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k NOBLE FIGHT.
AN EMINENT HOPTIIKUN MWTIR'S
LOMU CONFLICT \VI « II DIHKA-K.
Twee'T-ire \>»'« of Prowperftr, A«l*er
•lir a*'* ^MfTrring—Tin- (Jri-nl Vio»
t®ry Won by Mriewce Over a
Nini»l««,rn IH*cn«r.
(From the Atlanta, da., Constitution.)
Foremen nmoag tho b«wt kno.ru Invjrers
aa'i farmers of North Carolina Hands Col.
Immc H. filing, of Gr< <'uvitle. Pitt Co., a man
who has on the odgi of eternity and
whose life had been m -a nred hjr minuter*.
“It has been tw*nty-two yettra sin e 11re¬
name a resident of this town ” said .CoL
Suva In t'dllug his story to a reporter ; “ev<>n
then the flr<<t symptoms of Gravel were as¬
sert rur Cie-nm.; vs at were slight. Gra lo
aily, however, my di*e«tv> develops 1 , nnd
fight it aa I would it * • • no 1 to irain a
stronger foothold day by day until my
misery was comp! t'*. For «ixt»**«n years I
Beyer kn- w what it was to It* fr et Iro n pain,
not pain ns an or Unary man thinks of It, hut
acohte «iif, esemulatln *, unen luru'de pain.
Tortured 'r im head to foot, at times thrown
Into spasm- when It would r qairethe uatto 1
strength of four m m to hold rao until I was
stuplflod with stimulants an l opiates. I
cool 1 not sit, I In or stand In anyone position
but th« short-vat lira**. Ble-p was out ot the
question unless brought about by the strong¬
est stimulants nr opiates. Oh, hovr many,
many times bare I thought of putting an end
to that life of suiT-rlntf. But then my mind
would rer-wt to my wife, my children, my
home, and I would restrain my hand with
the hope that sons other means of oscap#
would bn offered, I searched the archive*
of m« lie!ne for relief. Doctors were con¬
sulted, lithla waters, mineral waters, drugs,
opiates an 1 Mlmulnnts of all sorts wern tried
Without avail. Why, I sent clear io the
Wish In lies for medicine and yet tho result
was th * sains,
“I kept at my work ns long as l could but
nature R ive way at Inst and 1 succumbed to
the Inevitable. Mv entire nervous system
hsd been shattered by the stimulants nnd
oplsti-s I had taken, my blood ha l actually
turned '<> water, my weight had dropped
from 17d pounds to 128, audit seemed to
everybody that the on | w in in slu'ht. Why, I
cout t not b arthe I’entle hand of my wife to
l ply athe my llm!'* with tepid water. I was.'•im¬
living from hour to hour. I had made
my wit), sailed my Itusiu *s and I waited
for the last »tran 1 of life to snap.
“It was at tills t me that a somewhat simi¬
lar as at ay own was brought to my no
kirn*. Th s man h id suffered very much ns I
hail, hts life ha t been despaired of as mine
had and yet ha had been cured. Think what
that little word meant to me—CU11ED. The
report pljshe stated that the work ha t been aceom
t hy a medicine known ns Dr. Will¬
iams” Piiik Pills for thoroughly Pal • People. anil found I mveati
imte I the report that
it was Dr trip* Williams* In detail. Pink Pills Then I procured began some
of and taking
them an I begin health to ui get ehldl, better. I began to
sleep Itfce a sound, calm and
p>'itce ui. My appetite came back aud my
n* rv<‘s were soothed and restored to their
normal con Mtlon and 1 lelt like a new man.
But the greet est blessing was the mental im¬
provement. I began to read and digest, to
formulate n**v. plans, to take Interest In my
law practice, waleti be an to come back to
me as soon as my eib-nts realized that I was
again myself. Alter a lapse of 10 years I
ride horseback every day without fatigue.
“That Dr. Williams* Pink Pdls saved my
life Is b von l doubt, nnd I atu spreading
their praise far nnd wide,**
Inquiry aiuut the the town of Greenville Sugg's sub¬
stantiated atiove facts of Col. case,
and that mnnv others are being benefited by
l)r. Williams’Fink Pills.
