Newspaper Page Text
MRS. FRAKK LESLIE. THE WITCHING WIDOWS WORK. flow ri I'rctty Youaijj Widow Struggled and Toiled and Achieved a Triumphant Suo ccss. From the X<\v York journalist. It has so often been staled that 'women know nothing of business," that it has conic to be accepted as a trnisin by unthinking people. Yet hundreds of business men owe not a 1-"'- .it---- 4 illLiU Ul IUUU" SUCL"U? Iij cwi -uvautu, sagacious wives. A frequent modification of the first statement is that "women cxcel in small economics, but arc unable to grasp large business enterprises,"' or if they do they bccome masculine and lose that gracious icmininity which is the principal charm of woman. The utter falsity oi" these statements is nowhere more strikingly shown than in the case of Mrs. Frank Leslie. With executive ability, capacity for work and newspaper genius possessed by few men, she preserves all the charm of her womanhood and is as popular in the social as in the business world. Through the force of her own personality, she is at once one of the most attractive as well as most imporfaut figures in the profession of journalism, i-or -Mrs. Leslie was a journalist, ami a good one too, before she became the head of V. the great publishing house which bears her name. In the management of her ten publications, employing i>00 editors, artists, engravers," printers and others, Mrs. Leslie has displayed the very highest business qualities. An untiring worker, she is found in her office every day, from nine to four o'clock. $!)C signs ail the checks ami money orders, makes all contracts for ;: ~ - -.c c Innli nrfr VI CVViti ovu. proofs of all articles before they arc published, ami approves the make-up of every periodical before it is sent to press. She is the head of the whole establishment. No woman in America has illustrated higher and grander qualities?a broader capacity, a loftier courage, or a more indomitable perseverance under the storm and pressure of heavy difficulties and burdens ?than she. The story of her life reads like a romance. Miriam Florence Follin was born in the French quarter oi 2sew Orleans. She begau cany to write for the magazines, her iirst appearance in print being at the age oi tUrtcen. She was a hard studeut and a!i accomplished linguist. She traveled extcnsivelv and published several interesting volumes giving the results of her journeying?. iicr literary work was crisp, iVesli and evidencing that editorial faculty for getting at the root of things which has been so remarkably developed in her later work! From the date of her marriage to .Mr. Leslie she became his most valued adviser and most ctlicient coadjutor in all matters attecting the make-up ol him many publications. She assumed af once the editorship of the Laily'i 3[agazinci and maintained a general and careful supervision over the con tents of all the other periodicals. To rare literary ability, Mr?. Leslie added unusual business capacity, and hrr husband soon foam! her advice ?:o less valuable regarding the mechanical ami business departments of his establishments than concerning the letter-press of his publications. When Mr. Leslie died in 1880 there was 110 time leftfoi the beautiful young widow* to mourn. She was and is as dainty and refined ? * 1 . 1 T_ .1.. as the most tenaeny cnerisneu jauy alive, yet there were before her stern, unpleasant duties which demanded the heroic strength that often fails a powerful man. The Frank Leslie ^business aflairs seemed almost hopelessly entangled. The high credit, the existence itself of the house, were imperilled. A great sum of money was needed, and needed at once. By a legal process and in response to her husband's wish, 3!rs. Leslie abandoned her Christian name ot Mariam Florence and became in the law and to the world "Frank'-* Leslie. To the business world she became even more than Frank Leslie. When the slender, sweet-faced, gentle-voiced woman walked into ner husband's office, and putting back the sad announcing folds of her crepe veil, announced she had coxnc to stay, her gentle, gracious femininity won the sympathy of those about her. But when she came the next day as early as the earliest clerks, and the next day and the next, something more than respect ana syinpauiy ior uio uravy little woman came into their regard icr her. She sat at her desk like a Xapoleon over his war maps. She developed a remarkable faculty of knowing news, for seizing upon the very things that caught and charmed the public mind. A thousand and one things in the history of illustrated newspapers originated in her brain, and were executed for her papers. All day long . she bent to her desk, and was her own wise counsellor. The best of it all was, that Frank Leslie was not afraid. Big contracts did not frighten licr, notes to pay did not canse her to xct nervous, reading interminable pages of proof did not l'ret her, thinking out new features for her paper did not perplex her. Always cheery in her speech, and with considerate and hopeful words lor her employes, it is no wonder that both men and women leli in love with the new Frank Leslie and gave her the best work of which they were capable. The dying wishes of Frank Leslie have been carried out, but only alter his widow has encountered and triumphed over one long succession of difficulties and obstacles. Her pluck and genuino(ability has won lor the hearty sympathy and kindly feeling of the newspaper press. The average journalist is a gentleman, and if there is one thing which he admires more than another it is "grit." Abil itv he respects, but courage, especially in a beautiful woinasi, he enthusiastically admires. Mrs. Leslie said the other day that she had never been attacked, but had always received the kindest treatment at the hands of the gentlemen of the press. It is but just to add that she has deserved every word of praise which has been bestowed upon her. The story of the waxslie worked up the murder of President Garfield abundantly justifies her rank among the foremost editors on the weekly press. It was only a short time after she came into possession of the property that Garfield was assassinated. The first rumors of the event reached her tlLTl/lll/ HAIIV VII ^tUUiVlUV morning, J illy 2. "Within an hour two artists were 011 their way to Washington, and before sunset were diligently at work sketching the scenes of the tragedy. One ot" them returned to j New York by the midnight train with j their united sketches. The whole staff had been ordered to report lor | dutv earlv Suadav morr.injr; and, bv I diligent work that day, the following i night, aud through the fourth of July,! the paper was able to come out on ; Tuesday morning with full illustra-; tions of the chief events and personages The following Friday an extra number was issued, and on lLe next Tuesday the regular edition, with fuller detail?and illustrations?making three illustrated papers published in a single veefc, an achievement without parallel in ewspaper history. The death of Garfield made :i still severer ; demand o:: M;->. Leslie's ability to : grapple with a It ocarred late j on Monday eveuin^, September 19, and { the "Illustrated"' newspaper had gone ? DW???B?? to press when the news arrived. She | immediately ordered the pres.se? stop-! ped, destroyed t!:e part of the edition j aiready published, set the whole force I of the establishment at work preparing ^ n/)Wi/-kn tvifli r>ti(rrflvii)(/s of the I n m;\> uuuvn ??