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THE SHEFFIELD BOOM.
W bnt is lletui? Done h.I Sheffield* A In.-Hal •
iitjr Avenues, Streets aud Railroads—The
Sale.
There never was an enterprise begun
under more favorable auspices than the
projected city of Sheffield. Its location
on the south bank of the Tennessee liver
between Tuseumbia and Florence, s te¬
sted on high bluffs that command a view
for miles of i he surrounding country', he
healthl'nlneew of the place, ita fertility
and proximity to the immense coal and
iron fields and its many other advanta¬
ges have attracted tiie attention of cap¬
italists and manufacturers, while the
newspapers hardly in nearly all the states, wi h
an exception, have commented
.the favorably city. on the flattering prospects of
nevr
latest A reporter, wishing t® obtain the
information about Sheffield,
called at the office of Captain J. F.
Burke, one of the executive committee
of the Sheffield company, and v ho has
just returned from the north, where he
has been absent a month on business
connected with the new enterprise.
In response to an inquiry about Shef¬
field. Capt. Burk said :
“We shall have to take advantage of
the columns of the press hi answering
the questions that have accumulated in
regard to Sheffield, the new north Ala¬
bama city. We have headquarters for
information in Atlanta, Nashville, Mem¬
phis, Tuseumbia, Montgomery, Mobile
ana Selma, bnt it is impossible to answer
each man separately, so great So is the in¬
terest taken in the matter. we wifi
answer “When through does the the sale press.” take place?”
“It begins will on be May conducted?” 8th ”
“How it
“In the fairest and most open way.
Not a sin: le lot will be sold at private
sale. The lots, as platted, will be put
up at auction and sold without prefer¬
ence or prejudice. Each bidder will
stand on the same basis terms?” exactly.”
“What will be the
“We will ask only one-fourth cash
and the balance in one, two and three
years. Our object in selling for keep so little
cash is to allow the buyers to the
bulk of their money for building. Where
a man with a thousand or so dollars can¬
not afford to Day cash for hie land and
at the same time bui'd a house, we take
only oue-fourth for the land and let him
put the rest o*f his money in improve¬
ments.”
“Will there be large ntt ndance at the
sae?”
“The outlook is that it will be the lar¬
gest crowd at a laud sale ever seen in
the south. We have aimed specially to
avoid making it crowd anything of a frolic, or
attracting the We will that h&ve usually big go
on excursions. a
crowd but it will be a crowd of earnest
and quiet investment. business men looking for
homes and
“And why should it be a big crowd?
The ‘iteof Sheffield, is in my opit ion-—
and in the opinion of everyone who has
seen it, an ideal site for a city. 11 is
the most, beautiful spot I ever saw. The
bluff is from 25 to 125 feet above the
Tennessee river, which is half a mile
wide at that point. The ground is roll¬
ing, delightful, with noble fresh growth, possibility the climate
is without the of
malaria or epidemics. Besides being
incomparably healthier and handsomer
in locality than Birmingham rivals, it or Chatta¬
nooga, its nearest is as near the
coal and iron fields as they are—is near¬
er Sk Louis, the great iron market, and
has the advantage of river transporta¬
tion direct to that city. A considerable
trade is already done by the river.
When Sheffield is at work and the new
.railroad is finished, the river trade will
be immense. Iron, lumber and other
products will be sent by water to St.
Minis and the products of distributed the west
brought back by boat te be
by Sheffield merchants throughout the
south. mercial As a it manufacturing wi 1 have superiors and com¬ in
the point beautiful no and healthy
south. As a
home, I do not think it will have an
equal ”
“Is the road finished to the coal and
iron fields?”
“It is graded about 20 miles which
carries it to the coal and iron field, and
the track is laid about 8 miles. More
than 1,000 hands are now at work and
the end is being pushed rapidly towards
Birmingham. The company that builds
this road own largely of the stock in
Sheffield—the personelle of the two com¬
panies beiDg virtually identical. The
men who control the Memphis and
Charleston ™ . . road . and the Last ... i ennessee
and Virginia system are heavily in teres
ted m Sheffield, pis secured to the
new city a railroad ol its own penetra
ting the coal and iron fields, the good
4,000 r/.L Cer miles ^ 1U of ?’ road, °i a and 7 Stem a nvex 0f Ht which : arl , y
leadfcf rom ita ■wharves to the water ways
i<x£i7° rJd '
AVhere will mi .i. the largest , , number , of .
purchasers come from? Purchasers will
eome from every quarter There arc
already at Tuseumbia families from Da
kota and San Francisco waiting to pur
chase ground and begin business. Large
numbers will go from Birmingham and
Anniston composed of those who failed
to get in early in the speculations of
these places, and are determined not to
miss the Sheffield opportunity. As an
instance, one of our stockholders bought
a lot at Birmingham three years ago for
$2,600. After wliathe holding it one year be sold
half of it for gave for the whole.
