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THE HENRY AYEEKLY
YOL. XIX.
B. W. WRENN, JR.
Attorney-at-Law,
C °”Bpec C .au L ty. aw Atlanta. Georgia.
i 1 GO. W. iiiiv o.
11
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonough, Ga.
Will practice in the counties comprising
the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Sjpreme
Court of Georgia, and the United States
District Court.
r. oickiiy,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonough, Ga.
Will practice in the counties composing
he Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Court
oi Georgia and the United States District
Court. apr27-ly
jV .1. KKAUAIH,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
McDonough, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of Georgia
Special attention given to commercial and
»thercollections. Will attend all t he Courts
at Hampton regularly. Office upstairs over
Thk W kkkly office.
A. KISOW'A,
" ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonough, Ga.
Will practice in all the counties compos
ing the Flint Circuit, the Supreme Court of
Georgia and the United States District
Court. janl-ly
| on > 1.. 'I’VE.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Gate City Natioal Bank Building,
Atlanta, Ga.
I'racticcs in the State and Federal Courts.
j j A. PGIIPLGS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Hampton, Ga,
Will practice in all the counties^:omposing
the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Court
of Georgia and the District Court ol the
United States. Special and prompl mten
tiongiven to Collections, Oct 8, IHJ'h
I jIC. «. I». CAWPBEM,
DENTI ST,
McDonocgh Ga.
Any one desiring work done can ho ac
commodated either by calling on me in per
son or addressing me tbrongh the mails.
Perms cash, unless special arrangements
ire otherwise made.
\ THE STANDARD. ;
[ DURANG’S !
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► Durang’s Rheumatic Remedy Co. \
: 1316 L Street, WasMngton, D. C. 1
* * Durang’s Liver Pills are the best on t
* * earl it. They act with an ease that makes j
lheui a household blessing. X
A PRIC2 28 CTS. PER BOX. or 5 BOXES FOR $1 Z
£ FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS. 4
WM. BOLLMAMN,
Watches, (: Spe-ctacfe*.
Clocks, •) No (i s Br0a „ st.
Jewelry, (:
Silverware. :) Atlanta, Ga.
W t illlll *“ money; also other valua
-lUUU hie premiums to good guessers
BASE BALE Enthusiasts, this is your op
portunity. See otter of Home and Country
Magazine. Price 2c. All Newsdealers; or
53 East 10th Street, New York.
VIRGINIA COLLEGE
For Young Ladies, Roanoke, Va.
Opens Sept. 12, 1894. One of the lead
ing Schools for young ladies in the South.
Magnificent Buildings, all modern improve
ments. Ca mpus 10 acres. Grand moun
tain scenery in valley of Va., fainod ,for
health. European and American teachers.
Full course. In Art and Music uneic6lled.
Pupils from seventeen States, For cata
logues address the president,
W. A. HARRIS, IJ. 1)., Roanoke, Va.
THINACOiI f peopl!e
It makes thin faces plump and rounds out
the figure. It is the STEANDARP REM-
leanness, containing no arsenic,
and Guaranteed Absolutes// Harm
less. Price, prepaid, $1 per Box, •> tor If.
Pamphlet, “How to Get Fat,” free.
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HAIR R BALSAM
Cleanse! beautifies the^hair.
1 SSBBllllr ■Never 1 Fails to Restore Gray
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Cures scalp &^hair_faliiug.
sa-lion, Pain, Take in lime.sucU.
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v.-ill positively protect Horses and Cattle
from any annoyance from flies, Gnats and
1 nsects of every kind, improves appearance
of the coat, dispensing with fly nets. Rec
ommended Bv thousands. Try it and Be
convinced. Price of “Fly-Bend,” including
Brush, quart cans, $1.00; half-gallon, $1.75
one gallon $2.50. One gallon will last
iliree head of horses or cattle an entire
season. Beware of imitations. Address
•Crescent Mfg. Co., 2109 Indiana Avc, Pbila
FOR SALeT"
One house and lot and one
building lot, both near public
square. Apply at this office.
HORROR OK THE CAMP.
The Major’s Story of a Deadly Night
Prowler.
As the Major entered the clttb and
took his seat in the familiar circle the
westerner was just fh ishing a snake
story.
‘■We found him there on the next
day, sitting all doubled up, with his
mouth to'the bitten place, aud the dead
snake lying near him. lie had died in
the. very act of sucking out the poisou,”
he concluded.
