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THE NIGHT BEFORE THE MOW
ING.
O, the night before the mowing.
n hen the warm south wtntl was blowing,
It was pleasant and sweet to pass
Ankle deep through flower ami grass—
Grass an<l flowers so pnniUlj blowing
On the night before the mowing.
But when next my feet went atraving.
Men were busy with the haying:
1 law the sharp scythe swiftly ibm
Through nrxMlng flowers and blowing grass,
Till blowing grass and flowers were lying
Underneath the hot sun—dying.
But ’twas not long ere sweet content
Filled the meadow with wondrous scent;
And flowers and grass, as Lb'aching hay.
Had learned the moaning of the M|y. J
And i<*t/th >y weroso proudly bWWHhg
On the night before the mowing.
Maiden, unto woman growing,
Maidon. with the loose hair flowing.
With eyes blue as the skies above.
Face as fair as the rose of lovm-
Crowned with youth and joy and liefftity.
Thou shalt learn diviner duty.
Oft when life has fairest showing
It is ready for the mowfrig:
Then should trouble, pain or strife
I-ay the Idade to thy young lifts
Do not fear; on some sweet morrow
Thou shalt learn tne why of sorrow.
—.Vary X. Barr, in Harper's iVreklu.
A HAPPI GIKL’S LETTER.
Dearest Amy—Herd T fit I>f rnAvin
dow and look out upon the river and
think of you. I must Write to you and
tell jou all that has happuue<Lsiumi my
birthday party &-my sixteenth birthday,
that we kept so merrily out there in our
country home. It was soon after Christ*
in its, the twenty-eiglit n of De’cetnoer,
and the Christina* wreaths were all
about the room, and the children's
Christmas tree, all gilttcriiig with glass
balls and link* cam Una, stool in the
corner. I wore my while silk with
Jacqueminot roses in my hair and at my
bosom. You had pale yellow silk and
tea-roses. We wui uUm best dancers in
the room, and papa had quite a little
band to play for us,
Don’t you raiu< niber telling me that
you thought. Dr. Jack fiarcin had the
most beautiful even you ever saw, ex
cept in the head of aseal? Such a fun
ny eoinplinient! But they were splen
did, and you were right; and when you
said he was very much in love with
me, you were right, too. But Charlie
Constant hail been courting me for
sometime, aud he proposed that even
ing when he followed me into father’s
study, when'l went to gut some muale.T
I remember just what he said—the very
Won la:
“ Rose, you are the prettiest girl 1
know. May I have you?”
I laughed, and said: “Yes. if mother
and father say so.” And he kissed
Later on, when Madame Vine was
playing a wonderful piece, all trills and
quavers and crashes, Dr. Jack Garcia
got me to himself in a quiet corner, and
aid the same thing. What he said
was:
•• Rose, I lovo you better than my life.
I wish 1 thought you liked me enough
to be my wife some, day.”
And. Amy, in spite of what hnd just
happened, a real pang pierced my
heart. You know how he could look
at one, and what a deep, soft voice he
had. 1 had hard work to answer just as
1 did.
“O, Dr. Garcia. Ido like yfm; but I’m
engaged to Charlie Constant.”
But. then, who could blame mo for
my choice? Mr. Constant was pld Arch
ibald Constant's only son - rich, hand
some, accomplished -all that men envy;
anil Dr. Garcia was poor, had his way
to tight in the world, und was not hana
sonie. Good? O, yes, I knew that
well; but nil the girls envied me Charlie
Constant. Yes, I said that quite quiet
ly, and he took my hand, said: ‘tGod
bless you; 1 hope you will be very hap
py,” and went away, and 1 ilid not sea
iiitn for a long time. Charlie brought
me a ring next day, and we were to be
married on my seventeenth birthday.
What a pleasant year it was. It
passed' like a dream, and mid-winter
vame again, and the week before my
wedd ng was a full moon.
