Newspaper Page Text
j THE JUGGERNAUT.
Facts About a Great Hindoo
Religious Festival.
The Car Ueed Is the Largest 1
Vehicle in the World.
k : l
Juggernaut is variously pronounc' d
•s Jaggcniath, Jumergutha and Jng
ennatha, the last being the Sanscrit
and probable root of (he many word*
of the sums general construction all of
Which signify “Lord of the World;"
really one of the nam s of Vishnu,
the second god of the Hindoo triad.
Juggernaut, besides being the name
of the idol representing Vishnu, is
also the name of a town or city in the
Province Orissa iu Ilcngul, British
(ho city having taken it* name
from Juggernaut’s car nnd idol en¬
shrined within its walls. The ground
upon which the town is built is con
side red holy and is held hy the com
enmity as common property, no tribute
being exacted from any resident, other
than that be perform certain rites in
and about die temple, thus proving
himself n Hindoo and a li in believer in
Vishnu in iii< manifold forms.
The cily of Juggernaut has about
60,090 iiiliitbitiints, but as there is a
roligiiKis festival bold there once every
mouth, llic population constant y
within it 1 borders falls hut little sh >rt
of F.0,000. Tho principal street of
the city rims north ami south for 2 3-4
miles—both sides being formed by an
almost unbroken lino of Hindoo tem¬
ples, ail of which are overshadowed
by (he great Temple of Juggernaut,
which stands at the southern extremity
of the main street.
Thu ‘’great temple” rises to a height
of nearly 300 feet, and is surmounted
by ft bronze covered dome, the point
of which reaches 100 feet higher. The
f,u1l which surrounds this gigantic pa¬
goda is n square with sides 660 feet in
jCnglb; is 18 feet I hick at the bottom
ami nearly 40 feet high. Besides the
great pagoda iu honor of Juggernaut,
the iiiriosure contains temples ami
idols dedicated to dozens of the oilier
Jiindoo deities.
All of tho idols arc monstrous in de
Sign and frightful looking iu appear¬
ance. That to Krishna (another mime
for Juggernaut) is pain led blue ami
lui* h face hideous m the extreme.
According to Hindoo legend Krishna
Upptta ly< « L|inier ‘iim
were found under n tree and brought
before King hnlnidyuinna, who was
directed by one of the god* to form an
linage of Jaganath (perhaps Jugger¬
naut; see John W. Wright’s “Idol
Worshippers of India,” page 866),and
place Krishna’s bone* inside.
Visvakiumn, a divine architect and
sculptor, undertook to mako (ho im¬
age, but, being hurried by tho king,
jert off ill anger. Ho Jaganath whs
left without hands Or fee!. Iu com
pensation, ltrahuiu gave the image
eyes and a soul. It may in: seen by
tins legend that it was oiiginaJy on
account of 11 10 saintly hones within if
that tlio imago was venerated.
Besides Krishna or Juggernaut, two
Others of the idols are provided with
immense cars or chariots. Tho Car
of Juggernaut i* thought to be the
lavgest wheeled vehicle that hits vei
been made in the world. It i*:it 1-2
feet square at the base and 13 12 feet
in height, mounted on 10 wheels, each
6 1-2 feet in diameter. Once each
year, at the great minimi March fisti- j
vat, Juggernaut, mounted on the ap, \ !
of bis stalely car, i* taken to » house
about one and a naif miles in the coun¬
try, where a female linage is supposed
to bo waiting to become his bride.
Tlio removal of the chariot from tin
shrine to the country house being a
proeeecdiug holv iutheextreme.no
animat* are used for drawing Uk ,
chariot, men. women nnd children
only being permitted to perform such
righteous services.
tin till* occasion either five or seven
rojtes are attached to tho front of the
car, tho middle one having been
twisted from hair cut from the heads
of female devotees. It was a long
cherished bellhf in Christian countries
that 111 u:y pilgrim* saeritlc’d them¬
selves u)tOit these galls days l»v falling
prone before the car and allow mg the
pondrous vtieel* to pass over their
bodies.