*% : sketches sent in over early Tuesday j I morning by the artists at Elberon, and I before Wednesday night had on sale a ; | p per full of illustrations of the death-; i bed scenes. "A week later she seized | j another opportunity. The body of j the ds^ad President Garfield was to be conveyed to Washington on the Wednesday after his death, and funeral | services to be held in the Capitol on Friday, before the removal of the remains for Cleveland for the final ceremonies. Mrs. Leslie resolved to ; anticipate the usual day of publication the following week, and deposit in Cleveland papers containing full illustrations ol the scenes at Washington on Monday morning. She sent for the President of the American ZS'ews Company, and communicated her purpose, lie was incredulous and doubtful; she insisted it could be done and should i-- ?.,,i :4. "Vrwf lots fhnn j UU UUIIC, umi 11 ??as. iwi I 30,000 copies of the "Weekly" were ! sent to Cleveland, where they sold so I readily that it is believed as many i more could have been easily disposed i of. Such achievements as these soon vindicated Mrs. Leslie's claim to snc, ceed the founder of the great publishing j house. The expenses were nccessa: rily enormous, but the outlay was more than returned in a circulation higher than the paper had ever before reached, and in the establishment of nublic confidence in the new pub iislxer. There is nobody in the business who possesses more thoroughly the confidence of the heads of the great news companies with whom i publishers of Illustrated papers must ; have the most intimate relations. The money got from the enormous sale of the week at the time of the Garfield assassination was that which largely repaid the loan from Mrs. Smith and put the great house upon its feet j again. It is now a splendid property, I rrr/^..<K n million dollars >> VI III HVUl XJ \Ji. W and this lady is the owner and head of it all. Personally Mrs. Leslie is a most charming woman, a petite, graceful figure, a shapely, well poised iic&d, set upon perfect neck and shoulders, and crowned with mass of golden brown hair, "a head full of first qual; ity brains," as an enthusiastic writer recenly remarked. She has a clear, bright complexion, and the most glorious great grey eyes imaginable. Eyes full of sympathy, of kindliness, ; of laughter, ller kindness toward rrmiicv irrUpps 15 Wfll kllOWll. SllC is ;vi.,.3 ? . .. ever ready with advice, and oftentimes : unostentatious yet substantial assistance. It is difficult to indicate in cold type (he charm of a thoroughly womanly womanhood like !Mrs. Leslie's. ' There is that subtle magnetism which 1 words cannot express. Jler voice is t singularly sweet and pleasing and in - speech she is winning and direct. She ; dresses with exquisite taste. In her ; office in plain business-like black, but at the opera-and receptions site is 1 splendid in diamonds and laces that [ were earned by the resources ol her own strong brain. She has manv ; warm friends among the best known literary and artistic people of the day, ' in this country and in Europe. Aggregates for Doubling Small Amounts. The delusive result or multiplying by two, or ^doubling numbers several times, is very well illustrated in the following story, which a Western newspaper man has set going the rounds: A merchant employed a clerk, who wanted the place principally to learn the business, "salary being no object/' At the suggestion of this industrious seoker after knowledge and contemner of worldly goods, the merchant will.. A?Av?iAntnrl fr\ v thn fifllfirr fl f". 1 WliOVlHV/Vl W I UU j v* v ? ccnt for the first month, 2 cents tor the second month, 4 cents for the third, 8 cents for the fourth; and so on for three years. Ilere is the "account," as figured out by the bookkeeper, which we may well believe "staggered"' the merchant: First month .01, second month .02, third .04, fourth .08, fifth .10, sixth .32, seventh .64, eighth $1.28, ninth $2.50, tenth $5.12, eleventh 810.24, twelfth $20.48, thirteenth $40.96, fourteenth $81.92, fifj teenth $103.80, sixteenth $327.OS, sevi teenth $655.3(3. eighteenth SI.310.72, nineteenth $2,621.44, twentieth $5,242.88, twenty-tirst $10,485.76, twentvv second $20,971.52, twenty-third $41,943.04, twenty-fcurth $83,$S6.0S. tv.xnty-?ifth $107,772,10, twenty-sixth $335,544.32, twenty-seventh $671.088.6i, twenty-eighth Si,:' 12,177.28, twentyninth $2,084,354.50, thirtieth $5,308,709.12, thirty-first $10,737,418.24, thirty^second $21,474,830.24, thirtythird $42,949,072.90, thirty-fourth $85,899,345.92, thirty-fifth $171,798,091.84, thirty-sixth $313,597,383.08; toial salary for three years, $087,194,! 767.35. This is. we suppose, a modern com1 bunion of the old storv where a linn garian King bankrupted himself by paying (?) a blacksmith for putting in oJ nails in the shoes of a horse at the rate of a penny for the first nail, two for the Second, etc., and suggests also the computation which shows that a grain of barley to the lirst square of a chcss-board, two grains to the second square, and so on through the G4 squares, will give a linal aggregate ex^ cecding the whole barley crop of liie world through an indefinite period. ouuu liUAc, iiunvui j iiiwa>^ oil 11\v vnv; with wonder the first time they are brought before the mine. While Tli^re is Life There is Hope. Many of the diseases of this season of the year can be averted by a small amount of care and at little cost, by the timely use of Ewbank's Toi*az Cinchona Coiidial. It cures Diarrluea, Dysentery, Choi| era Morbus and like complaints. JVo | traveler should be without a bottle, as i | it will prevent any disease that would j ; no doubt arise from the change of! ...v~/i I.