Newspaper Page Text
A. A. DeLOACH. Pr.-s.tuid Mgr,
H. A- rotOACH. Vice Pro* and Supt-
W. M. DoLOAOH, Assistant Supt.
A- O. DeLOACH, Assistant Mgr
SAW MILLS!
WITH
Moacl’s Patenl YariaMe Friction Feel
THE BEST MILL MADE.
Brass of Beal Merit are Being Skipped to all Paris of lie World.
A-XaIa SIZES
--PROM-- 'll m L
4 TO 200 m I km mam
piSl MM I
H. P. .'I k ■BSP 1
vl Sr
Wi < «13*S * : as I,,
BPpJ? fsT-Z \ . ‘ V
Igfee',. Jg^ggij|I T.; fa
■■ ■
SSpI' iV; & ■ W/Umjm
m .
v •• V. I mam
m
W
1,
;-4SP5 >1 ,
i u i
«1
verk 35; . '
fit 1 ;
' ■- ■' A ■h ; i
mm L:
4
,
If *
’ 1 1
I m J
>
,»1 '1 I
WE MANUFACTURE
Grist Mills and Turbine Water Wheels .
Shafting, Pollies and Gearings of all Kinds
DEALERS IN
Engines, Boilers Planers, Belling,
Etc.
Our Mills have been Greatly improved recently
33"OH5r TECIEj
a CHAMPION DUPLEX DOG”
to hold Round and Square timber. They
COST NOTHING EXTRA with our Hills.
Send for Illustrated Catalogue.
5G? n
i
s
T7nro*t*tlng Prey to Tlgera.
There are some unfortunate Indian
Villagers who appear to live all their
llvea in constant peril. On the onq|
band stands the man-eating tiger; on
the other the A rms act warns them 1
to beware of acquiring lethal weapons.
Thoy have nothing for It, therefore,
but to trust everything to official pro¬
tection, and this, it appears, some- 1
times proves anything but a safe-
guard. Only the other day the mis¬
erable inhabitants of Anami, a ham¬
let in Bengal, implored the Lieuten¬
ant Governor to take action before
they were gobbled up.
A particularly hungry tiger had es¬
tablished itself close to the village,
and almost every day witnessed a
fresh outrage, At one time, the
beast showed a preference for cattle,
and the milky mothers of the herd
had tlielr ranks thinned. But this
kind of fare required to have its mo¬
notony relieved at intervals by the
substitution of “long pork,” with the
result of some inhabitant becoming
acquainted with the digestive tigrine
apparatus.
The villagers were quite willing to
make war upon their striped foe; at
least they professed to be. But they
possessed no arms, that being for-)
bidden by law, while the state pro-i did
not attempt to afford them any
teetion beyond the general offer of
rewards for tiger killing.
Similar cases are by no means un-.
common; they often come to light in J
the native papers, by which they are
adduced as arguments for the abro-l
gation of the Arms Act. That rem¬
edy would be far worse than the dis-
ase; If all the people in Indian were
llowed to carry deadly weapons
would be no end to battle, mur- ;
der and sudden death. Efficient
Btate protection is the proper reme<
dy for an evil which would scarcely
exist at all but for the interference of
the state with the liberty of the sub-
lect.
$100 Reward. $100.
learn The that readers there of is this at paper least one will dreaded he pleased' disease to
that 6cieuce has been a bio to cure in all its
stages, and that is catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con¬
stitutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken in¬
ternally, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de¬
stroying the foundation of the disease, and
giving the patient assisting strength by building in doing up the its
constitution and nature faith
work. The proprietors have so much in
its curative powers that they offer One Hun¬
dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure.
Send for list of testimonials. Address
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. O#
\&T Sold by Druggists, 75c.
r One of the most gifted sculptors of his Hunga-
y, Leo Sessler, starved to death in room
n Neupest a few days ago.
A Child Enjoys
The pleasant flavor, gentle action and soothing
effects of Syrup of Figs, when in need of a lax¬
ative, and if the father or mother be costive or
bilious, the most gratifying results follow its
use; so that it is the best family remedy known
a tid every family should have a bottle.
