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About Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 2, 1889)
PILGRIM FATHERS. _ XliC National Monuniont in Their Honor Dedicated. I Unveiled Amid Impressive Cere* monies at Plymouth, Mass. national monument ... honor ol . The grand m the Pilgrims has been dedicated at Ply mouth. Mass. The sons and daughters oi Plymouth were there in great numbers, with many visitors from far and near. The" weather of the early ' morninj was - unpropitious. It T was necessary to” review the parade from beneath sunris* umbrellas. The celebration began at with a salute by Battery A and the ringing oi belis. The morning trains brought vast num bers of strangers, and a great throng sur rounded the new monument at 9:30, when the dedicatory services ^h^’exerrfsesv. were earned out by ths rfS’m-dw d t ereve^fc terestin- The band rendered a choral by John K. Paine, following which the song oi praise, written by R. Yi. Thomas Power,was sung by the Temple Quartette the President Following th* tin song came the request or ot Pilgrim Society, ex-Gov. Long: the response Smitten damation by by KSmdt^rs^&fp the wand Marshal George H. Rhodes; reading Chaplain, of Smptma! the Rev. selections by the Grand Charles A Skinner, and prayer by the Grand Chaplain The report on the examination of themonu ment and libations of corn and wine bv th{ Junior and Senior Grand Wardens respect ivdy and the libations of oil by Deputy Grand Master, Samuel V\ ells, were iol lowed by the invocation by the Grant Chaplain. Grand Master Endicott ther delivered an address. The assemblag* sang an appropriate closing hymn by the Rev. R. W. Thomas Power to the tune of “America.” The exercises concluded witl a proclamation by the Grand Marshal, ben¬ ediction by the Grand Chaplain, and tin “Pilgrim Chorus” by the band. Meantima the o’clock ‘ procession moved had been the torm¬ ina, and at 11 over exten¬ sive route in seven divisions. At. the com¬ pletion of the parade the officers and mem¬ bers of the Pilgrim Society, their with places the orator, in ths poetand invited guests, took great dining tent, discussed and the feast for provided hour. foi the occasion was an The dinner was ths big event of the day. Ex-Governor John D. Long, President of the Pilgrim Society, presided, William and the oration B. of the day was delivered by C. Breckinridge, of John Kentucky, Boyle followed by a poem by O’Reilly, followed The oration and poem were by speeches from J. Q. A. Brackett, George F. Hoar, Henry George Cabot Lodge, E. Freder¬ ick Greenhalge, Dr. Ellis, Chief Justice Durt'ee, William Cogswell, Nathaniel P. Banks, E. A. Morse and other distinguished gentlemen, Mr. Myron W. Whitney, invited guest, an sang during the dinner Mrs. Hemnn’s ode, “The Breaking Waves Dashed High.” The monument is situated on one of the highest hills in Plymouth, northwest of the rock on which the Pilgrims landed and west of the anchorage of the Mayflower. thought Tho monument was first of in IS53, when the In Pilgrim Society design agitated mafia tho sub¬ by Hammatt ject. that Billings, year a a famous was architect, and the present site was selected. The monument is of solid granite, and consists of an octago¬ nal five feet pedestal, high, is which, standing t forty surmounted iy a figure of Faith, who, left standing on Plymouth Bible, P.ock, holds in her hand an open and points heavenward with her right hand. This figure is thirty-six feet high. The pedestal inscribed bears four tablets, of upon which 9*4 are the, tho names the foundors colony first settlement. and historic facts connected vy|,' ' jjflK aff.he - " , estals, Below upon these which tablets w».ijla<»eArfWSfch! project f-atjE ^..Tg-rOrMoralitj'. Law. Education. Fr.