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Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov’t Report.
Bakins i
L Powder
ABSODUTEOf PUR®
INVESTIGATING.
The CommitteeHandcapped by
Evidence Withheld.
CAN COMPEL ATTENDANCE
The Character of Members of
the Committee Is' Ac
cepted as a Guarantee.
Washington, May 21.—The action of
the committee in deciding to hold secret
sessions in hearing testimony in the in
vestigation of the bribery and sugar
trust scandal in the senate is believed to
be a concession to Senator Gray who,
appreciating the personal character of
the proceedings, was reluctant to serve
as chairman of the committee. The
committee will have to ask very deli
cate questions touching upon the private
character of senators. It is promised
that a complete stenographic report of
the proceedings will bo given out for
publication. Members of the committee
say this will show whether the final re
port, which will be made by the com
mittee, is in accordance with the testi
mony taken. The character of the
members of the investigating committee
is generally accepted as a guarantee
that the investigation will be thorough
and that it will not be affected by the
standing of the senators involved.
With all this assurance, it is not gen
erally believed that the inquiry will dis
close anv direct proof of stock jobbing
while the tariff bill was before the
finance committee. In the first place,
the committee, no matter how searching
its investigation may be, will be seri
ously handicapped by the fact that it
cannot punish witnesses for contempt,
as was held by the court in the Hallet-
Kilbourne case. It is difficult to see,
therefore, how the committee will be
able to force the representatives of the
sugar trust to reveal any of the facts
touching the inquiry.
The sugar trust has already refused
to tell the government about the extent
of its business and the corporate agree
ment under which it was organized.
Attorney General Olney, with the anti
trust law behind him, failed to bring
the trust to book by proceedings in
court, and the committee is not invested
with any authority like that conferred
by the anti-trust statute.
It is a matter of general comment
that the senators suspected of specula
tion manifest no concern about the in
vestigation. No one imagines that any
senator, with the exception of Mr. Mc-
Pherson, who made tho admission in
the senate, has carried on any sugar
Stock transactions in his own name, and
it is generally believed that the stock
jobbing has been done through the or
ganization of a pool controlled by the
trust. Os course, this could not be con
firmed, except by references to the
books of the trust’s brokers, or by ad
missions of the trust’s representatives on
the stand, who cannot be reached under
the authority conferred on the commit
tee.
The members of the committee, appa
rently, are not discouraged by this seri
ous handicap, and as Senators Allen and
Lodge are determined to expose, if pos
sible, the pernicious influence of the
trust in American politics, it is alto
gether probable that some interesting
facts bearing on the trust’s methods will
be brought to light by the examination
of witnesses other than those appearing
as the representatives of the great mo
nopoly. This feature of the investiga
tion probably will not be reached until
the latter part of the week, and it is
possible that if the inquiry into the
bribery charges consume more than two
or three days, this phase of the matter
will pot be taken up until next week.
It is hinted here that Senator Lodge and
his Republican colleagues will find that
the inquiry into the charge that the
trust contributed campaign funds in
1892 will prove a boomerang, as it is ■
said openly that tho trust not only con
tributed to the Democrats, but to the
Republicans.
TELEGRAPH BREVITIES.
Two mad dogs were killed on the
streets of Raleigh Saturday.
The stonecutters at the Piedmont
marble works in Pickens county, Geor
gia, are on a strike.
Asheville N. C. sent 21 negro waiters
to Staten Island, N. Y., last week. They
will work in the hotels on the island.
A big sensation has sprung up in At
lanta on account of published reports
that Fred Lilly was suspicioned of being I
connected with the murder of his i
mother, Mrs. M. A. Lilly, who was
strangled in her home in the suburbs of
the city a week ago.
Emile Deary’s Body to Be Burned.
Paris, May 22.—Tho Siecle says the '
prefect has refused to hand the body of |
Emile Henry, the anarchist who was
beheaded, over to his mother, but will
have the body cremated. This action
was taken to prevent a repetition of the
anarchist manifestations on the occasion
of the burial of Vaillant.
Tennessee’s Mountains Are Snow Crowned,
Bristol, May 22.—Snow has been
falling here, and the mountains are
covered with it. On White Top moun
tain, east of here, the snow is five inches
d«wn
Peruvian Finances.