Sometime ago he directed his agent to
close out his real estate in Birmingham,
in order to invest in Sheffield, and he
was informed that tlie remaining half of
his lot was now worth $30,000. Now
there will probably be but one auction
sale of lots by the Sheffield company,
and those wlio purchase then will get
the “underhoM.” Three or four hun
©red bids dollars invested at the beginning thousand
fair to be three or four
dollars in a very few years. AVe have
the history of Birmingham, Roanoke,
Anniston and other places before us.
Here is a package ot' letters from persons
in Texas, Iowa, Arkansas, New Hamp¬
shire and other places who have limited
means and youthful families. These per¬
sons desire to move to the new city, in¬
vest their means, in order that their chil¬
dren may become identified with the
place, and increase their store as the
general and property the increases, tho popula¬
tion value of property. There
is a good deal of foresight in all this.
Sheffield There is has no the disputing advantage the in iron fact that
man¬
ufacture. Hero it a New York paper
that contains a long article about Shef¬
field, and it truthfully says that the
new city will rival Pittsburg. Birming¬
ham is now soiling iron in Pittsburg at a
lower price than it has ever l)een Bold"
for there, and Sheffield can do better
than that by river transportation, for
Sheffield can sell iron in Pittsburg for
less money than it can be made tor by
the Pittsburg furnaces. Here is
enough The of itself to build a large city.
reporter thanked Captain Burke
for the interview, and picking up one of
the hantlsonje lithographed maps of
‘Sheffield took Ms departure, promising
to call again.
furnished Maps and other information cheerfu'lj
free upon application to Cap
•tain J. F. Burke, Atlanta; Major A. H.
Moses, Montgomery, Tuscumbiaj and Cob W. t.
Gordon, Ala.
THE CATTLE DISEASE.
Benori o! Veterinary surgeo, Holcomb on
the Subject.
The United States Veterinary Surgeon
at Fort Leavenworth, Dr. Holcomb, de¬
tailed to investigate the cattle disease in
Woodson County, reports that the foot
and mouth disease exists in a severe
form, and not the dreaded anthrax, or
black leg, as at first supposed, which ia
much He more fatal, killing 80 per cent.
did not expect to find foot and mouth
disease, but was prepared to find an¬
thrax. The foot and mouth is a specific
disease that takes its own time. The
majority of the cattle examined showed
the characteristics of this peculiar dis¬
ease. In the more recently discovered
cases which very belongs high temperature was found
104 deg. Farhenheit to this One epidemic, about
of tho most
positive proofs of the correctness of th®
diagnosis is the death of a calf several
days after the mother was taken with
the disease. The disease poisoned tli®
milk and thus killed the calf, whioh was
only a few days old. The characteristic
ulcerations of the alimentary canal and
mouth were also found. When an ani¬
mal is attacked.it becomes feverish and
stupid, and the climax of the diseas® is
the rotting off of th® hoofs, followed by
death. In the instances in th® present
epidemic the diseas® is at present coa
fined to North-eastern Woodson County,
but as cattle have gone to other parts of
tlie State from there since th® epidemi®
broke out other localities ar® apt to b®
affected. WMle it may be a great losa
to the owners of the stock, yet to de¬
stroy the herds in which the disease has
appeared would be the best and safest
course to pursue. Those who have lost
their feet will be of little use for beef,
in as they will not easily fatten. All herds
the neighborhood, whether affected
or not, should be strictly quarantined.
Cattle have been known to take the dis¬
ease several months after others have
recovered, but by mixing the herds it
has appeared again in as virulent a form
as before. A microscopical examination
of the milk shows traces of the poison
fully three months after the animal has
recovered. If any of the cattle now
affected should recover it would be a
dangerous thing to turn There them on th#
range in the summer. can be no
question that the State owes it to itself
to find out bow it originated.
