Newspaper Page Text
m
Eight Men vs. Three Hundred. ’
In 1891 a young electrician, now In
Paris, on looking through Carnegie’s
great steel rail plant at Braddock,
Pa., casually suggested that electricity
could be made to operate the widely
separated pieces of machinery at a
saving of many thousands a year.
Last week Andrew Carnegie visited tho
plant for the first time in two years
and saw electricity doing the work,
This improvement, together with oth
as, makes it possible for eight men to
do the work 300 did in 1891.— Elec- \
trical Review.
Oats sometimes escape from culti
vation and grow from year to year so
persistently as to seem wild, regions they
have been found thus in as
widely separated as Algeria and Japan,
the Pyrenees and North China, the
Hebrides and the Desert of Mt Sinai,
Shoot Folly as it Flies.
Says the bard. The difficulty is that the folly 1
of some folks don’t fly, It sticks. We cite, as !
a forcible illustration, the folly of people who j
keep on dosing themselves with objectionable >
drugs for disorders of the stomach, liver and
H<Srtte^S^h^Sft 35 iwl 5 S a Sot only and
remedies these, but also restores vigor
strength, and banishes malaria, rheumatism ;
and nervousness. 1
The man who meets with success is he who
is blind to all impending obstacles.
Dr. Kiip'er's Swamp-Root enres
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet Laboratory and Binghamton, Consultation N. free. Y.
The worry over crossing the bridge before
we Net to it is generally worse than going over.
J,mvy'X? 'Together |
and until the last few ywws was supposed to be
remedies, and by constantly failing to cure
with toc&l treatment, pronounced Hincurabie.
Science has proven catarrh to be a constitu
tiooal disease and therefore requires conatitu- ,
constitutional market! STo '
is the oh v euro on the
it*i 5 tak r. internally in doses from lodrops to
& t. » lit ai\. H *t \r directly on tho blood
and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer
one fa uadred dollar, f ran y case It fUU to
eura.
free- Address
fcif F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0..
Fold by Druggists, 75c.
p
First-rlns* lien and Women In Demand.
“There are always Rood openings for live,
energetic m ! n and women of good character
in our line of business to devote all or part of
Johnson! e o^the e firm'B. F^.b.hnso^&^m! ’•
Hiclimond, Va., says in reference to their ad- !
v ertisemenu j
Mrs. Winslow V Roothins Syrup for children
teethips;, tion. softens the Rums, redu -.es inflamma¬
allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Karl's Clover Root, the great blood purifier,
Fives freshness and clearness to the complex¬
ion otul cures constipation, 25 cts., 50 cts., 81.
I can recommend Piso’s Cure for Consump
tion to sufferers from Asthma - I>. T. Tows- i
SEND, Ft. Howard, 'Vis.. May 4, ‘si. I
' Wl
W WIFE'S NERVES I
i
Are weak and she suffers terribly from nerv
ousness, headache and loss of sleep. Such
la the testimony of many a man. The poor,
tired woman Is suffering from impuro and
impoverishod blood. Her food does not di
gest. She is living on her nerves, her
strength is gone. Her nen.es and muscles
NEED STRENGTHENING I
By tho usa of Hood’s Sarsaparilla which
makes pure, rich blood, areates an appetite,
and gives tone to all the organs of the body
This is not what we say, it is what Hood’s
Sarsaparilla does. *• My wife began taking
Hood’sBars.iparilla about three months ago. !
She has been in poor health for 15 years. !
Hood’s Is doing her good. Her appetite is
better, she looks better wife" and there has been
improvement in every J. W. Eonea
son, Greenfield, Tennessee.
M ood’s Sarsa¬
parilla
,
Be Sure to get C ures
Hood’s ,
Hood’s Pills are the best after-rtinuer
Pills, assist digestion, prevent constipation.
Treat Your
Stomach Well;
It’s the driving; wheel of the
human machinery. Good
wholesome food is what the
stomach wants—nothing
else.
A suggestion for to-mor¬
row’s breakfast,
9
BUCKWHEAT
CAKES.
