Newspaper Page Text
THE SCOURGE IS
Existence of Yellow Fever at Hampton Causes
Great Alarm Throughout the Country.
EXPERTS ANNOUNCE MALADY GENUINE YELLOW JACK
People Hurrying Away From Resorts In Vicinity of
Hampton--Extra Precautions Taken.
A special of Monday from Norfolk,
Va., stated that tho breaking out
yellow fever nt the Soldiers’ homo
Jlampton, tt and , tbe ,, rrevalei.ee , of , an
epidemic even before it was known
thnt there was a case of yellow fever
in tho ITj.ited States, is enusing almost
a panic in eastern Virginia, and tlions-
and. , of , people, , especially the summer
guests nt Old Point, Newport News,
and other immediate Atlantic resorts,
are flocking to tho northern and east-
ern cities for protection from the dis¬
ease.
No Doubt lift to DIftcaft©.
.Surgeon Oenernl Sternburg , ,
Washington received the following
from Liciitcnaut Colonel DoWUt at
_ Fort ,, Monroe regarding (lie outbreak , ,
of fever;
FoicrMosno*, Vn, .Inly 13-Surgeon rten-
eral, H. S. A., Washington At 4 o'clock p.
m., yesterday Surgeon I’oltus, United States
marine hospital service, quarantine officer,
officially slated thnt yellow fever Is nt the
Soldiers' Home; 34 cases, with « deaths.
Commanding officer took Immediate meas- ,
urea for quarantine.
Surgeou Bed us states surg'-ou general
mnrlne hospital sorvico was notified yoster-
day ntternyon, (Slgnod)
T'kWitt, Rnrgcon.
Adjutant General Corbin and Major
Johnston, assistant adjutant general,
were at Fort Monroe Sunday and were
present when Surgeon Pottus made
his report to Lieutenant Colonel Do
Witt. General Corbin eays that from
all accounts there is littlo doubt lliat
the conditions are serious, and there is
no telling how fur^ie infection inny
have reached.
Genera! Corbin further says that
there is not tho least question about
tho character of the disease, physicians
who were present at tho postmortem
on some of tho victims declaring that
yellow fever was surely present,
According to advices received
the “ "''w department Monday, there
had been a total of 40 cases, six of
whom died.
Tho Soldiers’ Home has no connec-
tion with the war department. It is
under a board of managers evented by
congress, which manages nil the
diers’ homes throughout tho country,
The men admitted are soldiers of
the war ot the rebellion. Officers of
the war department are very much con-
cerned on the part of the military post
nt Fort Monroo, which is within six
miles of tho hofno.
Hoiflrn From Hio lteRortfl.
A Washington special says: Tho
yellow fever outbreak at the soldiers’
homo nt Hampton has caused great,
anxiety at the national capital, be¬
cause, when it became known that tho
scourge Was in reality existing in tho
Soldiers’ home, the summer guests nt
the hotels at Obi Point immediately
packed up their things and took the
bouts and trains for Washington gnd
Baltimore. There is fear that in this
way the disease may ho carried to tho
capital, and that n quarantine may be
instituted in Washington.
Monday the marine hospital service
hurried a number .of surgeons to
Hampton and vicinity.
Dr. Wasdin, of the marine hospital
who is already at Hampton, is
as tho export at the, home.
PEERAGE FOR PAUNCHFOIE.
Britinh Ambassador to the United States
Goes ITp a Notch.
It was officially announced in Lou¬
don Monday British that Sir Julian Paunco-
fote, ambassador to tho United
States, who Was head of the British
delegation to the international peace
conference at Tho Hague, has been
elevated to the peerage.
TAX COLLECTOR HIDING OUT.
Davis* of "Walker County, Alabama* Short
His Accounts.
A Montgomery, Ala., dispatch snys:
State Examiner Perry has filed with
Governor Johnston the result of his
examination of the office, of Tax Col¬
lector Davis, of Walker county. Ho
reports that the collector OMUpuftthe
state and county $14,705, and has ouly
$1,000 to his credit in tho bank.
Some two weeks ago Tax Collector
Davis went to Birmingham and got on
a spree, and Governor Johnston sent
the examiner to Jasper to check over
liis accounts. Since thnt time Davis
lias kept out of the way of the authori¬
ties.
PENALTY IS DEATH.
Under Givens Charge Is Returned of Desertion. to Manila
On board the transport Ohio, which,
tho Newport, sailed from San
Wednesday night for tho
was Benjamin Givens,
of company H, Fourth United
infantry, manacled and guarded,
be returned to Manila for trial upon
charge of “desertion in the face of
enemy,” the penalty for which is
_
BISHOP BECKER PASSES AWAY.
