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RICH RED BLOOD
In the body of an adult person there are
about 18 pounds of blood.
The blood has as its most important ele¬
ments, small round corpuscles, red and
white, i u proportion of about 300 red to 10
white ones.
If the number of red corpuscles becomes
diminished and the white oftes increased the
blood is impure, thin, lacking in the nutri¬
tion necessary to sustain the health and
nerve strength of the body.
Then That Tired Feeling, Nervousness,
Scrotula, Salt liheum, or others of the long
train of ills, according to the temperament
and disposition, attack the victim.
The only permanent remedy Is found in
a reliable blood medicine like Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla, which acts upon the red corpuscles,
enriching them and increasing their num¬
ber. It thus restores the vital fluid to healthy
condition, expels all Impurity, cures Nerv¬
ousness, That Tired Feeling, Scrofula and
all other diseases arising from or promoted
by low state of the blood.
That these statements are true we prove
not by our own statements, but by what
thousands of perfectly reliable people say
about Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Read the testi¬
monial in the next column from a beloved
clergyman. Then take
HoocTs
The Blood Purifier
fn our mdv. two weeks age we told of our very superior *11.
Iteel hand end power feed cutter to be offered at
$10 WOfifl $40
Last week we told of the process of galvanizing and its indis¬
pensable the experience pre&ervat ef two ive qualities. representative Next business week we firms will of give Illinois, you
•ne of whom has sold 40u and the other 600 Aennotors. The
week following we will quote a price on the beet pumps made
(hand, wind null and irrigating) lower than wn ever before
•dreamed of; aud the week following that vve shall talk to you
€>f steel galvanized tanks, with covers, at the unheard of price
•f cents per gallon. This is cheaper than wood. They do
not shrink, leak, rot, rust or give taste to water.
The A ermotor Company treats the public generously.
While state legislatures are passing laws to secure repairs for
fatal machinery «t reasonable price*, IT IS A FACT THAT
THE A it KHUTOR COMPANY IIAS FOR THE YKAR 189*
SEEN COMPELLED TO RAISE ITS PRICKS ON REPAIRS
BECAUSE HO ft K OK ITS CVS TOWERS II AYR ftEEN ORDERING
INDIVIDUAL PARTS TO MARK VP COMPLETE MACHINES,
SINCE IN THAT WAY TWfcY COULD GET A MACHINE
CHEAPER THAN BY ORDERING IT ASSEMBLED. People
pel are led not eo mpe.lled buy to buy machinery ; they are com
in to repairs. The A ermotor Company
•old •raj thiereep low ect gen- 1 " trous to a fault. It
so thi at cub- could
buy chine the less repairs and |fi£3 injsMnnrl f Assemble a nut
at than the mwh \2lPJ a ** 8U1 b]ed ma
chine would cost. But since it was
not certain that they would get the machine
own assembled reputation, in good the shape, Aer • ■ j motor for the Company protection has raised of its
\ JX ^
the price of certain repairs J Just enough to prevent this
in future. Not only has the | 1 B Aer motor Company always
given the beet goodset thelow- I I est price and refused to sell
•poor article atany price, but it haa now ESTABLISHED
fWKST! THK COUNTRY BRANCH HOUSES I R 1 IN VARIOUS TARTS OF
IN ORDER TO HAVE NOT ONLY ITS
GOODS REPAIRS EASILY WITHIN ACCESS!- | „ J KLK, BIT TO HAVE ITS
EASY j y REACH. It expects soon
to matter greatly of incrgpso the this I v //■ ft number of houses. This is
a greatest ft Y importance to those who
are wise purchasing machinery, I ) H Accidents will happen, and
a man will look to it fj vm when lie is buying an arti
ale that repairs can quick- YU ly be had at reasonable
Our very low prices and high standards cn everything
•ouneeted with water supply and power production by wind,
together with the accessibility of a full line of our goods and
(•pairs, will be appreciated. AermOtor Co., t'Weage.
There’s No Use
Wasting Words on
RipansTabules
-THEY
CURE Headache >
ruinjin
Dyspepsia,
Constipation,
Heartburn f
★ Dizziness »
f!
