The herald and advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1887-1909, October 26, 1888, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Site Jerald and gipertiscr. Newnan, Ga., Friday, October 26, 1883. THE MODERN STONE AGE. Many Implements Made of This Material Still 'Used in Virginia. All over our country we find many in teresting relics of the Indians. Stone spearheads, arrowheads, hammers, chi sels, knives, scrapers, etc., together with pottery, some of burned or baked clay, some cut from soft stone, as slate, steatite, etc. Similar remnants of the so-called stone agoof mankind are found in nearly every portion of- the globe, and, besides their interest as curious survivals of a bygone •- time, they aid us toward a dis covery of the prehistoric man. It is' hardly of less interest, or of less historic or scientific value, to note how the stone age still survives among us to no little extent. Here in Virginia, for instance, many people still scald their slaughtered hogs in hogsheads or barrels, as onr barbarian progenitors boiled their meat in skins, by heating stones,and putting them into the water until it is hot enough for the pur pose. The stones ordinarily used in this way are roundish, hard, and very heavy black.j or brown modules, sometimes called “negro heads,’’ or iron stones, although they are compressed lava, up- heaved in strata tlixough crevices in the rock crust of the earth at remote periods of geological time. We sometimes encounter stones that are hollowed out in the center, often to a socket, and these not infrequently are treasured by their finders as an ancient Indian stone for mashing or grinding corn, with the aid of a stone pestle; yet they are nothing more nor less, for the most part, than discarded stones once used’by our rural brethren for their gates to swing upon—many gates in all parts of the commonwealth being still thus pivoted. Many a housewife in remote country regions still has her stone weights, more or less rough, but honest; wherever the old Kentucky rifle lingers there is likely to be found still a set of soapstone bullet molds; our log cabins yet have rough stone and clay chimneys, where they are not of mud and sticks; in many a humble household a thin rock, not always smooth, is the utensil for baking corn bread; and the scone “mash trap” is familiar to all our country boys. The stone pipe, believed by many to have gone out with the Indian, is made.and used today by many colored folks and by no few white folks. Whenever soap stone, or steatite, is found, not only the stone pipe, but many other articles sup posed to he archaic, are still manufac tured and put to service by the ingenious and thrifty. In such localities stone pans, stone troughs for children, etc., are still common. Some day they will be dug up and attributed to the Indians, or even to their predecessors. A little in quiry and investigation would show much more of the stone age still here than we have adverted to. It is not rare to see stone sinkers in use for lines, and nets in fishing; the flint is not yet superseded wholly by the match; (here are clocks in the land yet run by stone weights; stone hovels, with dirt roofs, are not unknown in our moun tains; the colored ruffian, and sometimes the white one, carries a stone in a stock ing, along with his razor, when on the warpath; many a cider press and tobacco press are still made effective by stones swung at the end of their lever; and our small boys are all in their stone age whenever they can give their natures full and free play. We are not -so far off from the stone age man as some imagine; many of the implements and relics supposed to be prehistoric, and doubtless so in many cases, have their modern duplicates, and in some instances are all in use among us.—Cor. Petersburg Index-Appeal. Tli© Multitude of Millionaires. Since the civil war millionaires (the word means not .those having a million, but those reckoning their wealth by mill ions) have steadily multiplied. Many men who were content to earn a decent livelihood, who had never dreamed of aught beyond a modest competence when Sumter was fired on, now count their income by hundreds of thousands. To be a millionaire is to be conspicuous or dinarily, but in New York there are millionaires wholly obscure. They are not known to be rich outside of their narrow social circle, and will not be until their obituary in the daily news papers shall have mentioned the fact. There are so many and so excellent op- ortunities here for making money, to im who has pecuniary perception, that millionaires seem to spring up between showers. You hear of a man grown very wealthy whom you remember a short time before as dependent on a sal ary. You are not sure that the acquaint ance you avoid, because he habitually wishes to borrow, may not soon be one of the monetary magnates of Fifth ave nue.