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' *'■* ip! u 9vUn hM been tv«*r of «t&rV 'Mora deaths by vlo- oooQtred within six weeks the fifty-two weeks of last Vor toy oneof"the three preceding k- More lives have been lost by ac- sea and land since January 1 were sacrificed in the Egyptian More damage has been caused by 'the storms and floods of the last few irselrs than by the storms and fi xxU of ‘tlM three or four preceding years, i Hundreds of fires were lost and mil* Jions of dollars' worth of property de stroyed by the disastrous floods !n Ger many. Three hundred people went 'down with the steamship (Umbria. Scores of men and women met with a itful death in the Newhall House holocaust. The casualty list was boor- mously increased by the iosn of the 'City of Brussels, the California railway | accident, and .the series of tsrrible ns- losions that followed one another like he discharges of great sisrnal guns of 'distress! or like harbingers of coming gloom. Then came the storms of snow and sioet, sweeping over a seetion that bad scarcely recoteVed' from , lhe effects of intense cold. Crops were damaged, fruit trees were broken down, trafil was suspended, and business checked. Before the country had recovered from the effects of the snow and ice storms came the unprecedented floods in the Ohio Valley. These have resulted not 'only in great destruction of property ,and loss of life, but in unsettling the conditions of business activity in the in undated districts. Manufactories have been broken up or closed, thousands of people have been thrown out of employ ment, and hundreds of others have lost their homes and all their property. Disaster has followed disaster, horror has succeeded horror, and floods have followed floods with such rapidity that no opportunity has been given for re oovery from depressing effects. Public spirit and courage have been be a'on down, as it were, by cruel blows in the ■bane of accident and calami'y toward the lower level of settled depression and gloomy foreboding. An appeal is made, too, to what there is of fatalism in the American composi tion by those in politics and business who are always eager to turn depicss- lug circumstances or disastrous events to personal account. To those who*e interests depend on the weakening of public confidence or the breaking down of business enterprises, calamities ri'-o opportunities. To such men political mistakes that result in the defeat of a K t National party* or legislative ders that cripple great todustrias, or floods-on the Ohio that throw thou sands of men out of employment, are jbat the means of creating a panicky feeling. When the absolute facts of disa-’ter |are supplemented by gloomy prophe cies 'as to what will follow, the people are excusable for any feeling of deprovdon t hey may exhibit. It is bad enough to Inow that the Ohio River at Cincinnati ) hjgher than at any previous recot a, and to contemplate the tenfold greater destruction that follows as the natural result now. But when it is pointed out that in ISii and 1847 the cholera fol lowed the great floods, and that thou sands died of the dread disease, the future does not seem to hold much of promise. It is bad enough for tfle farmer to contemplate his broken fruit trees and ice clad wheat fields without hav ing prognostications thrust in bis face going to show that tbo severe winter will be prolonged beyond its time. The theory that epidemics and pcstl lenoes follow great floods will not hold ood. The cholera wave of 1882 struck uebec in the spring, moved up the St. IjtwMnce and the lakes ,to Detroit and Chicago, and was carried from the lake region to the Ohio and Mississippi Val leys. The cholera prevailed Jn Ohio in years when there were no floods. The E eat flood of 1847 occurred in Dcoem- r, and the cholera came up from New Orleans late in 1848. The pestilence vailed in 1851 also, but there was no lood. There have been floods at in tervals of two and throe years since, but in none of those years great epidemics. According to the theory of the special ists the next great cholera epidemic is to occur in 1889. The fantastic theory that there is some mysterious connection between great disasters and pestilences will not stand on the face of facts. The disasters at at Milwaukee aad in California were ia no way predicted on climatic conditions or elemental disturbances, as were the calamities in Germany ami os are these in the Ohio Valley. There has been loss of life through carelessness and mischance, and destruction of prop erty through agencies beyond man's control. The record is startling, but 'should not make men less oourageou* > • f be allowed to foment a spirit of dis< w tent.— Chimyo Inttr-Octn*. 't ,r *ja- Nicknames of States. In answer to a request the Brooklyn Eagle gave the following catalogue of the States and the “ by-names ” of their oilmens: Atoms. 1.1/. Mi Atoam Topthptoka OmUfomla Gold Hunted OAmtolX,. Hover* OBBttiittoat.; Woodon N utmogA gtoy Muak Ku>» Florida. -Flv-u-Uio-Cn^k* Gw*** Sucker* I Indian* Him trier* gSOa.. Hue kevc* *“«••• J*y Ibwketa '•■totojr Com (’rteker* Iflftoms .CraolM • ,....Foxe* Vanrun|. Craw Thumper* Igjgg.,,,.,.... WoltrwIfMt* AwSSWOW .Gopher* TiulVole* ■' * * * * * * V—| Puk&t* gtoMSS... ItviK Ector, IJwvad*..,. Karte H«»» Hoy. yeiaey Blue*, clam Citcber* Vtm Jotk UnickcrhM-ker* JWcth CaroUna Tar Boiler* ami Tuekoe* X” 0 -*-**- * Bucki'}*H Wet Feet atid Hard C*mo* £"“wytvanla. PuunaulteS and broad Ui-im* . . * . . Y VkeiMI W.4A.W *a asi • • . *-»Y, v.