The weekly Union times. [volume] (Union C.H., South Carolina) 1871-1894, November 13, 1891, Image 4
T WO MAIDEN!
A laddie sailed out on a calm blue ?ea; t
And two maidens fell a-weeping. |
"Ala*,"' said they,
' 'Tie a doleful day; j
Mayhap ueveriuoro
To the sweet green shore |
Khali lover to me I
And brother to the?,
Khali lover to thee
And brother to me.
Tome back from tlio treacherous, smiling
?a."
A EOod<?hit>J"* " "* ~ilJ uC*,
Jfjfc rti(l two maidens fell a-woeping.
The years passed by,
And two cheeks were dry;? 1
A wife and n mother, with baboon her knee, '
Kat crooning a tender old lullaby, '
Nor thought of the lover beneath the sea; ?
Hut at. eventide.
By a lone fireside,
A sister sat weeping for hint who hatl died,
Who came nevermore
To the bright green shore, I
T<> wniuler with tier the sweet meadows o'er.
?Ztteila Cockr. in Xrw England Magazine.
A LUCKY ESCAPE.
nv M. QUAD.
During the Indian troubles which followed
the close of the Civil War, 1 was
attached to various Western forts and
camps as scout and despacli rider, and
in that capacity bad my fall share of adventures.
It was iny fortune or misfortune
almost at the outset of my career to
strike the Sioux a blow which made them
forever after hungry for life. This was
in ls''d, while they were pretending to
be at peace, but actually kiliiug every
white mau who was found outside the
forts. I was then at Fort McPherson,
and while carrying a despatch to a small
body of troops stationed on the Saline
Fork of the Kansas River, I encountered
a small baud of Indians. This was about
10 o'clock in the forenoon. I saw them
emerge from a dry ravine and head to
cut me olT, aud at ottce halted aud disinoited.
1 was then on the crest of a
rulgc, and close to a natural sink which
would make a good rille pit. It was big
enough to shelter my horse as well, and I
was all ready for the redskins before
they knew 1 had taken the alarm.
Whilsnotin war paint they showed
... luonnfj, miu t RUl'W tuBv
if 1 fell into their hands my scalp would
change owners within five minutes. There
wasn't a Winchester rifle among the Indians
at that time, and uot one in ten
had setn one. I had one, while the nine
redskins before me hstd old fashioned
muzzle loading rifles, and 1 believed I
could surprise them. They were led by
a sub chief named Little Feather, and
among the nine were two others named
White Water and Runuiug Hear. These
three sub-chiefs were warrior* of renown,
and were then on their way to attcud
a council and a war dance.
It was Little Feather who summoned
me to surrender on paiu of being burned ,
at the stake, and he was the one who
directed atlairs when I shouted my reI'l.
i iic mm; spread out, mounted ou
their ponies, until tlicy half encircled my
refuge, then, at a signal, they came
tmougHi11 to1'i/.1* 8!?.Pc,.,t'Hcl1 OMC yelling j
my face, with a dead resl'for ifiy'?K..9u |
tumbled Little Feather and White Water
out of their saddles, and that stopped
the charge. As they checked up I
killed Jfuouing Jtenr, and before they got
out of range i wounded one oJLth? ?
nn nts of the dead chiefi isafcly into the
111 ? tnc (
f0llt soon became kpnren, and every s
Sioux what '-great tribe swore to have *
-c. A reward of tea ponies was
offered to any one who should kill me,
and twenty it 1 were taken alive. I was 1
advised by everybody to clear out of 1
that locality, but I refused to go until
tin* long-expected war finally broke out
and 1 was attached to a moving column.
The threats of the Indians had not
greatly disturbed me, as I knew they
they would always be trying their best
to capture a scout, no matter if they had
never heard of him. Those were days
when every white man on the ulaius
lived a year in every week and never
forgot for a moment that his life was in
continual jeopardy. Several plans, as
I afterward learned, were formed to
capture ine, but I slipped through.
