Newspaper Page Text
Keeping Meat,
A scientist gives a bit of information
for housekeepers that may be found
■ useful. He says meats ought never to
be wrapped in paper even while com¬
ing from the butcher’s, much less
should they be left in paper over
night, or when put away in the ice¬
box. A large-sized sheet of paper
will absorb half of the juice of a good
steak if it has the opportunity, and
thus destroy the most delicate and
relishable portion of it. One house¬
keeper has a covered china dish that
she sends to the market, and in this
meats are placed. When she requires
a large amount she often sends the
porcelain-lined preserving kettle with
a rack in the bottom and a piece of
ice underneath. Of course this is not
necessary in very cold weather, but
during fall and spring people do not
realize that meats deteriorate very
rapidly upon exposure to the air. The
temperature is so much cooler for
them that they forget that chemical
changes take place quickly even in
moderately cool weather. A market
basket fitted with an agate tray or ba¬
sin is excellent for meats. An ordi¬
nary cover may be used, and in this
way the steaks and joints will come
to the table in a much better state
than as though they had been allowed
to give up their substance to a bit of
manilla. The custom of sending home
butter in wooden trays is severely crit¬
icised. The wood is almost certain to
impart a disagreeable flavor to the
butter. It may not develop immedi¬
ately, but the butter will not keep as
long, and is quite sure to become ob¬
jectionable before it is used. Paper is
quite as bad, and when one reflects on
the material of which ordinary paper
is made the suggestion is scarcely cal¬
culated to prove an appetizer, Of
course a very high degree of heat and
powerful chemicals are great clean¬
sers, but all the same a fastidious
taste prefers the purity that comes of
contact with nothing but surfaces
known to be perfectly clean.—The
Ledger.
Determ’ned.
Old Harding—Well, I guess that
young Dabsley’s determined to marry
our Lib, in spite of everything.
Mrs. Harding—Why do you think so,
Jeremiah?
Old Harding—Why, you know she
sang to him and played the piano night
before last and here he is again!—
Cleveland Leader.
Destructive Storms Along the Coast.
Reports of maritime disasters along the
coast come in thick and fast. People who
“go down to the sea in ships" should bear in
mind one thing in particular, namely, supply that of it
is highly desirable to take along a
Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters as a remedy for
sea sickness. Nausea, dyspepsia, biliousness, and kid¬
constipation, all malaria, succumb nervousness to its beneficent and
ney speedy trouble, action.
It’s a poor article that can’t get a testimon¬
ial of some kind.
Chew Star Tobacco—The Best.
Smoke Sledge Cigarettes.
When cats fight in the dark they always
scratch a match.
State of Ohio. City of Toledo. I
Frank j. Cheney makes oath thatho is the
senior partner of the firm of F. J, Cheney &
Co., doing business in the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, andthatsaid iirm
will pay the sum of one hundred dollars
for each and every case of CATARRH that can¬
not be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh
Cure. Frank .I. Cheney.
Sworn to before me and subscribed ill my
—- j-A. i presence, this 6 th A.^OOEA^ day of December,
VSEAL D. 1386.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and
acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. .T. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold bv Druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
1 cannot speak too highly of Pi so’s Cure for
Consumption.—Mrs. Frank Mobbs, 21o\\ .~-.vd
St, New York, Oct. 29, 1894.
_
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. 82 trial bottl e andtrentlse Phila., free. Pa.
Dn. R. H. Kline. Ltd., 931 Arch bt.,
Look out for colds
At this season. Keep
Your blood pure and
I Rich and your system
Toned up by taking
Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Then
You will be able to
Resist exposure to which
A debilitated system
Would quickly yield.
FT
NORMAN’S J
> neutralizing (<
» CordiaL*
( f The Safest, Surest and most Pleasant stomach
? Remedy for all affections of the
and bowels. For incipient »nd chronic ^
, E
CHOLERA |NFANTUM AND FLUX, It Is \ \
unsurpassed.
IT CURES
: ( -> ...DYSPEPSIA... .
and *1! derangements of the digestive
► organs.
► Price, 25 and 50 Cents.