Lima, May 22.—At a council of the
ministers, to consider the financial diffi
culties which beset the country, there
was a strong sentiment in favor of en
forcing the payment of duties in gold.
The newspaper Patrioe Arequifa has
suspended because the authorities de
mand a guaranty of 19.0QQ soles, ,
FLOYD’S SINGERS.
The County Convention Hold a Two Days
Session in Cave Spring,
The cold wave prevented many people
from attending the Floyd county singing
convention, which met in Cave Spring
last Saturday and Sunday. But those
who attended report a splendid time in
spite of the disagreeable ■weather. Ordi
nary John P. Davis, Sheriff Moore and
a party of about twenty , went down
and report an interesting and pleasant
meeting.
Mr. R. A. Barnett, of Everett Springs
is president, J no. C. Foster, of Foster’s
Mill, vice-president and John P. Davis,
secretary and treasurer of the Floyd
county association. The next meeting
will take place at Pleasant Valley
church, north of Rome, the fourth
Saturday and Sunday in July
FLOYD MASONS.
They Will Hold a Big Picnic on Jane 125th
—All About.
The masons of the county have decided
to have a basket picnic on June 25th.
The place for having it has not been
decided upon yet, but it wil be one of
the following three, Chicamauga, Cave
Spring, and Black Creek Fall’s. There
are two lodges in Rome, one at Cave
Spring, and one at Floyd Springs. The
total membership of the county lodges
numbers about 450.
Bartow, Polk, Walker, Chattooga and
other adjoining counties will be invited
to participate, and the mason’s picnic
promises to be the largest one of the
season. The committee in charge of
the matter are trying to get reduced rates
on all the railroads and have every rea
son to believe that they will be successful.
FARMER’S ARE BLUE.
They Say That Their Crops are Injured By
the Cold Snap.
The cold wave which came down on
us last Friday night has done consider
able damage to gardens ana some things
in the crops. Some vegetables in the
city gardens have a sickly, droopy look,
that does pot promise well for them.
Farmers from various districts of the
county speak rather gloomliy of the out
look, and say that cotton is injured and
will be retarded in its growth considera
bly. There is no reason for uneasiness,
however, for reports from all sections of
the count • state that the prospect for a
splendid harvest was never better,and the
balmy weather that will be with us now
will bring warmth to the tender cotton
plant and it will grow off all right.
will visit us.
Mr. Arthur Values, of Paris. Will Be in
Rome Shortly.
’ Judge Meyerhardt received a letter
from Mr. Donald Harper Monday, in
which he states that Mr. Arthur Valois
will sail for America at an early date,
and that he would come to Rome for
several days. Mr. Valois and Mr. Har
per are associated in the practice of law
in Paris, and the combination is a
strong one. Mr. Harper writes that he
is delighted with Paris, and Parisians,
and can talk French like'a native.
OATES NOMINATED.
The Convention Met in Montgomery—A Big
Meeting- S “* CZZJ
Montgomery,'‘"'Ala., 22. (Special.)—
The convention met today and congress
man Clarke, of Mobile, elected perma- ’
nent chairman. All contests were de .
cided amicaby. Oates nominated, 272 to
232 for Johnston. Convention adjourned !
until 10 o’clock tomorrow.
Mr. J. M .Davidson,"” the popular
hgent at Kingston, for the W. & A.
R. R., was in the Bartow county mass
meeting a week ago. He says it was
the most orderly meeting of thefkind that
he ever saw. “When the motion was ’
put to nominate General Evans,” said
Mr. Davidson, a rising vote was taken ’
and 180 men stood up. When the other
side was put there,twelve or fifteen who |
rose. Uncle Belt Crawford, an Atkinson ;
man,then moved to make it unanimous, ■
and Colonel Watt Harris, another At- j
kinson man rose am! .-iud “Mr. Chair-'
man, though lam an Atkinson man, |
there is no one who respects Gen. Evans
more than I do,and I take great pleasure j
in seconding the motion to make it
unanimous” This was very handsome
in these gentlemen,and it showed how
thoroughly fair the meeting was.”
