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THE YOUTH OF NATURE.
■
For oh' to It you. Ls It you.
Moonlight, and shadow, and lako,
♦.tnd mountains, that (ill us with j y.
Or the t>oet who sings you so weV?
More than the singer ore the»3
YoursHvss and your fellows ye know not; and ms.
Tbs mat*dess, the on", will ye liac.v?
Will ye scan tne, and read rue. and P-’l
'Of the thoughts that f. rment, Ir. my breast.
My longing, my sadness, my joy -
Will y<; claim for your great ones the ;;ift
-To hare rendered the gleam of my skiea.
To have echoed the moan ■ f t.iy :sjos.
Uttered the voice of my hill:-?
When your great nn.-s deg it. will ye say
All things have suffered a -<
‘ 'Nature is hid in their grave?
Ittwe after nice, man after man
Have thought that my »•< r -t w..:t theirs,
IlaredreamM that I lived l.ut for the:.,.
That they were my glory and joy
They are dust, they are changed, they are gone'
J remain.
t ’ —Matthew Arnold.
A CHANGE IN VENEERING.
■POSSUM AND ’TATER.
Georgia Gourmets II ho Revel In the Cliief
Delight of the Tear. •
Did you see that suspicious looking j *'
timal hanging out in front of a 31a- j " roor * *
A Machine That Makes a Straight Grain
Appear Variegat'd.
A recent product of inventive talent
ore of veno, riiig is a protty b.g W j ^ - 0 , Irs£ . “ lA e «- P even if it
ne ss in t:i;s pail of the world, too, lor - • , » . i -f
d,e, V ,re ,vvc-.,,y-,hr r factories ta | SV
kmAS
wav three deep or more is shaved up i l * ie I>os»un r ,
every day into ribbons that are some- not to’be snored ,at?
times seven feet wide and a thousand ; knov. tha P.; 5 -'.•*, “ J . ..
Atlanta
Did vou
Iixerrisr in Voi:r Ollier.
The re; I less di'-comfort which comes
from long stooping over a d i: or
compressing one s liver for horns on
the edge of a drawing board is apt to
seek relief in skylarking or idh ness,
or if the conscientious clerk or
draughtsman still sticks to Lis work it
is with reluctant lingers and beclouded
brain, and the “output" doterior *"s
both in quality and quantity. In such
a case five or leu minutes’ brisk u of
the clubs or chest weights will accom
plish more tlian an hour’s skylarking
or ariy amount of loating. It lias a
wonderful good effect in quickening
the stagnant circulation, and u ch ar
head and strong hand take up the
work with renewed vigor. It ;s sur-
4 pricing what a. little vigorous exercise
will accomplish if systematically
taken. A few minutes once or twice
a day, at most three times, will soon
give most satisfactory results in health
und efficiency.— Health.
A Violin Expert’s Dream.
Let me tell you what I am thinking
about—the phonograph, as it will be
perfected one of these days. Say Hart
of London has a Steiner or a Guarne-
rius for sale and somebody here wants
to buy it. A dealer lias been so iar
only able to show what it looked like.
Tone, quality, escape description.
What he will have to do now will be
to have his violin record its own
sounds on the phonograph. He sends
you by mail the phonographic cylin
der. You grind it oil’ on a machine,
and there you are. We shall then be
able to compare tones, and there will
come a better appreciation of what is
musical coloring. It will be like a
cook who manufactures of a certain
dish and who sends you by mail a
tasto of his peculiar plat.—New York
Times.
panel the beauty of expensive woods
with variegated grain without tlie cost
of using the ex; - nsive wood for the
entire article, The more wavy and
variegated the grain of a log is. the
more it twists and curls and run hither
and you. the more valuable it is for
veneering. For this reason no end of
slumps have been cut up into ribbons,
not to mention knots and burls.
How ver. the supply ‘>f lugs w:tli
an intricate grain and even of good
r tumps—for not every slump cun be
u- h for veneering—is limited. r inc j
i:> ,-nts of tiie v* neer making firms '
have penetrated even the least acces
sible forests of the country in search
of suitable timber, and the competi
lion for t; es of a twist grain has
brought the price up so high as to
make profits unreasonably low. lives
have been known to bring as high as ,
£•300 each, though it makes the veneer ,
man groan to pay half that sum.
