Newspaper Page Text
Medicine
t)r, in eyi«>r words, Hood's Sarsaparilla, is a
universal need. If good health Is to be ex
psotod during the coming season tho Wood
awt 1 m i'luriri’d row, All the $orms >i( die
'#43*1 must be <*egtroyi«i and the bodily health
trail! «j>. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the only
Vue Wood purfifer proto iii«»tSy In the public
bye today. T uiwsfore Hood's Sarsaparilla is
the best aiedkln# to take in the spring. It
Will help wonderfully In esses of weakness,
nervousness;! and ail diseases caused by im¬
pure Wood, (let Only Hood's Because
HoocPs Sarsaparilla
Is the Only
True Blood Purifier
Prom I. no ntly in the Public Eye Today.
Taking Russia’s Census In One Day.
In the autumn of the present year
the census of the whole.of Russia will
bo taken in one day. For, this pur¬
pose a committee, consisting of up¬
ward of 200 persons, has been work¬
ing more than two years, and tho in¬
structions to the different provinces
will be lssni d shortly, ft is believed
that in twenty provinces there are now
upward of 47,000,000 inhabitants,
whereas when the census was taken in
lfiliO in the satno districts there were
80,000,000. It is supposed that the
greatest increase of population has
Poltava, token place ia the provinces of Kieff,
Kbarkoff, Tmnboff, Samara
and Viatka and in the towns of Kieff
Kbarkoff, Odessa, Baku, Body and
Kishim ff. - London Standard,
In a qpitels Lunch ll ioni.
Waiter.......Did you get everything you
ordered?
Patron-"Well, no I nuiflVd that
apple dnrnpbng Detroit Free Press,
BAPTISTS IN \V ASJUNUTON.
jfiMuuhem Itn s Will do tty Southern
Railway to the Annual ( onveiitloo
in May.
Tin S»ui hi:rn Baptist tLo Convention la a (treat
convention; ahi'l Soutlu-rn Hallway is a
(treat railwiy. From all principal wfll points in
t he entire .South round trip tickets be said
via via the Southern Railway to Washington and
set’ urn, at rate of one fare for the round tri(
Tho date. May Tl,h and ftfti, «>> id isf(«»» days
Southern Halbvay is the only railro ui
from It tiie tile South only railway entoriox which Wayhtngto three dally
is lias
thri;tflgli twins from tho SoutSi to Washing
ton. including toe 11 nest train in the South.
"The Ves! United Limited
The Southern Railway is tire only railway
which has It.* general ntlleos in Wnahineton.
Anil remenilier that the return schedule#
by the “1’iednmnt ztft'd Air going Line” schedules. Southern Kaii
wuy, are a- as tiny
tor fulfill this formation oommunicate with any
agent of ar*a t svstejti.
Pis (. lire i 1 the inetllctno to break
dren’s (. itch# and Colds. Mr 's. M, O. US*
8i ra*!« Wash.. March 8, ’:H,
" McELREES :
WINE OF CARDUI.
A ^Plll
/
m
V
ImmM %
W
| For Femala Diseases. |
Morphine Habit Cured
IN 20 DAYS.
NO SUFKKRlNt 1, Nor any Money
Not Required OUftKTi, in Advance. 8ATI8PIED,
otic cent til] an el
Cumt to .see m« or ivrltti me at. oik;© fur terms.
.
10 . a. smriMES, m. x>.,
ATL ANTA, t;A« I It? All * a Hili* l* Ni
How Consumption
Is Now Cured!
J-'anipthkit fuHy i!c#ktU tng piteiMtmto tit*
GO kl
ROBERT HUNTER, M. D.,
117 »MI IJtli St,, New ¥«rk
rmE positions
r At Good, Guaranteed Salaries Jte
■ Ml, ■ h„0 V un .- U. n in nrit <40 I>a«!V
»ArMtS™^ ,I,<i,A KMm,YMKNt n-t
HIGHEST AWARD
MPERiap [.'I WORLD'S FAIR, n
.
. ..
'
Ve? p 0 ,
BEST SUITED T ° N s
te 1 ^ONDITidkic 4vr'f8TlV£0 BO^ r ,
t For “HlONSx DICES U v w
uyspeptic.Deiicdte,Infirm
AVlte A f' TT Tte L/ rtKuUnR F51TFP C fs XT
TheSAFEST « r-T“ cr rOOOiN
THE SICK ROOM FOR
INVALIDS
r COffVALESCFHT^ *
Og Mothers,Infants^
JjL. _ c- , ;■*
:?s ?s
j " My little girl h m always had ft poor ap
j petite. I have given her Hood 4 * gsrsaparil
la, and staoa I hare given It to her sho has
had ft good appetite and she looks well, I
have been ft great sufferer with headache and
rheumatism. J have taken Hood’s Sarsapa¬
rilla. I am now well and have gained in
strength. My husband was very sick and #11
ran down, I decided to give him Hood's
Sarsaparilla and he began to gain, and now
be has got so he work* everyday.'* Mrb.
