Newspaper Page Text
A Boodler Sentenced*
Judgo (severely)—“You have been
found guilty of stealing tho people’s
money, and you aro sentenced to ten
years of in five tho hundred penitentiary, thousand and dollars." to pay a
fine
Groat Boodler—"Yes, y’r hono{.” bo
able Judge—“But tho fine, as you the will floe never is remit¬
to pay
ted.”
Boodler—“Thank “Judge—“And if you, conduct judge.”
you your¬ for
self proporly the law will allow time
good betiavior, and you can get out in
about a year and a half.”
Boodler—“Thanks, the judge." if hap
Judge—“Aud, by way, you court
pen to feel ill in a week or two, the
will issue an order allowing you to gc
home to die."
Boodler— “Thanks, judge; but sup¬
pose I don’t die?"
Judge—“Don't mention it. Call the
next case .”—New York Weekly.
Thirst for Knowledge.
Tramp (with an old school book)—
“Say, mister, will ycr kindly tell me
what letter this is?”
Pedestrian—‘ ‘Certainly. That’s L.
Can’t you read?”
“No, sir; but I'm tryin’ to learn, an’
I tha’u't rest till I do, nuthcr." laudable
“I am delighted to of find class. so You
au ambiti n in odc your
have taken the right course at last.”
“Yes, sir. It’s mighty rough on a
traveler like me not ter he able to tell
whether a sign says ‘Beware o’ the I)og’
or ‘Free Lunch Opening.’”—Street &
Smith’s Good News,
space out
A Day of Rest.
Sunday-School Superintendent —“Can
any of you tell me why Sunday is called
the day of rest?”
Littfe Dick (holding up his hand)—“I and
kin. It’s ’cause we get up early in
hurry through breakfas’ bo’s to dress
time fer Sunduy-fchool, so we won’t be
lste, and then skip inter church ’fore the
bell stops ringin’, ned then go home to
dinner and get fixed up for afternoon
service, and then get supper an’ go to
bed so pa and ma can get ready for evert
ing service. That’s all we do ."—Street
«f Smith's Good News.
Ladifs needin-t n tonlr, or rhlldren who
want building: up, abould take Brown's Iron
Bitters. It is pleasant to take, cures Malaria,
Indigestion, Biliousness and and LI ver Complaints,
makes the Blood rich pure.
Mrs. handsomest Lloyd Brice wenrs what nre New probably York.
the set of turquols in
A Life Saved
Mr. Goo. llay in olid, of Renecu Fall^ N. Y., 1* »
pump setter In tbo employ of Ramsay A Co., th«
well known pump makern of that place. He Is a
member of Ramsay Engine Co. lie says:
‘‘My wife without aoubt owes her life to Hood’i
Sarsnpnrllla. A few' years ago she wa9 at Uoath’i
door, due to blood poisoning, or as physicians say,
pyaemia. After everything ©Iso failed Hood‘«
Sarsaparilla brought her out of the crisis oil right.
81nco then she has suffered at times with numbness
and headache, but continues taking
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
and is gradually getting over theso troubles. She
clings to Hood’s, takes nothing else, and we hellers
It will effect a complete cure.”
“August Flower
How does he feel?— He feels
blue, a deep, dark, unfading, dyed-
in-the-wool, eternal blue, and he
makes everybody feel the same way
—August Flower the Remedy.
How does he feel?— He feels a
headache, generally dull and con¬
stant, but sometimes excruciating—
August Flower the Remedy.
How does he feel? —He feels a
violent hiccoughing or jumping of
the stomach after a meal, raising
bitter-tasting matter or what he has
eaten or drunk— August Flower
the Remedy.
How does he feel?— He feels
the gradual decay of vital power;
he feels miserable, melancholy,
hopeless, aud longs Flower for death and
peace— August the Rem¬
edy.
How does he feel ?—He feels so
full after eating a meal that he can
Remedy. hardly walk— August Flower the
G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer,
Woodbury, New Jersey, U. S. A.
DONALD KENNEDY
Of Roxbury, Mass., says
Kennedy’s Medical Discovery
cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep-
Seated Ulcers of 40 y ears ’
Btanding, Inward Tumors, and
every Disease of the Skin, ex-
icept Thunder Humor, and
Cancer that has taken root.
Price, $1.50. Sold by every
Druggist in the United States
and Canada.
