The Kershaw gazette. (Camden, Kershaw Co., S.C.) 1873-1887, September 18, 1879, Image 4
ipuy,
you?
i, don* CO
a unrtt gayly, fy#]
i adranoe &hd nook retreat,
i splash and gurgle, M
: ell their peartj feet. .
.at ma long waves ere rising, v.l
doll, foam-oepped nowMiUnD,
, ooble Laboring through them
Homeward brings throe toll-worn mm.
Weary with their bitter struggle? '
Sixteen hoars Of oonstent ?train,
Eighty miles of ooeen battling,
Scanty dally bread to gain.
And the restless ooean angers
As the night falls o'er the land;
the orated broakors thunder
Now fonr deep across the strand.
Anxious grew the tlrod faces,
'dive the tiller to my hand/
Bald the old men, 'the mutt pees them,
Or we never more eh all lend.'
Down eame the brown saS oreaklng,
B^riuKiug forward with ft bound;
Up the foam flew and enwrapped her,
'Mid the waters boiling round.
Fi vo long mine tea, then the eoble,
Q altering, trembling, safely lies
At her mooring, *neath the Oerbln,
From the storm-beridden sides.
Happy wee enet! rippling wavelets I
ToOingmen, end raging sees I
All are OhUdren of one Jfether,
And lite out His great deoreee.
>B THE FABMKiPS HOUSEHOLD.
Domestic Nolo..
Raw Oustaiuj.? For flliessse of the
stomach when very delicate food is re
quired, this custard 1b exoellent. Beat
up an egg with sugar to taste; add * cup
of milk and whatever flavoring liked.
Quince akd Am* jBUCiT.?Take
equal quantities of quinces and apples,
atew them separately till. tender (the
quinoes will take tho longest), strain the
mix It, and to every pound of
">w three-quarters pound ofl
sugar; proceed aa for quinoe
Big I
t/aphbs.?-One pound flour, two
Uespoona butter, a little ?alt; mix I
th sweet milk into a stiff dough; roll
thini eat Into round cakes, and I
Bstassa
greasing. Nice for invalids.
?Take one pint of soar
ful of molasses, one*
butted two teaspoon
one large teaspoonfull
{0, one pint of wheat
Tn^Un meal:
an oven of
f one-and-a-half
.attained
'box Bab-J
>ors, stir fre
"St*
wtoiur
una,
"25 01
_ H$SJ (W0 Wlfl gftllOHB.
A Convenient Plaster.?Take one
ounoe of white resin, one ounoe of mat
tallow and one ounoe of granulated
ainjmer well together. Have
ilf a yard of flue bleaohed oot
with a oaee knife spread the
ealve while hot over the surfeee of the
oloth; spread it on evenly and quite
thin. When oold lay a thickness
of tissue paper lightly over the snrfaoe.
"*"vwill prove a oonetant oomfort In
irottnds. suoh as seratehes, oats or
A bit eat off and stuck over the
plaoe is a quiok cure, as it exeludes the
air and is not bulky or In the way, si*
A^iumw ?* Hl?fc Ornal.
o4ttnot
IWl w
netthnr
u ? .
P, BOT irwn
i ftro orneltio*
men who
htyp, And
Mmm" >*?!
?tad ?powerful quantity of poison. I
TtiU <? rmly (ma ftrt^narwtnw\>|n? pnl?vn?
to vhldbuid U in m arsenio,
and >11 not cwirtoriotflfl by l>ni I
or growe in M effectIt? ?gainst the I
delicate system of the hoc as against I
other animals. A wheat or tye stubble I
is ergoted in vet seas one wd should not
| be gleaned by boga. Cattle may eat
unsound oorn more safely than hogs, ae I
they Me not eo much affected by the I
ergot* Bnt good economy will be to I
oonsign anoh to the oompoet. Our phy- I
sioian forbids us eating spoiled tea eta-1
I blea or tainted meat; likawiso, to keep I
I stook healthy we must give healty food, I
I pure water, dean pens and sufficient ex-1
eroise. I
Lice had kidneyworm are maladies I
I of leas serious oonsequenoe, and in the I
I Southern Skates only ts any trouble en- I
I oountered from liee. A cheap and easy I
I remedy is to feed sulphur osoe a. week I
I and keep the hogs in cleared land, al-1
I lowing them to wallow in the mud. For I
I kidneyworm, feed sulphur and salt in I
I regular and moderate quantities. Salt
I alone is generally a sore remedy, and is
I relished by no stook more than by hogs.
IA remedy for cholera has been found in
I a severe fly blister applied to the throat.
I Feed oil.otto gruel or flaxseed boiled,
I or give linseed oil. Feed roots and soft
I rations, but no oorn or anything to aug
? ment fever. Diluted oarbolio add ap
I plied as a wash during the first stages
I of cholera, and used aa injection*, has
I been of good effeot.
? The rfmptoms of hog oholera are loss
? of appetite, a dry, empty oough, tremb
? ling high feter, and the seat of pain ap
? pears in the throat and bowels, and the
? disease is likely to arise from any of the
? causes previously noted. However, ainoe
? careful attention and timely preoantion
? are a sure means of prevention, always
? at our disposal and comparatively inox
? pensive, and while no oure is ever sure,
? let us assiduously adopt the former
? method of treatment, the labor being
? more agreeable and the profits greater.
Fish Catching by Steam.
A writer who. has been among the fish
ermen of Long Inland sound, says that
the fish we not only ground up, and
than squeeaed. by ateam power, but ao
tually caught by steam. A large fleet
of steamera ia engaged in the work. I
counted half a dozen, yesterday, while
aailing a few milea out from shore?all
hard at it. out in the middle of the
aound. First, they let down a big net.
This is so rigged with a 'puoker-string'
aa to be easily drawn together at the
top, like the old hand 'work-bags' of
our grandmothers; and when there is a
good haul of fish?as there almoet al
ways is, for the white fiah, moss-bunk
er. or bony-fish, as it is variously oalled,
fairly a warm in Long Island sound, and
I have in some seasons seen hauls of
2300,000 and even 400,000?the great net
made, aa it mart be, of the strongest
material, is olosed and hauled to the
ateamer and there opened and emptied.
The emptying*or transferring of the
tumbling and Hopping* mass of fish is
effected by meana of a big iron aooop,
which shuts and opens Uke that of a
harbor and river mud-digger. It is
worked by ateam, and theprooeas mikes
a whirring noise whioh is audible in still
weather at a diatanoe of two or three
miles. Aa the aooop rises with its finny
load the water fliea out in a fountain,
visible afar. It opening and emptying
can be readily understood by any one
who typ observed a mbd-dlgger.
