The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, December 07, 1888, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

§hf ierald. and ^dncriificti. Newnan, Ga., Friday, December 7, 1888. TRADING WITH JAPAN. Stmo Figures Showing How Much of It We Do—Imports and Exports. Governor Hubbard tells me that we buy more from Japan than any other foreign nation. “Last year,” said he, “our imports from this country amounted to 21,000,000 Japanese dol lars, or about 16,000,000 American dol Iars. We bought $11,000,000 worth of her raw silk, and nearly $7,000,000 worth of her teas. The fair cheeks of our ladies were cooled last year with $97,000 worth of Japanese fans, and our noses were wiped with $816,000 worth of Japanese silk handkerchiefs. We buy nearly $300,000 worth of porcelain every year, and our imports of bamboo ware amount to $102,000 of Japanese money. We buy more than twice as much off Japan as any other country, and our imports are increas ing every year. In 1887 we bought $1,500,000 more goods than in 1886, and the United .States will probably continue to be Japan’s best customer.” “What are the chief articles ot ex port from the United States to Japan? ’ L asked. “Kerosene oil leads (lie list,” was the reply. “Half of the .Japanese na tion lights its houses with our coal oil lamps, and we sold in 18SG over $2,- 000.000 worth of coal oii to Japan. There has been a falling off this year in this, but the export is still large. Then the American clock is popular in Japan, and you may see thousands of them in Tokio. The common office clock, which hangs upon the wall, is very popular, and one sale of clocks here amounts (o 160,000 Japanese dol lars a year. Many a Japanese baby is now brought up on American con densed milk, and $55,000 worth was sgld last year. Wo sell sole leather, books, machinery and provisions, aiul Japan bought $91,000 worth of our Hour last year. Their figures are small, but American foreign trade in its infancy, and jt Ijas a world yet to con quer. Hgre in the east there are 000 ? - 000,000 of people who require more or TesS of some kinds of goods, vyhicli American brains, push and capital can furnish ai a pro lit, and in Japan there are 38,000.000 of people who are ready to take from America what she libs to sell that fits her needs, whenever they can buy it. as cheaply of her as of other nations. We sell to north China $6,000,000 worth of cotton sheetings a year, and this in the teeth of the manufacturing nations of Europe. Japan is much more accessible to us Why should we not sell to her ?” “flow much do we sell?” I asked. “None,” replied Governor Hubbard. “The American cottons do not enter the Japanese markets. We do not make the cheap and light article of cotton required by the Japanese. A slight change in the factories, how ever, would adapt them to this class of goods, and there is no doubt but that our American mills can get a limited market here when they are forced to look abroad for foreign trade. They will then have to sell their goods in close competition with England. We are Japan’s nearest foreign neighbor. We have the cotton at our doors, and our factories are in operation. Japan raises some cotton, but it is of an in ferior quality. It seems to me that foreign trade offers the solution of many of the labor and capital troubles of the United States. When the home markets are glutted and factories closed for want of demand, this for eign trade could eat up some of the surplus and keep the mills from rest- ‘ Japan buys,” Governor Hubbard went on, “$51,000,000 worth of goods a year from foreign nations. It sells in round $52,000,000 worth of goods abroad, and its imports are thus nearly $1,000,000 less than its exports. The needs of the nation will grow with the new civilization, and an increased de mand for our productions will be the. result. Among the chief things it now buys are steam eugiues, clocks, watches, bats and caps, iron, steel, window glass, sugar, woolen and cot ton yarns. Its importations of cotton yarns last year were $8,000,000, and it bought $500,000 worth of wines. It sells abroad about forty different arti cles, and some of these will be new to you. In camphor there is an export of $1,000,000, and in cuttle fish a like araount, Japan sells $2,000.01)1) worth of copper a year, and it .has one of the largest copper mines in ilife world,. It sells $1,000,000 worth of novfielam, $1,000,000 worth of silk handkerchiefs, and $7,000,000 worth of tea. Wc buy nearly all of the Japan tea that goes abroad. The sales of raw silk amount to $19,000,000 a year, and of cocoons to $200,000 a year. It sells $400,000 worth of mushrooms, and $2,000,000 worth of rice. The trade of the country is susceptible of increase, and Japan'is by no means