‘‘Without wishing to throw any dis
credit upon your story, of winch 1 uu
fortunately failed to hear the mail
part,” observed the Major, ‘T beg t(
remark that in my opinion not one mai
in ten dies of snake bite in this epun
try. Hold on, now ! Don’t interrupt!
1 know that in all the rattlesnake and
copper head stories the victim swells
up horribly and dies in a few hours at
the outside. Rut if you will look back
at the army records you will fiud that
only three per cent of the men bitten
by venomous snakes died. Of course,
in these cases medical aid was close at
hand, which undoubtedly saved many
lives that would otherwise have been
lost. Rut it goes to prove that the fa
tality of snake poison is much exagera
ted. Now,” continued the Major look
ing about him and speaking with tm
pressive slowness, “there is but otte
living thing that I know of in this
broad country of ours whose bite is ab
solutely fatal, and fatal in the most ter
rible way.”
“Leopard tarantula,” suggested one
of his listeners, “Gila monster,” haz
arded another.
“Oh, pshaw !” said the Westerner.
“You mean the centipede, I suppose,
Major. Somebody has been telling
you hair raising stories about those ug
ly reptiles.”
“No, sir,” responded the Major.
“Not the centipede, nor the tarantula,
nor the Gila monster, although I would
just about as soon take my chauce with
a rattlesnake as any of these. The
animal to which I refer is familiar to
all of you. Probably there isn’t a
man here hut has seen one of them, but
so rarely is a man bitten Ly an animal
of this kind in this part of the country
that the terrible veuomousiiess of the
bite is almost unknown.”
“Well ?” said the listeners in a breath
as the Major paused ; and there were
volumes of inquiry and skepticism in
the interrogation.
“Just hy way of illustration,” con
tinued the speaker, “let me tell you a
little story of my experiences when I
was captain of a company that was do
ing some fotagiug aud general lookout
work on the banks of the Mississippi in
’GL My company was encamped quite
near the river in a meadow sloping on
one side to a small hill. Game was
fairly plentiful, good cold spring water
abounded, there was nothing to do but
to take things easy, and we were all
growing fat on it after our hard cam
paign of the previous winter. In my
company there wa3 a big fellow named
Muller who was very popular with the
other men but who used to make trou
ble hy walking in his sleep, then wak
ing up lost aud confused, and yelling
for help until some of his comrades
came and led him back to his tent.
“ ‘lley ! hey ! you fellows. Where
anal? Help! I’m lost. Help! hey!
Come out and get me.’
“Grumbling and swearing, Muller’s
chum, Conroy, stumbled out after him,
for if left to himself Muller would have
stood there yelling all night before try
ing to find his own way back, that be
ing one of the peculiarities of his som
nambulism. Conroy had had experi
ence in this line and he knew. When
he reached Muller the latter was rub
bing his leg.
“ ‘Something's bit me,’ be said. ‘lt
grabbed me just below the knee and
woke me up or I might be going yet.
Do you think, maybe, there’s any
snakes arouud here ?”
“ ‘1 haven’t heard of any just around
here, said Conroy, leading his comrade
hack to the tent. ‘Wait a minute and
I'll light up and have a look at your
leg. Yes, something’s bit you, sure
enough, but it wasn’t any snake.
There’s two teeth marks plain as day
just below the knee. Say, you must
have run into somebody’s veller dog
and got him riled. It looks more like
dog teeth thau anything else.’
“‘But there ain’t a dog within five
miles,’ objected the other. ‘Any way,
it don’t amount to much. Only just
j went through the skin. I can hardly
j feel it.’
' “Muller rolled himself in his blanket
.McDonough, ga.. Friday, jury 27. isot.
and by morning had forgotten all about
the bite.
“It was very slight and apparently
healed up all right. One morning a
few day 8 later I had the men out for a
drill, when Muller, who was ordinarily
one of the best soldiers in the company,
was eery badly out of time in going
through the mauual of arms. Finally,
at the order,‘shoulder arms !’ he half
lifted his piece, aud dung it right
straight out before him As it fell -
with a clatter, the man tore open his
coat at the neck, with a gasping sound
like a choking. Ilis eyes turned up
uutil only the whites could be seen, aud
his face, drawn and distorted, twisted
tself inlo a horrible travesty of a hu
man face. So terrible was the sight
that his companions, forgetful of disci
pline, drew away from him, leaving
him standing alone. The sergeant
walked over to him, when Muller, with
a yell, jumped for him, aud fastened his
teeth in the man’s neck. Duryea, that
was the sergeant’s name, beat him off
and a dozen men seized him. Yelliug
and snarliug like a wild animal, he
fought viciously and with the most
amazing display of strength I ever saw,
flinging men right and left uutil at
length a blow from behind sent him to
the ground. At my orders the men
bound hint and carried him to his tent
while a mounted messenger rode to the
nearest village, some ten miles away,
to get a d. ctor.
