Newspaper Page Text
How He (>ot It.
De Bore—How did you catch your
cold?
De Bristle—You know colds are con¬
tagious?
• ( Yos.”
“Well, I caught it asking other peo¬
ple how they caught their colds.”
Out 111 tla» fold.
Political candidates may be unaxpscUdly
left out In the cold when the returns coine
in, but people who elect to use Hoetstter’a
Stomach Bitters for dyapepaia, liver, kidney
or bladder inactivity, constipation, malarial
complaints tlie cold elsew-hcrr. or nervousness, are never left In
or Well may physicians
lend tholr unejna ifled sanction to this time
honored and unfalliiiK medicine.
It Is frequently more easy to detect a false¬
hood than to discover a truth,
I)r. Kilmer’s H w a mf - Root curss
all Pamphlet Kidney and Bladder trouble*.
end (’oritoiltatlon free.
Laboratory Hinuhautton, N. Y.
That man is happy who can look upon the
snecesa of others without envy.
State or Ohio.CTtt or Toledo, t
Lucas Coir sty. I ,
FhaEK J.C’HKNEV makes oath that he Is the
senior partner of t ho tirinof K. J. < 'HKxt.r&
Co., dolnit business In the city of ioledo,
Count Jay y and State aforesaid, ONE UFNPUEl) and that said DOL¬ firm
will the sum of
LARS for each and every case of C ilarrh that,
cun uot be cured by the use FltA.VK of 11A t.t.’a .1. ClIKNEV. 1 ATAUIIU
(J UKE< and subscribed
.-worn to before me In my
presence, this0th day of December, W. A. I). 1HS6.
I A. Gleason,
( Notary Public.
flail's Cal nrrh Cure istftken internally and acts
directly on th<- blood »n<l mucous surfaces of
tho system. Send I'. .1. < for iikncy testimonial*, <Si CO., Ioledo, free. O.
fir Sold by DriiBKists,
The r»anan*‘ment of tho A .ft W. P. It. K ,al¬
ways alive to the comfort and convenience of
Its patrons, will put on an extra sleeping e ir
between Atlanta and New Orleans during the
period of the Dligrnin-i Mnrdi-Gras festivities at tho
office latter of point. Mr. Gao. \V. Allen, are now T. ready at So- the
I*. A., 12
Kimball Ileus-, and those dosir ng to make
this trip will do well to call on him some dny i
in iidvnncu to secure sleeping ear accmnmo
dat ions
Gin. \V. At.tcv, T. I*. A., Atlanta. Ga.
,ISO. A. (!ke. Gelt. Pass. Agt., Atlanta, Ga.
% School ( hildren
will cat swei-tnii'ats mid you can’t prevent it.
The ,'irst you know of it there is a headache;
Du- ,iiId i> bilious and something must he
dune. I '-i- Kipaiis Tubules, a remedy which
Is standard for ueli troubles.
Impure Blood—Eczema
Inton8o Itching & Burning
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Cured and
Cave Sound Relief.
I was troubled for months with a break¬
ing out ou my skin. 1 suffered terribly at
night nnd had to cut my Hager nails short
to keep mo Iroai sorutchlng. Three physi¬
cians did not help
my on so. I had
about given up In
4 try It friend Hood’s despair sootued a advisod Sarsaparilla. bottlo aslfevory when me to of a
dose helped me and
after I had taken a
j few bottles I was
^ entirely well and a
■ sound man again. I
I proved Hood’s Sar-
3 saparllla to be a
Jjf|'^ good blood pnrlfler
Mr. AYm. HI. Flennlkcn nnd I gladly recom¬
mend it to every sufferor.” Wii.i.i sx II.
Flknniken, Carmichaels, Pennsylvania.
J-Joods Sarsa- par ilia
Be HOOD’S'. Sure to get Cures
» Easy to try, effect. easy to
tak*>, ea*y in 25e
McEl .REES
WINE OF CARDUi.
il
6 i v
l! pSt§| 7
i- •» ■
For Female Diseases.
