The Adel news. (Adel, Ga.) 1886-1983, December 14, 1900, Image 4
.tlment-
short-
d cage
io anl-
i, heat,
r 1th out
a stroke
C.ll..tobl»
r-sss two kind, of style to
s, hu are the y?’’
, 'Well, the
kind you put cn with
”° U ° W£i ' and kind you put
looney you .’’-Puck.
-
Prosperity For 1901 .
Indications everywhere point to great
Riga prosperity of for the coming year. This is a
country, a healthy nature. The success of a
as well as <rf an individual, de~
ponds upon health. There can be no health
stomachi^weak. tronTutTtry Hostetler's It you have any
which .stomach
■ biliousness. curess Obtain dyspepsia, indigestion
our Almanao for
It contains valuable information.
f ■eon Bisk.
“HI walk backward down the cellar stairs la
the dark 111 see future hu-band." 5
i ^j ,Il8ens0 ' yba’Hjbe more likely to see your
The Best T’(%*cription for Chilli }
P t7 er 18 a bottle of f i MOVE'S
CHILL lOKtC. it 1* simply iron and quinine fa
» tasteless form. No cure— uo pay. Prices).}.
S Jrnado m*m dreadful §**>.H,. mistake p-ck.i. night.” .
wa^wMitr a last
t
^ intoacnar-ch btzzir."
satesiman in each southern state
*
Of Course.
“It io be an a tual fact that an Indlau
it Didn't Longfellow make Mtune-
ladelphl. Press.
asms SSSr
Best For the Bowels.
No matter what alls you, headache to a
cancer, bowels you will never get well until your
nature, are put right. Cascarcts help
produce cure you without a gripe or pain,
lust 10 easy natural movements, cast you
oeuts to start getting yomr health
“*3*1 gehaYflt, -^OascABExa $ut up In metal Candy boxa*^every Cathartic, the
let has O.C.C. tab¬
Imitations. 8tmJpwi-w ft. Beware of
Logic.
fatal, Bystander—Poor fellowl One of his wounds is
I beLere!
Policeman-So It is. but the other wan ain’t;
ao ho has on avert chance.
If you want ‘good digest’on to wait up¬
on bar your of appetite” you should always chew
a Adams’ Pepsin Tutti Frutti.
Game Along the Hoad.
"Did you have fun hunt! ug?”
“Yes; be; fore w« got out o >f: ,.i wn Hlttem shot
a plate-glass window
WHY MRS. PINKHAM
Is Able to Help Sick Women
When Doctors Fail.
How gladly would men fly to wo¬
man’s aid did they but understand a
woman’s feelings, trials, sensibilities,
and peculi ar organic disturbances,
things are known only to
■women, &i and the aid a man would give
is not at his command.
To treat a case properly it is neces¬
sary to know all about it, and full
information, many times, cannot be
given by a woman to her family phy-
il
Mbs. g. H. Chappell.
sician. She cannot bring herself to
tell everything, and the physician is
at a constant disadvantage. This is
why, for the past twenty-five years,
thousands of women have been con-
noing their troubles to Mrs. Pinkham,
and whose advice has brought happil
ness and health to countless women in
the United States.
Mrs. Chappell, of Grant Park, Ill
wW portrait we publish, advises ali
suffering ham women to seek Mrs. Pink-
s advice and use Lydia E. Pink-
e»^\S^SS"o°4e and womb , she, therefore, speaks a 'vS from
knowledge, ££rj, and her experience ought
therS ^o^hdenee. Mrs. Pink-
‘“ d
■ Bull’s Cough
Conquers ------ • —ugh or cold at once. Kt/flin
Snppe and croup, consumption, bronchitis.
ssc.
M /
jpE
•y
•cjMce the best results
^eptabie or grain, the
.used must contain
lotash. For partic-
■l pamphlets. We
te.
I WORKS,
is* York.
