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“YELLOW JACK” PERVADES ALA.
RAMA’S CAPITAL CITY.
NEW CASES DEVELOPING DAILY.
Dr. Guiteras Report* Discovery of Six¬
teen Patients—Governor John*tou
Is Criticized.
A special from Montgomery, Ala.,
states that the board of health aud Dr.
Guiteras held a conference Friday
night at which the latter made an ad¬
dress, advising how the fever should
be treated. He will file his report
with the surgeon-general.
After visiting the patients in the
city he reported sixteen cases of the
fever.
Ten new cases were reported Fri¬
day.
Dr. Guiteras refused to make a state¬
ment over his own signature, being
compelled to report to the government
first, he said.
The doctor says that the first killing
frost will exterminate the disease. He
contends the disease is not contagious
and that no harm can arise from the
nurses or doctors circulating about
the streets. He says it is the germ
which causes the epidemic.
The new cases are widely scattered
over town and are not confined to any
class of people.
The following dispatch has been re¬
ceived from Selma:
“The committee of public health for Dal¬
las county considers the symptoms of H. L.
Chapin as sufficiently suspicious of yellow
fever to ask Dr. Saunders, state health of¬
ficer, and Dr. Guiteras to come to Selma for
investigation.”
Governor Johnston is being severely
roasted for deciding to modify the
ctate quarantine so as to permit refu¬
gees to stop at places in Alabama
where the authorities have not quaran¬
tined, but a little reflection is bound
to satisfy a just person that the gov¬
ernor is right.
Only a very small part of Alabama
is governed by municipal regulations.
The cities can quarantine and protect
thousands, but the small communities
and the country districts could be
overrun with refugees if the governor
would permit the trains to stop wher¬
ever passengers wanted them to.
At New Orleans there were fifty
new cases and five deaths Friday.
At Clinton, Miss., eleven new cases
were reported.
At Edwards there were four new
cases Friday; total to that date, 487;
deaths. 26; discharged, 346; convales¬
cent, 48; under treatment, 37; in the
country, deaths 4, all white; total
cases, 550.
VAN WYCK LEADING.
Democratic Candidate Forging Ahead Jn
New York Municipal Campaign.
A special of Friday from new York
says: Every turn of the political
wheel here in the big city has been
favorable to Van Wyck. It is not that
he and his managers aro so much wis¬
er than than any other political man¬
agers, or that the judge himself is re¬
garded as possessing to the highest
possible degree, and beyond every¬
body else, the qualifications essential
to the mayoralty, but the democratic
candidate seems to have been born
under a lucky star. Every move of
his enemies has played into Van
Wyck’s hands.
The latest great plays of the Low
people are to have Mrs. Grannis attack
the democratic candidate for his visit
to the French hall some years ago,
and then to resurrect Parkhurst, get¬
ting him to declare for Low.
The Parkhurst matter came to a
head Friday, The reformer writes
from Switzerland, where he has been
for some time in a retreat. He de¬
clares for Low and hurls the usual
“reform” criticisms at “Plattism” and
“Crokerism.”
SPAIN REFUSES MEDIATION.
Informs Uncle Sum’s Government That
Its Good Offices Aro Dejected.
The Madrid papers say that the re¬
ply of the government to .the United
States “declines mediation” of any
kind in the question.
SEAL CONFERENCE BEGINS.
Hon. Jolrn AY. Foster Chosen as Chair-
man of the Body.
The international fur seal confer¬
ence convened at Washington Satur¬
day morning and organized by the se¬
lection of Hon. John W. Foster as
chairman, and Mr. G. A. Clarke, as
secretary.
Mr. Clarke for two years past has
acted as assistant to Dr. Jordan in his
investigation in Behring sea. The
conference adjourned to meet again
Monday morning.
After the adjournment the delegates
were accompanied by Secretary Sher¬
man to the executive mansion and pre¬
sented to the president.
DEAD JOURNALIST BURIED.
Dana Funeral Service* Were of Simplest
Nature.
