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To Break a Bog From EatirgEggs.
Divide a heaping tcaspoonful of tartar
emetic into eight or ten doses. Break off
th - end of an egg, empty a pait of the
contents and stir into the remainder left
in the she 1 a dose of tartar emetic. Con¬
fine the dog in a mom, or tie him, and
give him the doctored egg. In an hour
or two lie wi 1 he trying to turn himself
wrong side out. As soon as he is over
the nausea, give him a second egg and a
third, if he will eat it. When he refuses
to eat the egg, and lets lie by him for
several hours untouched, pry open his
mouth and force the egg down his throat.
Afterward you may trust him in your hen
house.
The object in tying the dog is to let
him get nothing else to eat while he is
under treatment, or he may think it was
the last thing eaten that made him so
sick. The idea is to convince him that
eggs no longer will lie on his stomach.
Bowdlerism.
Inasmuch as we are likely to have use
for such a word as Bowdlerize, it is time
to become familiar with its meaning and
origin. It is derived from the name edition of
Thomas Bowdler, who edited an
of Shakespeare, and another of Gibbon
from which all the naughtiness was left
out. A large amount of classic literature
will h^ve to be put through this process
of Bowdlerizing in order to make it ac¬
ceptable to some fastidious folks of to¬
day.
II invites’, Spectacles.
The reputation of these fine glasses is not of
the dorsed, cheap order. warmly They praised have by been the solid used, en¬
and repre¬
sentative men of the United States. Sudh
men recommend them us Senator-elect Juo.
B. Gordon, Ex-Gov. Fitzhugh Lee, Gov. E. W.
Wilson of West Va., Rev. H. C. Morrison. D.
D.; Bishop Alex. W. Gregg, Chancellor Uni¬
versity ot the South: Gov. R. B. Hubbard, Hughes, Ex
Minister to Japan; Judge Simon P.
of Arkansas and many hundreds of others.
Thes“ famous spectacles are sold in nearly
every town from Maryland to New Mexico.
Call for Hawkes’. Take no others. Every paix •
warranted.
SI00 Reward. $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleaded to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cure in all its
stages, and that is catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con¬
stitutional treatment. disease, Hall’s Catarrh requires Cure a constitutional is taken in¬
ternally, acting directly the upon the thereby blood and de¬
mucous surfaces of system,
giving stroying the foundation strength of by the building disease, and the
the patient up
constitution work. The proprietors and assisting have nature much in doing faith its in
so
its curative powers that they offer One Hun¬
dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure.
Send for list of testimonials. Address
F. J. Chunky & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
,
Money in the Business.
Tell Mrs. Wells that her, or any industrious
person can make $30 a week in the plating
business. For particulars address the Lake
Electric Co.. Englewood, I1L A Plater costs
$3. I am working now and know there ia
money iu the business.
son’s If afflicted Ey e-water with sore Co
,
m
L?y.^=Q-w_ jn
OI^E> ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is and pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, acts
gently yet promptly Bowels, on the Kidneys, the
Liver and cleanses sys¬
tem 1 effectually, dispels colds, head¬
aches obstipation. and fevers and cures Figs- habftual is the
ofily remedy of Syrup its kind of
ever pro¬
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac¬
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its- action and truly beneficial fe its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances; its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c
, drug¬
and $1 bottles by all leading who
gists. Any reliable hand druggist will
may-not have it on who pro¬
cure it promptly - for any one
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. N.Y. -
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK.
Every Farmer his own Roofer
CHEAPER than Shingles, Tin or Slate.
Reduces Your INSURANCE, and Perfectly
Fjre, Water and Wind Proof.
K xr^STEEL ROOFING,
corrugated
" Catalogue. - SEHD OuriJew
j & prices
Sts cy < K: C 1 M N sX T' : Ox- pi]
Our Roofing is ready; formed for the Building,
and can he applied By any one. Do not buy
any Roofing till you wfite ABSENTS to us for.our WANTED. Descrip¬
tive Catalogue, Series B.
