The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, July 21, 1892, Image 4
f The 7/otftfr Ee$a
pT' x * ^
Published Every Thursday,
E. NORTON, Editor,
J T MAYERS. Qen'l. Manage*.
1892 JULY. 1892
Su. Mo. Til. We. Th. Fr. Sa.
! 1 2
3 4 5 C 7 8 9
10111 12 13 uj 15i 16
17-13 19 20 21 -.22 23
24 25 26 271 28 29 30
'E I Frrr
Queen Anne Fronts and Mary
Anne Backs.
( 11 IU1I1 n 1 I?w? l U'.u ! I
.. ' vv ti > rt'i i (( 11 iii v 1 t 11 iW 111^ 1 WI ~
tune to live across the way from a
house that had a Queen Anno front
built onto its plain Mary Anne hack.
At that time 1 was not very familiar
with legitimate Queen Anne architecture
and 1 believed the new front
on my neighbor's house to bo pure
Queen Anne?because tney told me
so, and they had been so informed
by their architect. I am the more
inclined to believe that that front
was Queen Anne because nowadays,
any style, whether imitated in bodsteads,
sideboards or booses, that
cannot be otherwise accounted for,
is known by the merest tyro?to say
nothing of toadies?to be Queen
Anne.
For years and years my neighbors
had lived, wholesomely, happily
and comfortably, in one of those
big, bleak, angular and inartistic
residence*, with a gallery up stairs
and down, a hall ditto, a wing, in
which were located the servants'
rooms and cooking apartments.
There was not a room that was not
made sacred from its sweet associations
with the births, deaths, and
marriages that are the peaceful pro
gross and fate of every family. All
the rooms had their gentle ghosts, or
held like perfume in an incense
bowl the frncrrant iiietiiorins nf i??wrt._
0 -- """ '""H"
tor juul of tears. Hut the girls grew
up into young ladyhood, the lads
were in demand for germans and
opera parties, the stur ly father prospered
in business and the upshot of it
nil was that the old house was moved
back and lesthotie carpenters solderodon
to itngorgeous, gabled shingh d
anomaly that for purposes of identification
was referred to as (jueen
Anne. The new front was mighty
line. It held a library, u suite of
drawing-rooms, a reception room,
a music-foom, a dining-room, a
break fast .room, and a few accessories
in the way of cloakrooms and lavatories;
so much, in fact, tlmt it has
always been a wonder to me why the
architect did not also transmogrify
and foresooro the old original home
stead, instead of tacking it on as a
constant, plain, weatherboarded reminder
of days that are dead.
v~.u:?. '
iwuuii^ in i>ow v/neans was liner
than that Queen Anno front, and
often in the eool of the oven tig we
used to promenade down the street
just to admire its artistic facade
and study in our ignorance its intricate
curiosities of architecture, lint
as we walked home again we wore
invariably brought cheek by jowl, as
it were, with the plain, old, dear, and
tamilinr two story rear building and
somehow, as the result of a joke, wo
fell into the way of calling it the
house with the Queen Anno front
and Mary Anne hack
Hut it took me a long while to
got used to the incongruity. 1 did
got lind it easy to adjust the Queen
Anno with the Mary Anne. As I
passed from the gabled, (esthetic
front v to tho plain,
weather-worn rear building now
joined on to Queen Anno by a sort
of mediaeval lancet windowed link, 1
could not but bo reminded of a corpse !
dressed only in front and who on
ressurrection day will be obliged to
persistently hack against the pearly
walls of the new Jerusalem in order
to hide its doficiencoa of costume for
which, poor thing, it is not all re
sponsible.
"'"detour
^ Am,. fr?nt .'u,'"Lg?T,,a
akin to that e.\pc?if(" ^ "'scomforfc
tlcinan who con.1!. "y the gen could
not live unlej?".l0<' 'hat ho
recently amputated f<y)? tofs of his
ly straightened out. Atoro proper-1
inembered limb was u net lie diswas
found out the toe realised, it
straightening! the member wJcd
seburied and the ex owner had
uioro trouble. And just so it seer
ed to me. I never couJd rest ea
in the enjoyment of m/ neighho
grandeur until that Mary Anno ha
was renovated to a proper accord ah
with the Queen Anne front.
