Newspaper Page Text
f. A Strong Plea.
The Coart—I have a good mind to
bake an example of yon.
The Prisoner—Don’t do it, judge;
don’t do it. > For the sake of your fel¬
low men, don’t do it.' It was exam¬
ple# that druv me drink. My wife
was always holding some okap up aa
le. Don’t make me one fer
\u to point at. Have pity
5sban3s7
Shall Porto Rico be a State?
Our public men arc trying to decide what
action should bo take n regarding the status
of l*orto Rico. Wo have never before had to
deal with a similar condition where nearly a
million people of a foreign tongue have been
annexed. Neither have we ever had before
such and a reliable med'ine for malaria, fever
ague as Hos* liter's Stomach Bitters, It
drives the poisons out of the system and es¬
tablishes strength to resist future attacks
The largest llOTary of small books in the
world belongs to a Frenchman.
- Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away.
To quit tobncco easily and forever, he mag
attic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-Tc
Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak iren
strong. All druggists, 50c or %\. Cure guaran¬
teed. Broklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
Used Clippings from masculine heads of hair are
for making strainers to clarify sirups.
How’s This?
W e offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot bo cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J.w hkney A CO . Props., Toledo. O.
^Ye, for th* 3 * underHignrd, have ard known believe F. J.Che
’ the last 15 years, him per¬
tly financially honorable able in all to business out transactions obliga
t carry any
l^nmde A Tar by their Wholesale firm. Druggists, Toledo,
ax.
Its. Jhfs’u. Toledo Kont< Ohio. & Marvin, Wholesale Drug
Hairs 5 Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act
directly upon the blood end mucous sur
fees of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold
by all Druggists Testimonials free.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
IT. H. Orken'8 Sons, of Atlanta. Ga.. are the
only 8eo successful Dropsy offer in Specialists in the world.
their liberal advertisement lu an¬
other column of this paper.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething,softens the gums, reduces inllamtna
tion.aP ys pain,cures wind colic. 35c. a bottle.
faster Cyclists in Denmark are not allowed to ride
than the speed of a cab through towns.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascareta Candy Cathartic. 10c or 35;.
HC. C. C. fail to euro, druggists refund money.
Ireland possesses the most equable climate
of any European country.
That Pimple
On Your Face Is There to Warn
You of Impure Blood.
Painful consequences may follow a neg¬
lect of this warning. Tako Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla and it will purify your blood, cure
all humors and eruptions, and make you
feel better m every way. It will warm,
nourish, strengthen and invigorate your
Whole body and prevent serious Illness.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is America’s Greatest Medicine. Price, SI.
Hood’s Is cure all Liver Ills. 25 cents.
Savages Holding Their Own.
It Is believed that the inhabitants of
the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions,
where the struggle for existence is in¬
tense, are at least holding their own;
and the Eskimos of West Greenland,
In recent years, have certainly been
Increasing In number. In fact, only
very limited parts of the world are
known to be actually decreasing in
population, the Islands of the Pacific,
^wbeja^the jmtlves are dying -aborigines out, be
of the Hawaii group are about bold¬
ing their own; and the natives are
growing In numbers In the Loyalty
group, and In Wallis, ’Guam, Tahiti
and a few other regions; but among
the myriads of other islands in the
Pacific there Is as yet no evidence that
the natives may escape the fate of the
Tasmanians, who are now extinct.
Milkmaid Taught the Professor.
Rev. Dr. Upson says that he was
once rusticating with Dr. Timothy
Dwight, who has just resigned the
presidency of Yale, when they bor¬
rowed a horse from a farmer on con¬
dition they unharnessed him when
through their drive. They filled the
contract except as to the collar,
(which they could not get off. Mr.
iDwlght said; “It must have been
put on when he was a colt, and the
way his head’s grown since it’s im¬
possible to remove it.” Just then a
passing milkmaid told them to turn
the collar round if they wanted it off.
“My dear brother,” said Dwight,
"either of us thinks he knows tea
times as much as that woman, and
yet we didn't know enough to turn thu
collar.”—Pittsburg Dispatch.