Mullagatawny Soup;
A lesson in soups was given in Miss
Parloa’s cooking school, New York, and
white stock, mullagatawny, bouillon and
class. consomme White were prepared first before the
soup was made. To
four pounds of veal, which had been sim¬
mered in a gallon of water for four
hours, was added half an onion, a pars¬
The nip, a turnip and a stick of cinnamon.
soup was then cooked one hour
longer, and strained through a sieve
when it was ready to be served.
In the preparation of mullagatawny, a
fowl weighing three pounds, three
pounds of can veal, two large onions,
celery, two large slices of carrots, four stalks of
three tablespoonfuls of butter,
one tablespoonful of curry-powder, four
tablespoonfuls of flour, salt and pepper,
and five quarts of water were used A
piece of chicken fat, equal to two table¬
spoonfuls, was taken from the chicken
and melted in the soup-pot. The vege¬
tables, which were cut fine, were put in
the soup-pot and cooked twenty minutes
with frequent stirring. Then the veal
was added, and the whole was cooked
fifteen mim?t es longer; then the chicken
aQ(I water were The - BOUp waR
skimme d and set back where R would
simmer 8i ow l y fonr hollrs . When the
0 Meke» was tender it was removed and
Bet one side, while the soup cooked.
After the soup was boiled the butter was
melted in a frying . pau> and the dry flour
stirred in till the whole was a rich brown,
when the curry-powder was added and it
wa8 removed from tbe stove. TMs mix
ture was slirred into the soup and it was
tlten coo ked half an hour longer. Then
jf was strained and returned to the soup
kettle and the cMoken was cut in small
bits< Seasoning of salt and pepper was
added and the soup simmered thirty
minutes longer.
The Chinese custom of decapitating
their enemies slain in war is explained
by the statement that they believe that
the appearance of a person in the spirit
world without ahead is prima facie evi¬
dence ef having committed some crime,
and punishment is awarded accordingly.
Hence the horrible mutilation which
took place on the evacuation of Shanghai
by the Tuipings, when the imperial offi¬
cers gave orders for the decapitation of
every rebel body.
The Queen of Madagascar, at her re¬
cent coronation, wore a dress of ivory
satin, with much gold embroidery. yards length, She
had a train, two or three in
of handsome dnrk crimson velvet,
spangled with gold, borne by six offi¬
cers of State. Her Majesty expression is quite of
young, of a most pleasing dignified and
countenance, singularly ■
ladv-like.
“How does it happen, doctor,” asked
Lawyer Coke, “that so few of your pa¬
tients recover?’ “Probably,” quickly
replied Dr. Bolus, “for the some reason
that so few of your clients recover.”
OUR SCHOOL-BOY DAYS.
A BAD BOY WHO CAUSED A SF.NSATION
ON EXAMINATION DAY.
How a Caiitnaiou was Started by the Dr.
claim er—The Solemn inanity of thy
Teacher and How it was Broken.
Our school-teacher was one of the
disciplinarian, kindest men living, but he was n strict
and anything laughable
seemed to him to be wrong. Some of
the thought school-boya felt hurt at this, and
if they could only get him to
laugh just once, so he would know hew
it felt, it would do him good, and not do
the school any hnrt. So one Friday
afternoon when there was going to be an
“exhibition," such as speaking pieces,
the boys put up a job. At noon ofie of
the boys whose father kept a grocery,
brought up about half a pound of black
snuff. The snuff was parcelled out to
aH the boys, a “pinch” to each, and at
a given signal all were to take the sung'
and watch for results. The red-headed
boy was to go upon the platform te
speak “Bingen on the Rhine,” aid
when he got te the proper place he was
to take his snuff, and sneeze, and the
rest were to follow suit er trump.
The school-room was full of visitors,
most of them parents of the boys, and
the teacher was in his element. The
teacher told the visitors how the school
was progressing, and what improvements
the scholars were making, and then the
good man announced that there would
be a declamation by one of the scholars,
of “Bingen on the Rhine,” and as the
red-headed boy came out of the aisle
with boots four sizes too big, and pants
two sizes too small, with his father’s old
fashioned “stook” around Ms neck, and
tumbled up on the stage, as a boy al¬
ways tumbles when he wants to do any
tMng nice, there was a titter on the part
of the visitors. The teacher frowned,
half at the awkward boy, and half at the
visitors, and as the boy faced the audi¬
ence and made a bow that would stop a
clock, the teacher said, “Lot ns have the
utmost quiet, and George, tako your
hands out of your pockets and speak up
loud.” George removed his great, lug,
awkward, red hands from Ms pockets,
nnd spoke up lond. That was what
George was there for. Clearing Ms
throat, and swallowing the Adam’s
apple that stuck up like a bracket shelf
in a pantry, he proceeded npon the
mournful story of “the soldier of the
Legion,” who “lay dying in Algiers."
