Newspaper Page Text
soldiers aod New S „a P er S .
“We have grown so accustomed to
newspapers.” said an old soldier, “that
■s.
fort and contentment of mind. Now, I
heard from home. A newspaper—and
we saw few of them-was as welcome as
a square meal to a starving man. At the
battle of Chicamauga a detachment of
Federate were posted behind Lee & Got
don’s mills, on the banks of the Chick
“eS
imothe 'yater and started for the enemy,
a shrewd trap. They cut down the dam
just as we were in’the middle of the
stream, and a torrent of water came
down upon us. It came up to our waists
and nearly swept us off our feet. We
bad to hold our guns above aur heads in
order to keep them dry, and you know
wading through deep water is slow
work. The enemy, in the meantime,
were firing upon us. hut we managed to
plunge through the water and reach the
bank. Just as I climbed up I saw lying
upon the ground a copy of a Kentucky
paper. It was only two days old and
entirely unsoiled. I stooped down in the
middle Of* the charge, under the hottest
kind of a fire, and folding up that paper
put m my pocket. We drove the
Yankees out of the mills, and after the
battle was ovc*. i sat down and read the
paper, advertisements and all, with the
most intense .pleasure. It passed from
one soldier to another, and they read it
until it was so badly worn that the letters
^r n .° l0ngerbedeC,im “' Cd - “ Chlcas °
Provisioning a Balloon.
Expecting a long trip, we had taken
food and water for three days. We had
chicken, corned beef, beans, bread, crack¬
ers, hard tack, salmon, lobsters, pickles,
salt, vinegar, mixed nuts, oranges and
bananas. So you see that we were not
likelj r to starve, had we gone, as we
thought we might, into the deep wilds of
Michigan or Canada. We also had hooks
and lines for fish, and a keen ax, to aid
us in the woods, or wherewith to chop
our way out of the wreck had we been
cast away on one of the great lakes. And
we had an electric light for use at night.
Our plans had been well laid; and had
not Moore been hurt, or had not the bal
loon been torn at the start, our voyage
would perhaps have been more to our
liking.
A few final details may interest you.
The last and first sound to reach us,
while we were above a mile high, was
the sharp shriek of a locomotive. I
saw one express train as we soared above
its tiny track; and it looked like a mere
toy train a few inches long which did not
seem to move faster than a snail. Yet
we knew that it was on its way with ail
its usual speed, thirty# miles an hour, at
least.
During our voyage we ate and drank
just as we might have done at a picnic.
Truly, we lived “high.” A luncheon
above the clouds was to me a very novel
affair. I threw over the peel of an or¬
ange. Down, straight down it shot, a
flash of gold in the sun, 100 feet, 1,000
feet, a mile. Long before it struck the
earth it had gone out of sight. But be¬
fore it disappeared it came to a point
where it seemed to stand still in midair .
—St. Nicholas.
Marble Turned to Lime.
The marble slabs which form the roof
of Girard college, in Philadelphia, have
turned into lime through the action of
the sulphurous smoke of the anthracite
coal burned in the building.—New York
Evening World. i
There is no place where the upe and
downs of lire occur more rapidly than in *
W ashington, and as a result the pawn* •'
brokers of the capital are all wealth v.
j What IS this Disease that is Coming
.. UDOIl US?
1 Like thief at night it steals
a
in . Tile
upon US unawares. pa
tients have pains about the
cliest and sides, aild sometimes
j n t ] je back. They feel dull
and , Sleep\ the TOOUtll .v i lias
lw . a a 0
,
i bad taste, especially in the
collect/about „ a „ 4. teeth? l. lf olI»>^
‘
: the The
j ;U)pet ; te is poor. There is a
reeling like a heavy load Oil the
j stomach: sometimes a faint, all
? _____ 011e Sensation at .,4- the 1^+-tlwi ] it ot the
ttOmach which food tlottS not
j , at isfy. The eyes are sunken, ij
; the . hands , and i j? feet become , cold (
j md clammy. After while
l * a a
°° u g i u h ^ f IS in , aI . T1ISL f ( Uiy, ] rv hut out
| clxter few months it attend
a IS
e q w ith a greenish-colored ° ex
p 6 Ct . 01 atlOJl. . • mi I lie rmtipnt patient fpols let 18
tired all the while, and bleep *
doe8 ^ seem to afford
*
rest. After - a time . , lie , becomes
nervous, ’ irritable and gloomy, I
*Ul(l , JiaS , evil -i f lOieDOuingS. nrA Kodin«•<* Tliere lot It !
is a giddiness, a SOI*t of whirl
• sensa tion in the head when !
,
rising up suddenly. The bow
els become costive; the skin is :
dry and hot at times; the blood !
becomes thick and stagnant; j
the whites of the eyes become j
tinged with yellow; the urine i
is scanty and high colored, de
positing We a sediment after stand- I
ing. is frequently food, a|
spitting up of the tasle sqine
times with a spur am: A -•
sometimes with a sweetish
taste; this is frequently at
tended with palpitation of the im
heart; the vision becomes
paired, witli spots before the
eyes; there is a feeling of great
prostration and weakness. All
of these symptoms are in turn
present. It is thought that
nearly one-third of our popu¬
lation has this disease in some
of its varied forms.
It has been found that phy¬
sicians have mistaken the cause
of this disease. Some have
treated it for a liver complaint,
others for kidney disease, etc.
etc., but none of these kinds of
treatment have been attended
with success; for it is really
constipation and dyspepsia. It
is also found that Shaker Ex¬
tract of Roots, or Mother Sei
gel’s Curative Syrup, when
properly this prepared will remove
disease in all its stages.
