The Pickens sentinel. (Pickens, S.C.) 1871-1903, May 18, 1882, Image 4
oWf
nezothing but
WWalittle ol~i
most rapidlyis
won obloral hydrate and ab
3etr to exert a innla widerange
vo=T of nitrogen one gallon of
7 uals one pound of lean meat.
from the leaves of the pinea
0lant resembles jute, and Ay,itis
bt be utilised in manufactures.
Ewo -has been found in the human 1
- er, the liver and musoles of the ox, 3
n egg, wheat, barley and corn,
Tsa re& at which aqueous vapor is
liven off by plants is more than one and
quarter ounceser square foot of leaf
surface every tw ve hours.
Tan retina of the frog, afwtf bein re
moved from the eyeball and bleared in
the unlight, will, if placed in the dark
Brst turn yellow, then buff, and lastly
rose-red.
PatnoLIWx has been used as fiel on
board steamers. One tank of oil, situat
ed at the remote end of the ship, would
hold fuel suflicient for a double trip.
Tan hell-bender of our Western rivers
-the largest American salamander
breathes entirely by means of its skin
which, to expose more surface, is greatly
expanded, lying in ugly folds.
Tan milky sap of many plants contains
eaoutchouo, suspended in the form of
minute transparent globules, these being
frequently as small as 1-20,000 to 1-50,
000 of an inch in diameter.
TbOrnGH oxygen is heavier than nitro
gOn, and therefore ought to fall to a
lower level than that gas in the atmos
ere, no difference has ever been found
exist in the relative proportions of the
two.
WHEN the stomach of the sea cucum
ber becomes troublesome, Trom indiges
tion or other caue, it ejects it through
nas mouth along with its other internal
organs, and quietly awaits the growth of
a new set.
Tua waste liquor of gas works com
bined with the slaty shales found-among
the coal, yields alum, used in the manu
facture of paper and preparation of
leather; copperas, or green vitriol, used
in dyeing, tanning and the manufacture
of ink and Prussian bluo, and sulphuric
acid.
THm following test is given by the
French Academy for distinguishing f4lso
gems from diamonds. If the point of a
needle or small hole in a card, when
seen through the stone, appears double,
the stono is not a diamond. All color
lesgems, with the exception of the
diamond, cause double refraction.
"BUYINGSOAP."
Somne Infornaaton for the Boy.
"You see, gentlemen, that I place
this $10 bill in this envelope, this $5
genback in this cover and this $2 note,
iued by the United States Govern
mnent, in this third and last inciosure."
T ~hus spake a partially red-haired
young man who wore a stove-pipe hat
ndcheckered pants, cut tight, with
~*g spreads' at the bottom, as he
stodi mud an inch deep at the ap-.
Proach of the Charleston bridge. He
iya surrounded by quite a large er
d bybut there w ofta
,.., he continued,
duoss the manner in which I intro
duetefamous soap manufactured by1
~' ti~ e Multumn in Parvo Works,' and
-W'ils guaranteed to eradicate from
jI~tl~g anything of dirt that the gar
macontain--such as grease,3
~ r'~IIIi, pitch, paint, tar or var
Ihave now right before your eyes
in three envelopes a sum of good,
-und .ourrehocy of the United States,
regating in value $17. In each of
pse envelopes beside there is a cake of
.oelebrated 'Multum in Parve' soap
at any retail drug store fifty
Ia cakce. Now has any gentleman
o hi rowd the nerve to offer me $1.50
~N *ow he three envelopes? Remember,
~~Is~sdone simply to advertise the arti
latwhich I am agent
~4 Ther was no immediate response
~ a~d~ y any one in the crowd to this
4~ 1oqiet appeal. People are naturally
~ pjiota and a man hates to be the
one to lead off in a scheme that he
~ ~o~sat his heart must be conducted
~, ~ ~ skin " basis. At last a tall, hun- 9
a 4r-away-eyed-looking specimen
around, and got out a trade dol
j~m4 a fity-cent piece and handed it :
~"here you are, my friend ; open
envelope and see how ,you have t
rewarded for your nerve.'
crowd pushed eagerly around the
4oilg fellow, and could have
*hemnselves with rage when they i
$ m almly fold and put away in ias
t*dohide pocket-book seven-t
u earned dollars.a
*this juncture that the World! |
Scame on the scene. An ao
In the crowd told him what a
mind, friends," said the
-bttmpants young man, rapidly ,
another roll of greenbacks a
%.oe, "you shall have an- t
S~e; the company by whom h
* ~)plo~ed is not mean-so here ai
* upanother hree envelo es I
o7ntn manothsery 17 It "
~sea tolerbly fir pe.i
ishands were not as quick
10e.of the World'. repre-.