I think i wasted a great deal
time over this architectural inc
gruity before it occurred to me t
a more serious fault, and a far n:
irremediable, is to be found in pe<
who are permanently afflicted i
a tort of mental and moral dispio
f,. 1
t'i v"' *
A
Jr
v - ?
J /v?=
tion that call bo explained by saying
they are closely alike to my neigh
bor s house with the Queen Anne
front and the Mary Anne back.
Who has not been amused to see
a swell carriage at the front door of
a swell residence, while an untidy,
broken swill barrel, a disgrace to
any neighborhood, stood at the
back?
Who has not seen the mistress in a
lace tea gown lolling on the porch
of the Queen Anne front, while the
slatternly unoared for poor relation
work in the ashes pint or the porch
Of the Mary Anne back?
Who has not seen the high art
young ladies in tennis gowns playing ,
011 the lawn before the Quoen Anno
front, while their ragged lingerie
flopped on the clothesline hohind the
dreary portals of the Mary Anne
hack.
Often \v?i have known the hired,
society hothouse llowers of the florist
to come in at the Queen Anne front
door, while the unpaid maker of hull
dresses, or the hungry beggar for a
slice of bread, went unrewarded from
the gato in the shadow of the Mary
Anne rear.
Who has not heard of the chick*
en salad and champagne punch reception
in the Queen Anno drawing!
riintn Kilt vi'lwi Iioofo I-" /w?i. ? I i
W?I1) UMV II IIV II v ( f? v/l I-IIV I v 1J Ui^lll 1
quHrrol in tho Marv Anne hod room,
or of the corn beef and yellow grits
repasts that follow the reception in
tho Mary Anno break fast-room.
I have heard of a Queen Anne
front and Mary Anne back sort of a
lady whose only tea gown is reserved
for reception duys, who only uses her
nice table linen when company comes
who even covers up her toilet ornaments
on all save her reception days, j
But I have nlso heard of the Queen
Anne front Christian who does all
his praying in church; the Queen
Anno front philanthropist who gi\os
only when the gift is certain to We J
published; of the Queen Anne clergyman
who only has time to he socially
intimate with rich parishion
ers, and of the Queen Anne social is1
who publishes a line equality and
practices a close exclusiveness and
who snobbishly will have nothing to
do with people who nvo not rich and
fashionu ulc.
Now and again there is put forth
by some sharp publisher a book of
the biographies of persons of the
Queen Anno front and Mary Anne
back turn of mind. Each individual
writes his own sketch, anonymously
of course, or if he does not he
gots some friend or relative to do the
slavering for him. The result is a
sonof romarkablo superlativos of
adulation. Not long since a lady
who writes exhibited to me a gushing,
biographical sketch of horsolf,
cut from a magazine ami pasted in a
scrapbook, bi\t which, unfortunately,
I knew sho had written herself.
Who has not hoard of that jovial,
beneficent employer who talks of
his employes as his "people," who
lores them so dearly in public, but
has it in for them for every small
fault they commit, and is certain, in
the end, in a sly, subtle way, to get
even with them; who sets a spy over
them and never forgives them if surprised
into any manifestation of in
dividuality or any expression of in
dependence
1 have known a preacher to talk
beautifully of the great loving heart
that shortkl make a man Christ-like,
and J have known the same preacher
to shut the door on a foolish,
friendless girl gone wrong. I have
known a philanthropist to spend six
weeks getting other people to give
money to a charity concern, yet send
a little child asking bread emptyhanded
from his gate. I have seen
% mtkkSn/iom 4/\ t l?o 1? C ... !..! 1
?? j V\J mv UUU1II Ot'U 1CJIJU1U
era Urnw her petticoats a.vuy from
the clean, guinea-blue gown of an
old mammy, hobbling in one of our
street cars. 1 have seen a rich toady
whose carriage was at the daily disposal
of hor rich minister's wife, re
fine 5 cents to an old woman who
wantoit it to go to the poorhouse.
