The Montgomery monitor. (Mt. Vernon, Montgomery County, Ga.) 1886-current, September 30, 1886, Image 4

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A Mother’* Lore. Maternal love i* the embodiment of tlie one idea of perfectness, and purity, and faith under the heavens. In the hour of resolve and emulation the valor of the warrior may be overpow ering; and pathetic fervor and enthusi- I *»rn the orator and poet may thrill us to glorious exhilaration; but at the final test, with death closing about us, besides the heart’s trust in God, the mother's love bears all analysis, becomes stronger, and truer, and more potent to support as earth and its transitory hopes fade farther a'.id farther away. To look up to the blue, beautiful heaven, so wide, so mercifully wide for all the erring and repentant; one thought • if all the mother has borne and struggled for, one fervid realization of her patience and sublime trust and endeavor seems to In* the second Calvary of our hopes. Her work in life, our own belief in its fidelity and acecptan< c in heaven’s sight, seem to lessen the wretchedness and failure of our own weak labors. Tier free, may be homely and wrinkled sand old, her hands faltering and unsteady, y» t those features are aurcolcd with a silver • rov.n won through patient suffer ing, those trembling fingers are magnetic still to tnrill and guide and bless. What we owe her volumes have told. Mow much silently and earnestly we re pay her, sho never knows this side of the grave. For the soul that lias wandered, re turoi'jg to its allegiance in latter years, ear. never tell in words the emotions it i xperirnces, can never flame the soulful thoughts that strive to atone for the re inissncsses of the past. Amid the bitterness of contrition, and the longings of hopeless regret, the soul’s ardent love makes up for all the careless jo me-by years; the influence of a mother's •example is accepted, and sought for, and profited by, and cherished. If the hidden ( motions of many a heart, seemingly hardened and immersed in the cares of life, were revealed, we would lie surprised to know how many are on the lxirder line of heavenly faith, only be cause to them the mystery of a mother’s love has never yet departed from the memory. Juvenile Jokes. Litti.K Carrie G. said she liked sea bathing, only her mouth leaked and let in salt water. A had little Milwaukee boy, having been expelled from school, returned in girl’s clothes, and the imposture was not discovered for several months. Maiik Twain lias furnished parents with a valuable recipe for bringing up hoys. “Take ’em by the hair of the head," he says, and you’re pretty sure to catch ’em." “What is a lake?" asked a teacher. A bright little Irish boy raised his hand. “Well, Mickey, what is it?” “Bhure, it’s a hole in the kittle, mum.” Perhaps he thought she meant leak. “How that child docs squall I” ex claimed a girl lo her friend, as sho nod itt it tonniil tv Chinese batty. “Os course,” replied hor friend, “Every cop per-colored Chinese buby is sure to boa little yellcr.” Tkaciiku (to a boy in grammar class) “John, correct the following sentence: ‘lt are very cold.’" (John ns he wipes the perspiration from his forehead with his shirt sleeve) —“lt arc blooming ’ot.” “Tommy," said a mother to her seven year old hoy, “you must not interrupt me when lam talking with ladies. You must wait till we stop, and then you can talk." “But you never slop!” retorted the boy. Gay Old Gentleman (to boy on twelfth birthday)—“l hope you will improve in wisdom, knowledge and virtue.” Boy (politely returning compliment, totally mi •onseious of snreasm) — “The same to you, sir." The Mexican Baby Supply. Everything concerning Mexico is of interest just now, and it is pleasant to be assured that among the chief productions of the country are children. Thus an observant correspondent in that country no es the large acquaintance of the people witH multiplication in saying that .Mex ico is the hot-bed of children. The land is flooded with them, and a small family is a thing