Newspaper Page Text
STORIES OP BAM NOTES
THOUSANDS OF THEM ABE LOST
IN FIRES AND SHIPWRECKS
The Farmer Killed tfte Pig i hat
Swallowed the Pnrse—Money Hid
Over False Teeth.
£ UBIOTJS, strange dent* notes. connected and indeed, interesting with are bank inci¬ the
Convenient as the bank note is,
through its capability of being stowed
away in a small space, and being of
inflnitessimal weight, those very
qualities sometimes have an unfor¬
tunate tendency to insure its disap¬
pearance, say* the Boston Globe.
Dogs, cats, rats, mice and birds
have over and over again found the
crisp bits of paper handy, and applied
them to uses not contemplated by the
issuers, and to the considerable be¬
wilderment and despair of the unfor¬
tunate owners.
Bank notes are known to Rave found
s resting place in every quarter of the
globe—a resting place from which
they will only be removed when some
venturesome explorer finds among
them the dust and bones of an unfor¬
tunate predecessor. Prom the highest
mountains to the deepest vales and
jangles the earth is strewn, here and
there, with these valuable bits • of
paper.
Floods, fires and disasters of all
kinds prove mediums for separating a
bank note from its owner. Home are
recovered, but were it possible to
form a correct estimate of those out¬
standing and unredeemed that belong
to an issue long called in, the amount
would be found to be way up in the
millions.
It is stated that the Government,
after redeeming all that were offerpd
of the postal notes or fractional cur¬
rency issued during the war, credited
to the profit and loss account the
enormous sum of $16,000,000. Whore,
then, are the notes that this amount
Represent?
Thousands of them are known to bo
in the hands of individuals and col¬
lectors, who retain them as relics;
but the majority of them must be
scattered or destroyed. It is pro¬
portionately the same with bank notes
of larger denomination, no series over
issued having been redoemod in full.
There is rarely a fire of any size,
especially in a large city, that does
not burn up more or loss bank notes,
and when such conflagrations as the
burning of Chicago, Boston and Port¬
land occur, thousands of dollars in
paper currency are swept out of ex¬
istence.
Shipwrecks are also another calamity
that retire from circulation a large
amount of paper curreuey. Hardly a
vessel goes to the bottom without car¬
rying with it a sum of money, and
while oceans, seaB, lakes and rivers
are thus enriched, Governments find
themselves just so much in pocket,
not being obliged to redeem that
which cannot be presented for that
purpose. But, as stated boforo, bank
notes are often found in queer and
unheard-of places, and what some of
these notes will survive is interesting
In the extreme. The impression ex¬
ists that banks never lose any money
—that is, mislay it—but there are
many instances of carelessness on the
part of the officials that has caused no
end of difficulty and trouble.
In 187C a package of 810,000 was
found in the vault of the Second
National Bank of Boston that had been
missing since August, 1874. At that
time H. W. Edmunds was paying
teller of that institution, but the
above sum was one day missing
from his cash, and although the direc¬
tors believed him to be an honest man,
the fact remained that a deficiency ex¬
isted aud he was quietly discharged.
After leaving the bank^Mr. Edmunds
went into the book business, but, the
shadow of suspicion still rested on
him. Thirteen months came aud went
before his name was vindicated, and
then only by a most unexpected dis¬
covery. His successor, Henry 0. Ful¬
ler, while engaged at the vault one
morning found the identical bills that
had been missing for nearly two years
in the safo near the jam of the door,
and in such a position that every time
the door was opened they were pushed
further out of sight. An examination
proved them to be the same bills that
had been missing for nearly two years,
the absence of which had caused so
much trouble and sorrow to the man
who was responsible for the loss, and
the news of the discovery spreading
like wildfire, congratulations poured
in upon him from every quarter.
