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■g ■ _be i ^ 11 aa— HUNTSVILLE GAZETTE. Published Every Saturday. HUNTSVILUt. • • • i L4BAMA HOUSEHOLD BREVITIES. —A little tallow well rubbed in will heal a small cut in twelve hours. For children, who are invariably cutting their lingers, being scratched by the eat, or having little calloused wounds it is in valuable. —Roast Liver.—Take a calfs liver, lard it all over, roll it in pepper and salt, and roast it in the oven with a buttered paper over it, baste it often while it is cooking; it takes about an hour to cook. When done skim and strain the sauce and sorve the liver on it. —To dye pearl buttons, wash with lukewarm solution .of potash, then place in a strong aqueous solution oftbe desired color and let them stand, with frequent stirring, in a warm place. To cause the color to penetrate, an immer sion of two weeks may be needed. Uso the aniline colors. —An exchange says: Pour one tea spoonful of clear solution of tannin (a heaped teaspoonful of tannin to a gill of rain water) into a tumbler full of the suspected water. If no turbidity occurs within five hours the water is good; if turbidity occur within one hour the water is decidedly unwholesome. —It is seldom convenient to smoko house plants, and tobacco water may be used for insects instead, standing the pots in a bath-tub or spacious sink. Pour boiling water upon cheap tobacoo, dilute it to the color of weak to|. Lay the pots upon their sides in order that the under surface of the leaves may 1x3 reached. Frequent drenching with water only will keep red spiders in sub jection. —Solution to color bronze largos, locks, etc., a rich brown.—One pint of water, five drachms perchloride of iron. The articles must be made perfectly clean and dipped in the hot solution until the required color is obtained, then dipped in clean hot water, dried and lacquered. If only a varnish is re quired, use clear shellac varnish col ored with dragon's-blood, gum and burnt umber. —Corn Cake.—Sift two cups of corn meal, one cup of wheat flour, two table spoonfuls of sugar, two teaspoonfuls_ cream of tartar, dissolve one teaspoonful of soda, wet it up with milk, heat in two eggs, make it thin enough to pour in a well-greased pan. It is delicious for breakfast or dinner, with sweet butter. I have made it like ligfit sponge cake. (Jet it on the bottom of a hot oven.— New England Farmer. —Glycerine should never be used as a lotion without diluting, as it has such an affinity for water that it absorbs even the necessary moisture of the skih and produces a red, feverish, irritated sur face. Many people complain that they “can not use glycerine at all,” because it “don’t agree with their skins.” Dilute it with water and then try it, or, what is better still, mix glycerine, water and cologne in equal parts. WAGES IN CHINA. Artisans Who Work for Starvation Wages and Never Strike. The State Department at Washington has received a report from Consul Pettus, stationed at Ningpo, giving statistics in regard to labor and wages in China. He says: “Wages have not increased here for years, and strikes never occur. Trouble is rarely experi enced, as laborers are confined, to dis tricts where they are employed. One laborer is allowed Jt-o be employed out side of bis district; he may, by general consent, join laborers of another district —not otherwise. “House servants are better paid than any other class of laborers. They are intelligent, and have to bo honest and faithful, otherwise they will fail to pro cure letters for good service, without which they will be thrown out of em ployment.” Me appends a table ot wages of labor erg-*nd artisans in his own district. Batfceis fiake 84 a month and black smiths 8k Block-cutters, boat buildcfc and1 boatmen get 30 cents a day, ami, bricklayers 20 cents, .Makers" of bricks are paid $4 a month, and cabinet-mak er?, carpenters and carvers. 92 cents to 30 cents a day. Coffin-makers are paid 25 cents a day for their gruesome toil, and chair-bearers get HO cents a day for carrying their superiors. Coolies, the common laborers, receive but 20 cents a day, and female cotton spinners even less, 10 cents. Clerks got 85 a month with board and. cooks get the same. Dyers are aristocrats among the' labor ers, receiving 88 a month, and em broiderers get 30 cents a day,- A farmer is paid from 83 to 84 a month, with his bon-rd. Fishermen are paid from"815 to 820 for a season, which lasts about'two mofiths. Fan-makers are pa id.30 cents a day, and gold and silver workers' frmp 25 cents to 40 cents. Harvesters get -20 cents a day, painters 21 cents,! plumbers# 24 cents, potters the same, rice cleiyiers and reapers 25 o?nts, saluuaieetS 20 cent?, silk spinners 30 .cents\^and female silk winders 14 cents. Sailors receive from 84 to 88 per month, with, board, and soldiers 85 a month, with uniforms. Straw-hat makers get lS cents a dary. tea pickers 10 cents, fea sorters 10 cents, tea flrers 30 cents, tailors 14 cents, with board. and umbrella makers 20 cents. Salesmen get 84 a month and tea packers 88. These rates are all paid by Chineso masters.