Newspaper Page Text
HI ■ IIII i II
AN IRISH FAIR.
Characteristic and Curious
Scenes at Tuam.
r .„ m „ CheaiTciothe, ^ and People
Engaged in Selling Pigs.
Fun at the fair of Tuam is not quite
dp t. .11 that f( chimed of P -uoybrook
in its palmy days, says a correspondent
of the Now York Time*, but for an
American who wishes to pursue one
great f. branch of w twsrd emigration to
8 > l ( S r i Around
the ancient cross of ‘ I uam, wit T: i i t - wur< f/ i
figures in high relief of Christ and cer
tain Apostles and its Celtic decoration
in low relief on the abaft, compoacd of
interlacing ribbons, around m» .uu.ien
cross arc the vendors of cheap clothing
and beyond them the country people
who have pigs for sale. The clothes
peddlers arc at the hardest sort of work
making an auction of their stock, if auc¬
tion it can Vie called. For instead of
beginning at a modoratc price and aug¬
menting they begin at a high price and
come down. The descent from 10s. to
7s. is rapid, but when they get to Os.
and 5s. their agony is touching. 1 he
most dismal women, facing each other,
wail a ballad with much quaverm” and
drawl, wiiilc knots of fresh-faced elderly
dames, in brilliant pettico at*, caps, and
big cloaks or shawls of plaid stuff stand
by their wares, generally from two to
five well washed, combed, and clipped
grunters. Big pigs and little hogs, pink
“cracklings” and tawny “shoots," sleepy
monsters whose owners have a smirk of
self-satisfaction and hold themselves
proudly aloof, and scrawny porkers of
whom the master is wistful and ready to
bargain with the most unpromising—
these are scattered about the square and
three streets debouching on it. Since C
o’clock the animal which in i(s American
variety Bismarck abhors lias lifted up a
clarion voice in expostulation with fate.
The country people are generally clad in
the costume which has passed away in
most parts of Ireland, for here is the
heart of Connaught, terminus of a branch
railway, and Irish is spoken on all sides.
Lean and wrinkled men wear the can been
on their heads, but do not stick their
pipes in the hat band as of yore, proba¬
bly because the raubeeti is an old “stove
pipe” hat, tin* band of which is too tight.
Their swallow-tail coats are made of na¬
tive frieze, (pronounced hero fryzo,) their
breeches of corduroy, stockings of heavy
knit stuff, and shoes of unblackod leath¬
er. Borne wear hoots, other feggins.
Buell an old man is a sight to behold
when trying to humor a flock of sheep
through the crowd. His lean anus flap,
This knees bend, his face works in the
most persuasive gritnmaces, and from
his lips come floods of imprecations and
cajoleries.
Tho cattle are sold In a big field on the
outskirts of the town. The great space
is brown, flecked with black, ns one
looks across the cows and steers minded
by men, boys, and women. There is no
tethering and no placing inside rails.
Tho district is too primitive for Hint.
Tito steers jam together in close herds
with their heads inward, greatly deject¬
ed, and here and there a cow must bo
rounded in by many thwacks of a cudgel.
The fame of the Irish forearm when
wielding a shillnluh must have arisen
from a constant practice on tho backs of
cattle in a nearly pure agricultural land.
Now am] then a whole herd is bought,
and tho purchasers and their friends ex¬
tricate it and get it on the road. Then
it is worth seeing how the brown and
white spotted mass of cattle flows down
hill, charging tho up-e.mdng crowd of
people. Before runs one band of ex¬
cited peasants trying to keep the herd
back. Behind is another, flourishing
their sticks with a wild light in their
eves, ns if coming from some “cattle
Ipoil” with tho booty they have lifted.
Give them spears, bonnets, and plaids—
aud a scene from the old days before tho
discovery of gunpowder passes before
you.
Advert is ng by Balloons.
The practice of using balloons for nd
vortising is likely to become a nuisance
And a danger. J.orvl EHenborough, in
Pickering vs. Kudd, 4 Camp. 211*, threw
out a doubt whether a balloon, in pass
ing over a man’s land, committed a tres¬
pass; but In Kenyon vs. Hart, 6 B. A S.
