Newspaper Page Text
:
: . % V
ur at
.
CAPITAL.
id Doings of ths Offloloi
_ Washington that Mex
|g» and Guatemala have extended until
May 1, 1896, the time within whiofa
H» boundary lines agreed on* by re
IMrt treaty, shall be pot into effect.
JaHus Moth, United States consol
d Madgebarg, Germany, reports to
% department of state that the Ger¬
man beet eagor industry is now in a
m deplorable condition and nothing—
a*!* an increased bounty—will save it
bob serious loss, unless its unnatural
I MtUnsfeu be checked. Germany, Mr.
Moth says, will probably make an
ither attempt to abolish or regulate
Jse bounty system in Germany, but
... 11» doubts whether satisfactory on
a
dbntsnding in this way can be reached.
8ergeant-at-Arms Bright, of the
rte, has taken steps to secure the
utoement of the law prohibiting the
tnees vehicles from entering
Usds of the capitol building.
1 if f has long been e statute forbid
., the grounds
Uag the passage through vehicle
»f nay loaded wagon or any
Employing a business sign, but it has
I been ignored for so many yesrs that
f ft has virtually become a dead letter. ihe
Daring the Coxey excitement
inn invaded by probably a
thousand vehicles of all descriptions.
Deep Water la Harbors.
IdlMWHd Oraighil), chief of received the en¬
gineer corps of the army, has
MM very encouraging reports on the
“ 5 ^’ smeni of southern harbors. At
0M sj at Galveston reports oome
. have now between eighteen
nineteen feet of wqter where there
• originally bnt twelve feet. At
*0 MTifth the depth has been in¬
land from fourteen and a half
1 to twenty-four feet, snd it
: aptMHted • Sf that twenty-six feet will be
Autned before long. When work
(tlMgun at Gharleeton harbor there
ptett twelve feet's! low tide. The
p$r there now reports fifteen fee t,
M expects more when the jetties,
tab are now nearly Johns completed, are
Mod. In the 8t an increase
tfU fil* tWelrsand a half feet to eighteen
reported, except over the bar,
Hilda depth is expected there be
Otvtt Service Statistics.
>e forthcoming annual report of
tfafted States civil service 00 m
Ugh will show that tha whole sum
regularly employed in it
eervice of th ie country
150,000. Of theee, approxi-
1 one-fourth are in the elaed
vioe subject to to competitive
under the civil service
[ thoee in the unoleseified
sur ,000 ore laborers, 5,000 are
by the president eubjeot to
on by the senate, 1,500 are
ifislative 8,700 bran oh in of the the judioial goveru
id ore
The civil eervice sot excludes
date otal from number ole*eifloation^^^_ ofS po*i tions st¬
ir the extension o! loir, oivil eervioe
im March 14, 1894, to January
woe 8,184. Of these 5,587
led to the classified service by
on end 2,647 by
■ j classified but ex
set to competitive exsmi
elefer Patrol Dutj. -
artment bos de¬
bs revenue eatter
leutio coast from
rby ordering the
one and Forward
1 ' an. The reason
vement is that it
a closer lookout
from Cuba which
>w fever. At the
toe cutters will oo*
States steam
■venting filibuster
leaving th*
k In oonneo
k of these rev
duty, Surgeon
oed e letter to
is attention to
lion of yel
of
i arriving
A three rev
s inspect
ted for four
etors. to be
it-
■
f
»o*i« service will 1 '
POSTMASTERS’ SALARIES.
Some Change* Which Will Take Effect
July 1st.
A Washington special says: The fol¬
lowing changes in the classification of
postmasters* salaries, to take effect
July 1st, have bepn announced, the
changes being made on the basis of
postofflcC Georgia—Increase: receipts: Cordele, $1,200
to $1,500; Covington, $1,100 to $1,-
200; Dalton, $1,600 to $1,700; Fort
Valley, $1,200 to $1,800; Hawkins
ville, $1,200 to $1,300; TbomasviUe,
$2,000 to $2,100; Valdosta, $1,600 to
$1,700; Washington, $1,300 to $1,400:
West Point, $1,200 to $1,300.
Decreases: EatontoD, $1,100 to
$1,000; LaGrange, $1,600 to $1,500;
Marietta, $1,900 to $1,800.
