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V. IIV V. ;; IIAVK CYCLONES. They 3Zust Increase Every Year Until We Plant Trees. From tlie Chicago Herald. In the scientific column of a Chicago journal, of July 4, it seems that the whole theory of cyclones was elaborated in a couple of lines. In an article for the history ot Chicago (vol. 1. j p. 588), tho writer gave tiic following suggestion. "But Chicago has been singularly free from the devastating cyclones that have cut swaths of ruin j in all the conterminous country, and j the reasonable solution of the fact j appears to be that the light atmosphere : of the lake absorbs the approaching ! cyclone ami disseminates it.. The force of a cyclone, a* the force of dynamite, requires repression anil compression to educate it.' in mis nccu.->uni\ brief allusion the two great factors of cyclones, simoons, northers or other other it-real convulsions, are stated negatively. But in these marvelous natural convulsions ail the postulates nave to be expressed in that manner. In fact, to speak of the "force" of a cyclone is almost to use a misnomer; /or it? force Is not mat oi propuisiuw, but of exhaustion. Take the winter of Texas, the "norther", as an example. The hot Southera sun for days and days beats upon the treeless plateau nf "El Llano Estacado," or the Staked plains, and as an inevitable consequence the air becomes exceedingly rarefied aiul expended. This expansion continues until the superheated portion is met by a mass of cool atmosphere, and then the natural effect of cooling and condensation of the heated air ensues. This creates ?* - ~ 'r> -filla/J "Kxr o U vacuum, W111CI1 lUiHU.-s 13 nn^u 1/; ? current, of the cooling motor; exactly on the same principle a? that of the cooling sea breeze, explained in every work on physical geography. Should there be a very large area 01" superheated air, then the continuous condensation and rushing in of the cold air makes the "norther." The same causes produce the same results in P\v7r>nr> <vi lrmd find the tOF pedo at sea, and both are prefaced by a rapidly falling thermometer and barometer. And the destruction of the forests of our Northern States is the occasion of the cyclone, and nothing else. The trees are nature's means of disseminating moisture in the upper stratum, which, by the cooler temperature of night, is returned to the thristy earth in the form of dew, and the removal of the trees causes the nmntarrnnted rarefaction of the air and the consequent cyclone. Nebraska used to be unenviably distinguished by the violence and frequency of its windstorms. IIow many of these unpleasant visitations has that State had since the comprehensive treeplanting1 that has been carried on there? It would seem that that case alone was sufficient proof for the successful -I vr?fhnnt ueixiujisuauvii uiu u.nv.^, any purely scientific reasons being adduced. "But, if any reader has not been io Nebraska, or has had no opportunity to consult the statistics relative to that State, the cyclonc theory advanced is easily proved by visiting auv large furnace. Go there and get the firemen to open the door of the furnace and listen for the result; the deafening roar that ensues is the cold air rushing to take the place of the rarefied and superheated air, and is a cyclone 011 a amall scale, and if we can imagine one furnace being situated immediately behind that where the experiment is made, and other behind that, and so on ad infinitum, then we have an cxact representation of the cyclone traversing the various areas ol the superheated atmosphere, udui it arrives at a region where the temperature is normal, when ii. subsides. The rotary motion of both the cyclone and the whirlwind is another proof of the verity of this argument. The outer edge, or circumference, of both is the first to be cooled, and the centre of the rapidly chilled mass of air ascending imparts to the whole body its revolutions. The motion of the "ear'h 011 its axle has been alleged to have some inflnoiwo ml tho mfnrv morion- bnf this has not yet been satisfactorily demonstrated by our scientific men to be accepted. Antagonists of our theory have adduced the simoon as a simoon as a contravention of its being a scientific fact, but, however' comforting the apparent contradiction may be to the "Ilobber Lumber Barons", it is, in fact, no substantial allegation adverse to the theory at al.'. The fact that the simoon is an intensely hot sandstone, - 1 ~ J-i ^ 1 /I rrrin/-! Willie liiU ilf illiui id it >ci v ^viu it niuj negatives nothing-, for pyrology has not yet demonstrated how hot air can be made: and it is only needful that one section of atmosphere should be hotter than the air in iis vicinity for the heated portion to ascend and its location to be supplied by the cooler. And these simoons always occur on the deserts, where there is absolutely 110 forestry. Hence, as it is impossible to transplant the lake?which has proved the V.w Ph " / ?*? rrrv f r\ 4 Ti r* SllieiV vaivc IVi IV lu^, v; clone-infested region?, the only means for their abrogation and ultimate prevention is to inaugurate an extensive system of tree-planting' and preservation, and then ?and not until thenwill the terrible devastation of the cyclone become a thing of the past. It is the acme of stupidity to imagine that any part of the fundamental laws of nature can be set at nought without the direst results following, and just how any nation can infer that the whole configuration of a country can be changed without a corresponding change accruing to the atmospheric condition of that country is hard to conceive. Trees were piaced 011 the earth for some other reason than to supply a lumber market, and their flnctviH-tion hn.s r.O!if:ln sively shown at least one purpose that they were intended to serve, that of equalizing the atmospheric temperature, and therefore equalizing the wind and rain. Apart from the disadvantages resulting to agriculture, in view of the disastrous loss of life, it would seem the duty of our effete Congress to take speedy and coercive action to prevent the abolition of our forests, and also to encourage the planting of trees, thereby the droughts that have made crops almost impossible will be unknown, and these terrific atmospheric results ?called cyclones?will ccase to be, simply because what called them into existence will cease to bu causes. Thirteen PetriSied UoUie.?. India n a roi.is, J ad., July 2:;.?A special to the Journal from lioehester says: "While 3Ir. T. Bowman, residing about three miles north of Akron, was engaged in setting posts u Joy or two ago he was greatly surprised to have a post with which he was packing the bottom oi the hole break through and disappear from sight. He took iiis spade and dag down, with the intention of discovering where the secminglv bewitched post disappeared to. The -." i 1 1 ?i ,j,\. UOie WHS suun CIK tJ ;cu. anu. ?i v .1 n. llwclosed. He procure* I:: ladder and a lantern, and descended into the cave. Then the hair of the inquisitive 31 r. Bowman stood on end. On the ground were the forms of 12 men, while a part of a thirteenth leaned up against the si;-.' of the cavern, with one ; hand outstretched. as if earnestly address- j inghis 12 comrades. Mr. Bowman examined the bodies and found them to be petrified. He soon made his exit, and spread the news, and up to the present time hundreds of people have visited the spot. The awe is about 20 yards square and about 9 ! feet deep. There is much speculation about the strange discovery.