'
Applied ELY’S C REAM B VI.M imt. lin niB
Absorbed, Into Nostrils Is Quickly Br Citt*,
Cleanses the Head, !}<>!? l
CATARRH# Heals the Sores and Cure*
Restores ly Taste and Smell, quick*, m
Relieves Cold la Head and
Headache. $LY 50c. at Druggtste.
BROS., 56 Warren St, N. Y.
b&eco $50 than PURE REWARDS^ HAVANA Cuttings tho
in
fillers oi our IION’T brand ot cigars.
bBb{|H & tg S 9 buy a 10 cent Cigar vben you
jfSEHegs H can FOt a* good, a one tor 6
■ cent*. bON’T Many smokm now
13 ^
_ WINSTON. w. u. i:m.ih * co„
NORTH CAROLINA.
IF YOU TTA T 7T7!
Malaria or Pile*, Blok Headache, Coetlre
Bowels, Belching; Dumb Ague, Sour Stomach aud
if your food does not
and yo u have no appetite.
Tuffs Pills
• wfiLnsfft ikv*a trouble*, frlco M
FINNY WONDERS.
Marvelous Things to be Exhib¬
ited at the World’s Fair.
Processes For Hatching and
Farming Fish will be Shown.
Tho Uuitcd States I'isli Commission
hopes to mnkn this exhibit tiio most
attractive feature of tlie world’s fair
at Chicago. Nor would this expecta¬
tion appear necessarily unreasonable,
inasmuch as tho waters of tlie earth
cover countless tilings in which man¬
kind is most keenly interested, being
spread over an area three times larger
than that wherein explorations on
land aro practicable. An entire build¬
ing will bo devoted to aquaria, in
which all sorts of living sea and fresh
water fl-lies, ns well ns otiicr animals
will bo exhibited. Another structure
will be filled with anglers’ apparatus
of every kind, with every description
of hooks, lines, nets, sinkers, poles,
artificial bait, spears, etc., ns well ns
traps and other device* for commercial
uso strictly, which tho sportsman
sneezes contemptuously at. Also will
be shown tlie mechanism by which tho
ocean bottoms are surveyed and map¬
ped out, with dredges and other par¬
aphernalia for collecting specimens oi
every varioty of lifo from the depths.
Appliances which record soundings
even in the great sea holes six miles
down or more will be displayed with
devices for taking the temperature of
tlie always frigid depths, for bringing
up samples of bottom oozo and for
recording tho tromoudous pressures
of tlie nether waters.
An elaborate series of exhibits will
show tho most approved methods
adopted for farming and hatching
fish. In this way will bo illustrated
tho processes by which tho great shad
fisheries, which would otherwise have
boon already destroyed, are maintained
in Th*. Potomac and other eastern rivers
and how, similarly, the wonderful sal¬
mon fisheries of tho northwest are
kept up by pouring into tho streams
annually millions of young fry.
Hatching of various food fishes will
bo carried on constantly in jars, turn¬
ing out hundreds of thousands daily,
so that tho public may have an oppur-
tunity to observe how science has
learned to assist tlie piscatorial offort*
of nature.
Tlie notion of a fishery exhibition
seems to have been originated by tho
Dutch, who held the first one at
Amsterdam in 18G1. In 1805 a simi¬
lar show was opened at Bergen, Nor¬
way, at which were shown all kinds
of apparatus for tho capture of aquatic
animals from tlie whale to the shrimp,
besides models of fish curing estab¬
lishments and sea products of every
description. During the following
yoav a fishery exhibition was started
at Arch action, in France, at which,
among other tilings, the multitudinous
uso of sea weods wero demonstrated,
likewise tho value of guano made from
inodiblo fishes was shown, and
various other strange sea products
were placod ou viow,such as ambergris,
spermaceti, shagreen and the dye
shells of tho Indian ocean. Tliero
wore also ovstors from the Islo of lto,
growing in tho native element and on
the very tiles which for propagating
purposes had been placed to intercept
the spat. Cultivated mussels, so valu¬
able as bait, wore seen hanging iu
beautiful clusters just as they had
grown on basket work provided for
farming them in tho Bay Aiquaillan.
In 18CG, also, an even larger fisheries
exhibition was given at Bologuo.
During 1867 there were several moro
shows of a similar character at various
European cities in Denmark, Austria
and Sweden.