-fio: jam! and at their feet are alt-relief ta*>?ts. repr renting the embarkation at Delfth, an. the signing of the social compact, the lac ting Indians. at 1’iymouth, and the first treaty with .the The monument cost in the neighborhood of $200,000, the major portion of which was presented by citizens. Massa¬ chusetts gave $19,000, Connecticut gave $3000 Government and the United States gave $15,000. The cornerstone was laid with impressive ceremonies August 2, 1859, but it was not until last fall that the work was finally completed. THE NATIONAL GAME. Dunlap is said to be for sale by Pittsburg. Baseball has become a fixture in Aus¬ tralia. Kelly, of Boston, leads the League in sacrifice hitting. Dup.yea, of Cincinnati, still leads the Association pitchers. The Boston club has already cleared ex¬ penses on the season. Hartford, Conn., is trying to support an amateur baseball league. Every Pittsburg player caught drinking will have to pay a fine of $50. Columbus has released Catcher Peoples and signed Rudolph Kemmler. The Boston club has purchased the release of Shortstop Smith, of Pittsburg. Gumbert, of the Chicago te«m, is the champion home-runner of the season. Keefe, of New York, leads the League pitchers still, on the number of strike outs. In the Hawaiian Islands they are so far advanced as to use the double umpire sys¬ tem. Boston paid St. Paul $3500 for Pitcher Sowders’s release and received $100) from the ^triple statistics-one plays have each been by recorded Cleveland, in official vv ashing .on and C me ago. neser been “uiY riht at short field siw--e G ""recentiv le^the IIiwton o/bases, with'New Lea«-ue in the total average 378, York only a marginal point behind. The sum of $7300 and Shortstop Quinn, was the offer made bv the Bostons for Glass cock, of the Indianapolis club. Senator Gorman, of Maryland, second has a passion for baseball and once played baseon the Nationals, of Washington. John Irwin, brother of Arthur Irwin, replaced * fwUny J a'/ third a Chicago to . late date had made , the ,. ESMidb' up SSWSf"-"* ‘ The ^ikras of the Southern Iteagns -. national then^Wn and Western clubs. signed bv inter twe^fonr'v^^ffid twentj-fonr yea.* old ^EteS^rd^ lie has a retom oi fifty smkeouts m three single cviiLsecutive games, and of seventeen in a game. Pitcher AVhitney s contract with Buffalo is rather a peculiar one. He cannot be re Bi^idock. the ez-Bostonian. never did bet> ter work in his life, both in totting he is also handSng theteamslrilfullv. ’ OBrien, the Cleveland twirier, whose mystifying curves have been a source of worriment to the heavy batsmen of the League, k a protege of xim Keefe, of the - ew iorks. General Arthur Dixwell, of Boston, u perhaps the most remarkable baseball en thuFiast in the country. He has retired witt a fortune from active business and spend every afternoon at a ball game. % THE DEMOCRAT, CRAWFORDVTLLE. GEORGIA. THE LABOR WORLD. Brooklyn has the biggest bakery. Pittsburg has the biggest ax mill. Boot and shoe manufacturers are busy. Window glass factories will soon start up. The bakers of Leipzig have gone out on strike. 1 Electricity is used to haul coal out of | mines. Great Britain has 1500 co-operative unions. ! England is complaining of the arrival of . pauper i a bor. | The European workingmen are opposed to j , standing armies. One of the street car drivers in Dubuque, \ Iowa, _ is a woman. ; Silk manufacturing is growing very rap : idly •; m the United States. j , The United ,. . , Order ,, , of , American . Carpenters . l be rapidly, ] ls salf increasing j ber There of foundry is a wonderf and machine ul increase shops. in the uum , j On June 30 2-SS furnaces were in blast in tke United States, and 293 out of blast. . j Due ye industrial i the New York Wayne) banker ! founded an college at j ***• | Belfast flax weavers get $o per week. \ Other workers make from fifty cents per j ^ek up. j English iron workers are agitating “no ; Sunday Monda > work and five days ‘ per week with* * | oftV ’ English mill men who are obliged to 1 work ou Sunday are making an effort to i in , T ~ *> 11 ■ Spain allows children from nine to thir teen to v.oik live hours daily. From thir teen to eighteen, eight hours. Electrical coa! mining machines are being introduced into English mines which can do as much work as four men. The Indianapolis stonecutters have sue ceeded in carrying the eight-hour schedule after a struggle of fifteen months, The University in biaeksmitlung, of Atlanta, Ga,, has a course as lias also tho University of the City of New York. There is a great falling off in the immigra¬ tion of laborers this year on account of the enforcement of the Contract Labor law. The only woman barber in Boston is Jennie L. Dodge. She is a New Hampshire girl and has 1883. followed her trade with success since ( Silk weaver’s wages have declined twenty I per cent, in ten years, but they are said to be earning nearly as much, because the ina chiuery is better. 