The Columbia sentinel. (Harlem, Ga.) 1882-1924, November 18, 1886, Image 7
tattooing.
One of the Singular Industries
in the Metropolis.
4 Professor Who Has Illustritol Many
People Tells About His Vet'.io'li
Amon" the innumerable trades in New
York is the singular one of tattooing. I'
South street, where many ships from all
orertlie world lioat the wharves, there is
»n old man who forth rty-two years has
been busy from morning till night tattoo
in" people. He tattoos about 3,000
persons every year, and, to show that
tattooing is not confined to the barbari
ans of the South Sea islands, it may be
said that he has tattooed nearly 100,000
white people in his lifetime.
He has tattooed not only white people,
but barbarians also, for many years ago
he was in the Sandwich Islands and
tattooed the Sandwich Islanders, cover
in" them with American flags, anchors,
ea"les and other devices borrowed from
civilization. When he left the islands
nearly 500 of the natives were walking
picture galleries.
This curious artist, Professor Thomas,
has a large and airy office or studio in
South street. He is a genial, elderly man
and wears spectacles. He began life as
a sailor, and followed the sea for twelve
years, being one of the crew of the first
American war Vessel, the Vincennes,
Captain Paulding, that ever entered a
Japanese port. He learned the art of
tattooing on board .ship, and thirty-two
years ago, when his time was out in the
navy, he came to New York and set up
in business as a tottoo artist.
Many of his customers are sailors, who
have anchors and stars and clipper ships
and goddesses of liberty and crosses tat
tooed on their arms. He says, however,
that most of his customers at the present
time are city people, such as yachtsmen
and travelling business men, who have
their names tattooed on their arms that
they may be identified in case of acci
dent or death, and if they chance to be
long to some fraternity, such as the Free
Masons or the Odd Fellows, have its em
blem added also, that they may receive
aid if helpless, or burial if dead,by some
member of their order.
Many ladies have their names tattooed
on the right arm just below the shoulder
that it may remain invisible when they
wear a ball dress. At the time of the
disappearance of Charlie Ross for several
years after many mothers brought their
children to Professor Thomas’s office to
have him tattoo their children’s names
on their arms in order that they might
certainly be identified even if they should
be lost for long years.
Captain Costentius, trreek, who
was captured by the savages and
prodigally illustrated by them, and lived
to travel with Birnum’s show, was the
most elaborately tattooed man ever seen
in any European country. Professor
Thomas said that Costentius was a fine
piece of animated pictorial work, for he
helped to tattoo him.
He added that the Captain was not a
Greek, but a native of Bunnah, and that
all the natives of that country are
tattooed. Captain Costentius came to
this country wearing a fine coat of tattoo,
but he was hardly tattoaed enough for
the show business, and so several New
York tattoo artists were put to work by
Mr. Barnum to more amply illustrate
him.
There are now in the country six
tattooed men and five tattooed women.
The story told by all of them is that
they were cast away in various parts of
the world and tattooed by the savages
among whom they had the misfortune
to fall and from whom they had ulti
mately the good fortune to escape.
None of these tattooed people ever saw
a savage, and all were tattooed by
Professor Thomas.
The mystery of why any person
should consent to be tattooed is ex
plained by this incident: A girl worked
on Grand street for $2 a week. This
meant starvation or the gutter. A show
man offered her $45 a week for two
years if she would become a tattooed
woman. She accepted the offer and
after she had traveled with the show six
months she made a match with another
“curiosity” who was rich, and they have
now’ retired and joined the wealthy
class.
Tattooed men now get from $25 to S3O
a week, their wages having fallen 50 per
Cent, owing to the increased number.
For tattooing people for the sideshows
and circuses Professor Thomas receives
from $175 to $250. It takes him six
weeks, working from three to six hours a
day, to fully illustrate a tattooed man.
For making an anchor on a sailor’s arm
he charges 25 cents; a Goddess of Lib
erty and the Stars and Stripes costs $2 50.
Other designs made on the arm in India
ink cost from $1 to sls. Professor
Thomas has 500 different designs for
tattooing.
He lately tattood two Spaniards from
head to foot with religious pictures.
They are as elaborately tattooed as Cap
tain Costentius, and are going to Italy
to travel in a show in that country.—
Aeie York Journal.
TV. W. Corcoran, the Washington
banker, is 88 years old, and has given
more than $2,000,000 for charity.
Fat People and Fluids.
