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knowiM much. '*4 murtis wMrh «qto *How ■■ UK,.. heart, * tbertt 3 TW» irtW ujlP \om» frimiti »*re Who ptaeotf llio erttk- in ■ choir, Yrom wBlch ho to. el tourw, to w Th«<!UrntMl piUtua on Iho wnifc Thor dww Iho enrtala, when «OT»or*d A SUP* UndoMpo. “ Booh ! 1 Ho «aoro.l, “ 1\^o enKroow > sky *•> t>lne 7 And etaoMle Uko t ho-r one or or know— Hnchtollhjl oeowot wood— UtUruotoMturooud no pood.” But whi ilwAoaarpi 0)( critic tolkol, ThoCO« ocroM the jm luro polked; idbowiaothocrllic m d the chon Ktoa thooo who on him had the Uu(h, Foe bo hou orillclord ■ uuall I'rnmod hole cut tu the »,tl»l'« well. ” — DiiroU I'm Pr*M i Lund of Diamond*. Perhaps p Mefdt'ttcriptinn of lliis luntl of gomn may intcroatyour rt'otlor*. Tliiu place Is altont sercfi liundrthl milee *u*t land from Cape Town, aud nl>oiit Avo bundretl from Port Elizabeth. To roach Kimberly from Capo Town oi.e lift* tc travel throngh a coiuitry called the Orctii Kamxi, n btureu: rocky tract, with acaioo any sign* o< life in it. It Ls altotit three humlrcd mileatbrongh it. A more ileaolato region can scarcely l»e found. 1 do not think I saw ten acrer, for a dis tance of two hundred miles, tljgywMd |ioesihly bo plowed; and, ■ JfWging irom sitpearaiiees, I think a rat,, to tcavel through the Karroo^ wttuld need a knap sack on Ids buck, well laden with pro visions, to sustain life on his journey, unless he was of near kin to Dr. Tanner, Kimberly, like its surroundings, is a bar ton waste, very nnpleasant for a family home. Moat of the country hern u worthless for farming purposes. Water t is scarce; wood is Very Wcaroe. It is - brought here by ox‘tenniB from a distance t»f 100 miles, and sold on the market at Miction for from $25 to $50 per load, ac- sording to size and quality. None of it would be merchantable in your city. Old dead wood, dug up by the roots and brought to market, roots and all, sells from $25 to $50 per load; and a load of live wood (uusplit), containing one and s half cords, sella for $10 to $50 per load. Potatoes glow to tthorrh -fhrjtrre. of En-' glish walnuts. Meets, carrots, onions, ruemnbers autl lettuce are luxuries nearly unknown here. The dust and dirt is (earful. I cuunot describe, it and do jns- lioe totlio subjeci. It fills your eyes, uoso and ears, and mats -your hair and whiskers; and us for clothes, the natives, who wear none, have the advantage, as I he water is hard and miserable, full of flirt, and sells for sixty cents per barrel Tor washing purposes; and as for drink ing, something strongev is the Common (•overage bore. But the diamonds! It Is truly a laud of diamonds.' Already itvtt $125,000,000 worth have been dis- Nivered. In the late war one of the :hiefs (Baecahunii oll'e.rod a quart meas ure full of diamonds for a cannon. Claims * of thirty-one iKitmre feet have sold for $48,000 ]ier claim! 'Hie mines are all worked by large companies. The largest is a French company. The manager in formed mo that their expenses wore $70,000 per month. They take out of their claims four hundred load of dia- tnondiferous earth per day, worth on an average $14.40 per load. There me rovj andhurgo companies in the sainemflio. futile and a half from here is another mine called old Do Ih'ors’ mine. Three miles further there is another one called Du Tait’s Tun, and one mile from thuY is another called Buli«mtien. All these »re extensively worked by companies. Bnlpantien Mine was originally a farm, on which was built a brick house, wnd on Ihe discovery ot diamonds tlie house whs found to coiitain the precious gems in the plaster used to lay the brick and iu the plastered wul s, while the children with what they called “the sluny ‘htones." There has recently Ix'en a dia- Afiond mine discovered, eight miles from hera, called Oliphant’s Fantein. Claims Jo the numlter of nine hundred have Been surveyed and sold in that mine, and.Ctip'l'H'ople hero are w ild with specu- ^ latioh. An acquaintance of mine bought Claims in Jager’s Fautien Mine, forty miles from here, which cost him $710, •ud in a short time he w as offered $33,- I>00 for said claim. It seems that men are like bubble* the world over. Home «g9 Up SUtl exphnle financially, the ex portion Iteing by far the most penalty- jor bttyh.g a Ibnd of u negn • is five years’ im prisonment at hard laltor and a tlne.of $2,400 for Ute first ofiense, and ten years’ for the second. Aud yet the tem)>tation out of a populationr of there are over 600 now in prison ilUcit (La mon 1 buying and diamond' jjf thu piiiuuei'a aril 40.000 to_#200,000. Surely_ the e transgresaor is hard.