Newspaper Page Text
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
Practice in looking at distant objects
Improves the eyesight.
The crab is ft dancing insect, and four •
fifths of its moves arc mado to amuso
•tteli.
Seymour, Ind., has the largest wooden
butter dish mill. Its capacity is 150,000
” er
Steel rails now weigh 100 from pounds lifty-six to
the yard, alt increase
• no intis
(Mo.) firm recently shipped .
A Bangor,
7,000,000 feet of spool wood to Scotch
threadmnkers.
New .. England , , makes . 100,000,000 .oa aaa a ,a of ..r
Ihe 100,000,000 pairs of shoe* used in
(lie States annually.
The Russian Government lift* decided
to plant several thousands of acres in the
Cauca^us with olives.
iptdet ! •/ *s 10,000 “sc* not, equal «■».*■»«■ substance
are in
to tho si/oof a Single hair.
l’fflp mills have so multiplied in Maine
*'»' ......« ovcr..»ppty ....
lc"-s new mills are put up to turn tho
pulp into paper.
The Baldwin Locomotive Works last
yiar ...... lo.ilt mull hu locomotives, locomotives the int limn-st largest
number ever turned out in one yea. by
»ny establishment.
The process of electric bleaching now
used in the big paper plants is from forty
to seventy per lime. cent, cheaper than the uso
of chloride of
Dr. Caro, a Cuban chemist and pro¬
fessor in the Havana University, hasdis-
covered , a process , by winch , any adultera- , ,,
tion in wines is immediately detected.
Tiiirty years ago there were near one
hundred liglitniug-r?d factories in tho
United Btatc ow there are but four,
yet they turn out as many rods as cape
from their so numerous predecessors.
Tho ino-t valuable marble mines in
America axe at'1 ate, Pickens county, Oa.
New Kugiand there, capitalists and own rapidity more than
7000 acres are grow¬
ing richer by tlie extending use of their
product.
) he excited Baris Academy of Science is just
now over a plant called Colocasia.
This plant often exhibits a trembling or
a vibrating motion without any appar¬
ent. cause, and as many as ion or 120 vi¬
brations have been observed in a single
minute.
At the intelligence bureau of the
I nited States Navy Department a large
map shows by colored tags the present
location of die world’s war vessels,
which include about 100 belonging to
Great Britain, 100 to France, 40 to
Germany, and 40 to die United. States.
One of Scotland’s rare marshy plants,
a g ums of the order of arrow grasses,
has, according to 1‘rofessor Hillhousc,
beeome extinct. It was to he found
only on the moor of Methven in Berth-
shire ; but some 300 or 400 black-headed
gulls have settled down on this moor
and nnniliiliatcd every trace of vego-
tat. on.
Borne electric motors made by M.
Trouvn for icronautical experiments are
remarkable for their tightness. One—
made of aluminium, except the magnets
—weighs but a little more than three
ounces, and develops one-fortieth of a
horse-power, second. lifting Constructed itself seventy-two
feet iu one on tho
same scale, a one-horse motor would
weigh less than eight pounds.
Experiments , it is > slated, being
are,
maiie on the Brussian railways with
axle-boxes in which (lie bearing surface
consists of sheets of vegetable parch¬
ment set on edge, and strongly com¬
pressed together. is said The be lubrication of
these bearings to very perfect,
as, owing to the capillary attraction be¬
tween the different sheets, the whole
becomes thoroughly saturated with oil.
There is a water wheel-in uso at Bow
doinlmm. Me., which is probably th only
one of its kind in existence. It, is twenty- |
seven feet diameter, with a foot of its
riut out of water at high tide; tho spokes
are wide and set diagonally, like the
•vanes of a windmill. It turns eighteen
hours of the day the by tide power, running
one way witli flow, the other with
the ebb. With one foot fall of tide this
wheel gives about fifty horse power.
At a rooont meeting of the Hoyal So¬
showed ciety of theoretically Edinburgh, that Brofessor Tait
water could
be compressed bulk. to about three-fourths of
its original is The of compressibility that
of sea water ,02 of fresh ;
wkter. If the water of the ocean were
suddenly to he onto incpmprcssible,
tour per > eut. of the habitable laud of
the globe would depth be of submerged, would because in
the mean water be •
creased llti feet.
