Newspaper Page Text
OBLBS 4 HOLLINSHEAD,
RESIDENT DENTISTS,
VATCROSS, 61,
OFFICE—Up stain in the Parker
•epl2 1y
.iOHS 01 3UCHOLL8. If. o. BRAlfTLET.
NIGHOLLS & BRANTLEY,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
BLACKSHEAR, GA
! td&~ Practice in State and Federal
Court.
Brown House,
FOLKSTON, QA.
Vrs. A. L. BROWN, Proprietress
SaTUMli, Florida and Western
railway.
rad «.m.bjc<ntr»l
rnna C1BD K EFFECT HOT. 14. lags.
MuHfiSS,°» *“■"* «“ ™
Vast India Fat MalL ,
lT
iSES. Bimfora Lt 11J m
Plant StMmthlp Una.
M, Lv..jrampa...Ari|£;
AT...Hnkai.Xi, Li.
Tuml Pnn
S*t.....p m
W*A. fit,
San....n xu
Thar*., §*t»
h **J1..Lt
wSteSJ?* York Mopm
7o»un5f**?<••■» Esprass,
* « am !>***'•• •• 8ft JAnn*h Lv 7 68 pm
IUudv ...... : ..Jesap Ar 818pm
• Board, $2.00 per day; special r
the week or month.
*tes by
sncoiv w. hitch.
d*#A*D H. MYERS.
' 0IT ^tI & MYERS,
AT . rORNEYS AT LAW
( WAYCEOSS, GA.
/ Office on Plant avenue, 2d door east of
'BattUa house. augll l2rasog
....Waycross!!!
..Lv 6 05pm
* ,d$ i&Ar..
A noon Ar...
TOO am Lv..
T 88 am Lv..
—Callahan....
...Jacksonville..
..Jacksonville...
... Callahan....
..Lv 247pm
..Lv 2 05pm
..Ar 7 85 pm
..Ar 0 67 pm
1016am Lv..
1100am Lv..
U16 am Lv..
12 04 pm Lv..
12 84 pm Lv..
122 pm Ar..
....Waycrofs...
...Homerviia..
Dupont....
....Yaldoata....
..Tbomaavilie"
..Ax 440pm
. .Lv 8 65 pm
..Lv 840pm
..Lv 2 66pm
..Lv 228pm
. .Lv 1 46 pm
8 35 pm Ar..
j.. Bain bridge...
..trllUuD
4 04 pm Ar..
.Chattahoochee.
. .Lv 1180 am
8 42 pm Ar..
......Albany....
...Lv 10 90 am
i J. S. WILLIAMS,
(Attorney and Counsellor at law,
( WAYCROS8, GA.
Will practice in the Brunswick Judic
ial circuit and elsewhere by contract.
Pullman buffet cars to and from Jackson
ville and New York, to and from Jackaonville
and New Orleans via Pt naaoola, to and from
Jacksonville and Louisriile via Tbomaaville,
Atlanta and Nashville, and Jacksonville to Cin
cinnati via Jcsop.
East Florida Exprttt.
180 pm Lv......Savannah Ax 1165 am
8 20 pm Lv Jesop Lv 10 21 am
4 21 pm Lr Blackshenr Lv 9 84 am
4 40 pm Ar Waycross Lv 915 am
iCason &
6 67 pm Ar...
785pm Ar...
5 00 pm Lr..
6 41 pm Lv..
. ...Ctllahan....
. Jacksonvi lc..
...Jacksonville..
. ..Callahan
..Lv 7 83am
..Lr 7 00am
..Ar 8 55am
..Ar 8 11 am
7 68 pm Lv..
8 45pm Lv..
• 00pm Ar..
....Waycross...
.. Homeiville...
....Dupont
...Ar 5 67am
..Lv 510am
. Lt 4 55 am
8 20pm Lv..
.. Lake City...
.‘.Ar 1015 am
6 55pm Lv..
7 20 pm Lr..
.. Gainesville...
...Live OA.,.
..Ar 1005 am
..Ar 6 40am
910pm Lv..
10 01 pm Lv..
10 84 pm Lv..
11 25pm Ar..
12 60am Ar...
1 55 am Ar..
Dupont
Valdosta
... Quitman
.. Thomasvill •..
Camilla
Albany
...Ar 4 60am
...Lv 4 05am
..Lv 335am
..Lv 2 60am
..Lv 189 am
. .Lv 12 50 am
WAYCROS8, GA.
GRAIN HAY
SALT AND DRAN,
BY THE CARLOAD.
Orders from the country solicited and
prompt attention guaranteed. oc30 ly
H.L.Boone&Co.,
HARDWARE
I Stovds, Mill Supplies,
BELTING AND STEAM FITTING,
Valdosta, Ga,
2 00 am Lv..
320am Ar...
Waycross..
Dnpont
...Ar 1120 pm
...Lv 10 00 pm
6 40am Ar ..
10 05 am Ar...
...Live Oak...
