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WOMAN'S WORLD.
PLEASANT LITERATURE FOR
FEMININE READERS.
MY LADY.
My lady In is not fair, but morning a c tear light until night.
Hhines her eye* from
The My lady Unot learned, but she know* there
way to every heart; straight she
goes
Though neither fair nor learned, she i* one
To love and love, and never to have dune.
—New England Magazine.
umkiuck lack jikvivai..
Miss Foster, the adopted daughter of
the late Irish Chief Secretary, has nearly
iiucceeded in reviving the manufacture of
Limerick lace, ns an im\>ortunt Irish in
dustry which lias been long neglected.
Mis* Foster, since her marriage with Mr.
Robert Vera OBricn, has lived m , ir
Limerick, and she recently turned her
attention to reviving the lace industry,
which now bids fair to resume ita wor.ted
activity. Assisted by a committee she
ha* ojiened a trainingachool rapid for girls, the
pupils of which are making
in the art. All the necessary material
been supplied to the girls, who, in ad
dition to their ordinary training, receive
lessons at the. local Hcliool of Art in con
nection with South Kensington.—JVetr
York Herald.
AN EMPRESS IN TUB KIT01IKN.
The Empress of Austria is the best
royal housekeeper in Kurojie. Bhe is as
thoroughly acquainted with the details
of the imperial Austrian kitchen as her
husband is with the details of the impe
rial Austrian Government. She superin
tends the household affairs of the big pul -
nee at the Austrian capital with , , the , great
eat care. She receive* personally,
and acts upon reports from cooks, butlers,
ki-qiera of the plate and keeper* of the
linen, (looking del ices which have b,
come inconvenient or antiquated
abolished only at her command.
New methods of preparing
serving food are adopted only at her sug
gentlon. Changes in the personnel of
establishment are made for the most part,
only in obedience to her orders. Conse
quently n person can cat, drink, sleep
and be served better in her house than in
any other in Europe.
The kitchen in which ttie food for the
bluest blood of Austria is cooked is a
huge room with . , all the , arrangements »
rach end for preparing fish fowl, and
beast for the table. Fifty chicken* ran
be cooked at once on one of the lug,
whirling spit*. Against the side walls
from floor to ceiling stand scores upon
score* of ehaling dishes. In these dishes,
all of which are self-warming, the
meats are carried to the carving-room
whence they arc returned to the kitchen
ready to bo served. The boiling and
baking, and frying and carrying and cut
ting occupy a small regiment of servants.
Twenty-five male cooks, in white clothes,
dress, spit, season and stuff the meats.
As manv female cooks prepare the vogc
table*, the puddin s, and the salads. A
dozen or more boys hurry the birds, fish
and joints from the kitchen to the ran -
ing-room, where long lines of carvers
slice and joint everything laid ,„. for ,
Uj
The kitchen utensils till a big room
0 ,am,ng into the kitchen This room is
the ideal of German housewives The
high walls are covered with pans, kettles.
griddles, and covers, which shine asonlv
German hands and German muscle could
make them shine There an- soup tureens
in which a big boy might be drowned,
kettles in which twins could playhouse,
and pans which would hold half a dozen
little Hanacs or Gretehen*. In short,
about every culinary utensil on the walls
is of the heroic size, suggestive rather of
the Missouri barbecue than of the feasts
of crowned heads and diplomats at one of
the first of court*.
For days before the great court festivals
the whole Austrian court kitchen staff.
from the “head court cooking master”
down to the youngest scullion, work like
mad. The chefs hold repeat,si consult.
Uon. in their council chamber, often de
bating hour after bonr with all the earnest
ness of a Parliament orC mgress con, era
ing the best methods of preparing fowls.
sauces, cakes, and s, ups The menu, as
selected bv the chefs, is submitted to U»r
master of ‘the provision department, so
that he mar immediately order from the
city whatever the cellar* of the
lack
The Austrian court dinners arc famous
on the Continent. The delicacies which
result from the protracted meetings in the
council chamber of the chefs are often so
fine tlist favored guests not infrequently
observe the old German fashion of taking u
cboice bit home to their friend* in the
name of the Empress and with her best
wish,** All that remains of a court feast, or
dinner, is sent to the Viennese h.vspitals
tin the days just after the banquet the Em
pres* is very bu*y looking over the re
(torts and inventories o! the frau head
keeper of the napkin*, and the fraulein
head kcejter of the tablecloths, and the
herr head guardian of the imperial china.
and a dozen other like functionari.-s with
jointed titles. She review-* all these coni
mimications with conscientious care, and
order* with strict attention to minute de
tails the replacement of all that has been
lost, broken, or defaced.
