University of South Carolina Libraries
Ristory of the Tichborne Trial. The Tichborne caso reads like a hlgly-colored work of fiction and may be b refl gven as follows: Roger Charles Tiohorne was born January 5, 64. 1829, and was, after his father, heir to the title- ad large estates of his uncle, Sir Edward. 'Roger was educated in France and at the Roiban Catholic Col lege of Stonyhurst, and when 20 years of age, entered the army. In the year 1852, Roger wooed the daughter of Sir Edward, his cousin Kate, but her parents were opposed to the match, and the young man resigned his commission in the army and went to sea. On June 19, 1853, he arrived at Valparaiso, and on April 20, 1854, so ded from Rio do Janeiro for New York in the ship JBella, a vessel that was lost. In March of the year 1858, Sir Edward died, and was succeeded by his brother James, the father of Roger ; and Sit. James died June 11, 1862, and, as it was believed Roger had been lost at sea, was sue ceeded by Alfred his second son, and brother of Roger. Alfred died in February, 1866, and was succeeded by a posthumous son, born in May, 1866. Lady Tichborne, in the meantime, was not on " good terms " with the rest of the family, and in her peculiar and pro nounced way manifested her feeling. In 1865 she began to advertise in the Eng lish and Austraillan newspapers for Roger, who, it will be remembered, had been absent, i. e., dead, nearly twelve years. In the year following a butcher of Wagga Wagga, Austraila, supposed to be Arthur Orton, but called himself Thomas Castro announced that lie was Roger Charles .lichborne, and that lie had been saved from the wreck of the ship Bella. This person after some cor respondence with Lady Tichborne, set sail for England, reaching London on Christmas, 1866, and in the month of January, of the next year met Lady Tichborne at Paris, and was accepted by her as her son, and furnished with funds. Lady Tichborne was almost the only member of the family who recog nized him, all the others repudiating him as an impostor. For some months he went about England collecting evidence, securing witnesses, and obtaining such information in reference to the real Roger as would be valuable. In March the first action was commenced by the " claimant" filing a bill in chancery, the real issue of which was to enable him to prove himself to be the veritable Roger, and the rightful ownpr of the title and estates. The case diil not come to trial for nearly four yenrs, because of commissions being sent to South America and Austrailia; and in the in terval Lady Tichborne died The trial began May 11, 1871, and, with two adjournmente, it continued 103 days, till March 6, 1872, when the jury interposed, dleclaring themselves satisfiel that the "colaimant " was not R ger T'chborne, and he was non-suited. Hie was at once ordered into custody to be tried for per jury, but was later released on bail. The perjury trial was comimnced April 23, 1874, when he was found guilty and sen tenced to fourteen years of penal servi tude ; he was sent to Millbank, and later - transferred to Dartmoor prison. The estates of the Tichborne were valued at ?24,000 a year. The first trial was be fore the Court of Common Pieas, and the perjury trial was before the court of the Queen's Bench. ft wais settled beyond reasonable doubt that the " claimant " was Arthur Orton, who emi grated from London, his native place, to Australia, and because of evil-doing changed his name to Castro. There are, however, many in England who believe, and still claim, that Orton is Roger Charles Tiohborne. tSlberian Exiles. A large proportion of the persons who are in Russia sent to Siberia bl)Cong to the class whom not a fewv New York tax payers would be delighted if they could similarly dispose of. If a man is idle, a drunkard, or a nuis ance in any way to a community, the au thorities of his district, meeting in coun cil, decide to pay the cost of deporting him to Siberia, not as a prisoner, but as a colonist ; for one of the objects of the Russian