Newspaper Page Text
Blighted.
**1 guess I ain't a suoeesa in the pun
business," "1 confessed Mr. Fmallwort.
put in three hours the other night
s tttng up a joke about a ride on like a
orse at the price of ft cent being
_ « wife of Ulysses, because it was ft
penny-lope, and when I read it to my
family my eldest daughter informed
me, in her superior way,that the word
was pronounced Penellopy. ”— Cincin¬
nati Tribune.
Brlttrpnfl 11ml n Ilunilrnl Arms.
But £ervou«ncss l »sas many querr synn and tam*. all
depart whatever there m i. he, ihev one
In consequent - of tho .nothing. In'U
Crsting influence of II (‘tetter’. .“stomach I! t
fere, which loros lire system thron.h ths
medium of thorough -
lstton. Tremendousm rv<*. toon n qulrer*u-sd
|ne«* petite, by if- o-.-. Ir promotes rit- p and ftp
Malaria, and fort!He- thenys emae-'inst dl-eft e.
<«instipaf In . rheumatUra and thl
ney troubles are relieved by ii.
A tattler's tongue is a menace to any decent
community;_ _ ___
Dr. Kilmer s s w a nr- tt not enras
alt Kidney and Bladder 1 roubles,
Pamphlet Laboratory and Consultation frre.
Hi n - hamtou. N. V
Dninkenne. lit very r.iro among Japun'se
Women.
Br*i of ,41I
To cleans? tho fcyMom in a gentle nnd truly
beneficial manner, wlnn the Springtime cornea,
tx*o t ho trnt? and perfect remedy, Syrup of Figs.
One bottle will answer for all tho family and
costs only 50 rent*, tho large $1 Try it
And be plea< d. Manufac tured by t he Cal for
pia Fig Syi up (’o. only.
ITin^pnd. Kissing a woman's lips is a grofs insult in
llciilih la Epfiiioiny.
A well man ran <!o hh mm h work n* two
E who nr.- ‘"tindor ths wo »th«r,'’ and do it
tier. A box of i: pans Tabu loft in the office
will save clerk-hi re
Plao'm Cure for < 'onsvimiclon ha-* snved me
inany Place, h Baltimore, oorii i\-tbill. Md., S. Doc. F. 11 2, Aiiev, MU. Hopkins’
Blood Will Tell
Host gundy upon tho condition ot tho phy¬
sical system. If the blood is pure and fall
•f vitality It will carry health to all tho or¬
gans ut tho body; It will expel tho norms of
disease and tho result will lx) a oondltlon of
porlo’t health. If it is Impure and Im¬
poverished, mttb a oondltlon will be lrn
jwesihlo. Tho Imst way to
Keep the Blood Pure
Is by the use of Hood's HaroeparlUa, bo
eauso Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the treat blood
purifier that medical seltmne has ever pro
duoed. This 1» the eoaret of its wonderful
ouros of scrofula, salt rheum, nervouanosa,
•leepleasuoss, rheumatism, and all other dis¬
eases which originate in the blood. Taka
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
A
A M
er •a^I V.
Worn Out
Mood'eSaraaparltlnRostoredCood
Health Feet as If Made Anew
"I had the grip tn Us worst form, taking
Sold a ssrvind time ami bavin# a rel«|we. My
trtomlft and physicians thought recovery was
tmj 'Msildc. mr system was so low. I could
0 oi turn in boa without help. 1 had no tip
petlt" and 1 was weak all worn out. After
juy Utniws, 1 would got unable up In the morning
Iseliug so tired, being to rust nights.
I Had Sever© Paine
In my left side, through my u«ck and shou!
Anrs. I tried different remndtea, but they did
IkoA help nrn. I decided to try Hood's Baroo
So ©ftrilla I took one bottle ami commenced
feel l etter. 1 have now taken several
potties and it has worked wonders. It has
given me an appetite and I have gained In
Strength rapidly. Tin' pain In my side and
Shoulders ha* left me aud I feel like a new
Hood’s^Cures
r**n»on. 1 on n <}o my own work now and
lielp ollmr*, 1 would ftdvi*' ftll thneo who
in j* *r h^nUh t - try *Cann*ix, li hxVb SftrnapA
Lwds, rill a.” Mhh. l'.i.MiHA C. North
Stomach Trouble Cured.
*‘I havu tAkun Ho'Vt’s SarHaparilla And it
Nab hrtlivMl me by taking plrapl«s from my
fa|fM‘ find fondi«'Hd and has ruUovfd me aI^o
« f Htomaoh di fib'u Ity. My ».Va mother »n<l
iMvthur hav»» also Uiktva H ' Sar&ipariUa
Kew with benefit. Ham Lett, Hi Attorney liood'a. Stroot, j
York City. Get onW
___
Hood’s PillsuTc.'^Au^M^.Vr'c:
_ The !
