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About Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1883)
What a Newspaper Costs. Mr. Charles A. Dana has been giving views on New Yory city journalism, Tie says^a great improvement is " notice- 7 “^ Hhble. " Better talent ‘ is now employed, of . A competent writer ^ leaders will be laid from from §100 §100 to to 8150 $la 0 per per week; week; aud and no no man an functions fit fit to to supervise supervise etlitor-m-chief them them and and perform perform of can be pad week. for The less than reporters from are 8150 of two to 8200 classes, per Those of the regular staff are paid by the f h 5 E>e J®" 0 * 1 ?. n °l ? nly routlne duties oi reporting, but are always , pared be sent off special pre to upon service, in which case their railroad fares, car are paid by the ofhee. Then there are a ■number of reporters who are attached to leach paper who are paid according to ■the |any work they perform and without hav prescribed functions, and should be in readiness to do WnatevOT may l>e necessary. , “I know several men who, without hav [ ing regular seventy-five salaries, will average from fifty to dollars a week. Of j I these two classes of reporters a first rate j paper must eaeli employ about fifty. In | Washington newspaper has need of regular correspondents or reporters and i occasional contributors, and the differ I I ent papers differ as to the respective number of these two classes. In Albany each New York paper must have its regu¬ lar staff devoted to this service. In Eu¬ rope every leading paper has its regular staff of correspondents. There must be a correspondent in London and one in Paris who report constantly either by post or cable.” It will be seen by tins : estimate that making a newspaper is no child’s daily play. could The day is past when a great be gotten out with one man whose hat was his desk, and who wrote heavy “leaders” while seated on an old flour barrel. Saved his Money. I Gambetta left 800,000 francs. This I came from his shares in the Republique \ Francaim' newspaper. When it was a 11 - noiince.il that his share was one million francs. Ganibetta said: “What a lot of things we can do with that for the Republic.” “No,’’replied my friend, “Ido not un j derstand it in that way at all. We in tend to place this money so that you can’t get at the capital, for we know very well what you would do with it.” Gambetta, however, persuaded hundred him that he must have two or three thousand francs with which to pay off some old debts, and lie finally allowed the remainder of the money to be in¬ vested to suit his friends’ desire. Short ly after the investment was made, they were a little surprised one day to hear that he had popped into the ollice of the PelHe Republique and asked for twenty thousand francs on liis account, and that, a few days later he had come again in urgent need of ten thousand francs. S^tep, . Fearing fijgy lest quietly he might took make some to false find measures : but what he had done with the money, jtetand *' after a careful search of a month or so they found that he had lent it all to f the manager of a theatre, who and had had got ■% into trouble with his creditors, as a last resort come to Gambetta as illl nld friend, asking him to save his lion , or and his life. The manager did not succeed in arranging matters with his creditors, and consequently blew out his brains, so that Gambetta never saw his thirty-five thousand francs more. » m 1 Tornadoes aud Earthquakes. 1 did much ter *v? |rible The tornadoes which so Enay work in the South a few days ago, furnish some valuable testimony in to |th:-plaintiff or the defendant a case v .on trial at Jefferson City, Mo. issued Joseph | s' Bilker, a farmer, held a policy Company, which by the Rockford Insurance ,; insured him against loss if his house should be destroyed by fire or lightning. Tho house was swept away in April, 1880, by the great tornado which ruined .so much property in Marshfield. The com¬ pany held that the house had been de¬ stroyed by the wind, and refused to pay, I but Mr. Baker declared that the destruc | tive force of the tornado was electricity I and lightning, and upoji, that ground sued the company for the amount named I in his policy. The theory that tornadoes Si