-5-srs.., , Vwuumt. Green Mountiin Bos« Vlrtgiu*. f.. BQftuhirt iUd^vra Batter Three Thoaaaad lean Old. A sample of Irish bog batter, prob ably 1,000 yean old, cm analysis, yeilded the following resnltsr Volatile fatty adds, calculated as butyric, 6 per cent ; soluble fatty adds, not volatile, 43 per oent; insoluble fixed fatty adds, 99.48' glroarol, minute traces. - The • ftattr adds contained 9 per oent d and 91.0 per oent stearic and An older cample at an- A* teken eooe time ago r Sgyptisn tomb. It dates fracs 90 or 990 years before Christ It ine small stabastsr vase, tiy bean pound in while Hew Wemea Bathe. Kind reader, didst ever see two women bathe? They emerge from their bath house, looking as though they had stolen something and expectA^toseo a hurley policeman bob around cHmuTer, clap his rude hiui(\s upon them^nd exult- ingly cry, “Now I’ve got yon.” Then they trip along half a down steps, not altogether like Dundreary on a sand piper, but somewhat resembling both. Then one says “Oh, dear!” and roadie* down to pick a pebble out of her shoe, while the other takes the opportunity to yell like a pair of panthers, and then runs back with all her might to the bath house. Her mate, of course, doesn’t got the pebble out of her shoe, but gets sev eral more ia to keep it from being lone some. Then the screamer tiptoes down again to the yelling place and says, ‘‘What a fool I was!” The other comes dovfti, having secured a new invoice of pebbles in transit, and Screams, “What is it?” As it is nothing but the devil's apron string and not a snake, tbs screamer again says, “What a fool!” And the other replies, 44 ! know it!” Then they langh. But they keep their eyes about them, and each mouth is ready to emit » scream. By this time they vend) tha water's edge. A puny roller is ad vancing. It breaks a little way out, and as the line of foam is sent up the bench they turn and scamper with oil their might. Then one says, “What a fool!” And the oilier replies, “I know tt!” Then they take hold of hands, deterhiined to do or die. Another wave makes them flinch and tremble and scream just a lit tle, but they keep on till the water reaches to what would be their knees if they were men. Now they face each other, each holding the two hands of the other. Anybody who has seen the fire men at work on a hand-engine will un derstand the motion readily. They keep this up for five or ten minutes, talking like a brace of parrots all the time, till one of them screams with all her might and runs half way to the bathhouse. She stops to remark that she knows she will die, and looking down sees the cause of her scare—a blade of seagrass wound tightly around her ankle. Spunk ing up courage again, they nock the water once more, and again the hand-engine nmncnuvre is repeated. Then one of them whispers, “There's a man! ’ And the other says, “I don't cure one bit,” and runs with all her might to the bath house. Then the one who him-seen ;tho man saunters slowly after, picking up a •bell or two on the way, pretending to think there isn’t such a tiling as a man in creation. By and by they ejnergo from the bathhouse, and ostentatiously display the key, towels and bathing- dresses, chatting in a most voluble man ner. “It was just lovely!” one re marked. And the other says she feels “so refreshed, you know." The Difference In Waltzing. A new industry has been developed in the East to take tno place of walking matclies, prize tights, and so fofth, which goes by the name of “Long-Distance Waltzing.” A man waltzes by the mile, haying a track laid out around a hall which is so many laps to the mile, and so many girls to the lap, or so many laps to tiie girl, we don’t know which. Any way the male wa'.tzer inis relays of part ners, and as fast as ho tires out one partner another is standing ready, all saddled and bridled, and without stop ping at all lie lets go the waist of the one and encircles the waist of the other, and goes on to viotory. A mjOi waltzed ten miles one evening at Ithaca, New York, and wore out twenty girls ami three orchestras. Tins don t seem to ns to lie a very enjoyable exercise, though it may he business. The idea in waltz ing should not be to got over as much ground as possible, and tire a partner out, but to take iteavy, and linger along, and to allow the soul to become wrapped up. To waltz-by the mile is like drink ing champagne on a wager, to see how much a person will hold. If yon drink champagne for enjoyment, sip it for pleasure, the bubbles will go up into the brain,' Aid weave fancies there that make you happy, and you can shut your eyes and imagine yourself in heaven or Chicago, with an angel hand as soft as down smoothing away cares, removing wrinkles that time has painted about tbs eyes, and causing you to feel ns though you had guessed light on wheat, but i| yon drink champagne as though yon wore drowning out a gopher, your stom ach will feel like a sewer, and you can ■hut