuin to our.-. U n<j
uon. ""thlsbron known ut'd' ui*tuu'thob» for"m«n°v U y«r!I
»nd it i« no exa*K<T»tion to ««y »
remedy in the world r or cough*, etc.
A QUESTTON ABOUT
Browns Iron
Bitters
A NS WE RED.
Tho question has probably been naked thnneandfl
of timo*. ‘Mow can Browr’H Iron Kittore cure every
kVi-'^iiD-n^’rJRiVi^VDio'Lny^'i'.L’ti'ii PhyBioiann rucogni^.e Iron Vito bnut. restoratife
an
agnnt known to th« profonsion. and imiuiry of any
leading chemical Hnn will fmhetafiHate the aasertion
oj.h*r»niihi«nunu*^inmrtiLTm’.^Tjhi^K^oun- fn'iportnntfnM^Tniiiniii-iiiimoticu. iti«,
nVri'out* ov n ’ A'li/s) cotubiuttion Y Vt i Vi’ hui it it m been no t.minct. found,
lr«Ati»fAoiory iron BITTERS&'S «T*r
BROWN’S IRON
ciiro»iii<iiAttHii<>ii.iiiiio.min-ns, WrakncsH,
TiveUFeeUug,ue««Yaltt^wiity,Pttlntou» l>TsprpRi„, Malaria, c.,iiin Favrij,,
Hide, Back or LimbMlfaclrtchc and Nuiirn.
DnUVwil O InUil Di I I tllO.not cure In n
SSSS*
fedf 0 ^Althr'csiw ” 1 — toeeffeotieiiAiiAiiy !„th“'•h^in^VerTuuiin.Iil more rapid enamerkea.
KWi ujo ome ro»pi
jurion*. ISnSSSfSS^Sollle^lm. i^hyiieiant ?S3!S^«£SXr2*iS
and Dru^nma commend it.
Genuine has Trad# Mark and cro«wMt rod Mn®f
on WT»n.toT T4HK KOftfriim.
W OWilN’S Suro»t and Mam fit lte’giiDiior
BELLAMY’S EXTRACT
GOSS Y PIU
Root* irs rooommand it. Sold by all
.J. 15 DANIEL, Wholesale Agt.,
KILMER’S .”. Sill® c*cr:^5
5
▼ GFor§ srvj
3
Pricl** 1? -
DR. §
f,
25
JONES
PAYSthe 5
Ton Wtiton
!*•» Hteel B*aria|. »,
Tor* Hun i«4 ll.im Boi fur
^ 900.
i kvwrv *St* Heal*. For fref fr)t%
■ entloB thl> paper and »d4r*«a
JQMCS OF KINOHMITON.
H1NCU A MTHN. N. Y*
-
HERMAN
u FOR ONE DOLLAR.
Te
r! J'"''''•«»*■..; Vl. llYc.a.X"™
<: lly ,
BZ |H ft, |lfl ft I rt V B S {figi t\n ft* SH | 9 II #1 M Al
BpoeiM»*r*m*ii.hiMh**ui»*eie**e^b»i!i Hi
,i,. W of
aM.thno#anii«of cMoaol ti.« w.»r*t kiuU and ion*
*tattdln* liavw It*»vf»f5ir«i<i. l»d««d..»o#tronirl# wyfalib
iogttherw'una v a
pliiffttioii. OPIUM 1 ftirnd CURE! iri fow (lays. Will o<)#t
vfftfi a
nofliingr to try it, an*1 a euro in eertatn. A«l<lr«tgH
•ramp for n»f»I $. .Vlru. .1. C. CAIlfiTUN*
I a I i ii striii, Aiiuiln, (*a.
_
I C n POTXABB SL WI each MJ for M ACil Brut I Jf and KN.
ff /
■ Q Anael.ed. IVarranted fi»• year*. 8e«tun trUH/d*
Buy diret t *i,rl **«« RIto %.(&,
OrnaiglvFn a* pmnlui/i*. Writ* (< r f R l‘.P. cir¬
cular with IOf'0 teetlffiOrilal* ^rx-tri ever r s ate.
OfcO. 1‘AYSL A C O. ff 11 **-------‘ Mai*
.................... . .....
C1VEN A WAY I JLSTS S&t
^J, ta rf ,, 3T- rj fni
** "tJuJTZnZ' >Z </o»f J
*i, '*w» mm mi unw ■ n .irM,
n.„» e,
RUPTURE ja/k fr«*c. A.idts»cn O. mm tlit v*. Ex{ihin.itton Ir5! lin, .d and N. Y
ifi'.n K. way,
WOTS \J PEARL ivony TOOTH POWDER
UHpInfl Tael h Per fart r ed U#uia llanliliy,
fe ■ toHoldinrnMiHetrn -Send era**
D ^aldlUfldilAM f, ' r ‘’insalorj COL. U
Att'r, WatshlfUton. D O.
W WORLD.
