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THE CARNESVILLfi <r^i
TMIBUNE.
ESTABLISHED 1875 .
As Corbett Knocked Sullivan Out,
So Do HOOD, ANDERSON and CO. Knock Prices Down
Our New Goods Are All in
Prices and quality guaranteed. We have a fine line of
Millinery, Dry Goods and Notions.
Wo can please anybody who will give us a chance. Onr line of SHOES and prm will fit any one.
HOOD, ANDERSON Sc CO.
HARMONY GROVE, GA.
HOUSE ANI) HOME,
Dress a Minor Consideration
With the College Girl.
Less Expensive Than the Boys—A
Health-Keeping Routine Worth
uable 9 Practising—Recipes and Other Val¬
Hints for Women-
Dress in a woman’s college is a
matter of much slighter moment
than last it is popularly supposed to bo.
Tho about thing her a girl education who is in
earnest cares
for is her gowns, if only they are
comfortable and suitable. One
girl through known entire to tile college writer went
an course of
four years with four now gowns,
and she was well dressed all the J
time, The expenses of fitting up
ono’s quarters are not so much for
“know allT’thFK^ J,"how’’whh-h
case. T The o knowing how, which
is characteristic ot a womans
fingers, is better than a great
many dollars in a man’s purse.
The daintiest study parlors the
writer has ever seen w r ere two
furnished with the most obvious
arhelos of need by the college, and
decorated at an additional ex-
pense of $25 for the two by tho
girls who had taken them for the
year. There is no point of ex-
pense in wdiich the woman student
has not the advantage matte?how of the man
atudent. No little ho
can live on, she can live on loss
Vn hen lio economizes m dead
earnest he goes into a cooking
club and eats abominable food be-
cause it is cheap. Bile rigs up a
kerosene stove in her own room
»nd does her own coolring and
lives w r ell on a dollar less a w T eek
than lie does
A Health-Keeping: Routine.
“Nature designed, w r rites an
the authority on health matters, “that
enormous amount of material
exuded from the skin should bo
carried off and lift purified largely ^ Wr by
the action of and
clothing prevents this action; it is
in feet, parts, as the air-tight, Clothing of the
almost and is
wholly • * * impermeable That by the end to light.
we are
encased in an envelope of active
putrefactive change, which
action necessarily exert a most depressing
uj>on the skin, and thence
upon be our doubted. physique The m general, health can-
not pre-
cautions he advises are: A sponge
bath in the morning, wfith brisk
friction before or after, a complete
change with of clothing before dinner,
tion washing with flesh of the brush, feet, and fric-
a and in
___ warm _ weather ,, a sponging • off tx at i.
night. »h*uld The clothing removed
be hung up, fully exposed
to air and light, and, of course,
two suits of underclothing will be
in use. It may be added that
luxury fresh stockings* every day are a
well worth paying for; that
shoes should be alternated every
should day or two and that the feet
not be encased m high
leather or kid boots a moment
onger tuan must bo.
,
Recipes for the Toilet.
...For whitening and softening
the skm a harmless lotion may
prepared from two grains of
carnla powder, two grains muriate
of ammonia and eight ounces emul-
sion of almonds.
Brushing the teeth with the
finest pulverized wiflow charcoal
will make them white without
damage to the enamel. dissolved
• A lump of beeswax in
a small quantity of sweet oil over
a candle and cooled is an excellent
remedy for charmed hands
.♦.Tim nails should be brushed
twice a d»y and the
r " e rPa
b towri H
the nails become stained, wash
them well with soap and,
rindner brndi thorn * with lemon
/
°vr Muddy -! j complexions . must oe- ,
* *
pend upon warm-tinted gowns to
take off the useS pallor. Black should
never be except m headgear
CARNESVILLE FRaNKLIN CGUMTY GA. WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER «-w L(> 1802.
PEOPLE NOW ON EARTH.
>r Miss t Irene G. ^ --, Wood Is now enjoying . ,
her first vacation after teaching school
in the same room for a period of seven-
ty-two consecutive years in Cochesset,
Mass.