Biliousness.
1
V THEY COST 50 CENTS A BOX.
DRUGGISTS SELL THEM.
And That’s All
___Therejs to Say.
r ♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
McELREES
XWINE OF CARDUI ■t
£\mvS
m\S %
♦
vMm I* 'a r*y %
♦
♦
|V
’
| ♦* For Female Diseases h
inifPivc ft V \ saw
.1111111111 I F 1 U MILL,
C0RN hull
HAY PRESS. WATERWHEELS
tallest nu«l Cheapest.
DeLoach Mill Manufacturing Co.,
350 Highland Avenue. Atlanta, Ga.
RAMONS LIVER
PILLS
ID* -AND
eTomc Tonic F Pellets.
TREATMENT for Comtipaticn
and Biliousness.
At all stores, or mail 2»c. double bo*: 5 double boxes
BROWN .HF’G CO.. New Y'ork City.
■ 1 Sill | 1 IV W ED C C C C To Introduce our goods and to
” • II secure local and general agent*
■ ■ ■ * we will send one ounce Ked Ink and
two ounces Black Ink FREE, preraid, upon receipt
of 6c. postage. KING MFG. CO., D 41. Chicago.
WALL ST • NEWS FR EE to I.ETTEEof readers of this raiue paper. sent
Charles A. Buldwla & Ca.. 40 Way su. N, T
> < In view of the benefit I have had from
Hood’s Sarsaparilla I wish to give the fol¬
lowing testimonial. I have several times
been badly
Poisoned With Creeping Ivy.
As the old school of medicine simply tried
to remove the symptoms instead of the
sources of them, much of the poison was
loft in my system to appear in an itching
humor on my body with every violent ex¬
ertion in warm weather. At all times there
were more or less indications of poison in
my blood, up to a year ago last winter, when
Large Sores Broke Out
on my body. I then purchased a bottle of
Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and after using that
and a half of another bottle the sores and
humor disappeared. I attended the Chris¬
tian Endeavor Convention in Montreal and
also visited the World’s Fair in the hottest
weather of the summer. Was on the go all
the time, but
Had No Recurrence
of the burning and itching sensation which
had marred every previous summer’s outing.
I have reason, therefore, to be enthusiastic
in my praise of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Sam
url S. Schkell, pastor of Free Baptist
Church, Apaiachin, N. Y.
True Nerve Tonic.
The Love That Is Just Right.
There is nothing in this world quite
so pretty ns the love between a mother
and daughter. When we hear that a
girl is coming home from school after
an absence of several months, we usu¬
ally go to the depot to see her mother
hug her. There is something a little
funny about the love between man
and wife, and there is something not
exactly perfect in the love between a
mother and son, but the love between
a mother and daughter seems to be
just right .—Atchison Globe.
WAS GOULD INSANE!
FINANCIAL WORRY AN» PHYSICAL
EXERTION NOT THE GREATEST
DESTROYER OF HUMAN LIFE.
For Humanity’s Sake, After Thlrty-slx
Years of Nerve-Creeping Slavery, He
Tells How He Was Set Free.
Caldwell, N. J., March 26, 1895.—(Special.)
—Since one of our prominent citizens suf¬
fered so terribly from tobaooo tremens, has
made known his frightful experience in be¬
half of humanity, the ladies here are making
tobacco-using husbands’ lives miserable with
their entreaties to at once quit tobacco.
The written statement of S. J. Gould is
attracting wido-spread attention. When
interviewed to-night he said : “I commenced
using tobacco at thirteen; I am now forty
nine; so, for thirty-six years I chewed,
smoked, snuffed and rubbed snuff. In the
morning I chewed before I put my pants on,
and for a long time I used two ounces of
chewing and eight ounces of smoking a day.
Sometimes I hau a chew in both checks and
a pipe in my mouth at once Ten years ago
I quit drinking whiskey. I tried to stop to¬
bacco time and again, but could not. My
nerves craved nicotine and I fed them till
my skin turned a tobacco-brown, cold, sticky
perspiration oozod from my skin, and
trickled down my back at the least exer¬
tion life or excitement. slowly My nerve vigor and
my was being sapped. I made up
my mind that I had to quit tobacco or die.
