Newspapers / The North Carolina Prohibitionist … / Oct. 28, 1887, edition 1 / Page 4
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TEMPERANCE. ? ' Honest Honesty t 1J1 ryJ -.t 4? Ati; : ' -' ' VyJ i:;i"ijr--'i .y f 1 -Honest man . ? . i . with an .:' V.; '.. ' Honest indignation ; . ' can, in an -' V"' i; .. -j-Honest manner V ; '.X ?yy- and with an ' ,.' - j ; ' .-'' : Honest enthusiasm, ' " .- " - through an ' : . Honest use of' '.. . - Honest Politics : . ; Honestly join in an - : l-yk-: Honest, crusade .-.';....' ; ; :-. .-Honestly ' ' :', .--;:''' '" Annihilate " ; v ' . the . -r. v Hum Potoer, - -. ; . as an ' - -.'X-'f:yyy..- - Honorable " - , ; . : ' . achievement of an :"i''?VN . HoneU purposoj ; V- . to seen re his country's v HONOR. O V . " - Demorest, A Disarmed Soldier. - . Th. .T n TTolland said: ": " . 1 A wine drinkinsr clergyman is a soldier disarmed; he is not only not worth a straw in the fight, he is a part of the impedimenta of the temperance army. "We have a good many such to carry who ought to be ashamed of themselves, and who very soon will be." - Alas that there should yet be any such dis 'armed soldiers! National Advocate. - Ihe Temperance Field. From all present indications it . appears certain that the movement for legislation against -: the saloon will - be pressed more vigorously and determinedly in the different State Legislatures during the coming winter sessions than ever before. "? The friends and advocates of high license, local option nd prohibition, have been unusually active dnr " mg the past summer and have greatly in creased m numbers and influence. The par tial and temporary defeats the prohibition ists have sustained in Michigan, Texas and . Tennessee have only served to stimulate them to new and renewed endeavors, to more earnest, active efforts for the overthrow of the saloon. - -The result of the summer's work, m tha i.-hr.lr ho a hosn nf the most encourag ing character; prohibition has been proved by undeniable testimony to be a practical success in Kansas Iowa,-and other parte i of the Union, and it will carry with it into the legislative halls this winter a greater weight of evicence in support of its claims than it has ever had before. The liquor men realize their danger and are organizing everywhere, to resist the enactment of laws against then traffic. . - ..,.- , A Western correspondent of the Neio I oris Times writes a long letter to that journal con cerning the Prohibition movement - in the Northwest. He expresses himself as being greatly impressed with the strong and rapid : growth of temperance sentiment in the agri cultural States and Territories. Where fifteen and twenty years ago liquor flowed as freely as water, where it was the ruling and popu lar custom to drink at all times and all occa sions; where saloons were far more numerous and better patronized than all other branches of business together, there is now a feeling of bitter and : determined hostility to the exist ence of the liquor traffic in any form.' It is only the foreign vote, it is said, in Michigan Wisconsin, .Missouri, and, Minnesota, - that keeps these States-from adopting constitu tional probibitien at once. - Some classes of foreign-born residents unite in the opposition to the saloon. Especially is this true of the Scandinavians. The correspondent takes pains to assert,- however, that this wonder- - ful upgrowth of temperance sentiment is not attributable in any: marked degree to moral or religious considerations. Poverty, envy, selfishness, in his. view, are at the bot tom of the whole prohibition movement in the Northwest Such a statement as this is a libel on the tens of thousands of noble Christian men and women who have every where led in the struggle against the saloon, who for years have been giving to the cause their timv their money and their prayers, and whos'a, patient and unwearying laborj haveTseen the hops, the inspiration, and the impelling cause of the whole movement. - :s Encouraging notes come from - every, quarterof the field. The State Temperance Alliance Of - Tenoessea has called a conven tion of the temperance organizations In the State,to take action with reference to temper ance legislation. ' The call has much significance.- r 4The: very large vote polled in the recent election has shown the great strength of the ' Prohibitionists, ; and - they - are con vinced that . they can sec re such legislation as they may desire,, .-The- canvas for - the constitutional amendment is - . well under wav in t)regon, where an election - will be held next month. Every county in Florida , which has voted on local option has adopte i it fThe lowa Supreme Court has de cided thatthe prohibitory law authorizes the State authorities to prevent the exportation of spirits, as we1.! as their use in the State. Prohibition sentimmtis strong -in Colorado. Pueblo,"Tthe second city in the State, has an anti-saloon,' government, and many of the smaller towns have local option : in full ."force. - " .. ; - It is reported that the Commissioner of In- . ternal Revenue is about to conduct an inves tigation into the manufacture of beer in this country.'? It is not understood that the inves tigation' will be mide in the interests of ie n perance;" yet it can hardlv -result in anything but good to that canse if the work is honestly and thoroughly performed. It is a well known fact that beer-is adulterated with - many kinds of harmful and poisonous drugsr and rendered unfit in every way for con sumption by man or beast. In its purest state it is an-in'oxicant, and productive of disease and death. New York Observer ; .v , Influence of Beer on Digest ionT -; Professor H. A Hare, M.D.;of the Uni var sity of Pennsylvania, has recently baeti s i'V jecting ; to scientific tests the popular idea that beer is an aid to digestion. It ha? long been supposed by many that thelighter forms of alcoholic liquors, particularly the various - forms of beer, are an aid to digestion. The expariments made, however, very clearly show that beer distinctly retards both s ili vary and gastric digestion.- This "was trm with reference to every specimen of beir ex-: amined, fome seventeen in all.