Newspaper Page Text
JapanpDC Women.
.Tapanoso woman cannot be Tain, for
they never wear jewelry. In Ob I Ml
every woman weara earriiiqn, but no
Japanese woman ever hail her ears
pierced. Japanese women are shock¬
ed, too, at the immodesty of European
ladies who appear in public with their
arms and shoulders uncovered. The
Japanese lady of rank thinks nothing
of tucking her kimona up to her knees
in rainy weather and her petticoat us
well, though her stockings reach
scarcely above her ankles. And the
Japanese working women will slip off
the kimona and other garments to her
waist when she is heated or hindered
by her clothing at her toil, but expo¬
sure for the anke of exposure, from
motives of vanity, is unknown among
the women of the mikado's kingdom.
Mr*. I.o . I'u aan.
Time to Bel ire Them.
Little Dick Auntie savs all thosi
pretty things called bric-a-brao used
1 1 be in regular ust 1 wonder w’en
they went out of fashion and got stuck
way up on mantle-pieces.”
Little. Dot “1 guess it was w'en
folks found tlmt some of their eliild-
was goin to be boys.”
Plenty of Water.
Autumn Boarder- “Von advertised
plenty of boating waters lu-r Why,
sir,that stream out there is hardly five
f et wide.”
Farmer Catehem— “Va-ns.lmtthere’s
plenty o'water. Its ten feet deep.”-
.W w York II 'akin.
Rents anil Gentlemen.
First Roy Is there any difference
between ‘gents’ and ‘gentlemen?’ ”
Beoond Boy Yep \ gent is a
feller not will knock you down if you
sav he's no gentleman.”
Forlll'j WiMih Nr
Thin ran ran ly bo done, F r«t, use 11
finest nervine ami toi ie In existence, Hoate i
ter'* Stoma' h Dittern Next, give up o “-i- bU
and min ;ral M*d alive*. which ruin the
Kelt, and have an (*lT«v t, t »t
1 i da iriReroii* y nu-tfe <1< »<“• liysi iihia weiiki 1
Vhe nt of insomnia ind nerve
Hit!* remedies indication and the \w
h> mptoiii* nftj ned. : il iria 1.
liver and kidn »y nip aint
(Yrti ftlnlv. contract all the debt* you <ar
That i«. Ik, contract them by making thru
r mailer.
ria. Brown’s BiliouauchM Iron Bitter* and General cure* Dyapejmla, Deuiflt'* Mala¬ Give#
at rt>i uftti, aids Dltfmtton, loner tie Alvcb
creates appetite. The bent tonic for S u rgi ng
Mothers, weak women anil chil ire i
Will the inoGti bofor unpopular 11 on
mn t ot it 3 silver ra>
JMhlonkcja Oct., 1 mt.
Your torn t-epi mdont wa hown through the
F|«! TOU hu i id i ng of 11 North Georgia Agri-
cuHura urn 1 C’ollogt* one flay of ln>t week, and was
very murli pleaded with what ho uaw then*.
The entire htillding baa lxu n thoroughly r
ovated and pul in the beat poasible coimiti
The greatest < halign, however, uat noticed in
the rooms aanigned to t.e BuHinea# Depart
UK uient widt h ti a new feature of the Fohooi
Here everythin g ha-* been chan god, improVi
and llrat-elasH perfeetiy a nereial dapted training, 10 meet the neotlH of a
Sh riband coinn and ypewriting. together In with
I abort, it i«
1 h< purpt MO «»f th a iruateea to make tiieooui
here equal to that iri any tirnt-claHH husim
college, and at a gr rally reduced « ex p<
Experienced teaehera make have bn iengaged and
HO pft! Jin Hpai ed 11» t to* department a
e*H f nun the very at art. I ireiit* who do*
Hire a pin U inuate the their ta UkH d tiauifh-
ter* away from aliun im
city, Particular* will find here aj^' \vhathe ^MH
upon
Btatk or Ohio, City or Toledo, At.
Luoar < ’opntv.
Frank J. Ciiknky makea oath that he t* the
senior partner <d the firm of E. J. URRNKY .V
County Go., doing and huHlncK* State aforesaid, In the and City that of HaUl Tola :
firm
will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DDL
EARS for each and every rase of (Uiarrh that
cannot hsoured by tho use <d II ai.l’h('atauiiii
Cure. Fiiank .i. Ciiknrt.
e worn to >*efore me and auhscrihed in my
presanoa, this Oth day of Deeornbur* W. Glia A. IX IMHtl.
. ■*.*- . a. son
|nralJ notary Public
Hall's Catarrh Cure is take n Internally and acts
direct ly on tlm blood and mucous sur
the system F. r t tnmmtals, free,
J. Chene v it Co., Toledo. O
UT Hold by D ruggists, 7fg
W» ( a re ft nature.