NORMAN’S
t Indian Worm Pellets. ]
The Peerless Expeller of 4
>) WORMS
• • • A
•
k Small, nicely sugar coated and easy to <j
V *m\ take.
H
>> THE BEST LIVER PILL ON THE MARKET. .
Price, 10 and as Cents.
SOLD EVERYWHERE. SjS
ifcxSA.
FOR
FREE
SCHOLAR¬
SHIP.
a-ctual business taught
Railroad Fare Paid.
TEED. Open all yea? to Botb Sexes.
Cieorgia-Alabftina Business
MACOti. Georgia.
mm ur livlo fiiti luoi.
_
FEARFUL TORNADO DOES DEADLY
DORK __ IX I0RT SMITH.
FLAMES ADD TO THE HORRORS.
Without Warning People Are Crushed to
Death In Debris of Many Wrecked
Buildings.
Two score of human lives and up
ward of one million dollars’worth of
property were destroyed by a terrible
tornado, which burst upon Fort
Smitb, Ark., a few minutes past 11
o’clock last Tuesday night
The storm struck near the National
cemeteiy and tore its way through the
entire city, leaving Hs path marked by
and 1 e , children, , a /V 1 eso peacefully a 101 J: asleep ^f en ’ ."°“ their le . n
m
homes, were, without a moment s
warning, awakened to a horrible death
in the fearful storm, while others,
momentarily more fortunate and who
escaped the furies of the wind, met a
far worse fate a few moments later in
Hie flames which soon engulfed many
of the wrecked buildings.
The known dead are.
Silas Mincher, merchant.
Harvey Butledge, a negro.
Two unknown men from Burgess
hotel.
John Griswold, a tailor.
John Martin and J. J. Riley, far¬
mers from Madison county attending
United States court.
George Carter, foreman at Grand
opera bouse.
Mrs. Milt Burgess, proprietor of the
Burgess hotel.
Two unknown men, died at St.
John’s hospital.
J. M. Foutz, a farmer.
Joe Kyle, a farmer.
Two Lefevre boys.
Malt. Knapton, Jr.
Mrs. Malt Knapton.
Joe Lucas, a negro.
Ed Ferrell, a butcher, and bis two
little children, Irene and Roy.
Frank Richardson,restaurant keeper.
John Adams, a eitrpenter,
Mrs. Charles Mauver.
-Ritter, a gardener.
Mrs. Will Lawson.
Louie Sengel.
Miss Holden.
John Badt, a farmer.
Mrs. Maggie Shehan’s infant.
L. Woehle, a butcher.
James Smith, a clerk.
Mrs. Jones.
The list of wounded is a fearfully
Tong one, and many more names will
probably be added to the death roll.
The tornado was of such magnitude
that the full extent of the damage is
not yet knewn. It swept straight
across the city, leaving behind a path
of desolation and ruin.
The scene folloiving the first terific
crash of the storm was one of awful
grandeur. Business blocks, handsome
mansions, hotels and humble cottages,
were razed to the ground and scattered
in shapeless masses. Several of the
wrecks caught fire and the inflamable
timbers burned furiously.
.The city was crowded with rural
visitors, many of whom were sleeping
at boarding houses unregistered. For
this reason the number of victims who
perished in the catastrophe may never
be definitely known. and
The federal court was in session
there was a great many farmers in the
city, who crowded the cheap boarding
houses and wagon yards. abandoned
Business is practically classes
all over the city and men of all
are assisting in cleaning the debris.
Leaving Fort Smith, the storm
hounded by Van Buren and continued
down the river, demolishing every¬
thing ill its path. News from outside
points is meagre, but rumors of much
damage as far south as Alma are cur¬
rent, it being reported that a number
of persons were killed near that place.
MANY DEATHS BY EARTHQUAKE.
Fifty People On One of the Molucias Is¬
lands Killed.
An official dispatch received at The
Hague from Batavia announces that
the capital of Amboyna, one of the
Molucias islands, has been completely
demolished by an earthquake.
The dispatch further states that fifty
persons were killed outright and 200
were more or less seriously injured.
SCANDAL HUSHED UP.
