The Morgan monitor. (Morgan, Ga.) 1896-????, July 02, 1897, Image 4

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HUDSON RIVER EACLES. A Famous Breeding Place for the King of Birds. that it 18 sometimes called “ Eagle s Neat, says a correspondent of the St. Louis Republic The eagles of Storm King have, m they ever evTr’d had any. D During tb the m0 piiau T fishing season they will approach with- in a few feet of the fishermen when they are hauling their nets, and arc fish. Y\ hen the fishermen are clean ing fish on shore they will often op- proach the cleaning platform arid help themselves to the offal that cornea from the fish prepared for salting and smoking. They have been known alight on the outriggers of a fisher man-, sWif and become interested observers of the process of hauling a is always appreciated and taken, After ■which the grateful bird, after a few JTg^ng^t^ks^'TttlnioTbT hX, devour fastnesses of the to i.s quarry in solitude or to satisfy the hunger of its voracious pair of eaglets frfends The shad fisherman are great of the eagles, and would not harm one. The best time to see the eagles of Etorm King Mountain is in the early morning. At the first break of day thev are astir, and can he seen on the tongues of rock which jn, out into .1* river at many 1 points on the high- • lands, 11 splashing , , and . playing , . in . tho water. This can be seen every morn inrr ‘ 4 it ■ ing, except ^^,. \Wion the ice covers the •** srr r* ~t ; “ ,r-' too cold for them to wash in. It is a strange trait of this bird that when at liberty it is clean to a nic-tv ‘ hut * xi hen i t. kepi in captivity .. .. m . a cage or rath it becomes careless and filthy. The first ravs of the morning sun arc _____ greeted . , by a tho birds , • j with n screams and demonstrations of joy. Gathering their powerful pinions underneath them they mount thousand, effect into the air, screaming with delight and heading straight into the rays of the blazing 0 sun. fry. I here is . one old ,, eagle 1 in ■ tho .1 cl. Storm King flock which the fishermen have named Harvey Birch, after the hero of J. Fenimore Cooper’s tale, “The Spy.” It is claimed that this old eagle, a male, has bcot. known in the highlands for nearly, if not quite, a century. He is known from a pecu- liar droop in one of his wings and his habit of flying sideways, and the fur- ther fact that ho is hoary with age. The bird is supposed to have been shot by woodchoppcrs many years ago and escaped. He was named Harvey Bireh because of his having been seen on the particular mountain near Gar- risons, where Enoch Crosby, alias Harvey Birch, tho patriot spy of tbe Revolution, had the cave where he nseil to meet and confer with NVash- to « ton - Kre tho Farowoll Is Spoken On 11 ,.. .look of , 1 ... earner, nr on hoard train that is to bear you away from thoso .io Imweda^LVTn of you, that safeguard against flitipp* lothe fortifying Pse ami savin k propel tin. of great Ionic for oonsUpailoii, hi lousne s, malarial and kidney complaints and n. rious uess. m __ Considering the fast that it always get roasted the peanut manages to preserve Its heetlultiess. Fits permanently eared. No"(its or nervous- neiwftftftr first day’s use of I>r. Kline’s Great .^k'linr, Md*s't.J 1 ---------------- We hftvfl not been without PIho’ 9 Cure for Consumption for 20 years. -Lizzik Fkrrkei . Camp st., liarriaburg. i»a., May 4, ’ 94 . v ii w«itb»itTp Catarilfiure r>. i • ii ■ Ky., says: "Hail’* <-ure« vvoiy cite that takoa it.” Sold by Druggists, Tfic. Mrs. Winslow's soothing Syrup for children toothing, softons tho gums, reduces InQamm.t . 1 . u r,-'.,, 1 ........ GAINED IN STRENGTH vv«* Confinod to the Bed Moet of the Time— The Remedy. ”1 was much rundown Inhealth and had to keep my bed tho greater part ot tho time. I had no appetite and did not rest well nights. X began taking Hood's Sarsa- partita and my appetite returned and 1 gained strength rapidly, and soon felt like a new man. I attribute my escape from illness of nny kind th© past winter to tak- Ing Hood’s Sarsaparilla.” Aim, Mikur. A rthur, New York . Get Hoods. U llByU ..J I. 8 mil- rallS the beat family cathartic, ras, to operate. Stic. _ MEDICAL DEPARTMENT Tulane University of Louisiana. It* advantages for practical Instruction, bvth to th© great Charity Hospital with ioo bods and 80,000 patients