It is probable that the a 'counts of
these «rlf saeriflees have been too
highly colored, and that the great 1 s*
of life upon such occasions, when
Uiousr ndi t>f traniie devotees are coi -
giegated together, routes more from
*ocid nt than ftom a de-ire to shirt for
heaven front directly underneath tit 1 '
wheel* of the holy c.t'.—; D 8L Louis
Itt-JHibhc.
It is estimated that Lie 200,
bu-hcls of ct aabei res which New Jer
«•> wit scad to market will tvalize to
the farmers a round ui' lion of dollar-.
THE DEMOCRAT, 'A WFORDVILLE, GEORGI A
Ennrmons Horse Povrer.
It is a very easy matter to talk about
18,000 or 20,000 horse power, but fow
persons realize what it means or the
enormous force that it exe.t*.
The new White Slar Line steam¬
ships, for instance, or the Inman
Line s City of New York develop from
18,000 to 20,000 horse power. They
have twelve boilers and seventy-two
furnaces,worked with forced draught,
Assuming I hat the engines will require
18 pounds of steam per liorso
per hour, then 100 tons of feed water
must be pumped into the boilers every
hour and 100 tens of steam will pa«s
through the engines at the same time
Iu twenty-four hours the feedwater
will amount to 3,840 tons, occupying
138,240 cubic feet. This amount of
iva er would /ill a length of 493 feet
of a canal 40 feet wide and
7 feet deep. Taking the COli
dousing water at thirty times tlie feed
water it will amount to 4,800 tons per
1|0U1% or lJBfS00 tona in ,wenfv-four
, 1011Pfl(01 . f()ra * ix _d«y transatlantic run
|)0l 1( , gg (]m|i 69KSOO (OIIS> or 2 4,883,.
000 ( , 1||(i . This amount of water
would till a cubical tank 293 feet on
the side—a tank into which the Itoinan
Catholic Cathedral, steeples and all,
or the Times building could be put
and completely covered up.
The coal consumption is not less in¬
teresting. Four hundred tons u day
are burned on tho 20,000-horse power
pressure. This would till 400 wagons.
It requires fi r iis combustion 8.600
tons of air. occupying a space of 222,-
336,000 cubic feet. It is impossible
to put those figures in shape such that
they may bo grasped by tho average
reader, b t enough lias been cited to
show, nevertheless, that (lie circula¬
ting pumps and fan engines of such
ships are a hard-working lot.— [New
Y ork Times.
Olives.
The olive tree in its wild slate is a
thorny shrub or small tree, but when
cultivated becomes a tree 20 to 40 feet
high with no thorns. It lives to a
good age. The leaves resemble those
of a willow; the flowers arc small and
white and grow iu cluster* a* grapes
do, and the fruit is greenish, wid ish,
violet nnd even black in color and gen¬
erally oval in shape. It is produced
in great profusion, so that an old olivo
tree becomes very valuable to its
owner. Olivo oil is much used as an
article of food in tho countries in
'. v,,icl ' 11 : a niv ul^-d, ,«..( * - - ;
extent in other countries. Pickled
olives are very much liked by most
people, thong i to many they arc dis¬
agreeable at first.
Among iho Greeks tho olivo was
sacred to Minerva, tho goddess of
wisdom; it was also the emblem of
purity. A crown of olive twigs was
the highest honor that could he be¬
stowed upon a Greek citizen. An
olive branch was also iho symbol of
peace, and the vanquished who enmo
to bog for ponco bore olivo branches
in their bunds.