‘Hold up the hands of organized char!
ties,” shoui s an exchange. Hadn’t you bet-
!er fill them lirst ?
For impure or thin B1 >od, Weakness, Mala*
ria, Neuralgia, Brown’s Indigestion -it and Biliousness,
take J ron Bitters gives strongi’
making old persons feel young-and you
persons strong; pleasant, to tak<
Garza the Mexican revolutionist, is living
quietly in Costa Rica.
An Extended Popularity. Brown’
Bronchial Troches have for many years
been the most popular article in use for reliev¬
ing Coughs and Throat troubles.
Working the growler—teasing a chained
bull dog with a broomstick.
If your Back Aches, or you are all worn out,
good for Iron nothing, Bitters will it is general debility.
Brown’s cure you, make you
strong, cleanse your liver, and give you a good
appetite -t'Hies th*> n^rvo
Taking things easy—stealing chickens from
an open coop.
Beecham’s Pills cure indigestion and constU
pation. Beecham’s—no others. cts. a box.
If afRloted with Rore eyes life Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son's Eye Water. Drusarists soli at 2.">e. a bottle .
Not a
Local Disease
Because Catarrh affects your head it is not
therefore a local disease. If it did not ex-
Catarrh
ibt in your blood it could not manifest itself
in your nose. It is a constitutional disease.
Catarrh
and to cure if, therefore, requires a con*
6titutional remedy and a thorough blood
Catarrh
pnrifler like Hood’s Sarsaparilla which ex¬
pels all trace of the impurity in which the
Catarrh
disease originates, and thus perfectly and
permanently cures Catarrh. Itememher
Hood’s s ?>Cures
Bold by all druggists. SI per bottle; six for
Hood’s Pills cure all liver ills, biliousness^
Jaundice, indigestion, sick headache, 25 cents.
Letters frets Mothers
speak in
warm terms
of what
Scott’s Wyt
Emulsion
has done
for their del¬
icate, sickly
children. It’s has f . L"
use
brought cr_ health.
thousands back to rosy
Scott’s Emulsion
of cod-liver oil with Hypophos-
phites is employed with great
success in all ailments that re¬
duce flesh and strength. Little
ones take it with relish.
Prepared by Scott & Bowno. N. Y« All drugglfltg.
Am JSf U No< 62 1898.
I CALENDAR CURIOSITIES.
Do You Know When the End of the
Century Will Come?
The year 1900 will not be liundreth a leap year
simply because, being a year,
although it is divisible by 4, it is not
divisnble by 400 without a remainder.
This is not the real reason, but a result
of it; the real reason being the estab¬
lishment of the Gregorian rule, made in
1582. end
The nineteenth century will not
till midnight of Monday, December 81,
1900, although the old quarrel will prob¬
ably again bo renewed as to what con¬
stitutes a century and when it winds up,
and thousands will insist on midnight a premature of
burial of the old century at
December 81, 1899.
But, as a century means 100 years, and
as the lirst century could not end till a
full 100 years bad passed, nor the seoond
till 200 years had passed, nineteenth etc., it is not
logically clear why the cen-
tury should bo curtailed aud broken oil
before we have bad the full 1900 years.
The 1st of April and the 1st of July in
any year, and in leap year the 1st of
Januury, fall on the same day of the
week. of .
The 1st of September und the 1st
December in any year fall on the same
week day. January aud the 1st of
The 1st of
October in auy year fall on the same
week day, except it be a of leap year. and of
The 1st of February, March
November of auy year fall on the same
day of the week, unless it be a leap
year, when January 1, April 1 and July
1 fall on the same week day.
The 1st of May, 1st o£ June, and 1st
of August in any year never fall on the
game week day, nor does auy one of the
three ever fall on the same week day on
which any other month in the same year
begins, except in leap year, when the 1st
of February and the 1st of August fall
on the same week day. day the week
To find out on what of
any day of this century remainder fell, divide Add the
year by 4 and let the go.
the quotient and the year together, then
add 8 more. Divide the result by 7,
aud if the remainder is 0, March 1 of
that year was Sunday; if 1, Monday; if
2, Tuesday, and so on.
