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THE MACOJy TELEGRAPH: FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9, 1894.
CLOTHING
is CHEAPER
Since the Wilson Tariff Bill
has gone into effect.
We will sell you a better
Suit for (•
Than any so-called Wreck or
other fake sale.
Buy from an established, re
liable house and get your
money’s worth.
Money refunded if not satis
factory.
Everything in the Clothing-
Furnishing line.
J. H. HERTZ
Corner Second & Cherry
DIED.
On Wednesday evening, Nbv. Ttfli,
Marion, third son of John G. and Re
becca. T. Ruan. Funeral from Christ
Episcopal ctrurcfe tfiufe.- (Friday) morn
ing at h*a!f past 10.o'clock.
sira i in.
The Kemains of Russia’s Dead Cza
Removed in State From
Lavidia,
THE MOST SOLEMN CEREMONlEf
rii* Czar Visibly Aflictvrt by th« Solem
nity of the Occasion—'The Journey
to Sebustopol Commenced—
The Ceremonies Today.
iJ>. A. KMTING,
!NimilTAKr,U AMD FMRALn^r.
RU fit _ r. ' 11 '
511 Mulberry St« - filnccn. Gn,
Telephones—Oflice, 4G7i nesiilenco. 4G8
L. McMANUS CO
GENERAL
IIMIM
Day Telephone
. eieph
Wight Telephone
• 238
- 232
Undertaking
Establishment
Next to Hotel Lanier.
Day Telephone 436
Night Telephones.... 435, 178
EMPIRE STABLES.
(Timberlake’s Old Stand.)
618 and 520 Poplar.
Livery, Boarding and Sale
Fir»t-class accommodation*.
TOM R. HUDSON, Proprietor.
St. Petersburg, Nov. 8.—-The most
solemn of religious cervices was held
at noon yesterday in *Jhe Churdh at
Divadta, to which the body of Alexan
der III. was removed the previous
night. Masses were said Lu the pres
ence of the bbdy. The services were
ftltitendrtd by Emperor Nicholas II..
the Cz.brina add the Che Prince and
Princess of Wlales, dhe representatives
of the various foreign powers, and
many others. The Crar was deeply af
fected. Ax the oouoluslon of the ser
vices twid after the royal visitors pres
ent and the troops had viewed the
body, ttfie populace were formed in
line and filed past the coffin. Many,
of those who looked upon the face of
the dead Czar were visibly affected,
and txpresadons of sorrow were heard
on all Bides. The weather this morn
ing had improved, nnd arrangements
were early perfected for the removal
of rthe body to Sebastopol. Hie cortege
left the church ax 8 o’clock. The pro
cession was headed by the chief of the
palace police, and the muster of cere
monies, both jnoimtea, followed by a
number of troops, Including the Crim
ean division, composed of Tartars;
then followed, long files of servants
of <the imperial family, footmea and
domestics. Next in line were repre
sentatives of the Zemstvo, or district
assembly, the municipal authorities,
NO CHINESE ARMY’.
Japan Wants China Open to Free Com
meroidl Intercourse. .
London. Nov. S.—Mr. Uichada; the
charge dtiffalrs In Lopdonv
salr today in- un ltervlew with a Cen
tral News reporter:
"Japan could not accept, as an answei
to her proposal of reform in Chrea, th*
maintenance of a Chinese army In tft
peninsula. The presence of Chinee,
troops in Corea meant: merely a serte-
i n? wx>rs suah as are now perpetated
In Manchua. Japan never meevaced
china's Integrity. She did no: intend <o
oreak up the empire, ad certainly doe*
not wish others to do so. The heigh*,
or Japan's ambition is to see China con
solidated. freed from corruption, pros
perous. and open to commerce and civ
ilization."
The Cwrtral News has this dispute!
from Shanghai.
•'The panic in New Ch-wan^ and
throughout Manchuria oorttlnues. Nu-
S erou ?,»5 s>unary P^PPlG.are arriving at
Ne» Clmanx. and two-thlrfl, ot the
atones have be«i closed.
"Chan* CM Tunc arrievd In Nankin
las. cve.vlnc With toa remains ot the
t v J®*i'oy of Ltjnz Chinn*. A war levy o;
}J r ?* , llars -A liwd has bedn Imposed
..1 ii ink .,v. ru - Ii.-.ip). win resi.u lt.‘
HE HAD SMALLPOX.
