Crawfordville advocate. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 189?-1???, May 31, 1895, Image 3

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Too Hard for to Learn. “I’m a good deal worried about my ■on,” said Mr. Whykitis. “He doesn’t seem to know the value of a dollar.” “Well,” replied tho man who was puzzled over finance, “if it’s a silver dollar that ho doesn’t know the value of, I don’t see that you can blame him much.”— Washington Star. There are about 34,000 tame deer in Southern Norway. Most of these are ecattered throughout the mountains of the Saeterdal district, but about 7,000 live on the plateaus of the Viddas and surrounding districts of Hallingdal, Thelemarken, Numedal and Sogne. Nothing Succeed. I.ike success. The successes achieved by men and things, are not always based upon merit. Rut a sue cess well merited and unprecedented in the annals of proprietary medicine, should these ever ( ome to be written, is Hostetler's stom¬ ach Bitt-r-, a botanic medicine, discovered remedy nearly half a century azo, and the leading for and preventive of malarial, rheu¬ matic and kidney - omplaint3, dyspepsia, con¬ stipation and biliousness. ; Several knives fortable use have been found in the catacombs near Athens. : To Cleanse the S.stem I Effectually yet gently, when costiveor bilious’ or when the blood is ijnpure or sluggish, to per. manentiy cure habitual constipation, to awak¬ en the kidneys and liver lo a healthy activity, without irritating or weakening them, to dis¬ pel headaches, colds or fevers, use Syrup of Figs. The Greeks had oats B. C. 200, but used them only as food lor their hordes. Dr. Kilmer’s swamp- Root cure- ! all Kidney and. Bladder troubles. Pamphlet Laboratory and Binghamton. Consultation free. V N. An onyx seal ring, belonging to an ancient Athenian, was lately dug up near Athens. Always Cures Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Bad Breath, Debility, Sour Stomach, Want of Appetite, Distress After Eating, and all evils arising from a weak or disordered stomach, It builds up from the iir-t dose, and a bottle or two will cure the worst eases, and insure a good appe¬ tite, health exce 1 lent digestion and result in vigor¬ ous and buoyancy of spirits. Thereis no better way fo insure good h< altJi and a Tyner’s long life than to keep the stomach ri -lit. do this. Dyspepsia The Tranquilizing Remedy is guaranteed lo A Iter-Dinner Drink. For sale bv Druggists. Manufactured by C. O. Tyner, Atlanta. Don’t Tobacco Spit or f mote Your Life 1 Away i Is tho truthful, Maiding title of a book tobacco about No-To-Bac, habit the that harmless, braces guaranteed nicotinized i cute up nerves, eliminates the nicotine poison, makes weak men gain strength, vigor and manhood. You run no physical or financial risk, ns No To-Bac is sold by Druggists everywhere, under a guarantee to euro or money refund¬ ed. Book free. Ad. Sterling Remedy Co., New York or Chicago. Mr-. Win-low’s Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬ tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25e. a bottl) it Is Merely tliiml Health. That, beautiful complexion is health, pre¬ served by Ripans Tubules. Ripan- Tabules purify the hi od, clear the skin of blemishes and make life more worth living. We will give $100 rewar 1 for any case Catarrh of ca¬ tarrh that cannot be cured with Hall’s Cure. Taken interna ly. ' F. J. Cheney <fc to., Props., Toledo, O. We think I’iso’s Cure for Consumption Pinch.- is the only medicine for Coughs.—J innie aRD, Springfield, Ills., Oct. 1, l&H, It Is More Than Wonderlul how oomfort patiently removing people sutler them with with Hindercorns. corns. Get by Is Your Blood Pur© If it is. you will be strong, vigorous, full of life and ambition; you will have a good appetite and good digestion; strong nerves, sweet sleep. But how few can say that their blood is pure! How many people are suffering daily from the consequences of i mpure blood, scrof¬ ula, salt rheum, rheumatism, catarrh, nerv¬ ousness, sleeplessness and That Tired Feeling. Hood’s Sarsaparilla purifies, vitalizes and enriches the blood. Therefore, it is the med¬ icine for you. It will give you pure, rich, red blood and strong nerves. Tired Feeling, create It will overcome That an appetite, give refreshing sleep and make you strong. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in tho public eye today. Hood’s Pi 5 Js the* after-<tiQH*»r pfM 2Scts. ana family cathartic. WALTER BAKER & CO. The Largest Manufacturers of m PURE, HIGH CRADE 1 I ■/ HIGHEST Continent, AWARDS have received 4k 5 A .: ill. e Mi Industrial and Food EXPOSITIONS ! 11" m nrirm I. mi lies Unlike or other tte Dutch Chemical* Process, or Dyes nc Alka¬ a-e delicion* — BREAKFAST use‘1 in arv of COCOA their prepare!!' absolute]/ rs. Their less than cent is pure end soluble, end costs one a cup. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTER. MASS. Notice to Mill Men n tIbe < SaI\v I ^n ex^tence tver: The finest and roostcorn SSuSdbvtue Mi to-o&y, is man i De LOACH HI LL M CO., 35() Highland Atlanta, <«a. i o k first prize at World’- Fair at Chicago. All sizes, tr*.m 4 :j p, up to the largest. Prices reduced. Send for cata¬ logue showing tew improvement-:: a so. of Portao.e Corn Mil s, B i'i e Pres-es uni Turbine Water heels. Pulleys and Shafting and all kinds of mill supp! es. PARKER’S | j HAIR BALSAM j gg Cleans.s Promotes and laxur beaut!ties unt prowtn. the hai. { ! i u - -v v •AvPtS© Ail ti-St riks- Bj gusts WKctiE C- A. Use 3est Cough S»mp. Testes in time. Bold by dr-egtr.__ CAREER OF A DESPERADO. NEW ANECDOTES OF NOTORIOUS BEN THOMSON, OF TEXAS. His Wonderful Aim and Playful Use of Pullets—A Triumphant Entry Into Austin—His Last How. P EOPLE in the capital of Texas still talk about Austin’s fa¬ mous desperado and pet bad man, Ben Thomson. Some of the stories, says an Austin letter to the New York Sun, have never been printed. In appenrance and manner he recalled Perry, the great train rob¬ ber. Like him, Ben was a model of neatness and good taste in dress. He resembled a dapper dry goods clerk. He carried a slight, willowy cane, wore clean linen, and his feet and hands were as dainty as those of a woman. In frolicking with his wife she could throw him on the lloor and hold him there, and she possessed no more than ordinary strength. In a rough-and tumble fight, without his pistol, Ben would have been nowhere with a lusty youth; but when it came to the revol ver he was a wonder. No man ever lived who could draw quicker or fire with more unerring aim. It was his boast that for twenty years, during his amazing career, he never missed his mark, and no antago¬ nist ever got the drop on him. Ben was of Engish birth, his father moving to Texas when Ben was just beginning to walk. The boy enlisted in the Confederate Army when about sixteen years old. The first thing he did was to quarrel with his Lieuten¬ ant, whom he struck iu the face, for which he was chained to the floor in the guard house. The confinement became so galling that Ben, in his rage, set fire to the building and was released barely in time to escape be¬ ing burned to death. Crossing tho Rio Grande he served under Maxi¬ milian for two years. His principal occupation was in running down de¬ serters. He inado a brilliant success of the business. He did not bring back many deserters, but, ou the other hand, the deserters did not get away. He returned to Austin toward the close of the war, married and settled down as the most prominent citizen, which reputation stayed with him to the end. He would remain quiet and pleasant for weeks and months at a time, smiling, genial, suave, a piuk faced man to whom every one was proud to take off his hat. Then, after a time he would begin to grow moody and reserved. Those who knew him well would remark: “Ben’s getting bilious again, and nothing will cure him but the killing of some one.” Soon the cure would bo brought about and Ben would become his old, mild mannered self again. His facetious ness had different ways of expressing itself. A favorite method was to mount his horse and ride full speed up and down the main street of Austin, shoot¬ ing out the street lamps, while his ad¬ miring friends ducked to cover, though no one was ever hurt during those escapades. When tired of this fun he would ride down to the Mayor’s office, pay his fine and go home. Oc¬ casionally he