The Fitzgerald leader. (Fitzgerald, Irwin County, Ga.) 19??-1912, May 27, 1897, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

L FRUIT STEAMER ( IIASEI) BY SP AN- ISIf MAN OF WAR. CULLED DOWN BY STORM OF SHOT Hold-Up Was Attempted On the Out¬ bound Trip and tho Keturn. Captain’s Story. After being twice chased by Spanish gunboats and passing through a per¬ fect storm of shot, which splashed in the water across the vessel’s bows, the British fruit steamer, Ethelred arrived at Philadelphia Sunday night, after a five days run from Port Antonio, Ja¬ maica. When the Ethelred left Philadelphia May 12th, it was the intention of Capt. J. I). Hart to accompany her, hut he wns arrested as ho was about, to go aboard. As it was, his invalid daugh¬ ter was a passenger. It is supposed that the agents of the Spanish govern¬ ment in the city had notified the Span¬ ish authorities in Havana to watch for the Ethelred in Havana waters. The first encounter with the Span¬ ish cruisers occurred off Cape Maisi, on the trip down. Just after dusk on Sunday evening, May 16th, a gun¬ boat without lights shot out from un¬ der the Maisi capes and crowding on all steam steered directly for the fruit vessel. After steaming for an hour without gaining an inch, the gunboat turned a eearch-light on the other vessel. All steam was crowded on the Ethelred, which was beginning to show the Spaniards a clean pair of heels, when a small white cloud of smoke belched from the cruiser’s side, and a second later a solid shot out the water a half mile ahead of her bows. Then came a second and third shot, each Bearer than the other. Captain Israel kept on bis course, and after another hour’s hot chase, the Spaniards dropped from the race. The second chase happened last Thursday in almost the same spot in which the attempt to hold the vessel np occurred. Just as the Ethelred rounded Cape Maisi an immense Span¬ ish gunboat, of the newest type, started out from under the cape and gave chase. For two hours the chase was , Kept , enlivened -j • now and i n then bya i np, £ __y solid shot , throwing . up a sheet , , of » white x 5 1 spray just • i ahead i -l of the ,, swift vessel ,, s ^bows ,\‘ T legan Ail o on as 1 -r a e c; ^paniau i x meant to chase the Ethelred clear to v i , ,, ". ie av ' a e capes, \\ en ano lei steamship was sighted and the big gunboat steered off and gave vigorous f iase <> 6 nt " I tiscoieiet icsse. CROCKETT SOUGHT DEATH. Placed Muzzle of Gun In His Mouth and Blew His Head Off. James P. Crockett, w'ho is said to be the second wealthiest citizen in De- Kalb county, Ga., and who has alw'ays enjoyed tbe respect and esteem of that section, placed the muzzle of a double- barreled shotgun in bis mouth Sunday morning and blew his head almost en- tirely from his body. Tbe cause is shrouded in deepest mystery. Some say it was mental aberration; others believe his poor state of health had something to do with it. Crockett had been ill for over . six months, suffering with rheuma¬ tism. There was no cause for despondency or discouragement in his business af¬ fairs. Ever since he started his little grocery store in Decatur, when Atlan¬ ta was flame swept by Sherman’s torch, liis success has been unhindered. He later speculated in real estate, making a fortune of nearly $200,000, which he now leaves to his family. YOUTHFUL BANK THIEF CAUGHT. The ®30,000 He Had Taken Found on His Person. Albert M. King, the Boston bank messenger, who disappeared from that city a few days ago with $30,000 of the bank’s money, was arrested at, Farmington, Me., Sunday. King reached the place on a train from the Bangeley lake region and was taken into custody immediately. When searched at the jail all the money taken from the bank was found in King’s pockets. AMERICAN MEDICAL SOCIETY To Hold Golden Jubilee in Philadelphia June 1st to 4tli. The golden jubilee meeting of the American Medical association will be held in Philadelphia on June 1st, 2d, 3d and 4th, and promises to be not only the most important meeting ever held by this great organization, but also the largest gathering of noted medical men ever before brought to¬ gether in the city. Apart from the large attendance of physicians from all parts of the coun¬ try, the numerous able and interest¬ ing papers placed upon tbe program insure a meeting