KING COTTON
Buy or sell your Cotton on JONES
A 5-Ton Cotton Scale.
NOT CHEAPEST BUT BEST.
For terms address
ifl W JONES BINGHAMTON. OF BINGHAMTON, N. Y.
SOUTHERN BRIEFS
DAILY OCCURRENCES IN THE
SUNNY SOUTHLAND
Curtailed into Interesting: and
Newsy Paragraphs.
Ex-Governor John McEuery, of Louis¬
iana, is dead.
The trial of Mrs. McKeo for the mur-
3or of Mrs. Wimpee was begun at Horae,
3a., Monday morning.
The strike on the East Tennessee be¬
gan Sunday at the yards in Atlanta. The
brnkemen and firemen are contending for
the standard rate of wages.
The official statement of Schwartz &
Co., the failing bankers of Louisville,
given out on Thursday, show t;he assets
to be $57,553; liabilities $802,803.
The government will investigate the
alleged cruel treatment of Hungarians
ill iployed by contractors ou the Norfolk
d Western railroad at Pocahontas,
W. Va.
A dispatch of Thursday from Bristol,
Tenn., says that D. C. Morrison, depui
circuit court clerk of Scott county, Vir¬
ginia, under Charles M. Carter, is a
forger to the amount of $30,000, more or
less.
The Tennessee senate, on Thursday,
rejected the bill appropriating $25,000
for a state exhibit at the world’s fair.
The house, however, passed a bill allow¬
ing county authorities to appropriate
money for exhibits at the fair.
A special of Saturday from Martins
burg, W. Va., says the worst snowstorm
that has ever occurred in that section of
the country has just' ceased. It lasted
forty-eight hours, and it is supposed that
about six feet of snow has fallen*
Dispatches of Saturday from Win¬
chester, Va., say that snow has been
falling there for thirty-eight hours and
has reached a depth of over two feet and
in some places nearly three feet. Coun¬
try roads are impassable, It is the
severest storm for thirty years.
A dispatch of Saturday from Asheville,
N. C., says: Two disastrous landslides
have occurred on the Spartanburg railway, branch
of the Richmond and Dauville
and through traffic has been discontinued.
The track is covered to a depth of of forty
feet for a distance of a quarter a mile.
Governor Buchanan, of Tennessee, on
Saturday, a.ppoined George W. Fond, of
Knoxville, to be commissioner of labor
and inspector of mines, and the senate
confirmed the appoinment. and Mr. Ford is
a shoemaker of Knoxville secretary
of the Central labor union, Knights of
Labor and Farmers’ and Laborers’ Union.
A. Falk & Son, lnnre wholesale
retail dealers in clothing, in Savannah,
are financially embarrassed. On Friday
the National bank of Savannah foreclosed
on a mortgage for $19,000 and took pos¬
session. of the stock. Other mortgages
have been entered up, making a total of
$59,200. The firm has always rated high
leeently, and had an extensive business.
A Raleigh, N. hundreds C., dispatch inquiries of Friday of
says: There are of
the governor regarding the refunded
direct tax, and some holders of receipts
and some newspapers intimate that the
the money ought to be ou hand now. The
delay is at Washington and is
able, for every stub of the tax receipts
must be copied This and work copies is sent being to the
governor. now done
as rapidly as possible.
The distilery and winery of the Gal
leges Wine Company, at Irvington, Cali¬
fornia, one of the largest establishments
of the kind^ in the st-ite, was ,seized by
revenue officers last week, on account of
frauds alleged to have been perpetrated
in the unlawful use of untaxed brandy,
The plant seized comprises exteifsive
buildings, ajl the utensils and appurte
nances of the business and between 300,
000 and 400,000 gallons of wine and
brandy. , ’ „
The Marietta and North Georgia strike
was settled Saturday. And the engineers
and firemen who left the road March 10th
last p ill return ‘to work. So will yte
members of the brotherhood committee
wlio presented the the receiver, grievances Mr. Glover. of the
engineers Receiver Glover to had conference With
a
Assistant Chief Youngson. Both gen¬
tlemen manifested quite a conservative
spirit and in less than a half hour a com
nlete understanding was Birmingliam, reached.
