Newspaper Page Text
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LEGAL A VV-EPTISIriG.
Ail aavortisemont8cn)ln»tiiig from public offices
will be charged Cpr in atricj. accordance with an act
£Ud 35 c£nts per 100 words for.each subsequent
insertion. Tire cash mnstaecom.p»’uy copy of each
«<{ 7ortisement, unless dlffereutorrangements have
A aye been made.
’ • ! '' '
JOHN H. HODGrS®, Proprietor. Devoted to Home !
■ end
A" ' t - - lij^ ....
Home Interests and Culture.
Isunroh abswto
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TWO DOUl.AjES@ A Year in Advance.
'tV;;;
...
PEHEY, _
.JANUARY a 1885.
NO. 2.
provided for 1
■Commercial Job Work t
and L.i gal Ulankskeptconstantly ou band.
™
'
COUNTY BAILIFF’S SALE..
Will be su’d before the court house door in the'
town of Perry, Houston county; Georgia, between •
tbc ligal hours of sale, at public outcry, ou the first:
Tuesday In February, IBM, the following property, |
to-wit:
One mouSe-cdlOred marc nude, I
1 sett of wa"on harness, 1 two ; b orse wagon Lev
ied on as the property.of Joseph Vieeou. to satis-1
fy a fi-fa front Honstoo County Court, January!
Quarterly Term, 1885. in favor of dark's^ .Cove
Guano Co. vs. Joseph I'/nson.
J. N. TUTTLE. Countv Bailiff.
1 January 1,1886.
t EOBGIA—HOUSTON COUNTY:
m.,
W. L. Bainoy. guard'an of Sallic H. and J J.
Birch, minors of J. L. Jiircli, deceased, has ap
plied lor dismission from his trust:
This is therefore to cite all porsons concerned
to appear at the February lerm,) 885, of the Court
of Ordinary of said iioTUty, and show cause if any.
they have, why said application scould . not
granted.
Witness my official signature this Ja... 1, 1885.
4w A. S. GILES, Ordinary.
Queer Birds that Talk.
Conspiring’ Against the Boy.
His First Sleigh Bide.
.. ■ .
. Savannah News
QEOBGI
A—HOUSTON COUNTY.
A, D. Skellie has applied for administration on
tlio estate of T.* J. Gnrr. late of sadi county. do-
ccased:
TiiiaTs tberefoi c to cite all persons concerned to
appear at the Vebr iery torm 1885, of the Court of
Ordinary of said county jfhd show cause, if .any
they have, why said application should not be
granted.
Witness my offi dal signature and seal this Jan.
1. 1885.
it. - . A. S. GILES, Ordinary
G E
EOEGIA—HOUSTON COUNTY:
W. M. McDonald, administrator de bonis non of
W. J. Miller, of said county, deceased, lias ap
plied fordismission from his trust:
This is therefore to cite all persons concerned to
appear at the March term, 1835, of the Court of
Ordinary of said county, and b'jo .v cause, if any
they have, why said application should not be
granted-
Wituoss my official signature this Dec. 4, 1884.
A. S. GlLE-t,
3m. Ordinary.
C TEOBGXA—IXbuSTOK Count! :
T
C. B. Wellborn, Executor of C. W. Holloman, of
said county deceased, has applied for dismission
from his trust.
This ie therefore to cite all persons concerned to
appear at the Feoruary term, 1835, of the Court of
Ordinary of said county and show cauEe.il an v they
have, why said application should not be granted.
Witness my official signature this Oct. 23 !SS4.
3m. A. S. GILES, Ordinary.
u
\ EOftGiA HOUSTON COUNTS.
Mrs. M. It, Stripling has applied for administra
tion on theesiato of Bohart Etripliug, late of. said
..comity, deceased:
This is tnereiO' e to cite all persons concerned
to appear at the February term, .1885, of the Court
of Ordinary of said- coujtv, and show cause, ii
axy they have, why said application should not be
granted,
Witness my official signature, ihis Dec. 25,
1884. A. S. GILES,
lui. Ordinary
^lEOltGIA, HOUSTOS CODS'-Vi .
J. S. Thomson, exc.cntor of Thomas Dawlcins, of
said county, deccasso, has applied for leave to
soil alltlie real estMa^f'said deceased:
This is therefore to cite a'l persons concerned
to appear at the February Term. I8H5i ot the Court
of t'rdinarj oC said.ir.yiut.r and sin.wcause, if any
■to y have, wJiy..£fij Application should not_.be
graoti*d.
