Newspaper Page Text
He Approved the Recipe.
“Do you know, dear,” said Mr.
Runnimuae, ‘‘that I like the way you
make a Welsh rabbit?”
“Why, Charley!” she exclaimed.
“You know you couldn’t eat the last
one.” And I
“Yes. want yon to make ’em
all just like it. Whenever I eat Welsh
rabbit I hnve indigestion.”—Washing¬
ton Star.
A Singular Form of .Monomania.
There is a class of people, rational enough in
other respects, who are certainly monomani¬
acs in dosins themselves. They are constantly
trying experiments upon their stomachs, their
bowe's, their livers and. their kidneys with
tra sl>y nostrums. When these organs are
really out of Stomach order, if t.hev would only use
Hostetter’s Bitters, they would, if
not hopelessly insane, perceive its superiority.
Surely, if a’l the world was made for man,
then man was made for more than the world.
A Child Enjoys
Th? p'easant flavor, gentle action and soothing
effects of Syrup of Figs, when in need of a lax¬
ative, aud if the father or mother he costive or
bilious, the most gratifying results follow its
use; so that it is the best family med icine known
and every family should nave a bottle.
He on whom heaven confers a sceptre knows
not the weight till he bears it.
Dr. Ki’mer’s Swamp-Root cure^
aii Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton. N. Y.
It is to live twice when we enjoy the recol¬
lections of our former life.
Everyone Knows How it Is
to suffer with corns, and they with are Hindercorns not conduc¬
ive to walking; remove them
Piso’s Cure for Consumption F. Hardy, has saved Hopkins me
many a doctor’s bill.—S.
Place, Baltimore, Mil., Dec. 2, ’94.
Hrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for child ran
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion ailavs pain,cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
If afflicted wl(h soreeyesuse Dr. Isaac Thomp
gon’s’Eyp- water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle.
Always
Taking cold is a common complaint. It Is
due to impure and deficient blood, and It
often lends to serious troubles. The remedy
is found in pure, rioh blood, and the one
true blood purifier is
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
IfOOU $ flilio rlliS act harmoniously Sarsaparilla- with 85c.
Hood’s
P oor soil
and exhausted fields which
were once productive can again
be made profitably fertile
by a proper rotation of crops
and by the intelligent use of
fertilizers containing high per¬
centages of
Potash.
IT
Strikingly profitable results
have been obtained by follow¬
ing this plan.
Our pamphlets are not advertising 1 circulars boom¬
ing special fertilizers, but are practical works, contain¬
ing latest researches on the subject of fertilization, and
are really helpful to farmers. They are sent free for
the asking.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St.. New York
MARLIN REPEATER.
I 25-20' MAHUN w
Only Made in 25-20 , 32?20, S 3S-4? and 4-1-40 Repeaters Calibres. made.
Solid Top and Slde-ejectlrlg Co.
All other Calibres ready. The Marlin Fire Arms
Catalogue free. New Haven, Conn.
SEND
us your
address
f how to
\ At make $3 a day; absolutely sure; w# fur*
aixh the work and teach you free you
work in the locality where you live;
Bend ub your rddreo* ami w% will explain
the business fully; remeraner we g^iar
’Jw£Jr 1W autee work; a absolutely clear profit sure; o. $3 tor writ# every at -ay's one#.
»• « T. _ MORGAN,
KaBMcer, Box LF, DETROIT, MICHI«JJI.
Drs. Maybe and Mustbe.
You choose the old doctor before the young one. Why?
Because you don’t want to entrust your life in inexperienced
But
when Dr. Mustbe is in reach. Same with medicines as wi
medicine makers-the long-tried remedy has your confidence.
You prefer experience to experiment-when you are conceme .
The new remedy may he good — but let somebody P
The old remedy must be good—judged on its record of
it. choosing AYER’S Sarsa¬
cures. Just one more reason for
parilla in preference to for any half other. century. It has Its been record the s inspires tan . f*
household sarsaparilla a If others be i good
confidence 50 years of cures. may
-
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla must be. You take no chances -a y
take AYER’S Sarsaparilla.
A Chinese Divorce.
—
The American bnmorist should be
glad to learn that loquacity is recog
nized in China as a ground for the di
vorce of a wife. Opportunity for
many jokes is piesented by this fact,
Other causes are neglect of her lord
and master’s family, jealousy, child
Iessness and curiosity. The young
Chinese girl seems born to be ruled
half her life and to rule the other half
unless Fate gives her a too-long
lived mother-in-law. In her home she
is subservient to mother, father and
brothers, working for them all and
looking for no reward in the way of
trips to Europe, diamond rings or sad
die horses. At12 or 13 she marries.