.. Gainesville...
...Lv 7 20pm
1015 a
n Ar...
8 45 a
-5 27a
610 a
715 a
1110 a
in Lv...
m Lv..
tn Lv..
m Ar...
m Ar...
....Valdosta...
.... Quit min
...Thoinasvi.le..
...Lv 8 30pm
..Lv 7 55pm
...Lv 7 00pm
..Lv 4 00pm
B
KiTTlsrSWIO
J
TY TY ROUTE.
Fifty Mile* Shorter Than any Other
Sovte Between Wayerocc
and Albany.
On and after Friday, September 10th, 1886,
passenger trains will ran as follows :
FOR THE WEST, NORTH AND SOUTH.
Hail. Express.
Brunswick lv 100 pm
Pyles* Marsh lv 148pm
Jamaica lv 210 pm
Waynesvillo lv 2 50 pm
Hoboken lv 8 54 pm
Hcblatterviile lv 413 pm
Waycross ar 4 40 pm
B irannah. via S. F AW.. ar 7 58 pm
«, via S.F.& W ar 7 80 pm .
Jacksdhvill*. via8.F.4W lv 200 pm 9 80 pm
Savannah, via 8. F. A W. lv 7 01 am
Waycross.
. lv 4 55 pm 12 45 am
Pearson lv 612pm 2 00 am
Ala * *
Ty
Hacoo, via a R. R ar 940
Atlanta, via a R. & ....ar 185 pm
Marietta, via W. A A.IUUr 2 59 piu
Chattanooga, via W. A A. ar 7 07 pm
Cincinnati,viaCin.So... ar 650am
FROM THE WEST, NORTH AND SOUTH.
Mail/ Express.
Cincinnati, Via Gin. So.... lr 8 47 pm
CbaitanooRS^viaW. A A.. It 8 55 am
Marietta, vtaW. A A lv lS6pm
Atlanta, via O.R.R....... lv 245 pm
Macon,viaO.lt. R It.... 710pm
. Albany........... »Jv 530am 1115pm
lv 643
lv 7 09 am 12 82 pm
;. It 8 44am 207
• i. in no .m • •<
Savannah,via8.F. AW., ar 7 58 pm
JacAaonviRs,TiaSFAW. dlc 780pm 805a
Wavcrosa. ....It 1184am
Bcblattonrllla It 1201pm
Bobokra. ‘JJJPO
(riyMiBi* i“P m
Pyle?Marsh It 237 pm
Brunswick.. •* 820 pm
BRUNSWICK AND WAYCROSS ACCOMMO
DATION.
vine ana at. Homs via j/nornasvi'ie ana suoany.
Montgomery, Nashville and Evansville, and
Cincinnati! to Jacksonville via Jesnp.
Pullman sleeping cars to and from Bartow
and Montgomery via Gainesville.
Albany Exprtss.
8 45 pm Lv S irannah Ar 6 10
1125 pm Lv Jesnp Lv 8 20 am
1 SO am Ar W*ycrosn Lv 1130 pm
5 25 am Ar Callahan Lv 9 05 pm
615amAr Jacksonville. ...Lt 815pm
8 15 pm Lv Jacksonville At 615 am
8topj at all regular stations. Pullram buf
fet sleeping cars to and from Jacksonville and
Washington, and to and from Jacksonville
and Louisville and Lonini le via Thomseville
and Montgomery. Pullman buffet cara and
Mann boudoir buffet cars via Waycroes, Albany
and Macon, and via Wavcroes, Jesnp and
Macon.between Jacksonville ana Cincinnati.
Also, through pissenger coaches between Jack
sonville and Cbattarooga.
Thomasviils Exprtss.
C 15 am Lv Waycross Ar 7 00 pm
7 83 am Lv Dnpont Lv 5 26 pm
8 37amLv Valdosta. Lv 415 pm
915 am Lv Quitman Lv 3 30pm
10 25 am Ar Xfcom eville. Lv 2 15 pm
Stops at all regular aud llag stations.
Jtsup Express.
8 45 pm Lv Savannah Ar 8 80 am
6 10 pm Ar Jesup Lv 6 25 am
Stops at all regular and flag stations.
Tickets sold aud sleeping car berths secured
at the Passenger Station.
WM. P. HARDEE,
Gen’l. Pass. Agl
R. G. FLEMING Superintendent.
AGRICULTURAL
g at all Stations.
«... *°°* m
Anira Waycross 8 » am
Leave
Leave* Wayoroea.. .'.4 48 pm
Arrives Bninawick 10 25 pm
Purchase tickets at the station, and save
extra faro oollected upon the train.
Tho mail train stops at all B. A W. stations.
Connections made at Waycross to and from
. *11 points on Savannah, Florida A Western
**FtaUman Palsoe Sleeping and Mann Boudoir
ears upon Jacksonville and Cincinnati through
SET J. a. McDUTFIE, G. P. A.
V* ar ANGIEB, A. o. P. A.