Greatest rtedieal Discovery
o the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery. i
I
DONALD KENNEDY, Of FOXBURY, MASS.,
Has rlisoovered in one ot our errmnon
pasture weed* a remedy that cures every
kind o' Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down loacommon pimple. .Vnd forfiovk
Manittce, Mich., Feb-14, 1S'J5.
Dr. Kennedy,
Dear Sir :
Jam the little boy you rent the
Discovery to about six weeks ago■ \
J used tiro bottles and also the j
salt'e. WTicu 1 be /an to use the
medicine my sores were as large as
a quarter of a dollar, and now they
are as large as a ten cent piece and
I feel much better. Mamma and
I feel very thankful to you. 1 shall
write again and tell you hoJ> 1
am getting along.
1 remain your little friend ,
AKDDE B’ 1‘OMEJiO Y,
88 Lake Street,
RAIS.
TREATMENT £%£££:
At •)! •lory*. «r Sr m«Il i‘>c •o >ub,« box ; 5 Soabir bon* “
•1* IIHOW.\ lire «.. \r. I ork <
s
Ben la Ccugfe tiaM Srrupk^4»sK* Boitl tioo<L Cre 1
by tfrugsrun*.
N SUMPTION •
J
MADAGASCAR.
The Big Island to Which France
Has Sent an Expedition.
Its Queen is Bound to Wed Her
Prime Minister.
Madagascar, which lias given rise to
much excitement in Europe, France
having sent an expedition to subdue
the natives, is the third largest island
in the world, and is situated to the
cast of the African continent, from
which it is separated bv the Mozam¬
bique Channel. The population num¬
bers between 400,000,000 and 500,000,
000, divided into numerous tribes, the
governing one of which is Hova, in¬
habiting a province of tho central
highlands called Imerna.
The island was discovered in 1506 by
the Portuguese, who named it St.
Lawrence. The French have coveted
it evor since 1442, when « company
called the Society dc l’Orient was
formed under the patronage of Car¬
dinal Richelieu, with the object of
colonizing it; but all attempts at con¬
quest have been unsuceesssul.
By tho treaty of Paris (1814) ft num¬
ber of French settlements on tho east
coast became British, ss dependences
of Mauritius, then ceded, and to these
was added in 1815 a portion of the
northeast coast, including Port Loqucx
and Diego Suarez, In 1810 diplo¬
matic and commercial relations were
entered into between Great Britain
and Kudfimn I., King of tho llovas,
who was acknowledged as sovereign of
tho whole island. By the treaty con¬
cluded between the British and Mala¬
gasy in 1805 the seme title of supre¬
macy was accorded to Queen Iiasohe
rino, amt by the French-Malagasy
treaty of 1808 to her suocossor, liana
lavona II.
By tho treaty of 1885 France ob¬
tained tho Port of Diego Suarez as a
naval station. Tho Malagasy Govern¬
ment has always declined to admit the
political rights claimed by Franca, al¬
though Great Britain formally recog¬
nized tho French protectorate over the
island in 1890.
Although all tho acts of the govern¬
ment are done m her name, Ranava
lona Nanjaka III., tho present Queen
of Madagascar, has no political
authority. Sho reigns, but her hus¬
band, Rainilaia Rivony, tho Prime
Minister, rules. Ho succeeded his
older brother as ruler of tho island,
after a coup d’etat in 1804. In 18811,
on the death of Ranavalona II., ho
raised the Princess Razallndrahoty to
•~-e throne, iguoring tho claims of hor
elder sister, who was noted for her in¬
temperance.
Tho Princess, who was then twenty
one years of age,* had a few months
previously lost hor husband, Prince
Ratrimo, and was in desperately
straitened ciroumstanocs. The prop¬
erty of the family was such, in fact,
that her undo had to earn his liveli¬
hood as a butcher. Rainilaia Rivony,
who was llfty-live years old, married
her ns soon hn she had assumed the
royal dignity, iu aooordaucj with an
invariable custom obtaining in tho
island, by which tho Queen is hound
to many tho Prime Minister.
Like nil the llovas tho Queen in very
intelligent. Sho was educated by nuns
of the French Order of St. Joseph of
Cluny, but wits subsequently converted
to Protestantism, the State religion,
through the influence of the Angto
llovn party.
Of late years great efforts have been
made to improve the army on Europe¬
an methods. According to » British
officer who during tho operations
against the French iu 1884-85 served
with General Willoughby, cotnnmn l
sr-in-chief of tho Hova army, the
j 0 ( rt i Htrongth of the latter is about
14,000 , . armed with tho Hinder . .
meu,
Tbt>ir * rtilk ‘ r y oow»ts <>f two
batteries of four seven pound mounted
^ eflch> wLich MB 1)0 ,, ltu . ei , ou u
war footing of six guns, and six bat¬
teries of six barrelled Gatling guns,
each weapon fitted with a feed machine
to carry 8,000 pounds.—New York
Recorder.
