Newspaper Page Text
A Beautiful Fish With Cnrlons HsbltS.
There is on exhibition at a little aquar¬
ium in a window in New York a curious
group of the finny tribe never before
seen in this country. It is a family of
Cochin China paradise fish consisting of
■ foil grown male and female and several
of their little progeny. The fish is a
marvel of beauty. The head is gray in
color, and is mottled with dark spots,
and the gills blue,bordered with crimson.
The eyes are yellow and red, and the
black. The sides of the
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PARADISE FISH BUILDING ITS NEST,
are crimson, with ten or twelve vertical
blue stripes. The tail is crescent in
shape and is crimson, with a blue border.
•When the fish is excited all the colors
are brilliant. When the male fish is
fighting for the possession of a female of
the species he extends all his fins and dis¬
plays their most vivid colors. The tail
is covered with small spots, like the
eyes on a peacock’s tail, and the under
surface of the fish becomes jet black. The
colors of the dorsal fin change constantly
from green to blue, sometimes showing
white spots, and the body trembles
perceptibly, radiating colors of every
hue.
As summer approaches the fish become
leery active and build a nest. The male
fights for the possession of the female
and the victor betakes himself to a corner
-•f the aquarium, where he commences
to construct his nest. Taking a position
about an inch below the surface of the
water he frequently takes air into his
mouth aud then ejects it forcibly in the
shape of little bubbles covered with a
glutinous substance which prevents them
from bursting for several hours, He
continues to make bubbles until he has a
HtUe floating platform about six inches
jm (thick. circumference and a quarter of an inch
When the nest is finished the
jfemale beneath approaches the nest. and 1 denosits her eggs ‘bo
eggs with his moi ,<-v
iiiu bubbly nest. When all tne eggs
Shave been cared for the female again
makes her appearance, and the operation
is repeated until about a thousand eggs
.-are on the nest. The eggs hatch out in
>about thirty-six hours.— Gliitago Herald.
A RESPONSIVE AUDIENCE.
Hawley—Why, Curtin, how is it you
were not a first-nighter at your own
play? Are
Curtin—I was too nervous. you
just from the theater?
Rawley—Yes. pathetic bring
Curtin—Did my scenes
any tears?
Rawley—Yes; the people in the house
laughed till they cried.—[Munsey’s
Chattanooga, Roms A Columbus
Railroad.
“CHICKAMAUCA ROUTE.”
This new and popular route has a Don’oU
Daily Passenger Service between Chattanooga
and Cedartown.
The traveling public would do woll to pa’
rouizo this now short line between the Nur.li
and South. Close connections are made at
Chattanooga, Tenn., Home, Ga., and Carroll¬
ton, Ga., with alt lines diverging from these
points. and
Our patrons aro assured good comforta¬
ble accommodations.
Note Bchcdule below. In effect Sept 28, 1890.
SOUTH NORTH
Passenger STATIONS. Passenger
Trains. Trains
No. 8 No. 1 No. 2. No. 4,
Daily. Daily. Daily, Daily.
Dep. Arr. 11 80a
w 9 40a .. .Chattanooga...
wcr, 9 56a .....itossville..... 11 12a
10 10a ..Mission Ridge... 11 OJa
w« 10 23a .Crawfish Springs. >4 p 10 48a
10 37a ...Bock Spring..,. 10 37a
10 44a .....Copeland..... 10 25a
10 59a .... Lafayette..... 10 11a
....Marti ndale .... 9 49a
)p 11 28a ........Trion....... 9 30a
ip 11 39a . ...Summerville.... 914a
ip 11 49a .. .Raccoon Mills .. 9 02a
ip 11 58a ......Lyerly...... 8 42a 50a
Ip 18 04p .. ..Taliaferro...... 8
Ip 18 12 p .....Holland..... 8 83a
Ip 18 82p . .White Springs .. 8 28a
ip 12 S5p .....Lavender. ... 8 07a
»p 1 I0p ......ROME...... 7 40a
ip 1 28p . .Silver Creek.... 7 17a
p 1 42p ......Summit..... 7 03a
I-* ....Lake Creek.... 0 58a
ic .... Cedartown.... 0 45a
......Youngs.
tc .......Felton
____Buchanan
w ......Kramer, 12 5V'p
c« .. ..Mandeville 12 45p
^ .... Carrollton 12 30p
Arr. Dep.
