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MRS. EMMA FLEISSNER
Suffered Over TwoYears—Health Was
In @ Precarious Condition—Caused
By lelvic Catarrh.
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PE-RU-NA.
" Mrs. Emmsa Fleissner, 1412 Sixth
Ave., Seattle, Wash., Worthy Treas
urer Sons of Temperance, writes:
««] suffered over two years with ir=
regularand painful periods. My health
was in a very precarious condition and
I was anxious to find something to re
-store my health and strength.
*] was very glad to try Peruna and
delighted to find that it was doing me
good. I continued to use it a little over
three months and found my troubles re
moved.
] consider it a splendid medicine
&nd shall never be without it, taking a
dose occasionally when 1 feel rune
down and lired."’
Our files contain thousands of testi
monials which Dr. Hartman has re
ceived from grateful, happy women
who have been restored to health by
bis remedy, Peruna.
If your druggist does not keep
Peruna in stock, send remittance to
cover price of one bottle, $l.OO, or
six bottles, £5.00, to the Peruna
Drug Mfg. Co., Columbus,Ohio.and
the medicine will be forwarned to
you by express prepaid.
SQUIRRELS RAID
’
ADMIRAL'S HOME
Tear Up His $l5O American Flag and
Break Glass and
Dishes. :
Invading the home of Rear Admiral
Ludlow at Sayville, N. Y., several hun
dred gray squirrels tore a Dbeautiful
American silk flag worth §l5O in the
admiral’s home, broke crockery and
glasses, and, although the Ludlow
caretaker tried hard to get the squir
rels out of the house, he was unable to
do so.
The little fur coated animals have
been scampering about the country
around Sayville in droves, and farm
ers complain that they are worse than
an army of rats. The admiral has
been particularly annoyed by them.
His gummer home is an old place, and
a real colonial church, which is re
garded as a valuable relic, stands on
his estate, The admiral, who was in
Philadelphia, sent word to the care
taker several days ago asking him to
get the house ready for the summer.
To get some of the things that were
stored In the church the caretaker
went to the old place of worship and
on opening the door found almost a
thousand squirrels in the place. The
next day the caretaker drove the
squirrels out of the church and, spread
ing a thick wire netting about the out
side of the building, prevented them
frcm getting back.
Proud of his victory, he went home
and the next morning went to the Lud
low house. He found that the squir
rels, unable to get back into the church,
had marched over to the dwelling and
made themselves comfortable. They
tore down the flag for nest making
material and in scampering about also
broke most of the glass and earthen
ware in the building. The caretaker
now is trying to devise a means where
by he can get rid of the animals. He
{8 not permitted to shoot them, this be
ing the closed season for squirrels.
Old Chronic Sores.
As a dressing for old chronic sores
there is nothing so good as Chamber
lain’s Salve. While it is not advisa
ble to heal old sores entirely, they
should be kept in a good condition, for
which this salve is espeeially valuable.
For sore nipplés Chamberlain’s Salve
has nosuperior. Forsale by Dawson
Drug Co.
DENTISTRY
PR W. H HOYL.
Dawson, Georgia.
OFFICE OVER BELL BROS.” DRUG STORE
SR s ... B O
SHUver FIHRGS. ...cc-ccaccesrssssses IBC
Cement or Bone Fi11ing5...........75¢
xamination Free, and estimate of Cost cheerfully made, which plares you under
no obligation whatever. ALL WORK GUARANTEED.
~ LIVING TOMB
|
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|
'Awful Doom of Mohammed Mcs
- fewi, Who Murdered Thirty
{ . .
| six Moroccan Girls.
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'WHIPPED DAILY WITH THORNS
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'He Was to Have Been Crucified, but
i Sultan Abdul Aziz, Moved by For
| eigners’ Protests, «Commut.
! ed” His Sentence.
i With details of fiendish cruelty that
| cannot be fully realized Mohammed
i.\lesfewi. the arch murderer of Mara
- kesch, Morocco, was walled up alive.
It was this Mesfewi who was to have
been crucified for his terrible crimes—
it is known that he murdered not few
er than thirty-six young women—and
i who was saved from that fashion of
execution by the outcry of the resident
foreign officials.
Mesfewi was a cobbler and public
{etter writer. Associated with him in
lis crimes was an old woman of sev
enty named Annah. Many girls of the
city disappeared in the last days of
~April, and the parents of one young
woman traced her to the cobbler’s
shop. Annah was put to the torture
‘ and confessed.
| She told that the girls, who came to
dictate letters, were treated to drugged
\ wine and then beheaded. Twenty de
capitated bodies were found in a deep
pit under the shop and sixteen more in
the garden.
