Newspaper Page Text
Another Insurgent Victory.
“The Caban insurgents stole another
march on Weyler yesterday.”
“What was that?”
“They spilled six barrels of ink out
of bis ammunition wagon.’’--Philadel
phia North American.
Vn nro not ".'bakes btfore Taken’'
With m lariai rlla?***, but with prvl jfinus
viol ncc afterwards, if you nesleet immediate
mea urc of if.ief The tirest preventive nrl
reined a! form of medica’ion is l ©'tetter's
Stomach Hitters, the potency of which as an
antidote to miasmatic po on has be n dom
oastrated for over forty year- past. The liver
when disordered and c mreeted. the bowel if
ron*tipat and, and the kidneys if nact ve, are
promptly aided by it. a,dit i invaluab e or
'lyspepsla* nervous **ebi ity and r eumatlsm.
It is heaven upon ea*th to have a man's
mu and m *ve in c a ity. rest in Providence and
lorn upon the poles of truth.
Dobbins' Floating-Borax Hoap Tests more to
make than any other floating soap made, but
consumers have to pay no more for it. It is
guaranteed to be 100 per rent, pure and the only
floating soap made of Borax. Wrapjiers in red ink.
Th-re arc m.00n.000 id copper pennies
m attered about in toe United Slates. 1
Mrs. Winslow’s .-vmrnin* >vruu Tor children
hethiny. softens the trams. re inces inflamma
tion.allays patri.f-nre- wind colic. 25c. a until-
Psvmanentlycnred. No
ffrPt d * y "J “*• ot !>"• Kline’s Ghkat
rres2iriuJ bottieand treat
iss. Sand to Dr. Kin e.WHI Arch St.. Ph!ln..P*.
Take
The best when you need medicine. For blood,
appetite, nerves,stomach, liver, nothing equals
Sarsaparilla
Th.;OneTrue Hioo l Puriti r. All druggists. SI.
Wood’s Pills cure oil Liver His. 25cents.
A Singular Case
Briggs—Heredity is a queer thiug.
Colby—Y h, aud it’s opposite —what
ever you call it—is queerer yet. A
man may be a Lard drinker aud his son
abhor all kinds of 1 quor. You must
have known some Mien cast?
Briggs—Yhh,l have. Aud I’ve known
cases where the father was a prohibi
tionist aud the sou a guzzler from his
boyhood up. 1 remember one particu
lar case in the town where I came
from. There wits a young fellow tlit re
who actually had a de> p rooted abhor
rence for water in every form.
Colby—That’d strange. Was Ids
father a prohibitionist?
Br<ggs—No, lie was a milkman!—
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
How Is Tins! ness?
“Glad to meet you, Mr. Sapp,”jta : d
the man from the w< st, who had just
been introduced. “How is business?”
“Business,” said Cholly, “business,
socially considered, at least, is doosid
vulsrftw.” —ludiauopolis Journal.
SACRED CONFIDENCE.
MO WOMAN'S LETTER PUBLISHED
EXCEPT BY REQUEST.
Mrs. IMnktmm's Tender Relations With
the Suffering of Her Sex—Women Who
Cannot Hide Their Happiness.
There is a class of women who, from
their own experience, sympathize with
their suffering sisters, and in order
that such suffering
may be lessened, uo
bly put aside false A
modesty and in <£
heartfelt gratitude T p
w ha t every
-,v om a
women, Ejj& 1 'j
and has jljjgk j J
requested agS?! / rot
ns to pub- Bjlpg i 11
iish the l/iU
faets in her / Irl\ ' |
ease, other- tfl |f / |
wise it would • J j}) \
not be done, as y / f***
all such evidence
is treated in sacred confidence, unless
publication is requested by the writer
She says to Mrs. Pinkham“ I
wish you would publish the circum
stances of my case, in order that other
women may be benefited by my expe
rience.
“ 1 doctored nearly all the time for
two vears. I spent several hundred
dollars without receiving much benefit.
