The Savannah morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1900-current, August 25, 1900, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

ESI 1 Kf , i^| lli P\A Since your blood is your life it behooves you to keep it pure. That person who goes through the world without regu i I I ■ larty purifying his blood gets an affliction. Nine ailments out of ten have their origin in thin, impoverished blood. And to . rjxir attempt to remedy them by preparations recommended especially for them is to lose sight of their cause, and the relief is not permanent, ror instance, an ointment may be prepared that will relieve eczema, but this ailment will have another outbreak. Dyspepsia may find temporary relief in certain rem cdies--s° may rheumatism—so may scrofula, cancer, erysipelas and women troubles, but the final cure only comes when the blood is purified. Pure blood builds up the constitution. Pure blood strengthens your digestive organs so that food becomes nutritious and dyspepsia will disappear. Pure blood is clear of all acid from which rheumatism gets its start. Pure blood contains no poisons that gives rise to cancer, eczema and scrofula. Pure blood disposes of the causes of a thousand pettv diseases that render you uncomfortable and unhappy. Graybeard Is the PUREST BLOOD PURIFIER Made. It has cured Cancer. - r , It has cured Eczema. ' ,'-l * llrhas cured Rheumatism, , It has cured Catarrh. It has cured Dyspepsia. Mind you, these were not trifling ail ments, but every one an ailment which doctors had failed to cure. Graybeard is made of fresh herbs, blos som* and berries. It contains no mercury or potash. For eradicating old and deep seated ailments as Cancer, Catarrh, Ecze ma, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, it has no equal on earth. You want nothing else to take. Try nothing else. Nothing else lo necessary. In Graybeard you have every thing to build you up and make you stron ger than your disease. It will drush out your diseate. It will leave you as you were before the - ilm* lit seized you. There is noting a hundredth part as -rood as Graybeu q (0 ,j 0 this. There is wiW n ® : made like -raybeard—none ever of the w* 1 * S ° ne 1 ' S re at inventions 'd. Catarrh of Stou lc j 1 “I take Graybeard and know it help more than anything I can get. I have 116 tarrh of the stomach and can’t find an. thing to relieve me but Graybeard. "EUNICE FOUNT.' 'NT, “Heesvihe, Ind.’’ A Drummer Cured. Mr. J. M. Brown, many years a drum mer in Bat-esvllle, Ark., writes; “I have been troubled for a long time with rheuma matlsm in my fee* and joints. When I sat down I could not get up without exper iencing great pain. When I stood on my feet any length of time I was compelled to sit down and even even got no relief. “In spring this aliment increased “I began the use of Graybeard a few weeks since and am pleased to say that now I am all right. Nothing ever gave me relief but Graybeard. A Conductor Cured. I contracted/ cold a few years ago work ing on the bridge gang over in Alabama and was laid up with rheumatism. I tried a great many remedies all of which seemed to relieve me Borne, but none cured me. All did some good as far as they went, but they did not go far enough. Graybeard cured me before I had taken, one-third as much, as of other remedies. wm. w. McDaniel,, C. R. R. Conductor. Get GRAYBEARD at Drugstores" "Sl a BottIe""6 Bottles, SS. O* write to Respess Drug Cos., Props., Savannah, Gal _ INVISIBLE • WALLS ARISE. STRAXGF} HAPPENINGS IX MEXICAN CITY OF UIKHEVD VRO. Are They Reared by the In easy OliostH of the Guerilla Chief Mar ron <m<! His Gnu u or by the Re sentful Wraiths of His Victims t Prom the Boston Herald. For scores of years the old one-story Slone house on the street of the Seven Gentlemen in the city of Querendaro had remained In the possession of the Allen des, till, in the troublous times preceding Gen. Diaz’s coming into power, it had passed into the hands of “Col.” Marron, guerilla leader against the French and imperialists, as he preferred to be known, but regarded by the “Mocho” party in the city as a bloody-handed robber and highwayjnan. How the “Colonel” had become possess ed of the house was something of n mys tery. No deed was passed; the old own ers, the family of Allrnde, most respecta ble people with haciendas and shares in mines, had been extinguished, there re maining at last only one old man, as deaf os a wall, to occupy the place. He dis appeared one night, and the next day the “Colonel” took possession with his “estodo mayor,” or staff, a desperate crew re cruited