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PITH AND POINT.
— H Tho baking-powder war” is the
heading of an advertisement in some of
our exchanges. Another Yeastern diffi
culty, it is presumed. —Norristown Her
ald,.'
—Said Brown, looking about the es
tablishment: “I don’t see Belcher
around. How do you get along without
him? You told me he was your right
hand man.” “So he was,” replied the
storekeeper, “but now he is left.”—Bos
ton Transcript.
—A medioal journal explains how to
make a “dropper”—an arrangement to
drop medicine out of a bottle. The
quickest and most emphatic dropper wo
ever saw was a young man who en
s— bared a blacksmith shop and picked up
a that had just come out of
the fo\.a. He dropped it with so much
dropabTeness, so to speak, that it made
him perspire—and swear. —The Judge.
—The New York Graphic prints pic
tures of “the great diamonds of the
world.” There are about thirty of these
precious stones, and the most surprising
thing about them is the fact that not a
single one of them is owned by an edi
tor. Newspaper men never did care
much for jewelry 7, anyhow.
—“Oh, I’ve just had such a scare!”
exclaimed a prim and pale housewife;
“I feel as if I should faint.” “Why,
what’s the matter?” was asked. “Well,”
she replied, “yo : may not believe it, but
as sure as I live that new girl deliber
ately opened the parlor shutters and the
sun was shining right in.”
—“ Have you ever before been pun
ished by the law?” asked an Austin
Justice of a oolored culprit. “Yes, I
called a man a liar, and I had to pay a
fine.” “Is that the only time you have
come in eonfliot with the law?” “Now
fiat yer speaks ob hit, Jedge, I bleeves I
was in de penitentiary for ten yeahs, ef
I disremember myself”— Texas Siftings.
—A society drama was presented at
the theater at Salt Lake City recently,
but when in the third act the husband
began to rave and tear around because
his wife had run away with another
man, the audience with one accord rose
from their seats and exclaimed: “The
idea of making all this fuss about one
'woman 1 ” and left the place in disgust.
—San Francisco Chronicle.
—The firm, steadfast character of
Massachusetts men is seen also in things
material. Look at the weathercock, for
instance. This, elsewhere the symbol
of instability and fickleness, is here
transformed into stability itself. When
ths thing gets turned toward the rising
sun, its fixity of purpose, its staying
power, its rigid inflexibility, is simply
sublime. It knows no north, no south,
no west. —Boston Transcript.
—A distinguished physician says that
the garments worn by women are
preferable to those worn by men. He
may speak from experience, but we
don’t believe he ever wore a walking cos
tume of royal blue cloth, with facings,
revers, and pelerine of velvet plush,with
a velvet basque, a long, clinging pelisse
trimmed with lace jabots down the front
and back, Charles 11. collar, and a tiny
black velvet poke and a rib-compressing
corset cut entrain, and so forth. Hardly.
—Chicago Times.
Sir Garnet Wol eley’s Coolness on the
Battlefield.
All accounts are agreed as to. Sir
Garnet’s demeanor b lit before an 1 ;Tter
•the fight.- His coolness an-.I -cl -reliance
were extraordinary. Cu the mo ning
before the battle, when lie took all the
Genqjals and their respective staffs to
reconnuiter the enemy’s lines he dis
mounted within a couple miles ufTol-ol-
Kebir, an.d gathering the others around
him, explained cvaetly what he count
to do. With a short stick he po ntod to
the intrenchmiuts as lie might to a
blackboard in a lecture-room, and qui
etly indicated in turns th position of
each part of the attacking ; o roe. He
had the whole thing otV by heart, knew
and explained in exact detail what ev ry
regiment had to do. While they were
thus occupied protected only by a small
cavalry escort, the eumv’se tout a
party to observe them, but mad - no
further demonstration. Wolseley's
“lecture” finished, they all remounted
anil rode back to camp.
After the battle was pra •tieally won,
Sir Garnet came t sthe bridge across the
canal communicating the light wi ll the
left attack, and getting oil his hor e,
quietly began to write iiis telegram an
nouncing the victory on a scrap of na-
Eer handed to him b one of ids ta t.
Lere, too, lie received th reports from
the various staff officers of divi ions and
brigades, asking mor. particularly as to -'
casualties. “Are you unit - -ur ?’’ li ■
always said, “hun t giv - in - wrong
figur-s. Don’t mention any olli er's
name unless you are quit • positive h is
hit.” All this tim h - was giving or
ders right and left, now to on • s atf offi
cer, now to another, and through it all,
confusing and embarrassing the -itu
atiou might w. 11 hav - been, was p r
fectly qui* t and unco iC rued,--London
World. __
Getting a Character.