annually. Special lustra©- tlon in given daily at tho beside of the td<*k. The next session begins October nth, 1807. For C *Pi«f U< S* I * aVi n 1 M*’n K OH i R ,, * wi\o. xk w OKIE a sms PER DAY SHIRE Salary or Commission, DO yxm mm AwowNr, titady mphymem the yaenura. atJ 006 wages. t!yot,y ovn Vt f»n:sh tvsiof iwii» rtftmets. AMERICAN TEA CO. OitRorr. Michigan.' Sweetness and Light. Put a pill in the pulpit if you want practical preaching for the physioal man ; then put the pill in the pillory if it does not practise what it preaches. There's a whole gospel in Ayer’s Sugar Coated Pills; a " gospel of sweetness and light.” People used to value their physic, as they did their religion,—by its bitterness. The more bitter tho doso tho hotter the doctor. We’ve got over that. Wo take “sugar in ours”— gospel or physic—now-a-days. It’s possible to pleaso and to purge at the samo tiino. There may be power in a pleasant pill. That is the gospel of Ayer’s Cathartic Pills. More pill particulars in Ayer 1 . Curebook, 100 peee*. Sent iree. J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. A VETERAN’S WIFE. Affected With Heart I>l.«x«c and Given i; p to Die—saved in a Won- j In Sew the Yorlc, village than of Mrs. DrookMd John Plak laadtson tho wlteo Co , an old resident and vetoran o tho war of the Rebellion. In April of this year, Mrs heart disease, the family oh^lcTaa physician having htme recommended her to settle all her worldly affairs, as *ho was liable to bo taken at any mlnuto, and Inquiring friends expected at n# ejghhors and phyalclans, suddenly began and to mnnd, and now s’i© to as strong ic althy » woman of her advanced age (76 j aVn-Tiriy as olTUsbe follow- tug (s her own story l of hew she was cured. -i consider it is duty to myself and the community to tell of my extraordinary re- fntut Illness. I hnl long been suffering SSSHKHKS affected funtionally > hreame so and or- ganteally, that the doctor said I was liable Wmto b^agomuithfLl physician. T™ not disposed having to die, done however, if I could help left •». »nd he all ho could, I SLT^L^'LTliTe^md'TTire^im^to^ry Leon a remedy that had rocommondod by a frlond who hri'i been at (loath a door from [TlngTodh,“t1L* Whatever^ 10 ^ “ e ->’ ut who now on bt I may have had as to this remedy's emeo.ey lr. a dissimilar dls- ease, to that from whlsh he had suffered, with S: the name and address of tho person who had been so beaofltod Borov husband , who now was anxious that I should atonoe tako tho trpfttment, purchased for mo a box of Dr.’Williams’ Pink Pills. I took them entirely i^rssfjs-ss-r.'s cured, and able do house- to my work as well as when I was a young woman. "I had always, until I tried Dr. williams' I’irik PI JIb, lookod with suspicion on all ad- vortlaed proprietary medi -iaes, but now my < to* have undergone "wondrous change i <“ dtrsottor, for under <iod s alt wise i Irovidenoo, apparently ‘Pink Pills’ have renovated m «. nn d given mo a now lease | of life. “T1U» is no secret in this locality, and I j , the samo benefits that I have received, i “Cr.xmnoA Fisk.” Pink Pills'are sold in boxes (never In loose . form by tho dozen hundred, and or the public arc cautioned against numerous imitations sold in this shape) at 60 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, and maybe had wniianS’^fetllUsino Compnny. ma r ° m * _______ p roll(a 30tt (o 600 ,. pp ( . pil<> ' l0 eewing machine, one of the j greatest blessings in the way of 111 a- chines ever offered the public, sold for . years at sixty dollars in tho United ( states The same machine, however, to be shipped to a foreign laud, could be purchased below twenty dolin’s. | After the patents ran out the price j fell rapidly until now sewing machines arc sold for twenty-five dollars and of- ten below twenty dollars. The sewing j machine manufacturers became ini- | menscly rich irom their profits of sev- ! hl »‘ d 7 d 5 mcTst* tl!