would lock the Mayor in his own place until his friends released him. The Mayor took all this good naturedly, because it was prudent to do so. Thompson went down to San An¬ tonio on one of his periodical sprees. He was showing signs of bilonsness again, and something had to be done to get his liver right. He picked a quarrel, or rather renewed an old one, with the keeper of a variety theatre, who had long before earned his title to that of a bad man. Ben took a drink at the bar, which formed a part of the place of entertainment and told his enemy that he would be back in half an hour to close up accounts with him. Thus warned, the m n n leaned his double-barrelled Bkotgun in the corner behind the bar within instant reach, and awaited Thompson. At the end of the half hour he saw Thompson standing about a dozen paces off, his hands at his side, as motionless as a statue, but looking steadily at his enemy behind the bar. Thompson had been drinking and his tacts was of a fiery red, but he was able to stand without a tremor, and the steady, terrible stare of his gray eyes were like those of a devil. There could be no mistake; he was there to kill. The landlord caught up his gun sighted over the bar, and let fly with both barrels straight at Ben Thomp son. The horrified crowd looked to see him slump downward with half his body blown away, but he did not stir. The man, although a superb marks¬ man, had not so much as pierced his clothing with a single pellet of lead, but he had given Ben the excuse for which he was waiting, and he drew and fired. A single shot was suffi¬ cient, and he did not waste any more on tho victim, who must have been in a state of collapse before he tried to aim his gun. This affair caused more than the usual flurry. Thomson was arrested and confined without bail pending his trial. He had been appointed Assist ant Marshal at Austin, and the citizens became indignant because of his long confinement while awaiting trial. The papers spoke of the outrage—was there ever an arrest that wasn’t an outrage?—of keeping “Our Ben” so long in jail, and demanded that prop¬ er consideration should be shown him. Soon he was tried, and with the usual result; he was acquitted on the ground of self-defence. When he Q a q r rr were in waiting, cr esides a crowd of several thousand. The mo ment the familiar figure, in his natty , dress, appeared on the railway plat formthe multitude broke into frenzied cheers. Ben raised his hat and bowed iu acknowledgment, for he dearly loved to be appreciated. Idea his enthusiastic friends unfastened the horses and drew the carriage in tri¬ umph through the streets, while handkerchiefs waved from windows and fair faces beamed with joy. This town knew how to welcome her great est hero. But the pitcher wont to the well once too often. It was down in San Antonio again that Thomson and ono or two cronies started on a death¬ killing spree. They went baok to tho variety theatre, quarrelled, wont off, and then returned. They were ex¬ pected by a half dozen of their en¬ emies, who received them with a volley from their ritles. Ben went down on his back, riddled like a sieve. While dying he wabbled his revolver about, and with his eyes glazing in death fired at one of the men, who had once been his partner. The bullet struck the man in the knee and then Thom¬ son fell back dead. Tho wounded man, who had received the desperado’s last shot, was obliged to have his leg amputated and died from tho opera¬ tion so that tho end of Ben Thomson was in consonance with his whole life, for, like Colonol Jim Bowie at tho Alamo, ho killed a man wliilo in tho act of dying himself. SELECT SIFTINGS. One-eiglith tho population of Great Britain is in Loudon. Gold which is pure is said to bo twenty-four carats fine. Herodotus says that Croesus was the first ruler to order gold coins made. When Japanese oranges have tho skin removed tho sections will fall apart naturally. Belgium took its name from tho Belgae, a warlike tribo which inhab tied it before the time of Christ. Ten sick days a year are said to bo the average human allowance, but it must be a matter difficult to esti¬ mate. ‘ It is within tho easy memory of people of middle age when a banana was a great rarity in tho United States. General Greene had tho reputation of being tho most polite man in the Revolutionary Army during the war for independence. A lady who was dying of consump¬ tion last summer is well now. She was struck by lightning, and since has steadily gained iu health. William Penn’s formal but kindly politeness impressed even the Indians with whom he dealt. One of tho names given him by them was “The Good Big Chief.” Mr. Mudd, of East Boone, Mo.