The Darlington herald. (Darlington, S.C.) 1890-1895, October 26, 1894, Image 4
1
' ■
Mr*. Winslow’* BooUi
teothlns, soften* the go
tion, slisy* psin. cures ’
log Sjtup for ehlUrtn
ins, reduces Inftamne-
rtndcoUc. ac- s botu*
Whole Family Helped
“ My husband was
troubled with Mtken-
mutism to that he
could hardly lift his
band to his head, and
also had severe i*ain*
in his stomach after
eating. FOur bottles of
Hood's Sarsaparilla
completely cured
^IWtiie Our son was all
run down and Hood's
■ Sarsaparilla built hiut
up, and he gained 15
lbs. Our little hoy Leon has also been giveu
aupetite,weight and strength by the vnedlnn*'
Hood's Sarsanarilla cured me of Krynipe*
tas, which 1 have had for 15 years and which
Is now entirely driven out of my system, bine*
Hood’s 5 ^ Cures
taking Hood’s I *m better In every way.”
3IR8. H. K. JoHItSQN, Lyme Centre. X. H.
Httod’a PHI*arc a mil I oatharilc. tSesn'ia
★ WORLD'S*PAIR ^
J HIGHEST AWARD I
, "SUPER'DR NUTRITION-THE LIFE”
THE I
IO-IISTAL^
Has Justly acquired the reputation of being
The Salvator for
a^The-Aged.
An Incomparable Aliment for the
Growth and Protection of INFANTS and
-d-HI^DRECre
A superior nutritive in continued Fevers,
And a reliable remedial agent
In all gastric and enteric diseases;
often in instances of consultation over
patients whose digestive organs were re
duced to such a low and sensitive condition
that the IMPERIAL QRANUM was
the only nourishment the stomach
would tolerate when LIFE seemed
depending on its retention
And as a FOOD it would be difficult to
conceive of anything more palatable.
Said by DRUGGISTS. Shipping Depot,
JOHN CARLE A SONS, Naw York.
Valued Indorsement
of Scott’s
Emulsion
is contain
ed in let- ■
ters from
the medi
cal profes
sion speaking of its gratify
ing results in their practice.
Scott’s Emulsion
of cod-liver oil with Hypo-
phosphites can be adminis
tered when plain oil is out of
the question. It is almost
as palatable as milk—easier
to digest than milk.
Prepared by Scott 4 Bowne, TX. Y. AH drugglsta.
pORTIE’S
1 Practical
Business
COLLEGE,
KAMA.
Splendidly equipped. Very
Thorough. Expert aroount-
ante and court reporter* aa
teachers. Term* liberal.
Graduate, assisted to good
positions. TVrite (or par
ticular*.
J. K. FORTES. President.
B. 8. CURTIS, Principal.
WALTER BAKER & CO.
The largest Manufacturers of
PURS V HIGH GRADE
.COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
, On this Continent, have recatrad
" HIGHEST AWARDS
froaatht great
EXPOSITIONS
Unlike the Dntui Freetw, no Alka-
or otfce; Chemicals or Dyee arc
need *.u any of their vreparatlofta.
Theirdeltciene BREAKFAST COCOA (e absolutely
pure aa eolnble, and coeu lea# than ent cent m c*f.
9010 BY GROCERS EVCRYWHCRC.
VALTER BAKER ft CO. DORCHESTER, MARS.
^ iinjn^cinhoiJffWiii,
PRICE 91.50.
Every lady need* a rood strong water-proof
•hoe for about lot aud (arden, one that'e com.
xorlablaand genteel In appearance. We are
aware of this requirement, and trouble of
obtaining such In some sectlon*. This shoe
la sawed, nice thick sole*, comfortably wMe,
lew heel, best Veal Calf, will last a year, will
not rip. if yon need a pair send price-P. 0.
or Bxpree* Money Order. We offer yon this
Indncementtotrythem. Send 10c. extra.via:
•■JO and we will prepay them to your nearest
express office, if you name this paper
We Will Send Extra
* box of water proof leather preaerving oil
blacking, price 10c., free,
Thb Offlr Qpin only ’till Dio. lit
All sixes, Ito*. no half -Ixes. Money will lie
refunded—less expen;e, Knot satisractory.
This adverttsemrntwill not appear again.
GILREATH * CO..