The Well Known Trolnto Dies Suddenly
at Washington* Ga.
Bishop Thomas A. Becker, of the
of Savannah, Ga., and leader
the Catholic church in the south,
at Washington, Ga., Saturday.
The death of Bishop Becker will
profound sorrow throughout the
state, as well arnoug his co-religionists
as xvith those of different denomina¬
tions, who, while differing with him
in faith, admired his splendid traits of
eharacter and his wealth of mind and
hearh
1 Surgeon General Wyman has not yet
decided whether he will go to Hamil¬
ton, but will do so if there is any nee'd
of his Borviccs. Arrangements oro al-
rendy tl „ lo to throw , |lmrnntino lincH
i around any place where the disease
shows itself outside of the homo,
j Secretary Hospital Algor Given directed Up to I*ot.loots.
the Josiah
Simpson hospital at Ft. Monroe to he
■ to the mariue ll08
ow , )ita |
sorvico if it is wanted by Surgeon
I General Wyman. This hospital con-
'y 118 1.000 beds, and wns fitted up for
the troops stationed at Newport News
last summer. Only a small portion of
it lias ever been used.
Thp j| secretary told Oenernl Wyman
CB on j] 10 wnl . department for any-
thing that it had or was wanted, and
it would bo furnished at once without
rega ,. (] to regulations or rules. The
secretary said that Surgeon General
vvymnn should ho assisted in ovory
wa y in dealing with the epidemic. Tho
following order was issued by tho war
department Monday: '
o Tll( , r , ri . s „ n ,. n of yft || r , w fnv „ r , lrtV | nR
| )mm om ,dally reported at tho soldiers’
i lome at Hampton, Va., the secretary of war
directs that you give orders fortholmme-
dlate movement of the garrlsonatEt.Mon-
rD o to sofho place of snfety somewhere on
the northern const to be selected by you.
Two commissioned officers and not less than
twenty men will he left in charge of the
)' 09t - ,f there are immune* lu the eotn-
".and they will he given preference. Ac¬
knowledge receipt and report action taken.
"H. C. Corbin, Adjutant General."
Til© I'OHHi I>1 © UftUg©.
Dr. Wasdin’s official report of his
tho examination Soldiers’ of ’existing conditions at
home reached Dr.
Wyman Monday. It is dated Sunday
and notes tho fact that tho doctor has
seen all cases of suspected diseases nt
home. Ho sums up the history of
th e contagion ns follows:
“Early in July nil old soldier enter-
od tho home for n short rest and soon
afterwards appeared at the dispensary,
whore lie informed the physieiai l in '
that ho was but recently from
Santiago, via a transport to a northern
tlionco lie started for Manila via
Francisco, to bent his way to the
on a freight train, and entered
his baggage. He complained of
chills and fever and was pre-
for. Ho mingled freely with
inmates of tho home and a short
ago disappeared, From this as
possible cause, tho outbreak is as
j there “Preceding had been Friday, noticed the nothing 21st of July,
of a
suspicious nature. The weokly death
rate was ns usual. Hut on the 21si
and 22d there became ill during the
night, with sharp pains, more or less
chill, high fever, some eight or ten in¬
mates, men of usually good health.
Those seizures, although noted ns pe¬
culiar, had occasioned no alarm until
about denth.jpeeuried, Thursday, tho 27th,. when a
the man becoming
distinctly death. yellow some time prior to
“Ou or about the Hame day another
one died, without linving attracted par¬
ticular attention; ho also turned quite
yellow. Autopsies were held ou both
liy the resident pathologist. Then
a telegram was sent you asking for an
expert. I found there were 3,500 in-
ill mntos since and thirty-five had been taken
the 21st.”
ALGER POSTED (JT1S.
v
.
ltetirlng War Secretary CrtticlU.. Notlfie. General
Tlint He In llclng
A Washington dispatch jfcjger says: About
ton General days ago Secretary cnbled
Otis, saying that there was
some criticism of him in the American
press, but assuring him that the ad¬
ministration was thoroughly satisfied
with his conduct of the Philippines
campaign.
HALL CAPTURES A TOWN.
A Sharp right Itetween Filipino* niil
American* Before Calambn.
A special from Manila under date
of July 27, snys: Brigadier General
It. II. Hall, with 1,000 men, has cap¬
tured Calamba, ou Laguna de Bay.
