Newspaper Page Text
A MEXICAN MEAL.
gatables and Drinkables at a
VVayslde Inn.
gread Like Cannon Balls, and Nativa
fruits Washed Down with ‘'Pulque.”
\t an Indian village of unpronounce
able name, says a letter from Mexico to
thl , Philadelphia Beeord, we stopped for
luncheon, in its only public resting-place
a typical fondita, which is Spanish for
“little restaurant.” The earth floor of
t hi, wayside inn was neatly swept, and
i W whitewashed inner walls hung with
pictured saints wreathed with gaudy pa
* r roses. Rickety-legged benches
were ranged (immovably) around the ta
ble; and the only two chairs the estab
lishment afforded—which were kept as
articles of rertu, of little actual use to
their owners- -were brought for the ac
commodation of lot Americanat, who
were suspected of not wishing to con
form to the rural custom of squatting up
on a petite (straw mat) spread on the
floor. The windows, of course, were
guiltless of glass, and had the usual iron
bars before them, but I observed that the
rude barn-door-like shutters were of solid
mahogany—a woo 1, by the way, which
is cheaper in many parts of Mexico (oe
cause less rare) than common pine. The
great oaken door, with its enormous
hinges and lock like the breastplate of a
mediaeval warrior, was quaintly carved—
probably not less than a century ago by
some long-forgotten artist. There are
manv things in this wonderful country
which are calculated to arouse the spirit
of highway robbery in the breast of the
most honorable tourist. I longed to tear
that door from its hinges and run off with
it or to seize from the shoulders of the
master of the mansion his zarape—a na
tive blanket of softly-blended oriental
hues, with the national escutcheon in
the centre (a big eagle perched upon a
cactus bush, with a serpent in his beak)
—which would make a most ravishing
portiere.
Our refreshments were speedily served
upon a well-scoured table to which the
addition of a cloth would have been an
incongruous superfluity, and the menu
was as follows: Stewed frejoice (red
beans), with our choice as to “season
ing”—whether we would pour rancid
goat’s milk over them or molasses from
the Chinese sugar-cane ;small black loaves
of Mexican bread that would have made
excellent cannon bails, of course without
butter, which docs not “grow’” in this
country; watercresses and fresh olive oil,
from which we compounded a salad fit
for an emperor’s table; wild honey and
stewed apricots and a basket of ripe tam
arinds, pomegranates, figs and mangoes,
arranged in their own green leaves, as
the poorest of these people have a taste
ful habit of doing. The inevitable
pulque w’as at hand in a pig-skin “bot
tle” which retains the perfect shape of
the animal, minus head aud tail, and
gurgled an approving note, alarmingly
like life, while its contents were being
emptied into our mugs. These so-called
“pig-skins” are really the undressed hides
of sheep, with the woolly side turned in.
Nothing else is considered so good for
holding the jxopular beverage, though
we are told that a skin of small size costs
not less than $2.50, and lasts little more
than a month, as the constant fermenta
tion going on inside soon eats the wool
oj. In this volcanic country the travel
ler must eschew water, or suffer serious
consequences, and one must drink some
thing besides the bitter Mexican coffee;
therefore we long ago made up our minds
to pulque—the cheap drink of the na
tives—and pulque it is, every day of our
lives at dinner. Iconfess, how ver, that
it required considerable effort to educate
ourselves to it, and it was only accom
plished by resolutely fixing our thoughts
npon that glorious product of the year—
the century plant—from whence it came,
and by repeatedly assuring one another
that the thick, white, nasty liquid re
sembles home buttermilk, though we
know it to be an outrageom libel on
northern dairies. But, even now,
Betsy and I sometimes amuse ourselves
in leisure moments striving to compute
the quantity of sheep’s wool which we
must have absorbed in the course of the
last two years, since the contents of each
•lleged pig-skin contains a good deal of
it—“in solution,” so to speak.
Immediately following this dainty re
past the mistress of the fondita produced
her private cigarette holder and tendered
us the customary courtesy with the air of
a princess, an act of kindly hospitality
which we would not for the world have
*ounded her feelings by refusing.
Changed His Mind.
“Don’t you think we had better send
dear Clara abroad to complete her musical 1
education?” asked Mrs. Mullethead of
Berlord.
“And have me go to the poorhouse?
Not by any means,” he growled in re
ply.