For the last century do the same
thing, hut add 4 instead of 3. For
the next century, add 2 instead.
It is needless to go beyond the next
century, because its survivors will prob¬
ably have some shorter method, and find
out by simply touching a knob or letting
a knob touch them.
Christmas of any year always falls on of
the same day of the week as the 2d
January of that year unless it be a leap
year, when it is the same week day as
the 3d day of January of that year.
Easter is always the first Sunday after
the full moon that happens on or next
after March 21 It is not easy to see
how it can occur earlier than March 22
or later than April 20 in auy will year.
New Year (January 1) happen on
Sunday but once more during the cen¬
tury; that will be in 1899. In the next
century it will occur fourteen times only,
as follows: 19113, 1911, 1922, 1928, 1933,
1939, 1950, 1950, 1901, 1907,1978, 1984,
1989 and 1995. The intervals are regu¬
lar—G-5-0-11, 6-5-0.11—except the in¬
terval which includes the hundredth
year that is not a century, when there is
a break—as 1893, 1899, 1905, 1911—
when three intervals of six years come
together; after old that intervals plain sailing will till
2001, when the occur
in regular order.—[Boston Home Jour¬
nal.
Firemen ou Bicycles.
After the soldiers, the firemen are
making use of the all-conquering happening cycle. in
This, at least, is what is
Belgium. The Burgomaster of Brussels
has ordered the formation of a cyclist fire
corps in connection with the local
brigade, for the purpose of carrying the
first aid to the persons in danger through
an outbreak. The men are already being
drilled every day, the machines selected
being tricycles, upon which they carry a
coil of rope, a hatchet and other articles
useful in cases of emergency. It is
thought that by tins means help will not
only lie earlier forthcoming, hot that the
health of the men will be improved, as at
present, at the first alarm of fire, some
of them are told off to run to the spot,
where they arrive hot and perspiring, so
that often they catch a bad cold through
standing about afterwards in tbe cold and
wet.—[London News.
Washington as a Juniper.
George Washington was a noted
jumper in his day, and when he was a
young man, taking a walk up the Poto¬
mac, he stopped at a plantation where
there was a jumping match. As the
story goes, the prize lor the best jumper
was to be the beautiful daughter of the
planter. Washington entered the match
and much to the disgust of the young
lady he distanced her lover by full ten
inches. Noting the black looks ou the
girl’s face and the disappointed appear-
anee of everyone as to the result, he
withdrew his claim and the real lover,
who up to that time had never had his
equal as a jumper in this part of the
country, got back his sweetheart.—
[Frank G. Carpenter.
Christian King lvllama.
King Khama, the firm ally of the
British in their South African war, is a
Christian, a monogamist and accompanied a teetota¬
ler. Khama when a youth,
his father to an old Boer’s to sell tusks.
The Boer produced a brandy bottle and
plied Khama’s father with the contents
until h6 induced him to give up a val¬
uable quantity of ivory for a paltry horn
of powder and a bar of lead. From that
day Khama resisted the temptation to
patronize the black bottle.—[New York
Herald.
Rest the Kyes.
In continued use of the eyes, in such
work as sewing, type-setting, bookkeep¬
ing, reading aud studying, the saving
point is looking up from the work at
short intervals and looking around the
room. This may be practiced every ten
or fifteen minutes. This relieves the
muscular tension, rests the eyes, and
makes the blood suudIv much better.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.-—-Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Powder
absolutely pure
Portuguese Characteristics.
The men of Portugal are as fond oS
6how as are the women. Their flip
gers are nearly always loaded with
rings, aud about their bodies hantf
chains as thick as ropes, from which
are suspended bunches of trinkets.
The Portuguese dandy is fond of
anything that draws attention to his
much-esteemed person. Above his
showy vest he wears a cravat of ricb
colors, and in his buttonhole a full j
blown rose. I know 1 am safe in say'
ing that most of the promenadera
whom I have seen on Sundays in the
chief thoroughfares with riding
whips in their hands and handsome
spurs on their heels have never set
foot in a stirrup The spur is to
them a sort of sign of nobility which
they arrogate to themselves, a relia
of the privileges of the old chivalry.