I was finally made prisoner uudei
^^L<ynuulu.r tiLri was returning J
the Hying cofumn ro fort Wallace f
r with despatches. I had set nut unn.. I
* after dusk and made a good twcnty-fiv<
miles when a heavy fog settled down or. t
the plains. It wouldn't have bothered |i
an Indian to keep the points of the com- a
pass, but after I had tinned and twisted s
among some dry ravines I had to own up I
that I was lost. My horse was just a* e
badly ofT. When 1 gave him his head a
lie mine to a stop. The only thing to do i
was to dismount and wait lor daylight, t
I was sitting on the ground, not feeling i
a bit sleepy, and my horse was lying s
ilowji. when a band of thirty-seven In- a
dians, all mounted, walked right on to i
me thiought the fog. I heard the foot- (
steps ol their horses, but could not lo- t
catc them in the fog until too late. n
When I leaped up it was with the t
thought that I might make a break fin
it on foot, but before I could turn they i
were all about iu?, and in another millute
I was made prisoner I
rtu _ * i
i lie uioians were as much surprised a? I 0
I was, and it. was broad daylight before I c
they identified me. Up to that time they s
had treated me fairly well. When it 1
was known that I was the scout whose s
life they had so long thirsted after half 1
a dozen bucks tried their best to toma- s
hawk me on the spot. When theii 11
angry excitement had cooled down there '*
was as much rejoicing as if they had cap
ttired a fort. Six warriors were called ft
out as a guard, and soon after sunrise 1 %v
was put in their charge and started for a "
big Sioux village on Deer Creek, be h
tween the two forks of the Republican
Kiver. f was, of course, disarmed. o
Then my elbows were tied together, tuy
feet tied under the horse, and for feat
f se would run oil with me he was
a lariat.
non we made a halt of half ?nn
id 1 was given about half a pound I*
sd biitfalo meat as my share of the
v meal. My arms were unbound ''
night eat, but the whole six con- H
Stautly kept their eyes on inc. When we v
set off again I was bound as before, and *
we rode at a gallop until 10 o'clock at 1
night before the village was reached. I
understood the Sioux lingo very well,
though 1 did uot let ou to, hq(1 the talk
is we rode was anything but pleasaat to J
ue. It was agreed that 1 would be put
o the torture, and that it would bo made
;o last as loug as possible. A
When we reached the village I was
placed in a t jpee aud my arms uubouud,
I'hey refused to cast the lashings otl my
l"gs, though three of the bucks stood
guard outside. 1 was bo still aud soro
with the ride that I eould not have taken
live steps had they turucd an<^
told me to go. l'got not awiuki&SiS^P
that night, aud it was not until abouttk,
o clock next nioruiug that iny legs were ^
#rccd. It was a village of eighty lodges, j
and the one I occupied was almost In the '
centre <>. the collection. I couldn't have J
reaped had they left the tent unguarded, '
>ut they took no risks. There were al- '
vays two and sometimes four of the bucks '
qunttcd outside of the lodge, aud out- (
lide of these a circle of squaws ami chil- ?
iron.
Ii was the thin! day after my capture j
t>ofore I was disturbed. Then most of ,
the warriors having returned to the vil- |
I age on purpose to witness my death, I ?
was led out at three o'clock in the after- i
noon to undergo "the preliminary to ]
actual torture. This is running the '
gauntlet. There was as near as I could 1
judge sixty men aud boys in each line, s
and the lines were four feet apart. Mad '
each ouo been armed with a switch to '
strike me it would have beeu punish- 1
meat enough, but they were allowed to
use clubs and sticks and tomahawk
handles. When f looked dowu the line
I felt that there was no show dor me to'
make tlio run, nnd jot I must make tho
attempt. You may ask why I dicf not
absolutely refuse, aud let tlieiu do their
worst then and there. Because, I was
hoping for them to show me a little
mercy. They woull torture mc, but
not so cruelly as if I refused to run.
I got as good a ready as 1 could and
when the signal came I sprang away at
the top of my speed. Blow after blow
fell upou me while tho savages shouted
men ['iviiM'ir^, :iu'i id my grcm surprise
I fit length reached the euil of the lines.
There I fell in a heap and they gave tue
about ten minutes in which to brace up
for the run back. I made only half tbu
distance this time, being struck over the
head with a club that I sank down unconscious.
When 1 bad recovered my
senses they returned uie to the lodge,
where I lay for many hours expecting to
he taken out any moment for torture.
They would have finished inn but for the
f ?* ). .tlud. tliu wife uX Liljtic I'talker, yylw
M M in nnotucr Tillngv t\{ty mum ??> ;,
had not yet arrived. .She wanted to be
in ;it the death and so further proceedings
were declared oli' for the day.
The squaw arrived soon after midnight.