S edissy young fellow this
$aoing the bills in the fa
#tho had made be- so
cbance, gentle- Ck
40*~ses terms as th
or four tei
eto'ti
Sin
th
best
hat observation i al
at some will amt of depe
og than, other. For instanoe, I ,
ad soils will adn~ft of dee ow
ng thm stiff clay soi or ose that
ave heavy clay Aubso Subsoiling
or such lands perhaps is better than
o deep lowing. Zthink that all soils
re bnfted b d" plowmg o0090
ionaly; and hM deep plowig
ught t be done always in the fall, so
hat the new soil can have the benefit
bnd influence of the sun, air and frost to
>tter fit it for a crop. We should
>e a little careful sbout turning up too
nuch of the new soi at a time, for som-e
iubsoils require certain elements to make
hem productive that can only be sup
Alied by some system of manuring. I
Ind by deep plowing in the fall, and
hen by a top dressing of flue
nanure, fits most any kind of soil well
'or a term of years it followed b a ju
licious rotation of crops. If I draw
nanure to a piece of land in the fall
winter or spring and plow it under I
generally plow a little shaollow, so as not
o gt the manure too deep in the ground.
[f Iam plowing for small grain in the
!all I generally plow a good depth; if I
am plowing for small grain in tI sprfng
[ do not plow so deep. A farmer muSt
study the natute of his land, and experi
me a lite and watch closely the re
sults, and by that method he can soon
learn what is best for his land. The soil
differs very much sometimes in the same
locality; seasons vary, droughts and
heavy rams occur, cultivation and fertil
izers-all have a powerful influence on
the productivenessa of the growing crop,
as well as deep or shallow plowing. So
we see that in drawing our conclusio s it
is not always the depth of plowing one
that produces our light or heavy crops.
I think a crop of clover has a good iinflu
ence on the lightening and loosening of
some subsoils, and on stiff, heavy clay
land it sometimes has a better effect than
doop plowing. Clover, I think, is a good
and clicap and very effectual way of ren
ovating old, heavy land.---AllIn E.
Smith, McHenry county, Ill., in Farm
era' Review.
The Rights of Others.
If parents would teach their children
ko respect each other's rights under all
3ircumstances, society would be bur
lened with few of those men whom we
low meet daily, and who deliberately
prey upon the folly or weakness of others.
lhere are some children that seem to
iave no sense of "mine or thine," but
aorrow at pleasure what they want, ap
ropriate to their own use what belongs
x> other members of the famnily, make
sharp bargains, cut off the corners in a
~rade, and consider themselves only
"smart" and praiseworthy when the
aave over-reached or outwitted their fe
owe. Unfortunately, in many such in,
,tances, the parent rejoices rather than
nourns that " that child seemA to have a
:aoulty of taking care of himself." Let
is sketch what seems to us an ideal on
lition in a family as to the principle of
' mine and thino." Each member of
~he family has his own personal belong
ngs, and these are sacred to him
lone. No ot9 a&p2tr meddles there
vith. -, . deasures aroE~tn9gt
p ropriate bylay one b~ut
. 'self. hehaveroomby himself
hat room is safe from intrusion; no>
ocks nor keys are needed to guard him
ior his from impertinent and officious
neddling. Nevertheless, the parents'
>versight never fails ; and they revise all
>argains and agreements made between
heir children, so that the elder may 1.10t
ake advantage of the younger, or the
harp of the dull, so that each one shall
ave an " even chance" with the nest.
['ho laws of equity govern parental de
isions and sechre to each child justice.
Vith such training at home, there is
title danger that these young pee
ile will develope into over-reaching, av
niejous men and women.
Writing.