at the end of its. material development. ”—Frank G.. Carpenter’s Letter. THE EASTERN QUESTION. Uneasiness of the Macedonians, Who As pire to Become Free. We have lately heard a great about Macedonia. It is a name which al ways seems to trouble the despots and the diplomatists; for it is a name not to their credit, any more than the name of Armenia. Without going into minute geographical questions, Mace donia is just now a convenient name for certain lands which in 1877 -8 Rus sia set free from bondage to the Turk, but which Europe, at the treaty of Berlin, thrust back into bondage. But when “Europe” gave Macedonia back to the Turk, it did at least make him promise that be would give the land “institutions” of some kind or other which were to make everybody there happy. How very simple “Europe” must-have been if it thought that the Turk would keep his word. Plain peo ple who looked to facts and not to formula, knew that the Turk had made this kind of promise over and over again, and had always broken it. Of .course the Turk broke his word this time, too; Mace donia is cruelly oppressed, like Ar menia or any other land that the Turk has got hold of. And “Europe ” which gave him the power to do wrong, has in no way stepped in to hinder him, or even to rebuke him, for this wrong doing. • “Europe” is very angry when a people asserts its rights against a despot—it looks on very calmly when a despot breaks his word to a people. But the Macedon ian people, on whom the rub comes, are less calm; they know that the Turk will never do them any good; so they wish to get rid of the Turk. They wish to join their free brethren, all the more so since the half free have been joined on to the free. For this they are called names in well informed circles, and their free brethren have to walk yery warily lest they should be called names too, In no well in formed circle is the grand Turk ever Called names for breaking Ills \yord or doing any act of oppression. For the grand Turk is an imperial majesty, and an imperial majesty must not be called names. But the enslaved Bul garian who seeks for freedom can at Iny moment be called a “turbulent conspirator,” and the free Bulgarian who tries to help him can at atly mo ment be called a ^foreign intriguer.” Chus, as we al] know, “The Eastern Question” is still “awaiting its solu tion.” It has been awaiting it ever since the beginning of record ed history. Plain people, who look at the fasts, are apt to say that the solution will never come till the Turk is got rid of; sometimes they are tempted to say that it will not come till the “will of Europe” is got rid of too. That means till the sovereigns of Russia and Austria can be taught to mind their own business, a process which is likely to take a good while. Meanwhile The Times of a recent date has assured us that “the treaty of Ber lin is a very good example of what a treaty ought not to be.” It is some thing to he told that from a well in formed quarter. To be sure, we are also told that “there is a tendency in Macedonia to resort to insurrections, which would produce awkward com plications.” No doubt there is such a tendency in Macedonia, but it is not peculiar to Macedonia; it is common to all countries in all ages of the world which has been so treated as to make insurrections needful. And no doubt the “complications” produced by such insurrections have otten been “awkward” for those against whom the insurrection has been made. The tendency to insurrection has been at different times shown very conspicu ously both in Old England and in New. Something of the kind was done at Nasebv, something at Bunker Hill. Whether the general results at Naseby and Bunker Hill down to our own day are to be looked on merely as “awk ward complications” or as anything else must he left to well informed circles to determine.—Edward A. Free man in Kansas City Journal. One Cause of Rain-Storms. A correspondent of the Northwest ern railroad advances' a curious theory loods for the increasing prevalence of lk and rain storms. He says that there are over 80,000 locomotives in use in North America,and estimates that from them alone over 53,000,000,000 cubic yards of vapor are sent into the atmos phere every week, to be returned in the form of rain, or over 7,000,000,000 cubic yards a day—“quite enough,” he says, “to produce a good rainfall” every twenty-four horn’s. Estimating the number of other non-condensing engines in use as eight times the num ber of locomotives, the total vapor thus pro jected into the air every week in this country amounts to 470,000,- 000,U00 cubic yards. “Is this not,” he asks, “sufficient for the Hoods of ter ror? Is there any reason to wonder why our storms are so damaging?”