--titulh Cor. Hartford Time*. Funny. , | ^Prentice Mulford, in the Hati-,^--;, *soo Chronicle, relates the f'dbtX-ovoking Uk exjxTienoe of ooinieol .. i,,, c*nnoyaiiec» as a puUfc ^ tho y J" ■ays: •‘None can rgaiffrn iul occurrences i lectura^'jj, upaet the unfortunate lie platform, and divert and dis- m him the attention of an uu- lfo« lark fwall Hecnred b Neetkn "Sh* is • Sleeper. My dignity was in a state now whieli cannot lie described. I was to ruffle*! that—well, 1 said to my companion, "If these people kuew who 1 am they—” bat nay companion cut me short tncro and said. "Don't talk snohiolly. If they did know who you are, do you suppose it would help your high mightiness to • vacancy in a train w hich hAoo vacan cies in it?" This did not improve my condition any to speak of, but just then I observed that the colored porter of a sleeping-car had his eye on me. I saw his dark comitonanco light up. He whispered to the uniformed conductor, punctuating with nods and jerks toward me, and straightway this conductor came forward, oozing politeness from every pore, and said : “(kjnT t>c of any serv ice? Will yon hnOpHtpliiee in tho sleeper?” _ Yes,” Isaid, "and much obliged, too. (iive me anything, any thing win answer." He said; "^e have nothing loft but the big family stateroom, with two berths and a couple of armeboint in it, but it is entirely at vonr disposal. Here, Tom, take these satchels aboard.” r He touched his hat and we ami the colored Tom moved along, i was burat- 7 lujd in and waited. Tom made nr comfortable in that sump tuous great apartment and then said, with many bows and a perfect atlbiencc of smiles, "Now is dey anything you Want, sab ? don’t make m> difference wliaj it is.” 1 sai'l, "Can 1 have some hot water and a tumbler at 0 to-night, blazing hot? You know about the right temperature for a hot Hootch punch.” i* Yes, sah, dat you kin ; you kin pen on ,4*. I'll get it myself." "(bssl! now that lump is hung too high. Can I have a big coach caudle fixed up just at tho bead of my bed, so that I emeOtead com fortably ?’ " Yes, sah. you kin, I’ll fix her up myself, an’ i’ll fix her So she’lb bum all night. Yes, sah; an’, you, can T'B call for anythrng yoii wniils, and dish yer whole ruilmnd'H bo turned wrong eend up an’ insido out for to git it for you. Dat's so.” And fie disappeared. Well, l tilted myjrcad back,. Imnded my thumbs in my nrm-lioles, smiled a smile on niv companion, and saW geiitlx, “Well, what do you say now?” My companion wiis not in a humor to re- s|M>ud, and <1i*ln't. "The next moment that smiling black face was thrust in at the cradk off* 4h>>--d<x>r and this' sjieeoh ing to drop just om* little remark to my companion, but I lujd in Oriffa *f Um ‘•Botort fema.” Close by Market street—now Broad- 11 way—lived and prospered a baker, tbs first man that ever baked New-Year cakes—iu fact, the inventor of them. The name of our friend was Volckert Jan Pieteraen Van Amsterdam, com monly known as Baas. He was Dutch from his large feet to bis round bald head, ami had no respect for any one or anything that was not Dutch. He whs u regular attendant at the old Dutch church, but, nevertheless, in constant fear of Iteing bewitched. His wife, Maritje ? was economical even to saving the ]wrings of her nails, and his ginger bread babies were always made in imi tation of his children. It wss New-Ycar eve, 1655, and Baas was in his shop dealing out cakes for small pieces of money, called wnmpuin. He had taken an extra glass of mm in honor of 8t. Xickolaua. when he heard a sharp rap. and in walked as ugly on old woman as ever he had sot his eves on. "I want a dozen New-Year-cookies,’’ she screamed. " Veil, den, you ncedu - sbeak so loud.” replied Baits. "Duyjrel! I ain’t leaf, tlen.” " I want a dozen,” screamed Ihe old woman, "and here is only twelve. ” "Veil,' den, nud vhat de duyvel is dwalf but a dozen?” said the baker. " I tell you I want one morel ” she shrieked. " Veil, den,”* taid he, “yon may co to de duyvel und get anodoer; you von’t get it here.” From this time on our baker's wife and hiihself were made miserable. Their money and cookies wure taken away by invisible hands; their bread either rose out of their sight or sank into theetrth; their famous brick oven was torn down, and i>oor Baas pelted with his own bricks; Maritje became deaf; Bans was black and blue from-head to. toe; and such a life as he .ed whs purgatory. Thrice the old woman aujH*im*d., and lliriee was she sent to "de duyvel.” Aud tit last, in his agony, Bturs bethought himself of Ht. Ni^kaiutis, who advised him, on hearing of bis troubles, when he counted a dozen to oTTint thirteen. “Py St. .Tnlimirnade Ho >u Nieholaiis ^is a great plockhend ! fol 1 owt-d J “ . f..,x‘,var' i.'leiiA you. stUt, 1 '■ 'thbvkt^'ybu'iiu'- inlunli’. I told de con- duetah so. linws!, I knowed you de iniimte 1 sot eyes on you.” "Is that,so, my boy ? (Handing him a quadruple fee. i Who um 1?” "Jenuul McClel lan,’ and he disappeared again. My companion said viuegorishly, "Well, well! What do you sus- now?” Bight there conn's in the marvelous coincidence l mentioned awhile, ago, viz.. I was— speechless,’ and that is my condition now. Perceive it ? A Free Country. It has hUvhvs been thought, by read ers of the daily payers, that New York had u tail sharp of crime;’ bat it appears that the place has never been permitted to show its real criminal strength, on aecouni of a law which makes it.a crime to bo a witness. It apjtears that when a witness, or a probable witness, ia dis covered, who has any knowledge of a criminal transaction, ho is at once ar rested and plftcod in the "house of de tention," which is nothing less than