Newspaper Page Text
44 YoaNeverMbstheWattr." Till the Well Runs Dry.
We nenxr realize ihe value of health
until it ia gone. When old time■_ strength
and vigor are •wanting, purify ihe blood
by taking Hootts Sarsaparilla; soon re¬
stored appetite, perfect digestion, steady
nerves and even temper <wltt prove it is
bringing back the glow of perfect health.
it,
yvev/H oisAPPohUs
JOKE ON A SPANISH SKIPPER.
• 'apt. Doncelo Learns tho American
Fnshlon of Lonrilnff Grnlu.
“About four years ago" snhl the
anperlntcndent of one of Buffalo’s
grain elevators, "while I was In charge
of an elevator In Baltimore, a small
Brig ran up to the elevator to take on
a load of wheat. I he Captain s nnmo
was Doncelo. lie was u Spaniard and
for ten or twelve years had traded
arotiml in Eastern ports. lie had uev-
er seen a grain elevator and his idea
of loading grain into a vessel was that
it wns shovelled hi by hand, ns it was
years ago. Ho found me nnd in his
gruff way said:
“ ‘I want to put In in,000 bushels of
Wheat, nnd I don’t want to lay around
here u week or two. See If you can’t
get me out of here in two days any¬
how.’
, “I smiled, said tlmt I would try,- and
gave orders a minute later to got the
brig up In position, whore wo could
assail her iu good shape. The < tipinln
went to his berth to sleep, for it wus
nearly midnight then. We snugged the
little cruft up against the wharf,
opened her hatches, nnd inserted three
full-sized spouts leading from well-
filled bins in the top of the elevator.
All the employees understood what the
joke wns to be and they decided to
break n record. Everything was ready
for the loading a half hour nfter Capt.
Doncclo went to bis berth, but wc bad
concluded to let him get fast asleep be¬
fore going on with the joke.
"It was an hour and a bylf after
the Captain bad disappeared that the
power was turned on nnd a second
later thousands of bushels of grain
went rushing from the bins Into the
hold of tho little craft. The boat listed
heavily for a moment and threatened
to but the slid over to
the centre .?nd righted tftfisUlp. DYnVfi
rushed the •g'Fffta through tho three
spouts. You could hear the roar for a
thousand faet. Seven minutes nfter
tho power was turned on tho power
was turned off. The tfi.OOO bushels
had been paid out nnd rapt. Doncelo’s
boat was setting pretty low In the
water. About this time tho Captain
appeared on deek In Ills night shirt.
“ ‘To tho pumps!’ he shouted In Span¬
ish iu Ills loudeSt tones.
The crew was on deck In a mlnuto
and Capt. Doncelo flitted about like ft
paper man Iu a windstorm. Spying me
on the wharf laughing he accosted mo.
“‘What Is the matter that my boat
sink* at her dock? 1 lie asked.
“ ‘She’s not sinking, 1 guess. You
said you wanted to get out of here In
less than a week nnd wo loaded your
Boat for yu q - fn a liun ' y.*
“The Captain looked at uio queerly,
stepped over to the hatchway nnd
looked at the heap of golden grain In
the hold. He was amazed, to say the
least. He remnined iu port long
enough to have the mystery explained,
and n good wind prevailing, he set out.
He had lain Just two hours nt the
dock.”
t The French cruiser Sfnx, which car¬
ried Dreyfus from Devil's Island to
France, is pained after a'port town le
Tunis which wns bombarded and cap¬
tured by the French In 1881.
All Skin Disease* Cured,
J5y a wonderful ointmout called Totter!no. ‘‘It.
is tho only thing that Biloxi, Klvos mo relief,” writes
Mr*. M. E. Latimer, Miss, blio liml an
Itchy breaking out on her ekiu. It cure* tetter,
ealt rheum, and all other skin trouble*. 50c. per
box at. your drugfftats, nr send tho amount in
stamps to J. T. Shuptriu©, Savannah, Gn.
A man hut to ubo both hands if he ever un¬
dertakes to carve an average sprlog chicken.
Don’t Tobacco Spit ond frroke Your Llie Away.
’loqult tobacco easily end forever, l>o mag¬
netic, full Of life, horvo nnd vigor, take No-To-
Rac, the wonder-worker, that make* weak men
etrong. All druggist*, 60c or $1. Cure gnatan-
leed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or Now York.
Hurrying to got rich generally necessitates
one to be dishonest.
THE REASON WHY
For man or beast
SLOAN’S
Excels—is that it Penetrates
to the seat of the trouble im¬
mediately and without irrita-
ting rubbing—and kills the
pain.