FASHION NOTES.
Numbered with novelties are the
plaited skirts.
Velvet muffs will be carried this winter
to match bonnets.
AU fail sleeves are set with the hc*-J
above the shoulder.
Black, with Boulanger red, and tan
vnth ... Eiffel , the . latest , , combm.. ,.
rouge, are
turns from 1 an*.
Short mantles and talmas are made with
high shoulder gores that are turned
square at the elbow to form sling
sleeve*.
In the shops where a specialty is made
of mourning toilets the brooch or buckle
used on the basque is purple, white or
black enamel.
The refinement which distinguish, .ha
new woolen* i* also characteristic of the
fashionable color*,which are mostly half
sliades of green, gray, blue or terra
cotta, and exquisite tint* of fawn and
brown.
Some of the black silk stockinette
jersey* are made with vest*, deep collars
with rovers, and turn-back cuff*, formed
of openwork silk passementerie and
crocheted silk stars finely interwoven with
cut jet.
Th<- French quadrille plaids are than very the
beautiful and softer in tone
Scotch, which, though they do not all
follow the clan colors, still show a cer
tain crudity of colorings that is not so
pleasant to the eye.
A charming little toque of brown velvet
has a black-piuinaged bird on either
side, and on a little velvet muff to be
home with it there is a similar bird
noised on the outer side, gazing ajipeal
*ngly up at the , wearer.
Fashion has decreed that ladic* in
Londons brat society must appear at
afternoon teas, lunches, kettledrums and
other bare, afternoon well entertainments in the evening. wjtn The
anilK as as
hmg gloves will be drawn off, and no
bracelets will be worn, but the fingers
"*>1 glitter with costly ring*,
Some Rare Old Bonds.
It was while Judge Folger was Secre
tary (said an old treasury official). One
morning an old man came in to me who
was from a New England State. lie
said that about twenty years ago be found
some old stocks or bonds among the
papers of an uncle (mentioning his name);
lie had been a man of national reputa
tion for ability, and had a comfortable
fortune for those days—that is, from 18J<)
to 1840 and he had come to the United
Htntes Treasury to find out if they wen
worU( anythin „ t | ir , sft ,. mc d to be
Unitr(| 8tfl tes bonds, I looked at them.
T , were tnn „ f th „ ,, old bonds,
ftn( , W( . rc indepd (:uri(mit ies. They Worth, were
(>1( , and „ ( , w from ^ but wer „
• j j ftn j ^ i(1 K « )ld| $70,000,
fm therf WM u>n vean p inU , reHt , lue on
t , K , m You ,, in , maK , II( , thu old man’s
lltwlzemeDt wl „. n , told himthis. “Why,
, w<mM ^Wlly have taken $5000 for
them,” said he, “and I offered them to a
Boston banker for less than that, but he
rather superciliously and contemptuous
ly declined to buy them at any figure,”
1 took the old man in to see Judge Fol
ger, who was very much interested in the
matter when I explained it to him. He
|w( , „„ vof ,),e “old loan” sc
curi|i and uf „.’ r thelM . were paid and
„ in „. Iril , ,, cIi ,. V( . h , d i r „. led that one of
them tie framed and preserved. Well, in
h 4 * 1)11111 half an hour's time the old New
Englander walked out of the building
with a check in his pocket on tho New
York Sub-Treasury for $70,000 111 gold,
llow that “smart” Boston banker must
have cursed his own ignorance and stu
pidity when he learned wlmt he lmd
thrown away.— St. 1 /juu Republic.
Beggars 011 liuvsebnek.
