Newspaper Page Text
t%S Pseultr Amusement of a Utile Ken
tucky Town.
People of the little mountain town
o t Bbarpshurg, Ky., have a peculiar
Aivsrtlsaement known as "egg-throw
tnc." Formerly Sharpsburg was the
scene of many shootings and cuttings,
but the boys amuse themselves now
by throwing eggs at one another. The
eggs cost but little more than did the
44-callbre cartridges used in their
Winchesters, and since they have
been throwing eggs nobody has been
seriously wounded.
The heaviest battles occur on Satur¬
day night. Jim Strong Is the captain
of one egg-throwing band and Bill
Eversole is the captain of the other.
They have about twenty men each.
Each man has to provide himself with
a dozen eggs, and of course it is to his
interest that he buys them where he
can get them the cheapest. As no in¬
dividual expects to be struck by bis
own eggs, he does not require the
dealer to “candle” them. In this way
the dealers In country produce here
are able to realize at least cost price
on their sickest eggs.
Last Saturday night’s battle was a
glorious one. The moon was shining
and the boys lined up for the fray
about 9 o’clock. Every member of the
two companies was present. The cap¬
tains did not throw, simply directing
the movements of their men. Each
man had his full quota of eggs when
the battle began. The first volley was
thrown by Strong's men, and six men
on the Eversole side were struck.
Then the Eversoles began to throw
eggs, and at their first volley Seven
Strong men were marked, and one egg
carried away the cap of Captain
Strong. Then the throwing became
Indiscriminate, and no attempt at vol¬
ley work was made.
The sport did not cease until the
entire 480 eggs were thrown. Nearly
every man had been plastered and the
captains were regular omelets from
head to foot. It was decided that
Strong's men wou the fight. The most
casual observer passing along the
street next morning could have told
there had been an egg battle, for the
houses, sidewalks, fences, and curb¬
stones were plastered with eggs and
shells.—Chicago Record.
Son of a Siamese Twin,
W. L. Bunker, of Milan, Kan., who la
said to have raised the largest wheat
crop in Sumner County, Is a son of one
of the famous Siamese twins. When
the twins had become rich they settled
in North Carolina, bought two largo
plantations adjoining each other, and
married two sisters, They divided
their time between the two places,
spending a day and a night on each
alternately.
About aSSil, ten or twelve years after
the death of the twins, two of their
boys came West and settled near Milan,
where they still live.
W. L. Bunker has a large farm well
stocked and fenced, and is wealthier
than the average Kansas farmer. He
is proud of his lineage, though he sel¬
dom mentions it. Ho is now about
forty years old, and .says he remembers
well how the twins went about from
one plantation to the other. He has a
family of several children, aud the
home suggests a quiet refinement not
often surpassed by the country place.
Tlie Blue*.
This is a synonym for that gloomy, harmssed
condition of ttic mind which ha* Its origin in
flff’SSS 0M 6 torments the
"megrims” and ‘‘mulligrubs'’ ceaselessly, vanish when
dyspeptic almost Bitters,
attacked with Hostetler’s Stomach
that, stipation, moreover, chills and annihilates fever, kidney biliousness, complaints con¬
and nervousness.
The man robs others who does not make tho
boat of himself.
A l’roae Boom,
EE-M. Medicated Smoking Tobacco
And Cigarettes
Arc absolute remedies for Catarrh,
Hay Fever, Asthma and Colds;
Besides a delightful smoke.
Ladies as welt as men, use these goods.
No opium or other harmful drug
Used in tbelr manufacture.
EE-M. is used aud recommended
By some of the best citizens
Of this country.
1 f your dealer does not keep EE-M.
Send iUe, for package of tobacco
And lk'. for package of cigarettes,
Direct to the EE-M. Company,
Atlanta, Ga.,
And you will receive goods by mail.
How’* TMit
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
an v ease of Catarrh that cannot bo cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Cheney Toledo, O. „
F. J. & Co., Che¬
Wo, the undersigned, have known F. J.
ney for tho last ii> years, and believe him pel
fectly honorable In all business transactions
ami tion financially made by their able firm. to carry out any obliga¬
West Ohio. ft Tun as. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Warding, Kix.nan & Marvin, Wholesale
Hall's Druggists, Catarrh Toledo, Cureistaken Ohio, internally, act¬
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur¬
faces of the system- Testimonials Druggists. sent free.
