University of South Carolina Libraries
K3S, OF FORTUNE. k tftlfttng «•»( Or if; ptrolMBM Um creaUng klaak WQl tvar bMtf bar home) I on hand, Um livelong day I bom fey eyM ageinat the bay aaa fba gallant tba wbetflng foam. latticed window-bar* I watch at night the floating (tar*, And cradled by the rolling *ea The client hamlet lie*; An ebbing tide npon the tend, Ike mighty water rock* the land, —And through the leaning Unden-trea, Bepeata the crystal skiea. My freighted ship—perchance the gale Give* battle to her swelling sail, Her heaving charger meets the blow And plunge* panting back; The current swims beneath her keel. Bar eearlet banners writhe and,nM|. And in the foaming nobd below The water* circle black I Or yet a thousand leagues from shore, Th* red flames eat her to the oos*i She leaps in all her Masoned gold Along the hissing tide— Her quenchless Jewels sink In slime— A treaeure for the hand of Time, And rushing through the empty hold " The ocean claims the bride. Ah, friendJ too long yon followed here, The flagging footsteps of the year To watch, beyond the melting bay, Th* distant shining sea— A floating hull from other lands dame reeling up the yellow sands— A wreck of life, the sailors say: For you—but not for me. Dona Baan Good an. The Rightful Heir. For some weeks post the engagement between the Earl of Beauvray and Miss Ifillioent Moyle hod been chronicled in the fashionable intelligence of newspa pers, and the marriage was appointed to take place in July. .. There were many who considered Miss Moyle a lucky girl, for Lord Beauvry was not only of ancient joung, immensely wealthy and well-looking, bnt he was popular every where, owing to his sunny temper and uprightness of ohaRicter. Lord Beau- vray had been merry without being dis solute. He was the most irreproachable of gentleman, just as his betrothed, Miss Moyle, was the fairest flower among that boquet of pretty girls who had been pre sented at court in the same season ns herself. Millioent Moyle was a rich heiress as well as a pretty girl; but this was about all that could be aaid of her. Her father, Joeiah Moyle, a bill-dis- oounter of Lombard street, was a “new man” of the dty plutocracy. It was aaid that the peer* relatives had been much scandalised on- hearing of His Lordahip'a intention to marry the daughter of a man whose antecedents were just a little misty. One sunny afternoon just a fortnight before the date fixed for the marriage, a brougham with a coronet on the panel* clattered up to Mr. Moyle's business house and Lord Beanvray alighted, ghastly pale. The hall porter was startled by his appearance, not lees than by the broken voice in which he inquired if Mr. Moyle had left Just then Mr. Moyle himself strutted out, all glorious with a geranium in his coat and a white hat pVohed aoook on his pointed gray head. “Ah, Beauvray!” cried he, with cheerful welcome, but perceiving the look on the peer’s face, he exclaimed: “Why, what’s the matter? Not ill, ! hope?" “No, not ill,but I want to speak to you far private," said Beauvray, hoarsely. “Shall we go off in the phaeton?" stammered Mr. Moyle, full of uneaai- “ No, into your room; but let us be quite alone," repeated the Earl, and he himself led the way to the offloe. Plumping down into the arm-chair at the writing table, Mr. Moyle stared in bewilderment while the peer sat down opposite and produced a blue envelope with several black seals. Laying this on the table, Beauvray placed his hand ou it and looked into the financier's •yea. “Mr. Moyle,"said he, sadly, “I hare a painful communication to make, but I will not boat about the bush. I find that. I have no legal right to the title which ! bear, or to the fortune which l am using." “Eh! what?" exclaimed Mr. Moyle With a gasp. “I made a discovery this morning, in rummaging through a box of deeds," continued Lord Beauvray, whose voice grew steadier. “You know that I in herited the title from my uncle. He was the eldest of three brothers. My father, the youngest, died while I was a boy; my second uncle died » few years later, and we fancied he had been a bachelor, but it appears that he had been clandestinely married, and left a ■on—a lad whom you know, by the way, for I have seen him in your house. His name is TimbureL” i “ Timburwl!" echoed Mr. Moyle, with A start. “Young Timburel, who used to be dak in our, firm, and whom I dis missed for presuming to make love to oor Millie I" *1 was not aware of those particulars,” Mid fiord Beauvray; “but young Tim- burelis the man; he bears his mother’s > (she was an actress), and we used |o think he was the natural son of my •oeond uncle; but his parents were law fully married. “And do yon mean to say that Tim- burel—a vulgar, eonoqlted upstart, who is living on his sits at this moment, with uot a shilling in hk pockets, 101 be bound—do yon mefen to say he has be- eome Earl of Beatumy f * “Not on^y that, but he beeomes abso lute owner of Arty. My poosr fatbsr left nM e _~„ a Whfln I put Timburel in poa- of hi* own, I shall have nothing la the Guards and -.