The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, January 26, 1882, Image 4
mm
mW'
VMk rv Mi o(Ttf«r-T«w.
JTow r««r wkUkW »hi wiu tu*.
Tkw •round row »«ok Bail ku«:
•botorwrouT Wo, dwH ••prow-
r Biood if Tlptr-TOM.
UlBff* moro dwr,
with all tutr (Mr;
ooudB you m« of thaw
Quwu Tlpty-Tow.
T«t moot t*nd«r Ja«t it rru.
Whw ill playthlnf* ah* mutt lewt*.
Thm for Utti« raqXto ahowi
Artful heart of Tlpty-Tow
BUU by day and atiU by Llfht
I grow fonder of the iprlta;
Aad bar heart wbooror knowa
Ha Boat lore dear TlptjbToaa.
1-TlptjbT.
wn the yn
i and fe are
IF
Thinking of the bopaa ■
When the roferad la a roee
And bo Bora amall Tlpty-Tow
Hittp'f Mrtt BthooL
MehiUbe), or, *a *he wm familiarly
eaDad, Hiity ^laon, lived in ihe town
of Boaton.
"I Bay town, beoanse at the time of
which I am abont to write Boston had
sot been incorporated aa a city.
Bitty's father was accounted a man of
iaportanoe, having held for many years
the position of Selectman, and having a
voice in the affairs of the town. He
waa also a man of wealth, and could af
ford to pay the aom of " a shilling a
weak and two foot of wood " for the win-
tv, that hia large family of children
after the other, attend a
Oray'a
one day when Bitty waa abont 7
i old she waa entered aa a pupil in
aabool of Madam Gray. Madam
school waa bald in a large wood-
is Masked oo what waa then, as
• new, known aa North square,
time thta was the “ coart end "
town sad oae of the meat thickly
parts. At the back of the boose
wdeo, and waderneeth the kitcb-
waa a eellarvay or bulkhead,
yard aad caliar way bore aa
it part la the education at the
Chart to
Literature." Bat It tree not in books
alone that Bitty eoooasdad; from the
making at patchwork and the
of a handkerchief, she had passed to the
uklung of a shirt, and lor this latter had
received a prise of s needle-case. This
meant something, I assure yon, in thos#
days when every thread was counted in
the taking up of a stitch.
I dare say some of you would lika to
know if the good pupils received reward
cards in those days, and also how the
hty one# were punished. As to
ihments, I know little, ae Bitty
not often subjected to them. There
waa the standing upon a mark upon the
floor; and there was the being seated
between two boys, or the boy between
two girls. The rewards were many, bnt
not by cards. If 'me of the amall boys
iiad been good he might fish for bits of
paper on the floor with a bent pin and a
thread line; or the scholars all would
be allowed to go out and slide down the
cellar door-way. If vs^ good, the girls
misrht take their work into the kitchen :
and if very, very good, might go out ana
sit in the son; also, in special instances,
Madam Gray aomatimea gave her pupils
a piece of stick liooride l
Bitty remained at this school nntil
the waa 12 years old, when she waa
deemed fitted for school number two.—
Wide Awake.
A Bay Agmi*.
Sometimes an old man becomes a boy
again, though too smart to drop into hia
childhood. An illustration of
this pleasant tendency waa given, not
many months sinoa, by an old man with
veral mil Ik ns.
Ha waa in ths habit of prowling
around ths office of ths insurance com
pany in which he was a director. One
morning aa he was thus investigating, he
happened to some acroaa the dinner pail
of the office boy. Hia curiosity led him
lo take off the cover. A si toe of
made breed, two doughnuts and a pseoe
of apple pie tempted the millinuelre's
appetite. He became a boy again, and
the ilmn* 1 pail accrued the ooe he
eerrmd sixty years ago.
Beta
the boy, ukdigaanlly.
** Tae, auany, 1 aoepert it mey be
but li e • firat rate one tre all thet. I've
not eatee ao food a oma tor maty years. “
of nouns that in
is rather injurious,
people, especially, need oeffee, and they
fond of drinking it; for a similar
m It is a favorite beverage in the
Orient, where its consumption is im-
But to persons of an excitable
temperament the enjoyment of coffee is
hurtful; they ought only to taka it very
weak. With lively children it doea not
agree at all, and it is very wrong to
force them to drink it, aa is often done;
while elderly people, who are in need of
a atinmiant for the decreasing activity
of their nerves, are right in taking as
much of it as they fhoose.
