Newspaper Page Text
Spring Makes Me Tired
To many people Spring and its duties
mean an aehing head, tired limbs and
throbbing nerves. Just ns the milder
weather comes, the strength begins to
wane and “That Tired Feeling” is the
oomplaint of all. condition is
The reason for this
found in the deficient quality of the
blood. During the winter, owing to
various onuses, the blood beoomes
loaded with impurities and loses its
riohnees and vitality. Consequently,
as soon as the bracing effect of oold
•Jr is lost, these is languor and lack
of enorgy. The cure will be found in
purifying and enriching the blood.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the greatest
and best spring medioine beoauie it is
the greatest and best blood purifier.
It overcomes That Tired Feeling be¬
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is the Only
True Blood Purifier
Prominently in the Public Eye Today.
An Odd Monument.
Perhaps one of the very oddest
monuments is the tablet in a Berkshire
ohureh in memory of a soldier who
had his left leg taken off “by the above
ball,” the actual cannon ball being in¬
serted at the top.
Young House —“A woman is driv¬
ing me now, and I can never under¬
stand what she wants me to do.”
Old Horse—“That’s easy. A lot of
jerks backward on the reins mean that
she wants you to pro ahead .”—Good
News.
That dump in a
man’s stomach
* -which makes him
irritable and misera¬
ble and unfit for bus¬
iness or pleasure is
caused by indiges¬
tion. like cliarity, Indigestion,
covers
' a multitude of sins.
The trouble may be
in stomach, liver,
bowels. Wherever it
is, it is caused by the
presence of poison¬
/ ous, refuse matter
which Nature has
been unable to rid
herself of, unaided.
In such cases, wise
fpeople little health send down officer, a
personified Pierce’s by Pleas¬ one
of Dr.
ant Pellets, to search
out the trouble and
remove its cause.
The Greatest fledical Discovery
I l of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS. i
Has discovered in one of our common
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down to a common pimple.
He has tried it in over eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except in twocases
(both thunder humor). Ho has now in
his possession over two hundred certifi¬
cates ot its value, all within twenty miles
ol Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced from the
first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted
when the right quantity is taken.
When the lungs are affected it causes
shooting pains, like needles passing
through them; the same with the Liver
or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts
being stopped, and always disappears in a
week alter taking it. Bead the label.
If the stomach is foul or bilious it will
cause squeamish feelings at first
No change of diet ever necessary. Eat
the best you can get, and enough of it
Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed¬
time. Sold by all Druggists.
WALTER BAKER & GO.
The Largest Manufacturers of
Ud PURE HIGH GRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
On this Continent, have received
HIGHEST AWARDS
fl im, ip Mislria from tho ami great Fool
EXPOSITIONS
I g»n Europe ami tarica.
HfiL WWa M '** ttnhke or other the Dutch Chemical! Process, or Dv no Alka- ea era
'TM* ijOT „UBed * n an L their preparations.
Their delicious BREAKFAST COCOA is absolutely
pure and soluble, and coat* less than one cent a cup.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER & GO. DORCHESTER. MASS,
n h SF DAI I lutde. pal ding’s
the
MM !8#r%0biHogame. game. Valuables New New Rules. Rules. statistics. How _____
TO SETTLE Settle ALL all DlSPUTI Disputes. 10c.
Pictures of all leading players. Postpaid, Tennis
I Lawn mirnTfinMifi i ennisouide. Spalding’s Lawn
new rules.
How to Play. How to Lay Out a Court. Picturesof
Leading Players. Valuable book fi or all. Postpaid, 10c.
pi gPfr Handsome Catalogue of all Sports—
■ Im. fc fci any address. Ask for Catalogue No. B
A. C. SPALDINC & BROS.
New York. Chicago. Philadelphia
Parker’s BALSAM
HAIR the
a Cleanses and beautifies j hair.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Hull* Fail itH is Youthful roltestpre dolor. Gray
tft falling.
Cures scalp diseases & hair
50c. nnd $1*00at Druggists-
ZMTS'
CTRES WKtfit ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastea Good.
In t ime. Sold by druggists.
ss
SiO
cause it makes puro, rich blood. It g! ves
strength to nerves and muscles because
it endows the blood with new powers
of nourishment. It croates an appetite,
tones and strengthens the stomach and
digestive organs, and thus builds up
the whole system and prepares it to
meet the ohange to warmer weather.