-"V ~-“'~ don’t say snch bosh," Lcfef old Moyle, grasping his nose to him that Lord ed the moneyed man. Butin a moment this idea fees dispelled by Lord Beau vray displaying the content# of his envel ope—a marriage certificate and a num ber of letters which substantiated the story. Then he entered into explana tions. It seems that his unde^tho Hon. Col. ds Yray, being in garrison at Malta, - oome.” had privately married an Italian actress named Timburelli. After a year’s union this fickle person deserted him, leaving her child to his care, and soon afterward she died. Under the circumstances the Colonel, though he provided for the boy’s*maintenance, deemed it convenient to conceal his marriage, and eventually he died suddenly, without having ac knowledged it. Apparently, however, Ms conscience had tormented him, so that while looking the moral courage to speak the truth during his lifetime he had left evidonoe by which it might be known after his death. Unfortunately the envelope containing his marriage cer tificate had lain mixed up with some other documents in a box which Lord Beauvray (who inherited, the deceas'd papers) had never thought of examining till that morning, when he bat! l>egun to sort his family papers in view of his mar riage. • * ' .-...-r-J The shifty glance of the money man quailed in the light of unquenchable honesty in that of one who happened to be a nobleman In something more than the name. * * , * 3 There was a pretty hubbuh in society when it became known that the Earl ojT Beauvray—or George de Yray, os he now simply called himself—was going to abandon fils title and estates to a man who had been a city clerk. Of course George do Vray’s marriage was postponed. The turn in his fortunes had thrown so much business on his hands that it was impossible he could de vote a month to honeymooning until it was all disposed of; besides* which, ho felt iMnmd to make Mr. Moyle the offer of releasing his daughter from her en gagement. At first this proposal waff pooh-poohed equally by tho bill-dis counter and Miss Moyle herself. Millie, who was not quite so sensible as she was pretty, wept a good deal at not becom ing a Countess; then she wept at the no bility of George’s action, which every body was praising. —Suddenly the bill-discounter crumpled all the papers in his hand with—a fever ish grasp, and looked at Lord Boauvrny. There was an expression in his dull eyes as of a light behind on uncleaned pone of glass. “I say,” he whispered,, “have you told anybody besides me of this se cret ?” "No; I came to you first, ns in duty bound. ” “Then what prevents ns from destroy-^ ing the papers ?« I shan’t say anything about it. That young Timburel is a skunk and a snob; it. will bo ridiculous to see him a lord, and he’il ruin himself or l>eoome mad with conceit—so foolish is he. I say, Beauvray, if I throw-this envelope into the fire who will know anything about it?” y _ , “I shall,” answered Lord Beauvray and ho held out his hand for the papers. Now, there was staying in the house of the Moyles a poor little cousin of Mil- , lie’s, named Gertrude Brown. She was a soft-eyed brunette of eighteen, very quiet and lovable, who acted as compan ion to Millie and hail to bear much from the whimsical humors of this spoiled chili Gertie had always received marked kindness from Lord Beauvray, who treated her as if she had been his sister, and she looked upon him writh admiration as tho most noble being she had ever seen. His renunciation of rank and wealth had struck her as an act of sur prising heroism, and she could not oe much as allude to it without tho tears gushing from her eye*. A shrewd, merry little thing too, in her way, she was capable of discerning tho difference Uiat existed between a genuine mati of honor like Lord Beauvray and a mere-man of money like her Uncle Moyle. It was this enthusiasm of poor Gertie Jkuwn’s on poor George do Vrnys-’s lie- half that began to make tho eup of Mr. Moyle’s bitterness overflow. That worthy gentleman had taken to musing that there was an-end now to his chances of sitting in Parliament, getting a baronetcy and all that. ~ ^ T — Poor Gertie held her tongue, although her heart throbbed wofully. She had heard that the now. Lord Beauvray, the ex-Mr. Timburel, had been invited to dinner on a certain evening, and she lie- gan to suspect that her precious undo was forming a plan for making of this former clerk of his tf' suitor for Millie’s hand. - ?! Her intuition was not at fault. Old Moyle hastened to make peace with his discharged clerk, whose vanity was easily tickled. He become a regulai visitor to tho