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It wm ^ momM Utf Um Is era* brali-U- common la Um «*!*, or ratlmr the not urltif of frutU for winter am. The mine of froU UuU Is lo* emry and depend mostly on luckto keep ns la “ wli fruh during the prehen sible Inter. This waste reprehensible at all times, but more es- peolnHy when fltit i| scarce. This sea men certainly ft 'a good one to begin the *x*roisc of oar* in such matters, if we hare never exercised it before/ Fruit is scarce. With many it will' be difficult to preserve a wtnter'i* supply even with the most careful management. To such the advice to adopt some effective sys tem of preservation wilt surely be time ly, while those who may happen to have n surplus will find it to lie greatly to their pecuniary interest to be guided by euoh counsel. Carelessness in picking, If is hardly necessary to say to any one, must be avoided. Fr ruit that is roughly bandied in gathering can not be expect ed to keep well, and all who are en gaged in picking, therefore, should be compelled to handle the fruit with care. The owner of the orchard does not al ways do this, but usually a man takes pretty fair care of his own. If any reader should ' Id happen to be an exception to this rule, he can hardly expect that help will be different from ntmself. Asa thing, however, fruit growers suffer the most severely, in the direction indicat ed, through the carelessness of help. It ill r Is so difficult to get those who will per form their duties conscientiously, that the farmer and fruit grower is liable to great damage almost all the time. It will be Judicious, therefore, to keep a strict surveillance over those who are employed to pick fruit, and is most or chards the fob will not be so extensive this year to make that difficult, if H ever is. The damage done to frett by oareleae handling Is so Irretrievable that it must be prevented, or we mi^tu pretty nearly la the as well pot pick the The practice ef placing apples cellar too early In the season is altogeth er too common, and can but reenlt la i^ery. -Applee never should be placed in the cedar anti! cold weather ap- r>roaches; until that time they should be kept ia a dry building above ground, or la the shade out doors. Keep them just as cool m possible thle way on til treesing r le near, wbea they may be re- to the cellar. Perhapeasoomssoa a way ae is practiced is to place the ap ples In a tight barrel. For a time they wUl keep perfectly la this way, hut (t How long then reled P We eaa psaattoe. whk to saying l able, and Tr WM SBOt, IS wm k t. The tall b rde and a high nmd as a “sho _ Just aropad Um cor ter from the old Pori's Theater,where President Lincoln was shot. Is what appsars to bea vacant U brick buildings on either ' ;h board fence In front, iow bill-board," shot out from passers-by a view of the Interior. An eiterprlslng Italian fratt-vender oo> oupl u a little recce in the high board feno» with hie"stjmd," and contrasted with luscious grapes, bright bananas, and other portions of hla stock, are, the flaming posters of the minstrel troupe that hasJust played an engagement at the new FordVTneater, the sttractiona of the Baltimore Oriole, end the advertisements of two or ihrecuocean •teamshlp companies. Behind the scones is, however, one of ths most curious ob jects .to be found in Washington. Back of the high board fence art tne ruins of, a ffkme house which formerly stood on the lift,And Whipb, by the lowering of