We had planned a glorious sleigh
ride. To start at noon and return lit
nine in the evening. There were six
sleighs, each holding two. Charlie and
1 together, of course. We drove two
new horses that day animals that cost
him a fortune, and were splendid creat
ures, though very nervous ami hard to
handle. But I was not easily fright
ened then; 1 did not know what fear
was. I could not remember over hav
ing been hurt in all my life. 1 had
never been ill or unhappy-
We flew over the snow, one behind
the other, untill we came to the fall. It
is a fall in summer. Then it was only
a frozen precipice, the Alge of the rocks
covered with snow, and the branches of
the grent trees all covered with icicles.
One branch fell as we dashed up. It
frightened the horses. They swerved;
the sleigh turned over; that’s all 1 know
about it. Afterward 1 came to myself
down on the rocks, horribly hurl and
cold—so cold 1 could not stir; and 1
knew I was freezing to death.
1 did not know what nad happened to
Charlie. Perhaps he was lying near by
somewhere, dead. The sun was going
down, and far up above 1 saw the cliff
over which I had fallen and the great
icicle that showed where the wateroawne
down. I thought of mother, aud lath
er, and everybody, and it seemed verv
hard to die. O, Charlie must be dead,
I thought, or he would have comedown
to me. It was all a kind of dream by
that time, but just as the last red gleam
faded away 1 saw a man coming down
the rocks. A rope was around his waist
and a staff in his hand. He came near
er and nearer, and at last he was beside
me.
It was not Charlie. Il was larger
than he.
“ Is it father?” I asked, through my
frozen lips.
“ No, ’ was the answer. “ No, dar
ling. Father is up on the rocks there.
It is I.” and I knew it was Dr. Garcia.
I don’t know how he got me up, but
ne did it somehow. 1 was in a little
roadside hut, in bed between blankets,
rolling in every limb, but at least not
Jut in that fearful cold. I heard father
. sell Dr. Garcia he had saved my life,
| rod I tried to thank him. And it was
" tnot her who told me Charlie was safe. I
had not dared to ask. Afterward 1
found that the horses had run away,
rod the rest ot the sleighing partv had
gone on, knowing nothing of the acei- !
“*nt; and that Mr. Charles Constant
had arrived at my father's in a farmer’s
sleigh, to tell thua I was dead at the i
bottom of the Fall*.
•• I should only have killed myself if
I'd gone after her,” he had said, “even
if Iliad not been so bruised and hart.”
That Was true enough, and I did rtot ,
blame him, although 1 thought that L ]
Woman as 1 was, would have got to him
somehow. But, you see, I called him ■
Mr. Constant, lie was never Charlie to
me again. 1 had been very much hurt,
and after weeks ami weeks had passed
away I began to know that I was not
likely to be myself again 1 asked Dr.
Garcia to tell utc the tfiith.
“Could you bear it if it Was so?” he
isk<-d.
*• 1 begin to think wo can bear any
thing,” I said, ‘ and you need not say
any more.’’
After that, die next day, I sent Ids
Mr. GousUhiL I don't want to tell you
what passed, but when he went away he >
had my ring again, and 1 knew be had
never loteu m<. It was very hard to
ts ar, dear. vefy ( very hard; but, as I
said, We can bear anything that can be
fall us.
Snniniur came slowly. When it was
w arm 1 began Io sit up again and to try
to knit a little* and then Dr. Garcia be
gan to take me out to ride lie used to
lift mo in and ont of his little carriage
like a lutby. and he petted me like <m<.
1 am sure he spent hall his fees m buy
ing books for mo. He was the only one
of the young men who troubled them
selves about me now, and do you won
4er I began to love him? I used to cry
to think that 1 bud not fell in that wuv
When 1 was the sort of g.rl that cofid
hope to make a man happy by loving
him. If hi' could do ail this out of pity,
What would he not do for love? It nev
er came into my mind that anybody
could lovo me now, until <»oe evening
he came and told me so. “Moro than
ever, darling;’? he said. “Afore than
ever! ' I nestled up against hut ami
hid mi face on his shoulder, and cried
like a baby.
