Newspaper Page Text
A Smart Reply.
Some recruite were being drilled at
Aldershot by a very impatient cavalry ,
drill sergeant. After about an hour of
Bard drilling at the sword exercise, the
sergeant gave the order, "Stand at
case.” 7.
No soonpr were the men standing at
ease than the sergeant began to com
plain of their altitudes, and wound up
by saying: ‘‘Why, you fellows are like
a lot of dummies. I can get smarter
soldiers than you at a shilling per box.’’
After about a minute’s hesitation one
of the recruits remarked: “t suppose
tfiere would he sergeants among
them?”—Answers.
Tea in 1 moet.
The Times of India declares that t«a
drlklng Is the curse of Thibet. The
people, it says, have such an Insatia
ble craving for the beverage that they
will sell their houses, their flocks, their
very children, to procure It. If ever an
upoRtle appears In 'Thibet to regencrato
tho nation he will have to preach a
crusade in favor of whiskey drinking
In order to wean tho inhabitants from
the national vice.”
A N v .w Crazy Keel In Connecticut.
A lot of fanat-in* in tho Htate recently im
mersed an old rheumatic woman bodily In
the water to "heal her” as they Wild. She
nearly died in consequence, How much bet
ter it. would have been t.o have, treated the
poor old woman for her infirmity with Hos
tetter’* Stomach Bittern, which kidney not complaint only cures
rheumatism, hut prevent* constipation, liver
and rcntcdicH dyspepsia, prostration. it
trouble ami nervous Dive a
t ystcmatic trial.
No wise merchant will ever try, under any
circumstances, to make customers take what
he knows they do not. want. He will not sub
stitutc good* of doubtful value for those of
demonstrated merit.
To Cure a Cold In One Day.
Take Laxative Promo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money if it fails to euro. L'5c.
It is expected that before long Canada can
veil annually sr/i.tmu.finii worth of butter and
cheese, to Great Britain.
ttlOO Howard. Winn.
The render* of this paper will he pleased disease to
learn ! hat tlie,re isat least one dreaded
that science ha* be en able to cure in ail its
stages, and that is t'atari'll. HnU's Catarrh
Cu n> is the only posi f,i ve eti re now k now n to the
mi ■dieai fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu
tional disease, requires a constitutional treat
ment. Ball’s Catarrh < lire is taken internally,
actingdi redly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system, thereby destroying tho
foundation of the, disease, and giving the pa
tient, strength by buihli/ig up the constitution
and assisting nature, in doing its work. The
proprietors have ho much faith in its curative
powers Hint they offer One Hundred DolKr*
for an v case that if- fails to cure. Send for list
<>f UcKtluionUilH. ilo n
ro ' Tol( ,
M„1,1 l,v DniKtflHi.-, mily 7.V-.
11,‘liv Fa PIHn ar e tlio beat.
A 1 ’i'n.e Fuhiii.
KK-M. Medicated Smokinn Tobacco
All.! uitfaroUes
’
n. M.l. s a ticlight fill smoke.
Ladies as well as men, use these uoods.
N, (opium or other harmful drug
EK M^d :mi«l
My some <.r t he bed c itizens
or this country.
If your daalcrdocs not keep EE-M.
.JTCAKStSiaSr
Direct t.» the kk-M. company,
Atlanta,
And veil will receive goods hy mail.
VI rs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for child ren
te" llil’nc, softens the.gums, wind reducesiullammn- eoluv bottle,
lion, allays paDi. 1 ;ores a
Fits permanently cm ed. N'o Ilfs or nervous
ness niter flrstdny’s use of Dr. Kline’s Oreat
Nerve I lest, ire r. trial hotUeund treatise I ree.
hit. 11. II. Ki.im:. Lid.. «« Arch St., I'iiila.. Dr.
Sciatic
Rheumatism
” I have boon troubled with sciatic rheu
matism and have been taking Hood’s Nar
saparilln. I improved every day and now
am ns well as I over was in my life. I feel
live years younger than I did before taking
Hood’s Sarsaparilla. ’ Wu. O’Bbibs, 2515
4th Avenue, West Troy: Now York.