On to the plain, mouost,every daylooking
Mary Anno structures of
daily life, how many people aro there
who build Queen Anne fronts of
stucco and Swiss shingles, in which
to house sham fashion, sham elegance,
sham tastes, sham philauhropties,
sham virtues and sham enterprises.
Of these the foremost are the peo j
plo who scrimp, save and contrive to
get away for the summor, not into
the woods, nor on the sands where
the salt waters are, but away any
whore, to some fashionable hotel,
full ( f the two types of society, the !
truly fashionable and rich, and tkol
people who wish to he thought truly
fashionable and rich. The old,1
grinding life ut home, lived patient- j
ly for the sake of this annual outing, I
i? forgotten; they arc now in oecupjiney
of the Queen Anne front. All
is dark niul lightd are out in that
Mary Anne back whore tho ball
dresses were dyed, tho bonnets made
over, the servants stood off and the
bills disputed.
Mrs. Tomshoddy, who goes away
for the summer, refers to her maiu,
her housegirl, her dining-room servant
and her cook, but forgets to explain
that all these are comprised in
the one sad little slattern who sleeps
in a closet and really does the work
n f five.
7 Krs. llillyer intimately discusses
r M W'lends, the Flats, who share oxck
uues^ith her at home, and no one
ice 11 kos biwas her way of saying she
N"ow tljXJTH.
I of 1 "Ho front \lv harm in the Queen
on-people w/j,Mary Anne back is
hut!1' incongruity \gh at the appariorti|
this combination ^hat the owner
ophfhawed of tj,e ,/jJkely to grow
ititfends, ,v(l08(: ?' si(lc. My
V?f " ut ncvcT, TL Vn"P'rRI
"noy to
11?
^THTRY II K ll AI
say, becutno disloyal to tho old roof.
The mother in the family used to
say: "The old house?big plain
and easy going, is what we were;
the now part?tine frescoed and all
style and artificial manners, is what
wo arc."
In fact, I havo known whole cities
to live .vith a view to keeping the
best foot forward. The front streets
were cleaned; n isitors were allowed
to see only tho show;, places. A
great bluster was made of enterprise
| hospitality and energy. But when
| visitors came they had to pay double
| price; immigrant > were systematical
I ly crowded out; old grudges were
\isited on innoccu' heads; at the
first hint or :i hotel, a railroad, a factory,
property wa run up to absurdly
fictit ouN values; in fact, the co/.v,
e.oinfortnbln iitiiimu'mc* o !????.? a
_ - r? ?"\III1U
fiont was all for show, ami mi ugly
human conllict still festered in the
angular halls of tin* old hnlf-fuined
Mary Anno hack, in which the
town's morals and tho town's real
character were contained.
In modern American life everything
tends to the facade. It is
raised high over the ro >f?a |> re to use
of factory carvinc mul
--
glueing (hut a good strong wind can
easily blow down, 1 nde.r its shadow
inav be sickliness poverty grimy
dingy rooms. The white marble carIriage
stej) docs not always announce
a clean kitchen. The clean swept
sward on the front street does not
always moan that the alley-way is
is elear of broken bottles or that the
neighbors in t he side streets have to
complain of everyday untidiness.
A direeloire gown has hcen known
to drapid over a ragged or soiled
petticoat. Let us for t ruth's sake j
lie true to ourselves, and when wo
httild t,tue 'n Anne fronts remove
that suspicion of imitation fineness!
that is inevitably suggested by the
Mary Anno 1?:\ k, .
liie Rest (!urg
No matter what von complain of
the effects of the grip, chronic!
dyspepsia, nervous prostration?tiny I
ill that flesh is heir to somebody
is sure to ask if 3on bave tried the
"rest Cure." It happens tube the
fml of many fashionable New Vork
physicians at*the time of writing,
just as a goodly number of them proscribed
the Salisbury treatment in- I
discriminate]y a year or t wo ago hot
water, raw beof and starvation. <
It was beguilingly put as "resting
the stomach." Sometimes after it
the stomach took an eternal rest, if
the patient had not robust health,
The rest euro is extremely fa.<hionable
just now. It is very cxpens've
to rest properly, tbougli \<>u may not;
think so. Some of the society girls!
here who are trying is have nothing
the matter with them; they only
want to till out hollows in their
checks and cover their collar bones j
with adipose tissue, and this I admit
. ... 1 1 * ? -
savs "lie who nas moil the euro, the
"treatment almost invariably accomplishes.
