Newspaper Page Text
A OUEMLER 3, 1906.
THE SUNNY SOUTH
THIRD RAGE
Palma, a Pathetic Figure,
Scorned bv Nation to Whom He Has Given d.Ill He Was
M>!i- years :mo tile P'>P-
• I’tT *'«■•! of Iiis country- |
Ui<n. he assumed tin- head
of the new Cuban respun- 1
lie - in tin- midst of general
. celttim. Now he with
draws a heartbroken oiei
man, hated by the revolu- ,
tionists, and scorned even |
by many of his own for-
in;r i artisans.
i he publication pf I’alma's letters to •
President Roosevelt, in which as early as !
Sepi ember 4, he announced his intention !
° give up the struggle to preserve peace !
on the island, and asked the United >
states to take charge, entranged from
him many of his closest friends. Right- !
or wrongly 1, they argued that the part I
of true valor wouid have been to keep j
up the effort a little longer before pro- i
paring to surrender that comp ete free- !
dom for which Cuba had battled during j
a oenturv of bloodshed and wrong
'But Palma was a man of peace, and j
could not stand the prospect of war and
bloody conflicts, sc he resigned, and to- :
day, at 70 years of age. the former head
of the republic stands broken and alone,
with small funds and a big family to :
care for. •
HIS CRUEL FATE.
Plate ha f played Palma, the Cuban pa- ;
triot, many cruel pranks, but this last :
i* certainly the saddest.
The white-haired old man who now re- j
turns to private life, has been tip and i
down during all his life, and it was the j
intertwining of his fortunes with those j
of his beloved Cuba that accounted for j
hie vicissitudes.
CJp in Central Valley, New York, they j
speak of Palma as the "schoolmaster, ' I
from the fact that he was conducting in j
the quietude of that little town a school j
for Cuban boys, when the call came the* •
took him to the highest office in the gif j
of his countrymen.
Central Va ley would gladly welcome i
hint tack, for Palma made many friends
during the years he spent there who are
stili loyal to him. but the house In which j
he lived hag been sold, his school scat j
tered and it is not at all certain that at |
bis advanced ago of life Palma would j
have the energy to gather pupils, and j
start, once again the wearying round of ;
the. pedagogue's life.
Central Valley never expected Pa'.rna j
n come back. When he 1"ft. there to
,e Cuba's president, the country for (
residence at Camp Columbia, in a modest
resilience, three quarters of an hour's ride
from the city of Havana.
Every morning by 8 o’clock he was at
his desk. and li< worked straight through
until 6 o’clock, taking a light, lunch
in the middle of the day and eschewing
. that hearty I o’clock dinner and siesta
; which Cubans of easy means think in-
1 separable from a comfortable life.
NEW AMUSEMENTS.
Ho bothered little with social affairs
which was a source of much griei to Ha
vana's butterfly population, for the gndy
'accoutred staffs of/ho Spanish captains
were always ’>} t admired feature of
the big dinners :cfl balls that mark tie-
winter season.
Nor would he it* nd the tl.-.'.ter or a
bull fight on S-n » iy Hi devoted that
day to his family and passed it in the
American way. i i fa t he wjs much t>>o
thoroughly imbued with our manners and
* customs to please his fellow countrymen.
But Palma’s most serious mistake wa
in his appointments to offii
education and long period i
study made hint impatient
If is related that one of the
i
out exciting the suspicions of the enemy, j guns and mortars put in position. So
The morning light would dawn upon a quietly and secretly were these opera-
quiet and deserted scene—not a sou! to ! tions carried on that the intelligence of
be seen—not a sound t i be heard—not a an attack about to be made on Morris’
thing In indicate offensive operations '.hat island was startling even to ns. \Ye were
the night had concealed. In this manner unprepared for t.hc activity and energy
batteries were thrown up. and forty-six I displayed by General Gilmore."
HOW TO FIND C'JT.
Strange Stones of Warnings
In Dreams, a World, Old Mystery
Ey HENRY M. WILT3E.
Written for The SUNNY SOUTH.