My ankles were tightly lashed
i.nd 1 could not sleep. She was for having
me out at once,and came ami looked
into the lodge to see it 1 was safe; hut
she was told that I would he put to the
torture after breakfast in the morning,
:uui long alter sue i>:\<I turned away I i
heard my guards gloating over the pros- i
peels. Jt was agree.! among them that I
I was a game man ami would hold out
for several hours aud give them lots of I
amusement. i
Half an hour after daylight the Tillage 1
was astir, and at sunrise a sguaw brought 1
mo some breakfast add the lashings 1
wound my ankles were east olF. I i
learned several years alter that it was 1
intended to oblige me to run the gauTut- I
let again. I was eating the meal the (
citemehc h.Woairht when a sudden ex- i
great shooting, folloWeu -nphnre was a
the report of firearms, and the next !?? **.
ute tiie 20" froatiersmrn who had
r
l'w,l^ll-roT^ong. It wasn't five minutes ^
Velore the lleeing warriors rallied 1
for defense, hut before that time I was r
wife. At (lie lirstalarm L leaped up aud ?
out of the lodge full against one of the a
guards, and as 1 ran I was tired at two ^
>r three times. 1 was among the horse- "
men in a minute or two, and after a bit ?
I got a rille and took an active part in "
the hot tight going on. V.'e were driven '
otl after a couple of hours, but we got 8
every pony in the herd and burned all v
the lodges, and they had many a dead ''
warrior I'l mourn Itv.tr
? I'
It was a singular thing that in after
years I should meet the sutiaw of Little '
leather on the reservation and huve a 2
long talk with her. So it happened,aud b
?he calmly told me that she hud been ti
promised my scalp as a keepsake and that c
it would have been her hand which a
would have ended my agonies alter I had b
amused the waniors to their till as a n
prisoner at the stuku v~r* trvrftc. u
Short-Live:! Athletes. p
Did it ever occur to you, said a Boston
rainer, that athletes are rarely longived?
By athletes I mean the folks who ^
re training themselves continually for ^
pecial feats of muscular power, and I
cave out the dilettante amateur who ex- ^
trcises slightly, comparatively speaking, ,
,ud then with only the object of phy.scal
development. it is my opinion y
hat, as ;i rule, the professional atnlcte
s not a very good risk for the life inurnnce
people. Ami this aside from
my risks of physical injury of h sudden
lature to which the athlete in the course j
>f his performances may he subject. I
liiuk it would seriously stuinp you if I ^
iskcd you to name a dozen cases of ex- s
reme longevity among men who huvo t
seen famous for their muscular power ,j
nd skill. But auybody can nauie a ^
lozen people who have led sedentary f
ivcsfroni hoyliood and attained cxtremo
Id age. Very strange as it may appear,
onsumptiou is a disease to whic i the ^
witnmcr, the oarsni in, the runner and
lie tighter h ive all on numerous occaions
fallen victims. I then mat ism is
nother coarnon disorder. All of which g)
onetimes makes uic think that nature
ever intended tiie development of the |,
uinan physical energies to the point at |
hich they are often observe I. Tne y
thlete who lives the longest is the man
dio used to bo an athlete an I gave up
is athletic fancies and plans before lie
ad reached middle life. Otherwise you
nd that the average of years on earth si
f athletes is auprisingly low. ol
tl
A Diamond Field in Kcntnoky.
mii expert irom roc soma Australian is
elds, brought to this country hy a com- ci
any interested in a "tract of land tn" ft
[entucky, says there is every reason to w
elicve it is a diamond-field. The ground re
ppeara t<; he the crater of au extinct la
olcatio. Over a bushel of small but tr
xquisite garnets were taken out in a few ul
ays' search. Ono is pronounced by hi
'mcinnati lapidaries to be one of the ?i
nest known and worth hundreds of ?I
yliaid. ? C Timtt '/
BIG BERLIN SENSATJON. '
Prominent German Banking Home
Fails.
lie Royalist Houn Suffer# and
the Aristocracy Throughout
the Country Shocked.
jensio^W^nes^^^n^e^iia'o'f Ilirsch
eld aud WolfOj bankers ot this city,
aused a sensation in financial circles,
?ut it was nothing to the new dcvelopncnts.
