Newspaper Page Text
A SAUSAGE FACTORY.
Ways of Making a Popular Arti¬
cle of Food.
The Various Curious Process¬
es Described in Detail.
••This factory turns out an averng’o
of 40,000 pounds of sausages every
week, or about 2 , 000,000 pounds a
year,” said a New York sausage manu¬
facturer to a Washington Star corre¬
spondent. “Cals and dogs do not
furnish any portion of tho raw
material, as is popularly imagined.
We use nothing but beef, which wo
buy in the shape of whole carcasses.
Let us enlor the refrigerating room to
begin with. Here, you sec, are the
dressed carcasses Intng from hooks by
the dozen. Tim room is kept at a
temperature of fivo degrees below
freezing point by means of pipes
through which evaporated ammonia is
conveyed. As you will perceive, the
pipes are thickly inernsted with ico.
“Too cold for comfort, eh? Well,
let us go to the next department, to
which the carcasses arc convoyed from
tho refrigerating room. Here they aro
cut up by men who have such skill in
the work that they do it with wonder¬
ful rapidity. Four butchers are em¬
ployed at it, you see. One separates
each carcass into its principal parts, as
you would carve a chicken. lie docs
it about as easily, so perfectly docs lie
know every joint. Those parts are
passed over to the second man, who
dissects them further, removing tho
bones; the third man reduces them to
fragments convonicnt for handling,
and the fourtli cuts away tho fat.
“The bones we sell, and the fat wo
try out iu big coppor kettles, putting
it up in glass jars. Many people pre¬
fer this pure beef fat to lard for cook¬
ing purposes. Tho pioccs of clear
meat we throw into this hopper, and
knives run by machinery chop it into
hash. Then it is put buck into the
hopper again, and after being re-chop-
ped is forced through perforated steel
plate, which will not permit a bit of
larger size than a small shot to pass.
Now it must go into this great vat of
sheet iron, which revolves while big
chopping knives work up and down
inside, the stuff being constantly stir¬
red at the same time in order to mix
in thoroughly the spices which are
added at this stage of the process.
“No, it is not ready yet for making
into sausages. It must first go into
another refrigerating room and re¬
main thero four days, during which it
•seasons’ and tho flavor of the spices
got thoroughly worked through it. Be¬
sides salt, wo use pepper, allspice,
coriander, mace and cloves. After
being seasoned iu this way tho finely
chopped meat is put into a largo re-
ceptaole, from which it is squirted
through tunes into tho ‘casings.’
These casings are the intestinal envel¬
ope* of beeves ami sheep, tho former
being used for bolognas and the latter
for Frankfurters. Wo aro obliged to
import the sheep casings from Eng¬
land, because the diamoter of tho cas¬
ings obtaiued from American slieop
is too small, although wo must pay
twice as much for the imported. Wo
get the best beef casings from the
•iaugh tor houses.”
“Bolognas are mado of beef only,
but Frankfurters contain acertuiu pro¬
portion of veal. A littlo saltpetre is
put In with the sutisngo mixturo to
make it rod. The final process is to
hang the freshly made sausages in tho
amoke houses,which somewhat resem¬
ble great iron safes, you sec. To make
a smoke we simply build small tires of
hickory wood on tho iron grating at
tho bottom of each smoko house,
which smoulder for hours. Frank¬
furter* are smoked for ono hour and
bolognas for six hours. The cheapest
bologna sausago retails at 14 conts a
pound, and tho highest-priced, which
i* warranted to koop a year, at 40
cents a pound. The finest bolognas
made iu this country are manufac¬
tured iu New York city.”
Reasons for Emigrating.
It seems, remarks the New York
News, that Canadians have Cot li
variety and multiplicity of reasons
for emigrating southward. A legis¬
lative commission charged with the
duty of finding “tho causo of emigra¬
tion of furmers from the Province of
Quebec to the United States,” has just
reported a series of answers nominally
corresponding with .the days of tho
week. It is an interesting if not par¬
ticularly instructive division of cause
into seven elements. Poverty of
French Canadians, largo families,
difficulty of establishing homes, defcc.
live cultivhiou of lands, taste for
luxury, local seizure of household
effects for debt and tho “plaguo of
peddlers.” If it were not that the re¬
frigerant temperament of the Canadian
brother precludes the possibility of a
joke,*wc should think, adds tho. Nows,
that those modern seven wonders of
trouble were sololy Pickwickian, par¬
ticularly the wind up about the ped¬
dlers. But it is all serious and official*
Therefore, we can only sympathize
with our distressed neighbors and
kindly intimate, in circus parlance,
that it is not necessary to crawl under
the canvas in order to enjoy (he bene¬
fits of Uncle Sam’s greatest show on
■math.
