Newspaper Page Text
HIE wonij) FRO VI THE SIDE-
I WALK.
Did yon ever stand in tne crowded •trei't,
In the glare of the city lamp,
And list to thetread of a million feet
In their quaftfly SUC&ical tramp T
~“ le F ’ lr ßing crowd go to and fro
cis aplf-aennt eight, I ween,
' ‘1 mark the tigurer that come and go
,--i. *‘ l<? c 'er-changing set no.
Here the publican walks with the sinner proud,
And the pneat iu hi- gloomy cowl,
And liivcß walks in the motley crowd
With Lasarus, cheek by jowL
And the daughter of toil, with her fresh voting
Mai t
As pure as her spotless fame.
weeps step with the woman who makes her mart
In the haunt* of sin and shame.
How lightly trips the conntrv lass
In the midst of the city’s ills I
A* freshly pure a« the daisied grass
That grows on herairtjve hills.
And the ls-ggar, too, with his hungry eye
And his lean, wan facp and crutch,
Hives a blessing the same to the passer-by,
And he gives him littic or much.
When time lias beaten the world's tattoo,
And his dusky armor (light
Is treading with eAolcs* footsteps through
The 1.’1.-0.-. .T tie < nt >■! I,
How many of these, shall b« daintily fed
And shall hlng to Bhiiuts ra sweet,
While many will go to a sleepless bed
|g And never a crumb to eat
Ah me 1 when the hours go joyfnlly by,
How litt'e we atop t- > heed
Our broth i-b - and sisters' despairing cry
In their woe and Utter need I
Yet suck a world nr the angels sought
Thia world of oun a aM call,
If the brotherly ton. that ths Fat bar taught
IVas felt by etch for all.
Yet a few short years and thia motley throng
Will all have passed away,
And tlih rich and the poor and the old and the
young
W .11 bo undisHmmlshcl i-livr, '*
And liin, tbit laugh ...ill Ups that im.au
Shan in alienee alike lie scaled,
And some will lie under a stately atone
And some in the potter's Held.
Put the sun will be shining Just as bright.
And e . will the silver moon,
And Just such a crowd will be here to-night
And just aurh a crowd at noon.
Ami men will i»e wicked and women will Bin
An ever since Adam's fall.
With the same old world to labor in,
And the same Clod over all.
“Guilty, but Drunk.”
Capt. Henry’s misadventure recalls a
story which went the rounds twenty-five
or thirty years ago, and is old enough to
bo new*. 'lt illustrates the embarrass
ment w hich a glass too much sometimes
occasions the nest of men. There lived
in Georgia, says Col. Bradbury, whom
Burton credits with the narrative, a Cir
cuit Judge by the name of Brown, a
man of ability, of integrity and beloved
and respected by all the legal profession.
But ho had one fault. His social qual
ities would lead him, despite his judg
ment, into occasional excesses. In
traveling the circuit it was his habit, the
night before opening court, to got
“comfortably corned.” In a certain
county town, one day, a tough citizen
was arraigned on a charge of stealing.
After the clerk had read the indictment
to him he put the question:
‘ ‘ Guilty or not guilty ?”
“Guilty, but drunk,” answered the
prisoner.
“What's that pie..?” exclaimed the
Judge, who was half dozing on the
bench.
“He pleads guilty, but says ho was
drunk,” replied the clerk.
“What’s the charge against the man ?”
“He is indicted for grand larceny.”
“Wnat's the ease?”
“May if please your Honor," said the
Prosecuting Attorney, “ the man is a
guhirly indicted for stealing a largo sum
from the Columbus Hqtel.”
“ He fe. hey ? and he plenqs *’ —
“ He pleads guilty, but drunk !”
The Judge was now fully aroused.
“Guilty, but drunk! That is a most
extraordiary plea. Young man, you are
curtain you were drunk?”
“Yea, sir,”
“Where did you get your liquor?”
“At Sterritt’s.”
“Mr. Prosecutor,” said the Judge,
“do the favor to enter a nolle prosequi
in that man’s case. That liquor of
rritt’s is mean enough to make a man
<lo anything dirty. The court got
drunk on it the other night and stole al)
of Sterritt’s spoons! Release theprioner,
Mr. Sheriff; I adjourn the court.”—
LouisvUle Courier Journal.