- In more than : two-thirds of Jihe specimens of beer examined the stomach digestion was delayed consider ably more than one hour, and in some in-. - stances the delay was nearly two hours. Some recent experiments made by Professor Duggan, of Baltimore, at the Johns Hopkins University, show that alcohol in all its forms retards the digestion of starch in a very marked degree. These two set3 of experi ments together show very conclusively that beer retards the digestion in- conse-roance of the alcohol whiob it contains. ; When it is considered that the nutritive valne of beer is so exceedingly small that, a whole ho.zshead contains no more actual nutriment than a single loaf of bread, it will at-oace appear that the popular faith in beer as an aid to di gestion or to nutrition has no foundation whatever. Good Health. -. .. . r ; Prohibition in the Sonth. " The strength of Prohibitioc throughout the South is each dayj. becoming more ap " parent. The greater portion of Georgia i . under prohibitory laws, or at least prevented from the sale of liauor bv local outio:i. and ; so is a laree portion of : Mississippi. In Florida, where the same county campaign is being . carried on, the Prohibitionists are meeting with unexpected success. Of fifteen ; counli js that have lately held elections in the matter of prohibitfon twelve h ive voted against the sale of liquor, and there are half a dozen other elections at hand. In Florid, unlike ihe other Southern States, the nezroea have generallyr-voted lor probib t o an 1 ih those ojunties in which they are inoit nu tneyare nwft.m - naerous the ; entire anti liquor ma juniy is greatet. . The fact. was noticed some twoor three years ago that the Prohibition ques- - tion was bsing transferred to the fcoufch and that thj movement was giining strmcth : here and was rapid y . spreadinar, ,but few imagined that it would develop v a I the strength it - shows to-day. Nevcrl Orleans Times-Democi at. ' " t . " ' . -W. C- T. U. Bu I let i n." ' v y: Hon. Henry W. Blair is writing a; history of the temperance movement in this coan- try. "''"'' K "'' --:';s'V:' ;:' '.. ' y '': Liquor men have dollars at st ike; Chris- - tian men have sons at stake. ;v , Which are the most valuable' ; ; ""'.- '-v.' ;- "; Mrs. Mary A. Livermore has - delivered ; more than eight hundred temperance .ad dresses. ; .'.;.,; ' . ';" - . fxootxos 0 08 sooorrs oa" ojom. ejoq 31 'ppiOM orni.w jo ..rr. irf QiTi mi . nosn avou Aoucui xp.T. ; - r c - Young man! if you would avoid the risk of ip.h stino-a the soul of a son who, : with a spade of vice, digs a grave for his mother," take the vow . of total abstinence, bind it as a talisman about your character, and resolve never to cross the threshold of a liquor saloon. . AGRICULTURAL. TOPICS OP INTEREST IJEIiATIVE TO FAltM AND GAUDi?f. ..; , - , Disease in Sheep. " . -v' '' A soft, puffy swelling under the jaws Is a symptom of various diseases in sheep arising from -impoverished:; blood and dropsical condition. This is caused by anything which 'prevents full nutrition and oxidation of the blood. - Thus a dis order of the liver caused by the presence in it and in the gall bladder of parasites, known ns flukes, produce this pulfy swell ing ; thread woi mi in the -throat jand Iung4 also cause this swelling under the jawj which contains watery serum.- It is also producedrby the injuriouseffect of grubs in .the head, which weaken -the sheep. When flukes infests the liver the whites of the eyes are yellow ;-when woraas exist in the throat the eyes are bloodless and pale and; the skin is thin and white, and grubs, in the head cause a discharge from the nose and violent snort? ingj The remedy for all these is to give four1 "drachms of turpentine every morn ing mixed with molasse3 or milk an hour before feedinsr. and to crive salt daily and fpftd liherallv with bran and oats. -New York-Time. -: -Vy - -i -y"i ' -;"' -"H; i Itat-Proof Corn Cribs. ' N. J. Shephesd writes to the Prairis .Farmer that after he had been unable to: exclude rats from hia corn crib by ordi4 nary - means, -he lined it with hemlock nlank'six inches wide, and covered the- floor and ceiling with the same material,? placing the plank about one-fourta or an. inchaDart. 'Not a rat has found its way into! the crib since. . -Mice, however, have found cntrince ; they seem able to gnaw, hemlock, while rats cannot.' To exclude these he would lay the floor with plank from four to six inches wide, with inch spaces sbetween them to admit ven tilation for the corn, and then cover the whole with woven' wire with - meshes which mice cannot pass. '- Nail on the inside of the studs woven "wire strong enough to resist the pressure of the corn, and with meshes to exclude mice. $ Then nail woven wire on the cross pieces over head. 1 The floor wire and that overhead need hot be very heavy: Such a crib wiil shut out both rats and mic? and let in ; more air ;than any other. Its extra cost I will be ; repaid . m a few years in clean, ; sound, .well dried and unnibbled corn, u '- How to Get Kid of Canada Thistles. Several correspondents make the bid ouerv of how to get rid Of Canada thistles. The only way that has met with general success is to prevent the tops irom grow ing until the roots die of exhaustion, or in. other words, until Ihe plant dies from h wtiv want of air and light. The reason the Canada thistle is so hard to kill out is because the roots are not only perennial but' they spread by underground root stocks. 1. e.. stems that branch - Qit un der ground and j- produce new plants. These-perennial roots and root-stocks are several inches below the depth of the ordinary furrow cut, and are not usually turned up in-stirring or breaking the ground. One plowing merely puts the land; in nice tilth for them to come up and make a good . crop of vigorous shoots, as with aa asparagus bed.. To kill them the land must be continuously nlowcd or the thistles .otherwise cut off for one, two or three summers. ;! time should not 1 elapse between the plowing to allow the thistles to get up and "get their breath, so to speak.' In hoed crops ithey are sometimes killed out by giving -constant attention. Ob servation leads to the belief . that the seeds are verv '. uncertain if irrown far North.- Many isolated patches are grown in Cmcaero on vacant lots and along ua improved streets. 4 These seem to spread rather slowly .by the underground root stocks, but their absence in adjoining lots and streets as favorably situated-in dicates that the seeds are not perfect, -Prairie Farmer -i . Making Cream Churn Easily, . : A lady friend, an experienced and suc cessful butter maker, thus explains how shomakes the butter come quiefcly as cold weather approaches: She keeps the cream crock -in the cellar as cool as lwssib e. and as the natural result it is too cool fur-good butter making, If the crv.am is directly heated over the fire it is apt to make soft: butter, as every housewife knows. What she does ; is to take ia ouart or a little more of sweet milk heat it quickly over the ; fire, and then mix it with the cream already in the chum, adding enough to bring it up to the; light temperaTurfc.T Jhe muter comes very umckly by this method, ana is not ii 5 i-i jj - j ! -m. ina4e soft late m the season. - It is not a plan, so well" adapted to butter making m hot weather,-for then the creamy unless kept on ice, usually needs no- warming. SomVusc hot water instead ot "milk,: but the advantages of