The Columbia sentinel. (Harlem, Ga.) 1882-1924, July 29, 1886, Image 7

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A PILOT'S LIFE Dangers of the’ Man who Guides Ships to Harbor. Qualified Seamen who are Invested with Great Responsibility. TVhether there be dangers in the sea, |JiV or air, the perilous nature of a pilot’s duties makes it imperative that he meet it with a cheerful alacrity, for the e»yrit iu tariff existing in the guild is imperious in its influence. Cast among the broth erhood the pilot must not lose, or else he i s indeed a ruined man. Except in the matter of discipline, full command of the vessel is vested in the pilot. His respon sibility is great; the general rule being that no owner or master of a ship is an ,werable to and other person for any loss or damage occasioned by the fault or incompetency of a qualified pilot acting in charge of the ship when she is within the district of the pilot and when his employment is compulsory; though the presence of a pilot docs not absolve a master from the consequences of any in jury that may be caused by his own care lessness or ignorance. He must be ready at call, and under all circumstances, to face alike the winter’s cold, blinding sleet and the summer’s heat, the storm and the sunshine; and blow high or low, in fair weather or in foul, the pilot must he at his station to guide safely all in coming vessels. And in Boston Bay this is particularly true. Said a man who has lived all his life on Cape Cod to a writer in the Bos ton Record-. “We have had piled up on the shore during the past 100 days many vessels which are a total loss. The men who navigated them were saved, thanks to the gallantry of the life saving force, but thousands of dollars worth of prop erty are buried in the sand. What the further losses will be no man can tell, but we do know that unskillful seamanship and an imperfect knowledge of the coast is responsible for much of the loss. But while it is true that there has been this large loss, hundreds of vessels have sailed jafelvby been brought to an chorhf" a Secure harbor. I have not heard of a vessel's going ashore that had a pilot on board, and I do not think there has been one.” It is perhaps needless to say that the pilot is a qualified seaman, thorough in all nautical accomplishments; for he can “hand, reef and steer,” navigate by sun, moon or star, and with the “marks and deeps’ ’ of the lead line, familiar to him as his own handwriting, he knows the intricacies and varying depths of the many channels. A technical knowledge of all rigs, too, is his, besides a sign manual by which he can make himself understood by sailors of all nations. How relieved in mind must be the mas ter of a great ocean steamer, with its hundreds of passengers and its precious freight, after battling with the stormy Atlantic for days, with scarcely a single peep at the sun, and in doubt about his reckoning and position, to see, away off shore, one of these little pilots vessels making her way towards him. Gallantly she holds her course, heeling and right ing, pitching and ascending, and as she moves up under the snug canvas, looking like a boxer stripped for the fight, there is seemingly a sentient power in her every motion. It is the skill and training of years that puts the little craft so easily within two cables’ length under the lee of the steamer. Now comes the crucial test, for the pilot must board the waiting craft. The agile crew must grasp the little boat from the deck, and poising it on the rail, in the very nick of time, launch it over into the seething foam alongside. In jumps the pilot and his two oarsmen and soon the tiny canoe can be seen—now poised in midair on an an gry wave crest and anon deep in the dangerous hollow, coming straight for the ship. One misstroke, the slightest weakening of a nerve, and the hardy fel lows would be engulfed in the watery chasm with no stone to mark their graves. It is with delicate care and skill that the frail craft is ranged alongside when a rope 18 thrown, by which, grasping with mus cles of steel, up the side the pilot springs, hand over hand, until he alights on the deck. Long Sentences. The London Figaro says: “Mr. Gladstone’s longest reported sentence, if I mistake not, was found to contain 157 words. This was until lately thought to be the longest on record. But now it appears that Senator Edmunds has beat en it with a sentence 168 words long. The Grand Old Man, however, still pos sesses an average which has not been surpassed. A statistician, to whom time is clearly no object,hasdiscovered a speech of the Premier’s in which there are ten sentences which contain an average of seventy-two words apiece.” Worried Over Labor Troubles. Tramp— You see, your Honor, these labor troubles Judge—Nonsense! Labor has never troubled you any. Tramp— It has troubled me day and Sight for years, your Honor. Judge— At night? Tramp— Yes. I lay awake at nights studying how to avoid work. Judge— I’ll spare you that loss of alcep for ninety days.