"1 ought to snv No!” I said:
“What good am Ito »nv urn but he
kissed ma—■‘Oh. liovir he kissed me; and
lie told me I was more to him than any
thing else the void r >itld give: and
then I told him thjit was Mbit he was
In me; for, imine I. indeed, he was.
“If I could otilv walk about as 1
used.” I said, “and ’ook pretty, and
be udefid again. I run a’hnmed to give
you tlduhcjploss little me.”
“You nte alwavs jn-n!ty,”’he an
swered; “always, always.”
But 1 felt that he, (t'd tidt f
should walk. The fall had paralyzed
tuv limbs, you see.
"Mother put jjje to bed that as
usual, and 1 lay awake for hours, think
ing of him; ami 1 prayed oh, how I
prayed! for health and strength to be
of use to him who loved me so. And,
Amy, such a strange thing happened!
hi the middle oi the night I thought
that I awoke, and au angel stood near
the bed. I looked, but felt no fear, and
sluj smilvd ou me. and said:
“God has answered yotlr prayer.
Remember to praise Him.” And then
it seemed that 1 slept again.
Doubtless it was all a drCaul, but
when 1 did awake 1 felt that something
hnd happened to me. The numbness
was gone, 1 could move, and from that
moment I 1 egan to get well.
1. am uhnok* hs strong as Lp ver now.
Though 1 know I am noFsTTpretty, and
perhaps I shall never be, still I suit
Jack Garcia, and I am diintent. Heaven
knows lam muip than that llmnkful
and happy lieyond All words to tell;
and as I sit here looking al the river,
and thinking that to-mni+on' « ill be my
wedding-day, J honestly believe n<> liv
ing woman can he io blest as Jack Gar
cias wile; aud iny honest prayer is
that 1 shall be worthy of him and his
love. Hush. Halle y.
How to Raise Strawberries.
One \uxv hMl'ojlant Hoften
overlO )kßi! bw>tl>a cuhilfeior. ft is that
the pro liicti n of the ,-eed or iruit is a
very exhaust ng process.' When a man
buys a tree from the nursery and it
bea ■- a half d izcn samples of iruit
the first year, it stops its grow th just
about one year. Hence, until a tree
gets a good grow th it should not be al
lowed t» bear. 4're.w that are growing
rapidly do not bear, and if a tree is
bearing at all, it is to the detriment of
the growth.
Ast raw berry plant usually bears a
crop or fruit and also proauces new
vines. Now, if the blossoms of those
plants from which we want to raise new
plants are cuj,plT m the whole
strength goes into the nflw plants, and
one thou-and Dinners grown from plants
that are not allowej to Iruit are worth
more than five thousand grown from
plan's Hint bore frail st the same time.
Ohl plant-, are worth nothing new
plants from an old bed are worth noth
ing. The only plants worth using are
young plants grown from such as are
not allowed to fruit The true way to
raise strawberries is to get young plants
of this deserip.ion and not allow them
to truit the first i ear. l'he\ will throw
out plenty of strong, vigorous ninnern,
and the next season before bearing take
a part of the-u to make a new bed. A
new bed should by njade every year.
B lii n we plan’ in the spring We should
get no fruit the sattit* year. The next
rear we get the largest crop we ever goL
The vines can stand and liear a partial
crop the next season, or be plowed un
der as soon as the crop fs gathered.
I like best to raise one full crop and
only one. It is less labor to make a new
bed than to clean up an old one* It is
very little labor to plant nu acre of
strawberrii's if properly done, and no
other crop pays so well. The only diffi
culty is to get the right kind of plants,
but every man can raise the plants him
self in this way. Strawberries will do
well on any land that will raise <r.>od
corn. Cor. Prairie Fanner.
Not That Kind of a Donkey.