’1 ho American olive is remarkable
for the hardness of its wood. It i
found us far north as Virginia. lts |
fruit is (11 for u*e and its (lowers are
fragrant.—-[Detroit Free I’rcss. j
The Capital of Costa It ten. '
The cttpilnl of Costa K.e.t, San Jo*o,
i* situated between the livers Aguilar
and Torres, with an altitude of 4,600
feet, which, with its iati tide, im-ure 8 i
till equable, agreeable temperature tiie
year round. Tito streets are laid wi It
great regularity, ami (lie bouse* have
nil iliose com oils and conveniences of
c.vilized countrie* which ate so sel
dotn found in Central American
cities. An abundance of water per
mil* a daily llusliing of sewers, which
U ,v '» uiml b > !|IW ’ ’ J ' lu, »ro
"" h ' bUHl lo lho S l ,iUli>,h P'iesU for
" «»'>• wo: k®, which
PX,rem, l> lU, " l>Ip ' vtH ^ ust ,lu5 ,,im "
10 ,lus ‘‘’“"D v. A few
’ miles up stream a sufficient amount of
w ter i» diverted into a tnasonrv
; aqueduct which lead* <0 tiie highest
j point of the city, from where by
, sinailer duet*, it is distributed
to every
j bouse. The ore flow arrangement i*
\ a wooden float, which when pushed up
by excess of water allows ttie surplus
j to pass oft through w aste pipes to the
J sewers. With nothing but ignorant
I j native labor, mud bricks and sun
j burned pipe, great credit is due tlic-e
I old priests for their admirably -adapted
waLrwaxs. [Ni’w A 01 k limes.
!
j lDmeuibt ring (lie Tnfortuuate,
1 Mother—Well. Jobnnv, otd you dis
j peso charity? of tlio ten pennies 1 gave you fur
:
Johnny—Ac*, mi. I gave two pen-
11 ic* to a boy who itad no parents,
three to a boy with only one leg and
the other five to Tommy Jones.
Mother—To Tommy Jones! Wbv
be lias part at s nd L woks and clothe;
’ and everything ,\e needs,
Johnny— \es, but he can’t whistle.
A CRANBERRY BOf.V uT
How the Little Rsd Berriei A ; 5
Picked.
Picking Time is Considered s
Long and Happy Picnic. . |
Cra I >
The largest cultivated .-yj i
bog in existence lies ab.ut six m. 1* i
north of Wareharn, Mass. This bog I. J ;
100 acres in extent. Other bogs a, j
the vicinity belong to the same '.ant j
agemeut. The-e bogs are all as 'sail
as the tidiest garden. The long tndj
level stretches, like a carpet «tr< ".’it
with white and crimson beads, an
most plea-ing and novel sight. 1
in early September a thousand pie era
camp about the swamp*, some in tem¬
porary board cabins, but most of them
in tents. The manager furnishes the
provisions, which the campers cook
for themselves, and lie rents them the
tents. One hundred and twenty
pickers constitute a company, which
is place 1 in charge of an overseer, and
each company lias a book-keeper.
Each picker i* assigned a strip about
three feet wide across a section of the
bog, and lie is obliged to pick it clean
as lie goes. 1 lie pickers aie pai l
the measure, which is a broad
<]ii:irt pail with ridges marking
quarts. Ten cents is paid foi a
measure. There is a wide variat
in the quantity which a picker v.'
gather in a day, ranging all the \\.
from tea measures for a slow pick'; I
to forty and even fifty for a rapid one,
anil in extra good picking, seventy
live measures havo been secured.
Various devices have been contrived
for facilitating cranberry picking.
Tlio Cape C >d growers like the picker
tliey use best. This is essentially a
iimusctnip-like box with a front lid
rising by a spiral spring. The opera¬
tor thrusts the picker forward into the
vines, closes the I d by bearing down
with bis ilium, and then draws the inl¬
plcinent backward so as to pull off the
berries, Perhaps a fourth of tin
pickers use the implements. Children
are not strong enough to handle them
continuously, ami where the crop is
thin they possess littlo advantage.
Baking off the berries is rarely
1 practiced in the Capo Cod region, li
: is n rough operation and it tears the
, vines badly. Late in Fall, if picking
lias been delayed und frost is expected
are
limes used. Alt ordinary steel garden
ruko is employed. Tho berries me
inked off ihe vines, and tho bog may
then bo flooded ami t! e berries are
carried to the flume, where they are
secured.
This picking time i« a sort of long
nnd happy picnic—all the happier for
being a busy one. The pickers look
forward to it from year to year, and
are invigorated by the change and the
novelty.