He went through ft nicely until he came
to the passage which says, “His voice
grew faint and hoarser, his grasp was
childish weak, his eyes put on a dying
look, ho sighed and ceased to speak.”
As George sighed, he put his thumb and
finger to his nose and inhaled enough
snuff to have exploded a bank safe. He
began to catch, and aot like a person
who is going to sneeze, and the boys
tsegan to load their own cartridges.
History will record that George snoze
first, though he tried hard to prevent it
apparently, with him. and The the visitors teacher did sympathized not, aud
they began to titter, the teacher
frowned, and George gave another
sneeze that nearly knocked the glob "’fltje e off
the table, and then they laughed,
teacher was about to say something ap¬
propriate to the occasion, to apologize
for the declaimer, when away over by
the stove a big boy sneezed so that it al¬
most loosened the stove-pipe, and then
a little fellow on the front seat sneezed,
and finally the skirmish line of sneezers
was overcome by the main force, and in
half a minute sixty boys were sneezing
for all that was out. The visitors,
noticing the helpless and forlorn look of
the teacher, his wild appearance, tried
to keep from laughing by stuffing hand¬
kerchiefs in their mouths, but they had
to laugh or die, and it was not long be¬
fore teacher, everybody was laugliing except the
and he looked as though he
wanted to die. George was on the plat¬
form yet, bat he had forgotten the bal¬
ance of his “Bingen," and the audience
had forgotten him, but when he turned
to the teacher and asked if he could be
excused, the teacher said, “Yes, a
thousand times, forever,” and then the
teacher had to laugh. He said there
would be a recess of ten minutes until
the scholars had sneezed up a lot- ahead,
and then there was a solid ten minutes
of laughing.
The Pension Bill.
The United States House Committee
on Invalid Pensions by a vote of 5 to 4
decided to report adversely upon the
Price bill to pension all soldiers who
served in the late war at the rate of
twenty-two cents per month for each
month of service. The bill of Represent¬
ative Robinson, of Ohio, to place" all ex
Union soldiers who were confined in Con¬
federate prisons upon the pension rolls
and to pay them $2 per day for each dav
of their imprisonment, was taken up and
Representative Watson offered a substi¬
tute, providing that a pension shall be
eiven to any ex-Union prisoner of war
whom a board of pension surgeons shall
ind to be suffering from any disability,
.ither general or specific, and also pro¬
viding for the pensioning of the widow of
any Union soldier who was confined in a
Confederate prison and died from the
effects of Ms confinement. The only
evidence necessary in the latter case to
be the testimony of the physician who
attended her husband in his last illness.
The substitute was adopted bv a vote of
j to 3.
Imports and Expoats.
The Chief of the Bureau of Statistics,
of the United States, in his eighth
monthly statement for the current fiscal
vear of the imports and exports of the
United States, says:—
Dio excess of the value of exports over im¬
ports of merchandise was as follows;—
Month ended February 29, 1884.. ..$ 6,601,664
Two months ended Feb. 29. 1884.. 26,283,187
Eight months ended Foi). 29, 1884. 88,299,898
Twelve mouths ended Feb. 29,1884. 100,419,136
The total values of the imports of
merchandise during the twelve mouths
ended February 29, 1884, were $C82,-
776,609, and during the twelve months
ended February 28. 1883, 3750,332,073,
a decrease of $67,555,464.
The total values of the exports of
merchandise during the twelve mouths
ended February 29, 1884, were $783,-
195,745, and during the twelve months
ended February 28. 1883, $793,689,854,
a decrease of $10,494,109.
Milwaukee has more saloons in pro¬
portion to population than any other
in the country.
Houses and cattle west of Medina
river, Texas, are dying by hundreds for
want of grass.
Long Island farmers are forming
vigilance thieving tramps. committees for prosecuting
The spruce trees in Vermont have
been attacked by a mysterious disease
which is destroying them.
The Detroit Free Press says that
four-iifths ot the female hired help in
that eity came from Canada.
