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Jws AND NOTES FOR WOMEN,
*
new hairpins have heads of am
■■•Queen of Sweden is an excellent
B I enamel is the \ery newest cr.i/f:
■fvelry.
■Jjetjn Elizabeth of Houmnnia has
ftaj fen a ballet.
flphough deaf, the Queen of Peumuik
M;‘id of music.
■Bfei takes the place of heli trope
■■summer tints.
MQten Marguerite <>f Italy is very fond
literature.
Iffjqe fashion of wearing a corsage dif
|H 5 from the skirt is in vogue.
Margaret College, Glasgow, is
■■nj Woman's college in Scotland.
of General Lew Wallace
JtWea.on woman suff'-itg'; temper
■®s Kate Kavanagh is a successful
■■s£> * n l he 0 rur d’Alene country of
|BSeen Olga, of Greece, has made and
■Soldered a national costume for her
ffKji nd.
and copper promises to rival
'"MB and gold as a favorite color com
■B‘on.
■Milte braids will be in vogue on dark
IHRiis, and on velvet and silk th-y are
flyfancied.
■no Empress of Germany tastes por
■ff of every article of food intended
■file Emperor.
and green are very stylishly
gMQicd together in some of the new
flwand bonnets.
woolen lace looks rich
IjHfelegant as a trimming for summer
and lusties.
bows of ribbon, with a stiff quill
are the only permissible trim
■frworn for traveling hats.
■Ke Princess of Wales is setting the
SRtple o< displaying as much jewelry
flrassiblc on court occasions.
flap Frances E. Willard, the tempcr
■■g organizer, says the doll teaches
■ll girls to be vain of dress.
{■•Queen Victoria lives a few years
■Ei'ir she will have reigned longer than
personage of history..
that is a basque at one side
the other a well defined polo-
is among the latest caprices,
■■ay with yellow —the bright, brassy,
Mnrcup hue is one of London’s atro
combinations for evening gowns,
Silver hooks and eyes are seen
the corsagesol some of the summer
flins, and are ornamental as well as
■Li.'
SB-j-illiantine, the new summer stuff so
IlMllar for house gowns, is merely the
alpaca in new tints and printed
Walton, a farmer living near
■pu, Ga., says he has five married
whose aggregate weight is
1000 pounds.
University of Zurich, Switzerland,
liflponferred the degree of Doctor of
aflbsophy upon Miss Fiances IL .Mitch-
Philadelphia.
His stated that so great is the demand
■Hgreen hats the present season, that
lind it at times almost impossible
them in stock.
(■ia Wheeler Wlh ox writes with a
of Marshall Wilder, the humor-
Iflon one side of her and a mirror tied
fli r ‘hbons on the other.
IMriped fabrics, when used for corsages,
(■made more effective by being made
sharply at the back forms, and
fflope diagonally to a point in front.
Jflpiong the most attractive of the sea
|fl|| bonnets are those of straw lace,
are nearly as delicate as some of
IB- silk and thread hand - wrought
Blecves arc made of two materials to
iflrery stylish and are very becoming.
■> full wide puffs with wide bands be-
are very pretty,and bows to finish
IHlbow and wrists.
IBhere are in Asia 200,000,000 of Bud-
Btwomen not one of whom,according
■ter religious belief, has any hope of
except, perchance after
Bismigration through many aninnls,
gflr spirit- may enter some hoy infant.
Bt is said that the new gold braided
whfte camel's hair capes
■called Bulgarian simply because they
■to be called something, and the
Bne Marie Antoinette had been
■fetched about as much as it would bear.
■Sr Sarah Hackett Stevenson said at
■ Woman’s International Conference in
■shington, that the women who went
Kfl quarters of the globe as physicians
B[ more missionary work than the
■rch mlssionaiies, because the doctor
Healed to nature.
