Newspaper Page Text
the trust after no*to*bac.
EMimate* Tkii* Halt « Million Tnbaren
tlnern Win Be CmrmA ta kr the Uee
ol Ke-To-knr, Canale* a Lm* at Vlnny
MUIIm* ef Dellnrn ta Tebeece Siena*
leetarere.
ported C*iOAOo,Augn,t to-day that Jl — [Special.1—It was re¬
been offered the a large mm of money has
the the tobacoo lobacoo oaerea habit habff rne nropfioforw nropriraere of or the tno euro rur« lor lor
failed ealle 1 “No-To-Bac,” which
1* famous ali ov»t tho country for its won¬
derful effect. Tills offer, ft was said, was
made by purtlee who desire to take It off the
market and stop Its sale, because of its in¬
jury to the tohsoco buiincss. Mr. IT. L.
>*uslnoes, Kramer, gencrsl manager of tha No-To‘Bac
Randolph was interviewed at his office, 4S
street and when questioned
promptly said
“No, sir; No-To-Pae, no t f or 9n tnfo the
tobacco lrws^ tv r , just refused ahalfmii’
*on from nlht?r partfasi for onf
V erls Ir^y No-To-Tlic affects ttofelMcco hus!
’»i"es. It W in cur „ A half million people
VsO'ih in J'!)4, would nt an otherwise average s expend tring of *50,‘which
for •25.000,000.’ tobnc’o,
amounting In roan l figures to
Of ertirse, tobacco manufit -inrers’ and deal
ertt’ loss W tho gain of iho parly faking No
To-Itac. iioiw No-To-TJ ic benefit physically?
Tea, sir. Tho majority of our patients re
«port an immediate gain in flesh, and their
mlcotinc saturated systems are cleansed and
'made vigorous. How H N’o-To-Bao soil/
Principally Wo through our traveling agents.
by employ over a thousan 1. It is also sold
druggists, United wholesale and rotatl, through¬
out tha Htat<'« nnd Canada. How are
patients assure t that No-To-Bac will affect a
•-ur« In th'-ir case? t¥e ntisolufcty guarantee
thr«Mi boxes, costing 9<2.50, to cure any case.
Failure to cure means tho money back. Of
th-'ro are failures, hot they are few,
w*- can better afford to have tho good
wilt of an occasional failure than his money.
We puLlisli r, little book called ‘Don’t To
Rolls wneco Spit of Smoke Your Life Away,’that
nil Hliout No-To-Bac, which will be
analleit frw» c.o any one desiring It by ad¬
dressing the Sterling lleinody Co., 45-19Ran¬
dolph street, Chicago.”
I’ulnt for Iron.
A good metallic paint for preserving
jiroti exposed to tho weather is made
billows: Pulverize oxides of iron such
as n d and yellow ochres, or brown
hematite iron ores, finely ground and
simply mixed with linseed oil and a
drier. White lead applied directly to
iron in considered to have a eorrosivo
1 ho Chinese national army numbers
about <>50,000, peace footing. The
•fftpanoae army numbers about 275,000,
peace footing.
Comfort Costs r>0 Cents.
Irritating, aggravating, agonizing
letter, Eczema, Ringworm and all
-other itching skin diseases are quickly
cured by tho use of Tetterino. Gusts
50 cents a box post paid—brings com¬
fort at once. Address J. T. Sliuptriae,
Bavanr.ak, Ou.
HowN This!
YVo offer One Huml red Polar' Its ward for
IHIV Ha case of ('atarrh that cunuol bo cured by
1 s i lutorrh ( 'uro.
U -I. ('UKNKV A; Go., l‘r >p'., Toledo, 0.
" e, I ho undersigned, bavu known F. ,T. Clie
noy lt>r the hist 15 yearn, and 1>"I evu him por
Jecl y honoraido in all business transactions
and financially ahlo to carry out any obii^a
llpn v\ csTiV made i by their Wholesale firm.
Ohio. ituAX, Druggists, Toledo,
Waliung, Rinnan * Marvin, Wholesale
Dm rxlsis, Toedo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cun- is taken internally, act¬
ing dire- tly upon the blood and mucous sur
Jacenof by ail Druggists. the system. Testimonials Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold
treo.
“A I’rnctlcnl
B a fit <-p tin t (op the present a -e. “Of what
use in it and “flow soon will 1 net my money
out of it'/’’ aro questions always asked before
inakinnan investment of any kind. Bright,
Intelligent time young hulies elo«s no longer spend the.fr
in acquiring u accomplishments.
Parents who wish to vendor their children
Independent, give them cannot d i a wiser thing than
writing. For a course in sho-thand and type¬
young Indies it i* a genteel and
p'easant tlie work, and for young men it is often
tion. stepping f stone to a higher business posi¬
ough or terms, etc., in t be best, most thor¬
and compu te school in the South, write
Miss McNutt s School of Stenography &
B Typewriting, ldg., 157 and t.i;> S. B. ,V 1,. Assn.