-I j wuiui, IUUU aiiu uiuuuiu, WUUUUL lib; I use. The most valuable medicine in ; the world, contains all the best and j j inofet curative properties of all other ; j Tonics, Bitters, etc., etc., being1 the j : greatest Riood Purifier, Liver Reg u la-' : tor and Lite and Health-Restoring Agent in existence. For jl^laria, Fever and Ague, Chills and Fever, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Sick Headache, Nervous Headache, Chronic j Rheumatism, etc., etc., it is truly a j Herculean Remedy. It gives new life | and vigor to the aged. For ladies 111 i ; delicate health, weak and sickly children, nursinz mothers. See circulars wrapped with bottle. m . o f "r L i ir*nr VliA WJ.hMU>, O. O., Ot'pi. i, i ; II. B. Ewjjaxk, Es<i-, President of; j The Topaz Cinchona Cordial Co., 1 ! Spartanburg, C.: Dear Sir?I have ; ! used a c;isc of your Topaz Cordial in ! my family, and :i> a Tonic and Appe- ; ti/.er I can cheerfully recommend i: to all who are suffering1 from Debility and lack of appetite. My children, especially, have been much benefitted by its use. Respectfully, Hutson Lee. | Ask vour druffffist for Ewdaxk's i Topaz Cinchona' Cokdial anil take no other. Tiie Topaz Cinchona Cordial Co., * Spartanburg-, 5. C., U. S. A. - Ex-Governor Moses's life is ebbing away in a felon's cell in Massachusetts. A theological jealously is liable to be the ihom godless of ail jealousies. The right is never all on one side. <;k.\eral news items. Facts of Interest Gathered from Various 1 luarter*. A terrible storm prevailed on the loth at j Newark, Ohio. There is a genuine smallpox scare in the | Eastern District of Brooklyn. Saturday Representative Morrison made I an unfavorable report on the tariil bill. } Numerically in Great Britain the elec-, tions are nip and tuck. Birmingham. Alabama, has seven street: car lines and two more building. Hugh W. Brooks, alias Maxwell, has been sentenced to l?e hanged on the 2otIi of j August. Terribly destructive storms passed through ?!./. T 11! Him. iin; ix?u;iviu\uu, in., juuuvu x nuaj <*xjv?. ?_ **** day nights. Farms were laid waste, buildings unroofed and crops scattered to the winds by I storms in Illinois, Wednesday. The rug weavers who have been on a i strike at Philadelphia, have returned to | work under protest. One hundred houses have been destroyed | by fire in Koden, Poland, turning 800 famii lies out of homes. Th<f strike at the Knights' cotton mills at Xatic. K. I., extended from 175 weavers to 00 other hands Tuesday. A railroad yardmaster, at Elizabeth, X. : J., lost his life Thursday in trying to save that of a young lady. i The Executive Committee of the South | era Railroad and Transportation Associa: tion met ia Washington yesterday. I Ata Chicago boarding house lire Tuesday ; several people were injured by jumping from second story windows. The Sultan has declared for peace, and ; has ordered that the army and naval re| serves disband. Gallo, the man who fired a revolver in ; the Bourse several months ago. h.is been ! sentenced to twenty years' penal servitude. it is again reported that Sartoris and hft family are shamefully treating Nellie, ("en. Grant's cup of sorrow was full when he died. One hundred and twenty convicts, in : Dade coal mines, Ga., have barricaded j themselves ia a building and defy the authorities. Serious rioting broke out ia Belfast, July 1 -J, between Catholics and Protestants. Many persons were injured audscnt to hospitals. | A revolution lias broken out m iaiuaun! pas, Mexico. The insurgents have captured the town of Agualeguas. Five citii zens were killed. The New York lost 45,000 subl scribers by advocating Ben Butler for the j Presidency, and its dividends fell of -"iO ! per cent. The Victoria, election returns indicate I that the mcmliers of the new Parliament : arc, with two or three exceptions, Governj ment men. | The report that the Czar, the Emperor ! William and Emperor Frances Joseph will ; meet during the coming autumn at Konigsi ber? or Kiel has been revived. I ? Humor has it that Gen. Gordon would | have been favorably considered for the Cabinet, but was "too near Wall street." i tt 1 4. ->r ? t % v I I1UW UUUIU .U<IUI11U? iiuii >;uiuau. Al>out 12 miles from Elmiro, New York, : in Wynkoop Creek section, the farmers | were exhausted Wednesday night, having been fighting forest tires since Friday. Captain Pater Van Pelt Monday ended with his own hand a long career of useful! ness and not a little distinction as ship news reporter for the News York Herald. The citizens of Augusta have sent to the i Rev. Dr. O'Reilly, Treasurer, ?500 for the Parliamentary fund. Augusta sent in January about sGOO for the same purpose. Ex-Sheriff John Rcnoe. of Sumter | County, Tenn., was taken from jail at I Livingston on Tuesday by a mob and 1 hanged, for the attempted murder of his i brother-in-law. Mrs. Caroline Benedict, a "well-known J woman, who for many years has resided in j the little village of Mottville, in the town : of Skaneateles, X. Y., died recently after a i fast extending 53 days. One of the deputies rt the Lake Shore ! yards, Chicago, Tuesday shot and tried to i kill a man who remarked that his gun looked as if it had come from a pawn shop. Trouble was narrowly averted. An epidemic of typhoid fever has visited ' the little village of Waterford, situated in the Northwest corner of Racine Count}', Wis., remote from railroads and entirely isolated. j Small pox of a ver}' malignant type has broken out at Santiago, Chili. The dis' ease, which is epidemic and becoming j worse evc-ry dav, proves fatal in 70 per cent I V/i tllV^ |A;iOViiO UIIUV.^V,U. The Londsdale Company's cotton mill, at Asliton, R. I., shut down Tuesday in | consequence of a strike?2S spinners locki iug out, 2i>0 employees. Cause?insufficient ' pay and tlie uischargc of an overseer for : incompetency. 31 rs. Mary J. O'Brien, the wife of J,';lm i J. O'Brien, chief of the Bureau of Elec: tions, died of blood poisoning after :i paini ful illness lasting over ten weeks, at her ! home, N. Y. ; The grand jury have indicted Bernard I jr. v erne anci \\ nnam nogariy on me : charge of keeping their barber's shops open in violation of the Sunday law, in Boston. I These will be test cases. The reported purchase by China of 1.000 ; tons of German steel rails lias caused many conflicting rumors in England regarding the intentions of the Chinese to imrncdi! atcJv construct systems of railways. ; On Sa! unlay last a puma, which h;is )>cen j infesting the nci^lil)orhoocl of Pilot Grove, ; Texas, for several weeks, tore to pieces and ! .1 1 ?i ~i.i i ucvuuiuu uic uxic jL'ai uiu uiniu vi aiaiiiiu J living on Burns's tract. The old sugar commission house of J. de I livers <fc Co. luiw suspended, and Henry C. de Iiivers, the Ijeiid of I he firm, is missing. ' It is thought thai his mind is unsettled and j that he wandered away, not knowing where lie was going. A soldier attempted suicide in Koine Sunday, and among his effects was found a i paper deelaring that he had been designated i>y a