Newspaper Page Text
"Nature Abhors Vacuum. ft
a
SHjothmg in the luorld stands still. If
you arc iwell and strong day by dAy the
blood supplies ils tide of vigor. If you Are
01. the blood is tvrong And carries increas-
ing quantities of diseased germs. You can¬
not change Nature, but you can Aid her by
keeping the blood pure. Hood' s Sarsapa
rilla does this as nothing else can. He
$ure to get Hood's, because
[SgAAapaAlth
eVer Disappoints
Difference In fount y l.ong vlty.
The opinion of Insurance actuaries.
based upon the closest Inquiries and
abundant figures, is that there exists
In some families a quality ns separate
as any race peculiarity, which enables
a majority of its members to go on IIv-
lug beyond the average period.
Though not physically stronger than
other people, and ns often attacked by
dispnsr. they h:ivt» a power of rccov-
’
erlng thcnmelvcs , completely , . - after *. ... ill-
.
ness which other men do not possess,
and they consequently decay more
slowly. It is thought probable,
though not certain, Indeed, that this
peculiarity extends to whole races,
and Unit the greater average duration
of western ns compared with eastern
life Is derived from it. Thus, It is
stated, the Asiatic Hint Is the one who
Is never attacked by severe Illness-
lives as long ns the European, but if
lie Is attacked Ids faculty of recuper¬
ation is inferior; lie does not recover
so completely, or he dies at once. The
derivation of the quality or qualities
here Indicated yet remains to be under¬
stood.
Fetnnle bootblacks ore increasing
rapidly in France. They wear a cos¬
tume not unlike that of the nuns.
M®B*WQU8
VWomen
are ailing woman. When
a woman has aomo fomalo
trouble sho Is oortaln to
bo nervous anti wretched'.
With many womon the
monthly suffering is so
great that they aro for
days positively insane ,
and the most diligent ef¬
forts of ordinary treat¬
ment are unavailing.
Lydia E. Plnkham’i Vegetable Compound
comes promptly to the re¬
lief of those women • The
letters from women ourod
by It proves this . This
paper Is constantly print¬
ing tham .
i The adv too of Mrs. Pink-
ham should also bo so-
ourod by every nervous
woman. This costs noth¬
ing. Her address Is Lynn,
Mass.
c HOICE will always Vegetables find a ready
market—but only that farmer
can raise them who has studied
the great secret how to ob¬
tain both quality and quantity
by the judicious use of well-
balanced fertilizers. No fertil¬
izer for Vegetables can produce
a large yield unless it contains
at least S% Potash. Send for
our books, which furnish full
information, We send them
free of charge.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
I OVELY SJLOO li¬
Lamps
All hand-naintod. >’o
handsotiwr lamp mnde.
Solti at m turn far tu ror>
prices We pay the
FKKIGHT.
Makes a most accepta¬
ble present.
ih anllt ul colored cut-
- •4- nloKtte tif hnud-palntrd
lMKi.oit orliANOUKT
LAMPS, f r «*e.
[i Ho'ty Lamp Ouaran-
f tied. Mom g back if
\ you maid it.
Manufactured by
MAKKTIIK LAMPS, Pittsburg Glass Co.,
YOU BUY DIRECT Pittsburg, Pa.
Agents Wanted
U-na*. C. n. AuJ*r»vu* Co.. SU Elm st.. Doll*., i ex.
POTATOES $ | .20
3 Bbl
■.« rgp*" .1 Sr.S Sill , 11 ! l.ran.r.l. tnerk,
Prlcp»
uV.\*riI slvsTf fr«zy HUPP r w!ri7
“««V" ,i7«a
AN INJUNCTION
IS ASKED FOR
To Restrain Gov. Taylor From
Interfering With Lawmakers,
THE DEMOCRATS MAKE PETITION
Judge Cantrell l.iauesOrder Which
Is Tacked On Taylor’s Door
at Capitol Building.