No matter of how long standing. Write
for free treattae, testimonials, etc., to S. J.
Hollensworth A < ’o.,Owego, Tioga Oo., N. \
Price $1; by mail, 11.16.
humble Don’t Hel st»H*k at low prices to get quer
I luxuries with.
Many persons are broken down from over
work or househohl cnr»». Bn»w u’h Iron Bit
terarehutlds tin* system, aids dlge ■st ion, re¬
move* execs-* of idle, and cure , mult al aria. A
splendid tonic for women ami children.
l egitimate business enterprises u i»
alymt, but the saloon goes marehln
Beef!. n's Pills corrert bad cffeci
eating. eecliain’A no other#. *5c ditsa
♦.onNKye-WHler.Drnpg‘,st>"-eU Ifnrtli*’ d with Koroeve** ufo Dr. isaacTbomt
nt ’ifvtwr tKVtth
Hood's 5 ^ 11 ’Cures
h "M> unirv claurUtPt
A /h /jHj||jgv|jh ^ion, Gmcic F. Ku >f Bo«*
while visiting nt
■ Jour hi nine thm> year*
^ from buy mow
ra ami struck on her hcml.
K! Sh* wantakun immtMll-
Vs at-uly'to the city hottpl*
tal, Boston. Her nkull
whs badly crimlied. Tho
wound waa ttresn d and medi prtssiortiHJd
for the blood* NolwIibataitiUug this, blood
poinoning set iu it lie child failed to rally,
Previous su with
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
led me to give it to her The #s-‘od effects were
quick! v notioeabh In l ■ hs than a m >nth slio
was aide to run db Pt tbe farm ami in a short
tim^ she ha t r nomp dvtely recoved her full
strength and he saltb* Mtts. Sorin a Kan-
PALL, hiillll Aett on, Mas«. Get ltoop’a.
Hood * Pill* eim ,> ah Liver Ills, BlUnusuess,
Jaundice, ludtgestion. Kick Headache tfeats.
“HOTHER’S
\ FRIEND” .•
is and n harmless; scientifically prepared ingredient Liniment
every is of
recognized value and in constant use
by the medical profession. It short¬
ens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes
Danger to life of Mother and Child.
Book 'To Mother mailed free, con
taimng valuable information ud
voluntary Sent by test inn nial
of price,f'..'O cxprens bottle. ctiavp piepiU. receijit
]sr
BRA0F1ELD REGULATOR CO., Attantx, 6a
Sold by all dra^gisu.
« I f
Do Not Be Deceived
wit' E 'll >taiL Uit
bar¬ 1*
U*8#L a for id Ua
pn cka*'c- v pi
CONGRESS IN SESSION.
Re Daily Routine ot Both Houses
Briefly Epitomized.
What Is Being Bone to Allay Finan¬
cial Repression and Bring Relief.
til st Da v In the Hoiiuti) vVeiluf H-
ihiv morning, the pending question
being Mr. Dulph’s motion to correct
Monday’s journsl, Mr. Morgan re¬
sumed tlie floor. Referring to the
supreme court’s decision, upholding
Bpcal Reed’s counting a quorum,
he said the house had rules and a pre¬
cedent for Reed’s action, while tlm
senate had not. It was not possible
for the president of the senate to take
a similar course without its being
unconstitutional. Mr. Morgan claim¬
ed that the minority only wished
to lm\ present action post¬
poned till tlm people could he heard
from at the polls. Mr. Morgan then
paid bis respects to Mr. Hill for re¬
marking upon Mr. Morgan’s connec¬
tion with the confederacy. Ho said
the south had not seceded because it
objected to the constitution of the
United States. When it found that it
could not get its desire, it came back
to the house of its fathers. Other
democrats bad fought on the Union
side, and had never sneered at south¬
erners for siding with democracy. Mr.
Morgan spoke for two hours. He ex¬
plained thut the effect of his proposition
to repeal the whole of the Sherman
act would be to bring into full force
all of the Rlund act that bad not been
repealed by it. It would take from
the secretary of the treasury the “dis¬
cretionary would powers” to coin silver, and
make it imperutivi At tin
close of his speech Mr. Dolpli’s mo¬
tion to amend t he journal was (on mo¬
tion of Mr. Voorhees) laid on the ta¬
ble yeas -45, nays 11 Messrs. Dolph,
(iallingcr and Perkins. Mr. Teller
made another motion to corroet the
journal and took the floor. At T,:15
o’clock p. m. Mr. Voorhees moved
that the senate take a recess until 10
o’clock Thursday morning, which was
agreed to.