Be wondrous wary of your first com
portments ; get a good name, and be
very tender of it afterward; for ’tis like
the Venice glass, quickly cracked, never
to be mended, though patched it may
be. To this purpose, take along with
you this fable. It happened that Fire,
Water and Fame went to travel toget her
(as you are doing now) ; they consulted
that if they lost one another, how they
might be retrieved, and meet agaiu.
Fire said, “ Where you see smoke, there
you will find me.” Water said, “Where
you, see marsh and moorish low ground
■mere"you shall find me.” But Fame
said, “ Take heed how you lose me, for
if you do you will run a great hazard
never to meet me again ; there’s no re
trieving of me.”
You never see the straggle Detween
duty and inclination more strongly
marked than in the respectful attitude of
a dog sitting on the sidewalk, his head
bent back and one foot aimed at the back
of bisear, undecided to spring up and
answer the imperative whistle of his
master or sit still and sSpot the flea lie
has* just got the *xact range and right
elevation on.— Burlington Ifau'keye i
Mrs. Mehnert, who is ninety nine
years old, has kept the Golden Trumpet
Hotel, Reichenbach, Ger many, for eighty
consecutive years, and is still hale and
hearty. !
Selection of a Farm*
There are many things to be consid
ered in the selection of a farm. To the
i rich gentleman who wishes to retire
from tne noise and tumult of city life, a
farm has a different meaning than to
the poor man who must toil daily for
the maintenance of himself and family.
The former will look through golden
eye-glasses and seek for luxuries in the
country, xvhile the latter must obtain the
necessities of life. The one will let in
dividual taste rule in the choice, the oth
er asks himself: “Is this the best place
j for me to do substantial fanning?” No
general rules can be given for the rich
man who buys a farm for the purpose of
spending money, while for the one who
seeks to make a living from the land
there are some words of advice.
The size of a farm should be suited to
the capacity of the pocket-book. Many
young farmers make the mistake of buy
ing a large farm with little money to
pay for it. There is nothing that so
binds a man as a heavy mortgage. It
eats the very heart out of the farmer,
and hangs like a leaden weight upon
every aspiration of his wife and chil
dren. It is better to buy a small farm
iud have enough capital to work it well.
As the surplus increases, it may be in
vested in more acres, or in a better
culture of those that have already
proved profitable. There is a size be
low which many of the economies of
the farm cannot bo practiced to the best
advantage, and on the other hand there
is danger of going beyond that acreage
where the most profitable farming may
be carried on. It requires considerable
executive ability to manage a large farm,
and therefore many men are excluded
from such by a lack which they may
not fully appreciate until the trial has
been made and the failure re
corded. Farming is not like the
taking of a qitadel, and cannot
be done successfully with a rush and a
noise. It is a thoughtful and steady
working out from well laid plans—a
conquest for crops, and the head must
be clear that wins whore the seat of a
campaign for a life time covers town
ships or even square miles. The soil is
the foundation of farming, and it should
be fitted to the kinds of crops that it is
desired to raise. The differences in the
nature and capacities of sand and clay
should be understood, and a favorable
mixture of the two obtained if the e is
an opportunity for choosing. A rich
soil, with proper management, means
good crops at once, but it may be as
profitable to invest much less in an
equal area of over-cropped land, and
bring it up to a high state of cultivation
by green manuring and other methods
of restoration. The farm-house is to be
the home uf the family, and therefore
the locality for the farm should be
health|pl. *The richest land for the
price may be on the border of a malaria
breeding swamp, but the profits of the
investment may be more than balanced
by the doctor's bills and loss of time,
not to mention the discomfort of fevers
in the household. It is important that
there be an abundant water supply on
all farms, both for the family and the
live stock. There are social considera
tions that no farmer should overlook in
making a choice of a farm. He lives
not to himself alone; the childx-en need
the privileges of good schools, etc.; in
abort, the commuuit should be one in
which sympathy, goodness and intelli
gence prevail.
With a good farm of proper size,
healthfully located, abundantly supplied
with water, good neighbors, and a
handy market, a man is so well situated
that he ought to make himself and those
around him happy. Choose well, and
Void on to the choice —The Agricult
urist.
Pearl*.
