The Fort Gaines sentinel. (Fort Gaines, Ga.) 1895-1912, May 03, 1895, Image 4

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Look Out for “ I Your First Duty is to Yourself. Your Bodily Condition Calls for the Help to be Found in a Good Spring Medicine The beat Preparation for this Purpose is Hood’s Spring is the season for cleansing aod renewing the blood. Daring the Vinter it has crept sluggishly through tho vions, gathering impurities from ipdoor air, from fatty Substances in the food, and from many other sonroes. The great blood purifying medicine •specially prepared to do this work is Hood's BarHaparilla. It will give to the blood phrity, richness and vitality •nd these will bring hoaltli and vigor, strong nerves, a good appetite, refresh ing sleep, and powers of endurance. Cleause your blood by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, a renovating preparation especially blood, prepared to make pure then you may enjoy the season •f flowers and birds and oat door pleasures, for you will bo healthy, strong and well. Rood’s Pills cure lino*, all headache. liver ilia, 25 hilloaa- cent*. TheOreatest Hedical Discovery 4 of the Age. KENNEDY’S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS • > ■i.. Has discovered In one of our common pasture woods a remedy that euros every kind of Humor, from th§ worst Scrofula down to a comftion pimple. He has tried It in over eleven hundred eases, and never failedozoept In twooaeea (both thunder humor). Ho has now la his possession over two hundred oertifl oates of Its valuo, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit Is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When tho lungs are afflsetod it causes •hooting pains, like needles passing through thorn; the same with tho Liver Or Bowels. This is caused by the duets being stopped, nnd always disappears in a week after taking it. Head the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will oauso squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you oan get, and onough of It Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed¬ time. Bold by all Druggists. CONFIDENCES. 15 Ya», Jennie, 1 hsve noticed It, I would not ap*%k of it mt all Were it not for the fact That I know a remedy. I had the ume experience. Every now and then, And alwayi at a time Most inopportune. One of thoie little pimple-like face blotches Would appear on my And annoy me Beyond expression. I haven’t had one for lix months now, I have a talisman That ft protects me. I get at the drug store. Yau have seen the advertisement— I am pretty sure. Ripans • Tabules Is the name—three dozen in a box I Swallow one after dinner. Or just before bed time. About once a week and You will be beautiful annoyed no more. But more I If you Would believe that possible. MORPHINE IN 20 DAYS. HABIT CURED. NO SUFFERING. Pat lent a sleep at night and every city. day Not are able to go alxmt anywhere in the confined to bed a single day. No pay in ad¬ vance. Not one cent required write till cured and satisfied. Come to see me or me at once tor terms and further particulars. Don’t miss tliis opportunity. B. A. 8YMS, M. !>., Atlanta, Georgia. 111“ Oexmidcr street. Scott’s Emulsion is not a secret remedy. It is simply the purest Norway Cod-liver Oil, Glycerine, the finest all combined Hypopnosphites, and chemi¬ cally pure into a perfect Emul¬ sion so that it will never change or lose its integrity. This is the secret of Scott’s Emulsion’s great success. It is a most happy combination of flesh-giving, strength¬ them ening remarkable and healing agents, all their perfect union giving value in WASTING DISEASES. Hence its great value in Consumption, wherein it arrests the wasting by supplying the most Scrofula concentrated it enriches nour¬ and ishment, and in Anaemia and vitalizes the blood. In fact, in every phase of waiting it is most effective. Your doctor will confirm a 1 we say about it. Don 7 be persuaded to accept a substitute / Scott & Bowne, New York. All Druggists. 