Hood’s Sarsa narilla -
Is tho bast— in fact tlioOnoTrue Blood Puri fl&r. •—1
Hood's Pills euro nil liver ills. 85 cents.
nPHIM, U MORPHINE,WHISKEY,CO
Vli* 1 ?SSMl M
a , ; , , , Ji'i , rr^ y TmV. WfforFMAS; iitctso.
uum i ls.Du iia iiuiututf. < iu.
mm am m g a ill For Poultry, half cost of
LLIUIMIUI I* tllulllM 1 Nelt,n La’i'bCatalogue K* Also farm. 'free?* yard.
K. iTsiiKLl AHEROER. 401 : . st., Atlanta, Ga.
Gann'n Patent Canon Planters and
Guano Distribute". It’s er-onomy touse
thvm. Every farmer Pan afford to have one
or more. blend tnr samMe and prices.
J. '1‘. 6.5511, Macon, Ga.
_ A
AGENTS WANTED.
Mon op women tn every county fur a successful line
of Novelties. On ’• \utom:t;ic Fire Alarm nml also
U vu’d lav 1.5 vm sweep the market. Success is
assured to ve agents. Apply at once for o.'
ami exclnsi e tcrritopA . Information ami under
writers’ indorsement five. Wide Av»itU«* Hr**
\1 iu-| it cY Nou4l> F«., i’.O.U >x ml.A'ineimmM.A!.
POTATOES • $ 1.60 Bbl.
YYis' unaiu a yield oi* 7Ht buikdt per •ere* ‘
Price* dirt cheap* worth Gar great ^10 *e«d Keek, fe? III
farm Heed Sample#, te vet • atart. (
10c* yeatuc®* Ja»N A. MUIHSEKDCO., LaUre***,Wla.
OSBORNES &
udcneM aueat
\ Uii IJNl l j. I.ii . Actual business. No text v
books. Si UU’t Ml n»*. (Jheap hoard- S **iui lor O'll-.tlagrui
RUPTURE U>so!ut«ly cured Write v with- *oi
circulars Mid t , -t mutuals SF.XTON, M.
117 W. Ml ((‘Iie-ii si., \ llama, Ga.
If afflicted wt*h ) Thompson's Eye Water
sot* <
FORYOU
100 per cent. profit aud a cl.Huce to win hundreds of
dollars in (loin and ;i Fiuo Gold Watch. For parti*
cularsaddress.W.T.A'hoathaui.«lr.. Henderson, N- c.
|*1 K Q C* \ Busiue.vi College, Louisville, Ivy.
x m i kuiok advantauks.
*#■ W w* Book kkkpinu, smoktuaxd and
U’B l.Eti&ArHY' UeauUIul Catalogue ftree.
_
)
SHERIFF AMR EIGHTY DEPUTIES
TO APPEAR Ilf COURT.
TROUBLE AT.LATIMERTOBE AIRED
The Prosecution Claim They Will Have
No Trouble In Securing; Convic
tion of Murder.
A special from Wilkesharre, Pa.,
says: The ease of Sheriff James Mar
tin and his eighty deputies, charged
with murder and felonious wounding
of a score of strikiug miners at Lati
mer, September 10th last, will be call
ed for trial in the criminal court within
a day or two. It is expected the trial
will last a week or more. Able conn
sel have been employed on both sides.
Tlie first battle will be over the
selection of a jury. More than a
hundred witnesses have been sub
poenaed, but not all of them will be
heard.