Where Macaroni Is Prepared.
Macaroni is largely made by mt
ehinery in this country, but there are
still thi> little Italian bakoshops where
the tubular paste is prepared by hand
mut'h as it was in those old days when
the Sicilians got their customs and
traced their blood to the maritime
Greeks. Iu u certain small bakery iu
Bleecker street, the proprietor of
'which comes from Genoa and bears a
historic name, von will see the succu¬
lent cylinders turned out with a aim
plieity which smacks of the kandmill
aud the wheat mortar stage of breail
jinking.
Tables are set in front and the show
window is decked with tl most
tempting confections of Roman taste;
Cut thi F6 is a larger room in the rear.
»nd there yon will find two Its tans
with bared arms grinding and crack¬
ing the hard Dakota wheat, sifting it
with a revolving serein to separate
the broken kernel from the bran, and
kneading the mass withastotit wooden
block until it is like paste
The w heat has been carefully washed
at the start, and if the day Ire fine,
dried in the sun Aftc: it h been
broken up and thnnq u hour
the dough i* taken out no*J {>Uce4 it)
t cylinder with ft perforated bottom.
A plunger is placed on top of the
cylinder, and the whole available
force of the shop bend their weight to
the lever,
From out the perforated bottom
dozens of macaroni tubes start wrig¬
gling toward the floor. Little plugs,
a trifle smaller than the holes and held
in place by pins, half close the per¬
forations, and the dough, forced
around them, is transformed into hol¬
low tubes in exactly the same way that
the housewife shapes her doughnuts.
The macaroni is cut off in lengths of
ton feet and hung to dry upon wooden
frames before it is put on the market.
—New York Mail an<l Express.
Substitute for Hard Lumber.
The enormous advance which has of
lute taken place in the price of some
of the hardwoods required in various
special branches of trade lias directed
attention to the possibility of pro¬
ducing some less expensive material
as a substitute, says the English
Mechanic, and in one branch of trade
this has been carried out with very
successful results.
For the manufacture of loom shut¬
tles box-wood has hitherto been very
largely used, but tho price of this
description of wood has become al¬
most prohibitive, and it has been
found that by compression of cheaper
classes of timber—teak being about
tho most suitable for Ibis purpose a
substitute meeting all the require¬
ments can be obtained.
For carrying out this process an
English firm has just completed a
powerful hydraulic press to bo used
in compressing timber for loom shut¬
tles. This pross consists of a strong
cast-iron top and bottom, with four
stool columns and stool cylinder, with
a largo ram. The timber is put into
this dio, and a pressure of fourteen
tons per square inch is applied. The
presstiro is then relieved, and tho
large rain descends. Tho top pressure
block, which fits tho dio, is then re¬
moved, and tho small ram, rising
pushes the timber out at the top of
the die.
The timber so treated is made very
dense and uniform and so close
grained that it is capable of taking a
very high finish. For tho manufac¬
ture of shuttles it has been found as
good as boxwood, and thero is no
doubt it might bo applied to other
branches of industry where expensivo
hardwoods have to bo used,
Testing Bridges,
Tho life of iron bridges is consid¬
ered by some as unlimited, provided
they arc well cared for, while other en¬
gineers believe it to bo from fifty to
100 years. Tho great cost of the re
nowitl of iron bridges renders it im¬
portant to determine as exactly as pos¬
sible when a structure ought to bo re¬
built. A mere ocular inspection is
not sufficient to do this, and periodi¬
cally repeated measurements, with the
help of instruments, become indispen¬
sable.
Tho deflection is frequently meas¬
ured iu tho following manner: A
piece of paper on a board is fastened
to a truss in tho center. Against it is
placed the point of a pencil, which is
stuck through a vertical plnnk placed
alongside, and tho point describes a
vertical line on tho paper when tho
bridge deflects under a load. But tho
results arc inaccurate, as tho length of
the lino cannot bo measured exactly,
and expensive temporary staging is
necessary. This method has been im¬
proved in various respects.
A narrow plank and pencil liavo
been suspended from tho truss, turn¬
ing ou a liingo. Before and after tho
loading tho pencil is inado to describe
an are on a fixed piece of jrapor. Tho
distance between tho axes, which can
be measured more accurately than a
line, gives the deflection. A steel point
and a zinc plate are proposed instead
of the pencil and paper. Certain en¬
gineers record tho deflection ou a re¬
volving paper-covered cylinder, aud
others run a wire, which is fastened
to a weight of about sixty-five pounds
over a sheave turning a hand, which
records on a graduated sector.—Paving
and Municipal Engineering.
