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BIMETALLISTS MEET IN CITY OF LOUISVILLE
Third Annual Convention of the Ohio Valley League, Which
Comprises Four States.
ISANY PROMINENT MEMBERS TAKE PART IN THE PROCEEDING
Banquet Given At Which William Jennings Bryan, Ex-Governor
Altgeld and Others Make Speeches.
The Ohio Talley League of Bimetal¬
lic Clubs, comprising the states of
Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky,
began its third annual convention in
Louisville, Ky., Wednesday. Mc-
Cauley’s theater, the scene of the gath¬
ering of the white metal hosts, was
profusely decorated when the conven¬
tion was called to order at 2:30 o’clock
in the afternoon.
A likeness of William J. Bryan was
suspended from the fly over the speak¬
er’s stand, while pictures of Thomas
Jefferson and Andrew Jackson hung
from the two upper boxes. The na¬
tional colors in flags and bunting com¬
pletely covered the walls of the the¬
ater, presenting an inviting and artis¬
tic appearance, while a brass band
played the national airs at intervals.
Prominent among the delegates and
visitors were men whose words have
been of national significance, and what
was lacking numerically was seemingly
supplied by the aumented enthusiasm
of those in attendance, for when Pres¬
ident Tarvin, of the Bimetallic League
began his annual address the lower
floor was only comfortably filled, while
the balcony was only partially deserted. occu-
pied and the gallery entirely
The boxes were occupied by ladies,
wives and daughters of the delegates.
But as the convention progressed the
crowd increased until perhaps 1,000
people were in the theatre.
Called to Order.
The convention was called to order
at 2:30 o’clock by Chairman Semonin,
of the local committee, who intro-
duced Mayor Weaver of Louisville,
He extended a hearty welcome to the
visiting delegates, told them that the
key to the city was in their possession
and that their work would be well done
if they indorsed Bryan for president
in 1900.
At the conclusion of his address,
Judge J. P. Tarvin, Covington, Ky.,
president of the bimetalic league, was
introduced and spoke at considerable
length. His remarks were at times re-
ceived with the greatest enthusiasm,
a re-affirmation of the Chicago plat-
form, or an indorsement of William J.
Bryan as the presidential nominee be-
ing the signal for vociferous applause,
President Tarvin’s speech was of
more than passing national signifi-
cance, as it presages what is to hap-
pen, if a tenor of the delegates assem-
bled is a fair criterion of the senti-
went prevailing in their respective dis¬
tricts, for when he declared that
bimetallism and the free coinage of
silver at the ratio of 16 to 1 as was
enunciated in the Chicago platform of
1896 would be the paramount issue in
the presidential campaign of 1900 re¬
gardless of the efforts to have the
question of trusts supplant it, it met
with an outburst of applause that in¬
dicated an overwhelming approval of
the speaker.
Following Judge Tarvin, Congress¬
man James M. Robinson, of Indiana,
made an impromptu speech. In re¬
ference to the coming campaign of
1900, the speaker said that it lay with
the democratic party to name the vic¬
tor and that they would make a great
mistake if they did not select Mr. Bry¬
an. The votes which Mr. Bryan got
in 1896, he said, were only pledged on
the part of the voters to carry the
standard of bimetallism to a triumph¬
ant finish in our next national election.
These pledges, he said, were still fresh
in the hearts of all champions of the
silver cause and needed no reiteration.
The delegates were late in' reassem¬
bling for the evening session, and it
was after 8 o’clock before the conven¬
tion got down to business.
President Tarvin introduced the
Hon. Flavius J. Van Yorhis, of Indian¬
apolis, whom he said had given forty
years of his life in defending the prin-
CANNON FOR SPEAKERSHIP.
The Republicans of Ohio Favor “Hon¬
est Uncle Joe.”
Information has been received in
Washington by a well known western Illi¬
congressman to tbe effect that the
nois republican delegation may have
to abandon Mr. Hopkins and take
“Honest Uncle Joe”' Cannon as its
candidate for the speakership. The
unexpected strength shown by General
Henderson in Wisconsin has had a
very depressing effect upon some of
the Hopkins boomers.
The reasons assigned for the bring¬
ing out of Cannon are supposed to be
national in their character.
DINNER TO GENERAL WHEELER.
Luncheon Ia Spread At Union Club
Rooms In Boston.