The loss .to the United States forces
was NVitlJjtho fqpr killed niul twelve wounded.
largo armies engaged tho
fighting was terrific‘.and jgreat num¬
bers of tho insurgents w$ro killed.
Calamba is a city on La Guna do
Bay, about 30 miles southeast of Ma¬
nila. It is much further south than
tho United States troops linvo yet pon-
etrated on land.
COLLISION ON VOLGA.
A Pasaenger Steamer Goes Down With 155
Souls On Board.
A dispatch received at Berlin, Ger¬
many, Thursday, from Nijni-Novgorod
reports that a cargo and passenger
steamer collided on tho river Volga,
and that tho latter snnk, drowning 155
persons. captain of
Tho report states that the
the cargo ship has been arrested for
disregarding signals,
ENGINEER AND FIREMAN KILLED.
DJuafttriou* Wreck Occurs on Erie Rail-
way—JMLany Passenger* Hurt.
At 11 o’clock Saturday night Erie
passenger vestibuled*train No, 7 for
Buffalo aud Cleveland, leaving New
York at 7 o’clock p. m., was wrecked
Lackawanna.
A freight train w as first wrecked,and
passenger trian plunged into the
wreck.
Only the fireman and engineer of
darailed engine of the west¬
Chica'go express, which turned
on the track, were killed, though
number of passenger* were injured.
APPEAL TO COTTON RAISERS.
Suggestion That a Change Be
Made In the Manner of
Harketing Crop.
In its lending editorial Sunday The
Natchez Democrat tuido tho following
appeal to the cotton farmers:
“Tho timo will soon arrive for tho
marketing of the next cotton crop and
tinless a change is mndo as to the
mode of doing it tho same low level
of prices that was current last year
will he the inevitable result. It is a
well established fact that large port
and interior receipts during tho
months of September, October and
November nro tho great factor in mak¬
ing prices, and it is in your power to
prevent this, ns you have tho remedy
in your own hands, which is to hold
hack on your farms ono-third of your
ginnago until after December or Jan¬
uary. The two-thirds will bring
nearly ns much money, marketed in
this way, as the whole crop marketed
in the usual way.
“fu doing this you will not he de¬
priving the merchants or the hanks to
whom yon are under obligations of
whnt, they are justly entitled to, but
on the other hand, protecting almost
their salvation as well as your own.
“Tho government says tho acreage
in cotton lands is 8 per cent less than
last year, and thnt (lie July condition
is 4-10 per cent less or a total depre¬
ciation of 11 4 10 per cent.
"Estimating tho currant crop at
11,200,000 hales, it, means a slirinkngo
of 1,277,000*lmIoR,or a crop of 9,923,000
hales for 1899-1900.
“Notwithstanding all this and the
further fact that tho cotton mills
throughout tho country aro making
profits ranging from 20 to 40 percent,
mighty efforts are being made to
create tho impression that tho crop
will he an enormous ono, with the
view of getting your cotton cheap, and
it. is for you to determine whether the
greedy spinner will succeed.
“You will bo ussailed by tho wily
speculator with nil kinds of arguments
to prevent you from holding your cot¬
ton, but it is your ouly weapon and
your financial salvation depends upon
its use.
< i Wo will keep this appeal promi¬
nently forward in our columns and
devote a part of each issue to earnest¬
ly advocate it, and w r e ask our associ¬
of tho press and merchants aud
bankers, who are equally interested
with us in building up the prosperity
our southern country, to join and
sid us in our efforts.”
SALISBURY YIELDS POINT.
PropoROH Joint, CommisKion To Arijuat
Troubles Tn Transvaal.
A London special says: The Mar¬
quis of Salisbury having at last broken
silence on tho Transvaal question in
so decided a manner it mny be expect¬
ed that President Kruger will hardly
be likely to refuse to listen to the gov¬
ernment’s now proposal for a joint
commission to examine the franchise
bill. This proposal meets varying
criticism in London. Liberals are in¬
clined to regard it as another instance
of tho "government incurable tendency of the Salis¬
bury culty by referring to it shelye to a' commission. every diffi¬
Mr. Labouchore calls it a climb-
down on Mr. Chamberlain’s part, and
undoubtedly it savors moro of Hnlis-
bury than Chamberlain. Others think
it n concession to the Transvaal’s con-
tention that the matter should be re¬
ferred to arbitration. All agree, how¬
ever, that it forms a practical bridge
of which Kruger can avail himself to
retire from an impossible position.
TO SELL OLD ORDNANCE.
Obsolete Gnus ami Stares Will lie Placed
Upon tli© Market.