—Paul R. Cleveland in The Cosmo politan. Mammoth Japanese Crabs. The greatest marine curiosity of Eno- shima waters is the giant crab that trundles along a body as large as a turtle’s, and sweeps out claws that meas ure ten feet from tip to tip. Formerly the fishermen threw* these creatures back into the sea when they found their nets tangled up with them, but of recent years they clean the shells and sell them for foreign museums; The giant crabs are said to promenade the beach at night, and one version gives them phosphores cent eyes. If imagination cannot supply a picture of those crabs on the beach, it is all detailed in “Allan Quatermain. ” Rider Haggard, in his careful owning up to where he found the original of the re markable things in that book, owns to having read somewhere about these hor rible crabs, and so borrowed them to put in the canyon into which his canoe load of heroes emerged after their under ground baptism of fire. These crabs and the six foot cucumber are the few things in nature in Japan that are enlarged.— St. Louis Globe-Democsat. The lawyer knows when he has lost his case; the physician, when he has lost his patient; the clergyman, when he has lost his parish; but the author’s whole life may really be a failure, and yet he him self may never find it out,—Harper’s HOW GAS IS MADE. A Simple Explanation of the Way Illu minatin'; Gas Is Made. How few people can intelligibly explain some of the most ordinary things in every day life. An official of the city gas works was heard to say not long ago that if he might judge by the number of times he was asked for information, not more than two people in ten know how common illuminating gas is made. They all seem to understand, he said, that it comes out of soft coal, but they are ignorant of the process by which it is extracted. We do not doubt this at all, for it is the common things that we are apt to overlook in our search for infor mation. Now, let us give you a simple explana tion of gas making. Break up a piece of bituminous coal into small fragments and fill the bowl of a clay tobacco pipe with them. Cover the mouth of the bowl with wet clay and then thoroughly dry it. Put the bowl of the pipe into a fire where it will get red hot, and you will soon see a yellowish smoke come out of the stem, and if you touch a light to the smoke it will burn brightly, for it is nothing more or less than the gas from the coal. You can purify and collect this gas in a, simple way. Fill a bottle with water xnd turn it upside down in a bowl of water. You know the water will not run out of the bottle because the air pres sure on the water in the bowl will pre rent it. Put the end of the pipe stem jndcr the mouth of the bottle, and the gas will bubble up through the water into the bottle, gradually displacing the water, mil if the pipe were large enough to aiake a great deal of gas the bottle would be entirely filled with it. You have seen the immense quantities )f coke which they have at the gas works; that is what is left of the coal after the gas has been burned out of it. Coke is carbon, only a small part of what was in the coal having gone off with the gas. Take the clay covering off your pipe and you will find the bowl filled with this coke. Now, that is precisely the way gas is made in large quantities at the gas works. Instead of pipe bowls they use big re torts, and these are heated red hot by furnace, for the fire must be outside of the retorts. Heating coal red hot in a closed retort is different from burning it in the open air. A large pipe from the retort carries off the product of the coal, consisting of steam, tar, air and ammo nia, as well as gas. The ammonia and the tar go into tanks, and the gas into coolers, and then over lime, which takes up the acids in it into the immense iron gas holders which you have seen at the works. These holders are open at tire bottom, and stand, or rather swing, in tanks of water, being adjusted by means of weights. As the gas comes into them thej- rise up out of the water, but the bottoms are Always submerged, so tliat the gas cannot escape. The large gas pipes, or mains as they are called, con nect with the holders and conduct the gas through the streets to the houses where it is used. The pressure is given to the gas by the weight of the iron hold ers, which are always bearing down on the gas they contain. How to Live Long. Milk is not always admirable as a din ner drink, especially when fish plays any part in the menu. Tea or coffee taken with meat is simply suicidal. These hot beverages turn the meat into something resembling leather, and the result inter feres sadly with digestion. The man who desires long life must not give a place to “high tea” in his daily programme. Of tea itself it can only be said that it is harmless if not taken too often or made too strong. The American lady who after several calls and a cup of tea at each remarked that she could “always worry down another cup” was probably unaware of the mischief she was doing herself. No one need totally abstain from tea if they only take the precaution to buy it good, not to make it strong, not to let it infuse long, never to take it more than twice a day and to abjure it after o in the afternoon. The morning tub is indispensable to all who wish to live a long and healthy life. It is true that there have been centena rians who have known nothing of this luxury, but their longevity has been in spite of that fact, not because of it. The bath is good, but not too much bath. Walking is good, but it must not be over done. Dickens overdid it. Most of us, however, underdo it, and scarcely walk enough. Flesh accumulates upon us in middle age because we do not take suffi cient exercise, and then we give up long walks because we are stout and conse quently lazy, thus reversing the process of cause and effect. The health suffers seriously, and a way is opened to many maladies.—Cor. London News. Wild Horse of the Plains. So much has been written of the horse of the plains, which, foaled upon the dew kissed grass of the prairie, has never known a halter or the touch of a man’s hand, that descriptive reference to their fieetness. wariness and oftentimes their graceful beauty, particularly among the stallions, would at this day lack interest. But one curious fact is known to but few aside from those who have followed them for hundreds of miles and studied their habit! closely. If there are enough in a band these animals group by thir- teens. With every stallion there are twelve mares. What becomes of the weaker males whom the stronger fight away—whether they bide their time to get the quota of females or. in the des pondency of equine bachelorhood, go off alone and starve themselves—is not known. The matrimonial regulations of the wild horse, however this may be, allow to each male ^twelve consorts, and, the remarkable feature is, no more. They draw the line at an even dozen. Even when the bands that roamed these great plains, then tenantless except by other wild creatures, numbered in the hundreds and more than a thousand this peculiar division into famifies-was plainly noticeable! They kept a littie apart and never voluntarily mingled. —Colorado Cor. Chicago Tribune. A Waste ef Fiber. It is stated that two-thirds of the wood used in paper making is waste, though experiments indicate that this c$n be profitably converted into, fertilizers. 1 STRANGE SCENES IN JAPAN. First Impressions—The Common People. A Strange Festival—Japanese Women. In Yokohama is a long boulevard called the “Bund, ” bounded at each end by a jetty or pier called the “Hatoba,” with a pleasant wooded bill to the left known as the “Bluff,” dotted with white houses. The harbor or bay itself is a circle of water perhaps three miles wide—big enough at any rate to be so rough in windy weather that the ships have to get up steam and go to sea for safety. To come now to “first impressions;” there are, of course, two kinds of these. There are the mere sense impressions, the things which strike the eye and ear as strange, and there are the “first im pressions,” which mean the conclusions springing to the mind when the exter nals are first understood. The former class of these “first impressions” gener ally attach themselves to very trivial matters, but they are often not the less entertaining for all this. The first thing, for instance, that I noticed in Japan was the enormous hats of the coolies, and next the ludicrous combinations of European and foreign dress worn by many young, members of the middle class. A pot hat, a cotton wrapper or bath gown—the yukata—a pair of long stockings and boots—that was a common mixture, the wearer evidently and rightly thinking that he had adopted the best points of both systems. An hour after landing, too, a re mark made to me by an educated Japanese gentleman on the Belgic recurred to me. I had asked him if the coming constitution for Japan was likely to include trial by jury. “After you have seen Japan,” he replied, with a smile, “you won’t ask that question. ” I mean by this that I was struck with the fact that the common people of Japan, courteous and clever and civilized as tkey are in many ways—the hewers of wood and drawers of water and pullers of jerinkishas—are upon a different plane from the common people at home. One might say that they live in two dimen sions, whereas trial by jury, not in its origin, but in its significance today, is a three dimension idea. Moreover, the rulers of Japan see that