24!*; 154 Law J. Hep. M. C. 67, Lord
Biaekburn said that he understood “the
good sense but not the legal reason of
the doubt,” and there need be no hesita
tion in saying that a balloon in the air
may commit a trespass. Probably, there
fore, the neighbor of the owner of a cap¬
tive balloon which infriu His bound:,
ry is entitled to an injunction, and if he
takes no step, in proof of time hi*
neighbor will obtain an easement for his
balloon. Such an injunction was granted
tome years ago iu the ease of a captive
balloon which was drawn up and down
for the entertainment of passengers iu it.
Apart from the question of trespass,
anv substantial annoyance is caused, a
balloon may be enjoined as a legal nui
tanct.—London ISiblic Opinion.
There arc now 100,000,000 German
carp in the United States, the deseon
dents of thirty-flve fish brought to the
United States leas than a dozen years
•gc.
Submarine Boats. !
The problem of submarine navigation
concerning which M. Verne romanced
fourteen year-, ago, may be now regarded
as completely solved, and the clever
■«««*
surpassed in ingenuitj >y t.i < Nordcn- a
sell designed and built by M.
felt, a Danish inventor, and Mr. J. F.
Waddineton of Birkenhead, Eng. The
^ ih,
Wad( ] inffton boat by electricity. The
formw 5g c ig ar . H haped, steel-plated, 64
: n p. n „th }2 f< < t beam work’n<» and 11 feet
'
, P * Two p nronellers p 1 rs 0 f in a ver
tical . direction . . supply the sinking ft>rco,
and a system of balanced rudders keeps
^ boat in a horizontal position. The
, lcam is supp , ie d by a marine boiler for
tl . av< ., Ung on the surface, and is stored
U p f or moving under water. The crew
five in the air space in the hull, which is
sufficient to sustain four men six hour*.
This boat has remained under water over
without .
an hour at a time inconvenience
to the men, and has been success
fully operated at a depth of sixteen feet.
Blie lias been run 150 miles on the -re
face, -without rccoaling, at a maximum
speed of eight knots, and under water 1G
miles at a maximum speed of three
knots. Although 0 this is comparatively
. speed, the vessel . . |
a low rate ol is rc
garded as a complete success. Mr.
Waddington’s boat is also cigar shaped,
but somewhat smaller than the other,
being feet long and G feet in diameter
at the center, tapering oil to the pointed
ends. A tower is mounted on the boat,
and her depth of immersion below the
water surface .. is regulated by external ,
inclined planes, placed one on either
side and controlled from within. She 1
is fitted with a rudder ,.laced 1 aft, ’ and a
self-acting arrangement serves to keep
the vessel in its horizontal position. Sho
is manned by a crew of two men, and a j
supply of compressed air is provided for \
occasions when the boat remains sub- !
merged for any length of time. The
motive power is electricity, which is
stored on board in 50cells. These drive
a screw propeller, and the charge they
carry is sufficient to propel the boat for
10 hours at a speed of nearly nine knots
an hour either below the water or on its
surface. The cells also supply lights
through glow lamps, and drive a pump
loi emptying the water ballast tanks,
wliich arc filled for submerging the j
boats. This vessel lias been given several
trials near Liverpool, England, with
results that are declared highly satis- ‘
factory:- Inter- Ocean.
An Hardily Paradise.
The loveliest summer resort on earth,
writes „ Dr. Oswald, _ .. is probably , , the , pin- ,
teau of Nowcra Ellia, the King’s Bum
mit,” as the natives call it, in the high
lands of southern Ceylon. Like the seat
of the Olympian gods, it is above all
earthly troubles. On “Ceylon’s isle” it
would be a mistake to suppooe with the
old hymn that “man alone is vile.” In
the lowlands there are not only scorpions,
lamia ticks, venomous snakes, and thirty
or forty varieties of mosquitoes, but, ;
landleeches, hastening through the ° **rasa
with a cloth measure movement—an al
ternate contraction and extension of their . |
anatomy. They introduce themselves
in the lower garments of persons trespass¬
ing on their native jungles, and extract
toll at the rate of an ounce of blood
apiece. But neither leech nor lamia ever
visits tho heights of the King’s Summit.
An elevation of nearly six thousand feet
so fully insures tho plateau against the
peril of climatic diseases that the recove¬
ry of lowland refugees generally dates
from ‘ tho second day of their arrival.
The climate is that of a perpetual May—
light showers now and then, but gener¬
ally cool mornings and sunny afternoons,
even in August, when tho monsoon
clouds brood over the coast plain and
vent their electric wrath in thunder¬
claps resembling tho crash of a volcanic
explosion.