Ready for the table at
a moment’s notice.
LIGHT,
DAINTY,
DELICIOUS,
«
■4 ,♦♦♦'
★ WORLD’S-FAIR *
JIIIGIIXd^T AWARD I
L SUPERIOR N UTRIT I ON - t he LIFE”
alvli s*
•H- S- '
THE GREAT
Bas justly acquired the reputation of being
The Salvator for
I IM VALIDS
^ The-Agred.
an Incomparable Aliment for the
Growth and Protection of INFANTS anc:
C H I LO Ft e:im
A superior nutritive in continued Fevers
And a reliable remedial agent
in all gastric and enteric diseases;
often in instances of consultation over
patients whose digestive organs were re¬
duced to such a tow and sensitive conditi- n
that the IMPERIAL GRAMM was
the only nourishment the stomach
would tolerate when LIFE seemed
depending on its retention
And as a FOOD it would be difficult to
I : conceive of anythin? more j alatable.
b > •> R L (i C ! S T S. Shipping Depot
JOHN CARLE & SONS. New York.
WOMAN’S WORLD.
-
PLEASANT LITERATURE FOR
FEMININE READERS.
_
AN aristocratic hoarding norsx.
There is a certain young widow in.
Mew York who* within a few short
years, has made a fortune at that usu
ally the most unsuccessful of all occu
pations, the keeping of boarders. She
bas recently purchased a one hundred 1
thousand dollar house, with elevator
and all hotel conveniences, and charges
her very swell patrons the prices of
the Waldorf. Table napkins, with
one’s own initials upon them, and ,
linen, also one’s exclusive own, are !
among the luxuries. And she boasts
that young men take their dinners at ;
her house when they “get tired of Del
monico’s. Detroit Free Press,
HISTORY or the chafing-dish.
Women who first prised their chaf
’ug-dishes fot their convenience are
deling an added pleasure in using
ft Utensil that has a history at least of
2000 years. They refer to what Seneca
said of them, and quote Soyer’s de- i
scription of those used by the ancient
Greeks and Romans. The dish is also
referred to by Cicero, and is supposed
to be the “authepsa a kind of sauce
pan of Corinthian brass of consider
able value, and made with such art
that its contents cooked instantly,
and with little fire. This simple double and >
ingenious vessel possessed a j
bottom, the uppermost one holding
the light delicacies destined for the
dessert, Jr and the lire was underneath.
ADoiuer A nnth author iiuiaor bti) sava s . • “Nnt ^>01 nnlv onj did um i
the channg-dish adorn, the tables at
the royal banquet, and contribute to
the gastronomic enjoyments of the
ncD » ] out 311 4 - it it was was m in kiedi nigii tavor favor tneu then as as
now among the representatives of the
histrionic art. Pliny relates that the
tragic actor Aegopua had a dish worth
1000 sestercii.” The chafing-dish was !
known in America as early as 1720, at
about which time it is recorded that a
we weauuy „Hhv iatner, father wisning wishing to io give eivo ms bis
daughter “a truly elegant wedding
outfit,” ordered for her from England
among other things, “six small brass
chafing-dishes, four shillings a piece. ”
—New York Post,
THE GERMAN HOUSEWIFE,
This excellent habit of saving is no
less conspicuously a characteristic of
r< lierman than of -r. French v. „ women, 1
though the former play a far less im- |
portant part in the National affairs of
their country than the latter.
X In the Fatherland, as in by far the
gieater number of Continental realms,
woman ia really what Tennyson pro
nonneed her to be half a century ago
— \the lesser man.” She is in many
respects a model housewife, skilled in
all tll|c arts and crafts that Contribute
to building up and perfecting the ma
terial comforts of home life.