It was reported at the tiuic tnc
nilure was announced that the Emprcsj
>f Germany and Prince Henry, of Prw
ia, were liable to lose a large aiuouiUc In
he failure, nud that the Minister of Pub
ic Worship, De You Goosler, ' hat
ost his entire fortune, siul that mam
nctnbers of the most aristocrats
families were involved in the linn'i
roubles. Under such circumstances ?
igid examination into the atTuirs ol
tlirchfcld aud Wolfe was ouly natural
rbis inquiry into the bankers' busiuesi
iiiethods commenced Wednesday aud re
suited in the arrest o(, Wolfe, head of tin
!irm, on a charge of the most serious na
i.ure, particulars of which are not ye
made public. This financial upheave! ii
the only thing being talked about ii
Berlin, and further aud more startlin;
devcloptueuts are exported when the ful
facts become kuown. The amount of tb<
firm's liabilities is not yet annouueed, bu
it ia understood that it is very high.
Electricity For Kuitairays.
An experiment was made to-day i
stopping a runaway team by electricity
A spirited-looking team of horses to
closed carriage were driven at a runawa
nace down the wide travel walk londin
from Michigan nvcnuo to the Illiuoi
Centinl Railroad station. When th
team had run about 150 yards they sud
. denly checked themselves and came to
standstill in a distance of tcti or fiftee
feet. The electrical device consists of i
small dry battery located under the driv
cr's seat. From this, through the line
or along the pole or shaft of the vehicle
extend wires to small metal balls placet
within the nostrils of the horses?not ii
the tender portiou of the nose, but in t
tough, wet fold of skin and hair withii
;the nose, so that no irritation is CAU9cd
Other wires end in a push button at th
driver's seat and one inside the carriage
i When the horses run away a pressor
upon either ouc of the buttons closes tin
electrical circuit and a mild shock is ad
miuistercd at the end of the no3e. Tin
horses at once, surprised at this uuex
pccted sensation in front, throw them
selves on their haunches and try to back
away from the source of the shock, and
come to u standstill so soon as they can
overcome the foiward movement of'the
carriage. A surprising fact is that the
horses do not immediately attempt to go
foi ward, fearing the foe that, though invisible,
instinct teaches is ahead. While
the result noted is invariable, tho cause
is absolutely local in character, and does
lot causo the slightest injury to the
lorses. The inveutor and his aids have
heuiselvcs, in testing the apparatus durug
the experimental work, taken the
'nil shock hundreds of times without
larin. It was the seutiment of all present
*hat the exhibition was un entire
iucceu.?Ohtcago Timet.
The*St. Olair'thnnd* is mo .uugwirnvet
iiuoel in the world. It i* 6050 feet
the American cutting to the
iver edge is io?a feet? aaj from the
tanadiau cutting to the stiver edge is
950 feet, and tho distance across tho
iver is 2300 feet. The tunnel walls arc
f cast-irou segnieuts, thirteen of which
ii<l n key form a circle. The segment
litnensions are: Length. four feet ten
aches; width, eigthtceu inches; thickass,
two inches, with flanges inside six
aches deep and 1; inches in thickness,
'heir total weight is 548,000 tcus. The
egmeuts are bored and secured in place
rith bolts seven-eighths of an iuch in
iumeter aud weighing in all 2,000,000
lounds. The outside diameter of the
uriucl is twenty-one feet and twenty feet
aside. The soil excavated amounts to
,190,400 cubic feet. Employment has
cen steadily furnished to 700 men since
rst the work of construction began and
osts complete about $3,000,000. It is
year ago since the engineers, who laad
ieen working toward each other from
pposite sides of the riv** au-J
raulic shields together and shook hands
itboms below the surface. The aproaches
and railway tracks havo becu
depleted since that day. The Qrand
'runk people believe that when the tunel
is in nctual use it will offer facilities
>r through communication between
'hicago and all points east which will be
reutly appreciated by passeugers and by
i vi^mv uiai|/|iv? r?. Ab OUUI lAjUO IIIU UIO*
uicc to the seaboard about six miles and
iven tw > uours in time.?Chicayo
Jirul''Not
Dyiiig Ont.
The generally received idea that the
ndian races are dying ?ut is not ;iceptcd
by a correspondent of the Easttorfc
Sentinel, who says that the Pasamaquoddy
tribo now numbers more
ban four times as many individuals as it
lid a century ago, whuu the place at
ybaik (Pleasant Point) was set apari.
or tlieir occupancy. Nor is there any
videtice that physically they are detcioriting.
In a recent athletic contest of
licked men of Washington County, this
orrespondent noticed tiiat the man who
eld undisputed precedence as a specileu
of physical development, whose
triku was like the blow of a catapult,
ml whose homeward spring and rush
ad the speed of a race horse, was a
.sa n i.pio idy Indian. ? tetoislon {Me.)