“What little knowledge of medicine
I possessed offered no solution for so
extraordinary a case, and the first hint
of the real cause I got from Conroy,
who remembered that Muller had been
bitteu while wandering on the hill a
few nights before. I examined the
bite, the sufferer haviug become some
what calmer, and found it inflamed and
black at the edges. When the doctor,
a young man recently from the north,
arrived, be agreed with me in suppos
ing that Muller had been bitten by
some venomous animal or reptile, and
that in some way the progress of tin
poison had been retarded, but was ut
terly unable to say what creature had
bitten him. For four hours fhe doe
tor worked unremittingly over poor
Muller, who went from convulsion to
convulsion and finally died in terrible
agony.
Resolved to solve this mystery if pos
sible I took Conroy and two other pri
vales, and with the doctor made a care
ful examination of the hill where Mul
ler had been bitten. We/ouud a few
harmless snakes, some field spiders, one
of which the doctor said was poison
ous, and some tox skunk, and wood
chuck burrows, but nothing to indicate
the presence of any poisonous creatures
as had killed Muller. Thoroughly dis
couraged and not a little alarmed, 1 led
the way back to camp’jnst in time to
hear a great commotion at the further
end. Before we could reach the place
a private named Storms burst out from
the crowd of men and came running to
wards us at a tremendous rate ol speed,
but just in front of us he fell, rolling
over iu convulsions, just such as* had
racked poor Muller, and tearing at his
coat sleeve. We threw ourselves upon
him while the doctor ripped open the
sleeve and examined the arm. There,
sure euough, was the mark of teeth.
Storms was taken to his tent, and on
the following morniug his body was
taken out to he buried with that of
Muller. One of the men afterwards
told me that Storms awoke one night
and called out that something was biting
his arm, hut in the morning he said
nothing more about it.
“We buried the two men together
with their faces covered. It was a
gloomy day in camp. A still more
careful search of the hill had revealed
nothing, yet I went to bed feeling sure
that there was more horror in store for
us, and the men, instead of gathering to
sing and play games, collected iu little
groups to talk in low tones of the
strange deaths of their comrades. It
was hardly a surprise to me when the
uext morning our bugler, who occu
pied the tent next to Storms, came to
me pale and trembling and showed me
two small punctures on his arm. Al
ready the edges were turning dark.
“ ‘Captain,’ said he with trembling
voice, ‘its bit me too. It was five or
six nights ago I felt it like a rata gnaw
ing at me, but I thought theD it didn’t
amount to anything. 1 reckon now
I’m done for.’
“Cauterization and all the remedies
at the doctor’s disposal couldn’t save
the unfortunate man. fie died as his
comrades had died, in fearful spasms.
Terror seized the camp, the men were
completely demoralized, and finally sent
a deputa'ion tagging me to move camp
I and get away from the featfui
j that no man heard or saw or knew ol
until he found on his body the marks of
I death. I was undecided what to do,
so l consulted with the doctor, who
thought that the best thing was to stay
where we were and endeavor to sohe
the mystery rather than run away.
I Two men came to me early ou the fol
lowing morning, one with tbe dread
mark on his haud, while the other
showed it on his foot.
“ ‘lt woke us up just now,’ said one
of the men. ‘I felt it gnawing at my
hand aud yelled, and Jim, here, kicked
at it as it brushed past him, aud it
grabbed his foot. Cau we see the doc
tor, please, sir ?’
“They were put under treatment at
once. For days after that it rained
continually, and, while we were execs
sively uncomfortable, we had no
cases of the poi-ou bite. Six days ttf
ter the two men were bitteu the doctor
came to me, with his face white.
“ ‘One of the men is raving,” he
said. ‘The bitten p'ace is black. He
won’t live through the day. We'y
have to move the other man, or the
horror of it will drive him crazy.’