Price, 75c. Family per bottle. Bold by best, all
Hall’s Pills are the
Piso’s Cureffor bill. Consumption has saved me
many a doctor’s - S. F. Hardy, Hopkins
Place, Baltimore, Md., Dec. 2, ’91.
Kite permanently cured. No fits or ne rvous
ness after first day's 82 trial use bottle of Dr. and Kline’s treatise Great
Nerve Restorer. free.
Dr. K. B. Kune, Ltd., 981 Arch St„ Phils., Pa.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup forehtldren
teething, allays softens pain, the gums, wind reduces colie. 35e. inflamma¬ bottle.
tion, cures a
More and Greater
Are the cures produced by Hood's Sarsa¬
parilla than by any other medicine. It
you are suffering with scrofula, salt rheum,
hip disease, running sores, boils, pimples,
dyspepsia, .loss of appetite or that tired
feeling, take Hood's Sarsaparilla. You
may confidently expect a prompt aud
pormanent euro. Its uuequaied record is
duo to its positive merit. Remember
HoqcTs Sarsaparilla
1*theiies-tfact lhaQtu&True Kl*»otl Purifier.
ae O i*. 9 a. do not cause pain or
grtpe. All druggists. 35c.
:
BRUNKIl*
M inform*Uou tin plain wrapper) mailed free
FIELDS OF ADVENTURE.
rHB Ki Rff .r s d e st°
Alone on Shlphoavd With a Maniac Rent
on Murder—-Quick Wit and Solf-Po**#*
•lon Save the Intended Victim** Fife—
A Farmer Ha* a Terrible Experience*
It was on the fifth day of our voy¬
age, writes a ship’s doctor in the Lon¬
don News, and we wsre amusing our¬
selves on deck when a message was
brought to me to say that Mr. A—
would like to see me in his cabin.
I had no difficulty in finding his
room, and was met at the door by Mr,
A— himself. He shook hands very cor¬
dially, and invited me to enter and
take a chair. No sooner had I done
so than he carefully locked the door.
Thinking this rather strange, I in¬
quired as to his illness. He did not
yeply for some time, and then said;
“lam not ill. I sent for you,” lay¬
ing his hand on a large knife, “to cut
your throat. ”
He was a man I had not before par¬
ticularly noticed, but now, as I looked
up, I fully made up my mind that he
was a mauiao.
I am not a coward, yet even now the
thought of that moment makes me
shudder. There I was, in a remote
part of the ship, alone with a madman
of twice my strength, without a chance
of escape, or means to give an alarm,
and being unarmed, quite at his
mercy. heard of other somewhat
I had simi¬
lar cases, and, though a tyro iu the
profession, had had some experience
among the insane, 1 knew, therefore,
that resistance would be of the least
service to me, and that apparent this ac¬
quiescence would be best. All
quickly flashed through my mind, and
accordingly, could, feigning I said-. the utmost in¬
difference I
“Ah, yes, Mr. A—, 'to be sure, It
won’t take long, will it?”
“Oh, no,” said he, calmly, survey¬ hand.
ing the knife he now held in his
“Oh, no; the job is quite a light one,”
Here he poured out a glass of wine
and begged me to drink it. As I did
so an idea struck me, and I said:
“By-the-by, Mr. A—, your knife
doesn’t look very sharp; the trachea
is tough, you know, and will want
some cutting.” if read
He looked hard at me, as to
my thoughts, but after a time, con¬
vinced that my suggestion was a good
one, and examining his knife more
closely, he said:
“Yes, doctor, I think you are right.
A little grinding will do no harm, so,
if you don’t mind waiting, I will just
ruu to the carpenter’s shop.”
This was exactly what I wanted, as
feeling sure he would not lock the
door after him, I thought my escape
would be easy. 'What was my dismay,
then, on his departure, at finding that
it was locked as securely as before!
I passed up and down in despair,
tore at the door, flung open the port¬
hole window, and shouted with all my
might, but all without avail.
Time went on, minute by minute,
and he could not be long now, I 11
the frenzy of despair I groped about,
from corner to corner, in search of
some weapon of defense; but no, not
oven the merest stick, not the smallest
thing upon which to lay hands. And
then I heard the footsteps approach¬
ing in the distance. quicken, brow
I felt my pulse my
brow hot. Impulsively I flung
off my coat, got to the farthest end of
the room, aud, standing as defensively
as possible, resolved to fight to the
last.