* aTjl GADDIS. V. P. A G. K.
ODDS AND ElfDSl.
An exchange has an article on “Why
Bees Make Honey.** They make it to
cell.
A father may succeed in cutting off
his son without a cent, but he can’t cut
off the lawyers
If a man borrows money he does not
care to have it talked about. He wants
to be qnietly let alone.
Tin xockers on a chair never stick out
hall so far behind at any other time as
when a man is prowling around in the
dark barefooted.
When Georgiana was three, she said
suddenly one day, after long quiet:
‘ Mamma, where do the to-days go
when they get to be yesterdays f*
The sheep is a mighty useful anim 1;
his body is good for meat, his wool for
clothes, ana his skin is. manufactured
into doeskin, and even kid cloves.
A damsel, gave this as an excuse for
the size of her pedal extremities: She
had rheumatism when a child, and her
mother rubbed her legs the wrong way,
and robbed her calves into her feet.
A younci woman in eastern Maine
cries by the hour because she is tall.—
Jtx. This it a rather peculiar case, but
we have often heard of a man commit
ting suicide because he was “short,”
Tou can always tell a man who has
once been a clerk in a hotel, says an ex
change. Our experience has been that
G o can’t tell him much. He thinks he
towa it all.
VI acB that one of the new rules of
the national game provides that where a
batsman is hit by a pitched ball he is
given his base. Novy^ what is to pre
vent a man getting hit on purpose to
take hia base !” ‘‘nave you ever been
hit by a pitched ball I"* “Never*.** “1
thought not.”
NO WEDDING KINS.
“Violet,” said the young man with
hair evenly balanced and creased
breeches, “I have come to-night to ask
yon a question that has been on my
mind for weeks.”
“Well, Victor,” 6aid the shy goddess.
“I am anxious to know if you wonld
take me ‘for better or for worse* P
“Well, Victor, to look at yon, I
should say worse 1”
Victor is lingls yet.— Yonkers States-
“I have some donbts about the young
man’s stability,” said the minuter to
Mrs. Funnjbone, respecting one of her
daughter’s admirers.
“Have you! Well, if you only knew
how he hangs on every time he comes,
till tho roosters crow, you wouldn’t
doubt his stability any longer.” And
the minister turned sadly away.— Washr
infftm Critic,
Spring va Antnmn Planting.
From long and extensive experience in
p'anting in different situations and soils,
I am in favor of autumn planting of
forest trees, and also evergreen shrubs,
unless in cold, bleak situations, when the
latter are best deferred unt'l spring or
early summer. There may be situations
where the soil is too wet to admit of early
planting, but su.'h is unfit for planting
at any season till drained. There is an
old saying, which in practice I find to be
correct, viz : ‘Vlant a tree in autumn
and command it to grow; but in spring
you must conx it.” Same are of opinion
that severe frost will injure early planted
trees. That I have proved to be a fallacy.
In order to test it,I left young trees with
their roots uncovered during severe frost,
and planted them when thawed, and I
found that they sustained no injury.
There is more ri*k from drought m
spring planting than from frost in au
tumn or winter planting.— L>iuton Oar-
den.
Phosphate Tests.
The jfeta Jersey State Experiment Sta
tion during the post season nas examined
and analyzed 146 different brands of
complete fertilizers, the products from
fifty-four different manufactories. A
bulletin gives a full report of the result
of these analyses. Of the whole number
tested but six samples fall bolow the
manufacturer's guarantee in the three in
gredients—nitrogen, potash and phos
phoric acid—while eighty-two contain
more of each than is guaranteed. Of tho
remaining samples twenty-four contain
less nitrogen, thirty-one contain less
available phosphoric acid, and thirty-
four contain less soluble potash than
their guarantees require. In many c ases
the deficiency is hardly appreciable when
expressed in dollars and cents; in sev
eral ca-ea it is more than counterbal
anced by an excessive amount of
other valuable ingredient, indicating ir
regularity in making the mixture; and
in no case do the indications point to de
liberate fraud.
• Food and Care of Poultry.
These are two very important questions
to consider in their relation to poultry
culture. Unhappily tho inexperienced
novice is too apt to think that any kind
of care or food will do in raising poultry,
and when the season demands good
shelter and nutritious food in variety,
he shamefully neglects his birds, and is
forgetful or ignorant of the fact, that the
proper care and food bestowed on poultry
are not lost; that fowls appreciate kind-
swarming, only one good swarm would
be hoped for. If a second or third came
forih. they .were weaklings, and sot
worth saving.
A silo has-been built in North Carolina
of heavy plunk, on top of the ground.
It has double walls, four inches apart,
filled with earth to exclude air. Size
thirteen by sixteen feet; cost sixty dol
lars only.
Dry leaves from the woods make the
best Led for pigs, as fine litter of any
kind is always preferred by them to that
which is course. Mast-fed pigs always
bed comfortably in the woods.