J u en a'.
Restored to Hlflit nt Ninety-Fire*
At tho village of Llanon, CardigQuliro,
the Rev. Wm. Herbert, late rector
I the parish, has entertained 500 of hit*
trishoncrs to tea in commetn oration of,
ie restoration of his eyesight in his niner-fifth
year. The reverend gentleman
tho oldest clergyman in the prinpulity
and held the living oLuUawie.
>r hitf a cdntury. Si* years ago, fio*for,
he lost his sight, and resigned his
ictorship in consequonce. During thd(
st few months'he hat been under tho
eatraentof ao eminent Mancdester oclist.
The cataracts were removed from
is eyes, his sight completely restored,
id he is now ablo to read the services in
iiurch with the ut?U03t easv.?LrfixJfrn
"U-BUt,
I H
Is
FTra^CTSP
I ^J. | f w *'
t v thc ^'opc and characfl
P I ' ^ I ' I
{ Lois filet's Dsngerc
i A Tula of the Tow-Pi1
1 How UlclcoM Cantc bj
Two Techs" Abioa
% A Youag Knight of tl
A Boy Lieutenant. A 1
Smoky Days. A Story e
I Hints on S<
Articles of great value to Young
b HA. Andrew D. White, Ex-Pr?
* '"^PtSBtflcnt Timothy Dwiglit, or
President B. II. Cnpen, of Tufts
President G. Stanley Hall, of C
i S President Francis L. Patton, ol
Professor Jnmcs Bryce, M. P.,
; I" I
s
J
(
V A Rare Yoting Man.
I 7
c ^ Episodes in My Life
? 1 ^'le 3tory ?* ",e
f Unseen Causes of Di
Boys and Girls at tl
\ , Glimpses
Housekeeping at Windsor Cast
8 ^ l. Hpytjueen Victoria Travels; I
' TwjTStory of Kensington Palac
B Met the Queen; by
. I /
.JMore than One Hundred ca
1 The Flash-I.iglit.
My Queer Passenger,
i Molly Barry's Manitou
1 Shut Up in a Microbe <
The Cruise of a Wagot
The Illustrations wi)
. ^ will be marked by impartiality
I be more attractive thaw ever.
V"A Yard
... ? ? ^ L - iimi ?H
- % picture,
^ fSj'eefmrn Capita sent free
I on apt'lhiiHon. ADDRESS,
The Cathedral nt Home will sc.tt 34,0C0
r.erfon*-;
"August
Flower"
There is a gentleDyspepsia.
__ man at Malden-onthc-IIudson,
N. Y.,
named Caiviin.A. G. Pareis, who
has written 'us a letter in which it
is evidentt'that he ha9 made up his
mind coinMkJmg s<Sme.things; and
- ?l?i?>-is*"*Whac he saj s:
" I have used your preparation
called August Flower iu my family
for seven or eight years. It is constantly
in my house, and we consider
it the best remedy for Indigestion,
and Constipation we
Indigestion, have ever used or
known. My wife is
troubled with Dyspepsia, and at
times suffers Very much after eating.
The August.'Flower, however, relieves
the difficulty. My wife frequently
says to me when I am going
' to town, 'We are out
Const!patioh of August Flower,
and I think you had
better get Atipihei bottle.' I am also
troubled w ith I ad igest ion, and when
cv?ri l am, 1 iuKe one or two teaspoonfuls
befofe eating, for a day or
two, aiul allU&ultie is rg^uoved." W
CLY'8 Aa/iprU I
CREAM BALM
wlion applied into Urn ^ ^
nosttila will bo ?b' r^/^TAR?Vm
orbed, eftocln
cleanslnx the head of fur f\ gL & kt k
catarrhal virus, odus- WjAYfF\fpR Jy J
ins healthy secretions.
It allays Inflaminatfon, ^k* 95^" ^ fll
protects the mem- HT / < iflj
lirano from additional . wj]
colil*. completely v-V ^^
lieal? the aore* and ro- ^
tore* sense of last* 50C|
and unell. aj a
TRY THE f.'lIRK, W*
A particle i? npplle-i Into each nostril and Is agreeable.
frjce w cents ut i.rti,gist* or I,/ mail_
fcl.Y BHoniKlUi, o> Wwrrsu tfueet, hew Yortc.