1 lish Leading au industrial Paterson school (N. for J.) the firms education will estab- ot J pupils in designing, dyeing and the weaving j of all textile work. 1 The Manufacturers' Gazette, of Boston, I face says: of “There the globe is not where another workingmen country on are?fo tj0 j ! well provided for in America.” ■ ' as A wholesale x'aecination contract wa? entered into recently by Manchester, the Amoskeag Mass., cor¬ poration at the works, taking in the whole 8000 operatives at tha j expense of the company. The Southern Pacific Railroad Company Sacra¬ | has discharged Cal., 380 of being its employes machinists. at The mento, 100 taken lessen officials say that this action is to the expenses of the road. „ The Carpenters’ r , Brotherhood is growing . at an exceedingly rapid rate. It was only i 000, scattered through 475 cities in the United 1 States and Canada. ; ^ Possibly the , best , organized . , painters’ , | union in the country is the New York Pro Sed^mhVS'and fJrSs/r^tS attepA ete. A member receives $23 on the death his wife, while in the event of his own date his heirs receive $50. Th lr® were numerous casualties duringtbe erection es:.iqiaVc.’^“i'uai'8oUwvorkme'n of the I’ai-is Emwaititm. h.iUrtj*»sv, It is hurt their legs, 3(50 received severe injuries in the eyes from projecting timbers or bars of iron, 1 I t were scalded or severely burned and fifty had their fingers cut off. twenty-four. Tire deaths from falls are put down c.t NEWSY GLEANINGS. The corn crop is abundant. London contains 90,000 paupers. Canadian industries are prospering. There are 342,000 miles of railroad. The Shah is still the rage in Europe. The debt of New York city is $88,000,000. England is constructing fifty-two J war About 30,000 people a day go up the Eiffel Tower. Coal is $18 a ton and gas $8 a-thousand in Venezuela. The number of dogs licensed in New York city is 8032. There are now 101 geographical societies in the world. Iowa has paid off her last dollar of State debt—$90,000. A “sweet potato trust” has been formed j at Baltimore. Yellow fever has broken out on the Isth¬ mus of Panama. A mountain of pure manganese has just been found in Colorado. Human- sacrifices are still quite common on the East African coast. In Chicago 1,324,000 in hogs were packed this year against 1,557,000 1886. The Georgia Legislature of has passed minors. a bill prohibiting the sale cigarettes to ^ p or ^ J( | ^British American patent mediein Mr. Parnell has a surplus of $100,000 his ^ sl <*P*"** before the The neT ' French army law extends th I age of liability to service from forty-five y e ^ rs t° oily. j Montana’s Constitution makers have ra¬ jected . . , suffrage _ , by a vote , of . thirty- ... ^ ! woman three t0 thirty-three. Nwetekk sabnon < ^nneries are in opera tlo . “ ln ,^he;» are so thi -k in th boatS oft “ u ^nnot crowd Philadelphia has caught the common e^plaint, and recerrtly two unbeara ble termagants were placed under $500 bond? to keep the peace. kffsssssNasz ssis . s;^ _ «jg»a roBg ft “ Hoese steaim? hasincreasadt08 uch aner exist twenty 1 over Buffalo' years ago. Since Bill has been showing 2rom in Pari3 fa e has had offers of marriage twraty . nine French women. The women were Li all ages and conditions, three or four 0 f t hembeing enormously rich. The beadiest, skeletons of 200 oeorJe te believed to be the skeletons of victims of au ! Indian massacre of fifty years ago. j q. The French kid gloves are nearly ali 0 f ratskins tanned, rats Vicing more plentiful than kids in La Belle France. Ths United States War Department has about decided to adopt the smokeless and noiseless jziwder invental powd'er by Captain Noble. an Englishman The is of a gray color, and comes in long threads like a whir. cord. _ J LADIES’ DEPARTMENT. rr l A SII.KES SCORE-BOOK. A young lady whose charms are known to all social Lewiston came home one day with a row of sixteen little pin-holes in one corner of her new parasol ‘a id eight similar punches in