Bulloch times. (Statesboro, Ga.) 1893-1917, February 09, 1893, Image 7

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FOR THE LADIES. CAPS AND GOWNS FOR GIRL STUDENTS. The long-talked-of matter as to whether or not the students of the Woman’s College of Baltimore shall wear caps and gowns has been decided and the caps and gowns ordered. The authorities have selected the regular un¬ dergraduate gown with the regulation Oxford cap. Just when they are to be worn is as yet unsettled, a3 some of the authorities desire the students to wear them to any aud all college exercises, while others prefer them to be worn only on special occasions.—[New York Independent. KX-EMPRESS EUGENIE. The beautiful Spaniard; the low-born who would accept an Emperor’s love only “through the church door;” the Empress who cried, “This is my war!” “This is my war!” when the French troops were marching for Berliu, is de¬ scribed by a man who saw her recently as faded and utterly broken, carrying a uane and stumbling as she walks. She sometimes stealthily leaves England for Paris, but she cannot remain loug in the French city. Queen Victoria is still her friend. Otherwise she seems quite alone. —[New York World. MASAI WOMEN. The Masai \yomen were very interest¬ ing. They were fairly loaded down with coils of brass aud iron wire, which formed earrings, leg-lets, collars, weight and armlets, often amounting to a pounds. of forty, fifty, and even sixty, Those who cannot afford to wear the heavy coils, wear as many of the lighter bracelets as they can procure. The higher the rank of the woman, the which more of this sort of jewelry she Fashion wears; her betokens the fact that has slaves even in Central Africa. The Masai women are tall, gaunt, and bony, but not well developed, probably owing to their wearing so much heavy jewelry while growing. They are very fleet and strou v , and are the purveyors of the tribe; allowed to pass unmolested every¬ where, even in times of war.”—[Demo rest’s Magazine. , A MADE-OVER GOWN. A bright* head girl*, with more her banker’s, of a deposit has in her than at made herself the most fascinating of cos¬ tumes out of a last year's gown. The skirt of the gown, which was of dark wool, she cut and fitted over to the de¬ sired shape. Fortunately, it was a dull, reddish, rough stuff, and with a little quilling of velvet doubled together and plaited she finished the edge. Then a black velvet coal, relic of former gen¬ tility, was made to do duty as a little jacket, cut shorter than the Eaton model, slashed up the back to the neck and ■edged all around with a finish of jet. The top of her skirt she edged about with a double bias fold of velvet, fitted •neatly, and less than two inches wide when all finished, and this she hocked over a full waist of the gay green and blue tartan wool, checked off with a thread of scarlet in silk.—[St. Louis Re¬ public. PRETTY PINS AND THEIR USE. Little girls and big girls “with silver pins sticking in their sleeves,” and also adorning their bonnets, bows and bodices and various other portions of their attire, are a common sight this season. Pins, both little and large, are exhibited in every conceivable modification. These ornaments were never more fashionable nor in greater variety, and are set with Irish diamonds, tiny pearls and stones, framed in gold, silver, jet, steel and iridescent metals, the patterns showing heads of birds, bees, moths, green and gold katydids, ruby eyed “darning needles," June bugs and the like. Some of the delicate floral ornaments are exceedingly beautiful, being mounted in fine gold and enamel and set with brilliant stones that flash and glitter with every movement of the wearer, Real diamonds set in pins, dagger hilts and slender fillets for the hair are worn by every wealthy woman, but these shed no more brilliant rainbow rays under the gas or electric light than the popular “brilliants,” which are safer for obvious and many reasons, their possible the loss not of being of great moment, as in case genuine jewels.