A Musical Hen.
J. U. McDonald, of Portage, Wis.,
owns a musical hen. The lien delights
to steal away to the hous-.’ of a music
teacher adjoining Sir. McDonald's rcsi
deuce, and at odd times while the music
is going on has succeeded inlaying an
egg under the sofa or some other equally
unusual place,
The other day the music teacher heard
notes sounding from the piano, and go
ing into the music room preceived this
curious inhabitant of the henhouse
walking up and down the ivory key
board, tumbling out thirds, fifths
and eighths to her hen-hip's great de¬
light
As the tinkling melody leaped forth
the hen curved and arched her neck
from side to side in apparent delight,
and clucked iu a musical way.
ToHCliiiig tip a Tainting.
Chicago man (to artist) )Vhat’s the
n!Wne °f the picture!
Artist It is called “An October Sun
it reflects the glowing beautv of
an Italian sky as Lie orb of the day sinks
to lcsl behind-
i Chicago man—H-m. Til tell you
wkat ril <-io. You mint in a couple of
half-burned pork-packing establisfc
meats an’a hook an' ladder truck, an’
label it ’ The Great Chicago Fire,” am!
I’ll take it Bat'on »
at your own price.—
Ct n\tr.
Short Aphorisms.
sr& | i
“f" d " ,uch
-
"« “ *l*‘ k “ *>«*
unwisely.
p itT j,j m who cherishes no love for
his fellow-man.
Flowers and labor are nature's proph
Dress speech, and manner reveal the
man’s character
Learn to read the thoughts of the man
in bi« countenance.
To slip on the sidewalk is better than
to slip with the tongue.
The maxim is an old and a true one, ’
“All thieves die poor."
what a miserable liar is man when he
cannot believe himself. '
The young cub is as tender as a chicken,
The old mosquito clamors for blood.
In prosperity we know not our friends,
Adversity gives our enemies a chance.
“A .small leak sinks a great ship. So
vjf>cg k a laboring man poor.
\ ' heritage, re .
jbiIit as a ian t0 thy f e low-man i
The bee is honored more for its iaboi
than for its song, and yet its song is one
of gladness.
He who increaseth profitable and deservetb labor is a
benefactor v to his fellows
highest honor.
He who decreaseth willingly the labor
rw r r m! ° ! "" " d
servin 0 o in mnj.
In the days of drouth how glorious
seemeth the rain. In the days of rain
we long for the pleasant weather.
—----
Potatoes. ....
There is a frequently quoted but most
fallacious rumor floating around that
bread is the stall of life Believe me it
ig ull veritable nonsense; wheat simply speculator, a an
ot her concoction of the
To he surc^if you use the term in its
broadest meaning, slap-jacks, to include crackers, well
sweet-cukes, and as as
the commodity that is sliced off the
loaf, there is probably more bread used
than any other item in the world’s bill of
fare; but for good sustaining which assistance limping
there is no better prop on
humanity can lean than the invigorating
potato. is palatable, capable of infinite _ j
It most
variety in its preparation, and exhilarates
but never inebrates, possessing none of
the qualities of a ‘ ‘sour mash ’ even when
served in the form in which it usually
accom p an ies roast beef.
The nature of the potato is most unob
trustive, there is nothing in the wide
world so inmonscly serviceable that has
received so little commendation; however,
its modesty bespeaks its merit,
We must acknowledge the potato is _ not
a pretty thing to look comely, upon. its color not
Its form is not
(esthetic, and its skin is rough and lumpy; native
wash it clean of the dirt of its
home and it docs not gain much.
Some things, like certain varieties
wild flowak, are i ”.t pretty m..« number of
them peciraen, yet when they you get a handsome,
the togethe: lias are quite, this advan
but potato not even
tage, for a heap of a thousand potatoes
is no more beautiful than a lone solitary
tuber.
R,lt taliC tllcm wll en the arc prepared
for our use, when we find them on the
table cracking open, white as snow, full
to steaming nourishment, they are love
ly to the eye and savory to the palate.
T)nly give the potato a little seasoning,
a little luxurious cream, and a good stirr
ing up, and the richness, the pleasure it
can confer is unriveld.
The potato is the symbol homely, of plain, sub
stantial, unobtrusiveness useful, but people. teach
Their may you
more fortunate otiCvS how your homely
brothers and sisters feel.