The commonwealth will claim that
the strikers were only exercising their
rights us American freemen when they
marched on the public highway un
armed. It will be contended that they
were not lawless; that they had
offered no personal violence to anyone de
and that they were npt bent oil
stroying property. The lawyers for
the prosecution will quote decisions
from the higher courts to show that
such a body of men had a right to
move on the public highway while en
gaged in n peaceful mission. counsel for de
On the other hand,
fense will charge that the strikers were
riotous, that they were armed and that
] ! their intention was to destroy proper
ty. They will call witnesses to show
that the people living in the strike
district were fearful for their lives,
and that some of them moved away
for safety. the sheriff
Tt will also be shown that
. had i COllie 111 COIitllCtWlMl with th« * Ue strikers Sl,, £ e,S
j at Hazleton <>li th<3 i)*ortyilig 0* oep
| tamber 1st; that ho then warned them
by leading the riot act that they were
violating the law, and that they
disperse and go to their homes, in
: I atead of accepting this advice, they
jeered the officer of the luw and pro
I The Latimer on their inarch to Latimer operation,
mine was m
! Hie employes had no grievances, so far
! [ as known,''and it will be averred the
only object the strikers could have bad
I ill going there w»S to intimidate the
j men. Theowiiersoftheminelmdap- the sheriff protect llieir
uealed to to
v; attempting to ,1. U.
sworn duty in the matter, his deputies
in conflict with the strikers and
bloodshed was the result. The de
■ ftJUSO will contend that this was the
n)OH t natural thing ill the world, and
j ^ nnilw , hc t .j rtmm8t auecS it. would
be a travesty of justice to hold the of
ficers of the law guilty of murder.
house will hurry
In Taking Action On Teller ltesolution.
Poltiicnl I)«bivte.
A Washington special says: There
seems to be no prospect of an abate
ment of the political debate which has
.lioen iu progress in the house during
the consideration of the appropriation
bills.
j Agniu Saturday almost the entire ses
sion was consumed iu the discussion
of political topics.
'The controverted question arrived ns to
i ^ther or not prosperity had
j attracted the most attention and testi
| 1U()11 y p^o and con was offered through
the debate was good natural, both
sides seeming to recognize that it was
merely a struggle to score political ad
Yfllltllge. reached
The determination was uy
leaders in the bouse of representatives
j t | 10 '1’eller resolution for the pay
mt lit o( bonds in silver, which passed
the senate, should be disposed of by
the house on Monday in order that the
attitude of that branch of congress
might lie placed before the country
immediately. The conclusion was
reached after numerous conferences
‘ between Speaker Reed, Chairman
Dingley, of the ways and means com
mittee; Messrs. Dalzeii and Hender
son, of the rules eomimttee, and other
influential members of the house. •
THE RAILS SPREAD,
Resulting In Wreck of a Train Ill Which
Four Lives are Lost.
Four persons deair aud thirty suffer
ing from wounds is the result of a dis
jistiH* on the Maine Central railroad,
near Orouo, Maine, Sunday.
The dead are: Daniel Cunningham
and wife, of Troy, Me.; Airs. Jennie
S. Murray, supposed to he of Calais,
Me.; Rev. Father Hugh NcGiath, of
South Boston.
Tho railroad officials say that so far
as they know the track was in good
condition. The weather had been
very cold for some days, and it is
thought thnt the action of the frost
may have caused the rails to spread.
MERCURY BREAKS RECORDS.
Now England Ha* Coldest Weather
Known In Wars.
A Boston dispatch says: Belated re
ports from remote places in northern
— Luglaud show that the .. tempera- .
New ,
turo was the lowest known in many
years. the
At Lancaster, N. H., mercury
broke all records of the past twenty
live years.
- reported ,, from
Fovt> below , zero was ,
n number of places Vermont! in Maine, New
Hampshire and
RACIAL FELD 15 ARKANSAS.
White* urn! Negroes Threaten to ftenort to
Arm* to Settle Difference*
A special from Little Rock, Ark,
says: Trouble has broken out again
between the blacks ami the whites in
Lonoke county, ami a race wav is
threatened which, when once started,
may outrival anything of tho kind
witnessed in the south in years. The
trouble has been brewing for a long
time, ami the feeling between tho
races is so bitter that the first spark
will cause an explosion.
