Newspaper Page Text
T. ’W.
Dealer in Furniture,
Mv goods are the latest designs and direct from the factories.
I have a full line of COFFINS AND CASKETS cheap. •.
Call &see my goods. First door west Drugstore
Summerville, - , -. Ga.
I
1.1. i 1
PIANOS AND ORGANS.
118 and 120 West Eighth Street, Chattanooga, Tenn.
The Leading Music House of the City.
We carry the largest stock, sell at the lowest
prices andon the Easiest Terms of any firm
in the south.
pflfiniF
E BAKING, COOKING and ROASTING.
IS ATTAINED UY THE USE OF THE CELEBRATED
NEW SUNSHINE RANCE,
Which wo make In four without RESERVOIR,
NIGH SHELF,HIGH CLOSET, LOW CLOSET s WATER-BACK.
IfRH Can heat your house thorough- ,
Villi ly» HEALTHFULLY and ECO-
W UV NOMICALLY with the |
■ TORRID STEEL DRUM FURNACE. \ «
Those who use the TORRID always praise VtJL ;r3ESks<l
It. Send for FURNACE BOOK giving heat- W|
Ing capacity and prices.
ORR PAINTER & CO., reading, pa.
COLT’S -A? j
LIGHTNING MAGAZINE
SHOT
of all kinds.
COLT’S PATENT
IRE ARMS MFG. CO.,
HARTFORD, >
MENTION THIB PAPER. ' CONN.
t INDURATED FIBRE WARE.
ABSOLUTELY ONE PIECE!
HAS NO HOOPS!
NEITHER PAINTED OR VARNISHED!
not affected by hot water!
HAS APPEARANCE OF POLISHED MAHOGANY.
PAILS, TUBS, BASINS, PANS, KEELERS, SPITTOONS,
SLOP-JARS, WATER-COOLERS, REFRIGERATORS, &C., &C.
LARGE VARIETY OF GOODS.
CORDLEY & HAYES, New York, Sole Agents.
Factories: Portland, Me-. Peterboro, N. H , Watertown, Mass.,
Oswego, N. Y-, Lockport, N. Y., Cleveland, Ohio, Winona, Minn.
FOR SALE BY ALL HOUSE FURNISHING, HARDWARE, GROCERY AND CROCKERY DEALERS.
FULL PRICE LIST AND CATALOGUE FREE ON APPLICATION,
WnDTimnD’Q
MuMliluUr U Paneled Metal Ceilings.
I .'v ■ T
• ■
1 Ji -L Jte. L •*.
NfA: A r I f ( GTiVS
foal NIA ► ..< ui.tL.
1 APFcARArCc.
FIRE PROOF Aliß SAVI UJSUIUKCh win not siain, crack or fail off like plaster, I
PAD CCJM IRnhi A STEEL ROOFING Can be put on over old broken plaster with
. ’S 1 X,=,s,s, --
A« x NORTHROP &> CO. > pittobcrch, pa,
Armed With Credentials.
A colored man wa% going tip
Brush street the other evening with
a watermelon in a wicker baby cart
when he encountered a patrolman
and at once came to a standstill,
“Well?” quiried the officer.
“Wall?” quiried the negro.
“1 see you have a melon there.
It being so early in the evening 1
shall not —”
“Oh, I’se all fixed for dat, salt.
Jistlook at dat,” He pulled a. pa
per from his pocket which read :
“The bearer of this is O. K. He
paid me forty cents for the accom
panying melon.
“J. Blank, Grocer.”
“H’m,” said the officer as he re
turned the paper.
“H'm,” echoed the colored man,
as he picked up his feet and moved
away.—Detroit Free Press.
A Prohibition Town.
“So this is a prohibition town?”
said a drummer to a landlord of a
small local option town in Texas.
“Yes, we don’t allow- any liquor
to be sold if we can possibly prevent
it; but sir,there are men in this
town so utterly devoid of honor and
principle that for twenty cents they
will peddle out this liquid damna
tion. What do you think of such
an unprincipled scoundrel?”
“It strikes me it is a mere mat
ter of business. Where can I find
that unprincipled scoundrel?”
“I am the man. Follow me.”
