Atlanta age. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-19??, January 13, 1900, Image 4

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Artificial Eyelashes in France. Artificial eyelashes appear to be the latest French novelty. False hair is an ancient institution, and we have long been accustomed to false teeth, tmd even eyebrows. Henceforth, accor ding to the “Medicine Francaise,” there is no reason why an other wise beauti ful face should bedistigured by red eye lids or ragged eyelashes. The process may appear a little painful, a needle threaded with hair being passed through the lid and the threads cut in the middle with a tine pair of scis sors, each end becoming an eyelash. But what will not beauty endure if thereby It may become more beauti ful?—London Chronicle. England’s Armored Trains. The magnificent armored trains used by England In her war with the Itoera will trans port her troops, protect bridges nnd tele graphic communications in abont the same •way that Hostetter’s stomach Bitters drives dyspepsia 1 rout the human stomach and then mounts guard that it does not return. Iho Bitters h«'< won tn every case of indigestion, biliousness, liver and kidney trouble for the l»nst fifty years. It Is invaluable at >ll times. T<>o Severe a Strain. “Rhyno tells me he has gone out of politics entirely?" . , . "That’s true. Politically speaking, he was on the fence, and when the heelers began pulling a leg on each side it was more than he could stand.”—Chicago News. Vitality low. debilitated orexhausted cured by Dr. Kline's Invigorating Tonic. Fekk $1 trial l>ottle for 3 weeks’ treatment. Dr. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch St., Phlladelpha. Founded 1871. In Westminster Abbey 1,173 bodies have been buried. of the Puddit "Proo. Is in the Eating.” It ts not <what <u>e say, but <what Hoofs Sarsaparilla does, that tells the story. Thousands of people give the proof by telling of remarkable cures by Hood*s Sar saparilla of Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Dys pepsia, Catarrh, Rheumatism, and all other blood diseases and debility. Kentucky Tars Serenade a Crowd. Far up in the military masts of the battleship Kentucky two Jackies perch ed and sang a midnight serenade as the ship swung down East River from the Brooklyn Navy Yard on her way to Tompkinsville. On the Brooklyn bridge the trolley cars had come to a standstill owing to an accident, and hundreds of pas sengers alighted, and peering through tho guard rails saw the oncoming bat tle ship, and many observed that her tall military masts reached nearly to the flooring of the bridge. They did not know her name, however, and a passenger put his hands to his mouth and shouted in sailor fashion: . . » "Ship ahoy, ahoy.” Scarcely had the cry been given when back came the reply: "Ahoy, my hearties. We’re the Ken tucky, seaward bound, and— “She was bred In old Kentucky, Where the meadow grass is blue. There's the sunshine of tho country, In her face and manner too.” The crowd listened a moment and then gave wild cheers. The Kentucky passed quickly beneath the bridge, but the clear voices of the Jackies could be heard until the battleship was lost sight of far down stream.—Correspon dence, Chicago Record. Dyeing is as simple as washing when you use Putnam Fadeless Dies. Sold by all druggists. The Disappointed One. A severe and elderly woman passed by with one of her kind. We caught only this frag ment: “It seems to me some persons are born just to get the first reading of new books at the Athenaeum.” —Boston Journal. State of Ohio. City of Toledo, l Lucas County. ( ' Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney Co., doing business in the City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and thatsaid firm will pay the sum of one hundred DOLLARS for each and every cage of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my (' —) piesence, this 6th day of December, XREALX A. D. 1886. A. W. Gleason. ) .Votary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Fold by Druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. A Slight Misunderstanding. Site—l suppose you were presented at court while in London? He—Yes. twice; but I was acquitted both tim< s.—Chicago News, After six years’ suffering I was cured by Piso’s Cure.—M ary Thomson. 