As mistress and servant alike slie is
capable and conscientious, an adept
both in keeping down household ex
P 0U8es a » d in obtaining tho utmost
value Wkiud for the ipdficy r‘ ’
,P° lhe S “; typical 1 . German “housefrau of
^ be lrddl ^ e or “burgerliche” class is
aa accomplished seamstress, cook,
laundress, “cutter and contriver,”
deeply versed in tho quality and price
ot ’ al1 imaginable comestibles, fabrics,
articles of furnituro and household
implements. She is thoroughly
grounded in the literature of her na
tive laud and is acquainted with at
least one foreign language, besides
possessing an exhavstivo knowledge of
history, geography and what may be
termed practical arithmetic.
*■ In the educational process, indeed,
which she has inevitably undergone as
a girl the element of utility predom¬
inates. If, however, she has been en¬
abled to attend the “Hohere Toshter
schule,” or high-class establishments
organized for the instruction of young
women in sciences and accomplish¬
ments, she probably knows a good
deal about chemistry, mathematics,
music aud drawing, and can write and
speak English and French with toler¬
able correctness. Hence she starts in
married life with an abundant stock
of intellectual as well as physical
training to fit her for companionship
with a highly educated man and for
the discharge of all her purely domes¬
tic duties toward husband, children
and servants.—Chicago Record,
FASHION NOTES.
Red hair is all the rago at the French
capital.
The fashions make most women who
conform to them look absolutely gro¬
tesque.
One of the features of the hair¬
dressing just now are tho flat pointed
curls set in the middle of the forehead.
lhe ne'west petticoats are made in
small checked silk, with a pinked-out
ruemng ot the same or black silk trim
ming the edge, bilk skirts continue
in great favor in Paris, and indeed,
are considered indispensable.
A “dress improver is something
very nice to have. It is a somewhat
new idea. It is made of the very
lightest haircloth, does not weigh a
pound and does away with the need
of heavy skirts, keeping the dress in
proper lines.
Coarse bourette threads are effective
on plaids aud stripesof darker shades.
Blue and brown are loosely woven in
basket squares and flecked with tan
color. The trimming for these stuffs
is velvet, sometimes of the prevailing
color, but more often of the color
least used in the fabric, thus aceentu
ating the contrast.
Evening skirts are made t< e from
two to tive inches oa the floor, an
are trimmed with a festoom 1 rat of
lace or chiffon. Four var i i l four
yards aud a half are the wi i tu -r
walking skirts, Black an t wmte
striped silks are very , and
these are freqnently cut so that the
sides fora a succession of Vs, which
nses^np an immense amount of ma
Ladies’ cloth with smooth glossy
surface comes in very btrikiug colors,
the new bluet, cerise and other pur
plish reds and bright green among
them, which are often male more
showy still by a contrasting color ba
ing used for tho velvet collar. TtU 3
a sage green cloth dress has a collar
of .nauve velvet, one of tan cloth has
a bluet collar, and a cerise cloth is
also topped off with bluet velvet.
WORDS OF WISDOM.
Workfast reaches rest first.
t lime comes as last as it goes.
'* 6 a c °ld day that can t get coldefi
Cynicism is the salt of disappoint
rnent.
it isn’t the long ’ sermons that reaeh |
p^ygD
1 n ^
x
c ‘ nn 1 '• !
A ton of Complaining _ won t raise a ■
pound of relief. j
The finest family trees Jo not grow
in auriferous soil.
A handful of sunshine can knock
oll £ a car t] oa j 0 f c ]ouds.
^ , T f . men can make . dollars . .i ,,
ew
fnotu s a - tli0 Bftmc tuue * !
Pluck is the search warrant with ,
which to find opportunity. |
A man would be surprised if he were
what a woman thinks he is.
Independence, like honor, is a
rocky island without a beach.
To really understand a man W 8
must judge him in misfortune.
Wide thinking Mings generods mo*
tives and self-forgetful action,
Apart of love is worship, and re
quires worthiness to be perfect.
Neglect is an active principle of evil
its re , uUs be v 0 aJ calculation.
- , be so-edie-t boat :
H is not always t the sp^ediastt boat
that can sail closest to the wind. j
It- is the feeling of added strength j
that makes the achievement easy. !