When the drummer returned his
moustache was moist and he was
out a quarter.—Texas Siftings.
Mr. Guiteau, of Freeport, 111., a
man about 45 years of age and a
man of good manners and gentle
manly bearing, has just accepted a
position as engineer on the Ala
bama Great Southern railroad. He
is a first cousin to the famous Chas.
J. Guiteau, who shot President Jas.
A Garfield and was afterwards ex
ecuted for the crime. As he sat in
the Alabama Great Southern office
this morning he talked about
“Cousin ( harley.” When approach
ed on that subject, he said :
“Yes, he was my own first cousin,
my father and his father being
brothers, I knew him nearly all
my life. Charley always was a
crank,though, and it was thought
that he would do some rash act
sooner or later.”
Engineer Guiteau very slightly
resembles “Charley,” but one could
not tel) it unless he knew that they
were related. He will probably
reside here permanently.— Birming
ham Evening News.
Attilla’s Humor.
What docs Gen. Sheridan mean
when he speaks of taking 100,000 of
bis “bummers,” and the “bummer’s
sons” to go south, with the govern
ment’s permission to finish up th',
job in which he was engaged in
Georgia in 1864-5.
This is a queer deliverance. But
the general says : “The truth is,
these incidents come back to me in
I a humorous vein.”
If there is any humor in this
there are millions of people who
will fail to apreciate it. Cities and
towns destroyed, states given over
to the torch and the sword, famish
ing women and children driven to
the woods to escape a brutal sol
diery—these are some of the inci
dents which now provoke Sherman’s
mirth.
This little incident places the (
modern Attilla in a new light. It
seems that he is not altogether dev
oid of humor. And yet it may oc- (
cur to some that he is more worthy
of respect in his sterner moods th a
in his merrier moments. Tin (
facts speak’for themselves.—Con
stitution.
“I’m going to feed that hen of
mine on sugar of lead.”
“What an idea !”
“I want to see if I can make a
typesetter of her.”—Harper’s Ba
zar.
A girl caught the small pox on a
Pacific Mail steamer and her father
has sued the company for .$25,000.
It is not enough that the patient is
pitted. Something more substan- ,
tial than sympathy is wanted.
OIL USED AS FUEL,
I
It Is Troublesome and Much Cheaper ■
i Than Coal.
j An editorial in a recent issue of a (
‘Cincinnati paper urges the manufact-|
urers of Cincinnati to consider the
?,uestion of using crude petroleum as
uel. Investigation shows that Cin
cinnati is behind many other cities in
the use of the liquid fuel which is
found in such abundance in Ohio and
within such easy access of that city.
Cleveland manufactures and uses
the Lima oil extensively as fuel, and
jis even experimenting with good re
sults in the direction of converting it
into a gas for fuel purposes. Chicago (
is using 10,000 barrels a day of the I
new fuel. Even the town of Hamil
ton, 0., has made more progress in
this direction than Cincinnati. A
gentleman just returned from Hamil
ton says the number of oil cars he saw
on the sidings led him to make some
investigations. He found a large
flour mill which is running three 100-
Ihorse power boilers with Lima oil as
fuel. These boilers required nine
tons of coal for a twenty-four hours’ |
run, at $2 a ton, making $lB a day.
The same boilers are run with twen
ty-eight, barrels of oil, costing 50 cents
a barrel at Hamilton, a total of sl4.
.Two stokers and coal shovelers were
dispensed with, making a saving of $3
a day for labor. Tim saving in
shovels,' wheelbarrows, grate bars,
cto., tor this establishment is estimated
Iby the proprietors at $2 a day, making
the total daily expense of oil sl4
lagainst $23 for coal. The oil is said
to furnish ono-third more power than
the coal, with less wear and tear on the
■boilers. At other factories in Hamil
ton boilers are run with gas made
from Lima oil.
. Nearly every town of any conse
quence in Ohio uses more or less Lima
oil as fuel. In Harrisburg, Pa., a firm
that has a contract with the govern
iment for furnishing steel for steel
■clad ships uses gas from Lima oil for
melting steel billets. This firm states
that they are able to melt a ton of
steel billots from gas made from three
(gallons of oil, and regard it as one of
the most important discoveries of the
age for the manufacture of steel.
