The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, May 08, 1884, Image 4

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ioms FOR SPRING. D* apriof o' d« year mb a aUppin' erkm* An’ look* wid * pwcp through d* ooT chilly *'», An* <U bird am *r lookin'airoon'fur Uaaong A* be hasp* on do lim’ an’ d* half frozen br’ar. V " t '-f- ~"h~‘ ' «•'. 4 — Da fir* feel* good, for dar'* Ice in de creek, Bat apring it am oomin erloog )e* the name. Pur I aeed a yaller hanuucr wid a utrtw in hi* b*ak, *— An' he know* wlmt he’* doin’, of he down FU be blame. / m be mighty glad when de worm win* blow An’ de cow* kUh'h aroun' enjoyin' o’ de cood, Fur. tnr tell de Lord * troth, IV sorter *ca'oe o’ ckwe, An' hoster iiuwk miglifly fur ter git er little wood. D* hog* am awful touchy when de weader it iaeol’ An' da holler* like de debil when yer climb* in de pen— Doan want er man ter eat 'em, oh. no, blen ye aool, Bn I ha*ter oompromiie on de dominlcker hen —jirtafMnie Travkhtr. Praise Her. Andrew Lee had oomo home from hie •hop, where he had worked all daj, tiiW find out of spirits—came home to his wife who was also oat of spirits. "A smiling wife and a cheerful home —a paradise it would be 1” said Andrew to himself, as he turned his eyes from the clouded face of Mrs. Lee and sat down with knitted brows and moody as pect. Not a word was spoken by eithe^h Mrs. Leo was getting supper, and sn£ moved about with a weary step. “Come,” she said at last, with a side glauoe at her husband. There was invitation in the word only; none in the voice of Mrs. Lee. Andrew aroee and went to the table. He wee tempted to speak an angry word, bat controlled himself and kept silent. He could find no fault with the chop and the home-made bread nor the fragrant tea. They would have cheered his inward man if there had been only a gleam of sunshine on the face of his wife. He notioed that she did not eat. “Are you not Well, Mary ?” The words were on his lips, but he did not utter them, for the face of his wife looked eo re pel Ian t that he feared an ir ritating reply. And so in moody silence the twain sat together until Andrew had finished his supper. “This is purgatory I” said Lee to himself, aa he commenced walking the floor of their breakfast-room with his hands'thrust in his trousers’ pockets, and his chin almost touching his breast. After removing all the dishes and taking them into the kitchen, Mr*. Lee spread a green cover on the table, and placing a fresh trimmed lamp thereon, went out and shut the door after her, and leaving her husband alone with his unpleasant feelings. He took a long, deep breath as she did so, paused in his walk, stood still for some momenta, and then draw ing a paper from his pocket, sat down by the table, opened the sheet, and eommenoed reading. Singularly enough the words upon which his eyes rested were, “Praise your Wife.” They rather tendered to the disturbance of mind from which he was suffering. “I should like to find some occasion lor praising mine.” How quickly his thoughts expressed that ill-natured sen timent I But his eyes were on the page before him and read on ; “Praise your wife, man; for pity’s sake, give her a little encouragement; it won’t hurt her.” Andrew Lee raised his eyes from the paper and muttered: “Oh, yea ! that’s all very well. Praise is cheap enough; bat praiae her for what ? For being sullen and making your home the moat disagreeable place in the world ?” His eyes fell again on the paper. “She bee made your borne comfort able, your heart bright and shining, food agreeable; for pity’s sake, tell ber you thank her, if nothing more; she don’t expect it; it will make her eyes open wider than they have in tea years; but it Will do her good for all that, and you too.” It seemed to Andrew as if this sen- tance were written for him, and just for tbeoocas3on. It was a complete answer to b is question. * * Praise her for what ?” and he flalt it as a rebuke, lie read no further, (or thought came too busy, and ifi a new direction. Memory was con victing him of injustice to his wife ; she had always made his home as com fortable as her hands could make it, and had he offered the light return of praiae or comfort he had experienoed? He wee not able to recall the time or oooe- m he thought thaa, Mho. Lee eame ia from the kitohen, and taking her work-basket from the okaet, placed it on the table, and sitting down without speaking, began to sew. Mr. Lee glanced almost stealthily at the work in her haute, and saw that it wee the bosom af e shirt whieh she was stitohing neatly. He knew that it was for him she was at work. “Praise your wife.” The words were before the eyes of his mind and he could not look sway from them; but he wee hot ready for this yet He still felt and unforgiving. The expree- i wife’s face he interpreted to and with ill nature he His eyes fell upon the I out before him and he word, apokeo in'a ) the Utile rift in the elood Mhitte through.” £|a straggled with