^ THE tllALtEST PILL tN THE W08L0I ^
I
be included in this advertisement, but the
ter of the reading that will be given in it
Nine Illustrated
itories for the coming year will be of rare
>US (lift. A New Fnglaml Quaker Girl's first C
itll. The Hardships encountered by a Boy who
r his Name. A charmingly written Story of tin
il. They set off on a Tour of the World in que!
onor. The Story of a Boy who stood at his Pc
fruc Narrative; by Free S. Bowley. I
>f a Forest Fire; by E. W. Thomson. | <
elf-Education.
Men who desire to educate themselves,
sident of Cornell.
Yale University.
College.
"lark University,
r Princeton College.
author of the "American Commonwealth."
Five Special
Describing the life of a young inventor of i
A delightful paper telling how he came
lautic Cable. Mr. field's mutative lus i
sense ; Three admirable articles by the E
ie World's Fair. What Young America
of Royalty.
ie; by Lady Jeune.
i>y II. W. Lucy.
:e; by The Marrprttr OT Lome.
Nugent Robinson.
Short Stories ai
pital Stories of Adventure, Pioneering, Hui
Old Tliad's Stratag
Very Singular Bur;
The Tin Peddler's
Oven; Blown Across Laic
i-Camp. , A Young Doctor's
1 be improved and increased in number. T!
and clearness. Household Articles will
The Illustrated Weekly Supplemc
Free to Jam
iwb iimmmwi Vi&xrHiTTBi
entitled "A YARD OF BOSKS." It* productl
The Youth's Comp/
Frequent, shallow cultivation of the j
growing crops in one of the secrets of sue- ;
cost. Have the soil in condition nt time j
of planting, work it deeply once or twice, 1
nua after ttie roots have well started keep j ^
the surface loose and porous, but do not | C
plunge the cultivator down among the j *
tender, spreading roots aud break them 1
off, thus depriving the plant of the very ! I
means of gathcriug up its needed nourish- | c
uont.
? ! t
The man who complains that his cows I
are unruly can safely bo set down as a j 8
poor farmer, and very often he is a cruel , g
one, who deserves punishment. Most I
unruly cows are made so by hunger. ! C
Whrrs.li Jeknionvllle t
"I have bought a farm of 710 acres with ]
ho mom r inadti mirMn* fnr VOll, and US It ts J
In a flourihblntr country I think 1 shall establish
a town on It. and call It 'Johnsoiivllle.' " J
This isan extract from a letter Iroin W. H.
Skinner. This young man startcliu business .
something over two years ago. with scarcely ti
dollar, Hiitl lio tins made wonderful iiriurrm.
The llrst year his prom a 'footed up to over
01. Thole are hundreds and thousands of
young men in this glorious conntvy of our* ,
who cm do juid us good w ork an Mj . Skinner.
Write quickly to H. K.Johnson & Co., Rich- ]
mond, Va.. and they will give you an opportunity
to do as well or'better.
New York granite cutters now work
ight hours. .
t'utlllrd to ibe Kent,
All are entitled to tho bast that their money J
will buy, 80 every fumily should have, nt once '
f
a bottle of tho Itost family remedy. Swop of
Figs, to demise tho system when eos'lvfto- bit- 1
lous. For sale In IIOc. and |l I Kittles by all i
a 3
leading druggists.
Conductor E. D. I/oomis, Detroit. Mich.,
Druggists. 7&e. I
The Gorman Government baa en tared into I
a seheuiu with private firms to blacklist .
workiugmen who ooma under their displtaeure.
FITS stopped free iyr Dr. Ki.im'h Cheat ,
Nerve Kevtorxr. No tits after first day s ,
use. Marveleus cures. Treat! a and trial .
l>ottle free. Dr. Kline, 931 ArchSt.,Phila ,Pa *
t 11'- ?JLL-*!LU 1 J.' :
Advice to Womev
If you would protect yourself
from Painful, Profuse, Scanty,
Suppressed or Irregular Men}
struation you must use
BRADFIELD'S ^
FEMALE I
REGULATOR ] 1
jasfe ijsdjrea
s^^^sffiiirasissrB
effeot It truly wonderful. J. \v. Btrakok.
QRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.;
ATLANTA, OA.
