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WOMAN’S WORLD.
PLEASANT LITERATURE FOR
FEMININE READERS.
woman’s STRONG LOVE FOR WHITE.
Upon entering the world it is her first
robe. In a white gown she is brought to
baptism. She says her prayers in white
and kneels for confirmation in spotless
robes. She is married in white, and
after that she lives over the white r <
meat days of her youth in the robes she
makes for her children, and when her
task is ended she folds her white hands
and lies down to sleep in a shroud as
white as her soul.—— Atlanta Constitution,
LOVES THE RLACK SHEEP.
All old-fashioned housewife in a
Clifton (Penn.) farm-house will never
permit her husband to be without at.
least one block sheep in his flock. She
has got a notion that it is not healthy to
wear stockings with any kind of dye in
the wool, and as she dislikes to wear
white hosiery, all her stockings are
made out of natural black wool, She
cards the wool into roils by hand, just as
people did three or four generations her ago,
spins the rolls herself and knits own
stockings. Once n tree fell on her only
black sheep and killed it, and her hus¬
band had to hustle around and find an¬
other. 1 took him three days and miles
of travel, but lie finally came across a
black ewe lamb fifteen miles away and
bought it .—Chicago llcrald.
NEW FABRICS.
Tit silks there are several specialties,
out : being tho sole Itoyale, which is to
be, had plain or serving as a groundwork
to brocaded or satin stripes and tracery
designs. It lias a minute pattern over it,
which gives it a dull but rich look, and
it is in black, white and every shade of
gray. It is the material par excellence
of the season for rich mourning costumes
and mantles.
Regcncc is another silken novelty, with
a ribbed satin face, resembling faille
Fruncaisc, making up handsomely as
dresses.
Hoic eclat comes next as a rich looking
silk at a moderate price.
Oachemire Itoyale is a grenadine silk,
with a little wool introduced to give it a
cashmere touch. It looks like extremely
rieh cash mere and has a silk hack.
In thinner fabrics there are silk-warp
armurea with broclie designs, suitable for
evening or fete dresses, embroidered crepe
de chine, with a concentrated design at
the base forming a deep border, rising
upward and softening into scattered
sprays; Balzerinc, * sort of narrow-striped
grenadine with broad silk crepe stripes;
erepuline with a broad border of simulated
crape and pongee silks with a pointed
design, overshadowed with a delicate
tracing of silk work.
The broclie or figured nun’s veiling
and thicker nun’s cloth, the light camel’s
hair and a fine French twill serge are all
to be fashionable, and in nearly all cases
the designs culminate tit what is intended
to be the btiso of the front skirt drapery
and lose themselves in small detached
groups. Plain material is generally sup-
plietj with the figured to make up into a
costume.
A specialty is nun’s inch-wide veiling, with as
many ns ten rows of ribbon
woven in, at their own distance apart.
Another specialty is snowflake crepe nun’s
veiling in light gray with squares traced
out as large ns “muffler” handkerchiefs,
in white fancy woven design, with two
corners ornamented. These are intended
to form panels, and arc both uncommon
and stylish.— New York Telegram.
DAILY LIFE OF A GIRL IN INDIA.
The following document has been
translated into English from the vernacu¬
lar language in which it was written by a
young lady of about sixteen. At the ex¬
amination of a girl’s school by the local
committee of managers, the pupils were
requested to write the story of their daily
life and avocations. The exercises which
they produced were very similar in many
points, but this was one of the best:
“After getting leave from school on Sat¬
urday, 1 went homo mid put away my
slate and books. I next took oil my
school -dress, and, having put on other
clothes, I attended to household work.
When evening came l lit the light in the
HUGHSON & SULLIVAN S SURREY BUGGY.
\
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■I
ISTo. OS.
The Surrey Buggy Is fast taking the place of t he Phceton, as It is much lighter and neater In
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Write for 1’rlees and Catalogue on our full line of work Including Wagons, Carriages,
Carts and Cutters.
IIT’GIISjON Jv- tSTJLlMIV-VIV,
lMii’.f»eturcr» tor the Trade. EOCHESTEB, XT. " 5 T-
ADVERTISE NOW.
We will insert you a nice, well-displayed ad
i , srtisement at as low rates as any first-class
paper can afford to do. Advertising rates made
known on application.
