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LOYAL TO THE CORE.
An Kx-tJnlon Snliller Inscribes t!*e Now
Famous Kebel Flag; Scene."
Mr. G. W. Gifford, a gentleman well
known to the business men of Naslz
ville and Tennessee, was present at
the reunion of cx-Confederates at
Macon, Ga., which President Davis at
tended, ami £tood within a few feet of
him during the scenes of the review
of which the Northern Republican
press have had so much to say. Mr.
Gifford is a pronounced Republican
and an ex-Union soldier, is a member
of George 11. Thomas Tost, No. 1, G.
A. R. In an interview he said: “I
feet it mv duty as an American citizen,
to protest against the wrong which is
being done the people of the South
and more particularly of Georgia in
the piihlicatii ns which are being made
by leading journals of my party in re
gard to the conduct of ex-Confederates
at the Macon'reunion and tlie conduct
of Mr. Davis. It is true that the al
leged incidents which are made the
basis of this assault by the Northern
and Eastern press occurred in Georgia,
but the assault has widened until it is
sought to reflect upon the loyalty of
the South. There were a few Con
federate flags fluttering but these
were principally in front of sa
loons and underneath them were
placards .stating the saloon was
ex-Conieaerate headquarters, flic de
vice evidently doing a sharp dodge by
the sahj»Mi-lvoe.|'er to attract custom.
I was standing within ten feet of
Mr. Davis on the porch of Colonel
residence where the meet
ing him and the Confederate
veterans plaint which so much misrc]>-
resentatiott has been made occurred.
I saw the chair -brought out and the
old man take Ids seat in it. When the
flag was pushed forward to the railing,
Mrs. Davis leaned forward and pluck
ing a shred from its torn and tattered
folds, fell back in her chair and put
ting her hands to . her face began to
weep? The sceue was such that no
man could have resisted its pathos.
Not an ej’b in that vast assemblage
was dry. Men wept, yes, but their
tears were not disloyalty to the Union,
but were forced from them by the sad
ness of the scene. Union soldiers who
were there wept and aremot ashamed of
their emotion. It was in this excitement
the flag was pushed forward to Mr
Davis. Rising with an effort, he con
vulsively snatched itsfolds and pressed
them t(f his lips, then fell hack in his
chair exhausted. Then arose cries for
Governor Gordon. He stepped to the
front and delivered a speech which
■was as loyal to the Union as any John
Sherman ever made.
When he referred to the perfect
union of the sections to-day under one
flag, Jthe cheering was louder and more
spontaneous by far even than which
greeted the incident of the flag. No
man could have looked upon that as
semblage and heard their shouts and
hhnestly entertain the faintest idea
tii.vt mese people arc disloyal to the-
Union. The flag was not torn to
pieces by men eager to preserve relics
of the .wjuch Jefferson Davis
had kissed, as tlie Republican press
charge. It was quietly borne away,
and not a shred was taken from it ex
cept that “fly Mrs. Davis. I walked
among the thousands of ofc-Confedcr
ates At Macon, and talked with hun
dreds, stnd I declare, with all sincerity
and truthfulness, that I did not see or
hear a single tiling which indicated
any antagonism to the Union. 1 re
member that, after it was all over, I
was talking with a party of men who
had'fought for the Union, and hap
pened like me to be in Macon on busi
ness, and some one*remarked that he
wondered if anv a'ttempt would be
made by the Republican- press to
misrepresent the occasion, and
we agreed that those who
seek to make the people of other
sections believe that those ox-Confed
eratee had acted as enemies to the Un
ion, and givejj vent to disloyal senti
ments, would be nothing short of gross
iujustfee,*and no man would have the
depraved imagination to attempt to do
so unless he were a sensational news
paper col-respondent. As men we felt
llnit.y, e would be recreant to bur sense
and consciences if we failed to recog
nize) the loyally among these old vet
erans, now our peaceful fellow-citizens.
Now-1 sec that the press of the North
has done a great wrong. I know the
injustice of the Miarges, and i feel it
my tlnty to sav what I know. It would
be p base ingratitude » the people
anufhg Whom 1 live if I did not raise
my voice to protest against this misrep
resentation; One little circumstance
illustrates the temper of the people.
I had occasion to spend a good deal of
time at the depot looking after freight,
and frequently stopped to look at the
gaily decorated cars -which had brought
Mr. Davis from Mississippi. There
were many flags upon it, everyone
was thy flag of our Nation. —Nashville
Lettef in Minneapolis Tribune ( Hep.)