Aims Dtnrta*, 888 B. 4th St., 8. Boston, Mass.
Leaves fluit Crawl.
Among the strange stories told about
♦he wonderful things to be found in
Australia there is one of crawling
leaves. English sailors first brought
an account of this phenomenon. They
wore roaming along the coast, whim a
sudden breeze shook down a number
of leaves, which floated gently surprised to the
ground. The sailors were
at this shower, because it was not the
fall of the year, but midsummer, and
the falling leaves looked fresh and
green. Rut this was nothing to what
followed After a short rest those
leaves began crawling along the
ground toward the tree from which
they came. The sailors were too much
frightened to stop and investigate, and
one of tho men said, in relating the
adventure, that he expected every
minute to see the trees step out and
dance a hornpipe. Fortunately, other
travelers were not too much frighten¬
ed to stop and examine the matter. It
was discovered that these queer leaves
were really insects, which live upon
the trees, and are of the same color as
the foliage. They have very thin, fiat
bodies, and wings shaped like large
leaves. When disturbed by a breeze,
they fold their legs under their bodies,
and then the leaf-like shape, with stem
and all, is complete. Not only aro 1
tkey bright green in summer, like the
foliage of tho trees at that time, but ;
they actually change like tho leaves j
do to tho dull brown produced by the
frost. Another peculiarity of these
insects is that when shaken to tho
ground they seldom use their wings,
After lying there a few minutes, as
though they wore really leaves, they
craw! to the tree and ascend the trunk,
without seeming to know that they
have the power to got back to their
qnarb. rs in a much easier and quicker
way.— JS T ew Orb-o m Pica yum.
Reading and Talking.
Those who read largely are best iit
ted to converse well, for they obtain
from books and papers interesting
matter for discussion. . As to tho man
ner, it can bo acquired only by social
mingling with our fellows A hermit
cannot be expected to be a good con
veraationaliitt. Whether In simple talk
or in the higher forms of conversation,
" is need to consider tho preferences of
others and try to adapt ourselves to
them Areal amiability will lend an
indefinable charm to onr apeech. Ab
ruptnoss, contradiction, all assumption
of mental superiority, arc to bo stud:
ouely avoided. Gracmnsness and
eideration are requisite for those who
would make themselves helpful and
agreeable Children should be en
oouraged not only to listen, but mod¬
estly bear their partin the family talk,
asking questions freely and relating
^l^u^DBa^r . Sm ° . ldCT . Pe ° Pl , °
Proserviiig Ship Timbers.
A novel process is being attempted
of at Ouimlcn, Me., to*preserve tho wood
a new 1,400 ton schooner, now ul
most ready for launching. All of the
timber of the inside and outside of the
vessel has been soaked in crude petro
to save it from dry rot by expos
uro to tho air and to prevent the rav
ageB of the teredo worm in salt waters.
Evon the vessel’s beams have been
coated and the tips of tho topmasts.
j It is expected that the oil will become
| so thoroughly soaked in
upper Works that the water cannot
penetrate, through the wood. Old
«Si verted into % r7V bulk petroiimn. t Ce carriers, “ f ,,n -
tfthZirY l UHoiubioBS
m other trades, have wen known to
ITa with dthcr"inl either crude or ,!r Sard refined HI oil.
Getting Mixed.
"Things is gotten’ might mixed,Man
dy,” said Farmer Corntossel, "mighty
mixed.”
"What's the matter?”
"The politicians air all try in' to toll
the farmers about farmin’, an’ the
, farmers air tryiu’ to tell the polite
j |
ticisns about politics.”
1 "Didn’t , ......sotBaffl<5T“ toll tlmt
| out? rt said you the young man 1
wa8 young woman.
‘‘ 0i replied Bridget
i “^ nt be towhl me to come back an’ ax
• yw. ag'in, au’s to be sure Oi hadn’t
* misunderstood the name.— Washina
hmHU(r -
1 Not hing to be Afraid Of.
j j work,” *‘l.t strikes said me Mr. that TilHttgliast you arc afraid of
I to the
tramp who had asked for a quarter.
