Newspaper Page Text
lietonn in the Kitshen.
There are so many reform' in progress.
it seems time to look afteT the kitc hen,
and wake person* to the fact that there is
no symbol reason of why discomfort a kitchen should be the
and despair. Food
is the preservation of health
and mind, and its suitable prepa
ration is as “uobli” an occupa
tion as any other. The trouble arises
from the fact that any sort of room and
furniture are "good enough for the
kitchen;’’ the result of this theory is that
no one can blame a refined woman for
morbid “hating and the ugly place,” and becoming
gloomy when obliged to
work there, for we all know that how¬
ever tasteful the other rooms are, the
average kitchen presents cracked walls,
bare, worn floors, and an air of neglect in
spite First of the all, weekly banish cleaning. the idea that house¬
of
work and cooking are waste of time, and
believe that toward these tilings, kceing well performed, family
go very far your
from the use of wrong stimulants, then
look round and see what can be done to
make this room as attractive as the
others.
If the walls are too broken to be whi¬
tened or tinted, paper them and the ceil¬
ing with cheerful paper. and It decreases
the amount of wall paper protects
the wall from chair-backs to ceil them up
to a height of four feet; this ceiling is,
of course, to be painted like the doors
»nd window-frames. All of the wood¬
work, including the wood box and cup¬
boards, should be painted to harmonize
with the paper.
Paint the old, wooden chairs some
harmonious colors, and place a soft,
bright, There rocking-chair in a bracket retired corner.
must also be a or high
shelf for the lamp, so that the light will
be diffused for evening work.
Carpet the whole floor with a bright,
clean carpet, placing bound oil cloth in
front of the stove, sink, table, and cub
board ; avoid loose nondescript pieces of
carpet, or anything shabby. Protect the
walls behind the stove, sink, and with
washable splashers of oil-boiled red,
or white; make the window curtains of
the same, and wash them all frequently.
Make some large, pretty holders of
some thick, pliable material, and keep
these, the tongs, etc., hung on nails;
everything made of this kind should be neatly
and kept on particular nails, Re¬
member that slovens can not keep an at¬
tractive kitchen.
Modern Bridesmaids.
Bridesmaids arc very important and
ding, picturesque and their features of tlie modern wed¬
costumes ore not only ex¬
tremely rich, hut in many cases really ar¬
tistic as well. At an English wedding
this winter, the bridesmaids wore gowns
of white silk draped with white gauze
and trimmed with silver galoon, while
large Gainsborough ostrich lints covered with
white feathers adorned their
heads. At a “violet wedding” the brides¬
maids were dressed iu costumes of purple
velvet and copied from a popular wedding, painting,
a novel feature of this was
that many of the guests wore costumes
which were in some shade of the same
color.
Fifteen contestants dad for tho fray,
Armed with good steel and in battle array—
Striving for their lucre, honors as bravo and Knights of gold. old
Strove for medals of
Driving Seeking each sound shining the pen over the paper—
to 4 as most proper caper.
The praises of remedies known tho world over,
From Paris to Calais, from Calais to Dover;
Bat each description Knight vainly strives-language fails
in
Of the manifold virtues of “Favorite Presorip
tion.”
When ill or depressed with the "draggin h
down” suffering feeling, headache, consequent upon weakness, back.
from weak or lame
und the many ills common to the weaker sex,
take Dr. Pierce’s Prescription, which is guar¬
anteed to give satisfaction or price ($1.00) re¬
turned. See printed guarantee on bottle-wrap¬
per.
Dr. Fierce'* Pellets—gently laxative or ac¬
tively cathartic according to do»e. 26 cents.
A man opened his window on the morning oI
the 1st, and in-flew-enaa.
Don’t urge children to take nasty worm oils.
They and will enjoy ask eating for Dr. Bull's Worm Destroyers
more.
The serpent was the most subtle of all the
beast* of the field, but the army trader it
sutler.__
It Is mentioned as a peculiarity of the grass
widow that she Is seldom green.
Old smoker* prefer “Tanslll's Punch.’’