---
IMPURE UUnCi a?>
t ig
BIDS FOR WARSHIPS
Are Opened In Office of Seoretary
of the Navy In Washington,
EVENr WAS ONE OF SBEAT INTEREST
Eight Bidders Show Up and the Figures
of Bach are Well Within the Limit
of Co.t Allowed By Congress.
A Washington special says: Never
since the birth of the new navy has
there been 6uch a gathering of shin
builders and metal kings ns were as-
•B«8$bled in the office of the secretary
of the navy at noon Friday to witness
the opening bids for the amount of the
naval construction which Secretary
Long denominated as the greatest in-
event this or any other coun¬
try had ever seen, involving the plac¬
ing of contracts of about §59,000,000.
The secretary left the cabinet meet-
ing to presidejBi the ceremony, and
associated witRRim were the chiefs of
the naval bureaus, while among the
spectators were representatives of
prominent firms and others identified
X neiVWere eight bltiue , and most
of the bids were well within the hunt
°j. ships. co8t ~l The ovrti notable t h i C 7 feature lg , rCKH was for the
attempt on the part of the younger and
smaller concerns to break the line of
the old organizalions which have con¬
structed all of the heavy vessels of the
new navy np to this time.
Because of ebaruges made in the
specifications by the bidders, the gen-
oral tendency of wMch is In consider-
ably reduce the equipment of the
ships, it is not possible to tell which
of the bids are actually the lowest.
The battleship bids ns read are:
Cramp & Sons, one sheathed and
coppered, 83,600,000.
Newport News company, oue sheath¬
ed and coppered 83,593,000; one un¬
sheathed
Fort river works, one for $3,580,000,
or two for $3,555,000 each, all sheath¬
ed and coppered. Without sheathing
one for $3,640,000, two for $3,405,000
each. A bid also is submitted for two
more at the same price under the act
of 1900.
John H. Dialogue & Sons, one
sheathed and coppered, $3,400,000;
one without sheathing, $3,490,000.
Another at the same figure under the
act of 1900.
Bath Iron Works, one sheathed
and coppered, 83,500,000.
New York Ship Building Company,
one sheathed and coppered, 84.200,-
000, or two at 84,175,000 each. With-
out sheathing, ouo for 84,100,000, or
two for 84,075,000 each. This firm
offers to reduce the time limit of com-
pletion sixmonths.
Moran & Co., Seattle, one
sheathed and coppered $3,865,000 or
two sheathed $3,490,000, Without
sheathing, one for $3,697,000 or twe
for $3,586,000 each. Bids also are
made for two more at the same price
under the act of 1900. This firm also
offers to reduce the time limit about
six months.
Union Iron works, one unsheathed,
$3,400,000.
A naval board will consider the bids
and report upon them.
The acts of congress limit the cost
of the cruisers to $3,600,000 each, and
of the battleships to $4,250,000 for the
sheaflled and $4,000,000 for the un-
sheathed.
Secretary Long expressed himself as
pleased with the result of the bidding
and that the bids were very liberal
The bids were for five new battle-
ships and six armored cruisers, aggre-
gating a total displacements of 154,- ’
000.
Of the battleships, namely the Penn-
sylvauia, New Jersey, Georgia, Vir-
ginia and Rhode Island, three are to
be sheathed and coppered and will
carry super-imposed turrets; the other
two are to be unsheathed vessels, hav¬
ing “quadrilateral arrangement” of
eight inch turrets.
M ill Be *«Captai«” Bontelie.
The bill authorizing the appoint¬
ment of Representative Boutelle, of
Maine, as a captain on the retired list
of the navy upon his resignation from
congress fi hy was favorably reported Fri-
ft y the house committee on naval
affairs, over which Mr. Boutelle pre¬
sided until his present affliction.
NEW LINE OPENED.