You may learn from the ^ potato that
there are thousands of men and women,
unattractive in appearance, uncouth in
speech, and awkward in manner, whose
h, art arc rich in goodness and whose
lives are those a perpetual around unfolding benefac
tion to them.
They only need a little stirring up,
a little developing, a little investigation,
and their repaying qualities are found to
he unequaled.
Fuels Noted.
In Europe cocaine has been found ef
fleient in the treatment ol asthma.
Xfir Cannclton, Pennsylvania, the
ground heaves and pulsates just like a
human breast.
TnE statutes of New Jersey now for
bid the killing, wounding or catching of
auy song birds at any time.
The Pittsburgh Humane Society is
seeking to prosecute organizations which
insure the lives of small children.
, law . .. ork . prolllblting . .. ...
Thk new in NOW i
the employment of children iu factories
will force*30,000 children out of employ¬
ment.
The plonisphone, instrument that ,
an
double bass, is a recent invention of a
Buffalo musician.
Mbs. Ixa B. McLasb ia one of the
largest mail route contractors in the
The flies from which the first United
so-called Franklin—cents .
m-i',- the
were cast . are now ... used „ 1 as „ c paper tv-ner weights xx c i_m
in a New Haven counting-room.
Serve an Injunction on Disease
By ln\ igorating h feeble constit u tion, remov.
ing a debilitated physique, and eniicntng tnm
and innutricioua circulation witn nqsterier a
Stomach Bitters, the finest, the most highly
sanctioned. and the moot popular It strengthens .he
preventive in existence. of Tver and
stomach, remedies etyeeaheJShfu toriior the
bowels, and impose ^
' and
ncys and bidder. Nut only does it arrest
prevent the ipearrence of malarial fevers, but
it furnislies the only adequate safeguard
aga nst them to persons who have never been
afflicted with those mala.ties, but would be
liable to incur them if medicinally unpro¬
tected. It eliminates from the blood certain
imparities which the most skillful patholo¬
gists ass c n as the exciting cause of those ag¬
onizing t o r plaints, rheumatism and gout, and
it is. moreover, an excellent remedy for an en
feebled or overwrought state of the
for mental desioudency.
AJi ANCIENT VESSEL. !
—- - - - -
The dredge ToreJhicM h., W, .t
Srf
acros.- the river and opposite Drayton
street, repairing preparatory to driving piles'and I j
the wharf. The dredge yester
day struck an ancient wreck, supposed to
gtr0 ^ , v built _
The'timbers are of oak. Both the
planking and timbers and the greater part
of the frame have been brought up by
the dredge. The wood is in a fine state
of preservation, being as sound as when
first "put into the vessel. The dredge
alfso brought numbers of old bayonets
anchor,Ind the rtump TAhe"vessel’s
foremast can be seen at dead iow water,
arid also the stump of the main and
mizzenmasts.
The wreck ^lunec deep in the mud
mu D0W 11 came mere is a mystery,
From the appearance of the stuff brought
up from the wreck it is evident that the
ves T f! belonged to the last century
ish var sloop into this harbor, and that
the crew' scuttled the sloop to prevent its
cartAfC. But at what part of the river
tied. slices At sunk the time was she never definately supposed set- to
was
have considerable money on board, as
usual with Spanish war vessels at that
Y’ork, and parties came out here for the
purpose of finding the wreck and recov
cring the money supposed to have been
sunk with her, but whether they ever
succeeded in finding tlie wreck or money
is not known. The wreck is certainly
that of an old war vessel.
about her shows it. The .—Savannah preservation News of
the wood is wonderful
Mrs. Ferdinand Ward.
j n a recen t interview with reporters
who visited him in his Sing-Sing prison,
Ferdinand Ward, ex-wizard of Wall
street, told them it was not true that he
b ad stored away several millions of dol
] ars 0 ut of his ill-gotten gains. “My
wife is living on less than $ 1,500 a year,”
llc said j was j n Stamford, Conn., the
other day on business, and chanced to
make some inquiries about there. the life
0 f y( rs . Ward, who is living From
-^-hat I saw and beard I was convinced
t ], at jf jj rs _ Ward really does live on less
^i iap $1,500 per annum, she is as pecu
liarly talented in financial management as
her enterprising husband, Her house is
a ] a rgf», three-story dwelling. the A. sweep
p,g carriage drive leads past portico
on | b e side, and in the rear is a well ap
pointed stable sheltering three horses,
The big shade trees on the grounds,
from one of which depended a hammock
filled with satin covered cushions; a
group of cozy easy chairs on the portico;
vasc s aru l hanging baskets filled with
Rowers and trailing plants—all this gave
a . t appearance » of wealth which seemed
r ..i.-h incompatible with she the enjoys, small
Mrs. Ward says
\y'hii6 twtood eying the house with the
cur i os ity and freedom of a stranger, Mrs.