*' Sold again?Second-hand articles. FKEAKS OF SOMN'AM JiULISTS. Eight Cases Wlu'ch are Worth Noting? ! An Interesting Collection. From Uk* Chicago Xev.-s. A gentleman was discovered .it one o'clock in the morning in a neighbor's garden engaged in prayer, evidently under impression that he was in church bnt otherwise in a deep sleep. A young man, of whom Petrus writes, used to get up in his sleep, climb on to his castle battlements, seat himself astride them, and then spur nrt wnip me waii unacr mu impulsion that he was mounted upon his steed. Dr. Pritchard had a patient who was particularly fond of horse exercise, and used to ride at night, find ! his way to the stable, saddle his horse, 1 enjoy a gallop and finally come back, i knocking at his own front door, in a j somnambulistic condition. Dr. Macnish, of Edinburgh, gives an j account of'an Irish gentleman who ! swam more than two miles down a | river, got ashore, and was subscquent| ly discovered sleeping by the ruad>ide, I altogether unconscious of the extraor; dinary feat he hud accomplished. : Dr. Haycock, tiie eminent Oxford ! divine, would often rise from his bed i at night, i*ive oil! his text, and, while asleep, deliver an excellent sermon upon it. He was frequently watched, but no amount of tugging, pulling or pinching ever sucoeeueu in rousing him. Professor Fischnell, of Basel, writes of a young student of Wurtcmburg college who used to play hide and seek while fast asleep. His fellow-students knew of his propensity, and when he began "walking" threw bolsters at him, which he always eluded, jumping over bedsteads and other obstacles i placed in his nay. Moritz gave an instance of a poor and illiterate basket maker, who was unable to read or write, yet in a state of sleep vigil he would preach iluent sermons, which were afterward recognized as having formed portions of the discourses he was accnstomcd to hear in the parish church as a child more than forty years before. A young"girl given to sleep talking was in the habit of imitating the j violin with her lips, giving the pre! liminary timing and scraping and ; flourishing with the utmost fidelity. : It puzzled her physician a great deal until he ascertained that when an infant the girl lived in a room adjoining a fiddler, who often performed upoii his instrument within her hearing. While TIi re is Lif*; There is Hope. Many of the diseases of this season I of the year can be averted by a small i amount of care and at little cost, b> | the timely use of Ewbaxk's Toi'A> ' Cinchona"Cordial. J It cures Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Choi; era Morbus and like complaints. Xc ; ; traveler should be without a bottle, as | it will prevent any disease that woulc ; no doubt arise from the change o; { water, food and climate, without its .: use. The most valuable meaicms lr [ the world, contains all the best ant J most curative properties ot" all othei | Tonics, Bitters, etc., etc., being the ! j greatest Blood Purifier, Liver Regula: j tor and Life and Health-Restoring : Agent 111 existence. For Malaria Fever and Ague, Chills and Fever Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sick Headache, Xervous Headache, Chronic Rheumatism, etc., etc., it is truly i ) j Herculean Remedy. It gives new life . j and vigor to the aged. For ladies 11 1 I rteHratp. hr-alrh. weak and sickh' chii : : dren, nursing mothers. See circular: * i wrapped with bottle. Charleston, S. C., Sept 1, ISSo. | II. B. Ewbaxk, Esy., President o | The Topaz Cinchona. Cordial Co. j Spartanburg, S. C.: Dear Sir?1 hav< i used a case of your Topaz Cordial ii i my family, and as a Tonic and Appe ' i tizer I can cheerfully recommend i: t< : j all who are suffering from Debilit} I and lack of apnetite. My children ' " ??-- i I especially, nave uuuii muuu ucuvmux I by its use. Ilespccliuliy, ! " Hctsox Lee. Ask your druggist for Ewuaxk': Topaz Cixchoxa Cordial and tak< i no other. ! Tiie Topaz Cixchoxa Cordial Co., I * Spartanburg, S. C\, U. S. A What a !?!:ave Did. A young gentleman who is well knowi in St. Paul" lias worn a full heard am j mustache for sc oral years. The other c'a\ | he made up his mind to have it removed I and accordingly he visited a tonsorial estab j lishment and carried out his design. Aftci ! the operation he put on a new suit, and ther j started to walk up Third street. lie hac gone but a few steps when he uiet a vouni lady to whom he had been very devotee daring the winter, and in whose eyes he hac found favor. He raised his hat and ther ! turned about to walk with her. The youns lady looked at him in astonishment for; | moment, and. then said: "Sir, I do nol j know you, and your insolence is unpardon able. If yoij don't leave me I'll call ; policeman," with which she turned about and entered a store. Too much dazed tc follow the lady, the poor fellow kept on. A few minutes later he saw one of his mosl intimate friends. He ran alter him and, taking his arm he exclaimed: "Hold on, old fellow: I want to speak to you.-' The man thus accusted shook the other off and remarked: "Well, you're the cheekiest ! >? ? o lr\rwr 1 nmrftr cmxv j luau x m; in <i iuuv. a cu.? j you before. Get out of civ way." Almost | paralyzed, the victim wended his way to ! his employer's place of business. lie went ! to his desk and proceeded to take down his ! books. In a few minutes the manager I came up, ordered him out of the store and | threatened to have him arrested. This I time the unfortunate sufferer managed to j explain who be was, but the shock was a ! severe one. That night he made a solemn I resolve never to shave again and to shoot j every man who failed to recognize him. A Great Forest Fire. J The tire at Amecameca is 12 miles broad, I and is traveling rapidly. The damage so ' KI/t, CI.rnof o vo j iill Id iliVsUllsUittisu;. iv/iv,owai??