your eyes and imagine yourself in hades or Cheyenne, and feel a horse hay rake scratching your aching temple. It is thesnme way with waltzing. If you do it for pleasure, and get the right partner, you cun waltz just os well on a sofa, or in a big arm chair, and with your arm around her you cau look into her eyes and hear her speak to you words that no ( ne else can hear, and as the eyes snap with the electric light of love, and her mouth unconsciously gets itself into the regulation shajie for a kiss, you forget whether you are on foot or In the cav alry, and so forth; but if you waltz by the mile, and change partners every lap, you lieoome heated, and every partner wants to throw chloride of lime on you, and and your legs ache, and so do your partner’s, and there ought to tie a law against it, while waltzing for pleasure should bo mode legal tender by law.— Peek's Hun. A New American horror for Europe. Haw fortunate it is that in the earlier and severer days of our national de velopment Europe kindly forbore to tell us now entirely dreadful were some American products on which millions < f lives were absolutely dependent! Strong men would have failed hopelessly, inuL the heroes of our Revolutionary period would have died in infancy had there been any one to tell them'that Ameri can pigs wera olive only with trichin.e, our beef was unfit to eat, our mutton destitute of nutritive qualities and our weather worse than anything outside of Sootiand. But a more startling and terrible decision than any of these has just been announced by a i English con- temporary; it is that corn meal tastes like the smell of mice, appears to the tonne td contain a large quantity of tana and that thoae who habitually eat it go mad. This is simply awful, par ticularly os Americans nave never sus pected it. For two hundred and fifty years a large proportion, sometimes a majority, of the American people have subsisted on corn meal almost to the exclusion of flour, and found it so pala table that many of them preferred it. They have gone mad, but they never knew it, for the proportion of insane persons in localities where corn-meal, bread is most used is noticeably small. .Still, perhaps, oer people do not know modneea when they see it. Three Ameri- epos quite famous for extravigani food- aaas tor food mode from eon-meal were Geotwe Weehinrton, Abraham Linoola And Robert sTLee. The world admits thet there wes something an usual in the t T* organization of these men; it have been merely corn-meal Delights of British Bailway TVavel. the train leaving there shortly before 8 o’clock. They traveled by themselves till they reached Ayr, when they were joined nyastalwari, gentlemanly-looking Iban, who proved to beadangerods com panion. Directly the train moved out of the station tha Bew-pomef picked up a pipe belonging to on* of the gentlemen and threw it out of the window. Al though rather chagrined neither of the gentlemen said anything^ wishing to avoid disturbance and believing that their companion was intoxicated. Soon the stranger began to punch them in the ribs with a stick, put himself into a menacing attitude, talked very incoher ently and amused himaelf by knocking off their hats. The two gentlemen began to think that matters had proceeded just far enough, and one of them quietly in formed the stranger that he had better desist, and that he might find, if he per sisted in his “little game,” tnat he nod met his match. The train had passed Irvine and was flying onward, when sud denly the stranger produced from a styl ish game-bag a six-clmmberod revolver of largo size. He examined it for a min ute or two and then drew the trigger once or twice, evidently to satisfy him self that it was not loaded. The exami nation of the revolver concluded, the straugefc laid it down beside him on the efcat while he took from a case filled with bull-cartridges half a dozen to load the revolver. Tlio stronger of the two gentle men thought that his time for action had arrived and quietly picked up the revol ver, ostensibly with the object of look ing at it; but when his excited fellow- traveler requested it to be returned the request was refused. Then a scene oc curred in the compartment. The stran ger rushed at the gentleman having pos- v ession of*^ae revolver, knocked off his hat and endeavored forcibly to possess himself of the weapon. He failed and was then observed looking for a knife. He was then told that if he did not sit down and remain quiet he would lie severely dealt with, and ho contented himself with threatening what he would do till the train reached Johnstone. Here the geutlman handed tiie revolver to the guard of the train and informed an offi- eml of what had occurred, and stated that the man had as much powder in his jioewession os wt>uld wreck &'train. The reply received was to the effect, “ You are all alike to us, and if it don’t suit you you can change your carriage.” This the two gentlemen did and went to Glasgow in another compartment, thinking them selves exceedingly fortunate in having escaped serious injury from one who had all the apjiearance of Edinburgh CowranL being a lunatic.