20 So. Tryen St. Charlatta, N 0.
A Shoe House 26 Years.
^■CARRIAGES
Buggies & Harness.
* Two swards st World's
Fair for IBtr«artb.Bw»»ftr sod
Prices. Six yssrs sgo ws
dlscsrnsG lbs Urslsr %t*A Osgsa
sslhog dtrset u> Cossunisrt st
wboisssls prices Kssuli: op-
*srd of I09 f — ▼•MIcIm —f*
A sod our fsetory now tb« largest
f oneerih.deslinit direct witbeon-
_ _ sueners. Ssnd for oot mam moth
sftdLML IB page lllustist free csUlogus.
fU.UAMGK CAIMIAQE CO., CINCINNAII, O.
«JM.'
TiBK AND GABDK9.
CDfilffU OP THB OOOSMBBXBZ.
This shrub needs oooI&bm and shads
The bright, hot boh prodaoea mildew,
which Monte the growth. The bashes
nre, therefore, best grown in the shel
ter of some building and in oool, moist
soil Some native varieties are mod-
free from this mildew, but
American-grown berries will probably
equal the flue ones grown in the oool
English climate.—N«W York Times.
k DROUGHT-PBOOP CROP.
Tiuoky is the farmer who in thisyear
of droughts has planted some sorghum
as a fodder crop. It is much better
to resist protracted drought on ac
count of roots striking deeply into
the soil, while corn is shallow rooted,
and suffers whenever dry weather
comes. At the West, where droughts
ore much more severe than here, sor
ghum is commonly planted for feed
ing. Its early growth is slow, but so
soon ss its roots strike down the stalks
shoot upward, and two months after
planting the sorghnm will be larger
and yield more tons per acre than will
any kind of corn.—Boston Cultivator.
HOO CHOLERA.
Feeding hogs gresn cornfodder Will
not prodnee cholera, ss sn inquirer in
timates, says Professor J. H. Shep-
perd of the North Dakota Agricultural
College. That disease is caused by
speciflo germs nr micro-organisms
which are in this case small plants.
There are a great many kinds of dis
ease germs, as well as germs that are
benefleial in many ways. Most per
sons not acquainted with hog cholera
all almost any swine disease by that
name, and I feel sure that hops are in
many oases thought to have cholera
whed in reality they do not. I hove
known of no serious results from
judiciously feeding green corn fodder.
Many tons are annually made use of
in this manner. It is a succulent foo.l,
and a sudden change to an exclusive
diet after feeding dry food might cause
serious scouring of pigs. The change
should be gradual. In cases of re
ported deaths from using this feed I
would be inclined to think that a de
rangement of the digestive system was
the cause and not cholera. It would
not be advisable to confine pigs to this
diet exclusively, but given with a
small quantity of dry corn or with
bran and shorts I would not expect
serious trouble.
BAD TEMPER IN THE DAIRY.
Has any one ever figured np the
cost of bad temper in the dairy? If
allowed a rough guess at it, I would
say that bad temper was the cause of
more loss in the dairy than all other
sources of loss put together. A man
may have fine cows, a good’ stable,
the best dairy implements and a good
market, yet he is losing money all the
time simply because he loses his tem
per when a cow gets contrary or acts
in some way to irritata him. He then
begins to swear and yell and act like
a general idiot. Now, a cow is a
good deal like a woman in one respect
Yon yell at her and she inatantW loses
her head. Her judgment is all gone
and her nerves are on top. Now look
not for a squall. Nature never meant
that man should abuse tjie softer eex,
either woman or cow, without being
made to pay for it Just how the
woman gets the better of a man when
he acts the fool we all know. All men
do not know, though, just how the
oow gets in her fine work under the
same circumstances. She takes her
revenge in a negative shape by not
giving as muoh milk as she would have
given had she been better treated.
Not seeing hit loss, the man does not
appreciate how heavy it is until he
comes to sam it up at the end of the
season when he good natnredty to
himself attributes his losses all to
bad lack when it shoald be to fool
temper.—Home and Farm.
SMALL FLOORS OP POULTRY.
Farmers often keep too many hens
in one place. Fifty is all that should
be kept in one flook as the food will
§ st less, and more egge will be laid
in winter than if 100 are kepi Th«
r*a“‘ way to do, wnore more than
fifty fowls are to be kept, is to have
another in some ont-of-the-wav place.
