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I |BW AN OLD STORY.
When the spring was beginning and May
day was nigh,
On a country girl spinning the king cast
his eye;
Fair flourish the roses anear the court
wall,
But the rose of the hedges is fairest of all
“Let me hide my fool’s face ’neath a lying
tombstone,
, For the world’s gone a-maying, I mope
here alone,”
► Said the jester, who sat on the steps of
v the throne.
But the blossoms will fade which the
thoughtless have torn,
And the cheeks of a maid will grow with
ered and worn,
Why should there for such a small matter
be woe,
Since each hedge, and each village, such
roses will show?
“King! go to your wine; pretty maiden!
go moan!
| When its meat hath been mumbled we
leave the picked bone,”
Said the jester, who sat on the steps of
the trone.
, Yet a peasant is grinding a knife sharp
and strong,
And silently winding his way through the
throng—
Then the dogs must be driven from lick
ing the gore
Os a monarch struck down at his own pal
ace door.
“Though her name be a gibe, and her altars
o’erthrown,
In the end, gossip Justice will seize on her
own,”
Said the jester, who sat on the steps of
the throne.
—Edward Sydney Tylee in Temple Bar.
A FAMOUS TRUCKING SECTION.
The Rich Region That Has Been Devel
r oped in Southeastern Virginia.
The famous trucking in the vicinity of
Norfolk, Va., lies principally in portions
of Norfolk, Nausemond and Princess
Anne counties. Various causes combine
in rendering the section especially suit
able for the trucking business. The soil
being a light sandy loam becomes warm
early in the spring, is readily influenced
by fertilizers, which are held by a clay
subsoil from three to four feet beneath
the surface. The influence of the salt
„ atmosphere of the ocean to a great ex-
■ tent counteracts frost in early spring,
F while proximity to the gulf stream ren
ders the winter milder and the spring
earlier than at other points of the same
latitude. The relative situation and ac
cessibility by water to great northern
markets contribute to the desirability of
the section.
Tire well-known fact that Norfolk
truck reaches market in better condition
than that from many other sections is
due to the fact that the bulk of it is
hauled in spring wagons to the wharves
' and thence forwarded without further
* transfer by water transportation. With
so many favorable conditions it may be
taw’readily seen why this section has
wonderfully developed since the
w period when trucking was systematically
begun there, not over twenty years ago.
Nearly all of the truckers are natives
who own their own farms, inherited
from ancestors, and all of them have
been made well-to-do or wealthy by the
business which they follow. I never
knew of one who made a failure. Some
times the losses are very heavy on one
article by reason of depression in the
market, but these are invariably offset
by good prices received for other pro
duce. Some idea may be formed of the
fluctuation in prices when it is known
that in the case of an article, kale, so
| largely produced there, the price varies
r according to circumstances from 3 cents
to $1.50 per barrel.
Large experience, system and undi
vided attention, added to natural advan
tages, produce the satisfactory results
spoken of rather than any peculiar
method of cultivation. The ordinary
system of hot-bed culture obtains and
vegetation is forced by the judicious use
of fertilizers, without which the busi
ness would prove a failure, for though
the soil is admirably adapted to truck
ing it is what is generally denominated
poor land. The business is conducted
■ by some parties upon a very extensive
scale. The Young strawberry farm,
“ two miles from Norfolk city, is the larg-
■ est in the world. A few years since a
? Mr. Ames, of Nansemond county, sold
half of his potato crop for $20,000; what
he realized for the balance I did not
learn. The same season Mr. Ambrose
Lindsay, the largest trucker in the same
county, disposed of his crop of the same
vegetable for $90,000. —Norfolk (Va.) Cor.
Philadelphia Times.
The Mania of Feuds.
German papers occasionally allude to
the irrepressible feuds of our Kentucky
mountaineers, whose penchant for self
f help they seem to consider a character
istic of anglo-American manhood in a
state of nature. But how would they
reconcile that theory with the law-abid
ing conservatism of the same variety oi
the genus homo in Tennessee and west
ern North Carolina? Is the feud mania,
like milk-sickness and goitre, the pro
duct of special highland districts, or,
like consumption, a hereditary and
slightly contagious, though not epi
demic, disease’—Dr. Felix L. Oswald.
a
The Phillosophy of "Cram.”
