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A NOBLE FIOHT.
IWIVRVT HOf'TIIKSIN l.AWTCR'S
I/O NO CONPl.If’T Willi DIHKAHK.
T»»e»jf*iiTe Yea i ol I*roe?erltr« Adver
oily nn«l ^nflfrlnt Tl»” (irtnt Vic*
Won by ^lencf Over a
Kinbborn IMiriM-f,
(Fro*n (hr Atianfr, Go ., Constitution.)
Foremost among tho host known lawyers
sn l farmers of North Carolina Man is CoL
I«aa<* H. Kugg, of Greenville, I’itt (To., a man
'
whose Hfo ha 1 n m e-nr •<! t y minutes.
"‘I* has lxr n tw nty-t w j y rirs sin >e I bo
Warn* a resident of this town ” said CoL
Bag* in t-lling bis ■<tory to a reporter; "evfn
♦ben the fir*t symp’oms of Gr.v-i wore as
•mingthejrwdv's but wxresllgat. Grain
ally, howevi-r, my >li*-->ise develop"), nn i
nght it a- 1 wo il l it • '•‘• no 1 to gain a
wrong r fo fiiol 1 lay by day until my
mUery w-n comp! t■>. tor dx' cn years I
n<*ver kn<-w what it was to be free Iro n p i'n,
not pain as an ordinary man thinks of It, but
•fronting, excruciatin'.', ananJur.i' Is pafn.
Torlured from a ! to fool, at thnoe thrown
Into spasms when It would r •quirothw uuito l
Strength of four men to hold mo until I was
•(Qpllted with stimulants ant opiaP-s. I
•noul l not «jt, llo or stun 1 in anyone position
\«t the short'at time. Hlrvp was out ot tho
quest I on unhm brought about by the strong¬
est stimulants or opiates. Oh, how many,
many times hnv • I thought of putting un on l
to that life of suffering. But then my mind
wonM r<*v rt to my wife, my children, my
home, un I I w ml l r sir en my hand with
tlm hops th 1 1 ho no other neviiH ofosenps
woald be ofTi-rn I. I snrehe | tho archive
ot moilk’lns for relief. Doctors \v ,4 re cotr
fculte.l, Utflirt waters, mineral waters, <)rtigs,
opiate* an I stimulants of all sorts were tried
without avail. Why, I sent clear to tho
W.-et Indies for me Heine and yet the result
was the «ame.
”1 kept nt rny work ns Jon£ as I could but
nature xavo way at last and I succumbed to
tho InovltaMo. My entire nervous Hystem
had been shattered by tint stlmulauts and
opiates I had taken, my blood ha I actually
turned to water, my weight had dropped
from 17d ptunlH to 123, and ft seemed to
everybody that the end was In sight. Why, I
could not le ar the gentle hand of my wife to
bfttho my limbs with tepid water. I was sim¬
ply living from hour to hour, I had made
my for Will, s‘tiled my busin ss and I waited
the last s!ran t of life to snap.
“it was nt this time that a somewhat simi¬
lar ens « as my own was brought to my no¬
tice. This man had suffered very much as I
had, hts life had b *en despaired of as mine
had an t yet he had been cured. Think what
that little word meant to me—CURED. Tho
report stated that the work ha I been accom¬
plished by a medieln > known as Dr. Will
lams' Pink Pills for Pale People. I Investi¬
gate 1 the report thoroughly and fmtn 1 that
It was true in detail. Then 1 procured soma
of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and began taking
them un l begin to get bettor. I began to
sleep like a health ill ehi’d, sound, calm and
peaoe’nl. My appetite came back and my
nerves were soothed and restored to their
normal eon Hi ton and I lelt like a now man.
Hut tho greatest blessing was tho mental im¬
provement. i began to re i 1 an I digest, to
formulate n.'Y. plans, to lake Interest in my
law practice, which be un to come back to
me as soon as my clients realized tttm I was
again myself. Alter a lapse of 10 yours I
vide horseback every day without fatigue.
“That Dr. Williams' Pink Pdls saved my
life Is beyond doubt, and I am spreading
Iholr praise far and wide.’’
stantiated Inquiry about the a! the town f of of Col. Greenville Sugg’s sub¬
ovo lets c.ise,
and that munv others are being benefited by
I)r. Williams' Pink Pills.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People
are eonsid Nfi an unfailing specific for such
diseases ns pmotor ataxia, partial paraly¬
sis, t*t. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia,
rheumatism, off.^j|0f nervous headache, the after
la grippe, palpitation ot the heart,
paio ing and sallow covnjflexions, that tired fold¬
resulting from nervous prostration ; all
diseases resulting from vitiated humors in
the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipe¬
las, ote. They are also a specific lor troubles
peculiar to females, such as suppressions,
irregularities, and nil forms of weakness.