another. Her mother was horrified, and in¬ dignantly rebuked her. What do you suppose the dear girl had been doing? Scoring the urns at a baso hall game. — Ltieisto.i {Me.) Journal. EXCURSION COSTUMES. Excursion costumes which may bo worn in longer « are made this summer m foulard or M ham or sateen of any color. The sk z s, straight in the back, .are sk-hi v draped 1 at the ’ side, and French waists, . or pretty blousos laid in fine plalt3 J at the throat belt and at tile top and bottom ol the sleeves complete the costume: Lit tle cloth jackets, with , facings . of , , Hack , , watered . , silk, ,, are made , to went'with > these suits, and the bells are sometimes of , black watered silk. Occasionally . the collars and cuffs a:c of velvet. 1 The color is whatever one pleases, fos* there ire no rules on this point this yenj. T1IE CRAZE FOR YELLOW. Society lias the yellow fever. Not the scourge, but ail insatiable taste for the color. The fancy has been raging for some time and still the cry is more. I a.m are displayc 1 in windows, cor¬ ners and hallways, and in nothing but a yellow jarliniere i the beauty of the color and folia-e so effectively brought out ' No c:lbinct is r0!1 idcre 1 ^ elk vcd -without a bit of yellow porcelain and n drop lamp or pedestal burner of orange china, with trimming! of blackened iron, is Ihe very acme of artistic taste. Then there is the King’s blue candle¬ stick, with the candle of gilded yellow wax, the graceful form after the Greek . mandarin , and , , how canyon „„„„ „„ lm m ware, agine a bunch of mignonette more po¬ etic than displayed in a smoot bowl of underglazed yellow? These craze colir ists, ; who are a 1 tw unto themselves, go ns far ;;s to worship . the marigold, . ‘‘that which ! ho florists were obliged to lorce and which brings ° as good ° return as the queen of flowers, tlie rose. But think o! putting y cllow mari g olds in a y ellow Uwl and then say who dictates in chromatics.— Philadelphia Press . t AN ENERGETIC LITTLE BALfbntoMAK. I heard a story about, a pretty little widow tho other day which contains a hint to young women who are suddenly thrown upon their own resources. This little woman lost her husband, and in the course of time it became necessary to do something to support herself. Af¬ ter trying a good many places she was given a position in a State street dry goods store with the handkerchief coun¬ ! ter as her department. Tho first day ! j she , there ,, gentleman ,, along , was a camo and stopped at her counter to look at | the goods. She felt that she ought to ! sell him j something, so she went at it energetically, and, though the man tried in every way to elude her persua¬ siveness, he couldn’t do it, and was fin¬ ally forced to buy a half-dozen hand kerchiefs. When she got her salary at the end of the week she found a sub stautial increase over the figure at which she had bee n engaged. She asked the cashier the reason why. “Because of a sale you made the first day you came. If you remember, you , g 0 id a half dozen handkerchiefs to a gentleman , after . making , . a long , talk. » > | 1 “ Ye8 ’ 1 rcmcmb <’ sh ° 8aifL ‘‘ r J a at was Mr. Pardridge. jj y ° Ur ^ ° U " ht ‘° U „ This was a good wliile ago. The lady is happily married again. You may bc ure lhat a ffir l who cay sell goods to the proprietor of the stoi , will no t he any too long getting a husband, and a good one too. — Chicago Mail. BARBER SHOPS FOR WOMEN. Barber shops for women seem to be increasing in New York and m any of them Lav; regular customers, The work done is, of course, confined al most ZS... wholly to brushing, cleaning arfd h,.,. m.„ .r CUS — c , too, in the pigeon-holes which one ““ fillofl with ^ a ^. sh °P for men. The barber aad her assistants are of course women,and to one of then. the , writer . sa:d, the other day: , , „ often olten should shou a a a wornan ) lave her hair bimhed?” “Every night and morning """? i th “ reply. 