Meantime, while the buying agents ;
have been c unping out in all sorts of j
uncomfortable wildernesses looking j
for fancy timber, a few men have i
been trying to devise plans by which I
fancy grained veneering can be made
from plain grained wood. They do ,
not think they have obtained perfec- ,
lion yet in the matter. What they j
have done is to make the product ol a i
log of plain grain sail for just four;
and a half times as much as it did, say
a year ago.
To understand the new process one i
must first know what the old one was.
That was simple enough. A log seven
feet long or less and of almost any
diameter above seven inches, exclu
sive of sap, hud its bark chipped off ; ure
some
b
will astonish you as they did me.
This file tailed country animal has
been a part of the south as long as
there has been any .- ruth. and. like
the rabbit, he is very prolific, and
seems to increase instead of diminish
as the years roll on. He is very fond
of persimmons, from which tne name
of opossum i- derived. lie was
nearly always caught up a persimmon
tree, and years ag > was known as the
animal of the persimmon, which was
gradually contracted into o possum.
Jt is useless to say that the ’possum
is a nocturnal animal, and is caught
by means of dogs who tree him in
some small tree which is easily cut
down. Hiram- > as it nay sound old
’possum hunters will toll you that the
bigger a 'possum is the smaller the
tree in which he is caught, and it is
Why Women Fade.
Women lose their beauty because
colds undermine their life. Dr. Acker’s
English Remedy for Consumption is nn
ure for colds. Sold by TV . P.
ewnan, Ga.
Why is an unpaid subscription bill
like a bottomless chair? Chorus of
Country editors: “Because it needs re
ceipting.”
Pimples, Sores, Aches and Pains.
When a hundred bottles of sarsaparilla or
other pret* :itiou< specifics full tot radicate in-
Wnrr scroUiia or contagious blood poison, re-
memher limt B. B. B. Botanic Blood Balm
Ui.s rained many thousand victories, in -is
i man v seeming v incurable instances. Send
i to tne Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta, Da., for
••Book of Wonders," and be convinced. It is
the iir.lv THUS BLOOD PURIFIER.
\V. Messrs. Howell’s X Bnyls. <la..
writes: "I afflicted nine J ears with a res.
\1! ih,. medicine I could t ake did me no good.
I tiu-n tried B. B. B., and 8 bottles cured me
Mis. s. M. Wilson, Bound Mountain,Texas,
writes: ‘‘A lady friend of miae was troubled
with bumps and pi tuples on her face and
-,-k. Sh- took three bottles of B. B. 15.. wul
her skin got soft an ! smooth, n moles disap
peared, and her health improved greatly ’’
J.-s. I.. Bo.-worth, Atlanta, Ga., wiles:
••'Some years ago I contracted blood po>on.
1 ha i no appetite, my digestion was ruin d,
rheumatism drew up my limbs so I could
hardly w-dk. my throat was cauterize n\
in,: Springs gave me no relief, and
!■ v life was one ot torture until T gave B. B.
lY. a trial, and. surprising as it may seem, t,he
use of five bottles cured me.”
DRUGS!
DR. J T. REESE.
HAS A FULL STOCK OF DRUGS and
MEDICINES,
CHEMICALS.
PAINTS. OILS,
BRUSHES. PUTTY,
WINDOW GLASS,
PERFUMERY” AND
TOILET ARTICLES!
JICSICA L IXSTIiUMI'XTS,
XOTIOXS, GA It!) EX SEEPS.
VJOLIX A- GV1TA I.* STJUXGS,
CIGARS, TOBACCO AND SNUFF.
CHIMNEYS,
Professional <£arbs.
,VV/' "N >*V •> .‘V.’W' •'W*« ' XA/W-VV,
W. H. BINGHAM,
Attorney .it Law,
NT* wuan, G*.
(Office over N’ftvnan National Bank.)
Prompt attention to all business e#-
trusted to his care, special attention to col
lections.
L. P. BARNES,
Attorney at Law,
# Newnan, O*
Office up-stairs over B. S.’Askew A
l’AYSOX S. WHATLEY,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga
Will practice in all Hie Courts and give
prompt ntuniion to all business placed in n?