"You d>* me an iujustie i air/' rc
piled the weary walker. ‘ I am not
afraid of work, for if I let it alone it
will not hurt in dP-*- Judge.
Ills Reason
One of the most famous French ad
vacates, Langloia, was asked by 1’aria tho
president of the parliament of
vhy ho took upon him t.> plead bad
•'-Hi!.- a. Hi- answered, with a smile,
that Ire did it because ho ha 1 lost a
great many good ones,.
!>■ hoirair ---■hr
Youth.
M.imni'i f i.-qi*. von nod nmoethiag
j pleasant birthday when you gave Tommy his
gift ?
| Bob V. >5to ; I told him it was Otto
j i hsd left, over fr.»m last year, tin’ I
j ‘bdn i !- ar' nothtug about «t <;Wr.
i f fytrr’tfi> iikhr ,f>ntitft
STATE NF
I
, .
CELLED FROM MAX . i I
BRIEFLY PARAGRAPHED. j
!
Happenings of General Interest to !
:
Georgia Readers. |
I
Several tbounnnd dollars i
have been :
subscribed at Dawson towards build¬
ing a cotton factorv, and a proposition
has been made by a northern mill man
to move his plant to the city. He
writes that he has improved machinery
aad that everything else belonging to
his plant is in good condition.
Last-year the farmers of Burke conn
ty used over $10,000 worth of gnruio, ’
inore than will bo used this year. That
moans 500 bales of cotton saved. !
Every former is "up to his neck." too,
for grain, bacon and lard. Old Burke
has been hit hard for the past live
years, and could not realize the im¬
portance of these things until the past
two seasons when cotton went for four
and five cents.
Comity Treasurer Waring Russell haa
filed suit against the city of Savannah
for $5,000 damages for land which he
says was taken, from him to open up
some of the principal streets, in 1871,
and for which he claims ha ha s never
been compensated. By decree of tho
courts it was decided in 1875 that tho
lands belonged to him, but why he has
delayed the pressing of his claim until
now is not known.
The Gainesville Eagle remarks
Now, a word to farmers and garden
ers: Give these government seeds a
wide berth Don’t bother with them
They are never first-class and often
worthless. Get good seed Go to a
reputable dealer and buy them And
be sure aud get them fresh JllBist OB
having pends last year’s seed. Far more de¬
on good seed than good ground,
but it takes a combination of the two
to make a success.
Tho case of the Gate City National
Bank, of Atlanta, against the Fidelity
and Casualty Company to eolleet tho
amount of Lewie Redwine’s bond to
gather with damages and attorneys’ verdict
fees, has been concluded and a
for the plaintiff rendered. The bank
was allowed the amount of tho bond,
$10,000, 08, interest in the sum of $1,121,1
damages, in the sum of $1,000 and
attorneys’fees in the sum of $1,200.
Tho other side will carry the case to
the supreme court,
The seventh annual assembly of the
Germania chautaaqua began at Albany
under the most flattering auspices, and
the indications are that- tho institute
will be better patronized than ever
before The opening sermon was
preached by Rev, T, T, Dowling, a
distinguished Episcopal divine of Bos
ton, Mass. The sermon was listened
to by 3,000 people The chorus of
150 voices, under Mrs. T. J. Simmons,
is the finest in the history of the Chau¬
tauqua.
At Atlanta, a few days ago, Judge
Lumpkin handed down his decision in
tho mse of j. H . Mccaditt and other
8 tookhoMcw in the Huwanee River
phosphate Company. Tho charge
Kmdo was that tho com} , anj whou ; t
wa8 organized bad purchased a tract
of lau(l Bt , 01ir dollars an acre, and
yet tho now subscribers were made to
take it at ten dollars an acre. An ap¬
plication was made for a receiver. The
case has been before the court for a
long time and it was decided. Saturday
by the receiver being *ho denied. Tho
wil1 carr y case to the
supreme court
Sheriff Calloway, of Wilkes county,
will be in his glory during the Atlanta
exposition. Ho will servo Georgia
barbecue from the time the gates of
the show open until they close. Ho
made application for the privilege and
his proposition was accepted. Ho will
erect a suitable building on the
grounds and will be constantly on ex
hibition in his favorite role of bar be
cuist. His fame has gone abroad and
thousands of northern visitors who
have heard of him will have the pleas
are of enjoying his delightful meats,
W1;cn the chaaael in Brunswick
harbor shows twenty-five ^ feet of water, ;
it wili be prepare to rtjCelV0 th
]u , RN sl vcssols that sail the seas. That
I1K , aIlH tLllt Brunswick, south of New
Y ” rk Norfolk, will have the host
harbor on the coast, and as a result of
the competition of heavy class vessels,
will get the lowest freight rates to be
had. When all of this shall have been
completed, and the competition in
sight, Brunswick will owe a monu¬
ment to Colonel 0. P, Goodyear, who,
at tho risk of hi« private fortune,
cleaned tho sandbars, and established
the safety and perpetuity of the har¬
bor, Colonel Goodyear’s work upon
tho outer bar is now being surveyed
by a board .'appointed under the act of
congress to survey it and determine
whether he has secured the depths re¬
quired under that act.