Whole Coiamuni'y Threaten*! By a
Faith Out© Crank.
Alliance, O., Nov. S.—Benjamin Hu*
zart. aged 23, reslduis at Doorflold,
oiaht m.les north of hero, returned
homo from New Vorlr «ity one week
ayo. knowing ho Lad been exposed to
smallpox. Ho caano through nnd
stopped In Pittsburg nnd tills city on
h!s way home. Sunday ho attended
rhureh lit Deerfield, and that evening
was taken sink, breaking out r,'i
smallpox on Tuesday. No quarantine
unis established unt-d today, and over
noo people were expos.d to the conla
glon. The people are wild with ex
citement. Huzurd is & faith cur’st
and did not want a doctor
MARRIAGE AS A BUSINESS.
Sanderson Was In for WhaA It Was
Worth.
Kansas City, Nov. 8.—W. »H. San
derson, brother of Gam Sanderson, the
noted horseman of Covington. Ky..
^Tublta i £? arrestsd toaSay nt the Midland
mirations of Valfa. dlatrlct. Ali of tflw rtn ^biwumv. On Oct.
dead Czait’b Russian and foreign deco-
rations were carried 6n a cushion pov-
tjred with Bllver claih.
Immedtateay behind Che bearers of
«heSe cushions came She clergy bearing
lighted randies; then followed the cof
fin. borne by members of the Imperial
and &a<lQrs fP>m Imperial
. Th ? cortege proceeded on foot
from LAvadla to Vaita, a distance of
*SX, S®**- the beautiful cexist,
rtoilowlng <tbe coffin came Che Czar
and his suite, the Prince of Wales nnd
toe Russian grand dukes. Then the
Czar.na and the Grand Dutosss in
mourning cotushes.
Jire .„£° ut9 of che Procession
mis lined wltlh troops. Upon the nr-
wero oftJ° rteSB at VoJta, prayers
Hr fJ 3tte S eS J or 1018 re P6*e of the soul
of toe dead emperor, and a eotlute
hn- fl JS? fr0 J? * le sh| P s In the har-
*“’■ The ooftin was then placed on
Merkoot
bor,
J2*fl the cruiser" Pamlat
Hotel on a charge of bigamy. On Ocrt
27 he married Helen Hengsgel of
Leavenworth, Kan.. vfWsjt family Is
one of the wealthiest In that'city. She
also has a fortune In her uivn right.
Six months ago Sanderson married
Eliza Flood at Nevada, Mo., and a
brother of his Leavenworth wife
caused hla arrest.
Sanderson was making a big splurge
on the money of his bride. He Con
fessed that he had been making a busl-
ness of getting married as a financial
vanture, and that Miss Hcnegel was
nls sixth wife. He Is 27 years of age.
WAITE WANTED ELSEWHERE.
He Is Disgusted with Colorado and
WJU Go to Illinois.
Denver, Col.. -Nov. 8.—Governor
Waite is going to leave Colorado. He
*■ Ured of the state, and disgusted
with his defeat, it well-known Popu-
AII our lives we write our records
•so: and the deepest, sorest sears w
make are on those who hive us most
tenderly, who have highest and hesi
and closest claims to be guarded from
rounds and to trust us for Healing
ather than burling. For it Is n quai-
y or human love that when it Is
;iven there is given with it the powei
o infl.ct upon the heart that holds u
ae keenest anguish, to bestow upou
ae hear; the sweetest happiness It
may know. But We sU'ilto anti bruit
and make scars. In* our anger, In to
taste, sometimes in mere wantonneu
>r for file venting of temper, wo write
he records which will live, which can
lever he obliterated, vu.cll at the tali',
of the Anal accounting we must meet
md acknowledge as cur work, our
own condemnation. How eloquently
the gentle, lovlug, sorrowing hearts
tve hurt and leave our evil marks deep
v - graven upon must appeal in their
silent retention of the scars wo make
ipon them—how they must appeal
' against us to him to whnni they are
uare nnd read as open books.
