The Pickens sentinel. (Pickens, S.C.) 1871-1903, November 18, 1880, Image 4

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LOVED TONrEIvU. Rlow.many of us, with a weary heart-ache Iave put away something ftt mother's sate, That we gently take out when 9ad and alone, Recall when she wore it, her look and her tone. It may be the spectacles she once used to fold On the brown-fidded Bible, worn and so old When her mild eyes grew tired of reaiing Truth, She carefully taught in the days of our youth. A half-fluished stocking with needles there yet I The dear old white hands--can we ever forget ? How they knit and they sewed for us long, long ago, Until life's drearn in over. We cannot; oh, no I Perchance 'tin her picture, or the old arm chair Tender associations ever cling there. 'Twas in it she sat when we clung to her lap, And toyed with the hair 'neath her snowy lace cap. By its side we have knelt, at the long day's close, And the words that were taught everyone knows. How many, I wonder, since then, ere they sleep, Have forgotten, "I pray Thee mny soul to keep!" How many have felt a sweet memory"charni since then, gently leading from sorrow and harm. In the desolate (lays that come to us all, Thank ood for the menory Loved Tokens recall. A Reminiscence of Gen. Scott. One evening during the early days of our "late unpleasantness" there was tobe an exhibition of Grammar School No. 44 in New York City. I arrived late at the school building, and found several dii tiugnished looking visitors on the plt form of the hall. Among then was one whom I at one recognized by the por traits I had seen of hin-it was Major General Scott, the hero of the Mexican war. He was in full regimental!, and sat in an arm chair a little to the right of the center of the stage-a very grand, large man, with snowy hair and whis kers. lie gave the most flattering, the most ral)t attention to the reading of every composition, to all tho singing, declaration--every exhibition of skill, however perfectly or imperfectly done. The presence of so distinlgiislhedi a visi tor stimulated some to do their best, while it scared others iito doing their very worst. It was on the whole, how ever, a brilliant success. After the exercises the president of our local board of school officers approached the General's chair and said something to hin. We knew he was asked to imake a "few remarks," and wondered if 1he would consent. To our great deligit, there were evident signs of compliance; the (d liero commnenced to rise. One of the school officers approaching his chair on the ol))osite side offered to assist him. He declined iassistanice, but when the gentleman persisted and made an at tei)t to take hold of his arm, General Scott inpatiently and imperatively put him aside. Those near the platform heard hiin say, "I nleed no assistance 11o assistance-only give meo a little time." The process of getting straight ened up on the part of the General was very slow, but not a jerky or a trembling one, and suggested rath ier i rheumatic infirmity than the stiffness of age, though he muist have been ov'er seventy. How immlfenselry tailli hoseemed as he stretched his majestic figure 'ier and hi hyr un tillheltower. ~ ~d boe bel Ten .enea'in sioduced wa pefcthe t ~ , aumlaor s rign ooefou n fhefrhi im ag ajesicniplon ntin untry originalbtany thle baid. Te prieerand encurge tihe puilnc a prfed th to d i nevefo Ha coparedn theieductonths and tyenv to oe oforoteln by and boito nthseng tery couryigiftyabout ago.in ht was, ini short, tile prince of what chil dreni call "goody speeches. "-N. Y. Graphi. Diary of a Dollar. Found myself yesterday morning in the pocket of a man who had promised to love, honor, protect and cherish me with all his might and main. And this morning whe~re am I ? Burst. Broken. In a hundred pieces. Lying dlisjecta membra, etc., in grim ealoon tills or dirty pockets. But I anticipate. I was on the reserve force