?‘ intellectual
His own
r touch with
\ ignorance,
galiani lead-
wa;.
nrs of Cuba in the «lwring
aspired, after the republic had been pro
claimed, to he chief of police fo • Havana,
but that President. Paimu r« fu.--«•! him
the place because he could rot read and
write. The man became a bitter enemy
of Palma, and a leader in the revolt which
proved the president’s undoing.
| Uncle Sam is now „ooXing after the
present in Cuba, the future is veiled in
i doubt. It may never be that the people
I of the pearl of the Antilles will be able
to govern themselves, but the experiences
and failure of the lirst president of the
j republic will always constitute one of the j a
j soddent chapter.** in Cuban history.
N all stages 01
developments
hav* ex f :ised their pow-
» i s i:i efforts to make* out
th*- significance of dreams.
Of this there are striking
instances in Bible.
I lie sa vage regards them
as among the actualities of
Ins life, fr in his dreams
liq: ' been hunting, he hr-
: ‘ 1 r : self.
or soul - Ilia actually cn-
jov .| the expedition. And
seen or heard,
.souls of others.
iiisMi'. tli.it tiiey would be accepted as
conclusive 'ey a Jury, under instructions
from a learned fudge. The pr of of the
second dream nuts upon common nelgh-
boiliood belief, derived from the state-
rankind merits of old people who were living at
the time, and heard the circumstances
related again and again, liev-r ■
their truthfulness.
A WARNING DREAM.
Judge N. A. Patters a, a widely known ; many
citizen of East Tennessee, states that
when a rugged boy of 8 years nr lather
Fill a bottle or com "‘.on glass with
your water and lt-t it stand twenty-four
hours; a sediment or settling indicate?
an unhealthy condition of the kid ey?
it it stains the linen it is evidence of
kidney trouble; too frequent desire to
pass it. or pain in the back i# also con
vincing proof that the kidneys and blad
der are out of order.
What to Do.
There is comfort in the knowledge so
otter. expressed that Dr. Kil ner s
Swamp-Root, the great K - inp v remedy,
fulfills every wish in overtoiling rheu
matism. pain in the back, kidneys, iver.
bladder and every part of the ur nary
passage. It corrects inability to h >ld
water and scalding pain in passing It.
oi bail effects following use of liquor,
n <j wine or beer, and over omea that un-
' pleasant necessity of being compelled to
go often during the day. and to get up
s during the night.
The mild and immediate effort of
Swamp Root the great kidney and blad
Leaves from an Old
Scrap Book
Continued from Second Page.
Simply,
dreamer--.
Dreams
make the
impress! v
tifnl
us than
re .sr>t to he caricatures. They
arge larger, the .striking more
slve. tiie beautiful yet mere beau-
In fine, t hoy fake firmer hold upon
experiences.
soon be convened to devise measures .■
filling up the ranks of on- gallant arm,.
I have respectfully to suggest to the m-
tborities a speedier nlar and certainly
more effective one; . nd that is. let an
inspector general be sent from Richmond.
\a., to inspect e\ ry garrisoned post, hos- j upon such
p'tal. arsenal, quartermasters’ and com- j intern perm.
d that dreams were sent
ny the gods, often for purposes of de
ception Plati av< redence to t
taut they are sent as divine manifesta
tions. and again tie represented them as
illustrating the dominant mental impulses
and habits, depending for their character
nditions as temperance or
in the indulgence of appe-
President Palma, in His Home.
island, that he purchased arms, and
wrote hundreds of articles designed to
prevent the ause of Cuba I lib re to the
Amur: an p-nple
HIS NEIGHBORS WONDER.
Central nYUey had only half believed,
but i w when it saw ball the gaze of
the whole world directed to itself, and
read tint Palma was to be the first chief
magistrate of the Cuban nation, it re
solved that hi
In triumph.
old friends and neighbors, and set out to j
j show the world that Cuba could make j
! proper use of its new-found independence j
i Perhaps at that time, no -one, least of j
all, Palma himself, entertained doubt#
| that the outcome would be a success. J
I Tiie new leader seemed to have all the
i natural equipment. He had spent a life- |
j time in the cause, hr was popular, he
knew tiie country, its population and all
its problems, and he Ifad that pride and
liould take his depart,iri ; j oy in tho lina q triumph of Cuba that
; augured well for his ability to administer!
| its affairs.