of important scien¬ tific results. DEATH IN FLAMES. Two People Killed and Tln-eo Seriously Injured In a New York Fire. Two persons were killed and three injured in a fire at New York Sunday morning in the four-story and base¬ ment brownstone building at 149 West Twenty-third street. Several persons narrowly escaped death. The dead are: Mrs. Catherine Mossway, 33 years, died at hospital from suffocation and burns; Beatrice Mossway, 4 years old, daughter of the former, suffoca¬ ted in her room. HISTORICAL CHURCH BURNED. I Was First Kill flee For Worship Built In Savannah By John Wesley. Christ church, the mother of the Episcopal union in Savannah, the first and only church founded and built in America by John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, before he left the Epis¬ copal church, the ground for which >vas ceded by King George III, has been destroyed by fire. The fire broke out at 12:30 o’clock Saturday night and the church was soon a mass of ruins. The cause of the lire was the care¬ lessness of the porter who pumps the organ. He keeps a caudle back of bis bellows gunge at night so that he can read the indicator. After the choir practice Saturday night he went away and forgot to put out this candle, which burned out and started the con¬ flagration. The church contained the records of Savannah and much of those of Geor¬ gia from 1810, the time when it was destroyed by a hurricane, and all these were burned. The records be¬ fore that time were destroyed by the hurricane. The original church w'as founded soon after the settlement of Savan¬ nah. The first edifice was begun in 1743, but was not completed until 1750. In 1796 it was destroyed by fire and was rebuilt upon an enlarged plan in 1803. The next year it was partly de¬ molished by a hurricane and was not rebuilt until 1810. In 1838 the corner-stone of the pres¬ ent edifice xvas laid, the old church having been torn down, and the build¬ ing was completed in 1840. The founder of Christ church was Bev. Henry Herbert, who came over from England with Oglethorpe. John Wesley was its third rector, and on the site of the present edifice stood the rude chapel in which he administered as chaplain to the colonists. It w'as in Christ church that the first Sunday school W'as established by John Wesley, nearly fifty years before Robert Raikes, who is honored as the founder of Sunday schools, originated the scheme of Sunday instruction in Gloucester, England, and eighty years before tbe first Sunday school in America on tbe Bailees plan was es¬ tablished. PREPARING FOR QUEEN’S JUBILEE London is Taking On a “Strictly Busi¬ ness” Aspect. London, according to advices, is al¬ ready plunged into the queen’s jubilee preparations r and for the next six weeks , it promises to be themostun- . comfortable - , ,, city in Europe, ™ Along 41 the ,, route J . of e the J procession the fronts of the buildings are disfig- nred by hideous scaffoldings, prepara- V | tory . to , building •, seats. ^ Even churches i jMartin’s, ^ in the fields, have been gola to Apec !, atorSi who have al- ^ complett y covered the edifice mentioned with building preparations, a little sign reading “Services as usual” being about tbe only indication left of the church proper. St. Paul’s cathedral is likewise disfigured by huge stands. The price of provisions has already advanced and everything has at least doubled in cost. For tbe jubilee W'eek several of tbe large hotels refuse to make any definite arrangements for rooms, even to old patrons, until a week before the jubi- lee. Every person who lias been able to do so has let his or her house for the celebration and is preparing to flee to the country. The fact is that every one in London is, to use a slang ex¬ pression, “on tbe make.” ROl SS MONUMENT IS DEDICATED. Blind Millionaire’s Gift to Confederate Veterans Is Accepted. The monument given by Charles Broadway Bouss, tho millionaire New York merchant, to Confederate Vete¬ rans camp was dedicated Saturday afternoon in Mt. Hope cemetery, in West Chester county. After the dedication the graves of the veterans of the southern army were strewn with flowers. After an hour the visitors returned to the city, where a reception was given to Mr. Bouss in the evening. The monument is the finest in the cemetery. It cost $5,000. It is New