are electrical storms has, therefore, been on trial, aud well-known experts have r testified, some of them appearing for the I plaintiff and others for the defendant. I The most eminent of these experts is Thof. Tico, who has collected a large j; mass of evidence in support of his be¬ lief that tornadoes are caused by elec¬ tricity, and that the destroying force is -,, electrical. It is true that every tomndc ■ v is accompanied by great electrical dis S turbances, audit may be that tahny of the very strange and curious freaks of It • these storms are the work of electricity, but the observations of meteorologists do not seem to support the theory that tor¬ nadoes are of electrical origin. It is more reasonable to hold that electricity ' i is generated or develojied to some, extent I after the beginning of the storm by the i conflict of mighty degrees currents of of air which are of different temperature. Women In Civil Service. A Washington letter says: . “A book could be filled with pathetic histories of women in the civil service. rnlp, the Many single arc soldier’s widows. As a women, as well as those who have been married, are supporting others, mothers, young brothers and sisters, sometimes aged parents, sometimes a large family, and sometimes there is a drunken hus¬ band hovering about and trying to get the earnings fiiat are needed to keep his children alive. Not a few of the women who sit down to their desks promptly with their fellow clerks in the morning have been at work for hours, dressing their children, getting their breakfast and hurrying them off to school, and they the'day’s go back to their home work, when routine at the department is over. Such women look forward to a hpliday, not for rest and pleasure, but for the amount of home work they can get out of it. They are much more for¬ tunate than many of their sisters who are struggling for existence, but there is a good deal of commonplace heroism in their lives, nevertheless.” A Check on the Cashier. So o many book keepers and cashiers are defaulting defaulting now-a-days, now-a-days, that tnat tne the mat- mat ter is attracting attention among busi ness ness men men and ana others, omers, and ana many many sugges- sugges tions _______|________I________________ are offered. A practical book keep- r ing writes as follows aud his suggestions are are worthy worthy of of more more than than a a passing passing no- no tice:—“Wherever n.... a man has the lunwt. baud ling of money let there be placed a check upon him by having his accounts ex amined bv another employee, or, better still bv a member of the firm either derstood at the time the engagement is made that this is the rule of the house, and let this rule be carried out with the utmost re«nilaritv. It is nonsense to sav, - some have done that this will “hurt a man’s feelings. ” My opinion is that an honest man will gladly submit to it, in esmuch as it takes a'great responsibil itv off his shoulders, while a rogne will f jon be found out, thereby saving his employer, perhaps, considerable loss, The firm I am with is a large and well known one, and I therefore have expe rience. otherise I would not. be where I M lieu I engaged . the ,1 supei vis- . am. was ion I speak of was exercised over me. After a year mv directors were kind enough to sav that in future this should not be done any J more, V as they ' were sat isfied . ■, that 1 , . mi then* frums o ^oie safe i m ■ ni\ hands.” I there and then requested them to be kind enough to continue our former system, for the reasons above stated, although I appreciated gave them to under stand that I duly their mark of confidence. At my repeated, urgent request we kept on the even tenor of our way, and the result is that lio doubt— not even the slightest suspicion—exists i„ the minds ot my direct.