Family and Stable Slroa
Sokl by IValer. generally.
Or. Earl 8. Sloan, Boston, Maam.
“For six years I was a victim oi nothing dys¬
pepsia m its worst form. I rouhl eot
but milk toast, nnd nt times my stomach w ould
not retain nud (Hiicst even Uiut. Lust March 1
began taking CASCARETS and since then 1
have steadily improved, until 1 am as well as I
ever was in my life." . _
David H. Munpar, Newark. O.
TRADE MARK REOI»TfRCD
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good.
fiood. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, 10c,
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
E" Y,lrl1 ’ M1
N-iftut
If .fflicted with I Thompson’s Eye
»or« aj.8, UM
f -.xl
2§§T=S.-.
CURES WHERE Syrup. AIL ELbt Good. r.vLb.
Cough Sold bv Tastes druggists.
in tima
CONS U M P TION :
333 MS:
CHILDREN DIE
BY FLAMES
Asylum Al Sparkill, N. Y., Is De=
strayed By Firo.
WERE ONE THOUSAND INMATES
Shrieks of tlie Dyinjf Little Ones
Added Horror To Heart-
rending Scenes.
a special to tho New Y'orlt World
f rom Nyuck says that lire wan disnov-
ere 4 , ,n . I' 10 , largo boys , and , girls . , , oi-
plruu asylum, connected with St.
Anne’s convent, at Sparkill, Orange
county, nt 1 o’clock Monday morning,
but not before tho entire sthuoture, a
frame building, was wrapped iu
flames. Tho report states that many
of tho inmates, children, were burned
and suffocated.
George Martin, of Sparkill, one of
thoso who first discovered the fire,
telephoned to Nyack for assistance.
Mazoppa engine company responded
from that placo. Eight doctors also
went to the asylum from Nyaok. A
request for aid was also telephoned to
Piedmont. Empire engine company
was dispatched from Piedmont to the
econo of tho fire.
The asylum, which is couduotcd by
tho Bisters of Mercy, held about 1,000
children. It was a long frame build¬
ing, threo stories hi'h. Tho flames
discovered until tho whole
building was one mass of firo. Tho
children had scant chance for escape.
Special trains over tho New Jersey
Northern railroad were rushed to tho
renrest railroad station. The asylum
was situated botwoen Sparkill and
Orangeburg.
IIcurtremliuK Scenoi.
Tho scones at tho conflagration wero
heartrending. T'bo children, clad in
their night robos comld bo soon falling
backward into tho furnaco of damn and
siudife, wJ.’ik tho shrinks *-:£ - crackle the dying
could ho heard above the of
tho devouring flaroo.
Some of tho children wore crippled
for life by jumping from tho windows.
Many of tho sisters also wore injured,
while others lost their lives heroically
while trying to rescue their charges.
Although tho service of the firo ap¬
paratus from neighboring places had
been promptly rendered, the engines
nrrivod too Into to he effective in sav¬
ing life or property. Tho tiro startod
on the upper floor of fho three-story
building. Nearly IK10 of tho occupants
of the convent occupied rooms on this
floor nnd all tho dormitories wero
lighted with kerosene lamps.
There is little doubt that the firo
was caused by the explosion of one of
these lamps. Tho firo spread 'vapidly
upward and burned through tho shin¬
gle roof of tho building in two jilncos.
At tho time of the discovery the fire
had mado such progress that the sis¬
ters ould not awake tho hundreds of
children under their cave, marshal
them in order, and march them from
tho building, ns was the practice at
fire drills. Many ol" the little victims
wero suffocated in their sleep.
INVESTIGATOR STATE LINES.
Tennessee ami Virginia Olllcial* Have
Conference at Bristol.
At the conference at Bristol between
Governor Tyler and Attorney General
Montague, of Virginia, on ouo side,
and Governor McMillin and Attorney
Pickle, of Tennessee, on tho other,
touching the boundary line between
the two states, it was agreed that At¬
torney General Pickle, of Tennessee,
should, in October, petition tho United
Slates supreme court for the appoint¬
ment of commissioners to review nnd
remark ihe Hues.
The conference wns in overy way
satisfactory.
Americans Ambushed By Insurgents.
A Manila special says that four men
of the Twenty-third regiment, station¬
ed nt Cebu, wero ambushed by tho
natives in the hills and three of them
killed. The fourth man succeeded iu
making his escape.
CHACOKJfAU WON FUTURITY.
Koeno’s New ly l’u roll used Korso Captures
jRicli Stake at SlieepsUoad.