England granite, sixty feet high on a base of ten feet. The pedestal is com¬ posed of only three pieces and is nine feet high. The following inscription is at the base of the monument: “Sacred to the memory of the heroic dead of the Confederate Veteran camp of New York.” WILL PARDON REDWINE. Attorney General Has Ordered His Case Reopened. A Washington special of Sunday says: Lewis Redwine, the wrecker of the Gate City National bank at Atlan¬ ta, and who is serving a term in tbe Columbus Ohio, penitentiary, will be pardoned. The attorney general has given or¬ ders for the reopening of his case, which was closed when President Cleveland refused to grant the pardon upon the former application. This was done at the instance of Colonel Buck, who went to Attorney General McKenna to urge that action. LIST OF NEEDY AMERICANS. Consul Bee Places the Number In Cuba at 1,200 More Than the Estimate. A telegram was received at the state department Sunday morning from Con¬ sul General Lee indicating that tbe number of Americans in need in Cuba is much larger than was supposed at first. The consul general says that the number may reach 1,200. The consul at Matanzas rejiorts 250 there and the consul at Sagua 450. STRUGGLING CUBANS GAIN A VIC¬ TORY ON UNITED STATES SOIL. STORMY SPEECHES PRECEDED VOTE Sir. Hale Fought Desperately the Consid¬ eration of the Morgan llasolution on Recognition of Belligerency. The joint resolution recognizing the existence of a state of war in Cuba, and declaring that strict neutrality shall be maintained by the United States, passed the senate Thursday af¬ ternoon by a vote of 41 to 14. The resolution as passed is as follows: “Resolved, etc., That a condition of pub¬ lic war exists between the government of Spain and the government proclaimed and for some time maintained by force of arms by the people of Cuba, and that tho United States of America shall maintain a strict neutrality between tho contending parties, according to each all the rights of belliger¬ ents in the ports and territory of the United States.” The vote on the final passage of tbe resolution was as follows: Yeas—Ba¬ con, Baker, Bate, Berry, Butler, Car¬ ter, Chandler, Chilton, Clark, Clay, Cockrell, Culiom, Davis, Deboe, Fora- ker, Gallinger, Gorman, Hansbrough, Harris of Kansas, Heitfeldt, Jones of Arkansas, Jones of Nevada, Lindsay, McBride, Mantle, Mason, Mills, Mor¬ gan, Nelson, Pasco, Pettigrew', Pettus, Pritchard, Rawlings, Shroup, Stewart, Thurston, Tillman, Turner, Turpie, Walthall—41. Nays—Allison, Burrow's, Caffery, Fairbanks, Gear, Hale, Hanna, Haw¬ ley, Spooner, Wellington, Wetmore, White and Wilson—14. Ananal , , y sls . of , the .. vote , shows that . tlle . affi ™ a ^ G was cast 18 re P" bh - ean s and 19 democrats and4 populists, and , tbe negative by 12 republicans au< 9 n demon a s. Prior to the final vote, the motion of Senator Hale to refer the resolution to the committee on foreign relations was tabled—yeas, 34; nays, 19. Mr. Fairbanks, of Indiana, then pro¬ posed a substitute providing that the president extend tbe good offices of the United States to Spain toward se¬ curing an end to the conflict and tbe ultimate independence of the island. This, too, w'as tabled. Yeas 36, nays 16. Then followed the adoption of the original resolution. The voting occurred after an excit¬ ing debate, participated iii by Sena- tors Thurston, A Nebraska; Elkins, West • • xx White, a r* California; i -e ■ Fair- * Virginia; banks, Indiana; Hale, Maine; Spooner, Winconsin, and Gorman, Maryland.* Mr. Thurston, who presided over the republican national convention at St. Louis, recalled tbe stirring scene when that convention enthusiastically inserted a Cuban plank in the plat- form, and declared that this resolution was in partial fulfillment of that pledge, Messrs. Elkins and White urged a conservative course and an inquiry by a committee. Then came the first vote—that on the Hale motion to refer. It was a test of strength, and the defeat of the motion assured the pas¬ sage of the resolution. Mr. Fairbanks tried to stem the tide by offering a compromise proposition, somewhat on tbe lines of tbe Cuban plank adopted at St. Louis, but it met the same fate as tbe other motion. This brought Mr. Hale forward for a final protest. He spoke with intense earnestness and feeling and