The squoeeed-out fish, after the oil
be?a extracted, is still useful. It is
lure, to be used onoorn-fields
itiea bear any proportion to ita
iferous capaoiuea?as illustrated on
many a hard-fought field?it ought to
proauoe some big crops.
Great Britain'* Corse.
A correspondent argues that what
Chreat Britain want* i* the substitution
of a land tax for a tax on rental YAlues,
The absence of a land tax enables land
lord* to hold immense tracts free of tax.
An illustration i* afforded by a pieoe of
land at Liverpool, owned by the compa
ny that manage* the dook* in tnat city.
The Wallasy pool toll bridge ia owned
by thi* oompany, and the toll* are col
lected by a family lWlng in a honee at
one end of the bridge. Thia faittily is
not allowed even space for a oabbage
garden. The land Is worth from $15.
000 to $50,000 an aora. and yet it is
crated for oow pasture at sevan Aniu?
I an tore, and pays taxM at the rate of
i twenty-flve per oont. of the rental?that
is to nay, 01,80 per aore on land worth
an average of $88,000 an acre. Thia ia
only one instance of a widespread, dia
astrona system, whloh ia raining the
BrltUh htiebandman. The people of
Imfe. owning their land, are able to
Btnppori themselves from il. Franco
fteua more agricultural prodnota
ahe bnys, even when her wheajujf
aa abort aa it la the preaeptaeason. a
Kngland la oompell^tMfo buy a larc
proportion of faottevery year. In 1868.
with a pontfation of 28,000,000, Greet
BrU??n>onght #125,000,000 of food pro*
Mm. or atihe mm of #4.60 per capita.
In 1877. with a population of 88,000i00^
Great Britain bonght food
pita
To Atttftrion* Lire. I
He who attires alter a long and pleas
ant terarrrtlife moat see* to attain oon
ttjwMfl oquMilmity, and earefnlly to
WoId everything whioh too violently
taxes hia fooling*. Nothing more nninkly
oonsames the vigor of life than the vio -
lence of the emotions of the mind. We
know that anxiety andoare oan deetroy
the heslthiest body; we know that fright
and fee*, yea, exoeaa of Joy, beoome
deadly. They Who are naturally eool
and of a quiet tnrn of mind, upon whom
nothing ean make too powerful an im
pression. who are not wont to be ex
cited either by great Morrow er great joy.
have the beat ehanoe of living long and
happy after their manner. Preserve,
therefore, under all oirotunitanoes, oonn
Mla Th? Sanitarian, a eompoaure of
mind whioh no happin?s?, no misfor
tune oan io6 mnoh dintntb. Lore noth
ing too Violently; hate nothing too pas
sionately; fear nothing too strongly.
What Indiana are Cftpahle Of*
The Boolety of Frlendi of New York
dty, who hate the ftpeoM eare of the
Winnebago tribe of Indtaii, here made
? report on the eonditlon of thereeer
?fttlon, and oommend thepeaee policy m
worthy of continnanoe. 'So rapidly hate
th?y ftdTftneed from nomad lo habit* to
thoee of elriH?*d life.' *ftj* tho report,
?that ft beoomee only ? qnentionofe
few yeim for thlw tribe to require no
farther aid from the government.' Ton
years ?go rations were towed to them el
? cost of ebont WO,000 ? year, end thoy
then hftd only ?00 aeres of lend nnder
cnltiration, end ?nbejeted on ftOterto
Tjnl
i
i ftojl
tribe hue e
ment ration* and bnffklo meet. Daring
the peet yeer the tribe haft been self
SXJSZfW--. t * mm i a M
- Maoh
led eohool
IWa kaft *
ID? flflp. ,tH)0Yl
i exception of
for ftftle. nml
Bi
H
fashion; yetveryfew are
mIaI 4 ll |1 ? - ,1 . ?V
wing puiM taoMtMrc ????????
The regular Sootoh cap is shown for
very young faoea, and 4here we jauuljr
Derby hats precisely like those worn by
? novelty this Mason is feather felt,
with loose shreds of feathers foaming the
pile of fine felt; in white and pale gray
these will be used for dress bonnets.
Small fancy plaids of wool and silk
eombined are used for trimming plain
wool dresses. Those with mneh red and
gold on olive grounds trim effectively.
New tints of cloth shades are shown in
the bonnets for winter. Rembrandt
green is very largely represented, and
is dark like myrtle green, bat with more
bine in it.
Unique oostumes are made for little
girls of the gay bandanna plaids. Some
times the entire drees is made of ban
danna handkerchiefs, and a softening
effect is given with plaitings of lace.
Japanese fans, oovered with silk or
satin and painted by hand, are among
the fans new this season. Ladies in
dustriously inclined take the oheap
Japanese fan and oover and paint it to
suit their taatee.
One of the newest fanoies in jewelry
is the 'old oaken bucket,' set in solid
gold; the earrings are tiny golden buok
ets, and the pin is a perfect little wind
lass, with rope coiled around it; from
the end of wliioh the buoket is sus
pended.
Among the many * ooquettish acces
sions to the toilet are the prettiest im
aginable little side saohels of laoe, mus
lin or crape de chene. These are lined
with some delioately tinted satin or silk,
perhaps white, and there is always a
little oluster of flowers set on one Bide.
Dark oloth oolors in the new shades of
amaranth, Rembrandt green; prune,
Burgoyne, golden brown, and duck's
breast blues are shown in the new
woolen dresses being prepared in the
furnishing bouses for early fall wear.?
The materials are camels' haircloth,
oashmere and a new fabrio oalled (oils
de tanglier, whioh is regularly woven,
yet has a rough surface, and resembles
bunting made sufficiently heavy to serve
for warm winter dresses. The trim
mings are satin of the same shade, silk
plnsn borders, many rows of maohine
stitching, wide woolen braids and gay
oontrastiiig "ilks in Sootoh plaids or in
most intricate mosaic designs.?Har
per's Bazar.
The Souroe of Turpentine.
Every traveler by railroad through
the pine forests of North Carolina and
other States abounding in the long-leaf
pine has been struok with the singular
appearanoe of the trees, sometimes ex
tending for miles along eaoh side of the
road and as far baok as the eye oould
penetrate; for eveiy tree seemed at first
sight as though it had been whitewashed
upon one side about as high as a man's
head. If seen by moonlight, the per
son might readily believe, if a believer
in suoh things, that he had got into a
very large field full of ghosts, for suoh
a forest oertainly has a very weird ap
pearanoe. Suoh a scene is exhibited by
a turpentine plantation that has been
thoroughly worked; the prooees being
first to ohop a box near the root of the
tree, large enongh to hold from one to
four pints, into whioh the juioe of the
tree oozes while the out remains fresh.