If cream becomes sour, the sooner it is
then skimmed and churned the better,
but it should not be churned while too
new. The best time for tlfe skimming
and churning it just before acidity be
comes apparent.
- Park Earle, the great Illinois straw
berry-raiser, says unmulched vines will
be more or less dirts, and a good mulch
helps in a drouth. The paths aud all va
cant ground should be mulphed, which
will lap on to rows somewhat.
The ingredients of commercial fertil
izers, upon which both their agricultural
and commercial value depend, are nitro
gen, phosphoric acid and potash. Sul
phuric acid and lime are also always
present in superphosphate in the shape
of plaster.
The finest butter product is only pos
sible where the butter is made from
the best milk, bv the most careful pro
cesses, untouched fyjr hand, and when it
is brought to market just at the time
when it-* oxidation or mellowing by con
tact with the air brings about the mature
or ripe flavor.
No kind of stubble, except of clover,
of which the root forms tue principal
part, is worth anything as manure. Of
grain crops, especially, neither the stub
ble above ground nor the root below is
worth regarding as a fertilizer. If the
straw of grain stubble can be burned, it
is no waste to make this disposal of it.
In selecting a dairy cow tho most im
portant point is a good constitution, in
dicated oy large lungs, stomach and di
gestive capacity. She should come from
a good milking family, the eye should
be bright, muzzle broad, nostrils thin
aud large, chest and lips broad, legs fat,
udder broad, milk vein? largo and head
small.
A Southern paper says potatoes should
be drv and handled carefully, not
bruised nor cut, put in banks or bills of
twenty or thirty bushels, covered with
litter or cornstalks set up all around,and
then old boards or split stuff, and over
these at least a foot of dirt. Those who
put two feet of dirt on each hill say they
never lose potatoes by frost or otherwise.
One of the best devices for keeping
stock warm in winter is to put up a
frame, cover it with poles from the
ness, though they do not express it in j woo ai build a straw stack over it,
words, but rather in deeds, by returning • - - ...
the favors in the stops of nice fresh eggs,
tender broilers and well flavored and suc
culent roasters.
The question of proper care and food
is settled, though different ways may bs
practiced to attain the one, and different
methods used in the preparation, and
different kinds of food in the composi
tion may be given lo attain the other,
still in the broad sense of tho term proper
care and food, they are good and approx
imate to what is generally considered
proper.
Every breeder cannot readily obtain
the same kind of food, nor give the same
kind of care, but each one can pfocure
variety of food and give good care. The
better the care and the more varied the
food tho better the results.
The approach of winter suggests extra
caro and heartier food. The morning
meal should consist of cooked ground
feed, say part corn, barley meal and
middlings, to which add boiled pota
toes, vegetables or roots. The midday
ration should be a light feed of oats and
buckwheat with some green food, part of
the grain scattered among the leaves,
chaff or cut straw on the poultry house
floor to keep the birds busy, and in the
evening they should have a full meal of
corn and wheat. Meat scraps a few times
a week of course is to be added, and the
leaving an opening on the side opposite
the direction of the prevailing winds.
With plenty of straw a shed of this char
acter is as warm as a basement barn and
much cheaper,- and can be made by any
farmer. It does not even require a ham
mer and nails, though with these and a
few boards the work can be made more
attractive in appearance.
Ashes which have been leached often
contain much fertilizing value. In phos
phates they are sometimes richer than
the unleachcd, froYn the fact that phos
phate in ashes is not readily soluble.
Hut this inert phosphate is of little
value. Occasionally, however, old
leaclihd ashes have been so long in places
where they havo absorbed nitrogen that
they have formed a nitrate of potash,
which is one of the best fertilizers
known. Such ashes, whether leached or
not l are very valuable.
How Big War Panoramas Are Painted.
Theodore R. Davis has au article in St.
Nicholai describing the manner in which
in various cities are made. We quote as
follows:
The central platform is, of cours'e, the
standpoint from which visitors will view
the panorama—and therefore the artists
„„ « ~ are obliged to go to it frequently, as the
bill of fare varied to suit the tkstes of I painting nears completion, in order to
the fowls as often as it is convenient so to I observe the effect and progress of their
do.—Poultry Monthly. 1 . , . . ,
- This, too, is the place of conference,
Farm and Garden Notes. and despite tho siijns of “No Admit-
Drainaze only will destroy tho acidity > taace,” within and without, visitors are
of certain soils I freejuent and usually welcome. These
« . * ,, . ,, ; visitors are often veteran soldiers who
♦ r ^ them,n took part in the action represented, and
total darkness, steadily cool. who often make helpful suggestions.
For sheep it is lecommended to change The army stories that are told on the
the range frequently this time of year. central platform, when old soldiers meet
To clean the red lice out of the hen- and discuss the old day9, would, if col-
house, burn sulphur and old tobacco lected, make a prodigious volume. The
eaves in it. floor of the platform Is chalked and re-
_ .. ..„-netting. . _
fcX^Ukc^
An agricultural writer recommends ! ty of data, as well as names and ad-
giving sheep a mess of ground oats every i dresses, are pinned to the convenient
evening between now and lambing time, j timb:r with thumb-tacks.