The funeral services of the late
Charles Anderson Dana were held
Wednesday morning at the beautiful
St. Paul’s Episcopal church, Glen
Cove, Long Island, and the interment
was in the churchyard there.
Hundreds of distinguished citizens
■were present, including many men and
women whose names are prominent in
journalistic and political circles.
SIXTY NEW CASES
Wai Fever Record In Now Orleans Wed¬
nesday-Six Deaths.
All previous records as to the num¬
ber of new cases of fever in New Or¬
leans were broken Wednesday. Early
in the evening sixty new cases had
been entered on the books of the board.
At the same time there had been six
deaths. These had all occurred dur¬
ing the early hours.
The flight from Montgomery con¬
tinues. Upwards of 500 refugees from
Alabama’s capital aro in Atlanta, Ga.
The tables have been completely turn¬
ed, and those who were so. violent in
insisting on a stringent quarantine
against Atlanta have been compelled
to seek refuge within her gates.
Montgomery’s board of health at 1
o’clock Wednesday afternoon reported
five new cases and one death.
The executive department of state
has been removed to Birmingham.
The department, of agriculture is also
there temporarily, and the convict de¬
partment has taken its books to
Speigners. the
Birmingham is now practically
southern terminus of traffic on the
Louisville and Nashville. For fear of
the inadequacy of the state quarantine
the towns of Jacksonville, Auburn and
Tnskegee, for which places a very
large percentage of the refugees were
headed, have organized local quaran¬
tines.
Selma, however, has the most de¬
termined quarantine of all. Every
avenue into the central city is guarded.
APPROYE SOUTHERN HISTORIES.
Virginia Ex-Confeileratea XVtint the Truth
of Events Taught.
The Grand Camp of Virginia Con¬
federate Veterans met in Richmond
and adopted the following resolutions:
“Resolved, That only such histo¬
ries as fairly present the principles
and facts upon which is grounded
our American republic be used. In
this spirit we would recommend
as Virginia histories, those by Mrs.
Mary Tucker McGill and General
D. H. Maury, and as histories of the
United States, those of Mrs. Susan
Pendleton Lee, Rev. J. William Jones,
Shinn, Hansel series and Holmes.
Further, we would suggest for its
moral and patriotic influence as life aux¬ of
iliary reading the admirable
General Robert E. Lee, by Mrs. Mary
Williamson—in our opinion it might
be adopted—such is its clearness and
verbal simplicity, as a current reader.
“We desire, also, to express our ad¬
miration of the recent utterance of the
grand commander of the Confederate
veterans of Virginia, Col. John Cus-
sons, in his trenchant arraignment of
the south in his “Glance at Current
History.”
STOCKHOLDERS HIT HARD.
Tlieir Investments In Looted Southern
Mutual May Como To Naught.
Stockholders of the Southern Mutual
Building aud Loan association, which
failed in Atlanta last February, have
received the report of the receivers,
James A.Anderson and M.H.O’Byrne,
showing the condition of that concern,
and the report makes it clear that
stockholders will not receive more
than 25 per cent of the amount paid
in.
The general report of Accountant B.
F. Moore, attached to the letter of the
receivers, shows assets of $651,262.53
and liabilities of $879,208.66, leaving
a deficit of $227,946.13. The real de¬
ficit will be much larger thau this be¬
cause most of the items in the list of
assets are worth considerably less than
their face value.
BOHANNON ROBBERS FOILED.
Gang: Made Almost Successful Attempt at
Jail Breaking.
Bohannon and his accomplices were
caught Wednesday night in an attempt
to break jail at Dalton, Ga. They had
obtained a small steel saw and had cut
seven bars in two. They had three
more to cut to get to the brick wall.
An hour’s work would have let them
out of the cage. They did most of their
work during the day while it was rain¬
ing hard.
At night the prisoners in the cage
appeared to be very jolly and sang for
an hour. The singing, which was to
drown the noise of the saw, aroused
suspicion and they were detected at
work.
There are twelve in Bohannon’s
cage. All the car robbers are there
except Kinneman and Morris, who
are in another cell.