bill-disoouuter’s, taking care never to oome at times when he was likely to meet George. His visits displeased Gertie Brown, but ho easily succeeded in winning the favor of the discounter’s daughter who correspond ingly lessened her liking for George, and one day when she cast an aspersion upon him which Gertie could not help resent ing, she screamed, “ If you are so fond of Mr. de Yray, why don’t you get him ie marry you? That would be two beggars together.” Naturally, Gertie went to her room to have a good cry, but from that day she ceased (speaking about George and be came very circumspect in her demeanor toward him. When he called to see Millie she left the room. George soon noticed these tactics, for his interviews with Mr. Moyle's daughter were growing more and more irksome by reason of Millie’s coldness and irritability. At the “No, but it's very Inconvenient," said Millie, still querulously, “and that re minds me, if wo marry. T suppose yon dqn’t mean to live on my money. Para says his banks might break and all sorts of things. So I suppose you will do something to get an independent in- made some inquiry about Miss Brown ahe fired up in a jealous pet "You seem very anxious about Miss Brown. I am not obliged to show her off in the draw ing-room whenever visitors oome. She is only a pauper cousin whom we have taken in for charity." « “It’a queer charity, dear, if you talk of it in that way," laughed George. “I don’t oooaider poverty adiagraoe, either." “Yfls,” answered George, coloring deeply, “I have applied for an exchange into the line, and think of going ont to tho war on the Indian frontier. I shall have a Lieutenant-Colonel's rank—so -if yon wait for me two years, Millie, I will return- with a new career and perhaps an income l)ofore me." ^ % “Ob. wait two years to become a sol dier's wife and go out to Jive in baking Indian boat 1” exclaimed Millie, pout ing. "I no'vhr bargained for that. ” Just at that moment Gertie Brown came iu. She had a message to deliver to Moliio from Mr. Stojlo and blushed as she crossed the room where tho pair of quarreling lovers sat ' I “ Miss Brown,” said George, rising to shako hands with her, ‘ ‘ I wish yon good- by, for I have just been, telling Miss Moyle that I am going to tho war in India” “ You arc going to tho war! Oh, Mr. de Yray—if anything should happen to yon!" exclaimed Gertie, and the tears started to bar eye^ —_ —^ “Thank yott for those tears,” said George, gratefully; “ I shall know that one person here, at least, will feel interest. * Now give me ns a keepsakt that red book-nxarkcr you are holding it your hand. I will bring Iwek the libber with something hanging to it.' ,, “The Victoria Cross, pnri.np*,» tit tered Millie, rather uncomfortably. “I declare that's quite poetical. 'Well, good- by, Mr. do Yray; wo part os friends, don’t y o?” “Excellent friends,” answered George, as he lifted bot h Thor ha^tda to fils lip.- and hissed them pmyfully. " *» * a* * * One year passed. There had been t Triumph of the British arms in India, and tho name of Colonel do Yray was as sociated with it. His name was in every- Body’s mouth, IIhad received promo tion and oilier honors,-and was returning to England after the termination of the campaign, as Major-General Sir George deVray. As for MUlio-Moyle, she was betrothed to the Earl of Beauvray, and when Sir George arrived iu London one of the first things he read in the paper was that the marriage between this young lady and his cousin was to take place in a week. He no longer cared now. Ho went t« Mr. Moyle’s house on tlws very day of his return in tho afternoon and was ushered into tho dining-room, where luncheon was taking place. He was re ceived like a hero, ter Mr. Moyle liked to ho on good terms with successful nten, and Millie w:us anxious to obtain some thing like forgtee'.iess for her jilting. Bke received it fully and freely, so far ns ~eould.be judged from tho young Gen eral’s manner, for he was frank am\ pleasant, but after the first greetings were over, lie addressed himself princi pally to poor littlo Gertie -Brown, who sat radiant and trembling.' At last, when a toast had been drunk to George's honor and Millie’s happiness —honest Mr. Moyle acting hs toastmas ter—the General dn-w a parcel from his- pocket and extracted from it Gertie’s boeS-marker. There wer&^Jmyjiugf rom it the cross of the Bath, a "Victoria Cross and something else—a wedding .ring. “Will you take all three, Gertie.?” said. George, approacliingMillie's little cousin. “Bravo, Sir George !” excTSimed Mil lie, clapping her hands, though she lumed a little pale, “I always said that, Gertie and you were intended for cue other. ^ . “So did I,” said worthy Mr. MoyleV "but I say, hullo, what’s that?” There had been a loud knock at the door and a footman entered with a telegram ou a tray. Mr. Moyle o}>eiiod