The Bulloch herald. (Statesboro, Ga.) 1899-1901, July 27, 1899, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

AS“l!NMANLY” SAYS PINGREE overnor ef Michigan Severely Scores President McKinley TREATED ALGER SHAMEFULLY” he Assertion Is Hade That War Secretary Repeatedly Offered to Vacate. A Detroit, Mich., special says: Gov I ernor Pingree handed to the Associ I ted Press Friday a prepared, and signed l interview, giving what the governor I asserts are to be “facts which are ab I solutely reliable, bearing upon the re¬ lations between General Alger and President McKinley with which the public are not familiar.” At the out ! set the governor said: “I have no hesitation in saying that I the course pursued by the president in this matter is little less than cow ardly. It is, to say the least, very unmanly.” Governor Pingree said his informa¬ tion did not come from General Alger, but from one whose knowledge of the facts cannot be disputed. Proceeding, he says that repeatedly since the eastern newspapers began their attacks upon Secretary Alger, the secretary informed the president that if those press dispatches embar¬ rassed the administration in the slightest degree, he w r ould resign at once, but the president as often pro¬ tested emphatically that he had the utmost confidence in Secretary Alger and his conduct of the war depart¬ ment, and that the country could ‘not afford to lose his services. The governor says that at the time “his alleged alliance with General Al¬ ger was announced, and before his dis¬ avowal of interviews criticising the president had reached Washington, General Alger told the president that upon the president’s slightest intima¬ tion he would resign, but the presi¬ dent refused to entertain the idea for a moment. “As to the ‘alleged alliance’ being any reason for asking for General Al¬ ger’s resignation, Governor Pingree says, ‘Long befo,*« my announcement that I would support General Alger for the senate, Secretary of State Hay, on June 2d last, requested Vice Presi¬ dent Hobart to intimate to General Alger that his resignation would be acceptable to the president and would relieve him from the embarrassing at¬ tacks of the press upon the conduct of the war. Mr. Hobart very properly declined to be a party to such unmanly, not to say cowardly, proceeding and express ins opinion in terms decidedly vigor¬ ous. “After that General Alger, entirely ignorant of this miserable conspiracy, several times offered to end the attacks by submitting his resignation, but still the president did not have the courage to express himself to his sec¬ retary. General Alger finally did hand his resignation to the president to take effect January 2d. “The president dared not face the general in a manly way and ask him to retire and give his reasons for mak¬ ing the request. He finally accom¬ plished by indirection what he dared not do in an open and frank manner himself.” Governor Pingree states that Mr. Hobart was finally prevailed upon by Attorney General Griggs to convey to the secretary that his resignation was desired and gave my alleged alliance with the secretary as a pretext. Commenting on the whole matter, the governor says that General Alger’s sacrifice was compelled by demands of New York politicians, backed by the “unscrupulous and heartless press.” He predicts that it will be learned “that the president himself will he responsible for whatever mistakes have been made in conducting the war.” “I am told on the very best author¬ ity that General Alger made very few appointments of officers during the war, and that the commissions were issued almost entirely upon the order of the president.” Jl’LAURIN HAS “CINCH.” Manager* of “Private” Allen Give Up Fight In Mississippi. A Bpecial from Jackson, Miss., Fays: The campaign managers of “Private” John Allen now concede the election of Governor McLanrin to the United State senate, althought they make no estimate of the majority. McLanrin now lacks only five votes of the number necessary to elect on joint legislative ballot, and the coming pri¬ maries positively assure him ♦fifteen, with a good fighting chance for twelve more. It is conceded that McLanrin will have to his credit the ninety votes necessary to elect. “A Good Name At Home Is A Tozm of Strength Abroad.” In d-omell, c Mass., ‘where Hood's Sarsapa¬ rilla is made, it stdl has a Larger sale than all other blood purifiers. Its fame and cures and sales have spread abroad, and H is universally recognized as the best blood medicine money can buy. member Never Disdppoin t s SourStomaeh BETS, ‘letter I will I never wu be Induced without to them try in CA8CA My liver in the house. was a very bad shape, and my head ached and 1 had stomach trouble. Now. since tak lug Cascarets, 1 feel fine, My wife bas also used them with beneficial results for sour stomacli." Joe. Krihuxq, 1S21 Congress St., St. Louis, Mo. CANDY