Purify M tfce Your Blood
coming of spring the blood ifcould be purl
m impurlUee which here been accumnlathis
tor months or even years, are liable to manifest
*b«mselves and seriously effect the health. Hood’*
«»rwp»rllU If undoubtedly th« bert blood purlfltr
U expel*OT.ry taint of Impurity, drive, out .crotu
Jen* ■mod humor* th* quality and irrm* and ton* of dlieuc, and , 1 m, to th*
essential te rood health.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
“My dsufhter suffered terribly with sore eyes
wued by scrotul* humor. We were obliged to keep
her out of school for two years. We hod medical
etteedtnee, but she failed to rain relief, At hut
knowing th»t Rood's Sarsaparilla had cured my
mother of rheumatism, aud believing It must be goon
for the blood. I concluded to have my daughter try
it, and It ha* entirely cured h*r."-C 0 B»runs Ykaonn,
US East Main Street, Marshalltown, Iowa.
Purifies the Blood
“Rood's Sarsaparilla has cured “e of salt rheum,
which . ,, i v have had for year*. I do think It Is a splsn
did medicine. I am so yeare of age and my akin 1
Just s
as smooth and fair as a piece of glasa''—Mas
XML* Cpajuc, South Norwalk, Conn.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
•uWbyaUdmuhUs. *l;,lxfor»». Prepared only
tty C. I. HOOD A CO., Lowe]j, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
Cur«t MLaSsfinmnii wit boat. fat:.
do**. Price 91.50 bottie Build* up from th« tin*
medicine). Afflicted per (nmko.t one gallon of
►end stamp lor tub pArticu
i*re and certificates of wonderful cures. For sale by
drtiffghd’' C#e, and by Ga. tho Atlantic CcrimUicr
Atlanta, Agents wanted where there
sre remedy no drunK wbeb'tf 1 *!*- dw.nk in g&lUra* Atlanta of daily. «bin wonderful
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL
CONSULT DU. l.OBB, 329 N.rth
Despondency, SSS&gSSEfS Catarrh, Dimness Ulcers, Sore., ot Vision, Impaired Memory, Llvsr!
Stomach, Kidney iBrlghfa Disease); Lung,
RTCsIl write lor question list conBdentlaL
or and book.
Or*afn Sfatpa coin* cf 1*79, IW. 81
m and Hi ar« very V«lu«t>:*; a 1*0 30 cent \ d-’rre
•f 1671 and 76. Crruda ball Mil .14 Of 18*1
are worth •500: dollars Thou
sands of other I ntMd Hi fairs an *1 forrifn coins,
federal a otcuc.v, eta,, are worth largv pro
in lams, ftaud 10 enu for Coin Value Gulda
and tern* to agonts. Ladios or genu uak*
15 ncr da g writing for as at homo. Address
Euwnuc t LBBiu«T CO* UOnttK Ky*
QUAINT AM) C0R1OUS.
] boys given free rides
Messenger are
agon public vehicles in Nt>w York.
Thu mercury at Sintn Barbara, Cal.,
recently tcached 99 degrees in the
shade.
A citiz-'n of Franklin, Pann., is
tnxed nine cents cu ical estate and
$3. 50 on dogs.
Aunt Mary Fune'ty of Jonesboro,
Me., aged 91, refuses to have help and
does her own work.
Three pounds and a half U the con>
bined weight of twins presented to a
happy couple at Topaka, Kan.
Jamea K. Polk is the only man who
ever held the speakership of the House
of Congress who reached the Presi¬
dency.
When Charles Mackay, the author,
died, his right hand assumed the cus¬
tomary position for holding a pen and
so remained.
Two centenarians living in the neigh¬
borhood of Alton, England, have been
great smokers and moderate drinkers
all their lives.
A British brig from Galveiton to
Rotterdam, when spoken in inid-ocean,
was found to be damaged by a collision
with a whale.
A Freemont (Mich.) man owns a hen
which lays at night, a proceeding which
he claims is as phenomenal as though
she ate hay like a horse.
A spectator of a fire in Wilmington,
N. C., met with a singular accident. A
stream of water from the hose struck
hiiu iu the faco and toro one of his eyes
from its socket.
Cue of the missionaries of the China
Inland Mission, a Scotch gentleman
worth $1,000,000, js living iu China
on 25 cents a week, using all his for¬
tune in the work.
The Duke bf Devonshire, at Chats
worth, his country seat, has the largest
private conservatory in the world. I;
is 217 by 150 bet, and is one of the
“prides of England.”
Last year 1700 permits were issued
to amateur photographers who desired
to practice iu Crntnil Park, New York,
and this year it is expected that the
number will exceed 2500.
A successful gambler at Mon to Carlo
celebrated by a dinner at the hotel that
is said to have cist $15,000, and the
next day he was in such an inflamed
condition that lie blew his head oiT.
An army of mice holds possession oi
the new police barracks in Berlin, Ger¬
many, and no efforts on tlio part of the
authorities are sufficient to extirpate
them. The rightful owners are house¬
less before this foe.
