The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, March 22, 1883, Image 4

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. X' A-. ■** . — f U/, ; : ( - ■ Thtj turad to % brlfhtor ibMls" cop HlfO 0*v tttb plclara fair, Iw^tVlU Mn?' nit * RM WM « OMdMl And h* wu • timid rmtt, And th« Tolatna to«T rl*w 7. ToMtiMf—thOM two- „ U • Ut o< dotlaa, fonootA. Aad (feu* warn* a* piatty • ff«tar« In an th* book, m tOKMa, A* the on* that loaned— Br tba twlUMbt acpoanod— Wan ooar tha prtotod vao; with ban ao bUndln* d to a brighter itiadr, tba aback o( tba jou lb , 1 aarr truth * 1 ' Aa rad aa tba diaek of (ha maid., Tba ahadowa bra»a to deor*n, Tba prtnt»d*prRa waa a blur, Tot be did not etoto Tba book nor propoM A abaoga of amploymaat to bar. Bat, aa In tholr aaffor raadlng Tbalr hand* togather had met, In tbs rtma warm claap, Mora than friendly grarp. They ttagarad and Uugarad yet Bor aaadad they for a moment la aaoh other'a face to look, Tor tba esorot guaaeed Waa at aooa aonfaaaed, Aad aaob heart waa an open boob. The TTomen of Lima. Lima, aaja an exchange, ia called tba women. beautiful; eo they are, black ejoa and ebony dreamy black eyee of the harems, nor ey are eallfcd if you admire trensea—not the w : . ,T etot wr •* bitt the black eyee that eaaily reveal the different typee of character. I’omvisn ladies hare character and are not afraid to ghow it; yet we hear nothing of equal rights and privilege* among them. I'cr them to- lay claim to a right is bnt to pogfieAB it, for they can easily win over the priesthood, and thus have the most fcl class of Peru on their side, are generally occupied, but'do not c; they look upon labors* degrading. They rise early,.take a enp of tea and go to mass. Their toilet requires but a few moments. Their walking suits are neat and pretty; in this respect they surpass ns. The dress is black and never touche* the ground; there is no fussing ot fumbling with trains. A white skirt is sometimes seen a little below the dress, with a deep hem and two tucks, and al ways white and clean. Prunella gaiters are generally worn; and hands arc bare; t-orear the head, full- . of the skirt. The subject of dress claims most of , —^ their time and attention; their ball dresses and opera and soiree suits arc magnificent Their boots, especially, are beautiful. No people have naturally { as ■mall feet as the Peruvians. The Peruvian-made boots are too small for foreigners. Peruvian ladies are not very intelligent; \ aa soon as they {mss tmyond the seltool- will period tiny care little^ for U n-ikn -or CUraUae. Many learn to piny the piwwe > when young, but do not care to continue when married. They are excessively eburterms in their manners, but we are not to be misled by apimaranees. Their mode of salutation"is more of an embrace than anything else, and they always •ay: "My house and all that! have is entirely at your disposal, and wo are to be as one family/’ They are always wealthy in imagination—at least they navar speak of poverty. They love to ’ smoke. Although handsome when young, they soaroely turn twenty when they l>e- gia to fade. One thing always la-ts with tiiem, and that ia their gait. Their move ments are gliding and graceful; the same ia true of the men. A Scene in n School* Room. Boy-nature was neither studied or un derstood in the former days. If the . moderq^achool, taking it* cue from (lit modern Tamily, leans unduly Jo (lie side ©f moral tuaafon, the did fashioned schoolmaster was a partisan of Hogging. He also took his cue from the parents. whosom»Jto was, "Spare the rod, spoil * the child, ” , "PveTnrmght you our Jock,” said a Bootch mother to theschoohnostor, drag ging forward a struggling young savaged "mmd ye lick him wccir. No ponder that J«>nk, thus consigned to tlra rule of the strap, should grow up a worse savage. Of course lie would be come a bnHy and beat his weaker mates. A Scotch editor, common ting on the rough school of his boyhood, where nothing kept the boys in any sort of or der but the strap,—fausc is its Scotch 1,—desorilies a scene which ho wit- [ during a school session: 1 Jock Lad maltreated a son of hors on the green, and she had ooino to inflict vengeance upon liim l>cforo the whole •chool. JiK’k s oouscious soul trembled 1 at the flight, and she hiul little difficulty in detecting him. Ere the master hail recovered froin’tho astonishment which her intrusion had created the fell virago hail pounced upon tlio culprit, had dragged him into the middle of the floor, and there began to liclalior him with the domestio tnu«c, which she had brought for the purpose. The screams of the l>oy, the anxious an treaties -el the master, with his con- atant, "Wifle, wifio, l>e quiet, lie quiet,” and the agitated fooling which began to pervade the school, formed a scene which defy words to paint it. Nor did Mog desuH’ttl she had given Master Forsyth reason to remcml>or her to the latest day of his existence. She then took her departure, only remarking to the teacher, "Jock Forsyth will no “addle witiimv.Taud* a?ain m a hurrv. ” The Discovery of Counter*IrrltaUon. But few people now living are ac quainted with tha theoretical idea of counter-irritation, which has been so in the practice of medi- WA1V8 AlTD WHIKS. A XiicmB-raAUBB—the schoolmaster. Thb soda-drinksr often thinks of • — ' .