Some Diplomatic Romances.
Many diplomats have recently wedded
Americans. A few years ago, however,
there was even a greater eageruess to
wed American girls. One Del Campo,
of the Chilian Legation, angled earnest •
ly and widely for an American girl with
a fortune. He was a rogue and kept the
city in an uproar by his sprees. After
an unusually impassioned appeal to a
Washington girl the he was recalled, and
returning by way of Panama he
from wrote a friend, letter to describing her,purporting to come
a in vivid lan
guace an account of tho re ected Del
- am pa’s death by tho dread fever of the
tropic* His obituary was done up by
Inmself in good shape. The girl was
still lamenting her coldness to ihe sen
^live Southerner when she heard front
the t. b'liun who took her lover's pla e
that the former atia he of the Chilian
l egation was now attache ol a horse car
in the Chilian capital.
These modern romances of American
girls u .d foreign noblemen cannot match
the allinnco of forty years ago—the fa¬
mous ntarr age of the old Count de Bo-
disco, the Bnssiau Minister, and Miss
Harr.ct Williams, the Georgetown beau
tv. He was old plumpers" and decrepit. his It is said
tant he wore * in cheeks
h: d dtes-ed his poor, broken old form
so that he looked like a man of forty
after he saw the beautiful school girl at
; er father’s house in Georgetown. For
tva< a schoolgirl—only her. fourteen
when he married He sent her to
uri peto finish her education,and when
h ; ame back .she »a ; the mo-t beauti
»1 woman in America. A magnificent,
air woman, with golden hair and browi
was this young wife of the old
■ de Boais 'o. Vfter leaving here
i c husband returned to tutssio, and she.
i e. ante the reigning belle of St. Peter*
bu r g. — Cni.agv Trk une.
AN OLD TIME PARTISAN.
«** *S*y tor*oajl to mind bis familiar figure
rit^omor ^^ Wint ° r OTOr,U,g, ’ **
In his ca*y chair, with pipe in hand and his
silver-rimmed pushed back until they
find a soft resting plaoo on his beloved snow-
white head, with oyos sparkling and his face
beaming memories with pl arntre as bo calls back old
of days long gone by, lie is likoly to
talk something after this fashion:
“It’s a long timn slnoe I was a boy. Ah, but
that was many years ago. Sixty long years
havo gono and tho good Lord knows they wore
short enough. I was then as spruce and port as
as any chap theroalsmts.
changed “On, but we boys were tioys I Tilings have then
didn’t take a heap much sineo stock those in stylish days. clothes, Boys and
they Clothes didn’t carry canon like they do now.
and oanes didn’t cut muoh capor then,
but it was good hard seme and work.
“Tho boy who could do tho biggest day’s work
^iw j jook-
)j0 waH mrc U) iaV() t j 10 KWIiettHt an< i |„. st
In’ '1 gal at tho ‘Hingin' school’ or ‘«pplo peolin.'
ttKMSr 53B? 2 ? X'
miles or more to two your grandmother, and wo
didn't have very go.«l roads either, but gon-
* r *U|’ had ( to follow ”g’r, some old £™“Kp'K("o; Indian trail.
1
world anything, found thoro was tho bust medicine in tho
in any log cabin homo you oamo
acr, ^- Wiy Mess f remember that my old grand-
™ ) 1 “ lcr > a «l her aonl, sho’s boon dead these
fifty made yean medicine or more, could make the best home
for miles around. Her ‘sareapa-
rilly’ in oonldn’t bo Is at. Gome to think I just read
tho paper about somebody who is making tills
)amo old log cabin medicine, under tho name of
‘Warner’s Log Cabin Sarsaparilla.’
“ It does seem splendid to think that you can
| Imy those good old homo euros at tho druggist's
I nowadays. “ Mobbe
you think peoplo woro not healthy In
; those days, but I tell you that it was mighty sol-
dom anybody was sick long when they had such
j good ‘ 1 1’oople old grand-mother used he medicino so healthier handy. and
to stronger,
ihoy lived longer, when I was a boy.”
Explorer Stanley.
