Newspaper Page Text
f A3J (WDpr H. A. tetfiAOM. .*inna m«r.
Vico Pres- and JSiipt.
W. M DeLOACH, ssistftnt Supt.
A. C. DaLOACH, Assistant Mgr
SAW HILLS!
WITH
DeLoacl’s Patent YariaMe Frisia Feel.
THE BEST MILL MADE.
Because of Real Merit are Being; SMppefl to all Parts of tie Worll
A.X.X. SIZES i ?■. ! Y ■I " ll 1 jf
-PROM-- l-df ,v. r *
& -
m. •. -
p|| dH
f \ ,
4 TO 200
%.''j ■J “s 1. ■Hi
HE. P. ■ i-iH m. j.
%, «t£ 1 < si b I.!-;: :
ei 1 \ SiitS !
KPII Vv• m il f Hi
mmm ii
" '1 - ■ima a WY s A
Tv. . •••V ttljg 4 :|b '=
/■ % ® : ¥K; ■"T
mt l£g
ife -1
■. '■ ot,? tA :5s' ••
11 M'ffl
?
STi JE t. i»i
■
■
ill': 1
|i.
mm.
j
WE MAI^UFACTURE^dV”
Qrist Mills and Turbine Water Wheels .
Staffing, Pollies aid Gearings of ill Kinds.
DEALERS IN
Engines, Boilers Planers, Baiting,
-fcLi “tO«
Our Mills have been Greatly improved recent' y
IBTJ-’S- TEC IE
it CHAMPION DUPLEX DOG”
fco hold Round and Square timber. They
COST If ©THING EXTRA with our Mills.
Send for Illustrated Catalogue.
1 m a
i y i
fik. rP T lA TSTTP-A-.
outwittm ny a Moonimncr.
When .Tack Itoper was called In ths
United States Court this working morning ha Ini
rose and pleaded guilty to
bn illicit distillery. of others he sent j
With a number was
to one side to await sentence.
Working in an illicit distillery is
nothing but a misdemeanor, whlloi
operating a distillery is equal to at
felony. Roper knew this and entered his
plea to working in the distillery, whloh.
was aocepted. long did work?” asked the
“How you
Judge, when the man stood up lor sen¬
tence. reckon."
“Oh, ’bout a week, I
“Whose distillery was it?”
“My own.”
The judge looked puzzled, but all
jxe could do was to give him a two
tnonths’ sentence lor working Journal. in an
Illicit distillery.—Atlanta
The wealth of New to York the City, as a
corporation, $559,000,000. amounts It is thus enormous distrib¬
cum of
uted: Central Park, 9200,000,000; Croton fifty 1
other luot,$200,000,000; parks, $50,000,000; public markets, aque- $20,-
000,000; city lots not in public use,
>8,000,000; dooks and piers, $30,000,-
&00; police stations and land, $5,000.-
000; schools, $5,000,000; $15,000,000; fire depart¬
ment, $20,000,000; courts, prisons, lots, $3,000,-i and
Islands, armories, $3,000,000. water
000:
Since 1871 the city’s in valuation, property ha»
more than doubled being
then $277,000,000.
_
THB latest caprice of women is to
be lean. Surely this will prove of
good to no one unless it be the
Turkish bath people. The artists
are setting their faces againstdirnples
and rounded figures, and depict
women lean, almost lank. Such is
the type affected by the intense
Parisienne.
How’s This !
We offer One Hun tired Dollars Reward fox
any case of Catarrh that cannot be oured by
Hall’s Catarrh p. Cure. Cheney & Co., _ Toledo, , _ O.
J. F. J. Che-
We, the undersigned, have known
ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per¬
fects honorable in all business transactions
and- financially able to carry out any obliga-
TncixfWhphisale Druggists, Toledo,
Wald ixa, Kin!»an*& Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, taken Ohio. Internally, act¬
Hail’s Catarrh Cure is
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur¬
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75c. per bottle. Spld by all Druggists.
Politeness is the result of good sense and
good nature.
Ladies needing a tonic, or children wlio
want building up, should take Brown’s Iron
Bitters. It is pleasant to take, cures Malaria
Indigestion, Biliousness and Liver Complaints,
makOs the Blood rich and pure'.
Doing nothing for others is the undoing oi
one's self.
not a Cough, be negleotad Co&d or Brown's Sorb Throat should
Bronchial
Troches are a, simple remedy, and give
prompt rollef. 25 cents a box.
Pride requires very costly food—its keep¬
er’s happiness.
