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Spring Makes Me Tired
To people Hprmg and ... its daties , w , u it makes . rich . , blood. ,« i It Ti *
meenenaohtnghea^ed many oaase pn re, given
Umbe and rtrength lone™ and muscles because
throbbiug nerves. Jnrt as t^e milder it endow, the blood with new powers
weather oam«, the strength begins to ol nourishment. It create, so eppet.te,
wane end “That Tired Feeling is the tone* end strengthen* the stomach and
ooapiaint of all.
thm *.
found is the deficient quality of fee moot the change to warmer weather.
Wood. During fee winter, owing to Hood*. Sarsaparilla i. a medicine
various eaueea, the blood beoomes upon whioh you may depend. It is
loaded with imporitiee and loses its the only true blood purifier promt
richness and vitality. Consequently, ; nently before the public eye today. It
as soon as the bracing effect oi cold has a reoord of ouree nnequalloi in
air is lost, these is languor and lack the history of med mine. It is themed
of enasgy. The cure wlU be found in loino of whioh so many people write,
purifying snd enriohing the blood. “Hood’s Sarsaparilla does all that it is
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the greatest olaimed to do. You oan take Hood’s
and best spring medioine beoaueo it is Sarsaparilla with the confident expea*
the greatest and best blood Peeling purifier, tation that it will giro fake von pure blood
It overoomes That fired be- and renew health, it now.
.. , - ^ I 8
nUUU f 9 WarSaUarilla M m 0 F% m I 45
r . • -a- " v ■ . *
T | _ | B*| A | f
|Q V A ft jn \#
> 19 I I I j
True ___ Blood __ _ _ Purifier
Prominently in the Public Eye Today.
Gertrud® Haul, whose stories and
poems have been appearing for several
years in the big magazines, is distin¬
guished among literary women in be¬
ing young, hundsome and comfortably
well off.
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR
★ The BEST ★
FOR
Dyspeptic, Delicate.Infirm PERSONS and
AGED
* JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. *
WALTER BAKER & CO.
Tho Largest Manufacturers of
,,.[ il PURE, HIGH GRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
6!^ On till. Continent, have received
- HIGHEST AWARDS
from tho grett
Industrial and Food
. 1 EXPOSITIONS
ffi I lo Europe and America.
____ 1'nllke tho llntch l’rwe.i.no Alka
l'.. or other Chemicals or l>yrn ere
need In «ny of their nreporetlone.
Their delicious BKBAKKAST COCOA fe eheolutelj
yum sud soluble, end 1 - 01 M less than one cent a cup.
•OLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
VALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER, MAS8.
TheOreatest fledical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
OONAID KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS.,
Has discovered In one of our common
paature weeds a remedy that cure* every
kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down to a common pimple.
He has tried It In over eleven hundred
eases, and never failed except in two oases
(both thunder humor). He has now in
his possession ovor two hundred oertifi
oates of its value, all within twenty mile*
of Boston. Send postal card for book.
▲ benefit Is always experienced from ths
first bottle, and a perfeot cure is warranted
when the right quantity Is taken.
When the lungs are affected It causes
shooting pains, like needles passing
through them; the same with the Liver
or Bowels. This is caused by the duots
being stopped, and always disappears in a
week after taking it. Bead the label.
If the stomaoh is foul or bilious It will
cause squeamish feelings at first
No change of diet ever necessary. Eat
the best you cau* get, and enough of It
Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed¬
time. Sold by all Druggists.
■ GO HI I Spalding's official Bass B»ll
fl PI Wlafcgame. nil Guide, the authority of the
Niw KriJt*. Hoar
to Sxttlx all Disrrrxs. Valuable* atat .sTlos.
l’lctuieso’ all leading player*. K-'SSsn&SS Poatpald, 10 c.
LawnTennls & 8
How to Play. How >0 Lay Out a Court. Picture»oC
1 eadlng Play era. Valuable Uwk tor all. Poatpald. 10 c.
FREE Haudeome Illustration*—s#ut Catalogue of all Sporto—
over KXKi free to
any addrcaa.Ask for Catalogue So. B
A. C. SPALDING A BROS.
New York. Chicago. Philadelphia
Parkers BALSAM
HAIR
O'eansus and baautifi&s the hair.
i*tt Never motes I'ailsioUfkiorr a uxurbuifc growth.
flair toils V out hi ill ( 'o'or.