Hie South Carolina Bailroad Commission
Bide Over the “short Cut.’*
A Columbia, S. C., dispatch says;
In fifty-eight minutes the special train
of the railroad commission ran over the
52 miles of Southern “short cut” from
Allendale to Hardeeville Friday. The
time between Columbia and Savannah
will be lessened twenty-five minutes.
The Southern has arrauged with the
Central of Georgia to use its lines and
terminals in Sayannah for freight and
the Plant lines for passenger trains.
ARRESTED AT GRATE.
Mourning Widow la Charged With the
Murder of Her Husband.
While attending her husband’s
funeral at New Virginia, la., Thurs¬
day, Mrs. John Hosack was ai rested
at the cemetefy charged with his mur¬
der. She was placed in jail at Iu-
dianola. She took her arrest calmly
but protested her innocence.
Hosack, who was a well-to-do farm¬
er, was killed with a blow on the head
whin sleeping beside his wife. Mrs.
Hosack claimed to have found her
basbfuid dead.
D£ WETS U ItiiO U N DED.
Boer header Will Bt* Lucky If He Use ape*
This Time.
Ger Alices ra! Dewet from Cape Colony to be state that
daugerous T appears in a most
position and to need all his
stra tegy to extricate his force. With
mg British umns on three sides
[ two swol
A
PA tSE SUBMITS REPORT
Agreed Upon By Way. and Mean* Com¬
mittee Catting War Beteno. T**e*.
A Washington dispatch sa-J’s: Cbau’-
man Payiifr, of the ways and means
committee, Friday submitted the re-
port of that committee sigtied by ail of
the Republican members in favor
the bill reducing the war revenue tax¬
es about 840,000,000. The report
says, in part:
“While the war for which these ad¬
ditional taxes were levied is ended,
the train of extraordinary expendi¬
tures has not terminated with the close
of actual hostilities.
‘‘According to the report of the sec¬
retary of the treasury, the receipts for
the fiscal year ended June 30. 1900,
were 8660,595,431, while the expendi¬
tures were 8590,068,371, showing a
surplus of S79,527,060. He also esti-
mates the receipts for the fiscal year
ending June 30, 1901, at 8687,773,252,
and the expenditures at $607,773,258,
which would leave an estimated sur¬
plus of $80,000,000. ending June 30,
For the fiscal year
timates 1902, the the secretary of at the^treasury S714,633,Q42, es¬
revenue
and the expenditures at $69u,374,804,
leaving an estimated surplus of only
820,258,237. It will be seen that for
1902 there is an estimated increase in
the revenue of §29,000,000 over the
previous penditnres year, of nearly and an $83,000,000.’ increase of^ ex-
©LEOMAUUARISE BILL PASSED.
The House Favors Grout Measure By a
Vote of 196 to 9!«.
A Washington special says: The
honse Friday passed the Grout oleo¬
margarine bill by a vote of 196 to 92.
The bill as passed makes all articles
known as oleomargarine, butterine,
imitation butter or imitation cheese
l . , . „„„ _ fof - __ . _ - f ___
rans P or 6
for °ousumpu,m OT n r sal.e sale suhieet subje.* to to th« the
P»'>™ P«™* «* a .tot
T. b,lt I'™™ 11 ” 111 t,,o!e or t r ltory
from forbidding the transportation or
sale of such product w hen produced
and sold free from coloration in imi¬
tation of butter.
The bill increases the tax on oleo¬
margarine colored in imitation of but¬
ter 2 to 16 cents per pound, and de¬
creases the tax on oleomargarine un¬
colored from 2 cents to J of a cent per
pound. interesting discussion
A long and
preceded the vote.
SOUTH GEORGIA CONFERENCE
Ofthe M. E. Church Held In Cuthbert
With Large Attendance.
The thirty-fourth annual conference
0 f the South Georgia Methodist Epis-
copal church was convened in the
Methodist church in Cuthbert with
the promise of being one of the most
important and successful sessions ever
held by that organization.
Enthusiasm was rife and the dele-
gates entered into the work of the
conference with a vim and energy
that was prononneed.
