The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, July 14, 1887, Image 4
u
I
Urncral MaMrr Wurkman ro»<erl>’» Lrrtnrr
V on TmbpbtbbM. ,
Ocncrnl Miwtor Workman Powtlerly, lu
the I’liiliulelphiu Journal of United li&tior
publiskce a temjreranec lecture addressed
to the members of the Knights of Labom.
It la entitled "The Justice of My Position,”
and is a reply to unfavorable criticism mwlc
by certain of his oorreepondents on lectures
delivered by him .recently in Boston and
Lynn, Mass. Mr. Powderly says:
“I know I am riglit. 1 know that in re
fusing to even touch a drop of strong drink
I was and am right. In refusing to treat
another to liutt wlileh I do not believe to be
good for myself to drink I - know that I am
right. In not allowing a rumseller to gain
admittance into the order of the Knights
of Labor! know that l am right. In ad
vising our assemblies not to rent halls or
meeting rooms over drinking places I know
that I am right. 1 have done this from the
day my voice was tlrst heard in the council
halls of our order.
My iiosiilon on the
queslibn of temperance» ' '
of our . .
>right»- I sin rVs
termined to maintain it, and will not alter
it one jot or tittle. I know that in the or
ganization of which I am the head there
are many good men who drink, luit they
would be belter men if they did not drink.
Ten years ago I was hissed because I ad
vised men to let strong drink alone. They
threatened to rotten egg me. I "have con
tinned to advise men to be tcm|>crate, and.
though I have had no experience that would
qualify me to render an opinion of the
efficacy of a rotten egg a* an ally of the
rum drinker, yet 1 would prefer to hayc
my exterior decorated from summit to l>nse
with the rankest kind of rotten eggs rather
than to allow one ijrop of liquid villainy to
pass my III*.
"Ten years ago the cause of temperance
was not so respectable as U is to-uay, U
cause there were not so ninny reapectablt
men and women atlvmallng it. It ha^
gained ground. It is gaining ground, and
all Istwusr men and women who hallswv in
it conk! not la- brow -baak-n or frightened.
Take a list of the labor aut aides of America
anti the total sum paid lnU» tlic ireaaurha
from all aminva fr. ni their <>rganl/»tl->n In
the preset11 time will nut axtvtsi fS.008.0Ui.
The K nights of l^abor ts the iaritwl and
ax«t Inflm-ntUl of lliem all. ami tiaaigh th
much has Irt-a said cotMcrning the vast
amount (If mtmry thwl hi* tsfil rniterteal
from Use RM-mts-rs. yet the W4al sum ieviul
ami f'lJletied for ail |*irpi*rs up to Ihi
nreartil lime let i ttenl f^st.n*)
Now let us turn to the ithr
York atone it Uiaiimab •! I
fSi.UUU a >iay a»r nl («*
UUU la a )rar If I • o.
.1
.1
n
let U
•k.r
4.i
l
K<
mm than
rv.inw.
for I Ur
m-mk-s
reform
r m our
»al.
TW« OSSM »•••
Kr«ws (ha Saw Tuck KmnncsnJ l ’hron-
lota’s eottob artM-ia lha fuUowtag figure*
nra ^fthm«I retail*a to tha n»ove«M ul of
the slnfia dnnng tha |«mt w.wk -
Tha total reca«|*n iwachnl t,.Va* I*Isa,
l.KM hah* Umt are k, V*** l«*h*
w«-k, ami l.utj l*h* three
; mahitog tha lutei r»«r»i4*
1st .’>e|**-tuls r, iMM's 0,1.4),4U
, .’s'JUi, Till Iwh* for the wsaia
uartudol show tag a derm w mane
b Btsmhay 1, Imu'n of 7U,»4 Uk*.
The aSlMifta for tha vaat reach a total
of M,<T7b laslcw, of which Iu,7h7 ware to
t treat IlnUin, MU to I'laucw, ami J,(lhl
to tha mat of tha ooaUarat.
Tha total rsaibta aapfdy of nothin,
up by oabta ami talmrraiih. U-r the
is as folio
Total of Uraat itntaiu stook Kil.OnO
total of OuoUartiUl stock* <4*4,
HUd- h, "f a b>Ui of Kun>pran storks
of l.SIS.MU balaa. Tha total viatUr
suptdy for tha woiht M l,MJti,iiS balm
of Urn namher
ami tWW.MJU Lmi
Tha imports into eooUneotal ports
daring the week were .Vi,(*at baka,
Thaaa figures indicate adrerraao in the
oottoa in agbt of bah* s*~
pared with tha same data of Imi,
a decrease of 41,'JtiU balaa as ouaunred
of Ihho. m
By invitation the summer meeting of
the society will convene upon the grounds
of tlie inter-BUte farmers’ summer en
campment to be held at Upartanbnrg,
8. C., the first week in August next.
The society will bold its business meet
ing on Wednesday, the 3d. The regular
programme of essays and discussions by
the society will take place on Thursday
the ith, this day being assigned by tl
arranging committee as iho State Agri
cultural and Mechanical Society Day,
Aayon are aware, it has lieen our cus
tom to have a reproeentatiou of three
delegates from each county. While we
wish to urge upon the members to see
to it tliat each county sends a delegation
at'the same time we call your attention
to the fact that this is a meeting of the
society, and all members are entitled to
be present, and wo hope as many will
attend as possible.
