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Rdiftlng Choking Ferson.
Pouuding a person on the back until
his ribs cave in or the spine is dislo
cated may be an interesting method
to treatment (for the administrator),
but there is a more sensible and ef
fectual way of relieving the sufferer.
Frequently the obstruction is not be
yond the reach of a long, slim finger.
Forceps of some kind, however, will
prove more effective. If these are not
within reach, a small wire with a hook
bent on one end may be used to ad
vantage on some obstructions, in this
and similar emergencies carry a firm
hand, but work lightly and deftly.
During the operation, the head of the
person afflicted should be thrown well
back and the tongue depressed, so as
to permit of the freest possible access
to the throat. If the obstruction is so
low as to be invisible or has passed
into the windpipe, it constitutes a case
for a good surgeon. Fortunately,
enough air can usually be inhaled to
prevent Immediate suffocation.—Home
Magazine.
When the Kitchen Range Is Cranky.
When your kitchen range fire refuses
to burn brightly and the oven fails
to bake or roast properly, do not blame
the range until you have tried to find
the reason for the trouble.
A “clean” range is a necessity for
satisfactory cooking. Lift off the cov
ers and see if there is not a layer of
fine ash on top of the oven so thick
that it lessens the draught and pre
vents the heat from penetrating to the
oven. This should be lifted out and
not swept into the fire or down be
side the oven.
Brush the side of the oven clean, then
get at the most important part, the
bottem. Some ovens have a plate
on the inside that lifts out, some a
plate on the outside; some are made
to be drawn out altogether. If you
have a stove man once to clean for you
and see how he does it you will not
need him again. Notice how he gets
at the bottom, and above all, see that
he leaves things 60 that you can take
out the cover or oven yourself when
you wish to. You can get the ordinary
scraper at any department store, and
also a long-handled dust brush or
whisk broom. These will answer in
nearly every case. This is a dirty job,
but should be attended to once a
month.
Much often depends how the
fire box is kept. Masses of clinkers
are allowed to gather on the bricks.
These should be removed by common
salt placed on them while the fire
is hot. If they do not come off the
first day they will the second or third
by using more salt and tapping them
with the poker. Do not let ashes or
cinders gather about the top of the
fire box.
In starting a fire dump everything
out. Do not try to start a fire on top
of ashes or cinders, as it will often sulk
for a whole day. The cinders can
be burned to good advantage on top of
the fire afterward. Use as little paper
as possible in starting, and do not
pack the coal in. Fill the box to the
top of the bricks and no further. Pok
ing the fire spoils it, shaking never
hurts it.
If you range sets into the wall and
the pipe runs straight up into a sheet
iron board, and the uraft is poor, the
chances are that the pipe does not con
nect with the flue, but runs into the
open space above the board. Have
the pipe run up into the end of the
flue and you will find a vast improve
ment. Then, if things are not satis
factory, there must be somtbing wrong
With the chimney.
An Adjustable Sofa For Invalids
For the bedridden invalid who creeps
out to the comparative freedom of sofa
life there are possibilities of great re
lief in the new tufted spring couch,
the long seat and head rest of which
is artfully hinged to admit of many
changes in the sick person’s position.
It can be adjusted to support a weak
back, to raise or lower the head and
the whole cushioned top of the sofa
can also be lifted off to slip into a
wheeled spinal chair that the patient
occupies while stretched at full length.
\M©VS£HUE>F
\|jeirspf
Bice, Baked with Dates—Two even
tablespoons rice, one quart milk, one
cup of dates, stoned, one saltspoou salt.
Bake very slowly, with just enough
heat to keep mixture bubbling gently.
Stir once or twice; then allow to
brown. Bake one and a half hour, or
until rice Is thoroughly soft. Serve
l very cold.
I Potato Pancakes—Pare, wash and
■ grate four large or six small potatoes
■into a bowl and add quickly to them
■he beaten yolks of two eggs, half a
teaspoonful of salt, and a tablespoon
ful of fine bread crumbs. Beat in
gradually the whites of the eggs, beat
en to a froth and saute by spoonfuls on
a well-greased, smoking hot griddle.