— A Jewish Legend. According to tiie Jewish and Mohamme dan tradition, King Solomon, who was wise beyond all other men, knew the lan guage of animals, and could talk with the Waste of the field and the birds of the air. A Rabbinical story is told of Tiira which rims in this wise : One day the King rode out of Jerusalem with a great retinue. An ant-hill lay directly in his path, and Solomon heard its little people talking. “ Here comes the great King I ” ho heard one of them say. “ His flatterers call him wise and just and merciful; but he is about to ride over us, and crush us without heeding our Bufferings. ” And Solomon told the Queen of Sheba, who rode with him. fo ft out said,. And the Queen made answer : “ Ho is on insolent creature, O King ! It is a better fate than he deserves to be trodden under our feet” But Solomon said: “ It is the port of wisdom to learn of the lowest and weakest” And he commanded his train to tarn ide and spare the ant-hill. Then all e courtiers marveled greatly, and the Queen of Sheba she bowed her hood and made obeisance to Solomon, saying: “ Now know I the secret of thy wis dom. Thou listeneot as patiently to tbs reproaches of the hasoUe* to the flat teries of the great” N A Taxon professor has written a pam phlet to prove that cities built of lime- staoa ora the healthiest in tha world, and never much visited by malarial die- mmo, including yellow few. _ The limeotoo* is said to absorb carbonic aotd orising from animal aad vsgstaUq HU LAST DEAL. eMMeris Storr •* How Ice Is Bade. Every knows that different fluids will boil at different tenqieratureB. Water boils at 212 deg. Fahrenheit; ether at 95 deg.; sulphurous acid boils at 15 deg., or 17 dog. below the point at which water, freezes; while ammonia in liquid form, and under the ..ordinary pressure of tim atmosphere, wdli boil at 28 deg. below zero, or 60 deg. below the freez ing-jxiint of water. Tt not only vapor ises or boils, as ire say, at a very low temperature, but tiie vajxir has an im mense capacity for latent heat The keen eye of modern science has noted these peculiar characteristics of ammo nia, and machinery has been devised to taka advantage of them. A certain amount of liquid ammonia is introduced into the machine; and assum ing that there is no leakage or breakage it will do permanent duty. It will start here, go through the apparatus, and come back; ready to do duty over again as often as required. Here it is a liquid; a little further on it flies off into a gas; then it eoifdonses into a liquid; and again a little further on becomes a gas, once more to settle into the liquid state toward the end of its journey at the orig inal starting-point. Now, if the reader will bear in mind that liquid ammonia on changing into a gas absorbs an im mense imaiitity of heat, and is bound to have it from somewhere or other, he will easily understand that just at tiie points in the machinery where the change takes place there will be intense cold. The ammonia, as fast as it becomes a gas, must ifave caloric to generate, and it will suck what it requires out of the machinery and the surrounding air, or anything else that happens to be near. It is at those points in the apparatus where this process is going on that we find the icicles hanging and the little f iatches of snowy-looking ice and hoar- rost Just at these points you may re duce temj>eratufo to almost auy degree you please; and if you want to cool your brine, all you havs to do is to pass it through a coil of pipe winding ronud the receptacle in which the heat-sucking process is going on; and, if you choose, it may be mode hot euough to freeze a tank of water in a baker’s oven. Most, people know that ordinary brine, that is salt and water, requires a much greater degree of cold to freeze it than pure water. Hence salt cast upon ice or snow melts it. A solution of chloride of lime, which constitutes tiie “brine” in this machine, may bo cooled down to 50 deg. below zero without freezing. In connection with the ice-making machine, it is not necessary to reduce the brine to such a temperature; but after passing through a spiral pipe in the “cooler,” it issues in a frigid torrent, which freeze** water more rapidly than the scveltot winter’s night. A Pacific “I never dealt I’ve dealt the game tor twenty years, hot I’ve quit now. I made nothing nfor lost anything, i tor a sight loneesaw, I should a gambler still. Hereby Let me tell it: ae three yean ago I ran a high- toned game ai a certain place yon proba bly know, for it strikes me I saw you there. It was a square gome, os I will leave any one to say—a thriving gome— for I dealt for half the bloods in town, and often hod as many as five lay oute at a time, with too much business on habd to eVen get time to rest One evening * young chap strolled in, with a sort of curious stare on his face, and I concluded right there that he Iras green. He waft fair-headed, and had fcpair of blue eyes and clean-cut features—im in- nocen{-looking yoang fellow, if ever I Saw tine. He only required a glance to convince you that he was a’Vtranger in the gambling-room. He soon Was at home, though, for I saw in his blue eyes the love of play, and, after that evening, he waa a constant visitor. He played his pile right up, and never growled if his lack was hard ; and. on eyery sec ond