A suit of more than local interest
has been filed in the superior court at
Macon. The parties to the suit are
Major J, F. Hanson, one of the most
prominent manufacturers m the South,
"ho is and has been for years, one of
tho strongest protectionists in the
country, and United States Senator
elect A. O, Bacon The senator is the
defendant. The suit grows out of the
fact that Major Hanson was. compelled
to pay a bowl which he signed three
years ago for one of. Senator Bacon'*
clients.. f ‘bont $14,000. the amount It is for of this which was .—
■ aiaount
***** he row Major Harmon sets out
he was induced by Hcuator Bacon
' te s5 ff n *be bond on. grounds of long
1 friendship, . and that Senator Bacon a*
sured him, that he could not possibly
lose anything. He says that 'Senator
Bacon has, repeatedly, declined to jn
damnify him for the Iok-h of tho bond
The Commission Named.
1 the members of the special com
! mtesion to p«M upon gnd decide all
j matters of tiontroveray between th* j
j ebAv *t]M 4*5*>«« £ p«f*,.‘sn» 1 i
.g to the Western and
railroad, lmve been named by
Jtffesr Atkinson. They are: Jndge
JonurL, Hopkins, of Atlanta; Hon.
Warner Hill, of Morriwether county,
and Hon. Thomas R. .Tones, of Dalton,
This commission is created in ae
oordance with house joint resolution
No. 18, adopted by the last legislature;
and the special matter which it will
consider is the controversy between the
state and thg Central Railroad Cbm
puny over certain property between
Forsyth and Whitehall streets in At¬
lanta. The Central claims the prop¬
erty in question as part of its right of
way, while the state contends that it
belongs to the Western and Atlantic
right of way.
Tho commission will sit at the enpi
tol, but will probably not begin its
work until Juno or Julv. Mr, Wim
bish will represent the state in all of
those cases. Tho matter of compen
sation of commissioners is left to tho
governor, with the approval of the
next session of the legislature,
A Distinguished Approval,
Hon. Charles W. Dabney, Jr., as
aistant secretary of agriculture of th
United States, after visiting the Geor¬
gia experiment station, said:
"It was very unique in many re¬
spects, set off as it is by itself, and
not having a college located in con¬
nection. I usually find colleges run
in connection with stations, and then
the practical and scientific farming go
hand in hand. But here I find more
practical farming than 1 have found
elsewhere, and J am inclined to think
that it may be tli at it has proven bene¬
ficial, and it is well for some stations
to be scientific and others practical.
"I had access to all of the books
and the papers of the station, and was
shown over the farm, Colonel Red¬
ding is the right man in the right
place, and is surrounded by able as¬
sistants on the farm, but ho really
needs more help—a clerk any way—
for ho Cannot possibly do justice to
his correspondence when he attends to
his other duties.
"During my tour through the south
and west, I found no station that is so
neatly kept, and can unhesitatingly
say that, it is the best kept farm that I
have visited.
walks, "Everything drives, is in perfect order; its
lawns and tho prepared
ground itself shows that nothing is left
undone, I must confess that I was as¬
tonished at the earn taken.
"Of course it most not be expected
to see any showy crops, for that is not
the object of the station, but you can
fifty for mo that I found this station
conducted on a most progressive and
rational plan, With better drainage,
better system of water works and
buildings in better repair than any I
have visited, and my visit was one of
pleasure,”
SOUTHERN COTTON MILLS.
An Accurate Census of Number Con»
pletod and iit Course of Erection.
