Newspaper Page Text
WEEKLY **> TIMES.
BY FO VCIIE «f .JOHNSON.
Entered nt the i>ostoflice nt McDonough
Ga., as second-class until matter.
McDonough. Ga., July 3, 1891.
A Monroe farmer is selling corn at
95 cents a bushel.
The surest way to prevent a con
test over your will is to die poor.
The grape growers in Monroe coun
ty report a heavy yield on their vines,
and one of them will ship 50,000
pounds from his vineyard.
A dashing young widow of Atlanta
has swapped off a $25,000 damage
suit over a dead husband fur a live one.
Women are good at the bargain
counter.
A Kansas boy earned a nice Bible
by committing 1,000 verses to mem
ory, and then he traded his Itible for a
shotgun, and then accidently shot bis
aunt in the leg.
The political situation has narrowed
down to this fine point: Legislation
for the people by the next Democratic
congress or the final triumph of the
new “People’s Party.”
The south is gradually taking from
the uorth and east her large iron
manufactures at such a rate that in a
few years a majority of them will be
south of the Ohio and Potomac rivers.
The Georgia Press Association held
a meeting on the train while passing
through Ohio, and passed a resolution
appropiiating SIOO from the treasury
of the association to the Davis monu
ment fund.
The Republican Alliancemen of
Kansas are quitting the third party
movement on the ground that it is in
juring “the grand old party.” “The
sow that washed has returned to wal
low in the mire.”
A large tree was blown down in
Mrs. Lambdin’s yard in Barnesville
last week, in falling it broke off near
the ground and inside the trunk was
found a petrified bird. It was looked
upon as a rare curiosity.
In a sermon on Sabbath resting,
liev. Dr. Deems, a New York divine,
declares that scan and beast can do
more in six days than in seven.
There can be no question cf the sound
ness of this statement.
Sam Small has been in trouble ever
since he quit newspaper work and* be
came a traveling preacher. Sam
made a mistake in that he didn’t rec
ognize 'that a real good newspaper
man is the true evangelist.—Aracricus
Recorder.
A Tennessee man has sued his
raothea-in-law for six months board.
She made a visit coveriug that length
of time, and threatened to come back
again, lienee the suit. The sympa
thy of the entire community is said to
lie with the man ; though it is likely
he will be non suited.
Mrs. Zerelda G. Wallace, the vener
able mother of General Lew Wallace,
is now in her seventy-fourth year, but
still lectures with eloquence and en
thusiasm on her favorite theme ol
woman’s suffrage. She has this sea
son addressed large audiences in
Washington ami the large cities of the
West.
Over a century ago a party of Span
iards hid a bar of gold in the river
bluffs near liochport, Mo., and despite
the efforts of wealth-seekers the treas
ure remained unfound until the other
day, when a man with maps and charts
made his ap|>earance, and after a short
search discovered the treasure.
John D. Rockefeller, the head of
the Standard Oil company, is the rich
est man in America, being rated at
5120,000.000. Aud yet liejs one of
the most miserabl e men in the world.
He is a physical wreck. There isn’t a
bootblack in New York who is not far
happier than this modern Croesus.
One of the latest new industries is
the culture of camphor trees in Flori
da. Already there have been most
gratifying results obtained, and at a
cost to insure a profitab'e yield iu the
future. The Florida camphor closely
resembles that of Japan and in ten
years the business will have assumed
large proportions, and be quiet retnun
erative.
The Atlanta Constitution says :
The Democracy will be in no danger
from a third party unless it pursues a
course that will cause a general de
mand for such a party, If we doubt
and dally and dicker on such bur
ning issues as the tariff aud tfie cur
rency, and allow the money kings of
Wall street to dictate our platform aud
select our stanadard bearers, then we
must expect a third party.
Itch on human and horses and all
auimals cured in 30 minutes by Wool
ford’s Sanitary Lotion. Never fails.
Sold by C. D. McDonald, druggist.
tycDonougb,
TKfcp TO TROI BE*S,
I*,t ut a loons Made From Wood In .lust
Eleven Hours.
This world has been steadily moving
for countless hundieds of years, but ev
ery once in a while science humps if
self and mauages to keep abreast of the
universe. The latest sprinting feat
of science cousists in disclosing a pro
cess which enables a pantless man to
go into the forest at daybreak, chop
down a tree, and by wonderful alchem
ic touch pull that same tree over his
bare legs at sundown in the shape of a
pair of trousers eminently fit to a fig
urc in a chestnut street promenade on
a sunny afternoon.