among the sort of people who hang on the edge* of every revolutionary cy clone. And as the “Colonel” was a testy person whose hands were stained with powder, and something more doubtful, and ns his enemies had a trick of vanishing, nobody in the city dared inquire into the conditions of his tenure of the Allende property. He was a tall, wiry sinew’y man with long; brownish mustachios, eyes gray and full of fire, a harsh mouth, and hii eagle’s beak of a nose. Things were unsettled in the state and the “Colonel" was much afield, usually in the Sierra, where, like a hawk, he watched the fer tile plain below and swooped down on an unwary enemy. During the war of the intervention he commanded as many as 1 400 dare-devils, and once had made a cash into Querendaro, surprising and pun ching awfully 4,000 French soldiers, some of whom had seen African service and all tough chaps. That exploit made the tame of “Col.” Marron famous. For a few days he was master of the city, and good imp* rialistic citizens were hiding ftway in the disg’uise of cotton-clad peons. \ dozen or more were ranged against a wall out by the cemetery and shot for ' • I'.emies against the republic.” It was Mid that the “Colonel” did some exten sive and profitable looting. Anyhow', he *eemed, in after years, to have hiddden treasure to resort to in case of financial difficulties. The Fmperor Maximilian went to his and slowly peace returned. The iron-handed Juarez ruled in the City of Mexico and finished the anti-clericai pro fciarnme begun years before by Presklent * v ‘monfort . Friars and nuns were bun hfd out of the convents and monasteries, K'out properties, the result of centuries church rule, were sold to speculative >pj* for whatever they chose to pay. a ' and thus the great leveler, revolution, re attributed accumulated wealth. It seems " i ntunil eort of'process—it happened in 1 1 .'Vk time In England; II him occurred many muds at different epochs. Prey *' ' Juarez wave place to President •do. who wn n milder man and hud 'renuomt work lo accomplish, and. 1 'aniv, there loomed high In the political lirmsnent of Mexico a soldier of genius "'d the able* of them nil, the great eon •" destiny, Poitlrlo Diaz. Li'tJo *'•* Letter from Texas. Ballinger, Tex., Jan. 29th. “I thought I would write you what your wonderful Graybeard has done for me. I had catarrh of the head about 35 years, and suffered a great deal. I have tried many kinds of medicines and have been treated by doctors, though all of them fail ed to cure me. And I being so old and my disease so chronic, I didn't think there was any medicine that would cure me. But more than 2 years ago I had very plain symptoms of cancer on my nose and face and decided to try Graybeard not thinking that it would cure my catarrh as well as dancer. I bought 8 bottles from Mr. Pierce, and less than 6 cured me. This has been more than 2 years ago now and no symptoms of the old diseases have appeared. I can praise Graybeard for what it has don© for me. Persons need never think they ere too old for Gray buurd to cure them. I am now 75. “MRS. RHODA DEAN.” • Graybeard Cured Him. “I would here say for the benefit of the public', that I was troubled with rheuma tism in my hips for three months, and as I handled Graybeard X concluded to give it a trial. I took two bottles and a half and was cured. I do believe it to be a great medicine. “Also Sister DeLoach took it for paraly sis and it helped her surprisingly. “Rev. A. R. STRICKDAND, “Easterling. Ga.” Eczema. Do you k , „ vmj *w when you have eczema? warm weathp Is ur * ki " ™ ,Bh! increase? Wl?, oes ,hls stinging sensation ters and sores fi* v <H> •cratch do large h.is when you work?' 1 Do the y torment you Eczema is en outbko ai - . , . . * 1 person afflicted with bad ‘ k | undue .exercise without ai can ” th Itching, or get warm in hed* 8 , ing on fire. The blood is aflaix. n . . . peculiar poison that creates tlT* and calls for a powerful alterative move it. Nothing short of a 1 ICINE will accomplish a curt. _ ] i Eczema. Lafayette, Ala., May 16. I have tried your Graybeard and know for a truth that it is effectual. It (Aired me of eczema and a sever© at tack of indigestion. I do not hesitate to recommend st. All who try it here will not be without it. 6. A. JARRELL. beaten, and fleeing left the country. Thus the dawn of modern Mexico began. A man with vast and Napoleonic plans had begun to build anew national edifice, a statesman who had no fear of Ameri can invasion, the friend of Grant and an encourager of railways. It way as has been said, some two years