Newspaper Page Text
For Men Only I
Who are suffering with Coughs, Colds, Aeth
raa or Bronchitis. King's Wild Cherry and
Tar, 25c. Pleasant and it cures. Burwell
A Uvhs Co., Charlotte, N. C., and ail med
icine dealers. No cure, no pay.
’’Take Time by
The Forelock.”
wait until sickness overtakes you.
When that tired feeling, the first rheu
matic pain, the first warnings of impure
blood are manifest, take Hood's Sarsapa
rilla and you will rescue your health and
probably save a serious sickness, sure
to get Hood’s, because
In a Coffee Grove.
You see all those bushes with red
berries strung along their branches?
That is coffee, and the taller tree among
which it is growing are pimentos, from
which the world gets its "allspice.” It
looks like jungle, does it not? Yet
many hundreds of pounds would not
buy that one hill slops. Among the
lovely flowers humming birds sparkle as
they fly and hover; butterflies as large
as birds dispute the honey with them.
As you turn around the corner you sur
prise parties of tiny ground doves ,and
every now and again the larger pea
doves flit across the road. Up from
the valley below the sounds of voices
{nd laughter. Stop your carriage and
jok down. Those arc the works on a
coffee estate, and those flat terraces par
titioned off into squares are the ‘ bar
becues” upon which the berries are
dried. You can see that some of the
•quares are a different color to the rest.
The dark ones are those that are cov
ered with coffee berries; the others are
those which have not yet been filled.—
Good Words.
Facts
For Sick
Women
First—the medicine that
holds the record for the
largest number of abso
lute Cures of female ills
is Lydia f. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound.
Second—Mrs. Pinkham
can show by her letter
files in Lynn that a mil
lion women have been
restored to health by her
medicine and advice.
Third-AH letters to Mrs.
Pinkham are received,
opened, read and an
swered by women only.
This fact is certified to by
the mayor and postmas
ter of Lynn and others of
Mrs. Pinkham’s own city.
Write for free book con
taining these certificates
Every ailing worn ar
invited to write to Mrs.
Pinkham and
vtojlteeQ of charge.
Lydia £ Pinkhan. Med. Co., Lynn, Ma**
NO crop can
grow with*
out t Potash.
Every blade of
Grass, every grain
of Corn, all Fruits
and Vegetables
must have it. If
enough is supplied
you can count on a full crop—
if too little, the growth will be
“ scrubby.”
Send for cur books telling all about composition o?
fertilizers best adapted for all crops. They cost you
nothing.
<>ERMAN KALI WORKS,93 Nassau St.,New York.
m STOPPED FREE ~
Permanently Cared
Insanity Prevented by
OR. KUNE’S fIREAT
HERVE RESTORER
,TOU* FiU. EpfUfn.
>cM :
re»UBC and $3 trial bottle
•y payEitexpreM chargr.onlr
to Dr. Kline. Ltd. Bellevn*
>1 Arch Si.. Philadelphia. F*
!POTATOES?Bb°!
I.argest Aeeß POTATO (.rowrri In America A
Price* SI.SO A up. Inorniou, storks ofl.raM. V
Claverand Farm Need*. Send this notice and
£™O£CLOVERS
Jobs a. salzkb seed co., la ckosse, wis. a. c. p
Attention is facilitated if you mention
thlsp* per when writing advertibera. So. 4
RHEUM tTISM PAIN I \ BAK. LbGRIPPF.
CROUP nntl < OL'iS. Grandmother uted H. why
BOA you? 1T« the greatest medicine known. SoMJ>>
21 druggist* and general store*. Made only by
tOOiK GREAHE LfrXMWa CO- G*WM»<»o, M. C
THE LOGIC OF EVENTS.
FREE TRADE SOPHISTS COMPLETELY
DISCREDITED,
ImpreMivc Lessons Taught by Our
National Experiences in the Paet
£ Eight Years Under Two Different
Economic Systems.