About three hundred and fifty dele-
gates—ministers and laymen—were in
attendance
One of the most important features
of the session will be the assignment
of the ministers to their charges. The
distinguished divine of Kansas City,
Bishop E. R. Hendrix, presided over
the conference,
TO SCENE OF CRIME.
Negro Cliar^ed With Assault Is Taken
Back to McD.innnxfa.
Jim Alexander, the Henry county,
Ga „ *» ne % TO ’ c ^ ar ge^ with an attempted
assault u P on Mlsa Lummis, near Mc-
Enough, aud sent to Atlanta for safe
keeping some time ago, was returned
to McDonough, Friday,
At the t,me of hia ca P tnr e Alexander
was at work OQ a farm Dear McDon-
ou ^ h * and was tak en to McDonough
aQ d placed in jail . there. Later a
crowd f ° rma d an< l i fe was learned the
negro would be lynched. He was
carried to Atlanta and placed in the
Tower *
CANDIDATES FOR STATEHOOD.
Move For Admission of Arizona and New
Mexico Inaugurated.
A conference fraught with much
promise for the people of Arizona and
New Mexico was held in Chicago
Thursday night.
Governor N. O. Murphy, of Arizona,
and Governor M. A. Otero, of New
Mexico,“were the two conferees and
immediately after the conference Gov-
ernor Murphy left for Wanhington to
inaugurate the campaign which has for
its object the admission of the two ter¬
ritories to Btatehocd.
CAN FIGHT Ia\ HENYER.
Board of Aldermen of Colorado Town
License Bint; Contests.
The Denver, Col., board of aldermen
has has passed an ordinance licensing
prize fights. The cost of each license
will be $250 for each performance.
Fight promoters have been at work
in the west evei since the death of the
Horton 1-w in New York trying to
make it possible to hold some of the
great championship fights in one of
the more important, cities. They failed
in Chicago and gradually worked fur¬
ther out until they reached Denver.
VIOLATED LOCAL OPTION LAW.
Colored Postmaster In Florida Charged
With Running Blind Tiger.
James E. Clark the negro postmas¬
ter at Eatonville, Fla., a town popu¬
lated entirely by the colored people,
has been arrested ou a charge of vio¬
lating tho local option law.
Clark is the leading citizen
practically the emperor of the town
It is not the first time that he has
been before the court on this charge.
He gave bond and is again bad
transacting Uncle Sam’s business at
bis regular dosL
THREE CHARGED WITH MURDER.
Outcome of m
Thanksgiving Day Tragedy
In Jacksonville, Fla.
A Jacksonville, Fla., special sayB:
As a result of the Thanksgiving trLg-
sdy, killing of Policeman Raley ^\nd
Chandler Brooks, the grand jarv/has
■ eturned three indictments for mwder
in tho first degree, two against n
fiaxter and one iointlv against
■
Sure Cure for Colds
When the children get their
feet wet and take cold give
them a hot foot bath, a bowl
of hot drink, a dose of Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral, and put them
to bed. They will be all right
in the morning.
Ayer's Cherry
Pectoral
will cure old coughs also; we
mean the coughs of bronchitis,
weak throats, and irritable
lungs. Even the hard coughi
of consumption are always
made easy and are frequently
cured.
Three sizes: 25c„ 50c., $1.00.
If your druggist cannot su ipply yon send us one
dollar and wo will express a large bottle to you.
all charges prepaid. Be e snr "re and give ns your
nearest express office. Addr __ess, J. C. AVEE CO.,
Lowell Mass.
Fashion in Furs.
For jackets Persian lamb is the
choice of the hour for those who can¬
not afford the seal, that is confessedly
the most beautiful of furs. Persian
lamb is like seal in that it is durable,
becoming and lends itself to close fit¬
ting and graceful lines.
