Newspaper Page Text
ARDWARE
BELTING AND STEAM PITTING,
j Valdosta, Ca.
S
K/TJKTS-WXC
\ND WESTERN
1LRO AD
:K
ra
TY TY ROUTE.
W* MUm Shorter Than any Other
Monte Between Wayorooo
and Albany.
RUN *ft«r Band*,, M>7 151b, 1587, pus-
•pt Intel will ran u'follow.:
I amttnmuD ms.
yob the west, north and south.
B 4 w --• 800 am 803pm
•Pjla* Marsh It *6 27 am *8 SI fra
IT 6 64 am 0 00 pm
Ste" 1 * 7 S3 am 940 pm
®°«>k*a... It 829am 10 40 pm
Savannah, via a. if *W.. ar 13 06 am TToVra
OhArlmtoo ar 480 pm 10 40 am
oroaMt... It 7 08
j?y cr0,,Tto ”^ w »▼ 10 00 am 11Mpm
lv 1115am 104am
It 12 30pm 2 07am
2* V It 2 03 pm 8 30 am
2Sy«©r. !▼ 2 18 pm 3 45 am
^7’uungham It 2 41 pm
P-fWfe It 3 00 pm
Albany ar 325pm 8 00am
Columbus ar ...... 5 50 pin
• 30 am
Nfristta, Tia W. & A.... ar
Chattanooga ftr
LonkriU. viaLAN...ar ™
Cincinnati, via Cln. So.ar 6 40
YBOH THE WEST, NORTH AND SOUTH.
■Cincinnati, TiaOin.So...Ir ^.V!*.. *9*5) pm
Loehville, Tia LA N It 8 45 pm
Orattanooga, via W. A A.. It 8 05 am
VVVL'« W 12 63 pm
I Atlanta, vlaC. a R. It 200 pm
Colombo*
Albany, via BA W
Davia
lv 11 (<0 am 10 05 pm
’Willingham.,
Sumner
.lv 11 41 am
lv 12 13 pm 1113 pra
lv 12 32 pm 1128 pra
lv 2 11 pra 12 43 am
lv 3 30 pm 1 47 am
ar 4 49 pm 8 00 am
::::::::::::::
J7 sycro*s.
Savannah, via 8. F.AW.
Charleston
Callahan., via 8FAW,
Jacksonville
ar 7 58 pra 12 06 am
ar 1225am 4 (JOpm
.ar 6 57 pm 5 25 am
ar 735 pm 615 am
THE SUMMER DAYS.
The summer days are long and tweet
Oh, sweet and long I •
We ait and list at Nature's feet
Unto her song.
We dream and dream through days so rare,
- Oh, life it sweet!
With birds and flowers and tender air,
And sunshine deep.
Pair youth and lore go band in hand,
In life’s bright spring;
Loro uses well his magic wand
Sweet spoils to bring.
Young hearts, be happy while ye jnay,
For youth is fleet;
The path lie* not again this way
For thy swift feet.
Then dream and sing thy happy song
Through sum inert ide;
Mirth, innocence and joy belong
And with thee bide.
—Sarah P. McLean, in the Current
A SONG OF THE SUNSET LAND.
In the far-off hills of the sunset land;
In the land where the long grass bends and
quirers,
Where the ghosts of night apd morning stand
Py the gleams and dreams of the lonely
rivers,
Where the brown sedge waving, stoops and
shivers
At the water’s edge in the sunset land.
Through the trackless paths of the sunset
land;
Where tho silence broods in a dream un
broken,
And the days dip by like grains of sand,
Where the song unsung and the word un
spoken,
Seem like a part of a namless token
Of the wild gray wastes of the sunset land.
On the snow-clad peaks of the sunset land;
As they rise in the clouds so near to heaven
In shadowy vastness, stern and grand,
Where gaunt old pines by the lightning
riven,
Moan in the wind, through their branches
driven.
On the crags and cliffs of the sunset land.
’Mid the rolling plains of the sunset land,
Where the echoes drift on the tufted
heather
In the wake of breezes swe?t and bland;
Where the shadows go in a troop together
Across the haze of the fur June weather
In the grassy dells of the sunset land.
By the wand’ring streams of the sunset land,
Where the ripples rise ’mid the tall reeds
bending
And float away to an unknown strand;
And the shade and the sunlight slow de
scending
Fall where tho voice of the waters blend
ing
Bings of the sunset land.
—Ernest MeGoffer/, in Inter-Ocean.
Jacksonville, viaSFAWIt 2 05pm 700i
Callahan lv 2 47 pm 7 37 am
Charleston lv 6 10 am 3 03 am
Savannah It 130 pm 7 06 am
Way cross, via BA W. It 5 05 pm 10 00 am
Sehiatterville It 5 32 pm*10 25 am
....It 551 pin 10 40am
Pyles* Marsh. It 8 00 pm*12 46 pra
Brunswick sv 8 28 pm 114 pm
•Stop on Signal.
Purcmaae tickets at the xtation, and save
•extra faro collected upon the train.
mail train stops at allB. A YY. stations.