Chacornnc, owned by James R.
Keene, won the Futurity rnco nt
Sbeepshoad Bay Saturday in tho fast
time of 1:10 2-5. J. J. Hyland’s Brig¬
adier second nnd Bromley Compa¬
ny’s Windmere, third.
It was the twelfth running richest
stake in the country and second time
that tho Keene colors have been in
front. The Futurity stake was worth
nearly 812,000. It was won by tlie
favorite and was altogether the most
satisfactory Futurity ever run. Twenty
horses went to the post.
GUEHIN'S l’lilKN 1)S FAITHFUL.
Beleaguered Anti-Semite* Deceive Food
lly Underjivound Passage.
A Paris dispatch says: Tho anti-
Semites assert that they are conveying
food supplies by nu underground pass¬
age to Jules Guerin, the anti-Semite
agitator, and his beleaguered compan¬
ions at tho headquarters of tho anti-
Semite league in tho Hue do Chabrol,
Tho troops on the cordons have
been increased, but otherwise there
has been no change in the situation.
ARKANSAS TOWN DEMOLISH!).
Storm Wrecks Village aiul Not a House
Was Deft Standing.
News reached Newport, Ark., Sat-
nrday that tho little village of Picas-
ant Plain, situated in tho hills of the
port, was struck by a storm Friday
night and literally wiped out of exist-
enee. Not a house was left standing,
As the town has neither telegraph or
telephone connection with the outside
world, the details of tho storm’s
ravages wus difficult to obtain.
DELEGAL GIVES
Nfegro Murderer of Deputy Sheriff
Townsend In Darien Jail.
HIS OLD MOTHER SURRENDERS KIM
ItelnttvcH of the Murdered Mon Agreed
>" ot to ill mm Him -Sltimtlon In
McIntosh County,
The round-up of negroes in McIn¬
tosh county, Gu., Saturday resulted
in tho surrender oft Henry Delegal.the
murderer of Deputy .SheriffTownsond,
and the location for future arrest of
Delegate brother nnd the woman di¬
rectly Donegal's implicated in the killing.
surrender was made to
Lieutenant Wood, in charge of a de-
tuebmsnt of thirty Savannah soldi*'s
stationed fifteen miles in tho couplry
to baelc up the sheriff’s posse, tthn
were scouring the swampy, and Delo-
gal state s that ho surrendered to tho
troops for protection, as he saw the
sheriff’s Capture posse was closing in on him,
nnd his was only a matte® of u
few hours or minutes.
At 4 o’ti'ock Saturday afternooki, the
military sfi ecinl with Lieutenant Leon¬
ard Wood, .Lieutenant David Harrow
and twenty-five men left Dariein. Tho
two forces combined at Eulonin.ou tho
twjelve miles from Darien,nnd
tho slioriilts posse, leading by half a
spread over the country. Every
was arrestod ns the posse pro¬
and hold by detachments for
approaching militia.
The Delegjal settlement wns i?oon
and tap tho posso ditshud up to
houses neigroes scurried to their
like frigh toned rats. Eight cab¬
were surrounded, pickets strung
and each innn stood beside his
for
Tho negroes sent their women nnd
children out and this wnH followed by
tho posso closing in, arresting nil tho
men and searching tho premises. Tho
search proved f ruitions, but. a confes¬
sion of Delegat'd whereabouts was ob¬
tained nnd tho posse divided, hnlf
going to the swamps. Tfhe swamps
were being beaten closely while tho
military lined out on the. bluff, pre¬
pared to send a volley iiufco the out¬
pouring negroes as they cftino before
the p<w?<v.
At this critical juncture Delegat'd
aged mother camo out of tho swamp
with a request that Delegal bo allowed
to surrender to tho soldiers.
The entire posse joined in request¬
ing Messrs. Townsend, who wero anx¬
ious to avenge the death of their
brother, to surrender their arras nnd
they finally reluctantly cons^utod and
gave their word to allow Delegal’s
safety.
Delegal admitted the murder, hut
denied sending for his friends to help
lpm kill the whites. There is positive
evidence to tho contrary, however.
With tho prisoner seenijed, a quick
run was mado to Darien Junction, and
at 0 o’clock Saturday evening the
Train from Sa vannah arrived with nd-
ditional reinforcements of 161 men
and eleven officers of'tho First Georgia
regiment under command of Colonel
Lawton.
Tho run hack to Darien was without
incident and at 8 o’clock the prisoner
was safely landed there without blood¬
shed.
CARPENTERS (10 OUT.
Sli-iito In Clintt.nnnoga Caused 15y I>is-
cliargo of Threo Union Men.