before the restorer of order took Mexico in hand that “Col.” Marron became the de facto owner of the ancient city house of the. Allendes. Querendaro was a long way from the federal capital; times were doubtful; he had been a power in his region, and had shown that he could raise troops and command them to good purpose, and so his predatory tastes had to be overlooked by men at the capital. It was no time to bother about a fighting gentleman's peccadilloes. The occupancy of the old house by the guerilla chieftain was characterized by prodigal expenditure, much cok fight ing on Sunday afternoons and high gam ing. Awful tales were (old of people in veigled there, who were tortured Into sending letters to iheir friends in distant places demanding large sums of money for some unmention and purpose. One party in the city said these were high players who had to s nd home for mon.y to meet debts of honor, hut the few Mochos, or Clerical party men. still alive, whispered that Col. Marron was no Republican of fi er. but an out-and-out scoundrel. They only whispered this statement in the pri vacy of th. ir own houses and with , the and ors barred. But Marron carried himself w th a high htad; he rode abroad with his bodyguard of friends all armed to the. teeth, and nobody liked to talk of his doings. He had become possessed of all the bakeries and meat shops of the city, leased them to enterprising north-country Spaniards or io natives of a business turn of mind, and so had a comfortable month ly income of fully $2,000. Thus, w th extra Income derived from queer sources, ha could live in the style becoming a gen tleman nnd support his henchmen quite like an old-time feudal baron, and just as respectably. In fact, this type of sttong, unscrupulous and resolute men paralleled. In the times spoken of the powers of William the Conqueror; might makes right till lawyers and notaries come along wi h red sealing wax, much tape end stiff parchments. You have got to begin somewhere and somehow', Fam ilies of the aristocracy begin like ihe Duke of Argyll's race, by killing off trou blesome property holders and arizing what they have. The houee was ample, like all old-fash ioned Mexican houses, built on broad and generous principles, and suited to the pa triarchal life of the people. Fifty guests could easily be accommodated there, and in the. palmy days of the Allendes they entertained in baronial style. Marron. th* lr successor, was lavish in his hospi tality. Nobody outride of his following lived th re; he was a woman hater and allowed none of the gentler m x on the premises. His cooks were devoied follow er- They would not be tempted to poison him. No one exactly knows what went on In the house and its great gardens nnd en walled orchards. There were "high Jinks,” much feasting, gambling and pistol prac tice Occasionally strangers, apparently well-to-do. went to Ihe bouse and popu lar rumor ran that they did not always rome out again. The Marron tenure last ed from 1874 till I*9o- Then the Colonel, being old and worn with excitement and most of all, with high living, fell 111 and his spirit departed to unknown regions. The Mochos, Who were unsympathetic, said he had gone lo hell But ns he had merely lived ns other able men had done in many periods of the world's history nnd gave of h!s substance to the poor at -1| t | m ,s we may cherish the hope that h n fared ss well a* any feudal baron. A keen and prosperous lawyer named Don Nicholas Valdemoro, about CO years THE MORNING NEWS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 25. 1900. # ClQwta- OUR WAy-QUIOK SALE! ANO PROMPT SCTUSN! AC- tltduO ©HOT!® & • WHOLESALE • ........ Fruits* Produce* F®O c y Groceries, Jobbers, COMMISSION MERCHANTS 13 WEST MITCHELL STREET. S * ■ is? ■n i. 'utmo.c -A f* 24 f Respess Drug Cor, , e x Dear Sirs:- For three - years X suffered great pain and annoyance frea Catarrh and Blood Poison and found no renedy that would relieve me. GRAYBEARD was recommended to tie and three tottles made anew man of me I actually weigh 20 pound* more, and my health is more Vigorous than for years. I think it is the greatest remedy that ! ever saw. Yours Minister Cured. Dear Friends—l suffered more or less all the time for ten years with rheuma tism, trying many remedies, but failing to perfect a permanent cure. So I expected to live the balance of my days in pain. But I began taking Graybeard, not ex pecting to be cured of rheumatism, but hope to be cured of tetter on hands and neck. And when I had only taken 3 bottles all my rheumatism was gone. That was .early a year