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rrms or tn
Prof. King toy: “ The btoloon
U condetntr.l by many, and juatiy *o,
bacauae there are thoae who claim for it
impoaaibilitire. It can only be uaed end
valued for what it is worth to setose*-
It will novar be used aa a earner in tha
strict sense, baaaoae that la impractica
ble ; Imt tor scientific research it is the -
only mesas we hare of studying the
higher regions and learning about the
upper currents—elxmt tha formation of
rain and snow and the action of storms.
It is tha only thing by which we can
reach a point in the heavens clear of the
earth ; and for these purpose* it is in
valaubls. Tha day will never cmne
when they will be male to navigate the
air against the currents. That sea only
ba done by flying machines, having mo
mentum, which a balloon is without ,
You can not throw a tuft of cotton
against the wind, for the reason that it
has no resistance The balloon's mis
sion is scientific in several way*. You
know in case of war it has been vary
useful in escaping from besieged ciUoe,
like Paris, for instance, ami tot military
operations is the only way you have of
looklag into the enemy's fortifications
with impunity. Il is also valuable for
looking down into deep water. I had an ,
offer made to ma once to float over Lake ’
Eno and search for a steamer tliat had
sunk in a storm. From a balloon you
can look down to the bottom of very'deep
water, because you are away tax enough
to overcome ths redaction of the sky.
"I have not the least doubt that the air
will bo navigated by a flying maahins,
but it will have to fly bettor than a bird
flies, the same as a ship, and than a fish ;
that is, the ship will carry a thousand
IMiaaangen and a heavy cargo, end go
through water very swiftly, while a Ash
has all it can do to take care of itself. The
flying machine will bo propelled by
some great force -it may be nitro
glycerine, it may bo gun powder, and it
may be something also that will give it
momentum but, whatever it is, it will
l>e light and compact, so that a handful
of it, ao to speak, will last a whole day.
A base-bail travels when hit by a bat,
and, it there should boa fly on its sur
face, H would carry its passenger You
know how nicely a piece of card-board
can bo shied through the air. The fly
ing-machine will operate on something
like the same principle, but balloons will
never be used for the purpose, being, as
I said before, without momentum."
AKItroCMITIV inLtH.K.
The glen who do not work and yet
live on the fat of the land, says a New
Y'ork c<irres|Mindont, are constantly in
creasing in Now York. Ido not refer to
the clever fellows who pick up all sorts
of odds and ends by their wits, but to
tha high-toned idlers along Fifth avenue
and thereabout, who toil not, neither do
they spin, and yet dress in tha beat, and
fair sumptuously every day, chiefly at
tha clulw. Most of them are the eons of
men who laid up fortunes by just as
hard work as any of our bnsy merchant*
are doing now. The fortunes were put
into real estate or some other form of
jicnfianant investment, and now yield
handsome annual returns. We have
landlords in New York whose rent-rolls
run from |30,000 to >50,000 a year, and
tn some caaos to <IOO,OOO. Tlieae, I
‘Mflfl hardly say, are exclusive of the
Asters, Goeleta, and other heirs to enor
mous estates. We have scores of very
rich men, Iwride, who made great fort
unes in trade or by speculation, and who
rank as millionaires, though tbsir names
are not often seen in the papers. As a
rule, the sons of those magnates, of the
first class and the second, have no incli
nation to work. It was enough for their
father* and grandfather* to do tliat
What they live for is to have a good
time— to drees at the top of the fashion,
drive fast horses, lie hail fallow* well
met with the nalxibe of the clul«, get
invitations to stylish dinner* and recep
tions, and in,* general way copy the
manner* and dress of the English aria
toertcy as cloaely as possible. A gvxsl
deal has been said from time t<> tint*
about tile growth of a privileged class in
New York. The class is a very large
on«, and it include* another class, which
may be called the community of aruto
cratic idler*. As families acquire large
wealth, and set up in the fashionable
world, thia class steadily increases. Our
fnnmis, the Oommnnnita, dislike it
greatly, and would like to pull it down,
but it keep* on growing, and will con
tinue to do ao. Its existence is, no
doubt, one of the inevitable conae.
quenee* of the ao-umuiataon ol mcaev
in individual hands
UOOD ADVrCK.