A coolness has arisen between Mr.
and Mrs. Fitznoodle, one of the most
respectable fAmilii* in Austin. Oue dav
Inst week a Mexican donkey was run
over in the outakirts of Austin, and
killed by a freight tram on the Interna
tional Railroad. Next morning, jnst as
Mr. Fitznoodle was about to start down
town, his wife threw her arms around
his neck and said;
“Dear Alonzo, promise me not to go
near the railroad track. How can the
engineer distinguish between you and a
donkey, in time to stop the train
2’eaas tinge. ,
Life in Germany.
Simplicity is the rule cd German fife,
and a very winning simplicity ft is. The
upper classes are not rich,and live unos
tentatiously ; the upper middle classes,
comprising professors, lawyers, doc
tors, and ?. good many officers, exist
upon inccmea which, according to our
notions, would seem beggarly, yet they
rub along comfortably and merrily, be
cause their women are so versed in
economy. In the richest German house
hold the mistress superintends the
kitchen, and lends a hand to the cook.
There are certain dishes which she al
ways makes with her own hands, be
cause her Fritz likes them so. She may
boast thirty-two quarterings on her es
cutcheon, and be terribly proud of her
lineage, but she has no nonsensical
idea? about its being degrading to put
on a canvas apron, lard a piece of veal,
make jams; or dolt? out with her own
hands the prunes that are tb be put into
the potato slew. She keeps he," l,est
Attire lor SdndayS; and makes it serve
on a good ttiany of these festal days,
for she does not follow fashiofi blindly
or in a hurry. On ordinary days she
dresses With a plainness which would
textiite the contempt of a Frenchwoman;
but then hel ; culinary pursuits do not
prevent her from being uy far the intel:
lectual superior of her French or Bel‘
gian sister. She reads serious books,
that she mav be able to converse as
an equal with her well-taught sons;
, the practices tnusic; that she. may re-’
I tiiain on a level With het daiighters;
i who are trained to be brilliant pilinlstsj
i and she finds time to read the newspa
per, in order that she may understand
i tvhat her Fritz has to say about the
topics of the day.
The example thus set in hi<gh life by
the “Frau Grafin” is copieu in lower
spheres by the “Frau Doctorin” and
the “Frau Professorin.” These ladies
keep no cooks; they perform most of
the Household labors, with the assist
,nce of a maid-of-all-work, and when:
ever practicable they do all the washing
i of the family lineti at home, and make
their own dresses. Withal, they are
Very hospitable in a homely way. They
delight in evening parties at which case
au tail is served with cakes and sausage
sandwiches. A carpet dance, a little
singing and music, round games, and
a goou deal of frank flirtation between
the young people, furnish the diversions
at these entertainments. In the winter,
several families club together to hire a
large room in which dreiste-mache (lit
erally “make-bold”) assemblies are held
once a week. Each family brings a
certain quantum of the refreshments,
as ut old-fashioned picnics, and dancing
is carried on within sensible hours—
between seven and eleven p. m. The
object of these assemblies is to make
young people “bold” to disport them
selves at more ceremonious balls should
they be called upon to do so; in fact,
they are unceremonious dancing parties,
at which the guests appear in morning
attire, and expect no costlier beverages
at supper than lemonade and beer.
The cheapest towns to go to in Ger
many are the capitals of small duchies.