If tho houses ate two or three hundred
yards apart, fences will not be re
quired. The houses need not bo
expensive, and most farmers hose old
lumber lying around, or an old shed
that ought to be tern down, and all
this can be Worked into tho poultry
boascs. The housed should, at least,
h« twenty-five by fifteen feet for fifty
fo .'Is. Have the roof firm and tight,
an thon line the house inside with
go t, stout building paper. Little
ora 'kt in the sides of a house or datnp-
nes is the cause of siok fowls during
he intersoasoo. Thefrohtandsonth-
id > of ihe house should be seven or
eight foet high and have two ordinary
sized bouse windows therein,.. while
the back ox north side should bo four
or five feet high. The reason why
the house should bo large, light ami
dry, is because during the cold or
stormy days of winter thefowlsshould
be confined therein; and if plenty of
litter is kept on the floor, and small
grains are buried under this, the fowls
will be kept busy and happy all day.
This means plenty of eggs, and plenty
of eggs in winter means plenty of
money just when money is most
neodod. Do not be afraid of shutting
the house np as tight os possible st
night, bnt duriog the day, when the
hens are confined, open the windows
and give plenty of air, nting wire net
ting to koop the fowls from flying out.
It nr uat be remembered that hens are
dr sssed just ss heavily in the daytime
ne 0 at night, and il kept too warm dur
ing the day they will feel tho oold of
niaht more, and sickness will be the
rs ult. Tho droppiugs should be kept
by themselves and not be allowed to
be seratohed all over the floor, and
the roosts should bo all on a level aud
not mors than eighteen inches or two
feet up from the floor. Tho roosts
should be three or four inohes wide, a
two by flve-inoh joist making an ex-
oellont roost.—Ameriorn Agricultur
ist.
POTATOES FOR COWS.
The Veterinary Bohool of Lyons,
France, has been making some experi
ments in the nse of potatoes for feed
ing dairy cows. The results are sum-
mariied as follows;
Dairy oow*. when deprived, of all
other nourishment thna potatoes
(which should be given raw and ent)'
will oonsume per day an average of
seven per oent of their lire weight. |
Under the influenoe of this exoluivel
regimen there wa* an increase in the
quantity of milk and a notable loss in
live weight; this result was very clesf
and remarkable. Cooked potatoes
were more readily taken by the cat-j
tie, bnt when they were given flone,
and every other form of nourishment;
was exeluded, rumination was affected
or stopped, and digestion was hin
dered. The use of cooked potatoes
could not, therefore, be persisted iu.
Whether they ere raw or cooked,
potatoes should be mixed with some
other food to constitute a convenient
ration, both from the double point of
view of milk production and for fat
tening purposes. This mixture of ra
tions is slso favorable to the mechan-
ioal and chemical acts of digestion.
- From observations on a tot of dairy
cows fed with a ration of which pota
toes formed the half of the total dry
matter, and on another lot where they
only formed twenty-two per cent., it
wai fully recognized that the first or
larger quantity was clearly preferable
to tho second or smaller. From other
experiments it appeared that raw po
tatoes favored the production of milk,
while an equal quantity which had
been cooked fattened and increased
the weight of the animals. Under the
influenoe of a ration of whioh cooked
potatoes formed the basis, the amount
of sugar in the milk was found to rise,
bnt the increase did not continue
when the ration was changed.
An analysis was made weekly during
nearly font months of (1) the milk of
eight cows whose ration contained
about forty-four pounds of potatoes
and [2) of another lot to which twenty-
two pounds had been given. In tho
first case there was a decrease of den
sity of the proportion of dry extract
and oaseiue, and in the second nn in
crease of batter and mineral mutters.
The practical use of tUsseexperiment-t
01 the introduction of the potato into
the ration of dairy cattle will ba regu
lated by the fact of thj milk bein{
sold off the farm or used for butter or
cheese making.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
Are yon mowing aroaal the s-ims
bushes that you were twenty years
ago?
Remember shade trees in t,K> gr.i it
profusion injurs thi quality o' th>
grass.
Are you plowing about tiis sa.nj
little swale that yon ware twenty
years ago?
Do not make tho horse carry a heavy
halter in addition to the bridle whan
at work on a hot day.
Time put into farm improvements is
a bettor patrimony than money in the
bank for yoar children.