- Call Emigrant! at Caatle Garden. The first thing a newly-landed emi grant gets to is the water tank, says a New York letter. “How good it tastesl” say one and all, as they stop be fore the Croton water faucet and drain the bright tin cup dry. And the first thing bought is apples, which lie tempt ingly on the fruit stalls in the inclosure. Beyond the rail is a large ampitheater where are innumerable wooden seats and three big stoves. In spaces beyond, whole families congregate after landing for days until their place of destination is determinad, and perhaps because some of the party are tdo exhausted by the voyage to go further. Connecting are large lavatories for men and women, and stationary tubs where they can wash their clothing. In pleasant weather Battery Park affords a pleasant lounging place for the women and children, but in winter and such weather as this, they re main inside by the stoves. The place is clean, and so large that 2,000 emigrants have room without crowding. VeVy few of any ship’s load but what, after passing inspection, leave at nnce for their place of destination determined on before leaving home. Seldom any but the Irish remain in the city. Often whole troops of Bulgarians are sent to the wood cutting districts of Pennsylvania, while agents from mines in the West are wait ing to take parties of Hungarians and Poles away. So far as the city is con cerned, but little addition is made to its population by the arrival of emigrants, as they usually leave here within a few hours after landing. Among the immigrants arriving on every ship are scores of young girls who seek America to better their fortunes and support those left at home. On their arrival at Castle Garden, these girls are well cared for by the authorities, and so far as possible protected from designing persons who seek their ruin. Oft-times these are among the ship’s passengers and have ingratiated themselves into the con fidence of their unsuspecting prey before they reach the New World.— Rochester _ Union. Ha S Been There. “I was a tramp for several years,” said a buggy washer at one of the livery sta bles the other day, “and I might have been on the road yet but for the circum stance which deprived me of this left leg at the knee. A tramp with a wooden leg would be nowhere, while I get around the stables at a fair gait.” “What was the circumstances?” “Well, seven or eight of us were tramping together through the oil regions of Pennsylvania, and one day’ one of the gang stole a can out of a shed in the woods. It contained nitro-glycerine, but none of us knew the article then. He carried it for about an hour, when we all bunked down in the shade for a noon day nap. Some of us were half asleep, and we were all packed together under one tree, when the man picked up a stone and began hammering at the can. I was lobking at him out of one eye, and I was wondering whether the can held oil or lard, when all at once the vaults of Heaven fell to earth with a crash. Half an hour later, when I came to, I was lying in the bushes 200 feet from the tree, and my foot, ankle and leg were a mass of pulp.” “There had been an explosion?” “You bet! There was a hole in the ground into which you could have dumped a cottage, and the big tree was a heap of kindling-wood. Out of the eight of us five could not be found, and I suffered the least injury of any of the wounded. All that was gathered to gether to represent live men were some bits of clothing and leather—not o.vcr two quarts. That was a corker on me. Whenever I see a stray can lying around I lift my hat, take a circle to the right or left, and pensively observe: ‘Not any to-day, thank you—l’ve been there!’ ” Detroit Free Pre»». The Warlike Apache. A correspondent of the Chicago Inter- Ocean says: The Apache is not only the most warlike of American Indians —and I do not except the Ute Indians, the Sioux, nor the Comanches—but he is also the most skilled in war. Trained to an endurance which would be unattainable in a more endurable country; with the eye of a hawk, the stealth of a coyote, the courage of a tiger, and its merciless ness, he is the Bedouin of the new world. He has horscS that will exist on a blade of grass to an acre, and will travel 110 miles in twenty-four hours thereby with out falling dead on the homestretch. He knows every foot of his savage country better than you know the interior of your parlor. He finds water and food where the best of us would starve to death for the want of both. More than 100 different plants yield him intestinal revenue. He has fastnesses from which no force can dislodge him; and when you lay siege he quietly slips out by some back door canon, and is off liko thistle down on the wind. The dangerousness of an Indian is in inverse ratio to his food supply. The Apache, born to starvation, his whole life a constant fight to wrest a living from vixenish nature, as well as to wrest life from his neighbor, is whetted down to a ferocity of edge never reached by the In dian of a section where wood and water and facile game abound. MR. AND MRS. CLEVELAND. I’l.uut Impreaaloaa Made In XVaalil..- tea by the Pr aident'a Bride. Before President Cleveland married complaints of his exclusiveness, or rather of his seclusiveness, were frequent. Al most any one who went to the white house could see him. but it was a rare thing that the outside public caught a glimpse of him in the common walks of the community. He occasionally indulged ! in a short drive through the fashion ableportion of the city; once or twice a month he would ride down to his old fashioned Presbyterian church, but he was almost constantly hidden away from the popular gaze behind his big desk at the white house. A remarkable change is noticed in his habbits and manner since he married. He appears at church punctually at 11 o'clock every Sunday morning with pretty Mrs. Cleveland by his side. They frequently take long afternoon drives through the public parks. Last Satur day afternoon, when the Marine band was giving its open air concert in the white house grounds, the president and his wife walked out on the lawn and en joyed the music with the government clerks and shop girls. I suppose the first time the president was ever seen walking on Pennsylvania avenue was last Saturday night. He had been down to the station to see Secretary Manning, who was passing through from Warm springs. The president dismissed his carriage at the station and with Colonel Lamont sauntered leisurely along the crowded sidewalks to the white house, three quarters of a mile away. In his loosely fitting dark suit and broad brim straw hat he looked the picture of a democratic president. He is mingling with the peo ple of Washington more than he ever did before he married. Mrs. Cleveland re ceives much credit for this change iu her husband’s habits. She has pleased every body by her unaffected manners and her easy adaptation to her new sphere in life. She had to face a severe trial when she ! became the bride of the president, and whenever she appears she is still the ob ject of eager curiosity and close observa tion. While she cannot be unaware of ' this fact, she never betrays the slightest consciousness of it, either by the disguise of indifference or the tremulous un i certainty of embarrassment. She appears, under all circumstances, a dignified, ! graceful young woman, a beautiful type of womanhood of the republic. Her dress, like her manners, is remarkable for its elegant simplicity. It is the universal j opinion in Washington that President Cleveland has won a capital prize in the j matrimonial lottery. A Princely Claim. The claim of Myra Clarke Gaines to the . heirship of Daniel Clarke, the Irish mil lionaire merchant, land speculator and i politician of New Orleans of eighty years ago, has been a veritable romance of liti gation. Nearly thirty years ngo the Su preme Court of the United States decided favorably to her claim, but this bore no ready fruit. May 3, 1883, Judge Billings in the United States Circuit Court of Louisana decided the case of Mrs. Gaines against the City of New Orleans in favor iof the plaintiff, the suit having been ; pending for