The question whether water is fatten
ing or otherwise has been much dis
cussed. Formerly it was generally
a-s: i ted that the victims of obesity should
mortify the flesh and reduce the fat by
abstaining as much as possible fiom
liquids and remaining in a continual
state of thirst. Latterly the opposite has
been affirmed, and I am to d that a re
duction of weight s or.c of the results
claimed by “the hot water cure,” pro
vided always the water is taken as hot as
possible, painfully hot, and in great
quantiles. Expcrimentshave been made
in Pans by Dr. Debovc which controvert
both these doctrines. These experi
ments indicate that, provided the same
amount of solid food is taken, large
quantities of water make a man neither
thinner nor fatter. They were carefully
made on a friend who took weighed
quantities of food daily, and while
these remained equal doub.ing the quan
tity of water had no measuable effect on
the weight of the body. Still, it is quite
possible that the old theory of thirst cure
and the new theory of hot water cure may
both be correct. Both violate the natural
conditions of health. Scalding hot water,
like tea or coffee, or grog of similar tem
perature, unquestionably injuries the
teeth, stomach, and other organs con
cerned in the early stages of digestion,
and it is very p obable that deficiency of
liquid impedes the latter stages, whereby
the chyme, by the aid of the digesting
fluids, becomes converted into chyle and
blood. A fat man may easily become
thinner by injuring his health. “Bant
ing” is dangerous, as many who have
fairly tried can prove. The difficult
problem is to reduce the fat without re
ducing the strength at the same time. A
skillful trainer will undertake to bring
any man down to his “fighting weight,”
i. e., to the best condition for violent
exertion, but as soon as the discipline of
the trainer is relaxed the obecity, when
constitutional, returns, and a long con
tinuance of high training is murderous.
Perhaps the old prescription, “keep
your mouth shut and your eyes open,”
when followed with judicious limita
tions, is the best. Eat less, sleep less,
and walk more are safe injunctions, pro
vided they are obeyed in moderation.
The fat man who uses malt liquor as a
daily beverage deserves to be buried
under cross roads at midnight, accord
ing to the ancient modes of degrading
the willful perpetrators of felo de se.—
Gentleman's Magazine.
An Artist’s Lions.
juandseer had an extreme fondness for
studying and making pictures of lions,
and from the time when, as a boy, he
dissected one, he tried to obtain the body
of every lion that died in London. Dick
ens was in the habit of relating that on
one occasion, when he and others were
dining with the artist, a servant entered
and asked, “Did you order a lion, sir?”
as if it was the most natural thing in the
w’orld. The guests feared that a living
lion was about to enter, but it turned
out to be the body of the dead “Nero”
of the Zoological Gardens, which had
been sent as a gift to Sir Edwin.
His skill in drawing was marvelous,
and was once shown in a rare way at a
large evening party. Facility in draw
ing had been the theme of conversation,
when a lady declared that no one had
yet drawn two objects at the same mo
ment. Landseer would not allow that
this could not be done, and immediately
took two pencils and drew a horse’s head
with one hand, and at the same time a
stag’s head with the other hand. Ho
painted with great rapidity; he once
sent to the exh.bition a picture of rabbits
painted in three-quarters of an hour.
Mr. Wells relates that at one time when
Landseer was visiting him, he left the
house for church just as his butler placed
a fresh canvas on the easel before the
painter; on his return, three hours later,
Landseer had completed a life-sized pic
ture of a fallow-deer, and so well was it
done that neither he nor the artist could
see that it required retouching.— St.
Nicholas.
New York’s Palatial Structures.
Go away up town, in the vicinity of
Central Park, and look over some of the
enormous structures there, writes a N.w
York correspondent of the Boston Herald.
Vast piles of apartment buildings upon
which millions and millions of dollars
have been expended meet the eye almost
everywhere. Moreover, the fact of their
costliness does mt go unseen. From
caves to cellar, from capstone to gutter,
it sticks out everywhere, so that he who
runs may read. There is not a corner or
a pillar, or a doorway that does not tell
of vast expenditure. What is the re
sult? Why, in those great buildings
single suites of apartments command
rentals that run up into the air as high as
I the buildings themselves. It is not at all
uncommon to pay SIO,OOO a year for a
flat in one of these great buildings. And
that is just where the return comes in.