™, while I go home in the evening without having to worry myself whether my directors do not, perhaps, have some misgivings about me or my cash account. I repeat, , the ,.' only , way to keep , tilings , . straight m an office which is to keep right-minded a check on the cashier, to no man will object. "Lr* This >» can i*— be done in a *?r «“* i: prevents irauu. Worse Thau a Brick. AX INFERNAL MACHINE TO HE CAREIlU.) IN THE CROWN OP A HAT. A Harlem gunsmith and model mnkei who has had considerable experience in constructing intricate machinery, includ¬ ing devices for handling powerful explo¬ sives, said lately that lie had in the past few months made two so-called in¬ fernal machines that were concealed in unoeent-looking silk hats. The ma¬ chinery is operated by clockwork. He added: “ To conceal the machinery there is placed over it a concave mirror. Any curious person looking into “the hat would not notice its shallow depth be¬ cause of the appearance his face would assume. The can is intended for nitro¬ glycerine, and will hold considerably that more than a quart. It is intended (he man who wishes to use the machine shall wear it into the building he wishes plac¬ to injure. Removing his liat and ing it against a wail, he will take a handkerchief out of it and at the same time remove the pin that allows the clockwork to start. Then he will put on a soft hat, which he will take from his pocket, and walk hat top-heavy away.” and liable “Isn’tsuch a to drop off?” the reporter asked. “ Not so heavy as you would think; only two pounds and about five ounces. Any one can accustom himself to carry brick like that in his hat. ” a Holding Power or malls. The extensive use to which nails and screws are put in construction lends con¬ siderable interest to any records of ex¬ perience tondiug to discover their hold¬ ing power. Haupt, in his “ Military holding Bridges,” gives a table of the power of wrought-iron lOd nails, 77 to the pound, and three inches long. The nails were driven through a 1-inch board into a block, and the board was then dragged in a direction perpendicular Taking pine to the length of tbef nails. a plank nailed to a pine block with eight nails to the square foot, the average breaking weight per nail was found to be 580 pounds. Bimiiar experiments with oak showed the breaking weight to be 415 pounds. With 12 nails to the square foot the holding power was 542 \ pounds. pounds and with G nails in pine 4G3J 12 The highest result obtained was for nails to the square foot in pine, • tin breaking weight being in this case 612 pounds per nail. The average strength decreases with the increase of surface. Tredgold gives the force in pounds dried re¬ quired to extract 3d brads Irom Christiana deal at right angles to the grain of the wood as 58 pounds. The force to draw a wrought-iron Gd nail was 187 pounds, the length forced into the wvkxI being 1 inch. I’acilie toast Mining Stocks. A writer in Harper’s speaking of silver mining stocks on the Pacific coast says: The aggregate value of tho mining stocks which belonged to the list of the San Francisco board at the period of highest prices, in the year 1875, was, in round numbers, $282,000,000. The aggregate value of the same stocks in the summer of 1881 was but 817,000,000. There had ocenrred a shrinkage of 8295,000,000, or more than fifteen times the amount of the total value surviving. What had happened? The “bottom had dropped out” of the famous “Comstocks,” which had been during their productive known period thd among the richest mines to history of the world. “Consolidated, Virginia,” which had lieen valued at 875,000,000, and which in seven years produced 865,000,000 in silver, was now estimated as worth less than one. “Sierra Nevada” had fallen from 827, 000,000 to 8825,000. But the greatest shrinkage of all was in “California,” which declined from 884,000,000 to $351,000. These figures alone explain a depression the vestiges of which, though the ruinous crisis is long past, still remain. The stock-gambling hardly mania had possessed the community, making a distinction of either age or sex, and when the bubble broke there was reason enough for gloom among those who had iaid up their treasures ir. this kind of securities. A VETERAN BENEFACTOR. Hl» l*awi 1 IIV, Pr«*wni I”pon Plans, S*nlij«K*l un<l \V1 vi lit* Has to Suy linn. a That Astoi.idled V’trfc Tune *.) Nearly forty years ago a young man. of unusaal endowments, began to mold public opinion upon _________|_________ a subject of vital importance. ] ji !C a ^ p pioneers, his early.efforts t ____________ were uu successful, but his ability anil the value of his hi* work work soon soon won won public *•••*• 1 ........ confidence, and 1 to-day to-day there there is is nor. nor. a a village village or hauilet n the p^ U [ r (ATl s that .'' 