We begin to write our records
from the time we begin to know anil
think and we write them through nil
tur lives. We wr.te them on the soft
white, unsullied hearts of little eh.Id
reu, giving them bitter memorials
us to carry through the years of their
lives here and on to the beyond. We
wr.te them deep and hard upon tho
hearts of the poor nnd liumhlo nnd des
olate. the stricken and disconsolate
and discouraged hearts, already sorely
bruised. We make ourselves Judges
of our fellow men and 'sister women
and measure out punishment to them,
many times deliberately seeking to in
flict pa'n that »ve may leave a sear to
live nnd throb and testify against us,
to help make the record we must meet
when justice will be done according to
deserving.
How many, many scan we make,
how deeply we wound, how sorely we
strike! It has no Justification for any
of us. no obliteration of tho records wo
write with our cmelty or or careless
ness or anger or tuallco, that our own
hearts may bo deeply scarred With tho
records of wrongs dono them. Each
scar we bear bringing with It tho
memory of pain ought to be an appeal
for compassion and sympathy and love,
for balm and healing—an assurance
that the scare we mako will enduro
and throb their protests to heaven
against us.
It may be that there will be no re
cords needed at the end save those we
write for ourselves upon the souls and
hearts of human beings, that there
will be no Judgment or condemnation
but the fearful array of nil the wounds
we have given. Would more be needed
for any of us? Could any bosk wherein
all our shortcomings and failures and
sins and follies were written one by
one ehame us more, demand of us
more sternly or relentlessly r,ho plea
and too Journey to Sebastopol wao be- : lls . t , ra . Ili to-day for tho Governor. Ha
e2J2i-i Pa,!nlut Merkoorla will be ! ‘LF!’,’!' 1 15,0 1 ' atter k» considering a
escorted by the Ironclad Twelve Anna
ties amd the cruiser Oriel. P
RIOTOUS STUDENTS.
g§?.» n SSlu> a d^on1tmlon h agaiiSt
Professor Zajchariii'a housa nit Moa.
cow TO* *today by an am
crowd. The windows of the dwellfne
were smashed witfc stonen The SifiS
THE FAIR
WHITE FRONT,
Almost Opposite Post Office.
Sign nnd Square on Window.
Fine individual Tea' Setts, 75c. sett.
Very fide China Cups and Saucers,
55 and 20c.
Fine China, Plate*. 10 and 12c.
Everything rock bottom. No retail
Btore la America can beat my prices.
R. F. SMITH.
Sole and Only Proprietor.
ACADEMY OF MUSIC
Beginning Friday, November 0—Two
nights and matinee—Farewell Vialt.
FREDERICK LOUIS
WARDE - JAMES
In three grand classic rivals Friday
evening, Shakespeare's Historical
Tragedy,
"RICHARD HI,”
With special scenery and costumes.
Saturday Matinee—Lord Bulwer's his-
forlcal play,
"RICHELIEU,”
Mr. Wnrde as Cardinal Richelieu, Mr.
Jamca os Count de Buradas.
Saturday night — Ths celebrated
tragic-comedy,
"HENRY IV,”'
A magnificent production, with band-
eome scenery nnd gorgeous costumes.
Note—Positively the last appearances
of the tragedians together In Macon.
Prices. 25c. to 81.50; matinee, 25c. to
81; reserve seats at Ludden & Botes'
Music House.
further damage.
“ubscriptlons have been
tcr a monument to be erected
f?J? 8 ""mo!* of Czar Alexander?in
wi u Ss2ijrs*sK
n»nt "wHt h ta understood 'he mS
meat will be erected aD Moscow. The
T coast ruddng* itiie tomb of Al-
in. i n 4^ cathedral of St pe-
p , aul commenced^ 1 ’The
twdy of tho late czar wilt re«st hfHtdo
the tomfco of Ms »ote aM i£
near the entrance of tho oathedrah *
SERVICES IN NEfW YORK.
K° rI 5’ . Not ' 8 '~ a aeTV !oe in mem-
ti.il J. a ’ e , cz ‘*r of Russia wua hr'ld
Gr€«eic church on
risMT-sS s&a
of white amd a eucoes^lion of hin^v
crowea. In front ctSTSku whs a
canopy qf black with a wreath of vin.
o a “h? other.^ aM ° no ot wIllte roaca
Fajther Jlitnoft, who Is a Russion
“m*; eenduefed -the service. whichwlT
paiftJy In Russian and partly in Grnok
fYither Ag’aithjdom, -pastor of the Greek
churdfl, assisted. During the
^ Si BeI T Jco Fatlher A^tbad^! wjlk^
edrthsNjug’h the aisles swinging tho cen
sors. The chan're and muiny of
SZtODHM warn wl,, n n I- - A /. k
propose Ion nvaAle to .him to lake up
his residence in Illinois. The story Is
that the Populists in Illinois have
taken such a llklns to tlhe Governor
that they wumit him not only to re
side among them, but also to lead
them to victory as their candidate for
Governor In 1896. The reception given
WWti on hla recent visit' to
the_ W [nd y City pleased him tm-
meOMfly. It is not probable that the
n«? aX 5S?. M 1,ve ,n fut
UNION OF THE CHURCHES.