Trained in the law. he had spent his
earlier lift looking after estates lett him
bv his at her. But comfort aid not weight
with hii wi ll lie heard the call for'
Cuban freedom. lie became identified;
with the revolutionary party, and front j
i hat day ti i independence was achieved-
ne'er let up in ids battle against*
missaries’ office, and wherever lie finds j
an able-bodied man in these places per
forming any duties that a wounded or in- |
valid soldier can perform let the said j
inspector have the power to pond the said ,
man to the field. This measure will gi ’c
us at least fifty thousand men and ire- j
vent any further call upon the workln B
men of the Confederacy. A SOLDI EH.
BATTLE AT KNOXVILLE.
The Ciiattaac- ga oe^i p.-unened the j
fpllowing item of nows:
■YVe stated in yesterday's paper that
Fast Tennessee had been again visited
by a Yankee force under General Carter,
andi that they had been seen near t
r.oir's Station. From that point they
went towards Knoxville, and at 9 o'clock
tit". Numerous modern philosophers
have insist* d that we constantly dream
while uslei-p. the mind being always in
action. But this seems to he almost ix-
clusively a metaphysical theory, while
the physi logical view is that dreams
arise largely- from conditions of the or
gans, the muscles, the nerves; from pre
vious impressions, anc the like causes.
One experimenter found that leaving
his knee exposed when he went to sleep
caused him to dream of riding in a dili
gence. during which occupation the knees
at the task of weeding among
rn which had been planted in a
irehard. The ground v.-ns new.
■red with stumps, so that it was
le to reacli uli of the
weeds with the plow
It*- worked v.-itli a sharp hoe. to say
nothing of a keen appetite Tt was in
the month of July, and the weather was
Ists often eon- intensely hot: wherefore h<- wore no foot
covering. At sunset lie dropped his hoe
n an unfinished row, and went to supper.
After the meal he went to bed, and slept:
is soundly as a tired boy should. Ke
--H.-1 e. illlgeiS I . , , ...
, dreamed that the next day had come. ,
soon: tines' anf ] j, r had taken up his work where it
g.iin visions, was dropned th<» liic! t before. Soon he.
-olds of thei came to two small stumps, standing close!
'ogether and surrounded by a thick
growth of grass and noxious weeds, i
While lie was engaged in cutting them
away a black viper sprang out and,
struck him on tlie upper part of bis foot.
The dream awakened him, and he die- i
tinetly felt a pain in the foot that lv
thought had been bitten. But he al
most Instantly fell asleep again, and the
next morning remembered nothing of the
dream until he reached the field, took :
ur> his hoe, and started to go to work.
There, immediately before him. were the
two stumps, surrounded by grass and
weeds, presenting a perfect p tt ire of
what ho had seen in tiie dream. The
boy shuddered with fear, and took a
hasty step backward. Then advancing
he cautiously moved his hoe over the
tops of the entangled weeds, and under
neath saw. coiled and darting out its
tongue rapidly, a large black viper, ready ;
to strike.
With a ouiek and well-aimed blow of
the sharp hoe he dispatched the veto- |
mous reptile, quite as deadly as the i
dread rattler, 'and. as he thoroughly be- j
lieves to this day, albeit he is more than I
highest becausi
power lias bee
most distr
medicine, you
Sold by druggi
-dollar sizes.
Swamp-Ki.
and a hoi
sent absot
Dr. Kiln.,
When wri
you read i
’until Sun
mistake,
Swamp-Ro
and the a
every bott
itim,
tad ,
It stands
able eura-
thousand#
remedv.
It. bo it
: m!s-
"N’o.
are opt to become cold. Many made, •
many experiments by going to sleep and; three score and ten, save-t his life,
having an assistant apply some slight "TV hat was it. lie repeated. -
stimulation or tit.ilation to parts of his|a providential Warning of impending
body, which usually caused him to dream, i danger. T have often heard of other in
When tickled on the lips he dreamed of stances in which people yielded t.. the
being cruelly tortured; that plasters were; impressions made by dreams, or mental
ANOTHER PRESENTIMENT
that had
rested bv
■arried to
was held
he re
turn tn
ir-resist;
In tin
hied in
: unit-.I to the United States and then be-
1 -.line postmaster general of the •Repub
lic of Honduras.
The Spanish government had meantime
confiscated Palma's estates in Cuba, and
as there was no prospect that lie could
return to his native land, ho conceived
| he plan, after his retirement from the
Honduras postmastership of going to
some inland town in the United States,
and starting n school for Cuban boys. He
•hose Central Valley.
WORKING FOR FF.EEDOM.