and laid by to pay a bill. My comrade was a 50-cent piece who was expected to pay that day's expenses. Buddenly this comrade disappeared. On dit, he was borrowed. I came next, I wont thus: For a cigar after breakfast, 10 cents; for a glass of beer at 10 a. mn., 5 cents;I for four glasses of beer for the crowd at 12 in., 20 cents ; for another cigar, 10 cents ; for boot-b~lackig, 6 cents ; for a shlave, 15 cents ; for frmut, 10 cents ; for car fares, 20 cents ; for another glass of beer, 5 cents. Verily, what a shadow is a $ I What a shadow it pursues i--New York Graphic. ____ " Potatoes and Point." Says a writer in Notes and Queries: I have always understood that it meant eat ing potatoes only and pointing to a bacon hanging on the wall. I have heard a variation of it. Four Irishmen, wishing to live frugally, bought a lot of potatoes to eat, and a red herring to rub them on to give them a flavor; but, finding this used up their herring too quickly, they got another, which they put into a bot .le, and rubbed their potatoes on the out side of that. There is anotrier saiying as common as "Potatoes and point." To one asking what he can have to eat, it is considered very clever to say, "Bread and pullet." "Let's have it, then," says he. A large lumn of bread is set on the table and we as rtihe chicken. "Chio, there it is." wool, mplant t in keeping warm the front of the But the peculiarity of the clothing is the exclusive use or sheep's wool, even avoiding pocket and other Iinines of nattOn A Horse on a Ballroad Trestle. The freaks of drunken man take turns that surprise everybody, themselves in cluded. The newspaperschronicle many' of the insane freaks, but none more sen sational than the performance of James Streden, an employe of the Bay View rolling mills, James had been up at West Bend attending a gathering of friends, and in driving his one-horse buggy through this city toward Bay View switched off from Kinnickinnick avenue, in the Twelfth ward, and. took the St. Paul railroad track to cross the Kinnickinuick river on the railroad bridge. The bridge has for a bottom only ties placed abont twenty-two inches apart and the task of walking across on a dark night like it was is quite a tick lish one, even for a sober man. For a horse, and especially for a horse con trolled by a drunken driver, the task is well-nigh impossible. Streden, howev er, was not sober enough to take in a greater fact than that a bridge lay be fore him and must be crossed. There fore, when his horse hesitated for a mo ment, lie applied the whip, and the no ble animal commenced his perilous trip across on the bridge ties. Cautiously and very slowly the horse felt its way, step by step, till he had nearly comple-. ted one-half the distance across, whien the drunken man became impatient and struck the animal with his whip. A false step, a stagger and a final plunge told the story of the horse's drop of fif teen feet into the water below. The wrench and snapping of the harness and thills threw Streden out, and ho, happi ly, followed the horse into the chill wa ters of the muddy river. Oflicer Weis ner and Mr. Davidson heard the double splash, and ran to the river in time to see the horse swim out and clamber up an iiicline to the dock, while Streden, now nearly sober, was making efforts to keep his head above water. To draw the mlan to the shore was but the work of a moment, wbon it was found that lie had suffered some scratches and bruises, but, with the inexplicable luck of a drunken man, he had no bones broken and had suffered no internal injury. The buggy, which remained lodged be tween ties on the bridge, was the most used-up member of the trio, and was re moved before the next train was due. Alitwaukee Wisconsin. The End of the World. The following dismal picture of the end of the world is by the noted French scientist, Camille Flammarion: The earth was born; she will die. She will die either of old