ADVERTISE NOW.
house, find taking my beads I went to
worship our god Jugonath. Having
prostrated myself before the great Lord,
Jugonath, I went into the house, and
taking my book, sat down to rend.
When the night was somewhat advanced
I put away my book. Then having
taken my food and washed my face and
hands, I spread my bed on the ground and
sat down. Then I gave praise to the
great Father and supreme Lord, and I
went to Bleep. In the early morning I
got up and having performed and my house¬ down
hold duties 1 took my hook sat
to read. When the sun was well up 1
anointed myself with oil, and went out
to bathe. Then I came home und
changed my wet clothes and put them in
the sun to dry. Then having made my
reverence to our spiritual teacher, I made
my prostrations to the sun, and having
reel lived spiritul comfort, returned to the
house. I then took food, and having
washed my face and hands I ate some
betel-nut, and sat down to write. When
the day was spent I returned to my
household work, and again worshiped the
god Jugonath. Now I have come again
to school, and if there are any faults or
mistakes in tin's exercise I hope that they
will be forgiven .”—I a wire Hour.
FAS1I10N NOTES.
The Hading veil is disappearing.
They are wearing hat crowns much
lower just now.
Colored tulle bonnets are being made
for midsummer wear.
The newest fubric for little girls’ cloth¬
ing is plaidcd mohair. It is light iD
texture and its color combinations are
generally artistic. styles
There are now three distinct of
tailor-made costumes which seem to be
equally favored, viz., the Empire, Eng¬
lish and Dircc.toire.
It is just as well to remember that
blouse waists of washing silk must bo
eutirely unlined if they are ever to be
successfully washed.
It is announced upon authority that
the fashionable shade of hair just now is
light brown, so full of warm tints as to
seem red in sunlight.
Among Worth’s latest inventions is a
train that falls over half a yard or so at
the top, and docs away with the ne¬
cessity of further ornament.
Honors are easy between plaids and
stripes. Plaids are in high favor with
the select; fine stripes are moderately
worn by the mass of womankind.
An evening costume recently seen at a
Paris reception was of shot velvet, appar¬
ently of vieux rose and green, the com¬
bination making a dull heliotrope.
A full frill of lace which turns over al
the neck and falls into a jabot down the
front of the corsage is one of the finish¬
ing touches given to a dinner dress.
A combination much worn this season
is that of black and yellow. Black straw
hats take yellow ribbons and flowers, and
yellow straws have black ribbons and
black feathers.
Laying Tracks by Machinery.
An invention wikirh promises to revo¬
lutionize the present method of railroad
construction was put to a practical test re¬
cently on the Green River branch of the
Northern Pacific Railroad in Washington
Territory. George Roberts is the inven¬
tor, and the trial of the new machine was
made in the presence of the superinten¬
dent of construction, the chief engineer
and about 300 railroad men. The ma¬
chine worked beyond the expectations of
the inventor and to his entire satisfaction,
the men laying at the rate of two and a
half miles of track per day, and twelve
men doing the work of seventy-five by
the old way. It handles ties and rails of
the heavest kind—used in constructing
mountain roads—with the greatest ease,
placing them rapidly and accurately in
position. The machine is so constructed
that it can be used on any ordinary flat
car. All construction material is moved
Oil rollers from the rear to the front,
where the machine takes up the rails and
the ties, laying them very rapidly.
Where the test was made the grade was
steep and difficult. The great success at¬
tending the trial Ins caused the Northern
Pacific to secure the refusal of the first
machine, and the inventor is now arrang¬
ing for building two more machines to
cost $1200, and the inventor receives a
royalty of $50 per mile .—Engineering and
Mining Journal.
tvaijjja*
NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN.
Coral is said to be a coming rage.
Women are blossoming out as orators,
Toques are worn more pointed in front
Trains are the rule now for hens*
dresses. |
Barmaids arc going out of fashion it i
England.
Filigree jewelry, always beautiful, h ;
again in favor.
Ostrich feather trimmings may be wori !
on evening gowns.
Ostrich plumage is a conspicuoui
feature in millinery.
If a caste women in Corea shows he;
fucc she is outlawed.
Silk fish-net costumes are made uj
over silk skirts and waists.
latest “Hot-potato napkins” are the verj
novelties in funcy napery.