Annah died under the torture. By an
ancient Moorish custom Mesfewl was
condemned to be crucified.
His crucifixion was set for May 2,
but this form of punishment was given
up because of the foreign clamor, and
it was announced by Sultan Abdu!
Aziz that Mesfewi would be beheaded.
He was kept in the Marakesch jail un-.
til outside attention was dulled, and
then on May 15 his torture began.
Daily he was led into the market
place and whipped with switches of
the thorny acacia. Ten strokes were
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THE CROWD JEFRED AND BESLABBERED
THE VICTIM.
given each day, and each stroke drew
Iblood. After each flogging the cob
bler's back was toughened and anoint
ed with vinegar and oil so that he
might be fit for the next day’s ordeal.
So the daily whippings went on, and
I when it was seen that despite all care
. Mesfewi was falling into exhaustion it
was decided to carry out the supreme
sentence. This was that he be walled
up alive in the public market place.
The day of execution was set for
Monday, June 11, the Marakesch mar
| ket day. The news spread, and the
market place was thronged with thou
sands of Moroccans, who squatted in
the blazing sunlight and waited for
l the ghastly show to commence.
Just outside the jail where Mesfewi
was confined stands the chief bazaar,
It has very thick walls, and in one of
these, facing the market place, two
masons dug a hole six feet high, two
feet wide and two feet deep.
Mesfewi was thrust into the recess
'in the thick wall. The masons stgod
aside, and the crowd struggled and
fought to get in the front rank, scoffing
in derision and pelting Mesfewi with
the offal of the market place.
Then the masons came forward and
deliberately laid on the first courses of
the masonry. The wall rose to Mes
fewi's knees, and then the chief jailer
came forward and gave him bread and
water. The masons again stood aside,
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Porctlnln ©COUWEE. i.:: .- risrsisiiavs-. BB
Gold Cxownn T 8 ....................- BB
Full Upper or Lower Plate. ... ... . .S 8
Bridge Work.... . .84 to 85 per Tooth
The Dawson News. Wednesday, July 18, 1906.
and again the crowds jeered and be
slabbered the victim.
So it went on, stone by stone, until
only Mesfewi's screaming head was
seen. The last stones were thrust in
place, and Mesfewi’s living tomb was
completed.
Night came, braziers were lit, coffee
was made and still Mesfewi screamed
and the crowds yelled. Tuesday came
tn, and Mesfewi was still screaming
for mercy.
So it went on all day and all night.
When Wednesday broke those close
to the wall reported that the prisoner
was only moaning. Finally the moar
ing stopped, and the delayed business
of the market was resumed.
COMING OF HARVESTERS.
What Outside Help the West Will
Need to Move Its Wheat Crop.
The inrush of harvesting hands is
one of the most interesting features of
the crop moving preparations at the
west, says an Abilene (Kan.) corre
spondent of the New York Post, It is
worth coming a long way to sece. The
men who come from the east and go
into the harvest fields by the thousands
have practically nothing with them
when they arrive. The state of Kansas
asks for 22,000 men this year. Okla
homa took 10,000, Nebraska will want
20,0600. The workers remain in the
fields for a full month, as they move
alonz with the harvest's progress from
south to north, They get from $1.50
to §2.50 a day, an average of perkaps
§2 and board. They are an addition to
the hundred thousand workers who
live 2t home and help in the harvest.
Many communities take none of the
outsiders. But they are the ones for
whom a vast amount of hand to hand
money is needed.
A good portion of the men line up
at the country postoffices on Saturday
night and send east a part of their
money. The currency remains, how
ever, and this is why the banks are
able to get along with less than might
geem possible. The hundreds of thou
sands paid to the workers in every
wheat country are by no means all
spent before the meén go home. Some
of the men do not even pay railroad
fare, for they have a way of taking
possession of a freight train and rid
ing free whether or not the crew is
satisfied with the action. Fully one
third of the money earned is carried
home in pockets or sewed in the linings
of coats.
BITTEN BY OVER
FIVE HUNDRED DOGS
Jersey City Cur Catcher Says No One
Need Have Hydro
phobia.
Is there such a thing as hydrophobia?
If there is, can it be overcome by the
mind?
With his body a mass of scars from
516 dog bites, Herman Rocktoff of Jer
sey City goes merrily on catching un
licensed dogs and insisting that science
is a failure and that there is no such
thing as hydrophobia.