I remember then the door bursting
open, and the cry of A—, not alone,
as I thought, biit securely pinioned,
aud attended by two of the ship’s
crew, iu charge of the second officer.
The relief of the moment was so
great that it completely prostrated me,
and my nervous system was much
shaken for some time, while the inten¬
sity and reality of my situation often
now makes me feel something akin to
what the condemned, about to be
hanged, must experience.
I learned afterward that the peculiar
and excited manner of the maniac, the
large knife in his possession, and his
anxiety to sharpen it, drew suspicion
on him, which, with the fact that I
had been called to see him, induced
the officer to secure him and come to
his cabin.
For the remainder of the voyage he
was kept securely confined, and
watched day and night, and on arriv¬
ing at New York was handed over to
the proper authorities, who, on inves¬
tigating the case, found that the man
had escaped from a private lunatio
asylum near Liverpool, aud had by
strategy aud cunning eluded the vigi¬
lance of his keepers and taken pas¬
sage in our vessel. He was, I believe,
transferred to England again, though,
happily, not under my care.
f A Fguraunr H»s a Terrible Experience,
A Jasper (Fla.) dispatch follow¬ to the
Cincinnati Enquirer relates the
ing: Bud Harvey, a farmer, living
about ten miles out in Big Turkey
Hammock section, started for town
Monday, in the midst of a driving
rain. Soon the wind increased to a
terrific storm, the rain coming down
in sheets and the wind almost throw¬
ing the buggy over. Coming to a de¬
serted house, he stopped, as if to go
in. Suddenly a terrific roar was heard
behind him. Looking back, ho saw
A dense, black cloud hovering over
the ground, reaching to the tops of
the trees. He could see big, tall pines
falling iu every direction and splin¬
tering across each other, while the
noise was appalling.
It was rushing rapidly in his direc¬
tion, aud, seeing his peril, he thorough¬ whipped
up his horse. The latter, a
bred, took the bit in his teeth and
slatted on a dead 'run up the road.
Nearer aud nearer came the hurri¬
cane, and he could hear the noise^ of
falling trees a few rods back of him,
the frantic efforts of hi* hor»e bareW
keeping him in front of the terriflo
whirlwind.
Suddenly he felt an upward twist of
his buggy, and, to his horror, real¬
ized that he was riding in midair, as
it were, the rear end of bi* buggy
being lifted up over a foot from the
ground. Frantically he plied the
whip, and for a few seoonas the race
with grim death was a terriflo
one. The horse, wild with terror,
sped onward with his utmost speed,
the buggy careening from side to side,
running only on the two front wheels,
and it was all that he could do to keep
from being dashed over the side. Sud¬
denly he felt the buggy settle down
into the road again, and he knew he
was safe. The horse ran half a mile
before be could bo pulled up. Look¬
ing back, Harvey saw that the road¬
way he had just passed over was so
thickly strewn with fallen trees that
he could have walked a mile on the
trunks without touching the ground.
The whirlwind had ceased as sud¬
denly as it came. For a distance of
four miles and a quarter in width the
destruction was complete, the terrific
storm making a neatly cut path
through the thick forest, leveling the
trees close to the ground, presenting
a scene of the utmost destruction.
A Lueky Escape.
In our camp on the Guanuco river,
on the coast of Venezuela, says a re¬
turned traveler, a little Irishman
named McCarty had a thrilling experi
ence. He was a reckless fellow, and,
rising one morning before the rest of
us were awake, he thought he would
take a swim. Running to the edge of
the high bank, he dived without first
looking about him, far out into the
water. As he came to the surface in
the middle of the narrow river, and
shook the water from his eyes, the first
eight that met his gaze was two jaguars
on the opposite bank, looking at him
and snuffing inquisitively. He turned, alto¬
only to see on either side—and
gether too near—an alligator regard¬
ing him with marked attention; while
under the bank from which he had
leaped, lying with its tail in the water,
was coiled a big boa, that he must
have passed directly over in diving.
The situation was too much for Mc¬
Carty, and he yelled for help. At his
outcry all of us in camp jumped to and our
feet, grabbed shotguns and rifles,
ran to the bank. There we saw Mc¬
Carty “treading water” out in the river
withjall his unwelcome companyabout
gazing at him with growing interest.