himself a while ill netnre had to be oon- Wa moody, aceusing spirit He though t of manr to sey, yet feared to say them, hat Ms wife should meet Me advance At Imk leaning to- aad taking hold of the linen i she wee at work, bo ■M M a veaoa oaiefully modulated with ‘Ton are doing this work My shirts are better made and whiter thaa those of any other made in the •hop,” said Las, encouraged to go oc. “Are they V’ Mrs. Lee's voice wee low and had in It a alight hnakineaa; aha did not torn her face, bat ber husband saw that tee leaned a little toward him. He had broken the ice of reserve and all was easy now. Rls hand was among the clouds and a few feeble ray* were already struggling throng^ the rift it had made. “Yea, Mary,” he answered softly; “and I’ve hewd it said more than onoe what a good wife Andrew Lee must have.” Mrs. Lee turned her face toward her husband. There waa a light In it and a light in her eye, but there waa something in the expression of her oountenanoe that a little puusled hta>. . jJ.’J “Do you think so?” she asked quite solterly. “What a question I” ejaculated An drew, starting up and going round to the side of the table where she was sitting. “What a question, Mary," he replied, as ho stood before her. t “Yes, darling,” waa his warmly-spoken answer. “How strange that you should ask me such a qaestipn.” _ “If you would only tell me so now and then, Andrew, it would do mrgood.” Mrs. Lee arose, and leaning her face against the manly breast of her husband, stood anti wept, What a strong light- broke in upon the mind of Andrew Lee; he had never given his wife even the smallest .reward of praise in all the loving interest she had manifested daily, until doubt of bia love had entered her soul and made the light all around her thick darkness. No wonder that her face grew clouded, nor what he considered moodishuess and ill- ■ature took possession of his heart. “Yon are good and true, Mary, my own dear wife, I am proud of you, I love you, and my first desire is futgrour hap piness. Oh, if I always see your face in sunshine my home would be the dear est place on earth.” “How precions to me are your words of love and praise, Andrew,” said Mrs. Lee, smiling through her tears into his face. “With them in my ears my heart can never lie in shadow.” How easy hod l>een the work for An drew Lee. He had swept his hand across the cloudy horizon, and now the bright sunshine* was streaming and flooding the home with joy and beauty. —Popular Monthly How the Hungarians Idre. THU OACSK OF THB OUTCRY AGAINST THE PAUPXBS WHO CROWD INTO THB MIN ING UKOIONS. A SERMON WORTH READING A letter from Muhanoy City, Penn., says:—The outcries of the public against the Hungarian paupers crowded into this region by New YdHi emigrant agencies Lave been so loud that the Town Council at a late meeting, appointed a commit tee to investigate the ■object, and twenty dens were visited. If the Hungarians BVed like other peo ple there would be no objection to them, but they congregate together in such numbers and filth as to breed disease. The committee fouu«k890 persons hud dled together in the twenty places vis ited. Most of these places were stables converted into human habitations by these people themselves. Few of them contained more than one room, and in this, men, women, and children lived— eating, sleeping, cooking, and washing. A few of the buildings were without floors. In one room, the largest visited, 25 by 35 feet in demensious, were 13 men, a woman, and a child. The woman and one of the men kept the other* os board ers. One stable was divided into four rooms and contained 18 persons. A very small building divided into nine rooms, tbo partitions being made of the lumber from dry goods cases, Contained 43 peo ple, 36 of whom were, .men, 4 women,, and 3 children. In one room were 8 men, and 7 in another. Six rooms visited had at least 8 men each occupy ing them. The Council last year encountered similar trouble with the Polanders, but overcame it by reducing the number in each hor.se, and establishing and enforcing health rules for those that re mained. There will be a clearing out in the Hungarian quarters during the next few days. Not more than three or four will be allowed to a house. . Trouble for Chill .Las made no reply, but her h«e- [ ted not fail to observe that ahe ke> that rapid ereetpese had bMB MMtog, and k nftidld hftd Chili is evidently going to have some trouble with the European creditors oi Peru. Having taken a large part of Peruvian territory, the reeouroea oi which were pledged for foreign debts, tbeNbreign creditors desire to have ap plied the maxim that the annexation oi territory oanka Its burden with it The Chilian view no doubt ia that they and the creditors have been engaged in what i* known in the classical language of the law aa a “race of diligence,” in which Don Patrick Lynch haa by means of his army and navy clapped his lien on first, or in other word*, that all foreign claims must be subordinated to those arising out of the oonqueet of that country. The fact is that Peru is bankrupt, and haa been so for many a long year, and there are not enough assets to “go ’round.” The foreign creditors cannot ask their Governments to go to war with Chili over the distribution, and no Eu ropean Government could afford to insist upon the right oi the bonds to be pre ferred to the war claims of a country which haa got ite security by fighting for it The matter will no doubt ba compromised in some way. Lost It.