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Brewton Banner from Brewton, Alabama • Page 3

Publication:
Brewton Banneri
Location:
Brewton, Alabama
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

HUNTING 1FIK5 MONKEYS. "Oh, Lor 'Iiu Ailn! run away When observed. They would Med star Adrcrllslnff Clients tit It ha become eommin to bfgla irtfcle in an oleyant, intereatinff trie, Then run It we avoid all inch, Ami call attention to the of Hop Bitter in a plain, bomwt term a fav lible, To induce people To (rive them one trial, which to prove tbeir value that they will never une anything else." 1' Thi Rkmedt so favorably noticed la all tbe papers. Kriigiou and secular, i Having a large sale, and is tupplantlng all other medlriiMM, "There ino deriving the virtue of the Hop plant, and the proprietor of Hop Bitter have shown great shrewdness and ability "In compounding a medicine whose virtues are so palpable to every oDobervatlon." Tho Dyspeptic's Predicament The dyspeptic is indeed an object foi commiseration. Not only must he suffer torments that rob him of a portion of hisfliinity, but it now appears that if he would hold on to tho remainder of that article he must avoid books that treat of diet and digestion.

An anthority comes to the front with a statement that there nro nearly 2,000 works extant on the above twin-subjects, and that the sufferer has the desirable privilege of studying the question until, twixt the disease ana the doubt engendered by the differences of opinion among tho doctors, he becomes a suitable subject for the lunatic asylum. One will learnedly assert that saliva does not enter into tho process of digestion and was never intended for that purpose, while another, with equal emphasis, will declnre that digestion could not get along without it. It would be quite as well, perhaps, for the dyspeptic to let the doctors and their theo Xn the early days of Mathodlim In a certain oonirrojation, where tbw wo uue one ncn man, Umire to build a now chapel. A church meeting wan held. Tlia Bid rtcn BCfltahman ftaaanrluMi nti.

wo djnns ntfjd tie chapjli 1'U airs torropain." Just then a bit of pla'sto'r fallitfi froW tiii celling hit him on the heal Looking up and testing bow bad it was, he wm: -urouiren, worse wan tboucht: I'll make it 50 pun'." "Oh, Lord," exelaimad a devoted brother on a back mat, "hit 'im again!" There are many human tabirnacles which are in sore need ot radical building over, but we putter and fuss and repair In spots without satisfactory results. It is only when we are personally aiarnteil flt the real danger that act independently; dnd (to the1 fight thing. Then it is that we most keenly gret becauso we did not sooner use our judgment, follow the advice born of the experience of others and jump away from our perils. Thousands of persons who will read this paragraph are in abject misery to-day when they might be in a satisfactory condition. They are weak, lifeless, full of odd aches and pains, and every yoar they know they are getting Itrorso, Oven thollgh the bast doctors are patching them Iri spot The origin oi these aches and pains is the kidiieysaridlivefi and if they would build these all over hew with Warnor's safe euro, as millions' have done, and cease investing their money in' muerab'y unsuccossf ill patchwork, they would bo well and happy and would bless tbi day when the Lord "hit 'em" and Indicated the common-sense course for them to pursue London Press.

Women Cashiers. The movement in favor of employing women in all kinds of work that was formerly done by men only is one that should be carried on with caution, for women and girls have sometimes been put into situations for which their sex is unfit and the result has Men a reaction against their employment in capacities! where they are really useful Hut of all the posts as to which women's aptitudes are the least open to question that of cashier must be cited first. Women are excellent money keepers. While male cashiers form a grievously large percentage among the prisoners brought to trial for embezzlement, women and girls, being seldom exposed to the same temptations as men in the matter of dissipation, betting, gambling or speculation, have very rarely been known to misappropriate moneys entrusted to them. An honest woman is very honest "an honest man is too often, as Lord ralmerston bitterly said, one who has nevef been! tempted." A man once applied to ad Italian banker for a cashiership, and Was asked to state his qualifications.