many years. The case had previously been referred to a master in ! chancery, who, March 16, reported to • the court that the city was indebted to Mrs. Gaines for rent and property that it had wrongfully disposed of in 1837, in ’ the sum of $824,660, with interest amounting to $779,401, making a total of $1,604,062. Council for the city filed I exceptions to this report, and Judge Bill ings decision was the result. It confirmed I the report of the master in chancery, but i he added certain interest to the amount mentioned, bringing the amount of the judgment against the city up to $1,925,- 667. Judge Billings held that the dc | fondants had kept the plaintiff out of the i enjoyment of her property for forty year*. and the loss to the latter was rep | resen**i by the judgment given. This judgment the city refused to pay, alleg ing nulla bona, whereupon Mrs. Gaines applied to the court for a mandamus com pelling the city to levy and collect a tax to pay it. After long arguments on both sides the case was submitted, and June 18 1383, Judge Billings rendered his decis ion. requiring the city to levy and collect the amount of judgment and interest less $40,000 already seques tered. June 27 Judge Billings permitted , the city to bond the mandamus on giving : a $50,000 bond pending an appeal to the | Supreme Court. October 16 the record in the case was forwarded to Washington. Tliirty-two copyists had been at work for three months preparing the manuscripts. It was bound in one volume containing 9,403 pages and weighing 192 pound, Since then the court has rendered several • judgments against Mrs. Gaines and or dered execution against her property. i May 22 last a motion to mandamus the city to fund the judgment was argued be fore Judge W. B. Woods of the United I States Supreme court, sitting in the Cir -1 cuit Court, and he refused on the ground that the judgment was not yet final, be ing still on appeal to the court of last resort. When Mrs. Gaines died, January 9, 1885, she was in straightened circum stances, and admitted that the judgment she had obtained at cost of so much effort had in the main passed into the hands of lawyers, speculators and money-lenders. —N. 0. Picayune. Indecision is one of the most common and unfortunate of weak traits in human ' character. Col. F. W. Parker once said: “Either you do or don’t—Please do or don’t.” E. G. Short, of Carthage, N. Y., stamped a copper cent with his initials in 1864, and last week it came back to him through the hand of a customer. The Physiology of the Liven The liver is the largest secreting organ In the human body, and the bile which it secretes is more liable to vitiation and misdirection from its proper channels than any other of the ani mal fluids. Luckily for the bilious, however, there is an unfailing source of relief from liver complaint, namely. Houtetter'a Stomach Bit ters. a medicine which for over a quarter of a century has been achieving thorough cures of the above mentioned ailmente, fever and ague, dyspepsia, bowel complaints, rheumatic and kidney affection, and disorders involving loss of nervous vigor. It Ls. moreover, a preventive of malarial disease, and affords protection to thousands of persons residing in districts of country where that dire scourge is prevalent. As a remedy adapted to the medicinal require ments of families, it is supremely desirable, and as a means of fortifying a debilitated sys tem, it is thoroughly to be depended upon. Decolette Dres'es. Discussion is rife anent the subject of low-cut dresses. It is the all-engrossing subject of the hour. In regard to their propriety, evcrylxaly has an opinion, and some arc publicly expressing themselves, pro and eon. A great deal of nonsense mixed with a lit tle wholesome sense, will probably be ex pended on the question, all to very little purpose. The fashion is in, and will un doubtedly stay for several years, or until its patrons tire of it. Washington society adopted the cos tume last season, Miss Cleveland acting ns a leader of the fashion. The reason wits patent—she was not a very pretty woman, but she had good arms and shoulders. The new mistress of the white house is following suit. Iler wedding dress was high in the neck when worn at the im portant ceremony. When she appeared in it at her first reception, it had been in the hands of the modiste and was cut away the regulation depth. Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher has pro vided her article on the subject for the public's discussion. She places the weight of her influence on the other side, and pronounces against the exposure. Mrs. Verdant attended a swell dinner the other evening with her husband. They were lute, and immediately upon their arrival tße company was seated at the table. Glancing down the long rows of guests Mrs. V. was horrified to observe that, apparently, she was the only lady present with a dress on. In consternation she turned to her hus band and said: “This is disgusting! I never saw such brazen creatures in all my born days.” “Tut, tut! my dear,” said he, “don’t show your feelings. It's the fashion j you must bear with them.” “Bear with them! I should like to see myself!” she scornfully replied, and subsided into significant silence. “Well, I shouldn’t,” whispered a gen tleman, who unavoidably overheard the dialogue, as he glanced at her up right, thin shoulders. A disciple of Mr. Ingersoll says it is a custom especially adapted to orthodox believers’ needs. They should accustom themselves to it, as it is peculiarly suit able to warm climates, such ns they per sist in believing exist, but iu which he has no faith. A mutual friend requested permission of Mrs. Blueblood to introduce to her daughter a successfull Chicago dealer in dressed beef. In reply Mrs. Blueblood said: “Oh, really, I can’t allow her to meet him—a pork-packer.” Mr. P. P., when so informed, said, looking hard at the daughter's bare arms and shonders, “So she objects to my business.” “Ah, at least I am modest enough to dress the goods I have for sale.” Two gentlemen were admiring a draw ing room full of pretty ladies in full dress. One said to the other, “Mrs. Whitcomb seems to care very much for dress.” The other replied, “I cannot say whether she cares much for dress or not, but it is evident she does not care for much dress.” These are a few of the chestnuts that are floating around, originating in the in tense excitement aroused by the introduc tion of the fashion. Indeed the decollete dress promises to be as good a target for slow wits and society’s critics as ever the “Dolly Varden” or the “Grecian Bend” were in their day, A Brave Girl. Let the timid women who are inclineu to jump from a carriage every time the horse pricks up his ears, read this story of a Westfield, Mass., girl: She was driving a spirited horse, when the head stall broke and the bit came out of his mouth. Os course he ran. The girl, perfectly powerless to restrain him, sat upright in her scat, while the frightened animal ran wildly through the streets. She never said a word, even when a daring man caught on behind and climbed into the buggy, only to find himself quite as powerless as the girl. But his added weight helped, for after a half-mile run the horse was tired enough to admit of his being caught, and the girl jumped out of the buggy, not much frightened, and not a bit hurt. First Newspaper Humorist (at dinner party)—-“I flatter myself that is not a bad story.” Second Newspaper 11 uinorist (without smilling)—“Yesit will do.” F. N. ll.—“ Then why don’t you laugh? That is a nice way to treata friend’s joke.” 8. N. 11. (laughing)—“Oh, 1 didn't know this was a social matter. I thought you wanted my professional opinion. Pray pardon me.”— Puck. Almost every year many hitherto un known insects or worms appear as ene mies of fruits, vegetables, and of shade trees. It takes a busy, active person to keep up with the old and new pests. Farmers should never fail to report for the benefit of others remedies they have proved to be successful. The Chinese alphabet contains about thirty thousand characters, and the man who thinks of constructing a Chinese type writer will have to make it the size of a fifty horse-power threshing-machine and run it by steam. ■M’ 1 ■ “Four or five hours waiting for about ten minutes’ fun,” is why so many persons do not like the modem horse racing methods, The long waits be tween events are profitable to the sellers of pools and fire water. Prof. Chai. P. William.-, Ph. D., of Philadel phia, says there is neither morphia, opium nor minerals in Red Star Cough Cure. Price, twenty-five cents a bottle. Philadelphia has (H 8 churches. or one for every 270 voters: 245 public schools, or one for • very 714; 1,095 bakeries, or one for every 10); 3.4s4retail groceries, or one for every 51; and .'i.'