Newspaper Page Text
; •
LOVE AND CARE,
I .ore pftt In hi* bower one summer day,
A i«l Care, with his train, came to drivo him
away.
“1 will not depart,” raid Loro;
An l soininp his lut^ with silvery words,
/Ie ran his lingers along the chords,
And played so sweet, so entrancing an air,
That a grim smile lit up the faeo of Care.
“Away, away 1” said Lovo.
“Nav nav—I havo friends I” grim caro re
plied:
“Beho.d, here is one—and his namo ; s Pride 1”
"I caro not for Pride !" said Lovo.
Thon touching the strings of his light guitar,
Fnde soon forgot his lofty air,
And seizing tho hand of a rmtio queen,
Laug'ied, gamboled and tripped ito ’or tho
green—
“Alia. Alia I” said Love.
“Aw.ti with your Jeers!” cried Caro, “if 3on
please;
Here’s another—lank, haggard and pale Dis
ease 1”
“I care not for him,” said Lovo.
Then touched a strain so tender and weak,
That a Hush passed over his pallid cheek,
And Disease leaped up from his couch of pain,
And smiled and rc-cchoed tho healing strain.
‘•Well dono for Diso.we,” said Love.
“Pshaw, Pshaw T said Care, “this squalid
one, seo I
How lik’st thou tho gaunt look of Poverty ?”
“I caro not for him,” said Lovo.
Then struck such a sound from his viol's
string,
That Poverty shoutod aloud, “I am king 1
The jowclcd wreaths round my temples shall
twine,
For the sparkling gotna of Golconda aro
mino 1”
“Ay, ay, very true 1” said Lovo.
“Nay, boast not,” said Caro, “there is fretful
Old Age;
licwaro of his cructheB, and tempt not his
rago 1”
“I care not for Age,” said Love.
Then swept tho strings of his magio lyro,
Till tho glazed cyos sparkled with youthful
fire;
Aud Ago dropped his crutches, and light as a
fay,
Laughed, capered and danced, llko a child at
play,
“liravo, Sir Eld I” said Lovo.
“A truce,” cried wrinkled Caro, 1 with thy
gleo I
Now look on this last one—'tin Jealous) I”
“An me ! ah mo 1" said Lovo:
“Her green eye burns with a quenchless flro—
“l dio I I die I ’ Then, dropping his lyro,
Love Hew far away from his cherished bower,
And never returned from that fatal hour 1
Alus for ttioo, blighted Lovo 1
HER AUNT'S PARASOL.
UY JOHN A. PHTRIIS.
“You can mlvnnco iui many nrgumontfl
ns you clmosn, sister Charity, toward tho
impropriety of borrowing nuut’s pnrnsol,
but !, for ouo, slmll not listen- -at losst,"
correction herself, "pay attention to
them. When slio started for Schenec
tady sho told mo I might use it when
ever I saw lit”
"Nay, not so, Bessie," oontradictod
the older sister, n stout maiden of unoor-
tain ago, with uncompromising ways and
hatehot face; “sho said on a fair sun
shiny dny, when tliero was no danger of
rain and tho wind did not ra?o. Why
can’t you bo reasonable ? Yon havo a
protty black ouo which answers overy
purpose, and aunt’s is suoh n bizarre
thing that it would attraot attention
anywhere. You will bo as conspicuous
as tf you had a Bird of Paradise flying
over your head. All tho colors of tho
rainbow soem to run through it"
“Not so hod ns that, Charity; yon ox-
aggorsto. It is su|>crb with its rioli
colors blending so beautifully; and ovou
tho most cursory ohsorver would know
that it was no common thing and first
saw light in somo foreign spot, Dou’t
try to dissuade me; I slmll bo a jackdaw
on this occasion and deck myself in bor
rowed plnmngo. Aunt’s pnrnsol is just
tho filing to shield my hrunotto fnoo
from old Sol’s llery eye. You old oronk-
or I" pulling naido tho laoo drnpory at
tho window to peon out "Tho day is
still nnd warm and thoro is scarcely a
hit of wind stirring.”
"Tliero will bo soon,"oxolnimod Char
ity noo|>or, who could prophesy liko
uuolher Vonnor. "Now mark my word I
I havo not studied tho faoo of the sky
and kept track of tho clmnguB in tho at-
mosplicro for years not to ho wcatlior-
wise and conscious of an approaching
storm. Tliero is every indication of a
storm of wind."
"Well,” philosophically returned tho
younger giri, "Jot it oomo. It is useless
to expostulate with tho weather gods,
however unpropitious their aspect, and
I havo no intention of relinquishing tho
gratification I slmll exporienoe in carry
ing a parasol. I’ll run np to tho room
now and get it.”
Sho vsnishod, to rotnrn immediately
with wlmt she at least thought to bo tho
most beautiful parasol in the world. It
certainly was unique; barbario, Charity
termed it. Mrs. Taylor’s husband, who
was a sailor, had brought it five years
before from some unpronounceable for
eign part, nnd presented it to his wife,
who doted on curiosities, nnd who treas
ured it up ns a pearl of great prioo and
never used it save on somo rare occa
sion.
But onoo had Bossio had the pleasure
of appearing with it on the stroot; and
it was only whon her aunt was suddenly
oalled away by telegram, to the death
bed of an old friend, that she had won
from her a reluctant oonsent to wield it
on somo fine bright day.
With delight she unfurled it now, and
held it by its glittfjiyg handle aloft.
Splendid colors, m winch gold and crim
son predominated, blended together ex
quisitely, and the girl’s face wnB liko
somo beautiful picture, as she half con
cealed it under the long gold fringe de
pending therefrom. A lovely brunette
of eighteen was Bessio Hooper, with
lustrons eyes in which there was a spieo
of mischief, and a • figure that was os
graceful ns tho white lily drooping on its
stem in ita bed of glossy-veined leaves
in the jar on the window-sill. In her
neutral-tinted garment, unrelieved by a
hit of bright color, tho many-liued sun-
sbade seemed to snpply the finishing
touch to an otherwise too Bombre toi
lette.
Vexed ot the portinaoity of hor sister
in adhering to her original intention of
cany in g tire parasol, Charity again
broke forth in denunciation ef the thing.
"It is not suitable lor a civilized hein^
to he seen on tho street with," she ex
claimed, “especially the sister of one
who is a pillar of the church. Have
you no shame, Bessie Hooper ? Put
aside the outlandish thing and don’t at
tend divine service with it. It’s only fit
for a dweller in Heathen-Land. I’d liko
to see me carry it!”
“1 too,” lnughed Bessie. "It would
be too rioh 1 Do, Charity,; hold it over
your red head and see how it would
look,” and she held it temptingly forth.
But the indignant spinster drew be
yond tho reach of its contaminating
touch. "Carry it, if you choose; but
remember if anything happens to it,
Aunt. Susan will never forgive you. She
will abominate you.”
“Well, let her,” was the laconic reply
of the girl, who, as the first stroke of
the church-hell fell upon her ear, began
to tie on her hat.