Sensational Suit at Newbem, N. C., Is
Withdrawn.
A special from Raleigh says: Mat¬
ters have taken a new and strange
turn in the Hancock sensation at
Newbern. The following is a copy of
a notice to the clerk of the superior
court withdrawing the suit against
Robert Hancock, president of the
Atlantic and North Carolina railway,
by Elizabeth Abbott: “I desire to
withdraw the suit entitled Elizabeth
Abbott and next friend of Thomas Ab¬
bott, against Robert Hancock. Please
act accordingly.” Signed Elizabeth
Abbott. This was the suit for $10,000
damages for ruining Annie Abbott,
Hancdck’s niece.
INDIAN STORY A FAKE.
Report of Uprising In Indian Territory
Said To Be Unfounded.
At noon Wednesday the Associated
Press correspondent at South McAles
ter, I. T., sends the following:
“The whole story of the Indian up
rising is a fake. The first account of
the alleged affair was sent ont by the
a «ent for the C„ O. & Q. railway at
Farishoro SETS IT to the train di»-
WHALE MET HIS MASTER.
Captain Appleton, of the British
steamship Benridge, from Bio Janeiro,
witnoS8ed an exciting conflict between
a whale and a swordfish on the voyage
up. The whale was plunging along
about fifty or sixty yards away from
the steamer, when suddenly it leaped
clear out of the water and fell back
with a tremendous splash. He saw
on the other side of the whale a sharp
dorsal fin cutting the water. It was a
swordfish, the whale’s hereditary en¬
emy. The swordfish did not wait an
instant, but plunged straight for the
whale again, and the latter with a
sharp twist, eluded him once more,
and tried, without effect, to seize his
assailant in. his great jaws,
8 Then, for a few minutes, the two
came to close quarters, and their iden
tity was lost in a fierce confusion of
writhing bodies, thrashing tails and
^wSh X
colnbftt< He that the fierceness
’ '
, of tho fi gllt wa 8 indescribable, and
the noise made by % these two young
sterg could have een heard a mile
away.
The swordfish drew off, and, wheel¬
ing round, made a dash at the whale,
but the latter leaped clear out of tho
water, trying to fall on the swordfish
and crush him. This maneuvre was
repeated a dozen times, and then the
swordfish again closed with his ad¬
versary, and in the mix-up apparently
wounded him, for the water as jt was
thrown up in the struggles was slight¬
ly tinged with blood. The whale was
far from beaten, however, and con¬
tinued to fight on as fiercely as ever,
and this sort of thing was kept up for
nearly an hour, at the end of which
time the whale appeared to be getting
tired.
Suddenly the whalo sounded, the
swordfish following him, and for a few
minutes nothing was seen of either of
them. Then they reappeared a short
distance on the other side of the ves¬
sel, the whale now seeming very weak,
as he moved slowly in the water, and
showed several wounds in his side
where he had been cut by the sword¬
fish. Twice he avoided the fierce
rush of the latter, but at the third at¬
tempt the swordfish plunged into him
at full Bpeed, burying his sword al¬
most to his nose in the whale’s side.
The latter doubled up like a jackknife,
and with a tremendous heave threw
the swordfish clear of the water. As
he oame up those on the Benbridge
saw the sword, which was still buried
in the whale’s side, snap off like a
piece of kindling wood close to the
swordfish’s nose. For a moment he
darted hither and thither on the sur¬
face of the water, apparently unable
to steer himself with the balance of
his natural appendage removed, and
then, plunging beneath the surface,
was seen no more. The whale was
evidently done for, writhing and
thrashing and spouting blood and
water until the sea all around him was
a mass of ruddy foam. Gradually his
struggles became fainter, and at
length he lay still on the water, evi¬
dently dead or nearly so.
A Remarkable Experience.
The fishing schooner Helen G.
Wells, wilich left Gloucester for the
Great Banks, was turned bottom up
by the seas off Green Bank, but has
righted again, and was towed into
port without the loss of one of her
crew of eighteen men.