..f titles, writing del'd#.
. ic., will receive spe-
iver Askew’s store.
hands. Kxnmina; ion
mort gages, coni r ct s,
edil .U-ntiop. Office i
L. M. FARMER.
Attorney at Law.
New mm, Ga
(Office over First National Bank.
Will prac'ice in ,d! ihe C
M> .In
is of l oweta
mied.
LAMPS eSL
irT Kerosene
l)v hie hanc
J. c
Wit
ourt
fi 11 tt
y
P f 13
through hit work ? I'•
achy, tired, pain ir. ray rnj
only the young ’possums, that climb a ; Sf'trhiiTfcdy seems out of order,
very large tree when pursued b} tne ; that it is no wonder you yta fa- :-, a
dogs.
Three or four years ago our commis-
Ft ^
won’t digtn
W< answei
broken dowi
N EWM AN,
Attorney at Law,
Nvwnau, Georgia,
practice in tlie Superior and .iustie*
. hi ; hr county and circuit, and else-
l)' -p- ci-.i! iivivi im-iit.
1 or
Atlanta.
SPECTACLES.
SODA
FROM THE
N GREAT VARIETY!
WATER
BKsf M ATKRIAt.s,
condition, cud you will Iwucp : r cti inc *•* i • nn
you can cure your LI^ KM. Tbi tiir v h- • r L*.
. w . is out of order and youmust curoit hy p romp Ay
sioii l^orcliants bcrr^ii buying cl low using those never failings-'wi
■possums fr<>m the country tuid spiling Q ( McLailS'S Celebrated Ever I’iUs.
them to a few select customers 111 At- xheT wil l restore you ar.d give vigor and IumI’.Ii to
l.mtu. Before tllilt time a ’possum now youv whole system, making you strong an ’■ well.
mui then found its way into ihe city .
through the agency of some great X3x ,_
ready sale for this toothsome animal i CELEBRA TEB LI VER PILLS
Everything lias changed since then, j — y - AUE BY—
mid the ’possum has. through no ef- FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa.
forts of his own. arisen to a very im- ou t for Couxterfeits made in St Louis,
portant place in the commercial world.
One commission merchant informed
me that lie handled 300 ’possums a
i month, and at Folsom’s restaurant 100
of these animals are butchered every
month and served out to those who
fond of them, and that means
USE IV0RY POLISH teeth. e
PERFUMES THE U K M ATH.
An Ingenious Poison Stopper.
An ingenious stopper has lately been
this
rietta
,, r . i. 0 . . ,sf>,l _ orroinst ' and North Georgia railroad, a section
the log so as to cut off a shaving or ! o/ the country which is^ regarded y
ribbon about one-thirtieth of an inch I the finest m the world for grapes, ije,
thick as the log revolved toward it.
Two men rolled up the ribbon and car
ried it away as it was turned out.
course; the knife had to be set parallel
with tlio axis of the log or the wood
would not all be cut up, and so if the
grain of the wood were straight, the
ribbon could not have a variegated ap
pearance ; even had the long, straight
poisons. The stopper
rubber, and is surmounted by a per
forated ball of india rubber brightly
colored so as to render it distinctive in
tlio light, and containing a bell which
rattles when the bottle is moved, thus
drawing attention to the character of
the contents, even though it be impos
sible to see tlie label. Buell a warning
stopper would have rendered impossi
ble many of the accidents which have
from time to time taken place, notably
oi.o a few months ago, when a dis
tinguished surgeon lost his life owing
to a mistake as to a bottle containing
S iisonous medicine.—Cassell s l’umily
aguzine.
product WQuld have had no value over
the plain grain, but it was in consid
ering the possibilities ol cutting at an
angle that the new process was hit
upon.
The inventor noticed that the growth
of no two different years in a tree had
exactly the same color and grain, even
when the log was perfectly straight
grained.
Suppose a knife were made that
would strip off a ribbon that dipped in
and out through the growth of say two
years on a log. Certainly the ribbon
would have two kinds of grain and
two kinds of color. To get the ribbon
tlie inventor made a knife with a
wavy edge. The waves were a quarter
of an inch high. However, this did
not produce a sufficient variety in the
grain of tlio ribbon to suit the in
ventor. and he added to it by giving
of 1 the knife an oscillating movement in
IjOss of Different Members.