Last June 1 wrote to you and described
all my aches and pains. Such a long
list as there was: headache, back
ache, bearing-down pains, terrible
soreness, constipation, dizziness, feel
ing of extreme lassitude, irregularity
and nausea ; but you answered my
letter and told me just what to do. I
followed your advice.
“ After taking eight bottles of the
Vegetable Compound and three bot
tles of Blood Purifier, I am glad to
write you that I have not enjoyed such
good health for years, and I am able
to do all my own work. I can surely
sound the praises of Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound, and a
number of my friends are taking it
upon my recommendation/’ — Mrs. W.
L. Elliott, Liscomb, lowa. __
ENGINES
FOR GINNING..
u Q t economical and data'll*. Cbeapcat and Ves.
... thi marker for ca<l VA It lABI.I-. FK
KEKU SAW AM# STANUAttO i-U
--f’LKJILA'I * l<l<V fc*nd f^rcataloßil* -
A. B. FARQUHAR CO., Ltd..
oyivauia Aricnu*l Work-, Vurb. I*n.
THE fc’iCLl) OPADVBNTCBE.
THRILLING INCIDENTS AND DAR
ING DEEDS ON LASD AND SEA.
At the Merer of a CV izy Man—Four
Fishermen Aclrilt Five Days—
Treed By a Roar.
THE story bronpht in by Cap
tain Fritz, of the ship Granite
State, some titqe ago, is a re
markable insta*,ce of the mis
chief one man may be sponsible for
on board a ship at sea. The ship was
at the mercy of a crazy Spaniard for
two days and nights, and, to add to
the terror of the situation, she was
loaded with kerosene oil in cases, and
the man was intrenched in the hold
behind a barricade of the cases, and
was fully prepared to set fire to the
ship before being captured. In the
efforts to capture-him Captaii Fritz
was severely wounded by a knife fas
tened to the end of a shovel handle,
and while the crew was wasting am
munition in a vain attempt to reach
the man with a shot he waited behind
his barricade and when the firing
ceased began his work of slashing
those of his shipmates who were with
in reach of his terrible weapon. On
the third attempt to dislodge him
there was no resistance, and it was
found that he had cut his own throat
with his knife. He had provided a
supply of bi-cuit and water, and had
a pipe aud tobacco and plenty of
matches, and it was not until his
boily had been dropped over the side
and the cargo restored that the cap
tain and the crew of the Granite State
felt easy.
Insanity was the cause of another
case of deuth at sea, which was
brought before Judge Lacombe seven
years ago, when Captaiu Justus A.
Bailey and Mate Donald A. Nicholson,
of the ship Southern Cross, were held
in bail for having caused the deatn of
Ah Low, the Chinese cook ot the ship.
In the testimony it came out that the
Chinaman, in a fit of insanity, had
barricaded himself in the galley, cut
a hole through the deck at a place
where he could reach a lot of ammuni
tion which was in the cargo, and then,
being fully equipp.-d, began a fusil
lade ot shots through the after wiu
dow of his little tort. Attempts were
made to force the door, but the cook
threatened to blow up the ship, and
as the hole he had made in the deck
opened diiectly over a lot of nitro
glycerine, gunpowder, gasoline and
cartridges, it was no idle threat. The
captain ordered his men to protect
themselves with boards from the shots
of the cook and break in the door,
but their attempts were unavailing,
and as a last resort the captain took
a heavy rifle and began firing shots at
random through the door of the gui
lty. For some time the shots were
answered by the opium crazed China
man, but finally the answers ceased,
and when the place was entered the
cook was found to be dead. The
Southern Cross brought into port the
galley uutouohed after the fight, and
the doors and wulls were unmistakable
evidence, that there had been a hot
war on a small scale on board.—New
York Tribune.
Two Fishermen Adrift Five Days.
John Powers and James Ring, two
of the crew of the tishiug schooner
Norma, of Gloucester, Mass., arrived
there lecently after being astray five
days and six nights in a dory without
food or water. When they strayed
from the schooner they had nothing
with them but half a jug of water and
a little bait in the bottom of their
dory, which had been shaken from
the trawls in hauling the day before
and which was in a decomposed state.