This inter-Stafe farnflOTB* summer en
campment meeting has been so thor
oughly advertised that it is unnecessary
to say more than to urge as many as
K asiole to be present. It will be the
gest concourse of farmers proper that
has ever assembled for the purpose for
which this meeting is organized; it will
be fraught with various matters of ma-
teiial interest to all farmers, and it is
eminently proper, if not absolutely nec
essary, that your society be fully repre
sent'd, it living the only “simon pure”
agricultural organization in the State
that has for its object the tliscuadou and
development of purely agricultural sub
jects, aud of matters that apply to tuc
farmer’a every-day life.
It ia true we have the order of the
Patrons of Husbandry, under whose
auspices this farmers' inU-r-State en
campment is to lie held. The (Jraugus
liave their social ami educational fea
tures. which cairr along with it its lady
nM-mlwrebip, ami while we individually
think it the best ami moat perfect or-
gaiuzaUon in all its equipments the- farm
er lias ever had, yet it has failed to keep
its hold on the rank ami tile of our
fai mere. t . „ ’"V*
'1 lieu we have the farmer*' movement
orv-annation, which has developed into
an organisation whose |uin>e object is bn
look after ami protect the fanm-ra' I*'
litawl nghla, to watch over and sue that
mtc' Irguiation as is nirevry for his
utl<-re«4 b* ascwral, ami to take charge
of all iskttcra of a like chareebw, whreb
all sill readHy acknowUslge to us |*v-
rmuu-ally prqo*. Hot never before in
the hlakury of our agricultural intenwt
has there uesa more ored^of a vitalixing
(wurrnt than at this Ume. t *rni< re are
da} by day bring aroused In'U;-1 fact
that they, bio, mast bs pe<gM<ain
Thu. ia th* age of bos aertwamiagrewb’r
, F" •klurl (ruin tbr tti. un|i9ttwiat nU to
| mi) Vtn*nU» m cuUi^nUt*ci v in nml
I in nil ci ^Janu «quij ments; ami
where will the wiuera > **“ fct,1 g for thia
vitaiuiiig current if not la tbs Stale
iK-uitunu ami Mwchanioai Hunrtj ?
for tha post twenty yrera, since
rre.rganuninm after las war, your a>
I met > has bs* a tlotag a good a« rk, ta.tb
ia Ins diannaaun of sgneultarel mbmets
at «<ur samnisr amrUnn as wall as l«v
Art is not confined to big ami expen
sive paintings, marbles and ornamental
bric-a-brac or to old silver plate. One
with a very limited salary may enjoy
the pleasure—within hi* means—of hav
ing as artistic a homo as the rcoeipient
of an income of thousand*. Some
bunches qf flowers here and there, a few
pretty pictures, a few good books and
the essentials in the way of ornament
are named at onee. Fot ono poor shil-..
ling a week a wife can buy blossoms
enough to make her home look bright
and blooming from January to Decem
ber. Even with a very small salary
this is a snm which may indeed be well
spent upon the daily boauUiicaUou < of
i he house. Pictures, too, are almost as
cheap as wall paper. Even those given
away by some business lupuses as adver
tisements are sometimes pleasing
enough to be an addition to any room.
A common carrot will thfow out broad,
green,'feathery fronds if-suoplied witli
ft».ud." ? v SK'ijn.-s ssta:
the top; will thrive ami make a tiling of
real beauty, to say nothing of the de
light to be found in watching the tiny
leaflets grow. A sponge tilled full of
flax seed, kept wet ami hung in the
window, will soon make a beautiful bail
of tin"daintiest, freshest green.
A few spraiJTofTplant called "Wan
dering JLew. which any florist will
gladly five away (or soli a great new^-
paperful for 10 cents), will grow in a
gIVsof water all winter long. A hit of
charcoal iu the water will keep it sweet
and fresh.
The bulb of a hyacinth will cost one
shilling, the peculiar glass \ase u« d to
grow them will cost anulfuT, but both
the bulb and tlic glass will last winter
after winter, keeping a yearly blos-om
hidden away to glsuden your vies
wh.-n tired of the dreary grayin-ssof the
cold weather. . •
In fart, it only requires a careini
>MMJ-ewife with'.her wstehful eye ever
searching for the things wiihiu her
me.-itis, aud at an aIino*t iiiliHitrs.imal
noil ay the holm* may not only bo attrac
tive but artistic.
ag
nd
T
nr X •«•.