Government is to dlevelop the resources of that vast and thinly p~opui lated land. The numbers sent have av eraged, of late years, from 17,000 to 20,000. A trustworthy authority says that the number of political prisoners sent to Siberia is enormously exaggerated. As a rule, the work imposed on those in the mines is by no means severe. The prisoners no longer go to their destination all the way on foot. From Moscow, where they asbemblo, they go by rail to Nijni Novgorod, and~ then by water to Perm; thence by rail again to Ekaiernburg, whence conveyances take them to Tiumen. The remainder of the journey is by water or on foot. Prisoners are divided into classes. Th le first arc treatedl as felons ; the second only partially lose their civil rights, do not always undergo imprisonment, and in any case only for a period, at the ex piration of which they become colonists --New York Sn. What a Boy Can Eat. An in quiring and anxious boy of 19 writes the editor of a great morning paper for advice as to eating. Says he : "s the soup you get - in restaurants * good ? Some of it appears to be greasy." Ver profitless is the answer of the edi tor tothe boy : "A boy," says the scribe, S" a boy, in truth, ought not to thinki about such things. His physical econo my is a marvelous contrivance, and yet it is one that performs its operations *without help from his intellect." Yes, boy. Eat anything. Because you're a boy and have a good, strong stomach. Forget you have a stomach--becauise you re a boy. Eat heavy bread, sour bread, leathery cooked meats, greasy pies, poinsoned candies, anything, vyery thing-because you're a boy, and yoa're supposed to have a stomach which will digest tenpenny nails. Eat when in a profuse prespiration, eat and work or study the moment you jump up from the table, eat whatever is set beforo you, be good, bad or indifferent, and all because you're a boy. nature that she surpassed the ordinary beings of earth. She was a ministering angel to Sheridan, and from the mo ment she died he became an altered -*t* -an A Key to Editorial Expressions. An attentive reader of newspapers can ee a great deal more than is set down )n the printed page. For instance, an xpression common in these days of iominations is, " While a portion of the icket is not such as we should have iominated, we shall give it our hearty iupport." This means that the editor's nost bitter enemy, who will give the >rinting to the other paper if he can is )n the ticket, and the editor hopes tiat, he low down reptile may be beaten out )f sight. In the case of distinguished )rators, the remark, " The Hon. Mr. Blank was attacked with sudden indis )osition and did not speak" means that he venerated statesman was too dru4k o hold his head up. The- observation neaus the same thing when applied to ;he lights of the American stage. " We !ailed to catch the last words of the speech" means that eloquence at the ritioal periodwas drowned in " budge." " We regret that we have not spacq to publish the gentleman's eloquent effort in full " means that, in the editor's opin. ion, thie speech would have made a redeic tive mule leave his oats, and that it would be an outrage on the public to print it. " We may refor to the address hereafter" means that the newspaper man feels happy at getting out of it this time, and trusts that perdition may seize him if he ever mentione the ma ter again. In obituary notines "con gestion of the brain," when applied to a gentlemen of easy views in regard to drinks, means delirium tremons, and " Ie was his own worst enemy," means that the deceased was a drunkard, and the worst enemy of the people who loaned him money. "He had his fault-, who of us has not ?" is an equivalent expres sion. In regard to poiformances, dram atic, and otherwise, " Those who failed to be present, missed a rich treat" means that overybody "failed." "TThe audi ence was small but appreciative " means that nobody was present except the holders of complimentaries. "Owing to the inclemency of the weather the audience was not what