Under-draining lands raises its tem- j The artists paint steadily, every in-
peratnre from twenty to thirty degrees, dividual being mainly occupied in per-
greatly increasing its producing qualities. | fccting his own work, though never hesi-
Horses greatly enjoy and thrive upon “K or extend aid in some
go d, systematic currying and rubbing, special direction. One artist, for in-
Grooms can not “fuss” with their horses ; stance > has an excellent figure of a
too much mounted officer, all complete excepting
Some are T.=omm«.diag renewed et-
tentionto the cultivation of fl«, which [ Sr^tkgiTnJhf CSfi? --
U midm-wtogi*. a proHt on boths.rew j
A liberal sprinkling of dry earth, and
also a solution of copperas, should be
made once a week in a stable of dairy
milch cows.
It is den’ed that fowls and turkeys in
jure the grain by roaming through it,
while it is clear gain for them to devour
slug* and enrich, the soil.
A horticulturist says make cuttings of
currants and gooseberries now—six
inches long—and insert them vertically
in mellow soiI, pressing them down.
With care, it is said the English wal
nut can be successfully grown in this
country, even in the Northern States.
But our common walnut is richer and
better.
Grapes are recommended as the best
crops to grow on gravelly hillsides, but
in nilly land the north hillsides are usu
ally productive, and will support good
crops of all kinds.
If you do not make ways for surface
water it will kill the life out of the soil.
As air and the oxygen in it give lifj to
animals, so it makes life profitable and
supports it in the soil.
Manure in a heap, according to Mr.
Stewart, dees not lose anything by evap
oration and fermentation. A heap of
fei men ting manure is undergoing rapid
decay ready for plant food.
If a farmer feels more at leisure at this
season than In spring or summer be can
keep himself employed snugging up
about the house and yard. Some could
look to the winter wood with profit.
A successful apicultnrist will take one
strong swarm, and by fall have four or
five colonies from it, and all with honey
to spare. By the old system of natural
bio portrait for the incomplete figure.
8oon another brush is busy with the
horse, while still another artist call* for
some special saddle and bridle to be
brought to the platform that he may
A HORRIBLE murder.
Baltimore, Md.—About 0 o’clock
Friday evening a negro man brought to
tho Maryland University on Lombard
street the b » lv of a white woman and
left it with An !craon Perry, the colored
ianitor, saying ho would call again for
the $15, the price agreed upon. The
body was taken to be prepared for keep
ing antil needed Iot dissection, but it
was found that the head was terribly
crushed and that there w ere two wounds
in the left breast, and the police were
notified. Yesterday a post mortem ex
amination of the body was made, aud
the physicians stated positively that the
wounds were made after death, leaving
the inference that it was simplr a case
of body snatching and that the work
had been done by a novise.
Tho body was identified as that of
Emily Brown, sixty years of age, who
for the past six months had been board
ing with a colored family in the western
part of the city. She was of dissipated
habits, and lived on what tho could beg.
She was at her home three hours before
her body was brought to the university,
and it is now evident that the was mur
dered lor the price her body - would
bring for use ou the dissecting table.
PeiTj, the janitor who received the
body, denies that he ever saw the wo-
mon, but he is known to have been a
boarder at the same house and to have
eaten breakfast with her on the morning
of her murder. He was arrested as ac
cessory for the crime.
John Ross and Albert Hawkins, both
colored, were arrested and confessed to
have killed the woman at the instigation
of Janitor Perry. They followed her to
her room, and Ross smashed her head
with a brick while Hawkins held her
and stabbed her through the heart with
a knife. They then carried the body to
the university in a bag furnished by
Perry, who received it and shaved the
head to make identification difficult.
The blood-stained clothing was thrown
into a tub of water. Ross also boarded
in the house with the unfortunate wo-
m&d. The price to be obtained for the
body was the sole object of the murder.
Fine Mnsie.
“Do send that organ-grinder away.
His music is horrible.”
“I don’t think so. I consider it fine
music.”
“Final’
Decidedly so. How could it be other
wise, when it’s ground so much?”
A Chanc* for Health
Is afforded those fast linking into a oonditlon
of hopeless debility. The means are at hand.
In the form of a genial medlolnal cordial, Hos
tetler’s Stomach Bitters embodies the com
bined qualities of a blood fertilizer nnd dc-
pnreat, a tonic and an alterative. While It
promotes digestion and assimilation, and
stimulates appetite, has tho farther effect of
purifying the life current and strengthening
th* nervous system. As the blood grows richer
and purer by its use, they who resort to this
sterling medicinal agent, acquire not only
vigor, but bodily substance. A healthful
change In the secretions is effected by it, and
that sure and rapid physical decay, which a
chronlo obstruction of tho functions of the
Charged with Whisky.
