Newspaper Page Text
Highly Flavored.
Lady—Are you sure the tee ia gen¬
uine? It has a very peculiar smell.
Dealer—Very doubt; possibly ; gunpowder, China
no they’re having war in
just now.
I’m All Cnstrnaa,
Is the remark of many a nervous individual.
He or *he will soon cease to talk that way
after beginning and persisting in a course of
Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters. Nothing like It
ts renew strenath and appetite and gopd
digestion. It cheek* the inroade of malar A,
and remedies liver complain', constipation, disorder.
dyspepsia, ta rheumatism and household kidney remedy.
It Is every sense a great
A whale when struck miles by a harpoon cannot
swim faster than nine an hour
To Clean** ik« Hvotem
Effect oally yet gen tlf, when costive or bilious,
or when tho 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
rig*.
Tlie Exquinraux make water-proof clothing
of the intestine* of the walrus.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp -Root cures
ail Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y.
In United States gold colas, 90 parts are
gold, 9copper, and 1 silver.
Savnnnnh) Gn.
I have of been Eczema greatly for annoyed with using a severe
attack a year, after seve¬
ral remedies with no benefit, I used Tetterlne
with perfect success, Ttvo boxes made a
compute cure. 1 would not take one thousand
dollars for the benefit I’Ve derived from its
Use. 1 take pleasure in recommending it to
others. Salomon Cohen, President Savannah
Carriage Co. Sent by mail for 50c. in stamps.
J. T. Shupt.rine, Savannah, Ga.
After Dinner.
After the heartiest dinner adoseof Ttvkii’h
Dyspbi'iwa Kemkot uld will remove all unpleas¬
ant feedings, digestion, and build up your
health. As other an after dinner drink it is fur su¬
perior to all remedios, as it never disap¬
points, and leaves an appetite lor the next
meal. For sale by Druggists, Manufactured
by ChA*. O. Tykek, Atlanta, Ga.
Not No Convenient.
scribing Physicians indorse remedies Rlnans Tnbulos by but pre* in
the they contain,
form not so convenient, Inexpensive and ac¬
curate as in lUpans Tubules.
8 . K. Coburn, Mgr., Claris Scott, writes: "I
find Hall’s Catarrh Cure a valuable remedy.”
Druggists sell It, 75c.
Get lllndnreoi-ii* and IJ*e it It
you want to know the comfort of no corns. It
takes them out perfectly. 15c. at druggists.
I cannot ‘-peak too highly of Ptso’a Cure for
Consumption.—Mrs. Ml., New York, Oct. 29,1894. Frank Monies, 215W.22d
retiring, Mrs. Winslow’s softens tlie Soothing Syrup for inflamma- children
gums, reduces
lon, allays pain, euros wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Wife used “ Mothers’ Fiuknd" before drat
child - was quickly relieved; suffered hut little;
recovery rapid. E. E. Johnston, Eufaula. Ala.
U afflicted with KorrM>ycv< u«« Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Kye-wftter.DrnmristHHell at 26 o perboUls.
Your
Health Depends
Upon pure, rich, healthy blood. Therefore,
see that your blood is mode pure by
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
The only true blood purifier prominently in
the public eye today. Get only Hood’s.
Hood’s Pills with
asc.
The Greatest JTedical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS.
Has discovered in ono of our common
pasture weeds a remedy that cures 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 twocnsoB
(both thunder humor). Ho has now in
his possession over two hundred certifi¬
cates of Its value, all within twenty miles
of Boston. Bond postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced from the
first bottle, and a perfect oure is warranted
when the right quantity Is taken.
When the lungs are affected it causes
shooting pains, like needles passiug
through them; the same with the Liver
or Bowels. This is caused by tho duets
being stopped, and alwnys disappears in a
week after taking it. Bead the label.
If tho stomach is foul or bilious it will
cause squeamish toolings at first
No change of diet ever necessary. Eat
the best you can get, aud enough of it
Dose, one tablespoouful in water at bed¬
time. Bold by all Druggists.
★ ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR *
MPERlAt
★ the BEST^
FOR
INVALIDS
* JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. *
it Platair s» if
Variable Friction Feed Saw Mill
IK THE WORLD. Manufactured by
THE BROWN 4 KINS SUPPLY CO,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT.