secret society to kill the King, hut that i i lie preferred death rather than d<> as in- ! structcd. ILu would not lxrtra}- the society. ; ; Judson C. Clements is the Jirst Congress-1 i man fipm Georgia to secure a renomjna- i ; tion. Eight years ago Judson Clements j I defeated Dr. Fclton, the famous Independ- i ent, who had wrestled the Seventh District j from the Democracy. The aged mother of Congressman Cole ' was informed of her son's death in Balti- i mortron Friday last. The Khock completely 1 prostrated her, and she died Sunday after- i noon, a couple of hours before the funeral j of her son took place. The sensational reports put into circula- j tion as to difficulties between Russia and \ the powers regarding Batoum have been j in nftifinl ouarters :is non- ! sense, possibly originating in stock ex- j change schemes. The boiler of a portable engine exploded i at Alton, Illinois.'Tuesday and injured five | men, three fatatlly. Besides ihc- wrecking | of the tlirreshing machine and the burning j of all the wheat adjacent, three or four horses were killed. Mr. Cyrus W. Field is endeavoring to serve a process on James Gordon Bennett in a suit for libel. Thus far the effort has proved unsurr-essful, the difficulty being the fact that the defendant resides in Paris, is often in America, and has no residence in England. Dr. Robert Taylor, formerly associated 1 with I)r. L, A. Sayre, of New York, re- i ports the cure ;.-f a case of traumatic teta-1 nus. or iocKjaw, resuiuuic irom a wounu, i which is said to be the only instance in ! which a fatal conclusion to such an attack has been averted. Shortly before midnight of Monday the ' Illinois M:illeablc IronWorks, situated near j the Northern limits of Chicago, took lire j and the buildings were burned to the i ground. Loss on building, stock nnd ma-! cliinery estimated at $40,000. Only $5,000 worth of insurance known. Mrs. Ruth A. Mudgett's boarding house in Chicago was burnt Monday morning, i and the inmates only escaped death by! jumping from a second-story window. One j of the persons tl^us escaping was Mrs. Gil-11 bel t, whose face was badly burnt, and why also sustained serious internal injuries. Tim pri-.il/-li nrf iVl-ivim' "PoCi'-a-Kno"' a ^ r- v ?cj - ? with the Germans. Sixty thousand repeat-1 ing rides will be distributed to that portion of her a: my on the Alsacc-Loraine front by j August. German forces confronting them | ! have recently been armed with similar weapons. 1 A number of Berlin journalists have been indicted for a breach of the press laws, in publishing documents relating to the case of Captain Sarauw, recently convicted of selling information to France regarding German foriiticalions, while the case was under consideration by the courts. Many large towns in Russia have no pe-' ' rio.'icals at all only because liiere were no j . parties who could suit the local governor: in the capacity of editors. As regards local ' official matters the governor performs the i i role of a censor. Thus, for .instance, the ! session of the local representative3, though j I open, canii-:t be desribed in ihe newspapers without the governor's permission. After a week's investigation of the various rumors which have been floating about, there is good autority for slating that an extradition treaty between the United States and Great Britain has lieen signed, says the j New York Star, and that the convention j provides, in addition to the customary 1 clauses, for the surrender of dynamite miscreants. Statements prepared at the Treasury De partment show that the receipts of the government so far this month are decidedly less than the expenditures, and unless an : Kr.fV.ro thr. <>ml nf (]ir> i month the public debt statement to !>e isj sued on Aiujust 1 will show little, if any, ; decrease. Payments have been unusually ; heavy, over $10,000,000 having been paid ; out tin's week on pensions alone. A largely attended mass meeting was i held Monday evening at St. George's Hall, in pursuance of a call upon "all English, j Scotch and Welsh residents of Philadelphia to show .Mr. Gladstone and their countryj men "across the sea' that in America, as in Great Britain, there is a responsive throb to the appeal for justice to Ireland." The j following cablegram was ordered to be forI warded to Mr. Gladstone: "The English, Scotch and Welsh residents of Pliiladel' phia, in mass meeting assembled, extend to I you their sympathies in the struggle for ' justice to Ireland, and ask you to i>ersevere iu the light to the end." San Francisco dispatches, of July 12, give further details of the earthquake in j New Zealand. The severity of ?h; shocks , caused the inhabitants to rush in all dircc! tions. The second shock produced a vol! cano. magnificently and awfully grand, ! which illuminated the country for sixty ; miles. The escaped natives, gathered in j groups on the hill sides, the smoke, and ! huge masses of lire resembling meteors, | presented a panoramic view in all its realI istie horrors which human nature desires i not to witness, at least again, and the seers ; of the forest not at all. I Once and a while some man has courage i enough to marry :i Yassar graduate, but as 1 a rule the girls don't step oil very well. ' Out of nearly 700 graduates, only about 200 ! have been drawn iu the nuptail noose. The j full blown buds left have taken up various j callings. There are IT physicians, 10 book ! 1-nr.ni'iM 0 nrfrnnists chemists. 13 school ! principals, 2 farmers, 1 census clerk, 2 ini surance agents. 230 teachers, G artists, 1 i law clerk, 5 librarians, 1 copyist, 12 music j teachers, o astronomical assistants, 2 jour\ nalists, 3 gymnastic teachers, 2 missiona; ries, 3 public readers and -i authors. Yet i ; tlicy say women have no chance. I A special dispatch from Grape Creek, Illinois, says: "There is prospect of a riot ; over the importation of negroes by the ; Grape Creek Coal Company, to take the i places of the striking miners!. The strikers ! declare t lie new men can't work under any , | circumstances, and that they will resist j force with force. The Sheriff of Ycrmil. lion County lias forty special deputies on ! the ground, and will do all in his power to maintain* order if the negroes conclude to go to work. There were over a thousand i strikers when the present strike began, but . the number is now reduced to seven or ; eight hundred. It is rumored that the commercial rela : lions of the United States with south ; America are to be still farther si lengthened by the laying of a direct cable from this j country to Brazil and the Argentine Con! federation. It is probable that the cable | will be in operation by January 1, with i the immediate result of reducing the rate per word