>> !■ » •— • — — Dr. Fellows for advice. He gave a hia- tory of his case, summing it all np in »words: " In short, doctor. I can’t * "Thou,” replied tha *, wuo was some what famous as a wit, "you fool, why don’t you sit stand* tag.” This so enraged the cobbler that ha left tha physician and sent in a bill for b pair of boots. Tha doctor paid the bill, fare a fresh order for another pair, and soon gained the confidence of his patient. Learning that the cobbler vilified him, ha determined to maho i suffer. He prepared a machine which,aieans of a fly-wheel, throw and backward a board like a 1 shuttle. Beneath tnia board When the . for treatment for with which ha hawaa strapped by the _ board and tba machine tn ■attest Tha poor cobbler Thb promises of soma men always re main shall owa. _ a - Nbw way to ‘icnow all about thy self'—get a Presidential nomination. — ‘ Isw’Tit slightly paradoxical to call a man with full t>eara a bare-faced bar? Fnr time—when you hear your father’s cane thumping along j&e hall. CoMMismovxB La Duo, in his cropre- porie, never mentions the hops at U16 Bsasida. ■ ■ ' . • A wwrnmr journal heads an article: "A Lunatic Escapes and Marries a Widow.” Escaped, eh? We ehojild say he got caught A WnrnniALTi man has discovered a way of instantly turning sweet milk into fresh butter. He feeds it to a goat Patent applied for, „ A WwooNstjf theorist says that hay will satisfy hunger. There may be some thing in this, for a couple of straws will frequent satisfy thirst. It is claimed by some medical men that smoking weakens the eyesight. Maybe it does, but just see how it strengthens the breath. . Rostov has a‘public vinegar inspector at a salary of $1,000 per year. One would think he would get awfully tired looking for his "mother.” A i.itti.e girl ni church, after the con tribution phite had boon passed, com placently and audibly said, " l paid for tour, mamma, was that right?” "Raid Jones: "Smith won’t have so soft a thing as he had. "I don’t know,” replied Robinson, "he’ll have a soft thing so long as ho doesn’t lose his head." Rriixiet—"And Tiow shall I cut the poie, mum?” Lady of the house—"Cut it into quarters.’’ Bridget—“Aiid how many quarters wood I cut it into, mum? ” Ydc may have noticed that the flies never bother a speaker, no matter how dull bo is, but invariably attack the over worked sitter who is trying to get a lit tle sleep. "Ah heavens; cnen .tana, sentiment ally, to her visitor, "when one is adored by a magnificent captnin like you, noth ing over can make her love again—unless, it is a major.”. * - • — •.» -~*^ shabby,” said a young man about town one evening lust week. "I believe 1 will have to strike another prayer-meeting the first rainy night,” Occasion Ably .you find a Detroit man' who can stand having his whisky stolen and hot complain; but when the flies pester them during a morning nap, they all kwear.—Horton I'urt, Biibbiov is wealth in a. crude form, and after it is coined and kept at interest a:~whtfojifr becomes wraith Tn~nrmi«T" Tutm again. This language of ours is worse than the gem puzzle, a heap. Dietrcicb queer how men differ nl tout different things. When a man honks a lot of fish he will brag of it for ’ three days, and when he hooks a lot of apples he hasn’t a wyfd to say'aboUt it. "On 1 thought this was a drawing room car!” apologetically observed a lady to a man in the dooi of the smoker as she discovered her mistake. "It is, mum,” lie said, drawing Ou hisn with all his might. A roET asks: “ When I am dead and lowly laid, * ♦ * * And clods fall heavy from the spoil©. Who’ll think oi liie?’ Don’t worry. Tailors and shoe makers have very retentive memories, and you’ll not be forgotten. ’ . ... A New York man was challenged to fight a duel the other day, and Iteing at liberty to choose his own weapons pro posed a trip to Boston on a Sound steamer. The challenger backed out He said the idea that death must attend a duel was a relic of the dark ages. A visitor enters a' French newspai>or office and is greeted politely by the office lx>y—“If monsieur comes to tight a duel he will have to be kind enough to call again; all oiir editors are already engaged for to-day.”