\. V4i?j ! appeared, which have been worth at least ! $2,000,000 to the people of the valley and its surroundings on account of 1 heir-effect on the climate and the rains. Five Indians perished in one day by being burned to death. Huts and hovels have gone down like straw, and is as yet impossible to ascertain how many lives have been lost. An nrmv at ?1>nnt. 4-000 men. including Indians and soldiers, are tenaciously fighting the fire and trying to head it off.?Bodie (Cal.) Miner. Tote. We were asked yesterday if 'tote'' was a good word?a correct word. There is none better. It is of excellent parentage?Angio-Saxon. Chaucer, the lirst great English poet, uses tote several times in his celebrated "Canterbury Tales, " and just as the Southern people use it to this day. A Northern writer tried to use it and he [abused it. He wrote: "He ordered the boy to tote his horse around to the gate." ' ( ll/l X'i-io 1? A\"\?+,.y c-lir\r\o/l nr* *iC tA I \yJAA ^V/iUI U CWIU Ciipj'Wi U' in the early editions of his biir dictionary, ile said it was a Southern provincialism common among the negroes. It is a legitimate. honest word, of which no man need be ashamed.? ~\Yilmngioii [X. C.) >tar. A Mean Old Genera! Hoisted. j Old "General Debility" has beon put i to flight in Arkansas, with, happy rei stilts. From Brinkley, from Webb city, ! and fjom Walnut Ridge, Messrs. P. It. Anderson, E. 31. Taylor and F. S. Pinchbeck respectively, write that they were all afflicted with general debility, and received solid benefit from Brown's Iron Bitters. This is pleasant to know, not only for Arkansas people, but for all sections of the country where General Debility has counted victims by the i thousand. For sale even-where. * ( E.\KRAL ,\E\V<5 ITEMS. Facts of Interest Gathered from Various Quarters. -v- ? i' i i r. ;i i lie -Now a i/rK iiup crop is uu cmut *?? are. The new Parliament meets '<r> the ->th of August. The visible supply of cotton is 2.G10,90S j : bales. Vancouver, B. C., is reported to be again j in ashes. j It lias been announced that Gladstone j will resign. Tracy Co.. bankers of Elmwood, 111., 1 "0 wronir StW.OOO. . | Graham's daring feat at Niagara is inspiring many iniititators. An Illinois murderer went mad 1'nUny i just before his execution. The Savannah Knights of Labor arc j taking an active part in politics. The Prohibitionists were beaten at the ' polls in Vicksburg by a vote of six to one. j Hog cholera is raging in Botetourt and ; several other counties in Virginia. Mrs. Isaac Hayes, of Sareppa, X. -T.. was restored to reason by an attempt at suicide. Cholera reports in Italy. Thursday, were: j ! Twenty-one new cases and nine deaths. Boulanger's pistol failed to fire. Larienty missed his mark. So ended the Paris j ; duel. i | The [New York banks now hold *23,610,| 925 in reserve in excess of legal requirei incnt. Dr. Meynardie, of Charleston, has been announced for Superintendent of Educai tion, A young man, in Baltimore, killed himself last Thursday because he was too lazy to work. j The street car strike at San Francisco is . i at an end: the demand of the drivers was ! acceded to. A jealous lover in Nashville, Tenn.. | shot his sweetheart, three others and then : himself Sunday night. ' i There was a dead lock between the two ; | houses of Congress yesterday cn the river ' | and harbor bill. i There is talk of a labor parly movement ,; in Texas. It proposes an alliance with the | monopolistic Republicans. The lirst bale of Texas cotton of the new : crop was reported at Galveston Saturday: one week ahead of last year. One thousand acres in watermelons re; turn a revenue to the railroads equal in ' i amount to 25,000 acres iu cotton. Another crowd of high-born men and damps attended the Dilke divorce trial in . i London on Saturday. [ j Paul .Morphy's valuable trophies, ineludI ing the magnificent gold chessmen, are to I be sold to the highest bidder. Detective J. F. Cox, of "Washington city, i ex-Con federate Brigadier General, died Sun[ j day night, at Fort Monroe. rn .4. X UL'l U \>il5 il .><UJUU?lliM U<JlllU113li?UIUU 111 :: Monoghan, Ireland, Saturday, after the result of the poll had been declared. Samuel K. Gay, chief clerk of the Pitts> j burg pension office, has skipped to Canada ;; with ?J;00 of government funds. I Six members of the Missouri House of f Delegates have been indicted for drunken5 ness in office and three for bribery, i' Mitchell, the English, pugilist, sailed for I home the other day with ?40,000, made in : a few months by muscle. s i The moral of the recent French duel is that great men are sometimes of very in\ firm temper and very bad shots. i Charles Xeilson was caught in a pully, , Thursday, in the Seaboard Manufactory, at Mobile, and crushed to death. * A man named Gregg fell from the sixth 1 story window of the Evans building, New ' | York. Thursday, and was killed. 1 The Mexican revolution still continues. " ; The general government is massing troops 5 to march on the troublesome province. Ding Chang, a wealthy Chinese resident of Boston, was murdered and robbed by : one of his countrymen Saturday night. f An explosion occurred in an' unused , house, near Cork. Ireland, Sunday. Two J men were killed?supposed dynamiters. 1 | An unknown tramp and the race horse Flora, valued ::t ?7,500, were killed in a ) rai-road accident near Chicago Saturday. Captain James B. "Willing, a Baltimore i merchant and politician, has gone to Can1 ada with 000 of somebody's money, j Lord Granville is said to be so broken ia health lhat he will forthwith retire from 51 public life in order to live quietly at Wali! mer. John H. James, the banker, charged with making short returns to the United States j Government, will be criminally prose cuted. Cobb, of Indiana, and Laird, 'of Xej j braska, had a round in the lobby of the ] Capitol Friday, in which the claret was .; drawn. , | Two cases of yellow fever were removed -1 to the quarantine hospital at Boston, Frir' day, from the forecastle of the brig Carrie I j Purentcn. II The State Teachers' Association of KenC j tucky has agreed to work for the defeat of I every Congressman who opposes the Blair 1! educational scheme. ' | Gladstone's resignation is in the hnnds of > ; the Queen. lie returns to the parliamen1 : tnry bive, the busiest of opposition bees, to ' i sting. L The Baldwin Locomotive "Works, Phila : (lelphia. have just sent out engine No. ' | 8,000. Number 1 was built in December, ; 1832. , j The Augusta factory bell will bo rung 1 next Monday morning, and it is believed I that a large number of the operatives will : j return to work. k i jrriusu;!, tui; uc^caocu vai u ; j night several years ago, while a student at ' the military academy in Charlotte, killed a i negro waiter in a saloon in