Newspaper Page Text
H.LBoone&Co,
HARDWARE
j Stoyas, Mill Supplies,
TY TY ROUTE.
Mils* Shorter than any Other
# Bout* Between Wayorou
and Albany.
Om ad after Sunday, May 15th, 1887, paas-
•user trains will ran as follows 5
annul STANDARD TIM.
FOB THE WEST, NORTH ANI> SOUTH.
Rimaw|ok,TiaB*W....lT 6 00am 808pm
Pyles’ Marsh hr *6 27 am *8 84 pm
. It C 54 am 9 00 pm
wsTnesriUSk .It 7 82 am 9 40 pm
»▼ 8 29am 10 40pm
geblstterrille It 841am *10 55 pm
Waycrosa ar 9 05 am 1125 pm
SaTaQoali, rta A. P AW.. ar 12 06 am 610 am
Charleston ar 4 00 pm 10 40 am
£*Uaha» ar 11 86 am 4 80 am
JacksonTill* ar 1200 m 6 80 am
Jaeteonriils, via & F. A W It 7 00 am 9 00 pm
17 7 87 am 9 45 pm
Charleston It 8 00 am 6 10 am
Savannah., 1 T 7 06 am 1 80 pm
'Wayoroa via B A W It 10 00 am 1155 pm
'?«*»•«» It 1115 am lOilim
It 12 80 pm 2 07 am
gjTj It 2 03pm 8S0am
■««>»• It 218 pm 8 45 am
.Willingham J T 2 44 pm
Diwis It 3 00pm
ai 8 25 pm 5 00 am
6 60 pm
Chattanooga..... *
XtftQisTill# viaLAN...ar
Cincinnati, viaCin. So.ar
FROM THE WEST, NORTH AND
* , Mail.
Cincinnati, TiaOin. So. ..Ir
Louisville, via LA N It
*' toga, via W. A A.. It .....
910
1 05 pm
2 36 pm
7 05 pm
630 am
6 40 am
SOUTH.
Express.
9 00 pm
... It
12 53 pm
2 00 pm
6 00 pm
IfaeoD....
<Mqmtma
Albany, via B A W. ....•• lv 11 (C am 10 05 pm
2»tIs It 1125 am
Willingham It 11 41 am
Sumner It 12 13 pm 11 13 pm
Tjr Tj. It 12 32 pm 11 28 pm
W 2 11 pm 12 43 am
£««•<» It 3 30 pm 147 am
Waycroas. ar 4 49 pm 8 00 am
-Savannah, TiaS. F.A W,
Chari*- -
DaUahi
Jacksonville.............ar 7 85 pm C 15 am
Jacksonville,'via 8FA W lv 2 05 pin 7 00 am
Callahan 1 v 2 47 pm 7 37 am
Charles ten It 610 am 3 Warn
Savannah l T 130 pin 7 06 am
Waycroas,via BA W. It 5 05 pm 10 00 am
SohUttarvilh* l v 5 32 pm*10 25 am
Hoboken. It 5 51 pm 10 40 am
C 53 pm 11 39 am
7 33 pm 12 19 pm
7 58 pm 12 06 am
lesion ar 12 25 am 4 00 pm
an..vi»HF A W..ar 6 57 pm 5 25am‘
Waynesrills.
icketa at the atation, and aavo
lected npon the train.
Tho mail train atopa at all B. A W. station*.
Connections made at Waycroas to and from
attaints on Sarannab, Florida A Western
Pullman Palace Sleeping and Mann Boudoir
sleeping cars npon Jacksonville and Cincinnati
Express.
PirsWc
Savannah, Florida and Western
WOMANS WORLD.
PLEASAVT LITERATURE FOR
FEMINISE READERS.
RAILWAY.
[All trains of this road ero rno hr Central
fltaddard Time.]
HME CARD IN EFFECT MAY 15, 1837.
Passenger trains on this road will run daily
■S follows:
West India Fast Mail.
HAS DOTH. HEAD DP.
7 06 a m Lv Savannah Ar 12 06 p m
1280pm Lv....Jacksonville....Lt 7 00am
440pm Lt......Hanford Lt 115am
900pm Ar Tampa Lt 8 00am
1 Plant Steamship Line.
. i&.Vm} Lt...Tmbp»...At *
KSS’.fSl Ar "■*»»--** 2£.j£
i Ar.. II. Tun... L.
Pullman Buffet Cars to and from New York-
aadTsqjpo.
. New Orleans Express.
• T 06 am Lt Savannah Ar 1
8 42 am Lv Jcsup Ar 1
150am Ar.......Waycroas. Lt 506 pm
Pnllman buffet oars i
rtile and New York, to a
Hew Orleans via Pensaoola.
East Florida Express.