Astonishing as this feat may seem, it
is a sober fact, and all that is necessary
is a tree, an axe, a pulp-mill, and cash
enough to induce a tailor to work in a
spry manner. The method was dis
covered by a person named Mulscher
lich, and he has named it the bisulphite
process. Mr. Mulscherlich is honest,
lie does not claim that he is the first
person who discovered the possibility
of the forest as a wardrobe, but modes
ty poiuts to the ancient fact that Adam
once climbed a fig tree and plucked a
dress for his helpmeet. Of course,
for speed, Adam’s method had much
the liest of it; but for completeness the
bisulphite process is far and away in
the lead.
It is not known to a certainty what
induced the inventor to attempt to
make cloth out of wood, but it has been
shrewdly surmised that necessity was
at the bottom of it. At any rate there
is a stoiy afloat to the effect that Mul
scherlich insisted iqiou presiding at
shad breakfasts and other events of a
bachaunalian character much against
the wishes of his wile. The good wo
man stood it as long as she could, and
then bundled up every pair of trous
ers in the house, sold them to a peddler
and then went home to- her mother.
The trouserless and wifeless husband
who was familiar with the bisulphite
process, at once determined to put it to
the test, and at the same time put his
wife to shame, lie wrapped himself
in his indignation and what garments
be could find, seized an ax, and sneaked
along the fences and hedges into the
forest, whore he speedily cut down a
poplar tree.
Tin: must no UK.
From this log the festive husband I
cut thin boards of laths, free from
knots, in a direction paralled to the
grain. This occupied but a few min
utes, and soon after the trouserless go ,
nius was knocking on the door of a
pulp-mill with an armful of the wooden
strips. They were immediately dump
ed into a boiler* containing a solution
of sulphuric or bisulphite acid, and
while the wood was boiling the victim
toasted his shins before a glowing fui
nace fire, for the day was somewhat
chilly. After boiling the wood was
quickly dried in the open air, in order
that the fibre might be greatly
strengthened. Then pulp was mixed,
plastered on an endless cloth and pass
ed through a series of complicated
rollers, until it finally ca.ue out in
strands as strong as linen ones.
Four hours had already elapsed and
the scantly clad husband seized the
strands and rushed up stairs to a loom,
where the cloth was woven. While
this was being done a tailor took the
measure of the man, and soon after the
cloth was handed him he began to
stitch away on a stylish pair of trousers.
The victimized husband went back
to the forest to cut enough strips to
make a coat'and vest and before he
had finished ths task the tailor rushed
over with the trousers complete.
Til K KI.K.V KNTH IIOUK.
1 1 had taken exactly eleven hours to
perform the modern miracle. To make
trousers from trees, is one of the com
ing wonders, which is assured by Mul
scberlich's bisulphite process, which
, will eclipse even the feat of turning a
section of a forest into an edition of the
Record in twenty-four hours, which is
being accomplished every day, as all
of the readers of the Record Souvenir
know.—Philadelphia Record.
An Easy Solution —The Northwes
tern Mechanic is responsible for the fol
low ing: A man who wanted to learn
what profession he would have his son
enter, put him in a room with a Bible,
an apple and a dollar bill. If he found
him when he returned, reading the Bi
ble, he would make a clergyman out of
him ; if eating the apple, a farmer ; and
if interested in the dollar bill, a banker.
When he did return, he found the boy
sitting on the Bible, with the dollar
bill in his pocket, and the apple almost
devoured. He made a politician out of
j him.
Versatility of Talent “McGuires
father was an Irishman and bis mother
a German.” Great heaven! What
does he driuk ?” “Ob, he’s America!!
—anything !”—Temperance Times.
The Fall of Man—“Aud so Adam
was very happy. Now, Willie, can
you tell me w hat great misfortune befell
, him ?” “l’lea'e, Miss Parsons, he
| got a wife.”
THE FARMERS 'ALLIANCE.
I
Livingston at the Home of George.
Winona, Miss , June 24.—The
great alliance day for < arroll and con
tiguous counties has come and gone.