Witness my oflJciaTsiguat.ueSad seal this Dec.
25, 1884.—lxn : A. 8. GtLE-:, Ordinary.
101HT ill USE' Cl
ST. LOUIS; MO.,
Muufact-nrers aod Deale vs in
me
POM!
These Ranges ara made entire
ly of Wrought and Malleable Iron:
They do not crack or break from
lire; They do not burn out. The
heat passes entirely around the
oven, heating it to the same de
gree in every part, making them
uniform and perfect bakers. They
require less than half the fuel of
cast stoves of same size. No dan
ger of burning your house with a
“Home Comfort Range,” as the
sparks do not pass out the flue. .
This medicine, combining Iron with pure
vegetable tonics, quickly and completely
(lures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Weakness,
Impure Blood, Malaria,Chilis and Fevers,
and Neuralgia,
Macon Telegraph.
“Hello, there}” was the shrill: The age of the small boy is
: voice that greeted a News report- drawing to a ctoseundenthe rule
er as he passed a certain fruit es- of municipal corporations, and in-
tablishmeni In the. city the other surance companies. One by one
^ § 'afternoon: ~ There'was no one on ; his pleasures and his liberties fall
: the street who appeared to be the away.. The time approaches when
! author of the exclamation. “Hello,! ft© American boycato only cele-
therei” shouted the voice as the brate Chnstmas-by Bmoking cigar-
j.News man started on, and he stop-' ‘ 1J “~ “ ‘
fped again and looked around-to.
see what was wanted.. A glance
into a row of cages hanging under
an awning caught the mischievous
Haiional Republican.
New Orleans FreefiaitcBs'
A special institution of New Or-
etfces on the front stoop, or suck
ing the barren head of his faithful
cane.
The day of the horn in the larger
cities has.passed. The old folks
Itis an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the
I XIv ' I
Kidneys and Liver.
It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to
Women, and all who lead sedentary lives.
It does not injure the teeth, cause headache,or
produce constipation—oilier Iron medicines do.
It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates
the appetite, aids the assimilation of food, re-
lieves Heartburn and Belching, and strength
ens the muscles and nerves.
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of
Energy, &e., it has no equal.
H®- The genuine has above trade mark and
gleam, of a gaudy green and red complain of it. The sky rocket,
parrot’s eye, and told the story
It was no ordinary old maid’s
Polly-wanira-cracker kind of a
| Parrott, but a regular talker. He
| sat on his perch with a. sort of
what-do you-want-now look in his
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other. eye, and looked the very pei'ROnifi-
Ilr.do only by BU01V5 CUE31ZC4L CO., BALTDiOUB, MB. 1 J J r
- _ ! cation of modesty and unobtru-
:rh i fiivBnflas f ‘"\Tlia’o nof. xrexrvr
The Best Paper in ills Seiiiltl 61 ™- ^ »5*.
THE SAVANNAH
.$2.00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE.
ed yet,” said the' dealer, “but there
is no telling-what he may come
to.” In talking with Gardner, the
Bull street fruiterer, who has had
considerable experience with the
strange birds, the News man pick
ed up some interesting facts about
i their habits. “The reason that
i parrots learn to talk easier than
: other birds,” said Mr, Gardner, “is
| because their tongues are always
This mammoth newspaper contains all tbs nows ' Il.jA-lJ vnnnrl rmrt Tn fit pi;,
of the week, Terangthic Dispatches up to the hour . L -CCti, i OUUCL ailCl n^-.iiy. LU UiieiJ.
Not a Local Paper, but one Suita
ble to any Locality.
A BUSINESS, FAMILY, LITERARY AND
AGRICULTURAL JOURNAL.
rials, etc.. Spec-a* Iteparhucitls elevated to Geor
gia. Florida, aud couth Cafoilua Sews, aud that of j erally harsh and discordant, al“
otn&r states. I y m ■
To tee farmer, mechanie or art sau, the business 1 though Some 01 the Smaller birds
or professional mab," who hits* nor the advantage i
of a daily jjail^tlie Savannah .Weekly Kkws is ’
the jiicidium by wliieli ae cau be in: onned of events
transpiring ia the busy world, wtictli ;r in his own
iitite or in the most distant «>art of toe globe.
Every yor..dv «5nbseriber Is ent : tled to one of tiio
JdoitNiNG Kews Lipiot.y serials as a premium.