Many persons are broken down from over¬
work or household cares. Brown’s Iron Bit¬
ters rebuilds tho system, aids digestion, re¬ A
moves excess of bpo, and cures malaria.
splendid tonic for womv’> ami child ren.
Delay has always been injurious to those
who are prepared.
Beecham’s Pills instead of sloshy mineral
■framers. Beecfiam’s—no others. 25 ets. a box,
t-r-
• ’
'
p
mm
Affss Ortencla E. Allen
Salem, Mich.
Liver and DCidney
trouble caused me to suffer all hut death.
Eight weeks I lived on brandy and beef tea.
The doctor said he had not a ray of hope for
my recovery. I rallied and commenced taking
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
and from the first felt better. I continued and
am now able to assist my mother in her house¬
work. i owe my life to Hood's Sarsaparilla.”
Ortencia E. Allen. HOOD’S CUBES,
Hood’s Pills cure nausea, sick headache, indP
gestio i, biliousness. Sold by all druggists.
“August Flower”
Miss ,C. G. McClavE, School¬
teacher, 753 Park Place, Elmira, N.
" Y. “This Spring while away from
home teaching my first term in a
country school I was perfectly
wretched with that human agony
called’ dyspepsia. After dieting for
two weeks and getting no better, a
friend wrote me, suggesting The that I
take A ugust Flower. very next
day I purchased a bottle. I am de¬
lighted to say that August Flower
helped me so that I have quite re-
sovered from my indisposition.” 9
Aim 11894
“ Mothers’
Friend’*
HIKES CHILD BIRTH EASY.
Colvin, La., Doc. 9, 1886.—My wife used
ttOTHER’3 FIIIEND beforo her third
confinement, and says she would not ba
without it for hundreds of dollars.
DOCK MILLS.
Sent by express on receipt of price, 451,50 per bot
He. Book “To Mothers” mailed free.
BRADFIELB neOULATOK CO.,
ten sale «t *u»n»>*ei«Te. srusThM
REVIEW OF TRADE.
An Alarming Decrease in All Classes of
Business-Iron Output Below Average,
R. G. Dun’s weekly review says:
Starting with the largest trade ever
known, mills crowded with work and
all business stimulated by high hopes,
the year 1893 has proved, in sudden
shiinkage of trade, in commercial dis¬
asters and depression of industries, the
worst, for fifty years. Whether the fi¬
nancial results of the panic of 1837
were really more severe, the scauty
records of iliat time do not clearly
show. The year closes with prices of
many productions the lowest ever
known, with millions of workers
seeking in vain for work and with
charity laboring to keep back suffering
and starvation in all our cities. Wo
all hope the uevv year may bring
brighter days, but the dying year
leaves only a dismal record.
The review of different departments
of trade given today exhibits a collapse
of industry and business which is al-
. most without precedent.
The iron industry attained a weekly
production of 181,551 tons of pig May
1, but by October the output had fallen
to 73,895 ton a, and the reoovery to
about 100,000 December 1 still leaves
40 per cent of the force unemployed.
Over one-half of the wooleu manu¬
factories are idle and, excepting a
brief recovery in November, have been
ever since new wool came in May, for
all sales at the three chief markets in
the eight mouibs have been but 166,-
795,460 pounds, partly for speculation,
the price having fallen 20 per cent for
fieeee, to the lowest point ever known,
against 212,339,003 pounds in tha
same months last year.
Sales of cotton goods are fully a
quarter below the usual quantity. The
small advance attempted in boots and
shoes a year ago was sustained, but
With prices as low as ever, the ship¬
ments of boots and shoes from Boston
are 24 per cent less than last year in
December.
Not only manufactured goods as a
Whole, but the most important farm
products are so low that farmers find
little comfort. Official and other re¬
ports deluded traders with the notion
that crops of last year were so short
that famine prices would be realized on
purchasesEnormous stocks were bought
aud held, with the aid of banks, until
heavy receipts in the spring caused a
collapse of wheat, pork and cotton
pools.
Disastrous failures helped to pro¬
duce the alarm, which soon made mon¬
ey impossible lo get, but even at the
worst hour of the panic prices were
scarcely lower than they are now.