At Boston, Mass., Wednesday, Gen¬
eral Joseph Wheeler was tendered an
informal luncheon at the Union club
by Governor Wolcott. Among those
present were John D. Long, secretary
of the navy, Richard Olney, former
secretary of state, and Josiah Quincy,
mayor of Boston.
ciples as enunciated by the republican
.
J’ a
The _, Indiana stateman , , was heartily ,
cheered when he arose to address the
convention.
The speaker at once entered into a
discussion of the financial question,
saying it was the problem , , „ of . progress
and of liberty. It is a question of the
greatest moment, he said, to the peo-
pie of this republic. He reviewed the
question from its inception, touching
upon the evils, which he contended
following a concentration of money
0 B srss;
er e
Ex GovernorJ.P.Altgeld, of Illi-
nois, was presented. The greatest Illinois en-
thusiasm prevailed when the
statesman aros^to address the conven-
tion the delegates rising to their feet,
waiving their hats and cheering lus-
,•]
While Governor Altgeld was in the
midst of the discourse Mr. Bryan
reached the theater. After the speech
had been concluded the distinguished
visitors repaired to the Galt House,
where a banquet of the Young Men’s
Democratic Club of Louisville was
given to James Tarvin, the president, the
To attend this and to respond to Mr.
toast, “The Democratic Party,”
Bryan had made a special trip to
Louisville two days earlier than he ex-
pected.
Tli® Banquet.
At the conclusion of the banquet,
and with chairs a-tilt and cigars glow-
ing, the guests settled themselves to
listen to the feast of oratory that was
planned for the occasion. In response
to the first toast, “The Ohio Valley
League of Bimetallic Clubs,” Judge
James P. Tarvin, president of the
league, responded. the Hon.
Following Judge Tarvin,
William Jennings Bryan, who had ac-
cepted a special invitation from the
clubs to be present, was introduced to
the assembled guests. His subject
was “The Democratic Party.” -4 tu-
mult of applause greeted him as he
arose, and amid the fluttering of hand-
kerchiefs and the clapping of hands he
was escorted to a chair in the center of
the dining hall. He spoke in substance
as follows:
“I am not here to make any extend-
ed remarks. The committee has ar-
ranged that on Friday I may tell all I
know, aDd all that I may learn be-
tween now and that time. I am in
need of rest, but I willingly join in the
tribute to the Ohio Valley league and
the Young Men’s Democratic Club.
In the campaign of 1896 we were com¬
pelled to rely on the new men because
of the desertion of the old men, but
as the darkness brings out the stars,
so did many new ones appear all over
the firmament.
“You have asked me to respond to
the toast,‘The Democratic Party.’ A.
party is merely a business organiza-
tion composed of individuals who
think alike and act alike in order to
bring into operation certain fixed be-
liefs. If unity of purpose determines
a party, the democratic party is cer-
tainly entitled to be called one. Its
purpose is to carry the government
back and place it on the principles ex-
pounded by Thomas Jefferson with
the maxim ‘equal rights to all, special
privileges to none firmly grounded in
every branch, legislative, executive
and even judicial.”
Referring to the Chicago platform,
he said:
“It was not written for one cam-
paign. It will live and it will out-
live those who sit at the tables here
tonight.” from the
Referring to the defections
party ranks in 1896, he said that the
party was stronger for them, but that
the door was open for the return of
the penitent.
MEASURE WAS KILLED.
Capitol ot Florida Will Not Be Moved
From Tallahassee.
The event of the day in the Florida
legislature Tuesday was the over¬
whelming defeat in the house of
Clark’s bill to move the state capital
from Tallahassee. The measure re¬
quired three-fifths vote of the whole
house for its passage, but received the
decided minority of 26 to 39. An
amendment to the constitution with
the same end in view was defeated at
a previous session. This ends the re¬
moval agitation and the legislature
now proposes to spend $50,000 im¬
proving the present state house.
FOUN DTWENTYTHOIJS A N D.
Workmen Unearth Wealth In Tearing
Down Old Building.
At Portsmouth, O., Wednesday, a
tin can containing $20,000 in gold was
found by workmen engaged in tearing
down the meat shop belonging to the
^state of Philip Mnlter, who died
over a year ago. down his
The family decided to tear
old place of business, ostensibly to
erect a new block and the money was
found.
WHY A VEGETARIAN.
MME. LILLI LEHMANN GIVES
REASONS.
Fell* or Her Simple Diet—Sins* I.olde
on a Plate of Klee—Her Health Is
Much Improved by the New and
Simple Pare. V
Mae, Lilli Lehmann several years
Ago was prostrated by a severe illness
and was off the stage for a long time.