■theese straws are a now wrinkle at
Ker parties. The cheese comes in
■<r sticks like macaroni, and one end is
Ki with a narrow strip of ribbon,
iese cheese straws were first introduced
it ho five o’clock teas two seasons ago,
d now find their way to the fash.on
le dinner table.
klbcrt cloth, among the best of new
iglislt woolens, is to be had in golden
jjtue, blood orange, terracotta, moss
d olive green, all which are made up
ith much heavy braiding of gold, sil
r, steel or copper, the design outlined
ith silk or mohair braid yf a color cou
nting with the foundation.
Parisians are wearing a new sort of
rring to which they have taken
ndly--an arrow’ or feather fixed almost
Lriz.ontally across the lobe. The arrow
generally enriched with a single pearl,
feather has a small cluster of colored
(ones. Long droop earrings have also
k»« in aguiu, to the delight of women
Rio possessed such trinkets and Last
bed to exhume them from the cases in
hich they Lave lain so long,
A POST-OFFICE ROBBERY.
How the Thieves Managed to Get
Into the Safe.
A post-office inspector says:—T wont
up into Minnesota to investigate a rob
bery. The postmaster was a well-to-do
German merchant, whose greatest ambi
tion is to be postmaster. Ho has a son,
‘Nick,’ a round-faced little boy, who was
all smiles and smartness. When the '
postmaster received his commission ho !
called Nick to one side confidentially:
‘Nick, I am der bostmaster; you are der
assistant bostmaster. Der government
trust us with broberfy, und I don’d feel
riglid aboud it. I must go down to St.
Baul und pny a safe,’ So the old man
went and bought a new safe that cost
$425. They got it in place, put all the
stamps and other government property
into it, and two weeks later burglars en- ■
tcred tho building and the'safe was -
opened and robbed. When I got on the ,
ground the postmaster first wanted to |
. read his political speeches in the last ,
campaign and tell me how much he
thought of tho administration, but we |
got to business finally. Ho showed me
how the burglars got into tho building— I
quite an easy trick—and then showed
the safe. ‘Und dese doors was open just
as dey are now!’ he said. I looked over i
the safe; it was brand now—not a mark I
of violence on it anywhere, nor locks dis
turbed. I told the postmaster Nick
must have forgotten to lock it the night ,
of the burglary. This brought Nick to ,
his feet in a paroxysm. All at once
something caught my eye on the wall. ,
Tt was: ‘Turn to the right three times,
stop at 37; to the left twice, stopping at
91; to the right once to 84—open.’
“ ‘What is that!’ I asked.
“ ‘Oh! dot is der gombination. Yon
see, when I get this new safe in they
sent a card up from St. Paid with that
on, but I forget him, and Nick he lose
him, so I just write dot up on der wall
whore we can see him.’
“ ‘And you can't imagine how the
thieves got into your safe?’
“ ‘I has buzz.lcd my brain over it for
two months!’
“ ‘Don’t you think the thieves might
have found the combination on the
wall ?’
“A great light seemed to break in
upon the honest German ‘bostmaster.’
He opened his eyes wide, looked again
at the safe and tho combination on the
wall, and then, with a big sigh, remark
ed: ‘Well, now, maybe dot was so.' ”
— - ■ ---
Lassoing Tramps.—-Officer Orguello,
of the Los Angeles police, carries a las
so, and ho finds it of great assistance in
catching tramps who may desire to evade
him and the jail which awaits the cap
tured tramp in that city.
John Hale, of Westbrook, Ga.,
named his first child First Half; his
next, Second Half; his third, Other Half;
and his fourth, Best Half. He says that
his biasings come in halves. '
* •-♦- i
For constipation, “liver complaint.” or bil
iousness, sick h-a<la<’he, ami ail ii’ is
ing from a disordered condition of ths liver
and stomach, tako Hr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pur
gative Pellets ii go ,tie lavative or .active
cathartic, according to size of dose.
Anarchy is in tears. Twa bi eweries caught
Are la-t week.
CM’T SLEEP!