the street's l*rol under Ooy. Shepherd’s scheme of bsantifylng the national capi tal, Was undermined and fell to the ground. Only the roof remains Inta ,f , and underneath it Is constructed a room Very muoh aS lf a huge dry-goods bo . baa been crowded into the space, ia which live John Birch and his sister, both of whom were born in tne house that formerly stood on the site; lived there alone after their parents had died, and continue there under its ruins the life of a hermit They come out upon the street but rarely. If yA scan the high board fence closely yon will dis cover ths door, covered oyer with the posters, perhaps, but it is still there, and should it happen when either of the two Inhebitants of the place desire to come out that the door i* pasted shut, tliey do not stop to swear, but simply part Ft# Bellgiens Uan ef U Treaties. It haffor some time seemed probable P* the political schemes of Arab! the posters by crowding the door open, belie/ing that the beoeflol ng Ui rial to them light the high board fenoe. paper, after all, is in making weather- existence of John and bit sister to comparatively few people, yet they live la the center of the mty, within arm's reach of almost thousands who pase and re pass the place every Ihf men * e*e may be tLaU-d at e bet wee nil fly and sixty years, a peculiar drees made from of some animals, hie breast though hla long ttreiy hides tt from view, out In the Be the skies He never goes out la the sunlight, qua- eequeatiy hie skin Is at while at a ehud's. The kwg beard he ode with * Patha and the so-called National party to Egypt were complicated with a wide- reaching religious intrigue, whose ob* ject was the supersession of the Ottoman Oaliph by a member of the Sherlfal fam ily of Mecca. The impression is con-) Armed by the news whieh has w lately reached Us froth Arabia The Grand Sberif has been deposed by the Turkish troops stationed in the Hejaz, and his place has been Ailed by a brother of his prtdeCessor, who, it will he remembered, was assassinated ait Jeddah in March, 1880. The reason assigned- by the Porto for Its Action Is the alletred ontn* plieity of the latC Sherif in toe designs of the Egyptian rebels. But although it is incumbent v upon Abdul Humid to punish such defection, it Is doubtful whether he will gain roueh in the end by the change he has broughtjabout. Ine real significance of the revolution at Mecca will bo found in the displace ment of the fanatical by The liberal t Begre Beydrsllttcs. is * very general f May eUim that the While siipcretMoa trait,! believe that negroes art, of all races, the most sti perstitioua. They have as many omens as the ancient Homans* some of these being connected w.th blfds, ■bMeskhai like the Homan auguries. For InsUc.ce, If a forest bird- Ukes xefuge indoors, its sometimes happens in A great storm, legrobs Itwk oil this As icertain arj i nounoement that death will soon visit some mem!>er of the household. I re- meipbpr one day seeing a bird Ay through t|»at had been left open tp air party, which has shown itself exlremt-ly •-*—English. ,j! —— friendlyfb the English. The elevation of an avowed partisan to the Shci ifate and the effect of'such a $lcp upon her MohatUmcdan sitbjctjts iti India are among the substantial benefit* which EAglaod iuu reaped from luir rapid coo* que^of Egypt. To elicit the full meaning of-the mea ger telegrams.Which have been received fr be kirns*" which a mtxtorv Ilk* Hs aissps generally by