Passengers leaving Chattanooga on No. 1, ar.
rive at Romo. Ga., 1:05 p. nu, Carrollton, 11:20 4 p
m., Griffin, 7:23 p. m.. and Macon p. m.
Returning, leave M&oon 8:10 a m. Griffin 10:20.
a. m., Carrollton 12:30 p. m., Rome 3:20 p. m.,
and arrive at Chattanooga at 6:40 p. m., Mak¬
ing daylight ride between Macon, Ga., and
Chatanooga, Tenn. 4 C, It. R.
See that yonr tickets read via C. R.
W. H. WILLIAMSON, A. N. SLOAN,
Acting Sup’t. G. F. «fc P. A.,
Rome, Ga. Chattanooga, Tenn
NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN.
This is the era of rings.
Aprons are coming in again.
Donation parties are now raging.
Gauntlet gloves arc very much worn.
Moonstones arc in high favor at pres¬
ent.
The paniers are here and have come to
stay.
The skirts are slashed and lined with
silver silk.
After-dinner coffee cups grow smaller
and smaller.
It is not the fashion just now to wear
corsage bouquets.
Sealskin robes and garments arc greatly
affected by society.
Silk underwear has not proved to be a
commercial success.
A Miss O’Duffy of New York is an im¬
porter of wild animals.
English crepe is mingled with Sicili
enne in toilets for debutantes.
The theory goes that American women
are the best treated in the world.
Girdles are much in fashion—the kind
that were worn in mediaeval times.
Wear black when you are youthful. II
will not become your mature years.
Uniformity of arrangement is entirely
banished from an artistic and comfort¬
able room.
In Russia women are not allowed to
practice medicine before reaching the age
forty years.
Louis Quatorze waistcoats are stilt .a
feature of some of the very latest gowns
from Paris.
Mary Elkin ton, daughter of a promi¬
nent Quaker at Philadelphia, has recently
married a Jap.
Bridemaids’ dresses for children are
made of white cloth, with an abundance
of stitching.
Fleecy Shetland wool nubias are find¬
ing favor among the acknowledgedly
elderly ladies.
Crepe de chine, richly embroidered,
has not a rival in the way of material for
evening gowns.
In dog collar fashion a necklace of
white violets or chrysanthemums is worn
with evening dress.
Mrs. Stanley, wife of the African ex¬
plorer, says the American women are the
smartest in the world.
Purdy, Texas, has a bride who is six
feet five and three-quarter inches in
height and only seventeen years old.
Miss Horwitz, of Baltimore, Md., has
a willowy and graceful figure and is one
of the best dressed women in America.
There are now 200 regularly ordained
'"omen preachers in the United States,
where forty years ago there was only
one.
Mrs. Belle Wooster Higgins, of Sulli¬
van, Me., has had nineteen years of sea
life, and has sailed to every part of the
globe.
Over $300,000 worth of French bon¬
bons are exported to Constantinople
yearly for the ladies of the Turkish
harems.
The Methodists of Germany are almost
unanimous in their opposition to the
proposal to admit women to the general
conference.
Mrs. Miles, the wife of the Indian
fighter, is a niece of General and Senator
Sherman and a sister ot Senator
Cameron’s wife.
Black ostrich feathers powdered with
silver are used with elegant effect or
princesse dresses of black velvet wrought
with silver embroideries.
Sevres has lost its popularity, so great
ten years ago, and Dresden rules whore
once Sevres ruled, though connoisseurs
find other porcelains to like better still.
One of the features of the display in
the women’s department of the World’s
Fair will be dolls dressed in the garb of
nuns of the different convents of South
America.
It is told of Mmc. De Stael that she
was never seen in company without a
sprig of laurel in her hand, which she
constantly twisted and turned as she
conversed.
There are about 2500 women in the
United States who hold diplomas from
medical colleges. The first woman phy¬
sician was Elizabeth Blackwell, who
graduated in 1848.
The great beauties of bygone ages
owed much of their triumph to the se¬
crets of the toilet, but unfortunately, so
jealously were buried these with secrets their guarded that
they were owners.
Three of the richest women in Phila¬
delphia, Penn., $3,000,000; are Mrs. Thomas A.
Scott, with Mrs. Joseph
Harrison, with $2,000,000, and Mrs.
Baldwin, who has a fortune of $2,000,
000 .
For very youthful bridesmaids the
bodices are round, half low, and finished
with short gauze sleeves arranged in a
very high, full puff upon each shoulder,
with a white rose and foliage at the top
of each puff.