It la generally thought than is noth
ing earner than to give good advic It
is ao abumiaat and ao cheap, it is aaid,
becauae it mete nothing Now thia may
be appboabi* to much of the trite ooun
•el and meat of the well-worn maxims
that live upon the lipa but do not come
from the heart ; ft may be true coo cam
mg such exhortation* as we have been
in the habit of hearing from one ganen
tion and panel ng <m to tha next, without
much rehavaos to their eppbcabditv ;
but it is not true of anything which bon
eady bean the name of good advice
That » not plentiful mw aaey to giro.
I* Oblcagn the woman dresa so mnrh
liks men that they an allowed to hang
on tha straps of etreat car* without
nnrigalttesi. I
BOWS TO KATO FT.
Eder Travina was once th* moat
noted man m fltstern Saw York as a
c*n»p.maatiag leader He had a power
ful votes, was * flasat eg aster, sad-ta
ths prime of life eanld flrt wwey wflfc
any men who ever sought to disturb his
meeting*.
The elder w** oooe bolding * camp
meeting near Yonkers, and wood reached
him that a notorious rough known as
“Chicago Bob” intended to be <m
hand on Bunday for a row. He made
no reply and took no precautions, and
when Bob appeared on the grounds
with a cigar in hi* mouth and a slung
•hot tn his sleeve the elder didn’t grow
l«te worth a cent. Bob bad eoate <Wt
there to run tilings, and ha took a for
ward seat When the people started to
sing be began crowing, and thus created
confusion.
" Robert, you bad better est down,"
<,l>asrved the alder, a* he came forward.
" Chicago Bob sits down for no man I”
was the reply.
"Hit down, Robert," contained the
skier, a* be put his band on the loafer's
arm.
<■ Here goes to clean out the crowd !"
crowitl Bob, as he peeled off his coat
Next instant the alder bit him tinier
the ear, and, a* he fell over a bench, bs
wm followed npaitd hit again and again,
and while in a semi-unconscious atate
lie was carried off by niaWciid.-
Next day he was tha Stet one to go
forward for prnyira. The aider put hi*
band on his bead, and aaked :
“ Robert, are you in earnest f "
“lam.” «
“ Ara you really seeking after faith ?"
•• Yon bet lam I If faith help* a man
to get in hi* work aa quick a* you did
yroh-rday I m 1-ouud to have it if I linvv
to Hell my hat I "
He didn't get it very strong, but he
did p<> more crowing while the meeting
lasted.— Wall Streel Daily Soiot.
(Ht 1 .ouis < hronfe-la. i
Trial by Jury.
Home believe that even thia form of trial is
aol perfectly fra* Ire si prejudice. But in
section, Hr ruroba Oil naw beeu tried by
that great jury—ths public—and been judged
lhe infallible cure for Kheutuatiaiu and all
painful disease*.
Aa usbiwo on fha question of tha
duration of printers' lives, the following
is interesting; Beventean meaabar* of
the London Society of Compositors
died during the second quarter of tha
current year, a* comjiared with eighteen
in the <x>m spending throe months of
1R79. Their length of life varied from
2M to 82 year*, the total ago being 758
years, giving an average of 44 year* 7
months to each. Os the forty-one oom
poaltor* on the superannuation list, two
have died during the quarter. The
present membership stand* at B. 060;
allowing an increase of 100 on the quar
ter, and of 110 ainoo the corresponding
date of last year,
(Bpsrt* (Wis.) Herald ]
As an eshlbitlou of the intrinsic worth of
Bt. Jambs <Hi,wv think the case referred to,
that of Mrs. O. W. Hubbard, of this town,
cured of Sciatic Rheumatism of long stand
ing by th« Oi), U certainly striking, nnd, be
yond all doubt, conclusive a» to it* efoency.
Tee remedv hss our indorsement.
BJfaSB.
A woman in England died leaving a
lieqiiret to her brother on condition
that he should not marry a woman
who had ever occupied the poaition of
servant.
Hn mame<l such a weman. The
court upheld the will and said that a
tentator might, in leaving real property,
fndnlgo his bad fooling* by attaching
a penalty upon marriage tn any way,
if he did not violate wbat tho law held
to be public policy; and there wm no
doubt the law allowed such a prohibi
tion, and that a condition not to marry a
iwrticnlar person, or • native of a par
ticular country, or a person belonging
to • particular religion* Met, wm not
illegal.