They pulled until midnight and then
rigged a drag which was thrown out
to keep the boat headed to the wiud.
The men laid down in their craft and
went to sleep, while the boat drifted
before the wind at sea.
As the morning dawned, fog set in
again. Toward evening they heard
the fog horn of a steamer close by.
They rowed toward the sound, but the
vessel passed without discovering
them. They then again headed for
land. Their stock of water had by
this time become exhausted, an i,
thirsty and huugry, they ate the bits
of bait in the bottom of the dory.
The next day their boat was almost
crushed by an iceberg that drifted
down on them, but relief was afforded
by a piece of ice which they managed
to take from the borg, therewith
quenching their thirst. The sea con
tinued rough,with wet,foggy weather.
On the fifth day they were nearly ex
hausted, and with their cramped con
dition and blistered haDds they were
hardly able to row through the night,
but did so the best they could in order
to keep warm.
On the sixth night their frail craft
drifted while the occupants lay in the
bottom with the intention of remain
ing there until death relieved them
of their suffering. The weather
cleared, however, and they were
sighted by the British brig Dione,
Captain BowdeD, from Cadiz for St.
John, N. F., which picked them up
and landed them at St. John’s. At
the time of their rescue they were 160
miles from land. The United States
Consul sent them to Halifax, whence
thev were forwarded to their homes
in Gloucester.
Treed by a Monster Boar.
Hon. Theodore Boosevelt, of New
York, is fond of talking abont his ex
periences in California, and daring
one of these narrations be said:
“The most exciting and risky hunt
ing on the Pacific coast to-day is
among the wild hogs, down on the
bottom lands of the Colorado River,
fifty or sixty miles south of the old
town of Yuma. A party of ns was
down there last year, and I believe we
had adventures enough to thrill our
sportsmen friends for a full genera
tion.”
A great many hunters in California
indorse every word of Commissioner
Roosevelt's opinion, aud no hunting
ground for big game is probably be
c< ruing more popular than this in the
winter time, when the climate alonq
the lazy, muddy Colorado River is
likethatof July in the Eastern States.
Two years sgo an experienced
sportsman from Southern Illinois was
spending the winter in Yuma. He
had a pair of very fine, large stag
hounds, which the owner claimed
could run down and kill any wild hog
along the Colorado River. One day
he took the dogs and ride and went
down the river for a nice little boar,
just right for the oven. He had not
gone thirty miles, and landing, be
lore he found a band of hogs and little
pigs, and turned his dogs loose on
them when out of the tales nearby
jumped au enormous boar, a mon
ster, who, with mouth wide open,
paying no attention to the dogs, made
for the huuter. The latter drew up
his rifle and fired, but on came ttie
boar, the dogs nipping him at every
jump.
The hunter fired a second shot, but
on came the beast. The hunter turned
and ran for a mesquite tree a few
ya rds distant, the hog oiose to his
heels. He dropped hin gun, jumped
for life, grasping a limb of the tree,
just as the hog grabbed his pants, and
tore one-half of them f£om him, but
he was safe, just out of reach. The
dogs all .this while ran grabbing the
hog by the hind legs, to which the
beast paid no attention. The mad
boar seized the bark of the tree in bis
great tusks and tore it into shreds.
Finally he turned upon the dogs, in
stantly killing one, wounded the other
so that it died soon after. Then he
turned his attention to the treß where
the hunter sat. He guar led him un
til it was dark. Twice did the mau
get down and try to get his rifle, but
his foe was on guard and drove him
back up the tree. During the night
the boar left. Daylight came, aud so
did help. The men had hardly reached
the river and got out in their boat
when down came the old hog after
them, in vain pursuit.—St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
Predicament of a Young Lady.
The news of a thrilling adventure
experienced by a young lady from
Oakland near Skaggs Springs, Cal.,
has just come in. The young lady was
one of a party of twelve San Francis
cans who left the springs early in the
morning on a tramp through the
mountains. Just four miles from
Skaggs’ is a rock, well known to tour
ist? as “Major’s rock,” which towers
nearly 100 feet high. The ambitious
girl went ahead of the party and sealed
the rock by a very daugerous path.