Charity, who had stationed herself at
the window, now hurriod on hers and
left tho house. A widower, in whom
sho was interested, was oomlng dow
the street. Bessie smiled, then went t
answer the door-hell, which had jus
sounded.
On tlio 4oor-stop stood a stalwart,
fair-haired man—Harry Gale.
"Good-morning, Bessie. I called to
nccompauy you to church.”
"How did yon know I was going?”
she queried, mischievously.
"Oh I a liitlo bird told mo. By jovo I
Bessie,” as they walked down tho street.
“That’s a gorgeous nfiair you've over
your head—a truly stunning afTt ir !
What is it? A tropical bird—a—Bali I
f lack for a word to apply to it. Your
face looks charming beneath it, though,
whenever I can catch a glimpse of it
through that tantalizing friugo. Didn’t
Charity denounce it as being too gay for
church?”
"You would have thought so, if yon
had heard her go on. Aud, indeed, if it
lind been on tho Babhnth, I should novor
havo dared to carry it. wonder why
Elder Hopkins administers tho right of
baptism to-day, instead of Sunday, as
was his originnl intention ?”
"He wnH called unexpectedly to Cali
fornia, nnd Ids converts will ho baptized
by no one elso. Gracious ! Bessie, how
tho people stare at you—your parasol, I
mean,” with a curious twinkle in hii
I rank blue eyes os lie made tho correc
tion.
"Nonsense, llrary I”
Js a humbug-a regular flatterer I I
hoard him tell T.il Jones that sho had
eyes liko tho forget-me-not, nnd ltuth
White that her hair was tho color of tho
dafiydowndillyi I wonder you would
listen to his Oattery !”
“I don’t soo why. Y’ou, yourself,
have made fine speeches to me."
"But that is different," ho returned,
Indignantly. "I proposed to you some
time since, nnd to day you nro to give
me a decided answer, remember.”
"I remember,” in n tone of vexation.
“Yon needn't speak quite so loud. A
squad of girls nnd hoys draw nonr, nnd
you don't want them to overhear. Hco
tho people ahead of us I Tho church
will lie crowded to-day. Do you be
lieve in immersion, Mr. Galo? Or linvo
you no prediction for wliat .Tolm tho
IlnptiBt deemed indispensable?”
"I believe you to lie a coquette of tho
first water," ho muttered, wrnthfully,
tinder his breath, as ho saw hor dispen
sing hor hows nnd smiles indiscrimi
nately right and left.
Tho little chnroh wns filled to roplc-
"Tho truth, Bessie I How its ra
ilinnt colors scintillate in the sunlight!
It rea'ly makes you look ton percent,
better."
"So J lid go Miller’s son remarked, the
only timo I overused it to ward off tho
etui s rays,’’ she said, demurely.
"Judge Miller's son is a ninny I" ho
retorted, sharply, biting his lqis, "Ho
lion, as Bessie hail predicted. An excel
lent discourse, prepared carefully for tho
oonvoits, followed. Thon tho congrega
tion filed out of the building nnd re
paired to the hanks of n cool, deep
stream ihnt oleft in twain a green, dan
delion-starred meadow, on whoso odgo
prow willows, witli tho brnnohes droop
ing so low that their silver-green hair
almost touched tho babbling water.
BcsRio tripped duiulily along witli tho
crowd, her aunt’R parasol over hor head,
Harry Gale keeping porsistoiitiy at hor
side.
Tho calm of (lie day was broken ns
Charity had foretold. A wind that was
strong nnd raw lind suddenly arisen, nnd
Bessio drew instinctively toward ono of
tho bonding, long-tressed willows.
Twas nn lmprosBivo soono-^ho hanks
lined with poopio of all agos. Below,
where tho water wns cool nnd orysinl-
olonr and tliero were no obstructions, the
stream had been dammed up, mnkiug
qnfto a deep pool. Into thin tho minis
ter stepped and I lie converts were each
in turn immersed, appropriate passages
from the Bihlo falling now and then
from tho coral man’s lips. no had just
reiensod from the cool emhrnco of the
wnters a young girl clad in snow white
garments, so emblematical of purity,
when tho wind sighed through the trees
in tho most direful manner conooivnhle.
When it oensoil its moaning voice tho
minister began tho following sacral
words, in clear, solemn times that thrill- d
through the crowd:
“Tho wind blowoth whore it lintel It
and thon henroth tho sound thereof, hut
knnwest not whcuco it oometh nor
whithor it—”
"OiH)lh,'’ ho had meant, to say hut tho
word died in stilltioss on liis lips. Tlioro
eamo a gust of wind, far more powerful
than any that had preooded it, and swept
along and lashed tho waters of tho
stream, nats were blown off, trees
writhed niul creaked in tho blast nnd
somo of tho people wore nearly thrown
to the ground,
Bessio cried out, hut only through
anxiety as to tho fate of her parasol,
which had esenped from hor grasp, and,
asif it lind been a lliing of life,tokenun
to itself wings and flown away,
Liko tho hrilliaut Bird of Paradise it
luid been likened unto, it flew—carried
off by tho strong bronthod wind in tho
dircotiou of tho stream. Would it dip
its radiant plumngo into tho water and
ho ruined forever V Or would it ho torn
into shreds amongst tho brnnohes of tho
willows ero it reached tho stream ?
Bossio clutched hold of narry’s arm
in hor trepidation, and shouted;
“Hun for your lifo nftor it, Harry,
and if you bring it hack to mo intact,
without n blemish. I’ll say ‘vos’ to tho
question you naked me ages ngo, Oh I
mu! run I”
And down tho hank Harry sped after
tho flying ihing. Aa good luck would
havo it, it did not go far; its (light was
interrupted by the swaying branches of
a willow, which, as tho wind died away
as suddenly as it liail sprung into action,
caught and held it in nn unloving clasp
till Harry arrived upon tho soeuo and
released it.
Anxiously he examined it. Not a
spot of dirt upou it, not a siuglo rent in
it, could lie detected; nnd so ho oh-
servod to Bessie as thoy wended thoir
way slowly homoward.
But tho girl deolared piteously “that,
somehow, ita colors looked less bright
than before its flight, that—really, sho
hadn’t considered tho momentous ques
tion sufficiently to dooido that day.”
But Harry stopped hor, his voice firm
slid clear.
"Say yoa or no, Bessie, for I shall
never mention tho snbjeot to yon again.”
And perceiving that ho was thor
oughly in earnest, and loving him sin
cerely, Bessio dropped her pretty air of
coquetry, so natural to tho majority of
women, nnd made answer in tho affirm
ative.— (JoiUy'a Lady Hook,
Tho Nose.Bags.
The following anecdote will bo appre
ciated by our military readers :
In tho cavalry service it frequently
happens that, by reason of dentil, deser
tion, and discharge, tho number of men
in n troop is less than tho number of
horses on baud. A troop captain, not
long since, hail occasion to send up n
requisition for orduauco stores, includ
ing, among other things, "sixty-live
nose-bngs."