A table prepared for a workingman’s
society in Ijcipsic represents that a loss
of different members of the body re
duces the capacity to gain a living in
the following proportions: Loss of ^ .... —-~o ---- -
both arms, legs, hands or feet, 100 per the direction of the length of the log
cent.; loss ol right hand, 40 per cent.;
of right thumb, S3 1-3 percent.; ot one
eve, 22 per cent.; of left thumb or
right index linger, 14 percent. ;oi any
linger, 5 per cent. — Brooklyn Logic.
possums and corn liquor. A number
i of countrymen living in Fulton county
Qf ) catch many ’possums during the sea
son, and sometimes they bring them
in by the wagon load, as they would
bring in a load of chickens.
’Possums are sold at various prices,
governed according to the size of the
animal. The kittens bring from 20 to
40 cents, while the full grown range
from 40 cents to $1. The ’possum is
ripe by the 1st of September, and he is
pulled until the 1st of March. The
average sum paid for ’possums a month
during the season will amount to
something over $500, making the ’pos
sum crop worth about $4,000 to At
lanta.
A dish of ’possum and taters at the
restaurant will cost you 30 cents, but
if vou want a ’possum supper it will
cost you from $1.50 to $2. A ’possum
supper consists of a whole ’possum,
baked with sweet potatoes, and then
there’s corn bread and coffee thrown
in as extras, for ’possum and taters, to
be enjoyed, must be eaten with corn
bread. There’s a very remarkable
thing about ’possum meat. It is as
greasy as the meat of a liog: but, un
like that, it can be eaten with safety
by persons with the weakest digestion.
It won’t fill you up like pork or other
meat, but you can eat a very large
quantity of it and feel .no bad effects
iRIOKLY ASM
BITTERS
One of the most important organs of ihe
human body is the LIVES. When it fails to
properly perform its functions the entire
system becomes deranged. The BRAIN,
KIDNEYS, STOMACH, BOWELS, all refuse
to perform their work. DYSPEPSIA, CON
STIPATION, RHEUMATISM. KIDNEY DiS-
EASE, etc., are the results, unless some
thing is done to assist Nature in throwing
off the imourities caused by ihe inaction
of a TORPID LIVER. This assistance so
necessary will bo found in
Prickly Ash lifters I
It acts directly on the LIVER. STOMACH
and KIDNEYS, and by its mild and cathartic
effect and general tonic qualities restores
these organs to a sound, healthy condition,
and cures all disease;, arising from these
causes. It PURIFIES THE ilLOOD. tones
up the system, and restores perfect health.
If your druggist does not keen >t ask him to
order it for you. Send ?c stamp for copy of
“THE HORSE TRAINER/’ published by us.
PRICKLY ASH BITTERS CO.,
Sole Prowie‘~' ^ r MO.
by a cam of a half inch stroke. Now. * .
as the lev revolved against the knife a j from so dom 0
St- i
European Troops In India.
The total number of European troops
in English India in lcffib was 01,015,
and the average death rate per 1,000
was 15.18. In the province of Bengal
thero were 39,000 men. and the death
rate was 15.5. In the province of
Madras 11,000, and the death rate 10.2.
Province of Bombay 11,000. death rate
12.7. The number of native troops
was 100,010, and the death rate was
19.46 per 1,000.—Chicago Herald.
Safes Made of Pasteboard.
“You'd be surprised," says a New
York safe manufacturer, “at the num
ber of sham, pasteboard sales in New
York, and they’re made so well that
anv ordinary person would he ue-
ceiVed. They have a business like ap
pearance and give an office a thrifty
look, all for $5 or t-o. whereas tlic^ieal
art Lie would cost something like $100.
—Chicago Herald.
the log, and exposed
variegated in color by the varying
depths to which the knife cut, but
which was at the same time very
wavy, if not curly in appearance. The
variations in the color even of a plain
black walnut log were remarkable and
beautiful.
There was one objection to the ve
neering-. and that was it did not lie
down fiat on the surface to which it
was to l>e glued. This was ’remedied,
however, by stacking up tne riebon in
a hydraulic press that squeezed it with
a pressure of forty tons to the square
inch. Ii came out of that press flat. !