When the remainder of the party ar
rived she was sitting on top of the
rock thoroughly frightened, for al
though she had reached the summit
with apparent, ease her courage failed
her for the return journey and she
call Oil loudly for sioineo.
The other tourists strove in vain to
rescue her, but without avail. They
could not climb the treacherous path.
Messengers were dispatched to the
hotel and ladders and ropes were pro
cured. After much loss of time holes
were dug in thß rock aud the ladders
were placed in position. But how co
convey the woman to the ground after
they had reached her puzzled the
strong men who went to her assist
ance. All other efforts proving intile,
a big bucket was found, to which a
strong rope was fixed. Into this the
young lady was induced to sit.
The next perplexity was how to low
er the bucket, as the men on the lad
ders had all they could do to hold on
themselves. Finally, however, by
great effort, the rescuers managed to
scramble on top oi the rock. Then,
grasping the rope with their hands,
they lowered the bucket with Its oc
cupant amid the cheers of the onlook
ers. The young lady, although great
ly frightened, was unhurt.—Jdaa Fran
cisco Examiner.
Bob Mason’s Fight With a Buck.
“Bob” Mason, a famous Sonorni
County hunter, had a thrilling expe
rience with a big buck in Mendocino
township recently, Mason was out
hunting and slightly wounded a fin*
deer. In pursuing it he fell into a
deep hole of water, He lost his rifle
m the stream and after flounderieg
around a while managed to get ho and
of a big log that projected over tie
pool. He crawled upon it, and hid
hardly seated himself before he siw
the buck swimming towaid him.
The animal’s eyes were blazing aid
he made straight for Mason. Mason
drew his hunting knife, and when he
buck got near enough he grabbel it
by the boms and both went dowi in
the stream. They struggled, and at
one time Mason thought his time iad
come. However, he succeeded irin
flicting a mortal wound on his eneny,
and after a few moments succeedd in
getting to shore with the buck. ?here
a party found him lying exhausted by
the side of his dead adversary, about
an hour afterward. It was theiercest
fight he ever had with a deer aid Ma
son has had a good many oi taern
San Francisco Chronicle.
One Toothpick Industry
In Harbor Springs, Micb., tbre is
a large and flourishing wood tootipick
industry. White birch is exeluiveiv
used in the manufacture of the loth
picks, and about 7,500, QUO are trned
out daily. The logs are sawed o intc
bolts each twenty-eight inebs in
length, then thoroughly stoaml and
cut up into veneers. The veu Jr is
cut into long ribbons three in< es in
width, and these ribbons, eight r ten
at a time, and run through th ooth
pick machinery, coming out * the
; other end, the perfect pieces tiling
| into one basket, the broken pi< is and
refuse falling into another.- forth
eastern Lumberman.
HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
ECIENOK OF nOir.IN i i*or ATOKA
In a bulletin issued by Pro es*ol
Snyder, of the Minnesota Agricultural
Colleze, he makes a point of interest
to the housewife. He shows that when
|>otatoes are peeled and started boiling
in cold water there is a loss of eighty
per cent, of the total albumen, and
where they are not peeled and are
started in hot water this loss is re
duced to two per cent. A bushel of
potatoes, weighing sixty pounds, con
tain about two pounds of total
nitrogenous compounds. When im
properly cooked one-half of a pound
ts lost, containing six-tenths of a pouud
of the most valuable proteids. It re
quires all of the protein from nearly
two pounds of round beefsteak to re
place the loss of proteiu from im
properly boiliug a bushel of potatoes.
—New Orleans Picayune.
THE CARE OF POLISHED I LOOKS.
No rollers should be used on furni
ture over polished floors. Each part
which touches the wood should be
fitted wi v h a piece of thick felt *ecure
ly glued on. This protects ths floor
and allows easy movement.
These floors require only the sweep
ing with a hair brush and the wipiug
with a dust mop or soft cloth.