that city. The Birmingham Age asserts that "the ;: time is not far distant when Alabama will 11 send an almost solid protection delegation ; to Congress." ,1 Secretary Manning's health is improving ! so rapidly that lie will probably be able to i rAitimn liis nflieinl duties when he returns ! in October. Cashier Thompson, of St. Louis, when I he ran away, being a defaulter for ?70,000, left st written confession and pica for 1 mercy. Benjamin Rum age, of the Union Coal ! Works, near Wheeling, Va., was blown up ! in his store Sunday morning. Henry Camp' bell, the supposed dynamiter, has been arj rested. Hundreds of horses in the neighborhood : of Lily. Illinois, are afflicted with a disease ; resembling glanders. The disease is j spreading rapidly. Three of the printers-in New Haven, t Uonn., charged wun conspiracy against uie Courier, were found guilty Saturday. The | case will be carried higher. ! At Atlanta on Saturday the Kimball | House proprietors withdrew their applica-; j tion for ail injunction against the city to I restrain the enforcement of the prohibition j I law. 1 ?5l Special UiSpaiCU arum uumuu, .itu,, ; I says: Cashier Belizer, who wrecked the ; i Dundy County Bank at Beakleman, also j | wrecked the Chase County Bank at Impe- j I rial, of which lie was President. ! "Win. Hunter, Second Assistant Secretary 1 j of State, and the oldest official in continu- j ! ous service in the United States, died in i ' Washington to-day of a complication of j < diseases incident to old age. j The man Graham, who navigated the 1 whirlpool rapids in a tub theotherday, has j ! starli-J a dime museum, with himself and { j barrel as the principal features. There is no new development in the mill ! ' strike at Augusta. Nothing is likely to i I occur until the return of Mr. Mullen, when . | the status of the affair will be fixed. In India, between lST-"5 and 1SS0, no less j : than 103,000 people died from snake bite, i ! Tn the same period the Government mid i rewards for thejrilling of 1,073,540 pofson ous reptiles. An Mhsnv flotliino- firm ndvr*rfises tTint. it will "supply every boy in town with a j brass drum free" on the purchase of any kind of a suit. 0, yes; every city has its i own heart-rending troubles. The friends of the river and harbor bill in i gnaaagMSg u.t4 'Wini.mi.n j"A.ia.T*mtvm jn Kaasaaae the House declare that Congress shall not! adjourn until the measure has been linaliy disposed of. There is already a movement amoncr Prohibitionists to make Joseph Cook their na tionai stanuara-ocarer. ms name jias nut f been brought to the front, but il v.-ill be in due time. As the Senate has only rejected seventeen out of 2,427 nominations to olliee sub- j milted by the President, both panics claim I credit for good work. The claim may safely be admitted. TV. L. Ivulster, a drummer for Jacob Hichl, hat dealer of Norfolk, Ya., committed suicide at the Central Hotel, liuluigh, N. C., Sundu}', by taking chloral, tic leaves a wife and child in Norfolk. Dr. Scheurmaun. the druir<rist, and AI. Bronk unci Ilollis :md McMahon, saloonists of Atlanta, were each lined $500 by Recorder Anderson for running quart license saloons. The steamer Gate City, Captain Hedge, of the Boston and Savannah Steamship Line, while ok her passage from Savannah to Boston, went ashore off the Island of Xaushan in the Vineyard Sound, Sunday. She is a total wreck. In excavating for a sewer through an old ( emf'erv at Water lord recent! v a large number of bones were thrown up by the j workmen. A number of boys used the ! bones for hats in playing ball. Thirty-one new cases of small pox were : sent to the hospital Thursday in Santiago, | Chi lie. The want of rain there is becoming .serious. The v.ii 'lc army and police | of the republic will be vaccinated at once. | The Kniirhts of Labor in Augusta asked j President Estes. of the King Mill, to run his mill at night so as to give the strikers i from the Augusta Factory something to ! do. The demand was refused. Mr. Edward Z. C. Judson, the * v.-ell known author of dime novels and stori?s of adventures for boys, died Friday at his home in Stamford, 2s. Y., of heart disease, lie was 04 years of age. The Massachusetts Legislature has passed o hill mwnnriiuinrr s?() 000 for entertain . ?. ?-?*** "i i?r ? o ' I ing President Cleveland in case he should i pay a visit to Massachusetts this summer. The Governor has signed the bill. A Chicago citizen is desirous of trans portiDg to his summer residence near that city one of the big California trees 300 feet in height, 9S feet in circumference, and weighing about 40.000 pounds. The estimate of the cost of the work is ?18,000. Governor "West, of Utah Territory, lias issued a proclamation to the Mormons re 1 minding them that in violating the law oi the land in reference to the marriage rela I tion they incur a heavy fine and imprison ! inent. There are black sheep in every Hock ant if ran't. lir> liplnrd. Lt;vi R. Reese, the ! Treasurer of the Knights of Labor at For I Worth, Texas, was recently arrested foi | embezzling funds sent there to relieve th< ; sufferers by the strike. For ten days past the Democratic leader; ?in Pennsylvania have been in neirotiatior | with friends of .Master Workman Powder ; ly in regard to his nomination for Governor i and it is now officially announced that Ik ! will enter the race. There was quite a disgraceful scene ir both houses of the national capitnl Fri day. Opprobious epithets were freely ex changed which produced personal all.-rca i tions. The punishment received by al j parties implicated was totally insufllcient. Albany's bi-ccntennial was inauguratec i nnr mote I OUUUilJ >>1111 a IXUlXKiXLJ W1UOC, WUiVUiliW. sung in tlie great cathedrals of Eurojx when a strong array returns from the blocd\ fields of war flushed with a glorious vie I tory. A man named Mason, who had embez : zled $30,000 of the money of a companj : building a railroad in Guatemala, was ar I rested in Philadelphia on Wednesday, whili | trying to pawn his shirt. He had just got i ten rid of the last dollar. A Knights of Labor organization ii ! Cleveland has adopted the singular name o "Frankie Folsom Assembly." The conn i try may know from this what to expec j from the political clubs in lbck> if Grove: | is to be renominated. A majority of the House have detr-r mined to consider the oleomargarine bili while the minority have resolved that i ! shall not be considered. In consequence i i is thought the contest will '>e protractor : until adjournment. Mrs. Crawford testifies that she neve: loved her husband, but married him because Iter life at home was miserable. I)i< she better herself? Has any woman wli< ever took such a step stopped short of deg radatio:; and infamy? 