Tho carpenters, joiners ami fuvni-
uitnre wood workers employed in the
Loomis ifc Hart Manufaeting company,
at Chattanooga, went out on a strike
Saturday morning. Tho company dis¬
charged three men who are officers in
their union, and tho men refused to go
hack to work until tho throe men were
taken back.
OIL TASKS IJIJILV,
Standard Company Uowpb Over Two Thou¬
sand Darrels By Firo.
Ono of tho most destructive fires
that has over occurred! nt the Standard
Oil refinery broke out nt Whiting,
Ohio, Sunday night. It was caused
by a teak at. the bottom of one of the
stills. A few' minutes nfter tho fire
broke out there was a terrific explosion
and tho flames spread rapidly to the
two immense tanks containing 2,200
barrels of partially refined oil.
BEPOKTATION OF BLACKS
Is Senator Duller’* Solution of the
linen Problem.
Ex-Souator M. C. Butler, of South
Carolina, has written n letter’to Colonel
Wyatt Aiken,of Greenwood,expressing
himself on tlie recent acts of lawless¬
ness in that community. He attacks
tho position of Senator Tillman and
others who denounced the action of
the whites.
Senator Butler favors deportation of
negroes as tho only solution of the
race problem; and instead of the state
prohibiting emigrant agents working
within its borders, as is the ease iu
South Carolina, he contends that a
bonus of so much per head should be
paid to get tho negroes out of tho state.
OLD FRIGATE BARKED OUT.
Tho Constitution Too Valuable n Relic to
lli*k In Parade.
Acting Secretary of the Navy Allen
has advised tho Dewey committee in
New York that the department finds it
inexpedient to grant the request to
have the old frigate Constitution take
part iu tho parade. valuable
Tho ship is regarded as too
a relic to ho subjected to tho risk at¬
tending the trip from Boston to New
York.
WARRANT FOR COL. NEAL.
Ex-Superintendent of South Carolina Pen¬
itentiary to De Arrested.
At the instance of Col. T. J. Cmt-
ninsgham, chairman of the board of
directors of the penitentiary, a war-
j s that Col. Neal failed to turn over
the money of tho penitentiary to his
successor within thirty days lightest after the
i atter had qualified. under The this charge sen-
fence fora conviction
j R three months’ imprisonment and
81.000 flue.
Fft.lilon Flint!.
A coat of xvhlte corded cloth with
eollnra and cuffs hr qM od with white
flheniUe and gun-metal braid la neat
and jaunty.
Hats continue to tilt to one aide nnd
to be worn off the face. As long ns the
pompadour Is in favor lints will bo
worn back.
The sailor hat from now on will have
« sunken crown, a narrow back and a
rolling brim. Immense bows of taffeta
land flownrs will be used as trimming.
Ixnils XV. coats are promised Inno¬
vations, and one of pale fawn box-
cloth Inlet with a dull satin marvellous
of tbn same shade, Is shown as a model
by one of ihe smart tailors.
Black stocks should never be worn
'Acept with black shirt waists or fig¬
ured waists with a black ground.
A large majority of the fall hats are
poke shaped to quite u degree. The
brims flare Instead of being tied down,
and the crowns resemble elevated tnm
o’shnnters.
The satin stpek Is steadily crowding
out tho usefulness of the linen collar.
Double faced satin ribbon ran be
washed and ironed nt home without
cost, and that fact alone deuls a death
blow to the linen collar, with Its neces¬
sary laundry hill.
Tin* Now Torppdo.
A young fw«do 1 ihb Invented a torpedo
Operated solely by In vial bio rnye of light,
which enablea It to explode at. will beneath
the enemy’s fleet Id a like Bubtlo inrinner
Hofltetter'B Stomach hitters attack*. nud con¬
quers nil stomach troubles. When a sufferer
lr. in crusilpAtlon ot dyspepsia or liver com-
I'l»int t/ikri; the Bitters he Is sure <>f one
thing, B' OUer or later, and that is cure, free
that a private Revenue Stamp covers tho
neck of the bottlo. *
A man bns ono big annoyance each
ami a woman hns n dozen small ones.
To Cure fount i put Ion Forever.
Tiike C fiRCBrots ( audy Cathnrtio. 10c or
Jf f. C. V. full to euro, druggletfcrefund
Tho man who uses religion as a
slionlil not conlplnin if ho fulls in tho mud.
Bownro of Ointment* for Cntarrh
font a! n Mercury,
n* mercury will purfdy destroy the flense
smell and completely dorango the whole system
wh‘*n entering It, through the mucous surfaces.