That pasture needs drainage for
either sheep or for cows if health and
best results are to be expected.
Are you not wastiug time that, it
applied, would iu a few years fit your
farm for all modern maehinery ?
The demand for good ridin ; horse <
will inorease in proportion to t i > im
provement in the horse* pro la j a 1.
The friends of the busy bee main
tain that it.-would pay to keep a few
obtonies to pollenize the blossoms of
fruit trees.
Are you plowing around that same
rook, that aa boar's time would re
move, that you have plowed around
for twenty years?
The most vigorous -n 1 healthy foli
age of the strawberry plant is not an
indication of the best fruiting plants,
according to Professor Lazonby.
Cross, unrestrained dogs iu the
country prevent the free movement of
the country hoys and girls; let those
be first and dogs lest in full liberty.
The wealthy people of oar great
cities are getting to appreciate the
pleasures of a horseback lide. They
are the ones who pay good prices for
horses when they find what they want.
A praotioal dairyman suggests that
two or three doses of saltpetre, one
tablespoonful for a dose, is a remedy
tor ropy milk. Ropy milk, however,
seldom results unless the cow is milko.l
too soon after calving; it di(appears
later on.
Sometimes eggs are luid_a! night
while the hens are on tho roost. The
cause is a weakened state of tho egg-
produoing organs; tho result of over
feeding ami lack of exercise. Hens
which are unable to hold their eggs
are usually too fat.
A practical berry grower says that
a quarter sore garden, well arranged,
set to best varieties and properly oared
for, should yield at least tweuty-iive
bushels of berries. In no other way
osn a farmer produce so mnch of value
with so little labor as iu a garden of
•mall fruits.
A writer says that many fail to un
derstand while yet it is the fact, that
when oows are on good pasturage is
when they need salt the most. The
hotter plan Is to keep the supply in a
convenient place where they can help
themselves. One advantage with rook
salt is that it does not waste to any
great extent if left exposed.
The owner of a small farm who
keeps only one or two cows is more
interested, or should be, in having
eboioe animals than those who own
large flocks. One good oow will serve
the purpose of two- inferior ones, and
where space is limited every additional
quart of milk or pound of butter is
quite an item with the keeping of a
single animal.
Orasshoppers lor Bait.
Engineer Carlisle Laughead, wish
ing to try his luck at fishing, and de
siring some bait for that purpose, sta
tioned a boy on the cowcatcher of tht
engine on the way up t,o the front o.
the Oregon Pacific with a large sack,
the month of which wa* distende-i
with a hoop. As the grasshopper;
would rise before the engine, flying to
oss side, the boy would hold out tht
•aok and scoop them is, thus beint
able to swoop down upon the unsus
pecting hoppers with the power am
swiftness of steam. He gathered in (
half bushel or more. With those fa*
grasshoppers Mr. Laughead succeedei
in luring from the placid waters o
French Creek 302 speckled bean tie;
to attest to his prowess as a fisherman.
—Albany (Oregon) Herald.
m
One-third of the females of France,
bver fourteen years of age, are farm
laborer*.
Thera are 145 women studying med
icine in Paris, and the most of them
are Russians;
Almost one-sixteenth of the popu
lation of the District of Columbia is
made up of widows.
A Leavenworth (Kan.) bride of s
week sent some macaroni back to the
grocer because all tho stems were
empty.
Mrs. Cleveland is never a blind fol
lower of the latest fashion.’ She ie
more apt to consider “what is becom
ing” than ''what is the ioshion.”
The experiment of appointing
women as postmistresses' in Germain
has not given satisfaction, and it L-
said that no more will be appointed.
Though the new fashions are much
admired the gown of quaiut design is
still in vogue. This may be due to the
fact that its very antiquity gives it n
touch of novelty.
The British Government has begun
to export young women to Western
Australia for wives for the settlers
there. Those who wish to go are sent
free of all expenses.
It is said that Philadelphia has a'
greater number of women cyclists
than any other American oity, having
six or eight clubs, tho members of
which often ride in parties.
Cook's plumes promise to have a
run equal to that enjoyed several years
ago; they will be worn singly, in pairs
and in threes and fours on all shapes,
but more especially the walking models.
Pearls should bo worn only by
women whose skin is faultlessly white
end soft, ns their peculiar opalescent
sheen accentuates by-force of contrast
any tendency to roughness or sallow-
ness.