In 1863 France gave such an exhibi¬
tion at Havre, in which pickled mack-
cx’el were shown for the first time and
excitod much curiosity. It was not
until 1871 that tho Italians entered tho
field with a show at Naples. A pisci-
cultural exhibition was held at West¬
minster aquarium, London, in 1878,
but owing to tho haste with which it
was got up it was unsatisfactory. In
1880 (lie Germans gave a fishery ex¬
position at Berlin, which was a grand
affair. It is a matter of history that
the display made by the United States
on this occasion far exccedod that of
any other nation in comprehensiveness
and in tho variety of objects shown.
The first prize, given by the emperor,
w T as awarded to America for tho com¬
pleteness of its showing. The Prince of
Wales, in 1881, opened a national fish¬
eries exhibition at Norwich, which
proved so successful that it was fol¬
lowed the next year by the interna¬
tional fisheries exposition at London.
This last was, perhaps, tho most im¬
portant event in (ho history of tho
fisheries of tho world, and did more
to advance the interests of lishermeu
than had boon done by all other shows
of the sort up to that time.
However, not all these exhibitions
put together have made such a dis¬
play as will be shown at Chicago to
celebrate tlie anniversary of tlie dis¬
covery of Columbus, and It may
reasonably be anticipated that tho
great show of fisheries to come will
give a new inspiration to the studv of
the water-farming of the future.
— [Washington Star.
. lift weather breaks watch spring*.
FOB FARM AND ttARDKH.
CAKING FOR THE FARMER,
Germany lias instituted u state sys¬
tem of livo stock insurance for farm¬
ers. It is to bo conducted by a cen¬
tral insurance buroau composed of di¬
rectors appointed by tlie government.
Tho sum paid in caso of loss is seven-
tenths of tho value of tlie animal, ex¬
cept in caso of cattlo killed hecauso of
having contrasted disease, and then it
is eight-tenths. Tlie premium is fixed
at one per cent, of tlie value of tho
stock insured. Tho state makes a free
gift of $10,000 annually to the fund,
hut should tlie losses exceed tins
amount, together witli the amount
from premiums, then tlie premium is
to bo raised to one and three-fourths
per cout., and if that be found insuffi¬
cient, the state guarantees tlie defi¬
ciency.— [New Nation.
HOW MUCH A SILO SHOULD COST.
In reply to a question how much a
silo should cost, it is told in a bulletin
issued from tiio New Hampshire sta¬
tion that the day of costly silos is past,
and it is this fact alono which enables
the rapid extension of this system of
storage. A wooden silo keeps its
contents with less loss than a stone or
cement one, chiefly because of tlie
penetration of air through mortar and
cement. A silo built independent of
the barn, having its own frame, roof,
etc., can be built for $1 per ton of ca¬
pacity, if above 75 tons capacity. If
built in tlie corner of the barn the
cost of material and labor will be
about one-half that sum, but on most
farms where tliero is lumber, and
whero much of tlie work can bo done
by the farm help, this cost can be re¬
duced almost, if not quite, to an actu¬
al cash outlay of $25.—[New York
World.
PROFIT IN REARING THE CAI.VES.
Those who have a good crop of
good calves this year can better afford
to give them tlie attention they de¬
serve than they could at any othor
time of late years. It is an open fact
that in numbers cattlo are considera¬
bly reduced as compared with tlie
situation u few years ngo. Cattle have
been generally fed younger than for¬
merly. Western ranchos have closed
out. Shortage of feed has driven cat¬
tlo to market. Those who have taken
the pains to produce calves of good
breeding can now afford to kcop them
and kcop them well, with the assur¬
ance that they will return every dollar
put into them with largo interest on
tho investment. Calves should not be
disposed of to the butcher for a few
dollars iu order to save a little trouble.
All theso little troubles are what con¬
stitute a business. There is no busi¬
ness that is froo from them. Tiio
good prices in prospect for cattle for
a number of years to come, with the
present prospect for an abundance of
feed, will make th ; feeding of good
cattlo a very inviting business.—[Ne¬
braska Farmer.
DEED AND SHALLOW CULTIVATION OF
CORN.