Safe anti Rapid Telegraphii.g.
Au instrument has been contrived
by Louis C. Coe, an operator at Green
Oak, Mich., that automatically repro
duces a type-written message more
rapidly than by the ordinary Morse
system. Operators at intervening
offices may discover which offices are
in circuit, but cannot overhear the
passing message ; even the w ire ma)’*
be tapped and yet no one can steal the
message. Absolute secrecy is thus
St . c „ r ,. ( i. it is also claimed by the in
venter that his system is not affected
by leakage or induction, and that the
receiving instrument is noiseless,
Such a contrivance would remove one
great objection of telegraphing, in
that the secrecy of telegrams would
be assured: and in the sporting spec¬
ulations. would prevent the stealage
of the results of a prize fight, a horse
race, a chicken contest or other high
moral function, by tapping the wire
from the house tops.—Atlanta Con
stitntion.
The wool clip of 18t*4 is placed at
140,000,000 ]rounds, a decrease of 10,
0$O, 000 unds 41 . reTioiis
Tear.
FOE THE HOUSEWIFE.
fbvit i»ob pies.
In cooking fruit for pies, torn-overs,
etc., it is well to remember that sugar
does not counteract acidity, it simply
disguises it. A very small pinch of
carbonate of soda sprinkled over the
fruits before cooking will save sugar
and render the dish more palatable
and wholesome.—St. Louis Star Say¬
ings.
FBOSTWa without eggs.
Elegant frosting may be made xvith
out eggs. Take one cup of granrJated
sugar, one-fourth cup of wat^r and
one teapsoonful of extract of lemon.
Let it boil until it will thread, then
take it off the fire and beat until At is
thick as honey. Spread on the cake
(which should be cold) with a knife
dipped in cold water to make the
lrosting smooth and glassy. Lemon
juice will whiten frosting, cranberry
or strawberry juice will color it pink,
and the grated rind of an orange
strained through ft cloth will color it
yellow. — New York World.
The A USEFUL following TABLE <Jj* MEA8T of fRES. capacity
measures
may bo found useful to hang in the
kitchen for easy reference:
Two cupfuls equal line pint.
Four cupfuls equa ->ne qnp.rt.
Two cupfuls soft c equal one
pound.
One pint milk on equals one
pound.
Two cupfuls gti ed sugar equal
one Sixteen pound. ta 4l jjid equal
one cupful.
Four cupfuls floury qual one quart
or one pound.
One dozen egga s| 1 weigh one
and one-half pou*)
Four even teasi . liquid equal
one even tablespoj
Two and one-lie i powdered
sugar equul
Three fry ma¬
terial eqatf nful,
The followin, -•portions is
also valuable.
«
One teaspoon!* one quart
soup.
One teaspoon! two quarts
flour.
i to cupful
One ti aspoonfg \ one
molusses. '
One teaspoonfi to one-pint
sour milk. 1
One teaspoon| to ono loaf
plain cake.
Threo teas •>« powder
to one quart
One scan* two
full oupfui
One slant to one
full cupful o aS. i*
Ono scant Oi., uid to two
full cupfuls of fl. uflins.
One-half eupfit •oast or one
quarter cake com* J ,yeast to one
pint liquid.
Four pepporeor mr cibTMr-bne
teaspoonful mix* rb* for each
quart of water fo ■took.
It is often said cooks that
“they never mi they guess.”
Not so. Long e has taught
them to mean a "asure accu
ratoly, by mean sainei expen¬
once and judging ds, however, is
a most rikefy- expe t for beginners
whose pinions art 1 insufficiently
furnished with pf r for indepeu
dent aerial navi* —New York
Advertiser.
SCIENTIFIC SCRAPS.
Only six parsons t * of 1,000 live to
he 75 yoars qld »•' *n reaches
the century. '
A elay fouud u . Clarence, Mo.,
hat been found to > >ntain 40 per oont
of aluminum.
Tho bottom of the deepest part of
tho Atlautio has recently been
proved to be about five miles and a
half down.
The orbit of Jnpi.er is 1,000,000,000
miles iu extent aul in it takes the
grand planet 4,83:! days to make one
round trip.
An electric railrvud is to be built in
the spring from Miroed to the Yosem
ite valley in California. The length
of the road is to be sixty-five miles.
The ratio of deafmntee in the world
is one to 1,600 feople. There are
upward of 40,000st eh unfortunates in
the United States ; 1,000,000 in the
world.
An electrician says the time is rap¬
idly approaching whe be
able to telegraph >o of
the sea shp48 travaqiing with le
or eny direct oonnl4§ton.