Alabama—Increases: Athens^ $1,100
to $1,200; Evergreen,$1,000 to $1,100;
Greensboro, $1,300 to $1,400; Ozark,
$1,000 to $1,100; Pratt City, $1,200 to
$1,800; Tnscnmbia, $1,100 to $1,200;
Union Springs, $1,200 to $1,300.
Decreases: Bridgeport, $1,100 to
$1,000; Jacksonville, $1,100 to $1,000;
Marion, $1,400 to $1,300; New Decs
tur, $1,400 to $1,300.
South Carolina—Increases: Beufort,
$1,500 to $1,600; Bennettsville, $1,200
to $1,800;Darlington, $1,300 to $1,500;
Georgetown, $1,300 to $1,400; Green¬
wood, $1,800 to $1,400; Spartanburg,
$2,100 to $2,200; Yorkville, $1,200 to
$1,800. Marion, $1,100 to $1,000,
Decrease:
Tennessee—Increase: Bristol, $2,100
to$2,400;Clarkesville,$2,200 to $2,300;
Cleveland, $1,50040 $1,600; Covington,
$1,200 to $1,300; Greenville, $1,600 to
$1,700; Jackson, $2,200 to $2,300; Mc¬
Kenzie, $1,100 to $1,200; Maryville,
$1,100 to $1,200; Milan, $1,000 to $1,-
100; Murfreesboro, $1,700 to $1,800;
Sewannee, $1,000 to $1,300; Sbelby
ville, $1,500 to $1,600; Tullahoma,
$1,500 to $1,600.
Decreases: Dayton, $1,100 to $1,000;
Harriman, $1,700 to $1,600; Johnson
City, $1,700 to $1,600; St. Elmo.
$1,800 to $1,700; Trenton, $1,400 to
$1,800.
A PAPER COMBINE.
Manufacturers of Newspaper Forming
a Trust With Big Capital.
It has beoome known in Wall street*,
New York that some of the manufac¬
turers of paper for newspaper use have
been planning to form a combination
with a big capital. Their represen Wall tp
tives have been talking with street
mdto with reference to financial plane.
Some of those in the movement are re¬
ported to bo the Manufootarers* Paper
Company, represented by K. B. Futl
erton; the Fall Mountain Paper
Company, represented by a Mr. Rnsseli;
the Niagara Falla Paper Company and
the Glen Manufacturing Company.
There are also understood to be other
companies, fifteen or twenty in all,
mostly situated in New England and
New York, whioh would go in should
the projeet oome to a head. So far
nothing definite hat been settled.
There has been talk of a capitalization
ot $20,000,000 with $10,000,000 in
bonds. The combination, if formed,
would probably be e big newspaper
trust, and possibly, if its shares were
listed on the stock exohange, might
rival other big Industrials as a subject
for aotive speculation.
A TRIBUTE TO 8ULLIYAN.
The Old Chens pion and the New Cham¬
pion Are to Meet Once More.
On Thnredny, June 27, et Madison
Square Garden, New York oity, the
once mighty and invinoible “cham¬
pion of champions,” John L. Sulli¬
van, will be tendered what will prob¬
ably be the greatest tribute ever paid
to a pugilist, in tbe shape of a mon¬
ster testimonial. An elaborate pro¬
gram has been arranged, whioh will
surpass anything ever presented Dunn to
the sporting publio. Johnny The
will be master of ceremonies.
following pugiliatio stare have prom¬
ised to spar at the benefit: •
James J. Corbett, Bob Fitssimmone,
Tommy Byaa, “My Mysterious" Billy
Smith, Jack MoAuliffe, George Dixon,
Jimmy Barry, Peter Maher, Steve
O'Donnell, Jim Hall, Jo# Choyneki,
Dan Oreedon, Diok O’Brien, Jim Mo
Yey, “Shadow" Maber, Bob Arm¬
strong, “Brooklyn Jimmy” Carroll,
Frank Boaworth, Paddy Smith of Den¬
ver, “Young Corbett,” Pateey Kerri¬
gan, Jimmy Handler, Stanton Abbott,
“Kid” Lavigne, Ike Weir, Jack Shel¬
ly, Jimmy Gorman aad Jack Levy.
from Atlanta waited
npom Ftemdmt CS««laiM
the purpose of inviting him to be s pres
Statos
Uu
la
MM? ; ‘ 1 Are
i.jBtoTf‘n**|Vi
.V
___
■
I ■8 M* - - — - ..... ■ be¬ ■ ?