‘ft .iw',. lyp *" f,T rr ^ 1 lt, if* n K W. ’ " ” 11 < tb, they v Htll foi irom Efty ilollai s *’ to ; ""u I. is genoiallx ^ 0,,ftTO nud ^ ei ntood j that ., . mi ft P ST 111 ee,ne,,t *’ H maintained. ^ Business hi men 8 k are compelled to .L pay from three linn- | died ,| M ,i o, to rive hundred i,„„ 1 1 pel cent profit or I o° without the machines. j Are there any other machines which | ■ V , U T d ™ <dl l >rolils a3 the sewing ma- j <**nne tlici lor years, and tue typewrit- j liiachino lius and does, except it bo j the bicycle? i ---- impurities in the Atmosphere. Professor H. H. Woodbridge, of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, says that although carbonic acid gas, j or carbon dioxide, is by no means the | only i,J impurity in the air wo breathe, it the one which can be easily mens,,,- Jed. others. and furnishes a fair tost of the i . The best normal air contains tlireo aud a half parts to every ten thousand of carbon dioxide. The air in the streets () f an ordinary city contains four and a half to five parts. The streets of I A>n- flon are on occasions charged as heavi- jy as twelve parts per 10,000, and the air above an old graveyard is said to be sometimes as high as sixteen parts, This is all outside air. Within a public hall or a church the air will get much worse. Mr. Woodbridge found in the Bos- ton Theatre one evening air in tho galleries which contained 49 parts car- bon dioxide per 10,000, with Other im- purities in a ratio to correspond. Tbe method of making these measurements to ‘‘ xhi, ’ ,Rt the dry »ir from a dry bottle of known size, and lot it fill up \ " V ifh ,T 11 fh U1 n ° nrdirmrv Ordinal > nir air nf ol tVm tno rnnm room, r*f ot course continuing the exhaustion long enough to secure a fair sample, and then subject that sample to chemical tests. Another interesting fact is that it is the combustion, particularly of coal, which loads the air of our city streets „ ](], Pftr l, on dioxide, rather than tho \ breathing of living animals. Compared with a huge chimney over a steam ! boiler, a room full of' mple is very I harmless. IUMIULLU III11UUUII iMLUILL, . timi. WRECKED IV A GULCH • - SEVEN PEOPLE TAKEN OUT DEAD. Nineteen Others Were Injured lint Not Bertously—Disaster Caused _ The St. Louis . express on the Wa- bMl » railway, which left Kansas City ■*( 6.20 o’clock 0 c,oc “ Saturday ^turlay evening evening, plunged , through n trestle at Missouri City, Mo., at five minutes of 7 o'clock, carrying down the entire train with * . .....- I he gorge, which a few hours pre- vious was practically empty, had he- Z™* m< < IT? oi s i ownpour o 1“" rain and TV the ^ructure weakened. As a rewH 1 !l'° ‘^..phe seven P® , 0 P , ! o w C r C lulled. 1 A conect ust is lt '* W.H. Mills, postal clerk Bt Louis. ^,,^7 G '.‘ tave A. K.Tm bmith, postal 7 A clerk, 7°'^ bt. Louis. ChaHes Winters, postal clerk, bt. lj ouis. p 1.11. if Tlrink Brink, nootnl postal ..left clerk, a* bt.Lonis. T Edward Grmrod, baggageman, bt. j. ou j R *, r - r . . . , 2 ^ 5 bem all there is not one bro- ken limb, though many of them were thrown three-quarters of the length of tl>o e rnnohoH coaehes in in x\ uhinh Inch they *iw v xi ere ruling. rEDnrr -Tohn Ennis, traveling salesman for Beckman & Mcknight, was in the rear 013(1 ni ,,i ^ ,j the il„ t,ftin „.t • i wftfl , „ n n the „ only . one that escaped , injury. It was like- wise the only car in which none of the passengers were injured, Mr. Ennis bad an interview with a farmer who had como from Missouri City in the evening and was at the place where the wreck occurred to flag the train. The farmer claimed to have waved a Hag on the track, but owing to the terrible rain the engineer was unable to see the signal. Mr. Ennis said the "reck occurred at 7:05 o’clock One of the most important things, a nd one which scoured the safety of the remaining passengers on tho train, was the flagging of a freight train which followed the passenger train about ten minutes. This freight train was flagged by passengers 300 feet from the wreck. The engine passed over the trestle, which broke immediately afterwards, and the tender, with the front or through smoking car, was thrown back into the gorge. Tim farmer with whom Mr. Ennis Ulked said that at 5 o’clock there was practically no water m the. gorge, but i at the ti,ueof tho " Teck l[ was ra K ln B : a torrent of ten feet or more in depth. unsafe, . The for ""' which r , Raid had t!lf> ^8* impelled him ,d<?ar, to y stand in the storm and attempt to flag the train. ___ _ KESTUCKY HORSE YY0X. --— Ornament Captures the St. Louis Sweep- stakes of *l», ooo. Kentucky neats Missouri—Orna- _ ment outran Typhoon II iu Ihe St. Louis derby Saturday in the $12,000 sweeDstake Mneopai-nKe for ior three-venr-olds uiiee ytai oius ana and several thousand 1st. Louisians walked home. The much-played Typhoon IT was beaten, not only by Ornament, of Kentucky, hi but also by Buolcvidere, a twelve one shot who came near eet- , ing j„ first-jdace. Aside from there- sssertment of Ornament's superiority, the race was a disappointment. Orna- ment’s price, 19 to 20 and out, pre- vented any heavy play on him by the visitors, while Typhoon. 