unknown. They greet you, he says, in every window, at every corner, every woman’s back. They till the carriages on the pin/a, they are like a swTirm of bees around a honeysuckle one on every tiny flower and hundreds wait ing for their chance. A man died the other day who was followed to the grave bv eighty-seven sons ami daughters and had buried thirteen, so that he was falher to the grand total of 100 children. There is another man living in Mexico who has had two wives and who has living forty five children. Allowing tlie small aver age of five to the family, one could sec how numerous the grandchildren would Ik\ lam acquainted, he adds, w ith a gentlemen whose mother is hut thirteen and a half years older than he. and she had eighteeu more of a family. It is a blessed thiug that the natives are able to live in n cane hut and exist on beans ami rice, else the list of deaths by starvation would lx- something dreadful. Hr. Gimi.kt returns empty-handed from a day's hunting, and in response to his wife's inquiries, candidly confesses that he killed nothing. “Why,’’ retorts Mrs. G., slowly, “ you could have done better than that to have stayed at home and attended to your regular business." The doctor never even smiled at her wit. United Irki.and, a Dublin newspa per, calls the recent victory over Glad stone in the United Kingdom "the trick sters, soreheads and mountebanks' grab after the emoluments of power." Important to Xtcrebant Tailor*. M. von Keller A Cu., mu cess-ora to Keller A Ruhl. at the oid Cloth Ito ise. c orner Ann a cl William Sl*. New York ott-. are doin* an ex tensive business by means of t urn is', mff lo the Merchant Tailoring trade throughout rue Tut ted States, complete samp e celle turns of tbe r Woolens in season, anci receiving and executing orders received through tlie sam ples. Whenever a style lias Iren sold out, litre notify their c-.is outers to that etlect. so that the parties holding tlteir samples are al wacs properly intc-rmed as to w nch styles they ran offer to ti e r t atrons. The Merchant Tailor ts thus placed in a position to scow * lars-e variety of styles without encumbering himsel: with a larga stock. We understand that any Merc f.anlTa lor -tea ring such collec tion of aatne'-rs ean have lame sent free of eharga. Auareae Massrs. H- you Kaliar * Cos LADIES’ DF.PABIMEST. Row Bridal Veils Are Worn. The manner of wearing the bridal veil now U copied directly from royalty. Every one is familiar with the arrange ment of Queen Victoria’s ever-present veil, and in this manner do the brides of to-day fancy wearing them. It is hunched ■•lightly on the top of the coiffure, form ing a coronet or cap, and thence falls back over the train. This arrangement requires a skilful hand, and is generally intrusted to a milliner’s manipulation. It m becoming to most faces, but does away with the traditional use of the which has always been to cover the modest face of the maiden, it being an old-time custom always to lift it as soon as the ceremony was performed. The bridal veil then was full of significance, now it is merely an ornament. —/Veto York World. I'HklilonN In l*arasol«. Parasols this season are unusually var ied, and some of the styles arc exceed ing novel and attractive. In common with the rest of the toilet, ribbon plays an important part in their adornment, while lace, guaze and net are used in a variety of ways. Some of the parasols have a full ruching of net around the top, ami full folds are brought down along the ribs and caught in at the tips. Others are covered with loosely-plaited crape or net, and still others have the lace covering shirred around the top, whence it falls below the silk in full, loose folds,draped at one side with loops and ends of ribbon, and showing the silk beneath. The en-tout-cas is in de mand this season, us it is large enough to afford protection from a sudden show er anti sufficiently attractive to be used as a parasol. Velvet, foulurd, pongee and sateen arc all used as covering for the many new shapes. The sticks are often very elaborate, and aro generally longer than those of last season, thus serving as a walking stick when the para sol is closed ; the ferrules are of steel and do not suffer by contact with the pave ment. Some parsols have two large lace handkerchiefs laid one over the other, forming eight points, and have a deep full of lace underneath.