FOB FAHM AND GARDEN.
CIIEAr TAINT FOR A FENCE.
An excellent cheap paint for a fence
or outbuilding may be made a* fol¬
lows: Use two quarts of skim mi|)k,
eight ounces of fresh lime, six ounce*
of jinsecd oil, two ounce* of Burgundy
pitch, and tbreo pound* of Spanish
white. Sliiko tho lime in wator and
ndd onc-fourtli of the milk. Dissolve
tho pitch iu tho oil by heating, and add
a little at a time to the lime. Then
add tho Spanish white and the rest of
the milk. This makes an insoluble
paint that will not be v/nshod off'by
tho rain, and may bo colored any de¬
sired sliado by adding any mineral
color, ns umber, sienna, or chrome
yellows, to make e stone brown. It
is best when applied warm. — [New
York Times.
COVERING FOR STRAWBERRIES.
Straw, corn stalks, refuse from the
cane mill, or ieavos from tho woods,
will answer to cover tho strawberry
bod, to protect it from injury by re¬
peated freezing and thawing, but iu
using leaves or brush, something of
the kind must bo put on the top to
prevent blowing away. Tho covcriug
need not be done until tho winter
fairly sets in, and care should be taken
not to put on loo much. Of course,
if no attention has boen puid to the
bed, tho growth of weeds be covering
enough; but this is the least profitable
wny of raising slrawborrios. It should
be said, however, that quito a number
think this is better than not to raise
any at all. — IWestern Rural.
THE CULLS OF THE FLOCK.
liy culls is meant the had siioop of
Die flock. They may be old sheep and
they may bo young slieop, but they
are tho ones no spirited sheep raiser
wants a rival to see.
What is tho best tiling to do witli
them? Feed them off.
Nearly all sliocp breeders havo a
hack pasture, or a hack shod, where
tho culls aro kept out of sight. If
shown at all, they aro shown to visitors
at tho very last moment and under
protost. While it is hardly fair to ask
a breeder to show his culls, there is
not a better index of his flock both in
breeding and in management.
Tho host sheep breeder in the coun¬
try always showed tho culls first, and
they were no disgrace to his farm.—
[American Farmer.
I’ROVIDE STOCK WITH SHELTER.
Stock well wintered is half sum¬
mered, aud tho reason is that animals
that havo been poorly cared for in
winter get very poor. They don’t get
nutriment enough to keep thorn grow¬
ing, and half of tho summer’s pasture
is lost, aud by the time tho summer is
ended tho stock lias just begun to fat¬
ten a little. Every person should
havo barns for their stock, not for the
big profit tiiore is in (hem, but to be
humane to the dumb brutes, says the
National Stockman. Talmago says
when wo all become Christianized we
will have barns for our stock, and
I believo 111 in to be rigid. To
comprehend the animal’s feelings
rightly just imagine that we
had to be out in (bo cold snow, mud
or rain. Just, for instance, think of
the war camp life, and a heap of us
stock raisers had to be out on tiic
frozen ground at that time. I think
every person that 1 ms 6 tock should
have some kind feeling for them.
Think of it, every person that lias not
sufficient stable room, and you will
undoubtedly put up somo kind of shel¬
ters. You can put up some kind of
sheds even if you have to cover them
with straw, which would be better
than none at all. Stock owners, got
ready and build your barns this fall.
Don’t put it ofl' any louger. Wliv,
you can feed your stock on one-half the
feed and keep them iu bettor order
titan you can by letting them stay out¬
doors.
TEAS AS A CROP TO PRECEDE GRAIN.
Leguminous plants havo boen desig¬
nated as collectors of nitrogen and
tho cereals as dissipators of nitrogen.
Many practical men havo generalized
from this that all leguminous crops are
especially fitted to precede tho cereals
ns collectors of nitrogen for the latter
crop. This view of tho caso is prob¬
ably correct when a considerable por¬
tion of tho leguminous plant is left
upon the ground, ns with clover. The
theory, howevor, may be questioned,
says Professor Waller Balentino, so
far ns such crops as peas and beans
are concerned, they having no large
roots to leave in tho ground, and with
which tiic entire aerial portion of the
plant is removed.