'I' lie merely nervous
"run-uowii" patient who tries the
rest cure is j)iit preferably in it room
containing vory few adornments. A
trained nurse is a matter of a course.
She is not suite red to con verse much
with the patient, hut she gives mas- j
sage and electricity under tho doctor's
instructions at regular intervals, i
Tho patient is direct' d to lie as still
as possible, hardly to raise the head
above tho pillow, the idea being to
save the slightest expenditure of
strength, while the circulation which
would otherwise suffer from lack of
exercise is kept in perfect order bv
regular massage. No news from the
outer would, not a hint, is permitted
near the charmed chamber. The m
I
tient k?c8 ik? one except i ho nurse
and physician; site is told to think as
little tis possible and she gels nothing j
except, milk and malt for several i
weeks. She develops a ravenous
appetite long before that time and
consumes milk by the gallon whether
She has attested it before or not;
she becomes a more sleeping and
eating animal for the time being.
If she does not emerge a driveling
idiot, she comes out with a radiant
complexion and twenty or thirty
pounds stouter than when she went
in, and with steadied and quieted
nerves. 1 hero tyre some natures that
1 should think the monotony would
drive to in anity. A curious feature of
the rest cure, with its weeks of milk
diet, is that it is slid to eradicate any
previously formed gustatory preferences
one may have had. Like a
child, all things to cat are an experi- :
meat. What you liked before you
may dislike now or vice versa.
The daughter of a celebrated divine
who is a living testimonial of what
this peculiar new medical fad can
accomplish in the way of good results
and who is a very clever young,
wmnnn >.? - 11 ' 1
............ bwtvi 11 m iiiivi in ihp mini j
week of treatmunt her doctor, as a
joke, sent in u rag doll, because she i
complainod so bitterly of having
"nothing to look at." "There never
was a c hild on earth," she declnred,
"who was inado so perfectly happy
by a gift of a doll as I was by that
rag baby. It was the grouted comfort
to me, and I was reduced to
such a state of artificial babyhood
that it was as much a satisfaction to
have that doll on the pillow by me as
if I were only four years old, I
should have liked a Noah's ark," she
addod pensively, "but the doctor
thought all the animals would be too
exciting."
Absurd as it may sound in the
telling, the rest cure is really, with
some temperaments, a remarkable
success. The utter absence of care
or need for though: is a relaxation
invaluable for over strained nerves.
It is the nineteenth contury remedy
for the nineteenth contury disease, j
too much nervous strain and tension.
I
jD7 TH U JLISD A'
In the days of stago coaches they did
not need ''rest cures."
Under the direction of a wise phy
sician, perhaps no better recuperative
measure has been devised for the exhausted
brain worker or overdauced
society belle. And then as I observed,
it is so fashionable.
As you lie motionless, storing at
the ceiling, with your trained nurse
near whom yon are paving from
eleven dollars a week t j watch you
re<t?if you must occasionally permit
your mind, which should boas nearly
a vacuum as possible, t.> conceive a
thought let it, bo the soothing one
that you are doing absolutely the
correct tiling, the proper and approved
thing. It you are not worn
out by the winter's social strain or
* 1 ? ? ^? "
imc moors of your mind, you ought
to be, and you arc laying up for
yourself treasures of reservi strength
a renovated complexion ami enchant*
ing added roundness to figure, ^o
rueditato on these sweet thoughts as
you follow (iothams latest fad, in (
stead of your doctor's prospective i
hill, and be happy.