trial by jury is often a failure or a farce with us, and they have no wish to educate the people up to it. In Japan there are almost as many re ligious festivals as in Spain, and one of these—rnatsuri is their generic name— was being celebrated the other day in the Japanese town. I went to look for it with my detective camera, and when I met it I could hardly believe my eyes— it corresponded more to one’s idea of New Guinea than of Japan. Upon an ordinary bullock cart a raised platform and scaf folding twenty feet high had been con structed, and bullock and all covered with paper decorations and green boughs and artificial flowers. In front a girl with a grotesque mask danced and post ured, while half a dozen musicians twanged impossible instruments and kept up an incessant tattoo on drums. Chil dren wild with delight crowded up among the performers and clung like flies all over the cart, and only that Providence which takes care of them, to gether with drunkards and the United States of America, preserved them from making a Juggernaut of it. On foot around the baslii, as the whole structure is called, were twenty or thirty men, naked as to their legs, their faces chalked, with straw hats a yard wide, many col ored tunics, in which, scarlet predomi nated, decked out with paper streamers and flowers enough to make a Sioux chief despair of himself, dancing along to. a very rude chant and at every step banging upon the ground a long iron bar fitted with loose rings. The colors, the song, the dance, the music and the clanging iron formed to gether a spectacle as barbarous in taste as possible, something wholly different from what one had supposed the gentle culture of the Japanese to be. At the time I was greatly puzzled, but subse quently I learned that this matsuri is not so barbarous as it looks. I took it to be a serious religious ceremony. I found that it had just as much to do with relig ion as an Italian carnival has—that is, it was born of religious feeling and has entirely forgotten its ancestry. Bud dhism, which is the religion of the com mon people, lias always played to the gallery, so to speak, and the priests of today make money out of the matsuri, partly in the shape of the coins which are thrown into the temple ponds and partly from their share of the subscrip tions of the well to do people of the neigh borhood, by whom the festival is sup ported. The affair is thus a Japanese carnival, where people drink sake and play the fool themselves or watch others doing so, exactly as at Nice or Venice. No account of “first impressions,” too, would be complete without an illusion to the grace and charm of the Japanese women. The first time one sees a couple of pretty and prettily dressed Japanese girls walking abroad under their huge variegated paper umbrella, with their elaborately dressed black hair, their per fect tiny hands and feet, their large brown eyes—set obliquely if they are “beauties:” with their delicate, soft toned ci 'Vt* garments, and the heavy flat silk obi Dvisted round and round their waist and ending in a colossal how be hind; with their funny motion on their clip-clapping pattens, half undulating run and half waddle, and their merry laughter and chatter—when one sees them for the first time, I say, one is usually delighted enough to follow them up and down for half an hour under a i fine pretense of losing one’s way or look- | ing into the shops. At least I did, till I j succeeded in getting a snap photograph ; of them.—Yokohama Cor. New York World. An Exercise for Health. If you are troubled with too much blood in the head, the best thing you can do for a simple remedy is to take the twisting movements of the trunk at the waist. Keep the feet firm, turn the trunk as far as possible to the right—till you face right—four times; the same to the left; then alternate the movements. Next, ber.d the body strongly and slowly to the right, from the waist, then to the left. Again bend forward as strongly as possible, from the waist, then Slightly back, at first, increasing on the back movement later, as you are able.—Mary E. Aden in Youth’s Companion, Some fashionable ladies are not satis fied with ready-made fans, but must save them made to order; they are, owever, satisfied with Dr. Bull’s ough Syrup at 25 cents and take it egularly. “One fire burns out another’s biirn- • ! Si ti nd most pain suffers more to be ured, but Salvation Oil is painless and certain. It costs only 25 cents. ^ Mary Auderson will sail from Lon- lon for New York on the 2Sth inst. oor • Promptness. First a cold, then a cough, then con sumption, then death. "“I took Dr. Acker’s English Remedy for Consump tion the moment I began to cough, and I believe it saved my life.”