TVt^LO.XxXlV Magazine Rifle.
tar large or r » rto—a!i alat«. Th* •tronge.t ihaotln* rifle rntia. PaHWl ~ 'S.
asm %• y guaranteed, a.,i ih* onlj absolutely Ml* r.fla on the market. >/
^AfeLLKtV, erORTTMl tfAWhyj ANT* TABorT RIKl-KS, world wnirwarl. E«nd ter
F1UK AftlfTB CO., New Hnvcn, Conn.
KJSLICKE The Best T
Waterproof
Csaf.
H <\ Th* ri«H BaANDfiLMlKB la warrant*.! wa*T».»i and wit! ►** • p >«« dry to
B fp m \l 'te h«r*1*at ftorm, T‘m pt)|fMKI, fll.H'IER pwrfrrt riding e*»at, and
fy . _ _ a u n*w tb* "Fiaa
M ^ i w A A* M U U JT* Fy V\ “ cr.oara tb« rnttra a«kt<l> R*«ar« «.f (mitatlotia, Ni Not,* gctvmfna wtth«vu« Maf*
F* ^Brand” t* llliiatrafrd Cataiogua trer A ■! TdV«», Aowtun, 1
wiajqira s r i 3C i. ,! ’ n|ag ~.
ELY'S CATA
CK E AM mt BALM
■/fl'Cnm
IS WORTH flj
S 1 OOO
... Woman Cnllti ,
Of
■niflcrina from
0ATARRo.-|| n » rr * P DU kgfffi
-A. E. NEWMAN, HAY-FEVER
Grill ins, Mic h.
A nftrticle is tOrts. applied hr into miil each »t uontril dniggiets. .ml is ejreeebla Sendfor
touiw. Pric. BUOTHKIIH. or Drumrials, Owego. S. Y.
circular. Kl.Y
Tho llib RpOlfflCf Ul OuiGol PllPiflCifVin Uul luulljf III HjifllPP llulUi 0
.
tyTb?a<u*when'Tar-S*" ’ w* t>>r'V'xfu come« P to Tir£
»howin*»u the tintv of the rainbow. *2 to *4 per
^^^^.^Tptionmo^ot six and p.pera flm* gfreoTi order
ur»i sic. order from each county to
“ e,ulotlln s thU
11 . ni.KDSOE,
BOOK AGENTS WAMTED for
PLATFORM ECHOES
•r LIVING TRUTHS FOR HEAD AND HEART,
By John B. Gough. -
HU l«*t and crowntn* Ufa work, brim full of thrilllnr I alar*
Mi. humor and pathoa. Bright, pura, and good, lull of
IIOTT. 1U1IO AgcnU oi ^"“oVuVh^n^. W.ulcil,—U«u end Woai.D. *1#»
||.** 00 . month mul.. aT-fiarmtc. m> »*«er.«c« »• we
rice Hxtrm Tirm, and I-., >>.<,«.. Write lor circuit, to
A. I». WOUTUIMU I’OH A CO., U.rtford, Co.x.
_
A STEP IN ADVANCE
OF ALL OTHER*.
Betteb instrument*.
LOWER PRICES.
EasierTcnm*
WRIT* ANrw TTIbest Plan.
TOR
FULL .
PARTICULAR* TO
□ EIN BROS. A CO.
NEWARK, N. J.
MEIIII:Al, l> HI*A KTMKNT
TULANE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA.
fFonnerlv, 1847, -1881, praot-ioul the UniYeraity instruction of in Louinians. tho din J
Itn HilvautaRefi for unrivaled, umwj
of tt»o Mouth-Wont »r« as the I nooirrei it
superabundant materials from tho «mat Oharity II •»
pilid with it« 700 bods, and ‘ 20 ,coo patinnts annually.
Mt iubmtH hay** no hospital-feos to pay and Hpocial iu
nt•lift i hi ia daily jriven <t lh« bnliirl* «/ the nick,** in no
other mwtitutmn. K*»ruatah)RU«Morinformatkm,addr««a
l»rof S. 15. (illAll.1,15, OT. tt; Orlcane, Dean, lift*
Utf-I 1 o Draw. 1-261. New y
IUiiiplrw. filotchrfl, Scaly or Oily Hkliu
lllemlaltea and nil Shin Olnenaes Cured
and (’omplcxloi ll^nufified by
Beeson’s Aromaiie Alum Sulphur Soap. I
Sold by DruRffiiitB or wont by mall on receipt ofB
• 1,1 crute by \VM. IIHKYDOPPI5 L, Mbhii-I
fuclurer* 208 North Front St., Philadelphia, Pa. ■
——1
Salvo COhtii DRUNKENNESS
and Infempernnre* tmlv not ln»u» &
out effectually. The sotentlAo aotl
dote for llu* AI roll o I flit bit and the
only bottle#. remedy Tllffhly tlmt endorsed iinro* to by tend the mod* trUf
•2k M leal known profpanUni Now York And pro phyalcUina. pared by Send well*
atumpR for clroulara and reference*.