Another phase of ths relations
tween the railroad* and the fruit grow¬
ers of Georgia he* developed and he*
created • decided *tir in business cir¬
clet. It came in the shape of a circu¬
lar of the Southern Bail way and Steam¬
ship Association, which declared that
hereafter the minimum amount to be
•hipped in any car will be 24,000
pounds. This increase of about 20
means an
per cent in the rates upon peaches.
Heretofore the minimum has been
20,000 pounds, and the growers claim
that they have not been able to get
even that amount inn car. The aver¬
age, so experts declare, is but little
over 18,000 pounds. A number ot
these fruit growers express their views
very forcibly upon the subject.
“This simply means,” said one of
them, “an advance in the already ex¬
orbitant fruit rate of 20 per cent, net
to all points, both east and west.”
The fruit growers are busy arrang¬
ing to move their crops, and when
their attention was called to this cir-.
cular they expressed great surprise,
and did not mince ’words in giving
their opinions of this unforeseen ac¬
tion.
The circular referred to is as fol
lows*
^’Advance Notice 1,231. —The South¬
ern Railway and Steamship Associa¬
tion, Office of Commissioner, Atlanta,
Ga., June 8,1895.—Taking effect June
22, 1895. Please refer to R. C. circa?
lar No. 65, BerieB 1892-’93, flaming
rates on peaches, pears, grapes, etc.,
to eastern and western cities, and note
that the minimum carload weight is
changed to 24,000 pounds. resolutions
“In accordance with
adopted at the 122d session of the
rate committee, subject No. 12.
“Supersedes, in conflict, R, C. cir¬
cular No. 65, series 1892-93, and A-77.
“£. B. Si AHUM AN,
“Comm issioner. ”
FAILED TO GET TRUK BILLS.
South Carolina Unsuccessful In an Ef¬
fort to Prosecute.
Ths dispensary law bobbed up in the
court of sessions at Charleston Tues¬
day. Daring the morning the grand
jury were given a batch of bills by the
solicitor. Among these were six
against parties for the violation of the
dispensary law. On these Judge
Buchanan said that the jurors
should carefully consider the evidonce
against the accused and render
presentment according to the evidence.
They should not permit their preju¬
dice, if they held any against the law,
to influence their verdict. If the law
was an obnoxious one the strict en¬
forcement of it would be tbe surest
means of enlisting public sentiment
and thereby causing its repeal. On the
contrary, if they permitted their pre¬
judices to influence their presentment,
it would redound in favor 0 / the law.
In a short while tho jarors returned
and reported that they had been una¬
ble to find indictments against the fol¬
lowing parties, against whom bills had
been given them; Fritz Mollenhauer,
Henry Hemme, George F. Stenicken,
M. L. Clark, W. J. Bowen and Barney
Lovett. Assistant Attorney General
Townsend said that he was totally sur- 1
prised at the aotion of the grand jnry,
as the evidonoe in the cases above
mentioned preponderated against the
•a cased.
BISHOP TURNER RETURNS
Froi Afrlo’s Shores—Liberia the
Negro’s Paradise.
Bishop H. M. Turner arrived at
New York Saturday from Africa, vis
England, on the Cnoard steamer Etru¬
ria. The bishop has been in Africa in
the interest of tbe African Methodist
Episeopal church, of whioh he is a
bishop. He has visited Bathurst, Si¬
erra Leone, Liberia and otheir points
in Africa.
He says the Horsa, the steamer which
carried over 200 oolored emigrants to
Liberia from Savannah, Go., in March
last, arrived there safely and landed
tha eolonists at Monrovia, the capital
of the republio. Each head of a fami¬
ly was donated twenty-five acres of
good farming lafld.
The bishop says thet up to the time
be left—about the middle of May—
two very old members of the oolony
bad died, each of whom was sick be¬
fore leaving the United States, and
three infanta had died, but that the
other emigrants were apparently doing
well and were very hopeful. The
bishop highly indorsee the emigre** 00
movement. He says Liberia ie e rich
country, and the black men can there
rise to any distinction without being
hampered by reeeon of hie color.
GROWERS WILL ORGANIZE.
i <
th* fruit growers of the state bj th*
to be shipped in a gar. Ia fact, the
* et tbe way Me*
t herirte^^eu tkegr^wh
It looks to
ureef
9»
*4 the
is*'" 5 - '■"¥ -«|r
ii» MiiifiM 1 itinr —^' ••'•nBflU
s —* * J---- mmm, --
;
THS NOTED DIVINE-3
DISCOURSE.