Marten has returned to . the place
that it occupied years ago in public
favor. It is admirably adapted to the
high collar and wide rolling revers that
give such an air of luxurious comfort
to an otherwise simple costume. Sable
fox, which is merely fox dyed in imi¬
tation of sable, and mink also are
greatly liked for scarfs and «mnll
neckwear, , i he furs for ‘half
proper
mourning are chinchilla and ermine,
A fascinating chinchilla blcnse 1,
eugou and bolted with a band *of gold
and green salon.
as waistbands ou
sleeves. The collar is extremely high*
and the revere are so fail as to he al-
most ruffly. The galon enriches the
throat, likewise outside the collar, and
forms a stock at the front.
A close fitting broadtail coat has an
odd arrangement of black cloth ap-
piiqued over green velvet and em¬
broidered with green and gold. It
forms a modified Spanish girdle effect,
with upper edge battlemented. The
coat is lined \fith green satin, which
shows in the double revers. Large
buttons of onyx are used for the fast¬
ening, which is at one side.
A luxurious Newmarket of pulled
mink in sharply defined stripes covers
the gown completely, and is absolutely
simple in its lines. The collar is of
the deep shawl pattern, and sleeves
are ‘‘small bishop,” with ruffle effect
below the waistband. Such a garment
would be grotesque on a small woman,
but on a tall, stately figure is superb.
A turban of Persian panne in wood
brown tones has a brim of mink, aud
a side pouf of the panne is fastened
by a gold buckle.
A novelty in fur coats is an Empire
coat of mink, with brown velvet scal¬
loped yoke, deepening at the sides in¬
to a bolero effect. The velvet is richly
embroidered with different shades of
brown and gold colored silks. The
sleeves are bell and the muff is bag
shaped.
A still more striking novelty is of
cninenilia, and is quite indescribable
In shape. It suggests a graduated
cape with sleeves more than anything
else, and the fronts are turned back
in huge revers from
rangement „ f ermine. a -
° scalloped ruffles,
and tho e black velvet 1 picture hat has a
band of chinchilla bordering the crown
and the inner edge of the brim, with
an ermine head catching the two great
ostrich plumes.
The prices of these confections
range from $350 to $3,500. Furriers
say that the high cost Of furs is due
largely to the ., _. wish , Of . the ,, extremely .
.
rich, Who would rather nav 1 higher nigner
prices than ,, allow ,, their
favorite furs to
be “vulgarized” by even comparative
Cheapness. In point of fact ’ thev sav
it t nas hn<! hoon Deen fha the best ' '
season v. for „ trap—
ping in ten years, and immense num- uui
hero oers or nne skins . have , , i>/an brought
into the market.—New York ior a Trihnn. xnDune.
-—-
HARVESTING.
A little girl and her aunt, went for
a walk out on Union street the other
day, and as they walked the aunt
caught her skirt on the sharp edge of
her shoe heel and tore off several
inches of lace.
“Won’t you tear.it off for me, dear?”
she asked. “I cannot mend it now."
The accommodating little girl
dropped on her knee and for several
minutes there was a sound as of tear-
ing goods—really much more tearing
than was necessary to remove a piece
of lace only half an inch wide.
“Haven’t you finished yet?” finally
asked the aunt.
“Yes,” said the little girl, rising
wearily; “I was taking all this off. I
wanted enough for my doll’s skirt
while I was at it, ond the little bit-
you tore wouldn’t do.”—Memphis
Seimeter.
More Names Than Lives.
The cat is called kat in Danish and
Dutch, kati iu Swedish, chat In
French, katti or katze in German,
catus in Latin, gatto in Italian, gato
in Portuguese and Spanish, kot in
Polish, kots in Russian, cath in Welsh,
katb iu Cornish, catus in Basque and
ga z or katz in Armenian.