Tulane University of Louisiana.
Ita advanfcajfost for practical instruction, both in
ample laboratories Froe aud abundant hospital m »t« rials
are Charity uuequated. Hospital with 700 access is given to the great
beds and SO.lhM patient* an¬
nually. Special instruction is given dai'y a t tbs brb
»1de ofthk RICH. The next session begins Octobar
’"th, For cataJogu* and information add I r
Prof. S. E. CII AILLK, M. 1)., Dean.
EWP.O. Drawer 261. NEW ORLEANS, LA.
HAIR PARKER'S
Cleanse* „ BALSAM
Promote,"! and hcautifiii* the hair.
■-W ft 25ever Fails a luxuriant Hentorc jrrowth. Orny
to
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cure* scalp discuses 2c hair lulling.
fiOc,and gi.oo at Druggie*
MOST TERRIBLE OF GUNS.
IT WILL SINK LARGE SHIPS AT
TEN MILES RANGE.
Will Hurl 500 Pontiffs of Explosive
With Deadly Accuracy—Horrible
Havoc of This Marvel of Orrtnance.
¥ AXIM, the gnnmaker, and
Dr. SchupphauB, the gun¬
powder expert, have just
invented a new cannon and
torpedo powder which will knock like' all
modern war vessels to pieces egg¬
shells. This big gun will throw a
huge cannon ball full of explosives ten
miles, and where it strikes it will
smash into kindling wood everything
within hundreds of feet.
In fact, this new terror doesn’t even
have to bit a warship to do this. If
the shot lands in the water near by it
will sink tho ship and stun everybody
on board from tho force of the explo¬
sion.
The discover j is called “the Maxim
Sckupphaos system of throwing aerial
torpedoes from guns by means of a
special powder which starts the pro¬
jectiles with a low pressure and in¬
creases its veloeiiy by keeping tho
pressures well up throughout the whole
length of tho gun.” Patents on the
systom have been taken ont in the
United States and European countries.
The special powder employed ia
almost pure gun cotton, compounded
with such a small per cent, of nitro¬
glycerine os to possess none of the
disadvantages of nitro-glycerino pow¬
ders, and preserved from decomposi¬
tion through a slight admixture of
urea. It is perfectly safe to handle,
and can bo beaten with a heavy ham¬
mer on an anvil without exploding.
This new death dealing powder has
been fired in field guns and in the
heavy coast defense rifles at Sandy
Hook with surprising results. From
a ten-inch gun, loaded with 128 pounds
of this powder, a piojectile weighing
571 pounds was thrown eight miles
out to sea.
To test the efficiency of tho system
in torpedo service tho inventors con¬
structed a gun on a new model. The
gun was of four-inoh calibre and threw
projectiles weighing fifty pounds, con¬
taining uitro-gelatine or Maxamite, a
now, high explosive invented by Mr.
Maxim, nearly as powerful as nitro
gelatine, and safor to handle. The
damage done was confined to a sand¬
bank in tho neighborhood of then
works, but even with so small a pro¬
jectile sand was thrown as high as a
church steeple. The record of pres¬
sures and velooitios was fully as good
as that at Sandy Hook.
To tost by a large gun tho actual de¬
structive. work of this now powder
would bo impossible in a civilized
oommunity. The force of the high ox
plosiye thrown would bo too great. It
would be necessary to withdraw to the
Great Sahara Desert, tho wilds of Si¬
beria or some equally unfrequented
locality in order to see just what
would happen if 500 pounds of ex¬
plosive would hit something. Even in
Sahara some wandering caravan or ex¬
ploring party thirty or forty miles off
might bo missing after the discharge.
The big gun which Messrs. Maxim
and Schupphaus propose to construct
will be a twenty-inch gnu especially
adapted for coast defense. This guu
will show some peculiarities. It will
not be* built up, that is, composed of
many pieces of steel bound together,
but will consist of a siuglo thiu steel
tube about thirty feet long, with walls
not over two inches in thiokness, in
marked contrast with the mortars
whose walls are mado eight or ten in¬
ches thick in order to resist tho pres¬
sure of the discharge. Tho recoil or
the gnu will bo offset l»y hydraulic
buffers underneath containing water
and oil.