.’.Vj liquor-saloon*, or one for every 29 persons who exercise the voting franchise. A leading citizen of Hagerstown, Md., Mr. George W. Harris, had suffered for sometime with facial neuralgia and toothache, when he tried Nt. .Jacobs Oil, He says; “It gave me instantaneous relief, and I consider it a won derful remedy.” As a rule, the man with a corner on oats or the world nev'er talk* toomdeh. but you can pump a fool dry in regard to h msclf and all his wife's relations in about thirty minutes after setting your pump, or within twenty-five minutes after getting a suction on it. Relief is immediate, and a cure sure. PboP Remedy for Catarrh. 50 cent*. Petter results are derived from Hall's Pair Renew or than from any similar preparation. If you suffer with chills and fever, take Ayer’s Ague cure. It will euro you. Only the lugy hope to alt on prosperity with out work and self- ivnial Invalids’Hotel and Surgical Institute, This widely celebrated institution, located at Buffalo, N. Y„ is organized with a full staff of eighteen experienced and skillful I'hyai clans ano surgeons, constituting the most com plete oiganlzatlon of medical and surgical skill in America, for tne treatment ot ad chrome diseases, whether requiring medical or I surgical means for their cure. Marvelous suc cess has been achieved in the cure of all nasal, throat and lung diseases, liver and kidney dis cases, iliaviißvs of the digestive organs, bladder diseases, diseases peculiar to women, boot! taints and skin diseases, rheumatism, neural gia. nervous debility, paraysis, epilepsy (fits), sphermatorrhea, and kindred affec tions. Thousands are cured at their homes tbroui.h correspondence. The cure of the worst i uplines. pile tumors, varicocele, hydro cele and strictures is guaranteed, with only a si.oil residence at the institution. Send 10 cents in stamps for the Invalids’ Guide Book dWpages) which gives ad particulars. Addresa 1 World’s Dispensary Medical Association, ! Buffalo, N, Y. Long-winded ideas are gem*rally weak ones. Condensation lathe great force. The farmers, in the r iniani]*, we’re sure, | Could find the roots and plants that cure; If bv their knowledge they only knew For Just the disease each one grew. Take courage now and “Swamp-Root” try - (for kidney, liver and bladder complaints), As on this remedy you can rely, Menrman’s peptonized nr.EF tonic, the only rireparation of beef containing ita mitre nuhi tout proprrfirN. It contains blood-making force.generating and life-sustaining properties; invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous prostration, and all forms ot’general debility: also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over work or acute disease, particularly if resulting from pulmonary complaints. < aawell,Hazard «£ Co., Proprietors. New York. Sold by druggist*. The biggest fool of all is the young man who wou.d appear worse than he really is. Dr. Pierce's •'Favorite Prescript ton” is not extolled as a “cure-all” but admirably ful fills a singleness of purpose, bring a most po tent specific iu those chronic weaknesses pe culiar to women. The only way mans advance is by pulling down the work of others. No trouble to swallow Dr. Pierce’s pallets. Learningmaj crowd experience to the wall, but can neicr push it over. You will get more comfort for 25cte. in Lyon's Heel Stiffeners than in any other arti cle you buy. Henry's Carbellc Halva. Tbe b-'at aalve used In the world for Cuts, Rruiiss, Hies, Seres, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Tetter, Chapped Hand*. Chilblains. Corns, and all kinds of Skin Erup tions, Fi eekles and Pimples. The salve is guaranteed u> give perfect satisfaction tn every ease. He ours you get Henry’s Carbolic Salts, as all others ar« »«u imitations aud counterfeits. TIRED OUT! At this seiuHin nearly every <me needs to use eome sort of tonic. IKON enters into almost every phy sician's prescription for those who need building up. iW For Weakness, l.aeslliide. Lack of Energy, etc., it HAS NO EQUAL, and is the only Iron medicine tliat is not injurious. It Enriches the Blood. Invigoratrw the Syatem, Restores Appetite, Aids Digestion It does not blacken or injure the teeth, cause heiui sche orprodneeconstipation— other Iron medieinet do Mn. .L D. Burkk, 1H High S’ , Montgomery, Ala., any*: "My syatain WHS genet illy debilitated and (be aligliteHtexertion fatigued me. Alter lining llrowu'v Iron Bittera a short time 1 regained iny appetite and strength.” Mbs. Geo. W. Case, 3fi Chestnut St., Macon, Ga., says: " 1 used Brown’s Iron Bitters for a coiintant feeling ot wenrinenN and lahsitude with tbe most sat isfactory results. Il given mo much pkariire to rec <>nim<’nd ittoall feeble women aa a complete st rength euer.” Genuine has above Trade Mark and crossed red linos on wrapper. I'm he no oilier. Made only by HHtIWN CHEMICAL CO.. BALTIMORE, Ml*. M S. “Jo nes! What arc you - talking’ about?” What JHPtiRB u <‘V<’ry body talks about. MWimUmMw i? 