The Charleston News and Courier has
n > admiration for either candidate '
for the senate from that state. It says: |
“Senator Butler has answered the
questions propounded co the candidates
for office by the State Farmers’ Alliance, j
We are not favorably impressed with his ,
letter and we do not believe that it will
please the Alliance or strengthen him I
with the Democrats. It is of a piece with ;
the letter recently written by Governor
Tillman and is open to the same objec
tions and deserving of the same censure. ;
The points of resemblande between the
answers of these rival candidates for
Uuited States Senator are so remarkable
that they might have been written after
consultation between the respective
writers.”
Mr. D. A. G. Outzs, who Was in the
newspaper business in Rome six years
ago has been admitted to practice in the
supreme court in South Carolina. The
Columbia register says he was one of the
i original “reformers” in South Carolina.
THE HOME TRIBUNE. ThUI SOAY, MAI 24 18W4
A BRIGHT OUTLOOK.
Georgians Have Another Audi
ence with the Committee.
i GOOD IMPRESSION MADE.
■ The Government Building at
Chicago May Be Brought
South.
Washington, May 21;—Messrs. J. J.
Spalding and Clark Howell, represent
ing the Cotton Stat is and International
exposition, to be held in Atlanta in the
fall of 1895, appeared before the sub
committee of the appropriations com
mittee of the house and gave the full
details, facts and figures concerning the
exposition. The committee also had be
fore it Mr. Bickford, secretary of the
board of managers of the government
World’s Fair exhibit at Chicago.
Mr. Bickford, in reply to the question
as to the advisability of the removal of
the government building from Chicago
to Atlanta stated that he thought it en
tirely feasible and well worth consider
ation. It was shown that the building,
which cost $375,000, could be transport
ed to Atlanta and re erected at an ap
proximate cost of SIOO,OOO.
The subcommittee, which consists of
Messrs. Livingston, Brookshire, Robert
son, Cogswell and Camion, communi
cated with the treasury concerning the
ownership of the building which, it had
been reported, had already been sold by
the government. The treasury depart
ment replied that the building still be
longed to the government and that the
secretary of the treasury had done noth
ing further than to consider a proposi
tion for its sale.
The committee seems to be favorably
inclined to the removal of the building
to Atlanta and the authorization of a
government exhibit. It is probable that
a portion of the building will be set
apart, if the removal is made, for a dis
play devoted to the educational and in
dustrial advancement of the negro at
the end of 30 years of freedom.
Messrs. Howell and Spalding also fur
nished additional resolutions and in
dorsements from the boards of trade
and commercial organizations in the
leading cities. Similar resolutions had
already been submitted from leading
commercial organizations in every part
of the United States, the central feature
of the proposed exhibition being the es
tablishment of closer trade relations be
tween the United States, Central, South
and Latin American countries.
Australian Delegates Start for Ottawa.
Sydney, N. 8. W., May 22.—The
Australian delegates to the intercolonial
conference that is to be held at Ottawa
have sailed on the steamer Arawa for
Vancouver.
Do Fish Show Temper?
A fish inquisitive or in a temper is un
doubtedly an absurd idea at first sight;
but the absurdity lessens on reflection.
All animals of whose ways we have in
timate knowledge reveal the emotions
which the fisherman denies to fish. For
example, children, lambs, young tigers,
young lions, young monkeys, kittens and
puppy dogs rush at things which at
tract their eyes, and that without
thought of eating them: and if they are
thwarted or injured in the contact, they
are apt to rush at them again iu irrita
tion.
If, then, we take it for granted that
fish are incapable of curiosity and irri
tation , we are assuming that the minds
of fish are fundamentally different from
those of all living creatures with whose
natures we are familiar.
That, when one thinks of it, 'would
be au assumption so great as to be im
possible of acceptance until it had been
justified by the clearest reasoning. No
reasoning whatsoever can be offered iu
its favor, and some can be offered against
it. We have no authority for believing
that the mental characteristics of fish
are different from those of animals gen
erally. We are used to believing this;
but the usage is unintelligent. It prob
ably springs from the separation of sym
pathies which comes from our living in
au “element” other than that of the
salmon and the trout. If we were am
phibious, we should have a clearer in
sight into their ways and perhaps find
that both fun and indignation lurk, at
times, under the saturnine aspect of
their visages.
As it is, some of us who have been in
the accidental neighborhood of a shark
have had cause to realize that, even as
“a hungry man is an angry man,” a
hungry fish, when aimoyed in pursuit
of his meal, is angry, too, and not un
willing to risk his skin in vindication of
his appetite and his wrath. Besides all
fishermen, to their sorrow, know that
there are times when salmon and trout
rise briskly, but “not in earnest.”
