The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, July 03, 1884, Image 4

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OTOt MX r AIM OV BBOM A MINUT* n« ntateMMit Matf* hy Oaa al at Graai Ac Ward. If tfeay war# ita Caaa. * ■ [From tha Haw lock Bun.] A cobbler takes half s day to sola and heel a pair o< oboes. In Grow Hill pan* itentiary a few hundreds of men and women start with the raw material, and tarn out 8,800 pairs of shoes in tan hours, or more than six pairs of shoes a minute. The men and women hare lit tle to do with it. Machines do the work, and need only to be fed, started, and stopped; all the fine and ingenious work of building a beautiful shoo they do, one port at a time and one machine to each part. For instance, the first machine cuts the soles out of the leather. It is nothing but a punch fitted with a knife the shape of a shoe sole. Different sized knives out out anything from a baby’s to a plantation darky’s sisa. Cut ting out the sole loaves tbs sheets of leather in tatters. The biggest tatters are used for heels; the smallest make fuel. Leather scraps make as good a furnace fire as coal does. The next machine iplitk a thto slice bF the upper surface of the sole a little way from the edge all around, so that it looks as if a thin sheet had been pasted on to the sole, leaving the edges nnpasted. Under this looee edge s machine presses s little gutter or channel in whioh the nailing or sewing is done, and afterward hidden by pasting the loose edge over it when the upper is attached. At the same moment convicts are Gut ting uppers out of dressed calfskin. They lay patterns on the skins and thus cut the needed sites. This is done by hand, hut the linings are sewed to the uppers, and the bnttonholes are pot throngh both leather and lining by ma chinery. The bnttonoholes are stitchei. by antomatio machines, consisting of a sewing machine having under the needle a little plate which tarns exactly in accordance with the outlinea of the buttonhole, and stopa when the button hole is finished. One man feeds several machines, starts them, and does not touch them while they are at work. Af ter this the soles and uppers come into the hands of one set o# onnvic»" the liwttora and lackers on, who put the two together with s very few small tacks. Fhese people all work like lightning, bnt are slow tieside the machinery. The soles and uppers are firmly joined in several ways. One machine puts in brass screws and bitea them off exactly at the right distance between the npper and the nnder surface of the leather; an other driven in an iron smew with • nioety; another sews the parts together with wax thread, the thread pasting throngh a heated metal horn, whioh keeps it soft and warm; yet another im itates hand sewing with yellow thread, ' leaving an extended sole, whioh is after ward bevelled to look pretty. The ment of tbie machine is that the shoes it sews are pliable and easy to the foot, and bring a good prioe. This does its work in eleven seconds. The heels are made separately, and when finished have all the nails project ing half an inch from the bottom of the lower sheet of leather. A convict puls one of theee heels into a metal eup in a press of groat power, and over that he rests a shoe in the right position. Then down oomee s great bar and sqneeses the heel and shoe together, driving every other nail all the way in and leaving every other nail sticking a little w^y oat He takes the shoe out, puts a pretty heel Up on, puU the shoe back, submits it to the pressure, sod then with draws it, and finds the Up firmly nailed, with the nails not quiU through the tap, which presents a smooth, unbroken un der service. Tha hnol sharing A*™?. present to the heel a eet of rapidly in volving knives, shaped to make a straight heel or a guttered one, or even a lady’s French heel, cats the front of tfe another trims and saMOtha (a af the sole. Tha edge d sides of the heel me edge is put under a hot aise of a fat oheatnH. to and fro with inoredibie rspMBty, 1 imitation of tha motions of the cobble who need to do the work by hand. A large Iron, also heated by a gae jet, does the same thing for the heal, and,does if nnoer such pressure that eraeka and un evennesses in the heal am smoothed over, filled up, and oonoealed. Some shoe uppers have eyelet holes In stead of bnttonholes. Thorn la a ma chine in the prison for doing this work. It has two steel rock elose to one another, and while one punches the holes the