a prison and from which ho can only l>e released njsni buil. In this place wit nesses are sometimes kept for months, aud even years, while the criminal -him self is out on 1 null It will be seen, thero- fore, tluut tiro iieuulty against any one for making a complaint, or giving in formation that a crime has been com mitted, is very severe,*and by this means much of the crime committed in New York is kept out of the courts and not made a luudeii of. expense upon tho peo ple. Strangers in New York, who have had their pockets picked or been robbed, cau secure—justice only by going to lirisoii Uuahselves for a few months, while their iwsailant ^s out on busily and industriously^engaged inpick- uig |M>ckets enough to. fpe-ja lawyer to clear him; and to such a C^unplexion does it come at last that the poor victim is ready to fall on his knees before .the man who 1ms roblxul him, and implore him to be merciful and release him from prison. But pick pockets, as a class, are a hard-hearted lot, aud usually spurn the snpplietmi liukTO Ins offer is ae*;onipanied by a tender *'f money. Our Western pe*>ple, when in Ni-w Yt*rk on business or pUMsnrer slirmld take cmr not to place themselvt'H iu the itower of these merei- iess wretches by Ixung robbr*d bvTheml In case, however, such a misfortune cannot bcjnvvcuted, -and a-p.vM>n finds his jpoekejt-book stolen, he should make a break to get OOt of tire etty/ aiid die .father than be taken. rraeking IVheat into Floor \ tract from him the dienee. i "On one qpcasioii „ eat got into the church where I was shaking, ami trotted up and down a course she had laid out for herself bqforc the pulpit. She did this With an erect tail, and at times made short remarks., "It is singular that a single eat acting in this manner is more effective in inter esting and amusing an 'intelligent andi- snoe than any speaker. Under such conditions Cicero lumstdf would have to knock qnder to the cat. Ho might go on talking, but the cat would capture the boose. “And then the awful sensation of l>e- ing obliged to keep on as though nothing Ibid disturbed yon; to protend you don't see such a oat; that you are not thinking of it, and knowing all the while that your audience are getting their money's worth out of thejsat, and hot out of you!” --— Cold and Magnetism. An investigation, conducted in the physical laboratory of Harvard Univers ity. has led to ths discovery jof the re markable fact that intense cold can de- r*i*» magnetized steel bars of nearly all the magnetism that may have been im ported to them. The intense cold was produced by solid carbonic acid. This mot has an important bearibg upon ob- ssrnations of the magnetic condition of toe earth, token in high latitudes; for •J*** to be jdaiijr. —<1 y in the earth’s nmgnetnnm nay' in large port to conditions of i, which affect the magneto observations. It also must that the molecular oondU a millers no lop, wheat into IW clmm’thaf the people theji hillierlo in- _ ■ ^yYJiBBt llio mTwt valuabl.- iu ifi, world. Burr atones are things of the past and Hungarian st*x*l rollers have taken tlioir plm , c. These rollers ar* 1 nlHiul thirty inches long and eight inches in diameter, it takes five sets of steel rollers to finish the. flour. Each set of rollers run closer Hum the preceding. After the wheat passes each set of roller. 1 - it is bolted or sifted through course cloth. This cloth lets the disintergrated .par tides of w;heat through and pas** ott the bulky and larger pieces, which are run through another and a closer set of rollers aud cracked again. The last rollers have little else but wheat hulls aud waxy germs of wheat, which do not crack up, but smash down like a piece of wax. The germ of a kernel of wheat is not good food. It makes llour black. By the old millstone process this waxy germ was ground .up with tho starchy portion and bolted through with the flour. By the now system of crackiug tho kernel instead of grinding it this genp is not grqund, but flattened out and sifted or l>olh<d out, while the starchy portions of the wheat are Crushed into powdered wheat or Hour. All the big mills of MiiineajHili* now manufacture by the new process. -put. Nickolaus, oc her demand, when she i*x- Tlie hpcil is luvtkenr- tthd- fliou'_>ht, Baas; and while ho was thus thinking, St, Nick luul vuiiislictl, and in his stead was iluf old woman! SIu* rc- E sited her demand for “<aie nOire” and »ias, rememltering St. (•iied* <1 to clHinjfljJ^ heiM'cforward a dozen is thirteen, and thirtefu is a dozen.” And, taking a cooky with an otligy of the good saint on it, she made Baas swear that ever af terward twelve should Is 1 thirteen, ns a tvjs* of tbe ttfirtren miglity States that should arise out of the ruins of the (iov- ernment of Yaderlandt. — It is well known how terribly St. Nioh- olnus revenged irimself upon thos*> who set themst'hes up ngaiust tho venerable customs of their ancestors, und refused the homage to him to whose gissl ofiitvs it wus owing tlmt this, his favorite city, has surpassed all others in t>eantifnl damsels, valorous young men, iimice- pies, olickis'ks, aud New-Year eookiga. —l/arptr’s Magazine. ‘ f — A Bcmarkahle Monnmeut. A correspontlent of tho Nsw York JJt eiiing / W ways Baltimore has what no other city in the world, save Genoa, possesses —a monument to Christopher Columbus; and although the monument was built almost a oentur^ ago, very fow Baltimoreans know of its existence. It is *>ii flu* property known.as "Belmont,” tho old country residence of the" Aider Bunitim, of hotel tame, and within & stone.’s- throw oi the fortifications built by ^ General Butler for the ilefcnso of Baltimore iu 1861. There seems to l>e nothing accurato as yet known about if’ except that the property from 1789 until 1796 was owned and occupied by the first French Consul to tnis country—Charles Francis Adrian de Faulmier, Cheva/icr d'amour. The njonumeutp-which is a substantial and well-proportioned shaft fifty feet in height, is built of cure, for auch complaints as Cholera, Diarrbcea, Pains of the Stomach ami wowels. ITr. Worthingtsu’s old an t S cieil'witli'i nmg7rVoarorplns^^and to fh»ve tTsurn andsneedy l ^ U * r ^Tti an exccdcnt state of preservatiAn, ex- ,nr ^ as Cholera x-ept where'the cement has been chi]>ped off by vectors. On one side of the base is a moihi® tablet with this inscription: SACRED to the' v; MEMORY 4 of t CHRIS ^ ^ COLl MBUi, - - 1 \Oct XII . MDCCV xvmc, , Which atm ns 1792, three hundred after CulmuhM* sighbil America. On two other sides of tho base are places left for tablets, which have never been inserted. The legend is that the, french - Consul built, ♦K^ .mrtnti ment at im ex- {•eiise ^|>5rtcd. iWifPuf- U among the poor people of tjio neigh- • obrhood tliat the monument was ercctetl , to 1 he memorv uf a favorite horse, but it ir nui very likely that a man would be quite so eccentric as to expend $4,000 Obelisks. . Ths Homans had s possum for obe lisks, removing the one now in” New York, and the one in London, from He liopolis and erecting them before the Cmssreust of Alexandria. Here is an account of an bbelihk greater than ours ; The great obelisk which now adorns the piazza of St. John Latsran, at Borne, was originally set up l>efore the Temple of Amen at Heliopolis. - jt is of red granite, and as it now stands it to 108 Feet 7 inches high, and its faces are re- sjiefctivelv 9 feet 8j inches and 9 feet wide at the Itase ; one of the bases is slightly convex, and it has l>een calcu lated to weigh 455 tons. The Persians, the Greeks and the Homans allowed it to remain in the place it was originally designed for, but on the establishment of Christianity Constantine the Great, intending it for the adornment of his new capital in the Fist, remo\ed it to Alexandria alntut 300 A. D. This inten tion he was unable to carry out, but it was brought from Egypt by 1 vis success or, Constant ins, w ho rc-civctcd it in the Cmcus Maximus. A ship was Ittfilb fir eonvey the obelisk to Borne ; 300 rowers tugged the huge trireme and its ponder ous burden ueroHrt the wntem of the Med iterranean fi> the shores of Ostht. Ar rived there the olveiisk was slid off from the dock of the galley on a low cart sup ported by rollers instead of wheels, kud it waif then dragged and pushed through the gates of Ostia into the Circus Maxi mus. “All that now remained to be done,” records the historian, AulniLums Marcelliuus, “ was to set it upright, which they hardly exjteotod to accom plish. Large lieafns of wood, were plant ed upright and raised to a dangerous altitude, resembling a forest of machine' ry. To these were attached long, thick ropes, which, from their w eight and ten-' sion, appeared but as so many slender threads, and veiled the sky as with a close netting. To these ropeathe moun tainous mass of granite, covered with its profusion of hieroglyphic^, was attached, and 1 icing gradually raised up into the air, and for some tune actually suspend ed, was at last poised upon the bast* pre pared for it by the cxervions of many thrmsands ef ‘men.—A-brassen sphere, Thebe are between 700 an J $90 pro fessional models in Paris, thirty-three of whom are Americana. Th age, from children of six women of sixty. covered with plates of gold, w as placed upon the top, which, being soon after damaged by lightning and consequently taken away, was replaced -Ivy a figiff^ftf a flame, also made of brass, covered w ith gold leaf and carved to resemble a blaz ing tire. Old Age. Tho brain in old persons, after the age. of 70, diminishes both in bulk.aiwl den sity, and thus IveeouHw lighter. Its ca pacity for continuous hard work is thereby lessened as realty as is that of the hotly for muscular laltor. 3 As an old uiau, however, has the ac cumulated knowledge, skill and practi cal experience of almost a lifetipic, uml that wonderful facility which comes of habit, he way, with good health and care, do much of Jiis best work in tho neighborhood, say, of 80. Ke cannot l>ear mental ‘strain, and he must not attempt mental “spurts,” but lie can still slnov himself a “workman that ueedeth not to be ashamed.” Since,"however, theBrain is not then so firmly supported by the skull, tcid is slighter in texture, the blood vessel?! are more easily dilated of ruptured. The danger of paralysis, and apoplexy is still fitrther increased, because the blood ves sels becomo- in olD age more or less ob- sitied and brittle, and thus less nblq to sustain a sudden ruali of blood. —The aged ahonU careiuUy abstain from every form of violent action, and, indeed from every v iolent- emotum. The full team of toil, whether in reaihig and supitorting children or in the service of the public, evirns a right to what to the normal physiological condition’ftf ago— freedom fr^m all that annoys, pcrjjlexes, harasses, excites and burdens.