—[Philadelphia Times. A LOST ACCOMPLISHMENT. The reasons of the growing infidelity to needlework as an amusement are not far to seek. The nervous restlessness of the modern temperament is one of them. Our grand mothers knew nothing of nerves and were content in the accomplishment of one square of wool work in the span of a labor day. Hour after hour sat the mother of all, living at her spinning wheel or at her tapestry frame, slum¬ brous of brain, tranquil of heart and placid of face, while the world without revolved in bliss or despair, recking naught of her whose soul lay in the evolution of an embroidered blossom or the turn of a stocking heel. To-day far other issues claim the energies and the wits of womanhood; her ears are no longer closed to the press of life nor to its pain, for which knitting is no sedative nor crochet an anodyne. discarding of Another reason for the ■what is commonly called “fancy work” among educated women is characteristic the spread of the utilitarian spirit so of these latter days. Life is less ornamen¬ tal than it was, but it is certainly more useful as a whole. Butterflies may be numerous enough, but there are more bees. What is the use of embellishing antimacassars? is a question which cer¬ tainly never occurred to our fair ances¬ tresses, but it rises naturally enough to the heart and also to the lips of the modern maid who joins a Dorcas society if the love of stitchery be in her, or sub¬ scribes to a library if it be not. Lawn tennis has also something to do with the decline and fall of the work basket. Twenty years ago the necessity for physical exercise had not dawned upon the female intelligence, and the doctrines of hygiene were neither understood by the public nor formulated by the faculty. The boys of the family went out into the fresh air to play ball, but the girls sat in the school room and learned to do crewel work, while their mothers played croquet, with never a vision of tenuis to disturb their lethargy. Now these ac¬ tivities are the rule instead of the excep¬ tion, and as the days provide in them, np extra the hours in which to take part cult of the health has Modern superseded life has the cult longer of tln^a^ftdle. useless stitches, aud few no enough minutes for necessary ones.— [Cincinnati Enquirer. WEARING WORK OF A TEACHER. Close observation shows that teaching is oue of the most wearing occupations working for women. Even the hard clerk, typewriter, journalist and or drudge¬ seams¬ tress, with longer hours more like employment, keeps her health and aud strength better through five years of continuous service than does the average school teacher. The girl who begins with erect carriage and rosy checks will be seen in the course of a few years to have lost both. Much of this is attri¬ buted to the nervous strain necessary for the regular routine of governing often an unruly class and at the same time teach¬ ing the required studies. But allowing that teaching is hard work, without entering into the reasons, certainly nothing should be neglected which adds physical comfort to these positions ot honor, filled many times by earnest women who strive by enthusiasm in their work and by a noble example to make teaching a profession. be absurd to declare It would seem to it is their right to occupy only rooms which can be properly heated and ven¬ tilated, and yet a girl known to the Brooklyn Eagle last winter owed a severe attack of pneumonia to the low tempera¬ ture of her room, while others suffered more or less from the same cause. Be¬ cause there are conditions over which the teachers themselves have little or no control, they should be all the more care¬ fully attended to by those who do. There is another consideration, however, for which they themselves are responsi¬ ble, ami that is the midday luncheon, which is very apt to be a basket affair, eaten as rapidly as possible in order to go on with school work, or, as while one teacher said, “She took a bite correcting papers which had to be ready for the afternoon session.” The full hour’s When possible, rest at noon breath should of fresh be enjoyed. air and a a few minutes’ walk will make the duties of the afternoon easier. IIOME-MADE BEAD TRIMMINGS. In these days of passementerie, used lavishly bead fringes and gimps so the on both day and evening gowns, her woman of trimmings taste aud and ingenuity thereby can make small own save a fortuue. 