They clearly had been token aback by
the suddenness with which he had ap¬
peared among them, but as their sur¬
prise wore off they seemed disposed
toward closer acquaintance. and the
We shot one of the jaguars
boa; the other jaguar ran away. Then
we peppered the alligators with bul¬
lets and shot so hotly as to keep them
away from McCarty while ho swam to
the shore. It was a fine sight to see
him clawing his way up the steep bank,
slipping back in the wet clay almost
as fast as he climbed, until he got near
enough for ns to give him a hand. He
had a lucky escape and a practical
illustration of the wisdom of the say¬
ing, “Look before you leap.”
Tlirlllliiff Adventure of » Boy,
Au Iowa boy recently passed through
an experience which he will not forget
if lie lives to lm 100 years old. He is
only five years old, and one day when
his father wont to the wheat field to
drive the harvester lie took him aloug
aud perched him on the high seat at
his side. For a time the little fellow
watched the yellow wheat lop over as
it was out in a wide swath, and the tall
arms sweep it back and bind it, and
finally the fat bundles being tossed
aside one by one. For a time all this
was very interesting, but presently the
little fellow grew tired and began to
squirm and complain. And then, just
as his father was leaning over to look
more closely at some of the machinery,
off tumbled the little fellow on the
conveyor. He shrieked just onee, aud
his father tried vainly to stop the
horses. But before he could even
slack the speed the boy had been driv¬
er^ up through the elevator canvas
with half a bundle of wheat, the bind¬
ing twine had twisted swiftly around
his neck and legs, and he was rolled
out on the wide carrier, securely bound
in a wheat bundle. He was almost
choked aud there was a tiny bit of skin
torn from his shoulder, but otherwise
he was unhurt when his father cut
the string and helped him up again.
But a worse frightened boy would have
been hard to find.
Copperheads in lit* Cellar,
Albert Knapp, a farmer living at
Fishkill Tillage, N, Y., had a desper¬
ate fight on a recent night with five
copperhead snakes. Knapp went into
his cellar with a light to draw a pail
of eider for a party of friends, and saw
a large snake coiled on a board.
Knapp secured a long-handled hoe
and prepared to kill the snake, when
he was horrified to see four others
come from under a large iee box in the
corner.
Kuapp managed to kill all five oi
the snakes, but was nearly exhausted
when he came from the cellar and told
of his terrible struggle with the ven
onions reptiles. Farmers in the neigh
borhood cannot remember when poison
ous snakes have been so numerous as
this year. The wet weather is sup
posed” to have something More than to 400 do with :
their appearance. cop
perheada aud rattlesnakes have been ;
killed there this season.
Favgeet House In the World. '
The largest house in the world is in
Wieden, a suburb of Vienna. Iu this
domicile there are 1400 rooms, divided
into 400 suites of from three to six
rooms each, and they at present shelter
2112 persons, who pay an annual ;
rental of 'over 100,000 florins.
There are now four times as many
wire nails made as cut nails.
AGRICULTURAL TOPICS.
Lo ««• Wajfon Tire*.
After bo much wet weather it might
be supposed that wagon tires woffid
give no trouble on even the oldest and
most dilapidated wheels. muddy. This is true
bo long as the roads are B«t
nowhere in August will the roads re¬
main wet very long. The previous
thorough wetting which the wheels
have had during the recent wet
weather has nwollen the woodwork,
which shrinks all the worse for this
when exposed to sua and winds. It
pays to paint the woodwork of wheels
onee a year, doing it when the wood
is thoroughly dry. If the wheel has
an application of linseed oil when dry,
much of it will soak in the wood, and
the painting will last longer without
renewing.
When to Handle Bees.
To handle bees with the most satis¬
faction, select the warm, bright days,
when the bees are flying most. The
fact is, the warmer the day, the less
danger of stings.
Avoid as much as possible working
with them on cool, cloudy days, as
they will be always found more
irritable on such days. Also avoid
handling them early in the morning
and late in the evening, for the same
reason.
Bees abhor being molested at night,
and no work can he performed with
them at that time with any satisfaction.
They are always the most peaceable
when they are gathering honey, and
may he handled as safely as a brood of
chickens.
Sorghum For the Silo.
While no kind of grain as feed can
supersede corn in cheapness and value,
sorghum is a formidable rival to it for
fodder, especially when put up in the
silo. It stands drough better, which
js likely to make it popular in the arid
portions of the West, where corn often
fails. The sorghum has too tough a
stalk to feed green, but when eat and
put in the silo there is enough fermen¬
tation to soften the stalks so that they
ean be eaten. The sweetness of the
sorghum furnishes carbonaceous nutri¬
ment just as does the starch of corn
grain, and in even more palatable form.
Wherever cane sugar is made in the
South the workmen who attend the
grinding always grow fat from the
sugar they eat.
Muck Overestimated.
Many people still think that black,
mucky soil must necessarily be very
rioh. But the fact that it remains with¬
out fermentation shows either that it
has little nitrogenous value, or that it
is so saturated with water that it has
become sour. Yet we have known
many city people buy black muck from
swamps to pot flowers in, aud pay
tweiity-ftve to fifty cents per bushel
baskets for it, when dry earth from
the side of the road, with much less
vegetable matter, would be much bet
ter. Most muck, especially from
swamps, lacks mineral fertility. It is
easy to handle and to work in, and
this is what makes it popular. But it
neods both ammonia and potash to
give the best results.
Poor Milkers.’
Success in dairying must depend
not only cm having cows able to give a
liberal mess and keep at it, but, also
on the kind of milkers employed. A
careless, lazy milker will easily lose
more than his wages daring the time
he is employed, Not only this, but he
will quickly convert a really good cow
into a poor one. The milk which the
careless milker leaves iu the udder is
always that which has the largest
amount of butter fats. If it is not
drawn the fat is re-absorbed into the
cow and helps to dry her off’. The
difficulty in getting help that can be
depended on is the great drawback in
running a large dairy farm. It is also
no light job to milk ten, twelve or
cows twice every day. It w II
any man’s hands tired until he
used to it.
Drying Wet Grain.
AU who are used to lmudliug either
or tile, know that when thor¬
dry they will absorb a great
amount of water without being satu¬
Advantage is taken of this fact
by grain dealers aud farmers, who
place dry bricks which are easiest to
haudle and least likely to break among
damp grain to prevent it from beating.
It is surprising what au effect this will
have if a very few bricks are inter¬
spersed through the heap, Each brick
will absorb fully half a pint of water
if it is dry to begin with. This will
dry out the surplus moisture out of a
good many bushels of damp grain.
This might be used in mowing away
damp hay or grain in the bundle,
though in neither of these positions is
there so much likelihood of injury as
there is where threshed damp grain is
closely confined in bins.
Waste of Svreet Corn Stalks.
This is the time of year when the
Oweet corn ears are gathered. Us
ually on eaob stalk there are two or
more ears, one fully ready for use as
green corn, the other small aud im
mature. To save this last the stalk
i* left uncut. But in most eases the
Second and always the third ear is too
small to he profitably marketed,
Whenever there is only one ear on a
stalk it should at once be cut and fed
to the cow or horse. It is worth more
then than it ever will be again. TV e
are not sure that this is not true, even
when there are one or more nubbins
left on the Stftlk, if ffsd to milch COWS.
Ordinary fodder corn is very poor feed.
It needs to be supplemented, as this
sweet corn fodder does, with a greater
amount of nutrition, which is worth as
much in increased milk yield as it is
in a f® w nubbins of corn. Sweet corn
fodder is more wasted than any other.
It is wasted in trying to save nubbins
corn u’orth more for feeding than
^* e T are * or anything else.
9
m
<A - h
is the name to remember when
buying Sarsaparilla. It has been
curing people right along for
more than 50 years. That’s why.
Be Cood to Yourself.
The Medical and Surgical Reporter
gives the following practical advice:
“Think deliberately of the house you
live in—your body. Maks up your mind
firmly not to abuse it. Eat nothing
that wlil hurt It. Wear nothing that
distorts or pains It. Do not overload
it with victuals or drink or work. Give
yourself regular and abundant sleep.
Keep your body warmly clad. Do not
take cold; guard yourself against It.
If you feel the first symptoms, give
yourself heroic treatment. Get Into a
fine glow of heat by exercise. This is
the only body you will have in this
world. Study deeply , and ..... ,,
the structure of it, the laws that gov
eru lt> the pains and penalty that wilt
surely follow a violation of every law
of life and health.”
Immigration Figures.
The highest immigration record, ex¬
cluding the arrivals of aliens not so
classed, is that of 1882, when the pro¬
digious number of 188,992 came, fol¬
lowing the previous year’s 069,431, till
then unprecedeuted. In 1883 there was
a heavy falling off to 603,322, and the
decrease went on until 334,203 was
reached in 1886. Then the tide again
tinned, and with some variations an¬
other climax was reached in 1892,
when the figures were 623,084,the third
highest mark, and not far behind that
of 1881. But then began another ebb,
with 502,917 in 1893, followed by 314,-
407, then 279,048, then by 343,267, and
now this year by an astonishing reduc¬
tion to 230,832, as shown by a special
bulletin of the Treasury Department
The Toad’s Larder.
S. V. Hall, of Dunkirk, Ga., discov
ered a fact in natural history the other
day. He has a number of beehives
around which toads were in the habit
of gathering of an evening. Prompted
by curiosity, Mr. Hall lingered the
other evening as the bees came in
laden with honey to see what the clam¬
my jumpers were waiting for. As the
bees came in the toads shot out their
long thin tongues and captured every
bee. Mr. Hall dissected one of the
frogs and found its stomach full of
bees, some whole, others in various
stages of digestion. The toads as gour¬
mands certainly manifested an inter¬
esting intelligence in forsaking the
garden with its chance bugs for this
certain provision of choice tid-filts.
A Beautiful Blotchy Face.
Right off you say, "Impossible!’’ And other so it
Is. Tetter. Eczema, Ringworm or any
scaly, ugly skin disease makes the
face hideous. "Tetterine will cure them. It's
the only cure—certain, safe, sure. 50cents at
druggists, or bv mall for price in stamps. J.
T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ua.
The Prohibition ticket in Nebraska this fall
will bear a white rose.
THE TUKN OF LITE
la the most important period in a wo
man's existence. Owing to modarn
methods of living, not one woman in a
thousand approaches this perfectly
natural change without experiencing
a train df very annoying and some¬
times painful symptoms.
Those dreadful hot flashes, sending
the blood surging to the heart until it
seems ready to burst, and the faint
feeling that follows, sometimes with
chills, as if the _ "
heart were go¬ ft.
ing to stop for
good, are symp¬ j
toms of a dan
gerous nervous
trouble. Those
hot flashes are
just so
many calls
from na- £%&
ture for res
help. The
nerves are crying out for assistance.
The cry should be heeded in time. Lydia
E. Pinkhtsm’s Vegetable Compound
\% w^anStem'ltThto oman s sysvem at xnib xrymg SinTpticd 1 1
of her life.
The Vegetable Compound is an in
vigorating strengthens of the female
organism. It builds up the weakened
nervous system and enables a woman
to pass that grand change trium
phantly.
It does not seem necessary for ns to
prove the honesty of our statements,
but it is a pleasure to publish such
grateful words as the following: 1
** I have been nsing Lydia E- Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound for some
time during the change of life and it '
has been a saviour of life unto me. 1
can cheerfully recommend your medi
all and I know it will !
cine to women,
give permanent relief. I would be
glad to relate my experience to any •
sufferer."’— Mbs. Della Watson, 524
West 5th St., Cincinnati, Ohio.
GEORGIA LADIES
TELL THE TRUTH .
Bullards, Ga., writes: Eight
years ago X had Slow Fever
3 months. Five Doctors at¬
tended me, but I continued
to grow worse until 1 00 m
KE& sk-OB ” riienced taking Dr. H. A.
fa Simmons Fiver Medicine
\ ' three times a day, and X was
well before one Package
, was taken. Have taken a
few doses “Black Draught,”
but did not think it cleansed
„ ray Fiver as well ns Dr. M.
XA.S.F. 31.
Female Complaints.
There are two critical and even danger (ms
periods is in female life, when tho greatest
core necessary,
Ssf'de^e.^eyTo^ibmm^e or neglect this mysterious development ia
malady hysteria, frequently proving most serionn,
such as Sts or even concutaption ;
While at the second period, called “change
of life/* there is often much distress and
danger. At both these, periods of life Dr,
Simmons aVlo, Squaw Vino Wine ia icvalu
and it iarecomaacndcd that a dose of ft
be tween tjike n twice during a week menstrua! for some time, periods, be¬
and the
and for strengthening the system Sim- .wo
strongly urge the use of Dr. M. A.
hseas Fiver Medicine, a dose at bed tune.
jjg!§S|w (kflp&Uefo Seville, Ga., says: 1 bats
f used Dr. H. A. Simmons
» Fiver Medicine ia my
W&mA \ f} cess family in many for SO cases years with of Indl- euc
■
BL.s jg Pfe J® X gestion and Sour Stom
SKtSf aeh. I think it superior to
t if® “Thedf ord’s Black Draught**
Bftanjhand and I “ZeiMa’s shall recommend Regulator,” Dr.