There are fifty of these gas plants now
in operation, and one is being erected
at Johnstown, Pa. Business men who
are watching the progress of liquid
fuel believe that within a year 150,000
barrels a day will be used for this pur
pose.
The Lima Oil company is composed
]Of Ohio oil producers, and is entirely
outside of the Standard oil company,
has 200 cars of its own, and every one
of the number is kept busy day and
night. This company has made con
tracts to furnish oil in Hamilton, 0.,
for two years at 50 cents a barrel. The
amount of this oil that is being pro
duced in Ohio is much greater than
the public generally supposes.
| The total output of the wells is not
under 1,000,000 a month. When the
actual gauges shown less production
it is when the largo wells are shut in
and are not allowed to yield up their
full capacity. This is the case at this
time, owing to the inability of the pipe
lines to handle all the oil that could
bo produced. The Standard Oil com
ipany pays the producers 15 cents a
barrel for the oil at the wells, and the
(fact that they have now 9,000,000 bar
rels in tanks in the region is evidence
that, they belie,vo in its future. The
tanks ii.i which the oil is stored arc
taken down and removed from the
Pennsylvania fields where so much
(tankage is no longer needed. The oil
is now being used for fuel purposes in
•twelve states and territories, and it is
not unlikely to ultimately take the
place of coal for manufacturing pur
poses, except in the vicinity of coal
mi nes. —( i 1 obe-1 Iciuoerat.
Sir Morell Mackenzie*!* Family.
Dr. Sir Morell Mackenzie has a fam
ily consisting of a wife, two sons and
three daughters. One son is on the
stage under the name of 11. If. Morell,
while the other follows his fathar’s
profession. Each of the daughters
has a special talent, which she is given
every opportunity for cultivating.
Eth< 1, the oldest daughter, has a taste
for journalism, and i; the London cor
respondent of u Philadelphia paper;
Hilda, 1 lie second daughter, aspires to
bean artist, and has a studio,’where
she paints industriously; while Olga,
the youngest, i~ a musician, and has
done sorr thing in the way of original
composition. While writing his now
’famous book, “Frederick the Noble,”
Dr. Mackenzie shut himself,up in a
room at Ihnnpstead road for six weeks,
working almost night and day until
it was finished.—Harper’s Bazar.
Ixiynl to 111 ; Wlfi-’B Memory.
M. Jean Aubert, whose pictures of
Cupid;; and nymphs find so ready a
sale in this country, married an Amer-!
lean woman, for whose death, some
four years ago, he is still inconsolable.
Her room is left just as it was when
she died, and every day her husband
lays a bunch of fresh Howers on her
pillow. ()no would hardly suspect M.
Aubert of so much sentiment to see
him. He is apparently the jollicst of
mortals, short and stout, with merry
eyes and a quizzical expression about
the mouth.—Harper's Bazar.
Spellfl Ixi JFnslifih Fashion.
The. fact that William D. Howells,
the novelist, spells in English fashion
has always caused comment from
Americans. “Honour,” “parlour,”
etc., are to bo found in the BostonianV
works. The explanation is that he has
his works setirp in Great Britain in
order to secure English copyrigh t. But
what ho gains in copyright he loses in
wrong spelling.—New York World.
Railway Ext eu* lon in IJrazll.
Several South Americans just now
are in London pushing an imposing
scheme for railway extension in Bra
zil. It is proposed to construct a line
from Pernambuco across Braid! and
the Paraguay and the Entry Rios
region to the Argentine town of Santa
Fe, there to connect with a transan
dina railway for Vajjianiiso, Three
hundred and fifty million milrelsare
wanted for tho joo,—Frank Leslie's.
SiIHAT FISHT
PJ The Original Wins.
?C E. Simmons, St. Louis, Prop’r
6 1 M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine, Est’d
f I xß.p, in the U. S. Court defeats J.
Prop’r A. Q. Simmons Liv
er Regulator, Est’d by ZeiliniS6B.
■ "M* M. has for 47 years
1 PH curc d Indigestion, Biliousness,*
1 /M Dyspepsia,Sick Headache,Lost
1/ Appetite, Sour Stomal*, Etc.
W A Rev. T. B. Reams, Pastor M. E.