Waited-for opportunities are usually i
or less frazzled at the edges,
TIya dawn f, snam* ’? tho Lricrhtpr Brighter fn* to.
it darkness j , that has gone before. j
:
m Ta ^ * e ca r ° ? e f tbe . v ^sequences and t
. .
excu ”" h W1 ^ car ° ° aomse ve3 ' j
Sometimes nations, like invalids, * '
muE u<? >or:3e ofciore iuej can , ,
® ' .
better. |
Most great ideas at the first '
are
tried by hardship. It is the test for j
the gold.
A man doesn't stand around with
hie hands in his pockets if there’s
money in them.
If ft man can see good in anything, )
don’t try to show him that there may
bo something else visible.
Future of flic Horse,
WLat will be the future of the horsa
. America? asks writer the To
m a in
ronto Mail. But a few months ago 8 wu
tad , . fully . ,, one thousand ,, , horses , in . tho ,,
f, everal stree t car sta ble3 ’ aa<
there ,aonth are only . a couple , of f score. A
J, °- VC ^ 1 about °J; two clt f hundred ^ration horses em- in
ie watering departments, to¬
( ^ , a Y. m' ie h o the work is done by
operated and propelled by
e \ ectMClt f- A proposal 1 now under
l bsCUssi°n to convey our garbage out
SI aml ^f thea , tbo Cl more ' V lr f borses lta b - v wl11 e ° be fcri ° lald uu oif ’>
or 80 1 ’
The horse is not only being set aside
in America, but in the older world
especially i^Tratce, and where the mule,
traction engines iftiui. electric cars are
qierseding In many parts of
France The Owners of country man¬
sions, distant three to five miles from
a railroad station, have coke or petro¬
leum-heated road engines, not only to
pull cart trucks with produce, but to
convey back manures, etc., to tho
farm. The engine is in constant re¬
quisition to tug the ordinary
family carriage or omuibus to and
from the railway station. The engi¬
neer is the same who has charge of the
general farm machinery.
At one country railway station,
where the company has busses waiting
ti transport the travelers some miles
inland to villages, a traction engine
has been employed as an experiment.
If successful a wagon will be attached
of a special construction, to transport
fruit, vegetables, butter, milk, etc.,
at very low rates. There is a compen¬
sation for the “noble animalits flesh
has never been in greater demand for
consumption; as a strength restorer
in the form of soup, it it now the
favorite with the debilitated French
people. Eveu on this continent horse
flesh is largely used as food, as recent
despatches from over the border in¬
formed us that horses were sent freely
to slaughter houses, and alter the car¬
cass had passed through various pro¬
cesses, it finally reached the consumer
labelled “dried beof.” But wbat arc
we going to do with our horses. The
question remains unanswered, and
there I leave it for others to meditate
on, just as I have done.
Tallest el Office Buildings.
The tallest office building in tho
world is that of tho Manhattan Life :
Insurance Company at 6 4 Broadway,
this city. On the Broadway side it is
! 350 feet above the sidewalk to tho too I
0 f the t i 0 me, and on the New street
side 3^3 feet . There is a steel flag
staff, in three sections, that rises above
this for fiftv feet ho’ld with »n «. Iditinnal
; t«n feet in 'to it safelr From
rhe Nevv street side walk to the base of ,
the foundations, according to the fig
ures of Kimball & Thompson, tin i
I 1 architects, the distance is forty-.'!v;
feet, The height of some other great !
structures is as follows: Madison i
1 Square Garden from sidewalk to the )
top of the statue Diana on the
I tower, 337 feet six Mi - ’ f ; Cathedral,
New York, to the t the crosses
oa the t: JJarthohli
Stati Li 1
' ai
: ' aureu. icw York
to tL on the spire
^ 1 ■rii. iwers, 27 1
1 feet; 270 feet;
,
VV lg, New York, 25J
V herlauds Hotel, New
York, 23 4 feet. -New York Sun.
Indian Liml I’retljr Well ’aid For.