Such art ob should never he used excopt on
nros**ript,ionB from reputable phystclnns, the as
damage they will do Is ten fold to good you
can Curo possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh
manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, O., contains directly no mercury, and Is taken
internally, acting upon the blond
mucous surfaces of the system. In
Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine.
It Is taken Internally, and Is mado in Toledo,
Ohio, by F. J. ( honey A Co. Testimonials f re6.
Hall’s Fold Family by Druggists; Rills price, tho 75c. per bottle.
are best.
The man who is anxious to buy usually
gets the worst of the bargain.
/i UPof
m ^ ■A
m
iM
iMlTAmm /«¥ lit/
THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination, but also
to the care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
known to the Cai.ifohnia Fig Syrup
C o. only, and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and original remedy. As the
genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
by the California Fig Sybup Co.
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one iu 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
givon to millions of families, makes
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy. It is
far iu advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on the kidneys, liver and
bowels without irritating or weaken¬
ing them, and it does^iot gripe nor
nauseate. In order to get i^ beneficial
effects, please remember the name of
the Company —
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CG.
8A.S FRANCISCO, Cut
LOUISVILLE. Kx. FEW YDKK.N.T.
Home of flic Edam Cheese.
AA'hlle the Edam cheese Is a famil¬
iar visitor on the table, not every one
knows whence it comes nor how its
ennnon ball proportions and gay col¬
oring has been achieved. The north¬
ern part of Holland is the seat of the
Edam cheese industry, and the conse¬
quent cleanliness of the relish Is there¬
fore doubly assured. In making It the
fresh cow’s milk is carefully strained
and the rennet added. As soon as the
milk curdles tlie whey Is drawn off
and the curd, thoroughly kneaded, is
pressed into moulds. This process Is
repeated until the whey has all been
extracted and the curd Is compara¬
tively dry. It is then wrapped In a
linen cloth and kept for ten or tivelve
days until quite solid. Then the cloth
is removed nnd the cheese put Into
salt lye. Afterward a littje more dry
salt Is sprinkled on the cheese, until
tlie maker thinks it Is salt enough to
insure Its keeping. It is next put into
a vessel and washed with whey and
scraped to remove the white crust. It
is next carried Into a cool room nnd
laid on shelves, where it is frequently
turned. The ripening process lasts
from two to three months, the round
balls growing the fine yellow or red¬
dish color peculiar to Edam cheese.
The cheeses intended to be exported
to this country are rendered still more
brilliant by dyeing the rind with a
vegetable dye.
For Over 30 Years
Wintersmifch’s Chill Curo has stood nt the
top notch as a reliable remedy for chills and
lever. Such success guarantees its value. It
cure* where otheis fall. AH druggists sell it.
Address arthuji Petek & Co., Louisville, hy.
In Japan most of thj horses are shod with
straw.
Xo-To-Uac for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tot accc habit cine, mokes weak
men strong, bleed pure. All druggists.
England mikes 15,000 artificial limbs an¬
nually.
kmppmn ' h ‘.- ; v,«... K !?r □- >(• i d.,' Si !* . m « mm lISSU m if! M'm Si PC! r’ 1
rr; m 3i : :
-
To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, bo why not try it? Price oOc.
KANNEBS IN THE SICK BOOK.
I ftneor.sfal Physician's Advice to
IlCKlnnrrs In Medical Practice.
A physician who has reached profes-
6lona! renown In New York nnd earned
a fortune which enables him to under¬
take only the kind of cases that In¬
terest him, attributes much of his suc¬
cess as a practitioner to one rule be Im¬
presses on all the young men In his own
profession In whose welfare he Is con¬
cerned. Physicians are likely to think
that their colleagnos who earn large
Incomes from their practice owe much
of It to their manners, whether they
are assumed or natural with them.
"I tell every young doctor in whom
I feel nny Interest,” he said, “that
cheering conversation, a henry man¬
ner, awakening a patient’s thoughts to
other things than his malady, and
other quantise, supposed to make him
popular are *11 very well In their wny,
but useless unless one thing more is
added to them. No doctor should ever
fall to return to the subject pf his pa-
tlent s Illness before he leaves him.
Hint should be the last subject lie
talks about. Without that addition to
the other blandishments of a sick-room
trmnucr he will never get the full bene-
lit of them. The sick man, or more
likely the sick woman, likes to believe
that Ills or her Illness is the most ab¬
sorbing thing nnd to realize that tho
doctor Is thinking more of that than
of anything else. If this is neglected
the patient’s thoughts are very much
inclined to dwell on what seems a
slight neglect or indifference, nnd to a
sick man that may assume Importance.