Berlin has become very dear. Dresden,
Leipsic, Stuttgart, Munich, are all cheap
in comparison with English cities, and
they offer first-rate educational advan
tages; but they will be found more ex
pensive, on the whole, than such places
as Brunswick, Cassel, Darmstadt,
Weimar, and Coburg. Taking Bruns
wick as a specimen of these second rate
towns, it is a place where a family can
live in the utmost enjoyment and digni
ty on a small income. It is an old
fashioned town of picturesque architec
ture ; but the streets are broad, and the
houses large, with spacious and lofty
rooms, wide court-yards, and grand
staircases. Most of these dwellings are
let in flats, each of which has its sepa
rate kitchen, with its wooden balcony
overlooking the yard, and a separate
staircase for servants. A ten-room flat
(furnished) can be had on a first .floor
in the best quarter for about S3OO a
year; on a second,fors22s; and on a
third, for $l5O. But prices are lower in
the old streets on the outskirts of the
city. It is not the custom to let unfur
nished, as almost all the houses contain
a stock of old-fashioned furniture dating
from the last century, when the court of
Brunswick was one of the most brilliant
in Germanv. and when the citv vVd«
crowded with wen thy residents. It has
all the appearance of a wealthy city
still, though the present Duke lives
most of the year in Italy, and does little
to attract strangers to his handsome
palace. It has a university, a gym
nasium, a public school for Boys, sev
eral private schools, and a large acade
my for girls; a museum and public li
brary, and a noble theater. The Duke
chiefly helps to support the theater, and
for this much deserves the thanks of his
subjects. Formany years the conductor
of the orchestra was Franz Abt, the
eminent composer, and at one time he
had the best qualtior of violinists in
Germany under his orders. Perform
ances are given at the theater four times
a week, operas being performed on two
nights, and plays on the other two; and
the cost of a S)>erail:, or stall, is only
six thalers, or about $4.60 a month.
/Ml the ducal cities have good thea
ters, ns it is a point of honor with the
nrinceliiurs who rule in them to show
they are enlightened patrons ot music
ana the drama. The theater of Coburg
has a well-deserved reputation.
Tourists will not find German hotels
cheap, even in the small towns, for
landlords have got into the habit of
overcharging foreigners, and nothing
seems likely to cure them of it; but the
restauratiofu are very cheap. A sub
stantial dinner with beer can be had for
thirty cents; and in the braueries, which
officers frequent, a good supper, con
sisting of a plate of veal cutlets with
fried potatoes, or bacon, sausage, sauer
kraut, costs but fourteen cents, glass of
beer included. Schooling is as cheap
as in Belgium, and better, for the dis
position of German youth is studious,
and the professors are stiniuiatea nytne
assiduity and sharpness of their pupils.
—Harper's Wcckbt.
Potash for grape vines is being tested
in France. A variety of the black mus
cat has been found defective in color
where potash is deficient in the soil, and
the writer recommends that one vine of
this grajie he placed in every grape
house, to show by its full or by its defi
cient color whether the border ior the
roots has a sufficient supply of pr/ta&h.
Origin of Popnlar Phnu <*•
•• A Rolling Stone GBthe "
-This quotation apr* 1 ?. rowl
•• Ephemerides of 1 mlao. »» \
10 <r rtone gathers no moss. W"
Tusser. in “ Good Husbandry Lesson. •
stone that is rolling can gah v
n.»
nroverbialism originated with 1
Ker author of "five Hundred Pomta
of Good Husbandry ”
his •• Au Habitation Enforced. in.
Stings are
which have long since become proxy r
bi~No Roval Road to
Ettclid. who opened a of ’^ h os
maties at Alexandria, id ' Vp.i bv
the First Ptolemy, was one> m>k«d ®y
that sovereign whether lie could not ex
plain his art to him in a more c 0
dious wav, to which Euclid 1
celebrated answer that there was no
roval road to geometry.
“The Nine Worthies. —4 he historic
al personages designated “The
I!'" Sr Kg of
Israel.‘and Jud:<’ Maccabeus: :md
three Christians. Arthur, King m Bn -
ain, Charlemagne audu o<Wre ) ol Boud
'"-Thr Bed oi
tes, called by Farnsanlas Polyp ’
was, in mythology, a fobber of ant.
Greece, who placed on an iron bed th.
travelers who fell into his hands, which
their stature was made to fit by cutting
bfl' the pfojeeting limbs, or by stretch
ing them to stilt its dimensions; whence
the metaphorical expwdon of "The
Bed of PrOcrtistes.’’ *
“City of Magnificent Distances. ' — }
A popular name given to the City of
Washington, the capital of the Lnited
States, from the fact of its being laid
out on a very large scale. The entire
site is traversed by two sets of streets,
from seventy to 100 feet wide, at right
i angles to one another, the whole again
i intersected obliquely by fifteen avenues
I from 130 to 160 feet wide.