with a trace of bitterness in liis words. He declared that the elements opposed to the administration, democrats and pop¬ ulists, had furnished the bulk of the vote in favor of the resolution, and that the foreign policy of the admin- isiration was thus to be dictated by its opponents. He expressed tbe fear also that the resolution would lead to war with Spain. Mr. Spooner added his pro¬ test against tying the hands of the ad¬ ministration. Mi-. Morgan closed the debate, re¬ senting tbe suggestion that party lines w'ere drawn on the resolution and as¬ serting that the administration should have dispatched a war vessel to Cuba to protect our officials on the island. The final vote was then taken and the senate adjourned until next Mon¬ day. MORE POSTOFFICES. New Ones Will Be Established WliereVer Needed. Fourth Assistant Postmaster-General Bristow has inaugurated a new policy as to the establishment of postoffices. The last administration exercised a very conservative policy in dealing with this question, holding that there were already too many offices in oper¬ ation, and that it would be better, as a general proposition, not to have the offices too close together. The present regime has determined to establish offices wherever any rea¬ sonable amount of business can be se¬ cured, with the idea of accommoda¬ ting as many people as possible. ROMEYN RECORDS Now In the Hands of Secretary Alger For Review. The judge advocate general of the army has completed his examination of the record of the court martial in the case of Captain Henry Romeyn, Fifth infantry, who was convicted of assaulting Lieutenant Michael O’Brien, of the same regiment, at Ft. McPher¬ son, Ga. The case is now in the hands of Sec¬ retary Alger for review. SENATOR EARLE DEAD. Prominent Sooth Carolinian Bald Low By Bright's Disease. United States Senator Earle, of South Carolina, who was eleoted last January, died at his residence in Greenville Thursday afternoon at 5:35. He had been ill for several weeks, but until last Wednesday hopes were entertained of his recovery. Bright’s disease was the trouble. His death has already caused a stir among the politicians. The selection of his successor may change the whole political Checker board as it had been drawn for South Carolina to 1900. Judge Earle w'as a native of South Carolina, being born in Greenville county on April 30, 1847. His father, Elias D. Earle, of Greenville, was a prominent lawyer and at one time held the office of superintendent of publio works of the state. Judge Earle’s early education was received in the Academy of Sumter. Immediately upon leaving the academy he hastened to join the ranks of the confederate army, In July, 1864, at the age of seventeen, he enlisted as a private in Charles’ battery of light artillery, at the close of the war a part of Kemper’s artillery. At the close of the war Judge Earle returned home and entered the Fur¬ man'university, where he graduated in 1867. He chose law as his profes¬ sion, but being too poor to study it in¬ dependently, he taught school by day and studied law at night. In April, 1870, he was admitted to the bar and began the practice of his profession at Anderson, where he remained until 1875, when he removed to Sumter, S. C. As a lawyer Judge Earle soon dis‘ tinguished himself. In 1878 he was eleeted to the legis¬ lature, and for four years he was a useful and able member of that body. He declined re-election to the house in 1880, but was elected senator from Sumter county in 1882. In 1886 he was elected attorney gen¬ eral and for two terms filled that re¬ sponsible position with signal ability. In 1880 he had the honor of represent¬ ing his party in the national demo¬ cratic convention at Cincinnati. Again in 1884 he went as a delegate to the national convention. In 1888 Judge Earle declined the nomination of governor because he was committed to the support of Gov¬ ernor Richardson, who was a candi¬ date for re-election. He ran against Tillman for governor in 1890, but was defeated. Judge Earle then returned to Greenville, the home of his boy¬ hood, and opened his law office, de¬ termining to devote his entire atten¬ tion to the practice of his profession. In 1892 he was elected judge of the sixth circuit. The history of the campaign in which he triumphed over John Gary Evans