In Garst’s saloon, in Alai,
near the heart of the city, at an early
hour Friday morning, a customer Winchester took a
drink and then coolly drew a
saloon keeper, , . him , . to'
rifle on the ordering
deliver the contents of the cash drawer
The saloon keeper obeyed, and banded
out quently about captured $20. and The^ bound man was subse- to the
over
grand jury. Neighboring Italians came,
to the rescue, but scattered at a com
mnnd from the robber. He was nearly a
white mulatto; a-cl his was the boldest
robberv ever oeonrrin - ". in B rmingham.
A CLEVER COUNTERFEIT.
Dangerous Two-Dollar Bill in
Circulation.
A sensation has b<;en caused at the,
jasury department by the discovery of a
icate so nearly
o be almost im
of detection. Heretofore all
our paper currency have
itfected by the failure to
•acter of paper on which
e government notes are printed," of it which
so arranged that each part form
a complete note contains a small silk
ad running through it lengthwise,
paper is for the first time almost
itly imitated in the counterfeit just
rered.
BUSINESS QUIET.
Dun & Co.’s Report for the
Past Week.
It. G. Dun & Co.’s weekly review of
trade says: If the news is good news, ns
concerns the condition of business at this
season, the outlook is fairly satisfactory.
It is a season of transition and uncer¬
tainty, and every week that passes with¬
out distinctly untoward events brings
closer the new and probably large crops
of next summer, and lessens the chuncc
that intervening disaster, financial, in¬
dustrial or commercial, may prevent a
revival of all bu-iness.
Trade lias been rather quiet and hesi¬
tating, as is nutural at this scasin, and
there is rather more complaint the of slow
collections, but throughout northwest
bad weather and the bad state of country
roads supply an explanation. The ( ut
look for coining crops continues excep¬
tionally good. It lias been a week of un¬
healthy speculation in some products,
owing to the desperate efforts of power¬
ful combinations to force prices ou which
they c-m unload without loss. Wheat
rose to 110| on Monday, and at 115J is
still 2 cents higher than a week ago, sales
here having been 711,000,000 bushels;
and, corn, with salts of Oo,000,000
bushels, has risen 4 J cents t - cents,
while oats, at 59J cents, are less than 1
cent higher. Pork products advance,
I and coffee and oil a small fraction each,
-bile cotton is a sixteenth-lower. The
! .hough reneral ighest now point average a this fraction of year prices on lower, Monday, reached is still and its 1
per cent above last week, but manufac¬
tured products do not share in the ad¬
vance, except iu a few cases.
EFFECTS OF TIIE STRIKES.
Threatened strikes in the building
trades cause some uneasiness, and some
strikes in textile works result, on the
whole, unfavorably to employers, while
some of the great coke producers have
attempted to resume at a reduction of
wages, the result being yet uncertain.
Coal agents have changed schedules to fit
the fact that recent quotations have been
fictitious, and new prices are 15 to 25
cents higher than a year ago.
At Boston money is easy and trade dull
because of the weather, but large orders
for lumber promise active building. At
Chicago dry goods, clothing and shoes
are dull, though the sales exceed last
year’s for the same week, and receipts in
wool are considerably increased, while
there is a decrease in Hour and lard, and
a decrease of one-half in dressed beef.
At other northwestern points trade is
fair, though much affected by the
weather and.the state of the roads, but
sjow collections are the rule. New Or¬
leans finds trade only fair, but cotton re¬
ceipts increase. rice Sugar is Trade dull, molasses
stronger and firm. at Savan¬
nah Is holding its own, but at Jaekson
ville ik dull, the orange crop haying been
marketed. The outlook for vegetables
good.
The stock market has been exceeding¬
ly dull, but, on the whole, stronger, the
average price of stock b.eing about 60
cents per share higher than a week ago.
The prospect for peace among the rail¬
roads does not grow brighter, however,
and signs of rate cutting are frequent.