The berries must now be sorted and
“screened.” If there are no unsound
berries the fruit can be faiily vvcl 1
cleane 1 by running it throng!) a fau¬
ning mill; anil some growers find it
un advantage to put all the beiries
through I lie in li before they go to the
hand sereeners. A screen is a slallcd
truv about six feet long and three ami
tv half wide at one end and tapering to
about ten inches at tho oilier, with a
sitle or border five or six indies high.
Tho spaces in tho bottom between the
slats are about a fourth of an inch
wide. The serceii is set upon suw
lu rse«, and three women stand upon
a side and handle over the berries, re
moving the poor ones and the leave
and stick*, and working the good one*
toward the small and open end, where
(hey fall into a receptacle, The
bei ries are baireled directly if tliev
are not moist, but if wot tliev arc firrt
spread upon sheet* of canvas- Old
sails being favorites—nnd allowed to
remain until thoroughly dry.—[Gar
| .p u . l;K t Stream,
Th® Labrador Du k.
A bird that lias become extim t lat
ly >n a very extraordinary auditimc
countable fa»hion is the Labrador!
\ duck. This fowl was black and w lute
in color and in no way very valuable t< <
man.inasmuch as it fed on fish and luoy
a corresponding flavor, but the interest
j attaching to it i* due largely to tiie ct»
v. 011 * manner of its disappearing. <
j far ns it is known there were iie.vJT
vert many of these ducks, wb eh u*Jd
to be shot occasional'y by sportsmim
along the ’Sort'd Atlantic coast fr^tn
! Labrador to Chesapeake bay. A fdw
j , used to be captured each j.. year by) «
taxidermist at Camden, N. on a tiro
Uvitli i ,_ wi ,f 0 | t j l0 get for them of/the
tish just under tho surface
w
' ‘ a * hc « l “
dor du. . iv let* • ver been see:,. Vnr oits
tliemie, have 1. .-a farmed to ac utf
for tim mystery, it having been u.
gested, among other things, that a dis¬
temper was accountable in the premis¬
es. Others have surmised that the
birds, being so few, got mixed up
with the flocks of other species and
were lost. One danger that has to be
encountered by birds of a not very
numerous variety is that, in migrating,
tl ir flocks will lose sight of one alt¬
01 er. The pair of stalled Labrador
• <* ,i-:s nowin posse.-sion of thcNation
al -Museum at Washington were killed
by Daniel Webster and were them¬
selves the originals from which the
ere: - Audubon made lus plates of the
c. — [Washington Star.
int birds that at e Extinct.
giant birds of antiquity there
aver* 'o'.d cr n science knowscom
: uui -ety lime about, though some of
i.t'i; )nes and even their eggs are to
1 nis day preserved in museums. One
i"f tin -e was tiie epiornis of Madngas
j ir, which stood 12 feet liiglt and
yveighed 1000 pounds. Only two of
|s eggs have ever been discovered,
I id tliey were found i i graves. Each
°jf f Item was as big as six ostrich eggs,
'Mr 148 good sized lions’ eggs. In tiu
r Jt times the Arabs used to go in
-ir trading vessels as far down the
f i coast as Madagascar, where
.aw (] tese astoni-hing fowls,
g back accounts c.f them which
onsiincil to give rise to the fables
CO- Nil),js. | ruing the roc of the Arabian
; \ iv Zealand, at a later period,
;n< n to have existed an even
i . , oird than the roc, known to
sei , ( f . , )| )e dinoruis, which was not
quit® ho tall, however. It stood about
nine (Vet high when grown. The
boiido 011C 0 f this creature are
cxliibil,.,! ilt ||,c National Museum,
and ltiiq v measure six feet from foot
'
■ I-, The .. dinorins did . not , have ,
even '■“dimentury wings. It became
extinct -about the time Cu.pt. Cook vis¬
ited New Zealand, and lie might very
if possi|, In* Ltd y hay,, found one or moroalivi
tried. When he arrived tho
nidi' were still wearing the feathers
"i l!l ‘ tyird for orna nents.