Some idea of how much it costs to
keep a family of able-bodied Indians
may be gained from a perusal of the
depredation claims paid and to be pael
by the United States Government. Iu
addition to the vast sums snpplied for
ibis purpose since the act of 1799 an l
ratified by various acts ot Congress
1 since that time it is somewhat surpris
ing to hear that 11,090 claims have
been tiled since I8J1, »ggr igating in
. value about §4'),00 1,009. All things
j considered the land: taken from the
i Indians in one wa id another since
lColumbus landed aud about which so
many tears hay : been shed have been
J pretty' well pai i for.—Chicago Times.
English Court Etiquette.
Etiquette is the very life and health
of a court. It is observed even in the
arrangement jof seats. On each side of
the small, lofr dais intended exclusive
ly for royalty, are rows of chairs,
which were definitely and clearly as
signed, not by law, but by absolute,
although unwritten, custom, to the
different orders ia the socinl scale who
accept the queen’s invitation. No one
but those prescribed might occupy
Thu<(! on 0QQ gjdeare duchesses
am i marchionesses; on the other, am
bassadresses and ladies of the diplo
uiatic corps,
XV lie re It Goes.
Shipper Smart to High Market
.Tone- —Why is it you haven’t sent ac
count of sales with check of that last
6 ]ripment I made Jones—It’s you? all owing
Mmh Market
to other shippers. ”
Incongruous.
< i Bingley has furnished his house in
Louis Quinze.” His morals
< < Isn’t it absurd? are
distinctively Louis Quartorze. >>
5 o
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
JR® do you Eirtci
fg Become 8 Mother?
\ so, then D permit p'i£££ tta to
%™Ue S
tion is indeed
a true
f S "Mother’s Friend,”
>^W%MjisChildblrth ! j /m fflft tt mjabs Easy
JS ® 51 7^7 preparing' tbe
tion, , ' thus assisting . Nature ** sten ana i fo snonemiiff , r PfJ?";
« Labor .” The painful ordeal of childbirth
is robbed of its terrors, and the dangers
thereof pro at tv lessened to both mother and
confinement is also
greatly short e ned’the mother strengthened
find hounslixaem built up. ^nd for tile an childJbfoinoted. abundant secretion of
Send io cents for a large Address, Boot: (168 WORLD’S pages),
giving all particulars. Medical SS A IO 3
R is . pe ^s a RV ‘ 1
aul ‘ ’’ u a °’ 1 •
PAINLESS CHILDBIRTH.
Mrs. Fred Hunt, of Glenvilie, N. K,
Says : 1 Seed about V>T. Pierce’s Fa
vorite Prescription being SB good for « wo-
man with child, so I
got two bottles last
September, and De¬
cember 13 th I had a
twelve girl. V,'hctl pound 1 baby was
confined I was not
sick in any way. I
did not and Buffet any the
pain, when P X
ed child was born I walk¬
into another room IB •
and keep went your to Extract bed. band of 1 p M at& §
Smart-Weed on H
all the time. It was
very cold weather Mas. Ktjrrr.
and onr room was and
very cold but I did not take any cold,
never had any after-pain or any other pain.
It was all due to God and Dr. Pierce’s Fa¬
vorite Smart-Weed. Prescription This and is Compound eighth Extract living
of the
child fered and the largest of them all. I suf¬
everything that flesh Coilld suffer with
the other babies. I always had a doctof
and then he could not help me very husband much,
but this time my mother and my
were alone with me. My baby was only
seven days old when I got up and dressed
and left my room and stayed up all day. ”
CARRIAGES
Buggi&s bifK^st & Harness. at World's
Two awards
Fair for 8t& en£fls,Heanty and
“A" Omdr, C4a. iiOiv FViccii. Bix years as;o we
discarded tbe Dealer and began
selling direct to Consumers at
wholesale prices. Result: up
\TK ward of 100.000 Vehtele# sold
and earth,dealing cur factory now direct tbe with largest
- y on con*
—Burners. Send for our mammoth
■ a fcr&dt.697.09. 126 page Ulustrat. free catalogue.
ALLIANCE CARRIAGE CO,, CINCINNATI, O.
■
$ McELREES
WINE OF CARDUS.
