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2 THE LAMENT OF DAPHNI& £■*■**, whose faith I have to weaKiy kept, Olovik whose smile 1 never more may see, gftj ttte ten these sightless eyes have wept, jf tat ms plead onoe more, onoe more, with ihesi |4ld ast dream in love's first golden hoar That iton mine eyes thine image e'er ooald ff thy pictured face in every flower, hated thjr footsteps In the whispering The Mrds and waters echoed thy dear voice; Thine eyes smiled at me from the stars above* fealeepof thee 1 dreamed—woke to rejoice sail again the story of oar love. Che tele is donel My punishment is just. 1 lifted up mine eyes, 1 turned away. And tol the flower within my hand was dost, And darkened was the light of love's sweet day. get think not that my heart strayed with mine DjTM; Mar. love, for it was shrined within thine, own. Qan'nt thou its pleadings evermore despise? JU t hy warm beauty hardened into stone? Bis work but h*lf complete. Death stands afar. And will not end the misery begun. Night, railing, tells my tale to every star. And the dAy mocks me with the heartless son. ' Bat nope still lingers while my lips can pray. And through the endless dark 1 grope for thee, : Thinking, perchance, upon some happy day j Thou wilt relent and torn again to me— Wilt turn again to be my guide, my light, And pleading, hoping, in the dark I wait For t hee or Death to end the weary night: O love, dear love, I pray, come not too latel —Anuie Louise Brakenridge in Kate Field's Washington. A BOOK OF PICTURES. REMARKABLE CHANGES SEEN IN SOME ILLUSTRATIONS, • Points That Ptusled an Inquisitive Boy and Convulsed His Humorous Father. Characters That Appear to Have an extensive Wardrobe. •Papa," asked the boy, looking op from his book, “can a man grow a real beard in one day?” “1 should say not," answered the father cautiously, being mindful of the fact that within a week the boy had pat to him this question—“ Why does a woman walk on her heels in crossing a mnddy street,” and when he answered that he did not know, the boy had said. “To get across." But there was no sell about the question the boy asked, nor about the next one, which was this: ‘Can a man get bald in one night?" “Be might in an Indian country," an swered the father, whereupon there was silence for a little time. Then the boy impatiently said: ** I don't understand these pictures at all Everybody in them keeps chang ing around, and 1 don’t know who is who. and 1 don’t see how they know each other half a day running." The book was “The Swiss Family Robinson,” and the title page declared that .there were “100 illustrations." It was worth while to follow the “family" through the pictures. Putting aside a colored frontispiece which depicted a lusty barelegged boy on a rock, with a polo cap crowning a shock of yellow hair parted in the back, a bow in his hand and his eyes fixed on a sjtouting whale that looked like a sar dine sneezing violently, the panorama o{ened with the “family" kneeling in grateful prayer for its escape. The father, with head bald on top, smooth shaven face and long locks of white h.ur falling on his shoulders was the central figure, and made an ideal vicar of Wakefield. Fritz, the eldest son, wore a long coat and long ’ trousers, and Franz, the youngest, was distinguished by a large button on his coat in the small of the back. This was in the fore noon. LIGHTNING CHANGES. A few hours later, in the afternoon, nehold the change 1 The father had grown hue, closely trimmed side whiskers, and lw* and his sons had changed their straight locks for crisply curling hair. From a gentle faced Madonna the mother had !>een changed into a vivacious looking Jewess, and, strangest of all, two St liemards in the first picture had become trim bulldogs, with every appearance of being able to make a good fight Then there came a lightning change. In five minutes their father’s whiskers tuid grown an inch or two, Fritz and he luid gotten into knickerbockers, termi nating in the father’s case in blue stock ings and buckled shoes, both of them had lost the curl out of their hair, and one of the bulldogs had been metamor phosed into a setter standing over a red ish brown rabbit that was declared in the text to be an agouti Noon, the next day. and the father and Fnts were again presented, seated this time by a brook, bnt conveniently near a stone jug that might have held molasses and might not The father looked like a Highlander in a farmer's clothes, and Frits, who had grown three or four years older, was dressed like Dan ton when that gentleman was of some oon ecqoenoe in Paris and looked like him. (Jus of the dogs had become a King Charles spaniel. The other did not ap pear, bnt was probably in seclusion, set tling on the breed in which he would next appear. The pair were on a hunting excursion ou their deserted island. 