-Nr: mil certain hot springs iu New
Zealand great accumulations of the
hones t,i tin- birds were subsequently
found. New Zealand climate com
pclled jbem to gather for warmth in
these pjuces, and there they died. It
remind4 olie 0 f a very plausible theory
that is entertained regarding the great
beds oa u, s .ii animals found in the
weather, tho notion is, crowde ie
beasts (o a sheltered place, and there
' blin d came and destroyed them
en masse.—-[Washington Star.
Electricity an l Leyden Jars.
The term electricity is derived from
the Greek word electron, meaning
“amber,” because from amber the
properties of what we call ‘‘electri¬
city’’ jiverc first discovered. Christian Six hun¬
dred /yeari before the cra
Thales wrote concerning Hie attraction posse-sed
wliidh amber when rubbed
for dry ami light bodie-'. But it is to
mi Ivnglishinan named Gilbert that wo
owe the word “electricity,” which he
derijvo.i from the Greek, and in his
works—about “ 1000 A. 1).—he de¬
SBspes tli force of the so-called
“tltlid.’ to Von Gueiike, of “air
ptiiLiip” celebrity, and many others
aftrt’him continued the investigation
off the * abject.
,At t! - beginning , . of , the ,, , last , century , 1
gr/eat attention was pa il ti Hie electric j
nuaciiine. The Level m jar was, as its
mime indicates, discovered by Mas- i
cl/iciibroel. of Leyden. Franklin made
site first lightning discovery iu 1709.
\foiia and Galvani, to whose invention
'|e , volt , . electricity - • • and . galvan- ,
owe at:
ij-in, and Farraday in more modern j
line, gave a great impetus to electrical i
•ipiu'O, TIlC ifTCJlt part that Clodncitv . .
;
lias been playing . . . t . iie domestic , . Ins- ..• 1 I
111
tore of the world since . ,, Farraday , . * |
death is probably known to our read
What .
ers. the future of this agent )
may be we can only guess, for even ;
now it may be said that electricity is
iu its infancy.— [Brooklyn Citizen.
ralifornia’s Engrlis'1 Walmt Tr?CS.
The English walnut groves arc just
coming into good bearing in Anaheim,
Los Angeles County. They produce
from §100 to $600 per acre, and the
entire crop of the valley lias yielded
*20,000 this season. Only twenty
* ven trees are planted to an acre, but
u h tree w iil yield §20 worth of nuts.
Nineteen years ago Fresno County was
* desert, given over to the jack-rabbi:,
Wheat cou'.d not be raised even on the
valley laud, bocuise of the excessive .
drouth in summer. Iu 1871 the first
rriuating canal brought in 600 set
tier*. These have now increased to
..000 colonists, whi'e land tormerlv
’ ha* six.,’ „ cam.! sv-tein*. 30(1.
.w
; , 0 m . r , , ,,, grain. 20.000 in vineyards.
j id 3000 iu orchards. —[New Turk
Tribune.
Crisp Paragraphing^.
Railway censtructois agree now that
the epe d limit of the steam locomotive
ht s been about reached.
One police court in New York in three
hours d sp sed of 120 cases—an average
of a miaute and a half to each case.
A union passenger depot will be
erected in St. Louis, It will cost
f 1,000,000 and will be one of the largest
iu the world.
A snuff box containing three gold
rings was unearthed in the excavation
ior an annex to the Niles works at Ham¬
ilton, Ohio.
E iward Parson Weston, the once
j tamou , pedestrian, is 61 years of age, but
| lie regards a fifty mile walk of little im
I portance.
During the l ist year twenty-six rail
r ads with 3,000 miles ot tr.ck have
become insolvent; mortgages were fore¬
clos'd on twenty-!our.
A Pullman pa ! ace car recently passed
from St Louis to New Yoik, which was
chartered especially for the transporta
t.ou i f two valuable dogs.
In 17€G a stage coach wont from York
to Lond n. E' gland, iu four days. In
1890 a railroad makes the journey in five
hours and forty two minutes.
The fashion for men to we.r wedding
; rings is greatly on the increase in Eng¬
land. Heretofore the English have pro
j j tessed to consider it an effectation.
Mr. Gladstone does not smoke, and
dislikes tobacco in every form. He has
I a profound contempt for sma t attire and
a profound dislike for new clothes.