Joseph Murphy ia put down as the
richest of actors. He is 6aid to be
worth *450,000, most or which represents
the savings from his annual income, for
ho is on 6 cf tho most economical oi
Bta & c artists. >
Ror ^ n T c - \^ r f THK< F’ ° D ° of ^ rassa *
®Jiusetts , Sumry , worthies, who makSfbTa dates peasant 1 hack to
utile town,
boast that he has been personally ac-
q „ a inted with every president save
Washington and Jefferson.
Dr. Babcock, of Chicago, is, although
blind, a specialist in throat and lung
diseases, his acute ear making up for
his lack of sight IIo was materially
^ ndie3 ,! 5y t he * id a nd
Frenchtlowinrio^SMTon. . , r y
Atmr Betsy McKay, of Taylorvillo,
Ky ., has reached the very old age Of ono
hundred and six years, but her eyesight
and memory are remarkably preserved.
She has one hundred and twelve dc-
scendants living, and remembers many
interesting incidents of early Kentucky
life *
A STATISTICAL CORNER.
For a pound of honey,‘bees visit from
one hundred to two hundred thousand
flowers -
River ferryboats transport
S’ ^Vwi&VewyF"^°* 0 , 00 : 00 " pc ° pI ° and , 130 £ 00 ’°P 0 ton «
Is a full „ tOTn o{ tho Tlntas0 in
gp a i n last year, as published, the total
yield of wine is estimated at 540 , 000,000
gallons, and is described as good in ten
provinces, fairly good in thirty-four and
had in five.
"lx has been estimated,” says the
Tropical Florida, “that there i3 in this
state 350,000,000 tons of moss hanging
on our trees. This, when gathered and
ponnd it would amount to the enormous
sum of *7,000, 000 .”
Tue British Medical Journal says
that <lurin S 1891 tho people of Paris
0<5n3amcd 21 > £ ^ hors< f» tlon ^ ys
^ 1 “fhe XfjTa? . S
2d . to 10d . ^ pouni only one-tlurd
was sold fresh and undisguised, the rest
being made,4nto sausages.
Bang Up Style.
“ P-i
- „
pad her or had her hair . brushed » pon
forelieaff to-night?”
Y l tiiougnt it .....
es 5 of dressing it. was a Dang
up way J .j 1
T~ ~
Interesting.
The Groom—He’s my best man,
yon know.
The bridesmaid—He’s mine, too.
-Truth.
_______
, . .
Rousenoia iimis.
—By rubbing with a flanne
dipped' colorations in whiting be the taken brown off dis-
may cups
which have been used in baking,
_ a n Gasv an d simple 1 way to ex-
terminate rats is to fill a cask a
third or half full of water and put
a tempting bait on a light floating
board and scatter some chaff on
the water. Then cover the cask,
leaving a liole in tile cover about
four inches in diameter. Make it
easy for the rats to get on the bar-
—Silks and ribbons naj oe
cleaned and made to Iook like ne’u
by sponging them with equal
parts of strong tea ana. vinegar,
Iron with a not too hot iron.
--Castor oil 1ms not failed
any case to remove warts m which
was applied once a day for two
to Six weeK.
—Old lace shawls , -scarls
ana
may with a little trouble bo trans-
formed into very handsome covers
for the sofa, and look handsome
enough to madm tho work wen
Feet
^tive for
3^d parts may be remo'ejrionly
care must ba taken to let tRepat
tern , at the joining.
the lace should be tacked on a
ored silk or cotton
an q the pattern outlined with cord
Qr c ]fi a i n3 tit<;>h. Either filoselle,
’ better still, fast-colored silk,
y b use d for tins work. The
color-should match the lmmg.
Cannibalism,
<<t ^ n 11S • •»«-_ Mrs, a Smith ,,, , S shin , ,
•
,
•
“Have ‘No; it belongs to Mrs. Jones.”
you got Mrs. Brownes
ribs?”
‘ “Naw! You mean Mrs.
White’s. ”
“That’s sol A piece of neck
was t 0 go with ’em, wasn’t it?”
“Yes,”
“Where’s Mrs. Green’s liver I”
“Oh, that’s frone lone Irams ago.”