I have been ten years in prison," he said, "and so shall not mind being locked up in a room by myselt ana having my pockets searched when I go out and come m. The banker admired his impudence, took him at his word and used to say that he made a good cashier. We are not affirming that antecedents like this rogue's are required to fit a man for a post of trust but we do maintain that it is very difficult to find a thoroughly trustworthy male cashier even among applicants provided with a mass of testimonials, whereas careful, honest and well educated women, in whom full con' fidence can be placed, exist in great numbers. Paper Counterpanes. A paper making firm has been turn-ing out counterpanes and pillow-cases of paper.

No. 1 manilla paper is used, two large sheets being held together by a slender twine at intervals of three or four inches. The twine is gummed, So as to hold the sheets firmly together where it lies. A hem is placed on the counterpane to keep it from tearing; the safety edge is composed of twine. Ornamental designs are stamped on the outer surface of the covers and cases, giving them a neat, attractiva appearance.

When these counterpanes and pillow-cases become wrinkled from us 3, they can easily be smoothed out with a hot flat iron. The counterpanes can be left on the bed when it is occupied, and in cold weather will be found a warm covering, the paper preventing the escape of heat. The new paper bed-clothing is seventy-five cents per set The Pensacola Commercial gays the moss crop of Florida is worth more than the cotton, and can be put on the market at less expense. The demand exceeds the supply, and there is not a county in the state in which this product is not going to waste. The purest, sweetest and best Cod Liver Oil In the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy livers, upon tne seashore, it is absolutely pure nnd sweet Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others.

Physicians have decided it superior to any of the other oils in market. Made Dy uaswell, Hazard ft Mew lorit. Small and steady gains give competency with tranquility of mind. Chippe 1 hands, face pimples ana rough skin enred by using Juniper Tar Soap, mad by Ca well Hazard New York. Charity: A service that the receiver should remember and the giver forget Hay-Perer.

Ely's Cream Balm was recommended to me by my druggists as a preventive to Hay-Fever. Have been using it as directed since the 9th of August, and have found it a specific for that much dreaded and loathsome disease. For ten years or more 1 have been a great sufferer each year, from August 9th till Irost, and have tried many alleged remedies for its cure, but Ely's Cream Balm is the only preventive I have ever found. Hay-Fever sufferers ought to know of its efficacy. J-BANK B.

AlNSWORTH, Of P. B. Ainsworth Publishers, Indianopolis, Ind. I have been afflicted with Hay-Fever for seven years Ely's Cream Balm cured me entirely. H.

D. Callihan, Baggage Master, i. St L. K. Terra Haute, Ind.

Good company and good conversation are the very sinews of virtue. A Only Dacbter Cured of CniumUnm. When death was hourly expected from Consumption, all remedies having failed and Vr. H. James was experimenting, he accidentally made a preparation of Indian Hemp, wnicn cured his only child.and now gives this rear on receipt of stamps to pay expense, ttemp also cures night swea's, nausea at the stomach, and will break a fresh cold 84 hour.

Address Craddoct 10 Ko Philadelphia, naming this paper. When yon retire to bed, think over what yon have been doing through the day. Important- When you Ti-ft at JTwr York oity, bsrc. nprwNvnudtScarriaiia hire, and stoprttb toal Union Hotel, oppoeit Gnod Central depot. 61m elegant roome.

titled up at a oortofona mimfm dollars, 1 and npward pr day. European plan. Ei-wtor. ReeTanraatanpplwdwithtliebeat. Horse oara.

rtaieeacdeleTatM railroads to all depots, ramilwa ran lire better rcr less mooey at. the Grand Uniom Botelthan at anr otbvr nrst-ulaai Dotal ia the ctfj. Always speak the truth. Make few promises Live up to your engagements, pome uown on tne rocics for the pears, they would take hold of tho fruit gingerly with their long teeth, rolling up their lips to escnpe tho spines. Darwin would have said that the lonr teeth were cultivated by natural itflocUdH for this very purpose Aftttr pulling bit tho' pear thev CareftttiT rOH It In kiln Pnrfh with thir Je'A to wear oil tho anine-.