02ni> Day—T he senate met at 10 a.
m. Thursday, but the discussion on
the question of the amendment of the
journal, the subject which has been
before the senate for the lust two days,
was not, taken up till 11 a. m,, when
Mr. Stewart, took the floor. The in¬
tervening hour was taken up m wait¬
ing for a quorum and in the reading
of a report front the treasury depart¬
ment ns to the financial aspect of the
government for the current fiscal year.
Tlie summing up of the document is
that, if present conditions continue,
there will bo n deficiency of fifty mil¬
lions lit the end of the year. Secretary
Oar!isle attributes the'Valliiig off in the
revenues to th< xisting financial
uncertainty He says an inspection of
the figures will show Hint the defi¬
ciency is duo to falling off in tlie rev¬
enue, not the increase of expenditures.
Mr. Stewm 1 finished his speech w ithin
two hoursuud left the chamber, He
had little to sav about the rules, ex
cept to declare at the close f bis
speech that the attempt himself to g«p. the
vice-president to disgrace and
make himself famous wiis outrageous,
and that the vice-president would not
thus lav his hands on the constitution
and laws of bis country, but would ad
minister the rules and protect tlio mi
noritj Mr. Stewart was followed by
Mr. Dubois
(U rn Day I'be fourth session ot
the legislative day of Tuesday began
Friday morning at 10 o’clock. Air.
Yoorlioos gave notice of an amend¬
ment to the rules, lie said it was sub¬
stantially tlie amendment proposed by
Air. Hill with some additions It
provides that w henever any bill or res¬
olution is pending as unfinished busi¬
ness and lias been debated thirty days,
any senator may at the same time
move to fix a time for a vote, such mo-
tie = not to r amendable or debat
ab r i and t io put immediately,
an - , if a vote on the bill or
resolution and all pending amend¬
ments shall be had al the date fixed in
the original motion, without debate or
amendment, except by unanimous
consent. While the motion to !i\ the
date for a vote is pending and also at
the time fixed by tlie senate for the
vote, no motion of any kind is to be
entertained until the bill or resolution
is filially voted upon. Air. Voorhees
then moved that the senate proceed to
the eonsideritliou of executive busi¬
ness, mid the doors wove closed.
born Day 1 lie Voorliecs'eloture res¬
olution was not taken up Saturday
morning, as it was expected it would
If there lmd beeu a morning hour
it would luivo been laid before
the senate in the ordinary course of
business. But there was no morning
hour, and there was no motion to take
up the cloture resolution. The silver
purchase repeal bill was taken up us
soon as a quorum was obtained and
Mr. I’efTer continued the speech against
it which he began Friday of last week,
speaking to a listless and inattentive
audience.
rut: hocrb.
til st Day, No bills of importance
were reported from committees in the
house Wednesday. The transaction of
routine business was proceeded with.
A bill was passed amending the stat¬
utes relating to fees of United States
marshals, clerks and commissioners.
Air. tieary then called up thcAicw York
and New Jersey bridge bill. DoAYitt
Warner, of New York, and Mr. Geary
at last came to blows iu a dispute over
an amendment to the bill, after which
it was passed. The house then resumed
considers turn of the printing bill. A
proposition to publish 400,000 addi¬
tional copies of the “Horse Book,” ex¬
cited a good deal of discussion. They
cost (50 cents per volume. A compro¬
mise providing for 75,000 copies was
agreed upon. At 5 o'clock, without
completing the consulqj* of the
bill, the house ndjuiirnt
62sd Day In /
Outhwaites. from pus
i ulee, requested
the bankruptcy Monday b the 5
for next,
ti The house prejug)
leration of routin
64 th Day.—-T he , •al
transmitted to the i ut tel in-
formation relating to Waeifie
railroad. ID snvs the gf lent was
uot made a party to the Jtbeivership
proceedings and there is grave doubt
ns to their validity as far as tbe United
.States are concerned. Special legisla¬
tion is needed to properly protect tho
interests of tho United States. Mr.
Sayres, chairman of the appro¬
priation committee, presented the
emergency deficiency bill for S3J8,-
000, and it was passed. Jerry
Simpson and Mr. Unrtis, of Kan¬
sas, got into a row over a remark of
the former, that Curtis yvsh acting as
the representative of the Santa Fe
road, but Speaker Crisp cut it short.
The house judiciary committee agreed
to report favorably the bill amending
the naturalization laws. It provides
that no alien who is an anarchist, a
polygamist or immigrated to the Uni¬
ted States in violation of tlie laws of
this country, or cannot read the United
States constitution shall be natural¬
ized us a citizen of tbe United States
or any state.
(15th Day. - fn the bouse Saturday a
bill to divide the, eastern judicial dis¬
trict of Michigan, in northern and
southern divisions was passed. An in¬
teresting discussion of the financial
condition of the treasury and tlie
country followed. The house then re¬
sumed consideration of the printing
bill, which YVttH completed and as
amended it was reported to the house.