4 Many < f them never brusn it thoroughly at ail, and as for cleaning it, all they know about that is to scour it once or twice a vear with borax or am they . would their kitchens. mon a, as This ruins the hair, yet they know no be'ter. Many ., a fine „ . lady , goes ibon . with six months’accumulation of dirt on ber , Lead under . a fw . bonnet, and would bo horrified to think herself not as clean as she should be. Women who know how to care for their hair come hero onco a month for a dry shampoo to clean the scalp, and once a mon:U I clean their hair itself with cnstilc soap and water, drying it immediately by spreading it over a hot air register. Tiio hair should have air arid sunlight too. I think the hair of American women is becoming more and more scanty, while nearly all the fine switches and wigs of human hair in the market come from tlio heads of the German and Swiss peasant girls,who work bareheaded m the fields, aad whose tieiscs are so long and thick that they aro glad to sell some of it lor next to nothing. SOME ROYAL REDS. Clarence House, tho residence of tho Duchess of Edinburgh, is one of tho most comfortable houses in London, and is famous for its good beds, for the only daughter of Alexander II. of Russia is, like many Muscovite ladies, very par¬ ticular about her beds, and will tolerate in her liou e none but the very 1 ed. Even when a mere child, and long be¬ fore her marriage, she was so particular about this very important item in do¬ mestic comfort that, to insure tho sheets being tightly stretched over the mat¬ tress, she used to have them sewn down, for even the slightest crease or wrinkle would entirely destroy the tvposj of this imperial spoiled child for the night. Her royal Highness usi.l to !> • great¬ ly chaffed about this weakness by mem¬ bers of our royal family when first sho camo to this country, but tho Queen, v ho is also very particular about her beds, stuck up for her, and although now the sheets are no longer sawn down to the mattress, they aro composed of the most exquisite line linen that can ho procured, and stretched like a tight rope over tho most perfect mattresses that can bo manufacture l iti Paris, in which capital the milking of limttresies h.is.li|Een brought up to the level of a iiuo I tt, A l ious and amusing chapter might inde be written about the bodi of Eugjfio illuiWpiis personages. The ex-Empress is quite as particular about her beds ns the Duchess of Edinburgh or our gracious sovereign, and quite agrees with the first-named lady as to the fine¬ ness of the linen and the tightness of tho drawing of tho sheets, but her Imperial Majesty has an odd fancy to have her bed so low as to give a visitor to tho imperial bed oliuniber the iinpres * gje(d ow of the Ortijar is nim .sf ping on the fjopi*. It is m- 1 iteM ...Illy elevated more than a foot frafr ifoor, an all who have visited in Cions, “Vi >bl ) ompiegne, tho private and apartments tho Tuillorios at St. will rw-’j I nher.— Mtdcru. Society. FASHION NOThS. Sira onnets for summer aro almost as soft k’H' and held in shape byline wire. Me )! i Hi 3 fife w 11 kcly to tnk 1 like „ tba t ll y place ,, sit uglit high collars so long worn. \ AVIiei | i--ci olored gloves go out of fashion, \ ' gray-green will take their place. Fnsliic bio ladies indulge in sweet scented n, papr, but their taste is j questiona 1 • Bilver-b j l cooking utensils are ! taking th ( . j H ice of those made of cop¬ per and b f »l A very nndsomo new summer wtufT is China silk i with a sma.l raised figure seati\red over it. lioue bi joriH, with holes in the ceu tre to !-.-vv 'j rough, are used upon riding habits of descriptions Scarf RfulHqc vi’|i three-eighths of a yard wide, l on the lower edge, are worn with t aveliug hats. Sailor fiat, which are again used for i summer w- a are much more trimmed than they vri r, ‘ last icason. There m vine kinds of Scotch tennis | flannels, wool and cotton, wool and i silk, wool, oe’ton and silk. j Scotch flannel*, with stripes of color alternating h white are the first choice j l° r tr:Iin is go V n i this season. Twenty yards of ribbon is a very j meager estimate of an allowance for trimming on a » jrnincr drcA*. i Washing *ii: D> soft, du I colon is with tennis costumes aD(1 8onMstinio for ic entire gown. | Plain coat *i - :h urt plaiting rarely keen full- . . , ;.ie or 1 i ness at the top p. I ■ . the armholes. Enormous atr'i a\e necf v ary ap nendaffts > 8 to the lie , taffeta and surah * u by ladies when * Paris sends out a=?o!s of half s Ik, half velvet, togeti. with other, made i of alternate striji# of watercu silk .mu : mat* lace. ) ! English tailorsi e p’ain blue or white . Isle T , of W.;t,,,t VT for tennis , ^, gowns, combinedUv ol ,X striped flannei, : which latter J , , W ; serve ’ Appreciation. It is only when a person becomes an invalid that they appreciate good health. It is only when they have tried various advertised reme tliesand found no relief that they feel that they would appreeiaai <\ sure rcstorativo. 