In connection with experimental
work running through a period of six
years at the Maine station for deter¬
mining the effect of different forms
and qualities of fertilizers, a little data
bearing on this point has been inci¬
dentally obtained. Thus the north
half of each of tho plots on an ox-
perimenlal lie hi was one year cropped
with peas and tho south half witli
barley, ami the following year tho en¬
tire field was cropped with oats. A
table in the annual report for 1891
shows the yield of oats and straw per
plot and per acre as divided between
the north and south half of each plot.
An examination of this table show*
that with tho exception of Plot No. I,
to which stable manure was applied,
that portion devoted to peas last year
gave a smaller yield of oats this year
than tho portion on which barley was
produced last year. Tho result* ob¬
tained from the Hold, divided into four
plot* of two acre* each, show nothing
favorable to tho theory that peas nro a
better crop to precede a cereal than a
cereal.—[Now York World.
HOW TO ItAISE POUBTItr.
Thoso of onr readers whoso poultry
lias been Iroublod with cholora, roup,
gnpos and so oil, will bo pleased to
know the “how I do it,” of a man
who never lost a chicken by disease.
A correspondent of Homo and Farm
writes:
1 1 give my flock access to water
.
out of iron vessels. These aro washed
out nnd filled daily.
2 . I havo sulphur and copperas iu
tho house by tho pound. Put a fow
small lumps of copperas into tho
water about every second day.
3 . I sprinkle nbont a tablospoonful
of sulphur iu the liens’ nests every
time I put on a sctier, and change
nests nnd sprinkle the sulphur at fre¬
quent intervals. This answers several
purposes as: (a) The nits aro killed out
on tho old liens, (b) Thero can bo
none on tho little one', which is all
important, (c) Keeps my brood, big
and little, “feeling good,” which is
half tho battle.
4. I never had much, it any,
trouble with ‘‘tho gapes.” Tho sul¬
phur and copperas so fully used,
“gets” them as it does all microbic
life. Especially do I put dry a tea¬
spoon of fine copperas and sulphur or
a tablespoon of popper into a quart of
moistened meal about twice a week.
If the feathery babes do get “tho
gapes” tho butt of a broom-straw
dipped Into kerosene and touched to
the back of the sufferer’s throat will
cure; ono application “every time.”
6 . I feed salted food, lightly of
course, as all animated naturo needs
it daily. I give thorn salt fish scraps
and cut up ham rinds into lengths for
them.
6 . I make pots of my flock. They
like to see mo around, and unlike “the
liens of Dakota which never siug,”
liiino siug constantly.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Currant cuttings may now be ad¬
vantageously made.
Ilepot callas in rich soil and give an
abundance of wator.
Many varieties of pears ripen better
in the house than on the tree.
Arrange to keep the tomatoes off the
ground and lessen the risk of rot.
Keep the begonias intended for
winter flowering well pinched back.
Salt or salt brine can often be ap¬
plied undor the pear trees with bene-
tli.
When through with a crop in the
garden put what is left under tho
ground.
Clover loosens up the soil by pene¬
trating it, and when it decays helps
the soil mechanically.
Corn is one of the best crops to grow
in an orchard, potatoes come next nnd
beans are probably next.
Because sour food or injured grain
can be bought cheaply it is no reason
why it should be fed to poultry.
A pedigree plant may be said to be
one wliicli possesses the best points of
its variety in tho greatest perfection.
It is a well-known fact that unfertil¬
ized eggs, that is, eggs laid by liens
not kept with roosters, will keep
longor than fertilized ones.
The Muscovy duck seems to bo the
favorite in the South. Their popu-
Unity is duo to the fact that they aro
better suited to warm climates.
Those poultry raisers who live near
a city can sell tho poultry droppings
generally to florists. We have in
mind sovoral poultry men who do
this.
It is a great mistake to crowd too
many chickens in one coop when
shipping. Tho evil effect is obvious.
Farmers should be careful and not
overcrowd a coop.
Will Build an I'nsinkahlc Boat.
A Leith (Scotland,) boat builder is
tho patentee of a boat which he claims
is unsinkablo and uncapsizablo.
Hitherto he has constructed them of
steel aud ho claims that owing to the
manlier in which tho fore and aft sec¬
tions, which are conical in shape, nro
permanently and hermetically sealed
tho boats are rendered uiisinkable,
evon if filled witli water, as the water
runs back into the sea through the
opening in the couter board easing.