CANNON CONVICTED.
It was Proven That He Bought Goods
From Bohan nan.
“Mac” Cannon’s trial at Dalton was
ended Friday by the jury returning a
verdict of guilty.
The trial of Cannon was a most dra¬
matic one throughout.
The defense had set up an alibi.
The state assaulted it until it was a
question with the audience whether
the jury would believe it or reject it.
Twice did the accused man spring
from his chair to interrupt the state’s
counsel. Each time his attorney, Col¬
onel Watt Harris, checked him, and
attempted to speak for him, but Judge
Fite would uot hear the lawyer.
TRAIN SERVICE CURTAILED.
Fasscnfjer Cars Virtually Abandoned on
Alabama Great Southern.
All passenger trains on the Alabama
Great Southern road have virtually
been abandoned south of Birmingham,
Ala., on account of the yellow fever
below the city. Trains Nos. 3 and 4
HIT annulled, while Nos. 1 and 2, the
Cannon Ball New Orleans-Cincinnati
trains, do not discharge or take on pas¬
sengers, express or baggage in Alabama
or Mississippi south of Birmingham.
MISTRIAL DECLARED IN THE CEL-
EBRATED MURDER CASE.
THREE STOOD _ _ OUT __________ FOR ACQUITTAL
The Big 8»u8age>nalter Furnishes n State¬
ment to Kepreiientfltives of the
AsHocial I*<1 I* I’OSS.
A , Chicago special , soys: The rr, Luet- r
gert jury failed to agree and asa result
a mistrial in the celebrated case was
declared by Judge Tuthill Thursday
morning.
As soon as the court was called to
order Foreman Heickhold handed the
following to Clerk Knock, who, by
order of the court read it aloud:
“We, the jurors in the case of the
people of the state of Illinois, vs. A.
L. Luetgert, tender to the presiding
judge, the Hon. Richard S. Tuthill,
and the brilliant state’s attorney,
Charles S. Deneen, and his no less
brilliant assistant, Mr. W. M. Mc-
Ewen, as well as the attorneys for the
defense, our most heartfelt thanks for
the very kind treatment we have re¬
ceived at their hands, and we do not
hesitate to state that were it not for
the way in which they have attended
to our personal comfort, as well as to
our sanitary condition, the hardship
would have been very great.
“As to the trial we wish to state
that, while the evidence was such that
we were unable to agree upon a ver¬
dict, one thing we did agree about,
and that is that the circumstances
were such that the police had ample
reason to prosecute on the showing
without hearing the defense, and we
commend them for having done their
duty on this case.”
This was signed by Foreman Heick¬
hold and the balance of the ju;y.
The jurors were evidently of the
opinion that the statement was enough
to give the public .at this time.
The twelve men were divided as fol¬
lows:
For conviction and ihe death penal¬
ty—Heickhold, Boyd,Bibby,Mahoney,
Behmiller, Hosmer, Shaw, Frauzen
and Fowler.
For acquittal—Harley, Holabiru and
Barber.
Luetgert’s Statement.
Thursday night ihe Associated Tress
obtained the one great feature missing
iii the famous trial—the sworn testi¬
mony of the defendant himself.
Standing in the gloomy jail adjoin¬
ing the grim looking gray stone court
building iu which his remarkable trial
had at last been brought to a finish,
the burly sausage manufacturer capped
the climax of the extraordinary series
of events which began with his sensa¬
tional bankruptcy and the alleged
frightful diabolism of boiling his wife
to death at midnight in a vat in his
factory cellar.
Closely following the final result
of the trial, which has attracted
world-wide attention, Luetgert made
under oath a statement for the Asso¬
ciated Press concerning the fearful
crime charged against him, the first
sworn statement yet made by him,
and the first sworn statement of such
kind ever known in newspaper an¬
nals. The affidavit was put in writing,
in due legal form, and is certified to
by a notary. declares
The affidavit explicitedly
Luetgert’s innocence. The document
in full is as follows:
“To the Public—The result of my
trial ended today is a victory for me
because of the disagreement of the
jury, but I am very much surprised
that the jury did not bring in a ver¬
dict of not guilty.