Cures scalp diseases at hair failing
50 e. ana $t-ia»at Druggists
k. N.C Twenty, '95.
2133315;
'»K<
Best CURLS WHIRE ALL El .SE Good. FAILS. Use .
Cough Syrup. Toe lee
In time. Sold by druggists
’■-'lb
CDS'.
-
(Hem Hearing Plants.
The assistant director of Kew
den«, . lecturing , recently , at ..I the t ,
institute on some curiosities of
cal plant life, said that among
were the pearls found occasionally
the cocoanut palm of the 1 hilq^pine
lsluuds pearls which, like those of
the ocean, are compospil of carbonate
of lime. Tho bamboo, too, yields an¬
other precious product in the shape of
true opals, which are found in its
joints. In each case this mineral mat
ter is, Vp, of course, ’ obtained from the
soil, • 1 ihe ___,■ natives of . tho nil Celebes
use
these vegetable opals as amulets and
charms against disease.
Hold ihr Fort
Against a bilious attack by calling to your
aid that pulsHant ally, Hostetter’s Stomach
Bitters. The ton will then be driven back
utterly defeated. Dyspepsia, sick headache,
ma aria', kidney, nervous and rheumatic
trouble and constipation yield to the action
of this most beneficent of remedies Take it
regularly and you wul soon experience its
good effects.
It D better lo be a-pure and truthful man in
rags than a hypocrite in broadcloth.
When Traveling
Whether on pleasure bent, or business, take on
every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it, acts
most pleasantly and effectively on the kidneys,
liver and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches
‘and other forni“ of sickness. For sale in 50
cents and $1 bottles by all leading druggists
What wr> may call hindrances sometime?
open tlio way to success.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp - floor cures
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
.Pamphlet Laboratory and Bnrtrnaraton, Cpiuiultation free. Y.
N.
Tria’s nre very often essential in building a
character.
Providence. U. I.
Please forward six boxes of Totterine, C, O.
D. I think il st range that it is not sold here
lu New England, as it Is the beat cure for Ec¬
zema, King Worm and all eruptions of the
skin I ever saw. I got a box from a Cincinnati
drummer, an l gave part of It to a young lady
who had tried almo.t even thing to remove
Pimples and an eruption from her face. cured Two
applications of TelU'rine completely whose
her. 1 know al-o a gentleman body
had b«en covered with Eciema—two boxes of
Tettsrine cured him completely, and now his
skin is as smooth as a baby’s. P. O. Hanlon,
with Silver Spiings Bleaching Co. Sent by
mail for 50x in stamps. J. T. Shuptriae, Sa¬
vannah, Ga.___
Mrs. Wtnslow’sSoothing Syrupfor children
teething, tion, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Plso'h Cure for Consumption is an A No. 1
Asthma medicine.— W. It. Williams, An¬
tioch, Ills., April 11, 1894.
Which Sinn Wins*
The one with steady nerves and a clear
brain. That moans, in nine cases out of ten,
the man with a good digestion. to-morrow’s A liipans
Tabule after dinner may save
business.
_
Whirl a Hsase of Relief it Is to Know
that you have no corns. Hi ndercorns remove*
thorn, and is comforting. 15c. at druggists.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle.
The new drunk law in New York,
prescribing imprisonment instead of a
fine, bothers the people of the metrop¬
olis. It will bo dodged by the courts
or repealed.
That lump in a
man’s ston.\ch
which makes him
irritable and misera¬
ble and unfit for bus¬
iness or pleasure is
| k caused tion. by Indigestion, indiges
A like charity, covers
W a multitude of sins.
F The trouble may be
in stomach, liver,
bowels. Wherever it
is, it is caused .by the
presence of poison¬
ous, refuse matter
which Nature lias
been unable to rid
£ herself of, unaided,
Unpeople if In such cases, wise
send down a
A little health officer,
personified Pierce’s by one
of Dr. Pleas¬
ant Pellets, to search
out the trouble and
remove its cause.
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
It is estimated that gold in circula¬
tion wears out on au average in 240
I j Thomas A. Edison has again seenred
lontrol of the phonograph and will
'urther improve it.
j SumaQ hair varies in thickness
i rom the two-hnndredth and fiftieth
1 the six-hundredth part 1 of an inch.