... 1,1 Montevideo . , the , capital of Uniquay,
wl, ‘ ‘ “•»•* « •« I,f "'™ d '
“ ^at are to be found in every Italian
«ty, which is another ch.ractemtic stamp
” f immigration. The blind, the
and the halt assa.l you from a most
every conceivable place, but especially at
* h :’ dt ^.° f ®)'>'r®)>es,where their dole
ful ' w >»r
H ' ,,or l l0 *' '“I'.’ a,ln08t dl f tr »® l “K-
1 ,s “ religious society which
l, V «®trilwtion. levied on the
-
l«'»* li ®, and , who proceed from house to
h, ; UHC w,th 11 sm : k * ,ua « °v«r the shoulder*
^belting . donatums . idso “for the love of
ir *' I’* 0 ! 1 •' consn er 1 a .-ac ri
<««<>'« «®t to allow them o depart empty
perhaps the most curious
" ,,l '’ r,du ! U o{ * l >» "“-ndi-mit paternity to
!‘ h n ^® k cn £! here n ,s . tho .‘‘ be W number ar , on of 'l 0 ™' h,.
*' ,s quite a
l l, ' ss ,m *»«« ouUkirt* of the 1 city I hey
solicit . any kind of contribution* -but pre
'* r V mU wlth wh ' r ’* *° >.'>.v 'he nauve
,lnnk V”""*- „ °“® llt,lc fe ' low '
n»mnted on . 1 , 1 , antiquated 4 . steed, 1 part.cu
Urlv
™ v, rv ‘ ,,tIeu>n, from ,hat h,s hum :
l,1 « br, 1 ’! h l * n * ln d i “ treM ’ Hr ur< oslr ‘ i
vou tbft U, mo,t as8U ™ n cc 1 "»tb
• '
:i k"’<xl-humoml , grin; joked J about the
J°I uc ? of ,lie **1' * b out *}» borSf ’ whicl !
««* 1 f # t<w old to walk, and
"Lslied that you might live .thou
sum ‘ Washington Otar.
v >otM . . About ,. . iht> Need,f T ..
’
It is iuipoasible to say who were the in
ventore of needles. At a very early
i wr >°d rude attempts were made among
various uncivilized nations to form such
an article out of bone, ivory, or like
material, in order to stitch together their
clothes. Doubtless our first mother eiu
l >lo vpd ,uch *» instrument along with
.
’he fibres of plants, etc., as thread, But
Aae tMvd of were in common u.w
!Unon R *hc more refined nations of anti
'1 U ’*T- 83 ’he Hindoos,! hinese. Egyptians,
Assyrians, Hebrews, Greeks and Homans.
*'huy mentions the ladies of his day as
having needles of bronre for sewing and
knitting; and numbers have been found
1,1 Egyptian tombs that must have been
m * d * 4000 toevdir
was first manufactures! in 8pain, where
;kr process of making it was long kept a
SW ' ,P L " hence it was firet imported into
England in the time of Queen Elizabeth,
1650, Christopher Greening, at Long
t'reeden, in Buckinghamshire, erected
needle works, and thus began the manu
facture of an article for which England
IS feared throughout the world.
Story of a Tioliu.
A gentleman living in Richmond. Va.,
Odin -Web is «od,trf with
the early history of Virginia. It is one
of four violins connected with the early
history of that section of the country,
U lf marked, “Nicolaus Amati fecit,
Cremona, 1651.” This violin was
brought to this country by Robert Bol
Un*. the husband of Jane Holfe, the
granddaughter of Pocahontas, who was
the daughter of the mighty Indian King
Powhatan, of Virginia. The violin is
of superior t*-ne. volume and finish, and
has been used by many prominent per
fonnera dunng the past century.
W ASHING ION, 1). C
MOVEMENTS OF TilK PRES WENT
BA I) HIS ADVISERS.
Ar-rojsmrsrs, iwcigiosa, asdothe* mattcri
OF ISTZ.R1 XT mm THE KATIOSAI. CAPITAL.
The statement is out that congress will
investigate the civil service commission,
and preparation* for the investigation
are now being made.
The secretary of the treasury has ap
pointed L. G. Jeffers superintendent buildings of
construction of the federal at
Birmingham, Ala., vice Shepherd, re
moved.
Dr. Green, president of the Westerr
Union Telegraph company, is preparing
a reply to Postmaster-General W'ana
maker's schedule of rates in accordance
with the directions of the executive com
mittee.
The president on Tuesday appointed
the following fourth-class postmasters:
Miss Laura A. Cobb, lilairsville; James
E. Goethe, Dale’s Mill; A. P. Howell,
Lax, Ga., and James R. Ozinent, Battle
Ground, N. C.
The new Catholic University of Amer
ica was on Wednesday formally opened
with impressive cercmoni, in the pres
ence f i large number of prelates of the
church and the distinguished laymen from
all part* of country.