Many an exasperating hour have all
of us spent with fish who give our flies
a frequent poke, or a frequent nibble at
the tails of them, and escape “untouch
ed.” Many a time, also have we found
them rising at the fly, not with their
mouths, but with their tails, seeking to
flick them under the surface and to
“drown” them, to all appearance in the
spirit in which a cat plays with a
mouse. The analogy between fish and oth
er creatures in the matter of curiousity
and gamboling goes even further. It may
have been observed that it was the young
of tigers, and cats, and dogs, and other
creatures, that we spoke of as given to
playing with things that attract their
eyes; not the elderly animals so much.
Well, fish are in in exactly the same
case. —The National Review.
_
It is said that the Atkinson men hope
to use last Saturday’s little group of
counties as an ignis fatuus for the voters
in Floyd next Saturday. The people
who followed Evans thirty years ago
were not to be stopped by a skirmish
line, and those who favor his nomina
tion for governor are not to be deceived
by a trick of pocket boroughs thrown
out to confuse the voters. This is to be
au Evans week. Atkinson will get a
county on Thursday, but watch things
fall in line for Evans on Saturday. Floyd
is for Evans. All that is necessary is for
the people to come out and vote.
Money Spentln Drink.
According to The Statist even six
glasses of wine daily (divided between
a family of two or three persons) means
£lB ss. a year, and six glasses of spirits
means £24 6s. Bd. a year.
And as for the poor it is perfectly ap
palling to think that (as I know by ex
perience) iu lairs of the utmost squalor,
where the parents are always begging
and the chidren always starving, they
manage to find money enough, some
how, to keep themselves constantly
muddled with two-penny ale! Socialist
orators denounce with fury the luxuries
of the rich; but the luxuries of the rich,
much as they are to be deprecated, are
innocent and harmless compared with
the criminal madness of self-indulgence
which makes so many hundreds of thou
sands of the poor destroy themselves,
and pluuge their wives and children into
abject irretrievable misery because they
will not—will not, until at last they
cannot—resist the tyranny of a brutal
and self-created appetite.
The stream of horrible profits which
drunkards pour into the enormous reser
voir of the drink trade, is a stream
swollen by untold misery to the inno
cent, and a stream which everywhere
leaves the slime of its overflow ever de
vastated areas of society. But, apart
from drunkenness, and all its ruinous
incubus upon the well-being of our
country, the amount of hopeless waste
caused by the drinking habits of ou.i
poorer population is the main cause of
the pauperism and demoralization with
which for so many weary years, the best
men have struggled in vain.
If there were no other and deeper
grounds for temperance efforts, they
would be amply justified by the immense
prosperity which the working classes
might achieve for themselves if they
would divert into the channels o p useful
trade the vast mass of wealth—amount
ing according to some calculations to
£60,000,000 a year—which they spend
on an article of consumption which is not
a food, but a needless stimulant; and
which even in measures that are deemed
moderate, is to large multitudes of men
a source not of strength, but of weak
ess, not of health, but of widespread
anguish and disease.— The Contempo
rary Review
Emerson’s Lecture.
The Queen Street Hall, in Edinburg,
was packed with an audience that had
an unusually sprinkling of distinguished
citizens, whose presence obviously deep
ened the general hush of expectation.
Eight o’clock struck, and instead of the
lecturer au official appeared, who inti
mated that, according to a telegram
just received, the train in which Mr.
Emerson traveled from Newcastle was
some minutes late. But before the an
nouncement could be read, Emerson
himself stepped upon the platform.
His person was tall and comely, but
neither plump nor lath-like, and his
eyes, though large and clear, were not
flashing. All that had been said by en
thusiasts about the “spiritual expres
sion,” the “supernal radiance,” and the
effusion of “the over-soul” that trans
figured his face, was unverified. It was
not a ’‘fulgent head” and countenance
which suddenly came into view! In
audible, clean-cut tones Emerson gave
forth his opening sentence —a shining
proverb—and so continued to the end—
a lecture of his being altogether like one
of his essays. His reading neither
marred his composition nor helped it.