A lady of Havana, HU, though now
yards ninety years in of the age, has worked 10,000
of lace last two years.
VERY NEAR rr.
“Hasn’t young Mr. Slim offered yon
Ms hand yet ?” demanded a mother of
her daughter. “He’s long enough about
it.
“Not quite, mother; but he came very
Hear it teat night.”
“How didkhe cerme very near it?”
asked the old lady.
“He offered me his arm.”
BUSINESS. MEN
wearied frotn the labors of the day, on ttoing
home, and find that they cannot little have darling the desired is still
acoessary rest, for the
suffering, and slowly and pittifully wasting
effects away hy the drainage If npon would its system from the
of teething. they Remedy, only think to
use l>r. Bigger’s Southern loss of
sleep This, and bowel complaints Taylor's would Cherokee be unknown. Rem¬
with a bottle of
edy of Sweet Gam and Mullein, combining
stimulating expectorant demulcent principle healing of the of sweet the
gum wife the one
BinUcin, for the cure of croup, whooping
oongh, coldB and consumption, presents a little
medicine ghest no household should be with¬
out for tlie speedy relief of sudden and danger¬
ous attacks of the lungs and bowels. Ask your
druggist for them. Manufactured Taylor’s Fremitim by Walter Co¬
logne, A. Taylor, proprietor Ga.
Atlanta,
Said a railroad magnate: “Times are
getting “Not close, and I must economize.”
ia your living, I trust?” queried a
friead. “Ah, no,” replied the large
shareholder; the living “not in my living, ” but in
of my employees.
Nature is the great teacher, slie clothes the
fowls aud animals with warmer clothing for
winter; helps them to cast Carboline, it oft' in summer: whjek is
makes the best Hair Oil,
Petroleum perfumed, aud sold at $1 a fettle.
Alfred Chadwick for‘which yokod his Judge wife .Tenni- to a
plow with a steer,
son, of Beiroit, gave her a divorce. He in¬
sisted that he only followed the general
usage among the market gardeners of west¬
ern Canada.
Druggists in malarial districts say that Lydia
R Plnliliam’s Vegetable Compound is as much
the standard; i-medy for female weaknesses as
qxmine is for the prevailing chills and fever.
Senator Pendleton, of Ohio, is to de¬
liver the oration at the Mecklenburg Tuesday, May celebra¬
tion in Charlotte. N. C., on 20,
and SixtakeJ - Carlisle is to make a brief ad¬
dress.
Piles! piles: Piles.
Sure care for Blind, Bleeding and Itching
Piles. One box hag cured worst cases of 20
rears’ standing. No one need suffer five min
htesafter using William's Indian Pile Ointment.
It absorbs tumors, allays itching, acts as poul
ficc, gives instant relief. Prepared only for
Pilesj Fraser itching Med. Co.. of private Cleveland. parts. Mailed for *L
O.
©eor&ia is snia to have more Mormon*
within its boundaries than any other Southern
State.
I hnv» Oar Vest Families six
b«n troubled for over yefig
With a tevere kidney complaint, with, also a wea»
ness of the urinary organs, its attemj
aut troubles. My wator needed constant at¬
tention, some days as many as twenty times,
with severe pains in lh<t b adder, as well as
in the back and loins. At times 1 passed a
limited quantity of urine, highly colored
with unnatural heat and sediment; frequent¬
ly evacuations would bo very painful I
concluded that I must do something for it,
fearing that more serious trouble would fol¬
low. I wept to the druggist and was recom
mended to use Hunt’s Remedy, as it hal been
used with wonderlul success in several severe
cases of- dropsy and kidney and bladder af¬
fections herein Bangor. I concluded to try
it, and before I had used one bott'e found it
was helping me beyond my expectations. less color My
water became more natural, an t
sediment, *the pains in back and that heavy
feeling gone, witi.a general toning up of the
system; and I continued to use it until I
used six bottles, and it has completely cured
me.
Others of my family have used Hunt’s
Remedy with equally as good success, and we
do not hesitate to recommend it far and near,
believing it a duty as well medicine as a pleasure Hunt's to
recommend so good a as
Remedy. You oro at liberty to give my tes¬
timony to the public. D. T. Hodgeen,
Orsjngtow, Me., May 19, 1883.
I indorse the above statement.
A. M. Robinson, Ba Jr., M«
Ap oth ecary, ngor,
Last year the railroad track laid in the
Southern States extended 1,662 miles.