She even despaired of regaining her
health and of being able to resume her
career. At that critical moment two of
her friends advised her to become a
vegetarian, saj's the New York Herald.
She followed their advice, with most
beneficial results. One advantage she
derives from it is that on the days
when she sings she is not obliged to
(;hange her dfet Here ig gomething
that ghe has t0 say on tbe topic: “The
days on which I sing,” said Mme. Leh-
mann, “I vary my mode of life hardly
a jot. For five years I have been a
vegetarian. What a glorious word for
^ ^ ^ ^ H
with gucb a fee i ing 0 f exultation! My
shattered nerves bad kept me l0 r a
long time on a bed o{ illness. It
geemc(J j mposslb i e for me to recover
from attacks Qf heart palpltaUo n, diz-
and fa)nting gpeIls- PinaUy
*«*» ■»*
recommended me to become a vege-
Parian. Though I had a kind of mys-
crious repugnance to the idea of giv-
mg up my rare beefsteak, to which I
bad become accustomed, especially in
America, and feared that I might he
attacked with weakness in conse-
quence, I gathered my energies to-
gether and began one day to live only
on vegetables and fruit. What hap-
pened? It agreed admirably with me.
True, the first two or three days I
couldn’t get rid of the idea that I
didn’t feel satisfied. But by the fourth
day I was accustomed to it, and after
a fortnight the attacks of dizziness and
fainting and heart palpitation had
reased. I was a free being, cured of
all my troubles which had been playing
me such bad tricks. In addition to this
I must not underestimate the satisfac¬
tion I feel in knowing when I sit down
to a meal that I am not eating nay fel-
low-creatures and that la order to sat-
isfy my appetite no harm has come to
(hem. and it has not been necessary to
take the lives of any of them. But you
want to know principally what I eat
and drink the days I sing. Whether I
sing or not. my diet remains the same,
I carry out the same program, and that
suits me perfectly. If I happen to be
a t home I rise very early—at 6 or b:30
o’clock—go into my garden and work
there among my plants and flowers. If
the weather is bad I write a good deal,
At 7:30 I drink a glass of milk, eat a
little rye bread and now and then some
; fruit. Usually I dine at noon, but
i wben j s ; ng j n the evenings, an hour
j latel . j take a plate of vegetables or
j r j ce g0UPj t hen I eat a plate of rice,
| 4 O ’ c ]ock I have a cup of milk,
and at 7 0 - c lock eat some green salad,
| a coup j e 0 j eggs 0 r cheese. At odd in-
j tervalg dur j ng the day I have fish, fruit, I
p erbaps tw ice a year j ea t hut
Five Generations Represented.
\Trs Mab el a Phillips 82, Dec. 15,
; i isac ’' ‘' Y c.’.+ion First generation
j Mrs M i 62 Feb. 9 1899
' '
f” Second generation
| ”‘ ' ‘ ‘ V r ‘_'' y Alexander 48 April 4,
j 00 stoehr' Third generation
j J ,ini ’ 23 March 11, 1898.
*4 ' Pour t b generation
•• 1898....
, uU ia stoehr ’ Aug. 25,
- Fifthgeneration
' n '''' j n ' .1,'' 'southwestern part of
: * ‘ of
, ania in 4 be quiet towns
| ‘ \
, u n i 0 ntown, live the
11 link
, memo family who form a
; Qf flye gener ations.
; ln great-grandmother and the
] / n( , motber reside in Califor-
=■ about fifty miles south
n ' a w bich is grandmother,
- and tbe
0 live in Uniontown,
and child
about tweuty ml ] es sou th of
" ^andchildren, l'ifornia There twenty-eight are two great-great- great
Grandchildren” and twenty-six* grand-
children In
family, most of
whom are living. !•» 5 &
Only seventy-
eight years separ¬
ate tbe great-great¬
grandchild from
great-great- :.T'
the: who,
grandmother, advanced age >*» fS
at the V
of 82, is enjoying w
the blessings of life fM a I
as heartily as she
did twenty years vsZ
ago. The great- m i
4 great-grandchild years old. Mrs. is Hi *
Mabel the a great-great- Phillips is 1 £4^ fv”
grandmother, while
t li e great-grand- \
mother is Mrs.
Mary A. Sutton,
The honors of
are
proudly borne by Mrs. Mary E. Alex-
ander, who is the mother of eight
children, five of whom are living. Mrs.