Pearls are perhaps the most valuable
of all the offerings of Animate nature,
and are the results of the efforts of the
bivalve to protect itself from injury. A
parasite bores into the shell of the pearl
bearer, and when felt by the animal it
immediately fortifies itself by covering
up the spot with its pearly secretion; the
parasite pushes on, the oyster piling up
until au imperfect pearl attached to the
shell is the result. The clear oval pearls
are formed in a similar way, only in this
case a bit of sand has become lodged in
the folds of the creature, and in its
efforts to protect itself from the sharp
edges, the bit becomes covered, layer
by layer, and assumes naturally an oval
shape. This growth of the pearl, as it
is incorrectly termed, can be seen by
breaking open a SSOO gem, when the
mac\‘ wilFbe seen in layers resembling
the section of an onion. The Romans
*vere particularly fond of pearls, and,
according to Pliny, the wife of Caius
Caligula possessed a collection valued
at over $3,000,000 of our money.
Julius Cresar presented a jewel to the
mother of Brutus valued at $250,000,
while the pearl drank by Cleopatra was
estimated at $400,000. ' Tavernier, the
famous traveler, sold a pearl to the Shah
of Persia for $550,000. A $20,000
pearl was taken from American waters
in the time of Philip IL It was pear
shaped, and as large as a pigeon’s egg.
Another, taken from the same locality,
is now owned by a lady in Madrid who
values it at $30,000.
Fresh-water pearls are often of great
value. The streams of St. Clair Couuty,
111., and Butherford County, Tenn.,
produce large quantities, but the largest
one was found near Salem, N. J. It
was about an inch across, and brought
$2,000 in Paris. The pearls from the
Tay, Doon and Isla rivers, in Scotland,
are preferred by many to the Oriental,
and in one summer $50,000 worth of
pearls were taken from these localities by
men and children. Mother-of-pearl
used in the art 9 is sold by the ton, from
SSO to S7OO being an average price. The
last year’s pearl fisheries in Ceylon
alone realized SBO,OOO, to obtain which
more than 7,000,000 pearl oysters were
brought up.— N. Y. Evening Post.
If there shouldabe a wool famine
within a year or two, there would be
nothing in the fact that would surprise
some of the principal authorities upon
wool matters. Rat has carried off many
sheep in England and on the continent,
.• nd it is said that sheep are in numbers
tar below the average. It may be that
the American wool-grower is at last
about to find his reward Tor having clung
patiently to his sheep through the long
period of low prices.
fiflo Young and Yet Ho Unhappy.”
Eddie the son of a prominent merchant
in a neighboring town to Grenada, is
only two months on bis way to bis sixth
year. His father says Eddie Inis been m
“ladies’ man” evet’ since be s twn
years of age. But it. was only a few
weeks ago that lie succeeded in finding
his Psyche, who so ruthlessly plunged
the love-poisoned dart into Ids young
soul that the simple name Mildred was
metamorphosed into the tender name
‘‘ sweetheart.” The villiage school cl< w:d
and she broke the secret and her lover’s
heart by telling him that she loved Ids
brother better than she did him. When
the father came home Eddie buttonholed
him and sobbed out:
* ‘ Papa, papa, Eldred said she won’t
have me.”
“Oh, son she was only joking.”
“ N-n-o, sir, she wasn’t, ’cause she
told me three times.”
There being “no lialm in Gilead” for
his lacerated heart, he decided “ to take
arms against a sea of troubles” and with
a curtain cord end them. Having se
curely fastened the loose end of the
green cord around his neck, he jumped
out of the parlor window, a distance of
four or live feet from the ground. For
tunately the cord broke and 'eft no marks
of suicide, save a blood ring around his
ueck. —Memphis Avalanche.
This Memphis (Tenn.) Avalanche
throws out this suggestion : “ Every
where in the Mississippi delta are to be
found traces of the engineering skill of
the mysterious race vaguely called
‘ Mound Builders.’ Artificial elevations,
miles of camils and long stretches of
low protecting levees are to be seen in
nearly every county bordering tin the
river from Cairo to New Orleans. Would
not modern engineers do well to study
carefully the system which these ancient
people no'doubt found to be an efficient
remedy for devastating floods ?”
An Age of Suspicion.
Truly, this is an age of suspicion.
Nevertheless, Capt. F. M. Howes, of
the steamer William Crane, Merchants’
& Miners’ Transportation Line between
Boston and Baltimore, who suffered
severely from rheumatism, caused by
the exposure incident to his profession,
was cured by St. Jacobs Oil. This is
no suspicion. —Boston Globe.