In households of limited menus it is
often necessary to use succory with
coffee. We do pot pretend to pro-
Dounce this, if taken in moderate quan
tity, hurtful; br.t we do say tint, it in a
poor substitute for coffee, and that there
is nothing in it to recommend iu use. A
far better mixture is milk aud sugar
and there is good reason for it'f both
milk and sugar are articles of food.
Milk contains the same ingredients as
blood; and sugar is changed in the
body into fat, which It indispensable to
us, especially in the process of breath
ing. Having taken no food through the
Bight, the lorn our blood haa buffered
during sleep by perspiration and the
fat which haa been lost by respiration
must be compensated for in the morn
ing. For this milk and sugar in coffee
are excellent.
It is good for children to liave s taste
for sweetened milk or milk-coffee iu the
morning. We roust not find fault with
•l horrible daath, I
wWiesd this •
« ln«o
IV It* BAHmr tf the
Sis:—My aaUvaa for Ika pabtlealtoa of tha ttnei
whtot^oUow •••,•*»«, tru
ths* I hart baas mvad from s
by vUebthay hsva«rar
__ 'll li start that to-dar thounanj*
of paopla art vltbla a foot of tbo graro and tbay
lo not know H. To toll how I waa caught away
from )uat thta pnahloa aad to warn other* asalnat
ocarina It, ara my oblccta la tbl* communication.
On tan drat day ol June, ISM, I lay at mr red-
deuce la this city •urn uodM by my friends aad
waiting for death. Heaven only knows the h 0 *?
I then endured, for word* can never deecrife It.
Aud yet, If a few years previous any one had told
me that I waa to be brought *o low, and by to ter
rible a disease, I should hare scoffed at the Idea. I
had -always been uncommonly strong and healthy,
had weighed over 300 pounds and hardly knew, In
my own. axpsrienoe, what pain or slckhees were.
Very many people who will read (Ala statement
realise at times that they are unusually tired and
cannot account for It. They feel dnll and Indeffnlte
pains In various part* of the body and do not un
dors land it. Or they are exceedingly hungry on<
day and enUrely without appetite the next. Thb
was just the way I felt when the relentless malady
which had fattened lleelf upon me (ret began. Still
I thought It was nothing; that probably I had
taken a cold which wonld soon pam away. Shortlyt
after this I noticed a dull, and at times neuralgic,
pain in my head, bnt as It would come one day and
tie gone the next, I paid but little attention to It.
them if t r
*1 it.
quicker,
fnoiliUte
their Ixxl
Not that
sugnr
frum the
For this
very wme-
g»r ; they
s must )>e
'tiger, to
fund in
te growth.
but the
is formed
teu food.
s appom
hi. With
therefore,
red at the
w. are the
hdd with
*m. m
m 7
m Grey wwa tall and atatafy ta
m4 he Bitty • ahthimh ayw ao
hke am sM lady, bet that was uo
1m te part te her atyle at drama,
i «f Weak Nrhamaae fitted ri me
karchief
whUa ha*
_i<d the aaaae
U held la ptern by a Wk nhbom
I armend the fame* at the heed
ea«d aS the top. the eoda left
I wiah I aould drew to* you ha*
« she sat by the fireplace ta a
On tha flow, by her aide, were two
Mteflam hornet, ome oomtainiog the books
<d Ihe boys and girls, and the other the
•f the fir la, beth books and
placed there at the cloee at
ohfcj.
Tbeee lap-bags were sprout made in
ol bags, and usually oon^pincd
H handkerchief to ba
or s shirt to be made.
A girl In early Boaton times was con-
ridared a mere dunce who was not
■kilHul with her needle. Upon the side
ol tha bag waa stitched a piece of cloth
■oma two teohaa wide by six inches in
kogih; this waa divided by rows of
stitching, and into each of these divis-
iom a shah) at thread was drawn and
««t; lor this waa before the days of
BMQl-cotfcxi.
Hitty was furnished with a lap-bag,
thnad, needle, thimble and several
sqmases at bright eeHoo for patch-work.
Bha waa also provided with a copy of
tha " New England Primer.” This was
• book about half an inch thick, six or
seven inches broad and nina or ten long,
printed on paper not much lighter or
Anar than common brown wrapping-
paper. Dte ooven were of ooaree bine
paper.