An hour later—Clara vainly trying to
teach the attic of the scale to piano ac
companiment.
“I do think dear Clara should be sent
abroad to develop her musical talent,”
’entured Mrs. Mnllethead again.
“Send her away by all means,” was
fee still more ungracious response; “bet
*r that I should become a pauper than a
lunatic.— Tidßltt.-'
Types of the Cowboys.
The steadfast, most reliable, and hard
est-working cow-boys are those who are
bom in the cuttie regions, or the old
timers, who have lived there so long that
they have forgotten the manners and
customs of a better civilization. There
are cowboys following the trails who are
not yet in their teens, and there are many
who are crowding on to seventy. Some of
these old boys are as erect in the saddle
and throw their lassoes as unerringly as
any of the younger ones, but others are
! bent and wrinkled, and should never go
on a range. It would kill them to leave
the camp, though, and many of these
old-timers will die in the saddle. I
know boys not yet fifteen, who are ex
pert in running a steer on a round-up, or
in manipulating stampeded cattle, as any
Mexican that ever threw a lasso. The
Mexican cowboy, you know, is generally
regarded as the master of the horse and
lasso, and it is the custom for people to
say, “He is as smart with the rope as a
Mexican.”
Taking it all in all, I think the white
cowboy is superior to the Mexican. The
white man is cool, patient, and of better
judgement. If a Mexican runs a steer
for any length of time he gets wild, and
soon uses up his horse. He is apt to in
jure the cattle in his hot mood.
Besides that, the Mexican is superstitious
and when his religious fears come upon
him the cattle in charge are a secondary
consideration. I have known a herd of
3,000 cattle in charge of Mexicans to be
stampeded in a thunder-storm because
the Mexicans were afraid of the thunder
and lightning, and threw themselves
from their horses, stripped themselves
and lashed their naked bodies with cac
tus as a penance for some sin, while the
herd rushed wildly away in all direc
tions, and hundreds were lost. It is not
an uncommon thing for Mexican cow
boys to stop on the trail to punish them
selves for their sins. Frequently their
wild cries cause a disastrous stampede
of the cattle in their charge. I have
seen these Mexicans walk barefooted for
rods over patches of prickly cuctus,
while a companion followed them and
lashed their naked backs with the same
thorny plant.— New York Sun.
How Stanton “Tapped” the Tele,
graph.
Major Johnson, of Washington, who
was Secretary Stanton’s confidential clerk,
said the other day: “About one of the
first acts of great importance which
Stanton did was to establish the head
quarters of the telegraph of the United
States in the War Department. This
meant that all the telegraphic communi
cations with relation to the war should
pass directly into the hands of this amaz
ing Secretary At his orders I made a
record of every telegram from and to
the President, from and to all the Secre
taries, from all the generals in the field,
to any and everybody. A record was
kept of all the dispatches sent by Gencr
al-in-chief Halleck, by General Grant,
and ail the commanders of the army of
the Potomac, and by General Sherman
and all the generals of the army of the
West. The dispatches of the Secretary
of the Navy and all the movements of
his gunboats were put on record, and all
cipher dispatches received at the War
Department deciphered by General Eck
ert, and recorded by me. Every wire in
the country was tapped and its contents
run into the War Department and made
a matte: of record if it in any way related
to the war or was in cipher. The tele
graph operators of the department, un
der this censorship, became the most ex
pert, probably, in the world, and they
now hold high positions in their profes
sion. They were Bates, Tinker and
Chandler. Some of the dispatches in
cipher intercepted were from corps com
manders in the field relating to gold
speculations in New York.”—Washing
ton Slar.
Disastrous Somnambulism.
A rather amusing incident occurred
recently in Hog mountain district. A
gentleman who is in the habit of walk
ing in his sleep had a dream. He dream
ed that he saw a fine covey of partridges
running along toward an old house and
then go in. Thinking this a good op
portunity to capture them, he quietly
slipped along until he got to the door,
when he suddenly jumped inside and
closed the door. What was his astonish
ment to discover a mad dog in there,
which rushed at him at once. His only
chance of escape was to jump through a
window, and through he went with a
bound. When he awoke he was lying
outside the house on the ground, having
jumped through a window in Iris bed
room and carried the sash with him. He
was badly bruised and his leg severely
cut by the glass as he broke through.—
Gwinnette {Georgia) Herald.