Then, to keep up the supply, the bark
and a portion of the san^ud are out
immediately abogflHkbo^ This
rooogf
[rough the summer, aud per*
haps two 9* three summers, extending
as high as a man can reach, with a pe
culiar-shaped tool, whioh makes a out
like a gouge, forming diagonal ohsnnflla
from each side toward a oenter line that
leads down to the box where the semi
liquid turpentine gathers. When the
box is filled, the turpentine is dipped
ont with an iron tool made for the pur
pose into iron buokets, whioh are car
ried by a neok-yoke from tree to tree,
and when full to barrels plaoed here and
there among the trees; the barrels when
filled are oarried to the distillery.
After the scarifying prooess has
reached a height of several feet, a con
siderable portion of the pitoh oongeals
on its way down and bleaohes white in
the air, and it is this that gives the
trees their ghostlike appearance. The
first run of the trees, oalled 'virgin tur
pentine/ is like pure honey, straw
colored. and is the most valuable. That
whioh is scraped from the tree has lost
a considerable portion of its vol
quality by evaporation in th^JMl ,
and of oourse yields les^Mrmts of tur
pentine npon dintnit^iGfi', wnioh, in sec
tions remote he*!! rail or water trans
ports Won^is-ine only valuable portion:
the^rerth, being a waste matter, not
JTOrth hauling. I have often seen the
resin drawn from the stills fafer oon
ductors, generally three-oorusred wood*
en troughs, and so le&(5fl some rods
from the distillery ;iat6 a natural hollow
or exoavation amf there set on fire; a
Knuine ejertiplifioationof wastefulness,
ita -Veiy inolpionoy the turpentine
busmess is founded upon waste?the
waste of vast tracts of fine forest; for the
trees after the seoond boxing and scari
fying on the other side, must soon die,,
tor only a little strip of bark is left be
tween the cuttings, just to keep the tree
alive long enough to be thoroughly
drained of its vsluable juices. Then de
cay oommenoes, hastened by the annual
burning of the wirs-graesi whioh oovers
the sunaoe in nearly all of the pine for
ests: and gradually the trees fall to the
grottnd and are consumed> and with
them the greater portion of the young
trees, whioh would in twenty years re
place the old ones if the fires oould be
kept from their destructive work. But
flies will never cease while cattle-raising
is the sole business of a majority of the
'piney woods poople.'
Why He Neter Drank*
II ii related by a Chester lady that
when Qoneral William Henry Harrison
was running for the presidency he
stopped at the old Washington tffottse,
in Chester, for dinner. After dinner
wine was served. It waa notloed that
the general pledged his toasts In water,
and one of the gentlemen from New
York in offering another said: 'General,
will yon not favor me by drinking a
glass of Wine f The general deolined in
a tery gentlemanly manner. Again he
wiu urged to join them in a glass of
wine, xhia was too mneh. Ha roea
from the table, his tall form ereot, and
in the moat dignified manner replied:
'Gentlemen, I have refused twioe to par
take of the wine onp?that should hare
boon sufficient; thongh yon press the
enp to my llpa not a drop shall pass the
portals. I made a resolve when I started
n life that I wonld avoid strong drink,
and 1 have never broken it. I am one
of a elasa of seventeen young men who
graduated, and the other sixteen fill
drunkards graves?all through the per
nioious habit of soolal wine Sinking. I
owe all my health, happiness and pros
perity to that reaolution. Will yon nrge
ma now f , :
The ordinary life of * looomotlte is
years. Tit* looomottve wa are
observe, never
??'
vromeu
?; mow
In 1,000 <
wm married before the mm of 15. ?
marriage of women at that age Is
unknown, but it i? rare, Men do
begin to marry, aa a rule, until they i
18 yean old. At the age of 19,
young men aze just beginning to
seriously of the subjeot, young m
are at their moat favorable time V
I of them marrying at that age than at aafr
other. The years of greatest probability
with a woman are from 18 to 25, culmi
nating at 22. At 30 and 21 the ohanoes
are even, being better at 19 and 33 than
| at either of the intervening years. At 28
begins 4 steady deoline; bat not until
the age of 83 do the ohanoes fall below
one in a hundred; after that age they
do, and in the rest of her life her
ohanoes are but seventy-six in a thou*'
sand. At the age of 58 the vanishing
point appears in sight; no marriages oe*
earring at that age, and at the age of
54, at 55 and 56 ooours one marriage
esoh, at 57 none, at 58 one, and after
that a woman has literally 'not onie
ohauoo in a thousand* of w edding. Her
Ibest years are four in number, being
{from 19 to 33 inclusive. With m manfi
is different. His best years are ten in
number, from 31 to 80 inolusive.- It is
at the age of 31 that he evidently turns
his attention wifeward, and it may be
that legislators were entirely right in
fixing that as the year when he shall at
tain his majority. In no year of his life"
are the ohanoes one to ten that he will
marry. His very best years are at 28
and 25, as a girl's are at 19 and 22,-r
From 21 there is a pretty steady in
orouao till he is 25, ana then his ohanoes
slowly deoline, although they do not
drop suddenly until he is 80. It is
worthy of note that the sudden drop in
the ohanoes of both men and women oo.
ours the year after they beoome 'old
bachelors' or 'old maid*.' Men do not
begin to marry till about three years
later than women, but they keep it up
more or less steadily five years later.?
With men the ohanoes do not fall below
1 in 100 until the age of 40 is reaohed.
Then it is 1 in 50, and after that but 1 in
200. Marriages occur, however, every I
year until 56Is reaohed, then on alters
nate years to 62, and after that oomes
but one, whioh is at the age of 70.
Oddities of Monarch*.