-, was elected when he ran for office, snd Mr. Pistole, of Nodaway County, has long been used to jokes about going offand getting loaded. A man near Doniphan, Mo., chopped down a tree to get at a coon, Then he found tho hole he was watching was made, not by a coon, but by a cannon ball, fired durian the Civil War. If the lava and ashes vomited from Vesuvius since A. D. 79 could be molded into bricks there would bo a sufficient number to make a city as large as New York and London com¬ bined. A broadsword of the Commonwealth period, bearing the inscription : “For the Commonwealth of England,” and supposed to have been the sword car¬ ried by Oliver Crommell himself, was sold at an auction iu London the other day for $604. During the Franco-Prussian War tho Gerinau fired 30,000,000 rifle car¬ tridges and 363,000 charges of artil¬ lery, killing or mortally wounding 77,000 Frenchmen, showing that 400 shots were required to kill or mortal¬ ly wound one man. Caiilornia’s Orange Output. Tho managers of the Riverside (California) Fruit Exchange has just issued a report which is very en couraging to orange growers. It says that up to date the exchange has paid over during the present season to the twelve associations in Riverside which composes it the sum of $119,000, and the exchange now has fruit valued at $150,000 en route to Eastern pcirts, making a total of $269,000 worth of fruit thus far sent forward. The re¬ port adds: “The shipments of oranges from .Southern California this season up to date have been very much heavier than any previous year, the total up to yesterday exceeding 2750 cars. This would indicate that oranges have been moving very rapidly from other points, as the above number of car loads would probably cover about fifty jier cent of the entire crop in Southern California.” — Washington Star. A Tantalizing Answer. A certain English commodore, who had the misfortune to lose a leg m a shark encounter, was beset wherever he went with questioners, eager to know how, when, and where he had met with his loss. He finally invented an expedient for suppressing his tor¬ mentors. He would promise to an tfae T^tion. .. , but . on.y one, swe J, “ 0D ; on the subject. 1 he question invaria¬ bly was, “Howdidyou lose your leg?” and the invariable answer, “It was bit off,” which, of course, left his hearers more curious than ever.—Argonaut. Antiquity ot a Tov. The jumping jack is by no means an invention of to-day, for the early Egyptian children had it among their playthings. In the Leyden Museum there is a capital little figure of a man working away, even as a currier or a baker. There is a sloping block be fore him. lou pull the string and the figure moves, the hands keeping on the slope of thx block.—Louisville Courier-Journal. Moie Twin and Triplet letters. The mail continues to bring to the white house many “twin ami triplet” letters, as Private Secretary Thurber denominates them. There is little va¬ riation in the style of the epistles, and few of them close without a request for assistance. Here are extracts from three of a dozen or more which found their way into the white houso waste basket recently: “We have two children and expect another very soon. If it is a boy it will he named Grover if you will lend me $500.” “My wife noticed in tho papers an account of the triplets which were christened after your family, and the outcome of the matter. She says now, how will it be with a fonrth-olass post¬ master's children ? We have two girls, which we liavo christened, one Ruth and the other Esther. Unfortunately we have no photographs ns yet, not being able to have them taken. Any little memento will satisfy her and will be thankfully received by all tho fam i>L” “Sir: Ou the 12tli of June, 1893, there was a boy baby born to me at my house, weighing ten pounds at birth. I was so enthused over your election and inauguration that I named my baby Grover in houor of Grover Cleveland, president of the United States. My boy will be two years old June 12, 1895, and would appreciate a present from the chief magistrate of our nation.” Those bogging letters, which were quite interesting at first, are getting to be tiresome as they multiply .