—Walter N. Wallace, Washington. Sold by W. P. Broom, Newnan, Ga. John L. Sullivan is only 29 years of age, and it is said that he has made and spent $300,000 in the last three years. Take it in Time. “For want of a nail, a shoe was lost; for want of a shoe, a horse was lost; for want of a horse a rider was lost.” Never neglect small things. The first signs of pneumonia and consumption can positively be checked by Dr Acker’s English Remedy for consumption. For sale by W. P. Broom, Newnan, Ga. A Texas man was fired at and the bullet was turned aside by a pack of cards in his vest pocket. A Narrow Escape. Col. W. K. Nelson, of Brooklyn, came home one evening,' feeling a peculiar tightness in the chest. Before retiring, lie tried to draw a long breath but found it almost impossible. lie suffer ed four days from pneumonia, and the doctors gave lnm up. Dr. Acker’s En glish Remedy for Consumption saved him and he is well to-day. Sold by W. P. Broom, Newnan, Ga. A Chicago man was sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment the other day for stealing a pint flask of whiskey. SI Terrible Forewarning’s. Cough in the morning, hurried or dif ficult breathing, raising phlegm, tight ness in the chest, quickened pulse, chil liness in the evening or sweats at night, all or any of these things are the first stages of consumption. Dr. Acker’s English Remedy for consumption will cure these fearful symptoms, and is sold under a positive guarantee by W. P. Broom, Newnan, Ga. A prisoner escaped from the peniten tiary at Auburn, N. Y., last week by cutting through four feet of solid ma sonry with a knife, and then sawing through the roof. fnr more than its share of the suttenng- ci That “ poor back” is hela respond- ^ bkme the dog? On the same mankind. If your dog bites a man w ’ ias i nervousness, impure blood, and principle the kidneys alter their protes ^ extraordinary work in ridding the resulting constipation. 1 Kse loicc ... - result Q f e ff ete matter retained m the system of the poisons wbicn are tllG /* Jgfl back aches; the kidneys are dis- blood. Then the sufferer says t le bg UD j ess t he nerves are strengthened, eased. “Not yet;” but they win removed . These are the causes the blood purified, and the constipation ^ ,1 mni removes them quickly, of kidney troubles, and x arae s Gciciy eff — also strengthens the weak With its tome, purifying, anu laxa <e ^0 ^ diseases 0 f the nerves and kid- kidneys, making it almost mmlhUe * J| try Paine ’s Celery Corn- neys. If your hopes ox cure have not - ... Price Si 00 pound; it gives Tec, health to nil who complalt of -thetr poor bad*. JV*. fU Sold by Druggists. Send for Illusirat WELLS, RICHARDSONS CO., Proprietors, BURLINGTON, VERMONT. ■ The Best Purifier Made. Damascus, Ga., June 29,1SS7. I have suffered with Catarrh for about four years, and after using four bottles of Botanic Blood Balm I had my general health greatly improved, and if I could keep out of the bad weath er I would be cured. I believe it is the best purifier made. Very respectfully, L. \V. Thompson. How it Sells. Palatka, Fla., May 31, 1887.'” We have been selling B. B. B. for two years, and it has always given sat isfaction in every case. " a *=■ . Lowry & Stare, Druggists. tX-” CTT BILIOUSNESS, SICK EEADACE HEARTBURN, LIVER INDIGESTIOI MISBEPSIA, COMPLAINT, JAUXDICI BY USING THE GENUINE On.O.RftcLANE’flESI ^"CELEBRATED—— HHSILIVER PILLS! PREPARED ONLY BY FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa. JK5“Beware of Counterfeits made in St. Louis."©! THOMPSON BROS. NEWNAN, GA. FINE AND CHEAP FURNITURE —AT PRICES— THAT CANNOT 6E BEAT IN THE STATE. Big stock of Chambei suits in Walnut, Antique Oak, and Cherry, and Imitation suites. French Dresser Suites (ten pieces), from $22.60 to $125.00. Plush Parlor Suits, $35.00 and upward. Bed Lounges, $9.00 and upward. Silk Plush Parlor Suits, $50.00. Good Cane-seat Chairs at $4.50 per set. Extension Tables, 75 cents per foot. Hat Racks from 25 cents to $25.00. Brass trimmed Curtain Poles at 50 cents. Dado Window Shades, on spring fixtures, very low. Picture Frames on hand and made to order. SPLENDID PARLOR ORGANS Low, for cash or on the installment plan. Metallic and Wooden Coffins ready’at all times, night, or day. THOMPSON BROS., • NEWNAN, GA. ATLANTA & WEST POINT RAILROAD, —.•o*4AND^‘>"— WESTERN RAILWAY OF ALABAMA. -W'READ DOWN.*' ME TABLE NO. -w-READ UP.-w— Accom moda tion. Local Mail (Daily) No. 51. r ast Mail (Daily> No. 53. In Effect Septembers, STATIONS. 