Often they would get the prickles in their nands, and then it was amusing to seo them set up liko human beings and pick the spines out of each other's handsr Just beforo morning they would go into the cornfields to steal corn. Thoy would pluck all the fears thoy could carry in their nrrns and hasten to some deop ravine. Here thev would husk tho corn and eat tho cobs clean of kernels. If discovered they quickly dropped their booty, rolled over into the ravine, and disappeared. The Cook In tlm Orient A Chinese Cottle tniifrrir.

to ntiltan nil the odds and ends of the kitchen. He takes the feet ol ducks and chickens (which in this country are universally thrown away), and prepares them into dishes similar, but sunorior to nin-'g feet and calves' head. The bones and sinews of meat are kept as with us, for tho stock-pot; all fat-containing triattor is carchilly tried out. The fat is drained off nnd set aside; the cracknel left is dried, compressed, salted, nnd used as an appetizing food. Economy can go to no greater length than in the treatment of tho watermelon.

The pulp is used as with us. The rind is boiled or sauted, producine green pulp, like summer-squash in flavor and smoothness; is also pickled, sweet-pickled and preserved The Seeds am wnshfirl And thoroughly dried. Thev are used liko almonds, after dinner, and as the basis ror many cakes, confections and pre serves. The peel of orange and lemon is always saved. Some is dried and grated, some preserved or candied, and some used to give a mild perfume to closets and wardrobes, containing wearing apparel.

The' scientific fact, that long boiling or stearains, under pressure, will soften many vegetables, which would otherwise be uneatable, has iong been taken ad-Vantage of in the East. The pea-pod is cooked, as well as the pea, and makes a delicious and wholesome dish. Bamboo-shoots are steamed until they are almost ready to fall apart; they are then dried and are ready for almost instant tise. The woody fibre has been changed to a fine semi-pulp. The Chinese love of economy is well illustrated in the roasting of poultry and meats.

In the Caucasian civilization, this is almost invariably effected, by suspending the article to be cooked over the tire. The roasting is accomplished, but the juices and fat are lost in whole or in greater part. Among the Chinese the articles are suspended in a fire-pit over a dripping pan. The fire is built on the side, and the flame and heated gasses have to pass around and Over the articles, in order to escape into the chimney flue. Every of juice and fat is caught in the dripping-pan, and thus utilized.

Another instance of Mongolian ingenuity is the separation of fats into their component elements. The fat is melted over a slow fire strained and filtered, while very hot. It is then allowed to cool very slowly. At a certain point (I think 105 degrees Fahrenheit), the fat separates into a whitish yellow, solid fat, and a yellowish oil. The former is good for keeping meats airtight, as it is except in the hottest tropical weather; the latter is tho best substance we have for frying.

When made from fine suet, it is sweeter and purer than the best olive oil. In the utilization of odds and ends. the Chinese coak labels each and everything. The oil used in flavoring a dish, is kept in one can; that for frying, in a second that for frying fish or onions, in third and fourth. Garbage, proper, is never allowed to remain in the Oriental kitchen.

In the country it is given to the pigs; in the city, it is immediately burned. As a matter oi luck (and probably to keep away the mice), a Chinese cook wants one or more cats in his kitchen. In the tropics, where insect life is' tumultuous, he keeps a half-dozen lizards upon the walls and ceiling. Wong Chinj'oo, in iifew York Cook. Origin of Mosquitoes.

The Indians have a very sitisfactory account of the origin of the mosquitoes. The legend runs thus: There were in times of old, many moons two huge feathered monsters permitted by the manitou to descend from the sky and alight on the banks of the Seneca river. Their form was that of the mosquito. They were so large that they flew toward the earth. Standing on cither b.ink thoy guarded the river, and, stretching their long necks into the canoes of the Indians as they attempted to paddle along the stream, gobbled them up as the stork king in the fable gobbled up tho frogs.