The palaoeu on whioh Sultan Abd'ul. i
Aziz and the ox-kliedive expended eo
many million*, luxurious as they are,
have been surpassed eren in modern
times by the freaks of rulers still more
eooentno. History has preserved the
memoiy of the ioe-palaoe built by the
Russian Empress Anne, who punished
several of her dainty oourtiers by compel
ling them to pass the night in its great
ohambers of state, where they were all>
but frozen to death. The czar Paul,
grandfather of the present sovereign,
oonsttuoted a room formed entirely of
huge mirrors, trhere he spent hours
walking to and fro In full uniform?a
singular taste for the ugliest man in
Russia. One of the native prinoes ol
Java oooled his palaoe by making a
stream fall in a casoade over the gate
way, and the Indian despot, Tippoo
Sahib, plaoed beside his dinner-table a
life- sue figure of a tiger devouring an
English offloer, the roar of the beast and
shrieks of his viotim being imitated by
hidden maohinexy. The late king of
Onde keptin his oountry palaoe a large
oolleotion of pet serpents, wnioh he Is
said to have more than onoe amuied him
self by letting loose with fatal *effeot,
upon the luckless Hindoos who oame
TTithin runlu* i v
An Unpleasant Discovery.
A queer transaction wm witnessed in
a oomotery at Milwaukee a few days
sinoe by two gentlemen who had attend
ed the funeral of the ohild of a friend,
and remained walking about the grounds
after the oortege had departed. The
sextons had not filled up the grave
when a seoond fnneral arrived. It was
also that of a ohild, but the grave pre
pared for it was too short. The men,
therefore, deposited the seoond ohild in
the first grave, and when its friends
were gone aotually transposed the oofflns
to suit the sise of the exoavations. Bat
for the exposure made bj the witnesses,
the marble lamb that was to be plaoea
ufvu nun tfmvu ui nine niuy Would
have rested npon the sod that covered
over little Jimmy, aijd-tfie flower* that
were to deokjhiffgrave would have
wasted thehrflSreetnesa npon the hillook
of th?-mtle girl that happened to be
Aimed the same day. The sextons who
had 'mixed those babies' np soon found
they had raised a hornet's nest about
their ears by this fctrange transaction,
and the ootyurtrere again taken up and
transferred to their proper positions in
a hurry. .
Ill* Pride Humbled.
A young attorney, who lately passed
the bar of Detroit, was bragging of the
brilliant prospeots before him, when an
old deniaeno! Justioe alley remarked:
'Tee, yon will get along. Judge ?
was speaking in yonr praise the other
day.'
'He was, eh t' replied the young limb.
'Well, I always thought I stood in pret
ty solid with the old man. Words of
praise from him mean something and are
worth something. What did he say?'
?He said yon had already made yonr
mark in the world.'
?Bid ho? Well, 111 show my grail
tnde Jt t lire long enough. Then he's
had his eye on me, eh ? Please tell pe
how he said I'd make my mark*'
?L*V? Me/ mused the icuryman as he
soratohed hli? head.1 'Well, now, I oan't
raoolleot whether he said It was in the
mnd ox on the ioej but next time I see
him I'll have a penoll handy 1'
The Italians m a Class.
'Oar ohief trouble in Italy,' writes a
Erofessor in A'ert&tier, disouseing eduoa
on, 'lies in the fact that we bate no
large olass of oullivaitd people, in. the
sense in whioh the term is used in Eng
land and Germany. We have learned
men and i norant men, but the spaoo
between these two poles is but spaniely
populated. Our peasants are quick
witted and brigtht, while the German
and the English peasants are slow and
stnpid. Oar common people talk most
entertainingly and are natarally gifted
with humor and good sound'sense. But
their talk is all personal; their mental
horiaon is narrow. Tho same is the
oase with the middle olass Italian. He
is externally polished, and can apply
himself easily to anything in whioh his
power of observation oan assist him.*?
But he has no turn for abstraot reason*
ing.'
They Botrijed Th?tn?olr<*.
A Nlsgsr* Falls correspondent in
eltnedto makefnn of tho nowly-mftrrted
people always to be found el il
?el of nafcnre, on, aoooun* of
tempt* to simulate persons long ns
the matrimonial knot, tellfl thin
story s Several years sfco, it lo r<
there wm ft painful rovnlfttion
this deprftWty of the newly m*
One day a large hotel plans* was oocn
been
Ssnd'a nniioul
" esnlhatshc
frien<Kflnd
. us add that mrj
in her heart. The habit,
a genuine Parisian, imme
theftppMruMotiMwvork,
out ita faults before noticing
aeea,was never indulged in by
her. Her enetom wee rather to praise
than to biame, and the criticised alike
impartially the work of friend or foe.
She had been in her time a great beauty.
'My features,' aha says 'were well
formed, bat I have never tried to give
them expression.' Her faoe waa hand
aome rather than interesting; her fea
tnrea bore the stamp of Grecian regu
larity: her Toioe waa faint and without
any ring. In conversation she wsa the
reverse of Parisian. She was inoapable
of dawling the mind with 'eeprit' by
a brilliant play upon words, by unex
pected sallies and ready answers.
Mental fencing was unknown to her,
and she very seldom said anything
witty. Her writings oontain very little
humor; she was mostly inclined to tao
iturnity. She was a better listener
than talker, and what she heard was
often reproduced in her works. 'Your
mind is sluggish,' Musset is reported to
have once said in reference to ner oollo
quial failings. Inoommon, perhaps, with
other writers who are muoh absorbed in
their works, she had another remarkable
peculiarity. 'If I had not had my
works on a shelf before me/ she says,
'I should have forgotten them even to
the title page. Ton may read half a vol
ume of one of my own romances to me,
and with the exception of one or two
prinoipal names I should never know it
had been written by me. If I were sud
denly asked for my opinion on one of my
own books, I could sinoerely answer I
did not know it?that I must first read it
before I could say anything about it.'
She alleges this peculiarity as the reason
Why in her memoirs she says nothing
ft bout the subjeot and tendenoy of any
of her own works. Bhe soaroely ever
quotes the titles of some of them.
Early Gold-Mining in the South,
An article in Htrper's Magazine on
[old-mining in Georgia states: The first
>ieoe of gold ever taken in the United
ftates belonged to this deposit, and was
oked up in 1799 by Conrad Bead, a
>y "who lived in Cabarrus oounty. North
Carolina. It was as large as a smooth
ing-iron. bnt was sold to a silversmith
for $360. 60. Afterward much larger
lumps were fonnd: one weighed twenty?
eight pounds, according to tradition.?
Thia excited so mnoh attention that ex
ploration was begun,and the gold traoed
southward until the borders of the
Gherokee territory in Northern Georgia
Were reached, ana prospectors began to
% croach upon the reservation. Protests
fr >m the Indians naturally followed, and
Q ?orgia sent a large polioe force to keep
bt ok the invaders, bnt it was of little
avil. The rush to the mines was muoh
the stampede to the Pacific coast in
, and reokless, dissipated men from
uarters of the country flooked in,
led about the woods, set up log
and ahanty grooeries on all the
as, and psid no respect to the
,te of the Indian, or any one else un
to defend- them. Even United
treops were powerless to keep the
.. i hordes west of the Ohestatee,
andjliero as elsewhere the disoovery of
gold was the end of Indian possession
and kborigirtal simplicity and charm.?