At present three kinds of knives are j
used m these machines. There is no i
telling what new forms of knives j
will be invented. Tlie machine itself j
is but little more expensive than the;
old style, but a knife costs several j
times as much. Besaics, when a knife
gets dull, a man has to labor over it 1
with emerj
get it in order again.
Prescriptions put tie with ^rci-.t cure,
:uiil from the hes! and purest druu-. We
handle the best goods nun sell at reasonable
prices. Call to see us and be convinced.
GHKEN VII.LE STREET News an. Ga.
. ARNOLD,
BURDETT & CO.
HAVE JUST RECEIVED
— IN
CAR LOAD LOTS
\v.
A.
Tl
'HN Ell,
Attornevait Law,
Newnan,
Ga
t'l
*t'S
in .i 1 ’ tlieStatouml Fedei
ai Coir, lb
< >tli<
e N
». 4
1 Ipeni House ioiiMiiig.
\v.
Y.
A r
l’KINSON,
Attoniov at Law,
Newnan,
Ga.
’ill
pracice in ali Courts of
this
and
:"U'
inn
t: <•
unities and tin- Siimvim
i ’ou
rt.
<i.
w.
pi
:ddy, m i).
< utiee over
oilers ills
i and surroundii
promptly
Physician and Surgeon,
New nan, Ga
E. Avery’s Jewelry Store,
rviees to tihe people of Newnac
country. Ail calls answered
F00S’ FEED AND COTTON
SEED MILLS.
All sizes. The same that we
have sold in such quantities,
and which have given univer
sal satisfaction.
T. B
.DAVIS, M. D.,
Physician ai
<1 Surgeon,
Newnan,
Ga
Offl
rs liis profe.-sioiutl
services to the
oiti
zvns «
>f Newnan and vie
inity.
LUt.
THUS. COLE,
D*
ntist,
Newnan, Ga.
D<
•pot Street.
WINSHIP’S
Gins, Feeders and Conden
sers, and Cotton Presses.
„ DR. HEM (LEV'S _
tXTRACL^m
VAN WINKLE’S
Gins, Feeders and Conden
sers, and Cotton Presses.
SONS & CO.’S
!F ftlRiim
A Most Effective Combination.
This well known Tonic and Nerv ine Is gaining
great reputation as a cure for Debility, I)y»pei>-
Bia. und NEKVOITS disorders. It relieves afi
languid and debilitated conditions ““g, 1 !*;
tem ; strengthens the intellect, and bodily functions,
builds up worn out Nerves: aids <n*cem 1011 re*
stores impaired or lost Vitality, and brings back
youthful strength and vigor. It is pleasant to thj
taste, and us^d regularly braces the Syfttcui again*
the depressing influence of Maliiritt.
Price—$1.00 per Bottle of 24 ounces.
FOE 13ALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
EffiFOR
(Improvemt nt
auled -jins.)
on
QUniS WHERE AIL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use
in time. Solti by druggists.
very late one bright, moonshiny night
last winter met a very large and very j
fat old ’possum on Wheat street, and ;
after a little persuasion the ’possum j
was induced to accompany him home, j
The next day that ’possum was the I
leading attraction at the dinner table, j
If you have never tasted ’possum i
meat you have lived in vain; if you
have never inhaled the delicious fra- \
grance arising from a dish of ’possum i
' and ’taters, life has been but a mock-
| cry to you, and if you do not get you 1
a ’possum and bake him with sweet !
! potatoes for your dinner to-morrow ;
! you’ll regret it even to the end of your
life.—Atlanta Journal.
From Dr. W. P. Harrison.
Ua9Hvii.t-15.Tevn. May 2,1S88-I have used
Swift’s Spc-ilfte in ray family for ome time, and
believe it to be :;r. excellent remedy for all impu-
ri:|. s of be blood. In my own case. I believe
that I have warded off a severe attack of rheu
matism iu the shoulder by a timely resort to tins
efficient remedy. In ail cases where a |«r-
manent n iief 'is sought this medicine com
mends itself fora constitutional ireatment that
thoroughly eradicates tlie seeds of disease from
the system. I;ev. \V. P. Harrison.
Waco. Texas, May 0, 1SSS.
