Dade County news. (Trenton, Ga.) 1888-1889, December 14, 1888, Image 7

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WOMAN’S WORLD. •LEASANT LITERATURE FOB r FEMININE readers. j /ar<T e Feet Look Best In Black. ■wjjen will women learn that big feet look their best in black? Not iu shiny Wack, like patent leather, which natur ally attracts the eye, but in dull black, me soft kid. They *can wear lovely Uppers or low shoes of this kind iu the morning. an< l L° r Ike evening a black ea tia one is always good form. A very ki<rh heel wilt not make a large foot look small- It simply puts it upon a pedestal ajid the lookers on have an opportunity to measure its length. A black velvet jlipper can only be worn by Cinderella, ft ud the foot of Cinderella must be slen der, else the pile of the velvet will make It look thick. A large buckle is never desirable, except with a slender foot and T ery low instep; when there is a fine arch a small buckle cr bow wants to be adhered to, so that the natural beauty may be shown to great advantage. —New York Star. Bracelets and Sleeves. “Bracelets are a drug in the market,” said a New York manufacturer to a Sun reporter. “Wo have not had any sales in this country worth speaking of for three years,” he continued, “but are exporting a good many to Germany this year. The reason the business is slow here is because women are wearing long sleeves and cuffs. Short sleeves are the style in Germany now, and the demand for bracelets is hr sk there. Next year we will do a good domestic trade, for short sleeves are coming in again here. The first step toward them is the fashion of pulling the sleeves at the shoulders and elbows. Short sleeves and bracelets will be the proper thing within six months. We watch the changes iu sleeve fashion closer in our business than the ladies do themselves. It is very import ant that we should know in advance what kind of sleeves will be worn, and go I know that next year there will bo a big bracelet boom.” The Bone Dish. “Well,” said a lady to the Observer yesterday, “I was at a dinner party last night where all the latest kinks were put in, and I was glad to find one that is really sensible and a comfort. I don’t care about eating my ice cream with a fork, or about having a wonderful and specially devised spoon for Komau punch, or a new patent back-action fork for my salad, or about seeing the olives tied up with ribbons, or anout having my napkin ( hanged four times during the meal. I think lots of those frills are tiresome, but I am glad to have a bone dish.” “A bone dish!” echoed the be nighted Observer. “Yes, don’t you know how in England they are always giving you in a sort of informal way an extra plate, not changing your plate, but letting you have two at once; at break fast or lunch, to be sure, it is not so in formal, it is there regularly for your but ter —instead of the little sniffs of dishes we use—and for anything else you want it for, and you always do want it to re ceive your bones and potato skins. I’ve always thought that though we make so much fU'S and elaboration in our swell table arrangements, that nothing com pensated for the comfort the English get out of that extra plate. Now I found last night that the latest tip-top touch is this something, only of course with a Yankee improvement. The bone dish is now launched in America, but it is not another round plate, but a long narrow dish taking up much less room, and it is for you to use as a receptacle for what ever you don’t want on your plate. It is a glorious comfort.” A Southern Diuna. But I must tell you of something that lives and moves and has its being, writes a Philadelphia Time* correspondent from Alabama. In short, ft is a girl, not a girl of the period, nor a typical girl of thß South, but our own Diana, who can drive like Jehu, ride and shoot like*a cowboy, run like a professional and swim like a duck. She will go rowing with no company but her dog and gun, and she can drop her oars, spring to her feet with her gun, and shoot a marsh hen or grosbeak without rocking the boat or misplacing the oars. She sleeps on pit lows of down from birds and ducks killed by her own hand, and expects by next spring to have enough feaihers of the same kind to make a feather bed. I neglected to mention what, perhaps, is more remarkable than her other accom plishments, that she can drive a nail without mashing her fingers. Once, in deed, she drove a nail to good purpose. While studying for a prize at school she was taken with a violent