Newspaper Page Text
Tid Bits
■P»!ass adays, eyes are made ao cleverly now¬
that even the wearer cannot aee
through the deception.
A wit, teeing the name “Hagwell"
upon a would door, said lhat without the gentleman’* the H.
name be a* well
It is told of a Scotch clergyman that
when he was a child, on going home
from church be was asked the text He
replied, “Except ye pay the rent, je
maun a’ lea’ the pariah.” He had mis¬
understood the passage, perish." “Except ye re¬
pent, ye shall all likewise
A farmer, calling on a neighbor, ob¬
served that hia clock was not nghh
‘•Weil, you see, sir,” said the latter,
“nobody don't" understand much about
that clock, but me. When the hands of
the clock stand at twelve, and it strikes
two, then I know it’s twenty minutes to
•even.”
The non. E. Everett, the American
Senator, once had his health “Here’s proposed
thus by the artist 8tory: to
Learning—when Ever-it rises it grows.”
Everett, springing to his amend feet, 1 at Here’s once
exclaimed: “1 beg to
to Learning—whenever it rises it grows,
but never above one Story.”
In Naples there is a racs of cats who
live in the churches. They are kept and
fed by the authorities on purpose to eat
the mice which infest all old buildings
there. The animals may often bo seen
walking about among tbe congregation, altar during
or sitting gravely before the
mass.
Fingers Before Forks.
Although the fork plays a more useful
and conspicuous part at one’s meals than
anything else, except the supplies, there
are certain edibles which it is the fashion
lo eat with one's fingers. Here is tbe
R S test list:
Olives, to which a fork should never
■•applied. Bjkptinigus, whether hot cold, when
or
■jkwhole, Hoc, which as it should should be be. dipped in
Bfc or in a little salt.
(SWremble f 'which way bo properly placed
cloth beside the plate.
Strawberries, when served with the
Item liouses. on, as they are in the most elegant
Bread, toast, and all tarts and small
cakes.
Cheese, which is invariably eaten with
the ple. fingers by the most particular peo¬
Even the leg or other small pieces fashion¬ of a
bird are taken in the fingers at
able dinners; and at most of the luncheons with¬
ladies pick small pieces of chicken
out using a fork.
Discrimination in Words.
Pretty refers to external beauty on a
small scale. Grace of manner is a nat¬
ural gift; elegance implies' cultivation.
sisarss
is the strongest word of its class, imply¬
ing everything softmst and delicacy similar in addition words. to
that is in
Courtesy has reference to others, polite¬
ness to ourselves. The former is
a duty or privilege to assumed others,
the latter r is behavior
from proper self-respect. Benevolent
refers to the character of the agent act¬
ing, beneficent to tbe act alms-giving, performed.
Charitable is restricted to
except when used in reference used to judg¬
ment of others. Lovely is only
where there is something more than
external beauty, when there is a combina¬
tion of personal beauty and pleasing man¬
ner. Faultless features do not make a
lady lovely who is disagreeable in dis¬
position .—Boston Journal of Education.
Franklin's Famous Toast.
Ben Franklin was dining with a small
party of distinguished gentlemen, when
one of them said: “Here are three na¬
tionalities represented; I am French, and
my friend thcro is English, and Mr.
Franklin is an American. Let each one
propose a toast."
i^wns agreed to, and the Englishman’s
turn came first. Ho arose, and, in the
tone of a Briton bold, said; “Here’s to
Great Britain, the sun that gave light to
all nations of the earth.”
The Frenchman was rather taken back
at this, but ho proposed; “Here’s to
France, the moon whose magic rays move
the tides of tho world.”
Ben then rose, with an sir of quaint
modcsiy, and said, “Here’s to George
Washington, the Joshua of America, who
commanded the sun and moon to stand
•till—and they stood still.”
land Upland farmers in the west of Scot¬
report very heavy losses of sheep on
account of the severe weather and worry¬
ing by dogs.
Good Blood
la absolutely
Essential to
Good Health
You may have
Both by taking
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
The beet
Blood Purifier.