American women are said to spend
ii02,000,000 a year for cosmetics.
Miss Laura White, of Kentucky, ii
making a reputation as an architect.
The women of Chicago want repre¬
sentation on the Educational Boards.
Tea cigarrettes are said to be coming
into fashion for feminine smoking in Eng-.
Land.
Round waists and belts are slowly bul
finely displacing pointed bodices aud
basques.
There are six women police officers in
file London police force, all employed as
ietectives.
Rlack hats and bonnets are trimmed
with the yellow minosa, a favorite trim¬
ming flower.
Bonnets of white and rose tulle are
lecorated with roses. The eglantine is
the favorite.
Chicago has a home for self-supporting
women, where board is to be had for
$2.25 a week.
With dresses of pale green crepe de
shine black gloves and ribbons are now
worn by the fashionable.
Brocades with Empire designs of floral
icrolls and laurel leaves are made up ovei
skirts of white satin or silk.
The monk’s gown of brown camel’s
hair, which envelops the wearer from head
to foot, is used for traveling.
France is somewhat shaken up overyiL
ieged indulgence in morphine-taking by
thousands of Parisian women.
There is such a craze for reviving old
Fashions that it is to be expected that snufi-
boxes will soon come into use.
Bishop sleeves of chantilly lace are a
yard and a half wide and show a closer
anc of bright color underneath.
A London milliner has invented a cork
bonnet. It is made wholly of the bark
»f the cork tree and is very light.
Shoulder capes are sometimes made in
i V shape of two pieces of ribbon with
bias sides, meeting in the front and back.
A discovery, due to the plentiful royal'
Heaths abroad, is that a diamond necklace
worn between two jet oues is) strict half
mourning.
The authorities in Holland have decreed
that a woman cannot serve on a school
board. In Sweden it lias been decided
that they can.
You can buy a child’s sash of washing
silk five inches wide and one-half yards
long for one shilling, but you must go to
London for it.
Seen upon a recent hat: Two birds,
three butterflies, two yards ribbon, foui
of lace, about ten of silver cords in rows
ind rings and rosettes.
Frocks of fine white wool braided all
over with white silk look and simple
raough for a shepherdess and are costly
enough for a princess.
A new finish for sashes of silk or rib¬
bon is two bands of jet openwork across
the ends, with a handsome jet fringe fall¬
ing from the lower one.
A young lady in Portland, Me., has
worked up a new business, in which she
is said to be doing well—that of reading
to old or disabled people.
For morning walks or shopping thick
veils are allowable, but for all other oc¬
casions the sheerest dotted net, coming
|ust below the chin, is the correct thing.
An easy mitigation of the new baggy
lleeve is to shirr it just below the arm¬
hole, and set velvet or galloon under the
ihirriug, with another row just above the
lull.
It is discovered that Brooklyn nurses
tiave a habit of drugging children when
they take their charges out for an airing,
in order to gossip and flirt with the po¬
licemen.
Miss Harriet Hosmer, the sculptress, at
a reception given her by the Chicago
Woman’s Club, wore five medals, four of
gold and one of silver, which bad been
awarded her in Italy.
The punishment of women by flogging
still exists in the Transvaal. Though the
South African press is down on the prac¬
tice, only recently a woman was sentenced
to receive fifteen lashes.
A servant girl in Easton, Penn., who
recently died, left $500 to the German
Lutheran Church, and $5000 to a grand¬
daughter of her employer. The money
was all saved out of her wages.
Miss Mary F. Seymour, editor of the
Business Woman's Journal, approves of
women learning stenography and the use
of the typewriter as an aid to proficiency
in other businesses and professions.
The newest thing in London household
economy is a female butler—a maiden
dressed in a livery of blue, green, gold,
or scarlet, as taste may prefer. The ef¬
fect alleged is “more quiet and equal
ityle.”
More than a third of the board school-
mistresses in London get salaries of over
$1000 a year, and there are altogether
about 1000 in the metropolis and the
provinces together who receive $(550 or
upward.
A company has been formed to erect,
throughout Great Britain, blocks of dwel-
Iingain which solitary women may live
side by side and enjoy the pleasure of
cheerful society, independence. withoutsacrificiug either
their privacy or
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
Smoking is said to be good for hay
lever.