Statesmen in forecasting the indus
trial outlook for several years prior to
the enactment of the Wilson tariff pre
dicted the defeat of protection to
American industries.
For decades the country has been
filling up with people from foreign
shores who, without any reflection
upon their general intelligence and
motives in seeking a new place for
industrious pursuits, were ignorant
of the Government and institutions
of this Republic. In this condition
they easily became the victims of the
political shyster and demagogue.
The cry of “tariff reform” was raised
and persistently exploited until a
sufficient number of people were de*
eeived into voting against the inter- '
eats of the laboring classes to carry
the election. During the campaigns
leading up to the catastrophes of
1890 and 1892 no sophism, false
hood or misrepresentation was un
appealed to for the purpose of mis
leading the workingmen and labor
ers. Peddlers with tinware on their
backs were started out over the rural
districts with instructions to ask
double the usual price for such goods.
Upon being inquired of for the cause
of such advanced prices, they credited
them to the McKinley' bill. Demo
cratic campaigners vehemently as
serted that the dinner bucket would
double in price. An ex-Governor of
this State held aloft a tin cup while he
berated the tariff on tin. Another ex-
Governor charged the Republicans
with admitting diamonds free for the
benefit of the plutocrats. Both were
false and only intended to mislead and
deceive the ignorant. Newspapers
and magazine writers quoted decis
ions of the Supreme Court of the Uni
ted States against the principle of
protection to industries, which bad
no more to do with the tariff for pro
tection than Pike’s Peak with the
Gulf Stream.
The flood tide went on and Cleve
land was landed in the Presidency.
Then the storm began and for four
long years the whole people suffered
as never before. Every prediction of
Republicans in the press and on the
stump in the campaigns preceding his
election was more than verified in the
daily experience of every business
man. Laborers were idle, factories
were closed, the consumptive capacity
of the people declined more and more,
foreign importations grew less, com
merce languished, the national bonded
debt largely increased, insolvencies
aud receiverships were more numer
ous than ever, individual indebted
ness grew as the years rolled by—all
the direct result of Democratic “tariff
reform.” The aggregate losses to the
nation have been conservatively est ; -
mated at four to five billions of dol
lars.
The foreign contingent could not bo
schooled in the economy of prote; aon,
except by paying this enormoustuition
in the school of *rieng e The
greatest prosper 1 : trts attained
.ration after
' ; ley bill. If
v• - r .e clamored
in trade and
Je aud were *ed to believe that
■ tariff reform” under Democratic ad
-1 ministration would bring it. In vain
history was adduced to prove disaster
and ruin always had followed low
tariffs, or tariffs squinting toward free
trade. “Tariff’for revenue,” a sweet
political morsel under Democratic
tongues, always increased the public
debt.
The lesson, though a long aud hard
one, was learned at least for this gen
eration, and the majority of voters
wanted no more of that kind of ex
perience. That trinity of administra
tions— Harrison’s, Cleveland’s and
McKinley’s prosperity sandwiching
dire adversity, should be treasured as
a warning precedent by every work
ingman and be handed down to his
latest posterity.
The lesson of this recent national
I experience is that men who so recently
i have been reversed in their prognosti
i cations by the trend of political events
cannot in any sense be trusted with
the solution and determination of the
profounder problems of the present
nor those which will arise in the
future. —Topeka Capital.
Taste* Differ.
Chairman Jones, Bryanocrat. is on
fire to abolish protective duties. For
by cutting wage earners’ pay twenty
five to thirty-five per cent, and throw
ing a couple million wage earners out
of work he imagines they would vote
for the free trade party. But it ap
pears to many people that Americans
are sick of soap houses and Wilson
tariffs to foster tramps and manufac
ture candidates for the poorhouse and
public charity. But tastes differ.
It Will Feat Him.
No wonder Bryan is loath to recog
nize prosperity, even after he has been
introduced to it. He can t beat it,
but it can and will beat him.—Tacoma
(Wash.) Ledger.
Tlie Great Trust Period.