The cruising yacht he is about to
build will not be of steel, however,
but of an aluminum alloy. The metal
is ns white as silver and possesses a
breaking strain’of twenty-four tons to
tho square inch. It is unaffected by
water. Tho yacht, which instead of
being painted, will bo polished, will
bo thirty-two feet long and eight foot
broad, and will be provided with
roomy cabin panelod in oak and com¬
modious forecastlo. The deck fitting*,
as wel! as a centerb&ard dingey which
will accompany the yacht, will be
mado of the sumo while metal. If
litis expei iiuctit should turnout sue.
cossfully a new doparturo in yacht
constructions aud fit! jngi maybe ex.
doc ted.
QUAINT AND CURIOUS.
One person in ovo^y nine Is left-
handed.
Owl* hav# a very acute icnse of
hearing.
There are nearly 3000 stitches in a
a pair of hand-sewn boots.
Olio million dollar* in gold weighs
3,685.8 pound* avoirdupois.
Globes and maps wore the Inven¬
tion of Anaximander, 602 B. C.
The first pair of spectacles wa*
mado by Spina, an Italian, 1299.
John McDarby of Salmon Falls,
Mass., lias double teeth all round.
Chain »hot woro tho invention of
l)c Wilt, tho great Dutch admiral.
They were first u*od in 1666.
A Mr. Ilyatt of Boston has a Mexi¬
can bcetlo which is still alive, though
it lias catou nothing in a year.
The most important Japanese holt,
day is the Feast of the Lanterns from
July 13 to 16. It is the Japanese Dec¬
oration Day.
Along tho coast of Peru there is no
rainfall,and all agricultural operations
aro carried on by a complete system
of irrigation.
Unless an Austrian gain* the con¬
sent of his wife ho cannot get a pass¬
port to journey boyoud the frontier
of his own country.
According to acalcuiation published
in Justice, a Loudon paper, the entire
population of tho world could stand
on a field ten miles square.
Tiic overflow of the Nile begins in
Juuc every year and lasts till August.
During that timo the rivor is a turbu¬
lent stream twelve miles wide.
A blood beet measuring fifteen in¬
ches in length, fourteen inches in cir¬
cumference and weighing four pound*
is a curosity at St. Tammany, La.
Think of paying $250,000 for a
single meal! That is what a wealthy
Roman did, when ho wished to impress
a dozen guests with his disregard for
riches.
M. Paule, who recently died in
Paris, was tho inventor of the “peg-
top” trousers, which were so much
worn by American voluuteer firemen
and village sports about a quarter of
a century ago.
The only man in tho world who
lives in a house of coppor is an iron
manufacturer named N. Poulson,
whose unique residence stands at the
corner of Eighty-ninth street and the
Shore road in South Brooklyn.
Some of tho native women of Aus¬
tralia have a queer idea of beauty.
They cut thomsolves with shells, keep
the wounds open for a long time, and
when they heal, hugo scars are the re¬
sult. These scars are deemed highly
ornamental.
India furnishes a market for large
numbers of white diamonds, as well
as for yellow or colored diamonds, or
stonos with flaws or epocks in them.
The natives invest their savings in
them and other precious gems, as we
do in stocks and shares.
The grealost price ever paid for a
horse was $150,000, given by Mr.
Malcolm Forbes of Boston, for Arion,
which ho bought from Senator Stan¬
ford of California. Axtell, the trotter,
brought $105,000 when three years old,
while in 1891 St, Blaise was sold for
$ 100 , 000 .
When Queen Victoria’s dogBdie they
are laid to rest beneath the turf where
they gambolled as puppies and were
exercised when tlioy grow up. Eacli
littlo grave is marked by a stone tab¬
let nbont a foot long and eight inches
across, whereupon a few words are
engraved, giving the name and date of
death.
Mars ami the Weather.
The extraordinary activity of tho
sun’s surface during the present year
seems to havo produced, as stated by
Professor E. J. Houston, tho follow¬
ing observed phenomena: 1. The re-
cont brilliant aurornldUplays. 2. Mag¬
netic storms, or marked disturbances
of the inclination ami declination of
the needle. 3. Unusually severe elec¬
tric storms, as shown by earth currents
of great intensity. 4. Marked meteo¬
rological disturbances, such as the re¬
cent hot weather in the United States.
6 . Extra-terrestrial effects, as seen in
evident decrease of the polar snow-
caps on Mars, indicating hot weather
on our sistor plauct, Of course, Pro¬
fessor Houston adds, the influence
may bo mutual. It may bo that the
unusual proximity of Mars may be
the causo of tbo great number of spots,
in which caso we may thank Mars for
the recent terrific heat. — [True Ameri¬
can.