A letter received at Washington from
Caracas, dated November 5‘h, etates that
on October 26th, the i-tatuca of Guzman
Blanco, in that city, were pulled down
and dragged through the street* in
pieces. Similar statue* in other cities
met a like fate.
Monday afternoon the president that issued
hi* proclamation declaring the the con
ditions impost d by congress on Htate
of Washington to entitle that state to
admission to the Union have been rati
fied and accepted, and that the admis
sion of said state into the Union is now
complete.
Fourth Auditor Lynch, in his annual
report to the secretary of the treasury,
says that there is a deficiency of $253,464
in the appropriation for the pay of the
navy ami marine corps fur the last fiscal
year, caused partly by ttie payment out
of the fund of claims for longevity, and
for service on board receiving ships under
ttie recent decisions of the Supreme
Court. The Auditor make* an earnest
recommendation for an increase in the
clericil force of his office.
November cotton returns of the de
partment of agriculture show a remark
able variation in the condition in differ
ent localities. In North Carolina and
Virginia the season lias iieeu very short
and excessively wet, nnd continued the crop seri
ously injured by long rains in
the season of blossoming, Tennessee
reports injury to the crop by wet
weather, lack of cultivation, and early
frosts during the past month. In these
mates tho crop is much worse than that
of lust year. Elsewhere the crop is
comparatively Alabama, late, especially with large from growth South
Carolina to a
of weed, ln the lowlands early frosts
have injured uplands crops in east tho southern of Mississippi, belt
while tho are
still green. West of Mississippi, in a
been largo portion of The the cotton area, for there picking has
uo frost. weather
has been remarkably favorable, assuring
tho gathering without waste of ull that is
opened in excellent condition. Indica
tions of the yield per acre, by county cor
respondents, are about three per cent
higher thau last year. So much still de
pends on future killing frosts and sunny
weather for opening and gathering tlmt
tho result cannot be known very closely
until after Christmas. There has not
In-on sever-; general loss by caterpillar
and bollworm, though the damage in
•onto localities has been serious.
crerars will
HIS LIBERAL BEqTKRTS TO CHURCHES AND
LIT EH ARY SOCIETIES.
The will of the late John Crerar, of
Chicago, was admitted to probate Thure
day in tho county court. The will dis
poses of personal property scheduled
at fit,500,0(10, and real estate valued at
♦SO,000. Crerar was a bachelor, and
ml. °. "leave! r ° n T quests" 1
her of cousins he bt of
120,000. ♦10,000 and *5.000 respectively,
and those of the first, second and third
degree, and other sums are Given to
churche*. hospitals, charities, historical.
•cientifie and literary societies and to
personal friends, the whole acsrreiratinc
a million soda quarter dollar*. There
mamuir of the estate, estimated to be
worth about ♦8.350,000, i. set apart for
the erection and maiateoance of a pub
lie library iu the city of Chicago, to be
known as the “John Crerar Library.”
A BOLD ROBBERY
BT TWO MEN. SUPPOSED TO BE RUBK
BURROW AND UUS PAI .
A special to the Birmingham Age-Her
ald, from Sulligent. Ala., the uear.st
tel- graph office to Vernon, the countv
seat of Lamar county, tells of a bold
robbery early Wednesday night. Two
ncrtvil^ armed men runic up to the resi
deuce of Mr. Summers, a merchant
Vernon, and asked him logo to his store
and let them have some burial material
for a person who had just died out iu the
country. Summers went and let them
into the Store, struck a light,
wo* surprised to fend himself looking
down the barrel of a big revolver. In
obedience , .. t instructions . he opened lus
-
sac and gave the robbers four hunared
d oll»n. ail he ha h The robbers are sup
cl^.nL ' Sli
from Vernon.
REDUCED RATES.
The Monon reute railway announces
that, beginning wait December, it wil
fr rg^round' 1
♦22 m Chicago to Jacksoavilla ♦♦♦T5.ani
for one way ti, ktt- lle»e rates
will apply to the In iianap is and Lin
cmnati. and Hamilton and Dayton rad
way, alec via Bergin, Ky.
POP! L A ft SCIE\<"i?.
During the last ten years an os-nlist of
Cronstadt, Russia, is said to hare treated
thirty ease- of photo-electric ophthal
mi.;, a new disease due to the action of
the electric light on the eyes.