Wax, alone, gives the liigheut pol
ish ; but is always slippery. It should
be rubbed on evenly. Any little bits
remaining will snow as blank specks
after the polishing. The brush should
be used across the grain at first, after
ward with the grain. Wax aud tur
pentine furnish a less degree of polish,
which is, therefore, less sHppery,
while the addition of parafbue oil
lessens it stili more. If it be desired
to keep the floor very light the oil
mixture should not be used, for oil
always darkens wood.
Water is the worst thing that erin be
applied to any waxed surface. A
damp cloth may he used. All spatters
or drops of any liquid should be wiped
up immediately. When spots come—
as come they will—rub them hard
with a piece of thick felt under the
foot or with a flannel moistened in
turpentine.
Remember to keep the surface well
polished, then dirt cannot stick and
substauces spilled cannot reach the
wood and make spots With all these
precautions the floors which are con
stantly used will need an entire reno
vation occasionally. They should
then be rubbed all over with steel
wool till every spot is scraped out. If
the wood has grown dark it may be
whitened by a wash of oxalic acid.
Ruo perfectly smooth andcleau before
applying the wax or other encaustic.
A good encaustic which will clean
and polish at the same time may be
made from wax, sal soda and any uood
soap. The wax and soap should be
shaved and dissolved in boiling water.
Stir frequently and add the soda. Put
the mixture in something which may
be closely covered and stir constantly
until cool. This may be applied to
floors, furniture, marbles, tiles, bricks,
etc. It will remove ink from polished
surfaces. The French use white wax
on white marbles, but this is not abso
lutely necessary*—American Kitchen
Magazine.
EECtPES.
Baked Apple Jelly—Fill a two quort;
granite or earthen diab with alternate
layers of sliced tart apples and sugar.
Bake three hours, closely covered.
This is delicious, and should turn out
a solid pink jelly.
Cherry Blanc-Mange—Ono quart
sour oherries; wash in cold water and
seed ; place in the fire with half a tea
cup of cold water and stew until ten
der ; add a teacupfnl of white sugar,
a teaspoon of butter and two taole
spoons of cornstarch which have been
perfectly dissolved in four teaspoons
of cold water. Stir gentiy until corn
starch is cooked (from five to eight
minutes), then pour into a dish or
mold to cool. Eat with cream.
Corn Soup—Take the water chicken
was cooked in and p ace on the tire;
add the remaining chicken meat and
bones to the stock, o<: wHich there
should be two quarts. Simmer until
the meat leaves the bones, then strain ;
flavor with a teaspoouful of cayenne
and celery salt. Add a small cup ul
of sweet corn ent Irom the ear, place
where it will cook slowly for half an
hour, and just be ora serving add a
cupful sweet cream or milk.
New Potatoes—Scrape an 1 lay in cold
water ten minutes; cover with boiling
water and let boil fifteen minutes;
then add the salt (to one pint of water
half a tablespoonfnl of salt) and let
boil hard fifteen minutes longer.
When cooked pour off every drop of
water; take off the cover of saucepau
and shake the potatoes for a moment
in a current of cold air, then place on
back of stove and cover with a cleaD,
coarse towel until ready to dish.
Sponge Cake—Beat the yolks of two
eggs until thick, add gradually one
cup of sugar, one-half teaspoonful eaca
of lemon juice and grated rind and
beat well. Ard three-eighths of a cup
of hot water, the whites of the esrga
beaten to a stiff froth, one cup of flour
silted with one saltspoonful of salt,
and a level teaspoonml of baking pow
der. Bake m a battered eake pan
forty-five minutes. When ready to
use, breax into pieces. Sponge caxe
should never be cut.
Jellied Tongue—This is a recipe pre
pared by Mrs. S. B. Buckner, and was
often on her table when her husband
was Governor of Kentucky. Boil the
tongue until tender, so that the sk<n
will pull off readily. Cat in thin
slides and arrange in mold, having pre
viously laid slices of lemon on bottom.