THE SAVANMAH
iissiilnis,
Enlarged January 5, 1885,
to ant
8-Page, 56-ColjrDo Paper.
THE LARGEST PAPER IN THE SOOTH.
Issued Every Day in the -Year.
$10 a Year, Including the Great
Sunday Issue of the “News.”
I he Daily News gives prominence, to ulJ matters
relative to the Agricultural, Mechanical a nd Man
ufacturing interests of the country, as well as the
General. Political and Commercial News.
Yhe]TeTeg's.pliiei State, GederaT* Local News
^id Market Departments uro. acknowledged to be
the best aud most comprehensive of any paper in
the Booth.
Subscribe through yon,* Nev/.s Dealsc' or Poet-
xnrvfl i o .v oD-vro.ml-dlrtrot to ——-— :
naii^G i uu| uiisrsniuBOi
Be sure and examine these
Ranges, and you will never use
any other Cooking Apparatus.
Nov. 28—3m.
s Hj.
Successors to Thomas Wood,
Ns xt to LANIER HOUSE,
MACON, GEORGIA.
Largest and Cheapest Fur
niture and Carpet
House in Middle Georgia.
Dec. 11—3m.
“WE ASK ALL?’
Interested in Hides, Furs, Wool, Roots,
Feathers, Beeswax, Butter, Chesse, Eggs,
Dried Fruit, Poultry, Hay end Produce
gengrallyj -tp send tor onr Price Currents.
Prompt returns on all consignments.
- Trial shipments solicited.
.Waste Cotton 'and Mates Dealt in.
• R. Ii. WZIiXiIAMS & CO-.
GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Office, 169, William Street,
£>ct 23 New York, ly
CA8H FOll ALL WOiiK.
cc.-1 an* fuily prepared to repair Watches,
Jewelry of all kinds, Clocks, Machinery, Gnus,
Pistols. Locks, etc. Work done in the best man-
nor and at low piices. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Will make a specialty of the manufacture
of Gold aud Silver Bings, Ornamental Pins. Badg
es, etc. fcilyar Sppops made, or mended as good
as new.
Work will not be delivered nhii] paid for, ,
nnless special arrangement is made beforehand;!
and if payment is not made, articles repaired wiii i
be sold,for repairs after thirty days from time |
J. H. ESTILL,
Savannah. Ga.
£JS SSTS.AOBS5IHTARY
mni?
VSE
r$i&
Dsiiioiosfs lliustratod •
UMU
WITH TWELVE CUT PAPER PATTERNS OF
YttUK OWN SELECTION AND Jir AN Y SIZE,
BOTH PUBLICA'aTOKS, ONB YBAP«,
$3,50 (THREE FIFTY).
Of sail ’tlio
Illustrated vnth Orfeinal.-Steiel Engravings,
Photogravures und Oil Fiomres.
Commencing with the November numbsr,
1884, each Magasino wiU contain a COUPON
ORDER, entitling'the holder to the • selection
of ANY PATTERN illustrated in that iiutd-
ber, and in ANY SIZ S.
DEMOItEST'S MONTHIiY is justly entitled
the World’s Model Magazine. Tko Largest in
Form, the Largest in CirculatSba, and the best
TWO Dollar Family Magazine issued! 1S85 will
be the Twecty=.5i-st- year of its publication; it is
now improved so extensively as to piace it in
quarto. 8 V x 11 n inches, elegontly printed and
fally illustrated, each number having steel
engravings, oil .picture, or art subjects, pub
lished by W. Jennings Demorest,.New York,
^AS3 BY SPECIAL AGEESii&KT
COMBINED" Vt'ITH TEE
SOME
at $3.50 Per Year.
420.
MAN’S
ORGANISM
Is the most complex work' of the' Creator, and
aid should Bo sought from the imistskilled physi
cian—for the human body is too precious to he
neglected. It becomes the question, then: “What
physician shall oe empiqyedr’’ r
Dn. Osoab Johskseszk, of the Uri vereityof Ber
lin,Garmanv,has made a.lifelong study of ailments
of the Nervous and treuito-Uriuary System.
have pleasant voices.”
“Gan j’ou explain why birds talk?”
