Newspaper Page Text
Washing a Fine Art.
Ever since spinning was a typo of womanly
Industry, from ago to age it has been ex.
parted that beautiful apparel should clothe
women, To keep dainty belongings in good
order it Is necessary to have them properly
laundered. This Is especially true In tho
laundering of pretty summer gowns, which Is
ttow Quito a fine art. To do the work properly,
All a tub two-thirds full of warm water, dissolve
the fourth of a cake of Ivory Soap (which will
not fade the most delicate colors,) odfi It to the
water; wash tho articles through it, rinse first
in clear ami then in blue water; wring, dip iu
thin starch, shake out and hang on tho lino iu
the shade. When dry, sprinkle and iron.
(»owii9 thus laundored will retain their fresh¬
ness tho entire season. Eliza R. 1’akkes.
High Speed On the Rail.
The terrific -speed of seventy-five
miles an hour is attained by the Brit¬
ish jails several times every day. The
chief West Coast expresses from Lon¬
don to Scotland attain this speed twice
en Shap, route; in once on the falling gradient
at the wilds of Westmoreland,
and once down the Beattock Bank,
forty light miles from Carlisle. With a
load and tail wind it is no un-
common thing for one of these trains
to travel at the rate of seventy-seven
miles an hour.
On the Great Northern Railway, if
the conditions are favorable, the Man¬
chester and Scotch expresses will
sometimes travel at seventy-seven or
seventy-eight miles. According to
Mr. Martin, the locomotive expert,
the 2 o’clock special express from
Manchester to Loudon recently at¬
tained a speed of 79.40 miles an hour.
While these speeds are undoubtedly
great for regular runs, it must be re¬
membered that the Journal’s special
inauguration train ran a mile in thirty-
two seconds, and several miles consec¬
utively at a gait under thirty-five.
—New York Journal.
Labor Uprisings in Russia.
With the decline of Nihilism in
Russia has come an uprising of labor.
All the factory towns are having
trouble now with striking workmen,
and tho authorities are unable to cope
with the difficulty. It is forbidden
by law in Russia to form trades
unions, but even Russian despotism
cannot go to the extent of making a
man work when he is not so inclined.
The place of the walking delegate is
taken by the labor disturbers, and the
ignorant and oppressed workmen fol¬
low these men with singular faith and
fidelity.
Sixty of the preachers have been
imprisoned and recommending are to be transported general
to Siberia for a
strike to the workmen. The Nihilists,
Anarchists, andrevolutionary elements
generally have been quick to recog¬
nize the power of the label- movement.
They are working in every way and pos¬
sible to influence the workmen to
make them believe that their only sal¬
vation lies in a general movement.—
Foreign Letter.
Coining Money For Abroad.
The Philadelphia Mint has gone in¬
to the business of coining money for
foreign countries. According to a
recent statement of the mint during
the month of May, 60,017 “10-colone”
pieees were struck off for Costa Rica,
in view of the recent adoption of the
gold standard. The value of these
pieces is estimated at $279,291.81
The total face value of the ooinuge of
the United States for the month was—
in gold, $4,486,950, and in silver,
$1,600,000. Of this latter sum $200,-
000 was subsidiary coin.
Six Costly Tilings.
The biggest price for a painting was
that paid for Meissonier’s ‘■‘1814.”
M. Chancbard gave $170,000 for it.
The most costly buildiug of modern
times is that of the New York state
capitol at Albany. Nineteen million
six hundred thousand dollars have
been spent on it. In 1892 I. Malcolm
Forbes paid $150,000 to Senator Stan¬
ford for the horse Arion, making it
th> most -yiluable equine the world
has ever known. The most valuable
book iu the world is a Hebrew Bible
now in the Vatican. In 1512 Pope
Julius II refnsed to sell it for its
V weight in gold, which would amount
5 to about $103,000. The “Imperial”
^diamond is considered (he finest stone
of its kind in the world. The Nizam
j of Hyderabad offered $2,150,000, tbe
9 largest price ever known, for this dia-
<j mond. The costliest meal ever served
o')was a supper given by Eelius Verus to
a a dozen guests. It is said to have
cost $242,500.
His Connection.
Bannister, the comedian, was pre¬
sented to a proud old Scotch dame.