The march of Stanley, tho African cx-
plorcr, river from Lake the Albert shores Nyanzaisone of tlie Congo of
to the
,nost wonderful achievements in the his¬
tory of exploration iu any part of the
world. No explorer 1ms hitherto ut-
j tempted so dangerous inconceivubledifficulties— a journey—one
and fraught the with of tho expedition
success can
on *y •>« comparatively described by say¬
ing that Stanley hits outdone himself.
Ho led his forces 2,000 miles in 100 days
through tiro dense African forest, braved
savage enemies, endured agonicsof thirst
uungcr, was exposed to deadly fe-
v °rs, and lus total losses in his marching
f,,rco . U P 1° tl10 date of tho letter from
him, One were 100, out of a total of 380 men.
of the great obstacles to his march
who was thehostlity persuaded of the Arab slave-dealers,
many of his men to desert,
robbed and murdered the stragglers of
l s l ,llr fy> ft! *d laid waste by firo large
tracks of country which he had to trav-
cr8(1 - By his matchless generalship, his
Indomitable pluck, his patience in endur-
i ing unutterable perils, Stanley has fairly
won tho title of the greatest explorer of
, this country, if not indeed of nil in tho
rears since Columbus crossed tho terror
aspiring western ocean.
A Great Scantp.
' Some miscreant who will bo a marked
man if lie is ever discovered, played a
contemptible and most scurvy trick oq
tho Chicago Frcic, Preset. At an early
hour yesterday morning the party above
i alluded to broke a window in the office
| | and He did entered tho composing apartments.
not cotne to steal anything, be-
cause ho was well enough posted not to
ticulnrly g 0 near a newspaper offico editors to pilfer, par-
! after the opulent and tho
i feportorial Vanderbilts had gono home,
j Ho wanted pi—good, old German pi.
His soul yearned for it and he got it.
Going to each of the printers’ cases, lie
grabbed handfuls of German and Sans-
crit typo, and with tho abandon of a
thoy thorough would villain, distributed them whero
do the most harm, Lower-
caso “tit’s” came into friendly juxtaposi¬
tion with small-cap “xV’and “ill’s,” and
“Ill’s” were en rapport with tho of
our daddios. The whole alphabet was
thus treated. This little irregularity
was not discovered until several columns
of matter had been set, and then the
proof-readers began to talk in a language
unfitted for uso iu Sunday-Schools.
Dry Goods Merchant: “You have
called in response to our advertisement
for a floor walker?” “Well, sir,what are
your qualifications “1 for father tho position?” of three
Applicant*. twins.” am tho
pairs of
Cleanse
the System
DO with that most reliable
medicine—Paine’s "clcry
IT Compound. It purifies the
blood, cures Constipation,
and regulates tho llvorand
NOW lug kidneys, tho system ('ffiH'tually ot all cloano- waste
and dead matter.
Paine’s
Celery Compound
combines true nerve tonic and strengthening
qualities, reviving the euergles and spirits.
•• l have been troubled tor some years with a
complication rious remedies, of dimcnlttes. finding After trying va¬
and not relief, I tried
l'olne’s celery Compound, lieforo taking one
full bottle the long troublesome symptoms be-
fon ftvl like to subside, and I can truly say now, that I
and 1 have a new gained man. Digestion In has Improved,
ten pounds weight since I
have commenced taking the Compound."
Honkstus Stearns. Felchville, Vt.
$1.00. Six tor $5.00. At Druggists.
Wklis, Kiciuri'son ft Oo., Burlington, Vt,
any oME|=si^
CAN
A Dress, or a Coat, Any Color
Ribbons, Feathers, FOR
Yarns, Rags, etc. TEN CENTS
»nd in many other wavs SAVE Money, and make
look like NEW, by using DIAMOND
DYES. The work is easy, simple, quick; the
colors the BEST and FASTEST known. Ask for
DIAMOND DYES and take no other.
For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles USE
DIAMOND PAINTS.
Cold, Silver, Bronse. Copper. Only to Cents.