A
SS iPVRVS
1 : 7 r?
0 m e>
B. ii ry %
M: \\
5 M. m
For Fsmale Diseases U
SULLIVAN
& CRICHTON’S d
J
and School of Shorthand
T!ie Best and Cheapest Business College in America.
Four Penmen. Time short. Catalogue free* Addiesa
.Sullivan dt Cricliton, Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga.
HELPFUL HOUSEHOLD HI XT.
Some housekeepers serve lemon with
mutton, but most people prefer a com
bination of tart and sweet, as in mint
sauce or fruit jellies.
According to tho Medical Record,
castor oil has not failed in any case to
remove warts to which it was applied
once a day for two to six weeks.
IIalf „ ........ tlle battle in washmg dishes is
^Al**™* ■ Washing th ° d,Khcloth9 out once Rnd a week towels in
ammonia water should never be neg
lected.
A P iece °[ ^amois skin bound on
„ c-djge», shaped to fit tbe heel and
kept in place by a piece of elastic rub¬
ber worn over the stocking, will save
much mending.
Never allow meat to be placed di¬
rectly on the ice, as water dries out
the juices; it is even worse to lay it
there wrapped in paper. It should al¬
ways be laid in a clean porcelain ves¬
sel.
A use for common salt recently
given is to rub it into the roots of the
hair to remove dandruff. Rub it light¬
ly at night, not using a great quantity;
in the morniDg it is all gone, only
ienvinn o a slight dampness.
A nice way to keep wax for the
work basket is to fill half shells of
English walnuts with melted wax, fas¬
tening the two half shells closely to¬
gether at one end. There will then
be a small space at the other end,
through which tbe thread will slip
when the wax is being used.
A Practical Suggestion.
• . VVliat we waut to do,” exclaimed
the long-haired orator, “ia to widen
lie sphere of woman’s work.”
i t Thou give us bigger kitchens,”
_>oke up a sharp featured woman m
e audience .—Chicago Tribune.
KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY,
CHRONIC RHEUMATISM.
Mohrots, Iowa, Nov. 25, 1891.
Dear Sib Mr Kennedy:— In ’64 I began taking your Discovery for Chronic Rheumatism; suffering so much
nnin till I used to call some one to sit on my limbs to deaden tho pain. I had doctors for six years. No use. j
then began with your Medical Discovery. The first bottle wont to every joint and gave me pain. My husband said
< ( Keen till you see it spring tho joints.’’ So two and one-half bottles cured me so that I was able to walk two
on I have kept it in the house ever since. I opened the 22d
miles. Had not done it for six or seven years. had doctor I have taken Discovery. Lott! 0
today, for I take it instead of doctoring. I have never a since your I am
widow 74 years of age, and a well woman. Yours truly, Mrs. Elizabeth
Hills.
SCROFULA.
Lloyd, Texas, Oct. 5th, little’girl. 1894.
Donald Kennedy Roxbuky, Mass, Kind Friend I will now givo yon the particulars about my
She five old the 2nd of last May. When she was less than a year old a kernel came under her right jaw o a
was years do, and ho told to it with old bacon grease, and it might
her neck I asked the best doctor what to mo grease rise
and ’which it did, and I tried everything, but it kept running for nearly two years. I came to Texas and was at
run postmaster at Aubrey. I noticed his taco had a bad scar, and I asked
Aubrey Texas, where I saw the present Scrofula the and Kennedy s Medical Discovery cured him
the cause and how he got it cured. Ho said was cause it and if I
would get for my little girl it would surely cure her. I got one bottle and she was soon better. I picked
some and almost hard bone, and after being mashed they looked
white lumps out of her neck as big as peas, as as a up
like burnt bone crumbled up. In less than a week the swelling was gone, and had quit running, bhe is still taking
it but apparently she is as well as ever, and as gay as any child.
Yours truly. S. L. Jackson.
CATARRH.