Iron railroad ties have been tried in this
countr y nnt * !P ven U P -
California roofing slate is said to be
the finest in the world.
A new industry is the manufacture of
ink from tho oil and grease extracted
from spent cotton waste.
The Chinese laundrymen at Pittsburg,
Penn., bleach their washes with chloride
of lime, aud the garments soon rot away.
An English firm has just brought out
a new sensitive flame burner, which can
be extinguished entirely by a loud noise.
A new process of hardening plaster of
paris has been discovered whereby it can
be adapted to the construction of floor¬
ing in place of wood.
A French scientist of the name of
d’Assicr declares that the earth is gradu¬
ally getting colder, and that the severest
period will be reached in the year 11,750.
White lead is manufactured by the new
Hannay method direct from the ore in the
space of a few hours, while by the old
process it was a matter of several months.
The new Hengst powder made from
straw is said to be smokeless, flameless,
practically non-fouling and non-heating,
and being granular, is not liable to pack.
Pulu, the “vegetable silk” used by up¬
holsterers for fine cushions and so on,
looks like brown thistle down and grows
upon the leaves and stalks of a tropical
fern.
At the German surgical congress, which
recently met at Berlin, more than one in¬
stance was shown of the entire removal
of the larnyx and subsequent ability to
speak. consumption
Electricity for the cure of
has attracted much attention of late years,
either for generating ozone for inhalation
or for its influence on the vasomoters as
a current or as static electricity in baths.
Water glass, which is simply glass with
such excess of alkali that it dissolves in
boiling water, is one of the most valua¬
ble substances for fire proofing both wood
and cloth, and much used in the arts as a
vehicle for mineral paints.
Somebody has discovered that peach
stones can be used as fuel, and now they
command $6 a ton in California. A sack
of stones weighing eighty pounds will
last as long as an equal weight . of coal
and give greater intensity of heat.
The ultimate extension of wrought iron
is one-six-hundredth part of its length.
The working strain is from one-sixth to
one-fourth the main strength. Resistance
to flexure acting evenly over the surface
equals one-half the tensile strength.
The British gunboat Sandfly, while under¬
going experiments to determine the amount
of water required to make up for wastage
on a six-hour run at the most economical
rate of speed, consumed coal at the rate
of 2.64 pounds per horse-power per hour.
If you add 15 to the pressure per
square inch in pounds on a given boiler,
and divide this sum by 18 and then multi¬
ply the quotient by .24, the resulting
product will be the number of gallons of
water required by that boiler per horse¬
power per hour.
The surface of the moon is exposed
during its long cloudless day of some
350 hours to the direct rays of the sun,
which shines upon it with a fierceness far
beyond anything experienced on the
earth, and afterward it became almost
immeasurably cold from its night of simi¬
lar period.
An Electric Mountain Railway.
One of the most interesting achieve¬
ments in modern engineering is the elec¬
tric mountain railway recently opened to
the public at the Burgenstock, near Lu-
cerne. The rails describe one grand
curve formed upon an angle of 112 de¬
grees, and the system is such that the
journey is made as steadily aud as
smoothly as upon any of the straight
funicular lines. The Burgenstock is al¬
most perpendicular—from the shore of
Lake Lucerne to the Burgenstock is 1330
feet, and it is 2860 feet above the level
of the sea. The total length of the line
is 938 metres, and it commences with a
gradient of 32 per cent., which is in¬
creased to 58 per cent, after the first 400
metres, this being maintained for the rest
of the journey. A single pair of rails is
used throughout, and the motive power,
electricity,"is generated by two dynamos, which
each of twenty-five horse power,
arc worked by a water wheel of nominal¬
ly 125 horse power, erected upon the
river Aar at its mouth at Buochs, three
miles away, the electric current being
conducted by means of insulated copper
wires, The loss in transmission is esti-
mated at 25 per cent.
Exhuming a Revolutionary Vessel.