1 The gallon judgs that are now being soli j in Atlanta and handed out through tlx ! back window to smiling citizens are callec | 'cornblow vases." Xearly every home ir j Atlanta has one, and in many cases the} ?? ? IinontifnlK- Ar-erw-iU'A with n r-nrn rnl J stopper. Lieutenant Hand, of the revenue cuttci ! Steven, reports that the schooner Lewi: : Willis capsized two miles of! Nag's llc;id j X. C., at midnight Sunday night and tha' : the officers and crew of the Steven sue ooed in saving a woman and child by cut ting through the side of the vessel. A delegation of 10 Chiricahua and Warn .Spring Indians irom Arizona, aecompamet by Capt. Darst, of the 4th cavalry, callec on Secretary Lamar at the Interior Depart j ment yesterday and strongly protested I against their removal from the San Carlo; i reservation. Now Jefferson Davis can get a pension of ?8 per month for services in the Mexi can war if he will only come forward and have his disabilities removed. When Mr. i iiiUlUf w.is a Jiiuuiue; ui : used to offer an amendment excluding Mr. I Davis by name whenever the Mexican pen| sion bill came up. ! Under sanction of a few black laws remaining on the Ohio statute books, the ; Springfield school board has decided that I colored children shall not attend the publie schools with white children any longer, but shall go to a school of their own. The : colored people are indignant and excited. The new marriage license law of .Mary' l&nd relieves the clergymen of the respon! sibility of ascertaining if there is any imI pediment to the marriage of the parties i nresentin<r the license. The clerk of the ; court where the license is issued must do | this. AY hen the hell of the Enterprise Factory in Augusta rung Saturday morning 60 out | of the 75 strikers returned to work, the I others refusing to obey the orders of Mr. : Mullen. Mr. Meynardie went amongst ; those who had refused to go back to work ; and induced all but six to return, and they promised to return to work Monday. : In February last Typographical Union i Xo. 90, of Richmond, Va., boycotted the | firm of B:iughtnan Bros., wholesale sta! tioners and printers, for employing uon ; union printers. On Wednesday Judge ! Bond made an order fixing October 11 to | hear argument on the motion for an inj junction. j A syndicate has purchased a mountain near Atlanta, and now has several hundred hands employed in getting out Belgian blocks. They have a $700,000 contract with the city of Cincinnati aione, and a quarter of million with Columbus, Ohio. They are figuring upon contracts with other Northern, Western and Southern cities. Gottfried Waller in his testimony in Chicago Saturday in reference to the Anarchist revolution told of howthe groups intended, in case of police intervention, to throw bombs into the different police stations and then shoot the survivors down with rifles as they came out. After that a general attack was to have been made on the rest of the city. The South Carolina Senators failed in an attempt to secure an amendment to the sundry civil appropriation bill, appropriating; 000 for the purchase of laud and the j erection of a wharf for the use of the government at Charleston. The original estimate was for si0.000: but a letter from the supervising architect which Senator Hampton had read stated that ?40,000 would be required. Loth Senators made remarks on the subject. The Senate adopted the committee's amendment appropriating ?2,000 for the primary tnanguiauon oeiween Charleston and the northwestern comer of the State connecting with the oblique arc of the Blue Ridge.? Cor. Charlotte Observer. HyiWH.'jMimii "w?MP?W? BRIC-A-BRAC. Net receipts?Fish. Before you decide understand. A peaceful quilt?A crazy one. Home rule hasn't yet made as many | heroes as home runs. It is a wise railroad stock that knows its j own par. Cruelty to insects?Eating ^chestnuts in j the dark. Close contest?One woman trying to out-1 1 f, .P. J UiWO uuvtuvi. Confidence is a plant of slow growth in an aged bosom. When does a bullet resemble a sheep?? i When it grazes. i ? j Circuit Co;:vt? Sneaking around the t : house to avoid 'lie dog. Alan proposes, woman discloses, and then ! the whole world says: "I told you so." Nowadays a man who ?oes to Washington and gets back is called a statesman. Matthews was rejected on the theory that no negro has the ri^ht to be a Democrat. After all, this world is a dangerous place | ?very few ever get out of it alive. I There isn't a criminal in prison that doesn't I think he ought to be vindicated. Of the making of new soda water conj coctions there seems to be ao end. It is lar netter to stana cn ceremony uuau : on somebody's foot in a street car. A break is noticed in the water pipe at the corner of Main and Medium streets. Pasteur ought to come to this country i and tackle the picnic ice ci earn. It is worthy of note that the mosquito ! never drinks behind the bar. | Frogs are the greatest croakers in the j world, and they never do any work. The lead market is dull and heavy, and ! in truth it is never otherwise. A Philadelphia firm advertises a soap j that will wipe out the national debt. 1 The girl with the sweei tooth becomes j the woman with the false one. Few men like to carve at tlie dinner | table, and fewer .still know how. An undertaker, in New York has fallen j under the band of the boycotters. ! Anyone who is quick f t repartee must ! necessarily have a great response ability, j This is the season of the year when you I can set what vou do not want real cheap. A man who is not ashamed of himself > need not be ashamed of his early condition. ; Men sunk in the greatest darkness imag : inable retain some sense and awe of Diety. Woman is not mtich of a philosopher, but' she is proverbially a clothes observer. I Every Atlanta home will now have a , i peach blow vase of the capacity of two gal[ Ions. The hot weather will bring large crops ? to the farmers and short crops to the barbers. ; What word is that composed of five leti tcrs from which if you take two one re. mains? Stone. , Educated tramps are rare. They always * say: "I seen some wood." They never put it: '*! saw wood." i In Russia it is never asked "What's in a - name?" It is taken for granted that it's the - whole alphabet. ' Confirmed bachelors are not made so by ' the church, but they are true to their faitli just the same. J In Paris the city owns the street cars. 5 i Here in America usually the street cars ; { own the city. | Why is a man who is deciding a matter | by an appeal to chance like a strong horse? I Because he can draw lots. There is no government on earth more desirable than ours, unless, perhaps, it lx* * j one