Lulu Stoehr is the daughter of Mrs.
Alexander and the mother of Martha
Stoehr in this chain of five genera-
tions.
There is a difference of only twenty
years between the great-grandmother
md the great-great-grandmother, Mrs.
Phillips being 82 and Mrs. Sutton 62
years old. Mrs. Sutton, again, is only
nineteen years older than her daugh-
ter, Mrs. Alexander, who, in turn, pre-
don’t eare for It much and only take It
when X can find nothing else. With
one plate of rice taken in the after-
noon I am strong enough to sing Isolde
and to stand the strain of all the great
roles which last until midnight. I
never touch alcoholic drinks, never am
thirsty, and I have a fine buoyant feel¬
ing when I am out walking. Every
morning I go through calisthenics,
take a swim when I can, otherwise cold
baths, work a great deal In the gar-
den and indoors, I no longer know
what fatigue is since I’ve become a
vegetarian and can stand a great deal
more both mentally and bodily.
Therefore I can highly recommend this
mode of life. Simple as it is, its effect
up.on the soul is most stimulating.”
POPULAR TURQUOISE.
Demand for Fine Specimens Is In Ex¬
cess of th« Supply.
“Of all the many colored gems that
are now being worn perhaps none are
more popular with the ladies than the
turquoise,” said a leading wholesale
dealer in precious stones in New York
to a writer for the Washington Star
recently. ‘The demand for fine tur-
quoise is largely in excess of the sup¬
ply, owing to the fact that only a few
perfect specimens are at present pro¬
duced where they were once abundant.
Some of the best turquoises are found
In the Los Cerlllos and Grant county
mines in New Mexico, but the finest
gems come from the Niskapur mines ;n
northern Persia. There are five or six
of these mines, but the most produc¬
tive of all is the Rush mine, which
is situated at the top of a mountain
that rises to an altitude of 5,000 feet
above the sea level. The turquoises
are found at a depth of from 70 to 80
feet below the surface and the miners
descend first by means of a diagonal
tunnel, an'd then by ladders fastened to
the side of the shaft.
“At the mouth of the mine, which is
on a precipitous hillside, half a dozen
men stand on a ledge, and with small
hammers break up the rock that is
wound up to them with a windlass.
When a turquoise is discovered it is
placed on one side in the rough state,
incased in stone, and sent to market
at Mesked. There the precious stones
are separated from the fragments of
rock and the good specimens are sort¬
ed from the poor ones. Although in¬
ferior stones are plentiful, turquoise
of fair size and good color are seldom
found. Many of them look excellent
when taken from the mine, but the
color soon fades, or a green tinge is
developed or white spots appear on
them. Some of these white spots are
so small that they can only be detected
with the aid of a strong glass, and
even then they appear as mere specks.
but in time these specks increase and
may spread right across the stone.
These defects spoil the stone for the
European and American markets, and
they are sold to orientals, who are less
particular about such flaws. Tur¬
quoises are worth from $1 to $50, and
sell according to the size and quality
of the stone.”
Chinese Children Rescued.
At a Methodist school in China theta
a i e 50 girls picked out of some river
or pond where they had been thrown
by their parents to drown.
cedes her daughter, Mrs. Stoehr, by
twenty years. Mrs. Stoehr is 23 years
old and is nineteen years older than
her daughter, Martha, the great-great-
grandchild of Mrs. Phillips.
The members of this family forming
a link in the living chain of five gen-
erations were all married at the age
of 18, with the exception of the great-
grandmother, who became a wife at 15,
The great-great-grandmother is a
hearty old lady and is today a healthy
specimen of good cheer. She was horn
in Maria Furnace, on the Yough river,
near Connellsville, Pa., Dec. 15, 1816.
She was married to George W. Pliil-
lips at Bunker Hill, Pa., in 1834. She
well remembers the early history of
this republic and often entertains her
relatives and friends with reminis-
cences of the time of her youth. The
great-grandmother, Mrs. Sutton, was
born in Bunker Hill, Pa., Feb. 9,
1837, and was married to W. B. Sut-
ton in Uniontown, Pa„ May IV, 1852.
