Newspaper Page Text
A. Ay ORMLOACMb PmiWO in Sr.
H. A. CvtAAOK. Vice Pres and Supt
W. M. DeLOACH, Assistant Supt.
A. C. DeLOACH, Assistant Mgr
SAW EV3ILLS!
WITH
DnIMs Patent VarialilB Friction Feed.
THE BEST MILL MADE.
Item of Real Merit are Bsins Shipped to all Paris of lie World.
all sizes Bill m
--FROM-- Si III i
: .11 il
4= TO 200 CPflfe;i| O v ill!
■■
iHH §fefi ffetlip
TT. P. II* \\ ®}
i V— *| I
K II <yf ii IlffTI 1' Ill
m wmmkpm T%T * . fS.ll HI . .1 a E
iy mmd w- 'MB®®'’ -w? i \
,
K! m *
i£- r~ .............
^ JkL,- - i , 1 - . v if
byI'.. ' -
Jl
Lj
i ; , ]
m't '
.
mmm m
r
I ; ' ; Th
A 5/ > II ■ 1 I
m [ >:i J
•L- •• Hi
mM Hi' Sill ♦
■si %
mm i if
mm
.. £ iPW ■ j|H IPr
WE MANUFACTURE
Grist Mills and Turbine Water Wheels .
Sitafttag, Pollies and Gearings of all Kinds
DEALERS IN
Engines, Boilers Planers, Belting,
Etc.
Our Mills have been Greatly improved recently
b ur y tile
“CHAMPION DUPLEX DOG”
fco hold Round and Square timber. They
COST NOTHING EXTRA with our Mills.
Send for Illustrated Catalogue.
a
isrc?^ ga-
What's la a Name.
What must be the toolings of a tall,
gaunt, with bony ajpooiman of who womanhood} realizes
that a she snappy will manner, always be known
“Pussy?" New us
says the York World.
Isn’t it awful to meet big women who
are known as Daisy?
Isn’t It ridloulous to meet a woman
nearly six feet high and hear her ad¬
dressed And isn’t as Tiny? absolutely idiotlo to find
it
a odorless creature with gray eyes and
ashy Pinky? hair who speaks of herself as
The only proper sort of name is one
that its owner need not be ashamed to
see anywhere, on a ohecif or a tomb¬
stone - one that is a credit to youth and
a dignity in old ago._
The Tragedy of Life in Now York.
Could anything be more pathetio
than the- story of ll-yaar-old of the miserable Sanford
Parker rushing out house the other
Brooklyn tenement
day to earn a few pennies wherewith
to buy food for his starving mother, Poor
rendered helpless by pennies, dropsy? and in
boy! He could earn no
desperation stole the brass handle of a
trolley motor, hoping to sell it to a
junkman, buy food. and But thus he was procure nabbed money by a po. to
liceman, and locked up in a station
house. Meanwhile the poor mother
died of starvation. Is there any worsa
destitution than this in the mcs'
wretched of London’s slums?
Deafness Cannot be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach th©
diseased portion of the ear. There is only one
way to euro Deafness, and that is by constitu¬
tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in-
llarned condition of the mucous this tube lining of the In-
Eustachian Tube. When gets
llained you have a rumbling sound entirely or iinper- closed
feet hearing, and when it is
Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam¬
mation call be taken out and this tube re¬
stored to ils normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever; nine cases out ten are
caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in¬
flamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can¬
not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for
circulars, free. _ Toledo, , „ O. _
F. J. Chenf-v & Co.,
j£?T*Sold by Druggists, 75c.
A clean mouth and an honest hand w ! l)
take a man through any land.
Tbe Most Pleasant Way
Of preventing the grippe, colds, headaches,
and fevers is to use the liquid laxative rem¬
edy, Syrup of Figs, whenever the system
needs a gentle, yet effeciive cleansing. To
be benefited one must get the true remedy
manufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only. For sale by all druggists in 60e.
and $1 bottles.
A chronicle grumbler can set dow as a
person who loafs too much.
__
Malaria cured and eradicated from the sys-
tem by Brown’s Iron Bitters, which enriches
the blood, tones the nerves, aids general digestion.