A mm in Brcpkn has invented a
kind ot •. , oi^bonSw*’,ior calmiu# : tho
wavea, rrMrh cam be wed s short dis¬
tance. There are t-inMl holes in them,
allowing ibe oil to ridl out in about
an hour. bfp ■ W „ " m
The balloon recently sent up by
French sciential's with automatically
registered thermometers and barome¬
ters, reached a height of ten miles,
where the thermometer registered 110
degrees below zero.
Hinee 1865 the death rate among the
British troops in India has diminished
from sixty-nine to fifteen per 1,000.
At the date mentioned not a single
town had a supply of pure water, bat
now nearly all the large cities and can¬
tonments hare wa erworks.
! POSTAL CARD MELAGNE.
Eight Thousand Varieties Known to
the World.
It seems almost incredible that th rre
should be 8,000 varieties of postal
'sards, but that Is the extent claimed
for a collection. These, however, in¬
clude various issues of the same nation
and denomination, and also cards is¬
sued for special occasions.
Postal cards have been in circulation
a little less than twenty-five years.
The idea originated with Dr. Emanuel
Harmann, a professor of national
economy Wiener, at the Imperial Academy ol
in Neustadt, Lower Austria.
His ideas, under the head of “New
Means of Correspondence by Post,"
ware published and attracted the at¬
tention o! the government offieials.
The director general of posts took up
the idea and succeeded in having an
issue of postal cards put in circulation
in 1869. The original name given
them was the “ correspondnz karte,”
and this has been retained ever since.
This new move on the part of Austria
quickly excited other countries to
adopt a similar method of correspond¬
ence, and before the close of 1870
nearly all the European countries
Were using cards.
Germany was really the second
country to employ them, and a special
series was issued to the soldiers en¬
gaged in the Franco-German war.
These were called the field-post cor¬
respondence cards, and were sold un¬
stamped to the soldiers at the rate of
about five for a half-penny. The
soldiers had the privilege of using
them without paying postage.
Another series was issued for civi¬
lians. These had a place left for a
stamp, and the writer hail to aflix a
German postage stamp to tho card be¬
fore posting. The field post-cards are
now rare, the used ones being scarcer
than the unused ones.
Another card of equal rarity, and
also a reminder of the same war, is the
balloon post-card, issued by France
daring the siege of Paris. The cards
were sent up from Paris in balloons,
and the mail bags were thrown off
into the surrounding country, where
there was the least possible opportun¬
ity of their capture by tho enemy.
They were smaller than the post¬
card now in use, and were covered
with war-like expressions as “Paris
defies the enemy 1” “Glory and con¬
quest signify crimes, defeat signifies
hate and a desire for revenge.” “Only
one war is just and right—that for in¬
dependence. "— Exchange,
In One Ton of Coal.
From one ton of ordinary gas coal
may be produced 1,500 poundsof coke,
20 gallons of ammonia water and 140
pounds of ooal tar. By destructive
distillation the coal tar will yield 69.6
pounds of pitch, 17 pounds of creo¬
sote, 14 pounds of heavy oils, 9.5
pounds of naphtha yellow, 6.3 pounds
of naphthaline, 4.75 ponnds of naph
thol, 2.25 pounds of solvent naphtha,
1.5 pounds of phenol, 1.2 poundsof
aurine, 0.77 of a pound of toludine,
0.46 of a pound of anthracite and 0.0
of a pound of tolnone. From the lat¬
ter is obtained the new substance
known as saccharine, which ia 530
time* as sweet as the best Cftje sugar,
one part of it giving a very sweet taste
to a thousand parts of water.
ACUTE DYSPEPSIA.
SYMPATHETIC HKA.HT DISEASE OFTEN
ATTENDS IT.
The Modern Treatment Consists In Re¬
moving the Causo. ...
(From the Republican, Cedar Rapids, Iowa).
Mrs. V. Curley, who has resided In Clarence,
Iowa, for the past twenty-two years, tells an
interest! 11 ® story of what she considers rescue
from premature death. Her narrative is as
follows:
“For ten years prior to 1894, I was a eo2
stant sufferer from acute stomach trouble. X
had ail tho manifold symptoms of acute dvs
pepsia, and at times other troubles were pres
out in complication—I did not know what it
was to enjoy a meal. No matter bow careful
I might bo as to the quality, quantity and
preparation of my food, distress always fol¬
lowed eating. X was despondent and blue.
Almost to the point of insanity at times, and
would have boon glad to dio. Often and
often X could not sleep. Sympathetic lioart
trouble set in and time and again I was ob
ltgod to call a doctor In the night to relieve
sudden attacks of suffocation which would
oome on without a moment’s warning.