” ..Saven: * * *
....Jest
Way.r
~add free”;
Bwtta, “pdludH, purely brigM 1 ';
Clan,-rckw’ 1 u the crvital aee;
_ Lory, a «tar ot r*.lient light
CHhenne, is “pare” as mountain air;
Barbara, coiueth “ from afar”:
MUrel, is •• like a lily fair”;
Henrietta, a soft, sweet “star."
3B&WJ9E5JFSS-,
Margaret is a shining “ pearl
“ with the faithful lew "•
Swan, is • “ lily white”;
Jane has the^willowV’ curve and grace:
•cilia, dear, is dim of right”:
Sophia, shows “ wisdom 7 ou her facet
Constance, is firm and «• resolute”;
Grace, a delicious “ favor meet*';
Charlotte, “ noble, of good repute”;
■
Lucinda, “constant os’the day";
Maria, means “a lady fair";
—.■Abigail, “ joyful ” as the May";
EHttbeth, “ •« oath of trust”
« — r:—». -
Cmmelia, “ harmonious and fair
v "»* Wert nightingale”;
Lydia, “ a refreshing well
r V a ®° U K °*«cred praise";
•>"" 1 “••Ml
PTiecilla, ancient of days.”
—AVir York Graphic.
Girls in Ringlets.
Ringlets flourished in 1846. In those
days accomplished girls “twanged the
light guitar,” and acoorapanted them
selves in the most sentimental of songs.
They liked sitting dreaming in the moon-
light, alone or en tete-a-tete. They read
unlimited novels, and had no sense of
humor. They never awoke to the reali-
tiM of life until they married and wore
their hair in hands. If you put a girl in
iglets, what can you expect? Certainly,
thing practical or energetic. It is well
known that the slightest exertion takes
the ringlets out of curl. Let us hope
♦ o* n 1 cruel as again to
-Boston Herald.
U26sin Ar..
. TOO am Lv..
.. ..Callahan
...Jacksonville).;
..Jacksonville...
.Lv 2 47 pm
, ;Lv 2 05 pm
..Ar 7 35 pm
ibi5 am Lv..
1204 pm Lv..
1184pm Lv..
AJNpm Ar..
,...Wayo:oss...
... Qnitman....
.. Thomasville..
..Ar
..Lv
..Lv
..Lv
4 40 pm
2 56 pm
2 23 pm
i85pm Ar..
...Bii n bridge...
..Lv 11 25 am
4b4pm Ar..
. Oust tXtJOOOl ICO.
..LTUOia
ISgfe
... Jacksjuvi:e..
....Jacksonville..
..Lv 7 00am
..Ar 9 45am
'7 20 pm Lv.
8 31 pm Ar.
Way cross...
Dnpotu
...Ar 6 35am
. Lv 5 80 am
RIBpmLv.
....Lake City...
..Ar 10 45am
9 45 pm Lv.
• 55 pm Lv.
... Q-unesvilie...
..Ar 10 SO am
340 pm Lv.
1065 pm Ax.
Dupont....
...Thoniasvill-..
. ..Ar 5 25 atn
..Lv ,3 25am
Pullman buffet com to and from Jackson
ville and 81 Louis via Thomarvi .lo and* Albany,
Montgomery, Nashville.
785pmIiT.
10 06 pm Lv.
12 40 am Ar.
JUDiny Express.
SxTonnan Ax 610 am
Jesnp Lv 320 am
... Waycroas..;„..Lv 1210mm
630 am Ar.
9 00 pasLv.
. ...Jacksonville.
Jacksonville.
...Lt 900pm
...Ar 580am
105 am Lv
2 90 am Ar.
.Waycroas..
.Dupont
...Aril S» pm
...Lv 10 96 pm
7 10 am Ar
- 10 30 am Ar.
Live Oak...
... Gsinesvilk*..
...l v 6 55pm
...Lv 345pm
10 45 AID Ar.
Lake City..
...Lv 3 25pm
2 55 am Lv
6 30 am Ar.
'll 40 am Ar.
Thomoaville..
...... Albany.
..-.Ar 935pm
..Xt 7 00 pm
...Lt 400pm
Savannah, and to and from Bartow and 8av-
annah via GaintsvQl*.
Thommlll* Express.
605am Lv Waycroas Ar 700pm
1025am Ar Thonuavlllc....Lv 216p:
Stops at all regular and flog stations.
WM. P. HARDEE,
Gcn’L Pass. Ag
R. a. FLEMING, Superintendent.
that fate will
make them fashionable,
Wedding Suiierstltions.
The hride must keep the pins which
fastened her wedding dress.
“Twice a bridesmaid, never a bride,”
a proverb that needs no comment.
Marry at the time of the moon's waning
and your good luck will wane also.
If two marriages are celebrated simul
taneously one of the husbands will die.
Fair or foul weather upon one’s wed
ding day augurs a happy or unhappy
married life.
If a girl who is engaged accidently
lets a knife fall it is a sign that her lover
is coming.