When the gun is fired some of this
oil and water will bo displaced by the
shock and will rise into side-chambers.
The entrance of tho water and oil into
the chambers will so compress the air
in thorn that on the cassation of the
recoil tho air will force tho water and
oil back into the buffers anti the gun
will again bo in position for firing.
On account of the simplicity of its
construction and the lightness of its
walls this gun will not be expensive to
build.
A twcnty-iuch gun of this type,
usiug the new powder, could be
planted at tho entrance of New York
Harbor, either in Fort Washington or
Fort Wadsworth and command the
entire sea for a radius of ten miles.
So uniform are tho pressures and
velocities obtained that a wonderful
accuracy of fire is possible. It would
only be necessary to train the gun
upon any ship sighted by the range¬
finder within this radius to insure its
complete destruction.
The quantity of explosive thrown
would be suffioient to sink a man-of
war if the projeotile exploded in the
water within fifty feet of its side. At
one hundred aud fifty feet the con¬
cussion of a five hundred pound pro¬
jectile would be sevoro enough to
cause dangerous leaks and disablo a’
ship. Equally fatal consequences
Would ensue if ono of these great pro¬
jectiles struck any par!’ of the super¬
structure of a ship and exploded.
No man-of-war ever built could with¬
stand suoh a shock. Its sides would
be instantly disrupted and it would
sink a broken mass into the waves.
The explosion of one of these huge
projootilea under water in proximity
to a man-of-war would bo equally dis¬
astrous, for the water being a uniform
body, the force of the concussion
would be the same in all directions
anil would strike the side of the ship
like a catapult.
This system of throwing projectiles
is just as efficacious on shipboard
against coast fortifications or other
vessels at sea. It is not hard to pre¬
dict what would happen, A man-of
war armed with these guns would be
lord of the sea, for it could sink any
I
ship, wood or steel, almost as soon as
sighted, and at a distance beyond the
reach of the heaviest guns now afloat.
The strongest armored ships -would be
crushed like egg shells before the
terrific fire, and the sea would fast
swallow up the noble steel cruisers
that it has cost the Nations so much
to perfect.
The steel turreted forts which it ia
proposed to erect on Homer Shoals at
the entrance to New York Harbor,
commanding all the channels, would
not be invulnerable to one of these
guns at seven miles range. No founda¬
tion could be built at the present
stage of the military art strong enough
to resist the explosive force of five
hundred pounds of nitro-gelatine.
Every gun would be dismantled, and
every man killed by the shock. The
history of war, like the history of
evolution in nature, shows that attack
is always ahead of defense.
Imagine tho fearful execution that
would be caused by one of these man¬
made meteors in case of bombard¬
ment. A hostile ship carrying this
system could lie beyond the Narrows
and discharge a projectile into the
lower portion of Now York City do¬
ing millions of dollars’ worth of dam¬
age, blotting out thousands of lives
and leaving a yawning crater where
the explosion occurred. The mere
thought of tho carnage would make a
demon shiver. No Nation menaced by
such a calamity could afford to stand
on ceremony in the adjustment of in¬
ternational questions. Wars would
consist of one shot, if they were ever
entered into at ail, and if but one of
these earth-shaking projectiles ever
fell within a great and populous city
war would bo banished from the earth
as something too frightful, too Sa¬
tanic to be contemplated.—New York
World.
WISE WORDS.
Human seienco is an uncertain
guess. —Prior.
Each one sees what he carries in his
heart. —Goethe.
Deliver me, O Lor 1, from that ovil
man, myself.—T. Brooks.
A wise man should have money in
his head, not in his heart.—Swift.
Ho deserves small trust who is not
privy counselor to himself.—Ford.
In persons grafted in a serious trust
negligence is a crime.—Shakespeare.
If hours did not hang heavy what
would become of scandal?—Bancroft.
If we try to obtain perpetual change,
change itself will become monotonous.
—Buskin.
He is a fool who cannot bo angry;
but ho is a wiso man who will not.—
Old Proverb.
A cruel story runs on wheels, and
every hand oils tho wheels as they run.
—George Eliot.
It is a great sin to swear unto a sin,
but greater sin to keep a sinful oath.
—Shakespeare.
Names, says an old maxim, are
things. They certainly are influences.
—Tvron Edwards.