But undoubtedly a wife after hi*
own heart wm worth a great deal more
to the man than the bequeat in hi*
•inter'* will, which he forfeited.
THB S4.VX or BXGAarXK
The Bank of England wm moorpural
«l in 1649. It cover* five acre* of
ground, and employ* 900 clerk* There
•re no windows on tha street. Light is
admitted through open court* ; no mob
could taka the bank, therefore, without
o*nnon to batter the immense walk Tho
clock in the center of tha bank hw fifty
dial* attached to it large cistern* are
sunk in tn* court, and engine* in per
fect order are always in rendtnere in
csas of fire
A (raw* Matey.
Nothing 1* *o (vxidiuivc to » m*n * re
maininit •bachelor aa xtnpping for one night
■I the hotwe of • married friend and being
kept awake far Ave or *ix hoar* by the cry
ing of • crow baby. All cro** and erring
bai.ie* need .inly Hup Ritter* tn make them
• ell and nulling Yonng taaa. reaoember
thia Traveler.
The mysterioua gift of money which
lewd Beaconsfield** hero, Endymion
Ferrara, reemres recalla the fact that to
William Pitt, the younger, came one
day from an unknown benefactor a prea
ant of >70,000 to promotee his early
career in Parliament. Bo that th* fiction
i« n>. ntrangwr than the truth.
Tte. B>M UM *»■ —»rv»»i
Warner • Haf* Klney uxl Liver Cura.
The Sabbath i* th* green omm, the
little granay meadow is the wihtamsss,
where, after the wwek-dgy* jouruay, Um
pdgnm halt* for retreahmant and rapoaa
—Dr. KnatU
to tattrnt wjum a wtrna.
Yo Semite falls are tn summer really
otte of tbs kmte tniunartng sight*
They are 2,04 feet above tee valley,
and 1 sensed in three tails—first, 1,000
feet; ssoond, 584 feet; third, M 0 feet.
She first fall to the higheat in any pot-
Koo of tea gfebe yte teewt to man.
Ihmng tbs winter, however, and when
ths snow of that asaaou begins to melt
tn the mountains above, tbs falls dis
charge a voluma of 400 gallrm* of water
per aecoud. In the cold season, too,
large m asses of ice form each night at
the aides of the fall* When the warm
rays of ths morning sun begin to shine
upon theae igumtitw of »<*» lacge mass
es dtteflh ttemselfhi, aad tai With •
terrible rattle ami wxnn that sound* like
thunder, and reverberates and re-echoes
it* peal* upon the walls of the valley for
tQilee around. This loe falls a distance
of nearly 1,009 feel ewd fe ewaebed to
such minute particles that ft leaps over
th* next fall nndistinguiahable from th*
water that cames it along.
In the winter, too—which, unfortu
nately, is the season when the valley u
closed to travel—the great volume of
water shooting over the falls create* a
vastium that caoses the air above to rush
'in with the force of a tornado. In con
*<-.|ne*oe, wbm 4xiw i* feUtaft B «s
drawn into the vacuum in large quanti
ties, and is deposited, with the fragmen
tary ice, at the foot of the fall*. Henc*-
it iorms an nonsense deposit of coageale.l
know and ice, 300 or 400 feet deep.
When the spring thaw begin*, and the
descending water is a degree wanner, it
liegins to wear out a funnal-ahaped hol
low te the yAtfef th* gatec. strikes
at thabottom *1 this* hsviag nutetlei,
it makes a curved rebound, and ascends
often 600 feet high into the air, then
drop* into the river, and makes a fearful
turmoil at foam and spray. When the
•up nliinosUpon those, tel ths wind hap
{wins to be blowing propitiously, and
scatters the clouds of spray in different
directions ami with equal velocity, the
•cene beoomes so gargtxiu*, so grand and
orerjicwaring, ths* no pen or brush can
ever hope to portray even the ahadow of
ita grandeur..
A cave forty feet deep, which lias be
neath and behind tho upper fall, can lie
entered when tha wind, m it sometime*
does, blows tho entire body of the water
mude. It is dangerous sport, however,
to enter, for in the event of the fall re
turning to a vertical position, thus cut
ting off retreat, the spray must inevitably
cause speedy suffocation. Buch ic the
fall in winter; in summer, when your
tourist sees it, it poasease* none of theae
I >eatitie*, and late in the summer of a
vary dry season, the 400 gallon* per
necond are represented by 400 gallon* a
month.