Hood's Sarsaparilla is a medioine
upon whioh you may depend. It is
the only true blood purifier promi¬
nently before the publio eye today. It
has a reoord of eures unequalled in
the history of medioine. It is the med¬
ioine of whioh bo many people write,
“Hood’s Sarsaparilla does all that it is
olaimed to do. ” You can take Hood’s
Sarsaparilla with the confident expec¬
tation that it will give you pure blood
and renew health. Take it now.
INTERESTING FACTS.
White flowers are the most odorife¬
rous.
Leprosy is increasing rapidly in
Europe.
Asses’ milk is sold at three shillings
a pint.
Of the people of Spain one-fifteenth
are nobles.
The Thames was once a tributary of
the Rhine.
An iron-clad can be launched in
twenty-two seconds.
Twelve thousand horses are killed
every year in Paris for roasts and
soup.
In Italy the criminal classes bear
the highest proportion to the popula¬
tion.
Rats will leave a house in which a
guinea pig is allowed to wander about.
The official term for the “growler, •>
or London four-wheeled cab, is “Clar¬
ence.”
South American ants will sometimes
construct a tunnel three miles in length.
Among the Siamese it is the custom
to reverse the elbow joint as a sign of
social superiority.
Donkeys have an aversion to drink¬
ing running water or crossing a run¬
ning stream.
An acre of good fishing ground will
yield more food in a week than an acre
of land in a twelve month.
Within a radius of 1,000 miles of
Malta nine-tenths of the vegetable
food-stuffs of the world are grown.
The greatest proportionate loss of
officers to men in any battle was at the
capture of the Redan, where three of¬
ficers were lost to every twenty-two
men.
Oil has practically no effect on
troubled water close in shore, because
the surface is not usually broken by the
wind, but by cross currents, rocks, ed¬
dies and so on.
When a railroad line runs north and
south, on the track on which the trains
run from the south the eastern rail will
wear out first, and on the other the
western.
Hold, the Fort
Against a bilious attack by calling to your
aid that puissant ally, Hostetter’s Stomach
Bitters.’ The foe will then be driven back
utterly defeated. Dyspepsia, sick headache,
ma'arial, kidney, nervous and rheumatic
trouble and constipation beneficent yield to the action
of this most of remedies. Take it
regularly and you will soon experience its
good effects.
It is better to be a pure and truthful man in
rags than a hypocrite in broadcloth.
When Traveling
Whether on pleasure bent, or business, take on
every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it acts
most pleasantly and effectively on the kidneys,
liver and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches
and other forms of sickness. For sale in 50
cents and $1 bottles by all leading druggists.
-~
J rag' "—
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root cura-
all Pamphlet Kidney and and Consultation Bladder troubles.
free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y
Trials nre very often essential in building a
character.
Providence* R. I.
Please forward six boxes of Tetterine, O, O.
D. I think it strange that it is not Bold here
in New England, a* it is the best euro for Ec¬
zema, Ring Worm and all eruptions of tho
skin I ever saw. I got a box from a Cincinnati
drummer, and gave part of it to a young lady
who had tried almost everything her to remove Two
P.mples and an eruption from completely face. cured
applications of Tetterine body
her. 1 know also a gentleman whose
had b?en covered with Eczema—two boxes of
Tetterine cured him completely, and now his
skin is as smooth as a baby’s. P. O. Hanlon,
with Silver Spiings Bleaching Co. Sent by
mail for 50c. in stamps. J. T. Shuptrine, Sa-
vannah, Ga. *
Whlch Man Wins?
The one with steady nerves and a clear
brain. That means, in nine cases out of ten,
i he man with a good digestion. A Ripans
Tabule after dinner may save to-morrow’s
business.
M. L. Thompson & Co., Druggists, Conders-
port. Pa., say Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the best
and only sure cure for catarrh they ever so'd.
Druggists sell it, 75c.
What a Sense of Relief ft is to Know
that you have no corns. Hinderooms druggists. removes
them, and is comforting. 15c. at
Asthma Piso’s Cure medicine.— for Consumption W. R. Williams, is an A No. An¬ 1
tioch, Ills., April 11, 1894.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces in flam (na¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water.Druggists sell at 26c per bottle.
BELATED BLIZZARD
SWOOPS DOWN UNEXPKCTKDLY
UPON THE NORTH AND WEST.
Snow and Ice with an Abundanoe of
Frost Reported.
The following telegrams denote the
extent and severity of a stray blizzard
that swooped down upon the north
and west:
A killing frost fell at Erie, Penn.,
Sunday, and did very extensive dam¬
age in the grape belt.