There are plenty of people, too, who are
willing to pay for the privilege of occu
pying any one of these great tiers of
palaces —for they are alike palatial inside
and out. And fmther investigation
shows that the old apartment houses,
‘ upon which the money was spent inside
the walls exclusively, are peterine out in
■ proportion to the growth of the demand
for coming places in these bigger and
, more gorgeous structures.
A NEW VIEW OF CONSI’MI’I iON.
Aud Owe which Appcnl** lufumuiou
MiißyCunihlr Cu»rn.
< Jtcd <•.«! .Sil
“Many persons <le oZ Cauxiunition who
xni l rauly bi cine l, : ’ w. Or. 8. .s. Cljifm,
M Wate.'town, N. Y.. “if they w.>uhl go at
t right. 1 have h Dttw view if til# diseaw.
l’<’Dsutnptiou is not always of lung origin.”
“How r>* What is it then t ”
“Many cases o; consumption are so on<l
iry. Thi diNCUve itself prevails everywhere,
Mit the b- Htt practitioners refuse to attribute
it entirely to mher.tau •or tho weath r. If
t pen n lives in the most favorable climate
n ibe world au<l has any tendency to lung
weakness, if certain conditions exist in the
lysiom, that climate, h twgvor favo abie,
«viU not prevent development of the disease.
The di order in su h cases is only a secondary
*y nip tom in the lungs of some other ailment,
tud can never be cured uuUl approached
through its source.’’
“Yes. doctor; but what is the method of
tpproacbf ”
“If you dip your Huger in acid you burn
it; do you not*”
“Yes.”
“If you wash this burnt finger every second
with the acid, what is the result?”
“Why, constant inflammation, festering
xnd eventual destruction of the finger.”
“Precisely I Now then for my method,
which commends itself to the reason and
judgment of every skillful practitioner. You
know certain a ids aredeveloped in the body.
Well, it the system is all right these a ids
are neutiali/ed or utili ed and carried out
If the system is run down by excesses, anx
iety. continual exposure or overwork, these
acids accumulate in the bicod. If there is
inv natural weakness in the lung, this a id
attacks it, having a natural affinity for
it, and if t he acid is not neutralised or passed
out of the system, it burns, ulcerates and
filially destroys the lung. Is th;s clear?”
“Perfectly! But how do you prevent the
ac -umulation of these acids in the system!”
“Irregularities of the liver and kindneys
create this excess of arid and the supply can
be cut oft’ only by correcting the wrong action
of these organs. The kidneys alone should
carry out iu quantity, in solution, enough of
this arid daily, which, if left jn the blood,
would kill four men. When the stoma h, the
liver and the kineys are all conspiring to in
crease the arid, the wonder is that weak
luiijns resist death as long as they do!”
“But you have not told us how you would
treat such cases.”
“No, but I will The lungs are only dis
eased as an effect of this arid or kidney poi
son in the Ifiood. After having exhausted
all authorized remedies to correct this acid
condition, 1 was competed, in justice to my
patients, to use Wasner's sate cure; though
a proprietary remedy, it is now recognized,
1 see, by leading physicians, by Presidents of
State Boards of Health and by insurance
physicians, as a scientific and the onZy
specific for those great organs in which over
ninety per cent, of diseases originate or are
sustained.”
“Is this form of treatment successful!”
“It is wonderfully so, and for that reason
I am only too willing that you should an
nounce it to the world of consumptives.”
Note by the Publishers:— We have received
the above interview from H. H. Warner &
Co., Rochester, N. Y.. with the request that
we publish it for the good of suffering peo
ple. In a foot note to their letter they say:
“The experience of Dr. Clark is not
strange to us. In our correspondence we
have Lound that many thousands of people
are suffering from what they think is Con
sumption, whereas the real difficulty i$ with
the liver and kidneys, proven by the fa t
that when those organs are restored to health
by the use of Warner’s safe cure, the con
sumption disappears, and so does uremic or
kidney poisoning, which causes so many
symptoms of diseases that the human system
is subject to. The same may be said of rheu
matism, caused by an acid condition of the
system. We insist upon what we alway
have claimed, if you remove the cause, th«
system will soon perfect the work a’r. ady
begun. Mrs. Bev. Dr. Theodore Wolf, of
Gettysburg, Pa., wife of the editor of the
Lutheran Quarterly, said her friends
thought her *far gone with Consumption,’
but after a thorough treatment with War
ner's safe cure, she says: ‘I am perfectly
well.’ We can cite thousands of such < ases.
butone is enough, if you publish the above
article, kindly send us a marked copy.”