— Frank Leslie’s Newspaper. Corporal Size No Advantage. “Our diminutive size is not an infir mity. Abstractly considered i am just as large as you are; all dimensions are i^lativo, and especially in intellectual beings is it impossible to fix any abso lute standard of size. Physical health is, of course, a grand consideration, but muscular strength or corporal size is a matter of the least possible im portance. Your Brooklyn bridge could have been built as well by men three,’ four or live feet tali as by men of six. Your greatest physical achievements ar6 not the result of muscular power of individuals, but of brain power. Even your absurd and wicked battles, the only place where mere bodily strength is held to be of any conse quence, are won, if won at all, by brains rather than by brawn. Oh, no; large bodies are or no benefit to a race. Of course the largest indi viduals in a community have a cer tain advantage over their smaller brothers, but an increase in the aver age physical stature of a race cannot be considered an improvement, rather the reverse. It takes less to. clothe, feed and provide shelter for small peo ple titan for large ones, and as the size of the earth is limited, it is evident that the smaller the inhabitants, the greater will be the inheritance of each, and, as I have said,, a race of giants would accomplish no greater material results than have been achieved by the smallest races of civilized men. When you look at us aright,” he con cluded. “you will see that we are no smaller than you are. ”—“The Man in the Moon” in feood Housekeeping. Balance of power, to assure the inde pendency of states and control the ambi tions of sovereigns, was first laid down as a principle by Italian politicians of the Fifteenth century, on the invasion of Charles VIII of France, A. D. 1494.— Boston Budget.’ A Claim That the Olfactory Sense Dimin ishes as Man Progresses. The future of the human nose looks dark. A scientific gentleman has been making this non-partisan organ the subject of his careful investigation and makes a distressing report He argues that it is only a question of time when all sorts of noses, the Ro man, the anti-Roman, the snub and the turn up, will have permanently disappeared from the human face. The Philadelphia Telegraph presents this abstract of the report: “When the sense of smell vanishes altogether—as, it is affirmed, will in fallibly be the case one day—-the organ itself is bound to follow its example sooner or later. It is, no doubt, a fact that the olfactory sense is much keener in the savage than in the civilized man, and it is reasonable to conclude that the more we progress in civiliza tion the duller the senses will grow, and as nature never preserves useless organs, when the nose loses its power of smelling the nose ‘must go.’ ’ A fair count would disclose the presence of a large number of noses which their respective owners hold in the highest esteem. Amid the changes of fashion, the nose has firmly held its place, and long ago it came to be regarded as a staple—not for a day only, but for all time. And must the nose really go? Well, if it must we pity that noseless age that lies ahead of us, for it is certain to find itself seriously embarrassed. In certain parts of our country sacred and secular music is sung through the nose, those indulging in the exercise arguing that that’s the true way to sing. But with the decline and fall of the nose this school of music must necessarily break up, and unless an other school take its place, what’s to become of the fine art of singing? Equally obvious is it that when faces come without noses, eyeglasses will Lave to Reid in their place by strips of sticking plaster or a rubber band going around the bead. Such wretched devices will be far from or namental, even if the strips are edged with pink gimp and the hands are ac centuated with yellow rosettes. Conse quently, noseless persons with failing eyesight will grow nervous—let us trust rofane as eir ances- lyiecesfeary to observe that the moment the nose goes out florists will be forced Into bankruptcy. Thb majority of people buy flowefts to in hale their delicious fragrance. But in order to inhale one must have an in haler. An attempt has been made to give the blind some idea of colors by means of certain colors, scarlet for ex ample, being expressed by the blare of a trumpet. But we believe that no educator has ever conceived it possible to make a noseless man smell with his ears or his eyes, or even with his wis dom teeth. Hence we feel warranted in asserting that, let the nose be dis carded and florists will not be able to pay ten cents on a dollar. Will an im portant department of the crockery business also suffer? Inevitably. There will be little or no call for vases in that evil day of no noses. For the average lover of bric-a-brac collects vases s m order that when the girl that does the dusting shatters or breaks them “the scent of the roses may hang round them still.” But who wants the scent of roses hanging round a vase— but the reader will catch our meaning. The subject is so painful that we stop right here. As has been s© beautifully remarked—we quote from memory and may not give an exact quotation—“while the nose lasts we have high, exciting, gratifying prospects spread out before us and our chilurdh. Beyond that, I seek not to penetrate the veil.”