1 VVhen,°the^?or he contemplated •. it'wasS'arm'd he estnbli«h yesterday incut large magazine t this city, the of a m fact was deemed so important that a repro p r . Dio Lewis is a gentleman oi s;\i> years air 1 two hundred pounds. wi:h suow-whiie hair and beard, but proba dy the most pur feet picture of health ami vigor in the me “d ^£^ 1 ™ o£ w0 , k he has already dm.. . promises sti.t greater activity for years to coarteou-ly, come. He and re ceived the interviewer most in ™t>ly to a question said: Ih^Vcome here for the same reason t hat 1 went to Boston twenty-live yeais ago. Then Boston was the best platform in the country from which to speak ot education. New York has now bo come most hospitable to progressive thoughts an( j especially so to movements on behalf of physical training. “I have reason to know the great and abiding interest, of the American people in this subject. They have come to realize that the future of our country pivots upon our jiliysicnl vitality, aud especially upon ilie vigor of our women. .My new magazine will bear the title ‘Dio Lewis’ Monthly,’ and be devoted to Sanitary and Social Science. 1 pages to inaugurate a new “Have you not written several books on the subject?” - Yes, nine volumes, and some of (hem ll k< Our Girls,’ published by the Harpers, have had an enormous circulation, but the best -*-»>£ ’£ 5 S& 8 & ought to conclude with ten years of organized warfare.” “D c;or, what is the occasion of this new interest in Health questions? "It has come through suffering, which seems p, e on ly road .to self knowledge. Ti-e stomach, heart, kidneys or fiver fall into trouble, happiness is gone, and then people give attention to their health.” fcSssjR^isBSsasa diseases of the jthin the last few years kidneys have greatly multiplied. When 1 was engaged in practice, thirty-five and forty years ago, serious disease eif the kidneys was rare; but now distressingly frequent and fatal.” 1 “To what do you attribute this great in¬ crease of kidney troubles?” stimulating drinks, adul¬ “To the u eof terated food and irregular habits of life.” “Doctor, have you any confidence in the remedy of which we hear so much nowadays, Warner’s Safe Cure?” ”1 believe in tho ounce cure.” of prevention, rather than in a ton of “But have you noticed tho remarkable testimonials of Warner’s remedy?” “I have, and confess that commendations they have puz¬ zled of proprietary and astonishedjne. medicines The usually come from unknown persons residing in hack counties. But I see in our most reputable newspapers the warmest praise of Warner’s Safe Cure from College Professors, respectable ph vsi cians, and other persons of high intelligence and character. To thrust such testimony aside physician may he professional, forget that but valuable it is unmanly. addi¬ No cau tions to our Materia Medica have sprung from just such sources. 1 was so impressed with this cloud Warner’s of witnesses that I purchased neighbor¬ some bottles of Safe Cure at a ing drug store, and analyzed one of them to see if it contained anything poisonous. Then I took throe of tho prescribed doses at once, and found there was nothing injurious in it. I do not hesitate to say that if l found my kidneys in serious trouble, I should use tliis remedy, because of the hopelessness of all ordinary treatment, and because when a hundred intelligent that reputable certain persons remedy unite has in the statement a cured them of a grave malady, I choose io believe that they speak the truth. ‘But as you prevention. may know, my For great interest in life lies in forty years I have labored xn this field. One of the phases of my work in New England was the estab¬ lishment of the Ladies’ Seminary at Lexing¬ ton, >li}S3. in My aim physical vvas to illustrate the possibilities their school the fife. This training institution of girls during before 1 left it, tho largest and successful became, seminary . for most young women owned and managed by one person day in our country. I sat down to dinner every with n family of two hundred persons. The remarkable results of this muscle training among girls were given in my paper published in the North American Review of December. 