After the usual long interval this re
quisition wns duly returned from Ban
Antonia, with Hie indorsement: "Re
spectfully returned to Captain ,
—til Cavalry. The returns of his troop
show that ho lias only fifty-four men,
nnd explanation is doBireil ns to why ho
requires sixty-five nose-hags.”
The captain’s explanation was ns fol
lows : “.Respectfully returned. Tho
nose-bags aro rfequired for my horses,
and not for tho men."—JIarper's
"Drawer."
Sparrows. — English farmers now
jffer six cents per dozen for sparrows’
heads, and tho same price per dozen for
their eggs. These prices have stimulated
a raid of almost complete extermination
is Kojne counties.
FLOUR MADE OF HOOD.
The chief industry in the Catskill re
gion of Now York, a local letter says, is
producing wood flour, a kind of oonBin
to wood pulp. It was first manufac
tured in tho Catskills about nine years
ngo, nnd now over twenty mills aro in
full blast. The process is exceedingly
simple. Any soft-wood tree—poplnr is
til" favorit -is foiled and drawn to tho
mill. The bnrk nnd boughs nro removed
nnd tho trunk put in a machiuo which Jh
nothing hut a lead-pencil sharpener on a
largo Rcnlo, with four or more knifo
edges instead of one. On starting tho
mnehino tho pencil sharpener revolves
with great swiftness, and in n few min
utes converts tho log into a hundred
miles of Hue, clean ahnvings. Theso are
ground and bolted exactly ns in a Hour
mill. The product is a soft, fine, yellow-
ish-whito (lour, similar in nppearnneo to
a very well-ground corn meal. It poB-
sosnes a slight woody smell, and is al
most tasteless. It is put up in largo
lings and then is dispatched, unmarked,
to the buyer.
1 tried to lind out who purchased tho
article, hut with no success. Tho wood
miller was not very communicativo.
"It makes," iio said, “well, I don't
know how much exactly. Ouo log may
give flvo lings, nnd it may givo ten. It
sells well— that is, pretty tolerable, I
reckon I c nr about eight or nino dol
lars a dny out of it perhaps more, I
never figgered it up. \Ylint's it good
for? Good many things. It's used to
stiffen paper, lmt if you put in too much
the paper gets brittle. I’nper stoek is
dearer than poplar flour, nnd that's why
they put it in. If you mix the flour with
linseed gum and 'biled' oil you get a
kind of oilcloth. Homo folks mix it
with meal to givo to pigs and other ani
mals. I guess it's good, hut I novor
givo it to my hogs, nnd oven ttioso fob
lows givo it to somo other fellow’s crit-
ti rs and not their own, Yen, I hnvo
heard that somo had contractors mixed
it witli meal for army and Indian sup
plies, lmt I don’t take muoli stock in the
story, because they could buy sour
meal us cheap ns poplar (lour. It
wouldn’t pay to mill pine or cedar or
hemlock ; thov’ro worth too much ns
timber. But nnv wood tlint isn’t nsod
that way can ho milled into flour. I uso
poplar almost altogether, hut when I run
short of logs, I grind up buttonball,
birch, elm, or willow."
Tho farmers disliko the now luilustry,
ns it promises to play havoc with tho
forests, which nro both nn attraction to
tho hoarder nnd n protection to agricul
ture. Tho tanneries years ngo used up
nearly nil tho onk nnd homlock ; the
lumbermen have stripped tho country
practically of pine, cedar nnd walnut;
the chair fsotorios nro consuming tho
hickory nnd maple ; and now tho wood-
flour mill promises to grind up what
rcunining trees tliero may ho.
The I,nut of Ilia Leech Fishers,
A grizzly old man, with his breeches
legs turned up to liis thighs, waded
through tho ditches of "The Neck" in
tlie First Wnril tho other day. Ho oar-
rieil with him a tin can nnd a miniature
scoop net. lie was engaged in tho
Homcwhnt curious occupation of cntching
leeches,
"Tho business," said ho to nn inquir
ing reporter, "is nearly playod out, bnt
I make something ut it yot."
The old follow then proceeded to caro-
fully wash out liis tin can, remarking:
"Hiiyo to ho very careful to hnvo
nothing hut pure water in this can, for
f Iio 1-echos will not livo in anything hut
pure vator. I lmvo been n leech flrdior-
mn i lor twenty years, and it took me n
good while to lentil how to keep them.”
The manner ot this odd old mail’s fish
ing wits very simple, no vigorously
stirred up tho mud in tho ditch with liis
feet, and thon wutohed for tho loeohes
to rise to tho surface, nr perhaps settlo
upon Ids Imre legs. Those which onmo
up ho caught with liis little scoop net,
transferred them to liis tin can of water,
nnd tlicn calmly proceeded to pick oft
such ns had faatonod upon Ida limbs.
The loss of blood appeared to givo him
no uneasiness, although in a day’s fish
ing this must iio considerable.
Chatting about liis curious modo of
making n living, tho old man snid:
"1 lmvo frequently taken 3,000 leeches
from a single stream. If they onco got
filled with blood, they drop off dead,
nml thus many dio nftor getting a square
muni from the legs of tho cattle which
roam through tho ditches. Loeohes
may with enro ho kept indefinitely.
There is a fair sain for them in Philadel
phia, hut tho demand hns dwindled very
much of Into years. French nnd Swed
ish leeches are now very goncrnlly used,
boonilso thoy can ho preserved so mtioh
castor. Years ngo many men and hoys
were engaged in leech fishing in this
neighborhood. I am all that is left-, and
only I beenuso I nm too old for any
thing else. Tho pauper loeohes of
Europe lmvo destroyed tho industry,
you seo," c< noludod the old fisherman,
with a twinkle in liis eyo, ns ho went on
liis way up the ditch, nnd tho reporter
pondered ns ho walked back toward tho
city It this would not bo another olinnco
for protection to American labor. Tho
old man had probably ouo vote at lenst,
—J’hita. Record,
Freaks of French Students,
Homo disturbances lmvo occurred at
the St. Oyr military school, A student
by night having climbed up the flagstaff
nnd torn off tho red and blue of the ling
leaving only the white, thirty students
wore threatened with consignment to a
regiment unless tho culprits’names wore
given up. Tho ohief offender came
forward, nnd wns sent ns n privato
soldier to a regiment, while his two ac-
complises were threatened with punish
ment. Eight other students havo been
sentenced to thirty days’ confinement
nnd to t Iio loss of thoir holidays, Twolvo
more lmvo nlso lind imprisonment, nnd
half the school are deprived for several
months of thoir weekly leave. Tho
affair originated in the students’ custom
every 110th of Juno to turn round tho
school nlmauno, whieh has Bix months
on each side, and to treat everything
thoy find in tho same fashion. They
happened to lie doing this when General
Lecomto mnilo his general inspection,
hut not approving of tho proceedings ho
treated them seriously.
Gcu. Sheridan in Society.