Hitty could aeon say the alphabet,
which waa impressed upon her mind by
tbe small pictures at the margin of the
y uUm* they have had te ■ iK, mremy
at
read y I
which aiiil
are daily
Tha '
ad to .
ban tad with
prufll, or thoaa whuaa
ftf'-ua to that of man. la tha struggla
thay are oaliad a poo to sustain for thaar
susteoea thay labor under tha special
disadvantages, aa compared with i
animals, that they require more shun-
supplies of food, and that their
reproductive powers are greatly inferior.
The great flash eaten are already fast
disappearing before the bullets of ambi
tious lion and tiger huutere ; the whalea
and other great mammalia are becoming
eoaroe; the largeet of the deer family,
the elan, is lees widely distributed than
formerly; the largest of wild cattle, the
aurooka, which once ranged over the
whole of Europe, is now only found in
the forests of Lithuania and Moldavia;
the bison no longer covers the prairie
with boundless herds; the great arma
dillo is disappearing from South Ameri
ca. and the kangaroo from Australia. ' w
A powdkh known as streupulver, com
posed of three parts salicylic acid and
eighty-seven parts of magnesia, is used
fa the German army aa a remedy tor
sweating of the feet A Belgian physi
cian, Dr. Kohnhom, tried its efficiency
fa several cases of night sweating by
consumptives. The beneficial effect
immediate and permanent The
powder wea rubbed over the whole body.
To prevent any breathing at tha dust
and consequent coughing a handker
chief most be bald over the patient’s
mouth and noaa while the powder te
being applied.
'**, suf"
lisa dte-
a fa
MssUr* Aa
fire aa a
a aaal by
an, who
mtie asy-
rvliag a
obby, are
the luna-
y-boreu."
I tha <loo-
a bobby-
•ea ; but
. can't"
Iu IMf the War of the Rebellion
broke out “d fa 1871 occurred the
great fires at Boaton and Chicago. The
year 1881 is crammed full of startling
events.
Houses B. Dior, Esq., associate ed
itor of the Delaware Co. Republican,
Chester, Pa, waa cured by 8t Jacobs
Oil of very severe injuries resulting from
a fall. Elis arm appeared to be para
lysed, but the Oil cured him.—Phila-
Iphia Ledger.
goo* the next, I paid
However, mr stomach was out
of order and mr
food often tailed to digest, causing at times great
fet I had ao idea, even ae a phy
sician, that these things meant anything eerious or
i disease was becoming fixed upon
ulug fixed
suffering
from
color
Inconvenience. Yet ]
stclau, that these
that a monstrous
me. Uftnaiaiy, 1 tnougnt
Malaria, and ao doctored m;
I got no better. I next noUced a peculiar)
and odor about the fluids I waa paastna—also
there were large quantities one day and very I
the next, and that a persistent froth and ■»
peered upon the surface, and a sediment eetl
the bottom Aod yet I did not realise my danger,
for, Indeed, seeing these symptoms eontfnually, I
finally became accustomed to them, and my suspi
cion was wholly disarmed by the fact that I had no
polo In the aflbeted organs or In their Tietalty.
Why I should have been to blind I cannot under
stand.
hia
r little
1 scum sp
illed In
■yself to aveaeome It
I eonanllad tha tert
And, Oh I how hard 1 tried I
Heal akUl to tha land. I
visited all Dm prominent mineral springs In A
lea and traveled from Maine to Oaltforala. Still I
new won*. No two physician* agreed aa to my
On* eald 1 waa trow toed with spinal torl-
’, nervous prostration
. /SXCj
ol toe bvala , aa
I really taffTT'
during all
111/ * telBIMIMF,
and so on through a long list
‘ all ofwnlch
during all eg which time 1 ww sUmdUy gvowtag
worn. My aandtltaa had rntly became piiletoe
The slight eywipiesw- I at tm axperlanmd were
davelepsil Into tostthie and constant dleeedsei ths
Uuia twig* <A pnto had grown la oaks eg aguny. My
weight had bora »edneed from W7 ta IH peoads
My ill* waa a lartaea leasyetoi and frtonde. I rooU
retain ae le^ epoa my atomneh. and Urod wholly
by lajeeltana “wma Uvtng memi patn. My
pwlee WW a neon Walla toe la my corny 1 fro-
iKsyrjvs.'siKrSsra
111*1* er as afihet to dmdmlag the pan I r elt
dips and Bights I ted the dmlh proee.query kto-
roajatoally. My wrla* ww Sited wliA tab*
k
out of its
ftejs
Tbn bted by acMsdsat fefi
fate tk«
jwrd, aud as quick M thought the cook
uiudfi n rush far thfi littl# songster, sad
awullowwd it whoU, f—thore sud all. -
NMIce.