Insect Scuse of Smell.
In an extensive scries of experiments
by Prof. Graber, insects and many othel
I invertebrates perceived odors much more
quickly and acutely than the vertebrates
: tested (birds and reptiles). The anten
nae proved to be not the only organs of
smell in insects, although these appear tc
be essential to the perception of some
fine odors. In some cases the palpi of the
mouth organs arc more sensitive than the
■ antennae, but perception of smell through
tire stigmata or respiratory organs is not
I rapid nor important.
PEARLS OF THOUGHT.
Teach thy tongue to say “I do not
know.”
A proverb is the wit of one and the
wisdom of many.
Say no evil of any one but yourself,
and do not listen to any.
Deceit is the oleomargarine that is
mixed with the butter of truth.
To have what we want is riches, but
| to be able to do without is power.
i If you cannot speak well of your
neighbors do not speak of them at all.
In every ago the vilest specimens of
human nature are to be found among
demagog es,
Prudence is one of the virtues which
were called cardinal by the ancient
ethical writers.
All nations that grew great out of little
or nothing did so by the public-minded
ness of particular persons.
Poetry is the blossom and the fra
grance of all human knowledge, human
thoughts, human passions, emotion, lan
guage.
Adulteration of Candy.
The adulteration of candy is chiefly
by the use of terra alba, or white clay.
This harmful stuff can be detected by dis
solving the suspected candy in water,
when the clay falls to the bottom undis
solved. An ounce roll of cheap lozenges
will sometimes contain three-quarters of
an ounce of this injurious stuff. The
coloring of candies is, for the most part,
not dangerous, since a piece of red col
oring matter the size of a gum drop will
color 5000 pounds of candy. Unscrupu
lous manufacturers, however, sometimes
use mineral instead of vegetable colors,
and, cartloads of such candy have been
seized and destroyed by the health offi
cers in New York.
For the most part carmine and cochi
neal are used for red, saffron for yellow,
caramel or burnt sugar for brown, and
this with carmine for orange. Green and
blue candies are to be avoided. These
colorings are used sometimes, however,
1 in “decorating—a surface treatment of
fine candies by hand, in which a water
color artist is employed to do art work at
wholesale according to the model set him.
As for this purpose the proportion of
coloring matter to sugar is about one
millionth, the result of swallowing paint
is not so disastrous as might be expected.
In flavoring, essential oils are used, about
a pound to a thousand pounds of sugar,
and this is worked in during the boiling
or kneading. Liquorice colors and fla
vors both at once.— Harper's.
Metropolitan Monkeys.
The endeavor to make the ehampan
zee at the Central PnrV ’Znnin.rtnoi
uens, New York, the so much sought for
“missing link” is successful to the point
of causing the interesting creature to sit
at the table and take his meals, eat
sweetmeats from a teaspoon, use a knife
and fork, and wipe his mouth when
• necessary with a napkin. At the latter
test of civilization, however, he seems
to be especially recalcitrant, discarding
the napkin with scorn as soon as the en
forced ceremony is accomplished. The
daily consumption of cod liver oil is
another approach to popular custom
which marks the champanzee’s kinship
to the human race.
A pet monkey, which takes its daily
airing in the carriages with its mistress
withiu the city suburbs, has created es
pecial remark from its becoming toilet,
which consists of a scarlet cloak trimmed
with dark fur and a little peaked hood,
from which peeps his aged but astute
face. The passers-by who are regarded
with disfavor receive scowls, grimaces
and chattering from the monkey, other
wise they create no comment on his part.
The drive at an end, however, he evinces
his dissatisfaction in long cries.— New
York Herald.
The North Slar Still There.
Governor David S. Crandall, formerly
editor of the Lockport, (N. Y.) Courier,
used to tell a story of the great meteoric
shower which fell in Novembey, 1833.
He was at that time living upon his farm,
a few miles distant from Lockport.
Among the men he employed was a
chore-boy 12 or 14 years old. On the
night referred to Mr. Crandall was en
gaged in writing after the rest of his
family had gone to bed. Seeing through
the window the shower of mereors, he
aroused his wife, and then the boy, re
questing them to come to the door. The
boy was at first absolutely struck dumb
with astonishment, thinking that all the
stars in the heavens were falling through
space. After a little he turned to
the North Star and his courage came
back. “Gosh?” he exclaimed, “the old
dipper hangs on yet, don’t she?”
