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Spring Makes Me Tired
Tornany nsople Spring and its duties
Sean an aching head, tired limbs and
throbbing nerves. Just ss the milder
weather comes, tho strength begin* to
wane and “That Tired Feeling” is the
iplaint of all.
The reason for this condition is
found in the deficient quality of the
blood. During the winter, owing to
various causes, the blood becomes
loaded with imparities and loses its
Abfaniws and vitality. Consequently,
ss soon as the bracing effect of cold
is lost, these is languor and lack
erf energy. The cure will be found in
purifying and enriching the blood.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the greatest
•nd best spring medicine because it is
%be greatest and best blood purifier,
ll 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 tho very oddest
monuments is the tablet in a Berkshire
church in memory of a soldier who
had his left leg taken off “by the abovo
ball,” the aotual 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 •ho backward on tho reins mean that
wants you to go ahead.”— Good
JNewa.
r % ■+ /* That lump in a
man’s 81 o m a c h
ft which makes him
irritable and misera¬
ble and unfit for bus¬
iness or pleasure is
caused by indiges¬
tion. Indigestion,
like charity, covers
m a multitude of sins.
The trouble may be
in stomach, liver,
I bowels. Wherever it
is, it is caused by the
presence of poison¬
I ous, refuse matter
which Nature lifts
been unable to rid
lierself of, unaided.
I In such cases, wise
'people little health send down a
personified of Pierce 1
Dr. usFieas
ant Pellets, to search
out the trouble and
remove its cause.
Hie Greatest fledical Discovery
j , of the. Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBORY, MASS, i
Has discovered in one of our common
pasture weeds a remedy that ouros overy
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 of its value, all within twenty miles
of Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced from the
first bottle, a«id a perfect ouro is warranted
when the right quantity Is taken.
When tho lungs are nffooted It causes
shooting pains, like needles passing
, through them; the some with tho Liver
or Bowels. This Is caused by tho ducts
being stopped, and always disappears iu a
week after taking it Road tho label.
If tho stomach is foul or bilious it will
cause squeamish feelings at first
No change of diet ever necessary, Eat
the best you can get aud enough of It
Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed¬
time. Sold by all Druggists,
WALTER BAKER & GO.
Tho Largest Manufacturers of
PURE, HIGH GRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
On this Continent, have received
HIGHEST AWARDS
ftora tho great
Industrial and Food
EXPOSITIONS
if ll Europe and Mcs.
Unlike the Dutch Proeewqno Alkn
Dm or other Chemicals or Dves ere
pare ana eoluble, and less than iocSi r»Wu«3j
costs one cent a cup.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE,
WALTER BAKER & GO. DORCHESTER, MASS.
BASEBALL»“S Kjf to Settle all Disputes. Valuable* statistic*. o\v S
Dictates or all leading players. Postpaid, 10c.
LawnTe n n islU^sEw
How to Play. How to Lay Out a Court. Pictures of
Leading Players. Handsome Valuable book for all. of Postpaid, all Sports— lfto.
ffC iff «■“ 1000 Illustrations—sent Catalogue free to
■ ■ * mm over
"■* ony address. Ask for Catalogue So. 13
A. C. SPALDING & BROS.
NswYork. Chicago. Philadelphia
hair balsam
and honutitm* the hv.r,
HlrWT ---------- a 'uxunant growth.
L«j All EtS-fMLS. S
CiiKfcS WHUIt Tastes Good. Use &
Bast t.'euah Kyrup. druggists. jg
in time. • Sold tiv
cause it makes pure, rich blood. Itgives
strength to nerves and muscles because
it endows the blood with new powers
of nourishment. It creates an appetite,
tonee and strengthens the stomach and
digestive organs, and thus builds up
tho whole system and prepares it to
meet the change to warmer weather,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a medicine
upon wkiob you may depend. It is
the only true blood purifier promi
ncutly before the public eye today. It
has a record of cores unequalled in
tho history of medicine. It is tho mod
wine of which so many people write,
“Hood’s Sarsaparilla does all that it is
claimed to do.” You can take Hood’s
Sarsaparilla with the confident expec*
tation that it will give you pare blood
and renew health. - Take it now.
INTERESTING FACTS.
White flowers are the most odorife¬
rous.
Europe. Leprosy is increasing rapidly in
Asses’ milk is sold at three shillings
a pint.