Wheat has repeatedly sold at the low¬
est price ever known, and is but 1-2 a
•cent above it now. Pork fell $7 in an
hour when the speculation burst, but
sells lower yet today. Cotton was lif¬
ted a cent with accounts of scarcity in
September, but has lost most of the
gain and sells below 8 cents. Thus
unreasonable speculations, by prevent¬
ing the sale of surplus products, have
proved a great injury to farmers at a
time wheu their enforced curtailment
of purchases is disastrous to all other
industries. Clear evidence of the
shrinkage in direct branches of bus-
siness is afforded by answers already
received to several thousand circulars
requesting figures of sales during the
last half of 1893 and ’92.
Iron returns thus far aggregate $40,-
863,180, against $65,520,921 last year,
a decrease of 88 per cent. Reports
thus far of jewelry show a decrease of
29 per cent. ^
It is curious that the only trade
showing any increase as yet being
groceries, the trade being 1 1892. per cent
larger than the last half of
In thirty-seven years covered by the
•records of this agency, the number
of failures have only once been a little
above 16,650'in a year. In 1893 the
number reported has been 16,650.
The aggregate of liabilities in all
failures reported has in six years risen
above $200,000,000. This year the
strictly commercial liabilities alone
have exceeded $331,422,939; the lia¬
bilities of banking and financial insti¬
tutions have been $210,956,864, and
the liabilities of railroads placed in
the hands of receivers about $1,212,-
917,033.
Serious Shooting- Affrays.
News comes from Tallapoosa county
of three serious shooting affrays. At
Denver, Jim Street and Tom Perry¬
man, highly connected young men,
were the principals of au impromptu
duel, the result of a quarrel. Street
was fatally wounded. Perryman is
under arrest. At Reeltown a party
of young men, who were drinking
aud having a good time, got into a
general light. Pistol ballets flew
thick and fast. J. F. Olding was
killed and other men wounded. It is
not known who fired the fatal shot.
At Dadeville, the county seat of Talla¬
poosa county, Deputy Sheriff’ J. A.
Carlisle shot and killed John Hogan,
who was under arrest and resisted.
Hogan had cut another man, and en
route to the jail drew his knife on
Carlisle and cut him severely, when
the office r shot him dead.
Another Liberal Donation.
Maj. Mi Heaps, of Jackson, Miss.,
has made another donation of $26,000
to the trustees of MUlsaps College.
This completes the first $100,000 of
the endowment fund. Mrs. Annie
Davis Smith of Canton, Miss., lias
given $2,600 to the college to endow a
scholarship to be named “The Jefl’er-
so Davis Scholarship,” in honor of her
uncle, Je fferson Davis.
An Epidemic of Smallpox.
There is au epidemic of small pox
at Torreon, Mexico, 110 cases being
now under treatment. At the town of
Lerdo, five miles south of that place
there are 225 cases.
i N EVERY Re-
ceipt that calls
for baking powder
use the “Royal.” It will make the
food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor,
more digestible and
1 wholesome.
Royal er \*i
“We recommend the
Baking Powder as superior to
all others .”—United Cooks
and Pastry Cooks' Associ¬
I ation of the United States. \
e
The Saitea seas.
The whole sea is composed of the
Atlantic and Pacific, the Indian Ocean,
the Arctic and Antarctic seas and var¬
ious smaller bodies of water. It has
an area of 140,000,000 square miles
and would form a circle of 13,350
miles in diameter. The relative size
of the areas of the whole surface of the
earth, of the whole sea, of the Pacific
and of the Atlantic can be represented
by a silver dollar for the surface of
the earth, a half-dollar for the surface
of the Whole sea, a twenty-five-cent
piece for the surface of the Pacific and
a silver half-dime for the surface of
the Atlantic. —-Chicago Herald.
A Sale Place in a Storm.
The Chippewa Indians say that the
beech tree is never struck by light¬
ning, and whenever a thunder storm
overtakes them they seek shelter un¬
der its branches. Strange to say there
appears to be some foundation for
their curious belief. The writer can¬
not remember ever .having seen a
beech tree that had been shattered by
a thunderbolt, and lumbermen who
have spent most of their lives in the
woods agree with the Indians; but no
one seems able to give any reason why
this tree should be so favored.
The trees most frequently struck by
lightning are oaks and elms, and it is
wiser to remain in the open and get
thoroughly soaked than to seek shelter
under them when a thunder storm is
raging.—New York Advertiser,
curios About books.
Queen Victoria’s “Jubilee Book,”
the volume containing the jubilee
speeches and addresses, is eighteen
inches thick, has leaves 2x3 feet and
weighs sixty-three pounds.
The family Bible of George Wash¬
ington’s mother is owned by Mrs.
Lewis Washington, of Charleston, Va.