11 to 10* was hardly more attractive, ALL QUIET AT KEY WEST. Governor of Florida so Wires tho W ash¬ ington Authorities. President McKinley has received a message from Governor Bloxliam, of Florida, stating that the sheriff of Key West wired Saturday morning that the contemplated trouble — id not materi- j ul : 7.e c is quiet .uid orderly. ! ANSW’F.RTO JAPAN’S PROTEST. Secretary of State Forwarded It to Japan¬ ese legation. A Washington special says: “The reply of the secretary of state to the against « ,nd ‘' st the f , tho annexation J»P«ncse of government Hawaii has been forwarded to the Japanese lega- f’ im h e,e > rtll d by them cabled to ' okio. “ The lc K ! ' t " on wil1 probably file n mpplomentary statement upon recciv- mg instructions from the home gov- ’-'mment. “It is expected that this will take some time, as the note of the Japanese government is worded iu the most carefully diplomatic manner. DAVIS’S RECTOR DEAD. Kt>v. Itr. Kartell, of Christ Church, Nor¬ folk. Vu., Busses Away, Rev. O. 8. Barton, D. D., rector of Christ church at Norfolk, Va., died Saturday afternoon, aged fifty-seven years. Dr. Barton was one of tho most prominent divines in the south- orn diocese. He had been rector of Christ church since 1865 and was rector for Jefferson Davis during his incarceration at Fort Monroe iinme- diately after the war. NEURO MAY BUY THE MILES. Would I s© Colored Labor, nml Throw 300 Whites Out of Work. Selma, Ala., is much exercised over the report that a wealthy New York negro will bid heavily for the Mat- thews cotton mill property to be sold at foreclosure next month. He proposes to operate the mill with negro labor. Hits would throw the three hundred white operative out of employment. The property is very valuable. A large block of this stock was j by tbe defunct Commercial bank. GREAT NAVAL REVIEW Of Warship* of the World In Honor of Queen victoria. off Spithead Saturday navaf the occasion being the grand review held in honor of the completion of the sixtieth * year of the reign of Oueen Victoria' The Prince of Wales, * representing ° j . * jpr , . , « foreign ^’. r . e ' lewei ” ,'i]n° mariUme^aHrlfe "and nf 6 ?!^ swiftest' 0 of' fr ml f , s t strontrest these f ,,i cr ' . V,' lifi ,» rnn , i n • tho iUfr / f ’ * ?. n uear p f' ,r,llral - , Miller, and , the heir , ap- L| es ' of a British^warshics^in * which « ere 196 fighting <■ ,,. ships of t different itr » classes, carrying about 900 heftv y ‘ 1 Y to,IH in all. * — r< *® Wl they formed a line abicast of , the British battleships, where they 'TthThafff other nations Each nation sent ib best available ship and a magnificent display interesting resulted An feature of the British d,, et waH j| le t r „i n i n g ships, which coniDriHcd | thrpp of flip pap 1 v iroii-plad 4 * a S(1 la d roI1 of cruisers which usually K ' ih “ training crew on board i n the West Indies, or in some other hri^wShtl^ warm latitude and in^lm a fleet of training of the British ports >’ ’ The ... British fleet assembled June 2‘2 an(1 tnu was was arawn drawn up uir in in iour four nnea, lines ex ex- teiicling from abreast of Portsmouth ] review8 £+* •< <»»« nava there was free access to tho renew rpvipw . ground up ... to t1)P the llollr hour named for the oflicml lnsjicction, m lion a jj vease i 8 with visitors anchored in their assignP(1 b positions, 1 and the tour 01 f th ine neot fl . " as com,,mneed commenceu bv i>y the tiie p r i nce of Wales, WILL REFER TO LEGISLATURE. Governor Kllerbe Will Not Issue Order Reprimanding Gen. Watts. A Columbia, S. 0., special says: Governor Eller be will not issue a gen- eral ord r reprimanding adjutant Gen- eral Watts, ns recommended by the court of inquiry. It is probable that the governor’s not being on the pleasantest personal with the general may have m- fluenced him in this regard, he desir- ing to avoid tho possibility of letting personal feeling influence him. Then tho action of the board is