1 A few hoars later Fritz had gotten hiz shock of yel low hair back, and traded his Danton customs for knickerbockers, bine stock ings and a sack coat, while his father bad somewhere picked up a Russian peas ant's dress, and grown a full brown beard, and the King Charles had become a setter. The jog had disappeared. PEBBONAL APPEARANCE. That night the father shaved himself down to the aide whiskers, dyed his own and Frits*# hair black, pat a sailor shirt ou bhnaalf and a pair of striped lawn tennis trousers on Flits, and the next morning went out sailing. While they we ana mt the Jewish, faoed mother changed hsr countenance for a subdued Inah, arrayed herself in a dark fates gown that dtoteoeeda jtsd petticoat, and Hbw hinrtkimtlsf on bar heed. 1 Taking Jack, one of her other sons, and putting a trim polo cap on hia yellow locks, the two, accompanied by one of the 8t Bernards, went out for a walk. A day or two later the father had got ten back his full, yellow beard, which he seemed to wear with his peasant cos tume, and one of the dogs had changed into a hound. But if you hoped the father would stay that way long enough for you to get acquainted with him, di vest your mind of that thought Before night he had returned to his trim side whiskers and curly hair, while Fritz had shrunk in length, broadened in girth, and put on long trousers that were too short for him and heavy shoes. And so the pictures run. The father changes his clothes, his beard aud his hair at least once, and often two or three times a day, Fritz is a good second in this kaleidoscopic performance, the mother facially runs through all the races and exhibits a bewildering number of differ ent costumes, the little boys must have been branded or their parents would never have been able to keep track of them, so extraordinary were the changes they underwent, and the dogs offered enough varieties to have given a capital bench show. The “one hundred illustra tions” were altogether the most entertain ing things about the copy of “The Swiss Family Robinson" over which the boy puzzled and the boy’s father laughed.— New York Times. A veteran Provincetown (Mass.) fish erman, who claims to know, says that when mackerel are on the move the ad vanced body is entirely composed of fe male fish, while the rear column is formed of the male. LEMON ELIXIR. A Pleasant Lemon Drink. For biliousness and constipation, take Lemon Elixir. For indigestion and foul stomach, take Lemon Elixir. For sick and nervous headaches, take Lemon Elixir. For sleeplessness and nervousness, take Lemon Elixir. For loss of appetite and debility, take Lemon Elixir. For fevers, chills and Malaria, take Lem on Elixir. Dr. Mozley’s Lemon Elixir will not fail you in any of the above named diseases, all of which arise from a torpid or diseased liver, stomach, kidneys or bowels. Prepared only by Dr. H. Mozley, At lanta, Ga., 50c. and SI.OO per bottle, at druggists. Lemon Hot Drop*. Cures all Coughs, Colds, Horseness, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Pneumonia, Hemor rhage and all throat and lung diseases. An elegant and reliable preparation. 25 cents at druggists. Prepared only by Dr. H. Mozley, Atlanta, Ga. April l-6m A Tremendous Eater. Johnson City. Tenn., has the cham pion eater of the country. This is one Clay Morris, a whilom blacksmith, who is said by competent witnesses to have recently eaten at a sitting four loaves of bread, three chickens, three pounds of ham, five good sized yam potatoes and five cucumbers, with a quart of gravy with the bread and a pint and a half of beer with which to wash the whole down. The occasion of this meal ,was a wager between himself and his brother. Job Morris, who himself ate two and a half loaves, two chickens, three pounds of ham and four potatoes, but retired from the contest in seeing his relative’s appetite apparently undiminished. The winner declared the meal nothing unusual with him, and indeed seemed to suffer no inconvenience from his gor mandizing, but enjoyed unbroken slum ber for nearly fifteen hours after. He says his enormous apj>etite has been of gradual growth and is rather proud of it though he is wholly unfitted for any work by it and spends the greater part of his time lying down or sleeping. At one time, however. Morris was con sidered a good workman and the strong est man in the county. Strange to say he is not fat in proportion to his height, which is something over six feet, and weighs only 160 pounds, but he claims not to have known a spell of indigestion for over ten years, and though he is stupid in the extreme, is very vain.