There need no longer be doubt as
to which party is the breeder of
trusts. From 1893 to 1896, when the
Democrats were in power, everybody
had to ask for credit. —Huntsville
(Ark.) Republican.
San Juan hill was a naturally strong
position, heavily fortified and defend
ed by regular troops who were armed
with the latest and most destructive
weapons of modern war. Tex our un
seasoned American soldiers carried it
by direct assault.
“Thrbk years ago I was badly afflict
ed with Eczema, and used Tetterine
with the most gratifying result. I
made a permanent cure after doctors
had failed to relieve me. I have symp
tons of It breaking out on another part
♦f my person,so you will please send me
one box Tetterine by return mail for
the 50c. enclosed. W. L. Mounce, 124
St. Marks avenue, Brooklyn, N.
Sold by druggists or by mail for 50c.
by J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
The rush of new postoffices to secure
the name of Dewey is still going on and
attests in some measure to the continued
popularity of the Admiral. A Dewey
postoffice was established the other day
in Wisconsin and on the heels of it
came an application from North Da
kota.
More mushrooms are raised in the
vicinity of Paris than in any other place
in the world.
Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not spot, streak
or give your goods au unevenly dyed ap
pearance. Sold by all druggists.
All except
bad ones!
There are hun
dreds of cough medi
cines which relieve
coughs, all coughs,
except bad ones!
The medicine which
has been curing the
worst of bad coughs
for 6oyears is Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral.
Here is evidence:
“My wife was troubled with a
deep-stated cough on her lungs for
three years. One day I thought
of how Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
saved the life of my sister after
the doctors had all given her upto
die. So I purchased tv. » bodies,
and it cured my wif completely.
It took only one bottle to cure my
sister. So you s.se that three bot
tles (one dpj'iar each) saved two
lives. We all send you our heart
felt .hanks for what you have done
fc, r us.”—J. 11. Burge, Macon,Col.,
Jan. 13, 1899.
Now, for the first time you
can get a trial bottle of Cherry
Pectoral fot 25 cents. Ask
your druggist.
The Sandringham Club is the first
woman’s club in London to provide a
billiard room, where its members may
receive instruction in that game.
How’s This?
WeofterOne Hundred Dollars Reward for
any of Catarrh that can not be cured by
Hall’s Catirrh Cure. ,
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props.. Toledo. O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him
perfectly honorable in all business transac
tions and financially able to carry out any
obligation made by their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, To
ledo, Ohio. _ .
Waldino. Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale I
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. „ i
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, i
acting directly upon the blood ana mucous |
surfaces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. t
Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
I can recommend Piso’s Cure for Consump
tion to sufferers from Asthma. —E. D, Town
send, Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4, 1894.
Mrs. Winslow’sSoothlng Syrup for children
teething,softens the gums, reducing inflama
tion. allays pain.curea wind colic 250 a bottle
Dr.BulTs
1110 1,681 romed y
VOUgH Consumption. Cures
Ci/wtlra Coughs,Colds,Grippe,
w V r LI P Bronchitis, Hoarse
* ■ ness. Asthma, Whooping-
cough, Croup. Small dose* ; quick, sure results.
Dr. Bull'3 Tills cure Conslt/alw'x. Trial, 3oj<>vsc.
CARTERS INK
Have you tested it—
No odfier ink “just as good.”
BOOK AGENT'S WANTED FOR
the grandest and fastlat-bellißg book ever published,
Pulpit Echoes
OR LIVING TRFTHS FOK HEAD AND HEART.
Containing Mr. MOODY'S best Sermons, with i>OO
thrilling Stories, Incidents, Personal Eiperiences.etc., as told
By D. L. Moody
'ivnuelf. With a complete history of h'.slife by Rev. CHAS. F.
GOSS. Pastor of Mr Moody s Chicago Church for five years,
sud an Introduction bv Her. LYMAN ABBOTT. D. I>.