card, he’d stack the limits- up in blue; Take it altogether, his luck was hard—sometimes the hardest, 1 think, 1 ever saw. I’ve known him to lose, at a ■ingle deal. oeven double shot*. ‘ ‘ Business for me, of course, but somehow it almost seemed too bad. I souldn’t say a word, though, and, yet I liked the boy. He had lots of the filthy. I think, from the day he liegan, he must have dropped a cool $10(1000 on the gome, and he never growled. “ We both quit gambling the same night—he, poor lad, for sufficient rea sons, and t because I loathed tljW gums. It was in this wise : 41 His coin gave out in a deal or two, and he put up a diamond ring, just to see his ill-luck out, you know. The chips soon went He had a pin, ft flam ing stone in massive metal. He passed that in without a word, and drew $50 in f 'old. 8o help me God 1 I wished him tick ns heartily as any player there ■ but no, his last stake went my way on a los ing ace. He drew $300 more, I think, on his watch and chain, anil tried bis line bets again, but his luck was gone. My God ! I’ll never forget the palp, haggard look that crossed his lace, but he was game. He never uttered a word, and kept his chair like a pillar of stone. For a moment he seemed dazed at bis reverses, but suddenly his eye caught the thin, worn circlet of dull gold on his tittle finger. He looked at it a little while, and a dark wave of hot crimson blood passed over his face, for the cir clet seemed to cling even faster than the flashing gem he hail passed in before. He at last Gripped it off his finger and handed it to me. It enmo reluctantly, this worn old ring. ‘ What can I have on this?’ he asked. ‘I don’t know what its value is, but I’ll rcdeeiu-it first of all;' It might have cost $5 new, but it was worthless then. “Stilt f passed mtt * fifty stack re turn, just tti let him try again. He planked it down in the jxit, afid tlien low upon the table he laid his face on his folded arms. Well, for a wonder, his luck changed, and ho won three times. H« took no notice of me. as 1 told him when the limit barred, and so we played two fifty on each card. Would you believe it? In the deal the pot won out and never lost! And still he lay with his face hid in hia arms. The deal was out, and I shook him up, Inn not a muscle moved, and, raising hia face, I started back in hoiror at tin- glassy expression of b : *ayes, *<»r the boj was aead." Eating Lemons. A good deal lias been_said through the pajs-rs lately alxmt the henlthfulness fif 'lemons. The latest advied’ks to how to -use them so they will do the most good runs as follows: “Most people iriiow the lieuetit of lemonade before breakfast, but few know how it is more than doubled by taking another at night, also. Tin way to get the better of a billions syt. tern without blue pills or quinine, 1s t' take the juice of one, two or three lem ons, os the appetite craves, in ns much ice-water as makes it pleasant to drink, without sugar, liefore going to bed. fn tiie morning on rising, or at least half an hour liefore breakfast, tike the juioe of one lemon in a goblet of water. This will clear the system of humors Wtd bile, with mild efficacy, without any ot the weakening effects of calomel or con gress water. People should not irritate the stomach by eating lemons clear; the powerful acid of the juice, which is al most corrosive, infallibly produces,inlln- mation after a while, but properly di luted, so that it does not bum or draw the throat, it does its full medicir&l work without harm, and when the stomach is clear of food has abundant opportunity to work on the system thoroughly ” The advertisement of the New* York 8m which commence* thlrweek ia our column* will be contlnnsd for three months. Till 8m ststca that tbs circulation of Its sovsrnl j editions last year was 66.636,030, agilnst f J36,9J9 the year previous. Thi Sdn, it fan fihcs a live and generally i n-wspipsr at a very low rate, ex greet deal of money to advertise the fact T)>ls is one of the secrets of its success. The j 8rtr believes that every man should sub scribe for end liberally support hi! local newspaper first and foremost. Having done this conscientiously asd faithfully, it advi-l ■<■ nil those who may wish to supplement | tVelr (own or county papir with a metropol itan journal, to give The 8m a trial An Undoubted Hltaslng, • 1 <>at tl>litT years arc. ■ prominent Paydcisu, by ts* n d« ot Dr. William H*l', dltcortrtd, or p.iriuc d liter lone experimental nssarch. ■ rem- cUfir (tiwaw* cf ibo thnw*. chrtt and luogs, whin i m ai of inch wonderful * IB'-any that It toon t-in d a wide lepUUtioa In tbt* country. Tbs n m'-ofih* medicine (• I>r. Wm^ Hall', Baliam f r ibo Lois a, aod nny bo rsfoly retlsd aw *• a ap.ai. mod pa oil Ire ears lot coUihs, coirs, tors tb>oi>, fee roll by rll diuggUts Durco’s C .h rra SuulF ‘11, w:.U kaow o icm, d v kr U.tma r*tll aai. - ts n Its Wall rtrued pnpul .rltr. K . SiTSt*. of Gcrewa, X»n5.«, w.nra, Miirc i tit-, irfi) r h re u,ed Purno', c.i •. r h mult muIHi the onij- thios tbrt di>M-i; >. .u>r mhmI n afwdy • elk ct* • curs.’’ fold by ill Cius ia(V llcjoler. Hrjolcr, “He (V Alive “\Vio* I.omI, bn! I-Found. ’ Under date of Jtilj !>, 18. 