Bulletin No. 14 of the Missouri ex¬
periment station (Columbia) is devot¬
ed to a report on experiments with
corn mado in 1890. In those experi¬
ments a trial of deep and shallow til¬
lage gave an increase of over 14 bush¬
els per acre, or 21 per cent, of tiio cn-
tiro yield, in favor of tlie shallow til¬
lage in 1889, and nearly 13 bushels, or
80 per cent, of ihc yield in 1890. The
implement usod for shallow tillage
was made expressly for this experi¬
ment, and has a number of knives
running an inch or moro under the
surface, loosening tiio soil and effect¬
ually destroying tho weods in its path,
but not lifting tho soil sufficiently to
cover tlie weeds i:i tiio hill unless
quite small.
Tho Illinois experiment station at
Champaign lias mado similar experi¬
ments, in which tho average increase
in favor of shallow culture was nearly
eight bushels per acre over a period
of three years.
Tho Ohio experiment station has
eondnetod similar experiments, using
a cultivator not so well adapted to tho
purposo ns tho ono described, but
with results also in favor of shallow
tillage.— [Chicago Times.
FATTEN THE OLDER FOWLS.
Hens that have produced eggs
all throughout the season are about
through their usefulness ns layers this
year, writes a Central New York farm¬
er. My old soldier friend and neighbor
who has been so successful with bis
400 fowls is now fattening tho oldest
birds and thoso which liavo been culled
for otiicr seasons, and lie will sell
before they begin to moult. Iu Octo-
bor his March pullets wilt start to lay
just when the price of eggs begins to
advance. A great secret of success
is; Ho will not bo at tho expense of
maintaining fowls any time of year
unless they nre either growing or
producing. He raises bis own pullets;
persons who do not would save money
by disposing of tho old hens now amt
purchasing early pullets next fall.
From this time uutil winter old hens
will hardly pay their keep, aud they
will bring moro than enough now to
buy pullets then. To prepare fowls
for market at this season they should
be restrained in an airy inclosure two
weeks before killing, where bugs and
worms can form no part of their diet;
(uanv would huv Doultrv iu summer
who do not now if they coul l have
that assurance. Out soldier poultry-
■nan avails himself of this feeling of
consumers and gets two cents a pound
above market price. Many profer
fowls of soino ngo to chickens; boiled
until tender and thou stewed down
thcro Is moro substance to them and a
better taste—just as good veal is bet¬
ter Ilian “bob veal.’’—[New York
Tribuno.
SWEETS FOR HORSES.
Tho fondness for swcots on the part
of die horse has been taken advantage
of in different parts of (he world and
his appetite for saccharine matter
catered to with the best results in im¬
proving his condition. Ilorses thrive
remarkably well on sugar and mo¬
lasses, and those ingredients—inter¬
changeable terms in this connection—
have been regularly used since 1873 in
Australia and SDath America and
other parts of the world for getting
horses into condition for sale, atul also
for colls while wintering in tho park.
In raising colts there is a risk of their
suffering from stoppage of the bowels
if fed entirely on dry food, and to
avoid this they are allowed carrots or
roots of some kind in addition to their
dry food. Sugar not only improves
the condition of the colts, but prevents
any risk on tho stoppage above re¬
ferred to. The way it is used is to
tho sugar in water and pour it
on tlie chaff' or cut hay, taking care
that tho food is well mixed, and in a
day or two the colt will bo found lick¬
ing the sides of the manger long aftet
tho last morsel of tho chaff’ has been
eaten. — [Southern Cultivator.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Stale eggs are smooth of shell.
Let young poultry have free range
as soon as possible.
For breeding keep two or three
geese for every gander.
Fermented soft feed often induces
disease, especially cholera.
If ducks aro kept, be sure to have
the duck house light and dry.
Tho hens’ laying thin-shelled eggs it
often caused by a lack of gravel.
When tiio liens aro confined a meet
of cooked meat will promote laying.
Do not sell off all the old hens.
Keep some of them for mothers next
spring.
On the farm the poultry ought to
pay a good part of tho running ex¬
penses.
Cooked food fattens fowls more
rapidly because it is moro thoroughly
digested.
Feed only soft feed in tho poultry
troughs; scatter grain of all kinds on
the ground.
Always have the nests so that the
hens can walk into them rattier than
jump down.
Feed for growth for eggs and
not merely for subsistence if poultry
is to pay profit.
Ducks grow faster than chickens,
are free from vermin, aud are less
liable to disease.
Look often to the horse’s mouth. Hit
tooth should never bo allowed to get
jagged and cut his cheeks.