’ The exercise of “cram” before examin
ations at college has been much ridiculed
and denounced. It is defended by Pro
fessor W. T. Harris in The Forum. “Os
all my school discipline, I have found
this one of the most useful. The abil
ity to throw one’s self upon a difficulty
with several times his ordinary working
power is required again and again in
practical life on meeting any consider
able obstacles.”—Chicago Times.
“Sweet Grass” an Indian Perfume,
“Sweet grass” is used by the Indians as
/ a perfume. It has a long blade like
timothy, is striped, and when dried
smells like sweet myrrh.
THE SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES: WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 1. 14*6
Chinese Tea-Drinking in Ban Francisco.
You drink without meat or bread at
this place, where I advise you to take
tea. Your food is fish and candy and
nuts. You will not miss the meat or
bread on the table. And this, I think, is
about the highest praise I can write
down of the delights in spending a
25 cents for a taste of pure and in adulter
ated tea. The dinner, or “tea,” is, I as
sure you, made up entirely of fish, fruit
and nuts; and such queer and curious
candied fruits!
You see no Americans here, except
those who come tearing up the brass
stairs with a very red guide-book and
very bad manners. Some British sea
captains, who know tea, loaf about, but
are very quiet. And so it rests you here.
You see groups of Chinese merchants,
or travelers, come in, sit on a table and
take tea as at home exactly. They do
not like chairs, and so they double their
legs in all sorts of ways. They pay
;reat respect to strangers, and all will
rise and run in a body to help you if
need be, or to give any information.
They always bow gravely and respect
fully as they come in or go out.
Tea is brought in a large cup of the
thinnest and finest blue porcelain. You
may smell of the tea, finger it, tear it
all to bits if you like. A man stands by
with a brass teakettle of a curious old
fashion filled with boiling water. This
is poured on your tea at your pleasure.
Then you put a little red porcelain lid on
your large cup. Then in about half a
minute you pour the tea from your big
cup into a very small and very fine cup,
of an egg-shell size and thickness. In
the course of half an hour you may, if
you like, have as many as three cups of
hot water poured on your tea. But lam
told that a real good Chinese tea tippler
only has one; takesit strong and straight,
you see.—Joaquin Miller in Chicago
Times.
The Clam Cure in Connecticut.
In some parts of Switzerland the na
tives make their fortunes with what
they call the grape cure. The system is
gravely advertised, and resident physi
cians administer the proper quantities of
fresh grapes. You go to a mountain vil
lage, enjoy the fine scenery and bracing
air, eat grapes for a certain number of
weeks, and are sent home in excellent
health. Enterprising Connecticuters are
proposing to advertise the clam cure
in a similar manner. The medicinal ef
fects of eating New London clams have
never been adequately exploited.
The extraordinary recovery of ex-Presi
dent Arthur, who got well as soon as he
iiad eaten fried clams, is cited as an illus
tration. Most men about town know
the virtue of a cocktail of clam juice
before breakfast. A diet of raw clams
is one of the best remedies for dysppesia.
In the clam cure, as in all other cures,
it is necessary to have some faith as an
adjunct; but this can be supplied by the
publication of certificates from patients
who have been benefitted by a sojourn
on the Connecticut coast. —New York
Star.
The Care of a King’s Heart.
A curious ceremony, recalling to one’s
mind the customs of the middle ages,
took place a few days ago at Munich.
King Ludwig’s heart, which had been
i removed from his body previous to the
embalmment of the latter, was placed at
the time in a magnificent silver-gilt urn
specially made for the purpose and filled
with spirits of wine. The 2d inst. all the
bells in the city began to toll, flags were
half-masted, minute guns fired, and shops
closed, while the urn containing the ill
fated monarch’s heart, accompanied by
an immense military escort, was borne
in solemn procession through the streets
to the Western Railway station, whence
it was conveyed by special train to Al
totting, about half an hour’s ride by rail
from the capital. On arrival there it was
confided to the monks of the ancient
monastery of the place, who have al
ready in their keeping the hearts of a
long line of King Ludwig’s predecessors.
—London Letter.
Oliver Cromwell’s Cap.
An interesting heirloom, known as ths
“Oliver Cromwell cup," has recently
been the subject of litigation. The cup
in question was presented by Oliver
Cromwell to his son-in-law, Gen. Ireton,
and was given by Gen. Ireton to Dame
Whorwood. A descendant of this lady,
one Dr. Whorwood, bequeathed “to
Lord Sherborne and his heirs my Oliver
Cromwell cup presented to our common
ancestor, Dame Whorwood for an heir
loom.” Unfortunately, however, for the
carrying out of the doctor’s intentions,
the late Lord Sherborne died before the
testator, and Mr. Justice North has re
cently held the cup did not pass to the
present Lord Sherborne, but that the
legacy lapsed, inasmuch as the the testa
tor intended to give the cup to the indi
vidual who at the date of the will was
Lord Sherborne. —Pall Mall Gazette.