toothache. Her mother forbade her going to school in such violent pain, and there was no den tist nearer than Mobile. So with a sud den resolve she got a nail, and, holding it against the tooth, sho drov-e it out (or more likely in) with one blow of the hammer, then went to school and won the pri.e. She has kindly taught me how to row with a good stroke and how to swim with an inflated pillow case. Now she would teach me how to shoot. I can make ready and take aim, but when the time comes to fire my fingers are so occupied with stopping my ears that I Cannot pull the trigger. Diana knows every cattle mark in the community. She owns quite a number of sheep and cows, and can tell at a glance if one ss missing. At present Di ana’s most devoted admirer is a man who can neither ride, drive, row nor swim, ■hoot a gun nor smoke a cigar. This toay be the irony of fate, but I suspect it is fat?, nevertheless, for she imagines now that she drtests him, and that is nsuallv one of the shadowa cost before the coming event. A New Industry For 'Women. Cooking delicacies for the sick, with a dainty perfection that cannot l e at tained by large caterers or ordinary cooks, is a comparatively new but very popular industry, added to the list of peculiar employments by which women ■reenabled to earn their living in New York, One of the consignors of the Woman’s i-.xchange has entire charge of this special branch of cuisine, and has coined dollars for herself, besides carry ing comfort to many sullerers. i-he failed entirely in the cake department at the Exchange, but at the suggestion of some friends she began the cooking oi those delicacies which long practice had »>ds her u adept and an artist in pre- paring. Now the invalids in the richest houses on the avenue, the boarders at the Hoffman House and Brunswick, the sick in various hospitals, and the delicate friends of wealthy patrons among the poor alike enjoy the same broths and teas, iceland moss and blanc mange she prepares, and which can be found no where else so delicious in taste. Beef tea, chicken and mutton broth and beef juice, with various similar delicacies, may be had at any time on a day’s notice at the Exchange, and in cases of emergency they are often prepared by the lady during the night. Many physicians in the city, under standing the importance of suitable diet for their patients, recommend to them the food prepared by these women who are by long practice proficient in the art of serving. Another woman makes her living preparing calf’s foot jelly for the sick. Th s requires a longer notice than the broths, as she sometimes experiences some difficulty in obtaining the calves’ feet in the uptown markets, which ne cessitates a half day’s journey among the down town shops. Still another gentlewoman prepares va rious kinds of bread, brown bre*d, gra ham, and heilth food bread, the latter made from entire wheat. One customer, a delicate man boarding at a very ele gant uptown restaurant, consumed eight loaves of health food bread a week through the entire winter. A wealthy lady in town has kept an old coachman alive on the beef tea made by the gentle spinster at the Woman's Exchange all through the pa t summer, and another lady ordered rolls and chicken broth sent to a sick servant for many weeks, until her recovery was announced. A lady in Washington, learning of the ill ness of a poor friend, ordered nourish ing dainties sent to her through a long illness. The kindness of rich women continually manifests itself in this way. Other women employ themselves very lucratively in the preparation of pure jellies, containing no gelatine, for inva lids, and still others are occupied in the making of w:ne and fruit cordials and tonics for the sick and debilitated. These women are almost without excep tion ladies of wealth and refinement, who, learning their dainty and womanly art of invalid cuisine from experience gained in the care of their own families, nave a peculiar skill which cannot be ac quired in any other way, and which some sudden whirl in the wheel of for tuno has caused them to employ for the public good through the emptiness of a private purse.