“We moved him, and at night the
first man died and the other began |to
show the awful symptons. It was that
night that we got the explanation, and
I wonder it didn’t go off my head. I
was just dripping to sleep when I heard
a sound such as I had never heard be
fore. It was a rasping, barking sound,
repeated quickly aud chokingly. Sud-
denly it flashed across my mind that
this was the animal that had bitten the
men. Catching up my revolver, I ran
out to find a score of the men, who had
crept out of their tents on hearing the
strange noise. Bright moonlight made
everything as clear as day, but look as
we might we could not see anything to
explain that noise. Yet the air seemed
full of it. Presently, far up the line
there came from behind a tent a man’s
figure, lie moved rapidly toward us,
Ins body bent, but his head turned far
backward as if some force were putting
it hack. From his throat came put;
Mreadful Tfft l #tiroir*&om)d: -Afflu** Mt'iv*’
nearer we saw his face ; a private in
front of me gave a shriek and fell down*
upon the ground. Another seized his
gun and shot at the thing, but misse*
then turned and ran. The rest of us
stood as if struck into stone. From
the tent where the sick man was lying
the doctor heard the commotion. He
came running out and took in the whole
situation at a glance.
“‘Follow me!’ he shouted. ‘Get
ropes, some of you !”
“Then he threw himself upon the
horror, and brought him to the ground.
The men bound him, how, I don’t
know, and it was not until he was tak
en to the tent aud I noticed a blackened
wound on his neck that I knew him fur
Sergeant Duryea, whom Muller had
bitten. He and one of the other men
died that night. After it was over the
doctor came to me.
“ ‘l'vo suspected it all the time, and
now I know it,’ said he. ‘I can’t ex
plain it, but it’s hydrophobia, the most
violent and sudden that 1 have ever
seen. Do any of your men keep dogs ?’
“ ‘There isn’t a dog within ten miles
so far as 1 know. Besides, those marks
were never made by dog’s teeth, unless
I am greatly mistaken.’
“ ‘Then what in heaven’s name—,’
began the physician, but he broke off
suddenly. ‘l’ll stay here and see this
thing through,’ said he.
“But one patient was left and lie was
in spasms by morning. The doctor
and I were watching by him when a
raw honed back woodsman, carrying a
muzzle-loader, strolled into camp and
greeted the doctor, who addressed him
as Uncle Zeb, inviting him to come in
to the tent where the sufferer lay.
“ ‘Old Zeb knows every living thing
in these parts,’ whispered the doctor to
me. ‘lf any man can explain this lie
can.’
“Tie backwoodsman meantime was
examining the patient with many
shakes of the head.
“ ‘There’s only one thing for that
case,' he said finally, touching the muz
zle of his gun significantly. ‘lt’s shor
ter an’ easier.’
“ ‘No, Zeb,’ said the doctor hastily.
‘Can’t do that. Though it would save
suffering,’he added gloomily. ‘What
is it ?’ he asked finally.
“‘Skunk,’ said the old man briefly.
“ ‘Who ever heard of a skunk biting
any one ?’ I cried and the doctor added ;
‘Skunks aren’t poison, Zeb.’
“Putting his gun on his shoulder the
backwoodsman walked out. An hour
later we heard the sound of his gun,
and he came back, carrying a big skunk.
“As lie entered the tent the man
die*—--“M i uncovering the bitten
pl i ',ed that the skunk’s teeth
At xaeriy fitted to the marks. There
| was no room for doubt. Skunks had
killed the men, all except Duryea, to
.whom Muller had communicated the
hydrophobia venom.
“We moved camp that day. If we
I had stayed there longer I think that
half of my men would have gone crazy
i after the horror of the sight of poor
Duryea in the madness of hydrophobia.
! I know I felt as if that place was haun-
I ted. Afterward 1 learned that it was
not uncommon for skunks to bite men
| sleeping on tbe ground, when driven
by hunger, and that such biles aro in
variably followed by hydrophobia of a
most speedy and terrible type, except
| in the case of Indians, who are not sus
| eeptible to the poison.
“That, gentlemen,” concluded the
Major, “is why I speak slightingly ot
-rattlesnakes, centipedes, tarantulas, am!
such things. I wottl I rather be bitten
and stung by any and every other liv
ing thing foil ml on this continent than
take my chances with a skunk bite.”—
New York Sun.
Western Ways. *
The di-penser of rite .finest brand of
Western justice sat on a soap-box with
u law hook spread before him on an
upended whisky barrel.
“Who arrested this man ?” he asked,
as the prisoner stood up before him.
“We did,” responded half a dozen
citizens standing around.
“What’s the charge?”
“lloss stealin’.”
“Kin you prove it?”
“You beteber life we can ; ketched
him in the act.”
The judge looked ugly.
“Will you swear to it f” he asked.