Obsolete ordnance and ordnance
stores at sea coast forts in the depart¬
ment of the gulf, which have accumu¬
lated to such an extent as to be an in¬
cumbrance, will shortly bo put upon
the market aud sold.
According to an order issued by
General Frank, commanding the de¬
partment, the commanding officers nt
these forts will nt once cause invonto^
and and inspection reports to be prepai^P
forwarded to the headquarters for
tho action of tho inspector.
The action of tli'e inspector, it is
stated, will bo to put the gnus and
other ordnance on sale. Cities on the
lookout for park aud cemetery decora¬
tions will in this way be given an op¬
portunity to purchase such implements
of warfare as may be desired.
WILL NOT OPEN GRAVE.
Insurance Company Seems Satisfied That
Chase Is Keally Dead.
A special from Bristol, Tenn.,states
thnt the attorneys for the insurance
company in the case wherein the death
of Thomas Chase, who held a policy
of $27,000 and whoso death has been
brought in question, have abandoned
tho idea of opening tho grave in which
Chase is alleged to have been buried at
Milligan, Tenn.
President Hopwood, of Milligan
college, mnkes a statement thnt Chase
is surely ; dead and that the dead body
was seen bv no less tliau fifty people
who were intimately acquainted with
him and that there could not possibly
be any mistake as to his .death.
Prussian Town Destroyed Hy Fire.
A great fire raged at Mariouburg, in
west Prussia, Wednesday. Forty
houses were razed to tho ground.
Tho fire brigade from Dantzio and
Elbing were summoned to assist in
subduing the fire.
Dreyfus Reported Ill.
The Petit Journal (Paris) says thnt
Captain Dreyfus is ill with fever and
that his condition is serious.
ORDER BEING RESTORED.
Rioting ami Lawlessness at Cleveland,
Ohio* Is Subsiding.
A dispatch from Cleveland, 0.,says:
Slowly and surely low and order are
triumphing over law lessness and dis¬
order and tho city is beginning to re¬
sume its old time appearauce today.
Frifluy the street cars were well pat¬
ronized especially during the busy
hours of the morning aud evening.
This is paid to be the best indication
that the government is wiuning in the
struggle,
44 Actions of the Just
Smell Sweet ”
Du frugnnn of Uft Is vigor and
sirsngth, nclthtr of which can be found
in a perron whose blood ia impure, and
whose every breath speaks of intern.-1
troubles. Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies
iht blood and rr.iiTTihe weak strong.
JfocrdA 8aUaf)<Miffk i
Panning: the Gont Along:.
“Will you obllg** m<- by holding this
ram wbilo I oprn this gate? It la
tened on the Inside, and I find that I
must, climb over.”
Such was the remark of a man stand¬
ing at a gate In a lonely rend, and It
was addressed to a stalwart sailor who
had Just come up. The only other
object visible on the long straight road
was a large ram, whose massive,
crooked horns were being held by the
man as the two stood quite still In
fropt of the gate.
“Why, sartlngly, shipmate," said the
obliging tar, as he seized the big
horns.
"1 fhank you,” the first holder said
when he got to the other side. "You
will, no doubt, be surprised to hear
that I never saw that ram until to¬
day. The vicious brute attacked me
about half an hour ago, and wp have
been tussling together ever since. As
long ns you sland before him holding
his horns firmly, he enn't hurt you.
Ooodby, T hope you will be ns lucky
getting away from him as I have
been.”
The sailor’s answer has not yet been
recorded.
A.k Your Uraler For Allen’* Foot-Klise,
A powder to shrike into your shoes; rests
tho feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen,
Sore, Hot, Callous, Ae.btug, Sweating Feet
and Ingrowing Nails. Alien’s Foot-Ease
makes new or tight shoes easy. At all drug¬
gists aud shoe stores, kG cts. Sample mulled
FKEE. Adr's Allen S. Olmsted,Eeltoy, N. Y.
Heaven must enter you before you can en¬
ter heaven.
Con't Tcberco Spit end Smoke Your Life Away.
To quit lobnccc eoelly anil forever, be mag¬
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
liae, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. Ail druggists, 50c or $1. Cure guaran¬
teed. Booklet aud eample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
A man whols full of faith Is always faith¬
UP op
'W! lit/
the excellence of syrup of figs
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of aWd (the combination, but also
to the care skill with which it is
manufacture^ by scientific) processes
known to the) California Fig Syrup
Co. only, and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and orlginol remedy. As the
genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
by the Caiupoknia Fig Syrup Co.