From th« 10th of October. 1881,
the 1st of July, 1882, genuine Rock
9phiko Watrs will be supplied U cus
tomers by Ellis k Oo., of Bailey Bpcings,
Alt., at the following rates:
Ten gallons In anti-corrosive can. .$6.00
Same ^tn refilled at ; — 4.00
Five gallons fa anti-corrosive can.. 8.25
Same can refilled at.'.... 2.50
Nine gallons in glass bottles 7.50
Reasonable freight and express rates
are given by all railroads. Tins water
has been known for nearly fifty years
as a sure cure for Dyspepsia, a sure cure
for diseases of the Kidney and Bladder,
a sure cure for all curable cases of
Droney, a sure cure for Scrofulous cases
of the Bones or Skin, and a certain de
stroyer of the terrible thirst for intoxi
cating drink that overcomes so many
worthy resolutions. Deprive a drunk
ard -of his dram for three days and
meanwhile give him plentv of Rock
Spring Water, and he won r t want the
whisky. Don’t you think it’s worth
* jT Tf y.m Aft, Hvnp a pnafal te
lis A Co. It will cost only a cent.
At Edgerton, Mo., last September,
Nathan Andrews wm murdered by Olay
Suell, since which date five members of
the latter’s family have died, three of
them from shame and grief.
WmTWiiU ■mya* WrtssL
Ths Foltete Balt Ox, Marshall, Mich., will
rowd their Xlacfire-Volta lo Baits aod other
Ktootris Appltonoaa on trial for thirty day* to
any parson aOiotod with Nervous Debility,
Late vitality, aad kindred troubles, gnarantew-
tnx cniu plots rate oration of vigor and manhood.
AJdremse above witboht ie-tv
t. A—Ho risk Is toaoxtad, as thirty days'
teal la altowaA
" I pasrxa lighter litermtnra.'said the
goaty mau when Woroenter's Unabridged
ell on bis toes.
Knnrrr-WoBT will ewe kidney sad liver dto-
YAQH’mSTO.
manly
end rottory
Ing pleat
ssiatewek
at tha mtmt
•grvrable.t.
yai tiling
Thr ovrntr
uf III) ) *• P
la cmm who
gntbora the
chief com
fort. as be
■alia hi*
omfl for the
axettommst
of the »aev,
or for the
ganuine en
joyment of
guiding hht
beautl ful
vowel over
the water.
Those who
have the
care, man
age m e nt
and work
ing of a
yacht dwell
almost upon
the water.
As a class,
they are
quiet, sober,
careful .skil
ful men, but
their life of
exposure to
the elements Is productive of much rheumatism
among them, and they suffer considerably from
pains, Ihe result of cold, bruises, sprains, Ac.
St. Jacobs On, is a favorite remedy with they
men, because of the splendid service it render*
them. Captain Schmidt, of Tompkinsville,
Staten Island, N. Y., says that he has been a
great sufferer from rheumatism for many years.
He had severe rheumatic pains In nearly every
posUonaf hia body, ami Sunk red sothsCkt times
he would be entirely unable to awend to active
business. He said: “ I am quite well now, how
ever, and. as you see, I am able to work without
any trouble. I attribute my recovery entirely to
St. Jacobs Oil, for I felt better as soon as 1 com
menced to use tbat remedy: and whenever I feel
anything lika rheumatism coming on, I mb the
place with the On., and It always doea what Is
claimed for it. finding Sr. Jacob* On. did me so
much good, I got piy family to uae It whenever
they had any paiu* or colds, and It has done coed
in every ca*e when they have tried it. I can
say that 8r. Jacobs Oil Is a mighty good rheu
ms tie remedy, and Mont intend to he without tt.“
This experleuce Is such as has been < nfenfi not
ouly by yachtsmen and others, who follow the
water, out by people In every walk of life and
variety of pursuit the whole world over.
iSSSKfr
KIDNEY-WOR
HE GREAT CURE
“ ft B
RHEUMATISM
An tl la foe all lisssaro to Ite KlgWlVfi,
UVBH AMO »OWtLfi.