The destruction of life was so great that not an Indian could pass without being devoured in the attempt. was long before the monsters could be exterminated, and then only by the combined efforts of all the Cayuga and Onondaga nations. The battle was terrible, but the warriors finally triumphed, and the mammoth mosquitoes were slain and left unburied. For this neglect the Indians had to pay dearly. The carcasses decomposed, and the particles, vivified the sun.

flew off in clouds of mosquitoes, which have filled the country ever since. 1 A Fable. A Pair of Lions, who were traveling across the country in search of Food" came upon a Man who had fallen Asberj the Grateful Shade of a Tree. One oi the Lions observed that the Hunter was probably an Artist. 1 oeg to Diner witn you," replied the other.

"He is doubtless a Poet." "I say Artist 1" "I say Poet!" "You must be Blind!" "And I know you are Idiotic IB "You lie!" "So do you 1" 4 And they Rushed upon each other Administered many Grievous Bites. Tie sounds of combat Awoke the Man, and Warned him to escape. Moral "1 never Question the alien," said a Fox who Witnessed the Quarrel. ACOIIr ASTD XVOTDSVTa Collection for museum. iri: Museum of Natural last of tira tWd Bpociei 01 quadrumana, Or mon'.

key, apes babooat, which Mb. -Morris K. Jogsup, a wealthy rodent of horW Dr. H. A.

Ward, of Rochester, 10 coltect from every quarter of the globe. Dr. Ward told a Time reporter of hit cttorts on both hemisphere. In collects tho qnadrumana: i "There are two hundred and twenty-lour apocic of qnadrumana in all, and I waa instrwetodbyMr. Jessup not to stop in til every one was secured.

I have now xiclivwed something over 'one hundred species, and have little hope of obtaining the rest, on account of the difficulty of reaching them. The family of le-murs, for instance, comprise fifty-one species, thirty-threo of which alono come rom Madagascar. Now that Island is at war with Franco, and a French fleet has i lu 8n 1 of The consequence is mat all foreitcnors are taken for French-oieri, and on tny recent trip there I could do nothing -whatever. I even took the trouble to go fa France and have United States minister and tho foreign department of that country certify that I was an American and wished to visit Madagascar for purely scientific purposes. The echeme did not work, and I was assured on arrival that if I attempted exploration on the island my lifa couldn't be insured for a cent.

However, I set a trader there at work, and ho may do something for Ms. By various means I have managed to secure thirty species of the lemurs. The remaining twenty-one are divided among Madagascar, the interior of Africa, Siam, and Ceylon." "It is said that some incident in jour career caused you to give up shooting "Well, that is perhaps true. When I ivcd at that 'state of mind I was in Nicaragua. Here is a species of monkeys 'called tho howlers, which have a trumpet apparatus in the throat by which they nmkd a terrible noise that can be heard for miles.

One day I observed one of these howlers up in a tree which seemed so hava strange swelling on the neck. Having a great curiosity to learn what this seeming lusus naturae meant, I shot the animal. Down it came with a heavy bump. As it fell a little one was released and dropped to tho ground. It had been 'clinging" to the mother's neck, and had appeared in the distance like a freak of nature.

When the mother touched the ground she just reached over to the little one, clasped it to her breast and died. This act was 'so human and touching that it af fected me more than I can tell, and for In British Guiana these howlers are used for food. The natives broil fielr arms, which are about as long as and very much resemble human arms. The taste is very good. To see lines oi these arms hanging up in a native village causes strange sensations to the trailer, in British Guiana.

"Any one who will examine old spec-Sinens of the gorilla in museums will find on inspection that thtir hands and feet piiuvvn a ui a luug iii Hi hi was almost impossible to find gorillas in the wild state in possession of these limbs. It seems that the natives of "iaboon, Africa, recognized them as their natural So, instead of killing them off, they caught the young and cut off their hands and feet. We had to teach, the natives the difference in the value between a whole and frag- tnentary animal. When they learned the lesson we began to get specimens that were whole and the natives more value in return. "New-Yorkers seem to have much fun with Mr.