— New York Com mercial. Woman'* licit Friend. A hairpin is a woman’s best friend. It fits a multiplicity of uses and she is never without one. If her hair is short you can depend upon it that in a recess of her purse or a pocket of her reticule you will find the hairpin. If she buttons her shoes she uses her hairpin, and who ever saw a woman button her gloves with anything else? If her head itches, does she scratch it with herfinger? Non sense! She whips out a hairpin and re leaves herself. Suppose a nickle has dropped between the bars of the wooden foot grate in the street car. Docs she soil her lingers as a man would, and then not get it? Certainly not. Out comes the hairpin, and tlie coin is lifted out without trouble. If hershawlpin is lost, where so good a substitute as the hair pin? If she eats a nut does she take a nut pick? Most assuredly not. Tho hairpin again. It is with a hairpin that sho ri|>« open tho uncut leaves of a book or magazine; it is a hairpin with which she marks her progress in her favorite book; if a trunk key is missing, a kair piu opens tho refractory lock as neatly as a burglar’s skeleton key would; with it sho cleanses her finger nails, and, if it is a clean ono, even picks her teeth. And the feats of hair securing that she will make a simple bow legged hairpin ac complish nearly surpasses the belief of man. Altogether, it deserves to be class ed among tho great inventions of the world, and tho grave of the original man who created tho first onecould have no prouder epitaph than this: “That is the kind of a hairpin he was."— Chicago Neirs. Wh«re I.nrr» nrc Mntlf. The most of tho hand-made lace is manufactured in Belgium, France, and England. Large quantities are also made by machinery in the two latter c mntries anti in the United States. Tho application of machinery to this delicate and intricate work lias made many kinds :of lace very cheap, which, when made by hand, never could have been other wise than expensive because of the labor required to complete them. In Belgium, where a very large part of the real lace is made (the liand-iuado laces are all called “real,” and machine lace s “imitation”), over 150,000 women are said to be employed in lace-making, and the majority of these work at home. There are 900 lace schools in tho count ry. Probably the most important center of the work in that country is the city of Brussels. A very expensive kind of lace is made here, known as Brussels lace, which is of very fine thread and in tricate design. Mechlin lace, which is very fine and transpsrent, is made at Mechlin, Antwerp, Lierre, and Turn hout. The manufacture of Valenciennes, another favorite lace is extinct in its native city—whence it derived its name —but has attained much prosperity in Flanders. It is now chiefly made at th° towns of Ypres. Bruges, Courtrai. Monin' Ghent, and Alost. The productions of Ypres are of the finest quality. Iu France, a few years ago, the number of iaee-iuskers was estimated at 350,000, but this total had been considerably re duced by the use of machinery in recent years. The point d’Alencon lace, which is a very beautiful lace, made entirely by hand with a fine needle, in small pieces, which are afterward united by invisible seams, is made principally at Baycux. The towns of Bayeux and Caen are es pecially noted for the manufacture of fins black laces. Chantilly lace, which was formerly made almost altogether at Chan tilly, is now made quite extensivly at the two towns mentioned above. The pro ductions of the towns of Lille and Arras are also well known. Lille lace is very simple in design, but very fine and beau tiful. The lace of Btilleul is strong and cheap, and extensively used for trimming. The