We gla ily give place to the article, for if
we can in any way stay the ravages of Con
sumption, which curries away so many mill
ions yearly, it is our boundsn duty so to
do.]—Pub.
Feathers are Unhealthy.
“Don’t like youu bed, Air. Withers?”
“No, mam, I do not.”
“You’re the first boardet I ever had
that kicked on the beds. It’s an insin
uation against my establishment, sir.”
Can’t help it.”
“Feather beds, too, to every boarder
in the house!”
“That’s just it. I’m satisfied that
they’re unhealthy.”
Feather beds unhealthy!”
“Yes, mam.”
“What makes you think so?”
“That spring chicken you bad for din
ner to-day. He slept in feathers, and see
how tough he was.”
A Long Wait.
“See here, Mr. Hotel-keeper, I sent
the waiter boy for my dinner an hour
ago, and he hasn’t brought it yet.”
“Here, Jim! what docs this delay
mean? Is this the boy who took your
order, sir?”
“Ye—es, I think so. He’s grown so
in the meantime, I hardly knew him.”
A Ca.e Not Beyond Help.
Dr. M. H. Hinsdale. Kewanee, 111., advises us or a
remarkable cure of Consumption: He Rays: “A
neighbor's wife wan attacked with violent hint dis
eax*- an I pronoun ed beyonfl help from Quick Con
sumption. As a last res »rt the family was persua led
to try Dr. Wm. Hall’s Bals-.m for thr J.unos. To
the a tonlshrnent of all, by the time she had used
one half dozen bottles i-he wan about the house do
Ing h-r own work. . saw h rat her wor*t and hx <
uuldca th j could recover.”
The Youth’s Companion.
PRIZE STORIES t
$1,500 First Prize Story “Blind Brother” will begin Jan. Ist.
SSOOO Prize Serial and Short Stories.
The other Prize Stories, eight in all, will be published during 1887.
Cvrin Inn I 1007 any one who »üb»cribe« now, and aenda us $1.75, we will send the Companion free from the time
riHH 111 Irin I Inns J he subscription is received to January Ist, 1887, and a full year from that date. This offer Include*
■ IWU IU 41411 s IUUI 0 the Double Thanksgiving and Christmas Number*. l‘«rU Money Ordtr,Check, or Letter.
Sazajle Copies And Full Announcement Free. a _ .. . _
pieaa. mention tbu peper. Address PERRY MASON & CO., Publishers, 45 Temple Place, Boston, Mass.
The Hunds.
Ths care of the hands is an all-impor
tant part of a lady’s toilet. To keep the
skin smooth and white, the nails tinted
and tiled, with the half moon visible at
the base, requires constant attention.
A noted actress, traveling on her beau
ty, has a professional manicure dress her
hands each evening. Society women
spend much time polishing their nnila;
busy women can only follow slowly and
snatch a moment each day, to keep them
in presentable appearance and endeavor
to retain as long ns possible the beauties
nature has given her. For n pioper care
of the hands a manicure set is absolutely
necessary, and can now be easily ob
tained at reasonable cost.
A few hints for its use, our lady read
ers may appreciate. Soft, warm water is
the best to use for washing the hands; a
little borax dissolved in it whitens and
softens the skin. A most important
thing is to properly dry the hands after
ward ; if this is not done it reddens and
chafes them. With the curved, pointed
ivory push back the skin from around
the nails, and file them until they do not
extend beyond the tieshy ends of the
lingers, giving each nail a rounded,
slightly pointed edge. Then use the fine
powder and shammy polisher, rubbing
them to a satiny pink tint.
A woman's finger nails arc just ns
much pearls as her teeth, and should be
ns prized and carefully attended to; her
hand has a great share in expressing her
thoughts aud feelings. Its use and qual
ities are an open index to her whole
character.
TIRED OUT!
At this MMon nearly every one needti to nee some
sort of tonic. I tt(>N enters into almost every phy
•ician’e prescription for those who need building up.
R % -
For Wenkncns, Lnspilude. Imrk of
Kner*v, etc., it HAS NO EQUAL, and is
the only Iron medicine that ia not Injurious.