M. Cornu,the French scientist,believes
that the light of shooting stars cannot lie
due to combustion or heat, as supposed,
but it is a phenomenon of static electric
ity developed by simple friction.
In a recent issue of a Russian medical
journal, a contributor emphatically calls
attention to the common sunflowers as an
excellent and cheap substitute for quinine
in the treatment of malarial fevers of all
possible forms.
The German Government propose
forming a botanical garden in the Cam
eroon®, for the purpose of determining
what plants, medicinal or commercial,
are the best for cultivation in the planta
tions of Germany’s African colonies.
It is said to have been demonstrated at
the Paris Exposition that, by a combina
tion of compressed air and water, it
will be possible to drive a train on
slides over a hundred miles an hour.
There is no smoke, no noise and scarcely
any perceptible motion.
Narrow chested recruits of the Prus
sian army are to be measured monthly,
and those whose chests are not widened
by drill are to be discharged as predis
posed to consumption. All are to be
considered narrow chested whose chests
are less in circumference than half the
length of their bodies.
The new and ingenious process brought
forward in London for the production of
aluminum steel is likely, it is claimed, to
supercede all other methods. It consists
simply in melting pig iron in contact
with clay and a certain flux, the result
being a sonorous, incorrodible alloy,
containing 1.75 per cent, of alluminum.
In observations on eighty-two male
and twenty-eight female convicts Dr.
Fradenigo, of Italy, has found them more
liable to car diseases than law-abiding
citizens, but has detected no constant
relation between the obtuseness of touch,
taste and smelt so common in convicts
and the sharpness of vision credited
them.
Dr. Von Duhring has reported a case
in which tuberculosis was transmitted by
the earrings of a girl who died from con
sumption to another girl. Shortly after
the second girl commenced to wear the
earrings an ulcer, containing tubercle
bacilli, formed on her left ear and she
subsequently developed pulmonary con
sumption.
An official report states that in Eng
land and Wales 546 persons were killed
by lightning during the twenty-nine
years from 1852 to 1880. The inhab
itants of rural districts are found to suf
fer more from lightning than those ol
towns, while vicinity to the west and
south coasts reduces the chances of injury
by lightning, and distance from the
coast and high land seems to increase
them.
A new ice machine of great capacity
has recently been devised, in which the
sulphurous anhydride hitherto employed
for this purpose is replaced by a mixture
of sulphurous and carbonic anhydride
alone. The inventor of this arrange
ment explains the matter on the basis oi
the theory that some kind of molecular
action, or rather reaction, occurs between
the two gases when liquefied, in conse
quence of which the pressure exerted by
the gas is much smaller than would be
expected.
By comparing modern skulls with
those of the same race in an old mon
astery in the Kedrou Valley, Dr. Dight,
of the American College of Beirut, Syria,
has shown that thirteen centuries have
added two inches to the circumference
and three and a half cubic inches to the
of the Caucasian skull. The
brain is developed in the parts presiding
over the moral and intellectual functions,
growing higher and longer, without in
crease of the lower portions, which give
breadth to the head and in which the sel-
5sh are centred.
Hunting Buffalo Bones.
A curious industry of North Dakota,
Will decrease in time, is buffalo
bone ha , v c P b ickin T 8- P, * u ^ htercd y f and he , rd * tbe of ir h ^° skmfi
»fld , , ami now the pioneers make , mev
chandise of the bones scattered over the
P» iries - The bones are shipped to St.
Louis or Chicago and turned into-glue
and fertilizers. Kansas, Colorado, Nc
bradra and even older States have aU
been the scene of this strange contnbu
tion to wealth, and no one knows how
many thousands of carloads have thus
been gleaned after the slaughter of the
American bison.
An Emperor’s Appetite.
The Czar of Russia is said to be an
enormous eater. He considers three
poun,is of meat and two quarts of cham
pagne a very light luncheon. His din
ner would be sufficient for three men of
ordinary digestibility. His insomnia is
due to his gormandizing, but he prefers
sleeplessness to dieting. He smokes con
stantly. and altogether lives an existence
which would kill any num devoid of an
iron constitution. His health is further
menaced bv thirteen court phvsicians,
five court surgeons two oculists, one
dentist and four medical specialists.-
jfrdicwl Tietm.
-- "" -
Sea.Gull and Crow in a Fight.