Wall St., Knoxville, Tonn.
Wait (Vr good hick ami y.q will wait for
gooil fortune.
Dr. Ki'tiler's Sav a m r- Ft oot eures
all l’ainphlet Kidney and Bladder troubles,
and Consultation free.
Labi tratory ltin.diamtou, N. Y.
Marry for money and repent, when tho
money Is spent.
If ti filleteil with Mire eye - use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Kyo-water. Druggists sell til 35c per bottle.
Weak k\\ Over
Hot wiNither always has u weakening, debil¬
itating effect, especially when tho blood is
thin and impure and the system poorly
nourished. By taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla
f-f oocf s Sarsa¬
parilla
trength will be Im¬ r'ures
parted and tho whole
body invigorated. Peo¬
ple who take Hood's
Sarsaparilla tire almost always surprised at
tho wonderful beneficial effects.
Hood’s Pills arc safe, harmless, sure.
McELREES ~i
WINE OF CARDUI.
.tr
** ► vM M KPf
M'Mtt r: J %
Fr ♦
♦
♦
«S 8 Sl«>t ♦
♦
♦
Frf Female Diseases. :
|
r "'"
Koval Gerinetuer
! %
( urcs Dyspepsia.
THE ELASTIC
ARTIFICIAL LIMBS.
with ball-lH-arinv knee joints
T:.o laio.-t improved and best
J Send a 516* Successor ad pr.ee . MS for T. (o des list. to d C. No.114) riptive A. HILLS, McDermott, St.Charles catalogue
*t reel.. New Orleans Lu
Buyers of Machinery, Attention!
Deal directly write with mannfaeturers and
us for prices.
KNGINF8, BOILERS, SAW MILLS,
Grist Millls, Cane 31 ills, Cotton
Gins and Presses,
And anything wanted in the machinery line.
(UHOFIKLO’S IKON WOKKs.Mncon.t;*.
<tinnrv~ I UUU llu-r Hull *yI to good Hooter*, gueuien other catch valukbl*
W on.
her oiler In Home nnd ( omiirv Magazine.
Price 26 cents obtained S»m;> «• this Magat’ne can be Men and full
i>3 pert East icuUrj l«h Street, New at Y. otfioe. Oily. All Newsdealers, or,
r*
THE MONROE ADVERTISER, FORSTHY GA.. TUESDAY. AUGUST 31. 1894. -EIGHT PAGES.
BUDGET OF FUN.
dUMOROUS SKETCHES FRtlM
VARIOUS SOURCES.
Choir Thoughts—Evidence t>f It, at
Least—Woman’s Rights—A Fear¬
ful Ordeal — Light—Ex*
oeptional, Etc., Etc,
’What a beautiful thing Is thought,” she
said •,
“A boon it is to myself an l Jim,
, sit an 1 think he is thinking of me,
Aud he sits an 1 thinks I am thinking of
him.”
—New Y’ork Press.
EVIDENCE OF IT, AT LEAST.
“I saw a sign of wealth to-day.”
t . What was it?”
“Old Qoldcoin affixing his name to
i check.”—Atlanta Constitution.
$ AVD C.
Cuttan Thrust—“That young Dam
’eigh has got more money than sense. ”
Dulhim Bluntly—“I didn’t know
ho was rich.”
Cuttau Thrust—“He isn’t.”
LionT.
Senator Pougher—“No, sir, I don’t
care to express an opinion in regar I to
the matter you speak of.”
Reporter—-“Well, as it won’t weigh
more tlmn an ounce, suppose you let
me have it by mail?”
EXCEPTIONAL.
“I saw a policeman go uii to a
stand to-day and pay ten cents for a
comic paper.
“And suppose he did?”
“Well, a cop’s supposed to get all
the chestnuts he wants free.”
A PULL WITH HER HUSBAND.
Dikley—“I wonder what induced
the female giant at the dime museum
to marry the india rubber man.”
Dokley— ‘I suppose she wanted
somebo ly she could twist around her
lingers.”—Boston Traveller.
woman’s rights.
Miss Frank—“I believe in woman’s
rights. ”
Jack Cleverton—“Then yon think
every woman should have a vote?”
Miss Frank—“No; but I think
every woman should have a voter. ”—
Scribner.
A FEARFUL ORDEAL.
She—“You are sure there is no
evenin r paper?”
He—“Yes.”
She—“Horrors! think of having to
wait until morning to find out what
kind of dress I wore at my own recep¬
tion. ”—Chicago Inter-Oceau.
LOVE IS NOT PRACTICAL.