It Enriches thr BlootL InvlaornfcN thr
System, 11 reform Appetite, Aids Digestion
It does not blacken or injure the teeth, cause head
ache or produce eonstipstion—ofAsr /row mstMctnes do
Mr. J. I). Burke, hi H.gh St . Montgomery, Ain.,
says : ’• My ayatcin was generally debilitated and the
slightest exertion fat igned me. After using Brown's
Iron Bitters a ahort time 1 regained my appetite and
strength. ”
Mrh. Geo. W. Cask, 26 Chestnut St., Macon, Ga.,
says. "I used Brown's Iron Bittern for a constant
feeling of weariness and lassitude with t he moat a*t
hla<*tory results. It gives me much pleasure to rec
ommend it to all feeble women asu com pietest rength
ener.”
Genuine has above Trade Mark and crossed rad lines
on wrapper. Tukr no 01 lirr. Made only by
•u;ou\ < IIFMK-AL <;o.. BALTIMORE. MD.
e lys CATARRH
CREAM
I s offered from acute
inflammation in my QK 1 /
nose and head. For
a ireek at a time /
could not see. Mrs. ]
(Icorqie, S. Judson, WBhSE— I
Hartford, Conn. HAY"F£VE R
A particle isapp'ind into each nostril and is agreeable
to use. Price 5() <*tM. bv mail or at <!ruggr-tn. Send for
circular. ELY BROTHERS. Druggiats, Owego, N. Y.
BEFORE YOU BUY A
Carriage, Wagon or Buffi
—WRITE TO—
HOTCHKIN CARRIAGE WORKS,
SYRACUSE, N. Y.
rw-LOW PBICEK TO I)KALKRfI.JII
We Rope to Cut Os! Horsas’ Manet
Oelabi’N el •gCLIPMK* iItLTEIL
mid II If ( D LE Combined, c .nnot
be all > .nd by any boras. Simple rawW
Halter to any part of U. S. free, on
receiptoftl. $».,! I by all Sa-ldlar/,
Hird ware and Harness Dealers
Special discount to ths Irada,
th’nd for Price LI t V
j. u. ligh k*
llochcowr. \ V. ■■ *
rjigb. 1 ACE ’ HANDS, FEET,
and »ll their Imjarfertlons. including
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I JO'-, for l»<>ok'7r .'.O i.agnt, edition.
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Frink’s Rupture Remedy
Will quickly cure any cas* of hernia or roptuie.
Explanation and testimonials free. Address
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energetic worker Medness in hh sect ton Ralurv S7O.
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A g’tperior hair di es ins. Always safe and
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The « anjirra of croup may be averted by
using Ayer's Choi ry Pectoral.
Old Gknt Ah, nu I've c-Hight you
kiasing niv itaaghter. I'll fix you no you
won’t want Frightened Young
Man Julia, do you think ho is goiag to
make us marry?
Ont. of every five we meet has some form of
Heart Dhease nn«l is in constant danger of
sudden death. Dr. Kilmer's Ocean-Weed
Heart Remedy regulates, corrects and cures.
Price f I.OJ. 0 bottles $5.00.
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for your labor and more can be earned In n
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g ven away. Among them are: lav Without
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barmen* and Stockbreeder*' Guide: Com non Sense
tn Poultry Yard. World <’y- lopedln ; Danielson's
(Medical) Countelor; Boya* Useful I’aatline*. Five
\WM Before (hr Mait . People’* Hietvr. of Unit ’d
Ktatcv; » nlverial Mlito.y of II Nutiom ; Popular
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Any owe book and p.i|»er, vine year, nil p nd paid, for
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the Ist of March. Natlafactlon guarnn'oed on b oka
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A Corrector, RcCTlator, Norvo-Rest.
Heart is the Seal of Lift ."
One of every live we meet him some form
of Heart DiMuiHC, and is In constant dan
ger of Apoplexy or Sudden Dcnthl
SYMPTOMS find DISKASK.
For which this Remedy ahould be taken
Heart-pains Palpitation Hoart-dronay
Skip-Beats Throbbing Kpaains (Fits)
Nuinbiutss Purple-Lips Poor blood
Shaky-Nervca Syncope Faint-spoils
Hot-fiiishes Paralysis I Icnrt-sy nt pathetic
Hush of Blood to thr llr«id, Fcrltle-circula
?4/»a, { / <iborcd-l>nathinu, Ihart-t nlar(u nirnt.
Nervous-prostration. Heart-rheuuuitiam, IS
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One Mudicino will not Cure ell kind* of Dlncaaea. ■
THIS REMEDY IS A KPKCIFIC.