the mis- sive and uttered an exclamation of horror and dismay. “Great heavens, read this!” he faltered. The telegram announced that the new Lord Beauvray had been killed in a rail way accident. So the Indian hero got his titles and estates again. A Celebrated Case. •mmmmrnmmmm . The. Ducheue de Chauln.es, who ha* lately Sled in Faria, was the wife of the Uta Duke de Chanlncs. She was of a noble race, but born to poverty, because her branch of the Galitzin family were converts from the Bussian to the Roman frith. The Duke met her and married her, though his mother, tho Duchease de Chevrense, opposed the nuptials and looked down upon her future daughter- in-law as a low-born person, not fit to be associated with. The Duke andJDuchess went to ^Italy, where they disagreed. The Duke came home with his children and began a ’suit to retain possession of them. Ho obtained a favorable decision. On his death in the Chateau de Sable, an the rivur Sarthe, in the Province of Maine, the charge of the children was, ! by a legal decision, provisionally iu- I trusted to tho Duchesne do Chevreuse, ; his mother. ~T f ’ On the 22d- of March last a desperate and unsuccessful attempt was made to carry off the children from the chateau from Mme. do Chevrense, and it was al leged that one of tho . Duohesso do Chaulhes’s most ardent admirers was tho would-be abductor. The Duchcsse de Chanlncs then instituted a suit before the Tribunal of the Sciuo against her mother-in-law for the reversal of the judicial decision which deprived her of •, A Newsdealer’s Derlbe, • For some time past a prominent news dealer not many rods from tho old Alb&by depot, in Boston; has had*Aon- siderablo trouble with a-crowd of young fellows who make their loafing place on a corner near his paper stand. He has tried in vain many different ways to drive them from that place. He became so enraged at them a few days ago, after exliausting bis efforts in trying to clear them away,’ ho started in search of one of tho bluc-ooated guardians. After jjalking .up and dowff many of tho streets in the vicinity, and not finding the object of bis search, ho returned to his stand fully resolved to invent some means by which, ho would lie successful, in the work he set out to do. After Romo clays of careful studying, ho thought of an invention that he believed would accomplish his design, and set id Qut pul ting it in operation. At noon time the other day, when the largo mul titude of people who drily pass by on their way from work to their dinners, he displayed over his stand a sign which measured about throe feet square, on which waa written iu blue ink tho follow ing notice, whichvshowed that tho writer careful about his punctuation Tnreal) -fonr Honrs (A 1.1 ve . From John Koho, LsFsystts, Ind.. who snnoac- ess thst be ti cow m “ peileci health,” we hate the (ollowlns: “one year *f o 1 was, to all appear- aoes, in the last ttaaet el Consumption. Our bast physicians save my case up. 1 flnilly rot so low thst our doctor sold I could oot iivo twenty-four hours. My lilendt then purchased * bottle ol Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam for th* Lunu, which consider ably benefited me. i conttnusd uutll I took nine bottle*. 1 am no# In perfect health, baying used no other medicine.'’ was marks * / WANTED. A Policeman who knows all the side doors oFThc liquor stores and who can her children. This suit excited great in- j Bt(m a up to the bar and drink his whisky tercet in Paris. Tho Tribunal confirmed the decision of the family council depriving the Dnch- o.ssc do Chauluos of tho guardhtoship of hex children and condemned Iter tojiay i the costs of the trial. Tho jndgm nt /j riso aflirmrd aftethc comjilaints brought j by but by the family council against htr. ment the’odd and still attend to his duty. He must I also bo jfi with a.gang of thieves which l ii.fi vt tho in-ighi>orhood. Also wanted *. tw.mty-ftve loafers to stand on tho corner J and spit tobacco oyer the sidewalk. As may l>e imagined, hardly a passer topped and read \\ ifIHimU.se- GKatrine. , Gastbink should b« ttkea before or aftn menls to insure perfect assimilation of food. Gahtbine is in liquid form. Sold by druggist*. ign." The teamsters, too, Alexis Bouvier wrote a now story found- stopped I'm ir te..m, uu 1 read it, and iu a case, entitled ti leux ed ou fho DUeltesse.” . The decision of tho Court was given on tho Cth of . Juno last. Mine, cle Chevrense, the mother-iudaw, is fifty eight year* of ago. 4 — ... • The New Boy. Old Moyle had sunk in a chair helpless. His face was 1 a thing to sde. r A Nebraska Blizzard. Tho road was a mere track across the wild prairie, crossing draws-and winding Laround, the elevated portions. At long intervals, tho dug-out or sod-house, if uot abandoned,-gave evidence of habita tion. The wind, that Indore blow with