.Jt rs , Alexander, the grandmother, was
born jp Carmichaels, Pa., April 4,
1855, and was married to W. E. Alex¬
ander in Waynesburg, Pa., in April,
1873. Mrs. Stoehr, the mother in this
chain, was also born In Carmichaels,
March 11, 1875, and was married to
Paul M. Stoehr, cashier of Armour
& Co.’s Alleghany city branch in
Pennsylvania, in Uniontown, July 20,
1893. Martha Stoehr, the great-great-
grandchild, was born Aug. 25, 1894.
PRESENTIMENT.
Saved Him from Death and Put Him
on tli® Rond to Wealth.
San Francisco Chronicle*. Captain
George P. Bills, of Santa Barbara, who
left the city last Tuesday for Alaska,
has had the experience of being saved
from death by a presentiment to be¬
come a Klondike millionaire. Four
years ago Ellis was a poor man and
gained a livelihood as master of a
small craft employed at sea otter hunt¬
ing along the California coast. Today
he owns several of the most -valuable
claims on El Dorado and Bonanza
creeks, and he. is known to the world
as one of the miners of the far north¬
ern gold fields to whom fortune has
been kindest. And this far flight from
the deck of a steam schooner to the
owner’s stateroom of the finest private
yacht that can be built, should Ellis
choose to own such a craft, Is all be¬
cause he obeyed a mysterious mental
warning that kept him, in 1895, from
becoming a member of the crew of the
schooner B. E. Webster, that was lost
with all on hoard, Ellis at that time
was financially stranded in Santa Edr-
bara, with a family to support. He se¬
cured a position of otter hunter with
Liebes & Cc-„ of this city, and signed
a contract to go to the coast of Alas¬
ka, on the Webster. For several days
before he was to start the presenti¬
ment haunted his waking and sleeping
hours that the voyage he was about 'to
make held death for him. He is a
strong, fearless man, but finally he
yielded to his fears and secured release
from his contract. The fate that over¬
took the Webster entirely vindicated
the occult admonition that had reach¬
ed Ellis, for in a terrific gale off Lazy
harbor the schooner foundered, and
the twenty men on board perished. El¬
lis worked his way to Alaska, toiled
over the icy trails, and reached the
Y'ukon in time to locate some of the
richest claims in the Klondike. Dur¬
ing his recent visit to San Francisco he
brought his family here from Santa
Barbara and established them in a
home Worthy his present affluence. El¬
lis has returned to the Yukon country
to look after his interests there. He
will be absent a year, and will then
come back to his family and make his
home permanently in San Francisco.
IN VARIOUS PLACES.
The recenf boom in stocks and the
accompanying wave of prosperity in
Wall street, New York, proved a rec¬
ord-breaker for hotelkeepers, as well
as brokers, and it is said that visitors
have been turned away from the hotels
by the hundreds. Visitors flocked to
the metropolis from all parts of the
country and Canada until the figures
of last year, which were then con¬
sidered unusual, have been far sur¬
passed.
When Lord Carrington of England
suggested an emigration of eligible
young ladies to Australia—a sugges¬
tion which has caused great indigna¬
tion among the spinsters there—he evi¬
dently had not considered the brisk
demand for the charming commodity
in Moulton, in Cheshire. The school
board in that interesting village is at
its wits’ end, because the new school-
marms and assistant schoolmarms are
snapped up almost before they put
their feet inside the schoolroom. The
intimation of their arrival is usually
accompanied by an announcement that
they are leaving to get married.
Prior to the recent passage of the
diplomatic and consular appropriation
bill by the United States senate it was
amended so aj to increase the salaries
of various United States consuls and
secretaries of legation. The salaries
of secretaries of legation to the Argen-
tine republic, Venezuela and Peru were
increased from $1,500 to $1,800; of the
consuls at La Guayra, Venezuela, from
$1,500 to $2,000, and at Pernambuco,
Brazil, from $2,000 to $2,500. The sal-
aries of Lie third secretaries of embas-
sy at London, Paris and Berlin were
fixed at $1,600 each. The consulate at
Naples was placed in the $2,500 class,
tbo consulate of Collingwood, Canada,
in the $2,000 class, and the consulate at
Niagara Falls in the $1,500 class,
Oldest Form of Animal Life.
The Tuatara lizard of New Zealand
is said to he one of the most ancient
forms of animal life now existing. It
originally possessed four eyes, but now
has to be contented with but two. It
lays eggs and these take no less than
thirteen months to hatch out, the em¬
bryos passing the winter in a state of
hibernation. These remarkable ani¬
mals are found only in one or two
places in the colony and they *are rap¬
collectors ]
idly becoming scarce, as
from every part of the world are con¬
tinually oi their track. They are
about eighteen inches in length, and,
like many of the lizards, are said to
have the characteristic of being able to
replace portions of their limbs, etc.,
which have been destroyed, One
owned by Carl Hanser of Awanul had
the misfortune to lose an eye some
time ago, and now a complete new eye,
as perfect as the undamaged one, has
grown in the place of that lost.