In men they affect a radical cure in all cases
arising from mental worry, overwork, or ■ x
|V\4M of whatever nature. Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills are sold by all dealers, O • will be sent
post paid oa receipt of price, (5.) cents a box
or (! boxes for .f 2 50 they are never soid In
bulk or by the 100) by a Idressing Dr. Will¬
iams’ Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
Vermont’s State Flower.
The Vermont legislature has passed
n lull designating tho “red clover” as
tho state flower. The vote taken
throughout the state resulted as fol¬
lows: Whole vote cast, 17,611; rod
clover received9,572; daisy,2,567; but
ter-cnp, 945; scattering, 4,525. The
clover was selected on the grounds
that it is indigenous, fragrant and most
useful.
“Eatables and Drinkables” is tlie
sign displayed on the front of an old
house in Haverhill, Mass.
>,V
irTTir.'
« 5 !
1® 11^ Ilf
/
i
JSP' §«
gif' '
J* II* ALC tr M i i % 0p i.sq [•
^ A Lawyer Says
I have found Hood's rsnvMriuaof groat ion
etit for Sjirin l«s«'tude and that bull, rloepy.
heavy tired feeling, that croj't over r.;o like a
Hood’s s P> Cures
vampire. Ib>otVs .rave me < r.tir* relief and 1
am sure "inure* i vimr ir. 4.” J.ll. Mourn**,
Attorney. Fayette. Alabama. Get Hood's.
Hood's Pil s are purely vegetable. 2 c.
m “ What’s there?
Thinscs
For the
Co?k, sir”;
o
riethinks it is
some
/9
Buckwheat
For the morrow’s
breakfast.
u
THE MONROE ADVERTISER. FORSYTH. G A.. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 11. 1894. -EIGHT PAGES.
BRIEF TELEGRAMS.
A CONDENSATION OF OUR MOST
IMPORTANT DISPATCHES.
Short an<l Crisp Morsels of General
Interest to Our Readers.
^ _ North 1 latte, Nebraska, Na
tional . bank closed its doors Monday.
Tho Lexow committee assembled
again in New York Monday morning.
It is rumored that more sensational
developments will take place.
Ex-Governor Leon Abbett, of New
Jersey, Tuesday died at his home in Jersey City
afternoon. He had been sick
for the past ten days with diabetes.
The foot and mouth disease has
broken out among cattle at Falmouth
and Siltingbourne, England, aud the
boards of agriculture have been notifi
ed of its existence.
Eight lives have been lost and prop
erty amounting to $1,000,000 has beep.
destroyed by the forest fires in the
bottoms of the Tennessee. Tho fires
are still raging with destructive fury,
A fire originating in a gasoline ex¬
plosion at Omaha, N’eb., early Tuesday
building, morning destroyed the exposition
the Fifteenth street theatre
and the First Baptist church.the dam
ago aggregating about $90,000.
Tho Canal-Fulton Tool Manufactur
ing Company at Massillon, ()., was
closed Monday on account of financial
embarrassment. Details are wanting.
The company did un extensive busi¬
ness in mining tools throughout the
United States.
Tho Tacoma, Wash., National bank
closed its doors Monday morning, the
cashier’s notice stating that the insti¬
tution was going into liquidation. The
bank suspended payment during the
panic last year and resumed after
doubling its capital to $200,000.
A gang of Syrian smugglers have
been arrested at Detroit. There are
several women among tho number.
They have been operating between
Windsor and Detroit aud thousands
of dollars worth of Armenian rugs,
silk, etc., have been smuggled across
the river.
1 he steamer Lambert’s Point, the
first ship of the new line, the Norfolk
and North American Steamship Com¬
pany, to run direct from Lambert’s
Point to Liverpool, arrived at Norfolk,
Ya., Tuesday morning. During the
next twelve months twelve other ves¬
sels will be built for this company.
Albert W. Holmes, of tho Western
Bank Note company, was bound over
to the federal grand jury at Chicago
Saturday morning by United States
Commi; sioner Wirt under $2,000 bond
on the charge of violating the law iu
connection with engraving and print¬
ing the warrants for the state of Mis¬
sissippi.