Crowley, this chimpanzee in Central park, and well they may. These uniinals come from West Africa and are hard to secure. Much less is known about them than the gorillas. Thev are smaller and more intelligent. Mr.

Crowley's hands are pink on the inside, but they will turn dark when he gets older. In Sumatra I secured the slender gibbon. They ate a peculiar anthropoid ape and are great feilows to swing. I have often seen them swing on a limb like gymnasts on a trapeze until they had secured sufficient momentum, when they would jump to another limb and go back and forth from limb to limb in that way. "Perhaps the only attempts which have been made to civilize the monkey is in Malabar, India.

A. fine species indi-geneous ia this quarter is the Nelligher-ry langur. The natives here have fan ning machines called the punka. In other days the punka, which consists of a movable frame, covered with canvass and suspended from, the ceiling, was kept in motion by a slave pulling a cord. An English officer conceived the idea of teaching the langur to work.

He took one of the species and tied its hands to the while by means of another rord the machine was kept in motion. The movement of the cord is up and and, of course, the monkey's hands being tied to it. went up and down, and the animal saw the machine move. Its master patted its head and fed it with andy, and the langur soon learned to think it fun to work the machine. When I was in Malabar securing specimens of this species, I saw thousands of them working the punka, the Indians having immediately put the ani mals in captivity when they saw their utility.

Gaboon, Africa, I found the most peculiar- baboon of all, the mandrill (Mormon, maimon). In Abyssinia they go in groups, like dogs, and are -very hostile. They always came out and oarsea at me. une ot tnem wm not attack alone, but a band of them will push each other on and bark encouragingly to each other. As long as you stand i 'and face them you are safe, but the instant- you shoot among them or run you are gone.

They then rush on you tn a body and tear you in pieces. They have teeth three inches long, like tusks. I was amused to see them gather the prickly pear. "This fruit is covered with sharp spines and ia difficult either to pick or skin for eating, as the spines stick in one's and sting terribly. I would take my field glass and watch the man-drills from a distance, as they an apt to or a It by in of fftd from Opiate, JSmetict art A Prom pt, safe, sure cure HAY-FEVER.

I have been Hay-Feier sufferer three yean hare often heard y' Cream Balm spoken ot in the highest terras. Hi not take nnoh Udct ifl it beat the many quaild rfredltftfe. A friend persuaded' me id try the Balm, and wiih wonderful mooes T. S. Qexx, Syracuse, T.

Cream Balm bss trained an enviable reputation wherever kaofrn din-placing all other prepnfa-iions. A particle Is applied into each nostril; no paiu; agreeable to use. HAY-FEVER Price Wo. by mall or at drnKEiBtst Send for auM ou.uiiar.rw., jjrnggiifcg, Oweffffc THOESTOB'S SITOOTH POWDER Keeping Teeth Perfect and Gum Healthy. We Waftt 9,000 Mora B00K Agent to 8ell The Pefstfiial History of U.

S. GHAUT. C3 GO Tba book MutrruMth General' tir flyrll wrtisM, wA private cuter, tad ia ttw mU 00m pUu and riiblt biiuiy him Unt A Itrgti hudmi Mtaro TOluma, iupirblj II 1 astral wL We wiat om agent la mrr (Jrcad Army Pott tad in every towaabln. BeoA for full particular, and SPECIAL TERMS TO AGENTS, Ummm Wtae one bT lendinf 66eti. far outet Mtntta.

tills paper.1 AddrtM AMERICAN PUBLISHING Hartford Bottom Chicago Cincinnati or bu l.ouia Rest for the Weary! Health for the Sick! Men and women are often worn down in mind and body by the labors and cares of Ufe. Tbeir nerves give way under tbe severe prendre, and the whole system is involved as a consequence. It is then that Pemberton's French Wine Coca acts as a direct means of restoration, giving perfect health to mind and body, dissipating every feeling of depression and lassitude, and imparting calmness, energy and happiness. Pemberton's French Wine Coca IS THE ORBIT MKKVI BISTOBIB AND 1KVIGOR1- tob. Gives health to the nerves and the entire system is restored, for tbe nerves are the life of man.