•V 4 1 HP SI P 8HF 9 f i V III V if? 1 W ■ II * p 0 9V II f J Gray w™ y
a Perfect Dressi ng and Restorer. P— \t&
An apt answer
The dangers associated with the
fishing Industry on the Newfoundland
banks are many and grave. Foremost
among them Is that the dories may be
upset while fishing, which Involves
the almost inevitable loss of their oc¬
cupants. Callous captains, secure
themselves from the necessity of j
going, frequently order their men out |
when the weather does not warrant 1
It, and disasters are the result. One
of these brutal skippers was aptly
answered last year by a bankman, of
whose courage or capacity there was
no question.
“Out with you,” shouted the Cap¬
tain. "Hurry up there. It’s a fine fish¬
ing day.”
"Oh, no, skipper,” replied the dory-
man. "It’s too stormy to-day for a
boat to fish.”
"Nonsense, man,” replied the skip-
pet. "If my old grandmother from
Provincetown was here to-day she’d
get her dory out.”
"Then, skipper,” said the man, “If
her grandson will come out with me
now I’ll haul my trawl.”
It Is needless to say no dories were
launched from that schooner on that
(late.—Philadelphia Ledger.
A CUBAN SUCAR PLANTATION.
E. F. Atkins, of Boston, is the owner
of a sugar plantation in Cuba, near the
town of Fergus, which is 13,000 acres
in extent, It employs 1,500 persons,
and on it there are two forts, 30 miles
of railroad belonging to the place,
three steam railroad locomotives,
many homes for thq white people and
the natives, a big sugar factory, and a
river which floats lighters loaded with
sugar from the plantation docks to the
ships on the coast. Last year it rais¬
ed 20.000,000 pounds of sugar, and its
owner expects to do much better this
year.
CURES BLOOD POISON.
Treatment Free.
Blood poison is the worst disease on earth
yet the easiest to cure when B.B.B. (botanic
® °d Balm), is i. u_ed. Many xr _____ hn\e pnup.es, „
spots on skin, ulcers, mucous patches, fall-
ing hair, bone pains, rheumatism, catarrh
..*« W-dta. S or„, *»,., nJ
don t know it s blood poison. Get Botaoio
LI"
drugstores. Ireatment of B. B. B. free by
r medical
advice , given. , Medicine sent at once, pre-
paid. B. B. B. makes blood pure aud rich.
Pointing the Way Out.
“What do you think Miss Popklns did when
I stayed late last night?"
“Wh.i?”
“She got up and hung an ‘Exit’ placard on
the parlor door.”
Good Position.
Trustworthy men wanted to travel. Experi¬
ence address no. - Peerless absolu'ely necessary. For particulars,
Tob. Wks., Ledford City, Va
Wing Repartee.
The Easy Mark—She said she had "other fl»h
to fry ” 1 wonder If she insinuated that 1 was
a tl sh?
The 8 ubrette—Impossible! ill lobsters are
crustaceous. Chicago News.
1 *> Care a Cold In One Day.
Take Lax*tivr 11 homo Quinine Tabt.kts. All
driiKglste W. refund the money tf It falls to cure.
E. oaovK’S si^natune is ou each box -is
Settled at Last.
May—Do you think one should marry for
lore or for money?
laperoH—My dear, love Is an excuse for
mai riage, but money is a Justification.
Tour Storekeeper Can Set . Von
Carter’* Ink or he can get it for you. Ask him.
Try it. in Car Ua.on. loads are tent annually waiter’s? to every
state the Do you buy
In the Wrong ChM.
‘‘Mrs Pheed-m’s boarders seem to be near-
ly .?^ students who belong to the normal class.”
os, but fhe tells me that their appetites
are a .buorinal.”
or nervous
o™.
Nprre 1>r K Restorer. lK Ku »*,Ltd.. $2 trial bottle ArchSt;.. and treatise Lima.. free.
- sei p».
Language.
a r0U8,ng eood footba!1 « ain rt
t
Dyeing Is as pimple as wnsbiDg Bold when by you all
u*© Futna# Fadeless Dies.
druggiata.
Sometimes Excusable.