Bix leaves from this historic volume
were torn out and deposited in the
cornerstone of the Alary Washington
Monument, at Fredericksburg a few
years ago.
In the Vatican Library there is a
treatise on dragons, a manuscript in a
single roll 300 feet long and a foot
wide, the material of which is said to
be the “tanned gut of agreat dragon.”
JIMI ft m &
V
am
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and 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 the
laxative remedy, Syrup principles of Figs.
0 Its excellence is acceptable due to its presenting and pleas-
in the form most
'ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax¬
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches aDd fevers
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 of Figs is for substance. sale by all drug¬
Syrup in 60c and $1 bottles, but it is man¬
gists ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed Syrup on of every Figs,
package, also the name,
and being well informed, you will not
substitute if offered.
v i
One bottle for fifteen cents, | i
Twelve bottles for one dollar, by mail.
R* I • P*A*N*S
m
Ripans Tabules are the most effective rec¬
ipe ever prescribed by a physician liver for any
disorder of the stomach, or bowels.
Buy of any druggist anywhere, or send price to
THE RIPANS CHEMICAL COMPANY, 10 Spruce St., New York.
-0K.)
a m- r <>» t:tr ■ r : •if.?.:*. .
The characteristic passion of the lit'-1
tie King of Spain is for soldiers.
Everything about the army interests
him, and he will listen to stories
about battles for any length of time.
He was once taken by the Queen to
the Convent of the Assumption. About
sixty or seventy of the white-robed
pupils were sent into the gardens to
see the King and sisters, whereupon
His Majesty, seeing an unrivalled op¬
portunity for exercising his favorite
talent, immediately organized the
grave but amused girls into companies.
He then appointed the Infanta second
(n command, and giving the word
“march,” placed himself at the head
:if his charming army. On meeting
the Queen, who was walking about
with several of the nuns and court
ladies he ordered “halt” and 1 ‘pre¬
sented arms,” following up his ciom-
tnand by a chanting of the “Maroha
Real,” which was at once taken up by
the girlish voices. —St. James Gazette. •
The most useful insect is the silk
/Form. It is estimated- that 5,000,000
jersons gain a livelihood by raising
ihe worms.
EBEES ai b
commends A prominent “Goldori clergyman Medical of Mississippi Discovery” re¬
to
Buffering builds humanity everywhere. The “Dis¬ soiid
covery” when reduced up below the strength healthy and
flesh a standard.
DYSPEPSIA m GENERAL DEBILITY.
Ecv. 4- H. Mevs, of Friar’s Point.Oeahtaus
Co., Mississippi; writes:
number “Having of suffered for a
it- years with
and dyspepsia, torpid liver
having general debility,
and tried gever-
al physicians with I little
RH Hficd, or no benefit, resolv’-
a 8 a last resort, to
K • H ^ consult at tho World’s your specialists Dispen¬
sary. Being advised by
them to use Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Dis-
8» eovery, I did so, and
V 13 js \ after using several bot-
ties, I fee) entirely y re-
Eev. A. H. Mevs. stored to health. Now,
I take great pleasure
In recommending everywhere.” your medicines to suffering
humanity
.WHY NOT YOU?
| fWINE McELREES’ CARDUI" l
OF .<* -
❖
♦ A
m
♦ 7asiani3-?> *
t fJM 7m ! i
fY
s
%
(ft* f
wmim 4 5
! For Female Diseases?j
If any on© doubts thsC
BLOOD A POJSMiSr B 3 SS
SPECIALTY. ■ (fM*ourr.lUbi]Jfrr. in.^u-
■B3&3KS3HBHSriff Our
<•
ruurant*. lotlldo poUdjIum, * com—«>< wnpullltor 1 our Maeio CjpMUme ftot Sprln^ftlV 1. iniY *«
Ulina: that will permanently. Poritly. th«
cur. proof ««il
Mated, tin. Cook RsKeur On , <-hlo«*o. lifi
• RED AND SLACK PILLS#
SUB* CD HE for Malaria, Ague, Chills and Fever.
Registered. ^BEj5snSj«Si v^&SfflspiGS. < Jersey, Guernsey and
Holstein Cattle. Thoroughbred
Sheep. Fancy Poultry. Hunting
sauTdrcSl and House Dogs. Catalogue.
*. W. Bvliie* Cheater Co.. PeBus.
m foam CURES WHERE AL
, RES Befit Cough Syrup. Tastes Good, Use
in time. Sold by druggists.
(8f8