“They have to be kept separate
from each’other and treated with
great kindness. In such case they
will soon pick up almost anything
they hear. .1 have, one at ray house
now that is beginning’to talk,-and,
strange-to-' say, • • almost - ‘the firsh
words he tries to utter are those he
has picked up from tho passers in
the street. If they are to be taught
sentences, it is necessary to repeat
them over and over again. They
learn quickest and best when they
are young.”
“Are tlieir tongues ever, loosen
ed by surgical operations ?”
“Not ordinarity, I believe. Some
times- the ligament-o£ the- tongue
is cut, but it is.not considered nec-
HIS ES2SSDIESCU2E
Any debiiily or derangaiuint of fhe nervous sys
tein, includhig Spermatthdrca, Gonorrhea, Syphil
is, Stricture, lmpoteucs, etc., etc.
Because you may have been cheated and fooled
by quacks, who claim to cure this class of disor
ders, do not hesitate to give Da:- JohIsssses’s
methods fair trial before your case becomes
chronic and incurable.
. S- FKESi 'SS4
A valuable troriass. explanatory of Da. Jouax-
jcessex’s system, will bo sent by mail,- post paid,
and securely sealed from observe non, to any suf
ferer addressing his solo authorised agent for th.
United ktates and Canada.
HENRY VOGELEB,
40 Sou'.li Street, New York.
T3f"Cora>)i:caie:i symptoms treated from' Dr.
i«a .. r . _ <%
j&r" TLiBis'meaut for all who have wcrK done at • JQhannecsen’s Spe<*ial Prescription, uoder
piyehop. "Respectfnllv. \ oi a duly qualided consisting physician.
T? \ •TO'RSO'V^ \ All correspondence held as stricUy CLnfdentia!,
‘ ^ V ' * &nd advice by mail free of charge.
Sep. 6—tf. Berry, Ga,
Dec. 16-r-Jy
essary, - .
“What birds talk most fluently?”
“The ordinary green parrot is or
pretty fair talker. He is generals
ly vej’y docile. The African gray
parrot, the Mexican yellow head
and the Cuba parrot all exhibit a
greater degree of intelligence than
is usual in birds. They all have a
monkey-like restlessness and love
of' trickery, and although they are
affectionate and docile, they are
generally of capricious, irritable
temper. The African gray parrot
is the size of an ordinary pigeon,
but is of a gray ash color, with a
crimson tail. He is- famous for
his docility and his power of imi
tating noises of all kinds, his lo
quacity and his mischievousness.
In confinement he lives to a great
age, Birds of his species have
been known -to live a hundred
years. The magpie io a great fa
vorite,-and is a lively chatterer,
but is not found, in thiB rnarket.-
He is generally shy and vigilant in
an extreme degree, notable for his
cunning in eluding enemies and
seeking food, and, it may be said,
nothing comes amiss to it. Grain
of any kind is not unacceptable,
but eggs or carrion are preferable.
It is easily trained, impudently fa
miliar, and learns to articulate
many words very distinctly.
. “Another valuable bird for a pet
is the whistling bullfinch, which,
while there are none here, are-
sought after in many place:
Their training is interesting, and.
is a work of both time and trouble.:
It is carriednn chiefly in Germa
ny. About niue months of patient
"training are necessary to get a bird
well educated. Itibegihs when it
is-a mere nestling, and is careful:
ly continued until after the first
moulting; for it is a curious cii-
cumstance that all that has been'
previously - acquired is apt to be
lost at'that time, or is afterwards
so imperfectly remembered that
the bird is of little value.”
says the municipal authorities,
must ascend beyond the suburbs,
.ancf the insurance men have like
wise banished the cannon cracker,
the fiery “serpent” the- noble
“fountain” and the versatile Roman
candle from Rome.
The police guarding the store
house chases the youngster across
the border. The farmer guarding
his fodder rack, chases'him back.
Life is full of persecution and the
glory of Christmas wanes with the
age. “ . ’ -
The curbing of the juvenile in
stincts many regard as the most
dangerous experiment of the age.
It is simply bottling up- confusion
for the years to come. Every boy
born into this world is gifted with
the capacity tor just so much noise,
and allotted to just so much mus
cular energy to devote to action.
It makes no difference how much
you check and curb him the boy is
going to have his day in court: if,
as an Irishman might say, he has
to'turn aside at forty to do it.
Left to himself he ~ will deafen
communities on holiday occasions,
break a few limbs, burn hair and
fingers-and perhaps here and there
a house. But.his tendency to de
stroy; his capacity to make a noise,
cannot be exhausted in a less
harmful way. The best men. gen
erally., are those who have been
successful boys and have had their
fling; the worst are frequently
those who have been compelled to
turn loose their deviltry late in life,
and do not. react.