1882. Besides I established the Normal Institute for Physical its Training President in Boston, and for ten years was and Manager. Dr. Walter Leonard Channing, 1 )r. Thomas Hoskins, Pro¬ fessor aud o! liens were among its teachers, and more than four hundred per¬ sons took its diploma and went out into all parts of the land to tench the new school of gymnastics. to devote And now to tho the magazine years left which to me 1 I propose here establish. It have come to will bo tho largest periodica! and will ever devoted the to hundred this field of literature, questions hygiene present and one of with the simplicity of a child’s talk. To this end all so-called learning will be subordinated. The maga¬ zine will be more or lose illustrated, and will strive t ; reach a high place in tho confidence and hearts of the people. In a few weeks our first number will appear, and ue shall fondly iiope for it a hearty welcome.” The facts above narrated are indeed most important. It is gratifying to know that the lifelong experiences of a gentleman who stands without a pear in successfully demon¬ strating the always principles been in of hygiene; whose heart has sympathy with the afflicted, and whose brain lias ever been ac¬ tive in planning for their relief, are to bo given to the public through the pages of a magazine. And it is specially significant and proof positive of rare merit that a pro¬ prietary Warner’s medicine, Safe even Cure with is such high stand¬ ing as known to have, should be indorsed and recommended by a man so able, so reputable Dr. and of such •stional renow n as Dio Lewis. Monster Turtles. Some of the newspapers are inclined to make fun of the Gloucester crew that reported a big turtle seen at sea. Sev eral years ago some workmen were • making excavations in lower India, when they came on such to what was evidently a house; at least the natives con sidered it. It was carefully unearthed, and turned out to be the shell of an enormous turtle that lived during tho tertiary period. It was fourteen feet long and nine feet high, and competent naturalists expressed the opinion that when alive it must have been twenty five feet long. It was a land tortoise, and crawled about like our common wood tortoises df to-day, making foot prints as large as those of an elephant, fn the Western country known as the j> a d Lands hundreds of fossil turtles have been found, their interiors filled with solid rock, once the sand or muddy lake or sea-bed in which they lived, As Iowa eilitor, being asked by a cor respondent if hogs paid , lias looked over hi® subscription list and a decided that dioj not. Deserted oil Towns. |}„t Blit if It ev,., n re , IS is a. a nieturo pict.uc of 01 aesoiauon, desolation says Bui'ut'tto, it is ail Oil town tllilfc lias been left; that has gone off by itself and died. The • dismantled derricks stand .Vy.nl about like Kl,,, SO o,, many 1111 , 1 V tombshvies t< mustoues. Tlio ine deserted llOllses, Wltll ttieir sllllttereil windows, look as though the crowd, flviug *■ away iV to new oil fields, had cruelly ii. put . OUt tit . yts <1 f. t 1 ie . _ C Id i i town lest it i should iollow. lhe doors hang ill crippled fashion on paralyzed hinges; thev have forgotten their old hospitality 1 *. * of the “flush I times; , • >> 11 there • neither ... is welcome nor rejection in _ their half-open attitude, but. they look as though they stood ut.unl ajar ninr to to nave 8rtM tlio tile gliosts erhosts tho tneI trouble trouble of hunting ior tile JvOJ liolo, -Lhe ills- ; mal creak of the walking-beam is sue- ; eeeded by a quiet infinitely rigger more dismal, ■' : Tho merry song of the lias ceased. and the voice of the notnndio sluggler mingles no longer with tlio defiant shout of the rustier, Tho gin-mill has passed away and no longer runs even on a single shift. The chimneys topple over and wear the disheartened look of a hat out of season. Even the tramps slum the town, and there is a general look of a linen duster in December about the settlement. Usually one or two of the poorest houses are inhabited by dejected families, who seem to wonder what they are staying there the for. I have often wondered the why deserted few oil people who did re¬ main in town not move into the best houses, but they never do. They are usually people who are tpo dolefully poor to follow the crowd to t he new oil fields, and when they stay behind they remain in their own houses. They take the fences and the shutters and porches and floors from the properly of their absent wealthier neighbors for firewood, but it never seems to occur to them to move into the mansions and burr, up their hovels. 