“Who are the Bannisters?” she asked
peevishly. ‘ ‘I do not recollect nieet-
ing with them before.” “Madame,”
replied the actor, gravely, “we are
closely connected with the Stairs.”
“Ah! there is a good and ancient fam¬
ily!” cried madame. “Mr. Bannister,
I am delighted to make your acquaint-
ance .”_Household Words.
An Elephant and a Baby.
At the circus parado in Middletown
recently a small child on Broad street
got away from its mother and toddled
out in the street to see Jumbo. Before
anyone could realize what the child
was up to, it was directly in front of
the herd of elephants. Everyone ex¬
pected to see tne little one crushed to
death, but the leader of the herd care¬
fully picked the little one up with his
trunk and swung her out of all dan-
g er .— Hartford Courant.
Personal Piety and Hot Weather.
Hot weather brings no excuse for
neglecting family or private devotions,
and not until its effects actually dis¬
qualify one for exertion is it a reason
for remaining away from the house of
God, The truly devout will say; “If
I am ever needed it is today; —Ghii® -
tian Advocate.
REV. DR. TAUIAGE.
THE NOTED DIVINE'S SUN¬
DAY DISCOURSE.
j I
An Eloquent Dissertation on the Sin or
Gambling—An Insidious Vice Which j
umber 4 II. Victims by the Than-
MUtds-aUjr be Saved by Grace of God. .
Text; "Woe unto them that sin, as it were i
with a cart rope.”—Isaiah v„ 18. j I
There are some Iniquities that only nibble
at. the heart. After a lifetime of their work
the man still stands upright, respected and
honored. These vermin have not strength
enough to gnaw through a man’s eharaeter.
But there are other transgressions that lift
themselves up to gigantic proportions and
seize hold of a man and bind him with
thongs forever. There are some iniquities
that have such great emphasis of evil that
he who commits them may be said to sin
as with n cart rope. I suppose you know
how they make a great rope. The stuff out
of which it is fashioned is nothing but tow
which you pull apart without any exertion
of your fingers. This is spun into threads,
any of which you could easily snap, but a
great many of these threads are inter-
wound—then you have a rope strong
enough to bind an ox or hold a ship in a
tempest. I of the of gambling. A
speak to you sin
cart rope in strength is that sin. and yet I
wish more especially to draw your atten-
tion to the small threads o! influence out
of which that mighty iniquity is twisted,
This crime is on the advance, so that it is
well not only that fathers and brothers and
sons be interested in such a discussion, but
that wives and mothers and sisters and
daughters look out lest their present home
be sacrificed or their intended home be
blasted. No man, no woman, can stand
aloof from practical such a subject as this and say,
“It has no bearing upon my life,”
for there may bo in a short time in your
history an experience in which you will
And that the discussion involved three
worlds—earth, heaven, hell. There are
gambling establishments by the thousands.
There are about 5000 professional gamb-
lers. Out of all the gambling establish-
ments bow many of them do you suppose
profess to be honest? Ten—these ten pro-
fessing to be honest becausethey are merely
the antechamber to those that are aeknowi-
edged fraudulent. There are first-class es-
tablishments. You stop a little way out of
Broadway, New York. You go up the mar-
bio stairs. You ring the bell. The liveried
servant introduces you. The walls are lav-
endertinted. The mantels are of Vermont
marble. The pictures are “Jephtbah’s
Daughter” and Bore’s “Dante” and Virgil’s
“Frozen Region of Hell,” a most appro-
priate selection, this last, the for the place,
There is the roulette table, finest, cost-
liest. most exquisite piece of furniture in
the United States. There is the banquet-
ing room, where, free of charge to the
guests, you may find the plate and viands
and wines and cigars sumptuous beyond
parallel. Then you come to the second
class gambling establishment. To it you
are introduced by a card through some
“roper in.” Having entered, you must
either gamble or fight. Sanded cards, dice
loaded with quicksilver, poor drinks mixed
with more poor drinks will soon help you
to get rid of all your money to a tune in
short meter with staccato passages. You
wanted to see. You saw. The low villains
of that place watch you as you come in.
Does not the panther, squat in the grass,
know a calf when she sees it? Wrangle not
for your rights in that place, or your body
will be thrown bloody into the street or dead
into the river.