—New York Times. Chinese Host Dwellers. The swarming inhabitants of these floating tenements have tlioir only homes upon tho waters of the noble Felling river. Tho miles of closely cjAwded boats moving between restlessly tho up and down stream green fields, resemble a hugo metropolis of vast squares and avenues, river rocked cradles, where the drama of life is en¬ acted by the thousands who glean but a scanty livelihood. As soon as a boy born to ono of these river denizens can stand upon his little feet, lie is strapped to a skull or oar, and begins to go through the motions of propelling the boat,earning his living at least in theory, from the earliest age. Whenever his hair is sufficiently long to plait into n respectable tail, ho begins to manipulate chop-sticks, to Hate foreigners, to understand tho ring of money and in timo to paddle liis own small wherry and carry a for¬ eign devil up and down tho river. If ho wishes to see a little of the world he may ship upon a traveling junk, not to venture,however,outside of Chinese waters, and after accumulating a few dollars ho takes to himself a wife and establishes his home among the river population.— Outing. ♦ He Was a Hog. At a reception in Paris, a traveler, who was a strong “Anti-Hemitic” was nlking to Rothschild on tho beauties i,l the island of Tahiti, and sarcasti-1 ! eally remarked: Jews' “There are neither hogs nor ' thero!” “Indeed!” retorted Rothschild. “Then you and I should go there. Wo should be great curiosities.” A Livma SHADOW. ItlSJYTAHKAIJLK TKANSFOKMATJOV OF A NORTH CAROLINA MAN. StrangB, but True, Ktory From I lie Lum¬ ber Region# of n Houtliern State — Verified by Personal Investigation. (From, the Greenville , N. (J., Ilejlector .) Tho following interview has just been given i mu- reporter by Mr. G. A. linker, the overseer it the farm of Col. Isaac A. Sugg, of Green ville, ,\. C. It will interest , anyone who , lias , ever had typhoid fever. Mr. Baker said in part: “1 was living In Beaufort County, and on tho 2d day of October, infill, I was stricken ! down with typhoid , lover. J had the best] physicians to attend me and on the 15th day of January, 18!M, I was allowed to get up. 1 was enunciated, weak and had no appotite. 1 couhl ( niy drag along for a short distance ai'd would be compelled to sit down and ! lent . This continued for some time and 1 1 began to give up hope of ever getting well. I lost my position in lieaufort County and | having secured one in l'itt County, clerking i I undertook ' :u a store, it, but was so weak I c.uid not do the work and had to give, it up. ’lhe disease settled in my knees, legs and lent. 1 was taking first one kind of medicine j and then another, but nothing did roe any j good. 1 was mighty low-spirited. I moved | out to Coi. Fugg’s about four or five months j ago and commenced taking Dr. Williams’ i'A'.y. 1 took three a day for about three months, i began to regain my aknots appetite began iu a j u time, and then my wt to | 0 :Hij poor, and hope sprung up with a blessed nets tt at is beyond nil telling. At the ex- j piiaticn 0 /the three months I was entirely i cured and could take my axe and go in the woods and do as good a day’s work as any; man. i was troubled with dyspepsia and j that 1 ns disappeared. It is also a splendid Editor,! tf.uic lor weak Wflliains; people. I say, Mr. Oct! bless Dr. may hellve fora long . time: 1 know he will go up yonder to reap his reward for he tias done a wonderful lot ! of Itr. good. Wilburns’ Tell Pink everybody Bills for that Pale ask* people you about that | if they will come to me I can certainly satisfy | them «- to their merits. I always carry r. , I t x of jliis with me and when ever I ieel bad ! 