The Tradesman, Chattanooga, Teftn.,
has compiled a census of the cotton
mills in the southern states, having
procured Its data separately from each
mill. The whole number of mills,
completed and iu course of erection,
is 372, and tho number iu each state is
aw follows: Alabama 21, Arkansas 2,
Florida 1, Georgia 06, Kentucky 0,
Louisiana 5, Maryland 18, Mississippi
8, North Carolina14.0, South Carolina
02, Tennessee 24, Texas 9, Virginia 0,
West Virginia 1 Thirty-six add:
tiouai mills are projected, and will
probably be at once erected, as fol
lows; Alabaman, Georgia 9, Kentucky
1, Louisiana 1, Mississippi 1, North
Carolina 5, South Carolina 11, Ten¬
nessee *2, Texas 1. Total completed,
under construction and projected, 408,
against 180 in 1880, and 254 in 1890,
Tho whole number of spindles and
looms in mills now erected and in
operation in the south, omitting those
projected, as compiled from The
Tradesman reports, is as follows, with
comparisons with 1890:
e~M iSaS •INIU. K.R - noriM.'
t» im 1895. 18110.
AInbatna •• 1C3.802 T9, m 3.020 1,092
Arkansas-. tl.IfiS ....... 210
Ftoi'ii!.-..... l.-fW ....... ....... ......
tJ**-«nr'ii Kmitacky ... 5?«..’US 4*5,452 14.105 10 459
. 52 90 1 42,942 092 077
Limt-illilH . 50.708 B3.132 1.612 1.380
Mi-»i Maryland, m,M m.m 57,004 3,i42 2.1:01
N t'lirn'lna si, |>j 547.270 »;788 335,700' 10.1-5 1,849 1 332
7 v 4
R TVimessi*©.. t'amlitiu, 83R.eS» 382.784 97.324 21 2*3 8.541)
124IW2 2.574 4 2.013
Texas 70,5110
Vlrtflnia Virginia ... l:.7 HW 94.294 4. t 2 .*.!
25
3,(>01,349 1,(219,082 70.874 38,895
This census of The Tradesman sho ws
an increase in spindles of nearly 100
per cent, in the five years, and of
nearly 100 per cent in looms. The
total number of cards in the southern
mills in 1895 is 7,251, an increase of
almost 100 per cent, in the five years.
The Tradesman reports an increase
of about 100,000 spindles since June,
1894, and of 1,500 looms, without in¬
cluding the thirty-six mills now pro¬
jected and soon to be built in the
south.
On April 15th The Tradesman will
publish the most complete and com¬
prehensive review of the cotton mill
interests of the south ever published,
China Kicks cm the Price.
a Central News dispatch from
Shanghai sayw it is reported on good
anthnj lly tha t the principal conditions
of peace include the Hulepeadenee of
Corea,.the payment of an indoinnity
<>r 40o,ooii,oofl yen and the eef-i-mn t«
Japai! Of Formosa and Liao Tung, m
tiomd' condition ! (>f tli^ceMtox?'of
Lain Tung and Port Arthur is objected
fe by China.
Electrical Works Burned.
Clark A Wheelers electrical works
on the Delaware, Lackawanna and
Western railroad, five miles west of
Newark, N. J., were destroyed by fire
Sunday morning. Over $50,000 worth
of motors and dynamos were do
stroyed, together with about $30,006
worth of machinery. The total iom
will amount to about 5110,000, oa
which there was an insurance < f
fdB.iHJO,
Mftkonc Makes tin AMignmpiil.
General William Miilurac has made
an assignment under deed of trust to
Judge Edmund Waddell,of Richmond,
A*a. The tnwt includes even the Ma¬
hon* family residenee, with its farui
turn and all his smr-nnal preparty.aud
I* IWftda t« segrsra Wot*.* “.Biiretfsitloa
**0;Wi
Big Headed Women not Beautiful,
A woman with a big head can never
be handsome, much less beautiful.
The "big head” that is sometimes ac¬
quired is not the sort referred to, but
that actual,largeness of skull and fea¬
tures which savors of disproportion
apd cau never bo symmetrical when
combined with feminine shoulders.
Webster i/iti massiveness may please
the Willards and the Somersets,
though never the admirers of beauty
and womanly grace, and to whom size
means nothing intellectually, provided
the gray matter has room enough to
exercise its precise function. There
is an antediluvian notion that the
small head of the antelope or the deer
signifies a typo well followed by nature
in the construction of fair women,and
eves if the present development of
brains does physically affect. the race,
this standard must remain the truest
and best while the Venus of Milo con¬
tinues to exist. — Bouton Jfcrakl,
A Case of Overtime.
“Say," said the office boy, "I think
the boss ought to gimme a bit extra
this week, but T guess ho won't."
“For what?” asked the bookkeeper.
"For overtime, I was droamin’
about me work all las’ night.”— ■Titl
Bits.