“Did you send the with
it?” .
“No.”
“Why “I clean not?”
“Well, forgot.” just attend* it.
to
Where’s Mrs. Gray’s brisket?”
“In this basket.”
Were these two cannibals con-
^“8? jy,f- £ra By no means. f alk It was
“ ere 8 me “ t ° * ° Ter ‘
this morning between a
butcher and liis assistant.
Hints fop the laundry.
Deodorized benzine is excellent "
for cleaning lace winch will not
bear much handling Y.wfc®
henzme not used, and-after he the hath the
must given a chance to
evaporate.. Borax also employed
is as a
cleansing agent Immereed for this delicate weak
trimming. solution mgbt m a found
over it will be
in the morning ready for a gentle
rmsing.
For removing . fruit stains: _ To
one ounce of sal-ammonia add an
equal pint of quantity water. of Dip salt the tartar article and .a
in
the mixture and afterwards wash
in the usual way.
A Great Scheme.
“Yes, I’m the in the lecture busi*
ness,” said long-haired passen¬ I’ve
ger, “and I’m coining money.
got a big scheme, I have, Big and houses it
operates to a charm.
wherever I go.”
“A Scheme?”
“Yes. I always advertise that
my lectures are especially for
women under thirty yearr of age
and for men out of debt. the You people just
ought trooping to see the in.” way
come
*r*r mEB9Si-M4fJ*£i3L ^ *
THE CROW ‘ED HEADS.
' Tke emperor oT China has ten meh
yv-hose sole duty is to carry his um-
brella.
v The czar of Russia had made himself
bald by a habit he has of rubbing the
top of his head with his hand. This
was due probably to Ins desire to know
whether it was there,
Tim "holy rose, which tho pope bo-
stows every princes, year upon some Roman
Catholic ten this year to the
queen Portugal. The estimated
value of th i 3 jewel is 50,000 francs,
Capt. F. L. Lugaud, nominated to
succeed King Mwasg-a, of Uganda, was
the leader of the British East Africa
Company’s expedition for the purpose
of establishing British influence m that
part of tho dark c ? ntmc ° t '
^ iffcarria^ „. .
d^wn b^o^W
n jf icen t bays, with outriders, but when
j s a f; iiycres she is quite content
with a rickety old basket phaeton drawn
by a measly little donkey, whose ears
are almost as long as his legs.
t Sfc
nnd cx . Queen Natalie, the parents 0 }
Alexander, are not to be men-
tionc ,j ]. erea f te r in the prayers publicly
made in the churches for the health ol
the members of the royal family.
THE BEAUTIFUL IN ART. ■
^ wh6 Itmey
completed a bust of Louisa M. Alcott,
was onoo f jj er “Rttle men.”
ix collections centuries old, to be seen
in Chiq* and Japan, are specimens of
the most remarkable drawings in the
of a U kinds drawn with
'
works’ of a Japan-
B native of
Watanebe Seitei, and he is a
To kio. Some of his paintings have
already exhibited in Baris and
pra i sc d by the French critics.
Oxs of the most sensational paintings
a t the British exhibition this season is
Mr. Waterhouse’s “Circe.” The picture
represents the enchantress-eng^ed m
tel the poison she
hns been pr -mg in her palace.
HOUSE AND HOME.
Our Lease of Life Dependent
Upon Our Nervous System.
Its Causes—A Physician’s'Wholesome
Advice—Other Valuable Hints for
the Domestic Cirele.
Nervous exhaustion is a term
which carries with it a multitude
of c derangements , , of nature not ,
a
descnbnb.e. It means exhaustion
of the very centers of life, an ex-
haustion which may lie more or
less complete. It marks a failing
vitality or an overstrain of some
part or the whole of the nervous
system.
Nervous exhaustion may be the
beginning of the end, or it may be
die end ot the beginning. At tho
same time it is simply an indica-
tion of a weakened nerve force.