age, when her vital elements shall have been used up, or through the extinction of the sun, to whose rays her life is suspended. She might also die by accident, through col lision with some celestial body meeting her on her route; but this end of the world is the most improbable of all. She may, we repeat, (he ai natural death through the slowv absorp~tionl of her vital elements. In fact, it is probale that the air and water are diminishing. The ocean, like the atmosphere, appears to have been formerly much more considler able than it is in our day. Tfhe terres trial crust is penetrated b'y waters which combine chemically with the rocks. It is almost certain that the temperature of the interior of tile globle reached that of boiling water at the depth of about six miles, andl prevents the water from de scending aniy lower; but thme abisorption will continue with the cooling of the globe. The oxygen, nitrogen, anid car bonic acid which compose our atmos p~here also appear to undergo absorp tion, but slower. The thinker may for see, through the mist of ages yet t o coime, the epoch, yet afar off, in which the earth, deprived of the atmosp~herie, aqueous vapor wvhich protects her from the glacial cold of space by preserving the solar rays arou~nd her, will become chilled in the sleep of death. As Henri Vivarel says. "From the summit of the mountains a winding sheet of snow will descend upon the high plate~aus and the valleys, driving before it life and civili zation, and masking forever the cities and nations that it meets on its p)assage" Life and human activity will press3 ill sensibly toward the initer-tropical zone. St. Petersburg, Ber'lin, London, Paris, Vienna, Constantinople and Rome will fall asleep in succession under their eter nal shroud. During very many ages equatorial humanity will undertake Arctic expeditions to find again under the ice the place of Paris, Lyons, Bordeaux and Marseilles. The sea coasts will have changed, and the geographical map of the earth will have been transformed. No one will live and breathe any more ex cept in the equatorial zone up to the day when the last family, nearly dead with cold and hunger will sit onl the shore of the last sea, in time rays of the sun which will thereafter shine here below oni an ambulent tomb revolving aimlessly around a useless light and a barren heat. Paganint and the Blind Man. One cold Christmas day a poor blind man was playing .on a violin and try ing to earn a crust in one of the London streets, but somehow his tunes lacked the power to bring him any pence. There stood the blind man cold and1 hungry, alone in his misery. Two gen tlemen wore passing, and stop~ped oppo) site the p layer, conversing a few minutes. One of them approached the player, and gently pattinglhis back, said: "Won't the people give you any money?" "No," was the reply; "they won't open their windows; it is too'cold." "Weoll, lend me your fiddle, and I will see if they will open for men" The speaker took the vio lin and played a tune the like of which was never be fore heard and likely never to be heard again in a street. The win dows opened as if by magic, and money was thrown out of them plentifully enough. The charmer having accom plished his purpose gathered up the money, and handing it to the blind play er, said, "There, you can go home now; you have got sufficient to 'keep you for one day at least." It was Paganini. A MAN in Jersey CJity (lied the other day from hyd r'ohbia eleven years after a dogh had bitten him. The niext thing somebody will be taken sick of colic b~e cause Eve ate an apple. --Biugelo Cour 4er. _____ Arousing ii. Reader. An alarm of fire at mid night is a startling thing. but not half so startlhng to many~ who hear Jit asi would be the sudden knowledge of their own dangerous physical condition. Th' ou sands of thousands are hurrying to their gaves ,ecause they are carelessly indifferent tothe insidious inroads of disease and the means of ouo It is the mission of H. Hf. Warner & Co., with their 8afe Kidney and Liver Cure to arouse men to a sense of their danger and bhen cnre them.