A-k AM,
If yon are troubled with malaria, constipa¬
tion, btdcmsness kidney f rouble or dyspep¬
sia, of Hostettor’s Stomach Bitters, and it
.will be speedily forthcoming. Nervousness,
loss of appetite and sleep, and a )o.« of vigor. .
aifttaiiR are also of remedied eminence by indorse tins restorative. valuable Phy- I I
pr^%lkl llnw& xhopcovle it, a con
0t An ‘ tUo
Tobacco so effects the brain that in many
instances It almost renders one unconscious.
Dr. Kilmer’s mRm p- H o ot euro
all Pamphlet Kidney and and Consultation Bladder troubles.
free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. V
Innocent I1D tcro-cu thegn-atcst temporal
power of any of the popi -.
CON federate vbtrk %>«*.
iiav ZtTXlnT^h' Enmninmeiit T>
On Ma> 17th i. id tub tho s nfiicri! ita'i.iai
knv M
turn at y«*ry tot—. Hiwiat »< commode ;
8IZ M
at t once with sftmn repr(tentative of tho
‘•Great Hiun- t I■!!"• Honti'-'
_
State opOmo, cUtt of Tor,too, l g ,
Lucas County. c *
Frank. J. Chesjcv 'makes oath that h Is the
senior partner of the firm of F. J. Chbney &
Comity Co., floina anil business St aforesaid, in the anil City that, of said Toledo, firm
ate
will pay t he khiii of ONE HUNDRED DOL¬
LARS for each and every ease of O uarrh that
cannot be cured by the use Fhank of H Aot.'s O ATA nun
t’r hk. .1. OltENSy.
r worn to before me and subscribed in mr
presence, this- 0tlx day of December, A. D. 1
, —■ • -- , A, W. UX.EASQN,
l SEAT, f
Halt’s 1 —) t'fttftrrh Cure Is taken internally Ant-mi Public,.
iilooil and act#
direct ly on t he anil mucous surfaces ot
the system. Semi for testimonial Us, free
F. ,f. Chksey & Co, , Toledf ). 0
by Druirgists, 7S&
"A Fresh Jinjrlinh Complexion.’ 5
well That healthy tlufn plait and white mwht just as
people iieft’th. 0 wouhf Tabuics reamniweS of' tblm
trouble, because Kipans an h to the root of tho
a stoma in <ood order pro
•luces good blood.
Mn. chlklran
teethimr, a! softens pal the stums, reduces Inflaiama
lays n, cunts wind colic. a
ss.
gvftnrtRes m
M
^5^1 s
Pa gpiv' i.
rx/_ yte*.
oisris
Both the method and results when
Syrup anti refreshing of Figs is taken; the it is pleasant
to taste, and acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, on tho Kidneys,
cleanses the sys¬
tem aches effectually, and fevers dispels colds, head
and cures habitual
constipation. only OJ nip OI Figs is tho
ducet., remedy of its kind ever pro
pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable ite to and tho stomach, prompt In in
action truly beneficial its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy excellent and agreeable substances, its
many qualities commend it
to. all and have made it tlie most
popular remedy known. ,
byrup of Figs is tor sale in ;>0
gists. cent bottles by all leading drug
Any have reliable hand druggist will
may not it promptly it on for who pro- ! j
cure any one
wishes to try it. Do not accept any j
“W* -
CALIFORNIA no SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. |
LOUISVILLE, AY. HEW YORK, N V,
“Shave your Soap”
—so the soap makers say, es¬
pecially if you’re washing delicate
things. Now, in the name of
common sense, what’s the
^ se V when you f n get
Pearline, m powder r form
\1 \x‘"‘ 1 .......for . this very reason, why
Vi u\ V ..... do VOll j want to Work over
—
II ij \ SOAp, which, II it S good for
' x anything, gets very hard and difficult to cut,
Besides, Pearline is vastly better than any
j powdered soap and could be. more, It has too. all T the here ^ood s something properties in of it
any soap — many without harm-much
j that does the work easily, but more
! easily than any other way yet known. I
j Beddlers and sosne nnscrapBlocs grocers will tell you,
| 1. LI .I f AtD W CXI, S«x5 tw ” or "the same as Pearline.” IT’S
. FALSE—Pearline tei is never peddPd. if ynar grocer sends
j you sn imitation, be honest—srttd, it 333 JAMBS l”> • t *'.tw '
; j j I « 2 s USUAL ......... ............... PRICE, $15°PPERM0I0R ...............tf& n , . v . M“$7.50
! -4
'■
The AERWOTOR AMT1-FRE6ZIWO THREE-WAY FORCE PUMP taa fsw cacei-rr so
hroatt, hint a very lares air chamber, has a very tog* spsmt vpuftiog, has a wir.tJuJiH shuroff a Istccr s«ur6e»!,
s:s4 can Sso fomtrtisU br any dealer Uas s Uie ot lUa Rociy 'MoauUins at the above price. Of warn, * ts twisar to s*> to an
Aftiwotor sgarn far theta. It h always bettsr to go to on AennoWT #g«®4 ter say- tbfeft jw may west wht<* l-« handlt,*.