1 he handsome jet fringes and gimps cost enormously, and so do the tinsel and metal embroideries. But if you will buy the jet beads by the and secure long, thin beading needles and very strong silk, patience and taste will do the rest. Suppose that you wish to make an Empire belt with a deep jet fringe. Purchase a strip of ordinary jet trimming, mount it on .stiff muslin and stud it thickly with jet nailheads until it is as heavy and rich-looking as you may desire. Then the fringe. Fasten each long thread of beads separately sufficiently on the belt, until you have a thick fringe. Line the belt with black or colored silk, and you have a hand¬ some ornament which can be worn with any gown. Embroidered velvet yokes and sleeves will freshen up an old gown aud make it as good as new. Suppose you have an ancient black gown known to all your friends. Put in a pair of emerald-green velvet sleeves, studded with black nailheads, and make a jet belt studded with emerald beads. Presto! a smart, new costume, Frills for the bottom of dress skirts and flounces on bodices may be edged with narrow velvet ribbon, on which are sown square jet beads; the effect is charming. pinkish A beautiful bodice may be made of mauve velvet, sewn all over with jet and amethyst beads. The zouave jackets now so much in vogue lend themselves easily to the art of the embroiderer. Lovely effects are made with gold and silver cords and tiny gilt sequins. White jet, pale-yellow and pale-green beads make charming fringes gowns.—[Once and panels for A delicate-hued evening Week. FASHION NOTES. There are still many smock dresses. Every shade of gray is fashionable. Pointed cape collars and rounding capes are stylish. Winter ulsters appear in a variety of attractive guises. Dark green and bright red mixtures are much fancied. A sash of soft nainsook or ribbon is worn at the waist. Flowers have superseded feathers as a trimming for bonnets. Flowered and striped flounces, make handsome house wrappers. Brocaded India silk is much used to make indoor blouse waists. Bonnets remain small, with close sides and tiny old Dutch crowns. There is less hemstitching and drawn w'ork used than last season. The Empire puff is still seen on sleeves that are otherwise close-fitting. There is little change this season in the first dresses worn by children. Satin slips are preferred for the trans¬ parent gowns now so fashionable. Box cloth is becoming a fashionable material for ladies’ jackets and cloaks. The bell skirt, with a graceful drapery in front, is very becoming to stout ladies. Ruchings for the neck are very popu¬ lar. but are rather smaller and narrower. Pretty and inexpensive evening dresses for young girls are embroidered nuns’ vailing. Hats are much more worn than bonnets, and may be large or small, to suit the wearer. Shaded velvet for sie ves and trim¬ ming is the handsomest novelty of the winter. Some of the new sleeves are formed of two or three puffings, and finished with a deep frilling. Frills of chiffon in high colors have one edge worked with white in long darning stitches. Even the baby ribbon has colored edges; the scarlet-edged black is pretty on children's hats. For young women the fashionable silks for evening wear are extremely delicate in coloring. Ruffles, puffs and gathered folds of velvet are stylish edgings for silk and woolen dress skills. Golden brown and light reddish violet shades form one of the striking com¬ binations of the season. Rather elaborate braid work in soutache upon the revers, cuffs and collar is noticed upon many ulsters. Among the fashionable colors for veils for the coming season are white, black, navy, gray, tan and brown. For simple dresses, simple cashmeres trimmed with dotted bands embroidered in black silk are worn by little children. The chief trimming used on the first dresses of little children is real Valen¬ ciennes lace or soft, hem-stitched ruffles. Shaded velvet - sleeves with contrast¬ ing costumes, and plaid velvet sleeves with blue or green cloth gowns are pop¬ ular. A corselet of the square Russian shape and shows four rows of jeweled gimp jeweled velvet, each row being held by a clasp. The Eton jacket prevails, but all kinds will be worn. The zouave jacket, with square fronts, are exquisitely hand