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CURIOUS CAIRO.
STREET SIGHTS AND SC ENES IN
\N ORIENTAL CITY.
Donkey* and Donkey Roys — TTic
Veiled Native Women—( ameli
In tend of Carls — Hie
Water Carriers.
t* of the most interesting
and iHrjtcn > town* id »be world mn«t
be this ( tun AH time and all the na
lions of te» day ieem to be represented
ht re. The great museum presents to us
stat in *vond rful life and real beauty
and artistic merit older Ilian the pyra
raids m than 5000 years old now
— while we can mm: the same type of men
exactly, walking in the streets of Cairo,
IP ide it annual influx of winter
visitors, twei pally English and Ameri
ins, there arc tome regular residents in
C.uro, Of tviib a 20,Odd or ltd,000 are
Fair* (>< all rht: nations of Europe,
Orient ab from 1! part* of
od many from Arabia
and othe t parts of Asm.
Till! fil »t thing ^fiiat struck my eye on
en nn< t he cit y was the great charm and
ofi seeing nearly all the men and
1 ) 0 } A d in long w hite or pale blue
garniepti. 'Uhesc bang quite loose and
look like long night ‘-liirts, coming down
lo tin ■et. T'hr feet life Covered, When
if all; with brig hi yellow br
TI i slippers, aiul the head is cu
in a white turban, generally
mid round a white cap, which shows
UI)OV( it This is either the well-known
fed 1 pvitli it blEu k tassel or the pale
brown I< It cap characteristic of the fella¬
heen.
S> x ; <o the very picturesque effect of
th».se'♦dry. jiretty garments, jierhaps the
nio-t sijirpiising donkeys, thing was the great num¬
ber of saddles, carrying large bright
ec)loi( \il cloth that thronged the
streets Each of these is attended by a
boy i n Die dress described above, who
ru„i lirhind it and shouts at it and whips
it. At first sight it looked its though
there twt-re almost as many donkeys as
pe on ,i< 1 in the streets
The [native women constantly ride don¬
keys aiiyl very curious figures they look
In the 1 addle. Of course a womait in
tin’s e yuntrv thinks it as great a disgrace,
unless tone of the very lowest class of the
people, I to expose her face as tc> expose
any otlnt i part of her person. The eyes
only mcl visible, the mouth being kept
most Kcitupulously covered Very large,
loo-1 ga|'meuts, generally of shiny, black
silk, art ^ worn by ladies when out of
iloors, aii'd they ride cross-legged, but
with thorn] so short that their limb-, do
not haoi.g down at all, but are in an al¬
most horizontal position, In fact, they
fathei the\j suggest have trussed chickens. hold in this
Way hardly nn\ on the
addle, id one or often two men run he
side donk<|ys them) and support them. Dome of
tin- are magnificent, proud -look*
ing white)or gray animals, as large as u
rather sm:Ml mule, and carry gorgeous em
hroidcro.fl saddle's and saddle cloths iff
red vefivet or blue doth. Most of the
hack Monkeys, on the other hand, are in*
signilielpnt looking little beasts, which
Hr< mu, inappropriate when Carrying
>me gf 1 eat, fat Turkish merchant or a
long leg gvd, red-coated English soldier.
Wt-Utb y Bgypliaus will often pay $500
for a l< eaUy good ‘brnkoy, while, rxttUcnt)
juiiii; s t an he bought for a quarter or a
thirid o| 'he money.
I'he most, remarkable sight, perhaps, is
the nun iber of camels to he seen slowly
marchiii-g through tho Streets of Cairo,
CameN < " the deserts one expects to finrfe,
but few people are prepared to see so
many M them in the city. The fact is
they lar supply the place of carts, of
v. hich vtU'y few indeed arc to be seen, and
nea rly a,II the alfalfa used in Cairo h
brought in stacked on and around camels.
Both donkeys and the numerous horses in
small ha«;k carriages, which nbpundhcre,
SCPIU to Bo fed almost entirely on alfalfa.