,ii ...i—---—
Subject: “Woman . ’a Opportunity. _ .... .. ,,
Text: “She shall be called woman.”—
Genesis if., 23.
God, who can make no mistake, made man
and woman for a specific work and to move
in particular spheres—man to be regnant
in his realm; woman to be dominant in hers.
The boundary line between Italy Scotland, and Switz¬ is
erland, between England and
not more thoroughly marked than this dis¬
tinction between the empire masculine and
the empire feminine. So entirely dissimilar that
are the fieldsto which God called them
you can no more compare them than you can
oxygen and hydrogen, water and grass,
trees and stars. Ail this talk about the su¬
periority of one sex to the other sen is an
everlasting eler have waste scale of ink and delicate spelfth. that A he jew¬
may a so can
weigh the dust of diamonds, but where are
the scales so delicate that you can weigh in
them affection against affection, sentiment
soul against against sentiment, soul, thought world against agaiDSt thought,
a man’s a
woman’s world? You come out with your
stereotyped remark that man I is superior to
woman in intellect, and then open on my
desk the swarthy, iron typed, thunderbolted
Writings of Harriet Martineau and Elizabeth
Browning and George Eliot. You come woman’s on
with your stereotyped remark about
superiority to man in the item of affection,
but I ask you where was there more capa¬
city to love than in John, the disciple, and
Matthew Simpson, the bishop, and Henry
Martyn. the missionary? that
The heart of those men were so large
after you had rolled into it two hemispheres
there was room still left to marshal the hosts
of heaven and set up the throne of the eter¬
nal Jehovah. I deny to man the throne in¬
tellectual; I deny to woman the throne af
fectional. No human while phraseology will ever
define the spheres, there is £u intuition*
by which we know when a man Is in his
realm, and when a woman is in her realm,
and when either of them is ont of it. No
bungling legislature ought to attempt to
makea definition or to say, “This is the line
and that is the line,” My theory is that if a
woman wants to vote she ought to vote, and
that if a man wants to embroider and keep
house he ought to be allowed to embroider
and keep house. There are masculine wo¬
men and there are effeminate men. My
theory is that you have no right to interfere
with any one’s doing anything that is
righteous. Albany and Washington mig ht as
well decree by legislation how high a b rown
thrasner should fly or how deep a trout
should and plunge as to tryto seek ont the height
of depth of woman’s duty. The whole question
capacity the whole will settle finally the ques¬
tion, prepared subject. When a woman is
to preach, she will preach, and
neither conference nor presbytery can hinder
her. When a woman is prepared to move
In higheet commercial spheres, she will have
great influence on the exohange, and no
boards of trade can hinder her. I want wo¬
man to understand that heart and brain can
overfly any barrier that politicians may syt
up, and that nothing can keep her back or
Keep her down but the question of incapac
itv.
i was in New Zealand last year just after
the opportunity of suffrage had been oon
ferred upon women. The plan worked well.
There had never been suoh good order at
the polls, and tbe righteousness triumphed.
Men havq not made such a wonderful moral
success of the ballot box that they need fear
women will corrupt it. In all our cities man
hAs so nearly made the ballot box a failure,
suppose we let women try. But there are
some women, I know, of most undesirable
nature, who wander up and down the coun¬
try-having no homes of their own or for¬
saking rights, their own homes—talking well about their
and we know very that they
themselves are fit neither to vote nor keep
house. Their mission feeems merely to Hu¬
miliate the two sexes at the thought of what
any one of us might become. No one would
want to live under the laws that suoh women
would enact or to have cast upon society the
children that suoh women would raise. But
I shall show you that the best rights that
session; woman can own she already has in her pos¬
that her position in this country at
this time is not one ot commiseration, but
one ot congratulation; that the grandeur
and power of her realm have never yet been
appreciated; high that all that the she thrones sits to-day of earth on a piled throne
so on
top of each other would not make for her
a fbotstool. Here Is the platform on whioh
she stands. Away down below it are
the ballot box and the congressional assem¬
blage and the legislative hall, Woman
always has voted and always will vote. Our
great-grandfathers thought they were by
their votes putting Washington into the Pres¬
idential chair, No. His mother, by the
principles inculcated, she taught made him him, President. and by the It habits
she was
a Christian mother's hand dropping the bal¬
lot when Lord Baoon wrote and Newton
and philosophised Jonathan Edwards and Alfred thundered the Great governed of judg¬
ment to oome.