Acts like a charm on persons in ill
health, giving new en ergy and strength.
It is a barren kind of criticism that tell?
you what a thing is not.
Foa Coughs and Thkoat Disorders U3e
Brown’ Bronchial Troches. 14 Have never
ohanged my mind respecting them, except X
think better of that which i began by think¬
ing well of.”— Rev. Henry [Vard Beecher. Sold
omy in boxes.
A child’s question is the first round in the
ladder of knowledge.
Brown’s Iron Bitters cures Dyspepsia, Mala*
ria, Biliousness and General Debility* Gives
strength, aids Digestion, tones the nerves—
creates appetite. The best tonic for Nursing
Mothers, weak women and children.
-All cruelty springs from hard h eartedness
and weak character.
Mornings -Beecham ’b Pills with a drink of
water. Beeoham’s—no others. 25 cents a box
It afflicted with sore eves e Dr. Xsa ac Thomp-
aon’sEye Writer. Druer^ists sell : at 2DC. a bottle.
%
ML m
'ip. lilfSl m mm
fa ftai Jflfc
.. Tffff HM
Mr.Cha8. A. Stalker
West Walworth, N. Y.
Diseased Bone
Alter an injury to my laid right leg caused and in tn©
hospital muoh suffering, Rochester I was r.p a year where a I
at another year,
Underwent seven surgical operations, the last
taking away the lirnh at April, the hip. ’92,1 Jly commenced case was
pronounced taking Hood’s hopeless. Sarsaparilla. After the second
bottle the wound at the hip entirely healed. A
third bottle made me feel well as ever and
built up my system.” Chas. A. St.ai.k cuAYcst
Walworth, N. Y. HOOD’S CURES.
llood 'n Pills are purely vegetable, perfectly
always reliable and beneficial.
CATARRH ♦
V IN CHILDREN
For over two years my little girl’s life
was made miserable by a case of Catarrh.
The discharge from offensive. the nose was Her large,
constant and very eyes
became inflamed, the lids swollen and
very painful. After trying various reme¬
dies,! gave heri mms. 1 [The first bot¬ the
tle seemed to!_I aggravate
disease, and in but the time symptoms soon cured. abated,
a short she was
Dr. L. B. Ritchey, Mackey, Ind.
Our book on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. Swift Specific* Co., Atlanta, Ga.
THE JUDCES the 01
WOWS COLUMBIAN EMSIM
Have made tbe
HIGHEST AWARDS
(Medala and Diplomas) to
WALTER BAKER & CO.
On each of the following named articles:
BREAKFAST COCOA , . . . .
Premium No. 1, Chocolate, . .
Vanilla Chocolate,
German Sweet Chocolate, . .
.
ior ■•u«my of material,” “excellentflavor*
and “uniform even composition.
VALTER BAKER 6 CO., DORCHESTER, MASS
DIAMOND STUDDED TEETH.
A New Frivolity of Young Misses With
More Money Thau Brains.
“Where the fad originated, for I sup¬
pose it must have had a starting point, I
am unable to say, nor have I any idea
how far it is likely to run; hut it is an
undeniable fact that well-to-do women
are now having valuable diamonds set in
their teeth much as they would have the
same gems set in a brooch or any other
article of personal adornment. I for one
cannot but deprecate the practice, for I
believe that many young women who are
silly enough to have this the looks of their
mouths spoiled in way will regret it
later on. ’’ This was said to a reporter
for the New York World by one of the
most the prominent dental district. surgeons living in
Murray Hill
“What sort of people are adopting
this fad?” Well, that is a pretty hard
question to answer, but I should say they
are mostly of that sort one would be apt
to meet at a summer resort, appearing in
full evening toilet at the breakfast table
Women who are fond o display and
have more cash than intellect. Youdil
foolish girls living in boarding schools
are another class that seem to have taken
up the new freak with avidity, and are
spending their of pin chocolates money and for dia-
monds instead car
mels. They insist on ruining the teeth
one way or another, but I always try to
dissuade them from the diamond lunacy
by giving them a little appreciated. fatherly advice
when I think it will be But
I am verry sorry to say that it seldom
is. Here is a case in point: called A few
weeks ago three young girls ou me I
to have diamonds set in their teeth.