Till one ls accustomed to the sight it is
Strang- to see ti stream oi large
darks C> thw bright green herb per
imbul-it i t'g to- s reels with a little bit ot
* ’‘- t - , u Ai ' ’7“ ’ ' j" ' u , ' ' ! l ,' A< " 1 1 '
" : '• ■'
lU( , ''" ''
1 1 "
. ,
ni :: 1 "! ’ '' ‘' sC us '. * u ". in '
-
i ..v < .in. .q - • 1 •> x '-> uo 't oim. I' 1 '
V llU ‘ h .r ' uni qu ui! ,.
l' 1 " 1 vi-ibiM-hnui. I he alfaltn is so
••j.-n-ked a* either side ot the animal in
nets of rope, and on Ins back, that no
more of I.ie tan Me .n nlun t Have tie
M-nh, 1 ,*'»*«’« i M.K' Mcn.
Ihe oan-ls may often b- seen going _
O‘ ! ou as many as
.HI \ of,hl " ! ’ ' ■ ";’'. a s l ia ' , ; t
.
file.verj 1 1 silei \ 1 1 “y fiu 1 ’unr ll ."' \ '*' great u s.dt pads 'j
• mlt ' u Ul ° !l sutu! '
make no noise, yd i'v tlnur very .-ize au.l
■ 1S<
h, ;.T ”•
• > ,, .. lv I.:., ‘ ' u , Y U
i
'U
Oil,- ' u- av, mum ing toward
ti- „tr -> depositing their load
of aUV. Y nnd then they are generally
being ridden by the fellaheen, ov
farmers, v bo have brought them in.
The motioi " the earn. ! is it walks—ami
the- farm camels m-u-r seem to troy
TP.: ; K ,h,
m v ustomed t'» d, lor i :. bodies of the
m. n . wkw.ud and forward with
even step of the bem in a wav ihe which
forcibly mt, Uiriocation of hips,
lu-uinm r a ■’ -'.ufully Mill back.
. 1 lis to bo seen light-colored
itly built camels, which seem to
TliH^W the ft-llalicca
1, ughbri 1 racehorse
. C-d- . V. ,:-d .1:, - ,r w!,t
„ u.ed Te m 'am t>. e..„el l; „p,
xmt Mahers ori.m\ I'r.tn- > tin I .-.vpf.r.n armv.
of thU eor.w may often be seen
t roti'ng through the less crowded streets,
risi - >priagit? to th long swinging trot
oft'' caneis am! holding the heads
U a'-ter : :u :u a high in the air by nug>
tlil ugh urn^, to winch are at
t;,t : *ed th ,-ords for guiding and con
tr U 1 ng them, t'amels are never bitted,
am } arm camels have nothing but head
stall s 011 Uhey appear, however, to be
vert u’Lle and obedient to a word or a
touch « >u tht ‘ ,,cck from their riders or
drivers, owm tf lo thcir ? ro3t height,
moreovi r - everything is ready, at far as
possible to F et out °f their way, especial
• ly when ure loadeb Wlth stacks
of alfalF sight *
t*r strange is _ to see the
ter c;tn* < * r? K" m k about the streets. W«
ter is :u l <tu all through Cairo, but the
watf* ,8t< b “uh, and many of the poor
jk< ■ < prefer to buy their water from
the carrier-, as they or th- ir ancestors
ha c b< -*- u doing irum time immemorial-
THE MONROE ADVERTISER, FORSYTH, GA, TUESDAY, JUNE 17 1890.---EIGHT PAGES.
rather than impoverish themselves by
adopting such new-fancied European
fprh a.« mysterious jets of water homing
our of iron pipes.
Some of the water-sellers carry the
water in large earthenware vessels with
bras* spouts, which are strapped on
♦o their backs, and from which they
pour the water '•cry rleverly over their
shoulders by just stopping forward.
into a cup which they hold in
their hands. The majority, howevee,
still use goat skins, which look most un
inviting, being black skins with the hair
onJy roughly sh/tvcd off them and with
the four legs and tail cut off, not very
short, and tied up, while the water runs
out through the neck of the skin, where
a small orifice only is left. These large
skins are sometimes on the backs of don
keys, but more often the men carry them
on their own hacks, ami go along bowed
down beneath the weight they arecarry
ing yct looking most cheerful* and
clinking two brass t-ups in one of their
hands to call the attention of the passer
by to the fact that a drink of the good
water of the river Nile may be obtained
on payment of a very small piece, ol
money. In the case of very poor peo
pie the water carriers generally charge
nothing at all for a drink. It
l- common act of charity,
we are told, on some festivals for a man
of wealth to hire a water-carrier to stand
near the door of a mosque to which peo¬
ple are flocking to worship, with instruc¬
tion.? tci give water freely to all who wish
for it. The water carrier calls oUt t d tho
crowd that free drinks are to be had, and
occasionally turns round to the man who
is indulging ,in this needless act of chari¬
ty and compliments him in words mean¬
ing “God forgive thy sins, oh, dispenser
of the drink offering.” To which tho
drinkers fervently reply: “Amen.”