Heavy shipments of black walnut
are being made from Indiana, Ohio
and other western states for Knglund. 1
Agents are scattered all through the
country buying up walnut lands, and :
the price has risen to such figures ;u i
to astonish people who have not stud- j
icd the matter. One farmer in Indiana
worked incessantly for eight
years to clear away the walnut trees .
on his farm, and lie burned tip more
than eighty acres of the finest kind
of timber. His farm, after thirty i
| yearn of cultivation, could v.ot he i
sold for more l inn *s,00t). If it had
its walnut trees hack it would be
worth more than $100,000. This
farmer was an old settler in the
state, and only one among hundreds
of others who for more than fifty
years girdled and cut and burned the
great forests thev found occupying
the land. The Kugish company will
send t<? Knglaml probably 000,000
it? .if ? 1
nwitu " mtuiiii iiiiii 1.1luv nave. pur
chased from Li 10 farmers at almost
nominal prices. Northeast Georgia
is full of i his timber. It would be
well for I bo farmers there to take a
hsson from this.
ADVET1SEMENTS.
FAVORITE "
WE PAT TIIE^f | M fi |7f T> 7
rnEiuiiT. olirjl'illl
Warranted for Flvo Years.
HIGH ARM
O 3ST Hj "ST ^
Drop Loaf.Fancy Covor, Largo Drawers
Nickel Bings, Tackor, Baffler, Binder
Foar Widths of Ucmmors.
HIGH ARM MACHINE HAS A SELF-SETTINU NEEDLE,
AND SELF-THREADING SHUTTLE.
Sent on trial Delivered in your home free of
freight charges, liuy only of Manufacturers.
Save Canvassers' Commissions. GET NEW
MACHINES. Send for n Machine with
name of n business man as reference, and we
will ship a trial Machine at oncc. Address for
Circulars and Testimonials.
Co-OpefBtiVe $elwing Machine Go.
800 N. llth St., Philadelphia, Pa. )
Dli. 15. NORTON,
IF Y< ?U WANT A PUKE AKTI^LK
CALL
a.\i> ?ut rmo, ion in::
ui:i:i?.?i i:vi:itvnnA<; 1
IMNAKV R> S IIA
Jlesides Drills for Compounding
Proscipl ions the
also lias on hand a lull
.line of Pharmaceuticals j
and Patent Medicines.
KomHimcft you need a good Comb and
(Irtish, or something in the Soap lino,
rl\>i lot., IVI itn 1
21 lid Sliiiviiiti'
A good Tooth Ilrnsh or some One porfumory.
Ills Drug Store is 'he place to
| go and got thorn.
If you want some of the best kerosene
oil in town, or any dye stub's, call on him.
PICNS, PKNSTAFFS, PKNCILN
FANCY Oil PLAIN, WHITING;
PA I'Kll, AND GOOD INK CAN j
ALL lift FOUND TIIKRK, AXLK
ORKASK, IIORSK ANDCATTLK,
POWDKU-fl.
Physicians' Proscriptions Compounded,
with ( are. .
K. NORTON.
* . yT A . VW'\. t.j - '
Y JULY 21, 181
?Nature should be
RK9R9I assisted to throw
PblWHil off Impurities of the
! CURES NothlUf
Ull ADIAI doe8 11 * WeU> w
MALARIAL promptly, or so
POISON safelj u Bwift's j
Specific.
LIFE HAD NO CHARMS.
For three years I was troubled with mala* |
rial poison, which caused my appetite to (ail, j
and 1 was greatly reduced in flesh, and life
lost all its charms. 1 tried mercurial and
potash remedies, but to no effect. I could 1
get no relief. I then decided to try I5EKB
A few bottles of this wonderful KSsmSSI
medicine made a complete and permanent
! cure, and I now enjoy better health than ever.
J. A. Kick, Ottawa, Kan.
Our book on Blood and Skin Disoasea
mailod froo.
Swift Spkcifio Co., Atlanta, Ga. ;
j ? . I
Atlantic Coast Line.
Wilmington, Columbia & Augusta it- R
<'OIMIciinv(I N?*lie<l? !?.
Dated Jan. 4, 1802.
TRAINS GOING SOUTH.
No. 28.
I.<-uv<* Wilmington .. 0 25 p m?
Leave ( lindhourn 8 21 pin
Leave Marion II 8-1 p ill
Arrive Florence 0 10 p ui
No. 27.
Leave Wilmington 10 10 p in
" Chadbourn i
Mario* 12 40 a in |
Ai'-'ve Florence 1 20 a in
No. 50.
bea\* Florence 8 20am
Arrive Sumter <1 35 a m
i,eave ouinter ? a m
Arrive Columbia 0 15 a in
N<?. 58.