On October the 1 I stopped, of and the for damned. three days On
I suffered torturos
the third day I got so bad that my partner
accused me of being drunk. I said, ‘No, I
have quit tobacco.’ ‘For God’s sake, man,’
he said, offering me his tobaeco box, ‘take a
chew; you will go wild;’ and I was wild.
Tobacco was forced into me and I was taken
home dazed. I saw doable and my memory
was beyond control, which but I still knew how to
chew and smoke, I did all day, until
toward night, when my system got tobacco
soaked again. The next morning I looked
and felt as though I had been through a long
spell of sickness. I gave up in despair, as I
thought that I could not cure myself. Now.
for suffering humanity, I’ll tell what saved
my life. Providence evidently answered my
good wife’s prayers and brought to her at¬
tention in our paper an article which read:
‘Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life
Away!’ warning in these
* . What a sermon and
words! Just what I was doing. It told
about a guaranteed cure for the tobacco
habit, called No-To-B»c. I sent to Druggist
Hasler for a box. Without a grain of faith
I spit out my tobacoo cud, and put into my
mouth a little tablet upon which was
stamped No-To-Bae. I know it sounds like
a lie when I tell you that I took eight tablets
the first day, seven the next, five the third
day, and all the nerve-creeping feeling, rest¬
lessness and mental depression was gone. It
was too good to be true. It seemed like a
dream. That was a month ago. I used one
box. It cost me one dollar, and It is worth
a thousand. I gained ten pounds in weight
and lost all desire for tobacco the first day.
I sleep and eat well, and I have been bene¬
fited in more ways than I can tell, No, the
cure was no exception in my case, I know
of ten people right here in Caldwell who
have bought no No-To-Bae from Hasler, and
they have been-eured. Now that I realize
what No-To-Bac has done for me and others,
I know why it is that the makers of this
wonderful remedy, the Sterling Remedy
Company, of New York and Chicago,
say: ■We don’t claim to cure
every oaao. That’s Fraud’s talk, a lie, but
we do guarantee three boxes to cure the to¬
bacco habit, and in case of failure we are
perfectly willing to refund money.’ I would
not give a public indorsement if I were not
certain of its reliability. I know it is backed
by men worth a million. No-To-Bac has
been a God-send to me, and I firmly beliove
it will cure any case of tobacco using if faith¬
fully tried, and there are thousands of to¬
bacco slaves who ought to know how easy it
is to get free. There's happiness in No-To
Bac for the prematurely old men, who think
as I did that they are oid and worn out, when
tobacco is the thing that destroys their vital¬
ity and manhood. M
The public should be warned, however,
against the purchase of any of the many imi¬
tations on the market, as the success of No
To-Bac has brought forth a host of counter¬
feiters and imitators. The genuine No-To
Bac is sold under a guarantee to cure, by all
druggists, and every tablet has the word No
To-Bac plainly stamped thereon, and you
run no physical or financial risk in purchas¬
ing the genuine article.
SIXTY MIXERS DEAD
FEARFUL EXPLOSION IN A WYO
MING COAL MINE.
Nearly all of the Killed Were Married
Men and Had Families.
An explosion occurred at 6 o’clock
p. m. Wednesday in the Robky Moun¬
tain Coal and Iron company’s mine,
No. 5, at Red Canyon, Wyoming. Up
to noon Thursday fifty-nine deaths
were known to have resulted. Six
men were killed on the outside by fly¬
ing timbers, and five bodies have so
far been brought out of the mine.
A large force of men is now at work
to recover the bodies of forty-seven
men known to have been in the mine
at the time of the explosion. fully 250
There are fifty widows and
orphan children in the camp> as the re¬
sult of the disaster. There is no fire
in the mine and and the work or re¬
covering the dead bodies is proceed¬
ing as rapidly as possible. badly
The interior of the mine is
wrecked, caved in in many places and
full of foul*air. All the buildings at
the mouth of the mine were wrecked.