.The girl who step9, accidently or other
wise, ou a cat’s tail need not expect to
be married the same year.
The husband must never take off the
wedding-ring; to take it off will insure
him bad luck of some kind.
A School For Wives.
“A Perfect Wife for £25” is the head
ing of an advertisement in an English
paper. It is issued by a lady who *
going to start a school for wives.
these days of garish accomplishments
'the practical side of woman’s nature”
i neglected. In the new academy it
will be developed. Girls who go there
will be *‘instructed iu housewifely du
ties.” The classes wili consist of cookery,
dressmaking, physiology, book-keeping,
elocution and debating. The book-keep
ing will be very useful. The perfect wife
who keeps her husband’s choice editions
instead of lending them to casual ac
quaintances is far above rubies. But de
bating is the hosewifely duty which most
needs cultivation. When a little debate
docs occur in the domestic circle (on
milliners’ bills, for ii stance) it is la
mentable to think how unfairly women
are handicapped by the deficiency of
their education. It is the universal opin
ion of married men tliat debating power
is perhaps the point in which their wives
are weakest.—Philadelphia Timet.
The Coat of Gray Hair.
Since it became fashionable to be gray,
says the New York Sun, the price of real
gray hair has risen to enormous figures.
A hair-dresser in Sixth avenue recently
filled an order for one of his customers
for seven ounces of gray hair twenty-
eight inches long, and the price was $100
an ounce, or $700 for the order. The
same amount and quality of light-brown
hair would have cost about $60. The
high price is caused not only by the great
demand that has sprung up for gray hair,
but because good live gray hair is scarce.
comparatively easy {o secure scant,
- — - * gray locks, but few heads yield the
beautuul pearl gray tliat is so fashionable
when their owners grow old. The hair
falls out, leaving what remains thin and
of poor quality, or if it remains' on the
head the ends turn yellow and fray.
The ordinary lengths of hair supplied
. 1 order are from twenty to twenty-eight
inches. Gray hair is not often found so
long,and, when it does grow that length,
the owner js usually found in that class
of society that takes too much pride in
its hair to sell it. It takes ten times as
long to fill an order for gray hair as for
the usual shades of brown. The head of
the largest hair house in this city said
that he would not undertake to fill a gray
hair order to a certainty within six
months, as he would have to send to his
European correspendents to get the
goods. Almost all the live white hair
comes from Europe, the Swiss and Ital
ians furnishing a good share of it. They
are accustomed to classing hair with their
other crops, and to tending it with care,
with the final sale of it in view.
' ~ Girdles Tor Girls.
The girdle has grown to be a monstrous
fad with the girts, *ays a New York
respondent of the Argonaut. This m
to men *ho are a little stupid in the]
morning,” she said, sweetly, as she*
wandered out of the car at Fourteenth ’
street.
Saved by Two Girls.
Whatever may have been the original
of the fabled mermaids, “»ea-girl9, ,, the
real mermaids are certainly found in the
Sandwich Islands. That a strong man,
much leas a young woman, can be so
much at home in the water as to light
and HU the fiercest native of that element
on its own battle-ground, seems in
credible, but Senator Fair, of Nevada,
tells the following story as an experience
of his own:
It happened upon my last visit to the
Sandwich Islands. I am a very expert
swimmer, and nothing pleases me better
than to plunge into the salt water. The
temperature of the islands i* delightful,
and I could not resist the temptation to
take a swim.
I prepared myself, and plunged in.
After I had been in the water for half an
hour, I pushed out over and beyond one
of the reefs which surround the islands.
All at once I realized that something was
going on on the shore. There was quite
a number of natives there, aud they ap.
pea red to be greatly excited.
Suddenly two native girls swam out
behind me with long knives between
their teeth. I looked around, and to my
horror I saw a shark making for me with
terrific speed.
An instant later the girls had dived,
and the shark had nearly stopped. The
water around him was red with blood.
The girls came to the surface again, and
again they dived and plunged their long
knives into the monster. At last he lay
still on the top of the water quite dead.
The natives dragged him ashore, and
found that he was one of the largest
of his species.
But for the wonderful bravery of these
girls I should not be here to-night to tell
you this story.
Fashion Notes.
Neapolitan straw^bonnets have been re
vived.
Silk dresses are exceedingly fashiona
ble again.
Sewing machine silk grenadines are
again in style.
Braided embroidery is again seen upon
tailor made costumes.
Narrow flowers are a favorite garniture
for skirts made of a light quality of silk.
The Leghorn hat promises to be exten
sively worn by ladies and children this
summer.
Full vests of lace or surah, strapped
or laced, are seen on many midsummer
costumes.
Sailor hats of felt are brought out for
summer wear in the country for boating,
tennis, etc.
Some novel parasols are entirely cov
ered with bows and loops of very nar
row ribbon.
Ostrich feathers are a conspicuous feat
ure of hats, despite all predictions to
the contrary.