If they are deranged, all else will be, if healthy then, health to mind and body follows. Pemberton's French Wlfle Coca acts specifically upon the nerves, the muscles and the whole human organism. In every bottle there is health and rest and happiness. For further particulars, Bend for book on Coca. J.

S. PEMBERTON Sole Proprietors and Manufacturers, ATLANTA. GA. suffered for more than live years with indigestion, scarcely able to retain the simplest food on my stomach. I declined tn flesh, and suffered all the usual depression attendant upon this terrible disease.

At last, iauing to una reuei in anyemng eise.x com-tteneed the use of Swift's Specific, The medicine tomtd up the stomach, strengthened the digestive organs, and soon alt that burning ceased, and I could retain food without difficulty. Now my health is rood, and can eat anything in the shape of food, and digest it without difficulty. Take the prescribed dose After eating. JAitES MANN, No. Ivy St.

For sale by all druggists. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. THE SWTFT SPECIFIC N. 157 W. 2Sd St Drawer 3, Atlanta, Otv PENNYROYAL 7lCH ENGLISH" The OriffU.ftl nd Only OenaJne.

ttft ud ftlvsji reUafcU. Btnnsf artblM InltatfoM, ChlkMtr's EaflUk beat mtde. UdUpeawbla TO LADIES. BMikUat, in Uttmr wal jw by Mi- tarU. NAME PAPER.

Cash Wins. I can save vou several hundred dollars and sell von the finest Engine or Boiler built in America. Address THOMAS CAMP. Oen. Aii't, Covington.

G. Fare, Hands, Furt, and aU their Im- porrecilons. including Facial Develop-fnenr. Birth Marks, Moles, Warts, Modi. Freeklea, Rod Nose, Acne, Bl'k Read, Scars, Pitting and their treatment.

Dr. John Woodburr.3TN.Pearl3t.,Alr)a. ny, fl.Y. Est a lou. Beaaiucioruwaj OPIUM HA HIT.

Sure cure In M) to 30 dars. Sanitarium treatment or medicines by express. 15 rears established. Book free. lr.

Marsh, liulncy. Mich. D.1I. Great Englisli GouUnd Dlali 9 rilldi Hhaumatic Remedy. uvai uox, siiw; rotiuu, iw vw.

rt a IT Obtained. Send stamp tot I II I Inventors' Guide. IBua-auii. Patent Lawyer. Washington.

D. O. HACAxTS Magnolia Balm is a secret aid to beauty. Many a lady owes her freshness to it, who would rather not tell, and can't telL CIA1BH wm 3 I Indigestion Cured. i nr Mrnouiftra, well- I A rlLLd Did She Diet "Nor 8he lingered and suffered along, pinlng away all tbe time for years." The doctor doing her no good And at last was cured by thi Hop Bitten the paper any so much about.

"Indeed Indeed How thankful we should be tor that medicine." A Daughter's Misery. JMeven year our daughter suffered on a bed of misery, 1' rom a complication of kidney, liver, rheumatic trouble and Nervous debility, Under the care of the best physicians, Who gave her disease various names, it no relief, And Jtrow. she is restored to ns in good health by aejnmple a remedy as Hop Bitters, that we had tHunned for year before using fcrTTTone genuine without abunc'ttof green flops on the white labeL Shun all Jb vile, poisonous stflff with "Hop" or "Hop" irf Jwew Pensions toKoMier4Hefr. Benaatamt. for Circulars.

COL. L. BINU-HAM. Att'y, Washington. D.

C. SPRIG FEVER At this eeaaua evwry one nueda to ums ecm Sort of tonio. 1UON ftnten into aim cmt every ph, tnciui'a proscription xa inn woo neea uuuuiuk BE5T TONIC. For Weakness, JLnssUnde. of is the only Iron medicine that is not lnjarton It Enricties the Blood.