equivalent to a reprimand, and the legislature can decide whether a more serious view shall be taken of the case. The governor’s order issued says: “The report of the court of inquiry and record of proceedings will be at the proper time transmitted to the general assembly for such action as that body J may deem proper with ref- erence the adjutant and inspector general, who in this state is a consti- tiitumal officer, and it is ordered: “First, That Private FistTBurn, ol thfi Bichland Volunteers, Be discharged from the military service of the sta> “Second, That the captain of the Kicliland Volunteers publish an order renrimanilin<r repiimsiuung Private i male Dnnninrv Dunning, of oi suid said comp my, for leaving ranks without permission. “Third. That the court of inquiry having completed tho duties assigned, it is hereby dissolved. “Fourth. That the commander-iu- chief desires to express his high ap¬ preciation of the complete and careful manner in which tho court has per¬ formed its duty.” INSURGENTS KILL THIRTY, They Attack a Stage Coach and Capture Much Booty. A nows special states that a stage coach from Havana for San Jose de Las Lajas, a nearby-settlement, w r as stopped on the road by a largo band of insurgents, who killed with their machetes eighteen scouts escorting the coach, six guerrillas, one Spanish offi¬ cer, a doctor, a carpenter and three other passengers who attempted to save their lives by fight. The only occupants of the coach who were not killed by the insurgents were a woman and a child, who were among the passengers. The bodies of the. per¬ sons slain were stripped of their cloth- ing and left lying alongside the road, The insurgents captured a consider- able amount of booty. GERMANS FOR ALABAMA. Two Hundred Families Will Settlo In the Town of Bismarck. A party of 200 German immigrants and their families from Iowa and Illinois is en route to Bismarck, a town in Limestone county, Ala.,which has been designed for them. Bismarck was laid off last fall by a company headed by M. Meisner, one of the founders of Cullman, Ala., and Captain R. B. Mason, of Athens. The interests of the town will be vigorously pushed There is already a movement to build an electric tramway connecting it with Athens. Tho immigrants will engage in fruit farming. CUBAN BONDS SOLD. John Jacob Alitor Buy* On© of the 31,000 Six IVr Cents. A new York telegram states that John Jacob Astor has purchased one of the thousand dollar 6 per cent gold bonds of the republic of Cuba, which were issued last April. Dr. W. Seward Webb lias purchased one of the $100 6 per cent bonds. These bonds nro offered at 50 per cent of face value anil fall due ten years after tbe evacuation of Cuba. FIVE MEN DEAD IN V WRECK. Fatal (’ollision Occurs on Chesnpeake ami Ohio Kaili'oail. A serious collision occurred on the j Chesapeake and Ohio railroad new Burts, Vn., Saturday night, in which two engineers and three other railroad met. lost their lives. Two freight trains collided with a terrible crash, burying both engineers ; in the mass of wreckage. They were j burned to death by escaping steam from the eugines. The wreck was t bad one aud the road will be blocker some time. HOUSEHOLD MATTERS. Matting Sewed hike Carpet. Matting, so universallv used nowa- found that it will lie much more smoothly if it is sewed, as a carpet is treated, and found, too, that this may be done as well with matting as with the carpet. - Asparagus Fern In Decoration. At a luncheon recently given the whole surface of the square table was rnonds of about eight inches from point to point, crossing and recrossing to {orm au exact square, leaving a border about fourteen inches from the plates, glasses, * 4 etc. This network was made T fast ni the vine at reguiar inter- v ls with minute safety pins to one ing true diagonal lines to the opposite f u u.hlown flowers and many buds were strewn so placed as to raise th ““h «” Tsflow4rs “ 0 C1na 0 teadow y f* ami T t „ daintv J air which was well “ suited '‘° *, tU y0Uag i Furs and Moths. tc ^ l i « . . i a ll p U TTX at hom’e wTthoTTt daimer moths The best plan i, to then? hang the “i. 0 garments l? a lneuts and an<1 not u °t to tolcl fold ttie comb. i mi- Tills 13 ■ to . remove all particles of 01 dust f,n9t and an(l prevent P>event the ine possibility possibility of or mo th eggs being left ill them when atorerf Hnno- thpm in n rlnvlc eloflct them in a chest or ’ trunk'lined ’ ®. in the ® samo manner. But when this , is . not praotieable, any of the preventives sold i, v dru"gists in *v bo nsod in'ba-s They should I be T sowed caiemuy carefully in Dags, so so a a not to come 111 contact -with the furs. Dealers sometimes use fumes of sulphur to clean furs, but this al¬ ways discolors them, so should not be done until all else fails. Fur garments should bo takeu out and shaken well once a month, but hanging in the sun is not advisable, as it only helps to hatch the eggs if any remain in the furs, instead of destroying them as some believe.