Pretty dust cloaks for driving or trav
eling are made of alpaca or mohair, with
silk lined hoods.
Black hats with black feathers are In
high favor with light or bright colored
summer costumes.
White serge and camel’s-hair tailor-
made dresses are popular for morning
wear in the country.
An attractive dress for light morning
is made of white nun’s veiling, com
bined with plain white net.
Silk-warp cashmere and moire of a
The favorite ribbon for use upon black
lace dresses is black watered ribbon an-
inch and a half wide, with picot edge.
French dressmakers have revived the
fashion of making lace flounces over the
tulle to bring the pattern of the lace into
full relief.
Heliotrope toilets are not favored so
much as of late; but there are new shot
fabrics which show all shades, from peach
blossom to plum color.
Block silk Jersey waists flushed in
bright red velvet for collars and cuffs,
make a stylish effect with the brilliant
skirt of plaided gingham so fashionable
this season.
Dressy bodices to wear with silk or
muslin skirt^are made of alternate rows
of ribbon and lacc either black or white.
They may be in basque shape, or full
gathered to the belt.
Polka dots in India silks are very ele
gant and stylish always. This season
two sizes of dots are used, one for the
overdress the other for the petticoat.
Velvet is the trimming.
That Spanish hat so called is of Tus
can braid in form of a disk with tiny
balls of silk or worsted dotting the brim.
Bright colors are used in these balls.-
They are for seaside wear.
Large plaids are seen in fine surahs,
and are much worn by stylish women at
the seaside, for they may be worn with
a variety of corsages, and make thus
many changes in a limited wardrobe.
Felt sailor hats are shown for boat
ing, tennis, etc. They have low crowns,
straight, stiff brims, a* band of wide rib
bon and a] fiat bow at the side being
their only trimming. They are shown
in white, navy blue and dark red.
The Oil'Well Business.
Statistics show that 53,000 wells have
been drilled in Pennsylvania and New
York since the discovery ofpetroleum,
at a cost of $200,000,000. These wells
Air Isaac Newton's Profound
Thought and the Good of It.
Sir Isaac Newton, of Newton Centra,
Mass., waa one of the greatest thinkers
that ever carried a thinker in his boot
leg. Whatever he saw he endeavored
*0 find out the cause for it. But as he
was thinking all the time he didn’t see a
great deal. One day, as he was sitting
m his garden oiling np his thinker,, he
saw an apple fall from a tree. Most
men would have supposed that it fell of
its own aooord, but Sir Isaac had been a
boy himself long before founding the
theological seminary which perpetuates
his name, which, by the way, is a very
easy one to spell. He at once began to
wonder what made the apple fall; some
foolish people say that lie wondered why
it didn't faU up instead of down, but
that is all rubbish. Sir Isaac was no
fool if he was a philosopher, and he
knew that everything falls down exoept
a wig, and that false hair.
After (pronounced awfter) much
thought and study npon the subject, he
discovered the cause; he noticed that
the apples were more apt to fall down
after school was dismissed than during
study hours. So the next time he went
into the garden he laid low, and when
the apple fell he held his breath until
the cause came swiftly over the fence to
Mck np the effect. Sir Isaac collared
the boy, for it was he, and taught him
how easily pain might be produced by
the rapid impingement of a common
apple switch upon exposed or only par
tially protected portions of the humaf
form divine. He illustrated his theory
with a few simple experiments such as a
\oj of ordinary intelligence could easily
omprehend. This valuable discovery
of Sir Isaac’s has been a great boon to
grown-up humanity. It is now univer
sally known that apples are more apt to
fall when there are a few boys at large
in the vicinity than at any other time,
and that apples will fall for a boy when
they might nave defied the laws of grav
itation for months longer. This sublime
fact teaches us that modifications that
e at first artificial are rendered spon-
ueous by heredity.
The incident of the applo tree, how
er, had one bad effect upon Sir Isar*
It led him to hate boys, and he devof
much of his time to making life a bttr-
den to them. With this revengeful ob
ject in view he invented tho attraction
of gravitation, and by a joint resolution
of Congress, which he easily accom
plished by persuading the members of
CUIgrea Starving T* Booth
On account of ttatr Inability to dlgwt food,
wfll find a moot xnarroloua food and remedy In
Soott** Exruiaiaat of Pure Cod Ltrer OR with
Hypophoaphltoa. Vary palatabla and easily
digested. Dr. 9. W. Ooxn, of Waco, Texas,
eejre: **I have used your Emulsion In Infan
tile wasting with good results. It not only
restores wasted tlesuee, but glvea strength and
' - I am glad to use such
iese wells
have produced 310,000,000 barrels of oil,
which were sold at the wells for $500,-
000,000. Tins represented a profit to
the producer of $300,000,000. The
amount of oil exported is placed at
6,231,102,923 gallons. In the pool in
Washington county alone $3,200,000 has
: been expended in machinery and drilling.
mor “‘ i This does not include the many millions
The Jubilee editorial In the British London
rimes was over eleven oolumns long.
the gifted, but naughty, Lord Byron. Surely
he was In bad humor when ho wrote such
words. But there are complaints that only
women suffer, that are carrying numbers of-
them down to early graves. There is hope for
those who suffer, no matter how sorely, or se
verely, in Dr. K. V. Pierce’s “Favorite Pre
scription.” Safe in its action it Is a blessing,
especially to women, and to men, too, for when
women suffer, the household is askew.