Cover with jelly made of one box of
gelatine dissolved in a cup of cold
Water. Add one quart of boiling water
less a cup, juice of four lemons, two
cups of sugar. Strain well. Let stand
twelve hours before using.
Postal Business.
The growth of the poet office busi
ness of the country has been amazing.
At the close of the revolutionary war
there were only seventy five post
offices iu the United States. At the
close of the war of 1812 there were
3,000. At the beginning of the civil
war there were 28,586, and five years
after its close, in 1870, there were
28,492, or about 100 fewer, the only
step backward dnring the history of
the post offioe department. By 188 )
the upward rise had started again in
full force, and the number of post
offices iu the country reached 42,000.
There are now 60,000 post offices in
the United States, and the number is
constantly being increased.
A Similarity.
Harry—She has jilted me and I
know I shall die. The disappointment
wil kill me.
Aunt Hannah—l know how disap
pointment effects one, Harry. But
you will get over it. I felt just as you
do now when I set that yeller hen
on thirteen eggs and just got one
poor chick out of the lot.—Boston
Herald.
Help Wanted.
Men that can pro uce business to fell
mnnthh* installment bond*. Liberal com mis
sion* and bonu paid. Add res I\ 8. Rond
and Mortgage Company, Atlanta. Ga.
Shakespeare Criticised.
The school teacher was fonnd of giv
ing sentiments from Shakespeare as
copies to be “set” iu writing exercises.
One day he gave his class this adapta
tion of a phrase in “Hamlet:”
“The appetites grows by what it
feeds on.”
One of his pupils, a poor boy with a
lean and hungry look, having written
this sentence down twenty times in hie
best and most patient hand, could not
refrain from saying to the teacher,
when he came around to look at the
copy-books:
“I’ve written it down, sir, but I
don’t think it’s true.”
“Don’t you? Why not?”
“Because my appetite’s always grow
ing by what it doesn’t feed ou !”
The Blue and the Gray.
Both men and women are apt to feel a little
blue, when the gray hairs begin to show. It’s
a very natural feeling. In the normal condition
of things gray hairs belong to advanced age.
They have no business whitening the head of
man or woman, who has not begun to go
down the slope of life. Asa matter of fact,
the hair turns gray regardless of age, or of
life’s seasons ; sometimes it is whitened by
sickness, but more often from lack of care.
When the hair fades or turns gray there’s no
need to resort to hair dyes. The normal color
of the hair is restored and retained by the use of
Ayer’s Hair Vigor.
Ayer’s Curebook, “a story of cures told by the cured.”
ioo pages, free. J. C. Ayer Cos., Lowell, MaSs.
One Cup
One Cent
Less than a cent in fact —and all Cocoa
pure Cocoa no chemicals* That describes
Walter Baker & Co/s Breakfast Cocoa*
WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, - Dorchester, flaas.
the FAHQUHAR
LATENT VARIABLE
v y.i FRICTION* feed.
Mtiri nnd Blghttt JLwtri at (As World $ Co'amlftn Mrpatilton.
SAW MILL & ENGINE
BEST SET WORKS.* THE ITDRLB. WarrmataS the best made,
tblafle UUU, Machta* tj, and Staadard Agricultural lafta
mesta of Best Quality at Uwsat prices. lUastrat4 Catalofsa.
DON’T BECUf knife.
We can cure you w’th ur it. If you have
the PILES use Planter’s Pile Ointment.
vve ?uarantee to give instant and
permanent relie . S*nd nve two- AgpSjSfc
cent - tumps to cover postnye and
we will mnl FREE package. Ad- 'SS& s Y
*r s Dept. A,
New v p- cor Medicine Cos..
CHATTANOOGA, TENN. ,
Every M His Gvn Doctor.