29J£ Ohio Ave., Alleghany, Pa , March 19, 1894. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. With Hoe and Gun. The Transvaal Boer behind the hoe Perhaps may be a trifle slow; But he’s a sight to make men run— 'that Transvaal Boer behind a gun. —lndianapolis Journal. Dr.BulTs COUCH SYRUP Cures Croup and Whooping-Cough Unexcelled for Consumptives. Gives quick, sure results. Refuse substitutes. Dr. Buir sPi its cure Biliousneu. Trial, to far sc. Lovely sc.oo amps J All hand-painted. No handsomer lamp made. Sold at manufacturer’s prices We pay the FREIGHT. Makes a most accepta ble present. Beautiful colored cat alogue of hand-painted PA RLOR or BANQUKT LAMPS, free. Every Lamp Guaran teed. Money back if you want it. Manufactured by wra , Pittsburg Glass Co., YOU BUY DIRECT Pittsburg, Pa. o :potatoes' 0 ?,°: A —“.’’•'■'2 I‘O lATe Grower* In America \ A IA. r ’•"'•• ’•—■lial'—•Hen no* \ J VER * ▼ JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO,, L* CItOSSK, WIS. A. C. 9 ARTER'S INK Has the endorsement of the U. S. Government and all the Leading Hailroads, or> M. St •, aumM, USE LYDITE BULLETS Britain Is Forced to Use Out- lawed Ammunition. RUNNING SHORT ON OTHER SUPPLIES Issuing of the Order Causes a Sensation. Howl Was Kaised When Boers Used Them. A London special says; Lee-Met ford cartridges are running short in the British magazines, and, according to a semi-official report, the war office purposes to fall back temporarily upon 100,000,000 “Mark IV” expanding bullets, most of which are already in storage in South Africa. The war office, however, has issued a strict order to the volunteers that the fifty rounds of “Mark IV” given them must bo used in practice at home, none being taken to South Africa. After the public announcement that no such bullet would be used in this war, its employment, The Daily Chronicle thinks, would be a serious breach of faith, especially as the Brit ish commanders have complained that the Boers occasionally use such pro jectiles. The newspapers were reconciled during the early days of the war to cable censorship, taking it for granted that full narratives sent by mail would supply all deficiencies. For some weeks, however, even the mail eorre sponce that has arrived in London has shown signs of habitual scissoring by the censor. Pages are renumbered without chronological or logical con nection, leaving the happenings de scribed quite unintelligible in many cases. The editors acting possibly in concert are laying these facts before the public and insisting that they be permitted to know and to print the facts. The Daily Mail formally accuses the war office of “doctoring” in editing of ficial dispatehes before their issuance, and cites particulars. The Daily Chronicle avers that there seems to be an official conspiracy against letting the truth be known. Although the number of deaths from dysentery and enteric at. Ladysmith have been published by the war office since Saturday’s fight, nothing has been given out regarding the losses in the engagement. The war office as serts that it has nothing to give out. Arm chair critics who, in the absence of reportorial or official descriptions from the seat of war, pour fourth pages of conjecture and opinion, conclude that not much is to-be expected of the British hosts in South Africa until Lord Roberts shall have had plenty of time to think and fresh levies shall have arrived. Time is working now for the Boers. Each day makes mure difficult the three beleaguered posi tions. Although the war office declines to confirm the report that Lord Methuen has been racalled to England, inquiries made by a correspondent at Methuen’s home in Wiltshire have elicited tho information that when he received his wound his horse threw him heavi ly and spinal and other injuries super vened. The theory is now advanced that the seizures of the German mail steamers Herzog and General, since released, were made on purposely misleading information supplied to British agents, the design being to embroil Great Britain and Germany in a quarrel. BLISS FOR VICE PRESIDENT. Announcement Is Made That New York Merchant Is McKinley’s Choice. A Washington dispatch says: It is announced in administration circles that Cornelius N. Bliss, of New York, ex-secretary of the interior, will be the Republican nominee for vice president. The statement is made