“I did not kill my wife and do not
know where she is, but I am sun; that
that it is only a question of time until
she comes home.
“I did not go upon the witness
stand because my lawyer, Judge Vin¬
cent, was bitterly opposed to my do¬
ing so, and because he advised me that
it was not necessary.
“I am grateful for the tremendous
change in public sentiment in my fa¬
vor, and time will demonstrate that I
am not only an innocent, but a very
grievously wronged man.
Aijouph L. Luetgert.
“Subscribed and sworn to before
me this 21st day of October, A. D,,
1897. M. F. Sullivan,
Notary Public,”
CLEVELAND SPEAKS.
Kx-President Talks Before Large Audience
at Princeton.
The first annual exercises in com¬
memoration of the day when a charter
was granted the college of New Jersey
were held Friday afternoon in Alex¬
ander hall at Princeton.
Two thousand people were present
and the occasion was made one of sig¬
nal importance by the addresses of
Grover Cleveland, ex-President ol the
United States, and Lord Aberdeen,
governor-general of Canada.
The speech which Mr. Cleveland
delivered was notable chiefly for the
heavy, didactic sentences which marked
his public documents.
“GRUB” FOR KLONDIKERS,
Shipload of Poultry, Kkrs and Meats
Hound For Alaska.
On the steamship George W. Elder,
which left Portland, Ore., last Friday
for Dyea, Alaska, Charles E. Vest, of
'Portland, shipped 4,000 dozen poultry, eggs
and about a ton and a half of
fresh meats and oysters, which he ex¬
pects to transport over the Cliilkoot
pass to Dawson City by dog train be¬
fore Christmas. The eggs were broken
into cans, sealed up and then frozen.
BOHANNON GANG SENTENCED.
ludfe Fite Temper. .Justice until a I.arffe
Measure of Mercy.
Justice was tempered with merev at
Dalton, Ga., Saturday when Judge Fite
passed sentence on the nine car robbers
and tlieir nine patrons and customers.
Appeals in behalf of the self-con-
fessed and convicted men came from
all parts of the courtroom.
Before passing sentence, Judge Fite
reviewed the cases of the men, taking
them one by one. Iu conclusion he
imposed the following sentences:
Walter Bohannon, ten years in the
penitentiary; Jim Harris, sentence de-
ferred; Sam Painter, j Ben Pearoe, Tom
Kilmeman aU(1 E ¥orris , ool ored,
three years each in the penitentiary;
Bill Long, one year in the peniten-
tiary; Ralph Ellison and Luke White,
one year each in the chaingang.
For receiving stolen goods: Mac
Cannon, $1,000 fine and costs, and
twelve months in the chaingang, the
chaingang sentence to be suspended
on payment of the flue and costs,
C. j. Peeples, $500 and costs, and
twelve months in the chaingang, the
latter part of the sentence to be sus¬
pended on payment of the fine and
costs.
John Bender, $250 fine and costs,
imprisonment on the same condition.
Kirk Farrar, $250 fine and costs,
and six months in the chaingang, on
the same condition.
W. B. McCarson, $200 fine and
costs and six months, on the same
condition.
Anderson Geddings, $200 fine and
costs, same imprisonment, with the
same condition.
George Horan, $200 fine and costs,
same imprisonment, with the same
condition.
Clee Cumbee, $50 fine and costs
and same imprisonment, with the same
condition.
Ed Roberts, $25 fine and costs and
three months in jail, the jail sentence
to be suspended on payment of the
fine and costs.
Jesse Langston was previously fined
$750.
This was the last act in the car rob¬
bery trials and when it was ended a
feeling of relief came over every one.
With the verdict against Cannon the
public demand for blood was satisfied
and a wave of sympathy swept over the
community and lips which had been
crying for prosecution and conviction
now appealed for mercy. Among
It was a remarkable scene.
the convicted were men who had stood
high in the business, political and
social life of Dalton. They had fair
trials and able counsel and had been
found guilty. An indignant citizenry
had demanded their conviction and
now were present to witness the finale.