— Now Yoid Sun. Weddings Among Scandinavians Wedding presents were extensively given at most Scandinavians weddings, and among the lower orders the parents and friends presented the bride with a pig, sheep or cow, and the groom with a colt, dog, cat or goose. In days of old, too, the husband made bis wife sev eral presents, such as a pair of oxen for the plow or a harnessed horse and arms. This, we are told, was to signify that she ought not to lead an idle and luxuri ous life, but that she was to be a par taker with him in his labors and a com panion in dangers, which they were to ’share together in peace and war. The yoked oxen, the caparisoned horse, and the arms all served to instruct the women how they were to lead their lite, and how, perhaps, it might he terminated. The arms were to be carefully preserved, and, being ennobled by the use the hus band made of them, were to be consigned as portions for their daughter and to be handed down to prosterity. At the present day much enthusiasm is manife-t --ed it a Swedish wcddingiti the bestowal of presents of all kinds. Mr. Du Chailiu, describing a wedding in Dale carlia, says: “Every one as he left put in the hands of the bride some bank bills, which, without looking at, she dropped into the b g linen pouch on that occasion aj; her side. This was the parting g.ft, and* every guest, according to his means, gave money to the bride. The girls of the hamlet had heid a meeting, and all had agreed that each should give exactly the same sum. A popular bride often gets a considerable amount in this manner, which enabies her and her husband to begin life quite cheerfully.” It is customary, too, in Sweden on the wedding day for the bride aud bride groom to sit on a raised platform under a canopy of si.k, all the wedding pres ents being artistically arranged on a bench covered with silk. A Swedish bride also has her pockets filled with bread, for according to a popular super stition, it is supposed that every piece she gives to the poor on her way to church averts some misfortune, but the person to whom she bestows it will not eat it, as he thereby brings mistortune on himself. Few sights are more picturesque than a peasant’s wedding in Norwuy. The bride wears a crown and no end of trin kets, which are leather for the occasion, so that the “poorest woman in the land has the gratification of appearing for one day inherli e in a guise which she prob ab.y thinks equal to that of a queen.” bhe generally, too, remains dressed in all her finery throughout the festive merry-makings. As soon, too, as the marriage ceremony is o er the house is thrown open to ail friends and neighbors, leastmg and dancing being kept up somet.mes for several days. The bridal crown is so constructed that by with drawing a pin it opens and falls from the head, this being a signal for the gay do ings of the wedding to come to a close. As soon, therefoie, as the bride drops her crown the music is hushed aud the guests depart. — Interior. Fashion Notes. Quaint-Gretchen cloaks for little girls are in fashion. The newest jerseys are made in the directoire style. Large velvet collars are a conspicuous feature of the Winter wraps. But few of the corsages of the present time show a visible fasteuiug. House vasts or tea jackets are made of the new embroidered silks. Fillets of ribbon to wear in the hair with evening toilets a e imported. rersiau cashmere silk with an imita tion astraehan border i* converted into novelties. Redingotes and polonaises outnumber the ba que dresses among the new im portations. Matelasse galloons are the novelty in trimmings. They make rich borders for cloth dresses. Favorite designs in the uw brocades are leaves of every possible shape con veniently arranged. The ideal doth costume of the pres ent season is as severe in outline and finish as a riding habit. Handsome cloth costumes are made with a Direetoire redingote of one color opening over a skirt of another. Some of the mo3t elegant of the Win ter cloaks are very long, and are made of the new cloths —matelasse velvet or plush. A tasty gown for a.young lady is made of bright red ladies’ cloth, with a wide belt of the same, and ruches of black lace above the belt. Mediaeval tea gowns with corset waist and full skirt of six or seven breadths are made of bengalino. Soft brocades of pale blue, old rose, yellow, aud l,us sian green are also in favor. All bodices fit the figure very closely Basques, Direetoiie rediugotes and polo naises are about equally favored. The first-named, however, display an endless variety in style and decoration. It is predicted that silk is to be again generally worn. The prices of silk goods are advancing, aud it will no doubt Bl a long time befoio ladies can purchase them at the very low prices of the past two years. A Monument Without an Inscription. The monument to be erected in a Chi cago cemetery by the