V omi Church, Adams, Tenn., writes: “1
w. Ithink I should have been dead but
W | tor your Genuine M. A. Sim-
mons Liver Medicine. I have
IfRiRD/XS som .etimes had to substitute
I I OFrst] “Zeilin’s stuff” for your Modi-
I l ' I c * nc > bul >t don’t answer the
I l^ No / Purpose.”
/ Dr. J. R. Graves, Editor 77te
ist , Memphis, Tenn, says:
| I I received a package of your Li ver
A Medicine, and have used half of it.
A ¥ It works like a charm. I want no
P V X better Liver Regulator and c<.r
»■' •■ \ tainly uo more Zexlin’s mixture,
BMMM———t—w—MltetW
I CURE
FITS!
When I flay Ou»ri I do not mean merely to
stop them for a time, and then have them
turn again. I mean A RADICAL CURE.
I have made the disease of
FITS, EPILEPSY or
FALLING SICKNESS,
A life-long study. I warrant my remedy to
Cuttß the worst cases. Because others have
failed is no re ason for not now receiving a cure.
Send at once for a treatise and a Frkkßottlk
of my Infallible Remedy. Give Express
and Post Office. It costs you nothing tor a
trial, and it will cure you. Address
H. C. ROOT, M.C., 183 Punt Sr., New York
tfnrurß- ' i ■SK'.-’X*. <^ff-.nncaMCTMiiAi—O ITI r—tda—M—bH
ThiA nvaluable production is a suitable
■ Ulicib. lining with a pattern of a Lady’s waist
ind sleeves printed thereon, with a line indi
cating where to cut and one where to
rhu« avoiding the expense and use of a pape
pattern, mid transforming the most perplexing
pari of dressmaking into simplest. Ask your
dealer for them, and if he has not got them,
lake your measure around the bust under the
arms and send for them to
Slz.ey from JB7 to 3-1 corl 39c.
“ “ 3A “ <<> •* 45c.
•• “ 41 ** 44 “ 4Hc., In nil color*.
Send cxtrxi Sc. to pay poMtngre for each.
M. KAEMPFER, 343 Broadway, N.Y.
This Stay has become a triumphant and
perfect substitute for whalebone, being more
durable, and far cheaper; it is so constructed
as to be firm at the girdle, becoming gradually
flexible and elastic towanls the ends, where it
is provided with an eyelet by means of which
they are are secured to the casing and effectu
ally prevented from injuring the faliric.
Dressmakers recognize it* advantages, as it If
essential to comfort and ease, as well as for
the production of n perfect fitting waist. Ask
your deah'r for them, and if he has not got
them, send 20 •- for sample dozen of any size,
or assorted, (6 in. to 14 in.) to
M. KAEMPFER, 343 Broadway, fi.P
Cfotap, Boras £ Cobrabus
RAILROAD.
SCHEDULE in EEEECT July, 7, 188!'
No. 1. TRAIN 8 lies DA I I.Y. No. 2.
south nous i >; STATIONS* noiithrovni
READ DOWN READ VI
4j 9.00 mu < 'liotlnnooga. A 6.10 |>«:
“ 9.05 “ Shops “ 6.05 “
Rossville
“ 9.26 “ . M ission Ridge . “ 5.40 “
“ 9.10 “ .Crawfish Spring. ** 5.30 11
“ 9.52 “. . . Rock Spring “ 5.20 “
“ 10.12 “ .... LaEa\ 0tt0.... “ 5.01
“ 10.20 “ . . .< J uil«l . . “ 4.50 “
“ lo.i'i •• . Martindale . “ 4.42 ~
“ 10.48 “ . .Trion . “ 4.21 “
“ 11.00 “ . ..Summ-i ville. . 11 4.12 ••
“JI. JI “ Raccoon Mills “ 1.01 “
h 11.22 “ . . . Lv< I : .. •* 3.50 *•
“ 11.-.5 “. . .cl.'rki' 3.3 S 11
“ 11.40 “ . Hollands “ 3.33 *•
11 11.... S “ Camp “ 3.15
l.a-.-e mlcr. “ 1
“ 12.18 pm It Al> .Junction “ 2.54 “
A 12.30 11 . . Rome . L 2.10 “
I. 12. > ■ . . “ A 2.35 “
“ 12.10 “ . Eii. t Rua. “ 2.30 11
11 12.53 “ Silver Creek... 11 2.16 “
“ 1.07 “ . Summit “ 23 2 “
“ 1.45 “ ...Cedartown . “ 1.25 “
“ “ .Youngs... “
“ 2.12 “ . Dug Down. “ 12.58 11
“ 2.42 “ Jhteluman. . “ 12.35 “
A 3.00 “ . Kram r “ 12.15 11
L 3.40 “
“ 3.57 “ .. . . Mandeville .. “ 12.01 pm
A 4.15 “ .... Carrollton ... I> 11.45 am
Cfcm. hlUt)
No. 3. DAILY SERVICE. NO. 4.