other inserU-the eylete, whioh run down a little gutter, right aida up, axaotly into plaoe to fix into the punotums in tha leather, and tohave their edges squeeasd over by the rod and tha piece the! fits upon it. Twenty yearn ego shoemak- ing machinery performed only half of this work and did that roughly. How the shoes made in Grow Hill prison am snob ae most persona wear, and era in all rospeoU shapely, presentable, and wall finished. Borne of them retail for $4 or |fi a pair. In this prfcan, aide by aids with tha •eum of humanity, reputable man «td girls am employed, two hundred girls U the who live in Brooklyn, ing, and am fme to go these persons wok for the contractors, was asked what he thought of the of suoh surroundings upon the of good morals. „ He replied that uaed to be a general feeling that tha ar rangement wae improper and dangerone, but it has proved not so. OutakW fms labor has been employed m Grow Hfll eleven or twelve yearn, and of all tha hunAud* who have thue oome daily to the prison not one has ever bean sent Oere ae a prisoner. The not have anything to do with Got. Fred Grant’s countenance wore a careworn and pitiful appearance as he ■aid to a World reporter: “Yes, I am absolutely penniless,” ■aid he in sad tones. '‘Ward bar rained us all. "The secret of the whole trouble is the false represenUtions made to us by Ward and his rashness in speculation. When the firm was established, three yean ago, Fish and Ward represented to my brother Ulysses that they were each worth at least 1850,000. My bro ther was possessed of about, the Same amount of money. For a year the firm did a good business. Ward so completely won the confidence of my brother that be gave Ward the privilege of signing all the checks, of looking after the books, and, in fact, of attending to nearly all the business. My brother was not so grossly negligent as the pub- lie have been given to understand. For the past tbreq, yeans, almost from the very toginning of business, in fact, his domestic affairs have consumed a greater portion of his time. When the firm be- U gan bustaess hn wsx gxoegatagly atten- ^ doud andlnonntaln trout fry. live to all its details. He soon became foolish enough to trust in Ward. Whon my father and brother Jesse learned of the suooeM of the firm they both in vested large snms of money with it Ward assured them that they wonld have a bonanza, "A abort time ago my fafcer was ln- duoed to beoome a general partner. At the same time he placed something like 8200,000 in the firm. I came on from Chicago about a year ago. My wealth all told then amounted to about 857,000. I was introduced to Ward, and induced by visions of enormous profits promised by him plaoed nearly the whole of it in his hands for investment. .Neither the General, my brothers nor myself ever took a cent from the firm, excepting for actual expenses. Ward, on the con trary, has been living fast and taking all he could get Although I was but a cus tomer, I on Tuesday morning last con sidered that I was worth at least 1600,- 000, nearly all of which wss on deposit with the firm st the time of the crash. I most say that neither the General, my brothers nor myself ever suspected that Ward waa speculating so rashly as re cent developments indicate. ‘‘Wince the crash we have ascertained that to one person be would reveal start ling intelligence of prospeotive profits when possibly the money invested had long ago been lost. To another he would confide the most alluring and de ceptive secrets in order to secure his money for big own investment As far back as two yean ago we heard that he had held out inducements to investors baaed upon the ‘secret influence whioh Gen. Grant had at Washington for se curing profitable Government contracts. ’ When this report reached the ears of my father he com mimics Uni it to Ward and threatened to withdraw from the firm. Ward assured him that lie bad never offered auoh inducements to any _ -» one. MOBODT KNOWS ANTTHINO. "Have yon any idea as to what the assets of Grant A Ward ore ?” "None whatever. They do not know themselves. We hardly know where the money is gone. For my part, I have been so blind that I am nnable to say where the $500,000 I had a week ago ia. 1 suppose Ward could give more au thentic information npoo the subject than I can. All I know is that my bro thers and myself have lost everything we had in Ward’s ‘blind pool.’ What amount that may be is still a mystery to me and many others." AMOWm It MM MaTHKTMB. Born# amateur writers in London wrote a set of poems upon a given sub- ject: "Mm Brown Among the Aes thetes.” The following verses won the prise: Isays to Mis. ’Arris, ss w# set a-’svtng tea, “I woete what la ’erwi'i name the##'ere hmthetea be I” "to#V#*•#*.» #he says to BM, “I Tirana are 177 applications for divorce to oome before the May term of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, whioh has opened in Boston, and all but 82 of them are uncontented. A stattjk ia going to be erected at Antwerp to the old Flemish printer, Jardaen*, perhaps the grew list colorist of the seventeenth eentury. A South Oabomna man discovered that a chalk mark around a barrel of sugar is a sure cure for ants, and ia now mad because the Patent Office refuses him a patent for it Or the 25,284 students enrolled last year in the German University, 6,172 studied medicine, 9,117 philosophy, 6,* 62A law, 8,548 evangelical theology, and 811 Catholic theology. Dckino the first two months of this year 10,504 persons emigrated from Ger many. In 1883, during the same time, 13,616 Germans left the fatherland, while in 1882 the number wss 14,582. A hoot 1,800,000 trout fry will be dis tributed from the Wisconsin State Fish Hatchery at Madison during the preseat spring, together with about 200,000 Me ns-It la Olvaa Sr a Kyalelsa. only jsat la says as 'ow she'd take me there Ihet Meaeed night. we'd took s drop af aomethiak'ot to pat aa right, We eUrted on oar wish, and waa huaheredta ia style. Aad aaw a lanky fallow with a hawfnl gaehley Who mts, "Are you oomummit? do yon hever yarn and cling 7 " “I'm quite respectable," I says, "and don’t do no eeoh thing." Then came a. woman in a drees I’d been ashamed to wear, Who looks ss if she’d Jnst got hup and never done ’er ’sir, And righe and rolls ‘er heyes about; I really fqtt distressed. I says, “Hexenes me, Misa, is somethink ’eavy oaywrehesty” "O PhiUngstine!" she says to me and give me quite a start, "Ton do not hunderetand the true develop ment* of Hart; Tour eonl is not attooned to Hart’s too too bes- tatie bliss ” — * Hot ‘ere I says to Mrs. H., “I’ve ’ad enough of this 1 If these are what you call hjesthetea," I says, "they slat my form! Too tod," I euyst “’em, coese and ‘avatwo ’ two’s of somethink wsna I" Bowrow Woionr jm Broon. — The Boston Adoorffeersays: "Ilia related as a grave and solemn verity that two ' at tha door of a Boston broker,’ wheat one cried in great •Oh, dear Mrs. X., I don’t know but I am reined. I sold long or short on Dan and Beeraheba Railroad bonds, and, for the life of me, 1 don’t know which, but if it’a one way or the other Pm utterly bankrupt*, ‘Oh, don’t take on so. my dear,’ waa the reply, nfa jest the aaaae whh me on Hamm alia man mining stock; but Pm jest going in and tall the olerk that I didn’t mean a Word of what I said yesterday, whatever it was.’ ‘Oh, yee love,’ exclaimed the first, rapturously; ‘what a bead yon have for business. Why, yeu’re jus* like a Cora, Thbbi seems to be room for a few girl? in Illinois. According to the report of the Snperintendent of Schools there ap pears to be a •uperflnity of about 19,000 buys under twenty-one years of age. It is thought, says the Cleveland Leader, that Dakota will-receive 100,000 immigrants this year, and that the total population of the territory will lie about 500,000 on the 1st of next January. An old duck shooter calculates that broadbi/is fly at tho rate of from thirty- five to one hundred and sixteen miles an houj, and other varfetiee from forty-five to fifty, eighty or one hundred mile* pe» hour. Thk Brazilian marine has 50 vessel*, of which 8 are steam lannchea, 5 ships, 14 ironclads, and 4 in construction, which are armed with 85 smooth -bore and 92 rifled oannon. The naval force ia 3,000 men. Nearly 40,000 heads of families, rep resenting a population of over 100,000 persons, have l>eeu aided to emigrate from Alsace-1 moraine to French territory sines that district was turned over to Germany. Tin? largest l»ook ever made at the Gove mm Jut Printing-oflioo, in Washing ton, has jnst been finished. It is bound in sheep-skin and Russia leather, is 1 foot 4 inches in breadth, contains 10,000 pages, and weighs 140 pounds. A correspondent says that in Fisk- dale, Mass., under one roof, are living five generations, namely, the great- great-grandmother, 95 years old; the great-grandmother, 75 years; the grand mother, 53 years; the mother, 30 years, and the child, 6 years. The effective strength of the