—George Smith, of Indiana county. Pa., put $16,000 in bills in a wooden chart in his cellar. He would not trust his money to the Whan ha bronght the cheat to light a tow days agq to count over his treasure, ba found that thn rats had borrowed through and through the sheet until only a efitfO ftncIMi of ths original pack age of bills was in a negotiable oondt- tton. “ T" 1 A BnmoxFonf. Cofly., man has in vented a maobinc which will make IftO.i 0QQ mute * d»r, ' r - , : a LESSON ON RKSONAL INFLUENCE* XIr. Beeeher Telle Uc hNNS It* Petplt He* We Cm Make Oer Uvee SaMlwei [From the New York Herald.] There never waa a city since the world began, said Henry Ward Beecher in his Sunday sermon, just preceding the taking up of thalooWection, that had more need of Christian sympathy and succor than this oity of Brooklyn. When I came to Brooklyn, thirty-seven years ago, there was less than 50,000 people here. To-day there are more than 790,- 000, and I suppose before the flve years’ census is taken in Brooklyn the city will have verr near a million inhabitants. It ia the one city of the futnre on thia con tinent. Manhattan ia a bottle island— when it’s full, it's full; but Brooklyn haa all Long Island to spread ont on. There are but five cities in all Europe that are equal in population to Brooklyn —London, Paris, Berlin, Vienna and 81 Petersburg. Besides these, Brooklyn surpasses every oity on the continent of Europe. We are giving a very close chase to New York itself. We are grow ing faster than New York—a good deal faster than New York -and for obvious reasons; and there is no measuring what will be the rapidity of its growth in the future. New York in 1883 issued 23,000 permits for building. Brooklyn in 1883 issued 26,088. The difference is very great on our side. In that part of the year that is now elapsed—eight or nine months—the permits issued are in still larger proportion of gain over building in New York. We are surpassing New York in the numlier of factories and in the importance of those that are building. We are surpassing New York in all the industries that require the water edge, having here a shore line of more than twenty-five miles. Now, while there ore in this great city nearly 800,000 people, there are only 265 churches, chapels and houses of worship, which gives one church to every 2,024 inhabitants. In the outlying wards, with a population of 450,000 people, there is church seating for only about 50,000, leaving about 400,000 people in those outlying warda who have no churches, no Sabbath, no moral teaching. And yet of the 265 chnrches that exisfia-the city on the average they are not half filled, and where they are not half tilled it is be cause there is nothing there that draws or that meets the wants of the great in dustrial populations lying around about them. Under these circumstances what ■hall wc do ? I am not going to moke a plea for chnrch building, although I am glad to see churches going up. But the churches are not going to educate our population. We have got to have a wandering ministry; we have got to have ministera who go from house to house, as the apostles did, and that preach to men in their sorrows, in their sicknesses. Wo want missionary men and women who will go into places of vice. I don’t think we have half proved the power of the Gospel of Jesus Christ The influences that men throw ont to those around about them in the world was the subject of Mr. Beecher’s sermon, his text being Homans, xv., 1-3. The fol lowing passages arc picked out here and there from Hie discourse:— “We are perpetually acting as if we were instruments photographic. We are throwing pictures; we are throwing shadows; we are throwing light npon one, ten, acoree, hundreds. Every time we come into the presence of men something or other happens to them, for men are aa sensitive to inflqrnoe aa We are powerful in developing influ ence.’’ “A person whose life is just as regular os a checker board—oh I of all the mel ancholy singing that I ever heard was that of a bullfinch in a cage that had been tanght a little operatic air—(and Mr. Beecher showed how the bullfinch whistled)—and then over and over and over again, until I wanted to wring its neck " ^ “All real education brings men to men, and wherever you see men by the force of education separating themselves from and living above their fellow men, you may be sure they^are uneducated and vulgar just in that degree, for the essential spirit of evolvement toward the good in man ia the Christianliki spirit.” ' 'The command to be orthodox is not to be found anywhere in the New Testa menl Organized beliefs are all very well—among other things; but organiza tion ia not tea sum of religion, nocffian the need of religion." “I dent object to etoatieaaf B*t*ee; I don’t objeot that i&aa who aae alike in tellectually should fellow together, but they must not build up n wall between themeelves and their kind.” “The sign that a man is a gentleman is his consideration lot those who are not; the sign that a man is educated it the largeness of his sympathy; the sign that a man is truly refined « not that there is a Desert of Sahara in his soul, but that he bloeeonujike a prairie.” —-— Polities tr Hexlca, “ DICKENS’ DUTCHMAN ” DEAD, The Oik Peelteerterjr lunate Dies Cell Bear PktbUel»hfii. ■I la Ula -P milch i Charles Langh&oor, better kagffa W “Dickens’ Dutchman,” died a few days ago in the Eastern Penitentiary, ‘Thfla- delphia, where he had spent the better part of his hfifi. He was eighty-two yean old and was buried.hk Potter’s Field. He was first sentenced to the penitewto*? in 1810 and was released from time to time only to be returned for thefts. not LanghcimerV long residence penitentiary which gave him so notoriety. It was the fact of Charles Dickens having seen and spoken to him and writteu about him in his “American Notes.*’ More that thirty years ago, when the eminent novelist visited this country, he took occasion to go through the peniten tiary and there saw Lungheimer, who was serving a term of five years. When Diftkens wrote his “American Notes” he described the system of solitary confine ment and referred TbLangheiruer in quite pathetic tones. He said: “In a cell was a Gorman, sentenced to five years’ imprisonment for larceny, two of which had just expired. With colors extracted from yarn he had painted every inch of the walls'and ceiling quite beautifully. He lr> 1 laid out a few feel of ground behind "wfili exquisite neatness and had mado a liUlo bod in the center that looked, by-tbe-bye, like a grave. The taste and ingenuity he had displayed In everything was most extriinrdinary, and yet a more dejected, heart-broken wretched creature it would be difficult to imagine. I never enw such a pioture of forlorn affliction and distress of mind. My heart bled for him, and, when the tears ran .down bui cheeks and he took one of the visitors aside to ask, with his trembling hands nertonsly clutching at his coat to detain Ifjn), whether there was no hope of hilt dismal sentence being commuted, the spectacle was too painful to witness. I nev<r saw or heard of any kind of misery tha > impressed me more than the wretchedness of this man." Langheimer successfully passed through all the misery so pathetically pictured by Dickens and UvM to hear of the novelist's death. * - Printing Dfc'ect from Type. Hoe, the prinling-press builder, a new>paj>cr correspondent says, is mak ing a strong effort to induce newspapers to go liaek to the old sy.dem of printing direct from the type in place of stereo, typing newspaper forms os is now the the custom. Hoe is now building a pre^s for a New York evening paper which, he says, will run off 30,000 copies an hour from the type direct. He does not, however, want to make a contract to furnish a press to do this amount of work. If he could make a machine capable of that speed under the old type system, he would unquestionably do a good thing for himself and for the papers. It is certain that some improvement oug& to be made on the stereotyping system. It eats up a lot of time that is very valuable, for the reason that it comes Iwtwcen the moment when the news is ready aud the instant when press-work begin*—at a period, in fact, when every moment of delay costs a lot of money. Any scheme to get over the half-hour or so that is spent in stereo typing will be of immense advantage, particularly to aHernoon papers, where there is rivalry as to which ahall get the news out a few minutes ahead of the others. It is ah nonsense to say that atereotyping makes any practical saving of type. Where there are three or four editions packed off in a great rush m a dross of type will uot last more than a year with any stereotyping apparatus 1 ever saw, and r“ would be pretty heavy press work which* wore out type faster than that. Statistics of llUteracy. Mr. Blair, of "New Hampshire, ad dressed the United States Senate on the bill to aid in ten establishment and tem porary support o* common schools. In the course of his remarks he said: More than onppinth of the citizens of the United Stater are unable to read or write. According to the census of 1880, oat of the 50,901,000 of population in the United States there yere 9.82 per cent, who oould not read and 12.44 per cent who could not write. The propor tion of white people who oould not write was 6.9? per cent and of colored 47.70 per cent The number