The Snail Harvest in France.
The snail harvest lias just begun in
France. The “poor man’s oyster” is so
appreciated that Paris alone consumes
some forty-nine tons daily, the best kind
coming from Grenoble or Bergundy.
The finest specimens are carefully reared
in an escargotiere, or snail park, such as
the poor Capuchin monks planned in by
gone days at Colmar and Weinbach,
when they had no money to buy food,
and so cultivated snails. But the ma
jority are collected by the vine-dressers
in the evening from the stone heaps,
where the snails have assembled to en
joy the dew.—Chicago Herald.
Value of Crops in England.
In the list of realized sales per acre ol
cultivated land in England, mushrooms
lead with 500 pounds sterling as the
average produced. Following come fil
berts, 200 pounds sterling; onions, 192
pounds sterling; black currants, 168
pounds sterling; strawberries, 150 pounds
sterling; gooseberries, plums, early let
tuce and early potatoes, 100 pounds Ster
ling each. —Boston Budget.
The Belief in Omens.
The belief in omens is perhaps, after
ill, the most incurable of all supersti
tions. The statistics of a French insur
ance company demonstrate that any de
lay in the departure of railway travelers
stimulates the sale of accident policies,
even though that delay should imply no
suspicion of negligence on the part of
the railroad company. A Parisian buys
a ticket to Brussels, steps by mistake
into a Havre train discovers his blunder
at the next station, and buys an insur
ance ticket before venturing to start in
the right direction. The Brussels road
may be the safest in Europe, but he ac
cepts his mistakes as a hint that Provi
dence interfered to “head him back," as
the Texans would express it. It may be
s “warning" and he wants his family to
be on the safe side. Nine out of ten
gamblers are biased by similar misgiv
ings. There are roulette players who
will quit the table in deference to the
warning of an “unlucky number." Oth
ers will snatch off their money at once if a
fellow-gambler should happen to put his
stake on the same chance; “loaded cards
break.” A big hit, too, is accepted as a
hint that bad luck has readied its climax
and is about to change. Intrepid roughs,
business men of an otherwise consistent
rationalism, own the influence of fore
bodings; the traveler Gerstacker men
tions a big-fisted Arkansas backwoods
man who amazed him by the confession
that he was “always looking for trouble
after hearing the whistle of a kildeer,” a
sort of small sand-piper. The philoso
phers of antiquity, historians who never
waste a word on the mythological nur
sery tales of their countryman, think it
necessary to mention the omina preced
ing every critical event in the history of
their nation. —Dr. Felix L. Oswald,
The Plain of Gennesareth.
The sea of Galilee is probably never
more beautiful than at this season of the
year. Wherever its shores are culti
vated they are one mass of waving
grain. The chief beauty, however, lies
in the oleander bushes that fringe the
lake all around. Just at this season they
are brilliant with flaming flowers. They
grow in clumps about ten feet high, and
the flowers are so plentiful that each
clump has the aspect of a large bouquet
arranged with naturalness that defies
competition. The plain of Gennesareth
is partly cultivated, but still retains its
desolate appearance. Huge weeds make
impassable barriers along its many
marshy’ brooks.
This plain, from El Mejdel (ancient
Magdala) to Khan Meiryeh, is one of
the most highly favored spots in the
world from the agricultural standpoint.
Well might Josephus speak of it as “the
ambition of nature;” there never was
more fertile soil, and copious springs
send perennial streams meandering in
every direction. This spot will be a
mine of gold to some wise capitalist as
soon as a good government will guaran
tee perfect security. The thorn trees
which we met at Jericho seem to thrive
along the whole course of the Jordan,
and are everywhere the home of nu
merous pigeons. These are especially
plentiful on the plain of Gennesareth,
and are very tame.—Cor. Hartford
Courant.
The Importation of Weeds.
Americans inform us that about 220
species of weeds have been imported into
their country, mostly from the British
islands. In 1837 there were said to be
only 137. The common plantain is
known aming the Indians as the “Eng
glishman’s foot,” as though following
the steps of the white settlers. The
common yellow toadflax was, it is said,
introduced by a Mr. Ranstead as a gar
den flower, and is now known as the
Ranstead weed. In 1788, it had overrun
the pastures in the inhabited parts of
Pennsylvania, and was the cause of bit
ter complaints.