Cause and Effect.
“Kittrick is a curious follow.”
“How do you make that out?”
“I invited him to spend the evening
wiili me and he came, but right in the
middle of the time we were having lie
pleaded a forgotten engagement and
went off.”
“l’erhap* he wasn’t enjoying him-
*elf.”
“Yes ho was. Enjoying himself
lirst-rato and there was better to come,
for I had just got out my 400-liuo
original poem and was beginning to
road it to him, when lie remembered
hi* engagement auj went away.”—
fNcw York Pros*.
Tbe Lapps.
The Lapps call their country Sabme or
Same and themselves Bamelots, and the
term lot has generally been supp oied to
be a contemptuous nickname given to
them by foreigners, derived from the
Finish “lappu," and meaning limply
“land’s end folk." A more plausible
•nggestion, however, is that of Profes¬
sor Friis, of Christiania, who refers the
term to sn old Finnish root “lappaa,”
•ignlfylng to roam or wander about, in
allusion to their nomad habit*. In the
mouth of southern or more civilized
Lapps it appears to havo becomo synony-
mouse with rudo or barbarous, and js so
applied by them to the legs cultured
northern communities.
difficulty Anthropologists seem to have some
in assigning to the Lapps their
exact place in the human family, but it
may be safely affirmed that they are a
combination of Caucasian and Mongo^
lian types. Be this as it may, their
physical characteristics are remarkable—
decidedly tive. more remarkable than attrac¬
They aro probably the shortest
race in the eastern hemisphere, unless it
be Mr. Stanley's demoniacal dwarfs. A
man over live feet in height would be a
giant among them, tmd the women are
rarely more than 4 feet 0 inches. They
are also tho shortest headed and the
thinnest skinned people in the world.
Some of them indeed are long headed
know enough in the intellectual sense, aDd
as wed as any how to drive a
bargain and deal with strangers, but they
are none the less pre-eminently what the
scientific people designate as “brachy-
cephalic. ”—Good Words.
Watermelon Tests.
I draw my thumbnail over the melon,
edges scraping off the thin, green skin. If the
of the skin on each side of tbe
scar the are left ragged or granulated, and
rind under the scar is smooth, firm
and white, nnd has something of a glossy
appearance, the melon is ripe. But if
the edges of the scar aro smooth and
even, ar.d the thumbnail has dug into
the rind in places, an i the skin does not
come off clean, then the melon is green.
You can easily learn on two melons, one
ripe, the other green, noting the differ¬
ence after they have been opened.—
Southern Stockman and Farmer.
French Dinners.
We dined iu a little Parisian restaurant
where Americans are in tbe habit of go¬
ing to obtain those truly French delica¬
cies, pork and beans, buckwheat cakes,
corned beef, apple pie at.d oysters. I
knew a man from Chicago who dined at
this restaurant every day during the en¬
tire month spent by him in Pmi?, and
who at the end of that time, said that
he was heartily sick of French cookery.
Thus does the profound study of the
manners and customs of foreign nations
elighten the mind and ripen the judg¬
ment.—“Thompson’s Tombstone.”
A Fair Offer.
Old Gentleman—“Do you think, sir,
that you are able to give my daughter
all the luxuries to which she has been
accustomed?”
Suitor (a practical man)—“Well, you
have been paying for her board and
clothes, theaters, and I have been paying for con¬ No;
cer ts, operas, and so on.
I’ll pay for the board and clothes, aDd if
you foot tho amusement bills, I don’t
think she’ll miss anything.”—New York
Weekly.
Anxious to Learn.
Little Boy—“Mamma, may I study
history ?” time.”
Mamma—“Iu good
“But I don’t want to wait.”
“Why aro you so impatient?’’ th’ history
“I heard the teacher tell
class that the old Romans had stone cir¬
cus posters, and oue of ’em had been
found. I want to know wot it had on.”
—Street & Smith’s Good News.
Tbe Greatest ltace on Record
Is the race for popularity won by Hostetter’s
Stomach Bitters, it took the lead at the
■tart and distanced oil competitors. It eradi¬
cates ind gestion, malarial complaints, ail¬
ments of the bladder and kidneys, nervous¬
ness, neuralgia, rheumatism. Physioians com¬
mend, the public knows its value, the press en¬
dorses. Grand are its credentials, grander
stiff its suocess.
Turpentine is good for cleaning all
varnished furniture.
Sample Package Mailed Free.
Address Small Bile Beans, New Yo rk.