When the skin is empty the last cup of
water is handed to the pious donor with
the "Words : “The remainder for the lib¬
eral man, and paradise for the confessor
<d the unity; God bless thee, thou dis¬
penser of the drink offering ;”—San
Francisco Chronicli.
^ Tim Use of Cocaine in Surgery;
One of the most valuable conquests til
modern surgery is that which was rc
alized by the discovery of the various
substances by means of which it has be
come possible to render insensible eithet
our fellow creatures or animals of inferior
classes. Among these substance, which
go by the name of anaesthetics, there arc
two which surpass Sll the Others in the
quickness and certainty of their effects;
I refer to ether and chloroform, which,'
for this reason, the surgeons, of all coun
tries have definitely adopted for the re
quirenients of their practice.
It was thought for a long time that we
were now iii possession of two means of
iusensibiliziug that were absolutely per
feet, and which no Other substance in the
future would fever be able to equal or re
place. This opinion arose front the fact
tbat surgeons had ndt considered the possi
bility of producing amesthesis by any
other means than by the internal ad
ministration of drugs (by means of the
lungs).
No one had yet dreamed of the possi
bility that some day it substance might
be discovered capable of producing local
insensibility by the simple fact of its
being applied to the surface of tissues.
And it yet was already we^fenown that bv
apuiutng etner on die surface of the
skin wc could produce this result, and a
few surgeons had already been clever
enough to take advantage of this means
to perform without -.York pain a few- very
simple operations lFrald.
Tn6 Bond Between the Earth and Sun;
It would almost seem as if our globe
were always trying to escape from the
thraldom of the sun, who, knowing how
fatal to us such an escape would be, in
cessantly interferes to prevent it. If only
the sun were to withhold that attractive
power by which the earth is maintained
in the course at present followed, dire
calamity must result. This globe of
()UrH is now hurrying along at a pace
c f eighteen miles h second, and if the
suu ‘ attraction Ho lunger restraiiied its
s
wc should not continue td revolve in a
circle, but Would at Once start off in a
straight line through spaces Every min
ute would take us nlore than ;t thousand
miles, and by the time-a hundred days
had elapsed we should be twice ;us far
f Iwn the sun as we are at present.. Ilis
ffo-lu and his beat would be reduced to
oao . foUrth part of wliat we now enjoy.
With every successive minute the sun’s
influence would still further abate, and
it i3 almo8t nec dlcss to add that all
known forms of life must vanish from the
globe. It is. therefore, satisfactory to
know tl\nt we possess every security that
the sun's attraction will‘never decline
from what it is at the present moment,
a ud therefore there is no ground for any
apprehension that life shall be chased
from tlii-- globe by a dissolution of the
»» «lg.-il<« «mn »d
"«*• '
---- I—----
' I Uniune 1 A American * Coin Collection C °
Boring G Fannalec, , the . numismatist
of b ”. 3tou ; :l "°‘' 1 u e f res | de “J of M lltmng
ton,\ t., has .old J 1 h,s valuable and unique
collection ot Ametioan coins to New
York P ers «? s ’ ™ are *° ! eU them at
public auction. Ihe collection comprises .
30001 p,eces, nuroy ot -hioh »«
vmuieulated, and is thought the most
valuable single collection of l mted
Statw coinage in the world,and is valued
*t Mr. Uarmalee has been
this collec
Don which incmdes the rare 1804 dol
lar, for which he paid $750, although ;.
h:is smce nearl Y doubled ln value, and a
-pteimea ot ever, goM com from 1795
down to tbe present date, the best assort
qu.TV,:. s.,™ of The rare piece, ol
™
u i hi n a- each. An unsue
ecssful effort wm made to secure these
colas for the G ?\ ern “ ent l lt beiu S 3
nearl Y complete col ection even than
‘
P‘ 1 - ! “ ^
~
ANewAiolet. 4 x . , .