it would have been," means that nobody would have been there had the sky been as clear au crystal, and the " neighborhood been fanned by the spicy breezes," according to the hymn book, " blow soft o'er Coy lon's isle." In the way of dramntic criti cism "AMr. Montmorency bhows some crudity and inexperience, which will doubtless disaippear with time and study " means that Mr. M. is a hopeless and irredeemable stick." Finally, "A scandal in high life has been brought to our notice, of which we shall have more to say in a few days;" that means-well, that means "business." - AtchisoT (Ka.) Champion. Village Life in Western India. In this new work on the "Industrial Arts ot India," Mr. C. M. Birdwood says of the typical village: " Outside the entrance of the single viihlige street, on *an exposed rise of .ground, tho hereditary' po)ttcr sits by his wvheel, molding the swift-revolving clay by the natural curves of his hands. At the back of the houses, which form thse low, irregular street, theretare two or three looms at work in blue and scar let and gold, the frames hangirg be t ween the acacia trees, the yellow' flow ers o)f which drop fast on the .webs as tlu-y are being woven. In the street the brass and copper smiths are hammering away at their pots and pa.ns, and further down, in the veranda of the rich mani's house, is the jeweler working rupees and gold miohre into fair jewelry, gold and silver carrings, and round tires like the moon, bracelets and tablets and nose rings, and tinkling ornaments for the feet, taking his designs from the fruits and1( flowers around him, or from the traditional forms represented in the paintings and carvings of the great temi ple, which rose over the grove of man goes and p)alms at the end of the street, abiov,e the lotus-covered village tank. At 3:30 or 4:301 in the afternoon the whole street is lighted lip by the moving robes of the women going down to draw water from the tank, each with two or three water jars on her head, and so, while they were going and returning in single file, the scene glows like Titian's canvas, and moves like the stately procession ei the Panathenaic frieze. Later the men drive in the mild gray kine from the moaning plain, the looms are folded up, thel c'oppersmiths are silent, the elders gather in the gate, the lights begin to glimmer in the fast-falling darkness, the feasting and music are heard on every side, and late into the night the songs aure sung from the Ramnayana or Mailbharata. The next morng, with sunrise, after the simple ablutions and adorations performed in the open air be fore the houses, the same day begins again. This is the daily life going on all over Western India in the village coimmunities of the Dakhan, among a people happy in their simple inanners and frugal way of life, and in the culture delrivedl from the grand .epics o'f a relig ion in which they live and move and have their daily being, and in which the highest expression of their literature, art and civilization has been stereotyped for 3,000 years." " Tak Notis." It sometimes happens that the horny handed prospector knows little or noth ing of the forms required by law when locating a claim, and in such in stances the honest old boys just drive ahead and do the best they know how. A grizzled old bunch of antiquity struck a lead near Gjunnison, Col., and left the following notice written on an old en velope and stuck in a split stick : " TAR NOTIS I" The undersined elams this lede with all its diffs, spurs, angels, sinosities, etc., etc., from this staik a 100 fete in each direnahun, the Same being A silver baring load, and warning is hereby given to Awl persens to kepe away at their peril. Any peons found trespasing on this Clame will Be persecuted to the fil extent of the law. This is no munky talk butt I will assert my rites at the point Of th sticks shuter if legaly Neces sary to talk head and good warning. Ac cordin to lawv I post This Notiss. "JOHN SEARiaB." A onAOxa bel can never sound well. No xAN knows what a ministering angel hia wife is until he comnea home one day, snfeoring with a dreadful Oold and she happens to have A tX apparently frozen to deth in the neighborhood of Solothurn, Swiser. land, was placed upon the dissoc * tap, and giving indication of remAin 1g lif.; was Ypstored by the efforts of the physicians. A MARYLAND exchange refers to Mr. 4hoo. G. ForvsOd of lair, that State, who was cured .b 81k Jacobs Oil ot rheumatem.