1 don't know what they do for a living. 1 often wonder that tiny don’t start a saloon. That flourish! s where any other business fails. And if requires soflittle furniture; just a picture of George Washington and a half bushel of sawdust. SrECtmAfiNa.—Acorrespondont writes: “A New York merchant remarked : ‘I have been an occasional speculator for eighteen years, and have kept books to show the net result of speculation, which tlio average speculator does had not. specula¬ About to close inf business, I my tive accounts balanced, and deducting commissions to brokers, found that i was really short, but for 820,000 which T made lately in a real estate transaction, that represented eighteen years’ profits. At times I have made thousands, and but for my books should have supposed In brief, myself a considerable gainer. brokers’ commissions have absorbed my profits. t Not Hnliofied willi u l.iltlr. The Burgeon General of the ('. B. A.. Dr. B. P. Moore, writing from headquar¬ ters, Richmond, Va., in 1802, states n!)i eiallv that, “if Dr. Worthington can furnish large ijuautities of Iris Cholera and Diarrhoea Medicine, we will place il in the army, as a remedy in lmwel affec¬ tions.” sold for 25 and 50 emits a buttle, by druggists and dealers. The sympathy of good humor, of most curiosity people consists and self of im¬ a mixture portance. Gastrine carts dyspepsia. druggist Wlmt for it. more do you want? Ask your Oak. thine is in Hqinl form. The people wh ariT.v nc-.vr * oiuvtylicl arc those ttiiom vve i ithcr love mostor i-espect least, t-adins nnu cirls requiring anon-alcohol, in gi-ulle sii'nu'ant, will find Brown’s Iron Bitters hotrtfioi<i!. Those people each in other whom develop heart and late. understand ing balance Wriohihvim.I', Pa. Bov. Kliith Wileo 15 says: “Brown’s Iron Bitters have perma¬ nently cured m e of chill* a nd feye- ” We usually learn to wait for. only when m Imva no longer anything to wait I' A vi'TTEVll.l.t, Ark. Rev. T. .1. R-illy snvv: “J used Brown’s Ivon Bitters for Indi¬ gestion and chills with entire si tit faction. ” To tie content with little is difficult: to 1 >0 content with much, impossible. latdiee A ohilflron’s boots A shoes etyi’l, run over if Ljon'i Patent Heel Stiffener, are used. OoNtUDEli existence as a task, anti you will be able always to endure it. u-—. . Bhenmatine-Ooutaiine, the only Dr. rial Klmore’t 105 Wil¬ dis liam Bt., N. Y., is curative ever cover ctl for rheumatism, Htoiuiwdi and best diBcaHes. remedy known for kidney, liver and Abun¬ dant proof*. Send for circulars. Tjiohe to be feared arc not those who dispute hut those who concede. •* Dr. Ben sou’s Celery and Chamomile Fills me worth their weight in gold m nervous and rick headache.”—Dr. H. H. Schlicliter, of Baltimore. __ "floBituEH protects us from piissiou-. One liohhy heeomcH a passion. li Fit:,' Jfr/ti ' no cntl of tiiedicineno tc!\ rf . fir. !',cnx<>n\* Skin (‘me h<n driven away all lUpliuil* and I’m mail II tel Id '—Idu c. Yountr, Hamilton. III. Drug^isfs keep it. $1. Wiikn in the art work-shop. finds no temple op« n, it takes ref¬ uge PlTRIl cod-liver oil, from »elece«l livers on the sea *hore by CaaweU, Hazard <fc Co., New York, Absolutely pure and aweet. Pa¬ tient, who have once taken it prefer it to all othera. Phyeieian. deelaro it luperior to all other oils. ____ Mix cluireoal with the food when fattening turkey.. The charcoal corrects acidity of tic stomach and prevent. indiRction. Nature is the great teacher, .he clothes the fowls and animals with warmer clothing for winter; helps them to ca-t it off in summer; makes the best Hair Oil, Carboline, which is Petroleum perfumed, snd sold at a bottle. It is said that a well-kept Hook of poultry is the most profitable thing about th<- farm, not excepting the milch cow. Chappkd hands, face pimples and rough •kin cured by using Juniper Tar Soap made t>y Caswell, Hazard & Co., New York. Tw. purest butter ever made may become tainted and poisoned in one sluirt hour by ol. jectional surroundings. I!