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1 os Pres- and Sup t.
M. D6L.OAQM. Assistant Supt.
A. G. DoLOACH, Assistant Mgr
SAW MILLS!
WITH
♦
Moactfs Patent VariaWe Friction Feel
THE BEST MILL MADE.
Ins of Beal Merit are Bent SMppei to all Farts of tie World.
ALL SIZES ■III, .
&.4H
-FROM- lift U \ .A •1 ■ Q-yV W*’, I
•4 TO 300 o \
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WE MANUFACTURE
Shafting, Pnllies and Gearings of ail Kinds.
DEALER* IN
Engines, Boilers Planers, Belting i
Of 1 st Mills fund Turbine Water Wheels •
BUY Tin?!
“CHAMPION DUPLEX DOG”
to hold Round and Square timber. They
COST NOTHING EXTRA with our Mills.
Send for Illustrated Catalogue.
.A.TI^A.ISrTjSL, GhA.
HoocTs^Cures
“X have been taking
Hood’s Sarsaparilla for
some time and every
dose helps me. My little
boy, slit years old, had
sores on his feet and h«
could not wearanyshoes-
Wherever the skin
had cracked bad sores
Mrs. Titus, would form, presumably
on account of the blood
having been poisoned by ivy. Many remedies
failed to do him any good. Finally I gave him
.nd”®°£e®t® arsapari,la r uki°n””woLtir
uid disappear. After 8 h*
«M entirely cured and his general health was
greatly benefited.” Mrs. C. S. Titus, South
Gibson, Pa.
N. B. If you decide to get Hood’s Sarsapa-
rill* do not be induced ‘
to buy any other.
Head’s pm. .re p^.Iy
harmiMs, always reliable » n d beneficial. 35 0
BLUFFING THE SCRAPPERS.
How a Slim Young Man Intlmidafce'd the
Sports.
“I saw a funny thing in Cheyenne
a few weeks ago, ” said a Detroiter
who returned from a Western trip
the other day. “I was wandering
around town to see the elephant and
chance led me into a big saloon where
all the scrappers made their head¬
quarters. Back of the saloon was a
building where a professor of the
manly art gave instructions, and
where the ‘pugs’ thumped each other
at exhibitions. They were ‘trying
out’ a new arrival that day aud I
should say there we're forty or fifty
tough-looking chaps in the place.
Boon after I entered a young man
Who had oome through from Denver
In my oar dropped in. He couldn’t
have been over 24 years of age, while
he was over six feet tall and his
weight only about 120 pounds. He
was long-faced, thin and long-legged
and reminded you of nothing so much
as a boy on stilts. Two men were
getting ready to go on when long-
legs peeled off his coat, vest, tie and
collar, put them in my charge, and
climbed upon the platform.”
"That was a defi to the crowd?”
“Exactly, and in about a minute
they put a man up to punch his head
off. They gave long-legs a second
and the first thing he did was to take
the glasses off the young man’s nose.
The latter reached for them and said:
u t Excuse me, but I always fight
with my glasses on. ’
“ ‘But they’ll get knocked off or
jammed into your face.’
“ ‘Don’t you believe it! It’s never
happened yet, and I don’t think it
will now.’
“The scrapper over in the other
corner couldn't make it out. Here
was a man so sure of himself that he
was going to put up his dukes with a
pair of eye-glasses on his nose. He
must, perforce, be a knocker-out from
Knockersville, and it was better to
retreat than to carry around a broken
jaw. He therefore retreated. Sev¬
eral others came forward, but when
they saw long-legs seated cross-legged
in his corner with those glasses
poised so jauntily they didn't want
anything of him. Then he got up
and said:
“ ‘Gentlemen, there is no limit to
weight. I always fight in glasses, as
I’m a little near-sighted. I will,
however, remove my glass eye and
false teeth if deemed best. Will your
best man step up here for a couple ol
rounds?’'