-Mei-p- 4p-,l Row Teas Are Adulterated. It is pretty generally known that the orthodox teas prepared in the East for American and European consumption are adulterated, but comparatively few people are aware of the extent to whidh this adulteration is carried on, or what substances are used. M. Hussen, a French chemist of note, has made a thorough investigation of the subject, and the result of his researches has been laid before the Academy of Sciences. He finds that Prssian blue, indigo and gypsum, in small quantities, are the principal ingredienta employed to im part the "face " or f bloom," to teas and that in the proportions used they are very innocuous. This adulteration takes place where the plants are raised; but more extensive adulteration is sub. sequently indulged in by the Europa who, with their superior knowledge' have surpassed the Asiatica in their fraud by the use of still more dangerous drugs, such as chromate of lead and ar senicato of copper, besides making use of comparatively innocuous substances, such as suil pliate of iron, stearite, car bonates of lime and magnesia. The Chinese have become most expert in mainipulating green teas, which they color with a few simple substances, some of them poisoious-for example, plum bago, Prussian blue, curcuma and kao lin. With or without the true leaf of the shrub, they can produce a tea of any desired tint. In order to give the in ferior or false leaf the aroma of the tea, the Celestials mix a quantity of it with certain flowers, especially a species of olive. In short, according to M. Hus sen, no injurious proceeding is omitted in the Celestial empire to palm on the outer barbarian inferior or false teas. In the leading tea-growing districts the Government has a corps of inspectors who are required to see that the goods are dispatched in a pure state. The precaution, however, avails little--for at the shipping ports there is no attempt to prevent the merchants, or brokers, from commencing their fraudulent practices, which they carry on to their heart's content. In spite of their knowledge of the extent to which this adulteration is carried on, we presume our people will continue to drink of the cup which is said to cheer without stealing away a person's brains. Not Too Thin, but Too Short. A tramp just arrived in the Island City attracted attention by the fact that all his rainent was in tatters except his pants, which were a foot too short, but perfectly new. They did not fit anywhere. "I believe you stole those pants from soief store. They don't look like they belong to you," said a policeman, look img at the garments. ''You darned fool, if I had stolen them I would have picked out a pair to fit me. Ain't that the way you do when you-buy your pants ?" "I believe I'll arrest you, anyhow," and he was marching him off, when the tramp laughed, and said: " Galveston is the funniest town I've struck yet.." " What (do you mean by that ?" "Well, everywhere else the police ar rest you if they see fit, but here they arrest you if they don't see fit," and he glanced down~ at his abbreviated unmen tiona'bles, which struck him just below the knee, and laughed some more. GalvestonANe. " Popular" Music. A young man saw an advertisement of the " Chicago Miniature Piano Corn. pany," where for a dollar he could have a new instrument on which anyone ould play at sight. He sent his money imd receivedl not a piano, but the instructions how to make one. " Take a flower bar rel-any old1 one will do-put as many cats into it as it will hold. Leave a slit in the side the whole length of the barrel. A pointed stick moved along in this slit is sure to produce all the tones desired, since most of the cats will answer to the p~rodding. A clil d can p)lay it." Yet lie sued to