Dr. Williams' l’mk Pills for Palo People
nr- considered locomotor an unhiding specific partial for such
diseases ns ataxia, paraly¬
sis, Bt. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia,
rheumatism, nervous headache, tier after
efT -els of la grippe, palpitation of the heart,
pal « an I sallow complexions, that tired feel¬ all
ing resulting ( r > n nervous prostration ;
dlsetses resulting from vitiated humors la
the blood stteh us scrofula, chronic erysipe¬
las, etc. They are also a specific lor troubles
pet-u tar to females, such as suppressions,
IVTetnilariites, and alt terms of weakness.
In men they effect a radical cure in all cast's
arising from mental worry, overwork, or
cess of whatever nature. Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pi Its are sold by alt dealers, o will bo sent
post pal I on reeeij>t of price, (50 cents a box
or 6 box"* tor 4‘i 50 -they are never sold in
bulk or by the 100 ) by a (dressing Dr. Will¬
iams’ Hodicino Co., Bcbonoctsdy, N. Y.
Vermont’s State Flower.
The Vermont legislature lma passed
• hill designating tho “rod clover" as
tho state dower. Tho vote taken
throughout the slate resulted as fol¬
lows: Whole vote cast, 17,till; red
clover received9,572; daisy,‘2,507; but¬
ter-cup, 945; scattering, 4,525. Tho
clover was selected on the grounds
that it is indigenous, fragrant arid most
useful.
“Eatable* and Drinkables” is the
house sign displayed on the front of an old
in Haverhill, Mass.
i j
3 ■ m
I / ‘
sss
J. H. McGuire, JLsg.
A Lawyer Savs
I found Houd s -\iirs*pnrill»of great ben¬
efit for Spring laaa.tnde and that dull, sdeepy,
hoary tired feeling, that crept over me like a
Hood secures
rmapir*. Hood’s smv» mt> entire relief end I
am sure **tt cures being 1 ired.” J. H. McGcxrb,
Attorney. Fayette, Alabama. Get Hood’s.
Hood's PiliS are purely vegetable.
“What’s then?
Things
For the
Cook, sir**;
Hethinks it is
some
9
Buckwheat
For the morrow's
breakfast.
FOB FARM AND GARDEN.
FEEDING BEES IN TH* WINTER
It is quite possible to feed bees in
the winter on sugar syrup, and so take
most of the honey in the fall. Sugar
is much cheaper than honey, pound
for pound, and honey is more than
half water. The purest white sugar is
used, and boiled to a thin syrup. This
prevents souring, which would other¬
wise occur, and would be fatal to the
bees, as it produces dysentery—New
York Times.
MOTHER MARKING.
For four consecutive years a bound¬
ary rider, having a quiet black dog,
has looked after about 800 ewes in one
paddock, and though a different lot
of owe. wore lambed in that paddock.
there were always more black lambs
among tho produce than in all the
other breeding lots on the estate put
together,and they number about 4,000
says tho London Livo Stock Jour¬
nal.
This year tho boundary rider had
about the same numbor of ewes in the
paddock, but his black dog is not
there. The result is that there is only
one blaok lamb in tho lot. This has
happened with tho same lot of ewes
that last year in that paddock pro¬
duced fifteen black lambs. Tho writer
concludes that black lambs w'ero the
result of tho ewes seeing a black dog
among them every day. He also re¬
marks that in those paddooks where
foxes are troublesome, there are al
ways more red and yellow colored
lambs than in any other where ewes
are lambed.
ORNAMENT YOUR FARM.
Ornament your farm, not at great
expense, but with good souse. Do it
with skill aud judgment, with a few
trees here, another there, and a bunch I
elsewhere. You may never want to
part with your farm; that makes no
difference; a place beautiful is just as
good for you as anybody else, aud a
few artistic touches will often do it at
little labor or expense. Tho beauty
thus added to ours is not only an ex¬
ample but a stimulus to others to do
likewise, and presently you may find
homes of beauty all along tho road
from town to home and added value
that few could fail to appreciate. The
highways and the traveled roads of
our country could bo made as cool,
shady and attractive as the famed
roads ot Europe if the owners of the
farms bounded by them could only be
induced to plant shade trees within
their fences. Aud does the reader
suppose for a moment that such trees
need be only ornamental? Not for a
moment Beauty adds value, it is
true, but timber has a value in addi
tion to tho beauty it affords, aud as
well food and protection for birds and
for live stock, fruit and nuts for the
young, and in the years to come, when
our forest timber is gone, bo of more
than ordinary value for tho practical
purposes of life.—Chicago Times.