ago and I have not had a *<n from, that cause since. The tetter on ra ‘neek and ears disappeared, my gener a* Uh has been better, and I weigh 20 pourK ‘more than I did before taking it. Ho andc vt Graybeard will do all that Is claimed 1 jt S ' \ WHATL.EY, Atlanta, Ga. old, was the next ow ?r j{ ow p c arrang ed that little matter , f th( , title i (lon t know. He probably si| S fl e( j f or a g o ng, any legal heirs of the sjendcs and Mur ron's estate had passed nto , hf . hands n f bis only nephew. The Licenciado Veo.det^ ro was from Ruebia, and was keen a . the Poblonos have always been reputed be A Phila delphia lawyer would h&v, to take his dust on the highway of lro f PS slona’. competition. And he was ha a headed He had come to Querendaro In two years before Marron died. He ILJ] ,h t . place and, when the time came, t it. His family consisted of his wife k-, IA and three children of between 12 and two boys and a girl. He had, perhaps ten servants, including the chief garden er, who had peons under him and they don't count. People talked shout Marron's uneasy ghost walking about the rooms at night wit hour any regard to looked doors. Ser vants stayed but a few weeks as a rule and went away with queer talcs to tell. The licenciado grew nervous and. finally taking a house a few blocks away, be gan tearing down the Aliende-Marron ca sa. He confided to his friends that he had no fear of anything phantasmal, but his wife, not being able to keep servants long. It seemed best to pull down the house and build anew one on its foun dations, and then he would have some thing modern with the up-to-date con veniences that women like so well. II was a year and a half before the Valdemoros went back to the place into a house spick and span, bran new and smelling of fresh paint and paper, with a. private electric lighting plant and electric bells all over the house, which was of one story like the. old Place. The parish priest blessed the premises and (here was a grand fiesta and any amount of champagne. The ghosts were surely banished. They might walk in the orchards, said the licenciado. and much good would it do them. And the ghost did remain away until a year ago, when they came back in troups and with any amount of accumulated in genuity. You would have saiddhat it was “Col.” Marron and all his desperate gang. The pride of the llcenciado's heart was his collection of oil paintings, many of them selected by him in Europe, and valued at many thousands of dollars. He liked to show them *o his guests and expatiate on their merits He had sometimes talked of having a portrait painted of "Col” Marron as a sort nf fit historical subject, and perhaps if he had carried out his purpose things might have gone better with him. But the Senorn de Valdemoro objected, and put her plump Mexican foot on the project. One morning the licenciado went Into the big s.ala, or parlor, for some purpose, and noted with indignation that several paintings had been pulipd from their frames and lay on the floor. He called up all the servants and read the riot act to them. They got down on their knees and assured el senor onto that they could not have been guilty of such vandalism. It was evident that they were sincere, and badly frightened Into the bargain. A week after, the pictures having been duly restored lo their frames, the same thing happened again, only this time sev eral costly paintings had been ripped from the frames and slashed as with knives. Valdemoro was wroth, and con sulted the chief of police, who sent two trusty and confidential men to stay In the parlor nights. They remained on guard ten days, when one night they heard pic-' lures falling from their frame* and heard a smashing of mouldings which terrified them They holtel Into the patio and stayed there, yelling for the licenciado, who arose and went to the sala aril saw things for hlmeelf. His hair stood up all over his head. He swore rippling gentle oaths In the creole manner, too It waa plain that the supernatural visitor* were Picture of Health. “Graybeard did me more good than any thing l ever took in my life. I was troubled with indigestion, shortness of breath, and was given a great deal of medicine by my doctor, but it did me no good. I saw Gray beard advertised and bought it, and it cured me. I began to gain flesh and weigh twenty pounds more than 1 did a short time ago. MRS. J. G. BROWN. “127 Dee street, Montgomery, Ala.” Sound and Well. “I had congestion of the stomach—acute indigestion. Last August when I was so bad off, I heard of Graybeard and got my daughter and