In.tantlY Relieved.
Mrs. Ann Lacour, of Hew Orleans, La.,
writes; “ I have a son who bas been sick for
two years; be has been attend©;! by our lead
tag physicians, but all to no purpose. This
morning he had his usual spell of coughing,
and was so greatly prostrated in consequence,
that death seemed imminent- We had in tht
house a bottle of Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam foi
the Lungs, purchased by my husband, whe
noticed ye.ur advertisement yesterday. IV«
administered it, and he was instantly re¬
lieved.”
_____________
The Mormon Church embraces more
women than menl
DR. J. G. WESTMORELAND
Proposes to treat such chronic diseases as
>’asaJ Catarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma ant! Con¬
sumption by his special mode of lnhslatioi.;
aud Canoe’-, Kidney ana Urethral aftections
rjhJ Piles by local application. The latter by
tko painless mode, Address relieved consult permanently him’ in less
than a week. or at 55}^
b'outhE.oad Street, Atlanta.
It is said that John L. Sullivan is very
fond of going to pound parties.
Womans’ chiet beauty is her skin, Samar
Han Ntrvine ensures that chirm to patrons
Confectioners are the only class of men who
charge pretty girls for taffy.
Isaac Jewel, Covingt’n, Ky., says: "Samar.
iian Nervine cured my Asthma and Scrotn’.a
Piso’s SMWdy for Catarrh is a certain cure
for that very obnoxious disease.
The vital statistics of New Jersey births for 1883.
show 9,166 marriages, 24,430 and 28,
810 deaths.
MntrlinonyAll jHin.Irnt, for re«pon,ibto parties destrinir ■dlrrt.* corpM
ot ”W.ddin* tioiUBmuent Boll,"to nr Matrimony rend for
coot P.Box 2t.h. Boston, Miw,
WESTMORELAND’8
fori for the World •
O Q 11/ VV i« Uiver, rei.eves Heart paipuation, and Kidney torpid Ton
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Of the blood. eases dependent OH impurities
Price *1.51
O $3 TIT VV Diarrhoea, Mixture relieves
diarroce* and dyseo'ery of cf if
and $1.25 dr?n bottle. and adults. Price 10'.75c
per
O TXTIbain Tonia, relieves com
t J VV l»Ofl convulsions aud epileptic r r
♦W*. IXM '» * P i *1 Jpl.UU.
AlUf ft*, prepared and sold by
WESTMORELAND, GRIFFIN & CO.,
•5 South Broad f treet,
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A SPECIFIC FOR
Epilepsy,
Spasms, Convul¬
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iMM sia, Nervousness,
ae \Sick Rheumatism, Headache,
_
Nervous Weakness, Castiveness, Brain Worry, Blood Sores,
Biliousness, Troubles Nervous Prostration, $1.50.
Kidney *Snpipit- and Tpm Irregularities, tmoninis.
"Pamartian . Nervine is doing wonders.”
Hr. -1. O. MrLfimoin. Alexander City, Ala.
‘‘I feel It my duty to recommend it.”
‘‘It cured Where Dr. D. phvsicians F. Laughlin. failed.” Clyde, Kansas.
Rev. .1. A. Edic, Beaver, Pa.
BYr Correspondence freely answered, “a*
The hr. S. A. Richmond Med. Co., St. Joseph, Mo.
For testtawatals and circulars send stamp. CD
At Druggists* C. S. Critteuton, Agent, S. T.
IRUf-. to the quickest. ptnaasntwl
{Smlst utaesaan, and ooly Esas’sfaa bladder real real curative curative and
ever e
/ax/VX dtoep»«r«4 for a'-ut* te ASKSkSSt lumbago, and ana carom chromo soial
Boghtaod dj&pepeia £
tees easee ia S w*ek.v-ail
♦onufi of m 2 to 18 w«*b-relieve*
inllammatovy rofer to hundreds of relia>
Me people sonrpdtwho had tried in vain everything else.
Handy iat bot*Qtg;TI«*inlWB. it; tt be deehnes and ni«e send to 1rink. for A*k it—take roar
dru ail to get to us
MB*JKnaoie.Ada aaACo..lU»WUuamd U t N.Y
LATooces
•/ mv/Jsty
uLcmJxzs. Gets
AN ORGANISED IiUSINUSS COMMUHIIY.
25-m YEAR. SEND FOR CIRCULARS.