of persons of scbool age was 15,527,332, while the nnteber flnrolMtoras only 9,781,521, and even ot that mrt&ber the actual average - attendance waa only 5,805,342. That is to say, the average attendance was about two-thirds of thfc enrollment, or about one-third of the number that should at tend. i In thirty-four cities of the Union fifty to eighty-two per cent, of the chil dren were not enrolled at all-—that in, would never know fiow to read or write. in Unlucky Dog The »g ptoee* ballot for Mexico has no political The newspaper* do the no; paper* begin a disrmeatnc of about a year previous to the Presidential election. Next they “poatulete” or nominate certain eandidatee. At ten bend of tee paper will appeer, “Wo poetalate” so and so, naming the nal’a choice. Then, on election day, the voter* moemble at the polling and each depoeita a written •lector*, who are to coostitnte the Elen- toral Board of the State. Thia law stipn- latea that the ballot moat be written, and a table, with paper and writing uten- ■De, is pronited beside tee ballot bos, and tea baOotteate ba written and im mediately deporited under the inspec tion, ef the Saperriaor. Bometimea the voter* of the differentpattieawill meets *few fcOfffl prevtooa and agiee upon some eaqh voter has mm eua c . - nr.' Bill Nye, the funny writer, is a loeky and a* unlucky dog. He picked • up a' bit of paper in tha street on which was inscribed 1961 He bought a ticket in ^lottery of the same number and drew $20,000. This be Invested in a gold mine, and at end of six months he took the poor oath. He then went to Cape and wbfln[ walking on the beach h«| discovered a Young lady sinking for tee third rime, fie rescued her and re- ceived(BU90$. totes ber rioh father. That nigbl M ftteghf tee tiger and bad to barrnwnqwntottogetahmhfot. He Hiiiii tote- n-foWto put wp a tslaphaae wire, and while, doing ao hit upon an idea white be said to the company for 96,000. He spent $3,000 in solving tha worthlaasDeaa of a new electric light He fog the first ttye in hi* life that ho W&ukl salt the balance down to good real estate, $o he bought a farm and went to work. He resolved to dig a wail, aadteetewd day he streak a vein of octal, and harbecn offtred $50,0001w Oh, fittie baby, all pink, and wrinktod, and ugly aa you are in men’s eyes, hot* sweet you are to jour mother I Heaven knewa why, and iHaaven boiy— I say it reverently—Heaven that sent you. A woman who haa never loved a baby is not half a woman. She does not know what love can be. In every other phase of love there ia some selfishness. In that which we feel for our baby there can bo none. What does it bring to a mother, thia morsel of humanity, but pain, and fear, and weakness, depriva tion of pleasure, and vigils many and long ? Yet the love she haa for it pays for all. It is a passion—though it has never been called so—the strangest, sweetest, purest passion possible. When a lover’s lips touch hem a girl looks fair and bright, and as beauti ful as she ever will in life, so that those whosee her envy and admire; yetber emo tions may then be merely an equal mix ture of love and vanity. When a mother kisses ber first babe she is of ten pale and far from beautiful, but never in her life has such a depth of tenderness dwelt in her soul; never was she so near perfection; for all that wo women have of good and true in our hearts has its base in mother- love. It is from this that our power to care for our households^to do our duty. as daughter*, sisters, and wive,, muat principally spring. The woman simply capable of romantic emotion may have lovers by the score, but is never true to one, and * 8 always selfish to the heart’s core, grasping all she can, and giving nothing. The woman with strong mother-love in their sonls give that— though iu less degree than to their babes -a-4- ■»— Removing the Dletreeehif Effecte of iaferta} AYER’S AGUE CURE ——■—:yv Egg mu wwiii wo - NEARLY INFALLIBLE, ' THAT We Authorize Deaiere to Return the Money, . If the medicine ia taken according to directions, without benefiting the patieni PREPARED DR. J. C. AYER A CO., Analytical C Sold by all Droggiata. Price $1, si The expenditure* on rood* in the Yellow stone Park this year will be 9210,000. We MhanM Help Gee Another. Mr. Norman Hunt, of No.' 100 Chestnut etreet, Springfield, Mass., writes April 10, J88H. saying: » “Having the affliction caused by kidney and liver disea-e*. and after enduring the aches, pains, weakness and depression inci- deni thereto until body and soul were nearly distracted, I soucht for relief and a cure from my trouble, and was told by a friend who liad been cured by it himself, that the best and only sure cure was Hunt’s Remedy, and upon his recon>n:-ndnt4& 2 commenced taking it, and the first few doees ImproveJ mv condition in a very marked manner, and a continuance of it* u»* ho* justified all that my friends claimed for it—that it was a sure and permanent tore for all diseases of the kidneys and