son-in-law to send for the medicine for me. It did me tnore good than all the doctors .and I continued its use until now. I am s’ound and well; I am truly thankful for the discovery of si great and wonderful a medicine. “MRS. MARGARET A. OI.IVE, Mt. Pella, Term. no admirer,? of fine arts. So the pictuces were taken down, packed, find sent away for storage. The parish priest and his young assistants came and exorcised the demons, and tilings went well for a few months. Marron had never been addicted to the use of holy water. One afternoon in summer a servant was sent from the family sitting room to the dining room for a glass of water; she came back and reported that midway In the big dining room somebody hud built a wall and that she couid not pass he yond it. Her face had grown singularly white and her knees shook. The senoru went to the dining room and she, too, ran up against the invisible wall. Then he properly and decorously (as is cus- unary under such circumstance*)) fainted, away. When, the llcenciado, who * away from home, returned he found hi B dfe in a high fever and delirious. The r vnnts told him whit had happen ed, an< he was naturally Incredulous. Then he cursed them for a pack of Im beciles. t ut he was uneasy in his mind for all tha The next 'a v he remained In the ho tire his wife s-tlll'ii. Once he aroae and went to his library , 0 fetch a book, and Just inside the lihr*,y door he found a wall, solid, on which you could rap with your knuckles and hlrt them. He had a queer Yellng about the stom ach and tho a t, and went back to his bedroom to rei e ,,t and collect his senses. Then he returned to the library and found the wall otce mote. It was a rough wall he could tell by the touch, but he could not see it. He retired dix comfited. Next morning, he havhg said nothing about the matter, he wVri, once again to the library and found no wal. He accused himself of being a victim of n halluci nation But his brain wag tizzy and his nerves unstrung. \ The invisible builders wert active for weeks; there were times whet ihe dining room was obstructed, and always ire the, middle, across which a goo*} stiff wail had been erected. Only no One could ses It. Neighbors intimate with the Valde moro family were called In, and they felt the wall and were wonderstruek. In an hour the wall had vanished, and for months the family could move about freely; but a few weeks ago the house became again the scene of building opera tions. Valdemoro called In an architect, who made measurements, and finally sub mitted a plan: It Has, In outline, i, very good sketch of the old Aliende-Marron h.eo; the old walls were rising Just as they had before. Jokers sold that the dend-and-gone Allendes were recovering their property, of which they had been dlspossed. The Valdemoros moved out during such hours os the Invisible made their walls passable. The hoirv stands unoccupied; Valdemoro Is puzzling over a nice legal question, namely, (he right of ghostly builders to erect a house within your own. The descendants of the eld Mocho families of the city are wagging their heads and saying. "I told you so ” On some days you can wander all over IJcenelado Valdcmoro’s new house; .in other days you run up against unseeable walls. The fame of the house Is spreading be yond Querendaro. Some people say it Is the work of the Allendes: most people fancy It Is a trick of "Col.” Marron and his henchmen. I don’t pretend to know; I only put down the story ss told hy travelers from Querendaro. —Two more vessels of the British Navy, the Diadem and the Furious, have been equipped will) Marconi's wlreiesa telegra phy apparatus The revolving coll is sus pended to a gaff attached to Ihe mainmast above the. semaphore, which Ss the high est point on board. The apparatus It fitted to work up to a distance of twenty miles. Dyspepsia. Bloating after eating and a feeling of weight in the stomach are dyspepsia’s symptoms—eructations of gas—sick stom ach, heartburn, vertigo, all com© along. Sour stomach, headache, general depres sion and great nervous condition follow. We hear women say that they cannot sleep, and that they feel light-headed as If at times they must fall. We hear men say that they cannot work. The stomach is out of gear, they are restless and ner vous and form the habit of drinking. This is dyspepsia— It can be cured. Gray beard is a safe remedy for this ailment. It makes food nutritious and strengthens and invigorate the digestive organs by purifying the blood. Don't hesitate to take it. YVF.NT AGAINST NEW YORK. It* Mien fly Philadelphia tin a Score of 3 to 1. New York, Aug 24 —The Philudelphlas turned the tables on the New Yorks at the Polo grounds this afternoon, winning out by timely batting in the eighth in ning. Jack Dunn, who wus reltasod by the Brioklyn team, pitched for the Phll adelphias. The score: R.H.E. Philadelphia .0 0000 00 2 1—312 1 New York ...10000000 o—l 4 0 Batteries—Dunn and MacFarland; Hawley and Grady. Attendance 1,000. St. bonis’ Fine Game. St. Louis, Aug. 24.