lace manufacture of tho district of Auvergne, of which the town of Lo Puy is the centre, is considered the most an cient and extensive in France. Over 100,000 women are there employed, and nearly every kind of lace is made. Th® headquarters for machine made laces in France are at Calais. In England the manufacture of lace is carried on chiefly in the counties of Buckingham, Devon and Bedford. The best known of the English hand-made laces is the Iloniton, so culled from the town of this name in Dcvon-hire, where it was first made. In the city of Nottingham the manufacture of hand laces was an important industry some years ago, but this has been almost destroy'd by the introduction of ma chinery for lace manufacture. The town is now the headquarters for some of the finest designs in machine-made laces that are known. Lace is made to some extent in Ireland, especially in the town of Limerick, also in Scotland, and in nearly every country of Europe to a limited ex tent. — lnter- Ocean. Fashion .’Votea. Lace mitts are again in vogue. The handsom»st grenadines are bonded. Belts will bo much worn with summer dresses. Striped and checked materials aro all the rage. Laco mantles aro profusely trimmed with beads. Snowballs make a lovely trimming for a tulle bonnet. Tucks and plaits are superseding flounces and frills. The bodices of thin woolen materials aro lined with silk. Yellow and helitrope are the leading London colors this summer. Black, white, and scarlet are the pre ferred colors for tulle bonnets. White frocks are not so much in favor this year for festivals as formerly. The new peach color combines exqui sitely with gold shades of yellow. The London turban is a favorite, but for seaside, mountain, and travelling wear. Pongee combined with plaid Surah makes a pretty aud inexpensive summer dress. A tulle bonnet should be the lightest, most cloud-like piece of headgear imagi nable. Gathered panels tako the place of pleated ones on summer wash fabric dresses. Spangled crape fans in iridescent effects come among other novelties in this line. Large Gainesborough hats are again in vogue, but they have very large, high, conical crown. There is a new and delicious shade of peach color that takes tho bloom oil every other shade. Surplice bodices have the fullness be ginning at the shoulder scam, and cross ing diagonally from right to left. Necklaces of cut steel and black pearls, the latter not always genuine, are included among the novelties of the sea son. It is predicted that next fall we shall have a revival of the old-fashioned puffed sleeves that were worn in tho days of Josephine. A standing collar more suitable for hot weather has appeared, open in front about an inch. It is ono of the old styles re-introduced. Tulle bonnets—white, black, gray, scarlet, all shades of red and rose color, blue and heliotrope—are worn for full dress occasions. Fans this season are exquisite. San dal, violet and other scented-wood sticks are used, so that a little breeze brings a delicious perfum \ Plain surah and silks, with plush ot velvet stripes, are used for the skirt, the bodice aud draperies being of etamine, mohair or cashmere. Serges are in high favor and deservedly so, for there is no medium priced goods from which so much wear and general satisfaction can be had. Certain Peculiarities. “Here’s a silly joke, Bromley, about » man talking to a lady three hours, thiuki ing she was his wife all the time." “Darringer, the man was an idiot. I couldn't talk to a lady a minute withoul knowing whether she was my wife oi not, not even th ou h a fog-horn. There are certain peculiarities of emphaiil- ’ “Yes, 1 know, Bromley. My wife's i gait 'em, too." —Philadelphia Coil. SODA E.VGOE-. Carlooa Locomotlrea Beinf Bnllt at the Baldwin Works. At the Baldwin locomotive works tb-rc i are in course of construction four locomo- ' tives which are designed to be run by soda, which takes the place of fire under 1 the boiler. Soda has much the same j power as coal without any of the offen sive gases which that fuel emits. The