“I don’t know what I’m arrested for,
Your Honor, I'm an ojsterman, and went
into a restaurant and got clamorous,that’s
alL Asked the waiter for fish. ‘What
kind of fish— bluefisht’ saya he. “It
don’t matter,’ saya I, ‘blue or red, it’s no
difference to me. I’m color blind.’ Then
he thought I was making fun of him,
and there was a free fight.”
“Officer, what was this man charged
with!”
‘Whisky, your Honor.”
‘Ten dollars fine.
will affect tmmedia e and permanent relief.
One of Brooklyn’s Board of Health officers
recommends it as purely vegetable and per
fectly harmless. Price,» cents.
The Woman's Exchange of New York City
lest year paid out nearly forty thousand dol
lars to consigners of work In the different de
partments. A total of 1.100 ord<
received and filled • *
during the year.
the order department
rather vividly describes how a Honolulu
woman walks out- in the rain. Her escort
usually carries her umbrella, her dress, and
her shoes, while she wears simply a shawl and
a hit trimmed with red and white roees.
“Frailty, thy Name le Weasn,”
-Hand*,
fhat she Is frail, often'In body,
“ ’Tia true, ’tls true ’tis a pity.
And pity ’tis, ’tls true.”
Dr, Pierce’s “Favorite Prescription** Is the
best res oratlre onic for physical frailty in
women, or female weakness.-s or derange-
menta. By druggists. Price rsducsd to one
STOP that Cough, that tickling in tho throat!
STOPthat Consumptive Condition!
You can bo cored 1 You can’t afford to wait!
Dr. Klilmer’s Cough Cure [Consumption CM]
will do U qulokly and permanently. So cents.
Where#veryet
to Hallett A Co., Portland, Maine, and receive
free, full information a’> ut work that you ~
' ’ “ king thereby fron
$25 and upwards’daily. "Some'have male
‘ ~ *‘ Hallett At Co.
do and live at home,
* ~3and
$50 ii
wui start you. capita’ not needed. Kitncr sex.
Ali ages. N<t classof working people have ever
made money so fa>t heretofore. Comfortable
fortunes await every worker. Ail this seems
deep mystery to you, reader, but eeal along
> . will be cleared up and
your Mdlress and
proved. Better no: delay; c
DRKILMERS GEEEE
CONSUMPTION Oil.
Every lagreflleat U beA Vegetable
yredeeta tbat grow le eight of ovory cofferer.
Morphine, Opium or lnJuroosDraga
.... — functions of the
system produce. Is arrested. The prime causes
of disease being removed, health to speedily
renovated and vigor restored.
A spring mattress like a spring chicken, is
In season all tho year round.
Ahether Life Saved.
_Ab'ut two years ago a prominent citizen of
Chicago was told by his physician) that he
most ale. They said his system was so debil
itated that there was nothing left to build on.
He made up his mind to try a “new depart
ure.'’ He got some of Dr. Pierce's “Golden
Medical Discovery” and took it according to
directions. He began to improve at once. He
kept up the treatment for some months, and to
to-dar a well man. He says the “Discovery”
saved his Ufa
The Private Secretary to the person who
makes everything public.
Now, look at tfiie back of the photo
graph which is pinned to the canvas—a
faded carte de visite of a young officer—
upon a slip of paper we read the follow
ing: “Col. K., now on General Sheri
dan’s staff; then Captain, General
Thomas’s staff, H 47” (meaning the sec
tion H, square 47 of the panorama);
“French cap. blouse, Captain’s straps—
staff—dark blue trousers, gold cord, cav
alry boots, staff sword, McClellan
saddle; shabrack—black horse; sec
sketch.”
This instance will give an idea of the
way in which facts are preserved when
a panorama is painted oy artists who
conscientiously strive to make of the
work a great historical painting.
The Straight and the Carved Line.
The explanation of the old axiom that
“The curved line is the line of beauty,”
aay3 the New York Journal of Commtrce,
may be found in the fact that no grace
ful form and no picture ean be made or
drawn in straight lines. The quotation
asked for reads as followers:
Straight is the line of duty;
Curved is the line of “beauty;
Follow the straight Uoe thou shalt see
The curved Una ever follow thee.
The lines, are by William Maccall
(author of 4 Elements of Individuality,”)
who was a warm personal friend of
Thomas Carlyle.
The life of a hand organ man is one
Continual jjjr 2nd.
have given Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver
Oil with Hypophosphitss to lour patients with
bettor results th ui seemed possible with any
remedy. AU were hereditary cases of Lung
* that stage when
28 lbs^and are not now needing any medicine.'
When love to blind, marriage to a successful
Wa ought not to ha too anxious to encourage
untried Innovation, in cases of doubtful im
provement. Fora quarter of a century Dr-
Saga's Catarrh Remedy has been before the
public and passed through the severest test,
and to pronounced the most reliable remedy
for that disagreeable malady. Thousands of
teetlmoni als of Its virtues. 10 cants per bottla.