—Powell was in superb form to-day and had Chicago at his mercy all through the game. His sup port was perfect. Altendance 1.100. Score: R.H.E. St. Louis 4 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 x—7 10 0 Chicago 0 0 0,0 00 0 0 o—o0 —0 5 I Batteries—Powell and Robinson; Griffith, Dex.er and Chance. Cincinnati Heat Pittsburg. Pittsburg, Pa., Aug. 24.-Newtoti had splendid support and kept hits scattered, while the visitors' hits came just when needed. Bfckley’s batting was the Na ture At enhance 1,109. Score: K.H E. Pittsburg ...0 0000200 0- 2 10 2 Cincinnati . 4 0 0 4 0 2 0 0 1-11 12 0 Batteries—Chesbro, Husting and Schriver; Newton and fsahoe. Other Games. At Cleveland—Cleveland, t); Buffalo, 8. Second game— Cleveland, 3; Buffalo, 2. At Rochester —Rochester, 3; Toronto, 2. At Worcester—Worcester, 14; Spring field', 7. At Providence—Providence, 3; Brooklyn, 7. At Indianapolis—lndianapolis, 4; De troit, 12. Second game—lndianapolis, 9; Detroit, 1, RESU LT* ON THE TURF. How the Horse* Han In the Event* ut Muraliign. Saratoga, N. Y., Aug. 21,—Racing re sults; First race, five furlongs. Luck, 6to 1, won; Kid, 8 to 1, and 3 to 1. se.ond; Tveta, 7 to 2, third. Time, 1:01%. Second race, mile and' fifty-five yards. Koenig, 2 to 1, won; Godfrey, 7 to J, and 12 to 5, second; Tim Gainey, ti to 1, third. I Time, 1:44%. i Third race, six furlongs. Prejudice, 7 i to 2, won; Gitiraltar, 8 to 1, and 5 to 2, I second; Ralston, 8 to 1, third. Time, 1:13%. Fourth race, five furlongs. Water Plant, 7 to 2, won; Punctual, 25 lo 1, and 8 to 1, second; Cogswell, 5 to 2, third. Time, 1:01%. Fifth race, mile nnd a sixteenth. In trusive, 13 to 10, won; King Bramble, 4 to 1, second; First Whip, 4 to 1, third. Time, 1:46%. I'nrctl n Mile In 2fi!2%. Boston, Aug. 24.—The Grand Circuit meet at Readvllle cloned to-day with the notable feature of Anaconda, the gelding, pacing a mllg In 2.02%. thereby winning the 2:04 class and defeating by a very narrow margin Frank Bogash and Search light. Summary; 2:04 class, pacing, purse $!,B0O. Anaconda won two straight heals and race, with Frank Bogush second, and Searchlight third Time, 2:04%. 2:02%. 2:12 elars. trotting, purse $1 win York Bo.v won Ihlrd and fourth hosts and race, with Temple Wilkes second, also winning first bout, and Onward Ulivor third, tUoo Rheumatism. Rheumatism originates from axcosa of acid In the blood. Impoverished and impure blood. II attack* different parts of the body It is sometimes seated in the muscles, some times in the pans surrounding the Joints, and sometimes in the joints— henee the name muscular and articular rheumatism. When in the hips, it is called sciatic rheu matism; when in. the muscles of the badk, lumbago. Often when one goes to rise from sitting or stooping the sudden, “catching’ i so se vere that they some times cry out In pain. The feet and joints arc sometimes swollen without at first, causing any particular pain. This symptom is sufficient The uil men-t is getting u start on you. This is tho time to take Graybeard. The safest cure for rheumatism is a thorough blood cleansing. Graybeard is a known specific for rheu matism. It checks the formation of acid, dissolves*he acid deposit and produces a normal and rich flow of blood. Don’t hesi tate to ask for it. A Boy Cured. Mrs Hill, residing at IOVa W. Mitchell street. Atlanta, gave Graybeard to her son who was forced to stop work on account of severe attack of rheumatism, and It cured him sound and well. Lost Use of His Arm “Sine© taking Graybeard I have regained us© of my arm which was he’plews by rheumatism. W. C. FLENNIKEN, “Kingston, Tex. You Get Strong. Everybody who takes Graybeard ti lls u they get stronger. They eat more and It does not make them sick. This Is the se cret of the curative powers of Grnybeurd. The first thing it does Is to make you go to eating. You will eat more than you have eaten In months, nnd you will iind it will not hurt you as It used to when you ate heartily. By making you eat It makes you stronger. It makes you stronger os the new blood and bone and tissue begin to become part and parcel of you, nnd If you are afflicted with eczema you will find it gradually disappear. The same way with rheumatism, catarrh, dyspepsia, cancer, j In short. Greybeard makes you stronger than your disease and crushes out your i disease. , ' Gray beard Did It. “Like nil others who are fo unfortunate as to become a prey to Indigestion and bowel troubles, I tried variouu medicines end a number of the* best, doctors to treat my case, but found only temporary relief until Gray beard waa discovered. The mod winning second heat. Time, 2:11%, 2:11%, 2:09%. 