“Course we will ; didn’t we jist tell
you we ketched him at it ?”
“All right, gents,” said the judge
blandly, as he laid his gun across the
law bo k. “I’ll fine each and every
oue of you ten dollais and costs for
contempt of court in fetebiu’ him here
and dismiss tips case agin the prisoner.
You bug'fifor"'4Phtfrg ffinrnp whm' you
ketched him.”
“Prayer of llie Nerves.”
It has been said that pain is the
“prayer of the nerves for healthy
blood.” The pains of Rheumatism,
Neuralgia, Dyspepsia, etc., have their
origin in had blood. Purify the life
current—the blood—let it course
through all the vita! organs, pure, rich
and red,., bearing nourishment and
strength to each part as it has need,
anti charged with power to remove all
obstructions and expel all waste, anti
the pains mentioned will disappear.
They are but symptoms. Remove the
causes, which produce them and they
cannot exist. Dr. King’s Royal Uer
metu r does that very thing with uu
equaled ease and unfailing power. $1 ;
6 for !so.
Nose From a Blackbird's Breast.
A medical journal says a servant girl
was brought into a London hospital
with her nose smashed through a hy
(lraulic lift coming in contact with it.
The consulting surgeon sent out and
procured a blackbird, lie took out. its
breast, and having chloroformed the pa
lient he placed it where the broken
ca' tilage had heeu. The success was
complete When the flesh healed, it
was found that the bone supported it
admirably. The contour of the nose
was not marred, and there was only a
very slight scar, hardly perceptible, to
show that the girl had ever been hurt.
But for the operation she would have
been disfigured for life.
Moved the Wrong Man.
A few days ago, while a gentleman
was buying stamps at the postoffice,
some one took his umbrella, as he he
lfaves, by mistake, and the loser, says
the Boston Herald, put this card in the
morning paper :
“The kind friend who canied off my
umbrella at the postolfice yesterday will
bear in mind that the ‘(fates of ibav
en’ are ouly twentyfour inches wide.
,My umbrella measures twenty eight.
At the other place he won’t need it.
Didn’t Dives pray for just one drop of
water ? He had better return it to 208,
Chamber of Commerce, and no ques
tions will be asked.”
“Man is but a breath,” is a wise old
saying, and it is especially true of the
man who has been eating onions. Hi
ts all breath.
Laws are not invented ; they grow
out of circumstances.
Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder
Most Perfect Made.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U S. Gov’t Report.
Rc^ld’*?*
L\ msm® rowaer
ABSOLUTELY PURE
The Longest Day.
The sun bad sunk behind tbe bills,
and far and wide the purple shadows
thickened into night.
Hy the trellised gate, in the gloam
ing, the young man met the maid.
Sweet and fair she was, and brave
ami strong was he.
It was a new world to them now,
for only the evening before he had
claimed her as his own, and she had ac
knowledged the claim.
Is there a sweeter moment in life
than this ?
Ho had not seen her all that day,
and now this meeting came to Iter like
a benison.
“It has been the longest day in the
year,” he said as he clasped her in his
arms.
I low nice of him it was to make this
remark. She loved him for it. Tbe
day had been long for her as well.
“Dear heart,” she sighed and cud
dled close, “why has it been so long ?”
Of course she knew what answer he
would give, hut it is always sweet in
love to hear the loved one tell what
each one knows so well. 'Twas this
that made her ask :
“Why has it been s i long ?”
“Because—because,” he murmured,
dallying with tbe thought, “because it
is the 21st of June.”
And her heart went broke on that.
—Detroit Free l’t ess.
The convention of cotton planters,
which met at Vicksburg, Miss , on Ju
ly 12th, and adjourned after a short
session, will re assemble on August 18th
at the same place. The adjournment
was taken in order to enroll the far
tui-rs of Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkan
sas and Texas for the purpose of se
curing harmonious action. The idea of
the leading spirits in the movement is
that the price of cotton seed is altogeth
er too low, and that it would be better
for planters to fertilize their fields with
tlte seed than to sell them at the prices
that have lately prevailed. The price
of cotton seed is controlled by the cot
ton oil trust, and the planters propose
to light one combination by forming
another.
That Tired Feeling
Is a dangerous condition directly due
to depleted or impure blood. It should
not bo allowed to continue, as in its
debility the system is especially liable
to serious attacks of illness. Howl’s
Sarsaparilla is the remedy for such a
condition, and also for that weakness
which {travails at the change of season,
climate or life.