Leave Florence 7 40 a in
Arrive Sumter if 00 a id
No. 5a.
Leave Sumter 8 40 a m
Arrive Colombia 0 50 a m
No. 52 runs through from Charleston
via ('entral Railroad.
Leaving Lanes 7:45 A. M Manning 8:M
A. M.
Train on C.fc 1). Railroad connects at
Florence with No 58.
TRAINS GOING NORTH.
No. 51.
Leave Columbia 10 45 ) m
Arrive Smuter 12 04 a iu
Leave Sumter 12 04 am
Arrive Florence 1 15 a in
No. 59.
Leave Sumter 5 35 p in
Arrive Florence 7 00 p in
No. 53.
Leave Columbia 0 30 p m
Arrive Sumter 0 35 p in
No. 14.
Leave Florence 10 25 p m
M arion 11 02 p ill
" Cliadbourn 12 o t p m
Arrive Wilmington T a in
No 78.
Leave Florence 5 00 a in
Leave Viarion 5 40 am
Leave Cliadbourn 7 00 a in
Vrrive Wilininiiton 8 55 a m
"Daily, "f"I>ally except Sunday.
>o. 53 runs through to Cnarleston,S. C.,
vhT'Vntrul R. R., arriving Manning 10:39
P. M. Lanes 11:17 P. M, Charleston 12:50
; A. M.
No. 59 connects at Florence with C. and
I), train from Cheraw and Wndeaboro.
Nos. 78 and 11 make close connection
at Wilmington with W. te. W. it. R. for all
points north.
Train on Florence R. 11., Leave Pee Dee
Daily except Sunday 4:40 P. M., arrive
Rowland 7:00 P. M. Returning leav,
Rowland 0:30 A. M. arrive Pee Dee 8:50
A. AI.
Train on Manchester & Augusta H. II, I
loaves Humpter daily except Sunday 10:50,
A. M., arrrivo Himini 11:50 A. M. Returning
leave Himini 12:00 1'. M. arrive Sumptor
1:40 P. M.
J. P. DIVINE, (ten'l Supt.
I. H Ki.m.y, Supt. Trans,
T. M . E>iKKK) n, (ic i.'l 1 ??Agen
Supplement N<>- 2 to Charleston
& Columbia Division
Time Tflhle No. 9.
J u IIII it ry 4th, lh?9,
Schedule in effect trom ante.
Wilmington Chadbourn & Conway B- B,
l'ARbKNOKH AND KKKIOIIT DAII.Y, RXCKl'T
SUNDAY
. No as, northbound.
Leave eiiadbourn 7 15 a in
Leave I lion 7 45 a in
Arrive Hub 8 o0 a in
No 21, SOUTHBOUND,
Leave Huh 0 00 a in
I .cave I lion (1 15 a in
Arrive < .'hadbourn 0 45am
/.cave Chadbourn J 10 80 a in
Leave Clare idon 11 00 a in
Leave Mt J nburj 11 20 a in
Leave Loris). 11 45 pin
Leav SnnfordJ 12 02 p m
/.ouve llayboro 12 12 p in
Leave Prlvetts 12 12 p in
Leave Adrian 12 27 pm
Arrive Conway J 1 (HI pin
No 20, NORTHBOUND
I'ASSKNOKit ANI) KHKlOUl DAII.Y, tfCKl'T
RUN Da VS.
l /.,.vfA ... O -to .. ..
/.cave Adrian 8 00 p m
Leave l'rlvott9 * 8 06 i ni
Leave ilayboro 8 15 P m
Leave San ford A. 3 26 p m
Arrive at Loris 8 50 p m
Arrive at Mt. Tabor 4 25 P In
Leave Emerson P ,n
Leave Clarendon 4 50 p m
Arrive Chndbourn 5 20 p in
^Telegraph Stations.
Note- No. 21 wait at Hub until
No. 22 arrives.