—/'aria Charivari. An Owego man, after a little experi ence, truthfully and indignantly assorts that no woman, however nervous, has a right to wake up her husband from a sound sleep to tell him on inquiring what’s the matter, "Nothing, only 1 wanted to know if yon were awake.” "Nasby” takes pride in the service of his father and grandfather, in one way <JT another. As for liunbelf, he savs- "Mv own military record is clear. In the late rebellion I served by substitute. I furnishedtjireq snlmtitatoa. all of whom to-day arc.in good health—in Canada. ” Klx LIUI® Women of the Olden Time. Xu 1816, sixty-five years ago, says th,-* Boston JdUmal, six little women oi Waterford, Vt, rode ou the same horse and at the same time some miles over the Waterford hills. Their names and ages were as follows: Lois Rowell, aged twelve yearsNelly Caswell and Rhode Pike, aged eleven years; roily Caswell and Lois Dike, aged eight years, and Anna Caswell, aged four years. Lois Rowell sat on the saddle and held the reins, and small Anna Caswell and tlte other four misses rode behind her. They had » nice time, which they all still ro- memlier, for they are all still living. Lois Rowell, now Mrs. Charles S. Greg ory, lives with her son-in-law, Mr. Cas well, on a beautiful farm on the west bank of the Oonnectieutin Concord, Vt. 8h* has been totally blind for some five years, but is intelligent, cheerful and so cial, on© of |hose venerable ladies whom it is pleasant to meet and converse with. Nolly Caswell ia now Mrs. Jilos Jones of Victory, Vt.; Ehoda Pike is Mrs. Nelson Millen, whose residence the writer does not remember; Polly Caswell, now Mrs. Horace Buck, and Lois Pike, Mrs. Jef ferson Hosmor, live in Littleton, N. H., and Anna Caswell, Mrs. Wilson Buck, in Charleston, Vt They are all now widow* except Mr*. Millen^ Imd Mr. Millen is her second hatband. Who knows of six other women who together enjoyed e lark sixty-four year* ago that has been a pleasant memory to them from that tun* to thia? Read;-Mads Dimples. And now has turned np an ingenious -artist who advertises to furnish ladies with ready-made dimples I He thus de scribes the process i " I make a punct ure in tha sipu at the point where the dimple ia required that cannot be no- tiocxl when it lias healed, end with a very delicate instrument I remove a flight portion of th* mnacle. Then I excite a alight inflammation, which at tache* the akin to th# sub-cutaneous hollow 1 hare formed. Ia a few days the wound—if wound it can bo called" he* b5ed,and a Aaming liSki. tha res alt” Breton aafi New Teat. Bo long ago as 1719, Daniel Neal, an obasrvatit traveler, who ought to ba held in high esteem by Maasaohusett* people, wtoto of the New England " There are five printmjrq ton, which ere generaflv full of work, bv which it appears that humanity and the knowledge of letter* flourish more here than in all the other English planta tion* put together, tor in the city of New York there is but one bookseller’s shop, and in the plantations of Virginia. Mary land, Carolina, Barbadoos ktfd' the islands, none at all.” Happily humanity •d the knowledge of letters are no longer confined to one comer of the country; but, notwith- kbinding the growth of an opinion that Boston and New York are to ocenny rel atively the poeitioua of Edinburgh and Loudon, the capital of Mkasaeliweetbi still lias a peculiar prestige ns the oldest center of literary culture in Ihe country, oeusuig the eyes of {he rest of the Union to turn toward it with a particular inter est, a glance compounded of respect and reminisoeuee with something of insatia ble expectancy. ’The privileged Bos tonian, it ia true, laughs at Boston in his quii-t way- It ifl » capital place to. live in,’ 1 naiu tth eminent published who' baa his dwelling there, "because then you can go to New York. But if you live in Now York, wh» , re can you go?” The mot epitomizes tho sentiment of many among bis townsmen : but ifc. Uioy oouihUox:© join in the alien ialtgfi against theirbjittle city,” and recog nize a degree of, smallness and con straint in its general attitude, they also keenly appreciate the other side. 80 do some of our friends the Now York ers. One ot the younger New York poets, on visiting Cambridge for the first time, said to me: " We hear a great deal about tho failffri. of Boston to quite appreciate the mental breadth and energy of New York. But with all the admiration i felt for thia Tegidh before I cnuio here, I find / didn’t wholly Ap preciate it. There is such a thing as New York Bostonism.”