‘ ‘My troubles increased as time wore on and
I spent large sums in doctor bills, being com¬
pelled to have medical attendants almost con¬
stantly. During 1892 and 1893, it was im¬
possible for me to retain food, and water
brashes plagued me. X was reduced to a
skeleton. A consultation of physicians wa3
unable to determine Just what did ail me.
Tho doctors gave us as their opinion that the
probable trouble was ulceration of the coats
of the gtomaoh and held out no hope of re¬
covery. One doctor said, ‘All I can do to
relieve your suffering is by the use ot opium.’
“About this time a friend of mine, Mrs.
Symantha 8mith, of (Hidden, Iowa, told mo
about the esse of Mrs. Thurston, of Oxford
Junction, Iowa. This lady said she had been
afflicted much the same as I had. She had
consulted local physicians without relief, and
had gone to Davenport for treatment. Giving
up all hope of recovery, she was persuaded
The by a friend to take Dr. Williams' rink Ihils.
result was almost magical.
“I was led to try them from her'experienoe, i
and before many months X felt better than
I had for a dozen rears. X am now almost i
free from trouble, and if through some error
of diet I fool badly, this splendid remedy sets
mo right again. I have regained my strength
and am onoe more in my usual flesh. I sleep
well and can eat without distress. I have no
doubt that I owe my recovery to Dr. Wii
Uams* Pink rills, i" only wish that I had
heard of them years ago, thereby saving
myself ten rears of suffering and much 1
money.”
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all the ele
ments necessary to give new life and richness
to the blood and restore shattered nerves.
They by are for solo by all druggists, Williams’ or Medicine may be
bad mail from Dr.
box, Company, Schenectady, boxes 62.50. N. V., for 50c. per i
or six for
I,«w llntes fo Kasferu CilifH.
Norfolk, March 1S$5. -Beginnin j this
date, the Seaboard Air l.ia« tolies pleasure in
announcing to their patrons througliout t ne ~
eoui h possib y the lowest r ite? ever offvri d to
eastern citie*. Fo loving are rates to pr noi
points. Atlanta to Richmond. $3.30: Pe¬
tersburg. $^-75; Poit'RKmfh and Serf- Ik.
2S; Washington. Pbiaielyb viaPu’tsm nth. S^ oO*. York, * alii
omvtt, $14. $13; a. $1180;
Ho-t) .
Approved. General T. Passenger J. AXDFRSOX. -Agent.
E. St. dons. \ ;,-o n t i. T
The above low rates arid
•wt « who (.•‘Bterapi ria
Should take *di Aftv.int .1 4P of iftis fxtivm Off I
rare. L. For detailed iof-onnario.i. time t.i ies,
Ac., address ness p. a . New l v.\ r. ?
Gen. Agrt. Pass. IVp:., A riant • Ga.
Mrs. Winslow's Soot h i n ^ Sy- :pf - Ire i
feet hint*. «oftens the gams, redo i: a flam n^- j
tier:. aH* 3 rspaiu. cures
KarPs Clover Ro^t. the i
rives freshne'« and clear
ton And cures * Ss.. ■
If afflicted w! se i
tmt'sKye-irster.DrufgisU sell a!
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report *
ftl
4 Powder
Absolutely pure
A Vast Electrical Trust.
The consolidation of the great elec¬
trical manufacturing interests of the
country, to include such corporations
as the Westinghouse andGeneral Elec¬
tric Company, is now talked of tho
Electrical Review publishes this:
“There is on foot a scheme for a
consolidation in the electrical manu¬
facturing line, so comprehensive in its
scope, as to throw into the shade the
rosiest plans of the General Electric
promoters.
The project of consolidation is yet
in an embryotic state. It may take
material form at the next meeting of
the board of directors of the General
Electric Company, some of the mem¬
bers oi which are said to be in favor
of the formation of the trust. This
meeting will be held the first week in
April.
---^-- —
■» ,i ^ ^ p rAwfc^
s' flowers fade
and wither with time;
the bloom of the rose
.^a.3 is only known to the
u : ls4 healthy woman’s
I cheeks. The nerv
?v)OUS strain caused by
w ' vC;the ailments and
m iky pains peculiar to the
yv sex, ana tlie labor
and Worry of rearitltr
a familvr ianillj', r-esn can OIICU
be traced by the lines in the woman’s face.
Dull eyes, the sallow or wrinkled face and
those feelings of weakness” have their
rise in the derangements and irregularities
peculiar to women. painful disorders, The functional and chronic de
rangenients, cured
weaknesses of women, can be with
Dr. Pierce S Favorite Prescription. For the
young girl just entering womanhood, for
the mother and those about to become
mothers, and later in ” the change of life ”
the Prescription is just what they need '
it aids nature in preparing the system for
the change. It’s a medicine prescribed for
thirty years, in the diseases of women, by
Dr. R. V. Pierce, chief Hotel consulting and Surgical physician Insti
to the Invalids'
tute.at Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription will cure the chronic in flamma
tioil of the lining membranes which cause
such exhausting drains upon the system.