By druggists.
i eaui’
l—Flet
vical expression for a bald-headed
securely sealed. Dr. J. B. Maivhisi. Utica, N.Y
Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doses
of Ptoo's Cure for Consumption.
TIRED OUT!
At this season newly every needs to use rome
eort of tonio. IRON enter* into tluoit every pfcy-
•toiea’a prescription lor thoaewto need buOdtognp.
(RPN
msisiiiss
It doee not Utcken or injure the teeth, cawta
n Bitten a abort ti
I revalued my appetite and
.. .orVeonatant
»ith the moat sat
isfactory recult«. It elm me much pleaaore to me-
■mnaad it to aVfaebla woman aaaccnplate strength.
Mas. Oxo. W. Cask, £S Cheats ul
I BitVTC
BenelnehmlnrrTnileMiHrrnilrTni—flr-dM- .ts
on wrapper. Take no oilier. Made only b/
(SHOWN CIS KMIL'A L Cl*.. UALT1MOKE.MC
Oas Agent (Xarehaat only) wanted in every towa foe
a * CcsHub. I'm-.-giata. Prlacotonf^UL
. \V. TAXail L «fe CO.a Chicago.
Marvellous Memory
deriag—Any book learn*! in one reading. Mae.. „
ductioesforportal Caere*. Prcsiectos. with ogiaiooa
of Mr. Phocto*. the An ron>mer,. Hod*. W. w. As
ton, Ji'Oah P. BzKjimv. Dm. ICuoa. Wood and
"“PkoS £oisette.
831 Fifth Avvwnc.New York.
PATENTS SSSffifrafWEJZ
5 -a. Potent« Awyr-r. Waabtaftna. IX C.•
Membranes
Nose. Throat, Brooch a 1 Tubes. Air-cells
and Lung Tissues, causing Cough.
Whet Diseases Invade tho Lungs?
Scrofula, Catarrh-p<
, Mlcro-organ-
BUFFALO, 3ST. ‘
Organized with a toll Stair or elgtateeie
Experienced aud Skllirul rhyelcians
•ud Burgeons for the treatment of
„ au Chronlo Diseases.
OUR FIELD OF SUCCESS.
Chronle Nasal Catarrh, Throat and
Luug Diseases. Liver and. Kidney
Diseases, Bladder Disoahes, Diseases
of Women, Blood Diseases and Ncrv-
ons Affections, cured hero or at home,
with or without seeing tho patient. Come and
see us, or send ten cents In stamps for our
•‘Invalids* Guide Book,** which gives
all particulars.
Nervous Debility, Impo-
tency, Nortni-nnl I.oases,
and ail morbid Coudltlou*
caused by Youthful Fol
lies and Pernicious Soli
tary Practleea are speedily
"■* **“ 1 by our
and permanently cured by our
Specialists. Book, post-paid, 10 eta in stamps.
mmbmmb Rupture, or Breach, radl-
“ - “ “My cured without the knife,
bout trusses, without pain.
lunger. Cures
, Book sent for
in cents In stamps. *
PILE TUmORS nnd STRICT FIXES
treated under guarantee to cure. Book
sent for ten cents in stniniw. Address Waiti.n'*
DtsrBNSART Medical Association, 663 Maiu
Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
Tho treatment of many
thousands or eases of those
diseases peculiar to
T7T7-0 3VES33CT
io Invalids’ Hotel and
—.icui Institute, has af
forded largo experience in adapting remedies
r their
Surgical
and*"
UR. PIERCE’S
isms. Humors, and Blood Impurities.
What are the Primary Causes?
Colds, Chronic Cough, Bronchitis, Conges
tlon. Inflammation, Catarrh or Hay-l'cvei
Asthma, Pneumonia, Malaria, Meoelet
Whooping Cough and Croup.
RELIEVES QUICKLY-CURES PERMANENTLY
I lt will stop that Coughing, Tickling in B
Throat, Dry-hocking and Catarrh-dropping.
Is your Expectoration or Sputa 9
Frothy Blood-Stained Catarrhal g
Pus (Matter) Yellowish Canker-lU;c y
Phlegm Tuberbxitar Muco-jmndtnl 1 m
ItpreventsDecline* Night-Sweats, Hec-H
tio-Fever, and Death from Consumption. Q
| 25c, 50c, $1.00—0 bottles $5.00.
I fiyy jcniner*! Di«p«rw*ry,^Bii^unta
I . ** BOLD BY* ALL* llStt'COISTS. *’
DOC BUYERS’ CUIDE.
Colored ptstM, 1(10 engntvin^bp*
tS dtftoreut Wired*, prices th*7 mV»!
worth, and where to buy than
Mailed for 15 Cents.
ASSOCIATED FANCIERS,
837 8. Eis wth Ci. Yhitodclyhit, Pi
IE GUARANTEE YOU
I Books* Circular** Letter* and I’uper*
FREE
Favorite Prescription
is tho result of this vast experience.