Everybody, whether for or against the
subtreasury plan, was on tip toe with
excitement as to what Livingston would
say in this place, the home of Senator
George.
The court house was literally packed.
The farmers were here, lawyers, rner
chants and citizens, without respect to
avocation, were on hand.
Colonel Livingston was introduced
by Mr. King, president of the county
alliance.
Me began in a cool, pleasant and em
phatic style to assure the audience that
he was not here to participate in local
politics, lie sftoke of General George
in a very complimentary manner. He
said he had no opportunity to know the
exact position of either candidate for
the I nited States senate, and if he did
know they must stand or fall before
their own constituency. He appealed
for peace and co-operation from those
opposed to the subtreasury plan if he
(Livingston) could show that tie plan
was a good one for classes and callings,
and il he failed to do so this day, then
he would call on all alliances to aban
don the plan.
('olonbl Livingston made a complete
analysis of the national banking system,
and such an airay of class legislation,
paternalism and favoritism as is inclu
ded in that system, brought out by him,
dumbfounded the audience. The evil
effect on the unlimited powers of the
industries of the country was portrayed
with words that burned, and will never
he forgotteu by those who heard them.
lie then expounded the Ocala plat
form, and especially the subtreasury
plan. 'I his he did as no other man
could do ; every point was explained
and illustrated so the most ordinary
mind could g:asp the plan ; every ob
jection ever made vanished before his
logic and statement of facts as fast as
he touched them. He was exceeding
ly interesting when he came to speak
of the advantages, of the plan, especi
ally to the poorer classes of the peo
ple. He then forever settled the con
stitiitionalitv of the plan with those
that heard him.
lie next showed to the perfect satis
faction of every one that the plan was
practical. His sarcasm and ridicule
was withering wlieu he touched the
charge of paternalism. He was, per
haps, more convincing aud eloquent
when he came ty handle the insinuation
so often made of late, that platform and
order was not democratic. He riddled
the protective tariff system and made a
strong argument in favor of the free
unlimited coinage ol silver.
t’olonel Livingston spoke two hours
and thirty minutes and all regretted
the time when, w : th one of the most
eloquent appeals ever listened to for
right and harmony, he sat down.
Immediately resolutions of thanks
for his able sptecli and endorsing the
subtreasury plan were unanimously
adopted.
Colonel Livingston can carry the
subtreasury plan in every county in
Mississippi if we could but hold him
here. Colonel Livingston leaves for
Atlanta or, the next train.
Hugging for the Next Cotton Crop.
Col. Searcy of Griffn urges the far
liters to use only the heaviest bagging
aud put on as many ties as the buyers
will allow. If possible buy 24 pound
bagging, and cover every speck of your
cotton. The bagging costs not over
three cents a pound, and you can resell
it at the prices of your staple. The
buyers refused to allow alliauceat'n
any reduction in tare ou their cotton
covered bales ; and now that we have
tlnin agaiu in our power, let us feed
them on jute until they sicken with it.
Dive them every pound of tare, that
they deduct. Now, don’t forget tins in
ordering your bagging for the next
crop. Buy the heaviest weight you
can find, aud put on plenty of it too.
W lien you put oil a light bagging it is
a gaiu to the speculator and a cleat
loss to the farmer.
A well known business man of
' Columbus, says the Euquire-Suu, has a
new proposition in regard to national
finance which he thinks would relieve
the country and settle the money ques
tion. lie wants the Government to
pay all the pensious with new money,
which would increase the currency to
the extent of about f 180,000,000 a
year.
A second-band mattress, for two
months in the possession of its pur
chaser, a resident of Mebtuies, X.
caused him some uneasiness the other
night, because of a hard lump that had
worked towards the surface. He in
vestigated and found that the lump
was a wad of greenbacks amounting to
11,011.
“How will I enter the money the
cashier skipped with,’’ asked the book
keeper, “under profit and loss:” “No.
suppose you put it uuder running ex
jiensos,”— Philadelphia Times,
CUT WORMB IN CORN
Note* front h Hiilletln J«*u«*d by Ih.i
South Dakotit Agritmlltiral .station.
A perfectly clean crop of com is use
ful in keeping down the < ut. worms.
Few fan nil keep corn so clean as to
reap tin- full licneiitof it as a preventive.