First Boarder—A man shouldn't quarrel with
hia bread »n<l butter.
Second Boarder—Not unless he boards—Puck.
There t» more Catarrh in this Bection of the
country than all other diseases put together,
and until the last few years was supposed to bo
incurable. For a great many years doctors
pronounced it a local disease and presc Ibed
remedies, and by constantly falling to
cure with local treatment, a^r?h“etere\%X4 pronounced it in-
P
constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh » -e,
manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co , Totedo,
Ohio, la the only constltuti nal cure on tho
market. It is taken internally in doses f roin
10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on
the blood and mucous surfaces of the sy stem
They offer one hundred dollars lor any case
it{ B u 8 to cure. Send for circulars and testl-
monia’s. Address F. J Cekney & Co., Toledo,O.
Sold "7 Drucgists. 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
leetbiiig. softens the gmns. reduces Inflamma¬
tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 2 jc. a bottle
1 do EOt t»«i leTe Plso ’ 8 Car *\ for Consumption
Botkr. T?rtmty°sp^aK^ 8 lnd.,F“b. 15, 19 jo/
So Change In the Menu,
Star Boarder—I see that meat has advanced
‘“^“sourdropp- —That won’t bother us. The
leather market is firm.
WEfDEKR
Bi 11 m IU <4 TAKE THIS!
11 a My Bilious Friend,”
r said the doctor, “it i3 the best laxative
i
mineral water known to medical science.”
A glass of EnayadiJaaos
Wr will do more for a disordered stomach or a torpid liver
Wr than all the pills in the world.
it CURES CONSTIPATION AND BILIOUSNESS,
r Average Dose: One-half glassful on getting up in morning.
Vonr druggist or grocer will get it for you.
Ask for the full name, “Hunyadl Janos.” Blue label, recWfentre panel,
imported by Firm of ANDREAS SAXLEHNER, 130 Fulton St., N. Y.
MINISTER SHVED
Rev. Henry Langford entirely cured ef Nervous Pros*
trafion by Dr. Dreene’s Nervura Blood
and Nerve Remedy.
lit
v,
1
VW/A &
Si
&
•' v -
s/.
/;
/
z:
EEV. HEXRY LANGFORD.
«»ped Rev. Henry Langford, the eminent Baptist divine, of Weston, W. Va., has “For lust ea-
utter nervous and physical prostration. He is pastor of four churches. ten
years,” four he said, “I I have been nervous and growing worse all these years. During could be the last
or five years became so nervous I could scarcely sign my name so it read,
I was so nervous that I could not read my own sermon notes after they had been laid asida
awhile.
^ Lnd'^n^t Sv
hands and arms. I was so nervous that I could scarcely feed myself. In fact, my nerroui
.
‘You take two bottles of Dr. Greene’s Nervura blood and nerve remedy, and if you say it
,oa^»„u=h reiicf «». I hon E b. «o »«.
botu*. and oc»- i am wcaderfoUy teproved ta hceith uid in Oemsth. Dr. Oreeoe'. tier-
vura blood and nerve remedy did it. I can heartily and truthfully recommend it to the
sick. Too much cannot be said in praise of this splendid medicine. I say this for the good
of other sufferers from nervous and prostrating diseases who can be cured blood by this and remedy.
For myself, I am thankful to God that I found Dr. Greene’s Nervura nerfe
remedy, and for what it has done for me. ”
DR. GREENE’S OFFER OF FREE ADVICE.
Dr. Greene, Nervura’s discoverer, ■will jive hi* counsel free to all who
write or call upon him at his office, 35 West 14th Street, New York City. His
advice is from his great skill and experience and will shorten the road to
health. Thousands come to him and write to him constantly. Do not put off
jetting the right advice, if you are ill.
J. rv- INCH ESTER
f j “NEW RIVAL"
*
FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS
No black powder shells on the market compare with the “NEW RIVAL” In uni¬
formity and strong shooting qualities. Sure fire and waterproof. Oet the genuine.