liver. Several of my friends in Springfield have used it with the rw*t gratifying results, and I feel it my duty as well as a pleasure to me to recommend Hunt * Remedy iu the highest possible torru*.” I*fn nafactarar’* TewtlnaM,. Mr. H. W. Payne, manufacturer of bar- -v»> *** >r : “ ,d “•» as the nest bv the mother-bird under data of April It), IHKi; Lotteries and Presents. : Apt “(Jentleiuen-I have used Hunt's Remody, | th° b st medicine tor diseases of the kidneys, rliver, Madder and urirary organs, and have i rwe ved great Iwacflt to my health from it* Every sensible person should recog- use, and I find th*t it will do ju«t what is nize the fact, when anything is offered ^'"f 1 ^‘S ’ . . . ° . (tore health. I therefore pronounce it the for sale, no matter what it mrfy be—a newspaper, book, medicinos, pianos or ' jack-knives—for a certain nam of money, and gifts are offered as a bonus or in ducement to purchase, that the thing offered is not worth the money asked for it This conclusion cannot be avoided if one will only think for a moment. As this is not ft regular business transaction, ..the purchaser of anything so offered can not be surprised if be sh onld find out that ho has been deceived and has been led into n trap by means of a bait If there is any chance about the distribu tion of these gifts it becomes a lottery, and issimply gambling. The laws against lotteries are now properly becoming very strict, and so far os morality is con cerned the bnyer of a chance is equally blamuble as the offerer of it. Farmer* ore especially sought by persons who deal iu these practices, as they are l>e- lieved to bo more than usually foolish or dishonest. It is to be hoped that they will resent this unjust imputation by letting such business severely alone.— Xcw York 71 (/(/■». best medic ne that I have ever u*ed.” Bouton itnd Albany Railroad. A'b rt'Holt, Esq., jiaymaiiter Boston and Albany railroad, st Springfield, Mi*.-*., writes April 2H, 1881: “I have used Hu nr* Remedy, and rny ex{ieriei)ce with it has been *uch that 1 ran cheerfully **y that I am snlicfied that it wilt d > ust what it prormtte* to do, if used according to directions.” • Dakota's new capital, at liisnurck, will l>e ready for occupancy .Tune 1. A WOXDLRFUL DISCOVEPY. AKlei* i km Will. *J*ke the »nW an Make I rjfier. Lorrr Js. —George Smith, of Indiana county, Fa., put 815,000 in bills in a wooden chest in his cellar. He would not trust his money to the banka. When he brought the chest to light a few days ago to count over his treasure, he found that the rats had burrowed through and through the chest until only a small fraction of the original pack age of bills was in a negotiable condi tion. - - — riray R«>1 Mnn v of the hair dreadings of the day arc excellent, but the great mas* of the stuff* sold for promoting the growth and bringing back the original color, are mere humbugs, while not a few are pernicious in their effect* upon the (nwlp and hair. The falling out of the hair, the accumulations of dnndnin. and the pre mature change in color are all evidence* of a diseased condition of the scalp and the glands which nourish the hair. To arrest these cause* the article used must pfwsess medical as well as chemical virtues, and the change must be gin under the scalp to be of permanent and lasting benefit Petroleum oil is the artirl* which is made to work such extraordinary results; but it is after the liest refined article has tieen chemically treated, and completely deodorized, that it is in proper condition for t!ie toilet ami receives the name of Carboline. It was in far-off Russia that the effects of pe troleum upon the hair were first observed; a government ollicer having noticed that a par tially tiald headed sen ant of hi*, when trim ming the lamps, hod a habit of wiping his oil U-Mneaii-d hand* in hi* scanty b'oks. and tlie result was, in a few mouths, a much finer head of black, glossy hair than he ever had before. The oil was tried ou horse* and cattle that had hwt their hair from cat tk(plaguc,and the result* were marvelous. The mane* aud tails of horse*, which had fallen out, were completely restored in a few week*. These ex|»Tii!M‘nt* were heralded to the world, but no one in civilized ms-icty could tolerate the use of refined jietroleum as a dressing for the hair. Hi*, the skill of one of our chemists has overcome the difficulty, and he ha* suo<-ceded in i»'rf»s'ting CarU'linc.rerhlermg^it as dainty rne. Ext )l«ts t LOWELL. MASS. : bottl** tor $6 specif;: JLMJLL tc|0lllKliU|E|«l0|R)’ w ii srMiiru* FCR H Epilepsy, ^ * Spasms, Convul sions, Falling Sicknaa, ft. Vito* Dance, Alcohol- ism. Opium Eat- ing, Syphillis, Scrofula, Kings Evil, Ugly Blood Diseases, Dyrpcj* sia. Nervousness, ick J.’icdache, heumatisettf Kersou* Weakness, Brain Worry, DUmcI .Sum, Biliousness, Costiveness, Nervous Proi-tration. Kidney Troubles and Irregularities. 