Sleeplessness and fearful dreams
are the earliest and surest signs
of brain exhaustion. In healthy
sleep brain‘force is being stored
up to meet the next day’s de
mands. But nowadays the ner
vous system has been so over
tasked that it is tinable to control
the mind, and at night the worries,
troubles, and work are as present
as during the day. Hence the
brain has not time to recu
perate its energies. The proper
medical remedies are sedatives,
nerve tonics, laxatives, and
regulators of K. the general func
tions. Coca 7 and celery are
the seda tivesand nerve
tonics de tj 1 / U1 a n ‘J e
and in Paine’s
Celery K \I/7 » Com
pound A their
fu 11 ben efi cin I
effect is
Italsocon tains, in
scientific Ll*! r ''l ,ort ‘ ons
the best remediesof
the ma v. IK qhkteriamedi-
< caforcon \ /is Wsk stipation
* andkidneytAjj ' jw and liver
disorders. This is a
brief des ySjgjLWgai cription
of the medi ** s ™ aJKSa <’ine which
has brought sweet rest to thou
sands who tossed in sleepless
ness from night to morning, or
whose morbid dreams caused them
to awake more tired than ever.
AU nervous, sleepless,debilitated,
or aged people will find vigor and
perfect health in the great nerve
tonic, Paine’s Celery Compound.
Price, |I.OO. |
Sold by druggists. Circulars free.
WELLS, RICHARDSOS 4 CO. Proprietors
BURLINGTON, VT.
ijspintorf ■
I? /)' »Xh!
oS* /Z ' =- s ’ 2
J* ; :==£•-
io . : jiF t ~ -? -*
'EBrWt r
,gw 1’! = 1 f
£ » « '*=•*? 3 »
2 Iff , £* ? r
!• »N a dar. SamplM worth tl.sa FRKI
Uiim not iiudar Um hor*«'* ” r * u w , .
Haiti* IWlo Uvl<l<r Vo. Holiz. Mkh
A • •
Rats in China.
A plague of rats is reported in China,
which recalls the German legend of the
rats of Hamelin. Certain postal routes
have ha 1 to be ch inged in Outer Mongo
lia on account of the honey-combing of
the whole country by myriads of rats,
who have burrowed and eaten up the
pasturage so extensively that the supply
of food for camels and horses is greatly
diminished, and the burrows are danger
> ous to all mounted travelers and couriers.
The prize offered by the Australian Gov
ernment for a riddance of the rabbits
which infest that country may afford a
suggestion to the authorities in China to
offer inducements which M. Pasteur or
some unknown Whittington may find
advantageous enough to undertake the
task of ridding the country of these
vermin.
Centennial Exposition.
Cincinnati will bo filled with visitors
until the last of October. In quick suc
cession, the May Musical Festival, the
National Encampment Knights of Pyth
ias, the Patriarchs Militant of the Odd
Fellows, from all parts of the country
and Canada, play their parts in that city.
Beginning 4th of July, the Centennial
Exposition holds a hundred days’ jubi
lee in honor of the 100th anniversary of
the settlement of the Northwest Territory.
Not only Cincinnati and Ohio are inter
ested in this celebration, but ten other
sovereign and independent states clasp
hands and go to the aid of their sister
commonwealth, in showing to the world,
by means of a monster Exposition, what
marvelous changes and improvements
have taken place within their borders
within the space of one hundred years of
their history.
Why They Moved.—A little Harlem
boy whose impecunious parents are al
ways moving from one house to another,
was asked by the Sunday-School teacher:
“Why did the Israelites move out of
Egypt?” “Because they couldn’t pay
their rent, I suppose,” was the reply.
W ns America Ever Discovered ?
At the time, when Columbus started in
search of the New World, nearly every man,
woman and child in Europe insisted that there
was no New Wor d to discover. When he
came back, crowned with success, a large pro
portion of these good people adhered lotheir
theory; and if they were alive to-day many of
them would doubtless insist that America had
never been discovered at all. A man will give
up anything in this worldmore readily than a
pet theory. For example, look at. the individ
uals who still maintain that consumption is
incurable. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis
covery has cured thousands upon thousands
of cases and will cure thousands more, but
these people can’t give up their point. Never
theless the “Discovery” will cure any case of
consumption, if taken in time.