and was chosen by the people as United States senator is familiar to all. Judge Earle was married May 19, 1869, to his cousin, Miss Anna M. Earle, a most attractive and interest¬ ing woman. To them have been born nine children, of whom six survive. HOUSE EVADES QUESTION. Consideration of Cuban Matter to Be Delayed. Cuban affairs furnished tbe house with a day of bitter partisan debate Thursday. appropriating $50,- The resolution 000 for the relief of American citizens was adopted without a dissenting vote, but tbe democrats endeavored to force consideration also of the Morgan reso¬ lution for recognition of the belliger¬ ency of the insurgents. They accused the republicans of en¬ deavoring to evade this issue, but the dominant party through its spokes- man, Mr. Hitt, made the important statement that the republicans desired not to embarrass negotiations which were being projected by President McKinley to secure the independence af Cuba. M’KINLEY GOES TO NASHVILLE. He Has Decided Upon June IStli as tlie Date of His Visit. President McKinley has finally de¬ cided to go to the Nashville exposion next month. He has fixed upon the 12th as the date and will doubtless be accompanied by some members of the cabinet. To Increase Spanish Army. General de Azcarraga, Spanish min- ister of war, has introduced a bill into the cortez providing for an increase of the army in Spain to 100,000 men. DOCKS NEED REPAIRS. Congress Will Be Asketl to Furnish tho Wherewith. The r.avy department is making ar¬ rangements looking to the passage by congress of a resolution appropriating $100,000 for repairs to the dry docks in the New York navy yard. Commodore Matthews, chief of the bureau of yards and docks, saw Speak¬ er Reed with reference to the matter. The speaker referred him to Mr. Hil- born as the senior member in the city of the naval committee of the last con- gress. That gentleman advised Com- modore Matthews to prepare a report and submit it to tbe house, in which event it would be considered at once. USELESS PRELIMINARIES And Elaborate Spanish Etiquette Obstruct Mr. Calhoun. A special of Wednesday from Ha- van a says: In spite ot MV. Calhoun’s anxiety‘to get to work on the consider- Ruiz in- vestigation there has been able delay owing to tbe elaborate forms of Spanish etiquette and to the great number of useless preliminaries, The investigation, however, will prob¬ ably begin on Monday. GUIDED IIY M’KIN LEY. rroimo Will Hold Off On tho Cuban Beg- olutlon For a Time. No official information could be ob¬ tained as to what action the house may take on the Cuban resolution passed by the senate,. but it was understood that Speaker Reed would have a con¬ ference with the president on the sub¬ ject at an early Jay, and no action will to taken until after that conference. The inference was that the action of the house managers would be guided to a large extent by the results of the conference. It is also probable that some at¬ tempts will be made on the part of the democrats to have the resolution con¬ sidered as soon as it reaches tho house, but this cannot be done except by unanimous consent, which will not be given, or by a special order from the committee on rules. , IXELIGIRLE FOR MAYOR. Supreme Court Derides Against a Bruns¬ wick Alderman. A decision rendered by the Georgia supreme court Friday morning leaves the city of Brunswick without a mayor. In December last a municipal elec¬ tion w'as held there and the vote for mayor w'as 440 for E. H. Mason and 123 for Judge A. J. Crovatt. The ballots were counted, Mason was declared mayor and lie assumed the functions of the office. Since then Judge Crovatt brought an action to oust Mr. Mason on the ground that he was an alderman at the time of the election and was, there¬ fore, ineligible for mayor. Judge Sweat declared the election valid, but this judgment is reversed by the supreme court, which takes the position that Mason w'as ineligible. A new election will, therefore, be held. CREDIT ONLY WEYLER. American Newspapers Blamed For False Publications. At Madrid, Friday, Senor Moret T. Prendergast, a former minister, asked tbe government on behalf of tbe lib¬ erals in the chamber of deputies to submit all the papers relating to the rebellion in Cuba and to the diplo¬ matic relations of Spain with the powers. Senor Canovas, the