that has more offices. . j One swallow doesn't make a summer; I but if it's of the right stuff it will make a j fall. j- j Tender minds should not receive early ! impressions of goblins, spectres and appa^ I ritions. r By severe application a man may arrive at the highest degree of perfection, even in laziness. When a man wants to find fault he will i do so if he has to spend all his time looking t | for it. 1 ! We never heard of a woman applying ! for the office of auditor. That isn't her r; nature. -1 Nothing can pick sweeter music from 1 j the chords of old hearts than the delicate .) fingers of a child. If a man cared as much to hide defects from God as he does from his neighbor ' man would be angelic. [ A total eclipse of the sun takes place on , the 20th of August. Plenty of time to pre. pare glasses. j According to Wiggins, the weather I prophet the 20th of September will usher ! in a drown that will paralyze. . You can never depeud upon proverbs. s One says: "Silence is golden;" another: [ "Money talks." Speaking of drinking it may be observed . that the man who "can take it or leave it alone" generally takes it, i 'There is no universal panacea," fays a , i writer. Gracious, man, do you read the [ j patent-medicine advertisements? . j If a dealer in gravestones were to fail 1 i some newspaper would be sure to refer to ; uie uisasiei as a uusi m mux uil\ The stump orator is more like a balloon [ than anything else. The balloon comes . down llat enough after its gas escapes. I An exchange says: "Monopolies are reaching out further with, alarming rapidi> ty." The same may be said of bustles. It may lie said of a theatre hat, like ' some other disagreeable things, that there I is likelv to be a. woman at the bottom of it. The Republican candidate for Governor ' of Pennsylvania is Mr. Beaver, and he will have to work like one to get there. Everybody knows what heat we are enj during without being daily referred to the j thermometer. i Thr> tnwn nf "\T<i is for the; fact that its n;ime spells the same backward or forward. That's what's the matter with Hannah. "Too much absorbed in his business" was the comment of a newspaper on the death of a brewer who was found drowned in a tank of h:3 own beer. Two beaus had the beautiful maiden, Two beaus she had waiting upon licr: One vowed that he loved her, the other one praised her, And the one that praised her won her. That "cleanliness is next to godliness" is true. Sunday is bounded by Saturday night on the east and by washing-day on the western frontier. A Western man boasts of having killed seventy-five rattlesnakes this year. A halfdozen such men as he would soon demoralize the whisky business of the country. Tim Carroll. Iowa, hotels have ber-n mm ; polled to post conspicuously placards read- j ing: "The little game called poker is strictly forbidden in this house. A lady has -written a book which she calls the "Midnight Cry." We have not read it, but we know all about it, and Jane has our sympathy. The cats bother us, too. How times change! A writer says that thirty years ago a man who wore hair on his upper lip was considerered either a lunatic or a foreigner. Now he may be both. It would be hard to believe that Texans are actually suffering for water if we did not know* that it is for their cattle they want it. Tobacco blindness is said to be on the increase. The man afflicted by it cannot j .sec* that lie is puffing smoke right into the ; face of the person nearest him. An Atlanta man says the way to start a i balky horse is to lead him round and round I Tirtil is r}i77V Tliis is thr? nnK* icnv we believe, of achieving dizziness in At Unta at preseut. AVnat will our descendants do a hundred years hence when the greed of gain shall have laid the monarchs of the forest low and only bare fields greet the eye? It is asking a great deal of a Democrat i to keep out of conventions,t for it is the j only fun he has had for the past 2o years, | i but now that he is an officeholder lie must j, nnv tliA nonjilfcr r?f Tinvinfr "npf>n t.lms linn- ! , riv ?o J ored hj li;s party. 1! MM?1^??ien?ia??Magn " >t t if cur I uru tpkpiri p mrmp He will be Tried for the Murder of hi* Father, j Mother, Brother and Sinter. The trial of Willie Sells, aged 10, for the \ murder of his father, mother, brother ami i sister, was begun at Erie, Kan., on Moil- i day. The youth of the criminal, the number and relation of tbe victims, the entire lack of provocation, the manner of the killing and all the circumstances of the case make it almost unprecc'- 'ited in the annals of crime. The morning of March 8 Willie Sells I made his appearance at the farm house of! a neighbor, .Mr. Mendall. and in an excited : tone asserted that a strange. man had been ! at his home during the night and he thought; h.irl hurt his father, as he was lying on i the floor with blood on Lis face." As this I visit of young Sells was at 1 o'clock in the j morning, Mr. Mcudali questioned him' closely,"and Willc said he wakened and! saw a man standing in the door between the room Willie and his brother slept in j and the one occupied by the parents and j sister. "I got my clothes off the foot of the j bed," said the boy, "and was putting them on when the nan turned, looked at me, and . then ran out into the yard. I did not try | to arouse my brother, but put on my trousers and went into the room where my I parents were sleeping to get my boots and I overcoat. I saw my father on the floor with blood on his face, but I thought his i nose was bleeding, as he was frequently I troubled that way. "When I passed cut of I /3/i/vr tlio ctroncror stnnriin"" in the IXAt 0ViUii^w4 " "* " O -yard, but ran. 1 pursued him for half a mile, when lie mounted a horse held by ' ancther man, and both rode away as fast as j they could go." >'fr. Mcndall accompanied Willie home, j When they arrived the boy remained out! side. Mr. Mendall entered, procured a ! light, and was confronted with a horrible ! spectacle. The floor was covered with j blood, the ceiling spattered, and the walls i stained. Old man Sells was lying on the ! floor with the whole back part of his head { crushed in and his throat cut. so deep that I l.Jo 1./ ><,< ) TCOC olmncf: zpyptpA from his bodv. j Near ltim, also on the floor, was the body of Mrs. Sells, wi h her skull crushed and I throat cut in the same manner. A few ! feet away in the bed in tLn corner lay the ' body of Miss Ina Sells, with her skull ; crushed and throf.t cut. In the bed on ' which Willie had been sleeping was the body of Watie Sells, with a large .sash in his forehead and one of his eyes chopped out. Mr. Mendall found a large hatchet covered with blood and hair and a bloody butcher