Gentlemen: The wife of one of mv custo-
mers was terribly afflicted with a loathsome s.\in
disease, that covered her whole body. Sbe was
confined to her bed for several years by t [is
affliction, and could not h- !p hern-lf at all. 1C
could not sleep froctavi F nt L uig ru d stinir-
inqr of the shin. The disea-e l Tied the s.-:ill
of the physicians who tr ete-i it. Iler husband
began finally giving his wife Sv. Cs Sj>ecific. and
she commenced to irr.pr* ve a:: .-ut nnnirdiate’y,
and i;». a few Aveeks she was n*>p’iren11y w*•'!. • ’he
is now a hearty, hue-lookuie hdv. v. *tb no traco
of the afiliciiou i..^ ours * - ry iruly,
J. IT Sn.vr.s,
TTholcsLe Dr:: jfrKt. .* : .iaAxeiaie.
Treatise on Blood a:id J s :n:: • : free.
TnESviprS'T.nrK' F .. Draw1, Atlanta, Ga.
New Ycilc, ll i Bre : y.
BROWN’S
Gins, Feeders and Condcn-j
sers.
SKINNER
Engines. From 4 to 25c
Horse-Power.
A Demand for Soaj).
Tilt Chinese are making such large
denialds upon soap that in time they
may nnk among the clean nations.
The importation of foreign soap has
increas'd 133 per cent, in live years
and
th
Chiea,
Tlie Oath of Hippocrates.
He Was a Terror.
A littli Boston girl, after repeating
the Lom Prayer before retiring lor
the nigh, prayed for her father,
raotheF l-ethersi sisters and cousins.
After reputing the ntuiie of the hist
continued: “Isn't he a
Nero as an Orator.
Nero, the Homan emperor, is, per
haps, best known by his celebrated
performance on the lyre during the
burning of his capital, although this
eeffi for just a mouth to 1 legendary episode is not mentioned bv
Ne\v Y ork Sun. * such historians as Tacitus. M. liol-
■ leaux, formerly of the French school
f Athens, who is making excavations
T .. ‘a la Schliemann” in Bceotia for the
A correspondent senes us the Htp’,x> . government has found a stone
cratie oath, apropos of i - cent strictures ’ ffipxtar.i y of Apollo Ptoios. or
on Dr. Mackenzie s [ ublieation: : --UtKiilo of the Infernal Regions,”
••* * * Whatever in coimectioii - presents the Roman t\i-ant in
mother light.
The stone has engraved upon it what
Hoileaux calls ”a genuine speech
spoteii or autwu. i ••• m j D f Nero’s.” that is to say. one which
as reckoning taat aii such mould do no ^ CO rQposed for him. but uttered
kept secret. , ^ . ^ J probahlv ex tempore when giving lib-
2^*Full line of best make
BUGGIES and HARNESS,
in ware-rooms.
Try us before you purchase.
Sales made for CASH or on
TIME.
I believe Piso’s Cure
for Consumption saved
my life.—A. H. Dowell,
Editor Enquirer. Eden-
ton, N. C., April 23, 1887.
PSSO
Tlie best Cough Medi
cine is Peso’s Cube fob
Consu m ption. children
take it without objection.
J5v all druggists. 25c*.
•CURES WHERE ALL ELSE 1A1LS.
Best OoukL Syrup. Tastes good. U86
in time. Sold by druptrists.
mm ~
cousin,
ntoustc
eh;’.
so
aihecookies. —BoUon j-uav-
•AYhile I continue to keep this oath
unviolat 'd, may it le granted to me to
1 enjoy luo and tlie pmem .■ v: tlie art
1 resiiected bv all m u. in tul times!
”But should I trespass a ltd violate
* this oatl-. may •!:.• iwerse u- my mil
—New York i\.a
Noth'ag aits my pride better than
to see somaroudman humble himself
in my presace—to see him stoop to
things of lor degree.—Bar Homan.
Pry ivi iitimber is said to be con
tagious. sav and other tools carrying
it”from i-Hiiu'ecte-u \e(>od to souuu
timber.
The Cat Hard to Tr-Ain.