Chatham Co., N. C., has a venerable mule
that is known to bo fifty-seven years old.
Old pill boxes are spread over tho land by
the thousands after having been emptied by
suffering humanity. What a mass of sicken
ing, disgusting medicine the poor stomach has
to contend with. Too much strong medicine.
Prickly Ash Bitters is rapidly and surely tak
ing the place of all.this class of drags, and Is
curing all the ills arising from a aiaordered
condition of the liver, kidneys, stomach and
9 the name of a new society fast
_ D««f htere, WItm aid Ulstlwn.
Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseases, free:
ecnrely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi, Utica, N.yI
Good Health
You cannot have without pure bli
keep weU, purify the blood by taking Hood’s
peril! a. This medicine is peouUarty designed te aot
A SCU CURE FOR
INDIGESTION and DYSPEPSIA.
rtfetens have sent us their approval of
MylBCthatttto the beit preparation
Whorenevwheardotacaeeof Dy^pepeiowhere
DIOMTTilM was taken that woe not cured.
FOB GHOLEBA INFANTUM.
AOPBI THE HOST AGGRAVATED CASKS.
t will stop Toxrrraa is vrsgsasoy.
IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION,
aur summer Coca plain ta end Chronic Dlerrhoee,
which ere the direct remits of Imperfect dlgesttno.
DIGESTYLIN will effect an Immediate cur*
Take DYGE8TYLIN for ell peine end dtoordere of
Do not heettato to lend your money. Our kouae to
reliable. Ectablithed twenty-five year*.
U.n.fa'iHrVnf C^eiaUtf.^einikt., N.Y.
team. Clears out Bats. Mice. Roaohes, Water
Dura, Flies, Beetles, Moths, Ants. Mosquitoes
Musk Bats^ack A 80<h
HEN.LICE.
and destroyer S^Den Llc^^but
and outside of the aatts?* sifehass
P0 T a T0 BUGS
For Potato Bure, Insects cm
M
barrels
of plaster, orwhat Is better air
slacked lime. Much depends
to expel from the system all humors, impure parti
cles and effete matter through the lungs, Urer, bow-
els, kidneys and skin. It effectually aids wnslL Im
paired and debilitated organs, Invigorates the urns
Ufe and energy to ell the functions of tbe body.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; Hx for Prepared only
by a I. HOOD * CO„ Apothecaries, Lowell. Xam.
IOO Poses One Dollar
iindumental law of nature, with juris
diction over the tides, the seasons and
the movements of the planets, and
many other things which boys have
since been compelled to learn. So it is
whenever a boy sees au apple he thinks
of Sir Isaac Newton first, and then he
thinks of some way to get the apple,
and by and by lie wonders if he can get
some pain killer in the dark, and then
he thinks, how awfnl it wouid be to die
there, all alone in the night, and then
he thinks if he lives till morning he will
jve the rest of his apples to his little
rother, and thus you see quite a train
of thought is awakened in the boy’s
mind by Sir Isaac’s great discovery.
Sir Isaac never took out a patent on
his discovery, but the Bell Telephone
company claims that the_ principle is
covered by their invention and the
patents relating thereto, and if the
courts sustain this claim, as they pro
bably will, every time a man picks up
auytiiing that has dropped down he will
have to pay the telephone company a
royalty, and every time he lias anything
to do with the telephone company he
will drop something.—Burdette.
How Indians Poison Their Arrows.
It was a long time before Friday came,
and I began to think he was going to
disregard my summons, and was getting
angry, when he suddenly put in an ap
pearance. I explained to him what I
wished to know, and without the slight
est hesitation he said to the venerable
arrow-maker:
“Tell my brother all about the poison
ed arrows.”
“Well,” said the old man, “first we
take a bloated yellow rattlesnake in
Angost, when he is most poisonous, and
tie him with a forked stick to a stake;
then we tease him until he is in a great
rage. This is done by passing a switch
over his body from his head to his tail.
When he threshes the ground with his
and his eyes grow bright and sparkle
like diamonds, we kill a deer, antelope
or some other small animal, and, tearing
out the liver, throw it to the snake
while it is warm and the blood still
coursing through it. The reptile will
■trike it again and again and pretty soon
it will begin to turn black. When he
tires the snake is teased again and he
is induced to sink his fangs into the soft
flesh until all tho poison lias been ex
tracted from him and the liver is reek
ing with it. He is then killed and the
Krer lifted with a sharp pole, for so
dangerous is it no ono dares touch it.