Chicago, Oct. 15, 1894,
Donald Kennedy, Dear Sir:—I know tho worth of your Discovery, for three years ago, before I was married,
I had the Catarrh in my head and throat very bad, and my mother, who always gave it to all of us, made mo taka
three bottles for which I am thankful to God, for it cured mo and many others that we have recommended it to.
’ Mrs. Ellen Seeley, 217 39th St., Chicago,
FOR MOTHERS.
Elmira, N. Y., Oct 25, 1894.
Dr Kennedy, Dear Sir:--I have taken your Medical Discovery all through my Pregnancy, and our boy, not?
three months old is, and has been, in perfect health, while wo have throe other children, all of whom had eczema
and sore mouths. Our attending physician speaks very highly of your Discovery. G. W. Hammond.
Yours sincerely, Mrs.
DROPSY.
Haughville, Ind., Nov. 21, 1894.
Donald Kennedy Dear Sir:— Your Medical Discovery has made a wonderful cure in a case of Dropsy of my
neighbor after four or live good doctors told him ho could not get welL But your Discovery fixed lnm all right
8 ’ Yours truly, Samuel Nugent.
MALARIA.
St. Xavier, Mont.. Nov. 12, 1894.
Dr. Kennedy Dear Sir :—I must inform you of the good effects of your famous Medical Discovery. Ona
lady who was much afflicted with a constant Malarial Trouble declared herself relieved in a few days, and was ea
tiroly cured in a few weeks, and this is only one of many. M. Magdalen.
Yours gratefully, Sister
KIDNEY TROUBLE.
New York City, Mny 9th, 1894.
Donald Kennedy, Dear Sir :—In using your Medical Discovery I find it good for the general system and es¬
pecially for the Kidney Trouble. And the reason I can speak for it is this: After coming from South America, in
1880 I troubled with my back, which the doctors claimed was Kidney Disease. After using many different medi¬
was bottles of Kennedy’s Medical Discovery, and
cines—and I might just as well have drunk cold tea—I bought two
took it according to directions as given in your book, and my kidneys have not troubled me since.
Yours with thanks, Chas. AY. Allyn, 26 East Fourth Street
PRICE, $1.50 PER BOTTLE, LASTING IN REGULAR DOSES, ONE MONTH.
SOLD EVERYWHERE AT LOCAL STORES AND BY EVERY WHOLESALE DRUGGIST IN THE U.S.
flANUFACTURED BY DONALD KENNEDY, ROXBURY, MASS.
SEND POSTAL CARD FOR BOOK.
Not a TEadical Change.
Mrs. Battle—How time changes
things, to be sure!__Who’d ever
thought to sec Mrs. Lowleigh “in the
swim? 11
Mrs. Tattle—Who, indeed!
Mrs. K. —How straDge it must seem
to her? T.—WliT^range?
been Mrs. washworc tbe biggest Hasn’t part $^i of 0
a
her life?— rsfiid&go Record.
He Agreed With Him.
t • I don’t never read them lyin’ news
papers said Farmer Bighead to a
solicitor for his shipments.
.. That’s right, that’s right,” replied
the slick solicitor.
And on the strength of the slight
acquaintance thus formed, the know
it-all farmer gave him consignments.
The farmer now sings the old song:
<< He’s gone but not forgotten.”— Ex.
A Hay Rake Would Do.
< 4 I want to give Brother Tom some
little gift before he leaves for college.
What would you get?”
Florence—“I saw some lovely hair
brushes with silver monogram, and
B
i i You silly girl; don’t you know he
belongs to the football team? 11 Chi
cago Inter Ocean.
Cheap Rates for Holiday Excursionists
Whenever there and lhe is an public opportunity generally, to serve llie
its patrons, good
"Bouthern”—» synonym tor safety anil
service—exerts itself.
It is now announced with pleasure that this
“Greatest .Southern System” will place on
-ale Christmas holiday tickets for the season
of 1894-C5at the low rate of four cents per
mile one way, for the lotmii trip. These tick¬
ets will b- available from December 22nd to
2otii and Irom December 29 h 3,1895. to January 1st,
with extreme limit January
Call on any agent of the Southern Railway
Co. for further and fuller informal ion.