Some years ago a man brought $60
in mutilated bills to the Massachusetts
National Bank of Boston, asking that
they be sent on to Washington for re¬
demption. The story connected with'
them is amusing. It appears that the
man’s wife had been making a visit to
some friends in the country, and there
had the misfortune to drop her purse,
containing these bills, in the hog-pen
while watching these animals at their
morning meal. No sooner did one of
the old “grunters” spy the purse than
he took it for granted that it » ns
something dainty, and promptly pro¬
ceeded to gobble it down without the
slightest ceremony. The woman was
horrified, and upon appealing to the
farmer it was decided to kill the
monster „ and recover the , if , j
possible. It certain that money !
was the hog
was not worth $t)0, and if it was killed i
at once the meat could be sold; so lie I
was promptly dispatched, and in liis
stomach the purse was found, sadly
#hewed up. W ithin the purse the
money lay, though badly mutilated,
and the purse and all were brought to
Boston aud sent on to Washington by
the bank, who received iu the course
of a few days an amount equal to that
destroyed.
Uur English cousins tell some queer
tales regarding their bank notes, that
for uniqueness prove interesting.
An extraordinary instance of the
wanton destruction of bank notes
came to notice not long ago, when a
man lost his mind by overstudy. On
the morning that his reason forsook
him he made a special journey to town
train where he went directly to
the bank where his fund* were depos
ited, and drew out his balance,
amounting to a matter of £600, in £5
notes. Arriving at home he began to
cut the notes m strips, to be used, as
he stated, for lamp-lighters; but for
tuuately his sister disco vered of what
the lighters were being made before
he had them all cut up.
A medical student relates this inci
dent:
‘‘One day, when I wag dissecting
away at a ‘neck and head,’ when,
having removed the skin and super¬
ficial cartilages, I came down upon
the larynx. It was distended by
some foreign substance, and I care¬
fully cut away the cartilages and ex¬
posed the interior. There lay, tightly
impacted, a ball of paper. I
removed and unfolded it and discov¬
ered it to be, bloodstained and
crumpled, a £5 note. The professor of
anatomy, to whom 1 entrusted my
find, made some inquiries as to the an¬
tecedents of the ‘subject,’ and it was
found to be the body of a notorious
garroter, who had robbed an old man,
was pursued by the police and had
escaped; but fearing, detection, he
had swallowed the note, and had died
from its sticking in his larynx and
him. ”
Monroe, the noted English sculp¬
tor, once gave his sister a £5 note to
pay a bill. She put the note in her
pocket, and for a time forgot all about
it, oven sending her white dross to be
laundered without recalling the oc¬
currence. When the dress came from
the laundress she looked in the pocket
in a hopeless sort of way, when sho
found something hard, and, on damp¬
ening it saw that it was the lost note.
It was cashed at the hank on it being
explained that it had been washed,
boiled, starched and ironed.
WISE WORDS.
Horace. Fidelity is the sister of justice.—
There is a woman at the beginning
of all great things.—Lamartine.
The way of the world is to make laws,
but follow customs.—Montaigue.
One with more soul in his face than
words on his tongue.—Wordsworth.
To rule ones anger is well; to pre¬
vent it is still better.—Tryon Edwards.
Qur own heart, and not other rnen’f
opinion of us, forms our true honor,
Sohiller,
The silence often of pure innocenca
persuades when speaking fails.—
Shakespeare.
Names alone mock destruction,
they survive the doom of all creation
—Trevaniou.
Poets utter great and wise thing!
which they do not themselves under¬
stand. —Plato.
Our self-lofe is ever ready to revolt
from our better judgment aud join tha
enemy within.—Steele.
At court one becomes a sort of hu¬
man ant-eater, and learns to catch one’s
prey by one’s tongue,—Bulwer.
What rein can hold licentious wick¬
edness, when down the hill ho holds
his fierce career?—Shakespeare.
The happiest life is that which con¬
stantly exercises and educates that
which is best in us.—Hamilton.
There is only one real failure in life
possible, and that is not to be true to
the best one knows.—Canon Farrar.