Hon. John Went worth, better known as “Long John” Wentworth, has been finished by the Hallowell Granite Company, and all the stones shipped with the exception of the main shaft, which now lies in the yard near the railroad station. The material is entirely of white Hallowell granite, and the monument is plain in design. The base is eighteen feet square and two feet thick, anil Superintendent Hunt, of the granite works says it is the largest stone ever shipped in one piece. It could not be transported by rail, but it was necessary to ship it by vessel to New York and thence by h uge through the canal to Chicago. The second base is eleven feet five inches square by one foot six inches in thickness, The shaft is four feet six inches square at the base, fifty-five feet high and pyramidal in shape. Its weight is seventy tons, and two special cars are being constructed at the Cortland car works to carry it, being the largest stone ever shipped by rail in this country. It will cost $ 0;000. In speaking of his ma estic monument recently, the old gentleman was asked what inscription he intended to have upon it. “No inscription at all,” he answered. “It’s going to be just like me, a plain, unsophisticated monument. Then a man’ll come along and say: ‘Who’s monument is that?’ 't hen the man will say: ‘Wentworth’s.’ ‘Who’s Went worth?’ Then he’ll go and buy a biogra phy aud find out. If my name is on it he’ll simply say; ‘Oh, Wentworth,’ and walk off and forget all about it.” —New York Sun. Spiders’ Webs Poor Thermometers. “The spiders’ webs that one meets these mornings in the fields and mead xjws are not so indicative of the kind of weather that we shall have through the day as some suppose,” said a merchant the other day. “It is not exactly true that these spiderwebs are more abundant on some mornings than on others, and that they presage fair weather. As a matter of fact during the latter half of the summer, these webs are about as abundant oue day as another, but they are much more noticeable on some morn ings than others, by reason of a heavy dew which makes them mote cor.spcu ous. They are especially noticeable on a ■ foggy morning. ‘‘These webs are little nets that catch the fog. and on every little silken thread is strung innumerable minute drops like glass beads. After an hour of sunshine tbe webs are apparently gone. But they are still there, stretched above the grass, at noon and at sunset, as abundant as they were atsunr.se, and are then more serviceable to the spiders because they are invisible. The Hies and other insects would avoid them in the m-oruing. “Farmers consult these little webs os regularly as they would a thermometer, if they had one, and in many houses they often take the place of that instrument. A heavy dew occurs under a clear, cool sky, and the night pretending a day ol rain is Uiiiaily a dewle-s night. That dew then means fair weather, and a co pious dew disclo-es the spiders’ webs. It is the dew that is significant, and not the webs.” —New York Mad and Express. Origin of the Phrase “I’m Fly.” “The slang phrase ‘l’m flv,’ ‘he’s fly,” 1 began the old skipper, “which is used so much, in police parlance, dates back nigh on to 175 years ago. There was a famous market in New i ork called the Fly. I have heard said that the name ‘Fly’ was the abbreviation i’’ly, from valley, as the locality was between Golden Hill and another elevated piece of ground. The Fly Market was infected by a gang of idlers, bummers and sneak thieves, who occasionally picked up an honest sh 11 ing by doing chores for the butchers. They formed a faction in an antagonism to other similar lawless gangs, aud were kown as the Fly Boys. They terrorized all the others, and any one of them could go beyond their limits with im punity by using the shibboleth, ‘l'm Flv.’ Their superior cunning and crafti ness were everywhere recognized, aud now down to this late day we hear their cry and password used by even the pre tentiously moral. There was a ce ebrated pira’e in those days who, I believe, graduated from the scum of this market, for he adopted the name of t aptain Fly. die committed enormities, and paid the penalties of his crimes by being hanged in chains at Boston.” —New York Tunes. An Old Postal Regulation. It is rather an odd thing that if yon paste a priuted slip on a postal card the Government will charge the receiver let ter postage, while if the same matter is printed directly on the card nothing extra is demanded. The same slip which if pasted on a postal card would