His voice was simply to the ear what
good print is to the eye,
There was in his lectures, as in his es
says, a general want not only of prog
ress, but of coherency in the ideas, in a
sentence the ideas closely cohered, but
in a paragraph the sentences were ex
tremely loose. He stood before his audi
ence with Quakerlike calm and stiffness,
the only deviation from this attitude
being ’ a hasty step backward after
the delivery of a striking passage
movement which, in the case
of the pulpit orator, Robert Hall, sug
gested to John Foster the felicitous
simile of the recoil of a big cannon after
discharge.—Blackwood’s Magazine.
From The Grand Jury.
As one of the grand jurors of the last
term of the superior court I wish to en
ter my protest against the direction Mr.
Meyerhardt seeks to give the present
ments of that’ body. We did uot impugn
the motion of any of the officers of the
court or of the board of commissioners.
We found a practice existing for which
we could find no warrant in law and af
ter having secured the written opinion
of one of Rome’s best lawyers we were ,
confirmed in our opinion of its illegality. j
Mr. Meyerhardt pleads that it has been
the custom to pay their money. He is
too good a lawyer not to know that cus-J
tom does not make statute law, and it •
would take a statute law to give them !
the legal right to pay out this money.
The statute under which they claim to be
acting provide that the money received
from the rent of courts to other counties !
shall be applied to cost of each particular
case and if any money remain out then
it goes into the general fund and is not
applicable too the fine and forfeiture
fund. Has any such check ever been
kept by this board? It further provides
that the justice of the peace and the
bailiff receive their cost. How much of
this $1900.00 was paid to them? Not one
cent! Why? I have always voted for
the court house officers who are elected
in the county; but our oathes as grand
jurors made it binding on us not'to let a
question of friendship stand iu the way
of our investigation. In fact these ques
tions did not enter into the matter at all.
Have the hoard of county commissioners
of Floyd county the right to pay ou
$1900.00 in about 5 months to the officers
of the court for the hire of Floyd county
convicts to the Floyd county chain gang?
If they have it is right. If they have
not it is wrong. That is all there is in
it. * * *
Oxford Examinations.
When John Scott—thefjfuture Lord
Chancellor Eldon—took his B. A. at Ox
ford in 1770, he was examined in He
brew and in history. His own pen has
recorded this noteworthy “exam.” It
consisted of two questions—one in each
subject. The Hebrew question ran —
“What’s the Hebrew for ‘place of a
skull’?”—the history—“ Who founded
the University of Oxford?” The candi
date, of course, replied, “Golgotha,”
aud “Alfred the Great,” though he had
his misgivings touching the truth of the
second answer —a fiction which has since
been scattered to the winds by those two
highly distinguished Oxonians, Prof.
Freeman aud Mr. J. R. Green.—Temple
Bar.
MAJOR C.H. SMITH
Is Nominated For Secretary of
State.
CARTERSVILLE AND ROME
Send Strong Petitions to the
Gove nor—His Chances
Are Good.
Major C. H. Smith, of Cartersvile,
may be secretary of state. The people
of Cartersville have sent the governor a
petition , asking him to appoint the
major, and yesterday afternoon, a
similar petition went from Rome.
Major Smith has a great many friends
I here, and they signed the petition with
I pleasure. The following names are
I remembered as among the signers:
iW. M. Gammon, Jno. H. Reynolds.
E. H. West, P. H. Hardin, W. W.
Brookes, Jno. J. Black, R. T. Fouche,
A. W. Tedcastle, Frank Arbn, J. L.
j Johnson, Dallas Turner, A. J. Little,
IJ. A. Glover, C. A. Hight, R. T.
i Connally, A. J. Battle, M. R. Emmons,
G. B. Holder, Thompson Hiles, W. A.
! Knowles, W. C. Bryant, W. G. Cooper,
Geo. E. Murphy, R. D. Van Dyke, R.
G. Clark, R. T. Hargrove, Sam’l Funk
houser, S. Cornachan, T. F. Howell,
'S. S. King, W. F. Ayer, J. Lindsey
Johnson.
The Parsee—His Dress and Ways.