—HurpcPsMag azine. • *- The Rora© In England. Tli© Egyptians mummied all sorts of sacred Irnttea, including bulls, eats and crocodiles. If Englishmen should ever take to embalming leasts I am snrothAt, notwithstandingmuiyual-Hame ftlu { * m 1%* (Hff Harfaa Btotfi A pamphlet baa been iasued entitled: " American Political Anti-Masonry, with Good-Enough Morgan." In ctutt to gire the reader an idea of the narrative it may be wall to atato that in the year 1896. a Freemason, by tha nama of William Morgan, then reaiding in Batavia, attempted to maks aa axpoee Of Masonry. He was kidnapped on the 12th 61 Sep tember, of that year, and waa supposed to hav» been drowned in the Niagara riven' When he disappeared he waa qnite bald and wore no wbiakera. More than a year after thia time the body of a man was found forty miles east of the Niagara river on tha shore of Lake On tario, and an inqueat declared it to be the body of an unknown man. The clothing was taken core of bv one of what was then known as the Morgan Committee. Boon after this inchest Tburlqw Weed, who was cliief fussed to believe of Morgan. up and a second inquest held. The body, U ing thus disinterred, was found to have a full head of hair U]>on its head and full sido-Wliiskers on its face, All this Mr. Weed well knew, for, in a letter to the New York Herald, written in 1875, he says ; " The head tv as Covered with long silken hair of a chestnut ooldr. ” The second inqueat declared the body to be that of Morgan, and it was buried as such. But, doubt having arisen as to whether there nail not been foul piay by Weed and others the body WW {<»mi terred, and a third inquest held at Ba tavia. The head of the body this timo api>eared very bold, and with no whis kers on the face, although the proof showed that the head when found on thd shore wm WjBll covered with hqir. and tjhe face covered with wliiskers. It was also proven that the body was four inches taller than that of Morgan, and was that of one 'Timothy Monroe. Citizens of Batavia, where Morgan Jfid resided^ tesSBed that the body was not Morgan’s, and tho tliird inquest so decided. After tills Rbenezet Guffind said to Weed, " What are you going to do with Morgan now ?” to widen it was said Mr. Weed gave the celebrated re ply; "It is a good-enough Morgan till after election.” Henry O’Reilloy, th© editOTof the Daily Advertiser, pflb-’ lished some statistics ' intimating that Weed 4iad disfigured the head and faefe of the corps© of Timothy Monroo so os to make it look like that of Morgan, fit .tjmMr/yceil caused GTteilley to bo TmTtgaTnTfitoixIliey woultl pa/s by ] miUctM jor^ libel. The suit remained the bull and swathe the defniaT horsP iir * "t--- A Daksttbt JBSH tails • gooff story of hia annt, kho ia a model housekeeper and a scTnpHrou* stickler for a good table. Th* clergyman called near the dinner hour, and waa pleased to stay to the meal At th* table there was a good supply of well-prepared food, but the lady nit compelled to mi' grace thi ether to " bless the fnigal meal uhihUm aud apices. For if tile horso be*; uot agtxl in England utdoast the cult of the horse is a sort of r< ligiofi. There are t urn of thousands of English gentlemen who have horse on their minds during, the greater p:irt of their—waking hours. I’lie condition of tho animals; their grooming; the cut of their tails and manes ; the way in which they stand, or step, or.stride , the iashton of tln-ir bar- ness ; . tho build, tin: Itvik, the dress of untried thirteen years, thus harassing O’Keilley, but wtis finiilly nolle prose- f/uird, and lately Mr. Weed has pnbHcly stated that the ease was sworn off by O’Redlev, *0 that be could not get a trial. T'o this statement of Mr. Weed, Mr. O'Reilley now replies : "A lawyer familiar with prominent legal proceed ings at that time knows that Weed's in ability for twelve yearn to cause trial to he/iad aguinsT’ua bn his indictment is in TfcelT a til tel Spon our judiciary system, ami as to his declaration that lie urged the trial while he had been coachman and groom—these are matters to them of d.vp concern, of uneasy anx- tho trijJ ^bilo he had l>een swearing it iety. Ami this L* so not oiiqo a year or ‘ off > ifc may repeated'by us that it once a quarter, or once a month,' bnt would require as much hard swearing a§ every dnv and two or three times a dav • J 11 woultl make tho public lielieve- that every time, indeed, that they ride or 1 Morgan’s eoiqiae had grown four (mehes drive. Nor do I ■<iidy"TE,1iiTwr 1 5‘T7 T T length ami are called tofeersey-- men, gentlemen drivers of mail coaches aud tho like, who are gitwuns in everything except taking wages; ami some of whom, I was told, will carryJtheir coachmanship so far as to take a “ tip.” Apart from’these there is a very large class to whom iliC-perfec tion in the minutest {stint of thyirequest- jiun "turnout” is a question of thema- ror morals. ’When one of this class feels sure that his horee, his “trap” and his .groom will bear the criticism of liis friends and rivals, the ineffable air of solemn self-sufficiency with which he sits tho saddle or the lam is at once nmusing and pitiable. Tin se men criticise each the other’s equipages as women criticise each other’s dress, as pedants criticise each other’s scholarship. .Indeed 1:1 England there is a pedantry of tho stable.