was I talked slightly acquainted quietly with and one seriously. of them.
to her
They all listened very attentively, and
then fold me that they understood it was
jll the fashion or they would never thanked have
thought of such a thing. rhey
mo and left, convinced of the wisdom of
my advice. Well, that afternoon I met
the same three young ladies coming up
the street. One of them began to laugh
when she saw me and soon the others
joined her. Then I notioed that each one
had a stone fastened in her teeth. They
had simplv gone to another dentist who
bad no scruples in the matter.
“The diamond is set between the two
incisor teeth and exactly in the centre of
the mouth. To do this it is necessary to
drill a hole between tbe teeth, so that
once the stone is placed in position it
should remain there, otherwise the teeth
will decay. It might, of course, be re¬
moved and the cavity be refilled with
gold, but I cannot be help condemned. thinking The that
the practice should
operation is rather painful, but is not
difficult, and the fee is anywhere from
$5 to $10, or even more."
DESTRUCTIVE OCCUPATIONS.
Poisons That Lurk for Flax and Arti¬
ficial Flower Workers.
Very little is known of the danger to
life and health that exists in many occu¬
pations where women are largely em¬
ployed. In England a league has been
formed to call attention to the facts of
the case, and Mrs. C. Moliet has made
extensive investigations. has
In the linen trade, the flax to be
left to soak in the water, and rheuma¬
tism, bronchitis and pneumonia seize
upon the women who have to deal with it
in this stage. In the flax carding de¬
partment, the fine dust produces lung
disease and kills its victims at thirty.
In fur cape making, the odor and the
fine fluff are both extremely injurious.
A singular injury is caused to artificial-
flower makers, especially those em¬
ployed in making white flowers by gas¬
light. The dry dust causes inflamed
eyelids, and the work is so trying that
women are worn out long before middle
age. In the china trade, the clay dust
settles year by year in the luugs until
consumption white-lead results. trade, horrors
In tbe are
found quite match equal trade. to those Lead of is the in phos¬ itself
phorus highly poisonous, and the most danger¬
ous parts of the process of making the
ordinary blue pigs of lead into the deadly
white carbonate is carried on by women,
because it requires less muscular strength
than the rest. Cakes of lead are put to
ferment in tan and acetic acid fer three
months, and then the cakes have to be
grubbed out of the mixture by hand, the
poison getting under the finger nails.
After being ground to powder unde!
water, the dishes of damp lead have to
be placed in a stove to dry for a fort¬
night. The worst part is when these
oor women have to take away the dry,
ot, white carbonate of lead from the
stoves. Even tbe muffled heads, the
woolen respirators, deadly the sack overalls
fail to keep out the dust. They
rarely live many years; sometimes a few
weeks or months bring on the symptoms
of'acute lead poisoning, to which they
rapidly succumb. This white carbonafe
of lead is used for glazing china and
enamel advertisements. Tfie only safe¬
guard would be in prohibiting the manu¬
facture, and it would be possible to do
so, for various substitutes are already in
the market.—[New York Sun.
Marine Engines for Land Use.
An interesting departure in engineer¬
ing is the introduction of marine engines
for land service. One of the great elec¬
tric illuminating companies, it appears,
has adopted them in its work, and con¬
cerning their economy in respect to space
and power it is land reported, engine says the Age of
Steel, that the takes up some
ten times as mucu room as a marine en¬
gine, and the marine quadruple expansion
engine has ten times the heating surface
of the land.
Further, the new quadruplex two-
crank expansion engine is twice as pow¬
erful as the triple expansion three-crank
engine, occupies also 30 per cent, less
room and carries regularly 210 pounds of
steam.