be eha’ged extra for. may be put into an un sealed envelope and it wdl then go at printed matter rates, or the whole paper from which the clipping is taken may be sent, containing the article marked, at a much less rate than the Government wou d charge for the same article at tached to the catd. That is, the Govern ment would rather carry four ounces for a cent than the four-tifth9 of an ounce for the same money. —Detroit Fret Dress. She Was Not that Kind. They were holding an auction of smuggled goods at the custom house, and the auctioneer was crying for bids on a shawl worth a couple of dollars, when a woman on the outskirts of the crowd called out: “I bid four dollars !’ “Third and last call and gone 1” ex claimed the auctioneer’ ‘iComeand get it, madam.” She pushed her way in, saw what il was, and backed oat with the remark: “That’s no silk dress.” • “Nobody said it was, madam.” “But that’s what I came for. They told me that silk dresses were going for four dollars apiece, and I like to have killed myself running to get here. Four dollars for a shawl 1” “How much will you hid?” “Thirty cents, sir, and not a penny more!” “Stand back, please.” “Oh, yes ! Because I won’t go about with my feet on the ground and a four dollar shawl on my back, it’s stand b ick, if you please I I’ll stand back, sir, but I’m not that kind of woman. I believe in consistency.” “But you wanted a silk dress,” sug gested one of the crowd. “And wasn’t I going to mortgage the house and lot to buy the bonnet to go with it 1” she retorted. Fumigation. The punctured letter is a thing of the past. All of the fumigating stations have been discontinued. Charlie Green, who was at the station at the Ninety nine-mile post on the Savannah, Florida and Western Railroad, three miles below Waycross, Ga., came into the city. There were five men at his station. They have been given thirty days’ leave of absence and pay. They bandied from 18,000 to 22,000 letters per day, and 7,000 newspapers and periodicals. Each letter had to be punctured aud smoked in the sulphur fumes for four hours Then the letters had to be a-sorted and forwarded. Every letter had to be han dled twice. The sulphur fumes did not agree with the postal clerks, and their health was affected, but not seriously. They had a colored boy who went imo the fumigating cars and scraped together the letters from the wire screens. Ab >ut ten pounds of sulphur were burned at one time in a car, of which there were three. The clerks do not see that they come out ahead, as they would have had forty-two days off had they been on their regular railway routes. — Charleston , S. C. News and Courier. From Bad to Worse. “No, Orestes, it cannot, most not be.” “And is this, then, the end ?” And the fair girl sobbed, but no word parted the moist quivering lips. “You loved me once,” he broke in with wiid passionate psihoß. “What, oh, what has wrought this change ?” “You promised me you would stop smoking cigarettes”—with a drawn, set look navigating the east and west end of her recherche mouth. “And 1 did, I did,” he wailed plead ingly. “And took to a clay pipe instead,” she thundered forth; anil he knew that life for him held nothing now but the blank est of blank despairs. « Annexed. The Cook Islands, known also as the Hervey Archipelago, have been formally annexed to “Great Britain’s possessions. It is more than three score years since Williams and his coadjutors began their remarkable labors, whickwe-ulted in con verting the people of this group to Christianity. Under the agreement with Germany, also, the latter power will not object to this latest of British acquisi tions. The chief islands are four in num ber, Karatonga being, perhaps, the most widely known, aud they contain possibly 7,000 or 8.000 people. They are sit uated between the Society and the Friendly Islands, and their inhabitants are fairly intelligent and skillful in var ious ways. Shakespeare’s autograph is worth about SSOO. and Lord Bacon’s may be had for $25, which leads the New York Evening Sun to remark that Lord Bacon evidently did not write Shakespeare’s autograph. More than 60 per cent of adult Eng lish women, married and unmarried, are working for daily subsistence, and the number multiplies every year. Cure of Pneumonia. Hess Road, Niagara Co., N. Y.,1 March 24. 