knife. r><1 Mr \f<>nd?ll to | X UK, WVJ . ? j Mr. Bice's house, near by, where he went j to sleep or pretended to sleep, until next i morning. The officers in the morning I made an examination, but found no trace I of the stranger or liorse tracks, although | Willie's tracks were plainly indented in the | mud. It was discovered that Willie had j washed his hands and wrists, but above ! the wrists blood was found on his arms. ! There was blood under his fingernails also. | and his underclothing was considerably j stained. There was a purse containing 1 money under Mr. Sells's pillow, and two ! watches hanging in plain sight which were ' undisturbed, so that there is no probability j that the crime was committed for tiie puri pose of robbery. Previous to this horrible occurrence the i boy had borne a good reputation, and to i this day stoutly denies the perpetration of i the deed, and affirms that if he committed i it it was in his sleep or while his reason j was dethroned. It is said that he was a I constant reader of dime novels, and had j several times expressed a desire to become j a hero. The Rutins Potion, j Dr. Swan relates a very sad case of the | ruling passion strong in death. I al| v>uys believe a doctor's story except in a ; case of cure. If the patient dies you ' never hear anvthing but the truth. If ; he lives, the doctor has to find some ex; planation of the phenomenon. Doctors, i of Gourse, see a vast variety of human nature, and especially its weak sides, j This is a touching story of a young and | fair girl leaving the bright world while : tne aew 01 nie "was sujjl laying j.u> ! morning glories. You oan imagine the j sadness of the scene?the growing cerj tainty of the end, the passing beauty of | the world, the bright vision of all the ; happiness and the joy, the heavy : shadow hanging over all. "It is hopei less," said the gentle doctor, "you can | not live." "And must I die?" she asked. ! "You can not live." "Tell me, doctor, I i-vno fli-innr T crri " "Wliat IS ifc?" , w**v y.t i-t^ ? i "Does the hair caange color after : death?" "No." "Then I die happy. I'll look as well as those Smith girls 011 the day of judgment, an way."?San Francisco Chronicle. Farmers Abandoning Their Home* and Their Cattle for Lack of Water. Chicago, July 23.?A special from Fort Worth, Texas, says: "All day yesterday wagons loaded with i families arid* their effects from the western ! counties were streaming through the city, i They are fleeing from the drought prevaI lent in the western counties and have come I here in quest of work. They give most : gloomy accounts of the condition of the j crops and lack of water for the stock. { Hundreds of families are abandoning their I homes and going eastward to keep irom starving to death. The situation is critical. Rain seldom fulls in that district during August, and by the time it comes there will be, it is feared, nothing left in the country, NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ; 3I>6^^^r'ist."wewYork. tST SEND FOK CIECULAE. Deafness its causes an<i ci re, by one wlio was dear twenty-eight years. Treated by most of noted specialists oi tiie day with no beneilt. Cured kinmetf I mrtnfhc onrt efni^D "hnnrirPflc Af I others by same process. A plain, simple and i successful liome treatment. Address T. S. [ PAGE, las East 2Ctli St., New York City, ! DO NO MORE WHITEWASHING NOT WHEN PLASTIC PAINT j Can be had so cheap, send for pamphlet and color card, and iearn its merits. ! MAX WELL, HAZLETT & CO109 McElderry's Wharf. Baltimore, Md., and C06 Washington Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Parker's Tonic A Pure Family Medicine That Never Iutoxicates. If you ire a lawyer, minister or business man exhausted by mental strain or anxious cares do not take lntoxlcatisg stimulants, but use Parker's Tonic. It you ar* a mechanic or farmer, worn out with overwork, or a mother run down by family or household duties, try Pakkek's Toxic. CAUTION !?Refuse all substitutes. Parker's Tonic Is composed of the best remedial agents In the world, and is entirely different from preparations or ginger. Send for circular. IIISCOX <fc CO., 163 William Street, New York. Sold by all Druggists in large bottles at Oaf Dollar. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM. Parker's Hair Balsam is finely perfumed and Is warranted to prevent falling of the hair and to remove dandruff and itching. June30-:w Theworld Cheapest tIs Commercial College Lexington, Xj-. y' | nithnt Honor and Gold Medal over all other College;, at the World's Expoiitloa, for System of Book-keeping and General BuitneM Education. GOOO Cradutr* In tin?l. new. 10 Teachers employed. CoUof ydl Bu*Inc<u? Course, including Tuition, Stationery and Board, abr u'.#90. ShortHud. Tjix.Writlnf and Telegraphy specialties. So Va. ration* Enter r?ow. OrMmt? GaarmnWd boeeMa* for circulars address W. H? S5UTH, l^cs^t, Lexington, Ky. j W A \TT17T^ LADY active and \V /ill 1 Jul/ intelligent, to represent in lier own locality an oid firm. References required. Permanent position and j good salarv. GAY & BROS., 1G Barclay St,N.Y." I V/w/ffnr- ronr-trod atrcnffth. or who snffcv from tnfirmitle* pccalll? zs their acx, should try * ? i H ^ ^K5T TONIC* i This medicine combines Iron ^rita pare vegetable tonics, and is invaluable for Dis*iw peculiar to Women, and ail who lead sedentary lir?s. It Enriches and Purities the Blood, Stimulates the Appetite, Strengthens the ."Vluscles and J Nerves?in fact. thoroughly Invigorates. Clears the complexion, and maiestae skin (smooth. 7f rot. blacken tha taeth. cause headache, or prodaco constipation?all o:hcr Iron mcdsdnts do. Mrs. Flizabeth Baikp. 74 Farwell Ave.. Milwaukee, "Wis., says, under date of Dec. 26th. 1884: "I have used Brora's Iron Bitters, and it has been more than a doctor to roe. bavins cared me of tho j j trsaknees ladies have in life. Alsa enred me of Liver Comnlaint. and now av complexion is clear and i pood. Has been beneficial 1o my children." Genuine hbove trade m nrk and eros?ed red lines j on wrapper. Take BO Olber. Mad? nrilv by j BKOW.V CnKMlCAl CO..OAl.TI"ORE, Mr,. j i Ladies' Hand Look?nsaful and attractive, con' tainin<li-t of pnr.es for recipes, information about j cf.ins. etc., {riven n.vay by ai dealers in medicine, or mailed to any address on receipt of ic. stamp. | ^ Most of the diseases which afflict mankhd are origin- j ally caused by a disordered condition of the LIVER* For all complaints of this kind, such as Torpidity of tho Liver, Biliousness. Nervous Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Irregularity of tho Bowefe, Constipation, Flatulency. Eructations and Burning of the Stomach (sometimes called Heartburn), Miasma, Malaria, Eloody