The entire costume of the Parsee sym
bolizes the mysteries of religion. The
gauze shirt, bound with the sacred cord
1 ofKusti, must be woven with seventy
; two threads to represent the chapters of
■ “Izashni,” and the twelve knots of the
] heavy tassel signify the twelve months
■ of the year, and represent the perpetual
I obligation of sacred duties. The em-
■ broidery of the sloping back hats carries
■ out a further doctrinal signification, and
J in the white head bands of the women
warp and woof form an elaborate cryp
tograph of Zoroastrian theology.
Even the mode of wearing the silken
saris of pink,|primrosea,azure and green,
lis prescribed by ritual law, though the
i linen headband gets pushed further
! back, and the floating folds of the bril-
■ liant veil occasionally combine coquetry
[ with orthodoxy. A solitary instance re-
• curs to memory of a fuzzy fringe framed
’by headband and sari, and contrasting
: strangely with the Asiatic face and beau -
! tiful historic dress of the wearer; but
i the Parsee beauty rarely ventures on
' such a decided protest against the tyr
, anny of custom and creed. The poses-
sion of unlimited wealth enables the
Parsees of Bombay to exercise iniport
j ant control over the fortunes of the city,
I and rows of splendid mansions' in the
! suburb of Parel show the status of the
; colony which identifies itself with West
i era progress while retaining original
character and ancient faith.
I The superb carriages and horses of
• Parsee ladies contribute to the brilliant
effect of Esplanade and Bunder, when
fashionable Bombay assembles round
. the yacht club at the close of day, and
the liberty accorded to womanhood
paves the way to a distinctive posi
tion in the Indian future, for the
Zoroastrian maiden remains un
; fettered by the bondage of “purdah” or
the iron chains of caste. —All the Year
‘ Round.
TELEGRAPH BREVITIES.
Mr. Joseph Griffith accidentally shot
and killed a negro named Austin Payne
at Athens, Ga.
In the case of M. A. Spurr, Nash
ville, the jury could not agree and a
mistrial was ordered.
Camp Northen, of Griffin, is now
alive with Georgia militia who are in
their annual encampment.
In the Democratic contest now wax
ing warm in Georgia, W. Y. Atkinson
leads General Evans by six votes in the
counties which Have, so far, held pri
maries.
At Plaquemine, La., Adolph Block
and Jules Lebe had a difficulty with a
negro and a shooting followed in which
all three of the combatants were killed.
Block and Lebo were merchants and at
tempted to cause to negro the leave the-
I front of the store where he was creating
j a disturbance.
Newspapers Consolidated,
i Carlyle, Ills., May 22.—The South
’ era Illinois Zeitung, German Repub
' lican organ of this city, has been pur
chased by the Belleville Post-Zeitung,
with which paper it has been consol
l dated.
A South Carolina Appointment*
Washington, May 22.—The president
has sent to the senate the nomination of
A. McP. Hanby, jr., of South Carolina,
collector of customs for the district of
Georgetown, b. C.
Met, and Adjourned as VsuaL
Richmond, May 19.—The Richmond
Terminal stockholders met and ad
journed to July 20.
What Leads You
/ to use the imitations of Pearline? Some
i Jrr trifling prize, cheap prices, or because
I Xrj/ the grocer or peddler says "same as”
A V” ** J or “as good as?” What do these
j amount to, if your things are ruined in the
washing? They
maybe. And you
11 cant see th 6 dam-
ii. > a S e t^iat a danger-
I j* o* 3 washing com-
M pound is doing, until
the damage is done; with the poorest, that
I / f takes some time. With these imitations that
nobody knows about, you have to take yout own risk. Be
on the safe side, and use only the original —Pearline. Mill
ions of women can tell about that. Ask some of them, and
satisfy yourself. Get their experience.
c* zl Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you "this is as good as *
OCHU or “ the same as Pearline.’’ IT’S FALSE—Pearline is never peddled,
.. « and if vour grocer sends you something in place of Pearline, be
Xt BaCK back. 862 JAMES PYLE. New York.
■ Z
' lo.«
k ■ \
Air. Al. Symons
Baltimore, Md.
RunJDown
That Tired Feeling—Severe
Headaches, No Appetite
Six Bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Bring Back New Life.
C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.:
“ Dear Sirs: —Before using Hood’s Sarsapa
rilla I was frequently sick and did not know
what was the matter with me. One day I would
feel so tired I could hardly stand, the next I
would have a severe headache and so on, not
knowing what the next day would bring forth.
I did not have any appetite and
Was Greatly Run Down.