String Beans with Cheese—This is
not a common way to cook beans but
©nee tried it will become a favorite
way. Cook the beans as usual, after
slicing them lengthwise in fine strips;
drain. Put a tablespoonful of butter
In a frying pan over a hot fire; when
melted addMhe beans, half a cup of
milk, a teaf®onful of salt and a dash
of and lastly stir in
a heaping Bolespoonful of grated Par
mesan cheese. I<et all cook together
for five minutes and you will have a
delicious dish.
FARM AND GARDEN.
The Horse’s Bit In Winter.
When the -weather becomes severely
cold do not overlook the fact that to
insert a cold bit in a horse’s mouth
is torture. Iron and steel rapidly con
duct heat, heuce the sensation of cold
when the metals are touched. Rubber
bits are better, but should also be
warmed before using.
Dangers in Close Keeping.
In hot weather the chickens suffer
the most from overcrowding. It is
impossible to make them comfortable
in summer unless given plenty of room
and air. Overcrowding In hot weather
usually causes sickness and ditease.
Usually the colonies on the average
farm are too large, anyway. They
run over rather than under the limit
in most cases, and if this is kept up
in summer it is bound to produce evil
results. It is pitiful to see the good
layers slowly droop and crawl away
to some dark, cool corner to die. What
can one do when they show this de
termination to droop and die? It is
usually impossible to do anything.
The layers usually suffer from the
effects of the heat more than we im
agine. When a hen must go and sit
on a hot nest for an hour each day
to lay an egg, it may be surmised that
it is a tax on her system of no small
degree. Indeed, I think .this persistent
laying in hot weather breaks down
more good layers than anything else.
We can to a certain extent make the
work more comfortable for them by
having the nest located in a cool, well
ventilated place. It is possible to
have a door opened near the nest so
a cool draught can be created, and If
swung on binges it can be closed in
rainy weather. A little attention like
this should prove beneficial.
I have often wondered as I have seen
the men deluge their horses in hot
weather with cool water from a pall,
or hose, whether a similar practice
would not suit the hen. The latter
must feel the effects of the heat nnd
they show that by wallowing in the
cool dirt. If you dig up fresh dirt
and throw water in the hole to moisten
it, the hens will wallow in it with
more eagerness than if the place was
hot and dry. Would it not then pay
to sprinkle the hens on hot days with
a hose? I have never tried it, but
should like to. Some day we may
learn that every creature needs plen
ty of water, drinking and bathing, in
hot weather. Then we will see to it
that they receive it. Many of the ani
mals are like small children—they
show a dislike to plunging in the
water, but when once in they enjoy it. !
Because the hen mother of young I
ducklings will never venture to wet
her feet when her brood scramble into
the water, must we conclude that,
chickens will suffer if allowed to get
wet? If any one has had experience
in this direction it might be of value
to relate it.—Annie C. Webster, in
American Cultivator.
Alfulia Stack Cover.
Alfalfa bay will not turn rain, no
matter how well topped out a stack
may be. Where alfalfa hay is raised ex
tensively it is necessary to cover the j
stacks in some way, or to top them out j
with some kind of hay or grass that
will shed the rain. We recently
stack cover used on an alfalfa f;lw
which the owner said was equal in
keeping the hay to storing in a barn
or mow.
The covers are made of ten-inch !
boards in sections six, eight, ten or
twelve feet long, as suits the pur
pose and convenience. The boards are
laid, beginning at the top of the stack, j
so that the upper overlaps the one
just below, and all are held in place
by being stapled to pieces of No. 12
smooth wire, one wire within a few
inches of the ends of the boards, and
as many between as may be thought
necessary. With the shorter sections
the end wires are sufficient. These
wires go on the outside of the boards
lljppiiiiiiL
and are left long enough at the four
corners to fasten on a weight to keep
the cover in place. The use of weights
is much better than staking down, as
the settling of the stacks will not
cause the roof to become less solidly
in place. Painting the boards will
preserve them, and if rolled up and
stored in the dry, or laid on logs to
keep them from getting damp when
not in use, they will last for years.
In taking down a stack but one sec
tion need be removed at a time, thus
exposing but a small portion of the
stack. In getting the stack ready for
putting on the cover, do not top out
with a high centre, but put on only '
a well rounded top.—J. L. Irwin, in
Ohio Farmer.
Excessive Zeal.
A railroad man told this story to the
conductor in charge of the train on the
next track:
“The La Cross division established
anew flag station the other day,” said
he. “It’s nothing but a whistling post,
but the road built a platform and
laid a sidetrack.