50c. and 51* j “ I cannot speak too highly of Hood’s 8ar »aparil1a, as It has worked wondan la my ease. I am 74 years of age and have been afflicted with salt rheum on my hands for a (treat many years. I tried many things to cure them hut fat . My hands would crank open and bleed profusely, and the pain wae terrible to bear. Since taking Hood's Sarsa psrllla thefleeh has hoalod nnd the skin is as smooth as any farmer’s. I recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla as a reliable medicine and al ways speak In Its favor.” Llotd B. Chase, Swansea, Massachusetts. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in tho public eye today. Be sure to get Hood’s and only Hood’s. Odd Words Are Wanted. Wanted—“Words, words, Only they must be quaint, curious or unique. They are wanted by the Amer ican Dialect Society, whose New York branch held a meeting yesterday after noon for the purpose of letting its wants be known. So, if you happen to know of any curious verbal speci mens, send them to the society at jus! ynoe. The English Dialect Society is about to publish a dictionary con taing all tho known dialects spoken on British soil. It is the ambition of the American to do the same for the dia lects of this country. The value of such a complication is threofold. It will, firstly, preserve that which gives any language its variety and scope. Secondly, it will give one an opportu nity to perceive for himself how lan guage is made, how words conform themselves to the noeds and habits of living and invironment—dialect being the direct rosult of life upon language, while its final test is but another proof that the fittest survives. Thirdly, dia lect study binds together different and widely separated sections of country, giving them a clearer knowledge of each other. There is a possible fourth advantage. It is that all dialect stories of w hatever locality be taken care of by the Dialect society, rather than in dieted upon a long-suffering public. - New York Kvening ^ Sun. Didn’t Want Real Food. Theater Manager—You say you ob ject to having real food on the table in the banquet scene, Mr. Greesepaynt? Why the rest of tho company are de¬ lighted with it 1 Mr. Greesepaynt—Yes, but my part requires me to rise from tho table, af¬ ter a couple of mouthfuls, and say: “I cannot eat tonight—a strange dread comes over me ; I will seek the quiet of vondei apartment for a time.”— Exchange. Time may or may not bring to us the use of the ballot; but we will not be the more deserving of it through clamoring for it, and we will the soon¬ er win it by proving ourselves worthy of it. — Womankind. SULLIVAN A CRICHTON’S A A — and School or Shorthand The Beet end Cheapest Business College in Amerioa. Four Penman Tima short. Catalogue tree- Address Niillivnu At Urichtou. Prvor St., AtlaXTA, Os. UMBACH’S PATENT HARROW A Light. Durable Harro w. with Steel Teeth, in reach of all. Low in price and does the work Here is something that will save >ou time and labor. It fits on any common Iron Foot Plow Stock. Kun it over your Cotton — and corn just as itis Send $1.55 ■HHK&fiRBriL^cotning up. the It will soil find get one, and kill the first crop of j^rass. It makes or $ 12,00 and chopping easiw and quicker. Every get twelve. a b o d v delighted ibout They weigh , 1 with them. Address dozen.] looms to the HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. how to cook nsn. ITor people requiring a diet rich in phosphorus, which is an clement of brain and nerve, nothing is more suit¬ able than fish. This is particularly true of the oily varieties, those least fat being richest in nitrogen or flesh¬ forming elements. Fish, to be wholesome and palata¬ ble, should be eaten in scoons and should be perfectly fresh to secure the best flavor. The fish should be handled as little as possible, and only sufficient water for cleanliness used in washing. Af¬ ter being cleaned, wipe dry, sprinkle with salt and put in a cool place until ready to cook. To boil fish, put in sufficient boil¬ ing salt water to cover, to which add half a teacupful of strong vinegar. A kottle with a flare perforated bottom, on which the fish can be lifted out without breaking, is the best for use, but a plate placed in the bottom of a large, round kettle may be used. It should bo taken up as soon as it is done, as it is otherwise spoiled by standing in the water. When the thickest part will readily separate from the bone it is boiled enough. Large, fine fish are very appetizing when baked. They may be stuffed with a rich bread dressing and served up