Ward came out the front door and com
njenced to water and arrange the plants
, n tb e swinging baskets on the portico,
?i ic wore ft dainty morning wrapper of
; foulard silk, which, despite its flowing
proportions, could not conceal the beau
tiful contour of her graceful figure. «
There was a cold indifferent look or,
ij er f aC e and a certain mechanism about
! (u-r movements which showed that her
^jud was not on her work. Could she
have been thinking of her dashing young
husband, y’stone pounding waifs stove-plates within
q le g ra up among the Ilud
son hills? It seemed more than possible herself
is oncc she paused, and, seating turned her
slowly in one of the chairs,
face wearily skyward. She sat like a
ffatue for nearly three minutes, when she
caught a glimpse of the motionless spec
:a tor near the street, then she got up and
iisappeared. Ward’s is small, but it is
Mrs. home
handsomely furnished, and she keeps
three servants. If she lives on less than
$3,000 or $4,000 per annum she certainly
| mR acquired the faculty of making a
.) 0 n ar g 0 twice as far as the average
mortal .—Baltimore American.
Mr. G. E, Reardon, Baltimore, M l., Com
missioner of Deeds for all the State-, suffered
tor a long time with rheumatism, which yield
ed promptly to St. Jacobs oil.
Tiie School Board of Paris looks after the
fi#alth of the girls, and in order that they may
Appointed Parisian schools. ns medical inspector of girls in
Dipht heria is frequently the result of a neg
le< led ore throat, which can be cured by a
hot' ie of Red Star Cough Cure. Price,
iwruty-fivo cents a bottle.
Men in the lumbering camps of northern
Me, »i3 and ( nnaiia have to depend so largely
-upon salted foods that they have a great c-ruv
for acidand if they cannot tret raspbor- with
ries or blueberries will seek and devour
avidity the large, black .ants of those regions.
If yon are suffering from Chronic Cough,
Broncl itis. Asthma, or Loss of Voice-, Dr.
Kilm^s Indian Cdugh Cure (Oy»umptfon OiD
(
cure ' 1 r -ce w. and i.w.
The Brown Cotton Lin is "A >'o. 1.”
W
charts at.ay^«cee«ible point .Send to rmn
Farmers and others who hare a little leisure
time for the next few months will find it to
;he:r ;^.terest to write to B. F. Johnson <fc Co.,
..f Ki.’hmnd, whose advertisement appearsin
... column. They offer treat induce
uients to persons to work tor them ail or part
at their tune.
purest, sweetest and best Cod Liver OL i
ijvers, world, manufactured from absolutely fresh, healthy
upon the seashore. It is taken pure
j streat. Patients who have once it
f er ^ others Physicians hare de
cide<i it superior to any of the other oils In
mar ket. Made by Caswell, Hazard Co., New
(> n v -pro hands, face, pimples and madefy rough
to Coawe.L liaxioM W *g & Co., Jpjjgr^gQBP. .New lor*,
to life . by living . up to
The true way enjoy is
the prU-<*iples that sustain it.
vour gin house from burniDg. by using
Wsisoi s ’ Tampion Spark Arrester, bee his
vrrt -en:rnt in this psper.
Piso s Remedy for Catarrh is agreeable to
it is not a liouid or a snuff. 50c.
The color produced by Buckingham's natural. Dye
for the Wh skers. is permanent and
To promote digestion, to keep the Bills. body
healthy and ihe mind clear, take Ayer's
AH that is disgraceful about poverty is of
our own maktr.
SSTJSS” “"'.ho
nonnees that he is now in "perfect health,”
»e h»v« the following: "One year ago I was,
^ttoT'Sr^Vysic^ gt^my ?*<*
up. I finally got so low that our doctors .aid
Hall’s Balsam for the Lltvgs, which bene
fited me. I continued until I took nine bottles.
lam now la perfect health, having used no
ether medicine."
Any man looks like a sloven with run-over
heels, Lyon’s Heel Stiffeners keep boots
straight. 25c.