As generally raised, it cannot tliereforo
be compared to millet. Late fall plow
ing lias lieen recommended by some en
tomologists. This is on the theory that,
as the worms pass the winter in little
oval chandlers below the surface, they
would be turned up to tlie surface at a
time when it would be too late to make
this preparation again, anil would con
sequently perish. It is not claimed that
the -jieriod in which this preventive
plowing may lie done extends over more
tluui a very few days, just before the
final freezing up. The measure is there
fore applicable only to a small extent,
and even then would seem to require an
advance knowledge of the approach of
winter.
Our own experience and observation
does not lead to definite conclusions.
An extensive correspondence with fann
ers shows that every possible time of
plowing has been, in some cases, are
jiarently ineffective, and in other cases
apparently successful. On the whole,
w« have received about four times as
many favorable reports of spring plow
ing as of fall plowing, which must lie
regarded as a significant and valuable
point. It may be added that the letters re
ceived illustrate methods of observation
anil curious diversity of the cut worm
habit rather than the support of any
particular theory. Taken as a whole,
these communications apjieur to justify
the following conclusions: In gardens,
hand picking, and repelling agents like
lime, ashes, soot, etc., are of value in
the order named. In fields, burning off,
absolutely clean culture (this includes
millet raising and spring plowing), are
the liest measures an yet known. Head
ing off tlie worms where they are work
ing into a field may be done by plowing
a furrow a little ahead of them, leaving
the perpendicular side toward the field
to be protected.
I'ertllizer* for Corn.
A Virginia farmer writing to Country
Gentleman says:
We have made and used a mixture for
five years in succession with very suc
cessful results—composed of the follow
ing materials: One-third cottonseed meal,
one-third dissolved South Carolina phos
phate and one-third kuinit. We buy the
materials in hulk; haul home and mix
on the barn floor. We apply a hundred
pounds tier acre. Have got the mixture
for less than twenty dollars per ton—it
will probably Ik; a little higher this year.
We think it makes one barrel more per
acre and this, for one dollar's worth of
fertilizer, pays well. We use a corn
planter which drops the corn and fer
tilizer at oue operation—two rows at
once. We lay off the ground one way,
and then commence and plant, the other
way. It requires a careful hand to drop
anil there is no time to talk politics. Our
laud is red slate and has been settled and
cultivated for a hundred anil fifty years.
Indian Umiiii'H.
We here reproduce from the Fancier’s
Journal the picture of an Indian game
cock which was a prize winner at some
of the big poultry shows during the past
winter.
As may he seen from the cut, the
general appearance of the Indian game
is tlmt of a powerful bird, the laxly
INDIAN GAME COCK.
being very broad and breast oval and
prominent. The breast plumage in the
male is green black, as is the tail, the
bird being chestnut in color. It is
claimed that this breed, about which
fanciers have talked so much of late, is
a general purpose fowl, with many ex
cellent quantities. As yet farmers have
bad but little experience with the Indian
games.
Fact* Abuut tli« Ouooii *
A queen can beat a hen at laying.
Give her the best surroundings, with
plenty of honey coming in aud all that,
and she will lay 3,000 eggs in 24 hours.
She does not cackle over it, either. Each
egg measures 1-14 of an inch in length
and 1-70 of an inch in thickness. Even
when she is only doing an average busi
ness she will lay more than twice her own
weight in 24 hours. But, mind yon, she
does not do anything else. Does not
even, feed herself. Yon will see the
workers constantly offering her food.—
American Bee Journal.
Agricultural Nolen.
It is reported that sixty-four out of
seventy-five counties in the Texas grain
belt show a total increased acreage over
last year for wheat, corn and oats of be
tween 73 and 100 per cent.
The consumption of canned goods iu
the United States is increasing much
faster than is the demand for these goods
abroad, according to Bradstreet’s,
Cattle pastured in swampy or muddy
grounds are especially liable to ••foul in
the foot.”
The quickest way to get the rust off
a spade or shovel is to coat it with coal
oil and scour it with a brick.
It is said that nine-tenths of the swine
crop of the United States is put into
market under a year old.
No use running round asking Smith,
Brown anti Jones what to do for chills.
Cheatham’s Tasteless Chill Tonic will
cure you, cure you quicklr aud com
pletely. Give it a trial. Price 50 aud
7.7 cents. Guaranteed.