«*nry’» CtrbfHr Salve. Is the Best Salve for Cuts, Bruises, deers. Salt Khcum, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, anil all kinds of Skin EruntionH ; Freck¬ les and Pimples. Get Henry’s Carbolic Salve, as all others are counterfeits. Price 25 cents. Howto Shorten Life. Abemcthy, the great English surgeon, asked a ladv who' told Mm she only had a cough : “What would you have? The plague?” Beware of “only coughsTlio worst cases can, how¬ ever, be cured bv Dr. Wm. Hall’s Balsam for th- j.ungr. In i.S‘KSS! Whooping Cough , and “.'its Crotp iSSS“ , 'S‘’ by tJi druggists and dealers in trad: ine. WomniiN Friend. Having been troubled for many years with kidney rti ”"**• with 6,,vor ' ! I mins ™ W b »'' k nnd Hmbs-my Snl ., iw were time8 very l«<lly swollcn-1 was advlB'il to go to the hospital for treatment, which 1 .lit "ii tiie sdviee of a friend, but found no relief, «t least only of n temporary nature, and I had iciwn np »n ho|H»..f » *«» until my hn«b*nd was advised to use Hunt's Remedy by a fne,,,] that hail usod it and boon oui-ed of a severe case of dropsy ami kidney trouble. I procured a bottle. **nd had net used one-half of the bottle before Ibegnii to be 1 eU '“ r no in tU« back, and the uv ^m; ut »•> - limbs commenced to V» down, nnd my nppotue better, for I had become so bad that nil I ate dis tressed me very much. It was realty dyspepsia. com* bined with the other troubles, ami I have used four ix-ai-s «nd *m side to do my work mil «tt*-nd to household duties, winch before hail been a bnrden to mo And , „„ ouIy tlwllk s n,,uedy for tu e health amt hamiinesK »im>h i now enjoy. *nd esteem it ■' emit privilege and duty t.. give you this letter 111 b ”halt of my mauy suffering lady fricuc s 11 Uostunsnd „„d enn only say in «mc1u*iun that if you once try it you will be convinced, an I \vaa» even against tny own will, that Hunt's Remedy is indeed a woman’s friend. You are at lilierty to use this for their benefit, if you so choose. Respectfully yours, AIRS. W.M. GRAY, Hotel Goldsmith, 1416 Tremont Street, Boston. Ann! 25, lHtfl. A nuffftagc-MaKter’s Praise. Mr. II. Barny, baggaije-muster on Eastern Railroad, Boston, says: “ 1 have used Hunt's Remedy, the great kidney and liver medicine, in my family for months. It was recom¬ mended by friends in Portsmouth who have been cured of kidney troubles, nnd 1 Hud it just a« represented nnd worth its weight in gold. My wife is using it for dys¬ pepsia, and has improved so rapidly that 1 cheerfully indorse It as a family medicine of real merit, and I would not be without it.” April 27, 1888.__ _ _ The best way to make a name is to have an aim.__ DrWorthingtons 17 THE GREAT. KB i § I '■k m At*' f USED hb OVER 2 b YL’AKU Dyst’iitO Tlio best viMiit’iiy tor Cmiiptulut, < IioLtii. Ohih.io, llynpepitla, and other cry. '■Mimuifr "ii on | affection s of the h toninrh nI td h n fuels. lutroaucfd in t in* Army, 1862 , by Siirgeon-Genoral o. S. A. Keoomtnen tied by (Jtm. Warren, 1’urvoynr-General loo. Keiinef.il Raynor. Noll.iltor U. S, Treasury, Treasury, mid others. Ptiee, 25 ets. N lull) by Druggistti OBd Dealers. Dealers. Onlv Oi Ronuiue iMiuiue if if our nitnn* is blown in but Mr. Sole proprietors. THE CHARLtS A.VWELEX COMPANY 'ft. *i i iMoittt. Mil. 11 * 003 X 0 * No timo should bo lost if tho Ktiom ach, liver and bow¬ els are affeetod, to adopt tlio Hiuc rem¬ edy, Host otter’s Stomach 3 it tors. JM DibORfOB of tllO O ruanc nninod bo otuors »n<l far • moro furious, thorefor* •HriOriH hazardous. n dolay is I)yrtj»op Km a-R jNgy.Y _ nm, iSS-. T*iver Oomplftint, enr nic-s Ft lr.5MnX.wtt uwintf Jingo no time in tbiH offoct.ivo and fate STOMACH medicine. by all m For sitlo SL I) r vi g g i s t B a n <1 Iteilors generally. W EL 4 life S!.EjE Hi ■Jil MIl ■ .HIS AIN!S ..ssamp&f aia MS Mill MJ 1 •lir A ;ai» v. •j Jtj m Y|01U BjU 1 /Workman lilTSIN kks Ooli.kok, Nuwurk.N.J. T'cmiH VV tfjlu. l*o hit loll- lor jfiafluatcH, Write for circaliin. *• * > ftirninfieil teachers. ApplicAtion "Hcliwil s I or m mill copy »f our V9 ,Uinr;i:il ’ h«t»I lor |»r.* \»r , “ A'lilrihw Niiiionpl ........Chicago fix- ' scale co. a TON WAIMIN SCALE, *40. S TON, *50. i4T«i* (MSI, Brain Hoi lacludi d. too OTHER KfZKH. IMlirrd PH MTS LINT FliKK. FORGES, TOOLS, WORK. &c. <10 Bt.S'1 VUKCK MAflK FUR LIGHT #10 40 lb A f»vI II ami Kit Of Tool*. Farmers »■** »l»' «od i»o»rj doing odd Joh«. Blower*, A afivIIk. V1<**h a. Otlwr ArtDi«!