—New York Tribune. Care of a Refrigerator. Tbe care of a refr i ge r a tor involve! m ,1 ti lrt 1 : , no^oo “*} •(« °. f ‘ • „ “ . ° v () ? pd’tn ' ‘ bj ‘ ’ Th°°nnT f n ii mv therein - i. n , i, A „ i^Twif -r will T^’evtrZTh! Him ,,; * oovereil'with the iimvmmm there is no better nrevenVivo it, vanid meltinw nwnv fiwinnntlr She will i thnt the shelves nr. ’that o..,i ] ceD t oerfeetlv swe >t hut im hot water is emnloved for ftii mrnnw She will civo orders that the drinFin^ ,/nnn water The ice^nd becooled hv hein«r Sgtice „| w „i not by all,°she mit 1 iuto it. And, last of will en- to convince tho maids thnt there is no mafic nreservative on ton ,,f the refrigerator, and that particular spot is quite as warm as any other part of the storeroom; also that the coolest place in the box is underneath the ice —that is, on those shelves beneath it —and not, as so often supposed, on top of it, Thus anything placed over the cake of iee is much warmer than what is put away within the refrigerator. - New York Post. Recipes. Broiled Finnan Haddie—Broil in a greased broiler until brown on both sides. Remove to a pan and cover with hot water; let stand ton minutes, drain and place on a platter. Spread with butter and sprinkle with pepper. Farmers’ Rice—Let three pints of milk come to a boil. Rub into t\yo eggs flour enough to produce little grains and flakes. Stir this into the milk quickly; season with a half-tea- spoonful of salt and cook five minutes. Serve hot or cold, with stewed prunes. Rice Mush Croquettes—Cook for an hour one cup of rice, half a cup of fine cornmeal and half a teaspoonful of salt in a pint and a half of milk. kettle of hot lard, and fry a light brown. Eat with sirup. Deviled Crackers — Mix together three tablespoonfuls of grntod cheese and half a teaspoonful of dry mus- tard, one teaspoonful of anchovy paste, a saltspoonful of salt and half of that amount of cayenne. Blend this with ono heaping tablespoonful of butter; spread over the crackers, and put in a ! hot oven until they begin to color. Custard Eggs—Poach five eggs and place in buttered pie dish; sprinkle them with a tablespoonful of chopped parsley. Beat two eggs with half a pint of milk; season with a saltspoon¬ ful of salt and half that amount of pepper; the surface pour with over the tablespoonful eggs; sprinkle of j a grated Parmesan, and bake for fifteen minutes in a slow oven, or until the custard is just “set. ” Orange setting Custard—Separate the yolks in cool place. eight j ! eggs, a Add grated rind and juice of two large j oranges add to of tho water egg and whites; beat well, j cup set away for an hour; thou beat yolks of eggs, add with one cup sugar to mixture, and heat in double boiler. Let the cus¬ tard boil; stir until it becomes as thick and heavy as cream. Cool, set near ice; serve in glass cups. Barbecued Ham—-Cut a pound of raw ham in thin slices and soak in cold water half an hour; dry iu a towel, and place in a hot frying-pan; dnst each slice lightly with pepper and spread with a quarter of a teaspoonful of mixed mustard aud pour in vinegar in the portion of half a teaspoonfnl to a slice. Fry quickly, turning often. Serve on a hot dish, with a teaspoon- fill of sour jelly on each slice. Fish Shape—Line a plain china mold with mashed potato. Pound smooth about one pound of cold boiled fish (preferably whitefish). Mix with it two well-beaten eggs and sufficient white sauce to make it just moist enough to make a smooth paste (half a cup will probably suffice). Season with half a teaspoonful salt and half a SaitspOOllflll of white pepper; pass in- to the mold and steam for three- quarters of a hour. Turn out and serve with tomato sauce. Calling the