East Indian Snakes and Wolves.
An East India paper says: “Ono
thousand two hundred and sixty-four
persons were killed by wild animals and
9,515 by snakes in the Presidency of
Bengal last year. In the same period
the number of cattle destroyed was up
ward of 12,000. This, says a Bombay
paper, is a considerable bill of mortality
for one Presidency, but we suppose in
this, as in all other matters, as is so
often asserted, the ‘minor Presidencies’
must admit the superiority of Bengal.
Compared with the returns*of 1878, the
figures quoted from an interesting state
ment just issued by Mr. Counsel!, the
Acting Registrar, show a considerable
increase. In one respect, however, there
was a falling off, namely, in the number
9 of persons killed by wolves—eighty
three, against 152 in 1878. Probably
wolves are less voracious in Bengal than
they used to be, but the shikars, ama
teur and professional, have not shown
more consideration for them than f*.-
merly. Indeed, the s]>ortsmen have met
with greater success than ever, for
nearly 500 more were killed than in the
previous twelve months. Altogether
5,543 wild animals were destroved dur
ing the past year. From the statistics
sent in to Government it appears that
21,102 snakes were killed, against 24,276
in 1878, but the actual numlx'r was
probably very much larger. The re
turns relate only to the snakes for the
destruction of which rewards were paid.
These rewards are only given for co
-1 bras, dalxiras, and k crafts destroyed
within the limits of towns, xmuiicipali
tiea, and villages in which the Village
Chowkidoree act is tn force, and it seems
that many persons who destroy venomous
snakes, even within the limit's for which
rewards ore given, never ask for the
money to which they are entitled. The
total amount paid in reward? last year
w?s 28,870.14 rupees.”
“I say, mammy! didn't you fell Peleg
dat he mustn’t go in bavin?” “Yg
rightl ded, chile! has ye been dis lieving
my ’structions, Peleg J” “No, mammy
I hasn’t! I ’clare to goodness I hasn’t
been m bavin. Yo’ see I put on Uncle
Josh s britches by mistake der smornin’
an’ dere were such a lifeap of looseness ]
. to’em that when I un’ertook to jump
ober de brook dey dropped off an’ I
bather gum arter ’em. Oh, no, I hasn’t
bavm * “ammy!"— Rome Sentinel
Kissing a Poet.
Six of ns Chicagoans went to see
Victor Hugo. He receives every Sunday
evening, and always has a dozen or more
of his friends to dinner with him. We
knew that the regulation way to do was to
write to the poet’s secretary, asking per
mission to come to pay our respects to
the old gentleman. But we had neglected
to do that, and some of us were on the
point of leaving Paris as we wrote our
names on a card with the magic word
“Chicago,” thereupon, and wended our
way to the Avenue Victor Hugo. We
were shown into the parlor, a pleasant
room in cream and crimson, with tapestry
hung walls, a Venetian chandeleir, an
odd old clock, and a few choice bronzes
here and there. Two visitors were wait
ing for dinner to finish, although it was
already nine o’clock. By and by the old
poet and his friends came in. He is
much more gentle-looking than his pic
tures represent him to be. There is a
certain ruggedness, almost coarseness,
apparent in all likenesses of him. This
is not natural. The benign old face
with its crown of white hair is singularly
tender and lovely. His secretary pre
sented us—“ Americans who wished to
salute the poet. ’’
The gentleman of our party shook
hands, said and received a few pleasant
words, and then our turn came.
Little Edith, a tiny maid of eight
years, hold up her little baud.
“At her age she may have an em
brace,” said the secretary,"“and the old
poet kissed her upon her forehead, giv
ing her his blessing. Then a very much
excited young girl standing by cried as
she saw that embrace, “O, am I too
large to be kissed by the poet? ”
“Yts, yes, mademoiselle,” cried the
secretary, but the lovely oi l poet said,
“ No, no, dear child.” Then he took
the excited young girl in his arms and
gave her two good kisses, at which she
was highly delighted, and an id, half
laughing, half crying, “I thunk you a
thousand times. 1 shall remember this
honor forever. ”
Ami the poet said, with his hand on
his heart, “ No, no; it is I who must
thank you, and it is 1 who shall not
forget. ’’
And then everybody cried oflt, “ Oh !
how charming, how charming ! ” And
the excited young girl retired iu confu
sion behind Edith s mother, who received
another embrace from the kind old man,
and then the Chicagoans managed to get
out someway, and stood on the street
corner talking altogether in a highly in
coherent manner for fully ton minutes
before they remembered that it was ten
o’clock and quite time to go home like
ordinary mortals, who had not been to
make a visit to Victor Hugo.— Parin
Correspondence Chicago Inter-Ocean.