The center of trouble is the town of
Lonoke, a place of some 2,000 inhab
itants, about one-half of whom are
negroes.
A portion of the white people of that
town have been trying and to rid the place
of the negroes, clashes have been
frequent in the past. Several negroes
have been killed by whites and others
have been driven out of town.
It is said that there has been little
resistance upon the part of the blacks
up to this time, but they ure now or
ganizing for the purpose of mutual
protection, and the next clash is almost
certain to produce serious results.
This clash is expected to take place
within the next week or two, notice
having been served on the negroes
that they must leave the county within
that time or suffer the consequences.
The following written notice, bearing
date of January 23d, has been tacked
on the door of nearly every negro house
in the town of Lonoke and on many
cabins in the surrounding country:
"You aro hereby notified that you and
every other negro in Lonoke county must
leave Lonoke in thirty days and never come
bip:k again. If you don’t go you will he
hqng tij tl(e limb of a tree and your black
carcases (Hied with lead.”
The notices are not signed, hut are
adorned with a skull and cross bones.
Notices have also bean posted on the
doors of negro schools warning the
teachers to dose the schools and get
out of the county without delay. Many
of the negroes have taken their fam
ilies and all of their belongings and
moved out of the county, and schools
have been closed. Bnt a large number
have avowed their purpose of remain
ing in their homes anil defending them
at the cost of their lives, if necessary.
One prominent colored advised man in an colored open
lettpf tp his racp the
mgn of Lonpjje tp supply themselves
with arms and bo prepared tp protect
themselves.
GERMAN SAILORS KILLED.
lliitcliered By Cblneae While lloing Sen
try liuly at Klao-Chou.
A dispatch from Che-Foo, China,
gives details of the assassination of a
German sailor named Schulz, belong
ing to the cruiser Kaiser, which was
fiyst announced in a dispatch to the
Associated .Press from Berlin oil Jan
uary 26tli, while oh outpost duty at
Tsimo, the extreme German post in
Kiao-Chou bay.
The crime, which was committed by
a Chinese rabble on Monday last, was
not discovered until three men of the
corporal’s guard were making the
rounds in order to relieve the sen
tries. Then Schulz was discovered,
his bead having been severed from his
body. The relieving guard wqs direct
ly afterwards attacked by 100 natives,
and after a stubborn fight if is report
ed that all the sailors were killed,
Twelve natives were killed during the
fight. added that in ol
It is consequence
the outrage the greatest excitement
prevails at Kiao-Chou and it is believed
the incident will form the basis of
further German demands upon China.
A later special dispatch from Shang
hai says the Geijian admiral threat
ens to take measures of retaliation.
LEGISLATIVE AITS ATTACKED.
An Important Suit Filed Bv a Number
of Georgia Bankers.
An important suit has been filed at
Atlanta, Ga., against the state treas
urer by attorneys for 25 banks, which
attacks the constitutionality of all leg
islation passed on the last day of the
recent session.
If that part of their contention is
sustained by the supreme court, the
convict bill and many other important
measures enacted on the last legisla
tive day will be nullified.
The suit is brought to restrain the
state treasurer from examining private
banks, as he is required to do by the
Berner act, which is thus attacked.
The suit was brought in Fulton su
perior court and Judge Lumpkin has
set it for hearing on March 12th.
SILVER IS THE SENATE.
Tl\« Teller Resolution Thoroughly Dis
cussed By That Body.
For more than six hours Wednes
day the senate had under discussion
the Teller resolution providing that
the government may pay tho principal
and interest of the bonds of the United
States iu silver.
The debate was devoid of the sensa
tional incidents and acrimonious col
loquies which characterized that of
Tuesday, bnt it was replete with argu
ment and oratory. The time was con
sumed by Mr. Teller, the author of
the resolution, and Mr. Daniel, demo
crat, of Virginia, who supported the
resolution, and by Messrs. Hoar aud
Platt, in opposition to it.
OWED FOR SANDWICHES.
Falling to Collect Cash a Lunch Man Kills
Customer.