During the quiet years that Faima
spent in Central Valle.', he still worked
for Cuban freedom with unflagging zeal.
He was younger tiie-, and would have •
gone to the front and fight, but his
: compatriots recognized that he was not a
, man of blood and had no especial equip-
merit as a soldier, iie could do the cause ,
more good by looking after tis American
interests, and tailing care of financial ‘
j problems constantly arising.
As president of tiie Cuban Junta he dt- j
reeled activities in a dozen little known !
lines, and yet so great was his poise that
. only Cubans knew tiie services the little
schoolmaster was rendering. He had. J
though miles away from the battlefields. ■
gained such a reputation union if*rr. peo- ;
pie that when the war was over and j
Cuban freedom assured and the presiden- |
tial election came, he distanced all the j
soldiers, and was chosen president by a :
big majority.
flic morni
dinner wi
■ jrurney j
I One aft
work, the
i He tried
I harder, bu
; his ax oi
' ftom the
intention
•then came
, shall maki
j will laugh
' work just
i But by t
i the log in
j such firm
shouldered
i Arrived
session oi
eselt.
if I k
thougl
- he ha
• “fool
of hirr
by working the
down. He. threw*
lor and retu-ned
hopping with th"
Lately home, but
* what a fool 1
nd how my wife-
sc several hours'
it—a fool whim.”
I finished cutting
whim” had taken,
that he again
; looking
The Palma Family.
miles around gave itself up to a grand | Perhaps now
sadness Palma. r<
demonstration in his honor.
The community suddenly awakened to
he discovery that for years it had un
wittingly had in its midst a great man.
It had "ften heard whispers that the
little schoolmaster was a big factor in
< ,’uban affairs, that he w s at the head
of important secret, movements having flags, those of Cuba and the Unilec
for their aim the freedom of Cuba that j States intertwined, and pictures of Palm.-
he saw big leader
he raised lends for purusing
in Washington, that '
ar on the *
It is not improbable that instead of
being an aid to iiis administration of af
fairs. Palma’s simple habits of iit'e were
: detriment.
Like ail the Spanish people, the Cubans
hen prominent citizens ] j iav0 a love for and a fear of splendor,
terms of lavish praise, ! Palma had lived in simplicity at ventral
Valley. Being- president of Cuba did not
change, his ideas, and lie planned iiis life
on a scale that Jefferson might have ad
mired. He did occupy the palace that
had been the headquarters of a long line
of Spanish captains during the day? of
Castilian supremacy, but he removed
wore on every side. Then Palma, with J much of the elaborate furnishings,
tears in hi s eyes, said goodbye to his | In the summer time he took up Ids
calls that day, w
referred to him in
whena parade a milt long, with fife and
drum corps, bands, red-shirted firemen,
hundreds of school children and compa
nies of grangers, paid its noisy tribute.
The little village was trimmed with
esterdaj morning tiiey were met uy the
small garrison and citizens of that city,
a short distance this side. The action
t once i-emmenced, an,j continued for
Iiree hours, when the enemy were »-
pulsed, and retired from the field, going
in the direction of Strawberry Plains
bridge on the East Tennesso and Vir-
j g.'nia railroad. Dispatches to this city
; represent the fight lo rave been despe v -
i ate. The enemy’s force amounted to
I between four and five thousand, consist-
' ing of mounted infantry, cavalry and ar-
: Cilery. Our force comprised MeClimg's
. Battery, a small force of Confederate
troops and the citizens of Knoxville and
that vicinity. Wo have nothing as *o
the killed' and wounded on either side,
except that Captain Me Hung, of Me-
CluH’g’s battery, wa= hided. The enemy
left their killed and wounded on the fie’d
| Ixiter.— At a late hour last night w*-
. learned that it was Liuetenant MeClung.
i of the ordnance department, who wn
i killed, and that we only lost one otho-
j man killed and six wounded. The Yin
kees in their retreat abandoned filly
itorses.
President Palma’s Old New York Home
to him
1 then rudely torn impressions that came in the
j ptesentiments, thereby saving t
r may lie tiie cause of dreams 1 from disaster or death."
form of
elves
a way.
What
there will always be people to believe
that tiiey have vastly more significance
than : verindulgence in mince pie. or
lying in an uncomfortable position.