Old geese should not be sold; they
furnish tho most and best feathers-;
sell the young and koep the old.
The moulting season requires from
80 to 90 days, and the liens requirt
good caro while this is going on.
A young cluck is easily choked U
fed upon dry feed alone. Wator should
always be supplied to them when fed.
All poultry intended for market can
ho improved by feeding heavily on
fattening food a few days before
soiling.
Keep a foot hook haudy, and clean
tho horse’s feet frequently; it will
prevent thrush and other diseases of
the foot.
If young turkeys can have the run
of the wheat and oat stubble fields,
they will pick up much grain that
would otherwise bo wasted.
Transmission of Physical Defects.
Color-blindness is a condition which
is certainly capable of transmission to
(ho progeny. In ono family the males
alono were affected through seven
generations. Deaf-inntism is likowi33
handed down from parent to child,
while it lias been clearly ascertained
that tho chances of the children being
deaf is almost seven times greater
when both parents are affected than
when only ono exhibits the ailment.
Moro curious still, perhaps, are those
cases in which we find what has been
called the hemorrhagic (or bleeding)
habit transmitted for generations.
Here, owing probably to some struc¬
tural weakness in the blood-vessels,
bleeding, even of a slight character,
is wit i difficulty arrested. As regards
the appearance of this condition iu the
offspring, it may be added that in one
case which was thoroughly investi¬
gated three out of four males exldb.
iled tliis condition in one generation,
thirteen out of fourteen males showed
this constitution iu the next, whilo
only ono out of nine males was
affected in the third. Doubtless the
tendency to bleeding was dying out*iu
the third generation, but that fact
does not iu the least invalidate the
conclusions to be drawn from the
transmission of the malady in
the preceding generations.—[Harper’*
QUAINT AXD CURIOUS.
No itreot car* run in Toronto, Can
Ida, ou Sundays.
Indian mail-carriers in Mexico carry
thirty pouuds of mail seven miles an
hour.
A Wellington (Kan.) man sold two
prairie dogs recently to a Now York
man for $70.
A Russian millionaire recently com¬
mitted suicide because "life was too
monotonous,”
Tho largest railway depot in tho
world is at Birmingham, England. It
covers 11 acres.
The fastest record of a horse for 100
mileB is 8:55:53, which was mado by
the gelding Conquorer in 1853.
A girl in Alabama began laughing
at somothing funny, but could not
stop, and finally died from exhaus¬
tion.
London uses 4 1-2 gallons of water
per head for extinguishing fires, or
8500 gallons porfiro, and the estimated
loss upon each is $200.
There now remains in active service
in the army but 100 of those who
wero iu service as commissioned
officers on April 13, 1861, when Fort
Sumter was bombarded.
At a fire in Georgia, recently, there
being no water at hand, some little
colored boys pelted it with water¬
melons which were growing in a neigh¬
boring field, and the watermelons
bursting, soon quenched the flames.
Iu some parts of Russia the peas¬
ants are flogged when they fail to pay
their taxes. This year there aro so
many defaulters that flogging ma-
chines have been invented to polish
them off with neatness and dispatch.
Tiio highest trestlo on the line of
the Northern Pacific Railroad is that
across tho Corsican defile, about
twelve miles west of Missoula, Mont.
The track level is exactly 300 feet 9
inches above the rocks in tho gorgo
below.
A gigantic earth worm, which seems
to be closely related to tho common
angle worm, has just been sent from
Capo Colony, Africa, to the Royal
Zoological Society of England. It is
six feet live inches iu length and thick
accordingly.
For presents to distribute in Eng¬
land, Emperor William carried a large
iron safe filled with snnlF boxes,
cigarette cases, pins and rings; hut
largo as his stock was, he had to buy
sevoral thousand pounds’ worth in
addition in London.
The “angry tree,” a woody plant,
which grows from ten to twenty-five
feet high and was formerly supposed to
exist only in Nevada, has recently
been found in eastern California and
in Arizona. If disturbed this peculiar
tree shows every sign of vexation.
The British debt is so largo that if it
were divided into £1 notes they would
completely cover the State of Ohio
three times over. If paid in penny
pieces, and and each penny piled one
above the other, it would make seven
columns of copper reaching to tho
moon!
Gladwin County, Michigan, boasts
of having tlie largest frame barn in the
world, it is 156 feet long, 50 feet
wide; the structure is three stories
high, and is 73 feet from the base to
tho apex of tho roof. In its con¬
struction 500,000 feet of lumber, 80,-
000 shingles, 800 braces and 650
beams and posts were used.
Tlie origiual of “windfall” in the
seuse of “good luck,” dates from tho
time of William the Conqueror. It
was then a criminal offense to cut tim¬
ber iu the forests. Only such could
be gathered as the wind had blown
down; hcnco a heavy windstorm was
hailed by the peasants as so much
good luck, and from this comes tho
modern application of the expression.
The Trout Caught tlie Diamond.
This is the way the latest fish story
is told hereabouts: Joseph S. Frey,
saloon keeper on Soutli Third street,
and William Borcaw were trout fish¬
ing up iu Monroe county on Saturday.
While forcing Ids way through a thick
clump of bushes overhanging the
stream Borcaw saw a good-sized trout
dart out from a bank of the creek and
pass directly beneath him. Working
his way to a secluded nook a few feet
above, the anxious angler cast his fly
with such skill that in a few seconds
he caught and safely lauded a speckled
beauty about ten inches in length. He
mado a second effort, but could get no
more trout there. Well, the fisher¬
men continued on their way until
their sport had ended and they seated
themselves to clean tlieir fish,of which,
of course, they had a fine lot. On
opening one of tho trout the fish was
found to contain a diamond shirt stud.
This caused Bercaw to look for Ms
diamond, when it was found to be
missing. Then it flashed to the fisher¬
man’s mind how fortunate he had
been—that in passing through the
b: mli his diamond liad been forced
from bis shirt front; tlie trout lie had
seen dart in front of him had swal¬
lowed the jewel, and then he had suc¬
ceeded in capturing tho fisli. To a re¬
porter of the Express, who inquired
oi Mr. Bercaw concerning the truth-
fulnossof the story, ihola’ter declared
it to be a fact in every particular.—
[Easton (Penn.) Express.
All Sorts.
To bo well shod and better gloved are
peculiarities of the French and American
women.
Tho man who m ikes loud claims to
good character ou rht to be careful and
have it always with him.
Gen. Miles, tho Indian fighter and pa¬
cificator, is an expert rider of the bicy¬
cle.
The people of the United States will
cat |53,000,000 worth of candy this year.
Don’t fret. Fretting and fault-finding
mako moro women thin and wrinkled
than anything else in tho world.
A piano should n.-ver be allowed to
remain unopened for a period of several
months or longer.
When merely eating an ice or other
slight refro-hinent bciween dances it is
not necessary to tako off yodr gloves.
The emperor of Germany, while enter¬
taining much more freely than his grand¬
father did, has a keen eye to economy.
lished Cowp r was over fifty when he pub¬
“John Gilpin” and “Tho Task,”
and Defoe 58 when ho publi.-ked “Ilo
binson Crusoe.”
The first London directory was printed
in 1007, and contained but 04 pages, with
the names of 1,790 persons and firms.
The juice of a coif half lemon in a teacup
of strong hi ick e, without sugar,
will often cure a sick headache.
A fly lays 320 eggs during a summer.
The progeny of a single fly may from
Juno 1 to September 30, exceed 2,000,-
D00.
The Arabian year is a lunar one, and
in the course of thirty two years each
month runs through all of the seasons.
There are plenty of good fish always
in the sea, but thousands of worthy in¬
land people can never get to the sea¬
shore.
Bills are now posted in Paris by mi-
ehinery, which is said to be an im-
proviment on the hand and pastepot
system.
Lady Randolph Churchill is the only
American woman who has been honored
by the queen with the Order of the
Crown of India.
Maxims which seem truisms in their ap¬
plication to tho conduct of others aro apt
to escape us altogether in their bearing
on our own.
The empress of Austria is as busy as a
schoolgirl with her linguistic studies,
snd as interested as aland reformer in her
agricultural projects,
The actual expenditure of the British
government in 1889 was £88,083,830, or,
if we consider $-5 to be equivalent to
£1, $443,419,150.
To take rust out of steel rub it over
with salad oil and in foriy-eight hours
rub with uusiaked lime, finely powdered,
until the rust disappears.
If paint has been scattered on window
panes wet tlie spots with water and rub
they thoroughly with a new silver dollar, vin¬ or
may be washed with hot, sharp
egar.