the latter is that the warmi sweet milk imparts a better flavor to the.butter and- greatly improves jthe buttedmilk, besides, of course, making more of it. ;;-'-.:' ,; .;;'.' There is probably only a very small in crease; of butter that comes directly from the .heated - sweet milk. Possibly this furnMics no butter; but it does separate the butter particles more perfectly from the : cream than is possible otherwise The yield of cream and butter from milk should under most circumstances natu-r-illy . Increase in proportion to thCmilk as the' amount of the butter is lessened. A: farrow cow-five or six months after cajving - gives less but; richer milk than she does at first, ' . But what avails this to i he butter makcr, if he or she cannot separate the butter from "the cream in which it is. enclosed.' Adding-warm sweet milk seems-to entirely remove th:s diniciilty,'and has many other incidental ad y antasces. Cultivator. ; r-r ; .p cieaniness and Order in t3 iry:;toerwha Md veral years inhe li W .Yl'-y": uarrying, seems to ue.aiggmg into -some mnstvDraetices in the British Islev in a recent lecture oniDairy Farming"; he states mas it was not me u 1 duied' the milk alone," but. the food and. water which they put into , her, for the J Rn;mat waa oniy the machine which pro- : . - . . il ' 1 ? 1 . ,j ,1.- 0 milk- nn nream Ha irnnrfissed upon his audience the necessity there wa. for treating their; cows with gentleness, as in case a dairyniaid or any one else ili-trcatcd a cow, then she would not let mw uj..-v. ... . down her milk, land evil results would i follow".?-A cow must be milked- with rjVuckness, and no time ought to be lost iT fet $ng: the; milk strained into th ett ii 1 a: jvins. . Upon the great necessity fi f-. ii'Xnliness, that the'milk might pro iliK'.: the greatest quantity of good cream, li.- s.iid milk ought to be shallow in sum ; and deep in; winter, in - the pah.- uu if they allowed their cream, to fiminiai too; long on the milk it became ..;r, and this effectually, stopped the t nier obtaininff a good price for his bu t- , He believed- that a great' many . .... l ktiff or Bhnwn" nt tho rp.-prit ...ifintr show at York, were batl sole , -7 - - - lowing to the cream not having r :iik'i? from the milk until it had be in. ! f!cih wsc; Replying to the questi m -. j ua should they ke?p their cre.i . l before Ihey churn it, - he was aston ished to hear that the Yorkshire custom was only to churn once a week but he nrgedthem?to churn every third aay. They should Tceep each , skimming of the milk separate until about two hours be fore they put it into the churn. lie ad vocated every farmer being possessed 01 a thermometer, which could be purchased for one shilling, which he called alabor savir.g machine, because iVtold them.ex actly the temperature at which to churn. Sixty degrees temperature was hdouc me heat at which the cream should be churned." lie said that five-sixths of the bad butter made at the present day was due to farmers not knowing when to stop . churning 5 - L'H'.- - -: J:; AlMnt Horses. " Keiect ahorse with a big. coarse head; do not look -a second time at.-a' horse h either a Ion Black back or with a hollow back. ; r ; ' ";- -, ., :: ;-,..--'.;;;-' Where one horse dies-: from overwork in this country ' twenty die from exhaus tion, or want - of proper treatment. -: & sound :; horse ; will ; " stand a wonderful amount of work if he has the right kind of care while at it. : j--.;-;i 'frvs?-;r -5, -f If - A farmer who has a. good horse or two to turn into : money every year is gener ally one of a class, of men who are con- sidered thrifty : and irugat. i nere is. more clear money in raising gooa norses, if it is done judiciously, ; than in any other kind of live stock. .: .. ,' . . A correspondent of the London - Live stock Journal asserts that some horses cannot well do", certain kinds, of work which others can, owing to different spinal development. : He says if the back arches downward the horse cannot carry heavy weight, while if it arohes upward he cannot pull heavily. ; .For this reason contractors select horses higher at their withers than at their hips. "liiga-DacK horses cannot, back a load; whereas a horse with a low back can back any rea son able weight." i "". ;. , f '' ; ; Seasonable Bee Hints. -- .;. It is hecessary that bees receive as care ful ; attention as any other of the farm routine. The; person who expects to get nrofit from bees, be there few or many hive:, by letting them take care of them selves, soon gets disgusted, ana declares bees" do not pay. . Yet many farmers get fully as much; profit from half a dozen hives of bees,7 carefully looked to, as for any other investment of a similiar amount. . i v .' : ; There is no season : of ; the year when bees require more careful attention than during the latter part of September and through October, v Never allow a swarm to go into winter quarters, weak. Unite two swarms ; destroying outs ui oueens. Durincr the day remove as many frames from two hives as may suf- P506 t0 1;ave on,y oagh for the bees to I rin2tor nn 'iliw niionn that is to remain with the doubled swarm should be caged. Late in the evening place the frames of bees from one of the two hives in the other and release the queen, i Then feed daily until the swarm has about thirty pounds of; honey. j .Tne looa snouid oe the j best granulated sugar reduced into a rather thin syrup," or about the , consistency. : of i new honey. Melt the susrar and water together, so when it comes to a full scalding heat it will be of the right consistency. ' Do not Loil it down too thin, but add a little more sugar. " : Feed about sundown and from this until dark, half a pint to a pint a dav. and increase eradually. ' The oueen should eo.to laying immediately. and bv the time cold weather sets in the hive should be full of vounjr bees for winterinsr. L ' 'X . . -'i --''. Ia& small way, at least, it is preferable to winter out; of doors in a good bee- house, i Provide suitable boxes to place over the hives, so there ; may be six in ches of space on the side and top, leaving an entrance to correspond to that of the hive. Remove the supers, spread a sleazy cloth over the frames and pack the chaff all around the sides and over, the top. This will allow ventilation and absorb all rising moisture. Placea covering over the chaff to exclude damp, ahd the bees should winter nicely. , K- .; r: t Strong colonies that are weak;in stores should also be fed.