—The latest teiepnone story is that a
young lady in Nashville bowed twice
when introduced by telephone to a young
man in a distant part of town.
A Suceessfnl Firm.
Messrs Dio F. Wolfe & Co., of Nos.
174 and 176 Common street, New Or
leans, Louisiana, do an enormous busi
ness as brokers in “Cotton Futures”
and are rapidly taking the lead in that
line of any house in America. While
on a business trip to New Orleans we
called at their office and were courte
ously shown their perfect system of how
they do business. We never knew how
popular and widespread this investing
in Cotton Futures had really become,
but from their mail we judge they re
ceive over forty letters with Crafts and
Ltrders, and we were assured that
some i,ms as high, as sixty orders with
money ranging in sums from $lO up to
$1,004 were received, of course the small
er sums from $lO to SIOO are the most
in number. Messrs. Wolfe & Co., are
also the originators Southern Co
operative Cotton Fund Union, a system
of Combining Individual small sums
and operating the whole aggregate capi
tal under their careful supervision.
, From one of tlyir Statements we learn
: that for the last six weeks, they have
realized for their share-holders 68 per
cent, profit, that is, S6B for every SIOO
so invested. This is growing rap
idly and even old and experienced spec
ulators take advantage of it, as the risk
is reduced, enabling the managers to
place larger margins on ileal to prevent
sweeping loss, in time of rapid fluctua
tions and by having an ample reserve
fund at command, they can “hedge”
and thus hold their purchase until the
excitement subsides, and legitimate
profits are again gained. They have an
office in New York, as their Stock and
Bond operations are also large. We wish
to mention in conclusion that the Co
operative is managed separately from
their individual business.
A resident of K rkmansvilie, ivy.,
is cousin to his own children, having
married his aunt. He is ugcle- also to
his brothers acid sisters and cousins, and
brother-in-law* to his father audanother.
—An editor wrote a headline, “A
Horrible Blunder,” to go over a rail
road accident; l*ut though it was the
printer's fault that it got over an ac
count of a wedding, the editor was the
man thrashed allithe same.
Lyon's Patent Aletilic Heel iiiilfeners
keep new boots and stiots from mining
over. Sold by shoe and hardware dealers.
—Still sore and lame from recent ex
perience, the Boston Post man assures
his friends that “a man can nqfc leave a
house gracefully wdien he is impelled
by a 300 pound push from the toe of a
boot.”
That Itn'ibnnd of Mine
Is three times the man he was before he
began using Wells’ Health llenewer. sl.
Don’t Die in thk House. “Rough on Rats.”
Clears out rats, mice, roaches, bed-bugs. 15c.
Purf. cod-liver oil. from selected livers,
on the sea shore by Caswell, Hazard & Co.,
N. Y. Absolutely pure and sweet. Patienil
who have once taken it prefer it to all oth
ers. Physicians declare it superior to all
other oils.
rkscteo runs death.
William J Coughlin, of Somcrrllla, Mas*., says:
In the {all of 1379, I >u taken with luxarte or
ihk lungs, followed by a severe cough. I lost my
appetite and flesh, and was oonflned to my bed.
fa 1177 I was admitted to the Hospital. The
doctors said I had a hole In my lung as big at a half
doUar. At ona time the report went around that I
was dead, I gave up hope,4>ut a friend told me of
DR. WILLIAM HALL’S BALSAM FOB THE
LUNGS. I got a bottle, when to my surprise. I
oommeneed to feel better, and to-day I feel better
than for three years past.
BAKER'S PAIN PANACEA cures pain la Man
ar Beast, For use externally or Internally.
A teaspoonful of charcoal in half a
glass of warm water often relieves u
si< k headache. It absorbs the ga*os
and relieves the distended stomach,
pressing against the nerves that extend
from the stomach to the head.
C’hapvku bands, fate: pimhles add rough
skin cured bv using Juniper Tar Soap mads
by Caswell, IJazzard & Co., New York.
THE GREAT GERMAN
REMEDY
FOR PAIN.
Relieves and litres
RHEUMATISM,
Neuralgia,
Sciatica, Lumbaqo,
BACKACHE,
HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE,
SORE THROAT,
QUINSY, SWELLINGS,
kpkaiss, y
Soreness, Cuts, Bruises,
FROSTBITES,
IKT'.VS. M AI.DS,
And all other Bodily aches
and pains.
FIFTY CENTS A BOTTLE.
Sold hy all Druggists arid
Dealers. Directions in 11
languages.