NATIONAL UNITY
The Happy Time Foretold by Lincoln
C'oiuc at Last-
The journey through the
Sounf hafatlSst Brought about what
Mr. Lincoln foresaw with the vision of
a prophet. In his first inaugural the
soul of him spoke in this final sen
tence:
V!e are not enemies, but friends. We must
not be enemies. Though passion may have
strained, it must not breaW. oiur bonds of af
fection. The mystic chorus or memory, stretch
ing »t»mev«ybattle field and patriotic grate
to every loviug heart ;uni hearthstone, all over
this broad land, will yet swell the* chorus of
the again touched, as surely they
witl be sy the better angels oi our nature.
The time hoelold mure tlinn a score
of years" ago has " come ’at last. The
voice that prophesied the power of die
better nature in our pe pie is silenced
and the inspired soul that trusted anci
hoped is long with the saints, but he
did not misjudge his countrymen, and
at last the banners of the Union mak
ing glad the cities of the South wave
their welcome to a President of the
Republic who comes in the spirit of
peace to prove that while passion has
strained, it has not broken the bonds
of affection.
The black people of the South, de
ceived into the belief that a change of
parties meant rebondage for them,
look at last on the noble face of the
man who was to be their enemy and
hail him as their President, in whose
hands their liberties aie sacred, be
cause their freedom is fixed in that
law which he impartialy enforces for
White as well as black. So thg pas
sions of the past melt into good fellow
ship renewed. The spectre of a race
insurrection goes howling down the
wind to come up no more."' mid the
people are not northern, nor southern,
nor eastern, nor western. They are
American. Let the curtain fall upon
the tragedy of our history. Clear the
stage and dismiss the audience, for it
is surely a land of “Union and libeity,
now anil forever, one and inseparable.’*
—Ban I rancisco Alta.
"PATRIOT” TUTTLE.
The I.ntest Developments Concerning; the
Notorious lowa Blatherskite.
There is a strong probability that
General Tuttle, the lowa howler, will
presently luive a more engrossing oc
cupation than distorting military his
tory or defending himself against the
cruel people who remember and tell
the reasons for his leaving the army.
The information comes from lowa that
nobody who knows Tuttle now or dur
ing the war believes that he is entitled
to his pension, and evidence to this ef
tect has been collected and sent on to
the Pension Office, and it is understood
that the Pension Office is satisfied with
the proofs and will proceed against
him civilly to recover the money that
lias been paid him. Although falling
off from ;w log is by common consent
about the easiest thing in the world,
General Tuttle set forth in 18J8 that ho
foil off a log at the battle of Fort
Donelson with such violence as
to permanently injure him, and
as he was on or behind the log in
the line of his duty he w *s allowed a
pension, the arrearages amounting to
the pretty little sum of $6,000 in one
lump, and the monthly payments being
$30 —more than twice wlmt is paid for
total deafness, and a great deal more
than is given to thousands of severely
wounded soldiers. It is the pay of a
totally disabled Lieutenant-Colonel.
It was after Donelson that he was in
command at Natchez, his performances
in which place have been recently ven
tilate. The fact that he waited till 1878
before applying for a pension shows that
jt was many years war beforo
the valiant Tuttle fully realized how
much damage had been done him by
that falkofl tile log. The trWcnOT ' S
said to be conclusive that Tuttle is not
entitled to bis pension, and vs open to
suit and prosecution, but the offici Is
of the Pension Office refuse to say any
thing about the case beyond admitting
that they have heard that Tuttle was
not injured in the war.— Washington
Cor. Chicago Times »
PRESS COMMENTS.
Senator Allison says in his inter
views that lie is not seeking the Presi
dency. It is rumored, however, that
the lowa statesman does not lock his
door to prevent the Presidency from
seeking him. — Chicago News.
Roscoe Conkling says: "I never
realized w hat the phrase, ‘to feel like
a gentleman’ meant until I banished
public affairs from my mini.” Per
haps Lawyer Conkling is a gentleman,
but Statesman Conkling was the su
premest hog of the whole drove of
Solons among whom he was a "boss iu
his day.”— Louisville Times.
The lowa Stale Register, which
championed the blackguard Tuttle in
his abuse of t lie President last summer,
now quite characteristically defends
the blackguard editor of the Minneapo
lis Tribune in his attack upon Mrs.
Cleveland, declaring that "every
word” of the insulting article “was
true.” The Register is the leading Re
publican organ of lowa;— N. Y. Post.
How does General Fairchild
think he feels now? The Pieddenfc
lias traveled live thousand lilies, been
welcomed by the largest eroMhfc*. that
ever welcomed a public man on this
continent; has sampled various bills of
fare from St. Paul to Atlanta, trying
impartially the Northern stew-pot and
the Southern fr; ing-pan, and is still
unpalsied in head, heart and hand.