I Connections made at Way cross to and from
Ml joints on Savannah, Florida A Western
Pullman Palace 8l;ep!ng and Mann Boudoir
sleeping ears upon Jacksonville and Cincinnati
Entrees.
First-class car through to Chattanooga.
The only line rnnning sleeper to Cincinnati
via Queen and Orescent llonte.
F. W. ANG1ER. A. Or. P. A.
i 9. A. McDUFFIE, Q. P. A.
I ^ A. A. GADDIS. Y. P.&O.IL
Savannab, Florida and Western
I RAILWAY.
HXB CARD IN EFFECT MAY f5, 1837.
Pusenger traini on thU raid will ran daily
as follows i
Wnt India Fan Mall.
USD DOWN. BEAD UP.
7 06 a m Lv Savannah Ar 12 06 p m
13 30pm Lv....Jacksonvilie....Lv 7 00am
4 40 p m Lv Smfor.l Lv 115 a m
900pui Ar Tampa Lv 800am
Plant Steamship Una.
JSM! isr.pm
{££,,£2
I Pnllman Buffet C*r< to and from New York
and Tampa.
N«w Orleans Express.
? 06 am Lv Savannah Ar 7 58 pm
DttaraLv Jeanp Ar 616 pm
*9 50 am Ar Waycrosa Lv (T05 pm
U26am Ar..
12noon Ar...
7 00 am Lv..
10l5araLv..
1204 pmLv..
1234 pm Lv..
....Wajroro**...
.. Qiitmm....
..Thomasviihs..
...Ar 4 40pm
...Lv 2 23 pm
. .Lv 1 45 pin
8 35 pm Ac..
...L, 1125%m
4<»pmAr- .Cnattaliaociu'e Lv 11 SO am
Pullman buffet oars to and from Jackson
ville and New York, to and from Waycross and
New Orleans via Pwrncol %.
East Florida Express.
180 pm Lv ..Savannah Ar 12 06
S 21 pm Lv .^.Jraop Lt 10 32
..Wayvt
, .Lv 9 23 am
755 pm Ar...
415 pm Lv..
..Lv
. .Ar
7 Warn
9 45 am
' 7 90pmLv..
881 pm Ar..
....Dupont
...Ar
. Lv
5 Siam
825pm Lv..
...Lake City...
..Ar
10 45 ««n
8«5pmLv..
6 55 pm Lv..
...Uw OA ...
...Ar 710am
10 55 nm Ar Tbomarrill Lv 3 2.) im
122 am Ar A:bany. Lv 1 *5 an*
Pullman buffet cars to and from Jaokann-
785 pm Dv.;*....Savann«
Albany Exprass.
Savannah 2
.....Ar 610am
10 05 pm Lv~ Jeann -Lt 3 20 am
12 40 am Ar • Waycro>* Lt 1210 am
BSOam'Ar Jacksonville. ---*?▼ {>00 pm
9Q0pmLv Jacksonville Ar 530 am
105 .miff H JI
ALL BUT HANGED.
The story of a man who is reprieved
while standing on the scaffold with the
noose about his neck, must always thrill.
The fact of any one standing in the pres
ence of death fora moment has a strange
fascination about it, and his fellow men
are anxious to know what his thoughts
and feelings were as he expected to be
ushered into eternity. It has been my ill
luck to look squarely into the eyes of
grim death on several occasions, and my
good luck to preserve my life against the
fate which seemed to hunger for it; and
some of the incidents may prove interest
ing to .the general reader.
During the siege of York town by Mc
Clellan I was detailed from my company
to do scout work. While my reports no
doubt went to the commander nimself,
I reported directly to a division com
mander, whom I never met without
being forced to notice the fact that he
was the worse for liquor. Later on in the
war there was a chief of scouts, but at
this time theruwere half a dozen of us
taking orders diroct from this General
and reporting back to him in person. On
my third trip I was very nearly captured
by the Confederates, and in the squeeze
I got rid of all my papers, including the
pass which gave me entrance and exit
to the Federal lines. 'Therefore, when I
finally reached the Federal picket post I
had nothing by which to identify myself.
The officer in command of the reserve
picket post was a smart Aleck, who
thought to add to his importance by re
fusing to believe my story and sending
me to the headquarters of the brigade.
There I was regarded as a veritable
Confederate spy, and the General in
mand was extremely pompous in his de
meanor toward me. I can remember
the conversation as vividly as if it took
place yesterday. By the time I reached
hirf tent my arms had been tied"hehind
me, and 1 was looked upon as a very
dangerous fellow.
“So you are the spy capture
there at the picket!” shouted the General
as I stood before him.
“I am no spy, sir,” I replied.
“Oh, no, of course not; but don’t you
talk back to me, you infernal tratror!
Who sent you spying into our
“lam a Union soldier, sir, :
long to——” r
“Shut up, you scoundrel! Don’t
think that you can stand there and lie to
me. What rebel ccmmand do you be
long to!”
“None, sir. I am a Union scout, and
was detailed .
“Stop!” he shouted, while Ids face
grew crimson. “While the truth may
not help you, I hate to see you stand in
(he presence of death with a lie upon
your lips. * Guard, remove him.”