-Roc76ter (N. Y.) Stnday rdng Tribune. It Pays to be Polite. A gentleman at Bridgeport was 4n in terested and amused party in anvopisode which occurred at the South Norwalk Depot. While strolling about the. plat form waiting for a train, he saw a woman slip on something and nearly fall. . Full of sympathy and politeness, he hurried to tE rescue and assisted her to rise. As she assumed an upright attitude, however, something escaped from her possession that at once caught her bene factor's eye. It'was nothing else but his valise, which he had left in the depot a minute before, and which it appears the distressed female was trying to get away with. The gentleman is move than ever convinced that politeness doca pay. New Haven Palladinm. MI. E. G. GARTMAN, the buqiness manager of the Evening Dispatdh, of York, Pa., was cured neuralgia by three applications of St. Jacobs Oil.--Boston (Mass.) Saturday Evening Express. THE laiest t0oo for cntting glass is said to be 'a thin German-silver disk impregnated with diamond dust, while for drilling holes similarly impregnated cylinders are useu. Theso tools are said to cut very rapidly, and to show little or no wear from use. The send cankloS Be Uassed, nor if your lungs are badly wasted away can vou be cured by tho use of Dr. Pierco's "Golden Iedical Discovery." It is, however, unequaled as a tonic, alterative, and nutritive and readily cures the most obstinate cases of bronchitis, coughs, colds, and incipient consumption far ourpassing in efficacy cod liver oil. Send two stamps for Dr. Pierce's pamphlet on Consump tion and Kindred Affections. Address WOLD's DIsPNrsABY MEDICAL AssOCIATION, Buffalo, N.Y. A carTAIN peculiar plant is known im Now South Wales as the "sihoeblack plant." The flowers contain a large pro portion of a mucilaginous juice, which forms an excellent substitnto for shoe blacking, producing a brilliant polish. This juice is used by Chinese ladies for dyeing the hair, and it is said thatt in Java the flowers are really used for blacking shoes. "Fesnale Coumplaints." DR. R. V. PIERcE, Buffalo, N. Y. :-Dear Sir I write to tell you what your " Favorite Pro scription" has done for me. I had been a great suffereir from female complaints, especially "dragging down," for over six years, during much of the time unable to work. I paid oui hundrede of dollars without any benefit till] took three bottles of the " Pavorite Prescrip. tion," and 1 never had anything do moe so much good in my life. I advise every sick lady te take it. bins. EaILY RuoAins, M~cIrides, Mich, "1I KNOW," said a tourist in New Jersey, " that the owner of that farm 'was a famous apple-btealer when he was a boy. He keeps two dogs in his orchard." YouNG and middle aged men suffering fron nervous debility, p remiature old age, loss os memory, and kludtlred symptoms, should sent( three stamps for Part VII of pminphlets issue<4 by WVorld's Dispensary Medical ABsociation, Buffalo, N. Y. PAnAonAPHIING is a good deal like "pocket" rmining. Occasionally a rich vein is struck and worked for all it is worth, and then the paragrapher goes prospecting around for a " new lead." Search the Ser.ptures and arun $10 The paublishers of the I1L, ly Sprinigs (Miss.) Reporter, ini their prize' puzzli~e col umnn, make the iollo >ina offer: To the per son who will first t 11 us which is the long est vets.