Newspaper Page Text
THE CARROLL COUNTY TIMES.
VOL. XIV.
IT LEADS ALL.
Xo other bh>o<l-i>urifying medicine is made,
or hM cvrr been prepared, which so com
pletely meets the wauls of physician? ami
in* general public as
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
It Icaih the list as a truly scientific prepar.v
don for all blood diseases*. If there is a Inrk-
X nnA rni n ingtaUit of Scrofula about you.
Scrofula ai-ek’s sarsaparilla. w*i
Jjglodge it and expel it from your system.
For constitutional or s. rofuious Catarrh,
A a T«nnu Ater’s Sarsaparilla is the
bAIAnKn true rrmeh. It has cured
namberlcss cases. It will stop the nauseous
catarrhal discharges, and remove the sicken
ing odor of the breath, which are indication!
(X scrofulous origin.
11l PFRflllS Hutto, Tex.,Sept. 25,15?2.
ULuunUUO “At the age of two years one of
Qnnro my children was terribly afflicted
vUnLO with ulcerous running sores on its
fneo and neck. At the same time its eyes
▼ere swollen, much inflamed, and verysoro.
A.... CvrQ Physicians told us that a pow-
OUnt LI to erfnl alterative medicine must
be employed. They united in recommending
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. A few doses pro
duced a perceptible improvement, which, by
an adherence to your directions, was contin
ued to a complete and permanent cure. No
evidence has since appeared of the existence
of anv scrofulous tendencies; and no treat
ment of any disorder was ever attended by
nioro prompt or effectual results.
Yours truly, IJ. F. JOHNSON.”
PREPARED BY
Dr.J.C. Ayer&Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by till Druggists; 81, six bottles for S->
fROFESSIOXAL AND LAW CARD <
W.C. ADAMSON,
Atto’ney Law
carrollton, - - -
promptly transacts all business confided to
him.
of<x, in tZr-e court haute, north west comer, first
fw. 5-ts
's7 E. GROWT
ATTORNEY - AT - LAW.
and real estate agent.
MONEY loans negotiated on improved farms in
Carroll, Heard, and Haralson connties, at
reaaonable rates.
Titles to lands examined and abstracts fur
nished.
Offiice up stairs in tbe'court house,
•3tf Carrollton, Ga.
A.J.CAMP,
Attorney at
VILLA RICA GA.
WM. c. lIODNETT,
ATTOKN E Y-AT-L A W.
TULA RICA, - - - - GEORGIA
t J?’ Office over Dr. Slaughters
Drugstore. Prompt attention giv
cn to all business intrusted to him.
W. F. ROBINSON
Fhy ssiciiiii t£a Surgeon
BUCHANAN, - - - GEORGIA.
t.*T’ Chronic diseases a Specialty.
W. D. FITTS.
PHysician. Surgeon.
CARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA.
’till, at all times, be found at W. W, Fitts’ drug
More, unless professionally absent. 38-tl
W. F. BROWN,
Attorney A.t Xpyv,
CARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA.
C. P. GORDON,
ATTORN EY-AT-L A W,
CARROLLTCU, ------ GEORGIA.
WOOL CARDING.
1 mejnst reclothed, overhauled, and put in
eperatioh my large wool carding machine, and
willgive it my I’ernonal Attention from
tow until the Ist of January next. We make
perfect rolls, and guarantee good weight. Call
on or address | j yy SIMMS
l°tf Carrollton, Ga.
w. W, & G, W. MERRELI
A.tto’ncysi evt
CARROLLTON, - - GJ.
Re,coyl« and land titles examined. Will
collect claims, la; ge or small. Especial at
tention given to the business of managing
♦state by Executors, Administrators, Gar
dians Ac and oihe 1 ’ business before the Or
dinary. Wil] practice in all the superior
courts of the Coweta circuit, and always at
tesfi at Haralson court. IFill practice any
where- and in any court where clients may
requite their services:
DR.~D. F. KNOTT
Is permanently located in Car
rollton and tenders his
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
to the citizens of Carrollton and
vicinity.
Office, Johnson’s Drug Store.
Residence, Dixie street, opposite
G. M. [TpsMw’s. 1-2.
IREYOU GiILXG TO PIIM ?