I was taken away and confined in a
gnard house, but not for long. In about
an hour 1 was taken to another tent in
the same encampment, and I entered
it to find four or five general officers pres
ent. It was to be a drum-head court
martial. As I afterward learned, a re
port of my capture had been sent to
headquarters, and McClellan had replied:
“Try him by drum-head court martial,
and if found guilty hang him at sunrise.”
A drum-head court martial is a dignified
farce. It is convened to convict. The
idea is that the victim is guilty, but must
he disposed of according to the regula-
a Ar— Dumont Xv 10 65 pm
jp A5 am Ar I*Vt : Cny Lv 3 25 pan
a'M.m I.«777....,Dupoi>-. Ar 9 35pm
6 SO *01 Ar &maoA)o 3*
1140 cm Ar. ..A;l««y Lv 4 00 pax
Stop* at all ro ;ular Pullman bu£
fet sleeping cars hi ami from Jacksonville and
Savannah, ami to ami from Bartow and Sav
annah via Gaincarilla. -
Thomuvllle Express.
6 05 a m Lv Waycross Ar 700pm
YO 25 a m i’.—.lbomaavillc.... Lv 215 p m
S-ot.H at all regular and flag station*.
1 WM. P. HARDEE,
Gen’!. 1’aes.Agt.
1L G. FUMING, Superintendent.
that I openly and boldly approached the
Union picket, and that 1 was coming
from the Confederate lines, carried no
weight in my favor. The officer of the
picket said I was certainly a spy, and that
settled it. When they finally conde
scended to hear my explanation, I gave
my name, and stated that the General
to whom I made my reports would
identify me. I stood in neither awe nor
fear, knowing how easily I could be
identified. Some of the members of the
court were opposed to giving me this
chance for my life, but it was finally de
cided to despatch an orderly and adjourn
the court for an hour. I was con
ducted hack to the guard house to wilt,
and when again taken before the officers
I expected to be discharged without gc-
lay. You can therefore imagine my
feelings when I was informed that Gen,
utterly repudiated me. My regiment
and company were a dozen miles away,
and I felt that it would be useless to ask
further delay. In ten miuntes I was
found guilty, and sentenced to execution
sunrise, and before midnight a scaffold
had been prepared.
Why had Gen.——denied my identity?
The only excuse I could offer for him was
that he was drunk when the Messenger
reached him, and such proved to be the
case. Roused from his stupid sleep, he
had winked and blinked at the com
munication and made out a portion of it,
and then flung it down with the assertion
that be knew no one of my name. The
gallows was erected within a few rods of
where I was confined. Some beams and
boards Were taken from an abandoned
house, and the structure was & very rude
affair. I could plainly hear every blow,
struck, and the fellows engaged in put
ting it Up seemed to want me to overhear
their unfeeling remarks. About an hour
before daylight a curious change took
place in me. I began to wonder if I was
really the man I claimed to be, and it
wasn’t fifteen minutes before I had come
to the conclusion that I was some one
else—in fact, a confederate spy, as they
declared. This idea took such firm
lodgment in my mind that I would have
honestly denied my real identity. I felt
that I had been fairly tried and honestly
convicted, and that I ought to suffer
death. There was no particular terror in
the idea. The only thought about hang
ing which made me cringe was the fall
through the trap. It seemed to me as I
reflected on, it that the pain would be
something awful, but I was consoled at
the same time with, the reflection that it
would soon be over.
Half an hour beiore sunrise I was
brought out and escorted to the foot of
the gallows. If I remember right there
was about half a company of infantry on
the ground. Only a few of the soldiers
in camp were out to witness the pro
ceedings. They had graciously provided
me with spiritual conso'ation in the pres
ence of a chaplain, but, though the good
man talked to me for ten minutes, I did
not hear one word in twenty he uttered.
I was all the time wondering how long
before it would be over, and every
minute of delay made me impatient.
When the timecamo for me to mount the
scaffold I was really glad of it. There
was nothing in the sight of the dangling
rope to chill me. I took my place on the
trap, the chaplain uttered a prayer, and
then a soldier quickly tied my elbows
and ankles and pulled a cap over my
Head. It was a matter of seconds now,
and I said to myself:
“It is coming now—good-by to all—it
will soon be over.”
They had to cut a rope underneath to
spring the trap. My sense of hearing was
so acute that I located the man who
stood with an axe ready to do his service
at a given signal, and I heard him
whisper to himself:
tVhy, in God’s name, do they keep
the man so long in suspense?”
‘/Then I began to count one—two—
three, and so on, and had got up to nine,
when I heard a. shouting not far away,
and mingled with it the sound of horses
coming at a gallop.
“Don’t cut that rope!” commanded
the officer in charge, and I said to my*
self:
Something has gone wrong, and there
will be. a further delay. Perhaps I am to
be shot. That would be au easier way
to die.”
There was some loud talk around me,
two or three people came up the ladder
to tho platform, and directly a hand
pulled the cAp offmy head and a voice
said:
• ‘Captain, there is some terrible mistake
here. This is Roberts, one of my scouts.”
“But you did not know him last
night?”