It possesses
Curative Power
Peculiar
To Itself
Bl.T’S CaiAIII BALM
Absorbed, Applied into Cleanses Nostrils the a Quickly Head,
Beals the Sons and Curas
CATARRH m
___Taate and Smell, Bead quSefc
tr Believes Cold In aud
Saadache. 60c. at Druggists. r
BfcT BBOa. W Warreu Bt.. N. T.
___
NHIIOEC banniAflCJe Send particular for catalogue aud
w. B- GRA Y, VO 4t U'i etyla wautad.
Wooster St. u. Y.
**• LOIm flighted.
The pleasant effect and the perfect safety
with which ladles may use the liquid fruit lax*
atlre, Syrup of Figsjmder all oondltlone make
It their favorite remedy. It la pleating to the
eye and to the taste, gentle, yet effectual In
acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels.
The estimated population of ihe world ia
1 *10,000,000.
_
Malaria cored and eradicated from the
system riches by Brown’s Iron Bitters, which en¬
the blood, tones the nerves, aids general digus
tion. Acta like s charm on persons In
ill health, giving new energy and atren#*.
taining London, population the largest city 4,7*4,312 in the world, con¬
a of parsons.
Mew’s This T
Ws offer One Hundred Dollars reward for
any case of catarrh that cannot be cored by
taking HaU’s Catarrh cure.
F. J. Cnaaxv A to.. Props., Toledo, O.
Cheney We, the tor undersigned, the last 14 have known F. J.
honorable years, and believe him
tions, perfectly and hnanciaUy in able all to business out transac¬ ob¬
ligations made by their firm. carry any
Wbt A Tkcax, Wholesale Druggists, Tole¬
Wadding, do, O. Kink A Marvin,
Druggists,Toledo, an O. Wholesale
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,act¬
ing directly of upon the Testimonials blood and mucous sur¬
faces the system. bottle. sent free.
Price 75c. per Sold by ail druggists.
Ifawhra’ Spectacle*.
Tbe reputation of these floe glasses is not of
dorsed tbe cheap and order. warmly I hey praised have by been the solid nsed, en
, of the United States. repre- Such
sentat lve men
men recommend them as Senator-elect Jno.
B. Wilson Gordon, of West Ex-Gov. Va., Fitzhugh Rev. H. Lee. C. Morrison. Gov. E. W. D.
D ; Bishop Alex. W. Uregtr, Chancellor Uni¬
versity of tbe South; Judge Gov. R. B. Hnbbard, Ex
Minister of Arkansas to Japan; and hundreds Simon of P. others. Hughes,
These many spectacles sold In nearly
famous are
every town from Maryland to New Mexico.
Call for Hawkes’. Take no others. Every pair
warranted.
SMITH’S
Bile EANS
Cure Biliousness
Sick Headache, Malaria, CosUvenew, Heart
Burn, Dizziness, Bad Breath, Nervous
Debility, Dysentery, Jaundice,
Pains in the Side and under
the Shoulder Blades.
Nmr fail la act on a Torpid Uvor.
Expel poisonous bile from the system; Create
Clear the Complexion; Aid prevent Digestion: Chills ana
an Appetite; Cure and
Fevers. We also make
Smith’s BeamI SMALL
<40 to the bottle.)
Some prefer till* size. EipeclaUy •fnpng womrf
and chudrsn. Both eUes augur coated. Pleaeant
to tftko.
RELIABLE, SAFE, ECONOMICAL.
Price 25 cents per bottle, five for for $1,
either size. Sold by Druggist#. Writ#
Picture.
*•
The Cod
That Helps to Cure
li The Cold.
i The disagreeable
taste of the
COD LIVER OIL
is dissipated in
scorn
EMULSION
Of Pure Cod Liver Oil with
HYPOPHOSPHITES
OB’ LIME AND SOSA
The patient suffering from
BRONCHITIS CONSUMPTION, COUGH,
WASTING DISEASES, COLD, take OR the
may
remedy with as much satisfaction as he
would take milk. Physicians are prescrib¬
ing It everywhere. It Is a perfect emuliton.
and s wonderful flesh producer. Take no other
For a Disordered Liver
Try BEECHM’S PILLS.
26cts. a Box.
OB’ ALL DRUGGISTS.