Ymi go along a little farther and find the
policy establishment. In that place you
bet on numbers. “saddle;” Betting on two numbers
is called a betting on three num-
bers is called a “gig;” bettiug on four
numbers is called a “horse,” and there are
thousands of our young men leaping into
that “saddle and mounting that “gig
and behind that “horse” riding to perdi-
tion. There is always one kind of sign on
the door, “Exchange,” a most appropriate
title for the door, for there in that room a
mart exchanges health, peace and heaven
for loss of health, loss of home, loss of fam-
fly, loss of Immortal enough. souL Exchange sure
enough and infinite
Now you acknowledge that is a cart-
rope of evil, but you want to know what
are the small threads out of which it is
made. There is in many a disposition to
hazard. They feel a delight in walking
danger. near a preeipice because of the sense of
There are people who go upon
Jungfrau, not for tlie largeness of the pros-
peet. but for the feeling that they have should of
thinking. “What would happen if I
fall off?” There are persons who have
their blood filliped and accelerated by
skating very near an airhole. There are
men who find a positive delight in driving
within two inches of the edge of a bridge,
It is this disposition to hazard that finds
development in gaming practices. Here
are $500. I may stake them. If I stake
them, I may lose them, but I may win
*5000. Whichever way it turns I have the
excitement. Shuffle the cads. Lost! Heart
thumps. Head dizzy. At it again—just
to gratify this desire for hazard.
Then there ate others who go into this
sin through sheer desire for gain. It is es-
peeiaily so with professional gamblers,
They always keep cool. They never drink
enough to unbalance their judgment. They
do not see the dice so much as they see the
dollar beyond the dice, and for that they
watch as the spider in the web, looking as
if dead until the ily passes. Thousands of
young men in the hope of gain go into
these practices. They say; “Well, my sal-
ary is not enough to allow this luxury. I
don't get enough from my store, office or
shop. I ought to have finer apartments,
I ought to have better wines. I ought to
have more richly flavored cigars. I ought
to lie able to entertain my friends more ex-
pensively. I won’t stand this any longer,
I can with one brilliant stroke make a for-
tune. Now, here goes, principle or no
principle, heaven or hell. Who cures?”
When a young man makes up his mind to
live beyond his income, satan has bought
him out and out. and it is only a question
of time when the goods are to he delivered,
The thing is done. You may plant in the
way ail the batteries of truth and right-
eousuess: but man is bound to go on. When
a man makes $1000 a year and spends
$1200, when a young man makes $1500 and
spends $1700, all the harpies of darkness
cry out, "Ha! ha! we have him!” And
they have. How to get the extra $500 or
the extra $2000 is the question. He says;
“Here is my friend who started out the
other day with but little money, and in one
night, so great was his luck, he rolled up
hundreds and thousands of dollars. If he
got it, why not 1? It is such dull work,
this adding up of long lines of figures in
the counting house, this pulling down of a
hundred yards of goods and selling a rem-
nant, this always waiting upon somebody
else when I could put $100 on the ace and
pick up $1000.”
This sin works very insidiously. Other
sins sound the drum, and flaunt the flag,
and gather their recruits with wild huzza,
but this marches its procession silence, of and pale vie-
time in dead of night, the in when
they drop into grave there is not so
mueh sound as the click of dice. Oh, how
many have gone down under iti Look at
those men who were once highly pros-
pered. Now their forehead is licked by a
tongue of flame that will never go out. In
their souls are plunged the beaks the which of
will never be lifted. Swing open door
that man’s heart and yon see a coil of ad-
ders wriggling their indescribable horror
until you turn away and hide your face and
ask God to help you unadvertised. to forget it. The
most of this evil is The
community does not hear of it. Men de¬
frauded in gambling establishments
are not fools enough to tell of it.