! At Frankfort, Friday morning, the
Democratic attorneys filed with Judge
Cantrill in the Franklin county cir-
.. court . petition .... anting . . for .
cult ft 1 ° au id-
junction to restrain Governor Taylor ^
from interfering with the meetings o)
the legislature,
The petition covers the full situa¬
tion, and asks that Taylor and Mar¬
shall he restrained from attempting to
exercise the power of governor and
lieutenant governor.
The petition sets up the claim that
Goebel is governor and Beckham is
lieutenant governor. Mouth Tritftble,
speuker of the house, appears as the
plaintiff in the case.
The court issued tho following order
to W. 8 . Taylor and Collier:
Yon and eaeh of you are hereby no¬
tified that on Saturday, February 3,
1900, we will ask for an order of in-
juuction restraining you and each of
you and all others from interfering
with meetings of the general assembly
of tho commonwealth of Kentucky in
any manner whatever, or from assem¬
bling said legislature at said city of
Loudon, Laurel county, Kentucky,
upon petition this date filed in the
F'runkfort circuit court and from com¬
mitting any of the wrongs or unlawful
acts therein set forth. Haid motion
will he made before the Hon. James
E. Cautrell of tho fourteenth judicial
district of Kentucky, in the circuit
court room in tho court house at
Frankfort, Ky., at or about the hour
of 11 o’clock a. m.
Service of the notice on Governor
Taylor was secured, despite the most
stringont orders to tho sentriis to
allow nobody to pass in or out of tho
eapitol grounds. given
Orders to this effect were
early in the morning, but were revoked
later, and those having passes were
allowed free access to all parts of the
cupitol square.
As soon as word was brought to
Governor Taylor that the petition for
tho injunction had been filed the or¬
ders were renewed, hut they were not
renewed quick enough. Alonzo
Walker, tho stenographer for the
Democratic attorneys, gained ontranoe
to the grounds before the renewal of
the order, and watching his chance,
pinned a copy of the notice ou tho
door of the executive mansion, which
notion constitutes a legal notice to
Governor Taylor.
Wa'ker was at once placed under
arrest and confined in the guardhouse.
Several of the Republican members
of the legislature, especially those
living in the eastern part of the state,
left Frankfort, Friday, for London,
where Governor Taylor enlled the leg¬
islature to meet in session.
aOKUEIi IMPROVES.
The condition of William Goebel
Friday night was considered better
than at any time since he was shot.
The iron will and determination of the
wounded ma i that he will not die by
an assassin’s bullet is, however, still
considered the main factor in sustain¬
ing him, hut ou Friday night the at¬
tending physicians for the first time
held out some hope for his ultimate
recovery.
HKIDGKS SERVING TIME.
Floyil’tt ICx-School Cotnmlftiiotier Goe« to
Work at Convict Camp.
W. M. Bridges loft Koine, Ga,,
Thursday nicht to serve four years iu
tho penitentiary camp at Worth, 80
miles south of Macou.
Bridges will be given a bookkeeper's
position and wear the regular convict
K al 'l>. The prisoner will work for the
(.’Hilda Lumber coinpauy.
“TUIIN Til EM LOOSE.”
Senator OafltYry Given Ilia Mea of What
SltouM Be Done With Filipinos.
Senator Caffery, of Louisiana, in a
discussion of tho Philippine question
in tho senate Monday broke ne«
ground in developing his position as
an auti-expansionist. With - haraeter-
istic courage of conviction he declared:
“Turn the Filipinos loose as soou
as we can get rid of them. That would
be better for them and infinitely bet¬
ter for us. ”
Mr. Caffery’s argument was mainly
a discussion of the oonstitutioual
questions involved in the Philippine
uoliey.
JOHNSTON' HAI) MAJOllITV.
Vote of Pivotal Alabama County In Sena¬
torial Contest I* Consolidated.