In excavating to deepen a creek which
is to be used as a timber basin for Messrs.
mill, H. P. Smart & Brother’s new steam shingle
on the Vale Royal tract, the timbers
of a large ' vessel have been partly ex-
burned. The end of the keelson can be
imbedded in the mud at one point
and about thirty feet from it a well-pre¬
served live oak rib, with a part of the
planking attached, was taken out. The
land in the vicinity was reclaimed from
the river, and there is a tradition that it
was at or near this point that the British,
during the siege of Savannah in 1779, by
the armies under Generals D’Estaing and
Lincoln, sunk vessels across the river to
prevent the French and American war
vessels, which had passed around the
western end of Hutchinson’s Island, from
enfilading the defenses of the town. It
is not improbable that the old wreck
which is now brought to light, if not one
of those sunk at the time, has not been
afloat during this century. —Sazannah
(Ga.) News.
Shoemaker’s Maxims.
“Worn on the side
Soon a rich man’s bride.”
•Worn on the toes
Spend as he the goes.” heel
‘Worn on
Thinks a good deaL”
“Worn on the vamp
He’s surely a scamp.”
Veterans’ Reunion.
the smtviTons of the 4th geokoia
REGIMENT TO HAVE A REUNION AT
AMERICCS.
The 5th annual reunion of the sur¬
vivors of the 4th Georgia Regiment will
bo held at Americus, Ga., on the second
Wednesday in August, (14th.) Arrange¬
ments have been made by which mem¬
bers will get a rate of 2 cents per mile to
and from Americus. Blank certificates,
with instructions, will be issued upon
application to W. W. Hulbert, at They At¬
lanta, or to It. B. llall, at Macon.
invite all their old comrades to come.
and Americus is making grand preparations, W.
W. a pleasant reunion is assured.
Hulbert, President; It. B. Hall, Cor¬
responding Secretary.
Dorn in a Day.
Oklahoma was literally born in a day.
At noon on the 22d of April tho region
was a wilderness, without a single legal it
settler. At 4 o’clock in the afternoon
had a population nearly one-third as nu¬
merous as that of the State of Nevada,
and in two embryo cities elections were
in progress for city officers. In a week
the first hardships were overcome, pro¬
visions and good water had become rea¬
sonably plenty, and troops of disap¬
pointed or di-gusted boomers were wear-
ily wending their way out. '1 he settlers
who were early enough to secure claims
were so busily engaged in breaking up
and seeding their laud that there was no
need for the soldiers who had been sent
to preserve order.
The Women's Exchange of Kansas
City, Mo., is going to build a home for
working women, It thousand has purchased
ground for fourteen dollars,
and as soon as this is paid for, it will
commence the building. The home will
cost thirty thousand dollars.
A condition of weakness of body and mind
which results from many disorders of the sys¬
tem finds its best and surest relief in Brown’s
Iron Bitters. As it enriches and strengthens
t he blood so the st mach, liver and kidneys re¬
ceive powers to perform their duties, and the
depressing i nfiuences from a diseased and dis¬
turbed condition of these organs aro remove i.
An earthly treasure—A rich husband, whom
his widow has just buried.
A Piece of Her Mind.
A lady correspondent has this to say;
"I want to give a piece of my mind to a cer¬
tain class who object to advertising, when it
cent. costB them I suff-rixl anything—tics living death won't for cost nearly them two a
a
years with walking, headaches, being backache, literally in dragged pain stand¬
ing or was out
of existonce.my despair,I misery commi increased .tod the by sin drugging. of trying
At last,In adve tised medicine, I)r. Pierce’s Favorite
an
Prescription, aud it restored mo to the bbessed-
of sound hoalth. I honor the phy sicxan * ’
who, when he knows ho can cure, has tho
moral courage to advertise the lact.” Tho
medicine mentioned is guaranteed to cure those
delicate diseases peculiar to females. Read
printed guarantee on bottle-wrapper.
For bowels, all derangements take Dr. Pierco of the Pellets. liver, stomach One
and s a
dose.
_
Many a girl powders her face in the hope
pulverizing some ycung man’s heart.
“For seven long years I struggled away
farming, running a mill, &c., until I was
tunately introduced to B. F. Johnson & Co.,
Richmond, Va., by my brother, and ! went to
work at once, and in seven months I had made
more clear money than I had made in the
seven years before. They took me right by the
hand from the start and seamed to be very
glad of the chance to show mo how to do it.’
This is about what a young man said a year or
so ago of the above-mentioned firm. Since
that time lie has been steadily at work for
them, and is now one of the happiest.men in
America. If you need employment, it would
be a good thing for you to follow this young
man’s example.