CATHARTIC ^ TRADE MARK REGISTERED TW Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 2ic,50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. • « • Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, New York. US NO-TO-BAC GOLDEN CROWN LAMP CHIMNEYS Are the best. Ask for them. Cost no more than common chimney*. All dealers. PITTSBURG GLASS CO., Allegheny, Pa. Malsby & Company, 39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga. Engines and Boilers Steam Water Hcater*, Steam Pumps and Penberthy Injectors, m SpSliliL.. Manufacturers and Dealers In ’W MILLS, Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machin¬ ery and Grain Separators. SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and Locks, Knight’s Patent Dogs, Rirdsall Saw Mill and Engine Repair*, Governors, Grate Bar* and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price or.a quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue free by mentioning^this paper. BOTTLE OF MORPHINE. J. M. Warren. Ordinary Wilcox Co., Abbeville, says: “I used daily one bottle morphine and quart of whisky 7 years ago; Dr. Syms cured me in 16 days without losing anight’s sleep or suf¬ fering a tingle day, and I have never wanted any morphine or whisky since. Will answer any questions.” Patients given a written guarantee No suffering or lose of sleep. Habit cured in 25 days; no pay til 1 absolutely cured. For t erms, etc.. writeDr.B. A. Syms,51 W illianisSt., Atlanta, Ga. yjfiE Ok cured and Whiskey home Habits with at gffj VB out ticularssent pain. Book FREE. of p;ir BBS B.M.WOOLLEY, M.D. Atlanta, m. Office 104 N. Pryor St. NEW DISCOVERY; give* 1 quick relief and eur*s worst espes- Bonk of testimonial!! and 10 days’ treatment Free. Dr H. H. GREEK 8 *0KB, Box D, Atlanta, 6a. WANTED-Case of bad health that RIP-A-NS » » will not benefit. Send fi cts. to Ripans Chemical Co., NewVork. for lu samples and icoo testimonials. Suicide in New York City. According to the annual police report jhere were in 1S98, 673 cases of suicide in New York City. These were divid¬ ed up in this way: By burning, 1; by drowning, 21; by suffocation by means of gas, 137; by hanging, 70; by jump¬ ing from balconies, 1; by jumping frjjrn buildings, 2; by jumping from roof, 1; by jumping from windows, 3; by knife, J>4; by poison, 270; by razor 1, and by shooting. 142. The police gave aid in 526 cases of attempted suicide, but that was not the total number of such cases, as 606 persons were arrested for trying to kill themselves, of whom 255, or nearly half, were women.—New York Press. Are You Itchy? If so, something Is wrong with your skin. Ask your druggist for ’Jetteiine, nnd you can cure yourself «itbout a doctor for 50 cents. Any skin disease, ringworm, eczema, salt rheum, etc. Or send 50 cents iu stamps for box prepaid to J. T. Bhuptrlne, Savannah, Ga. Try a box. Brooklyn. N. Y.. pays 34 cents per night for each 1,230 c. p. lamp. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. Jf C. C. C. tail to cure, druggistsrefund money. TheSahanv desert is three times as large as the Mediterranean. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens llie gums, reduces inflamma¬ tion.allays pain.cures wind colic. ‘Joe. a bottle. After ph'sieians had given me up, I whs paved by I'iso’s Cure.—R alph Kiueo, Wil liamsport, Pa., Nov. 22. 1893. _______ The failings of good men are more lished than their virtues. p Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed fv H To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it? Price 50c, OLD-TIME XLOSIIKE DAYS. Life of White Before Gold Was Discovered. One of the pioneer gold seekers, Dr. Sweeney, was fortunate in meeting with Geo. \V. Carmaek, the discover¬ er of the Klondike, and from him he gathered much interesting informa¬ tion concerning the habits of the In¬ dian tribes on the Yukon and the white men who long before the discovery of the treasure hidden beneath the froz¬ en moss and gravel of the Klondike Valley lived with them and shared the hardships of their daily life. “Some of the things that Carmack told me,” said Dr. Sweeney, “were en¬ tirely new to me, and all very interest¬ ing. One of the things I have always been anxious to know was how the white men lived who hunted and trapped along the Yukon in the days when it was thousands of miles to the trading posts and civilization. Car¬ mack explained to me. “ ‘We were compelled,’ he said, ‘to do just as the Indians did. In the sum¬ mer time, besides game and fish, we ate berries, for Alaska is the home of all sorts of berries. And besides these we obtained other substitutes for the vegetables of civilization. The princi¬ pal of these were grass roots, certain small bulbs or tubers, and the inside bark of various trees. “ ‘In the winter we ate fish, meat, and berries, which the squaws dried in the summer, and stored away. Then also the little bulbs I have mentioned came in very handily. I have forgot¬ ten now what they were called, but they, as all old Alaska men know, form the principal food of the timber squirrels Gf that country during the winter. It was by rifling the hoards of these little animals that we obtained our supply of the bulbs iu the winter. Their hoards are always to be found in a solitary spruce tree in a thicket of stunted pines. That was the way in which we located them. The reason foA this I never knew. As a substitute for bread—of course, the Indians then had no flour—we ate a species of pud¬ ding made of the blood of the game we killed, boiled with dried berries and sometimes with the little bulbs from the squirrel hoards.’ “I asked Carmack how the Indians in those days obtained salt for their meat. Every one knows that, to a white man at least, salt is a necessity, and not a mere flavoring matter. In answer Carmack told me something that was entirely new to me. He said that the Indians made tt a practice not to throw away the water in which they boiled their meat, but allowed it to remain in the kettle. In course of a short time, he told me, the water or broth would become extremely salty and could then be maintained at what¬ ever degree of saltiness deemed de¬ sirable by the addition of fresh water to replace some of the salt broth dipped out and thrown away.” The Trained K arse's Baby. This has become an experimental age for babies. The writer of this recently saw the ten-months-old baby of a doc¬ tor whose wife was a trained nurse. The baby had never worn a thread of flannel or shoes and stockings a min¬ ute in its life, and very seldom wore anything on its head. It was very sturdy-looking and had never known a moment's illness. Its clothing on a hot day consists of two pieces only, and the women can tell what they are. It is never tortured with starched em¬ broideries and trimmed clothes.—At¬ chison Globe. The report of the Fire Department of Now York City for 1898 showed that 4,720 alarms were turned in, with 4,239 actual fires. Do Your Feet Ache and Burn ? Shake into your shoes Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes Tight or New khoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bun¬ ions, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Aching and Sweating Feet. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allan S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.__ New Zealand farmers send frozen eream to Lonuon, where it is churned for butter. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar¬ tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im¬ purities from the body. Begin to-day to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty guaranteed, for ten cents. 10c, All drug¬ gists, satisfaction 25c, 50c Brrmkljn has 474 miles of paved streets, exclusive of those made of macadam. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous¬ ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great NeYve Restorer. 42 trial bottleandtreatlsefree. Dr. li. H. Kune, Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Water is the hardest of all substances to heat, except hydrogen gas. No-To-Hac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobncoo hatdt cure, makes weal: men strong, blot d pure. EOc, $1. All druggists. Paper is now made In Holland from potato stems and leaves. W. H. Griffin, Jxckson. Michigan, write*: ’Suffered with Catarrh for fifteen years. Hal l’sjUatarrh Cure cured me.” Sold by Drug fi*ts. 7’>c. A Chance. Husband—I’m going to join another club tonight. Wife—I don’t suppose I’ll Bee you at all after this. Husband—Oh, yes! They have la¬ dies’ day.—Puck. Still More Counterfeiting. The Secret Service has Just unearthed an¬ other band el counterfeiters, and secured a large quantity of bogus bills, which are so cleverly executed that the average spurious. person would never suspect them of being Things of great value are always selected for Imitation, notably Ilostetter’s Stomach Bit¬ ters, which has many Imitators but no equals for disorders like Indigestion, dyspepsia, con¬ stipation, nervousness and general debility. Always go to reliable druggists who have the reputation of giving what you ask for. There were 2,150,000 acres planted In wheat last year in Victoria. Don’t Tobacco Spit end Smoke Your Lite Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag¬ netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or $1. Cure guaran¬ teed. Booklet w.lA sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Scientists have discovered that the memory is stronger in summer than in winter. “Mulberry Pills’* (Wlnterstr.lth’s) cure Even constipation, grandmothers headache, knew liver mulberry trouble. our the was Pills.” nature’s To laxative. their value Such are will “Mulberry send prove vre a sample size box to any address on receipt of a 2c stamp to pay postage. Address, Arthur