How to Detect Counterfeits.
Mr. Tanda of the Coin Department of
the Sub-Treasury, New York, says:
“Many good coins lack ring, and many
bad ones have it—especially gold coins
filled with platinum. If a diver coin is
of lead its color will betray it; if it is
filled a ‘harp eye can always detect the
joint la-tween the two halves. The
absence of ring is easily explained.
Silver dollars are stamped from long
strips, the ends of which strips are apt
to get curled in «u h a manner as to break
the lamina: of the metal, so that the
coins cut from it have flaws which dss-
■ troy the ring.”
SODA ENGINES
Carlsas LocomatlTes Brin* Built at the
Baldwin Work..
At the Baldwin locomotive works there
are in course of construction four locomo
tives which are designed to be run by
soda, which takes the place of fire under
the boiler. Soda has much the same
power as coal without any of the offen
sive gases which that fuel emits. The
engines are now nearly finished, and are
to be shipped within two weeks to Min
neapolis, Minn., and are to be run on the
streets of that city, where steam engines
are forbidden.
The engine has much the same appear
ance as a passenger ear. It is about six- '
teen feet long, entirely boxed in, with no
visible smokestacks or pijies, as there is
no exhaust nor refuse. The boiler is of
copper, 84 1-2 inches in diameter and 15
feet long, having tubes running through
it, as in steam boilers. Inside the boiler
will be placed five tuns of soda which,
upon being dampened by a jet of steam,
produces an intense heat. When the soda
is thoroughly saturated, which will occur
in about six hours, the action eeases, and
then it is necessary to restore it to its
original state by forcing through the
boiler a stream of super-heated steam
from a stationary boiler, which drives
the moisture entirely from the soda,
when it is again ready for use. The ex
haust steam from the cylinders is used to
saturate the soda, and by this means all
refuse is used.
These engines are the first of their
kind that have been built in this country
and are being constructed under the su
pervision of George Kuculcr, a German
engineer. The engines will have about
the same power as those on the New
York elevated roads, and will readily draw
four light cars Soda engines are now
I used in Berlin and other European cities
i very successfully, and they also traverse
the St. Gothard tunnel, under the Alps,
; where steam engines cannot be used, be
' cause the length of the tunnel renders it
■ impossible to devise a system of ventila
' tion which will carry off the foul gases
generated by a locomotive. So over
powering would those gases become that
suffocation would ensue.
Short Mention.
Storm signals—red eyes.
Fits—the gifts of mothers in law.
A small “nickel” may cause a great
quarrel.
Women’s rights arc maintained by
men’s bayonets.
Boot-snakes come with practice.
They are not water snakes.
The anarchists will begin practicing
again at an early day—on a tight rope—
last act.
It is thought an honor to teach boys and
girls letters—a disgrace to teach them to
work. Why?
Steamer men are looking forward to
crossing the Atlantic in palatial steamers
in four days’ time.
Both men and women have a fondness
for glasses; those the men admire usually
hold—“two or three fingers.”
JIXV/A1 JOIAUJ* AUCAI UIC
characters because of church going.
They have themselves only to blame if
undeserving.
Nelly Bly has lost her hand ! Chorus
of Excited Female Voices—Why, what
do you mean.? Why, she has promised it
to Ned Bronson.
At Fort Smith, Arkansas, there have
been eighty-six capital convictions and
forty-six executions since 1871, nearly
all from Indian Territory.
The possession of land enables one to
employ his own labor. The industrious
cultivation of land enables some to sell
labor, others to sell the products of labor.
A Pretty Story About Miss Terry.
At Mr. Irving’s reception the other
night (writes a London correspondent),
there was an American gentleman who
figures in a pretty story about Miss Ellen
Terry. One night in New York a little
deformed man came behind the scenes to
present Miss Terry with a tribute in the
shape of a book. This was a beautifully
bound volume containing cleverly etched
portraits of the actress and a number of
passages from her various parts, finely
engrossed. The frontispieces represented
four people sitting in the front row of
the gallary, absorbed in the performance,
and by these*four people, two brothers
and a sister of the little deformed man,
the book had been entirely manufactured.