The {methods adopted by the first white
settlors, and in vogue until recent years,
wer? very rude, oonsisting merely of
wash ng out the gravel of the beds of
the s reams by rnnningit through sluioe
boxe and splint baskets into a 'gum
but a split
or
, , the
through this trough
ftttn end to end, the rocker was kept in
constant motion, and the heavy gold,
permitted to sink to the bottom through
(he constantly agitated silt, was caught
by transverse meats, with or without
the aid of mercury.
fottow??
? Grow the VTood for His Coffin,
i A remarkable story is told of the late
Oapt. Stone, of Mound sville, W. Va,K
Who was bur i od recently. Thirty-five
?ears ago he oame from New Orleans to
MoundBvillo to make his home, and
^Drought with bin* two seeds of a mahog
any-like tree that flourished near his
former, home. These he planted, re
marking to his family that he would
have his oofflln made from the tree.?
One of the seeds died, but the other
flourished and grew. From a shoot it
feeeame a sapling, and finally, in the
Sourse of thirty years, grew to a fine
tree. About eight months ago a severe
windstorm passed over Moundsville and
Oapt. Stone found his tree laid prostrate.
He had it dried, sawed into lumbar, and
Sent to a Pittsburg firm. In a short
little it was returned to him in the form
Of a beautiful ooffio, and for four months
ft was preset red in his residenee. About
two weeks ago he contracted a siokness
that eulniinated in his death, and his
desire being fulfilled, he was laid in the
OOffln he planned thirty-five years ago.
Blogular Affliction.
Last September J. J. Clutter, ft young
man employed on the Pittsburg division
Of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, sud
denly lost bis eyesight while dancing at
a moonlight picnicet Oonnellsville. He
peoovCred hia Might in a day or two. We
jaow learn that Olntter, who ia employed
at the Edgar Thompson steel works, at
Braddook's, has had another similar bnt
still more curious experience. About a
ireek ago be suddenly beoame deaf and
dumb, and the following morning he
deprived o! the sento of eight. He
"ved no aUendftnoe of a medioal char
f excepting from local physicians.-?
complained of weakneea, bnt no
ot&er feeling of illness, and was as able
>to partake of food as freely ae when in
(borough health. About eight o'olook
lust Sunday evening he beoame repos
sessed of all the loa't faculties just as
suddenly and mysteriously ae he bad
(Mi them, having been deaf and dnmb
for forty-eight houra and blind for
thirty-six. After his reetoration he oom
plained of nothing exoept a weakness.
Ytbj He Boys MoIm.
Hheriflf ProBsly has some idea on
Ifcs end mnl?(. For farm work
pttrohsses the latter. The other
one of the hanfa a likely
?ntiK follow, asked: 'Why don't yon
>fiy hornet I'd a good deal rather
Irivo them.' I've no donbt of it,' re
adied the genial eheiiff, Vo had I.
ien I wm a boy. I'd plow a horse all
ft and then eprnoe up it night and
le tlx or eight miles to ?ee a girl. I
noticed, though, when a fellow rode a
tattle ho wae generally laughed ont of a
second visit. X guess I'll keep on buy
ing mules. Ton boys won't be so tired
When yon go to bed.
A swindler in NewYork, signing him
self Henry P. Jones, is sending letters
to farmers throughout the oountry,
dtaimlnf that having seen the feeder's
name, he oonolndes he is a long-lost
' ht-of cousin, and announcing that ss
is now msnsger of a lottery, he de
ns his relstWe toaotas agent; end In
ler to create a good impression among
ie neighbors, he will arrange that on
ie purchase of a ticket for $10 the eon
, * }***? *><>ney
loh will induoe Investments. Many
kVe bitten at the balk
1 , , "
FACTS AND FANCIES.
v- . -
A dollar saved is north two borrowed.
A. littte boy op town oalls the etaden
tram the ehunneyHh* shavings off of the
iuokfti
14 is always oppressive to hear persons
constantly striving to say witty or fanny
If there was leas style in dress at
ohnroh people in moderate eirenmstanoes
would be qaore inclined to attend.
To any clever married man: Don't
blush toaoknowledge your merit, it your
wife's relatives admit you have any.
An English laborer at Offham, Eng
land, lately olimbed a tree seventy feet
high and hanged himself at the top.
A pionio may be a common-place af
fair , yet if rightly looated there is con
siderable roam-ants oonneoted with it.
It would benefit farmers more if At
tention was turned to breed Lag fast
walking, rather than fast trotting horses.
Rev. Abraham Wyckoff, of New Or
leans, for health and pleasure rode his
horse from that oity to Flemington, N.
J., to visit relatives. He oooupied ten
weeks in the journey.
'Jeannie, did you divide your paper
of ohooolate with your brother?' 'Yes,
certainly, mamma; I ate the ohooolate
and gave him the motto?he is so fond
of reading, you know.'
The Waterloo Observer says : 'Ohiok
ens and lawyers piok up their living
with their bills.' The comparison is a
slander on all honest ohiokons that
soratoh for what they get.
Miss Nina Kearney, a daughter of
General Philip Kearney, who was kill
ed during the oivil war, was crowned
Queen of Love and Beauty at a tourna
ment at Orkney Springs, Va.
Mr. Hermon Wallingford of Portland,
Me., has a pair of mittens made from
hai* "lipped from his large New Found
land dog. The hair was spun into yarn
and the yarn was knit into mittens.
Aot one, they meet at in a pleae&ut dream;
?ot two, he'll treat to soda and loe oream-,
Aot three, hla caul), alas I is nearly played:
Aot four, his girl grows oold, sedate and staid,
Aot five, Just as bis love is ripe and mellow
His girl is sporting with another fellow.
He was inolined to be facetious:1 What
quantities of dried grasses you keep
here, Miss Stebins I Nice room for a
donkey to get into!' 'Makeyourself at
home,' Bhe responded, with sweet grav
ity.
No statue whioh tho rich man places
ostentatiously in his window is to bo
oompared to the little e*peotant fsoos
pressed against the window pane, wait
ing for father when his day's labor is
done.
Whitelaw Reid, of tho New York
Tribune, while in San Franoisoo was
shown through the Chinese quarter of
that oity, whioh caused him to materially
ohange his views on the advisability of
permitting Mongolian emigration.