Tho suit brought by Lawyer Theo¬
dore W. Siddall, of Philadelphia,
against Judge P. Amade Bregy, to re¬
cover $100,000 damages for alleged
improper rulings ngainst him in the
commou ideas court, has been dis¬
missed by Judge Dallas, in the United
States circuit court for want of juris¬
diction.
Five men were killed and a score of
people injured by an explosion of dy¬
namite in Hull, Quebec, Tuesday
morning. The accident occurred ou
the Hull waterworks extension. Two
boxes, containing forty pounds of dy¬
namite each, did the damage, The
dynamite was used for blasting pur¬
poses, and was stored in a 12-foot
square frame cabin, erected in the
street.
A New York Jfcrald special cable
from Bu nos Ayres says: The govern¬
ment of Montevideo lias requested
Minister Stuart to consider the advisa
bility of sending an exhibit to the At¬
lanta exposition. General A very, who
is at Buenos Ayres in the interest of
the exposition, met the Argentine min¬
ister of foreign affairs, Senor Costa,
Saturday, to discuss the proposed Ar¬
gentine exhibit. He goes to Chili in
January.
A fire at New York Tuesday caused
a loss of nt least $250,000 to the occu¬
pants of a building at 547 Broadway.
The firms affected are: Steinder,
Davidson A Co., dealers in fans, oil
paintings aud fancy goods, loss $100,
000; E. Modi A Co., flowers and os¬
trich feathers, loss $75,000; L. Simon
A Co., feathers, loss $40,000, aud the
; Popular Neckwear Company (David J.
VYlomon Co.), loss $40,000. The
building was damaged to the extent of
$20,000.
A special cable dispatch to the New
York Herald, from Berlin, says: “The
Berlin Post and Hamburger corre¬
spondents both state that Count You
Munster, the German ambassador in
Paris, has threatened the French gov¬
ernment with a rupture of diplomatic
relations on account of the charges
made in the Paris papers that attaches
of the German embassy were carrying
on an organized campaign of espion¬
age in regard to the Freuch military
and nav.'.l affairs.”
The Great Western Manufacturing
Company, one of the largest electrical
manufacturing concerns in the country,
having its general warehouses and
Uwmg to the Closing down of the
mines operated by the Sunday Creek
Coal Company, at Buckingham, Perry
county, Ohio, three hundred miners
were thrown out of employment and
With their families are in such a desti
j into condition that a committee was
! sent to Columbus to secure aid. Ow
ing to the fact that this is the second
time the mines have closed down with
:n a comparatively recent period, and
ako that the men were in the great
strike, they were ill prepared to be
out of work now at the beginning of
the winter.
A Chattanooga dispatch says: George
Mapp and Buddie Wooten will surely
hang for the murder of Marion Ross.
Wooten made a clean breast of the
crime, a few cau^e days ago, but for some
unexplained the fact was con
coaled from tho public. At the time
of the confession Wooten expected to
hang anv minute, a, he had not been
told of the respite. He saya that three
negroes,Will Dayton and'an unknown
man Marion of Birmingham, aSloon plotted to rob
Ross' and that
ami Dayton fired the fatal ,hot.
,, r.oss, , while ho was to rob the monev
, drawer, hut that hit nerve fo-ok
FROM WASHINGTON.
NEWSY ITEMS PICKED UP AT
THE NATIONAL CAPITOL.
Sayings and Doings of the Official
Heads of the Government.
John Secretary Carlisle has appointed
C. Lehman shipping commis
sioner at Brunswick, Ga.
Three topics_the Pullman strike,
the coram on weal ere and the Indian
Territory discussed troubles—were the matters
in the annual report of At
torney General Olney, submitted to
congress Tuesday,
The president has granted a pardon
to James J. NValker, convicted of
moonshining in Northern Georgia, and
has commuted to light imprisonment
the sentence of Charles B. Murrah,
convicted of counterfeiting in North
eru Georgia,
The friends of the Nicaragua canal
bill are making an effort to get it be
fore the house. Mr. Mallory, of Flor
ids, who was the chairman of the spe¬
cial committee which framed tho bill
now on the calendar, had a conference
Tuesday morning with Speaker Crisp
regarding the measure.
The house appropriations commit¬
tee Thursday agreed on the fortifica¬
tions bill for the next fiscal year. It
carries an appropriation of $1,879,
057, being $5,478,646 below the esti¬
mates on which it is based, and $547,
946 less than the appropriations for
the current fiscal year. The bill au¬
thorizes no contracts to be made in
excess of tho sums appropriated.
