Newspaper Page Text
Vermont's State Flowar.
The Vermont legislature has passed
bill designating the “rod clover” as
the state flower. The vote taken
•throughout the state resulted as fol¬
low!: whole vote cast, 17,611; red
dove? received 9,572; daisy,2,567; but
!jSVusre cl is indigenous, fragrant and most
that it
useful. b ^
-
has been sent to the .
A pJsrmoK
Turkish government for the restore
tion at public expense of the supposed
grave of Aaron, the high priest and
toother of Moses. The grave is ® n
Mount Hor,in the district of Elhadshr,
a part of the Turkish provinoe of
Arabia Petraea.
Is rfc ■ W*rk.i«Om World
Men and women continually break down
through mental strain and p'ly-i al effort.
The true repairer of vitality thus impaired, a
perennial lountaln of health and vigor Is
Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters, which restores
dige-tion, stfmuUtJs enr ches the blood, and health fn y
the b wets, kidneys and liver
when th y are ndol nt. Th s < ompreh rheumatism naive,
remedy also subdues malaria,
and nervousness.
Nearly a m i Hon and a half dollars r main
unclaimed, l a the New York savings banki.
Dr. Khmer's and Sw amp- Bladder Root troubles. cures
all Pamphlet Kidney and Consultation free.
«
laboratory Binghamton. N. Y
In these days of bu iness depression the
sheriff seems to be the per isteni advertiser.
H«vr’. TW1«! ■>
We, the under-igned, hive known F. J. Che¬
ney for the last IS year-, and believe him per¬
fectly non crab e In all busines-i tran ao> obliga¬ ons
and financially abl) to arry out any
tion made y their Wholesale firm. Druggists, Toledo, , ,
Was* St, Thu xx.
Waldwo! Dm •gist'*. Ktnfan To lo. Sc Ohio. M irvin, Wholesale
e internal act¬
Hall’* Catarrh Cure is taken y,
ing dlrectlv upon the b ond and mucous bottle. -ur
faces of the system. Price, monlalslfroe. 73c. pet
Sold by all Druggists. Test
Karl’s Clover Roit. the great b'ood purifier,
gives freshness and clearness to the complex¬
ion and cures constipation, 26 o‘»., 89 cts.,
Notice.
I want ev*rv man and woman In the United ky
States Int re-tsd in the Opium and Whl
habits to hav- rar book on thee dlseas s.
Addree- B. M. Wo 'Uey, Atlanta, Ga .BoxSSl,
and one w I. be sent you Irt-e.
I
J. M. MeGulro, Eaq.
A Lawyer Says
1 have tound Hood’s sarsaparilla of great ben¬
efit for Spring lassitude and that dull, sleepy,
heavy tired feeling, that crept over me like a
Hood’s 5 ¥>Cures
vampire. Hood’s gave me entire relief and I
sore “Itcuree being tired.” 3. H. MoGuxaa,
Attorney, Fayette, A la ham a. Get Hoodie.
Hood’* Pill* are purely vegetable, too.
What’s there?
f, Things
For the
Cook, sir**;
9^ 5 flethinks it is
some
Buckwheat
For the morrow’s
breakfast.
»
DIAMONDS WeaeU th
SiIverwarei2LL™£S“to
tiwsftty.
Watches SSJ 7 JS 2 :
Clocks-S^’.”,. Suitable world for
Wedding Presents.
’quarter* on that.
BtilsnftG&DissJfViaiy Go.,
"wast V I
-- tte --- '• ^4
> V . . 2 -
■ - HOUSEHOLD MATT
V &
know . Housekeepers are often puzzled to
why their handsome mirrors,
that cost a great deal of money and
were warranted to be the best, spot
as though they might be mildewed. If
mirrors are snbjeoted to very strong the
sqnlight or any artificial light and
quicksilver will often dissolve,
that ruins the mirror's usefulness np
^ „ n ^ M -Bilvered, for there is
no other way of correcting the bletn
jgb. a strong heat on a mirror will
j^so ma fee the quicksilver peel off.