— Exchange Reading Character from a Scarecrow. Now, look over there in yonder meadowl The man wbo made that scarecrow sweeps his barn floor every morning, oils and wraps his farm ma chinery when storing it, is careful to keep accounts and whitewashes the cel lar walla If yon don’t believe it iust took at his scarecrow. There are neatly made posts planted at regular intervals throughout the lot. From pole to pole is stretched twine, forming monotonous ly regular squares and rectangles. Why t£e very regularity of the thing strikes a chill to the heart of the crow and effectu ally prevents him disarranging the plans of so painstaking a man I—Lewiston Journal , Bow to Rolao • Church Debt A novel plan for extinguishing a church debt has been hit upon in Mel bourne, Australia The church com mittee—or vestry, as the case may be— divide the total debt among themselves and each man insure# his life for the amount that falls to his share The policies are transferred to the church and the annual payments on them are made out of the collectiena Then, of course, as the members of the commit tee “drop off,” the sums insured on theii lives drop in, and later, whan the only survivor dies, the last installment of the church debt is paid.—Fall Mall Gazette Fo- ninny veaw Mr. B. F. Thompson, *>f D- Moire*, lowa, was severely tfflicMd With eh tonic di unices. He gays: “A times it was very severe: to much to, that IJesrd it would end my life. About lever yeari ago I ebanoed to procure bo'tle of Cbsnheilain's Colic, Cholera and Dt srrfacsH Remedy. It gave me prompt re- I eF. end 1 believe doted' me permanently, ss 1 now cat ox drink without harm any ’JiterJ'Pknte.* 1 have also need Nln my 'With tb best results. For mis by **W*?,W’ t- ... • . THE WEEKLY FLORIDIAN TALLAHASSEE, FLORIDA. BTAYIN& THE HAND OF DEATH. Thor* I* Said to Bo a Certain and Rapid Mean* of Resuscitation. Colonel Henry Elsdale, of the Royal engineers* claims to have discovered a certain and rapid means of resuscitating persons from the effects of suffocation. A sapper among the men under his com mand at Chatham was one day found enveloped in the folds of a half empty war balloon. The coal gas with which it had been inflated had suffocated him, and to all appearances he was a dead man But effqrts were made to restore him, though the pulseless heart and ca daverous face of the man gave uo en couragement to persevere, in a mo ment of something like inspiration it occurred to Colonel Elsdale to send for some tubes of compressed oxygen, which had been prepared for the oxyhydrogen light This pure oxygen, at a very high pres sure, was hurriedly conveyed into the mouth of the prostrate sapper by means of inserting the nozzle of the valve be tween his teeth, and the supply was “gently turned on” to the smallest ex tent The effect was absolutely instan taneous. In an instant he opened his eyes and seized the nozzle between his teeth. In short, the sapper was not only thoroughly revived within a few min utes, but in half an hour walked away, quite well, to the barracks, and refused to go to the military hospital, as was suggested by his commanding officer. Of course the objection will be raised that everybody has not tubes of pure oxygen at high pressure in readiness to apply to such cases. Happily oxygen in quantities as large as those administered is not needed, and it can be stored “in small, strong bottles made of the finest steel, with a valve giving an absolute hermetic seaL” These vessels may be as small as a soda water bottle, and may be made part of the medical stock of every doctor. Oxygen at any degree of compression required can, in fact, now be obtained, and the whole apparatus for restoring vitality can be packed in a small box quite portable. What possibilities may not such a dis covery as that to which we have drawn attention involve! It is equally availa ble, we are assured, for those persons who have been asphyxiated by choke damp in coal mines, or by ordinary coal gas. People apparently drowned, and those insensible from long exposure in the rigging of a ship, might also be saved from an untimely end by what Colonel Elsdale calls “a dose of oxygen." It would probably be invaluable, too, in cases of suffocation from the fumes of charcoal, or in cases where chloroform had operated injuriously on a weak heart. Such a discovery should at once occupy the attention of the Royal Col lege of Physicians, with a view of ascer taining whether Colonel Elsdale has overrated the beneficient effects to be an ticipated from the administration of pure oxygen.