more authentic by the formal announcement of Secre tary Root that he will not permit his name to go before the convention, pre ferring to remain in his present cabi net position,. Engineers Get Raise. The recent demand of the engin eers employed by the Lake Shore road that the salary classification be abolished and a uniform scale of $3.80 be paid for a day’s work, has been granted by the company. MEXICAN COTTON MILLS. Twenty-Six Were Built There the Fast Year and More are Contemplated. Twenty-six cotton mills have been built in Old Mexico during the last year and new mills are being pushed to completion. There is mudh inter terest in prospecting for tin since that metal has risen in price, and some tin properties in the state of Durango give good promise, according to the reports of experts now on the ground. New Florida Railroad. A new railroad is soon to be built from White Springs, Fla., on the Suwannee river, to Wellborn, which will open up a fine farming section. Cave-In Kills Three. In the Barbee mine at Webb City, Mo., three miners, Joseph Cox, Chas. Stone and John Lloyd, were killed by a cave-in. They were buried under fity tons of earth. Register Mail With Carriers. The plan of having mail registered by carriers when collected will be put in practical operation January 14, when the system will be inaugurated i i sixty cities. THOUSANDS VIEWED REMAINS. Great Affection la Shown By Friends of the Deceased Dr. McGlynn. The funeral at New York, Thursday of the Rev. Dr. Edward McGlynn in St. Stephen’s church, of which he was formerly the pastor, was the occasion of manifestation of popular - affection such as has rarely been witnessed. The remains were viewed by 40,000 persons, it is estimated. For four hours a compact stream of humanity poured Into the church, and after gat ing upon ths. face that had been loved by so many thousands, passed out of the church. RAILWAY FIGHT IN U. S. COURT Stockholders File Bill Against Georgia and Alabama. ENJOINED FROM COMBINING. Judge Speer Grants Order Direct ing Defendants to Appear and Answer. The fight that Thomas R. Ryan and his associates are waging against the Seaboard Air-Line syndicate and John Skelton Williams, who is at the head of the syndicate, shows no sign of abating. Instead it is more bitterly contested each day. A long drawn and closely contested legal fight is imminent. In fact it has begun. The latest move in what will prob ably prove to be one of the most bit terly fought railway battles of recent years was made at Macon, Ga., Mon day when Judge Emory Speer, of the United States circuit court of the southern district of Georgia, granted a temporary injunction restraining the officers of the Georgia and Alabama railway from consolidating it with the Florida Central and Peninsular rail road or any other corporations on a bill filed by Michael J. Dady, a mi nority stockholder. It is alleged in the bill that J. Skel ton Williams is at the head of what is called a “voting trust” that controls practically all the stock of the Georgia and Alabama railway and is proposing to consolidate that road with the Flor ida Central and Peninsular, of which he is also president, and that the pro posed consolidation with the latter road is in his interest as well as in the interest of other persons associated with him in the “voting trust” and contrary to the interest of the road and its stockholders. J. Skelton Williams, John W. Mid deudorf and C. Sidney Shepard are also parties defendant and the injunc tion operates against them. The bill was presented to Judge Speer by Marion Erwin and Joseph M. Terrell, as counsel for the complainant, Dady. Dady’s bill, in addition to the allega tions that the proposed consolidation is prejudical to the rights of the stock holders and the road and for the per sonal interests of the “voting trust” headed by Skelton Williams, claims that the Georgia and Alabama railway and the the Florida Central are paral lel and competing railroads, and un der the constitution of the state of Georgia their consolidation is pro hibited. Colonel Joseph M. Terrell, of coun sel for the complainant, as attorney general cf the state of Georgia, is now officially engaged in prosecuting two suits in the name of the state of Geor gia and by the direction of Governor Candler to prevent other railroad con solidations claimed