cutting effect, had nCw increased into - a fearful gale, and was laden with pellets, of ice and snow that, striking tho face, could scarcely be endured. “What do you think of the storm, driver ?” I asked. “I have seen'them before, and as long as I know whore we tee, lam not afraid,” he replied. The fury of the storm in creased, and tho horses that struggled bravely forward now stopped and turned around. “I don’t know where I am,” shouted the driver. What! Gn at heavens! Are we lost in this storm ? My breath grew short ami my heartbeat loud. Written in ink, in a memoranda book, in my pocket, was my name and address. Some one would likqly find it, and the clue to fate and identity would lie established. There comes the snow- cloud sVift as a shadow. . The wagon- top that we held by united strength for protection was wrenched from our hold ■nd carried away as a plaything. A rick Ol prairie hay standing leeward was blown ou us and over us, and away with the kaat thing aha would snap ami sulk,-and atorm. “Whip the boraea for life, afternoon when George innocently driver t” we shout <1, and wo turned to He was a bran-new office boy, young, pretty-faced, with golden ringlets amt blue eyes. Just such a bojt ns one would imagine would be taken put of his little trundle-bed iu the middle of tho night and transported beyond 1he stars. The first day ,1m glanced over- the li brary in the editorial room, became nc- qnaipted with everybody, know all the printers, and went homo in tho evening as happy and cheery as a sunbemn. The next day lie appeared, leaned out of the i back window, expectorated on - a bald- : headed printer’s pate, tied the cat up by the'tail in jhe hallway, had four fir Ids j with another boy, borrowed $2 "from ait* 1 occupant of tho building, saying lib * mother was dead, collected his two,day’s, j pay from the cashier, hit the janitor with i a broomstick, pawned. a coat belonging to a member of the editorial stall,.! wrenched the knobs off the doors,\ ijpat i. tfip ice-cooler, jged three galleys of type, an'd mawligfiThis finger in the small piv.-i On the third day a note was received saying: “Mi Mother do pot want I to work iu such a dull place. She says ^ Would make a Good preacher, .so Do I mi finger is BetU'r^-gnmrfishiii’. Youiv short tune a large crowd—had collected id tout his stand. The officer - on the route, seeing the large crowd gathered about the stand, hurried to the spot, thinking a lively row was going on and •ii»v v-.iiiialdo* us'idawc teas peeded. Great was his .surprise when he Tualmd. into the crowd and saw everything was nil right. Casting his eye in the direc tion in which the crowd was looking hi; saw the sign. After carefully reading it; he several times-requosted the newsman to take it down, but his ropiest was ro- ftiholr How successiid this enterprising newspaper dealer will be with his new invention remains to bo seen.—/teuton Globe, A Snow-Bound Party. Till Death do Yank us.” A Curious but Pleasing Custom. -There is- a custom prevailing among which may throw a light upon the civil ized use of wedding cake. When a na tive girl whose exceptional Imanty has brought her many suitors is knocked down and carried off by her Accepted suitor, the wedding pair, within forty- -rightehours of the wedding, send a cup of jHiison distilled from the hulnhula (roc to each one of the bride’s funner ad mirers. If any recipient feels that ho cannot become reconciled to the mar- riage, he drinks the poison and dies; but if lie declares that ho will survive the loss f hia intended wife, he throws away the and feels bound in honor nevey show the slightest, sign of disappoint* ment. By this admirable system tlie husband is" spared the pangs of jealousy, and is able to live on friendly terms with the surviving tylmircrs of his wife; A Vermont letter says: Something ’ like flip good, old fashioned experience of being snow-bound recently happened to a party of friends ixiho had assembh d to celebrate the tenth auufvQrsary of marriage of a Cambridge couple. Tb« company was a large one, composed of old and young, several coming iifsleighs ■ from the adjoining towns. During the * afternoon the snow began to fall thickly, • driven by a fierce wind. By •nightfall | the roads were deeply drifted, ami the j wind blew if perfect gale.* .. What was to be done? Several pf the 1—guests started out with their ! niost of them returned, saying tluvt the : roads were impassable and the storm so" I blinding that the horses could uot keep the trail. to * I The result was that thirty-four guests stayed in ,the lit tle house all the .night, some sleeping tm the beds and lounges, Henry’s Carbolic Salve. Ills the Beat Ralrr for Cuts, Bruts**. Bora*, Ul cer, Belt Rheum, Tetter, (happed Hands, 1 h-:- iilslnr, Corn*, and ail kiada of likia EiupUo.