What do you chew ?
“LUCY HINTON 1”
Why? it is the best I find.
Because can
Who makes it?
T. C. Williams Co., Richmond, Ya.
Who sells it ?
All dealers.
How can I recognize it ?
The name Lucy Hinton is on every plug.
Delicate Women.
Children and delicate women should not be
forced to tako the vilo compounds which are
■usually given for constipation, like piles, preserved indiges¬
tion, etc. Hamburg best Figs laxative are known. &
fruit, and aro the
cents. Dose one Fig. Mack Drug Co., N. Y.
Oregon, the Paradise of Farmers.
Mild, equable climate, certain and abundant
crops. Best fruit, grain, grass and stock
country in the world. Full information free.
Address Oreg. Im’igr’t’n Board, Portland, Ore.
The Mother’s Friend, used a few weeks be¬
fore confinement, lessens the pain and makes
labor queik and comparatively easy. Sold by
all Druggists.
A Pocket Cigar Case and five of “Tansill’s
Punch,” all for 25c.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water. Druggists -*eU atSJ5c.per bottle
I^Bake No Mistake
If you have made up your mind to buy Hood’s
Sarsaparilla do not be induced to take any other.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a peculiar medicine, pos¬
sessing, by virtue of its peculiar combination, pro¬
portion and preparation, curative powers superior
to any other article of the kind before tho people.
Be sure to get Hood’s.
“In one store the clerk tried to induce me to bay
their own instead of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. But he
could not prevail on me to change. I told him I
knew what Hood’s Sarsaparilla was, I had taken it,
was perfectly satisfied with it, and did not want
any other.”— Mrs. Ella A. Goff, Cl Terrace Street,
Boston, Mass.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
tOO Doses One Dollar
N. Y. Guaranteed to cure Rheumatism, Gout, Neu¬
ralgia and accompanying troubles. One bottle ren¬
ders the blood non-rheumatic. Price refunded If not
satisfactory. $2.00. Cheaper to doctors. Send cash,
stamps or money order.
I A ID --'rrT/vnfin A I Bay Piso’s Cure for Con-
I for sumption is THE BEST
keepiug the voice
FRFIF! La aud ^ particulars e marriage ot our association paper
that pays over 81,000 AT MARKiAGE. Ad-
dress I’ll,-: COHUESPONDENT, Toledo, Ohio.
Main St. Buffalo. N. Y
PEERLESS DYES Sold Aro by tbo Drxouisis. BENT.
ctuGHPISOS CURE
Jj 1 1 \ W ^ 1 . ^ .
limiKinnltou v*. 1-ncl.
ITiere Is no doubt many well people imagine
themselves nick, being led to believe that nat¬
ural incident! of life aro symptoms of terrible
diseases and forerunners of death. Alas I that
such persons should bo so easily decsivsd by
tbo lying advertisements of unprincipled
nginat.ve. quacks. A blood It disease, however, is not im-
is a tiled fact, and its symptom*
are unmistakable. When one is troubled with
pimples and eruptions on tlio body, bad blood
is tlio came. When one is troubled with ach¬
ing bones and joints, bad blood is tbo cause.
When one is troubled with periods of weakness, congested
ami the functions of the bony becomo
and irregular, without warning and seemingly ascribed
without reason, tho eatise may be
to which,affecting an activity of blood poison m the the system defi¬
the mucous linings of and
nite organs of iifo, inquire their force dis¬
ables their action. In all phases of ill health,
brought on by an impure state of tho blood, B.
B. B. (Botanic Biooil Halm) has proven of a sover¬
eign romedy. It is the pot prescription will wise a suc¬ who
cessful give it physician, atrial. Further and sufferers information be will he
given gratuitously to those who address Blood
Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga.
In youth one lias tears without grief; in old
age, grief without tears.
^MOTHERS
£SSENS CH1LD fflGtR d ^-sH c K £ bor
Diminishes T0 UR 0f ,
^"MOTHERS" r HAILE a FREE ex
cj
SOLO BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
TF I YOU WIBH A ■ ...............
GOOD [SMITH ‘ & WESSON
REVOLVER
purchase one of the cele-
brated SMITH & WESSON T
arms. The finest small arms
ever manufactured and the
first choice of all experts.