Invigorate the System, Restores Appctite.Aids Digertiom It doee not blacken or tojnre the teeth, cam bead, ache or produce constipatxJB-otAer iron mcdictna do Dr. G. H. Brainjre, a Iwding physician of Springfield. "Brown's Iron Bitters is a thoptmtj good medicine.

Inse it in my practice, ana fifta its action excels all other forms of iron. In ireaJooass. or a low oondition of the system. Brown's Iron Bitters is tiBual) a posftire ItiBUll that atalanoea Gennioehsfl trade mark and crossed redlirosvoa -wrapper. Take no other.

Made only by BROWN CHEMICAL Lakes' Handbook nssfnl and attractive, containing list of prizes for recipes, information about coins, given away by all dealers in medicine, or mailed to any address on receipt of 2c. stamp. Twain, hnren-nmrflr Rname. either DOrtabte or de tached. Price, S500.

Adapted to threshing, ginning, grinding, sawin and all similar work, strictly first-class, cheap only in price. t. Other size engines at corresponding prices. The "Self -Tramping Cotton Press." complete, self-supporting, ready for belt. Price, $15u sares one-half of the labor, is quickly and easily erected, takes little room, is simple, strong and durable.

The cheapest, as well as best Cotton Press made. General machinery for sale. PROGRESS MACHINE WORKS, MERIDIAN MISS. sales, and 900 rwrcf. prone maae oy men and women with our labor-saving invention.

A lady cleared 7Uin one street. An Agent writes: "Your Plan brintm money quickest of any I man or woman malilnir tsxui than 9.4(1 nftr -BTfiak fahonld tlT Our easy money-making business. We guarantee it the be paying in the land. $1 samples qmck selling good free to any lady or gent who will devote a few hoars daily, ix- perience unnecessary; no talking. Write quick and se-cur your county.

Address, U. Merrill Co. Chicago R. U. AWARE THAT Lorillard's Climax Egg, bearing a reft tin tag; that Lorlllard1 Rose Leaf fine cut that Lorillard's Navy Clippings.

and that Lnrillard'a heat and cheapest, duality consMered COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS BALTIMORE, AID. This Sehool offers to Medical students clinical and other advantaes. Send for a catalogue tn Db. THOMASOP1K. Dean, VS.

HOWARD bTKbET. Chloral and Opium Kabits EASILY CflRKW. ROOK KREK. OR. J.

C. Jefferson. Wisconsli AMY K1ATASZO A DAY made wltn. outfits tor nanulacturiQE SteneiW Kev Checks and Rubber HUiuiju. Catalogue free.

8. H. SPENCKK, in aaiiigxon aut toscon, jiaaa. OPIUI Morphlrie Hnblt Cnrea In 11 todVdars. NepitT tlllrnrril.

D. J. STSPKSN8. tbanon. Oliia CITIIlTinllC free.

Circulars for pestle. SIIUmIIUHO Home Ktndy-SO Pn'essors. Correspondence University, Cmcago, Dl A. N. Man and Beast Mustang Liniment is older than most.

and used more and more every year. a t. Kl SI E3L kl Erffl IU1 EI El Hk. nun mum uu i ries severely alone and not bother his head about thttlr problems which may result, at beat, in problematic cures. Nature arid common sense are tho only reliable doctors for his case and tho sooner he calls in their aid, the sooner will he recover tho normal digestive powers he has lost.

Let him look to bis hours of retiring and rising, for the chances are a hundred to one that there has been no regularity in these; or, if there has, tho regularity consisted in going to bed at 13 o'clock and getting up at 10. Exercise, and plenty of it, in the open air is important, because it will enable him tho better to adopt a generous diet, which he should do, though a little sparingly until his organs recuperate and are able to cope with quantity. And last but by no means least, let him see to it that he has full employment fur both mind and body, for without it he might find himself possessed of a devil even worse than the one of whiebfee proposes to rid himself. The following table, showing the time required for digesting tho various foods, will probably have more interest for the dyspeptic than he over found, when a boy, in the multiplication table, especially if he should be on the eve of contemplating "a generous diet." ivta required Fob digesting food. How rjre- Aina of Jf ooa.