British army on the 1st of January last amounted to 158,029 men, and the total establishment to 165,386. The number wanting to complete was The in fantry numbered 100,818 effective and an rstablishtaent of 106,630, wanting 6,812 to complete. The London association which offers prizes of £700 and £300 for the two beet non-alooholio beverages is ready for business. Competitors most submit a sample of not less than three gallons of their article, with a statement of its in gradients, and the cost moat not exceed £3 per 100 gallons of English measure. There are 56,678 scholars in the public schools at Boston, this being a slight in crease over the number last year. Bnt there ia a marked decrease in the number of young pnpils, those of five yean and under having diminished twelve per cent, those of six yean three per cent and those of seven yean over two per cent The will of John J. June, a circus man for twenty-five seasons, has jnst bean admitted to probate in New York Stats. It waa dated 1841, and has never bam > mended crcndteited, probably be came he never rwviaad or added to thr number of hie jokes, whioh he Booms to have bequeathed to tha profession. Me. L a Plant, a Macon banker, true to hie name, has solved tha problem of utilising the swamp lands of hia seotjoi of Georgia by aetting oat 810,000 willow writings of twenty-eight acres, the produce af whioh for ten yean to oomehaa hem contracted for hyemanu- faotnnr in Georgia. The willow farm ia one of the new industries of the South. Jonathan Wheklocx deposited in the Hampshire Barings Bank, in Con- March 88, 1843, $100 bounty money whioh ho had received ae a Revo lutionary soldier. Two other deposits of $15 each sere added to it, April 15, 1884, and April 9, 1836. The money still remains in the bank, and amounted on the first day of January last, with accrued interest, to $2,065.44. Henkt Ikying tells a good story apropos of American respect for the sex of sexes. While somewhere out West he and Miss Terry visited a coun try jail. The jailer took them through hi# bird cage, and wee vastly gratified by their praieee of ite condition and management Finally Mias Terry asked Uhl>5616 the female ward was: "We are in it now, miss,” said he; ‘-but the fact is there are no ladies in the jail at present” N. , Ah old clergyman, a helpless cripple and poor, tome Tears ago lent money to a poor student at one of the large New England colleges to help him through his course, taking a note endorsed by a near relative. The boy died, and the relative refused to pay. He is "an emi nent Ohriatiaa” in his town, and for many years has professed entire sancti fication. The clergyman writes to the Independent for a4vioe, and ia told to Invoke the law to compel the endorser of the note to pay the whole debt. "Doctob, do you think #mrtkmg * hurtful 7” “Why, of eouree; look al the ohhfcneys. They make a busineas of the thing ; and yet it’a tboee that a»oj[^ the 14aat that do the beet,” M. Louie Pasteur, the French chemist, claims to have made a discovery of s complete ewe, or rather antidote, for hyhrophobia. In an in terview with a Figaro correspondent M. Pasteur says: ‘‘Cauterization of the wound immedi ately after the bite, as Is well known, has been more or leas effective, but from to-day anybody bitten by a mad dog has only to present himself al the laboratory of the Eode Normal, and by iweeuleHcm I will make him completely inraeoepti- of hydrophobia, even lily by any number of AtUmu Rwotlxo.—The public of San Merino, Italy, hi ing army of forty men, including offioms, and a public debt of $1,000. In pleasant weather the army jpes fishing er gets up picnics, end leaves the oountey in charge of an aged servant. ivoting the laet fou it I found out, in the first plmflkQiat the virus rabique loaee its intesHg by transmission to cer tain animals, and increases its intensity by transmission to other animals. With the rabbit, for instance, the virus rabique increases;-with the monkey it decrease*. My method was as follows : I took the virus direot from the brain of a dog that had died from acute hydro phobia. With this virus I inoculated a monkey. The monkey died. "Then with the virus—already weak cned in intensity—taken from this mon key I inoculated a second monkey. Then with the rirns taken from the second monkey I inoculated a third monkey, and so on until I obtained a virus so weak as to be almost harmless. Then with this almost harmless virus I inocu lated a rabbit, the virus being at