John Donnelly died in the hospital
^ Cincinnati Thursday from the ef
f ec ^ s G f a kuookdown blow adminis
tsred by Ben Green.
Donnelly anti a friend had refused
to pay for sandwiches ordered at
Green's lunch stand. Green followed
and oyertook them and kno cked Don
nelly down, his head striking the
curbstone.
A Benc'actreu’ Kind Act.
From the Evening Kev», Detroit, Mich,
Mr« John Tansey, of 130 Baker Street,
bctrolt, Michigan, U on® of those women
who always know just what to do !n all
trouble and sickness. One that Is a mother
to those in distress. To a reporter she said:
"I am the mother of ten ohllclren and
have raised eight of them. Heverul years
ago we had a serious time with my daugh
ter, which began when she was about six
teen years old. She did not have any seri
ous illness but seemed to gradually waste
away. Having neverhad auy consumption
In our family, us we come of good old Irish
and Keoteh stock, wc did not think it was
that. Our doctor called the disease by an
odd name, which, as I afterward learned,
meant lack of blood.
' It is impossible to describe the daughter feeling
John and I bad as wo noticed our
slowly passing away from us. Wo finally
found, however, a medicine that seemed to
jj s'
ni
\" i jm H
Vt
T I
Afost of the Time She Was Confined to lied.
help her, and from the first we noticed a
decided change for the better, and after
three months’ treatment her health was so
greatly improved you gained would not have re
cognized her. She in flesh rapidly
and soon was in perfect health. The medi
cine used whs Dr. Williams’Pink Pills for
Pale People. I have always kept these pills
in the house since and have recommended
them to many people. I have told many
mothers about them and they have effected
some wonderful cures.
‘•£ very mother in this land should keep
these pills in the house, as they arc good for
many ailments, particularly^hoso prising
from impoverished qr disease^ blood, and
weakened nerve force.”
Paris sends $3,750,000 worth of toys
to England every year.
That Everlasting Irritating Itch.
That describes Totter. Eczema and other
skin diseases. 50cents will cure them—stop the
itch at once. 50 cents pays for a box ot Tetter
ineatdrug stamps from stores J. T. or Shuptrine, postpaid Savannah, for 50 cents Ga. in
Ambition —The feeling that you want to
do something that you can’t.
Chew Star Tobacco—The Best.
’ Smoke Sledge Cigarettes.
times Ignorance—Sometimes blisters. it’s bliss, aiul some
it’s
Store FREE! qr'fpMaraCci-qp. Inventor’s Patent Pat.Oftiee,\Vash,, Guide. Any Drug 1>,
C.
Fruit
Trees and Vines become
hardier, and their products bet
ter colored and better flavored
whep liberally treated with
fertilizers containing at least
10% actual
Potash.
rnnr rKen An illustrated book v.'tiicti (ells
what Potash ’6, and bow it
applicants. L i should he used, address, is sent free to
all Send your
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
0 ? Nassau St., New York,
KING'S IMPROVED COTTON SEED.
R. J. REDDING, Director. HUGH N. STARNKS, Horticulturist.
If. C. WHITE, Vic© Director ami Chemist. J. M. KIMBROUGH, Agriculturist.
ATHENS, GA. If. J. WING, Dairyman.
GEORGIA EXPERIMENT STATION.
EXl*RKSS AND FREIGHT OFFICE, GRIFFIN, GA.
MR. T. ,T. KING, Richmond, Vn. EXPERIMENT. Ga.. , January 19, 1897.
MY DEAR SIR-This year tlie variety tests show King’s Improved at th< e very top of the list.