Never let the light shine directly on
jour mirrors for any length of time,
and never let them get nndnly heated
from contact with a gas jet, and it is
not likely that you will have any
trouble with them. — Washington
Star.
EXCELLENT FCBNITUBE POLISH.
Incombustible paint for woodwork
may be made by mixing the desired
color in powder in water saturated
with potash, to whioh a little staroh
paste and common clay has also been
added to stiffen it. Woodwork cov¬
ered with this paint will hot burn nor
blister in the neighborhood of a stove
or gaslight. A “polish” preferable to
varnish for furniture may be made by
boiling a saturated solutions of potash
in water, and adding, while it boils,
pieces of beeswax. When cold this
makes a mass of the consistency of
soft soap, which may be applied with
a brush, and whioh, with a brisk rub¬
bing, will give a fine polish. Much of
the artistic iron work now in use is
held together by screws and nuts.
These are in time liable to become
loose, and it is well to know that the
joints may be made tight again by
simply hammering the nuts on the
edge, whioh makeB them smaller and
enables one to screw up the piece as
firmly as at first. —New York Adver¬
tiser.
TAPIOCA BECIPES.
Tapiooa is one of the products of
the manioc or cassava plant, and is
used largely in the preparation of des¬
serts and as a food for' children and
invalids. It is inexpensive, light,
wholesome and nutritious, and a great
variety Of delicious dishes are pre¬
pared from it.
Tapiooa Fruit Dessert—Make a
plain blano mange or jelly by boiliog
soaked tapiooa until clear in either
milk or water; pat a layer of mixed
preserved and candied fruits in a glass
dish, and when the tapiooa has cooled
sufficiently pour a part of it over
them; add more frnit and the remain¬
der of the tapioca. Serve cold.
Tapiooa Cream — Soak in cold
water for two hours two tsblespooirfnls
of tapiooa. Drain it and beat it up
with a scant teacup of sugar, and stir
it into one quart of boiling milk. Let
it boil half an hour; then cool it
slightly and stir in three well beaten
eggs and any flavoring desired. Serve
cold with preserved or stewed frnit.
Tapioca and Bice Padding—Equal
quantities of rice and tapioca, Bay
three tablespoonfuls of each, soak for
a short time in a cup of milk, four
tablespoonfnls of bo gar, grated nut¬
meg to taste, a pinch of salt, one
quart of milk- Pat all together and
bake in a slow oven for two hoars,
stirring often daring the first hoar.
Tapioca Blano Mange—One cap of
tapiooa, three caps of boiling milk,
three tablespoonfnls of white sugar, a
pinoji of salt, any flavoring desired;
soak the tapiooa several hoars in a
little cold water, ponr it into the boil¬
ing milk, stirring it constantly; add
sugar and flavoring.' Take it from the
fire and ponr into molds. Serve cold.
Tapiooa Apple Padding—One cold cup
tapiooa soaked several hours in
water, one cup of sugar, a pinoh of
■alt, one-half nutmeg, grated. Slioe
apples into a baking dish until two
thirds foil; add the other ingredients,
with water enough to cover. Pat a
cover over it and bake slowly three or
four hoars. Serve either hot or cold,
as desired.
Tapiooa Scrap-Two quarts of stock,
one cap of tapioca; let it boil for
twenty minutes, stirring it frequent¬
ly; one teaapoonfol batter of soger, half one the
tablespoonful oatsnp, half of milk;
size of an egg ; a teacup well
cool slightly and stir in two
beaten eggs. It most not be hot
enough to cardie the eggs, bat should
be smooth, like or earn.
* Tapiooa Jelly—Three-quarters of a
cupful of tapiooa, soak, then boil it in
a double boiler, with one and a half
pinta of hot water and two-thirds a pinoh of salt.