If so it will pay you to use
Martinez & Longman’s
PURE PREPARED
PAIN T S.
Call or sepd /or color cards and list
houses painted with them to T II Robikds
* Son, Agents, Villa Rica, Ga., or
c J. COOLEDGE & DDO,
21 Alabama st. Ga ,
11 bolesale dealers in P'* T >s, Oils
Varnishes, Br • us, and
GP
FOR SALE.
P«“ i, ' iue ?j. B, ' iler », Saw Mills, Corn Mihr. Cotton
nil ' ,iil Spindles, pulley shafting. Hanger,
Whi.m U " CASTING. Piping. Steam guages
A l ' tS k CtC ’ etC -
ALbO Door.*, Sash, Blind?, Brackets, etc.
’ r, to for estimates on any
Ko 't of machinery.
R. b. C.)[,E * CJ .
N < u : a: 1,
-
Gh.D.W. D J RSETT
J>I U’SICIAN AND SL'RGEON
temple, cla.
’’’l brinC" U h’-i'ed .it Te npie I offer
’’•IIC 1 set vice.-to iheciliz ot Car-
01),,'. '-'“‘J ,lf -ii:g couiitte-. Special attention to
Chuh. di-cise* <4 women. Office at
swf'r-,i V i' * bell’s store, AU cilTs promptly a.i
frum n t "’ght—All night calls answered
“» d. J. McCain's residence. S—ly,
A Short Talk With The Beys.
M. Quad, in Detroit Free Press:
Take this lump of white sugar
and bold it under your microscope
and what do you see? It looks like
coarse, white sandstone, but at the
same time there is such a delicious
look that your mouth begins to
water, and you long for a taste.
lake the finest powdered whits
sugar—so fine that it feels like
Hour in your fingers—and under
the microscope you can see grain®
as if quartz rock had been broken
up.
lake the lightest, driest brown
sugar you can find and put it un
der ihe glass and yon‘see a damp
mass, with here and there a speck
of dirt. Every grain standsout by
itself, find you wonder that the su
gar did not wet your fingers.
Now, then, how°are sugars made?
“Don’t know,” as usual. I asked
a boy standing at the door of a big
sugar refinery, in New Orleans,
this question, and he replied:
“Don’t know, mister—never bin
in there.”
“Why not?”
“Drnther go fishing.”
Let’s see if the process won’t be
of interest to the thousands of lads
who have no opportunity to get at
the facts from pei sonai observa
tion.
Y 011 know that sugar-cane is
grown the same as corn, though it
must be more highly cultivated.
It is cut in season and carted to
the sugar mill, where the cane is
crushed and the juice extracted.
The juice or the sap is the flattest
stuff you ever tasted, and not at all
like the sap from a sugar maple.
It is run into pans and boiled down
until su<rar is left—a wet, coarse,
d irk stuff the taste of which would
disgust you.
Our southern sugar men seldom
attempt to make a nice brown su
gar, hut barrel up the coarse mate
rial IVpoke of and send it to the
refiner, or, rather, sell it to them.
Togo through a refinery jou
must jump from the basement to
the tenth floor and follow the pro
cess down instead of up. The su
gar goes first into the basement
find is dumped into the melters.
I hese are iron caldrons eight or
ten feet across the top and five or
six feet deep, with perforated bot
toms. Steam are used to
melt the sugar; and the li piid drops
down into tanks. From these
tanks it is pumped directly to the
tenth floor into clarifiers. These
:ue large iron tanks, steam heated,
and the liquid is kept at a heat of
200 degrees. The next move takes
it down to the ninth floor. Pipes
conduct it from the clarifiiers to
spouts below, and at each spout is
a bag made of coarse material. —
The liquid strains through the bags
into iron tanks on the eighth floor
These bags must be kept very clean
and the tubs to wash them in are
handy by, while men, stripped to
the waist, do the washing.
The liquid runs from the eighth
floor to the seventh, and falls into
huge iron pots sunk flush with the
floor. Each one of these great
pots is full of bone-black—7o,ooo
pounds in each pot. Bone black
is the dust of the bones of horses
and cattle, and it looks and feels
like coarse blasting powder. It is
a filter and a purifier. The liquid
makes its way down through the
bone black to the sixth floor, and
you now’ notice a great change in
col'r. It has lest its dark and
muddy look, and is as clean as
commbn water. Iron tanks receive
it as it filters through, find it is run
off in pipes Io other tanks on the
fifth floor. From here it takes a
boost back to the sixth floor, to go
into the pans to 1 e reheated as the
liquid is now getting cooled off.