Cheerful talking about other matters
nnd nny other agreeable tricks may be
gll very well In their way, but it is
necessary always to get back to the
source of the putlentls chief interest in
One other successful physician has
always held that the most Important
phase of his conduct in a sick room
wns never to appear in a hurry, what¬
ever the provocation might be. This
was difficult enough at times, but ho
managed to stick to the rule as
much as he could when there was
necessity for it. which was most fre¬
quent in the case of those persons not
so sick ns they though* they were.
“With them," he sale, “a doctor has
always to be most careful about the
niceties of sick-room behavior, for the
really ill are rarely ab!e to Interest
themselves in these details. But it is
the patients who think themselves sick¬
er than they are that are ft doctor’s
most profitable clients, nnd he has to
be more careful of his conduct with
them than In a cnie of life and death.
As a doctor makes more money always
out of persons omy hnlf sle’k than from
those who are dangerous ill, he cannot
afford to neglect the little things that
make him popular with them.”—New
York Sun.
A Doer That l^ver Forgets.
Under ordinary conditions Dandy Is
a good-natured fellqw, willing to ac¬
cept tribute from nlj comers. But he
has a memory of hte own, a revenge¬
ful temper nnd resflits nny slight put
upon him by strangers or friends. If
insulted at home he^ will retire to a
distance nnd proud*, refuse- Vo
anything more to do' with the offender.
Dandy is a collie. /
The grocer who Waters to the family
employs a shock-headed youth, who Is
full of mischief and a strange desire
to smite dogs to hear them yelp. lie
amuses himself when delivering goods
by kicking pets'furtively and then in¬
nocently wonder when they cry.
Ho tried it on." Dandy. He smote the
collie, but was mot by no answering
yelp. Instead the dog sprang upon
him so fiercely he was glad to betake
himself to tlui wagon for safety.
That was t\vo months ago, but the
dog lifts never forgotten the cruelty of
the offender. No matter what the
hour of day or night, as soon as the
footsteps of that youth sound on the
pavement c r back porch the dog be¬
comes wild with rage. Ho makes
every effort to get out and renew the
fight. Ho barks constantly and furi¬
ously nil the time tho steps can be
heard. He does not need to see his
torineuror, for ho recognizes the.
steps.
The boy has learned to reconnoiter
that home before making port. He Is
in moi'iai tear lost tho dog get to li'm
and complete tho job he commenced
when he nipped the log smartly after
that blow so long ago. Dandy Is just
as d< lermined to make reprisals at
tlio first opportunity.—Seattle Post-
Intelligencer.
Jnnu—Did you gain any flesh at the
Homestead?
Billets—Not much. As fast as I put
it on the mosquitoes carried it off.—
Philadelphia North American.
Best Prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever,
Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic
It is simply Iron and I “v. First Tasteless Tonic v
Quinine in a tasteless sii ever manufactured.. AMT
form.... Sold by ,r ; other so-called- 1 "Taste¬
every
druggist in tlie malarial fell less” Tonics are imita¬
sections of the United FAT tions.. Ask any druggist
States.....No cure, no 4 p, about this who is not
pay.... Price, 50c. PUSHING aa imitation.
'
:
WHOLESALER. r ■
^ ^ecomiReii^ .i-usi r . w , E, , ___ yj._j
Dt. Louis, Mo., Fob, C, 1800. V/niTEnnoEO, Terr., Sop. 13, 1898.
Parts Medioinb Co., City. PABI3 Medicins Co., St. Louis, Mo.
on OontlcmonWo tho increased sales wish wo to aro congratulato having on your you RETMLER. ltudo. Gentlemen:—I I think write Grovo‘3 you a few lines of nrafc-
pirovc ? a TosCeleS3 CfctS22 'ZTosic. On exam¬ Tonici ia of your tho best medicines TTasCcIlooa CEnSH
ining our record of inventory under dato of Kedkon, Ills. for Chills ono and In tho world
Jan. 1st. find that cold during the Chill Paris Medicine Co. Fovcr. I have tlirco children
of wc 1803 2660 dozen wc Grove’s 'i onic* Wo Gentlemen:—I handle , eight differ¬ that have boon down with malarial fever for 10
ccason . ent kinds Governor bottlcc months and have bought Chill medicines ofoU
also And that our calcs on your Lasativo Grove’s of Chill Tonic3 but I coll ten kinds and Doctor’s bills cominf; in all the time
Bromo-Qniniw.o TTabSols havo boon some¬ of to where I cell ono of the others. until I sent to town and (jot threo bottles of
thing cnormouG: having cold during tho late I sold 8S bottlo3 of Grovc’a GEalH i'oxalc in- Grovo’o XonSc^ My children are ell woll now
Cold and Grip season 4,200 dozen. one day and could havo sold more if I had had *-£-* istcloGi Chill Tonic that did
Please rush down order enclosed herewith, it on hand. Mr. Lave Y7ood3 cured Qvo ceres it. mneTi In ■ifn lvrhnlf
and oblige, Yours truly, 1 of chills with ono bottle. Yoons truly,
MEYER dR03. DRUG CO. Respectfully,
Per Schall. JOHN T. VINYABD. JAMES D. ROBERTS.