When he applied at the Jersey City
hospital recently to have a gash in his
right .hand cauterized he told the doc
tors how to do it. The new doctor mar
veled that a dog catcher should know
so much about the cauterization of a
wound.
“Why shouldn’t I?* said Rocktoff.
“That is the five hundred and sixteenth
time at least that a cur buried his
teethein me, and this is the two hun
dred and sixty-third time I have had a
wound cauterized. Let me show you.”
And Herman, who is a husky, big fel
low, bared his arms and legs and show
ed a jumble of varicolored scars which
in a museum might be mistaken for
the bungling work of a tattoo artist.
Rocktoff has been a dog catcher for
ten years. From the first time a yelp
ing pup sank its fangs in his thigh
Rocktoff has firmly believed that he
would never have rabies, or at least he
has never let himself believe that he
would have rabies.
“I've seen parents scare their kids
into havingz hydrophobia,” said Her
man. “I’ve been bitten by the same
dog, and nothing ever happened to me.
Perhaps I'm immune, as the doctors
say, but I guess I could go mad if I
wanted to.
“I think that anybody who doesn’t
want it need not have hydrophobia. I
always know when I have a bad bite,
and then I have it cauterized. That is
all the precaution I take, and I guess I
have been bitten by the really mad
dogs as often as any one.”
Attacked by Flying Fish.
The steamer Claudine was recently
attacked by flying fish in the Hawail
channel, between the islands of Ha
waii and Maui. The searchlight on
the vessel evidently attracted and an
gered the fish. A large school of the
fish suddenly rose out of the water,
and instead of flying away from the
boat, as is usually the case with that
variety of fish, they flew over the bow
of the craft. One of them flew direct-
Iy for the light and broke the glass,
putting the light out of commission.
A dozen fish reached the upper bridge
of the vessel, and two struck the side
of the man on watch, nearly knocking
him over. .
Burial Ground Girl's Boudoir.
In a rocky nook, with the scant pro
tection afforded by the overhanging
erags and the branches of trees, Anna
M. Wood, sixteen years old, lived for
nearly a week in Woodland cemetery,
at Stamford, Conn. Her home is in
Middletown. She ran away because,
she says, her stepfather vas not kind
to her. There are few men in Stam
ford who would care to spend one night
amid such ghostly surroundings. ;
«KISS ME IN
MY COFFIN”
Girl Makes This Last Request of
Sweetheart, Then Inhales
Deadly (as.
HE DIDN'T KNOW SHE LOVED HIM
Hopeless of Winning Handsome Dancing
Master’s Affections, Pretty Phila
delphia Stenographer Takes
Her Own Life.
Urged by the friends of Helen Ken
dig, the pretty Philadelphia stenogra
pher who killed herself after she found
the man she loved did not care for her,
the police searched long for other mo
tives, but found that no one was crimi
nally responsible.
Miss Kendig, twenty-two years old,
was employed in the office of a Chest
nut street broker and lived with her
mother in 2051 Pemberton street. From
the letters that she left it is apparent
that she was in love with Harry Oudi
not, a dancing instructor. She took her
life by inhaling illuminating gas and
died before the doctors could reach her.
The girl left a note asking the man
ghe loved to come to her coffin and kiss
her forehead. She further asked that a
bunch of flowers on which he had rest
ed his head when ill and which she
had kept should be buried with her.
Her farewell letter in part follows:
My Dear Harry —1 am returning all
your letters and other little things you
gave me. I love them too much to de
stroy them, and 1 don’'t want anybody
else to handle them. They are memories
of happyv times. The only thing 1 am
keeping is the small bunch of sweet peas,
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HE KISSED HER ON THE FOREHEAD.
the ones on which your dear head rested
once when you were ill. How I loved you
then! I can see your dear face yet.
Oh, Harry, Harry, Harry. when I went
to the dancing school and saw that girl
waliting for you to take her home my
heart died. It is so heavy it is dragging
me down and killing me. When I think
of living my life without you 1 feel as
though I had been climbing a dangerous
mountain, you taking my hand and lead
ing me and then suddenly leaving me all
alone in the danger.
I want you to come and see me when I
am lying in my coffin, and it is my re
quest that yvou will kiss me on the fore
head. It will make me feel happy.
Be a good boy, Harry. I feel sure that
you will come to me some day. It is just
a dreadful mistake, but you could not
help it. Goo;iby, darling; goodby. Your
heartbroken HELEN.