Brand new <>»<> pn.,brautiMhl illustrated. £7'1,000 mor
AGENTS WANTED-Men and Women. CZ Sales
immense —a harvest time for Agents. Send for terms to
A. D. WORTHINGTON A CO., Hartford, Coni.
LA CRIPPEN COLDS
Statesville
i You f3r[l f5O per wo. h*n<iilcg
Agents Wanted and Frames. write for
Urnia. C. B. Anderaouj J? SB Elm 8U Dali**. 1«.
■»■■■■* XIOITT . 1 HABITS (IREi)
OPIUM
T SCOVrRY;<!»n»
DROPSI
euea. Boj* W _ kViak .
» # . I*. H. A. 08 * Ava»»*, u*
WAIT A MINUTEI
Don’t be in too big a hurry ? If you
can get the best at only a dollar or so
- more, why not take it? It will be
cheaper in the end.
ROCK HILL
See our Agent or write direct. ,
Itching Burning Scaly
Blotchy Humors
Instantly Relieved
and Speedily Cured by
(uticura
' The itching and burning I suffered in my feet and limbs for three years
were terrible. At night they were worse and would keep me awake a
greater part of the night. I consulted doctor after doctor, as I was travel
ling on the road most of my time, also one of our city doctors. None of the
doctors knew what the trouble was. I got a lot of the different samples of
the medicines I had been using. 1 found them of so many different kinds
that I concluded I would have to go to a Cincinnati hospital before 1 would
get relief. I had frequently been urged to try CUTICURA REMEDIES,
but I had no faith in them. My wife finally prevailed upon me to try them.
Presto! What a change! lam now cured, and it is a permanent cure. I
feel like kicking some doctor or myself for suffering three years when I
could have used CUTICURA remedies. 11. JENKINS, Middleboro, Ky.
Complete Treatment $1.25,
Consists of Cuticura Soap (25c.), to cleanse the skin of crusts and scales and soften
the thickened cuticle, Cuticura Ointment (50c.), to instantly allay itching, irrita iioi.,
and inflammation, and soothe and heal, and Cuticura Resolvent (50c.;, to cool and
cleanse the blood. A Single Set is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, dis
figuring skin, scalp, and blood humors, rashes, and irritations, with loss of hair, when
physicians, hospitals, and all else fail, bold throughout the world. Potter Drug
and Chem. Corp., Sole Props., Boston. “ How to Cure Itching Humors,” free.
Millions of Women Use Cuticura Soap
Exclusively for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of
cruets, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and
healing red, rough, and sore hands, in the form of baths for annoy ing irritations, inflam
mations, and chafings, or too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for
ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative antiseptic purposes which readily suggest
themselves to women, and especially mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath,
and nursery. No amount of persuasion can induce those who have once used it to use any
other especially for preserving and purifying the skin, scalp, and hair of infants and
children Cuticura Soap combines delicate emollient properties derived from < uti-
CURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the most refresh
ing of flower odors. No other medicated or toilet soap ever compounded is to be compared
with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No
other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all
the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines in One Soap at Onb
Price, vir., Twenty-five Cents, the best skin and complexion soap, and the best touet
and best baby soap in the world-
SUCCESSFUL SHOOTERS SHOOT
WINCHESTER
Rifles, Repeating Shotguns, Ammunition and
Loaded Shotgun Shells. Winchester guns and
ammunition are the standard of the world, but
they do not cost any more than poorer makes.
All reliable dealers sell Winchester goods.
FREE : Send name and address on a postal for 156
page Illustrated Catalogue describing all the guns and
ammunition made by the
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO.,
I7S WIMCHESTER AVE,,HEW HAVER, CONK.
A Pet of *3 Army.
John N. Greely if the pet of all th.
army and the espeLal protege o{
signal corps, tjc ‘ °‘
of the signal the young man
can boast just 14 veor> vet. he is a$
as many men when, they get their full
growth. He wears i suit oi khaki and M
service hat, eats anything fro'U candy
to camp rations ant keeps on growing.