Rmnc, Nov, 8.—The pope today pie-
sided at the last conference In regard
to the urnon proposed between tne
Oriental churches and the church of
Rome. His holiness sanctioned rese-
lut.ons aiming to conform and enhance
tho prestige of the five oriental Cath
olic patriarchs and to extend their
powers.
The Cibesrvatore Romano today an
nounces that a great American pilgrim-
age Is expected here on May 18 1895.
SET A TOWN ON FIRE.
Wheeling, W. Va.. Nov. 8.—A dastard
ly attempt was made last night to de
stroy AildUon, the ootunty seat ot Web
ster county. The town was r,et on (Ire
In several places, and before the people
could bo aroused and the fire be extin
guished the opera house and the post-
office htflldlng were destroyed, and the
loss is very heavy, with but little Insur
ance. Aa Addison Is In the Interior,
only meager particulars can tie ob
tained.
ASSIGNMENT AT BALTIMORE.
Baltimore. Nov. 8.-£harIes F. Pitt &
Sons, importers of chemicals for the
manufacture of fertilizers, assigned for
■ ■ — m ino re- I f )enc S t thelr creditors today to
spouses were given In a monotone Tho ' ^ am Rosley. The firm la one of the
¥h V *°h ll,boul fcrty-flve minutest balers in chemicals in
of guilty, unworthy end condemned
There will be many of the maimed
and the halt and blind, many of the
poor wanderers on life’s highway, who
will be honored and bidden to go high
er beoause In their humility and In
their own poor ways they have be
stowed comfort and healing as they
could amd have written no evil records
of themselves In scars upon tho hearts
of 'their, fellow men. There are many
lives eduared . rigidly by the ti n co .-
mandmenta and the letter of disciplines
The church was crowded with dlatln-
of wore
uniforms and medals,
PRIESTS ARRESTED,
i *^° V ’ <•—Many Catholic nrleals
in Ruesian Poland (have b«tan urrem^d
tor Hefusfag to »Cake tho oath of alle*
the , new czar. A't Lublin, B^eh-
Reception to Nicholas.
8t Petersburg, Nov. 8.—The miinlci.
,0dily votoJ Bn 'inllmftod
credit for the purpose of defraying the
322nL$, the woeptlon
ppror Nicholas II. and the funeral of
Emperor Alexsuuter II. nnd
erection of o monument to (the dead
cmt. The council also adopted a oro-
to open a national fiubscrlptlou
£LtJ'% u <S le 2L f u> th * Ime to bo
ejected In St. Petersburg:. TEie Imperial
aGSfiaswS®
tuffs ®
United State*. The auets cTe 8l60i-
000. Inability of the firm to meet obU-
RAtroMi without eiicrlficinff valuable real
estate Is given as the cause of the sus
pension.
• WANTS . A NEW D^JAL.^
■ £f r1 . 1 ?' N ^ v - PUnce von Hoben-
ohie. too cbjcioellor, is understood to
l i poa .Rucker cubtoet chauges,
and 11 1« said that Freiherr von Ber-
lepsch, the mlnhittr of commerce, and
others In the PruMiatt cabinet will hav*
to tender their resignations.
ng fho late czarts body.
CLEVELAND WILL GO
IaS a ^®o^*„ 8 '.-?««Mtnt Cleve-
hStoy P ‘Svm t^'°act of c£J c land
mmmm mr* D - 1 SfeVffTOJ&iii
the
tJie legislature of Georgia approved De- w „ epe Bn(k WI11 ■ .
cember 18, 1883, that I. W. N. Peden, of oc/in Ita? r St 7"f„5 hrl ® t ,1 n the new
ths state ot North Carolina, os executor bera of the cabinet the man f
of the last will and testament of James and Private sSreTEi-^SS t 5 #lr Ia dlos.