Once in awhile, however, there is an
exposure, as when in Boston the police
swooped upon a gaming establishment and
found in it the representatives of all classes
of citizens, from the first merchants on
KtatP street to the low Ann strwt MmWi-r:
.'I H when Bullock, the cashier of tho Central
Railroad of Georgia, was found to have
Stolen S10H,000 for tho purpose of carrying
on gambling practices, ns when a young
K-n’nlanv e vears h ngo''was found" to "l.avo
stolen *40.000 to carry on gaming practices;
as when a man connected with a Wall street
insurance eomuuny a.I - found to have
<«<*<"■' -MOk.lKK) t ? curry .... In* gaming prae-
‘ «<4e™Uy th!> money leak" silently from wnb
<*« tpercluint’s till into the gamester’s I
l 't. I believe tlnu one of the main f
leading to this sewer of Iniquity is the ex- _
edtement of business life. Ts It not a sig-
nlfleant fact that the majority of the day
gambling houses in New York are in prox-
Imltv to Wall street? Men go Into the ex¬
eltement of stock gambling, and from that
they plunge into the gambling houses, as,
when men are intoxicated, they go The into agi- a
liquor saloon to get more drink.
tntion that is witnessed In the stock market
when the chair announced the word
“Northwestern.” or “Port Wayne.” or
"Rock Island.” or “New York Central.”
and the rat. tat. tat. of the auctioneer's
hammer, and the excitement, of making
“corners.'’ and getting up “nools,” and
“earryingstock.” anda“break” from eighty
to seventy, and the excitement of rushing
around in curbstone brokerage, and the
sudden cries of “Buyer three!” Buyer
ten!" Take’em!” “How many?” and the
making or losing of $10,000 by 'one opera-
tion, unfits a man togohome.nndsohe
go-s up the flight of stairs, amid business
offices, to the darkly curtained, wooden-
shuttered room, gayly furnished inside,
and takes his place at the roulette or the
faro takie. But I cannot tell all the pro-
,. e is S by which men get into this evil. A
' Y’ork. He Western
nlnn w en t to New was a
merchant. He went into a gaming
house on Park place. Before morning he
|, a d lost all his money save $1. and he
moved around about with that dollar in his
hand, and after awhile, caught still more
powerfully under the infernal infatuation,
h e came up and put down the dollarand
cried out until they heard him through the
saloon “One thousand miles from home,
and my last dollar on the gaming table.”
Many years ago for sermouie purposes
and in company with the chief of police of
New York I visited one of the most brilliant
gambling houses in that city, It was
night, and as we came up in front all
seemed dark. Tho blinds were down, the
door was guarded, but after a whispering
of the officer with the guard at the door we
were admitted into the hall, and thenoe into
the parlors, around one table finding eight
or ten men in midlife, well dressed—all the
work going on in silence, save the noise of
the rattling “chips” on the gamingtable
in one parlor and the revolving ball of the
roulette table in thoother parlor. Some of
these men, we were told, had served terms
in prison, some were shipwrecked bankers
and brokers and monev dealers, and some
were going their first ‘rounds of vice—but
all intent upon the table, as large or small
fortunes moved uo and down before them,
oh, there was something awfully solemn in
the silence—the intense gaze, the sup-
pressed emotions of the players. Noons
looked up. They all had ‘money in the
r api,ls. and I have no doubt some saw,
as they sat there, horses and car-
' houses and lands,
riages, and
and home and family rushing
down into the vortex. A man’s life would
not have been worth a farthing in that pres-
ence had he not been accompanied be' by the
police if he had been observation. supposed to Some on of a
Christian errand of
these men went by private key. some went
j n py careful introduction, some were
taken in by the patrons of the estabiish-
ment. The officer of the law told me,
“None gets in here except by police man-
date or by some letter of a patron.” While
were there a voting man came in, put
his money down on the roulette table and
lost; put more money down on the roulette
table and lost; put more money down on
the roulette table and lost; then feeling in
his pockets for more money, finding none,
in severe silence he turned his back upon
the scene and passed out. While we stood
there men lost their property and lost their
souls. Oh, merciless place! Not once in
all the history of that gaming house has
there been one word of sympathy uttered
for the losers at the game,
Sometimes these gift enterprises are car-
ried on in the name of charity, and some of
you remember at the close of our civil war
how many gift enterprises were on foot,
the proceeds to go to the orphans and
widows of the soldiers and sailors. What
did the men who had charge of those gift
enterprises care for the orphans and
widows? Why, they would have allowed
them to freeze to death upon their steps,
I have no faith in a charity which for the
sake of relieving present suffering opens a
gaping jaw that lias swallowed down so
much of the virtue and good have principle nothing of
the community. Young man. sharpen
to do with these things. They only
your appetite for games of chance. Do one
0 f two things—be honest or die.
j have accomplished It'is my object if I put
you on the lookout. a great deal
easier to fall than it is to get up again.