1 Mrs. H. E. Houghton, of $500,000, Spokane
Falls, Washington, is worth a
fortune that has been made within six
years from an original investment ol
$100. She is hardly thirty years old and
her husband is a lawyer.
Powder on the face shows less if ap¬
plied with a bit of chamois rather than
a puff, or if a puff is used the powder
should be rubbed gently into the skin
with a hare’s foot or a small soft brush
such as is used on babies’ heads.
EXCITEME NT IN R OCHESTER.
The ComnMtlea Ouaafl h w the •taunnaal
•f a PbyeMai.
An unusual article from the Rochester,
N. Y., Democrat and Chronicle, was re¬
cently republished in this paper and was a
subject ot much comment. That the ar¬
ticle caused even more commotion in Roch¬
ester, the following from the same paper
shows:
Dr. J. B. Henion, who is well known not
oaly in Rochester but In nearly every part this
of America, sent an extended article to
paper a few days since, which was duly pub¬
lished, detailing his remarkable seemed be experience
and rescue from what to a certain
death. It would enquiries be impossible which have to enumerate been made
the personal
at our office as to the validity of the article,
but they have been so numerous that fur¬
ther Investigation of the subject was deemed
necessary. With
this end in view a representative of
this paper called on Dr. Henion, at his resi¬
dence, when the following interview oc¬
curred: “That article of youss, dire Doctor, has
created quite a whirlwind, the state¬
ments about the terrible condition you were
in and the way you were rescued such os you
can sustain f*
“Everyone I of them mid many additional
ones. the was brought so low by neglecting
first and most simple symptoms. I did
not think I was sick. It is true I had frequent
headaches; felt tired most of the time; could
eat nothing felt one day and was ravenous the
next; dull pains and my stomach was out
ot order, but I did not think it meant any¬
thing serious.
“The medical profession has been treating
symptoms instead of disease for years, and
it is high time it ceased. The symp toms I
have just mentioned, or any unusual action
____
or Irritation of the water ohannels indicate
the approach of kidney the disease more than a
cough We announces the coming of consumption.
do not treat cough, but try to help
the lnngs. We should not waste our time
trying to relieve the headaches, pains about
the body or other symptoms, but go directly
to the Kidneys, the source of most of these
ailments.”
"This, then, is what than you meant when you
said that more one-half the deaths
which occur arise from Bright’s disease, is it,
Dootorf’
“Precisely. Thousands of diseases in are tor¬
turing Bright’s people disease to-day, which its reality are
in some of many forms.
It is a Hydra-headed should monster, and the slight¬
est symptoms strike terror to every
one who has them. I can look back and re¬
call hundreds of deaths which physicians de¬
clared at the time were caused by paralysis,
apoplexy, heart disease, pneumonia, complaints malarial which I
fever and other common
see now were caused by Bright's disease.”
“And did all these cases have simple symp¬
toms at first?"
“Every one of them, and might have been
cured as I was by the timely use of the same
remedy. I am getting my think eyes I thoroughly help¬
opened in this matter and am
ing others to see the facts and their possible
danger also."
Mr. Warner, who was visited at his ee tab
men t on N. St. Paul street, spoke very ear¬
nestly : Bright’s disease had in¬
“It is true that
creased wonderfully, and wo find, by reliable
statistics, that from *70 to ’80 its growth prominent was
over 230 per cent. Look at toe
men it has carried off, and is taking off every
year, for while many are dying apparently really
of victims paralysis of kidney and apoplexy, disorder, tiMjy which aro causes
heart disease, paralysis, apoplexy, record etc.
Nearly every week the papers the
death of some prominent man from this
scourge. Recently, however, the increase
has been chocked, and I attribute this to the
general use of my remedy.” people afflicted
“Do you think many are
with it to-day who do not realize it, Mr.
Warner?” New Orleans
“A prominent professor in a
medical college was lecturing before his class
on the subject of Bright’s disease. He had
various fluids under microscopic analysis, the in¬
and was showing the students what
dications of this terrible malady were. ‘And
now, gentlemen,’ he said, ‘as wo have seen
the unhealthy indications, I will show you
how it appears in a state of perfect health,’ usual
and he submitted his own fluid to the
test. As he watched the results his counte
ance suddenly changed—his color and com¬
mand both left him, and in a trembling
voice he said: ‘Gentlemen, I have mode a
painful discovery; I have Bright’s disease of
the kidneys;’ and in less than a year he was
dead. The slightest indications of any kid¬
ney difficulty should be enough to strike
terror to any one.”