A careful reading of good authors
~ives several distinct products-Sacts,
t~yle, readiness of expression, and a cer
am temper or frame of mind conducive
o good writing. Before writing a pro
uotion one must gather together an
bundrnce of material. Facts, style,
nd vobulary niust all be in readiness;
aust be saturated, as it were with the
uibject. And yet, if the peculiar power
i ganting, if feeling is cold or Absent,
Liese are like the brick, stone, and
ortar without the architect and mason.
t may be established ap a general'rule
bat no speaker gets worked up into
much greater fervor befof'e his audience
ban he expei'ienced when he was prepar
the production in his silent room.
This indefinable mood moves in ways
ysterious, so much so that menm have
nmpersonated it in a goddess, and called
a muse. She is said to linger along
Lie banks of rivers, in the leafy woods
t twilight, and along the pebbly shores
E the ocean. But she can be woded in
niagination in the writings of others,
aid carefully reviewing the paths in
'hich she has flown in the past, we can
Lore readily obtain bar 'sid. And so the
igg~stion is offered, that, after the
aterials are gatherad for a production,
ie next preparatioui, of equal importance,
to get the spirit as well as the 'fuacts;
id this is dorna by carefully reading the
orks of the best writers, and when this
obtained, give full rein to the inspira
onf, or aillatus, till its force is spent.
oomn~y.
About Novels.
"Miry," remarked a eanctimoenious
bher the other day to his sentimental
artoen-year-old daughter, "I see I will
ye to give you the Diclkens for reading
many of those trashy novels. I nev
thnoghU it did a girl muobh good to
oper upin the house to keep suchb
ings out of her hands but something
mst be dogie at once. i I find another
vql ,in your possession, I shAll be
npted to Burnett. Thoe things de-.
oy the peace of a great many other.
me bap~ Holmnes, Thre ts not a
teh n Noo0othot
t an aong bsconh
paper by oe that the ulests of
Wabps were miae tis matria,
A R WIIaSaM confined in ao or
eleven months shed its skin four .e
ate sixty rats, and, although it bad ao.
0ews to a tak of water, an apParAtus
prepared for the purpose proved- it had
never drunk a drop.
Taa Baltimore Gazete relates that a
lady who had been vacinated borrowed
a pair of earrings from a lady friend for
a day. The owner, on resuming their
ue, was astonished to fiad that -she was
thoroughly vaccinated in the es.
Exrnaisrus made to test the mus
cular power of insects prove that the
smaller the insect the greater propor
tionate musotlar power. A bee is, for
its weght,, thirty times stronger than a
horse, Or a bee harnessed to a wagon
can puil twenty times its own weight.
THU hydra, a water inhect, when out
in two and the extremity severed, will
at once form another separate and livin
body. Again can the second be "sli0
u ,' and the same strange pro ame
o formation will be carried out The
hydra can be turned inside out, and will
live in that manner as well as in its
natural state.
THm mass of the sun-that is, the
quantity of matter contained in it-is
nearly 830O,0 times as great as that of
the earth. This mass is about 750 times
as great as the combined masses of all
fte planets and satellites of the solar
sYstem; it is two octillions of tons.
The attractive pull of this tremendous
mass upon the earth, at a distance of
nearly 93,000 000 miles, transcends all
conception. It is thirty-six uadrillions
of tons; in figures, thirty-six ollowed by
fifteen ciphers.
IV we could imagine an infant with an
arm long enough to enable him to touch
the sun and burn hiniwelf, he would die
of old age before the pain would reach
him, since, according to the experiments
of Helmholtz and others, a nervous shock
is communicated only at the rate of about
100 feet per second, or 1,637 miles a day,
and would need more than 150 ears to
make the journey. Bound would do it
in about fourteen years if it could be
transmitted through celestial space ; and
a cannon-ball in about nine, if it were to
move uniformly with the same speed as
when it left the muzzle of the gun. If
the earth could be suddenly stopped in
her orbit, and allowed to fall unob
structed toward the sUn, uunder the ac
celerating influence of his attraction
she would reach the center in about four
*months.
Thu wonderful snow sheds-tannels
on the Oe atral PacjiO railroad arc of two
kinds, one with very steep roofs and the
other with fiat roofs. They cost per
mile from $8,000 to $12,000, and in some
places where heavy masonry was needed
the bost reached $30,000 a mile. They
,are firmly constructed to support the
great weight of snow and to resist the
rush of avalanches. Fire precautions
are very thorough. Corrugated plates
of iron separate the buildings into sec
tions, and in the great ten-mile section
there are automatic electric fire-alarms.