The trouble is that when men begin to go
astray from the path of duty they are apt
to say: “There’s no use of my trving to get
back. I've sacrificed my respectability, I
can't return.” And they go on until they
are utterly destroyed. moment^ I tell you, my
friends, that God this by His
Holy Spirit, can change your entire nature
so that you will be a different man in a
' want—what is ft?
minute. Your great
More salary? Higher social position? No,
no . I will tell you the great want of every
ma n if he has not already obtained it.
it is the grace of God. Are there any who
have fallen Victims to the sin that I have
been reprehending? You are in a prison,
You rush against the wall of this prison
and try to get out and you fail, and you
turn around and dash against the other
avail until there is blood on tho grates and
blood on your soul. You will never get
out in this way. There is only one way of
getting out. There is a key that can un¬
lock that prison house. It is the key of
the house of David. It is the key that
Christ wears at His girdle. If you lock, will
allow him to put that key to the the
holt will shoot back, and the door will
swing open, and you will be a tree inau in
Christ Jesus. Oh. prodigal, what a busi-
ness this is for you, feeding swine, when
V our father stands in the front door, strain-
i ng his eyesight to catch the first glimpse
of vour return, and the calf is as fat as It
will be, and the harps of heaven are all
strung, and the feet free,
There are converted gamblers in heaven,
The light of eternity flashed upon the green
baize of their billiard saloon. In the laver
of God’s forgiveness they washed off all
their sins. They quit trying for earthly
stakes. They tried for heaven and won it.
There stretches a baud from heaven toward
the head of the worst offender. It is a
hand, not clinched as it to smite, but
outspread as if to drop a benediction,
other seas have a shore and may be
fathomed, but the sea of God’s love-
eternity has no plummet to strike the
bottom, and immensity no ironbound
shore to confine it. Its tides are lifted
by the heart of infinite compassion. Its
waves are the hosannas of tho redeemed,
The argosies that sail on it drop anchor
at last amid the thundering salvo of eter-
nul victory. But alas for that man who
sits down to the final game of life and puts
his immortal soul on the ace, while the
angels of God keep the tally board, and af-
ter kings and queens, and knaves, and
spades are “shuffled” and “cut," and the
game is ended, hovering and impending
worlds discover that lie hHS lost it, the faro
bank of eternal darkness olutcMng down
into its wallet all the blood stained wagers,
Dcroand For Small Notes.
The increase in the business of the coun¬
try is shown by the great demand at the
Treasury Department, Washington, for
small notes. The Department officials are
fairly overwhelmed with required applications business for
small notes, evidently by
men in commercial transactions.
BICYCLIST WITHOUT LEGS.
The Legless Son of a Kansas Minister
Rides a Wheel.
Bicyclists -with but one leg are be-
coming quite common, but a no-legged
bicyclist is indeed a novelty, ouch a
one is James Jump, the son of the
j. ( , y _ Albert Jump, of Independence,
Kan. Twelve years ago the boy lost
both of bis legs in a railway accident.
One of his legs was cut off close to the
thigh and the other only a little lower
down. On the stump of the latter he
was able to fasten an artificial leg. Re¬
cently Mr. Jump became seized with a
desire to ride a bicycle. He bad wit¬
nessed venturesome feats of one-legged
cyclists, but he was in doubt about the
ability of a boy with no legs at all to
speak of to sit half astride a wheel and
make it go. He bought a wheel, how¬
ever, and set about learning to ride.
Leading his rubber-tired steed to the
curbstone, he balanced himself on bis
crutches and, with a side motion made
"i
' /
•m, Jr I! .*
Wm
'-2
s
V *■> >1
li Lp*.
RIDES WITHOUT LEGS.
easy by the absence of his leg, slipped
into the saddle. Fastening his crutch
in a spring catch on the side where hia
legs ought to be and putting his arti¬
ficial foot on the pedal, he was off.
He soon mastered the art of balancing
and can now ride at almost any com¬
mon speed he desires and can ascend
and descend any ordinary-sized hill.