Apples, sour, mellow Apples, sour, hard -Apples, sweet, mellow, Barley Bass, striped Beans, pod Beans and green corn Beef Beefsteak Beef, fresh, lean, dry Beef, fresh, lean, rare Beets Brains, animal Bread, corn pared. ft. m. 200 2 50 130 2 00 300 2 30 45 400 800 3 30 3 00 3 45 145 3 15 130 330 2 30 200 430 315 3 30 3 30 2 45 200 2 45 4 00 4 30 3 00 2 00 130 215 300 3 SO 3 30 400 4 00 2 30 2 80 3 30 4 00 230 2 0) 2 00 215 8 00 3 00 315 2 55 8 15 3 30 2 30 2 30 100 315 515 800 315 415 4 30 2 30 2 30 8 30 145 100 4 00 320 130 300 300 3 30 3 00 400 415 5 30 430 200 100 ISO 130 2 25 2 30 2 18 3 30 400 raw raw raw boiled broiled boiled boiled fried broiled roasted roasted boiled boiled baked baked melted raw raw boiled boiled fried raw fricasseed boiled baked roasted roasted boiled raw whipped roasted soft-boiled hard-boiied fried boiled roasted boiled roasted warmed fried broiled broiled boiled raw broiled boiled roasted raw roasted stewed boiled roasted boiled broiled roasted stewed broiled fried boiled roasted baked boiled boiled boiled boiled broiled boiled boiled boiled boiled boiled boiled boiled boiled boiled boiled boiled boiled fried boiled roasted roasted boiled boiled fried broiled Bread, wheat, fresh Butter, melted Cabbage Cabbage, with vinegar Cabbage Carrot, orange Cattish Cbeese, old, strong Chicken, full grown Codfish, cured, dry Custard Duck, tame Duck, wild Dumpling, apple Ezsrs, fresh Eggs, Eggs, Sggs' Eggs, Fowls, domestic. Fowls, domestic Gelatine Goose, wild Hashed meat veget Heart, animal Lamb, fresh Liver, beef's, fresh Milk Milk Mutton, fresh Mutton, Mutton, Oysters, Oysters, Oysters, Parsnips Pig, sucking Pig's feet, soused Porksteak Pork Pork, recently salted Pork, Fork, Pork, Potatoes Potatoes Potatoes Eice Salmon, salted Sausage, fresh Soup, barley Soup, bean Soup chicken Soup, mutton Soup, oyster Soup, beef, vegetables Soup, marrow bones Suet, beef Suet, mutton Tapioca Tripe, soused Trout, salmon, fresa Trout, salmon, fresh Turkey, domestic Turkey, domestic Turkey, wild Turnips Veal, fresh Veal, fresh Venison steak 4 30 135 The Caterer.

The Ynlnable Cork Oak. In Sardinia, Sicily, and the region around Naples, large cork plantations are being destroyed in the improvident haste of their owners to realize profit from the superior quality of tannin afforded by the bark, and from the carbonate of soda made out of the ashes of the wood. The French have planted this valuable oak largely in Algiers, where there is now over 500,000 acres in good condition. The number of trees in Spain is also increasing. It continues to grow for 150 years, and reaches the height of fifty feet.

The wood is not valuable except for fuel. It is thought that the tree would thrive in Cali fornia There are 412 different species of trees in the American forests. According to the Enek and Tile Renew, floating bricks are made of a very iight silicioua earth, day being ome-dmes added to bind the material together. They can be made so light that they will float on water, while their strength eqnals ordinary brioks. A New Orleans paper refers editorially to the wonderful restoration to health of Mr.

T. Posey, druggist, 225 Capal Btreet, that city, who some time ago was pros-trated by an excrutiating attack of sciatica. After much suffering his wife applied St Jacobs Oil, which cured him promptly and entirely..

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About Brewton Banner Archive

Pages Available:
865
Years Available:
1883-1888