Care must be taken, however,
to secure the genuine article.
IT WILL SELL BETTER THAN
COTTON.
Mr. John C. Hemptinstall,
Ala., 1 writes: “My J wife hai
. been much t benefited » .
80 D'N
! faker ^ 1 8 Extract hv 1 Up til.lt of Roots SlH saj 01
j j J. ‘ . ‘ "g"
the niedu 3 . . T ha8 ,ioile , , h<>]
* lu ^
‘ more L'Ood than the doctors ailU
adothei ,, medicines ... J)llt together. .
-1 WOllld rule twenty IlllleS to
i f‘ ferer *.Jf if lie tlx can ''*»'}* get it ill « f no «*«*■ other
thls • q. btate , 1 lxtter ,, tl,an ,1 cotton ... -
TESTIMONY FROM TEXAS,
V
1 ’
Eipley Co., Mo., ,. writes that .
she had been long 3; afllictea With
d ); 1 1 i * A “ of the
Uliliary organs and Was Cllivd
, ci. u .. R x traet of Roots
y r Mclxllire u n ■ merchant, » /
>
°* * tlie same P lace who Sold
»
Hoi'tnii +l»t» imuli/tlnA anva ^
' 1
. he has Bold , . it for four .
fail years
find never knew it to
S1IE WAS almost dead
T 1 wa8 80 loW Wlth d y s P e P“
• ,i , vdixr
woo « 1 7 :
. . to be found - , who . could
»cian
do anything with me. 1 had
fluttering of the heart and
swimming of the head One
day I read your pamphlet called
-dwon# the She ers,
which described my c lsease
better the than Shaker I could myself. of I
t™ d Extract
Roots and kept on with it until
I rejoice m good health,
rinsley, Bevier,
Munlenburg Co, Ry.
For sale by all 1 ruggists, or
«>dress the proprietor A. J.
^N lute, Lmnu ii, o 4 Warren
®t., JNew ioik.
Ruck leu’s Arnica Salve,
The best Salve in the world for onie,
braises, sores, nlrers, ^It rbentn, fever
H-ires, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
corns, and all skio eruptions, and posi¬
tively cares piles, or no pay required It
is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction,
or money refunded. Price 25e par box.
THE MORNING NEWS
STEAM PRINTING HOUSE.
Printing, Lithographing, Engra¬
ving, Stereotyping, Book Bin¬
ding and Blank Book
Manufacturing.
Hu Largest Concern af the hsd in the South.
thoroughly equipped and oompletewith¬
in itseif;the latest machinery and the
most skillful woikmen.
Corporations. Banks Bankers, Manufacturers, County Officers
and
Earmer8. Business Merchants. Men Mechanics, Generally
And
about placing orders for anything in tbe
above lines, from a visiting card to a
mammoth poster, or from a memorandum
book to a mammoth ledger, are requested
to gi« .bis boose. tral. [
J. 1 L4 n. COT! LO 1 1 I LL, f r ROP-, i
3 Whitaker St., Savannah, Ov.
I
4
I
A m
[»•
Ml experience preparation After Forty in years t.ue -
01 more
4 E than One Hundred
SIB Thonaatid appUcntiona for pat,ci.!.< m
Hun the Uri.ted Stales and Foreign Scieutine ornitt
■ trier, tliw publishers of the
rMLv Am rican continue to act. as er e tors
■ for pnteuts. caveats, trade-mar . » c-»py
mmmmmmm righis. etc., for the United Stai ■ atul
to obtain patenis in Canada. England. Their Frame
Germany, and all other countries facilities experi¬
ence peaeed. ia unequalod and their are uusur
Drawings and spociflcatlona prepared Terms and filed
In the Patent Office on short notice. vury
reasonable. No charge for examination of models
Of drawings Advice by mail free
Patents obtained through Morin Afto.are noticed
Inthe S<1 KVrrFIC AMERICAN. which has
the largest circulation and is the most influential
newspaper of its kind published in the world
1 The advantages of such a notice every patentee
andaretauda. illustrated
it This large ami WEEKLY splendidly $3.00 newspaper i
admitted published be the at devoted a year, to un H
to best paper eciem **.
mechanics, inventions, engineering works, u:ut
other departments country) of industrial progrees. pub¬ of
lished in any it contains the name*
all patentees and title of every invention patented
each week. Try it four mouths for one dollar.
Sold If by all newsdealers. to patent write to
you have SB invention Soientiho American.
Mann A Co., publishers of
Ml Breadway, new York. mailod
w Maadfrook akott ptUitt ftrea,
WI N C H ES T E R E
fl REPEATING Reloading Tools, RIFLES. and
Single Shot Rifles, kinds,
Ammunition of all
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO.
___....,.-m.... N 21v: EE_K‘VICN. CON N. W
Send for 76-Page
ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE
MENTION THIS PAPER.
A Hie Hansford, Libel for Divotce »»
va Harms
Wm Hanaford. Superior Court.
It appearing to tbe court that the <v
feedant Wot Hansford has not beenaei
ed. It ia ordered and adjndged bv >1
court that aaid case be continued anr m i
!» c « , , . by publication ... in »»
Hamilton Joubhal, a De**P*P« V'-M'"
’ n 8%1( * county. K A Rusmi l,
Plff ■
Tbe above v ard .. foregoing is a true t x
tract from minutes Harris Superio C XIt I {
Oct. term, 1887 .
A r Tll!,rrT ' c s c