D? F00 P Original METHODS
OLD Mrte New 'without doc- OF
forfl.mediuine orglasscs ROME
RUPTU or Cured uncomfortable witho'toiieration truss.
PHIMOS CttTfd pcw.pain]ess,safe,snre. without cutting; CURE!
NERYOOJIBfSgSaS^iaSSSItnv. PU DP HI PTUs eases «r all kmdf-I’^rhleta
Uil ITURIUso-called **incurable.'’ lOc.eacb.)
iritis Dr. T» B. FOOTE, Hoi TS 8 , X. Y. City.
Easy tonsev A CCTrtain cure. Not expensive. Three
rnnptng^ treafn^at In DruMtoi^or^y''nuu'L one package. f 1 <K>d for Cold
Fifty cents. B’- r” HAZELtlSE,
E. T. Warren, Pa.
30 DAYS’ TRIAL
MLwyi (BRFOKR.) IB -1
VAFTER.J
TTtLKCTRO-VOLTAIC BELT and other Eucmo
Nervous Weaknesses, Debility, and all kindied Lost Vitality, diseaseB. Speedy Wasting
lief and complete restoration re¬
Manhood Gitaimnteep. Send to Health Vigor Illustrated and
Pumphlet free. Address at once for
Yoltaic Belt Qo., Marshall, Mich,
10LID 81LVER STEM WINDIN6
FULL JEWELLED GENTS’ SIZE
WATCH FOR $12.50,
, FULLY GUARANTEED. This offer mads for 69
dayson'y. inspection before Goods sent t-y KxpreaaC. O. D., »ubiectto
purchasing.
J. F. STEVENS dr CO-, Jeweler*.
__ Atlanta, Ga.
GOOD NEWS
12 LADIES!
Greatest inducements ever of¬
fered. Now’s yoortim* to «?t up
orders for our ceietr..ted Teas
and Coflees.and secure a beauti
ful Gold Band or Moss Rose China
Ro§e Tea Dinner Sot, Set, or Hacdsome Gold Band Deccrated
Gold Band Wn«If Fc lull or Mom
l>ec<rated THE UKEAT Toilet Set. AMERICAN r particulars TEA address CO.,
P, O. Box 2t«. 31 and 33 Veeey St., New York.
eoNsuMPTiorc ] have positive remelr for tbe above diae«M; bv Ita
a long
nse tboesaads ot cases ef tbe worst bind and of
standing efflaaev, bare been I cared, will eend tadeod. TWO eo BOTTLES atroaf Is my faitS
lu tu that FKBB, te
rather with a VALUABLB TRBATISB on this ftotM, te
r. O. *44re..
tu Pearl Be. Nt v York.
' CZ
.
r i
fc ^ .XSUBSCBIItRS £ f
I X. roR s 2
No. fc § irsa? tsgn&Z sm IR13 place V/
nanew V
before that date, will receive a certiticate in the distribution free, and every seb
BCriber is g uaranteeda premium. Am ong the many premiums to be distribut ed are
llfl S 100 QcashlS 500 cash|S 250 cash
| 160 ACRES OF LAND, • ELEGANT $500 PIANO, OROANS,
i, t A k; WATCHES, Everything guaranteed HOUSEHOLD satisfactory ARTIGLES, refunded. BOOKS, We NOVELTIES, desire introd ETC.!
or money to uce
5 ur paper into 100.000 new homes this year. Our Company is chartered by the
State of thoi^outh. Texas, with Our a Capital of ^ 25,0001 Our Printing Establishment is the Ur
^est ia Company is endorsed by the entire Press and People of
1 sf the South, as strictly reliable. We are the originators cf the M NO BLANK **
listribution plan, and have many imitators, whose extravagant oilers are deceiving
r he people. X>ur ofiers are LIBERAL YET REASONABLE.
A Our SrNNT South if^nblished sqru-TnGnthly^deTo^d^to^hc^intarggtj^onhq Turn and. fire aide.
. R
iGENTS WANTED t"? 1 ?"n ripti0 ?
Bourbon: Alena fur DeGolyn'o VII
niuhen, and Comer Wlulto lm-tlfi'a.
_—_._____
SSI
LYDIA E. PINKHAS’S q
N YeptaMe Cnpu
.
IS A rCBITlTZ ODSS -ttj
j '?A For Female Complaints an A
/ Weaknesses so common t«
oar best female population.