“Sleeveless Errand. ’’-"This phrase oc
| curs in Heywood’s Proverbs, 1546. The
! origin of the word sleeveless, in the sense
j of unprofitable, has defied the most care
ful research at the hands of Sharnian
and other noted philologists. It is fre
quently found, says the former, allied
to other substantives. Bishop Hall
! speaks of the “sleeveless tale of tran
substantiatiou, ” aud Miltou writes of a
l “ sleeveless reason,” Chaucer uses it in
i the Testament of Love.”
“Drawn and Quartered.” —In the
I statutes of Great Britain the punish
| ment for treason still is that the
j offender be drawn to the place of exe
i cution on a hurdle ; that he be hanged
I by the neck until he be dead ; that his
I head be severed from his body, and
i that body be divided into four parts, or
J t/uartered. The sovereign may, and
i now certainly would, by a warrant
I under the sign-manual, countersigned
| by a principal Secretary of State, change
the sentence into beheading. In the
case of females, the quartering is dis
pensed with. From this statute rose
the expression “ drawn and quartered.”
“ We Recognize a Hercules from the
Size of the Foot.”—Pythagoras ingeni
ously calculated the great stature of
Hercules by comparing the length of
various stadia in Greece. All these
courses were nominally 600 feet in
length; but Hercules was said to have
measured out the stadium at Olympia
with his own feet, while the others fol
lowed a standard of later days. The
philosopher argued that by how much
the Olympic course exceeded all others
in length by the said proportion did
the foot of Hercules exceed that of men
of a subsequent age: and, again, by the
same proportion must the stature of
Hercules have been pre-eminent.
“Prairie Schooner.”—An American
ism for a large two or four horse immi
grant wagon, covered with white can
vas, such as were very commonly used
by the early emigrants from the Eastern
and Southeastern States. The expres
sion is alleged to have been originated
by George Francis Train, who said in
one of his early stump-speeches: “To
the East lies the Atlantic Ocean, bearing
upon its surface the white doves of com
merce, bound for distant ports, laden
wit!h the products of the broad West,
A hoSe bosom is to-day dotted with thou
sands of prairie-schooners, loaded with
sturdy men and women, who will ere
long make its remotest quarters blossom
as the rose.” —SL Louis Globc-Dcmocraf.
—The Eastpo rt (Me.) Sentinel says
There has lately occurred a decided
change in the sardine business. The fish
have suddenly and unaccountably dis
appeared from the coast, and in con
tinence thereof all the factories are
standing idle, and the operatives are
found on the streets looking for work.
Lack of fish makes a vast difference in
the business in the town. To most of
the inhabitants it is their living, their
all. Scarcity of tis'n also affects yery
sensibly the storekeepers, as when the
factories are running trade is good, but
when they are closed the stores present
almost as deserted an appearance os
the factories. As this same condition of
affairs prevails all along the coast,it is im
possible to foretell when we shall see a re
vival in the sardine business.”
Outrage by a policeman: Sam Joh - '-
sing was up again yesterday. “ What
brings you here this time ? ” asked the
•Recorder. “De pliceman, salt; de
same what brung me heah last time.”
“I mean what did yon do?” “I was
jees passin’ a grocery store, when I
struck my head agin a ham what watt
hanging by de dore. I tuck de ham
down to put it somewhares whar it
would lie safe from folks bustin’ their
brains out agin it, when de fust I knowed
a pliceman tried to get de ham away
from me, and becase I wouldn’t let de
ham go he jess brung me along, too. ”
A woman of Stockton, Cal., believ
ing that she was about to die, confessed
to her husband that she did not love
him, but had centered her affections on
a neighbor. She declared that she |
could not die unforgiven, and so the {
husband freely forgave her. But he ;
granted the favor only in view of her
speedy death, and. when she unexpect
edly recovered, he began a suit for di
vor e. Her defense is that he con
doned her fault by the forgiveness, and
a j:e uliar question of law is raised A’ I
F. H rald. I
No. 184 Market Street, l M
hr
tzezsttst.