or spread open and covered with a layer of dressing, put in a dripping pan with a little water and butter, set in a hot oven and baked ten minutes for every pound. Small fish or thin slices from a large one will be found very delicate broiled. The flesh should be clean and a double broiler used, the bars of which should be greased, tho fish laid on and turned over the fire until cooked through, Melted butter is tho newest addition to broiled fish. Frying is a popular Southern mode of preparing this food, and it is doubt if it can be surpassed by any other. T° have it in perfection a deep fry in 8 P an should be placed over the fire an( i balf filled with fat. The fish should be cut in slices of medium thickness, seasoned with salt and pep P er > r oIte<J in corn meal and dropped * n the boiling grease. When crisp and brown it should be placed in a heated 'l* 8 * 1 and garnished with parsley, Tomato sauce and cucumber catsup ma y be served with it. If the corn meal is disliked cracker meal or flour may be used in its place, or the slices of fish may be dipped in a thin egg , batter ,, ’ A11 .,, fish „ , “ 1 “P roved by serv sau ° e * White sauce is used Wlth boded fieb ’ make xt heat half * P int of ricb “ llk - th ! cke , n wxt h a teaspoonful , , of flour ; add A two table- t , *P°onin\a of but er a teaspoonful of “inced omon and a few drops of lemon ] mc ? ; let co “ e to a boil stir in the beaten 7 ol n J of ai > add a P mch of salt and a dust , ot white pepper. Drawn butter, flavored with walnut catsup, onion juice, celery extracts, or any other flavor desired, is a suit able accompaniment to largo fish, either boiled or baked, Gherkin sauce for serving with fresh fish is simple cream sauce with the ad¬ dition of chopped gherkins. Hollandaise, lobster, oyster, tortoise and shrimp sauces are all served with fish. The marinode used to boil or stew fish in is made of one carrot, one onion, one clove of garlic chopped and browned in butter over the fire, then simmered for an hour and a half in a saucepan, with a teacup of stock. When the fish is put in the marinode, a proper seasoning of salt, pepper, cloves and allspice should be added. After the fish is boiled the broth may be strained, put aside and used again, with the addition of a little water.— Chicago Kecord. IIOME-MA.DE CANDY. Nut Bonbons—Take a small quan¬ tity of the cream for bonbons, mis with it enongli chopped nuts to make it very stiff. Make in small balls and set aside to harden. Take an equal quantity of the plain oream for bon¬ bons, put in a bowl and set the bowl in a dish of hot water ; as soon as it melts to the consistency of very thick cream, dip the prepared balls in it, with silver fork, and set on greased paper to harden. Many combina¬ tions can be thought of and made by adding different flavors to each of the creams. Plain nut meats may be dipped in tho melted cream and set away to harden. Cream Dates—Make small balls of the cream for bonbons. Take one pound California dates, split and re¬ move seeds. Put the balls of cream between the two halves and roll tho whole in powdered sugar. Cocoanut Drops—One pound cocoa nut, grated aud dried, one pound of powdered sugar, two eggs well beaten. Mix this together; make it up into cones. Lay on a sheet of greased pa¬ per on a tin about an inch apart and bake fifteen minutes. Hickory Nut Candy—One cupful hickory nut meats, two cupfuls gran¬ ulated sugar, one-half cupful water. Boil sugar and water without stirring until thick enough to form a thread; flavor and set in pan of cold water; stir quickly until white. Then stir in the nut meats. Put into a flat tin and cut into small square*.--New York World. Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report Rpyaj» Absolutely pure OF GENERAL INTEREST. Fine laces may be cleaned by being packed in wheat flower and allowed to remain twenty-four hours. If a shirt bosom or any other arti¬ cle has been scorched in ironing, lay it where the bright sunshine will fall directly on it. Tea or chocolate should never be served with fried foods. Always serve coffee with fried oysters, fish or lob¬ sters, also with cheese. A carpet formed of layers of paper, a ply of felt, and an intermediate fill¬ ing of cotton, and provided with an infold side, producing a spring edge, is a late invention. An agreeable way of treating the eyes with salt and water is to wink them in a cup that is brimful. The eyes will be suffused by simply wink¬ ing the lashes in the water. A good tonic for hair is salt water. Put a teaspoonful of salt in a half pint of water and rub a little on the scalp every day with a small, soft cloth. The effect at the end of a month will please you. Any woman doing her work may so systematize it that it will be the eas¬ iest possible thing imaginable for her. She need not follow any other person’s methods, unless they are the very best for her own conditions. A new finish for furniture is that of Epping oak, and is a green, with a real forest hue in its brown depths. * Chairs, and high, straight-backed set¬ tees intended chiefly for halls, though they are seen in other parts of the house, are furnished in this way. You cannot make good tea with hard water, unless you soften it with a tiny pinch of bicarbonate of soda. Let the water be freshly drawn and quickly boiled, then use at once. The tea will be ready to drink after an infusion of about seven minutes. To make a mustard plaster for a child, take one teaspoonl'ul of ground mustard and three of flour, with enough water to make a good stiff paste. Spread between two cloths. For an adult, use one quart mustard to two of flour. Mixed with the white of an egg it will raise a blister. Don’t bathe your head and temples in cologne, and don’t try to scent your hair that way, because the alcohol in it will turn your hair gray, and burn out the natural oil. Above all things, don’t keep trying all the new patents medicines that are advertised to make the hair grow on the back yard fence, even. They may do harm, and they seldom do any good. The Dinner Bell Sounds but a mockery to the dyspeptic. He hears it, of course, but his stomach does not respond to the call. He “goes through the motions” and suffers afterwards for the small amount of victuals he partakes of. Hostetter’s Stomach Patters alters his condition into one ®f ability to eat plentifully, digest heartily, and assimilate thoroughly. Malaria, rheu¬ matism, constipation this and biliousness are con¬ quered by world-famed medicine. The value of a good mother can never be estimated. W'lien Traveling Whether on pleasure bent, or business, take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it acts most pleasantly and effectively on the kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches and other form.* of sickness. For sale in 50 cent3 and $1 bottles by all leading druggists Bolata, the product of a tree in Sumatra, is becoming a rival of India rubber. Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp - Root care' all Pamphlet Kidney and Consultation Bladder troubles. and free. Laboratory Binghamton. X. Y. Carriages propelled by electricity derived from a storage battery are common in Berlin. Chicago, III, From personal knowledge, having used it thusiastic myself and commendation in my family, and from tha en¬ of numerous cus¬ tomers, 1 have unmeasurably no hesitancy in pronouncirg remedy Tetterine known to be for skin superior diseases, to and any I to me have tried all the well known ones. I write this, the only testimonial 1 have ever given to a remedy, extraordinary because I merits am deeply of Te'terine. impressed C. with H. the McConnell. Mnrr. Economical Drug Co., 126 Clark St. Sent Dy mail for 50c. in stamps. J. T. Shuptriu*, Savannah. Ga. Notice. I tvaxt every man and woman in the United States intere-ted in the Opium and Whi-ky habits to have my book on the^e diseas -S. Address B. M. Woolley. Atlanta, Ga., Box 381, and one will be sent you free. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is a liquid and is taken internally, and and acts directly upon the blood murous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. Sold bv Druggists. 75c. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props,, Toledo, O. A Bright Eye is the =isrn of good health and an alert mind. Strange that it should almost always depend on the state of the digestion, but it does. A Ripans Tabu’e taken alter meals gives the little artificial help most grown people need. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Svrupfor children teething, softens the gums, redu os inflamma¬ tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottla Ican recommend Pi=o’s Cure for Consump¬ tion to sufferers from Asthma.—E. D. Town¬ send, Ft. Howard, Wig.. May 4, &4. If afflicted wit h sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬ son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle. Chivalry in New Zealand. A recent letter from New Zealand says: “I have traveled in many coun¬ tries, but in no other land have I seen the courtesy and unobtrusive chivalry habitually shown women, whether young or old, by New- Zealand young men of every condition and rank. The status of a New Zealand woman is con¬ siderably higher than that of her sister in Australia or England, and she ift not likely to forget that she gained the political franchise not by inadvertence or by party scheming, but as a delib¬ erate act of justice no less than chival¬ ry on the part of her countrymen.”—• Womankind. Vaseline is highly recommended for use on shoes, i, instead of any kind of polish. Put it on at night, rubbing it in well; after wearing the shoes • short time in the morning, you will be surprised at the polish they take on. A little lampblack mixed with the vas¬ eline adds somewhat to the polish.— Womankind. Consumption kills balls. more people than rifle It is more dead¬ much ly than any of the dreaded epl demies, it is a steal¬ V' thy- disease. gradual, It slow .the whole penetrates ('/is | in body. drop of It A, blood. every ' It seems to N work only at the ,// //i rible lungs, drain but the ter and waste I go on all over the I • body. sumption, To cure con¬ work on k the blood, rich make it '•pure, build and whole¬ •V some, up the \N wasting body tissues, into put the condi¬ II tion for a fight with the dread disease. Dr. Pierce’s Goiden Medical Discovery fights of in all the right if taken way. It will cure 98 per cent, cases during the early stages of the disease. Its first action is to put the stomach, bowels, liver and kidneys into good and working assimilation order. That makes digestion good makes sound, healthy quick and thorough. is half the It battle. That makes flesh. That consumption, the “Discovery” but good who for those lighter who have and less not are robust than they ought to be. Patent Force Sprinkler and Novelty Pump. Most Perfect and Effective Hand Apftratus ever invented for Throwing Water. IT HAS NO EQUAL. It Thrcws a Strong: Stream sixty Feet or .(lore. mm 1 m - >- - J m 8 mm li B m jUgfUi - With the Sprinkler attached it spreads the water in a gentle shower or spray. For washing windows or carriages, and showering lawns, gardens and greenhouse-, it lias no equal. It is adapted to throwing liquid solutions of all kinds to destroy noxious in-ects and bugs of every nature on plant.vineand tree,and should he kept in every liou-e, store and factory in ’ the country as a protection against fire. .50 Sent by express prepaid on receipt of SI II iinnieiitt A- Is cl ling in t h («., Atlanta, Ga. WALTER BAKER & CO. The Largest Manufacturers of PURE, HIGH GRADE I COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES On this Continent, have received HIGHEST AWARDS i V. from tha great Industrial and Fid El ■ EXPOSITIONS ! wm :j; Sin Ernie ami America. wT! Unlike the Dutch Process, no Alka _or other Chemicals or Dyes are “ ’ used in any of their preparations. _ Their delicious BREAKFAST COCOA is absolutely pure and soluble, and costs less than one cent a cup. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & GO. DORCHESTER, MASS. W L Douplas IS THE BEST. TIT FOB AKIN®. *3. cordovan: V FRENCH A ENAMELLED CALF. \ $ 4. * s 3.s? Fine Calf & Kangaroo. W 3.50 police ,3 SOLES. -y • ; ai s 2.$l75BCYS'SCH0ClSHQ£I I • LADIES • Over ir- One '—w Million BaoCKTOti,.MA 3 s 7 ^ People wear tho W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes AH our shoes are equally satisfactory They hey give the best value for the money, Their l equal wearing custom qualities Shoes In style end fit. are unsurpassed The prices are uniform,•••stamped on sola. From $( to $3 saved over other makes. IX your dealer cannot supply you we ran, A.N.U...... ......Eighteen, ’95 — . zajcrs: ■JL a® J*1 Best „ cures Cough WKtsf Syrup. all List fails. Tastes Good. Use in tuna Sold by druggists. SI3ST2 5T? 21:11»