A Strange Story,
A very atraugo discovery of a lost
woman was recently made at the Lan
caster County (Pa.) Almshouse Hospi
tal. The woman lias been missing for
eighteen years, and was finally found in
carcerated in tho insane department.
She was not insane, but simply slightly
weak-minded. June Fay was the daugh
ter of a wealthy farmer of Fulton County,
Ohio. She was wooed by a young farmer
named Billings, from Lancaster County,
Fa., who was in Ohio prospecting.
Against the wishes of her parents the
girl married Billings in 185(5, and settled
iu Flatrock, Seneca County. In 18G0 the
couple moved to the husband’s native
county, Lancaster, Pu., and settled in
Adamstown. At times the woman was
weak-minded, nnd in 1864 she was taken
to the county hospital for tho insane.
Her husband wrote to her Ohio friends
about it, and they directed him to send
her home at once. Billings says he
never received any word from them, and
concluded that they were satisfied to
have her remain where she was. She
says that she frequently wrote letters to
her parents in Ohio, but that they wore
cither not sent or never received. At
length she gave up all hope, and earn
estly prayed for death. She told her
simple story hundreds of times to
strange visitors, but they thought she
was crazy, and paid no attention to it.
Finally a new steward took charge of the
place. And Mrs. Billings wrote a letter
and asked him to mail it for her. He
did so, and the letter found its wav to
the woman’s friends in Fremont, Ohio,
As speedily ns possible her brother,
Joseph A. Fay, and her sister, Mrs.
Deal, went on, went to the asylum, and
there saw and recognized their long lost
sister. Tho meeting was au affectum
one, and all were in tears. Mi. Billings'
joy ou beiiig assured she was really going
home was unbounded, and she could not
express herself for weeping.
It Didn’t Squeak Again.
Fred McCabe, the ventriloquist, was
a great joker. Some years ago he was
ou the Mississippi, on board one of the
steamboats, and making the acquaint
ance of the engineer, he was allowed
the freedom of the engine-room. He
sat down in a corner, and, drawing his
hat over his eyes, seemed lost in reverie.
In a few minutes a certain part of the
machinery l»egau to squeak. The en
gineer oiled it and went about his busi
ness. In another few minutes the squeak
ing was again heard, and the engineer
rushed over, oil-can in hand, to give the
offending spindle another lubricating.
Again ho rushed to his post, and agnin
the spindle began squeaking louder than
ever. “Jupiter,”he yelled, “the darned
thing’s bewitched.” More oil was ad
ministered, but the engineer began to
smell a rat. Pretty soon the spindle
squeaked again, nnd slipping up behind
McCabe, the engineer poured half a pint
.of oil down the joker’s back. “I guess
i ere spindle won’t squeak again,”
j And it didn’t»_
One of the Results of JBstheticlsn.
A young man of Red Bluff, Cal
dressed himself as and on a
wager invited Miss Emma Toiler to ac
company him to an entertainment. The
young lady did not know that her escort
was dressed in this ridiculous fashion
until she reached the place of amuse
ment. She was mortified and indignant
at such treatment, and when she learned
that he had requested her company only
to wm a bet, she became morbid and ex
cited, and seemed to dwell so heavily '
u P° n what she considered a disgrace,
that her mind became disorganized, and
she refused sustenance, and suffered the
most intense mental agony and died.-
lehama Tocsin, t •
A Model Sexton.
Josiah H. Haywood, sexton of the
Church of the Unity, Boston, has re
cently celebrated his silver wedding.