\\ hile this is so. it is also so that Gen
eral Fairchild, whose name excluded
all others for twenty-four hour frprn
the trump of Lure four months ago,
doesn’t get a toot now.— San Fran
cisco Alta.
A Noticeable Fact.
li is noticeable that whenever and
wherever mistakes have been made in
the selection of unfit persons to hold
office —errors of judgment which, un
der our political system, must always
intervene to a greater or less extent
with all parties .;e President and
members of tlie Cabinet have been
swift to apply a corrective. One of
the cardinal prine.pies underlying the
administration of President Cleveland
is to give the country the serv ices of
tiie very best men within the ranks of
the Democratic part} and in this re
gard he has careful.v scrutinized, not
alone the recommendations of appli
cants for office, iint in cases of import
ant appointments lie has insisted upon
personal interviews in order to deter
mine within his own mind the essen
tials of litneto, and immediate capacity
—Kansas City hints.
CURRENT ITEMS.
—ln Cincinnati policemen receive
medals for acts of heroism.
—lt is said that an old law is still ex
tant in Virginia which imposes a fine of
fifty pounds of tobacco on a man if he
absents himself from church for one
month without valid excuse.
—ln a trial at Philadelphia, the other
day, the fact was brought out that two
young people, who were neighbors, had
been in the habit of doing their court
ing on the roof of a house near by.
—An astonishing firearm has been
introduced in France. It is of French
origin, and is wonderful in the results
obtained. At three thousand feet dis
tance ninety-eight per cent, of the
balls hit a number of baskets repre
senting a company of soldiers. Colo
nel Lobe!, the inventor, stood within
ten feet of a target while one of his
friends fired at it 6,000 feet distant.—
Boston Budget.
—A new method for extracting sugar
from molasses has recently been pro
posed by using wood spirits or methyl
ic alcohol, which has the property of
completely dissolving molasses or
sirup. Sugar and salts may be sepa
rated as oxalates, while the organic
acids and nitric substances remain in
the solution. We would remark that
there is much additional fire risk in this
process, as methylie alcohol is very ini
flammable.—Boston Budget.
—Virginia i 3 the great peanut-hearing
State, and most of the crop is grown in
the counties south and east of Peters
burg. After Virginia, Tennessee and
North Carolina produce the largest
crops. In 1874 Virginia produced 225,-
000, Tennessee 175,000 and North Car
olina 60,000 bushels. In 1884 Vir
ginia’s crop was 1,250,000 bushels,
Tennessee’s 600,000, and North Caro
lina’s 150,000. The average yield is
forty bushels per acre; the average
price $1 per bushel.
—An interesting case of the restor
ation of a person apparently killed by
lightning was recently brought to the
attention of the Academy of Medicine
in the City of Mexico. A large quantity
of cold water was thrown over the man
shortly after he was struck. This
treatment was continued until he
showed signs of consciousness and
complained of the cold. Then seda
tives were administered, and in the
course of sixteen days the patient had
completely recovered. — N. Y. Ledger.
—Several years ago watermelons
were almost unknown in California.
An old Missourian, *who owned forty
acres near Lodi, and who had raised
the fruit in old Missouri, planted his
whole lot to melons. His neighbors
laughed at the idea of melons growing
without rain, and he was called the
boss crank of the country. But the
vines thrived and bore melons, 40,000
of them, and lie cleared $20,000 from
his forty acres; and now LodLds the
great melon district of the Pacific
slope.
—At a recent sale of autographs in
Boston one of Isaac Allerton, who
came here in the Mayflower, fetched
S2B; an autograph pokm of William
Culleu Brya^^k-7; a of Robert
Browning, $2.25; of Henry Ward
Beecher, $1.25; of Jeff Davis, $1.75,
and of General Garfield, 75 cents.
Three pages of manuscript signed by
Henry W. Longfellow were sold fof
$3.25; one page of James
Lowell, $1.85; two pages of Harriet
Martineau. $1.37; two pages
Christine Nilsson, $2.12, and
of Wendell Phillips, 37* cents.,
—When the first electric telegraph!
was established, according to the Brit-1
ish post master-general, the speed of
transmission was from four to five
words a minute on the five-needle in
struments. In 1849 the average rate
for a number of newspaper messages
was seventeen words a minute. The
present pace of the electric telegraph
between London and Dublin, where
the Whetstone instrument is employed,
reaches 4G2 words a minute; and thus
what was regarded as miraculous sixty
years ago lias multiplied a hundred
fold in one-half century. —Arkansaw
Traveler.