We pity the man who has had
no boyhood; who never “busted”
crackers, blew up cats, fought
roosters, shot off rockets, fougfif
-with Roman candles and played
with fireballs. We ai’e sorry also
for the community he lives in.
come when that
A Louisianna member came, into leans, which strangers seldom dis-
the barber shop at Willard’s yes- j cover until they have been here^ a
terday with iiis head bandaged, j week or so, is what are stylbd
a plaster on his nose, his left hand" “free lunches.” Other cities give
tied up. with a handkerchief, and i lunches, it is true, but none have
one leg of his pantaloons half torn ever compared to New Orleans,
Snatched from the”Grave.
The time .mast
man will try to be a boy, and
town wont hold him.
the
Speaking o£“medicine by imag
ination,” a-writer in- the Progres
Medical says that doctors should
hot tell hypochondriacal patients
that their trouble is imaginary,but
should treat it as though it were a
real disease. "“Those who perform
miraculous cures,” he says, “do
not- deny the malady, but state that
they will cure it by the aid of a
higher power; sometimes a cure is
thus effected, and when we say it.
.off. He wanted to be patched up
and brushed off. “I have just ta
ken my first sleigh ride,’’ said he,
with a ghastly smile. “In South
ern Louisianna where I live snow
has only fallen twice in twenty-two
years, and then not thick enough
to cover the ground. That’s the
reason I like Louisiana. D—n a
country that has snow. You see,
I thought it would be a - grand
thing to take a. sleigh ride with
the merry jingle of the bells and
all that. Merry devils! I’ll take
the jingle of a horse car bell every
time in preference. By the time
we got to the Soldiers’ Home my
hands were so stiff that I could
hardly hold the reins, iand I would
have bet money that my nose and
ears were entirely gone. Coming
back the east wind crept down my
back like a swamp ague, and my
teeth chattered until the gold plugs
fell out. Coming down a hill on
the Seventh street road at a 2:40
pace, with the merry bells jing
ling in my frozen ears like the in
fernal tintinabulation from an
Arctic Hades, the horse suddenly
shield, the sleigh slipped to the
left, and, bang against a tree it
came, bottom side" up, with me
under the box and one of the run
ners resting gently on my head.
My companion, being a veteran
sleigh rider, landed on his feet, of
course, and with great effort extri
cated 1 my mangled remains from
the debris of the sleigh. That’s
the reason I say—bless a country
that has snow.
Oue of the “ExocUisters.”
A colored man walked into po
lice headquarters yesterday and
explained that he was" a fugitive
from Alabama, where there was
every prospect that the negroes
were to be re-enslaved this winter,
“I done got de start of dem, boss,”
he said with a roll of his eyes. “I
clum right away firm dar on fut,
and T never stopped till I struck
dis heah town. Dey
can’t Slaro
me, I tole ye now, ’cause Pse ac
quainted, wid de countrj 7 .” A ser
geant who had been an attentive
listener inquired: “What was the
trouble with you and the white
folks-?” “Jes no trouble at all.