They were at the theater every night and
used to sit in the best seats; but as the
expense became serious they gradually
went aloft, like Tom Bowling, till they
settled in the gallery, where they were
to be found nightly with unfailing regu
larity. When Miss Terry took the gift
that was the product of much loving care
she burst into tears, and the little de
formed man cried too and went away
perfectly happy to till the hearts of his
three companions as full as his own.
A courteous Frenchman, in reply to
a question why ladies were not admitted
into the Chamber of Deputies, said that
to be a member it was requisite to be
forty years of age, and it was impossible
to find any lady that had reached that
unseemly age.
A Healthy Body and a Clear fiend.
If indigestion, constipation and biliousness
torment the body, the head cannot be clear.
These orders react upon the brain most hurt
fully, and produce a cloudiness in the organ of
thought not experienced by a healthy man.
Happily these brain-oppressing maladies may
be entirely dispelled by that peerless alterative,
Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which cheers,
refreshes and invigorates the brain and nerves,
while it regulates the organs of digestion, as
similation and bilious secretion. It expels the
morbid humors which poison the system
through the bowels and urinary passages, and
exerts a powerful invigorating influence as
well. Its cathartic action is never Irritating,
▼iolent or painful, but even, natural and pro
gressive. As an appetizer and sie-p promoter,
the bitters is unrivaled; it mitigates the infirm
ities of age, relieves the ailments peculiar to
the getier sex, arre'-ta pre nature decay, and
Vull'ls up an enfeebled physique.
The Vassar girl, asked what animal
she liked best, very readily answered—
Man. Vassar girls antagonize war be
cause it consumes so many men.
For removing dandruff and curing all sealp
dibcases. use Hall’s Hair Henewer.
Ayer’s Ague Cure is acknowledged to be the
standard reuidey for fever and ague.
Little Jennie was capsized in a boat
one day, and would probably have been
drowned had she not had presence of
mind enough to keep her hands and feet i
moving, and thus keep herself afloat un 1
til help came. When she was retiring
that night her mother told her she must
thank God for having rescued her from a
watery grave, which she did in the fol
lowing way: “Doti, 1 am oblithed to oo
for helping to thave me from drowning—
and then 1 had a ’ittle strenth mythelf.
Drainage wanted. Secure' the serv- I
ices of a few bummers; draining is their I
business—d raining glasses.
•‘lt is as harmless as it is effective,*’ is what,
is said of Bed Star Cough Cure by I). . 8. K.
Cox, D. I)., Analytical Chemist, Wash ngtoii,
D. C. Price, 25 cents.
A Fort Worth, Texas, man dropped dead
on entering an eating house to get his dinner.
If the dinner was like most dinners you get at
Texas eating houses the man would have died
anyhow in a very abort time, consequently
there would be no necessity for an Inquest.
The virtues of St. Jacoba Oil, as proclaimed
by millions of restored sufferers, should induce
every one to supply his household with this
great specific. It conquers pain.
A Michigan lawyer lias invented an instru
ment for the transfusion of blood directly
from one person to another, it is reasonable
to suppose that the inventor's profession
makes him very proficient in the art of bleed
ing people.
If you have numbness In arms and limbajieart
skips beats, thumps or Hutters, or you are
nervous and irritable in danger of shock
Dr. Kilmer’s Ockan-Wbkd regulates, relieves,
corrects and cures.
Extraordinary but neveithelesa true. We
refer to the announcement <if B. F. Johnson
& Co., of Richmond, in which they propose to
show working ami energetic men how to make
from S7OU to |2,500 a year over and above ex
penses.
Mensman’s Peptonized mcKFtonic, theonly
preparation of beef containing its niHre nutri
tious pro/»<rtirs. It contains blood-making
force,generating and life-sustaining properties;
invaluable tor Indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous
prostration, and all forms of general debility;
also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the
result of exhaust ion, nervous prostration, over
work or acute disease*, particularly if resulting
from pulmonary complaints. (’aswell,Hazard
Co., Proprietors, New York. Sold by druggists.
One pair of boots can be saved every year by
using Lyon’s Patent Metaiir Heel Stiffeners.
Haw to Secure Health.
RCOVIT.t.’B SAUNA I’ARI I.LA AND STII.LINQIA, CIR 111.000
and Liver Syrvi* will restore perfect health to the
physical organization. It is. Indeed. a strengthen
ing syrup, pleasant to take, ami lias often proved
itself to be the beat B oot! Purifier ever discovered,
effectually curing Hcrofula, Syphilitic disorders.