-, which the shortest, and whtiel the middle verse of the Old1 Testament, ' will give $20 in goIld. Tro the plerson wit w ill first name the book and division in th< bible in which occurs every letter of the Hebrew alphabet, e wvill give $20 in gold These premiuma to be awvarded oun the 18th of .January next. Those who contest for thi premiums must send P. 0. Order fe r twen ty-five Cents, no stamn,~ for which they wil receive a copy of tihe Reporter of Jan. 19t1 containing thle correct aniswers~ and namte and postofihe address of paLrties giving~ them, to whomr will be6 awar d ed tihe 'remni umns. Aud ress', [ IJIacisI EIS Oms ol RParTER~ Holly Springs, M i; .a o'. No MAN can read a Chicago newspa per account of how some one with $400 made 400,000 in three months, on pork or wheat, without wanting to seil his ihirt for fifteen cents and buy futures in turnips. ________ fleer Amatu the KId-seyg. And it may seriously interfere with the health unless promptly counterac ted, and for this pur pose Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure has no equal. ___ PRtoF. RAOtL FIc'rE~T, of Geneva, is engaged in working out a problem in marine architecture, the proper solution of which he believes 'will effect a revolu-. tion in ship building. His object of studly has been the construction of a keel which shall cause the ship to glide over the water instead of pushing its way through. The resistance of the water to the passage of a vessel is in this way reduced to a minimum. He is now experimenting with a keel upon this Notice. F rom the 10th of October. 1881, to the 1st of July, 1882, genuine ROCK SPRING WATER will be supplied to cus tomers by Ellis & Co., of Bailey Springs, Ala., at the following rates: Ten gallons in anti-corrosive can.. $5.00 Same can refilled at.............4.00 Five gallons in anti-corrosive can.. 8.25 Same can refilled at.............2.50 Nine gallon. in glass bottles...... 7.50 Reasonable freight and express rates are g'ven by all railroads. This water has ben known for nearly fifty years as a sure cure for Dy'spepsia, a sure cure for diseases of the Kidney -and Bladder, a sure cure for all curable cases of. Dropsy, a sure cure for Scrofulous cases of the Bones or Skin, and a certain de stroyer of the terrible thirst for intoxi.. cating drink that overcomes so many worthy resolutions. Deprive a drunk ard of his dram for three days and meanwhile give him plenty of Rock Spring Water, and lie won't want the whisky. Don't you think it's worth trying? If you do, drop a postal to Ellis & 0o. It will cost nly a cnt.c THE old Ounarder Persia, in its day' the finest vessel afloat, took six tons of. coal to carry a tn of freight xaros the Atlantic: tbei izora., a new a er about, double the idIeof the Pe takes'a fifth of a ton. Changes like , 'as well as low land,iratea, are, swamgpin British farmers with Western grain. Fon a Cbristmas present buy one of the Ms. Or an Co's H 't: and our chidren will be delhited .and e youmus in your own home these long winter evenings. Tu value Of the sheep in Texa is $18,800,000.__ IT is impossible for a woman to suffer from treaness after taking Lydia E. Pinkhm's Vegetable Compound. D, is sad xit'triieWThi iidiiwho oh0e becomes deaf seldom enjoys a happy hear after. SUFFEREBs from Constipation should make one trial of Kidney Wort and be cured. THE first Normal school in America was established in Concord, Vt., in 1823. "Rough on aats." Ask Druggists for it. It clears out rats, mice, roaches, bed-bugs. 153. INDIGrsTrox, dyspepui uervous prostration and all , forms of general debility relieved by taking M UsmAq'o PafO!NID Bkw T1ouxo, the only preparation of beef containing its entire nutritious properties. It contains blood-mak generating and lif-ustainin ei; is invaluable inall enfeebled conditons, whether the result of exhaustion, nervous tration overwork, or acute disease, If resulting from pulmonary comp ute Ona well, Bazard & Co., proprietors, New Yr Oda Taar5y Days' TrIal. The Voltalo Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., will send their Eleotro-V6lbsio Belts and other Rleotrio Applianoes on trial for thirty days to any person afflioted with Nervous Debility, Lost Vitality, and kindred troubles, guarantee ig complete rostoration of vigor and manhood. Address as above without delay. P. .