In matters of prudenco last thoughts
are best; in matters of morality first
thoughts.—Robert Hall.
Where all aro selfish the sago is no
better than the fool, and only rather
more dangerous.—Fronde.
Ho enjoys much who is thankful for
little; a grateful mind is both a groat
and a happy mind. —Seeker.
That is the most perfect government
under which a wrong to the humblest
is an affront to all.—Seneca.
What thou wilt thou shalt rather
enforce with thy smile than hew it
with thy sword.—Shakespeare.
Some men do ns much begrudge
others a good name ns they want ono
themselves; and perhaps that is the
reason of it.—Penn.
The arrows of sarcasm aro barbed
with contempt. It is the sneer in the
satire or ridicule that galls and
wounds. —W. Gladden.
Silk From Spiders.
In an exhaustive paper on “Re¬
searches on Silk Fibre.” Mr. War die
says in the course of his report:
\“I believe, ii it can be obtained in
quantity, it might be packed in bales
and sent to England, where it would
readily find a market for being’carded
and spun into silk threads for sewing
or weaving purposes. It is difficult to
estimate its market value. I dare say
it would, at any rate, realize twenty
five cents to fifty cents a pound. It is
rather dirty, and this would to some
extent detract from its value as com
pared with silk waste. ”
The spider to which this silver* mass
was referable is Nephilengys, (Epeira)
Malabarensis, Walck., a species of very
wide tropical distribution, and ap¬
parently in great abundance! where it
occurs. There seems to bo-no reason
why almost any amount of this silk
should not be obtainable from the low
plants and scrub on which the,spiders
spin their snares, and, with a little
care in gathering, much less inter¬
mixed with dirt and other-adtventitious
matter than the sample above alluded
to. In fact, we may easily conceive
that it would be possible, with a little
trouble, to form a kind erf spider farm
for the purpose of producing this silk
in the greatest possible perfection and
abundance. From Mr. Wardlie’s analy¬
sis and treatment of this silk, it may
be seen that it possesses some very
valuable and curious characteristics.
—Nature.
Curious Birthday Celebrations.
Pokeberry Pete, a curious old col¬
ored charcter who lives in Yonkers,
celebrated his seventy-fifth birthday
last week in a curious fashion. He
made a pie of seventy-five oysters,
seventy-five clams and seventy-five
little eels and ate it all. It took sev
enty-five cents’ worth of Jamaica gin¬
ger to pull him through.—New York
Mail and Espiress.
ROSEBERY QUITS.
THE PRESENT GOVERNMENT OF
ENGLAND DECIDES TO RESIGN.
Salisbury Summoned by tho Queen to
Form a New Cabinet.
It is officially announced from Lon¬
don that the Rosebery government will
resign. Lord Salisbury will be sum¬
moned by the queen to form a minis
istry and his cabinet will proceed
with the routine business of the house,
obtain provisional supplies and then
dissolve parliament. It is expected
that the elections will take place on
the 10th of July.
The second meeting of the cabinet
Saturday afternoon began at 4 o’eock
and lasted until 5:45 o’clock, The
meeting was held to decide whether
the government should resign or dis¬
solve parliament. It was decided to
resign.
Lord Rosebery had a long private
audience with the queen and commun¬
icated to her the decision arrived at by
the government.
The Central News is authority for
the statement that Lord Rosebery,
while at Windsor castle, tendered the
resignations of himself and his col¬
leagues to the queen, who accepted
them. Her majesty has sent for Lord
Salisbury, who will proceed to Wind¬
sor castle when he will be entrusted
with the formation of a ministry.
It i3 not doubted that a joint min¬
istry will be formed of liberal union¬
ists and conservatives and the cabinet
will be called a unionist government.
When it became known that Lord Sal¬
isbury had been summoned by the
queen it wan said that he would not
consent to form a ministry with the
present house of commons and that he
would recommend the queen to dis¬
solve parliament.
The unionist rank and file advise a
prompt appeal to tho country. They
believe that they will be able to obtain
a liament. majority of eighty in the next par¬
They are now very enthusi¬
astic and sanguine.
Largest Cotton Mill in America.
The largest cotton mill in America is
to bo built at once in Adams, Mass.