Among the incidents of the oe
nasion was the reading of a letter fro™
Rev. M. J. Savage, his pastor, in which j
he said: • « *
“I propose therefore— entirely for your ;
own good— to suggest a few faults. If ,
yon can only manage to cure these you ,
will have become the ideal sexton, and :
you can command a salary of SIO,OOO a |
year, or perhaps more than that, by ,
traveling with Barnum as the greatest
curiosity of the age. The faults I allude
to are such as these:
“First—You have not yet learned how j
to make the church hot and cold at the i
same time. You must learn how to ;
make one pew mark seventy-five degrees j
Fahrenheit, while the next ouc to it is
down to a point where it would be un
comfortable for an esquimaux.
“Second—You do not seem to know
how to have a free circulation, a plenty
of fresh air, and yet not have any draught
anywhere. You must invent some way
to make all the draughts skip the pews
where rheumatic and bald-headed people
“Third—You have not yet acquired
the art of having the church flooded
with light while the blinds arc shut at
the bp*idc time. This should be attended
to at once, and you should not offer any
such poor excuse as that it is impossi
ble.
“Fourth—You must find out some
way of giving everybody the best seat,
right in the center of the church, no
mutter whether the pews are already full
or not.
“Fifth—You must learn how to fill all
the pews with strangers without making
anybody * mad ’ about it, and, at the
same time, have plenty of room left for
the regular pew-holders.
“Sixth—And finally you shall speno
ronr leii-nr- tiia in inventing a patent
church that shall be just warm enough,
and not too light, but just light enough,
where all tho people, whatever their
mental, moral or physical condition, will
be perfectly comfortable, and—crowning
achievement of all—that shall have all
the seats in the middle.
“What is a sexton for, anyhow, if he
can't please everybody at the same
lime?’’ _
Good Luck.
Rev. A. E. Lawrence gave some good
advice, that is worth repeating, to the
graduating class of the Newton High
School. “I hope,” he said, “none of
you belong to that most unfortunate
class who imagine themselves lifted
above the necessity of effort; who think
that their family position, or their fath
er’s wealth, or a little money of their
own, is going to bring the world to
them, and that the oyster is quietly com
ing to open itself for them when they
are ready to cat it. Tho oyster is a
great deal more likely to swallow them.”
A classmate said to me, when we were
leaving college together, “ Well, good
by, now, good-by; we will meet again
on the floor of tho Senate chamber at
Washington.”
We have never met there yet, and the
chances are growing small that we ever
shall. Nor has it been altogether my
fault. The world swallowed him up
after commencement, and nothing has
ever been heard of him from that day to
this.
In this struggling life there is noplace
for “ lucky ” men. The prizes are for
the workers. “Why are you iu such
haste ?” said one the other day to a man
who has made his mark in the world.
“Why not wait and see what will turn
up ? ”
“Turn up!” lie replied, “I never
knew anytiung to turn up for me in this
world unless I turned it up 1”
He who trusts to good luck to bring
the world round to linn just when he
gets rbady for it, will find himself like
the clown in Horace, waiting on the
bank for the stream io flow by, that lie
may pass over, without wetting his feet.
Too Troo, Too Troo.
Man that is married to woman is of
many days and full of trouble. In the
morning lie draws his salary, and in the
evening behold it is all gone. It is a tale
that is told, it vanisheth, and no one
knoweth whither it goetli. He riseth up
clothed in the chilly garments of the
night and sceketh the somnolent pare
goric wherewith to heal the colicky
bowels of his offspring. He imitateth
the horse or ox, and draweth the chariot
of his posterity. Ho spendeth his shekels
in the purchase of line linen and purple,
to cover the bosom of his family, yet he
himself is seen at the gates of the city
with one suspender. He cometh forth
as a flower, and is cut down. There is
hope of a tree when it is cut down that
the tender roots thereof will sprout again,
but man goeth to his home, and what is
he then ? Yea, he L altogether wretched.
Says the Brooklyn Eagle : Mr. R. G.
Moore, of Messrs. Vernam & Co., 34
New Street, New York, was almost in
stantly relieved by St. Jacobs Oil of
severe pain following an attack of pleu
risy. The remedy acted like magic.
The Swiss Way.