“But no one stepped. He waited a
minute or two and then pulled off
the gloves with a look of disappoint¬
ment and got into his clothes and we
went out together. He didn’t look
to me at all like a scrapper, and as
we walked down the street 1 said:
“ ‘What sort of a deal were you
giving that crowd?’
“‘A gigantic bluff,’ he answered
with a laugh.
“ ‘Are you a fighter?’
“ T never struck a blow in my life,
not even in fun.’
“ ‘But suppose one of those scrap¬
pers had tackled you?’
“ ‘I should have backed down and
asked ’em all up to drink. But there
was no danger. I’ve tried it half a,
dozen times before, and the glasses
always settles ’em.’
“ ‘How about the glass eye and the
false teeth?’
“ ‘I simply rung ’em in to help on
the bluff. Haven’t got a false tooth
in my head, and both eyes are per¬
fect. It’s a bluff of my own inven¬
tion and works like a charm. Please
don’t give it away.’
“And that afternoon, ” said the, De¬
troiter in conclusion, “when we took
the train east there were a hundred
sports down at the depot to see long-
legs off, and I’m a duffer if they
didn’t present him with a bottle oi
wine and give him three cheers and
a tiger!”—Free Press.
Mr. Bennett is a bright and well,
preserved old gentleman, but to his
little granddaughter, Mabel, beseems
very old indeed.
She had been sitting on his knee
and looking at him seriously for some
moments one day, when she said,
“Grandpa, were you in the ark?”
“Why, no, my dearl” gasped the
astonished grandparent.
Mabel’s eyes grew large and round
with astonishment. “Then why
weren’t you drowned?” she asked.
Curious Currency.
.Sheets of paper are used for mono,
in Corfu.one sheet purchasing a quart
Df rice, twenty sheets a piece of hemp
cloth, etc. We, too, use sheets of pa¬
per for money, but they are pretty
well covered by the Government with
original designs in green ink before
they acq uire any purchasing value.
Why They -i-re Called Spinsters.
Among our industrial and frugal
English forefathers it was a maxing
that a young woman shoul^i never bq
married until she had spun hersell a
«*t ol body. WMe ana u«d Unto.
But-prised Trf Monkeys. I
fro or three years ago an Austrian
<▼11 engineer was traveling in Cey¬
lon. Near Pasadena, one of the large
titles, was a Botanical garden, which
is considered one of tho finest in the
world. One afternoon the engineei
Itrolled around tho gardens admiring
the ibe tropical plants and examining
curious forms of vegetable life
with which the garden abounded. At
length he became very tired, and the
Say lay being warm, even for Ceylon, he
down and was soon fa t asleep.
jVhat happened is best told in his
‘“avo slept an hour when 1
"as awakened suddenly by a Queer,
OnCanny feeling, and opened my e>e.3.
1 udg8 of my surprise when I saw
perched upon my feet, body, and even
Upon ™y shoulders, a lot of little
monkeys, while all about me, and
beaming down upon me from the
trees, were monkeys of all sizes and
tge& It seemed to me there were
myriads of them. 1 was frightened*
for I knew these monkeys were wild,
and, in their wild state, I did not
know what so many of them might do,
1 gave one leg a twitch, then the
other, and bounded to my feet, throw-
ing off all that were gamboling over
and about me. In a second the mon¬
keys vanished, and only here and
there, peering down from the tops ol
the tall bamboo and rubber trees,
could I see any of them.
I was very much alarmed, .for the
appearance of so many of them was
entirely unexpected. It was a week
before I got over my fright. It ap¬
peared, however, that the monkeys
had meant no harm to me. The
congrees had been called, and their
examination of me as I lay upon the
ground was merely out of curiosity to
divine what kind of an object I was.’
Nevertheless, I vowed never to go to
sleep again in a wild tropical forest,
even if it were called a botanical
garden.
Who Wore Darby and Joan?
The name3 Darby and Joan are now
synonymous with man and wife.