81.59- Sample TeMiuioninla. "Samaritan Xervinels doing srendrrs. Dr. J. O. MeLcmoln, Aleisndrr City, Ala. •*1 feel it my duty to recommend it.' 1 I>r. V. Langhlin, Clyde, Kansa* "It cared where phvdciaiis failed.'’ Iter. J. A. Kdie, Beaver, Ba •ar- C*rr«*t>e*(tenee freely answered. ~U Tha Dr. 8. A. RicKmond Med Co., St. Joseph, Me Tor teettmonlals and circulars eenrt etamp. ts UOracgliU. C.7<. Crlttentea. - gent, S. JL XX.-OAUTION.-Xy AS BLUE FLANNEL 6ARMENTS, OrTnfhrter QnalKy ofCoede are enM »« the " femilne Xiddieef*.” wMcfi ereacJ mede hr thsi mill. The Slddieeel tvmMur.ln or*«» lo pretest their customer! sod the l' ■ - ” “lothtiw m.^efrom rtlF lilDIJhE. INU1UO U.l’E tl/ANNHA ANG I sold by elt tredtpr chah eranjiu* teer the "att.K ftANOKhS." iiirnUlied by ti»* Soiling A^eoutoeU parties ordering the (\>oda WENDELL, FAY & CO., *klU*<i] Aorxrs. kidm.i'sex coni-ast. •« en<1 ** Worth St . York »7 I rai.kll* Sl» •ostoiii SI A C heelkiit & i., I'klud tl j,lu' IheUMreeGer ell Clothtiw io« ■•rr - ' ■ variiT standard in IT CW)TH8, sol FKieS SJ'!» aoftA i) err r MVS AMERICAN _ MBSiaWU 'pIsraurTro ntlUJBU R tjVNXWn’- <£ T a* 1 -*-*-. To Speculator**. R. Uittlo* t I. €• Wilin’ t f«.. • - — * * 16 Uffted#*? i »ni 7 (Imnh^r of ej . Comm^rc*, Uhl©-#*. ftt'W YorE. Crain and Provision Brokora II•■ibars of all pmmD # nt Prodrco JCioSancM vn Haw York, Chieaco, hi. Lout* sad Mtlwsuk +. W« bar* axelotev* t< l**fT»p.i wiro vrAmrrv China** aa<1 Nate York. Will aiecot* ordaa* « n ' tadfmrat whan r*qaa*t«d. f'»r cirvulEis c*>nU.!V» ti partirulars, HO AS I. Ll.N 1>H1/ > M A t O., C ln«>C« ITSTTia TT r.«M Rand *r»« ftnee I l)eai rued TiYIet Net. I THE dill EAT J r. O. Hex »*. GOOD jtfEW3 12 LAfiJMJ (ireatrftt mduram-i ts orar ot ferrd. Now s yocr l in to aot uf orders for our te'.al r t “I Trm sn«1 ( allrcH,nnd secure • l*e»uto lial I.. Jfl liauri or Mt Kosj « h-na Tot Set. . r Hai »*D« I too* r». ad ** 1 )inner hot, ir tei-ld Hand Mote Y> r toil imticolars Address jpiKKlt AN TKA C O., Yfand il. Yueoy >t. # Sew York. ft8 tlw* famous eau dp coloj leXperimput* A tgw*j. folded several times and dipped iu hot water and quickly wrung, and then applied'over the seat of the yrain in toothoeshe or neuralgia, will gen erally afford prompt relief. Headaches almost always yield to the simultaneous application of hot water to the feet and the back of the neck A family of Swedes in Chicago tried to nse a railroad torpedo for tael. Home people have criticised their judgment in so doing, bat there is no denying that the torpedo burned freely and ‘made n hot fat:.—Boston Posh ^ Nkw Yoke, conntiug the cities on it* sides, nas over 2,000,000 of population. Mullein Vo. Cad Uver OU. . Dr. Quillian, the leading authority of Great Britain on lung disttseH, s*y*, while one of hi* patients gain* d only seven pounds by the use ;)of“Cod Diver Oi),*~iihe gained over thirteen by the use of Mullein. The old held Mull in made into a tea and combined with Sweet Gum, S resents in Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet >um and Muffriu, a pleasant and effective cure for Group, Whooping Cough. Cold* and Con sumption. Price 25ct* and #1.00. Thi* with Dr. Bigger*' Bouthern Remedy, an equally effi cacious remedy for Cramp-Colic. Diarrbo-a, Dyaentary, and children suffering from the effect* of^teething presents a little Meihcixe Chxnt no household should be without, for the speedy relief of audden and dangerous attack* of the lung* and howel*. Ask your druggist for them. Manufactured by Waiter A. Taylor, Atlanla, Ga., proprietor Taylor'* Premium Cologne. Won* on the Jer»ey City end of the Hudson River tunnel will soon be resumed. ogne. . on the human hair and skin were attended with the most astonishing results. A few a|>- pluntioiis.ju-horethehair was thin and falling, gave remarkable tone and vigor to the scalp ! and the hair. Every (wrticleof dandruff disap- ; pears on the first or second dreusing. all cuta neous disease of the skin and scalpare rapidly and iKM-manentlv healed, ami the .•juid seem* to jienetrate to the root of the hair at once. It is well known that the moat lieautiful colors are made from petroleum, and by some mys terious operation of nature the uae of thisarti- ele gradually inqiarta a beautiful light brown color to the hair, which by continued use deep ens to black. Tne color remains permanent, and the change is so gradual that the moat intimate friends can scarcely detect it* pro- gres*. In a word, it is the most wonderful discovery of the age. and well calculated to make the prematurely bald and gray rejoice. Carbolino is put up in a neat and attractive manner and sold by all dealers in drugs and medicines. Price one dollar a bottle. Ken nedy & Co., PitUlmrg. Pa., general agent* for the* United Stab* and Canada*. We advise our readers to give it a trial, feeling satisfied that one application will convince them of its wonderful effect*. Auhtrama could fnrniah 450,noo men from 2b to Pi, capable of bearing arm*. _ The Indian of falcon glance and Hon bear-' ing, the theme of the touching ballad Is gone; but the petroleum they discovered, now made into Cartwline, the Natural Hair Restorer will live forever. t The nienulacture of rope from asbestos haa become a large industry in England. Leading Physicians, Eminent Divine*—a') who try it, end ism Samaritan Nervine. A lezy policeman, like a good piece ot doth, s known by his nap. - Dr. L M ~ If.d., write*: MttMFTHK. 