A new violet has been discovered. Its
foliage leaves are longer than those of the
ordidary wild or cultivated violet. The
flower leaves of the new violet are a soft
white, striped oi mottled with light and
dark purple. Unlike the other cultivated
violets, the new one is a single violet. All
the cultivated violets have hitherto, with
out exception, been double. Single vio
lets, until this discovery of Mr. Cum
mings, have been without perfume, but
the Sykesville cultivated single violet has
a wealth of rich perfume that cannot be
surpassed. Those wonderful sweet plants
odora and oleo fragrans—do
not give off more wlelightful odors than
this new violet .—Hew York Worldk
THE TURQUOISE.
AN ACCOUNT OF THE DIFFERENT
Varieties of the stone.
Different, Places Where Turquoises
Have Been Found—The Color
Most Highly Prized—How
: the Stone is Cut.
j
i TVithin the past month daily papers
. nave given a brief account of the tur
j quoises in New Mexico, as though they
J only recently had been discovered there,
This may, indeed ' be new* to some per
sous, but not to those who* iftfcOff «ome
thiug about the history of these precious
stones. As long ago as 1858 Professor
IV. P. Blake called attention to the
presence of turquoise at Los Cerillos,
about twenty-two miles southwest of
fcantd Ft, where ancient mining opera¬
tions undoubtedly hid been carried on.
Nnce then fine specimens of turquoise
ft arr bei-n found in several States—for
example, in California, in Arizona and in
Nevada.
There arc many interesting facts con¬
nected with Idfquoise which it is well
sometimes to remember. To begin with'
the name itself, a curious fact is to „be
noted. Turquoise was formerly regarded
as coming from Turkey, and hence the
old Engish name of the gem was turkisc
or Turkey-storiC; But tho home of the
stone was id Persia. From Persia it made
its way westward to the Turks,- who
bartered ~uh‘ the European peoples. The
French naturally named 1C tfffqur-W, and
this is now our name for this stone of
delicate blue shading to a green.
Persia is still the home, or chief center*
of turquoise. About, all the finest tur¬
quoises come fiord ' ; n'c or iwcunines which
are situated near Nishapur, m Ivk'cYnssri,’
on tho road from Teheran to Herat. These
mines have been worked for the last
eight centuries at least, and are now very
deep, one shaft reaching down 160 feet.
Some interesting particulars concerning
the turquoise trade cart be gleaned from
the reports of Mr. $; W. Benjamin* late
United States Minister to Persia. Ac
hording to Mr: Benjamin; all Khdrasan
mines arc farmed by a few officials who
pay the Shah an annual rental of about
$30,000 for the privilege,
The turquoise occurs; imbedded in its
matrix, usually in seams or veins, some
times in nodules and in stalactitic masses,
It is never found in crystalizt*d form. It
is said that the process for extracting it
is much like that pursued in mining for
salt in the same region, except that in
stead of using a ball 6f May the native
miners burn a branch of dry grass in the
hole, being careful, however, as soon as
cracks appear, not to damage the gems
which may be incased in the block. The
stones are generally associated together;
that is; they Occur in groups of twenty
or thirty. The Persian miners divide
turquoises into two kinds—those iu
crusted with rock and those free from
foreign matter:
There are good reasons for believing
that the turquoise mines at Mt, Chal
bhuitl, in New Mexico; may be almost as
old as the celebrated mines of Khorasan,
in Persia. We know' that the early iu
habitants of Mexico used turquoise in
their mosaic work and for inlaying ob
sidian ornaments. Some race of early
American people must have expended an
immense amount of labor extracting tur
quoises from the rocks. Thus, one shaft
at Mt. Chalchuitl is 104 feet deep, from
ancient working to the commencement of
new work. Another shaft is 83 feet deep,
and at right angles a funnel runs into the
mountain fid feet.