TONOHENING HORSES FOB HARD WORK.
Winter hauling will do tho horses
good; it will strengthen their muscles
and toughen their shoulders, and put
them iu better condition for work bo
foro tho plow aud harrow. It is a ser¬
ious mistake, writes J. M. Stahl, in
tho American Agriculturalist, to keep
tho teams iu almost complete idleness
until spring opens, and then force
them suddenly into bard work. It is
apt to overtax them at tho very start,
and the result is thut they fall short of
what should bo their capacity for
work throughout tho entire spring.
Hauling fence material, stove wood,
and other things will wear off super
fluus fat and sharpen appetite, while
gradually preparing tho horses for the
hard work of the A dd. At this time
ono should also begin to bathe tho an
imals’shoulders with strong salt water,
This is the very best preventative of
galls. If it is used for six weeks be
fore the heavy spring work begins,
and the collars are even a moderately
good fit, Berious galls will be unknown,
though the work is unusually hard,
The best time to apply the bath is just
before the animals are put in the
stables each evening. Once a day is
often enough. The shoulders should
first be washed clean. As the salt
water is somewhat trying to the hand,
it is well to have a cloth fastened to a
handle, with which to apply the bath.
A corn cob makes a convenient handle.
The cloth can be wrapped and tied
aronnd one end, and the uneven sur¬
face of the cob will hold the rag nice¬
ly. Sometimes a pad to ease the col¬
lar from a gall is needed, hence it is
well to make two or three before the
busy spring season begins. The cap
acity for work of the horse depends,
in no small degree, upon the condi
tion of bis shoulders; hence by pre
venting galls and sores he is able to
do the field work faster.
TRANSPLANTING FOREST
The smaller the tree the more cer¬
tain it is to live when transplanted.
But if you want trees of fair eize, or
six to ten feet high, with s stem one
or two inches in diameter, select such
and then proceed to dig them up, sav¬
ing as many of the roots ss possible.
After they are dug, prooeed to the
pruning, bearing in mind that all Ioms
in the way at roots must lie fully made
good by reducing the number and
length of the bunches; an d, to be
sure of it, cut all back at 1 east two
thirds of their original length. If the
branch is six feet long, cut a *ay fonr
feet But in this priming leave the
stumps of branches m such a shape
that the head of the tree wi 11 be well
balanced when the new shot >ts appear
the following season. This may ap¬
pear at iirst to bo rather se vere treat¬
ment, but it is the only 6 afe way of
insuring the life of the specimens
transplanted. Besides, before the
end of the following summer
far more and larger shoots will be pro¬
duced than if not severely pruned. If
forest trees of all deciduoris kinds are
treated in the same way, there is little
difficulty in making them live aud
thrive, even if their roots are few in
*£“. ^“need !
to b « P aid to tho P'™ tion or uumber
of buds left on the pruned tree, for ■,
these will appear in (due time, and of
then more than are retally required to
form a good head to tho tree. Ihe
new shoots springing from the pruned
branches will bo in proj>er condition
for receiving the cions in the spring
of the second year after transplanting.
Unless such trees asyou purpose trans¬
planting have very large lateral roots,
they should bo staked wheu set out to
prevent being blown over by the wind
during heavy rains and wiuds in fall
and early spring.—New York Sun,
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
The dairy pays better in winter than
-
n summer .
Tho greatest waste is having r«o
system in feeding.
Fodder to keep a cow can bo grown
at not more than one fifth the cost of
pasture.
A small flock of sheep is one of the
most effective scavengers to be placed
on a farm,
Celery and asparagus are crops that;
can be groW n with profit iu tho irri
ga ti 0 u district,
This is a good mouth to fix up the
outbuildings and get everything in*
readiness for the cold of winter.