These pans are iron tanks with
ste im coils i isidc, find the syrup
is boiled for two ‘iionrs and a half-
As it comes down to the fifth floor
ajaii) it inns into the mixer, and
from that into the centrifugals on
the fourth floor. These centrifu
gals are open iron tanks, lined with
brass, ami perforated with thous
ands of sin ill holes. They make
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA. FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH jXIBBS.
,2 i ( ) ievolutions per minute as
they turn the thick, sticky stuff in
to a fair grade of brown sugar. If
you ever visit a steam laundry you
will see them drying clothes by tb.e
process, jhe centrifugal revolves
with such speed that all the damp
ness i< thrown out through the per
forations.
Close at hand, as the iron tanks
go spinning around, are tubs of
b.m? water, and the contents are
lad cd in to “tone’ the sugar and
further purify it. It runs now to
the floor below, and conies in a
hopper in which are revolving
knives. These knives mix and
firn and dry the sugar, and if the
grade is the one the refinery is
1 running on, the sugar is thrown
on the floor to be barreled. If a
higher grade is desired it fall into
a bin on the floor below, and a man
shove's it to an endless elevator,
ami it is hi-ted up one story again
and goes into the granulator. This
is a large iron cylender, kept con
stantly not, and revolving like a
coffee-roaster. The office of tins
is to separate the grains and far
ther dry the sugar. It comes out
hot to the touch, and runs in spouts
to the floor below.
You have seen a miller place a
barrel under a spout and let it fill
with flour? But this beats the
miller all hollow, lie must shake
his own barrels to settle the con
tents, while in this case each bar
rel stands on an iron plat ■which
keeps up a steady jolting, tilting
the barrel about, until the sugar
packs as hard as sand. One man
has charge of three spouts, and
as he wheels the filled barrels off
the shaker, a cooper stands ready
to put in the head, and crowd on
the hoops. The barrels are sent
up from the sidewalk on two end
less chains, f -’ ’ arms are at
tached at regular distances. The
barrel rests against these arms un
til it is carried to a certain higbt,
and it is then dumped off to the
cooper's feet.
Now, then, you know how su
gar is made—coarse brown, light
brown, powdered, granulated and
coffee, but three hours’ tramp
through such an institution reveals
many ot.ier interesting facts. It is
the place above all others to Hud a
perfect system. Everything goes
like clock-work, from basement to
the top floor. Every employee has a
certain task to do, and there is no
confusion. Steam works here to
pefection. It melts the plantation
sugar into its original state. It
boils if, tends if a journey of miles,
filters it, dries it, and transforms
the dirty brown into snow-white.
It does all the lifting, hauling and
pulling —it saves time and labor
and weary steps.
And, too, yon must forcibly re
alize how patient and persever
ing men have been before us, to
study and experiment until they
brought this process to perfection
The most trifling thing of all baf
fled them the longest. With
out bone - black our sugars would
be full of dirt; but it was only by
accident that it was ever used.
Who would have thought the char
red ami powdered bones of domes
tic animals a purifier for the main
ingredients in our sweet-cakes?
Bred in the Bone.
Two youthful politicians, one of
republican persuasion and the oth
er a ixd hot champion of the dem
oeratic cause, had the following an
imate 1 discussion of the situation
on Frederick street a few evenings
since. Said the K “publican lad:
“The dimocrats can’t be no gau
gf rs and store-keepers.”
‘‘Why not?" questioned the irate
demccrat.
“Cause they can't do no tigerin’
that’s the reason.”
“Then," responded the disciple !
of Jefferson, “I'd like to know who 1
form I out New Ymk went dimo-i
cra’ic. if it wasn't the jdimocrats
tliat did.
ibis was a poser.—Owensboro,
Inquirer.
Ttie root evil is a hog in a '
.flower garden.
How A. Brsve Man du*d i Che Soudan.