_
Many persons nre broken down from over¬
work or household cares. Brown’s Iron Bit¬
ters rebuilds the system, aids digestion, re¬
moves excess of bile, and cures malaria. A
splendid tonic for women and children.
Take egg stains from silver by rubbing with
a wet rag which has been dipped in common
table salt, ____
FITS stopped free by Dr. Kune's Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
bottle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Pbila., Pa.
God never sends a man anywhere where it
is not for bis own highest good to go.
We will give $100 reward for any case of
jatarrb that cannot be cured with Hall’s
Catarrh Cure. Taken internally. Toledo, O.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Proprs.,
Pails and tubs saturated with glycerine will
not shrink.
llafflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp-
ren ’e Eye-wa ter, Drttggists sel 1 at25c per bo11!e.
<3,
m i
\
w
A li m
ONR BNJOY8
Both the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing of Figs is taken; the it is pleasant
to taste, and acts
Liver gently and yet promptly Bowels, on the Kidneys,
cleanses the sys- •'i
* tem enectually, dispels l 4 i colds, 13 Ilead- 1
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. only remedy of Syrup its kind of Figs is tho
ever pro-
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac-
ceptable its action to and the truly stomach, beneficial prompt its in
m
effeefs, prepared only from the most
healthy excellent and agreeable qualities substances, commend its
many it
to all and have mado it the most
popular Syrup remedy of Figs known. is for sale in 50o
and $1 bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
•ubstitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL
LOUISVILLE, KV. NEW YORK. N.Y.
“How ws Make the Fruit Farm Pay. ”
Samp e Copy Free. Address:
C. A. GKIiEN, Rochester, N. V.
PATENTSHSES
co w'.io will do Writing for me at the;
homes make aood wages; no canvass ng
Address w th .‘•clf-addres-ed stampe
* MILLER, South Bend. Jncl
m GO
.i piSO’S A- Cheapest. KEJIEDY Belief FOE is immediate. CATARRH.—Best. A is Easiest certain. to use. For
cure
Cold in the Head it has no equal.
\ / CATAR R H mi
It is an Ointment, oi which a small particle is applied to the
nostrils. Price, 60c. Sold by druggists or sent by mail.
Address, E. T. Hazf.ltixe . Warren. Pa. i_
__
3^4 r£HmoNk\i*r\\i\iS CHICHESTER’S EmiSH, RED CROSS DIAMOND BRAND A A
THE ORIGINAL AND GENUINE. Tlie only Safe, Sure, and reliable Pill for sile.
Ladles, boxes ask Druggist for Chichester's English •ther Diamond kind. Brand in Red and Gold metallic \y
sealed with bine ribbon. Take no Refuse Substitutions and Imitations. v
All pills in pasteboard boxes, pink wrappers, ate dangerous counterfeits. At Druggists, or send n*
- -A 4a.!. in stamps for particulars, testimonials, and “Relief for Ladies,” in letter, bv return Mali*
10,000 Testimonials. Name Paper CHICHESTER CHEMICAL Co., Miidluon Square*
Sold by all Local DruiulsU. PHILADELPHIA. x*A.
In need of BOOK-KEEPERS, 8TEKO-
fr
n
»
ft
3PYKI0HT II*,
^ rtfigitty noiu
• the headache, deafness,
in ears, eye.
weak; obstruction of nose, dia-
times charges profuse, falling into throat, some-
others, thick, tenacious, watery and acrid, at
putrid ; offensive breath bloody and
impaired, ; smell and
taste and general debility.
Not all of these symptoms at once.
Probably only a few of them.
That’s Catarrh.
A medicine that by its mild
800 thing, cleansing and healing
properties has cured tho most hope¬
less cases. One that will cure you,
no matter how bad your case or of
how that doesn’t long standing. simply A medicine
time, but palliate for «
produces perfect and pe c
manent cures.
That’s Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy.
A cash payment of $500, not by
you, as you might be expect, but to
you, if you can’t cured. It’s an
offer that’s made in good faith, to
prove their medicine, by responsible
men, Remedy. the proprietors of Dr. Sage’s
That’s the kind of medicine to try.
Doesn’t it seem so ?
ir PADGETT “FREIGHT.
: A (ireat Offer that may not nun. in
: be repeated} so do not delay.
“Strike while the Iron is Hot.”