The Charles A. Vogeler 60.
(SuCMMOr, to A. VOGII.ER k CO:)
It»Himnre, Sid., 1. S. A.
”jSTRTg!f\
T& UUiRATEO 'ft
.
Old fauhtoned r*i»ftdl#® %r® rapidly gTound b®«
*o: e the edtanc® of lh * conquering specific, and old
V! ic: f*<j ideas in regard to depletion Mam jans of cur®,
have been quite exploded by th® ®ucc®®« of tfa® grehi
reuov-.uit, which tones the system, traaqntlixes th®
nt-ives, neutralizes malaria, depurates and enrich#* th®
b!o'd, rouses the liver wb®» torment, and promotes a
regular habit of body.
bur sal® by all Druggists and Dealer® generally.
■AGENTSsi
wanted for the best selling boots in the United
States. Write, and
Xji O O K
at the terms we offer. Salary and commission to the
right men. J. 11. CHAMBERS A CO.,
_ Atlanta, Ga.
SMALL PICA FOR SALE.
About 600 lbs. of this type, in
fair condition, suitable for newspa
per work; made at Johnson foundry;
Phi la.; large quantity extra capitals;
28 cts. per lb., for 50 lbs. or more.
B. F. Bennett, Atlanta, Ga.
’i" Subscription Books
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Territory cleo r. They satisfy the Agent hecau.se they sell
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“Nswman’s America,”om£hE22^“
llingrtiphy from the Hoilricrs to «luly iK,
The only hook covering the subject.
The Lives of Jam?s Brothers,
The only complete account Of the Missouri Outlaws,
“ Ths Jaaniistie,”
Uxiiluiations. inch! ling I K k\hLW, KWI .
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tsuning **olh versions of*thi '*«•« lestiimvnt. More
Features and Illustrations than ajiy other edition.
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S IMSiV. HOUSE. IMtO.nri OEALiAGH. \»
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COBURN & COOK PUBLISHING CO.,
96, 08, 99 & 100 Mctranolitan Block, CHICAGO, ILL.
THE BEST ™ LY
Two Dollar).
Demorest’s Illustrated Monthly.
Sold by all nfw«dpalO('fiand Postmaster*.
Send twenty eeiif* f«*r a *|»* eiinen py t<*
W. II N M N4w.N Di noKtM, Pubiifttier, 17
K. 14lh Nt ( New York.
The, New Volume (19) commence*
with November. Send FIFTY CEJf i!S
for three months; it will satisfy you that
you can subscribe Two Dollars for a year
and get ten times its value.
HUSE'S IMPROVED CIRCULAR SAW Mills.
r*»
4 Send for rffpA With uni versa i Fog
a Prices Low. Workman- "sp
J ship First-Class.
Kaaafaetured k s SALEM IBOIT WOBIS. SALEM. V. 0
MASON & HAMLIN
ORGANS
VllUflltV WO Kl.K>’* INOUM IRItl
«OA PKTI I XOM for NIX I KK* Y ft*. A it-* ; ih
Am erica Organ* f b««a foaud Mjnai ju a*y.
iIaCUEAPBAT. BtrU 109; 8 1-4 oeUva; raffiea**’
cumptM and power, wit* Wool natality, tor popelas
»*cr*d and ftocefer boac m school* or buruilW*. at only
S*i2. ONE HFNIIKKD OTMEK STYUA *
|3O, $57, AM, $73, $7%, $93, sl4l*, sll4. to s*<*;
knd uuwArt. rU .«*|«y stylet ore t eKoUy by an;
HK*r Ck-yanm, Also for <>*eT piiTmciiU.. NEW A kilt
IKAIED < 4 l 4M>bis;
HI A XL2 MM Tfcw Ofxtptaay have commenced lb*
a SS aiSkD ulhcMira of l T PR * ft- 1
a IrIIvUVIiRAND PIANOS, in!rodn'-i:i/
mtfrtaatf imprnvemm Li; adding to power and boaurt o
Kme and durability. Will >*♦< re nnre tuning cne~*ri
mmek <u *ther Fxcmm.
liAKA, with full partieu ai t, rK.ru
Till; M 4SON 4k KftWMN OR<J4\ AM
PIANO CO~ 154 Tiftuonl Sf . Hotnon s 16 ft
I4ih Si., N. York; 149 Wabaib avc , (
THRESHERS:^"**
Im. THBAULTMAN ATAYLORCO.Mansti.Id.O.
g
ct.i.jst.ni p* :r - •r. I. .*.!■.MiITMM 0.5..i,-A»l>.l , .lutiu*-,111.