—’Youth'* Companion. __ Die North American Indians, es|>e<*iaRi the SetuH-K tribe, made sach fretpient urj pi ja-troleinn (list fo- many jr •srs » was onfi knoWn a*Seneca GR Now ibis known ar Curb jlino. the VVoudertnt 11mhr Burswer. Fbanok. pays its Ambassador at Bt, Petersburg $50,000; London, $40,000; Vienna, $34,000 ; Berlin, $28,000; Con stantinople, $20,000 ; Madrid, $26,000; Borne (Quirimil), $22,000; Borne (the Vatican), $22,000. The French Minia- ter at Washington receives $16,000. hey are * every WlXiTO IX to men and narrative, which, the true ring of the third time, and he •gain every tune tHiul he commenced which acted like began to Improve watery accnmnlation the secretions naturally, that swelling or HI’ frequent before the diew oaa«- ij vegetodon, Ilemtrkah'e for ovsrcomlim c ed bv iatpore waUr «lec«yln etc., Brown’* I-on Hitters. Newbkrv, N. r.—Ror. a. W. onimrars; “I have takrn RrownYIrda Bi't-r*^!*) con sideHt otto of the bcU med eiaesVaotru.” Rock Bili., 8. C -R'v.J.8 White, •vi. •T pied Brown’* Ir >n B.tiers for fferpml de! bility. It rMto’ed ni * tostreneth ssd visor ’> IitwetKiRs are the shrine* where all the relics of the siiiitts, fulB5Firne virtue, and without dcbisioit and imposture, are . * The Tcxlimnii) ol • I’hvi.lriuii. James Beecher, M. 1)., o* 8i,journey, Iowa, tay-: For severa 1 year* [ have been using a t/ough liib.vn, ralle I Dr. Wm. Hall’* Bul- •ani for the i.nng-i, and in ylrnont every case (bioagii<>ut my practice I huve had entire access. I havc.used end prescribed hnn- Jrei'N o'bol les ever ginlle the day* of mr »rmy practice ( tS6*t), when 1 was snrgeoa_oi tfosj’ltat No. 7, bott sville, Ky. ._ ll«;ur>S Carbolic Snlve. It is the Best t\ilve for Cuts. Bruises -t iieo, Ulcers, 8alt Rhiutu, Tetter, Chspped II-nds, Chiiblvins, Corn 1 and all Kinds o 8sin Ern]>tiou*, Fieckle> end Pimples. A woman who has four sons, all sail ors, compares herself with a year, be cause she has four sea-sons. tu A WONDERED! Article DISCOVERT. thr llnlil anil father is using Hunt 1 bfin ‘ than bt t'twving, in fi 1 bi» has been for iplictty* hes A He says: "My .medy and seefn* to is very much better time. He had beer „ first time they go] of water, the second fnBy as much more Id constantly fill up had been tapped, Hunt’s Remedy, Ms case, ee he and now hu „ away through d he has none of np which Was so of the kidneys restored by the use) Hunt's Remedy. Ha is a well-known citizeof this place, and has always been in bnsina here.’’ Again he writes, NovcinW 'll, 1*® :• “1 beg most clioevfullind truthfully to state, in regard to Huai Remedy, that its ase was the saving of mifather s life. 1 spokeffo you in mf previoufetter in regard to hii being tapiiea thr«3 Wee. It is the moet remarkable case that in* ever been heard of in tiii* nection. F- a man of ln« year* (sixty year*) it i* a ratt remarkable cure. He had been unable touteud to J.s business more than a year, anvas given np by the doctors. Tlte first botv* of Hunt'r Remedy that ho need gave ins tat relief. H* M has used in all ■Botrtes eeVWTtSWtles, all continues to a-=e it wltenever he feels dro.y or slug- gieh, and it affords instant relief. He ia now attending to his regular business ad has been several month*. I am perfectly tiling that you *h< aid publish this letter, aiwe thor oughly believe that fftther’s life waaaved by using Hunt’s Remedy and these fats given above may be a benefit to others snaring in like manner frqm diseases or inaetb. of the kidneys and liver.” For Two ~ , Generations ' v/'“ ' * ‘ ' ^ The good stand-by, MEXICAN TANG LINIMENT, has dOBO more to assuage pota, relieve liniments put together* wnyi Because the Mustang pene trates through sklu and flesh to the very bone, driving out all pain and soreness ant morbid secretions, and restor ing the afflicted part to sound * ad supple health. - ■ it The Only Watch Factory IN THE SOUTH. - A Traveler’s Cuide. The Hon. Kenneth Itavner endoracsit. reliable GhoJera and DiarrhuiaJHedicin can be carried in the pecket. Price gnd 50 cents a bottle. tli.a Will t|:iU*' t;rr.> , Itcjuli-i-. Many of the I -i.. di-r’-^iugs of (lie day iir.' uxielleutibut thcgio.it iiui.-.sof lh:: stuffs sjU for promoting tlie growth and bringing back -W *»rH;tn;d c<4«r. arrsn-cre humbugs, while not a few aro po.sic.o '.Viu their efiacts-opou the scalp anil hair. ThcfJliiigoiitof the hair, the acciiinn)atiou-< of it ir.dr.ifl, und the pre mature chutig.- in c: In. a 0 nil avidence.. of a diseased condition of the 'C);1;V iihdttie glands which iioimih! I 0 .:air, -i'-owiresTUIt 8j-cnnkes die arluffalwed muii; jo-ecss medical art wett -s ch4.ideal vij tros in t the change must be- ,’111 utlUi - tT;T- ?c:V|V t.f> 1h-of iVcrmiiVu iit and .asting bciu th.