—London Chronicle. P. P. P. Saves Lire. SAYS will livi/forever. A prominent Savanrpthian, formerly su pei in tended of a railroad, says: ‘‘l was crippled in my feet and arms so that I could not walk without ciuiches, dot eat without having a servant to leed me. 1 tried physicians everywhere, but to no purpose, and finally went to New Yoik, where mv doctors, at one lime, decided to amputate my arm, but iouud that course impracticable, on account of a wound I hao reteived duriDg the war. I returmd t > Savannah a complete wreck, and my cast* seemingly hopeless. Asa lorloin hope I began to tike P. P. P., and am r<- joiced to say that alter using three bottlts, my limbs began to straighten out, my ap petite and health soon ieturned, find 1 now teel like anew man ; realty as if I had been made over again, and as il I could live forever—so long as I can get P. P. P.” This gentleman will not give his name for publication, but authorizes us to refer anybody .to him tor a veitificati iu of these tac t-, who will apply •<> uk Yours truly, Lippman Bros.. Wholesale Diutrgisis Proprietors of P. P. P. Savannah, Ga. How It Feels to Have u Hug In One’s Ear. “A bug in his ear,” is a figure very ex tensively used in common conversation. But, reader, did you ever have a bug in your ear in fact? If not, you have no idea how it feels. B. F. Tomlinson, who experienced the sensation, says he never suffered such torture in his life. The bug crawled into his ear while he was lying in bed asleep, between 11 and 12 o’clock one night. It was only a com mon candlebug or fly, but the degree of torture one of them can inflict while in the ear is beyond the scope of the imagi nation. Mr. Tomlinson said that when he awoke he dreamed that a railway train had jumped the track, struck him in the ear and was plowing its way through his head. The train kept going, bnt it seemed that it would never get through. ' Occasionally it would stop and then start again with renewed force. Then again the train seemed to be at a stand still, but the wheels would be turning with lightning rapidity. The train would move off gradually with a grating noise, and would not stop till the whistle blew for the next station or it ran off the track or collided with another train, which frequently occurred. Mr. Tom linion stood the torture till daylight, when he sent for a doctor, who succeeded in fishing out the bug, which in the meantime had died. Mr. Tomlinson said that if the bug bad remained in his ear an hour longer he would have been a raving maniac.—Mexico (Mo.) Intelli gencer. fray, mister l Is it pofrihlr you ar* suffering from ca*rrh, and hve tfot used Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Reui **rtV ? All the lemble consequences or cm. tarrh in the head may h** averted if you'll but make the effort! You know, too well, hi distressing symptoms 1 You pofllbly know, if neglected, it invariably goes fr m had to wotse, and is likely to run into con* sumption and end in the grave! Here is a way oi escape: Its makers are willing to take all the rlek, and make ’a standing offer *f SOOO for an Incurable oaee of this toa*home and dangeroue dieeaee. Yon can get SBOO, or better—a care! \ . The Fashionable Dinner Table. The fashionable dinner table is square. It should be large enough to accom modate comfortably the number of people to be seated. No more guests should be invited than will serve to make twelve people in all, on ac count *of the number of pieces of china in each course of dinner service. Heavy white damask is used for the tablecloth, and this should be hem stitched all around. The fashionable patterns in damask are small figures, and these mostly in the form of fine ferns, fine flowers, single rosebuds, pinks* chrysanthemums, carnations and long grasses. In the center of the table is placed the piece of dainty linen beauti fully embroidered, in colored silks, rep resenting national flowers in all their brilliancy. Upon this centerpiece is placed the bouquet or flowers, or the large candela bra. The smaller embroidered pieces, which are used under separate dishes and condiment jars, should be exact im itations of the centerpiece, and if that is square, all the small pieces should be square; if round, the same rule holds, and if the edges are serrated the edges of all must be cut in the same shape.