Flax, Chills and Fever, Breakbone Fever, Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chronic Diarrhoea. Loss of Appetite, Headache, Foul Breath, | Irregularities incidental to Females, Bearing-down j STflDiGEB'S AURftWTlS | is Invaluable. It is not a panacea for all diseases. but b ira ail aiseasesrauji! uivcrc, trill STOMACH and BOWELS. It changes tho complexion from a waxy, yellow tinge, to a ruddy, healthy color. It entirely romores low. gloomy spirits. It is onn of the SE$T AL" TERATIVES and PURIFIERS OF THE I BLOOD, and Is A VALUA3LE TON!C. STADSCER'S AURANTSS For sale b7 all Druggists. Price 8S.00 per bottle. C. F. STAD'CER, Proprietor, 140 SO. FRONT ST.. Philadelphia. Pa. ! FOR COUCHS AND CROUP USi TAySiOH.?S The sweet gum. as gathered from a tree of the same-name, growing along the small streams la the Southern States, contains a stimulating expectorant principle that loosens the phlegm producing the early morning eongb. and stimulates the child to throw off the false membrane In croap and whooping-cough. YThen combined with the healing snudlaglnous principle its tha mull-in plant of the old fields, presents in Tatios's Ohstcoxzx Remedy ov Swzrr Gum axs tne finest known remedy for Coughs. Croap, TThooplng-Congh and Consumption; and so palatable, any child Is nlcased to taVe it. Ask four .Irnzgist far ij. Price, 25c. and 91. WAITER A. TAYLOR, Atlanta. Ga. Use DR. BIGGERS- HUCKLEBERRY CORDIAL fat DUrrhcca. Dysentery asi Children Teething. For sale bj ^irnxgists. TUBFQU1NG MACHINES b 82 5GS=>^aiS6?w a specialty. Simplost, iicst Durable, Economical. aa?l Perfect in use?wastes no srain; cleans it ready for market. THRESHING ENGINES ftSSKF tiarsv JS51I.*. and Standard Implements generally. Seud for illustrated catalogue. A, B. FARQUHAR, Pennsylvania Agricultural Work*. YORK. Pa. ? ftr^VfiWASTCRforSa.SCOTTSlKaTit!. ts fcsS a \i feiectric uorsets. Vif B? 5 l?aiaple free to those lx-cosr. tag agents, is 5, 5 a 2 Ex Nn risk, quick sales. Tcrritorv piven. ^^Satisfaction jruaranteed. Address DR. SCOTT, ?42 Sroaiivay. NEW YORK. ^ 1 | ' PctadiVktlnL Cured by S.S.S. fiH ? fit id. s>. & vs. I have had blood poison for ten years. I g iodide of potash in that time, but it did me u " and limbs were covered with sores, and I conl< P mat:sm in my shoulders. I took S. S. S.. and it 5 cines I have taken. My face, body and neel s matism is entirely gone. I weighed 116 pounds J 152 pounds. My first bottle helped me greatly t I would not be without S. S. S. for several tim C. E. W - ?' * -"i J?!BHC A C _ _ " yiShLLEY jOOLl The Solublc'Guanoris'a^highly concentrate Grade Fertilizer for all crops. ASHLEY COTTON AND CORN COMP< two crops and also largely used by the Trucl ASHLEY ASH ELEMENT.?A very cliea tilizer for Cotton, Corn and Small Grain Crc Vines, etc. ASHLEY DISSOLVED BONE; ASH LEI Grades?fur use alone and in Compost heap. For Terms, Directions, Testimonials, and f publications of the Company, address THE ASHLEY PHOSP Nov25Lly These pills were a "ondsrful discovery. No others or reiieve all manner of disease. The information & the marvelous power cf these pills, they would walk tritliout. Sent by mail for 25 cents in stamps. Illu the information is very valuable. I. S. JOHNSON & "MOTHERS J FRIEND" 1 MAKES CHILD-BIRTH EASY. + fl The time lias come at iast when m the terrible apony incident to . I this very critical' period in a m woman's life can be avoided. A distinguished physician, who passed the greatest portion of his life (foity-four years) in gH this branch of practice, left to cliildbearing woman this priceless k".*acv ami Sil'e-saviisjx appliatce, ""TIIE MOTHERS' FRIEND." and iny there tBg are thousands of the best women in our land who, having J| used this wonderful remedy jB before confinement rite up and * JB call his name blessed. t wfl Wo TV" ' section of the country thanking us for placing this'prepara- ^Hj tioninthe reach of suffering woman. One lady from North I ? Carolina writes "us that she ? would like to. thank the pro prietors on iicr K'.-ees iui" uric?;- y ing it to her notice, as in pre- Ws- JH vious confinement she h?;d two . doctors, and they were com- V 1 pel led to use chloform, instruments, etc., and she suffered almost death; but this time she J used "MOiTIEIiS' FRIEND," I and her labor was sliort, quick and almost like magic. -Now J why should a woman suffer when she can avoid it? "We can prove all we claim by living iritnsxiea. and anvone interest erf can call, or have their hus- ' bands do so, at our office, and see the oj igina! letters, which we cannot publish. - 1 This remedy is one about which we can Jl not publish certificates, but it is a most Mk wonderful liniment to be used after the first two or three months. Send for our treatise on the Health and Happiness of Woman, mailed free, which gives all particulars. ^j|| The Bradfielb Regulator Co. Box 28, Atlanta, Ga. Sold by all druggists. Pill iWS 4 ______ 1 ! BUY THEM AT HOME. 4 -V 3 i ! THE BEST MAKES OF A | PIANOS AND ORGANS '-j -SOLD ATFACTOEY PEICES FOE CASH -OREASY INSTALMENTS. ! i DELIVERED TO NEAREST DE* POT, FREIGHT FREE. J Write for prices and terms to J 3T. W. TRUMP, Columbia, S. C. JuneSOLly maa^zmsgm_m , ' CAUTION, 2 j Consumers should not conf'isi our Specific B Jgfl with the numerous imitations, substitutes. ? potash and mercury mixtures which, are got- u ten up to set!, not on their own merit, but on g the merit of our Timedj. An imitation ii ? always a fraud arid a cheat, and they thrive a only as they can stealfrom the article imitated. I Treatise on Blood and Skin. Diseases rruaUd j free. For tale by all druggists. TEE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. I ^ Itraicer 3, Atlanta, Ga. ? Jm8 POTASH. know I bare taken one hundred bottles of B a good. Last summer my face, neck, body 8 I scarcely use my arms on account of rheu- 8 has done me more good than all other medi: are perfectly clear and clean, and my rhea- 1 when I began the medicine, and I now weigh and gave me an appetite like a strong man. B ~~-4 es its weight in gold. TCHELL, W. 23d St. Ferry, New York. JBLE GrUANO. d Ammoniated Guano, a complete High [)UND.?A complete Fertilizer for these :ers near Charleston for vegetables, etc. p and excellent, Xon-Ammoniaied Ferips, and also for Fruit Trees, Grape c* ACID PHOSPHATE, of very High or the various attractive and instructive HATE CO., Charleston,JS.^C. M % 1 i like them in the world. Will positively cxtse oucd each Itos is worth tea times the cost of a ience. One box will do more to purify the ^^^^^bloodandcnreichroa100 miles t<> get a box if they could not be had strated uamDhlet free, nostnaid. Send for it* CO., 22 Custom House Street, BOSTON, MASSi lich Blood! -