A.ddraM “MAI,Vo REMEDY,” York.
No. i! Wont 14th St.. Now
It In HurprEin: loir
much I saved lu quality
ssm ami prluo on
% Enqino, Saw-Mill,
m Grist-Mill, Cotton
Gin, Feeder, Cane-Mill, Con¬
denser, hlrm Oil and other
M'ssa-A'fcA*!? Wa
m CoviOtflOUf (*B#
No Rope to •ECXIPKK’ Cui OR Horses’ lIALTHIt Manes. JNL k\
Oolebrutwl 11)1.K ecanaML
ftni hull ILK hor*e. H+Mmf- J
Halter Hlippod to by part any of U. H free.Ym W
of any Hold by all Saddlery, JTA
receipt Hardware fl. and KforneM Deol^rn
Special Bend for discount J'rice-Mat. to the Trade, rji
J. Rocheitcr* C. I.IGHTIIOUMK, N. Y.
Jhba ASTHMA CURED! irlre
(Jurimiii Antlimn Ouro nfirer / uilaU>
M m immediate relit/ Ut Ate ototM, luwuei <wim
fortablfl Kleitp; rffnote (•urea whnro »JI other* fall* M
{trial convlttr.ru the tnnnt skeptical I’r lo« Pta .aOaI
a 1.00. * of Draut«tft or 1*1 mail. Hamplo Fittfh MinnJ for
fttatnp. Dll. It* MVmrFMIAS.HI*. Paul*
FACE, HANDS, FEET,
iu»d all tktefr lmp*rf*ctlo«i. inclodlBf
lJ«v«lo|Mfneiit, Kumrfluou* Hah, Hlrln Mwki,
ffiiKTBU. m T .« W.rl., Moth, Kr->:ll-. r R»l Nl >“. *««.
k ||.„I,, fl-.r., rutin. «nt lh-'f
rv Dr. JOHN H. WOODBUKV,
1 B7 *. IWISL iUin.r,». T. K.IVJ l»TO. »«». 10. Nrkimk.
S700 to $2500 A VKAK. clear
of nil expert , *’4Ui
bo furnish made working for horitcsanuglvOtheir i>h. Auvniti preferred svhol* v uuiete i o ran
thotr own
tho ployed buHinoHH. tsparo monii'iiiH may townHand tm proiluody cm*
also. A low vacaiicloa In « Ve.
M. V JOHNSON A Co., H)U Main M , Hk .ir-ond,
,/r
UtL
, o Q cts.BUYS A HORSE
nioT HISS’S
no m>t ran theri.k of your iior.e for
| i"emediee went »r xnowie-tee r ”n to ear* Mm. wi. "I'lRte. n we. lowing winp*/
j how to Tell for the Age itor.« of Hone*, HiMuer root poitpaM f«a
*n. y. jiohsic hook CO.,
j 134 I>«Obar«l HL. N. Y. City.
1 — —.......... - .. . .—— —-------
Diair iimV S D>|1a rlllS. Great EciflKsli G tvtand
Rheumatic Remedy.
OvmI Ho* bl.IMb ro mill, .10 c to.
C/3 to 9H h day. Aempipii *- , *'ortb *i.e.* fKKte
l |,1 bph not urid *f tbw bonw * foci. A'ldreM
1 Hut whteii'*iSaf.i:tv lir.n Ho *» k»<. Holly.A1lch.
I
; I -H OMalnfl utamp fot
Iiiv«*ntt*r’n Otikic. L. Hixo*
ham, Patent JsMPryer. V.’uHti.iik'tori. \ )>. C
$3 KLICCTBIO BELT for Kifln rtyn, Pain, Nnrrrniff 4
w.oik. 15(*okfrot. Fi.KTCHW.il A (Jo .(-Moreland, O.
fflKjrCur 1 t£ -.ale* iiau taken ol lh*t me dm lead Im oi
fiu r *"' r.iie*, and has five*
r aWl TO » OAT8. W universal sattsfac*
MfOuar*nU»d •W not .oil “‘'"'..ttniiuv MURPHY BROS.,
, mum Rtriotar* • Pam, Te*
D Mr 4 ofjly by fbs the Cl hi! and i the far rank* or of
KmiChimfcalCo. j. riln now
^ among cin«v< -'flic the oddom. leading Mcdi*
ClnMinnaU.HS A A. J.. SMITH.
Obio. Undford. Po.
Soldiuy Dfttvgiata.
fn-cfclOO.
PiBO’n Honicdy for Comrrh in 11 le
Ik«t, ixuhitnt to L’^*, and Cbe*p«st. nj
B "a s £xiM ®
II<*a<itt< A loo coo<l Hay Tor Fever, Cold In <Su\ the CO He cents. ad, |9 |Q
nr,
A. N, |J......... ....... ~T Mrt y>rHree t ? 8B
DEQT Sit THE