T know him now, and you will release
him at once.”
Gen. . As he awoke from
en sleep at an early hour a dim
remembrance of the message crept into
his mind, and he rolled out of bed and
found the inquiry sent by the court
martial. He could not remember what
word he had sent in reply, but he jumped
into his clothes and then into the saddle,
and he came just in time to prevent a
military murder. What was the effect
of this close call? Well, I went to the
hospital for two weeks with a fever, and
it was a full month before I was posi
tively certain of ray identity.—New Tori
Sun. ■
The Giant’s Causeway.
The Giant’s Causeway is a serieS of col
umnar basaltic rocks in County Antrim,
on tho northeast coast of Ireland. For
eight miles along the coast the land abuts
on the sea in cliffs of basalt, many oi
them made up of rude vertical columns,
and the appearance of these columns
from the sea suggests a partial resem
blance to architectural forms. The name
Giant’s Causeway is often applied to all
this coast range of cliffs, but it properly
belongs to only a small part of it, which
is a platform of basalt in closely arranged
columns—from fifteen to thirty-six feet
high—which extends from a steep cliff
down into the sea till it is lost below low
water mark. It is divided across its
breadth into three portions, the Little,
Middle and Grand Causeway, these being
separated from each other by dikes of
basalt. The columns are generally hex
agonal prisms, but they are also found of
five, seven, eight and nine sides,in almost
every instance being fitted together with-
the utmost precision, and it is said that
even water cannot penetrate between ad
joining columns. The name causeway is
given to the platfonn, as its columns ter
minate at so nearly a uniform height
that it presents an almost smooth area
extending to the water, seeming to the
primitive imaginatiin a road that bad
been prepared for the convenience of
giants.—Inter- Ocean.
• ^Silver on Their Soles.
The workmen in Mexican silver mines
become so skilful in stealing silver that
Hie owner* employ detectives to work
with them. An owner tells this story:
“One day a detective came to me and
said when such and such men came out
to examine their sandals. I had that
done. On the bottoms of the sandals
was what appeared to be mud, but when
it was scraped into a pan and worked I
found that it ran at th rate of $3,000 to
the ton. My miners had plastered a thin
layer of mud from the mine over the
leather, and then sprinkled on the parti
cles of silver, and over all bad put
HAYMAKING SONG
Work altogether!
Who would laugh or play
In the right bright weather,
To rake and make the hayf
With a wind light-blowing,
Across the field to nm,
And broad above us glowing
The good warm son!
Avan went home intoxicated. His
wife said: “So you’ve had another glass 1”
“Glass?” said he. “Wonderful word.
Take off g and it is you.”
“Yes,” she replied, “and then take off
1 and it ia you.”
We can’t
Bound the wind may dip!
We may wake to find sorrow—
The country all a-drip.
Work while the sun shines,
And give your brave best;
On wet days, when none shin—,
Time enough to rest
Each sunny minute
Is made of molten gold;
Whoso works to win it
May gather wealth untold.
If all are whole-hearted,
This bright, mellow night
Bhan see the last load carted,
The rick built right
In all life's doing
There's still a Now to grip,
And be will learn rueing
Who lets the Now slip.
Fools, the hour declining,
Think “some other dayp
While the sun is shining
Wise men make their hay.
PITH AIM POINT.
After dinner—A hungry tramp.
pound of candles.—
Traveler.
“What can I use to clean carpets?”
Use your husband.—Danville Breeze.
It was the lady who thought she was
going to swoon who had a faint suspicion.
The cheapest thing in straw hats this
teason is the head of a dude.—Phoayune.
Orange mobs are dangerous and so are
orange seeds. And so are orange blos
soms, too, sometimes.—Life.
A Western man has had a neeedle
taken out of his body. He now knows
how to account for the stitches in his
side.
“Listen to your wife,” says a medical
advertisement As though one didn’t
have to listen to her.—Boston Tran
script.
Tennyson’s last poem is in blank verse.
Some critics are mean enough to insinu
ate that he ought to fill out the blanks.—
Cleveland Sun.
Dialogue between two blind men—
“Do you know the gentleman who gave
you a franc just now?” “Only by sight?”
—Paris Qaulois.
The parents of a pair of Boston twins
named one Simul and the other Taneoua
because they were born at the same time.
— Washington Critic.
There is no change in the style of fish
ing tackle this year, except that the jug
has more body and not quite so much
neck.—Bochester Express.
Coins with the magic date 1837 are in
high demand in London. By the way,
any coins with any date are equally popu
lar over here.—Boston Herald.
Little Willie, when he first saw his baby
cousin, gazed on the tiny thing for a mo
ment in awed silence and then whispered:
“Mamma, is he a her?”—Wide Awake.
He always loved the joys of home.
At home at night he always tarried,
And never thought abroad to roam
Until he’d been for six months married.
i—Boston Courier.
There are men in New York who spend
half their their time dodging people they
have borrowed money of, ana the other
half in hunting up fresh victims.—Sift
ings.
According to an eminent English au
thority a goose lives fifty years. Pro
vided, of course, he refrains from blow
ing out the gas when he retires.—Yonkers
Statesman.