1886. f About a year ago I was taken with a severe pain in both lungs. I was first attacked with a violent chill, then a dreadful pain and then a cough accompanied by considerable fever. It looked very much like a bad attack of pneumo nia. A friend of mine procured five Allcock’B Plasters. One he put under each arm, one under each shoulder blade, and one on my chest close around my throat. In a few hours the cough ceased, the pain gradually abated and I broke out in a profuse perspiration. I fell into a profound sleep, and the next day was almost well. I wore the Plasters eight days afterwards, and have never had any trouble since. William A. Sawyer. The mother of Gen. Boulanger is a Welsh woman who is tro g and hearty at 85. Gen eel Qnacks, “Yes, it pays,” said a big. fat physician, with a name wbich is kuown throughout the medi cal w orld. ‘‘l have a practice worth S4O,OCX) a year.” ‘‘Women'/” “Yes, you’ve guessed it first time. They pay $lO every time they come into my office. W ben one gets on my list I tell you she stays!” and Dr. H laugned long and loud. This is quackery—gilt-edged, gen teel quackery—to keep suffering women pay ing tribute year in and year out, and doing them no good. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Presoi ip tion cures the peculiar weaknesses aud dis eases of women, it does not lie to them nor rob them. Among the students at Pi inceton college is one 72 years old. He is to be a minister. Delicate Children, Nursing Mothers, Overworked Men, and for all dis eases where the tissues are wasting away from the inability to digest ordinary food, or from overwork of the bruin or body, all such should take Scott’s Emulsion of Pure ( od Liver Oil with 11 vpopho-phites. ”1 used the Emulsion on a lady who was delicate, and threatened with Bro' chitis. It put her in such good health and flesh, that I must»ay it is the best Emulsion I ever used.’’—L. P. Waddell, M. D. Hugh's Mills, 8. C. Gov. Beaver is to be marshal of the inaugu ration procession at Washington, D. O. Shocking Accident. So read the headlines of many a newspaper column, and we peruse with palpitating inter est the details of the catastropby. aad are deeply impressed by the sacrifice ' f human I lives involved. Yet thousands of men and wo men are falling victims every year to that ter rible disease, consump ion (scrofula of the lungs), and they and theifff rienda are satisfied to believe the malady incurable. Now, there could be no greater mistake. No earthly power, of course, can re tore a lung that is en tirely wasted, hut Dr. Pierce’s Gulden Medical Discovery will rapidly and surely arrest the ravages of consumption, if taken in time. I)o not, therefore, despair, until you have tried this wonderful remedy. Mrs. Amelie Iti vos-Ohanler, the authoress, is to sail for Paris in December. A Remarkable Paper. Trrrc Youth’s Companion is a welcome visitor weekly n more than 400,000 families, and lias won a place in homo life obtained by no other publication. It is always safe, pure, instruc tive and entertaining. The v. onder is how any iamily can do without it. Any new subscriber fendin SIJS now, can have The Companion free < very week to .Tan nary 1,1889, and for a full yearfromtha date. Sam 1 le copies free. Ad dress Thk Youth’s Companion, Boston, Mass. A Radical Cure for Epileptic Fits. To the Editor— Please inform your readers that 1 have a positive remedy for the above aamed disease which I warrant to cure the worst cases. So strong is my faith in its vir tues that I will send fiee a samplebottle and valuable treatise to any sufferer who will give me his P O and Express address. Respy, H.GK ROOT, M. C , 183 Pearl St. New York. An Invaluable Traveling Compnnlon. No person should travel without a box of Hamburg Figs in his his satchel, for they will be found invaluable when change of food and water has brought on an attack of tion, indigestion, or torpidity of the liver. & cents. Dose one Fig. mack Drug Co., N. Y. The lady teachers of Illinois outnumber the gentlemen many times over. A perfect specific—Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Rem edy. _____ Some of the steamers plying between New York and England, make passage in six days. If afflicted with 'ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son’s Eye' water. Druggists sell at Hoc. per bottle. The best Cough Medicine is Piso’s Curo for Consumption. Sold everywhere. Hoc. uh i G OR SEI a|e Si; ' Famous TRiGCRACPKii’Er ifesg§Miffiok Birinp:-MnchinppT^ , n , n t out* establish iU 1 1 11 l« in all parts, by |1 II || :iof oar m*ihine».