The mill will employ over 1,000 people
and will have 80,000 spindles and 2,100
looms. It will cost 81,000,000. It
will bo 425 feet.long and 110 feet wide,
with an L, and will be live stories
high. The enterprise is headed by
Plunkett Bros, and some of the heav¬
iest capitalists in tho country aro in¬
terested.
No Moro Sunday Ball Playing.
At Toledo, O., Saturday Judges
Haynes, Scribner and King, com¬
posing the circuit court, made per¬
manent the injunction against Sun¬
day ball playing in that city. Tho
ground on which tho injunction was
granted was that the cheering made
it a nuisance. This victory by tho
civic federation is looked upon as tho
start of a moral crusade, tho results
of which may be f arroaching.
Tlie Mortgage Must l>o Paid in Gold.
The mortgage for §10,500,000 given
by the Mobile and .Ohio Railway Com¬
pany, aud on file in the recorder’s of¬
fice at Belleville, Ill., has been
amended and refiled. There has been
some doubt concerning the character
of the money in which the indebedness
should be paid and the amended in¬
strument provides that tho principal
and interest shall be paid in gold.
Insurgents M in a Victory.
Advices from Santiago tie Cuba nro
to the effect that a serious encounter
between tho Spanish troops and a
band of in.-urgent.-) took place near
Bancs, in the province ox Gibnra
Thursday. The Spanish troops were
unable to hold their position aud were
compelled to retire with considerable
loss.
Another Advance in Kails.
The Illinois Steel Company at Chicago
have announced an advauee of $2 a ton
in the price of steel rails, tho former
price being $23. The increase is at¬
tributed to the increased cost of ore,
coke and labor. It is said by the com¬
pany that a further appreciation in
values will be justified before the close
of tho year.
Will Not Withdraw.
At the session of tho Woman’s Press
Club of Georgia at Lookout inn a mo¬
tion to withdraw from the general fed¬
eration of woman’s clubs on account of
the admittance of negroes was tabled
after a heated discussion. Delegates
were appointed to the meeting of the
federation in Louisville next May.
Disastrous Fire at Seattle.
Early Thursday morning fire de¬
stroyed 8200,000 worth of property
belonging to the Seattle Consolidated
Street Railway Company at Seattle,
Wash. The company’s power house,
a brick structure, was totally destroyed,
together with twenty-five ears. The
electric plant was the most complete
in the northwest.
Charged With Embezzlement.
C. M. Mills, formerly of Try on, N.
C., was arrested at Asheville Tuesday
on charge of embezzling money order
funds of the government to the
amount of 8500, and was held to fede¬
ral court in bond of 81,000.
The Jungfrau Road Assured.
The financing of the scheme for the
construction of a railway up the Jung¬
frau mountain near Berne, Switzer¬
land, is assured, and the work will be
begun in the latter part of the present
i year.
In Southern Hospitals.
Some conception of the magnitude
of the labors performed in field and
hospital service by the officers of the
medical corps of the Confederate army
may be formed by the consideration
of the following general results;
Year. Killed. •Wounded. Prisoners.
1861 1,315 4.084 2.772
im ........ 18.582 68.659 48,300
l at 7 11,870 51,313 71,211
1804- 65.... 22.200 70,000 60,000
53,973 194,026 202,283
During the period of nineteen
months, January, 1862, to July, 1863,
inclusive, over one million cases of
wounds and disease were entered upon
the Confederate field reports, and
over four hundred thousand cases of
wounds upon the hospital reports.
The number of caseB of wounds and
diseases treated in the Confederate
field and general hospitals were, how¬
ever, greater during the following
twenty-two months, ending April,
1865. It is safe to affirm, therefore,
that more than 3,000,000 cases of
wounds and diseases were cared for by
the officers of the medical corps of the
Confederate army daring the civil war
of 1861—’65. The figure of course do
not indicate that the Confederacy had
in the field an army approaching
3,500,000. On the contrary the Con¬
federate forces engaged during the
war, 1861-1865, did not exceed 600,000.
Each Confederate soldier was on an
average, disabled for greater or lesser
period, by wounds and sickness, about
six times during the war .—Galveston
News.
Tlie Melaphone.