MOM MALM MI ALL LMVOOISTS,
? .l _ j. r m . jl
iy win cmoie me irienas or i hi lomf
s columns during 1892 ? the sixty-fifth
\
Serial Stories.
interest and variety, as well as unusual i
ontact with "World's People"; by Airs. A1
found Life at home too Hard for him; by
: Age of Chivalry; by ,
st of Profitable Enterprises; by .
st while Death was all around him. Miss I
I'ounregS. A Story of the Sahara; by
[)n the Lone Alountaln Route; by Miss \
Practical
The Habit df Thrift; by
llow to Start a Small Store; by
. Girls and the Vi.-iin. A Valuable Paper
A Chat with Edison. How to Succeed a
Boys in N. Y. Offices; Evils of Sinai
The Girl Who Thinks She Can Write
well-known Writers, Amelia E. Barr, Je
t Features.
txtraordinary gifts; The Right Hon.
to build the Suez Canal; by The
the thrilling interest of a romance ;
ininent English Physician, Sir
ins may do as Exhibitors; by Co!
Railway
The Safest Part of a Train; by
Success In Railway Life; by Supt. N. 1
ASieep at rvsi; ?>y n/imet nupt. Mi
Koundliouse atones. Humorous ana ps
id Adventures.
lting, Touring will be printed in this v
em. |iis Day for
glara. Capturing a
Baby. In the Burn!
e Superior. The Boys an
Queer Patients. 1 .On a Cattle
he Weekly Editorials on the leading
I be contributed by well-known writers. '
;nts, adding nearly one-half to the size ol
.lary, i8q2.
fiTwrt will nno rrtK'lvo a ropy of a bmutlftil <
on liu. cost TWENTY THOUSAND DO IX AI
iNION, Boston, Mass.
uONALS KENNEDY
}f Roxiiury, Mass., says
Kennedy's Medical Discovery
urea Horrid Old Sores, Deepieated
Ulcers of 40 years'
tanding, Inward Tumors, and
very disease of the skin, ex- J
?pt Thunder Humor, and
Dancer that has taken root.
Drioe, $1.50. Sold by every
Druggist in the United States
tnd Canada.
AGENTS WANTED ON SALARY.
or commission to tiau ilu the New Patent Chemical
Ink Erasing IVncll. Agent* making S.? |?er week.
Monroe Ennicr Slf 'g Co., I .a Cro urn, wis. Box 831.
MEN REMEDY FREE.
IVII.I1 atMioon KKeTOUkO. I have foiUid a i'BK.
tain bkl> t1 ill. 1 will Kindly ih'ii<1 the
n||| \i nsi|Ki oicnli'il) mil: to any sufferer. It
INI f I*? rcliuMu unil lusting rum. Addle..
Hill. 11 tins. k. oaiis hoxiTo, hausuau, aica.
(( ml# Weak Nkbvov., Wbrtchki> mortal, get
k|l"K well au<l keen well. Heulth tlrtptr
1 Ull tell. how. 50 eta. a year. Hample copy
ree. Dr. J. II. DYK, Editor, Buffalo, N. Y.
PENSION
-JpSHAGENTS Honne nd"l/ofll line !
IXXIVt J*?'* copytijfhted methods free Co all
mCMM m t,""0fVI
(nr "[inre hour*. 1'eceiunv Pu?p^a^lflciiaeinc
Aokncy, tj 41 h Ave., New York.
HUmmiffliBFI
vmcHEsrch's English, f
gmL
JBS \fj\X THt OKIQINAl *N? aiNUINC.
FJ jJ) lexdlew, ok briif/1<| for Cklekrtltr t Jft.(
I / fff twio, Moled with Mm ribbon. Take no <
1 *ST Alt plllx In porteboord boxeo, pink nropf
V W F,P '*< V > ">? f>r porlloultrr, untlmonlali
_X if T?.Umonlnle. Aon 1 fjfir.
**? Hold bjr nil Intent VrattliU.
Colds,
Cougl
juonsi
HOARSENESS AND ALL AFPECTIC
TAYLORS CHERO
SWEET GUM
IS BEST -K
1$k jqv druwUt or Merchant U
f
I
anion to iudee somewhat of II
i year o? its issue. .
n number.
lary Catherine Lee. i
Homer Greene.
Harold Frederic. '
C. A. Stephens. .
Fanny Al. Johnson.
Lossing G. Brown.
Vill Allen Dromgoole.
Advice.
Andrew Carnegie.
F. B. Thurber.
; by Camilla Urso.
s an Electrician; G. P. Lathrop.
I Loans ; by . Henry Clews.