VASELINE
lbs Palled Stats# aU of tbs fouovnag artlsis# oaf#*
fully paokeit
Ons Oue two-ouuos bottls bottle of of Purs Vaseline VsssUua Fomsd* . . IS j*«<h *
two-ouuos Cold Cream......}J • *•
On* isr of Vaseline }# 2
Onsueke Oas of Vaseline VaasUaa Gamphorlo* soap, unsoeuted, - • * * W "
OneoakestVasallneSoep,oxqul»i»!ysoemtedJS oaks of • • *
Oas twe-ouaee bottte of White Ta e a Ttn # - - M “
tksprtee SLU
Or for postage stamps any Ingts arCUls at
a yoariraigist ama f On no aeoot mt Se p. r v unSwl is aoospt thsnfrm from
any wQa Vasthna or preparation wW
naif labelled one name, Omoum you oem
lately r*M^ an imitation vobtob has tittle or no yajne
CbuMbrauRh Mfk. Co., 44 StsM Da. A W
BORE WELLS! fflj MAKE
------ MONEY!
Oar Well M&chlnta are the mo»t
KKLUBLE, DURABLE, SUCCESSFUL!
They make GREATER do HOKE WORK PROFIT. And 79 ^ 1
They FIN 1*11 Wells where wTv j
others FAIL! inches Any diameter. »i*o, £ KaJ
Inches to 44 Cat
LOOMIS & NYMAN, alogue
TIFFIN. * OHIO. BKFREr!
SEEDS.
dan We and have Held the Beads largest in and the most state. complete Assorted stock boxes of Gar- of
S3? TrVSK’d’
One., Herd. Grate, Timothy. Johneon (irae*. Lucerne,
Glover and T.II-m.tdow O.t Greta. Cafe .'tu- Free.
We import the femou. Bermuda Gra-s r at ,1 it at 82
per lb. MeMIIXANV German Millet,$l .76 hu.hel. ScuU ' or orders.
1. H. 26 Meriett a S . t uni a, Ga.
EPILEPSY or FITS
Cured by Dr. O. P. Brown’s Herbal Remedy, the
Restorative Aeaimilant. a Traetiae free, describing
Grand Epilepsy Street, and Jersey its cure, City, on N application. j. Established Andrew I860. 47
n pi u
WAtlante^a. fcu&w. OfficeW4>4WhirohaU 8t
Send for sample. «£»;«£. Dr.
f. H. it YE, Editor.
A.N.U. .Fifteen,
“German
Syrup”
The majority of well-read phys¬
icians now believe that Consump¬
tion is a germ disease. In other
words, instead of being in the innu¬ con¬
stitution itself it is caused by
merable small creatures business living in and the
lungs having no caterpillars there do
eating them away the as leaves of
trees.
A Germ The phlegm that is
coughed up is those
Disease. parts of the lungs
which have been
gnawed off and destroyed. called, These
little bacilli, as the germs are
are too small to be seen with the
naked eye, but they are very much
alive just the same, and enter the
body in our food, in the air we
breathe, and through the pores of
the skin. Thence they get into the
blood and finally arrive at the lungs
where they fasten and increase with
frightful rapidity. Then German
Syrup comes in, loosens them, kills
them, expells them, heals the places and
they leave, and so nourish
soothe that, in a short time consump¬
tives become germ-proof and well, A
DOCTOR
ENGLISH
uestlon Cough*, Colds greatest andConsumptlon, of Is beyond!
the sll modern remedies.!
wl I Is tops Cough Inons night. It will check!
Coldinsday. tbms, and CURE It will Consumption prevent Croup, It taken relieve! In;
me. IF THE LITTLE ONES HAVE
WHOOPING COUGH
n OR
CROUP
AN WILL
jJw^THINO - WHEN
m * ? In'uorior’a bill*
A 2 Be. bottls their may save lives. (100
may save IT ASK YOUR
FOR IT.
Pi
-III
O ' -i >
*.
YM. l
Thh French Crown Jewels were distrib¬
uted aud sold to the public; their peculiar
cutting and shape enables one to easily recog¬
nize them. We have some of these jewels in
stock, Rubier, aud will be pleased to exhibit them. In
monds, Pearls, by Opals, far the Sapphires and Dia¬
south, and we qnote have lowest largest prices stock for in the
the really
fine stones. Don’t buy before seeing our goods.