For two hours aud a half the demo¬
cratic members of the senate caucus
discussed the order of business Tues¬
day afternoon behind closed doors
aud adjourned to meet again Thurs¬
day after tho adjournment of the sen¬
ate. Nothing w r as accomplished, as
there was not at any time a full repre¬
sentation of the majority present, aud
when the hour of 4 o’clock came the
number had dwindled to twenty-three,
hardly sufficient to take positive action
on any proposition.
The president’s message is attacked
by all the republicans and mauy of the
extremists in his own party. The New
York bankers and newspapers inveigh
against his proposal to remove the tax
from state banks, because it will fur¬
nish an elastic as well as a safe curren¬
cy. The western silver men talk
against the removal of the tax because
they know there would be no further
excuse for an unlimited silver agita¬
tion if state banks could issue money.
Commeut on the message is unusually
conservative.
The following appropriations for
Georgia rivers and harbors are recom¬
mended by General Casey, chief of en¬
gineers: Chattahoochee river $100,000,
Coosa river $1,200,000, Flint river
$36,000, vekyl creek $14,500, Ocmul
gee riwT $50,000, Oconee river $50,
000, Savannah river $117,000, water
route between’Bavannah and Fernan
dina $70,000. For Alabama rivers:
Alabama river $200,000,Black Warrior
river $200,000, Warrior and Tombig
bee rivers in Alabama and Mississippi,
$775,000.
The republican congressional com¬
mittee has sent out a significant letter
in regard to the contested seats in the
next congress. There are upwards of
thirty districts wherein the defeated
republicans have indicated tlieir in¬
tention of filing contests. The com¬
mittee has addressed to each of these
contestants a statement notifying him
that he must not place any reliance on
the large republican majority in the
next congress, but must rest his pros¬
pects for success on the merits of the
claims he advances.
Among the gold deposits with the
assistant United States treasurer in
Philadelphia by members of the Stew¬
art syndicate for their share of the new
bond issue have been discovered seve¬
ral thousand light-weight half eagles.
Some of the coins have been worn
away by constant use, but others have
gone through the sweating process.
All of the coin has not yet been
tested, and Assistant Treasurer Bing
ler gave only conditional receipts for
the money and the depositors will have
to make up the deficiency in weight.
Nine gentlemen, representing com¬
mercial bodies in Cincinnati, O., call¬
ed ou the postmaster general Wednes¬
day for the purpose of securing a
better exchange of the mails in the
territory south of the Ohio. They
believe that ten hours’ time can be
saved in the transmission of corres¬
pondence between Ohio and Texas,
and also that a good saving of time
can be made between that state and
Florida. The postmaster general in¬
formed the gentlemen that he would
do all he could consistently for them
in the matter, but would take it under
advisement.___________
THE NEW REICHSTAG OPENED.
Imposing Ceremonies anti a Speech
From the Emperor.
The new reichstag building at Ber¬
lin, Germany, was openad Wednesday
with imposing ceremonies. Religious
services were held according to the
rites of the Catholic church, in Hed
wig cathedral, and under Protestant
forms in the castle chapel. Chancellor
von Hohenlohe handed to the kaiser a
speech from the throne, opening the
session of the reielistug which was
read by his majesty.
TILLMAN COMES DOWN
Am] John Gary Exans is Governor of
South Carolina.
The inauguration of Governor-elect
John Gary Lvans took place in tht
hall of the house of representatives at
Columbia, S. C., at one o’clock Tues¬
day afternoon, with impressive cere¬
mony. The chief justice administered
the oath and the new governor deliv¬
ered his inaugural address. All the
6tate officers were likewise sworn in.
B { ishop Howe Dead,
t,. B “ , ho P tv -n R -n- Flf tr e f . F 6 F -- P ‘ . S
',o '
d ,' oc *". »f South Carolina,
died »t hta . home tn Charleston, S. C„
Sunday afternoon. Bishop Howe was
disabled by paralyata about two year,
ago and at the d.occaan eonveht.on m
ol }«»*.
1 1 Capers \ was elected assistant bishop,
. , „ , , become,
;
SOUTHERN FLASHES
A SUMMARY OF INTERESTING
HAPPENINGS,
And Presenting an Epitome of tha
South’s Progress and Prosperity
S. Siesel A Co., wholesale liquor
dealers at Macon, Ga., filedmoragages
Tuesday amounting to $5,000.
The Manchester spoke mills, at
Richmond, Ya., which have been shut
down for some months, have resumed
operations with a full force of hands.