Of tho people of Spain one-fifteenth
nro nobles.
The Thames was once a tributary of
the Rhino.
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 tho criminal classes boar
tho highest proportion to the popula¬
tion.
llats will leave a house in which a
guinea pig is allowed to wandor about.
Tho official term for the “growler,"
or London four-wheeled cob, is “Clar¬
ence.”
South American ants will sometimes
construct a tunnel threomileBin length.
Among tho Siamese it is the custom!
to revereo the elbow joint as a
social superiority. 'imm
Donkeys havo an aversion rro.ssi^B
bur nnihiii;; \wib r or
niug stream.
All urlV i.f j r 1 > 11 .1 li"hmj|| 1
e...
'I luiiiillHHHHBH 1,9 J|j
Within h radius of
Malta nine-tenths of lliif^H fjBwB
food-stuff* of the world are U
officers Tho greatest to in proportionate battle los^pf at !H
men any was
capture of tho Redan, where threo oP
fleers wero lost to every twenty-two
men.
Oil has practically no effect on
troubled water close in shore, because
tho surface is not usually broken by tho
wind, but by cross currents, rocks, ed¬
dies and so ou.
When a railroad lino runs north and
south, on the track on which the trains
run from tho south the eastern rail will
wear out first, and ou the other tho
western.
Hold the Fort
Against a bilious attack by calling to your
aid that puissant ally. Hostetler's Stomach
Bitters. Tho foe will then be driven back
utterly defeated. Dyspepsia, sick headache,
ma nria’, kidney, nervous and rheumatic
trouble and constipation yield to the action
of ibis most beneficent of remedies. Take it
good r gnlarly effects. and yon will soon experience its
It U 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 Pigs, as it acts
most pleasantly and effectively on the kidneys,
liver and bowels, preventing fevers, hoadaohes
ami other forms of sickness. For sale in 50
cents and $1 bottles by all leading druggists.
Wlmt, we may eall hindrances sometimes
opeu tho way to success.
Ilr. Kilmer’s Swamp- Ro o r cura
sll Kidney and Bladder troubles
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. V
Ti-ia's nre very often ossential In building a
character.
Providence, It. I.
Please forward six boxes of Tettorine, O, O.
I>. I think it strange that it is not sold here
in Now England, as it Is the bast cure for Ec¬
zema, King Worm and all eruptions of the
skint ever saw. I got a box from a Cincinnati
drummer, and gave part of it to a young lady
who had tried almo.t everything to remove
I’ mules aud an eruption from her face. Two
applications U 1 of also Tott-rine gentleman completely whose cured body
r. know a
had b-en covered with Eczema—two boxes of
Teturine smooth cured him completely, and now his
st in is as as a baby’s. P. O. Hanlon,
with Silver Springs Bleaching Co. Sent by
mail for 50-. In stamps. J. T. Shuptrine, Sa
vanuah, Ga.
Which Man Wins?
Tho on© with steady nerves and a clear
brain. That means, in nine cases out of ten,
tho man with a good digestion. A liip&ns
Tabule after dinner may save to-morrow’s
bu ine.«s.
M. L. Thompson & Co. t Druqrcists Couders
port. Pa,, say Hall’s Catarrh Cure is tho best
and only sure cure for catarrh they ever so d.
j Hruggists sell U, 75c.
j Whnt a Sense of Relief it Is to Know
that. you have no cor ns. II i nde rooms removes
(bom, and is comforting. 15c. at-druggists*
F'so’s Cure for Consumption ii. is nn A No. 1
Asthma medicine.—W. Williams, An¬
tioch, Ills., April 11,109ft,
Mr*. Window's Sootliifut Syrup for i hJMr.i .
teething, softens the stums, reduces Inflamma¬
tion. allays pain, cures wind colto.. 25c. ah itti
If pfllfctod wfth w»reey«HU ko Dr. Isaac Thotni -
>on\ E ye-water. Druggists sell af25o per Uoti l».
CHAKQKD Tile '4on.
Police and Rioters Clash in Chicago.
.Blood Flowed.
Four policemen were injured acd
one striker fatally shot in a riot of
Illinois Steel Company strikers at
South Chicago Wednesday.
The riot followed a big mass meeting
of the strikers, at which about five
hundred men were present. The
speeches became so violent and the
men so demonstrative that the leaders
forced an adjournment. The crowd
would not disperse, however, and a
riot call brought a detail of fifteen
police officers headed by Lieutenant
Wagner to the scene.