I I tried a good many medicines but they did me
j no good. Having heard a great deal about
Hood’s Sarsaparilla I decided to try a bottle. I
am glad to say I soon felt better. I have now
used six bottles and feel as well as ever. It has
been of great benefit to me as I have regained
my appetite and
Now Enjoy Good Health.
I can strongly recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla
as an excellent blood medicine.” M. Symons,
625 Aisquith Street, Baltimore, Maryland.
Hood’s Pills act easily, yet promptly and
efficiently, on the liver and bowels. 25c.
.. m
- ...... .
C’% fe ’.-N **
2? AGA a ti S s'
COLD m THE HEAD
relieved insiantiy by one application of
ig&yrh Pewter
Soil everywharo by druggists or direct 1> ; us.
HON. ,Ju IgeSupr :!:ieCourt,Ncb.,v.'rhes:
bi’is;— I;■ .>• u- .j Dr..arney'sCatarrh;.! j ••.scualiy
andir.y t. i r sev rai ißonthi, ai.i the t.st rem-
edy 1 havo ever used. i
esneertaiuly recunirnend !
Rev. Father Clarkk, Sec’y to the RL Rev. Bishop
of Columbus, Ohio, writes:
Genileme • 1 cannot say enough for your Powder. It hag
cured do< fan aggravated atta xof cat-rrh when thing
clso could help me. /an deligkud wi.h it. All i. y friends to
wt om I administered samples are quite enthusia.-tic over it.
T? ' go<«d Sisteisspe.Jc nio-t e .cour i£nn c iy oftlieir u eof ir in
the Hospital under their care. 1 will do anything to speak a
good word for the remedy to help others whoare suffering.
Yours with many thanks,
jStowtL TsapaMßl
His Excellency Ex-Gov. J. E. Boyd, of Neb., writes:
Gekilemen; - I have use 1 Catarrhal Powder personally
and in my family for some time, and find it gives instant relie'
in c Ids in the head and Catarrh
r.l troubles. 1 can cheerfully X
ec mmoiidit as an efficient a..d
pie isant remedy.
Vo’-y truly y«nr«, Z
;»I. E. Ferguson, Custodian U.S. Appraiser’s Stores,
Chicago, writes:
Gentlemen —Being n' most entirely deaf for a number of years
pa"-tandpottin< no relief from many so-called cur s which I
tried, was induced by a fri- nd to try Dr. Birney’s Catarrhal
Powders jrmy dea’ness. Have recovered my hearing en
trfly, so that lean rto vheara watch tick plainly, it being
hold' 13 inches from my ear. 1 look upon it as a positive cure
for deafness and have recommended its use to many of my
friends and can say I z
have never heard of a
case whore it
failed to relieve.
Thankfully yours,
Sold everywhere by druggists or direct by us.
WE 9do you pay $3 to $5 for a catarrh
E® H remedy, -when (at popular prices)
Birney’s Catarrh Powder
13 better than a!l others? No sneezing ■?
or irritating effects. Full size bottle of HBq
powder and blower, complete, Post-paid
Neat and compact; can bo carried in vest pucke&>
Birney Catarrhal Powder Cq,
«3*FREE SAMPLE CHICAGO.
Mailed w any Address. 12C8 Masonic Temple.
E. T,. V. & G. Schedule.
From Atlanta... 1.55 am Tq Chattanooga. 2.00 am
“ Atlanta 10 40 am To Chattanooga 10.40 am
“ Atlanta 4.40 pm To Chattanooga 4.40 pm
“ Chattanooga. 2 45 am To Atlanta 2.50 am
“ Chattanoogall.lßam To A’lanta 11.15 cm
“ Chattanooga 4 02 pm To Atlanta 4.02 pm
“ relma 7 25 am To Cleveland.... 7 45 am
“ Anniston. ..110.30 am To Anniston.... 4 15 am
“ Gadsden.... 10,45 am To Selma 9.40 pm
“ Cleveland.... 9.40 pm To Gadsden.... 2.00 pm
Bbeckisbidgb Book. Breach of promise.
Hisrory of litigants, Illustrated. Agents suc
cess unparallelled. lOi.OOO already sold. Outfit
free, agents Wanteu. W. H. Ferguson Cc.
6th St., Cincinnati.