The Boston Traveler says: No end
of amusement has been afloat in Wash
ington during the past winter over tho
mistakes of Uon. Sheridan. The Gen
eral, of course, moves in tho very high
est circles of society, anil during tho
sensou he hns been introduced to hun
dreds of ladies and gentlemen. Ho is
ono of the most polite and ngreeablo of
gentlemen, nnd lias a perfect horror of
offending any ono through an intentional
oversight. After tho General had been
to n few receptions he found that he wns
totally unable to reenll the names and
oven tho faces of fully two-thirds of the
persons who had been introduced to
him. Driven to desperation, ho adopted
tho novel plan of bowing to everybody.
Now no ouo thinks of introducing a
friend to Goneral Sheridan. The proper
thing in society is to introduce yourself.
The General won’t know the difference,
nnd he will greet you with all the affa
bility of an old friend.
A railroad in which the cars run
astride a single rail 1ms been so success
ful in Africa that one like it is to bg
bupt in Friuioe.
WIT AND WISDOM.
A jionNRT is liko truth, because truth
sometimes stings.
There is no knifo that ents so sharply,
and with snch poisoned blado as treach
ery.
It seems odd that a flying debtor
should cross the ocean to nvoid tho bill-
owes.
No one can nfford to havo a friond
whoso talk makes him tired. Life is too
short,
NomiNO is more obnoxious than cant.
Es;iccinl]y if you aro trying to movo n
snfe aud the cant happens to get on your
side.
When a widower with half a dozen
children marries a widow with about
(lint number then yon hot there is domes
tic hominy in Hint house.
Tim is tho sonson when tho men havo
their hair cut so short that thoir wives
can uso tho top of hubby’s head for nut
meg graters,—Boston Budget.
In Tennessee, Nortli Carolina, Vir
ginia, Georgia and Alabama more tliRU
84,000,000 lias been invested in now
cotton mills.
A Stock Ysnns girl who is anxious to
get rid of her lover hns promised to
marry him whon l’ildon is eleotcd.—
Chicago Sun.
“Haiid workers aro never troubled
with insomnia," says a physician. Very
true; look nt tho hnnl-workod police
man.—J’hita. Cat/.
A rnoran sign to bang np outsido tho
closed hank doors: "Gono to Canada
nnd Mexico for our honllh. Bo hack
when they bring us.”
The Info Prince of Orango novor
know, poor man, tho delights of a Chi
cago convention, but thou ho owned GO
parrots. lie was never lonely,
"The man who whistles need novor
ho feared,” said a philosopher, hut at
flio iimo lie made this assertion "Sweet
Violets" lind not been writtcu.
“noMDAV” comes from three words,
"hole,” "in," "day,” aud menus thnt
alio holiday knocks a largor hole in tho
week than twonty-soven hours over
work.
In n glovo shop: "I want a pnir of
gloves.” ••What is your number, Bir ?”
"2,017." Glovo woman with somo
effort discovers thnt tho customer is n
cnl) drlvor.
“Mamma," said a littlo np-town hoy,
aa ho left liis bed and crawled into hers,
the other night, "I enn go to sleep in
your bed, I know I can; but I’vo slept
my hod all up."
One of tho reasons urged by tho ad
vocates of tho postnl-delirery system in
a smnll city wna tlint tho oflioo should
seek tho man, not tho mnn tho office.—
Burlington Free J’rcss.
A Faroo young Indy named Itouso
caught a glimpso of a poor littlo mouse,
nnd tlie scream thnt sho scromo shat
tered heaven’s bluo dome aud hulgec’
out tho wnlls of tho house,
Hquiaas will not allow his oldest
daughter, who has renohod tho mature
ago of sixteou, to hnvo a bonu. Ho says
Hint liis wife can do all tho hilling niid
baby nil tho eooing thnt tho house cm*
stand at present,
A Vermont mnn has a hen thirty-
nine yonrs old. Tho othor dny a hawk
stele it, but after nu hour eamo hack
with a broken bill nud three claws gono,
put down the lion nnd took an old rub
ber hoot in plnoo of it.
"Has Vulcan Loft thoSklos?" is tho
(iUo of a scientific nrtiele in nu cxchnngp.
Wo understand thnt Vuloan is guilty of
forging, nnd it may he that 1m lias toft
tho skies for Canada, ns is tho fnshiou
of forgers in this country.
Drill Hergonnt—"Attention, there,
PrivateBurko I Whntnroyonstauding in
tlint awkward way for? Don’t you know
what tlie position of n Boldior is?” Pri
vate Burke: "Faix and Oi do, sergeant,
and Oi don’t know a worms wan.”
A boy wnB milktog a cow in Dodge-
villo, N. Y., rooently, when lightning
struck tho cow. Tho boy, unaware of
tho causo of tho blow, was heard to ex
claim, “Ah, ha I your tail hit yourself
Hint timo instead of mo l”—J’hita. Call.
The schoolmaster had fallen asleep,
and tho scholars wore tnkiug advantage
of it. Suddenly, in tho midst of the
racket, lightning struck tho building,
and tho teacher, rousing hlmsolf, said
sternly: "Tho hoy who mndo Hint noise
will hnvo to stny nftor school,” And
theii ho fell hbIc.ci- again,
Ono of Jack’s Prejudices,
the ratlob’s HATRED OP WnAT SHOULD
UP. HIS NATIVE ELEMENT.
uno of tho strangest of tho many pe
culiarities of the sailor, Bays nn old
shell back, is his strong disliko for salt
water, lie not only has a great horror
of being drenched with this fluid, hut ho
will not oven consont to uso it for wash
ing purposes. At first sight this dis
liko seems unaccountable. Ouo would
suppose thnt Jack would take ns nntur-
nlly to salt water ns tho averago scu-go-
iug fish. He is comparatively freo from
this weakness when ho enters upon his
Ren onreer, hut it grows upon him stead
ily ns long us Iio remnius upon (lie
oconn, White tho disliko of salt water
is growing upon him, however, liis love
for fresh water is strengthened in a cor>
responding degree.
Whenover Jack sees n heavy wave or
oven a sliowor of spray approaohing
him ho will fly for shelter. Ho is pro
tected in a measure from tho waves
which tioard tlie vcasol by Ids heavy oil
skins nnd sea-hoots, Wiionover lie fnti-
oies that tliero Is any dnnger of his be
ing nltnoked by snlt water ho arms him
self with his oil-skiuB, but theso prove
no protection to his face when a shower
of spray flies over him. And the idea
of salt water trickling down the hack of
his neok is nbout ns agreeable to him ns
is. tho thought of an approaching mouse
to tho average womnn. An old sailor is
generally very oxpert fn dodging theso
siiddon thrusts of Neptune, but when
they strike him unawares it gives uis
delicate norves a great shook, and causes
him to cry out ns if he were really un
dergoing grant agony. The approach of
n heavy wnve will sometimes onuso nil
entire watch to Imperil the safety of
their Bhip by dropping at a critical mo
ment tho liruco ou whieh they are haul
ing. Moil have bcon known to desert
tlie wheel iu order to nvoid being
drenched with spray. It often happens
that when several men on wntoli are en
gaged in conversation one of them will
pause in tlie middle of an argument,
and, nftor giving a warning yell, will fly
for shelter ns if his life depended upon
it, simply because he fancied that his
skiu was in dnnger of being spattered
with salt water. A green hand, how
ever, docs not soem to mind a littlo
spray, but whon n Bliower of this de
scription strikes him ho will look
around iu surprise at the old sailors who
aro fleeing in terror.