RELIEF FROM PAIN.~
Women Everywhere Express theii
Gratitude to Mrs. Pmkhara.
firs. T. A. WALDEN, Gibson, Ca., writes:
“ Dear Mrs. Pinkiiam:— Before tak¬
ing your medicine, life was a burden
to me. I never saw a well (lay. At
my monthly period I suffered untold
misery, and a great deal of the time I
“" 1.3 troubled with a severe pain in my
Before finishing the first bottle
;sr Vegetable Compound I could
jvas ", doing me good. I continued
also used the Liver Pills -nd
.tive Wash, and have been greatly
d. I would like to have you use
fitter for the benefit of others.”
rtrs. FLORENCE A. WOLFE, 515 Hulberry
St., Lancaster, Ohio, writes:
“ Dear Mrs. Pinkham: —For two
years I was troubled with what the
local physicians told me was inflamm"
tion of the womb. Every month I suf¬
fered terribly. I had taken enough
medicine from the doctors to euro any¬
one, hut obtained relief for a short
time only. At last I concluded to write
ran in regard to my case, and can
t by following your advice I am
tectly well.”
Ifl. BA ItS, rtansfieid, La., writes:
We writing to you I suffered
lly from painful menstrua¬
tion, leucorrhoea and sore feeling in
the lower part of the bowels. Kow my
friends want to know what makes me
Jpok so well. I do not hesitate one min¬
ing them what has brought
great change. I cannot
”1. Pinkham’s Vegetable
iugh. It is the greatest
'the age ”
PISO’S CURE"TOFF
1 - UURES WHERE All ELSE FAILS.
Cough Syrup. Tastes Good, t
In time. 8oid hy drupsriets.
aifetaJaiiauifelfl
SENATORS DISCUSS MERITS OF
SCHLEY AND SAMPSON.
MUCH WARM TALK INDULGED IN.
Sampson’s Friends Charge That Schley
Wanted to Keep Out of Cervera**
Way at Santiago.
A-Washington special says; The en¬
tire executive session of the senate
Monday was devoted wholly to the
discussion of the promotion of Ad¬
mirals Sampson and Schley and other
naval officers engaged in the Santiago
campaign over the heads of officers
who were their superiors in rank.
The controversy was then postponed
for twenty days after a vote had been
taken *call* for the records of the
navy department bearing upon the
conduct of all aflccted by the advance¬
ment.
The discussion arose over the reso¬
lution of which Senator Butler was
the author, calling for these docu¬
ments. As originally offered it asked
for the reasons for the advancement,
but the resolution was modified so as
to request the record only. The reso¬
lution was then allowed to pass with¬
out further division.
For three hours previous to this,
however, the senate had been engaged
in a very animated battle, which in¬
volved mauy intricacies and was par¬
ticipated iu by a large number of sena¬
tors.
The main contests were first over
the general policy of promoting these
officers over others who were charac¬
terized as quite as deserving, though
less fortunate in that they were de¬
prived of such active participation in
the war, and, second, as to the rela¬
tive merits of Sampson and Schley.
Senators Gorman and Wellington, of
Maryland, One a republican and the
other a democrat, united in a fierce at¬
tack upon the navy department for fa¬
voring Sampson over Schley.
Senators Lindsay, Pettigrew, Per¬
kins and Money attacked the whole
system of promotion as a “species of
favoritism which was not warranted
by the facts.” The method of the ad¬
ministration was defended hy Messrs.
Hale, Chandler and Lodge.
Senator Wellington was especially
zealous in his advocacy of the claims
of Admiral Schley and his presenta¬
tion of reasons preferred why Admiral Sampson
should not be over him.
He made the statement that if the
official papers were ordered they would
demonstrate beyond a possible ques¬
tion the fnct that Schley and not
Sampson fought the bnttle of Santi¬
ago.
Senator Lindsay found much in the
promotion of both Schley and Samp¬
son over Commodore Watson to con¬
demn.