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthless
imitations manufactured by other par¬
ties. The high standing of the Cali¬
fornia Fig Syrup Co. with the medi¬
cal profession, and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Figs lias
given to millions of families, makes
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy. It is
far in advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on the kidneys, liver and
bowels without irritating or weaken¬
ing them, and it does not gripe nor
nauseate. In order to get its beneficial
eflfocts, please remember the name of
the Company —
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, Cnl.
I.OCISVIE.1.E. lor. S’BW YOKK.N.Y.
Hiding In An Ice Wngnn.
If you had happened to he near one
of the largest apartment houses In the
northwest quarter of the town about
4 o’clock the other afternoon you might
have seen a struage sight, for a gavly
painted ice wagon lumbered up to the
door and the Ice man handed out, not a
cake of Ice, hut a real, live woman,
and a pretty woman at that. Great
was the astonishment of everybody
who saw, but the woman herself
wasn’t in the slightest degree embar¬
rassed. She had been hurrying all over
the town since morning, making ready
to go away for the summer, and when
at last she stepped Into a small shop in
n side street to nttend to the very last
errand on her list, she was beginning
to be dizzy, and her head ached with
tho terrific heat till she was on tfie
very verge of collapse. The shopkeep¬
er suggested calling a carriage, but
she was afraid to wait. Just at that
moment un ice wagon drew up to the
curb, and the women—well, a mpment
later she was sitting on a borrowed
stool between two bldbks of lee’’ in
that wagon. She simply had hersplt
delivered at her own door, and she
firmly believes that If she had waited
for a carriage she’d have succumbed
to the heat. The lee wagon, she saj’s—
and, she doesn't forget to add, her own
common sense—saved her life.—Wash¬
ington Post.
___
Tbo Wonderful Discovery From
Soutti South American America, Mosquito *'M«ta Mosquito,” Perfume, mailed Famous
recvlpt to
any address ou o' the retail pr.ee.
Two sizes 10 and 36 cts. Address Arthur Peter
A t’o., Louisville, Ky. A few drops rubbed on
bands, Lice and arms keeps mosquitoes away.
Ciod invites us to come just us we are, but
He does not want us to stay that way.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cnscnrels Candy Catbartie. 40c. or 2.V.
it c. C. C. (ail toeure, druggistsrefuudmoney.
- I. irice doors always swing on very small
binges.
Plantain Chill Cure 1 Guaranteed
euro, or money your so
A SAMOAN TEST OF FEALTY.
What \Va« Keqalrcd of a Lover Whs
Courted a Halt! of Another Faction.
The following gruesome
true story shews what u
lev«*r family approval and tribal
fluence exerts upon the Samoan
acter. The story Is vouched for
every detail:
A certain young Samoan, the eon
a chief, who had reached that
when “a young man’s fancy lightly
turns to thoughts of love,”
deeply enamored of the taupo or belle
belonging to a neighboring village, be¬
tween whose “talking man,” father of
the taupo, and the suitor’s
there existed a bitter feud. The
tachment was reciprocated, but, as
customary In such Important
as matrimony, the question of eligi¬
bility was duly submitted to the
(a^e-na) or family council,
promptly returned a verdict of
possible.” Instead, however, of
cepting the decree of Ills family
renouncing his inamorata the
man rebelled and declared ho would
wed his dusky sweetheart in spite
all the codo of Faa Samoa and
trammels of family and tribal
proval that could bo Imposed.
young girl n^so asserted her
enec and scorn for the obstacles which
were put In their way, and with
help of a few girl friends began
paring her trosseau of fine mats
gaudy tapa, which brides In Samoa af¬
fect.
The wedding day approached. The
feeling between the rival villages ran
high, and before the. arrival of tbe
date fixed for the ceremony culmina¬
ted In open hostilities, Overwhelra-
lng pressure was brought to bear up¬
on the poor lover, who was reviled
and taunted with being a traitor, and
all the curses of endless generations
of ancestors heaped upon his devoted
head; family Influence combined to
exert its every wile to break the en¬
gagement but still he stood resolute,
lie was driven from house and village
an outcast on the -world a^id his prop¬
erty confiscated and divided.
3Tie day came and the bride sat
alone, deserted by her family, waiting
for her faithful bridegroom, The
hours passed; he did not come. Sud¬
denly a step was beard outside the
but, where she anxiously waited. She
rose expectnut. A curtain was thrust
aside; something was thrown into the
room aud rolled to the feet of the
horrified girl. She stooped aud picked
It up, and then screaming and laugh¬
ing slie fell upon the ground—a ma¬
niac.