On the passage of the bill tbe vote
stood 71 to 3. Mr. Ueltzhoover -made
the point of no quorum, and the ayes
and nays were ordered, ft resulted
148 to 8—no quorum. Thereupon, at
J :05 o’clock the house adjourned.
SOUTHERN NEWS ITEMS.
The Drill ol Her Progress and Pros¬
perity Briefly Noted.
Happenings of Interest Portrayed in
Pifhj Paragraphs.
r The strike on tho Memphis and
Charleston railroad ivas settled Wed¬
nesday, both sides making conces¬
sions All tho old men will be taken
hack.
A Fort Monroe, Va., dispatch of
Wednesday says: Tlie engagement Virginia, of
Senator Faulkner, of West
and MiR Virginia Whiting, daughter
of Colonel II. Whiting, u prominent
banker of Hampton, is announced.
The wedding will take place early in
the coining year.
Tho official report of the Brunswick
health board Wednesday gave forty-
two new cases and two deaths. Two
of the uoyv eases are on Bt. Simon’s
Island. Eighteen patients were dis-
eliarged. Wednesday’s report breaks
the record on new cases and puzzles
the people.
A dispatch of Wednesday from
Charleston. H. C., to the life saving
service at Washington reports the
Spanish steamship, ( Golden,
from Barcelona to New York,
lying partly disabled off Clmrlos-
ton liar. Part of her propeller is gone
All are reported well on board. c
The Brunswick board of health
meeting held Thursday noon, announc¬
ed thirty one now cases of yellow fever
nml one death. Twenty-five were dis¬
charged. Recapitulation—Cases under
treatment, 274; oases discharged, 289;
deaths, 29; total number of cases,529;
ratio of mortality, 9.1 percent. The
largest number of oases reported for
one day was 42.
Advices of Thursday from Louis¬
ville, Ky., state that the strike of the
shopmen of tho Louisville and Nash¬
ville may be saiil to be at an end, and
many of the strikers now find them¬
selves unable to get work. They are
willing to go back to their old places
at the terms of the company, but their
positions have been filled and Mast* sr
Mechanic Clifford will not discharge
the new men to give tho strikers
work.
A Nashville dispatch of Thursday
states that gold has been discovered in
paving quantities in East Tennessee,
and is to be mined by a syndicate of
Cincinnati capitalists, who, after thor¬
oughly prospecting, have leased seve¬
ral thousand acres of land. The find
is about thirty miles east of Athens,
and near the Great Smoky mountains
and the assays show that the ore is very
rich. Machinery for use in the inino
and a stamp mill have been bought,
and operations will begin at once.
A Galveston, Texas, special says:
The steamship Palmas, which arrived
in quarantine Wednesday evening, had
aboard eighty-nine of the crew and
passengers of the French steamship
Marseilles, which foundered at sea in
the recent cyclone off the south Atlan¬
tic coast. All effort to hoard the
Palmas and get a statement from the
erew and passengers of the boat Mar¬
seilles, has been strictly prohibited by
the quarantine authorities, who will
allow uo communication with the ves-
sel.
A Charleston, S. C., special says;
The dispensary constabulary got an¬
other move on them Wednesday amt
made three raids. They captured ten
gallons of whisky from the Southern
Express eompam \s usual it cairn
from Augusta, Gh., and was consigned
to parties in Charleston who are as
yet unknown Then they raided tin
places of W J Bowen and 1). W.
Goetjen, both on King street. In these
latter places the entire establishments
were sacked, nml the contents removed
to the jail and the proprietors placed
under bond.
The North Carolina State Associa¬
tion of ex-Confederates met Thursday
at the fair grounds at Raleigh. Col.
E. D. Hall, of Wilmington, its presi¬
dent called it to order ami delivered
an address iu which he urged thorough
organization. He was re-elected pres¬
ident by acclamation, and iu like
manner William C. Stronacb, of Ral¬
eigh, was re-elected secretary. S. A.
Ashe,P. E. Hines and F. H. Busbee were
appointed to choose u vice-president
for each congressional district. The
wives,sisters and daughters of veterans
were declared eligible to membership
in the association.
Chile is the most prosperous agri¬
cultural country of South America.
There aitf 7,000,000 acres under culti¬
vation, of which 1,100,000 are irri¬
gated. For many years the product
has averaged 450,000 tons of wheat
and 15O.QQ0 of other grains.
OUR LATEST DISPATCHES.
Tbe Happenings of a Day Chronicled in
Brief and Concise Paragraphs
And Containing the Hist of the News
From All Paris of the World.