A dog bitten by a rattlesnake in
Florida wa* cured of the bite by tho ad¬
ministration of gunpowder internally.
They increase the appetite, purify tbe whole
system an d act on the liver. Bile Bea ns Small.
For the first time the Russian soldiers
*re to be furnished with handkerchiefs
•t the Government’s expense.
Slck-Headache relieved by Small Bile Beane.
A teaspoonful of alum will make clear four
gallons of muddy water.
When Natur*
Needs assistance It may be best to ren der It
promptly, but ons Bhould remember to use
even the most perfect remedies only when
needed. The best and most simple aud gentle
remedy is the Syrup of Figs manufactured by
the Californ ia Fig Syrup Co.
An interpreter in tbe employ of the govern¬
ment on Ellis island speaks fifteen languages.
Bnown's Biliousness Iron Bilters and General cures Dyspepsia,Mala¬ Debility. Gives
Strength, ria, Digestion, the
aids tones nerves—
creates appetite. Tho best tonic for Nursing
Mothers, weak women and children.
Agricultural Note—I f any animal on tlv
farm the earns his annual sty-penned it must be
hog.
To Young Wives.
A disappointed bachelor has said that some
time after marriage a man’s wife ceases to be
supremely attractive to him. Never was a
greater libel. Beauty the preserved charm and yield grace their re¬
tained can never lose r of or bodies in
their empire. The preservation our
original healthy perfection Every and comeli¬ mother
ness is a sacred duty. young directions
who will faithfully carry out ihe
given with each bottle of “ Mother’s Friend ”
will never lose figure or complexion. The
dainty bud will mature into the blooming the day rose, she
and old ace will find her blessing Bradfield Reg¬
first used “ Mother’s Friend. ”
ulator Co., Atlanta, Ga. Sold by a 1 druggists.
Our old reliable eye-water cures weak or in¬
flamed eyes or granulated lids without p
Price 25c. John R. Dickey Drug Co., Bristol, Ya.
Swellings
In the neck, or Got.
•H tre, caused me terrible
suffering, and I spent an
enormons amonnt o f
„£gr/ ■p money vain. for 1 began medicines, to take in
Hood's Sarsaparilla and
, in a few weeks I found
.
the swelling very much
not done for years. 2 continued w.th Hood s
Sarsaparilla and am Perm a neatly
Cured.” Mas. J. Bigelow, Fremont, Mich.
-——--—
Hood’s PtUs cure liver ills, constipation,
biliousness- iaundieeutick. headache. 8&C*
Foreign Postage.
From the United State* to all follow-
In lowing the Universal countries and plaoes, which are
Postal Union, the post¬
age on letters ig five ( 6 ) cent* for each
half ounce or fraction thereof (prepay¬
card, ment optional), and two cent* for each postal
om© cent for each two ounce*
nowspaperai tralia, Austria Argentine Republio, Aus¬
and Hungary, Belgium,
Bolivia, Bn ail, Bulgaria, Ceylon, China
via and Hong-Kong, Chili, Cuba, Denmark
Danish colonies, Ecuador, Egypt,
Falkland Wands, France and French
colonies, Germany, Great Britaiu
and Brit ; sh West Indies
Greece, Greenland, Guatemala, Hayti,
Holland or Netherlands and Netherland
colonies, Honduras, Hong-Kong, India
Luxemburg, (British), Ireland, Italy, Japan, Libeila,
Newfoundland. Malacca, Mauritius, Norway,’ ‘Monte¬
negro, Para-
guay, Portugal Patagonia, and Penang, Persia, Peiu,
maoia, Rusia, Portuguese colonies, ltou-
St. Bartholomew, Salvador,
Servia, Siam, Signnporo, Spain and
Spanish colonies, Straits Settlements,
Sweden, Switzerland, Trinidad, Turkey,
United States of Columbia, Uruguay,
Venezuela.
Value of Mus e.
Mrs. Maternal—“I am sorry you are
going back to Germany. Had I not bet¬
ter get another music teacher for my
daughter?”
Prof. Von Note—“Id ees nod neces¬
sary. She knows enough museek to get
married on.”
No Amateurs.
Slimmer Hotel Doctor—“I hope there
will be no mistake in administering these
medicines.”
Servant—“Have no fear, doctor. I
am a professional nurse, and madam is a
professional invalid.—New York Weekly.
That’s What Brought the Factories*
Cheap fuel and low freights are the neces¬
sities lines, of manufacturing. railroads, Two fuel-oil pipe¬
^ive Griffith four these advantages one a complete and brought belt line, her
four factories as soon as the town was laid out
by Jay A. DWiggins So Co.—Chicago News.