3 he Japanese census shows the popula¬
tion of the Sunrise Kingdown o be 40,
072,1121. with an excess of males over
females about four hundred thousand.
The Fishing society, of Denma k, hav¬
ing oUered a reward for evi ry seal killed,
the extermination of these an-muls iu
Danish waters is only a question of time
The latest statistics show that there are
71,2t>7 lepers in Bengal, 13,944 in Mandras
and 13 842 iu Bombay. The lepers in
the native states are not include J in these
totals.
An organization modeled after tli"
j - Amerieac Chautauqua Literay and Seien
titic circle has been organized in Great
| Britain und-r the name of the National
Home Beading union.
; French surveyors have discovered
northwest of Suez the bed of an ancient
canal running for mil s in the direction
of the Bed sea, which it seems to have
connected with t o Mediterranean.
The King of Samoa is determined that
his subjects shall be sober if not free.
The following order is his own proclama¬
tion, and breach of which is to be visited
heavy penalties: “No sp rituous, vinous,
or fermented liquors or intoxicating
drinks whatever shall be sold, given or
offered to be bought or bartered by any
native Satnoau or FacificIslander resident
iu Samoa.”
An Idea For Boys.
What makes Butterworth. a boy popular? During Manliness,
says Hezckiah the
(be manly boys whose hearts could be
trusted. The boy who respects his
mother has leadership in him. T, e boy
who is careful of his sister is a knight.
The boy who will never viiate his word,
and who will pledge his honor
to his owu h art and change
i ot, will have the confidence > f
his fellows. The boy who defends the
weak will one day become a hero among
the strong. The boy who will never
hurt the feeliugs of any one wiil one day
fin I himself iu the atmosphere of uni¬
versal sympathy. “I know not,” once
said the g>eat Governor Andrew, “wh .t
record of sin may await me in another
world; but this I do know: 1 never yet
despised a man because he was poor, be¬
cause he was ignorant, or becau-e he was
black.” Shall I tell you how to become
a popular boy? I will. Be too maniy
and generous nnd unselfish to seek to be
popul -r; be the sou! of honor, and love
otners better lhan yourself, and people
will give you their hearts and delight to
make you happy. That is what makes a
boy popular.—Home Journal.
A Nice, Quiet City.
Drummer—The clock . the
J First new m
)He bl|iuim „ in Philadelphia will run
w hole year without stopping, don’t
Second Drummer —You mean
run; 'ou mean go. Nothing runs in
Philadelp! ia.—Jewelers’ Circular.
Nature produces the light given by
flip firefly 1 ‘ at ab’Ut one four-nun dr ruth
part Ot the COSt » of r the .i energy v exjKlKloi ovnondod
r the can(lle fl;1Ine> an ,i at an insignifi
cant fraction of the cost of electric light,
or the mos ■ economic .1 light yet dev i.*i d.
FlTSPtom>efl Rriioni'H. free )>y 1)R. Kline’s Great
f' v4i:vr No Fits after and first, S- day’s trill
Marvelous cures. Treatise Phtla.. Pa.
""" tree Jir. Kline. *81 ArehSL.
Cause of.
Rheumatism
An acid whlck exists in sour mUk ami cider, called
IncUr acid. Is believed by physicians ........... to be the cause
cf rheumatism. Accumulalin* fib.■ tlood. « «;
tacks the flbrocM tissues in the Joints, and causes
agonizing pains. What is needed is a remedy to
~
honestly reoommeiid Hood’s barsaparllla for
purposes. It has cured oiaer* oC rueumatisui and it
will cmre you.
Hood’s Sarsaosi'UlT
Sold by all druggists. «L alx for »1. Prepared only
by C. L Hrxio s OO.. Apoth«ariea, LoweU. Hai
IOO Doses Pns Dollar
25018 '.
,,
j
____ Eneusn. Rco C*oss ^^Dhhond Bhaho A\
< -■ONX Cmcmsmra
VtMMXRONkU * r\\i\iS
7 -
j ^ ^ AXT”** *• ch 2 raia»kLntu,rL
1 ; --- *uhiut«iw®ii*i.