Northern New York points experi¬
enced a drop of 40 degree in the ther¬
mometer in fifteen hours, the change
taking place from 2 o’clock Saturday
afternoon to Sunday morning.
At Lockport, N. Y., the thermome¬
ter registered as low as 28. Fruit and
vegetables suffered in Niagara county,
and although the extent of the damage
is not yet ascertained, it will reach
thousands of dollars.
At Monticello, N. Y., the thermom¬
eter fell 45 degrees in almost as many
minutes.
Ice formed during the night in some
sections of Sullivan and Delaware
counties, New York.
At Livingston, Manor and Liberty,
N. Y., and also in most of the up¬
towns on the New Ontario, Ontario
and Western railroad snow fell.
Frost ruined the entire grape crop
of the Chautauqua grape belt. The
loss is at least $1,500,000. That fig¬
ures the value of last year’s crop and
by reason of new acreage coming into
bearing the crop this year would have
been much larger.
The Chautauqua grape belt extends
from Erie county, Now York, through,
westward, to Erie, Penn. The vines
were loaded down with blossom buds
last evening. From one end of the
belt to the other, the vineyards are
now nothing but blackened ruins, and
have the appearanoe of having been
visited by fire. Three thousand, six
hundred freight cars were shipped
from the belt last season. The total
number of baskets reached 18,000,000.
To this number 3,000,000 might be
safely added for increased acreage this
year. Other fruit suffered nearly as
much. There will be no cherries.
The thermometer at Elmira, N. Y.,
dropped to 36 degrees above zero Mon¬
day morning at 7 o’clock, but the
cloudy sky and high winds prevented
a frost, which would have been disas¬
trous to vegetation in that vicinity.
In The West.
A special from Chicago says: Cheer¬
ing news comes from fifteen states
visited by frost Sunday morning. Tho
crops are reported safe. Wheat and
oats escaped uninjured, because neith¬
er had begun to joint, and where cut
down by frosts or heavy rains will
sprout again. Corn was slightly nip¬
ped by cold in a few states, but not
enough to occasion the slightest alarm
that the yield will bo affected to any
extent. There is no longer any ground
for a scare in the face of these facts.
On the contrary the outlook is said to
be better than it was on May 1st, when
it was unusually promising. Frederick,
Mich., reports nine to ten inches of
snow; Ossineke, three inches; Lewis¬
ton, eight inches; Menominee, four
inches, -with all garden and fruit trees
ruined; Manistee, two inches.
The frost did no dama’ge to fruit
trees at Grand Haven, and it is be¬
lieved that generally throughout the
state the fruit has escaped serious in¬
jury. Gray¬
A terrific Bnowstorm set in at
ling, Mich., and the snow is twelve
inches deep on a level, and at latest
reports was still Bnowing and drifting
Reports received from all sections of
Wisconsin indicate a general frost,
accompanied in many parts by high
wind and snow, reaching in some cases
the severity of a blizzard. Early
fruit and vegetables not of the hardy
kind and much grain have been de¬
stroyed by the sudden fall in tempera¬
ture. All kiuds of crops were dam¬
aged by the heavy frosts which settled
over the Chippewa Falls section of the
state. Water froze in many places.
Fruit, vegetables and cranberries are
ruined, while rye and corn will suffer
much. A severe snow and wind storm
prevailed at Manitowoc. It is thought
much damage will result to crops.
At Wasau last Thursday the ther¬
mometer registered 95 degrees in the
shade. Monday everything was frozen
up and about one-half an inch of snow
lay on the ground. An inch of snow
fell at Oshkosh and the thermometer
stood at freezing. Great damage was
done to early fruit, berries and vege¬
tables.
Telegraphio reports from thirty
towns in Iowa show that the frost Sun¬
day did inestimable damage to early
vegetation and small fruit. In the nor¬
thern and western part of the state the
damage was not so severe because of
higher temperature, but in many east¬
ern places early vegetables were killed.
Corn in the lowlands was cut down to
the ground. Grapes which are in blos¬
som were completely killed materially in many
localities. Wheat was not
injured, but oats were damaged to a
very great extent.
Heavy frosts visited portions of In¬
diana. The most damage was done in
the northwestern portion of the state.
Garden vegetables were killed and
fruit damaged. In southern Indiana
bnt little injury was done.
A heavy and killing frost visited the
northern and eastern portions of Ohio.