Keep onions from dampness. I)t>
not pile them up in deep layers. They
must be stored in a dry, cool place,
Some of the worst cases of con¬
tinued scouring have been cured by
changing from whole to ground oata
If extra work demands more food
^ e ^ er 8* ve a Bma ^ ration between
meals than feed too heavily at usual
times.
Gather peppers and tomatoes before
frost comes, Pull a few plants aud
hang them under a shed away from
the frost.
The autumn season is a trying ono
for young or feeble sheep, which
should be kept out of the long chill
ing rains,
All horses sleep standing, but most
Q f ^ em jj e j OWil once in twenty-four
hours and by so doing relax and ease
tho muscles.
Hens may safely be given all the
skim and buttermilk they will con
sumo, but little chickens should only
be given fresh milk,
Remove dust and cobwebs, and thus
make tho poultry house much bright¬
er, more sunny aud pleasant. Light
is an enemy to disease.
In tho dairy,quality counts for more
than quuntity, and there is more prwflt
in a small, well-managed one than in a
large ouo, run according to slipshod
methods.
Professor Henry of tho Wisconsin
University estimates that a shrinkage
* rora to fifty per cent in the
dair ^ l>™ d «eb» of the state was caused
^ rccent drouth,
Cucumbers, pumpkins, squashes,
And melons, must bo gathered before
they are frost-nipped. Melons will
finish ripening if packed in oats. Use
ripe cucumbers for pickles.
By good management one cow can
be kept tho year rouud on ’the pro¬
j uc t of an acre of ground, but no
management can make less than fonr
J acres of pasture support one cow.
Hens that are nffleted with bumble
foot roost too high and injure their
{eet by Btriking the ground too hard
when they fly down. Tho remedy
consists in the removal of the cause.
There is much detail connected
with poultry management. Women
as a class pay more attention to little
things than do men. Hence, the for¬
mer often make better successes with
fowls than the latter.
The late fall celery planted in single
I rows nee< ^ 8 blanching bv earthing or
boarding up. Winter celery planted
ia tlie same wa T must now be handled
mabe ^ grow upright, and fit it for
j storing in trench or cellar,
The oldest and toughest hen can be
made quite acceptable providing it is
well boiled and nerved with plenty of
nice vegetables, such as squash, on¬
ions, potatoes and cabbage. The
poultry keeper should have plenty of
good meat at low cost
Leguminona plants are most highly
enriching to the soil, owing to the pe¬
culiar property they have of absorb¬
ing azote directly from the atmos¬
phere, and assimilating and fixing it
in their bodies. They then give it os
manure to the soil ou which they
grow and are left to decay,
H to THE HOUSEWIFE. .
TF {ESHTNG x STALE LOAF.
To frt tshen a stale loaf of bread, pul
it in a s fceame’r over a pot of boiling
water, tend steam rapidly for fifteen
minuteB, : and then tear apart and eat
while sier iming hot. Serve from the
steamer as wanted. It can be brought
to the- table this wav by placing the
ate ,te “. an? M °™ r “ oh “ hn S d,8h A "° ,her
-
way is to dip the loaf in cold water
d put it in the oven, with a pan
turned over it, till it is softened clear
through; then remove the pan aud
let the crust crisp—Washington Star.
THE RIGHT SORT OF AN OVER.
For sponge cake and pound cake
have heat that will in five minutes
*«» • ot white paper yellow.
For all other kinds of cut cake use
an oven that will in five minutes turn
a piece of white paper dark brown.
When the oven is too hot at first a
crust forms on the bread or cake,
which prevents it rising. It is better
when baking bread and cake to have
the oven a little slow at first and in¬
crease the heat gradually.
When baking in an oven that is too
hot at the top fill with cold water *a
dripping pan which is about an inch
deep and place it on tho top grate of
the oven. Should the oven be too
hot on the bottom put a grate under
the article that is to bo baked.—New
York Times.
WHEN PAPERING WALES.
The following rules nro for the
scraping and treatment of walls of
various kinds preparatory to paper¬
ing
If the walls have been previously
papered it is advisable to scrape off
old paper, not only from a sanitary
standpoint, but also to insure a per¬
fect job. Paper-hangers cannot bo to
vigorous in advising customers to have
walls and ceilings scraped previous to
re-papering.