Daughter (pleading for her lover) —
“But, father, I am positive that it is
not my money he is after. He says
he would marry me if I were ever so
poor.” Father “Yes, he
Stern and Prosaic —
looks as if he had no better sense.”—
Philadelphia Life.
easily remedied.
Bank Clerk—“This check, madame,
isn’t filled in. ”
Madame—“Isn’t what?”
Bank Clerk—“It has your hus¬
band’s name signed to it, but dotes not
state how much money you want.”
Madame—“Oh, is that all? Well,
1 11 take all there is. Boston Home
Journal.
NEIGHBORLY CONSIDERATION.
“Of course, you believe in the
millennium,” said the irritable man’s
friend.
“To be sure.”
“What is your idea of it?”
“It’ll lie a time when every lawn
mowor will have a music-box attach
ment.”—Washington Star.
anticipation vs. experience.
Old Gentleman — “Do you think,
sir, that you are able to support my
daughter without continually
tug on the verge of bankruptcy?”
Suitor—“Oh, yes, sir, I’m sure
can. ”
01 d Gentleman—“Well, that’s
than 1 can do. Take her and be "
pv.”—Chicago Inter-Ocean.
_
can’t BE HELPED.
Bookkeeper—“six more of our
ning letters have been returned by
Dead Letter Office, aud postage had
be paid on them.”
Tailor—“It can’t be helped.”
“If your envelopes contained
name and address, they would be re
turned without expense.”
“Yes. but then the people who
jeive them wouldn’t open
New York Weekly.
NO MUSIC IN HEK THROAT.
Miss Birdliug—“Did you hear
Miss Jaugle is going to give a topsy¬
turvy party? And it will be great
fun.”
T Edith—“I ,., T never i heard i of r such -i
,, thing. \N hat is it?
MissBiriilmg , r -D- Every one -ill mi , i
pnr. m something they know
’
l-i Ed'th-oMng, H dear, smg. n , .
esgo n or eeiiu.
difference of opinion.
Mr. Billus—“Here’s a newspaper
paragraph that says women are less
sensitive to pain tlum men. I believe
there’s something in that, Maria.”
Mrs. Billus—“Yes, that's the mas
online theory. The truth of the mat
ter is that women have more fortitude
than men. As to—mercy! For
heaven's sake, John, be quick ! Knock
that horrid bug off my hair !”—Chi¬
cago Tribune.
WHY THE SECRET WAS SAFE.
“And you ask me to marry you!
exclaimed the proud beauty, scorn
fully. “You! Hiram Jinks, I would
not for the work; have any o: my
friends know you had subjected me to
’his humiliation!
“Then we’ll not say anything about
it, Miss Rocksey, said Hiram, look
ing about for his hat. ttreat Scott!
You can t feel any more sneakin’ over
it than 1 do.’ ---Chicago Tribuue. .
didn’t EXCEED ORDEP.S.
One of the worst cases of a literal
mind ta reported bp the Chicago Mail t
A gnest hurried up to the hotel
clerk’s Counter. He had jnstten min¬
utes in which to pay bis hill, reaoh
th«t station aud board his train.
“Whew I” he exclaimed. ‘Tvo for¬
gotten sommething. Here, boy. run
up to my room, B 4W, and see if I
have left mv tOoth-brusJl and spduge.
Hurry j I’ve only five minutes now.”
The hoy harried. In four minutes
he returned, out of breath.
“Yes, sir.” he panted. “Yon left
them.”
AFTER THE BAXK BOBBERY.
Alkali Ike — “You are a pretty feller,
Hooks, to stand thar in front of the
bank with your hands in the air while
the robbers were cleanin' out tho in¬
stitution. ”
Colonel Hooks (tho prominent real
estate agent) — “Yes; and if you fel¬
lows had done as I did, iustead of
shooting and yelling like a pack of
fools, it is probable that tho robbers
would have liked the place enough to
have settled down here and spent all
of that money in our midst, instead of
carrying it away with them.”—Puck.
HAPPENED UP I\ BOSTON'.
Fireman (at tho window) — “You’ll
have to hurry, miss. The roof’s al¬
most ready to fall in!”
Boston Girl—“In just a minute.
There’s a volume of Ibsen I can’t find,
and—
“A minute? You haven’t half that
much time—
“ ‘That much is a colloquialism, sir,
for which there is no good authority
whatever. The word ‘that,’ is never
an adverb. You should say ‘so much,
or ‘thus much,’ or ‘as much as that,
but not—”
She was dragged out just in time to
save her life.—Chicago Tribune.
UNABLE TO NEGOTIATE.
<f You’ve taken up all of my time
you’re going to,” said the wouiau at
the kitchen door, wrath fully. “I’ve
told you I don’t want any pins, towels,
soap, lead pencils, stove blacking,
combs or tin spoons. I’ll give you
just ten seconds to get away from
here!”