An F.astport picnic partv visiting Casco
j # ) and recently were attracted to a sound
ii ke that which an old-fashioned wind
miH mil?ht seud forth in a ff!ue . Tr. ev
«•'‘ *• » ! «» W»i
/ he v ^ l ' ne ^ ed tbe “ t0 »“ ha «
-
sight of a pitched battle being savageiy
waged between a sea-gall and a crow. It
was a hard fought battle, but the gray
bird won. knocking the crow out so
badly that he .—Perthvid was easily captured by one
of the party (Me.) Prets.
y A aT reCWIt '”5 caura /Tf ’ >no e thirty- ^
'
“ Te year^_ r
Wood pavement lasts about reran
VWkrs m streets where the traffic u heavy
Burning at the Stake.
•'Burning . at ... the stase . , is . the ,, most .
painful and horrible manner of death
T 1 e\er ever witnessed, witnessed ” said suia a a traveling rra.enngman man
to a Chicago Herald writer. \l am
forty-five years old, and the burning I
saw « a w‘t/,oh took nlsce plate at at noon nr«m one one dav aar, about apoui
the middle of July, 18 j 9, at Marshall,
Mo., eightv tTio" four miles from Kansas
Citv ’U tp® victim victim m was a a oo co.oreu nrpd man man
•
named John, who b longed to Gules of
Kiser, a farmer. On the evening
May 13 John had murdered young Ben
jamin Hinton at his steamboat wood
yard on the Missouri River, between
Laynesville and Miarria. John murder
ed young Hinton for his money, and ob
tained 852, some of which he distributed
among other colored men. Judge Hicks,
of Independente, then Judge of the
Sixth District, granted a motion for a
special term of court to try John and
two other colored criminals. This was
in the forenoon. When the court ad
journed for a nooning the people, impa
tient at the law’s delay, burst upon the
Sheriff as he was conveying the jail, prison- took
ers from the court room to the
them from the officers, and there in the
sight of hundreds hanged the other two
and chained John to a walnut tree and
burned him to death. He lived about
six or eight minu‘es after the flames
wrung the first ciy of agony from his
lips. Then the inhalation of the blaring
fire suffocated him. His face, arms and
breast were scorched body frightfully, and the
lower portion of h e was a charred,
shapeless mass. Judge Hicks was so in
dignant at this outrage that he resigned
from the bench. No trouble to those
concerned ever resulted from the case.
Oriental Beggars.
Beggary throughout the East is
thriving profession. There are guilds ol
beggar.-, besides the numerous coiumu
ni ties of dervishes, who aresemi-religious
mendicants. Many families have been
beggars for generations, and ari
mendicants from choice. Some of these
profession ^ beggars are actually wealthy.
Four-nnd-twenty years ago the writer
well remembers a case. The Chief Beg.
gar (the title was not conferred in deri
*ion) gave his daughter in marriage to n
substantial farmer. The girl’s dowry
consisted of two freehold houses, the
rooms of which were entirely fi.led with
dry pieces of bread, and the sale of these
begged crusts subsequently realized a
considerable sum, being disposed there of aa
food for cattle. In the east is nq
organized chanty, but Mussuimen are
exceedingly charitable, many giving
away a fiih and even a third of their in
come.
The Wife of Columbus.
While at Lisbon, Columbus was accus
tomed to attend service,says Washington o(
Irving, at the chapel of the convent
All Saints. There he became acquainted
with a lady of rank, named Dona Felipa,
who resided at the convent. She wa<
the daughter of Bariollommeo Monis de
Pallestrello, or Perestrcllo, an Italian
cavalier, lately deceased, who had been
one of the most distinguished navigators
under Prince Henry of Portugal, and
had colonized and governed the Island
of Porto Santo. The acquaintance nnd ended soon in
ripened into attachment adds Irving, to
marriage. It match appears, of affection
have been a mere as
the lady had little or no fortune.
According to the New York Commcr
rial Advertiser, since 1860 more than 60,
000 bodies have been buried in the Pot
ter's Field on Hart’s Island. There are
no single interments, The bodies are
placed in trenches, dug in regular rows,
forty-five feet long, fourteen feet wide,
and ten feet deep. Each of these pits
will hold one 1 indred and fifty bodies.