To remove ordinary wallpaper soak
the paper by applying hot water with
an old brush, and then scraping with
hand or pole scraper.
Heavy papers, such as leathers and
felts, should be treated to a coat of
hot paste, thinned down to tho con¬
sistency of cream. After a few min¬
utes soaking remove by scraping.
Whitewashed walls should be
scraped, after thoroughly wetting the
w T alls w’ith thiu paste or water, then
size with strong sizing. If whitewash
is not thick or scaly a strong solution
of vinegar will answer all purposes.
For damp walls we advise either one
}
two or three coats of shellac over the
damp surface, or tinfoil, which is put
up in sheets, can be tacked aud pasted
over the damp spots.
For varnished paper mix about two
pounds of common brown sugar or
molasses to one-lialf bucket of water,
then apply like sizing. The mixture
js also good for oil-painted walls.
Scraping however, is preferred to
either. For oil-puinted walls dissolve
two pounds of pearl ash in a bucket
of water aud apply like sizing.
For katsoinined walls, wash walls
and ceilings with a largo sponge, then
apply ordinary sizing. New walls
should have a coat of weak sizing.—
New York World.
SCIENTIFIC SCRAPS,
Teeth are now filled with annealed
glass.
Hcienoe will probably find a way to
utilize in our homes the central heat
of tho earth.
Darwin asserted that there is insan¬
ity among animals just as there is
among people.
Analysts say that butter is the
most nutritious article of diet nnd that
bacon come next.
A French physician reports a case
of hiccough successfully treated by
taking snuff until sneezing was pro¬
voked.
Electrical motors are to be intro¬
duced on board the cruisers of tho
United States Navy to swing gnu ter
rets, which are now moved by steam
power.
Solitary confinement is calculated,
doctors state, to produce melancholia,
suicidal mania and loss of reason.
Nine months of absolutely solitary
confinement are almost certain to re¬
sult in the mental ruin of the convict.
It is said that while 150 feet is the
limit at which diving work can be
carried on safely under water, a depth
of 201 feet has been attained by a
“helmet diver,”—• a diver who de¬
scends by himself and not in a diving
bell.
The only fast and at the same time
bright, natural yellow for dyes is de¬
rived from weld, a plant that is disap¬
pearing from cultivation. Coal tar is
the source from which most fast col¬
ors are derived, especially reds and
yellows.
Seaweeds do not receive any nour¬
ishment from the sediment at the bot¬
tom or borders of the sea, but only
from air and mineral matters held in
solution in theses water. The long¬
est plants in the world are seaweeds.
One tropical and sub-tropical variety
is known which measure* in length,
when it reaches its full development,
at least 600 feet,
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,
the natatory organs are lost, and only
after attaining nearly fu’l site does it
come back to the shore. The young
lobster loses aud remakes its crusty
she11 about ten times during the first
year, five to seven times in the second
year, three to four in tho third, two to
three in the HI After the fifth
the change is annual.
In th : s Woik.i-I)ni World
Men and women continually break dawn
through mental strain and physi al effort.
The true repairer of vitality thus impaired, a
perennial fountain of health and vigor is
Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which restores
digestion, stimulates enriches the blood, and healthfully
the b iwels, kidneys and liver
when they are indol nt. This comprehensive
and remedy also subdues malaria, rheumatism
nervousness.
unclaimed Nearly a million in and a half dollars remain
the New York savings batiks.
Dr. Kilmer’s S w a M p - R o ot cures
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet Laboratory and Consultation free.
Binghamton, N. Y.
In these days of business depression the
sheriff seems to be the persistent advertiser.
Titls!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any ea«e of Catarrh that cannot be cured hy
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Prop*., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che¬
ney tor the last 15 years, and believe him per¬
fectly financially honorable in all business transact ons
an i able to carry out any obliga
tion made by their firm.
est & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Waidixo, Ohio,
Rinnan & Marvin, Wholesale
Hali’s Druggists, Catarrh To'edo, Ohio.
Cure is taken internal y, act¬
ing directly upon the h ood and mucous sur¬
faces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle.
Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
karl s Clover Hoot, the great bloo l purifier,
gives freshness and clearness to the complex¬
ion and cures constipation, 25 cts., 50 ets., $1.
Why Put OB
taking keep medicine until you are sick? You can
a box of Kipans Tabules in the house and
at the first signs of 4 headache or bilious at¬
tack a single tabule will relieve you.
Notice.
I want every man and woman in t he United
States intere-ted in the Opium and Whisky
habits to liavo my book on these diseas s.
Address B. M. Woolley, Atlanta, Ga., Box 381,
and one will bo sent you free.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, tion, allays softens tho gums, redu -es inflamma¬
pain, cures wind colic. 25o. a bottle
After six years’s suffering, I was cured by
Piso’s Cure.— Mary Thomson, 29 1-2 Ohio
Ave„ A legh ny, Ft., March 19, ’94.
r •<
F 5 -at
£ Mai
t
V\
m
% /
f. NS
M .1
im
KNOWLEDGE
tends Brings comfort and improvement and
rightly to used. personal o ljoyment when
The ca
tei u'tan others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the needs the world’s best, products to
of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles. embraced in the
remedy, Its excellence Syrup of Ls Figs.
due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas¬
ant to the taste, the refreshing fnd,truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax¬
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
and dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
It has permanently given satisfaction curing constipation. millions and
to
met with tho approval of the medical
profession, Liver because it acts on the Kid¬
neys, and Bowels without weak¬
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every J8yru[> objectionable of figs is for substance, sale by all drug¬
gists in 50c and #1 bottles, but it is man¬
ufactured by the California Fig Hyrup
Co. only, whose name Is printed on every
und package, living also well the informed, name, Hyrtij* will- of Figs,
you not
L'teeptau y substitute if offered.
CARRIAGES
T Buygies & Harness.
i 7 Fair w " for highpst ftlrrtiffili,l>»»Mlr nwt»rr 1 . nt WorJS'. nml
Mm 1 ‘rlf*.. Kl« yi'itrft nie<»w»
, SGIitu? <lit< hMp<I 'llrwt Hitt Dt to *i»f IJojinuttttrg ant) (ii-11 mi at
0 wltolp*»lw yrir,pn, Hrmilti up
‘V wart) of 100,000 VrblrlH mm it
land our factory now Utn largaot
IS I on farUi./loalltiadlrfictwIlbeon
tnM•.»$>.*. mi men. Hand for our mammoth
"4 w, llluatrat. fra. catalo.n.,
ALLIANCE CARRIAGE CO., CINCINNATI, O.
It’s a
cold day
for the housekeeper
when Pearline gets
left, T ake Pear line from
wash in g ancl cleaning and
rs nothing remains but
r \ hard work. It
washed; is it tells the , who f washes. Hthings that fro
on woman Pear line saves
work, and works safely. It leaves nothing undone that you
want done well; what it leaves undone, it ought not to do.
-- 25
LJ T-ry Peddlersrand some unscrupulous grocers will tell y ou “ this
& A. L/ Pearfine ALSE—
is never peddled, and if your grocer sends you
something in place of Pearline, do the honest thing —send it back. 263 JAMES PYLE, N. Y.
Complete Fertilizers
for potatoes, fruits, and all vegetables require (to secure the largest
yield and best quality)
At Least IO% Actual Potash.
Results of experiments prove this conclusively, How and
why. is told in our pamphlets.
They are sent free. It will cost you nothing to read them, and they will save you
doIIars - GERMAN KALI WORKS, $3 Nassau Street. New York.
j....................... Webster’s
I International Dictionary \
! The New “Unabridged”
I / / \ A T he Best Christmas Gift
; WEBSTER'S Dictionary of KajlU b, Geo jrmpby, Biography. Fiction, J Etc .:
• 1 DdEKKXnONAL j Standard oftl>*F.#. 8upre«»«Co>irt, ih« U*- (lover onvtntl'rftiUnt OUlc*. mi<i ot S
; V V DJCTkECWSf J/ J Sll.iu* Sciioolboolu Comm-ntu-l by every State bupermtenurut ot bebooi#. |
1 G * C* Mterrlam Co., PubZ"hprtngllel«l, Hass.
* •
^ OSTSeud fer tree vsmybkt couiauun* ipecuaen ihmtrsslon#, «tc.