She is then the slave of her mother-in
law, and her term of servitude under
this awe-inspiring person’s rule is apt
chihlhTps !daverv Weari6 ° me ^ ^
Finally the mother-in-law dies, as
they sometimes do even in China, and
onamiMni. ~ imi* Mrs Snn
Flower herself, at once begins her re
gime of authority, rearing her daugh
ters to be submissive and her sons to
be spirited and filled with a healthy
contempt for womankind. And then
when one of these manly individuals
brings home a wife her victory is com
plete, and she bullies and tyrannizes
over her to her heart’s content, and if
she be malicious and the record of a
sad girlhood to avenge, the spirited
son’s wife is apt to have a sad time of
it.
QUEER THINGS.
Milwaukee millers ground 1,576,064
barrels of flour during the year 1894,
against 1,070,860 barrels in 1884,
735,481 barrels in 1874, and 187,339
barrels in 1864.
The receipts of barley malt in Mil¬
waukee last year were 764,705 bushels,
and the shipments 3,055,781 bushels.
Milwaukee is not only a large brewing
but also a malt center.
Chinese records are quoted to prove
that tea was cultivated in that country
at least 2,700 years before Christ, and
it is generally conceded that its use
originated in that region.
Dramatists in France get 12 per
cent, of the gross receipts of each
jilay, and are allowed tickets to the
1 value of 100 francs for every perform¬
ance of such plays as they have writ¬
ten.
It is estimated that 30 per cent of
the iron manufactured by Tennessee is
sold outside of the southern states.
It is said to be the favorite iron with
pipe, plow and stove makers in the
east and the north.
The several species of turnips allap
pear to have brignated in Europe, but
to have early spread under cultivation
into Siberia and ot er par s o s a.
They are still found m Their original
wild state in many paits o nor n
Europe.
Detroit street cars will . not be heat
ed by electricity this winter. The
Citizens’ company at least has come
to this conclusion after an investiga
tion of the state of science with refer
ence to the capacity of electricity to
furnish heat as well as light and me
chanical power.
The ground in Ihe dark coal gas re
gion of Indiana is said to be so perme
ated with the gas that it is dangerous
to drop a match in a well,sewer Several or any
sort of digging in the district.
serious explosions have resulted from
the incautious work of well-eleaners.
We See All of the Sun.
The inhabitants of this earth never
get a glimpse of but one side of the
moon, but in the course of a year
every portion of the sun’s surface is
turned toward ns. This is because the
sun’s equator is almost coincident with
the plane of the ecliptic, the inclina¬
tion being only about seven degrees.—
St. Louis Republic.
A Gentle Hint.
Down by a little running brook
I fir 3 t met Maggie May ;
Her father was a dairyman
Who made the business pay.
—Detroit Free Press.
LABOR’S LEADERS
MEET IN CONVENTION IN NEW
YORK CITY.
President McBride Talks of the Bond
Issues.
The convention ....... of the American
Federation of Labor was opened Mon¬
day morning at Madison Square Gar
den, Ne w York. Labor leaders from
the country, Canada and Great
Britain present to lend them
prestige to the convention as an as
semblage of the leading representa
fives of the organized working class of
! ' ^greatest interest is already dis
P^yed in the election of officers and
j the friends of candidates are actively
canvassing for votes. Samuel Gom
I j Pers, ex-president candidate of the for Federation, the office
is sure to be a
Interest also centers , . the ..
again. m
proposition to remove the headquar
I *ers from Indianapolis,
| The convention will remain in ses
si °n for more than a week. Many m
portant questions will come up lor de
! bate aud action. Among the matters
to be considered is the subject of a
j general movement for the eight-hour
'workday on May 1, 1896.
Wednesday evening there will be a
grand ball and reunion of all the labor
leaders at Madison Square Garden.
Invitations have been sent to meq of
prominence in nearly all the walks of
life.
The convention opened in the as¬
sembly rooms of Madison Square Gar¬
den shortly after 10 o’clock. The hall
was elaborately decorated with hunt¬
ing and streamers and banners of
various labor organizations were
also hung upon the walls. As this
is the first time in twelve years that
the Federation has met in New York
the convention has excited exceptional
local interest and the assembly rooms
and corridors were crowded some time
before the proceedings began.
John McBride, the president of the
Federation, called the convention to
order and introdcced J. W. Sullivan,
of New York, who delivered the ad¬
dress of welcome.