—New York Tri bune. Generous Gift for Industrial Education. J.. V. Williamson, the millionaire of Philadelphia, is about to found an in stitution similar in many respects to Girard college. He lias determined to begin operations at once, and, though feeble in health, hopes to finish dur ing his lifetime. • The cost is estimated at over $5,600,000. It is to be an in stitution for the education of boys in all departments of mechanical labor. Mi*. Williamson has appointed seven trustees to manage the business, whose names arc carefully kept from the public for the present.—Scientific American- Cold Weather and Health. There is no greater fallacy than the opinion held by many—particularly the young, and strong, and vigorous —that winter, especially a sharp, frosty one, with plenty of ice and snow, is the most healthy season of the year. Very few persons seem to realize the facts, that cold is the con dition of death, whilst heat is that of life. In warm as well as in cold cli mates, it is our unconscious effort to maintain our bodily heat at a temper ature of 98 degs. that wears us out. To this temperature, called “blood heat,” every cubic inch of oxygen that serves to vitalize our blood must be raised by our own bodily heat or life ceases. Since in cold weather the maintenance of a sufficiently elevated bodily temperature becomes very often a difficulty too great for our strength, the advent of a severe winter is quite as much to be dreaded as the visitation of a pestilence. Besides this, children should not be sent out to walk of a morning before breakfast in a cold wind, especially with an empty stom ach, as they got chilled, and it does the system a great deal of harm. A like rule should observed in mala rious countries, that on no urgency should children or grown up people go out in the early morning without a cup of tea, coffee or chocolate taken beforehand.—Herald of Health. What an Anarchist Says About the Anni versary of That Event. July 14. An Anarchist of this city, who shaves his beard so as to leave only a mustache on his face, was interviewed by a Sun reporter in regard to the pre diction of Capt. Bonlield, of Chicago, that there will be a widespread An- arc-hist uprising on the 14th of next July, and that in Paris, where their operations are to begin, the centenary of the fall of the Bastile is then to be celebrated. “It is true,” the New York Anarchist said, “that there will be a big time in Paris on July 14 next at the Bastile celebration, and it is also true that they had a big lime there on the same date in last J uly, and like wise on that date of every year since the establishment of the French repub lic. The 14th of July in France is like the 4th of July in the United States. It is the national annual holi day, when all France, including the French government and army, unites in celebrating the most memorable event in French history. The day is also celebrated in this country, mainly by Frenchmen, and it will be celebrated here next year, as Inspector Bon field, of Chicago, says. But there is no need of being alarmed about the celebration of next year, any more than there was about that of last year, pr of the year before. The celebration :s not anarchistic, but republican, and signalizes the downfall of monarchy. As the Americans in France and other countries celebrate the Fourth of July, so the Frenchmen in America and other countries celebrate the 14th of July; and the sympathizers with French liberty who live in France join hands with the people there, just as the foreign sympathizers with American liberty who live here join hands with the natives on Independ ence day. That is all the ground there is for the apprehensions of Inspector Bonlield, of Chicago, who probably never was in France. There is not the slightest danger in this country, any more than there is in France, of the Anarchists raising any ruinpuS on the coming French centenary. They are a hundred times stronger iu France than they are here, but the French government takes no heed of them. It is too bad that Capt. Bonlield should scare people about the 14th of next July.”