How many men there have been In high
sufficient political station stand who the would test to have which been their in¬
to
moral wife’s principle wa3 encouraged put had it not been for do
a voioe that them to
right and a wife’s prayer that sounded louder
than the olamor of partisanship? The right
of suffrage as we men exercise It seems to be
a feeble thl lug. You, and * Christian drop man, oome
up to the ballot box you ro ur vote,
Right offsoouring after you come* ot a street—and libertine or he a drops sot—
the the
his vote, and his vote counteracts yours.
But If In the quiet of home life a daughter by
her Christiaa demeanor, a wife by her in¬
dustry, a mother by her faithfulness, costs a
vote in tbe right direction, then nothing can
resist it, and the influence ot that vote will
throb through the eternities. is not that
have My other chief anxiety rights accorded then her, but that woman she,
by the grnoe of God, rise up to the apprecia¬
tion ot the glorious lights she already make pos
Firet. she has the right to
home happy. That realm no one has ever
disputed with her. Men may oome home at
noon or et night, and then tarry a compara¬
tively little while, but she, alt day It king, gov¬
erns it, beautifies it, sanctifies it. is with¬
in her power to make U the most attractive
place on earth. It Is the only calm I harbor
tethte world. You know as well as do that
this outside world and the world
are n tong ot jostle and contention.
The Who has a dollar struggles to keep it
Hi the who boa.it not straggles to Goins, get
up. ae down. Loosen.
ns. Underselling. Buyers
ran; about office, who
Struggle* keep trying to get ore
In trying to in; m Defalcations. out Pea
lea k Catastrophes, O woman, thank God
you have e home. and test vow _
■w
of ft
SsHSf but you sen,
Si as
to
«fff. is :
W
I X.
I
V rata
I
§ V
■i.
Mg
out that height and’depth ?£»&!£ and length and
^fflSAXlS^^H^E. What does want that is
right woman saeb realm?
grander than to be queen to a
Why, the eagles of heaven cannot fly across
that dominion. Horses, panting and with
lathered flanks, are not swift enough to run
to the outpost of that realm. They say that
the sun never seta upon the English EmpireT of
but I have to tell you that on. this realm
woman’s Influence eternity never marks
any bound. Isabella fled from the Snanisb
throne, pursued by the Nation’s anathema,
but she who is queen in a home will never
lose her throne, and death itself will only be
the annexation of heavenly principalities. idea
When you want to get your grandest of
of a queen you do not think of Catherine
Russia or of Anne of England or Marie
Theresa of Germany, bat when yon want to
get your grandest idea of a queen yon think
of the plain woman who sat opposite your
father at the table or walked with him
atm in arm down life’s pathway; some¬
times to the Thanksgiving banquet, some¬
times to the grave, but always together
—soothing your petty griefs, correcting
your childish waywardness, joining in
your infantile sports, listening to your even¬
ing prayers, toiling for you with needle or
at the spinning wheel, and on cold nighfs
wrapping you up snug and warm. And then
at last on that day when she toy in the back
room dying, and you saw harfake those thin
hands with which she had toilid for you so
long, and put them together in a dying
prayer that commended you to the God
whom she had taught you to trust—oh, she
was the queen! The chariots of God came all
down to fetch her. and as she went in
heaven rose up. You cannot think of her
now without a rush of tenderness that stirs
the deep foundations of your soul, and cried you
feel as much a child again as when you
on her lap, and if you could bring her back
again to speak just once more your name as
tenderly as she used to speak it you would be
willing to throw yourself on the ground and
ties the sod that covers her. crying,
“Mother! mother!” Ah! she was the queen
—she was the queen. Now, cau you
tell me......how many thousand miles a
woman like that would have to
travel down before she got to the
ballot box? Compared with this
work of training kings and queens for God
and eternity, how insignificant seems all
this work of voting for aldermen and com¬
mon councilmen and sheriffs and constables
such and mayors grand and presidentsl I have described To make how one
woman as
many thousands would you want of those
people who go in the round of fashion disgraceful and
dissipation, apparel going they as far toward be
as dare go, so as not to
arrested by the police—their behavior a sor¬
row to the good and a caricature of the
vicious and an insult to that God who made
them women and not gorgons, and tramping
life, on, down to temporal through and a frivolous eternat damnation. and dissipated
Your dominion is home, O Woman! What
a brave fight for home the women of Ohio
made some ten or fifteen years ago, when
they banded together and in many of the
towns andcities of that State, marched in
procession, and by prayer and Christian than
songs shut up more places of dissipation
wero ever counted! Were they opened
again? Oh, yes. But is it not a good thing
to shut up the gates of hell for two orthreo
months? It seemed that men engaged in the
business of destroying thi3 others did not know They
how to cope with kind of warfare.