- There will ths sea son be found many hives weak in stores. The sooner they are looked after and fed to increase the stores to a fulf wintering thee more mofitable t will th bees ; become Vanother season. Fani. Field and Stockman. . T : i The Torklsh Bnler's Meals. After his morning wralk in the garden the- Sultan" returns to his -own room. where he breakfast sitting on a divanr and the slave whose duty it is to serve the meaUv writes Oliver Harper, come3 in -fTl fiAVPrfti srnj,n w8 and kettles on a . ftlfl trav, rfchlv chased andTcov- ered with , a aeit and velvet cover, em broidered with gold threads and pearl, turquoise and coral beads. - -These, little kettles are placed,: one. by one,, upon another tray, smaller, and each one is first offered to . the chamberlainr who is obliged to eat -one spoonful from each to prove that it is not poisoned, after which it is offered to the Sultan, and so; on to the last. No living person 'ever eats from the same t a via, or with the Sultan, under any circumstances, or on any occasion. j;AU dinners I given to ambassadors the Grand Vizier and other Turkish functionaries may; eat together with 'the ; ambassadors,- and; the Sultan walks once around' the table, saying a word of greeting to the honored guests, but he never eats for sits down .with them. His food is r always cooked sepa rately and served separately,' and ep dishes are used at all, other than the pots ani kettles. 1 - , " , " - The Chinese my.' Thft Chinese have : a novel but effec v-?' live method; of prbyiding", against the f ,.iinrf nf : hanks." remarKea a naval 1 ititution susnend. the heads of the ; offi-. , - oriential law, be cut off and made part of the assets. As a consequence there has not been a bank failure in the Celestial Empire for nearly a thousand years." The repoiter could not help thinking that some of the Chi nese financial customs might be engrafted upon banking systems 1 of this country with advantages "to . poor .depositors John Chinaman may not . be much of a stump speaker, or warrior, or political wire puller, but when it : comes to flyin sr kites, playing euchre.'cleaning shirts and dealing with swindlers he can give his. Occidental' brethren:,T pointers and hold a lone hand every time. Philadelphia Call: ' ;C ? i St; j :'r: -IMX,- . 'S-'A ;Sad : FareTvellv-; "So you goto southern climate , . c ; ' To avoid the winter cold; - ;-;; yry I wish that I were with you, ,V"e could have good times untold. , ; - "You bachelors are foot-loo3e, -) X y'':: r And free to come and go; , i 1 ; ' , ': With men like me it's diiferent, -y We're tied to home you know, " U cT- "Mv health? Oh, I am never ' ; " ; : k - Afraid of frost and snow; ' , I My lovely wife wll make it .-' Quite warm for me. you know." - - - ,Merchn?-Tra"e'er. :A BANK PRESIDENT GOIIE SAIIilNQ FOB FRANCE '. "A CLOUD. - UNDER A Creditors Who Thought There Was h; Something , Crooked Papers for llfs Arrest Nearly Rbady-IIia ' , ; - - Trunks Went : Before Him. ; 5; . Charles L. ; Phillips, president ' of the de funct Columbian Bank at Philadelphia, has left the country, having sailed for Havre, France on Jihe Campagnie Generate Trans atlantique steamer La Champagn from New York. His departure was sudden and known to . but very few, and the belief is general that he left the country to escape criminal prosecution for; the part he took in the mis management of the broken bank, " The Columbian' Bank, which also .had a savings fund branch in Germantown, closed its doors on July oO, and made an assignment claimed by the oflicers to have been between 1 ?auu,uuu ana 3uu,ouu, ana tne assets more . than double thal amount. The appraisers, however: after about eight " Weeks' work,- v found that the assets consisted prmcipally of worthless stocks nd merchandise in ware-' houses on which advances ha K been made, in some cases equal to the full value of the. goo Js, and notes made and indorsed by Phil lips and his associates 1 The saving fund de-; positors;weremostly working people who had deposited tne savings or years wicn fnu lips and his associates, amounting to about $S0,000. - '--:: . r'-':-'. Several meetings or depositors were neia, ; and counsal had been retained. . ;- - The depositors demanded the arrest of Phil-- lips-on a criminal charge. He only laughed at the threat, ami told them that the failure of the bank . was an honest one, and they would all receive their money in . time, and declared there was no fraud about the. fail ure, and said it could not be helped. -f The chairman or. tne depositors' association which was formed at. one of the meetings, when informed of President Phillips' flight, said : " We hav ' been doing . all we could to- find evidence that ' would warrant his arrest on a criminal . charge, and we were just getting matters in good shape. We wanted to De sure oi naving eviuenue euougu to convict him and send him to prison before we made anv move in the matter. . lie nas no doubt heard of what was being done, and taken time by the forelock and got out of danger. A certain transaction of his came to lieht, and we think was actionable, and he may nave reoeivea a nmt oj. j.i was gen erally understood his trunks were sent away some time ago, and his flight is no surprise to us.n r- . x - - . - . One of the counsel for the depositors said: "We were almost ready to arrest him. ' The affidavit on which the warrant of arrest would have been issued has been' prepared and would have been placed in the hands of the district attorney in a few days.? ' ; - The affidavit sets forth that stock was bought by Phillips in his own name for a small sum, and immediately sold to the bank at an enormous advance. The depositors were swindled by Phillips. . ' : "He could be extradited, but the expense ;would be greater tjhan thesi poor people can bear." '" ".-"- ' i;:' " Phillips a short time ago sent his children to France, and gossip then said he was send ing his own trunk with them, and would snnn follow. ': - .. ' ' ..' - -. -- i ii. An Philadelphia paper ays in explanation of PrestFhiuips'suQdendepartureror urance i4Mr. Phillips, about six weeks ago, sent, his three younger children to the home of Baron de Lorme, a French nobleman and intimate personal friend, who resides near convent at which he wished Mr. Phillip's children to be educated." The children were sent t3 France, because it was the expressed wish of' the nobleman that they should come and live with him while attending school. Ten days afro, the Baroness de Lorme died sud denly of heart disease, making it necessary f r Mr. Phillips to sail, quickly, to provide other arrangements for his children in the event of unexpected changes in the Baron de Lorme's domestic arrangemeuts." . . . ' BLAZE IN ST. L01JIS. A Furniture Factory and' Business ; 7 Houses Burned Half a MUlion r' ;:-';,'--'';';'-: " Gone. T " . :':; - The most destructive fire that has occurred in St Louis in more than a year, broke out in the "Woolman-Todd!; Company's wholesale boot and shoe house, 413 Washington aveuue. It soon communicated to John Martin & Cb.'s wholesale clothing house next door on the east, inline sarao building, and then, sweeping swiftly through both stories, ign -ted the reaf part of the large five-story ware rooms of the Scarrett Furnishing Company, which were fil ed from cellar to garret with furniture. Here the firo raged with great fury, and in the course of an hour the entire budding ws gutted and all its contents destroyed.