Nos. 22, 21 and 20 will stop at all
stations for freight and passengers
?J, II* Kknley, General Manager
J. F* Divink, (len'l Superintendent'
K. IiouDKN, Sup't Transportation]
Jolm*on *. .lolinHon, I Jotinemi* A OiiHUlel.aum
.Marion, M. C. f (!on\vfty, H. O
JohnSenS ^ Quafefelcbaum I
ATTTONKYS AT LAW, '
Conway, 8. C. ;
JUT* Prompt attention given to all bus
ocas entrusted to our care. i
/ 1
)
! ROYAL 1
|SE?ING MACHINE |
?il I 11 III.I I I IMilHil I i:M I I I'I.WHHJIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHI?
Slllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllt^
_ uuKUirM High Arm.
rl Has a Heir net ting Needle. a
2 Hm n Self-threading shuttle,
a 11msNo Eoaal in Count runt Ion.
2 Um a Mechanical Apueumnc*.
? line aL Elegant Finish.
~ Hai a rerfect Adjustment.
? llaa a Positive Take-up.
2 Mas Stylish Furniture.
? lias More flood He\vli?y OuitlUlet* and ?
2 does a larger Range of Ouueial Work-;
- than any Sewlug Maohluo In tlio World. |
Examine THE ROYAL for polnta of 5
excellence, and you will ?
buy no other. ? |
I ROYAE S. M. CO., Rockford. III. f
Erf 1q
X \
MEN
, -~-i AND THl
1 /ft TITANIA
/^/7mlwn% *Th# Ouoen ol Fairies)
tllWKl' FOR IAI1IFS.
W, ?' X/ STRICTLY ,
\' :y -/l.;!, HIGHEST
rC : GRAPE
* DIAMOND FRAME !
^? ? ?M?
cushion and pncumatio
TIRES
Warranty With Every Wheel
SEND YOUR ADDRESS FOR CATALOGUE
ARIEL CYCLE MFG. CO.,"^"'
Kor Information and free Handbook write to
MUNN A CO.. 881 Bhoauw,.Y, Nkw YoniC.
Oldest bureau for socurlng patents In America.
Krory patent taken out by us Is brought before
tho public by a notice given f> eo of chur^e In the
Scientific JLtnmcan
i^areeat elrciiintion ??? ?'<% >?>?? ? * *
world. SpUmhHiIIv IMiiMratnl. No IXolH^ciU I
man ahoultl bo without It. Vcckly, tttt.OO n
lear; ?|.W) ?lx montli.H. A<ldr? -s MUNN A CO. i
(JULI8UKIH.96I urondway, Now i'ork. j
CACTEBiiE
ir^ ; it i
i NATURE'S
! CURE FOR >
i CATARRH
* > .
<| ?
ixYRAGT Iem Tagtus.
This new treatment for Catarrh and
4k? 1 1 !
iiiismc) ui viio lospiruiury organs is
one of the most important discoveries
in medical science and possesses the
following advantages i
li The patient can cure himself at a small expense
and without outside assistance.
2* No change of diet or pursuit of life Is necessary
during treatment.
, The remedies are In no wlso offensive to tho
fattent and entail no discomfort,
he remedy reaches the seat of the trouble
directly.
5. Tho romedles and means of appliance can be
carried In tho pocket without Inccnvcnlonoe.
VilliIS Til i:A TM ISST at any ilruy xh.ro.
CAOTERINF AND INSUFFLATOR, $2.00.
CCRRrSPONDF-NCli 8CLICITED.
Cacterlnc Medicine Co., Waco, Texas,
v SL 1
SPECIAL RUN No. 19.
GREATEST YAI.UE ON EAUTIIT.
Tyler', Kumona Aiitl<|iie OuU ICoii Cur*
tulu llcak comi.lrte, neo H|>?clnt circular*.
No. 4004,3 ft. 6 ill. Ions, net *16.00
No. 4009,4 ft. 6 in. 44 44 *21.00
No. 4010,5 ft. lonp, - - 44 *23.00
Also see new ISO page catalogue for
1802. Crent out of about 40 per cent from
former list. BOOKS FREE, postage lOo.
Shipped from St. Louit, Mo., or Indi*napolU, Ind,
BANK COUNTERS A 8PEC1AI.TY.