\\i
I ti
YVl
1 have read a good deal abdut the
damage done in late year* by chinch
bugs, army worms, curculio. borers and
other insects "too numerous to men
tion;” but few of tlio writers seem to
think or be conscious of the real reason
for the increasing number and birmful-
nosa of these nests. But we do not hay*
lo go far to find the reason, and. it is
found in the widespread and outrageous
destruction of our birds. Think of the
enormous number of small birds re
quired" to deck ladies’ hats nowadays;
and of the ruined crops of hundreds of
farmers and fruit growers in the United
States, and ask if the flatter is not^the
result of the former. Of course it is;
bhd will Of can dispute it. What is to
bo done? Something; and no time
should be lost in doing it. The Ameri
can Humane Society is, I think, doip
a good work in this direction, an
would in time blot out the bird-killing
business, especially as an adjunct to the
liiillinCTy trade of the country; but it
cab not work a reform soon enough to
satisfy the pressing necessities of.tbe
agricultural interests. We must appeal
to law to stop this indirect hatching and
raising of myriads of insects to destroy
the crops of the farmer, fruit grower
and market gardener.
i do not think a law against catching
birds would do much good, for it would
not be enforced; but 1 think a law pro
hibiting milliners, # both wholesale and
retail, from haudlinfe these ghostly orna
ments would have the desired effect, and
with such a law we might, in time, have
our bints as plentiful and useful as they
were a few years ago, before this bloody
war,on them began.
But small birds are net the only in
sect rater* that ire being exterminated*
for frivolous purposes. Tbs prairie
chickens are failing by tbs thousand by
Hie ruthless baud of tne market shooter
—that rile blot upon the human race;
enu I a* a fiend; grasping as a miser;
lazy a* a sloth; bramlesaas an idiokand
for hat mfulnem ranking next to the
devil himself. Why allow this low-lived
specimen of humanity to ply his das
tardly and destructive Work under the
very nose of the fanner be ia injuring?
Why not ernd him to the poorhouse.
n»i Him or penitentiary, where he coo Id
U<*k'-pt with much lees expenae to the
farm r*. who are now supporting him?
I here is n point that puzzles me.
the shot, the blood, the broken
«. or the tea there, that make* prav-
t.' ken meat such a delicacy? If
fowl were brought on lbs table ia
rood Mon In which the prairie
,<<n is usually served, it would be
I'kred entirely unfit to eat; so 1
l think the epicurean public would
much if prairm chicken shooting
Id b« prohibited by law the year
d. for at least live yeara and looger
t birds were n<4 plentiful enough at
lim* 1 think there
U<
;;
A Boston girl ciimo over to New-
York Slid amused herself very wcjj fn.r
several days, among liqf other pleasures
including thp beautiful display of oin ys-
anthemuins at Cosmopolitan il ill. j>lie
was delighted with it. The snlehili
shocks of snowy., and flimc*o»lorei
blooms and tho new Japanese sew I
lings tbat look as if Jialure had copied
them from decorations '.on Japanese
jars, and tho clean, fresh, curiom per
fumes tilled her cultured aoul so full of
sentiment that it bubbleit over for the
benefit of a New York man. He came
to cpU-uton after her return from the
flower show. He was a charming
j • jn g pnreon, who never by any acci
dent pollufcd his person with any arti
cle manfacturod in tills country. He
was turned out complete from top to toe
in English goods, and til* gait ore the
avenue filled ocholders with the wijdc«t
awe and delight, it so closely copied the
true thoroughbred stride- ’i ho import
ant details of dress had occupied his
walking hours so closely that he had
foil nd bulTTnTeTTmtrtO tm ton m I trismmd
over a book, and other matters even
more important had escaped his attcii-
tention, among them tho llower show,
which ho happened not loliavc heard of.
•T’ve just come from seeing the chrys-
antheuiums,” said the eutliudustic
young woman from Boston; •‘and, ()!
it was such a treat. 1 never enjoyed
anything so much in my life. Have you
, been yet?”
"No," he drawled out loud, tiiiu^iiig
to himself, "What the deuce is tin! girl
talking about, anyhow?*- 1 -After rapid
Wilt profound reasoning ho cattle to th.
conelusioq that being a Boston woman
and addicted toMtrr.iturc. the tiling that
she had been lo was something paiy.ik-
ingof an intellectual nature, add proba
bly scientific, judgingfnmi the b*»g amt
Unpronounceable name. So be re
marked lightly that ready he *M.dn't
go much into thst sort of thing wow- it
xlirelv for
Sensation!
Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute
Blair or Eoctxocu Experience* as* Hk.UI-
rill IMivsIrlas* iiimI Hareebn*. y .
ALL CHROMIC DISEASES A SPECIALTY.—
Patients trouted here or at tliotr homes. Many
, treated at home, through correspondence, as
w , y d 11 It ; HK. iesnilty as if here in person. Come and
W hy is it that three bottles of J . J>. J>. . t; , M , or S oirU ton (x'nts in Stamps for our
*• Invalid^' Guide-Book," which irlVos all |>«rtlc-
•«tjw».-^A4an«i VVoju.d's iiupkhhahv Mani-
cai. Association, or) Main St., Buffalo, N.Y. -
vV UxVi-Jd
xnth<
ihl I
Aff
your
of
>:
i,l.1M,.'ij7i are Aamran
with the corresponding dat«|
Tbs rwwii'U el inU-nor tot
week have been g.iar» bales.
t ltd into
nor euese decreased i. 1 11 bak*, and
were 47,bales leas than at the
period lest year.