- South of the Scarrett buildmg, No 607, was the building of the Mihell f urni ture Company, the fourih and fifth stories of which were entrely ruined and the lower floors flooded with water. North of thebcir- rett building. No- C15 and 617 were occu pied by Leonard Roos, extensive f urriers The stores were also completely gutted, and their contents either wholly destroyed, or damaged beyond repair. Adjoining the Woolman-Todd Company, on Washington avenue, was Koerner'ssaloonand restaiirant. This was crushed by a falling wall and after wards burned. On the corner ol.JouTth street and Washington avenue, withm the ansle made by the stores of John Martin fie Co?, aad the Scarrett Furniture Company, stands the large -retail dry goods store of Wm F. Crowe & Ca, which escaped the fire, bnt a part of its west wall .was broken in by the falling of the east wall of Martin & Co.'s bu Ming, and the goods were dam aged bv water and smoko to the amount oi about 10,000, which is covered by insurance. The second and third floors over Koerners saloon were occupied by- A. .Weiss fis CO , manufacturers of - underwear - dn(lo' Their loss is 30,W i surafice $20,000.1 Tho wo 9 nmr as thev can be ascar- tained are: Scarrett Furniture Company, W S125.000. ; irsurance 5,000; Wooiman, JOSS iibui.w, , - cnnm. Todd & Cp; , lo- John marxin os two Z ' insurance $50,03;LeonardRoos,lo on stock fixtures, .tc.f75,0oa, nearly.covered by in surance; - Mr, Roos also had a large amount of furs of all description, belonging to ladies, which he had kept through the on storage, and which were insured fr about W 0 The value of them is t known. TheyHre without doubt entirely destroyed. Mitchel's Furnitmompanyrlo f$?? insurance fl2?X)0; Koerner's loss 1A00; suranc e$6,000; The total loss will fall but lit tle short of half a million. -IInW Trru;i v, .wa fi n was rasmsthe auiey Jail Building arfd Manufacturing Company s works on Decalb street, between Barton and i Trudeau streets.took fire and were (tetewj LosVS30,000 on stock f 10,000 on buildme; in- for ;$30)00 td .TTiveefl?v and has contracts for jails e ty and tother places to the amoimt of fo.uou. :yy A FATAL EXPLOSION. three Men Killed, Two More Wonnd . ed and a Building Set on Fire.-.'- . i E. C. Wilsdon "f t his japan oven, at Ses sions & Sons' foundry, at Uristol, Conn., in the room where a dozen men and boys were at work, tc, go to his dinner.-; He had but just gone Uut when the oven exploded with fearful vicience, instantly killing one man and two boys, lacerating two others : ana setting the building on fire. ' It was some time before theflanies were subdued,- and then there mere dragged forth the charred remains of the three victims. - They are John Shane, aged - thirty-one ; Burt Cleveland, aged eighteen, and Willie -Youngv;. aged fifteen - The wounded are Daniel Griffin and William Bonnier. " No reason can be assign ed for the accident.- The exp osion drw hundreds to the scene and the excitement wm trroat nnrfcirMi'nrv before it waslearned how many victims there were in the flames, ineuamage 10 me utuxuug S This" Spanish ' Qiieeu Regent; has signed a decree " authorizing fhe construction5 of ; six ironc Hds of 7,00 J tons each, which shall be capable of attaining -a speed of from sixteen to twenty miles an hour; also four large and sixty small torpedo boats. T: -- - Common Myths. : Ignorant folk, wonder-mongers and eyen scientific observers have : dissem inated many erroneous and exaggera ted notions which are not readily erad icated We are still told, for instance, of the Norwegian maelstrom; a fright-t; fnl whirling chasm in the sea capable of sticking down the largest ships, " though in reality .this -fearful "whirl pool" - is simply "a run of the tide through a; sloping ' channel, is rarely dangerous, and then chiefly on account of the rooks on which it may draw ves-' sels. : Sir John Herschel gave his in dorsement to the statement that stars may be seen in the daytime from the bottom of : a well, but this has been- proven to ue an error dv tests ironta ; shaft nearly half v a mile deep.- Mr John.Mnrdock has recently shown that" the Eskimos do not, as text-books of f)hy siology affirm, doze through their ong winter nights, keeping up their bodily heat by enormous meals of : raw -1." -Jl t ..it'-.:.' winter life is active, theirs food mostly cooked;-and their consumption of oil" not excessive.'- ? A still widely accepted belief is that the liair-snak3 is a: woh derfal transformation of a horse's .hair when kept in water, thoughT these odd; creatures (known to science as Gordius auaticus) really grow from eggs, and in early ; s tages . inhabit the: bodies of insects, i-A - very - old- idea,; without foundation in fact,', is that crocodiles shed; mournful fears, while - stories of toads" imprisoned in solid, rock are nu merous; and supported " by much evi dence, but have - probably resulted from imperfect observation. Accounts of the germination : of grain from the' mummy-pits ol Egypt have arisen from deception practiced , by tho Arabs in placing fresh seeds" with the belong ings ; of : the mummies. Though now known to be incorrect, tho inference that tho moon influences the weather is a very natural one to untrained ob servers, and is far le3s absurd than a thousand vagaries- that gain credence, such as the dropping xt live reptiles from the clouds, the ejection of ilive snakes and other creatures from the human stomach, . the - localization of water by a forked stick, the exthv guishment of fire" by sunshine," etc. Arkansaw-Traviler. .. Tto World's Largest. Cities. : -. The; following information is often inquired for, and, as it may be usefaL in many cases for reference, wo have compiled a table of the largest cities of the " world, with their populations as stated by the latest authorities.. Jn the ' absence of any official census, the Chinese cities have . simply to be esti mated, and of course must be accepted as an approximation - only. We have not given any city whose population is. below 500,00(2, though" there are many we could enumerate which "closely ap proach that fjeure. It - will be : seen that in .the thirty-five cities tabulated below , there are d2,olu,-:51 J souls, orv nearly ; tho - population of the Brit sh ' Isles, a' fact which cannot be grasped in a moment by anyordinary intellects Aitcbi. Japanr.l,S32,0;0!Madrid, Spaini. 500,100 Bang&ok, Mam.. 500,000 Moscow,Kusa 611,971 Brooklyn, N. Y. 771, 00 New York, N. Y 1,400,003 Berlin, Pra8Sia.l,li2,3' Paris, Franco;-.2,239,023 Calcutta, India. 