Keeiy, the motor man, is trying to invent a
toboggan that will run up hill.
Chronic nasal catarrh positively cured by
Dr. Sage’s Remedy.
There is no such word as “fail” among the
fruit preservers. Tl.eir motto is: “I can.” •
If afflicted with -ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
s an’s Ey e■ w a ter. D ruggi st» se 11 at 25c. per bottle.
Don’t neglect your teeth, they are too valu
able. Use Long’s Pearl Tooth Soap.
Beck & Gregg Hardware Co,,
ATGAIMTA, GA.
ffl e-=>
< ~n 3=-
• B) c= i=s
T 3 =O txs
pg;
t Q> c-3 S
Write for i .©! r+ fTT| t” 4
Prices and |a| o GO £-“•
mention thia ' “T *•
paper. (ft
p
MARVELOUS
MEMORY
DISCOVERY.
\\ holly unlike artificial systems.
< arc <»l mind ivniideriii«.
Any bonk learned nt one rending.
Classes of 1087 At Baltimore, 100-5 at Detroit,
1.500 at Philadelphia, 1113 at Washington, 1218
i at Boston, Urge c'asses of Columbia l>aw students, at
- srale,5 r ale, Wel esley, Oberlin, University of Penn., Mich
igan University, Chautauqua, Ac., Ac. E by
Ric Harp I'koi tor,th? Scientist. Hon* W . W. Astor,
Judah P. Bi \jamin, Judge Gibson, Dr. Brown, E.
H. Cook. Principal N. Y. State Normal College, Ac.
Taught by correspondence. Prospectus pi st free
from PROF. LOIS kT I'E. 237 Fifth Ave.. N.Y.
JONES
ItaL., y/ 5 Ton Vi aeon Reales,
T,ro “ te»er», stvaT I’satlugs. Brafe
Tar* Beam and Beam Bok for
S6O.
F»erv «i», s ale. Fvr free prwt list
“ I’aper and address
a wS** e ,B *o BimAKTax.
® ’ lil'hllA.MT'D. A. y.
| ADPF I , LANTKTI<»N FOli SALE!
rA V 4 K* der*'*, saw and grist nnd nn
proTvmeiits, store, post-ottice. orrhatds and vineyurds,
1 up and swamp land,oaU, ash, hickory and other timbers,
good neigtiborliood, tine condition tor cotton, tenants,
. h treh.w, six mile, from K. K station. Address Rout.
I. K ipUKKb, Hoorn 30, James Bmiding. Atlanta, Ga.
GINSENG AND IM SUNS
Boixaht for cash at hiirhest market price*. Send for
circular. OTTt> WAttNEK, W Pnmv St., New York.
Greal EngbshGou* anJ
DicHl 51 IHSt Rheumatic Remedy.
(),ul Bus. .it round. I I I'illa.
AM W U«.st bcn>« »»d n>*k««wr«stsaejr wwitaffor»»»h«a
InMWI SI s««litn» is tbt world t'Jiher m Cotti, Wlt«
PMS. i«n» »'»««. A44wtt. lacs a lu., Asgstts. Marss
*
The Ke ult of tier! .
When anything s an is a test of "fifty years
am ng a discriminating peop'e, it is pretty
L'ood evidence that there is merl somewhere.
Few, it any, medicines have met with such
continued success and popu arity as has
ma ked the pr gress of Bkandreth's Pill-’,
which, at era trial of over fifty years, are con
ceded to be the safest and moat effectual blood
purifier, tonic an i alternative eve? introdu ed
to the pnbl c.
That this is tho result of mer't, and that
Brandreth’s Pills perform all that is claimod
forthem, is conclusively prov d by the fact
that those who regard them with the greatest
favor are those who have u ed them the
longest.