A. Peden, late of Duval county. Fh„ and , pected to be In the t ^- f ? 1Ur >!7 ! v are ex '
now deceased. Intend as the mid executor accommclatei? bn a srS^n?) 11 .^ , wl11 ^
to transfer to William N. Peden seventy, ning (llrectlyto th^eh^L?^ 11 rui >-
nine shares (79) of the cspitsl stock of ITT ” t ° e eh| P yards.
ths Southwestern Railroad Company of
Georgia. This the Nth day of October,
A. D.. 1834. W. N. PEDEN,
Executor Estate of James A Peden, de
ceased.
BIBB COUNTY SHERIFF SALE.
Will be sold before the court house
door In the city of Macon, during the
legal hours of ssle. on the first Tues
day in December, 1894, lot* Nos. 1, 2.
3 and 4. )n sauare 29. southwest com
mons. between Hazel and Ash streets.
Said property levied on to satisfy two
Justice court fi. fas. issued from 66Sth
district. O. M-. of Muscogee county. , , J
In favor of Loeb &. Kaufman and r%\/ tqlrfrlly
Louis Buhler & Oo.. and one a. fa. IdKlIlg
Issued from superior court of Musco- —
gee county in favor of A. J. Bethune
vs. L. W. Bales.
L. B. HERRINGTON.
Deputy Sheriff.
DENVER WOMEN VOTED. -
onstrat«I that' the _l womfns <e vote < Tn
Denver last Tuesday war ;;5
of tho total vote, rhe Iaatlini women
therefore formed a grate organization
of their own for toe next L l K V,na“
campaign.- the purpose hefpr to in
crease ihelr political powei and im-
portance. ,n
Malaria kept off
Brown’s Iron
Bitters.
80A.R3.
We are told that somewhere there Is
a record awaiting the ’Imu when the
history of the universe will be fin
ished, when the countless .y.-teg of light
and We and beauty will kavo been
ended and there w,H again be darkness
and silence profound such «s wfro be
fore the Creator hade the sun and itars
to shine and things to be. In that vast
record Is the story of every human Ufa
which has been lived upon UlU earth
from the beginning. There secrets
which were carried to graves forgotten
and loet during the centuries, which
were buried with hearts long mingled
with the dust, are awnitiug the final
accounting, have been wading silently,
relentlessly, while ages rolled by, ready
to be recalled when the enormous mul
titudes of souls troop by for Judgment.
We do not, cannot know tlte meaning
of these things we are told. We can
not know how the record is kept or
when or bow it will be opened. Wo
can and do know that away from the
great book we have been tcltl of there
are records which we write for our
selves ns we go—records wnicn cannot
die or fade, which cannot be blotted
or forgotten.
We make scars on living hearts. Wo
make them by word and deed aud look
and leave them to u-st'fy of and
against us before that awful, all
knowing, all loving power to whom
the sufferings of the meatiest of h>s
creatures appeal for vengeance. With
the best of us it is a fearful record wo
leave of our lives here, we send before
us to await our going.
Or. Price’s Cream Baking Powikt
World's Fair Itlgbut Sward.
and rulei and taws which will find
records written against them in the
suffering, the endurance, the pstn a<M
dread and deep wounds which have
left soars to tell of them.
Can ostentatious chnirltleai bribe Goa
to forget toe wrong done ,against thv
poorcHt and meekest of bis children I
cun at ife kept holy by the letter of
the law hide from his eyes the merci
less, bitter strokes dealt In oold cru
elty or -In evil temper upon toe hearts
over which he yearns? Are not the cup
of cold water refueed, the helping
hand withheld, the comforting word
denied, the talent due mercilessly ex
acted, but scars left upou hearts to be
read by the loving, all-seeing cyea and
understood In ail ''heir evil slgnitl-
ficance by the nil knowing?
Hope nnd faith and works nnd gifts
i.Lo all good, but charity Is best ot all;
and charity i3 the making of no scars,
the writing of no record In scare.
Yet we write the everlasting reoords
against ouneelves busily day by day.