engines are now nearly finished, and are to be shipped within two weeks to Min neapolis, Minn., and are to be run on the streets of that city, where steam engines are forbidden. The engine has much the same appear ance as a passenger car. It is about six teen feet long, entirely boxed in, with no visible smokestacks or pipes, as there is no exhaust nor refuse. The boiler is of copper, 84 1-2 inches in diameter and 15 feet long, having tubes running through it, as in steam boilers. Inside the boiler will be placed five tuns of soda which, upon being dampened by a jet of steam, produces an intense heat. When the soda is thoroughly saturated, which will occur in about six hours, the action ceases, and j then it is necessary to restore it to its original state by forcing through the boiler a stream of super-heated steam from a stationary boiler, which drives the moisture entirely from the soda, when it is again ready for use. The ex haust steam from the cylinders is used to saturate the soda, and by this means all refuse is used. These engines are the first of their kind that have been built in this country and are being constructed under the su pervision of George Kuculer, a German engineer. The engines will have about the same power as those on the New York elevated roads, and will readily draw four light cars. Soda engines are now used in Berlin and other European cities very successfully, and they also traverse ; the St. Gothard tunnel, under the Alps, where steam engines cannot be used, be cause the length of the tunnel renders it impossible to devise a system of ventila- ! tion which will carry off the foul gases generated by a locomotive. So over powering would those gases become that suffocation would ensue. Short Mention. Storm signals—red eyes. . Fits—the gifts of mothers in law. A small “nickel” may cause a great quarrel. Women’s rights are maintained by men’s bayonets. Boot-snakes come with practice. They are not water snakes. The anarchists will begin practicing again at an early day—on a tight rope— last act. It is thought an honor to teach boys and girls letters—a disgrace to teach them to work. Why? Steamer men are looking forward to crossing the Atlantic in palatial steamers in four days’ time. BoTn men and women have a fondness for glasses; those the men admire usually hold—“two or three fingers.” Most young men are reported better characters because of church going. They have themselves oniy to blame if undeserving. Nelly Bly has lost her hand 1 Chorus of Excited Female Voices —Why, what do you mean i Why, she has promised it to Ned Bronson. At Fort Smith, Arkansas, there have been eighty-six capital convictions and forty-six executions since 1871, nearly all from Indian Territory. The possession of land enables one to employ his own labor. The industrious cultivation of land enables some to sell labor, others to sell the products of labor. A Pretty Story About Miss Terry. At Mr. Irving’s reception the other night (writes a London correspondent), there was an American gentleman who figures in a pretty story about Miss Ellen Terry. One night in New York a little deformed man came behind the scenes to present Miss Terry with a tribute in the shape of a book. This was a beautifully bound volume containing cleverly etched portraits of the actress and a number of passages from her various parts, finely engrossed. The frontispieces represented four people sitting in the front row of the gallary, absorbed in the performance, and by these four people, two brothers and a sister of the little deformed man. the book had been entirely manufactured. They were at the theater every night and used to sit in the best seats; but as the expense became serious they gradually went aloft, like Tom Bowling, till they settled in the gallery, where" they were to be found nightly with unfailing regu larity. When Miss Terry took the gift that was the product of much loving care she burst into tears, and the little de formed man cried too and went away perfectly happy to fill the hearts of his three