once increased in intensity. "Then with the virns from tho first rabbit I inoculated a second rabbit, and there was another increase in the inten sity of the virus. Then with the virus of the second rabbit I inoculated a third rabbit, then n fourth, until the virns had regained its maximum inten sity. Thus I obtained virns of different degrees of power. I then took a dog and inoculated him, first with the weak est virus from the rabbit, then with the virus from the second rabbit, and finally with the rabbit virus of maximum inten sity. After a few days more I inoculated the dog with vinu taken directly from the brain of a dog that had just died of acute madness. The dog npon which I had experimented proved completely in susceptible to hydrophobia. The ex periment was frequently repeated, al ways with the same successful result "But my discovery did not end here. I took two dogs and inoculated them l>oth with vims taken directly from a dog that had just died of acute hydro phobia. I let one of my two dogs thus inoculated alone, and be went msd and died of aente hydrophobia. I subjected the second dog to my treatment, giving him the three rabbit inoculations, be ginning with the weakest and ending with the strongest. This second dog waa completely cured, or rather became completely insusceptible to hydro phobia.’’ A Touching Story. ^Congressman Blackburn, of Kentucky, is quoted as telling this story : "Four days before I went to the front with my regiment we bad's little girl baby. She is now grown, and you always see her with me at any social gathering. Well, in our army the furloughs came very rarely. When we got iifto line there was no great ohanoe for a man to get home. It wae abont three yean afterward that a few of us were one night going down the Mississippi on a river steamer. I had been sick and was returning to my command, bat pretty well broken ap even then. As for money, we did net have any, and the night wee hot ae I laid down on the deck, my throat almost parched with think Pretty aoon a little girl came along with a big glaee of lamonadA I tall you it looked good to me. She saw me eying it, stopped a minute, looked doubtfully at me and finally came up to mj side, ‘You look sail you wanted something to drink,’ ■he laid, offered me the glaaa. It wasn’t quite the square thing to do, but I took it and handed it back empty. It was like nectar to me. Then I thanked the little creature and sent bar away. Soon after, just like every child, she came bank leading her mother to see the poor soldier. By Jupiter, it waa my wife, and the girl was the baby whom I had last seen aa a baby but just born. You can imagine the reunion. They were with my brother’s family and happened to be going down river. That was the only time during the four years’ fighting that I saw my wife and baby, and under these circumstances what man would ever forget it.” Hunting With Belled Dogs. "I hunted with an English man in Michigan, once, who put bells on his dogs when he went woodcock-hunting; when the dog* got into thick covert, he could trace their course by the sound of the bells, and whenever the tinkling ceased, he knew they were pointing birds. , "He told me that one day he went out to a woodcock covert with a belled dog, and after following the eound back and forth and around and around in a tangled growth, suddenly the tinkling ceased. Very I—ic^leased, he went to the spot expiiftat #1 osh a bird, but he could HiidTieUher his dog nor^my woodcock. Long and patiently he tramped about the spot, to no purpose. Then he called his dog; it did not come. Here was a mystery. Oonld it be pomi- ble that his dog had fallen dead in some dense dump of the covert ? He called until he waa hoarse, and finally went back to camp tired sod mystified. And there lay his dog at tha lent door doa- ing, in the sun. It had lost the bell 1’’ — At Nicholas ' Mr. Ferdinand Wand certainly de serves some punishment. It may seem rather cruel, but we eannot help think ing that he should at least be prohibited from playing lawn tennis for etriy or nioety days.