knew how to fight the Maine liquor law, and
they knew how to fight theNntionalTemper¬
ance Society, Rnd they knew how to fight the
Sons of Temperance and Good Samar¬
the itans, but Hisera when Deborah took appeared his feet upon and
scene to
got to the mountains. It seems that
they did not know howto contend against
“Coronation" and “Old Hundred” and
“Brattle intangible. Street” and These “Bethany,” found they were ’hat
so very men
they could not accomplish much of the against cities
that kind of warfare, and in one
a regiment was brought out all armed to
disperse the women. They came down in
battle array, bnt, oh, what poor success! for
that regiment was made up of gentlemen,
and gentlemen do not like to shoot Oh, women
with hymnhooks in their hands. they
found that gunning for female prayer meet¬
ing was a very poor business. No real
damage was done, although there was threat
of violence after threat ot violence all over
the land. I really think if the Women
of the East had os much faith in God as their
sisters of the West had and the same reck¬
lessness of human criticism, I really believe
that in one month three-fourths of the
grogshops of our cities would be closed, and
there would be running through the gutters
ot the streets Burgundy and cognac, and
Heldsiok and old port and Schiedam
schnapps and lager beer, and you would
save your fathers and your husbands aud
your sons first from a drunkard’s grave and
seoondly from a drunkard’s hell. To this
battle for home let all women rouse them¬
selves. Thank God for our early home.
Thank God for our present home. Thank
God for the coming home in heaven.
One twilight, for after I had been I playing down
the children some time, lay on
the lounge to rest. The children said play
more. Children always want to play more.
And, half asleep and half awake, I seemed to
dream this dream: It seemed to me that I
was in a far distant land—not Persia, al¬
though more thAn Oriental luxuriance
crowned the cities; tropical nor fruitfulness the tropics, filled although the
more than
gardens; nor Italy, although more than
Italian softness filled the air. And I wan¬
dered around looking for thorns and nettles,
but I found none of them grew there. And
I walked forth, and I saw the sun rise, and
1 said, “When will It set again?” and the
sun sank not. And I saw all the people in
holiday apparel, and I said, “When do
they put on workingman’s swelter garb again the
ana delve in the mine and at
forge?” But neither the garments nor the
robes did they put off. And I wandered in
the suburb*, and I said, “Where do they
bury the dead of this great city?" And I
looked along by the hills where it would be
most beautiful for the dead to sleep, and I
saw castles and towns and battlements, bnt
not a mausoleum nor monument nor white
slab could I see. And I went Into the great
chapel of the town, and I said: “Where do
the poor worship? Where are the benches
on which they sit?" And a voioe answered,
“We have wandered ao poor U this seeking great city." And the
And I out, to
plaoe where were the hovels of the destitute,
and T found mansions of amber and Ivory
and goM, but no tear did I see or sigh hear.
I was bewildered, and I sat under the shadow
of a great tree and I said, “What am I and
all this?” Aad at that moment
there eaae from among the leaves, the skipping spark¬
up the flowery paths aad bright serose and sparkling
ling waters, a very I their step I
fTewit, “d saw
I heard their voices I
thought I knew Horn them, anything hut their I had apparei was t
ao different ever seen
bowed a stronger to strangers. But after
awhile, K S^SS?SSS.‘1L’S23 when they eMpwsd their hands end
■
ratty had eoine, and that God had
up into a higher home, end I
“Are ~ ant the votes* of
answered, “All
of
gg&SSSmn, the towera of the^Sf%^rae^to^ teRg .*■$> —
^n**I fait a child’s hand on my fees
a
3ES2
K a * urn * poor poor sad thfe ?
waber qnd lacking
. and quality of tho*,
gmM and the enervating effect of
weather. Purify w*™
your blood with
Hood’s Sarsaparilla bj * '
The great blood purifier which
tts merit by a record of proved
assaM^iSSB cures
Ilia now. sore to get Hood’.