’‘You know of Dr. Henion’s case?”
“Yes, I have both read and heard of it.*
“It is very wonderful is it not?”
“No more so than a great many others that
have come to my notice as having been cured
by the same means.”
“You believe then that Bright’s disease
can be cured.”
“I know it can. I know it from my own
and the experience of thousands of die promi¬ by
nent persons who were given friends.” up to
both their physicians and
“You speak of your own experience, what
was it?” languid
“A fearful one. I had fait and
unfitted for business for years. But I did
not know what ailed me. When, however, I
found it was kidney difficulty I thought there
was little hope ana so did the doctors. I have
since learned that one of the physicians of
this city pointed me out to a gentleman on
the street one day, saying: ‘there goes a man
who will be dead within a year.’ I believe
his words would have proved true if I had
not fortunately used the remedy now known
as Warners Safe Cure.”
“Did you make a chemical analysis of the
case of Mr. H. H. Warner soma three years
ago, Doctor? was asked Dr. S. A. Lattimore,
one of the analysts of the State Board ot
Health.”
“Yes, sir.”
“What did this analysis show you?"
“A serious disease of the kidneys."
“Did you think Mr, Warner could re¬
cover?”
“No, sir, I did not think it possible.”
“Do you know anything about the remedy
which cured him?”
“I have chemically analyzed it and find it
pure and harmless.”
The standing of Dr. Henion, Mr. Warner
and Dr. Lattimore in the community is be¬
yond question, and the statements they make
cannot for a moment be doubted. Dr.
Henion’s experience shows that of Bright’s dis¬
ease of the kidneys is one the most de¬
ceptive and dangerous of all diseases, that it
is exceedingly common, but that it cau be
cured if taken in time.
f 12, 1886, and
- was February 12,
1542.
KING COTTON
Buy or sell your Cotton on JONES
5-Ton Cotton Scale.
■ I NOT CHEAPEST BUT BEST.
r For terms address
-
If W JONES BINGHAMTON, or BINGHAMTON, N. V.
WMmmt&XS 2 S 2 !Xtt Ferry If. J.
SOe.: beet 250 . Lchabix's Smc Max. Little
FREE 12 full ’ength portraits beautiful actresses.
All d.fferent. Sind stamo for postage.
Hay A Co. , Box 1905, 8au FrancUoo, Cal.
A Princely Donation.
The magnificent gift of Baron Hirsch
to the Hebrew emigrant charity and aid
fund of $2,400,000, has created much
comment and considerable interest in
philanthropic The deed circles. gift which
of the munificent
had been drawn up and signed by Baron
Ilirsch, had been laid before the trustees,
as was a letter from the baron, instruct¬
ing them to draw upon him for the
amount on March 1. The gift is not
hnmpered by any restrictions whatever,
and will bo immediately invested in this
country.
The income of the fund is expected to
be $10,000 a month, this being the sum
which has been paid by the transatlantic
donor in monthly remittances for over a
year. Baron Hirsch merely executes part
of his avowed intention of distributing
that portion of his fortune which he
wishes devoted to philanthropic purposes
during his lifetime. The income will be
pevoted tion entirely to the relief and educa¬
of Hebrew immigrants and their
chidren.
Girls do have some advantages, any¬
way! Of 500,000 girl babies born in
Massachusetts, 364,222 reach the budding
age of fifteen. Of the same number of
boys, only 350,430 reach that age. In
the happy laud of factories New Jersey, where
there are fewer and more
peaches better and sweet potatoes, both babies stand
have a chance and the figures
368,311 and 378,293.
Ladies building needing should a tonic, or Brown’s children Iron who
want up, take
IndigestioDjBiliousness Bitters. It is pleasant to take, cures Malaria,
Blood rich and Liver Complaints,
makes the and pure.
The man who spends much time in trying to
please his enemies is one of the most foolish
of spendthrifts.
Dainty candies that children cry for are Dr.
Bull’s Worm Destroyers, They please the
children, but they kill the worms.
A good illustration of faith, hope and chari¬
loan of an umbrella.
Mothers’
i JS[
l at 7 ji ~ rrmpimlfm. Lessens
qUFE 4iM I
l r
WORTH ITS WEIGHT IN COLD.