The wind suddenly increased to a
hurricane and a great, white wave
struck the ship on the night of Novem¬
ber 10. The two men on deck, seeing
the mountain of water approaching, 1
jumped into cabin to escape it, and,
after that nobody has any clear idea of;
what happened, but the conditions of
the cabins seems to indicate that the
vessel turned completely over. The'
men in their berths were hurled out
on the floor, and with stoves, sea
chests and other furniture were sent
in a heap to the starboard side.
For three minutes the schooner re¬
mained bottom up, and then she gave
another terrible roll and stood on an
even keel onoe more.
When the men scrambled on deck
they found the eight dories gone, the
main boom In three pieoes, the patent
jiber and fittings, foresail boom and
gaff, throat halliards and jumbo boom
all carried aw ay, both stoves broken
and all the provisions beaten up and
watersoaked, while every drop of
water in the tanks had ran ont, a
sure proof that she had turned over.
All over the ceiling of the cook’s gal¬
ley was a mixture of beans, flour,
butter and lard, which had been thrown
there when she upset. The men
rallied to keep the boat afloat, and
finally made port.—New York Herald.
A Bullet Set In Gold.
Perhaps one of the most peculiar
presents ever made by a bridegroom
to his bride, says London Sketch, was
that of Maurice Gifford to Miss Thor
old on the occasion of their marriage
the other day. It was the bullet
which was extracted from the wound
in his shoulder which caused the loss
of his arm. The gold in which the
bullet was set was dug from a grave¬
yard in Matabeleland, and was fash¬
ioned in the shape of a double-headed
serpent, the heads supporting the)
missile, {the whole making a very
unique armlet. “
A Rat Hunt.
A great rat hunt came to a finish
fast Saturday at Gurneyville. Thd
total number of rat tails taken lacked
but three of 5000, and the winning
side won by fourteen There were
forty-four on a side, and Eirin Kirk
was captain of the winning side and
Arthur Oren captain of the losing side
The losing side is to give a supper at
the school house in the village ha nr
day night to the hunters and their
1 families, which will make a company
o. over b#.
FOR COUCHS AND COLDS.
Home-Made Candies That May Be Easily
Made at Home.
The present unseasonable, damp
weather, fruitful in colds, brings an
Inevitable demand for cough candy
and troches. Nearly all the excellent
cough candies and troches of commerce
have once been made by family re¬
cipes. It was formerly the practice of
many mothers to prepare a stock of
these candles at the beginning of each
winter. Shining amber-tinted lozen¬
ges of horehound made at home, or
white candies of Iceland moss soothed
the weary hours of children who were
shut indoors with colds. Where one
has abundance of time it certainly pays
to prepare these candies at home, for
only a few confectioners make them as
they were prepared in the last genera¬
tion. Yet they are easily made, and
are wholesome confections because of
their tonic powers. The herb has the
ability, when administered in proper
quantity, to excite the flow of perspira¬
tion.
To make horehound candy put an
ounce of the dried herb in a pint of
boiling water. It may be bought at an
herb store or at almost any drug store.
It may also be easily gathered at the
brookside in summer and dried, for it
is a familiar plant. Strain off the in¬
fusion of horehound and add a pound
of sugar to every half-pint of the
liquid. Boil the syrup until it threads,
and the thread cracks off brittle when
bitten, and then pour it out on but¬
tered sheets of tin. When it is partly
cooled crease it into inch squares, and
when it is hard break it up into sep¬
arate candies. If these candies are too
bitter for your taste, lessen the amount
of horehound a little.
Iceland moss makes an excellent
soothing cough candy. Taae five cents’
worth of the lichen, soak it over night
and wash it repeatedly. Take it out of
the last water and put it in a thick,
porcelain-lined saucepan in plenty of
cold water, and let it slowly simmer
over the fire until the water is of a
thick, starchy consistency, Add a
pound of sugar to half a pint of the
thickened water. Stir the syrup re¬
peatedly until a drop forms a creamy
ball when rolled between the finger
and thumb. It must be stirred repeat¬
edly, or it will burn. Pour it out on
buttered biscuit pans that have sides,
which will prevent the candy spreading
in too thin a sheet. It should be about
half an inch thick.