Tfcs Bussell county, Ala., vote, as
finally consolidated Sunday morning,
gives Johnston a majority of 61 votes
ov * r Morgan. The Girard beat gave
JohllfitOU 115 UiajOritY, kbicll OVeT-
came Morgan’s majority of 82 in tlie
nine-county beats. Oates received
on| y 2 » ud Ro< i ue ,nore 1 vote iu h e
Johnston , vote b/o; .- -
county. s was
Morgan’s t>14.
persistance op the dutch.
The Recovery of Submerge! hand in Hoi
land Makes a limiting Story.
The unconquerable persistence of
the Dutch race is very much in tin-
public eye just now. Alike In peace
and war the Inhabitants of the Nether-
lands have shown their aunty to pur¬
sue ft project with that tireless pa-
ui-nce wbieu. other things equal,
Ih certain to bring success. The strug¬
gle between the people of the Nether¬
lands and the encroachments of the
waters of the Zuyder Zee Is a thril¬
ling story, und the light evidently Is
not over yet. The land that lias beihi
recovered has been held, and now a
further and determined effort Is being
made to recover the submerged terri¬
tory, which hundreds of yours ago was
included within the coast line of the
Netherlands. The present attempt
does not contemplate the recovery of
the whole of the Zuyder Zee, but if
the plans do not miscarry, it is cer¬
tain that nearly 800 square tulles of
land will be reclaimed within the next
tll)rd of R eentllry at an es ti ma ted ex-
pendlture of $48,000,000.
The scheme contemplates the con¬
struction of a huge dike across the
Zuyder Zee, the location of which will
he determined by the favorable con¬
junction of shallow water and adja¬
cent islands. Nine years out of the
thirty-three which is the estimated
time for the construction of the whole
scheme will be occupied merely in the
construction of this dike, whose total
estimated cost will be $17,(XX),000.
When the dike is completed, the her¬
culean task of pumping dry the huge
lake thus formed will commence, and
considerations of economy will lead to
Its being carried on by means of the
typical Dutch windmills which form
such a picturesque feature of a Hol¬
land landscape. Although the work of
drainage is to extend over a quarter
of a century, the returns on the euor-
mous expenditure of the capital will
commence simultaneously with the
pumping, and as it is estimated that
the drained land, on account of its ex-
tremc richness, will have a market
price of $300 an acre, it can be seen
that this great undertaking Is likely to
become a paying investment long be¬
fore it is finally completed.—Scientific
American.
Evolution of Head Covering*.
Earliest of all forms of headgear
was tlie cap. The hat did not really
come into common use till the seven¬
teenth century. In the time of Charles
I, the queer, high, sugar-loaf shaped
hat entne into fashion. It was wound
with a rich band and trimmed with a
feather. Constant balancing of the
head was necessary to keep It ou. This
hat was taken up by the Puritans, who
satisfied their bitter consciences by dis¬
carding the frivolous bund and tire
wicked feather,
Charles II brought the French peri¬
wig into England, and the tall hat
went out to make way for a low,
broad-brimmed thing, gorgeon* with
feathers ami gimeraeks. These broad
brims became broader and broader. At
last, it became necessary to turn them
up at first, tills was done at the buck,
finally according to the wearer's fancy.
Out of this extravagant style of
headgear grew the cocked hat. The
footman nnd liveried coachmen of
many European nations still wear tills
style of headgear. ^During Queen
Anne’s time the cocked lia‘ was the
hat of the gentleman. Tho correct
fashion was to carry it under the arm
as much as possible.
The French revolution, wb'eli took
off so many heads that had worn tho
cocked tint, took off the cocked hat,
too. In its place the crescent shape be¬
came the style, partly by force. The
direct ancestor of that dreadful thing,
the high hat of to-day, was the noble
and sturdy beaver. Beavers went out
of fashion largely because the supply
of material became exhausted.—New'
York Press.
Our Increased Trade with Clilua.
England oau no longer compete with us in
the shipment of many products to China.