It was the severed head of her fath¬
er and before her stood her affianced
husband, stern, relentles sand cold ns
if turned to stone, in bis hand the
terribly mlfe-oti (head knife) freshly
dripping. Family persuasion had tri¬
umphed at last and the ordeal which
had been given him of proving his
fidelity to tribe and family In order
to be forgiven was the task he had
Just performed—taking the head ol
the bride’s own father and throwing
it at her feet.
The shock was too great for the
poor girl, whose reason, mercifully,
gave way. She uray yet be seen about
Apia, homeless and wandering, a sadly
pathetic figure, decked Ophelia-like in
bridal wreaths, with a chaplet of vines
twined around her heud, singing her
family song of victory or crooning a
ditty. The young warrior upon
whose fealty so terrible a test had
imposed sought aud found in war
oblivion which his poor afflicted
bride-elect yet hopelessly awaits.
Wanted Her Money or Her Teeth.
A great crowd collected at St. I.n-
zare Station, Paris, one day lately to
see a furious dispute between a young
girl and elderly man, during which
the girl kept uttering the cabalistic-
words, “My money or my three
teeth!”
At length the police marched them
to the nearest police station, and
the girl told h^r story.
She mot a man in Montmartre who
so admired her teeth that lie offered
her sixty francs f$12t for three of
them. The girl had them pulled, but
treacherous monster did not pay.
The mail of St. Laznre Station was,
not the culprit lu question.
was a case of mistaken Identity.
police are now looking for the
tlilef.
Rich—Yet Starving.
Doctors frequently have very wealthy
patients who nvo starving food, to fieath. They
have money to buy but their stomach
lias not the strength to digest it. It lies there
a heavy fermented mass, the sole cause of
dyspepsia, nervousness and biliousness. The
surest remedy to cure a weak stomach is
Hostetter's Stomach. Bitters. It will restore
vigor to the re organs. Nothing Is
“just as good that a private Revenue
Stamp covers the neck of the bottle.
In some parts of Ilussia the only
food for the people consists at present
of acorns, leaves, and the soft bark of
trees.
Fducate Your Rowels With Cascurets.
Candy Cathartic, C. cure constipation forever,
10c, 25c. If C. C. fail, druggists refund money.
Affections are the roots from which life
springs.__4^ Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething.softens tio^ailays pain.cures the gums, wind reducesjnftamma- colic. 25c. bottle.
a
The grace of sympathy is purchased at the
cost of suffering.
Rev. (now Bishop) Joseph S. Key,
Wrote: “We gave your Teethina (Teething
Powders) to our little grandchild with the
happiest results. The effects were almost
magical and certainly more satisfactory than
from anything we ever used.”
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous¬
ness niter first day's use of Dr. Kline’s’Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottlenndtreatisefree.
Dr. R. II. Kline. I.td., 931 Arch St.. Phila., Pa.
Piso’sOure for Consumption has saved me
many Place. a Baltimore, doctor’s bill.—8. Md., Dec. F. Hardy, 2, 1894. Hopkins
Rev. IT. P. Car-on, Scotland, Dak., says:
“Two bottles Hall’s Catarrh Cure com nlete-
ly cured my little >. irl.” 8old by Druggists, 75c.
The gross expenses of the state of New
York during 1893 w 11 reach $25.000,COO,
No-To-liac for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 10c, $1. All druggists.
To go to some places is to tempt the devil
tempt us.
Soleaoe af»« the •arrant.
Before marriage she Yra$ a school-
teacher and It took a good deal of
masculine tact to wean her from the
Idea of making a scientific career with¬
out Jhe Interference of a husband. But
now sho presides over a happy little
home in Detroit, and Is gradually be-
doming domesticated. Among the re-
cent possessions of the family Is a
Cow. led to and from pasture by a
girl hired She boy, was and skimming milked by off the some servant rlcb
yellow cream the other day when her
mistress appeared on the scene.
"Janc,” she snid, do you know that
there are In that milk millions of ml-
nute organisms of bacilli that look hor-
torted Jane, ns she banged the table
sis. "' l,h thesklm.ner, 1 here s not by one, way and of I eopffij- won
stand .t, either. I ^ours he bucU ,
ndf&fi£
ter. Yer the first woman ns ever told
mo I was not clean about my work,
I’ve nllus been fluttered at because of
me neatness. Toil'll not find a one of
them things in that milk, and 1 must
s,r. 1,a ” , " cc “ ** < "
“But listen, Jane—’’
•Til listen no more, that I won’t,
I've heard too much now. And you
don’t need to give me notice, ne’tlier.