The chief objection to a great many
cough candies of the shops Is that they
contain morphine, and even raw op¬
ium, in more or less quantity. There
are some popular cough candies which
contain enough morphine to put to
sleep a person who Is easily affected by
this drug. Especially is this so when
the candies are consumed without
much thought as to results. Candies
containing morphine are certainly dan¬
gerous for children to eat, and it is
strange that accidents do not occur
more often when confectioners handle
such dangerous drugs.
A Bimple troche which Is easily pre¬
pared at home is made as follows: Mix
together one ounce each of powdered
eubebs, liquorice and gum-arabic. Add
to this mixture one dram of oil of ani¬
seed and a third of an ounce of oil
of eubebs. When the oils are mixed
in add half a pound of raw sugar, and
finally just enough warm water to
make a dough as stiff as you can han¬
dle. Sprinkle a board with a little
powdered licorice and roil out the mass
as thin as a pie crust, Cut It into
small troches with a thimble. Let them
dry on a board in a closet or any cool
dry room. If the atmosphere is not
too moist they will dry in a day. They
are excellent, to soothe any roughness
of the throat that causes a cough. They
will frequently entirely stop a trouble¬
some cough which comes from some
such trifling nervous cause. The ma¬
terials are simple, and are easily ob¬
tained at any drug store. Do not put
them on the fire to mix them, but do
all the work on a board.
The latest French skirt models grow
narrower and closer on tile front and
sides.
Bad Dlgeitlon, Bad Heart.
Poor digestion olten causes Irregularity
of tbe heart’s action. This irregularity
may be mistaken for real, organic heart
disease. The symptoms are much tho same.
There is, however, a vtst difference be¬
tween the two; organio heart disease Is
often incurable; apparent heart disease Is
curable if good digestion be restored.
A case in point is quoted Ind. Mrs. from Ellen the Ntsn Col
Era, ot Greensburg. forty-three
som, Newpoint, Ind., a womau four with
years old, had suffered for years
distressing stomach trouble. The gases
generated by the indigestion pressed of on
the heart and caused an ir»egularity its
action. She had much pain In her stomach
and heart, and was subject to frequent and
severe choking spells, which were most
severe at night. Doctors were tried in vain:
t ie patient became worse, despondent, and
feared impending death.
Mfr 17'
o
jM, fs
i i * ,\\i i v\\\
A CAS* OT BEAUT VAILDHK.
She was' much frightened, but noticed
that in intervals in which her stomach did
not annoy her, her heart’s action became
normal. Reasoning correctly that her di¬
gestion was alone at fault, she prooured trouble,
the proper medicine to treat that
and with immediate good results. Her
appetite oame back, the choking spells be¬
came less frequent and finally ceased. Her
weight, which had been greatly reduced,
was restored, and she now weighs more
than for years. Her blood sOoa became
pure and her cheeks rosy.
The case is of general interest because
the disease Is a very common one. That
others may know the means of cure we
give the name of the medicine used—Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. These
pills contain all tbe elements neoessary to
give new iife and richness to the blood and
restore shattered nerve*.
Ayer’s
Is your hair dry, harsh, and brittle? Is it
fading or turning gray? Is it falling out? Does
dandruff trouble you ? For any or all of these
conditions there is an infallible remedy in Ayer's
Hair Vigor
Norway's Quaint Vehicles.
As every tourist is aware, a carioie
is a most comfortable little car on two
wheels for one passenger. The seat
is shaped like, a shell and nicely pad¬
ded, and the traveler goes along with
his feet resting in fixed stirrups at the
sides, unless he likes to tuck them up
in front of Trim, or dispose of them
elsewhere on the framework of the
carriage. The driver sits behind on a
box, used for stowing away small pack¬
ages inside and for talcing quite a lot
outside.
A slolkjaerre is intended for two per¬
sons and a driver. It is a rough cart.
and again the driver sits behind. Very
often these drivers are tiny lads. You
may get one about eight in some
places when the men are busy at the
harvest, and it is usual, when two con¬
veyances are required by the same
party, to expect one of the travelers
to drive the second conveyance.