The charge was made that Schley
had voluntarily left Santiago after
reaching the vicinity of that port, and
after Cervera had entered the harbor,
and p,Iso the charge that when the
Spanish fleet had sailed ont through
the narrow month of the channel Ad¬
miral (thon Commodore) Schley had
made a reverse movement with the
Brooklyn and gone in a direction op¬
posite to that taken by the Spanish
squadron instead of boldly attacking
the enemy in the beginning. It was
asserted that these facts were among
those which the archives would reveal.
The friends of Admiral Schley de¬
clared they had nothing to fear from
having all the facts known. Explain¬
ing his start to leave Santiago and his
refusal to obey department orders be¬
fore Sampson’s arrival, they said’it
was because he had been unable to
coal at sea. 'When they were asked
how it had happened, that they had
been able to coal thirty-six hours af¬
terwards, they replied that this was
due to the fact that a storm had given
place to a calm.
Senators Lindsay and Pettigrew,
who were not standing for either Samp¬
son or Schley, made the point that
these developments had merely em¬
phasized the reasons why the senate
should be put into possession of all
the facts before the voting.
“I am not the champion of either of
these officers,”- said Mr. Pettigrew,
“and if Schley ran away from the
enemy or showed a disposition to do
so, I want to know it. ”
AN ALLIANCE SUGGESTED.
Aguinaldo Wants Spain to Recognize His
Government.
According to a dispatch received at
Madrid from Manila, has the authorized Filipino con¬ the
gress at. Malolos
release of shortly the Spanish civil prisoners
and will liberate the military
prisoners. Senor
The premier, Sagasta, de¬
clares that Aguinaldo lias made the
liberation of the Spanish prisoners in
the Philippine islands conditional
upon Spain recognizing the Philippine
republic and allying herself thereto.
Aguinaldo, it is added, has similarly
demanded the Vatican’s recognition of
the Philippine republic.
WORK OF CHINESE REBELS.
They Capture a City and Order Execution
of Its* Officials.
The London Daily Mail publishes
the following dispatch from Shanghai:
“The Au Houi rebels who, under
the notorious desperado, Nui, rein¬
forced by rebels from the province of
Ho-Nan, attacked the city of KuYung
on January 10th, have captured it and
ordered the execution of all the civil
and military officials.”
COVERED FITZ’S CASH.
The Managers of Jeffries ond Corbet Tut
Up tlio Shekels.
A New York dispatch says: The
managers of Jim Jeffries and Jim Cor¬
bett have covered the §2,500 which
Fitz.simmons put up in this city for
Sharkey to cover. It is understood
that two weeks will be given Sharkey
to cover the amount before Fitzsim¬
mons says anything about fighting
with either Jeffries or Corbett. Cor¬
bett says he is willing to go to a finish
with Fitzsimmons.
PEACE TREATY UNCERTAIN.
Opponents of Measure May Force It Oyer
to An Extra Session.
Although the motion for an execu¬
tive session was made by the chair¬
man on foreign relations, the peace
treaty was not taken up in the senate
Monday. The status of the treaty as
outlined by a member of the commis¬
sion who favors ratification is:
The opponents claim to have 33 or
34 sure votes against the treaty. That
would defeat it,.which would necessi¬
tate an extra session. If there is to
be an extra session, the friends of the
treaty say they may as well take it
over unrejected by this session. They
do not propose to bring it to a vote
unless they are sure of ratification.
An extra session, they say, will
mean an extra session of the whole
congress. A conditional appropria¬
tion is made to pay Spain the §20,000,
000, or, unless some arrangement is
made with Spain, to extend the time
of payment three months. The United
States, it is said, would not like to make
this request. It is believed that, in
view of the possibilities of ap extra
session, unless the treaty is rattified
at this session, the opponents will
yield before adjournment, as a veTy
general desire is expressed to avoid an
extra session.
SOUTHERN PROGRESS.
The New Industries Reported in the South
During the l’ast Week.