Most children decidedly object to
taking pills; they more decidedly ob
ject to taking castor oil. What then
is to be given them when a cathartic is
needed? Cheatham's Tastejess Castor
Oil. It is the same as the plain effect
but actually delightful to the taste.
Price 23 cents.
,S«t l.anlly KxdtcA.
I’ro.fi -»*or < ‘ox let us cull him--was
thoroughly in earnest as a scientific
worker. Kvery event that he observed
wus mi le to add somethin;; to his
knowledge or to illustrate some truth
already learned.
11 is readiness to make [tassin j events
teach practical lessons was well shown
by an incident that occurred one day
in tlio lecture room.
Placed before the class wosa machine
by which some gas was being liquefied
in a heavy cast steel cylinder by cold
and enormous pressure. Suddenly there
was a terrible crash ;is pieces of the
cylinder were hurled violently in every
direction, tilass was shattered, plas
tering knocked down, filling the room
with dust, and general havoc reigned.
The condensed gas, suddenly freed
from pressure, rushed out like a stream
of snowflakes, adding decidedly to tiie
general effect of storm and destruction.
Luckily nobody was hurt, but two sec
onds after the explosion every man in
the class was scrambling for the door
over chairs, settees and whatever else
w;u, in the way.
At the door a few of the students
paused, and then they heard Professor
Cox calling, in the calmest possible
tones, for them to return.
Looking back they dimly saw the
professor, a crayon in each hand, stand
ing amid the ruins before the big black
board, which he was fast covering with
the figures of elaborate calculations.
A moment later lie began to lecture
as quietly as ever, describing fully why
the explosion occurred, the amount of
work done by it and the different .
in which this work had been oxpen . d.
In conclusion he said .
“Gentlemen, never be so excited by
any event that you cannot observe it
closely and draw from it some practical
lesson." \outh’s Companion.
I’ijy.zli'U !>y the l.au.
It is very difficult for a man un
learned and untraveled to understand,
in the slightest degree, the customs of
foreign nations. George Mabbedy, a
Copt, born at Jerusalem and educated
at an English school there, has for
many years served as guide to travelers
in the east. Yet after all his acquaint
a nee with "Franks" he fails to under
stand their customs. "With the lied
ouins’’ contains the following illustra
tions of his conclusions in regard to an
English lawyer and his mode of life:
lie proposed going to England and
helping me in my office.
“What would you do there, George?’'
1 asked.
“I Stand at door with mv sword.
This man come in; I let Lhn come
That man go out; I put him out."
Ills main idea is that I must lie con
staidly engaged on murder cases, and
that those whom I am opposing must
be always seeking my life, lie there
fore wishes me to be oil mv guard
against avenging knives.
George has been much pawled to
understand exactly what I do when 1
am at home, and how I earn my liv
ing; by the law. After much ponder
iug he proposes this question :
‘•When one man kill another and
conic to see you, what you tell him?"
“When one man kills another he
does uot come to me. lie runs away.
If he is caught he will be hanged."
"Hut if lie bribe the judge?"
“Judges in England do not accept
bribes.”
“Well, it is different in Syria." says
George, with a sigh of perplexity. Life
in Syria is to him an open Look, hut
England is tin) much for him.
Recollection* of Harvard shoth.
The leading scientific nun at Mar
van) were Agassiz. Peirce and (iouid.
eacli not only pre-eminent in lii.~ de
partiuent, but in a certain sense a pin
neer. Peirce was the iirst American to
learn modern mathematics, and I<> teach
his countrymen that what i iiey ealied
by that name hardly forme i even the
beginnings of the subject . and tin
same may be said of (ioutl ;a astron
omy. Tlie latter is one t. whose on
coui'aging words and efficient help I
must ever feel nu st dee[dy indebted ; in
deed, the way in which the loan and the
astronomer were combined m liis person
powerfully inrtueneetl the dinction of
uiy activities, and his Astronomical
Journal was the medium through which
my earliest efforts reached publicity.
Another teacher by e.vtmj ! ■ ua-
Commander ('barles I ,’enrv Davis. who
resumed bis former position as super
intendent of the "Miiiticnl Almanac"
the year after I became eotmeeted with
it. lie united all file ihisli of the old
fashioned navy leader with a kindly
courtesy toward men and women of
every grade which could not be ex
ceeded. Professor Simon Newcomb in
Forum.