The police ordered the crowd to dis¬
perse, but the order was met with
hoots and threats, the women among
the strikers daring the officers to shoot.
The policemen finally charged with
drawn revolvers and were met with a
volley of stones.
Lieutenant Wagner and three of his
men fell and the other officers opened
fire, sending abont twenty-five shots
into the crowd. At tho beginning of
the firing the strikers fled, four of the
leaders being arrested.
The wounded are John Wilkoski,
striker, shot through the head, will
die; Lieutenant Wagner, head cut by
a stone; Officer Martin Proty, club¬
bed into insensibility; Officer John
Walsb, McFrey, badly bruised; Officer Wm.
head badly cut by a stone.
None of the policemen were believed
to be fatally injured. After the shoot¬
ing the rioters gathered in groups
about the steel works threatening ven¬
geance, and more trouble was antici¬
pated by the police.
The mills were kept nnder police
protection and tho company’s store of
dynamite was heavily guarded all day.
WAS BROWN A VICTIM?
The Governor Believes that HIs Son
Was Entrapped.
The sensation attending the double
killing at Louisville, Ky. f is not over
yet by half. Tho prosecution will at¬
tempt to prove that Arch Brown’s
death was due to a deep-laid plot to
assassinate him; a trap, as the prose¬
cution believes, fostered and planned
by one who, for reasons best known to
himself, was afraid to do the work and
used Gordon as the tool to carry out
his designs. These statements came
directly from the prosecution.
Governor Stone has reason to be¬
lieve that his son’s coming to Louis¬
ville on tho day of the tragedy and
Ihe purpose ofhi^vM known to
’granhi
GROWTH H.
The Industrial Situation as Reported
for tho Past Week.
week Reports from all over the south for the past
indicate that there is increasing activity
hi and iroq making, on used by tho largo demand
tho recent advances in quotations. Lum¬
ber manufacturer* aro now very busy aud no
stocks accumulate. Prices are firm and ire
higher for some grados, with an mill upward ten¬
dency in all sections. Textile buildng
continues on a large scale. The reports for
the week include cotton mills, each with $1$0,
000 capital, at New Berno and Salem, N.;0.,
Sumter, S. O., and Belton, Texas, one with
$05,000 capital at, Abbeville, 8. C., a $50,000
one and at Temple, Selma, Ala,, others at Marion, Ala.,
Texas, and knitting mi list at
Ashboro, Among N. O,, and Winchester, Va.
other important now industries of ho
week are: Tho 1 lioraas Burger & 8ous Lum «f
Co., of Dsvig, W, Va., capital $500.000;a bow¬
ery and at Galveston, Texas, with $400,000 capi al,
tal. one at Covington, Ky., with Va., t-7o,UCQ owu
and tho Piukersburg, W. Cnair C a.,
capital $200,000. A $100,000 transportat on
company has been chartered at Galveston,T<ix„
and a gas machine company with the same cap¬
ital, also of Galveston-, tho Choctaw Coke (jo.,
mill of Laredo, Tex., capital $50,000; a $50 000 oil
is to be built at Selma, Ais., and one of
200 tons daily capacity at Greenville, Miss. The
I Antonia Lumber Co. hug t een chartered at
Yazoo City, Miss.,with $50,000 capital, and the
Old Dominion Tobacco Works, capital $25,(00,
at It chmoml, Va. There is also reported a
large flouring, mill at Houston, Tex.; foundries
and machine shops at Louisville, Ky., Durham
and Salem, N. G'„ Charleston, 8. C., and H ms
tod, Tex.; ice footories at Bonham and San An¬
tonio, Tex.; a shoe factory at Columbus, ami Ga.; a
tannery at Phil Campbell, Ala., wood
and working plants at Abb-ville, La,, Ga., Centerville City,
Baton Kongo, Faith, Bryson
North Wilkesboro, Walnut Grove and Wilming¬
ton, N. C., Chattanooga, Teun., and Texarkana,
Tex.
Enlargements of cotton mills are reported at
Little Rock, Ark., Columbus, Ga., Durham
and Goldsboro, N. C., of tanneries at Flint
stone, Ga., uud Chattanooga, Tenn., and.of
flouring mills at Liberty, Tenn. Ihe list of
new buildings for the week includes a bank at
Wheeling, W. Va., a business blook at Hunts¬
ville. Ala., a court hoiwo at Sparta, Temple, Tenn., Tex,,
churches at Albany, Ga., aud
aud an opera honso at Savannah, Ga.—Trades¬
man (Chattanooga, Tenn.)