The receipt* from the planUUona,
-. being iho actual movement, not melud
ing the overland receipts nor Southern
conmunption, of cotton that reached the
market through the outports for the
week were balea The total re
ceipts since the 1st of September are
S,1M,284 bales. The actual movement
from the plantations was only 3,588
bales, the balance being taken from the
stocks at the interior towns.
N Cotton in eight June 24 was 0,312,070
being a decrease of cotton in sight as
compared with last year of 116,822.
The Chronicle savs, in reviewing the
speculation id futures during the week:
"The speculation in cotton for future
delivery at this market has been feverish
and unsettled in tone, with the course of
prices somewhat erratic and irregular.
The reduced stocks have caused some
anxiety abont contracts for this crop!
- and August options advanced 40 points
from the recent figures—namely, from
10.66. to 11.06c., but there was no con-
sidererablo short interest to ‘squeeze,’
and prices gave way the moment tmyiug
ceased to bo active. The very favorable
reports from the growing crop prevented
any material improvement in tho more
distant options, although it is generally
admitted that the supplies will ruu
probably quite low in tho early fall
months, especially in Europe."
A VEIIY BKMAIULAilLK KKATVHE of the
annual report of the Tension Bureau is
not that tho volume of business was
greater than ever before, but that there
is an unexpended balance of the apprd r
priations for salaries and current ex
penses; which has been turned back into
the national treasury. Heretofore the
business of the Tension Bureau has been
so deftly arranged that not a dollar of
t - the appropriation ever found its way
back to the place whence it was drawn.
It is sufficient evidence of tho generosity
of the Government toward the soldiers
of the Union that in the year just ended,
nearly * quarter of a century after the
aloes of the war, there were altogether
176,879 claims for pensions considered
; 55,194 original pensions were grant
ed under the liberal laws now in force.
It requires a force of nearly fifteen hun
dred people to transact this business, an
_ i of nearly thirteen thousand let*
tan and documents being received and
out wvery working day, aud the
paid for penrions now reaching
enormous annual total of seventy -
; of doBaa. This sum rx
needs cither the annual etvil expendi
tures Of the ordinary military and naval
i at ths pwsnt time, as well
i of ths United
to the cmi
all s|«s
for cm
r Vi i
gw* < ral diefiUy >4 Hung* aufaMlaiaiii*; t
| our <-sihug st oar annual ntalo fairs, sod
it w ill he u*ly natural, a/U-r
omhIic rff.ifts ere rspandrd,
fan .rr* to turn to your auerety
quire ehat is the sewn frutu the agTM-ul
turn] eekch lower. Therefore w« euuid
aga-ii urge you to be presin> at the
Mpsitasiburg Mcwtiug. Let the BHtui'rn
iu tech county hold e aMetiog <»n ask
day in July, aud if uut more Urns
dth Ration of threw can attend, Ut IL<
dw tie upon those and forward lb
tolhomae W. Holloway, Tomana, h
0. We have been in the habit of mal
tug •j'ecial rates of Uaneportatiou fi
deh'galee to our eumoMi mot-tings, lnit
this i* one at which there will beeo large
an aUt odaUM outeide of the society tliat
we are using our effort* to gut unusually
low tates for all, which will be announc
ed at au early day.
D. r. DtTK'ax, Trewidenb
l moo, June 27, 1BH7.
I Sr Ka>Bta*a ml I Sr HOIroaAa.
Hailroad Comuii**ioners have j im
a stateuieot of the earniugs of Um-
Tl.e
(wu< d
nulr <ads <>f the State for Uu nu<nth
Mir Tim showing is a remarkably good
Of tlie twmty one road* indudul in the
•taU-iuent thirteen tliow an inereasi' of
$39 , 83 and the remaining right a de
crease of ♦4.1 13.05, making the nit in
crcw-u for tin tuoiilh over lazl year ♦5t">,
481 . ;3 or 0 26 per ceuL
Tin Isrgikt Imrea*: of any one road
that of tin Asliivilie and 8|inrtHntHirg
wlilrh, with only 30 per tint, increase in
mileage, shows B) 88 (nr cent, inereasi in
oarniugs over May, 1886.
01 tin railroads untiring at Columbia
the Cifrlotte, Columbia uud Augusta
sli .v s an Isfinisw of 3 i>cr cent.; tin Booth
Can 1 ina Uailway 18.U2, and tin Wilming
ton, Columbia aud Augusta 4 itl.
Tl;e total pasungtr tamings for tin
month, 1S80, were ♦129,810.46; for 4887
♦136,119.41; increoae, ♦t5 I 299.9<'».
The total freight tamings for tin month,
1880. were 1206,884 10; for 1887, ♦234,
577.41; increase, $27,663.34.
The bital tonnage for the month iu
1886 was 119,275; for 1887, 157,440; iu
crcuf<\ 38,165. .
lf*r* About tanSrrbtll'a Grave.
Tin fate of A. T. Stewart's remains so
alarmed the friends of the late William 11.