In tho Canton of Geneva, Switzerland,
every country school-master is required
to know something of agriculture and
natural history, to tho end that he may
instruct his pupils therein. Every vil
lage-baa its night school, in which lads
and young mon who have attended the
communal salvad the required term
until the eornyfletion of their thirteenth
year—may obtain further instruction in
matters rjJatiwr to their cnHincr- ami
ra uieir caning; ana,
during the winter, lectures are given in
the viilage school-rooms— sometimes in
the village churches —by professor<
, from the University, on agricultural
i chemistry and kindred subjects.
‘ The art connoisseur and exhibitor.
Prof. Cromwell, was cured of rheuma
tism by St. Jacobs OH.—Norfolk Vir
ginian.
Girls, if there is one thing more than
another that nolds the young men of our
. day back from matrimonial ventures it
is the disheartening spectacle so often i *
I presented them of their dear papa and j 1
I jnamma walking into church glorified
respectively by a sl2 ulster and a S3C -
bonnet. That’s what scares the boys.— 1
■Z/mfeiffe.. -7 J *
On the a;
- gcneJ*
j.nrilir "OGM .-hr. I :<W
:i,.“ n W®rT'i«co»>ry.
Cod liver bil as a nutritive, and
passed as a pectoral. For weak lungs, spit
ting of blood, and kindred affections, it
has no equal. Sold by druggists the world
over. For Dr. Pierce’s pamphlet on Con
sumption, send two stamps to V. ori.d s
Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo,
N.Y.
In the details of the first voyage of
the English to India, in 1591, we find
rhinocerous horns monopolized by the
native sorcerers on account of their re
puted virtues ia detecting the presence
of poison.
Fit*. Fit*. Fits,
-nccessfullj’ treated by World’s Dispensary
Medical Association. Address, with stamp
for pamphlet, Buffalo, N. Y.
A homely but sensible Philadelphia
gill, who never wore a big hat at the
theater, has been married three times,
and on each occasion married rich.
< »*i'c*r« «u»l Otlier T«t«uor»
are treated with unusual success by
World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
Buffalo, N. Y. Send stamp for pamphlet.
Advice to wives—Man is very mucn
like a egg—keep him in hot water and
ho is bound to become hardened.
Even <J renter tlmu l>octor«.
Richmond, Va.. Jan. 31, 1881.
H. H. Warner & Co.: Sirs.-— Your Safe
Kidney and Diver Cure saved my li’c when
the doctors gave me up. John J. Davis.
Each year 12,000,000 heads of cab
bage find sale in the Philadelphia mar
kets, and 5,000,000 are converted into
sauer kraut.
Kidney-Wort in this season sustains the
system and keeps up the strength.
Government bonds at present prices
net the owners 2} per cent, interest—a
low rate for money.
Don’t Die In the House.
Rough on Rats.” Clears out rats, mice,
roaches, bedbugs, then, ants, moles, chipmunks,
gophers. 15c.
Hibernian, after attentively surveying
a tourist’s bicycle—“Arrah, now, an'
sure that little wheel will niver kape up
with tis? big wan, at all, at all!”
Pub’S cod-liver oil, from selected livers, on
the sea shore, by Caswell, Hazard A Co., N. Y.
Absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have
once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians
declare it superior to all ether oils.
A German lately married says : “Id
vas yoost so easy as a needle cood valk
out mit a camel’s eye as to get der be
hind! vord mit a vomau’s.”
Chapped bund’, face, pimples ."nd rough
skin cured bv using Juniper TarJJoap made
by Caswell, Hazzard & Co., YNew ork.
The Illuminator.
t The existence of good
s yl feeling on the part of tho
French Nation for the peo-
C VzVtU, pie ofthis country is shown
N. by the presentation es a
colossal bronze figure of
Freedom holding aloft the
JSWyI torch of Liberty. Beauty,
/"AfiTli i'l with usefulness, is coiu
\l7 I « .1 Lined in this immense
ft SI work of art, fts the bright,
I £ blazing torch will servo
’ ’ JI the purpose of a beacon
fl « I light ia the harbor of New
i L York. There is another
rr*"’,. H p flgtire whk . h WIU ehal .
lengelarger praise and ad-
£ miration than even the
great work above referred
to. It is illustrated herc
• with, and represents the aged and worthy St.