If a price can be placed on pain, “ Mother’s Friend ” Is worth its weight in
gold. My wife suffered more in ten minutes with either of her other two
children than she did altogether with her last, having previously used four
bottles of “Mother’s Friend.” It is a blessing to any one expecting to be
come a mother. Geo. F. Lockwood, Carmi, 111.
Write The Bradfiekl Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga., for particulars. Sent by express, charges
on receipt of price, $1.50 per bottle. Sold by druggists.
<
>A.W I
ft - W A
XFS Wfliied MS to •V 1
Your health
is a citadel.
The winter’s
storms are the
coming enemy. You know that this enemy will sit
down for five long months outside this citadel, and do its
best to break in and destroy. Is this citadel garrisoned
and provisioned ? The garrison is your constitution. Is
it vigorous or depleted ? How long can it fight without
help ? Have you made provision for the garrison by fur¬
nishing a supply of SCOTT’S EMULSION of
pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites of
Lime and Soda ? It restores the flagging energies, in¬
creases the resisting powers against disease; cures Con¬
sumption, Scrofula , General Debility , and all A neemic and
Wasting Diseases (especially in Children constitution ), keeps coughs
and colds out, and so enables the to hold the
fort of health. f Palatable as Milk.
SPECIAL.—Scott s Emulsion is non-secret, ana is prescribed by the Medical Pro¬
fession all over the world, because its ingredients arc scientifically combined in such a
manner as to greatly increase their remedial value.
CAUTION.—Scott’s Emulsion is put up in salmon-colored wrappers. Be sure and
get Sold the genuine. Prepared only by Scott & Bowue, Manufacturing Chemists. N ew York.
by all Druggists.
pISO’S REMEDY FOR CATAiutn.—Best. Easiest to use
Cheapest. Relief is immediate, a cure is certain. For
Cold in the Head it lias no equal.
CATAR R H
It is an 1 Ointment, of which a small particle is applied to the
nostrils. nee, 50c. Sold by druggists or sent by mail
Address . E. T. Hazki .ttnb,
P|j|||k ^ ^ Brand
rur Tnt BBir.iN original ii AMn and r.rMiiiMr GENUINE. in.. The only ware* sa_____ p*bp«, and j reliable Pill . f#r sale.
Ladled, boxes ask Druggist blue ribbon. for Chichester's Take English ether Diamond kind. Brand Repute in Substitution* Red and Gold metallic \ V V
sealed with no and Imitation*,
WiSTSrs&ftaas:* CH,CHESTER CHEM,c ^«sb?¥r'
PROF. LOISETTE’S NEW
MEMORY BOOKS.
Criticisms on two reoent Memory Systems. Read)
•bout April 1st. Fall Table* of Contents forward®*
only to those who send stamped directed envelope.
Alaa Nevwrot^ta^Ad^Ms^, Proapeotus POST FREE of the Ixrtaettlan AU
of New YssSt-
& vr f
•1 *>
r" V I
\ "3
\s=, ^ViStWIO^djf *> w " p ;-'M
v
“WHAT AN ASS AM I!”
The ass thought himself as fine loot¬
ing as his neighbor, the horse, until he,
one day, saw himself in the looking
glass, when he said “What an ass am I!”
Are there not scores of people who
cannot see themselves as others seo
them? They have bad blood, pim¬
ples, blotches, eruptions, and other kin
dred disfigurements. All these annoy¬
ing things could be entirely eradicated,
and the skin restored to “lily white¬
ness,” if that world-famed remedy, Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery,
were given a fair triaL
It cures all humors, from the ordi¬
nary blotch, pimple or eruption to the
worst scrofula, or the most inveterate
blood-taints, no matter what their na¬
ture, or whether they be inherited or
acquired. The “Golden Medical Dis¬
covery” is the only blood - purifier
guaranteed to do just what it is rec¬
ommended to, or money refunded.
World’s Dispensary Medical As¬
sociation, Proprietors, No. 663 Main
Street, Buffalo, N. Y.
“ Mother’s Friend ” is the greatest
blessing ever offered child-bearing woman.
I have been a mid-wife for many years, and
in each case where “ Mother’s Friend"
had been used it has accomplished wonders
and relieved much sufiering. It is the best
remedy for rising of the breast known, and
Worth the price for that alone.
Mns. M. M. BRUSTEB. Monfigomery, Ala.
■SISrs&fWSSS Bryant’* Collette. 457 Main St. Buffalo. tCT.
TAoeiU umnxvi 'XtttCZ I QOt
»• to., news a. was a.
A. N. U Eight, 1891.