The entranoeto the mine is by vertical
passage into the side of a hill, not a
perpendicular shaft, and the workings
are very extensive. No explanation
of the disaster has as yet been dis¬
covered.
Scenes at the Mine.
The scene about the mine was heart¬
rending. The air was filled with the
agonizing screams of 50 widows and
250 orphans as they gathered about and
saw the distorted features and mangled
remains of fathers or husbands, sons
or brothers, or realized at last that
there was no hope to see their loved
ones rescued alive from the mine’s
cruel depths. Help and succor have
been tendered from all sources.
The mules that were in the min©
were kiled, as were the men, evidently
by the force of the concussion and
were removed as fast as they could be
reached.
The explosion blew out or loosened
all the timbering and supports and
cracked and shattered the walls and
roof of the interior ol the mine, so
that the search for the dead is attend¬
ed with great peril. The work of re¬
covering the dead becomes more diffi¬
cult as the working parties advance to¬
ward the seventh level, where it is
thought the thirty-eight men who have
not been found were gathered to await
the coming'of the last man tip of the
day, which was to take them to the
surface.
A few lives were saved because of
the time of the explosion. The miners
quit work at 6 o’clock, and it is cus¬
tomary for them to be near the en¬
trance and come out juBt as the whistle
blows. A number had come out and
some had just left the entrance to the
mine slope away from the working
tunnel when the explosion occurred,
thus escaping death.
Sixty men perished in the disaster,
thirty-eight of whom are still in the
min©. About thirty of the dead be¬
longed to the Ancient Order of United
Workmen and were insured for $2,000
eaoh.
POPULISTS WILL NOT JOIN.
Official Announcement that They'll
Not Affiliate with the New Party.
Ignatius Donnelly and Sidney M,
Owen, populist candidate for governor
at the last election, made official an¬
nouncement that the people’s party of
Minnesota will not join the free silver
coinage party. Mr. Donnelly says:
( 4 The idea of our party deserting the
principles laid down in the Omaha
platform and consenting to be the tail
to an exclusive fr6e silver party is al¬
most too silly to discuss. The people’s
party has other and fully as important
plans on and for the amelioration
of the condition of mankind. If the
silver men are in earnest in their
move, let them join our party. Wa
have always favored the tree ooinage
of silver, but we have other plans in
view which we cannot abandon. Had
the silver men stood by our party in
the last election we would have carried
Colorado, Montana, Washington, Idaho,
Wyoming and perhaps other states.
Instead of doing this, they said that
the republican party in those states
was in favor of the free coinage of
silver, and, therefore, it was good
enough for them, If that is so, I do
not see why the same party is not
good enough for them still. n
WATCHING CHILE.
A War Between South American Re¬
publics Threatened.
A private letter from Potosi, Teru,
just received in San Francisco contains
the following:
4 i War is threatened between Chile
and the Argentine republic, which
will dratv in Bolivia, Peru and Ecuador
as allies of Argentine against Chile.
One thing feared by the people here
is that Chile’s first step will be to put
a heavy body of troops into the cen¬
ter of Bolivia, which can easily be done
by railroad, and thus step in between
all the allies and ohastise each sepa¬
rately at liberty. Nobody here knows
just what will happen, but the outlook
just now is cloudy. i»
HONORING CONFEDERATE DEAD
A Monument in Chicago to bo Dedi¬
cated in May.
General J. C. Underwood, ex-lieu¬
tenant governor of Kentucky, and one
of the most prominent southern men,
is the author and executor of the
movement to build over the 6,000 dead
confederate soldiers who sleep in
Oakwood park, Chicago, a handsome
monument commemorating their brave
deeds and heroic fortitude.
He has succeeded in this magnifi¬
cent work, the monument has been
completed—the only confederate mon¬
ument north of the Mason and Dixon
line—has been recognized by the
United States government and will be
unveiled with imposing ceremonies on
May 30 th. of this monument,
The dedication
the ceremonies attending which will be
participated in by prominent generals
of both armies, will be a great event
in American history. It will make a
great step toward cementing the divi¬
sion between the sections and will an¬
nihilate much of the bitterness that
remains. It will be an occasion that
will attract the people all over the
country, and no one can fail to appre¬
ciate its significance. handsome affair.