Dey wanted to slave me agih.” “I
know all about that,” was the .re
joinder, “but what was the com
plaint the policeman had against
you? What did the sheriff want
of you? What was it the consta
ble had against you ? What had
you been doing?” “Sho, now,
boss, who tole yer? How long
since yon left ole Alabama?” ask
ed, the fugitive, as. he edged to
wards f fie door,'cap in hand. Then,
unless it is San Francisco. Before
the bar-rooms, as they were then
styled, “exchanges,” were really
the commercial exchanges of the
city, where merchants and busi
ness men met and transacted their
affairs: As they did not go home
to dinner, the saloon men found it
convenient to have a little warm
lunch for their patrons/ This
soon grew into a regular institu
tion, and the lunches set became
teen years resii
Tenn., make the /following st
ments as to the merits of Swift’s
Specific. Mrs. Turner’s case is
well known in that community.*
She.saj's: *
“I was afflicted for two or three
years with Eczema and Erisypelas
combined. My whole system was
broken down, my strength and ap-’
petite gone, and,I became as help-,
less as a child, being lifted from
place to place by my friends. I
was treated by the best physicians,
in the community with Iodide of
Potash and the other remedies for
such cases. I was given up to die
equal to the finest to be obtained by my friends. My sufferings
at any restaurant in the city: One j were beyond description, and I
of the saloons a short time ago! had given up all hope of .recovery,
used to advertise a bill of fare of Last January I was induced to try
boiled redfish, shrimp salad, wild Swift’s Specific, having received a
turkey, Galt House sausages, ham pamphlet from-the company, de-
and beef, Saratoga potatoes, rice, tailing its merits. The first half
bread butter, and innumerable side
dishes. The lunches served to
day are as good as you can get at
any eating house for 50 to 75 cents,
including some dozen dishes, al
ways soups of gumbo, a fine roast
dozen bottles had the effect to
bring back hope to my heart, and
the thought of being well again
brought joy and gladness to the
household. I have taken alto
gether 24 bottles. The sores have
of beef, vegetables, salads and I ^ healed up and tlisappeareclj my
breads. You get your lunch free, | strength has returned, and I am
but pay for your .drink the ordina-1 do all kinds of housework,
ry price of 10 or fifteen cents. If j s Specific, I honestly believe,
you can get a good lunch route, j sna tohed me from the grave, and I
and find the day upon which each! d° ■ Q0 ^ know how to be grateful
saloon sets its best table,"you will
be abld to fare excellently and can
postpone your dinner to the New
Orleans hour ■ of 6 o’clock, t.and
make it serve for supper also.
enough for my recovery,
Mrs. Sarah E. Turner.”
I know that S. S. S. has saved
my daughter’s life. She was the
most wretched looking object I
ever saw when she commenced
L03 Angeles (CaL.)Express: The taking it, being perfectly helpless.
Red Bluff Sentinel made this I thank God that we ever heard of
startling announcement one day |it. It has saved my child,
day last week: “The prayer- j Mrs. P. E. Bryan.
meeting at the M. E. Church will i Humboldt, Tenn., Oct.-1, 18.84
be hell to-night.” This typo-1 Treatise on Blood and Skin
graphical error made a good many Diseases mailed free.
people believe that something re
markable was to take place at the
meeting, so the church was crowd
ed. The officiating brethran, en
couraged by the large audience,
were inspired to eloquence, and
the result was that thirteen con
verted persons united with the
church.
Every one is praising the mod
esty andself-control of-the South
ern people. It was claimed all
through the canvass that if the
democrats should be successful
the South would be most importu
nate in her demands for place.
The reverse of this ..proposition
appears to be the truth. There-is
not a single Southern maD of any
importance who could be hired to
go near Mr? Cleveland to advise
him without a personal invitation.
N. Y.'WorkL
is faith which saves, we use a
phrase which is a rigorously scien-]' 8 ®'it. closed on him and he limped
tifie expression,
cles is no longer
to comprehend and .seek to imitate
them.’
To deny, mira- j painfully away, he said to himself
n questioii, but “Deymever make no such fnss
Just now there seems to be. a
fancy among fashionable people
to use owls—stuffed owls—as or
naments to set on the tops of book-
eases or other suitable places.
Common owls stuffed sell at $3 to
$8 each, whito owls at $15 to $20.
A dealer in Hudson street says:
“I have -been cleaned out of; owls
entirely, the demand has been so
large of late^ and I have several
Unfilled orders from Chicago
still bii hand—New York Bun.
over two pullets afore de wall!’
Chicago. Herald.
Sfo&sri *
li the little darling is spending such
TReoa ar6 Solid Facts.
The best blobd purifier and sys
tem regulator ever placed within
the reach of -suffering rhumanity,
truly is Electric; Bitters. - Inactiv
ity of the Liver,. ; Biliousness,
Jaundice, Constipation, WeakHid-
neys, of any xlisease of the urinary
organs, whoever requires an appe-
Outrin Arizona.
Hon. A. Tv r . Sheldon, Associate
Justice,'Supreme Bench of Arizo
na Territory, writes as follows:
“It affords me great pleasure to
say, from my personal observation,
and you know the scope of such
has been very extended, that St.
Jacobs Oil is the great and won
derful conqdarer of pain, the sov
ereign cure for all bodily aches
and pains, and I cheerfully bear
this testimony.”
aliyayA-find-.Elgctrie Bitters, the
in'er away byJh©drainageuponits system j best aled. only certain cure known,
from theeJrects or teething, procureabot-i They act surely and quickly,-every
AT. -a n.-n; 1 tr-.-u’.: rt. -i- -i -I-.ttL .1 . .J..,
tie of Dr: Biggsis" H-actlsoorrj Cordial, bottle guaranteed to give entire
^ = 'V *•< +»- -- 1 * Lit - • • • * 1 I
the Great- Southern Remedy, and find at-is faction or
money refunded.