day, k or Um suter orr-pv ng um ooskH or “shake iesru" ay night. Btrah was al wevealamestoelUirBof misC, sad from Mecca, we should Idok back over thk recent history of the Hejaz. We must bear iu mind that the Grand Stierif or official representative of the Hhorifal family is, in Arabia, a muoh more Im portant personage than the Ottoman Aultafl, and that through his intercourse with pilgrims, multitudes of whom vitit Mecca every year, he^exerts a grrfat moral induence over the Moslem world. Even at (yonstantinople the Sultan rises to receive members of the Sherlfal fami ly, sad it is said that should he rask* tbit pilgrimage to pereott, he would be received by the Grand Sberif as an infe rior. It is certain that no officer ef the Turkith (iovk'. I.m. ..L .■* iu , n,. :**.i r,-. •d* in Mecca, and the sole revenue which it derives from the Hejax comes from the ouskim dotie* *' thewiports of Jeddah and Terttbo. Th-- nniaber of Terkieb troops MMhi'icA at the pints . i*t n* :.- .1. mul at M*4»«ie end TsM t# the interior, U uaually about 8,000 th<’n, Hul Only half of these are regulars, and all of them are unpaid and enrattoned. it le eat eurgridnr, tbewfore, that a ra il of Aie iMt’sIhms sh mid s though rv<|iii«tte to aver, ae o* the part of the pertlsaM of the depr-ed Bherif The emtruordinery preeUge <4 Mherifal feusity, due to ihnr uadi.; Is—at from the prop has always elected lh« p-sl»c«v of G•v*rnuM*l, Wh-eh ha*e a ih* indwrw^* .4 Um huw<e by frwds hrtweea lu Svewchea. Hy e skillful »«• «f s« eh rtvabie* Um Herten he* besNi able 1>> fra psaetly twtev- fare WMh tike erder af eweewa^sw, Iher- the ISirte has h window the ... the room’, daring a very severe Wmlef, In my childhood. An awe-strickdn ex- F iicssion. fell .on the face, of my sable ‘tnatiirHyi’' who was prespnt. She •hook hdr head ahtf* iobEed gloomily around, and by a strange coincide .co not a month elapsed before a death oc- euneil, in our hoiiscn )lai though of bputso'k ifiigbt have happened and iv't hai>pened,a thousand times that forest biids have*taken refuge indoors without any such result following. Wo no;e only, the r-tre chance fulfillment, and hot the frequent failure of the omen, A::young Southern lady vi«iting a X >rTfiorn citv ope spring, iedUi ktitl to her ho-t«*Vs one day on the occasion of a wild bird flying Into her room during a storm, “That would throw negroes in the South into cfin'itv,niationr "*They alway9 look on a bird as a messenger of death under such gircumstaaces.” J Mfpre the flay Was over the young y, by a coincidence, received Intelli gence of the djeath of her father’s sister. Negroes also always take it as a sign of death if the “whip-poor will” comes itito tnd porch and uttdrs His "note. A great many of them seem to hold doves sacred, and to consider it sinful to shoot them, probably b c.vi.«e the Holy Spirit manifested itself as a dove at the baptism of our I-ord. Another superstition they have about birds is, that if they get hold-of the combings of your hair and twist them Into their bests you will have ache in eonsequebde. (lade when I was complaining of headscho in the pres ence of ■ negro grrt, she saei • “ Vow ought to bmra aBeU the combings from poor hair, and then your headache , Would stop.' The birds get hold of the hair* yew throw away, and twkt UM iato their neeU, and that is what makes i,i<>in irnb'e mid ridjcu'oi-'Coat. Wh mi ou r > on livii a man whom you’know' iin Ji tie about oddlv dresse d, or in'k ’’g j'T .1'Vi or exhibiting eepeiilri - tv ot i‘i' n<•'*, you ifi <y he s ire ilia' ' o i pwt min ed man, for the cirnOi'o • inlul off, the lli'lc shoott pArcc :tv, in mar. ltd men. Wives have ■ .erally much more sense than tjicir MUsbands,' even tliough they may be j'ever men. The wife’s advice is like "Tir fiklTaS thatTceeps the ship s^ady'.'