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Highest of all in Leavening Po•*»<.. T «te§t U. S. Gov't Report
1 1 akin*
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a •/' m 1
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Absolutely pure
Got Back at Them.
Bob—What did the lecturer say
when you threw those cabbages at
him?
Dick—Oh, ho said he hail hoped the
audience would be pleased, but he
really hadn’t expected they would en
tirely lose their heads.— J)alias Her -
aid.
Cross Trails, Ala.
Tetterine has cured me of Tetter
W'hich had been tormenting mo for five
years. Nothing else would give any
relief. I have known of many persons
using it with sumo good results. It
gives the quickest relief for burns, of
anything I ever saw.
Mrs. S. H. Hart,
Sent by mail for 50c by J. T. Sliup
triue, Savannah, Ga.
MISSING LINKS.
At LeedB, England, there is an elec¬
tric clock which has beon continously
ticking since 1840. Its motive power
is natural electricity.
In Houth America an eloctric drying
machine in which air is forced through
a chamber of heated plates is to bo used
in drying wheat.
An Indian carpet weighing three tons
and made by the prisoners in tho Agra
jail for Queen Victoria has just been
received at Windsor castle.
Pepsin, which is used as a remedy
for indigestion and stomach trouble, is
obtained from the membrane that lines
tho stomach of various animals.
To illustrate hotel life and traveling
arrangements generally is tho object of
a national exhibition to be held at
Amsterdam from May to November
next.
At Singapore the poet of tiger elay
er in ebiof for the Straits settlement”
bas just been given to M. tie Nancourt,
a IWluuan with „ record of 500 «.
gers killed,
The seven Bible, of the world ere the
Scriptures, ihe Koran, the Tri Pitikes
“" aaU “‘ 8 - «J° F ‘r, Kin S- 01
the Chinese, tho ittreo * edas ot the
Hindoos, tho Zendavesta of the Per
siaus and tho Eddas of the Hcandina
vlnnH vmiJ “*
The ihe Pilftthurn 1 tusoxnc/ Jfispalch D'mnateh Jpv<)s n-ivos tho the
interesting information that Charles
ton, S. C., was at first called King
Charles Fort, in honor of Charles I.
m Charleston a was substituted , . .. i , j. tor tho ,,
earlier designation in 1783.
An All Iron Railroad.
One oi the curiosities .... of ..... railroad
building is the construction of a road
running runmng from trom Tsmid J-fcimd, «, a harbor harbor about about
sixty mileB from Constantinople, to
Angora, about 300 miles. Tho
bridges, sleepers, stringpieces and tel¬
egraph poles, as well as the rails, are
of iron, nine-tenths of which are of
German manufacture. The bridges
average about four to tho mile, there
being P20 of them, tho longest having
a stretch of 590 feet. In addition to
these there are sixteen tunnels, the
longest measuring 1,430 feet. This is
the only railroad which penetrates the
interior of Asiatic Turkey, the Smyrna
lines being near the coast.
DIAMONDS
Silverware -The newest ami
best assortment in
the city,
Watches For Imlles or gentle¬
men. Every one guar¬
anteed. A large assortment,
Clocks without We have end. them Hultahle world for
library, VK HI office or homo,
Wit curry a full lino of goods sultu
bln for
WhIiIIiik Prm>»fN.
Ilrudt|iiurlcrs on Hint. Como,
HHlabli* Good*, Fiilr IhotlliigN
find Hoffom Price*.
Ison & Collins Jewelry Co.,
oft Whitehall Ht., Atlanta, Ga.
HALMSM^i^CtiewiiigGfff # cVr!**rTr**t*?uu*rMjn
(teFiNSri ” 1 utanoi; l ',7^:troV
F«h *• by the Medical ',SSStSSt Faculty. Send tor
A e««t (.ackttz.-. Silver, AUntpi c, Dor*5 *• A
f or l ratal Safe,
U1X>. K. iIAl.il, l«u Wr»t Wtil Sf„ New York, f
®Tonic Pellets.