braided. Robin-red is a new color in tailor cloth, and is pre'ty when combined with russet brown velvet aud dull gold passe¬ menterie. For ladies who like flannel bodices in place of silk or cotton ones, the very lightest weight of fiaunel is the most fashionable. * Poplin forms a pretty, and at present a fashionable, material for a house gowu, a sudden fancy having developed itself for this material. Yellow remains a favorite color for fanciful little dresses made of chiffon or embroidered silk muslin, which is laid over India silk. Velvet hats are favored for wear at any time; they are made to match the color of the costumes, or in black, laden with black plumes. Capes and pelerines continue the order of the day, and many raineloths and long garments are finished off with a single or triple cape. Sensible petticoats are of fine black silk alpaca, trimmed with a deep ruffle and edged with lace. They shed the dust, aud are suitable for rainy days. Jackets show tops having a single small cape, and capes show a small one at the top, above a very much deeper oue, or three capes all of the sa i.e size. Not only are bodices of plain textures worn with figured skirts, and plain skirts with patterned bodices, but two stuffs of one color are likewise employed. Cuffs woru outside the sleeve are among the new styles, and arc seen in lace, linen, and kid. With outing gowns, the kid cuffs are chosen to match a corselet of the same. Eyeless Fish in Boiling Water. One of the most remarkable discover¬ ies in the shape of a continent peculiar species of fish ever made on this was that made at Carson City, Nevada, in 1876. At that time both the Hale & Norcross and the Savage mines were down to what is known as the “ 2,200-foot level.” When at that depth a subterranean lake of boiling water was tapped. This depth acci¬ of dent flooued both mines to a 400 feet. After this water had all been pumped out except that which had gath¬ ered in basins and in the inaccessible portions of the works, and when the water still had a temperature of 128 de¬ grees—nearly scalding hot—many fish queer- taken looking little blood-red were out. In appearance they somewhat re¬ sembled the gold fish. They seemed lively and sportive enough when they were in their native element—boiling water—notwithstanding the faqt that they did not even have rudimentary eyes. When the fish were taken out of the hot water and put into buckets of cold water, for the purpose of being died trans¬ ported to the surface, they as quickly as a perch or a bass would if plunged into a kettle of water that was scalding hot; not only this, but the skin peeled off exactly as if it had been boiled. Eyeless fish are common enough in all subterranean lakes and rivers, but this is the ouly case ou record of living fish be¬ ing found in boiling water.—[St. Louis Physical Exercise. Dr. Sargent estimates that the pursuit of outdoor sports is limited to probably less than one per cent, of our vigorous young men. Even among the members of athletic organizations Dr. only Sargent ten per cent, are really alive. at¬ tributes the increasing lack of interest in athletics to the growing tendency among Americans, as a people, excellence to pursue sports in the to an end. In making achievement the primary object of ath¬ half letic exercises they are robbed of their value in various ways; for instance, by increasing the expenses of training; by the devoting of too much time to practice; by reducing the number of act¬ ive competitors; by relying upon natural resources rather than cultivated material; by depriving the non-athletic individual of incentive to physical exertions; by de¬ priving the exercises of their efficiency as a means of health. Dr. Sargent holds that the harmonious development broad¬ of the physique, and the building up and ening out of the highest type of manhood and womanhood ought to offer induce¬ ment enough for each to work.—[New York News. “How many people know,” asks the religious editor of the Buffalo News, “that the monument that Laban and Jacob set up near the borders of Canaan and called -Mizpah,’ or a lookout, was erected in suspicion rather than love? The literal meaning was this: ‘The Lord watch between thee and me when we are absent one from the other, and see that you are not tip to some new trick as soon as my back is turned.’ So when it is inscribed in an engagement ring it might mean: ‘The Lord watch and see that y >u do not flirt when we are absent one from the other.’ Those who use the text are sometimes wiser than they know.’’ If Cherkmntrd Kitrly, Rheumatism is shorn of its terrors. When it is young, annihilate it with Hostetter’s Stom¬ ach Ritters and prevent life-long torture. If it is chronic, it is always liable to attack the heart with a fatal result. The poisons taken to cure it simply alleviate its pangs, and are themselves Indigestion, dangerous in a slight overdose. liver or kidney trouble, costive¬ ness, ma aria and loss of appetite and flesh are remedied by the Bitters. Wife (significantly)-—“That pocket-book you ftave Husband me for a Christmas present was empty." (grim y)- "Ye , it was mine." Fon Coughs and Tiiiioat Disorders use Brown’s Bronchial Troches. “Have, oevsr changed think my mind respect winch ing them, except I better of that I Wynn by think¬ ing well of."—J?«. f/twy Ward Beecher. Sold only in boxes. The Taxes We Pay. The Washington Post presents some interesting tax figures: For the next two years our government will spend annually more than $500,000, 000. To pay one year’s expeusts of the government it will take nearly the com¬ bined wheat and oat crop. Our annual output of gold, silver, copper, iron, coal, Petroleum and lead will not foot our tax bill for twelve months. Nor can we do it with a year’s product of cotton, wool, rye, barley, wine, potatoes and tobacco. The combined capitalization $599,000,000. of One our national banks is year’s taxes will nearly swallow it up. Now, all this is the Federal tax. We have also to pay city, county and State tixes. We pretend to be a nation of plain people, with no aristocracy, no princes, no standing army aud no expen¬ sive frills, and yet our taxes are more enormous than those of Austria, Germauy and Great Britain. Bread Sauce for Roast Chicken. Peel a moderate-sized onion and boil it in oue pint of new milk; add to it a lump of butter the s'ze of a walnut, and pepper, salt and mace to taste, or if pre fered whole mace may be boited in the milk with the onion. Have ready a good pint of bread crumb3 in u basin, take the onion out of the milk and pour it, boil ini’, over the bread, then cover it closely for five minutes, stir tip well, and it will be ready to serve. Bought bread is bet¬ ter than homemade for making this sauce. An Iim>oi'tnnt Dlfl'prenre. To make it apparent to thousands,who think themselves ill, that they are not affected with any disease, but that the system simply needs cleansing, is to bring comfort home to their hearts, as a costive condition is easily cured by using Syrup of Figs. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Any lady who goes to church to show her new sack is sackreligious.—Wilson Mirror. STATE OF Onto. CITY OF TOLEDO, » f Lucas Countv. - 5s the Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney Toledo. & Co., doing business in the City that of said iirm County and State aforesaid, and each and will pay ihe sum of $100 for every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this dth day of December, W. A. D., ■j j- X. (jUJLABON, SEAL Notary Public. and Hall’s Catarrh Cnre is taken internally acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, Toledo, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., O. iar Sold by Druggists, 75c. Our old reliable eye-water cures weak or In¬ flamed eyes or granulated lids without pain. Priee25c. John R. Dickey DrugOo., Bristol, Va. Ir (t Ii? 7j $ - A A 7 I N 7 Mr. Wm. Wade Of Lowell. INDIGESTION RELIEVED Good Appetite and Good Health Re¬ stored by HOOD’S Mr. Wm. Wade, the well known boot and shoe dealer at 17 Merrimack St., near the Postoffice, Lowell, says: “When I find a flood thing „I feel like praising it, and I know from personal experi¬ ence that Hood's Sarsaparilla is a fine medi¬ cine. I have for a good many years been seri¬ ously troubled with Distress in My Stomach and indigestion. I had medical advice, pre¬ scriptions and various medicines, but my trouble was not relieved. At last 1 thought 1 would try Hood’s Sarsaparilla and