It alaaaaaa toe agaiam aff tea aated »•*■*?
tost scnccc use iasatftsl enteriaf whlok
mlr Ik* vtoUam of Sli eoiesi— mm ■■site,
THOUSANDS OF CASES
of too worst forms ot tola ******* <
have taro quioklj roUerod. to a •
- PERFECTLY CURED.
KIDNEY WORTv
tee te* wcofierfol success, aod aa toil
**1* in every peri of tbe Country. In
drede of oases It bee cured where *11 also tefi
foiled. IU* mild, but efflolent, CRKTAUf
IN IT* ACTION, but baratlero in atl ooom
txrlt rleauae., *tre«etUrui aad alveeNaw
IJfo to all tha important orsaosof too bod*-
The natural action of the Kidney* Is reetoaed-
The liver 1a eleeneed of *11 dieeeae. and top
Bowels mo re froel y and lieallhrully. In tola
way the wont diseases are eradicated
tbo *yitem.
i An It haa been peeved by
KIDNEY-WORT
la tha moat effectual remedy for oleanato* the
system of all morbid aeareUoua. X* afoontfite
used In every household as •
SPRING MEDICIIJHE.
Always cures BI I.IOUS.N MS. A ONBTTyA.
TION. PILBS and all TTTJCAIJi »!■■■—
Is pot up in Ury Vegetabie rorm, lo tin ctofo
one package of wtilch mate Conor** medlctoe.
Also in Ltoald Ferfo.' cry < •■or.trated for
the cnnTrnlcii— —u.roanntiroddT pro- n
pasaU. UaMtmlAt}uju tfrcieue* t* cUkfr/orm.
err irorTODu nuccGT.vr. nuca, •*.*•
VTKliLS, B1CIUKBSON ACo., Pr*p%
(Will send the dry poa-neto.l tfllLIXCTOaT
KIDNEY-WORT-
\\T A’.yntT) M g«rIs 1 nw«4l wB«*a | pay weekly.
VY L.lariat. atowSfir wark nfvam. U' to mode *•
htkgn^. Work cteHM fWr find dpIlYpred
Kmiui»c: «•, i«7 »Mtfc itCwe m
^1
/ I
N
120 English Needles
, Aoor.^ U.
•yro drilled sad burni.hed, will sol cal toe thread,
tomplr packace by mail. Mr. | X petoteto, Me. Tea
eon •nahe money with the■«. t ircnlonef UwarodePro*.
AOKICTH WABTXO. Now
1 M'l’drtfo, n* Pur)land at., »qeteo.
Tn Pretedcnt'n oalj brotlMr, a pay
mnater in tha anuy. will ha attechad to I
Gan. Hancock's ataff
Lraaa E. Ilaaasa a VtoteaUa t 'lrogiaa* i
to etrwngtb and »nkiieae to
JflPIMMF* A NO*
n WITCHES FHEE!
B.wf weea *■*'4 fotro* B
tea ew.» wnk V foa
imeo W Itone a to am
« •• o mnm « rt
BittcoS Eosneerns News.
^ s w* rtoauirM Ttototea ■Oh»rt"
THE OmctAL IMTORY OF THE
CUITEAU TRIAL
teetrtjsvs
Diary Free
«IU e*d FACT0KT SUPPUkJ
OF ALL imm KLTUie. Most
aod PACSIAA DILI. PUMPS ALL
AIN0VM0M Firf FlllMIt) WIU
60001 STEAM SAUfES. fROlti
uOvtHSOffS. ite
«. M. WLIIN6MAM ft CO.
MJ M«te ttekrt. 10WSVILLI. KV.
Ike enUre toad as a yr* miroag and lecturer, will
arouse Ik* rorprtoe and paadkto eatmeatty ot tka
medical f mfratoan and aatoatok aU wtU vrtem I
am ac.iu.inud. bat I make tka foregtoag toato-
U teaafi
Damkl Drkw, the great Wall street
speculator, waa fa hte early life a cattle
drover, at tha princely salary of 75 oeuta
per day, and drove himself into a
position where ha "rounded up” an
income of not leea than $25,000,000 per
innnm,
A representative of the Lynn (Maaa.),
Rem, in a late ramble throughout that
city, gathered, among other scrape ot
im tercet and information the following;
The first place visited by the reporter
waa the frnit store of Mr. J.. Lovett, No.
67 Market street, fa response to a rumor
that the proprietor had been cored of
the rheumatism by the great remedy.