Where is the Portuguese, be he
muleteer or calker, whose ancestors
did not wear golden spurs at the
battle of Ourique or of Aljubarrota?
I have noticed that a good many otlii
rials work in spurs as if about to gd
to battle, and when these knights of
the quill peacefully render up their
fine, bureaucratic souls to God, I
have no doubt that their spurs will
be laid on their tombs.
But have we any right to dwell so
long in a half mocking spirit on a
people of such numerous and trust¬
worthy moral qualities, and who, but
for their unfortunate indolence and
their exaggerated egotism, might be
For held up as a model to other naturally nations?,
the Portuguese are
good, hospitable, honest in their
dealings, generous and brave, and wa
are very certain that in the event of
any threatening of the independence
pf their country we should once more
6ee this heroic nation, in whom
Slumbers a powerful national invader} spirit,
rise as one man against the
as in 1388 a nd 1809.
___
Oak wood may be made to resem.
ble ebony by covering the surface re¬
peatedly with a hot saturated solu-
tion of alum for forty-eight hours,
and then brushing over with the fol.
lowing logwood decoction: Boil 8 oz.
of logwood and 8 oz. of water, filter
through linen and evaporate by gen¬
tle heat to one-half its original meas¬
ure. To every quart of this add 10
to 15 drops of saturated solution of
indigo, perfectly neutral. After ap¬
plying this dye to the wood, rub the
latter with a saturated and filtered
solution of verdigris in hot [concern
trated acetic acid, and repeat till the
jlesiied intensity is obtained; Oak
thus treated is said to be a close and
handsome imitation of ebony.
SMALL BUT EFFECTIVE,
Wan the little Monitor that met the Merri-
mac at Hampton Roads. So too are Dr.
Pieree’sPleasant Pellets, effective in conquer¬
ing the enemy—disease. When you take a
pill it’s an important point to have them
small—provided they have equal strength in
and efficacy. Yon find what you want
those little liver pill- of Dr. Pierce. They’re
put up ia a better wav, and they act in a
Let lor n ay, than the huge old-fashioned pills.
What you want when you’re “all out ot
sorts”—grumpy, thick-headed and take a
gloomy view of life, is these Pellets to clear
up your system and start your liver into
healthful action. Sick Headache, Bilious
Headache, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious
Attacks, and all derangements of the liver,
stomach and bowels, are prevented, relieved, and
and cared. Put up in sealed glass vials,
always fresh and reliable.
James William Craio, Esq., of Georgetown
Kii; ! says: “My wife thinks your little Pel-
lets ard the greatest pills out.”
WiFi’S SPECIFIC ••
m. For renovating the entire system,
JB eliminating all Poisons of scrofulous from the
Blood, whether preparation has equal. or
malarial origin, this no
but s _ eating treated “ For TRADE sore eighteen by best on my local months tongue. gradually physicians, MARK I had I w r an as
obtained no relief; the sore grew
worse. I finally took S. S. S., and was entirely
cured after using a few bottles.”
C. B. McLemore, Henderson, Tex.
♦
Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis¬
eases mailed free.
Thr Swift Specific Co.,
Atlanta, Ga.
rfz\
Consumptives and people
who have weak lungs or Asth¬
ma, should use piso’s Cure for
Consumption. It baB cared
thousands, ft has not injur¬
ed one. It is not bad to take.
It is tbe best cough syrup.
Sold everywhere. 95c*
’WWV>
V’
Twelve One bottle bottles for for fifteen one cents, dollar, | by mail. v
R-I-P-A-N-S
Ripans Tabules are the most effective rec¬
ipe ever prescribed by a physician bowels. for any
I disorder of the stomach, liver or
i Buy of any druggist anywhere, or send price to
THE RIPANS CHEMICAL COMPANY, xo Spruce St., New York.
He Knew Better.