As already has been intimated; the
{anquoise occuis, imbedded in its matrix,
usually in seams or veins; In New Mexico,
often found ju thin veinlets and lit
balls called “nuggets, covered with
a crust of the nearly white tuff. Some
times the specimens arc seamed or
streaked u ith limonite, derived from the
accompanying pyrite. In Southern Nev
turquoises occur to small extent,
There the stone is found in blue grains
running through sandstone.
kincls of turquoise are distir.
guished in mineralogy the real stone, of
calaite and the osseous stone or odonto
Ute. The last named is considered a
false turquoise, aud is supposed to be
composed of bone covered with phos
l*hate of iron. According to Professor
Silliman, of Yale College, the turquoise,
under the microscope, is a non-crystal
line material and consists of very minute
scales, nearly colorless, having an aggre
gate polarization amf showing a few par
tides of iron oxide. *
In chemical language turquoise- is a
hydrated phosphate of aluminium, asso
ciated witha variable portion of hydrated
phosphate of copper. The beautiful blue
color of the stone is dqe to this variable
quantity of copper oxide, while the green
tints of certain varieties are doubtless
due to admixture with salts of iron.
Tur,U0is es vary in color-from sky bluo
to apple green, ^o.v, he commote..
value of a turquoise has always denended
on its tint. The color mostliighh- prized
is that delicate blue which faintly i in _
clines to a 4 st „. ak of reea
lessons the value of a turquo^e
Again, q\ some specimens with exposure,
an sfonel acre «r r0 w oreen lienee all first
class are of good and fast color.
yyj XbfetlL fc k Khor-issnn trmnoiseu m-.
(, oak hue the
delicatc blue tint< llt th . lt the V retain ^
it £e r . • .
Xd a nf Xr than a those be ter from l and thrTfinSv a ‘LTlv n re
| ouened J nits Til , ie are* in trid "to
ated lur i=es said be from
1 f ^ , *......V.* . - th . l3 , J
aa «p”t to deke! a °«cl J
| °‘^ l.™ t , hr5 . w . lv .
truocfttcil coos. »d«
or ,, , v , t wu
,, ; /
two latter the more such stones are prized'
^ ^ ^
colored stone can be cut into a convince
one of Dale color would annear almost
white at the anex.
Again, the turquoise takes a fair polish
and gives a feeble luster. Lik g the
j “water” of the diamond or the lustre of
i the pearl, a turquoise has what the Per¬
sians call the zat. Onlv a stone with the
zat has have'this anv great commercial v^ue; those
; that prized property
| bring a good price. Large turquoises are
: not rare,' but as a rule they have little Yal
ue. They are generally pale or discolored,
and are used principally for the decora
tion of furniture and of the saddles and
j bridles of rich Persians. Two large ofwhich tur-
1 quoises are on record—one out
a drinking cup was made for the Shall.
j and another in which the treasure of
; Venice was kept, and which weighed
several pounds.
Once more, turquoises quite com- '
are
monlv imitated by enamels. They are
produced artificially by chemical I
compositions. One reason the delicate
sky-blue stones are so highly prized is
that they cannot be imitated. The other
hades may be imitated without serious
trouble Thus, pieces of bone are capa- J
bie of being Colored with phosphate of
iron so as to resemble Hie real gem. j
These artificial Etones, so extensively
worn by ladies, am known in the irade
as Occidental turquoises, in order to dis- i
.tinguish the®* from the genuine or Ori¬
ental stones.— Kc\e Tsrfc Star.
An Eccentric Author.
One of the few books, says an ex- j
cl .that were read with pleasure by
youth 100* your- »go< was “Sandford
and Merton.” Its author Thomas Day,
was a devoted friend of the colouie? dt*r
ing the American war,and espoused their
cause in his poems. He was an “original,’’
distinguished by that inconsistency be
tween theory and practice which gener¬
ally marks an eccentric person.
He went into society, but disregarded
tb» “minor morals,” such ascombiugbis 1
hair anu fnftking himself presentable.
Professing to think fhrit love had been
the curse of mankind, he continually an
nctmecd his' determination never to
marry. And yfcL-iri spite of this re
solution—he offered his hand fo' three
ladies, each of whom declined the hdndr/
To one of them he sent a long letter,in
which he expressed his affection, asked
her to marry him and detailed to her the
duties of a wife As Mrs. Day she was
to be satisfied with her husband’s society
-in<l to exclude herself from the company
of men auu v A 'rten The woman re
plied that the details were tacf nrtmeroi«
and onerous.
lu three weeks’ time he offered him
self again—to the sister of the woman
who had rejected him. She imposed
conditions bcforft ehc‘ would answet
“yes” or “no.” She tvoYfld jiiarry Ho
man who could not fence, dance dor
ride. As Mr. Day liad none of these
accomplishments aud h^d derided them
as unbecoming manliness, he was lady's in a
strait betwixt consistency and the
hand.