“That reminds me, ma’am,” said the
peddler, opening his package again,
“that I’ve got a little arrangement
here for the accurate measurement of
time, so you don’t have to guess at it.
It’s generally used in boiling eggs and
consists, as you see, of a little glass,
filled at one end with sand, which, by
simply inverting, runs slowly through
the wasp waist in the center down to
the other end, registering accurately
each and every time you use it and
allowing about three minutes and
twenty seconds tor the boiling of au
egg, which, as you know, is about the
proper time if the water is boiling
when the egg is put in, unless you
want the egg boiled hard, and every
authority on wholesome diet will tell
you, madam,that hard-boiled eggs are
unwholesome, causing indigestion and
sometimes redness of the nose, for
which there is no cosmetic that
will—”
By active exertions he managed to
reach the corner of the kitchen and
get around it before the dipperful of
boiling water got there.—Chicago
Tribune.
IVhat is a Comet’s Tail J
Brooks’s comet, from a photograph
taken by Professor E. E. Barnard, is
one of the illustrations in Knowledge,
and A. C. Raynard has an article on
“What is a Comet’s Tail?” wdiich
, should interest those who study the
j cosmos, says the English Mechanic.
j The tail of a comet must, he says, be
far more transparent than the earth’s
j atmosphere, The article is illustrated
i by a diagram of Jupiter’s family of
j comets, and by photographs of Swift’s
j comet, taken by Dr. Max Wolf, of
Heidelberg, showing the rapid changes
in the appearance of the comet from
; day to day. “The sun and the whole
solar system is moving through space
, towards a point in the constellation
' Hercules, having a right of ascension
of about 260 degreesi and a north dec
lination of about thirty-five degrees,
) The diagram of Jupiter’s family of
comets was made by Mr. Srvasliau, of
i Northfield, Minn., and “a vertical line
on the page approximately corre
j sponds to the direction in which the
system is moving—probably at a
J rate of some ten miles a second.”
That is Professor Yogel’s estimate.
A One-Man Parish.
j At a meeting of the Wirral (Ches
bire) Board oi Guardians, the cleric
(Mr. Ollive) stated that the township
of Netherpool, England, was in a very
peculiar position. According to the
Local Government act recently passed,
ar b v P lftce with a population of 303 at
i Ibe last census must form a parish
council.
When the ' last census was taken
Netherpool was rilled with navvies em¬
ployed in the construction of the Man¬
chester Ship Canal, and had, there
) fore, the required population. The
navvies had gone, aud now there was
only one householder living there, Mr.
Pickering, and he would have to meet
himself ,, ■ public , meeting and ,
in .A ap- 1
point . , , his . wile and * daughters * , , an>J ,
£ .° ser
„ £ ish eoimci!
Jf hp a<1 , Q prOTi(Je , [rec librarr>
£ public baths, allotment f gardens end
arial nd _ it woal< be rather
hard on him. The communication of
the clerk caused much amusement, and
a suggestion was made that if possible
j Netherpool should be added to tho
nex t parish, Overpool, for electio;
( purposes.—Blackburn Times,
j ' A Spud in His Pocket.
“I wonder if that potato would
1 , g rowr
The speaker stood on the postoffice
steps, and was addressing a friend.
He held in his hand a round, spongy
substance, not much larger than a
marble, which seemed to be withered
j by age.
<*if jt grow it would raise very
1 small potatoes. Is that
your coa
tribution to our beautiful city charity
of raising food for the unemployed? ’
| “No; that is my cure for rheuma
tism. I used to be a sufferer froir
j ^t complaint, and I tried all the
usual remedies, but nothing ever
helped me like this potato. When u it
lo6es its virtue j shali t HQoth er one.
I have never had a twinge of rheuma
i tism since I tried the potato cure.”
“The faith cure, yon mean,” said
j his —Detroit friend Free as they Emm walked off together,
WOMAN’S WORLD.
PLEASANT LITERATURE EOR
FEMININE READERS. '
S1500 BREEZES.
The handsomest feather fan on
record is that owned by the Countess
of Lonsdale, which consists of five
wide feathers, tha longest twenty
inches, with a handle of amber having
her monogram in diamonds, and cost¬
ing $1500.
FAI.SE EYELASHES.
It was tho Parisian woman who
were accredited two or three years
ago with the objectionable practice
of injecting perfume tinder the skin,
by which the very blood became
aromatic, and now to them is ascribed
another process, less oojectiouable,
perhaps, hut still very questionable,
it is a method by which false eye
lashes may be made. A fine needle,
threaded with dark hair, is drawn
through the skin of the eyelid, form¬
ing long loeps, and after the opera¬
tion is over—which, it is said, is pain¬
less—there remains a beautiful fringe
to veil the wearer’s eyes.— New York
Tournal.
iIODEST UNTO DEATH.