Tbocoh a man without money i*
poor, a man with nothing but money i*
•till poorer. Worldly gift* cannot bear
up the spirit* from fainting and sinking
when trial* and trouble* oome, any more
thaa naadachi- can be cured by a golden
erown, or tootiiachs by a chain of pearls.
A ooon farmer i* better than • poor
doctor, and a good horseahoer is better
than » Bishop who preaches sermon*
that nobody wants to hear.— Bobert
CWt/er.
Fee* of Boctor*.
The fee of doctor* i« »n item th»t very
inaiiy pcr»on> »re interested in juxl «t pres
eat. We believe the achedole for vivito i*
4X<K>, which would tax • min confined to hi*
b»d for • year, and in need of • daily visit,
over 41,011 ii • year for modical •Uendaace
alone! And one aingle bottle of Hop Bitten
taken in time would eave the JI.OW and all
the year'* aickneu.
BOW TO It BKACTirrL.
Large feet should never tie caaed in
kid, least of all in white kid alippers,
for kid reveal* *o clearly the form and
movements of the feet, and stretches so
easily, that few feethav* a chance in them.
Those who are very stout should wear
nothing but black ; those who are very
thin should put a little padding in their
gowns, and neither should be m tha
least deooUetU Oourier-Jbetrnel.
Tabi.eb'h Buckeye Pile Ointment It
only sOc. a bottle, and will cure Pi lea
permanently when used according to di
rection*. Therefore your sufienag it
without axenae, and you deaervs no sym
pathy if you do not use Taider's Bneksye
Pile' OuiUneut, the beet remedy foi
Piles For sale by all druggist*.
A wore datirod her husbauni to buy
her a new spring bonnet “Why. ay
dear,” said he, " how can I do it when I
have no money Y* And the simply ex
claimed, " Owe, dear I"
llxmau* and proaperny are ao IndlaaoluNy
with good baalth. that all thoaa aufferuiL
with Hoaraeuaaa, Coegfa*, Cold*, ate., should
try Dr. Bull'a Cough Byrup and be cured.
ITtoe M cetita,
To* Ayspepaia, Sepremfon of
apint* and general databty m than- vanoui
form*, also aa a prveaotre* againat saver and
ague aad other lutarwalUeaii favera, the lIIAC
Va<-arsoaLiTMi> Euxta or tatiaan lUax,
cnada by Oareall. Haaard A Co., hew tort, and
•old by all druggiata ia the 1-vwt tonic. aad foe
petirata recoTmux from fever or other sack
Meat* ha* noaqual
D! BULL’S
COUGH
SYRUP
B»crwrxwr nrDrww.vDßyen
There are person* m Fraase
who live quistiy and moderately upon
their from arrestment* tai real
retete «r other jwoperiy Im fkigimd
there are probably half as many, who
live in a simple and unostantatim* man-
I ner under the same circumstances The
English Government funds, known aa
“ oon*oi* " in the technical terms of the
money market, pay 3 per cate per an
num ; the French " rentes " pay about
tbs same rate of interest. The average
inoome from these aouroes to each owner
of these funds to not more thaa <3oh per
annum, and on this amount thousand*
of persons lire simple and contented
ftvre, enjoying in a modest and unas
[ sinning manner the fnuts Os tbmr Cart
■ futures and economy.
A French " rentier,” or an English
owner al “ ths fund*," or a qwson who
maybe pis*ressd of real estate, occu
pied or rented, enjoys a certain soma'
distinction cm account of his “ independ
ence," to wfiicta trim tbsre attwohesa
distinct ide* of certainty ofWnoomo with
the arearancc of a competency and
freedom from the cares and incoo
venienoes of pi vert y or embarraasmeuk
Bo long as these persons live with
(in their incomes, they are privi
teged persons in an rosy and wdl-dc
' fined positkin; jxinions of moderate
’ fortune who can afford to look upon
their front door a* sesuro Isom ths pos
»ible presence oi the typical •‘wiif,”
which is the <froa«l of all those who live
by uncertain employments. But, with
out the strictest plauincs* and economy
of living, all these people would become
j “of all men the most miserable."