At the summit is an engine and tank al
of the great Bierras, but without them
travel would be impossible. Sometimes
five feet of snow falls upon thorn in a
day, and often thirty feet lies on the
ground at one time, and in many places
snow accumulates to the depth of fii'Ly
feet above these great wooden arches.
- 11ow riome roets wTorRea.
How Dryden worked I can not find
recorded ; doubtless at any time and all
times, whenever the need of money
pressed him, rope always reguired his
writing desk to be set upon his bed be
fore he rose. Gray, the author of the
" Elegy," was, perhaps, of all writers
the most curiously minute in his method.
It is said that he perfected each line sep
arately, amending and rewriting it over
and over again, and never commenced
another until the first had wholly satis
fied his fastidious taste. Byron sat down
to write without any premeditation ; his
ideas ilowed with his ink, and one lino
suggested the next. But after the poem
was completed, and during its pass age
through the press, he was continually
altering, interlining, and addin~g. The
first copy of " The Giaour " consisted of
only 400 lines ; to each new edition were
added new passages, until it swelled to
nedkrly 1,400 lines.
During the printing of " The Bride of
Abydos' he added 200 lines and many
of the original were altered again and
again. One of the most constantly la
borious writeYrs ot whom we have any
account was S4outhey. In one of his let
ters he ays : "Imagine me in this
great studybof mine (at Gesta Hall, Kes
wick), from breakfast till dinner, from
dinner till tea, and from tea till supper,
in my old black coat, with corduroys
alternated with the long worsted panta
Ioons and gaiters in one, and the green
shade, and sitting at my desk, and have
my, pioture and mny history. * * * My
actions are as regular as those of St.
Dustan's quarter bags. Three pages of
history after breakfastg then to tran
scribe and copy for press, or to make my
selections and biographies, or what else
suits my humor till, dinner time ; from
dinner till tea I read, write letters, see
the newspapers, and very often induge
in a siesta. After tea I go to potry,
and correct, and rewrite, and copy till I
am tired, and then turn to anything tili
pupper-and this is my. life, which, if it
bnot a meryone, is yet as happy an
heart could wih. "-Argosy.
Feminine Finance.
The London World says " that spequ
lation of the riskiestcharacter is steadily
on the increase. It is a habit which,
once formed, is as difficult to eradicate
as the drinking of odd glasses of sherry.
Latterly it has spread with immense
rapidit aaig women. The 'feminino
finance -which Sidonia disliked is one of
the features of the epoch. The ladies
club at the West Etid of London, which
are *he growth of thelast few e* 2,
have given an apraciable Iise to
feminine spoont on. It wudbe a
mistake to suppose .that lady flnanciers e
ite exolusively a Lotadonpgowth. They
ibound in thie most trsaquil districts. I
E anaraintnt to itoqcivert t
*i ec noasl)iA~h
btion to
beware of
the Ohief end
bopiuty of Kes~or o i &
yoe
radiant soul within.
gives charm to the a, 4
cilpined and bea t 4s#win
ningly thrbugh faturre o of
classil mold. Beauty of personthen is
something whih may , Oulivatd.
Hence th4 aspiration t9 be beautiful is
not a vain one; were It, so, kind nature
would not have-. implanted it in our
hearts. I do not speak at random when
I aflirm that women with cultured minds
and hearts excel in beauty those wfo re
main ignorant ana perverse. From the
day when a course of intelleotaal and
spiritual training begins, you may de
tect an improvement In personal- attrao.
tion. How vain, then, Are rouges and
dyes and other osmetie - inventions i
Beauty is not made of paint and powder;
it is the tempre wiich health builds for
a pure, bri htapirft; or, as St. Clement,
of Alexand'a, says: "Beauty is the
free flower of health."--Alexander
Winchell, LL,. D.
Propagating Plants.
The p~roagtion of plants by cutting
is not a ult peraon; yet it would
seem . that horticulturists have taken
especial pains to obstruct the 9peration
with so many diftoult conditions that
amateurs nave -been discouraged from
undertaking this delightful and satis
factory employgent.' To be successful
it. sa solutely necessary that the plant
from which the cutting or " slip " is
obtained should be in perfect health.