| Ji l l 11 foods where the people can sea them, we will aend Tree to ona person in each locality,the very bust sewing machine’ made la world, with all tha attach mints. » will also send f pee a comp K-t« s of our costly and valuable art spies. In return we ask that yon ►w what we send, to those who y call at your home, and after 29 1 inths all shall become your own uperty. This rrsnd machina is •d* after the Singer patents, hich have run out: before patents run out it sold for &IKI, with tho a tschments, and now sells for Best, strongest, most use- TDIEI pii.i: brief iastrmetion. fiv.n. 1 bus. who writ, to u, at one. can ae rur. free th. belt in th. world, and tho flnr.t (Ineofwork. of hirh art evrr .hown toffrtherin America. Tit UK .1 CO.. Kox 1 sl>. Auiiusta, Maine. Swift’s Specific cured me of malignant Blood Poison after I had be n treated in vain with old so-called remedies of Mercury and Potash. S. 8. 8. not only cured the Blood Poison, but relieved the Rheuma tism wiilch was caused ny 'he jtnisonous minerals. GEO. BOVELL, 2422 3d Avenue, N. Y. Nine ye*, ngo Scrofula attacked two of mv chil dren, and they were badly afH c|pd with the disease, which resisted the treatment of my l ami y phy ician. I waa persuaded to use Swift’- Specific by seeing an account of cures in my county paper. The impro .e- Di'-n was apparent from th- first few - oses, and in a short time my children were cured, and are still sound atuTwell. JOHN WILLIAMS. Lexington, Va. Swrrr'kkiPEcmc is entirely a vegetable remfdy, and is the only medicine which permanently cures Scrofula. Blood Humors, Cancer and Contagious Blood Poison. Send for Books on Blood and Skm mai ed free. THE BWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3. Atlanta. Ga. SENT FREE. Every reader of this paper who expects to buy anything in the line of Diamonds, fine Jewelry, Silver and Clocks —or who thinks of buying A WATCH Should send for our new illustrated catalogue for 1889, which we tend free. J. P. Stevens & Bro., Jewelers, « Whitehall St, ATLANTA, GA. The Only Printing Ink Works In the &outh. HODGE & E VANS, Manufacturers of all kinds of Printing Inks, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. t\Yf Tin F ist ul a 'fl I and a 1 Rectal Dieeie** I II I 111 | treated by a painless pro* nm ■ H cess. No loss <>f time from ■Pr ■ ■ S* % business. No knife, ligature I SIB \° rCRUBtic A UADICAL CBl'.lt « j SI «guaranteed in every case £ 1 I I I IB ■ treated. Reference given. 5 QII 111 |Dr. R. G. JACKSON, 423* OB ■■ eitiEi mam iPjir Whitehall St.. Atlanta, Ga. HP^TIY 7^ 8 ® YOU WILL fi iVE MONEY* AM I’nln, Trouble ■feis(Agj;Ks?«| ■ ,r " l wi " rI7RR IlSSra CATARRH BY USING Ely’s Cream Balm. SaMa Amilv llalm into each nostril. ELY "BROS.,E6Warren St.. N. Y. til It at T £ PI I FIVE TRAVELING WANT CUI SALESMEN! ■ ■ On SnSnry or l oiniuh* #n. No previous ■ ■ experience necessary. Address, with stamp, STAMUAKU ERASER CO.UI’ANY, 188 Gay Street. KnoxvtLe, Tenn, A. _ who have need Pisa’s M- I.T|r*.Dr Cure for Consumption I NlJr* ffN “ay ll 1* BEST OF ALU Sold every where. 360. ■k *■ to SS a day. Samples worth *1.50 FREX V H Lines not under tlie horse’s feet. Write 0 \3 Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holley. Mich. Ciouc I We want to buy several in this locality. rAnmJ « CuETia It WmoH , 1333 Broad ray, N Y. *MI a Lin at home and make more money working for oe than InJmi at anythin, elae in the world Either an CoatlyouttU ruse. limn IUI. Addreaa, I*IX A Co., Augu«t», Mama I? *l**l* »I«I« ►%« rfr* *l* Jk aj« *J« rje ►£« »J« ►’ <»a> eyl »js Tne man woo ii*s invested lrum three jU We oiler the man who wants service to five dollars m a Kubber Coat, and (not style) a garment that will keep at his first half hour s experience in ama an ana him dry in the hardest storm. It is a ittirm finds to Ins sorrow that It is |M t ■ called TOWER’3 FISH BRAND hardly a better prelection than a mos- WW CL ■ “ SLICKER," a name familiar to every f.dto netting, not on.y feels chagrined m m ■ Cow-boy all over the land. With lin ns * . being so badly taken in, but also 3 BP Al the only perfect Wind and Waterproof leels If he does not look exactly like Ra| |tsi I*l Coat is “ l ower's Fish Bran J Slicker.” Ask for the “FISII BRAND" Slicxib I IMI Vi and take no other. If v, ur storekeeper does not h eve tlie nsn rraxd, send for descriptive catalogue. A. J. Towns, 20 Simmons St., Boston. M ass. *l* > T‘ “’l'* ►{a r-Js »%» ►%< »Js ►.« »I* ►!< "I* *’l* *l* *l* *l* ”1" 'a' *** > ~l~* “I* ’“l* Possesses many Important Advantages over aQ other prepared Foods. BABIES CRY FOR IT. INVALIDS RELISH IT. Makes Plump, Laughing, Healthy Babie* Regulates the Stomach and Bowels. Sold by Druggists. Jisc., 50c., SI.OO. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO.. BUSiIWOTON, VT, Baby Portraits. A Portfolio of beautiful baby portraits, printed on fine plate paper by patent photo process, sent free to Mother of any Baby bom within a year. Every Mother wants these pictures; send at onoe. Give Babv’s name and age. WILLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Props,, Burlington, Vt It’s Easy to Dye WITH DiMO^DyTs |[ Superior AjpT~ Strength, Fastness, Beauty, /M jJjIL AND f) SimpSicity. Warranted to color more goods than any other dyes ever mude, and to give more brilliant and durable colors. Ask for tho Diamond, and tak. no other. 36 colors; 10 cents each. WELLS, RiCHARDSON & CO., Burlington, Vt. For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, USB DIAMOND PAINTS. Gold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only 10 Cents, Lflu [for coNsurarniiH Piso’s Cure is our best selling medi cine. I have a persona! knowledge of its beneficial effects, and reoommend it —S. Larry; Druggist, Allegheny, Pa. FGUE BOOKS LEARNED IN ONE HEADING. A Year’s Work Dene in Ten Days. From the Chaplain of Exeter Colletre. and Houghto. Syriac Prizeman, Oxford, Co 1. Exon, Oxon., Sept., 1888. Dear Sir: In April, 188 S, while thinking of tak in. orders in September, I middoniy received notice that my ordination examination would be held in a fort niifht. I had only frit (10) days in which to p’epar* for the Exam. I should recommend a year’s prepar ation in the rase of an one so utterly unprepared a * I was; but you' Nys/.m had so st englhened my nat ural memory that I win able to remember amt yiv. the (fist of any book after reading 1 t ones. I there fore read LiKhtfoot, Proctor, Harold Brown*. Mosheim, Ac , Ac., once, and was successful in every one of the nine pai'e;.. The pre.ent Bishopof Euan burg knows the facts. Faithfully yours, (Rev.) James Midplkton Macdovau) [M, A. I To Prof. A. I.OIsETTK, '4117 Fifth Ave., N. Y. tJT-This System is tautf t personally or by cor respondence. Cali or address an above for prospectus CATARRH fi i \ where all other remedies fail. Ou» k. I otn /j 1 method of direct And co. tinuoutf 1' « \ medication of tho whole ruepirac V 1 X. \ or T «yßteni produces same effect w \ AiA \«8 a favorablechanffo of climat#. \ No smoko or disagreeable odor. >4 IT ILLUSTRATED BOOK giving full \ I particulars,free upon application. ' COMMON S N3E CATARRH CURB \ 60 State St., Chicago, Ul. JONES fct§ p m^3,psx3 Iren Levers, Steel Keariags, liraai Tare Beam and team Box for Irerv Tor free pr»c« m r * mertJon tbl« paper aud addreaa J C S icmes ef oiMBHAaTM. : • BINUHAIHTON. N. «». CONSUMPTION I have a positive remedy for the above diaease; bv lt« use Ihouoands of cases of tho worst kind and of lonsr standinjr have been cured. So strong is my faith in Ite efilcacv that I will tend two bott'e-' free, tosretber with a valuable treatise on this disease to any sufferer. Give Express and P. O. address. T. A, SLOCUM. M. a. 181 Pearl St., N. Y |AfSYHk'LfirclißElS| nGennts Astbnta Core nero tfaiU logive im-O U media's relief m the vrorst canes,insures comfort-■ H able sleep; effects care, whore s 1 cohere fail J ■ ■ trial convince* the mo,: tkeptical. Price 50c. a’ 25 HS 1.00,0 f Druggists or by msil. Simple EJLKEB Bfaffifflf-i«ii Si I, •■iMinri^f'lol SfIIESMENIIiI JUmui .tamp Wages $3 Per Day Permanent poaition vl Se n term i> anufac tu r m ."cm ctn nat i!‘ <Shlo!l &REYOU iIRRSED? this society, which pays its members IkiioO to <|l,vOO nt marriage. Circulars free. N. W. MUTUAL EN DOW.ME.vr SOCIETY, Box SAG, Minneapolis, I 1 ilia. |/"hefisAnfl say Pise's Cure for Con- I ID A fS k\ sumption Is THE BEST jUttiU UAi 3l^ e r ar. e Tc^ U V ° iC * Ijeur S3'l’ll Y, Book-keeping,Busine >< Forma Rv, U m L Penmanship, Arithmetic. Short-h ,nd, eta, II thoroughly taught by MALL. Circulars free, Bryant’. College, 457 Main Si, Buffalo, N. Y. I£| ffi ABT if FT I Tin BE If I. - NI)S. Ido a WS iit Bsß j r‘ 11 ' trictly Cummi sion Business. ■ W Hll ■ lor Rv INo options Owrflrx address Chab. Hite-Smith, 16 W. Bth St .Chattanooga,Tenn. ODIUM UABIT Painlessly cared In 10 to m rlUm Mho! i Days. Sanitarium or Horn. Treatment. Trial FTee. No Cure. No Pay. Tbs Humane Reui edy Co., La B'ayeitPa lu J. Rlaip’ePslle Gr . eat En 9<‘shGoui am DIcMl sriilsa Rtieumaic Rcmsly. Oral Box, Hit round, 14 I*lH., PEERLESS DYES Sot.d nv DRroa»ri COIaOavA II lor CouHUinptivm &ui Abtaiual* •cs. Send 2c. for it. i>«. ii ah I'LE rr, Boaldei’, GoL A. N. U : ............. .Fifty, 83.