A* a rato ha is a Bite-class, Kv«, rfttio'Mw ’wlde-a.wafce fetlsw J. tlut 1# Uws rc-i-v-.a aa Arrawtof agont. t» Is stsutafa’ IS,
In oor culn Hat of tbe«Ma4i of aetfats, yoa eon find one slew, stepi J, hchlnd-ato- ttttM* follow.. Wo tanridt ttisa.a SPECIAL
AERMOTOR FORCE PUMP AT $4.50, BETTER THAW USUALLY SOLD AT «8 OR SIO. Sffie4 for oar
4 hi tap Catalogs* flay nothing bn* im Aorowtftr V«mp. t*l do w>4 p*jr mare t!‘«n Awo»»«o» P’ic** t.-i u W» proto: «>» :>» til#: Wo
f««t*»4 ii «« 4w W* *>«« **t*h«4*4a 4*f*».«*» hmm ifk ***** th** « f»*t *«» c.hmp-f «.* r ‘
Vn* sressrii se»r*'»<w4tetureoH whwMitejf #» f.sii r«i* jib/#* tea Am&tetiit $fttMte &**w*tMi
St / ks-fh//.* ALRUIOTOA Pfl.4 ftkifOu**,
You want the Best
#
Royal Baking Powder never disappoints! 5
never makes sour, soggy, or husky food; #
never spoils good materials ; never leaves
lumps of alkali in the biscuit or cake; while
all these things do happen with the best
of cooks who ding to the old-fashioned
5 methods, or who use other baking, powders.
If you want the best food, ROYAL
Baking Powder is indispensable.
ROYAt EAKINf. «>Wt5E!» CO., ItM WAV.!. Of., MW-YORK.
How to Got a Wife.
Austrian matrimonial advertise¬
ments, according to a contemporary
correspondent at Vienna, are marked
by an acceptable humorous audacity.
Here,, for instance, is one that ran for
. days: A, anted—A ,
or MTfia rich
lady—no matter how old—-who will
finance a student of medicine until
such time m he obtains his degree,
when he engages to marry' bis' benefac¬
tress."
Another is quoted wherein a young
prince seeks ;a handsome girl with a
When dowry . of not less than $1,000,000,
the desired mate is obtained all
one’s needs are apparently satisfied,
judging from this advertisement for a
I' n rchascr for "a well-trained monkey,
ft talkative parrot and a beautiful, I
sympathetic cat," which belong to a i
l»dy who, owing to her approaching
marriage, Im no further use. for them, j
The most amastng' of the advertise
ments quoted by our contemporary is,
however, that of the.very Irish peru-|
4'= ter who makes wigs for "men of in
tellect, philosophers, scholars and phy
siciana, whoso severe mental labor in
tho cause of humanity has filled their
brains with genial ideas, while depriv
ing their heads of their natural eapib
lary envelopes.” These "artistically
finished wigs,” the advertiser contin
nea, "while extremely useful arc high
ly ornamental, are guaranteed abso¬
lutely invisible to the spectator. They
cau be seen any day. in. my private
show rooms,• Philadelphia .Press,
Engraving by Dynamite,
—'—“
Bome officers at the naval station at
Newport wore testing ft new fuse. j’ In
BO “V ^ wav fl 8 Km „ii Ur ie<1 i i,, leftt nf batl ,.-.1 “‘P* } _
P ^ *1 \l ****** iron block tl f on dynamite , which eartndgo tho cart
ridge was tired, and ft perfect imprint
of tho leaf was loft in the metal. The
discovery was afterwards used in dee
orfvtivo work, and the process is found
so accurate in operation that even tho
veins in the petals of flowers can be
reproduced in metal.
Political Investment,
“What is a vested interest?” asked
one of tho lawyers who was examining
a candidate for admission to the bar.