‘ tide by Mil
an Sr & Gilbert. -
ions in both young and old.
start a new growth of
hair so quickly"as to i
ed with sweet gum, presents in Taylor’
Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and
Mullein a pleasant aad effective cure for storing "the original col
Croup, "Whooping-Cough, Colds and time. °Not a dye, not
—----- — ; „• j ■?.-.- -. Id by all druggists at * ' " ’ ' ’
Tor sale by all druggists at 50c a bottle: Snosenberor the HoM-R JoTRNAL. §3c. and S1.00 a bottle.
if nobody were making more
noise than Ben Butler is you conlcl
hear the snowffall.—Chicago News.
An. Old Field Weed.
lUgiy pi
tizer, tonic or mild stimulant, will has suddenly atcraet&l the attention of
r)l-.jrnx7« "Plr-etriA "Ri+toTa fl,o the medical w;orld who now recognize it
to bo the best lung modicum yet discov- aess or anything else, yet Parker’s Hair
ared^whoa made into a tea, and combin- Balsam will stop the loss of the hair and j
&c\ mrtfch mum nroconin r r.r,-Tr7^ , , m . e <•, x
The Swift Specific Co.,
Atlanta, Ga.
A Jefferson county, Nebraska,
man produced 120,000 silk co
coons from his worms last year, all
of which he sold to the Philadel
phia silk culture association at
$1.25 per pound. He also sold
many eggs, the price of which av
eraged $4 per pound. He is now
growing 100,000 mulberry trees.
Vermont, which had almost 100,-
000 children in her common schools
in 1840 has now less than 73,000
children in them,, though the num
ber or those of the population un
der 20 years of age is only five
per cent less now than in 1840.
An old lady has just died at
Benares who was in many 7 respects,
one of the most remarkable per-
sonages in Northern India. She
was the wife of a General in the
Bengal Cavalry, and was in her
97th: year. She was married at 15
had IS children, 85 grandchild
reu, 73 great-grandchildren, and 5
great-great-grandchildren. She had
never been out of “India for a sin
gle day.
While a reporter was sitting in
the office of the Commercial Cable
company, one day recently, the
operator asked London the state
of the weather: The message
went via. Canso, Nova- Scotia, to
London and back, a total distance
of 8,000 miles, in just forty-fiue
seconds.
Mr. Efnglake is engaged on the
last chapter of the concluding vol
ume" of his “History of the Grim
ean War.” Twenty-two years
have elapsed between the" pnbli
cation of fcW first volume and the
last.
— ■
The 3sauty of Youth.
Ho matter bow handsome or stalwart '
a young man may be otherwise, nothing,
can make up for a partially bald head.
Shining talents are attractive but a slriv'i-
isg poll is not. ‘The cause may be sick- ;
nocic? Fir miwf.li in rr nlcn y’Ok Pqti.-Jn TTi.i.
perfumed. Onh standard 50 ce
ing.
Canadian merchants and manu
facturers, who have large mills,
save a third in their postal ex
penses, it is' said? by sending their
mail matter in bundles by express
to the nearest post-offices on the
United States side ox the bounda
ry line, where they mail it at the
two-cent rate, whereas they would
have to pay three cents if -the
matter ware milled on the ocher
side.
According to whe United States
Surgeon-General’s annual Teport,
the death rate for colored troops
has^for the first time since their
organisation, fallen below that for
white troops. Their mortality
from respiratory affections—usual
ly pnenmeaia—is more than tqnr
times as great as that of white
fa'oons. * "
New York appears to be embar-
Y>ra
tossed just now with a
of statesmen, each of whom is good,
enough for a senator and none of
whom has ability to raise -hiihself
above his cdthpetitori
— ^ ^ < —r
A M ssissippi farmer has 160
acres, pi anted" i a pe ppermink
-5- *:
£l Star tiling JZiszovzvy*
Rhvsicians are often startled by.
remarkable discoveries. The fact
that Dr. King’d-.New Discovery: for
td
'CSS
Consumption and ail Throat
Lung diseases is daily curing pa
tients that they had given up to
they iMUi given up
"ug_ them to realize
duty, and examine