to be contrary to the same clause of the constitution of the state which is claimed in this suit before Judge Speer is .about to be violated by the proposed consolidation of the Georgia and Alabama end the Florida Central and Peninsular rail roads. The bill prays that Messrs. Williams, Middendorf and their associates un der the “voting trust” agreement, be enjoined from voting the stock they hold under the agreement in favor of the proposed consolidation, and that these railroads be enjoined from re ceiving any vote under that agree ment. The allegation is made in the bill that the Williams syndicate is proposing to get several million of dollars for personal services in carry ing cut the consolidation scheme. After considering the bill Judge Speer granted the following order: “Read and considered. Let the defendants named be temporarily en joined as prayed until Saturday, the 13th instant, at which time they are directed to show cause before me at Macon, Ga., at 10 o’clock a. m., why the injunction prayed for should not be granted. “Ordered further, that a copy of this order be served on each of the defendants named or on their coun sel.” CRAIG WON’T RESIGN. The State Treasurer of Tennessee De cide« to Hold Two Jobs. A Nashville dispatch says: It is no. definitely known that State Treasure! E. B. Craig will not resjgn, having changed his mind since announcing his intention to resign some weeks ago. He has accepted the position of treasurer of the Virginia Iron, Coal and Coke company, but will hold on as state treasurer, because, it is al leged, he w-as not satisfied with the gentleman he looked upon as his piob able successor, the appointment being in the gift of the governor. Governor McMillan, however, has never said wdom he would appoint. M’MILLIN IN ST. LOUIS. Tennessee’s Chief Executive Speaks at Annual Jackson Banquet. The Tennessee Society of St. Louis held its annual Jackson Day banquet at the St. Nicholas hotel Monday night. Governor Benton McMillin, of Tennessee, was the principal speaker of the evening, responding to the toast, “Andrew Jackson. ine governor received an ovation at the close of his address. WHALLEN AFTER HARRELL. Obtaining Money Under False Pretenses Charged and Warrant Issued. A Louisville dispatch states that Colonel John H. Whallen, who is now under bond on a charge of offering $4,500 to Senator S. B. Harrel for the latter’s vote against William Goebel in the organization of the legislature, has sworn out a warrant rel charging the latter with money under faba pretenaea. Wha len filed a laugthy affidavit, in which Le claims to have been • riMi’n ©I miivlaeed aonfidaaat* TO NAME FULLTICKET Georgia Republicans Will Enter Campaign This Fall. STATE CONVENTION HAS BEEN CALLED Besidea th« Nomination of a State Ticket Delegates To Natioaial Conven tion Will Be (Jhoaen. At a recent meeting in Atlanta the Georgia Republican state central com mittee decided to hold a state conven tion at the capital, and in compliance with the instructions and as a result of the action jf the committee, the following call has been issued by Chairman Pro Tern. Johnson: Headquarters Republican State Cen tral Committee, Atlanta, Ga.—To the Republicair Voters of Georgia: In ac cordance with custom and in obedi ence to instructions of the state central Republican co-mmittee, directing a con vention of delegated representatives of the Republican party, to be held in the city of Atlanta, state of Georgia, for the purpose of electing four dele gates at large and four alternate dele gates to the national Republican con vention, to be held in the city of Phil adelphia, Pa., on the 19th day of June, 1900, aud for the further purpose of nominating a candidate for governor and candidates for other state house officers, ami for the transaction of such other business as may properly come before it, a state conve .tion of the Republican party is hereby called to be held in the city of Atlanta at 12 o’clock m., Wednesday, March 7,1900. Each county shall be entitled to twice the number of delegates that it has representatives in the lower branch of the general assembly of the state of Georgia. The committee further directed that all notices of ‘ county conventions or mass meetings shall be posted at the courthouse of the respective counties of the state holding such con vention or mass