lAcon, holding aloft in his hiuid that beacon which
will guide aright all sailing upon tho sea of life,
whose waters abound with the shoals and dan
, gerous places of sickness and disease, tl lie light
’ it easts is designed to show that Hr. Jacobs Oi I, is
- the true and trusted means of keeping the body
' <m its proper course, and of casing ana “righting
, it should it be unfortunately cast upon the shoals
’ of rheumatism or other painful uilu cuts. Thous
) ands of grateful ones throughout the world havi
proved tne value nnd felt the good of this Great
German Remedy, and are glad to recommend it
to all needing the services of just such a remedy
t In this eonneclion Mr. John S. Briggs, » well
| known citizen of Omaha, Neb., told a newspaper
f man that he was terribly iiUiictcd w ith an acute
attack of rheumatism in his back. The disease,
“ which had been preying upon him for years had
B drawn him out of shape. He resorted to every
, remedy known to physicians, but found no relie't
until lie tried St. Jacobs Oil, one Lottie of which
J effected u complete and ludical cure. Another
i case may justify reference :
3 A VET£SAJi SEAMAN'S TROUBLE.
. Editor Inter-Ocean, Chieiva, JU,: I send you this,
feeling that the informatilin conveyed will be oi
f material benefit to many of your, renders. One
1 of our oldest citizens, Captain C. W. Boynton, the
l Government Light-house keeper at this point, is
“ probably one of the oldest acumen in America,
J having sailed twenty-six years on salt water.
After this forty-six years’ service his eyesight
’ failed him and lie kept the Light at Chicago until
1 tlie Government built the Gross Point Light here,
r when he was transferred. While seated in my
store this morning the Captain volunteered the
1 following written statement: " This is to certify
I that I have been afllicted with rheumatism for
► twenty (2ft) years, both in my side and limbs. I
urn happy to say that, after using less than two bot
tles of the St. Jacobs Oil, 1 am entirely free from
I paiu, though still limping somewhat when walk
ing, from long force of habit. C. W. Boynton."
Referring to the foregoing facts, I might allude to
numerous similar cases that have come to my
notice, but "a word to the wise is sufficient.”
John Goebel, Pharmacist, Evanston, 11l
.
s-
FITTERS
It in the concurrent testimony of th. public and the |
medical profession, that HosletterM Stomach Bitters is » I I
med.cins which nchieves results spwedily fel., thorough '
andbeuign. Besides rectifying liver ji-order, it invigor- ji
ores ibe feeble, conquer, kidney and bladder compUints,
and hastens tile convalescence of those recovering from I
'' “ blin « diseases. Moreover, it Is the grand speGßefcr !
lever and ague. '
For sale by all Druggists *ud Dealers
10 “..***»« •awpi*. wo-11,
Wiml
h&tf if «ob I
K »»•«>'**• ~-- ’
HEALTH IS WEALTH!
Dr. E. C. Wbst’« N«rt» Braim Trkatkiwt; a
uppciflc for Hysteria, DixzlaeM, Conruhioni, Nervoui
Headache, Mental Depreaaion, Lota of
tun old Age, caused by over-oxertion, which leads to }
nriserv, decay and death. One box will cure recent eases. i
K :ch box contains one month’s treatment. Ono dollar a i
■'..j or six boxes for fire dollars; sent by mall prepa.d on
receipt of price. We guarantee six boxes to cure any j
case. With each order received by us for six bexes, ac- ,
coifipanied with five dollars, we will send the pur*
uh; ser our written guarantee to return the money if tne
treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued on *y
by <;. J. EUHN, Charleston, •. C- Orders by
uai 1 promptly attended to.
Address Bronin, Detroit, Mich.
ALBiMARLE FINALE INST.TUTE
CHAKI.OTrFSVII,I.E. VA.
Able Faculty. Healthful and beautiful
lacation. Instruction thorough. Terms very
low. Session begins Sept. 20:h. Order cat
a ogue. Rev. A. Eubank, A. M.,
Wm. P. Dickinson,
Pritp ipals.
JN er.) A Wkk«. sl2 a day at home easily made. Costly
•H i AjOutStfree. Address Tbus A Co., Augusta, Me
E EM CISM
rats BW, Ea A. fees ration For prices, etc.
Wilts The AULTMAN A TAYLOR CO. Mansfield, Q.