One white and fourteen negroes com
prised the new yellow fever cases at
Brunswick Sunday. One death was
reported.
A cable dispatch from Rome, states
that tho British embassador to Italy,
Lord Vivian,died at 7 o’clock Saturday
morning, of pneumonia. Lord Viv-
lan was r ap] lointed embassador at
Rome in 1801 Kit
W. T. Berry, shoo dealer of Eufau
la, Ala., made an assignment Friday
to P. B. McKenzie for the benefit of
all creditors. The liabilities are
about 87,000. The assets will proba¬
bly cover the liabilities.
Stratton & White, electrical and
general implement dealers at Ft.
Worth, Texas, filed a deed of trust
Friday night for 8400,000, with but
$50,000 preferred. This is the largest
failure Fort Worth ever experienced.
Advices of Sunday from Buenos
Ayres state that the murder of settlers
by insurgent bunds iu the province of
iSantx FcKeus, and tbe consequent
btato of terror existing, is causing
many of tbe colonists to leave tbe
province.
Advices of Saturday from San Joso,
Costa Rica, state thut tho government
of Costa Rica has agreed to surrender
Francis H. Weeks, accused of embez¬
zling funds, in the United States, to
the United States government.
A Han Antonio, Texas, dispatch of
Friday states that an extensive bed of
fine oynx lias just been discovered in
Sutton county and steps are being
taken to quarry it. A sample taken
from tbe bed and polished is rich iu
color and pronounced as worth $10 a
surface foot.
The social democratic federation
held a demonstration in Trafalgar
square, London, Sunday. The attend¬
ance was small. In tbe procession one
of tbe banners carried described Iloine
Secretary Asquith as a murderer.
Aveling and Hyndmann were among
the speakers.
Fire at Clinton, Ky,, Sunday, de¬
stroyed Mess Bros.’ livery stable, tbe
Davis hotel, J. L. Moss’s grocery,
Johnson’s dry goods house and Iltir-
pel’s hardware store and Winter’s
drug store. The loss is estimated at
about $50,000, with$19,250 insurance.
The fire is supposed to havo been of
incendiary origin.
According to New York advices of
Saturday tho total visible supply of
cotton for the world is 2,758,492 bales,
of which 2,387,292 bales are American,
against 3,086,427 and 2,695,427, re¬
spectively last year. Receipts at all
interior towns, 24,255. Receipts on
plantations, 325,167. Crop in sight,
1,431,904.
A special from Paris states that amid
all the pomp of peace and war the re¬
mains of Marshal McMahon, ex-presi¬
dent of Frnifce, and duke of Magenta,
were LaMudeleine, eonveye :d Sunday from the church
of across tho river Seine,
to the hotel des Invalides, there to rest
until the great reveille is sounded bv
the heavenly trumpeter.
A Raleigh, N. C., dispatch of Sat¬
urday says: Heavy rains have again
set in nml are damaging the cotton
crop. Tho state commissioner of ag¬
riculture says tlmt with favorable
weather since cotton began opening
probably the entire crop would by this
date have- been picket],but the weather
1ms been remarkably unfavorable and
has caused heavy loss to the planters.
A Chicago dispatch says: The New
Orleans limited, over tho Illinois Cen¬
tral road, with every coach filled with
NVorld’s fair passengers, was wrecked
by colliding with a coal train thirty-
five miles beyond Kankakee at 1
o’clock Friday night. Eight persons
were seriously injured and many more
suffered from bruises, but did not re¬
quire the attention of a surgeon.
A special of Sunday from Battle
Creek, Mich., states that thirteen of
the twenty-six dead, as a result of the
wreck of Friday have been identified.
There are still twenty-two badly in¬
jured patients nt the hospital. Of this
number Mrs. Vance, who has both legs
cm off, cannot live. There nro at least
seven bodies that cannot be identified
and these will be buried in Oak Hill
cemetery.
A dispatch from Montreal, Canada,
savs; After a walk of 3,500 miles from
Sun Francisco to Montreal, Mdmc.
Lodn Lavalle lies iu a cot in the Notre
Dame hospital, dying from the hard¬
ships suffered during her unprecedent¬
ed tramp. She reached the city Sat¬
urday night, having been several
months on the road, and was picked
up Sunday morning on tho wharf in
an unconscious condition.
An express package containing
$3,000 was lost in transit between Li¬
ma, O.. and Fort Wayne, Tnd., a few
days ago Hiid no clue to it can lie
found The package 'vas sent bv
Agent Oyler, of the Pittsburg, Fort
Wayne and Chicago road to th e com
pany’s depository at Fort Wayne, ami
nothing has been heard from it since
the money was deposited in the care
of the Adams Express Company at
Lima.
A WRECKED BARK.