premier, reply¬ ing, said the government could only attach credit to such information as was sent by Captain General Weyler. He severely blamed tbe American newspapers for disseminating false news, and cited as a case in point, re¬ cent statements attributed to Consul General Lee. MILES RECEIVED BY SULTAN. Uncle Sam’s Army Officer Will Soon Start for Thessaly. Advices from Constantinople state that United States Minister Terrell escorted Major General Nelson A. Miles, of the United States army, w'ho was accompanied by his aide-de-camp, Captain Ganns, and two secretaries of the embassy, to the ceremony of the Selamilk, Friday, after wTiich General Miles w r as received by tbe sultan, w'ho gave him a special audience. General Miles will start for Thes¬ saly in a day or so. Captain Soriven, United States mili¬ tary attache at Rome, has been nomi¬ nated military attache at the American embassy at Constantinople. PATTON'S RONES FOUND. licmains Discovered In Fire Debris at Chattanooga. Workmen engaged Friday in clear¬ ing the debris from the site of tho Richardson building at Chattanooga, Tenn., destroyed by fire April 3d, found a quantity of human bones, he- lieved to be those of S. M. Patton, 1he architect, who perished in that fire. The bones found were from Ihe pel¬ vic region of a man, and as Mr. Patton was the only man known to have been burned in the building, there can be no doubt as to the identity of the re¬ mains. Mr. Patton bad about $20,000 insur¬ ance, the payment of which it seems hinges upon the identification of these remains. CHINESE IN NASHVILLE. A Half Thousand Celestials Sport On tbe “Midway.” Two hundred and sixty-one Chinese arrived at Nashville, Tenn., Friday and joined the other celestials in Van- ity Fair. There are now 475 of them at the exposition. SUBTERRANEAN FIRES Threaten the Town of Newburg in West Virginia. The mines on the upper level of the old Scotch hill are on fire and threaten the existence of the town of Newburg, W- y a , which is lmiJt over t]ie m i nes . The fire was started years ago by malicious persons, and has recently grown so large that the residents have become alarmed. Armistice for Seventeen Days, An armistice between , , the ,, Turkish _ . . , and Greok tro ?Pf “ Thessaly, to ex- tend , over a penod of seventeen days, totally concluded at Athens illllrstla I SOUND MONEY LEAGUE Hold a Conference at Chicago—Claims to Be Non-Partisan. The Nationa? Money League held a session at Chicago Friday, The league claims to be non-partisan, u P bolds the g° ld standard and amis to organize the supporters of monetary ret ' 01 ' m b Y establishing local leagues throughout the country. It also ad- voeates “speedy, practical legislation, with the view of putting the finances on a firm basis. He Knew Where To Go. The Boston Traveler reoounts a funny incident which took place in the superior court in that city in the trial of one Bebro. A witness, after telling some of Bebro’s alleged faults, went on to recount an unpleasant ex¬ perience he had with the aocused a few weeks before the matter got into court. “I called at his office,’’said the wit- ness, “to try to compel him to return the money he secured from me by false representation. He ordered me from his office and as I didn’t care to be assaulted I concluded to obey him. As I was going out he told me to go to “And in consequence of what he told you to do, what did you do?” inquired Assistant District Attorney Sughrue. “Went straight to police headquar¬ ters,” replied the witness. It is needless to add that the sol¬ emnity of the court was disturbed for the next five minutes. Held (he Barber Responsible. A bright little fellow who has not yet seen his third birthday, often amuses the household of which he is an important feature by bis questions and observations. At dinner one evening recently it was noticed that he was intently study¬ ing the expansive bald space on his venerable grandfather’s bead. When a lull occurred in the table talk, the pride of the family took ad¬ vantage of it. “Grandpa,” he said, “who cut your hair that way?”-—Philadelphia Call. Joke Is on Him. “You know the nr>:n tenant that Chipper is always complaining about?” “Yes.” “Well, Chipper thinks he has an awful good joke on him. The tenant burned up one side of tbe coal sbed for kindling wood and now tbe neighbors get in at night and steal bis coal.”— Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Sure Deliverance. Not Instantaneously, It is true, bat in a short space of time, persons of a bilious habit are saved from the tortures which a disordered liver is capable of inflicting by Hostetter’s Stomach Hitters, an anti-bilious medicine and aperient of the llrst rank. The puins lu the right side and through the right shoulder blade, the sick headache, nausea, constipation uud saffron hue of the skill, are entirely removed by this esti- mablo restorative of tone to the organs of so- cretlou and digestion. The oiliest violin In the world was-found lu an Egyptian tomb, dating about :!,000 B. C. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. lot No-To-F ^9 Over 400,000 cured. Why not regulate or remove your desire for Snvqp money, makes health and Cure guaranteed. 60 cents and $1.00, aM druggists._______ B The bones or tombs of more than 200 have been found in various parts of Wo will give $100 reward for any. Gas tarrli that cannot he cured with llall'a Cure. Taken internally. F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., T Piso’s Cure for Consumption has- &av many a doctor’s bill.-j-S. i ? . Hardy,. Hdl Place, Baltimore, Md< Dec. 2, ’94. ^ JUvST try a 10c. box of Cascarets, the fl liver and bowel regulator ever made. <■■■ Fits after permanently first day’s cured. of No Dr. fits Kliine’s or norvoii^^B QreiMH ness use Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free Dk. It. II. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Pkila., Pa. ^1 Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children < teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma¬ tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. son's Tf afflicted Eye-water. with Druggists sore eyes use sell Dr. at 25c. Isaac per Thomp- bottle, j j St. Vitus’ Dance. One bottle Dr. Fenner’s M Specific cures. Circular, Fredonia, N. Y. Cascarets stimulate liver, kidneys bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; 10c. -/ That Tired Feelin 4 l Is a positive proof of thin,, weak, impurl blood, for if tho blood is rich, pure, vitalizeil and vigorous it imparts life and energv. Th« necessity of taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla toj| that tired feeling is, therefore, apparent td every one, and the good, it will do you is equally beyond question. Take it now. Hood’s Sarsa- parifla Is the best^in fact the One True Blood Purifier. Hood’s Pills are prompt, efficient and easy in effect. 25 cents. ALABASTINE artistic wall-coating WHAT? IS A pure, permanent and colli water. ready for tho brush by mixing in FOR SALE BY PAINT DEALERS EVERYWHERE. CPC •DLL. [i ^Iso’Alalm^ineSou^erhrKoc'k this seutTre^o I to any one mentioning paper. ALABASTINE CO., Grand Rapids, Mich. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, Tulane University of Louisiana. Its advantages for practical instruction, both In ample laboratories and abundant hospital materials are unequalled, Free access Is given to tbe great Charity Hospital with 700 bods amt 30,000 patients annually. Special of Instruc¬ sick. tion is given daily at the beside tho The next session begins October 14th, 1807. For catalogue and information address: Prof. S. K. CHAILLK. 31. I).. Dean. Cir-P. O. Drawer 261. NEW ORLEANS, LA. $ME MAKE LOAMS on ffLIFE INSURANCE policy in tho New POLICIES. York Life, If you Lava a Life would Equitable Life or Mutual and like to secure a Loan, write us giving number of your policy, and we will be pleased to quote rates.. Address ThcEcglisli-Aierican Loan am TrnstCo •: No. 12 Equitable Builtiiiiff, Atlanta, Ga. team's swine Taints Cure Bright’s Disease, Diabetes, Stricture, Gleet and all chronic or acute affections of the genito¬ urinary system, Restore weak organs and mi- part vigor to both body and ntlnd. One box $1.00; three boxes *2.50, by mail. Brepared by HAGGARD SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. Wholesale by Uautar & Rankin Drug Co. HAY PRESSES! IMPROVED HUNTER FULL CIRCLE “All Steel” anti Wooden (steel lined) ?liippetl on trial Li- white ftKKS: ill. Afe2u»!A?tt^. B. LEWIS, Lessee, SHOPS m er ' D b „x a 125m? UURtS WHtRE ALL ELSE (AILSV i:t ■ t Cough Syrup. T’asios Good. Use in time. Sold by dniKRists. SUMPfl & gags