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat The Movement Against Slavery. “Royal abolitionist,-’ the King of the Belgians is called, because he is so. deeply interested in making opposition to the slave trade in Africa. A inan of humane sentiments, moved by the stories of atrocities in that country, and especially by the statement that 2,000, 000 lives are sacrificed yearly in the slavegiving hi« influence* and money to help destroy it. The movement now being made in the work is a remarkable one, and, among other things, shows how repugnant to civil ized people are the slave trade and •lavery,—United Presbyterian, IN WOMAN’S BEHALF.; IN THE FOG. Veils of pallid mi9t and gray Wrap the world of yesterday; Fir-fringed islaml% rooky cape, Vellow sanda, and mountain shape, . t” Sun and sky, and waters blue. All are blotted from the view. Out to aca we blindly stare; Did we dream that such things weref No: untouched, and safe and sure. All these lively things endure; Vnderneath that hovering mis^ All the bluo and amethyst. All the rocky cliffs and sro, f All the surf-lines nestling free, Mountain forms and islands green— All are there, all hough unseen. If we bravely bide and wait Through this bnef eclipse of Fate, Smile through the unsmiling noon. Keeping heart and hope in tune— , Shadow shall give place to sun. And. out-stealing, one by onfi, AH tire fair Things mourned in vain ✓ Shallbe made our-ow n again. . ' • ' Dear heart, faint heart, who in shade Sittest, pale, perplexed, afraid. At the brief evantshment j Of ihy yestorday's content— t Courage take; for hope endures, Though a little mist obscures; And behind the fog-wreaths dun Brightens the eternal sun 1 —Susan Cocrtldge, In S.-S. Time*. WOMAN'S TALK. What It Embodies and Its Effbet upon the Condition of Humanity. “Odly a flock of women met to talk." “A lot of women's club women.” “Bet ter go homo anil mako that what it ought to be.” “Better be attending to their children.” But, sirs, says Abble Aorton Diaz, In Union Signal, ace you aware th^t talk like* their* implies thought, and that thoiiffhfc-power move# the world? Trace history from its beginning and you will see that the condition of humanity at any given period—its laws, its customs, its manners, its conveniences, its imple ments, its knowledge, scientific and otherwise, its * system# of education, its religious and other beliefs, its indus tries, its facilities, simply mark the progress of thought up to that period. Thought discovered America; thought acting on belief sent the Plymouth Pil grims to begin J'few England; thought, formulated in law, pushed aside the old way of settling disputes by hand-to-hand fights, clan fights, and knight-errantry championship; thought showed us our earth was a moving ball, q^id its place among the pilots; thought rid the country of slavery, thought called down the lightning and made it serve our needs; thought by converting useless steam into a mighty power turned all manner Of more material appliances in to useless lumber, as witness the spin ning-vylieels, stage coaches and numer ous industrial implements of a former generation, also the rescue of this once useless power from wapfce has been the mean* of : peopling our mat western whrliT. Infant, the history of advancing civilization does hot show how thought projecting itself into the unknown has seized’itnd applied this or that unrecog nised force to our various industries. That thought is a Iso’a r las ting powor is shown by many of onr present beliefs and customs. Thus the thought of the far-off Aryans coming doWn through the Celts and Gauls and the ancient Ger mans, manifest' itself to-day in our Easter eggs; eggs having bOrin used in the spring festivals of those olden times to symbolize awakening life. Even in that very long, long ago, the idea of fruitfulness was shown forth after close of harvest by the varied richness gath ered into minoe pies and plum puddings, tho fiery flame overspreading tho latter, symbolizing etenjal life. The recognition of the might of thought and of its lasting dominion loads us with the responsibility of