Theuver is let lie for about an hour,
when it will be almost jet black and
omit a soar smell. Arrows are then
brought and their iron heads pushed
into the liver np to the shaft. They are
leffe sticking there for about one hour
and a half, when they are withdrawn
and dried in the sun. A thin glisten
ing yellow scum adheres to the arrow,
and if it bat so much as touches raw
flesh it is rerbiin to poison it to death.”
I asked if Indians still used poisoned
arrows. “No,” he replied, “no man,
Indian or white man, for years past has
shot with these arrows, and they
are no longer made.”—Omaha IiepuUi-
Thebcst on! surest Rowdy fbr Care of
•n diseases caused by may denagemeat of
the liver, Sidneys, Stomach and Boweb.
Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Constipation,
yield readily to the
It is pleasant to the taste, tones up the
It Is purely Vegetable, and cannot fall to
prove beneficial, both to old and young.
s a Blood Purifier It is superior to all
others. Bold everywhere at tl.OQo bottle.
I found it a specific for Hay
Fever. For 10 year* 1 have been
great sufferer from Aug. 9th
till frost. Ely's Cream Balm is
the only preventive I have ever
found. Hay Fever sufferers
s/iould know of its efficacy.—
Frank B. Ainsworth, Pub
lisher, Indianapolis, Ind.
| Apply Balm in‘o each nostril,
ROOT BEER
Wwhota»m.b.~™
fine. wholeeoRMiMVftrmM. Sold by dni»:gi«t»: moiled
foraSc. O. E. HIRES. 48N.Dela. Are.. Philo.. Pa.
FOR HORSES.
TJ villa, W. Va., )
Nov. 17,1886. |
Recently I bought a
young horse. He was
taken very ill with Pneu
monia. 1 tried to think
of something to relieve
him. Conduded what
was good for man would
be good for the horse.
So Xgota bottle of Piso’s
Cure and gave him half
of it through the nos
trils. This helped him,
and I continued giving
same doses night and
morning until I had
used two bottles. The
horse has become per
fectly sound. I can re
commend Piso’s Cure for
the horse as well as for
man.
N. 8. J. Stridek.
wet, and Is quit® effect!™ what mixed with
lime, dusted on without moisture. White tn
Its concentrated state to la tha most ■
and strongeet of all Bu« Poieoni; when mtxed
aa above Is oomparaUrely harmless to ant-
■ xnals or persona. In any quantity they would
take. If preferred to nee In Uqnldform.e table-
■poonttu of the full strastte^Bocas on Rare’*
Powder, well shaken, fa a kon of water and
lt wen stirred up while uMn{. Soldi
w.(Storekeepers. l."c.,2Sc.&:
(jjChemtot, Jereey City- J-l
COLUMBIA
athenaeum,
A SCHOOL FOR YOUNG LADIES.
Ig^Before deciding where to send your
daughter to school, write for an illustra
ted catalogue giving full particulars, to
R0BT. D. SMITH, Pres’t, Columbia, Tenn.
Central University,
RICH MONO, KY. Next Seui
Faculty, thorough instruction,
lion open\bep. 14/87
mods? sle'sip sn se~— lUoejwtlthir lowllns,
Hpuly^l!W. a Klanton, DM?* Ohanoeilor?* 1010 *
y ysn ir~~ aixxrxa RtnLDIXS,
Washington, D. C.
Rheumatic Remedy.
,341 "wad, 14 Pill*.
OPIUMS
hloo HebU Cars! In
i’nS
1, Ohio.
JhpiGBnr.
ac* experiment—set the Oaramox. oxro Ban.
■ Headache. Sample Doee emd Dream Boefcl
\malled on receipt of two cental * pottage, f
the OR.HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY
JHARLIN REPEATING
RIFLE
’ BIST IN THE
WORLDI
BALLARD
J.P. STEVENS ft BRO.
JEWELERS.
Atlanta, Ga.
leal for Catalein,
BUSINESS
eelioolBinlheOountxT. Send for PiromUre.