Baby "A Portfolio Portraits. of beautiful baby pic¬
tures from life, printed oa fine
s k plate paper by patent photo of
5 process, sent ftce to Mother
•4- Bx jv any Every Baby Mother torn within a year,
wants theso
f \ J Baby’s pictures; name send and at once. ago. Give
i__ V /WELLS, auauNaToa, RICHARDSON vt. A CO.,
Poisoned by Burning Yor.
A singular oase of! wholesale poisoning
from that came the Morning near proving Sido School, fatal is reported in Sioux
Citv, Iowa, Shortly taught by Miss Hattie Oon-
niff. after school was called on
a recent foronoon a peculiar odor was
noticed, and searching for the source,
tho toaoher opened the door to the
closet where the scholurs kept their
wraps. A fur cup, belonging to one of
tho boys, had fallen into a bucket con¬
taining not aehefl, and was sending off
clouds of smoko. Tho teacher seized
the bucket and started for the door, but
when half way across tho room was
overcome by the smoko, and dropped
into tho nearest scat almost unconscious.
A boy then took the bucket, but at once
succumbed and fell to the floor. Twenty
of tho pupils who sat where tho Bmoke
reached them were deathly sick, and
wore unable to rise alone.' By super¬
human offorte tho teacher managed to
got the door open, and tho fresh air re¬
vived her whore so she they helped lay the tho children out
doors, tho on ground iu
agony. At end of three hours all
had recovered sufficiently to be taken
home, but woro very weak. It is sup¬
posed that poison of was the contained in the
coloring matter by tho cap, and that it
was set free burning.— Washing¬
ton Btar,
Increased the Bill
Customer—“I see you are advertising
full sets of teeth for $8.” Dentist (cau¬
tiously)—“Y-e-s, home?” sir. Do board.” you live at
Customer--“No, I Dent¬
ist (with dignity)— “You certainly cannot
expect an $8 set to bo of any use in a
boarding houso, sir. My ebargo to you
will he $25.”
The Episcopal Inhibited bishop of Glasgow,
Scotland, Canon Wilbcrforce
from talking temperance in the churches
of that diocese, because he co-operates
with the ministers of the Church of
Scotland in his work.
What will cure the worst caae of dyspepsia?
What will insure a hearty appetite and general in¬
creased digestion? What will cure
debility anu give anew lease of life? What
will dispel nervous exhausted depression and low spirits? full
What will restore What mothers to
strength? will strengthen nerves and
muse lee? What will enrich the blood? What
will enable you lack to overcome weakness, What will wake¬
fulness and of energy? pre¬
vent chills and fever and other effects of ma¬
larial poison? Brown’s Iron Bitters. It Is
well to know this.
Tho Jute bagging trust will only ask the
farmer $3,000,000 extra for bagging in 1890.
A Rndtenl Cure for Epileptic Fit*.
To the EiUtm —Please Inform for your roaders
that 1 have a positive remedy the above
earned disease which 1 warrant to cure the
worst caHcs. So strong is my faith In Its vir
lues that 1 will send frees samplebottle who will glvo and
valuable treatise to any sufferor
me his P. O. and Express address. Kesp’y,
H.G. BOOT. M. C . 183 Pearl St.. New York.
If afflicted with sorn oyos nso Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c.per bottle
You Need It Now
To impart strength and give a feeling of health
and vigoT throughout the system, there la nothing
equal to Hood’s Sarsaparillr It seems peculiarly
adapted to overcome that tired feeling caused by
i hang, of sea-on, climate or life, and while It tones
an l sustains the system it pnrifles and renovates
the blood. We earnestly urge the large army of
olerks, book-keepers, teachers, housewives, opera¬
tives and others who have been closeiy confined
during th> winter and who noed a good spring
medicine, to take
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
“For yoara at irregular intervals In all seasons
I Buffered the intolerable burning and Itching of
blood ixdsonlng by ivy. It would break out on my
logs, in my throat and eyes. East spring I took
Hood’s Sarsaparilla, as a blood purifier, with no
thought of it as a special remedy for ivy poisoning,
but it has effected a pemoment and thorough cure.”
Calvin T. Sitotk. Wontworth, N. H.