/• z • a week in your own town. Terms and $5 uotfi
tJpOO free. Add ess H. Hallett & Co., Portland, Me
PAINLESS EYE WATER!
t -raw rsr ~~ : mir i r Mscanu««M . w.isnaiwi.
RELIEVES AT ONCE. Cures inflamed and weak
Eyes in a few hours. Gives NO PAIN. The
BUST BEMEHY in the world for granulated
lids. Price 23 CENTS a bottle. Ask for It. Rave
no other.
»K. J. A. DICKEY, Proprietor,
BRISTOL, TENN.
(Use DANDRIFFLLE for the hair.)
HE(iE’B IMI’ROVEB CIRIiUUB SAW MILLS,
esA With universal Log J. j
Send for Beam. Double Ec-
CIRCULARS -SfX
u -Shi
Ytinftrtwel bv SALEM IRON WORKS. SALEH, M. ().
QOOS NEWS
•../ 25a
Get lip Clubs for <> u r CELT
HEATED TEAS, and Becurs a beautifu
73 ”Host Bese or Gold Band Tea Sot.’ :
(44 } leces,) Onr own importation. Un
■Lik.—of these beautiful Tea Sets given awa
to lie party sending a Club fur $25.00. Beware of the ao-calk*
“ CHKAF TEAS ” tiiat are being advertised—they are dangcrou
and detrimental to health —slow poison. Deal only with reliablt
Houses and with first hands if possible. No humbtie.
The Great American Tea Co., Importers,
P. 0. Box 2b'J. 31 A 38 VESEY ST., New York
a25 ’ for quart Black, Blue, Violet.
Red or Green Ink. All sent for sl. Agent
aii'l dealers wanted to sei! ink. Circulars.
Hht< u tar A Kbxmbb, 2 19 Mi • 27t h St., N. Y.
SPRING
FEVER
At this season every
body feels weak and out
of sorts, because the sys
tem is run down, and the
blood weakened. This
condition is dangerous,
because of the liability
to contract serious dis
ease at a time when
nature is less liable to
throw it off; and an ef
fective remedy, such as
Brown’s Iron Bitters,
should be promptly used.
This non-alcoholic, true
tonic is unequaled as a
preventive as well as
curative medicine.
•
Brown's Iron Bitte~~
imparts tone and strength to
the muscles, makes the blood
rich, clears the complexion,
and by revitalizing the whole
system, gives it a good foun
dation to v. ithstand the strain
of a change of season.
Brown’s I ron Bi iters
is beyond question the
best medicine made for
all diseases requiring a
tonic, such as Dyspepsia,
ndigestion, Weakness,
Malaria, &c. For sale
by all druggists.
’I
H
v '>’ v < v'
. r . e al!
« - - W ‘ w - ■
1 . •' -.7 •ai
c/» ■'•■■■'■ 4 •'■UH
° ’ CD CD r
LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S
VTftmBLB COMPOtmD.
Is a Positive Cure
Vnrnll those Putnfti’ Complaint, and WenkneuM?
f ° .iXmou to "urbeot popul<»t««"-
It will cure entlr u the worst form of Female Com
plaints, ail ovarii i troubles, Inflammation and Ulcera
tion, Falling r-n- Dis.>lacementß, and the consequent
Spinal Wea’.iics- end is particulrrly adapted tc the
Chanre o"
»i w’ll ■ < vc and expel tumors from tho uterus m
an eoily st- oof development. Tho tendency to can
cerous humors: boro is checked very speedily by its use.
It removes faintness, flatulency, destroys all craving
for stimulants, and relieves weakness of the stomach.
••j cares Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostrt <n.
Je.ims' Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and ndf-
That feeling of bearing down, causing p«in, weight
and backache, is :.iwa T ; permanently cured by its use.
It will at all time end under all circumstances act IS
harm, ny with the laws that govern tho female system.
For the cured Eli ’ y Complaints cf either sex t.liF
Compound is unsurpes’i. >l.
LYDIA E. 1-IN 'AM’S VEGETABLE COM
POU AU is prepared, at 233 tmd 235 W estern Avenue#
Lynn, Mass. Price ftl. Sixbottlesfor $5. Sentbymai.’
in the form of pills, also in the form of lozenges, on
receipt of price, $1 per box for either, Mrs. Pinkham
freely answers all lettero of > nquiry. Send for pampb
lot. Address as above. Jlmfion lAis Paper.