WARM WEATHER
Experienced in Chicago and Othor
Western Cities.
Last Friday was the hottest day on
record for’Chicago for this time of the
year, 90 degrees in the shade at the
Auditorium tower station of the gov¬
ernment bureau being marked on the
thermometer at 5 o’clock p. m.
A special from Indianapolis says:
Friday was the hottest May day in In¬
diana in twenty-four years. Tho ther¬
mometer reached 94.
At Des Moines, la., the heat was in¬
tense, the thermometer several hours
standing at 94, and at Madison, Wis.,
Friday was the hottest day for that sec¬
tion of the state ever known this time
of the year._
The devil never worries himself much
about an indifferent church member.
TURNEY’S INAUGURATION.
He Declares That Law and Right Have
Prevailed.
Peter Turney was inaugurated gov¬
ernor of Tennessee for the second time
Wednesday. The proceedings were
held in the hall of the house of rep¬
resentatives in the presence of tho
democratic members of the general as¬
sembly, the justices of the supreme
court, the state officials and 2,000 visi¬
tors. All of the republican members
of the general assembly deliberately
absented themselves and went to Chat¬
tanooga to spend the day with H. Clay
Evans, the republican candidate. Pres¬
ident Pillow, of the senate, in intro¬
ducing Governor Turney, said that
right had prevailed and the law had
been upheld.
Referring to the absence of the re¬
publican members he said this was the
first time in America that a vanguish
ed foe had sneaked away like skulking
cowards and dared not face the result.
He eulogized Governor Turney for
upholding the law and supporting the
constitution.
In his inaugural address Governor
Turney said he had made tho contest
because he had sworn to support the
constitution and the law. Right, truth
and morality had prevailed. Had he
abandoned the office to Evans when
his claim was based on fraud he would
have been a perjured man. He had
felt no uneasiness. The wisdom of
his course had been proven. He pre¬
dicts that the election laws would be
observed in 1896. He would support
tho constitution and enforce the law.
THE BLACK MAN IS HAI’PY.
Rejoicing Over the Decisions of Judges
Goff and Slinonton.
The two decisions rendered by
Unitod States Judges Goff and Simon
ton at Columbia, S. C., the oue niakiug
a free ballot and the other sounding
the death knell of the dispensary law,
apparently have created a big stir all
over tho state, and some pretty wild
talk is being indulged in.
The administration is more or less
worried. In official and legal circles
nothing else was even thought of ap¬
parently and the negroes and liquor
men the are giving all their attention to
now order of things, brought
about by these things. For the pres¬
ent, Governor Evans and the state au
thoritios are paying no attention
whatover to the registration matter.
As Governor Evans has already said,
ho does not promise to call an extra
session of the legislature or proceed
Rather in the registration cases.
Bj^ded as yet nothing has been
in regard to this mnt
’ Bfik.
if
IS P
[af Jfr franchise.” the Exercise of
istii
T CALLS IT A STEAL.
Col. Evans Makes a Speech and Re¬
fers to the Recent Contest.
The members of the Tennossoe leg¬
islature who voted against seating
Govornor Turney and who declined to
be on the committeos in charge of the
inauguration at Nashville spent the
day Wednesday at Chattanooga, the
guests of Col. Evans. Tho party went
to Lookout mountain, where they sat
down to a sumptuous repast. After
the feast Senator J. F. MeCarron,
toastmaster, addressed tho meeting
saying its object was to “renew alle¬
giance to the gallant leader who fought,
the one-sided battle in November.”
When Colonel Evans was called up¬
on ho was greeted with a storm of ap
planse. “I took the race,” said he,
“against my judgment and to attempt
a reform in the iniquitous ballot laws
of this state. What I charged against
tho administration has been proven.
It is rotten to the o re. I have point¬
ed out its frauds and they have been
unearthed. I am not discouraged. I
have been oonnted out. With the
same opportunities Turney had for ex¬
amining witnesses, I could have shown
that he was beaten by 20,000 votes.