laying hold on this mighty force and making it Serve the world’s advancement. Every generation lnl^ejdta the,;: results of past thought, is compelled to deal with re sults of foregone' causes. Thus, we of the present are working under transmit ted thought, as 6ho\vn in our educational systems, in our charities, in our treat ment of criminals and of the insane. This is unavoidable. But our business ,|s not with effects alone. We should not accept as fixed" and final tho modes lof procedure which embody past concep tion# of what bs wisest 'aM host. ©Thought is a living force; an active, working, enthusing force. It means progress. Thus it is the duty of each" generation, .while struggling with its in heritance, to • think higher and wiser thoughts for the next one. “Forget the steps 41r£ady'frod> arid onward urge our way.” Thfe ne\V plans devised by tho new thought will not at once change present conditions, will not fit into them. But all the same must we think the thoughts and plan, the plans, and leave the embodiment of those to the mighty thought forces which are ever marching on. It. is ours to. deal with causes. It is ours to so direct thought.as to establish higher conditions and wiser methods in L charities and in education This is pre ■rtsely what is being done. “Only a lot df women talking!”' “On ly womonisclub women!”. But what if their’talk embodies thought vital 1 to humanity? What if their topic be edu cation—home -education, school eduea jpation, as elich may and myst affect character? What if it concerns social problems—how best to help the poor? How best to develop the womanly and the manly? How to treat the weak and erring? How to uplift the degraded, whether these are in the slums or among the devotees of wealth and fashion? The wisdom of unwisdom of our present ^charity systems of mere palliation and alleviation? What if the talk tends to establish true ideas of a successful life tetter enabled to make home what it pught to be, and become a better mother fRnd to raise the standard of respectabil Fity? What if its tendency were to make practical, socially, politically and in every way, this much-preached and Wpported Christianity which we call ours, but declare can not be lived; or, iu*y say, to Christianize Christen dom. now largely given up to wars, to tjass divisions,'classoppnession. in spite of its fundamental principles of peace on earth, good will aiyo.yg men,and the fam [iiy oneness of humanity? What if by [ thus meeting, mind to wind and heart to U.eart, each woman goes to her home~ with quickened intellect and warmer impulses and added light, and, thus thought-ensued, thought-uplifted, is better enabled to make home what it ought to he, and become a better mother to her children? Only a flock of women talking! Only a laying hold of the power that moves the world! The important present duty, then, ia to draw women together in just such flocks, for just such purpose, and if hus bands, fathers, brothers and lovers would join them in this purpose, what might wo not expect for the uplifting of the people. But would men's clubmen do this? Are their clubs formed in the in terests of the home? Are such their topics of conversation? This is a matter vitally affecting the salvation of our country. _ A Good Suggestion, The following good advice is given by Lucy Stone, in Woman's Journal: Woman suffragists should take a les son from the farmers. At their meeting in Springfield, it was reported that 30,000 farmers had pledged themselves to vote only for such members of the Legislature as will be true to agricultur al interests. They voted irrespective of party and as a consequence they elected men who will support the rights of farmers in the Legislature. Women, having no votes, have no members of the Legislture elected by them with a view to special care of their interests. But women in all the States whose Legislatures are in session this winter can personally see the Senator and Representative of their district, find out their opinions, and earnestly en deavor to have them see the clear justice of woman suffrage. Much can he done in this way. A great deal of misunder standing and prejudice on this subject is dono away with or outgrown. Every body now knows that woman suffrage is coming', that it is only a question of time when men will make haste to re lieve women from the lielplossness and stigma which always befall a disfran chised class. When that timo comes, men will claim that they were ahvays woman suffragists, as they now do that they were always anti-slavery. In the meantime, each Representative and Senator should be