It Prevents Palay, Ahovk, budilen Drath. m
Every ingredient is from vegotablo pro-H
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(ipiitm or Injurious drugs. L
a of fmpwrv Ithioii ff
r«m aaraga Os >••«»*/Q/fisg InHvettre, £
Price $l.O0 —0 bottles $5.00. >
tWl’i-cpnreil nt Dr. Kllincr'H DDpensiiry, |
Blntrhainton. N. Y., U. S. A. ;
Letter* of Inquiry promptly niwwered. i
Invalids' (luide to Health (Sent l , 'rer). I
NOLD RY AM. DICITUGINTS. j
n ATLANTA
SAW WORKS.
Manufeotursra of and Daalsra in
Saws and Saw-Mill Supplies.
Ifepnlrlng n Specially.
Agwnt tfur 1.. >w ra A (Jompan Y’a
Wood Wo’klng .Hneliincrv.
Largo nnd complete rtock. Writs
fur catalogue. A rt.anta. Ga.
MOORE’S
r Kkk business university,
For Circular. A live actual Business School.
/ Don’t buy a watch until you >
/ find out about the latest improve- /
/ merits. Send for now illustrated /
/ catalogue and price lilt. J. P. /
I Stevens, Jeweler, 47 Whitehall X
' Street. Atlanta. Qa. '
Salvo CURES DRUNKENNESS
nnd I ntrmprr*ncr, not nn antly,
but. rC'o' tiift'h I h only ml' nlim- /mtl
<lo <* for the A L ol'ol IJiibjf nnd tlm
<>nly rrinrdv that durra to • i nd trial
wA bottle* Highly rndor nd by the me I
t< al piofe sion nnd prepared by well
known New York pln.l.dunn Hint
a'anipH for < trrulara mid referrm*. «
Addiini "KALVO REMEDY.”
t o •’•Wen- Hili Bt., New York.
0 A STHrSTcUREoTI!
H Ueriuun AufJvmn *'ure n*v<*r /o'* to >lreH
U * w imni-d, < to/inti>f- woi>l <:a*o« ln*ur<«<;on>-H
Hf-'lahl* alrep; .th cm iurr* Wli'T* all otlwi. full. aH
Uf>. .Z runviH' »• thr i.p.af ikti>hral Frlc* ..<• r|« andH
Esl.<’<>, of Drtnrgi«i« 01 by mail H*n>pl« llt b E forH
DIE R 111 Fl MAN, -t. Phml. Mtnn.Jg
E? 2<fc!as*ra Ureal tngiish bout and
MlSir S I SiiSa Rheumatic Remedy.
Ovul B«k '? 1 .UG i‘round, <SO cte,
O It -»1 erpliias I Libit < ured In 19
B 2 U’ '>day*. Refer to luuopatb ntscurnd
VI ■ Will inailpAft-. Dj y. MHh.
M tosomiersanelr* Send stamp
r for L'ircular*. COL. U UIN(J.
rClldßUala HAM AU'y, Waahlngton, D. (J.
SaRLECTIGC Btti.T for K.dnsr., I’„„, Nerv.m. A
Book »rs«. Fi.gj < hkk A Cg r„ lnu ,j q
SSSLICKffIS
| w X II nr i.K iduve■ •r • 1 w.l -1 -<w>', nn-l w 111 k 'ft you dry to
'
a® a ®
CEHTS
sos \ \L
THE BEST AND CHEAPEST
COUGH or GROUP
R-KIVIEID Y.
AS AN EXPECTORANT IT HAS NO EQUAL.
It Contains no Opium In Any Form.
AI.I.KN'S 1,1)110 BALSAM In Thrm .Mb*
BotH<»*. Price *25 Cents, 3<L>uui and g|
Th« i ent Butties arc put up for the acronunodaUa*
of all who desire simply a Cough or Croup RamMy-
Thone desiring a romeuy for CONBtJMPTIOw or aag
LUNG DISK ASK should secure the large |1 boUAaa.
Prios, 25c., 50c. and $1 per Bottle.
SOLD BY ALL MEDICINE DEALERS.
WONDERFUL
SUCCESS.
ECONOMY IS WEALTH.
PATTERNS FREE!
All that you wish to uro during the year,
by subscribing for
Demorest’s Monthly.