_ Edward Bok says that tho bard
times have driven thousands of women
into writing, and that the “dealers”
who have to read the manuscripts
sent to magazines aro taxed to their
utmost capacity.
Mine. Carnot, widow (if the late
President of Franco, his been asked
to remain honorary President or the
Union des Femmes de France, the
largort Tqluuttry ambulance organi
zation in France.
Lady Margaret Grosvenor, who has
become engaged to the young Prince
of Teok (brother of the Duchess of
York), is a daughter of tho Puke of
Westminster, whose income is said to
exceed $5000 a day.
Some of the brotherhood insurance
souieties are giving women the benefit
of the insurance privileges. The
Knights of the Golden Eagle has
amended its rules to admit women
members to tho insurance branch.
Mrs. Coleman Drayton, a daughter
of the late William Astor, for nearly
a year has been engaged in an unsuc
cessful effort to reduce her weight.
She is decidedly stout, aud most per
pie would unhesitatingly call her ie
The latest word of Parisian ecce..-
tricity is that pet dogs iu Paris are
now dyed to harmonize with the pre
vailing tint of * • ■>ir mistresses bou-
dor. Two shad s of violet are now
the most popular coloring for white
dogs.
Tho Common Council at Steinhubel,
Silesia, have elected, for the protec
tion of the village, r. night watchwo-
man. She is said to be stalwart and
resolute and takes a motherly inter
est in very small boys who aro out o’
nights.
The Dowager Marchioness of Lon
donderry is church warden of the
Anglican Church of Machynlleth,
North Wales. Two other peeresses
hold the same office—the Dowager
Lady Henthcote, at North Ealing,
Hampshire, and the Dowager Lady
Hindlip, for a chnrch in Worcester-
•nire.
r Miss Consuelo Vanderbilt, the New
York heiress, is just eighteen years
old. She is a brunette beauty aud ac
complished iu everything necessary
for the modern maiden to know. She
waltzej divinely and tiptoes through
the stately ‘minuet with all the grace
of a sixteenth century grande dame.
Women journalists are forbidden in
Japan. But Japanese ladies do not
lose much by this prohibition, inas
much Sk the most successful Japanese
writer of serial stories, who spends
bis whole day at the desk, just man-
ages, to make $5 a mouth—is, iu a
word, passing rich and famous on $30
a year.
One of the innovations among the
iwell women bicyclists st Long
Iranch, N. J., i* to have their groom
allow them on wheels. The theory
s that this custom gives the sport an
iltra-swagger character, besides in
uring the presence of a faithful
riend in case of an accident or a
oreakdown.
•The new Xenia Institute, the col-
ege for women established by the
'zat in commemoration of the recent
uarriage of his daughter, the Grand
Uucness Xenia, limits its sphere “to
the daughters of our faithful subjects
who, by reason of service to the State
or by birth, have acquired the status
of nobility.”
Queen Victoria's walking stick is on
nteresting one historically. It is
nade of oak, ont from the famous
cree oi Boscobel that sheltered her
incoster, Charles II., after tho battle
it Worcester. As a handle it has n
plaint little Indian idol, which Her
■lajesty received from the spoil of
ieringspatam.
The fashion of using a reversible
-addle, which was begun in England
leveral years ago by the Princess oi
iVales, was introduced to American
women by Miss Anna C. Brackett, who
was the first woman iu the country to
ise such a saddle. Even now it is not
u common use, although many wo
nen prefer it, children are taught to
ide upon it, and doctors recommend
A
Tho apple trade of Great Britai'
as assumed great proportion
mounting to 7,000,000 bushels within
.he past twelve years.
COST OF A BATTLE SHIP.
AS MUCH AS (4,000,000 EXPBNS7CE
FOB A SINGLE VESSEL.
What That Immense Sam Really
Means—Various Items That Enter
Into the Ship’s Cost.
I N looking over the appropriations
for the support of the Govern
ment for tt fiscal year probably
no item will be found therein
which specifies so much money to be
expended for so limited an object as
one similar to the following:
“The President is hereby authorized
to have constructed by contract one
sea-going, coastline battle ship, de
signed to carry the heaviest armor and
most powerful ordinance, at a cost,
exclusive of armament and of any pre
mium that may be paid for ' increased
speed, not exceeding $4,000,000.”