— Fashion Journal. Submarine Telephones. The difficulty of submarine telephony over great distances is the fact of con siderable electrostatic capacity in the cable, the result of this being retarda tion and deformation of the electrical impulses transmitted. If a line could be made of very, very low resistance, so that the electric current would have the freest possible discharge, the evil effect of this capacity would be in part done away with. The relation between these two things has been determined in a somewhat empirical way. Calling the total resistance of a telephone wire R and its total capacity in microferads K, successful speaking, with our present instrument, is really an impossibility when the product KR, of the resistance of the line in ohms by its capacity in microferads is greater than about 10,000. In the very best Atlantic cable KR equals Somewhere near 3,000,000, so that unless there should be some totally new developments in telephony we can see at once that successful telephoning across the Atlantic is very improbable on ac count of the enormous cost of a conduct or of low resistance and capacity, if for no other reason.—Electrical Engineer. A New Use for the King. Whatever the measures adopted, the principle of isolation is the essence of all genuine disinfection. Its efficiency for this purpose was well shown at Epsom common. One of the children in a gypsy encampment having been taken ill with scarlet fever, was, along with its mother, very successfully separated from the rest of the community by the simple expedi ent of a ring fence made of rope drawn around the infected tent and regularly watched. The result was that the slow progress of convalescence was passed through and disinfection completed without further extension of the disease. The surveyor. Mr. Harding, is to be congratulated on the success of his novel and effectual maneuver. The satisfactory result thus easily attained is of obvious importance, and the simple method employed de serves to be remembered in case of emer gencies of a similar kind.—London Lan cet. The Great Benefit Which people in run-down state of health derive from Hood’s Sarsaparilla,conclusive ly proves this medicine “makes the weak gtronr.” It does not act like a stimulaot, imparting fictitious strength, but Hood’ s Sarsapflrilla builds up in a perfectly natural way all the weakened parts, purifies the blood, and assists to healthy action those important organs, the kidneys and liver. Strengthening Cast Iron. Some of the most prominent iron founders are introducing anew and sim ple practice in order to secure stronger castings, the method in question consist ing in placing thin sheets of wrought iron in the center of the mold previous to the operation of casting. This method was first resorted to, it appears, in the casting of thin plates for the ovens of cooking stoves, it being found that a sheet of thin iron in the center of a quar ter inch oven plate rendered it practi cally unbreakable by fire. This result has led to the prooeas be ing now applied to the casting of large iron pipes, a core of sheet iron imparting additional strength and lessening the liability to any fracture. As an evi dence of the additional strength capable of being imparted by this means, it is stated that a plate of iron one-fourth of an inch thick, cast with a perforated sheet of 27-wire gauge wrought iron in the center, possessed six times the strength of a similar cast plate with no core. The quarter inch plate had the strength of a plate one in oh thick.