'Ilion- I sands there are who appreciate one rem;dy, fori it saved them after all other treatments failed. Failing in health, growing in weakness, they and, craved a tonic that would give them vim Vigor. They found ii in B. It. 15., the greatest btrmiLjthening tonic inthe world. The best blood purifier ; a safe prescription that never has fail ed to relieve every svmptoin of impure blood, Bead testimonials from thousands, who have been cured. Write Blood B.ilm Co., Atlanta, Ga., for medical advice. Be saved to health and Ion- I gevit t . re it is too late. Milking Opium. Opium is got by muting the capsule of the poppy flower with a notched iron instrument at sunrise, and by the next morning a drop or t wo of juice lias oozed out. This is scraped oil and saved by the grower, and alter he lias a vessel full of ii it is strained and d:ied. It takes a great railin' poppies to make a 110 1 uni of . and 1 it-goes through , , number 1 ot , opium, tv processes beforo it is re dy for the mar kct. In a liquid state it looks like a dark strawberry jam. l’rinoe or the Bootblacks. Antonio Aste, the Prince of the New York bootblacks, was recently married in great style in that city, lie owns n number of the most, valuable stands in town, and is the proprietor of several tenement houses—all purchased bv money raised in blacking shoes. His bride is a pretty young Italian girl named Annie Beriberi, who wore on the oeeasion a white silk dress trimmed with valuable lace. They will go to Europe for their ‘ bndttl t0Ur - Tun smallest church in the world is said to he the Catholic church at Tad ousac, at the mouth of the Saginaw liver. Its extreme etparity is not mure than twenty people. This church is supposed to have been founded by Jacques .tituoi. Snvo Thin 4,'fill llon’t, lot that benultful girl I'nAlo and droop into Invalidism or Mink the into an early it.ic.nl grave etaye for want of timely care at tnont. <u ioa of her life. Dr. PiorceV Iftivoriio Prwucrip will aid In vetfviluUuy: her health and (vtali iMiinK It on a firm basis and luay savo her years of chronic Bulforifig aud oonsequont. un JlRppiUOflft. A more pleasant physio You novor will find Than Plorco*» ama I “I’oUots,” Tho Ptirarallvo kind. Tho kinir of Spain not. \ ot t.hrn* yonrs old, and in a rohy-cliookofl, falroliild oflirlixlit dis¬ position and more than ordinary quick nous and curiosity for hisa^o. What do von ehow? “LUCY IIINTON!" Because Why? it Ik the best I find. Who can makes it? T. (’. Williams (Jo., Bidimoml, Va. Who sells it? All tlealers. How can I recognize it ? 'ihe name l.\ntj Hinton is on every plug. (’oralis said to be a eoml ng ra'-o*. It is to bo » 7 orn in all fornn*, even for buttons. 'Taklnifit alloyqd lior. tbero never was a time vvben our country wan enjoying Kieater and p l'OM- yet parity than at the present tnotneui, there are thousands of people in tho bind who fnssliur a ml fumlntf about bard tiipes. N«« doubt but what many of them are honeHt in tbelr complaints, and ii Jh often because (hey liave riot touud llie ri lit. kind of work or ll»e right way to do It. Now, if businoHK In not mo ving along « it h you sat isfaetor y, take our advice and write to Ii, K. .loliriHon Co., Hicii inond, Va. It is more than like! that, ibev can hel|» you, at any rate, It would rant you nothing but a posture nfiamp to apply to them. A KciiH'ily for IlulfircBtioii# For liicJfeH and children wlmsc t.a«tc cannot be offended with impunity. Hamburg indlgehtlou, Kigs forma mneily for cimKtip;iUon, onuFlg. Miu-k Draff Go.. N. 5. HoirH Wo.**M»il. Informal!<»" i ......... of l 1 ”: of .101111 niui \ V 1 Iwon, ii m l! il ! 