* LOWF-HT FKIim miOLKMALK As RKTAIL OPIUM MOnrtll.NK HABIT. Ten No pay till eurod. yearn eBtal>)i»hed, 1,000 Dr. cured. Ntiifco cane. Mi*r*l», Quincy, Alicb. The Westinghouse Engine —AS ADAPTED TO— COTTON <3-1 IT IN" I IsT G - jm-SEND FOR SPECIAL CIRCULA «.-*ai No Counter Shafting or Pulleyi - Required. to $14x0 Saved. Gins belted direct from Engine, or coupled to it, as in this ent, Without Beit. Boiler may be set 100 feet from Giu House. The Most Perfect out.fit for GINNING COTTON in the world. V.£a 1 K pg~Scnd f<rr llhutrated Circular. TDe WESTINGHOUSE MACHINE CO., PitlsW, Pa. I General Htute Agencies: r* » ToMPKJNB, Charlotte, North CarylirA. I 'Esinann VW.st, 33 M.ml» S'*«, lEoutgomery, Atlanta, Alabama Geoigia. ' Mc*NTt> >ll£BV lM»* W vAiV jjjityV V AM Appu _ _ . ■ fcs IW ■ ! SECRET AMONG THE LACIES The brilliant, fascinating tints oft Complexion for which ladies strive are chiefly arti¬ the ficial, trouble ami all who will take may secure them. These roseate, bewitching hues follow the use of Hagan’s harmless Magnolia Balm—a delicate, and always reliable article. Sold by all druggists. The Magnolia Balm con¬ ceals every blemish, removes Sallowness, Eruptions, all Tan, Redness, evidences of excitement and every imper¬ fection. t Its effects are immediate and so natural 1 hat no human i being can detect its applita ajMBPPtqMk. / I ill M7# NEW IMPROVED WATGH E 3 Largest Stock, tin- st Time Keepers, lov^t rnda*. •SEND FOB OATALOtJUK J, P. Sf EVENS WATGH CO. 34 Whitehall Btukict. ATLANTA. OA. T" > Ive lit•!"■ lur.v.n, STATIONARY I M.INJ,, in |H ?Ss, i’tllUllTI, 1 '-NT* ordnr, V r •< ill f • .* < Hold •)'»» D..n,\y for « nvh. r ’ n AM) WHISKEY II AH : i'S HI I RKI> In Three Wenks. II 1 X E IS I Ihir ph'in.pitli If, proofs *».tv1 Uirmfi, ml-lie i i « i.nruIf*Tli , *i, Willi '■>< fit»1 tip W. r^SU’ri^\.UV, II. I)., Vv Brojjd Btreht. FREE Horul to noOBH'S IUSBMSN itlluutH. INIIKBMTY, Ga. '■’or Til lift rated year kike Medical College, VI LAN'J’A, (ILOKGIA. IP'caUr -f-.-.un Peeies viiisT week in Octoceh and eaalami civ i vtoN l-HS. I 'la ndtlrttHit ■< al /ulvnulaece Hist eliis.. I•’«>i* fut.nliufiH'. ti-miB, idiC., ll|{. WH. IT.IUUN M(’Or,HON. IN*n«, I*. O. It.»x 284. JjtSG * w -li n | 70,, ii ,,V |? lown *«nnf^nn<5 ont.flf tO $20 1^^ftamplMworUi f /l k Hnre UurB Dlt. for KKU8F., Kpil^psy 284 I_Ai or Flt.n in .!4 Hour*. FfMto Mo, ........ vnimip lUUTlU RLflr&I WltWOVIvRA if you Wiwiitobeoomi* rKhEflRAPH lOHS ,,wvrt Hinploymont, H'IdrcHH I*. W. It I! A If, Ada, O tmo. $72 A nJtf KK ‘ 1a daS f r, &°i n > ,, r A j T u ' > A - b K CENTS W ANTF.l) for th© B*wt audiwt. w*n ir jEin Pictorial llook t and I’riooH widucoil L i t*o cent. National ITjuuriunm (Jo., Atlanta, (In, OPIUM HABIT The Cured Motlioino fold for PainlesslySy « mnall nmr«m *’ v f b* 1 ; p.ompoundtuij. AH vnm » trmitod by ; j*i.ml i tlon.” For full p/irf iculfiM uddri bi tbo £Pi‘i'ovor**r. DR. S. Eb COLLIN?. U PtH , %J. “THE BEST IS CHEAPEST.” ENGINES, TUDCCUtRC nflLOrlLnO SAW MILLS. HomPowers * (,’lovcrHaller% (SultMi to all t • ■ teyiH. i Writ, furl- «»:l. lllii-v I'aniplil.t mal lYirr* to Tl.ewultm*a & TftZlor < o.. MaruinrM Ohio MILL & FACTORY SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS. BELTING, HOSI ■nd PACKING, OILS, PUMP8 ALL KINDS, IRON PIPE, FITTINGS, BRASS GOODS, STEAM OAUGES, ENGINE GOVERNORS, &o. Send tor Prlee-lltL W. H. DILLINGHAM AGO 421 Main Stmt. LOUISVILLE. KY. Wl Um B<wt(V)UKh Byrojj e«M»d. El Use in Lime. Bold bj drn«(1iiU. Q CONSUMPTION ItnnnoltB I’oIIihi Vr TIid ami I 'fffM m»,>. I#’Bh fhnn t <»v*tr f.ttier prm • ■». Ilnndiwj* Hi abI.u/iI mw* *t iKdti and lii.rw* povvoricins. M*lw hrwivy k hal«‘H f»y pick. IiaimI Tim f«rO r tliAii iwijirrrre fifty f (*i*i mn new rilwxf § nicnfp in k»*» ft mil.* wor«»* theirinvoit’i/* Ire* to all. IlOAVOKS i Iron Works, ffhAtta*»«*«»», ■ - Tcnn., or RoAKoKK COTTOH HEJr* VhJ'FV Of). • Hm'Ii S<AU*.re. N . O. m^Sr^SSSSS ^SrUMitdti - **'* A* - .................. Twcuty-RlMlU- ’S3 KBYWrOIiDB’ IRON WORKS. D. A. JHIJI.ANK, iHwna««w. ,P. O Bo* 1690 Now Orlean\ L», Htonm, H*i fl A U*rr**> And M*»**«• BnjrinML brod*«bo*t Srura# Mills, Work. Buildia* Pnl*int Column*. Rajllnfflfc Front*, sliticnlv "i^Hiffiiuw