I must say #Jte effect tvu» surprising, Soon after 1 began taking it I found great relief, and now HOOd’S pariUa C U I 6 S eat without having that terrible distress. I also rest well at night and am in good health, for all of wnich I thank Stood’a aarstipa rtlla.” Wm. Wade. Hood’* Pill* are the best liver iniigorator and cathartic. Purely vegetable. MERCURIAL “About ten I con-_[ S.S.S. years ago traded a severe case of blood poi¬ son. Leading physicians prescribed medicine after medicine, which I took without any relief. I also tried mercurial and potash remedies, with unsuccessful results, but which brought on an attack of mercurial rheumatism that made my life RHEUMATISM one of agony. After suffering four years I gave up all remedies and tie pan using 8. S. 8. After taking several bottles I was entirely cured and able medicine to resume work. I- s.s.s 1 Is the greatest for blood poisoning to-day on the market.” < Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga TO YOUNG MEN. Splendid opportunity to learn a business that wUl give steady employment and a salary of $1000 a year. Send 2c. stamp for circular, containing full Informa¬ tion. Address Geo. H. Lawrence, 53 K. Htk, N.Y. City. -*■ Cheap Music. Fair Cu stonier—-“Have you a piece called the ‘Moonlight Sonata?’ ” Clerk—“Yes, madam; Beethoven’s ‘Moonlight Sonata.’ Here it is.” “What is the price?’’ “Only twenty cents,” “Ob, that’s too cheap. Show me something better.”—New York Weekly. Mrs. Wearie—“When you sweep little Johnnie’s room, don’t put the sweepings in the fire.” New Girl—“Why not, mum?” Mrs. Wearie—“The last time I did that the st'.ve exploded.” -QOYAL BAKING POWDER Imparts that pecul jLv - iar lightness, sweetness, and flavor noticed in the finest food, and which expert pastry cooks declare is not obtainable by the use of any othef raising agent.” B&fc' RpTAL £|Po'dW v RpTAL t l < Absolutely Pofre Absol Pulre lately Royal Baking Powder is shown a pure cream-of* tartar powder, the highest of all in leavening strength. _U. S. Government Food Report. Royal Baking Powder is superior in purity, strength, and wholesomeness to any other powder which I have examined .—New York State Analyst . Good Manners at Home* The presence of good manners is no¬ where more needed or more effective than in the household, and, perhaps, more rare. Wherever familiarity exists there is a tendency to loosen the check upon selfish conduct which the presence of strangers involuntarily produces. Many persons who are kind and courteous in company are rude and careless with those whom they love best. made Emerson of says: “Good manners are up petty sacrifices,” and certainly nothing and can more thoroughly secure the harmony peace of the family circle than the habit of making small sacrifices, one for anoth¬ er. Children thus learn good manners and in the best and most natural ways, habits thus acquired will never leave them. Courtesy and kindness will never lose their chann, while all spurious imi¬ tations of them are to be despised.— The Republic. He was Getting Uneasy. Upon the recent deeth of an eminen*. Engli-h divine at Cannes, the following bulle'iu was placed by the family upon the door of hi8 late residence: “Mr. S departed this life for heaven at 11 o’clock a. m.” Some passing wag, possessed pluccd of beneath more drollery than reverence, the notice a telegraph blank filled out in the following manner: Mr. S not “Heaven, 12. m. yet arrived. Getting uneasy. Peter.” An Ignorant stranger. Stranger— “Where is the court -house 1’ Boy—“Bout six blocks west from here.” Stranger—“But I don’t know which way is west.” Boy—“W’y jus’stan’with your face to th’ north, and’ then y’r right hand’ll poiut east an’ y’r left hand west, Thort everybody knew that.’’