—A Chinese temple costing $15,000
has been erected in San Francisco and
dedicated with all the barbaric splen
dor of pagan ritualism. The interior
fittings are of the most elaborate char
acter. One large screen in front of
the shrine of the grand joss is a mar
vel of fine carving. The shrine sur
rounding the idol is sculptured in wood
with such exceeding minuteness as to
be an actual study in its peculiar style
of art. The temple walls are hung
with richly-embroidered silken ban
ners, and an array of warlike pick
staves are ranged along the sides.
■ • »
—-A facetious bishop went to preach
a charity sermon a short time ago in
an Illinois church. The resident
clergyman who was very young, re
ceived him, and, thinking to say some
thing pretty, observed: “I am grieved
that you should have to come on such
a windy day;” but the youth found his
grief misplaced when the bishop re
plied: "Tut, tut, my young friend.
Didn’t I come to raise the wind?”—
A". Y. Ledger.
—At choir rehearsal —"Miss Julie, I’s
gwan ask yo’ ter sing a solo fur the
orffertory t’morrer.” ‘'llo, laws, Mis
tah Boots, I kaint’niess Mrs. Johnsing
’ll sing wid me! I’ssich a little goosey,
I’s skeered at .It soun’ ob m’own
voice.”
■* •
—A Mexican paper stated recently
that mu j ares were selling at the rate
of two for arniedio real in Guadalajara.
The next (lav it corrected the state
ment and said: "For mnjeres read
mangos.” Mujeres means women.
—The Audubon Society for the pro
tection of birds, founded in February,
1886, lias attained a membership roll of
40,000, representing all parts of the
United States and Canada. Not less
notable than this remarkable numer
ical strength is the society’s success in
practically accomplishing the peculiar
mission its proraotei s had in view. The
Audubon workers have not only killed
the barbarous fashion of bird-feather
wearing by women, but they are stead
ily promoting a widespread interest in
bird study, and awakening a general ap
preciation of birds in their relation to
agriculture and other interests of man
kind.—Public Opinion.
THAT BAD MAN.
Soma of tlio Influoncos That Make Sinners
of Us Instead of Saints!
Moral characteristics are too often the
outgrowth of physical causes. If so, should
a man with a diseased body bo trusted with
armies, banks, railroads or other great en
terprises?
In order to strengthen the mind, we must
Strengthen the body. But in aiding physic
al forces, certain muscles are frequently
strengthened, because of their use, at the
sacrifice of the parts of the body unem
ployed.
The oarsman develops the muscles that
are brought into use In rowing, and by con
tinually developing them he is prepared for
the great event. The poet and the artist
study nature to improve the mind and the
eye. .
To enable one to employ all his forces to
the best advantage, the body must be in a
healthy condition, so that all parts may fully
perform their functions, and thus elevate
the mind by strengthening the body.
The irritable man, the unjust man, the
unsuccessful man, the woman in her duties
of life, the counting room defaulters, and
the thousands continually making failures,
receive too littlo i charity, even when the
result is prostration by disease, or sudden
death by suicide, or some terrible crime.
For not until life is ended, and the result of
the post-mortem examination is known,
can the physician declare that the cause was
organic derangement of the system. They
pronounce it Blood-poisoning, melancholy,
loss of vigor, or nervous prost ration. These
so-called diseases, nine times out of ten,
arise from the kidneys, which are diseased so
that they cannot expel the waste matter
from the blood.
There are hundreds of thousands of peo
ple who do not know that the same quantity
of blood that passes through the heart
(this much favored and admired organ),
passes also through the kidneys. If the
latter organs are healthy, injurious matter
is not retained, but the pure blood that has
become filtered by the httio hair-like tubes
■which fill the kidneys, goes to the heart to
be diffused through the entire body, produc
ing health, and again taking up deadly
waste matter, as it goes.
But if the kidneys are diseased, the uric
acid attacks the weakest organ hi the body,
which must eventually give way. It. is then
that the physician and the patient treat
what are really the effects, not the causes.
The Strong point that the proprietors of
Warner’s safe cure make is that their great
remedy cures so many general diseases be
cause it corrects the causes, leavingthe ef
fects to right themselves.
Now, nearly every one who becomes pros
trated, is, if fortunate enough, able to so
curo the attentions of a physician, who
seeks to make an analysis of the fluids
passed. Wo have no doubt that the
founders of this great Warner’s safe cure,
have awakened the medical men from their
lethargy oil the importance of urinalysis.
We are to-day iu receipt of a little book,
Warncr's safe cure pamphlet, in which wo
find very valuable information in regard to
diseases, the causes of their existence and
their cures. It is very ingeniously put be
fore the reader in conversational style, the
reader asking questions, and the publishers
in their answers making very plain somo
points but seldom understood. This matter
will be received with much more interest
than the mass of stuff which is floating
about the country, proclaiming the various
merits of pretended nostrums.