A New Kind of Insurance
lias been put in Operation by the manufac
turers of Dr. Pierce’s medicines. His “Golden
Medical Discovery” and “Favorite Prescrip
tion” are sold bv drufprists under the manu
facturers’ posit ire guarantee. Either benefit
or a complete enre is 1 bus attained, or money
paid for these medicines is returned. The
certificate of guarantee given in connection
with salo of these medicines is equivalent to a
policy of insurance. The “Golde-i Medical
from Discovery” cures all humors arising, and skin blood and taints, seal;,
whatever cause
diseases, scrofulous sores and swellings. The
’‘Favorite Prescription” cures all thoso de
rangements and weakneses peculiar to wo
men.
_
Don’t hawk, hawk, and blow, blow, disgust- Catarrh
ing everybody, but use Dr. Sage’s
Remedy.__
What is our life but an endless flight of
winged facts or events ! In -plendid variety
these changes spirit. come, all putting questions to
theliumam
, *„ ^muclJ mi™ ti
four-dotiar m
monthlies, aud is illustrated by the
a^ 1 eiirert'Smng’and 6 wtoAe
companion. It has a unique place in Ameri
£ surpni^i tol^howm^ch of can The tegiven rice
for the small sum $1.75 a year. -
seiunnw wiflenmie you to the paper to Jana
Tas Youth’s Companion, Boston, Mass.
Urenon. flip Patndlne of l-'arm-p,.
Mild, equable climate, certain and abundanr
crops- Best fruit, grain, gras- and stock coun
try in the world. Full Information free. Ad
dress Oreg. Iin’igra’tn Board, Portland, Ore.
A 10c. smoke for 5c. “Tan«ill's Pune'
Dangerous w Tendencies
-^ f * c ^^^ h r at d ' r err ^! mly’“ 0 J r ‘ ro c t '™ 'ou p ^ aint, 1 c “ sr [b‘
n> g or
consumption, wMch reaps an immense harvest of
death* annually. Hence the necessity or giving ca
t*rrh fra mediate attention. Hood’* Sarsaparilla
core* catarrh by purifyiog and enrichin* the blood,
^df^aaed Try the
^Hood-.saraapanuacured meafeau^.^rene*.
of the bronchial tubas and terrible headache.’— R.
oauosy, Hamiitoa. Ohio,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
^ by drag's. uxfor$5. Fry pared onp
c ’ L noOD & co ” ^’becart«, leweu. Maa*.
100 0OS ® 8 «"• D ° llar
BRYANT & STRATTON Business College
atag; SSt%i^SSasiaL LOUISVILLE. KY,
25078 ‘.
litoa.c On impm* f«r ( ntiirrb flint
Contain >1 rcurjj
xb Mercury will surely destroy the sense of
p me an d completely derange the whole sys
,, through
iem when entering it the mucus sur
face*- Such artic.es should never be used ex
{ on ..-rripti--us from reputable physi- fold
c ja n .«, a- die damage they will do are ten
-o the no. d you ran pos»n> y derive from them.
Ha’-l’s < r.tarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J.
( henev& Co t,, , do. o. contains n > mer
(Ur y, and is taken internally, and acts directly
upon the blood and mucus surfaces of the
system. In buying Ha s Catarrh Cure be
sure you get the genuine, it is taken inter
u.aliy' and made in Toledo, Ohio, by t. J.
i Teney&Co. Druggists, price 75c. per bottle.
J8^*Sold by
“I.ttcy Hinton.”
Hark ! the sound of manv voices,
Jubilant in gladdest song,
And full many a hear: rejoices
As the chorus floats along:
“Hail the Queen of all Tobaccos';’ 1
How the happy voices blend.
“J .nest and purest among her fellows—
Man’s staunch *rd true friend.”
FOUND!
THE PLACE TO HCY ALL YOUR
Finite, Carpets, Rugs,
SHADES,. ETC.,
CHEAPER THAN ANY HOUSE IN THE SOUTH.
/>’<■ «o rc anil see our stock and prices
before placing pour orders.
rw-WRITE US FOR PRICES.
A. J, KILLER & SON,
4~ &■ 44 Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
<,tVEN JSVCMTEtN «VCM
US- *1 jSfS. ,7W1
SMITH’S SHE BEANS
Actontheiiver aiHlbi ,o; clear the complexion; costivenesg,
cure biliousness, sick headache, disorders.
malaria ami all liver and stomach
We are now making small size Bile Beans,
especially adapted tor children and women—
^ery small ami easy to take. Price of cither
size 25c per bottle. PHOTO-GRAVURE of the
A panel size “Kissing at 7-17-70," mailed on
above picture, makers of the
rec oipt of 2c stamp. Address the
great Anti Bile Hemedy—“Bile Beans.”