T , , , ,
la I dlno « Cal > a dlstance of thirt y
mles -
Lenenhock and Hnmbolt both say
(hat a single pound of the finest spi
lor webs would reach around the
trorld.
The diatoms, singld^oelled plants of
he seaweed family, are so small that
!000 of them laid end to end scarcely
.office to cover an inch of space on a
'ule.
Admiral Besnard reports that the
jewest French battleships were tested
8 P eeJ 80 fre( l ncntl y their
nacbinery x was worn out before they
™ r0 put mt ° 8ervice -
I The smallest known species of hog
is the pigmy swine of Australia. They
ire exactly like the larger brethren
in every particular except size, being
larger than a good-sized house
rat. ’*< 5 - jj'lv
! Dr. V. P. Clayton, of Greenville,
; 3 . C., is experimenting with the use
of cotton seed for food. Cotton-seed
! meal’s nutrive value is as great for
men as for stock. It is exceedingly
rich in bone and muscle food.
A comparison of the maximum tem
oeratare in different parts of the
* or i d H bows that the great desert of
^.; ca is b far tho hottest . This
Fast plain, which extends 2000 miles
From east to we8t and 1000 milee from
Qor th to south, is said to have a tem
perature of 150 degrees Fahrenheit in
the hottest days of summer.
In a paper recently published Pro¬
fessor W. W. Campbell writes that
under tho spectroscope Mars and the
moon present the same appearance.
-m. The evidence i of , water , vapor in their ., .
atmospheres, . , , he thinks, ,, . , u produced , ,
is
wholly by such vapor in the air of our
own planet. This is the most irnpor
tant of a series of observations all
tending to show that Mars cannot be
inhabited by animals such as we are
acquainted with >
Professor John W. Langley writes
iff a recent paper that when a muscle
( a exercised a portion of it is oxidized
or , burned. j Our u bodies j- are e furnaces,
in which the vital heat is supplied by
the same chemical changes whioh go
on in a 6tove when the fire is lighted.
And if for any reason tho flesh of our
body is not continually consumed by
this process of “combustion” we die,
as the fire goes out in a stove when it
becomes clogged with ashes and cin¬
ders.
Dog’s Response to a Taunt.
A dog story has come to the writer’s
ears whioh, though not within his per¬
sonal knowledge, is vouched for to him
in au entirely trustworthy way. A
certain dog, which was grooving old,
was in a barn one day with his master.
Tho two were up on a haymow from
which a sloping ladder led down to
the barn floor. The master walked
3 own the ladder, but the dog went
around by another way. When the
dog reached the barn floor his master
began to say to him somewhat taunt¬
ingly : “Poor old fellow f Daren’t
walk down the ladder any more!
Daren’t walk down ;the ladder!”
Whereupon the dog, with a quick
glance at his master, walked clear up
the ladder to the top and then turned
around and walked down it again. The
proceeding looked very much like a
deliberate demonstration on the dog’s
part, to his master, that he was still
capable of walking up and down a
Blanting ladder. Did the dog under¬
stand the taunt, or did he merely
catch the words “down the ladder,”
and take the utterance for a command,
which he dutifully proceeded to obey?
No one will ever know, probably,
Bince the dog himself can give no ac
oount of the matter.—Boston Tran¬
script.
Magnetic Sami tor Cars.
An experiment has recently been
made near Orange, N. J., on the Sub¬
urban Traction Company, with mag¬
netic sand from the ore separating
works at Ogden. Edison had an idea
that the sand would have more effect
in preventing slipping of the wheels
than the ordinary sand. The experi¬
ment was tried during a snow storm
on the Eagle Bock line, where the
grades are excessive and the difficul¬
ties of operating in snow are enor¬
mous. The experiment proved a com¬
plete success, the sand making a per¬
fect electrical connection with the
rails and no slip being noted.—Wash¬
ington Star.
The Greek Colony iu Georgia.
A Greek colony has been established
at Eden in Effingham County, Georgia.
They have purchased, eighty acres of
land from Mrs. Kahn, and about a
dozen of them are already there and
others are expected soon, They will
raise vegetables and other farm
products, but their principal object
is to raise fruits and grapes. They
are a thrifty, hard-working lot of
people.—New York JouruaL
A Wonderful Sensitive Plant.