When it thickens add of a
glam of apple, entrant Cook or lemon about jelly half
and a little sugar.
an hoar, or until the tapioca is dear.
Pot it in a mold, and when perfectly whipped
cold, torn it out. Serve with
___or soft custard.
Tapiooa Costard-^-Soak three large
spoonfuls of tapiooa in one quart of
water for several boors. Boil one
quart ot milk and stir in the soaked
tapiooa; boil about ten minutes until
it is dear. Best yolks of three eggs,
one eup of sugar, oa* teaspoon ful of
vanilla or other flavoring, and add
gradually to the tapioca; boil five
m urates; poor into a dish and mix in
lightly the whites of the eggs beaten
to a stiff froth. Eet odd, with sweet
Tspioea Padding.—Soak one cupful
of in
ot milk, tomr
ot »
of
arm a tin
I stna of hot
■ yt
0«rre $old. Ds-
-v. '3 r *T _< I
■:*'££ A
AW nWINKVT SODTBMK UWTIVI
MNO COWf UCT WIT H N8IAML
Tmirr-ln Years si Frssjferitr, *<»•»■
■itr aaS HsWsrts#—TfceOreat Tie*
Mnr Wes br Wmm Over a
Btsbbera Disease.
(Prom dm Atlanta, Oa., Constitution.)
Pore moss among the best known lawyers
and farmers of North Carolina stands OoL
Isaac H. Sugg, of Greenville, Pitt Co., amaa
who has been on the edge of eternity and
whose life had bees measured by minutes.
“It has been twenty-two years since I be¬
came a resident of this town " said OoL
srsssrr=«
serting themselves but were slight.
ally, however, my disease deve oped, and
flght it as I would it seemed to gain a
stronger foothold day by day until my
misery was compile. For sixteen years I
never knew what It was to be free Iron pain,
not pain as an ordinary man thinks of It, but
agonising, exoruolating, unendurable pain.
Tortured from head to foot, at times thrown
into spasms when it jrould require the unite!
strength of four men to bold me until I was
stupifled with stimulants and opiates. I
could not sit, lie or stand In any one position
but the shortest time. 8ie«p was out ot the
question unless brought about by the strong
eet stimulants or opiates. Ob, bow many,
mtny times have I thought of putting an end
to that life of suffering. But then my mind
would revert to my wife, my ohildren, my
home, and I would restrain my hand with
the hope that some other means of escape
wonld be offered, I searched the archives
of medicine for relief. Doctor* were eon
suited, Hthla waters, mineral water*, drags,
opiates and stimulants of all sorts were tried
Without avail. Why, I sent clear to th.
West Indies for medicine and yet th# result
was the same.
“I kept at my work as long as I could but
nature gave way at last and I succumbed to
the inevitable. shattered My entire the nervous stimulants system asd
had been by blood hat actually
opiates I had taken, my
turned to water, my weight and had seemed dropped
from 178 pounds to 123, it to
everybody that the end was in sight. Why, I
couid not bear the gentle hand of my wife to
bathe my ltmbe with tepM water. I was sim¬
ply living from hour to hour. I had made
my will, settled my buslu-ss and I waited
for the last strand of life to snap.
“it was at this time that a somewhat simi¬
lar case as jm>* own was brought to my no¬ I
tice. This man had suffered very much as
had, his life had been despaired cured. ot Think as mine what
had and yet he had been
that little word meant to me—CURED. The
report stated that the work hai been accom¬
plished by a medicine known as Dr. Will¬
iams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. I invest!!
gated the report thoroughly and found that
it wits true In detail. Tnen I procured some
ot Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and began taking
them and begun to get better. I began to
sleep like a health:ul child, sonnd, calm and
peaceiul. My appetite came baok and my
nerves were soothed and restored to their
normal eon Mtlon and I felt like a new man.