J. F. SMITH &. CO.. St. Louis. Mo.
ft ^NTS Wanted!
LIVING LEADERS I v M %8TK “?' Y " OKK
OF VIntchiPMN Interest.
THE NA/ O R l— D Comprising graphic biogra
phies of tile Men and Women of Greatest, Eminence,
Wealth and Power, who a- e leading the millions of man-
1-imi h af.d distinguished shaping the author.sa- destiny or Nations WALLACE, Pr--l>ared by
--1 lli v LEW JOEfi
H >N. S. s. cox, Mrs. FRANK LESLIE.
CHANDLER HARRIS, and others. The moat vAlurtble VII i
and chance popular for Agents Book pul make ed big in twenty years Liberal a Terms rar»
r - money.
and exclusive territory, Write at once for age''ey. Ad
dress 11 . < . ill Dili Ns A: O . Atlanta, Ga.
ffl?Sc0MBINING5 ARTICLE (TQ’/^dW*
UA FURNITURE . ^
r ' N v al I
S\^Y'?VWS>j
AND
AWHEEL I
CHAIRSV?
We retail at the louteH Automatic Br&k*
and wholrtnfe ship factory goods to prices.[fa be n fa cUA- FREE
paid for on delivery. \Xfa wheel nuiiui
Send stamp for Cata- \yy . ifcPIfUL TO HIKE.
logoff. Name floods desired. FE mm
Ll’Ul'KO MFH. CO., 146 rLstfc Si'rkludijr*.
Ely's Cream Balm
WILL CURE
P A T A P, R [j P im 9M
| Frio*- 60 C.-nin. | v;
Apply Balm into each noatril.
ELY BROS..S6 W.rr.n SI..N.Y.
AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL CONSULT
DR. L0B3
34ft Norlli Klftronth St.. Philadelphia, Pa., for
tbo treatment of Bloo-1 Poisons, Skin Eruption*,
Nervous Complaints. Brleht's Disease, Stricture*,
Impotence and ktmired diseases, no matter of how
tW~Ton Jodk standing days' medicines or from furnished what cause by mall orlplnatln*. rnrp
Send for Hook on SPKUIA L Diseases. tlltCi
$7 FOR A Poabie Breech-Loader
jjl Breech-Loader n, $4 to fl2.
vnnebeater lj.«hot Rifle*, Jll lo
Breecb-loHdlny Rifles, 4 to $1S.OO.
SeJf-eofkinr Revolvers, Nickel-;,!ated, $2.00.
flSer,d2c. sfAtip for 50-raire Catalogue and »ave 2i J»r
GRIFFITH A SEMPLE, Bt2 W. Main, LcuiivUi*. Ky.
This Trade
Mark Is or.
S.pdforiHuitratenCit.DtDi-'-./V-i. A. .1 1 —r. B,n-.on.
43 aJdl’waikK ATT _ ° n fc w S y°fRK
Importers and Wholesale I ealers in
ft MUSICAL MERCHANDISE, Accorueoiia,
10 . 11 -. I.uitira, .....HI, „*n
monicaa, Ac. All kinds ot Mrin*,. etc., etc.
SEND FOR CAlAitl Lf.
RB Ntll tfj ■ S Fail 6 *yi ■' IIS: ” WHlsAtii si home HAS- wh
: .
I r III in out pa-.D. Book of pap
Bryant’s t olleire, 457 Main St., Buffalo, >\ T.
OPIUM * D V.
J. L. STEPHENS, UteeaO
r-4 JAl.tl’S IS, ami S. UOl.I.KtlK, .ns,$50.Writaforcircoiar. PUwMpha. Pa7
>C. ATS:: r* p, « ti
l
■ I prescribe and tally an
dorse Big G as th€ ’oo^v
atSto d" care. 1it * cerlt - 0 cur *
fSf “| U. H. INI. Amsterdam, R A3 AM. M N. D Y.
Kfd only by *Sa We have ^)ld Big G fer
NSSk Ohio. D.'rI'Di-CHT A CO..
W Chicago, III.
A 1.00. p Htv DnntRa
A. S. U ......Forty-seven. '89.
oszm
Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians.
Corea where all else fails. without Pleasant and agreeable to the
taste. Children take it objection. By druggists.