companions as full as his own. A courteous Frenchman, in reply to a question why ladies were not admitted into the Chamber of Deputies, said that to be a member it was requisite to be forty years of age, and it was impossible to find any lady that had reached that unseemly age. A Healthy Body and a Clear Head. If indigestion, constipation and biliousness torment the body, the head cannot be clear. These orders react upon the brain most hurt fully, and produce a cloudiness in the organ of thonght not experienced by a healthy man. Happily these brain-oppressing maladies may be entirely dispelieti by that peerless alterative, Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters, which cheers, refreshes anil invigorates the brain and nerves, while it regulates t ; e organs of digesti on, as similation and bilious secretion. It expo s the morbid humors winch poison the system through the bowels and urinary passages, and exerts a powerful Invigorating influence as well. Its cathartic action is never irritating, violent or painful, but even, natural a id pro- Sessive. As an appetizer and sleep promoter, e bitters is unrivaled; it mitigates the infirm ities of age. relieves the ailments peculiar to the getler sex. arrests prematura decay, and bailds ap aa enfeebled physique The Yassar girl, asked what animal she liked best, very readily answered — Man. Yassar girls antagonize war be cause it consumes so many men. For removing dandruff and curing all scalp diseases, use Hall's Hair Henewer. Ayer's Ague Cure is acknowledged to be the ataailard remdey for fever and ague. Little Jennie was capsized in a boat | one day, and would probably have been ! drowned had she not had presence of mind enough to keep her hands and feet moving, and thus keep herself afloat un til help came. When she was retiring that night her mother told her she must thank God for having rescued her from a ; watery grave, which she did in the fol lowing way: “Dod, I am oblithed to oo j for helping to thave me from drowning— ] and then I had a ’ittle strenth mythelf. Drainage wanted. Secure the serv ices of a few bummers; draining is their business—draining glasses. “Itis as harmless as it Is effective, ’’ Is what Is said of Ked Star Cough Cure by Dr. S. K. Cox, D. D., Analytical Chemist, Wasii.ngtoa, D. C. Price, 25 cents. A Fort Worth, Texas, man dropped dead on entering an eating house to get his dinner. If the dinner was like most dinners you get at Texas eating houses the man would have died anyhow in a very short time, consequently there would be no necessity for an inquest. The virtues of St. Jacobs Oil, as proclaimed by millions of restored sufferers, should induce every one to supply his household with this great specific. It conquers pain. A Michigan lawyer has invented an instrn- ! ment for the transfusion of blood directly : from one person to another. It is reasonable j to suppose that the inventor’s profession ; makes him vei'y proficient in the art of bleed ing people. If you have numbness in arms and limbs,heart skips beats, thumps or flutters, or you are nervous and irritable—in danger of shock— Dr. Kilmer’s Ocean-Weed regulates, relieves, corrects and cures. Extraordinary hut nevertheless true. We refer to the announcement of B. F. Johnson &Co., of Richmond, in which they propose to show working and energetic men how to make from S7OO to $2,500 a year over and above ex penses. Mensman’s Peptonized beef tonic, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutri tious properties. It contains blood-making force,generating and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms of general debility: also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over work or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. Caswell,Hazard ,v Co., Proprietors, New York. Sold by druggists. One pair of boots can be saved every year by using Lyon’s Patent Metalic Heel Stiffeners. How to Secure Health. Scotill’s Sarsaparilla and Stillinoia, or Blood and Liver Svßur will restore perfect health to the physical