Refined Petroleum and Lubricating Oils.
|scp3 6m |
HERRON’S I
Special Anii'ounceineiit for the Spring! I
nt t<> our pAii’ons, anc? fLe public generally, this Season the most com
plete assortment of Goods ever sho\Vi.’ here.
They were purchased for CASH, and’ now off er them at INSIDE FIGURES
TWCo-te-e Ko JVk’iistEXls.o t
BUT SEE US AT ONCE, AS WE > q ELL AT
BOTTOM PRICES FOR CASH. |
We know that money is scarce this year with you, but ren-’emher that
Prices will be in Proportion to Your Purse
audit we have the Goods you want, and you can spare the money, now is the
time for you to secure
TITJB BEST GOOBS loy the H.'ELVST MONEY’
HERRON? <&> SION’S,
FOUNTAIN HEAD FOR BARGAINS.
THE “WHITE” SEWING MACHINE,
The Ladies’ Favorite!
ZBZEOJATTaiE
IT IS the lightest running I
the most quiet; makes the prettiest
BSfet..; -
'Ol stitch; and has more conveniences than
■tHsvs; .. ■ , A f t
ILA® 1T43 any other'.Machine.
0.: i v LFpRJfM It is warranted five vears and is tines
easiest to sell, and gives the best satis.-
gj t' lt faction of any Machine on the market.
| 15' Intending purchasers are solicited to
.
*. dealers wanted in all unoccupied ter
ritorv.
■ —1 i
-I. I>. Ac r r. F. SMITH.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers,
marll till janl 59 Broad Street, ATLANTA, GA.
a Use Lawrence & Martinis
I
F MONil ,G rniicuL D^. I SORE THROAT BRONCHITIS, ASTHMA, PNEU-
A CONSUMPnoN, Diseases of THROAT, CHEST AND LUNCS.
Uni C" Sil ft F" T’ftl 11 Has alw »ys been one of the most important
11 U I \la Sul IIL Illi II weapons wielded by the MEDICAL FACULTY
UftLUnlVI Ul Illi II againstthe encroachments of COUGHS.COLDS,
CONSUMlYo’iniuin.Ti.nf KR<>NCHI TI S , ASTHMA, SORE THROAT.
.ystem an„ u« “ l,u “' l UII
SrMT,I,9 W.
r, .. **' WITHOUT SPECIAL TAX OR LICENSE
he TOLU, ROCK AND RYE CO., Proprietors, 41 River St, Chicago, 111.
Dr- R. S’. 'WKIOHT,
W liolcsalc and Retail Druggist,
UVEIEZDIOIiKrZES, OUEledZICJkTjfe,
l er foV n 'r-? \ S o fl i"i’s - in l < i 'in' U Ar? nt! T " i . k ’. t r Ar,i,l eßKener!illy; White Leaa, Mixed/ Paints, ready
lor iL t.ioioibin Oil, LniMtd. Fanners. Machine and kerosene Oils: Varnishes
1 '"'{■Y"]' 1 ”"' '"’1” •”>: 1 ' a»>l> Fixtures: Surgical Apparatus." ueh ’
..... . ; ls Abdominal Supporteis, Irusses. Lancets, ’pocket Cases, etc e‘- I
Tins firm also deals in smoking and Chewina Tobacco, Fine < igars and Snuff an.Tlave the ex
elusive Drug trade in flae Wines, Whiskiesand Brandies in Dalton ’
compare with Atianta.^ 1 ’ C ° r " Cr ° f E "' g “ n<l l,il " lilton Greets, Dalton, On. Prices guaranteed to
ic!B ts
Tine Oalton. •» I
[CHAXtiRD I RUM IXDEPEXEEXT IIEA DI K
Brightest. Most Progressive. Lib- ’ isl
«iay« and W 1) '» kAv fl
News Paper in Northwes I
ONLY O3STOE I
Wuy • 'if
id. ■ M