President McBride responded in ap¬
propriate terms. He handled in a
vigorous fashion all the questions of
the day.
Roasts the Bond Deal.
■ On the recent issue of government
bonds President McBride talked some
erfme^of ‘the nine
teenth cent and the mo6t remark _
^ ^ perpfltrated upon our people>
wag comm jtted by the national
adm j n j strat j on ]D adding to the bonded
indebtedness of our country daring a
time of peace.
“The attempt to maintain a gold re¬
gerve 0 f one hundred million dollars
^ a con t r act such as was made with
the Belmont-Morgan syndicate was far
c j a [ t 0 gay the least, but a farce only
j n g0 f ar a8 ^ was intended to blind
tp e people to the fact that they were
being robbed, deliberately 8nd unmer
cifully, in the interests of eastern
bankers and bondholders, whose only
desire has been and now is the perpet
nation of a system of bonded indebted
ness of part of the government,
“The wickedness of the bond deal
was exposed to the syndicate advanc¬
ing gold to the government one day
to increase the reserve, and the next
day decreasing the reserve by hand
ing in national securities and getting
gold for them, and with this gold pur
chasing new bonds having a long lease
of life. The eastern bankers, if per
mitted, will continue draining the
gold reserve until new bonds replace
the old ones, and an interest-bearing
indebtedness has again been establish
®d, and the life of the national banks
prolonged beyond the present genera¬
tion of men.
“The bankers are not in Lusiness
for their health, and they do not care
what misery they plunge the people
into; how embarrassed the government
becomes or how heavy the people are
taxed, so long as their profits are as¬
sured; and why should they? They
are not to blame. It is humiliating,
however, to think, at the close of the
nineteenth century, that a national
administration can be found supine
enough, or corrupt enough, to permit
the government to be held np and
plundered as ours has been plundered
during the last year and a half.
“In the earlier days of this govern
ment, when statesmen anil not politi
ciana were guiding the ship of state,
the banks were subordinate to the gov
ernment, but today the government
is at the mercy of the banks, and the
bankers dictate our system of finance
and laugh at the protests of the
people against the tyranny of their
rule. You should not only protest by
resolution against the crime commit
ted, but bring your influence to bear
upon your representatives in congress
to the end that they may provide
against a repetition or a continuance
of this great crime. ”
Sixty Known to Be Dead.
According to the latest advices from
Calsarea, Asia Minor, sixty Armenians
are known to have been killed in the
massacre there on November 30th.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
1 Si ft Dtaking Powder
m
AB&eiOTm PURE
Preparing for tlie Worst.
Tourist—Hello, uncle! Where are
you going with that cart-load of chick¬
ens?
Uncle-I done gwine . kyardem
chickens cleam out f om ol Lain tuck,
Tourist-What are you going to do
Uncle-Case I done got some p’ints
on some quar doin’s dat’s gwine tu’n
up when did yer man Bradley be n sot
m degub nor scha r.
Tourist-Indeed! What’s going to
happen then i
Uncle—Dey done say dat he’s gwine
waxinate dis yer state wid dat Raoze
welp bizness what dey be’n wukkiu
down ter New York, an’ ef dat’s de
case dis nigga’s boun’ ter hab dese
chickens whar dey won’ be ’rested fo’
layin’ egg's on Sund’y.—Richmond
Dispatch.
£1
"you can.
Some say that the hypo
phosphites alone are sufficient
to prevent and cure consump¬
tion, if taken in time. With¬
out doubt they exert great
good in the beginning stages;
they improve the appetite, pro¬
mote digestion and tone up
the nervous system. But they
lack the peculiar medicinal
properties, and the fat, found
in cod-liver oil. The hypo
phosphites are valuable and
the cod-liver oil is valuable.
Scott! onud&icTL
of Cod-liver Oil, with hypo
phosphites, contains both of
these in the most desirable
form. The oil is thoroughly
emulsified; that is, partly di¬
gested. Sensitive stomachs
can bear an emulsion when
the raw oil cannot be retained.
As the hypophosphites, the
medicinal agents in the oil,
and the fat itself are each good,
why not have the benefit of
all? This combination has
stood the test of twenty years
and has never been equalled.
SCOTT’SEMULSION
has beei endorsed by the medical profession for twenty
years. (Ask your doctor .) This is because it is always
;palatable —always uniform —always contains the purest
Norwegian Insist Cod-liver Scott’s Emulsion Oil and Hypophosphites. with trade-mark of
on
man and fish.