« Fucslet acj'Piipp>'. P “ rnS:ii»At. —I VANT A WlFE amawlAiweroftsC hiri.tljr tf.M.p-i.t,*i n.i cbiMnm, a'm-iiunlisted .I in thn ln»t t'-n reari. but am kinelr. *nd wan ’ • Pr./t.nrKn: wit' 1 . A tu.l k.n U<1> I’tliw IX ('rwidow uuoel a: U (ir jitT-.’il. To iuvyeut off nr; on account of my monjij I w ii .»> that I wiint » I idy .rh > ia worth abcUl I am 'iiciiiiu tn *■'••*( fa th, a id will pay Bla* cash to the o,.rMin who '• ’i pill ’ tile add tew. of a lady whom I nap oe- e nil' i.cipn n'-nt \7itii and mmy. Send phot... and d*; *• r bo lu rrkan i ai' u an near ai eon can. rb 1 1U1 retoni-o h rvqu. ayU. S. KIMO, Capitol Hill, Wfchlnijtoo.D.te Nat louvre, No Itaunera—-" A Mv miner Idyl.’* ‘From n Frovldenen .tfrn hiint. Mr. (brohdE H. lUvin, a fruit dealer at 207 Went .niutter eirvCt, hears hie Kratefut tcslimouy to the iiQoi;ualod cxcrfo'Dec of the production of one ol :ir unwt nkillful T'rovtdMi^r Fharuiaetata. Mr ' Dnvle eaj*: “ taet aprinff I was very Krnatly Iron, tiled with »"vm i ti Summation of the kldneya, and it became so had that at time* I urlnittcd blood, aud my etiffei-inzs were intense. condition was mo paiuliil that for a white I «a« aearcely aide to attend to bnsiness, and tb«. aovero pains would oome *o -auilijeiily and severely that I would tie ohliKed to leave a cuntom .r w hom I mlfrht bapj^n to be wait- liuraixm. Iim in* a part of Ibc timu I was unable to walk, an \ fcareely knew wbat to do or which waj lo look for relief. At this time a friend recom me n.le.l Hunt’s Uomedv. I took two bottles of U_ and it took r.e bt bold of my disease and cub'd me very f>;s i dily. and 1 Tisve rxpi riencod no trouble with my kidney» sineo.' '“FurtLeniicrc, Hunt’s Remedy baa strengthened im* very mueh, and sin-'e 1 be^au to use It I bare been able to alien 1 to business, suanun al! right TiO-e. I beartiiy rvcomm-ed It to all. Wbat it^has don- for ine.it will ik> lor youlwho arc afflicted. 1 ' — SiiUrr.’rTfor TwenTy Vrari. "Ho-J. .Io-mo \ rerartr., Ol Hast Saginaw, Mich.. sa 1 s : J’Count n-a alnung tbo enthusiastic friends of -tian’. j Iti -.-.edv. it ban t roTcu in my rawB all \ on • 1 i:ni for it. Uavti.},'suffered for about twenty . ears, with aevero diiKOMe ot the kidneys (winch our local ph- simian pronojnc.ed Uright's Diaesee), 1 made a j .anier 'Ei t t-i co:i<ult the eminent lia\. n, of HamiUon, N. w York, of whose fame in this sit. lit 1 hadTlear ltno ’h. l)r Harenrxam- (U'dine caretirliy and eimply Mabl: .'(hi and set a bottle o; klupt m lioii.cdy and take aeeordimr to dl'-T JijtiliiiHIn ’ v Uavuiud a>k tsi Sor tr» at- nr. sti fn rtii.-r tunny to '[“nfaBT to take . 'i i di.’. i- whi.-h I iih*ut hare iH.ualit wilien a cTo’,"V throw ol my own d.Nir: but 1 Was in the doctor's lian !a, 1 an 1 of eoutwe i followed bis drtrp-D, ariit-mrhr plud I that I did ho, tor be- l..|o 1 I... 1 tak. n ijuut's !> •m. dy half a dny.cn times J toiiiid imni' iih- hem tit froia it, and by eontiu- iiinijtbe use -'i it tor a limited ttni*. I rwovereil ir ia iti. ,tfo.iiih' rntirelv, an t um to-dav, 1 think, mie of the in 1st rugiu'il of nipped Ifbiaanderv. Th .olid I, iudehted t I you sin for the promul; vion ot Mich a mr>dieiiie, and T Hope' joil may n.it go without.your reward." ' An Open ? Secret. TABO USnCKNT Ia kr g the best sxtsruljMmgf man or beast The f««sOtt why becomes »n ‘ JFf ? secret ” when we explain that “ Mustang ” penetrates sain* flesh and muscle to .the W bone, remofing all dlseMe and soreness. No other Uni. nent does this, hence none other Is so largdr used Of does such worlds of good* The Only Watch Faetoiy 1 * IN THE SOUTH,-! FACTORY, M Whitehall St. . ATLANTA.. Ga- " ,, ^0N8U«PT»aCAr«rCl DR. ■■ ■ ■ ■ » FOR THE LUNGS. M- There hn n*yrr twcii an liMtance In which thl» stcfTieg Invlgorant r.nd ami febrile nirdlelne hn failed to .-ward off the lomylatut, wh> d taken (Inly as a pro tection aeala-t ma- \£ larta. Itnrdrcds of = pb y al cl ana bS'^ abandoned all thcV offlrlpal a;>cc! ocs, ami r.ow ' pr.iM.rlbc tbiui narmlraa v'S’ctaMe tunic for rilin', and fever, «•» well aa *1 \- p.v <‘a mid nervous Wlecttor.s. iloaut- er r. 11 tn ra la Ibf ipccim-y.'irnccd. ’For aide by ail Dru.xta's and IVai era generait/. . RUltDIHS WATER PROOF _ , . , . This wAMsr-prooi m atonal nwtetmblo* ft ih for roof'd,out-ida walls « | f briUdirtiiLttfid plar-A Of nU«tpr. Clf > *-f "TI T il V Q Ort i wfesAv*. . 11. F n l & CU* BALSAM Care* C*t laencK. I BeaiMM Ceash. »i Ibeash srofi Jr rf-' v\ . .. A Plot Frustrated. go with tho storm. In loss distance than a mile wc reached a dng-ont. Thank heaven ! It is a refuge, and, more dead than alive, we staggered in at the door. Fortnnately it was inhabited, and the hospitable inmates did everything in their power for our relief. The driver’s face and my own were badly frosted, and the earn of my companion, frozen hard.— Ohio SUU* Journal. Tho investigation of tho Jobbery of $.'