One had better sail boldly in almost
any direction than drift without any di
rection at all. One had better sail in
the maddest storm that ever troubled
the sea of life, than lio on tho sea aud
drift with any ohanoe wind that ohooses
to blow.
A man may go fishing and oatoh a
handsome string of fish and lose them
out of tho baok of the wagon coming
home, or have them grabbed by the dog
at the house where he left his team, but
he can never tell the story and have it j
believed.
'Is there an opening here for an in
telleotnal writer?' asked a seedy, rod
nosed individual of an editor. 'Yes, my |
friend/ repiied the man of quills; 'a
oonsiderate oarpenter, foreseeing your
visit, left an opening for you: turn the
knob to therjgnt ??
^wryj^ s'-^ ? * ^ m
?? nat is the difference between tho
man who decorates old walis and fences
with oirdus bills, and the patent medi
cine advertiser who proclaims that hie
Sills are the best in the world ? Answer: i
ine is a bill poster and the other is a |
pill boaster.' This is physio-ally weak.
?jL'ue nnnd oars for passengers in the
Paris sewers are^neatly made nod far
Dislied withjjane seats. The line rolls
direotly^ over the eowora. The air is'
deaoribed as 'averaging a good strong
smell.' Male exouraionieta smoke, and
femiidne snuff perfumed handkerohiefs.
A horse sold by a farmer living in
Columbia township, Tasoola oonnty,
Miob., last fall, to a man in Ohio, re
cently appeared at the gate of its old
home, after having traveled over 800
miles. It left the premises of the owner
about a month ago, oud was supposed to
have been stolen.
Some of theviotlms of the great Glas
gow, Sootland, bank swindle pine and
aie, nnd the papers oooasionally refer to
those who have gone to an untimely
grave. R. Oallwell, of Inverness, was
A year ago worth 8850,000. His thirty
shares in the bank made him penniless
at seventy years of age. and he was
lately found dead in his bed.
A venerable divine, who had been
dining out the night before, went into a
barber's shop one morning to be shaved.
He saw that the barber had been get
ting more drink than was good for him,
for it made his hand shake very mnob,
and, naturally a little indignant, he be
gan to give him a little moral advice by
saying: 'Bad thing, drink.' 'Yes,' said
the barber, 'it makes the skin remark
ably tender.'
In Austin, Texas, almost everything
is plastered over with big patent medi
cine advertisements. In the oourtyard
of a hotel there is a big olstern, and on
it is an advertisement in letters a foot
and a half long: 'Smith's Diseased Liver
Bemedy.' A stranger from the north
saw the hotel olerk draw a bucket of wa
ter from the olstern on whioh the above
sign plastered, and then he said, as
thongh to himself, 'I've heard it was
iiokly in Austin, but I never expeoted
to see people draw off their medioine by
the bucketful.'
Daring their honeymoon they hud
been sitting and sighing and talking
poetry on the balcony (or three honrs,
all ot which time ho had both hor hands
tightly olaaped in his. Finally she
broke forth: 'Tommy, dearest, Iwant
to ask yon something/ 'Ask me a hun
dred-?a thonsand?a million things I' he
exolaimedin replr. 'Well, Tommy, I've
got an awfnl cold in my head/ she oon
tinued, 'and it 1 drew one of my hands
awfty to nse mypooket handkerchief,
wo^ild yon think it nnkind of me ? Jnst
onoe, Tommy, and then yon may havo
my hand/
? traveler in China, who took n jour
ney in a sedan ohalr, oarried by ooolles,
SHves thiM experience: For an hour or
?m riding in a ohair la novel, and you
have no speoial sensation of fatigue.?
There la an eaey, jogging gat t,. and .von
oan look out of your window* into the
faeee of the crowd aa yon pans along.
But after the first honr yon grow tired
and orampod. Ton cannot move abont.
Ton are oompresaed into one goaition.
Ton aoheand grow reetleaa; the jogging
trot beoomea an annoyance, and your I
ionrney, If it laata more than two honra,
beoomea the moat exhausting form of
travel knoim to man.
Mr. Arthnr Sullivan, the diatingatshed
compoaer of'Pinafore,' says to an in
terviewer: 4It is not,, perhaps, that any
one deairefl to be unittst itt suggesting
that I should be writing grand oparaa
and oratorios; but they forget to think
abont what they are flaying, and they
omit to mix a little oommon sense in
their view of pro'eaaional dntiea. Bwift
oonfesfled that htfl literary and Intel
leotnal efforts were prompted by his de
tire for wealth and title. My ambition
ia leas than that. I Want a reasonable
^aSSSH
"Maimers" In tb? OM?i Time.
A writer discussing the <^>w* which
to frequently heard, that WO ol this gen*
ersUon sre not ss refined as oar fore
fathers, declares that the conversation
of the "Good Qaeen Bess,' who was tup
nosed to be the model of what was re
finement at that time, would not be
permitted among the fishwives of to*
day; and has raked np a book on eti
quette of one hundred years ago, whioh
reads queerly now, ss instance the deport
mont for the diningtable: Do not nudge
your neighbors with tout elbows, do
not soratch yourself; do not betray by
any gesture that yon are hungry; and do
not look eagerly at the food as though
you could devour the whole of it. Do
not cruuch booes, nor break the stones
of fruit with your teotb. Do not suok
the bones to get out the marrow. Be
onrcfal not to dip your portion in the
dish, nor what you are eating in the
saltoellar. Do not offer to others what
you have already tasted, nnd tako it as
a general rulo that wbat has onoe been
on your plate must never be put baok
iu the dish. Carefully avoid talking with
the month full. It is unoivil to piok
one's teoth during the repast either with
a knife or fork. In placing yourself at
tablo have the head uuoovered.
It Will Out.
Theodore J. MoGuirk "was arrested at
Erie, Pa., the other day, for the murder
of a watchman in a Philadelphia dontal
depot on Ootober 7, 1865. By a oon*
fcssion which he made in 1877, when he
thought himself on his deathbed, and
which has just been disolosed to the au
thorities, it appears that he vru a co
conspirator with MoMonomin, Mara and
Fleetwood, threo notorious roughs, in
starting the great Philadelphia coal-oil
lire of February 8, 1865, when 2,000 bar
rels of oil, several thousand tous of coal
and a number of buildings werp de
stroyed and several lives lost; that, in
company with Mara, he murdered the
watchman at the dental dopot with a
billet of wood; that in 1868 he was him?t
self neatly stabbed to death by Mara,
and that when h6 recovered, a business
nisn, for whom he dcolares he contracted
to start the oil Are, sent him $25 and
helped him to emigrate to Michigan.?