Near Lebanon, Penn., tbero is a
school teacher who lms an inordinate de¬
sire for sleep, and frequently slumbers
during school hours. The scholars, not
long since, being unable to wake him,
gathered up their books and started
home.
A “lion” that had been ravaging the
barnyards around Nevada City, Nev.,
causing great fright among tile farm¬
ers, on being traced to its lair by a
party of hunters, proved to be a large
Newfoundland dog, whose headquarter*
were iu an old, abandoned cabin.
A Profitable Cotton Patch.
Mr. John P. Gray of Hampton
County, N. shows how careful
farming pays by the results achioved on
a cotton patch of twelve acres. He
has printed his process for working.
Ho breaks the land with a six-inch turn
plow the latter part of February. It is
then laid off iu deep rows live feet apart
He puts down fifty bushels of gfeen
cottonseed to the aero and covers them
lightly. On April 6 2l)0 pound* of
fertilizer are put down to tho measured
acre. Seed is dropped by band thirty
inches apart in hills; the ground is
lightly plowed about May 1, and also
on May 30, at which time cottonseed
meal mixed with acid phosphate and
kainit, is put iu. On June 1 cotton is
chopped out. On June 12 he “plows
shallow” with sweep plow. No more
plowing is allowed after June 30, as
tho cottoii is then largo enough to hide
a mule. After tho ground is broken all
plowing is shallow. The following is
tho cost: Work, plowing and hoeing 1
$96.80; cottonseed for manure, $120.-
50; guauo (609 pounds to acre). $79. 20;
cost of picking, $190.50; total, $48#.
Mr. Gray gathered 28 bales, weighing
505 pounds, and including bagging
(jute) and ties, avaraging net $45—the
28 making $1260, and tho net on the
12 acres being $774 .—Baltimore Sun.
Understood Both.
Indulgent Father—My son, your edu¬
cation has cost mo $10,000. I have
spent all I liavn and you must go right
to work to earn a living at something
you understand.
Finished Son (Harvard ’69)—Well,
father, which would you rather have
mo be, a baso ball pitcher or a billiard
marker!—2V«io Fori
BIRTH OF A NEW CITY.
-* Sr»ate*te »f New Blighted and Seothevsi
Capita! af •5,000.000
The new town of Cardiff, about seventy-Are
miles north of Chattanooga, Tonn., on the
Cincinniti Southern Railroad.
A representative of this paper visited Rook
wood, Tenn., during the week, where the c >m
pany’s offices are temporarily loeated, ana had
a wy interesting interview w-.th Mr. H. C,
Young, Vice-Preeideut of the mpany and
general manager of the work now in progress.
A drive of about four miles north of Rockwool
brought the reporter to the town site of Card.ff.
The company has shown great judgment in
their &el_>ction. The locality is a mast beauti¬
ful one, situated in the valley, which is about
one and onu-balf miles wide to the lc.othiils of
tha mountains on either side, and about two
and oue-half miles long, slightly rolling,
which insures perfect natural drainage, and the
numerous mountain springs, with their never
ceasing fo< of sparkling water, furnish an
abundant supply for all purposes and a 1 times.
Not alone has the company shown judgment
in selecting this location for its natural ad¬
vantages as a town site, as stored in the moun¬
tains are untoid millions of tons of coal and
iron. The iron ore is the richest deposit that
can be found in the whole length of this valley
—from Birmingham to its most northern point;
this is no guess work, as for the peat twenty
one years two large furnaces have been located
at Kockwood, four mile < south, and their out¬
put has demonsti ated the truth of this asser
tion. Coal is found in unlimited quantities
and of easy access; the quality is of the best,
and produce* a superior quality of cose.
With abundance of limestone on the
ground, Cardiff is in a position to mine and re¬
duce iron ore at the lowest possible figure and
will bo able to compete favorably with any
other Southern point.
The company will b8 known as the Cardiff
Coal & Iron Company, and has been formed
with a capital of five million (45,000,000) dol¬
lars; Mr. Bice’s plan involves its stai ting off
with no incumbrances; two million ($2,000,
000) dollars cash in the treasury, to bo receiv¬
ed irom the tale of stock; a mammoth su e of
kits is to take place on Apr.l £2d, and for this
sale it is proposed to foimuiate a plan which
wilt (liable purchasers to secure lots at reason¬
able and not sp culaiive priors; the intention
being lo give patrons of the salo a chance to
make a profit as wo.l as the company.