1 take one. ’ \\ e were forcibly struck with tne earnest- I Less ot Mr. Baker and his statements may be I leiii (1 fill. erased Hr. tv; form, i lianas’ all Pick the Pills elements eon tain, in a eon- to j ] • richness the necessary give new life and to blood end , restore shattered nerves. They are an un faiBug specific for such diseases as locomotor j ataxia, partial paralysis, rheumatism, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, effects of grippe, nervous 1 i canacLe. the after la pal- , pits.tioit of the mart, jale and sallow eorn ] , nil forms of weakness either in j male or female; and aii diseases resulting 1 irons vitiated humors in the blood. Pink ! piii sir** d tv ail dealers, or will be sent pot paid on receipt of price, (T-O cents a box, or i jes for -j2.50 j by addressing Dr. Williams Medicine Co., bckeaectady, N. Y, Take no Substitute for Royal Baking Powder. It is Absolutely Pure. AH others contain alum or ammonia. Extortion Eliminated by Electricity. Every one who has ever visited Niagara Falls, remembers tho exor¬ bitant charges of hacks, elevators, tolls, admissions, oto., and congratulates himself that he escaped with his mor¬ als, even if his pockets were empty. All that extortion is soon to bo done away with by the Niagara gorge elec¬ tric railway, from Niagara Falls to Lewiston. The plan of the route in¬ cludes all tho principal points of in¬ terest on the American side—in fact, a continuous trip along tho water’s edge at the base of tho deep river gorge, past the islands, whirlpool rapids, Devil’s hole and ovory notable nat¬ ural feature. It is proposed by this railway to charge but one fare and that not extravagant, for the round trip, to include the finest views to bo had from tho American side. It is ex¬ pected that this electric railway will be running by the time the tourist season is at its height, and that it will attract many more visitors to this greatest of nature’s wonders, especi¬ ally as it will bo possible to offer bet¬ ter rates to excursion parties from all pointB. Agreed With His Cross-Examiner. Mr. James Hyde, once a Iawyor in a small town on Long Island, tolls a good story about himself. He says: “It was when I used to practice law in a little town near the center of the state. A farmer had one of his neigh¬ bors arrested for stealing ducks, and I was employed by tho accused to en¬ deavor to convince tho court that such was not the case. Tho plaintiff was positive that his neighbor was guilty, because he had seen the ducks in tho defendant’s yard. t l i How do you know they are your ducks?’ I asked. »( ‘Oh, I should know my own ducks nnywherel’ replied the farmer, and be gave me a description of their various peculiarities, whereby ho could readi¬ ly distinguish them from others. i i i Why,’ said I, ‘those ducks can’t be of such ruro breed I I have soon some just like them in my own yard.’ “ ‘That’s not at all unlikely,’ replied tho farmer, ‘for they are not tho only ducksl have had stolen lately.’ ”— In¬ dianapolis Sentinel. “Carrying Coals to Newcastle.” Au English lady set oufsLr Germany ‘ ,u a visit to some of her relatives. 8he took with her a handsome pressnt, con sistiug of a silver urn, by way of sliow iug her dear continental friends a spec men of British artistic skill. When tho present was unpacked and carefully examined, there was found stamped iu a corner the following legend : “Made iu Germany.” The Lexington Havings Bank, which was opened for business at Baltimore recently, will bo managed exclusively by colored men. It was incorporated lust week with a capital stock of $10, 000 . IVIcDonald’a ltllll«» C«n. 1 Tet.tcrlne In the only remedy I ©ver sold tha would cureTfttorine ho it would not return. I’ve Hold six dozen in a year, and guaranteed return the every box. Pv.) never had to money for a Mingle box. I Fold a box to ft man ,1,'“'* (Umf’weB. recommend mushier film Tettai doing the nubile a ravor to ne. is n. Tanner. Sent by mall for 80c. Iu stumps, j.t. Shuptriuf, Savannah, Ga. ImDitlreil Health Is Not Knstlr Itegninul, yet Parker’s Ginger Tonic has attained It in many cases. For every weakness and distress. Wife used “ Mothkks’ Fhikn/) " before first ..pjpi W