His confession was made to the daugh
ter of a farmer for whom he worked;
but when he reoovered his health ho ie
pented it, and frequently threatened her
life in caso she betrayed him.
Lightning's Freaks.
Daring a storm lightning struck the
ohimnoy on tho house of Alexandor Bos
tio, living at tho head of Still Pond
oreek, Maryland. In tho room below a
siok boy was lying upon the bed. The
lightning ran down tho ohimnoy, craok
ed the wall in. two plaoos, knooked out
two window oises, and, glancing to the
bedstead where the boy was lying, it
split tho frame and broko the slats un
der the mattress, leaving the boy unin
jured. Mrs. Bostio, who wae in the
room at tho time,was stunned for awhile,
but not 6erionsly injured.
Florida is now shipping 6,000 hoad of
oattle monthly to Oaba. with the pros
peot for an inorease in tne demand. The
shipmonts of Texas oattle to Ouba are
also large, giving regular oocupation to
several of tho Morgan steamships, and
not a case of fever among thom.
All bablos are diminutive Croaars, elnoo they
corao they boo, they oonquer, sometimes by
ttelr gentle stillness, bat oftener by oontinucd
uproarionR crying Induoed by Oolto, Teeth lug.
Flatulence, eto. Dr. nail's Baby Byrup, by its
gentlo yot spool flo influence qutets tho little
onoL without ever produolng the least injurious
effect. Price 25 conts a bottle.
The roan who used a dime instead of
a pieoo of lead on his flnhllno oalled it
his sinking fuod, and the bill he owed
for the nso of a boat his floating debt.
Pub-hui of sedentary pursuits are predispos
ed to Constipation; t-noh thould always use Dr.
Ball's HMtlmoro PHIb, whioh insure safety
against Constipation and all of its disastrous
oonsequenoes.
Elementary and High School.
A Primary School, an A on demy and Ootloalat* Insti
tute 'or Hoarding and D>y Soholara of Doth Bexen.
IiOinbnrd 8t., near Kuinw, Iliiltlmorn, Mil.
The flrpt term of the Sixteenth Tear will begin
NINTH MONTH, (September) 9th, 1879.
Htudr ntn are here fitted for Bimluoaa, for College,
or John* Ilopklna Unlveraity. For circulars pleaae
apply at Bookatorea or at School room*.
E. M. LAUD, Principal.
GREAT WKTERNJ
fi&KS
Jlrwoh-loafllng Shot Gun*, $Mto|A00. Double Shot
Ouna.i} to 1150. HlngleOuna.t* to $10; nt?e?,$8to
$78. R*yoW6ir, $1 to $26. Bend for Prioo Lint and
Catalogue. Groat Western GuiwWorks, Pltlaburg,Pa.
N. B: Goodr R?nt C.O.D., Privilege to examine
and freight paid.
FOR SALE.
Orer 300 farm* In Bhenandoah Valley, W. Va.;
will take oily property In part pay for lomo of thoao
farm a.
AMo a portable Steam Saw Mill, Planer, Flooring
Machine and fifty aorca good ptnotimber land, $1,
600, half oaali, balanoe In lumber at the mill. Ad
drew, J. II. BRI8TOR, Martlnsburr, W. Va.
:&&&? in wenan
Common-Sense Chairs
AND KOOKKRO,
With or without Beading and
Writing Table. 4 lady pur.
cliMer wrlten: "The only ob.
Dillon to your nommon-SeuM
oker la. we all wnnt It.
"I lore It, 1 love It, and who
ahall dare
To olildo mo for loving the Oora.
* mon-Hcrfio Ohalrf"
9 Btronn, Knur, rind ltonmv
Bt* ?*cryvrh?r?. B?nd
(Jo""!* V A' 8m,oi'ai*? Moltflile, Onon,
Kvwy oh>tmUmp?d and warranted p?rf?M!
I* BOLD MOUNTED^
rTon Dollar j
!?%?. '< '' v.*' !."r'
EESSiiH
JOMtt ? oo.,iVBHIMMI
dffliLJMIT UlZtTTVI
CMMSmiN
(ton be cured by the continued twe f t OamnnS
(!?<) l.lr?r Oil And I>net*>PhMpkrtt* of r.litic,
a euro for Gonanmptlon. tlougba, Oolde, Aethtna,
Bronchltla, and all Borofulon* Dlteaie*. Ask your
druggist for ONmitn'i and take no other. If he
ha* not got H, I will Head Ms bottle* anywhere on
receipt Of fl. OMAR. A. OHMtTN.
18 B*v?nth a von no. Mow work.
AoEHTSwAStEDMft THE
XCTORXAL
HISTORY OF the U.S.
The great Intereat In tha thrilling hUtory of ont
country make* thla the fa?t<*t-?ol(lii? book ever
pnbllahod, PrlooM reduced 83 per oent. It l? the
moat oompleto Illatory of the V. 8. eter pnbllahed.
fiend for extra term* to Agenta, and ace why It aella
eo very fnat. Addreae,
National Ptttn.innina Oo.. Philadelphia,1 Pa
" vvrru ?*?
BURNHAM'S
Turbine
TOMsfes
orwioxt M South jn?iv*r Hi., Torn, P*
m
<*?? OR. CLARK
oMOHNSOkl'
INDIAN BLOOD SYRU
LaknUty, 77 W. 34 St., New York City,
unofnitMi ?wr.
t
L
#1
h
to g
<o ? :
ki if
& s# -
? ^
( TRAPS MARK.]
Tho Bost Remedy Known to Man!
Dr. Clark Johnson baring associated bl?
nUU Mr. Kdwln Kastuiao, an e*cupedcaptlT?.]
a ilavo to Wnkamotkla, tho medlciuo roan Of
Oomanches, Is now prepared to l?nd his aid in
Introduction of tlio wonderful remedy of ihattCIM.
Tho cxpcrlcnco of Mr. Kaetmau brlnjf ilmtlttt*
that of Mm. Chas. Joucsaud rou,of Washington
Co., Iowa, an account of whoso suffering* WM)<
thriillnqly narrute<l in the JVVw lltraldof Dot.
15th. 1N78, tho facts of which are BO Widely
known, end ?<> nearly parallel, that but littlo men
tion of Mr. Kasinian's experiences will bo fflVM
lio:o. T ey nn\ how i-ver, published lu ? neat vol
ume of;> o pa^ea, entitled, "Scvenand Nino *aar?