A 600-page II nitrated Fam.lv l*o tor ' o ok,
conttining valuable :n ormition pertaining
to diseases of the human system; how to trea
and cure them with simp est of medicines,
i he book coniains a full complement of (acts
in materia mdi a. PosiDai i toanyaddreson
re.eint of prce, SIXTY CENTS. Adi rest
Atlan a Publishing House, 116 Loyd
Sir ct, Atlanta. Gn
A HEW CAT Ml
Xj[ I 8 interesting, especially when it tells
all about the NEW FRUITS as well
as the old ones, and offers all at very low
prices. It’s Free. Send for It. Address
W, P, BEATIE, Atlanta, Ca.
fl Plll M habits cured. Book sent
il lIU 111 Free,Dr B.M. Woolley.atlamta.oa.
2L U Thirty-eight,^.
An Impossibility.
“Now, between you and me, dar
ling,'’ he began, aa be sat with his arm
enfolding her waist.
“George,” she interrupted, “I wish
that yon would be a little more pre
cise in your words. How can there ba
anything between you and me? Tht re
isn’t room,” and ahe hugged up still
closer.—Truth.
Th* Ladle*.
The pleasant effect and perfect safety with
which ladies may use Syrup of Figs, under all
conditions, makes it tbelr favorite remedy.
To get the true and genuine article, look for
the name of the California Fig Syrup Com*
pany, printed near the bottom of the package.
For sale by all responsible druggists.
No literal man would impute a charge of
un-teadiness to anotuer for having changed
his opinion.
Never Once Kail. and.
“TrrTKRiN* cured me of a very annoying
ca-e or itching piles in a few oays. 1 h ve
sold a good many boxes for the common itch,
ana it has n- ver one :ailed to Cure. It is all
that is claimed for it.” T. L. Bbdsol*,
Tallahntta Springs, Ala-
It cures a’l itches.
1 box by ma 1 for .'Ac. in s'amps.
J. T. -nrPTTUVE. Savannah, Ga.
Deafness Cannot be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach the
diseased iorti >n of the ear. There is only oue
way to cure deafness, anrl that in by constitu
tional remedies. Deal uess is caused by an in
flamed condition of the mucous lining of the
Eustachian 'tube. When this tube get* in.
flamed you have a rumbung sound or imper
fect hearing, and wutn it is entirely closed
Deafness is the remit, and unless the inflam
mation cm be tak n out and this tube re
stored toi s normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever. Nine cases out often are
caused by catarrh, which is nnth ng but an in
flamed condition of the mucous surface*.
We will give One Hundred Do'b rs for any
ca** of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that Pair-
Hot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. .Send for
circulars, free.
F. ,T. Chfnky & Cos., Toledo, O.
Sold by Drnggi ts, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
The l.atn lilt.
Campaign So ig, “16 to 1,” by Halley.
Everybody cal ing for it. Picture of Bryan
o i title page worth more than price. Send
25c. anil get one. Discount to trade. The W.
C. Halley Cos., 141 Marietta St.. Atlanta, Ga.
Piso’n Cure for Consumption relievos the
most obstinate coughs.—Rev. D. Ritciimuklt
i.kr, Lexington. Mo., Feb. 24, ’94.
If afllicted with sore eye-use l)r. Isaac Thomp
son's Eye-watpr.Drug!ristssel! at 250 per bottle.
St. Vitus’ Dance. One bottle Dr. Fenner’s
Specif!'* cures. Circular, Fredonia, N. Y.
A WOMAN
lEESITATES
"*"] therearesomany
- sick and half-
JJfpSSfcj sick women.
p Most of them
suppose their
peculiartroubles
by the physi
cian. That means local treatment and
examinations. No wonder they hesitate.
And hesitation gives disease a stronger
foothold.
The truth is that local treatment and
examinations are nearly always un
necessary. They should not be sub
mitted to ’till everything else fails.
McELREE’S
WINE OF CARDOI
cures painful menstruation, irregulari
ties, life-sapping drains, falling of the
womb and flooding. It cures all the
pains and troubles by making the
feminine organs perfectly strong and
healthy. Its action is wonderfully bene
ficial to girls just entering womanhood,
and to women passing through the
period known as the “change of life.**
No need to hesitate now. Cure can be
had right at home.
SOLD AT SI.OO A BOTTLE
BY DRV^CIUTS.