True Sympathy.
When one is afflic ted with any form of bloat
disease® be certainly appreciates true sympa¬ that
thy, It ebou d he remembered, however,
ti ue empathy does not ccnsiM in saying, “I
am sorry tor you,” but the sympathy must he
shown in a material way. Either get or re¬
commend a remedy that wi*l cure. This it
true ured sympathy. blotches When the fair skin is blemish¬ disflg*
l by pimples and the t omplexioa and
ed j when unyielding oil so res, 1 oils
< ar»_u ides break out the person, when the
bioou impurities impair the dim-stire functions,
when the urinary organs show signs of decay,
when the lungs grow weak and the whole sys¬
tem feels when achy and feeble, when the appetite
ia ]-■, then lire will seems it a burden sympathy and existence
painful, commend the sufferer be tiue of Dr. to John re¬
to a use
Bull’s light loilows Sarsaparilla, darkness, for will just this so sure remedy as day¬ rid
him of his afflictions »nd r< store him to^ound,
robust enjoyable he&Uh.—Manchester Ntw*.
James Gorton PcnmU is ILe most exper
driver of a tour-in-hand in the world.
I.AniES needin' a tome, or chillren whs
want building up, should take Brown’s lroa
Bitters, it ts i leasant to ta e, cures Complaint*, Malaria
indigestioiijBiliousness makes the Blood rich and and pure. Liver
Illinois has the greatest railroad mileageof
any state in the Union.
I think it a pity if any one who suffers from
a h ood disease does not know that Dr. Bull’s
K t rsapari I la wiLl make them sound and welL
It cured me after I thought my case incurable.
—R L. Tlumas, Nurfnlk, Va.
Bancroft, the historian, was at oae time
minister to .Germany.
State of Onto, City of Toledo, t „
Lucas county, f that • be is
Frank J.chknkv makes oatu
the senior p u tner of the liriu ot F. J. » IIKNKT
& co..doing business in the O tv of To edo*
< o:mt} and tale aforesaid, and that said tin®
will pay the sum of Oae lluudre Dollars tot
each be an I by every the case of Hall’sCatakkh Catarrh that cannaf uh*.
cured Use ot '
i rank J. Cue net.
Sworn to before me a id subscribed li taf
presence, this Oth day ot Decern or. A D.,1880.
\ . j . A. w. Gleason,
I seal
—,— > A'otrti'i/ PuUftt
Hull’s Catarrh Cure is taken inter ad> an®
ar ts directly on the blood and muc us Mir
taces of he 8} s.cui. Send lor le.-tmioniai%
free. Toledo, O.
F. J. CnKNEY & Co.,
tW~ Sold by Di u,'Kisls, 7ic.
Aa Evcr-lteRdy Ticket.
Thousand Mile Books at 2 cents per mile.
Good to a Thousand Points. Thousand mile
t ooksare now -oM by the Cincinnati, Hamil¬
ton & Dayton R. R. at the rate of S20. and ac¬
cepted on all div sions of the C’., D. & D. and
fifteen other road*, reaching a thousand or
more point-. The purchaie of one of these
mileage books assures tho passenger not They only
cheap riding but an ever-rt ady ticket.
will be pood lor passage between Cincinnati,
Indianapolis, Cliicago. Wayne, St. Lotus, Peoria. Toledo, But- Ar
falo, Salamanca, Ft. Ann
bor, Cadillac (Mich.) nnd innumerable olber
points. The following roads will accept the*®
between ail stations: Buffalo & Southwestern, O. Divisions
i lr.cago & Eric and N. Y., I’. &
of the Erie R'y. Dayton & Union; Pere Dayton, Marquitte, Ft,
Wavne&Cnb aso, Flint &
Ft. Wayne, Cincinnati & Louisville, Buff do, Indian¬ Gran<(
'ii’iink between Delro t and
apolis. Dtcatur & Western, Lake Erie&VVest*
wu. Louisville, New A bany & Cbicngo, ’icrrd
Haute & Peoria, r ’o’e lo, Ann Arbor and
Northern M chixan, Wheelin & Lake Erio
and Vandal ia Lne lor continuous passage be¬
tween Cincinnati and St. Louis.