Farmers in the summertime don’t need
to buy the funny papers. All they have
to do is to go out and watch the city
boarders trying to swing- the scythe.—
Journal of Education.
Young Student Physician (to charity
patient)—“I—I think you must have a—a
—some kind of a—a fevft; but—our
class has only gone as far as convulsions.
I’ll come in again in a week. ”—Harper's
Bazar.
“Old .Mother Peter she went to the
metre to see how much gas she had
burned; she danced a cotillion when she
read seven million, and her mind was
forever o’er-turned.”—Cincinnati Tele
gram.
Talks About Law” is the title of a lec
ture a man is delivering in central Da
kota towns. We have heard it given
several times by men who were coming
out of a court-room and we shouldn’t
think that the authorities would let a man
deliver it in public. It’s about as sul
phureous a talk as you ever heard.—
Dakota Bell.
WHAT BUILD MR. BELL.
There was a yoong-fellow named Ernest P.
Wh<ygo£ very mellow at the Planters' Hotel;
But he punched
The proprietor,
And he lunched
Then much quieter
In the chilly retreat of a dungeon cell.
Expense: 3100 and costs as well.
—Hotel Mail
There is an old retainer of a family in
the Western Addition who is always com
plaining. “Well, Tim, how are yon to
day?”' asked the lady of the house.
4 Sure, ma’am, an’ I’m not well at all, at
all.” “What’s the matter 1” “ Sorry av
me knows, ma’am, but I was fhinkm’,
ma’am, if you had any old medicines
about the house as you didn’t want, I’d
* * “to yez for thim.
Quite Unsettled.
Rev. John Quincy Adams Henry
of Portland, Ore, while in attendance on
“ “ " ■ convention last week, related
BaarFMpla Relate im Take (Ml
Liver OR on account of its unpleasant taste.
This difficulty has been overcome in Scott’s
Emuuxom of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophos-
phltes. It being as palatable as wink, and the
most valuable remedy known for the treatment
of Consumption, Scrofula and Bronchitis,
General Debility, Wasting Diseases of Chil
dren, Chronic Coughs and Golds, has caused
physicians In all parts of the world to use it.
Physicians report our little patients tako it
with pleasure. Try Scott's Emulsion and be
convinced.
Mr. Corcoran, the Washington, D.G^ philan
thropist is recovering, but can never walk.
44 Threw Fhysto to the Dogs”
When It is the old-fashioned blue mass, blue
pul sort, and insist on using Dr. Pierce’s
^Pleasant Purgative PeUeLV’ a modern niedi-
cal luxury, being small, sugar-coated granules,
containing the active principles of certain
roots and herbs, and which will be found to
contain as much cathartic power as any of the
old-fashioned, larger pills, without the latter’s
violent, drastic effects. The pellets operate
thoroughly but harmlessly, establishing a per
manently healthy action of the stomach and
bowels, and as an anti-bilious remedy are un
equaled.
Flower mission work is tlie fashionable char
itable craze in New York this season.
“A little lire is quickly trodden out
Which, being suffered, rivers cannot quench."
; Procrastination may rob you of time, but by
increased diligence you can make up the *
but if it rob you of life the loss is irremedi—
If your health is delicate, your appetite fickle,
your sleep broken, your mind depressed, your
whole being out of sorts, depend on it you are
seriously diseased. In au such cases Dr.
Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery" will
speedily effect a genuine, radical cure—make
a now man of you and save "
tores of a lingering disease.
) you from the tor-
Ghlcago claims a loss of $12,000,000 in the
building trades from strikes.
* • • • Piles, fistula) rapture and strict
ure radically cured. Book of particulars 10
cents in stamps. World’s Dispensary Medical
Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
In New York they hire out wedding trosseaua
for a nightly rental varying from $7 to $40.
Threw the Powder Overboard,
Were thrilling words, spoken at a time of great
danger. Thelives of all on the vessel depend) '
•on prompt action. Your life may be blesai
use of Dr. Ha
trouble.
o spread over the land by
tnds after having been emptied by
ing, disgusting medicine the poor stomach has
to contend with. Too much strong medicine.
Prickly Ash Bitters is rapidly and surely tak-
The best aad smrrotBmedy for Cure #f
1 disMMS caused by any denageKemtof
the liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels.
Dyspepsia, Pick FTir*TTnaelljsline.
BtUouCoapIatats and Malaria of aH kinds
jMAnaifiy to the bOMtat hflacuoatf
•uma-i
It Is pteenatte the taste, tones vp tbs
It Is puely Vegetable, and cannot fell to
prove beneficial, both to eld end young.
S • Blood Purifier it Is superior to ell
others. Bold everywhere at 81.00 e bottle.
IRON
TONIC
mm
threompluiea.
Inf only add to
aotMqwriiMat-
■fiteMii
■ ind Tired Tiling ab
ly cured: Bose*, inu»
and rappllM Brain Power.
Nifiriu trees cewplaiata
g^aslgrass
A Physician From Iowa.
Dr. H. Munk, Nevada, Iowa, states: Have ,
been practicing medicine fifteen
all the medicines I have
els. Dr. E‘ ‘
tiie best.
years, a— ...