•0,000 in gold belonging to tho United •States, from the vaults of tho Panama . Railroad Company, is developing some curious evidence, which would probably lie very interesting reading toCapto Kidd. It appears that a plot was forpoed hist year, in which persons in New York wore concerned, to purchase a small steamer, run her up to the Magdalena River, and capture the first largo remittance of bul lion and valuables found on its way from the interior to the coast. This piratical scheme in some way got to the ears of the United States Consul, at Barraai- quilla, and so was abandoned, though the plotters here could not be caught. So it appears that tho thieves of New York engage in foreign enterprises as well as honest men. Lumber from Straw.—Lumber is now being manufactured from-straw, tho standard size l>eiug thirty-two inches iu width, twelve feet" in length, and the thickness the same as tho average of surfaced boards. One ton of any kind of straw will yield 1,000 feet of lioards that may be handled as ordimiry ones. This lumber can be produced and sold in competition with wide walnut at about one-half tho price of the latter. an on the floor. Next morning‘ th<5 world , was buried deep in snow, |mfi after breakfast, a^reverything ln«I been eaten up by the small army of guests, it was found necessary to do something, so the men and boys laid haj&ds on all the. shov els and brooms aud pieee*bof b( ar.l they could find, and proceeded to make a tnn- hcl out to tlie rnMil Tlii'ii the teams were all hitched up, mtd presently a - long, slow-moving but merry line of road breakers went winding across the wide desolation of snow. It must "have been a pretty expensive and uncomfori "Die aimiversary for the fen-yeays’couple, but then it wasn’t their fault, at least, ami they had the satisfiiction of knowing that "ali these good peojvle were rejoicing in the thought that they had made them happy. Xdo uotdoubt though that they ail'd all other married couple’i, liable to the same experience, will thunk me' the suggestion to each and every anni versary guest, that they bring a codfish apiece and put a pound of butter into, the sleigh. tiTturs rtottn mm Ii-.- ir.KrtKM V ? isk .-'SK* y y l«sH *4 #*tr- 2er»r>vv<< — ’•V It U'"** >» 0’ f -rftll i l.l Mlf I »l\« P *.>1-Art*.'PalsUt» ** A T> \ Y e It made v'it’t m.v Kpl.'tldid otitlit tn P.o- lure Fmite?. ll.T). WaRWE! Anlmra,Mamo. A JSafk* Cure Epilepsy or Fits la-24 notirt. 1> t. K (.181*., >14 A r-fti:»l flt., St I.ouis,-Mfe, BTC * weex in yoor own tovm. Terns and $5 ontht iOD free. Address H. Ham bit «t Co., Portland, Her- d some camping out withonVeer, monto $72 * Aa5^Twxio5.'fSl£S»^K “THE BEST IS CHCAPCSTx ,, raim THRESHERS 81 '"® 4 1 Clo«rBalleri Write fork'BEK lllu«. r»mj>h.' it M ' ~ - 1. Ohio Horse Poffm j iSattwrt toull h.-'tiool. „ _ ati'l i'liivu to 'iuc AuUmiui A Iif lor Co., MamSlelU, AN ITOUR (brail who will tasks•***«Mm*»rof- itabl*; atrol pillr* ba«<nr»« if you can *•»<>(• lyoar tlm* toll. MUkUAY HILL. Box TBS, M, T. A liENTS'WA NTED for th* felt »nd rast*«ts*lt iux i’ictoriil lUoltx and niM»».Pric** radwtr* U r*r cent. M tioaal Put.llibiiic-Co., Atlasta, Ua^_ .day at hum*. Sampias worth (efivS. Btlnsox A (».. “ $«o$20 ML 1 L'KINS.WV INirKBSOTT, AIiIkbIb, Gk. l-’or I'!ii«trnt(-d Piriuitar. Ki), year COTTON (UMNO A civilian, recently appointed a pay master iu the army, was out calling last New'Yesr’s'Day, wcariug a uiufonn for aatr sMbs Wo gaiF^ffe An old lady at Rome, N. Y., received a new bonnet on Saturday. Soon after she was missed, and .her absence 4>ecame so protraefcTT that. the family became anxious and iustituhnl a search. Finally she was discovered in her chamber, sitting quietly with the new bonnet on. Her daughter exclaimed, “ Why, mother, what are yon doing here?” “Go along down,” the old lady replied; “I’m get ting used to this thing, so that I shall not be thinking uliout it all the time in church to-morrow." ' ■ PnOF. Beal says that celery if packed • in moss and placed in a cool'” spot in the cellar, will retain its Savor and fresh ness all wilder. Wo imagine it might taste a little cell ary. FOX dyspepsia, indigestion, depression of spirit* and general debility, ia their variooa form*; al*o a* a preventative againet fever and ague and other interiaitteatfevera, the " Ferro-Phoepborated Elixir of Caliaaya,” made by Caswell, Hazard A Co., Now York, aad sold by all Druggist*, is th* bast tonie; aad for patients reeovenmg from fever er ether etexaees, It has ae eqaah Ladies A child re n** boots A shoes can’t ran over if Lyon’s Pat. Heel stifieaers are used The manufacture of a kind of glue to mend “broken resolutions” would prove very profitable just, now. _ , A specific, and the only .due, too, tlte flfSt ttme. He awkward as the man who went to heaven, who caught cold sitting on a damp cloud and whose ii&lo did not fit. 1——.