I consider your variety the most distinct and well marked, and most constant of oil that I have
tested during the last six years. J t certainly require* closer planting, and yon will he interested
in the experiment to test this point when you get a copy of Bulletin No. 81, now being prepared
for the printer. Your* truly, K. «J. REDDING, Director.
lCavliestand Moftt Prolific Impartial Test
at th« Mississippi Experiment Station
gives tills:
Truitt...... ..1020 lbe Dickson's . SCO lbs
Welcomes.....t«50 •* [Peerless.. . 1150 “
Southern Hope. 10(50 jPeterkin.. SOI >*
Duncan’s........ 247 ‘King’s . .. .1210 “
XS-IKTO-’S
Imunni 1.1 Cotton m
Was awarded First Prize at the World’s
Fair and has stood the highest tests wher
ever exhibited. Just received one ear load
and as the seeds are in such demand I ad
vise my customers to order at once. Casli
must accompany all orders. Prices, Sl.OO
per bushel; 10 bus. or more, 75c. Send all
orders to W. V. McMillan, 35 Marietta St.,
Atlanta, Ga.
FOR SALE BY
w. v. McMillan, ATLANTA,
35 Marietta St., <JA.
To Women!
After you have tried Doctors and all
other preparations, and they have failed
to relieve you, then use
GERSTLE’S
FEMALE PANACEA.
TRADE (Gh F. P.) MARK.
IT WILL CURE YOU.
FOR 5ALE BY ALL DEALERS IN MEDICINES.
L. GERSTLE & CO., Chattanooga, Tenn.
Sole Manufacturers and Proprietors.
Subterranean Rivers.
In the November Geographical Jour
nal we find a communler.tton from Sir
Clements Markham, who describes how
I^pron Nordensktold reasoned out the
possibility of finding fresh water by
boring strong hard crystaline rock.
Baron Norrienskiold’s idea was that
by boring through the granite rocks
he would strike water bearing fissures.
He therefore selected the rocky islets
on the Swedish coast which serve as
pilot and light stations, and complet
ing borings found sweet water could
be obtained at a depth of 100 feet, the
texture of the rock preventing the salt
water from percolating through and
commingling with the sweet water ly
ing in the fissures. In the same num
ber of the Geographical Journal there
is an article by M. E. A. Marte! on
"British Caves and Speleology.” M.
Martel describes a descent into caves
near Enniskillen, as well as other de
scents in Ireland, and also describes
wha* he saw of underground rivers
and lakes in Derbyshire and in York
shire. In the case of the Irish cave3
he says their flowingt waters mus
have an outlet under the sea, as there
is no other way to account for the
phenomenon. We refer to these mat
ters, as they interest cable engineers,
and bear upon a paper read before the
Institution of Electrical Engineers
during the last session by Mr. Benest.
In this paper it was stated that it was
believed bv some engineers that sub
marine telegraph cables when laid on
a continental slope, and In a direction
more or less parallel to the coast line,
were liable to interruption from the
effects of an outburst of subterranean
water on these slopes even in deep
water. Deductions from the evidence
furnished by Baron Nordenskiold and
M. Martel seem to Increase the belief
in the theory referred to in Mr. Ben
nest’s paper.—Electrical Review.
Monkeys as uoia nnaers.
Capt. E. Moss of the Transvaal tells
the following story of the monkeys
who work for him in the mines:
“I have 24 monkeys,” said he, “em
ployed about my mines. They do the
work of seven able-bodied men. In
many instances they lend valuable aid
where a man is useless. They gather
up the small pieces of quartz that
would he passed unnoticed by the
workingmen, and pile umi up in lit
tle heaps that can easily be gathered
up in a shovel and thrown into a mill.
They work just as they please, some
times going down into the mines when
they have cleared up all the debris on
the outsides. They live and work to
gether without quarreling any more
than men do. They are quite method
ical in the..- habits, and go to work
and finish up in the same manner as
human beings would do under similar
circumstances. It is very interesting
to watch them, at their labor, and see
how carefully they look after every
detail of the work they attempt. They
clean up about the mines, follow the
wheelbarrows and carts used on min
ing and pick up everything that falls
off on the way.”—Tit-Bits.
Oh, What Splendid Coffee.