He sacrificed hi« consistency, : went te
Paris; took lessons in the three uccom
plishmentg and returned to England,
The lady laughed at his fold fencing; dancing
aud horsemanship, dnd biny that she
liked him best as he was before.
But Day’s spirit was up; he deter¬
mined to marry some one. He therefore
selected two orphan girls from an asylum,
with the view of educating them both
arid then Selecting Ilia fittest one for his
wife:
In order to cultivate their fortitude, he
used to drop ho’t Sealing wax on theif
bare arms, and fire off pistols, Waded
only with gunpowder, at their petticoats.
One of the two girls would cry with pain
or alarm, and she, therefore, was ruled,
out of '■he competition. • The other,
though she showed fortitude by hex
silence, would vfeear a certain kind of
sleeve and handkerchief then in fashion ?
hut which Mr. Day disliked. She alse
was dismissed.
At last he found a wife, a lady of large
fortune, who conformed to his whims
and believed him to be a great man. Be
appropriated her fortune, a thing so
despised with her, in until theory, and killed lived happily
no was by buug
thrown from i Coli bn was. training ac¬
cording to a method of his own: jli.-'
widow took to her bed and died twd
years later .—Kansas City Star.
The Bale Fire.
jp oiflert times, when New England
waS struggling colony,- when settle’
meats were few and far between, wheri
even Boston was but a struggling village
Hie sea, before the telegraph w r a?
thought of, beacon fires were nightly
lighted up on the hill-tops to guide the
mariner into port or to convey glad
or jp tidings through the land. But so
seldom were they harbingers of good
news that they were called “bale fires.”
| Tllc worc q uftale” means “sorrow,
calamity, misery, misfortune.”)
Massachusetts was then an almost un
ftrokeii forest, with here and there a
clearing where some adventurous Puritans
had established a settlement and carved
out, farms from the gloomy wilderness,
Garefully would these Old pioneers watch
the peaks, on whose tops were piled the
materials for the balefire, which was
0 f tc n a rallying the°red-skinned point as well as a w r arn
ing when and redder
handed Indian swooped down on the
O utlvino- settlements, burning and slay
mg without merev.
Then hastily seizing sword and musket,
equipped in breast and back plates, with
a steel morion for head-gear, these grim
citizens would hasten to the assembly,
and directed by the fires now blazing
bill to hill, march at once upon
their savage fou.—Detroit Free Press.
___
A To „„ s Housekeeper's k' Blunder.
ivpropo. Ul , lmpuiUULe uce t0 lu , he -
wife of knowledge of chemistry ^
a
comes the following story from the west
ern part of the State: A young house
keeper, knowing something of the pre
quaiity of salt, and
that iec cream and other substances to be
frozen were alwa ,s P acked iQ ice and
-
?alt. drew therefrom .the strictly . logical
-e-Wctioa that the »l« ™ intended to
preserve the ice in a solid state Upon
her cook, therefore, the injunction was
^efuliy and continually laid to keep the
icc -ll saited-especlallv the ice about
the meats and the milk for the baby—
with the amazing result that there was
in the refrigerator, wane
the liquids therein were always in a state
of eoagelatioa. Much did'the veun,
matron grieve Lbaad vei = .and loudly j so
dM her protest ™ the ice
el u-her starts n m tne cnaryeot ta qdorto undue
young matron explain caretully and with
teav? ao ^ could DOt he ber iault wh -“
was so caretul to have the me
- ich day m oreier o> keep it. The enem
istry of the problem was quickly ex
. ■ and she
Pained to the young woman,
i now salts the meht and lets the ice alone,
j —~* ew 5<?rv Sun ‘
■ ElectricLights for Sleeping Apartment'
! In the the new hotel at Tampa, Fla.,
! the electric lights in thesleeingapart
raents will be so arranged, “may says the
! Tampa Journal , that they be madf
’ to burn with any degree of brilliancy bj
turning on or off in the same
wav “as a gas jet or kerosene
lamp is This regulated very*last to give more or less
light. is the invention in
I electric lighting, and will overcome the
j greatest objection to electric lights it
: bedrooms, w’<jjch b* all former appliances
[give their iuki capacity when need.