SMALLEST HUMAN ATOM.
"Weighed But Twenty Ounces and Was
. Only a Foot High.
The smallest human being that ever
existed is believed to have been a lit¬
tle girl named Catherine Elliott. The
Coroner of Liverpool, England, was
called upon to hold an inquest on her
diminutive body. This human atom
was born in Glasgow, Scotland, about
three weeks ago. Her parents were
poor, and were easily induced by man-
% ■ (J I
/ ,1 {
m ]8|
§ &
i
^|\n r iii
N\\
if
SMALLEST BABY IN THE WOBLD.
agers to place their daughter Oh exhi¬
bition as a freak. She was being ex¬
hibited in Liverpool, the parents re¬
ceiving £3 10s. for showing and at¬
tending her. The child weighed only
twenty ounces at the time of her death
and was just a foot high. The palm of
her hand was not as large as a silver
twenty-five-cent piece. Her feet were
no larger tliau an ordinary man’s
thumb. The parents disclaimed any
desire to limit the growth of the mid¬
get. The little one had been guarded
from cold, was well-nurtured and had
never had a day’s illness until the day
it died. The jury returned a verdict
that the child diedfrom natural causes.
Strange Sit far a Temple,
One of the most strangely situated
buildings in the world is a Hindoo
temple. It is built upon a huge rock
4’> 'b
ml , t
.. 1 A A hi * dSfc
l!>73aillii|ill'q , i|'
■
yf' . <
THE TEMPLE ON THE ROCK.
that is balanced very nicely upon a
seemingly insecure base. The great
mechanical difficulty of getting the
building materials to the top of this
rock must have been vastly increased
by tbe peril of overbalancing tbe buge
mass and bringing it crashing down
upon the plain like an avalanche.
There is another temple in Burmah
similarly situated.
The Value of Electrical Vlantft.
Few persons realize the enormous
amount of money which is invested in
electrical plants of various sorts. Over
100,000,000 of dollars are invested in
electrical machinery used in mining.
Electric elevatorB employ about fifteen
millions more. Electric railways rep¬
resent about one billion dollars. This
does not include the money now being
used in the manufacture of electrical
machinery.
FACTS AND FIGURES.
The first solid-head pin was made in
England in 1824 by air American,
Lemuel \V. Wright.
The San Francisco board of health
has ordered the carpet beating estab¬
lishments out of the city.
The population of many South Sea
islands manufacture their entire suits
from the products of the palm times.
The brewers of Great Britain con¬
sume annually about 70,000 tons of
sugar in the manufacture of beer and
malt liquors.
Over 17,000 different kinds of but¬
tons have been found in pictures of
mediaeval clothing.
Southeastern Europe now has mil¬
lions of people who are far less ad¬
vanced than the Japanese.
The fasest flowing river in the world
is the Sutlej, in British India, with a
descent of 12,000 feet in 180 miles.
The Plymouth brethren, now having
their annual gathering at Plainfield,
N. J., are worshiping without a creed.
The population of Dublin has de¬
creased within the last forty years
from 261,000 to 245,000.
One inch of rain falling upon one
square mile is equivalent to about 17,-
500,000 gallons of water.
Letters patent have just been issued
covering the manufacture of yeast
foam from Rocky mountain sage
brush.
Arouse to Action
A dormant liver, or you will suffer r 11 the tor¬
tures incident to a prolonged bilious attack.
Constipation, headaches, dyspep ala. side, furred will
tongue, sour breath, pain in the right recal¬
admonish you of neglect. Discipline the
citrant organ at once with Hostetter’s Stomach.
Bitters, and expect prompt relief. Malaria,
rheumatism, kidney complaint, nervousness
and debility are thoroughly removed by the
Bitters.
The cholera morbus will never submit to ar¬
bitration.
__
We think Piso’s Cure for Consumption is the
only Springfield, medicine for Oct. Coughs.—J knnie Pinckakd,
111 b., 1,18fi4.
Rev. H. P. Carson, Scotland, Dak., s^ys:
“Two bottles of Hall’s Catarrh Cure completely
cured my little girl.” Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Pits permanently cured. JNo fits or nervous¬
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Klines Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. R. H. Kune, Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle.