The trials had been on for two
weeks and every day had brought sen¬
sational developments. 1 There had
--------
been two weeks of suspense lest some
guilty man should escape, and the
juries having done their duty without
favor, the good people thronged to the
court to hear the penalties.
MARCH OF YELLOW JACK.
"Worse at Montgomery—Fever Officially
Announced at Selma.
Two deaths and eighteen new cases
was Montgomery’s record for Sunday.
On Saturday thirteen new cases and
one death was reported by the board
of health, and the information that
there were half a dozen others that
were not reported because the attend¬
ing physician did not arrive until after
the meeting adjourned, did not serve
to reassure the people. The death of
Alderman John W. Deming, who died
a few hours after his case was report¬
ed, added to the excitement.
There is no longer any doubt about
yellow fever in Selma. Dr. Guiteras
reached the city on a special train from
Montgomery Saturday afternoon and
visited the suspicious cases in the prac¬
tice of four out of thirteen doctors. Sev¬
en were pronounced yellow fever. opinion
Dr. Guiteras expresses the
that the disease has been in Selma
from four to six weeks and that the
present patieuts represent the third or
fourth crop of cases. He says that
the disease is unprecedentedly mild,
amounting to little more in suffering
than a bad cold.
A case of yellow fever has appeared
in Atlanta, Ga. 11. H. Commor is the
victim. He is a white man, hailing
from Montgomery, is a fireman on the
West Point road, and is now in a
boarding house at 179 Haynes street.
He is in a serious condition, black
vomit having set in Sunday afternoon.
WHISKIES OF POOR QUALITY.
CMcago Parties Detected in Gigantic
Liquor Counterfeiting Scheme.
In a musty and darkened cellar at
No. 131 Sangamon street, Chicago,
lawyers detectives and constables
bave unearthed what they claim to be
one of the largest liquor counterfeit-
ing schemes ever operated in this coun¬
try. hours’ work $25,000 in
After four
counterfeit labels, representing all the
leading brands of liquor, bottles and
cases were found.
The loss to the liquor dealers and
manufacturers through counterfeit has
been nearly $500,000, and it may even
reach a higher figure.
BRYAN IN DEMAND.
Will Take the Stump In Ohio to Follow
Senator Hanna.
A special from Columbus, O., says:
The democratic committee will bring
Hon. William J. Bryan into Ohio for
the last four days of the state cam¬
paign. He follows Senator Hanna’s
speeches at Montpelier, Defiance, Van
Wert, Mt. Vernon, Newark, Shawnee,
Logan, McArthur, Jackson, Waverly,
Greenfield and perhaps. Cincinnati,
LEAP OF PASSENGER
TRAIN INTO THE RIVER.
LIVES WERE LOST.
Up By Wall#, tlio Unfortunates
Could Not Escape—Death Uist
May Bo Increased.
A special from Garrisons, N. Y.,
that a fearful catastrophe oc¬
on the Hudson River railroad
morning.
From the sleep that means refresh¬
and rest, to the eternal sleep
knows no waking, plunged, in
the twinkling of an eye, twenty-eight
souls—men, women and children. Into
the slimy bed of the Hudson river a
train laden with slumbering humanity
plowed, dragging through the waters
the passengers. There was nothing
to presage the terrible accident which
so suddenly deprived those unfortu-
fortunates of life.
The New York Central train left
Buffalo Saturday night and had pro¬
gressed for nearly nine-tenths of the
distance toward its destination, when
with the great engine, plunged into
the depths of the river. Neither in-
gineer nor fireman will ever tell the
story of that terrible moment, for with
his hand up on the throttle, the en¬
gineer plunged with his engine to the
river bottom and the fireman, too, was.
at his post. Behind them came the
express car, the combination car and
the sleepers, and these piled on- top of
the engine.
It is known that the morning was a
trifle foggy and that the track was not
visible, but if there was any break in
the lines of steel it must, have been of
very recent happening, for only an
hour before there had passed over it a
heavy passenger train, laden with hu¬
man freight. Neither is there an ex¬
planation ready. All is conjecture.