The Moit Uninteresting Country.
V. hat Is the most uninteresting
country In the world? The writer of
1 a Foreign Office report puts In a bad
^ )n thls connection for Korea.
The scenery is, indeed, he admits
strikingly beautiful, but nslde from
this there Is an ubseuce of almost ev¬
erything wflcii makes a country In¬
teresting to the traveller. There Is
■loti .1 g whatever which he cares to
take with him ns a memento of his
visit. There can be feu o<juutrle;.
anywhere which do not offer more at¬
tractions in this resppet than Korea.
It Is the habit to attrlbuc bis uniform
dreariness nnd desolation to the Jap¬
anese Invasion of three centuries ago;
nut there must bo something lacking
in the character of a people who have
failed during such a long Interval to
achieve any advancement In arts or
manufactures.”—London Daily News,
A Family Weakness,
a Whangarel (New Zealand) youth
w ko advertised for a wife was amazed
to fl n q am ong the replies letters from
two 0 f B i 8 ters, with photos inelos-
e j < j u this ca9e the mania for matri-
m onial alliances seems to have been
q U i* e a family disorder.—Sydney Bul-
j e tin.
Arc You Using Allen’s Foot Ease?
It is tho only euro for Swollen, Smarting,
Tired, Aching, Burning, Sweating Feet,
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Al len’s Foot-
Ease, a powder tQ be shaken into the shoes.
Sold Stores, by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe
25c. Sample sent FREE- Address
Alien S. Olmsted, Lelioy, N. Y.
The automobile is evidently a haughty
carriage—Judging from the price thereof.
Beauty Is Blood Deep.
Clri.n blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascnrets, Candy Cathar¬
tic clean your blood and keep it clonn, by
stirring purities up the the lazy liver body. and Begin driving to-day all im¬
from to
banish pimples, bolls, blotches, blackheads,
nnd that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascnrets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug¬
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 60c.
Shallow men are despised, but they don’t
require as much watching as deep ones.
Fits permanently cured. Nf. fits or nervous
ness after first day s use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. 9V trial hottle and treatleefreo.
Dk. R. II. Kmne, Ltd., 081 Arch St.. Phila., Pa.
After Cure.-M six years’ suffering I war cured by
Piso’s ary Thomson. Ohio Ave.,
Alleghany, Pa., March 19, 1894.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
tion,nilnys teething, sot tens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
pnin.cures wind colio. 26c. a bottle.
A man’s own good breedings the best se¬
curity against the ill-manners of others.
Fduoitc Tour Bowels With Cascnrets.
Candy Cathartic, C. cure constipation forever.
ICc. 25c. If C. C. fail, druggiste refund money.
Fly Iu His Ointment.
“Tyte-Phist is surlier than ever
since he came back from his vaca¬
tion. ”
“Yes, he has just learned of a place
where he might have gone and saved
$4.”—Chicago Tribune.
t
5'- m- 1(1
Lookatyourtongue 1 If it’s coated,
your stomach isbad, your liver outof
order. Ayer’s Pills tyiil clean your
tongue, liver cure right. your F.asy dyspepsia, take, make
your 25c. fi druggists. easy
to operate. All
Want your mo § beuid a beautiful
Drown ot rich \ tlc-J
GO Iskers tho
*3-CT8. or Druoui^ts, j>n P. Hill A Vo, Nashu*, N. H,
FOR SALE.
A First-Class Corner Drug Store,
doing a paying business. Fixtures are
modern and up-to-date. Have the finest
soda apparatus in the city. Would
exchange for real estate. Address,
A. L. CURTIS, Atlanta, «a.
/Barters ink
v —None so good, but it costs no
moro than the poorest.