This is an improvement on the tele¬
phone. The instrument originated in
the west, and by its use it is said that
the human voice can be heard over a
mile. A dispatch from Cincinnati,O.,
states that the Melaphone was tested
on a steamboat and that the pilot
talked with parties on either shore
with the greatest ease and distinctness.
It is regarded by the steamboat men
of great value in river traffic.
He Was Desperate.
Said Mrs. Fussy (who had kept the
long-suffering shopkeeper in agony for
over an hour)—You needn't show me
auything more; there is nothing here
that suits me.
“Can't I show you the door,ma’am?”
asked the shopkeeper, desperately.
COOK BOOK FREE.
Every housekeeper wants to know the best
things to eat, and how to prepare them.
“The Royal Baker and Pastry Cook.”
Contains One thousand useful recipes for
every kind of cooking. Edited by Prof.
Rudmani, New-York Cooking School.
Free by mail. Address (writing plainly),
mentioning this paper,
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO.
106 Wall Street. N. Y.
To Clean Silk Waists.
Both light and dark silk waists,
when soiled, may be greatly improved
in appearance by sponging them well
with gasoline or naphtha. Take a clean
piece of old bleached cloth, wot it in
the gasoline and rub quickly all over
tlie waist, rubbing the silk length¬
wise. Wipe the silk over with a clean
dry cloth and hang in the open air for
the odor of the cleaning fluid to evap¬
orate. If wrinkled, press the silk on
the wronk side with a moderately
warm iron, first laying a cloth over
its surface. This kind of cleaning will
remove all grease and much grime,
thounh not all kinds of spots. Car¬
pets and furniture coverings are often
greatly improved by cleaning them in
the same way. Do not bring the gaso¬
line or naphtha near a lire or light
and thoroughly air anything cleaned
with it. When a carpet has been
cleaned by it, leave windows open for
an entire day .—New York Post.
pi OTHERS
’1 1 A recovering from
[ —l tlie illness at¬
tending Child¬
FLc-m a 1 «•; s' birth, or who suf
Wfer from the ef
mu / v derangements fects of disorders,
¥
ailU displace
merits of the wo
manly organs,
will find relief
and a permanent cure in Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription, “Prescription” Taken during
pregnancy, the
HAKES CHILDBIRTH EASY
by preparing the system for parturition, shortening
thus assisting Nature and
“labor.” The painful ordeal of child¬
birth is robbed of its terrors, and the
dangers thereof greatly lessened, to both
mother and child. The period of con¬
finement is also greatly shortened, the
mother strengthened and built up, and
an abundant secretion of nourishment
for the child promoted.
HOTEL CUMBERLAND
Cumberland Island, ca.
Finest sea bench in the South. Fishing unexcelled
on the continent. Street cars free to the beach.
Naphtha launch anl fleet of riw-boats. Splendid
livery appointments. Ample 'accommodation % for 50-J
guests- Grand orchestra! Music morning and even¬
ing. Popu'ar rates.
UCK T. SHACKELFORD, Proprietor.
A Slave From Boyhood.
(From the Red Winj, Minn., Republican )
“I am now twenty-four years old,” said
Edwin Swanson, of White Bock, Goodhue
County, M i n n., to a Republican representa¬
tive, “and as you can see I am not very large
of stature. When l fcas eleven years old I
became afflicted with a sickness which baf¬
fled the skill and knowledge of the physician.
I was not taken suddenly ill but on the con¬
trary I can hardly state the exact time when
it began. The first symptoms were pains in
my back and restless nights. The disease
did not trouble me much at first, but it
seemed to have settled in my body to stay
and my bitter experience during the last
thirteen years proved that to be the case. I
was of course a ehiid and never dreamed of
the suffering in store for me. I complained
to my parents and they concluded that in
time I would outgrow my trouble, but when
they heard me groaning during my sleep
they became thoroughly alarmed. Medical
advice was sought but to no avail; I grew
rapidly worse and was soon unable to move
about and finally became confined continu¬
ally to my bed. The best doctors that could
be had were Consulted, but did nothing for
me. 1 tried various kinds of extensively ad¬
vertised patent medicines with but the same
result.