NERVOUS PROSTRATION.
A New Jersey Woman Expresses
Her Gratitude to Mrs. Pink-
ham for Belief.
“ Will you kindly allow me,” writes
Miss Mary E. Saidt to Mrs. Pinkliam,
“ the pleasure of expressing my grati¬
tude for the wonderful relief I have
experienced by talcing your Compound?
I suffered for a long time with nervous
prostration and
general debility,
. caused by falling
& of the womb. It
■ seemed as though
I my back would
B never stop ach-
ing. Ieould
Ssjg. HShL not sleep. I
: had dull
EEfi|A headaches.
I was weary
jSB all the time,
and life was a
burden to me.
i k I sought the
seashore for
BE. relief, but all
in vain. On
my return I
IS 1 "\ resolved to
' give your
medicine a trial. I took two bottles
and was cured. I can cheerfully state,
if more ladies would only give your
medicine a fair trial they would bless
the day they saw the advertisement, and
there would be happier homes. I mean
to do all I can for you in the future.
I have you alone to thank for my re¬
covery, for which I am very grateful.”
—Miss Mary E. Saidt, Jobstown, N. J.
CLAREMONT COLLEGE,HICKORY,N.C.
Girls and young
women. Loca¬
tion a noted
-ft health resort.
Ten schools In
L one. $400 Piano
given to the best
T. music gradu-
k $ ate
Is-.jVv I y|i m 1 and Mountain water, For air
catal’g add rcss
L-2 S. P. Hatton,
A. M., Pres.
FREE CONSULTATION!
Chronic Diseasesof all forms
in men, women and chil-
dren, SuccesBf ully treated. Rheumatism,
Neuralgia, Bronchitis. Palpitation, Indigestion. Throat
Constipation, <fce. Catarrh of Nose, and
Lungs. Diseases peculiar to women. Dysmen¬ Prolap¬
sus. Ovaritis. Cellulitis, Louoorrhea,
orrhea, &c. Write for particulars. Two cents may
mean Life and Happiness. S. T. Whitaker, M.
D., Specialist, 305 Nprcross Bld’g., Atlanta, Ga.
MAPLE SYRUP
Made on your kitchen stove in a few minutes at
a cost of about 2 5 Cents Per Gallon, by a
new process, whieh sells at $1.00 per gallon.
“I -want to thank you for the Maple Syrup
recipe which I find is excellent. 1 can recom¬
mend it highly to any and every one.”-—R ev.
Sam P. Jones, Cartersvllle, Ga.
Send $1 and get recipe—or stamp and investi¬
gate. Bonansa for agents.
J. N. LOTSPEICH, Morristown, Tenn.
DRUNK ARDS can be eaved with¬
out their knowledge marvelous by
Anti-Jag the
cure for the drink habit.
Write Reivova. Chemical
Co., Broadway, N. Y.
Full information (in plain wrapper) mailed free.
FEW EXTRA DOLURSICx'
Would You Like to Hake Them?
We can offer inducements ton few good MEN
(and WOMEN as well,) by which they can
build up a permanent and profitable business
by devoting a few hours each day at first—-after
while whole time. Address,
THE H. G. UN DERM AN OO., Atlanta. Ga.
MENTION THIS PAPER in writing to adver¬
tisers. .-YNUU7-31
‘ 2mg:
UUKtb WMtKt Syrup. ALL tl.oC tAlLb. Use
Kesfc (;ongh Tastes Good.
iu tuna Sold by druggists.
Q U N SUMPTION
????E’Efi
fragrant, What Is Tcttcr^M
It Is a iluctuous
cooling ainl honllngpowrr. It
Klneworm, It pain Kcacumaml and Itching all atonceW roug.^H
stops tho ■
used will positively euro oven
cases. fiO cents at a drug store ora
cents In stamps. J.T. Shup trine, o
emblem. Some politicians should adopt tho^H
___ _
teething, Mrs. Winslow’s softens the toothing gums, Syrup reduces for^B in,*
tlon, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. tu
HALL’S
Vegetable Sicilian
HAIR RENEWER
Beautifies and restores Gray
Hair to its original color and
vitality; prevents baldness;
cures itching and dandruff.
A fine hair dressing.
It. F. Hall & Co., Props.. Nashua, N. H.