Bhandbeth’s Pills are told in every drug
and medicine store, either plain or sugar
coa'ed. *
(I mHE STABRY FIRMAMENm
I***ON HlGH,”***!
Addison. But
you, for a few years at least,,
rather look at the firmament’
from the underside ?
. YOU CAN DC IT
observing the laws of
health and resorting to that
cheat-the-grave medicine
Warner’s Safe Cure .
''You are out of sorts; a splen- **
did feeling and appetite one
day,while the next day life is
a burden. If you drift on in
way you are liable I
become Insane. Why?
Because poisoned blood on
the nervQ centers -wherein
the mental faculties are
paralyzes
and the victim becomes non
responsible.
There are thousands of peo
t pie to-day in insane asy- A
TTlums a«id graves putx
thereby Kiduey-Poisou
ed Blood.
Insanity,according to statis
tics, is increasing faster than
other disease, is
eye-sight failing ? Your
memory becoming impaired?
An all-gone feeling on slight
exertion upon you? If so,and
M YOU know whether this
so or not, do not neglect your
case until reason totters and
you are an imbecile, but to
★day while you have rea- .
son, use your good sense
judgment by purchasing
WARNER’S SAFE
CURE and WARNER’S
'X'SAFE PIULS; medicines
warranted to do as represen
ted,and which willcure you.
WE B E R
PIANO-FORTES.
ENDORSED BY THE LEADING ARTISTS, SEMI
NARIANS, AND THE PRESS, AS THE
BEST PIANOS MADE.
Prices *s reasonable and terms as easy as consistent
with thorough workmanship.
CATALOGUES MAILED FREE.
Correspondence Solicited.
WAREROOMS,
Fifth Avenue, cor. 16th St, N.Y,
g
4ddrr.',
(J_ f- for fnct LM. QanWorks.Pitt.burrh.FE'W
Seines, Tents. Breech loading double Shotk-un at $9.00:
Single barrel Breech loaders at $4 to »l? ; Breech-ltrnding
Kid 's *1.50 to sls: Double-barrel Muzzle loaders at $5.50
to $-ja: Kepeating Rirt.'s, to-shooter, $H to »S 0 : Revolver-,
to rs> Flobort Ritte-S. $2.50 to »S. Guns sent C. O. D. to
examine Revolvers bv mail to any P. O. Address JOHV
i (TOM’S GRKA rWK tTEIIN «l:\ WORKS, MtteWg. Penna.
sli, Dutcher's-:-Lightning
4L FLY KILLER
Isoulck death ; easily nrerared and
Ki- used . no danger : tiles don’t live long
fK’ ygf enough to get atvay. Use it early.
XJF freelv il l the house of them owl bi
1 at peace. Don’t take anything “ill-t
I asirood.” There is nothing like the genuine DuP-h
--h"s FRF.D- K DITCH ER. St. U ans, Vt.
Cincinnati JUL X4O
Mr A OCT. 27th-
A *\jT„ M f h.t'l
> *• 5 .£.a. £ ~ fc
*!?'VmM i ? 1 j
„ ~• „_-.. .-a> *j'“‘" ta '** ,
CEMEjiWL EXPOSIriOJI WlO VHLLET
GRAND JUBILEE celebrating the Settlement of the Northwestern Territory.
‘ HgN W LO '*&HOXtIWI»' MHMtH \ S KIIU«6
rates from all points.
B. B. B.
(■Botanic Blood Balm.)
Observe the following editorial from the At
lanta C<jns!ituLion, the foremost paper of the
South:
“The Constituticn has observed the growth of
an Atlanta institution now famous well-nigh the
world over. It is the Blood Balm Company who
make B. B. 15. We have watched the course of
this medicine in hundreds of cases that appeared
to be hopeless, and it has w’orked amazing cures.