Economical.—Boh Toombs says tlint
Memminger, the Secretary of the Treas
ury, was a very economical publio ser
vant. Ho hired negroes to print the
Confederate onrroney, and paid them
for thoir work by giving them the nse
of thoir presses to print for themselves
nt night. In tho matter of a "frugal
mind," Memminger had a superior in a
man who hired negroes to gather drift
wood in tho Colorado ltiver after tho
war, and pile it up in his yard. They
boarded themselves, and he paid them
half of all the drift-wood they colleotod,
which drift-v?ood, of course, was just as
muoli their own ns it was his. The de
luded darkieB called this "working on
shears,” totally unaware of the faot that
they were furnishing the wool iof the
i '’shears,”—Texas Siftings,
SHALL TnE BODY RISE AGAIN 1
Henry Ward Becehor's subject on
Sunday was the resurrection of the
body. A few of the things he said are
given below:
"I nm not ono who believes in tho
resurrection of tho literal body, nor that
literally my hones shall ho covered
again with my identical flesh nnd blood
flow in those veins nnd arteries; never
theless 1 will never drop the langnngo
of the days when people did believe it.”
"Regard for one’s body is a moral in
fluence, nnd certainly it is n refining in
fluence wkon.it is regard for tho dust of
others.’’
"Sell-respect is ono of God's minis
ters of o.lucntion in life. Carried to
excess it mny becomo mischievous; hut
it is the operation of something that is
very earnestly useful iu lifo.”
"Tho resurrection of tho body is not
fo ho accepted ns a sefontiflo faot. In
numerable troubles bcBOt tho steps of
those who, instructed now in science,
yet find it hard to tear themsolvcs away
from old teachings that this vorv body
is to rise again. But wo nro to hold to
it by imagination. I am not to believe
in it by my intclloot; hut I will beliovo
it by my imagination.”
“It is difficult to toll whether more
birds aro Berved by thoir feet than by
their wings, aud so far ns man is con
cerned, given sound sense, and good
reason, ho is n man Hint- walks Iho
earth; give to him a vivid imagination
and ho lias wings nnd flies in tlie air.”
"What is there in sciouco Hint will
help a mail in Greenwood ? It is n hill
of holies, a heap of dust; it is tho
ground of tho wrecks that hnvo boot!
made in lifo. But in its nobler aspect
is it nothing more thnn that ? Is it only
tho end ? Is not Greenwood to tcu
thousand thousand almost ns tho opon
gato of heaven ? It is tho homo of
their heart."
"That which makes Greenwood honu-
tiful to us is not its science, its bones
nnd its dust, but those glorious associa
tions which lifo has treasured up with
the names that aro spelled out there.”
"It is tho liberty of all who wish in
cineration to havo it, Tliero ought to
he no bondage of the imagination, mid
there mny he some snnitary reasons for
it in crowded populations, and there
may ho somo reasons of convenience
where graves are denr nnd land is
source. But all tlio assoointiouH of our
English-speaking nml our German-
speaking people, for Hint matter, nro
violated by tho attempt to supersodo
our literature nnd our wliolo religious
thought by reducing tlio dend to nslios,
nnd putting them in urns liko sweet
meats on n Hliolf."
"Tlie wliolo spirit of tho New Testa
ment is in favor of a resurrection into a
form whieh stint! nnswer to our earthly
body, nml that iu some high and noble
way belongs to it, ns the blossom to tho
hud, rs tlie flower to the seed. Ill that
hope wo cherish tho body."
"So lot us livo that wo shall lenvo not
n mouldering dust to tlio disenehnuted
nnd materialized notions of tho world,
lmt leave a memory fnll of clustering
affections, nnd a glorious reappearing
when Christ shall come to cnll us homo,
CONSIDER THESE THINGS.
A Western I'lilloNoplier Cnmpnrc* tlie Lnwa
of tirnvltiillnn tu Hcvon Quarts of
Apples*
Mv son, there nro somo things that
hoys onglit to know. At your ngo a
young man should ho inquiring into
tilings. An apple fell nt tlio foot of
Newton, nnd while ho wns wondering
how it was thnt ns npples eamo down
eider nlwnys went np, lie discovered tlio
tnwof gravitation, whereby farmers nro
enabled to put a jieek of apples in a
seven quart basket. Now, every young
mnu slicmid bo observant and thought
ful, and study a great deal from tho
book of human unturo. How does it
como tlint your party frequently soleots
a niuety-ponnd man for a two-ten Con
gressman ? Wliy nnd how docs tlie
elerk with tlio smallest salary wear tho
host clothes ? Why does tho smallest
town hnvo Iho biggest mayor? Why is
tho ontii of nu amateur fisherman con
sidered void nud of no force in court ?
Why docs an nlnrm clock always make
the loudest noiso whon you want to
sloop ? Why does n man’s own dog al
ways got licked ill n fight? Why is it
that your 2:30 horso can novor trot in-
sido of 3:7. r ) when anybody else is along?
Can you roly upon the parson’s word in
n horse trado? And if so, why not?
Why is it that tho man who snores al
ways gets to sleep first? Why is it
right to steal from tlio government?
Why is the farmer more honest thnn tho
city man ? Aud if so, how many ? Why
does n spring chicken livo longer thnn
nn ostrich ? Why does tho man witli
tlio fewest troubles make tlio most fuss
nbout them ? Why is a mnu so much
better tlinn liis neighbors ? How is it
that tlie country gets nlong just ns well
when Congress isn’t in session ? Why
doe's tlio man with tho smallest adver
tisement. always want tho biggest "lo
cal ?" Wliy iloos an ugly man havo
such a profound contempt for personal
beauty? Wliy Hoes a tramp Unto soap?
Do tlio best meu in America rule this
country? Is tho 1’rosident always the
best amt wisest mnn iu all tho laud?
Docs tlie judgo really and truly know
moro lnw tlinn any of tho lawyers who
practice in his court? Is tho member of
Congress honestly nnd truly tho most
intelligent nnd nblest man iu his dis
trict ? Aro tho mombers of tho school
board meu of education ? Consider
these tilings, my boil It will do you
good to think ovor them, even though
you mny never solve the easiest oonun-
ifrum iu tho lot.—BdrdettEj
A .Sunday Trrp.
FAYINO A FINE FOR TnE TRAVELING, RUT
CAUSING A SURPRISE FOR THE MAGIS
TRATE,
A mngnzino writer in speaking of tlio
olden timo in Connecticut-, tells this
story: A sharp-witted Ynukoe, return
ing homo through Connecticut, on Hmi-
dny, was stopped at a littlo village, nud
requested to pay tlie lino, whieh ho con
sented lo do if taken before tho
magistrate who was to receive it, and
who was n mail of groat property and
extensive mercantile connections. Tlio
Yankee, teariug a leaf from his pocket-
book, wrote thereon a few words, aud
presenting it to the mngistato with the
money, requested him to sign a receipt
for the few 1 shillings, in order that ho
might not bo cnlled on to pay the fine
twice, should ho ho stopped again be
fore tho morroAV. So reasonable a re
quest being unhesitatingly complied
Avitb, the traveler put the paper in his
pocket nnd departed, apparently in no
Avorae humor for the interruption he had
encountered. About ten days after-
Avard, business calling the magistato to
Boston, ho took occasion to step into
his banker’s to look over his account,
when thoy informed him that they lind
duly honored his last week’s draft for
ono hundred dollars. They produoed
it to him, and ho immediately recog
nized the handwriting of the Yankee,
with his signature plainly attached.