The Crew Rescued and the Wreck
Burned.
The steamship Saginaw, from Asna,
arrived at New York Thursday morn
ing ami made the following report:
October 15th, latitude 29:20, longi¬
tude 72 :45, spoke German bark Ceres,
laden with cement, 77 days from Lon¬
don for Savannah, partly dismantled,
with six feet of water in her hold and
the crew unable to keep her free.
Took off Captain Heroh, his wife and
crew of ten men. The captain reports
encountering a hurricane October
10th, during which he lost, his main
and mizzen topmasts, sprung the fore¬
mast head, stove tho bulwarks, decks,
etc., and sprung a leak. The crew
were unable to free her. On leaving
the bark they set her on tire, fore and
aft, and when last seen she was burn¬
ing fiercely and was probably totally
destroyed.
THE HEWS IH GENERAL.
Telegraphic Advices
And Presented in Pointed and Reada¬
ble Paragraphs.
Tlie wife of late Senator Roacoe
Conklin died at her home in Utica, N,
Y,, Wednesday.
J'larly Thursday morning tiro de-
fffroyed the Canada Bank Note Com¬
pany’s building ut Montreal, Canada.
Tbe loss is $125,000; insurance, 840,-
000 ,
The Battle monument to commemo¬
rate one of the most important events
of the revolutionary war was unveiled
at Trenton, N. J., Thursday, and was
a great success.
A. W. Steinblock, his daughter Ida,
and his son William were suffocated
by gas Wednesday night at the Rniser
hotel at Chicago. The family came
to the world’s fuir from Hampton, la.
»Yt is supposed they blew out tbe gas.
Bursting YY'ater dams in the territory
of Tepuca, Mexico, have caused great
loss of life on several haciendas.
Twenty-four persons are known to bo
drowned. At Santa Inez, in tbe state
of Oxaca, the town was inundated and
the town ball and many other build¬
ings were swept away There were
similar disasters in other towns
The supreme council of the Scottish
Rite Masons of the southern jurisdic¬
tion began the concluding day’s busi¬
ness of the present session at St. Louis
Thursday morning. Upon the mem¬
bers elected previously to higher ranks
the grand commander conferred the
degree. Other business of a secret
nature was attended to and at 2 o’clock
p. m. the meeting adjourned.
The French neYvspapers publish long
comments upon tho sympathy death express¬ of
ed by the Russians at the
Marshal MacMalion, and seem greatly
pleased at it. The czar’s message of
thanks to President Carnot for the
courtesies extended to the Russian
sailors at Toulon and in Paris has also
greatly pleased tlie newspapers of Paris
and other cities of France, and it may
be said that France and Frenchmen
feel more confident today in the sta¬
bility of the republic and in the
strength of their army and navy than
they have done for twenty years past.
A Paris special of Thursday snvs:
The remains of Marshal McMahon are
still lying in state at Mont Gresson,
where the coffin rests on a platform in
the mortuary chamber, covered with a
pall, flecked with silver stars. Upon
the casket are displayed the field mar¬
shal’s baton, the sword and chapeau
of the dead ’ soldier president. The
interment will take place at Mont
Gresson on Sunday In compliance
with the request of the Russian gov¬
ernment, .Admiral Avellan will be
preseut at the obsequies of Marshal
McMahon.
W. C. Bunn, receiver of the Chatta¬
nooga, Rome and Columbus Railway
Company, has filed a petition in the
circuit court of tho United States at
Savannah, asking Judge Pardee to re¬
quire Receivers Comet and Lowry, of
the Savannah and Western, to turn th e
Chatt anooga, Romo and Columbus road
back overto the company. Theground
js that the deed of conveyance made by
the president and board of directors of
Chattanooga, Rome and Columbus Rail¬
way Company to the Savannah and
Western was fraudulent and drawn for
tho benefit of the Central railroad.
A Vienna special of Thursday says:
The political situation in Austria is
greatly strained. The government
does uot possess the majority necessary
to pass a motion of approval of the re¬
pressive measures taken in regard to
the city of Prague, as a result of the
Czech disturbances. All parties are
estranged from tho government on ac¬
count of the franchise bill; and the
journeying of Count von Taat'e, presi¬
dent of the council and minister of
foreign affairs to Buda Pesth, where
they are to consult with I mperor
Francis Joseph, has given rise to the
rumor that a dissolution of parliament
is to be anticipated in the near future.
AFTER THE HIGHBINDERS.
A Big Scheme on Foot to Send Them
Back to China.