Anions the Coninnehc* and Apaches," of Wbick
mention will bo tuado hereafter. Bufllco it to say,
thai foe several year*, Mr. Kautmaa, whW ?
t;\<\ was compelled to Rather tho roots, ft
bark*, herbs iwd l>orr:cs of which Wakaract
Medicine was mad?,Mid Is etlll prepared to 1
\lde tho PA>ie materials for tho succoaeful lM-_
(Suction of tho medicine to Uu' world; and AMQtM
the j-ribllo that t':o remedy Is tho saino no\T.M
jvhcu WuUauiclU'.a couipcllcd him to maUo it, 4
& tn
s
y> w
o
y*
r,I BLV-W.'i 5 T '
Wakcuuetkla, tlio Medicine Man
Nothing bnt boep added to th<* mrdlclno anA
iothlnK has boon taken away. It In without doubt
Iho 11k?t 1'uniriBR of the Blood and JIunewkb oi
Hio Svm'k* ever known to innn.
This Syrup possesses varied properties
It acts npon tlio I<tvcr.
It act* upon tlio K|1ncy?.
It retfiiluton tlio Howell.
It purlllo* tlio Rlood.
it quiet* tlio Nervou* Nyntcui.
t promote* Dttfoatlou*
It NtturUhoi, Strengthen* and Invlg*
orate*.
It carries oft'tlio old blood and makes
Now.
It open* tlio pore* of tlio skin, and
Induce* Healthy Perspiration.
It neutralizes the horcdiiary taint, or potion In
the blood,whlcb generates Scrofula,Kryuljiolai, and
all manner of 'kin diseases and Internal liuraors.
There uro no spirits employed lu Its miiunfnotuiP,
and it can bo taken by the most delicate bubo, 01
b/tho aged and feeble, care only buiy required (a
ItUntion to direction*.
& ,
3 I
5 S
5 1
a ^
? 1
fT
f =
Edwin Eastman in Indian Costume,
Okvbn and Ninb YBAtti Among tub Ookanchks
and Apacub*. A neat volumo of 300 page*,
being a Bliuplo statement of tho horrlblo facts
connocted with the pad inusHncro of ft hnlplcn*
family, and tho captivity, tortnresand ultimate
escapo of its two surviving lnnmberp For Ml#
by onr agents Kcnerolly. Price 11,00.
The Incident* of tho massacre, briefly narratod<
are distributed by agents, riiBB of chargo.
Mr. I?ni<tinan, nclng almost constantly at'the
Wuft, cnxMgcd in giithorliii; und caring the materl
nln of which tho medlciho it composed, tho sole
biiHiiuviH mniia^mnciit devolves upon Dr. JchnBon.
and tho remedy has boon culled, and Is known si'
Dr. Clark Johnson'*
INDIAN BLOOD PURIFIER.
Prioo of Large Bottlos ??????? $1.00
Frico of Small Bottlos SO
Hold tho voluntary testimonials of person! who
liavo lifcu cured by tho iiho of IJr. Clark Johnson'*
Indian lllood Hyriip, In your own vicinity.
Testimonials of Qaraflj,
South Carolhut, Testimonial?.
Good for Rheumatism.
Selkirk, Marion Co., 8.1
Dear Sir??I hare been troubled for ft
time with Rheumatism and have tried j
remedies. I board of your Indian B1
and of the remarkable cures effect
determined to give it ft trial. I I
from your Agent, Oharlos W. AlfC
did me more good than aoy modioli
nsod. I would say to all who are?t
this great remedy and you will <
lief. , ]
Would not take $900 for the Good Produced by
a $1 Bottle of the Indian Blood Syrup.
Greenville O. II., Greenville Uo.,S. 0.
Dear Sir i?I have used your Syrup for rain*
in the small part of my B&ok oansed from my
Hid aoy s. I would not take $800 for the good
produced by a $1 l>ottlo purobRsed from VOU*
Agents, Giles L. Glazoner and Josoph Oollln*;
Tho Indian Blood Byrnp the only MediOine
that llollovod Him.
Urooavlllo 0. u,, S. 0;
Dear Sir t?I havo boon troubled with Ner
vou? Disease for most J) yoars and havo been
under (roRtment of sevoral Doctors, bat I have
only found relief from your Syrup, whlota "
of your Agents, Giles L. Glaeener and 3
Collins. D. t>. BtOl
Cares Falling FIls, , ?
Holklrk, H. C., jRn. 28,1?
Dear Bin?I bought two $1 bottles of
Indian Blood Hyrnp from your Agent. Ch
W. Alford, to nse in my houso for Falling ?
ftnd I must say that it is tho beet modloind U.?v
oan be nse<1 in suoh orsqs. 1 think every
household should keep it in the honse at ft&
times. Alfred BetliMt;
Dyspepsia.
Tillers Ferry, Korshaw Oo., fl. 0.
This is to oertlfy thni I have been troubled
with DyspepeU for somo time and I used two
bottles of yonr Syrup and I must say th*t I
would not exchange hoslth for the money, bnt
money for health. JKwMb
Onres Iiivor Comprint.
Seneca Oily, Ooonoe Oo.,H. (),, March 10,1870.
DeRr Sir i?I was troubled with t<ir#r Com
plaint for somo time, and could get no relief
from any of all tho modlolne used. Hoarlog of
your Indian Blood Hyrnp, I nrooured some
from your Agent, and before I had takeu ono
bottle I was cured. I would recommend it to
the public. William Mills.
Rheumatism.
SB*
Hhrook* Mill*, Kernhnw Oo.. H. O.
Do*r Hln?I liavo nned one large bottle of
yonr flyrup ?nd it hu flono mo more good than
All tho I)ootore in 1Mb County. 1 winb'thet
??ory ono who in ?flvolod with Rhoumfttltin
and other dUoaiKM would try ft lx?UI? lo ?*t1?fy
thomRolvot). A. WfttkwMkr
NourelgU imd Blok Jteedftohe.
B?m? Olty, Oconee Oo., H. 0., M*roh 8,
Dear Blri Having Buffered With New
tod Nlok fleadaoho tor ?long tl
?H tho remede* that ooold be th<n
almoet oonolnrtod thorn wu no *
yonr great Indian Blood Byrnp
there wae .till * core. 'J here ft
dlolno tor the f*mt|y, /
'W<r Mm. Adeline
Palpitation
JSmffWHST
[Ifotftallbottle of jroor wonderf*
Let ail who
W "