At the first glance it scaroely seems
possible that a single ship, that can bo
tossed around at will by the billows
of the ocean, or be destroyed com
pletely in a few hours if cast upon a
lee shore, could cost snch an enormous
amount of money. Four million dol
lars would build a magnificent fleet of
forty full-rigged ships, each capable
of carrying 2000 tons of cargo to any
port in the world. It would buy every
ferryboat plying between New York,
Brooklyn and Jersey City. It would
bo sufficient to establish a line of six
teen good-sized steamships, such as
tun from New York to Jacksonville,
Fla., and other domestic ports. A
fleet of fifty such oraok yachts aa the
Vigilant conld be bnilt and fitted np
in elegant style for the price paid lot
just one battle ehip.
If we make our oomparisons with
ejects on shore, more astoniehing facta
can be gleaned. Take, for instance,
dwelling houses; a good three-story
brick bouse, occupying a lot 25
feet by 100 in an ordinary city, would
be worth, on an average, about $10,-
000. Four million dollars would
build 400 houses of that class, and if
these houses were placed in one row,
after making due allowance for streets
and sidewalks, we would have nearly
two miles of dwellings. There are not
many towns of 10,000 inhabitants
where the entire taxable property is
assessed for $4,000,000. An averag*
mechanic, in good times, will earn
about $600 a year; the money paid
for one battleship by the Government
would thus support nearly 7000 fami
lies, or a city of 35,000 inhabitants,
for a whole year.
It will naturally be asked, after
reading the above statement, bow is it
possible to expend this great .sum for
jn*t one ship? A visit to a large ship
building establishment where snch
vessels are consirueted will disclose
the fact that the principal item of ex
pense must be the labor. Walk
through the draughting room, the
pattern shop, the machine shop, the
boiler shop, and out on the vessel
herself, and everywhere you will find
men working away hour by hour, all
for the one ship. If wo should count
them we would find that there are
nearly eight hundred employed on one
part or andther of this four-million-
dollar vessel. Month after month
they work, and probably at the end of
four years’ time their task will be
completed.
However, tho men we find about the
yard are not tho only ones who are
employed in the construction of the
battle ship. In different parts of the
country many others ore working in
the mines, the blast furnaces, and
rolling mills to produce the. material
for the men in the yard to work upon.
Altogether it is safe to say that a thou
sand men are constantly employed for
a period of four years in the construc
tion of one of these leviathans of the
sea.
Probably no other creation of man
brings into employment n greater va
riety of artisans than the construction
of a war ship. If we glace over the
pay roll of a large shipyard we find
represented thereon draughtsmen, pat
tern makers, machinists, riveters, cop
persmiths, plumbers, boiler makers,
calkers, pipe titters, painters, carpen
ters, joiners, sailmakers, riggers, elec
tricians, belibangers, decorators, up
holsterers, and many other spec ail
trades and occupations. It has been cs-
tiayited that there arc thirty two classes
of workmen necessarily employed in
the construction of n steamship. As
the majority of theso men are skilled
mechanics who receive from $12 to
$25 a week, it can bo easily scon where
the money is expended for this class of
construction.
One of the most expensive parts of
the whole ship is the armor lor the
turrets and bolts around the sides.
The contract price for this material
varies between $500 and $300 a ton,
delivered in the shipyard. This does
not include the cost of placing the
plates on tho vessel, which amounts
co a considerable sum. Homo of the
dotes weigh twenty-five tons and arc
■forth nearly $11,000 apiece. It is
>robablo that when the guns and
quipmeut are supplied and tho pre-
nimns paid fo- increased speed, the
mst of one of these battle ships will
each a grand total of nearly $3,000,-
100.—New York Sun.
Highest of all is Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Baking.
Powder
AVMMftff-KIVFJW PURE
SELIUT simxus.
Flying frogs are common in Borneo.
Sheet music is sold by the pound in
Germany.
Many of the great men of history
were epileptics.
Umbrellas made of oiled paper are
used in Korea.
American coal was first discovered
by French missionaries.
One pound of sheep’s wool is capa
ble of producing a yard of cloth.
In 1890 there were 10.51 per cent,
more families in this country than
dwellings.
A case at Chiliicothe, Mo., whioh
had previously hung five juries, was
recently concluded with a verdict oi
$2.10 for the plaintiff.