A human being has, at best,
a certain lease of life, and this lease
is dependent upon the nervous sys-
the ordinary wear
and tear of life is . not replaced by nu-
intious foods it must, of necessity,
degenerate Tis 111 one degree or another,
and simp 1 7 a (iiiestionof waste and
repair. When external sm-
roundings are so forcible that they
svear away more energy than can
bo supplied, the nervous system be-
gdns to suffer, and though it may
have a resisting power born of a
strong suffer in constitution, cannot but
the long run,
Well defined cases of nervous ox-
haustion have a distinct line ol
symptoms, which prominent among
ate dilated a general feeling of
goneness, hands and cold feet, pupils, clammy
bluish nails, a
lack of color in the cheeks or a
feverish Hushing, restlessness, in-
ability thoughts to concentrate one's
and sleeplessness and
mental depression. Loss of weight
and appetite and a general bodily
decline are accompaniments.
Nervous exhaustion comes from
mental strain, from long exposure
'™ J and weather, from worry
oi “U f rts, from.disease affoctog
a mental depression ‘ or a waste ot
^ and from exce3se3 . It is
more li£ than likely ^ to develop ^ in middle
though it does" anT affect oa p3rioJj doth al
the
young and the old to some extent.
Xhe time of life when the system
j s mos attributable ^ hardy being selected seems
to bo to the extra ac-
tivity which this period carries
w ith it. x\ strong woman or a
strong man may break down under
circumstances which one of less
vigorous constitution could with -
stand with impunity. Those who
are born with a nervous tern pc ra¬
ment which is expending its energy
on victims every and possible their occasion quieter brothers are the
and sisters the fortunates.
Getting Along With Oae Dross .
If you are limited as to means,
and must make one dress s rvo
many needs, choose a color th '. ‘ is
not striking—none themselves of those that
register retina stimulate each the time.on.
the or un¬
friendly to counting the number
of times you have appeared in it.
With certain change in the dress¬
ing of tlie neck, fresh knots, of
ribbon, lace or some pretty conceit
of your own, a single frock in its
time can play many parts. It is
one of those touches of the homel v
that Howells sometimes uses with
such skill, when, in speaking of
two little old maids, he told how
tlieir black silk dresses, from many
makings over, retained the lines of
small holes where the thread was
ripped out, and - how they wore
thorn high at tlie throat shopping when they
Went on their little ex-
1 (editions, and at night “turned
them in” if they went out to tea.
Ev-n if there is a touch of pathos
about all this, they were undoubt¬
edly people. ingenious and resourceful
Title
Pulled Bread
Put a loaf of light, flaky, bread—
baker’s when convenient—between
two pans, and let it heat through
in a moderate oven. It will take
about twenty-five miuutss f<3r this.
Take from the oven and with a
fork tear tho soft part into thin,
ragged and pieces. them Spread in hot those in a
pan put about a oven to
brown. It will take fifteen
minutes to make them brown and
crisp. Serve at once on a napkin.
Always serve cheese with pulled
bread* This dish is considered
.more elegant than crackers for the
cheese course in a dinner or
’nncheon.
Co!d-Water Coffee.
For everv cun of water use a
heaping tke coffee tablespoon f<5r several of hours coffee. in Soak cold :
^ ter lt ,„ y be soaked ; all night
‘rimme? ^
i"*™" the ***■ economical ™
is said to be most
way for more is obtained from the ;
coffee flavor by certainly tins treatment. fine. Long The
is ;
boiling dissipates the delicious,
aromatic oils, and a* probably
these are the most valuable prop-
er tiea of the coffee, the necessity j
of preserAfing them is easily
Be caveful not to boil for more j
than from three to five minutes,
A HUMAN ALIQATOR.
hirlon* and Rerolrinr Sp-etacle
Physical l^ibroiify.