Peter & Co., Louisville, Ky. The chnmpion lady golfer of Ireland is 17 years old. Kducate Your Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever, 10c, 26c. If C.C. 0. fail, druggists refund money. We bate some persons because we do know them. I a snow storm in summer? We never did; but we have seen the clothing at this time of the year so covered with dandruff that it looked as if it had been out in a regular snow¬ storm. No need of this snowstorm. As the summer sun would melt the falling 6now so will i ‘if i mur H A I [I 'Hi melt these flakes of dandruff in the scalp. It goes further than this: it prevents their formation. It has still other properties: hair it will restore color to gray in just ten times out of every ten cases. And it does even pore: it feeds and nourishes the roots of the hair. Thin hair becomes thick hair; and short hair be¬ comes long hair. We have a book on the Hair and Scalp. It is yours, for the asking. If you do not obtain all the benefit* you expected from the use it. of the Probably Vigor, write the doctor about there 1 * some difficulty with your gen¬ eral system which may be easily re¬ moved. Addrei*, AVER, Lowell, Mss*. DR. J. C. THE ATLANTA udmedd Mieeie Offers thorough practical courses In Bookkeep¬ ing, and Shorthand and Typewriting. Students placed in positions without extra charge. Re¬ duced rates to all euterlng school this month. Call on or address. THE ATLANTA BUSINESS COLLEGE, 128, 130 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga. College of Dentistry. DENTAL DEPARTMENT Atlanta College of Physicians and Surgeons Oldest College in Statk. Thirteenth An¬ nual Session opens Oct. 8 ; doses April 30th. Those contemplating the study of Dentistry should write for catalogue. Address 8. VV. FOSTER, Dean. <52-03 Inman Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. ____ DR. MOFFETT'S Aids Digestion, Regulates the Bowels, 11? whim**? I Makes Teathing Easy. iff!AS**? TEETHINA Relieves the E Sift Boy/el Children Troubles of Any of Age. TEETHING POWDERS ’Ask Costs Your Only Druggist BB Cents. for it If not kept by druggists mail 25 cents to C. Jf. IWOFFJETT, ML D., ST. FOURS, MO. [lkttxk to m riNXHAic xo.. 78 , 465 ] “I was a sufferer from female weak¬ ness. Every month regularly as the menses came, I suffered dreadful pains in uterus, ovaries PERIODS OF were affected and SUFFERING had leucorrhoea. I had my children GIVE PLACE very fast and it TO PERIODS left me very weak. JOY A year ago I was OF taken with flood¬ ing and almost died. The doctor even gave me up and wonders how I ever lived. “ I wrote for Mrs. Pinkham's advice at Lynn, Mass., and took her medicine and began to get well. I took several bottles of the Compound and used the Sanative Wash, and can truly say that I am cured. You would hardly know me, I am feeling and looking so well. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com¬ pound made me what I am.”—M bs. J. P. Stretch, 461 Mechanic St., Camden, N. J. How Mn. Brown Was Helped. “ I must tell you that Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound has done more for me than any doctor. “ I was troubled with irregular menstruation. Last summer I began the use of your Vegetable Compound, been an d a.ter regular taking two month bottles, since. ^1 have I every recommend your medicine to all. — Mrs. MAGGIE A. BROWN, WEST Pi. ESTERS Send your name and address on postal, and we will send you our 156 page illustrated catalogue free. WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. 176 Winchsstsr Avenue, Now Haven, Conn, Doesn’t your hasn't boy write good well ink. f Perhaps he CARTER'S INK IS THE BEST INK. More used than any other. Don’t cost yon any more than poor ink. Ask for it. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT. Tnlane University of I/ouislana. Its advantages for practical instruction, both tn ample laboratories and abundant hospital materials, are unequalled. Free access is given to the great Charity Hospital Special with 900 beds and SO,000 patients annually. instruc¬ tion le given dally at tho bedside of the sick. The next session begins October 10th, 1809. For catalogue and information address Prof. S. K. CHAILLE, M. D., Dean, P. O. Drawer 261. NEW ORLEANS. LA. [LETTER to MRS. PINKHAM NO. 46,970) “I had female com¬ plaints so bad that it caused me to have hysterical fits; have had as many as nine in one day. “Five bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cured me and it has been a year since I had an attack. firs. Edna Jackson, Pearl, La. If Mrs. Pinkham’s Compound will euro such severe cases as this surely it must be a great medicine—is thero any sufferer foolish enough not to give it a trial ? SO’S CURE FOR |*4 ks Best CURES Cough WHERE Syrup. AU Tastes ElSE Good. FAILS. _ Deo Eu in time. Sold by druggists. USE CERTAIN CHILL CURE. MENTION THIS PAPER tisers. in writing ANU to 99-30 adver