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. New Haven, Conn.
A PROSPECTOR'S UNIQUE CLAIM,
The following unique claim is posted
on a mine in the Grand Encampment,
in Wyoming: “We found it, and we
claim it by the right of founding it.
It’s our'n. It’s 750 feet in every direc¬
tion, except southwest and northeast,
and there is 300 feet on each side of
this writin’. It's called the Bay Horse,
and we claim even the spurs, and we
don’t want nobody jumping' on this
Bay Horse—that’s what’s these trees
is around here for, and we’ve got the
same piece of rope that we had down
in old Missouri.”
Tjj e draught, of a vessel varies with
^ ^
ports draw from 15 to 27 feet, and
carry from 50,000 to 175,000 bushels,
FREE < OURSE GIVEN.- Posi¬
tions Guahantkbd by
$.yx)0dep'>sit. It. R Fake
Paid. Writf quick
Ga.-Ala. Bcs C OLT.EQB,
Macon, Georgia
Malsby & Company,
39 S. Broad St.. Atlanta, Ga.
Engines and Boilers
Steam "Water If cittern, Steam Pumps and
Penberthy Injectors,
lit
Manufacturers and Tlcalers In
SAW MILLS,
torn 31111s, Feed 51 ills, Cotton Gin Mac!,in
ery and Grain Separators.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
I ocks, Uniftlif’s Patent Hufgs, liirdsall Saw
Mill and JSneine Repairs. Governor*, Grate
Bars and a lull line of Mill Supplies. Price
and qualltr of crxids guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentfonlng this paper.
l« SHOES
UNION MADE
The real worth of W.
I.. lJoutflag #3.00 and
#3.50 shoes compared
with oilier makes is
Si.OO to #5.00.
Our #4 Gilt Kdge line
cannot ho equalled at
any price. satisfied Over 1,000,-
COO wearers.
WE *
USE y»\ One
FAST C01 q££ will positively ontwMf
fyelets two pair* of ordinary
V $3 or $3.60
Wo are the largest makers of m en’l #3
end 83.50 shoes in the world. W o make
and sell more 83 and 83.50 shoes than any
other two manufacturers In tho U* S-
The reputation of W. L.
best everywhere wasssiweas throughout the world. best
$3.50 the etamla-d hni »lw»y» b*«n $3.00
SHOL SHOE. _____
plscd to high for that their the Vfarct.
than «tp»ct they more get e'.Msrhcie. nxiiej
can
shoe* THE K>ld It KASO.V than other more make W J,. 1. Dougia. beeoiwe $.3 1 anu JBl *&Af
are any k«e*
AUK THE BEST. Your dealer diould
them | we give one dealer exclanre ule In e»cb town.
Take no wilntltutel Iniirt on having W. L-
If Deugha .hoe, with name and pnee for .tamped nd on oueet bottwm. to
your dealer will not get them yon. »
factory, enclosing price and 2Se extra plain for carriage.
State kind of leather, «lze, and width, or cap ta*.
Our .hoe. will reach you anywh-re. Catalomr l r*e.
W.L. HougU-a Shoe Co. Brockton, I Mf
^ ^ *Pj
FREE! CATALOG
*
SP0RTIN6 GOODS "
RAWLIN6S SPORTING
GOODS COMPANY,
620 l.oca«t St., 8T. LOUIS, Mo,
BOILER FLUEC
Pipe M Fittings
Six Car Loads io Stock.
Cut and Ship Quick.
7«i [BARD
Foundry, Mao|
Supply Stoi
m
** Booker Tl
Written by himself.® 9
are now making over
to sell to oolo ed peopn
tor terms, or send 24 < «l
at once. Please mentfl
J. L. NICHOLS & CO.,
DROPSYSrsJ of tvsthnoniaU and IO atayi
cases, fcoolt SSOH8. Box
I re*- Dr H. H. SBEEN B.