seen, and, if need be, should be supplied with suffrage litera ture asa means to a clear and correct judg ment on the subject. Do not let us fail of doing this. t A Misconception. It is an extraordinary misconception, Bays Alice Stone Blackwell, in Woman's Cycle, tc imagine that womep are “able to express the unbiased and unbrihed truth concerning our political system and our laws” more independently and influentially now than they would be it they could vote. In the first place, so long as it is held that women have noth ing to do with politics, that it is outside of their sphere, etc., they will be less inclined to interest themselves in public questions, and their opinion on such questions will he held in slight esteem on account of their presumable ignor ance and inexperience. In the second placer they can not make their opinions felt on election day—the only test of opinion for which the average politician cares And, finally, as long as women are in a state of complete dependence upon the other bcx, they are under the strongest pressure to tolerate and con done everything in men, and to be com plaisant even to the faults that are real ly most repugnant to them. As John Stuart Mill says, women, under our present system, are practically in the highest state of bribery and intimida tion combined. To Young Women. Rev. Frances E. Townsley.of Nebraska, has a warm and tender interest in the welfare of the girls of to-day. Sho says: “Wo are not called to he more puppet figures in a show, jerked by the wires of circumstances, inclination for the man ager, and God hut the looker-on. “You are each responsible as a warm, breathing, living woman. As such you can not die. Is Miriam dead? Her song of faith in Israel's God thrills every Christian soul to-day, a.id echoes from the million pulpits of Christendom. Is Mary Lyon dead? She lives in the life of every Christian graduate of Holyoke, and breathes in every effort for the phy sical and moral culture of women in America. Is Fidelia Fiske dead? She breathes in every Persian convent’s prayer, and pours into the missionary cof fers of our churches increasing benefac tions every year. Would you live hero after? Then live to-day. WHAT WCffVIEN ARE DOING. Fifteen girls from the Russian high schools in St. Petersburg have applied to chemists to he accepted as pupils and apprentices to the trade. Of late years the number, of women i entering the professions of painting and sculpture has enormously increased in francei Germany and Russia. < The free classes of the Cooper Union Woman's Art School in New York are, as usual, full to overflowing. They are under the direction of Susan N. Carter. The prime minister of Princo Ed ward’s Island, Mr.W.W. Sullivan writes that municipal suffrage has been grant ed there. So that now this form of woman suffrage exists in every province of Canada. There is a marked increase in the number of women students at the Buf falo (N. Y.) Medical College this term. There are aboflt twenty-five women who ; attend the lectures. The class includes several wives of physicians. The Woman's Club of New Orleans has a sewing department which keeps busy a superintendent and four assist ants. It finds sewing each day for sixty five women, who either work at the club-rooms, or go out by the day, or take their work home. A Woman's Directory is soon to be published in Chicago, giving the names 1 and addresses of 30,000 Chicago women who belong to /arious religious, benev olent and political organizations. The ; hook was compiled for the purpose of 1 estimating the number of women in Chicago who were interested in work ! not purely personal, and to encourage | them to a.greater unity of effort. Effects of Mental Idleness. Mental idleness is sure to load to men* tal ruin. He who will not exert his thoughts, who lets them passively re ceive whatever influence may chance to fall upon them, will soon lose the chief power which makes them valuable. It is an easy habit to fall into, and one which each person needs to guard against—that of listlessly reading, or listening, or dreaming instead of actively thinking and working up these influences into ideas and con victions that aro worth holding, because they have been justly earned. It is the vacant mind, where no good seed is struggling upward into life, which will soonest be covered with weeds.