-No risk is incurred, as tbirty days' trial is allowed. Poverty and Distrees. That poverty which produces the greatest Estress is not of the purse but of the blood. Deprived of its richness it becomes scant and watery, a condition termed .anemia in medical writings. Given this condition, and scrofu lous swellings and sores, general and nervous debility, loss of flesh and appetite, weak lungs, throat disoase, spitting of blood and consump tion, are among the common results. If yon are suffering from thin, poor blood employ Dri. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery," whidh eiriches the blood and cures these grave affeo tions. Is more nutritive than cod liver oil, and Is harmless in any condition of the system, yet powerful to cur_. By druggists. BEI1ATTY'MSPIANOFORTES.-ManIfoeta hait Iye'2den-s; Squar grand plnoro te ur very HeAti t i nttlhiless iron frames, stool, book, cover, boXes, 8 .5 to 8297.4; eatalogue prices. $00 to bl0oo;' sisfaction guaanteed or money refunded, after one %"rsi~;I' rhlb Planiofoyten, S123to $2i5i cata loue prices= to PM0: standard pianofortes of the uni. verse. as thousands stlty write for mmenoth list of tes nionials. Bearty a net ORGANtS, catthedral, church, chapel, parlor, uward. Visitors welone; free carriage meatspaslnge rs stratod catalogue (holl day edition) free. Adrew oreall upon D WIEL Fe JJIXA T es WmDofN, NZw Jna. TORMENT,_INDEED. Li fe's vexations do not generally come on one like a storm descending thle mountain or like a whirl wind; they comeo as the rain does in some sections of the world -gently, but every day. One of life's discomforts 1s presented herewith: According to popular Impression /hot weather, mosquitoes anti / mad dogs all flourish at the same time and arc chargeable to the malefic influence of the Dog Star. Speking of dlogs and the fgStar re indsus of a bo'istory of a dog and the comet, -and whichb we here give In a short extract from / the boy's letter: "Golly1 B~1ob, you ought to has been there last night to a-seen the fun. Tom Winkins' dlnrg Toddles a-setzin' at the gate \ wsa-gtin' at the Comte wI en along comes old ~I7 Sykes durned rat tar rier and the 2 waltzed over the fence and the 2 fought. The tarrier proved too much for Tod dles, and afore they could haul him off the bat tle ground he had made a good square meal off h is hide. Tom was in dlespair. A kind looking gentleman in a broad brim hat told him to get a lottle of bT. JACOBs OIL and rub him with It, and It would cure him in no time. What does Tom do but steal into the chapel at Vesper time and slide Into Father Jacobs confessional box and beg of him a bottle of his oil with which to rub his dorng. The Father felt of Tom's head ; It was hot an' a fore Tom could utter a prayer, two men were luggin' him home followed ygeate crowd who kept at a safe distance, thin ghe had been hit by a mad do . The more he kicked and screamed to be let fre, the tigh ter they held on to him." In reference to another torment, the Chicago Western (ithudic recently wrote: "'Mr. Joel D). Harvey, U. S. Collector of Internal Rlevez nule, of this city, has spenut over two thousapd dollars on medicine for his wi fe, who was sufler lng dreadfully from rheumatism, and without deriving an y bnefit whatever; yet two bottles of ST. JACOB8 OIL accomplished what the most -skillful medical men failed In doing. We could gye the names of hundreds who have been cured ths wonderful remedy did spaco ermnit us. 'e latest man who has been mnae happ through the use of this valuable liniment is lr. Jlames A . Conlan, librarian of the Union Catholic L.ibrary of this city. The followving is Mr. Con lani's inidorsement: UNAION CATuIOtic LIIBRARY ASSOCIATION,) 20 Dearborn $Nreet, Cn ICAco, Sept. 16, 1%0.j I wish to add my testimn(Iy to the merits or ST. JA cons Ol o a. a(lure for rheumatism. One bot tle has cured me of this troublesome disease, which gave me a great deal of bother for alonig time; but, thanks to the remedy, I am cured. 