The North Carolina conference of
the Methodist Episcopal church south
met at Dnrham, Wednesday, Bishop
Wilhon presiding. The attendance is
larger than ever before.
A. J. Laird, who embezzled money
from his daughter, who was postmis¬
tress of LaGrange, Ga., pleaded guilty
of the charge against him and has
been sentenced to three years in the
national penitentiary and to pay a fine
of $500.
A Columbia, S. C ., special says: A
move is on foot to unite the warring
political factions in South Carolina
and the first step was taken Wednes¬
day when an address to the democratic
voters of the state with that end in
view was given out.
If the Corbett-Fitzsimmons fight
comes off in Florida it will not prob¬
ably be in Jacksonville, as tho city
council has given a third and final pas¬
sage to the resolution repealing the
ordinance granting permission for
glove contests to take place within the
city limits.
A number of Savannahians promi¬
nent in railroad circles will appear be¬
fore tho railroad committee of tho
house of representatives in opposition
to the Doolan railroad bill, It is ae
knowledgcd that this bill was intro¬
duced in opposition to the Central’s
plan of reorganization.
The steamer Lambert’s Point, the
first ship of the new line, the Norfolk
and North American Steamship Com¬
pany, to run direct from Lambert’s
Point to Liverpool, arrived at Norfolk,
Ya., Tuesday morning. During the
next twelve months twelve other ves¬
sels will be built for this company.
Near Payne’s mills, Ala., Chief
of Police Mills, of Bessemer, and a
posse of officers cornered Jim Morri¬
son, tho noted Bibb county outlaw,
who recently dynamited his way out
of Pratt mines prison and murdered
Deputy Sheriff Dexter. Morrison was
heavily armed and a battle followed.
It is reported that Morrison was fa^.
tally wounded.
A Birmingham, Ain., special says:
Reuben F. Ivolb, who, in his own
mind is governor, and who, on Tues¬
day issued his message to the gei >ral
assembly and the people of Alabi na,
still asserts that he intends to carry
out the contents of his message. He
still assorts that he was elected gov¬
ernor and from flHHHHlHS
the people of the
him as chief exec
A Richmond,
command ot the
General AndersonnfflWc ——
disbanding the infantry comptSBi
Pulaski, Pocahontas and Chatham,
troop G of Richmond, troop F at
Manchester and battery D at. Lynch¬
burg. It has also been ordered that
several other commands report for in¬
spection at the end of sixty days with
a view to disbandment unless they aro
recruited in the meantime to a state of
efficiency.
The Chattanooga Times 2 >ublishes
the official voto of every county in the
state of Tennessee, each certified to by
county officers. The total Bhows that
Evans is elected governor by a plurali¬
ty of 841, the vote standing like this:
Evans, republican, 105,167; Turney,
democrat, 104,326. Turney was elect¬
ed in 1892 by 26,326 plurality. The
delay in ascertaining this result has
been due to the refusal of the canvass¬
ing board to give out the figures, a
course of action which, being unpre¬
cedented, has brought forth from all
conservative papers in the state the
most adverse criticism.
JAPAN’S PRICE.
Will be Satisfied if China Pays 400,
000,000 Yen for Peace.
The St. James Gazette (London)
prints a dispatch to the news agency
here, saying that, according to the
press statements, if the terms of peace
between Japan and China be conclud¬
ed now, Japan will accept an indem¬
nity of 400,000,000 yen, to be paid in
installments, with a cession to her of
the territory which she now occupies;
but in the event of a failure of the
present peace negotiations, the de¬
mands upon China will be increased
in proportion to the length of time
during which the operations shall be
carried on. No armistice will be de¬
clared unless China sues for peace,and
gives pledges for a faithful perform¬
ance of her agreement.
COMING SOUTHWARD.
Pittsburgians to Establish a Colony in
North Carolina.
One of the largest colonization
schemes that has been projected in the
vicinity of Pittsburg, Pa., has been
organized by an Allegheny firm, with
Tomb, Johnson A Co. in charge. With
the financial backing they now have,
the new colony is expected to prove a
success. In this event, within the next
thirty days more than eighty residents of
Pittsburg and surrounding towns will
leave to take up permanent residence
in North Carolina. Farming lands to
the extent of 50,000 acres have been
leased and purchased in Craven coun
tv, at the junction of the Neuse ana
Trent rivers. The members of the
colony are farmers, gardeners and me¬
chanics.
PEACE IN SIGHT.
ilediary Efforts in the Orient May be
Successful.