Time, with all its celerity, moves
slowly on to him whose sole employ¬
ment is to watch its flight.—Johnson.
The wise prove and the foolish con
fess by their conduct that a life of em
ploymeut is the only life worth living.
—Paley.
No one is safe from slander. The
best way is to pay no attention to it,
but live in innocence and let the world
talk. —Moliere.
Nature’s. Freaks of Fancy.
Nature’s freaks of fancy afforfi s
strange study. People are constantly
sending to the National Museum sup¬
posed fossil animals and other oddi¬
ties, which are in reality mere acci¬
dental forms carved by water. A
pebble in a stream gathers about itself
grains of sand until an odd shaped
lump is made. A favorite shape for
such lumps is that of a turtle with
four legs, a head and tail, even the
lines of the shell being sometimes dis¬
tinct. Similar concretions of carbon¬
ate of iron and clay assume the ap¬
pearance of petrified peanuts. Break
one aud you will always find inside a
small spiral winkle shell, which has
served as the nucleus. A queer coun
terfeit of this kind, forwarded to
Washington not long ago, was an al¬
leged fossil foot of a child with a little
stocking on, the latter showing signs
of wear on the ball of the foot and OH
the heel. It was only a concretion, as
was likewise what appeared to be a
petrified oyster on the half shell.—
New York Press.
Scientists Puzzled.
The Government scientists are dread
fully puzzled sometimes by odd things
sent to them for identification. For a
long time they could make nothing out
of a box full of small hard balls ol
fibrous material, stated to have been
picked up on a Western prairie, which
were forwarded to the National
Museum. It was finally discovered
that they were buffalo cuds, When
the animals were killed aud cut up on
the plains the cuds were left behind—
hard wads of dried grass made com
pact with digestive gluten and calcu
i a t ed to vem ain intact for an indefinite
period.—New York Press.
HOUSEHOLD MATTERS.
SERVING TOAST.
t)rv toast should be served directly
from the toaster When this is not
practical, pile it on a heated bread
plate, cover it with a napkin and out
it on the hearth or in the oven Toast
is given in all slight attacks of sick
ness, because it is so easily digested.
The more thorough the conversion of
the starch the more easily and per
fectly the system will manage it for
the change of starch into dextrine by
the action of heat is simply doing out
side of the body what takes place in
it, j u the ordinary course of digestion
by the action of the digestive fluids'
Therefore, when this is accomplished.
by artificial means nature is spared so
nuch energy,—-New York Recorder.
TO SERVE PINEAPPLES.
Pineapples, once a tropical luxury,
are Floridaand grown extensively in the south of
the adjacent islands. Large
pineapple plantations are found in El¬
liott’s Key, at Key Largo and Meta
oomba.
In 1892 the acreage in pines in the
three named keys was 930, and the
number of pineapples shipped from
the keys during the season was quite
close to 2.099,000. Plantations are
slowly extending northward on the
peninsula, and in 1892 had reached
Charlotte’s Harbor on the west coast,
and Indian River, Lake Worth and the
Jupiter region on the east.
It is not generally known that pine¬
apple plants may be grown and {it is
claimed) fruited in any window gar¬
den, or conservatory. The crown of
leaves at the top of the fruit, and the
small tufts—suckers—-sometimes found
at the base, will root readily if placed
in damp, rich, sandy soil, and put
forth long, light green, stiff and sharp
edged leaves—a great curiosity, if
nothing more.
Pineapples ought to be prepared for
the tablo in many more ways than the
usual slicing in sugar. If to be eaten
uncooked they should be peeled and
sliced with a thin, sharp knife or slaw
cutter two or three hours before they
are to be served, and placed on ice.
A variation in raw serving is to peel
and slice seven or eight oranges, grate
a coeoanut and peel and slice a pine¬
apple in thinnest possible slices. Put
the sliced fruit and grated coeoanut
in alternate layers in a glass dish,
with sugar between and stand in the
refrigerator until ready.