We write them deepest on hearts
which loVo us morit. but wfe write thorn
on hearts which love us not. We write
them on toe white, unsullied hearts of
toe children, on toe sore nnd tired and
bruised hearts of tho old—write them
with voice nnd eyes nnd gesture and
pen, directly and Indirectly, with false
Judgmet or Judgments too hnrd nnd
condemna'tlon too rash: write 'them In
biBto and In malice. In anger or wall-
ton nons. We write them nind they will
live and In that mysterious time,
near or far, when hlsteLy will be end
ed and tho voice whlobb nde toe light
to shtne will command the darkness ti
descend again and nil the worlds to
vanish, they will testify against us.
They will Uve through ait toe silence
and oblivion and desolation and silence
of deith nnd tho grave, and after all
the lapse of ages we must meet their
record.—A. B. Williams In Greenville
(S. C.) New*.
IT RRUN’8ST-JESS. S%
kb 'unvn 9 !>)«•« di*M<«« oftii«o*ni
IfftlM, retain* M char...
jMMMWsMrarfdw paUttMoaoMfr
lelMato d« Ukca JaUroaU/e «hc«
At A PREVENTIVK
r either tejtHIt IrepemlMeto—irtnai
»jr rooereal dlM.M, l.at In the eaaarf
ioM*Jrea4fU*8o*t**4T»c. Arruaum
—om W am wl,h 9oteorrl<*» an4 (IU«t, we (sara**
l per Uja, • * 0 bo*«* for 14.
qOODWYN’a DRUG STORB.
RDCBIVER8' SALE.
Fourteen Hundred and Seventeen and a
Half Acres of Valuable Farming
Land a in Houston County.
By virtue of orders of the superior
court of Bibb county. Georgia, granted
June 20 and November 6, 1894. I will
teU before the court houso door In
Houston county, Georgia, on the first
Tuesday in December next, between
the legal hours o< sale, the following
described lands, to-wlt: Lots one hun
dred and thirty-one (131), one hundred
a«nd fifty-eight (168). one hundred and
fifty-nine (169), one hundred and sixty-
two (162), one hundr<*i and slx^y-tfhree
(163), one hundred and ninety (190) and
one hundred and ninety-one (191), alt
lying in the Tenth district of Houston
county, Georgia, each containing two
hundred and two and one half (202 1-2)
acres, more or ess. and In the aggre
gate fourteen hundred and seventeen
and one-half (1,417 1-2) acres, more or
less, and known as the Lamar planta
tion. Said land* will be sold in parcel*
of one lot each and will then be sold as
a whole, the latter bid to be accepted if
it amount* to more than the aggregate
of the bids for the parcel*. »
Term* of sale: One-third cash, one-
third payable twelve months from
date of sale and one-third twenty-four
month* from said date, deferred pay
ment* to bear Interest at seven (7) per
cent, per annum, purchaser having
option at any time to pay entire bid
and accrued interest to date of such
payment In full discharge. Sale m»d'
subject to approval vf mi • u;i. T n
per cent, of bid reaulred to be paid at
time of sale: to be refunded if sale is
not approved by the court.
H. T. POWELL. Receiver.
VMBissies^es
Corr—triynrtciue Mcrtdl/ coaiUWntt&J. AASna
n vgftft 4 ftiMV* «?«. *«UKa
msm
St
Soventy-fivo thousand invested in Men’s nnd Bojb’ Suits
and Overcoats. All fresh, new goods, bought for the cash, at
less than the cost of manufacture.
This immense lot. of clothing is on sale this week, and res*
idents and visitors alike will do well to call and examine out
stock. ; '-
Over 250 Men’s all-wool Suits (this season’s styles) worth
$12.60 to $15, now on sale for $7.60 a Suit.
OVERCOATS.
1,000 Men’s light and medium weight Overcoats, worth
from $10 to $20, on sale now for $5, $7.60, $10 and $12.
Boy’s Suits $2 up, all sizes.
THE DANNENBERG CO.
atmtmmmmtmnwwtmg
Jr O p p Pimples, Blotches ^
" * " B ■ * anrl flirt Snrp.R
and Old Sores
^ pr1c a k n7p S oST ot Catarrh. Malaria 3
g Wakes
Er Marvelous Cures
and Kidney Troubles ^
gr In Blood Poison
5E Rheumatism
g^.and Scrofula 1
^IlN ©ullr^y muovert by P.P.P.