The present price of beef in Paris
is forty cents per pound, mutton being
tbirty-eight cents, veal thirty-six
cents, and the best horse meat sixteen
cents per pound.
One of the customs of ancient Baby
lon was an annual auction of unmarried
women. The proceeds of the sale oi
the beautiful women were used as a
dower for the ungainly ones. .
There is a superstition in China that
if you send for a charm the moment
you feel sick, you will get well. In
this country there is a similar super-
stitition about sending for a doctor.
On the coast of England and Franco
is to be seen the wild plant from which
have been developed the white and
red cabbages, cauliflower and other
varieties, and perhaps even tho com
mon turnip.
A joke uttered in the presence of
Isaac Hood, a colored man, aged sixty-
eight, who resides in Philadelphia,
tickled him to such a degree that he
burst into a fit of laughter which dis
located his jaw.
A Mexican sbeep-herder recently
rode eig ty miles between Little Hole
and Rock Springs, Wyoming, in six
hour* and a half, changing horses
three times, to get a doctor for the
wife of his employer.
An Albany (Go.) woman, who tried
to rid her premises of rats by soaking
hominy in arsenic water, says that the
entire tribe of rodents now inhabiting
her place are of snowy whiteness, but
still alive and frisky.
Pears ripened so rapidily during the
drought in California that they de
cayed within ten days after being
plucked. As a consequence the price
fell and it was possible to buy sixteen
luscious Bartlett pears for five cents.
In some parts of Ire and eggs are
sold by size. A large board with holes
in it is the measure; those which are
too large to go through the largest
hole command the first price; those
that go through the first, but not the
second, get second price, and so on.
Mr. Goldson, of Sulphur Wells, Ga.,
died recently at the age of 110, and
was shortly followed by his wife, aged
101. He leaves seven children, aged
respectively eighty-four, eighty-two,
eighty, seventy-eight, seventy-six,
seventy-four aud seventy-two. No child
of the family has died but one grand
son, who was killed in the war.
Venison has become plentiful In the Lon
don market.
Hosiery ot Wood Pulp,
Wood pulp has been put to many
uses, bnt the most extraordinary is in
adulterating woolen yarn. A way of
spinning the pulp has been discovered
and the production can be combined
with wool in making yarn, in the pro
portion of one part of wood to two
parts of wool. Much of this com
posite yarn is said to hivo been made
into hosiery.—New York Tilcgram.
The only clothing materials used in
Madagascar are silk and rofla cloth.
Che latter is spun from a fibre taken
rom a native plant and is seldom ex-
■orted.
atate or Ohio, City or Toledo, I
Lucas County. f “•
Fbank J. Chbney make* oath that ho Is tha
ealor partner of ths firm of F. J. Cheney A
a, doing business lathe City of Toledo,
bounty and State aforesaid,and that said ttrm
'lb W the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL
LARS for each and every case of Cuarrh that
ynnot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh
' DR *- ... Phank J. CitKNsr.
■- worn before roe and subscribed In my
wssence, this 6th day of December, A. D. ISM.
I > A. W, Oleason,
| seal! ’
i'TICT. . . „ . WntAry Pub'le.
(all’s Catarrh Cure la taken Internally and acta
Hrectly on the blood and mucous aurface* of
•he system. Send for test:mo»lals, free.
J-Chmiy & Co., Toledo. O.
Rr*Sold by DrugglsU, 75c.
< (‘I
r %
m
Ills Tomb a Miniature Church.
Dr. Woodward, of Sun Prairie,
Wis., has ordered a monument for
himself at Madison. It is to bo a
miniature church iu granite. It will
be erected on private property near
the doctor’s residence, and he will be
buried there when he dies.—Chicago
Herald.
A Beautiful Blotchy Face.
Bight off you say “Impossible!”
And so it is. Tetter, Eczema,
Ringworm or any other scaly, ugly
skin disease makes the handsomest fuoe
hideous. “Tetteriue” will cure them.
It’s the only cure—certain, safe, sure.