'woss, Ga., in the form of a human
^digator. The monstrosity is a
boy 14 years of age. who not onlj
bears a. close resemblance to 9
saurian, but hisses, bellows with
anrer and foams at the mouth
when enraged. lie can neither
nor rraik and is pr*-'Hen!h r an
idiot. When ........ hungry, ii __________ srrevor.
he can make known his want 3 by
groaning and searching a round the
room , half rolling and half crawl-
j rt - on j HS l>ellv.
l"h.e bo\ T> s body is alinost entire’.v
cover? 1 with rr !os or a delicate
texture. His h-d is long and flat,
anr } his eves r.rr round and bendy
Rn d blink with a sur^rffdal lid or
fil m fiko those of an alieator. His
niou th is long and wi le and is
filled wii h an n annually large
number of !dg k-oJ h. H:s legs and
nn ns are flat and crook sidowavs
from the joints. Akor^hor J 10 is
as fi-.- near a bbnding of iiu uriu and
The" 5t r ,, cv-r xnw.
f jy or W su*r t\ i T :.; 'v :*
. .1 V
,i' et
- T() ur 5 tn.k
. ! ury tor me ^’lon
T[N j ur j’ > - - r;n l.t.-i 1
a . a , M to 10. i m
wi:h his in t; i.C .
FirA Pbi -T
yj G.v'v t:i iX
s, aco \ "
t a’
■
i
l B
a .- ; ! ' a . or la
/. i 1 • -Y\V
S
l :•« ■V
air. -A ' — 1 os, sir.
v '■ c an a iv, hay;.cod on
Lr T; 0 X’--i 1' "ir- r—Ft course.
r - , - on t he¬
it o O'.
It C ;*: mg)—
vn cy 1 at icr,: tot)
r w : en.or-
noont o sr: Bare
hero. *3 VOtl SCO,
A ; - llrfi !I. Now 1. put the
rubUcr i Cd., r t
Mantel Her to Lnnsfii-
“I ml! 011 ." t’se m with
’■ confiding nature, “it is mighty
k-iugh discouraging to have your wile
at jour efforts.”
“Mino never do^..”
“ You're in lie k.”
“1 don't kn.ir You see I writi
for the comic papers.
A Strange Ommis3ion
“Oh,” she exclaimed, “how
could I be so careless I”
“What is the matter?” asked
her father.
“Here I’ve been home for a week
and just happened to think that I
left two engagements unbroken.”
Scientific Drops.
Fivo volumes of air contain one
volume of oxygen.
Water is composed of oxygen
and hydrogen in the proportion of
one volume of the f ormer gas to
two volumes of the latter.
The celebrated high electric light
mast high, at Minneapolis, which is 257
feet; has proved ineffective
for lighting- used. purposes, and is now
no longer
One of the latest inventions in
connection with tho application of
electricity self-lubricating to street car service is a
gear for trolleys,
wliisli needs no attention after be¬
ing once put in operation.
Prof. Dewar, whose recent lec¬
ture and demonstrations on the
attention liquefaction all of oxygen attracted
over the world, says
that while oxygen when liquefied
is strongly magnetic it is a pool
conductor words, of electricity. In other
oxygen presents the curi¬
ous paradox of a non-conducting
magnet.
Carbonic acid gas, which is
ejected in large quantities from
the earth, is being utilized in sev-
oral localities. At Burgbrohl,
near Coblentz, a carbonic acid
spring opened and during boring oper-
aliens, which is eight inches
wide and some thirty or forty feet
high, is being used m the impreg¬
nation of mineral waters.
Tho color f ceriuiu S hri m?5 and
crabs, and also the color of their
eggs, are known to vary greatly
With the surroundings. Those.
living in green sponges are much
larger, lay vastly more eggs,
are also a little larger, and
the shnmps are greeu and yellow,
and tlie large claws are always tL
brown omnge-red, while tho f of
brown^ sponges are red, blue
_ _____________
XVII—NO. 48
ROYAL APPlTITES.
TheKaiser a Simple Eater, While the
Czar Likrs Qnantity ami Qualify.
-rasw
xs gyjga Tins
am,a tc. is not tho cane
1 ^ ^
Austrian rr^-V Emperor. They mo
t ttV* different t from abK tho King evcr of $
JnplS , anTwh" ' a" ngaW
penchant with for a beefs! oak served
onions.
And which of all European sov¬
ereigns the has done most to advance
art of dining to the dignity of
a fine art?
It is tho Emperor of Russia.
He curiously combines quantity
and quality. His appetite is large
and his taste delicate. The office
of imperial caterer at St. Peters¬
if burg hard is no sinecure. The caterer,
worked, is well paid. Of
course, this chef is a Frenchman.