“Oub ice is going off like hot cakes,” says
an ica dealer. Hot cakes of Ice must be
something of a novelty. Texas Siftings.
Ships are frequently on speaking terms,
and they lie to.
A Young Girl’s Grief
at seeing her charms of face and form de
parting, and her health imperiled by func
tional irregularities, at her critical period
of life, was turned to joy and gratitude
after a brief self-treatment* with Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription. It purified 'and eu
riched her blood, gave a healthy activity to
: the kidneys, stomach, bowels and other
organs, and her return to robust health
speedily followed. It is the only medicine
for women, sold by druggists, under a pos
itive guarantee from the manufacturers,
that it will give satisfaction in every case,
or money will be refunded. This guarantee
has been printed on the hot tie-wrapper,
and faithfully carried out for many years.
Banana and bonanza sound a good deai
alike, and they are both mighty slippery.—
Washington Critic.
Better than a Hero.
“What a coward that Major Smith is,”
said Jones to Robinson, “why, the very
sight of gun powder would make him ill.
How did he ever manage to become an offi
cer in the army”? “Don’t say anything
against Smith,” answered Robinson, “he
once saved my life.” “Saved your life!
Nonsense, impossible! What, do you
mean” ? “I mean that I was in the first
stages of consumption; I was losing
strength and vitality every day with the
terrible disease, when Smith advised me to
take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery.
1 had tried all kinds of medicines without
success, and my physician had given me no
ho]>e; yet here J am, as well as ever a man
was, and I owe my life to Smith, and to the
wonderful remedy he recommended.”
A sick burglar is very loth to call a doc
tor, for fear that he may give him up.—
l exas Siftings.
Reinstated !
Hard indeed is the lot of the unfortunate
toiler who, in consequence of ill health,
loses the task which won him and his fam
ily bread! But recovered through the aid
of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, and rein
stated in his lost place, how he must bless
the great restorative! It is incomparable
for debility, rheumatism, kidney and blad
der complaints, fever and ague, and bilious
ness.
Eve ate the apple because she was hun
gry—that is hollow Eve.— Exchange.
Throat Disk vses commence with a Cough.
Cold or Sore Throat. “ Brown's Bronchial
Troches ” give immediate relief. Sold only
in boxes. Price 25 cts.
A poor stick —most of the mucilage at
present in the market. — Puck.
The Pleasure of the bath is greatly en
hanced by using Glenn’s Sulphur Soap.
Hill’s Hair and Whisker Dye, 50c. The best.
When does a. bullet resemble a sheep?
When it grazes.
Don’t hawk, and blow, and spit, but use
Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy.
The milkman generally has the call.—
ruck.
A Chicago druggist retailed over 100,000
“ Tan si IT s Punch ’ ’ 5c Cigars in four months.
No part of a man will stand as many
biows a* Ui» nose.
CAN’T GO BEHIND IILEM.
There is great intensity of the physical
condition sometimes, and there are facts
wiiich we cannot go behind. Iu illustra
tion further of facts which settle the points
of a prompt and permanent cure, the fol
lowing cases arc cited: In 1884 Mrs. Mary
K. Sliced suffered terribly with chronic
neuralgia. She writes from 1110 Maryland
Avenue, Washington, D. C. In the first in
stance she states: “I suffered terribly with
neuralgia in the face; Very severe attack
extending*to back and shoulders; suffered
intensely. Tried St, Jacobs Oil; had parts
well rubbed at night; in the morning all
pain gone, magically." June 10, 1887, she
writes from 224 Eleventh Street, S. W., as
follows: "Four years ago I sent you a vol
untary certificate setting forth the fact that
I had been a great sufferer with neuralgia ifi
my face, neck and shoulders. I obtained a
bottle of St. Jacobs Oil, and after three ap
plications I was entirely relieved from all
pain, and from that time to the present I
nave never had a return. The effect Was
miraculous.” Again, Feb. 6, 1887, Mr. R.
G. Troll, St. Louis, Mo., writes: “In March,
1881, I suffered terribly with neuralgia; had
suffered nearly three years. Applied St.
Jacobs Oil at "8.15 A. M.; at 8.40 took the
rag off'; at OA. M. went to work. In less
than five iiiintltes after that the pain was
gone. The one application cured me, Have
not had return of it since.” Mr. E. \V.
Spangler, York, Pa., June 17, 18s7, writes:
“Years ago had neuralgia; am not subject to
it now. The cure by the use of St. Jacobs
Oil was permanent, There lias been no re
currence of the painful affliction.” Clues.