Chickens. In England the calls chuck, chuck, or coop, coop, prevail: in \ irginia, 5 S,ISsffiS Spain (as pi, pi), Bulgaria, many, and the Tyrol. In Hungary, Bavaria, the Austrian province the term is used in combination, thus, Bulla, pi, pi; the call pullele, pul, pul, also oc- curs there. In some parts of Germany the poul- try are called with tick, tick; in Prus- „i a put, put, and young chickens 3C hip, the latter being an imitation of their own cry. In eastern Prussia hens are called with kluckschen, kluck, klnck; also tippschen, tipp, tipp. Grimm records also pi, pi, and tiet Lri’abibi tiet Weinhold reports from Ba- p" bibeli bidli- pi pi and Jn Denmark the call is pootle; in **-* *"> In Doubt. A near-sighted girl happened to pass «toreand to glance at the sk< T V w ‘ ndo "- She checked a scream and sa,d to hor companion: “Oh, please come here and relieve my suspense. Hotv ? “ Tel1 ra .« what am lo ° k in S at ’, , ^oa constrictors or bicycle . stockings: . — Wafdnll g ton k tar - A Nonsensical Notion. Some fo.hs aetuaUy helteve that they can cure skin dlseaseB through their stomachs. It s absurd : on Its face—absurd on tho face of the man who believes, too, because his disease stays right there stay8 tliero t m he uses Tetterlne, it’s the only safe and cortain cure for Tettor, IUnfj- worm, Eczema and other itchy irritations. Good jsssss*-^- **“ *“ ELIZABETH L FOR COLLEGE. WOMEN. ^ / » X CHARLOTTE, N. C. EQUAL TO THE REST Colleges for men with every feature of a, high grade College for women added. A FACULTY OF 15 SPECIALISTS From schools of international reputa¬ tion's Yale. Johns Hopkins, Amherst, land University Conservatory, of Virginia.Berlin,New Paris, &c. Eng¬ THREE COURSES Loading to degrees. GROUP SYSTEM * With electives. MUSIC CONSERVATORY With Organ,Piano, course Violin, leading to dip’^.iA. Pine Vocal. Guitar, Banjo,Man¬ dolin, ART CONSERVATORY Full course to dlp!oma--all varieties. FULL COMMERCIAL Course-Teacher from Eastman. A REFINED HOME With every modern convenience. CLIMATE Similar to that of Asheville. COLLEGE BUILDING, 172 ft, frontage,143 ft. deep, 4 stories high, built of pressed brick, fire proof, with every modern appliance. Catalogue Address, sent fre6 on application. REV. C. li. KING, Fresident, Charlotte, N. C. FU 'Who m . % “ opened Ib&i j§ HIRES bottle m L^L SZootbeer? flip The popping of a £ S cork from a bottle of 1 U\ Hires is a signal of 1 good health and pi ea-'*^^K f| &S»A B I sure. A sound the if] old folks like to hear I —the children can’t '* -S 5 I h resist it. v, ft > a HIRES! Rootbeer Is composed of tlio - very ingredients tho the system digestion, requires. Aiding the purifying soothing the nerves, blood. A tern per¬ il nee drink for temper¬ ance people. $ ; Made *inlv by A The Charles E. Hires C o., Phils. % -4j«5£3®SSflB8SaBSa A package Sold everywhere. make* 5 gallons. •s- ** GUARANTEE W** 1 ™”** 1 * «I THAT’S IBSfi 1 ROOD! • We have thousands of testimonials, and are Eut proud ol the stories of they tell of relief from many forms of misery. the experience another person may not he yours with the same preparation. Cjt U nn 1^. n ft a W ■ &** & ifS a . AAimYini7IAtl P || 111 jo ^UUI U 1 E8 | flllUllI i f * cjn v. Sold on merit only under an absolute guarantee to cure, if used according to di- reciions. Every retail druggist is authorized to sell two 50c. boxes Cascarets under guarantee to cure or money refunded. You take no chances when you buy our preoarations, sent by mail for price, JOc., 25c. or 50c.—address STERLING REMEDY CO., Chicago, Montreal, or New York—or when you purchase under A ^ c .”l?c 0 .°io=. 8- Your Own Druggists’ i«i«i«i* IIC1IMIBUMII IMIMIMl ICUWIBiiailBIIMlWIMlWIMIMlWIMlailWlCtlWIMieilMiflllfll uO END for Price List of our m Special Line of Low ft' ' Priced and Second = hand *» m, Isstfes? Wheels. m m ii Four of the leading bicycle manufacturers, ot whl-h sT 4 the John P. Lovell Arms Co. are tho moving spirits, offer "m'liSP high grade wheels at next to nothing prices. See the list, it tells the story. Col. Bust. S. Lovell From Our Regular Stock We Offer T reas. Lovell Arms Co Lovell Diamond $100. Lovell Excel $60. Lion and Lioness $50. Lovell Excel $50. Simmons Special $29.50 Lovell Excel $40. We have tbe largest line of Bicycle Sundries, Bicycle and Gymna¬ sium Suits and Athletic Goods of all kinds. Write us what you want and we’ll send you full information. If a dealer, mention it. JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO., 131 Broad St., Headquarters for Guns, Rifles nnd Revolvers, Fishing Tackle, Skates and Sporting Goods of Every Description. »*8END FOR OUR LARGE ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE. nn| I|BJ§|| ....