Purifies the Blood
"Hood’s Sarsaparilla purified my blood, gave me
strength, and overcame the headache and dizziness,
so that I am able to work again, I recommend
Hood’s Sarsap-riila to others whose blood Is thin
or impure, and who feel worn out or run down.”—
EctubkNabok, Lowell, Mass.
"We haw used Hood’s Sarsaparilla for years, and
recommend It os the best spring medicine er blood
purifier. Onr boy Is nine years old and has enjoyed
good health ever slnoe wo began giving it to him.
Wears seldom without It.”—B. F.Gnovim,
ter, N. U.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. * 1 ; alx for $a. Prepared only
by 0.1. HOOD ft CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
TV hkvolvL YOD WISH A r-v- . Tffti
pr.rctiaso one of thn cele-
bralM SMITH ft WESSON
first choice of all experts. KW
Ji“or fCsTrUS™. Bafew aSSm&JSs Si
®fftC'iTZi® .Tokrfehtt^Sf.tt'iSS^i
rele with firm’s nsme. address and dates of patents
pucaton. S tfITH & WESSON,
tr-ysntlon this paper. Springfield, linos.
IBlARCII
New York Ofilces Fifteenth 5’ICliuton Pines (Eighth 8 M,
•r 3ilB treatment North St., Philadelphia, Pa.,
for the ef Bloed Poisons. Skin Eruption*.
Nervous Complaints, Briaht’s Disease, Strictures,
Impotancy and kindred dieeasos, no matter of how
WV lens Ten standing, days’ mroicines or irom furnished what cause orUinatinjr.
bv mail rnct> rnFP
Send far Book on SPKCIA1. msense*.
sail SI60 SAW FARMERS * ksulvks, w««i n»o^
salem Ikon Wokks, Salem, N. C. Write for circular.
SOUTHERN DYE HOUSE
All kinds of Silk, Cotton or Woolen Goods
handsomely dyed or cleaned. -
I^Sults ft Bpooialty.^l
EXPRESS PAID ONE WAY.
24 Walton St., ATLANTA, GA.
i 1 Free Masonry. Sign., Grips, and Morgan’*
fate by mail on receipt 91. PEOPLES
Pl'BI.l.HHIXJ CO.. St. Paul,Minn,
BEST ON EARTH
to Agents free. Guaranteed to please. J. \V. Ml-
hng 1011 . Dry ados St*. New OrlemiM. I*a.
GO 10 $8 n day. Samples worth $1.50 FREE.
Lines not under the h«f»e*s feet. Write
JJrewsUr Safety Rein Holder Co,, Holly, Mich.
The Wonsan Praise B. U. B.
Thn goffering of women oortainly awakens
the sympathy of errery true philanthropist.
Wood Balm). Send to Blood Balm Co., At¬
lanta, Oa., for proofs.
H. L, Cassidy, Kennesaw, Ga., writes:
“Three bottle* of B. B. B. cured my wife ol
scrofula.” “1
Mrs. R, M. Laws, Zalaba, Fla., B. writes: B. B.”
have Mrs. never 0. H. used Gay, anything Kooky Mount, to equal X. C., writes:
“Not a day for 15 years was I free from head-
aohe. B. B. B. entirely relieved me. I feel
like another person.”
James W. Lancaster, HawkinsviUo, Ga..
writes: Five “My doctors wife was and in bad health patent medicines for eight
voars. has many bottles of U. B. B.
done her no good. Six
oured hor.”
Miss B. Tomlinson, Atlanta, Ga., says: “For
years I suffered writh rheumatism, caused bj
kidney and trouble and indigestion. roliovod I also was fcebU al¬
nervous. B. B. B. mo at once,
though several other medicines had failed.”
Bov. J. M. Ilichardson, Clarkson, Ark.,
writes: “My wifo suffered twelve years with
rheumatism and female complaint. A lady
member of my churoh had been oured by B. B.
B. Bho persuaded my wifo to try it, who now
says there is nothing liko B. B. B., as it quickly
gavo her relief.”
Some Mexican Superstitions.
It is believed that the murderer who
has slain his victim with sword or dag¬
ger will escape if the body falls up on its
side or back; but if the body falls face
downward, then tho and murderer surely
soon will bo captured put to death.