recover his money, because the music w~as not_"popular." WE reach for riches and we grasp a millstone, unless in health to enjoy them. A Cough or Cold qjuicly works our physical ruin unless we are careful. Use Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. P rice 25 ets. THAT slight kolfmy elult disastrously if not checked immediately, which can be efected by Cous.seus' Honey of Tar, a medicine which is highly appreciated b~y all sufferers with coughs and~ cold s, bronchxitis, hoarseneoss, etc. Price 50c. For sale by nil druggists. MALARTAL fevers can be prevented, also other miasmatic (diseases, by occasion ally using Dr. Sanford's Javer' Jnvigorator, the oldest general Family Medicine, wilich is recommended as a enro for all diseases caused by a disordered liver. Eighty-page book sent free. Address Dr. Banford. 162 Bradway, New York. bIMPURE BLOOD.-In morbid conditions of the blood( are many diseases; such as salt rheum ringworm s, boils, carbuncles, sores ulcers and pimples. Ini this condition of the blood try the VEGETINE, and euro these affections. As a blood purifIer it haB no equal. Its effects are won derfuld. GET Lyon's Patent iteel stiflners applied to those new boots be foro .vou run them over. Theo V.11 te et ('0., Darsaa, Much., Will send their Electro-Voltaic Belts to the afflicted upon 80 days' trial. Bee their adver tlsement in this paper headed, "On 80 Days Trial." __________ Dr. C. E. Shoemaker, the well-known aural surgeon of Reading, Pa., offers to send by mail free of charge a val uable little book on deafness and diseases of the ear, especially on running ear and catarrh and their proper treatment giving references and tes t imonials that will satisfy the most skeptical. Address as above. Daughters, Wives and Mothen. ti ey cure l'emale wean nse, such as Falingoth *ters. b ee, chronic Xnflammratlon or Ulceration of teterus unciental Hemorrhage or Flooding, Painful Allpressel and Irregular Menstruation, &c. An old and reliale remedy. Bend Postal card tor a paplet, with treatment cures and4 eortlflcates tromx *hscasai patsiens, io HIOwARTH & BALLARD, UTICA, viw York gold by all Druggists-i.50 per bottle. DSBmLU a ii.. 8 sa....4m a,.dm.i. The Man Who Ran the Daily. Enough is as good as a feast for some men. A man in Hartford, Conn.-prob ably a relative of Mark Twain-yearned to run a daily. His yearning was satisfied. He n it three days, the last run being into 'the ground In its obituary he says: "Our ambition to run a daily pa per has been satisfied for the present. We have had the experience. * * * If anybody on the Hill hears to-night any particularly sonorous snoring, they may know that it is an ex-editor of a de funct city daily putting in a square mght's sleep once more. rINUMos of mil'J is an advantage to the man who has a good 3nind. 11 his thoughts come crooked, a few absent minded spells might help him. YUE t BOO PU R - WILL CUREI Scrofula, Scrofulous Humor, Cancer, Cancerous Humor Erysipelas, Canker, Falt Rheum, Pimples or Hi morin 'lie Face, Coughs and Colds, Ulcers DrniiiNeuralgia, Dyr pesa, Rheumatismi'Pains in the . Constipation Costiveness, riles, D1u0110s, Head ache, Nervousness, Pains it the Back. Faintness at the Stomach, Kidney Complaints, Female Weakness and General Debillty. This preparation is selentifically and chemically con. bined, and so strongly cecentirated from roots, herbs, and barks, that Ita good effects are realized immediately aflter commencing to tak" it. There is no disease of the human system for which the VuoNTius cannot be used with PsarMeT sAFzT, as it does not contain any metallic compound. For eradicating the system of all impurities of the blood it has no equal. It has never faileod to effect a cure, giving lona and eirength to the system debilitated by dia-ase. its wonderful efllct upon the complaints named are surprising to all. Many have been cured by the V'x Oarsz that have tried many other remedies. It can