In some places ice was frozen a quar¬
ter of an inch in thickness. Fruit of
all kinds was destroyed. Along the
lake shore, grape growers kept fires
burning all night in their vineyards,
but the damage done to the vines is
very great, and the loss will amount
to many thousands of dollars. Wheat,
which had commenced heading, is
badly injured. Garden truck is ruin¬
ed and young corn frozen in the
gjound.
Northern Indiana was visited by a
snow storm which raged for several
hours. The oold woather increased
rapidly, and it is feared small fruits
and all growing vegetation have been
seriously injured.
In the South.
There was a light frost throughout
East Tennessee valley Monday morn¬
ing. No material damage-to fruit*
and crops.
A speoial from Montgomery, Ala.,
says; The oold wave has not injured
crops in this seotion.
There was a heavy frost throughout
West Virginia, bnt owing to the dry
weather no damage of any importance
was done.
From Savannah: The cold wave
will not materially damage crops here.
The cool nights will have the efleot of
damaging the cucumbers, asparagus
and other plants, but the damage will
not be serious.
From New Orleans: While the
weather in this section has been ex¬
tremely oool since Saturday, the tem¬
perature has not been low enough to
cause damage to vegetation.
DISPENSARY CONSTABLE IN JAIL.
Judge SImonton Holds that He is !u
Contempt of Court.
The war between the South Carolina
state and federal authorities on the
subjtot of the dispensary began Satur¬
day by the arrest of one of the dispen¬
sary oonstables. L. G. Byrd, of
Charleston, through his attorney,
Benjamin A Hagood, presented an af¬
fidavit to the court stating that while
proceeding down Meeting street with
a two-gallon demijohn of whisky,
which he had just received from Sa¬
vannah through the Southern Express
company, he was stopped by a dispen¬
sary constable, E. C. Beach, and by
him the liquor was seized in violation
of the recent circuit court injunction,
which permits the importation of liq¬
uor for personal consumption.
Upon this affidavit Judge Simonton
issued a rule to compel the constable
to show cause why he should not be
attached for contempt. Shortly be¬
fore 3 o’clock the hearing was had. On
motion of Mr. B. A. Hagood a fine of
$300 was imposed by Judge Simonton
on Beach. Thereupon the latter re¬
fused to pay it and was committed to
jail. It is undorstood that this will
be made a test case and that the state
authorities will institute habeas corpus
proceedings before the United States
supreme court at Washington, demand¬
ing Beach’s release in the shape of a
dissolution of the injunction.
BUSINESS IMPROVES.
Bradstreet’s Review of Trade for the
Past Week.
Bradstreet’s commercial agency re¬
ports on tho condition of trade for the
week as follows:
“The past week brought distinct,
and in some instances, even more pro¬
nounced evidences of improvement in
business, notwithstanding the increas¬
ing wave of industrial disoontent and
strikes for higher wages, always the
accompaniment of an upward tendency
to prices. Some little gain in demand
for either dry goods, plantation sup¬
plies or in collections (which is most
significant), is announced by t^o-
thirds of all cities reporting. Savan¬
nah expects her carnival to stimulate
demand, and Augusta states that fac¬
tories are asking for more money than
a
Merchants at Memphis, Charleston,
Chattanooga and Atlanta have experi¬
enced a better demand, bnt at Bir¬
mingham, New Orleans and Galveston
business remains quiet or unchanged.
Cotton goods are not moving very ac¬
tively at the advances, buyers having
supplied themselves at lower figures.
Popular lines of prints are relatively
active. First orders for dress woolens
for fall delivery have been taken, but
demand is moderate. Woolen machin¬
ery is fairly employed. Wool is quiet,
prices at the interior being above views
of manufacturers and stocks at eastern
cities making a light supply. The crop
is late.” i
THE MILLS WILL SHUT DOWN
While the Operatives Were Expecting
a Collapse of the Owners.
The strike situation at Olneyville, Mill
R. I., does not favor the strikers.
operatives have been expecting a col¬
lapse of the^stand taken by the mill
owners. They counted surely on the
inability ol manufactures to keep the
agreement to shut down the mills on
May 13th, for the reason that orders
nfust be filled. But now comes the
announcement that the Riverside mills
will positively oloso down.
The statement is made that the treas¬
ury of the National Textile Union is
exhausted and less than $5 is now on
hand. This means that the strikers
must depend upon voluntary contribu¬
tions from the operatives in other
states and it is not possible that they
can get anywhere near the amount
they need.
The local unions had about $4,000
when the strike began. The national
fund was $5,000. There are 8,600 op¬
eratives out of work, and they were
earning between $50,000 and $60,000 a
week.