766,238 Pe alcna,Java 50BH Canton. China. r.500.0X Pekin, China.. 810,00 C h a ngchootoo, . IPhiladelp i-v Pa ; 8o0,000 China...... . . . 1.000.CO 1 St. Peteroliarg, Chicago, -ffl.u-.i-- 715,000 Knssia ;-. Sartamv JP'n 766,164 96',17 'jonBtantmopie, Turkev, 700,03 Sianr China l.COO.0 10 JookChoo, China GlaBgow".ecottd JEjli g-Chow-foo, ,r. China..; .-.v...--; H a n g-Xoheon, China... .... Han-Kow.Ch'na King-te-Chiang, , China........ 630,000. Kt. iiOUlS, AlO. . &0O.WJ 514,018 Tat- Seen-Lojr, China. ...... . 600,000 CCO.OO0 Tien-TsiD. Cn'a 960.C0 - Tokio, Japan. .. C37.837 800,000;TEchantchaufa, - - 600,0001 Cnina . . 1,0C0,030 iTsin-Tchoo, - 5"0,000 China P00.003 67000 Vienna. Austria 7iW.105 Liverpool, Eng. London, Eng... 3,955,819 .Wooctanng.C'na. 800.00J U:yS: jCanht by a Clam. i; " -; ;.'A J traveler am ong the South Sea islands gives an account of huge clams so big that a single shell makes an admirable bath for a child the very touching of which is sometimes attend ed with fatal consequences. Diving for clams generally falls to the. share of the women,and aany a one has. met her doom from" getting nipped; by the ponderous dentated shell and so held a prisoner in the depths, never to rise again. Quite recently a poor fellow fishin g on one of the Paumotu atolls dived to the bottom of the lagoon, feel ing for pearl oysters, when he unlucki ly slipped the fingers of his left hand nto a gaping clam-shelL which closed and held him in a vise. The shell lay in a hole in the: coral, so that it was. impossible to reach ? the byssus by which it is moored in that safe harbor. The wretched man; in agony of mind and body, severed his own fingers with his knife and rose to the surface, hav ing, indeed, escaped drowning, but be ing maimed for life. ,' There have been other cases where a" diver thus impris-j oned has, - with greater deliberation," contrived to insert his knife into the shell -and so force it open sufficiently to' release his other hand. The Argo nau'. "."V:---;','.-r:-N-iiC".;ri--: ;. Postobtices were first established, in Paris in 1462; in Eng'and, 1581; in Germany. lG41 ; in Turkey, 1740. r Consumption Surely Cnrod.". ' J To the Editor: Please inform your readers ! tlof 1 Vavn 1 Smed a positive remeay lor ine aoove :a Rv its Hmelv use thousands of VatiaI aac '.iuim'Ii hva hmn nermftnentlv cured. ' i shall be glad to send two bottles of my remedy freb to any Of your - readers who 1 have con sumption if they will send me their Express and P. O. address. Respectfully, . , - T. A. SLOCUM, M.C., 181 Pearl Su, N.Y- Sumatra has anower "which crows to nine feet in circumference, and weighs, n teen pounds. : yy - - ' ; "-- ;. --':;-'." If you are bothered with "hard times" and want to learn how to turn your time into money ouickly and pleasantly, write to B. F. Johnson & Co., Richmond, Va. They have a -plan on foot tiiat you ought carefully to consider. :j.4 1 Cur lonely enough the Wan-who is always In j a pickle doesn c p; eserye na ieuii:r ww w a cent. -J -j -' ' ' ' - - Purity arid Str The former in the blood "and the latter Jhronghout the system, are necessary to the enjoyment of per-, feet health.'The best way to secure both Is to take Hood's Sarsaparllla, which expels all impurities from the blood, rouses the kidneys and liver, overcomes that tired feeling, and Imparts that freshness to the , whole body which makes one feel perfectly well. "1 have taken not quite a bottle of Hood's Sarsa parllla, and must say It Is one of Jfhe. bestmedlcine3 for giving an appetite, purifying .theblood anu regu lating the digestive organs, that I ever heard of. It did me a great deal of good."-Mas. By A. Stajuvxt, Canastota, N. Y. !: ; - . , " ' ; ' " - H ood's Sa rsa pari I la - Sold by all druggists." 1 ; six for $5. Prepared only by C. ITHOOD CO Apothecaries, Lowell. Mass. y' I oo poses One Dollar " "" TCI7 Wlla. SAVE HIONKY Time Palo, Trouble j y. and wilt C'fJKK CAT-ARRH ". ' . 11V tJSINO ;- '; .. - Els Cream Balm. ApplyBalm into each nO'stril J y e bos, 235 Greenwich fct, N . m a a m m T.fuIlM Wanted to nse oat ; ! iUUUiUUU "Magnetic Hairpins." They i Believe Nervous Headache and the discomrort orten caused by all otner hairpins, sample mo.t- j - Address . G. E. M. CO Vlneland, New Jersey m - to Soldiers Heirs. Send Umj MrfliMf f)n for circulars. COL. J lii- I yillUHSHAH. Att'y. Washiiiwon, D..C. i . .. . " $500 Reward. - The former proprietor of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy for years made a standing, public of fer in all American newspapers of SoOO reward, for a case of catarrh- that, he could not cure. The present proprietors have renewed this of fer. All the druggists sell this Remedy, togeta-, er with the "Douche," and all other appliances advised to be used in- connection with it. Mo catarrh patient is longer able to say '1 cannot be cured." Xou get $500 in case of failure. The gardeners in India are all Buddhists. J'. Coaramptlei, Scrofula. General Debility.!, ;v- .Waitini Diseases of Children, Chrome Coughs and Bronchitis, can be Cured ": by the nse of Scott's Emuxsioh of Pare Cod. Liver Oil with Hypophosphitev. Prominent physicians use it and testify to its great value." 'ildase read th-s following: "I used Scott's EniUi'sion for an ohstina'e Cough w;t'a Hemor rhage, Lo33 ,or Appetite, emaciation, a eep lcssnfsa, &c. AlTof these have now left, and I believe your Emulsion has saved a case of well-developea Consumptio3."--T. J. Fikdlst, Lone Star, Texas. ,; - . -There-i.yery little serf bathing in Russia. "y: -, Brewn'BLitrtejoUe;';' ""Why, Bro wn, how short vour"coat is," said Jones one day to his friend Brown, who wittily replied: i4e.?L but it will belonz enouErh be fore I pet another, - Some men spend so much; tonneaicines mat neitner neal nor nelp them, that new clothes is with them like angels' visits -"-fiew and far between. ? Internal fevers. weak ness of the lungs, shortness of breath and lin gering coughs,soon yield to the magic influence -of that royal remedy.Dr. R.V. Pierce's "Golden Meuicai discovery.". : - .- Market weaker.'f report Onions stronger milk . - . . "I Cure Fits." " -' This heading is a familiar sight to most news paper readers, as it nas appeared regularly in th hftsfc nublieat.ions for manv vcais oast. T XT n. r- lOQ Dso.l C Tifanr VM has a' world wide reputation as a successfnl specialist in this distressing disease, and has, no doubt, cured more eases than all other doc tors combined. As an evidence of good faith the doctor sends a free sample bottle of his rem vi v to all Ruffercrs who write for it if they eive 1 7 1 11. T. IbUUU Ul AW X V. -kV.. Hon XW1&. their Express and Postofflce address. . -" TJn satisfying food Tho 'provisions" of a mortgage. -; ', : .-- , y, y "': Functional derangement of the female sys tem is -quieEly cured by the use of Dr. R. V.. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription." It removes pain and restores health and strength. By all druggists. - . t . . . ' S'one bullets were used in 1514; those of iron are first mentioned in 1550. r.. -y.. ; ii; -- Pnprhterav Wives and fllotherw'.; Eend lor Pamphlet on Female Diseases, free fecurely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi, Utica,N.Y;. Rot A i, Glue' mends everything! Broken China.Glass, Wood. Free Viais at Drugs & Gro The value of nronertv ennually destroyed throughout the worjd is put at 58,520,000, KIDDER'S - A SURE CrttK FOR INDIGESTION and DTSPEPSI A. Over 5.000 Physicians have sent us their approval ot DIGEST YT.IK, saying that It ia the best preparation fnrTnfliirnst.inn that thev have ever used. We have never heard of a case of Dyspepsia whera DIGEST TUN was taken t hat was not cured. FOB CHOLERA INFANTUM. IT WttX, CUKE THE MOST AGORA VATED CASES. .' ; IT WILL. STOP VOMlTlJN HI fKWn AJN U X . - IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION. For Slimmer Complaints and CEronic Diarrhoea, which are the JwA results of imperfect digestion. DIGESTYLIN will effect an Immediate cure. -- Take DYGESTYLIN tor all pains and disorders ot the Btomach ; ther all come from Indigestion. Ask ronr Urufrgtst for DIGESTYLIN (price $1 per large liottle). - If he does not have It send one dollar to us and we will seul a bottle to you, express prepaid. Do not hesitate to send your money. Our house is reliable. Kstalilisheu twenty-five years. -WM. F. KIDDER ifc CO., ' ' ' Maim faciuriue C'lcinlat,t S3 John St.. Pi. Y. The treatment of many thousands of cases, of those chronic weaknesses and distressing ailments peculiar to females, at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical institute, Buffalo. N.-Y., has afforded a vast experience in nicely .adapt ing and thoroughly testing remedies for the cure of woman's pecuhar maladies. ' v- Dr. lierce Favorite Frescrlption is the outgrowth, or result, of this great and valuable experience. Thousands of testimo nials rewired from natients and from physi cians who- have tested it in the more aggra vated and obstinate cases which bammed their skill, prove it to be the most wonderful remedy ever devised for the relief and cure of suffering women. - It is not recommended, as a " cure-all," hut as a most perfect Specific for woman's peculiar ailments. - - , - - As a powerfal. iuvigoratlng Vonie, it imparts : strength to the whole system, and to - the womb and its appendages- fat particular. For overworked, "worn-out,, ,nHArir " dAliilitated tflohera. milliners. dressmakers, seamstresses, 'shop-girls,'' house- keepers, nursing motners; ana ieeoie women generally, DrPlerce's Favorite Prescription is .the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic. A ft n anniniUK uuu sii-cuKu7uiue qualed and is invaluable in allaying and jud- rlninir nervous excitability.- lrritaDincy, ex- tiniiKtion. rtrostratiou. hysteria, spasms and nthor rtistrpswinir. nervous symotoms com monly attendant upon iuncxionai ana organic liaoaan -f t.hn womb.- It induces reireshlog -aiAr.-Til relieves mental, anxiety ana ae- in iccitimata ' . medicine, carefully compounded by an experienced and skillful nhvnieian. and adaoted to woman's delicate organization. - It ia - purely vegetable in its composition - ana penuoiiy iuu uu m no effects in any condition of the system. For morning Bickness, or nausea, irom wuaiever cause arising, weak stomach, indigestion, dys pepsia and kindred symptoms, itsuse, in small doses, will prove very beneficial. ' "lavOrlW rrvscriiiiivu " mm Alva care for the most complicated and ob stinate oases of leucorrhea, excessive flowing, painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions. prOlapSUS, Ur XUllUK Ul wro nuuiU) ncoa uova, ' female weakness, anteversion. retroversion, bearing-down sensations, chronic congestion inflammation and ulceration of the womb, in flammation, pain and tenderness in ovaries, .accompanied with," internal heat."- : jtm a regoiaior anu proiuuier v- i "na tional action, at that critical period of change lrum II 1 1 i W W UUiOUUWU, A- c T .... lv - . v. - scription ' is a perfectly safe-remedial-agent. ana can proauce oniy gooa reniuus. iri rvHKiii ffieeious and valuable in 'its effects wnen taken for those disorders and derange ments incident to that later ana most critical period, known as The Change of Life..' i "Favorite Prescription." when taken In connection with the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical .Discovery, ana email laxauve doses of Dr. Pierce's Purffetive Pellets (Little Iiiver Pills), cures Liver, Kidney and Bladder diseases. " Their combined use also removes blood taints, and abolishes cancerous and scrofulous humors from the system. '; , "Favorite Prescription" is the only medicine for women, sold by druggists, under a positive gnaran tee, from the manu facturers, that it will give satisfaction in every case, or money will be refunded. This guaran tee has been printed on the bottle-wrapper, and- faitbfuUy''cattfed-out.tor -many, years. mm wii m i ir mi m i r .. . i m liarsre bottles 100 doses) $1.00, orWN bottles, lor For large. Illustrated Treatise on Diseases of ; Women 060 pages, , paper-covered), send ten cents in stamps. -.- Address, - - - -' Tcrld's tlspsssary Kssiical Issscialion, . 663 Main SC, BTJFFAIiO, N.TT. MerDtalse Haklt Cnrr4 la K to 2U daya. fo nav till eurea. lr, 4 6tebeB, LcaaaB.Onia. and ctraera ina "nsh Brand wa '7 ULl i mm Ld U. LZ3 Wholly unlike artificial systems. Any book learned in one reading. FcTTDAMF-NTir, Principles of the Loisettlan oystm. L Wholly unlike Mnemonics-In Conception. Pro cess, Development and Result. 11. - ine natural Memory Kestorea to its rxgra wo and made powerful. Precisely as the Microscope and Telescope oonstit ate a Selentltio extension of the Nat ural Eyesight, so ia the ScientificaUy trained Memory an extension oi tne ftamrai Memory. - - - . III. . The oower of Coutinaous Attention crowlruc apace with the Memory. . . - ---.-. - tle highest decree by tho Ave lessons, the System Is iv. Biemory ana Attention- oeina strenetnenea to no longer usea, except in rare cases at nrst ana aiter- waras-in none at mi. "Prof. Loidttc cave tne a newmiBOiT"-Hoii. Judah 1; Benjamin "It has greatly, strengthened my natural memory'' Hon. W. W. Aslr,-late O. S. . Minister to Italy "Prof . Lolsette's system appears to me to warrant the strongest endorsement" Joan C. Minor, M. D. "1 regret that it did not form a-5i part of the curriculum of our schools" Stephen ,- Band, Esq., Paymaster of the V. S. Navy "There is not one Institution of learning in the land that would be without Its aid if its worth were known" Rev. A. J. Mclnerney, Reetsr of St. Mary's Church, Annapo- lis "I have formed one class oy correspondence; and have decided that hereafter I sha 1 try to induce all my students' 'to master this system before they engage in the linguistic studies under my direction" Rev. Francis B.