Mrs. A.—"So yon have been to tho
circus.” Mrs. B.—"Yob.” Mrs. A.—
"Is it worth going to see?” Mrs. B.—
"Oh yes, indeed, decidedly.” Mrs. A.—
“What impressed you as being tho
most noteworthy feature of tho exhibi
tion ?’’ Mrs. B.—"The smell.”—Bos
ton Transcript.
A new journal, printed on blood-red
paper, and oalling itself the Hydra of
diarchy, has been Btarte4 W Paris.
FOR CURING CHILLS AND FEVER .
AND 4
Removing the Distressing Effects ot Malaria,
AYER’S AGUE [CURE
nA8 BEEN FOUND SO Jfcu
* NEARLY a INFALLIBLE, #
if THAT
We Authorize Dealers to Return the Money,
If the tncdicino is taken according to directions, without benefiting the patient.
PREPARED BY
DR. J. C. AYER A COi, Analytical Chomlete, LOWELL, MASS.
Bold by all Druggists. Prlae (1, six bottles for (5,
Brown’s Iron Bitters com
bines Iron with pure vcgetnklo tonics.
It is compounded on thoroughly sci
entific nnd medicinal principles, nnd
ennnot intoxicate.
All other preparations of Iron causo
headache, nnd produce constipation.
Brown’s Iron Bitters is tlie
ONLY Iron tncdicino that
is not injurious —its use docs not
even slacken tlio teeth.
It not only cures Hie worst cnscs of
Dyspepsia, but insures a hearty ap
petite and good digestion.
' Brown’s Iron Bitters Is tho
Best Liver Regulator—re- J
moves bile, clears the skin, \'i
digests tho food, CURES V
Belching, Heartburn, Best ’]
in tlio Stomach, etc. u.
It is the best-known remedy for •
female infirmities. -4
Tlio genuine has above trade mark
nnd crossed red lines on wrapper.
Tako no other. Mado only by
(| Brown Chemical Co., '
Baltimore, Md.
Scene In Court. >'•* :.y ^
A sorrowful commentary on tho
words iu Proverbs, "A foolish son is the
heaviness, ot his mothor,” wns witnessed
not very long since in a Philadelphia
court room. A reporter from the Paoiflo
coast, who was present, sent tho follow
ing account of it to tho San Franoisoc
Bulletin:,
Wm. Mooro and Wm. Richards wore
convicted of having forcibly entered the
Iioubo ot John Shaffer ond stolen two
hundred nud seventy-eight dollans.
Moore is twenty-five years ot age and
married.
Before sentence wns passed, his
mother, a poor Gorman, eamo weeping
to the liar, and .aid sho (haired to make
restitution of tho thoft. She had come
b!l tho way from Baltimore, sho raid,
and brought hor earnings with her for
thnt purpose. She Wen prodneed a
toother l aud-bag, took out half a dozen
fivo-dollar gold pieooa, a roll oi notes—
ail of them of small denomination—and
counted them ont in the hands of the
Olork of the Court. Whon the desired
snm wns mado np there was loft only
enough to take her hack home. Tho
roonoy was plaoed on Judge Ludlow’s
desk.
"Tako it hack,” said I'jo judge, "and
tell this poor roman that the paymont
of this mouoy will not save her son from
prison. The law must bo vindicated.”
Tho mother wopt hard, and said:
"Oil, I understand. 1 didn’t hope to
save my hoy from prison. I pay this
money because I wont to do what’s
right. Justice is justice.”
; "With that understanding," said tho
Court, “let tho monoy bo received."
Sentcnco of Moore and his accomplice
wns deferred until the last day of tho
term. A criminal with suoh a mothor
'should suffer keener punisbmont from
solf-binmo and self-contempt than from
a full term under tho law.
You Can't .llnlie 9500 bx Roadlnjr ThU, V
even if you linvo chronic nasal catarrh in its
Avoi-nt Riagiw, for although this amount of re
ward has for many years boon offered hy the
proprietor, of Dr. Sneo’ii Catarrh Romody.for
any case of catarrh thoy cannot cure, yot not-
,withstanding that thousands uso tho Remedy
they nro seldom called upon lo pay tho reward,
ana Avhen they lm\'e been so called upon they
havo universally found that the failure to cure
vos wholly duo to some overlooked complica
tion, usually oasily removed by a slight modi- 1 ,
ilcatlou of tho treatment. Therefore, if this*'
should moot the oyo of anybody who has mado
faithful trial of this great and world-famed
Remedy without receiving a perfect nnd per
manent cure therefrom, that person will do well
to either call or write to the proprietors, the
World’s Dispensary Medical Association, of
Buffalo, N. Y., giving all the particulars and
symptoms in the case. By return moll they 1
will got good advice free of alt costs.
i Ono half tlio State of Kentucky is under pro
hibition or local option law.
The Hope of the Nation.
Children, slow in development, puny, sorawny
and delicate, uso “Wells’ Health Renowor."
A sunflower Htaik in Georgetown'Kentucky/
has 105 flowers on it.
MOTHER,
If tho littlo darling is spending such sleepless
nights and slowly and pitifully Masting away
hy the drainage upon its system from the ef
fect of toothing, procure a bottle of Dr. Big-
ger’s Buulhern Remedy and find what many
other mothers havo hy its uso—a complete euro
as it will in all bowel affections in both young
and old. This, with a bottlo of Taylor’s Cher
okee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein, com-
Lining tho siimulating expectorant principle /
of the sweet gum with the demulcent healing •
one of tlio mullein, for the cure of croup,
whooping cough, colds and consumption, pre
sent a tittle medicine chest no household
should be without for tlio speedy relief of sud
den and dangerous attacks of the lungs end
bowelB. Ask your druggist for them. Manu
factured Ly W alter A. Taylor, proprietor Tay
lor’s I'rcmium Cologne, Atlanta, Ga.
TenneRseo lias thirty-three cotton mills, with
J,4G1 looms and 77,877 spindles.
An Old Flald Weed.
Tlie old field Mullein has been a seeming out
cast for many years but now it has suddenlv
attracted the attention of the medical world
win now recognizo it to be the best lung medi
cine yet discovered, when mado into a tea aud
comb ned witli the Sweet Gum presents in Tay
lor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum nnd Mul
lein a pleasant and effective euro for Croup,
Whooping Cough, Cold nnd Consumption.