.V Wealthy Duke.
Tlie Duke of Westminster is not only
credited with being the greatest land
owner in London, but also die greatest
house owner in the United Kingdom.
It has been stated that house property
built upon iiis lands lias fallen in at
termination of leases, or lias been ac
quired by him to the value of upward
of seven millions sterling, and hv the
end -if the present century, when tlie
whole of his leases fall duo, it will
amount to upward of fifteen millions
sterling, and all houses of the finest de
scripbonthroughout London. —London
Tit Hits.
An Early letter of TfmcLor.i > *>.
I realiv think I am becoming terribly
industrious, though 1 can't get Dr. Rus
sell to think so. It is so hard when you
CtidAiVor to work hard to find your at
tempts nipiMsj in tiie bud. There are
but 37TJ in the school. 1 wish there
were only fill!). —Life of Thackeray.
Mice Cheatham's Tasteless Chill
Tonic was introduced many other Ton
ics have been introduced to the public
None, however, have met with the
same success. The reason is simple—
they do not do the work it does.
When you have chills try it. Price 50
and 75 cects. Guaranteed to cure.
Cheatham's Tasteless Chill Tonic
is put up in 50 and 75 cent sizes. You
pay your money and take your choice.
Put uhatever sipe you buy, you may
rest assured that you are getting the
worth of your mouey. Jt never fails
to cure chills; it Is guaranteed to do so.
A FLOOD OF FI UK
i Will Destroy All the Wicked Be
tween I.Slid and him .
“I have never predicted that the
world would come to au end,” said
! Kev. E. If. Carswell at Atlanta Satur-
I day “Of course the world will goon.
Hut I expect the millennial age to
be ushered in in 1901, and 1 have now
iu prgss a book with the title : ‘Just at
Our Doors ; or, His Early Coming.
I have already sold l, a OO copies.’
The book will be issued in about fifteen
days.”
Mr. Carswell says the seccud com
ing of Christ will take place between
1890 and 1901. The righteous dead
will he raised, and with the righteous
living will meet him in the air, and the
wicked will he destroyed by a fi m l of
fire, after which the millennium will
be ushered in.
“The book,” said Mr. Carswell, "dis
cusses the fulfilled prophecies, show
ing that the principal ones have alreadv
been fulfilled, and discuses all the si-ns
by which our Saviour sai l we should
know he is even now at our doors. I
especially present the movement
among the Jews towards Palestine and
the proposition on the part of Eng
land, made two ago to the powers, to
move the Jews by wholesale to Pales
tine. The book makes special dis
cussion in its last pages of the numer
ical or mathematical prophesy of Dan
iel, which if correctly calculated and
accurately applied will call foi the
close of this dispensation in 1901.
If the calculations have been made
with exactness, the coming of the Sa
viour may be expected soon after 1890.
In advance of bis coming I expect a
great war in Europe, and (lie signs ol
it are now in the sky. The final result
of it will be the Czat of Russia will
become master of the eastern world,
lie will be attacking Jerusalem in an
effort to annihilate the Jews, and thus
prove the Lord's coming.”
Being asked for a desciption of ths
scenes that would foilow, Mr. Cars
well sail!;
"All the righteous dead will be
raised at tlie Saviour's coming lie
will change the bodies of the living
righteous from natural lo spiritual
bodies. They will then be titled up
above the ea tli and meet liim in the
air, and while there the earth will be
flooded with fire as it was once tlo< d “1
with water, and for the same purpose
- namely, to destroy all the wicked,
l'iie destruction i>f all wicked will he
tie blinding of Satan. The whole
earth will he changed and there will
be no more sea. Then Christ and tiie
righteous will descend out of the air
and the thousand tears of millennial
peace will follow.”
i n.: lit s; ;.r.si.x
Use IlrownN Iron ISiuers.
Physicians recommend it.
All dialers keep it. SI.On per bottle. Cenuine
has iradc-nmrk and crossed red lines on u "tipper.
CANANDAIGUA ACADEMY,
Hojs only. In orpnr.tte in 1705.
Thorough i tcpnrnti hi it hi! colleges and
for I nisi ties*. Home care and triinin" in
Principal's family. S» nd for eahilogu.* to
J.C. Norris, Prin., Oaicmdnigu i. N. V.