from ?2.91, the present tariff, to ! ?1. Under the present system eleven "re j peats" are requisite between here and Rio, while with a direct cable the message could ' be sent with onl y three4 'repeats." Bv using | 1 -"?.l ? c-1 7, I a cauie uuue, uuu uui^ ?. ivm ' for transmission, mcrcliant can send a | long dispatch to South America for an in| finitesimal amount. i The Monroe, N. C., Express andEnrjnirer gives an account of a very peculiar accident i that bcfcli Mr. M. L. Stames, of Jackson t (Ovnshin, in Union County. He was 1 clearing'up son]? land for Mr. Billy Win; Chester, and climbed u tree for the purpose j of topping it. While he was up in the tree, | a little negro boy, who had been sent to the j house for some tire, returned with it and set ; tire 10 a lot of brush piled around the tree. The blaze ran up the tree and scorched Mr. Starnes considerably. H.c attempted to j descend through it, but was unable to do ! so, and had to return to the top of the tree i and wait until the lire had died out. llis : mustache was singed oil' but no serious damage was done to him. A Xew Pension Bill Wanted. Now . while our Solons are dealing nut i pensions, and spending our surplus with the | best of intentions. I present, as a hard of j the humblest pretentions, a few types of | men whom I deem most deserving: i Give a pension for life to that oi selfj denying?for sucji Spartan virtue as this is I worth buying?who can fish all day long i and go home without lying, and tell the | truth without shaking or swerving! Give a pension to him who trades nags [ without cheating, and tells a good tale ; without ever repeating, and is pious at home as lie's pious at meeting?all men of this stamp need a liberal pension. Give a pension to him, whether married iu Y^/iv-r.7* fnr? Tirmirl Willi nil \Jk OWJ ? XiV? 10 WW vuw ? ??.* men to commingle; if you li^vc any left, then the scribe of this jingle prcsenteth himself to your kindest attention.?Till Jj'tUs. ' 1 ( Thread Made Jroiis the Blossoms of the Common Milkweed. Samples of 1 iii' new !c.\tile product arc I being introduced in the Xew York and ] Boston markets, the manufacture of which bids f:tir lo develop into quite an industry, t American inquisitiveness and ingenuity i united have produced thread made from : 11 11--.- tvtilTrvi'sisw? I UIC UiU5SVIJiS> Oi mu iniirv ?> ^l^.} z which has the consistency and tenacity of imported llax or linen thread, and is pro ^ duced at a much less cost. The fibre is } long1, easily carded, and may be readily , adapted to spinning upou an ordinary llax- j spinner. It has the smoothness and lustre of silk, rendering it valuable for sewing machine use. The weed is common } throughout this country, but grows pro- 1 fusely in ihe South. The material costs j nothing for cultivation, and the gathering ' is as cheaply done as that of cotton. a 3 Liability or Cloliiiiif; Storekeeper*. ? A person while trying on a suit of clothes ' iu a clothing store left his own clothes in a closet to which he had been directed by a r ?n ilif store. Certain oronertv t was stolen frem Iris clothes while they were s in the closet. No negligence having been Y proven against the proprietors of the store, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts held (Rea vs. Simmons) that they were not liable for the loss of the property. \v:?nt Do the Druggist* Say J They know what the people call for, ! v and they hear what their patrons say as J c to whether the medicines they buy work ii n-pll or not. kartell and Johnson, Paish | City, Minn., say. "Brown's Iron Bitters ii gives entire satisfaction to our custom- " ers." Klinkliammer and Co., Jordan, o Minn., say, "We sett more Brown's Iron n Bitters than all other bitters combined." These are only a few. We have htm- a ctreds more jiist as good. * k BRIC-A-BRAC. S \ Upside down?A feather bed. s Pay as you go or else don't go. Cultivate a cheerful disposition. | 1 Strict honesty lies at the foundation of ] financial success. Avoid intemperance, gaming and other < bad habits. Never have anything to do with an nn- ( lucky man or place. ; 1 Indorse for no man. Solomon truly said ( "he that hateth suretyship is sure." * t Always pronounced wrong, even by the 1 best scholars?Wrong. Glaziers take pleasure in the thought that 1 this is a world of pane. ' It's the little things that tell?especially the little brothers and sisters. It is the "duck of a bonnet" that makes a young girl's head swim. Uniform prices: "What the tailor charges ( for soldiers' clothes. Dressed raccoon meat is regularly kept on salt- at Clovcrdale, Cal., butchers' stalls, i How to live cheap?Visit your relatives and acquaintances. i There is danger in unwise speech, but there is also danger in unwise silence. There is 110 duty on the growth of wool that is pulled over the eyes of honest voters. ; Brother Jonathan?I can't understand what you say. What have you got in your 1 mouth? Canuck?"Wo'ms fo' bait. A story entitled ''The Penniless Maiden" | has just been issued. It will have very I little interest for the modern youth. General Miles wants tbe Lead of Geronimo. "We are not surprised to hear that Geronimo has a good head for warfare. We sec a lengthy article going the rounds i of the papers headed, '"How to Manage a Wife." In stock speculation always buy at bet torn prices, and then be prepared to see the bottom drop out. \\ ny the (^ucen smiles, says a JNew | York paper, is because somebody has asked ; her ot take something. It is computed that since the introduction of false teeth the ratio of good looking women has increased 60 per 'cent. You always hear of the man who draws the big prize in a lottery, but you never meet him. A railroad man remarked to other day that no conductor earning less than $200 per month can live a Christian life. Put a man on his honor to pay a debt and a gambler will pay as promptly as anybody else. Engage in one kind of business only, and stick to it faithfully until your experience shows that you should abandon it. It is an uphill job for the Xcw York swell with a single eyeglass to get up the stonv British stare. "When one might speak to advantage, and yet refrains from doing so, silence is culpable, and sometimes is even cruel. The New York Journal says tlic stock brokers arc entitled to a fine hall. They generally get it, too, only they do not spell it that way. There is not in nature anything so remotely distant from God/or so extremely opposite to him, as a greedy and griping niggard. { A Pennsylvania boy picked open a dynamite cartridge with * a pin. His mother; won't have to buy him any mittens next j winter. Although Puck professes to be a humorous journal, it is evident from his portraits that it would not do for