^ lhcrol um oil is tl.e a tide vhicli is male to \,o k Mich extraordintry .’Osults: ha? it i- afte.- the be t refined article has Iteea chcmicitliy lic ibid, aud completely Idalorizetl, that it is in proiier condition for tic toilet and ivceit e-tla’iianic of G tlbujiiie'. it was in fatroff Kiii--.ia that the effects Of iie- roir-mb upiiii the h dr wc'te.first observed; a rovernmeiit Qliic* r ha’, ing noticed that a par- . taUy-|ia!d-hcadcil servant of Ids, when trim- _ inirg the Inniii-. tmd a tab.tof wiping ids Jtiibosmoarct’ bauds ill his scanty locks, and the ivadt \va-, in i r fe .v months, a nincli finer 1 read of black, glo-sy hair tla.u he ever had before. The oil was trie Aon horses nud cattle, hat had lo-; theo tnii f, o:n cattle plague, und the result* wc.e mrrre'oas. Tl • rnmnnHuid tail- of iiorsiM, which h id fallen tut, were . cotiyili tcly rettiui i d iu. a (ew weeks, ^’iiese L-xperinients we e hcr.diied to tho world, hut no oiusin civ ii/.t t -O idy could tolerate the is.’of rc. n ■(! le t: ire im it- * dre sing for the hair. Bint!', skill,of one ot ourdl e nista has overcome the difficulty, qntl he haVsucceeded -in jierfcoungt '.irlnnine.rcndcrmititas dainty is h ■ fatuvus i a i de ccrogne. Ex|>eriii)eats on the hiiiitau hair a id skiu were attended .villi ti.e ni'ii.t a ao idling re ults. A few ap- piieatton-,wht ethokairwt*thinaudfalling, gave reirar! a de o :»• and vigor to the scalp ' indthc luur. livc^ tMi'licleofdnndrulfdisap- pe.trs on Die tiirt or sejiaal dressing, all cuta neous disens.M’f (lie skin and scalp are rapidly nid peril a 1 cti l.v heale.i. and tii6 liguid seems topcnctialetuilie_iLiut uf ih ■ hair at once. It is well known that thr ;ni,.l. beantifol colors 'art' inadu from pel:' .l. 'iin, ami by soino mys- - enon.coperation of uiiturf the use of thisurti- clb gradually imparts i 'p.'ittit ful li'dit brown cobirto the hair, v. hich b, continued use deep- •ns to black. Tlie color remains permanent, md the change >s so gradual, tlinf the most .ntimute frn nds ci.u scar. o'.y detect its pro- ’rcs.i. In a wdid, it is the most wonderful liscovery of the age, and well c dculated to uake tl.e prematurely bald and gray rejoice, 'iirbo'.ine is put, up in a- n^at and .attractive uaimer aud sold by all dealers in drugs and. me Heine*. Price one dollar u liottlq. Ken-, nedy A, Ou.. Pittsburg, Pit., general agents "Tor the United States and Canadas. . r We •advise onr leaders to give it a trial! . fceiie.g sntiedod that, oil* application wih cortviiiro them of itw-wonderfnl effects. WORTH SENDING FOR f Hr. J. a HCHENCK ha* Just published * book on DISEASES OF THE LUNDS !!E HOW TO CURE THEM I mumumis. which 1* offered FREE. ( e^iiUd.tosll eppUcint*. It contain* valuable n>rormmtBm for *11 who KUp|sjee theiuiwlvee affllrtcd with, or It*tile to any dlm-iuv of tlie throat or IqnK" Mention this paper. Addrms l>r. j. H. SCHKX K A -ON. 1’hlludelpl.l*. Pa. ' ~ i Hook.) V^ota \f yew wwA Hapliek or German . ! PORTABLJB SODA - FOTJNTAIIVS ", . ^ • Send lor CaUlogu*. Chapman ft Co* c-m 'MADISON.'■'I hi wstchmsk-ra. By msil llio. (hrc.iist irae. J.S.Bmcgq Co.. M Per St.. N.V , ssssnssw UCM ltloiiW.Ott tulievonieTfn.KriRVPIl ' TUUtfll IWtaHoPl It VI'ORS snd Is, yiinranTi-ed inn pie} um‘ni, siiil I*. \\ . It I-. AM, Aoa, Ohm Strong’&.-Sanative Pills A 81»*»*'• ly enra f<*r liver oomplaint, n^alatin* the .tyowelb, parityitiE the blood, cienn^inx from mnlAnal taint. A perfect cure for 010k heiulaon»*, constipation amt dy»pe|wiii.t Hokl by ieadum drujupaU. tor Almanac!* with ’tuU parUcularx, adorcsb C. h. uL’LL ft Co., boa <wU, New York. TUC CUM 18 ALWAYS InC OUH INTERESTING. mliig siwl from week to week, iniii'il stonr of Ihe lire* of resl ’ iheirdee**, pIbiis, lovr*,h*tei TM* »tnrv it inort Inter. gave the mid dleman'» profits, and boy direct from the hahmctuer. Send for Blustrated Price Urt. describ- lag new tm prove factory, ATLANTA Ga. Krom monilng 10 morning T1IK sl'N prims aeonilnurd story i iin n and women, snd of Ihelr dee**, and trouhli s. Thin tlnry it more inlrr. ttinn than ant rami art that >ca» ever dertaeil. Subscription: D*H.T (4 pa***), by mall. O&e. a month, or M.&O a year; Si'NPAT I* P»«. *I. •I.OO per year’, Wxxu.T (* l>a * e *’i.*V.'KSULliTD.dhiblUher, New York City. V r I r. , a . I cured u*jr**lf,of IndiKestiun .nd (tj-(ieri»uu sml y retni*f>, • THE EhRyEC'I'lqX PlCIJt, ■ r niy . ■....^ . fur all mi.mil-led. Sent by msil f.ir ktl .00 per In i. with my treatise on uidieeetion and dyspeuMn. JOHN Hi .Me tI.VIN, Lowt.i.l, Ma**., for IoUrt~en jian 1 Ity Trce-orer Amt T»* Cs4lectee, - ~ AsdlMuraS’.s with TEN Cest> .ii.t you'fl re, 1 c I tn ni.il, s Ool.l l. OOI "f GomU, that will btlas > "U is m-t* n. t.Ol.s M-uih O'." snOdi I.s.ln' III An«*..». Al i.- luUC-rtomly. M. Vuusi.-. lit tinwi'-sh *■ ’*• iTXjr* RKAKD KLIXIR l.,.n_ SwIM. » ^0f«, erW«»« UM NeUa ta 1 ko 4aye. Balk yeeagead #*4 prim e-erybed*. I er I Fkffe ,*U wmk. Win |*«*eit ew^fc DEPOTMt. JCOLEMANI Tab nor her MACH INERY NEW0R LEANS) MANUFACTURE StTEAMENG ! NES, C0TT0NPRESSES WA'TERELE V AT OR5 J r HAFT I NGPULLEYS, 11 jRiOlNlC OLUMT^S HOUSE FRONTS AN D C AS TING! "FiQ,UN DRY I SONERATO STREE TEXT END I NG' F’ROMMAGN0L i AT0 r CLARASTREET‘!