—New York Sun. A Door In nn Old Chnreh. Now and then a small door may be seen high np in the piers that divide the nave from the chanceL This is the door that once gave access from the winding stair within the pier to the footway on the top of the screen with which most chnrchep were qnce provided. When" screens were found inconvenient and were removed, these doors were left Reas church, Herefordshire, has a no ticeable example; Hinckley church, Lei cestershire, has another. —Gentleman’s Magazine. A. Abbelt, who hks long b<en with Messrs. Percival and Hatton, Real Eitste and Insurance Broken, Dei Moines, lowa, and is one of the beat known and most respected bnsines- men in that city, •ays: **l can testify to tbs good qualities ot Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. Hav ing used It In my family for, the past eight years, I can safely say It ba* no equal lor either colds or croup.” 60 cent bottles for sals by M. Lively, Druggist. Whn to So# u Oculist. Should any of the following symptoms be experienced, an oculist of repute should be consulted: Spots or sparks of light floating before the eyes; quivering of the lids or sensation of sand in the eye; perceptible fatigue or the require ment of strong light in reading; the bolding of objects at arm’s length or* close to the eye; squinting one eye or seeing objects double; dizziness or dart ing pains in the eyeballs or over the temple; perceiving a colored circle Around the lamp; sensitiveness of the eyeballs or contraction of the visual field; blurring of the vision or being un able to see objects distinctly at a dis tance; watering or redness of the eyes or lids; running together of the letters when reading, or seeing the vertical bet ter than the horizontal lines. —Exchange. The First Born. Young Father—l am amazed, shocked, my dear, to hear you say you intend to give the baby some paregoric. Don’t you know paregoric is opium, and opium stunts the growth, enfeebles the consti tution, weakens the brain, destroys the nerves, and produces rickets, marasmus, consumption, insanity and death?’’ Young Mother Horrors! 1 never heard a word about that. I won’t give the little ducky darling a drop, no, in deedy. But something must be done to stop his yelling. You can carry him awhile. Father (after an hour’s steady stamp ing with the squalling infant) —Wherein thunder is that paregoric?—New York Weekly. The Duty of Every Teacher. A teacher of science ought also to be an investigator, were it only for the in spiration that his example might give to the pupils in his charge. To .impart knowledge is a good thing, but to reveal the sources of knowledge is better; and in that revelation is found the educa tional value of research regarded as a part of the teacher’s essential duty.— F. W. Clarke in Popular Science Monthly. Paint Instead of Clothing. The arnotta plant has seeds coated with a red, waxy pulp, which is dried and made into cakes. It is much em ployed by the South American Caribs for painting their bodies, paint being almost their only article of clothing. Asa commercial article it is mainly uti lize as a coloring for cheese, butter and inferior chocolates.—Washington Star. Way Off. Dnllpate (who prides himself on his abstracted air) —Did you ever notice what a faraway look I have sometimes? Miss Spiritellie—Yes. Is that because you are a little off? —Good News. Blood Disease*. Blood diseases are terrible on aocount of their loathsome nature, and the fact that they wreck the constitution so completely unless the proper antidote is applied. B. B. B (Botanic Blood Balm) is composed of the tuie antidote for blood poison. Its use never frils to give satisfaction. Mrs. Laura Hart, Beaufort, S. C., writes: *‘A loathsome form of blood poison wm killing me. My appetite was lost, my bones ached, and p.<rts of my flesh seemed as if it would come off my bones. A friend brought me a bottle of B. B. B. The sores began healing at once, and when I bad taken two bottles I suipristd my friends at my rapid recovery.” W. A. Bryan, Moody, Teas, writes: “I had an agonizing case of Salt Rheum* h r four year*, no mutter which medicine 1 took it only seemed to iguravate until 1 fouud B. B. B It also cured my tw.> children of itch,which had resisted p eviou treatment.” People Who Live Over 2.000 Feet High. The population between 2,000 and 5,000 feet is found mainly on the slope of the great western plains. In this region the belt between 2.000 and 8.000 feet is al most everywhere the debatable ground between the arid region of the Cordil leran plateau and the humid region of the Mississippi valley Above 8.000 feet irrigation is almost universally neces sary for success in agricultural opera tions. Washington Star. * The most unhappy period of marriage, according to French divorce statistics, is for the period extending from the fifth to the tenth year. After that the figures drop