Quiet at the Mines.
A special from Roanoke, Va., says:
Everything is quiet in the coal fields.
The Southwest company began paying
off their men shortly after noon Thurs¬
day. Those living in the company’s
houses will not be paid until they va-
cate. The troops are haviug rough
guard service and many of them are
getting worn out. More troops or re-
j liefs are probable unless tho situation
improves.
A Wonderful Sensitive Plant.
An incident related by the author of
“The Pearl of Indio," in his descrip¬
tion of the flora of Ceylon, is almost
uncanny, although wo are assured that
it is true. It is about the mimosa, or
sensitive plant, nnd makes one almost
wonder whether the plant has intelli¬
gence. of
The doctor, one of the characters
the book, while sitting with the family
on the broad piazza, which formed the
front of the bungalow of a coffeo
plantation, recognized a thrifty sensi¬
tive plant, and it was made the subject
of remark, He called his young
dargliter of 11 years from the house.
“Lena,” said he, “go and kiss the
mimosa.”
The child did so, laughing gleefully,
and came away. The plant gave no
token of shrinking from oontaot with
the pretty child.
“Now,” said the host, “will you
touch the plant?” approached it
Rising to do so, we
with one hand extended, and before it
had come fairly in contact the nearest
spray and leaves wilted visibly.
“The plant knows the child,” said
the doctor; “but you are a stranger.”
An Electric Swindle.
A French fakir has lately been doing
a “land office” business in selling rat
powder that, while perfectly harmless,
was sudden death to the rats. In order
to convince the skeptical the man first
of ail powdered a slice of bread with
the stuff and ate apart of it. Then he
put the balance under a glass case,
wheie a rat was in captivity. The rat
went to eat the bread and instantly
fell dead. At half a franc a box the
powder went off like hot-cakes and the
lucky proprietor was in a fair way to
mako his fortune. Bnt the French
police, very active in detecting and
punishing fraud, “got onto the game”
and found the rat powder was nothing
but ordinary sugar. They also discov¬
ered. that the glass sample case was
connected with a powerful electric bat¬
tery, and the moment the rat touched
the bread the current was turned on
and his death was instantaneous.
Rugs to be thoroughly cleansed from
dirt should be beaten with that useful
little article known as a whipper, which
foroes from them all articles of dust.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Absolutely pure
Ancient Eggs Prized.
They do not think anything of an
egg in China, it seems, until it is about
100 years of age, old eggs being worth
as much in that country as old wine is
elsewhere. They have a way of bury¬
ing the eggs, and it takes about thirty
days to render a pickled egg fit to eat.
Some of the old eggs have become as
black aa ink, and one of the favorite
Chinese dishes for invalids is made up
of eggs, which are preserved in jars of
red clay and salt water.
liar Week Celebration; Snvannali, tin...
May 12-1C, 1805.
It has been decided to hold a May week cel¬
ebration in Savannah during the third week
in May, for whioh a very interesting grand pro¬
gramme has been arranged, including display,
carnival, large military sham parade naval and battle,
Tybeeday with an.i eie.
It is also expected that several large war ves¬
sels will be present. Central railroad of Georgia
The old reliable 16th,
will sell round-trip tickets May 12th to
limited returning May 18th, from all points in
Georgia, and from Montgomery, Ala., and in¬
termediate points, to Savannah, at the rate ol'
one fare for the round trip.
For military companies in uniform, twenty
or more traveling in a body on one tick et from
stations within 300 miles of Savannah and
from Montgomery, Ala., and intermediate
points, rate of 1 cent per mile in each direc¬
tion is authoriz d. At these very low rotes
every one will have an opportunity of making
the tr,;p to Savannah. schedules,
For further information, rates, of the Central
etc., apply to any ticket agent
railroad system or S. B. Webb, traveling pas¬
senger agent, 16 Wall street, Atlanta, Gs.
Parker’s Ginger Tronic is Popular
for good find work. nothing Suffering, soothing sleepless, and reviving. nervous
women so
| Hammar ■ C0ST ^Sfr^S PA,NT ° R Paints l^lfouaranteed 5 years.
Pun it inn.-ceu Oil only makes any Faint or Lead duriud • anu bright. L too ou. id
your Paint is ruiiK, your Paint must be good. It is absolutely necessary to add a gallon of
pure Raw Oil to a gallon of Hammar Paint to make it ready for application. Buy your OH
fresh from your dealer’s barged and know your Paint is made of pure Oil, and therefore
the best. It will co-t you much less than liquid Paint in cans and is vastly better.