SICK Well People
JfST SICK ENOUGH TO FEEL
TIRED AND LISTLESS. TO HAVE
NO APPETITE, TO SLEEP BAD¬
LY, TO HAVE WHAT YOU EAT
FEEL LIKE LEAD IN YOUR
STOMACH. NOT SICK ENOUGH
TO GO TO BED, OR HAVE A
DOCTOR, BUT REALLY, LIFE IS
HARDLY WORTH LIVING.
Ripans ©
Tabules
WILL MAKE IT SO. THEY ARE
flRoo iroR INDIGESTION,
§j&% . NAUSEA, DYS
s.' iv s-li
AMONG AMAZON SAVAGES »
THE STRANGE JIVAROS AND THEIR
PECULIAR CUSTOMS.
Queer Trophies of the Native* of
Kcuador—They I'se Poison In
Hunting am! Fishing.
J OHN L. BENSON, a well-known
scientific man connected with
tho Smithsonian Institution, is
at home in Pomona Valley, Cal¬
ifornia, after several years work in
Ecuador. lie has been there in the
interests of Cornell University and
Stanford ... l Diversity, . , , , ,
am as iroug 1
home a collection o annua * l ’ 11 •
birds, reptiles, ami queer ro P
the natives of Ecuador.
many mterestmg stories o 1
among tho Jivaros, io arc a „
tribe, living on the upper Amazon.
“White men never venture into the
wilderness,” said Mr. Benson, “ex
cept to collect rare orchids or butter¬
flies, or birds. There is nothing elso
there worth carrying away, aud tho
climate is exceedingly hot. As for the
people themselves—well, oven the In
diuns of tho Andes shudder at the
name of a.Tivaro.
“My travels,” continued Mr. Ren
son, “among theso savages was as far
from the Pacific coast as Ohio is from
the Atlautio coast. There is where the
Amazon haB itH source among tho
.
Cordilleros. t found hundreds of JiV
aros thero who had mover seen over
half a dozen white men. You will
generally, find tlic Jivaros along the
rivers. There are uo roads nor trails,
Nature is so vigorous and luxuriant in
that hot and moist region that frails
would bo covered with vegetation in ,
a few months. Bo the natives do the
next best thing to following paths-— ^ j
they take to the rivers. Witli all their j
savagery it is astonishing how splon- j
didly they make canoes with an old
axe carried over the Andes from some
distant trading post. They don’t un¬
derstand metals. But with the coca
bean as au article of merchandise they
go 1 hundreds 1 1 , of miles and ,,,1 return return with wnn
metal spear heads, hatchets, anti
knives. Ihey cultivate flip tne piauraxn, idiintain
banana, mango root, and live on them
with tho game they get. Their staple
in game is a species of wild hog that
lives in the darkest and thickest places
of
4 i Hunting this hog is sport for tho
Jivaros. Men, women and children
take part in the hunt. When a hog
is started they give chase. They
crowd through jungles, squirm t hrough
brushwood, going nearly as last as a
white man could in the open. On all
other occasions tho women remain at
work in the houses and plantations,
Mr. Benson has a full dress of a
Jivoro warrior, given him by a young
doctor doomed to death by liis people
for allowing three patients to die.
The Jivaros run very exclusively to
earrings in their costumes. Tho ear¬
rings arc suspended from a bit of cano
passed through tho ear. They consist
of four long pendants of beetles’ wings
of glistening green, gold and purple,
strung so as to form a tassel. The
brillaint scarlet and orange feathers of
the resplendent tocan are used for
fringe. The arrangement of color
shows remarkably good taste. elaborately
•“The women are not so
provided with earrings,” says Mr.
Benson. “Their chief ornament is a
stick passed through the lower lip.
Oue of the most interesting things I
saw Jivaros do was killing monkeys.
You see it tffivcs 5000 monkey teeth to
mako a neffklace. Tho savages move
along noiselessly, liko snakes in the
grass, and at sight of a monkey
through the foliage they blow a tiny
poisoned arrow through a pipe at him.