Ladies,
If troubled with any Female Complaint, treatment.
write me. describing case. Home _______
Cure c rlain and quick at smalt i-xpeage.
Particulars by mail sealed, 100 pace tmok on
Female Diseases ten cents. Mrs. Dr. Mary A«
Brannon, 15 W: sliingtnn St., Atlauta, Ga. ajj
1.re Wt«*8Chinese Headache C.’ure. Harm*
j« k- in • fleet, quick and positive in action*
,*•«i ,1 Tit paid * n rtetipt til $1 per lotll#
Ac.i*UiACo M CS2Wyandotte fct..KansasCity,Mo i
■
T'mher, Mineral, Farm Lauds and Ranehas
in Missouri, Kansas, Texas and Arkanja®,
I outl.t and sold. Tyler* Co.. Kansas Uty.Mo.
Oklahoma Guide Hook and Map sen; an t -»)»•*•
on receipt of fidcta*Tyler & Co., Ivau ggfc ;;
■
•
-i
- T
* A Children
*t
always
t Enjoy It.
SCOTT’S
EMULSION
of pore Cod Liver OU with Hypo
pltcsphltea of Lime and Soda la 1
> almost as palatable as milk. >
: It rather than !
: Children enjoy
( otherwise. A MARVELLOUS FLESH
( PRODUCER It la Indeed, and tho
! little lade and laasloo who toko cold
. oa3lly, may be fortlflvd Beolnot a
; coueIi that might prove serloua, by
( tilting Scott ’3 Emulsion after their
1 meals during tlio winter season,
i Jirituve of substitutions anil imitotlona .
m I
FOR A ONK-Oni.l.AH HI i.1. wnt n» i-y ra»D
will clfilv r, free o ail charge*, to »«uy pen son ta
the Unit fl staler, all of :ho foliowiug articles, oftp*
fully pock* :
Oup two-ounce bottle of Pure Vaseline, - - tost®
One two-on cp 1mm tie of Vaseline Pomade, • 15 “
gj' J "*" f o^vr.»u ."cim^hwice, -' I : I
10 “
One Cake of Vawl ne 7oap. Iinwem - - 10
OneCa^eof Va^el ae Jxoap,fxqutultoly scentad^5
One iwo-otmee bott e of Waite Vaseline, • 25 u
-
—
or for po-*a" *'*'»*• any *ngitn*irts at prist
yaeeiou^^r/ tratlon tKcrJrrom
labelled rpith our name, becaiutc you will car*
1 lainly receive an imitation which ha* Hti'e or no vah*
| Cfc***kr*«®h XS. C*.. «4 Mt«t* St., N. v.
--
PENSIONS SteT 1 Mdi»n, widows, 8 "" ■•ta* U«i*
——■ $12 mammmmmemmmm -*r® anU f ather* are
: titled to * mo. Fee t lGvrh ru you get ro ur money.
HlaJtkA freo. JUS LTV H. UCtTtA. Atty, li-blagt* a, D. &
SHORTH AND.™^!
,>^ortTua7^^umrCiu-h ton’s Nhortband .Vibuol. spet
ggU ® n f>gv ESI US! Ssp r.nd eU Whiskey at Habit®
feT '•3. £3* EPS e a w . 1 . «i ■
ill A IV mge 111 :t pain. B. ok of par
SfoMs tienlsr* sent HUE.
wa»i II wr—11 mine 1: M WOOLLEV.M ».
Atlanta,(Sa. Whitehall ftt
I IA80MA k Oflf
» f 7.1
1— M* IAIUSa <.Mharu.\i' U.. 1ACU4A HAEM.
£0c.; be«t, 25c. Lkkarix’§ Silk Mill, Little Terry N. i
a CO fl. CO 0 D DC M L o a
Best where CoU'gh. all Medicine. else fails. Recommended Pleasant and agreeable by Physicians. to the
Cures take it without objection. By druggists.
taste. Children
0 0 Z (J) G z ■u h O z
, 25 6T3.