—Street 6c Smith’s Good News. ©P 0 ' ?, \ U SH Bo Hot Bo Deceived with Pastes. Enamels and Paint* which stain the e^rj^rnitot, Odor Ie*g Durable, and the consumer pays for no tin or glass package with every purchase. MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS WITH THOMSON’S m SLOTTED OUNOH^mVCTS. easily and quickly, leaving the clinch un i clinch them Requiring hoc be mad* In niiso'utfly smooth. Rivets. no They to ihe leather nor hurr lor the are strong. (oh* rla and dumble* Millions now in use. AH emrth*. uniform or assorted, put up In boxes. yoesr dealer for them, or send 40c. in stamps to r a box ol 100, assorted size*. Man'id by JUDSON L. THOMSON MFQ. CO.. WALTHAM, MASS. m, r SHIL0HS 'TAKE < v ~ -T BSSI l 0 CURE. i. Cures Ocnsumption, Congas, Croup, Sore Throat, Sold by all Druggists on a Guarantaa. S^a LIGHTNING—The 60 Day Cabbage. Tbi* is absolutely the earliest ia the worM. toed ▼erj scarce. Pfcg., 1 5c.; y % ox, 36c.; >4 ’b., |2, postpaid. THE EARLIEST VEGETABLES t Will be in great demand this spring and will fetch big prices. To hare the earliest, plant Salter s seeds. ZS pkgs. Earliest Vegetable Novelties, f I, postpaid. d., FOR 14c. (WITH CATALOGUE. ISe.) „ To introduce our seeds everywhere, we Mftd, postpaid, upon receipt of 14c.: * ^ 1 pack*.* Six Weeks' Radish. lOe. In ell 8 rsckagM, * - r - 1 *' Silver State Lettuce. 15©. listed nowhere 1 44 Giant Prolific Tomato, 20c. mutter Me. X. # [;• i Long Brilliant Gian*. Flower Cucumber, 10c. ALL FOR 14c. - rr4. < 5 Seeds, 35e. f SALZER’S SEED CATALOGUE ^ (J f Is maiicd the finest receipt published. of 8c. Costs postage. us or«r $60*000! It Is gladly smsmi upon " JOHN A. SAL2ER SEED CO., U Crosse, W?s. A Latter-Day Marriage* Dowutoo—“So you are really going $ be married?” Upoton—“Yes, it’s all fixed. WeNte rented a furnished flat, and I’ve hired & dress suit for the occasion, and Marie haa borrowed her cousin’s wedding rig, anfll a plaster new caterer of Paris has show-cake, agreed to lend provided us hUj Ii mention his name in the papers." It is said that the custom of firing morning and evening salutes costs this government $1,000 a day. If this be atf it would be economy to Are the customs —Concord Standard. The Marked Success of Scott’s Emulsion in consump¬ tion, scrofula and other forms of hereditary disease is due to its powerful food properties. Scott's Emulsion rapidly creates healthy flesh— proper weight, Hereditary taints develop only when the system becomes weakened. Nothing in the world of medicine has been so successful in dis¬ eases that are most menacing to life. Phy sictans everywhere prescribe it. Prepared by Scott A Bowne, N. Y. All dmffKii rr Germa: Syrup” bad cold, hacking ust a ana a cough. We all suffer that way some¬ times. How to get rid of them is the study. Listen—‘'lamaRanch¬ man and Stock Raiser. My life is rough and exposed. I meet all weathers in the Colorado mountains. I sometimes take colds. Often they are severe. I have used Germ«* Syrup five years for these. A few doses will cure them at any stage. The last one I is had infallible.” was stopped in 24 hours. It James A. Lee, Jefferson, Col. <2> A Woman Has very little desire to enjoy the pleasure* of life, and I* entirely unfitted for the cares of housekeeping HEAD¬ or any ordinary duties. If afflicted with HICK ACHE DAY AFTER DAY and yet ther* aid few disease* that yield more promptly of utmost to proper in» medical treatment. It is therefore the portanee that a reliable remedy should a! way* be at hand. During a period ot more than DO YEAR* there has been no Instance reported wher- sru* casesbave not been permanently and PBOJIPTI.f ClIR ED by the use of a single box of the LIVES genuln* and lustly celebrated Dr.C. IIcI. A NE’H PILLS, which may be procured at any Drug of Store, 26c. or will be mailed to any address on the receipt should In postage stamps. Purchasers of these PUls be careful to procure the genuine article. Ther* ar» several counterfeit* on the market, weU calculated to deceive. The genuine Dr. C. HcLane’s Celebrated Liver PUls are manulactured only by -------- to ---------„ Pittsburgh. Pfc BICYCLES. 37JV Complete line of high, medium vbPK an 1 cheap srade kinds. Bicycles. Boa dries of Mil Immense Hnrcnina in No. 38 Peachtree Street, Atlanta, Ga. Best, Plso’s Easiest Remedy to U»e, for and Catarrh Cheapest. is the ■ CATA R R M Sold by druggists or sent by mail, 50c. E. T. Hazeltine, Warren, Pa. FRUIT TUBES. Largest and BEST Stock In United States. Planter* and Dealers should get OUR PRICES before placing ORDERS. E. MOODY & SONS, LOCKPORT, N. T. MS,8.BLAINE Authorized tor agents. Life. Outfit Bonanza only 2S «. IS. F. Johnson & Co.. No. 3So. 11th St.. Richmond. V*. PATENTB&AsBSS A. N. U. Six, ‘93.