'This statement, is uuasolicited by any one in its Inter est. Very respect fully, J A Mi.8 A . CON I.A N Librarian. D BUL SYRU YOU e~oare bentjoe . a reg ta . ~NSIONS. ieAse e eus or vaes. ens a enn to adrs law tastn ren. . ited i a~uaq~ pe lood Widos o ti tke ne as~r may~f e re t4 ou a h oes IZ!IJr trets oadhset. sua. sseso~il 'AN, CONSUMPTION BE CURED? SoMS UNTER4STUNO LKTTERS *Rom T"E PEOPlE, WHICH SHOULD Bi' READ BY THOSE AFFLICTEDe DR. SOHENOK oivas THE EVIDENCE ON WHICH HE BASES MIS ASSIRTION, THAT CONSUMPTION CAN BE CURED. Clear and explicit statements from well-known persons which should convince . the most skeptical. For other Certifioates of Cures send for Dr. Schenok's Book on Consump tion, Liver Complaint and Dyspepsle. It gives a full deioription of these diseases in their various forms, also, valuable information in regard to the diet and clothing of the sick; how and when exercise should be taken, &c. This book is the result of many years of experience in the treatment of Lung Diseases, and should be read, not only by the afflicted, but by those who, from hereditary taint or other cause, sup pose themselves liable to any affection of the throat or lung$. IT IS BENT FREE Post Paid, to all Applicants. Addree Dr. J.. I. SCRENOR & "ON, No. 00 Arch L, PhIlladelphla, Pa. From Mr. G. W. H. Martin, of Afton Depot, 'Va. Arrow DzPoT, NziAoN Co. VA., gept. 13, 1879. Dn. J. H. Scnxcx, Philadelphia, Pa. Dear Sir:-I feel it to be my duty to you and to all who may be suffering wi that awful diseane-Consumption to write to you of 1 he change for the better that has been made in my wife's condition by you and your great medi. cine. On August 29, 1878. my wife was taken down with kie Consuinption. r ca.It d ii one of the best doctors in this enunty. Ile nttended her ai faithfully as a man cmivld, doing everything in hits power, but @he got worse every day. In October I called another doctor. They both salM Aho could not possibly live, for she had Con bumiptioi, and that her Itings were nearly gone. She was at this time the most pitiful object any person had ever seen-a perfect skoleton, coughing and spitting large quantities of matter. I tried all kinds of patent medicines that wesre said to cure Consumption, but nothing did her ani~ good. On the 1st of October the doctorn' and all her friends gave her up. It was theIr opiniion that she could not live tye days longer. By chance I got one of your books, de scrihing uim'lar ca-as and their cure, and on, the 6th og November I wrote to you, describing her case. You wrote me to givo my wife your mnedicinios according to tho printed directions. and you thought shev could be cured. I at once bought some of your Palnsaoeste My.ap, 8esawreed Tomate and Ilastasaae PM Il, and gavo them to her. She begani to imtpiovo att once, although the doctor.i and her friend.. said I was throwing my money away. In a few days she got so she could lay down ait sleep-a thing she had not beeii able to do since she was Airst taken ick ; her appetite improved, and I never sa1w such a woiiderful ohanlge. Everybody who sawv her was astonished, for the like had niever been seen in this. coiunty. On the 23dt ot January you came and exaimnerd her lnngs with your Respiromieter. You proiiounceed ner right lung niealy gone, andt the left badly aflfected ( the same thing her former physicians had aaid h but you said she was improving as fast as, possible. About the lst or June she commenced attending to her household duties, and has continued to do so eve~r slince, doing all her own cooking and sewing for hiers-elf arid her yve children, andl to-day she looks better than e bias for ten years. ,My wife's case is looked on by the many who saw her as the most wonderful cure that has ever bieen made ini the State of Virginia; it was like raising the dendl. tSome of the miedicines you sent me I have sold, anid they have never faileid to give entire salifaction. There is ab great deal of medicine sold in this vicinit y now, aiid It hias niad,. other cures almost as wonderful a.s that of my wife. My purpose in thtus writinig