It to a powerful Rcstorntlvo Tonic
natural suppressions, prolapsus or
Vailing of tl«o uterus, weak bach,
ante version, retroversion, bearing-
down sensations, chronic conaes.
tlon. Inflammation nnd ulceration
of the womb, inflammation, pain
and tenderness In ovaries, Ihtcrnnl
heat, aud “female weakness.**
It promptly relieves and cures Nausea
and weakness of Stomach, Indigos,
tlon, Rloatlng, Nervous Prostration,
and Sleeplessness, In either sex.
PRICE $1.00, fob 8 SKSS!
Sold by Druggists everywhere. Send
ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce's large
Treatise on Diseases of Women, illustrated.
World’s Dispsnsary Nodical Association.
668 Main Street. BUFFALO, N.Y.
SICK-HEADACHE,
tion, Indigestion,
and Bilious Attacks,
promptly cured,by Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant
Purgative Pellets. »
<‘«*iits a vial, by Druggists.
Ask your retailer for the James Ussns* 83 Shoe.
Caution t Some dealers recommend Inferior
goods In order to inako a larger profit. This Is the
original gSSIioo. Bewaro of Imitations which ac
knowledge their own Inferiority l*y attempting to
build upon the reputation of the original.
None Genuine uuloss bearing this Slump, .
JAMES MEANS’
S3 SHOE.
a in Button. C
^tetany*State* or
J.Moans&Co
41 Lincoln 8k
ATLANTA
SAW WORKS.
•f and Dealers in
Saws and Saw-Mill Supplies.
Repairing a Specialty.
jT c2*1w*u».
J.P. STEVENS &BR0.
JEWELERS.
Atlanta, Ga.
lead far Catalegm
OLD PICTURES COPIED AID ENLARGED.
AgMts wanted In areryoounty in tli» so ith. Send
tor terms and circulars. It you cannot take an agency.
get ant'’’retail prices," and tend pictures direct to us
fnc enUrg^ment. Address SOUTHERN COPYING
COMPANY, Wo. , Marietta 8t., Atlanta. Os.
BTJSI1TBSS
schools in the Country. Send for Circulars,
Practical Busin*** Eda
SI5 OOKBl&’WffSSaKYK
ip IVlBUwsrt a Oo,.ta Whitehall 8tTTAtItnts.qa.
OPIUM HABIT'iUncL.
8# rant or self-denial. Pay when cured. Hand* >me
hook free. Da. O. J. Vutuut, Kansas City. M >.
GARDEN SEEDS “f 1 ??? 3
i Brill, IlnroniD, I
, Great English Goutsni
is BhtunuUo Remedy.
Oval Box ai.OUo round, 50 eta.
UNRIVALED ORGANS
alojue with full particulars; mailed free.
UPRIGHT PIANOS.
Constructed ou tbs aaw method of ■triaging, oi
similar terms, tend for dcscrlptiraCataissu#
MASON 6 HAMLIN ORGAN AND PIANO CO.
Boston. Mew York. Chicago.
PENSION
PERIENCE. lanCoaaaarowhsyc* SouciTVb
UffXLO 2. STEVENS & GO.
WASHINGTON Ih.CS. OLEV LAND. OHIO.
W E WANT YOU! SPSS'S® .
profitable employment to WV*ren>t;«*»■«»*«;
county.JU.Ury t»W>tahud •*&SdSte2te
IVORYD
'pearl!
KccplagTests Perfect and Game Healthy.
| ADYJ
Pensions
WORKS*
si
Circulars. COU U
BUMP
to Soldiers AII
for CIr '
HA 51.',
S 30 a week and
worth Uandpartn-uV
'■ o. VIU KKRy.Auga.ta.Mai, ,
PATENTS
Inventors* H»*l hit fre*.
A.N. 1..... V..: Tn
jp- 5 —PULVERIZING HARROW, CLOD
Crusher and
Leveler.
Maa.tU 16ft. tUl tTitkaad wilhoatbalky attachmest. * We iefirn free si Sfatribattag Depots.
fDTVT DO KOT BE DECEIVED. Don’t let dealers palm off A base Imitation \
,..fen,>r tool under the assurance that It to oeuer. SATISFY YOUBSE. ,
. , BY OliOEHtsn aM **aCMK” UN TRIAL. We mil send a doable gang Ac -
TpW ¥ A to any itepoc&ib'.c fanner :n iho United Stoles; if it doee not suit, he may sent
back. wepayiUK return freight. We don’t axk jay until tried oa his own/ana.
Bead for anmshlei cost aitur-s thousands ol testimonials fee.. tHHtate* and TarrUerica .
OPIUM
ead horpKi** II a kit cured la M
toAday*. Refer to luuipatP ate nit J
tosiijwrt. La. lUasa.'.utaty, Rich.
DUANE H. NASH,
* i-nttMP fSMfANVBF' V** other
fg fg 4MWKF* **>£ ottev^eeees* fMi/tae to