—.— It’s rather embarrassing for a shop- keeper to be obliged to bluff a tax asses sor on the valuation of his stock, and on being burned out that night have to face this man as chairman of an under- writers' cominittoe on valuation. _ _ for alt form* anil typt*? of skin d s -ase, is known tin world over as Dr. Benson’s Skin Cure. It i- not a patent medicine, bnt a relialile remed}-. “jft atB. tso&trqr.Tr. Bowa'aChtoi y wif* fata n . <Thww—ifeiFi(lii iiwuri « fjC 11 "dll V 1 '' whom (he Drs. here cSnMHT Jielp,f U senaJGf tome for myself."—Clifford Shand, TV indoor “Yes,” said Dr. Pillington, innocently, “I shall retire from" the proffsayou. now. I haw got enough, and am willing to give somebody clso a chapce. My motto anil ipt. live ’ /?o*/on TV/in- is, ‘Live and let lire.’ "~-Bo»t<jn Tran- •cript ** ' Tbs growing demaifA for laxative HMdi- cine* show constipation lo be on th* increase. It* primary canes Is indigestion. Gasxbuui AND DISTRIBUTOR. Th# chsepsas A* beet. Opens ramfl fUstribates fasts drop* cotton *c ed corn. pe*a,stc.,s* fes disutno*. In any earn ber. Coven SI time. Price. For taU era St Mum W. C. SMITH * CO., 31 South Broad St., Atlanta, Ota. positive remedy f imU ot cares of t »v» been cured. In Its orflrecj, thst I will set gether wtlh a VALVABt.S TKfeATlSI OUTsufloror. GiveKxpraMandr. O. address. PK T. A. SLOCUM. Mt r*arlSk.WewTes*. REYNOLDS* IRON WORKS. J>. A. MCLLASE, Manager. P. O. Box 1690, • --NEW ORLEANS. LA. Manuf(trU»»T Ii#ynold«’ C*UbfBl*4 Platform COTTON PRESScS* fctsdioi, fliril llor*« P<wrr: 8TEAM EN UINKS, A R I LiifleV ACU C M PAYS, SUambont, and Meogs PfeWnt Dredgaboat Work. Lucomotivt and Railroad Car Irofl Work a Spic'tltv. Building Front*, Coluinnx, Railing*, Blarkainithlnff and Machin# Wnrk lo *•»- •ral. G. C. Tlmife’fl Patent ELF.VATORS for atorMfl, Ort olid ted xr * rfltimate* mad'* bv th# MILL] ^vDE p 0Lv^nsi ^ITd'jdleyTI™- ’"'ICiOLEMANP^ I&BROf H.CR MA ; CH I NERY NEjWORLF ANS l MANUFACTURE. SJtAMENC!NES COIT 0 N P R E S S E S fATERELEVATOR• HAFT INGPULLEYS ijRTOlNrcOLUMNSHOUSE'L F[R0NTSANDCAST I NGS "F ! 0:U : ND'RY 1 SONERA TO "STREETEXTENDING' FROMM AG NOL I AT0‘ CLARASTREET!N NEW0RI FANSLA M r A 1 NOF F I CE8T SALE SDInPO T TWENTY AinFE 1 TWENTY ANt' L I GHTEEK ^ JUN I ON ST im* FORGET-^. t TNOTjiirtafl iwHENjr^ i k A R anfonnig oae iwsaa ible lo curio* BpU. “^5iiSa.Sva and all hAvoss l Blood illeess^S- *S Oergrtoes. La.rrw^ Literarr men. *5s»* chants. Rank era, la dle* and oU whose se- MKpfc ^ XX.—NOTICE.—XX AS BLUE FUMEL GARMENTS flo or Inferior Qaalltr < are sold as the " gennls# MMdlssex.” whi*h *****l made by that mill. The MkVKsrex Con,paej,ta orJsr to protect their eastomers and the public jflreoc ‘ thst hero*Oor all Otothin* made from TBlf NILI sax ktandaro indioo elck FLANNULS A* YACHT CLOTHS, eold bv all laedtnir clothiers.meet hearth* " SILK' ffANOEftfl,” furnished by fee SeXtai Afefeato all parUee oidering the good* WENDELL, FAY It CO„ SNI.LINO A0KNT8, MIDDLESEX COM FA NT, orth St., New York; «T Franklin it. S14 Cheetnut UL. 1 7 VnilHfi MEN Kfou want tobeoeawTELKORAPH lUUili Htl OPERATORS, and be goaiaate^i emplopnent, address I’. W. REA.M, Ana. OsBQ. Ce Be Ce Coleman BiififnMfl ColUgtt, NtwRrk, V. J. Writ# for CaUlogqe. dflffl WANTED ENKRGKTIC I.ADlW of epo<x1 fuldrera to Dell STAND Uilf leAUN- IIUV WAX.Thegojdi ere I lKM'-OLASti, CHKAP. ami sell leedily. F.e p.jrtieui.ira uddrt is SII.A** II. I’AINE* Ro»a Id bteiidani Hl»ck, C.lr. rln ml. Otileu MORPHTNC ] No per MU onr years established, eared. Ht&te cnee. Dsa Marsh. Quincy, Mich. S HABIT, nred. Ten bed, HERE IS ITS PLATFORM: _,ll tin' world * new*. Everything that inirivsta nwn end vvimicn; k kx! wrltlnn In every eolimm; honest and t aricle comuteti't hbeolutc Independence of partisan organization*, hut unwavering loyalty to true Demo ‘ k ' ‘ “ : Daili eraiUe. jiriuetplea mall. oSv Kubeerl month, or pages), SI 3© P'T year; Wkzxi. Tear I. W. 9NULAND, Publtahcr, ton: Daily (4 pogi-a). by (« w* so > a year; SVNPaT I i.t (• page,), SI per '. New York City. *abft*her«’ Umen, Atlanta, C* —XfebtesS Mia A FACTORYSUPPUES DF ALL KINDtti BELTINQ, HOSE •nd PACKING, OILS; PUMPS ALL ^ KINDS, IRON PIPE, FITTINGS, BRASS GOODS, STEAM GAUGES, ENGINE GOVERNORS, Ao. 8«ndfor Prioe-lisL W. H. DILLINGHAM AGO 421 Main Stmt, LOUISVILLE, KY. j&jJTF. A.) After s thorougb trlnt of the, TEON TONIC, I take pleasure, in etatixxg thst I have been Its greatly benefited by »ti use. JC inis ter* and Pub* lie Speakers will find it M cfHhe r—’—*■—*-— •vhers s hie 'sniinsasss, eetoimtiTe proper! Z-oh isr U it^ jry* ^ Ry ] [FURIi thF\ ILQOE A combination of Pro- SSSSXUjZgSSZ SUe, EroHration of fturi' Industry, I1L, e*y*;- <{ I oonaidsr It s most exoellent remedy tat the debilitated vital flames. ary. „ as a roll* mL.uoi greatest value s Tonic is neoes* | recommend it