As the little yellow ponies know the
routes inch by inch, and as it is the
custom when numbers of conveyances
are going the same way for them to
form a very long procession, there Is
not much need for a crack whip.- A
trille is rarely seen. It carries four
persons, and is more or less like a
small English barouche. The way in
which the driver manages to stow his
person away in a luggage-crowded ve¬
hicle is one of the wonders of Norway.
Facts About Alaska.
Alaska Is two and one-half times as
large as Texas. It Is eighteen times
as large as all New England. It Is as
large as the South, Including Texas’. It
Is as large as all the States east of the
Mississippi and north of the Ohio, in¬
cluding Virginia and West Virginia.
It makes San Francisco east of our
centre. Its coast line is 26,000 miles.
It has the highest mountain in North
America but one—Popocatepetl—in
Mexico. It has the only forest-covered
glacier in the world.
The Treadwell Is one of the greatest
gold mines. It has the best yellow
cedar in the world. It has the greatest
seal fisheries. It has the greatest sal
mon fisheries. It has cod banks that
beat Newfoundland.
It has one of the largest rivers in
the world. A man standing on the
bank of the Yukon 150 miles from its
mouth cannot see the other bank. The
Yukon is twenty miles wide 700 miles
from its mouth. With its tributaries
it is navigable 2,500 miles. It is larger
than the La Plata. It is larger than
the Orinoco. It discharges one-third
more water than the Mississippi, The
water is fresh fifteen miles from Us
mouth. It has probably more gold In
its basin than any other river, Its
color is beautifully blue to its junction
with the White River, 1,100 miles
above its mouth.
Purely u Local
Eczema is a local disease and needs local
treatment. The irritated, diseased skin must,
he soothed and smoothed and healed. No use
to dose yourself and ruin your stomach just
because of an itching eruption. Tetterine is
the only simple, safe a nd certain cure for Tet¬
ter, Eczema, Kinaworm and other skin tron
hies. At druggists or by mail for 51) cents In
stamps. J. T. Bhuptriue, Bavannah, Ga.
The sultan of Turkey is greatly influenced
in his public policy a Swede, Carl Jersen,
who was a common an, employed, workshops before of
Abdul Hamid’s acce i, in the
the Yilfliz Kiosk.
To Cure a Cold !n One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablet*. All
Druggists refund money If It falls to cur*. 260 -
The Ontario government has decided that
all who labor in Canadian lumber camps must
be Canadians, and that supplies must be pur¬
chased in Canada.
Oh, What Splendid Coffee.
Mr. Goodman, Williams. Co., Hi., writes:
“From one package Balzer’s German Coffee
Berry costing 16c X grew 300 lbs. of better
coffee than I can buy in stores at 30 cents a
lb.” *• 0.7
A package of this coffee and big seed and
plant catalogue is sent you by John A.
Halzer Heed Co., LaCrosse, Wls., upon re¬
ceipt of 15 cents stamps and this notice.
Mrs. Winslow's Smithing Syrup for children
teething, softens thegums, reduces inflamma¬
tion. allays pain, cu res wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
S25 FULL COURSE $25
The complete Bunin*** Courts or the complete
Shorthand Course for $25, at
WHITE'S BUSINESS COLLEGE,
16 K. Cain St.. ATLANTA, GA.
Complete Business rirul Shorthand Courses Com¬
bined. 17.no Per Month.
Business practice from the start. Trained
Teachers. Course of study unexcelled No va¬
cation. Address if. K. YVHITK. Principal.
B.&S. Business College, Louisville, Ky.
SUPERIOR ADVANTAGES.
Book-kxspimo. shorthand a*i>
Tnumnarnr. Beautiful Catalogue Free.
RUPTURE Abooiatefy carod with
txit cutting. Writ# ! o'
arm' mm and teot iraoniolo- J,(«, HKXTON* M.
117 11'. Min lib-h Hi., Atlanta* 4Ja.
SEEDS A805,MartUh»ad,Maa*. S-S
JAM KB J.H. UkEttORI
Corn
responds readily to proper fer¬
tilization.