Tbe more notoworthy of the new
industries specially reported during
the past week include a company
organized at New Orleans to manu¬
facture brooms, brushes, etc.; a cigar
factory in Florida; a §100,000 cotton
compress in Arkansas; a cotton mill
seed iij^North oil mill Carolina; in Alabama; a $100,000 §50,000 cotton
a
one in Texas; another of 90-ton capac¬
ity in the same state, and the rebuild¬
ing of one recently burned in Georgia;
a §30,000 creamery and refrigerating
plant in Georgia; electric light plants
in Louisiana, North Carolina and
Tennessee; an electrical supply com¬
pany in Texas; flouring mills in Ten¬
nessee, Texas and Virginia; gold mines
in North Carolina; a hardware compa¬
ny in Texas; a 10-tou ice factory in
Alabama; iron mines in Tennessee; a
petroleum company and a quarry and
mining company in Texas; a 35-ton re¬
frigerating plant in southwestern
Louisiana; two saw mills in Louisiana
and one in Virginia; a shingle and
lumbef mill in Texas; a stave factory
in Kentucky; a 1,000-ton sugar mill in
Louisiana; sulphuric ether works in
Virginia; a telephone company in
.South Carolina, and waterworks in
Louisiana.—Tradesman (Chattanooga,
Tenn.)
WORK OF A COWARDLY MOB.
Old Man and His Son Killed Hy White
caps—Daughter Also Wounded.
The details of a shockiug tragedy
that occurred late Saturday night, near
Colquitt, Miller county, Ga., were re¬
ceived Monday afternoon.
At a late hour of the night a party
of armed men, disguised as whitecaps,
went to the house occupied by old
man Bustin’and family, and one of
them, acting as spokesman, called to
fhe inmates to cony. ont. • Old man,
Rustin a and opened the door, his
arose
appearance being the signal for a vol¬
ley of shots, someof which struck him,
bringing him to the floor.
A grown son and daughter of the
old man, on hearing the firing, at¬
tempted to escape, but they, too, were
fired upon by the whitecap mob and
struck down. The son died in a few
minutes, and advices state that old
man liustin has also died from the ef¬
fects of his wounds.
Tbe daughter is not dangerously in¬
jured, and will recover.
The Rustins were respectable, indus¬
trious people, attentive to their affairs
and well thought of.
COLONIAL COMMISSION NAMED.
• -
Personnel of Officials Who Will Look
• After New Territory.
The secretary of war has completed
the organization of a colonial commis¬
sion to undertake the administration
in Washington of all matters of detail
respecting the government of territory
acquired during the war or occupied
by the United States forces.
The personnel of the commission
will he General Robert P. Kennedy,
of Bellefontaine, Ohio; Curtis Guild,
of Massachusetts, and George W. Wat¬
kins, of Grand Rapids, Mich.
Up to this point the secretary and
the assistant secretary have under¬
taken themselves to deal with the ad¬
ministration of the insular affairs but
the questions involved have become
so Numerous and complicated that it
has been found absolutely necessary
to call for assistance.
The commission will deal with the
bestowal of franchises and concessions;
the distribution of moneys to be spent
in public improvements and all of the
troublesome issues that have arisen
and are likely to arise in Cuba, Porto
Rico and the Philippines.
The new commission is to act en¬
tirely within the powers conferred by
the secretary of war and his sanction
will be necessary to give effect to any
line of aetion proposed by the com¬
mission.
MONEY FOR SEMINGLES.
Indians to Be Faid For Losses Sus
tainert In Civil War.
A Washington dispatch says: The
cretary of the interior sent to the
late Monday the finding of the
commissioners appointed to determine
the losses sustained to loyal Seminole
Indians during the civil war. They
place the aggregate losses at §213,915,
divided among 340 claimants.
NEWS FROM THE KLONDIKE.
Gloomy Situation and Number of Sick
Rapidly Increasing:.
Advices from Dawson, via S.eattle,'
Wash., state that the situation there
is gloomy. The number of sick is in¬
creasing and the six hospitals are full.
The mounted police have donated
for the help of the poor some S30,000
in cash from their treasury.
The death rate this winter has been
almost as great as ifl 1lie summer.
Several stampedes to new gold fields
have recently occurred, but in each
case the seekers were disappointed,
T MNUfigi’ 1%, 187‘?
Ayer’s
Hair
Vigor
What does it do?
It causes the oil glands
in the skin to become more
active, making the hair soft
and glossy, precisely as
nature intended.