Air. Burleigh, the war corrrea
pondont who was wounded at Abu
Klea, has under the inspiration of
his hurt, written to the Daily Te 1 -
egraph a thrilling account of the
and in it occurs this descrip
| lion of Colonel Burnaby’s death,
’■which must become historical:—
ҤtiJ ddwnMTpon trs ihe dark
I Arab wave rolled. It had arrived
within three hundred yaids undi
i minished in volume, unbroken in
I strength—a rush of spearemen and
i swordsmen. Their rifle fire had ceas
ed. Other Arab forces surrounding
o
. ue— the Mahdi > troops, plundering
Bedouins and pillaging villagers
I from tlie river side—stood eager
lon the hillsides watching the
' charge upon the British square. In
! wild excitement, their white "teeth
i glistening and the sheen of their
brandished weapons flashing like
thousands of mirrors, onward they
come, charging straight into our
ranks.
‘:I was at that instant inside the
square, not far from the Gardner
gun, when I saw the left face move
somewhat backward. Col. Bimna
by himself, whose every action at
the time I saw from ft distance of
about thtrty yards, rode out in
front of the rear left face, appa
rently to assist two or three skir
mishers running in hard pressed.
All but one man of them succeeded
in reaching our lines. Colonel
Burnaby went forward to his as
sistance sword in hand. As the
dauntless Colonel rode forward he
put himself in the way of a shiek
charging down on horseback.
‘Ere the Arab-closed with him a
bullet from some one in our ranks
brought the shiek headlong to the
ground. The enemy’s spearemen
were close behind, and one of them
suddenly dashed at Colonel Burna
by, pointing the long blade of his
spear at his throat. Checking his
horse and pulling it backward, Bur
naby leapt forward in his saddle
and parried the Moslem's rapid and
ferocious thrusts. But the 1 .-ngth
of the man's weapon—eight feet—
put it out of his power ■ > return
with interest of the Ara.j’s murder
ous intent. Once or twice Col.
Burnaby just touche i his man, on
ly to make him more wary and
eager. The aft: >y was the work of
seconds only, lor the savage herds
of swarthy uegroes from Kordofan
and straight-haired tawny com
plexions I Arabs of the Bayuda
steppe were fast closing in upon our
square.
“Colonel Burnaby fenced the
s earthy Arab as if he were play
ing in an assault at arms, and
there was a smile on his features
as lie drove off the man's awkward
points. The scene was taken in at
a glance. With that lightning in
stinct which I have seen desert
warriors before now display in
battle while coming to one anoth
ers aid, an Arab, who was pursu
ing a soldier and had passed five
paces to Burna y'; right and rear,
turned with a sudden spring, and
this second Arab ran his spear
point into the Colonel’s left shoul
der. It was but a slight wound.
Enough, though, to cause Burnaby
to twist around in his sa Idle and
defend himself from this unexpec
ted attack
“Before the savage could repeat
his unlooked for blow, so near the
ranks of the square was the scene
now being enacted, a soldior ran
out and drove his sword bayonet
through the second assailant. Brief
as was Burnaby's glance backward
at this fatal episode it was long
enough to enable the first Arab to
deliver his spear point full in the
brave officer's throat. The blow
drove Burnaby our of his saddle,
but it required a second one be
fore he let go his grip of the reins
and tumbled upon the ground.
“Half a dozen Arabs were now ;
abort him. With blood gushing i
c I
in streams from his ga.-b.cJ throat •
the dauntless guardsman leapt to
his feet sword in hand and slashed
at i b.c ferocious group. Thev wer?
the wild strokes of a proud, brave j
man ‘lying hard and he was quick-'
ly overborue and left helpless and
dying.”
The Little child, on the Track.
As the freight train on the East
Side road was coming into Ste
phons station on Monday night
the engineer and fireman, saw to
their horror, a little child not over
three years old, balancing her tiny
self upon one of the rails ahead
and clapping her hands in greatest
glee as the iron monster thundered
along toward her. The engineer
shut off steam and reversea the le
ver, while the fireman sprang to
the top of the tram and set two or
three brakes quicker and tighter
than they had ever been set before.