If this is weak or diseased, failure will
be the result, An exeilent method to
prove the proper condition of the plant
from which we wish to root cuttings, is
to note if the slip breaks or snaps clean
off, instead of bending. or kneeing. If
it snaps clearly off it is in the right state
to -root freely ; should it bend and not
break it is too old, when if it roots at all
it will be slowly and make but a sickly
plant. With but few exceptions, cut
tings of all kinds roc'. freel from slips
taken from young wood before it be
comes har'dened. The practice of cut.
ting at or below a joint, which has been
generally considered practicable, has
been the oause of niumerous failure2,
from the fact that when a slip is out at a
joint, the shoot has fr eneztly gIown too
hard at that point, wh eb anau inch
higher up o~r above theu 'uint, iteubst
condition will be discoverd
It is wisest to pot off cutting. as soon
as rooted, even if the roots are ver
small. Half an inah is the best' lengt
for them to be ; they will spindle andl
become weakly if left longeor, and when
once in the pot will not flourish as well.
The soil should be finely sifted and the
pots about two Inches wide and in depth.
Alter potting, place on boards or
benches coveredl with an inch of sand,
s~prinkcle freely with a fine watering pot,
Rnd shade four or fine days. By that
time thq wiill begin to root, when no
sh fadcmV clgeaanr . v
Hooping a Barrel.
Putting a hoop on the family fiour
barrel is an operation that will hardly
Lear an encore. The woman generally
attempts it before the man comes home
to dinner. She sets the hoop up on the
end of the stftves, takes a deliberate aim
with the roiling pin, and then shutting
both eyes, brings the pin down with all
the force of one arm, while the other
non instinctively shields her face. Then
she makes a dive for the camphor and
iubleached muslin, and when the man
comeus home she is sitting back of the
stove, thinking of St. Ste ph en and the
other martyrs, while a burnt dinner and
the camphor are struggling for the
mastery. iHe ays that if she had but
kept her temper she wouldn't have got
hurt. And he visits the barrel himself
and puts the hoop on very carefully,
and then adjusts it so nicely to the top
of every stave that only a few smart
raps apparently are needed to bring it
down all right. And then he laughs to
himself to think what a fuss his wife
kicked up for a simple matter that only
needed a little patience to adjust itself ;
then he gets the hammer and gives the
hoop a smart rap on one side, and tl;e
other flies up and catches him on the
nose, filling hi soul with wrath and his
eyes with tears? and the next minute
the barrel is lym~g across the room, ac
companied by the hammer, and another
candidate for camphor and rag is en
rolled in the gredt army that is unceas
ingly marching toward, ?he grave.
Danbury News.
Tms new Duke di Portland seetns to
be a generous young numn. The Swiag
estate in Caithhess was bought by the
late Duke of Portland not l ng before
his death, and the tenants have recently
petitioned the prqpen Dnkb to grant a
p~ermanent reductoi in their rents. The
eset an expert down toSootland to
inquire into the matter, and the report
was that the rents were 25 er cent, too
h~igh, and they have accordig been re
cluced. It turned out that thpe rtr
Liad loeen purposely oe-ntd ore
was brought -ito the market;: but it
would have been rather hard uponi the
purchaser had heha1 uened tobe apoor
BAr'rnbo16s ppers do it in this wise :
Elere rests hshead upon the Iap of
sarth ; a youth to fortune and to fae
mnknown. Too much benulne crept un
ler.ieath hIs girth, and played the mis-.
shki with his temperate sone.-Bloom
ngtorn 1Bye.
Mr. W. F. Hetherington, editor of the
ientinel, informed one of our represen
itives that he tried St. J~acobs Oil. for
heumatism, and found it all that could
e asked. The famedy caused the ln
entirely dsper~&pra(a.
ver-oa mul ece wto addioar
rhose education was not equal to his
r'tune, "is capacity." "Inde I,'"
de astonished rpy"well, thenXl
~drone Izmeait4,ol matte,'whut
'fi have fon St.~$aoobsOil to be a
lost ecllen remfrgsl
sln~" saps )~r. j~
D~V.
ormany mont
K om~meubed the Us Of Io
scriptlon." -It speedily
permanent oure. Yours
MIs. PAUL B. Bazta,
"Dwo. vas schoost enoh
vas too blendty," remark Han
his best girl asked him to
m6ther along with them to-the danos
* Tatible UumerIugsee
Di, P. V. Pranox, Buffalo, N. Y.:.- have a
friend who suffered terribly. I pumhased a
bottle of your "Favorite Pr"ipto1 and,.
as a result of its use she Is perfectly f
J. BAIaEY, Burdett, N. Y.
Dr. Pieroe's "Golden Medical Discovery" and
"Pleasant Purgative Pellets " purify the blood
and cure constipatlon.