1 to poAitive r*m*d.Y forth* pbnrt* dit****; b) 't# ait*' Uionjuintis of emsfm of th* w >r*t kin 1 of i •? § •Landing IteteIteDNN curfKi. ^ Indrithl. ng iff my f-rl'S in it* cite ear y, tiiat I will fM*n<1 TWoRuTTirRS KHF.K, UteAth«r with a VALUABLK TRK. ATISK o|t thitdi*- IteML to %ny caRrircr. t*iv»* Ksprvt't jkn i F\ O. *dd'fM. DK. T. A. SLOCUM. IM PoarlSt .^Vw Ynrk. WILBOB’S COMPOOKi) OF [PURE COD LIVER OIL AND LIME. T# Owe and All. -Are ' Mhiw Tnn ■■tlrrlnn I'roni ■ :mti*, or »njr ot Thu Coach, Cold, Bnmchiu*, or »ny < nalmonary tronbJoc th » cooftAn And mf^m^araption t If bo, an* "Wtihor** Par* G»d- lA**r Ojil «nd TTuif*,” g wf« god Bum remedy. Thi* no quark preparation, but i* pmernbed by the medical facuhv. Manut'd <>r, > bf A. B. Wilbor, Obemiat, Sold by all drugtf i»t«. G. McPheetcn, B oouisgton '‘Samaritan Nervine cure* fit*,’ Tho secret of the large and constant sale* of | Mrs. I’inkham'* Vegetable Componnd probably lies in the facCthat whereas there are ni*nv | "Bitters” and “Tonics” of equal value, be it i more or less, tho Vegetable Compound is so comrietely superior to all other preparations qsvilically recommended for the needs of women that it has practically no rival*. Ik6,;ii)9 person* emigrated from Germany, mostly to. tiie United State*, last year. A D r "RC> *'» »t< rv, Mr. Isaac C. Chapman, druggi-t, Newburg, N. Y., writes us: ‘^1 have for the past ten years sold teveral gross of Dr. Wm. Hall * Balaam for the Dungs. I can Snj at it ifh X I cannot * iy of any other medicine. I have n-ver heard a customer speak of it but to praiae iu virtue* in th* highest mtinuer. Tv have recommended it in a great many case* af whooping cough, with tha happiest effect*. I have used it in my own family for many years ; in fact, always have a bottle ia th* median? cioeet,’’ Robert Wilson had just retired to be 1 a hen the wind struck bis home at Rocking ham. N. C. His clothing toy upon a chair, and in his vret waste gold watch He wru blown out into the garden, and hi* watc i was found hanging by the cabin in the top of a high tree near by. It was *101 going. etm for the Do*don covers 700 square miles, ho* 700,000 houses, and 5,000,000 iuhabiUnt*. The short, hacking cough, which leads to conamuption, i* cured by Piao’s Cure. •aippi Senate passed s of habitual dnulhrd*. ¥\ formal trial Bare cur* for Blind, Bleeding and Itching Plica Oue box has cured worst case* of m | rears' standing. No ou* need aMferire mka •teaafter using William * Indian ntoOintment It abaoiiM tmnura, ailara itching, aM* os pool- • ST’ Prepared only tut ‘^XtiMSh.***** LYDIA t. rUKHAK’S Yeietal Conpuni niyoNmncva War Vernal* Cea^latateand iWeakw*—rs *• eeoaaaen t* ear beet female peanlarten. I* will eon tmUrtij the wan* fens ef r nsli Com- pUlmte,aU Ovarian trsohilg,InSs—xtlns an* I'koeta- Uoa, rajllnn an4 PtaMneraeeta, aa4 th* —aUfset SSSe^uST' aeaptaTB th* 30 DAYS’ TRIAL 1%1dye| XT'LXCTRO.VOLTAIC BFLT and othrr El screw Pj Am iascm «r* s-nt mi .») Dar«’ Trisl TO UF.n OVLY. Yorno OK OLI>, wlm ara • ff-nnf frnra Naavont Damurr, lywr Vitautt. Wa»tis« WlASKBSiKr. and ail kind!*] diseasm Spnrdj r*. Uet aad ronpl«t« rnetnratine •« IUaI.TH, Viooa and MAwaocnGriBANTsn'. bend atnnr* lor l!l >rtrat d Prapblot fro*. Address Voltaic Belt Co., Marshnll, Mich. IOLID SILVER STEM WINDIM1 FULL ilWELLEu O-MTS’ SilS WATCH FOR $12.6). F1TIXY GITARANTBEH, This nffw ntd-for •aysoniy. Gowds sent >y RtprassO. O. U., si IJ ot te tnspeetioe before pnrehasin*. J.' P. hTEVKMM dk CO-, Jeweler*, i Atlanta, t.a. j Mme. L. LANGE’S Lady’s Protector and Supporter. Frio- S Ik. Linen, |1 M. DEMITTANC * WITH ORDEE. SENT BY MAIL. &*nd for I>osorip(iYe Circular. 704 Broadway, N.Y. City, Agents Wanted. fcrj er I Ftps d**a WM peeee It e* tore* t w . ^ r _ , „ 9toM0teee matsd nan pe* i #.-» .h. •» L nEfriFa it».. »ww POSIONSif^ dflOHte te Hoidterssnd Hd™, - - j ( -- Att’l Sen I iitsma U HIM . linaton. l>. U CJ)I. U HIM 'u Waebmet. avd wiriwKY ntnirn fUUED IN TURKIC tVl.KKS. Fi>r Famphlety. proofseutten. ,1^ sdaremm . _ _ stamp W. W. Ik., Atlanta. Ceereia. iecne, w :ih .1-r ... UfcLDlMV, DaQmfly shenl* he wMheei Arau a rtXMMAJrt imat mu. ■~- T - t D» FOOTT* Origiaal UTH0D6 iBRaafeittattiil MILLKRS antf: FARMERS tor new catalogue of our tv a tel Milling Staclifnary. 81m. I In the mnraet. Write A. A. De Loach A Bro M paper. Atlanta, Oik AVKxas.'isnxi'ssys iM«eae» Paauaawe Oo , AGanu, ax. fto*l>se>anNetowwk<wrg|>«eetgaea n WAJIenue, ttteeMnUa.Ci.UI I $ Aft eampleetam* prtatae R V diploma, btribd «( frk eerds, »e Prtee bet fsee. leer* eredff gift end sehenl at 0»,. Warren, Fa.