In the course of a search for different! Washington counties, in the latter, close
material tiie writer recently came upon! ti the present site of Johnson City
two interesting cases of warning by One night he dreamed that he was out
dreams, and one of presentiment,
A DREAM AND A TRAGEDY.
About the year 1840 a well-to-do
farmer lived near the line of Carter and
trained a
t uvid enj,
lid of hii
dog. which was sr
demanded, he tost.il
the uninvited guest
that if she had es
and witl
his house in the pos-
iken Indian and his
pointing a loaded gtn.
iby, -.chile the squaw
is she locked on, 1r
lyment of the fun.
- axe and a faithful
vage when occasion
y rid his premises of
i. His wife declared^
■aped death by gun-
uuld soon have>
danger In all three instances being from
snaKes.
The facts regarding the first dream and
the presentiment, and what followed, are
so we!! attested by such reliable wit-
shot she believ
died of fright.
But after all, it is certain that only a
very small per cent of dreams and o-e
sentiments hit the mark. As Thackery
Of t resentiments which soma
people are alfivnys having, some surely
must come right."
THE KINDEST THING. ~' 1
Ranter—I thought this paper was
freindly to me
Editor—So it is. What’s the matter
now?
Ranter—I made a speech at the ban-
.ipturned tree suaii quet last night and you didn’t print a
dream. Let us see if tho line of it.
’ j Editor—Well, what further proof did
,-ou want of our friendship?
HOW YANKEES GOT MORRIS IS
LAND.
j The X"\v York i . . pit'll;-died a 1- ng
tetter during the war ghi -z a > accoun
I ,.f how the yankees got fot thold oi
' Morris island. In th, letter the w.-,;-:
j said;
•General Gilmore has awakened th,
i department front its lethargy. Takii ,
j Folly island as the base he has com-
i meneed siege opt-rations against t i.iu,
j ton which bill fair to result si
! The batteries or. the southern
j of Morris island were captur
! morning of the i^t.ii
! troops now occup
threatening Fort \
\ Point batteries, i
j the northern extre-
entrance to the he, -
“Morns' island . •
island by a r.crrox
' house inlet. On tin
Stomach trouble is not really a sickness, but a
symptom. 11 is a symptom that a certain set of
nerves is ailing Not the voluntary nerves that,
enable you to walk aud talk and act—but the
AUTOMATIC STOMACH NERVES over which your
mind lias no control.
I have not room here to explain how these
tender, tiny nerves control and operate the stom
ach. How worry breaks them cown and causes
indigestion. How misuse wears them out ai.d
i an-is dyspepsia. How neglect may bring on
kidney, heart, and other troubles through sym
pathy. I have not room to explain hew thi sv
n rves may be reached end strength, ned and
vitalized and made stronger by a remedy I si eru
tears iu perfecting—now known by physicians
and Druggists every where as L>r. £>hoop’sRer tor-
ii’ i(Tablets or Liquid.) I have not room to
exp! tin ho:v this renied.’. by removing the cause,
usually puts a certain end to indigestion, belch-
ctromity Inc heartburn, insomnia, nervousness dyspep.a.
on O.e AH of these things i.r* fully explained in the book
I wiil s'-nd you free when you write. Do not fail
1 . ‘to send for the book. It tells how the solar
•<* island and are plexus governs digestion and a hundred other
r and Cummings’ things every one ought to know—for all of us. at
arc situated a* ?’»ne time or other have indigestion. With the
And command tii,a
and Fort Sumter.
,a.rated from Folly For the free book
n „,i T i„!,| and the Health
nn 1, cell, d bt 0 iu Token you must ad-
>oint of land, lor dr*> B s Dr. Shoop, Box
>kl will send free my "Heaith Token”—an
intended passport to good health.
the last low weeks, vur troops have been K*’Sp?av.ineAVis. State
S busily engaged In building sand batteries which book you want.
\ and mounting heavy guns right under the Dr Shoop’s Restorative Tablets—give full
Book 1 on Dyspepsia.
Book " on the Heart.
Boole JSon theKidney*.
Book 4 for Women.
Book 5 for Men.
BooktSouHncumutism
in a field, and, on moving some dirt from
around the roots of an overthrown trey,
saw a large rattlesnake, coiled and realy
to strike. He tried to iiit it with a stick,
but it sprang and sunk Us fangs in trs
neck, causing his almost instant death.