Out- trade with the Chinese has Increased al¬
most forty per cent, wtthfn The the (net wins year,
this is merely natural. best Ilostetter’s in
everything. For a like reason,
Stomach Bitters, for fifty the best remedy in the
rouutry, has years acknowledged no
•uperlor to cure Constipation, indigestion
dyspepsia nnd biliousness.
Shortest Days of the Year.
“We’re having said Tarbox. ttie shortest days of tho
year now."
"You bet wc arc.' 1 said Briggs, as his
baud* came outof his pockets empty.
Statu or Ohio, City or Toi.epo.
Lucas County. i
Kicakk J. Ciiknbv makes oath that beta the
-enior partner of the firm of F J, ClIBNEY .V
Co., (loins; business aforesaid, in tils and City that of said Toledo,
County and State firm
will nay i he sum of one iiundkkp Dol.|,*itsfor
eaeh a tut every ease of cat A nit li that cannot
be ourod by the use of H Abb's Cats it mi Cpit*.
Frank J. Ciiensv.
Sworn to before no* and subscribed in my
pipssnep, tills HUi tlav of December,
<SEA I - A. D. ISSti. A. \V. (i I .EASON .
C—- I XotcirV IHtbHr.
Hali's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and
acts directly on the blood ami mucous surface*
of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. ,1. Orkney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold hv DruKci-t-, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Vitality low, debilitated or exhausted cured
by l>r Kline s Iiivtgo'attnx Tonic. Free $i
trial bottle for 2 weeks’ treatment. Dr. Kline,
Ld.,9ui Arch St, Philadelphia. Founded 1871.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays j>ain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an A No. 1
Asthma medic ne.—W.U. Willi a ms, Antioch
Ills , April 11, 1894.
“Man wants but little here below,”
Tvf«s e’er so from his birth—
It's different with the other sex;
Fair woman wants the earth.
—N, V. Town Topics.
DcBnlTs SYRUP
COUCH
Cures Croup and Whooping-Cough
Unexcelled for Consumptives. Give*
quick, sure results. Refuse substitutes.
Dr. Bulfi niUeurt Bi'nousutis. Trial, to/or ye.
A Mireaftlejical View of Krujer.
An appreciation of President Kruger
Is displayed in the window of the Lud-
gnte Circus phrenologist's, attracting
ti fair share of public attention. It
seems very like an appreciation most
of us have reached without phrenol¬
ogy. "Mr. Kruger,” says the profes¬
sor, "has a typical Boer head. It is
wide at all points in a line drawn from
the level of the cars upward. This in¬
dicates, besides much destructiveness
or an aggressive tendency a high de¬
gree of secret!veness, cautiousness and
acquisitiveness, lie is instinctively
distrustful, slow to decide, to speak,
to aqt. The lower part of his forehead
Is larger tlian the upper. With strong
perceptive powers, he has but moder¬
ate reflective powers or imagination.
The religious region of his head is
large. He is well meaning and con¬
scientious to the degree which his race
has attained. Phrenologlcally, we
we should say that the Transvaal ques¬
tion is one of race, and race Is very
much a matter of bruin development.
In this the Boft nnd the Briton are so
very different that the same methods
of thought und life can never satisfy
both.”—London News.
Eczenia in the Feet.
In fact, tetter, ringworm and all skin
diseases are cured by Tetterine. Mr.
Lee D. Martin, of Man Antonia, Tex¬
as, says; “I am suffering with a vio¬
lent caso of eczema in my feet. Please
send me a box of Tetterine. Mr.
Moore, of Moore & McFarland, Mem¬
phis, Tenn., says it cured him of a
similar case.” Sold at druggists 50c.
a box or sent postpaid by J. T. Shup-
trine, Savannah, Ga.
Ao Ingenious Invention.
A young man in Worcester, Mass.,
has Invented a loom for weaving
straw matting that does away with
the shuttle. An ingenious contrivance
picks up the straws and pushes them
through the warp as a harness on tire
loom draws the straw warp up and
down. Most of the straw mats used
in America are woven by liaDd in
Manila. ,raisin and China. Some of
the finer grades of matting come from
India. Machine made- mats will be a
novelty in this country,
Fresh Terror.