We take pleasure in giving our endorsement to
the men who make up this company. They are
truthful, accurate and conservative business men
qj physicians. They have the confidence of the
people among whom they live, and their medi
cine speaks for itself. A whole library does not
outweigh the heartfelt testimony of one man
who, in despair from a disease, no doctors have
been able to cure, and other remedies aggra
vated, finds that B. B. B. has restored his
health, vigor and manhood. And just such tes
timony the Blood Balm Company have bv the
bushel.”
No other remedy in the world can produce the
number of genuine testimonials of remarkable
and seeming miraculous cures as can B. B. 8.,
made in Atlanta, Ga. Read a few here sub
mitted : ,
KIDNEY WEAKNESS.
For fifteen years my liver and kidneys have
been badly affected —not a day in that time
without the headache. Since using B. B. B.—
Botanic Blood Balm—l have been entirely re
lieved ; no pain, no trouble at all, and I feel
almost like another person. lam one among
the greatest advocates of B. B. B. and you are
at liberty to use my name. Mrs. C. H. Gay,
Rocky Mount, N. C.
RHEUMATISM.
Jlewton, N.C., June2s, 188*. —Gentlemen: I
am pleasured in saying I have been a “sufferer
of rheumatism for ten years, and I have ex
hausted almost every known remedy without
relief. I was told to try B. B. 8., which I did
after long procrastination, and with the ex
perience of three bottles I now feel a healthy
man, and take it as a part of my duty to make
known your wonderful blood purifier to suffer
ing humanity. Respt’ly, W. I. Morehead.
BRIGHT’S DISEASE.
I have been a sufferer from kidney and blad
der troubles for several years. I have lately
had what is termed Bright’s disease, and have
had considerable swelling of my legs and
shortness of breath. The urea has poisoned
my blood also. 1 used (B. B. B.) Botanic Blood
Balm. Am delighted with its effects.
John H. Martin,
Rock Creek, Ala.
TONIC.
I have for some time past used B. B. B. as
a purifier of the blood and to build up 'he sys
tem generally, and consider it without excep
tion the finest remedy of the kind in the mar
ket. Yours with best wishes,
Arthur G. Lewis,
Editor Southern Society.
gNONF'rM
Wa/ THIS BOOK IS NOT ON 01R LIST. *
Confessions"^
limited. Price 35c. Send at once. Address
CHASE, DEDHAM, MASS.
’SSVK ‘KVIiaSKI ‘SS'VITO ”V
ssajppv ■*’ ao P UO S ’ 3 S£ peiinin
I & isn mo so ion si Yiooa snu
IteijaOlOkJ
Hege’s Improved Circular Saw Mill
With Universal Log Beam js
Rectilinear Simultaneous
Set Work and Double p -- nffi ——tt 1 JI
centric Friction ■ Xy. 1
Feed. Accurate! >1 JJRj J
Simple! Cheap! Bl KFu
Durable! Manu- efes&aS™*”
factored by
Salem iRONfIEHraKSgaaiMM
works, fflKMflffK&Mr
SA LEM, N.C.
U. s. a. «■
¥■ Plantation Engines
/C With Self-Contained
RETURN FLUE BOILERS,
for driving
H COTTON GINS and MILLS.
Illustrated Fampblet Free. Addresa
LEFFEL & CO.
,SPRINGFIELD, OHIO,
OP 110 Liberty St*, New s'ork.
KaSTH"m A
■ German Asthma, Cure nevcr/athtogive rcugl
■mediate relief ia the worst cases,insures comfort
gS able sleep; effects caret* where a 1 others fail J O
■ trial eonrinceg tkt wioal skeptical. Price «jOc. and ■
BLOOD POISONING, ula and all Diseases of the
J Urinary Organs positively cured or no charge. Our
medicine is a i reventive of Malaria and Yellow Fever,
i Full size sample bottle sent free on receipt of 2a
cents tc. prepay postage. Address TUK HAItT
MEDICINE CO.. Box 301, Unionville, Ct.
GO LD is worth SSOO per lb. Pettit’s Eye Salve is
' worth sl.o»di. hut is sold at 25c. a b bv dealers .
A, N. U Twenty-eight, *BB.