This belief is said to be so firmly rooted
union g the people of northeastern Mexi¬
co that when a murdered man fall’s upon
his face his slayer makes no effort to es¬
cape, and even sometimes voluntarily
surrenders himself to justice.
If a bride, while dressing for her
wedding, is pricked by a pin so that
the blood flows, great misfortune im¬
pends. If
two persons think of the same
thing at the same time, a soul is
loosed from purgatory. — Scribner’s Maga
tine.
Lung Troubles nml Wasting
Diseases can be cured. If properly treated in
time, ns shown by tho following statement
from D. C. Freeman, Sydney: “Having been
a great sufferer from pulmonary attacks, and
gradually It affords wasting pleasure away to for testify the past that two Scott’s years,
me
Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Lime and
Soda has given mo great relief, and I cheer¬
fully recommend It to all addition, suffering In a simi¬
lar way to myself. In I would say
that it is very pleasant to take.”
Trade Is fairly good throughout the country,
barring the coal and iron industries.
Children Cry for It.
If a child will take a medicine with pleasu o,
you may know that it is not in any way offen¬
sive to the taste. Children like Hamburg them Figs,
and It is no longer necessary to disgust Fig. Mack
with castor-oil. 23 cents. Dose one
Drug Co., N. Y.
The Mother’s Friond, used before confine¬
ment, lessens pain and makes labor com¬
paratively easy. Sold by all druggists.
Bronchitis is cured by frequent small doses
of I’iso’s Cure for Consumption.
At no other season does the human sys em so
much need the aid of a reliable medicine like
Hood’s Sarsaparilla as now. The impoverished con*
dltion of the blood, the weakening effects of the
long, cold winter, the lost appetite, and that tired
feeling, all make a good spring mediclno absolutely
neocssary. Hood’s Sarsaparilla la p:culiarly
adapted for this purpose, and Increases in popular¬
ity every year. Give it a trial.
"Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the cheapest medicine I
can buy.”—F. R. Riedel, Belleville, Ill
The Spring Medicine
"Every spring for years I have made it a practice
to take from three to five bottles of Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla, because I know It purifies the blood and
thoroughly cleanses the system of aU Impurities.
That languid feeling, sometimes oaUed ’spring
fever,’ will never visit the systom that has been
properly cared for by this never-failing remedy,’’—
W. H. Lawrence, Editor Agricultural Epltomist,
Indianapolis, Ind.
Creates an Appetite
“I wish to enroll my name as one of those who
have derived health from the use of Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla. For many years I have taken It, especially
in the early spring, when I am troubled with dizzi¬
ness, dullness, unpleasant taste In my mouth in ths
morning. It removes ths bad taste, relieves my
I headache and makes me feelgrer.tly refreshed. Ths
two bottles I have used this spring have been worth
many dollars to me I advise all my friends to taks
It.”—J ohn Bras*, (*3<3d 8 t, Town of Lake, Chicago;
111
Sold by ail druggists. *1; fix for go. Prepared only
by 0.1. HOOD ft CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass
IOO Dosos One Dollar
Look Here!
OrdiBTS fOT " tflG SkClTlTlOTl LBttB1
FUbs and Cabinets, DocumBiit
Fllm 9 Cabinets, Rapid Roller
Coppiers, the Sehlieht Indexes,
JfefaJ jRoZter Shelving; mam 3
“
styles of Office Desks, and the
latest improved Bank and Office
Furniture and Devices solicited
at the Atlanta Agency, by
H. FRAKKLYN STARKE,
Manager,
SS Peachtree Street,
ATLANTA. CA
—
SENT FREE!
Every reader of this paper, who expects to buy
A WATCH, 1889.
send for new Illustrated Catalogue for
which we send Free.
J. P. STEVENS & BRQ., Jewelers,
47 Whitehall Street, ATLANTA, GA*
A BIS OFFER!
We will make you a present of a building lot adjoin¬
ing one of the most promising cities of the West, and
pay the taxes on it for two years, if you will do a slight
service for us in your town. Send us your name, and
we will write you full particulars. Address THE
NORTHWEST CO.. 430 Wabash Ave.. Chicago, Id.