An incident related by the author of
“The Pearl of India,” in his descrip¬
tion of the flora of Ceylon, is almost
nncanny, although we are assured that
it ig trne . it iB about the mimosa, or
! sensitive plant, and makes one almost
wonder whether the plant has intelli
gence
The 7~ doctor, •. one ?' of the characters of
, . . ... ., ...
f, J on ° f the bung® ow of a coffee
plantation, recognized a thrifty sensi
tlve plant, and it was made the subject
" remark, He called his young
| daughter of 11 years from thei house,
| “'rSl Lena, 0 * 0 ', said he, go an iss e
6 cbl .., d dld !0 aU8 g g 6
L, * ’
aEd , came away. Ihe plan , . g v
ktm of shrinking from con ac wi
c d
toJhthe ,, . b Bt ,, ...
° ’ ™ ^
Eig to do so we approached it
„ ith one hand extended, and before it
h ad come f a j r jy i n contact the nearest
spray and leaves wilted visibly.
“The plant knows the child,” said
the doctor; “but you are a stranger.”
An Electric Swindle.
A French fakir has lately been doing
a “land office” business in selling rat
powder that, while perfectly harmless,
was sudden death to the rats. In order
to convince the skeptical the man first
of all powdered a slice of bread with
the stuff and ate apart of it. Then he
put the balance under a glass case,
where a raff was in captivity. The rat
went to eat the bread and instantly
fell dead. At half a franc a box the
powder went off like hot-cakes and the
lucky proprietor was in a fair way to
make his fortune. But the French
police, very active in detecting and
punishing fraud, “got onto the game”
and found the rat powder was nothing
but ordinary sugar. They also discov¬
ered that the glass sample case was
connected with a powerful electric bat¬
tery, and the moment the rat touched
the bread the current was turned on
and his death was instantaneous.
Bugs to be thoroughly cleansed from
dirt should be beaten with that useful
little article known as a whipper, which
forces from them all articles of dust.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Absolutely pcjbe
Ancient Eggs Prized.
They do not think anything of an
egg in China, it seems, until it is about
100 years of age, old eggs being worth
as much in that country as old wine is
elsewhere. They have a way of bury¬
ing the eggs, and it takes about thirty
days to render a pickled egg fit to eat.
Some of the old eggs have become as
black as ink, and one of the favorite
Chinese dishes for invalids is made up
of eggs, which are preserved in jarB of
red clay and salt water.
Testing Iron and Steel.
An easy and harmless method of dis¬
tinguishing these metals is to deposit a
drop of sulphuric acid upon the sur¬
face of the metal. A black spot will
be seen on steel, but on iron there will
be only a greenish spot which can easi¬
ly be washed off with water. If the
steel is not homogeneous, the black
spots found by the acid will vary in
intensity.
MINT C
>v
cost LESS THAN cheap paint or Qcraraitteed 5 ygC
Pure Linseed Oil only makes any Paint or Lead durable and bright. It ihe gallon oil in of
your Paint is puke, your Paint must be good. It is absolutely necessary to add a
PURE Raw Oil to a gallon of Hammar Paint to make it ready for applicat ion Buy your Oil
fresh from your dealer's barrel and know your Paint is made of pure Oil, and therefore
the best. It will cost you much less than liquid Paint In ca ns and is vastly better.
CONSUMPTION
can, without doubt, be cured in its early stages. It Is a
battle from the start, but with the right kind of weapons
properly used it can be overcome and the insidious foe
vanquished. Hope, courage, proper exercise, will¬
power, and the regular and continuous use of the best
nourishing food-medicine in existence—
Scott’s Emulsion
—the wasting can be arrested, the lungs healed, the
cough cured, bodily energies renewed and the physical
powers made to assert themselves and kill the germs
that are beginning to find iodgment in the lungs.
This renowned preparation, that has no doubt cured
hundreds of thousands of incipient cases of Comsump
tion, is simply Cod-li>er Oil emulsified and made
palatable and easy of assimilation, combined with the ‘
Hypophosphites, the great bone, brain and nerve tonic.
Scott & Bowne, New York. AH Druggists. 50c. and 51*
AFTER THIRTY YEARS.
THE BUCKEYE STATE CONTRIBUTES
THE STORY OK A VETERAN'S
SEARCH.