But the greatest blessing was the mental im¬
provement. 1 began to read and digest, to
formulate nee plans, to take Interest lu my
law practloe, wnloh be an to oome baok to
me as soon as my olients realised that 1 was
again myself. Alter a lapse of 10 years 1
ride horseback every day without fatigue.
“That Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills saved my
life is beyond doubt, and I am spreading
their praise far and wide.”
Inquiry about the town of Greenville
stantiated the above facts of CoL Sugg’s ease,
and that many others are being benefited by
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for spedflo Pale for People
are considered an un aillng
diseases ms locomotor ataxia, partial
se, St. Yttus’ dunce, sciatica,
rheumatism, nervous headache, the
effects of la grippe, palpitation of the
pale an I sallow complexions, that tired
ing resulting from nervous prostration; all
diseases resulting from vitiated humors
the blood, such as sorofals, chronic
las, etc. They are also a specific lor
pecu lar to females, such as
irregularities, and all forms of weakness.
In men tbey effect a radical cure in all
arising from mental worry, overwork, William*' or
cees of whatever nature. Dr.
Pills are sold by all dealers, o will be
post paid on receipt or price, (60 cents sold a
or 6 boxes for $2 60 -they are never
bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr.
iams’ Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
CURRENT NOTES.
Capt. Jonathan Pinkham, of Bath,
Me., thinks he is the oldest pilot in
active service in New England. He
only a few weeks short of 84 years
age and as active, steady and as rare
as ever.
An Alabama iron foundry has a
$370,000 contract from the Japanese
government for iron pipe to be used
in bnilding water works at Tokio, and
a cotton mill at Baltimore has a con¬
tract for 200,000 yards of oottofi dock
from the same source.
In <3orea the Protestant mission
foroe of foreign workers consists of
twenty-six married men, fourteen sin¬
gle men and eighteen single ladies,
representing the Methodist Episcopal,
Presbyterian and Anglican churches.
Mr. Charles Broadway Bones, of
New York city, is an enthusiast In the
matter of having all the existing col¬
lection of the archives of the Confed¬
eracy placed under one roof. The lo¬
cation of the institution he is wilt¬
ing to leave to the decision of the
ten ranking Confederate generals the plan that is
may be living at the time
perfected. _
The of balloon* ha* be¬
come pert of the regular training of
the German soldier, and a eaptive b* -
tried. From the captive balloon Ie
ff ifp ondod m riftrtw i up of some
5,000 candle power. J rasa night
carried by
Sirs
this way a '
sr
! iGCtaxer snr
eahhfiflfil
> '
9CY
tot
*•; y
dJ f Tlij CaallBoivar >n T*pau.
The cauliflower hes attained auch
perfection of growth in Japan that it
is hud to believe that it belong* to
the cabbage family. About thirty
years ago a packet of seed was sent
from England and planted in the
neighborhood of Yokohama. It is not
nntunal now to see the stems five or
sue feet high, whilst one head wonld
suffice for a large dinner party. The
flavor, however, is not nearly eo fine.
Cross Trails, Ain.
Tetterine has cured me of Tetter
SSSSSHS
nBillg it with same good result*. It
gj ° T es the quiokest relief for burns, of
anything I ever saw.
Mbs. S. H. Has*.
Bent by mail for Ga. 50o by J. T. Shnp
trine, Savannah,
The Lobster’s Infancy.
The young lobster leaves its parents
and spends its first thirty or forty-five
days in deep water. During this pe
riod its shell is changed four times, only
the natatory organs are lost, and
after attaining nearly full size does it
come back to the shore. The yonng
lobster loses and remakes its crusty
shell about ten times during the first
year, five to seven times in the seoond
year, three to four in the third, two to
three in the fourth. After the fifth
the change is annual,
Why Put Off
gJJ*g£b?iSEtatf thl h?^> 3 d
at the first signs of a headache or billow at
taok a single tabula wUl relieve you.