;X r*na>« College, 43* MaiTst. Buff.kl! N Y
Blair’s Ot« 1 Bex, ma/SSHS?
34t round 14 Fill*.
---------
A U E? C CatA'o gne free. Send at
America buy. H. 9 NORTON. once. Cheapest place in
to M. OOttBY, Pa.
PEERLESS DYES Bold Are bt the Psoochbs BEST.
A
•tv a J /a s.
& I
'S
L 7 l
„
?■) r i
■
/, ’ ■
TO c
’O
i -
nil IVi IF %
2 •: ■ .i
I,
X5
'I \ V
'
AN HONEST DOCTOR,
finding his patient suffering from that most common of American maladies—
Bilious Dyspepsia, or, in other words, from Torpid Liver, associated with indi¬
gestion, advised him to go to the drug store and get Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery the world-famed remedy for such ailments.
Golden Medical Discovery acts powerfully upon the Liver, and through that
great blood-purifying organ, cleanses the system of all blood-taints and impuri¬
ties, from whatever cause arising. It is equally efficacious in acting upon the
Kidneys, and other excretory organs, cleansing and strengthening them and
healing their diseases. As an appetizing restorative tonic, it promotes digestion
and nutrition, thereby building up both flesh and strength. It is the only
medicine of its class, guaranteed to benefit or cure, in all diseases for which
it is recommended, or money paid for it will be promptly refunded.
Copyright, 1888, by World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Proprietors.
\ $500 the 03**3?“33!lt proprietors of : SJE33I3 DR. SAGE’S for Catarrh an CATARRH Incurable in tha REMEDY. Head case by of
SYMPTOMS OF CATAKU!!.—Headache, obstruction of nose, others, discharges thick,
falling into throat, sometimes profuse, watery, and acrid, at in
tenacious, mucous, purulent, bloody tiiroat, and putrid; eyes weak, offensive ringing matter; ears,
jr deafness, difficulty of clearing impaired, expectoration general of debility. Only
breath offensive; smell nnd taste and a
few of theso symptoms likely to be present at once. Thousands of coses
result in consumption, and end in tho healing grave, Remedy
By its mild, soothing, antiseptic, demising, and properties, Dr. Sago’s
cures the worst cases. Only 50 cents. Sold by druggists everywhere.
Women Sold.
According to the reports from Ilodeida,
oue of the largest ports of Arabia, on the
Ited Sea, slaves are still smuggled across
from Africa in large numbers, and in
spite of the activity of the British, French
and It ilian cruisers. It is charged that
the Turkish officers connive at the trade
and receive bribe money amounting to $2
a head on the slave importations. In this
part of Arabia, slaves from the Zanzibar
coast and the Soudan were formerly in¬
troduced in large numbers, finding em¬
ployment chiefly in the harems and at do¬
mestic service. The blockade has prac¬
tically cut oil these sources of supply, and
most of the slaves now imported are
Gaila and Abyssinian girls, who can be
taken to the coast at the narrow part of
the Red Sea and shipped girls across destined in a
night. Most of these are
for the harems, and the more attractive
among them sell at the comparatively
cheap rate of $120 to $200 apiece.
Among the hereditary jewels belonging
to the duke of Cumberland, are Queeu
Charlotte’s pearls, valued at $750,000 and
about which for twenty years Queen
Victoria and the Hanoverian dignity. king quar¬
reled with mnjestorial The
queen maintained that they belonged by
right to England. The king insisted
that thoy should hayc been sent to Han¬
over in 1837 on the death of William IV.
The other jewels belonging to the duke
are valued at $2,000,000. His gold and
silver plate weigh twelve tons.
load Carts Iohwieel. oo m
"So’SSrfiuggies! tWDon’t buy before gi-ttlng price* and cat*
our
tosuea. Name THE GKO. W. NASHVILLE. STOCKELL TENN CO.,
thi* paper.
__
Swts say Sold who Cure it everywhere. have is for BEST Consumption used OF Piso’a ALL. 25c.
I prescribe G and the fully only en¬
^Oaracln dorse Big as
r specific for the certain cure
l TO 5 DATS. 1 of this disease.
Ytwd Stricture. not. u G. ELINGBAHAM, M. D-, Y.