They originated in a popular ballad
called “Darby and Joan,” written by
Henry Woodfall in the last century.
It is not generally known that the
two characters of the ballad were
real personages. John Darby and his
fcyifo lived at Bartholomew Close, and
died in 1730. In the poem Joan gets
dissatisfied with being a household
drudge, and declares that h-r work
Is harder than her husband’s labors
in the field. He offers to exchange
places with her, and she consents.
The result D that loth are quite con¬
tent to go back into their legitimate
spheres.
Almost every one who isn’t sixteen
gnd pretty, looks very lonesome at
times.
How’s This !
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Chf.ney & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che¬
ney for the last ^5 years, and believe him per¬
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and linanciallv able to carry out any obliga¬
tion made by their firm.
West Ohio. & Tuilax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Walking, Kin van & Marvin, Wholesale
Hall’s Druggists, Catarrh Toledo, Cure Ohio. internally,
is taken act¬
ing faces directly of the upon system. the blood Testimonials and mucous free. sur¬
sunt
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
All animals "whose habitat is tho Arctic
regions turn white in winter.
For impure or th n Blood, Weakness, Mala,
ria, Neuralgia, Indigestion and Biliousness,
take Brown’s Iron Bitters—it gives strength,
making old persons feel young—and young
persons str ong; ■ . to take.
On the railways in France passengers are
sold cooked snails in packages.
We Cure Rupture,
HoillnswirtS for < frS a t ter 1 T’ \ test ow J long ii al standing. etc.T Write
&7^i. n ni0I *' to S. ,T,
< & 0 l ' ve80 ’ ' lioga 0o N v
5 ” - -
Make a cotton flannel covering for tho
broom to use in ‘‘brushing up.”
orders, For Dyspepsia, iirovv/i’s Indigesi In tion Bitters—the and Stomach. Best CHs-
iwe :>7i
Tonic. It rebuilds the Blood and Htrenythens
the muscles. A splendid medicine for weak
and debilitated peraovs.
Siienoe may give assent, but doesn’t vor
the request for any larger loan.
A wonderful stomach corrector—Beeoham’s
Pills. Beecham’s—no others. 2b cents a box.
■y] ■s
n % Jim
,
C \s;
J * 1
ISOVLEDGE
Brings comfort arid improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. The many, who live bet¬
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more products promptly
adapting the world’s best to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of embraced the pure in liquid tho
laxative Syrup principles of Figs.
remedy, excellence is due to its presenting
Its acceptable and pleas¬
in the form most
ant to tho taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax¬
ative ; effectually cleansing the and system, fevers
dispelling colds, headaches
ana permanently curing constipation. and
It has given satisfaction to millions
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid¬
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak¬
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug-
‘ gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man¬
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
• Co. only, whose name is printed Syrup on o.l every
package, also the name, wiU igs,
and being well informed, offered. you not
accept gny substittite it
Highest of a!! in Leavening Power.—— Latest U. S. Gov't Report
:
KSL *\ , si ■■ Powder
Amommo? pure
Chinese Ingenuity.
Chinese Ingenuity seems equal to
every emergent’ . A man-of-war at¬
tacked a Chinese junk engaged in il¬
legal traffic and was eager to capture
the crew alive The sailors on the
Junk threw overboard thousands of
cocoanuts and then leaped among
them. The man-of-war's men could
not. distinguish heads from cocoa-
nuts, and nearly ail the Chinamen es-
cai)cd.
_
In Madagascar.