J. P. Stevens & Bro., Jewelers, 47 Whitehall
St., Atlanta, On. Send tor catalo gue.
Every Farmerbis own Roofer
CHEAPER than Shingles, Tin or Slate.
Reduces Your INSURANCE, aud Perfectly
Fire, Water and Wind Proof.
v^STEEL corrugated ROOFING,
“* Catalogue. r °* OU*»|«W
& price*
Our Hoofing be applied Is ready by formed for tbe Vo Building, bay
end esn till write any one. for not Descrlp
any tive Catalogue, Roofing Series you It. AGENTS to us our WANTED.
HtSP hiisfl PAINT.
Requires addition of AN’
advebtised in7348PAPERS
with Where we have no Agent will M.--N. arransre
any active Merchant.--!,, dk Y.
At Money 6 to Loan policies
per cent, on
by Order. this Anybody lirst-clase fraternal
Active farmere eanact as
UNION StraS well, an agent. lediee also. $200 do
~was a 34.S00 to
** jJjjuuJu in from 8 to 7 jeare
during In life, eicknees. end $7 Mention to flt9
YOR OHr weekly thte sud write at
to paper iBigPny.) once
8. Ci LESSOR,
8 Union Squara, New York,
OPJMCvhYsRY
Habits Cured without physical or mental injury.
Treatment Dwight, Illinois. identical For with that of Dr. address Kceley, at
particulars,
THS KEELEY Ivy Bt„ INSTITUTE, ATLANTA. GA.
Edgowood Ave. and
PROF. LOISETTE’S NEW
{MEMORY BOOKS.
Criticlane on two Full recent Tables Memory of Content, Systems. forwarded Heady
•bout April those 1st. who send tamped directed envelope.
only Also to Prospectus POST FREE of the Lolaettlau Al
of Newer Forgetting. Address
Prof.LOISBTTE, 287 Fifth Ave,, New Torn.
PENSIONS &S5S PENSION Bill
D BftUbi An*V U KHtta liCETC positivelyremediee
Harvard. Greely Pant iatretehar
College*, Adopted by also students bj professional at and business Amherst and othar
men n*rr
•I n.
CHILDREN’S COLUMN.
THE SNOW-BIRD'S SOKO.
A snow-bird sat ou a sycamore tree
And this is the song that he sang to me:—
“Open tby heart, litte girl, little toy,
And think of me all ak>n9
In the winters blast and tbe chilling snow,
While southward my friends have aH
flown.
“The ground is covered with snow and ice.
It is scanty fare that I find,
But I know you all have got hearts of gold,
And are loving and true and kind.
“Then think of the crumbs ’neath your dim
ing hoard; "«►
Just open your window each day,
And throw them abroad out over the saewt
And I shall be happy and gay.”
Don't you think this a message for yon
felling you just what you ought to dof
—(Housewife.
took off nis glasses.
A New Hampshire physician semis
mo the following cat story, for which
he vouches: “Among other queer
tricks, my cac Dick will take off my
glasses very carefully with his paw,
hold them with one claw and survey
them with great apparent interest.
The first time he did this was one night
when he had been napping and I read¬
ing. He is a great pet, and going to
him I bent over, without indicating by
any motion my meaning, and said,
gently: ‘Dick, if you want to go to
bed, take off my glasses.’ He immedi¬
ately reached up a paw and took them
ofi as deftly as though it were an old
habit. Thinking this a ‘happen so,’ I
put them on and made the same re¬
quest in different words, with precisely
the same result. After one more repe¬
tition he yawned aud plainly intimat¬
ed that was enough.”'— [Philadelphia
Times.
A GOOD DOG STORY.
A Newfoundland dog was one day
sitting on a wooden bridge over a
very swift stream discussiug a bone
wlien a predatory pug came along and
a smart altercation arose over the bone.