It cleanses the scalp from
dandruff and thus removes
one of the great causes of
baldness.
It makes a better circu¬
lation in the scalp and stops
the hair from coming out.
II Prevents and It
cures Baldness —.b
—
Ayer's Hair Vigor will
surely make hair grow on
1 bald heads, provided only
there is any life remain¬
ing in the hair bulbs.
It restores color to gray
or white hair. It does not
do this in a moment, as
will a hai% dye; but in a
short time the gray color
of age gradually disap¬
pears and the darker color
of youth takes Its place.
Would you like a copy
of our book on the Hair
and Scalp? It is free.
If you do not obtain nil the benefits
you expected from the use of the Vigor
1 writ? the Doctor about it.
I Address, DIt. J. C. AYER.
Lowell, Mass.
- $
How the Mao Behind the Gun Was Trained
in Our Navy.
From the time of the destruction of
the Maine in the harbor of Havana,
on February 15, our naval force in
southern waters had been placed par¬
tially upon a war footing. It was not
by any means that war was consider¬
ed inevitable. On the contrary it was
thought that even should the court of
inquiry decide that the Maine had been
treacherously destroyed, Spain would
meet all reasonable demands; but the
state of preparation was a state of se¬
curity demanded Ijv military pru¬
dence, and also was jaluable to men
and officers as a discipline and exer¬
cise. The men had already been well
trained at the guns—well instructed in
their - melanism and Ananuals—the
of war in time of peace; but to this
training was added constant daily tar¬
get practice with sob-cafibre fire—a
form of exerelse wtaUb is much ap¬
proved, and for which all batteries
are now fitted. It consists in firing a
small projectile from a large gun, em¬
ploying the pointing and aiming me¬
chanism of the latter. To effect this
the small gun is placed inside the
breech of the large gun and precisely
in its center, and is held there by a
special fitting. 80 adjusted, Its axis
coincides with that of the larger piece,
and, except for the shock and recoil,
the normal firing conditions with full
charge are imitated. > One-pounders
are ordinarily employed for the sub¬
calibre of the heavy turret guns, and
musket barrels for those of the sec¬
ondary batteries. During those wait¬
ing days at Tortugas ann Key West,
fluttering flags a few hundred yards
from each ship showed the targets,
and for hours each day the splash of
bullets followed the rifle reports with
monotonous regularity. After each
shot the gun was swung off the tar¬
get brought back, and aimed anew for
the next, thus making it an indepen¬
dent exercise. It was not inspiring
or dramatic, this steady burning of
powder in small quantities during the
sultry afternoons, but it was the sort
of work which makes war deadly, and
it bore its fruit in the swift and ter¬
rible destruction Naval^ampaign oLCervera’s fleet.—
From “The of 1898
in the West Indies,” by Lieutenant S.
A. Staunton in Harper’s Magazine.
Some Industrious Indians.
“The Crows,” says Major E. H.
Becker, Indian Agent, of Montana,
“are still ‘blanket Indians.’ but they
come nearer being self-supporting
than any other of the Western tribes.
They raised GO,000 bushels of grain
in 1898, and they have 40,090 head of
horses. They also have a great many
cattle, from which they get their own
beef supply. The problem of the young
generation of Indians is a hard one.
Those of them who come east and ac¬
quire a higher education than their
fellows, after returning to the reser¬
vation find little or no use for the
learning they have acquired. There
is nothing for them to do but drift
back into the oid camp life, which, of
course, brings about retrogression.”
Missed Santa Claus.
Baldwin—Well, what did you find
in your stocking Christmas morning?
Rimbo (full of penitence)—Nothing
tut my foot. I—I was ont too iate the
night before, I guess.—Chicago Trib¬
une. '
_
“What do you think of this? Here’s
an account of a jnan who has four
wives.” “That’s nothing. It ouly
proves that some men are harder to
manage than others.”—Life.
ff .. i
,
mm
“LaCreole” Hair Restorer is a Perfect Dressing and Restorer, Price ft,OO.
HOW CUSTER FELL
Bill” Tells the Story Anew la Hi*
Recent Book.