CONSUMPTION
can, without doubt, be cured in its early stages. It is a
battle from the start, but with the right kind of weapons
properly used it can be overcome and the insidious foe
vanquished. Hope, courage, and continuous proper exercise, the will-
power, and the regular use of best
nourishing food-medicine in existence—
Scott’s Emulsion
—the wasting can be arrested, the lungs healed, the
cough cured, bodily energies renewed and the physical
powers made to assert themselves and kill the germs
that This are renowned beginning preparation, to find that lodgment has in doubt the iungs. cured
no
hundreds of thousands of incipient Oil cases of Comsump-
tion, is simply Cod-lLer emulsified and made
palatable and easy of assimilation, combined with the
Hypophosphites, the great bone, brain and nerve tonic,’
Scott & Bowne, New York. AH Druggists. 50c. and 51
!
AFTER THIRTY Y{ S*
THE BlICKHTI! BT.1TK CON '
Till! STUHY OF A VJSTK;
SKA ICOII.
Ho»v Freil Taylor, n Member of t
lant XSOIli N. V., V. I„ Fin.
Found AVliat Ho JIa» Sought
Since the War Cloned.
(From the Aihtahula, Ohio, Beacoi
Mr. Fred Taylor was bom and broug
near Elmira, N. Y., and from there en
in the 189th regiment, N. Y., V. I.,
whioh he went through the war am
much hard service. Owing to exposur
hardships during the service, Mr Tayloi
traded chronio diarrhoea, from which I
suffored now over thirty years, with
lutely no help from physicians. By n
ho was a wonderfully vigorous man.
he not been, his disease and the experia
of the dootors had killed him long
Laudanum was the only thing which af
ed him relief. He had terrible heada
his nerves were shattered, he could not i
an hour a day on an average, and he wa
duced to a skeleton. A year ago he an 1
wife sought relief In a change of climate
removed to Geneva, not. Ohio: Finally, but the chan*
health came on the rei
mendatien of F. J. Hoffner, the leading d
gist of Ge,.eva, who was cognizant of sir
eases which Fink Fills had cured, Mr. Ta
was persuaded straw, to try a box. I took “As a drow:
mun grasps a so the pills,"
Mr. Taylor, “but with no more hop
rescue. But after thirty years of suffe
and fruitless search for reltef I at last fc
it in Dr. Williams’ Fink Pills, The day af
look the first pills 1 commenced to feel be
and when I bad taken the first box I wi
fact a new man.” That was two months i
Mr. Taylor has since taken more of the
and his progress is steady, and he has'
utmost confidence in them. He has regal
lull control oi his nerves and sleeps as •
as in hi9 youth. Color is coming baok to
parched veins and he is gaining flesh
strength rapidly. He is now able to do <
Biddable outdoor work.
As he concluded narrating his sufferij
experience and cure to a Beacon repo:
Mrs. Taylor, who has been his faithful hi
meet these many years, said she wishe:
add her testimony in favor of Pink Pi
“To the pills alone is due the credit of ri
ing Mr. Taylor from a helpless invalid to
man Mr. he is Mrs. to-day,” Taylor said Mrs. Taylor. Bi
and cannot find words to
press the gratitude they feel or recomme
too highly Pink Pills to suffering humani
Any inquiries addressed to them at Gene’
O., regarding Mr. Taylor’s case, they v
cheerfully answer, as they are anxious tt
the whole world shall know what Pink Pi
have done for them and that suffering h
inanity may be benefited thereby.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all the el
ments necessary to give new life andrlchne
to the blood and restore shattered nervt
They are for sale by all druggists, or may 1
had by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medic*
Company, box Schenectady, six boxes for $2.60. N. Y., for 60 ee
per or
Gem Bearing Plants.
The assistant director of Kew gar¬
dens, lecturing recently at the London
institute on some curiosities of tropi¬
cal plant life, said that among these
were the pearls found occasionally in
the cocoanut palm of the Philippine
islands—pearls which, like those of
tho ocean, are composed of carbonate
of lime. The bamboo, too, yields an¬
other precious product in the shape of
true opals, which are found in its
joints. In each case this mineral mat¬
ter is, of course, obtained from the
soil. The natives of the Celebes use
these vegetable opals as amulets and;
charms against diseask
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR
★ The BEST *
FOR
Dyspeptic,Delicate,Infirm and
AGED PERSONS
★ JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. ★
a.n. u.... ......-Twenty. ’95.