VanWINKLE GIN AND MACHINERY CO.
ATLANTA, GA., and DLAS, TEX.,
----MANUFACTURERS-
Cotton Gins, Feeders, Condensers, Presses 9
COTTON SEED OIL MILLS,
Shaftin, Pulleys, Wind Mills, Pumps, Tanks, Etc.
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THE
VARIABLE FRICTION FEED!
The Only Saw Mill in the ihWief that fully utilizew all the power. Warranted to increase capacity 20 per cent, over any bel
feed mill rtaade. Five sizes are made to cut as high ae 50,000 feet per day.
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$ 200.00
Mill has “Champion” Dogs worth fifty dollars, variable feed, ratchet set works, simultaneous head blocks and cuts 10,000
board lutribef per day. Warranted to cut 2 f 0U0 feet board lumber in ten hours with four horse-power engine, and 8,000 feet
with fifteen hofse-po’Wer. It is the only mill that fully meets the requirements of small nower. Thirty-seven saw mills sold
in one month, and ordefs come from Michigan, Wisconsin, Montana, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and from all parts
of the Skmth. .
This feed is easily attacned to otner mirfe--aft “Champion'’ Dog, and at lo-rr prices.
A BUSINES PROPOSITION.
To any responsible p’aftt, giving gtOrte,- satisfactory WARRANTED references, make we wiH good ship table one meal of onr under-runner large top-runn corn mill ills, in 20, the 24 country, and 30
iach. with our famous Virginia to as as any il
WATER or steam power. In case of failure to perform as stated, we to pay freight both ways and take le mill hack, and
found satisfactory, partv to pay us the price agfkkd m. which, and make we it will fast. take Write occasion for catalogue. to say, is VERY low. Now, think a
moment; you can get a 20-inch mill to make good me;il
DeLOACH MILL MANUFACTURING C0„ Atlanta, 0a.
DB. OWEN’S
Patented ISff Aug. 16, 1887. Improved July 30,183$=
#|MIPPSItosssr«saiff guaranteed to cur© the fol*
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UTJs&x W &|«Sf a
to th© womb or genitat organa of male or female.
ET8EST to responsible ELECTRIC parties INSOLES. on bo days iSiffiiR. trial,
Bend or.owen's 8c. for will bs
postage fee* illustrated pamphlet, which
| debt joa in plain sealed envelope. Mention this paper, addresa
j OWES ELECTRIC BELT & APPLIANCE CO. *
800 North Broadway, BT. LOUIS, MO.
! RUPTURE !
- ‘ ELECTRIC BELT ^
c COMBINED. AHD TRUSS 'iM M
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SiECTRO® D o ISRAEL’S aSShio mSrsslfePwi'th
SfflfM Dr
Boptnre pff^Sn6»W52l!«! in from GO 90 For full 4®fear»«
to days. description of Dr.
j . ‘ bmotmo BMT & APPUAKC3E CO
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|
| WimC! ^ONEY SAVED dAVtU ttUYtKb RUYFR<5
| ORGANS
, 30Q PIANOS AND ORGANS ♦ ♦
j ; To bc Closed Out Before Removal.
.
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^'f’tqerKiueed anUwiiL Fine fine to select from.
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p„... P.RLUPS & CREW. Esuwi^d,^- ATLANTA, ati amt* GA. ca
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; j We are prepared to do all kinds ot
JOB WORK
—WITH—
NEATNESS
—AND—
DISPATCH!
And respectfully
Ask a Trial
WRITE FOR PRICES.
GEO. W. CASE.
f MARBLE
:
I* -AND
| ■ wm i GRANITE WORKS!
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iii IS N: m MONUMENTS
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%1 . SI i IRON FENCING, ETC.
pUs j<, mmtWms, Stroair.
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MACON. GEORGIA.
HALLARY BROTHERS & 80 IPASY.
-DEALEBS TUT -
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MACHINERY OF EVERY KIND.
Steam Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Seed Grin dors, Belting., Lu'
bricating Oils, Iron Pipe and Fittings, etc.
MALLORY BROTHERS & COMPANY
ADVERTISE NOW.
We will immt you a Dios Il-displayed u
srtiaemeiit at as low rat** any first-clasd
paper can afford to do. MYertisin^ rates mad^
known on application.
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