Pineapple Cream—Beat half a pint
of sweet cream until it is stiff’. Peel
and chop a pineapple, add the juice
of a lemon, and two-thirds of a cup of
powered sugar; dissolve au ounce of
isinglass in a little hot water and mix
all lightly together, and pour into a
mold. When wauted turn it carefully
on the dish in which it is to be served.
Pineapple Desert Jelly—Make a
jelly with gelatine by the directions
that come with the packagos, using a
somewhat larger amount, so that the
jelly will be quite stiff. When cool
enough to begin to thicken, so that
the fruit will stay where it is put,
placo a layer of thinly slieod pineap¬
ple that has been lying well sprinkled
with sugar for two hours, iu a glass
dish, cover it with the jelly aud as
soon as it sets add more fruit and
more jelly until the dish is full. Set
it upon ice and servo with whipped
Cream.
Pulped Jelly—Use half a box of gel¬
atine soaked in a coffee cup of cold
water for half au hour. Add one pint
of boiling water, two scant cups ol
white sugar, and one quart of canned
pineapple reduced to a pulp. Let it
come to a boil. Pour it into a mold
and let it cool. Place it on ice, and
when wanted for use dip the mold
quickly into hot water and turn the
jelly out.
Pineapple Pudding—Stir together
over a fire until it boils the well
beaten yolks of six eggs, a cup of
white sugar and a cup of sweet cream,
with a half pound of grated pineap¬
ple. Let it just boil. Cool aud set
it upon the ice. Serve cold, with
whipped cream.
Pineapple Bread-Crumb Pudding—
One can of pineapple, two cups of
sugar, one-half cup of butter, two
thirds cup of bread crumbs, yolks of
six eggs. Beat the yolks; then mix
all together. Bake for half au hour.
Cover the top with the whites of t wo
eggs whipped to a stiff froth, with
four tablespoons of sugar. Serve cold.
Pineapple Shortcake—Make a shor t
cake as for strawberries; split and bat¬
ter it and place well-sugared shreded
pineapple between the layers and on
top.
Pineapple Pie-Make the filling by
beating the yolks of five eggs with one
cup of sugar, one-half cup of butter,
one cup of sweet cream and one pine¬
apple, peeled and grated. Beat but¬
ter, sugar and yolks to a cream, add
the pineapple and cream, and lastly
the well-beaten whites of the eggs.
Bake with one crust.
Pineapple Preserves—Peel and slice
and allow a pound of white sugar to
each pound of the sliced fruit. Put
fruit and sugar in alternate layers in
jars and let it stand twelve or fourteen
hours. Take out the fruit and boil
the syrup until it thiokens. Put in
the fruit and let it boil fifteen minutes.
Take it from the syrup aud when cool
put it in jars and pour the syrup over
it. Cover from the air when cool and
keep in a cool place.
To Can Pineapple—Peel the fruit
and break it into bits from the core
with a silver fork. Allow about half
a pound of white sugar to one pound
of fruit. Heat in a porcelain kettle
and let it boil about five minutes. Fill
the cans and seal tightly at once.
Pineapple Ice—Peel two pineapples
and grate them. Strain the pulp
through a sieve; add to it the juice oi
two lemons, one and one-half pounds
of sugar and one quart of water.
Freeze in an ice cream freezer. Deli¬
cious.—St. Louis Republic.
Bam art-abl e Growth of • Sew tnilaa
try.