It is wise of to be reach. prepared for evil, but better
to be out its
"Big Money In It For l'«.”
Among the 150 kinds of Cloth Bound Dollar
relume* given away by the Rochester (N. Y.)
American Rural Home for every $1 subscrip¬
tion to that Great 8 page, 48 col., 16 year old
weekly, (all 5x7 inches, from 300 to 300 pages
tiound in cloth) are
Law Without Lawyers. Danelson's (Medical
Family Cyclopedia. Counselor.
Farm Cyclopedia. Boys’ Useful Pastimes.
Farmers’ and Stock- Five Years Before the
breeders' Guide. Mast.
Common Sense in Peoples’ History of
Poultry Yard. United States.
World Cyclopedia. Universal History of
Yhat Every One All Nations.
Should Know. Popular History Civil
War (both sides). postpaid,
Any one book and paper one year,
tl. 15 only! Satisfaction guaranteed. Rochester. Refer
tnce : Hon. C. B. Parsoss, Mayor Roches¬
Samples 2c. Rural Home Co., Ltd.,
ter, N. Y.
The misfortunes of ignorance are the bless¬
ings of wisdom.
= fai
m Bold*-
7 l>” O.
tn
This medicine, combining Iron with pure
vegetable tonics, quickly and completely
Cures Impure Dyspepsia, Hlood, Indigestion, Malaria, Weak¬ Chills
ness, Fever*, and Neuralgia.
and
It is an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the
Kidney and Liver.
It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to
Women, and all who lead sedentary headache,or lives.
1 1 doesnot injure the teeth, cause
produce constipation—other iron medicine s do.
It enriches and purities tile blood,
stimulates the appetite, aids the assimilation
of food, relieves Heartburn and Belching, and
strengthens the muscles and nerves.
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude,
Duck of Energy, etc., it has no equal.
tv The genuine has above trade mark and
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other.
e.s. ... 1 . h. BROWN CHEaiCAL CO- HI I.TDMRK
D R. KILMER’S «;
dfth b Arrest thatrauirrh,iiron
chitist or Asthma. This
Remedy Cures relieves quickly.
KnTRTHnTnm prevents permanently. Decline, Nipht-Sweata It
aviiS death from Commiptlon. puon.
WieV!r#^Prepared rv.Prepared Binghamton, at- at - do. kilmkb’s N. Y.
dispensary. inquiry
.25 Letters of answered.
Guide to Health ( Sent Free).
SAVES YOUR LIFE. Sold by l>ru<rg:isti».
nrixiu KTVI EINGE'bS fi* r 20
PHILA.
pm 15 DAYS’ TRIAL.
A Full Set of
khm Atfnohmenls.
3 WARRANTED
Yettrs. Send for
Circular.
€. A. WOOD A CO.,
17 N. lOtU St., Ftiila., !’*•
ROANOKE
COTTON PRESS.
j The Beet and Cheapest Press
made. Costs less than shelter
j over other presses. Hundreds
» VBp11| 'Ifc'-reALiW L it ■*> «»t. al use at both steam
| rae twer pins. Bales
| ^ Kfjfe/. Addrews Roanoke «in iron MBP i. k .
and
iv'nnf RK *’ ’*'■
j j f W I LSON’S
/ If bnftmi USMpJAu lUii Cfj hi flnh A R 5/ AhhLOlM K PPF'sTP!)
! F\ ; the“wwM. d
T? 7 ?' NS"£«rc e iu house*
, 'vj'
, * 1 feTv&n'.M" K.V^v‘s'1?;’.^: *»i? Ani*t*r!
tar-KwimMuM* Awm* »'<« *>f
j '
j / / Don’t bny a watch until improve- yon
find out about the latest
j ( ments. Send for new illustrated
catalogue and price list. J. P.
Stevens, Jeweler, 47 Whitehall
Street. Atlanta, Ga.
| j ERMAN BSE!
FOR ONE DOLLAR.
A first class Dictionary gotten out at small
price to encourage the study of the German
Language. It gives KnglUb words with the
Berman equivalents, and German words with KnzUsh
feflnirions. A verv llbl cheap tviolc. Send $1.00 N. to
HOOK 1M B. SK, 131 Leonard by St., mail.
Y. (,'ity, and get one of tn**s** books return
OH WS Surest and Safest Regulator is
BELLAMY'S EXTRACT
COSSYPIUM druggists.