Poor Mr. Monkey is hit every time.
“Poison is used also in catching fish.
The Jivaro is not bound by game laws
or Fish Commissioners, so ho takes
large quantities of poison from the
varvasco plant and throws it iuto the
river. Then for fully twenty miles
further down the stream fisli are
gathered in canoes from the surface of
tho water. They are only stupefied
by the narcotic, The Jivaro cares
nothing for sport so long as he can
get the food. Yet, you never meet
him without his lance poised and
ready for its mark. Me carries it above
his shoulder, swaying back and forth
with every step he takes. Even when
s&auding he keeps his right arm mov
ing—always ready to strike. The
Jivaro warrior is like a sentinel in war
time. He is taught when he is a child
that ho must be ever ou the alert to
defend himself, and so you see him
prodding liis lance at your face with¬
out any reason. I was going to shoot
ou my first experience of this kind,
but my guides explained and smiled
at my inexperience. I laughed, but I
laughed alone. In all my experience
with tho savages I don’t remember
having heard oue of them laugh.
%. Nearly every museum has one of
the Jivaro preserved beads. They are
great curiosities. The warriors de¬
capitate their victims in warfare and
keep the- heads as ornaments at their
girdles. How these heads are pre
served is a good deal of a mystery.
The skull is removed and the skin and
flesh treated with extracts from plants
which contract and dry them, Then
the hollow head is filled with hot peb¬
bles and dried. The pebbles are re¬
moved and a strange object the sizt of
a man’s hand remains.”—New York
j The IllRbeat Priced Wine.
■
The most costly wine is, without
doubt, that contained in a cask named
the “Rose,” in the Bremen Town Hall
cellars. It is Itudeeheim Rhine wine
of the year 1653, and tho cask is re¬
plenished by degrees, whenever wine
is drawn, with carefully washed and
dried gravel. The wine has at present
the color of dark beer, and a very hard
taste, but an indescribable aroma. It
is never sold, but destined exclusively
for the sick of Bremen, who receive a
very small quantity on production of a
doctor’s certificate. At present the
Hn pp OSet | value of this unique wine
basso increased that a bottle (eon
taining eight glasses) would cost
j £000,000, a glassful £112,000, and a
drop £112. The only persons who
tie were-ever presented with a small hot
of this wine were the Emperors
William I and Frederick and Prince
Bismarck.
Wool Scoured with Naphtha.
In a new method of scouring wool,
naphtha is employed as the cleansing
substance. By means of a pump the
naphtha is forced through and through
the wool, extracting all the natural
oil. It is claimed that tho naphtha
does not injure the fiber of the wool,
alkali cleansing, but leaves the
fleece in better condition than when
cleansed by any other process.
A further valuable feature of the
new method is that after the grease is
extracted from the wool it may be
again extracted from tho naphtha in a
pure state, thereby becoming valuable
a medicinal agent or fora saponifi
cation into the purest of soaps. It is
claimed that a plant following this
method scoured 500,000 pounds of
wool, and had saved a product of 80,
000 pounds in pure wool oil.— Scien
f/y?c American.
I'Voiii AiiilnliiMsin, Ala.
T Have fully tested the curative qualities of
Tettorine upon several cases of Eczema of
slubboJ . h character and long standing, with
perfect success. I candidly beiieve that it
will cure any case of Eczema. C. I. 8. Com
thlini j. D . Sent by niail f or 50c. in stamps.
t. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
It isn’t always the one who labors the
hardest that gets the reward.
I cannot speak too highly of Piso’s Cure for
224 Consumption.—Mrs. St., New Frank Mobbs, 215 \V.
York, Oct. 29, 1894.