-
A J“ 8t ? r * ot tbe cottonseed-oil in
dnstr 7 of the soutil one of the
prla ? 1 .P aI f e®tu fc rea of a recent issue of
ttie Manufacturers’ Record of Balti
more > and we extract therefTom the
fo “° wi ?f P a ^ iculars:
In T 1880 there were forty cotton
with an aggregate capital
of ® 3 > 500 . 000 - There “re now 300
“t llls > havin 8 a combined capital of
ttbout *30,000,000. At present about
f- 500 ,000 tons of seed are annually
U8t4 b J the unlis - yielding to the
fana, -' ra abou t 818,000,000 a year
for a P roduct wbieb . nntil re
centl , J» wa « regarded waste
as a
^ a ‘ enaL The total output is about
l,oOQ,000 barrels, or 60,000,000 gal¬
lons of oil, 500,000 tonrof cottonseed
meal, 750,000 tons of hulls and 30,
000,000 pounds of linters, the aggre¬
gate value of which will average about
830,000,000. The demand for oil
is steadily expanding, and only about
one-third of the total cottonseed crop
is now consumed by the mills, there is
practically unlimited room for the
growth of this business. Ten years
ago the hulls were burned by the mills
as a fuel as no other use could be
found for them. Investigation prov¬
ed that they made excellent fodder, and
last year about 400,000 head of cattle
were fattened for the market on cot¬
ton-seed hulls, while 100,000 milch
cows were fed on the same material. ”
Much of the cotton oil is consumed
in the shape of salad oil, the article
making an excellent substitute for
olive oil. Purchasing the salad oil
that hears foreign labels will not al¬
ways insure the consumer against be¬
ing deceived, as large quantities of the
cotton oil are annually exported to
Italy and Prance, there to be mixed
with olive oil and labeled as the pure
product.
Those who bite at the bait, “some¬
thing for nothing,” furnish the some¬
thing.
The Horrors
Of Indigestion, when it takes along lease of
the stomach.are unsurpassed by any described
bv the most sensational writer of ghost stories.
Unlike this latter kind, they are real and not
imaginary. ach, heart Heartburn, wind on the stom¬
only few palpitation, of them. extreme Di-pos-ess nervonsne-s this
are a un¬
welcome tenant with IJostetter’s Stomach
tion Bitters, which banishes ail malaria, constipa¬
and biliousness.
Mind your business when it orders you to
be up and doing.
To Cleanse the System
Effectually yet gently, when costive or bilious,
or when the blood is impure or sluggish,to per¬
manently cure habitual constipation, to awak¬
en the kidneys and liver to a healthy activity,
without irritating or weakening them, to dis¬
pel headaches, colds or fevers, use Syrup of
Figs.
The more good habits you form the less room
you have for had ones.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root cures
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet, and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y.
The trlalB of life are the worst when con¬
viction follows.
THE SENT AND CHEAPEST BUSINESS
COLLEGE.
Porter’s Business College, lie con, Hu.
To those entering during June,July and Au¬
gust full a special rate of $25.00 commercial will be made short¬ for a
course, in either the or
hand department. Young ladies and gentle¬
college men desiring the to least attend pos-ible a ftrst-clasa should business write
at < ost,
for members partlcu are. the Macon References: Board Ciiai-man Trade, and
of of any
bank or banker of Macon. We can save you
time and money. Address, Porter & Ander¬
son, Macon, Go.
Teething Children.
Nothing on earth will take children through
the trylngordeal of teething so pleasantly, and
so very surely and safely, as Dr. King’s Royal
Germetuer. They all like to lake it, and it
acts like magic in meeting the troubles of that
critical period. Thousands have tried it and
tt has never been known to fail.
Southern Recipes.
“The Cream of Cook Books’’ contains the
best recipes of the old books, and many never
before in print,
“The New South Cook Book” is beautifully
bound, and will be sent to any address upon
the receipt of ten cents In postage.
B. W. VVuenn, G. P. A,
E. T., V. & G. R. R., Knoxville, Teun.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is a liquid and is taken
internally, and acts directly on the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Write for tes.
timonials, free. F. Manufactured J. Cmunfr by Toledo,
& Co., O.
Shiloh’s Cure
is sold on a guarantee. It cures incipient Con¬
sumption; it is the Best Cough Cure; 25e, 50c, $1
Portable Hay Presses
*60.00. Address, for circulars, C. B. Curlee,
Kienzi, Miss.