“Wbat a peculiar exercise the new
recruits are going through, I mean
that up and down motion with the
arms. What is it?”
“That’s the pump exercise. It’s for
use on leaky transports.”
We refund 10c for every package of Put¬
nam Fadeless Dye that tails to give satis¬
faction. M< nroe Drug Co., Unionville, Mo.
Sold by ail druggists.
An Old Itelic.
Dr. w. W. DeHart of Jacksonville, Fla., na»
one of the most valued Confederate relics that
can bo found anywhere. It la a nicely c rved
clgarholder that was once the property of Ad¬
miral s. mines, and ho smoked It while In com¬
mand of the famous Confederate battleship
Alabama.
PUSH! PUSH!! PUSH111
That’s the way some dealer# do ! Push cheap goods
because the profits are large. Why let a man push a
cheap Buggy 08 on you whe c you can get the best
it at only a dollar or so more? Q ....
that way ?
See our Agent or write direct FtOQC HIILEsROCkThLLS.C.'
m 2/.5Xi»y ;^i- wm
k
'
MR ■
m k .4
It®' ; M mm
M
% r-'it
WMi
m Internal Treatment
K,
-«
K I - Y
w
Consisting of skin CUTICURA SOAP and scales (25c.), and to
cleanse the of crusts
I m soften the thickened cuticle, CUTICURA Oint*
TO' ment (50c.), to instantly allay itching, irri-*
nt tation, and inflammation, and soothe and
heal, and CUTICURA RESOLVENT (50c.), to
cool and cleanse the blood. „ A SINGLE SET
if. Is often sufficient to cure the most torturing,
'r disfiguring skin, scalp, and blood humors,
agll with loss of hair, when all other remedies fail.
Bold tkfoufhotti tlu world. Fori*D.*C. Coot., Fro,*. Bctoa. EovtoCw* «pti,Haa«n,M.
Fao-simile. / ^ «.«»AT T mi * * THt uc UP fuR( ^ $■ Fag-simile. (uticnra
DISEASES G'ticura\ If |
Ut'-Y Reditobd c^ j5gfvr^> Hbuuokd
PUR EL \ N.- A., >4/^. ay f MEDICINAl
MEDICINAL, . i I
PRICE' SO CENTS- •• - ;V: || to tie/.
S -MiG
1 P ^‘ C E Z H.tNfi
Observant Freddy.
Freddy’s mamma bad a caller one
day who several times during her stuy
said, “Now I must go,” always Upon re¬
suming her seat, nevertheless.
auother repetition of the remark Fred¬
dy said, solemnly, “Don’t you believe
it till she's gone, mamma.”
I am
Past 80
and Not
a Gray Hair
“I have used Ayer’s Hair
Vigor for & great I tniny eighty years,
an d although I cm past
years of ogc. yet have not a grsy
hair in my head.”—Geo. Yel-
lott.Towson, Md., Aug. 3,1899.
Have You
Lost It?
We mean all that rich, dark
color your hair used to have.
But there is no need of tnourn-
; ovcf J t f of you J can £ n d «
°.
a 8 aIn -
Ayer’s Hair Vigor always We re¬
stores color to gray hair.
know exactly what we arc say¬
ing when wc use that word
" always.” hair heavy
It makes the grow
and long, too: takes out every
bit of dandruff, and stops fall¬
ing of dressing the hair. table Keep it on it
your ana ujf
every day. $i.oo * bottle, am druggist*.
Write the Doctor
If you do not obtain all the benefits you
desire from tlie use of tho Vigor, write
the Doctor about it. He-will tell you just
the right thing to do, and will send you
his book on tho Hair and Scalp if you
request it. Address,
I>r. J. C. Ayer, Lowell, Mass.
Buy it of your storekeeper.
Maisby & Company
39 S. 11 road St.. Atlonta, G».
Engines and Boilers
Mrr .,,1 Water Healer*, Staaui Pump* sm
Penbertliy Injector*.