Karl’s Clover Root, the great blood purifier,
gives ion freshness and clearness to the complex
and cures constipation. 25 cts., 50 cts.. $l.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the cams, reduces inflamma
Unn, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Km'
': ■■rsmm
R
>. <S2£
'v
KNOWLEDGE
tends Brings comfort personal and improvement and
rightly to used. The enjoyment when
many, who live bet¬
ter oflan others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the needs the of physical world’s best products to
the value to health of being, the will liquid attest
laxative principles embraced pure in the
remedy, Its excellence Syrup of is Figs. due
to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas¬
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax¬
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
and dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
It has permanently given satisfaction curing constipation.
to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid
nevs, Liver and Bowels without weak¬
ening them and it is perfectlv free from
every Syrup objectionable Figs substance.
of is for sale by all drug¬
gists ufactured in 50c ana $1 California bottles, but it is man¬
Co. only, whose by the Fig Syrup
name is printed on every
and package, being also the name. Syrup of Figs,
well informed, you will uot
a 'c- pt any substitute if offered.
CREXTO I ilkb tlou, free BALD Information HEADS how to iTSffi hair
bald fillUn. grow
upon a head, stop hair and rrmove scalp
diseases. H. W. Gardner, ITJxW.Sd St., Cincinnati, O.
A. N. V.... ......Seven, ’95.
There’s
'3- m Money In It
p-; —washing with Pearline. There’s
m ease and comfort in it, too. and
ep.fetv. There’s wear saved on
v
(if ✓
w 1 and do. little There’s time no spent. time wasted, There’s
nothing like Pearline. There’s no harm if you use it. there’s
no reason in doing without it. unscrupulous will tell
Lj Peddlers and some grocers you.
jrjfe ATTTO VV d.1 C “this is as good as” or “the same as Pearline.” IT'S
^fntalufioT. r~ uTonest^J FALSE—Peariine is never peddled, if your grocers rend
* tack. » ^ IES PVLE >
Highest of all m Leavenhig Power.—Lxte*t U. S. Gov’t Report
Wst po a S
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Perfumes as Preventives of Mould
Iness.
Mouldiness is occasioned by the
growth of minute vegetation. Ink,
paste, leather and seed most frequent
lv suffer by it. A clove will preserve
ink; any essential oil answers equally
rta well. Leather may be kept free
from mould by the same substanoes.
Thus, Russian leather, which is per¬
fumed with the tar of birch, never be¬
come mouldly; indeed, it prevents it
from oocuring in other bodies. A* few
drops of any essential oil will keep
books entirely free from it. For har¬
ness, oil of turpentine is recom
mended.
Alum and resin are used to preserve
bookbinders’ paste, but ineffectually,
oil of turpentine succeeds better; but,
by small quantities of oil of pepper¬
mint, anise, or cassia, paste has been
preserved for years. Dr. MacCulloch
recommends the addition to the flour
and water of some brown sugar and a
little corrosive sublimate; tho sugar
keeping it flexiblo when dry, and the
sublimate preventing it from ferment¬
ing and from being attacked by in¬
sects. A few drops of any essential
oil may be added to the paste when it
is made. It dries when exposed to
the air and may be used merely by
wetting it. Seeds may also be pre¬
served by the essential oils; and this
is of great consequence when they are
sent to a distance. Of course mois¬
ture must be excluded as much as pos¬
sible, as the oils or ottos prevent only
the bad effects of mould.— Ex.
Clurdeu Notes.
Making a hot bed is not a very great
task and it advances the season weeks
some times, when the spring happens
to be late.
With a good garden there is health j
and ble, variety not to of speak food, ot both the very saving desira- in ot j
household expenses. ^
,
Level culture is best for almost every
crop. in Hilling up is often disastrous I
a dry ’’ season, where level culture !
would have succeeded.
It does not hurt cabbages that are
buried to freeze once, but if allowed
to freeze and thaw and freeze again it
is spoiled. After the ridge is frozen
through cover it with straw and it will
not thaw out until spring.
Onions will stand more fertilizing
than any other crop we know of. They
are rank feeders and pay well for extra
care. They do best on a loose, friable
soil that will not bake after a rain,
though any land that will grow corn
will produce a crop.
Hints for Health.
Rapid eating is slow suicide.
Never begin a journey until break¬
fast has been ^ateii.