TREATMENT SSfiSSS
St At *« « ■tMM.orJnr:■»*«»•. BUOVrk <l-ib « St>i; b d.«bl» bo**#
tIF i; to.. N*w Voracity.
THE HL4MTIC
ARTIFICIAL LIMBS.
t; wilh bail-bearin'?
J Tim hi test lmjiroveff ana Iwit.
Semi for lies rlptive catalogue
r ami j rice ilsl.
T. C. HILLS,
Successor to A. McDekmott,
510 & 518 <0 .1 No.lU) St,Chattel
Street., .New ill-lean-, 1^1.
WAIL 8T.
< bui le, t, M (Itin III X » «., Iu Wall Si.. N. Y.
A. N. U ... "4.. i V ......E* rty-nine, ’Di.
•/>. piso’s cure r or
1
Use
in tum. Bold hr <imttti»te ’V
C ONS 14 ? > TtON
The Bridge of the Future.
Bridges made of steel beams imbed
ded in concrete promise to be the
bridge of tho future, being cheap,
strong and graceful. Near Ulm, Ger»
many, is a bridge of this sort— invent
ed at Paris in 1876 by dean Monior,
which has a span of 150 feet and yet
is loss than seven inches thick at_th&
apex or crown. The iron oT sfeel in
such a bridge strengthens it against
tension, while the concrete gives rigid¬
ity and withstands crushing.
Packing Grapes In Japan.
When the Japanese wish to send
grapes to distant friends they pack
them in boxes of arrowroot. Light
aud air two thus effectually shut out
and the delicate bloom is also pre¬
served, even though the fruit has beoa
transported thousands of miles.
PROGRESS.
degree People who get the greatest
. of comfort and real en
» joyment out of life, are those
a who make the most out
of their opportunities.
good (Jttick judgment, perception lead and
such
MBns. make promptly of to those adopt refined and
use
aud improved products of
/ > MkttMft modern inventive genius
which best serve the
needs of their physical
, \ the being. Accordingly,'
I and progressive most intelligent
w I found people
are to employ
/ the most refined ana
perfect laxative to reg
f ulate and tone up the
bowels, stomach, liver, und
of when in need
such an agent—hence the great popularity
of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. These are
made from the purest, most refined and
concentrated vegetable extracts, and from
forty-two to forty-four are contained in
as q, e cheaper made and more ordinary
pills found in the market. In curative vir
tues > there is no comparison to be made he
sample, (four % doses) SX.g’K of the
to seven Pel
Sid"’"** ° f “~.
!. ONCE USED THEV ARE ALWAYS IN FAVOR.
bilious The Pellets headache, cure.bilh,ns„c,.7 dizziness, costiveness, siS and
or
constipation, d sour stomach, loss of appetite,
c windy ° at i belchmgs, indigestion, ‘‘heartburn,” or dyspepsia and
distress after eating, and kindred pain derange*
U ients of Ule liver ’ stomach and bowels.
p ut up m . p ] ass via i S) therefore always
fresh and reliable. One little ‘‘Pellet”
£aa ‘ s a laxative, ‘‘dinner-pin,” two are mildly cathartic,
take each day after to dinner. promote To digestion,*
distress one relieve
from over-eating, they are un
equaled. They are tiny, sugar-coated
granules; any child will readily take them.
A ^ c V t ,10 8u, , ! i itu te that \ n ?, y b * rec0JI 1 -
mended tlll 1 to . be h . just • , as good. It may be ;
belter/or better ihe dealer, because of paying him
a eeds profit, but he is not the one who
n help. Address for free sample,
Woruj’s Dispensary Medical Asso
CIATION 6 G 3 Main Street,Buffalo, N. Y.
Imperfect Drainage
is a fertile -5 of
disease. Is YOUR l
blood suffering from
defective sewerage ?
Impurities cannot ac¬
cumulate if you will
tion use ordinary precau¬
and
Tabules, Ripane
tuG modern rem¬
edy for it hIiij/uihIi
condition of Liver
mul Blood. Try it
now I Don't jirurnw
tinulo,
* McELRKES j
GWINE OP CARDUlJ
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I For Female Diseases,.;