A San Francisco special says: The
Chinese Six Companies now appear to
be eager to take advantage of the
Geary act before the McCreary bill
becomes a law. Tho Six Companies
aro anxious to get rid of tho highbind¬
ers and worst criminal element among
the Chinese in San Francisco. To this
end the Six Companies are aiding the
police to arrest, convict and deport
highbinders. Tuesday sixty-two Chi¬
nese were arrested by the police as
vagrants. The agents of the Six Com¬
panies and police detectives inspected
the whole crowd at tho city prison.
Fifteen of the culprits were released,
as they were found to be hard-working
Chinese. The remaining forty-seven
will be arrested under the Geary law
ami an attempt made to deport them.
THE NEWS FROM BRUNSWICK.
Five Heaths Saturday and Forty-Nine
New Cases.
There were officially reported at
Brunswick, Saturday, five deaths and
forty-nine new oases of yellow fever,
the record breaker of the epidemic.
The warm weather following the few
days of raiu and the cool spell has
brought the disease rapidly to the
front. There are now 258 under treat¬
ment, 00 white anti 198 colored. The
outlook is not cheering for twenty-
five days yet. When the dread fam¬
ine seems to be disappearing and the
people aro breathing easier deaths
roll up and the fever increases alarm-
ingly. l uder
Recapitulation: dead treatment
258; discharged, 360; 34;
total, 652 ; ratio of mortality, 8.05 per
cent.
A Whole Trniu Crew Killed.
An accident to the Pennsylvania
limited at Wel^sville. Ohio, Tuesday
morning, at 6.15 o’clock, resulted in
the death of the entire engine crew
and fatal injuries to three men who
occupied the baggage and express car.
The limited ran into a freight train
which was crossing the main track.
RISE AND OTHERWISE.
A book on famous women has been
published in Italy.
“Saturday, pay day, drink day,
crime day ."—Lord Bramwell.
The engraver of medals at the Roy¬
al mint in Stockholm is a woman.
The California W. C. T. U..will em¬
ploy no worker or speaker who uses
tobacco.
To meet increased expenditure for
military purposes, Sweden is to-levy a
tax on malt,
Women florists are aenieving great
success in their business, which seems
preeminently adapted to them.
The Indians of Eustern Washington
have taken steps to prevent the sale
of liquor among them by unprincipled
whites.
The Glasgow University Total Ab¬
stinence Society carries on work both
in and out principally of tlie University, the lat¬
ter being in a mission.
A woman is one of the best veterin¬
ary surgeons in New 'Orleans Vs she
is a w ealthy woman, she does her work
for love of animals, not for pay.
The governor of Moscow lias increas¬
ed the severity of his Jewish persecu¬
tions This is having a ruinous effect
on real estute and other interests, as
fully thirty thousand lodgings are emp-
ty
A civil engineer in India, in writing
to a brother in England, who proposed
joining him, said that unless his total
abstinence principles were well estab¬
lished, ho had better bring his coffin
with him.
A petition signed and sent by the
women in a Nolivegian town to the lo¬
cal board protested against the em¬
ployment of girls in cafe and brandy
shops, asking that the brandy shops
be forced to olose earlier.
It is sometimes stated that none but
low caste Hindus have accepted Chris¬
tianity. This is combated by the Rev.
H. L. Mukerjee, xvho gix-es a list of
tiventy-seven Indian men of position
who Yvithin fifteen months have adopt¬
ed the Christ of the New Testament.
The Gypsies of Great Britain live as
ignorant of God ns though in the
darkest realms of heathendom. A gos-
pel wagon mission is about to be start¬
ed Yvhieh will be sent to the centers
where they gather, there to open
schools and preach tho gospel to them.
In a recent graduating class at Am¬
herst College, it «as found that the
non-users of tobacco had gained txven-
ty-four per cent in weight,thirty-seven
per cent in heighth, forty-two per
cent in chest girth and had eight cubic
inches greater lung capacity than the
users of the weed.
Honor Dear Old Mother.
Time has scattered the snowy flakes
on her brow, plowed deep furrows on
her cheeks, but is she not sweet and
beautiful now? The lips which have
kissed many a hot tear from the child¬
ish cheek are the sweetest lips in all
the world.
The eym is dim, yet it glows with
the rapt radiance of a holy love which
can never fade.
Oh, ves, she is a dear old mother.
Her sands of time are nearly run
out, bht'fcfcbK-"-IT. 1 k-4k they will go
further and reach down lower for you
than any other on earth,
You cannot walk into midnight
whore she cannot see you; you cannot
enter a prison whose bars shall keep
her out; you can never mount a scaf¬
fold too high for her to reach that she
may kiss and bless you.
In evidence of her deathless love,
when the world shall despise and for¬
sake you—when it unnoticed—the leaves you by the
wayside to die dear
old mother will gather you up in her
feeble arms, carry 7 y 7 ou home and tell
you all your virtues until you almost
forget that your soul is disfigured' by
vices.