Amsterdam, N.
lirdonly by tho We have sold Big G for
[this Chemical Co. many years, and it liaa
■ m ffiven the best ©f satis*
faction. DYCHE&CO.,
Ohio. D. R. Ill.
Chicago,
Trado Wklgl.QO. Sold by Druggists.
A. N. U Sixteen, ’89.
ki lling -e* The Gold Hunters' Ad -
§!| ventures in Australia,
Si by Wm. H. Thornes .
E An .xchUj itory ot two Y-.cV—Aftcntm* Is
$i [4 Austr.il,, iu the tsrly day* when tM (tOCuf&^of (Old
attract-*! t motley crowd of roc it UR, fsrlri,' ideal
V Dushrtuigcrj, "TickeL-of-Le.ce,” era irt oney
If variety of Adeeoturm.
The most fascinating story fLABHSOIf of DAH-
V' ii » S OER. EXCITEMENT,
and CONFLICT, over wcitteUI
m MHgb A splendid volume of 564 rep#, SSd A ( foil f:f
j-icW IlloitnUou, wltk he.OeiM Knpovef CpknACoeer, c?
‘ * PRICE The Che.pert, Luputatid meet CEMTST fsiy.ri-i L -kit
ONLY S3 Sail aU
iimti xifc ALEX. <* rent postpaid The Vf TfoWS^an,
$638 T. LOYD Chicago,Ill. A CO., Lafca-
B 'Saw. tide tarneuit Building, by P«ul Note, Coin, or«av«eet Kteicfa,
Tlig Best
Waterproof
Coat.
*iS\{ hardest FISH BRAND storm. 8LICKBB is watsigroof, and^whl kfcp^ysn dry In
^■?^rr." »rs the «r dd lmUntions. None genuine without t
nd’» trtd Illustrated Catalogue free. A. J. Tower, Boston,
In 1S831 contracted Blood Poison
of bad typo, and was treated with
mercury, potash nnd sarsaparilla
mixtures,growing 1 took small bottles worse all tho S. time.
T S. S. which
cured mo entirely, nr.d no sign of
tho dreadful diseaso has returned.
J. C. Nance,
Jan. 10, ’89. Hobbyvillo, Ind.
Ny llttlo nieco had white swelling
to such an extent that she was con¬
fined to tho bed for a long time.
out More of than her leg, 20 pieces and the of doctors bone camo said
amputation savolicr life. was I refused tho only the remedy operation to
and put her on S.S.S. and she is now
n p an d active and In as good health as
any child. Miss Annie Geesuno,
4 y. Feb. 11, ’89. Columbus, Ga.
■>V Book on Blood Diseases sent free.
Swift Specifio Co.
Drawer 8, Atlanta, Ga.
M OTHERS’ FREN I)
MAKES SHIIB BlilHiMV
IF USED B EFORE CON FINEMENT.
Book to “Mothers’’ Mailed'Free.
HBADFLELD HEfilLATOIt CO., ATLANTAJGA,
Sold by all Druggists.
_
Ely’s Cream Balm 6K5ShV
l’rlce 50 Cents,
WILL CUKE
QATARRfj
Apply Balm into each nostril.
ELY BROS.,66 Warren 3t.,N.Y.
JONES
ga n i:
Iron Lovers. Steel Bearings. Brass
Taro Boom and Beam Box for-
Ever _ SGO. For
y size Seale. free pricelist
rx me ntion this paper and address
JONES OF BINGHAMTON.
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.j.
ASTHMA CURE
German AethiaaCure the worst never insures jail* to gi\o ivul
! mediate able sleep; relief effects in where cases all others comfort- fall
\trial convinces the mott core* skeptical. Price GOe. 4
ana
CONSUMPTION I positive remedy for the above disease; by
nave a its use
thousands of cases of the worst kind and of long standing
have 1 will been send cured. two bottles So strong free, is my together faith in with its efficacy valuable that
a
treatise on this disease to any sufferer. Give Express and
P. O. address. T. A. SLOCUM. M. a, 181 Pearl St, N. Y
Orators say Piso’s Cure for Con¬
sumption is THE BEST
for keeping the voice
clear. 25 cents.