Larger crops, fuller ears and
larger grain are sure to result
from a liberal use of fertilizers
containing at least 7 % actual
Potash
Our books are free to farmers.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nauau St., New York.
•IMMHtMMHWMMNMj
FOR 14 CENTS;
W. with ‘i:A'ite. toi.inlSO,000 "* new 001 - ,
* i‘i , *r t r U r 10o|
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1 41 Quoen Victoria Gottuce, 16o j j
1 ** Klondjko Maloti, 16o
1 41 dumbo Giant Flowor Onion* Soodo, He Ho j -
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Worth ♦LOO* for 14 oenta. * {
i Abovo 10 pkg 0 , worth^$L00, wo wUl | i
”roat 7 P?ant*and°Bood notioe Catalog®# and 14c. j .
upon receipt of thi» trade and . .
poatago. We invito your 8al*or <
know wheu yon once in • •
■eed« you will never got along with* ( >
ont Bbl.Catalogalono them. Potatoeiatll.flO 6e. No,iO i
m * <
"inTTiiimmiumy •**!> CO., IA CROW*, Wig.
oeeeeooeooeeooooooooooooi JOHN A. SiLIBR ,
ALABAMA SPEAKS OUT.
Eju Kyleton, Ala., writes;
M "I® For Palpitation of
Heart and Sick
m X) d§j| Headache A. Simmons Dr. Diver M.
>£•/ Zl Medicine its weight is in worth gold.
........ % The imitations are not
JajH so good.
Wifehood.
Btato and physical condition should be at
their best, since consummated tho desire and marriage happiness and of
mankind are in
procreation. If she is feeble, It Is Impossi¬
ble that her children should female be strong. weakness Every
woman should know that Squaw
cun be cured; that Or. Simmons
Vine Wine will prove most beneficial uur
lng wifehood; local that It strength, will impart nourish physical, the
montai and and vitalise the femi¬
nerves, blood, brain, and aMOWKl com¬
nine organism insures a
paratively painless delivery,
e.
Oak Lane, Ala. .writes: Hava
^ S used Dr. Medicine 51. A. Simmons 12
Liver years.
■ it cured a ease of Sick
W) standing. Headache “Black of 80 Draught” years
“'-mf people is sometimes Substitute imposed when on
2% they cannot as a get the genuine
Dr. M. A. S. L. Bf. which I
think is far Superior.
Pufflnesft and Dark Rings Under Eyes.
The symptoms of liver disease may differ
according to the circumstances, weakness tempera¬ of
ment, age, or constitutional
the individual. Not pale nnfrequently and sallow and the there com¬
plexion fs pufflness becomes and dark rings under the
a of the stomach
eyes. The functional powers
are impaired and there is loss or Irregular.
Ity of appetite. These and cored all other disor¬ old
ders of the liver may be by that
reliable remedy, Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver
Medicine. The fact that imitators under
take to sail under our colors and sell on the
million dollar repatatlon of onr Dr. M. A.
Simmons Liver Medicine acknowledgment is a compliment the to
our goods, but an of
inability of their article to stand on Its own
merits, appropriate and shows the business an attempt of another, to unfairly which
is should unworthy out of gentlemen, for the Imitations and tbs and pnblio
look TO
lose to hare anything to do with them.
CLEARING GRUB AND
LAND STUMP
WITH A PULLER
me
c. D. EDWAHD8,
Bend for Catalog. Albert Lea, Minn.
PIUM, MORPHINE. WHISKEY.CO
permanently uaini-. Tobacco cured and By Bmiff-UIppip* IIAHUfESS HOMn Habit*
I It EATMK.Vr. My book, contain!'.* foil Infor¬
mation. mallei froa. DR. J. (". nOFPMAIt.
Room 4 Isabella Butldln*. Chicago, III.
S$a<uned4 Q^a/Zeat
- u li II Hi it, i in . Act ami ba*tn»o«i. No text &
r r>ok»- Short timo, (Jboop board Sand for cataloga*.
MENTION THIS PAPER in writing to adver¬
tisers. Anu 96-2
2.5'~CTS,
PISCTS CURE FOR
0IK4Q / r i
r
CONSUMPTION
‘2scrs'