'riii’ynny tlintforßrightu’ co ° lba<!<lcrcomplaints,this ~ °i remedy has no equal.” OCT-' A. A3. J T? It goes right to th«-Hpot. • tWr re pared nt Dr. Kilmer’s tn o' I HPKbHAhY.l!illL'hMmt4>|l.N Y. f~Y - lO Lrtb’i ■ f i mpilry annwrird. ct 04 Guld ® to Hwdth < Sent Free). w • WILSON’S f?( \ CHAMPION SPARK ARRESTER Beet open draught arrester in \ • / luc win Id. No more gin liouars k; / blu nt'd Iroiu engine sparks. Sold li I-II on guarantee. Write for Circu ’UJ’ lar. T. T. W INDMOK A CO., Nos. J 3b WsyneMsl iliedge ville,<«u. Err Responaible Agents wanted for anie of Arrester. Salary and Expenses I fIFF.IBM«I*OUTAHI,r. FUM EFt MF. It putoout Cree, washes wagoriH, windows, etx-. sprinkle* lawns, atrerte, gardenH, kills bug*. insT'cts in plwnt, vine, triw', InUlh out boatM, wlittewwabeß h»n bouses Throws wiatei 60 f»-wt railonr a minute, If needed*. Priix?, $2. To introduce it will nend for SI. AUKkI’M WANTED on Hiilorv nnd <-xpenae«. benv pie free to agenta. A L. RFEIItN Sorth Windhain, Maine. WjjKIIHJTT DECAY, A llfecxpeiinscft. Betnarkable and qnlnk floras. Trial pack ages. Consultation aud Books by mail FREE. Address Dr. WARD & CO.. LOUISIANA, MO. f fl nOI'LARS each for Nnu and I / ' bEW IMiMA ( H I N EN. I h, '" ton Vs iBI ■ ■■•'"•'i. Buy <lire< t aixl save |l A to |35. IHwYfWKI Orran.vlvsn aa premium,. Writs for F REKclr- <4 dJar with 1000 toktlnisnlab from irrrri'il. mPAYNUUI. HPIIIM morphine UriU!?! HABIT CURED. ■ aswm A NEW IHETHOD DK. .1. IIOEFYIAX, Jefferson, Wlwioimn TBDRSTOirSK'ETOOTHPOWDffI Keeping Teeth Perfect and Gums Healthy. ft? toft.'Sndny. ' a npb-s worm »i. 5 FKF,», hup* not u.id r till' h-dHOM fort Address WtP Ifio wr> a’- s. y, i r . m,- (<l (fi Holly,Ml h. MARRIED hV'.!■w;!!! 1 ,, "'Hr."'Yi' 1 Hnrtirii, i:..x no y. GEBSfIS for owe dollar. , Cr-' 'l' > ' ir,/ r out at .mall to <’ff . n 'Ji rlf or (he Oeruian ‘-‘’if lt • ini, a >d, with U>. |,-niil ton a V i ' ,-h .a . , i i o„ o> Iz'Wf 4 .. *;*, !'■ ! ! 11 rtf., N. 1 • City, and get ou“ o. t.■ ,/•, -k, oy return mail. z ■ • " ’ BEST IN THE 3M-A.TLUTJXT Pjfl~ , 111 ltl> aA,, - ,J,r > KTOKTI'tO AXD TAKUET ImtS wwU mmr.nl. Unitor IIIWU.MA truism, JIARI.IN FIRE ARMH CO., Now Iluren, Cona. ■Z B / CFf nn IN U tM The yaw POMMEL SUCKfB la a porter t rMtag ceat, and ■ 40 H WKEk M czrwrs tbs entire saddl* Wsware of Imitations. None gonafee tbe B 44 pjl F> HratAd” trademark. IlluetraUd Catalogue free A J Tower, Boetoa. Mana. A Skin of Beauty Is a joy Forever. DB. T. FELIX GOUBAUD’S ORIENTAL CREAM, OR MAGICAL lEAOHFIEB. V o Removes Tan. Pimplaa T. 5 Freckles. Moth Patahea W;* 4 g , R«*h and Skin diNraAea, and *• «Q •9 - every blemish on lieanty, - - « 3 b .Im’S 5- ■ - a* iW tAfU' it to be suit “ Z i* pro perl} <*J mane. A<vep • -t» /? J a® coualerfta jMIWr >< 1// of similar name ■ f Thediatlngulah \ ed Na \ said tn a lady <a 1 f \ ti>e haut ton, L ’ I (a patient): “A> I you lAdleo will ,IM ” 1 re® - ' * o”>”1 en 4 ’< l nor- amis < ream’ ao the least harmful of all the Rkln prennratlona” (>«e bottle will ImK all months, using it every nsy. Alao Pom Ire Rub tile removes superfluous nair without Injury to iheskla. ■ we. I. B. T. VOVRAVU. Rais Prsp., 4S M«n4 M., New Verb For sals by I’rigid hU and Fancy floods PeaieM In the U. 8.. Uauadas, Europe, t<• Re ware nf base imltatlonat gl .ou6 Kcwnrd for .0 nwi ami proof of any one uniting aamCk 5 TON ■■**•ll lUM WAGON SCALES, limi l.svsn, Bu«l Bsarlem, Immß Ts-s Bsste *n4 tW.m Bsa, JONYrU Ran *ha B«O r <.