Vanderbilt that a guard It still kept posted
about Ids ♦500,000 tomb. Night and day a
body of well-drilled, well-armed men move
a’lout in its vicinity on the lookout for pll
lagers or ghouls. In addition to these, a
system of signals or burglar alarms is added
whiili pebetvute many parts of the grounds.
At stated intervals these are set off by a man
on his six hours’ tour of duty, ami the re
serve nqiidly assembles at a given point. At
night the watch is even more vigilant. At
sunset a powerful flame la lighted in the
cupola, .which shines out over the humble
graveyard below and off upon the waters.
Into this dome one of the detectives must
go cv ry half hour and touch another
alarm, which reconisthe fidelity of those on
watch. Every 12 hours the chief enters tlie
liuilding to see from the register whether
each man on duty during the night has corn
his roumUat the prescribed moffitnt. The
cost of guarding ihrremains amounts to a
small fortune each year, anil it cannot but
occasion aomc mel-incholy reflections in the
man that just a little distance
bcyoiMluii* |M>mpou* mausoleum lie (be re-
ir.HrnF nf Cummlstore) Vanderbilt UU
without guard or hocor, eo far as thefye
can sic, t xcepi a simple stone betring his
Pit* HasZrc* Osllare
i Dr. Pkroe offers for the de
lectiua of any calomel, ur other mineral
poison or injurious dag, ia kia justly ede-
Wtfmt ' I’lseeaul IWgwUvcTriieWr llry
ere shut lue rise of a mustard seed, there
fore wily take* while thdr opention It
^.tsa
At
lo Ji
tha
furl
CJUi
b Ih
• dur
war
fiany
lea I
ifcr
n K
of
it n
was out of his lino, too dre p
bins.”
The Boston girl atarvd.
you mean, sir? Cbry
deep?** —■*•
"iVcil, you know." i
you ti, put) hi* (• >'
mouih every t.nio h<
one ha* to do »uih :
reading to keep uu wii
things, and for my par
thorn unlere I am quite
Jrct tbrr’re teihvwg »U
was gi-tliDg •kilhutly
question and r>»ntinU''<l
self coafi'lonee. lo add
end artretic touches to
"When 1 go Ip this s
declared. "I g’ f work* on
end reed np th.«re»nghl». •
loflow the spezher with i
teiest; bat Tm too ewfu
now to he side to do ttw 1
the Nineteenth C< nturv v
•Wl
at do
< too
' » uy is it tuattnree uowioboi re. j>. re.
arc sold in Atlanta to one of^ any other
T>foo3 rani3V- m(t ttriCT Tis- much • cmr--
bitmed in tlic State of (ieorgia as any
other pre} 'nnitiun V No out; nciJ.
qur word, but simply a; k tho druggi; !■.
Ask the i ; <;i'h'. They arc cnmpetiut
witnenees. Six hou.H-s iu Atlanta are
buying 13. B. B. in five and ten gross
lots, and Borne of them buy ns often as
perry two monllwi—AVky-these inqirc-
ccdcntcd salts here at home with so little
adverthing? Modesty forbids us leaking
a reply. Ti >*43. B. 13. Inx'ir before tho
public a quarterns.hwi4-» century, it
would not be uecisrary' to l»e boUtcrwl
up with crutches of i»age adverlifH numts
’new.' Merit will conquer aiuT^suwa
mquoy.
$1.60
FoY font year* I
from m ttrrible fon t of Ithcumsfu-m,
wliicii reduce t me so low tLot uli L pc
of recovery was given np. J havekuilor-
I id the most excruciating jsuu ilay and
{ night, and ofbn while wruhiugui agony
have wish' d I could die. 1 have tru’d
ovirythiug known f<*f’that disease, but
nothing dl<l Uu U.V good, uml h'lvcnl:.; 1
I sotiu' of the fiiKd rhyaicianl of tl.g
I Ntatv* to w<>rk on me, out a 1 ' to no effect,
I I tiare TTcnToTir ?8n»t yritlmut tliuling
I relief. I mu now proud hi •><•>' tliat afur
I nsiog only one bottle of B. if. B. 1 am
ciialded to w ilk around and attend to
I huaiMv*. end I woi.M not take SVit) for
the K-uetit nreivid from one -iugh' )>>t-
I tie of Jl. 1». H. 1 >< for U) all locrrliauts
j au«i b’i mesa uu i. o< lh«* tow ia lours,
I most truly, j. *». liALA.