The steal,” said the speaker vehement¬
ly, “is as plain to the mind of a think¬
ing man as is Lookout mountain to
tho sight of Chattanooga. I expoct to
help the republican party next year
and with the experience I have gained
I have an opportunity to make a hot¬
ter fight against the disgraceful demo¬
cratic machine that controls this state. ’’
GARMENT WORKERS WINNING
Success Seems Certain and Many arc
Returning to Work.
A Philadelphia special says: It is
evident that the success of the garment
workers in the present strike will be
nuiversal and that tho abolition of
“sweat shops” will be the outcome.
Wednesday morning 400 more hands
returned to work, ten contractors
having conceded their demands, and
the Knights of Labor leaders declare
that in a short time six hundred addi¬
tional workers will bo employed. Thus
far forty-eight contractors have given
in to the strikers, but thero are still
’,500 men and women on strike.
Texas Democrats on Silver.
Chairman Dudley has called a meet¬
ing of the executive committee of the
democratic party of Texas to be held
at Dallas May 27th for the purpose of
defining the position of the party on
silver. He says the issue must be met
and the party united fur action next
year.
A Wonderful Sensitive Plant.
An incident related by the author of
“The Pearl of India,” in his descrip¬
tion of the flora of Ceylon, is almost
uncanny, although we are assured that
it is true. It is about the mimosa, or
sensitive plant, and makes one almost
wonder whether the plant has intelli¬
gence.
The doctor, one of the characters of
the book, while sitting with the family
on the broad piazza, which formed the
front of the bungalow of a coffee
plantation, recognized a thrifty sensi¬
tive plant, anti it was made the subject
of remark, He called his young
daughter 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 contact with
the pretty child.
“Now,” said the host, “will you
touch the plant?”
Rising to do so, we approached it
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 tudden 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 a part of it. Then he
put the balance under a glass case,
where a rat was in captivity. The rat
went to eat the bread and instantly
fell «lead. At half a franc a box tbe
powder went off like hot-cakes and the
lucky proprietor was in a fair way to
make his fortune. But 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 asa whipper,which
foroes from them all articles of dust.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Royal KHg
Absolutely pure
nclent 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
elsewhoro. They have a way of bury¬
ing the eggs, and it takes about thirty
days to render a pickled egg fit to oat.
Some of the old eggs have become as
black as ink, and one of tho favorite
Chiueso dishes for invalids is made up
of eggs, which are preserved in jars of
rod clay and salt water.
May Week Celebration; Savannah, Ga.,
May 12.1G, 1 80S.
ebration It has been Savannah decided to during hold a the May third week cel¬
in week
in May, for which a very interesting pro¬
carnival, gramme has large been military arranged, parade including and display, grand
Tybecday It also expected with sham and several naval large battle, eie.
is that war ves¬
sels will be present.
Tho old reliable Central railroad of Georgia
will sell round-trip tickets May 12th to 18th,
limited returning May 18th, trum all points in
Georgia, termediate and points, from Montgomery, Savannah, Ala , and in¬
to at the rate of
one fare for the round trip.
I : Vr military companies in uniform, twenty
or more traveling in a body on one ticket from
stations within 300 miles of Savannah and
from Montgomery, Ala., ami intermediate
points, is authoriz rate of 1 cent d. per mile in each direc¬
tion At these very low rates
every the trip one will Savannah. have an opportunity of making
to
For further information, rates, schedules,
etc., apply to any ticket agent of tho Central
railroad system or S. 11. Webb, traveling pax
xenger agent, 18 Wall str. et, Atlanta, Ga.
Parker's Ginger Tonic Is Popular
for good work. Suffering, sleepless, nervous
womou find nothing so soothing and reviving.
mm ■s
•
COST LESS THAN CHEAP PALNT OR 3
WHITE LEAD.
luut, uumcu oil uni.y makes any Paint or Lead duroni■■ ana ongi.i. 1, ulu m /
your Paint is I'UKt:, your Paint must be coon. It i- absolutely nice.- ary to add a gallon of
ITHF. Kaw Oil to a gallon of Hanmiar Paint to make itieady for application. Buy vourOil
UKESn from your dialer’s bakhel ami know voun Paint i- made of pure Oil, and therefore
the best. It wilt co-t you muc h t.es s than liquid Paint in can- and is vastly better
x _qgg«w:
without CONSUMPTION doubt, be
can, cured in its early.stages. It is a
battle Irom the start, but with the right kind of weapons
properly used it can be overcome and the insidious foe
vanquished. Hope, courage, proper exercise, will¬
power, and the regular and continuous use of the 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 aim kui me uerms
tha are beginning to find lodgmen n the lungs,
this renowned preparation, that has n o doubt cured
hundreds of thousands of incipient cases of Comsump
hon, is simply Cod-li> i -er Oil emulsified and made
palatable and easy of assimilation, combined with the
Scott & Bowne, v New S r ^ at hone, brain and nerve tonic.