meeting at least ten days before such convention or mass meeting shall be held,and each county shall give such further notice as it may deem proper for the information of its voter*. That no person shall vote or partic ipate in any mass meeting or conven tion called in auy county of the state for the purpose of electing delegates under the call, or for electing dele gates to a county convention convened for the purpose, unless he be a legal and qualified voter of his county at the time of holding such mass meet ing or convention, or was a duly reg istered voter at the time of the pres idential election of 1896. That duplicate certificates of the election of delegates, signed by the chairman and secretary of the conven tion or mass meeting electing said delegates, shall be forwarded by the secretary of the convention or mass meeting immediately to tho secretary of the Republican slate central com mittee. All notices of contest shall be submitted in writing, accompanied by a statement setting forth the grounds of contest, which Nhall be filed with (he secretary of the Republican central state committee not later than three days prior to the meeting of the Re publican state convention; and no person shall sit for a delegate by proxy to the convention unless he be a bona fide resident and voter of the county represented. W. H. Johnson, Chairman Pro Tern. J. 11. Deveaux, Secretary. According to call the Republicans of Georgia will take an active part in state politics this fall. It is declared that candidates for governor and other statehouse officers will be nominated at the state conven tion. If this plan is carried out it will be the first time in a number of years that the Republicans have put a state ticket in the field and will bring them more prominently into the arena of state politics. Considerable interest attaches to the naming of a straight Republican state ticket and is declared by prominent members of the party that an active campaign will be inaugurated. One of the principal features of the ctnvention will be the naming of the delegates to the nat ; onal convention which meets in Philadelphia, June 19th, and the indications are that there will be varm contests for these places. TAYLOR REGISTERS KICK. Kentucky Governor Objects to Personnel of Coutegt Committee. A dispatch from Frankfort, Ky., says: Governor Taylor, through his attorney, filed with the contest com mittee a motion to require the Demo cratic members now serving on the contest committee to vacate. The motion was in the nature of a protest. It is supported by an affidavit charg ing that the names were fraudulently drawn by the clerk, and the Demo cratic members now serving are all disqualified by reason of partiality for the contestant, alleged evidence of which is mentioned specifically as to each. FOUR HUNDRED DEAD Is Result of Tidal Wave Which Swept Away Vessels 0,1 Japanese Con at. Advices received at Victoria, B. C., by the steamship Empress of Japan tell of a fierce storm sweeping the Japanese coast on December 24th, last, by which thirty-five junks were lost while ’ being towed from Osaka to Kobe, and 171 persons penshed. A tidal wave accompanied the storm, by which 411 lives in all were lost. SENATOR GOEBEL TO WED. Daughter of Hon. J. C. S. Blackburn Will Be the Bride. The Cincinnati Times Star’s Lex ington, Ky., special says. Senator William Goebel, who is contesting the seat of Governor W. S. Taylor, it is stated is engaged to be married to Miss Corinne Blackburn, the only single daughter of tho Hon J. 0. 8. Blackburn. The gossip* say the important avant ia to occur »»»«' diataly P af* T Mr. Goabal’a aoutaat ia decided r Wrt T RESTRICTION” The Sj tt ;t of a Strong Speech In enate By Horgan, of Alabama. The tj ro of Monday’s session of the sen , a 8 th e speech of Senator Morgan; Uabama, upon the general subjectf ~ ballot restriction in the south. 