Solil by ail Druggists.
Vwr WaHMMSR-v
ELIZABETH COLLEGE. ^
L FOR WOMEN. / » X
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
KQUAU to the best
Colleges for men with every feature of a
high grade College for women added.
\ FACULTY OF 15 SPECIALISTS
From schools of international reputa¬
tion, as Yale. Johns Hopkins, Berlin«New Amherst,
University of Virginia, Eng¬
land Conservatory, Paris, &c.
THREE COURSES
Leading to degrees.
GROUP SYSTEM
With electives.
MUSIC conservatory
With course leading to Pine
Organ,Piano, Violin, Guitar, Banjo,Man¬
dolin, Vocal.
ART CONSERVATORY
Full course to diploma-all varieties.
FULL COMMERCIAL
Course—Teacher from Eastman.
A REFINED HOME
With every modern convenience^
CLIMATE
Similar to that of Asheville.
COLLEGE BUILDING,
172 ft, i rontage,143 ft. deep, 4 stories high,
built of pressed brick, fire proof, with
every modern appliance.
Catalogue sent free on application.
Address,
REV, C. B. KING, President,
Charlotte, N. C.
EIB¥E e 5
--rrmnii
'll' ■V:
3
pjlffei fei-oviii .!i:[!.
I
/
k\
M fits® i
L'
jv I jgniipiiife
MS*
TASTELESS
CHILL
TOMIC
IS JUST AS GOOD FOR ADULTS.
WARRANTED. PR!C£50cts.
. GALATIA, ILLS., NOV. 16,1SS3.
Paris Medicine Co., uo., St. St. Louis, Loi Mo.
Gentl lemen:—We sold last year, GOO bottles of
GROV E’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC and h avo
bought three gross oss already already this this year. ye In nil our ex*
pericnee of 14 years, in the dru uj? business, ha vo
neyer sold an article that gave such universal satis*
taction aa your Tonic. Youtb truly,
ABNiY, Caur & CO.
“Success’'
Cotton......
Seed Huiler
and
1 Separator.
-:: ■
wm 1 Nearly
Jjr
doubles
■r tie Value
of Seed to tho
Farmer,
All up-to-date Dinners nse them because the Grow¬
ers give their patronage to such gins. Hnlleris
PRACTICAL, For full RELIABLE and GUARANTEED.
information Address
SOULE STEAM F EED WORKS, Meridian, Mis»
$75.00 For $37-50 To be obtained at
WHITE'S BUSINESS ATLANTA. COLLEGE, GA.
15 K. Cain St..
Complete Business and Shorthand Course Com¬
bined . $7.50 Per Mouth .
Average time required five months.
Average cost $37.50. This course
Would cost $75.00 at any other reputable Trained school.
Business practice from the start.
Teachers. Course of study unexcelled. No va¬
cation. Address F, B. WHITE, Principal.
w E MAKE LOANS on
LIFE INSURANCE POLICIES.
If you have a policy in tho New York Life,.
Equitable Life or Mutual Life and would
like to secure a Loan, write us giving number
of your policy, and we will be pleased to quote
rates. Address
TlieEiigiisli-Aiiierican Loan anil Trust Co..
No. 1^5 Kquitable Building;* Atlanta, Ga.
/H' J’Vftky VJ/ CIFIC HAGGARD’S TABLETS. SPE- 1 box,
iiVlVr J Y $100; mail* 3 Address, boxes $3.50, by
I Jr Haggard’s Specific Co., M il Tll^ l/
l U ATI, particulars ANT A, GA. by J<fUL- J
Full sent
mail on application.
ROBERT E. LEE.
The soldier, citizen and Christian hero. A great new
book iust ready, giving life and anceetry. A money
maker. Local and traveling agents wanted. ROY AL
PUBLISHING CO., 11 and Main Sts., Richmond,Ya.
S~^e//e f e
r.» u flu sin., (in, Aetind business. No text,
xiK.-. Short-time. Cheap board. Sand tor catalo^u*.
i
ft iinraytf'Sidook. ■ W rs It? S3 CURED AT HOME: harms .end >l«mp for
Jr* H ® w Smb * » Dr. j.b, &oo.,
BuilUiPg, Cincinnati, Ohio,