“There was not enough business to
pay the company to put a regular agent
out there, so the old fellow who keeps j
the store was appointed a kind of an
agent. Well, the first daj after he got [
his appointment the through passen
ger train was coming at about forty j
miles an hour, and there was the old
fellow on the platform waving his
little old red flag. The engineer put
cn the air and the train stopped at the
platform. When the conductor jumped
off there wasn't a man in sight except
the man that ran the store.
“ ‘Where’s your passengers?’ the con
ductor asked him.
“ ‘Why,’ he says, ‘I haven’t got any
• passengers.’
“ ‘What did you flag us for?’
“ ‘I thought rnebbe some one wanted
to get off here.’ ’’—Minneapolis Senti
nel.
Canada has spent in connection with
the South African contingents over
$2,000,000, and the British Government
expended $4,000,000 in the Dominion
for supplier.
SOME AGED ANIMAL3.
Those Who Have an Easy Life Live a
Long Time.
In tho vicinity of Paris a home for
old domestic animals was established
some time ago, and among the present
inmates, are a mule seventy-two yemn
old, a cow thirty-six and a pig twenty
five years old.
It is claimed that domestic animals
which lead an easy life are likely to
live far beyond the average age it'
properly cared for. Many birds cer
tainly attain an extraordinary age.
Eagles, ravers and parrots, frequently
live a hundred years, and pelicans
probably live as long, for it is record
ed that one of these birds was placed
in tho Amsterdam zoological garden
some time before 1792 and wa3 still
there in 1870. Tfiis pelican, too, was
at least four or five years old when it
was placed in the garden.
Eels are also long lived. Professor
Buchner tells of one which was kept
for twenty-six years in a pond at Thien
gen, in which it was placed at the age
of eight years. It attained a length of
nearly five feet and its favorite haunt
was in the current that flowed into the
pond. All authorities agree that do
mestic animals which are obliged to
do a good deal of work do not live so
long as those which lead a placid life.
Had Been There Herself.
“Seems to me that the rising gener
ation is rising pretty fast,” said the
bachelor, who expects soon to become
a benedict, after his friends had given
him up as hopeless. “I was out walk
ing with my intended the other day,
and her small niece, a girl not over
seven years of age, accompanied us
Naturally, the conversation, owing to
the near approach of our wedding day,
took a turn that was interesting to two
of us, but not to the third.
“Finally I turned to the' young lady
who is soon to oe my bride and said
with a smile:
“ ‘I suppose all this talk is over the
little one’s head?’
“Before she could reply the nose of
the ’little one’ went up several degrees
and she answered, icily, her words fall
ing like so many hailstones on a tin
roof:
“‘Oh, don’t mind me! I know what
it is! I’ve been in love myself!’
“It was several minutes before I
succeeded in catching my breath.” —
Detroit Free Press.
First Submarine Cable.
The first submarine cable was laid across
the English Channel about fifty years ago. It
mi also about the game time that Hostetter’s
Stomach Bitters, the world renowned dys
pepsia cure, was first introduced to the public.
If you are a sufferer from this ailm< nt. or
from indigestion, flatulency, constipation,
nervousness or insomnia, you should try it at
onoe, if you would be well. 111 ! genuine must
have our Private Die Stamp over the neck of
the bottle.
This would be a better world if all per
sons took their own advice.
New Jersey Skin Troubles
Can’t resist Tetterine. “I have been troubled
with Eczema four years. Tetterine ha-i done
me so much good that I gladly recommend it.
Send another box.”—W. C. Fuller, Seminole
Cottage, Sea Cliff, N. J. 50c. a box by mail
from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga., if your
druggiet don’t keep it.
Belfast is Ireland's richest and most
populous city.
A Christmas Dinner That AVas Not Eaten
Because of indigestion! This sorry tale
would not have be?n told if the system had
been regulated and the digestion perfected
by the use of Nature’s remedy, Garfield Tea.
This wonderful Herb medicine cures all forms
of stomach, liver and bowel derangements,
cleanses the system, purifies the blood and
lays the foundation for long life and con
tinued good health.
A friend in need is a friend—who usu
ally wants to borrow a fiver.
Eaoh package of Putnam Fadeless Dte
colors either Bilk, Wool or Cotton perfectly
at one boiling. Bold by all druggists.
Grade crossings in Europe are unknown.