TARRS in the fo'est may be. barren,
but trees in the garden should be fruit.
ful.
From MLssissippl.
CORINTIf. MISS., April 2, 1877.
Capt. W. P. Ellis, Bailey Springs, Ala.
Dear Sir-It gives me pleasure to
state the result of the use of Bailey
waters in my case. I hid for several
years been the victim of Chronic Di
arrhaa. The exhausting diacharges,
and absence of assimilation of food, with
painful ulceration of the bowels, had
reduced me from vigorous health to
an almost hopeless condition. My phy.
sician advised a trial of the celebrated
Bailey waters. In a few days after my
arrival the functions of the liver and
Kidneys were favorably affected, my
digestion became comfortable, the ir
ritable condition of my bowels rapidly
disappeared, and a comfortable state of
health soon establised. This occuied
two years ago, and I lve ever since en
joyed good health. Tattribute my re
covery entirely to the medical virtuF
of Bailey Springs. Very Respectfully,
D. S. MALONE.
A BxoommYN man reaoitem - t2,500
damages from a street-car boupany for
the loss of a leg, and now the drivers
have to stop their horses every few
blacks to pull enterprising citizens off
the rails.-Philadelphia New8.
Diutressed No More.
WrrroTox, N. C. Feb. 4,1881.
H. H. WARNxu & Co.: Sir;-Your Safe Kidney
and Liver Care has entirely relieved me of a
distressing kidney difflculty.
Roaz MOorE, Ex-Chief Fire Dept.
Tas three great ports of the worki are
London Liverpool and New York. Dr
ing 1880 they reached their highest
trade figures, the imports being at Lon
don about 6700,000,000 ; Liverpool,
$500,000,000 ; and New York, $539,000,
UO._ __
oaThirty Dayrc' TriaL.
The Voltalo Belt Co., Marshall, Mich., will
send the.ir Eleotro-Voltaic Belt. andi othur
Electric Appliances on trial for thirty days to
any person, afflicted with Nervous Debility,
Lout vitality, and kindred troubles, guarjtee
lug complete restoration of vigor and manfood.
Address as above without delay.
P. 5.-No rise Is incurred, as thirty day.'
trial is alowed.
BnOWNSON-" Well, I always make it
a rule toteilmy wife everything that~
hapn. Smithkin' -" Oh~ my dear
flotha~t'Anothing; I teU my wife
-lotiBrof things that never happened at
all."
KIDNEY-WoRT has cured kidney complaints
of thirty years standing. Try it.
NEXT to an effeminate man, there is
notbing so disagreeable as a mnannish
woman.
Thae Wusband of Mine
Is three times the man he was before he began
using Wells' Health Renewer. $1. Druggists.
Send for pamphlet to E. S. WELLs, Jersdy City,
N. J.
MaNsxAn~'uWeptonized beef t6onic the only
P~ieparation of beef containing Its enhire nutri
nous prQperties. It contains blood-making,
force generating and life-sustaining proper ties ;
inveluable for Indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous
prostbation, and all forms of general debility
also, In all enfeebled conditions, whether the
result of exhaustion, nervous prostration, over
Work or acute, disease, particularly if resulting
from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard
& o., proprietors, Ne* York. Sold by druggists.
ALWAYS KEEP COOL
- To stlekto yout
subec anthe
lent plan, andl(
whether it be in
4,1 questIons of
fInanee or fishing,
or any topIc what
ever, clii or plit.
- ~enoo and tellth
truth. However,
nw od4)Vt for lying,
when It COmeis to
maubject, and no
doubt our friends
ithe pieture aro
andulgern thsat
menbtasrellt )ar
hn)thoy aei aparet
- i.~ln Ther o~lesi
Remed for* ad tmpes arpe
eaierotonatheyhd
rheumatism than
fish, In which easo
it would be well
- for them that they
17 , ' o provided with
17- a bottle of ST.