On tlio lath of April it is proposed to run a
mammoth excursion from Boston to Cardiff, to
attend the opening sale of lots, for the accom¬
modation of whom ten trains of vestibule oars
will ho provided, freighted by the bram and
wealth of New England, und accompanied by an
Engli h syndicate ; at the same time excursions
will also bo run to Cardiff from New York,
Chicago, Cincinnati, Louisville, Lexington,
Frankfort, Nashville, Atlanta, Birmingham,
Montgomery, New Orleans, Kansas City and
other prominent points.
Mr. lticc and his associates have been at work
preparing for this enterprise audits presentation
to the public lor several months, and while Mr.
Rico was a firm believer in Fort Payne at the
start, thedcvelopmentsoftho past twelve mouths
have more than confirmed that faith; he is
equally confident that Cardiff will he fully as
satbfactury as Fort Payne has provod.
By Mr. Young the reporter was shown the
work iu progress and in prospect; a vast amount
has already been accomplished, and everything
was found to he running in a very systematic
manner, insuring the completion of an immeuso
amount of building and improvements during
the next three weeks before the sale.
The representatives of the syndicate have
taken hold of the enterprise individually, and
have shown their faith in the future of Cardiff
by contracting for some thirty brick blocks,
which aro now in the course of construction.
Mr. George Boswortb, a prominent architect
of Boston, is on the ground with a large num¬
ber of assistants, busily preparing plans forth#
company’s buildings and those to be el ected by
others.
The company has now about 600 men at work,
besides about 130 teams, grading the streets
and putting in side tracks; the plans for a fine
hotel, to cost $100,000, are complete; it will be
a handsome structure and an ornament to any
city, containing 136 rooms with every modem
improvement.
The company has also plans for a fine three
atory brick building with stone trimming,
75x125 feet, where will be located the First Na¬
tional Bank of Cardiff, with $50,000 capital,
paid up; the Hon. J. F. Tarwater.of B sjkwood,
Tenn., will lie its president. The offices of the
company will also be located in tins bu lding.
A large exposition building is about complete
and will be in charge of A C. Gill, the compa¬
ny’s geologist,where a fine exhibit of ihe natur¬
al resources will be on display. Mr. Gill has a
number ul assistants constantly at work in the
mountains, prospecting for new openings for
coal. The company has over 100 miner* at work
taking out iron ore, and the number will be
greatly increased as soon as houses can be built
to shelter them. A large foroe of carpenter*
are at work erect ing boarding houses, residences
and other buildings.
Work has been started on a new depot by the
Queen A Orescent Railroad, of a design in keep,
ing with the style and class of work being done
by the company, and to cost $5,000.
Mr. O. Bonne, the engineer in charge, i*
working a large force of men, and will have the
•treets in first-class shape by the time of the
Sale, April 22 to 25, inclusive.
As soon as possible the company will start the
erection of two large furnaces of the most im¬
proved patterns, beside* ooke ovens, etc.
Mr. Young is doing everything in his power
to forward the enterprises already started, and,
by the time of the rale, there will he accommo¬
dation* for all.
A project is now on foot to build & dummy
fine from Cardiff to Rockwood, which will take
definite shape within a few days.
As soou as practical a daily paper will be
.tarted and everything pertaining to wflrat-olui
town wili be established.
That tue future o!' Cardiff is assured can be
readily seeu from the following guarantees
from tne company, who mu, during the flrgt
year iron expend furnaces one million dollars in the erection
of costing $350,000; a hotel to
cost $100,000; water works, $75,000; motor line,
*75 000; electric light plant, $25,000; public
$150,000; building, $50 000; building and loan company,
ice plant, church, $30,000; school house, $15,
000; $n5,000, and coke plant, $50,000.
Never before in the history of ihe South has
enterprise such flattering of this nature been started under
conditions. Tue fact of Mr. W.
p. Rice being at t he head assures suocess, not
only for the company, but for every investor
wnomay become Interested in Cardiff in tne fu¬
ture.
F. T. Barnum, the veteran khowmsn. has
arrived at New York.
Japanese Wheat,
The Belgian Consul at Nagasaki wheat report*
that samples of Japanese were not
long ago sent to England to be analysed,
and that the report* of chemists and mil¬
lers established their made good from them, quality. and
First-class flour was
the result has been the formation of a
flour milLin" company at Nagasaki. kind is An¬
other establishment of the same on
the jjoint of being started with the latest
European appliances.
A Material Difference.