Their property, saved by years of in
j dustry and economy, would soon disap
pear and leave them, in their old age, in
jxTverty and wretchedness. Few of
them, knowing their security and re
alising their comfort, are tempted to
risk their income in the hope of increas
ing the nite of interest by riakful mvest
meats or speculation*
How fortunate it must lie for Anier;-
can« if they would but take a Icmod
from tucii examples m these ! What
misfortunes, what losses, what disap
pointment* and even miseries would bo
avoided by a more contented disposition,
more devotion to simplicity of life and
economy of living?— Rural New Yorker.
Thbhb is already in existence a “So
ciety for the Preservation of tho Irish
Language." Might we suggest the
speedy formation of another “Society
for the Preservation of the Irish Land
lord Y'—Punch.
Torrrx—“l wonder why dolls are
nearly always girls, Tolu?" Torr
" Why, because boys hate being made
babies of I ”
A GOOD FAMILY «DI!
STRICTLY FURE
B AL® AM
Tbi* tißfravtng r«pr«a*nt4 fha Lnagfl ta a baallby ateia..
What The Hoctora Nay!
BX rrXTCHFR of M , mt* “1
maod t»q- 'Bslmm' in psofotoxico to acy tit bar Rk*47
cio* fevg cvughs j tvid* ■’
DI. 4XK MiAsrarfa, 81., wrlfaa ot mmm
k ’
SIR ,r. I TT'RXXX. Rl.udutill., Ala., a ji, -5.1..
W lv.ctj.a-, wrtM: "Il U <•< M
,np«u.. Am < ou.unapi.ca I, IX.
Wav all aria- TWrw**. a »awa -.1
rwlaaa«ar» aM-waaa. H wIU b. taaa* a
•■aaa aarellaja, fiaaaa*x-
SS M EXFECTORANT TThM HO
IT C*kT*IWS HO OPIUM IN ANT FOEN
FOfrSAU fcrXLL DRUGGISTS.
•Ma Tlaaaa NAwwM Ae Sai-i
If the •tsmach, liver and bowela are afire ten.
t« adopt the aure rrmeiiv. ILwtetler'a Stom
ach Bit*rr< Diaeatea of the orranx named
bege< othrra far nanr»- tenoNa, aad a delay i»
therefore h.xardou* Ilyspepaia, liver com
plaint, ehilla and fever, early rhenmaoc
twinge*, tldnfv weaknea*. hirer eeriou*
bodilv trouble if trifled with Iz>ae n-- t:tn
in aain* thi* effective. «*fe an-1 lone known
med trine-. -««
For aale by *p Dregrrata and Dealer*
gaarsallg*
a
In the southwestern part of Boott
cowrtv Infl.. fe»»** "P* B0 ®-
a doubly-Idrioric spok-first.jm
account of tbs toutobary of tbs ssttfer*
there, ixrtbe paoßser days, by ths Indi
ans ; and, second, on account of its be
ing for eighty year* the roosting place
al millioMi pigeon*. The mas
sacre of the settlers occurred in Sep
tember, 1812. One night a band of rov
mg Pottawatomies attacked the Pigeon
Roori settlement, killing twenty-fou*
l-rwons, mostly woman ami children
and burning all the bouses A part of
the family of John Collin* and a Mrs.
Headl- and tier two young children were
all of the settiers that escaped.
The pigeon roost covers hundreds of
acre* The birds commence coming to
it early in the evening, and great droves
continue to arrive until late in the night
During the roosting season thousands
are killed nightly, the forest often being
the scene of the wildest confusion. The
hunters bring down their birds with
shotguns and poles—those roosting on
the lower limbs being knocked off with
long poles. A coimtant whirr of the
wings of the birds and cracking and
fall of limbs from the accumulated
weight of pigeons upon them is heard
and seen, and the scene often is so ex
citing as to beggar description.
gwg
cerßedy
KOK
RHEUMATISM,
Heuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Sorenest of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, See!!-
ingt and Sprains,-Burns and
Scalds, General Bodily
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.
W*» *erth equals #r Oil
a* a »ap, »etrr, rimpir and rArrrp Eit*mal
H-mMy A trial eutaJ* but the comparetlraly
trtftinr outlay *f 60 few!fl. and on* autfertn<
with pain can La re cheap and prvof cf Ita
eUAaaa
IHrActlvos in Etov*a Larruajrsw.
SOLD BY ALL MOGQIBTB AND DEALERS
IB MEDIQIBE.
A. VOGELER A CO.,
BftlHmor*. I’. >. JL
Rheumatism, Neuralgia.