. Business during failures, throughout the coun¬
try last week, number for the
United States 228, Canada 28. For the
corresponding week last year the figures
were 21"> in the United States and 20 in
Canada.
SOUTHERN CATTLE
Will' Be Rigidly Quarantined
i Against by Missouri.
’Governor Francis, of Missouri, has is
sued a proclamation ordering a strict
quarantine against southern cattle, on
account the'UnitedStatesdepartmentofagricul- of splenetic or Texas fever which
ture declares is prevalent south of the line
from the northern border of the Indian
Territory and thence cast to the Blue
Ridge Mountains. All cars carrying cattle
from those sections and entering Missouri
must be labelled “southern cattle.” All
stock yards at which such cattle are un¬
loaded shall be considered infected, and
must, therefore, be set Apart for the ac
commodation of “southern cattle.”
A PROSPECTIVE DEAL
Whereby English Capitalist Will
Invest in Tennessee.
A Nashville learned, dispatch good authority, of Saturday that says:
It is on an
English syndicate is negotiating for the
purchase of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and
Railroad Company, the largest corpora
tion of the s6rt in the south, and that the
chances are in favor of a great deal being
consummated. The prospective pur
chasers have plenty of money behind
them, as they have deposited the £2,000,000 develop
j n the Bank of England for
ment of the new town of Kimball, in
Sequatchee valley, which they have
bought.
Alabama’s New Road.
The last general, assembly of Alabama
appropriated $9,000 for the survey of a
railroad to connect the waters of the Tcu
nessee river with, the gulf of Mexico.
Ex-Governor Seay, State Senator John T.
Milner and ex-Senator R. T. Simpson
were appointed a commission to locate
the route and have the survey made. At
a mee'ing of the commission in Birmiqg
ham Wednesday, it was decided to make
the survey between Florence and Mobile,
going through the Warrior coal fields,
from north to south, and through the
following counties: Colbert, Frankiin,
Walker, Jefferson, Tuscaloosa, Pickens,
Hale, MareDgo, Clarke, Washington and
Mobile.
Potatoes vs Fish.
“My father,” says a Colorado judge,
“was a stern, exacting man, who did not
seem to think a hoy on u farm needed uny
time to go fishing or hunt woodchucks.
He was also a believer in the tree use of
the rod, which, as 1 used to think, often
spoiled the child.
“One week my father had to leave
homo to be gone three days, lie took me
out to a fieM of potatoes and said, ‘John,
I want you to hoe those potatoes while I
am ^ gone. I shall be gone just three days.
ou can do it in that time if you are spry.’
“As soon as father was gone I went
out und looked the field over. It was
just the season of trout fishing in our
region. I said, ‘Sho, I believe I can hoe
that field in two days easy enough!’ 80
I went off and fished all the first day.
“The second day I went out and looked
the ground over, and said, ‘I believe if 1
get up and work real hard I can hoe those
potatoes in one day.’ So I went und
fished all the second day.
“The third morning I went out, and
the field seemed to have grown twice as
big in the night. I said, 'I can't do it in
one day the best I can work, and father
will lick me for fishing two whole days,
nnyhowl’ So I went and fished the third
day.”
The judge doesn’t tell whether he finally
hoed the potatoes or not, but he has cer¬
tainly been a hard worker since then, and
perhaps the rod did not spoil the child
after all.
Mawt persons are broken down from over¬
work or household cares. Brown’s Iron Bit¬
ters rebuilds the system, aids digestion, re¬
moves excess of bile, and cures malaria. A
splendid tonic fpr women and children.
Sorrows of the past, remembered, sweeten
present joy._
FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
I cttle tree. l)r. Kline. 981 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Beecham’s Pills act like magic on a weak
Stomach.
r i BFfADFIELD’S \ *> I"
'J w »l
EMALEf» r LIGUL ATI1R
WORTH 50 DOLLARS PER BOTTLE.