—Once* Week. CATARRH. Catarrlial Deafness—Hay Fever—A New Home Treatment. Sufferers are ’ not generally aware that these diseases are contagious, or that they are due t'o the presence of living parasites in tiro lining membrane of the nose and eusiachian tubes. Microscopic research, however, has proved this to do a fact, and the result of this discovery is that a simple remedy has been formulated whereby Catarrh, Hay Fever and Catarrhal Deafness are permanently cured in from one to three simple applications made at home by the patient once in two weeks. N. B.—This treatment is not a snuff or an ointment; both have been discarded by reputable physicians as injurious. A pamph let explaining this new treatment is sent on receipt of three cents in stamps to pay postage by A. H. Dixon & Son, cor. of John and King Street, Toronto, Canada.—Chris tian Advocate. _ Sufferers from Catarrhal troubles should carefully read the above. How we admire the man who happens to catch us when we are doing a good deed on the sly.—Atchison Globe. Consumption Surely Cured. To the Editor:—Pleaso inform your readers that I have a positive remedy for the above named disease. By its timely use thousands of hopeless cases have been permanently cured. I shall be glad to send two bottles of mv remedy free to any of your readers who nave consumption if they will send me their express and post office address Respectfully, T. A. Slocum. M. C., 181 Pearl street. New York. When a cashier goes to Canada his em ployer's face and his own accounts are the long and short of it.—Chicago News. Don’t Fool away precious time and money and trifle with your health experimenting with un certain medicines, when Dr. Pierce’s Gold en Medical Discovery is so positively cer tain in its curative action as to warrant its manufacturers in guarantying it to cure diseases of the blood, skin and scalp, and ail scrofulous afflictions, or money paid for it will be refunded. $500 Reward offered for an incurable case of Catarrh by tho proprietors of Dr. Sage’s Remedy. oOcts., by druggists. Pr is tho unmarried lady who can give her sisters points on the art of how to manage a husband.—Bos ton "Courier. You hardly realize that it is medicine, when taking Carter’s Little Liver Pills; they are very small; no bad effects; all troubles from torpid liver are relieved by their use. A skillful cook is the most popular of Interior decorators. It is no longer necessary to take blue pilts to rouse the liver to action. Carter’s Little Liver Tills are much better .Don't forget this. The merchant has to drive a sharp bar gain when trade is dull.—Kearney Enter prise. We recommend “Tansill’s Punch” Cigar. Tiif. golden stair appears to be the only re Liable tiro-escape.—Binghamton Leader. ^'MOTHERS m, Friend” Sw ■dS»jB5S* BRAOFIELD REGULATOR CO. ATlANTAji SOLO RYAiL DRUGGISTS. an — { ^ vgmKi ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50o and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly ‘for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept anv substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL LOUISVILLE. KY. HEW YORK, N.V. Oregon, the Paradise of Farmers, Mild, equablec!imate} certain and abundant crops. Best fruit, grain, grass, stock country in the world. Full information free. Address Oregon Immigration Board.Portland,Oregon Talk nbout generalship! If Napoleon had ever seen a girl climb n barbed-wire fence he would have held the honors of Auster litz at nothing.—Binghamton Republican. An extexdeo rorrLARiTY. Brown'» Bron chial Troches have for many years been the most popular article in use for relieving Coughs and Throat troubles. There is no full stop to the furnace in cold weather. It always requires the colon —Boston Gazette. to economize. It is a *uf„ ,a, Tln that the bt*l is always the c/irajJL? t0Afo):nw physician may cost you your life AT$heaP have Malaria in your svstom von n^n^°u only be miserable, but unfit!u/worlTV0* time is money lost One dollar 8MntLf°n Shallenberger s Antidote will Cur« ,U for twenty-four hours. Sold by Druggl8^u ,a A short acquaintance—the man -v w b0"™ -oSai some pSlpta'KvMrt“i/En°toblo'J"’btl * / topVHImrr jfikg “LITTLE EO PEEP had lost her sheep and couldn’t tell where to find them.” So the old nursery rhyme says, and it goes on to bid her “ Leave them alone and they'll come home and bring their tails behind them.” All this may be true of lost sheep, but if you have lost your health you cannot afford to leave that alone. It will not come back of its own accord. Somo people brag that they never bother about colds. They “let them go the way thoy came.” Alas! too often the victims go — to a consumptive’s grave. Until vory re cently a cure for Consumption, which i* universally acknowledged to bo scrofula affecting the lungs, would have been looked upon as miraculous, but now people are beginning to realize that the disease is not incurable. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis covery will cure it, if taken in tune and given a fair trial. This worfd-ronowned remedy will not make new lungs but it will restore diseased ones to a henlthv stato when other means have failed Thousands gratefully testify to tills. It is the most potent tonic, or strength restorer, altera tive, or blood cleanser and nutritive, or flesh builder, known to medical science. For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood,11 Liv er Complaint” and Dyspepsia, or indiges tion, it is an unequaled remedy. “Golden Medical Discovery'' is the only medicine of its class that u sold by drug gists under a printed guarantee from the manufacturers, that It nil] benefit or cure, in every case of disease for which It is re oTnmenaed, or money paid for it will be refunded. World’s? Dispensary Medical Asso ciation, Proprietors, M3 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. p" H3»r* is ofrored by the manufacturers of DR. SAGE'8 BlESwMraSJ CATARRH REMEDY, for a cose of Catarrh in %g*P If — if "fia.a^wwaAbBI the Head which they cannot euro. Hv its mild, soothing, and healing properties, Dr, Cage’s Remedy cures the worst cases, no matter of how long standing. 50c., by druggists. Gaiii 15 fmfls. “I have been a great sufferer from Torpid Elver and Dyspepsia. Every thing I ale disagreed with mo autll I began taking 1 ean now digest nny kind of food; never have a head ar lie. find have guin« ed fifteen pounds in weight.” W. C. nCIIi'LTZt, Columbia, S. C. SOLD EVERYWHERE. CREAMBALM^p^^h /a was surprised after using Ely's Cream Balm tiro memths to find the right nostril, which was closed for 20 years, was oprneand free as the other. 1 feel very thankful.— li. H. Cressengham, 2 >5 IRth Street, «. ppijpris Brooklyn. HA,I “FEVER A particle is applied into each nostril and is aerrec able. Price 50 cents at drir?grists; by mail, registered. 60 cents. ELY BROTHERS, 56 Warren St., yew York I CURE FITS! When I say cure I do not mean merely to stop them for a time and then have them return again. I mean a radical cure. 1 have made the <J1se*se of FITS, EPI XEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS a life long etudv I war rant my remedy to cure the worst ca.-es. Because ethers have failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send at once fo^a treatise and a Free Bottle of my infallible remedy. Give Express and Post-Office, ill (i. ROOT, M C., 1*3 Pearl Street* New \ ork. AME THIS PAPER every thne you write. WAT STRONG, 8SO Main Street. MEMPHIS, TENS. tr Special attention to collecting and MATTERS PERTAINING TO 1HUL ESTATE. ■grNAME THIS PAP£P» •▼ery time youwnte TUDAAT and STOMACH rHROAT are CURED by ISI-'O KO-KO TULU ! *r-5AX£ Tfllt FAPl-It every time you wetto. A F” 1 Pff1 For rNVE!fTORS. 40-pas A a sA B K-gJ B KP BOOK PREP:. AOdr*:«s Yp BA Q 5-3 M w. T. FitxferaM. Attorney 3 P J B UbEvI JBl m Law, Wiakiacwi, I>. C. friAXS WSTirlil ftrerjlime you write. ACENTS CTANl PY’Q KXrtOBATIONBlii WANTED O 1 AFILlI 0 \trie*- *'*w | Beft urns. >V4\jnal FubUshiag Cv>, bt. Loim. F. OZAMNE & CO., -tinware, I -HOUSE 'f FURNISHING GOODS. r.an,|u, Oils. Orates, Kefrliter»to«. «r*»' Itcn-nrr, t'ntlerv and ver« arc,'laniif urera of PI.AIS and .J AFAXiVEIJ T'.v W1 K E, GA I- VA M/.EII K«> " ) ; Office. Salesroom Rrid Factory, 5S3 • Prrond. tr Send for Ctttalo&no and Price L-J'v-lTi'.uiirF City rail on tis. ME«1*1II*. I EX XESSLi AME THIS TAPER ...rj ttau jot »r!« : | MPORTER8 Or CHINA, CLASS ■ AND QUEEN8WAB® V^Vcrv^A. Cc. -MEMPHIS. CSnS.ad yonr orders for MASON FBI IT JA • ASSORTED PACKA6ES lor^'ul'^Vu-'TBADf AGENTS WANTED to SHI WHITE-PINE LINIMENT, THE CONQUEROR OF PAIN. Address I.OI IS I.Al'KAXSOS MEMPHIS. TENNKsoEE . PAPER #f«rj tin# you write. BOILEBN. SHAFT**®. I-Hlleys. SI com J »■£ Inspirator*. Etc. P!»" “ _ ■ V tlon. Mill and KF.PAIIt*. Archil.dural IK"' CHICKASAW IRONWORKS, tiiylslby1 .JOHN E. KAXDLEdsdl.. MemfbU, *e» garSA^E THIS PAPER «?«rj that you wnUt —■ SBPJD. SIIS :r,r*S CANUIE8 x LY A!*U CAHUrrt11 PCTUP. AddreM FLOYD A MOONEY, MENIP",J ivaaju tkii papxr «,«y d« jh *ra _ BUSINESS COLLEGE, MEMPinj*. Tf.>>^)al,B _I^^rwjxTEjgl1! 01? to 58 a day- Snm i AO FREE. ttne*»<* ”.?%;,h»£B to.. m«h.' if W BULWSTEIt SAFETY BEY HOLUtU yf., * v t THIS PiPEB «»CTJ aw icam**_— \a/ a pn m q THE BfST «.»v.r *3.7 | WAuU IN O 2X in.. y>i- 3Kla-~:?jvic*ug»- K/i : Farmer* * laborer* Bnioa Kicbang*, - ■jAUf STTDT. Book keeping. Pcnn »n jh.ir,<,.i.oi Hunt =• ! by wall. Circulars free. B“>“J — : ______ 1272 A. N. K. F... - WHEV WK,TIS» ™ AjVi-rVto*-^1 - ^ state that J«u •»* tU* y“b«r*