W. Law, Jr., Pottstown, Pa., April 10, 1887,
writes: “Was troubled for years with neu
ralgia ill neck atul head. Tried St. Jacobs
Oil; had tried different kinds of remedies
without effect, One bottle of the former did tlte
business. No return of pain and aches.” In
almost everv instance the reports are the same.
mu’s unlink
hold including In its t*ango of Instruction
Spelling, Elocution, Collection Laws,
Synonyms, Penmanship, Faults of Speech,
Short Hand, Composition. Commercial Forms,
Punctuation, Capitalization, Parliamentary Rules,
Copyright Law, Letter Writing, Legal Documents.
Give* Forms of Etiquette in Social Life.
Give« Pictorial Illustrations in Oratory.
Give* Ready-Made Speeches for all Occasions.
Give* Forms of Conducting Public Meetings.
Gives Bookkeeping and Interest Tables.
Give* Hundreds c.f Tables of Reference.
Tells What to Do on Important Occasion*.
Tel** llow the Country is Governed.
Tel!* Parents the Very Things they should Know.
Tell* Girls a Thousand Things of Importance.
Tell* Boys .What Leads to Success.
Tell* Teachers How to Govern and Teach.
Ie Fully Illustrated from Beginning to End.
1* the Book of Steadily Largest Sales.
Is Full of Useful, Practical Information.
1* the Form Bock which Students Consult.
le the Educator which Teachers Recommend.
Is the Standard Text Book In Colleges.
Many cheap imitations of this book are in the market.
Sec the original. Ask the book agent to show you
Hill’s Manual by Tho* E. Hill. Don’t let him Impose
on you by showing you another form book, pretending
to boas good as tkis. See the newly illustrated last
edition of Hill’s Manual, just out, and if you want to
sell xhi» splendid book, benefiting your neighbors and
enriching yourself, or sh<>u d you want an elegant
and va uable holliday gift, send for term* and partic
ulars to the
HILL STANDARD BOOK CO.,
103 State St., CHICAGO, ILL.
Ely’s Cream Balm
b tlio he 1 *! mined y for children
I •■“Hiring from
Scold in Head, Snuffles
catarrh.
Apply Balm into each nostril.
COCKLE’S
ANTI-BILIOUS
PILLS.
THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY,
For Liver, Bile, Indigestion, etc. Free from Mercury;
contains only Pure Vegetable Ingredients. Agent—
CUV*. >. V HITT EM TON, NEW YORK.
MEMORY
Vv holly unlike* artificial i*ysten»3.
Any lionlc luarnetl in nnr rundin/i.
K«commende<l by Mark Twain. Rk hard Proctoh,
th« Scientist, Hons. W. W. AfiTon, Judah P. Rknja
min, Dr. Minor, <fcc. Class of 100 (Jolurabia Law stud
ents; two cbissos of 200 e?tch lit Yalo; 4<rt) at University
of Fonn. Ph'la.,4oont Wellesley CMb'gn, and threoiargo
classes at Chautauqua University, Ac. Prospectus fobt
Flit E from PROP. LOIS KITE. 2::; Fifth Avo.. N. Y.
WEAK, NERVOUS PEOPLE
, And others suffering with
Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Kid
u "tSjfeiH Y ant* ail Chronic Diseases
Seprjr/ rp TDr posilively cured by Dr.
famous ELECTRO
MAONKTie KELT. Thou
-3 A btindp in cv* ry State in the
Union havlffAye been cured. FJ.EUTHinTY instantly
felt. Paten >»/ v <ted and sold 10 wars. Whole family can
wear same licit. ELECTRIC SIJSPjtNSOKIKS free with male
belts. Avoid worthless imitations. ELECTRIC TRUSSES
FOR RUPTURE. 700 cured in ’S6. Bend stamp for pamphlet.
DR. W. J. KORNE, Inventor,Jß3 Wabnsli Av.Chlcago.
■ JONES
EIGHT
Ton Wugon Seales,
u Levers, Steel hearing*. Braaa
re Beam and Ream Box for
„ . €SO
- me Scale. For free price !!-*
meDtloo thif paner and add res*
tr.NfS Of BINGHAMTON,
BINUIIA.tITON, N. y.
IthtjT fll! £ HEARD FROM. —Resent
191 ills 1 Mll A railro;t(l extensions hu\ e
Ivlvlcl I rihn developed exceptionally
tine mineral, stock and farming districts. Mnps
and full particulars, free, upon application to C.