organization. It is. indeed, a strengthen ing syrup, pleasant to tilk \ and has often proved Itself to be the best B.ood Purifier ever discovered, effectually curing Bcrofula, Syphilitic disorders, Weakness of the Kidneys, Erysipelas, Malaria, all Nervouß disorders and Debility, Bilious Complaints, and all diseases indicating an impure condition of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys, Stomach, etc. It corrects indigestion, especially win n the comp alnt is of an exhaustive nature, having a tendency to lessen the vigor of the brain and nervous system. If a cough disturbs your sleep, take Piso’s Cure for Consumption and rest well. BROWN'S IRON BITTERS WILL CURE HEADACHE INDIGESTION BILIOUSNESS DYSPEPSIA NERVOUS PROSTRATION MALARIA CHILLS and FEVERS TIRED FEELING GENERAL DEBILITY PAIN in the BACK & SIDES IMPURE BLOOD CONSTIPATION FEMALE INFIRMITIES RHEUMATISM NEURALGIA KIDNEY AND LIVER TROUBLES FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS The Genuine has Trade Mark and croased Red Lines on wrapper. TAKE NO OTHER. / Don’t bny a watch until you I / find out about the latest improve- / / ments. Send for new illustrated I / catalogue and price list. J. P. / I Stevens, Jeweler, 47 Whitehall / Street, Atlanta, Ga. ' - .. ■■ .... ... . DR. KILMER’S On© of every five wo Ls. meet haa gome form ot Heart Disease, and is i n con stant-dansror of Apoplexy, S&AraMK&jm Shock or Sudden Death 1 -|j|B This Remedy regulates, re lieves, corrects and cures. cßr EWPrepared at Dr. Kilmer’s . dispensary. Binghamton, N. Y. &, ift Guido to Healths Sent Free). sl.°° 'W $5.00 Sold by Druggists. WILSON’B /j{ CHAMPION SPARK ARRESTER Cp- b Best open drnnghi arrester in \ / the world. No more *iu house* K A burned from engine aparka. Sold PF|] on guarantee. vVrite for Circu •LLl* lar. T. T. \\ INDSOUdL CO., M m. zb V* »)De ."t., Mil led g evil I e. 4. a. Responsible Agunts wanted tor s&ie of Arrester. WOMAN’S Surest and Safest Regulator is BELLAMY'S EXTRACT COSSYPIUM Doctors recommend it. Sold by all druggists. J. B DANIEL, Wholesale Agt., At.aata.Ga. |!H |lT| Send to MOORE’S iPljij BUSINESS ON I VERSI TY, For Circular. A llveaettiHl Business School. minTimr quickly < ukh> by £>£l BMTa e K t RINK S RUPTURE KEM- BlUr I Ullb KDY Explanation andtest;- mouiais free. Audreys O. Frink, 163 Broadway, N. Y. Dill* GrMl English Goutand Blair S llllSi Rheumatic Remedy. Oval Hoi M.UO; round. 50 eta. Wto SS a dav. Samples worth SISC rftKfc- Lines not under the horse a feet. Address Brewster's Safety Rein Holder. Holly,Mich. ■a a mmm p eta mm a Obtained. Send stamp for yAIt. 1 1 I O Inventor’s Guide. L. B:s> I «A»i Patent Lawyer. Washington, D. C. $ n ELECTRIC BELT for Kidners, Pain, Nervous Jt dOwra*. Book tre«. FLXTCHJLR A Co.,Cleveland, O. - ■■ ■ - - - - " " BEST ItJ THE MiinHilN Magazine Rifle.:.'j^^jgg7 for larr* or imall jrarrio—a!l i'*m. Tie »troni»e«t ihooticr rfle made. Perfat " ac«-»»‘ary atd th« eaiy abaoiately u:« rifi# «a ine 3iar»eL v •BAT-fiARD GALLERY, SPORTING AND TARGET R T TLES. world Smi for L’»- : • MUM TN fTT? i" v»? CO,. Ncit Harm. Conn. SISLICKER'ir' ■“ kw \ Nw/ 4 Hi# F!>H BE A NT) SL’ r KFr. ;* \r-* —■.- ■■'- -»-***-• - and wi!i k**p yea dry In ■ A ». _ - V\l tba »tnrra. TV s r \.\P. -a t*’-- t r tc ™at, ard ■ * fcJ T)u K **-• ib-er:::-# aadd> ■ wit- t lb* • P.ab Ely’s CATARRH CREAM BALM WRjEvVjW Ihat'usedtico hot- ” ~ “CLCOAjJI ties of Ely’s Cream Kj Hf Ij-i 1 Ealm and consider H myself cured. I suf- PHAVFEVERp! catarrh and catarrh- Bfi 1 / 55*8 al headache and this EaL Kgj is the first remedy that afforded lasting KOggSV' . relief. —D. T. Biggin - - CT ] son, 145 Lake Street , ■» ..t ig Chicago, 10. HAY “FEVER A particle it applied into each nostril and is agreeable to n.e Price 50 eta. by mail or at druggists. Send for circular. ELY BROTIiLKS, Druggists, Owego, N.Y. Y Book telling you how to DETEU 1 and maM CURE DISEASE m tliis valuable ani* mai. Do not run the risk of login? your Horse for want of knowledge to cure him, when 25c. wil Ipav for a Treatise. Buy one and inform yourself. Remedies