Advices just received from India
show that the modesty of the Hindoo
female is as great as that of the hero¬
ine who figures in the delightful
French idyll called “Paul aud Vir¬
ginia.” A house at Pema, a village
near Tikara, c.iught tire the other day.
Within it were eleven women, one a
newly married bride. The latter, not
willing to expose herself to the iiublic
gaze, declined to leave the place, and
the rest resolved to stay with her.
Tho consequence was that all were
fearfully scorched before they coulrt
be rescued. Seven of them have since
died, and the others are lying in a
precarious state.—New York Adver¬
tiser.
NEW EMPLOYMENT FOR WOMEN.
A new employment for women has
been opened by the Bank of England,
which has for the first time this year
found work for six lady clerks—
work that tlieir quick fingers and
thorough accuracy enable them to
perform with great skill. Their duties
are to count and compare the bank
notes which, having been in circula¬
tion, return to the bank never to be
reissued. Lady clerks were employed
in Messrs. Barings’ office four or five
years ago, where they -were required
to count over the dividend warrants
and compare them with the counter¬
foils issued for interest warrants of
foreign loans paid by the house.—New
York Times.
moral: don’t curl.
A pretty lady cashier, with hair that
does not like to curl, a pair of curling
tongs, a spirit lamp, a laae curtain,
and various articles of feminine wear¬
ing apparel, came near causing a dis¬
astrous fire in the great Auditorium
Hotel in Chicago a day or two since.
Fortunately, the pretty cashier was
possessed of presence of mind, and
pluck, as well as of hair that refuses
to stay in curl, and instead of scream¬
ing fire, and starting a pasic, she
quietly went about extinguishing the
fire, or a great deal of damage might
have been done. As it was, only a
few of her clothes were consumed,
and some damage was inflicted on the
furniture of the room where the re¬
calcitrant hair was being reduced to
order.—New Orleans Picayune.
THAT SAGGING DRESS,
Even the plan of using fancy jiins
to hold the skirt and belt together at
the back, does not work always satis¬
factorily. A very pretty woman has a
number of belts that completely over¬
come the skirt difficulty. The belts
do not always match the skirts by any
means. She usually has a stock and
belt to match, however. The belts
are made either of muslin, linen, silk
or ribbon, and in the middle of the
back a piece of the belt ribbon is
ruffled on to the lower edge of the
belt for about three inches each side
of the point exactly marking the
centre of the back of the belt. This
can be caught to the skirt at the cor¬
ners with a couple of pins, and not
only conceals the entire strip where
the skirt sags and shows the dress belt
under that of ribbon, but it was rather
ornamental as well, and the woman
hasn’t any patent on the idea which
originated in her own brain.—New
York Journal.
WOMAN COMES LAST.
An Arab—meaning a tent dweller
in an equine sense, the town dweller
is no Arab—loves first and above all
his horse. No one need to recite the
oft-sung affection he will lavish upon
him. Next he loves his firearm. This,
poetically speaking, ought to be a six
foot, gold-inlaid, muzzle-loading hor¬
ror of a matchlock, which would kick
anv man but an Arab flat on his back
at every shot, but actually, in Algeria
or Tunis, when he lives near a city, it
is more apt to be a.modern English
breechloader. You must fly from
the busy haunts of men to find the
matchlock. Next to his gun he loves
his oldest son. Last comes his wife,
Daughters don’t count. I mean the
Arab doesn’t take the trouble to count
them unless in so far as they minister
to his comfort dietetic or otherwise.
Until some neighbor comes along and
proposes to marry, in other words, to
make a still worse slave of one of
them, she is only a chattel, a soulless
thing. And yet she is said to be a
pretty, amiable helpful being—said to
be, for no one by any hap ever chances
to cast bis eye on ODe worth seeing,
This disregard for women, be it said
to their honor, does not always apply
to the Bedouins of the Syrian and
Arabian deserts.—Philadelphia Times.
AMUSING A HOUSE PARTY.
It is a manifest truism that pros
perity is not complete unless shared
with others, and one of its most
agreeable expressions is a generous
and gracious hospitality.
The entertainment of many guests
for a week or more at a country house
is with us a comparatively recent cas
tom. In the days of oar grand
mothers a most lavish hospitality was
shown, buj was chiefly confined to the
members oi the Umil/t Bear and re*
mofp, and expressed more in the good
cheer at table than in any other form.
Now, however, we accept the re
sponsibility while of the happiness of our
friends under our roof, and sug
gestions for their amusement are
cordially welcomed.
A merry*, sweet-tempered hostess,
who has at heart simply the desire
that her guests shall have Ua thor¬
oughly good t ime, ” cannot fail of suc¬
cess. There is a fine contagion in good
spirits and sweet temper.