We refer to ever* Bank In Thirty States.
TYLER PE8K CO., St. Louia, Mo.
snag
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pnt?
cut biiHinoHs conducted for Moderate Fees.
Our Office is Opposite U. S. Patent Office,
nud wo can secure patent In Icbb time than thoflo
remote from Washington.
8cnd model, drawing or photo., with description.
Wo advise, if patentablo or not, free of
chargo, Our fco not duo till patent in secured.
A Pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents," with
names of actual clients in your State, county,or
town, ecnt free. Address, j (
C. A. SNOW & CO.
Opposlto Patent Offlco. Washlnoton. D. 0.
i
Aiwrle,Wis.,says: ?/b^. AfW.tm.
rhe accompanyI ng statement Wright wo \u m is. u itx <
>f my weight and measure- i?u,t ... uh. m in. 10I&. <
RenU will ahow the results of w*wu. at u. siin. in*. .
re months'treatment. Hip**., u h?. 40 to. it i*. ;
?ATIENT? TREATED BY MAIL CONFIDENTIAL
Ihwliw, m* with a* (Unlif, taeoavMlooc*, or b*4 tftota. '
tiKlM. uiHM IU. '
n /
gPLENDig
WE
DIREC'A' TO CONSUMERS.
ft wili ! *? y' i 11 gtt our prints *1 lnT?atl*Rf? tbl? mochln?
vhloh < "* ? Uu<* !. 'iLi.ui of ?*cry ocslroblo lm*
proTomeoi. i'liuplci, hiubl ctflcient mil p^rfvil tttichuotU
tr tn?df Cji . | o?d?nco Inritrd. WrlUil obmIo
THE PAHSGMS MFG. CO.
e&ro g.can ai VT..CHICAGO, ilu
Wash your face,
$8? Wash your hands,
ffep-'J Wash your head,
?MSL J>Wash your beard,
' { Wash babies heads,
wAwf Wash out stains,
r<JZ Wash away dandruff,
Wash away oimnles. V
Fr y^| Wash away freckles,
V/ash yourself with
KO-KO
T SyVf JELLY
Toilet Soap
For Pure White Skin.
tNU l?
" E. L. BALDWIN & CO.,
, /.? W 14 PA R K PLAC C,
DETROIT, MICH.
ACE.'ITS WANTED. SALARY OR COMMISSION.
SAMPLES MAILED FREE.
A GOOD SEAMSTRESS
HOUSEHOLD NECESSITY
'.NO A HOUSIHOLD NFCES9ITY IB
ONC OF OUR Nfc'W
SEAMSTRESS
SEWING MACHINE8.
NationalSewinsMachineCo.
w
UOOLIQOM TO
JUNC MANUFACTURING CO.
BELVIDERE, ILL.
Maaiitftcturm ( Flu* Faadlj Stwlag Machines.
Pure Cream-Tartar Powder
ENDORSED BY
PROF A. L. RIETZ, P. H, G,
of Medical Department Tiilnne Univernlty
of Doulftluna, wlio, utter a careful unnlyaifl,
prononnocH it a pure Cream Tartar J'owder,
ivlilcli he cheerfully lecointnomlN to tlio
public.
"The Southern Favorite"
Pure, Wholesome and Powerful.
You Want It. Ask Grocer For li
Gulf Mfg. Co.,
[roofing. i
> Metallic Woather Boarding, j!
| Complete Ceilings, ]!
l Corriinatful Sho?*lnn S
ion Roofing Paints, !|
Iron Roofing,;
Eave Trough*. Gutters and Spouting, (i
*#*> All forms? 7 Sheet Metal for Building1!
/ COMPLETE ANO READY \ !>
VTO APPLY WHEN 3HIPPEO./ >
weiwant"*^!
-an- .
AGENT
In IIiImtown? nn enovuetlo wovlcirmn to .?
? tnlca orders nutl A1TI.Y our mlitorikl* I
In tills vicinity. S
> CorrenpoiuUmoe noUclte<l| vrrlto for'*
l pvlco# nnit terms. (,
\ SCOTT & CO., Cincinnati, Ohio.\\
g ESTABLISHED 1B72. jl