A dispatch to the Pall Mall Gazette
(London) from Che-Foo asserts that
the terms of peace between Japan and
China have been very nearly com
pleted, through the intervention ol
ihe United States government, aud
that the feeling of teenrity is so strong
that many of the foreign ladies are
returning to Pekin.
The Lobster's Infancy.
The young lobster leaves its parents
and spends its first thirty or forty-five
days in deep water. During this pe¬
riod its shell is changed four times,
the natatory orgaus are lost, and only
after attaining nearly fu l size does it
come back to the shore. The young
lobster loses and remakes its crusty
shell about ten times during the first
year, five to seven times in the second
year, three to four in the third, two to
three in the fourth. After the fifth
the change is annual.
In Hi’s XVnrk-1-n ri WorlJ
Men and women continually break down
through mental strain and physical effort,
The true repairer of vitality thus impaired, a
perennial fountain of health and vigor is
Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which restores
dlco-tion, enriches the blood, and healthfully liver
stimulates the hovels, kidneys and
when they are indoh nt. This comprehensive rheumatism
rune and dy also subdues malaria,
nervousness.
Nearly a million and a half dollars remain
unclaimed in the New York savings banks.
Dr. Ki’mer’s Swamp- Root cures
a.l Pamphlet Kidney and and Consultation Bladder troubles. free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y.
In these days of bu-iness depression the
sheriff seems to be the persistent advertiser.
How’s This’
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
\Y e, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che¬
ney for honorable the last 15 years, and believe him per¬
fectly financially in all business transact obliga¬ ons
an i able to carry out any
tion made hy their tirm.
West & Thu ax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Waldinq, Kenyan & Marvin, Wholesale
Hall’s Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. internal'}’, act¬
Catarrh Cure istaken
ing directly upon the b'ood and mucous rur
taces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle.
Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
Karl’s Clover Root, the creat blood purifier,
gives ion and freshness constipation. and clearness 25 to the 50 complex¬ SI.
cures cts., ets.,
Why Put Ofl
taking medicine until you are sick? the house Yon can
keen a box of Itipans Tabales in and
at trie lirst signs of a headache or bilious at¬
tack a single tubule will relieve you.
Notice.
I want every man and woman in the United
States interested in the Opium and Whisky
habits to have my book on the^e diseases.
Address B. M. Woolley, Atlanta, Ga., Box381,
and one will be sent you free.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens tho gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
After six ycars’s suffering, I was cured by
Piso’s Cure. —Mary Thomson, 29 1-2 Ohio
Ave., Allegheny, P i., March 19, ’94.
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KNOWLEDGE
comfort and imnrovcmcnt and
‘ ’
physical rrc i iva s being, best products will to
the neecis of attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Its excellence Syrup of Figs. due _
is to its presenting
mtheform - acceptable andpJeas
most
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling and permanently colds, headaches curing constipation, and fevers
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid¬
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak¬
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every Syrup objectionable of substance. by all drug¬
gists in .’Figs is bottles, for sale it is
50c and $1 but man¬
ufactured Co. by the California Fig Syrup
package, only, also whose the name is printed Syrup on of every Figs,
and name, will
being well substitute informed, if offered. you not
accept any
CARRIAGES
Buggies & Harness.
Two highest awards at World’s
“A" Gr.de, «4i Fair for NirragCi.Beaiitj ya and
* I.ow Prleei. Six years ; ugo we
discarded the Dealer and began
selling wholesale direct prices. to Consume Result: rs at
of Vehicle* sold up
rd 100,000
and our factory now the largest
S -S£L on earth,dealing Bend for direct mammoth with con
*ra4..d«J,so. Burners. our
"X 126 page fllustrat. free catalogue.
ALLIANCE CARRIAGE CO., CINCINNATI, O.
It’s a
cola day
for the housekeeper
* when Pear line gets
left. Take Pearline from
<£~> washing and cleaning and
nothing remains but
hard work. It
washed; it tells the who washes. Pear ttlings line that
on woman saves
work, and works safely. J It leaves nothing 0 undone that you
want done . well; .. what . it . leaves . undone, . it . ought 1 not to do. ,
’ ’ o
Beware ___ i3 Peddlers Pearline as good is and as" never some or “the peddled, unscrupulous same as and Pearline.” grocers if your will grocer IT’S tell FALSE— sends you “ thi* you
something in place of Pearline, do the honest thing —send it back. ^ JAMES PYLE, N. Y.
Complete Fertilizers
for potatoes, fruits, and all vegetables require (to secure the largest
yield and best quality)
At Least 10%, Actual Potash.