Few events In our history bare so
the hearts of the American
as the destruction of General
and his men in their battle with
and Cheyennes at the Little Big
Horn In the summer of 1876.
Colonel Wiiltam F. Cody (“Buffalo
Bill”) in his new book, “The Great
Salt Lake Trail,” tells the story anew.
forces were divided into three
parts, one led by himself, the others
by Majors Reno and Benteen. The
two latter were first to be engaged
with the enemy, and were repulsed
before reaching the Indian encamp¬
ment. Custer, with his division, dash¬
ed on, and sent back to Reno and
Benteen the order: “Big village; be
quick; send on the packs.” Reno and
Benteen were not. or thought they
were not (Cody severely blames themi,
in a position to send relief, and Cus¬
ter was left unsupported:
“Down from the hillside, up through
the valleys, that dreadful torrent of
Indian cruelty and massacre poured
around the little squad, to swallow it
up with one grand swoop of fire. But
Custer was there at the head, like
Spartaeus lighting the legions about
him, tall, graceful, brave as a lion at.
bay, and with thunderbolts In his
hands. His brave followers formed a
hollow square, and met tbe rush and
roar and fury of the demons. Bravely
they breasted that battle shock, brave¬
ly stood up and faced the leaden hail,
nor quailed, 'when looking into the
blazing muzzles of five thousand dead¬
ly rifles.
“Brushing away the powder grime
that had settled on Ills face, Custer
looked over the boiling sea of fury
around him, peering through the
smoke for some sign of Reno and Ben¬
teen, but seeing none. Still thinking
0 / 'the aid which must soon come,
with cheering words to his men he
renewed the battle, fighting still like
a Hercules, and piling heaps of vic¬
tims around his very feet ....
“The fight continued with unabated
fury until late in the afternoon; men
had sunk down beside their gallant
loader, until there was but a handful
left—only a dozen, bleeding from
many wounds, and hot carbines in
their stiffening hands. The day is al¬
most done, when look! Heaven now
defend him! The charm of his life
is broken for Custer has fallen; a bul¬
let cleaves a pathway through his
side, and ns he falters another strikes
his noble breast. Like a strong oak
stricken by the lightning's bolt, shiv¬
ering the mighty trunk, and bending
its withering branches down close to
the earth, so fell Custer; but like the
reacting branches, he rises portly up
again, and striking out like a fatally
wounded giant, he lays three more
Indians dead and breaks his mighty
sword on the musket of a fourth; then,
with useless blade and empty pistol,
falls back, the victim of a dozeu
wounds.
Two Guns.
Not a few of the returning cam¬
paigners at Camp IVikoff were bur¬
dened by the weight of two equip¬
ments, although they had scarce
strength enough theft to curry one. Why
sunie of were sb ludtia is Indi¬
cated by a case related by the New
York Commercial Advertiser.
A man of tlio Thirty-third Michigan
was loaded down with baggage, and
over his shoulder he carried two guns,
tied together with twine. He was
smoking a cigar, and kept up a con¬
stant stream of bantering remnrks in
a reckless way.
“There’s our train, boys,” he said,
as his company crossed the platform
and clambered down the sandy slope
toward the siding. “Don’t you see
the sign? ‘Improved Stable Cars.’
Well, thank goodness, we’re going the
other way this time.”
When the men halted beside the
cars, a bystander said affably to this'
man, “You’ve got more than your
share of baggage.”
“I don't know about that,” answer¬
ed the Michigan soldier, soberly.
“AYhero did you get the extra gun?”
“It's a dead man's gun. It belonged
to a man who was killed down iu
Cuba.”
“And you are taking it home, are
you ?”
“Yes, I'm taking it to his folks.”
The stranger seemed inclined to get
more of the story, but the soldier turn¬
ed his head well away, so that no one
could see into his face.
“It belonged to my brother,” he
said.
_
Failing Memory.
“Why, grandpa, you used to say
that you killed six Indians with one
shot; then you cut it down to five; now
you say it was four.”
‘Well, well, my child. I suppose
that’s because my memory’s failin’ a
little every year.”—Brooklyn Life.