A well-known New England clerg
man once exchanged with a broth
clergyman and was entertained
the house of a parishioner who w
even too hospitable. She Insist!
upon his eating a large piece of mine
pie for dinner, and the minlst
yielded, against his better judgmen
The consequence was that he becan
violently ill, and was unable to preac
that afternoon, The doctor wi
summoned, and while he was mini
tering to his agonized patient, tt
latter looked up aud said, feebl;
but with an inimitable twinkle (
the eye: “Doctor, I’m not afraid 1
die, but I’m ashamed to!”
He Mispronounced It.
The Housekeeper’s Weekly tell
how a boy was led astray by a mif
understood title.
He was about eight years old, an
was looking over the book-shelves fo
something to read. A volume bourn
in read attracted him. It wa
Pope’s “Essay on Man. ”
He read it for a few minutes, am
then threw it down.
“It may he easy on man,” he said
“but it’s hard on a boy.”
“German
Syrup”
My niece, Emeline Hawley, was.
taken with spitting blood, and she
became very much alarmed, fearing
that dreaded disease, Consumption,
She tried nearly all kinds of medi¬
cine but nothing did her any good.
Finally she took German Syrup and
she told me it did her more good
than anything she ever tried. It
stopped the blood, gave her strength
and ease, and a good appetite. I
had it from her own lips. Mrs.
Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Conn.
Honor to German Syrup. @
THE JUDGES the ° f
WORLD’S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION
Have made the
HIGHEST AWARDS
(Medals and Diplomas) to
WALTER BAKER & CO.
On each of the following named articles:
BREAKFAST COCOA,. . . .
Premium No. 1, Chocolate, . .
Yauilla Chocolate, . . . . •
German Sweet Chocolate, . •
Cocoa Butter........
For “purity of material,’* “excellent flavor, 1 *
and “uniform even composition.’*
WALTER BAKER & CO., DORCHESTER, MASS
WORK
FOR
YOU.
Why be idl e, w hen yo u can sell our
pood - at home. We want an agent ia
every town in America.
Every family, especially where there are boye
pills, oukht to have a complete set of our fine Photo¬
graphs of Celebrated People. They will be These a source photo-, ot
pleasure and profl: to old and young.
graphs are being furnished by us to the leading picture
stores of Boston, and they are exhibited among tnetr
fp cial attractions In the show windows. We also tux-
tush them to leading Boston publishers for premiums,
and they are well worth the money we ask for them*
The pictures are as follows
6ER1ES Cleveland, A. Presidents Harrison, and Foreipn Arthur, Sovereigns. Garfield,
Haves, Grant, Lincoln, Queen Victoria,
pres. Sadi Carnot, Emp. William, Austria* King
Humbert, Czar of Russia, Emp. of
15c Reformers. i
SERIES B. Clergymen and
Bishop Brooks, Brooks Church, Henry
Ward Beecher. T. DeWitt Talmage, Spur¬
geon, Rev. Richard S. Storrs, Hale, Csnru
Gibbons, Rev. Dr. Willard, Canning, Wend* A. h
Phillips, Frances Robt. E. Col Iyer. 15c. Mary J
ermore, Rev.
SERIES C. Poets and Authors.
Whittier, Howells, Holmes, Lowell, Emerson, Aicott, Dicke Burrut
Kipling, Stowe, Mark Twain, Butler, Scott. 15c.
SERIES I). Musicians, Actors and Actresses.
Edwin Booth, Joseph Jefferson, John McCul* Henri
Irving, Denman Thompson,
lough, Paderewski, Patti, P. S. Gilmore
Lillian Russell, Mary Anderson, Adi
Rekan, Fanny Davenport, Marie Tempest
Loo E. and Politician#,
SERIES Statesmen Blaln^
McKinley. Hill, Russell, Reed, Gresham, Sherman,
Depew, Butler, Reid, Carlisle, Greely,
Conkling, YVhitelaw Horace
Daniel Webster, Bismarck, Gladstone. lBo^
To any one out of work we will mall any one of f i ,
above sample series upon receipt of three 2c stam
and seud you such liberal agents’ terms that you
make some money.
UOUSH k CO., 504 Stock Exchange, Boston,
tin i -THOMAS T. SIMPSON, fei
Washington, D. O. No aity’a
btalned.Write for Inventor's Guida