- fhUa. OaU. ^ — "What kind ot sauce will you have kith your steak?” asked the waiter of a diner in a restaurant when thaeondfanenti were earved with tha orders. "If the steak is as tough as yesterday’s send in a couple of circular saws.” In the Way of A hew French company ia going to insure against lack of work. It* buai- neas ought to be as sacoemful as that of the oldrwoman who bought eggs at a shilling a dozen and sold them for one cent each. The margin of profit was small, but she did an immense amount of business. —Philo, Call America exported 750,000,000 eggs isst year to England, and Germany ex ported 15,000,000 to this country. The hens seem to be working at croee pur- poees. - . ' The elder Jemal Gwton need to write poernu *nd tore rtoriee dur ing hia Iriauiu Bourn. Tha youager Bennett is notmuah of » chip of the &ld block. Ha doean’t write any poems or stories, but bo inherits the Maura hours. _ n Loose Legislation. —Gov. Cleveland, of New Ydft, *aye that a hundred bills loosely drewa-hara been sent to him by i the Legislature for approval flypae he has returned for revision; othei he has''' I vetoed. Borne interesting partkmlsn of the ■took cotes msde by Grant A Ward have been ascertained in the way of en dorsements, says the New York Sun. There are a large number of these notes ou^ and it is said the clerks employed by the firm have endorsed them to the extent of over $1,000,000. It was a common occurrence in the office for the clerks to endorse them. Ward would tell them that it was a mere matter of form, and it is said that even the colored porter’s name appeared on them as en dorser. From many o! these stock note* the collateral baa been detached, and' it ia said that many of them are held by the Marine Bank. The report L to the effect (liat after Mr. Ward pre sented them at the Marine Bank, Mr. Fish let him have them again, and Ward detached the securities and rehypothe- cak'd them. Now some of the parties who en dorsed the stock notes are anxious to learn whether they arc to be held re sponsible as endorsers, the firm toeing in solvent. When they signed their names as endorsers the stock collaterals were attacbcd-to the stock notes, and the names of tho securities were enumer ated in the stock notes. Now it is claimed that they are not liable, as the bank allowed the collaterals to be de tached and disposed of. At the Marine Bank, when the receiver was asked how much these notes held by the bank amounted to, he said he had not reached these securities yet in his examination, and oonld not state how they stood. If the endorsers were liable for their en dorsements lie would hold them respon sible, in ease the notes were as reported. TfIK HOUSE DOCTOR. FOR CURING CHILLS AND FEVEF AND Removing the Distressing Effects of lliliHt, \ AYER’S AGUE CURE HAS BEEN FOUND 60 | NEARLY INFALLIBLE, THAI We Authorize Dealers to Return the Money, ” « > • 4' If tho medicine is taken according to directions, without benefiting te fit lent PREPARED BY DR. J. C. AYER A CO;, Analytical Chemists, LOWEIJ Bold by all Druggist*. Pric# fl, six bottles for “Tuts ring, which 1 would ask you to accept of me, is emblematic of my love for you; it has no end.” “Thank you very much, Mr. B.; it curiously resem bles mv love for you; it has no begin- ni'*.” on Toolhnchr.*’ Instint relit f for neuraigi*. tootharhe, farc- mihc. A.-k for “Rough on lootnacho.’’ 15 A 25c. Where there is much light the shads is deepest, Piso'a Remedy for Catarrh ii s certain enrs for that very obnojioua discaa.'. One always tuts time enough if one will apply it well -CSi ^ j» I Tii* “LITTlB WCNORIf" JS3 KBBRtiR Fxrjner*. rruriigwfe#, 6a» *sM tr** * Wys <*» now «*wn * nam.ieome Hunting CnsnJ Than K-rrper. 9in llvakiug or nkcnit tew'totri •A rashly reJUsde U«kr cf ike ttownf day * rimv-r.lrknlcnan. gcnU 14 toM *tamp« to ftjr fwufw, and w« wU1nt«ocn tend van one rur JVetr ( aniMlsra Uadfrcn, finely finfcWek, tkfUllj Jdlddm f 'riled, with * Irriri ‘hat offrwpti iFc| " PrfsMfM ami Wt Tre. r.-t Kt publican or IVYM>crat'c iwulIdo#, just n* v,.u rkr. JUm Uvi/rs »«!1 like vr.id-irr 1 wt want Ijgg •pent* *t on e. V c urd fu’l tr-mv. gtOragu iCok art! the Little Wonder Time Kor|wr fWri to all h Ho order ■ bndjr*. ttrrtylj t*- got y*ri ftnrWsl. Rctor'i.ber th : » u » I'** I'fee'it. Ad*. 