Strasbourg birthplace, has the honor of
and Franco is glad
emphasize had tho fact that when I 10
to choose a nationality lie re-
mained a French man, r l‘\’' „ 1 *
knew the treasure ho had so jam i.
gave him' the rank of colonel.
Inch ... allows .. lnm to , , boar 1 .
a s-.vov
as well as a stewpan, and.
Ins ; pain otic
mziiig sentimon s
considerately glovse . over t-.io rn o
umca Kussitm saou/dcom]v . ns caof u> >\
a piiop*ct.* Gu.o’- 1
ivrautz, tiiongh nn; . nil c vlov*':' o
me Emperor o 1 an tbn. sin-,
remains a citizen o? Fraucj.
The Rattl'ic?.
The stnuturo fr >ni which the
rattlesnake takes h.'\ • :ie—
r ittle—consists 111 : ' n: tbT > 'j
more solid, horny c. 1 \
•round tlic end of 'fir-
rings thorns fives a
portions of the g?ue i > imr
•>i‘ lhe body,-is; . uie a;i*
a .colid found;-, i 1 u I;*. >uc.
the throe last u- cs ot the tai:
••'>ine united together in one m
hole or oov \ 7' • '-»Yo i Where
hones join, he — they no’. ; •
she {• nvrv-d hiv: • in i v «-uu oi
corn l \X 1 tin- Jrri funned.
..Oil v jv 1 l,v -
mark by groo
; \
of the i: .ir ld:*
I'cconr : in i 1 !
forms a t ifi
of such \ in SI I' V' •
vot cast t non
c v-it the
close to its
On. but Vi ho- ivi h\ ; . i
cn-i of the b >:iy ci :
cio-icd.
i ii place of s 1 ;; ’•■a t’m - r
.h r i : a 1 ) >aa '
u r;l -
a it g or
; -..Foot rattle, r
loose is- repotted at -> ■ ’
ting or a t ! -
tl.us formed ev.;.- Li t » v ' :i! '
s:m. Tims t ” : ■ -
conics uili vit ;*.y to • r * •
number or dry, itard. u\ »~o or 1
loose, horny rings, r id iu. 1
way a rattle may co
army as twenty-o to i ocxisting oV.'
rattling these rings, it is the r .
lent wagging rings by a tl;/: r • > l an l .. »■
of ; ud of
snake’s tail which pro-luces
celebrated rattling so ;u l —a*- > - i
which may be compare! the
rapidly rattling shaken of a number of jicaa in u.
p iper bag.
And She BeJi-v ri
It was nearly in..might whan
the young bride hoar i Ik*: iront
door softly opened, and r.uhoca no
up in his stocking feet she ri _\l
her eyes and detenniirY , . <ho
time for action h id 0 ur !*•
“This will never d-v. Georg*
said she, with a G • iy glitter in
her eye that sohe.cd him «n too
mstant. mind “Perhaps in I wouldn’t
it so much the year» ;o
come, but'our honeymoon is barely
over, and here you • ray out nearly
all night. Union you promise tc
stop I’ll go back to my ikt.oer. ”
plied, “Forgive me, my dear,” he re¬
bracing effort himself for the su¬
preme of his life, for he
knew the crisis had come, and
upon the result depended’whether
marriage was to be a failure or a
blooming success. “I know my
conduct must seem cruel to yon,
but that is only because you know
so little of men and their ways.
All inv life I have been accustomed
to staying suddenly, out all night. I can’t
stop told I for the doctor has
mo have heart disease and
that any sudden shock was likely
to kill me. That’s why, my dear,
I must taper off gradually.”
sobbed, “Forgive throwing me, George,” she
herself on his
breast. “I have been wry selfish.
I know you try to do what is ths
best for you. Never again will I
scold you, for it would drive mo
crazy if I knew I was the cause of
your killing yourself.”
Innocent Bobby.
Venther^ton^_Whn+ did mnv
sister sav when vou told her I wia
hero in thepario*- ’v^itinc for her ?
off* one finger and put it on
another.