It Trill cars entirely the worst form of Female Cota
nt 5 „ 0Tar,lla _ . troubles,Inflammation and Ulcer*.
8Sii*^5J5 =Wo „ * Life SpSiTS
' *
It will dissolve and expel tumors from the uterus tn ui
humors Early stara there of 13 development. checked The tendency to canoerouf
very speedily by Ita use.
It removes faintness, flatulency, destroys all cravtof
tor stimulants, and relieves weakness or the stomach!
Won. That feeun* of bearing- down, causing i'n'S'SSt pain, weijM
and backache, is always permanently cured by ita use.
it will at all times and under all circumstaDce^'-act is
Cum d arrf. rncoti.u o.Bubottic,rorts.» SESSJSS
r°' jr ‘ uMurp
No family should be without LYDIA S. PIKK3AITS
LIVER PILLS. They cure constlpation, billousuere auf
torpidity of the liver. 85 cents a box at all dru.-iglsts.
...s'
' EEESESa
___, _ ___ POKE
{HHCEI3T *
Attt RW.B
SUttBiGEftB! —MHSECUSU
discount to rc.uSB a omw&fl sit bhulm.
To Speculators.
R. lindblen & Co., H. G. Wilier k To.,
i and Commerce, 7 Chamber Chioigo. of 55 Broadwo/, New York.
Crain and Provision Brokers
Members of all prominent Prodoce Eschanges in
New York, Chicago, St. Louis and Milwaukee.
Chicago We have exclusive .New Yorfc. private Will telegraph ord- wire t between
and execute ere on oar
judgment particular*, when requested. ROrfT. LINDBLOM Send for circulars A CO., C contx hicag® in
mg
Mme. L. LANGE’S
Lady’s Protector
and Supporter.
Price: Silk, $2; Linen, $1 50,
EIXITTAXCE WITH OBDER,
SENT BY MAIL.
S*nd for Descriptive Circn!:r,
704 Breadway, N.Y. City,
'_ Agents Wanted.
V WILSOE’S COMPOUItD 0? N
PURE COD LIVER
k OIL AND LIME. .
To One and All.—Are you sufiorin^ from a'
Cough, pulmonary Cold, troubles Asthma, th Bronchitis, or any Consumption of the varioa*
if t so often end in *
so, use “Wilbor’s Pure Cod-Liver Oil and Lune, M »
»afe and sure remedy. This is no quack preparation,
but io prescribed by the medical faculty. Yanuf’d on y bjf
A. B. WILbob, Chemist, Boston. Sold by all druggists.
Consumption Can Be Cured I
DR. m. HALL’S
lw.BALSAM
Cores Consumption, CoUls^ Pneumonia^__Iiv.
Oriau. •t Lnnas. it eoethea inflaweil and beats and ttoe Membra*
ike paiooned by thn
diseaae, ti*htne«» and prevents the night sweat-* and
acrvis the chest which accampany
I HALL’S 1 ,*. I?k* u nu*^? IjALma.M B M ®* will an incurable
tiieutfb torofeMion&l&id laiia. cure you. er
IPS 827 firanoau tsc, Sao 8 Froccisco. SS ChJ. ’
OPIUM {j2J vhishy LE^M.
aUua Mat fr««. B. M. WOO D. , Atlanta, Go.
OLD RIP teKM’Jr 7
ftDil lUM liM URED IN'turfV WFP-iT*
UI
P ersio Ns asS! 'sL'S'lf
5
'.V
PATENTS SsSMSSS?*
POTOMI. N.X 10 SAL fmuwaa Oo . Atia.u, lU.
pl*c# A tine to Men re Bu*ine» daring Edaeat
Penm*n«hip and fall the Sfencenaa spring,
summer is at
College, Cleveland, O. Circulars free.
TTVANTED—LADIES TO TAKE OUR. NE%
, Fanov work at tn.ir homes, in city or roilo-rj.
and earn 5^6 to 81 * per week, making xoods for our
Spr ngand bummer trade. Send 15c- for sample and
partic ular*. Hu dson M ix. Co.. 365 Sixth A.e,. h’. Y.
Oii,. A 3 ENTS K. F. DIKTERK’HS. WANTED^MK Cleveland, Ohio.
Arsni; 143,’84
1 •I:.
•JH
1
\0
V-
rlflu’utud slumping (outta and Price Bout. nm- Send {Or
‘
} $_—