TR I H to.'jMmSpMi* 84*r. AmSm /
:. wip., tar 30 ewato. witt Affi.
tolsr of rjtw AMI imek ef hair, lead a COKRkCT t*ICM Wtftjf
TUK>. »f yt nr futurr ko.Uad w wife, with »»■* tai', Yr <LA,
••1 f.M* «f nratn j[, and da*« cf *arT **9. pgyahalor
itottfy prvi.ctwd Money i*turned to All cot Miiatrd
Addrrv# Frwf. L. ifartine*. 10 Hnni’y Pl..Bo«tor “ttS
\GENTN W 4NTFD fm tlw. Best and Fast**
Bsilmr Pkctorial Ho#ks and Biblas. Price* reducad X
•r a»nt Witiowt' ‘’nm.isHmft ('a.. Atlanta, §*
nnomrr Peitwarßintae «,B.nriisenoDM
BUGGIES f
(jP awVwltcw D WEAR
SOLD Wfito
mrm s ~
mi a Mi. As A r ) On Individual
'SK si a? Xy deals or Oh the
%% Popular and safe
Co- Ope r*a ti ve PLAN
' nv conservative
SPECULATING
Statements, Monthly Dividends
SIOOO Invested "WMSP"
Smaller Investments in proportion, Correspondent
wat/fed everywhere. Cbculais mailed to any addttPM
DIO. F. 7/OLFFE & CO., Brokers,
174 & 1 <6 Common el, NEW OM-V-AXS, j -
String’s Sanative Pills
»-<»U TUB
LIVES.
▲ 1 peed j cure for live! complaint, regulating 9%,
bowel®,purifying the hiood,cleansing from malarial taint
A pei feet cuie for sick headache, constipation an!
dyspepsia. Sold by all leading Druggist. Foi circular!
and almanacs with full pmticuiais, address, f. O. Bos
<6O, New York City.
I9iif le unifiii.ng and infalll
h,bin curin * EpHeptic
Urn b its, Spasms, Convul-
CUKES AND * gionS, St. Vitus Dance,
Alcoholism, Opium Eat-
VL lug, Scrofula and all
Tgjr fferrous a.n(Pßlood Din-
Lawyers, Literary Men,
r Merchants, Hankers,
Ladies ana all whose
f z sedentary employment
/ causes Nervous Prostra-
I tiop, Irregularitiee of
Js&f/ \c’.l / tho Wood, stomach,
iFjjr / bowels or Kidneys, or
J who require a nerve
TO toß’c, appetizer oi
I ftimnlant. S-AMARL
Tan nervine is m
valuable. Thousands
SsW FAILS. proclaim it the most
EtS&Us ««* wonderful Invigorsnt
■ w w(f » t’3 Ell that ever sustained the
■' \ vJf BS S sinking system. For
«3Wft S» V eaie by all Druggists.
rilK l»U. S. A. lIIt'UiHONU itIEDICAI. CO..
§ulc I’roprirloife, St. Joseph. Bio.
McBRXDE & CO/S
CHINA AND GLASS PALACE,
ATLANTA, OEORO^A,
Own the Gate City Natural Stone Water FilterW
.uid Cherry's Steam Fruit and Vegetable Dryer.
Agents for Seih Thomas Clock Co. I’rices turn
sned on application.
HEALTH IS WEALTH!
Da. K. C. W*»r'i Naar« aid BaAia Tebatmhht ; a
ipeciflc for Hysteria, Diarinea®, Contulaion*, Nervcu*
headache, Mental l)enrta®ton, Los® of Memory, Protna*
lure Old caused by over*«xert’.on, nbich lead® te
in.Atrr. decay *n-1 One box will cure recent caeefl.
liacli box contain® out month*® treatment. One dollar a
box or six boxen for five dollar® ; sent t>y mail prepaid on
receipt ef price. We guarantee six boxes to cure any
?a®o. With each order received by a® for ®ix bexe«, ao
:ompanled with five dollar®, we will tend the pnr
ihasvr our written (uarantee to retarn the money if the
treatment doe® not effect a cure. Guarantees itftued onlf
t»y G. J. LI'HN, Charleston, i. C. Orders by
mail promptly attended to.
OPiyiF HABIT
AND DRUNKENNESS.
Positively, speedily and permanemlv cured by
DR. KEBLEY’S GOLD REMEDIES, 'containing
:io form of Opium. Truth invites investigation.