Ic e is now used to preserve cut flowers. Salt
mixed with i e is baid to answer even better.
If yo nr Back Aches, or yon are all worn out,
rood for nothing, it is general debility.
Brown s Iron Bitters w.ll cure you, make you
strong, cleanse your liver, and give a good ap¬
petite--tones the nerves.
A cut lemon will clean discolored brass,
which can then 1 e beautifully polished with
ammonia much diluted with water.
Train Loaded With Stove Polish*
Last week Messrs. Morse Bros., proprietors
of the well known Rising Sun Kove Polish,
filled orders from two customers in the West
for twenty-three cars loads of stove polish. As
each car conta ned 400 gross, weighing 15 tons,
the shipment to these two houses was 9200
gross, or 345 tons. The immense business done
high by this grade firm of is goods a monument for which to the industry have earned and
reputation at homo and abroad. they
a
The Only One Ever Printed.
CAN YOU FIND THE WORD?
There is a 3-inch display advertisement in
this paper, this week, which has no two words
alike except one word. The same is true_ of
each new one appearing ench week, from The
Dr. Harter Medicine Co. Tide house places a
“Crescent” on everything they make and
publish* Look for it, send them the name
of the word and they will return you book,
BEAUTIFUL LITHOGRAPHS or SAMPLES FREE.
CONDUCTOR E. D. LOOMIS. Detroit, Mich.,
says: “The effect of Hali’s Catarrh Cure is
wonderful.” Write him about it. Sold by
Druggists, 75c.
Who suffers with his liver, consipa tion,
bbious ills, poor blood or dizziness—take
Beecham’s Pills. Of druggists. 25 cents.
w Vi
,5i \\
I. iV
rr%Mv4 m
r i w.
LESSENS PAIN—INSURES SAFETY
to LIFE of MOTHER and CHILD.
Friend, My wife, passed after having used ordeal Mother’s with
little through the hour
pain, week was stronger after in one her
than in a the birth of
former child. J. J. McGoldrick,
Beans Sta., Tenn.
Mother’s Friend robbed pain of its terror
and shortened labor. 2 havo the healthiest
child I ever saw.
Mas. L. M. Ahern, Cochran, Ga.
Sent bottle. by express, Book "To charges Mothers” prepaid, mailed on receipt free. of price, fi.50
per REGULATOR'CO.,
BRADFIELD
For sale by all Druggista, ATLANTA, GA.
Ask your doctor what hap¬
pens to cod-liver oil when it
gets inside of you.
He will say it is shaken
and broken up into tiny
drops, becomes an emulsion;
there are other changes, but
this is the first.
He will tell you also that
it is economy to take the oil
broken up, as it is in Scott’s
Emulsion, rather than bur¬
den yourself with this work.
You skip the taste too.
Let us send you an inter¬
esting book on CAREFUL LIV¬
ING ; free.
Scott & Bownb, Chemists, 132 South 5th Avenu«,
New York.
Your druggist keeps Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver
oil—all druggists everywhere do. $1.
36
WORLD S FAIR WORKWOMEN
AT II ORE. I?i(J PAY. Address, with Stamp,
J . KILMER iV CO.* South Bend, luu.
PATENTS JsfeKSs:
P —If you wish to make MONEY easy at
(5 your own homes, address incJudlng stamp,
DORA G. HOYT, South Bend, Inu.
i * W. L. DOUGLAS
taining der false money tin- S3 SHOE FOR
pretences*
sowed GENTLEMEN. Calf,
\r- 1 eamless, A genuine shoo that will comfortable, not rip t fine stylish
nd durable smooth inside, flexible, more sold the price.
F than any shoes other shoe ever at
£j3 Equals custom-made costing from $4 to $5.
► The only 93.00 Shoo made wills two complete cut;,
m which poles, securely double sewed the at the of outside cheap edge welt (as shoes shown sold In at the
SNpcA utPi same gives price, for such easily wear rip, having only one sole sewed
£ ; to a narrow strip of leather on the edge, and when once
16 m - : Cm DOUGLAS 83.00 times Shoo
it when worn through can be repaired as many the as
necessary, as they will never rip or loosen from upper.