— l for the bow
els, Dr. Biggers’ Huckleberry cordial is by far
COLUMBIA
ATHEIST iEUM,
lover tire house to get >
^ugs,Beee-/
i swriikteV
.rjmder.i , _
about and down the sink, drain A
pipe, first thing t& the morning wash it ail
away dowp thcMnk t drata_pipe> whwx all the
The Men
ere late
drink dm™
“Koran ox Rat^"' is'RoldTall "around 1—
world, In every efime, is the most extensively
DESTROYS POTATO BBSS
For Potato Bups Insects on Vines, etc., atabkv
■poooful of the povder, wen shaken, fax a kee
3 water, and applied with sprinkling pot
■pray syringe, or wMeh broom. Keep it vail
■erred up. lac., SSc. and $1 Boxes. Agr. Man.
'Mpm-KATSf —CLEAESOIJT-
Sf BED BUGS,
FLIES.
,»sgsagjjs%gKja
.blllUC* I. DEPARTMENT.
rim; university of Louisiana.
[Formerly, 1847,—1881, th* Unirwra ty of LouitUruu]
Its advanUinM for practical instruction, and wpeoU'ly
ia th« d» :un «t um SoutU-wuct w« unequalud.** tna
Uw M;:ur. ii it auperabundant material* from tt>* areas
Charity Hospital with its 700 beds, and 30,000 patients
annually. Studuuta hare uo ho*pital-feea to pay and
special instruction b d*i!y siren ut Uf badtide of (Ac
««ct. as iu uo other institution. For cataloguM or
infoimation. addreea
Prof. H. E. ( IIAI.LL. M. D., Dean,
fW"P. O, Drawer, SI, New Orleans, La,
TREATED FREE.
DR H. H. GltKKN Sc SOM’S.
Specialists for Thirteen Years Pent,
Hare treated Dropsy and its oompVicttiona with ths
moat wonderful moceea; uas veer table ra in "diet, en
tirely harm Wee. Remove all symptoms of Drops? ia
to.1. by th. bwl «l
P From the Int dow the symptoms rapidly 4
and iu ten days at least two-third* of all aym
If afflicted with
>hlet on Female Diseases, free; j daughter to school, write for an illustru-
Dr. J. B. MarchiBi, Utica, N.Y. j ted catalogue giving full particulars, to
droggSto
No Opium in t iso'_
Cures where other remedies fall. 25c.
sell it at 25c. a bottle,
for Consumption.
Tired Languid Dull
that I feel like a new being. ^
Hood’s Sarsaparilla to all who suffer with headaches.’
—Has. E. Satciieia, Oates Arcane, Brooklyn, IC. T.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1 ; *lx for $5. Prepared only
by O. L HOOD & CO., Apothecarlos, Lowell Maas.
IQO Doses One Dollar
Central University,
RICHMOND, KY. NextSess!.
Full Faculty, thorough instruct
0r |, l ». 0f »* t Ohi
moderate expense. I
apply to I- II. Blaui
PATENTS
■ Install, l>. C. Send for our bookof Instructions.
OPIUM
liriUlfl Dr. J- Stephen., Lebanon.Ohio.
R0BT. D. SMITH, Preset, Columbia, Tend.
MARLIN REPEATING
” RIFLE
BEST IN THB
WORLDS
dtc£o$.£(*Ahetafj£ < , i
is
GLOVES-BUILDISd,
\. D. C.
To lntroduoe them, we wui
• ^T If LOOO Self
i<- »ind us your"nsme7P.o7and express oftLi
Dial* 1 . Dill. 6rut En 5 u,h
xs the merits of au
- th. ditto.Vty of l __ _ _ _ ,
racular. the unoary nrgsus made to aucluu,. —_
full duty, sleep is ra»torad, th. smUbur ell ar newly
/one. the etrweth increased and sppeUta mads good.
Wears constant’! earing cease of Ion* Handing, cases
that hare been Upped e number of times; and the pa
tient declareduaaBetolire a week. Lire fall history
of eoM. Name sex. How long afflicted, how badly
swollen and where, ere bowels ooetire. here legs bunt
ed and dripired water? Bend for free pamphlet, eon-
taining teeumonlals, questions, etc.
Ten days’ treatment furnished fra# by mall.
If you otdar trial sand lOota In stamps to pay poataga*
Epilepsy (Fit.) Positively Cored.
H. H. GREEN & HONS. M. Da.,
g&OX Marietta Street, Atlowto, Oa.
J.P. STEVENS &BR0.
JEWELERS.
Atlanta, Ga.
Mod for Ca»alen«i
BU8INESS
schools in tbs C
One of the best
t Practical Business Edu-
£44^cation atCaldsinltli’x School ol llns.
^ loeoo,W*S Broad St.Atlanta.Ga. Send
POOC foe Circulars A Specimen of Penmanship.
TAPEWORM™
liars A Specim
GIL* AltoJhlflai
IP If Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co- HoUy, Mich.
PATENTS gr.f.’Kt-o'airKS:
I ham. Patent Lawyer. Washington. U. c.