I’ll leave within the hour, mum, f nr
they’s plenty of places and them as
don’t be slanderin’ a honest workin’
girl.”
The husband came home to find his
wife in tears and audibly wishing that
she wasn't “smart.”
Having Fun With Temper.
In Paris there lives an eminent paint*
or who Is economical and sententious.
The other day one of the students
broke a pane Ol glft8S In the Studio
window, and replaced It temporarily
by pasting a sheet of paper over the
n pet lure.
When the painter came down thp
next morning he tjmist his cane
through the makeshift, with tbe re¬
mark, “He that breaks, pays.” Nono
of the elfiss.^however, took the hint,
and next morning another sheet of
paper was pasted across the window.
It met with the same fate. And so on
the next day, and so on the fourth.
On the fifth day when the artist
came down there was the paper as
before. Fire flashed from his eyes.
and roaring. “He that breaks, pays!"
he drove his cane through yie paper—
and through the pane of glass behind
it that had been put in by the stu¬
dents and then carefully pasted over
with a sheet of paper.
Thousands of Itchy People
Have been cured quickly by Tetterine. It cures
any form of skin disease. Mrs. breaking M. E. Latimer,
Biloxi, Mia?., had an Itchy out on her
Skin- 8ho sends *1 for two boxes postpaid to Ga., the
manufacturer, J. T. Shuptrino, Savannah,
and writes, “Tettorino is the only thing that
gives mo relief.” Send fifty cents in stamps
for a box if your druggist doesu’t keep it.
sufficiency The self-sufficient man will never get tho
of God.
Ask for Allen’s Foot-Ease,
A powder for the feot. It cures hot, smart-
as 30,000 testimonials; all 'orB'td'ZSto; shoe
drug *yid
stores sell it; 25c.; sample mailod FREE.
Address Alien 8. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
Brooklyn, 1,200 N. Y„ pays 34 cents per night
for each c. p. lamp.
Beauty Is Blood Deep. t
CieLn blood moans a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Casoaretg, Candy Cathar¬
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up the lazy the" liver and driving all im-
purities from hotly. Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
gists, Capcarets,—beauty satisfaction guaranteed, for ten cents. 10c, All drug-
25c, 50c.
He who drifts to ruin will get there just
as sure as he who drives.
>4 2
K ► f seesvwsp
je eifl Atie ? >
U <
Are your nerves weak?
►J Can’t in you back? sleep Lack well? energy? Pain r <
Appetite your poor? Digestion <
bad? Bolls or pimples? *
Lfl These Eigns of <
are sure
h poisoning. what poisons?
From >
U ways From found poisons in constipated that are al¬
N bowels. 4
» ^ If the contents of the
bowels are not removed from
>4 the body each day, as nature
intended, these poisonous ► *
>4 substances are sure tp be
► i absorbed causing into the suffering blood, al-
^ ways and
frequently causing severe i
disease. K
>4 There is a common sense
cure.
va
m ■' V.
, They daily insure an easy I
y and natural movement of L
i the bowels. X
> You will find thatthe use of <
4 ;9,
► r~
► r
<
4
<
r with tbe pills will hasten <
< 1 It cleanses the
► recovery. from all impurities and
4 blood ►
► is a great tonic to the nerves. >
► 1 Write f V; Vector.
< Our Merlical Department haa ono
► of the moat eminent Tell phy*iciane the doctor in ◄
tho United States. You
^ X just how you are suffering. ►
l r "wtll Without receive the best medical ftdrio©
4 cost. Add ress, ►
UR. J. 0. 0. AYER.
> Lowell, Mass. ^
^
THIS PAPER In writing to adver¬
tisers. ANU 99-31
mr ®* Cfl! vvi. ■n
C SAVED BY <
( LgItM to uxs. pihkhak ho. ;», Ml
„ you h#T6 saTed mv Ul0) .^tched < almost,
mo ( the brir)k ot y,, gr , v sigh-
BBfl wi#h to t) '* k , ou . About
teeB monthB j Wfts a toU i wreck,
f hTsJcall i had been troubled with
euf . orrhaja , or(ome tlme , but had given
^ an * atteDtioa to th , trouble,
„ infl#mmBtlon ot the womb
6nd oyar , es rcslllted 6ad then I nt-
fere(J agonics * had to givo up my player), pro-
{c5sion mubleian and iano
w con(ined to my bod aaa llfe beoamo
'Sp*" sc. »
___ _____
havo contracted the
l w habit under their care, if my
intervened.