Chickweed is said to have been intro
duced as bird-seed, and the Scotch this
tle arrived in a bedtick filled with thistle
down. Feathers being cheap, the bed of
down was replaced by feathers, and the
former thrown by the wayside. The
seed soon found a congenial home. There
is a troublesame American water-weed,
however (Anacharis alsinastrum), which
has avenged our transatlantic cousins
threefold by choking our ponds, rivers
and canals. Another little intruder from
the cape (azolla pinnata) may be trouble
some. It is a charming little aquatic,
and most interesting under the micro
scope. Some one had thrown a hand
ful of it on a pond we wot of, where the
common duckweed (lemna) flourished;
but azolla quickly monopolized the
whole surface and crowded out the duck
weed. —Chamber’s Journal.
Mingling of Different Bloods.
Every individual must be regarded as
a very complex mingling of widely dif
ferent bloods. To go no farther back
than the grandparents he must be com
posed of at least fourteen different na
tures. It is not to be wondered at that
such a multiplicity of combinations
should lead to great variations. The
wonder seems rather that members of a
family should resemble one another as
much as they undoubtedly do. Some
times in face, sometimes in form, fre
quently in the gait, gesture, and tone of
voice, family peculiarities make them
selves apparent. To many of these traits
Mr. Francis Galton has devoted his at
tention. His latest interest has been
shown in the color of the eye. The tints
of the eye, for the purposes of his in
quiry, were divided into “light,” “hazel
and dark gray," and “dark.” “The
heritage of peculiarity” in relation to
eye-color for any child was found to
amount to one-fourth from each parent
and one-sixteenth from each grand
nt. —Chicago News.
Kitty Was Provided, Also.
A little girl was sitting at a table, oppo
site a centleman with a waxed mustache.
A;: vi gazing at him for several moments
she exclaimed: “My kitty has got smell
ers, too!”
Rivalry Between the East and Went.
“This question of the rivalry of the
east and west,” continued the gentle
man, “grows more important every year.
The Atlantic seacoast, with New York as
its head center, becomes more and more
antagonistic to the interests of the west,
and it is only a question of time when
there will be a great party of the east op
posed to one of the west and south. The
elements for such parties are forming,
and it seems to me when they crystal
lize that the reign of New York will be
for the time over, and that the great
west will rule. The west has now the
major part of the voting population of
the United States and it is in the infancy
of its growth, while the east is far ad
vanced."
“Might such a state of affairs lead to
the moving of the national capital to
the west or center of the country?”
“No! Washington City will continue
to be the capital of the United States as
long as the Union lasts. The railroad
and the telegraph have made all parts of
the country near to each other, and
there is not the reason for a central
capital as in the past. If you will look
over the world you will find that the
great capitals are seldom in the center
of the population over which they gov
ern. London is in a corner of Great
Britain, Paris is in the north of France,
Pekin is in the east of China, Berlin is in
the north of the German empire, and St.
Petersburg is aw’ay off on one side of
Russia. Then there is too much money
invested in Washington, both by poli
ticians and the people, to ever allow of a
change of the capital. The senators and
representatives now own private prop
erty in Washington running high into
the millions, and there will always be
large individual interests owned by the
men who control such movements. The
government buildings of Washington are
worth at least $100,000,000, and the
parks are worth many millions more.
Then there are the historical associations
of nearly 100 years of our government.
No, I don’t think the capital can ever be
moved, and I don’t think it should be."
A Few Facts Concerning Coral.
The value of coral depends on its color
and size. The white or rose-tinted vari
ety stands highest in popular esteem,
perhaps chiefly because it is the rarest.
It is mostly found in the straits of Mes
sina and on some parts of the African
and Sardinian coasts. The bright red
coral, in which the. polyps are still living
when It is fished up, stands next in
value. Dead coral has a duller tint, and
is consequently sold at a lower price.
Two entirely different substances bear
the name of black coral. One of them
is not, properly speaking, coral at all,
and it is commercially worthless, as it
breaks into flakes instead of yielding to
the knife, though it is often sold as a
costly curiosity to foreigners. The other
is the common red coral which has un
dergone a sea change, probably through
the decomposition of the living beings
that once built and inhabited it. It is
not much admired in Europe, but in In
dia it commands high prices, so that
large quantities of it are exported every
year.