The land engine carries only 80 or 90
pounds of steam, and gets one horse¬
power out of from four to ten pounds of
authracrite coal, while the quadruple ex¬
pansion marine engine develops one
horse-power pounds Welsh out of coal—that one and is, a quarter accord¬
of
ing to these data, the land engine re¬
quires from two to four times as much
coal ns the marine engine to produce the
■ame power.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest Bale U. S. Go 1
row
ABSOLUTELY PURE
The official reports show Royal Baking Powder'
superior to all others, yielding of powder, 160 cubic inches strength! oSj
leavening gas per ounce a
greatly in excess of every other powder tested.
The Tower of Silence.
The pa rsees wlll not burn or bury
th , d d \ , )ecause lh /. eonsldc[ . a
, , . *> d , .V Impure, and . they will n not .
s « tVer themselves to defile any of the
elements, They therefore expose
their corpses to vultures, a method
revolting, perhaps, to the imagina-
tiou, but one which commends itself
to all those who are acquainted there-
with. And, after all, one sees noth!
lng but the qfliet, white-robed pro-
cession (white is mourning among
the Parsees) following 4 the bier to the
Tower of Silence. At the entrance
they look their last on the dead, and
the corpse hearers—a caste of such—•
carry it within the precincts and lay
lt down, to be finally disposed of by
the vultures which crowd the tower, llocli
A nd wb y should the swoop of a
of whJte blrd8 be more revo lting than
what happens at the grave?
Me anw h lle, and for three days
“ rte r > the tc ® nriests pr ''T sav s di constant constant nravers prayers
for t , lc departed, for . bis soul is sup-
posed not to leave the world till the
fourth day alter death. On the
fourth day there is the Unthanna
ceremony, when the large sums of
money are given away in memory of
the departed. The liturgy in use is
a series of funeral sermons by Zoro¬
aster,
Of superstitions, the Parsees have
had more than they retain. Con¬
nected with burial is the popular con¬
ception as to the efficacy of a dog’s
gaze after death. Dogs are sacred,
and supposed to guide the souls of
the dead to heaven, and to ward off
evil spirits; hence it is customary to
lead a dog into the chamber of death,
that he may look at the corpse before
it is carried away to the Tower.—The
Nineteenth Century...
The senior surviving officer of the
confederacy is James Longstreet:, for
whom a New York firm is now pub¬
lishing a book. Beauregard was the
last of the full generals, Longstreet
heading the list of lieutenant gen¬
erals. He is a very old man now,
gray and deaf. He lives quietly and
simply at hiA home in Gainesville,
Ga. General U. S. Grant and Long-
street were army friends before ’61.
Longstreet accepted office from Grant
when the latter was President, and
has since taken no part whatever
even in local politics.
It follows as a matter of course
that a yachtsman often gets beaten
In a spanking breeze.- Boston Ga-|
zette.
Poisoned Through a Letter.
Veratrine is a vegetable powder,
nearly which white, very acrid and poison¬
ous, is obtained from a genus of
plants called verat'rum sabadilla. It is
a subtle and dangerous poison, the
odor of which moi .is to the brain and
Is very liable to produoe death or in¬
sanity. marck received One day in letter 1870 marked Prince “pri¬ Bis¬
a
vate.” It was opened by his confiden-
tia seoretary, who had read but a few
Ikies when he fell into a swoon. An-
other clerk who tried to read the let-
ter was seized by the same symptoms.
A after physician hard saved struggle. their lives, but only
a It was after¬
ward ascertained that the letter had
been poisoned with veratrine, evi¬
Chancellor. dently intended for the famous German
YOUR GOOD HEALTH,
jjMa r—7 if you’re a suffering wo-
Bla B M,nmn, demands Doctor
tNgnjr M Jf scriptiou. Pierce’s Favorite There’s Pre- no !
ifjjn wS’B'ltW' other for women’s medicine peculiar like it,
JSSESSSS ills. No matter b"v
distressing it relieves your synTji-
aches toms, and your andl
if faithfully pains, used will
jmi g jPjSPjt cure bring in a every permanent chronic
weakness or derange¬
ment, in catairhal inflammation, and in the
displacements of wo^nn. West Liberty, 0.
Dr. R. V. Pierce : Dear Sir— I can cb eer-
fully recommend your valuable medicine, th©
“Favorite Prescription,” health to suffering females.