—New York Sun, Brilliant Durable Economical A Lifetime Crowded Into a Moment. The question of the duration of dreams has recently been discussed in Germany, among others by Dr. F. Scholz, who has given some striking examples from his own experience and observation. It is not possible to give a definite answer, and probably enough dreams vary much in point of duration, just as they vary in force and vividness. At one time the figures of a dream, whether they emerge from the horn or the ivory gate, are as real as in life; the sorrow is even more in tense, the happiness more realistic. At another time they seem to live only in a pale moonlight, and we watch the scenes rather than participate in them. It is very certain, however, that the majority of dreams are only of momentary duration, though ex tended occasionally to the length of a minute. In proof of this Dr. Scholz tells the following story from his experience: “After excessive bodily fatigue and a day of mental strain, of a net disagree able kind, I betook myself to bed after I had wound my watch and placed it on the iiight table. Then I lay down beside a burning lamp. Soon I found myself on the high sea on board a well known ship. I was again young and stood on the lookout. I heard the roar of the water and golden clouds floated around me. How long I stood so I did not know, but it seemed a very long time. Then the scene changed I was in the country and my long dead parents came to greet me; they took me to church, where the loud organ sounded. I was delighted, but at the same time wondered to see my wife and children there. The priest mounted the pulpit and preached, but I could not understand what he said for the sound of the organ, which con tinued to play. I took my son by the hand, and with him ascended the church tower, but again the scene was changed. Instead of being near my son I stood near an early known but long dead officer—I ought to explain that I was an army surgeon during the maneuvers. I was wondering why the major should look so young, v. hen quite close in my ears a cannon sounded. Terrified, I was hurrying off, when 1 woke up and noticed that the supposed cannon shot had its cause in the opening of tiie bedroom door through some one entering. It was as if I had lived through an eter nity in my dream, but when I looked at my wat sh I saw that since I had fallen asleep not more than one min ute had elapsed—a much shorter time ' than it lakes to relate the occurrence.” Dr. Scholz has collected many other ; examples of a similar kind.—London I Globe. Are Diamond Dyes. They excel all others in Strength, Purity and Fastness. None others are just as good. Beware of imitations they are made of cheap and inferior materials and give poor, weak, crocky colors. 36 colors; 10 cents each. Send postal for live Book, Sample Card, directions for coloring Photos., making the finest Ink or Bluing (10 cts. a quart), etc. Sold by Druggists or by WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Burlington, lit. For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, USE DIAMOND PAINTS Gold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only 10 Cents, 7 ame s CELERY ; COMPOUND CURES Neuralgia Nervous Prostration Rheumatism Kidney Diseases Ail Liver Disorders PROOFS T< p a ine’s Celery t-um- nound cured my p - c \r headaches. °Mr,L.A.BKHNTNB R , San Jacinto, Gat- “After using six bot tles of P-"uu e S Celery Compound, 1 am cured of rheumatism. Samukl Hutchinson, South Cornish, N. has done me more good for kidney disease than any other medi cine" Geo. Abbott, Sioux' City, lowa. - “Paine’s Celery Com pound has been of great benefit for torpid liver, indigestion, and bilious ness.” Elizabeth C. TTr.At.t-- Quechee, vt. THOMPSON BROS. NEW NAN, GA. FINE AND CHEAP FURNITURE —AT PRICES— THAT CANNOT BE BEAT IN THE STATE. N Big stock of Chambei suits in Walnut, Antique Oak, and Cherry, and Imitation suites. French Dresser Suites (ten pieces), from $22.60 to $125.00- j Plush Parlor Suits, $35.00 and upward, Bed Lounges, $9.00 and upward, Silk Plush Parlor Suits, $50.00. Good Cane-seat Chairs at $4.50 per set Extension Tables, 75 cents per foot. Hat Racks from 25 cents to $25.00. Brass trimmed Curtain Poles at 50 cents. Dado Window Shades, on spring fixtures, very low. Picture Frames on hand and made to order. SPLENDID PARLOR ORGANS Low, for cash or on the installment plan. Metallic and Wooden Coffins ready at all times, night or n day. THOMPSON BROS., NEWNAN, GA. ATLANTA & WEST POINT RAILROAD, u -'OriANDrio-- WESTERN RAILWAY OF ALABAMA. * Si! -K-READ DOWN.m- ~>~3TIME TABLE NO. l7.4>—=> -v-READ UP.-H— I 5 14 am 5 29 am 5 55 am 6 07 am 6 30 am 0 50 am In Effect November 11,1S88. STATIONS. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv. Lv Lv. Selma . Montgomery .. ... Chehaw. ... .. Auburn .. Columbus.... . . Opelika . West L’oint .. .Gabbettville... . LaGrange.... . Hogausvlile... ... Grantville... Moreland .... Newnan ... .Palmetto.... .. Fairburn.... .. Red Oak .East Point. .. Atlanta .Ar. . Ar. Ar. . Ar. .Ar. . Ar. Ar. . Ar. ..Ar. . Ar. .Ar. . Ar. . A r .Ar. . Ar. Ar. Ar. .Lv. Local Mail (Daily) N o 50. 9 02 pm 7 00 pm 5 48 pm 5 11 pm 6f50 pm 4 55 pm 4 10 pm 3 45 pm 3 20 pm 3 »J9 pm 2 52 pm 2 42 pm 2 15 pm 2 03 pm 1 40 pm j 1 20 pm 1 Accom moda tion. it xn Ai IS CECIL GA BBETT, General Manager. CHAS. II. CROMWELL, Gen’! Passenger Agent. WALTER E. AYERY, Xcxt Door to Dost Office,) —DEALER IX- RELIABLE WATCHE CLOCKS, JEWELRY. SILVERWARE, SPECTAC LES AND EYEGLASSES! Origin of Blood Oranges. The blood orange is a mere variety of tbe sweet orange obtained by culti vation, and appears first to have been raised by the Spanish gardeners in the Philippine Islands, from the capital of which (Manila) it, together with the well known cigars, formed atone time one of the chief articles of export. On its first appearance in Europe it excited a considerable sensation, and, in the last century, very high prices were de manded for the trees which bore the wondc -ful fruit. None, however, now come to us from Manila, our supply being derived almost entirety t. n Malta, where great pains and mien'non are bestowed upon their cull.vat: n It was for a long time supposed* r::d. indeed, the idea is not yeL q . mat —that bleed crattgcs were ;v,.. ta .a by the grafting or the cm. -a pomegranate: but there i* not t.. slightest foundation h r ih:.> New York Star. “Boast of the day iu ifi , Russian proverb. The Death Watch Beetle. As most people know, the death watch is a small beetle which fre quents decayed rotten wood and is of lonelv and retiring habits. It is one of the smallest of the vagipenr.ia, of a dark brown, with irregular bright brown spots, the helmet turned up aud the upper lip hard and shining. It produces the ticking sound by pecking at the wood witn a small, hard proboscis, when in tne act Oi se curing food. The writer once chased down a death watch through a pile of old pa pers in a cigar box aud was fortunate enough at last to see it at woiu. Tue ticking was quite as loud as that of an old fashioned watch while the insect was not much larger than the head ol dm Francisco Chronicle. 0lb=Ctmc ^-Hemebies. KNIGHT’S OLD ENGLISH OINTMENT t !S guaranteed to cure ingrowing toe nails, wounds, cuts, bruises, gathered ringers, fel ons, boils, gathered breasts, corns hard oi 'of;, carbuncles, bunions, arm when caused by a wound and applied in time, even lock- taw. Brice 30c. a Stick by Mail Prepaid. Kniglu's Liver, Kidney and Malarial Pad is invaluable in districts where malaria pre- vans. It will cure, or better still, will prevent. KNIGHT’S LADIES’ PAID is a sovereign remedy for female weakness irregularities, lucorrhea, etc. Price, *1 each’ ; repaid. * Knight s London Toilet Specialties. Useful sv.d ornamen'sl noveltbs. p.« well as staple goods for Wedding, lb 'ftd.-i.v and Sou venir G:!ts. FIXE STATIONERY ! Also, Christmas Cards, in season. Watches, flock-, Jewelry and Spectacles repaired in be J style of workmanship. Medals and Badges made to o.der. Letter and Monogram engraving. To cure co;;f Irenes.* the medicine must !;e more tluui;; purgative. To be per- it eon; it, it : Wain a black pin.—San Tonic, Alterative and Cathartic Properties. Tati’s Pills possess these s«alities iu 'xu eminent degree, and Indispensibie to every lady’s toilet. Srivt. for ctKcur.ARs. Lady age.v v anted. Can make $50 to $100 per month! KNIGHT’S REMEDIES, Gohi stry.-t. Philadelphia. Pa. OR. iVIOFFETT’S ai FFi-ra A A wnittn^gf ■.ArT.fF;'- SySEDiCiME FEMAl By giving tone to and strengthen g, ine System and bnlldir.it un t hV-Y-..: • V INDIAxf ’Vy'ShY’! corrects all irregularities and ' 7 mom which so many ladies snitY , , weak, debilitated Woman hr—’tk o G .W makes cheerful the dpsnon'dt-G' " spirits. In change of lifer..,;-j out INDIAN WEED. /”£'%jr , Ask your Drug gist. J ,w ’ *- "■ mz For -tali G. \V. Cl -'Y J- Lyndon, Newnan, ■vi r, (.frail! viiie, Ga. A Mark of Superiority. The table of precedence is more in- Speedily Hestore foresting to the fashionable v. oriel of London"than the multiplication table. A man values the privilege of going into a dining room before another, be cause it exhibits him as entitled to priority of consideration. — Youth’s Companion. _ . to the Lowe’s their natnnl peristaltic} motion, so essential to regularity. Sold Everywhere. Of Interest to ladies. useurSlfhSS^;h2 miM ’ un ^ cures when aUelsc orders o£_the_Stomach andBowe‘£ d toc^D^ We will send a SAMPLE cf our wonderful r who wishes i to any lady ady who wishes . ,7 and Bowels. 50c. at Drug: , hsndercorns Stops [ toCure - I-’ cents^ ort ^y^ Neve r r