Mr. Leavstt not being fa, the reporter
had a talk with hte sou. Mr. Lovett
stated that hte father had been cored of
rheumatism
by the St. Jacobs Oil. Qe had the dte-
Hifferrro each ae I •**. la aa ampto
me to take Ike atop I k*v*. and If I can ancceaafully
hen from the dangerous path to which I
alked, 1 am will tag to endure nil profee-
donal and pertosal consequence*.
J. B. UKNION, M. D.
Roomer**, X. Y., Dec. SO, 1SSJ.
" Papa, how do editors get in free at
all the shows?” "Well, sonny, as a
general rule they give $25 worth of ad
vertising for a 25-cent ticket”
Dr. R. Y. Pikbcs, Buffalo, N. I.: Dear Sir—
1 was siok tor six years, and could scarcely walk
about the bouse. My breath was short and I
suffered from pain in my breast end stomach
all the time; also from palpitation and an in
ternal fever, er burning sensation, and experi
enced frequant smothering or choking sensa
tions. I also suffered from pain low down
aeroas my bowel* and in my bank, and waa
much reduced ‘ “
I have used your
and
Prescription,’’ and feel that I am well.
1 Golden Medical Discovery” and "Favorite
ihat I a
Very respectfully,
DELILAH B. McMILLAN, Arlington, (H.
A Dslawabx man served for five years
fa prison before he eonclnded to estab-
liah hte fanooenoe of the crime. He
didn’t want to rush things.
Ter weak lungs, spitting of blood, shortness
of breath, consumption, night sweats, and all
lingering coughs. Dr. Pieroe’a “Golden Medi
cal Discovery’ is a sovereiga remedy. Su
perior to cad liver oil Bv drurrieU.
i STiHDiEDBEIED?
IN MANY HOMES.
ffw fwagfoo, Oetote Craeip. KcronefolUe aa* an
«tker sSaeiioa* ot tto Threat as* XCKtoB, IPetaafo
aanroie* in* .Uerly tojoe* all eaaapebUro. *• •*
IN CONSUMPTIVE CASES
_> appv aaekaa *• sees OSaetoSs ttel 11 SlaeSy-Sve ^ oat
•eat. ora permaeaailr ewe*, where the *u»cnoe* are
etrietly oeaptle* wltk. Ttor* k aeetoateol er ake. to-
tlrirtlj eeaetle* with. There la ae)
gredleau lehana the feeag tr *U.
te in ii ■ ■
fit M EXPECTORANT IT NAS M EfiUAL.
. IT CONTAINS NO OPIUM IN ANT FOAM
J. N. HARRIS fit OO., Froprlatora,
CEXCEXXATE. •-
VQR SALE IT~*U. 0RUG6ISTS.
OP IJ M U"
Y0UN6 MEN SflSStJCJZX'Jil'?
mom. lifoii. v.LAWTlxa MKja.. Wa
m to wo ’zjzszz, ^r.
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Payne's Automatic Engines.
GUNS ^TaT^:
TM* Rkllnr Haw Machine emteff a •
Sju* tog to a m Inn tee, on* wsmalr* the
beet and cheapest tket to mete We
will not be undersold If we knew
it We went thr
address of every
one who Intends te
cut log*, wood or
tie*. The person tending us such names can bay
our machine at wholesale price. Circular free.
United Btato* Manfg Co., Washington, D- C-.
Farmers, Planters, I Stock Feeders
Will Save Noaay by Ortofiteg their awn Yeefi.
Thx Cblebbated
Tins. Bradford Portille
FOR CORN, WHEAT, JtNO
STOCK FEED.
AIM Leather,Chim Belt
ing, Bolting Cloth, ete.
Write for detoriptlve
circular and Price List.
THOL BRADFORD I CO.
at too*wee* Wrote, fHtomtnnooM, Ohim.
PuMleher** Cnlao, Atlanta. Q« —Three.-'>l‘
Wkfrmtil
-twU iSKU'fTjpiTcK
tore toes ael*. Irk to dntoeresal
«—u trotasetob. teeyrtetletbto. V*
rito M trv ea Tkeeaefo to reerv r**e. ete foaet a*
ae ike slew aManyefilatoflar etna. Ce> tale
set, ae4 etoe rmm e Mm* aee* eSevtae Metkle* to
to* u *a*nM aeoJEarro e Oro S, VSM At^ateees.m