York. AH Druggists. 50c. and 31,
AFTEE THIETY YEAEB.
THE BUCKEYE STATE CONTRIBUTES
THE STOJKY OF A VETERAN'S
SEARCH.
How Fred Taylor, a Member of the Gal,
l»ni 189th N. Y„ V. I„ Finally
Found What He Has Sought
Since the War Closed.
(From the Ashtabula, Ohio, Beacon .)
Mr. Fred Taylor was bom and brought up
near Elmira, N. Y., and from there eniisted
in the- 189th regiment, N. Y„ Y. L, with
which he went through the war and saw
much hard service. Owing to exposure and
hardships during the service, Mr Taylor con¬
tracted chronic diarrhoea, from whlth be has
suffered now over thirty years, w.tb abso¬
lutely no help from physicians. By nature
he was a wonderfully vigorous man. Had
he not been, his disease and the experiments
of the doctors had killed him long ago.
Laudanum was the only thing which afford¬
ed him relief. He had terrible headachoe,
his nerves were shattered, he could not sleep
an hour a day on an average, and he was re.
duced to a skeleton. A year ago he and his
wife sought relief in a change of climate and
removed to Geneva, Ohio; but the change in
health came not. Finally, on the recom¬
mendation of F. J. Heffner, the leading drug¬
gist of GeueTu, who was cognisant of similar
cases which Pink Pills had cured, Mr. Taylot
was persuaded :c try a box. “As a drowning
man Mr. Taylor, grasps a rtiaw, so I took the pills,’ says
"but with no more hope of
rescue. But after thirty years of suffering
and fruitless search for relief X at last found
it in Dr. Williams'Pink Pills. The day alter 1
took the first pills I commenced to feel better,
and when I had taken the first box I was in
fact a new man.” That was two months ago.
Mr. Taylor has gjnee taken more of the pills
and bis progress is steady, and he has the
utmost confidence in them. He has regained
full control of his neives and sleeps as well
as in hla youth. Color is coming back to hit
parched veins and be is paining fiesh and
strength rapidly. Ho is now able to do con.
sidcraUe outdoor work.
As he concluded narrating bis sufferings,
experience and cure to a Beacon reporter
Mrs. Taylor, who has been his faithful help
meet these many years, said she wished to
add her testimony in favor of Pink Pills.
"To the pills olopa is duo the credit of raff¬
ing Mr. Taylor from a helpless invalid to the
man he is to-day," said Mrs. Taylor. Both
Mr. and Mrs. Taylor cannot find words to ex¬
press the gratitude they feel or recommend
too Any highly Pink Pills to suffering humanity.
0., inquiries addressed to them at Geneva,
cheerfully regarding Mr. Taylor’s ease, they will
the whole world answer, as they are anxious that
shall know what Pink Pllla
have done for thorn and that suffering hu¬
manity may be benefited thereby.
Dr. Williams’ Pink lulls contain all tho ole
tnonts necessary to give new life and richness
to the blood and restore shattered nerves.
They are for sale by all druggists, Williams’ or may bo
bad by mail from Dr. Medicine
Company. Schenectady, boxes N. Y., for CO cent*
per box or six for $2.50.
Gem Bearing Plants.
The assistant director of Eew gar¬
dens, lecturing recently at tho Loudon
institute on some curiosities of tropi¬
cal plant life, said that among these
were the pearls found occasionally in
the cocoanut palm of tho Philippine
islands—pearls which, like those of
the ocean, are composed of carbonato
of lime. The bamboo, too, yields an¬
other precious product in the shape of
true opals, which are fouud iu its
joints. In each ease this mineral mat¬
ter is, of course, obtained from the
soil. The natives of tho Celebes uso
these vegetable opals as amulets and
charms against disease.
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR
★ The BEST ★
FOR
Dyspeptic,Delicate,Infirm and
AGED PERSONS
* JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. *
A.N.U