*N r newo:ri. FAN SLA M I NOE F I CE 8v SALESDEPOT TW£NT Y.AND' E . GiHTEEK hJUN I ONS'i 3 Tax universe to Ditt-mio great city, full of beloved ones, divine and human, by nature endeared fe> each other. Fast Thiukiiyr. Onto mail (IiMiks faalet* tl'Hlt [Diolhet man $>r reason* us \mrelv ,phy.sica! ; if thoi*' whieh givn pi uniri-r I'tsfi'r 4hnt t>f another. Mics.'j vvhn movi■sjun kly are apt -fi. Hiinii ■pbekl.r. the ifTto* le nervous system jmiorinuE its para ess with rapidity, for such a purpose. Jap<taese Ornaments. This city is being Japanized. In fact, this may lie called tho Yokohama era. Four years ago there were only three utyren in New York thlit kept Jnpanene goisls, and even they were rather obscure * aud out of tho way. To-day there are not less than seventy-five such merchanis. Almost every stfeet VhjIow Foiirteeiith has one or more. They have also in- vadod the sidewalk, where they flourish their fantastic wares iu the face of the passer-by; and there are even some itiu- ^crants who l«ob into your ofluv every day, lidding up some lawmen d trifle and exclaiming “On’y ten cents!’’ I think the people of this city tonight half a million Japanese ornaments,last year, ludewl, sO great to the demand for J:tp- Lsdisi * cb il d ran , s boo’s AfV^Treu^d over if J,ven’» - If ttWvomnu really 1<>vcs her Intobant and ci$joys his sm-iet^-, she, eng And way to ke.%» him home eveuin^s. Lt her get songDtosly to liint fi. him that i yonngman calls very often Of rgi ■ veiling - at his lioidto. ftud he’H plaitt. Ininbg-lf ir thojmrlorrright after supper, and novel tliink of gtjing out. - . • 70 A WEEK. (Uadsy »tborn#•as|ir mad*. OoMl, • I 4 outtlt fro*. Aadraaa This 4Oo.. Aa<aa a, Ms. 566 ~THfi BIST 18 CMCAtoCST." THRESHERSSS, woraakt % by all 1 . rjjfcA.1. liabl. In curtu pile fill*, Jparo 11 * 1 uu Tulsious, Bt. \ IMS sac*. AlcohotUaa, "urn Eating, Mw- dsblllivArofnln all K«WvmM an M. Tn ymeo, LaWvern, rary mnn, Mar ita, Hanksrs, IA- and all when# an- raiplojuisM __ thn blood, atomacb, bownlaor klndaya. m who rsqnlro • nerv* tonic, appnUanr OT mnlanf, Hamarfta* vtn*laIn**lu*hlR daproctaln w wonderful t» "rnic SkSxWcincoj . rial* PruprlMMR, M. Jowpb. Ma to changed by great odd.— The Cleveland Leader sums up the savings of ox-President Hayes ns follows: “ Tho aggregate salary for the four yean was $200,000. The expenses of the po sition during that time were $134,000. Had Congress refunded tho $1,000 he paid for the ex|>oi.H08 of 4ha ’visiting statesmen’ to Louisiana--his' ‘savings’ would--have been about *70,000. As it is, he went out of the ollioe with $66,000 to be carried from his account os Presi dent to the l>enelit 61 his occonnt ss a private citizen. When b« became Presi- lutr iemd wjkh debts ffrrthe OUiOtfiirof !90,0i(0, iuosfly on account ot bequests charged upon tlie Birchard es tate. Of this amount he has paid $60,- 000 oat of his savings from the Presi dential salaiT, so that the net available in cash result •6,000. i of his Presidentol ternvto l, so grt«u anese goods that three factories me running day and night, and’ one is iu Bhode Island.—Hew York Letter. In a little village of Eure-et-Loire may tot vead on the portals of tho ceme tery, ".By decision of the Municipal Council, there are to 1* buried here only tin* dead who live in this coi m^uno. oil, from Mice*4 Hren >7 Hasved * Co, lately pars and sweet Unhitching 8 Horse InatoaUaeoulj. A very interesting experiment was lately made at Milan of Signor Mainetti’s invention for instantaneously detaching a horse from a carriage. The horse, <put at a gallop, was detached without the least shock, leaving the carriage behind, and only carrying off the harness on hte back. The contrivance consists of » lover within reach ofthe coachman, who, with the slightest effort, withdraws two little iron pegs which fasten the traces. Now, as all the harness on the horses to fastened to two iron bolts, fixed ou the shafts, and these bolts are only held in their places by the traces, it follows that t)ia moment the latter are loosened the boits slide out snd the whole of the horse’s harness is detached from the car* riage, while the shafts snd bars remain in their places. The experiment was l»* nested with success several times. It wss one of the ancient sages wno mid: "The goodness of gold to tried by fire, the goodness of women by gold, snd Um goodness of men by — ’’ Ppe* cod-Uvsr on the ms (hors by Nsw York. Abssht^, ,— .Patients who hsvs onoe taken it nrofor it ‘7 um fnihj thankful dmt T rrrr inert Itr. Henson’* Celery anil Chumomilr Pills, foi they rinert my periodical /nm/i/.Vtr.’l—Mrs. J. II. Paddison.JPofrtt Cqgwffjl. N. 50c. "Edoknia, Etagenia, will you still in sist on wearing tie hair qf another wom an upon your htoad?” "Alphonse, Al- phsmso, do you still insist upon wearing the skin of another calf upon your feet ?" ■- a -i—i ..i ‘to ■ vVai-oott, the getitieman who ate thirty brace of (jaails iu thirty days, was relieved from any disagaeeable