— Hural Kao Yorker, your head ache.” TWy used to have a tuortal urfuf Of bciftg Conjured, sad this feeling, though on entirely extinct, l b«l gross. gvoereMy old the wane, is Certain ne- got the ■ia eiavery sad If they stork up two ft* ks the •! •< .w of so* of !heir fellow errahte egaiaet wham they* nigger we* .-•i a kaa aseae the belief that she We* eneheiwd. aw4 kov marts. KieUl oaly break ike spelt by hsr eg to • aoefttal. where she pre neat eeatary I hy piartag the tie over the end </the < an eighth of the top of m tightly ia the barreL. Apple* thei not Thus packed rattle about ia the arc not (hue packed barral in transportation and arc Muoh to their tojary to a natal of view. To avoid this flU the harral wall up, and have it stand upon plank to whieh is fasten'd. by mean* of a chela, a lever. Place dfe head of the banal, or a board largo enough to cover the fruit, over the apples, bring the lever down upon it. and thus preas the fruit ifown into the barral. Such a bar rel if apple* portation will not n. —BViv--,, be inji Rurnl. ured in Becked far Lost Time. At Riv you i a certain manufactory in Fall where there arc a number of ladiee employed, it was detcr- on their part to present their employer with an album and a large family Bible as a testimonial of their * for him. The money was col- and the articles purchased. ' On (pointed afternoon the girls col- at the office of their employer, •od in a neat speech presented him with their offering. The recipient accepted the gifts and thanked the givers in a flew choice words. After conversing some time the overseer glanced at the dock and mid: “Girls, I think yon had better go back to your work now; you have lost three-quarters of an hoar al ready." The girls ware taken aback, and feeling much disconcerted, went back to their work, bat groat was their •nrpriM and chagrin when the next pay- md to find that the over- day came round had “dookad" every one of them flor the time lost to making the preeenta Hon.—Wmmtm (Mm*.) Sav. Matrimonial The most candid i in Austin I'tid voungm ia Nk-odemue Morphy, lie called at the office of a wealthy citisan, and cam* right out and said: • * 1 want to marry your daughter, i ran’f live without her. ’’ , with my dough- Mdewafe mare thaatwo or ihra* ime* a year, aMthea efkar mgaHan. waee hie etraag* appear—e le aa« a-rtkvg by ee maay people. Oeeo ia ahuui a ho fuoa oa a eprc* sad gri* «c that he gar eraOy bn eg, up ia iM eouri. wiMi* his remarkib-e ap always eau— a Irmp.r »ry 1 *uvp>-« he iadu'ge* 1 koitoatiag bevarages now »o<t thee, but if he doe* so, they arc brought to hi His *irter comes out whenever it is necessary to make any purchase* at grocery, hut their fend is selected to avoid ae much a* poeeiUe the neeeeei for o'lokiog it. Biroh’s aieter, who upward of sixty rear* old, due* most of the talking for toe family. “John, you know,” ana will say, “is a little weak- minded, and has no idea of busineM.’ When their father lived one of the ad S dning Iota belonged to the familv, but ohn, by sharp practice, it is said, was Induced to sign a dead for It and thus virtually gave the property away. Since being made the victim of knavery he is very alow to talk about selling anything, though the lot on which they lire, if im proved and built upon, would make one of the moat eligible sites to Washington. The Italian owner of the preeent stand to always jealous of any on# who wants to see Birch, fearing that a purchaser of the property win one day happen along, and ae will be compelled to move mi stand, and It to his habit to mislead those who call and want to pass behind the high board fence by telling them some story about Blroh being absent just then. Washington, it to said, has two or three hermits, but -none stranger than John Birch. The Birches, from the earliest recollection of the oldest inhab itant, were' a queer people, and were more or less reserved and recluse in their habits. However, a brother of John is famous to-day on the minstrel stage.—Wzikifwton dr. Chicago Timet. A quiet man was traveling a snort time ago by rail, and was annoyed by the noise which two or three men in the same car were making. One of them bed beett tolling tremendous stories about himself in a loud voice, and had tried once or twice to draw out the quiet man. but in vain. At last he turned to lim and said, rather offensively; “I fear, sir, our notoe has rather imoo- venienced you." “Not in the lean, he replied “I thought. ’ remarked the aoiey the aher <4 the tww hreo be*. r«>-| seS traiy known ae ley 4 sad A—s. ic'<> which the Wherihl lentil* I* 4 • 4*4 The (ircod hhevlfal, A heel Meteliefc, who has fort toes toe eie* ad Me rates—* to Arefo fVhe, ha* had a leap andeeesMlOi Mb IteBrrt •hsatabd Bee lu ley;, uad • ••palled by (he l*— fore tie, •ae ——Mad ta |nt% He hsM v» has l«r flve fear*, a* (to ttito he »*• dvpmed fuv ally to the t’eAph. end »fc« the Aurtee •» re eufaeaw le He tee They tepeeaaas the marc bh*eal end prcgoeeMve party li« keflisMileae ef Arcoie, ead heea always »hiiw a t*4eraet the hmMa* Bed >4hev hereiw* with wham to «*»atort el teag they reasalaad ia puwev. Um retell as heiercee ladle ead Mcicee wave ef e fneedty rherector, and it to eedy •ithta ■he test two yean Um* the tody erty hue towjan a ferae of led too 4iw. I edeed, the tatort re pv—at alive of Aoaa branch. El Hoe eye. who h -osia* • •reed bherif ta I off, atede MHHB <>W stMMdt |o tW rrOOC toeery farttoa el it by perdeieg laaerp'nx ep aeoftal retetb ae with the British t*ov- a*eAt «•• all «»• -e»» *»• waea Um le af be Indite nibjeau eeaM ia to at Me>ce. Aanwdlag to Mr. w. b Biun', b we* mainly oa thie gmaiid that the Tnrhi-h IkrveveaMnl. which dar>4 aot depove h im M acr«Miai »f hie great popularity, detarmiued to remove him by othec meeue. It to ver Uin thet hi* e«s***ieati»a *J«rrt Ml •Ith ltd tod—aa* <4 a Iwd am which a ■ae lard tf tr* •'»> sh»*rt cbo^ eleey* tooh oa that ae a rtge tooe ewu* mrwtov ot too t—tty aw—* eaa lanorert to a »*ry A JndlcUes Wife. AGENTS WANTED 11 A Judicious wife, *ay* Huykin. to al ways alpptng off from hot nu-hand’f moral natuMf HttlC twig* that are grow- ng iirwroQg direction*. Sfffl keep* him n shape by continued pruning. If you Kay auythlrtg sjlly she will affectionately tell you so. It you declare that you wili rill find some do some abmrd thing, she moans of preventing you from doing it. And by far the' chief part of all the com mon sense J.hert 1s Ip this world belongs iinqiiestiortably to women. The wi^o.-t things a man cotnmonlyidoes are those wit ch hirwife coupfele him to dg.'