IMm Purchasers of footwear the desiring superior to Qualities econo-
should consider and be influenced
of these shoes, not
w to buy cheap welt shoes sold at $3.00.
ke’T s 4 XV/ and »3 Fine Calf, Hand
tg M m Sew SS.AO/ineCalf; id; $3.50 Roliee and *2.25 Farm¬
ers; and £2.00 Workingmen’s:
Roys* §2.00 and Youths*
§!< 81.75 | School Shoes; Ladles’
Sho a . 00 p *1.73 ; asewe^«^ Best Dongola, 0 ,
fc Ikr : are standard of the same merit. high
aw of
sir- WlhL 1531*713||j t ft ‘ f
1 o
7
Will give exclusive sale to *l>oe dealer, and g.nera 1 merchants whcrel bavt
ace send direct to Factory* Iuae-4*
jOoutffas* Brockton*
"5
r
s St
DO with NOT ttistei, CE DECEIVED^- unameTa*
the hands, injure and l’nlnta which stain
The Rising tlio Iron, and burn off.
Bun Bfo?o Polish Is Brilliant, Odor-
less. Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin
or giasn package with every purchase.
S. S.S.
Georgia, JL gathered from the forests of
and has been used by millions
of people with the best results. It
CfjRES
All manner of Blood diseases, from the
pestiferous the little boil on your nose to
worst cases of inherited blood
taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism,
Catarrh and
Skin-Cancer
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga.
“August Flower”
“I have been afflicted with bilious¬
ness and constipation for fifteen years
and first one and then another prep¬
aration was suggested to me and
tried, but to no purpose. A friend
recommended August Flower and
words cannot describe the admira¬
tion in which I hold it. It has given
me a new lease of life, which before
Was a burden. Its good qualities
and wonderful merits should be made
known to everyone suffering with
dyspepsia and biliousness.” Jessb
Barker, Printer, Humboldt, Kas.®
NATIONAL SURGICAL INSTITUTE,
ATLANTA, GA.,
Treats Deformities and
Chronic Diseases, suoh as
Club Feet, Diseases of the
Hip, ysis, Spine Piles. and Fistula, Joints, Par-
a Female Ca¬
tarrh, and Diseases private
disease*, Urinary Hernia, Organs.eto.
of the cl
Semi *or illustrated ri-u-
nr. Name this paper.
A WOMAN HAS
very little desire to enjoy the pleasures of life, and !s
entirely unfitted for the cares of housekeeping or
any ordinary duties, if afflicted with
SICK HEADACHE
DAY AFTER DAY
nnd yet there are few disea 6es that T Id more
promptly to proper medical treatment. It t is there¬
fore of the utmost importance that a reliable remedy
6hould always be at hand. During a period of more
than
SIXTY YEARS
there has been no instance reported where such
cases have not been permanently and
BY
the use of a single box of the genuine and Justly
celebrated
DR. C. McLANE’S
LIVER PILLS J
which 1 may be procured at any Drug Store, or**will be
mailei d to any is. address on the receipt of 25 cents la
postage Purchasers stamps. these should be careful to
of Pills pro¬
cure the genuine article. There are several counter¬
feits on tho market, well calculated to deceive, TM
genuine Dr. C. McLane’s Celebrated Liver Pill s are
manufactured only by
FLEMING BROTHER8 CO., Pittsburgh, Pa.
i
m 5* n
THE
ONLY TRUE
A ’■'IRON
’TONIC
MB disorder, h°° strength', D , iYvisR
build renew
appetite, restore health and
vigororyouth. Indigestion, that Dyspepsia, tired feel¬
ing absolutely eradicated.
Mind brightened, brain
^ p power 0 Increased,
b pones, . nerves , mus-
cles, receive new force. 10
suffering from complaints
culiar to thei r sex, using it, nna
. a safe, speedy cure. Returns
rose bloom on cheeks, beautifies Complexion*
Sold everywhere. All genuine goods bear
“Crescent. ’ ’ Send us 2 cent stamp for 32-paga
pamphlet.
OR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. St. Louis. M*.
Ever? la His On Doctor.
A 600-pageProfusely Illustrated Book, contain¬
ing valuable information pertaining to dis*
ea-os of the human system, showing howto
TREAT and CURE with the simplest of medi¬
cines. The book contains analysis of court¬
ship and marriage and management of child¬
ren, besides useful prescription*, recipes, Address etc.
Mailed, post-paid, for 60 cents.
ATLANTA PUilLISHING II(IUSE,
110 Loyd Sheet, Atlanta, Ga.
Best, plso’s Easiest Remedy to Use, for and Catarrh Cheapest. Is the B
ARR H
Sold by druggists or sent by mail,
50c. E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa.
A N. U..... ...... Forty-two,'92.