Mrs. W.—“Whatever is meant by the
underground electric system, Widgery?” the under¬
ground Mr. W.—“Why, electric my is dear, just the
system It reverse is
of the one now generally in use. a
system the wires in instead which it is the proposed inhabitants.”— to bury
of
Funny Folka.
Rich, Red Bloed.
With rich, red hlood coursing through the
veins and the heart’s action never obstructed
by a single nkluu particle of blood poison full or allotted impar¬
ity,me ought to live out their health.
time in ease, in comfort and in perfect
Old mother earth has furnished herbs of heal¬
ing and strengthening virtue that wonderfully clean
assist nature in keeping the blood pure and
Science revealed these herbs to that eminent
physician. Dr. John Bull, of Louisville, meritori¬ Ky.,
and they are happily blended in his
ous compound, called scrofula Dr. John Bull’s Sarsapa¬
rilla. Syphiills and yield readily of to
its magic influence, and other symptoms aches,
impure indigestion, blood, such weak as pimp kidneys, es, sores, etc., vanish
pains, like snow before the day sun. It is the
noon in
only compound that It is absolutely leaves safe to use
cases of bad blood. never any whole un¬
pleasant afterfects, and it stimulates the dose
system, beginning with the very first
taken.
_
While the truo American does not believe in
a king, he will bet his last cent on four of
them.
_
Catarrh CanH Be Cared
with LOCAL APPLICATION, as they cannot
reach the seat, of tho disease. Catarrh is a
blood or constitutional disedSe, and in order to
cure it you have to take internal remedies. and
Hall’s Catarrh Cure the blood is taken internally, surface.
act- Hall’s directly Catarrh on and mucus medicine. It
Cure is no qv.ack
was this prescribed for by one of and the is best physicians regular in
country it is composed years, of the a best tonics pre¬
scription. known, combinined with the best blood purifi¬
ers, acting directly on the mucus surface. The
perfect combination of the two ingredients is
what produces such wonderful results in cur¬
ing catarrh. F. J. CHENEY Send & for CO.Props.,, testimonials Toledo, free. O.
Sold by Druggists, price 75c.
- i -
Erie Railway.
This popular pastern Line is running solid
vest ibuled trains, consisting of beautiful day
coaches, Pullman sleeping and dining cars- and
between Cincinnati, Chicago, New York
Boston. All trains run via Iaike Chautauqua holding
during through tlio tickets season, privileged and passengers off at this
are to stop tickets read
world-famed resort. Be sure your
via N. Y„ L. E. & \V. R. R.
Tiie game cook is always pretty well heeled
when he goes out on a business trip.
Tbero is a ease of scrofula hero that has
mended very fast under the treatment of
Bull’s Sarsaparilla, after all other treatment
failed to do the man any good. J also know of
a ease of piles that Bull’s Sarsaparilla cured.
In cases of whites and womb diseases it has
proven itself the best medinino to give quick
relief. John J. Coolie , Jjf. I)., Mt. Fieri ton. Inti.
When a woman wants the earth it is with
the view of giving it to some man.
JyftpP e fRlSS
J
* a
BD
: vV
WM
Wig
OK© KJVJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
to the taste, and acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, on the Kidneys,
cleanses the sys¬
aches tem effectually, and dispels colds, head¬
fevers and cures habitual
constipation. only remedy of S^rup its kind of Figs is the
ever pro¬
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
ceptable its action to the stomach, prompt in
and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
its healthy and excellent agreeable substances,
mend many it to all and have qualities made com¬
it
the most popular remedy k nown.
and Syrup $1 Bottles of Figs by is all for sale in 50o
gists. Any reliable leading druggist drug¬
who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it Do not accept
any substitute.
CALIFORNIA FI0 SYRUP CO.
8AN F&AUCU8C0, CAL,
tommiE. ky. vsw roue. n.r.
*tV IN •tVtWTMN SIVtHTY
[■n. y : >?r Sp*y I
. ►
4
To euro Biliousness. 8lck Headache, constipation.
Malaria, Liver Complaints, take the safe
and certain remedy, SMITH'S
BILE BEANS
T.'so the SMALL 81ZU (40 little beans to the bot¬
tle). They are the most convenient; suit all ages.
Price of elthCT size. ‘25 cents per bottle.
KISSING panel &
cents (coppers or stamps).