»1-Pr!ckly A*h. Poka Root am! Pott*-
Biiint. tho yrctitmt blood puriflor on
htlililtiMt Vhoro "Icki
foeilogt and Uttlrodo fli
Abemdrkw, o.. July 21.1»01.
your P.P. P. *l Hot B p r I a n, Ar k., ana
It ha» dono in* moro gootl than throa
iuonfBit'tre»tre*ntottltoHotBpiia|*«
flood thro* bottle* 0..O. U. r-agp
Aberdeen, Brown Oounty, O* |
CapC. J. O. John* ion. —
i nil whom ii mav conctrnt X hero- •— 1
. _ a eatlfflfo the wonderful properties «—
r«t rrov.Uwt! Jfjni wiiJi «ilaa- 1
For primary,neoondnry «nd tertiary
_ BypbtlU, foridiwd poiBonlng. morcu-
it: Su
blotchen, pimple*, old ehronlo nicer*,
tetter, «cnld lioed, bolls, eryalpelae.
- - eczema-wo may euy, without ftnr of
contradiction .tunt f. 1*. P. Is tho beat
dp blood purifier In tho world,and make*
positive, apeody and permanent cures
i yeursei —
nightly and dlenanvuMe eruption o
my face. I tried overy known remt
dy tut Id vain,until P. P. P. waeuMid, •
Bkln Cancer Cured.
TetUmony/rom Vi* Mayor 0/ SequinJtx* *
Seomw. T*x., January 14.1893. *
Mbhbrr. I.i ppm an Hhob., Bavannab, •
Go. 1 (ienUtunn-l bavo tried your P. .
BaBeaafflfSgB
dcrfnl tnnlu und blood oleaualug prop- rltntlon from tho sent of tbn dUeas* <
to sent of the dUeas* 1
,-c abreoiUng of IIic
More*. I have token flvoor six bottle* '
sotbero
and provonea
ran. I have
1f«rtl oonfldrtnc
inuriuw, nu.Aug. 14th. 1803.
n onenk lu tho highest terina of
medicine from iny own peraonal
lodge. I wasnffected with heart
ryboi
. Hrni;
{ our'me-
ncwlodge. I wai
di*Ms*. pleurisy 1 HPjj ——
• 8&yoara, wh* treated by tlievory boat
, ph> wlclnna ana apont hundroda ofdol-
Tars, tried every known romedy wltt
> out finding relief. 1 have only take
and feel oonfldenc i J111 a rj o f h >tr cotirrc
will effooc f tiure. It hna also rellafed
ectod with heart
d rhoumatlBL tor
"I'tyili.M
Attorney *41
• out Uniting rolliT. I have only taken
. on* bottlo of your P. P. P.» and can
oherrfully aay It has done me more
good than any thluR I have overtaken.
I can recommend your madtolno to all
gprlogfield. Green Oounty, Mo. ’
Book 00 Blood dims Moiled hot •
ALT. DnUOOIBTS SELL IT.
LIPPIMAN BROS.' ■
PBOPRIBTOU0,
Kdppnan'i Bloek,l*f‘
mimmmmmim
Castor 1A
for infants and Children.
** Castor!* 1* 10 well adapted to children that
t recommend It a* superior to any prescription
known to me.’* JL A. Amchkk, M. D.,
Ill So. Ozford fit., Urooldjn, N. Y.
“The use of 'CastorU U so universal aud
it* merit* so well known that It Borms a work
of supererogation to endorse It. Few are the
Intelligent families who do not keep Castorla
within easy reach."
Cjuulo* IUattv, D. D m
New York City.
Ceetori* cure* Colic, Constipation, *
flour fitomarh, DlaiThaao, Eructation,
Kill* Worms, gives sleep, aud piomote* di>
gestlon,
Without injurious medication.
"For several years I have ;
your ‘Co* tort a,' and shall always continue to
do so ss It has Invariably produced beneficial
reeulU."
Edwxm F. PARbsx. K. D., %
126th Street and 7th Avo., New York City,
Th* Cnrrstm Cnvrswr, 77 Mchhat Brasjrr, Nrw Yea* Cmr.
A Mfomatv: 1
Knows a^ood dvinn
When she sees it
. ThnWswhu
she uses **' l
m
mt
U work* wonders inttvt Uomt
Sold in 4 lb. packages. Price 25 cents.
Made only by j
The N. K. FairbanK Company,
Chicago, St* Louis, New York,
Boston, Philadelphia.