Doctors recommend it. Sold by all
J J. B. DANIEL, Wholesale Apt., Atlanta,Ga.
) S 7 QO tO of all expense. can
j be made working for us. Agents u!s Vifay^beVrcdjtabiy^em preferred who can
0 Spare°monu
a f johkson tcu., 101.5 via n .>t„ nr-.moad.\a
ft fcra Y! '- cn 1 to MOORE’S
f fi 8US ' N ‘, S Lr«; RSiTY '
1
i in ular. A Ilv-aeinal Business Sohooi.
ihdrstofssitootbpowdi
Kcrpinc Teeth Perfect and (turns Healthy.
11 antt!U««<l U | j i l|| WlltsGxX 11.4BITS cared el
UliUlll ai nqine wiitiout pain. Beak
1 u.»ouuj.i, xl. u. » D ■— "- *
“ .
■a ■ to Soldiers Jk Heir* SeaJtifews
j wIlvIvilwHAM Circulars. COL. L. #1 SO. ;
I Alt *y. VVashiuston O.
,1pawgf BEST irj THE
_ WORLD.
MARLIST Magazine Rifle. r
>or large nr imali rat me— i’ri. Tae *trocc*et tboctlcr rifle rrt*d«. Pwfecl
Ocr+ f T p-.^r»st»ed. and ifce only »b*oiuWiT **:« t •fl« on the mxratl.
BAD LARD GALLERY, SPORTING ANT* TARGET RIFLES, world lcnwaM. Send for
Uiwtraud tBtaiBcoe. MARLIN FIRE ARMS CO., New Haven, Conn.
HiTini-Md [SUCKER W | jrat* trap« rein.** mark. ». • nr.iMi w>ov* D<m't abiwluteiv wane the* %r*o~r Tour end raonpr vind on r*ocr. * rnra snd or mbbrr Will krep (^at you The Waterproof dry FISH iii Is Erer the BRAND Tlie h«r<ie*t Made. Best FLICKER Coat *torm
| | or FISH BRAND ’ lucm and txkeno other. If your rWrekeeper do«
fcothavU 7 i * wraitd for ^^ rt ntive r^txlocue to A. J. TOWRR. 20 Fimrrione St, Bo«trn. Ma 1
i M i h it i i tu t
PHYSICIANS AND DRUGGISTS RECOMMEND IT.
Consumption Can Be Curedl
WM. DR. HALL’S
* IUlvtlwi ■ FOB ISAtAC* THE BALSAM
( urn Consumption, Colds, Pneumonia. In
fiurnzn. Kroncliinl liiffii-iiHies, Ue" ncl, m*J
thr Lung*, inflamed nral poisoned by the din*
3«htnensner o«f t be eta rst wideli'arcoinnany malady,
|t. Consumption is not an Incurable
HALL'S BALSAM will cure yon, even
liiougn prnlessioiial aid mil.
AfK FOR THE
W.>L. DOUGLAS
Best material, perfect fit, equals any ts or *6 shoo,
•▼err pair warranted. Take none unieM atampew
W. L. Douglaa' 43 00 Shot', Warranted.” Congress.
Button and Lace. Boy* ask
for the W. I— Douglas’ '
•*.00 Shoe. Same ityi« e 0 ad /
theisoosnoe. If yoa ca UQQt I
get tlieae etoea from deal
era, aandaddreaa L. on Douglaa. postal
card to W. xO
Brockton, Maaa. & /-<
$ 3 . *
6 ^SESI
BOOK AGENTS WANTED for
■ PLATFORM ECHOES
1
«r LIVING TRUTHS FOR HEAD AND HEART,
By John B. Gough. •
Hi* l»*t and crowning life work, brim full of thrillinr inter*
tat, bumor *nd patho*. Bright, pure, and good, I added ull of
“laughter and teara.’* it »elU at tight to ad. To it is
the Life and Death of Mr. Goush, br Rev. LVMAN $10# AB¬
BOTT. 1000 Agent* Wanted,—Men and Women.
to $200 a month made. (£7*Dist*nci no hindrance as w»
tire Extra Term* and PayFreightM. Write for circulars t#
A. II. WORTHINGTON JL CO., Hartford, Cona. ,
SCALES
awarded FIRST PREMIUM
AT THE WORLD’S EXPOSITION, New Orleans.
BEST VALUE Ear TOUR MONET. fti r .