Love her tenderly and cheer her de¬
clining years with holy devotion.—
Bugle Call.
Mistaken Anarchists.
Ragged Robert ‘These ’ere an-
archists won’t never succeed till they
git a battle-cry Their ‘Bread or
Blood’ motto don’t create no enthu
siasm. ”
Wearie Willie—“Guess not.”
Ragged Robert—“No. Ef they want
ter git the people with ’em, ef they
want ter stir up th’ hearts o’ patriots
to noble deeds, let ’em march through
th’streets yellin’ ‘beer or blood!’ an’
we’d all join iu.”— New York Weekly.
millions
of House¬
keepers
A RE ing that ing lible Royal Powder most daily of all infal¬ tests, Bak¬ test¬ by
the test of practical use.
They find it goes further,
makes lighter, sweeter,
finer-flavored, purer and
more wholesome food
than any other, and is al¬
ways uniform in its work.
Its. great qualities, thus
proven, are the cause of its
wonderful popularity, its sale
being greater than that of all
other cream of tartar baking
powders combined.
Will You Marry Soon?
If -o. you are obliged to have a t .lid
is karat -ul l ring. Von will want to
ue sure that u IS IS karai, pure
and genuine. Write to n» tor our
catalogue ot wedding ring;
J. P. STEVENS 4. BRO., Jewelers,
ATLANTA, >i\.
*«i
d %
Y
m
' l r
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. Tlje many, who live bet¬
ter man others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, W’orld’s by best more products promptly
ada ’ pting the to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of embraced the pure in liquid the
remedy, laxative Svrup principles of Figs.
Its excellence Is acceptable due to its presenting and pleas¬
in the form most and truly
ant to the taste, the refreshing perfect lax¬
beneficial properties of a
ative ; effectually headaches cleansing the and system, fevers
dispelling colds, curing constipation.
and It has permanently given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid¬
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak¬
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug¬
gists iu 50c and $1 bottles, but 1'ig it is Syrup man¬
ufactured by the California
Co. only, whose name is printed Syrup on of every Figs,
package, also the name,
and being well informed, you will uot
accept any substitute if offered.
99
“ 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.@
McELREES’
OP
Jr & sms
i® y ggvj|f
Pn ■ i
T
m fy
p-»
■
For FoinalB Diseases.
® T RANGES
The Best for Either Heating or Cooking
Excel in Style, Oornfoi t and Durability,
ASK YOUR STOVE DEALER
To show you SHEl’T'ARD’S L atest catai.ogub.
tf no dealer near you write to
ISAAC A. SHEPPARD & CO.,
LARGEST maa i'v’rzw south.
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
WITH
THOMSON’S' Ja ^-
SLOTTED S “
CLINCH RIVETS.
is required. Only a hammer needed to drive
r.nd c inch th. m easily and quickly, leMy :n g ihe clinch
absolutely smooth. Inquiring Rivets. no hoe to he mndo in
die lea'her nor burr for the Thev are ftlroiijr*
touch and diirahlo. -Millions now in use. All
lemiths. uniform >r ass >rted, put up in boxe-L
Ask your denier for them* or send 40c. Ill
stamps for il box ol 100 , assorted sizes Man'ld by
JUDSON L THOMSON MFG. C0 V
WALTHAM, MASS.
■BBMB M Bfi POISGilI MfflHB jl If any ono doubts tha*^
iBLOOD I |
A SPECIALTY.
H ao^nm nii -I f ! ‘ n -nrial Lacking is
$„qo,ooo. When mercury,
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Tan TdeA iT FA Hlllouoncss, M ILV MEDICINE
■ * For Headache, Indigestion, Conr.tJpatlon, Hud B §
|Complexion. land oil disorder Offensive of the Stomach, breath, .^agjgSMh s
■
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iaiKiimui: m m <vmm m> *» mi- m m «aiiiuamiinal
CANCER
CURED WITHOUT THE KNIFE
Or use of pan nfui, i ur .i-ig, poisonous plaa- Dr.
tors. Cancers lusively Fort treated. Payne, Ala
P. B. Green’s Sai latormm,
O — ■■■■■ « ■ » ■ ■ ■ —
UPTURESEgSE day by mod*
■ 3Iechanical ..every Mcan«. Our tells
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you how -1. B. Seeiejf & Co. pnVaeipiSir
jlngleside 3ES,etreat.
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10 CE?4T^ pi *>p k5 < \i wi ?
DlStory-" and address In the bushels •• Agents’ of
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N OE R Cured Permanently
no kn i
Best Cough Syrup. Tables Good. U £2
ga»-^gMti&i;asaslSiai in tixto. Sold by druggrists._
a. K. V. Fm^Mnirte, ,'£3-