So violent became the debate that both
suddenly overbalanced aud fell into
the stream beneath. The nearest
landing place was a hundred yards
diwn, and to it the Newfoundland
betook himself without much difficulty
and after a good shake was preparing
to depart when he suddculy became
aware that the pug was having a very
hard time of it, wildly beating the
water and showing every symptom
of exhaustion. One look was enough.
In went Uie shaggy-coatcd fellow, and
seizing the other by the collar brought
his late euemy safe to land. The two
dogs then eyed each other with inde¬
scribable expression for some seconds,
then solemnly wagged their respective
tails and with dignity departed.
tot’s adopted family.
Tot cauio to mo one morning with a
puzzled and inquiring lool?in her large
beautiful brown eyes. “What would
you do with him?” she seemed to say
“He worries mq more than all the
others put together.”
Tot was a small cream-colored Es¬
kimo dog, and it was one of hei
adopted children, a turtle, that was
just then causing her motherly heart
so much anxiety. After thus ques¬
tioning me with bar expressive eyes, a
bright idea seemofi to strike her. She
ran to her closet and separated the
troublesome turtle from JSio otbor
members of her rather singular family,
pushing him with her nose into a cor¬
ner of the room. Then she brought
some pieces of muslin, and covered
him over so that not a bit of him could
be seen. “There, now, I think he will
sleep and give me time to attend to my
Other children,” was her apparent
comment.
Tot was in the habit of adopting all
the motherless strays she came across.
At the time of which I write, we had
two little ducks that had been left
orphans. Tot heard them complain¬
ing one day. It seemed to make her
very miserable. At last she could
bear it no longer; so downstairs she
went, and, to my utter astonishment,
returned with one of the ducklings,
safe and sound, in her mouth, deposit¬
ing it in the box with her threo pup¬
pies. In the course of the day she
succeeded in bringing the other little
fellow upstairs and placing him with
his brother. The ducks seemed quite
happy with their adopted mother, aud,
when older, followed her everywhere,
running after her, and screaming if
Bhe got too far ahead of them. A
singular thing it was that Tot and her
own children never injured these
feathered foundlings. Bat I am sorry
to say that Tot never loved the turtle,
always eovering up the ungainly little
creature whenever it ventured to put
out its bead or be sociable with the rest
of the family.—[St. Nicholas.
A Parisian- wit once defined expe¬
rience as a comb that one became pos¬
sessed of after' having lost one’s hair.
Fancy Cookie*.
Nich Muwins. —Two eggs, butter siee
of an egg, one cup of sweet milk, one
baking tablespoon powder, sugar, one heaping stiff teaspoon bat¬
flour to make a
ter; take in muffin rings or gem pans.
Pastbt fob One Pie.— One heaping
teaspoon cup pastry baking flour, two teaspoons lard, one
i*alt. Sift flour, powder, salt and baking one teaspoon powder
together. Rub and chop in shortening;
make quite stiff with cold water, one
quarter cup or more.
Cheese Sticks.—O ne cup of cheese
grated fine, one and one-half cups flour,
butter size of small egg, salt to taste.
Roll out like pie dough, cut in strips,
and roll round about the size of lead pen¬
cil. When baked, cross the sticks on a
plate, pig-pen fashion.
Kentucky Rolls.— Put three quarts
of flour in a large crock, scald one quart
of buttermilk and pour over the flour;
beat well, then add one cup of yeast and
one cup of butter or lard. In the morn¬
ing mix one teaspoon of salt, one table¬ stiff
spoon of sugar, and flour to make a
dough. oughly, Let it rise twice, kneading rolls, thor¬ in
then make in long put
pans, and bake when very light.
Canada, according to a report of the
chief of the raised Grain 50,000,000 Inspection of bushels Western of
Canada,
wheat last year, 20,000,000 bushels of
which will be available for export.
laria. Brown’s Biliousness Iron Bitters and General cures Dyspepsia, Debility. Gives Mr.
Strength, appetite. aides Digestion, The tones tonio the for nerves— Nursing
creates best
Mothers, weak women and children.
Easter Is the pledge of Life rising out of
all Death, In earth. of fellowship with all in Heaven and
FITS slopped free by Dn. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s trial
ere. Marvelous cures. Treatise and S3
1 ottle tree. Dr. Kline. 831 Arch St., Phfla., Pa.