him to ''take off" anything. They never rap on the counter and cry "cash-here" in a Montreal dry goods store for fear of creating a commotion among American customers. "I've run a piece of wood under my linger nail," said an old married man to his wife. "Ah," she sneered, "you must have list AM >' yttu jvui liuau. A base brill player in New Jersey is' named Spuyder. He ought to be a good man for the outfield, where most of the Hies go. The young ladies who wear red jeckets should be advised jn tirpe, .and go to tli/2 seu shore, instead of the country, this summer. Sea cows don't chase womep. People hire lawyers in certain cases for j two reasons. One'is for the settlement of disputes and the other to dispute settlemeats. "Shrouds!" exclaimed an old lady who was listening to an old sea captain's story, "what do you have them at -sea for'/" "To bury dead calms in." An original way of answering two ques tions at a time: "Here, Biddy, what's the time o' night, and where's the pertaty pudding?" "It's eight, sir." A callous realist describes the decollete basque as a garment lined with pleuro pneumonia, and trimmed with rheumatic congestion. 'Socms tliniirrji "V <tnt hnM nrr>)t V soon after marriage," remarked a friend. | "Yes," was the reply. "I understand his , wife believes in free wool." A little city girl, upon seeing cats'-tails ; near the road on her first visit to the countiy, ; exclaimed. "Oh, I never knew before that sausages grew on sticks!" The largest match factory in the United States is said to be at Akpon, 0., but some of the summer resorts hope to equal it in ? match making this season.' 1 There is only one time in a woman's life when she has nothing at all to say, and it is , when she hears that the woman*across the i street has a new silk dress. "When a man will insist upon offering a 7 ?20 reward for the return of a seventy-five i cent dog his wife ought to soothe his grief with a tlatiron. There are signs of a serious drought in Pennsylvania A milkman in Montgomery Countv has committed suicide through des pondehcy. 11 is in better 'form now to say to a man who is boring you; "Oh, bring me a J chair," than to remark bluntly, "You make me tired." i The failure of a "butter king" in Elgin, t 111., is spoken of in the papers. "VVe sup- <j posed all these troubles about Greece had s been settled quite a while ago. The effort to scare the people by telling -t them what the people will do if the people * :lon't do something else is not likely to ifleet its object to any very great extent. A book hi.s been published in Paris, en"Tim \11t11mn nr AVnrrmn " Tt ic r probably a good book, And, at any rate, t is very different from a woman's fall. A parson, preaching on the depravity of ,lie age, said that "little children who could _ leither speak nor walk were to be seen nnmVg about the streets cursing and wearing." "I bless Eve for eating the apple," said a * roung lady, the other day, as she stood ! * jefore the mirror. "Why?" asked a com)anion. "Because there is such a delight n trying on a new dress when it fits well." " "When cows have learned to read, and u: iorses to appreciate dry goods and pianos, w t will probably pay some enterprising firm 11 o advertise themselves on rocks and"fence _ toards. Ir , Smith (nervously)?'"Are you sure there p re no toadstools among these mushrooms'/'' lary (guiltlessly)?"Theywuz l?ought for i la missus' table, but she told me to try 3m first on the boarders." D It doesn't take a woman long after she is narried to learn that a man can muss up a mreau drawer more in three seconds than he can put it in order again after an hour's latient work. j is _ . , , ! tc vv xien is :i 111:111 ueau r :isks an ex- _ hange. When he can gaze calmly for live linutes at a show-case full of fishing u-klc and not want to hie away to a trout Lrcam. | When you see a man take off his hat to ou it is a sign th;it lie respects you; but ,-heu he is seen divesting himself of his } oat you can make up your mind that he J itends to try to make you respect him. j "Papa, what is the school of acting?" j iquired a. Seventh street young lady. < It's an arrangement for turning out a lot ~ f theatrical dummies who have been set in lotion by cranks," was the response. "Is your son going to become a farmer?" ei sked .Mrs. Blank of Mrs. Oates. "Why >t bless you, no/' replied the latter. "My St on is a graduate of the State Agricultural ;ollege,"and has no intention of adopting ,uch a profession."' (who has iust been hustled out of ler chair by her small but obstreperous jrother)?"Do you see, mamma! Herman s such a naughty boy! I do wish, dear namma, you Would be more careful in the [election of your children !*' Why, Laura, how tight you wear your jorsets." said one lady to another, as they vere dressing for dinner: "I never could ?njoy anything I ate if I wore mine as ,ight as you uo." "Grace before meat," ;hc other "replied as she laced herself. The reason the man who minds the other nan's business doesn't get rich is because :he other man whose business he minds generally isn't grateful enough to be reciprocal and mind the business of the man tvlio minds his business. See? Cincinnati policemen who served in the svar will wear on their sleeve a red tape to iistinguish the soldier element of the force. ?Ex. Most of the boys who served in the svar have seen all the "red tape" they want to in this life. "Will you have another bit of steak. Charlie?" said his aunt, somewhat deaf. ' 'I Lave had sufficient," replied Young America. "Been fishin'?" "I have bad plenty." "Caught twenty?" "You are an old fool." "Broke your pole?" The lad left the table in dispair. Make thy recreation servant to thy busi ness, lest thou become a slave to thy recreation. When thou goest up into the mountain. leave this servant in the valley: when thou goest to the city, leave him in the suburbs; and remember the servant must not be greater tlinn the master. "Are you going to make a flower-bed here?" said the Brooklyn girl to lier father's gardener. "Yes, miss, them's the orders." "Why, it'll spoil our tennis grounds!" "Can't help it, miss. Your pa "says he's bound to have this plot laid out, for horticulture, not husbandry." One fly on the 20th of March is repreK,r '?nn fj,? 