The island of Madagascar has two
distinct climates, two classes of na¬
tives, and two classes of fauna and
flora. Along the coast it is tropical
and malarious, and the natives are
darker and larger than in tho inte¬
rior. The Interior is a high table¬
land, and mountainous. There the
climate is cooler and the natives
smaller and lighter in color than on
the coast. But in the Interior they
are more intelligent, and they rule
& 6 liras
Flower o
“lam happy to state to you and
to suffering humanity, that my wife
has used your wonderful remedy,
August P'lower, for sick headache
and palpitation of the heart, with
satisfactory results. For several years
she has been a great sufferer, has
been under the treatment of eminent
physicians in this city and Boston,
and found little relief. She was in¬
duced to try August Flower, which
gave immedaite relief. We cannot
say to much for it.” L- C. Frost,
Springfield, Mass. C7
46 Mothers*
Friend"
wakes kid m asi
Colvin, Lr,., Dbo. 2,1883.—My wifo nsorj
MOTHEK’S I’lilBlTO Pafo-o 'isr third
confineraont, and Bays sho would not; be
without it for hundrtids of dollars.
DOCK 2IILLS.
Sent by express on receipt of price, fl£0 per bot
r Book “ To Mothers ” mailed free.
BRADF/ELO REGULATOR CO,,
s CALK BY ALLDRUO<MBT«. ATLANTA, flf A.
lilHiD YOUR OWN HARNESS
V WITH
THOMSON’S iMJ
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
No tools required. easily Only and quickly, a hammer leaving needed to clinch drive
nn,i clinch thi ni the
absolutely smooth. Inquiring It no hole to be made in
the leather nor burr for the 1 vets. They are »tr«sa~ ifUKt
and dieifable. Millions now in use . All
lengths, uniform uniform or or assorted.-put assorted, put ud up in bi oxes. In
Ask your roiir dea!er dealer fmi* for «Sa thetn, or send 40c.
stamps for a box of 1 100, assorted sizea. Man’fd by f „
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO.,
WALTHAM, HASS.
For XsigSeside Diseasi’R Women. Scientific !™l.etreat. and
of treatme •*nt i
cures guaran i oed. Elegant apartments for Ja dies be-
fore and tlnring confinement. Address The Re 5 s‘*
dent Physician, il-75J Baxter Court, Nashville, Term
USIS
j*
m lUg a
Bo Not 3o Deceived
vrlth Pastes, Enamels and P&fntfl which Bttdn tho l a
hands, injure the iron and burn red. *
The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Brilliant, Odor-
1083, Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin
or glass package with every pure •toim.
OH, LOOK!
By J. Hamilton Ay or 3, A. M., M.D,
This is a most Valuable Book for
0k the Household, teaching as it does
the easily-distinguished. Symptoms
| $ of different Diseases, tho Causes,
\ . . and Menus of Preventing such Dis¬
m 1 m Itofef eases, whicu and will alleviate the Simplest or cura.. Remedies
i-r profusely 698 PAGES, illustrated.
A ;.The . , Bopkis written in plain
-to.— rp . .. d*y English; every-
c—— anil is.free from the
' ' ‘ R*Si&-4 feitsXJP technical Doctor Boors terms wnica vali valueless render most the
.w — - so to
1} mm* eaders. This Book is
0 of Service in the
* Family, ana Is so worded as to be
readily understood by all. Only
60 CT8. POST-PAID.
“ Before and After Taking." (The low price only bein'- made
possible by the immense edition printed). Not only does this Book contain so
much Information Relative to Diseases, but very properly gives the ft Production Complete
Analysis j>f everything pertaining to Courtship, Marriage and Recipes Pre¬
and Rearin'? oi Healthy Families; Botanical together Practice, with Valuable of Ordinary and Herbs.
scriptions, Explanations Revise I aud of Enlarged with Complete Correct Index. use With this Book in
New Edition. Dou’t
the house there is have no excuse illness for in not knowing iamiiv before what to do order, in an ociergoucy. but
wait until you ONLY your 00 POST-PAID. vou sen : at postal once
1 fSr this valuable volume. CENTS Bond I
notes or postage stamp-, or any denomination not inrgi r than 5 cents.
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE. ISA Leonard Stroet, N. Y. City. ^
His Keoson.