BEADDOWN - KE.IDVI
I. 4.50 pm Chattanooga. A 19.20 an
“ 4.57 “ Shops . . “ 10.|.-, ■
“ 5.16 11 Mission Ridge •* 9.52 “
“ 7.30 *• Crnwlisli Spring “ 9.49 “
'• 5.41 '• Itm-k S;n imr . “ 9.29 “
“ (>.OO I.a !<’:i • ••11 < ... “ 9.08 “•
“ 6.10 “.. . Olii! } . . . “ - ..’S 11
'■ 6.18 •• . .Martindale, . “ 8.70 “
“ (>.35 “ . .Trion . “ 8.3 J “
“ 6.46 •* .SunimcrA i’l •. “ 8.22 “
6.57 11 . Raccoon Mills 11 s.H ••
“ 7.08 “ . Lv< rly “ 8.00 “
7.20 “ . .Clark “ 7.
“ 7.25 “ .Holland 11 7.1.; “
11 7.44 . Camp. 11 7.24 “
“ 8.05 “ .R. A'l>. .Junction. “ 7.01 “
A 8.15 “ Homo ..... 11 . 6.50 L
L 8.20 “ “ <> 6.45 A
•• 8.25 “ ... .East Rome “ 6.44 “
“ 8.39 “ Silver Creek .“ 6.30 “
“ 8.54 “ .Summit. “ 6.17 “
A 9.10 “ Cedartown L 6.00 11
, CONNECTIONS.
At Chattanooga with all roads leading
out of that place.
At Rome with E. T., V. A tin., Rome
ami It. <t D. railroads, and with Whit'
Star Line Steamers.
At Cedar I "•..n vith tin E. ,V W. road
At Kr im; r with <4a. Padiic rad:
At Cafrollton with Central It R
Georgia. A. M< i•( ;LLI S I'EI; ’ ‘ ,
Asst, i,i rl. Pass. A ft.
.ILSo ■ ; r.n, n. a. ren.u.:,
JGen 1 Mangr. Supcilntenden.
Brno®
-S
ill
CO.NN. t/ -
PATENTS.
Caveats and Trade Marks obtained
and all patent business conducted for
M O DKK ATH Fl-: ES.
Our oilice is opposite (lie U. S. Patent
OlHce and we can secure patent in less
time than those remote, from Washing
ton. Send model, drawing or photo,
with description. Wo advise if patent
able or not, free of charge. Our fee is
not duo till patent is secured.
A Pamphlet, “How to Obtain Pat
ents,” with name of actual clients in
your State, county, or town, sent free.
Address,
c. A. SNOW & CO,
Opr. Patent Office,Washington,D.C.
RUBBER STAMPS.
Manufactured by
Clipper Stamp Works.
ROME, GA.
All Yindc Rubber Printing
rill AlllUk) st ain p g made to
order. Send for prices.