My daughter suffered for years with Female Disease and had the Lest medioil
■without relief. I was persuaded to let her try one bottle of Brad field ’# Female
tor, and she began to improve at once. Knowing what I do of the remedy, I would liavo
its cost was 50 dollars per bottle. It cured my daughter sound and well after all other
dies liad failed. K. D. Fkatherstone, Springfldd, Term.
Write Bradfield Regulator Co., Atlanta. Ga.. for par icnlars. Sold by druggists.
-ELY'S CREAM BALM-CIeansea tlir. Nasal
|Passages, Alla.vs Pain and 1 ntlamination. Smell, and Cures Heals J^SSSjg
the Bores, Restores Taste and
I
A A Sr
Apply Hives into Relief the Nostrils. at onee —It for in Cold Quickly in Head. Absorbed. WKCvdTM
-
50c. Druggists or by mail. ELY BROS., 66 Wnrren St., N. Y.
r
'N..
Q ! n
Us iV
■sa 5_L urn,
is
LA / H
A w
I
-=T.- J.
v
lavi rH K' sf HI fj
Bj'...; v
R *
«r. op* \
r
A cough cold M £
or w
is a spy which has -
stealthily come inside
the lines of health
and is there to dis¬
cover some vulner
able point in the fortification of the constitution which is
guarding your well-being. That point discovered the spy
reports it to the enemy on the outside. The enemy is the
changeable winter climate. If the cold gets in, look out
for an attack at the weak point. To avoid this, shoot the
spy, kill the cold, using SCOTT’S EMULSION
of pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil and Hypophosphites
of Lime and Soda as the weapon. It is an expert cold
slayer, and fortifies the system against Consumption,
Scrofula, General Debility , and all A ncemic and Wasting
Diseases (specially in Children ). Especially helpful for
children to prevent their taking cold. Palatable as
Milk.
SPECIAL.—Scott's Emulsion is non-sccret, and is prescribed by the Medical Pro¬
fession all over the v/orld, because its ingredients are 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 the genuine. Prepared only by Scott & Bowne. Manufacturing Chemists, New York.
Sold by all Druggists.
* U1 SOS n*..u..L' i i vui cA1 A..mi.—Best. is .Easiest to use. BjjS ____ jj
Cold Cheapest. in the Head Relief lias Is immediate, a cure certain. For H9B
it no equal. ■
CATAR R H
■ Address. E. T. Hazeltine, Warren. Pa.
Diamond Brand
y
nr i'y Ltj THE ORIGINAL AND GENUINE. The Diamond only Me, Brand Bure, in Ked »nd reliable and Gold PI]] metallic for sale.
Lndlea, boxes sealed aak with Druggist ribbon. for Chichester's Take English ether kind. Refuse Substitutions and Imitations.
blue no mdu
\ W- Ur ESS) Ac. . All in pills stamps in pasteboard for particulars, boxes, testimonials, pink wrappers. an aro dangerous i.'bter counterfeit*. ii1c«r ca^ At Druggists, UMyS^y, or
—X---- l0,000 Testimonials. Name Paper. Ch ic h Che
Sold by all Local Druggist*
?
*
i x
i
Y\
\ m 1
Copyright, 1890. He who waits
for an inactive liver to do its work,
exposes himself to all the diseases
that come from tainted blood.
Don’t wait! Languor and loss of
appetite warn you that graver ills
are close behind. You 'you can keep
them from coming; come—with can cure Dr.
them if they’ve
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discover £
It’s the only blood and liver me
cine that’s guaranteed , in Your every case,
to benefit or cure. money
back if it doesn’t. Thus, you only
pay for the good you get. Can you
ask more? It cleanses the system
and cures pimples, blotches, erup¬
tions and all skin and scalp dis¬
eases. Scrofulous affections, as
fever - sores, hip - joint disease,
swellings and tumors, properties. yield to
its superior alterative
It is thebest medicine I everbought. My
wife has been sick for more than five years.
andyour remedy has done her more good
than all the physic she ever took, and all
the doctors that ever attended horn
REV. S. M. WALKER, Johnson’s Station, Ga: