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WHERE EAGLES ABOUND.
FREEDOM’S BIRD FREQUENTLY SEEN
IN THE HUDSON HIGHLANDS.
It .Make* It* Homo Among I rocky C1IIT*
and Steep Precipice*—A l.l(flitl>ou*e
Keeper’s Pets—One Shot by a Soldier
During tb® Resolution Still XAving,
It is not generally known that hun¬
dreds of eagles have their homes
among the rocky cliffs and steep preci¬
pices of Storm King, Cro’ Nest, But¬
ler Hill, and other' lofty points in the
Highlands, near West Point, N. Y.
From the beginning of May until the
middle of September scores of eagles
may lie seen after daybreak soaring
nloft in quest of food. Small birds
are attracted by a peculiar fascination
to their noble but cruel enemy. When
within striking distance, the eagle
with one swift dart gathers the unfor¬
tunate victim in its talons and flies to
an exposed but inaccessible spot and
quickly devours it. It is the rabbits,
however, that suffer most from the
eagles in this vicinity. Scarcely a
rablnt is now*tobe found in the High¬
lands. • Lambs, too, have been carried
off by tbe king of birds. Only a few
years ago a soldier’s infant was play¬
ing on the rooks near the outskirts of
his post, when a huge eagle) swooped and
down from the mountains
tempted to carry it off. The mother
heard its .screams and had great diffi¬
culty in rescuing her child.
There are two old eagles whioli fre¬
quently visit the lighthouse on Gees
Point. When Coroner Joe Miller had
ehargq of the light it was his custom
to take large chunks of meat from his
home and place it where the eagles
could find it. They soon became ac¬
quainted with their benefactor. Fre¬
quently they fperohed on the big bell,
and Joe would feel lonesome when¬
ever a storm prevented his visitors
from making their appearance. When
shad fishing was in season Miller
would place a fish for each bird on the
liglithoUie tower,' The eagles carried
those up to the mountains, presumably
to their young. When Miller left the
lighthouse the eagles still paid daily
visits to the point, but the new at¬
tendant gave them nothing, and their
visits became less regular. Occasion¬
ally two eagles are'seen in the vicinity,
but they do not perch on the light¬
house, and remain but a short time.
On Turk’s Head, above Garrison, an
old eagle that lived during the Revolu¬
tion is still said to exist. John Dono
hoe, whose'father "and grandfather
passed their lives at Garrison, has fre¬
quently soon him. His habit of flying
sideways and tire peculiar droop of his
right wing makes him an easily recog¬
nized object. This droop was caused
by the shot of a British soldier, who,
while passing up the Hudson ou a man
of-war, was ordered by his captain to
shoot the eagle as it soared quite a
distance aloft. The soldiers’ marks¬
manship was good, but it cost him bis
life. A band of patriots, hidden in
the rocks, saw the deed, and, as the
ship lay well toward the shore, their
volley killed the sharpshooter. The
wounded eagle was cared for by the
patriots, and Donohoe says the bird
still flios over Turk’s Head.
The Highland eagles are very clean,
and never fail to take a morning bath.
Shippers and steamboat men who ply
on the Hudson say that at, daybreak
scores of eagles may be seen coming
down from the mountains for a plunge
in the Hudson. The eagles in this
■vicinity have curved beaks and broad,
expansive wings. When flying, they
spread these wings from eight to nine
feet. Their claws are curved and
sharp. The females are all larger than
the males.
Three tourists who visited West
Point climbed from the eemotery to
the top of Cro’ Nest. While going up
the mountain side they came across
move than a dozen eagle nests. In
schno wore newly-laid eggs, while
others were empty. Only a few sticks
and some branches were used by the
birds in constructing their uests. The
tourists were careful not to touch them,
as they feared an attack.
Eagle Valley, just west of Highland
Falls, has long been a favorite resort
for these birds. As the place is be¬
coming more inhabited the eagles rfre
deserting it. This may partly be ac¬
counted for by the action of the set¬
tlers in shooting any eagle that comes
insight. The eagles thought the. set¬
tlers’ chickens were for their special
benefit, hence the disagreement,—New
York Times.
A Kentucky Snake .Story.
Gus Stewart was over from Wildie
Saturday, and told us the following
snake story:
A snake came upon a gang of
chickens ou tho outside of the yard,
caught one, and swallowed it. He
followed the chicks, which by this
time had passed through the fence.
His snabeship reached through,
grabbed another, and swallowed • it.
The old hen could stand it no longer,
and pounced upon him, but having
chickens inside on both sides of the
fence he could neither go forward nor
backward. The hen tore the suake to
pieces and released her chicks, which
were alive.—Mount Vernon (Kv.)
Signal.
Growth of Language.
That the English language is much
more copious than it was in the days
of Johnson, is evident from the fact
that the compilers of the new -and
monumental Oxford dictionary have
gathered 85,591 words beginning with
the first five letters of tbe alphabet,
of which fifi,254 are main aud 13,181
subordinate words, with 10,156 spe¬
cial combinations explained under
main words. Of the main words 47,-
786 are in current use, 15,192 obsolete
and 2516 alien. But- with all these
words writers have not improved
greatly upon Shakespeare, Milton or
even Johnson and many others of an
earlier era.
HI P DI86A 86.
A Common Can*e of L«m«neu In OW1
<lrtn—Symptom* and Treatment.
Hip disease is on* of the most oom
mon causes of lameneiss in children.
This is not only because it occurs per¬
haps more frequently than disease of
qny other joint, but also because it be¬
gins so insidiously that the early
stages, when treatment might accom¬
plish most, are. of ten passed before
the trouble is recognized. is' slight
The first sign usnally a
limp, which comes and goes for no
apparent reasons there is no pain, and
as the chqld can give no excuse for
limping, Is he is perhaps reproved bad for
what regarded as merely a
habit. There is $ little stiffness after
sitting, and especially in the morning
on getting out of bed, but this passes
away with exercise. It may disappear
for days at a time and then return in a
rather more pronounced instinctively form. to
The child seems
avoid a shock to the hip by stepping
on the tips of his toes, but when tojd
to put his heel to the ground he does
so without trouble.
After a while a little pain begins to
be felt, and this, like the limp, maybe
intermittent at first; it seems too slight
to have any serious significance, and
the parents often speak of it ns a
“growing pain.” At first the child
hardly knows where the pain is, it is
so indefinite, but soon it becomes
more marked and is referred to the
knee.
Tbe limp and tbe pain are so slight
and so inconstant that no alarm is felt,
and so the opportunity of throttling the
disease in its infancy is often lost, and
the more striking symptoms of the
second stage set in before a physician
is consulted.
Now the little patient begins to
have "night cries.” Suddenly, in the
midst of sound sleep, he utters a
piercing cry expressive of severe pain;
but he is not conscious of suffering,
and may not even wake, or if he does
he cries in a startled way for a minute
or two and then falls asleep again.
At this time, if the child is ex¬
amined, one leg may be seen to be a
little thinner than its mate and per¬
haps slightly drawn up at the hip,
The disease is now fully established,
and while not necessarily incurable, is
much more difficult of management
than it would have been. at the begin¬
ning, when a few weeks’ rest might
have sufficed to remove all signs of the
trouble.
The moral is, never to neglect a
limp or a “growing i>ain” i n *be
young,—Youth’s Companion.
A Hungarian Helioacy,
The head waiter, to tempt me as I
came in, passed me with a live thing
flopping on a plate—it was a fish this
time, just out of the water—and stopped
just long enough to allow me a rapid
glance at its beauty. I at first sup¬
posed that some lucky line had but a
moment before drawn it struggling
from the lake, aud that it was then be¬
ing taken to die elsewhere. It was
only when I overheard the minute in¬
structions for its immediate and proper
serving—it was passed to an epicure
at tho next table to mine—that I was
undeceived, aud it was not long before
I discovered that’suoh fish formed one
of the chief attractions of the place. I
then began to . watch, from where I
sat, the small boy wbo, in the centre
of the cafe, presided over the fountain his
under tho blazing gas-jets, dipping
net into the marble-lined pool, chasing
the dodging fish round and round, un¬
til some unlucky victim of tho right"
size slipped into tho mesh, and was
flopped wriggling on a plate. The
sight had rather dulled my appetite.
I would as soon have ordered its mate
ns I would have thought of driviug in
a spring lamb and carving out a brace
of chops while the little fellow waited.
I liad the curiosity, however, to in¬
quire the price of this gasfronomical
luxury. It equalled that, of two bot¬
tles of Extra Dry—the price being the
same to commoners and to kings!—
Harper’s Magazine.
The Senate’s Reverent, Attitude.
There is one thing for which the
Senate must be given credit. It cer¬
tainly pays deference to the daily
prayer which opens the proceedings.
Prayer time in the Senate is quite a
function. Just before the chaplain
ascends the temporary pulpit a num¬
ber of the pages arrange themselves in
a row in front of the desk, making a
semi-circle in front of the clergyman.
All the doors leading into the Senate
floor aud galleries, from the lobbies
and cloakroom, are closed and guarded,
so that no one shall enter or depart
during the invocation, Absolute
silence reigns and every Senator, no
matter what his religious belief or
absence of belief may be, reverently
rises and remains standing until the
prayer is concluded.
The Senate may not always be n
dignified and quiet body, says the
Washington Post, but when the chap¬
lain is praying ij is a model for a
church.
Monster Carp Towed the Boat.
Few fishermen, especially in inland
waters, says a Phoenixville corres¬
pondent of the Philadelphia Record,
are privileged to ride iu a boat towed
by a finny monster at the other end of
an angler’s line; but such was the ex¬
perience of Johu Clark, of this borough,
while fishing in Black Rock dam
yesterday, In the middle of the
stream he hooked a monster carp, and
the latter resisted as the line was
hauled in.
Neither man nor fish was disposed
to give iu; so away went Clark’s boat
up stream, towed by the carp. It was
an exciting time for the fisherman, but
finally about a quarter of a mile above
the point where the novel ride began,
1*6 managed to stop the skiff and get.
the upper hand of the carp. The fish
was hauled into the boat, landed, taken
to Clark’s home aud tipped the scales
at twenty-three pounds.
BICCEST YOKE OF OXEN.
■tanU Seventeen Hand* High and To¬
gether Weigh T30O founds.
The greatest yoke of cattle ever seen
in this country is owned by J. D.
Avery, of Buckland, Mass. They are
named Joe aud Jerry. Their age is
eight years and they measure ten feet
in girth. They stand seventeen hands
high and their measurement from tip
to tip is fifteen feet eleven inches.
There is not a difference of ten pounds
in weight between them, and the two
together tip the scales at 7300 pounds.
They hold the world’s record for one
pull, having drawn 11,061 pounds or
stone, loaded on a dray, on a level,
just eight feet in one draw. They are
models of symmetry in build, are ex¬
tremely kind and docile and beauti¬
fully colored. The best of care is de¬
voted to them, one man spending sev¬
eral hours every day in grooming and
cleaning them.
In speaking of his handsome yoke
of oxen Mr. Avery said: “The oxen
have not by any means reached their
limit; they have gained iu weight
some seven hundred pounds the past
year and are capable of carrying an¬
other thousand pounds. Unlike
other large cattle, their flesh is dis¬
tributed very evenly which adds very
much to their looks, and they stand on
their limbs as straight as a pair of
calves.
“They are remarkably intelligent
and well trained. They are very ac
tive and can easily walk a mile in
thirty minutes. They are colored,
like all pure Holsteius, black and
white. Their coats are as fine and
glossy as a thoroughbred racer’s.
They ore still worked moderately
when at home. Their yoke was made
to order, and probably is the largest
yoke ever worn by any team. It is
seven feet in length aud weighs 200,
pounds. their
“Their crowning glory is mag
nifloent set of highly polished horns.
For size, quality, mating and beauty
combined their equal does not exist in
the world. It may be of interest to
know that their feed consists of eight
to twelve quarts of corn Mid oats
ground together, two quarts of flax
meal aud from six to eight quarts of
bran each day, with an occasional
change, to suit their appetites.”—
Philadelphia Times.
WISE -WORDS.
Tact is very often the knowledge of
when it is better not to tell the whole
truth.
The shiftless man is always away
from home when a good opportunity
knocks.
Borne men learn enough in six
months’ travel to bore others for a
lifetime.
Do good and cast it into the sea; if
the sea doeB not recognize it the
Creator will.
Nothing can make people go blind
any quicker than filling their eyes
with gold dust.
A man likes to refer to himself as an
idiot at fiines, but it makes him mad
if anybody olse agrees with him.
Slander has a buzzard’s eye, a
wolf’s nose, a viper’s tongue, a bat’s
wings, a leopard’s claws and a raven’s
voioe.
Genius sometimes seems to be that
sort of gift which gains unmerited
sympathy for recklessly disregarding
itself.
We learn wisdom from failure more
than from success; we often discover
what will do by finding out what will
not do.
If people could see their obituary
while they are still living, it would en¬
courage them so much that they might
lire longer.
Besentment seems to have been
given us by nature for defense only; it
is the safeguard of justice aud the se ■
curity of innooence.
It is strange that, of all possible
tasks* simply to be what we are
should prove not the easiest, but in¬
finitely tbe hardest.
There is a class of people who think
they are too poor to buy flannels for
the winter who will spend their last
cent having their fortunes told.—The
South-West.
j European Murders.
Italy takes the lead of European Na¬
tions, with an average annual crop of
murders of 2179, a ratio per 10,000
deaths of 29.4; Spain follows, with a
ratio of 23.8, aud 1200 murders; Aus¬
tria, ratio of 8.8, and 600 murders;
England, ratio of 7.1, and 377 mur¬
ders.
In England, in the reign of Henry
VIII, there were 71,400 persons hanged
or beheaded; iu one year 300 beggars
were executed for soliciting alms. In
1820 no less than forty-six persons
were hanged in England for forging
Bank of England notes, some of which
were afterwards asserted to be good.
Capital punishment was abolished in
Italy in 1875, and murders increased
forty-two per cent.
AppeudlcltU Is Contagious.
The observations of Professor Golu
boff, of Moscow, have convinced him
that appendicitis is not only a con¬
tagious disease, but that it sometimes
occurs in epidemics. It was unusually
prevalent in Moscow last year. To il¬
lustrate, Professor Golubofl mentions
that in a small boarding school where
in several years there had not been a
single case of appendicitis, he treated
seven cases within two months.
The Chicken Was ToaUetl.
A few days ago the family of Ed
Fay concluded to kill a chicken ta
cook, and found this invoice in its
gizzard: Twenty-four BB 22-caliber
cartridge shells', two gravel stones, and
two glass beads, a bit of glass, a
pin. The shapes of the cartridges had
undergone modification while ia the
chicken.—rTopeka (Kansas) Journal.
A CONTENTED PEOPLE.
Mexican Villagers Whose Habits Are Very
Simple.
The inhabitants of the little interior
villages of Mexico retain many of their
primitive customs. They are peace¬ Their
able, congenial and religious.
life, though monotonous in the ex¬
treme, is a happy one. They cultivate
corn, beans, wheat, and possess small
herds of cattle and goats. The
women, in addition to performing
their household duties, cultivate
vegetables, flowers, fruits and plants
for medicinal use. They raise cotton,
from which they spin and weave
manta (a eotton fabric) for clothing.
On their feast days, which are
many, they go to church dressed in
their bright costumes, those of the
maidens being white adorned with
ribbons of many colors. The senoras
wear striped dresses of white and
blue. The hair is worn plaited in two
braids, while upon the head is the in¬
dispensable “inazclohuati” (a head
dress worn by the lower caste Mexi¬
cans), woven in red cotton. The
women’s eyes are large and expres¬
sive, and their teeth perfect and bril¬
liantly white. The form is slight and
the movements graceful.
The young men dress in jackets
without sleeves and knee breeches.
Upon the day of their marriage they
adopt trousers, which are made by the
“Novia” (sweetheart) who has already
woven the manta. They take their
places in the church with the children,
senoritas and senoras on the right and
the men and boys on the left. They
pray and sing in the native Mexican
language, which is richer, sweeter
and more expressive than the Spanish.
In the “Dias tianguis” (market
days), . they assemble and exchange
their goods. Money is a superfluity,
and the interchange is made by means
of barter and trade.
Their meals consist of “maza de
maiz” (flour of corn), which is mixed
with powdered chile, in making
tomales, tortillas, frejoles (beans),
and the native fruits and vegetables,
of which there is an endless variety,
including aguacates, nanohes, teteo
zas, tilapos, sandias, cliieozapotes,
meloues and others.
Every year the people assemble to
elect their judge, or alcalde, whom
they usually obey implicitly. This
magistrate is selected from the older
men of the pueblo.—City of Mexico
Letter.___
Dug Up a Fortune.
While digging up a tree in the yard
of Bilver Trevine at Monterey, Mex¬
ico, Petronilo Hernandez found three
earthen jars tilled with gold and sil¬
ver coin. Hernandez, who was a ser¬
vant, secured a sack and carried away
two or three loads of the treasure.
When Trevino learned of the discov
cry lie had Hernandez arrested for
robbery. The wealth amounts to
about $20,000, one-third of which
must go the Government. Hyrnau
dex is confined in prison.—St. Louis
Globe Democrat.
Rebellious Memory.
Totsie accidentally discovered a doll
that her mother had concealed in a
trunk in readiness for the little lady’s
birthday. The following day at din¬
ner she remarked: “I’m trying so
hard to forget something I want to re¬
member that I don’t feel very hungry.”
—Judge.
Venom Inhftled with the Air,
And imbibed with the water of a malarious lo¬
cality. has still a certain antidote. Experience
sanctions confidence in Hostetler's Stomach
Bitters as a preventive of this scourge. A11 over
this continent and in the tropics It has proved
itself a certain means of defense, and an erad
leant of intermittent and remittent fevers, and
other forms of miasma-born disease, Nor is it
less effective for klduey trouble®, constipation,
rheumatism and nervousness.
A man may smile and smile and still be a
ternperanee advocate.
A Prose Poem.
EE-M Medicated Smoking Tobacco
And Cigarettes
Are absolute remedies for Catarrh,
Hay Fever, Asthma and Colds;
Besides a delightful smoke.
Ladles as well as men. use these goods.
No opium or other harmful drug
Used in their manufacture.
EE-M. is used and recommended
By some of the best citizens
Of this country.
if your dealer does not keep EE-M.
Send 18c. for package of tobacco
And 0c. for package of cigarettes,
Direct to the EE-M. Company,
Atlanta, Ga.,
Aud you will receive goods by mail.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That
Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the sens© of
smell and completely derange the whole system
when entering it through the mucous surfaces.
Such articles should never be used except on
proscriptions from reputable fold physicians, to the good as the
damage they will do is ten Catarrh you
can possibly derive from them. Hall’s
Cure manufactured by F. J • Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken
internally, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. In buying
Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genuine.
It is taken internally, and is made in Toledo,
Ohio, by F. J. < heney & Co. Testimonials free,
tar* Sold by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
I cannot speak too highly of Piso's Cure for
Consumption.—Mrs. Frank Mobbs, 215 W. 22d
St., New York. Oct. 29, 1894.
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous¬
ness after first day s use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
1 )k. Ii. U. Kline, Ltd..9tfl Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
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 25c. per bottle.
fte Y0DX5 Plaatitios
iC Cotton M KtlLLEH
AND SEPARATOR,
The result obtained
from the use of our ma¬
chine has been so very
«at?sfactorv that we enter upon our THIRD
SEASON with a feeling of great confidence.
Uur machines are'durable and thoroughly
effective. Tiie ground kernels »re left in a
fine condition for distributing as a fertilizer.
The hulls are valuable food for cattle. De¬
scriptive pamphlet with testimonials from
prominent out ton planters throne-boat the
Southern States, together with simple of
product from oar machine, will be a or warded
on application. Mhrj Cc„
Cotton States alXuama.
Mention this paper when yon write.
Estimating the Sphinx’s Age.
The famous Sphinx near the Pyra
mids of Gizeli was thoroughly investi¬
gated by Professor Erman, who at a
recent meeting of the Berlin Academy
lectured about its probable age. Care¬
ful researches show that it could not
have been built previous fo the so
called “Middle Kingdom,” or about
2000 B. C. Between her front paws
there was originally the image of a
deity, all trace of which at the present
time has disappeared. For the build¬
ing of the colossal work more than
twenty years must have been necessa¬
ry, even if 1,500 men had been em¬
ployed all the time.
Progressing,
Old Job was taught to read by the
minister’s wife, and proved a very apt
scholar. Keturning home after a pro¬
longed absence, the lady met her old
pupil, and asked him how he was get¬
ting on. “I suppose you can read
your Bible now comfortably, Job?”
“Lor’ bless you, ma’rn,” cried Job,
“I’ve been out of the Bible and into
the newspaper this long while.”—
Household Words.
No line to Cry.
No use to fret and worry and itch and scratch.
That won't cure you. Tetfcerin© will. Any sort
of skin disease, Tester, Eczema, Salt Rheum,
Ringworm or mere abrasion of the skin. At
drug stores, or by mail for SOe. in stamps from «J.
T. Shuptrlne, Savannah, Ga.
More men have been self-undone than have
been self-made.
MRS. ELLA M’txAKVY,
Writing to Mrs. Pinkham.
She says:—I have been using your
Vegetable Compound and find that it
docs all that it is recommended to do.
I have been a sufferer for the last four
years with womb
trouble, weak
back and excre¬
tions. I was hard¬
ly able to do my
household duties, : 1 PJ
and while about
my work was so
nervous that _
I was miser- had SGjjjS
able. 1
also given ARI "
up in des- A
pair, when T
was persuaded to try Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, and to-day,
I am feeling like a new woman.—
Mks. Ki.i.a McGabvv, Neebe Iload
Station, Cincinnati.O.
01BMI3 A Ulcers Cured, St- mo. treatment
$1. A* RoBtttTH, ew Berne,N.G.
GET THE GENUINE ARTICLE!
Walter Baker & Co.’s
Breakfast COCOA
Pure, Delicious, Nutritious.
• T Costa Less than ONE CENT a cup.
•I, Be sure that the package bears our Trade-Mark.
4 ! Ml (Established Walter 1780.) Baker & Co. Dorchester, Limited, Mass.
Trade-Mark.
DRUNKISI ed with*
by
Full information (in plain wrapper; mailed frst.
^lllipsgKpa "SacGess”
WKHUKSSr Uciton......
1 Seed Huiler
and
, p Separator.
P Nearly
doubles
tbe Value
of Seed to tic
farmer.
All up-to-date dinners use them because the Grow
ers give their patronage to such gins. Holier is
PRACTICAL, RELIABLE and GUARANTEED,
For full information Address
SOULE STEAM FEED WORKS, Meridian,Mia,
S25 FULL CQUBSE S25
Tbe complete Business Course or the complete
[Shorthand Course for 025. at
WHITE’S BUSINESS COLLEGE
15 K. Cain St., ATLANTA, GA.
Complete Business and Shorthand Courses Com
bined. $7.50 Per Month.
Business practice from the start. Trained
Teachers. Course of study unexcelled. No va
cation. Address F. B. WHITE. Principal.
CHRONIC DISEASES
ot all forms
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED.
Rheumatism, Neuralgia. Bronchitis, Palpita¬
tion, Indigestion, etc.
CATARRH
111 '
of the Nose, Throat aud Lungs.
DISEASES PECULIAR TO WOMEN.
Prolapsus, Ulcerations, Leucorrhea. etc. Write
for pamphlet, testimonials and question blank.
I>K. S. T. WHITAKER, Specialist,
205 Norcross Building. Atlanta, Ga.
by a new pro- j ;
cess made on
your in kitchen few j
stove a ;
minutes at a
cost of 25 cts. and sells at $1 per gallon.
* ‘Have tried this syrup and find it excellent.’*—
Gov. Robt. L. Taylor. Nashville, Tenn.
Send $1 and get the recipe: or $2 and I will
also send Dictionary of twenty thousand rec¬
ipes covering all departments of inquiry. I
Agents wanted.
J. N. LOTSPEICH, Morristown, Tenn.
THE GEORGIA TELEGRAPH SCHOOL
Teaches telegraphy thoroughly, and
[ „ starts service. its Only graduates exclusive in the Telegraph railway j
School ia the South. Established
k nine years. Sixteen hundred sue
j^fcessful ^'^hool:s.'Sl graduates. Send fen illus- a
» telm B
BETTER
THAN
KLGNQYKE
B.4S. Business College. Louisville. Kv
Book SUPERIOR advantages', i
Telegssfhy. Beautiful keeping, Catalogue Shorthand Free. asb J
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HALL’S
Vegetable Sicilian
HAIR RENEWER
Beautifies and restores Gray
Hair to its original color and
vitality; prevents baldness;
cures itching and dandruff.
A fine hair dressing.
R. P. Hall & Co.. Props.. Nashua, N. H.
Solit by all Druggists.
ALABAMA LADIES
DON’T DIE
Oak Lowery,Ala..writes!
Have used Dr. M. A.
Simmons Liver
Medicine in my fam¬
ily for 10 years, with
>>•* ' good results. I think
L
it is stronger than
Pm “Zeilin’s” or “Black.
Draught.”
0 caused by Cramps
Arc an irritation of the nerves.
They aro local spasms, frequently tbe result
of uterine disease. There are pinching,
gnawing and contractive pains in the region
of the atocioch extending to the back and
chest. They are often the symptom and
effect Diver of Medicine indigestion. should Dr. be M. used A. simmona to
stimu¬
late the digestive organs and Dr. Simmons
Squaw Vine "Wine to give immediate relief
and permanent cure.
After the old proprietors of the article
now called “Black Draught’’ were by the
United States Court enjoined from using
the words constituting oar trade name
does not equity require that they aland on
their own trade name and merits (if any) of
their article, and not seek to appropriate
the trade for onr article called for and
known publishing as Dr. the Simmons picture I.iver another Medicine, Dr. Sim¬ by
of and
lug mons on their their article wrapper “Black falsely Draught" adverti s
that was
established in 1S40, that being the year la
which our article was established, while no
one ever heard of “Black Draught” till
falsehood after IMS. and Why associate do they advertise article with that
their
ours (having the picture of Dr. 11. A. Sim¬
mons on of it) another by their Dr. Simmons, publication if of done the
picture unfairly trade? not Is net
to the motive appropriate parent? our
ap
_____
San Antonio, Tex., says:
My wife has used Dr. M.
A. Simmons L’-vr Med¬
icine many years for Sick
Headache and never
fails to buy a package
when she eipeote to
travel. It saves one from
t ■ taking injurious drugs,
f or 15 years it ho* been a
necessary medicine In my
. house.
Caul ion. Don’t be footed Into taking
cheap worthlooastaff. If the merchant tells
you “ it is know jnst tho that Dame" he as M. A. 8. aell L. M.,
yon may is trying to you
cheap stuff to make a big profit by palming
Oil on you a wholly different article.
: . ill r’-iw"
( jS
i Utes^ FAT it
| "v IKS
j y
!
2L _ -
i
| ■
TA5TELE5S
CHILL
TDNIC
IS JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS.
WARRANTED. PRICE 50 cts.
Co., Galatia, Louis, Mo. Ills., Nov. 16,18*3.
Paris Medicine St.
Gentlemen:—We sold last year, 600 bottles of
GROVE’S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC and have
bought three gross already this year. In all oar ex*
perlenee of 14 years, in the drug business, hare
never sold an article that gave such universal sails.
faction as your Tonic. YouMtraly,
AB>ELtAB> a CO>
_______
WEAK MEN
VI Are fully restored
by HAGGARD'S SPE
►MRW CIFIC $1.00; 3 TABLETS. boxes $2.50, 1 box. by
T<! ly mail, .\ddress,
ilv HauEard’s Specific Co.,
ATLANTA, GA.
Full particulars sent by
mail on application.
Aiiensfsi. Ga* Actual business No text &
books- Short time. Cheep board- Send for catalogue.
ROBERT _ E. LEE.
T mon«
MENTION THIS MPER2S.“SSSSS
I —‘. I
¢ 125018.;
: :3
CURES Cough WHERE Syrup. AU ElSE fAlLSi Use
Best Tastes (rood.
in time. Sold j by druggists.
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