1( senator from Alabama took as » x t for his speech the res olution J jduced several days ago by Sena * r itchard, of North Caro lina, or tg er the substitute which that «en since submitted in place ofsHormer resolution. The substituting as follows: That an enactment by constitgu or otherwise by any state confers the right to vote u x any of its citizens be cause o le j r descent from certain persons classes of persons and citizens because they art>t descended from such persons classes of persons, hav ing all qualifications pre scribed lg w> i n the opinion of the sent jg j n violation of the fourteen a nd fifteenth amend ments tbe constitution of the United an d of a fundamen tal prin e o f O ur republican form of ernment. In open Senator Morgan said that this riutiou reveals the fact that we haycached a danger point in the histo>f the republic which wr cannot avo or neglect. The next >ipportionnit o f representation in the house must made by this, or the fifty-Beventlng reS g tSa id the senator, and the pri)i e 8 on which the ap portionmentin be made will be a question of gravest importance in this year’s el OUt He question ought to be cons:der<i u advance of these elections. 1 people should decide She great involved in these resolutions abe elections of this year upon potions submitted to them in some Q . “I am said the senator, “that no othtribunal except the people voting ho elections has the light or the poto finally settle this question here tented in the resolu tion offered by senator from North Carolina.” «ST. JAHN’S DAY.” Celebrated By *lacksonian Club at “St Jackson si” waB appropri ately Omaha, Neb., Monday by thfacksonian Club. Three separate -.(ions were down ■on the programnThe first was an informal receptiqeld at the club headquarters ing afternoon, at which W. J. n, Congressmen Carmack, of Tetjee; Overmeyer, of Kansas; Weav.f lowa, and sev eral other Democi lights, were the guests. Mr. Bryan was chief centre of attraction, and <h> the two hours the reception hundred Democrats had pai^ r respects. At *5 o’clock a dinneg tendered Mr. Bryan and a few o notables at the Omaha Club. At 9 o’clock ergfl the annual banquet of the clutthe parlors of the Paxton hotel. vers were laid for three hundred, there were no vacant places. Aijborate menu was served, and it near midnight before the speak in pan The speech of theiing was made by Mr. Bryan in res a to the toast, “Our Nation.” ■ ■ 1 ■' 1 it SOUTHERN 11RESS. SOUTHERN I}] List of New Industri Pint W Jr list »» The more imports the new in dustries reported fo week include coal mines Jabama and West Virginia; coppt ies j n Texas; cotton mills in Geoi Mississippi, North Carolina, Soutrolina, Ten nessee; a cremating ig© manufac tory in Georgia; an el 3! light com pany in Arkansas; an -ical supply company in Texas; flg mills in Alabama, MississipiTennessee, Texas; gold mines andandle fac tory in Alabama; a han company in Texas; an ice factor Arkansas; lumber mills in Kentutfiasissippi, South Carolina, Tenn,' Texas; a machine shop in Weirgi n j a ; a planing mill in Georgiy mill in North Carolina; a steeliig plant iu Tennessee; a teleph exchange and a tent manufactorj Texas.—> Tradesman (Chattanoogtn.) FOURTH DAY’S Grind of Testimony In Wai Steady and Mo The fourth day in thdational trial of Actress Julia M<n began at Chattanooga Monday ing at 9 o’clock in the superior t room, before Judge Estell and (ousand spectators. The prisoner, pale antressed looking, entered the couim, de claring with an attempt atile that she was feeling some betUn she had on Saturday. The trial Monday was x seusational features, and testimony has been steadyt onous. DANES AND NORWFA To Establish a Colony Near Athena, Ala. Arrangements have practibeen concluded for the establishnear Athens, Ala., of a substantony of Danes and Norwegians. >ns and acres of land, near the i*vo been purchased by Oliver h as agent for the colony and tb<eta tion is that the colony will i<ed \n time to begin the crop for 'ar. VAST ARMY IN PHILIP. With Arrival of Tran«p>rt Granvill Have 65,000 Men. With the arrival at Manilfce transport Grant, which left S<i cisco on December 21 with thy eighth Volunteer infantry, al Otis will have command of an re force of abont 65,000 men. The army now in the Phi>a aggregates 63,500 men, of whici* are regular troop* and 81,500 I* nnteere, With the arrival of th t the entire volunteer etrensth oQ be ia PhUippisiti | TALKED into it, D<?n ’ fc ai l J our ? e,f be talked into buy i vSZ / WZ<l J IE 6 * Bh ?