^, ; A wife is !l grhnd _wielder Of:'rttariBi'i'*1 pruning knife.. If Johnson's wife h'ul iiv«d* llierb would have been no hoard ing up of orange peel, no touSffibg ad fit-p sts lu walking along the streets, n dating and di inking-with disgutling ,• ,r ciiv. If Oliver (roidsiuithhad been in i'ri d he never woii'd bajp^worn that A CATALOGUE JUST XMUZD OOMTAUnM® 00 ILUJ8TRATI0R& AND PUCES (fF , WHtCDES, JEVELBY Am siLVEtthnui ‘ wm to seat to any esd— upon application to J.P. STEVENS ft CO., DICTIONARY « Universal Knowledge. ATLANTA* . ■< Tb« most €*ofHl and xdk 5/ tmrd> 'a**'**- FAIRBANKS' —The large, tmiq’ e library left "bv the lute (ic and* vain We iivimj ic.i w, -.cor^v P. Mac b. United State . M ni ter to Italy, ha boon, to’d by tlie executo; s of .\>iv«r*lar-h s e-tate to Frederick B d ugs, wlio o ic i- dence at Woodstock, Vt., is the fdaec where Mr. Mar. h Wa toinT it s a d to tie the intent off-of ^fv’. l illing to iresent ihii library t» t!« Uaver-'ty of ermont, at Bniliib|idn. Sine o Mr. . Alar h Was for some t'meS^ie of it < trustees. Mr. Mar h had at on 1 time ma le a will by which he left h * library to the Uni versity of Vermont, but-later hi* <• r- cumttam-es were -o impaired by wlut he spent in the pub! c erv ee that lie Ira- unaliie to ra ry ou h s original in- — V Y H.r.lltL AehUvnekrtrtrt the C m*, tf* Ptddlm *r i ■lamp tat /alt faH^utart. dd*to» •* konse n*arut t* r*n. <*. Cheenbereb ixTiovU, MO.. Clhteege, XU., AUeeto, MILL a&d FACTOEY SUPPLIED OP AH KINDS. BELTING HOSE and PACKING, OILS, PUXPS ALL KINDS, IKON PIPE, FITTINGS, BRASS GOODS, 3TEAX GAUGES, ENGINE GOVERNORS, Ac. Send f®r Price‘Hat W. H. DIL LINGHAH A 00., 143 Rain Street, LOUIS VILLE, KT, NoTarne is nglier than a crooked boot or shoe; straighten them with l.von'e Heel Stiffener* bold by Shoe and Herd •ere Dealer*. < oar «* •eU. n*e*»lel*. to Ibe he*t to us “WeT* DAttoy*’Gl”Drcggwto ■—I io E- a Wb— Jwney CMy. A A ae rure*ee»teeev rtest A sen*. Tea**. Vtornarr to > UM* l • tons—, t*—** ^ tkiito eto am * am* a*4 • UU r***'* *•* % • xr.'ui hi* order* to Me ca for hi* before the crime wa* committed. The man who eucceeded the murdered El lloMeyn io itog) was, ae we have •ad, the tg*l and already twice de-| posed Abdul Mutalleb, the representa tive of the fanatic and reactionary party in Arabia It was of ooorte expected that the Zeyd faction, by way ot return for their restoration to power, would vigorously support the policy of ABdal Hamid, which from his accession has been directed t* the enforcement of the Caliphal authority of the Ottoman Sul tons. But Abdul Hamid had chosen the wrong party for his purpose, for while the Aouns are indluixigea to dis pute the grounds of his title, the Zeyds f, of aii Ai are, of all Arab*, the most bigoted up holder.* of the doctrine that a Caliph must be of the blood of the Koreysh. When, accordingly, Arab! Pasha, in or der to intimidate the Sultan, began to moot the idea of an Arabian Caliphate, he seems to have had no difficulty in persuading Abdul Mutalleb that he would be selected for the office. But the capture of Tel-el-Kebir put an end to all such plans, and the ambitious head of the Zeyd faction has now been relegated for a third time to private life. His successor is the hereditary head of the Aoun family, a brother of £i Husseyn, who, since his assassination, has been regarded as a saint. Some collisions win probablv enough occur between the ousted ana the Reinstated parties; but inasmuch m the Aouns are *;ish 1101001/ supported by Turkish bayo nets, but command much the larger fol lowing in the Hejaz, their ascendancy at Mecca to not likelv to be shaken Henceforth a i»arty which owes h to England's success "in umob to England’s success"1n Egypt will be dominant at the religious center of Islam, and its friendship may be-ex pected to nave an Important bearing on • be influence of Great Britain East.