to you is to benient others who may be suffering from that dreafnul disease -Coin gumption-and I will cheerfully answe'r all inquiries that may be made of rae, whether by correspnndenice, or per sonally, and I can refer te thirty or forty persons of the. highest standing in this community who will vouch for all that I have written. Yours, etc., G. W. HI. MA RTIN. Guard tbe System Against MAL.ARIA By Using. DR. SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PIL LS, rhe Great Vegetable Substitute for Mercury. rhey will cure Chills and Fever. rhey will cure Diarrhcea. rhey will cure obstinate consti pation, leaving the Stomach and Bowels in a healthy con dition. They will cure Liver Complaint, that great forerunner of Con sumption. DR. 'SCHE NCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS Do nos produc, sichness at the stomach, nausea or ri. ng. On the contray, they are so mild ind agreeale In ;heir action that a person aufibring with a elek headache sour stomach or pain in the bowels is speedily relieved ft these distressing smptoms.n they direty onn purifies the blood for the whole body. The ae apefq pe aon of tha gyea arn well Prf eh ng, othe College of Medicine, of Cincin natldua~: lno atison it acts upon the bowels h iver Copaint there Isnt lequal inth mercralaget., aonsing the liver to healthy action, oerani~ a the r~ of'ieand keeing up these actioiia qua anted.** (8ee A merica,, Dise nsatoyy, page 7are0.) In al ases of idver Compl I or s a . hr RHEU MTI LIVER AND BOWE ." " UMt causes the d-A my the vietms of THOUSAiDS9 OE" E8E 1T cf the worst ibetas et MKff ' II PERPROT X I - hshad wedristlsueees, and an sale in every partof tf countrei -; - droe ofoaaemitaseured ailed. Itis mild, btiol6 OT, N ITS ACTION, butharmlessin all 4t eleusee, Stregthesa v MLe to all the inportaut oa d . Mu, natural action of the KidubysacC , Th Lvivrin oleanedof a , t Bowels move fkeely and hoal - i,. t wa- Ae worst diseses aro oradicated- eai, th.. .asm. A.utshasbeengeo b' ?hdM imta is the most effbotual remedy fjrb ensing sysemof alI morbid .esaetota. At,spen usedin every household as a Always aueBUUlE8~C~UFW TIOSN, IL8 &144Olt Ispubopin~ey ta one package c dri chnikes GI n -i Also in Liquld VFerg very Cne the convenience of those who cannot gilarelt. Iaes*etek ette GE 'tToryl RUG~ 1!S, e4|9IT O IlW I M WELLS, UIA1 pltOm &4:* ~k~ (Will send the'drY.ffOtbifti.V N'i 1 risk o us.ThUd y 44ft n to bm d usass vral s4 av n een em. rs * r el nm tesmeetals. lowaI .U1 .I st ft u. Tbousaas do n*we ian for te 320 to 80 saved toT : ot, and when you o a frind forj o iee bs %arew ss s 60" m . 7W7 LP . 5 oLLEY,4*. : HABIT t MANUATTAN ~ B D0K001 . . W0j. ,ZO.4 , -i UWNT- s the Best an hm - LI Ioo U dM ;bls. 1111 o e evi-o JUNS iVOlven. cassloged free. A 4rw. Ie t bJe Vlt THE HARP-ETTE, sI~5o. OR-62.O0. AMERICAN ZIThER,. The e t Low Priced Wol.The eea isersnent to~ leka HAT ois d swpe 0y nR-a n usic c lean to pla e ratuie eiAjafe houre played with thetianmb and hap o canc e tadjustable to any pth both for lor uscand acom pa i 011uinii~od e. t y ad r t r a fo r dan e uthc r-onr l ngto y it I a-orte wit Ila5 ,fl thu ~4 1-onot co o tsesperiorinstruinetlWit e esfa iIAIA'uIUsET"-" 4bG'N h.* a'n nlanu :r turers,57 WYashi'gton Street, iluston, Mass. Ecnt to any a4. rmo eceipt ofprie a week is your ewe sewn. OEO bnat*9 free. Add .e. E atu.mTT 0e6as44, e TlOII RD Ifyou would escape the pains and dlangers of child birlth, send~ stam~p to Dr. Stainib neck Wilson, At, laint a, - Ga., i or "Glad Tidny for Mothers," cYII~on tatinlinlgmOt inport - anit informiation eve r AGENTS WANTED FOR Til ICTORI PISTORYF WO ~L Embracing full and aulbentia accunta of efdr iMmio the rae no al ef trh re and Komi the, i t ot 7 tory historleal 9gavin~b ~di the lsend for specimen peges and estr a trpgstofpgets. Addras A~tuaLPoa.;satbo Co., A tlait a, Ga. E~nfnit, n o< ithAu d i~ W ANDCATES~ neMsgg ofPayn'sdnoAtom satiac En tenes bl.7.A . A ,2r.'en lulithers' Uiol n, Atl n o i.....,,., w $jb .---81 TNU~g THwe 1v"1 -MI~ an--oaw he,~q