*
k\
'JBrP- •A '-ILF
i
IZ3H
Manufacturer* and Dealers In
SAW MILLS,
Corn Mills, Feed Mill*, Cotton Gin Maclilu-
or.T »n*l Grnln Separators,
SOLID and INSERTED Saws. Saw Teeth and
I n. ks, Knlplit’s Patent Dor*, IWrdaall Saw
Mill und Knclne Itopalr*,Governor*, Grit,
lint* and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price
nnd quality of roods guarnnteod. Catalogue
flee by mentioning this paper.
BOOK AGENTS WANTED FOR
the grandest end faate*t-Bellin< book ever published.
Pulpit Echoes
OR LIVING TRUTHS FOR HEAP AND HEART
Containing Mr. MOODY'S bent Sermons, with MK
Thrilling Storiei, Incidents, Personal Moody Experiences.etc., aatol<
Bn I). L.
Iimse
and in Introduction br Rev. LYMAN illustrated. ABBOTT, (£7*1*000 J). JJ
Brand new, flOO np., 6 <auf» fully mor
AGENTS WANTF.U-Men and Women. U7“fale
immenBe —a harrrat time for Agents. Send for terms t
A. 1>. WORTHINGTON A CO., Hartford. C’OIIM.
RBnsiii!:ss!:oiie26 ■a ItYANT & STRATTON Lou ,ll n^r^uy (Tlook kecpliq
if; Catalog
B#Co 8 t Do more than 2d class school. f re
Cli&STEgsi
pjy ■ jN eiAyW
6 WP pRBlj?
Send your mime and address on a
postal, and we will send you our 156 -
page illustrated catalogue free.
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO.
176 Winchester Avenue, New Haven, Conn.
2 i-aJ era Live agents everywhere to sell ourm
K GAS LA up, A Gas Plant. Brighter than th k
■ " electricity or oelsbachcity gas. Cheaper
osone 100 candle light, cent a tlav. Polished bra
Fully guaranteed. Retails $6.00. Michigan l3ig money St., OUicai ma r
Standard Gas Lamp Co., 108
gives S&lzer’e Rich, Hapo What Spelt**
T is
green Cat*
rood, FARM tel
at SEEDS
26c.
»
ton Sailer’s Seeds are Warranted to Prodace.
jKSyUahlon by growing Litther, 250bushels K,Troy,Pa,, Big Four astonished Oats; J the Hrelder,
SggW Hed Mishicott, Wing, Minn., Vt'is., by 17.‘5 growing bus. barley; 320bu»h. and Salzer’i II Lurejoy, cera
M 500,000new per acre. If you doubt, write them. We wish to gale
g-'Sja cuttomern, hcnceir ill lend on trial
10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR !Oc.
1 10 Corn—Spelts,producing pigs of rare fttrtn seeds’,"Salt 80bush, foo B««h, Broiuua l and the 4 ton* S-earad hay
per acre—above oats r.nd barley. Inernita
—the greatest grans on earth; Salxar tag • 4*1
o Rape, Spring Wheat, ks., including our mam¬
moth Plant. Fruit and Seed Catalog, telling all
about Halicr a Great Million Hollar A
m Potato, all mailed for 10c. postage ;
positively worth |10 to bbl. getaatart.
Bead Potatoes $1.20 a and up.
Please this ^ 36 pkgs seed*, earl lea $ t 1 vegata- 00 aPc*t<
send t - .
adv. with X .lone
10 c. to Salzer. k i —
DROP S Y,S C .°J“ 7 ;,
cases- Book of testimonial, and 10 day*’ treat!
Free. Dr. H. H. OHJEH'S SONS. Boi B. Atlanta
REES
Mentiou this Paper f,ltcl Su°ims1x e, ' t< '
2 ®
GURtS WHERE Syrup. All ELSE FAILS. Uee
Best Cough Tastes Good.
In time. Sold br druggists.
I®