—A', r. Sum. ton. “that you did not seem to by my stories " ’Voile the re- mid the quiet um. », to feet. 1 em a bit britieh Columb an has dieoov- n* w way of exterminating the Finding t'wd OHe-t iaie asleep, crept «p to I a When Um.^a* “ n>« feet t*. b'etfuen, to kill that hetfer •*• ■den. 1 saw an aagvl U4d me, *Ruw, Peter, eiey and and I wa* twind thDo <** he t<>Ui •o I tort killed the heifer ” 8>| if not convinced, m* di* banded. I recall another iastoae* of a negro explaining away hto omdoct by mesas of a rtoteo. Om winter, eonto ton er jlOSHFERi twelve year* ago, when oar Legislature, ikUn * " w ing of aable reprewnto- g in Richmond, an i with a tprink Uvea, wa* *itiing portant railroad bUl, involving the in- temu of eeverol Northern capitalist*, wa* before the Hsus*. There was a negro member wbo at first vetoed the bill, but suddenly went over to the other side of the question. On being quee- tioned by a gentleman from the same county as to this sudden change on his part, he explained it away by laying he tiad seen a vision; that a man hod ap Reared to him and. told him that it was very wrong for him to set himself against the people who had freed him. But later it transpired that the vision which had wrought so^great a change was a check for a good round sum—a vision that politicians of hto stripe are more apt to see than a vision of angel*. —Lynchburg (Pa.) Cor. Philadelphia Pres*. Where Dees X Come From! “Whence comes the > of mathema ticians ? n to o question on which M. de Lagarde supplies some curious infor mation (in a note to the Gottingen Royal Society of Sciences). The old Italian algebraists named the unknown quantity in an equation, cota or ret (which they either>wrot« out or denoted by a sign). These are translations of the Arabic sai, thing, by which the Ara bians in Spain indicated the unknown quantity—writing the Ai able equivalent of t: thus our 12 z would be s-12. Now it has been the rule Jn to expreet in Arabic e by th< *. Thu* pur mathematical x seems to hare done from the Arabic tor thiugr^Gping further back, to the Greyka, it appears that Diophaatus id the uaknowa quantity ardkmot; tor this, a final sigma, accented, to be written. It is thought the Arab ans may have denoted this by their «. aa i colled' it by Um aame <4 The Greek name for the square of Bitters 1* unfiihoe tad »f*nt- bU !n tariag EpilepUe Fit*. SptMM, Convul sion*, 8t. Vito* Dnncn, A Icohohnm, Opto luf, Scraful* a ■ E»l mUPtocmful, tnd *11 Nvrvou* •AlTOnod Din Laornn. LilemrV Mvr.bnnU, liinllW*. liili,. and *11 »b.«* r*u*r« Kvwna. Prantrn- Oon, foneaUfiton at tan biooZ e ■■«**. who rnqoirv • nnrvn iTyW^ffc-f T A MniERVI VX W to nil: UK. M. a. HM inioNn medic at, CO- j^ t fg M |)^^faJeeeeO.Me.M I T 1 . » f . 1 * A • r v «* — • » H MASON ft* HAMLIN ORGANS .•erwriviwe oar otmtuma *•*■•,» »Om tmmmmt (»■*■■ MOm mm moat ^mi a MV . — < ■ A* rwi> yTw. tU^^^amamr pi v*»e»Vi r**»eVieUFli » ■vo! < p | i y n « r-rTrr.-; ■ IrciSWW . ■*•> r I * x •*. m.