H. Warren, Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Paul, Minn.
IN MINNESOTA. -From an ex-
I IflliV clus * v<? S'-nin country, Alinnc-
W I Wld * 1 sotH is t»eing rapidly trans
formed into tl„, finest stock and dairy
state in the Union. Cheap lands still ob
tainable, convenient to railroad. Partlo-
Jl I ®*? free u Pon application to C. If. WAli-
KEN, Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Paul, Minn.
INESS CENTERS.-The
{¥ j pW hullding’ of railroads in a new nnd
fertileoonntry creates many »ew
towns, affording 1 excellent business op
portunities. Particulars regarding such
opportunities in Montana, Minnc ota and
Dakota will be sent upon application to
C. E. WARREN, Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Paul.
SIOO to S3OO ?.„nv ;i
working for ns. Agent* preferred who can furnish
their own horses and give their whole time to tho
business. Spare moments mar be profitably cm
•ployed also. A few vacancies in towns and cities.
B. F. JOHNSON & CO., 1013 Main St., Kb hmond, Va.
GUnDTHANCi SSEuS^
1 The most BIHPI.E mi.l
ViEWBI i COMPLETK SYSTEM in
exinteime. ran be learned by anyone in 10 to 20
da.'S. TITITIOBi I,OW. Handsome salary paid
solicitors. Send stamp for ClßCtn. Alts. TERMS, ete.
(HAS. A. BliTfOX, BUUKYVILLK, 01110.
(AA PEP PROFIT and SAMPLES FREE
llßal /a-rxrtn to mpn canvi,s, <-r3 for Ur. Scott's
v/XjJN 1 Genuine Elrrtrio Belt*, Krti.hr*,
etc. I,»dv agents wanted fnr Electric Corsets Quick
sales. Writeforterms. Dr.Sontt.tls2 Broadway, N. V.
SMM!FARBIERS' : "
or Half Time. ■ Wlili3BßllUuomeorTnivel
lug. GUARANTEE CO., 1120 Fine Street, Sr. Louis, Mo.
ARIIIIKI Morphine lfublt CttTCi In lO
P hM to #« days. .\o pay till core*.!.
VI Bsr 111 JUr. J. Stepbsm, Lebouou, U«
iMEJ o LIVER
BEWARE OP IMITATIONS. ALWATS
ASK FOR 1)R. PIERCE’S PELLETS; DR
LITTLE SUGAR-COATED PILLS.
Befog entirely vegetable, they op
erate without disturbance to the system, diet,
or occupation. Put tip in glass vials, hermeti
cally sealed. Always fresu and reliable. As
a Dilative, alterative# or purg'Ative.
these little Pellets give the most perfect
satisfaction. ....
SI HEiME ££*■
Bllio«* Headache, j?
Dizziness# Gonstlpa- xdJL
tion, Indigestion, 'W,
Bilious Attacks, and all l\
derangements of tho stem yKstfijS'
ftch and bowels, are prompt- jfg,
!y relieved and permanently ***
cured by the use of Dr.
iMcreo’" Pleasant Purgative Pellets.
In explanation tit the remedial power of these
Pellets over SO great a. variety of diseases, it
may truthfully be said that their action upon
tho system is universal, not a gland or tissjfe
escaping their sanative influence, bold by
druggists, 25 cents a vial. Manufactured at tho
Chemical Laboratory of Wori-d's T'ISBKNSaBT*
Meijlcatj Association, Buffalo, N. j .
£assooß
is offered bv the mainifactnr
fy / era of Or. Sage’s Catarrh
If . ' J Bemedy, for a ease of
wf Chronic Nasal Catarrh which
y/TF* g* they cannot cure.
SimPTODH OF CATAKUII.—DuII,
heavy headache, obstruction of the nasal
passages, discharges falling from the head
into the threat, sometimes profuse, watery,
and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, mucous,
purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are
weak, watery, and inflamed; there is ringing
in the ears, deafness, hacking or coughing to
clear the throat, expectoration of offensive
matter, together with scabs from ulcers; the
voice is changed and Ims a nasal twang; tho
breath is offensive; smell and luste arc im
paired; there is a sensation of dizziness, with
mental depression, a hacking cough and gen
eral debility. Only a few of the above-named
symptoms oro likely to be present in any one
case. Thousands of cases annually, without
manifesting half t*f the above symptoms, re
sult in consumption, and end in the grave.
No disease is so common, more deceptive find
dangerous, or less understood by physicians.
By its mild, soothing, and healing properties.
Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy cures the wqist
eases of Catarrh, “cold In the J»e»aW
Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache.
Sold by druggists everywhere; 50 cents.
“I'ntold Agony from Catarrh.”