. Three Articles of Arlviee by
anette L. Gilder, Kate Field.
W. E. Gladstone.
Count tic Lesseps.
Cyrus W. Field. #
Morel I Mackenzie.
I. George R. Davis.
Life. Col.
H. O. Prout. g_
t. Central, Tlieo. Voorhees^,
icHT SoiiU'icrn,"1" chafRfirittNnc. "I*
ahctic; by An Old Brakeman.
.v
r 'vj
olumc. &mong them are :
the Hag.
Desperado.
Ing Pineries.
id the Wiltl-Cat.
Steamer in a Storm:
Foreign and Domestic Topics
The Children's Page will
f the paper, will be continued.
I TLI^ CIU I
.. 1?^ , -~V?/ ?#. 1 tl
"Olorcil I * . I
tH. ? I i1) |
Seiwl Check, nmt-Offlce Onler, or
Hcoi'tercil tetter nt our risk. .
lien 1. ttflfl w? WIMll ? ?',vic~a..a<o nunc-* ^B
A 1 nil 1VI A/1111 nimi or woman In every county
?IUU IU ?LUU ?l(hp lT. H..to Introduce searS
A rlo.olHHt; will 4.-Hko.l. Adapt
MrtNTII 111 to town orrouutry. No nit M
wF I P|,t mmiiHiie nrrntHip Jew?lnr.
Splendid opening f..rtho ilglit person. Um4 j*h M
irt mrr* ami <t?it'i wall Idbi for taker*, Krra If J'J
can tpnrr a few hour- a wrote, write at onoe to B. F.
JOHSHON Jt <H)., Illrhninml. Vn., for Information
about tlie W*?o?l IMag on earth mimctlitug that will
open yourrven pit 1 keep thrin open. M
KING COTTON
Buy or tell your Cotton "JOKES
>?/*** 5-Ton Cotton 8calt.
W " I B NOT CHEAPEST BUT BKtT.
R 11 For term* address
Bil IJ BJ JONES or BINOHAMTOH,
_ _ _ BINGIf AMTON. W. Y. _
I Ctmtunpllrr* and peiipitH
who have weak tunes or A nthma,
titould use PIso's Cure for H
Consumption. It has eared H
thoDi utli, It has not Injar- H
o?i one. It Is not bad to take.
It Is the best cough syrup.
r?taikw?kei?k?k4?%?k?kk?est<kk?w
\ DO YOU GROW
VE6ETABLES FOR MONEY? ii
I oue Valuable ^6W Book, 2O0. ! j
* TilK ?IOO PKIKK BHHAYS. Written ] '
# by Practical Market tlnloncrs and Vegetable ,
* orowers, Heats on tho following subject* in a <
J eoticlae and praeiloal manuer. " Haw aad ('
S what to Orsw la the Hunch far North- '
# rrn 1*1 ark eta." at* > "Culture af Cub- ,,
i bavr and Ontuuavviik islsiaforatsrisid /
? and JllnrBrtlug," making a neat Illustrated r
? volume of *4 page* of vital Interest to every 1
S grower. MAILED KHKK ON MCCKIPT OFOhfy !|
* f16 rI'll In, IN HTAMI*H OR HII.VEK. OUR , ,
* UKKDCATALOaUKMAIKKUFRKK. AIMnm, i
t JOHN8QN + gTOftgf^Haodam-- ,
f at Jt*A< ;
?r-?=
I Thorough, P radical JnatructlAn. Oradw?
atea aaaiated to poaitiooa. M*CaUlci|M ?
HRKK. Write to
Brjut I Sintton Buiam Collin, 1
' LOUISVILLE, KY. *
Ito Chohs W\ Diamond Baamd JS.
N\i?r\\i\iS &
Th? aalj Ruft, tan, >Unk?U? rill fci Hh. \"Br '
lllit IHamond Brand la K*4 and Gold awaalHa \7
>lkrr kind. Kt/ntr Jititiitntton* and ImUmtitnt. V
*r? in jujnrmM?Rl?rMla iUrmlHi.aiijIU
I, ?M "Kcllcf far latlu* to WW, ?>T .? *"?? giA
Chichester ?a^
IS,
i "v\4-n /^"V^ Ti-o.
" j "
>NS OP THE THROAT AND LUNQ3,
REE REMEDY OF -4#
and MULLEIN
NOWN REMEDY.
?r It, A9? TAKE so SEOST UETg,