It cures nervous prostration, sleeplessness,
faintness, nervous debility and all disorders
arising from derangement of the telltale
organs and functions.
Mrs. Jennie Williams, of Mohawk , Lane Co.,
Ore von writes- I
waMtiirk was sick ior for over overinrce three
years with buna dizzy
the spells, heart, palpitation pain in *' the of
back and would head, have and
at times
such a weak tired feel¬
ing in when the I morning, first got
and up times
at nervous %
chills.
The physicians dif¬
fered as to what ray
disease was. but none «P
of them did me any
good. As soon as I
commenced taking Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Pre
SftfM Mr», ’Williams.
well nights, and that Dad, nervous feeling and the
pain in my back soon left me. I can walk sever*
al miles without getting tired. I took in ail three
bottles of ‘ Presen ption ’ aud two of’ Discovery.’ ”
WALTER IKER & GO.
The Largest Manufacturers of^—
M PURE, HIGH GRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
On thi. Continent, h 4v , rece l T ed
HIGHEST AWARDS
fr&ftt th« great
111 Hrial and Food
EXPOSITIONS
MSflltlj lipin Unlike Europe the Dutch and Proceen, America. Alkt
no
—H,'i TheTdeiiSS. '■‘li.h breakfas^ lica or other Chemical*or .^auSlltd? Dyer ix%
cocoa
pure CQ<1 • oluble ’ Rnd costs less than onc cent a °hp*
SOLD BY QROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER. MAS8.
Ohl Po«tns;e Si amps
will WANTED!
I pay from 50c. to $100
each for tho Htamps issued
by ihe different Southern
cities duliner 1 he war; also
good and pries* for old U. us^d S.
unused, foreign confederat fitampp, rel¬
3> or ics, etc. Stamps ‘hould o be
kept when on the poaaib'e. entire Remit¬ t-nve!
ope of
tance or return stamps
on day of receipt* sjjlTII,
J. s. . IU.
1 2 S.State St., Chicago,
IVSORPH3IME; IN 20 DAYS.
HABIT CURED. NO SUFFERING.
Patients j»l *cp at anywhere night and in every th3 city. day !Not are
able «o go about
confined to bed a single day. No j ay in ad¬
vance. Not one cent inquired write till cured and
satisfied. Come to see me or me at once
this for terms opportunity. and further particulars. Don't miss
B. A. SVMS, M. D„ Atlanta, Georgia.
11)7 Alexander Mrcci.
SULLIVAN
4 CRICHTON’S A
EjindS
and school of Shorthand
The Best and ChfAoest Time short. Br.aine*e Catalogue College in America. Address
Four Penmen free
iilllTan & Crichton* Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga.
HAVE YOU FIVE OR MORE COWS ?
If so a" Baby ” Cream Separator will earn ita cost for
you every year. Wbr continue an inferior system
* another year at so great a Agriculture. lose ? Dairying Prop- is now rly the
only profitable feature of con¬
ducted it always pays well, and must payyou. Ymi
I need “Baby.” a Separator, All styles and you capacities. need the Prices, BEST,—the JTo.
\ ana
Upward. Send for new 1895 Catalogue.
THE DE LAVAL SEPARATOR CO •»
*C Branch Offices: General Offices:
—. ELGIN, ILL. 74 C0RTLAK3T ST., NEW YORK.
—***
A
m * A I Babies and Children
thrive on Scott's Emulsion when all the rest of their food
seems to go to waste. Thin Babies and Weak Children grow
strong, plump and healthy by taking it.
Scott’s Emulsion
overcomes inherited weakness and all the tendencies toward 9
I Emaciation Lungs. children Chronic End or all Consumption. C-oughs, persons suffering and Wasting Thin, from weak Diseases Loss babies of and Flesh, will growing receive Weak $ t
untold benefits from this great nourishment. The formula
for making Scott 's Emulsion has been endorsed by the med¬
ical world for twenty years. No secret about it.
SenJfmr pamphlet on Scott 9 ! Emulsion. FREE.
Scott Sl Bowne, N, Y. AM Druggists. 50 cents end Si u
As English translation ot “The
Thibetan Life of Jesus,” which M.
Notovitch, the Russian traveler, says
he discovered in a Lamaist monastery
in the Himalayas, wiil be published
soon.