Containing Stories, Poems, and other Literary at
traction*, combining ArtlMic, Hcientfilc, and liunar
hold matters. Illustrated with Original Steel Kngrav
ingN, Photogravures. OH Pictures, and fine WoodL
< uts. making it the Model Mtignzliie of America
Each number contaliw an order, entitling the
holder to thr selection of tiny pattern Illustrated ia
thr fashion department in that number, in any
ihe sizes manufactured, making pat ter uh during
tiie v« ar of the value of over three dollar*.
\Ve also niopose to give cnmdtlcrahle attention to
the Grund PnoiiißiTloN Party movement mm one 4»T
the moht important and live moral IwHitet* of the day
Send twenty cents for the current number with
Pattern Coupon and you will certainly subscribo
Two Dollar* for a year ami get? ten times its value
W. JENNINGH DEMOKEHT. PvimmiiFin,
17 E. I lth fit., New York.
Sold by all Newsdealers and Postmasters.
UNRIVALED ORGANS
on the KASV PA VMIWThm,™. from S»'LA.»
r.-r month up too ».7 to St tul fur <»<
uloßUe with Full particular., utaliril fn a-
UPRICHT PIANOS.
Uonstrurted <>■ the new method of stringing.
Moiilar terms. >end for descriptive catalojuo
MASON & HAMLIN ORGAN ANO PIANO CO.
Boston. Now York, Chicauo.
BOOK AGEVTS WANTED n»r
PLATFORM ECHOES
•r LIVING TiiIJTBB FOR DEAD AND HE ABT.
Jiy John B. Gough.
Illa laat end erownlag Ilf* work, brim full of thrilling Iwlse*
Mt immor and sathoe Bright, pure, and (»wd, full s<
daughter and toara. 'lt aalla alalfMia M. To it la a rtaSß
thr-Life and Heath of Mr. GouaL, Bov. LYMAN AIL
Ba i r. 1000 Ageeto Wanted, Man and Women.
k)SWOOa month mada. 0 7*A<*ranoa n*
|lv« Krtrt Trrmt **■! Pny n Uf/htt. Write foi rlrcuiwe l»
A. D. WOliilllNWrON As <J«., 11 ar IU rd, Ownm.
JONES
ffrWPAYSthi freight
li Ton Wagon Mraleo*
* ron Larara, Ht*al Staring*.
Mk'Aiy/v PitfjL Tara D*um *a4 Braa Roa fui
moo.
Irarr ait "Scala. Far fi*t MSB
X ' aieellt* »hi* p»P’ , r and aCdrwas
Z> < W'2s* W •INQHAMTMD.
If w BINGHAMTON. N. v
WELL DRILLING
Manhlnsry fm Wrllnof any depth, from itOto Ji OW fbetSL
for VVa’wr. (fit <>r (Jan (>ui Mount'd hteana
Portable Hout Power Marhinna art to woi k In MO rnlnnlwa.
<JiiMrn.nt**et| to drill faMtxn and with leas power than
« iher. Sjwriuily adapted to drilling Write in raith w
roek 2S Lu I .wo fart F itrinare and others aro mahttir
i • S4O prr Jey with our niachisery and lnol» XplrwAiA
bualnraa for W Inter or Num mor. Wtara tha olr|r*(
I’.rgeat Munn fuel <i rwrw f n thw bush am Rond < cnaia to
.Stamps for llhilt rated ratalogue U Addhkm*.
Pierce Well Excavstor Co., Nrw Vnrfc.
WE WANT YOU!
profitable employment to reprsMiit ua in ew-ry
county Salary <75 j»rr month and sipriuma, or a.
large roienilMlori on ralna If preferred. Goods ataplau
Lvcry one boy* Outfit and particulars Free.
HTaNLMBU BILVKKWAHK Co.. UoH'ION. MAM.
THITRSTON’SSTOOTHPOWDEU
Hooping Teeth Perfect aud (Jitino ileeltbr.
Mto IMn day. Minples worth gl.od I It KB
Lines not und -r the* horse's f«*«(, Addrema
BMawbiaM'hHarsry Rbin Hulukk, HolJy. tllaM.
HO Cured. Tnmtfi out sen ton trial.
<Jd fiwTH If GMANK ItKMEDV Co., LllFuyetU , lr»dL
dMU Pino's Rernsdy for Cntnrrh In ths
Hott, to Use, and Cheapest. Ufia
: os
HI Alar, rood for ('old In tin* Hoiul,
Jlondaf hr, flay Fever, db'. 00centa. j||F
A. N. U I'orty.fiv * ’H«