From Father to Son.
Scrofula is a blood poison which descends from parent to child..
It ia a taint
which must be
eradicated from
the system be¬
fore a cure can
be made. Swift’s
Specific, S. S.
S., drives out the
virus through
the Of
the skin and thus relieves the blood of the poison.
BOOKS ON BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES FRGil.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ca.
DOWN WITH HICH PRICES.
WHY not buy from the Lnrac.it^Factory of
Tbs W0NDCRF0L w world,and SAVE Dealers" profit#' RlfRIBERAYORS
50 Over 1,000 Articles
sarnies sold direct to consumers, thereby ■rial!
a 'Shearing 30 to 50 per cent.
i: !•
Our New “Mil •• 1.
a aromatic Brake '■
won aU Coaches,
FREE, f.
LUBUl ««i ICE BSCSTI.
tricycles. IT*
arncc «■* Sc. cawsuuTmn
M ,
THE j
,
WONDERFUL ISS !§
LUBUR6 CHAIR icusn I)
Combines a room-full
of Chairs la one, besides
making a Lo once, Bed, or Coucfi? cunt
Invalid appliances of every Rockers, description
LIBRSRY DESKS. Fancy Chairs, AO. HRS BEDS.
S3* Write at once for Catalogue.
Send stamps and mention goods wonted. ^o_M__MMiM_«#
THE LUBURG MANUFACTURING CO. Philadelphia. Pa.
Dept. A 103, Nos. 381, 323, 385 North Nth Street.
Have You a Cough?
Have You a Cold?
jgk Or Taylor’s Consumption? Cherokee Remedy* of
Sweet Gum and Mullein
WILL CURE YOU!
Ask your Druggist or Merchant for It. Take nothing else.
ADVICE TO WOMAN!
For PAINFUL, FBOFUSE, SCANTY, SUPPRESSED
or IRREGULAR MENSTRUATION, you must use
DRADFIELD’8
FEMALE
i* REGULATOR
Henderson, Ala., March 8,1885.
For three years my wife has been under the treatment of the leading
physicians for menstrual troubles, without benefit, most of the time con¬
fined to her bed. After taking three bottles of BBADFEBLD’S FEMALB
REGULATOR, Bhe can do her cooking, milking and washing. N. L, BRYAN.
BOOK TO "WOW" MAILED FREE, WHICH C0HAIIS VALUABLE ffMIAffOI Of ILL FEMALE DISEASES.
BRADFIElpO all REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA, GA.
T or gale by Srotflett.
.—-
25013 . .
CHICHESTER'S EHOUSH, RED CROSS DIAMOND BRAND JK
esasaggHsagt sssslaBi^y
Patent medicines differ—
One has reasonableness, an- .
other has not. One has repu¬
tation—another has not One
has confidence, bom of suc¬
cess — another has only
“ hopes.”
Don’t take it for granted
that all patent medicines are
alike. They are not.
Let the years of uninter¬
rupted Qf thousands success of and the tens
cured and
happy men and women, place
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Disoovery Favorite Prescription and Dr. Pierce’s
on the side of the comparison
they belong.
And there isn’t a state or
territory, in no the — nor hardly a
country world, whether
its people realize it or not,
but have men and women
in them that’re happier be¬
cause of their discovery and
their effects.
Think of this in health.
Think of it in sickness. And
then think whether you can
afford to make the trial if
the makers can afford to take
the risk to give your money
back as they do if they do
not benefit or cure you.
AFFLICTE0 FROM CHILDHOOD.
Mrs.N. Ritchey, of Mackey;Ind., says: “Justice com¬
me to say that S. S. By has worked little short of
a miracle in my case, in curing me of aggravated Scrofu¬
la, which afflicted me from childhood. It attacked my
throat and nose, and threatened my lungs. My throat
was so sore that I was compelled to subsist on liquid
food. When I began S. S. 8.1 was in a wretched condi¬
tion but commenced to improve at once, and am now
entirely well’’
• 1 :
Cures Best where Cough all Medicine. else fails. Recommended Pleasant agreeable by Physicians. the
and to
taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists.
‘ 72561.8 7'