These are the four important distinc
tions of color, though they, of course,
include intermediate tints which rank
according to their clearness and bril
liancy. The size is a still more impor
tant matter. The thickness of the stem
of the coral plant—we use the commer
cial and entirely unscientific expression
—determines its price, and many a
branch of red coral is valued more highly
on account of its thickness than a smaller
piece of the choicer rose color. The
reason for this is clear. A large,
straight piece of material affords an op
portunity to the artificer; a crooked one,
if it is only bulky enough, can at least
be turned into large beads; mere points
and fragments can only be used for
smaller ones, or made into those horns
which are said to be invaluable against
the evil eye, but which do not command
a high price in the market, perhaps be
cause it is overstocked.—Saturday Re
view.
Providing for New York’s “Unwashed.”
New York provides liberally for its
“great unwashed” in a fleet of eleven
free baths which are moored at different
points in the East and North rivers.
These baths are big brown houses, look
ing like half of a packing box, with two
doors on the land side from which egress
and ingress is had to the baths. These
boxes are moored with two strong cables
and ride at anchor. The largest of them
is at the battery, and and resembles the
old picture-book representations of
Noah’s ark, with the American flag fly
ing from the peak.
Access to these baths is had by means
of a broad gang-plank, and an unruly
rush is prevented by the presence of a
big, good-natured policeman. The baths
areopen from 5 in the morning until 9
at night, and are a popular resort for all
the men and boys who can not go
to the beaches. They are clean, undgr
control of bathmen, and those frequent
ing them are subject to rules and regula
tions governing them. At the battery is
a free bath for girls and women at a
short distance from that of the boys, but
at the other places alternate days are
given to women.—Cor. Chicago Journal.
The pain and misery suffered by those who
are afflicted with dyspepsia are indescribable.
The distress of the body is equalled or sur
passed by the confusion and tortures of the
mind, thus making its victims sutler double
affliction. The relief which is given by Hood’s
Sarsaparilla has caused thousands to be
thankful for this great medicine. It dispels
the causes of dyspepsia, and tones up the
digestive organs. Try Hood’s Sarsaparilla
LIVER PILLS.
Use Dr. Gunn’s Liver Pills for sallow
complexion, pimples on tbe face and hilliout
ness. Never sickens or gripes. Only one
for a dose. Samples free at E. J. Keitfer’s
Solomons & Co.'s, O. Butler,'s, and Lippman
Bro’s.
ItteMcaL
TeJenEy’sT
CARBOLIC SALVE
The most Powerful Healing
Ointment ever Discovered.
Henry’s Carbolic 4alve cures
Sores-
Henry’s Carbolic Salve allays
Burns.
Henry’s Carbolic Salve cures
Bruises.
Henry’s Carbolic Salve heals
Pimples.
Henry’s Carbolic Salve cures
Piles.
Henry’s Carbolic Salve heals
Cuts.
Ask for Henry's—Take No Other.
OF COUNTERFEIT;. a*
SUFFERING
WOMEN!
Beat! what the Great Methodist
Divine and Eminent Phy
sician says of
Dr. J. BRADFIELD’S
Female Regulator!
ATLANTA, GA., Feb. SO, 1884.
Db. J. Bradfhcld—Dear Sir: Some fifteen
yearsagol examined the recipe of Female
Regulator, and carefully studied authorities
In regard to Its components, and then (as
well as now) pronounced it to be the most
scientific and skillful combination of the
really reliable remedial vegetable agents
known to science, to act directly on the
womb and uterine organs, and the org.ns
and parts sympathizing directly with these;
and, therefore, providing a speci/lc remedy for
all diseases of the womn, and of the adjacent
organs and parts. Yours truly,
JESSE BORING, M. D., D. D.
taU CAUTION !-®«
The Country is Flooded with quack nos
trums, containing IRON and other injuri
ous ingredients, which claim to cure
everything even
We say to you, if you value your life,
Beware of all such!
Bradfield's Female Regulator
Is a purely vegetable compound, and is only
intended for the FEMALE SEX. For their
peculiar diseases It is an absolute
SPECIFIC.
Sold by all druggists. Send for our treatise
on the Health and Happiness of Womar
mailed free, which gives all particulars.
The Bradfield Regulator Co..
Box 28. Atlanta, Ga
PROVISIONS AND GKOCKHIr.