I \Vav».i(y, \Va»h« r tounTyT T* ta j r*"’"*’”* 1
Ut ‘moitH t rt} tt ** 1
At** lei*. I»A . Al t
t^r “ rrswi-oiil,v “ vrun-down." (Jct)iHtatO<l
pchoqlteachom, milliners, seninstroseee.hou*©-
l,.- idiTs, and overworked women (pnerally,
)>r. lVrce'8 Favorite Prescription Is the best
, ,1 all restorative tonics. It is notU “ t‘uro-«ll,
it admirably faljllls a sinifienesg of purpose.
n>r a rvWt is>b , nt 8p<'ciflo for all thoeo
( hronlc Wraknesses and Diseases peculiar to
v men. The treatment of many thousands
• t such flese*.Wt the Invalids’ Hotel and 8urx-
I 1 I a-,t ituto has nffin-de»l -ft large cxpericnco
ng reinedIjw for their cure, and
SsO-! 07 Or. Piew’s Favorite Prescriptioa
ti a Mill* id' j. vast experience. r«
“' n. iuflaii
JlPt
tuternul congeakioM. Iiifiamreeilon
mill nlcera(toii» 1* I"* a xpeelfle. It
is a l -w rful 1' :«ernt. n» well ns uterine, tonic
ervlne, and l!’u>.irts vigor snd atrrneth
wlmlere
nd
to t
'.<r.
ffc-l
thm
.cli. Ill'll,
.us pros! i
i. It rum> wcakucaa of
■i, I i <nting, weak lack.
. vThun.-tion. d< l>UHy and
r.- x. Favortti'Ihrecrlp-
v under our posittrs
I, *.li ntil. bid wra*>iwr nr<<uud bottle.
PRICE $1.00, ti.*”
s«ad 10 oeot* msCuiiM.tjjr Ih-. Pk-rce’a I _
^ " < wo per*i
r ,.r .vt<:n-«. WiMtno'e Diana*
aiAitu*. OU Main street.
FILLS.
oft
no objsrt
toe lo oucb
l.'tlfl AWtl
VbntiiHnw •*'!
teman ia
tbs Umtsd
Tm It
iri g
(. aoJul
cuuressvsry
ftlltl Ibrl
l Mwl
•Ub.
IttnftffHHl
A; evsa tbs
rralljf in
ii%l wm
k 5 w j
uuM ADik
jrm It if bs
nmltt w
•# t»«> #
ibU «4
1 Uft CtHD
prebsad its
Im fifr
ty* liift •
III'! i* A
w It# ran
hardly sarn
«i« til l».b
ck Im II
HHUMI
wing to 1
its orarritv
• n l tl»r
ftuitng
ima fa
v yravw
of tbM law
OtMinlr?
lo Mmf
•IMift0
leavw %
ffuek uf lbs
I#f. ti
wr Hwftlf
m girt
arm tot
Dua l say
Sew Yu
rlk iu#u
•m
ili# rrof*
tbm; surely
•ivbe.o i
• .V.
r. n
Nwrth
lU-alen'SI III* Own
the
the
Ka cently a young |diyai< tan of
Harvttrei medical sclu^tl ronre-iTed
nfca of playing a joke on Me* Anui
CojM land, one of the I oly stialenls of
tin ('■»*llc , _'<xof Physician* idid Surgeon
and <tl (he same time rubbing out an
old s. ore bo had laid up against her
Hi* plan* were carefully niaptH.*d out,
says Iho Bo*ton Iknihl, and. every
thing being in readiness, the lady was
called tqion to attend a ia :o of ft acturc
of tho leg. Somewhat astonished, site
promptly answered tho snmmous of suf
fering humanity, confident of her abili
ty to siutuiu tho dignity of the profess^
ion she had udonted. On arriving at
tho rrsidenco indicated sho was sur
prised to find her patient a man about
40 years old, apparently suffering tho
most excruciating pains. Removing
tin) covering, she discovered thefraciure
to be tliat of a wooden leg. Nothing
dniiutc I.. and without showing any evi-
denen of her discovery, she replaced.tlio
covering, said iho must go for somo
split!is anj bandages, and would re
turn inmiediutcty. S!io did so, bring
ing with her smuo small pieces of brass
and brads, with winch she at once pro
ceeded to repair tlio fractured limb.
Tho surgical operation was performed
in a retuarkabio short space of time,
ami the injury left to tho, healing pro
cess" of nature. Sho quietly gave tlie
necessary directions, informed tho man
that ho would bo all right in a (lav or
two, and that her bill was $25. ft is
scarcely necessary to say tliat tlio fee
was not forthcoming, tlic matter being
treated as a good joke. Next morning,
however, Miss Copeland appeared on
tho scene with a constable, and, much
to tho chagrin of the son of Esculapius,
collected her fee. It would seem that if
tho young graduates of Harvard medi
cal school wish to got ahead of tho lady
Studeiitrof the College of Physicians
and Surgeons they will have to rise very
early and use more brass than Miss
Copeland did in reducing the fracture
of the wooden leg.
■ ■■ ■ —■re • re —
How to Have While Hand*.
The remarkable discovery has recent
ly been made that "white hands are
coming into fashion again.” It would
seem tbat hands have been growing less
white than they used to be, and nave
suffered from too great attachments in
ladies to lawn-tennis and boating and
other masculine accomplishments.
“Chapped and red hands are never pret
ty, and thi
id rice would
CotHpamuii.
ty, and these, of course, invariably fol
low on outdoor exercise. The evil ia,
happily, not beyond remedy, and, to
effect' thia purpose, ‘tlie daughters 6rtoouIJ"s^e tvfiai
fashion.’ as many of them will learn
with aurprise, now have dishes of hot
water shaped like a flgwer-lexf on their
toiist-ubte, in which they steep their
hands for a while before going to bed,
anoint them with vaseline and put
hoed with a preparation of
bs at
too large
in*ecl% for the
nly pick a little
;U that, but for
damage on an
ird* would do cm ten.