6*“: HA Hi CM K A 1 U.. I'eLlerbrixA. Cone: 30 DAYS’ TRIAL ((fvukvj vArrm#,! \7e have bt-ard llu r ia tallTng of a “cure all," but when a fatln r u tdTfng a hottlo of medicine for th« summer complaint to hw family in the country his horse has a tndden attack of cholera from over-feeding, i, g.v. n the contents o the bot tle and isaoon n stored, as was a cate we liar# J:i»t heard of. Dr. Rigger’s Southern Rem edy should certainly relieve men of dtar-- rhiea, dysentery and chiidrse teething. This, with » bottler of Taylor’s l hefoke# Remedy of Bwret Gnt.i nod Mullein, combining the stimu lating expectorant principle of the sweet gum with the demulcent healing one of the mullein, for the cure of croup, whooping cough, colds and consumption, presents a little miuciM chest no household should be without for the Sp'y'dy relief of sudden and dangerous sfls-ks of the lungs snd bowels. Ask yourdrnggis . ir them Manufnc.tnred by Walter A. raylor, imp-ietor Taylor's Premium Cologne, Atlanta, “UixihU OB Itch.” “Rough on Itch" cures humors, eruptions, riDg-worm, tetter, salt rheum, chilblains. Good behavior is the best test of vir- tne and amiability. The chance concoctions of ignorant men have ■omeipucs brought disrepute not only on their own worthless medicines that deserve no credit, but sometimes, with much injustice, on really reliable preparations. I jolies should not hesi tate about Mrs. Pinkham's Vegetable Cont- ponnd. for this remedy has been tried, proven and praised for years.' Jennie—"What is a dude?” "Well, a dnde is a 50-oent man in . a 50-dollar suit of clothes.” Pretty W ##,«■■ Ladies who would retain fre#hn#ss and vivac ity. Try “Wells’ Health Renewer.” Ore woman’s few is souther women’s sphere.- Hartford Sunday Journal luatanlly Relieved. Mrs. Ann Lxoo-ir, of New Orleans, La., writes: "I have* son who has been sick for two ysars; he has been attended by our lead- las physicians, but all to no purpose. This Doming he had his usual spell of coughing sad was so greatly prostrated in consequence Nutt death aeeraed imminent. We had in the Sous# a bottle of Dr. Wm. Halt’s for lh# Lungs, purchased by my husband, who ■sticed your advarrimment. W# admin ia- w#d it andhs was instantly relieved.” A KAi am do whet he owht to do; vtan he a«7* he aeaaol ho wul Hot fjf# Pi—iny##. If you are losing your grip oa life, try "Wells’ Health Renewer." Go— direct to weak spots. The Well street venka «f at old eej- inc h "The toait wboapeeuletoe ie loei” IS A yosirivx CUI1 Far Famale ('•wplaintaand iWcaknrwea •• common to oor brot female |>opa)ailoB. It will cur* entirely the worst form of Ft riMtle Coot- plaints, *11 Orariaa trooLlf, laflriQMariUon arid Ulcer* don, fAllinf and Pisplrioementf, and the eonseqnaa! SplHsl Weriknesd. ana ii particularly adapted to th« Change of Life It will dlseolre hn<I expel tnmon from tho utemri in aa •arty of dprolopfnei.t. Tho tcndciicr t > i-Ai.c<irouj humors there It chocked very Bp^eUiij by its use. It rwmoTcs fain turn, flatulency, dr^trors all eraxlng or •timuiautN, and relic re# wi aknr>-« of tho 8ton»a< h, .t cure® Bloating:, Headaches. Nervous J'rostratioau oencrai Dcb'iirr, hleeploarmriw, i>ep* **y1on and Indteea Mon. That feeling: of bcaj ing d^wTi, < au?lr|rpaln, wcJ^hl ind harkache, is always permarontly curv'd by its rse. It will at all times arid under ad clrcumstaarari act In kanuoay wilti the law* that forum tl.s Frmaio system. For the enro of KMnrr Oomplalr ts of ell Her sex. thti Compound u uasurpa.sed# Price $L0d. Lix bottles for ft 04 #io family should bo wlthottt LYDIA Z. FISK.IIAit'S LITER PILLS. They exxro constipation, blilorisaeNii aad torpidity of the llrar. S6 cents a box at til druggie:* Ht CHAM OF < P IONEER HEROES IMU.LSEEDS thrillinjr adrenrurei of al! the hero-expiorsr* and Sf^htsra w.th InU-tni, outlaws and wi^i t^a***, over oar whole eountrys froit. the earliest twnee to the present. L.res and famout ex- ptoiti of rVfr'*o, 1. a Salle, Ptxndirh, Boone, A»en f on, B-ady, Crockett, Bo~r«a, Carwon, (hiafer, WiM Bill, Buffalo Bill, flena. M ’p* anil Crook, rrrat Indian Chief■ a..d scorae of Satfvare 1 s. 1 SCAMMEL jj OO#, Box 4i4o, Philadelphia or tfl. Lottie. Fusta VUfc Mitit Sms Betel, Fauquier, County, Va. Tha fifth season of this favorite and popular Rummet Resort, will open June 17th. It will be condnct d under the same management that has rnado this Hotel a '‘Home” for tlwusanda. Terms tl2.00_to f'21.00 pec weak. For particulars, address (nnt 1 June ITth). ¥. TKNNKY k CO.. Ifatkmal Hotel. Washington, D. 0» Red Sulphur Water. CURES CONSUMPTION. I .M.E'TllO VOLTA 10 BFLT and other. Ft Kr*«ig *i AFFJ lAMCie are e-nt on mj Days' Triad TO JftUV OTJ Y. YOUNG OK OLD. wl.o are *>ffenng Anas Nr Ivors D*:«ii.jty, Ixist Vitality, Wasrur# WF-riKNF.SlS*. and ail kindiel diecas**. .Speadjta- <*ef ani complete r *ator*tion to II FAI TH, VioOtt asd •f \ \h v-'D (11’ar>s i ekd. beud at once :ar Illuatraud i' in pi'lei free. Address VoJtflicJBeUOa, Mairball, Mich. Important TtrSnrll## I# IN# prWw #T VASELINE (PETKOI.KI'M JE1.LT.; One Ouse# bottles rtdHCek Irom IS«. le 10a Two Ounce bottles reduced tram 25c. le lie. Five Ounce bottles reduced frem 60c. te 21ft The public MW ix* ireurt »»» but orifiMl ——1 N>iiIro bj a*, u lh. imitation! *r» worthlm*. Ctiesebrough Manulacturing Ce., New Tert, «.L.C»Ua Of ah iggis cr AlVtllllt. , - iffl Daring '■4/botT0j J¥'lanlu. (jcu AN OROANIZED BUSINESS COMMUNITY. 