oun i. "
| AWEEKf*
O|4> I
mg while as con venient V
03$ to the buyer as any \\ /1
Sfl instalment system, is ’m /-□
flfaS a whale sale i/ at cash BQE
to us. The V
co-operation of the //S
HtTQ club members sells us
LluMff q 8 watches in each PH I LA. ... ~„r
Jidt; S3B Watch Club, and we get cash from InK
ISg the Club for each watch before it goes
out, though each member only
« niore for your money than any one else |||igß
I .fi an( ! wh Y we are doing the largest
watch business in the world. We sell
Kfi only first quality goods, but ourflNnM
[UjsT prices are about what others get for sec- mMr
j|3u ond quality. OurflO MlrerWa tch
, ||& » is a substantial Silver (nat imitation
Rg « any kind) Stem-Wind American Lever
MS 1 ' Watch—either hunting case or open.H&gw
In 5 Our S 55.00 Wutcli is a Stem-wind. lIaMM
||2 1 OpcnFace, first quality, stiffened Gold 0801
Jl* & AmericanLevcrWat(h,r7/rtrrtw/r<///o IMK
Bl wear 20years. It is fully equal to any
TOill'iH watc h B °ld for by others. We findMMi|
WgM a first-class Stiffened Gold Case much
more satisfactory and serviceable than
Iflll any Solid Gold Case that can be sold at glp|
■s~g less than double the money, as cheap gn||
BSff solid cases arc invariably thin, weak, flJgli
of low quality, and worthless after $E|
UgR short use. Our S3B Wutcli contains
numerous important patented im
provements, of vital importance to accur-l ||Wi£!
ate timing— Patent Dust/ roof, Patent Stem IrM i
tP7n,l, &c., which wc control exclusively. It ga i
isfully equal for accuracy, appearance, dura
bility and service, to any f 75 Watch, either 00
Open Face or Hunting. Om-$43.00 Holl- JiGp
road Watch is especially constructed for U®
the most exacting use, and is the best Rail
road Watch made. Open Face or Hunting,
All these prices are cither all cash or in clubs,
SI.OO 11 week. An Ajax Watch 1/ ! I ||M
Insula.ur given fret with sadi Watch. iTatf
•Uln Office in Cc’s Own Building
004 WALNUT ST. PHILADA. PA. W
Agents Wanted. 4$ I
Ajax Watch Insulator, SI.OO \| bi ill
A perfect i»rottictl<>n agnlnst magnetism..) y.-., yk CT Sr 1
/•tlirny Sent bj'mail on receipt, [
of price. ClZ’ ' rrjf rtn any Commercial i
Maui HOM FLOWKRS in THK
LAND OF FLOWERS I
DOUSSAN’S
Sweet South
In 1 ox. Bprlnkler-Top Bottle*.
EACHJSS CENTS.
AIJIO OUR EXTRA FINE SPECIALTIES.
LYS DES INCAS I SPRING MIST I
LUNEASI NEVADA I
IMPERIAL PINK I
ROUSSEL ROSE
EDEN BOUQUET!
LILY OF THE VALLEY I
All SO eent* per bottle. PICCIOLA I
The moit delicate and moat lasting odors nad«.
Our trade-mark patented on every label.
“Delicate as a cobweb.
Lasting as the hills.”
tlTIf your druggist don’t keep them *on4
Amount to u* and we will forward prepaid.
DOUSSAN FRENCH PERFUMERY CO. 1
AO Chartr.a AL, New Orleans. Im. •
«IkG hasglven univer
tl Kallsfactloii In the
ire of Gonorrbeps And
leet. I prescribe Hand
el safe In recommer d
g it to all sufferers.
A. J. STONER. M.D..
Decatur, 111.
TRICE, 81.00.
Bold by Druggists.
Solid Oold w.tcb.nnvii'H
S I /V.if IN» -*uh In th. world. H n H H
I 1«I»« <im«k.r P «r. W.rJL lljjlj
t Oify H.»ry Solid Oold
C “"- !•'««*
r 'K’’"'’ S’“” • it... With work.
Lrb ßn<l of equal ralu.
j VWOnePer..»n io.acb 10.
V’v. mltiy can accurc one free,
. together with our large and val-
x’-'*. ---;. uable line of I<<iufi«*hol<!
Siimplcu. These samples, cs
j- Wc -t *i ,e watch, we send
** Free, and after you have kepi
.h«-m in y.;ur heme for 5 months au-l shown them to those
•t.’io :u i y .-are called, they become your own propeflj. Tho.®
’ , . be »um of rt'rxtrint; the V’r.trli
**!«*'• We pay ail eiprcs.', tr*'if txt, etc. Arfdr-M
dfujt/u Box l’a» tl^ud 4 Aluiue.