References best in the State. For terms, pamph
ets and proofs, addresp,
W. C. BELLAMY, M.
71-2 Broad SI., Atlanta, Ga.
CIOT.KSfAW BIISIX'MI COt.l,t:t.f, Jy-wnrv,
/ S. J. Writ, for CjtUiOjMS. Colim.s A Talks, bro^a.
MILL and FACTORY SUPPLIES
)P ALL KINDS. BELTING HOSE and
PACKING, OILS, PUMPS ALL KINDS.,
IRON PIPE, FITTINGS, BRASS GOODS,
STEAM GAUGES. ENGINE GOVERNORS,
Seo. Sand for Price List. W. H. DIL
LINGHAM & 00., 113 Main Street,
VILLE, KY.
m il SIB!
Pureonn* Pui’K nvv PUN m;»k« N* w B
Blood, and will comi lotely cb-mge tiie lluod in ’a*
entire *vstem ta three montbs. Anv ;.frnni wbe
will take one pill each eight, from Ito IT week*- r.-.a lx
restored to sound health, if Rncli a Thing be i n s Me
Sold everywhemor sent by n»all f nr H h*tt« r
I. H, JOiINSON il' i :i.» Rttsioiiy .hub®,,
Bangor, '>o.
wmms\
UIN I'i.Fy I'i.N: 1 have used lilt. ll.ntmTsJiiUN Tonic in my pradiec. and 7TF an experience
** twenty-five years In medicine, have never found anvthlng to give the resuils that Dj . Hartkh s-
Iron TONTOdoes. In many cases of Nervous I’rostratfon, f emale Dlsiiases. Dyspcr.idii. and an Im
poverished condition of the blood, tins peerless remedy lias, in my hands, male some wondt—t dfciires.
vases that have battled some of our most eminent phvsleians have yielded tc i.is meat and twmri)>ar
able remedy. I peesejibe it in preference to anv iron preparation made, in fa- I. such .. coCTcomaa
as Du. Barter's iitux Tokn is a necessity iti my joactice. Du. IJOBEI.T tjAMLELN
mt. Lofts, mo., vuv'. . issi. 310-1 Wash. Avewtie .
It gives color to the blood,\
natural healthful tone to |
the di(festive ortjans and 1
nervous si/steni, making
it applicable to General ,
Debility, Loss of A p/ie- l
tite. Prostration of Vital j
Powers and Impotence.l
IKANUFA6TURED BY DR.F*n.TER MEDICINE CO. 9V> N MAIN ST.. ST Il’J'S
Development of_Southem industries!
NEW DRESS. FULL of NEW Llr ■ 1
AGRTC LI LT U I? I SI
£e“THE CHEAPEST JOURNAL IN THE WORLDS
it exposes nil Humbugs. It instructs and entertains every member of the family
It is a complete guide- for Hardening and Fruit Growing, and full
of Valuable Hints on Cotton aud Sugar C ulture.
Amoy other Southern writers are Dr. A. OEMLER, fruit aud vegetable grower, of South Caroline
B >i. o. c. GEORGESON, Of the Texan Agricultnrcl Colitye, Prof. 6. C. SAA ALLOW, Mo., Frof .)
AcDRYDE. Teun., Trot. J. VA. SANIiORN. Mo., Prof. J. I). AA'AIIFIEI.D, IMd., Hon. J. S NEVA MA N
Ga., and Dr. D. E. SALMON, engaged by the Government in the investigation of important veteran rg
subjects in taa Southern States, who will contribute the results of their experience and research.
M-mbors of the Editcria] Staff and artists arc to make trips through nil the .Sflirihc: •
States, gathering valuable material and illustratioi s fortlie Southern Form. Garden and Household,:
spool'd Btt -ntion will be dev, itc.l to Southern Fanning and Gardemnv. and to the profitable grot, it.
of Southern Fruits and Vegetables for Northern markets.
Senators LAMAR (Miss.) and GORDON (Ga) and other gentlemen interested In the deed r
mrntof Souiliern industries, wh , huve called upon us, have Influenced ns to add these new foatnr
whi, h will hereafter m- i o the Amfuican AcßiorT.TttßisT invaluable in every Southern fam
nearly 100 columns of onjrinal matter and from 60 to m original illustrations in every number.