The monument is a
The pedestal is of Georgia marble and
the statue is of fine bronze. It is
forty feet high from the base to the
top of the statue. Surrounding the
monument will be four cannons, ap¬
propriated by the United States gov¬
ernment by special act of congress,
approved January 25, 1895. The bill
making this appropriation was pushed
through the senate by the efforts of
Senator John B. Gordon. The sena¬
tors recognized his good purpose in
the matter and lent him their willing
assistance. The bill passed the house
during the last session without a dis¬
senting voice. consti¬
This act of the government
tutes the first recognition ever shown
the confederacy by the government,
and for that reason is very significant.
The dedication speech will be made
by General Wade Hampton, The
southern generals who will be present
are: General Fitzhugh Lee, General
John B. Gordon, General W. W. Ca¬
bell, Harry Heth, E. C. Walthall, L.
L. Lomax, Marcus J. Wright, M. V.
Butler, Clement A. Evans, F. C. Arm¬
strong, Eppa Hunton William H.
Payne and others. From the federal
side are expected General Schofield,
General Flagler, General Lawler and
General Palmer. The Grand Army
posts will participate in the exercises
and hundreds of confederates will be
present. The Grand Army men have
been for two years assisting in decor¬
ating the graves of the southern sold¬
iers.
General Underwood is very enthu¬
siastic over the outlook for a great
event on May 30th. He expects many
southerners to be present. He also
expects every southern city of size to
send a carload of flowers.
GOVERNOR FOSTER’S POSITION.
He Alone Can Secure a Settlement of
the Labor Troubles.
The general impression is that there
is only one man in the city of New
Orleans or state who can secure a set¬
tlement of the existing labor troubles,
and nearly every one is wondering
why his excellency has not made an
effort in that direction.
Governor Foster’s action in the
strike in 1892 is recalled. He was ac¬
corded with having harmoniously
brought that affair readily to a con¬
clusion, which was in time to compass
great public weal. Now it is believ¬
ed that the governor could be equally
as effective in the present emer¬
gency. But from an interview had
with Governor Foster, it is gathered
that he was not wholly responsible for
arranging matters before. Also, he
does not occupy the same relative po¬
sition now as he did theD. Before he
was in touch with the leaders of both
sides; now he is not approached or
communicated with by either party to
the dispute.
Therefore the position is recognized
as a very peculiar one, and the chief
executive can do nothing to render the
public assistance beyond continuing to
sustain armed peace on the levee front.
THERE WERE NO BIDS.
For the Georgia Southern Road When
It Was Put Up.
The Georgia Southern and Florida
railroad was again put up at auction
fixed at Macon,Ga.,Tuesday. by Theupsetprice
the court was $3,750,000. Com¬
missioner Hardeman tried to get a bid,
but no one offered to buy it.
The road will be put up again on
the first Tuesday in April, and on that
occasion the upset price will be $3,
000 , 000 .
It is thought a party of Macon capi¬
talists will organize and buy the roac
at the next sale.
A Joke on Depew.
At Rutherford college, at Ruther
fordton, N. C., seventy-five students
went to the depot to meet one of their
professors. As the professor left the
cars the students set up a yell. Chaun
cey Depew was aboard and thought
they were cheering him. He left the
car and made them a political speech.
The train moved off before Dr. Depew
saw the joke that was on him.
WITH ALL OX BOARD
THE SPANISH CRUISER Reix a
REGENTS GOES DOWN.
She Carried a Crew of 420 O dicers am}
Men.
The Spanish cruiser Alfonso XII
hae returned to Cadiz, Spam, after &
search for the missing cruiser R e j na
Regente, and reports having found the
latter vessel sunk near Bajo Aceitanos
not far from the Straits of Gibraltar'.
Only twenty inches of the Reina Rq.
gente’s masts were above water.
The Alfonso XII has returned to the
scene of the wreck with a number of
divers and diving apparatu i in order
to recover the bodies of t.m crew of
the sunken warship.