Results of experiments prove this conclusively, How and
why, is told in our pamphlets.
They are sent free. It will cost you nothing to read them, and they will save yoa
dollars. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street. New York.
[’Webster’s i International Didiionary
The New “Vuafiridged”
The Best Christmas Gift
: WEBSTER'S A Dictionary of English, Geography, Biography, Fiction, Etc.
.
: \ \ INTERNATIONAL DKUGKAhf nearly Standard all the Schoolbooks-.'Ccmraenfied of theTAS. Saprerrw Court, by the I'.3. Government State Supertaleadeut Printing Office,and or Schools. ot
: . every
G. & C. Mcrriam Co., Pubs., Spring-field, Mass.
WSend for free pamphlet containing iptcansa pages, iUuttrahoro, etc.
• iiaiiiciifiiMiiiiitiamitusmiiisuiisitMnkkisHtuiiimcmaiiitiiiiHHHiimtii’MiMiiai
Highest of all in Leavening Tower.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
4 ?:
i
Absolutely pube
Got Back at Them.
Bob—"What did the lecturer say
when von threw those cabbages at
him?
Dick—Oh, he said ho had hoped tho
audience would be pleased, but he
really hadn’t expected they would en¬
tirely lose their heads. — Jiallas Her¬
ald.
Cross Trails, Ala.
Tetterine has cured me of Totter
which had been tormenting me foriivo
years. Nothing else would givo any
relief. I have known of many persons
using it with same good results. It
gives the quickest relief for burns, of
anything I ever saw.
Mrs, S. H. Hart.
Sent by mail for 50c by J. T, Shup
trine, Savannah, Ga.
MISSING LINKS.
At Leeds, England, there is an elec¬
tric clock which lias been continously
ticking since 1840. Its motive power
is natural electricity.
In South America an electric drying
machine in which air is forced through
a chamber of heated plates is to bo used
iu drying wheat.
An Indian carpet weighing three tons
and made by tho prisoners in the Agra
jail for Queen Victoria has just been
received at Windsor castle.
Pepsin, which is used as a remedy
for indigestion aud stomach trouble, is
obtained from the membrane that lines
the stomach of various animals.
To illustrate hotel life and traveling
arrangements generally is the object of
a national exhibition to be held at
Amsterdam from May to November
next.
At Singapore the post of “tiger slay¬
er in chief for the Straits settlement”
has just been given to M. de Nancourt,
a Frenchman with a record of 500 ti¬
gers killed.
m The seven Bibles of the world are the ,,
Scriptures, ^ the Koran, the Tri Pitikes
fhe Buddhists, the Five Kings of
the Chinese, the Ihree Vedas ot tho
Hindoos, the Zendavesta, of the Per
sians and the Eddas of the Scandina
V1U,U8,
rr. The „ Pittsburg Dispatch gives ii the „
interesting information that Charles
ton, S. C.. was at first called King
Charles Fort, in honor of Charles I.
Charleston was substituted for the
earlier designation in 1783.
An All Iron Rai’road.
One of the curiosities of ff
building is the construction of a.
a harbor about
' fwplM HPP^Sout i te,. lU A'Wl Constantinople, to
300 miles. The
^mutges, sleepers, stringpieces and tel
egraph poles, as well as the rails, aro
of iron, nine-tenths of which aro of
German manufacture, The bridges
aver age about four to the mile, there
being 120 of them, the longest having
a 8tre tch of 590 feet. In addition to
thero aro sixteen tunne i B , the
. , measnnng 1,430 n A feet , , Tms ■ is ■
°. D y inilroad whuih penetrates tho
interior of Asiatic xurkey, the .Smyrna
lines being near the coast.
DIAMONDS —We sell them.
Silverware —The newest and
best assortment in
the city.
Watches —For ladies or gentle¬
men. Every one guar¬
anteed. A large assortment.
Clocks —We have them world
without end. Suitable for
librar y. office or home.
YES!
We carry a full line of goods suita¬
ble for
Wedding Presents.
Headquarters on that. Come.
Reliable Goods, Fair Dealings
and Bottom Prices.
Stilson& Collins Jewelry Co ’ J
55 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
7
The Bridge of the Future.
Bridges made of sterd beams imbed-*
ded in concrete promise to bo thj.
bridge of the future, being cheap,,
strong and graceful. Near Ulm, Ger¬
many, is a bridge of Ibis sort—invent¬
ed at Paris in 1376 by Jean Mohier,
which has a span of 150 feet and yet
is less than seven inches thick at tlm
apex or crcwn. The iron or steel in
such a bridge strengthens it against
tension, while the concrete gives rigid¬
ity and withstands crushing.