_
Hood’s Pills
New Substitute for Butter.
The latest substitute for butter is
said to be a product made from pe¬
troleum, but by what name it is to
be known we have not learned. Petro¬
leum is put to many usee, and in the
exhibit at the World’s fair there were
over eighty different oils made from it
including “imported pure olive.” It
is all right to use science in as many
ways as possible in the aid of humani¬ I
ty, but it is entirely wrong to put
fraudulent products on the market and '
call them genuine. If we are to have
a new substitute for butter let it be |
called by some different name. I
The Mrnnee«t Men Crovr Weak |
Sometimes. The short cut Jo renewed vlror ■
is taken by those sensible enough to use Ho»
tetter’s Stomach Bitter* Byst'-mati aby. It
re-establishes impaired digestion, enables the
system to assimilate food, and combines the
Qualilios of a fine medicinal stimulant with
those of a sovereign preventive remedy. M*.
laria, dyspepVa, constipation, rheumatic,
nervous and kidney complaints are cured
and averted by it.
by a hor^e In a mad rush for one of our sodas.”
Dr. Kilmer’s swamp- Root cur*?
all Pamphlet Kidney and and Consultation Bladder troubles.
Blncbamton. free.
Laboratory N. Y.
An Asheville, readers N. C., paper makes the unique
claim to “more for least circulation of
any paper In the United Slate-."
Change of Lite.
When a woman approaches tho change of
life she is liable to have a return of all the
menstrual derangements, and other ailments
that afflicted her in fomftr years. The direct
action of McElree’a Wine of Cardui on the
organs Afflicted, make it the best remedy for
use during this period.
Mrs. D. Pennington, West Plains, Mo., says:
"I had been suffering from change of ltfeand
it took the form of drop-y. The doctors told
my husband it was useless to prescribe for me
any more. About that tyme we got Dr. McEl
ree’s book on the treatment of female diseases
and decidfd >otry the Wine of Cardui Treat¬
ment. After using nine bottles, I am well.”
Always Ceres
Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Bad Breath, Debility. Distress
After Eating,'and disordered all stomach. evils arising It builds from up a
weak or bottle will
from the flret dose, and a or two
cure the worst cases, and inanre result a good in vigor¬ appe¬
tite, excellent digestion and There is
ous health and buoyancy of spirits. health and
no better way to insnre the good stomach riiht. a
long life Dyspepsia than to Remedy keep Is guaranteed to
do Tyner’s this. The Tranqu Hiring After-Dinner
Drink. For eale by Druggists. Manufactured
by C. O. Tyner, Atlanta.
J. 8. Parker, Frrdonia. N. Y., says: "Shall 1 be¬
not call on you for the Cure $100 will rewar J, for of
lieve Hall’* Who Catarrh bad." VV?ite cure him any for case
oatarrh. very Druggists, 715c. par¬
ticulars. Sold by
Experience Leads Many Mother* to Say
“Use Parker’s Ginyer Tonic" becaose it is good
for colds, pain and almost every weakness.
Ptso’8 Cur" i* a wonderful Cough medic.ne.
—Mrs. W. Picxisrt. Van Siclen and Blake
Aves.. Brooklyn, N. 1., Oct. 26, ’94.
N IT-
1 g
V
ON© ©NJOVS
Both the method and results when
Syrup refreshing of Figs is taken; it is and pleasant
and to the taste, acts
gently Liver yet promptly Bowela, on the Kidneys, the
and cleanses sys¬
tem effectually, dispels colds, head¬
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. 8vrnp of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro¬
duce!-, pleasing to tbe taste and ac¬
ceptable to the stomach, prompt In •
its action and truly beneficial m its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy excellent and agreeable qualities substances, commend its it
many all and have made it the most
to
popular remedy known. 60
Syrup of Figs is for wile In
cent bottles by all leading drug¬ j
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may Dot have it on band wffl pro¬ .
cure h promptly for any ooa who
wishes to try k Uo not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG GYRUP CO,
SAN HUMCOCO, CAL.
Lovtsntu. a. mm mac *r
★ HIGHEST AWARD* '
WORLD’S FAIR.
MW 4
★ the best ★
_PREPARED FOOD m
SOLD
.★_
■
'v
-