I
si «j
*A
Chronic Indigestion
Kept me in very poor health for five years, I
began to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla and my
digestion was helped by the first three doses.
Sarsa¬
parilla
I ly four have believe bottles now it and taken has I cured firm¬ over fures
me, and also saved my
life. Mbs. R. E. Pbincb, Bushville, N. Y.
Hood's Pills are purely vegetable.
PJEH TREATMENT1 for Constipation
and Biliousness.
At all stores, or by mail 25c. double box; 6 double boxes
$ 1 . 00 . BROWN MF’G CO., New York City.
Do You Wish
the Finest Bread
and Cake?
It is conceded that the Royal Baking Powder is
the purest and strongest of all the baking powders.
The purest baking powder makes the finest, sweet¬
est, most delicious food. The strongest baking pow¬
der makes the lightest food.
That baking powder which is both purest and
strongest makes the most digestible and wholesome
food.
Why should not every housekeeper avail herself
of the baking powder which will give her the best
food with the least trouble ?
Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift
or prize, or at a lower price than the Royal,
as they invariably contain alum, lime or sul¬
phuric acid, and render the food unwholesome.
Certain protection from alum baking powders can
be had by declining to accept any substitute for the
Royal, which is absolutely pure.
Measuring Brickwork.
Tb. Boston J mn al „/
gives the following: Ordinary bricks
are about eight inches in length and
with a mortar joint about half that
in width, so that each brick on the flat
will give a horizontal surface of abou
thirty-two square inches, or four aud
a half bricks will coyer one square
foot. As ordinarily laid there are
inches, nmo courses four to and every twenty-four
or a half to the foot;
U Tu\ \ ! C0 " rile8 ’ Wlth f °” and
a half bricks to the course will
twenty and one-fourth bricks to the
cubic foot. Maste, cutting and close
jo.nts will easily require an a lowanco
of twenty-one bricks per cubic foot
which will be found a very convenient
figurc for estimating the number of
bricks required for a wall of given
height and thickness, as is thus be
comes unnecessary to find the cubic
conten s of the wall, but merely to
multiply its face area, or the product
of its length and height in feet by
seven-fourths of its thickness iu
inches, which, as the thickness is
always some multiple of four inches,
is a very simple process.
An Ancient Telephone.
An English officer has discovered in
India a working telephone between
two native temples which stand over a
mile apart. The testimony of the
Hindoos, which, it is said, is backed
up by documentary proof show's that
the system has been in operation for
over 2,000 years. Scientists engaged
in excavating the ruins of ancient
Egyptian temples have repeatedly
found unmistakable evidence of wire
communication between some of the
■temples of the earlier Egyptian dynas¬
ties, but whether these served a tele¬
graphic, telephonic or other purpose
has not been positively determined.
“Dm you tell that man I’d gone to
New York, as I told you to do, James?”
“Yes, sir. I told him you started this
mornin’.” “That’s a good boy! And
what did he say?” “He wanted to know
when you’d be back, and I told him af¬
ter lunch sir.”
\\fryjyj sttend s Business College until
/J (SIS you get our catalogue; you will
/ * save tuition, time, board and car
j fare. Bookkeeping, Shorthand and
Good hoard, Telegraphy month. taught. Carfare returned.
tlO.OOper Address
,1. « HABkHON, Rome, Go.
A Guaranteed Cure
FOR
The Opium Habit.
We guarantee to cure the opium disease in
any form in fifteen days, or no pay for board,
treatment or attention. Sauithrmm at Salt
Sprints,near Austell.Ga. Correspondence con¬
fidential. Address, Co., Drs. Lock Nelms’ Box Gl’arantis
OhumCukk or 3, Austell, Ga.
For Engines, Boilers, Saw
Mills and Machinery, all
kinds, write MALLARY
BROS. & CO., Macon, Ga.
I nUCI Ilf rl I I Diamond ARE THE BEST Cycles MADE.