No eflher praparaUca baa cured ao man J caaoa oZ lbaa<
dtauamang complatnu a* Pond'S EXtFOCt.
Pond's Extract Plaster i»o*nu)iataiu*.
bl* io ib«w« (ii**a*vs, Lamba<<>, I'aiaa la Back o* 6*d»,
Pond's Extract Ointment (M
fr o*4 *b«n r*m wal cf eloUtiug Lno«TW«Ktrt, u •
I (rm h*lp m> rauavinf inftammaiory caaaa. Iwid by a*’
YOUNG MEN *•"> »««««•••
11MPLOY MENT-ME'ViK' iSSSt
>JIwSAuAJVr— U AU EXPENSE*
|| SLOAN
* *-•• SSS *•>,(. si. Claelnnaii. u.
CELLULOID
EYE-CLABBEB.
ftepr-entin* th* chokwct Miwtel Tortoire-
BbeU ud Amlwr. The fish test, b*nd*oai«L
•ad known. Boid by OpUcten* And
uT’i 1 ?., M * d * SPENCER OPTIOAL
M FO CQ., 1* Malden Lan*. New I*rk.
Or Dt« n taa SflFXn
BUT, it aeta ibaflaata*
If. ptodociof lb* E!O*-
al abadaa of Black a«
» .<!•♦* XCrTnA I Nth*
asss
a tad ttiUai for Lafly
amaa. Bold by !>ra>-
applM bv H de
•ra. Dopot tfc WQ_
U-. Jt.T
*•. CBITTOTPF. ATk
Send Your Addreee on a
Postal Card
ENRICH BROS.,
Eighth Ave., New York,
Shopping in New York
7" y ,r “ l ,IMI BeU ■Stelae »w *•*-.
dr a “ t*^ 0 " na »' ion?*’* »S
vp-»*u. «<*u*a
-Mj r-u MV liW* Ail fiprto Ue*n lu* hl.
7*°** *>*■*?*■»’-- 1* *•« frwsvMrt
. ',l-uwX look-
w'VKAte ntox-
-
■mirr~i<«.’ or »-•-■ r ”®
u MW luTiiZX • -TTwIhTT'
Moo-mi.pud
p,k c . .*.•.? - •
qfbmb con mutftta.
Om fl*y «* a* got to talking
.bout th*t witty oid «y«to, Ossa »wif
when on* of th* ocEaffiby took sflvxnt
smc< th*o|>entac«4df™*this>i <fo
Mrs of his : "Way- taifofl th .
“isitrifM, byAMlartattaMs, to
heritor* podkatF* Bwa* givun up,
al ooure*. aU the ssaww was.
oMse h* Us ptafeaa." kdlMMsfaU
ths Mbto re« 4 until, on* by one,
we sew 1A H«* on* tnoughtfti 1 num
observed : “It wm impossible to gi Tn
the nswor, beesua* th* Dean had
tnred to reaerve tha saswor to hinteelf.
I could not, for tastanee, say it is right
for ms to pick an artist’* pocket beesne,.
he ha* picked your*." Here is another
oonundrutn, founded upon spun, which
only the proponnder can solve : An old
man sad • y*wog were standing by
a meadow. "Why," asked the young
men, "ie this clover older than you ?"
•' It is not," replied the other. “It i*.
though," returned the young man, "be
cause it is pasturage." Thereupon »n
abstracted-rooking pfar«on, who had not
followed the line of remark, and had
not understood th* illustration, startled
ns with this irrelevant inquiry •• Why
eunot a pantomimist tickle nine Esqui
maux ? Giv* It up ? Why, it’s bacaues
he can gesticulate."
Bath Robert Collyer: "Tbs very flmt
person I want to see when I go to heaven
-you may call me a heretic ff you like
is not the Christ, not the Heavenly
Father; it is that little daughter, with
her sweet blue eyes and her beautiful
blonde looks, that was taken away from
my wife and myself in 1858."
"Do tou see that stick, sir?" said s
veia stupid acquaintance to Sidney
Hmfli. "This stick lias been all round
the world, sir I” ’‘lndeed I” said the re
morseless Sidney. “And yet it is noth
ing but a ■———axw-
" What is the difference between *
honevmoon and a honeycomb Y Give
it up 1 “ One is a seN and the other
a a lot of liULe cells-
* ynar to A<sato, nad nxpeDMn. H ()ul£l •”<**
)jTJ AddrMn F. B»M» A Co., AnfoMn, M«
pi s i’i' eo i
(T 77 "7 A^O.J 1A <XjtA?Fioo a, Tddr»- P.