JACOns Ori theo
Great German
Iteedyforthis as well as other painful allments.
WR'L L NA IT ITS COLOMS TO THE MA~T
, loello, lennyl what Is the trouble?" "Oh,
i'm all broko up," was~ the resonse to the Iu
quiry of an old shipmate of WIl11am G. Dennis
ton, one of Farragut's wvar-worn veterans, well
known In the southern seetidon of this city, who
eame limningh into the3 Amrneiani office yeste'rday.
I thugh I onl 4go under the hatches this
time," continued Dennistona. "I never suff'ered
so much In my life. I had the rheumatic gout
so bad that I could not got ofl' the bed or ptmy
foot to " floor, aind would have been tereye
I f a fhjq ad not recomnmendled ST. JACOS rL
to me. I- hesitated some time-before getting a
bottle, thinking It WAS another one of thoseadver
ite~d nostrunms, but was finally Induced to give It -
a trial. and a lucky day It was for me. Why 4
bles mystasia flor bathing the limb thorou gh
wit th Oi I eltrelef ndmy faith was pinne
to S~T. JA COB and his oi after Chat. I freents
that If It hadl not been for ST, JAconOESOL I shouki
w ~t lte, and then welln hasent relypsed
Ofy 1bats anything of *e kind I have ever
ea fAd anyJ rson who doubts It send them
ton d24i et 5t.-PAildepMa& 2inva
DrBULL
Among the micaial ~~ ~iiq4ag
totter's stomach 11ltoere etan
the further progress of all dIrer e41 ofUbe
and bowels, rovivea the vital stamina, Pro d*i
dies chills and fever, Increaes the atTvy o th
counteracts a tendency to rheumatism, ad Is 9gehI6
stay and solace to aged. InArih and nervouaPeg1u
For sale by all Dtruggists and Dealers
generally.
"I'MIN LOVE"..
-0
Hold By thq
your
breath won
,ill you derful
see the facial
new com aist
le cards, that sat
"s I'M for the
IN DA DDr
LOVE." pictuies
-0- .0
Bend 11o. (stampe) for the "LOVE" cards,
SAMMIS & LATHAM, Publishers,
79 NASSAU ST., N. Y.
MNLY '', =ergy, =. -ox
lvi1 11 d' y a. Obecrn diseases
of either sex cured at Med. Inqt.
13 Elsn X .. Ctelsgnatt,O. PAY AFTER CURE.
AGENTS WANTED FOR THE
t HISTORYOF TnEWORLU
Embi acing full and authentia accounts of ever natiak
of &taent sid modern tim and Iriludin a h tor of
th rise and fall of the Greek and lioman Empires, he
midlle ages, the crusades, the feudal system, the reforma.
etic, t iseovery and settlement of the Now World,
It contains 87'. ;1ne historical engravings and Ia the
moat completc f iptory of the World everublIshed. Send
fox specimei, pages ana extra terms to Agenta.
Addes eN t-rrvoAr. PUv-L8nur Co., Atlanta, Ga
SA Wz.x. Sl a day at home easily made~ 00itlty
Nl6~Outfit free; Address Taut h C., Augu ta. Me
MOORE'S UBUSINESS
Athmnta, Ga. One of the best practical -
schools mi the country. Circularai malled ivmu
U A Treatise on theirETI
slpeedy cure SE'NT FREE. Da.
Strog'sSanative Pills
FOR T)IE
LiVER.
dyspepsa. lBold by all leading Druggist. For circulna
mdaInuacs w iI full particulars, address, 1P. 0. ls
RUINED!
Ruined by Rum t~ How
many of your acquaint
ances? Aye, many.
BROwVN'S IRON BITTrERS
is the practical temper
ance medicine of the day.
Not composed of liquor,
not sold in bar-rooms,
but a true tonic in every
particular.
If BROWN'S IRON BIT
TERS is taken aCCording to
- directions, it will not onily
relieve the intemperate man
of the aihinents resulting
'from his exceses, but it wvill e
remove~ all decsire for artifi- e
Cial stimulIlants.