Weakness of the Kidneys, Erysipelas, Malaria, ali
Nervous dis inters and Debility. Bilious Complaints,
and all diseases indicating an impure condition of
j the Blood, Liver, Kidneys, Stomach, etc. It corrects
Indigestion, especially when the comp alnt is of an
exhaustive nature, having a tendency to lensen the
vigor of the brain aud nervous system.
If a cough disturbs your sleep, take Piso’s
Cure for Consumption ami rest well.
BRO IVNS
IRON
BITTERS
WILL CURE
HEADACHE
INDIGESTION
BILIOUSNESS
DYSPEPSIA
wL'Dirnuc imocTiiATir.M
MALARIA
CHILLS and FEVERS
TIRED FEELING
GENERAL DEBILITY
PAIN in the BACK & SIDES
impure: blood
CONSTIPATION
FEMALE INFIRMITIES
RHEUMATISM
NEURALGIA
KIDNEY AND LIVER
TROUBLES
FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS
The Genuine has Trade Mark and crossed Red
Linea on wrapper.
TAKE NO OTHER.
/ Don’t buy a watch until you l
/ find out about the lats-st improvs- /
/ mentn. Bond for new illustrated /
/ catalogue and price lint. J. P. /
I Htcvenfl, Jeweler, 47 Whitehall /
Street. Atlanta, Ga. '
DR. KILMER’S of every five w<;
meet lias Romo form of
Jlcitrt J)lßcnMc,iind
«hu it du rigor of Aj-oph xy.
Shock or Sudden Death 1
lllrt 4 ’ Ul<xJ y nj'iilHtcH, rc
iievcM, < rirrcctM and cures.
. inHI'KHMAiiv. BirigliujuUm, N. Y.
6for. LHU r iofliHiuhy ana-vered.
Cl an Ouidc to Hoalth(H«nt Free>
»l.»» 55.00 Hold bj
■fcfT-T WILSON’S
f I CHAMPION SPARK ARRESTER
I Heat open draughi arrester la
/ . r w «Fld. No siorc gin bouwea
If, / barned from engine aparlks. Mold
i on KUMrmittc. W rite for < art u
'LLr I lar. T. T. W INDMOIf A’ < <>., Nd.
M A il> Hii/in- M., .Wllledgcvlile. <* m.
I ST” Reaponatbh, Agimla wanted for aal* of
WOMAN’S Kn reM and fiafsst Heguiafor m
BELLAMY’S EXTRACT
COSSYPIUM
Doctora recornmand it. Hold by ail druegiafa.
J. B DANIEL. Wliolaaaia Agt.. A thnta. tin
TOBIT*"* 1 MOORE’S
FKIjK BUSINESS UNIVERSITY,
For ('ireular. A Bnain<*hs H< Loul
RUPTURE
llwwa I wJIIaB EDY. I.ifdai.ation an<> terti
moniala freo. Addrvort O. Fill L. IG3 Jiroadway, N. Y
Dillgs kreal English Gout and
DlalF 5 I IIISi Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Box al.OOi round, .50 cts.
AF to SM n day. Samples worth S.-S* f kkk
Lines n</t uiid**r lh< horse a fret Address
WW WMTEk’ahArKTy Jiri*. Hu.,i>f h. Holly.>ll n.
R 1 TET NTQ Obtained. Mend apirnp for
}* A I EL I JuvenUrr's Guide. L
I uam. J'atent Mwyer, Washington, D. C.
FQ Ef.ECTILJG BEU' for Fain, Nervoua A
vfv w»aa. Hook free. Fj.kt< mfm A Co ,Ctev»i«nd. O
- BEST IIN THE.
Magazine
For larre or »rr.»ll r -all »te,. *j vtroara** r.fo
airoa. y guarardarei, ai.d lha only atez>h.U)y Saia l.f.a or. tie iM»rVI
•pADLARD OAI.U.ItY, F.rOft’HMl AMI TA 10. t.T MFI KB ward Hand Sr 4WI I
> ... MAK MN Fl 1/ v. aH .HH < <»., ’ ■ Hu/tiy
Kftv.'oi in 1/rnjiw
I 11. K r W Werjiroof
i 10BRIr(w !■ IV 11 Coal.