A successful cat trainer says that
next to the goat, which is the most ob-
tinate animal in the world to instul an
idea into, the cat is the m -t difiieuit
animal to train. Tney never takeeny
. - torj
horse i: th g. and th y have net a par-
ticle of at dm - id vc s r;
erty to the Greeks. Nero plumetl him
self. of course, on his versatility, and
believed that he was an ’’all round"
genius, able to compose* to make
speeches, to act and to sing. The dis
covery of 31. Hoileaux may, perhaps,
prove that the tyrant was a real artist
in words at least, for, according to the
learned excavator, the fragments of
oratory fotmd on the stone were
couch'd in strong, sonorous and em-
Lutie Greek.—Paris Cor. London Tol-
■\Vhen I eav Cr?.E I do not ffean merely to
gtop them for a time, and then have them re
turn again. 1 MEAN A RAWCAXi CLRi*.
I have made the disease of
FITS, EPILEPSY ov
FALLING SICKNESS,
A life-long study. I wakbaxt tny remedy to
CtrsE the worst cases.. Btcacse oir.ers have
failed is no reason for r.ot nowrecsivicg a cure.
Send at once for a treatise and a r ree Bootee
of mv Infallible Remedy. Give Express
and Post Office. It costs you n^'ramg ior s,
trial, and it will cure you. Address
H.C. ROOT, M.C., la-'PE-wa 5mKewYOSZ
OF PURE COD LIVER Oil
AND hypophosphites
Almost as Palatable zs
THAT F10HT
The Original Wins.
C. F. Simmons, St. J.ouis, I’rop’r
M. A. Simmons Li v r Medicine, Est’d
1S4O, in the U. S. Court riLFEATS J
H. Zeilin, Prop’r A. (t. Simmons Riv
er KeguLitor, Est’d by Zeilin i36».
M. A. S. L. M. has for 47 years
ured I.'.-dioestio:.', Biliolsmsss,
Hysi-1 i-.-.ia,S:cx Headache,Lost
Afpf.tis Sock Stomach, Etc.
Rev. T I!. Reams, Pastor M. E.
Church, Adieu , Ter.n., writes: “X
think I . houid have IV en dead but
fur y er Genuine i. A. Sim
ir ons Li-> ur AXedidne. I have
St.ir.cli:::: l.ad to Substitute
“Zeilin’s stuff” for your Medi
cine, but it dor.” ar.s'.ver the
purpose.”
"Or. ]. K. Gr-vec, Editor The
■trZ—XT
Tho mrit strength of American
wrought 1.5 is 45,800 poiinas; Lng-
lish, 4o,i41
x -:
probahly
boston Tv
to tux
crxuci.nt.-
An American Crcnpcund.
“dieesrne” is a compound which
} as cmercrc-l from a bankruptcy suit
r.i jlL. --i fL Io I'J lOBIO
from A: u-rk-ii. and it is sold in large
.-.uouk-vj# in llxgland.
So disguised that it can fie taken,
digested, and assimilated by ih© most
sensitive stonracb, wher tiie plain ell
cannot be tolerated; and by the com
bination of the oil with the hypopuo3-
pRitsL is math more efficacious.
Seffiaikabic ao a Sesii prodewr.
Pers*KS gain rapidly while taking ii*
SCOTT'S EMULSION is acknowledged by
Physieiiais to be the Finest and Best prepa-
- 1 it: or. in the world for the relief and cure ot
coasyasPTioK, scrofula,
OEMS SAL DEBILITY, WAST'HC lOffi •’ ! CEv AND CYCLONES,
\r -/*. Mi rr..- i er.r.. says:
\ f I received a ■ .n.’,. .v; of vour Liver
A A Medi.-:: • . A > • '• : 1 :.lf •: it.
It _
-A j’mzorrX- Lr,
Insure vour houses against
DISEASES, EMACIATB
COLDS and CHRCMjC COUCHS,
The grat remedy for TbnsicmpVaJL, ar.d \
1 Easting in Children. Sold bv all Dmjg sts-
J0NE
H.C.
with
FISHER & CO., Agts.,
0.
•A NAN,
G.
I reply
;u: :mtl vicin ty (
will :>• answered
deuce on College street.
n* t
on Depotj
- L
my rtM-
T : • -f-.- 1 1 ompanies and
loWC.nl ; aiCo.
as