vtomaeli tronblee bj using UasTanm, and took nothinif else ihir- ing tlie task, tkfid by alrug^ist?. An old gentleman of eighty four, and his bride, aged eight.w two, enterctl a rail- wuy car tUn other dk<y, and took a tveaii by the stave., A vcmtli occupying the seat in front says he overheard the fol lowing: Cld Gentleman (to his toide)— " Who’s a ’ittle lamb ?” Bride—" Bofe of us.” ( What to Hie world? A dream within s dream, as we grow older each step to an inward awakening. The youth awakes, aa he thinks from tdrihHroodi a rail-grown man despises thp pursuits of yputh ss visionary; the old .man looks on' msuhood ss a feverish dream. Is death the last sleep? Dr. Benson’s Skin Cure consists of internal I snd external ti-Mtaicnt at same time, aud i» ’ makes.ths skin white, •oft snd smooth. It I UrtdrwBtoto.' PETTI OVER U TEAM Tb.- i„»l I'-mM, for Choleni. Crarop^ IHmrrho *. Hyai atrrr, *Haaairr< omplalat, IkyoMpola. amt .Mrr of the itomach and botceU. Intniduced ia Ibe Army, ■** 6y S.irgvi»n Owners 1 C. S. A. Keconimeo4r4 by Gea. I; *I n, S: ru , H«o. Kenneth Ravner RnUeitor 1 ©them- Price, *5 cu. Hold by Drawists tml Dealers. OdIt renuine if our nameis blown in bottie* Role proprietor*, T m CHAIIW A. VOfiltlt ^ i|0STETTE|»b TSero Si* *6 beea an tnatanc* la vhlch thli atcrttaE lovtcoraat acd anti febrila medletae baa failed to ward ofl •be complaint, when takeadaly aa a pro- keettoa traluat i lari a. Handreda of Sbyttelao* have abaodeoed all tbr •mclaal •perl fca. and bow preaertke tbl* barmlen nirrtable tonic for elitn* and fever, aa well aa djra teria Bitten •ectSo t*h Tot aala bv al Druotsto aad Deal n tb FREE Rend to HOOKS'S ■(IWUSOM tMIl AUuatia, For IlluMrated O'-ut-r web rear. ® ot *nA* Evsia*** t’ot ir««, Hewark, W.). Terms SO Fasitioa* lor r.addate*. Write for afrenlars. ® *11 wbe will makaiysrs feesy: KUii-r.VL’sutax. Tie Cain Boi aii Baste! Faeterr, • CAIRO, Uala. I has rebuilt its factory with saw maohinsry, the 1st sat snd mast approved designs, sad u •grin manufacturing, aad promptly fillfg afl orders for FRUIT. BERRY AND PICKING BOXES. Send for lUurtmted Catalogue and Price Lilt, TYPE AND NEWS CASES FOR SALE. .One thousand pounds of Bourgeois, ike this, in cose and tied up. 'Price twenty cents per pound in quantities to suit. Ivews cases $1.25 per pair. 21*00 I >>. B 11 geo Is, like this, in quad* Vk* to suit, at fi teen c*nts. 500 lb?, of Xlioloa, like thla, at twenty five :ea eper yoaod. Address. Atlanta XtwsfApmt Umoff, Atlanta, G«. a«*NTS WAsreO tor tM emit Hibf PUtorUI B wkj aad Btblee lead fastoetiell Bitoss rad aesd M ^MOHFItAAH HABIT. No nay t ill r urtsL - Ten year* taut).Kali ’ " eurnd. Hints Cl . _ Mtarwh, Qtuucy, Mich. IEON WORKS. I). A. .Ut l.ANK, Mana«rr. iP 0 Box 1690 New Orleans, La Mannfactarera of Ri-yivilili' (Vli-bra- •«d Ptattorm tX)TT()N I’HFKHFS, St.am, Hand A Hor***- Pmr»»r. Steam Engine*. Sn*«r Mitln, anil M«i«* Patent Drodcetwat Wurk. Building Fronta, Culnmni., Railmfn, Black- amithlrm and Machine Wnr*. Mf*OKDKK» SOLICITED. _ MILL ft FACTORY SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS. BELTINQ, HOSE and PACKING, OILS, PUMPS ALL KINDS, IRON PIPE, FITTINGS, BRASS GOODS, STEAM GAUGES, • ENGINE GOVERNORS, Ao. tend for Price-list W. H. DILLINGHAM AGO 421 Main Stmt, LOUISVILLE. KY. j-* Boanwke Cotton Traae. made R cLV*1.ta lh?n thaUOT ■WOTr ether vr-*«i->. Hundred* ia artoal aae at bot h rtoam aad buiae.ew r.ina.MakMbeery bile* if h.ad fa*«*r (ban any ala a-a pick .Tke new improve- meot la .ia hi'o^d-acrlbed la tka wOTd* ef their liivaaton free to All. Addreaa, Bo.a ke iron W<Yk*. Chatto* ao aa, Tann..or'Ro*Doke Cot. l^aerem Oo.Hteb bauare.8 0, OPIUM HABIT Cured Painlessly, ip sold fot n rniall rrargrin cU ? ^ tnr co re«r|r:n sIm ftthpeont of Al <*»•“• freated hy Rptf-.n) Jumi.’l I*, r full part;c^llare $ tli« Hi^rov'creic lilt!. DA. S. B. eOU!N r , La Peti, A. N. r. n Twenty-Two.-US Twelve h.ifto power, STATIONARY ENGINE, in perltxtt runrmm nrder. will be eold tor if 160. cash. Addroee, ATLAPTA Newspapeb CpuiM, Atlanta, Ga. A combination of Pro- tolbido of Iron, Peruvian Bark and Phoephoruoin raoN t * r "v? rhtriL , _ .Jts pleasure in stating that I have bean t.roatly benefited \>£ its uae. |fi InUtere and Pub- Do Speakers wiU find it of the metest valae where a Tonic ia notice ■ery. X recommend it aa a reliable remedial agent, possessing un doubted nutritive and restorative properties. LoulnilU, Ky., Or*, t, 18«, a palatable form. 1'or D&UUy, Lost of Appe tite, Prostration of Vital Pvotot* it isimdiepenta- S3S*./ / X consider tt* a most excellent remedy Uu the debilitated vital forces. ILOQtt m?mi)»TXBI DR. HARTER MBPICIWE CO.. !18».K4aHT., W.lAgP The Westinghouse Engine —AS AbAVTU) TO— — * 4 ooT"ro2sr a-iisrisriisTa. _ *0* SPECIAL CIRCULAR,' Ho Counter Shafting or Fullsya Beq aired. ISr$75 to $10O Saved. Gin* belted direet from Esgiae, m. coupled to it, as la this cut, r Without Balt. Boiler may be set 100 feet hem Gia Boose. Tke Best Perfect osfiftt fag GINNING CGITOK toiM werid. /*L*r ne i Tom* L/w« Clee4Mv IMEStDIGIDSB Uffllffl tt, PMui, pi. anarrA lSnManra Coauar, a l|*n*(t* SV 01 '"*- konwmaar law Wgaa* . "TT