The Reina Regenta was reported
missing on March 13. She had just
conveyed from Cadiz to Tangier the
returning Moorish mission to Spain,
The cruiser left Tangier on March
10th for Cadiz and her whereabouts
has not been definitely ascertained
until now. Pieces of one of her boats
and eemahore flags were reported to
have been picked up along the shore
near Ceuta and Tariffs. She carried a
crew of 420 officers and men and all
hands are believed to have perished.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DOST SHIP.
The Reina Regente was launched in
1888 and wa3 one of three second
class deck-protected cruisers of the
same build, her Bister ships being the
Alfonso XII and Lepanto, all of 4,800
tons, 12,000 horse-power and expected
to steam 20 knots. The wrecked
cruiser was 320 feet long, had 5 feet 6
inches beam aid a draught of 20 feet
4 inches. She was propelled by twin
screws. Her protected deck was 4 3-4
inches thick on the slopes, her conning
tower had five inches of armor and her
gun shields were 3 inches thick. Her
armament consisted of four 9 1-2 inch
Hontoria guns, one on each side; aft
forward of the central superstructure,
one on each side; 4 six and a half inch
Honotoria guns on each side, the for¬
ward pair in sponsors, middle pair in
recessed ports, and 15 rapid fire guns,
She was also fitted with five torpedo
tubes.
Affirmed and Denied.
The El Impartial, a Madrid news¬
paper says that the report of the wreck
of the cruiser Beina Regente has been
discovered to be utterly without found¬
ation. The Alfonso XII, which was
sent out to search for the missing
ship, has, the paper asserts, returned
from her cruise without having ob¬
tained any news regarding the fate of
the cruiser. The government still en¬
tertains the hope that the Beina Ee
gente, having run short of coal, basi
been blown into the Atlantic an l majl
yet On be the heard from. hand Correspom j
other the
dencia reiterates the assertion that the
Beina Regente was discovered sunk in
shallow water at Bajo Aceitunos, add¬
ing that the wreck was just visible at
low tide. The paper also says that
the cruiser Alfonso XII has brought of
from the wreck the bodies of thirty
the crew of the wrecked ship. The I
Alfonso XII will return to the sceneo!
the wreck with divers and draggin? ashoMl
apparatus. A cushion washed bavin?I
at Tarifa has been identified as
come from the cabin of the Beina Ee l
gente. Admirsi
It is asserted at Madrid that
Pasquin, minister of marine, knows
the truth regarding the missing ermset
but that no offioial announcement of
her fate will be printed until a
cabinet shall have been formed. Me*®"
while Cadiz and Carthagena, whet*
most of the officers and crew of tM
ship belonged, are in general moui®
ing and the women of these cities ars
heaping maledictions upon the heads
of tha Moorish embassy, whom tbffl
look upon as the cause of the disaster,
as it was upon her return trip fro#
conveying them to Tangier that tW
cruiser was lost.
CROSSMAN MAKES AFFIDAUl
That the Flag Fired on was the StiH
and Stripes. ^
The following affidavit has
drawn up and signed by Cap* 9 *
Croseman, of the Allianca: kei®j _ J
* i Captain James A. Crossman, TJ*j
duly sworn, deposes and says: e /"J
have read in the morning P a P j
this day, Tuesday, March 19,
that the commander of the Sp aCl d
gunboat Conde de Yenadito has
the statement that the steamsbip 1
was off Cape Maysi, Cuba, on the off
day of March, 1895, which fire* ^
on by his gunboat, raised the
flag in saluting him. In view o
statement, that the flag I hoisted do most solemn^ the stau 0 = ^
on ;; , L
steamship Allianca, in 6a ' utin b»,
,- n
Spanish gunboat off Cape Maj s! ' , >
March 8, 1895, by my orders America » J
my presence, was the ^
sign. This is the only flag j
such purposes—the national u :
America.
“James A. Cbossman, S
9 4 Sworn to before me,
den, notary pubBa__ *?
just tc
Trulbt is the name 8**®i ^
railway station in the sugW coast.
Louisiana near the gulf