Mr*. WinMow’* Soothin* Syrup for children
teething, h of tens the gums, reduce* Inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 28o. a bottle
After Cure.— *lx years’* suffering, Thomson, 1 was 29 cured 1-2 Ohio by
Piso’s Mart
Ave.. A legh nv, PMarch 19. ’94.
\ 9
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends rightly to used. personal * The enjoyment who live when bet
others and enjoy many, life with
tei unan more,
adapting less expenditure, the world's by best more products promptly
to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value principles to nealth of embraced the pure in liquid the
laxative
remedy, excellence Syrup of Figs.
Its is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas¬
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
oeneficial properties of a perfect lax¬
dispelling ative ; effectually colds, headaches cleansing the and system, fevers
and permanently caring constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acta on the Kid¬
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak¬
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every Syrup objectionable of 'Figs is for substance. sale by all drug¬
gists in 50c andf 1 bottles, bat Fig it is Syrup man¬
ufactured by the California
package, Co. only, also whose the name is printed Syrup on of every Figs,
informed, name, wilj
and Ming well you not
fc-oept any substitute if offered.
^■CARRIAGES Buggies & Harms*.
Oni s a fils f a; itr r, looi fil years an «ro
I I JaL OBB| SlJcIrSJdtbe Dealer I and
GS / m) :S*3?v»sc£
aWu'Sstar/KasKjiSi
ALLIANCE CARRIAGE CO., CINCINNATI, Ow
'S- ' It’s a
cold day
m for the housekeeper
• when Psarltiu wett
left, Take Ptarlitu from
washing and cleaning and
nothing remains but
\ hard work. It
shows in the
thing* that are
washed; it tells on the woman who washes. PtarUru saves
work, and works safely. It leaves nothing undone that you
want done well; what it leaves undone, it ought not to da
Beware SaES
duag-ratettterA I.T.
Complete Fertilizers
for potatoes, fruits, and all vegetables require (to secure the^ largest
yield and best quality)
At Least 10 % Actual Potash.
Results of experiments prove this conclusively. How and
r, k told hi oar pamphlets.
it via cost to read toou.aad they wtQ save y%
IS
= m
r ^
I
Ja m ■,
row . ;• ,
r er. dsL. WX¥%
m*u !'*m iff
ABSOLUTELY PURE m *■
MISSING LINKS.
At Leeds, England, there is an elec
trio eloek which has been continonsly
ticking since 1840. Its motive power
is natural electricity.
In South America an electrio through drying
machine in which air is forced
a chamber of heated plates is to be used
in drying wheat. ^
An Indian carpet weighing three tons
and made by the prisoners in the Agra
jail for Queen Victoria has just been
received at Windsor castle.
Pepsin, whioh is used as a jremsdy
for indigestion and stomach trouble, is
obtained from the membrane that lines
the stomach of various animals.
To illustrate hotel life and traveling
arrangements generally is the objeot of
a national exhibition to be held at
Amsterdam from May to November
next.
At Singapore the post of “tiger slay¬
er in chief lor the Straits settlement”
has just been given to M. de Nancourt,
a Frenchman with a record of 500 ti¬
gers killed.
The seven Bibles of the world are the
Scriptures, the Koran, the Tri Pitikea
of the Buddhists, the Five Kings of
the Chinese, the Three Yedas of the
Hindoos, the Zeudavesta of the Per¬
sians and the Eddas of the Scandina¬
vians.
Civilised Monkeys.