A quart of wheat contains more nu¬
triment than a bushel of cucumbers.
Sleep is the rest of a tired, uervous
system and the time of its recupera¬
tion.
There is nothing more soothing in
case of nervous restlessness than a hot
salt bath just before retiring.
In sleeping in a cold room establish
the habit of breathing through the
nose and never with the mouth wide
open.
Not Exactly.
A—What, you call me a swindler?
B—No; but I am prepared to give
ten marks to the one who proves to
me the contrary .—Deutsche Wespen.
Better Crops
result from use of fertilizers rich in potash. Most fertilizers sold
do not contain
Sufficient Potash
to insure the best results. The results cf the latest investigations
of the use and abuse of potash are told in our books.
They are sent free. It will cost you nothing to read them, and they will save you
dollars. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, New York.
E ION’S ^ -AND-; Mil?
& g^Tonic Pellets*
TREATMENT far aud O.nstipatioa Bdiotisaeis.
At aU states,or by mail 2oc. doable bo.r: 5 diaibie baxes
Stl tt. BKOVVX >IK’G t o.. New Yorls City.
VlPlIJs?™ g SEEDS
1
u BAfli ' A>D *™»co.,xsoo.B*m~ C o^.
Does Prohibition Prohibit?
When the tall man slipped down qn
the ice in front of a drug store, #rm
lay there apparently in a faint, a erdika
quickly gathered.
Everybody with advice on hand
it out and proffered it. Then a
ran hastily into the drug store, a&
hastily reappeared with a glass in
hand and kneeled down by the foiled
stranger.
“What is it?” whispered the strang¬
er, feebly lifting his head.
“Water,” said the man with thd
glaBS.
The fallen stranger rose to his feat
and stalked indignantly away.
“This is a one-horse town anywayy’*
he hissed, between his set teeth—bfj*
tween his two sets of teeth, in fact.—
Rockland Tribune.
PLEASANT——esaafl*-
1 VS LETS
-‘srv CURE^
£ SICK HEADACHE,
5 BILIOUSNESS,
v CONSTIPATION*
INDIGESTION,
it evsevx DYSPEPSIA,
„ b—- „ " POOR APPETITE,
and Stomach, all derangements Liver and Bowels of thjt
.
Of all druggists.
ONCE USED
ALWAYS IN FAVO 1
YOUNG SPIRITS,
a vigorous body and
But all fail when the
vital powers are
acbd’ftyand^losT'of 'power result
manly from bad habits,con
true ted by the ignorance young
through of their ruinous
con
sequences. Low
impaired spirits, melancholia,
memory, irritable
morose or
temper, fear of impending calamity and a
thousand and mind, and result one from derangements such pernicious of bbdjf
tices. All these permanently cured praCf bjf
are
improved patient leaving methods of treatment without th#
home.
A medical treatise written in plain tmt
chaste language, treating of the nature,
symptoms securely and sealed curability in plain of such diseases;
sent pt of this notice, with a envelope, in stamps m|
io cents
for lostage • Address, Wori.d’S DrsPEN
n .x;
W. $3 L. Douglas
SHOE TIT IS THE FOB AKIN®* BEST.
M yjK fHENCHAENAMELLEDCALF. C052D0VANV
smmm $3.5?POLICE, Fine ZwWmm
3soles-,
.1- ,
&2.M7S. BQYS'SCIIOSLSH&A
IE3 *
WKS8SYSHE*, JSKOCKTOM>lA33y^
Over One Million People wear tho
W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Slices
AH our shoes are equally satisfactory
They jJvo the best vsluc for tbs money#
Their They equal wearing custom quafltlec shoes in unsurpsesed. style and fit.
The are
From prices $i to ere $3 uniform,—*stamped on sole,’
saved over other makes.
If your dealer cannot supply you we can.
| -58
E vj
sj-TEqe?
Beet CURLS WRtRt AIL ELSE
Couch Syrup. Taa-.as Go-, * r. P
in tuna Sold by drop;/*
r®
M