Prico 25cts and *1.00. This with Dr. Biggere’
Southern Remedy, an equally efficacious rem
edy for Cramp-Colic, Diarrhoea, Dysentery,
and ehildren suffering from tho cfecta of
teething presents a little Medicine Chest no
household should bo without, for the speedy re
lief of sudden and dangerous attacks of the
lungs and bowels. Ask your druggist for then
Manufactured by Walter A. Taylor, Atlanta
Ga., proprietor l’ayor’s Premium Cologne.
NaahviMe, Tenn., has a colored tragedian, T.
C, Scottren.
A salt fishery is to ho established at Punts
Rasss, Fla.
"Itongh an Pain."
Cures colic, cramps, diarrlims; oxtemally for
aches, pains, sprains, headache, neuralgia,
rhoumaiism. For man or beast, 30 and 60.
Carterot couaty, M. O., has shipped 100,000
watermelons to Nnrthsm markets tniB season.
"Ilangti aa Pain” Piaster.
rorons and strengthening, improved, tho
best for backache, pains in chest or side, rheu
matism, neuralgia. 25c. Druggists or mate
Tlio first knives wore used is England and
tho first wheeled carriages In Fra^ao In 1560. ,1
Twenty.'anr iiaurato litre.
From Jehn Kuhn, Lafayette, Ind,, who
nnnouncai that ha is now In "perfect
health," we have tho following': "One
year a»o I was, to all appearance, in the last
stagoi of consumption. Our best physic aos
gave my case up. I finally got so Vow that
our doctor said I oauld not -live twenty-four
hours. • My friends th»n’ purchased a bottle
of Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam for the Lungs,
which benefited mo. .’ I continued until I took
nine bottlwi. 1 am now in perfect health,
having usod no other medicine."
The eriv ef IfiahnaaJ. Vs., is new In as good
sanitary otMdkiei as It Is peswtla to wake it.
Carbo*llite««
Full oft we feel tlio surge of tears,
Yet Joy bos light for all tho years.
To all whose hair is getting tlitn.
Our Carboltne will koop it tu.
The first steam engise on thin ofiMkiemt was
brought from lngkiat tt 1753.
Threat end T.nng Disease#
ft specialty. Bend two letter stamps for r
jOTjTO -#glT,n *A 6, £ trBatmen t. Address
World’* Dispensary Medical Association. BuL
lalo, N. Y. *
Terelvo of the two* ty-seven translator* of
the new version «f ft!) Old Testament died
during tho twenty-live years occupied in that
work.
The surprising success of Mr*. Lydia E.
Pinkham’a Vegetable Compound for ths sev
eral disease* peculiar to women forcibly illus
trates tho importance of her beneficent die-
covery and tno fact that she knows how to
mako the most of it.—Da. Haskelu
Recently 10,000 pounds, of grapes / were
shipped from Ridgeway, NXO., in a day. tji. v )
, * ' * * Flic tumors, rupture and fistu
las, radically cured by improved mat hods.
t,„u -
Book two totter stumps.
Modics.1 Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
orld’s Dispensary
,
A three pound tomato is tho product of Met
( calf county, Kentucky.
Hay-Fetm ts a type of catarrh having pecu
liar symptoms. It is attended by an inflamed
condition of the lining membrane of ths nos-
■ trlls, tear-ducts and throat, affecting the lnngs.
An acrid mucus is secreted, the discharge is
accompanied with s burning sensation. Tliero
ere severo spasms of sneezing, frequent attacks
of headache, watery and inflamed eyes. Ely’s
Cream Balm is a remedy founded on a correot
diagnosis of this disease and can bo depended \
upon. 60 cts, at druggists;,60 cts. by mail.A
Sample battle by mail 10 cts. Ely Bros., Drug- "
gists, Owtgo, N. Y. ‘
? Several sales of corn in the field(h&vejbeen
mado is Bourbon county/Kentucky,^at 92.15.
and $2.20 per barrel, “4
\
Night Sweats* - -4
Headache, fever, chills, malaria, dyspepsia,
} cured by “Wells’ Health Kenewer.” 91,
^ Philadelphia policemen carry neat'black wal
nut canes—a present from tlie^mayor. '
• • The inoreasiag sales nf PisoVCuroVttests Us
^claims as the best oougli remedy.
r It costs the 35,000,000 of peoplo^of England
' about .£880,000 per annum to live.^jj^..
ITISASPECIFIC
r°ii
•Kidney It Liver
^ Troubles*
Bladder, Urinary
and Liver Dlaeaaee,
Lropey, Gravel and
Diabetes.
IT IS RELIABLE
ourtng
-Bright's m* '
coee, Pains in '
tho Back, Loins
or Bides, Helen J
'tlon or Noni 1
etontlon of *
jUrine.
HIQHLY RECOMMENDED. •
It eoree Bllioninem, lloadaoho, Jaundloe, Bone’
‘ etomaoh, Dyepepela, Constipation and Pile*. ,
IT WORKS PROMPTLY
and cures Intemperance, Nervous TMnn—os 1 1
General Debility, Ezoeeeee and
^ Fomalo Weakneee. f ^
f USE IT AT ONCE. I
11 reeLores the KIDNEYS, LIVER and BOW.* 1
£L8, to a healthy aotlon and CURED when all t
Other medicines fMl. Hundroda have been caved |
Who have boon glvou up to die by friends and !
physician*
Price 91.85. Bend for Illustrated Pamphlet to '
f nURrS REMEDY CO. f Profldence, II. I. \
I SOLD HY AU imumUSTM. i 1 *
HUNT’S (Kidney and Ll?er) REMEDY
eneonragee aleep, oreatn* an appetite, brace* nptht
*/*tem, and renewed health t* tho rfiilt.
Tho OLD RELIABLE
FAIRBANKS SCALE.
Thrco and four Ton Beales nt grcstly reduced
prtocs, Every Cotton Gin nnd Planter aliould
have a Genuine Fxiiuunxs Bcai.e. Write for
prioon. FAIRBANKS A CO.,
New Orleans, La.
Paynn’ Automatic Engines and Saw-Mill-
> (t -Vif* pVEnif.t.J* Itnstn. with Mill,
ant-hooka, rig eomplet*
... F......I.., « U v... ( ...iv)-. Kngtne on abl4a.fli|
laaa. Hint for eircular(B). 11. vV. PAYWl At
MONA, Manuf«ctur*ra or all atylea Autnnintlr Rn*
( lure, from Ito I o II. I*.; alan Pull-ja, llangera aad
baftnjr Uraira K Y lioi IHoO*
OPIUM
HABIT
CURED
CUUE UUAItANTRRI),
AM rommunicationa atriotl/ con*
(blentml. For painohlat* aud
certiftoatca addraaa
CKO. h. BRADFORD, I.D.