It costs 50 cents. Druggists or by
mail from J. T. bhuptrine, Savannah,
Ga. n ^
New fortifications are to be erected la
Pensacola Harbor, Florida, at a cost ot
•1.000.000
Karl’s Hover Root, the great blood parifler,
fives fre.-bness and clearness to tbs complex,
ton and euros constipatiou. 115 eta.. 50 cts.. $1
PBtudf.ntb oi prlncetoii Uonette lormally
decided to ahc'.hm hazing In all Its forms
(ratltlcted with pore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp-
lon's Eye water.Druyglsts sell atY5C per bottle
TO PUT ON
needed flesh, no mat
ter, how you’ve lost
it, take Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Dis
covery. It works
wonders. By restor-
% ing the normal ac-
f /tion of tne deranged
organs and functions,
it builds the flesh up
^ to a safe and healthy
standard — promptly,
pleasantly aud nat
urally. The weak,
~ emaciated, thin, pale
^ and puny are made
strong, plump, round and rosy. Noth
ing so effective as a strength restorer
and flesh maker is known to medical sci
ence; this puts on healthy flesh not the fat
of cod liver oil.and its filthy compounds.
It rouses every organ of the body to ac
tivity, purifies, enriches and vitalizes
the blood so that the body feels refreshed
and strengthened. If you are too thin, too
weak, too nervous, it may be that the food
assimilation is at fault. A certain amount
of bile is necessary for the reception of the
fat foods in the blood. Too often the liver
holds back this clement which would help
digestion. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery stimulates, tones up and invig
orates the liver, nouri«hf*B the blood, and
the muscles, stomach ...d nerves get the
rich blood they requi.e.
Spent Hundreds of Dollars with no Benefit.
M. J. Coleman of ?, Sargent St., Roxbury %
Mass., writes: “Alter
suffering from dyspepsia
and constipation with un
told agony for at least 18
mouths, I am more than
pleased to say that after
using Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery and
‘Pleasant Pellets’ for one
month, I was entirely
cured, aud from that day
to this I do not know,
thank God. what even a
slight headache is. I paid
a doctor on Tremont $1.,
Boston, m one day (for
his advice only,) the sum ,
Of $IO OO With 53 50 fof J
medicine, and derived no J. Co~tMA.v Ksq.
benefit got more relief in one hour from your
medicine.*, as far as my stomach was concerned,
than from all the other medicine I used.
Ifauy person who reads this is suffering from
dyspepsia or constipation and will use your
medicine as I have done, he will t iver regret it."
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and Improvement and
lends to personal enjoyment when
rightly rued. Hie many, who live bet
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
lew expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world’s best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to hroilth of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in tha
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial proj^rties of a perfect lax
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
is give
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak
ening them and it is perfectly free from
•very objectionable substance.
• Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug-
g’sts in 50c ana$l bottles, but it ie man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs
and being well informed, you will no’
•ocept any substituM if offered. *
W. L. Douglas
S3 SHOE NOMUKAKInW
$5. CORDOVAN,
FRfNCH&ENAMEUEOCAir ’
^.“FBCCAIfAlftKaAM
15.IP P0UCE.3 Sam.
V EXTRA FINE.
*2.te?B0Y&M)ft5HaE&
fc SEND r0ft CATAUMUB
iW’L* DOUGLAS*
* BROCKTON* MASS.
Y«a o«n save montr bj waarlag tka
W# L# Doaglua 93.00 Shoe.
Bccaaao. wa are the largest manufacturer! el
thla trade or shoes in the world, and guarantee their
value by stamping the name and price on the
bottom, which protect yon against high prices and
tha middleman's profits. Our shoes equal custom
work in style, essr fitting and wearing qrfalltlet
We have them sold -
the value given than
stltute. If j our deal
easy fitting and wearing qualities
•old everywhere at lower prices fot
t than any other make. Take no eo^
l*r cannot sunoly you. wa n
* AkELREES,-
fWINE OF CARDUJ.I
a
irFoi Female Diseases.:
• MI HIM M« *(•*««*«
N U
43
The Best. Thing in
Milk Pails
is Pearline., That’s the solid truth. You
get them cleaner, and with less work and
fuss, than with anything else you can use.
It saves you so much that it’s cheaper than
the commonest ;tuff can be. Proof—the
largest dairies and dealers use Pearline.
Some women are afraid of Pearlinc.
They think that where cleaning is made
so easy, there must be some harm to the
thing washed. But .Pearlinc can’t hurt
milk pails, anyway. And it can’t hurt the finest lace 0/ the
softest hands, any more than it hurts milk pails.
Not With the imitations—the fact that they are imita-■
So tors or followers proves a lack of something, jut