1 1 >• I ol Mali. ' 1 j ncy, wife of Thotntt VVib-on. born jit Imnci - ick i d., 1 vobuxl. Hbc children is-, if livistkC* U<‘1r t<* au i cHtalc. If dead, her or next of kin i arn wanted. Addratw, W. J. (Jovil, Wc (Mty Iowa If lUMctf'il with H'irn eynHijm- l)i',lHancThon>|i f-.oii’h I'iyt’ wilier.Druggist!- rll uGGc.iu-r bofMu Old unokprs prefer '“Tansill’H Punch” ("»<■. < 'igur to ni<»-l in reuP-rs. -———— Summer ■ « ■ ■ Weakness Lb quickly ovcircorno, by Uio tonluK, ami bio.^1 rmrif*in</ puriryrag nimliiioii (|u»ini«s of or «ooa« Hoofl’w Uxuroaixtrliltt mmvmn m. Tills popular mr<lbrine* driven off that tlfad foiling ao<3 car™ sick licofiache, <ly«prp«lu, uorofala, and alj buiriorn Thousand* triittfy that Moo4 f M Hath* barilla “makea tho weak BtrODg.” “My hiviltli wan poor, an J bad froyuurit nick hoa<J nchm, c*mI4l iw»t *l««p well, did not much ap petite, and had no ambition t/> work. I haffft faknu 1than a IKittle f»f Hood** Barsapatilla and fat I like a now j^rnon.” Ham. W. A. Tcmiaaa, W«»r Hanover, Ma; N. ». If you ilucldo tf> taka liood’A HorattyarUlu do not l>^ Induced to buy any other. Hood’s Sarsaparilla UnlA liy ali dnwifluU. $1; *1* for $5. I’roiAirert only by L\ I. HOOD * CO., A[ioth*'Wl««, I/iwcll, Uo*m. IOO Doses One Dollar IHE STORY OF iliUd JUST PUBLISHED. It road* Uke a romance; i* immtBMly populm. 15 A.ji able BOllclt or, Woman or >fuu, run take to 26 ord«rn a day. Reliable reiiren'miMUvt fr«AMd in «very oounty ln th« U. 8. Apply early If you w*.nt a chance on thi* threat b<s>¥.. Siaiary to right party.; il , M.EINW I’UHUBHfSOCO., HMu JhlcMO, oU. res HOME ZZl III v hi: * HAiii: PUINTINCi INKS FROM FRANK J. COHEN, General A K c*nt V.l Hunt A Ini* Jim a Hi., ATIANTA. 4^ \. u\ CHICHUSTUPI’S ENGLISH y pehntroyal pills. J^**J Crow Mmmond Brand. trill for «$de l»fa » 4 vVr in «nr< f.ftdl*-*, *»k v*« •**<•4 I>la imm< 1 Brand. ■» rrd iftotadi* b4J«. miib s» 'I nk* «»oLa<jr. Fri.d 4f. ftuniii) lit “Kffllef for UJlOk’' in letter, \.j Mini I. FUliado, /'fir. CkicU* *t *r Cl»«taUMU v#., MadUaa »<i » !*•» (Orators llfor Junmjjtiofi | Cl tt*y fc'M. VUo'r k*4**{iing ‘jit OCI.jt.Ji. (’urn LiTHK the for Ui.hT voice (U ri a UOME I thAroiffh PSSSis.lTf&MJafaTSror ilAlT. b1ro*U»r« Cotleu* > tftu<Dt Uy Buffalo. irr Hry»ni* • 4 37 ilain Ht.. S V *9 A AIEIIICA ■ HOUR Is 4 Tftlr 0.. ttlekmmmd. r A BRYANT & STRATTON Business College 'Xilf&gsWuWMMiiZ. LOUISVILLE. KY. M _ RDAnFIFI PglnUllLLU tf W I r _. ^3 2 ' L. t Lr mil Srlfm Jnl S fa* f I * ( r | Iya M Si fT — A I ||P ■ pTflFIt 11 a '•‘J ic» sOe; “ *■•» if -111 ,iPF »|TY ..C^FD tu nAlU fO .1 f U '■-CU'^'aN 1 Cf * iPi dOnc/iD* Til R’l 1 ODU Jv P jll‘ CI lr\lvL“ I r rm *a p* t| *T* |“* I I »T IAIJ /V\ | N * i \ sickness vJreA I lUI V on monthlv 6RLKT .UKHEEJvJa SujWHStNlU.BE. mwrfnmami HE WGIMA -&OOK TOWOM AN BlfADF/ELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA GA^ MBLoarAU eauasiBTa 1 OOO GASES TINWARE. $15,00 Per Case. Freight Prepaid, retails i on # 25.00 CONTI NT. AND RIT.IL PHICEfi scoffer l’ots, 1 quart , Of, .10 $11.64 i*«'offer t*ot». 2 quart Its.15 1.84 6 loffee 1‘ots,!! quart , in. .SO Li* s stmniird wi.sii muons, hi in (ji) .05 M 11 stamped Wash tin.-ins, ia8 131 11 ;; In <lfi JO .611 * ’ " . .15 .80 . (a, .05 i.40 12 Cups, 1 quart ......... .. . 08 .10 l.'M 1‘2 Covered HucVeta, l 1 -* pint ... . . (o> .1)5 .6® *24 Covorctl llucket-M, 2 quart (to . 10 2.4C 0 Covered Buckets, 3 quart..... .....W .15 .80 (»('<m*rod Buckets, A quart ... « 8.20 LtU 0 Milk Buckets, 4 quart .... (tj .10 ,aa (i Milk Buckets, 8 quart ..... W .25 1.60 12 Stamped Dipnoi's, ‘ a pint. o'o .05 no 12 Cocoa Shape Dippers, hl’k handle .10 . a 18 Stamped Flates, 9 in .....(«o .05 ■ iS^Sd »!!!{ feu’in": - - $d« i.to ■ I e Mumped Stamped Milk Milk I’ana, I’ans, 15 13 in in (at .is .80 (» . . i.o .2(1 1,20 8 Dish Bans, 8 quart ............(Vo .10 .3*1 (1 Dish Bans, 10 quart............... (a* .20 !.» 8 Dish Bans, 12 quart. ...... ■ 4 .•>.') .75 Total Retail Selling Price $25.08 ami Shipped promptly to any point In of t our suite, t'RttiOHT ranfAiii, on receipt *ir. 00. L. F. BROWN, Charleston, S. C„ Importer nn<i Jobber of EnrtlK'iinnnv Tfnuarc. a ln««*witrc. 