■■ ■ "■ fig ■ ■_ ■* ■_■_ ■■ ■■ ALL HIGH THE GRADE LATEST IN IMPROVEMENTS.
EVERY RESPECT.
THE TOURIST’S FAVORITE.
WHAT WHY!
IS 9 THE WONDER
ITi OF THE ACE.
CALL AND SEE IT.
ICIRAFF £.<
We Send tor our .Special Garanin List of second-band and shop-worn Wheels,
have got just what you
CATALOGUES FREE TO ALL. AGENTS WANTED
HIGH GRADE BICYCLE FOR $43.75^^
OUR STORTING GOODS LINE IS UNEXCELLED.
86 ^ "
drsd
JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO.,
131 Broad St. and 14T Washington Su, boston.
A Potato Preserving Process.
b ’ of'
ha deviged t he plan immersing
them for ten or twelve hours in water,
to which ha8 beeu added {rora one to
two cent of commercial sulphuric *
ftcid , then rin8i ftnd drying Tbe
skiu of tLe potato protect* the interior
from the af!tlon of the acid> wbi!e tha
de i icate germ8 in the are detjtroy jkovin _
ed The process seems to have
hi hl 8at i 8 f ac tory. In the ease, of a
low specimens of Richter’s Impel*,*tor ’
potato a remarkable reault ba H be ^
noticed( the treated buds having heen\
made incapable of developing exter
nall but Gaining sufficient vitality
to cause them in the course of time to
become transformed into small pota
toes inside of the original tuber. The
exhausted parent patatoes containing
their plump progeny “ Meeting formed a curious
exhibit ftt a rece t of the Bo
tauical Society of France.-/^,
THROW IT AWAY.
B _ d fs-n There’s no loop
l any need of
Vs wearing chafing Trusses, clumsy.
E&agSE which give only partial relief
i at Inst, never cure, but often
£ apBBk Inflict inflammation, great injury, strangulation inducing
I and death.
HERNIA kuptu^’S
Sr * matter of how long standing-,
or of what size, is promptly
end permanently cured without the knifa
and without pain. Another
Triumph in Consorwativs Surgery
is the cure, of
HlTTMAPCl 1 U IHvJ J\iO, Ovarian, varieties, Fibroid without and the peril* other
Of PILE cutting operations.
TUMORS, lower Fisuflafand ot^er
diseases of the bowel, promptly cured
without pain or resort to the knife.
QTflNTF D J. VJ.1 £J in large, *he is Bladder, crushed, no matter pulverized. hovr
and STRICTURE washed out. thus avoiding cutting.
IZWX 1 !
cutting. Abundant References, and Pamph¬
lets, on above diseases, sent sealed, in plain en¬
velope. Mf.dical 10 cts. (stamps). Association, World's Buffalo, Dispen¬ N.Y.
sary
Bayers directly ol Macliiirf, Attention!
Deal with manufacturers and
write us for prices.
ENGINES, BOILERS, SAW MILLS,
Grist Millls, Cane Mills, Cotton
Gins and Presses,
And anything wanted in the machinery line.
.SCHOFIELD’S IRON WORKS, JIaeon,Ga.
J)| / TO 10 d >9 D C Canbemnsleworklngfok Fsrdes preferred
ae °®' who oaa
furnish a boras and travel
A H gig WEEKrew^r P P II through the country; a team,
1
*
citte& Mm and women of good character will find
this an exceptional opportunity for profitable eto
P'oyment, Spare hours may be used to good advan¬
tage. B. F JOHNSON CO..
11th and Main feta., Richmond, Ta«
PISO’S CURE FOR
Consumptive* and people
who have weak lungs or Asth¬
ma, should use Plso’s Cure for
Consumption. It has cared
thousand*. It has not Injur
ed one. It is not psd to take.
It is the best cough syrup.
Sold everywhere. Sac.
!cqnsumption. h
1
A. N. u....... .... Twr-nu-fnur. ’94.