-Denlo, Professor of Hebrew in the Bangor Theological Seminary- "Prof. Loisette's ' system is a great boom not-only to. the student of aorthand. bufio the veteran reDorter' W. W. Wil- soa. Stenographer. . . '"Since learning your System. I find tcim soon learn mj Iiay any piece oi. music witnout notes, a xeas nn- possible to me formerly 'Eliza Cawthorne "No man has a memory so poorhat this method will not greatly aid it; nor has any one a memory so good as not to stand in need' of the help which it can fur nish" -Prof. Win. R. Harper, of Yale -"By his Sys tem I have already-learned one book In one reading, aDd I intend to loarn many more in the same way" Sir Edward H. Meredy th Bart. "I coniidently rec ommend your system to all who desire to strengthen their memory and cure their mind wandering" oernam fiuis, isq.- "it is a perfect memory sys tem" Weeily Budget "! do-not say that I made myself a walking Hume or Macaulay, but I do say that what I had learned. 1 knew uerfectly. thanks to your system, . The result was full marks Hour- fteginaui a. jnurray, n.sq. "i nave just come. vu. iwp iu n uuisatj cAaiiiitiKuon, anu 1 owe my buu- cess in great measure to the general improvement wnicn your system naa enectea tn my retentiveness . I have nonesl- stem to all wishing to train their memo ries effectivetv. and are therefore wllllnir to take rea- - sonable pains to obtain so useful a result" Mr. Rich- - ard A. Proctor, the Astronomer "Prof . Loisetfe did not create a memory for me: no, nothing of the kind. And yet be did for me what amounted to the .. same thing, for he proved to me that I already had a memory, a thing which I was not aware of till then. I had before been able, like most people, to store up and lose things in the dark cellar of my memory', but be showed me how to light up the cellar. It is the difference to change - the figure between having money where you can't collect it, and having it in Four pocket. The information cost me but little yet value it at a prodigious figure" S. L. Clemens, (Mark Twain) ''There Is this all-important diirer ence between other systems and that of Prof. Lol sette, that while the former are-arbitrary and aru ftclal the latter Is entirely based upon Physiological and Psychological principles" The Peoples Friend thus saved twenty hours out of twenty-four iu learning the two sermons" Rev. S. H. Lee. Class of 100 Columbia Law students: 200 at Merlden: 250 at Norwich; two classes of 200 each at Yale; 400 at Wellesley College and 401) at University of Pennsyl vania; 330 at Oberlin College and three large classes at Chautauqua. Prospectuses sent POST FREE, with opinions In full of eminent people in both continents. Great inducements to Correspondence.Classes. Address . . . PROF. NOISETTE, - - - 237 Fifth Avenue. New YorlC : -- ' : B N D ' ;'. -Gone where the Woodbine Twineth. Hats are smart, but "Kocoh c Rats" beats them.' Clears out Rats, Mice, Koaches, Water Burs, Flies, Beetles, MothSr Ants, Kosqpltces, Bed-bugs, insects. Totato Bugs, Bparrows. - Bkunka. Weasel, Gophers, Chipmimts, Moles, Musk Rats, Jack Babbits, Squirrels. ICe. & S5c. Washlneand Starching Powder. A revela tion in housekeeping A new discovery, beats the world. How to Wash and Iron. Dishes, Glassware, Windows, made clear as crystal, with Bough on Dirt. unipiO fIDI O The most inexperienc I UUlIU UlitLo ed can, with Bough on Dii-t, do as nice washing ana Ironing as can be done ihahy laundry. Boiling not neces sary ; unlike any other IS "can be used in both WASHING and STARCHING yonneedbafe no fear in using this article: being free irMn vile alkali it does not rot, yellow nor injure the -guest fabric; clears, bleaches, wbitens. Ho only article that can be added $0 .starch dsot 6r cold) to give a good body and beautiful -jrloss; insist on your Druggist or Grocer pet " t.pgit for you. 10 & 25c. E. S.Wells, Jersey City. RQUGHsECORNS for hard or soft Corns 15c. At PruKpists, learn all ilioit a liar f Hew V lo Pick Out (inod One ? How tohitw Imptr" lection aad ae 4uart " aat'nsl 1" rand? How to and effect n cn; wlipn name "iffJC." t Tell the Aee- by -the -Teel? Vhitt call the X) i fl e r e t la rt Sf the . Animal f Ha. r. slioa n rTfl-rno 1 roorrl V All tfctat and at her Vuluabl lniorinaiion relatias I i . Ji Sli lliV II I iTsthatI I be btalned JJf rrHuiuK will nr-t nwH r "V r, j BOOK 'CO.. 134 Leonard St. H. X FOR ONE DOLLAR. rA flrat-eiasa lMcUouary gotten out at mall price to encourage the study or the OrrAiaa -fimam. It rives KnKltHh -word with tb 6fnKR equiVSenl. nd Uermau wordsj with bnarlistt .drfinl: Ions.-A wry rheap book . Send c SI. 09 w BOOK IMJB. MOUSHi, 131 Leonard -. I'.Us, ud on.- of th boolca Oy return inMI. ' . , r- Win t mv curs I do not mean merely to stop them tor a time end then hare them return aain i . 1 mean a. radical core. I have made the disesae ot FITS, EPSY orFAIiLlNG SICKNESS a Jifo-long etndy. I warrant my remedy to care the worst caws. Because others have failed is no reason for not now recoivrng a . cure. Send at once for a treatise and a Fre Bottlo of my infallible remedy. Give Express and Post Omeo. Sr6. liOOT. M, d, 183 Pearl St. New York. . -,-. " MTCn to sen NOVELTY BTJO AGEHTS WAlITEO MACHINES and BUG . iifciis tnr mabinir Rues. f5 TTnnda. Mlttena. etc Ma chine sent by maU for $1.' Senu for late reduced price list. E. KM fc Co.t TJed Q AIILE GREASE fTGet tho Genuine. Sold Ercrrwhere. Blair' f;il Grea! English Gout in4 G ritlUa Rheumatic Remeay. Oval Bext 34 1 rsand. 14 JPHla. Iinnrr FOR ALL. S30 A wek and expenges i f il lT f f paid. Valuable outfit and particulars W Ullkk free. P. O. VICKEBY, Augusta, Me. riBXlCAli YARptuoafno" 1,1 dress K. II. "UelgtomfcL'e.j SOLDIERS amd their Widow, no Tv lor juattu. rifrrA MONTH. AgenttWanUd. 00 best well. IvV ! 1 1 lnpr articles in the world. 1 sample Free. V vl Add ress JA Y BROS SON, Detroit, Jtftcft. AT r? f " fi Obtained. Send stamp for QATEulb Inventors' Guide. L. Bw i ham, Patent Attorney, Washington.). C. --. .iL Wo W IP .FTx.Au rL Write - rvniloldeV-, Holly, Mich. imnrovement. 'IHiRIlBANIO; FrernoD O. PEUSIQUS Au Increase may be due. Ad dress MILO B-. STCvTt Co, Grover Dd'g.Washlugfn.D.C Sltna Wr.te ii.m, mrn meu. . uuo . - . . t . . tt mn nAt TH rettlt' Eye Sarre la GVinb Sum, rbutlTsoTd atKe"aboxby dealera. 17 'FrrnVIllB Best Ifatenrocf i '. uva-L3 uu--mi n n V' 8 m '4 i Gi II E - rx- - - Th FISH BRAND SXTCKEB 5s waTranted wntsrpToofl and wit! keep you dry "trafle - marK. xmtimteu"""". '"yy,' era. " "3 A. - . V'- . f A, i.r-.
The North Carolina Prohibitionist (Bush Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 28, 1887, edition 1
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