-• ! |M, M»e and ert ... /ms V rdughaiUlßM. N.Ys BOOK AGBim WANTED fbf PLATFORM ECHOES er LIVING TKUTUB FOR READ AND UEAUT, By John 13. Gouyh. Wa laat and crowning life work, brim full of th-lllinr Intstt e»t. iiuinor ami pathos Bright, pure, aud food, full of ‘‘lauchter and tears ’it «.uA4 4» «J«. To II ta added the Life and Heath of Mr. Gough, by Bev. LYMAN AB* BOTT. 1 COO Agente Wanted, Men and Women. *IOC to SBOO a month made. oj*Z>Mf«nea no Aindrunr. aa WS five Kitra Ttrma and /’-»y AVefaAf*. Write fm circulars tp X D. WOUTUIAGTON A Mar Hord, VoaaJ step in advance OFALLOTHERI JParTTLR INSTRUMENT a >owt r prices. £ AS I c rTk R JK, y ,t>m. for . Kuniy’fc" Full Particulars. BEIN BROS. 4 NEWARK, N.J. r W HPi in pirn. Blotchru, Rcaly ar Oily Hkln» I Ulrnilahra mid all Kkln DUrnsca Cured ■ nnd Complexlou Bentillfled by 1 Beeson’s Aromatic Alum Sulphur Soap. I Rold by Druggists or sent by mall on receipt ofH Ift cents by WM. DKKF DOITKL, Mnuu-I facturer, ‘JON North Front St., Philadelphia, Pa. J Salvo CUKES DBUHKEIHESS and Infemperanre. not but efToi lually TUoonly sctentlAc an* dote for the Alcohol flnbit and Be only renjody th mi dares to send trial {A bottles Highly endorsed hy th« aef ePJL teal profession and |>raparea by well, known Now York physlctaoa Se« 4 ah’in pa for circulars and raferoßoett Address “HALVO REMEDY,” No. 2 West 14th St., New Ttefc. t No Rope to Cut OR Horses’ Manes, kl Celebrated * » IIALTKII JWL Rnd BRIDLE (Combined, • annul JYK. jHI ip lied by any horse. Sample MlEaw iJlu Halter to any part of U. H. free, on jFaßC— receipt of sl. Sold by all Saddlery. Hardware and Harness Dealers Rpeclal discount to the Trade. Bond for Price List. >5 J. (>’. UGHTHOIIHE, W* I lloclieotrr. N. V. » * JWVGrind j™ >< A Elour -nil <>or» uKnSFJJf <r. wiix.ir. ioo p»r —cut. more mode Iu keeplgfiMal* Al«o POWER Mi 1.1., aud MUM FEKD MIL.I.M. Circular, and Te.llmonlali.na, OU application. WILMON HKOa., Kualoa. Pa. CONSUMPTION. I have n positive remedy for the above dlassae; by its ÜBS.thoa*sn<lß of csens of the woial hind aud of long stand luu in vo beaneured. I n •lead ~*u strong I■ my faith 1B Its •meacy. that 1 will aond TWO HOTTLBB FREB, togslhsr wllu a V A LUA HI.ETH EATISK om this disease to any i-r. GI vo os prose and P O uNrn DU. T. A. BLUCUM, lai Pearl At.. New York. I "asthma CURED’! MUM tJermun Asthmn Cure never /ui/« to klvcH • M immediuiv relief Iu ths worst oases, Insures < <un-M fortabio sleep, efllMW cures where all others fall. AM trial convinces the moil aAeftlleal. Price &O rfe. end■ 81.00. of HriigKisto or by mail Ham pin FKI'F. A>rM stamp. DK. H. HUHIFFM AN, Hi. Paul. Mleu.| jgagk face, hands, feet, a*it all thatr Imparfectloaa. Including ■LBh Devclopemeot, Ruuarlitioev flair, Hlr Ik Marks >ajr Molnv, wart., Moth, Freckles, lUd Now, Arae, T/fCT Blai-li Head*. Ho.rs, Plttlnr and tkelr JOHN H. WOODBURY, o*7l. P.arl SLA I baoy.S.T. Kil’b’d WO. Saad 10c. hr beet. Cl VEN AWAY I IA orals in |a>aiara i'miii- to par m JHuf m>4 ■rapjitna, isrya parlor ■ rarroii.g of al) ”OI!K I'IIMD'ENTM ; ” sis- ' 3 i-v 3h Inobw: •< •>> ■ Also some on« In this ooeimuioty shioiM arn.l fl Huuiwi’ •• ly ■ for outfll and eaoir* Ibo sfrnrv of thr l««t l.oub now t.'i! i.eii-■ ed, ''Tiis lAr»a su'l firs res of Our I’wsldeoto.” Iluadrad* vs oan i- sold iiorn Ad-irasa lu>u i*ua. <>>., v>4 Wsbaab Av., Cldveyo.g JAMS Hwoet PlcUlr L!’ JELLY Vinegar, ( ntNiip, Prriarrvve. Cunrii.ifc un« K ran I-inn king for faiiurix' wivns. mailru with every dlim* p «’k of Fall Turnip Heed (any kmdJ |y- PAPER <>F WINTER HI.ETS THROWS IN. JAMF.K IIAKLKV . Need Giowor, Madison. Ark. IA/ AMTirn V TruvilhiM nod Eurnl ww rtlv I ELL# ■ Niih'Miiiin for n line of PaUmt Modicnmi. H»oi<l Ao •••mfs for outiit »’il full purlK'ulai’H, sent postpaid Adilross ■IAH|!n M. ItLt 11, Green Kld«r, : n . Dlaimla Dall* Great English Gout and ■Hull S I IIISs Rheumatic Remedy. Ovhl Box round, fto eta. 09 ELECTRIC HKLT for Kidnnys, Pain. Nnrvmiv .1 Jvwi'nk. Book fr*»H. Fi.r/i< iiki< A tin .(Uhvolau'l, (>. ~ > Book tßillng you how to DKTJRJ I'RM> CURE DIKEANE in this valuable ani mal. Do not nin the rlek of losing your Htreo for want of Knowledge to cure him, wh« n '2sc wil Ipay for a Treatise Buy one and Inf rm yourself. Remedies for all Horse Dleeases. Phitoa showing how to Tell the Age of Horses. Font postpaid for 26 cents in starupa. N. Y. HOttHE ROOK CO., «<c list taken the lead !A ♦hr -.-ira (li4t class o» 1,.-., »n,l h». .ire* alm . ,r universal wliblac ti.jM, MUK PHY O haawoft the Mvor of tl r public and now among th. leading Mcdl- ' Pa. jp/dby Dniygitu, Pm-c 41 OU- Pise's Remedy for Catarrh Is tbe Ib-st, Lomuci to L’sr. un i C'beapeaL MB FO'>d for Cold In tbe Head, BL m II• adavh•-, Hny ver, <fu .60 ccnta. A. ■*. I • went v-imii . Nfl