—A’oAi- arU Grant White in the Atlantic.—; nxi s breeches twelve, months death.”—Exchange. V Milking Amend*. A dramatist sitting by a friend at a theater contrived to extract a handker chief from his pocket and—transfer it to his own. Presently a man behind him, tapping him on tho shoulder, whispered: "Beg pardon f here’s your purse. Didn’t know you belonged to the profession;' all right!” at the samp time slipping into the amateur's hand tho purso lie had ex tracted from his pocket. Tho story may p iss, for altogether honor among thieves --has no Existence, rt is probable that reg ular practitioners act oa tho principle that dog should not eat dog. That thuy ever go an inch beyond tlmf we do hot believe, oven though we have it on the authority of the Gemini* that Obaries- Di kens once 4oat 4iis watch at a theatre in Paris, and found it at his hotel withw f note running: . rl-l - hw;iO thought I w#* doaliiiK with a French man, and, oof A oohiitryman. Finding out my mistake, I. hasten to repair it hr returning herewith the watch I stole from you. I bee you to rer/ivo theh •—— d ett r ro: 1 n p-yin aif, Or® Pbo*y—"What I — — — A Prrxipnr-KEr. Tritlers with feminine affections do Hot always get off cheaply. A young clergy-, man, wise enough to choose well, but foolish enough to allow himself to Im ruled by his friends, after proponing to a young lady, declined to fulfill the en gagement; and King sued for breach of promise, was east in damages-—£f>,000. This brought him to his senses. Seek ing tho plaintiff, ho owned that he had lionaved infamous] v, but vowed that ho had loved, her all tfie while And loved her •till, and prayed her to forgive and for get "My friomls, 1 ’ said he, "can make up objection now; they cSfinot say you are vritbont -a penny. smce—you hiwe^ £5,000 of yoiu- very own.” His pleading proved irresistible, and the lady and money were soon his own again.—Cham ber* Journal. School-boys and Headaches. >— Prof. Tretehler has delivered a lecturo tadore the German Association ot Natur alists. and Physicians which contains a fact of some interest to teaebers. Ho •ays that headache In scho^ decidedly, uicreases, until in some schools, and notably in Nuremberg, one-third of tho. •eholars suff»r fronwt. Ho believes that the cause is over intellectual ex ertion, caused partly by tho adoption of too manv subjeete, but principally by tendency to demand-night-work.' Tho brain is then freshlv taxi'd when its cells are exhausted. We begin to hear the samo complaint in England, espe cially from London schools, and are tempted to lielieve that in some of them an imperceptible' but steady increase in the amount of night-work demanded has been going on, which is passing a safe limit. It does not hurt the quick, afid it does .not hurt the stupid, but it does hurt the boys and girls who want to fulfill all demands, and have not quite the quickness to do it The usual quantity of Latin, for example, to l»e learned at night has witliin the lo»t thirty years more than doubled, while the pressure from parents upon tha children to learn it all has increased in nearly tho-same proportion. The in creased crowding of schools explains much, but it does not explain this head ache, which is not suffered by thc-boys in prujKirtion to their ill-health.—Ihe Spectator. r——— to make many epolo- _ deftciencrif. fn the grace too clergyman asked our Heavenly Father to " bless the frugal meal” This mjjjde tii* lady Tory lAa Tervw W Um ItoaA. Jasfu, Ft*.—Mr. Boalffman W. Wil son 'traveding for A. G. lAItoed A Co., dealers in Firearms and Cutlery, Bfdti more, waa prostrated here, with the "break-bon© fetir;” he asserts that in hia own, as well as in the case of others, the only thing found to relieve this pain ful malady was Bt. Jacobs Oil This Wonderful pain-cure .has the endorse ment d such Men as Ex-Postmaster General James, Senator Daniel W. Voor- hees, and an army of others. Thi most original of advertiaemeht- appeared lately m the Newaik paperc It was put iq by a woman who notifief her alwent husband that if he did not return within three days she would malty another fellow. She >s from Po land, is this determined woman, ami it would seefl that she is following a nu tiunal custom. A Tribal© of m-1 It. One-off he skrengesfmidJTi^'rifffaW' houses in tli© drug trade, and one mot- eminently snccesSful in introducing med ioines of merit to the people is "Th Dr. Harter Mkdioinr Coucany, of Si Lobia^The one to which it.is now di reeling most attention, i- "Dr IIai tkh’h (ron Tonic,” a r. mi dy for debil ity and ptoHilRilofi and all tlie .ifls {'f euliar to a system incapable of pe f>>rn. ing