Corsets For Girls.
lho ni °{ .. her who . has , made up.
i?EMS§ , .
SSS SDsSSi
ance 0 f cu tting strings and drag.
figure ^ ing ‘ ^ irts - Then it is that th*
should be provided with a
which will not C1 th*
waist comfortably, but giv € the
“**** « W***«* ^ •»«*
Tc Make Prune Jelly.
One pound of the best prune*,
one box of gelatine, lemon juice,
cinnamon, sugar. Stew the
prunes in one quart of water until
they are in pieces, removing the
stones. Soak tho gelatine in on*
pint of cold water, and when th*
prunes are done add the gelatin*,
which should be soft. Sweeten U
taste. A little lemon juice is in¬
dispensable, and a trace of cinna¬
mon. Pour into a mould and eat
cold with sweetened, whipped
cream.
Electrical Cookfii?.
Cool :ig Ivy:electricity is boin^
demon 'rated in Eni.fi nd and i*
surely ono ot the pr . abilities of
tho r our future. F: *y, too, th*
convcuienco of Join. . big' familr
ironing “flat” with a si agio elcctrie
that knows no variation or
cessation of luvt, which *is an in-
novation not ofiv promised but
shown. It looks as if the mili-
enium of tho lion o'keeper lies in
tho storage battery,
_
How to Poac-t Eg ji in a Bali.
To poach egg.4 in a ball is a
knack known to clever cooks. Th*
water is hen to 1 to boiling a...! ac*
rapidly is stirred till a small whirl¬
pool produced, in the hollow
heart of which maelstrom the
is cleverly the dropped. s3ts Tho motto*
of water tho white in¬
stantly into a circular covering fo»
the unbroken yelk.
A Gooil R^tcrt-
A one-legged political orator,
named Jones, who was pretty suc¬
cessful in bantering an Irishman,
was asked by the latter “how hn
had come to lose his leg.”
“Well,” said Jones, “on «x«n>-
ining my pedigree, 1 and looking up
my descent, found there wa«
some Irish in me, and becoming
convinced that it all settled in thni
left leg, I had it cut off at one*.*
“Bo the power,” said Bat, *'U
’ud ev been a deuced good thing tff
it had settled in yo head.”
Desperate Straits.
Bill—-Steve, I guess we’ve got ta
starve.
Steve—Wouldn’t they give yon
anything at that house?
Bill—Nothin’ but pie, an’ w’en I
ast fer a fork ter eat it with they
sez I was too pertic’ler.
Steve—They thinks becuz a
man’s poor hez no self-respect, X
s’pose.
_
It Refers to Monopoly.
Little Niece—Aunty, you are a*
old maid?'
Aunt Little Mary—Yes, Niece—Don’t darling. the Bible
it isn’t good to be alone? sa f
Aunt in this Mary—It refers darling, only and to
men does refer respect,
not to women. Most ol
the women are better off alone.
Favorably Impressed by the Review.
novel Chicago of Smith’s Editor —- that Where’s I brought thaS
home some time ago?
His Wife—I don’t remember
seeing Chicago it. Editor—Why, X
brought it home just ye3; I
after re¬
viewed it in the paper three Sun*
days ago.
That FiHed the Bill.
“I have here, sir,” said the neW
reporter, to the editor, an account
of the wedding of a steamboat cap¬
tain. head-line What for it?” would bo a good
“How will ‘Marry-timo Intelli¬
gence’ cover it?” replied the editor.
ACADEMY CF THY
Immaculate Conception
80 BOYD ST,
AUAKT/U '
Wait
This boarding and day school,
under the direction of the Sister*
of our Lady of Mercy, afford* to
young ladies all the advantages of
a thorough English education.
TERMS PER SESSION, IneH 'in?
board, Music, tuition and washing, $75.
chargee. drawing and painting form
extra
Studies wilt be reuiroed r ,t filoudgy
in September.
For further inform tion audr a*t
ns above.
CLEVELAND HOUSE
TOCCOA, GA.
^Sg^Good I). E. CLEVELAND, Proprietor.
Fare, Polite Attention.
*2 PER DAY.