Packing Grapes in Japan.
When tho Japanese wish to Rond
grapes to distant friends they pack
them in boxes of arrowroot. Ligh*
and air are thus eflVetmlly shut out
and tho delicate bloom is also pre¬
served, even though the fruit has been
transported thousands of miles.
PROGRESS.
degree Tcoplc who get flic greatest
of comfort and real en¬
joyment out of life, are those
m who make the most out
of their opportunities.
ft good Quick judgment, perception and
lead such
[l make promptly to adopt and
use of those refined
J and improved products of
( * modern inventive genius
C* ffl which best serve the.
needs of their physical
Mmki being. Accordingly,
. the most intelligent
\w \A L* /j l\\\ i' \\ JI J the and arc progressive found most refitted to employ people and
perfect laxative to reg
t ulate and tone up the
^stomach, liver, and
v bowels, when in need
of stteb an agent—lienee the great popularity
of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. These are
made from the purest, most refined and
concentrated vegetable extracts, atul from
forty - two to forty - four are contained in
eaeli vial, which is sold at the same price
as the cheaper made and move ordinary
pills found in the market. In curative vir¬
tues, there is no comparison to be made be¬
tween them and the ordinary pills, as any
one may easily learn by sending for a free
sample, (four to seven doses) receipt of the Pel
lets, which will be sent on of name
and address on a postal card.
qncC USEDTHGY ARE ALWAYS IN FAVOR.
bilious The Pellets cure dizziness, biliousness, sick and
headache, costiveness, or
constipation, sour stomach, loss of appetite,
co at ®d ton gue, hidigestiou. or dyspepsia,
windy . belelnngs, heartburn,” and
distress after eating, and kindred pain derange
ments of the liver, stomach and bowels.
j> ut U p j n pi ass vials, tli n foro always
fresh aud reliable. One little “ Pellet ”
is a laxative, two are mildly cathartic.
^oneStfay’aftS Cf ©Steft
distress from over-eating, they are un
equaled. They are tiny, sugar-coated
granules; any child will readily take them.
no substitute that may be recom
Ifesfer to be ‘‘just as good.” 11 It may be
the dealer, because of paying him
g| .*ofit. but the cue who
Tfc*
Imperfect Drainage
is a fertile source of
disease. Is YOUR
blood suffering lrom
defective sewerage ?
Impurities cannot ac¬
cumulate if you will
use ordinary precau¬
tion and
Tables, Ripans
the modern rem¬
edy for a sluggish
condition of Liver
and Blood. Try it
now I Don’t procras¬
tinate.
♦ ft McELREES V
O
WINE OF CARDUI.f
0, <>
1 s A rflipi
mmSgiL i
fQJ FBUlSlO DlSBBSSS. % ♦
ilMSMSS* GfiswiiuGum
Vcm* * * *? * * t** ******** sin, in-J i cwtio i, •*
\ uWn Tfaffacleanme aa 1 A-uama.
r 4 Teeth aal Promotes the Appetite. Sweetens
the Breath, cure* me Tobacco Hawt. Endorsed
** t»7 the Medical Faculty. Send for Ji, 15 or 25 ..
$ geo.^ualm,' Vorti. ^
5 LIVER
PHIS
-AND
<VTonic Pellets’.
TREATM ENT S.WitS.1
it fciJ »tor«^, or hr m*i! 25c. double box ; d >nbl« boa- i
tl.OO. BttOVVN HF G CO.. Nfvv York City •
THf: I-UsTtC
ARTIFICIAL LI MRS.
with ball-bearing knee joints.
pi 1'lic latent des ini;iroved catalogu and be->.
.Ji Send for rijitive «
m and price list.
ii m T. C. HILLS,
Successor to A. McDekmott,
516&51$ (o dNo.111 St.Charles
sireet., New Orleans 1-it.
•JI “HI All I. OT O I NF.WS LKTTLItor va’.ut so: t
« I'fl ICE to readers f>f r ) - pa iter,
diaries A. Balttvrin A Vo., 40 Wall St., X. Y,
A. N. U ..... ........Forty-nine, Hi,
B I Ul ^ P.lSO’ ^-QUl
tmJ r~ _ CURES WHERE ALL ELSE f AiLS- 2
Best Cough Syrap. Tastes Good. Use ii
in tima ftrdrl he
s ■- rj
.
SS*