Three years ago my became so poor
that I was scarcely able to help,with the house¬
hold duties. 1 was persuaded to try your
medicine, and I purchased six bottles. That,
with the local treatment you advised, mad©
me My strong and has well. it in the family with like
sister used
results.
[/ One bottle for fifteen cents, |
Twelve bottles for one dollar, by mail.
R-I-P-A-N-S
*•-
> -
Ripans Tabules are the most effective rec-
ipe ever prescribed by a physician for any
disorder of the stomach, liver bowels. *
or
Buy of any druggist anywhere, ©r send price to
THE RIPANS CHEMICAL COMPANY, 10 Smwcb St., New Yome. J
New York City’s Wealth.
The wealth of New York City, onorrr^ft
corporation, amounts to tho distiW
sum of $559,000,01)0. It is thus
uted’ Central Park, $200,000,000;
other parks, -ff tc«».000; markets, Croton
duct,$200,000,ut;u; city lots public public iS
000,000; not in $30,0uw
$8,000,000; docks stations and piers, land, $5,0001
000; police and depart
000; schools, $15,000,000; fire
ment, $5,000,000; courts, prisons, lots, $3,000,' anC
islands, $20,000,000; water
000; armories, $3,000,000. hai
Since 1871 the city’s property beinj
more than doubled in valuation,
then $277,000,000.
Queer Freak of a Nail.
T. T. Bell, of Independence, M<\
bile chopping (lays down found a large tenpenn; walnu
tree a few ago, a
nail ten inches beneath the surface
Mr. Bell says fixing he remembers swing at driving the be i
there while a
ginning of tho war—thirty years age
The man who makes the most nois
in a quarrel is usually believed to b
in the right. - Atchison Globe.
66 German
99
dian • Regis Leblanc keeper is a French Cana
store at Notre Dame dt
Stanbridge, Quebec, Can., wbo wa
cured of a severe attack of Congest
ion of the Luns£s by Boschee’s Ger¬
man Syrup. He bas sold many s
bottle of German Syrup on his per
sonal recommend ation. If you droj
him a line he’ll give you the fill
facts of the case direct, as he did us
and that Boschee’s German Synu
brought him through nicely. It
always will. It is a good medicine
and thorough in its work. «
k Weak Digestion
strange as it may seem, is caused
from a lack of that which is
never exactly digested— fat. The
greatest fact in connection with
Scott’s Emulsion
appears at this point—it is partly
digested fat —and the most
weakened digestion is quickly
strengthened by it.
The only possible help
in Consumption is ike
arrest of waste and re¬
newal of new , healthy
tissue. Scott’s Emulsion
has done wonders in Con¬
sumption just this way.
I Prepared by Scott & Bovrne, K. Y. A11 druggists.
DROPSY ., ■ cured sand Treated Remedies.^ Foaltifely with cases many Vegetal CC! frep 11 til - 1 J M
nounced hopeless. From first dose .ymptoms rapidly disap a
and in ten days at least two-thirds . all symptoms areremo-* FREb,
HOOK of testimonials of mir„ ulous cures sent
TE8 DAYS TBEATWIEHT t 1KISHE2 FREEbymai
Wli. II. !i. SKEEN JdSOKS, 1 peelaiuto, Atlanta. Gt
®m 33333XT3?C UND BL OS PILLS !
RUJKLE CUHE for Malaria. Ague, Chibs and Few
Druggists, price, El per l->x, or Benner Hygif
ManufactuMug Co., P. O. Tl.y 15733. I!t>81 on
PAT D until ENTS Batent obtained. Waabin -THOMAS gtoe. Wv w D. for r. C. Inventor’s Ko.aity siMri < ;
FREE CATAT.Or.IIB to i-u rc \
& 10 ct“. t inter > cv
Real Bargains. «. D. Co.. ;-181
A N U No 21394
pi so’s q iPids*i?** b
ConsusaptlTen and people
who have weak lungs or Asth¬
ma, should uso Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. It has *enre<3
thousands. It has not injur¬
ed one. It is not bad lotake.
lt is the best cough svrup.
Sold everywhere. Siic#
CON3U^Pt;i«Nl;v ; ; ;