To blow the whistle would be noth
ing but murder, thought the engu
neer, for it would surely f-ighteu
the child and cause her to fall in
front of the train. So he called
out, and probably the tones of his
voice had never before been so
tenderly modulated. But 'calling
and motioning were of as little
avail as the endeavors to stop the
heavy train so suddenly. The little
girl, knowing no fear, was waving
her sunbonnet and her laugh could
be heard in the cab of the engine.
The strong man closed his eyes and
a feeling of sickness came over
him. But it was not destined
that that little life should thus be
crushed out. Something—was it
mere chance or the brush of an
angel's wing?—caused the wee one
to reel and fall backward awav
from the track, her tiny feet al
most touching the wheels as they
Wert rumbling past. •
The coining holidays will be
more generally observed than any
for many years, and we would
remind our readers that a bottle of
Dr. Bull’s Cough syrup will prove
most acceptable holiday present.
It is understc 4 hatAlr. Arthur
• n , .
will run over co Washington ocea
sionally for a little game of pano
'• de with Grover.
The Sham And The Koah
Every good thing h is it s host of
imitators; every genuine article its
counterfeits. Bad manners and
wicked habits have theirs also ;but
he who shams the bad never boasts
of it, while they who ape the virtu
es of the good or simulate the gen
nine never hesitate to place * the
counterfeit before the public in
their most alluring tones. When
these people imitate they always
choose a pronounced type or popu
lar subject to copy from, and when
they claim to be as good as “So
and So,“ or to sell an article equal
to “So-and So,“ the public may de
pend upon it that. Mr. “So and So
and his article are always the best
of the kind. Thus the sham is always
proving the genuine merit of the
thing it copies. A firm of enter
prising gentleman produce and pop
ularise an article of household’use,
such as the Royal Baking Powder,
whose convenience, usefulness, and
real merit make for itself an im
mense and universal sale. A hundred
imitators arise on every hand, and
as they hold out their sham art
icles to the public, yelp in chorus,
“Buy tliis;it’s just as good as Royal
and much cheaper!’’ The Royal
Baking Powder is the standard the
world over, and its imitators in
their cry that theirs is as good as
Royal" are all the time emphasizing
this fact. In their laborious attempts
to show by analysis and other
wife that the“ Snowball” brand has
as much raising poweu'as the Roy
al"; or that the “Resurrection'’pow
der is as wholesome “as Royal”; or
that the “Earthquake’’ brand is“as
pure as the Royal,”as well as by
their contortive twistings of chemi- ■
cal certificates and labored effort
to obtain recognition from the Gov
ernment chemist and prominent
scientists who have cerritied the
superiority of Royal over all others,
they all admit the “Royal” to be
the acme of perfection, which it is
their highest ambition to imitate.
But the difference between the real
and these imitations, which copy
only its general appearance, is as
wide as that between the paste and
the true diamond. The shams all
pay homage to the“ Royal!"
But for democratic party quar
rels the world would never have
heard of Abraham Lincoln.—lndi
anapolis News.
Spiritualists bcl’eve that the ro
ses of earth arc transplanted in
heaven.
The mischief is always <l»»iie
when sheriffs au>! engineers are
asleep.
P evident Cleveland kissing ih' Bible
There was no intention of the
chief justice to open the book at
any particular place, and no desire
i of President Cleveland that there
‘.should Ik‘ anything pre-arrangad
about the ceremony in any wa v.
The particular place where he
kissed, therefore, was the n -uh of
accident entirely. As the type
used in the bible is small, the lip
. of the president touched six verses
t of the 12th Psalm, from verse 5 i
• verse 10, inclusive. They arc .
; follows:
A good man showeth favor 1
lendeth; he will guide his affai
with discretion.
Surely he shall not be moved
I r
forever; the righteous shall be in
everlasting remembrance.
Ho shall not be afraid of evil ti
dings; his heart is fixed trusting m
the Lord
His heart is established, he sh. 11
not be afraid, until he sees hi- de
sire upon his enemies.
He hath dispersed, he hath giv
en to the poor; his righteousne-s en
dureth forever, his horn shall be '
exalted with honor.
The wicked shall see it, and be j
grieved; he shall gnash his teeth j
and melt away; the desire of th.
wicked shall perish*—Baltiumre
Sun. •
Geu. Logeu And Morrison.