MEXICAN WANKS
SWB dreee E. H. CAoleloo d
S5jggfj
not under tho h
Safety Rein
OPIUM Hab,tCured ‘
frWSBjBl!l
I “*gaggs3QgggBa^:
gBBcaauns
Humane RcmcinrCo..LaFayette.Ind- 1 L P U.... Tb!rty-tbrco, , 8T
- _» . 1 - . , , ,, 1 lots uoes not luciuue me xuauy millions
beside an omn«iint 1 m T 8e ^ 1 that are represented there in the natural
* ho ,!■“ T e ifdustrj. Independent of the oil
*"j£L. Position. Her slim ^ inen there is »bont $30,000,000 in-
girdle.-from one sid,^’nhich’f/SlSl nested in natural gas Pennsjl-
fortv-mr Ht*L. a ♦ I vama. These are majestic figures, and
evarv chain «-«- , re*^b- #n ! serve to show the magnitude of the oil
ev#nr Chun was a trinket. We fell to j nil n;i„
talking .about them, and 1 looked them “ d *“
qver, while she chatted about the history
' * *
everyone. There were fourteen Ro-
man coins, a latch-key, pen-holder case,
vinaigrette, skating medal, button-hook,
glove-buttoner, silver address-tablet,tiny
sibrer bon-bon box, a corkscrew, a
miniature scimetar, a chatelaine watch,
a small oxidized iron parasol, which,
when opehed,-became a fan, a bullet with
which she had killed a bear on her
brother’s ranch, a card-case, a lock of
hair in a locket, two miniatures, a drain
purse, a compass, a small paper-cutter, a
dozen odd tnkets of every conceivable
chape, and a double-barreled dog-
whistle.
“Where did you collect them allP ]
asked.
“Everywhere,” she said, with a shrug.
“Don’t you find them troublesome?”
“Oh, no; they’re vastly usefuL”-
“How so?”
“They supply subjects of conversation
Worms in Raw Eggs.
Serman paper, Professor Li
duces reliable data iu answer to the ques
tion whether living worms are to be
found in hens’ eggs. A short time
previously his sister had found a
round, thread-like worm, the length
of a little finger, in the white of
egg. It moved itself in a very lively
She at once took the egg to a
w who put the worm in alcohol
lessor Mobiux, of Kiel, decided that
the specimen was an example- of the
thread worm of fowls often found in the
small intestine of the domestic hen.
Only a few instances of the existence of
the same in the white of the egg have
been recorded.
Good carpets from common more are
the production of a French manufac-
The following words, tn praise of Dr. PeeroM’s Favorite Prescription as a remedy for those delicate disease* and weak
nesses peculiar to women, must be of interest to every sufferer from such maladies. They are fair samples of the spontaneous
expressions with which thousands give utterance to their sense of gratitude for the inestimable boon of health whioh has been
restored to them by th6 use of this world-famed medicine.
John E. Seoar, of MOlcnbeck, Vo, writes:
“My wife had been suffering for two or three
years with female weakness, and hod paid
out one hundred dollars to physicians with
out relief. She took Dr. Fierce’s Favorite
Prescription and It did her more good than
all tho medicine given to ber by tbe physi
cians during the three years they had been practicing upon her.”
Mrs. Georgs Hkrgkr, of WatfidAH. Y n
s a great sufferer from leuooiv
The Greatest
Earthly Boon.
The •Favorite Prescription 1
poor suffering women.”
rhea, bearing-down pains,
ually across my back. Three
•Favorite ITeocriptlon* —
feet health. I treated
iths. without r
a the greatest
of your
to per-
—, for
any benefit.
Sophia F. Boswdx, WMU Cottage,^
: “I took eleven bottles of tout ‘Fa-
Prescription* and one bottle of your
vorite Prescription
‘Pellets.* I dm doint -
for some time. I have
about sixteen
1 to employ help for
I iog your medicine. I have bod to w«f
■ supporter most of the.time; this I have-laid
well os I ever did.” t
writes: “Your '
has^worked wonders i
Again she writes: “
ties of the *F
gained *»«
and friends.
;en several 1
__n* I have
to the ostonlsb-
i my feet all day,
TREATING THE WRONG DISEASE.
Many tim** women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they imagine, one from dynpepsla, another from heart disease,
•* ’ *■ " exhaustion orproetrstion, another with]
another from liver , r ,
for which ho prt secribegSiis pj^andp^ona^Swmlng thorn to^e* such. when, in reality, they ore aU'onfr aymptonu caused bysomb
womb disorder. Tbe physician, ignorant ofthe cause of suffering, encourages his practice until large Wll»J« made. The suffering
patient gets no better, but probably worse by reason of the delay, wrong treatment and consequent rompllcatlons. A proper mediano.
hko Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, directed to tha cause would have entirely removed tbe disease, thereby dispelling all those
distressing symptoms, and instituting comfort instead of prolonged misery.
•A Marvelous Csrtr-Mrt O. F. SraAOTR
of Crystal. Mich, writes: “I was troubled with
female weakness, leucorrhea and telling of Jthe
• kidney disease.
i pain here or there, and in
An flfleoaive Breath
Is most distressing, not only to the person af
flicted if ho luye any pride, but to three with
whom he comes in contact. It is a delicate
matter to speak of, hot it hoe parted not only
friends bat lovers. Bad breath and catarrh
are inseparable. Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy
cures the worst cases, as thousands can testify.
A snn motor is the latest invention of John
Ericsson who designed the “Monitor.”