0100 Reward. 6100.
The render of this paper will be pleased disease to
learn that 1 here is at least abls pno dreaded
that science has bsen to cure In all ltd
ataqes, and that is Catarrh. Hail’s Catarrh
Cure Is the only positive cure known to tha
medical fraternity. Catarrh being a eonstitu*
tional disease, requires a constitutional treat¬
ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure blood is taken internally,
faces acting directly on the thereby an destroying i mucous sur¬ tha
of the system, the
foundation of the building disease, and the giving constitution pa¬
and tient assisting strength by nature in doing up Its work. The
proprietors have so much faith in its curative
powers, that they offer One Hundred Polar*
tor any case that it fade to cure. Send for list
of testimonials. Address
£iS“Sold F. J. Cheney & Co-.ToIedo, O,
by Druggists, 75c.
We wools not have oxpenStS
HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS GF DOLLARS
doing cslvanizinff, for which w» niude no •%lra charge, had
th«r» not be*n roorit in U. Galvanizing eon*i«ls !n coating tha
tr ° n f ^ m ^j st (»n thin •he«ts) ^etai, ftctl,
fcnd aluminum. would If there were for rot great merit barbed in galvan’jtinf,
ao on* pay wor* galvanised *“"‘ wire or ^
m K
OFt, for $15
)g „ Rih.d ^ |irjc# for an g.f 1)0f p aint«i wirvimui. .<ir4
we r<»H m* ages, we hcit.d rot
b*kt a l •aleasizbi? 'iSlv ouk rViIy r ri °/ol Alt’ ni, ^ f
too nocu> pat i-s ooihle pirn* ru« it. w# buihi
thfi !»«t vre knov*, end knowing that pointed thin sheet* Th* »r«
prnciioftlljr worthle*.s, tve have nothing to do with them.
enorraou* eost of preparing to do galxanizing, and of doing it
«*h on a i*r«a * 0 >ie, deter* others, some hi y haltanizkd
KLJK
liners rist our first around the rivet*.joints.
SD T,,EKKro,tE ' R 0 J*° *22?/?
painted gaivani**! utndmiUo material, a:n1 painted lowers, punched or those aft* made the up mh of
cut, and 9
Xt? S^MSSJS’
novr galvanlJO overything after it is completed, even bolU and
MiSSSSLrr™ - " 1 “
Thep, Ocoee: VShe* a ^ tecUon of ^SLtSfllS an Act-motor Wheel ia eM
u thatmttai.al* 1 %
n.jroim
»*•», Vmi'Jhb ryre
mohen metal, ond the whole tt
*”» ^AqSBPtinnx e TJ- n
c, In >-oa h... .om.. tint a
jwlftt ^i„ISr°nirit«l Md r.ii.bi.. tt i, -Em. |y«.‘s” «r«nsi.. r to °«n'oti,.r“' do, .nd .m.ii
silvery tj u white coating from tvhtch on. I | 3 file erery <i to pore and covers r*.
Z&£tS«E£ a time, forms, with the 2 Steal, Z I j 1 1 Chemical combination or
11 a
•»&*«* mfiu, f\ « «5T3
prices ot, wind - Si| towers, etc,, «nd u an
BSSSSldl «‘oS b/ uB SmuiSAmUS
it ih inpinitelt bv. n!i Per.ioit shape at k
KllUCl LOl 8li¥ SHALL \« PRICE, ANNOINCID
CUTTER, THE OPr«R WORTHi OP AN ALUSTEEL VERY Sl PERIOR IN PEKO OCR
f40 AS PRICKS CO, AT *10.
**xt ad. we shall offer yod Something of stiui
oeiatkb interest. Aermotor Co.,
AFTER DINNER.
iiliiiiii
if.
'd
-y, m :• j hi
Big dinner last night t
It was, indeed.
Plenty to drink, poof
Well, I should say so.
Headache In consequence?
Oh, no.
How do you manage It?
Ripans • labule,.
Will that do It?
Every time.
W.L. S3 SHOE Douglas
IS THE BEST.
FIT TOR A KINO.
Nk cordovan; CALF.
J|34*3SP FRENCH aENAMEUEU
FltffCAlf SiKANGAROi
MB * 3.5? POLICE, 3 soles.
ft* 5
bJ S2.$i7_s boys SchoolShoes.
w ^3-nist^. -LADIES
SEND FOR CATALOGUE LA9
*** W- L-DOUG a
BROCKTOH.r-lASS.
Over One Million People wear tho
W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
AH our shoes are equally satisfactory
They give the best value for the money.
They equal custom shoes tn style and lit.
Their wearing uniform,—stamped qualities are unsurpassed. sole.
The prices are on
From Si to $3 saved over other makes.
If your dealer cannot supply you we can.
Ill'S
HAY PRESS, WATER WHEELS
WBe«t nod i'lirapest.
DeLoach Mill 3Ianutacturiiig Co.,
350 Highland Avenues Atlanta, Ga.
A.S.V Twf J v , ’9 ?.