Prof. W. IJATTSXEti, the famous mesmerist,
of Ithaca, N. Y., writes; “Some ten years ago
i suffered untold agony from chronic nasal
catarrh. My family physician gave me up as
incurable, and said I must die. M.v case was
such a bad one, that every day, towards sun
set, my voice would become so hoarse I could
barely speak above a whisper. In the morning
mv coughing and clearing of my throat would
almost strangle me. By the use of Dr. Sage's
Catarrh Remedy, in three months, I was a well
mail, and the cure has been permanent.”
“Constantly Iluwklng and Spitting.”
Thomas J. Hushing, Eso., S9Ol Pine Street,
St. Louis, Mo., writes: “ I was a great sufferer
from catarrh for three years. At times I could
hardly breathe, and v.as constantly hawking
and- ppittlmr. and for t lio last eight months
could not breathe through the nostrils. I
thought nothing could bo done forme. Luck
ily, f was advised to try Dr. Sago s Catarrh
Remedy, and 1 am now a well man. I believe
It to bo the only sure remedy for catarrh now
manufactured, and one has only to give it f,
fair trial to experience nstoundirg results umt
n permanent cure.”
Three Bottles Cure Catarrh.
Eli Robbins. Runyan P. 0., Columbia Co.,
Pa., says: “My daughter lmd catarrh when
she was five years old, very badly. I saw Dr.
Sago’s Catarrh Remedy advertised, and pro
cui cd n bottle for her, and soon saw that it
helped her; a third bottle effected a perma
nent cure. She is now eighteen years old and
sound and hearty.”
*
quicker than any known remedy. It was the first
and is the only Fain remedy that instantly stops tho
most excruciating pains, allays 1 nil Amm at ion and
cures Congestions, whether or the Lungs, Stomach*
Bowels, or other glands or organs.
No matter how violentorexcruciating the pain the
Kin umalic. Bedridden, Infirm, Crippled, Nervous,
Neuralgic, or prostrated with diseases limy butfer,
RABWAY’S BEADY RELIEF
Hill Affbrd Instant Ense.
Internally, a half to a teaspoonful in half a tum
bler of water, will inn few minutes euro Cramps,
Spasms, Sour Stomach. Nausea, Vomiting, Heart*
bum. Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Sink Headache,
Diarrhea, Colic, Flatulency and all interna 1 pains.
Malaria in its various forms cured a nd prevented.
There is not a remedial agent in the world that will
cure fever and ague and all other fevers (aided by
Radwny’sPillslsoquickly as Rad way's Ready Relief.
ACHES -ZVUSTO I»_A.XIWfcL
For headache (whether sick or nervous), tooth
ache, neuralgia, nervousness and sleeplessness,
rheumatism, lumbago, pains and weakness in the
back, spine or kidneys, pains around tho liver,
pleurisy, swelling of the joints and pains of all
kinds, tl’.e application of Radway’s>Ready Relief
will afford immediate ease, and Its'Continued use
torn few days effect a permanent cure. I'rice.SO
cents. Sold by all druggists.
rfafD *txb
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A. YY. NcCOU.lllfk Hi NON, Cincinnati, 0., A Washington, D.C.
INFORMATION
etc..of Arkansas. Sent free. Addr* •-« Til ON. ESSEX or
T. It. miISOX, Land 1 o»U»ioner», LITTLE ROCK, A Kit.
TO $8 A DAY. Samples worth $1.50
rH "Ta FREE. Lines not under the horse’* feet. Writ#
ituEivsTEit safety rein roller co., Hoiiy,*ick.
-TI DY. Book-keeping, Penmanship, Arith-
SsyKsSi me tic, Shorthand, etc., thoroughly taught
by mail. Circulars* free. BRYANT’S COLLEGE, Hufft»lo,N Y.
BflljC for Poultry, Granulated Bone and
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l’rioe I.lst. YORK CIIKMIC.U. WORKS, York, Pa.
isoSkr Jo 1B ing articles in the world. 1 sample Frr*.
S#feW**Addre.'3 JA I URUXSOX. Detroit. Mich.
FOR AT J. s:t» a ri*ek amtPipeniiM
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V c. lIEIgSK, Box lis;, Mrw York.
an k i: 116Si^
WHEN MU IT! NO TO ADVEBTISEKS PLKASfC
.Isle that 1 ih: miw Uw ACvtrilsen>eut In this
paper.
CoKsuiPrsnnti
Colds,
Coughs,
Sore Throat,
Hoarseness,
Stiff Neck,
Bronchitis,
Catarrh,
Headache,
Toothache,
Rheumatism,
Neuralgia,
Asthma,
Bruises,
Sprains,