■- Write for Catalogue now, and say what
••• paper you saw this Advertisement in.
r: Remember that I sell everything that
toes to furnish a home—manufacturing
some largest things and buying which enables others in the
possible lots, me to
wipe Here out all competition.
are a few of my Start¬
% ling Bargains:
A No. 7 Flat Top Cooking Stove, full
size, 15x17 inch oven, fitted with 21 pieces
of ware, delivered at vour own depot, all
Twelve freight charges Dollars* paid by me, for only
Again, I will sell you a 9-hole Cooking
fitted Range, 13x13 inch oven, 18x20 inch top,
with 21 pieces of ware, for Thir¬
teen Dollars, and pay the freight to
Do vour depot. two prices for
not pay
* your goods.
I will send you a nice plush Parlor Suit,
walnut frame, either in combination or
banded, $33.50, the most stylish colors, for
to youf railroad station, freight
ail paid.
I will also sell you a nice Bedroom Suit,
consisting of Bureau with glass, 1 high
head Bedstead, 1 Washstnnd, 1 Centre
Tab!e, Back 4 Cane Seat Chairs, $16.50, 1 Cane Seat aud and
; freight Rocker, all for pay
Or I will to your depot. elegant Bedroom
send you an
Suit, with largo glass, full marble top,
8 Nice for $30, Window and Shade pay freight. spring roller $ .40
. ; on
Elegant largo Walnut 8-day Clock.... 4.00
Walnut Lounge....................... 7.00
s Lace Curtains per window...*..... .... 1.00
I cannot describe everything in a small
| store advertisement, but 22,600 have ft. of an floor immense
with warehouses containing and factory buildings room, in
*1 ■TV other largest parts business of Augusta, of this making kind in all the
under one
management in the Southern States.
These stores and warehouses are crowded
l r with the choicest productions of the best
factories. My catalogue containing illus¬
trations of goods wiil be mailed if you
will kindly say where yoti savr this adver¬
tisement. I Pay Freight. Address
Xj. F. PADGETT,
PROPRIETOR
fe Padgett’s Furniture, Stove
AND CARPET STORE,
1 110-1 112 Broad St., AUGUSTA, GA.
\
V
\
scarf i a ?gTL£Jt£ pins. 8 as well L the^StestdesSS of
I ^^t at l cr l^f 1 ^ 3 th1 0 ^th OUr «
i s P
thinkof buying without seeing our stock, wo
aro the only merchants in Atlanta in our line
who import goods directly from Europe. J. P.
Stevens & Bro., 47 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
tecn< * ‘ or catai °i? lie *
§/" ■ 1 i« £\! ^OTT'O^ H a S w
Buy or sell your Cotton on J0j^ES
M || 5 c -r nn ^keaWst^ut n n ii n „ q„ q i d
'
|| not best.
®f§ II For term. add™.,
” jokes of BINGHAMTOH,
Vr binghamton. n. y.
SMITH’S WORM OIL
Is Undoubtedly the Beet, Quickest, find
Most Itelinbfc Worm Medicine So!cI.
I certify that 1’almktto, the 19th Ga. of Sept. 24, 1890. I
commenced giving on child, 20 September months old,
Smith’s Worm my and the following 23
4 6 inches Oil, long, expelled day from
worms, to were
it. S. W. Long.
Sold Everywhere. 25 Cents.
0PH Atlanta. Atlanta. 61a. Ga. Office Olfl jout i I and cured ticulars B.M.WOOLLEY,M.D. 1045^ pain. Whiskey at XYhllehall sent home Book 1_____ k FRKE. Habits of or with- par¬ par* St
ENSIONS—Due ahled. }S 2 Ff.e in nil SOLDIERS! 26 H d,3 ‘
for ir increase. crease. 26 years years ^r.pftrience experience. & .
r.iTK foii W Laws A. D. W. 0. OTcUOIlMIUK _ ^Cincinnati. O.
SONS, A8HINGTON,
SiOK Weak, Nervous, Wretched mortals ko»
well and keep well. Health Helper
tells how. 50 cts. a year. Sample Y. oop*
tree. Or. J. U. DYK. Editor. Buffalo. N.
hIilE 5**2" The Finest Illustrated C talogub of
Slfafta Diamonds’. Watches Jewelry. SI Iver-
a svaie. We furnish every Souvenir, Spotm
made. J. H. JOHNS'! Ols &U0.. li Union fccuaie
A. N. U. ..... ....Thirty-eight,’91