ScJSSjU. /iiiasiSUve. A.S. L. SI, as long as i
caused Hysteria acquired feebleness
la constitution,mentalsu by natural or ileiingand,chiefly,
of such
derangements of the sexual system, ns
menstrual irregularities, delayed develop¬
ment of the generative organs, or too strong
sexual propensities. During a fit, the
patient’s clothes should be loosened; of fresh she
should havo an abundance air.
The sudden, copious sud head continuous and f appli¬ will
cation of cold water to the aeo
cut tho fit short. Between the paroxisms.
Dr. 31. A. Sirasuons Liver Modicineshoula
be taken to correct torpidity of the bowels,
and a conrse of treatment with Dr. Sim¬
mons Squaw Vine Wino which ia specialty
adapted to remove the uterine disorders.
CHRONIC DISEASES
ot all forms
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED.
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Indigestion, Bronchitis, Palpita¬
tion, etc.
CAIARHH
of the Nose. Throat and Dungs.
DISEASES PECULIAR TO WOMEN.
Prolapsus, Ulcerations, l.oueorrhea. etc. Write
for pamphlet, testimonials and question blank.
DR. S. T, WHITAKER, Specialist,
305 Norcross Building, Atlanta, Ga.
MONEY ■* * 15 NOT GIVEN APPRECIATED. AWAY
,!, T .....
When you can earn It easy aud rapidly , „ It , is a
good thing. For HOW TO HO IT, address
THE H. G. FIN'OERMAN CO., 404 Gould
Building, Atlanta, Ga.
—--
Ff SEND 10 CENTS FOR ONE OF
II i GARDNER’S
Lamp Chimney Projectors.
[ Jj Guaranteed to prevent chimneys
. from being broken Address by tho tt&mes.
h#; GARDNER Agents wanted. LAMP CHIMNEY
PROTECTOR CO., Atlanta, Ga.
1 - -AND-
'
WS-S £ Hr Tanks, Iron work; Stacks, Shafting, Stand-Pipes Pulleys, BOILERS. and Gearing, Sheet
Boxes, Hangers, etc.
MP*Cast every day ; work 180 hands.
LOMBARD 1R0X WORKS
AND SUPPLY COMPANY,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
$25FULLCOURSE$25
The complete Business Course or the complete
Shorthand Course for $25. at
WHITE'S 15 K. Cain BUSINESS St.. ATLANTA, COLLEGE, GA.
Complete Business and Shorthand Courses Com¬
bined. $7.50 Per Month.
Business practice from the start. Trained
Teachers. Conrse of study unexcelled, No va
cation. Address F, K. WHITE, Principal,
SSadmedd^e/Zeat
Aiicusm. <>a* Actual business. No text &
book'*. Short time. Cheap board. Send tor cna!oirj«.
KL0NDYKE IS ALL RIGHT.
8ul why p» r fi : . 3 a sfcar , t or vto— , nothing but * uik- to
sack it, and t.aco miies frost home? .( v.il! seli you dividend
_ _ ’------«--- Business
R Jr \ College, Louisville, Ky.
** ^ SU PERtOR ADVANTAGES.
“ ‘ ■ Book kkrpixg. Shorthand asd
Telegraphy. Beautiful Catalogue Free.
in H m r O.YETHOUSA.VDOAFY,Membership*
lc F in the ALrehants Exchange Association
** and otu&t of Holi-lay Coots- tireate.t sell¬
ing plan known. J. E. Holism A Uo., Chicago.
R WPtlltllall A H f* H t^i.f^uToo: Building, Ohio.
PUts
y j ur — 33 Dr D in writing to adver
i U 10 1 Lit risers. Akc87-4-0
5 2mm
CUStS AL” Fills" L*Ja
Best Cough WHtflt ELSE
in time, Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
gold by druggists.
S3
SLD