for all Horse Diseases. Plates showing how to Tell the Age of Horses. Sent postpaid tor £5 cents in stamps. N. Y. HORSE BOOK CO., aJON.ES" tYSthsFBEICHT Ton Wagon Hcales, d Is««eri, Suel Dearingi, Brass re Deem and lt»am Box for 300. livery ilte Scale. For free price Hal mentioa thU p’prr and address JONES OF BINGHAMTM, BINGHAMTON. N. Y. IDs Greatest curiosity in Mure. The Mexican Resurrection Plant, apparent ly dead, when placed in water soon comes to life, •howingall the tints of the rainbow. $i t*> $4 per dav ea-l.y made, as it selis to four out of five per sons at Send 25c. for 3. or sc*. tor 7 samples (s<fll for 25c. eaeh). Low prices by the UV) and 1,000, A rear’s subscription to one of six pap m s given to first 50e order from each county and to flr.st order mentioning this paper. 11. BLKDSOti* 31.1 Dlaiu Street, Fort Worthy Tcxsi> I Pimples, niotohe*. Scaly or Oily Skin, Blemishes and nil Skin Diseases Cured and Complexion Beautified by Beeson’s Arcmalic Alum Sulphur Sonp. I Sold by Druggists or sent by mall on receipt ofH 25cents by WM. DREVDOPPEL, 3lnnu-| facturor, 208 North Front St., Philadelphia. Pa- H Salvo CUBES DRUNEEBMESS and Intemperance, not instantly, fP** but effectually. The onfv scientific anti* £IS) dote for th.i Alcohol Hublt and ths only remedy that dares to send trtaJ m bottles. Highly endorsed by the med* leal profession and prepared by well- Qp known New York physicians. Send stumps for circulars and Address "SALVO REMEDY,” No. 2 West l lth St., New York. r STEP IN ADVANCE OF ALLOTHERS. rmnißSMunrpuAsil - '""3BBETTER INSTRUMENTS. A JfffAnn LOWER PRICES. /^^gFASIERTERMS BEIN BROS. 4 CO. B NEWARK, N. J. ■ M German Aithmu Cure never /ail* to *lvefl v immediate retie/ in the worst cases. Insure* com-H Ifortable sleep; effects cure* where all others fail. Hfri.zt convinces the most skeptical. Price 60 eta ana■ £ 9 1.00, of Druggists or bv mail. Sample FKr.E ‘" r H [ stamp. I» It. R. SC HIF I'” >1 AS. Wt. PanL Al Inn. W Fla Rope to Cut Off Horses’ Manes. Oelobritel‘FgCLlPSE* II ALTER, and BRIDLE Combined, cannot Wv | bo slipped by any horae. Sample MlyW Halter to any part of U. S. free, on * I receipt of sl. Sold by all Saddlery. rTswf Hard ware and Harness Dealers, f r x. . ! Special discount to tha Trade, rxt ygSK&Br l Send for Price-List. V % J. C. LIGHT HOUSE, Rochester, N. Y. J&m\ FACE, IIAM>S, FEET, Mf* aad all their Imperfection*, Including Fadal, lup Developement, Superfloout Hair, Birth Mark,, -e ,Es Mole,, Wart*, Moth, Freckle*, Red Noee, Acne, BUck H«i>. Scars. Pltt'nr their trei'm.at, n® Dr. JOHN H. WOODBURY, BV I. Furl 81. ilb.Dj, S. T. Eil'b’d IS7O. BroJ 10c. tor hack. CONSUMPTION. I have a positive remedy for the above disease; by Its ese.:h“n*ands of cast’s of the worst kind and of long standing have been cu red. Indeed..-o etrnngl* my falta In it* efficacy, that I wi 1 send TWO BOTTLES FItBB, together wlto a Va LCABI.BTREATISE on this disease W anj taff"! er. Give express and P O. Hddrrss. Dtt. T. A. SLOCUM, 181 Tearldt., New York. S7OO to $2500 be made working for us. Agents preferred who can furnish the:r own horses and give their whole time the business, pare moments may be profitably em ployed also. A few vacancies in towns and cities, li. F JOHySQN A Co., lUM Mam >t., Rlc.imond, Va. niisnrsaiTOOTH powder Keeping Teeth Perfect and (<uin* Heulthy, HERMAN S™J FOR ONE DOLLAR. I A first cla-is Dictionary gotten out at small price to encourage the study of the German Language. It gives English words with the S rman equivalents, and German word * with English ieflnltions. A verv ch>-ip book, bend SI.OO to BOOK PUB. HOUSE, 13 1 Leonard St., N. V'. ( ity, and get one of tn-.pe books by return mall^ «€* nas taken the lead t» the sales as that class oi rerL.9 i.es, and has g:ren almost aniversal siiiilic- MLRPHY G has won the laror of the public and now rank* among the leading MeOi ““Jul! SMITH. " ’ Bridl. l, Pt 6e'dby Dai^gists. 9% r to Soldiers Jt Hetra Send stamp for Circulars. COU L. BINGU I WilwlvildllAjl Att’y, Waaniugion. L> 0. ThTFty-flvc.