BUFFALO SCALE COMPANY, BUFFALO, N. V, i
Tiie Greatest curiosity in nature.
The Mexican Resurrection Pinna, apparent¬
ly dead, when placed in water soon comes to lit*,
ihowinx*11 the tints of the rainbow. $1 to S4 per
diiv ea.lly made, as it sells to four out of live per
ionsatsight. Send'15c. for 3. or 5de. for 7 samples
(sell for 25c. each). Low prices by the 100 and 1,000,
A year's subscription to one of six papers given to
first 50c. order from each county and to first order
mentioning this paper.
H. BI.KDSOK,
31,1 Haiti Street, Fort Worth* Texas.
Pimples. Blotches, Scaly or Oily Skin,
Blemishes and ail Skin Diseases Cured
and Complexion Beautified by
Beeson’s Aromatic Alum Sulphur Soap. I
S old by Druggists or sent by mall on receipt of B
£5 cent* by 208 WM. North DREVDOPPEL, Front St, Philadelphia, Manu-j Pa. ■
(ucturer,
mmmam
'a step in advance
OF ALL OTHERS.
A#4o l^S (Better instruments.
o LOWER 'EasierTerms PRICES.
WRITE Sew “3JBEST Plan.
FOR ET,
full S
PARTICULARS TO '4
BEIN BROS. A CO.
NEWARK, N. J.
Liffiljffi-
rfrT.’^ remedy to euro Hie woret cieee. Bocsuie othere here
tam-Ydy. Giro I*pr*s* m‘ and Post u/g^rl Office. It coete^ yo®
* °“ >1 °iid r r. a ,rPr‘: BOO” St. New X .rt_
Salvo Zm BRDHEEniESS
^ KAiSfflrsriBavKtoSKSa: <lot© for the Alcohol Habit and tha
only bottles. remedy that daroa to send trial
leal profession Highly endorfled prepared by the well* mod
Cv* known New and by Send
York physicians.
stamps Address for circulars ami refer enceA
“SALVO REMKDY,
i No. 2 West Uth St., New York.
! No Rope to Cut Off Horses’ Manes.
,
celebrwi‘ECLIPSE’ HALTER
nnl , itRIDLECombiaed-.eaanot A
be r slt-med by any horse. Sample W.
Halter to any part of U. S. free, on
1 receiptof$l. H ardware and Sold Harness by all Saddlery, Dealers.
j 1 Special discount to the Trade. rjfS V
I Send for Price List.
J. V. Rochester, IsIUIITIIOUSE,
N. Y.
| gif S Pl!lS> r Rheum£ , F ,. h r ,
M <»vaiT»ox VuTd Remedy y ‘
ronnd. so c.
OPIilil — — „,,___ lnkiipart*. or. marsh, „ . . qm* -,v. mk-h.
fi S Brewster’s LVWSJdeW^TSecW?^ Holder,
Safety Reis I lolly,Mieb.
PATENTS Send stamp ror
ator’a Guide. L. B. INGr
I uam. Patent I*awyer, \\ asti luston, D. 0*
Wii.
> A
25 cts. BUYS A HOUSE
Book teJino you how to DETECT aad
CURS RISK \SK in thin valuable ani
ftial- I>o not run the ii*k of losing your Horae for
want of Knowledge to cure him, wli n 25c. wiljpav
for a rreatise Buy Dircases. one and inform yourself.
Remedies for alt Horse Plates showing
how to Tell the Age of Horses, bent postpaid for
£5 cents In stamps.
N. Y. HORSE BOOK CO.,
134 Leonard St., N. Y. City.
G d is taken the lead tm
tlie safes ot ti at class of
r Care* la remedies, and has given
TO 5 Days.! ftlmosr universal Sstitfac
araateed net lo Uua,
• au*« Sirietur* MURPHY BROS..
Paris, Te*
Mfd #a?y ky ‘.h« O has won *h e fa favor of
Chi3iul the public and now ranks
a:i emongf the leading Mcdi
Cinciaaatl.BH ciaes of the o.looraf.
W. Ohio. A. L. SMITH
Iradft. J, Pt.
Sold by Drajrjis^.
Price 61.00.
S3 •-S 'e :E FOR
CUKES WHERE All USE FAILS.
Be9t Cough Syrup, Taste* good Use
in time. Sold by druxgMto.
£
_ ...........Tfcicty-lo r.’S6
a . N« * J .......