1 yf> „ W isn ig fel/lit . LfifSSON f , -. ‘ noon Vn.'hn iV braint smith a wesson yyry-' — flr*l *-U-of all i-T'i-ili' “'/'iw ‘B|i dKHi |leortloiibl* Mauufuct >ihm 1 acti«>ii, in cnliUrcsami Nafciy lluinmt'Vb 41 -i«hi. $• ,1 Shi- autl UUII ngW <’•matrurb* I illv «*nt.lrwJy «*ntB pectod • i for nilriSU'j’ shlri'. i'liVy im worfc »nil ami hk- imrivnh- D<*n<» d for linl-hp i iVtvl durubilti v m rurncv, >t l.udei’t- whidfc by ent-ap mu lien l»l«* «;iiNi-iron tinii ii I ion*« i a »> often koM tor tin* K^nuinr* nitlclo HU i i arc not. onlv iiijnllab'tf*, but rlnnirpiotiH. .11 »r Tl SMI'I H % W’KSSON rclw with livin UfiivolvorR 'h tinnip, aro atl (IIV lU Hilt mj»cd nd dattis upon of the patmta bar HH and art' u;iiai*iiiil« , »»cl perfect in every dflat tail In¬ Bibt upon httvinv lltV tho Kiumino article, , aud U’ if yo ur lienler cam P t Blip ly you an atid fil’d caroful or •Of Hilt 111 to iM« a u IroM b-low Will roivivo proinpl ! ill mau D**nc.ri pt 1 Vo I’.itHlouHc iiu -' prfooH furnished upon a»B pile ,11 ion. SMITH & WKNSON B tr Mention thD pap r. Snriuirfiolfl. ItiiMh JONES PAYS *1\, THE FREICHT. 5 n \\ ii ao ii f*i , nh , n l Iron I I.I VOIH SI III liiuuilip’ , I'itiuc Tin _ o ilt’Din and ffdam ilux fur Every N'Tiic. »uo. Mi/.e i- ui life pricelixft n ..ii ti<m th i JHl|H r II till U'lllu-KH JONES OF BINGHAMTON, lUNGII AHI I O \. V. Dr. Lobb After ALL otli.rA full. COIlMt.it, 329 H. 15 th St 9 PHILA., PA. Twenty yoaih’ ooaUauouri inactlfn in (liy irmc, nifiut ftii'l euro of tho n’lvlul ribciN of cHrly rlcri <U*H(roylng both mind imd body. McMtteflMi »ud treatment for one month, hollriN, wena «ec*u rely nettled fro u oh «*rvftUoi» tti uy mttirMa. ll«uk on Special DfnetiMc* iree. ARK VOI PI II Ml I NI. Oh htVlNU A i If I’ri'HH Cotton Will W« wood find trimiiifni or Cirrii!«r*and two Hay ltiro Hoy ft Press? I’n Lot < I'no* **«» foa i LM. upon uppllout Ion. IPMMIK I! IKON A Nl> in WOOD WOltliN. ciiattancmh;a. tknu. I*. O I!.. wllDHAI. It T.M I’iN'l' UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA. I iKqmiflrly, 1817 IHHI, tho IJiiiviirMity of nnd f,miialtuift.| | Itu udvnntfnfi'b t-.r pr/iotH’-ftl iri*diin?flo'i, lalii In t.liodiHOHMoM «>f tii« Kout n-HreMf ,ttr<« un««i l, mi tta» J «&’KlM' udutit» ii jiGHpU iioHpilul I -1 mut eh mini i v St •< vo no no n »**■ ■. t <> pay Mpu mi inHlrii’ iioti i» d.iily ICivnri itivon hi t.It•* licit »Ihii nf \ i .!•■ nick, hkIh up uddrciM 4.h«i’ iuntliuclott, GV.t it U 1 ur catalogu** nr information, # i*r«f. m 1 : CB AibM , .K I).. Dean, IflTp, O, Drawer i!6l. Ni-wOrltmiis b«. j I dropsy . IltKA TEI) I It Hi:. Pii»ili»elr Cnreil tb!»UB*nilB with Vee*<»lde Cur, pauanta ltemedie». Have ourf-I of eiwas. unp 1 :;';^/:Ti:!r T;,^ T ,.‘r',LV ail r Hen<1 book I Nyrnptoum rimiovod. tor fr«« li'iMro* I «Ia1b of inlraculou* ruro* Ton dayn' »r«-atm«nt i fr«« by matt If you ordiw trial, md<I Htc. ln ntnmpB m p w git a«e. bp. fi. Ii. Ubrcn A Bosm, Atlanta, (ml. DUTCH ER'8 FLY KILLER i Makes n cJcaii livery ' ttiiMl will kill u quart of BUid. Ht.opH bu/./.lng uround c*ra t / diving at evoH, tickling V'Mtr AM none, HklpB nard word* ami eur«H mMKV' at trWln'<exp*um. 1 Hend c4»nl»for hIkmuUi lo F. DUTCH KK, Hr Alban*, Vt ; Plantation Engines WiUi HeU-ConUIned !■/< RETURN FLUE BOILERS, ’ Fort DBIVIWa COTTON OIN8 and MILLa. litustiai'’<l I'Briqibiet (>*<• A !■} t*m James leffel A. Co. [ hl»UlNbFIFI-D, Liberty New OHIO, Yeefc. ur I IO * 1 ., VVib.. ttSTEO t'm ‘V'a 'irU ?.'{'."si V im’n 'i * "s'"’ i. "."5 '* ka i u it v.«y of Mli»f'p‘sr»tG(f gin*', M'lk*’ your old u in* r»«*w your i.ow gio*»o. Anyori‘A i nn uw». r. (J iiomi* Fiotih pisid agent on AJ.i, ««!*•« i»i cun fy, n>th"i m»4« by up. nr hiit) 0 mtmhini m» jo uhp Hittv* Hh tnoiber last. Mkchiriovi and tion ifiiaraiit<!*ul, Witte at »i»«* to J. r.\ I I-H X 4 0., UniMiibw, 'IVnn. R BII HIS wKi-k.-v n *Y frf'v pi SS M 2t : alii * ta li g? tvSi? vJyp lt»enr«I»(,hoiB«w<ifc outpa'n. nook n mr 9 m a y*3i lif I It IE. p K-l H d a .jg.JML" m tlctil.r* B.M.WOc;.LKY. or M IX StlULTSTti” Whoo WWtebAU 2V ill itf a i o -..‘.15 Frew l.inrn fWrit* ffrrar if«-r 4 ‘o., H'»i!y, Micfc. PEERLESS DYES £!Z£s£ SS5 m I vTfi*cr\b* ami folly •»» i »i:i.eun JO ft data. t,f inia dij.^oF**. fflRu i«u»*4 a«t U.V « 0 H.l.N*<ttA HAV.M.IL Y. r£M Strlolu/e. ADUUTdftB). N. Mrtnl/bf lb* V/e have sold Big (* lot j CLnciaoutiJK^g^m fu'tlon. j quo. I». B. DYffYEftOOu J-hir afO, in. I TffcdZ^^W^arklSI.OD. Bold by Druggy A.N.U ~.......^T..Tmrtr-twoT*