Manufactured action, In calibres 32,33 and 44-100. Sin¬
gle Target or double models. Constructed Safety Eamtaexlesa entirely of bent and Qual¬
ity wronjjht and stock, steel, they carefully inspected for work¬
durability manship nndaccurocy. aro unrivaled Do for finish*
not be deceived by
cheap malleable Bold for cast-iron imitations which
are often tho genuine article and are not
only unreliable, but dangerous. The SMITH &
WESSON Revolvers are all stamped upon the bar¬
rels with firm's name, address and dates of patent*
and sist are guaranteed having the genuine perfect article, in evory detail. if In¬
upon aud your
dealer cannot supply you an order sent to address
below -will receive prompt and careful attention.
Descrptive catalogue and prices furnished upon ap-
piicuton. SMITH & WESSON,
ty-Ment l on this paper,_____ Springfield, Was*.
JONES
jj is:
PAYS THE FREICHT.
tv 5 Tull X\ neon >cnlv» 9
pm „ Iron Levers. Steel hearings, Brasa
Tare Beam and Beam Box lor,
Ever*/ SB 430.
> L size Scale. For free prlee list
/ mention this paper and address
JONES OF BINGHAMTON. ’
BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
Lobb After ALL othori
r. fail, consult
328 M Si.
9 PH1LA., PA.
Twenty years’ continuous practice In the treat¬
ment and euro of the awful effects of early
vice, destroying both mind and body. Medicine
and treatment for one month, Five Dollars, sent
securely scaled from observation to any address.
Book on Special Diseases free.
lit Plantation Engines
’Li RETURN With Self-Contained flue boilers,
{jJR&Lijl f'dJsM FOR DRIVING
•’ • COTTON GINS and MILLS.
’ ‘‘^**7 Illustrated Pamphlet Free. Address
MSS ijAMES leffel & Co.
I SPRINGFIELD, OIHO,
'or 110 Liberty St., New York.
Patronize HOME
INDUSTRY!
BUY SOUTHERN-MADE
PRINTING INKS
-FROM—
FRANK J. COHEN, Geaeral Agent
23 East Alabama St., ATLANTA, UA,
BUTCHER’S
FLY E 1 LLE 1
Makes a clean sweep, Kvery
sheet will kill a quart of flies.
Stops buzzing around ears,
tfe, diving at eves, hard tickling your
• nose, skips words und se¬
cures peace at trifling 5 expense. sheets to
Send cents for
1’. DUTCHER, St. Albans, Vt
MILLERSBURG
female 0allege.
Located in i the the heart Heart of of the tlie beautiful l !?luc Oi’jinb
region of Kentucky. Health unexcelled i. Superior
instruction. The best school ________»r fo your daughter ghter in in the
South. Art, Music, Lite iterary, Scientific and Phono-
graphy departments, First-class board. Reasonable
terms. mis, Apply ivppiy early euriy to 10
Rev. C. POPE, Millersburq, Ky.
WASHINGTON 11 INFORMATION BUREAU,
COLE & DEEUEE, Proprietors,
932 I .Street N. W., Wnshiiijgtou, IK CV
General information fur nished.
Correspondenee solicited.
«?'o^O SM1THDEAL CT,CAi 8
PR * -
i/cua^uu i £ t=K£isi8g
COLLEGE, Richmond, Va.
RfflUSIC-ART-ELGCUTION Da l»e«ii-ablc I-o.ilion. and
IMS (irucrul Culture. interested
open to progressive students. All
■ B SB H wilt receive valuable informal ion Free,
by addressing E. TOURJEE, Boston, Mass.
r° *58 :i day. Samples worth 82.15 Fre«.
^Linep^ not under horse’s^ feet.^
aZ 5 AM SU„,?al MA3IR sr made iss#?; by onr Agent*.
Swts Sold say who Cure it everywhere. have is for BEST Consumption vised OF Piso’s ALL. 25c.
Si d°r«o * prescribe Big Cr and the fully only en-
ij||jp5r^r^Q^j^yg^Sj as
gfzzhkjA s^ecificfor the certain cuve,
|*3S Mfdoniy by tfea We have 3old Big C*fot v
^§f|L Ohio. sM) « ^.‘kI'dYCHE Chicago, & CO.. Hi,
Sold by Druggists.
A. N. U Twenty-six, ’89