Horn Id a Cabin*
New York Spe. Pittsburg Dispatch:
Miss Virginia Fair, who is soon to wed
William K. Vanderbilt, Jr., was born
in a rough two-story wooden shanty m
Virginia City, Nev., where her father
was a hard working miner. The Fair
children played with the other miners’
children and showed slight promise of
future prosperity.
Familiar.
“I wonder if Johnson hadn’t heard
that story before?” “What makes you
think so?” "He laughed so heartily.’*
—Rival.
It’s Trne
That advertising doesn’t pay—un-
tees it’s followed up properly.
That an advertisement which costs
nothing is usually worth nothing.
That no advertising man ever was
successful who didn’t learn from his
mistakes.
That a little fire may start a big
blaze—but if you don’t keep on feed¬
ing it, it’ll go out.
That many a man lays a failure, due
to loose business methods, at the door
of his advertising department.—Plain
Talk, Chicago.
Reverse Effect.
“So they finally froze Johnson out
of the company, did they?”
“Yea. And I never saw a hotter
man in all my life.”—Indianapolis.
Journal.
Sixty Miles an Hour.
A steam motor car, designed for use on the
railroads, recently made a trial trip, This going at
the rate of sixty miles an hour. will
probably be as much of a record beater as ha»
llostetter’s Stomach Bitters, the quickest
known road to health, i here is no quicker
way for sufferers from all stomach Ills to
reach strength and happiness than by this
great remedy. It cures indigestion, constipa¬
tion, nervousness, liver and kidney trouble,
and best of all the user stays cured.
Hickory nuts them are an in American large numbers product
and we export to
Europe, where they are found good eating.
Pecans belong to the hickory family.
Beauty Is Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without blood it. C as carets, Candy Cathar¬
tic clean your and keep it clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver body. and driving all im¬
purities from the Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that-sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug¬
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50o-
If we wait to eft a thin? until we are thor¬
oughly prepared, we never do it.
It Cure* All Skin Eruptions.
Tetterlne Is the name. Sold at druggists for
50c. a box, or prepaid direct from J. T. 8hup-
triue, Savannah, Ga. John H. Pablen. of Lex¬
ington, Migg , writes: ‘‘Enclosed find $1.00 for
2boxes of Tettorine. My father’shand wascured
by It, and 1 take pleasure in recommending it.”
Emma Nevada recently introduced her
daughter socially in Paris.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets Tandy Cathartic. 10c or 25c.
If U. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money.
The pessimist kicks because of the thorns
on roses, while the optimist rejoices because
of the roses on thorns.
“In Union
There is Strength ”
True strength consists in the union, the
harmonious ^working together, of every
part of the human organism. This strength
can never be obtained if the blood is im¬
pure. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the standard
prescription for purifying the blood.
: Never Disappoint
CONSTIPATION
“ I have gone 14 day* at a time without a
movement of Che bowel*, not being able to
move them except by using hot water Injection*.
Chronic constipation for seven years placed me In
this terrible condition; during that time I did ev¬
erything I heard of but never found any relief; 6ucli
was my case until I began using CASCARETS. I
now have from one to three passages a day, and If l
was rich I would give $100.00 for each movement; it
is such a relief. ’ Aylmeii L. Hunt,
1689 Russell St.. Detroit, Mich.
TRADE MARK RKOISTERI9
Pleasant. Palatable, Potent, Taste Good, Do
Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 20c, 500.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, XociresI, New York. 22S
D ETTSWm
EETH
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Aids Digestion, Bsgulstcs tin Bowels and Bakes
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TronMes of Children of Any Age and Costs Only
£6 Cents. Ask Your Druggist tor It.
_
39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, G».
Engines and Boilers
steam Water Heaters, Steam Pmnpi and
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ivjgl
Manufacturers and Dealers in
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SOLID and INSERTED Saw*, Saw Teeth and
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and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
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$3,000 7 DEPOSIT
TO REDEEM OUR
guarantee of positions.
jt, R. Fare Paid. Actual Business. Free
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25 (31‘s..
USE CERTAIN CHILL CURE*
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