Bounty Is Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar¬
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im¬
purities from the body. Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug¬
gists. satisfaction guaranteed. lUc. 25c, 5
in The Vienna Austrian for the Government treatment serum of dipthjria factory
disposed of thirty thousand four hum
and thirty-four bottles of the remedy
the last twelve months.
To Cure a Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative refund Brc mo Quinine tf falls Tablets. A\l
Druggists money it to cure.
There is a creature known as the hag-'
fish, or myxine, which is in the habit of get¬
ting inside cod and similar fish and devour¬
ing the interior until only the skin and the
skeleton are left.
I believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved
mvhoy’slifela«t summer.—Mrs. Al,lieDoug¬
lass, Le Roy. Mich.. Oct. 20, 1894.
Twenty-six thousand men are employed at
the Krupp gunworks.
Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets.
Candy Cathartic, cure cotistlnation -forever.
l0c.25c. If Cm C. C. fall, druggists refund money.
A11 the pope's private fortune is invested
in British securities.
egg. %
r
IVORY SOAP PASTE. f
« In fifteen minutes' time, with only a cake of ivory -
y Soap and water, you can make in your own kitchen, tt
a better cleansing paste than you can buy. *
Ivory Soap Paste will take spots from clothing?
and will dean carpets, rugs, kid gloves, slippers, patent,
enamel, russet leather and canvas shoes, leather belts,,
painted wood-work and furniture. The special value
of Ivory Soap in this form, arises from the fact that it
can be used with a damp sponge or cloth to cleanse
many articles that cannot be washed because they will
not stand the free application of water.
DIRECTIONS FOR MAKING.—Tc one pint of boiling w.Vtcr ndd one
end one-half ounces of Ivory Soap cut into shavings boil five minutes after
the Soap is thoroughly dissolved. Remove from the fire, and cool in con¬
venient dishes (not tin.) It will keep well in an air-tight glass jar.
CepTTfchl, 1597, by Th» P?wt*r 4 GMalle Ce., Ciaeiaaatt.
Pr One of the First Symptoms of
Failing Health in a Woman is |
NERVOUSNESS
Did vou ever think that there is always a ,
cause for this malady? In women Nervous,
ness is generally the forerunner of some
form of female disease, such as Whites,
Painful, Profuse or Irregular Me» ses, etc.,
either of which will produce Nerv ousness
[s v-^MGerstle’s \ \ \ j in all of its distressing intensity. If you use,
Female Panacea
p JlRAHK.
you will very soon bo cured of N*
ness and all other female troubles we* i
If costive, move tho bowels with milt 1
doset^)f St. Joseph’s Liver Regulator.
I ...../E I HAVE SUFFERED FOR YEARS of blood
With painful menses, attended with sour stomach, rushing to the head,
and occasional whites. I also havp severe nervous spells and heart palpitation so
bad bad I I cannot cannot rest. rest, 1 have used various various female female remedies remedies for for a a long long----- timejmt found
, , relief until about two mon WWW! antF 1 are*dohui
I no Female and ST tliey .
Panacea coa an shall me
more good than al all othe continue their use. SARAH _ , JENKINS.
Glenmore. Ga MRS.
If your case is complicated, of this write medicine. us and we Get will it give from you full drug¬ in-1
formation regarding does not the keep use it send $1 and will send your bottle,
gist. If he us we a
all charges paid. L. OERSTLB & CO.. Chattanocga, Tenn.
Dr. Joba Hall’s Modesty.
: Several years ago, when the famous
(Scotch -1 rlsh Congress met In Spring-'
1 field, Ohio, the late lamented Dr. John
1 Hail was one of the delegates. Though
many distinguished men were in at¬
tendance, he was the stnr of greatest
magnitude, and all were anxious to sec
and hear him.
At a reception tendered by the citi¬
zens to the delegates In the pnrlors of
the hotel at which lie was stopping,
he won the admiration of every one
by his hearty cordiality, and was fast
monopolizing the honors of the even¬
ing. By and by, when lie realized this
he began skillfully to divert the nttoi#
tion away from himself, guiding it in¬
to the proper channel.