7 Send 3tam» for December Issue—THE GREAT NUMBER FOR TIIE SOFT
C- GERMAN AGRICULTURIST, tho only purely German Agricultural Journal in the V
Sub-icrintion Price, $1.50 per annum, English or German; 4 copies $5.00: post-free. T
German p.-rmer in Texas and elsewhere through the South should have it. •
..txt rsi. : ?,y.receives a perfect plate copy cf DurRK’R lust great
IN IJJ. LvADOAv.” the original ef which is valued at 55,000. and is pronounced by -v
and oth"r lording artists as a beautiful- picture, an well as a great educator.
Elegant premium list with great inducement* f-rclubs sent free cn application.
GRANGE JUDD CO.. No. 751 Broadway, New
&COR Nervous Weakness, Deafness, Loss of Voice,
| Sense of Taste and Smell, Neuralgia, Faint
Eureka Catarrh Cure, I
A SURE RELIEF ANI> A SPEEDY CURE. *
Send for Circulars, Terms, etc., to Z'' S'wr- m
J. W. Q-URLEY, M. D., Atlanta. G 1
A CATALOGUE
JUST ISSUED CONTAINING
400 ILLUSTRATIONS
AND PRICES OF
DIAMONDS, WITCHES, JEOT
AND SILVERWRAE
j- sent to any address upon application to
0 f, STEVENS & Sor,
jewelers'
■ p .iIiANTA, - - —•
ufa t w B orrt ) hlnd l
llpo thoufi .mls uf ... e. lle ~q ae.ntrongi® niy tulth
jtanding have been < BCTTbEd FILER, to-
This NX Singer, S2O
FAQ quiet,httndsotnr atvbdurable-
Kill fCT t<,st t . , . U ‘
S WSrjfm "“ed” 12 "to,* .
It 4*l Also neut on lest trial
eirecL Kiopant ease, n t ’Vir *
tone, durable lr»ideanoS?Jt- < lr
1 i Mar, with testimonials,! y*-
„ e s Co , , 4? T i.i,.i 1 aa< >
'webstsrNs
unabbidgedL
and ■ t-jni.higs.
fi ‘A LIBRARY iTsTSELF. ’
/fS latest edition with 11»^00<D
Words, (3(K>O nforc than rtnyj
” . other Engli-h Dictionary.)
qri Biographical Dictionary vv Inch-
JL Jl? It contains gives brief facts con--
““ cerning 0700 noted persons.
Illustrations I—3ooo 1 —3000 in mini
''<er, (alsmt three times us many
in any other Diet’ry.)
HOLIDAY .GIFT,
Most aceQjdableto MasVr. T^c»y
er, Child, Friend; forHo*t.^ J l>h >1I t’ f, l a y.' ***t
ding, or any other occasion. ’ _
It is tho best practical Kngli'ih Dictionayy
extant. —London Quarterly Jit , T
It is an ever-present and relh'blo /j®'”?'”
master to the whole family.—-?.
G. & C. MERRIAM & CO., Pub’rs.Springfiy'lo.M^*-
f CJJR£ Fiy#jl
& time ;ird t fuJ
cal cure. » i:;ivo -'• )•* 'Cel • y ; 1..1 .-V
or FAUJNG FlTs>sb. » "h V" v. -'ni-t iny
remnffy w curd cpa ’ ' V;®
lailail it no rvirert f.r rnx-.-- ■». - ' J .*•
once fji l. i.eHtlso aud -J
Give Er.W’S iiiu F - ,tl .
HothintM-a tri.il, run I wil. **. *' ’•
AUlire* B !>: . H <«. -)• ’
V r tor only,!. This bei
patronage, act quick. J. I). m-S'RV, !t.»< i 7 j
rAI £NI &
Publishers* Tin ion, AtUmta, Ga > 4 Forty-|feht^ > B2.
INVEST ONE CENTKsS-^
■AND Brated Catalogue.
Save Your Dollars.feh.'a I V'
~ , -1 u . l-.ny fry 6etKi H
>Vur andiv?*, and wu will m-ikl y< mOi- pr^ljQki■
OUil ELEGANT BOOK !
Cent uning iUusttatinas and descriptions of sevsra
liundred Gold and Silver Watches, Diamonds. Jeweirj’
fancy A’tides, eta. Address WJii't'NLV COOK if t
(JO. f>i .Market St., Chicago. 111. (Established 1377.
(' d :c~.::pi>mtlon of J’.-.t
toocidetif iron, Peruvian
B&rkand Phvsphorus in
a palatable form. The
{onlyprepvi ationtr) iron
I that will, not blacken-the
l teeth,SO elm l uet’ ri'sl idof
\other Iron preparaticorst