Mr. Goodman, Williams. Co., Ill., writes:
“Prom one package Salzor’s German Coffee
Berry costing 15c I grew 300 lbs. of better
coffee limn I can buy in stores at 30 cents a
lb.” A. c. 7
A package at this coffee and big seed and
plant catalogue is sent you by John A.
Kalzcr Seed Go., La Crosse, Wis., upon re
ceipt of 15 cents stamps and this notice.
Pino’s Cure cured me of a Throat and Lung
trouble of three years’ standing.-^E. Cady,
Huntington, Hid,, Nqv. l;i, 1894,
TO COTTON PLANTERS.
For six year* past my Cotton has stood at the
front as tho earliest and most productive
Cotton grown in this country. My claims I are
not idle boasts, but every statement make Is
backed by Official State Reports from various
State Everyone Experiment farms. that tests fair
must know the are
and absolutely impartial, and they sho?/beyond
any doubt that under same conditions of soli,
climate and cultivation, my King’s of Improved
Cotton will make an average G4 per rent,
more than the other improved Cottons. What
does this mean?
ANSWER.
Where you now’ make five bales of Cotton, by
planting my seed you will make from seven to
ten bales—hence the two to five bales are extra
money, at no extra expense, save the cost of a
fc\v seeds
You don’t believe what you see in print?
Common sense should tell you that what I state
here aro plain facts, because I simply re-state
that which has been sent out by officials, who
had no axe to grind, and who did not know me
personally. Enough seed plant will cost only a
to acre you
little and surely the money will be well spent.
❖
p
ON© ENJOYS
Both tho method and result*? when i
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acta
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head*
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in ; ts
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known. sale in
Syrup of Figs is all for leading drug- 50
cent bottles by
gists. Any reliable it hand druggist will who
may not have on pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Bo not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL
LOUISVILLE. KV. NEW YORK. N.Y.
T NORMAN’S 'T ^ -z- I
* NEUTRA1.IZINU a
i> CordiaLp ^
CURES DIARRHOEA. <1
t NORMAN’S NEUTRALIZING CORDIAL 4
CURES DYSENTERY. *
A NORMAN'S NEUTRALIZING CORDIAL 4
CURES CHOLERA MORBUS.
NORMAN’S NEUTRALIZING CORDIAL 4
r CURES CHOLERA INFANTUM.
NORMAN’S NEUTRALIZING CORDIAL J '4
Absolutely Cures 4
DYSIMJI'SIA.
A
NORMAN’S 4
i Indian Worm Pellets. 4
THE BEST LIVER PILL MADE. <<
Sale, sure and quick in their action. A
^ PRICE, 10 AND 25 CENTS- 4
Wim SOLD EVERYWHERE.
mm
We want a hustling agent in every
county to sell our latest improved
Plows. All kinds direct from the fac
tory to the farmer. Work right around
your home. Baby Cultivator Comp’v,
Birmingham, Ain.
SEEDS fFIELD,
i (i ARDEN
AND FLOWER....
SKED COHN and CANK SEKI). Large
stock. Choice varieties. Write for
C. Ft. Sairca. cfc do.,
910 Market St;, Chattanooga, Temi.
m CSB
rr
5 '.
----
.
6 m m 1
4
R
4 is Natures Palatable,Vegetable Efficieht,Harmless,
i> H J pH)
<1 v
[•
jlitis
-vmTB ACWCHROMMALE DISEASES,
^ C 0 HVUL 5 I 0 H 5 , CRAMPS,^
“ c-n ERICS,INTERNAL (7 c-n i
'f9 5PA5M5®^r,
•v-iarac 0 lljAY' [3J BE
CISMMWSMm
V 5T.L0UI5, M0.,U.5.A.
ITS ip Oi fa
SEEDS Garden & Flower
with a world-wld.
reputation. oil. Catalog
free to
JAMES J, H. CBEt'ORT A SOJi,Marl/leUe»d,K««.
ur Users. 017
Ll\
% H ” ■■■rnrr'ii PISO-S CURE i n * FOR _rs>
u Rent Use M
iarsfSFT o in time. Sold by druRgtets. Ill