“Well—er—I suppose you have a
vested interest when you arc compell¬
ed to pawn your vest,” replied the
candidate, who was somewhat impe¬
cunious.— Texas Siftings,
Good for Trade,
Kitchen maid (at tho crockery shop) DuV
--"What! only one florin tip?
lug the pans year l have broken throe
scrap tureens, twenty-six cups, thirty
five saucers, five meat dishes and fifty
six plates.”
new sleeping car link
x<> Br „. w * ek , vm com,-at r,„
44enrKiii Htnuthem anil Florida »u»«t Pla.ni
ovuruift mum urn and Kimuianiirt lituo sp¬
aK
every evonbw 1 p. m.. »»<i arr.ve Brunswirk
mu mVamL riitnihuJi "•! Mm .i!’ 1 ’ ’t’lnn.S
tuui arrivimt SS, ihafcswick W, 1 ' uK" Tklswiu V£> *.
m.. ts ih n»
summer. ujn#i> Mnmni >n win 1* matin at
K.“8f^V^rW£S l
a ^ rto B. v.
<aV. s. . . Mill,
and t. a. T. V, A.
16 " streou KuutnUi iianse At luma, tin
llrteoili-. An.
riSBfflffl:. J; T."Ate,™;,V KX*. SSti
( Fitildur. SZC ‘“k
s, .L T. M. Shuptrlae. I). Sunt, by Savaftuftli, mttfi far no,; >«
-tamp-. tta.
Christian Endeavor,
The Christian Endeavor convention
which meets in Boston, Mass., July
luth-Inih, has already aroused a great
deal of interest. Tho committee of
arrangements have been granted tho
use of Boston common for a big open
mr meeting of a patriotic meeting duly
4th — Governor Oreenhnlge, Dr."Don
aid McLaurin of Detroit, Dr. 8,
Smith, the author of "America," and
si vc raf other prominent persons will
be present and apeak.
Dr. Smith is to write a special hymn
for tho convention. The singing at
the common meeting will be hv a choir
. assisted , immense
.
' ®«lu*tra. ' 7*voices, I-tidy fifty thousand oy an Gbus
tmn brndeavoters wdl take P«rt ii, tho
n» t u m telamon to Uie outsiders
^ nOT * lty
“ ' c 1
Like an open Look,
1 our faces tell the
£ tale of health or dis¬
& ease. Hollow checks
y a tt d sunken eyes,
y listless steps and
i languorous 1 •> o k s
tell of wasting de¬
bilitating d i i a s e
some place in the
body.. It may he one the
place or is another, generally
cause
traceable'to a cont
'5 tu pure on blood, source—- and Im¬ im¬
v.t pure blood starts
in the digestive organs.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery
P«”fies the } blood stimulates disease-genus digestive wher
actlon ' sea,c ie8 oal
ever they exist aud puts the whole body
into a vigorous, strong and healthy con
dit ion. It builds up solid, useful" flesh,
mbs out wrinkles, life really brightens worth living. the eyes
and makes
-----——— ---------- ---------- -.........—
W. S3 L. Douglas
SHOEHnafftKb.
*s, copnovAV,
V FRENCH A KNAWElutn CALF.
. $4*3.sa FlNtCADSdfANGftfirA
I I *3,50 police, a sql£3
I ®2.^i, 7 -? BQYS’SCHOOtSHQESL
r-ADDSia*
^* »«5S&e BROCKTON,MASS. T SHE»
Over One Million People wear the
W. L, Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
AH our shoes are equally satisfactory
Thrir wearing qualities unsui
. oia,
ifyaur&aiertaiinyt yyisuwaesn
an old-time remedy
IN A MODERN FORM.
RipansTabu!8S
•raft LATEST, M0-3J’ EFFECTIVE
DYSPEPSIA 0DRE.
Pocket Edition
Of a Suniard MsdicinM Praseriptioa.
That is*.
XbeaMtiv ltigredieati
In the form of TABHjES
Instead of Liquid.
RipansTabules
A single one gives pnuatit relief. 81
. At
}>:! ivsTutaihs. price '.'ftlrtS a hex.
!4'ugi!'ist'S ><r by mail.
1UBANS CHEMICAL CO.,
J 0 Spt « * v St,, Ke w VorV.
Notice £ ^ to Mill Men
\ » i
,,, ££>''£>'!£!£ ’ ‘ 4 «fa
i VJA'*
\
||i** Pi MON'S p 8S
c-Tomc Pel, its.
' TREATMENT SttBS!
-Vf .......... “iwttmku rtiliie Son; 5 UonblB lywtw
«>.. Nir«- A orft'iifv
ALESMEN **£?.£ SES;
reil <m eiitht- to every t-«Wa«» mao or #rm; Us¬
er* 1 «t!*iv. is »«•>.'' u4,-:.ik«I for :nj»«tls!«s *a4
iiaeirv IUK(! peFiinnml SKI. powtion. i <>.. i> < Xrtilrys-. »«{» r.t.
.
A N. U Fifiecs.. t>8