V X rn.aFIFHBBkWr»FLirggH la v .rented was- f.r.-.f, and will i..«p /- ’ dry in
■ A g VI Hhe hanlaat »Uo-M- roaatu, •!' > 'IS |»« it perfrt ( r>-Do. *'»»•, an.l
■ < DTJAIV a* ,«>var» the thlba aaddh l«< m.p .11,11,1.1;, i... Moi* nulne wilU.'d th«‘Flak
■ JD fbiaua ' I IHuan.l, 1 * I.ei A > • ,w. », »■, Mast.
ELY’S CATARRH
CREAM
ties of Ely's Cream B* I
Balm owi consoler
myself curl'd. I suf- FHAYFEVErII A* J
fin d 20 yean from MH
catarrh and catarrh- HE* z
al headache and this
is the first remedy nBSBL>tCS
- qftorded tatting
n'liif. />. 7’,“SV,-d* UAA.J
I «>», 145 Lake Street, —AkiWW
I Chicago, JU. HAt**FEVER
A parti via is applied into each nostril and ia aareeabla
to use Price fiU cts. t»v mail osat drurai*ds. Read for
circular. ELY BKOTUKRS, DruggiaU, Owago, N.Y.
* ■ Book telling you how to DETECT asd
|BBI CUKE DIHk'AHK in this valuable ani
mal. Do not run the risk of losing yonr Horae for
want of knowledge to cum him, when Me. wil I paw
for a Treatise Buy one and inform yourself.
Remedies for all Horae Diseases Hates showing
how to Tell the Age of Horses Sent postpaid fog
to cents In stamps.
N. Y. HOUHE BOOK CO.,
rw JONES
lian Nu«T Heailwf*. Brass
Tara H<<aa> and lle«n> Rm for
SOO.
Vvci, A. ala. Far frr» prl«« HU
a*’ aronU.Hi ihia pnuar and adSraaa
/ C V JONES Q> OINOHAMTINr
r W HINtUIAIHTON. N. Y,
The Greatest curiosity in Nature.
The Mexican Remirrecilon Planl, apparent
ly dead, when placed in writer ko«>ii comra to life,
showing all tli»* tlnt.M of the ialiit>ow to $4 per
dav ead y ma 10. a < it Mells to four out of Jive per
sons at night Send 2Sc. for H, or Me lor 7 namples
for 25c cadi) Low price** by thn too and 1.000.
A year’s anbn rlption to one oC hlx pip iH given to
fii Mi aoe order from each county u.vl to fimt order
mentioning this paper.
11. IILKDMOK,
I 31,’Mliiin Nltrvt, Fort Worth, Texas.
■ If In Hiirprtidnt how
much I iinv»*d in quality
utni price on
Enfllne, Saw-Mill,
Grist Mill. Cotton-
Gin, Fortier, Con
tlenaei, Cano-Mill,
<HI and othnr
M.rlll.n'V I'X
toTIIBM AHCAMr.
I’ovhigtsn* Ga.
» I igKBMHBBB)
1 ■ Pimples, matches, Healy ar Oily Hkln,
1 ■ Illeiulnhrn and nil Hkln I Ham kps Cursel
Innd Complexion ll<uiutitled by
1 1 Beeson’s Aromatic Alum Sulphur Soap. I
Bold by Druggists or sent by mnil on receipt of■
Uficrnta by W 111. DK E V DoPPKL, Mnnu-I
facturor, UON North FroutNt., k'hiladolphia, Pa- ■
Salvo (MS DROmSS
end Inteniporatico. not instantly,
but rft«*i (u.H)y Tht* only H' lontlfie anU
dot<« lot - Uio Alcohol tin hit and ths
only rrmecly that <tar*H to nrnd trial
bottles Highly endorHod by th« med*
leal profcMHion and prepared by wsll
known N«*w York phyHlcbinn. Send
stamps lot circnlurn and r< fareneca
addroMn "HAI.VO REMEDY,”
No uwastNthNt. NvwYork
STF r IM ADVANCE
OF ALL OTHtRS.
ITrn INBTftUMINTO.
A S4OQ prices.