No investment pays so well os a good edure-
tion. as is clearly shown by tbe record of the
Alumni of the Rugby School, Louisville, Ky.
It offers the best advantages, ond enjoys the
hixliest class of patronage. For fifteen years
it has Stood with tbe foremost in preparing
boys for collegeorbusiness life. The terms are
reasonable. Send for catalogue to
A. L. McDonald, Principal.
hn H. Jones, Tuttle, Ky„
i selling medicine for ser
loanceDr. Biggers’ Hack!
I have
pronounce nr. niggers- Huckleberry Cordial
the best I ever sold. It gives Joy to every
for all hrt^uhSti^^’Tt cured 'me when tho
physicians and all other remedies foiled.”
• * * • 'Organic weakness or loos of power
in either sex. however induced, speedily and
permanently cured. Enclose 10 cents in stamps
for book of particulars. World’s Dispensary
Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
Hireh Harris, a Polish Jew, died in Brooklyn,
N. Y., at the advanced age of 109 years.
If afflicted with sore eyes, am Dr. Thompson’s
‘ruggista sell it at 25c. a bottle.
r for Catarrh is
Having exhausted tbe skill of three phy
sicians. I was completely discouraged, and so
weak I could with difficulty craas the room
atone, l Degan taking Dr. Pierce’s Favorite prescription and
using the local treatment recommended in his ‘Common Sense
Medical Adviser.* I commenced to Improve at once. In three
months I was perfectly cured, and have hod no trouble since. 1
wrote a letter to my family paper, briefly mentioning bow mv
health had been restored, and offering to send tbe full par
to any one writing me for them, and enclosing a suns
relope for reply. I have received over four hundred _
In reply* I have described my case and tbe treatment
and have earnestly advised them to ‘do likewise.* From a
' have received second letters of "
stating that they
J — * had soot tbe
applied tbe
manv l have r
bar! commr'nc'.mNPmillliVli^N
*1X0 required for tho ‘Medical Adviser,* and had applied tho four years.”
local treatment so fullvaiidDl^nlTl^ddowiitherelnjaudwere
much better already.*’■■
THE OUTGROWTH OF A VAST EXPERIENCE.
Jealous
Doctors.
&sr££kas&£ar sksms
saysjsk
army of different physicians, and spent large sums
of money, but received no lasting benefit. At lost my husband
persuaded me to try your medidnes, which I was loath to do.
because I was prejudiced against (them, and the doctors said
they would do me no good. I finally told nr husband that if
be would get me some of your medicines, I would try teem
against tbe advice of my physician. He got me sjx bottles of the
‘Favorite Prescription,' also six bottles of tbe^IMsooyery.* for
ten dollars. I took three bottles of ‘Discovery* and four of
Favorite Prescription,* and I have been a sound woman for four
The treatment of many thousands of casw
of those chronic weaknesses and distressing
slliamfspfinnHsrto frunslri, at tho IsmMf
Hotel hm Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N.Y.,
bos afforded a vast experience in nicely
adapting and thoroughly testing remedies
for the cure of woman’s peculiar maladies.
Dr. Fierce** Favorite Prescription
Is the outgrowth, or result, of this great
and valuable experience. Thousands of
HhJ"»i«i«, received from patlente and
from physicians who have tested it In the
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the great
est earthly boon, being unequalled as on
appetizing cordial and restorative tonic. It
promotes'digestlon and assimilation of food.
gcstionTbloatinr ond eructattoS^raS^
An a soothing and strengthening
nervine, “ Favorite Prescription */ is un-
exhaustion, prostration, hysteria, spasms
and other dbtrcssii
commonly attendant.upon
organic disease of the womb. It induces
refreshing sleep and retteves mental anx-
1 ’3r.*merS3iFaTOrI»e Fiwcriptlon
^^^telitoMmstedldne* carefully
Lmcrientr-d and skillful
to woman’s delicate
|k vegetable in its
live care for tbe most complicated and
obstinate esses of leucorrhea, or “whites/*
excessive flowing at monthly periods, pain
ful menstruation, unnatural suppressions.
the womb, weak
of tbe womb, 1
derneas in oi—
ternal heat.**
In pregnancy, “ Favorite Prescription”
_i a c mother’s cordial,” relieving nausea,
weakness of stomach and other distressing
«*»ra«T»ifns common to that condition. If
is kept up to the latter months of
of that trying ordeal.
Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxa
tive doses of Dr. Pierce’s Purgative Pellets
(Little Liver Pills), cures Liver, Kidney and
Bladder diseases. Their combined use also
removes blood taints, and [abolishes can
cerous and scrofulous humors from the
$5.C
manufacturers, that it .will give satisfac
tion to every case, or money will bo re
funded. This guarantee bos been printed
the fcotUe-wropper, and_ faithfully cap-
SiTiESK S-StBSTSl
gy Send ten cents In stomps for Dr.
Pierce’s Uiyo.^llhMtratcd Treatise (100