It is au unmixed gratification to a
hostess to provide pleasant occupation
and entertainment for her guests
when they recognize that hospitality'
is a mutual obligation, and its duties
incumbent Upon them as well as upon
her.
Every guest is in honor bound to
hold his gifts or talents at the service
the rest, aud to co-operate with Ins
hostess in the schemes for the general
entertainment. There are some un¬
fortunates who do not seem to know
that the truest pleasure never comes
from pleasure-seeking, but from pleas¬
ure-giving. Such are sometimes a
severe strain upon the amiable toler¬
ance of their hosts.—Washington Star.
FASHION NOTES.
Brown hats are trimmed with corn¬
flower blue interspersed with mignon
ette and poppies.
Silk and wool stuffs in dull colors
shot with bright threads and eliecu.?
are most la mode for street wear.
Embroidery is worn much more in
Paris than lace. In fact, all the more
expensive robes are embroidered, and
gold and silver effects are popular.
A white moire parasol with a waved
edge, on which is an applique of ecru
lace, has a curiously carved handle
with ivory knob, set with a pearl
trimmed miniature.
Six-inch-wide lace, in scallop de¬
sign, combined with puffs of black
silk muslin, formed a handsome and
rather elaborate square yoke, made
adjustable for any gown.
Piquo has come into favor with a
rush. A stunning promenade gowu of
this fabric has revers, belt and roll
collar entirely covered with gold aud
black embroidered spider’s web.
Soft changeable silks and silks of a
small check with large bunches of
flowers strewn over them are worn.
Perhaps the prettiest in the newer
silks is one that has a small dot of the
same color in chenille on it.
Black, it is said, is to be a favorite
color in trimming leghorn hats. In¬
serted crowns of black chip, large
bows of black moire ribbon, stiff black
aigrettes, black tips, jet bands and
black roses and violets are among the
effects noted.
In the new checked taffetas, com¬
binations of blue and green, brown
and old rose, green and pink, etc.,are
seen. Fine stripes of black, blue,
green and brown are woven in some
of the checked designs, producing a
novel and charming effect.
Every time you see long gloves at a
great bargain get them; that is, If
you ever wear such gloves. The kid
put into long gloves is much better
than that used for short ones, and the
long ones will cleanse and cleanse till
they fall to pieces, and yet not lose
shape.
One of the prettiest and coolest ac¬
cessories of summer dresses is a blouse
front made of India mull, batiste or
net, banded with lace insertion, in
perpendicular stripes of the thin
fabric and the insertion, if the wearer
is inclined to stoutness, and in Breton
style if slender.
Very pretty silk waists are made
with blouse fronts aud trimmed with
diagonal rows of wide ivhite guipure
insertion. The belt of such a waist is
of ribbon or of narrowly-folded silk,
and the collar is of insertion and silk
turned down, or, if a stock be pre¬
ferred, is made of the silk laid plain
or in plaits.
Handsome white linen dresses are
embroidered with sprays and bouquets
of flowers, in natural colors. The
waists of these gowns have sleeveless
Eton jackets with turned-back revers
of the prevailing color of the embroid¬
ery. Grayish-blue linen embroidered
with yellow is the material employed
for one of these dresses made abroad.
Many of the semi-diaphanous toilets
worn at the summer resorts are made
up unlined and worn over petticoats
and low-cut underwaists of daintily
colored taffeta or, prettier still, of
shot silk of some sort. This imparts
an exceedingly charming two-toned
or shadow effect, and greatly improves
the appearance of the toilet.
Black and white checked silks are
conspicuously favored, and in the
selection of a dress of this sort dis¬
cretion is quite necessary, Checks
that look as if the black is very black
j and the white very white are, as a
rule, to be avoided. They are dis¬
tressingly trying to the eyes of the
needlewoman, and are apt to prove
too assertive when made up.
■ Satin and moire ribbons are used
this season in preference to velvet
ones for dresses of cliambray, gingham,
batiste, etc. The opalescent ribbons
are also seen on imported cotton
dresses, serving as a deeply pointed
j girdle, bretelles, strapped in Breton
style, stock collar, and wrist trim
mings. Velvet ribbons are more used
on taffetas, surahs, fayettas, shepherd s
checks, and other dressy toilets of
! light wool,
Transparent straw hats and bonnets
j are popular this variety season, and select though from
there is quite a to
none is prettier than the old-fashioned
Neapolitan braids that are thinner and
finer than ever this year. Some of
the shapes have low crowns of black
guipure, the wide flat brims being of
j cream-colored transparent openwork
braid. Color is laid beneath the brims,
; aa d the flower trimmings match the
lining in tint.
- am -
A Severe Remedy.