“For twelve long years I was thus a suf¬
ferer in constant agony without respite,
abscesses formed on my body in rapid suc¬
cession and the world indeed looked very
dark to me. About this time when all hope
was gone and nothing seemed left but to re¬
sign myself to my most bitter fate my atten¬
tion was caUed to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
for Pale People. Dike a drowning man
grasping cluded at make a straw, in sheer desperation I con¬
to one more attempt—not to re¬
gain my health (I dare not to hope so much)
but if possible to ease my pain.
“I bought a box of the pills and they
seemed to do mo good. I felt encouraged
and continued their use. After taking six
boxes I was up and able to walk around the
house. I have net felt so well for thirteen
years as during the past year. Only one
year have 1 taken Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
and I um able now to do chores and attend
to light duties.
“Do I hesitate to let you publish what I
have said'/ No. Why should Ii It is the
truth and I am only too glad to let other suf¬
ferers know my experience. It may help
those whose cup of misery is as full to-day
as mine was in the past."
Dr, Williams' Pink Pills contain, in a con¬
densed form, all the elements necessary to
give new life and richness to the blood and
restore shattered nerves. They are also a
specific for troubles peculiar to females, such
as suppressions, irregularities i and all forms
of weakness. They uild up the blood, and
restore checks. the In glowof health to pale and sallow
all arising men they from effect a radical cure in
casc<) mental worry, over¬
work or excesses of whatever nature. Pink
Pills are sold In boxes (never in loose bulk)
at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, ami
may be hail of all druggists, or direct by
mail from Dr. Williams’Medicine Company,
Schenectady, N. V.
Inexpensive Glory.
Heroine (despairingly) —How much
ftrL ‘ }’ on paid for thus relently pursu
ingjne? Heavy Villain—A paltry 815 week
a
expenses, ma’am. — Buffalo C'ou
rirr -
_ _
Tobacco l'sex's Sore Throat.
It's so common that every tobacco user
has an irritated throat that gradually devel¬
ops into a serious condition, frequently con¬
sumption. and it’s the kind of a sore throat
that never gels well as long as you use to
baeoo. The tobacco habit, sore throat and
Jost manhood eurod by No-To-Bac. Sold and
guaranteed to cure by Druggists everywhere.
Book, titled “Don’t Tobacco Suit or Smoke
Your Lite Away,” free. Ad. Sterling llem
edy Co., New York City or Chicago.
TVe Kcvivinir Powers ot Barker’s Ginger
'1 qnic make it the need of every home. Stom¬
ach troubles, colds and ah distress yield to it.
Mt OSBORNE’S
udtnedd a/lem
School of Shorthand AND d
and Telegraphy.
ISo x- text . books , , used. AWd’NTA. business (it. day
Business Actual from of
entering. psoer*. college eurr ncy and
goods u-ed. Send for handsomely illustrated cata¬
logue. Board cheap. R. R. fare pa d to Augusta,
HOTEL TYBEE
TYBEE ISLAND, (iA.
'VliI- Hotel ia noted for its excellent service and
splendid cu sine, ih* tab** being suppied with all the
e erodes
g*g ed for season. Specialty low vr rates rates this this 8 ‘ason.
” rrite * or terras. Special^ it i i ducements ducements to to partia* parties of ,
ten or more- IfOHAN *fc vOWAN.
Notice to Hill Men
And tar mere owning small power: The finest and
most conn ate Saw Mill in ex stence to-day, is manu¬
factured by ti e lUftOUU .11J 1,1,
3uO Ofy 111 iimd ,Ave.« Arlaiifn, Gn. To -k
pmo at \\ orld’aFatr at Chicago. Ail sizes, from 4 h.
p. up to the largest. Prices reduced. Send for cata¬
logue Born showing new improvements; a so. of Portable
M i s, Baling Prun es aud Turbine Water Wheels,
Puileys and hhaftmg ahd all kindsof mill suppl es.
F to 110 U E E. blood
n
fl a fresh, rosy color tothc luce, h is nourishing
to the system. Will cure Dyspepsia, simple
to prepare. Contains no dings, but a grand blood
$1. purifying tODlc. I will send the 'tee pt to anyone for
Addrtss K. M. COLL, Box 885, Sioux City, Iowa.
A. N. U....... ..... Twenty-six, ’95.
Where tGOh'E ____g| F OK
Heat cpEs Cough Syrup. all Tastes else Good. fails. Uae
in time, gold by druggists.
;C.O NSiUW PT ION