J. F. SMITH*CO..
Makers of * ’Bile Beans. * ’ St. Louis, Mo.
rlstfOn, Wit«, 850. The Elkhart Carriage
Harness Mfg. Co.
r/WftiL VrYDCy i *'*' hut r »©14 ta uij RhltMa
i | dtm tonsilat I *23.00.
milOLiT ALE FUI K9, th*«tbe 1
droierb* prvUt. Ship Mywher. P»T for freight **. rg 4 1*
aminatioo brforo bn jlug. m.
«kars«* if not •■Usfactory. Warranted ^ r ]
for H jaara. 64 • pn%« CnUiogar FRICK.
Address F. B. PRATT, Indiana. •*!_ juJ
Klkhart. - -
flrSli l kal commmc^ARTicit^L of fu rniture. (\Q aJSSPsjja;
.| - * 7 nva LID ABA-im
!- 5W?\.\Y.S
m . AND
V^j^lCKAIRSl^j^ WHEEL KM
S' I
VFe retail at Ulo srfk
tesaiMrw' HFtt. CO., 145 N. , !aVkAf?*
AUliCRG sth St. ruia4a-l»
-S/rONEY LOANED. MONEY SAVED.
/ St 1 l L
I? -••lie 1 Q*
/ IZX J i
:rS2 3
*72
I 7 it
* r
'Mil M I _L>- S3
i
■*.
ir?'
*o
i
$10,000 FOUND IN AN ASH BABHEL.
A New York rag-picker is reported to
have found $10,000 in greenbacks in an ash
barrel. This was a rare piece of good luck,
but how much more fortunate is the sufferer
from consumption who learns that, although
the doctors may have pronounced his case
hopeless, will Dr. Pierce’s him. Golden Consumption Medical Dis¬
covery cure is a
scrofulous disease of the lungs. The “ Dis¬
covery,” purifier of which the is the strikes most right potent the blood
age, at root
of the evil and there is no resisting it, if
taken in time and given a fair trial. In
the cure of all scrofulous and other blood
taints, scalp diseases, no matter old from what and cause arising,
absolutely has equal. sores swellings, it
no
V O-l;‘Jb’iJJbiED for an incurable case of
1 the proprietors of DR. SAGE'S CATARRH REMEDY^
SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH. —Headache, obstruction of nose, dischargee
/ falling tenacious, into throat, sometimes profuBe. watery, and acrid, weak, at others, thick,
.5 mucou6, purulent, bloody and putrid: eyes ringing In ears,
J-/ tf deafness, difficulty of clearing throat, expectoration of offensive matter;
breath offensive; smell and taste Impaired, and general debility. Only a
few of these symptoms likely to be present, at once. Thousands of ease*
result in consumption, and end in the grave.
By tho its worst mild, soothing, This antiseptic, infalliblo cleansing, and healing properties. Dr. Sage’s Remedy
cures creams” and strong cases. caustic solutions remedy with which does not, the public like the have poisonous long irritating snuffs,
simply palliate for short been humbugged,
in the of such a time, or drive the disease to the lungs, ns there is danger of doing
use nostrums, but it produces perfect arid permanent cures of tho
worst eases of Chronic Catarrh, as thousands can testify. “Cold In the Head»
is cured with a fow applications. Catarrhal Headache is relieved and cured as if by
magic. It removes offensive breath, loss or impairment of the sense of taste, smell or hear¬
ing, watering frequently or weak eyes, and druggists, impaired memory, when caused by the violence of Catarrh,
as they all are. By 60 cents.
Irish Poets;
From Charles de Kay’s profusely illus¬
trated article on the “Old Poetic Guild
in Ireland” we quote the following: “The
long training of the people in verse-com¬
posing and verse-reciting predisposes
them to the composition of poetry of some
degree of excellence. Irishmen and Irish¬
women as a rule have a knack at writing
if they receive any education at all, and
are natural journalists and writers at an
early age. The last remarkable poet of
the file kind known Ireland wasCarolan,
the blind bard of the last century, whose
portrait, and some of whose verses, trans¬
lated and in the original, were published
by tetic James Hardiman. He was as peripa¬
as Homer is said to have been, blind
also, and certainly a fine if not a great
poet. little Though the race is not extinct,
except the most ordinary verse is
published being in Irish to-day, the audience
too small to tempt the most ardent
patriot. With all its inherited short¬
comings, and with the evils that befell it
of owing ancient to circumstances, Ireland did the world poetic guild
the a great
service in keeping from destruction his¬
torical and national data lost from other
parts of Europe. It also added not a lit¬
tle to the world’s stock of tragic, of noble,
and of comic fiction .”—The Century.
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