Young Oudinot expressed much sor
row at the girl’s untimely end. He
said that he had no idea she was so
much in love with him. He said he
never gave her any reason to believe
he cared for her in more than a friend
ly way. “As to her reference about
sweet peas,” he said, “and my laying
my head upon them, that is something
I cannot recall.”
Stimulation Without Irriration.
That is the watchword. That is
what Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup
does. Cleanses and stimulates the
bowels without irritation in gny
form. Kendrick’s Drug Store, Daw
son, and H. A. Wall, Bronwood.
Beautify the Complexion
IN TEN DAYS.
g~ Nadinola
‘\ The UNEQUALED
el S neee BEAUTIFIER, en
; R e
Z I.E dorsed by thousax:is
e - guaranteed to remove
@~ % 1 freckles, pimples, all
7 =5 facial discolorations
TN SIS and restore the
e beauty of youth.
The worst cases in twenty days. 50c. and
$l.OO at all leading drug stores, or by mail
Prepared by NATIONAL TOILET CO., Paris, Teon.
e e eol L A ®
Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic
has stood the test 25 years. Average Annuyal Sales over One and a Half Mig’&"
bottles. Does this record of merit appeal to you? No Cure, No Pay.
Enclosed with every bottle is a Ten Cent. package of Grove’s Black Root, Liver Pills. '
In the Name of Sense,
that good common sense
of which all of us have a
share, how can you continue
to buy ordinary soda crackers,
stale and dusty as they must
be, when for 5¢ you can get
Uneeda Biscuit
fresh from the oven, protected
from dirt by a package the
very beauty of which makes
you hungry.
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
C. W. RAWSON, M. R. BACON, iy M. TICKNOR,
President. Vice-Pres. . Gen. Manager,
ALBANY MACHINERY. (0.
MILL AND RAILROAD SUPPLIES
Saw Mills,
Wood-
Working
Machinery.
We Call Attention to Our Large Stock of |
Traction Engines, Gasoline Engines, Threshing
Machines, Towers and Tanks, Heavy Machinery,J
Engines, Boilers and Saw Mills. Call and See Us.
Albany Machinery Company.
Albany, : s Georgia.
WE WILL SOOON HAVE SEWERAGE
and it will be to your interest to
9
Let Us Put in Your Closets at Once.
and avoid the rush. We can do it cheaper now than
later, as we will probably have to pay more for labor
when we get to needing it very bad. If you will take
this as we mean it, it will be money for us both, for if
you wait it may ot be so that we can get to you when
yvou want us; and you may have to get some of the
“come and go’’ kind of plumbers to do your work.
That is dangerous, as : : ’ 3 : 2
The Work Has Got to Be Done Right, or
It Means 11l Health.
And you would probably not have him to go back on
if he did you a poor job. PHONE 104 if you are
ready, and J. S. Clay will be there to figure with you.
We have a nice line of closets to select from. : :
Jd S CLEY a 8 (0
® o
The Sewing Machine and Bicycle House.
e R G LAR WBy 9
isade - . ¢ U ol GO S .
3 7 R " ] Foren '1;".() b :
A ; R Pt - p 7 TIR 3
# is the bestof all Liver Tonics and Bowel Regulators. It gives
g 4 Yyou anatural, active Liver, relieves Constipation prom ptly, ?nd
insures you good health. It is especially necessary in the spring,
§ when the system requires a tonic and invigorator. It is purely |
# vegetable and contains no ?ngredient that is deleterious to the |
¥ system under any circumstances. It takes the place of calomel, |
50 often used with bad after effects. It is not an experimental
medicine, but has established its enviable reputation by years ot
successful use. Your guarantee of its excellence and merit 13
the fact that Lamar, Taylor & Riley Drug Co. make and sell it.
Such a well-known, reliable firm would not, under any circum
stances, advertise or sell an article unless it was of sterling merit.
iR
YOU PAY BUT 50c FOR 50 DOSES
u——_—_—-———-———-———————_—_-
Mr. J. R. Young, ex-Mayor of Dothan, Ala., says: ‘‘l have been sellin®
Lamar’s Lemon Laxative for some time and recommend it to all sufferers
from disordered liver or any other 2ilment that it is recommended for. I
like it, use it in my family, have sold lots of it, and have never had any
complaint at all.”
| LAMARS LEMON LAXATIVE
The News For the Best Printin
WE WILL PLEASE YOU.
Heavy
Machinery,
Tnoipes,
Boilers,