We have recently been almost con¬
vinced by the practical experiments of
Professor Garner find his phonograph
that monkeys “L. have a distinct and Intel
gf™.r/iZJ „„ •»!«», „„„„ n, xr.n.
that there is a race of monkeys inhab
itating the mountain, near the great
wall of China whioh not only make hold
wine, but probably the vessels statement to
it. In confirmation of his
he cites from the official history of
Tangping, whioh states that recently a
large body of migrating monkeys
passed a village in oroaeing from fright- one
mountain to another. Being flod,
enedby the boys, the monkeya
taking their yonng in their arms, bat
dropping, in their flight, a number of
earthen vessels, some of whioh wonld
hold a quart. On opening these they
were found to oontain two kinds of
wine—a pink and a green—whioh had
been made from mountain berries,
It is sffimed that the monkeya store
this liquor for use in winter when the
water is all frozen. Dr. Macgowan
cites a Chinese aoeount of monkey.
in Chekiang who pound frnit in stone
mortars to make wine.— Exchange.
An All Iron Railroad.
One of the cariosities of railroad
bnilding is the construction of » road
running from Ismid, a harbor about
sixty mifes from Constantinople, The to
Angora, i about 800 milee. >
bridges, sleepers, stringpieoee and tel¬
egraph poles, as well as the rails, are
of iron, nine-tenths of whioh are of
German manufacture, Tha bridges
average about four to the mile, there
being 120 of them, the longest having
a stretch of 690 feet In addition to
these there are sixteen tnnnels, This the
longest measuring 1,480 feet. la
the only railroad whioh penetrates the
interior of .Asiatic Turkey, the Smyrna
lines being the coast.
“Eatables and Drinkables” is the
sign displayed on the front of an old
house in Haverhill, M ess.
The Bridge of the Fit
Bridges made of steal beams
ded in concrete promise tjdk:
bridge of the fntore, M'*
strong and graceful. Near
many, is a bridge of this sol
ed at Paris in 1876 by Jean Mo
whioh has a span of 156 feet»
ie less than seven inches thicks
apex or crown. The iron or ste
buoIi a bridge strengthens it ag
tension, while the oonerete gr" '
ity and withstands crushing.
Packing Grapes In wish Ja#*ti. to ^
When the Japanese Vjjjj m
grapes to distant friends thgaf lit
them in boxes of arrowroot.
and air are thus effeotually shot *
and the delicate bloom is nlso p
served, even though the fruit has bi
transported thousands of miles.
=
PROGRESS
People^ who jjpet t he gw
joytnent who out make of Ilfs, the are
me*
—*• of their opp o f SS * - *'
_ Petotf*
L tp good judgment, lcau
K make promptly of to those adopt
use it
JD M and improved produt
(X I modem inventive g
which best aervi
needa of their pb:
>3 K-W a \ I the and
X\j| \ /J are the found most ref to
X ./^perfect luitt
n bowel*, whet!
of of J2 such Pierc an agent—brace e’s Pleasant the Pellets. great po Tj
r *
made from the purest, most tea
each zspszt vial, which h sold at the tan
SlUfo^diStoc"^”
tues. there is no comoarisoo to b* a
tween them easily and l the b ordinaty sending/< pills
ont may earn y
SPSjflTSnbTSS and address postal card, £to2sfit SB
on a
Q NCB USED THEY ARB ALWAYS Wt
bilious headache, disrines#, rtom«h,lo»of« costive
^nstwion, iSlnga ^r ^feSrtfiitV’p
wind y eating,
distress after and kiadfl ZJL *
meats ^“Snd" of the rfuSbleT^e liver, stomach ■ a 21
Imte "
{ a a i aZ ative, two are mildly a
As a “dinner pill,” to promote * di
fito-one each ft-oni day aE to gW Hg
granules; child over-estitmy. will readily th tsk y^
Accept any substitute hat be
no t m sy
a better pro fit, but Me is not the pay t
steeds help. Addrces for free asm
World's Dispensary Mbdicai
Ciation, 663 Main Street,
Imperfect Drainage
is fertile H
ft sow
disease. Ie Yi
defective blood suffering
aewei
Impurities if cann
cumulate yc
use ordinary, and H
tion T ?
'
toe modern t
edy for & alu ft
condition of
and Blood*
now! Don’tpn
Lm
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WINE
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