There is a man in Rockland who will
be an ungrateful wretch if he ever
feels afraid of lightning any more. He
had the grip a year ago, and his
health hal been very poor ever since
until Monday. On that day he was
standing on Rockland street during
the thunder shower when he felt a se
vere shock in his left arm which para
lyzed it for hours. Then it recovered
and so did the man, who says he feels
. as well now aa he did before his ill*
* ^Sewiitei IMf) ferni
| | k
A Marvellous Showing.
.r The U. S. Government, through the Agri
€ cultural Department, has been investigating i
U the baking powders for the purpose cf in¬
1 forming the public which was the purest, k $
most economical and wholesome.
The published report shows the Royal ^
8 preparation, Baking Powder absolutely to be a pure, healthful k}
1 free from alum or any
adulterant, and that it is greatly stronger in
I leavening power than any other brand.
n onsumers should not let this vain W. 1
t in O' rmation, official and unprejudiced, CjQ
m unheeded. k:
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
VERITIES.
The Bank of Japan has a capital of
20,000,000 yens, The value of the
yen is about the same as that of a sil¬
ver dollar.
In 954 a drought began in Europe,
lasting four years. The summers were
intensely hot and the famine prevailed
everywhere; 3,000,000 died of hun¬
ger.
The opening of the door of a warm
room in Lapland during the winter
will be instantly followed by a rninia
ture snowstorm, the condensed moist¬
ure fulling in flakes.
A gold-weighing machine in the
Bank of England is so sensitive that a
postage stamp dropped on the scale
will turn the index on the dial a dis¬
tance of six inches.
The memorial bronzo doors which
the Astors will put in Trinity church,
New York, are nearly complete. It
took three years to iinish them, at a
cost of $100,000.
Tho Norwegian steamer Craggs has
brought 8,000 barrels of herrings from
Norway $10,00*0 to Chicago, and has made
by the trip. A load of grain
back will pay expenses both ways, and
three such trips will leave the vessel
free of cost and nearly as good as new.
Electric melting of metals, notably
cast iron and steel, as produced by a
new German process, is said to have
some very great advantages. In cru¬
cible steel the new process shows an
economy of fuel of moro than half,
which, for metal so difficult of fusion,
is a favorable result.
Tho price of corn in Russia lias
shrunk so low, in consequence of the
splendid prospect of the harvest, that
many farmers are sending their cattle
into the fields, as the cost of harvest¬
ing would exceed the price of the corn.
In the Caucasus barley and wheat are
cut green and given to tho cattle.
Forty-five pounds of corn is worth a
cent and a half.
Disaster Follows
When liver trouble is neglected. Unea-iness
below the right ribs and shoulder blade, dys¬
pepsia, nausea, constipation, sick headache,
furred tongue. Do you want ’em? Of course
not. Use Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters and
you won’t be bothered with them, or any
other symptoms of liver disturbance. Make
haste when the first signs show themselves.
Do not endorse for a man to whom you
would not willingly lend your money.
Karl’s Clover Ro it, the great b’ood purifier,
yives ion and freshness constipation, and clearness 25 to ets., the 50 complex¬ cts., $1.
cures
vfl
JI V WA y
\
m IM
%
•V.
nitii
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to used. personal The enjoyment who live when bet
rightly' and enjoy many, life with
tei chan others more,
adapting les3 expenditure, the world’s by best more products promptly
to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of embraced the pure liquid
laxative principles in the
remedy, excellence Syrup of is Figs. due its presenting
Its to
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,
disneliing colds, headaches and fevers
and permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid¬
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak¬
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of .’figs is for sale by all drug¬
gists in 50c and $ 1 bottles, but it is man¬
ufactured by the California printed Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, y r ou will not
accept, any substitute if offered.
J Stickers, j urnana end address^ only \0rs
Makes hard water soft
* *7 —Pearline. Every woman knows just
, what that means to her. Washing in hard
W water is so difficult, and the results so poor!
f)i'=h Pearline reduces the labor, whether you
& / use so ^ water or hard. But use Pearl
mFvc ^r ine, anc i it’s just as easy to wash
\ w ‘th hard water as with soft water
i Jf\ I- \ | q J —and Pearline the results are just as things good.
' i saves more
than your labor, though. We’ll tell you of these savings
from time to time. Keep your eye on Pearline “ads.”
' Teddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you “ this is as good as”
or the same as Pearline." IT’S FALSE—Pearline is never peddled,
■ f IQ and if your grocer sends vou something in place of Pearline, be
153.C1C Lone ^*—ttnd it Ittci . ^ * AMES PYL-B York.
T
Floor Stain.
A good, cheap and permanent stain
for floors is permanganate of potash.