well bo called THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER Dr. Callier Surprised. Vegetine Cured His Daughter. CALLIXaSTLLU, Chilton Co. Ala., May 15, 1878. DRAa A: a-My daughter has been affileted with nasal catarrh, affection of bladder and kidneys, and is of scrofu. Ilus dathesis, and, after having exhausted my akill and the most eminent physicians of Helina, I at last resorted to ihe use of your 'VonrXTi (without cenfidence,) and, to my great strprise, my daughter has been restored tc hea I write this a a simple not of justice, and not as an advertising medium. Respectfully, T. E. CALLIER, M. D. Vegetine Is Sold by all Druggists. "A KEDICINE WITHOUT 'A RIVAL." KIDNEY Blladder, Urinary and Liver Diseases, Dropsy 0 ravel and Diabetes, are cured by' HUNT'S REMEDY, the Great Kidney and Liver Medicine. HUNT'S REMEDY cure Bri ght's Disease, Retention or Nonreten. tion of Urine, Pains in the Back, Loins, or Side. HUNT'S REMEDY cures Intemperance, Nervous Diseases, General Debility, Female Weakness and Excesses. HUNT'S REMEDY cures Blliousness, Headache, Jaundice, Sour Stomach, Dyspepsia, Constipation and Piles. HUNT'S REMEDY ACTS AT ONCE on the Kidneys, Liver, and Bowel., restoring them to a healthy action, and OURBES when all other rnedicines fail. Hun dreds have been saved who have been given up to die by friends and physicians. Bend for pamphlet to WM!. E. CLARKE, Providence, B. I. Trial size, 75 cents. Large size cheapest. ____OLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. $OSTETTE4i CELEBR ATED SITTERS Ileets the requirements of the rational medical philoso phy which at present prevails. It isa perfectly pure veg etable remedy, embrecing the three important properties of a preventive, a tonie, and an aflterative. It fortlies the body against cisease, invigorats and re-vitalizes the tor pid stomach And liver, and effects a moot salutary change .n the entir e system, when in a morbid condition. For sale by all Druggists and Desalers generally. VAmTIAvn v erhe to ollur good and Arst-ol a goods to your customers ; we give 1 good Ktge. r all exj ress ehargee; we fufbxish out PEOPLE' 'B ez Bess. St. Louis Mo. pTTER$ New Lifte forw the.. Warsa Out by Dtsea.. Lobor, ba. Galef or Old Age. MA lT BITfR, prepared tothout femenaion from MALIv, Hoe,, (,ALI5A? and yaow, are the richest Nonrish ing Agent in the world ealled "Bltters" for the Weak, Convalescent, Overworked, Nervous, Melancholy and Sleepless. They feed the Body and the Brain, regulate the Stomach and Bowels, cleanse the Liver and Kidneys, increase the Appetite and enrich the Blood. For Ooo sumeptives, Delicate Females, Nursing Mothers, Sickly Children, and the Aged, they are vastly superior to overy other preparation of malt or medicine. Beware of imitations similarly namned. Look for the COMPANY's ii[INATURE as aboie. Sold everywhere. Malt fllsus..=o...-y. Deb . == Carelessness With Letters. Nearly 22,000 letters were posted in England last year without any address. r Amon these mysterious missives were more tan 1,100 containing cash, bank notes, checks, and bills, with an aggro gate value of above 44,000. As many as 72,000 postage-stamps were found loose in the letter boxes. More than 27,000 articles of various kinds escaped from the coverv in which they had been inr fectly secured and were sent to the - turned Letter Office. This flotiam of the Postoffice showed last year an 'in crease of one-half an compared with the year before. Tau funniest woman is the most fash ionable one. She wouldn't be saved from a burning building in an overskirt three weeks out of style, but she would carry a little good-for-nothing pug dog in hor arms, and let her toddling baby tire his chubby legs out trying to keep up with her.-NewHJaven Regiter. KEYSTONE uss # PPINISS ** A a, Literary Revolution. C~n TSVcb frmerly l.m t each: 1. Mac. al, e dferiok th ereat 11. ('at IyIl'a Li fe oi Robdt Burns. IlI. Lamattine's Life of Mary Queen' of Scotr. IV. Thos. Hughes' Manliness of Chrint. 