Mrs. Logan, speaking tu-night
of the senatorial contest waging in
the Illinois legislature between her
husband and Representative Mor
rison, said to youi correspondent:
•‘You iiavc doubtless observed that
during all this struggle not a sin
gle harsh word has come from can
didates or any of their friends.
Well, you will not hear a harsh
word if the deadlock should con
tinue all summer. Neither Colo
nel Morrison nor my husband will
permit it. They are the best of
friends. So are Mrs. Morrison
and myself. You see our husbands
were in the same brigade
were in the war at
Fort Donelson, and were woun
ded. Mrs. Morrison and 1 went
for them, and we have been the
best of personal friends ever since
and our husbands have been, too.
Mrs. Morrison would readily reseni
a slander against my husband, and
I tun sure I would not listen to an
untruth to injure Colonel Morri
son, or suffer an unfair advantage
to be taken of him. The same may
b 6 said of our husbands.” Airs. Lo
gan did not directly say so, but she
lias strong hopes of the senator’s
re-election.
A remarkadly handsome woman 1
is said to be the moveing spirit in
a philanthropical movement in
Russia to supply the poor of that
country with Dr. Bull's Cough
Syrup, the great remedy for cough
and colds.
Marietta, Ga., March 11.—
| Special. ] —The balloon man made
his aerial trip from here yestard \y
evning in the presence of a large
crowd. His balloon rose a
point near the south side of th
square. It rose rapidity and fell
near the national cemetery.
Conyers, March 11.—[Special
—On yesterday Messers. J. H.
Almand, Son <fe Co., bought the
stock of goods of Messrs. L. J
Almand A Co. Mr L. J. Ahn i;-l !
’ wih keep the books of Messrs J.II.
Almand, Son & Co. Messrs. J.IL, ’
G. A. and B.A. Almand have j
bought the stock of goods of Messrs.
Herrin A Turner at Lawrenceville.
Messrs. G. A. and R. A. Almand
will move to Lawrenceville an 1 ;
take charge of the store there.
Cochran, Ga., March 11.—The
town council have turned over the
work and everything in .-.onnection
with the artesian well to Alkerman
jF. T. Dawson, and he has gone to
; work in solid earnest and the indi
cations are that wc will -oon have
the water, pure and in satisfactory
abundance. The machinery i un
till the time nighj and day. The
water is within five feet of the |
mouth of the well.
Hartwell, Ga., March 11.—
Colonel Larry Gantt has snout the
day in Hartwell. In his visits to
, his 010 home in Elbert countv hi
hardly ever fails to take in our to a i
as he has many friends here wlm
i always give him a cordial welcome.
■"
headaches
V-d, Ar * g« ne **iiy uducM
V «. e ‘ • \ l’y Indigestion, Font
< . ‘ CoMiecnegg,
Deficient Circulation,
or some Derangement
‘ * ’>- r mill Digestive System*
• - . - * ..g! >r the use of
er’s Pills
•‘ rtomneh and produce a regn-
’•' ■ i’t of tbc bowels. By their
; m; organs, Aver’B ITlls divert
'■ i . i.i the brain, and relieve a.nl
Congestive and Nervous
"• ■' '"•< Headache* and Sick
: I by keeping the bowels free,
- ’ ■ the system in a healthful
immunity from future
s Pills.
FWEARED BY
J.C.Ayer&Co.,Lowell,lVass.
Sold by all Druggists.
THIS PAPER
IN CLUB WITH
If O D E Y ’ S
LADY’S BOOK
\\ 1 b • sent for 1 year to any address
on > ■ <vip < f > 2.5 >. which should be sent to the
publisher of the TIMES.
Godey’s Lady’s Book
I'th? 'l*b’«t t.imi \ magazine iu America, ana is
cur. h b\ the puss and public to be the lead
ing fishiou mi j /.i ie, ef-peccially ho, as its cir
culation probably cdvts tue largest area of any
American publication, its patrons being found
it: ev-. ry civilized country under the sun. isss
wiliinur!; ti e fifty fi.jth year of this niagaxlHe
and it is propo- d that, it shall not only ex tceed iu
excellent ein every department anything in its
prem’ous history, but surpass in attractiveness,
quality and quantity any other magaazines pub
Itshe I lor the same price. The magazines, du
ringlßss,wlllcGutaiu:
pages ot reading, consisting of stories
Novels, kbmances, Sketches, Poetry. History
Bio.uaphi. s. by Che test magazine writers, also,
Art and Current notes, Charades. Diale.'ties. ’ cs
sons eii L>t- --it: Ling and cooking.