K ITlrnali Refilled Christinn ITome;
11,10,1 BM THHR.ili.il i.¥ ANI/F.li.
■ 1 M 6 T S !%if « f Mtl.lv tlmr<Ulgh
IB 9 jy -fr g g w S;in«! j»i Mourn heutt <1;
I’iaiiod ; modern im
provements. No school in the South or West cuu
FOR YOUNG LAPSES.
oner a more elegant home or pleasanter surroundings.
SiM
appetinug. Sold by all dealers A beautiful Picture
Book and cards sent FUFF to any one sending
address to the 0. E. HIRES CO., Philadelphia, l*a
PARKER'S ~
wSSmfrSsß hair balsam
Cleanses and beautifies the hair.
a luxuriant growth.
> Ki Never Fails to Restore Gray
* lair to it® Youthful Color.
Cures sculp .1 -«•»>,•« M hair tailing.
Aims® RMuaaaoa
■'o rdrker s Ginger Tonic. It cures the worst Cough, 1
>' eak Lungs, Debility, Indigestion, Pain, Take in tiine.AOcts.
Thi • rCams.
•tops all pair. lie. at Druggists, or HISCOX & CO., N. Y.
The Leibig Company’s
EXTRACT OF BEEF
For Delicious For Improved and I
Beef Tea. Economic Cookery. 1
One pound of Extractor Beef equnl to
forty pouinls of lean href. Genuine only
with signature of J. vox Liebiu in blue.
WvAtlanla.
,1,1 Tn. ■ '■ Ij r i . . I
eut business conducted for Moderate Pee 9.
Our Opf.cc is Opposite U S Patent Office
and we can secure pat *m iu less time than tuowe
remote from Washington.
Bend model, drawing or photo, with descrip
tion. We advise, if patentable or not. free of
charge. Our foe not due till patent is secured.
A Pamrhlct, ‘How to Obtain Pstents," with
names of actual clients in your State, county, or
town, sent free. Address,
C. A. SNOW & CO.
Opp Patent Office. Washington. D. C.
MONEY
TO LOAN.
"r are now prepared to procure loans of
niOiiev ot. *hor| notice at low rates, and on
rets liable terms. Coma quickly, In-fore
the money is all taken up,
BKYAX i PICK EX.
A n r :v 3 bcvk
FROM l . r ■ O 0- VF.R
7
■ * * •• * • - i i
\ DIG'
% y
A GRAN., .. •
ft.r ti'.o 1 .41111.;. , Srii • « . ,
Tito / sit. . * ' *•■'--
brid-cd J>i
i. »'••« st. •.* i ■
livoncr-' -
Too o' ti
and « . . .
tho : «-
JL t.to ’. 1 *
lac.‘» lio * A
Ten Yj
died p ' t
been c :
Over $ j A * c
prop.V A 1 : 5 O
was p *i:v‘cd.
C 'i icr Z • «ipci ’ ? t
I ietioniryij" •• v: r. <.
' : ?. MEKKI \ M .■<
y *rf airfield, t osri , • . >
• i!i d-ndi sellers. illu.-i. «*.t c ..
coP'-n'CHT
iueiniiz csucTrfrN.
I
%
Of Kentucky University, LEYINGTON, KY.
S. tV. Corner Irt viV I Streets,
o|>|Nf>2l.f Clri./l House.
WILOUR H. cr.HTH, President.
Cyc ! i<‘.i.ii‘;.t, IN-.:. V -St. Honored CollefTA.
K. V . !: V. T>. fS-t'f’i. {■■'■■ • -t? of ;••••• C< H - , rivM the Gobi
> •la ,vi i I ; i cf i : ■ r t.t W'filt!*-* r.\po«ltlon f J r
? -• t; r>' |» iv»'»-Ik i l **!'* i ttortil ISualnea*
Kdu*»£,♦» »•;. -If 1 a:t-- ' - »!.<• »• t t \ tvar.