In administering penalties' punishment tx
the navy different earn
with them reduction to a loWgi con
duet class. Of these there are' /ouii
the fourtti being the lowest, and pm)
placed in it is deprived of shoreleari
for a period of three months. Fob
some breach the' executive officer found, oj
the United States s&tp Juniata
it necessary to plage a man on tha
fourth class, who decided to try fa)
obtain a mitigation of bis sentence.
With this object in view,' be sought
and obtained an interview with tho
executive officer, when the following L-v—-1
conversation ensued: “Well.
you wanted to see me?” “Yes, sir, 11
did. I wanted to know, Mr. B ——4
why yon put me on the fourth class?!
“Ah, you wanted to know why Ipul
you on tho fourth class, eh? Wela
I’ll tell you, L-, I put hadn’E you on flftj thj
fourth class because I p
cia-s to put you cm. Now go - fo*
v*a.rri ” IT a wp.ntv
* McELREES’ :
4. vViNE OF CARDUI.l
I
! wm
iJK I
ifeaiPiPte WJfc HipS4 l
*
ill§ia>f Diseases.
| For Female f
If ujay one doubts tha'I
I-SL09II tv® caaj. euro the noat ob-
P0SS88| stiaato jua#s itt 20 to Cl*
| d& 75 , lot him write
B A SPECIALTY. jHuticolarff and In/csth-
prate our relisb !itj. Our*’
financial backing i»»
sarsaperlrlR $50a,0QC. Hot Spring When mercury,. fall,
Iodide potassium, or tbo cuij w
l araitfceo a co.ro—sud onr MayIc C.Tphiienc is
:ng»thatvr ill c«ro permanentiy. Positive j>x oof Boat
•ruled, free, cook KkiiaDT Co,, Chicago, Jli.
FAN IDEAL F A VP. I LY WED J CINE
gl’or IndlgciiUon, Jifi-iomaaesg,
land aJJ. disorders '..u. to:C Stomach,
^ Liver and Bowels,
Buige-itioa by flruptristB fahow.4 j’.xuit u .-ir by use. uaiJ. Soicl Box ^ ^
- = or
i| I (fi For vials't, free ?oc. sample Pachajra 1 4 boxes),
“-nodper*
h iiiFAMU L'jsy.MlCAIi CO., New York.
ikiiCBiimcsmniaiimiissiiiicaii
CANCER
CURED WITHOUT THE KNIFE
Or use of painful, exclusively burning, poisonous treated. plas¬ Dr.
ters. Cancers
P. B. Green’s Sanatorium, Fort Payne, Ala.
0 “ ownaigwa
ored B8 i] R lustration*. y FACS All about Cage E Birds, RS’tS/Xra their food, diw*-
8JB imd treatment. 15 eta. by mail, 10 If t&l for 2R
Addresses of persona who have Song S aw Bird*.
BIRD FOOD CO.. No. <00 N. Third St.. Philadelphia, P»..
BfiRD by MANNA^SIINC. 400 N. 3d Philadelphia. Pa.
Sent mail for 15 eontu. St..
100 -Pag® Ohickan Book-
It teaches you how to detect and cure fke-
tares: how to feed for eggs and also for tat-
teniag Sent postpaid for 25c. Book Pob
(Tonne. 134 Leonard st.. K.Y City.
CANCER Cured Permanestly
NO ‘KNIFE. NO POISON. NO PLASTER.
JNO, B. BARKIS, Fort Payne, Ala. -
TRUSS The best n KIwSeR—
HAtell booh
Send for Treait- on >
“ Meetmnical Rupture.”
meat of 1‘Mlada.
.. B. SOfiLK • A: PC-.. 25 U ,ii 8t..
Am N I No, 41 1893.
s $mm±g0F? I ivy-
tlbt rAILb.* _ Dse ir
aid Best Cough Syrup. Tas tee Good. ri :
in time. Soklbyd: I’uucriats. H
CQ Si