■>•!(.) Prnct.cni K.-.-ipes; besides descriptions of
fashions dom. -; ic. and foreign,
150 pa i s illustrating Fashions in color, and
black and white,
50 ;u illm-irating Fancy work in colors and
black and white.
21 pages of select music
IS Beautiful Er.gr. wings.
12 lihistrations of Arehlte'. nil designs; be -
sides iiiusi rations oi House! al Interiors and
Stories
i,.e , Subscriber will be allowed to make a
selection e-i ;h month of a ‘'Full Size Cut Paper
i’ittvrn ot ;. iy design ill strated in the Maga-
A'lie, \ ithoui extra cost; these patterns are
wortr mme than 'he price of the magazine. He
v.ni: also pivsen to every subscriber a Bteel En
■u-.a: I- tl'oi framing) of Peranlt’s celebrated
picture ‘•■bleeping Love,’’ prepared expressly’ for
this magazine.
As Godey’s Lady book has faithfully observed
its promises with the public for 51 years, there
neo be no doubt about the above offer being
luiiii vp to the left,ter. Subscription price s2’oo
a year. Sample copies, 15 cents.
Adn-ess, GODEY’S LADY’S BOOK,
i . O. Lock Box 11, If., Philadelphia, Pa.
HAVE YOU TAKEN
Tig atm m worm m ®
11 not, lay this paper down and send fov it ngut
now. ”
II you wan: it every day, send for the Daily,
whicn Co-ts st<) a year, or $5 for six months or
lor three months.
L ycu w.iut it t very week, send for the Great
'V 'Y' - ’Ahi-' -I c jsi s $1.25 a year or $5 for clubs
ol live.
THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION
Is Hie Cheapest I
Biggest and Best Paper
Printed in America!
1 -J2p>g:- chock full of news, gossip and
week. It prints more romance
’’ ■ 1 - s ‘ <ry papers, more farm news than the
ugri< ultui . p ipers, more inn than the humorous
p :pers—besides a[l the news, and
BiLL A.i. 'S AND BETSY HAMILTON’S LETTERS,
L'i'CLE REMUS’S SKETCHES.
AND
' A...MAGE’S SERMONS,
C > » cj itH i vjjc!
L 1 m ■om e week take-a whole week to read it!
iciiv in’t firm or keep house without it!
■‘r.'yy _u , <hi a postal card, address it
u-, an i we wili -■ md yon specimen copy free!
Atl -*••-- TilE CONSTITUTION.
DO YOU KNOW
THAT
LORRILLARD’S CLIMAX
PLUG TOBACCO
with j: I Tin-Tag; Rose Leaf Fine cut chewin
naw >; .1) -, and black. Brown, and yellow
:ii:n- f.i the b st and cheapest, quality consid
-13321y
HAVE YOU A CARDEN?
IF YOU HAVE
<&tCUb
A ’he Best at the least money. Then
v ’ c \ J ? ue W>!l surprise you. No matter
S recio a a g U ' ri ‘ l moM »- Iti "
WM. H. MAULE,
& 131 Front St., Philadelphia.
A\ anted. Dry Hides and wet.
Highest prices paid, Cash or bar
ter. At the Post office.
.»-4ts. G D Merrell.
ZPO2? So-10.
ZTinn V ' n < , iini) r? ved farm Some
JUvU ~ry desirable places. Two well fur-
i. - ie- 4 loom houses in city limits. Also one
bu- ncss hotrne, good location for trade ’
Fii d 3 room coiuf ortable
1 V«j si a. if ■ »hou»c, auu one acre lot iu-«t
beyt deity limits. For terms etc., apply
„ S.N. JONES,
Real Estate Agent.
AGEN T S
C 5 er sold. Containing
1. tte, with gilt side and edges. •) x
prte* W.SO worth
im >• nt so ex .tains
> Shio‘ A<ULedi Foshce & MeMakin/CiSTciWuatL
1 vuio, Qi
NO. aL