It can be bought at a wholesale chem¬
ist’s by the quarter of a pound. Mix
about one-fourth of an ounce in a
quart of water and apply quickly and
freely to a dry floor with either cloth
or a brush. Repeat the process if a
dark color is desired. When dry, oil
with burnt oil or beeswax and turpen¬
tine. The Btain when lirst applied ap¬
pears a bright magenta, but at once
changes to a permanent brown.
Attention, Tour inf.
Tho most pleasant New an i cheapest way to
roarli Boston, York, and the hast is via
Central Railroad and Ocean Steam-hip Com
pan v. Tim tate is £42.50 tor the round trip,
$24.00 straight. Tattles Ticket.-s inc with vide meals the leli- and
cacies stateroom. of the supplied infonna all ion tall
sea ton. For on
or address any agent of Central It. It.
A spoon in a glass of hot water pro¬
vents the glass from breaking, because
the metal absorbs the heat more read¬
ily than the glass does.
SAVE DOCTOR'S &ZLLS
by the paying bowels attention thereby to properly regulatin thousan eCT*
and derangements preventing the a
one of system which
follow neglect of this precaution. Once
used for this purpose. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant
Pellets are always in favor. They’re purely
blue vegetable pills and calomel. far better, Their as a secondary liver pill, than
or effect
is to to constipate. keep the bowels open and regular—not
Miss Mary Anguish, of Glen Easton , Afar
shall pale Co., W. and Vd., writes: “Two years ago I
was cmaciuted, food fermented in
my stomach. A phy
eiei an pronounced my
I case * Catarrh of tho
Stomach,' but bo could
m not month help without me. I lived solid
\ a
food und when I tried
U to At eat this 1 time would I vomit. begun
taking Doctor Pierce’s
Pleasant Pellets, 1 and in
two weeks was decid¬
edly better. I tun now
in good health, and
never felt better In my
Miss Anguish. ^r, eating—Laving gamed
have no distress after
thirteen pounds since I began taking them.
W. $3 L Douglas
SHOE NO IS SGUEAKIN&. THE BEST.
$5. CORDOVAN, ENAMELLED CALF!
r • \\ *4*5.5?flNECAIf&KM6ARC1 FRENCH&
m
jggi ‘ POLICE, Soles.
3
W
i'* *2A 7 5 BoysSchool$hqes.
-
♦LADIES •
m EffTD0 Ne °M
.
SEND FOR CATALOGUE
m WNr^***?* WL*DOUGLAS,
BROCKTON, MASS.
You enn save money l»y wearing tlio
W. U. Douglas $3.00 Shoe.
Because, wo are the largest manufacturers of
this grailoof shoes ia tho world, and trtiaranteo their
value by stamping tho name and price on tho
bottom, which protect you against high prices and
the middleman’s profits. Our shoes cipiat custom
work In style, easy fitting and wearing qualities.
We have them sold everywhere Gt lower prices for
the value given than any other make. Take no sub¬
stitute. If your dealer cannot supply you, wo can.
HAI MS M§teF Qiiew[ngGym
• *••••••«•••• ■» o o * aaacoa S esc* <
" Curas and Prevents Rheumatism, Indlge tlon, v
4 Dyspepsia, Heartburn, Catarrh and Cleanses Asthma. tie" m
V Useful in Malariaaud Fevers. A
Teeth ant Promotes the Appetite. Hweeteus
the Hr ath. Cures the Tobacco H.ihit. Endorsed V
• by the Medical Facu ty. Send for 10, 15 or 25 “
i cent packag". Silver, Sfanipt or J'ostal Note, *
f GKO. R. HALM, 140 West 25th St., Now York.
THE PROGRESS
mm SELF-TRAMPING
IMP WCOTTON ¥Jy,\ ;W PRESS.
s3\l£ utreiii;, durable
’ reliable. Haves tramping in
N -let3»#linr hence only one man re
Cm, trjulred with Press. Packer has
: only to raise handle to start and
follow block is automatically
4JB»stopped. Also sole .M’l’r’s of the
- steel lined Ideal Hay Prm.
Progreu MIjr. Co., P O.Box P, Meriiliati, BIi»».
For Engines, Boilers, Saw
Mills and Machinery, all
kinds, write MALL All Y
BROS. & CO., Macon, da.
RAMON II S'ToNIC g^Tonic 3 F Pellets, -AND- LIVER PHIS
TREATMENT for and Constipation biliousness.
At all Cores, or by mail 25c. double box ; 5 doable boxes
*1.00. SHOWN UK U U(>., New Y'ork City.
£ </7 1 PfSO’S O.URBuFOR
bUHfcS WntHc ALL fclbt FAILS
Best _lntimaSoldH Cough byrup.l Tables Good. Use
in by druggists.
I r-i M«k«mgnstdl a j^a [ST?]
A. N. U...... ....... Thirty-three, ’94