its regular functions. TiiL rem d. is nothing new; it is well know a. in dor-id by the medical prufi-mo i, and recommended by them tor many iuinren- ties peculiar to women. The tdvcrliat ment of the ToNic. -wbich a; {TiTts ol-i wher*. cbpiSftaiR t'lo te-ii noniala fron this cinqs of sufferers, which are worth peraual. "Da. Hartkivh Iron is a pr' paration of ireiu an«Ki-a!i aya ba: K in combination with the phosphates, in gredients which denote it to be invalu able to weakened constitute us. Tn Voltaic Belt Co., ManfcaiUQeh., will sen4 Dr. Dye's Cslokretai JOfCtro- Voltsie Bolt* and XlsctriO Appllanos* on trial for thirty days to mon (young and old) who are afflicted with narvausasWl- ity, lom vitality and kindred troubles, guaranteeing speedy aad complete reator- atioh of health and manly vigor- Address as above. N. BT-N# risk I* insured, as thirty days' trial i* allowad. Sleep, riche# and health *re only tralv enjoyed after they have been interruptod. M eekeaji’* peptonlsed beef tonie/tha e«- ly preparation of beef ©ent lining its #©(»©* ***• tritiousproperties. It contains blood nsakinf, torce-generallog and lifoanstauring proper ties ; Invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia. \ srvpus prostration, and all forms oi **»•*•* debiHty; alio, in all enfeebled oonoitioM, whether the result of exhaastloa, nervous prostrktioa, over-work or acut* diesase, par ticularly if resu'ting from pulmonary *••*- plaints. CsawOl, Hssard A Cp., proprist*©*, New Yoik. Bold by drdggita —- IKila* a Ureal Deal af Weed. Mr. I Bnny, of Portlasd. Ms., wrltos: “T«rt ilenrjr’s Carbolic Sslrs Is doing a great deal of [ood. Some o( my friend* Hst* been gTsatly t*»- •nited by He uee. I think it b the b-st »!»• have ereraaed.” Beware of countertMu. Urnton'e Balaam Cures Colds, Ooughg, Rheifius- iliui. Ksdney Trouble*, etc. Can be USod egte© Ycruxt # any part that ha* pt»n um**. aged or worn. Brice* for repair* will br SSn yoa ®f F0KE . th 0 ! ia 7Jnte«d ^ut raenccd. All work guaranteed^rui your name and addrres in the pactoge with the watoh. for our ILLUB- 19 STEVENS WATCH C©w tfanufacturer* of atop-windmew*tch*k r««r,..4 03« »* I Rheumatism, Lumbago, Backache, Sciatica, Toothache, Bore Th r«M»l. *w©llla««, har»IHi.^*»ratoea, Bams. Mral**. Frosl Mile*. 1SD .H.L OTHIR BODILT Mils ASP AI H* ■■Id br DraftinU rod lashre *T«r,wk—. KlB,C«st»* Wretl!""! Is 11 I.sii*ii,««*. THE CHARLES A. VO«EIJeB<W. 4, *00ELIA 4 00.i kfmhlrenra, r A-4* j’ALL:SDEP0;J TWENTYAND CaArrEU hands rntcki d ]i{>s.aria- ing frum^yp^nm to -muiffen changes oi. temperature are usually treated wi^li cold cream, I^rd ciunphor ointment and spermaceti ointment. Glycerine is fre quency tLied a© a preventive. Dr. R-aer'e Vegetable Worm Syrnp fOstanU, de stroys worm! and ro mores the eecrettwis which emuee them. Baker’s Pain Panacea core* pstn JiL Han and Beast. Fvr ©*e externally and Internally. • -Ladies A children’s boot\A shoes’oan't ru over if Lyon’s Pat. Heel B.tfleneri lire !.sf' Dcrino n hailatorui lu Troy a boy heaved a twenty-pumid cake of -ico irrtr tho affeot'aud over fifty persons laajt oath that it was a hailtoac and that 1W llMill X.itV _ ■• “ rrriISX xrir. Krjoire. nrjolrc, " lie 1« Allr© Aanln.'. n« I.01.1, but I- Po;iitd.” tinder date of Inly il, iH 2, E. B. Bright, oi Windnor Locks, Onm.. writes p. p’ft'n. inodesi narrative, whiclt. from its very simplicity, ha the true,ting of fine i.-old. Hesiys: "My fattier is using Hunt’s Remedy and >m ,11. l>c ^mnrovini?. in fact. I10 is very m u h belter than henaabeen for n long time. He h.td bee; ^«pl>ed three times. The first time they-gir from him sixteen quarts of wufe;, ihe secon time ihirtei'ii quarts, imd fully as much 11101' the third time, and he would constantly till nj again every time after be had been tapped., uulil hs cOrnuumeJ Using liuntj. Reiuvdi which acted like magic in liis case, as h. begna to fro pfove-at—once, and now h - watery accumulation i>a*©es aw.iy through the seyrelionskiaturally. and he has.none that swelling ot filling up winch was s frequent before th 1 .- luuetiofis oj the kidneyf weie restored by tho um of Hunt's Remedy He is n well-known cithieu of this place, aud has always been in ba.-1:ies* here.” Again he writes. November 27, : ‘‘I beg most cheerfully .and truthfully t • state, in regard to Hunt’s llemt dy. that to use was the saving of niy fai tier’s life.r 1 spoke to you in my previous letter in tfg TFT to his being tap) *id thre 1 tfniss. I- is tl c most remarkalile case boat has ever Ke« y heard of in thL section. Fora man of hi_ years (sixty \yenrs) it iTa most remarkot> » care. He had been una'olp to attend to h ■ business more than a year, and was gr.tu rt; by the doctors. TJie Ur n bottle o> Huntb Remedy that he used gave instant >eiief. lb hat used in all severi bottle- hud cont ; uu:> to Us© it whenever he feel- drow.