The section of road was supposed to
be the very best on the entire division.
What seems to have happened was
that underneath the tracks and ties the
heavy wall had given way and when
the great weight of the engine' struck
the unsupported tracks it went crash¬
ing through the rest of the wall and
toppled over into the river.
Then there happened what on the
railroad at any other time would have
caused disaster, but now proved a very
blessing. As the train plunged over
the embankment the coupling that held
the last three sleepers broke and they
miraculously remained on the broken
track. In that way some sixty lives
■were saved.
Of eye witnesses, there were none
except the crew of a tugboat passing
with a tow.
They saw the train with its light as
it came dashing about the curves, and
then saw the greater part of it go into
the river. Some of the cars with
closed windows floated, and the tug,
whistling for help, cast off its hawser
and started to the rescue.
There were in the smoker, in addi¬
tion to the baggage man, Herman Ac¬
ker, of Peekskill, w’ho was in his com¬
partment; eight Chinamen, en route,
from the Canadian border to New
York, and a man supposed to be Thom¬
as Reilly, of St. Louis. All of these
excepting the baggage master perished.
The day coach contained eighteen or
twenty passengers, many of whom
were women and children.
How many of these escaped is not
known, but at least twelve were
drowned or killed in this car. Behind
the coach -were the six sleepers, the
Glenalpine, with fifteen passengers;
the Hermes, with twelve passengers;
the Niobe, with eleven; the Diana,
with about fifteen; Anita, nearly full,
and the Backet River, with no passen¬
gers. of human freight
The total cargo
consisted of something over a hundred
people.
W. C. T. U. IN CONVENTION.
All the Old Officers Re-Elected at Toledo
Convocation.
The biennial convention of the
world’s Woman’s Christian Temper¬
ance Union was formally opened at
Toronto, Canada, last Friday. The
program of the meeting was full of in¬
terest.
At the meeting of the executive
board the officers were all re-elected.
OLD DIRECTORY RETAINED.
Annual Meeting of Georgia, Southern and
Florida Stockholders.
The annual meeting of the stock¬
holders of the Georgia Southern and
Florida railroad -was held at Macon,
Ga., Wednesday.
The following directors were re¬
elected: Samuel Spencer, II. H.
Tift, H. P. Smart, T. D. Tinsley,
Morris Happ, W. C. Shaw, J. F. Han¬
son, George W. Parrott, T. B.
Gresham, A. S. Pendleton and J. M.
Johnson.
The annual report, in which such a
splendid showing was made for the
road by the present management, was
submitted to the stockholders),
EVANGELINA AT WASHINGTON.
She and Her Rescuer Cali Upon President
McKinley.
A Washington dispatch says: The
president gave a public reception Fri¬
day afternoon at which a large num¬
ber of callers paid their respects.
Among them were Miss Cisneros, the
escaped Cuban girl.
She was accompanied by Mr. and
Mrs. Karl Decker and Mrs. John A.
Logan.
Mrs. Logan introduced the party.
The Onion’s Virtues.
Onions are really sweeteners of tnd
breath after the local effects have
passed away, says one learned doctor.
They correct stomach disorders, and
carry oft the accumulated poisons of
the system. They provide a blood
purifier that all may freely use. As a
vermifuge the onion cannot be sur-
passed, and eaten raw will often check
a violent cold In the head, One small
onion eaten every night before rotiring
is this well-known doctor’s prescrip¬
tion for numerous affections of the
head, and 1s highly recommended for
sleeplessness. It acts on the nerves
in a soothing way, without the injuri¬
ous effects of the drugs often applied.
The heart of the onion heated and
placed in the ear will often relieve the
agony of earache; while the syrup pro¬
duced from sprinkling a sliced onion
with sugar and baked in the oven is
said to work wonders for croup.