0 C TS. 0eachI formery $1 5(1 each: 1. Arnold's Light of A-tr -.I I Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield. Ill. Baron Mltine ux. Pil's Travels and Surprising Adventures. For 14IN CIEN'iU: Bunyan's l'ii rim'sProgrem. IiiustrAtecl cath. 10!ie sent free. AMRI{ cAN BOOK EXI AN E Joh B. Alden, Manager. Tribune Building, New York. PENSIONS NEW LAW. Thousands of Boldier. and heirs. enti tied. Pensions date back to discharge or death. Time UmwdWd. Address with stamp, (GEO. E. LEMON, P. O. Drawer, S5. Waai.agtona, D. C. E NCYCLOPADIA or TIOUETTEBUSINESS This lthe chea p est and onq a e and reliable worb on Etiqueeand B uinessaud SocialYcrrns. It tellshu to peror fill the variou ditties of life, and how toalopesa, to h beat ad antage on all occisions. Alz-i rnts stei.-Send for circlar. coiltailiq a fill[ deactiptioii o4the wot k mid extrx terms to Age'.!.. Addroax NATIOXA. Pun.:sxaNo Co.. Atlanta. (I. CEL.LULOID EYE-CLASSE. Representing the choicest selected Tortoise-Shell an. A mber. 'The lightet, handsomneat, and strongest kno wn Sold by Opticians and Jewelers Made bySPrENCER 0 If. CO . US Maiden Lane, New York. liai uc 114 t e t -FS RI ST ADOROS :r, lirto tointe toilet fr Liy or C. ."ch TTENTON, Ag't. NEW EDITION. GET THE BEST. WEBSTER'S UNABIRGED. 1928 Pages. 3000 Engravings. t-OUft PAGEN COLOlfED PLATFES. Containing a SUPPL EMENT of over 1600 NEW WORDS and.Meanings, AND A NEW Biographnical Dictionary of over 9700 NAMES.. P'ub~ilset1 by G. & C. MIERRIAM, Epringfiebl, Mass. NA TRONA BS-CA ls the best in the Werld. It Is absolutely pure. It Is the best ahe Medlinal Purposes. nt Is the best ser flaking ad anl Family Usec. Sold by all Druggists and Grocers, PENN'A SALT MANUF. C0.s Phla. ALESMEN WANTE GOO D MENTO SELL CIGARS TO DEALERS. And send it v. it h your aplplicationl,atls Cincinnati. Ohio. - ei - E WU. P I 8 '8 C U E W5 g". n' B O tuan elegant eseaMastl ' ahp Whisky, suek at -ralaabte tesle, a righ, Jo ensrees p evr-werhed etergymi vgqr age ead ste wit -ammHAmm A 1T WANTEDI AI& WWI . .N... O.AC ..UTKa WOIb"n r fe106 sl. Tro M. A~ M O j1C 2 Such will plese answer 9 adv aent y r. o oe I l 1 W W ~L~ bus $0ae -A YEAR and expense to Agente. Outdt Free. ddress P. $o. VICKERY, Augue a, Maine. 0 9 wemell in your own town.Tesaid# Ott 6tes. A drPRA It. IIALLKI1 A CO.. Port land. MaIRne. APONIO'F'I"E to the " Original " Concentraled Lye and Reliable Family Boay aker. Direotions acoompan ea Can for makin sofl an Tollet 4oap iyt, i: fall weigtht and strength. Ask your grocer fao. 8A PoNIFIER. and take to other. PENN'A SALT MANUFACTURING CO.. jpk .-. E PIOX Vi1A. grand Modal Silver AIOd A Philade phia at Paris xposdiaon. V ASL IN E xposition. This wonderful substance is acknowleded by physic le ' throughout the world to be the beet remedy discover for the cure of Wounds Burns, Rheumatism, Skin Dis eases, Piles, Catarrh, Chilblains &c. In order that every one may try it, It is put up in I& sand 25.cent boitlqs fot houshold use. Obtain ii from your druggist, and yus will and it Apuperior to anything you have ever used. EEs 9end for FREE SAMPL.E COPY of th WEEKLY R=-- JOURNAL. 3EWS T. 0. NEWMAN, Chlcgo, Ill. P INorpIne H1abit Cured ina10 to 20 daysa. Nopay till CUred. O . .J. MTEPHIEX, Lebanon. * p 8 AND o Il htema Speerilly etre Ihv DR. IECiK'S only known and sutre Reanemly. NO 'HAtI E for treatine: I itil cured. Call on or aldtre&ss Dr. J. C. BECK. 112 John St.. Cinclnnati, 0. DANEL F. 111'ATTY'S ORGANS. 14-STOPS, F nlU lRFX & OcT, COiPLr . FlifuII NET P1 NOS e $1'J25 ut'. 