-yor slu gisti, and ft affords instant relief. He H no j Attending to his regular business and has bei :i several months. • lam perfectly witling Hint you sh< u!d publish this letter,-«s wo thor onghly believe that father’s hfo wns s ned te nsing Hunt’s Remedy xind t!:ess”facts given almvejnay be a bentit to others suffer in tr in like manner from disease? or iaavtipn of tlie kidneys and liver.” wke rsesfsfUg vllsl sts- *■ tkstr iseMre toms 'Apprselsttoa st th* mwrlto m • teals, si Htstottor 1 * StoBsek Bittors. H*t ssly tt tS* gSV » Strsaytk to the wssk, hut ii stM ssnvct* Irvsgfcls# weld sf las (t ss Us h*wsl» set st proper tatorvsla, give* ssss to Uses who suffar froa rh*o- ■stls sad kldasy trsnhlss, sad MS- goers M well s«p»o- rents fsfsr sad egos Korsslshy all Drug- gists sad Dsslsn gsnssally. LIST OF niSCASE* ALWAYS CURABLE P>V fsLSQ MmCAN’ MUSTANG LINIMENT, Th© Urindslone of Life. Tuniing qrindstoues to grind peytlios is one of tliose lieroio but iinobtrnsivft oeeupatrolift for which one get© no credit .11 ia a hopeless kind of tank, and, how ever faithfully tho crank turned, i« longing to Charles, E. Hniith of 8tony Brook, In I.hiul hia leg broken at Port Jefferson. -The broken bone was set, an< the leg waa imbedded in plaster of Paris. In two week* the h-oree could wr.lk around the stable; in three weeks the owner drove him home, a distance of five miles, and on Saturday the horee waa driven to a road wagon a mile in four minutes. It is usual to shoot horse* that break their legs _ — Bats the I law key 0 solemnly: "Ye*, daughter, you should go somewhere jhia summer. You cannot stay at home dur ing warm weather and live. To be sure your mother, who hasn’t been out of town sinos she was married, can stand it, but than aha ia old-fashioned and dboai/t know any hotter, and boeidea, aho. lies fun Enough doing tha washing and iron ing- By all ntoana.Ma-.-Ga a Wn duster and a basket and go at one*.” Oebmoea is a general term applied to is a groat dead of poetry about baying— J mean for those not engaged in it. One likes to hear tlie whetting of tho scythe on a fresh morning and tho response of the noisy bobolink, who sit© npofl the fence and superintends the cutting of tho dew-laden grass. Thorp is a sort of music in «the "swish” and a rhythm in the swing’of the scythes in concert. * * ♦ But if tlie scythes cut well and swing merrily it is due to tho boy who turned tlie grindstone. For my part I used to like tire 1 grindstone ‘that “wabbled” a good deni on its axis, for when I turned it fast if put the grinder on a lively look out for cutting his hands, and entirely satisfied his desire that I should—"torn faster.” I uifed to wish sometimes that I could turn fast enough to make Hi* ■tone fly into a dozefTpicces. * This is one of the disagreeable tasks of the boy farmer, and hard ns it is I do not know why it is supposed to belong es pecially to ohildhooiL Bat it is, and one of the certain marks that second child hood. Hss 00m© to a man on a farm is that ho is asked to turn the grindstone aa if bo were a boy agaiq. When the old man is good for nothing else, when he can neither mow nor pitch and scarcely "rake after,” he can turn a grindstone, and in this way h* renews hia youth.— Being a Boy. Home-Made Court Plaster. Th* Scientific American gives the fol lowing directions for making thia useful article: Soak isinglass m a little warm water for twenty-four hours; then evapor ate nearly all th© water by general heat; ; dissolve the residue in a little dilute al- • coho!, and strain tha if hoi© through a piece of open linen. Tli* strained mass should be stiff jelly when cold. How Itreteh a piece ot ulk or •arsenal ou a wooden frame and fix it tight with te or pack thread. Mah the jally, aad ply it to the silk thudy and dvenly v t«B W ted STRONG’S PECTOUL PIUS. A nuke remedy fob COLDS AND RHEUMATISM I Ensure healthy appetite, good digestion.repilar- pl Ity of tile Itowel*. KKHAi.m. tMn. and giving v the body. .V>M bv full "particti 1 ar» Sill, New York. . PHECIOI’S BOON TO DKUCATS Bficl bracing tin* nurvouii Byft* or and health to every flhreof iippUft. For Almanac* with C. K. Hcxi. A Co.. Box Igor pru ddre A/^ETVIiqrtt Mail* -Aon.T ••iliac mur raa ” VSwl* I O Medtelar*. K» capita: r»<;alra. ■i»a<larS t ar« C*., 1S7 Paatl 8 1 .., f. T. THE SUN EVERYBODY LIKES IT. THR SUN’S first aim in to b« truthful and usefuj^'hi «M*con«i r to writ# an ©nt*-r,taimiiR bilory frf tha tim#aiW Wbich we live. It pm.in, on an averag#, more than • wetk. Its circtfilatiofi. UL now larger uhscripti^n; Daily (4 paaaaM*?- jlllon copiee a __ _ ___ ______ than e?