18S3. Local Mail (Daily! No 50. IFast Mail (Daily) No. 52. Accom moda tion. 10 35 am 3 05 pm Lv Selma ... Ar. 9 40 pin 11 40 am 12 35 pm 1 2b am Lv .... Montgomery ...Ar. 7 35 pm 6 45 am 1 -18 pm 2 27 «ni Lv.... Chehaw ...Ar. 6 25 urn 5 10 am l.v.... . Ail burn A v 4 20 am Lv Co In m bus 2 38 pm • 3 20 a m Lv 7 30 am 3 22pu 4 00 am Lv. ... .... West Point.... .... Ar. 4 45 pm 3 12 am 7 00 pm / -D am Lv... ... Gabbeft ville.. .. Ar. 2 52 a m 6 49 pm i 59 am 3 48 pm 4 28 am Lv La Grange Ar. 4 C9 pm *30 am 6 33 pin 8 25 am 4 10 pm 4 52 am Lv .... HogansvTlle.. . ... Ar. 1 58 am 6 11 nm 8 38 am 4 22 pm 5 (.4 am Lv Grantvilie .. .Ar. 1 42 am 5 58 pm 8 53 am 4 35 pm 5 18 am Lv.... Puckett’s ... Ar. 3 19 pm 1 28 am 5 48 pm 9 06 am 4 45 pm 5 30 a nt Lv.... Newnan . . .Ar. 3 08 pin 1 (9 am 5 33 pm 9 32 am 5 Of* pm 5 55 am Lv Palmetto ... Ar. 1? 35 am 5 09 prn 915 am 5 19 pn 6 0/ am Lv Fairhurn ... Ar. 12 20 am 4 52 pm Lv... Rod Oak ... Ar. 12 03 an 4 37 pm 10 10 am 5 40 pm 6 30 am Lv ..East Point .. Ar. 2 15 pm 11 50 pm 4 25 pm 10 30 am 6 00 pm 6 50 am Ar.. .. Atlanta ... Lv. 1 5b prn 11 30 am 4 25 pm CECIL GABBETT, General Manager. CHAS. H. CROMWELL, Gen’l Passenger Agent. MARVELOUS MEMORY DISCOVERY. Aliy Book learned in one reading. Mind wandering cured. Speaking without notes. Wholly unlike artificial systems. Piracy condemned by Supreme Court. Great inducements to Correspondence Classes. Prospectus, with opinions of Dr. Wm. A Hammond, the world-renowned Specialist in Mind diseases, Daniel Greenleaf Thorrpson, the great Psychologist, and others, sent post free by Prof. A. LOISETTE, 237 Fifth Avenue, New A 01 k. WALTER E. AVERY, {Next Door to Post Office,) —DEALER IN- RELIABLE WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SILVERWARE. SPECTAC LES AND EYEGLASSES! Frcsa Es*. W. P. Harrison* Nashville. Tenv. May 2,1888—I have used Swift's Specific in my family for ?ome time, and believe it to be an excellent remedy for all impu rities of the blood. In my own case, I believe that I have warded oil a severe attack of rheu matism in the shoulder by a timely resort to this efficient remedy. In ail cases where a per manent relief is sought this medicine com mends itself fora constitutional treatment that thoroughly eradicates the seeds of disease from the system. Rev. W. P. Harrison. Waco, Texas, May 9, 13S8. Gentlemen: The wife of one of my custo mers was terribly afflicted with a loathsome skin disease, that covered her whole body. She was confined to her bed for several years by this affliction, and could not help herself at all. She could not sleep from a violent itching and sting ing of the skin. The disease baffled the skill of the physicians who treated it. Ilcr husband began finally giving Ids wifeSwift’sSpecific. and she commenced to improve almost immediately, and in a few weeks she was apparently well. She is now a hearty, line-looking lady, with r.o trace of the affliction kit. Yours very truly, J. E. Sears, Wholesale Druggist, Austin Avenue. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. The Swift Specific Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga. New York, 756 Broadway. _ f=BRiNG your Job Work to Mc- iNDON & Co., Newnan, Ga. Useful and ornamental novelties, as well as staple goods for Wedding, Birthday and Sou venir Gifts. FINE STATIONERY 1 Also, Christmas Cards, in season. Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Spectacles repaired in best style of workmanship. Medals and Badges made to order. Letter and Monogram engraving. W. w: MORGAN, WITH MUSIC & 0’REAR, WHOLESALE & RETAIL GROCERS, 33 West Mitcliel St., Atlanta, Ga. Will be pleased to have his Coweta friends call upon him while in the city. The best goods at the lowest prices. S3P* If you oice for this paper be good enough to settle at your first opportunity. The publishers need the money 0Ib=Ctmc ~>2\emcbtcs. KNIGHT’S OLD ENGLISH OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure ingrowing toe nails, wounds, cuts, bruises, gathered fingers, fel ons, boils, gathered breasts, corns hard or soft, carbuncles, bunions, and when caused by a wound and applied in time, even lock jaw. Price 30c. a Stick by Mail Prepaid. Knigiit’s Liver. Kidney and Malarial Pad is invaluable in districts where malaria pre vails. It will cure, or better still, will prevent KNIGHT'S LADIES' PAD is a sovereign remedy for female weakne irregularities, lucorrhea, etc. Price. SI ea, prepaid. ’ Knight s London Toilet Specialties. Indispensible to every lady’s toilet. rok circulars Lady acfvts wanted, fan make $50 to $100 per month. KNIGHT’S REMEDIES, No. 21$ Gold street, Philadelphia, Pa. FEMALE MEDICINE u ir»o Sl P Dg toueto and strengthening the 1 ineS^^mamibrniding up the general heil corrects all irregularities and annovtnTr from which so manv ladies suffer R t weak, debilitated woman health end strength makes cheerful the desnonde.ft .1 spirits. In change of life m, ladTsbnnm?, 5 ^ out INDIAN WEED. If ” Ask your Druggist. Safeand TTnfai PorWale by A. J. Lyndon, Newnan G. W . Clower, Grantville, Ga. ’ Use A rare medicinal yS©iLMfMPTiv e orst cases of CoughAVeak I.iim-ai orders of the StoK£TlM d SkTSTuSi HINDERCORNS.