<*dy job to eave a dollar or so wh/n HW/ P \ Bale ,n evftry tOWQ *n the \ r I &// ®° uth - Dld you ever think how easy it j 8 L> 1 ' z for somepeople to be talked into a thing? aeeiit or want oirrct. RQCK HILL rock Two Englishmen who have recently secured a method of procuring water marks by means of electrolysis thus the process: “In producing a disappearing and repeatedly revivable translucent water mark in or on manufactured paper, we proceed as follows: Upon a platinum sheet or plate forming the positive 1 > conducting surface we place a layer of absorbent material, such as blotting paper, previously moistened with wa ler. On this material we place the pa per having been previously moistened through with water. We then press, face downward, on the paper a pla *. num design of the water mark, and this design forms the negative elec trode. We keep this negative electrode in contact with the paper for from five to ten seconds, according to the nature of the paper and the amount of electric current used. The result on removal of the electrode Is a dis tinct and translucent image of the de sign, which gradually fades as the pa per dries, and finally becomes Invisi ble. The mark, however, can be re vived and made visible as often as the paper is immersed in water or moist ened in any other way.’’—Paper Mill. Itching, Burning Eczema. Was troubled with a painful skin eruption, and after all other remedies failed, the father writes: “Send me four more boxes of Tetterine for my little daughter. It does her more good than anything we ever tried. Yours, etc., Jas. S. Porter, Lynchburg, S.C.” At druggists 50c. box, or postpaid by J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga. Colonel John S. Mosby has written to a Richmond paper an elaborate de fense of General Grant, his friend, and certain statements therein remind me that Mosby’s rangers, or guerillas, nev er stood a sabre charge in the whole course of the war. Each man carried four pistols, oue in each boot leg, and two in holsters, aggregating twenty four shots. There was not a carbine or sabre In the command. Carbines were too heavy, and sabres had a dis position to rattle in their scabbards. Besides, close quarters were not to the guerilla liking. With Mosby’s men it was ever a case of scatter as soon as the enemy approached, if ever one company of troopers lived in mortal fear of another, the honor belongs to Mosby’s men and the Eighth Illinois Cavalry. The latter was the best cav alry regiment in the Army of the Po tomac, and Sheiidan oraered it to go to Muddy Branch to “exterminate as many of Mosby’s mer. as they can." The glitter of cold steel set a Mosby man off at a gallop.—New York Press. ibllahed tho Keeps My Hair Soft "I have used your Hair Vigor for five years and am greatly pleased with it. It cer tainly restores the original color to gray hair. It keens my hair soft and smooth. It quickly cured me of some kind of humor of the scalp. My mother used your Hair Vigor for some twenty years and liked it very much.’ —Mrs. Helen Kilkenny, New Portland. Me., Jan. 4, ’99. 'n Case any id of not- Used Twenty Years We do not know of any other hair preparation that has been used in one family for twenty years, do you? But Ayer’s Hair Vigor has been restoring color to gray hair for fifty years, and it never fails to do this work, cither. You can rely upon it for stopping your hair from falling out, for keeping your scalp clean and healthy, and for mak ing the hair grow rich and long. Jl.bO a bottle. 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Send your name and address on a postal, and we will send you our 156- page illustrated catalogue free. 5 WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. < 176 Winchester Avsnuo, Naw Haven, Conn “Built like a watch; Rarely runs down, Has all the finish Of a tailor-made gown.” lousands of the i of the South, he al Shoes. iem. ? SHOE CO. A I LANTA, GA. Malsby & Company, 30 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga. Engines and Boilers Ktemn Water Hunt era. Steam I’unips and Penbcrthj’ Injectors, Manufacturers and Dealers In s-a.'w mix. I.s. Corn Milin, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Mathtn- cry and Grain Separator*. SOLID and INSERTED Saws. Saw Teeth and Jocks, Knight's Patent I)og», Birdsall Saw Mill and Engine Repairs, Governor*,Grat* liars and a full line of Mill Suppllee- Erie* and quality of goods guarantcod. Catalogue free by mentioning this paper. ASK YOUR Dealer FOB- TOBACCO It’s no Joke, YOU GET THE VALUE IN THE GOODS. The Best Chew on the Market I<kW' Mention Ibis Paper (33 In tiac. gpi4 tfrAfPfilglfe—