$ | f |OJ TICKIIT, ln<Wk Mninn.
YOUNG
Cj ’1 'T W
w o Electricity & Absorption
a • J Combined
0, Q 1” ,fB giwMflr r«w« Ue Vital Tewra.
to? / Last Wnnhnnrf sod curing uw
' p. word <»■« or Seminal W**X
at MflLXmpotaikcy. *• b aT *
f I 4*» f \ rwV Ktectrn
/ A M toUtaod AbKftxwt Pto Comt
I USILJ («!»•©< Fat, 1110 tncSw « t.'—
I f ‘MW Mp**M 1 fau«er town uCMrwi, <
3 > 1 tho of *4
fl I'/Sw-B . pstrhnnn any •!«•*>>• •*■> *♦«•
I *aR ’ when yvu gas f*i lh« !•!*•« 1 *
V<aXTH£&>J prwwt tor M 3 00 M E>cVU
•« imM** 4 -. ■ ’ kubt." • Unm >*- rr ' hl »‘ Q »’"■*
A l»p*r Mrwt hr* u&»w-' •».-**.
[**?£ u5-Z--H yk D ft. D «ATRfW* ><*
> J J iJI
If you are
Interested
In the inquiry—Which Is the
best IJnnnent for Man and
Beast! —this is the answer, at
tested by two generations: the
MEXICAN MUSTANG LINI
MENT. The reason is sim
ple. It penetrates every sore,
wound, or lameness, to the
very bone, and drives out all
Inflammatory and morbid mat
ter. It “ goes to the root ”of
the trouble, and never fails to
©art! in double quick time.
miShJbersugarcanfseed’.i
■~(M« W. B. FOITBB. Xmm. *<••
Encyclopaedia&
TIQUETTE? BUSINESS
TL.a nth* rhnapnnt and M>ly oovnpin** Ttß#fc £
■ erbon Kuquert* nad B«•-■•«■ nod Bocml F ?.
♦♦Ha how to perform all th* ruxtona duenn “
h®wu» appear to the txnt Advunto<w on all or*** l ••
A*wata Wanted. -Aaat fr ttrfUn •
'•all of iba weak sod naira tarma l « A P“ l *’
Addronn. ManeatL Pviiuma Cw.. Allanu.
It rebaata aaOthen tfariuMull 1
< «n makr money handling the New No. '
Silent Lieht Running Wheeler A Wilwn S'"’
tng Machine. It is the only nuchine harm*
an eatabliahed reputation which i» of!rre<i •
wholeaalc in thia territory. For neeriy ‘h |rt ’
ream “Wheeler A Wilton” ha« been ahouw
hold word, and the name of th a rnaip*’’ 1
a wore guarantee of the superiority o’ ,h '
machine, and fair, liberal dealinr
buyen are referred to local agent’ and dca e
whoeell the Mo. S. Write for price* and ter™
to Wheeler A Wilaon Mfg Co., Atlant <■»
for Georgia, South Carolina, Florid* » n •
Sontheaatern Ala , Naehville, Tenn . ’’’
n ciwee a- d Morth Alabama. Ne't ' ,,f ’"
La., for Miaaiaipyi, Loniriana and Sout ’
era Ala. W. B. CLFVES Manage’
Needlea for all kind* of aewing tnacbi»«*
al wholeaale and retail.
South American Corn.
IM. inrM cor. ta Ibn w«!«L Th* bwrnnit
r nhich Avn-eigMthn widn, neb-tour*h lor*
h mahm ih« '*n< ir.nal nad ibe •**•» f tv
btfnalvn !HnM«4 >m. <m« tor nnl» itonwn* ' I *
<>• Moi Um per ewk, pew< paid If y*ilnd d m
aW«< I eui «nfm d »he aMßajr- •••'
fni. K,v«*v nlMMiid •*<«»• ■ , m
taMrvaaJ b MAMriV F-ni 1 **• ’
X> rUI twwnnkh umi. Ftahntoi• pton, !*•
Pubimbnen* Catos. Alton to, Oto..—.— —C<u*. -*i