T»o family should be without LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S
LIVER PILLS. They euro constipation, biliousness
and torpidity of the liver. 25 cents per box.
. Hold by mi Driigsists.
,IfHE CHEAT CSJKEL
g RHEUMATISM B
y As it is for all diseases of tho KIDNEYS’ 3
2 LIVE?? BOWELS. ¥
r It clean-os the system of tlie acrid poison
/ that causes the dreadful soString which W
p, only tlie victims of Rheumatism can realize. ■
S THOUSAKBS OF CASES <5
of the -worst forms of this terrible disease AS
jAcliave been quickly relieved, in a sliort timoS*
* PERFECTLY CURED. S
HSprics, 31. LIQUID or DRY, BOID ey iiuuggists. j
HiWELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., P
j Can be sent by mail. Burlington, Vt.
DR. STRONG’S PILLS
THE OLD
WELLTRIEDJjEALTH
ONDERFUL H RENEWING
REMEDIES.
Boid ny leaning druggists. For circulars and almanacs
with full particular*, address P. O. Box 050, N. Y. City.
TAKE THE
Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton
RAILROAD
Which is the BEST ROUTE between
c ix c ixxa r r [
AND
Toledo, Detroit &. Canadas,
C II I O A G- O
And all points in the NORTHWEST.
INDiAAAI'OI.Is, ST. UOTJISI
And all points in the WEST.
PULLMAN SLEEPERS ON NIGHT TRAINS ’
SAM'L STEVENSON,
General Ticket Agent,
CINCINNATI, O.
P AGENTS WANTED FOR THE" -
ICTOXtX/M,
HISTORYohmWORLD
Embracing full and authentic accounts of every natiea
•f ancient and modern timas, and including a history «4
the rise and fall of the Greek and Roman Empires, the
middle ages, the crusades, ths feudal system, the tefnrina*
lion, the discovery and settlement of the Nev? World,
etc., etc.
It contains 67H fine historical engravings,
most complete H istory of the World ever published. Send
ter specimen pages and extra terms to Agents
Address National PußLisMiKe Co,, Atlanta, Oa.
;?•- 54 'isarw
I ABT i-I MA B
w t’lernta.n Asthma Cisre never to g'lve im- 3
jg .’nas.xittls In the worst cnses, insures cotaf rl. K
j More sleep t offers where all others fail 4 M
S Z 1 tK ' 60c. and H
g DrucgUte or by in 11. Sample FRIU a
I ''■*» stamp. Dji. H. BCHIFFMaM, St Paul, Mian' &
SIIH
.v- ROOFS %
•y WALLS & CHILINGS V-
In Place of Piaster.
Catalogue and samples free tS
W. H. FAY, Camden, N J.
OP ISi A Treatise on their EATIHG
15 i gLB iHlspeedy cure SENT FItKE. Dr. JO.
Hoffman J*.O.Box_l3».Chican;o, HL
CSV- WilV WASTE MONET! Tm,n-m.o or oM.
O B If you w»nt a Luxuriant tnouslichv, flowing -t
Y* r T"Q whisker! or a hes»y growth of hair on bsld W ”> /Ze’S
■ O heads, or to THICKER. STRENGTHEN and
INVIGORATE tho HAIR ao s where don’t b«
Trr the n«at Spanish dieeoYerr which has NEvEF- tET
FAILED, . Send ONLY MX CFNTB to Dr. J. CUNZA- AtfV
LIZ. Box 180, Boston, Mass. Beware of all hidtaUaae. XKV. 1
MnilW’4 business
muuiw university,
Atlanta, Ga. One of the best practical
w-Jj/hJ- <<i country. Circulars mailed VBl'E.
- —
Piiblißhera 1 t'niun, Atlanta, Gu.Twenty-Seven. —’82.
T° f” 1 fl abundance.—S-5 Million pounds
6 fa is vk. imported lot year.—Prices lower
I B M| than ever.—Agents wun i e l.—Don’t
B Ebs 0 Yfust® time-—Send f<ir circular.
10 lbs. Good laelc cr I’Stxcd, for Ji.
IO lbs.
i Find
11 7
tb<
6h<
sac