WHITE h
Particulars to r
■fin bros aco *
NEWARK, N.J. •
!' A STHl!'■ CIR'ED !I
AHA German Aotlmiu ttwrr iwvm to rlveß
W W ifontf./faii . ti< U»«* worm «;•«:•> lunuri • coni-M
forttiltle alrfp corcn when ml 'l'lwm full. A M
trial rrmvww <■» «•<>•/ tKeplnal l’»,»O r|M rnwlH
S 1.00, of I'luggiMtH nt f>j load Hjinbh FlttCK t»r H
nutup. BAIL R. MOIIIPP’MA.N, Ml » ..«L Minn. J
No Rope to Cut Off Homos Manos Ik
. Olebr 1<• I LIPME' It Ai.TF.lt? JMk
anti Hit I Did: Coiiitnnml, cHtinuf,
be nlionetl by any itornr) Hunpl 1 > -ZjalK
Halter to any part or DM free,
receiptor |l. Hi.l l iiy nllM.wldh-i y, IM
11 kriwarn and liarneni Dculcrn
Rpeclul dlneonnf to the 'irudc
thud for iTioe IJni, fcr^gsjww—**K V*
J. C. LI<4IITIHI|JME, T
ItochrHt«'>. N V. >—.. w
face, hands, feet,
*>»<• all their Hik|>oita-'tfoua Im li:<llug FadaJ,
FumtrllkMiu* liulr, IHrth Marha
yg b .JF M>ht, War». ( .Moth, p rM -iilM, Noao. A<n«,
IA" 1 * N’MM, I'llUhp I'titi ihylr Ireatmanl,
Dr. JOHN H. WOGDPURY,
UZS. Pearl Mt. Albany,*. 1 Xvl’hM ISM HahWlOs. for best.
CONSUMPTION.
1 have m poeltlvii t *i»#<ly fnt th* al>ov<<<ll’t* >'n<y;by Its
■M. thotiaSmlN of CU4C«<>( the Worn h Ind mid nt long
•tariilliiir have ttwen futo<l I<, rn « faith
In Itwofncm y.thAt I wi I mooITWO HOTTi.H PRIS,
logatlier will, a V A 1.1/ A Hi.K TRE ATIMK <>•» ’MdlOM*
!• AUJ auffnrHr <Hvn kti pt own mih) P O toJrlr
PH T a MI.OCUM, 10k I’aariHt Now York.
S7OO to $2500
be Hindi! work Im for mt Ai;< ntfi pit f« -»«•<! vho “AD
' furnish the.i own holo HMinTgivc Oirli whole limo to
• tin! IdiMiiH-i h Mpai i-n.oiiM'itfH inuy Ih> f.iohiulkiy eu>
1 V'd tkino. Alnw vuk'unehtn in i«>m iiniind cities.
B. FjJOHNHON A Do. him Main .* 11 >, mond. Vs,
ffIURSTON'SSTraPOIDER
Keeping Toes h Pcrierf uiiiMuimii Healthy,
German iJ< fs a iizu
FOR ONC DOLLAR.
A firnt-lniß I'U-tUinur7 gotlcu a t amall<
pri4*e IO t u< •diF'ig* li»> Mtmly of the Gerrnaa
II give* Kfighnii wordw with the
!•••» man equb.J. nlw, -iiiil <i< 1 inaii wt.id-i v/lth English
» icni.HionM, a kciy eh q» h««ok. Wc.mi gI.OO te
BOOK Pl H. HOI HK 13 I Irfun.rd HI., N.
Y. <*lty* M-ud get on* of un mm ImoifN by return mail
«4* nav takaa tlx I«a4 la
thavalrv •! that claw •<
far<»««tiea, awd baa given
aUmml nnHevMl Mtiafac-
Unn,
MIJMPfiV saoyh.
Farit, in
fl ha* won the favor of
Hu- puLli* oirl now rank*
SHU-mg Hie tr-Sfliag Modi.
'•‘“"'A'')'.' -.Mini.
i,
-7
va ■ toHoi<ii- rt itMirt •iendstsnss
tJirciilars L.
I Act"/. V/uihlngtoa. D O.
■ PlHfi’n I/pi.whl/ Fot fjatiiirrb kt the HB
bcrti to l/m .hrni Übeapott.
A levi go<H» fold In th< Flfwwi,
■| JTaaMlacJd Jfa’/Fever, . f/lcftnUb
'a in. d Tl.lrtv-flve.’Ml.