MENTION THIS PAPER in writing to adver¬
tisers. Ah V 99-35
Teethina ffl DR. MOFFETT’S fi Aids Digestion,
Regulates the Bowels,
Safe* Makes Testhihg Easy,
TEETHINA Relieves the
asa .ft Bowel Troubles of
Mil J Ml Jilli Children of Any Age.
TFFTHiWR PfiWnFRS Aok Costs Only 25 Cents.
Your Drutrtfiet for it
If not kept by druggist# mail 25 cents to C. J, MOFFETT, UI. D., S'F. LOUIS, MO.
A Letter to Mrs. Pinkham Brought
Health to Mrs. Archambd.
[l.STTES TO U*». rlNKUAU NO. 4J,3M1
“Dbab Mbs. Pixkiiam—F qr two
years I felt tired and so weak and dlasy
"that some days I could hardly go
around the house. Backache and head¬
ache all the time end my food would
not digest and had such pains in the
womb and troubled with leucorrhcea
and kidneys were affected.
% “Af'er birth of et.oh child I grew
weaker, and hearing so much of the
good you had done, I wrote to you and
have taken six bottles of Lydia E.
Pinlfbam's Vegetable Compound, Pills, one
box of Lozenges, one box of Liver
one package of Sanative Wash, and to¬
day I am feeling a.s well as I ever did.
When I get up in the morning I feel as
fresh as I did when a girl and eat and
sleep well nnd do all of my work. If
ever I feel weak again shall know
where to get my strength. I know
yourmedlcine cured me.”—M rs. S ^ ALIN A
Archamho, Charlemont, Mash.
The present Mrs. Pinkhnm’s experi-
eni-e in treating female ills is unparal¬
leled; for years she worked side by
side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and
for sometime past has had sole charge
of the correspondence department of
her great business, treating by letter
as many as a hundred thousand ailing
women a year. All women who suffer
are invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham
at Lynn, Mass., for advice, which will
be promptly given without charge.
GOLDEN CROWN
LAMP CHIMNEYS
Arc tho best. Ask for them. Cost no more
‘^VTS^tnVm^co^'^rar.r..
- . PITTS’
Antiseptic Invigorater
FOB
The Stomach, The Liver,
The Bowels, The Kideys,
The Blood, The Nerves,
Contagious "Diseases.
Antiseptic Invigorntor is a germ-killer, a
aluretic, a blood purifier, a stomach and
nerve tonic, a s'imulant for the liver and
bowels. Manufactured br
PITTS’ ANTISEPTIC INVIGORATOR CO.,
THOMSON, GA.
WANTED AGENTS for our Colton
Book ; it bQglns nt So. and runs to 11c.;
figures the KJths and 20ths from 800_to 700
pounds; a *H.C0 Took for only 99c. It sells
like “het cakes;” terms liberal. Alsoior
the Bible Looking GIhpk. It teaches the
Rt bio by Illustrations; agents making from
?'\C0 lo $10.CO nor day. Write f o-dny.
o. L. NICBOL« St S.O., Ailn«t»/’Co.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3&$3.50 SHOES "*io»
Worth $4 to SS compared with
P other makes.
In<lorse<l hy over
1 , 000,000 wearers.
!§ ALL LEATHER3. ALL STYLES
THR GHSUUW bans W. I»
came and pries stamped on liotton.
Take no substitute cialmert
to be os good. Largest makers
of i?3 and- «3.50 Bboes in the
world. YourdtJii terehonlcl keep
‘Pern—If not, wt
VJ ** a pair on receipt of price. State
kind of loathe -er, size and width, plain or cap to&,
-- iwe;
W. L DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass.
REPAIRS
mm SAWS,RIBS,
BRISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, uto.,
FOR ANY MAKE OF GIN.
ENGINES, BOILERS flNO PRESSES
A: id Repairs for so-n@. BhafUnn, An Hoy?
Beltloy, Injectors, Tipes, Valves ana Fittings.
LOMBARD IRON WORKS & SUPPLY CO.,
AUGUSTA, GA.
THE ATLANTA
unedd HQo-Meae
OfTers thorough practical courses in Boolikeop.
ing, placed and in Shorthand positions and without Typewriting charge. Students Re¬
extra
duced raUs to all entering sdhboV this month.
Call on or address. THE ATLANTA BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 138, 130 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
rfe Tesonoot. ua
H,^WP^^SITUATI01HSGUflRflNTBED Tuition low. All Books FREE.
Over 50 Remington and Smith Premier type¬
writers. 351 students last year from 7 States,
fith year. Send for catalogue. Address. Dep’t22.
STRAYER'S BUSINESS COL’GE, Baltimore,Md.