John went to th Philippine Islands
with the cable slip Hooker, and h?
was present at th-1 laying of the cable
from Taguig to C Jamba in Laguna de
Bay. He learned all about reels and
lengths and coils jefore the casco had
got well out of tle bamboo swamps,
and sometimes nqgave Colonel Max
field palpitation oi the heart by leaping
from the steambo. t to the casco which
was in tow. It w; s during this expedi
tion that John hadihis first taste of camp
life. He slept hn a hammock and his
pillow was a lite (preserver blown full
of air, and noth pad thing to sleep on',
after all. Thdrelwas a splash, and a
spluttering, ant men a hurrying. Preu
ently some onf flashed a lantern down
upon the man Jn the water. And it wau
seen that the dnlonel had his revolver iu
one hand and, Li# other grasped a life
preserver. yie colonel was quickly
hauled on Board and no one knew
where the lifforeserver came from un
til John con|ssed that he had thrown
his “pillow” t 1 the colonel.
The boy i- anxious to get “under
fire” a few times, and he pleads with
those who l>)ld his fate in their hands
to let him fo on a campaign. They
shook their (heads. One night at An
geles the insurgents made an attack on
the town. ; Young Greely heard the
bullets singl and he heard one or two
shells go over his head and burst in the
distance. Be is not satisfied, and wants
to go to orw of the outposts where there
is heavy filing. He pleaded hard to go
with General Lawton on his northern
campaign. .His strongest argument wa»
that the litle son of General Lawton
hr/1 been rnder fire often, and once had
a horse s»Jt from under him.
Connect cut received from the inheri
tance tax Muring the year ended Septem
ber 30, i?i9, $1*5.195 s' ; vhile the year
aefore therecei; -in s source w
5i33.037..r The Tr
creasc
Ca f of e: 0
S< : ■ tC* * *■■* i - * I • ci<-
a single red-
nauiT your ume by usinu
11| IN 7 I IrtITATIONS.
1/VI ’ I They never produce best re
vw r i /■yrwvf' suits but often inflict great
W A\l H injury. Useonlv the genuine
H A 3 1 E and original OZONIZED
’ ’ ox MARROW and feel
safe. It never fails to make curly or kinky
hair straight, pliable and beautiful. . olu
over forty y<-ar -a and UB“d by thoirwfe
Warranted harmless. Only 50 cents. If
vour dealer cannot supply you send w»
address with 50 cents and we will ship your
first order for one b< ttld express paid. M
dress, Department H.,
OMMB M »■ 1
76 Wabash Avenue. £ HIOM.O I 'Ji—
JO-HE
A NATURAL M GNETIC OIL FROM TEXAS.
Discovered by H B. JONES. Dalles-
1885. The most wonder! u. discovery of the sgeanas
puzzle to the medical world. Rheumatism,acute par
alysis.aplntil affeetlon<t..‘tiff Joints. erysUelat.caurrb.
yield to this Oil like magic and postlveiy cures in b te
KKiSSS!£SS3»fi&At«rtsWi*il
SEATON GHEESE, Auent for ibe Cnrellnss
Henrietta. N. O’. _
Have you a home?
If no, yon want a GARLAND
STOVAi to make you happy.
If they are not acid by leav 1
merchant, write to
SHEPHERD SUPPLY CO.,
CHARLESTON, 8. C..
- STATE AGENTS FOR -
ALJ O IIANLFAC rLBERSOF
GALVANIZED CORNICES, ET&
DYSPEPSIA
|No Medicine to Swallow
F Cured be
' Tf not benefited.
, Fook free on M'P
11 .ijO for al’l >» tOl h ® . r
A K NI!W G R <»C ERV <'« • ’’■sp
[ SOLE APl’s. I OK >
lERCHANTS ,
Having shoes to buy "i' l
it to their advantage l
respond with us. V e
ing many lines under
market. Now r ece ‘' l^ fli |.
ders for our samples to o
ed in rotation.
. K. ORR SHOE £«■■
AT LA Al TA, GA;