Druggiat and Pharmaciat,
P. O. Dux 113. Columbus, tit
GOOD NEWS
IQ LADIES!
remaatatvar of*
>uMim* to get up
re lab rated Tea*
eabaauti*
order*for t
indCofloeaiindi
fill Gold Hand or Moaa lloaa China
'Ira Hat, ur Handaoia* Overrated
Boa* Hmuer Sot, nr (sold Hand Moat
rticuUra addraaa
)#|
L)re» mod Toilet Net, K< r full particular* ad
TilK tiltKAT AMKKIt AN TKA
;. o. lloi 9*9. M aud IU Vein/ St., Net
idldaiei. (let TIlK 11 KMT! Outfit Free to umml <
•tr». Special tern* to thoif er.lrnuk Irani a aittaiice. Thl*
la the book you want. Writ* quirk for circular*. *r **a<t
b©e. for i>ra*pcelu*. Mr Itlalnr A- l.ocun hook tsiii rat
taao. ai4 tlint* Marveleiia pectet .HmiimiU aiw*j» *eii.
Addrea* W. H. Thompion, I’uh, 404 Arch St.. Philad’i. Pa.
AGENTS WANTED r.rtk.uvEs.f
BLAINE & I CLEVELAND A
; ]ti LOOAN, HENDRICKS,
lol Yel.by T. W.Kirox I In 1 Vol by Holt. A. Uaaxuu.
AnUiorlted, lutlitnllc. Imparti*!. Complete, th# L>*< and
Th* laadlog Campaign hooka of ISM. Qutacll *J(
•than 10 to 1. FWf*th thousand in prra*. Kach toI.. fcOO
pa#**, ft.50. 50 per rent, to Accnt*. Oulft /We. freight!
peirf. A|«qU earn lib to a day. Now it tha Urn* l*
faakt moa*r faat. Send for Kxtra Term*, at one*, to
4IAUTFOUB PlHUbllLNM GO., fa'arfford, team
1IAY-FCYRR.
I cun reeommtnO
Ply’e Cream Balm to all
Hay-Fever aufferem, it
liolng, in my opinion,
foundad upon experi
ence and a atire cur*.
I wan afflicted with Hay-
Fever for twenty-fir*
yeaia, and never befor*
found permanent relief.
WciisTEU II. Haskins,
Marshfield, Vt.
Cronin Ilulm ia a
roomily founded on a
correct diagnosia of thu
i- -J difloaae and can b# d*-
■ CFl/F 13 ponded upon. L0 eta.
w ■» at druggiata; 60 eta. by
mad. Maniple bottle by mail to eta
KI«Y PROM., Druggiata, Owego, N. V.
japea
Coat a leaa than ahol-
r other preaaea. Hun-
Hale* faater than any sin c
pick. rrk -
piek. 1 h* new impreve-
inta in gin Vouaea da
llied in the word* of thair
inventor*
dra*n Koa
Woo» \ „
■ooga, Tenn.,
j fra# to all. Ad-
OANOKB JROH AND
Wonxa, Ohatta-
Ootton Prxss Co., Riah
j! CHLORAL A’^D
OPIUM HABITS
> easily, cured. book fkbe.
DR. J. C. HOFFMAN, JEFFERSON, Wisconsin.
SOLID 1 SILVER STEM-WINDING, FULL
^fJEWELED GENTS’ SIZE WATCH
# FOR $12.50.
rPCLI-Y GITAKANTEEn. Th. oltoi nude for
• IIO days only. Good* aunt by Ex press C. O. D., sub
ject to inspection before uurchaHing.
1*. KTLSVKNN, ^ C#.» .Jeweler*.
Atlanta, till.
OPIUM
And Whisky Habits Cured
IN T1IIIKE WKUILH.
For Pamphlets, Preofa and Terms
w«th8ct. stamp. W, C. URL-
LAiUr, M. P„ 7)4 Broad Mtrost, AtlnntaVtiu.
'TELEGRAPHY „
—AND— f?
Railroad 'Agents’ Business
taught at MOORIC’.S BUSINESS UNITER*
N1TY, Atlautn, Ga. Sand for Circular^
, iBiposiriraouii
Fm Female Consplalrite sRl
Weakaeiaea as cemmew te
our beet female poyulatlea.
It will cure entirely the worst form of Famola Com
plaints, all Ovarian trouble*, Inflammation and Uleerm
a 0 . 0 * ftnd Displacements, aad the cenaeeaeat
cikiuige ofTi/V*** *** P* rtloul * rl F odaytedto the
'diasolv* and expel tumor* from the uterus la os
#J. t ..? mo 7**. f * Int 5 ea- b flatuleBC T> destroy* all craving
for atimulMts, and relieve# weakness of the stomach,
Sj^nJUaMtaMb Headache#, Nervous Proatratlan.
“ft,?} WtT®piaeanoaa, Depression aad Indlgeo
feel! ngo f bearing down, oauilngpaln, weight
ft inwa*- C n^. ,B peramneatly curadby Its uae.
j’Jxo family should be without LYDIA E. FINLHAJPi
LIVXE FILLS. They cure constipation, biliousness aad
torpidity of the liver. SS cents a box at all druggists.
Nervous Debility
VIRGINIA FEMALE INST1TDTE
STAUNTON, VIRGINIA. 0.
MRS, GEN. J, E B, STUART,' Principal.
-ewlmi open. Sapt. 11th. 18M, with stall
corps superior Teachers, ^ — J —* -
tages offered. Number of
catalogues to the Principal.
PATENTS:'
- - r - - -'III IOO*, WHU a lull
. Terms moderate for advan-
Number of pupils limited. Apply for
, nd stamp for our New Book on
.'strata. L. BINGHAM, Pat-
•nt Lawyer^ Washiugton f Q,
OMAN’S SAFEST REGULATOR!
BELLAMY’S GOSSYPIUM.
For pamphlets, testimonials and price, address with
— pwu.pM.aio, vsBki.ui.aiBiB mu JIT ID*. IMHirPSS Will
atamp, W. O. BELLAMY, M.D., Atlanta, Ga.
W
Ladder, Wash Bench an
Ironing Tabic. The b«*t *«1
■ n* isr*ali*a of the eg*. Btrosi
dirsbl* sad cheap. Price wilbl
the reach of all. Large pr*SU I
-Agent*. • Bpeclal price* by ci
Thirty-two thotxand In us« nine
y I*t. 188*. Kneloie itamp for circi
lar a** tarn* to Agent*. AdJrei*
Th* COMBINATION MAO. CO. Springfield,<
DATFIJT<v f Tbos. I\ Simpson, Washingtor
rHIhlilwl D. O. No nay asked for paten
until obtained. Write for INVENTOR'S GUIDE.
-•ion for every $10 invested. P
humbug. Stamp for particulars.
M. L, AREY, Gold H11, N. O.
"mmwLSILS Bhort-hand School,
nt. wuiolo students yearly. Young men taught Book-
acep’-ug, Short-hand, penmanship, nml ansiiU'd to position*
AYPf for hTT.ife ScholarsblpTn th#
Coleman Ituainnsa College*
swark. New Jersey. Positions fo
1 graduates. National patronage. rite
tor Circulars to H. COLEMAN Jt CO.
I ■ Coleman lSoslnn»s'College,
’ h ■■ Newark, New Jersey. _Poajtion* f tor
A. N. U Thlrtx-Vive, ’8*
r SllwlUII* HAM, Ate'n Waikwalao. t?.