2:11%. 2:14 class, pacing, purse SI,OIXI. Stacker Tailor won three straight heats and race, with Fred W. second, arid Don Westland, third. Time, 2:10, 2:10. 2:13. 2:00 trolling, purse $1,600. Charley Herr won second and third heats and race, with Grattan Boy second, also winning first heat, and Kingmond third. Time, 2:08%, 3:00, 2:10. LATE SHIP NEWS. Arrived This Morning;. Steamship Naccochee, Smith, New York—Ocean Steamship Company. Shipping Memoranda. Algiers, Aug. IS.—Arrived, Eros, Savan nah. Hamburg, Aug. 24.—Arrived, Dorotea, Savannah Baltimore, Aug 24—Arrived, steomer Itasca, Savannah. Pensacola. Fla., Aug. 24.—Arrived, steamers Lebttry <Br), Williamson. Rio Janeiro, via St. Lucia; Rio Jano (Span), Guerrlco, Ship Island. Sailed—Steamer Lugano (Br), Knight, Ta lof Bank for orders. Cleared—Schooner Villa Y. Hirmano fAm), Clark, Cardenas; a'etmer Dera inore tNor), Borge, Havre. Pimplra nnd Freckles on Fare Your druggist will refund your mopey If Pazo Ointment fails to c ure you.—ad. FIN AT *2,000 AN HOI K. Mnnrlrc H. Memlhnin Tries lo Hreuk Long Branch Roulette Hank. From the New York Herald. Maurice B. Mendham, senior member of the brokerage firm of Mendham Bros., No. 20 Broad street, has the reputation among his friends of being a good loser where any game of chance Is concerned. It is not often that the fickle goddess frowns on him when he wooes her, but last Sat urday she. was In the moods so many of her suitors generally find her, and, as a result. Mr. Mendham departed from her shrine, after laying SB,OOO at her feet. He accepted his fate without a murmur, and when he returned to the city Monday one could not have told from his appear ance hut what he had won Instead of lost the um. It cost Mr. Mendham Just $2,000 an hobr for his, amusement, as he started playing in "Joe" I'llman's New York Club, in Long Branch, at 4 o'clock In the after noon, and arose from the roulette table at 8 o'clock. At one lime he was $5,900 ahead of the game, but he hal determined to try to break the l<ank, and was not satisfied io leave the club with such u paltry euro. When Mr. Mendham went to the fa mous New Jersey coast resort on Satur day, to remain until Monday, he took with him $4,500 In eash, which he thought would be all the capital he would need, in the Investment. Arriving at the New Y’ork Club, he stood watching for a few moments the play ut one of the tables, and then suddenly throwing down a bank note exclaimed, "A hundred on the red " Red it Oame, and the hanker handed to Mr. Mendham one hundred dollars' worth of one dollar chips Mr. Mendham then took a chair and began playing the numbers. He has gloat faith In 00. 17 , 23 anil 29, and played these numbers liberally. Fortune smiled on him, and in half an hour he had st,fi>) In front of him and u Utile later $5,009. Then hi* good luck deserted him. Slow ly at first and then rapidly a* he strove to recoup hi* loose* the big pile of chip* In front of him dwindled away, and by I ball pad Art o'clock Jtlr. M'.mJtuw had Catarrh. The mouth, throat, post-nasal cavity bronchial tubas and air cells of the lungl are liner! with a network of delicate blood vessels. When the blood is pure thesi Mood vessels are healthy and vigoro-ua and exude mucus which lubricates the ail passage© und protects them from the ef* foot? of cold, dust, etc. When the blood is impure, these vessel!, by reason of their delicate structure. an| unable to carry it. They become (‘logged, and hence results catarrh. Graybeard purities the blood, invigorate.! these small blood vessels, and enable! them to discharge the foul blood and re* stores health. Catarrh will not exist when the blood ti pure. Ugly Ulcers. Drnr Friends— I have been suffering 2J years with an ulcer on my ankle. Some times ip bed, sometimes on crutches. 