asq uickly relieved; suffered but.little. recovery rapid. E. E. Johnston, Eufuula, Ala If nlllieted wliti Horeeyesnse Dr. Isaac Thomii son’s Eye-water.Drugglsts sell at25o per bottle _ HammAr „ - OMT ™«s_ O.K.P iMifT OR MW®. Paints Guaranteed 5 y««ra A well-pal Died house Is the host indication of a thhifty man. Even v particle of wood or iron fn your houses, in implement*, etc., should be kept WKLI, painted. They will in t TVfK K as ioiur. LI mod Oh is the iikht preservative, and Hammar Paint the only i’a rii that requires the arid lion of pure Oil before using. That is why they are ukht, be¬ side- they are much < heapkh. N uiiilff MihSS^iiw Keep the Baby Fat. “ Cave Spring, Ga., May 21, 1894. “My baby was a living skeleton. The doctors said he was dying of Maras¬ mus, Indigestion, etc. The various foods I tried seemed old to keep he weighed him alive, exactly but did not strengthen or fatten him. At thirteen months what he did at birth—seven pounds. I began using “Scott’s EMULSION," some¬ times putting a few drops in his bottle, then again feeding it with a spoon; then again by the absorption method of rubbing it into his body. The effect was mar¬ velous. Baby began to stouten and fatten, and became a beautiful dimpled boy, u wonder to all. Scott’s Emulsion supplied the one thing needful. “Mrs. Kennon Williams.” Scott’s Emulsion it especially uselal for sickly, delicate children when their other food fails to nourish them. It supplies in a concentrated, easily digestible form, just the nourishment they need to build them up and give them health and strength. It is Cod-liver Oil made palatable and easy to assimilate, combined with the Ilypophosphites, both of which are most remarkable nutrients. Don’t be persuaded to accept a substitute / Scott & Bowne, New York. All Druggists. 50c. and 151, Not This Time. The robber cautiously entered the house. All was quiet and still. The only Bound was that of the ticking of the clock ou tho mantel. Shi He heard footsteps. Somo one was coming. Should ho shoot? No, it was only a woman. mako t t Woman,” be said, “if you no sound I will not harm a hair of your head. ” She looked at him fearlessly. “You could not harm a hair of my head if you tried,” she said. And then slie took tho wig off and swung it in tho face of tho bold, bad man; it was too much—he fled. LOOK OUT FOR BREAKERS AHEAD when pimples, boils, eruptions, manifes¬ and like tations of impure blood appear. They m r wouldn’t appear if i V your blood were A pure and your sys d \\ tern in the right \ condition. They show you what yon n* Vjp jf need—agood purifer; that’s blootl- what you get when you / y ^Golden /take Dr. Pierce's Medical Discovery. carries It health with it. All Blood, Skin and Scalp Dis¬ eases, from a com¬ Scrofula, mon Blotch, cured or Eruption, by it. to invigorates the worst are It the liver and rouses every organ into healthful action. In the most stubborn forms of Skin Diseases, such as Salt rheum, Eczema, Tetter, Erysipelas, Boils a nd kindred ailments, and Scrofula, it is an uncqualcd remedy. if ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR *• ★ THE BEST* FOR INVALIDS ★ JOHN CARLB * SONS, New York. * The Greatest rtedical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered In one ol oar common posture woods a remedy that enros every kind of Humor, from tho worBt Scrofula down to a common pimple. Ho has trlod It In over oleven hundred cases, and never failed except In twooaaca (both thunder humor). lie has now in his possession over two hundred certifi¬ cates of Its value, all within twenty mils* of Boston, Bend postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from tha first bottle, and a perfect cure Is warranted when the right quantity is taken. "When the lungs are affected It cause* etioottng pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This la caused by the duct* being stopped, and always disappears In a week after taking it. Read tho label. If tho stomach Is foul or bilious tt will cause squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you ean get, and enough of It. Dose, one tablespoonfnl in water at bed¬ time. Sold by all Druggists. — a. «. u....... ........Twenty-two, ’95.