Ii
BRO\VN'S IRON BITTERS
Will cure Dyspepia In
dligestion, \Veakness,
Malaria, dlecay in the~
liver, kidneys, and dliges
tive org~anh;. JiW ~As a
medCiinef for disecases
peculiar to women, it is
withou t a,~ equal. Price
$1.00. F~o1 sale b~y all
druggrists and dealers in
medicine,
a wee in your ewa town. T rnsmS en d s
THRESHERS
bs.a Tan AmrIMA*64Ya m
AGENT8T
an, womn and oef4I
'abe sxade* Inint 90 I
L.. E . P ..NK..
-oLa11tkeso f
1 '
2orwan uo" tirot hetetr o
Plants, 4ka ovarian troublevmenaen
-tion, Yaling and Displacements, A the 0o
fpipal' Weakness,.-and Is partcularly A&dat.
'hange of Life.
It. wldisso and expel nrst
in e&ai stage of development. Thke
ftmra uiumMoreis cheaked very
Qgenovs ainoes, aktmanc, aesry
tostbnuat, and relie'ves weakness ofth
IS aure Mating, Headamhes, Nermo.mIbtai
Tat toeling of beatWg down. eaIng PAin Wld
and buhe to always Permanently cured byit "Sa
1D illat all tinm and under atlecreumstass0sIn
basmaany with thelaws tlat rovern the femasle aofn,
For the e t ofEdney Conmplants of sither endW
POUN Is orepared at m: and 03 WSternAvenge
intne form of pills also inthe otor6n 4laalenge, on
gEopt of price, $I per box for eim rJi. mA
tvWynswers all ioters of inquiry. 864 Bead toin'0p1.
OLet Address as abTov. Metfa tf Jpr
No family should be without LYDtA 2PILa2
LIjvER PHJA They cure osiatob
and torpidity of thelivar. t ont par bas.
ar gold by all Dragae
L I *1'
I/I
THE'DIRECT ROUTE TO
NIACARA FALLSP
tiN EW YORgKn Dpw~ma and OTimorN.
Fora GuWeaBooks, Ratesp etc., l address ~~i *.
Dhneo~f. EDADS en1Soter get
. ili hd islve eVd xpl tuUAow Ro iAW I. '
1$ ~rniveualntesuWflthay unier~slLog
G end DbftBor leam, DoubsoAale Eo- ~ ~ 4
CIo ULRn.nr. rcto
Manufhaturd by lMw. pRmONeWORl, cuAe LEN.l N.
An Engath VeltteriySgo and une ICeist, nwlp
arelny inth ctry ays thatostf the Horsei and
,hthern' Condio Poeuiarns ofreisltely pure
Coond m unsauasle. Nohn*n:nt ilmk
1n ma ie hridan's C~otn Pd. Dent onemm~
aupnonfu tofon pisaont food. Soldeewe, or
eot of maileIebo for e lttr taip. .8 JONrON l'l00.,
losteu, asw.orm3er f Bangor, Me.14Luap
and trdit ora iae of the~vr lel KIeYSx.
onl thol bcim of Rheuat a ealn
THOSADUSAND FCSE
FrnGidcBos, h.tesr etc.R, adr
0.LS REDHARDSON Ge& So.enAet
Ilua be snuEy mail.LBrlington,
Da. E C. W st's aars n i rs sa t ao
p eil for ltr ican Coul i, e-vu
ur Oi'ld e caued ove-eerin which lead t
~anfchbo bytan onLe mon'sOren. OnLe. dN.a 41
ox rae, si bohe foury s dlas; tat tmoal p.Hread
celipt oore sWd e arte soihlboestoh lire sny
hat Whea'h odrl recers fr ea boesy pur.
omned ith vae. othings, et will keu.
tn m. lik LUr.Oanesdtlon, oes. o Ords b
al~pfl promp attned it oo. Bl vrweS
Pei y al(r W eeo anp. b.e5.adetS N ?yioii
1o~t~ mehng nirely ne. o gns
THRE CRED CUR
O~L3VAND S WL.
ulon tht ue thats uoftad sing sws4o
of he ors Purms ont-Li erib dlMe0r.S
u re oy. This esinoequack peato isot
. B. fLB, ChemLIstD R , ston Sod bf llde
WELS RCARSONUDN AG
mbea tymaIltatd pt ngt , Vk
HEIALT IWALH
iiar ec ant eth. Oe. bori uters aree ases.
ac1oc ntaon monh' t reat n ola