* harvested in*i<is of
it beemues eatable fd^
•y hate to fail Imu k ou
a chance for some la
to cover hitu«elf all over with
Who will come lo the front and
ve fanner’s crop* from the ravage*
ei*, and the birds from the merci-
inter?—V. A'. UcUroum, ta/’unn,
iiul IJjtm.
Ikying the Foundations.
An old mao. aged eighty, died in a
cave in a range of mountains in Ptonn
sylvania last summer. He had sub
sisted for years by begging, living on
broken virtual*, and carefully hiding
the money given him. Alter ids death,
a large amount uf silver was discovered
buried in tlie rave, with government
JjoipJ* And certificates of stock. His
son, who was a cripple, ha had allowed
to die in tlie county almshouse.
An old man who knew him in his
youth, said.—
"His father taught him to cheat at
marbles for pennies. He was trained
to believe tliat there was no value in
education, in religion, in the affections,
in tho decencies, in tho happiness of
life,—in nothing, iu short, but money.”
Tlio. heir to one of tho great ducal
estates of England was disposed, when
a boy, to bo extravagant ami sensual.
His mother would not allow his tutors
to curb him.
"it is the effervescence of youth,” she
M "Jt will pass away in time.”
said.
Last summer the palaces, galleries of
famous pictures, ami lands renowned in
English history, belonging to an old
and honorable family, were sold under
tho hammer to pay his debts, while ho,
a broken-down gambler aud voluptuary,
crept out of sight to France.
If a yotmg man could but look for
ward thirty or lifty years, and see him
self when tho passions which seem so
harmless now have done their work
upon him! .
A so-called magician in London has
been coining money lately by showing
to eacli visitor who consults him tlic
picture of his own death. One young
lad saw himself as a bloated old man,
dying of apoplexy; another lay on a
field of battle, shot to tho heart; a gay
girl saw a wrinkled, gray figure stretch
ed upon a bed. Surrounded by weeping
friends, Tlic trick was the result of an
instantaneous photograph taken as the
visitor entered, with tho addition of
costume and background.
But if each boy could, in reality so
face old age. but for one moment, there
would be IfUlo need of sermons to warn
him from his bosciting vice.
More thau one man has been saved
from final ruin by a single olmrviug
glance at himself in a mirror. Ho was
turned from evil courses by seeing what
he had already become. Uhc lesson
would be even more starttfug if
xtri! hrrttier“TbdWgmce
make of him. —Toufk’j
Fifn
>r. M
at e
came due wins < ou<
9SXM»**nl to do so
acts bad OMtiaosd and tbs
isrpsciva it. wbsw tbs atbsr
Uttar rsrstvai
years ago s woman near Ban-
burrowed $55 from a friend is
r'ling bar note. YVbra it
Id aot pay it. sod »bs
* sbe" cowhL lbs
I* S ltsMle-|*SNorsma Mw.lio.
Ths centra! platform***, of r><*ir*o, t
standpoint from which vuitor* will vm
tbs panorama, and therefor* the art* 1
ars obliged lo go lo it f'rqusnuy. as t
painting nssrs cuuq>UrU<<n, in ord*-r
obssrvs tbs effect and progress of in<
work.
Thia too, ia ths placs of confer*-ru
and dokpits the signs of -No Adm
lanes," within and without, visitors a
frequent, snd ttwiallr welcome, 1 a*
visitors ars often veteran soldier* w!
took part in tbs acftun reprr«rntcd. ai
who often make helpful surge*'ion*.
Ills army stones that are told on the
central platform, would, if rbllectcd.
make a prodigious volume. The floor
of too platform is chalked and re> halk
eH. toms referring to the panorama it
self, but mors to iilustrats oc* iimti<*»
upon other fields. The -trong pine rail
surrounding tbs platform is pencilled all
over with kindred decorations, whih
scraps of paper, upon which are memo
randa of incidents, and a variety of data,
as well as name* and addresses, are
pinned to the convenient timber with
thumb-tacks.
Tho artist paints steadily, every indi
vidual being mainly occupied injwrfect
ing bis own work, though never he*itat-
ing to ask or extend aid in some fi|>ce«ui
direction. One artist, for instance, has
an excellent figure of a mounted officer,
ail complete excepting tlic |>ortrait,
a photograph for which is pinned to the
canvas. While this artist goes to
strengthen a line of battle, another
one will rapidly paint an admirable
portrait for (no incomplete figure. Boon,
another brush i* busy with tlie horse,
while another artist calls tor some speo-
ial saddle and bridle to bo brought to
the platform that ho may paint tho Lrap-
P'ntfs- _u
Now, look at the back of tho photo
graph which is pinned to tho canvas—
a faded carte de visile of a young officer,
upon a slip of paper wc read tlie follow
ing: "Col. K., now on General Sheri
dan’s staff, H 47" (meaning section H,
square 47 of the panorama); "French
oap, blo’uae, captain’s straps—stall—
dark-blue trousers, gold cord, cavalry
boots, staff sword, McClellan saddle;
■habraok—black horse; soosketch.”