Ginger Preserves
The regular old time Pre
served Ginger,
IN WHOLE, HALF AND QUARTER POTS
at
A. M & C.W. WEST’S
SWEET PICKLES
Celery Sauce,
Salad Uressing,
Queen Olives,
Mixed Pickles,
Chow Chow,
—AT—
GEOKGE & GOOuMAN’U
Cor. State and Whitaker streets.
3 and 4 QLLAJR/T
WOODEN MEASURES,
—ONLY AT
The Dime Store.
Whitaker! street.
Texas Land Claims.
SOLDIERS who served in the Atmy of
Texas in the war with Mexico were en
titled to grants of trom 320 to 1920 acres, and
emigrants from 820 to 4805 acres.
In many Instances these lands are nnclaim
d by the true owners, and are possessed by
trespassers, but yet may be recovered by
prompt action.
Parties whose relatives emigrated to Texas
in early times, or were soldiers in her army,
are invited to apply tome for Information,
stating the name of the person under whom
they claim, »u<i the names and residences of
his heirs.
have an Abstract of all the valid grants of
Texas lands ever made by Bpain, Mexico or
Texas, and can fn nlsh chains of titles on
short notice. JAMES B. GOFF,
Attorney at Law,
Sampson Building, Austin. Texas.
B<ew 64p. Illustrat’d Catalog 188 ft
freest ever printed, now ready,
repreaenta over 900 New, origi
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m Desks, Tables, Chairs,
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Prices Guaranteed. Catalog
free. Postage 4c. No postal*
Printing.
IS fall Business. 1355
GEO. N. NICHOLS
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Blank Books
D! ,1 | rw Such as M igatines, Period
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MucalliHous Ji'i
Book and Pamphlet Printing.
RULING PAPEU,
OR ANY WORK IN
Printing or Binding.
The Celebrated OLD BKRRHHrRE anl L.
L. BROWN’S LINEN gEDJER PIPER,
with Papers of other makes, in full stock,
with every other material needed.
Thankfully received and
1 filled satisfactorily.
No. 93 1-2 BAY STREET*
Telephone 39.
Not responsible for poor work done by
other parties.
lapjrtut i! b Mirc'nw,
sum m ms susoi
Now is tha time to order your supplies of
Office Stationery,
Letter Heads,
Note Heads,
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THE
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ta Unity Ziuhlhhfflsat
Is preoared to do every description of MER
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Our facilities are ample to enable us to ex
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STAIR RAILS, BALUSTERS, NEWELS,
Ete.
ARTISTIC WOODEN, IRON and BLATE
MANTELS, and a full and complete line of
BUILDINGand FINISHING HARDWARE!
in connection with my usual heavy stock of
PAINTS, OILS, GLASS,
Railroad, Steamboat, Ship and Mill Supplies:
Write tor prices and estimates.
ANDREW HANLEY,
Cor. Whitaker, York and President Sts.
Steamboat Supplies!
MILL SUPPLIES,
RAILROAD SUPPLIES
Paints, Oils, aste.
GLAS -, PUTTY, BRUSHES. Ac.
LIME, PLASTER, TALLOW, &O.
Before purchasing elsewhere call and ex
amine
A_. 13. Collins & Co.;
(Successors u> John Oliver.,
NO 5 whitakertstreet;
Batchelor’s Celebrated Hair Dye.
ESTABLISHED 1881.
Best the wor d.
Harmless! Reliable! In.
NUkutiuicoiis' No di sap
▼ pointmeut, no ridiculous
1 t * nlg * re,ne( i’ es m
\ ba d dyes; leaven
\ the hair soft and beautiful
Black or Brown. Ex
*4 planatory circulars sent
) postpaid in soaled enve-
Y Topes, on application, men-
jfcjSUMyfflSfeY' tinning this paper. Sold
by al 1 druggists. Applied
‘aMWfcw&L Xpert* at
Bitaaor’s Wig Faetory.
V-fifCSW?. SOEastlOtbSt,N.Y.City.
~. This Paper l» on File
I I And Advertising OibroctoA*
IJVVIVIVUJ f u and aU other netaspapert
A iri&rDTIC IMO I can bemadean the. moetfaeof
abu termt at the poputae
I nnß Agenejigf
yKEYSTONE/ H. P. HUBBARD,
\ r > Mew Haven,
\$UCCE$$ < f fwbiK, H (h. towrparrt
L*— —" 4 DlmUir- .1 O.
7