#r Wfor#» Subscription: Daily (4 mail, IKlr. a month, or 94 .10 a j Swuoay pag#* 01.00 per year; Wbbkix A panes, j ft p«r v«*r. I. W. ENGLAND, Publiahsr, Naw Tork City. CHEAP SEWING MACHINES. fond ord«r. <Jrover St Baker, Wherln A Wllsoa, Florener. Hoair SkatUe. Aiaei- ><-aa, Mlacer, PkUaSelpkla, Haaaa, Elr. PRICKS, go,, fits, f ia »xxa #16., •W BaaS for Ctretiiar. ' ' » H. H. 80UDEE, Chatsnooga, Tean. ttlft A WEF.K., Ilita at horns easily mad* it bCosUf outfit (r.v asdrtoa'rnMkOs. A arte*. II* a UkWTS fVASTItl* (m Iba Am* m4 t-Z OF HtKAlt FLESH. Shenmatiam, Burna and Mrald*, Rtlna* and Bltca, Cuts and BruUea, Sprain* A tettlche*. ( ontoarted Hnacles BtiffJoinU, Backarhe, Eruption*, t roat Bit**, 0? AKlMAKk Scrafrhe , ^. ri '" ' i»<I f<»1 — Spavtsi.^tTSIfka, Semr Worm, Crufc, Foot Bot. lioef Ail, I,an.rnc«l, fiwliinj-. Fonndcrs. Spralrt*, Strain*, Sore Feet, StifTtee**, 'jj r s. and alt External d : —art*, aud '.very hurt or orrident Ferfsatral use in family, sW hie and atoc^ yard it ir < » THE BEST OF AEE LINIMENTS fs .inMlTfSeard inrs.- itaole incuiing mKic Fit*, HpasinM, * CVniv nlslnns, HI. V'.tu* Dance, Alcobotiem, tipium Kmliig. {*cr- ♦on* debility A-rofola and all wm'bu* and tlHsCt dW-a*es TO Clergymen. Lawyei i, I,tierary in»fi, Xe.- cbai'ji. B.uiker*—ta diu. and all wliusc *©- deniary employ men* cause* nervous Pro*- iU..n, Im.-ui-.nllc* lb* nlood, lilonihct. . iki'vcI* o» kind-.. *. iu .-fiuJrc e .rir.f* “ChHtrs. npfrtt*©: yv, sUin-tirt.!'. ©avaittsa Nervinei; Invel Tliousand* prochn/•> It tin' moat ■ . ■ noi ~foi 'i»- vigorant tbatsvef *«Mat nwltfat ■ '• “ mle by all Drug#**** TUKtefi tCA ifClMONt* MKDICAI. IV). Bole PropriHor.. Pt. Jiaepl. Mo Mlliag n*(«r.ti Brnki BiMak. 1 W • Fli are* U y*r*»at. SAWMai. reave** Oa., AUiala,e ♦ no A WEEK la jour owa tows. Terms ac £0 O to auttltraa.AAiriM HallsB aOajBrtland.lt to MOOBBW BxsiNeMv 1 NivEBaDrrT, Vflnntn, Ua. . For Illustrated Oronlar. 23tb year. "REYNOLDS’ 1 HON M URKS ■ .-i • ' ,.... D. A, MULLANE, Manager. P.O. Box 1640. - - NEW ORLEANS, lA Manufa-tory RcytioW*' aolu-Ucd ariI ©atiinatca intule by th* Manager. SPRATLING-COTTON PLANTER AMD QUAND DltYRIBUTOR. ch* Opei infei Th* che peat an* " 11'iuS, distribnfes guano, drops cotton seed etc., at any , in any num ber. Cover* at earn* Um*. Price, •tO.ue. For full particular*. i ■ is nts iTinii unnrei . tfnseru- pulo us parties have tried to imitate Our Rem edy and deceive Iff Dy using SIMILAR NAMES, b u t d o not be do- cel ve d; see that th* word © e*m»*Oa.J> l.trm. *1 •r.Ctocac. c. a. MILL and FACTORY SUPPLIES OF ALL ZIKL3. BELTIN3 HOSE and PACKING, OILS, PTJ3KP3 ALL 22*1)3, IRON PIPE, FITTINGS, BRASS GOODS, STEAK GAUGES, ENGINE GOVERNORS, Ac. Send for Price List W. H. Dllr LINGEAX ft 00., lit Main Street, LOUIS- 7ILLE, EY. 'THE BEST 18 CHCAPCST.” nuns, TUREQMPRQ 8AV1ILLS ' srsjtNwspt I llniLwlltnw riftYsrnnllsr Mawara HtncPmn A I.cnJlna London Phyw SHan cetahltokra n New Tork. (Salted to all section*. 1 and Price* to Tbe Aultman * _ Clswr Hillers Write for r nEK Illua Pamphlet Taylor Co., ManaOaid, Ohio, nr. A*. M-aeroto i EPILEPTIO FITS. PnmAmJtMmclofMeiicOu. M-ccrole (late of Ixmdn*), who make* a epe- i doubt treated and cared haa aimply been aitoulibing; we have 1 over to yeart’ standing •ucre*.fully cured by him. H* bna published a work on tbit illNaac, which be tend* with a large bottle of ble wonderful cure free to any ear f'rcr who may rend their expreee and P. 0. Addraea Wl edvl-e anv ono wlehl ng a cure to a-ldreee Dr. Aa MtaAoLM. bo. teJobaBt. SowTotA A STALK CUTTER FHEB m with my STATE CIT- HmpMSily 1 ..4ureblHty iSa p»rfe.*ed. *• make* Tbc; roUila fer ©IS. ler perfeel model and farm i ight and agucy dl to Irat ordei, otbera returned. ■ tha.patontew..,.. . o - H. «. CADY, Pitt* BlvC Ark. "Aa •rdtaary Aeld •tupid eaaoet break It. "—V. D aad can make, but the most Mr. Cady te a reliable geutia- WiLXiaa, Pree’t M. A F. B.uik. rurru. c. lee tto *er WAS ra. M J rave to r. a m. fiMeiifeM*oVr,4 Tn****( w e- fauwiug.the Aaeleet T.uipie aad Mewuic MeUea rneeully ^'.Heverad ta kiulu. aUo, Ike ler*e an Uleetteted ('.Mloge, ot Mwoole book, and r«via . wltb tottrei price., .Ire, parUreUre«f lb*errr lucre. ’live bwlere.Offered T. A. M. BnilDINQ A CO. SfiFI IB ta tf AtTretirga . II, ’8t with plo tore of ar Iron Sate on ablaek wrap par and white tetters ik on *v*ry package. Also, MS that it Is on tho la • ta m.p, and take no other. ■rr- a poettly- remedy tor tha aboru < of tba wont kind and of I a uf.', met I been ecru . that 1 will gather with a VALUABL1 TKIAtTs* any taabrer. ©1** kapram and P. 0. a Ok It A SLOCUM. 1U F) in'#*M^^y?to«« I , L ? d»en 1 dTVO - |T A BI m rptf W AfPiatA JlLTl Y• . thia. addreee. Fnariac. New Turk. H. H. WARNER & CO. ROOHSRTBRe R.Y. . A fomUtunlof* ot X>w ismid../Intk, Peruvian Pork amC Phosphorus in U is indispensa- XMV.J.Jt. TOWWEB, “off -Aoomaldex it mrt ekoeltent remedy tax debilitated vital to^pe^ ■ Sf-e 'te f I' ~. HBhI