Lorn Sr. a-M E ;t.-i »n C. ii-itr; *. 10.000 GraduttM
in Bi: «i i >«tt. I: T •a'h .rt emnlov T' 1 < ■-; C '•true consist*
cf Boi.t r.idae-t *.•:.:••.»• • •. P .mansfcif. Commercial
law, M. 'him i in r. 1;• kin .!•>' ■ • F>L '• Manufncturlng,
1.-Cfttros. r, Pr- “. V*T.-. i> C'orreSTV levee, etc
C'o«f .i. '”ii|l Un In :«Co'i •'• • ; "'ln' : n. Si .tinnery
t. : ! »T<l f iV.ifl, PY ■ •t-Tfend. Type-
Wi’.ri’.j i.r.il Teb'rttnhy •* >c-c* I til t '■ - : li iv- sn-ciat
. :n1 Ml 1 ■ • V ■ •t' 0 PlKines^
C »•;- Sm trial '• f-r f. id --. Mir t*-'n. i a! cmploTetl.
8 . -einl c. ||. --e of H.. .1 - k. - inr,«i I.
ness utbmetic an 1 Pcnnrinshtp when t:i.;eo .85 per mouth.
~llr •; o* **n da an 1 nivhu Stud.-- vs received on easy paj
:nt t • ; }* Arran'-” iticii• s can he na l« with IlnJlrr &>t Com*
r ,'rr .' Cheat'tla:' 1 t... s. to uttenil th i t Collar. Pit, vaCfl*
* ii. i Graduates 'c--ful. For circular*
? . ' . UxlßetMi Kr.
hom&mw Maew
cHICAao 25 UNION SOU ARE. ti. Y s>"’** k L G «o.
ar inui, MO 6os TOU,WA3S. atl/WTA.C*. M U«S.TES.
•T.UIUIVMO FOR SAL£ - QV
H. J. COPELAND & Co*
Mg
TERRY M’F’G CO., nashville, tenn.
fiJSg BgEM nMHUJ
BMII fi"S F- y %>* OVi tk* «i
Wk*lFßli*jffl? or hOGT or FAILING MANHOOD;
ftlMUMfMesaeral atid HES.VOTJS DEBILITY;
dHll c °f Body and Mind, lifiecta
PlHnil'niloi I rrcraor Exceaaea in Old or Younir.
Hubust, Noble CANIItI'H) fnlly il»rtcri*.l. i: ~w »„ enlarire an.|
Strengtbeu WEAK. IN HIVE LOPED OIU.ANB A HARTS OK BODY.
Absolutely unfalllo;* HOME TKKATBENT-HeneSt* »u a tiny.
B-'n tesllfr from 60 States un-1 fourtrieu. »Trlt. tl ,m.
D*Mrtptl«e Biiok, eiplanail-amt proof, r,ailed (sealed} Treo.
4dS--e.s ERIE ?ngE}lC.< ’. CO.. BUFFALO. At- V,
Aif*Ask for catalogue.
TERRY M’F’G CO.. Nashville. Tenn,
XOl U uni to Save
«sS* Fron 35 lo fO Cents
On Every Dollar You S;ie <1 ;
If so, write for our llluslra:i il Catalogue,
containing illustrations end rtricos of every
thing inanufaetured in tin- United States,
at inunufaeturers’p.-iccß. f , .'mo ii lust ra
tions, nil lines represented. CATALOGUE
mailed tree on application. Address
Chicago General Supply <’«>.
ITS West Van Buri n St , Chicago. 111.
icDoiißili Mm Ms
—AND
BRASS FOUNDRY
1 announce to the public that I ain
1 now dv to do all kinds «| Machine
•ilojtl. » I'-illl'. < l>t;«:!l
lictiti.l tlill ftacliln
cry. tig :<n«J Giiuiiuin
tliii '•i li s si Speeialty.
I keep constantly on hand all kinds of
Brass I itHngs, 1; irai ra • n. .
Iron l’ipin:r and Pipe Filling ; Pippin, -bit
and 1 breaded any Size and Length,* I am
prepared to repair your niaehinerv che.r.t r
than you can have it done in A'! mfit. \.ll
work guaranteed to i:ive sat, - ration
J J SMITH.
May 24b
For Malaria, Liver Trou
ble,or Indigestion, use
JBROWN'S IRON BITTERS
e tl.tlil. xa.*, |»j;n MKI I,
O Wanted : Go si Agents to si II out Gen
si line of merchandise. Xo peddlin'* \lt>va
salary will l»e paid to‘ live”
for further information, aldn s*
11l lA‘«| i* v4a ‘ll4*l*3ll *ll|»g»!% t 'o.
West Van Bun n St., f’Ueugo, UL