LIVER, BLOOD AND LUNG DISEASES.
other layer of mud. They were working
for 37i cents a day, and carrying out
cents wo
sandal.”
A Great Poet’s First Effort.
A certain traveling man recently dis
covered that he is a great poet, and this
how he found it out:
Oh, little girls, always practice
Even your slate penexft, savo them up with
care.
For some day when you uo longer need them
todosucuwiib, %
You can use th-.-ra heated to curl your soft
gold-n luiir.
—iltrchaM-Trauelcr.
an incident or two tending to illustrate
the unsettled state of people’s minds in
the Far Northwest. Among the resi
dents of Portland he found a family
with a letter from a Boston church dating
back thirty-four years. When he. asked
the lady of the family why in the world
shehad not some time in the course of
those thirty-four years come in and
joined one of the Baptist churches in
Portland, her simple reply was: “Well,
you see, sir, we haven’t been quite cer
tain whether we should remain.”—St.
Paid Pioneer Press.
flwiwiala Confined In Cages.
A Brooklyn physician says that most
wild animals become ^ insane after
they have been confined In cages some
time. After they have been captured
two or three months they go off their
mental bases. For snakes, crocodiles,
and that sort of cold-blocded creatures,
confinement is not irksome; they obtain
their provender without hustling for it,
and that suits them to a dot. Some
kinds of birds, too, find imprisonment a
natural condition, for they and their an
cestors for many generations were born
in cages and never knew liberty.
Liveb Disease
END
Heirt Trouble.
in regard to my health, being ■■■ _
liver disease, heart trouble, ana female weak-1
ness. I was advised to use Dr. Pieroe’a
Golden Medical Discovery, Favorite Pro
scription and Pellets. I used one bottle
of the 4 Prescription,* five of the * Disco v-
4 PlMoant Pnrtr.Hr. Pnllad.’ Ur health ho.
cry,’ and four of tho 4 Pleasant Purgative Pellets.’ My health be
gan to improve under the use of your medicine, and my strength
My difficulties have au disappeared? '
eback.
all day, or walk four or five miles a day, and stand it well; and when
I began using the medicine I oould scarcely walk across the room,
most of the time, and I did not think I oould ever feel well again.
I have a little baby girl eight month* old. Although she isallttie
delicate in size and appearance, she ia healthy. I give your reme
dies all the credit for curing me. as I took no other treatment after
beginning their use. I am very grateful for your kindness, and
thank God and thank you that I am as well as I am after years
of suffering.” _
^ Mrs. I. V. Wxbbxb, of Yorkshire, Cattaraugus Ocl,
N. PL, writes: 44 1 wish to say a few word* in praise
of your 4 Golden Medical Discovery * and ‘Pleasant
Purgative Pellets.* For five years previous to
taking them I was a great sufferer; I had a
severe pain in my right side continually; was
unable to do my own work. I am lumpy to say
I am now well and strong, thanks to your medicine*. 0
Chronic Diarrhea Cnred^-D. Laxakkb, Eaq„ *75 and *77
Decatur Street, New Orleans, La- writes: 44 1 used three bottles of
the ‘Golden Medical Discovery/ and it has cured me of chronic
rT™™7| Mrs. Pakhxua Bbbitoaox, of U1 Lock Street*
I GENERAL I Lockpon, N. Y. writes: 44 I eras troubled with
I I chills, nervous and general debility, with frequent
I IlCDII I TV I sore throat, and my mouth was badly cankered.
| ULDIUII, | My liver was inactive, and I suffered much from
dyspepsia. I am pleased to say that your 4 Golden
Medical Discovery’ and ‘Pellets* have cured me of all these
ailments and I cannot say enough in their praise. I must also
say a word in reference to your ‘Favorite Prescription,’ aa it
has proven itself a most excellent medicine for weak females.
It has been used in my family with excellent results.”
Dyspepsia.—James L. Coldt, Esq., of Yucatan, Houston Co~
MiniL writes: **1 was troubled with indigestion, and would eat
heartily and grow poor at the same time. 1 experienced heartburn,
■our stomach, and many other disagreeable symptoms common
to that disorder. * *
■ ■ . now entirely free from the dyspepsia, and
g, I am, in fact, healthier than I have been for
THF SYSTEM I flvo years. I weigh one hundred and aeventy-
IK ** aiM> | one and one-half pounds, and have done as
much work the past summer as I have ever
done in the same length of time m my life. I never took a
medicine that seemed to tone up the muscles and Invigorate
the whole system equal to your ‘Discovery’ and ‘Pellets/**
. Dyspepsia.—Thxbesa A. Cass, of Springfield, Mo-, writes:
44 1 was troubled one year with liver complaint, dyspepsia, and
sleeplessness, but your ‘Golden Medical Discovery* cured me.”*
Chills and Fever*—Rev. H. E. Moslxt, Montmorenei, 8. C„
writes: “Last August I thought I would die with chills and fever.
I took your^‘Discovery * and it stopped them inavery short time.**
health and vigor i
■ 4 *-" common pu
Salt-rheum <
to the worst
__ bottles of
disrrhoaT'iiy boweia'iixo n’ow regular."’
“THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE. 1
Thoroughly MMB
digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spirits, i
Golden Medical Discovery cures ali
poison. Espoe : -"“ tea M
land Swellings,
Rev. F. ApnunT Howell, paetor of the SI. E.
Church, of Silrerion, N. J., Bays: ’’I was af
flicted with catarrh and indigestion. Boils and
blotches b*'gan to arise on the surface of the
skin, and 1 experienced a tired feeling and
dullness. I began the use of Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery aa directed by
him for such complaints, and in one week's
time I began to feel like a new man. and am now sound and well.
The ‘ Pleasant l'urpntivo Pellets’ are the best remedy for bilious or
’ —* - - — M about the cheat, and bad taste in the
“ocn-jfd
99
cover used. My wife c
I not walk across tho
and can walk with tbs help of crutches. He does not suffer any
pain, and can eat and sleep as well as any one. It has only been
about three months since be commenced using your medicine.
I cannot find words with which, to express my gratitude for the
benefit he has received through you.”
Skin Diaeme*—The 44 Democrat and News,"
| A Terrible |
I Affuctioe.
I lUTUUIMIS, I OnlriOT if ml fool 7 ^ -**
r the v
the elbows and became so severe as to prostrate her.
After bring treated by several physicians for a year or two she
commenced the nse of the medicine named above. She soon
began to mend and is now well and hearty. Mis. Poole thinks
the medicine has saved her life and prolonged her days.”
Mr. T. A. Anus, of East New Market* Dorchester County, M<L*
Mrs. Ida M. Stooho, of Ainsworth, DkL, write*:
My little boy had been troubled with hlp-lolnt
ise for two years. When be commenced the
— of your ‘Golden Medical Discovery* and
‘Pellet*/ he was confined to bis bed, and could
not be moved without suffering great pain. But
w, thanks to your 4 DiaooTery,' he is able to be up all the time,
CONSUMPTION, WEAK LUNGS, SPITTING OF BLOOD.
Goldejt Mspioal Discovert cures Consumption (which ia Scrofula of the Lungs), by its wonderful blood-purifying, invigora
ting and nutritive properties. For Weak Lungs;-8pitting of Blood, Shortness of Breath, Bronchitis, Severe Coughs, Asthma,
and kindred affections, it Is a sovereign remedy, while it promptly cures the severest Coughs it rixengtbens tbs system
and purifies the blood. ........
It rapidly builds up the system, and increases the flesh end weight of those reduced below the usual standard of health by
OnL, writes:
mptlon.—Mrs. Edward Nxwtoit, of HarrowsmUh*
_ . a: 44 You will ever be praised by me for the remarka
ble cure in my ease. I was so reduced that my friends had all
-given mo up, and I had also been given up by two doctors. I then
went to the best doctor in these porta. He told toe that medicine
a onlv a ounishment in my cue, and would not undertake to
‘—" — said I might try Cod liver oil if I
which
— — >nrarii better that Ibeheve,
tinuatlon of your‘Golden Medical Discovery/1 will
to perfect health. I would—
t terrible disease consuli
—ag rise first; but take t—
eariy stages of the disease, and thereby save • great
now feel
your‘Gol— .
rect health. I would
;rribla disease consul.-,-.
thing rise first; but take tee
—*“ tagee of tee disease, am_
and be restored to health at
■uu in doubt, need but write m
addressed envelope for reply, when
be fully substantiated by mo.
Dicer Cured,—Isaac 13. Downs. Esq- of Spring Yaltoi,
BocMand Co-, N. Y. (P. O.Box 28), writes: 74 The ‘Golden Medi-
Golden Medical Discovery ia Sold 1>L Druggists.
cal DJaoovery* has cured my daughter of a very bad ulcer located
on the thigh. After trying almost everything without success, we
procured three bottles or your ‘Discovery/ which healed it up
perfectly.” Mr. Downs continues:
id Heart Disease*—“I also wish to
tbejemarkable cure goa have effected lnm;
For three years I tud suffered from thaifterri
ble disease, consumption, and 7 "
— ——-,-ou I bed wj
consulting you I had wasted away to
•skeleton: could not sleep nor rest, and many
times wished to die to be out of my misery. I
then consulted you, and you told me you had
* ‘ jt would take time. I
Iwpiftf ffiring Iwtl,... i .
took five months’ treatment in all. Tho first two months X was
sign* and i
ToSayYtig'tee aoUea sTboo hundred and sixty/amTnm well
reliance In curing Mr. Downs* terrible disease
in flesh and s
themselves!
_ tna era lea at one nun area ana sixtv. a '
and strnpg.”
^Medical Discover.”*'
Bleediks j
, 8 the lungs before she commenced using your
cony f * ,‘ f; ?ldca Medical Discovery.’ She has not
f nbffl .. ha t any since its use. For some sir months
she has been feeling so well that she has
ny since its use/ For 8f>ma sis months
discontinued it.’
Price $1.60 per Bottle, or Six Bottles for $5.00.
WORLD’S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Proprietors,
— Ho. 66j Haln Street, BUFFALO, If.