Wake Up. I
Yes, wake up to the danger which threatens!
you if your kidneys and bladder are inactive ,
or weak. Don’t you know that if you fail to
impel them to action, Bright’s disease or I
diabetes awaits you? Use Hostatter’s Stom- I
ach Bitters without delay. It has a most
beneficial effect upon the kidneys when slug- I j
gish, and system. upon the bowels, liver, stomach and
nervous
old? Why Because is the dude he of cannot today walk like the like sailor of
a man,
but must roll everywhere.
Catarrh Cannot be Cured i
With the seat local ol' applications, the disease. Catarrh as they cannot is blood read] ol
a enij
constitutional disease, and in order to Halil
it you must take internal remedies. actsdl
Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and
rectly on the blood and mucous surface. Halil wj
Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It fl
this prescribed country by for one of the and best is physicians regular
seription. is years, the a best to pr« nil
It composed of pqfl
known, combined with the best blood surfacM
tiers, acting directly on the mucous iiigjl
The dientsis perfect what combination produces such of the wonderful^® two
free. suits in F. curing J. Cheney catarrh. & Co., Send Props., for testimont^ Toledo,
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best. ■
A Prose Poem.
EE-M. Medicated Smoking Tobacco n
And Cigarettes
Are absolute remedies for Catarrh,
Hay Fever, Asthma and Colds;
Besides a delightful smoke.
Ladies as well as men, use these goods.
No opium or other harmful drug J
Used i n their manufacture.
EE-M. is used and recommended jM
By some of the be9t citizens
Of this country. S
if your dealer does not keep
Send 13c. for package of
Direct And Go. the for package EE-M. Company, of cigar^H
to
Atlanta, Ga.. goods>Mi||^9
And you will receive
No woman wants to be a new w
an old woman. J
Sores Healed by Hood’s Returnt^ Sarsajl
Have Never
‘T was a sufferer with scrofi^H uml
and had a very large sore
It caused me much pain. I ul.H
and despondent, but after
bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla
were healed and have never retul
C. N. Rockwell, White's Store, N.
Hood’s Sarsa
Is the best—in fact the One True Bl
Hood’s Pills ssSSiSSS? w
Siberia’s Snow Floweng of^|
Travelers in Siberia tell
fieriul flower that grows Janu.^H
which bloo-rs only in
the winter is at its height.
sum has something of the chilH
tic of a “morning glory,” lastinl m iV
a single day. The flower, when
opens, is star-shaped, its petals of th<®
same length as the leaves, and about!
half an inch in width. On the third!
clay the extremities of the anthers,J mint®
which are five in number, show
ute, glistening specks, veritable vege-I a’
able diamonds, about the size of
pin’s head—these are the seed of the I
flower. A Russian nobleman namedjJ
Anthoskoff took a number of the seeds 1
to St. Petersburg. They were placed
ir. a pot of snow and frozen earth. On J
the coldest day of the following JanuAjJ
ary the miraculous flower bur3M
through its icy covering and displayed^
its beauties to the wondering scien n
-
tints. The plant has been very ap¬
propriately named “the snow flower.”
’©Vegetable
.Sicilian
i Prevents the hair from fall-
11 ingf out, and makes a new
|sSh growth come in. have You A ,
save you
and get more. hair. No Jsp
gray
SiLi as
■7^
/
« a /;
mm A 5 Jm L/iX'
9b
..WE..
HAVE
From *19.00 Up. SECOND-HAND Up. Write for listaiW KfB
CYCLES from »!5.©0 of “Alex Special.^
cut and specifications offered our for the
the best bicycle ever ALEXANDER. money.
Aacnts wanted. XV. 1>.
OX, 0» and 71 North Pryor St., Atlanta. «a.
^NffiKUa, (Jr, Actual business. No text V
books- Short time, Cheap board. Send for catalogue.
DRUNK ARDS can be saved with-
out their knowledge by
Anti-Jag the marvelous
cure for the drink habit.
Write Renova Chemical
Co., 66 Broadway, N. Y.
Full information (in plain wrapper) mailed free.
o a q
U" (X O. BOOK-KEEFINa, SHORTHAND ^ AND
I'tsiKHKAPHr. Beauii/ui Catalogue