25th YEAR. SEND FOR (TRC’ LARS. AGUNTS WAITED n.,a. f.rrvw «e MSUHillU bed. Authentic Impartial Com k-te, fbe Jleri and fhsapsA AOOpaeeaM.h#. SrlU hk* dr* *• per rwat. to Af«a* Oiriit Free Fremhte pmd * end for Erfi a Janes, ete., to UPHl-'tU CO , UarUbrd, OaMe GOOD HEWS TOLAPIESl GfMTMt tndurom-i.t. ,tot A mA. Now', Tour tim, ,p oro.rt lor our rulabr W* Tra# ud l •Seca.uud wcor, . bauft. (cl Gold Bui* or Mom Rum Uhl— Tra H«t. or HoUl uteommodattoni ia Ik. mountain,. ElovtUou 1,0.0 (mt , 1 MO Mrm of (ormt .nd Uwn. Red Sulphur Springs, M#t## C'#Mty. W. Tm. oidvu, A HUr* Bmd (t.iu . . ClrauUn. COL L BINt HAM. Atfl. WMhinato#. D. 0. Pensions fOlIB SILVER SUM WIHBIHI FULL JEWULEO •EttS’ RUE WATCH FOR $12.50. mXY eilARANTEI Sm#—If. Ooma mut t j Ki ED. ThM ,Sm m#4, fat O 0. O. D.. nbimAt# r. JulA you have tried rverTthix^ faO#d try our Oerboline and bm happy; it will prow# it# merit#. On# dollar ■old by all druggists. , .‘YSk“ Mixed Ur.—A oorre^aodeBt writing to Naturen, states that tha pact winter no* been remarkable tor the diSnrono— In aiimote obeerved within short toe tan ore in Norway. For inetanee, while at Christiania the iee waa ftoin ten inches to twelve inches thick leal Janu ary, at Btovanger the thermometer fell to freezing point only once daring tha whole month. W# Mh##M Help O## Auetbwr. r. Norman Hunt, of No. 10$ Chestnut No. writ— April 10, ochre, pains, Mr. Norman street, Springfield, 1883. wiying: "Having the affliction caused by kidney and Hver discare*, and after •nduring the i, Wee In tees and depreaeion inci- MM nearly distracted, I sought for relief and a cure from my trouble, and wm told by a friend who had been cured by it him—If, that the beet and only sure cure was Hunt's Remedy, and npoo his recommendation I taking it, and the first few arr condition in a very marked m—M, •» a eontinusnee of lts um h- justified all that ssy Meads rtalmej for It—that A was a safe and permanent curs for all diaeaa— at tho kidneys and ttver. Several of my frirnds have need it with the mast ; results, and I feel R my doty m i to me to reoommoad Hnott Na the highest paesOde ten—." Mr. H. 1 ^ r "ft^#i* r mMu7aoter#r of har- ooes. saddlery, 1 ’ — 477 Main street, nnder date of Mom., writ— lo; 1883: have need Hunt's Remedy, »tor dimes— af the kidneys, hver, hledder nod urinary organa, and have received great benefit to my health from its —o, and I lad that It wifi do jam what is dam—d far it; * will oars die— and re- don health. I tnenton pronouns# it th« liest medtoine that I have #vnr ne#d.” B—sen and Atonny ttaltwed Albert Holt, Eeq., payrnaster Boston and Albany railroad, at UpriagMi, Mem., writ—April $3, 186 i; "I have need Hant s Keaeody, and my eipsrisa— with it has been snob that I caa cheerfully say toot I am that It will do juet what M todo.it J. r. OTEVENa * CO , Jeweler#, A 'ENTS WANTf U.le E. V. DLETKKICUu, Clevatend, Ohio. MET p«tm1. NaWO##i. F—nm-e On , A Imul, . ■ OMomu* Jtem Rom D’ur-r Bet. nr Gold B«#d Mum Dwrnt#d TaUuU But. For lull nurtiuelun uddrum ,MsS& asssfeMF*. OPi Uht’w.s'A'or.si.fjs" CmU GL AKANTEED, HABIT - a« i. iunvu, ia CURED DraaM—d 1 _ F. 0. Bos ML Celambe#, da lyerr OPS uttk M WTO VS rmMtdS I A B iWriLSH. Sralb; MAIL. 4 f M|"l|tl J'" **• "*■* , * r • ,re,,, w |ll Im Mud* by WA-Nuorm. mururnlw.C^m 1 W iamt atriflRB tot BUT If MW BiXbtl aw .‘struti. x bim;ham7f»*- —t tetner. W .ubinrto#. D. O. AaSNVhW. SI Brown's Iron Bitters com- hume Iron with pure vegetable tonics. . It is com pounded on thoroughly sci- entifie and medicinal principles, «"d cannot intoxicate. ■AH other preparations of Iron can— headache, and produce cocutipotion. Brown’s Iron Bitters is the ONLY Iron medidns that is not inJurioON — iu use does not evsa sleeken the teeth. It not only cures the wont coa— of N Dyspepsia, bat insure# a hearty op- toed d igmtia^ j I Brown's Iron Bitters is the Best Liver RegnlAtor — re moves bile, clears tho skin, digests the food, CURES Belching, Heartburn, Heat in tho Stomach, etc.. It te the bari-known remedy for femftio infirmities. The genuine has above trade mark end croceed red lin— on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by Bjrown Chemical Co.,