rapidly. Only 28 per cent, of the couples seek divorce between their tenth and twentieth years of union. Only one pair in 100 seeks to cut the knot after the period over thirty and under forty years. The Forth bridge was begun in 1881. There were then only two can tale ver bridges in existence, one of them carry ing the Cincinnati Southern railroad across the Kentucky river, and the other spanning the river Warthe at Posen, in Germany Both of these were built in 1878 Among the articles made of asbestos are mittens to guard the hands of fire men, assayerm. refiners and others who are exposed to burning. As the mate rial is not affected by beat, the work man thus protected can grasp hot irons, crucibles and the like without dieoom fort Experiments show that an electric current will travel over a good -onduo tor at the rate of 500,000 miles m minute, or around the earth in three second)- Light travels at the rate of 1,000,Oik; utiles a minute. Electric Bitters. This remedy is becoming so well knowr and so popular as to need no special mention. All who have used Electric Bitters sing the same song of praise.—A purer medicine does not exist and it it guaranteed to all that la claimed. Electric Bittern will cure all diseases of the Liver and Kidneys, will remove Pimples, Boils, Balt Rheum and other affections caused by Impure blood.—Will drive Malaria ftom the system and prevent as well as cure eli Malarial fever*.—For cure of Headache. Constipation apd Indigestion try Electric Bitter*—Entire satlefoctlon guaranteed, or money refunded. * Price 50 cents and $t 0$ per bottle at M. LlvelyT Drag stoire. FOa HEADACHE CAUSED BY Biliousness and fon gtipation, take antimigraine. CAUSED BY Indigestion and Foil Stomach, take ANTIMIGRAINE. CAUSED BY Sleeplessness and Xer* vousness, take antimigraine. CAUSED BY Debility am) l** Appetite, take ANTIMIGRAINE. CAUSED BY Malaria, Chills, and Ferere, take ANTIMIGRAINE. CAUSED BY irregularity of meals, dust, smoke, etc., while travelling by rail, take ANTIMIGRAINE. CAUSED BY Sea-sickness and to pro rent same take ANTIMIGRAINE. For the real old-fashioned SICK HE ID ACHE, take ANTIMIGRAINE. ANTIMIGRAINE fails to core any kind of HEADACHE. con. tains no poisonous drugs, and leaves no unpleasant after-effects. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR Antimigraine and refuse any substitute. 50 cents per bottle. 12 dose*. raaoi mm _ \ aunty rim ud iiwsji. jHEm W. A. RAWLS, Pharmacist, Has Exclusive Sale of these Celrbratxd Glasses in Tallahassee, Fla. Faulkner, Kellam & Moore, The only Manufacturing Opticians in the South. Atlanta, Ga. Feb. 25, 6m CHIPOLA HOTEL, MARIANNA, FLA. GEO. CHATTEBTON, Jr., & CO., Props. Free Sample Rooms. Special Rates to Commer cial men. THE TRAVELERS HOTEL, Corner Bay and Cedar Sts., JACKSONVILLE, -:- FLA. Anew brick hotel hnvitur ail the comforts of the more expensive house*, convenient to all depot* and landings, tspecia lv nd<ipred 10 TRANSIENT BUSINESS, elegantly furnished rooms, single or en suite, table as good as the best. This hotel wu built, famished and operated as a $3.00 a day house. Bates are now reduced to $2.00 a day, while the service is better than ever. This is the only all year hotel and the only $2.00 a day hotel in Jacksonville. All Florida people are at home there. The omnibus meet all trains. Secure rooms by mail or teleeraph. BURTON K. BARBS 37-tf Proprietor- ST. TERESA HOTEL" —AT— ST. TERESA, JAMES ISLAND, —FLORIDA, — ON THE GULF OF MEXICO. fill op June 20, Close October 1, UK Fine Sailing, Bathing. Fishing and HnatiH The Healthiest Summerßesort on the Gulf was Steamer meets train at 8t Marks days and Saturdays. Bates reduced on rturoa* and steamer. Tom Costa, F. 8. Bruju< Steward. ____■** JOHN GRIMM. HENRY H. GBH® ESTABLISHED 1878. GEIMM BROS Buoossobs *o Jobs Gbixx, Rmnmißiim lerctonti in domestic Fruit LeConts Pears. Florida Oranxee, **• SPECIAL TIBS IN THUB SEASON. 281 Washington St N. Y. tWßeturns made weekly; Cardß irf BtencUsaenton application. Reference, by t’ermlMon: T. C. KIMBALL, Prbs.,Gassbvort B** WESLEYANmR Ww STAUNTON, VIRGINIA. , Open* Sept. 17,1891. One of the most attractive schools for ysw ladtea in thsSonwj Conservative coarse in Music. Twenty-8™ and offleen. Situation beautiful. Climat* passed. KptU from twenty States. Tsrm^w fsSrf.yKssssy’xssS£ CHOATE’S DIGEST * • or THE Decisions of the Supreme Conrt| One volume Two volnmes (Interleaved) ** - | Apply to 1 B. B. Wo*** I • Supreme Court Room* |