0.4tl, r\f Anril. l,v WW V ILii \JL AXj/l ii } *7J VWV times 300. equaling 00,000. on the 2sth of May; by 27.000,000 on the :3d of July, and by 8,100,000,000 on the 8th of August.? Lend a Hand, for May. We will lend a hand in killing that By on the 20th of March, 1887. Emma picks up her pen, and in a burning gush of enthusiasm, writes: "The day is gone, the wind's at rest, the moon is up and fair, I'll wear the dress that suits him best, a ribbon in my hair." Oh don't, pic;isc don't. "We know the weather is getting to be right warm, but we don't think it will justify the above. So don't, we beseech thee. You can't bear it. Commerce of South Carolina. Mr. L. A. Ransom,nvho ?:?.s appointed by the Chief of the Bureau of Statistics of the United States Treasury Department to prepare a report on the internal commerce of South Carolina, has completed the work and forwarded the report to Washington. It contains a sketch of the railway and canal systems of the State, statements of produce and manufactures brought into and carried out of the State, freight rates from South Carolina to the principal markets of the country, statistics of the coastwise trade of the State, tables giving the productions of agriculture and the various Glasses of manufactures of ilie .State from 1860 to 1885, and detailed reports on the commercial business of the principal cities of South Carolina, with special reports on the mines and factory resources and minerals. The article Tvijl be published by the United States Treasury Department. Don't Handle Snakes. Wm. Reid, while bathing in Flat crcek, near Shelbyville, Tennessee, a few weeks ago, began to feel around under the rocks for fish. He caught what he thought was a fish, but upon drawing it to the surface iounci u to oe a large water moccasin. The snake bit lieid on the thumb, but it was killed, nothing- being thought of it till a few days ago, when Reicl's hand began to swell. He became delirious and wanted to bite everyone who came near his bed. It required the combined strength of several men to confine him to the bed. Several physicians were called in and all their efforts seemed fruitless. The svmptoms were similar to hydrophobia, l^he consiant attendance and skill of his physicians, however, pulled him through, and he is now getting well. Good Living. The following rules for good living are from the caterer; 1. Buy with judgement, 2. Buy the be?t, for the best is the cheapest. 3. Let your cconomy regulate the quantity not the quality. 4. Let you cook be a cook, and one that knows how to utilize what is now thrown to the dogs or otherwise wasted, 5. Study simplicity in the number of the dishes, and variety in the character of the meals. 6. Let the housewife be watchful enough to trace the leaks that are liable to spring iu ever}" larder. 7. Let the mistress be, indeed, the head of her own household and of her own kitchen. Mrs. Roger Pinckney of Early Branch, Hampton County, had quite an advc ure with a negro burglar recently during the lbsence of her husband. The burglar had ijoldly entered the private apartments of he residence, but instead of being fright;ned out of her wits the lady whipped out i revolver and tired at the intruding felon. Fie west through a window like a catapult md iyiade his escape. It is not known whether he was hit or not. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. 324and 326 Pearl St., New York. Ifr SEND FOE CIECULAE. DEAFXESS its CAISES and CI KK. by one who was deaf twenty-eight years. Treated by most or noted specialists of the day with no benefit. Cured hmxdf n three months, and since then hundreds or ittiers by same process. A plain, simple and uQcesstul home treatment. Address T. S. 'AGE, l'iS Eu.->i 26th St? New York city, )0 m MOBE WHlTEWASHliXG NOT WHEN PLASTIC PAINT an tie had so clieap. i?end for parjpJilet and color card, and learn Its merits. MAXWELL, HAZLETT& CO.. 109 McElderry's Wharf. Baltimore, JId., and . G06 Washington Ave , Philadelphia.. Pa. Parker's Tonic | l Pure Family Medicine That Never Intoxicates. . If you ire a lawyer, minister or "business 1 tan exhausted by mental strain or anxious ires do not take lntoxlcatlrff stimulrnts. but se Parker's Tonic. ( It you ar?e a mechanic or farmer, worn out lth overwork, or a mother run clown by famy or household duties, try P.vkkek's Tonic. CAUTION Refuse all substitutes. Parker's T onlc Is composed of the best remedial agents 1 t the world, and Is entirely different from reparations of ginger. Send for circular. HISCOX ?fc CO., 63 William Street, New York. Sold by all Druggists In large bottles at One ollar. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM. Parker's Hair Balsam Is finely perfume:! and warranted to prevent, falling of the hair and L T nnfi'M lu mworld Cheapest ^ Commercial College ?^Lexiiigton, Ky. ^ Plrbwit Honor and Gold Medal over all other Colleges, it tie World': EipotlUon, for 5ys:eja of Bock-keeping and General Bni.'neo* Education. COOO Gr*<im*t?* in He?l. io Teachers employed. C?t of Fall Btrnlnc** Cour?e, including Tuition, Stationery and Board, about $90. Short. Kud, Typ?.WritlBg and TVlrgrephy specialties. So Va. nUon. F.ntrr Sow, Graduate* Guaranteed Suerw". For srcnlais address W. B. SMITH, Prest, Lcilnjjrton.Ky. "I . i |7A Vf'rpTV LADY active and V ii.ii 1 xj\J~~ intelligent. torepront in her own locality an old firm. lieferlees required. Permanent position and jid salary. GAY & BROS.. 10 IJarclav N. Y. A QUESTION ABOUT Browns Iron Bitters ANSWERED. Tho qcosi -on has probably been asked thousands of times. "Hoar can Brown's Iron Bitters cure everything?" Well, it dnesn't. But it does cure any disease for which a reputable physician would p.-e*cribe IBOS Physicians recognize Iron as the best restorative agent known to the profession, and inquiry of any loading chemical firm nail substantiate tao assertion that there are more preparations oi iron than of any other substance used in medicine This shows conclusively that iron is acknowledged to be the most imoortant factor in successful medical practice. It i3. ho-ivpTer .1 remirk.-.blo fact, that prior to tile discovery of BKOU'.VsIKOX I JITTERS no perfectly satisfactory iron combination had ever been focin J. BROWN'S IRON BiTTERSfcSSS headache, or produce cos.-tipc.tion?a' 1 other iron xncdichiesilo. BROWN"*S IRON BITTERS cures Indisrest jot:. Biliousness, Weakness Dyspepsia, Malaria, Chilis aad Fevers, Tired Fcelinjr.CJcneral Debility,Pttin intho Side, Back or Limbs, Headacheand >?