2, E. B. Bright, of Windsor Locks. Conn., writes a plain, hoedeet narrative, which, from its very simplicity, has the true ring of line cold. Hoetysb "My father is using Hunt's iLunody ami seemi to ! e improving, in feet, he is Very mm h hotter ih.-iU hft hns been fur a longtime. He hadbeen tnpi>cd three times. The first time they got from him sixteen quarts of water, the second timo thirteen quurts. and fully as much more the third time, and ho would constantly fill ui> again every time after he had been tapped, until he commenced using Hunt’s Remedy which acted like magic in lus case, as he begun to improve at once, and now his watery accumulation pafises away through the secretions naturally, and he has none of that swelling or filling up which was so frequent before the functions of the kidneys were restored hy the use of Hunt's Remedy, lie is a well-known citi/.en of this place, and has always been iti business here.” Again he writes, November 27, 188*2: ‘‘I beg most cheerfully and truthfully to state, in regard to Hunt s Remedy, that its use was the saving of my. father's life. I F-poke to you in rny previous letter in regard to his being tapped three times. It ts the most remarkable case that has ever been heard of ia thi- section. Foi a man of hi* years (sixty jears) it is a most remarkable cure. He had l>eon unable to aitend to his business more than a year, and was given up by the doctors. Tha first bottle of Hunt's Remedy that he used gave instant relief. He has used in all seven bottles, and continues to nee it whenever he fuels drew i'nr slug gish, and Itaffords instant relief, tie is now attending to his regular business and lias been “•vend months. I am perfectly willing that yon fie U.d publish this letteijgts wo thor- oufebly beiieve that father's life was saved by using Hunt’s Remedy and these facts given above may bo a ben -fit to others suffering in like manfierTrom diseases or inaction of the THEMAT GERMAN lliii' Hi! Iii<, REMEDY Ijfiirainiiwniraipl FOR PAIN. Relieves and cures 15HEI MATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BAlKACHK HEADACHE, TOOTH A'Ek. SORE THROAT, QUINSY, SWELLINOS. M’RAINS, 46 So Bruises, fwliridtoL wnr 'It TES, IS . Al.p*, And ulInt.i. rl'iKtllyacliea at.d iniin*. INHIuuIinkIu niH ,jni nnv CENTS A BOTTLE. Sold by nil IimicstLste and Tvr.trrv 'tetiTCttons In U hingiioge*. The Charles A. Voctler Co. (^iuwsikit* lo A. VOOLl.KR.A 170./ <: :t w Md.. 1.8. A. Vaelw •mb’s Hmrj. In a communication published in the Army and Navy Journal, Commander J. B. doghlan, U. 8. N., states that the consultations of eminent naval and other surgeons, respecting his rheumatic at tack, failed to afford him the slightest re lief. By advice of Dr. Hoyle he used St. Jacobs Oil, which wrought a com plete and, as he says, wonderful cure. John Carr Moody, Esq., lawyer at Valle jo, Col., was likewise cured of a severe joint trouble. —A hot spring, which wells tip through a bed of gravel and iron ore, has been discovered at Richmond, Vo. Everybody will want a copy of the handsomely illustrated book, full of facts and original fun, just issued for ratuitous distribution, and which can obtained by addressing *‘ Supply De nartment,” The Charles A, Vogeler Co., Baltimore, Md., enclosing a 3 cent stamp to pay postage. X Ah Englishman has invented a wav of •awing a murderer’s head off with a red- hot wire, electrically heated, and the authorities are mcau euough to refuse him a chance to see how it works. ledies A chiiurea'* b^et* A siiocs c m’t rm over if Lyoo’s Pat. Heel titifisners nre us^ - is.—■ ; —Kcv. George Allen, of H oroester, Mass., has completed his nin'*ty-first year. He is the oldest ma e chi en o Worcester, the oldest clergiman n the State, and probably the onl (If", .i H»don UtrnbK ofFrani Unscru- p u I o u s parties nave tried to imitate our Rem edy and decei ve thepublic n using SIMILAR NAMES, b u t d o not be de cei ve d; see that the word SAFE with pic ture of an Iron Safe, on ablack Wrap pe? qndwhlte letters is on every package. Also, see that it is on the la- bel and tt a m p, and take no other. H. H. WARNER A CO. ROCHESTER. N.Y. ••Ar ts ■»•«*« sm-i «.< BrTf-l..aui fas THE PUREST AND BEST tkwas Hop*. Malt. drake aa* P—Oelt—■ The oldest, best, most renowned End vata- sble medicine in the world, and in addition it contains all the beet and most effective curative properties of all other remedies, bating tbs (reatest liver regniator, blood purifier, and Ufe and he tith restoring agent; on earth. It gives new life and vigor to tiie aged and • infirm. To clergy men, lawyers, literary men, ladies, and all whom sedentary employments cause irregularities of the Blood, Stomach. Bowels, or Kidneys, or who require an appe tizer, tonic and mild stimulant, it is invalu able, being highly curative, tonic and stimu- ’ating, without being intoxicating. No matter what your feelings or symptoms ire, or what the disease or ailment is. use Hop Bitters. Don't wait until you are sick, but if you only feel bad or miserable use the bitters at once. It may save your Kfe. Hun dreds have lieon saved by so doing, at a moderate cost. Ask your druggist or physi elan. Do not suffer yourself of let your friends suffer, but use and urge them to use Hop Bitters. If you have lameness in the loins, with