1 usn! remedies or iny own and falling t make, eure. I .Riled In different physi cians They all said that they could cur* me. but found It to ba of a stubborn na ture and failed. I saw Graybeard advertised ar.d I bought four bottles of It. two boxes of the pill* one box of the ointment. It cured me well. And I have one bed tie left. I say that I am well—not nearly well— but entirely well. It has been over twolv* months atid no symptoms have re-turned. I ho;>e the suffering will do as I hav* use It. have faith in it and be cured. Mrs. JANE GEORGE, Rockiale, Tenn. iclne being manufactured by friends (A mine and knowing it (o be made from pure material of th<- forest, was induced to give it a trial. 1 used It six weeks according t direitlons. and at the end of the time ) felt as well as I ever did. “O. A CUETT, Ex-Alderman, Butler, Ga.— j Rheumatism. Rheumatic Swelling in the legs Is cure® by Gray beard. Mrs. Joseph Brown of Butler. Ga., wqs afflicted with rheumatism. It caused her great pain. Her statement is that her legs swelled to unusual size. She. was not able to relieve the ailment until she procured | Gray beard. She h* now Hound and well. , Acid in the blood produces rehumattem. Nothing is half so good as Graybeard for rheumatism. 1 “My wife was afflicted four years with rheumatism, and I was not able to find anything to relieve her. She took Gray* beard about a month and seemed to be as well as ever. It cured our little son of tha ailment. Wo cannot praise Grayboaixl i too much. 0190. BOOTH. ] •‘CaraouvUie, Ga** 9 \ not one of them left. He then put on tha black the hundred dollar hill he had orig inally bet nnd It came red. Mr. Me ndhain drew out a thousand dol lar banknote and purchased 200 five dol lar chips. He played heavily his favorite numbers, but they would not come up. In fifteen minutes the chips had dlsap a red. He then purchased $2,000 in chips, and it was not long before they had found their way hack to the banker. His last $1,600 was gone at half past six o'clock, and Mr. Mendhnrn asked "Joe" Pllman If he would let him continue playing and ac cept his check for any further losses he might sustain. Tillman assented, and then Mr. Mendham made a desperate ef fort to win back the $4,500 he had al ready lost. TRAMPS IN CONVENTION. Hospitable Welcome IS Given lo Hundreds of Hoboes. From the Chicago Times-Herald. Britt, la., Aug. 21.—Britt is crowded with lrnm|t of ail degrees to-day. Tha town is theirs and nothing is denied them. Already 100 hoixws arc hero in attendance u|>oii the fourth annual convention of the Tourists’ J'nion, and by to-morrow night 400 are expected. As each tramp fall* off the cars he Is met by Reception Com mittee and escorted to the fair grounds, where there Is free food and drink. Every thing Is provided hy the citizens of Britt, and where demanded the hoboes are haul ed from trains to the grounds In car riages. Tom Way. a capitalist and leading citi zen. is running the hobo headquarters, while Editor Bally of the Tribune haa charge of the other quarters A lumber car arrived this afternoon filled with tramps from Chicago. Forty hoboe left Albert Lea, Minn., for Britt, but half were discovered and thrown off by the conductor and brakemen. The other half arrived here and claims provisions fox all. Two negroes arrived from New Orleans, claiming to have walked all the way for ihe convention's hospitality. Some are In rags and cariy the conventional toma to cans, while others have nondescript corduroy trousers, shirt waists and rem nants of silk hats. Private caucuses held to-night promise Interesting political action to-morrow, probably resulting 1n the nomination of Dewey for President, with "Head Pipe” Charles Noe of Sycamore, 111., for h‘s running mate. The hoboes prefer Bryan over McKin ley, Just for a change In the government, no inatler what It I*. A platform will be adopted tontnlning Ideas on railway legislation liencflttng the tramps. Most of the hoboes arc from the North and Northwest, anti from here will go southward for the winter. "Red” and "Over” of Colorado ant} "Fast Freight Ike" of Keokuk, are anion* the leader*. “Filipino Joe.” who served three years hi the Third Infantry, Is loudest In his de nunciation of the government, and, while opposing Dewey, favors supporting Debs or Altgeld. The anarchistic element Is small, however, and will have little Influ ence among the tramps, who have no In tention of repeating the Coxey and Kelly armies’ episodes. Britt will entertain the hoboes two days und then fire them out of town, —ln the Herman army the step l reck oned tit *Us Inches, and the number of steps In a minute at 112; in the Austrian at ZU's Inches, and the number at US to UK), in the Italian at Xi<i Inches, and the number at 130; In the French at 29ty Inches, and the mimlter at IIS; and in the at 30 Inches, and the number at Uti steps a minute. 7