“Onedaymyhusbandnoticcdthead- and
sement of your remedie. im-
mediately bought me a full trial. Soon
the pain n my ovaries was gone. Iam
strong “d robvis walk
ndc a wheel, and fcelUkcAglr tnher
«• like water of life to me. I am very
gratefully and sincerely your well-
wisher, and I heartily recommend your
remedies. I hope some poor creature
may be helped to health by reading my
. .. —Mrs. Col. „ _ E. _ P. _ RicllA-RHSON,
story.
Rhinkl a sdeb, Wis.
___
Vi J
aB ';®^fu* E X®dSr°f “Va“!re #d i haveoi!"
blood Has been purified and my complexion has isp-
CANOY
CATHARTIC
TRADE V/J.S BCOISTMIO
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Rttaeuy CstmpnBjr, Chicago, *»«n*rtak Yo rh, Sl 8
»6*T0*8fie
GOLDEN CROWN
Are tli© best. Ask for them. Cost no more
than common clilinncj'S. AH Dealers.
PITTSBURG GLASS CO„ Allegheny, Pa.
PITTS’
ANTISEPTIC INYI60RAT0R.
The most eminent physicians of this and
other countries believe in the existence of bac¬
teria (or germs) in the human system. Any
remedy that will destroy this poison without in¬
jury ANTISEPTIC to the pationt INV1GOHATOR "mil meet along felt elimi¬ want.
pot only
nates all bacteria poisons from the diseased
system, but is a fine tonic also. It cures all
STOMACH AND BOWEL TROUBLES,
Kidney and Bladder Diseases, Blood and Skin
Troubles, Nervousness, &c., &e. In fact, it is a
scientific combination of medicines, each of
which does i‘.8 specific work on each separate or¬
gan of the body. It never fails to reach the dis¬
eased organ and always does its work well.
A Safe »n<t Reliable Household Remedy.
For c»ale by Druggists ^verywhero.
College of Dentistry.
DENTAL DEPARTMENT
At] t roIlo „ e of Pli ysiciansi and Surgeons
Oldest Coi.lkg E IN State. Thirteenth An¬
nU ai Session opens Oct. 8; closes Apri il 80th.
Tlioso contemplating the study of Be nlistry
should write for catalogue
Address 8. W. FOSTER, Dean.
G2-0.3 Iiunan Rltlg., Atlanta, Ga.
THE ATLANTA
'/i ■udinedd oueae
Offers thorough practical courses in Bookkeep¬
ing, an^ Shorthand and Typewriting. Students
placed jn positions'without extra charge, Re-
duced j-ates to all entering school this month.
Calion COLLEGE, or address. TIIE ATLANTA BUSINESS
128,130 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
DR. MOFFETT’S
teething POWDERS
2£Vg!i
lids Digestion, Regnlates tho Bowels and Makes
Teething Easy. TEETH Iff A Relieves tho Bowel
Troubles of Children of Any Age and Costs Only
25 Cents. Ask Your Druggist for it.
If not kept, by druggists ST.LOl’IS,MO. mail 25c to
C. J.MOFFETT, ITt.B.,
c J, REPAIRS SAWS, RIBS,
BEISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, &o.,
FOR ANY MAKE OF GIN.
ENGINES. BOILERS UNO PRESSES
And Repairs for same. Shafting, Pulley- 4
Belting, Injectors, IRON Pipes, WES Valves SUPPLY and Fitting /
LOMBARD &
AUGUSTA, GA.
Tomtom 5 :
Pemiiu:to”and wo!
Over 00 \T M T O all
writers. 364 rtudrnts last year
Stir year. Send for catalogue. Add aK0
STMYER'S BUSINESS COL'GE.L
m’s
UNIVERSITY OF VIRt V
Letters.Sciencs.Law.Medicina.Ene. High location givee freedom from Malaru
Yellow Fever.
Scesioii bi jiius S< }!trinlM*r 15.
AddrcsH ( haintiau, Uiiivcrsiry of VIr*, a
Chni’letiesville, Vn. <c
DROPSY Bo of teatimonialu “
cnees- tk and 1(1 days' tri cat in 9".
Fro©. Dr. H. H. QUEEN'8 SONS, Box , Atlanta, Ga.
If afflictad with ) Thompson’s Eye Waler
aore eyes, use i
gy— 252.5:%C~‘£S.§ .l
m mm
(jUREoV/KERE all else fails.
Beet Cough Syrup. Tastes Good, Uso
in time Sold bv drimorists
19,335 C'ES_