| MS |# Anns ont^thelr^tnon’ledge ran b» raved vrttk. by I W 8 n 11 SI W I IB 11 |4 w^t!fthi*dri3n&S W ™^ Broedini 1 "^” free! 1 Fall lalora»»t*on (In putn wrapper) milled Send for Frice Hot! It is all that we ask k \ and it will cost bnt a postal to do it. All m ■JjK ^ we ask for is a to minute pet your on eve prices> details and « The goods will sell themselves. You jm know that as the well John ao w© P. Lovell Arms Co. (of which able Col. the indefatig- Ben S. Lovell, known all jjgP|9 gSgft-81 treasurer over the and world, acting is head) has made ana for a half century maintained its great reputation by the Lovet.e, r\ manufacture of Col. Ben S. sterling goods. It ia Treas.Lovell Arms Go. , still the world’s head¬ quarters for guns, rifles and revolvers, fishing de¬ tackle, skates and sporting goods headquarters of every for scription and is no less the tbe highest grade bicycles. The company was the moving spirit in forming the combination of the four leading manufacturers in this country, the “Big Four, 1 'so-called, to hold up the grade and hold down the price of wheels. Those who were handling the thousand and one wheels the manufacturers were ashamed to father “kicked.” The profit on the cheftp wheels was very large. But they kicked ride to first- no purpose, class guaranteed and today wheel a cyclist at the may price it has a be¬ fore cost to ride one made lise the famous razors,“to sell.” For this boon the catalogue public owes of the Lovell Arms Co. thanks. A our regular bicycle stock and a special list of wheels issued by the Big Four Combination will be mailed free on application to the John P. Lovell Arms Co., 131 Broad street, Boston, Mass. Not Particular. “I suppose,” she saicl acridly, “that you would turn up your nose at oold victuals.” “No,ma’am,” said Meandering Mike, “You’d be surprised ter see how good- natured I’d lake it if you was to offer me a Roman punch or champagne frappe. ”—Washington Star. FRICK COMPANY ECLIPSE ENGINES 4 Ai yS • j ■S . -‘Wt iff aiiijiil m7. Boilers, Saw Mills. Cotton Gins, Cotton Presses, Grain Separators, Chisel Tooth and Solid Saws, Saw Teeth. In¬ spirators, Injectors,. Engine Repairs and a full line of Brass Goods. tSTSend/or Catalogue and Prices. Avery + SOUTHERN & McMillan MANAGERS. Nos. 51 & 53 S. Forsyth St., ATLANTA, GA. Cure Bright’s Disease, Diabetes, Stricture, Gleet and all chronic or acute affections of the genito¬ urinary system. Restore weak organs and im¬ part vigor to both body and mind. One box $1.00; three boxes $2.50, by mail. Prepared by HAGGARD SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. Wholesale by Lamar & Rankin Drug Co. MAPLE SYRUP Made on your kitchen stove In a few minutes at a cost of about £5 Cents Per Gallon, by a new process, which sells at $1.00 per gallon. “I want to thank you for the Maple Syrup recipe which I find is excellent. I can recom¬ mend it highly to any and every one.”—R ev. Sam P. Jones, Cartersvlile, Ga. Send stamped envelope and see what It Is. J. N~. mfft’ICH, Morristown, Tenn. w E MAKE LOANS on LIFE INSURANCE POLICIES. If you have a policy in tho New York I-ife, Equitable Life Or Mutual Life and would like to secure a Loan, write us giving number of your poltey, and wo will be pleased to quoto rates. Address fcMisMwricai Loan aid Trim, No. 13 ISqilitable riiUU£V,t a , Atlanta, Ga. Bicycles “ALEXANDER SPECIAL”. ...*30.00 “O VIC II LAND”... *1*0.00 WAVERLEY...... *40.00 ELECTRIC CITY *50.00 You have no excuse now for not buying a bicycle if it’s the price you have been waiting for. Agent? wanted. Write for Bargain List of second-hand wheels. W. I). ALEXANDEK, 09-71 N. Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga. SAW MILLS, SUPPLIES. LIGHT and HEAVY, and «1CHEAPEST AND BE8T.I> SHTCtost every day; work ISO hands. LOMBARD IRON WORKS AND SUPPLY COMPANY, AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. in writing to adver¬ — {I 275 cm; I PlSQ’&r'CURKGRaR in time. Bold 8S4 u« by drcggleta._ ;»1.25:C~TS h N— ,-