Put up in 50 cent and $ 1.00 sizes. The small size
may be enough to cure your cough or help your baby.
the akrutotor CO. (Joss half the worm’s
a houses, ana supplies its gowjs and ■
^ . article fl'r
bettor le»smone» than
ggjffjjggd. “teSfoaivS^afwr. Tilting
completion windmills.
vj&k i usual price it also manes
JMraar , 1 st at /3 the
F “' ory ‘
OSBORNE’S
luwnedd
AND
School of Shorthand
auguhta, business ga. from day of
No text books used. Actual
ltering. Business papers, college curr-noy an l
CO ods used. Send for handsome!v illustrated CHA¬
lot gue. Board cheaper than in any Southern city.
On One Acre of
iswliatMr. Louis
Treadway made.
t YOU CAN DO as
WELL by getting the best plants, which are furnished by
W. D. BEATIE, Atlanta, Georgia. Catalogue
FREE.
!
Timely Warning.
-> The great success of the chocolate preparations of
r'J the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established
in 1780) has led to the placing on the market
many misleading and unscrupulous imitations
r of their labels, and wrappers. Walter
' name,
\ 1 Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu
facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and
■ Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are
used in their manufactures.
Consumers should ask for, and be sure that
t „_r-' they get, the genuine Walter Baker 8t Co.’s goods.
WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited,
DORCHESTER, MASS.
Efficacy of Hot Milk.
Hot milk for the complexion has
proved to be of the greatest benefit,
and many women say they owe an im¬
provement of their complexion to th®
constant use of hot milk applied every
morning and night to their faces.
Here is what a woman prominent in
the literary world, aud whose complex¬
ion is equal to a young girl’s, says:
“When I am frightfully fatigued from
the rush of the life I lead, I get a gal¬
lon of milk for 30 cents aud put it in
my bathtub, adding sufficient hot
water to cover the body. I lie in this
mixture for ten minutes and come out
feeling thoroughly refreshed and with
a new life to the skin, which, previous
to the bath, had a dead look."
"O^IRC^TORjrGN AnANTArtposmo^
A List of Reliable Business Houses
where visitors to the Great Show
will be properly treated and can
purchase goods at lowest prices.
STILSON * COLLINS
JEWELRY CO M
55 Whitehall St.. Atlanta. Ga.
Everything in the Jewelry and Silver
Tine at Factory Trices.
C/M' teA
FINE MILUNiWC
78 WN / TEH ALL S T.
Atlanta. Ga.
D TO AVOID THIS TTJSIMS
o N. TETTERINE
5 The ONLY painless and harm less
C ▼ CXJitK for the worst, type of Eczema,
R I Tetter, Ringworm, face, ugly rough patch¬ soalp.
i es on the ornetea
T Ground itch, chafes, chaps, pim¬
ples. Poison from ivy or poise -S-go oak,
p In short all itches. Send 0. in
Li W y - tamps or cash to J. T. Shu rine,
Savannah, don’t Ga., for one box, your
druggist keep it. Atlanta.
You will find it at Chas. O. Tvmcu’s,
For Slyle, Wear and Comfort,
14 WHitoHall St.
mu ~—r him— mirurw
ASTHMA
FOPKAM’S ASTHMA SPECIFIC
y Gives relief in FI?B minutes. Send
ilS for a FREE trial package. Sold by
p ii Druggists. on receipt of One $1.00. Box Six sent boxes postpaid $6.00.
H Address THUS. FOPHifl, BillLA., PA.
An Unheard of Offer !
'■SU This $55.00 Full Leather Top, Genuine
Columbus Buggy with ahurtH, sent ant*
' where for examination on r««
sj fal // \. ceiptof$5. if desired. None Brewster better Springs retailed
s.Ag /
it $100. Absolute guar ant##
for one year. If exactly &#
represented, pay nearest bank
the balance, $50. Price $33 8$
ASH WITH ORDER Draft, registered letter or money order. -~4
Buy direct. '£nve dealer’s American Boggy Co. r.Ol.L’JOD>!
t an d sotae profits Ohio.
PARKER’S
„ HAIR BALSAM
■ Cleanses and beautifies the hair.
■ Promotes a luxuriant Ilestore growth. Gray
■ ■ Never Fails to Color.
Hair to itB Youthful
■ Cures 50c, scalp and <Jisi*o>c*s $1.00 Sc Druggists hair falling.
7] at
I CTS CL GUHfcS WHERE All ELSE FAILS. EJ
Best rough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use ^
25 in time. Sold by dr ugg ists. ..RQp WH
% ■ consumption
A. N. U Fifty, ’95.