How Fred Taylor, a Member of tlio Gal¬
lant 1 Ktftii N. Y., V. I., Finally
Found What He Has sought
Since the War Closed.
(From (he Ashtabula, Ohio, Beacon.')
Mr. Fred Taylor was born and brought up
near Elmira, N. Y., and from there enlisted
in the 189th regiment, N. Y., V. I., with,
which he went through the war and saw
much hard sendee. Owing to exposure and
hardships during the service, Mr Taylor con¬
tracted chronic diarrhoea, from which he has
suffered now over thirty years, with abso¬
lutely no help from physicians. By nature
he was a wonderfully vigorous man. Had
he not been, his disease and the experiments
of the doctors had killed him long ago.
Laudanum was the only thing whieh afford¬
ed him relief. He had terrible headaches,
his nerves were shattered, he could not sleep
an hour a day on an average, and he was re¬
duced to a skeleton. A year ago he and his
wife sought relief in a change of climate and
removed to Geneva, Ohio; but the change in
health came not. Finally, on the recom¬
mendation ofF. J. Hoffr.er,the leading drug¬
gist of Geneva, who was cognizant of similar
cases which Pink Pills had cured. Mr. Taylor
was persuaded to try a box. “As a drowning
man grasps a straw, so I took the pills,” says
Mr. Taylor, “but with no more hope of
rescue. But after thirty years of suffering
and fruitless search for relief I at last found
it in Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. The day afterl
took tlie first pills I commenced to feel bettor,
and when I had taken the first box I was in
fact a new man.” That was two months ago.
Mr. Taylor has since taken more of the pills
and Lis progress is steady, and he has the
utmost confidence in them. He has regained
lull control of his nerves and sleeps as well
as in his youth. Color is coming back to his
parched veins and he is gaining flesh and
strength rapidly. He is now able to do con¬
siderable outdoor work.
As he concluded narrating his sufferings,
experience and cure to a Beacon reporter
Mrs. Taylor, who has been his faithful help¬
meet these many years, said she wished to
add her testimony in favor of Pink Pills.
“To the pills alone is due the credit of rais¬
ing Mr. Taylor from a helpless Taylor. invalid to the
man he is to-day,” said Mrs. And words Both
Mr. and Mrs. Taylor cannot recommend to ex¬
press the gratitude they feel or
too highly Pink Pills to suffering humanity.
Any inquiries addressed to them at Geneva,
O., regarding Mr. Taylor’s case, they that will
cheerfully answer, as they are anxious
the whole world shall know what Pink Pills
have done for them and that suffering hu¬
manity may be benefited thereby. ele¬
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain all the
ments necessary to give new life and richness
to the blood and restore shattered nerves.
They are fo» sale by all druggists, or may be
bad by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine
Company, Schenectady, N. Y., for 50 cents
per box or six boxes for $2.50.
Tiny Week Celebration; Snvanuah, Ca.*
May 12-10, 1 S05.
It has been decided to hold a May week cel¬
ebration in Savannah during the third week
In May, for which a wry interesting grand pro¬
gramme has been arranged, including display,
carnival, large military parade and
Tybee day with sham amt naval battle, etc.
It Is also expected that several large war ves¬
sels will be present. railroad 7 of • Georgia
The old reliable Central 16th,
will sell round-trip tickets May 12th to
limited returning May 18th, from all points in
Georgia, and from Montgornerv, Ala , and in¬
termediate points, to Savannah, at the rate of
one fare for the round trip.
For military companies in uniform, twenty
or more traveling in a body on one ticket from
stations within 300 miles of Savannah and
from Montgomery, Ala., and intermediate
point 0 rate of 1 cent per mile in each direc¬
, authoriz d. At these low rates
tion is opportunity very of making
every one will have an
the trip to Savannah.
For further Information, rates, schedules,
etc., apply to any ticket agent of the Central
railroad system or S. B. Webb, traveling pas¬
senger agen t, 16 Wall street, Atl anta, Ga.
M. L. Thompson & Co., Drugtists, Couders
port, Pa., say Hail’s Catarrh Cure is the best
and only sure cure for catarrh they ever sola.
Druggists sell it, 75c.
Parker’s Ginger Tonic 1* Popular
for good work. Suffering, sleepless, nervoug
women And nothing so soothing and reviTing^