Hood’s l’i'H are purely vegetable,
carefully prepared from the best ingre
dients. 25c.
The following sentiment, from the
Macon Telegraph, should be echoed
and re echoed throughout the great
commonwealth of Georgia : “Bound by
nature, by association, by instinct, by
self-interest, hy a common suffering and
a secret past, whether from town or
country, our people should continue to
be in one mind, in one thought, in one
purpose, and he who would rend in
twain those who have so long dwelt to
gether in unity is not a real friend to
his country ”
A claimant for a pretty considerable
section of New York city, including the
site upon which Trinity church stands,
has turned up in Pennsylvania. Tl e
claim involves thirty five acres of land
worth, with the improvements, not less
than $400,000,000.
Specimen ('uses.
S. 11. Clifford, New Cassel, Win., was
troubled with Neuralgia and Rheumatism,
bis Stomach was disored, his Lirer was af
fected to an alarming degree, appetite fell
away, and he was terribly reduced in flesh
and strength. Three bottles of Electric
Bitters cured him.
Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, 111., had a
running sore on his leg of eight years’
standing. Used three bottles of Electric
Bitters and seven boxes of Bucklcn’s
Arnica Salve, attd his leg is sound aud
well. John Speaker, Catwaba, 0., had five
large Fever sores op his leg, doctors said
he was incurable. One bottle Electric
Bitters and one box Buckleit’s Arnica
Salve cured him entirely. Sold at any
drug store.
5 CENTS A COPY
Too Much of tlio Hitf-ratf.
Are our immigration inspectors doing
their whole duty? It is important that
they should at this time for two reas
ons. The first is that" steamships are
bringing immigrants so cheaply that
many of those who are coming are very
undesirable. From the Mersey to New
Vork steerage passage can now be ob
tained for $9. And this price includes
not only the outfit of bedding, etc., but
also railway fare from London. From
continental ports the cost of passage is
about the same. With such rates it is
apparent that thousands of objectiona
ble immigrants are likely to reach our
slioies within the next few months.
We have more poverty-stricken people
in this country now limn we can prop
erly care fot.
Another reason why the inspectors
should be on the watch is that nearly
all the governments of Europe are
adopting most stringent measures
against anarchists. So stringent are
the laws and so active are the police
that this class of people will fiud it un
comfortable to remain in Europe.
They will come to this country. We
don’t want them, and they shouldn’t
be permitted to land if they come heie.
A 11 oiin«*liol«l Trenailro.
1). W. Fuller, of Canajoharie, N. Y., snv*
that he always keeps Dr. King’s New Dis
covery in the house and his family Ims al
ways found the very best results follow its
use ; that he would not be without it, it pro
curable. (i. A. Dykeman Druggist, Cats*
kill, N. Y., says that Dr. King’s Now Dis
j covery is undoubtedly the best cough remc
|dy ; that he Ims used it In his family for
I eight yo ' s and It has never failed lodoall
that is claimed fuj- it. Why not try a reme
dy so long tried and tested. Trial bottles
free at hiiv drug store. Regular sise 50e,
and SI.OO.
Tilings to Forget.
If you would increase your happiness
and prolong your life, forget your
neighbor’s faults.
Forget all the slander you ever
heard.
Forget temptations.
Forget the peculiarities of your
friends, and only remember the good
points which make you foud of them.
Forget all personal quarrels or his
tories you may have heard by accident,
and which, if repeated, would seem a
thousand times worse than they are.
Blot out as far as possible all the
disagreeables of life. They will come,
but they will ouly grow larger when
you remember them, and the constant
thought of the actß of meanuess, or
worse still, malice, will only tend to
make you more familiar with them.
Obliterate everything disagreeable
from yesterday, start out with a clean
sheet for today, and write upon it for
sweet memory’s sake ouly those things
which are lovely and lovable.— liam's
Horn.
Never was there a truer saying, in
the midst of life we are in debt.
Gov. Altgeld says that inasmuch as
the state of Illinois has been put to au
expeuse of SIO,OOO a day in maintain
ing the militia in the field during the
strike, there will be no state encamp
ment this year. Looking at the affair
from a soldier’s point of view solely,
the service in the field was better for
the discipline of the troops than an en
campment would have been. The
young fellows know now what real
campaigning is, and an encampment
would only have given them lessons in
theoretical campaigning.
Awarded
Highest Honors—World’s Fair.
DR
CREAM
BAKING
POWDER
MOST PERFECT MADE.
a pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. p ree
f r ni Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant,
{,O YEARS THE STANDARD,