A t'nre tlint Cures
is the kind most people desire. Such a cure is
Kipans Tabules, nut not a cure fore very I hi ng.
They are for all liver snd stomach disorders
and one tabule gives relief.
>T
*aJ
r-.-Vv
• .IvV V
m
\
KNOWLEDGE
tends Brings comfort and improvement and
rightly to personal enjoyment
used. The many, who 11, „
tei .flan others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the the world’s best products to
the needs value of physical health being, will attest
to of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Its Syrup of Figs.
excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas¬
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax¬
ative ; effectually cleansing the system, '
disnelling and permanently colds, headaches curing constipation. and fevers ] |
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical ,
profession, neys, Liver because and Bowels it acts without on the weak- Kid- j !
ening objectionable them and it is perfectly free from
every substance.
gists _ Syrup of Figs is for sale bv all drug- :
in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man¬
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup :
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, and being also the name, Syrup of Figs,
well informed, you will uot
E’cept any substitute if offered.
•a
lUPAT'X’.'ra 771. TZ3713
SOUTHERN SHORTHAND
-AND—
m
L,
In “The Grand, I’caclitree St , ATLANTA, OA.
At ffis lew Year’s” Opening, Jan. 1st, 1895.
Over 6,000 Have Been I’laeed in Fine Positions.
Bookkeeping, Shorthand and Telegraphy Taught.
SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS TO ALL ENTERING 1st JANUARY.
{vT'Sentl for Illustiiitefi Catalogue at once— v her. Aililres
A. C. BRISCOE, Brest., Atlanta, Georgia.
TA Be on Guard
ft against imitations of Pear/ins,
When they are not dangerous,
they are worthless. They
^ are usually both. Pearhnt
0 does what nothing
else can. It saves
v L v labor in washing, and
/' IV insures s atety to what
is washed. It is cheap,
thorough and reliable. No
thing else will “do as wellit is
\ just as well to have nothing else.
1 ’B T <T T** Peddlers and some nnscrupulousgrocers""!! ” “ the same
tLJKT 8 VV ctl (3 tell you “ this is as good as or
as Pearline.” IT’S FALSE—Pearline Pearhne, a
never peddled, and if your grocer sends yon something in place of
do the honest thing— ser.ditback, 2&1 JAMES PVIX, New f or*
Better Crops
result from use of fertilizers rich in potash. Most fertilizers sold
do not contain
Sufficient Potash
to insure the best results, The results of the latest investigations
of the use and abuse of potash are told in our books.
Th-y are sent free. It will cost you nothing to read them, and they will save you
do] iar i, GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, New York.
Cur£ s a Ll
X- 'A ipSEASES. SKIN
r 2^>emishe$ ii facial
. rf.Vrr ’
J.T* OR Shuptrine, BY MAI 3
u ^Savannah.G a.
P IOKHE a'ToNic Pellets
TREATMENT tod Bilioasneis.
—
S. V .... ......Fifty-one, ’91
I
Best Cough wncnc By nip. nLL Tastes Good. fAILd- Uee Of, j
1 SfSSrae' L iI:! f “' I By <!¥= dr uggist h.
THE
ENGINE5
3L2PTT)
% boilers
grewK giisNjr 2e\ Styles from
$§§§?, Of all
4 to 600 horse po»' er
2 k-v^***
-? 9
K5S
Send for Catalogues to ,,,.
A. B. 7AR«CHiIt C®., Bd.,t or ’
Tin-: i:i. '-Tn
ARTIFICIAL ball-bearin'-' knei LIMB*.
with j ...
The latest improved -riptlve a»
Send and fordes
i-rlce list.
T. C. HILLS. Mci»su'"’ T
Succt'S’-or t-o , St.Uhar.et -:
516 & 518 (o‘d No.nit
tfirvet., * N ' \v urlean^. La.
torelu’^ “ of valtr cent
CbarltM W A L L A. ST. ti;i FKEK idwlu A. LA.., 40 of Wall ( t Vs S. , p ■» S. , r Y-