When tie awoke in the morning the
dream seemed sc> like a terrible reality
! that he felt impelled to tel! it to a near
relghbor.
“Go with me.” he begged. “I know
exactly where
as I saw in th
| snake is there.”
j They went and found the reptile, coded
j just as he had seen it in his sleep.
“No,” said he, ”a part of my dream
has come true, but I’ll see to it that the
last and worst part does not come tc
1'i.ss. I will kill the monster."
"No." said his neighbor, "don’t risk
that. Let me kil! it."
"I uni the one to do the killing and
prove that the kilter part of the dretm
was false," replied the farmer, ami arm- i
ie.g- himself with a stout stick he -ad- •
.one - . took deliberate aim and struck,
bu; while h< was In the act his fo't '
slipped on a small round stone, lie stum- |
bled, missed, and the snake sprang at i
him. It struck him in the neck, near j
tlu jugular vein, and he was dead before :
his neighbor could get nlm back to his i
heme.
FOREWARNED.
Andrew Lowe was for many years - j
justice of the peace in Rhea county. ;
lower east Tennessee. But ho first ~et- j
tied at the head of the Pruned Sequatch!' j
valley, across the mountain known as
Walden’s ridge, it was his custom while !
Sura Cure
For Sore Eyes
Grateful Patrons Tell of Almost Mira
culous Cures of Cataracts, Granulated
Lids, Wild Hairs, Ulcers, Weak,
Watery Eyes and All Eye Diseases
—Send Your Name and Address with
Two-Cent Stamp for Free Trial Pack
age.
Tlit ou rep being mad*
•* "■ ■' •' lOMt V. c\cI>
: ! >ontediy restored
to ^sigbt poi sons nearly
' most instantly with tiie
rise of this magic rx’medjr.
Weak, watery eyes arc shared m t single mg.n and
Quickly restorctl to perfect iiealth. It has repeal
eflly curi' i Wiif»ru -ill otinv renn dies and ali doctor#
tailed. It is indeed a magic remedy and l am
int, thero to turn Ills stock out Oil t.io j glad to give this nee trial to any sufferer Irom sore
Scene in Havana on President Palma's Inauguration Bay.
guns light under the
‘ noses of tiie rebels, and wit’nui 800 yards three weeks’ treulrrent. Each form—liquid or
. of their works on Morris’ island. The tablet—has equal merit.Druggistseverywhere,
i work was all performed under cover of
j the night, and so quietly that the rebels
I had no suspicion of our movements.
! Screened from observation by the na-
: tore of the ground, hundreds of men were
; engaged night after night, silently arid
j industriously throwing up earthworks
and mounting heavy guns so near to the
j enemy that a loud word migiu have re
vealed the work. Shortly before daylight
j brush would he so disposed as ta eon-
! ccal the work of the previous night, with-
Dr. Step’s
Restorative
mountain to range during the spring.
: ummer and autumn months.
lie and his wife had long been -planning
a visit to relatives in Rhea and Monroe
counties, and it had beer, decided best
i to drive the horses to the farm before
| tie/ left. It udis his intention to go
i alter them :iie day before the one fixed
j upon for the start.
: When that morning came he said + o
i his wife. "Jennie, I have singular pre-
! sentiment that if I go on the mountains
| today I shall be bitten by u rattlesnake
■ and die. Suppose we postpone our trip
I for a day.”
any eye trouble.
Hundreds bate tiirown away ‘heir glasses after
using it a week. Preachers, teachers, doctors, law
yers, engineers, students, dressmakers and all who
use their eyes under SSagM
Lotion a ;afe, sure and quick reli« ^ If you bav*t
*< r»! eyes or any eye trouble, write me today. I cm
in earnest in making my otter or a ir v trial bottle
*»f *.ii4 lotion. It is the qnlj positive urc tor cots
met known, and I am glad 10 furnish proof in many
well-proven and authentic* cases whore it has cured
cataract after the « octors said that only a danger
ous and expensive operation would save the sight.
If you have eye trouble of any kind you will make
a serious mistake it \ u go t
free offer of this Magic Kye Lotion. Address, wit!*
vtamp. Prof. Herman T. Schlegel, I2ic> Mackinaw
B-dg.. Phicago, und you will receive !>y reruni mail,
prepaid, a trial bottle of his magic r. nwdj that haa
“His wife did not much believe in pre- ] restored hundred# to sight.