4ess a on1 Trial Vsrrautkscl. t'nstalogn e Freft Adulres, OANIEL F. BEAITY. Washi, gton, N. YCUNC M Learn Telegrahy and YOUNC Mcaitti $40 to S100 & tuonth. n terygradnate guaainteeda a a nsit uation. Adr% ,.Valentino, Manager..Tane vio.Wis. ON 30 DAYS'TRIAL We will send our Electro-Voltaic Belts aid othe Electric Appliances upona trial for thirty da)y to tth.s afflicted with Nertvus Debuit,, and diseasca q a pma,.a astur-e. Also of theO Liver, 1kidnaeys, Rhettmnatiaem, Pa ralysis, &c. .4 sure eure guarianteed or no pay,. Airess Voltsaie Re-It '... Mu las n1. Micis. ~we'e'.L, $12 ad dy at home eail y maade. Gostiy ~WOutflt free. Address Taux & Co., AugustIa, Mainle. AGENSTEMAKE MONEY 14ni.fIXO ova NEW BOOK~ AR 0ULT- !, H IL AND URir ? CDRE N. Wboribs its weigrist bin gold to every ono whor has the 're of chi. ldren. l'arenats at once nipraeciaate its value aid rarnmly a ecornimeand it. Has better setlinag qualities than any tbook niow oflererd to agents. lDon't fui to secure the ageny. or articulars neldressu Fl,4.NIEEE &t Die. 35 A gN.181V. F'it.h 8t., Cincinnati. 0. To Onsumptives. I ODER'S EMULSION OF COD LIVER OIL AND J Wild Cherry Darkc, the rmost palatable combinatiog ef these renownmed remedies extant. Ana unequaled remet dy for Conaunmptlon, Scroflula, all Lung afibctlons, Ner. rhich t o (d Liver Ol I combined wih the Wil Ohr ry, en tbles itI to be assdmilated by the most delicale stomt. ach, insures complete digestion of the Oil, tones up the system, relieves co~ug h, causes increase of flesh and s treng th. Endorsed by the most eminent physiotans.* A well-k nown specialIst an Lung affections has used It l~a ever two huandred cases, and says "there is no combina tion equal to It for COonsuroption, Scrotula," etc. 'hou sands of sufferers need and 'desire to take a combinationa of Ood Liver Oil, but have been unable to do so. Thei wihexcellent resultan Price On plar p er Bottle, Six flottles for Five Dollars. Oirculars said valuable in. formation to all sufferers sent on free receipt of a describe. Mea of ease. Address all orders to 0. G. A. LODER, Mianufacturing Chemist 529 Obestnut t.. Philadelphia, I~a. TilE lBONANie4Ri BOOH AGENTf is selling our aple1dIy illustrated book Li fe o QEN. HANCOCKIC By his life-Long friend, lEon. .5. WV. FORNEY. ina antheor of n'ational fame. This work isendosed by tuleuss. IlianeOCBE, party leadfers, and p ress; is loe priced, immnenselv popular, aid laki Ile wld-fire3 werythher.~ OJutfits 50c,. Aaeatsaremnlag eaaily $16 ar dauy., arethe bet bok, osat ?eras, aud full HUBBsRD) llROTHER., Atlanta, Ga LmANE & BODLEY CO., CIN('INNATI. *alANUAOTURERSI OF 8TANDARD PLANTATION MACHINERY, Stationiary and Portable Saw Mills GrIst Mfills, Shafting Rangers Pulleys, etc. Oaur maohinery is strong, saim le aid wefl made, and is ereGially adapted to te rivnan1 (o''armereranlt l'lautea-~ or an Ilus rad aalog LANE & DODLEY CO., John A Water Ste., CincInnatI, 0. 4 The Oroat Romedhy Fo'r THE L IVER, T HE [IOWELS, nd tho KIDNEYS. thme;tean. If -hc wr w~,' ithil bo 11rU dcti tlo c le ecomo el~i~~l ( ne i lerruao humnoris that 'hould hiavo been (rpolled natr---l y. I lrJrV JO rT w1 ra r tim nturci e !~ e edi, a~c a~ almay lbo. I hr ale 1.7ra1JDruais~ts. BEFORE BUYING OR RENTING AN edfor our LATEST Iz~wstaa TeD CATALoOns (32pp.4 to),) wit h waee sTYL35, at 51 and upward~ or 88pe Cer~and up Sentfree. MASON & IiAM'I.INORtiA CA 134 Tremaont St. BORTON'* 46 E1as 14th S6., NEW YORK 149 Wabaah Ave'., CHIICAdO. Do Your Own Printing. Presses and outfits from p3 to $30 Over 2,000 style f Type. Cataloglue nnd red uced ice l free. 0A MONTH. Agentawanted.~ ~A 'II 71-beet seiling atrlitcles inm the world ; i. cam .W~-''--ple free. JA Y BRION80N, Detroit, Micha. S 5 to $20 1'd'dayJathotmo'. i''le rth .Tie vaf-hoest In the world-Importers' prucern RLLargest cormpany In AmerIca -staple article pesees everyboy-Trade con tinuallylicrenus- ' D ingAgents wanted every-.'a--Best in Luoeme a watetmeBed o -:lr NESET 1BON TONIC a of Ueneet and ether Lan bel with a pr ei Kern. mmaeisseurs Sapve and Invalids muat have. A an4 whelsme and delicleus stinmlaat, adirably adapted. eeed from Dyspepeta, Malaria, ete. Delleate womeme a and physiesians, wera-out murses, tad the feeble of I Lad it a grateful lnvigeraat. :BERIS & BROWN,