This instance will give an idea of tho
way in which facts are preserved when
a panorama is painted by artists who
conscientiously strive to make of the
work a great historical painting.—77ico-
dore E. Davis in SI Nicholas.
—Twenty-eight unmarried women re
side in Garfield county, Col; also 1,000
unmarried men. All the men cau’t get
a wife from among the twenty-eight, and
it probably puzzles the women to make
a choice from among the 1,000.
At the fashionable ball dress marks the
man; the want of It the woman.
BKAHtmDS
< Bpcctio for all iliaeasM pe
Pwa-
Al
"liar to vooien, *ucta as P*
oar If fAiMtliar 1
trannisuoa, Lroourrrices
van.-*, eic.
TElttLE
BECIiLATOK!
i*i ('
Yu
•lit
LITTLE
LIVER
tMs
t. Tj IHI IffT " aud CbTHAHTtC.
SICK HIAOSCHI,
Mlllows n**adi**»t*,
1 M/** II *-••. *
llww* Intilftstlua*
r >.«1 illtlSUsAttsrks,
,, rare) ■»
hMrrt-** I*I*»*S»*
l•Mrsall*«'F*-ll«'l*. -*
L VAN WINKLE ft CO.
MAMTACTl'tlBit.
ATLANTA, OA.
-an-
Otuti TUAS.
• Mis Wl « *
X r A t m T t
SSMt M* I S
j •
■I I
M ftftfti B <
COTTON GINS and PRESSES.
TWiIom % rwl till
ft itAfr r%, ft (%• ill*, \sA%s v|$ft|%.
f*?4ft$w*|i%. IftffiA|a■ r%.
ft! Ittffft ftftbllt f
ftFWMIft sA«Mft ft tbftfc %.
I. VAN WIN\LB A CO.. At ar.ta.cn.
Sim
Thy
tut.
par a*
i ••
4.
Iff* Wbssdar s
• S
CilAUi.OT 1 h
FEMA12 INSTl'fOTi
S'KSSIOX HKtilNS Si
Us
(»’. NG l.ALUEr
ti'T to tli • '■ « Vf. . 1 IC in * \. ry depart
ment—Col.ci;ii"c, \!'t iiinl Mu>i.\ Olilj
• x|)*.rii i ceil‘hiuI Acc«<iu|>li»hetl teachers
TIm* buiidii'g is liri't' u with kh-, waimef
with t.ie 11 >t. a r»ucht-ia>u furnace*, lia:
iiot ai.id ccld w Ut i ifni'lijl, and lii>>t-t
appointment- a a Boarding Hch*
every u--p*-( t--iio Mi <*>1 iu tl;*- N.'uth ’ r.-
superior. ^
KuOuclon for tuo or uioii: inan th- * leo
hmiljr or n r bl>orboo liipl - h rg(*l wuls
lioin Onto of < uonnee, »rt«-i the Hitt iiioLtb
of the mssiou.
For Catalogue, wit!, lud , .tlc'.iiitiH, nd-
dress ■ Kkv. VVM. U. ATill.SXLN,
Charlotte, N. C’. -
GOLD MI DAT. awartnl at Cotton Kxpm-l-
lion A unta ' a . Dalla*. Tt-xita, and ( Larlcs-
f. on, **. •. Wrt f <r pri e* an<I terms to
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B» *3, ATLAXTA.UA.
Tflg ONLY TRUE
IRON
TONIC
Will purify tho El OOD rernfut*?
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Rfftork IV HKALTHondyiO.
ORorVOLlH rrr.ipeiDiiijWant
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Btrpnatti anJ Tired FeeHnu nb-
■olutolr rDr*>d: Bone*, imi*
ole* end u<<rve* reoeire new
for< e. } liven* the niimt
nu l KUM<!it:« Bruin Power,
i. - - Buffering from complaintj
i t*. I C?C pe dll ir to their *ei will find
IreMUIElO In DK. i:abte»'8 ikon
TONIC a wfe and *pe.«lT rnr*. Cii*e««ele»r. heal-
thrcoT.pleTlon Fre'p.ent i.ttetntt. at counterfett-
ingonly add to tha popdl.rMr.of the oriKlnul. Lo
not ei - irimeut -Ket the Oh.olKlI AND Bl bX,
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Bcdeehe. Sen.pie Dose end rream Book
mailed on receipt of two cent* In pottage
THE ON. HART ER MEDICINE COMPANY,
•t. Louis, Mo .
(
)
ir»v AffVfti , NASHTILUfts TMME
|Pitts, oaiuiinativei
* ...
rim oKAViftt a>d
TKl'TIIIN'lr rim DIf KN.
An insvint relief for coi'c of infunts.
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I <k Co., Angnsta, Ga,
1 1836 !SWIFT'S SPECIFIC.il 11886
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A BEKEDY NOT FOB A DAY, BUT FOB
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AN INTERESTING TREATISE ON SLOOO ANO SAIN DISEASES SENT |
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▼me ssnn
CO.. ATLANTA.