-1 *«•■■ KIDNEY-WORT r*** criaB j MEIMAfttM J The World’S Standard. dl Fir leiRiii Sol Ctitti at tlu Hit W1U MW thsa pay for Heetf ia pee Dhw't to Dombuged by tho cheer sad worthless Wegou Scake which oT'jfHod et say PrirtT thev w* of ao ead yea will to totter off a Seek. a Wrm J* we ibr Prices aad owe of am Ilo^O* Tfeimovneb- I>odl toy •mb rm have heart born ae, er eceo • which • —r o COTTON BEAM toaksaad a3i KIDNEY WORT B iirTBT ■ suntj:r: Itrrr.vr* THRESHERS— i auuitoa * vavumoiA. iiMaaoe.a ’..V aux. r* estee tux re to* towto htoe heeto » M to nDf^D • V****l«*fXI*Cu*■*•*■•. SIM* ■•Am, — ■* ■ X,v T*rk, th* r*Mi*h*r* M fi**. :s»»» SsbacrtMiM Bm*., tw t/mU." Il n*U parti* *•* ir &H .rmi** *»*. ■ AM Bl'SIMMee CWI.I.Vfc r, 5. Wriu to c*i*i*g,*. c«t«»*»s r*tm. <• . y . BUGGIESBS25SL1 SEMT* WAMTF.D to Um B«m Le r a en* _ _ *■ MllmtlSctoi*! SoM**** MNm. PrwMrv4u««e U Mr Mat. Y I*tm*4l FoaLMaiae C*.. All**!*, e*. end wUl ' •y*tem ta on* [>U1 towund I I Rkl iplntnlr chknre the blood In lb< BOStb*. An' parvon wb' :hl from 1 tollwrei.i m*r l* . If such • thing be i-wsibU. Where or lent by m*il for 8 letter atkmpe. OHNSON Sc CO., Beaten, Mae£, HtoMwc*Jtle. * MoBRIDE Sl CO.’S CHINA AND GLASS PALACE, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, Own the G»te Cltjr Natuval Stone Water Fllterer and Cherry* fcUeem Fruit and Vegetable Dryer. Cloc' - Agents for Seth Tbomee Clock Co. I’ricea forn on application. ssSprJojrtsifcuB HALL’S! ?p«* FOR Latin FOR THEI) ff t 0 ff Iff LDHesBALSAM = PILLS TRIIDI|aALTH THE MASSILLON NTT OUT TNI 01*11*1 Foirbanko' Stand* FAIRBANKS k 00., HEALTH IS WEALTH! toCbiat«eM «** Fit.. Ual. ilf*aMUM poeer.) This N.Y. Skiff tr, $20 Vk it ft ftff •« t f AttrtcTntotole f trto IWf—M qMM»i. Ma4——dda>Nfct»» fttal ftgvda IS Mito.ortAVg «>••••« i « ee'e >*orhanH'al Ktito lrtr.9 kfier awrila. m llh $1 fftool fen.1 tl Horsft. ntolv fTX AWto •rut on trot trial |’l*n If dr fflrrai F.Uvart roar, n tonr. dura Sir I Ml <V a net «Mt. die mMir.T~1th trrttmirnfBl fr ~ O I'ffvnr 41 CO. 4? Third .\r t HI ago CO « broNi# Cards, with namo and rm»a, 10 ffpnH. U£ C. ■. M1AUCY A C*.ll*rWri n, Cl. OPIUNN HABIT r AND DRUNKENNESS. rely, speedily and permanently enred by ;e/.KY’H MOLD KEMEDIBS, containing i CT Opium. Truth invltaa Inveatlgatlon. PoaltlTHy DR. KEf no form Reference* bent In the tuate. For tenna. pamph- leu and proofs, address, W. C. BELLAMY, M. V 1-3 Broad St., Atlanta, Om. Pub.T'nion, Atlanta, KocffssM: SSBtDlSCOrail: CUBE ' I aucoaasfnl that a aeCaradleeUaffliotad I combination of Fra* toa4<U of Iron. iVrwviaea I Bark* - —^ - i A nsslninhlat f ** /ev* **»«** *e* V \ only prepttr nd Phaopkaruoin that [aartffr \othrriron ! blacken characteristic of aojc Tonic twenty-five yean In medicine, have never found an Iron TOJriC doe*. In many ca*e* of Nervous rnmtra ratdlcc c the reenl ) y POC*T>s|b r ■overtshed condition of ihc blood, this pcerlc** rcuicdr ha*. In my hand*! m.-toM - ase* that have bafited »omc of our most eminent physlrtans have yielded tc onic In my pr nythltir to give thin. Female U side remedy^ J prescjlbe lt ln firefcrenre to *ny Iron prep* ration made M ’ rtKi • *'•» « ^■*** vr y • a |»i _ i vw i v |vi*.a»-«* ia* v sap any 1111 a* Du. Uaktcb'8 leoN ToNic 1* a neceMlty In my ft, port*. Wo.. Nor. 7f fflec* color to theltood,' DU. ROI tuttural healthful tour to ] .. .. .. i the dlyeatlre ortfaH* and] nervou* affrtem, making It applicable to General nebilit itp. Knot of Anpe- Hto. PfiotraHon of rlto KANUFATTURED BY THE D!T, Feelings, Diegueting Odor*, Weak 8<g8t, Sore Tbeoet. Cougbe, Asthma, and *11 Die- Eureka Catarrh Cure.