“I am forgetting myself,” he would
say to those who lingered round him,
fascinated by his brilliant conversa¬
tion; ‘you will not wish to give me alt
your time. Have you met the officers
of the association? No? Then let me
present yoq to them,” and immediate¬
ly he led the way to the receiving fine
in so gracious a manner that none
could be offended
“What prevented you marrying
Miss Timmins?” “I wrote her a pro¬
posal which she never received.”
“Didn’t the postmaster deliver it?”
“No; I forgot to mail the letter.”—
Chicago Record.
Ko.To-Kac for Fifty Cent,.
Guaranteed tobacco habit euro makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 50c. $1. All druggists
St. Petersburg’s bronze statue of Peter the
Great weighs 1.000 tons.
The Potash
Question.
A thorough study of the sub¬
ject has proven that crop fail¬
ures can be prevented by using
fertilizers containing a large
percentage of Potash ; #no
plant can grow without Potash.
We have a little book on the subject of
Potash," written by authorities, that we
would like to send to every farmer, free of
cost, if he will only write and ask for it.
OERHAN KALI WORKS,
$3 Nassau St., New York.
IPIUM and cured Whiskey home Habits with¬
at
out T'aiu. Bookofpnr
ticuiars eent FREE.
. ’Office B.M. WOOLLEY, 104 N. Pryor M.D. St.
'HPQY I V9 ■ quick NEW reliof DISCOVERY; and worst prn
• cures
Book of testimonials and JO dnvs’ treatment
Dr. H. H. GBEIH’S SOUS. Box D, Atlxnti. Ga
INSOMNIA
44 1 have been n»Jnaf CASCARETS for
Insomnia, with which I have been afflicted for
over twenty years, and I can say that Cascarets
have given me more relief than any other reme¬
dy I have ever tried. 1 shall certainly recom¬
mend them to my friends us being all they iU, are
represented.” Taoa Gillahd, Elgin*
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c, 50o.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Remedy Company, fhlfago, Montreal, New York, 816
Malsby & Company,
39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heaters, Steam Pumps and
Penbertliy Injectors,
B Mr9
—»•> * r* i
Manufacturers and Dealers In
SAW MILLS,
Corn Mills, Feed MHis,Cotton Gin Machin¬
ery ami Grain Separators.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
Locks. Kniglit’s Patent Dogs, Birdsall Saw
Mill and Engine Kepairs, Governors*, Grate
Bars and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price
and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentioning this paper.
FOR 14 CEBITS I
We customers, wish to gain and this heuco year 200,000 offer J ;
new Itadish, 10c ‘
” 1 Pkg- i'i Day Bijva Cabbage, lUc
\Pkg. fcaAj Beet, 10c
1 *• Earliest Lifchtu’e Red Cucumber loo
i 1 ** Long Lettuce, 10o
1 ** Salzer’s Best Toronto, 2uc
1 •* California Dinner Eig Onion, lUc
1 •• Early Brilliant Flower Seeds, loc l
8 *'
Worth $1.00, for 14 c ents, $l.Ul j
Above 10 pkgs. worth $1.00, we will
mail you free, together with our
great Piant and Seed Catalogue 14c
upon receipt of this notice A
postage- We invite your trade and
snow when you once try alongwith- Salzer’s
seedsyonwillneYcr Onion Seed get 68c. and
out them. 1.20
jii up alb* Potatoes at ff AC
a Bbl. Catalog alone ac. No. WIS.
AI.ZF.il SEF.D CO.. I.A (ROSSE.
eseeeeeeoQOoeeeeeeeeeeaee*
,8TGPFE0 Permanently FREE Cured
i
Insanity Prevented by
08. KUNE'S GREAT
NERVE RESTORER
o for*11 NtrwuM DUtaset. Fit*, Epilep* jr,
ii. Vitus' Dance. t>ol iteor NerrcraaBMS
’*«*. Ueot«, they Treatise and $2 trial charge* bottle vnlf
p»juweipr*fi
\\T ANTED—Case of bad health that R I PA N 8
it will not benefit. Send 6 cte. to ltipan* Chemical
Co., ^ewYork, for lo samples and lQou testimonials.
MENTION THIS PflPERIKTTIf.’SB