frequent itftins and aches; numbness of the thigh; scanty, painful and frequent discharge of urine, filled with pus, and which will turn re<i» by standing; a voracious ajqietite and unquenchable thirst; harsh and dry akin; clammy tongue, often darkly furred; swollen and inflamed gams; drupsical swelling of. the limbs; f equent attacks of hiccough; inability to void the urine, and great fatigue in at tempting it—you are suffering from some form of Kidney Q^Jrinary Complaint, such as Bmoirr’s Disease of the kidneys, stone or inflammation of the bladder, gravel and renal calculi, diatietes, strnuguary stricture and .etention of the urine, and Hop Bitters is the only remedy that will permanently cure you. Remember, Hop Bitters-i# no Vile, drugged, drunken nostrum.’but the purest and best medicine ever made, and no person or family should be without it. Don’t risk any of the highly lauded still! with testimonials of great cures, but ask your neighbor, druggist, pastor or physicians what Hop Bitters luisaii ! onn do for you and test it. ['wani^ ^ 100,000 n « w rr&dtTJ &£ Duff l . Bnu in order tooLuiK them, and to Jntro^l /dure it into every homt in the ('NION,'»€*r«l ’making extraordinary cflrrs. We will tend tho ’ _ jrrt Fiinly Ikper i-uMI : !. mtitlrd “Youth/ 1 ffor the next tA.-ee iwonfA* t<» ail who will aet.d < 4 *30 cent,, in a *-<•» t i «■»?• to help p«v posiag? ami cort of thu » »itiaernei.t; and to each [Spiftou wc wilt tond freo follow tags Our QiwbH. iination Family Needle Package, containing Ibuwt Enfliih NecdU*\ r .* r in ii .provtd wra|*Der».| tflF.ath pat kuffe eonUftn It . fotlowiii* . 4 pnpert, 25 ini leach; also. 2 'tcel frnJ* * ,3 hn-f <vtton darner*. 21 cation Uarnera, 2 < \ira ty.t eoitch doxnwa... Kg Iw >ol, 2 yarn, 1 worfted, 1 :i fo. *? rnrpet. ard 3 butt> r| lNe*“dlea. 1-2 dotrn new Gn 1 ■ be-n h/uily p \*oed Ned I 1 tiaykmti 1 Jnpan*m JlnnUt'chif/, 1 beaultful Ort^n-| "tuJ CTk'Uf" Ti fy, 1 elr-/nut, i.nported Lnmp “ YOUTH "j* a la't» V-cH.'unm Illustrated I-»t*-J krarr and Family fStpor, ftl.ed with Charmingi^ * Stories. Sketci.c*. JWma, TuMlfi- Ficlure*,^ ketc.; in fart. fw > v: ” an.uM and infUuctJ \the whole family ' s ir. !e, from the axw olf \eijrht to eighty. Write to-day. Addret tYouth ^ubMahinaCompam! LPoho ttroet, BOSTON. llASft AGENTS WAXTE» FOB THE HISTORY T*MS U. Sw BY ALEXANDER H. STEPHENS. It contain* over.JOO fine portrait* and enprarinfft of battle* and other historical teenes, and i* the most com-, plote and valuable hiatory every ^abiLshed. It l* •“Id he aubwcripCiow only, and Agent* are wanted in repry county^ Stnd for circular* and extra terms to Agents. Address, Natioxal Pvblijhixo Co., AtlauU, Qa. PISO S CUF?E FOR MRU WHERE AH tlSf MiU. Best Cough Syrup TK.Vok good. Use in ilmi*. Noli! uy.lrunpRtii. CONSUMPTION. OATOONiY LIME! ■Endorsed by all Builders »Mo hart used iL Capacity wf Works, 100,000 Barrels . PEB ANNUM. Plans and Bolted Corn Meal, ground by water-power, and tbs celebrated Nes'ver JPx-ooewre* Vlonur. C. W. GBAT dk CO., GraysvlUs, Ga* MERCHANT MIL LERA Mil 1 — flfid for our prices —4 pottentf ot Spoons. Forks, Fancy FiecaSt Combination Ssts, , wjurp-. Presentation Goods of all kind* We h*vs every article thnt eaube yfiisH foi, ruaiantee our «lver tte float quaiity at the lowest prices pop sible. ^ Goods bought from us «w engraved free of charge. J. F. STEPHENS * CO., Wholesale Jewelers, 84 Whitehall Street, ATLANTA, QA., PORXABL,® SODA - FOUIVTAJPVS Hcud for Catalogue. Chapman & Co., MADISON. INu. .Brer's bsard rut is . Icevriaat Mo-Uefis, Wh,s» rkoiroa b*U k*«t* is 2d to waag **.*1 *4 sar- ^ffsr 3 Fk«s <4ssa ktb« srerk. W.ll pr«*sitforfe., J _ Pssksgs wRk 4i<WMteas ssal*4 sad ?j « et*..*lamp.<or silver. L..4.L.S3II 1 HxtO Him-AgU.raUllitr.lll m AND NOT WEAR Ol ! T. f%t>> watchmaker*. P»y mail 2rV. Circuln. dWI L. Ufree. J.S.BlfiCUACo.. J8 Dey St.. Ji.\ WATER- PROOF This w/vt«r-proojmateiial~rananLhje__ for roofs,outsidn walls < t fxiildinRK. Mid intidg in t)l»r - of plaster. CataJotrun. 1 . Ilf y CAV P PA t-n**' •Bmpl«ifreo.tLeUb.lSo.iVV-nsr« I & IrUl ^ ^ MILL and FACT0E7 SUPPLiPft IF all KINDS. BELTING SOSE arid -AGEING, OILS, PTOP3 ALL tnsT^ IRON PIPE, FITTINGS, BBASS GOO^o 3TEAM GAUGES, ENGINE G0VEBN0E3, &c. fl^A - or Prlc9 Lht. W. E. DIL LINGEAX Is CO., 143 Kaln Street, LOUIS VILLE. KY. FREE •W-rai* rwassWr >* as awtats mstn tsfe .-<■ iksWUi a*ss sfw. ■rervoas trnaktes sf yoaih, aaW lor to- -4 MIMy wkisa yraesW.-* .,)« sWe. As ir ■Smw iantall 4>*>s»ss aiSsorroa* tS- Ot mm3s mr l.iT«r.ww «aa mi hy *mmm .U or Sho BOW.- wSi-m u KiWitry aaW SJvor Ca.o .-.-—.-o- ? survivor olloge. - Foadyspopria, *, dspreetion •( spirits aad gtoonl dsbuity. ia their variou forms; also as • prevsntauvn against fever aad agaa aad stiur latertoittaat fsvwnu tbs Blxlr et Oalimya,” AGa. Now Ysn, is ths bast toaie; ag fress (ovar sr Mhaoe equal —Tito whole number of letters mailed In this country during the ,\oar 1880 wee l,058;252,87fi, or on average of SI to each noo, »»«1 qhHd la the |(K®!E«^S4 ■tstfs SSssreek KUsre. Ms* saly Ssss tt Isaparl yyassltoireU, vsals ls«w aad saM. Fsssalsbi^sIl^Q Send to SIOORE'U BUhINENRt INI VRBSITT, ktlantjo, Ala. For IHusiratftil Circular. 25tb year. > “THI UEST IS OHKAPlVr.’ i mm TUDETCUCDCSAWlilL c . BonePowen 1 niltOntnO fi.„ r B„i!.n 1 Clsiff Hallf.- (Suited to .11 wctiOM.' Write for FMEK Ilkn. Punor.tt. but Tiice* to Tb. Anltnun A T*ylur Co., X.n.nrlil, 0...( A T \ with bottom prlctoT; alao, particulars of the vary r ▼ vw hueinaeofferM F. A. M. RUDDIN’Q 4 COl IfoMAlc Pub*.*heieaDd M ah u factor era, 781 Mioa«i way.Isww York. AWRKKtawi mr own town. Isnru UoattttTM.alUrsBAMmtaOaFarU*!-* « Fuze to r. a. v. Bm.iuwi CoIa«4 Show ok tiie Ancient Tetnpla Bad Masomic Mattetf rrrwotly dlscov»*rw.l in Mextce^ alao, tha Urge new illustrated Catalogue of Meeonfe books Bod rood^ ’ lurro. ^86 C. B. C* Coleman Huflinesa College. Newark, N. J. Write for Catalogue. S | ww *-"«**»*"» ajonaoB a ny tci*u entabli.br* xa Oftlrela NewTjrk - lor the Cure of EPILEPTIC FITS. ^MiAvooumalofiltdicime. TV. Ah. K-iernlo 0»to of I.oxidoiil, who m»V.* «|w- dally of Epilepsy, haj wllhont doubt treated ami cured more cnee# (mh’i any other It ring }Thy*iclBn. RlStucceas )uu» siioply aotmilshl^g; wa haivo heard of caaes of ever 20 years’ eianding aiiocetisfully cured by hl;n. Ho has piibHshed a v irk: on this diaeato, which bo ocufl* with a large batik) of his wnnd«*rful euro freo tn »iny snf- f 'rct wh» WMkf land thifr exprem? *ml r. O. Addre*w V s advia« any ous wishing aenro t«* a<k!re*» Ik, Ah. M^KKOM4, s<a. Jn>m 8t, New York. Strong’s Sanative Pills DEPOT^sJII^ SUPOUDLEY^^ OEEMANf T^brother, MACH I NERY| NEW0RLE ANSi manufacture, c;TI AMFNC I NE S COTTONPRESSES WATERELEVATORS SHAFT INGPULLL YS IRONCOLUMNSHOUSE FRONTSANDCASTINGS FOUNDRY ISONERATO STREE TEXTENDING FR0MMAGN0LIATO SEARASTREET!N ‘iEWORLEANSLA MAINOFF\CL& SALESORPOT TWENT^’MiQ E I GHTEET JJN I 0NST PirORGETl I TNOTlii^i Ki*:i :> 1). A. Ml LIAM'. Mana’jef. P. O. Box 1690. *—NEW ORLEANS. LA. M- ! <- * *.y T ...1 r ,!f -T. COTTO’f f —• >: .lAM .nil M l*i>-, StMiMii.p Ml, re'-ni IIW ’ PRtS-iS, v K'UIM.S. SI '• Ml m.i Ri: 1 'mini Ci»r b 1 * ».l. 11. C. T "l- 'j'-*' •<' solicited smletlimat*' suadB to* Al.u. j, I Jld l >fi t :P7«* ^ '-rk ••r- 'rstuive. Onowre nivr. rOWL'TMU A spsedy core for liver complaint, reguintlns Hit bowels, pniUytos the blood. oleAnwIn? fnmi ninU list taint. A perfect cure for *U k hesdschp, con stipation sad dyspepsia- Bold by all leertinf drug gist*. For slmanscs with full psrtioulars, address C. K. Hull A U>., Box «0, New York. 1 har. * p<^l(lvo rr':'- *(v t r il.o ) ■'» r.. tboeaeaS* of cas-- o.* i'.n i Ain i und ' stamling U.». bo-nin 1 M’.:*?!- ’,:a(i-- Mu :t* officacy, that I . ill-<*tu1 I’l* u lOTIliv-nli |r-tb.r with • VAl.i’AEl.l, TiiK..TiM.•’ ia .n,.alIcr e .- h ,«^K.P »• ^ n , m T , An Open - Secret. The fact ia well understood that the MEXICAN MUS TANG LINIMENT Is by far the best external known for man or beast. The reason why becomes an “open secret” when wo explain that “Mnstang” penetrates skin, flesh and mnscle to the very bone, removing all diseaso and soreness. No other lini ment does this, hence none other is so largely used or does such worlds of good. THE SUM IS ALWAYS INTERESTING ! From morning to~ Oiorniuc nntf from w*ek la week TUX 8UX prints a cototinued siory of the lives of few. men and'#aTrrrYr~An1'Tni.Tf fTtT^ts^pTftrrs, T6ve«, hai** and troubltii*. Thin story is mor' interesting them an$ romance ikat^wa e er d ri-es.1. ^«l«ftcrlpliofl: Daily (4 j rl'c.h/ by m u! SSt*. a month or $6.3(1 a year ; Htnoai H pagea/XI.MO per year; \Y krklt vX page*) $l«00 pvt year. I. W. ENGLAND, PublUher, New Tork City. 15 ta 190 I? X\l IX VAUBriA. AaareetVTBiiox «uo M nrtiftna. Ms OIVLY 030 f- Phtl*4*lpkt* IBIngn ttof tl -ittyl*. E<)u*lto*a/8lDire U h. K.fk-1.. SmtmStr, M ft -J .1 I. t< mrnmintA St/rrf y. f , f»r it. TbI* I* UM mb. »tkw w<WMaiM i.t.11 It Ut O. AS MMSlpM w.mni. fur IbrM .Mr*. t «l<1 for fllui tr.te-l Circu;»t .*4 Twt m-. !•!». A<Sarv..i CttARLKH A V .in A- f O., 17 T K.V . PUlUdrlpli*- K ,, is ui*.fi.ttTr.g anw Jf i; i. „ pfi HkM. In curing KflV *- " n /( aseptic Kite, Hpasma, u BO e’cnvulllong, 81. Vllur IO Mi “ " CURES AND e by all ’Ate " Duii'-e, AiioboUnm, Ol'lm» Kallng. Ner- YOU. Hr-billty/ilTOtUl* and nil Nervous afid l;l<««l diseases. To Ciergymeu, Lawysr*. f-lieiary men, Vor- ehunte. BnnWers^Xa- die* and all who»^«e dentary einpli.yi.ient causi*s Nervous I’niS- tration. Irregulantlt* of the blood, stonin''b. bowels or klndeys. or wh‘> iciolic a nerve L.., .. ifettr <>r X- i rs , «II -e ' * * .Stlinuisut, Samarltau N<Tvlnei»lti'alu»liia Tlioiisan.-aprofliilin 11 1!, ii.oat wonderful 'n pm, f'OI , (MONO I'.i'lirieuxa. St. Juaepb MO Tlgora.ittb^peersustelte'dtbpainkm^sipm.^r.B ■ale by i tt Elite PublUb.r,’ Union, Atlsnls, Ua..v Twrif.—'*3 SPIATLING ClOTTON PLANUR AND GUANO OIS1RIBUTOR. Tbs ehsapret <nd beet. Opens turrovT Btes distributes gnsua. drops cotton , * corn, peaa.etc. A distance. In any r um. at l i bar. Oovsre i ___ A^snttwantedsrsrywhars. Tot tufl'partlacisa Z‘ W. O. naTH * oo„ *1 Bewta Broted St., Atl»»tb, Ghu wh«ra ■h trUl of th* tke pleasure . hare btotfi itod toy its ■ and Pub- akars will find it grsstMt valu* a Tonic is nsoss PURiFiES m A combination of fro- tacMte of Iron, Fonsmicn Hark and Phosphorus it. m palatable form. Per Ma. &BV.J.L.TOWWBB. r Iadntoar. Z1L, ngw-J* — U 1 oosisidsr 1' s Boat exoellsnt rea*dy to tbs dabiliUOed vital foroas. •.}