>nr?i:? f?ia?for all tbea^ ailments Iron is prescribed dailv. BROWN'S IRON BiTTERS^TSK minute. Lik<? all other thoroaeh mcdicines. it acts Slowly. /When taken by wn the first symptom of benefit is renewed energy. The muscles then becotna firmer, the digestion improrea. the bowels are active. in iromen rne eaect is usnauy more rapia ana mar* . Tho eyes ixigin at once to brighten: the skin clear? np: healthy e?lor com^s to the cheeks; nervousness disappjars; functional derangements become regular. and if a nursing mother, abundant sustenance is supplied for the chi'd. ^eraoniber Brown's Iron Bitters is tho ONLY iron medicine that is not injurious. rh'jfiriant fui'l Drryjist*reeomuwl The Genuine has Trade Mark and erased red lines ou wrapper. TAIvM NO OTHEX. Most of the diseases which afflict, mankind are originally caused by a disordered condition of the LIVER. For all complaints of this kind, such as Torpidity of the Liver, Biliousness, Jfervous .Uyspepsia, in digestion, Irregularity of the Bowels, Constipation. Flatulency. Eructations and Burning of the Stomach (sometimes called Heartburn), Miasma. Malaria. Bioody Flux. Cnilk and Fever, Break hope Fever, Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chronic Diarrhoea, Loss of Appetite, Headache, Foul Breath, Irregularities incidental to Females, Bearing-doxn 2S??STADIGER'S AURftNTil is Invaluable. It is not a panacea for all diseases, but<f\8|jQgj all diseases of the LIVER, trill %?*?ggCi STOMACH and BOWELS. It changes the complexion from a waxy, yellow tinge, to a ruddy, healthy color. It entirely removes low. gloomy spirits. It is one of the BEST ALTERATIVES and PURIFIERS OF THE BLOOD, and Is A VALUABLE TONIC. STADIGER'S AURANTU For sale by all Srugglstit. Prico $! .00 per botfly r* ._A__ o.f.di auiuck, jTopnexqr, WO SO. FRONT ST., Philade?t>hia, P3. FOR COUGHS AND CROUP US* TAYLOR'S IRE TT 31. X* ESI PS". The sweet gum, as gathered from atrt* of tie sasie.Evao, growing aloe* the ?ms!l streams In tie Southern Stacea, contains a stimulating expectorant principle that looseni the phlegm producing the early morning cough. and ?t;radiates the child to throw off the false membraue in croup and whooping-cough. When combined with tis hctiir.; in collaginons principle !n the mullein r'sr.t of the old fields, presents in Taylor's Chxsosss Tmtr.or oy Swsrr Gcx axo McListx ths fiacj.t Iccown remedy for Coughs, Croup, Vii&oping-Cough and Consumption; and so palatable, any child Is pleated to taie it. Aslc ronr drnggist for it. Pr!c?, 25c. and SI. WALTER A. TAYLOB, Atlanta., Ga. Use DS. "&IGCERS- HCCKI.EBEHET CORDIAL for Diarrhoea, Dysentery and Children Totting. Tor salo bj ^druscists. THRFSMINR MACHINES 2 SIslLsUaaiB^y A SPECIALTY. Siri]r>!est. Most DnrtUic. Economical, and "Perfect in use?wastes Ro ciouus it ready for market. THRESHING ENGINES UMISS? .'^jw ?Ii!N. and Standard Implements generally. Send for illustrated catalogue. A. B. FAROUHAR, Pennsylvania Agricultural Work*. TORE. Pa. iprilRimaamn^ R i"gg g? | ^Sample free to tiiuce becoming agents. $4w2?Il t yNomk. quick sales. Territory (riven. i ^Satisfaction sruaranteed. Address DR. SCOTT, S42 Broadway, NEW YORK. S ECZEMA El I Gentlemen?It is fine tnn to pay that I th taken Swift's Specific. I have been troubled At the bednninu of cold weather last fall it lias never returned. S. S. s. no doubt broke it and I not well. It also benefited my wife p;reat cure of ;i breaking out ca my little three yea \Vatk:nsvil!e,~<Ja., Feb. 13.18S6. Treatise on Bioou and Skin Diseases mail 3 The S - *-IJ- L - nwcf rUTfgiiffMl fW.TSBI ^slshley SOLI The Soluble'GuanojsXhighly concentrate* [xrade Fertilizer for all crops. ASHLEY COTTON AND CORN COMIX two crops and also largely used by the Truck ASHLEY ASH ELEMENT.?A verv elu-a ;ilizer for Cotton, Corn and Small Grain Cro Vines, etc. ASHLEY DISSOLVED DONE; ASIILE"S trades?for use alone and in Compost heap. For Terms, Direction:?, Testimonials, and f< judications of the Company, aduress THE ASHLEY PHOSP NovSoLly Ihese pills vrere a ~cr.d:vful discovery. 27o other; )r relieve all manner of diseas:. The information a he marvelous porer of theso pills, they would wali rithout. Sent by nail for 25 cents in stamps. Illi he information is very valuable. I. S. JOHNSON & K8nf/n Unm I MOM ncn i BaBHRnDBnBMnBBnBBBHBKBHMMBHntf I J. RRADFIKim Female Bialator. This famous remedy nmst happily meets i the demand of the age for woman's pecui liar and multrfonu afflictions. it is a i remedy for WOMAN ONLY, and for one SPECIAL CLASS of diseases. It is a j specific for certain diseased conditions of j the womb, and proposes to so control the i Menstrual Function as to regulate all the i derangements and irregularities of WoI mail's MONTHLY SICKNESS. i Its proprietors claim for ii 110 other medical ! property: and to douM the .acts that this medicine does positively possess such controlling and regulating powers is simply to discredit the voluntary testimony of thouj sands of living witnesses who are to-day ! and happiness. Bradfiehl's Female Regulator ^ is strictly a vegetable compound, and is A \ the product of medical science and practi- " ! cal experience directed towards the benefit of Suffering- "Woman! j It is the stud ed prescription of a learned physician wh?;se specialty was WOMAN, and whose fame became enviable and boundless because of iu? wonderful success in the treatment and cure of female .. ; TTIV Tvcrr ATOP tiio GRANDEST REMEDY known, and richly d< ser\ cs its name: WOMAN'S BEST FKIEXD! Because it controls a class of functions the various derangements of which cause more : ill health than all other causes combined, ; awl thus rescues ner irom a long train 01 ' afflictions which sorely embitter her life and prematurely end her existence. Oh ! _ ! what a multitude of living witnesses can testify to its charming effects! Woman* ! ' take to your confidence this Precious Boon of Health! It will relieve you of nearly all the com- . ! plaints peculiar t?> your sex." Kely upon it ! as your safeguard lor healtli, happiness ' and long lifeSold by all druggists. Send for our . j treatise on the Health and Happiness of ; Woman, mailed free, which gives all par- " | titulars. ' i The Bijadfield Regulator Co., Box 28, Atlanta, Ga. miTrnn n nun inn jlTO id UilM , ! BUY THEM AT HOME. i . THE BEST MAKES OF PIANOS AND OKGANS ?SOLD AT ; FACTORY PRICES FOE CASH ^ ? OK? I EASY INSTALMENTS. I | DELIVERED TO NEAREST DEPOT. FREIGHT FREE. I I ? + \\ nte for prices and temis to nr. W. TRUMP, Columbia, S. C. JuncOOLly ! ? .?..? ? 1?? link I am entirely well of eczema after hannfi with it very little in my face since last spring. made a slight appcarancc. bet wen: away and ? * tip: at least it put my system in zood condition ,ly in.casc of sick headachc, ar.d made a j>erfect r old daughter last snmrr.er Kev. JAMES V. M. MOKIHS. ?i free. swift Specific Co., Drawer 3. Atlanta, Oz. JBLE GrUANO. d Ammoniaied Guano, a complete High V )UXD ?A complete Fertilizer for these ers near Charleston for vegetables, etc. ^ p and excellent Non-Ammoniaied Ferps, and also for Fruit Trees, Grape | r ACID PHOSPHATE, of very High ^ or the various attractive and instructive w a tp rn ks m ^ muaaju vuai^ s like thea in the rorld. "Will positively cure ruuaa ea.cn oox is Torta ten times tUe cost of a : 100 miles to get \. ox if they <could not b<i had lstrateri Tiamnhlfit. irpp nnstnaid Scnn fn*. CO., 22 Cusloai House Street, BOSTOIi, MASS*