Most things grow smaller as they are
contracted except debts.
How's This ?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney A Cos., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che
ney for the last 35 years, nnd believe him per
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out any obliga
tion made by their firm.
West A Tbuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Waldino, Kinnan A Mabvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood andjfTicous sur
faces of the system. Price, JjP per bottle.
Sold by all Druggists. free.
Hall’s Family Pills are thaf At.
The cost of painting JF Tower Bridge,
London, is $25,000. M,-
.•wpt
Syrup
tkfrb*st family laxative
It is pure.
It is gentle.
It is pleasant.
It is efficacious.
It is not expensive.
It is good for children.
It is excellent for ladies.
It is convenient for business men.
It is perfectly safe under all circumstances.
It is used by millions of families the world over.
It stands highest, as a laxative, with physicians.
If you use it you have the best laxative the world
produces.
A SIOO,OOO Fiddling Tour,
Jan tbelik, of Bohemia, aged iZ,
has just arrived in this country with
his fiddle. He is under contract to
fiddle for i vmerican and Mexican au
diences one hundred nights for SI,OOO
a night.
This break b all records of “paying
the fiddler.” Paganini, greatest of all
violinists, nev er dreamed of earning
SIOO,OOO in one season. That it is pos
sible for an American manager to
make such a contract today, with the
probability of clearing a large profit
on it, is a symptomatic twentieth-cen
tury fact.
Her Observation.
“Don’t the nights get longer pretty
soon?” said the young man with va
cant eyes.
"I don't know,” answered Miss Cay
enne, “they have seemed longer since
you begat' calling.”—Washington btar.
He* y For til© Bowfli.
No matter wYat ails you, headaohe to a
cancer, you will never get well until your
bowels are put righ t. Oascarkts help nature,
cure you without a £frip6 or pain, produce
easy natural movetU-GD** cost you just 10
cents to start petting ack - 9 AB “
carets Candy Catbart' genuine, pus up
in metal boxes, everyv ulet has u. G. C.
stamped on it. AJeware if imitations.
When a man is tVopped for non-payment
of dues he is genera '-ok 6 *
A Good iTs/ = 1002.
Cleanse the syityfHed WC the blood and
regulate tho liver biscuit
els with the Herb 1 *f , Ar .? e ?, Tet k
miring health and r 1 |^ a hx’or'the New I ear.
The feminine surplus in Massachusetts
is 70,398.
FITB permanently cured. No fits or nervous
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline f Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treat Me free
Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 831 Arch St., PhVU. Pa.
There are three telephone circuits be
tween New York City and Atlanta.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Synly for children
teetkiug, solten the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, ali.vyrs pain, cures wind colio. 2&o a bottle.
It takee iv wise man to get others finan
cially interested in a fool scheme.
Piso’s Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
as a congh cure.- -J. W, O’Brien, a22 Phird
Avenue, N., Minn tapolls, Minn., Jac. 6, 1900.
The man who hmowa the least shows it
the most.
Bronchitis
“ I have kept Ayer’s Cherry Pec
toral in my house for a great many
years. It is the best medicine in
the world for coughs and colds/’
J. C. WiiManis, Attica, N. Y.
All serious lung
troubles begin with a
tickling in the throat.
You can stop this ai first
in a single night with
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral.,
Use it also for bronchitis,
consumption, hard colds,
and for coughs of all kinds.
Three shea: 25c., 50c„ SJ. All dratflats.
Consult your doctor. If he says take it,
then do as be sayi. If he tell* you cot
to take It, then don’t take it. He know*.
Leave it with l lm. We are wllline.
J. O. AY Jilt CO., Lowell, Ma*§.
B— the selling price.
2? Profitable fruit
growing insured only
when enough actual
WPotash
rU- *’■ HOLMES Improved
Farm Level “Eclipse.”
Best up-to-dete level made.
Brio - $4-50 with rod. Write for
JJ&TfLEVv rietdriptive ciri-nlar. 12North
/yjo \\ Forfch St„ Atlanta, Ga.
Sarcasm Vs. Shingle.
' 1 didn’t mind the spanking dad gave
Hu half as much as I aid the sarcastic
wj ,y in which he talked.”
‘Wasn’t it a hard Helvin'?”
“You just bet it was.”
"Well, what did he say that was
v rnrse than the shingle?”
“He said, "Go way back and stand
i ip!"—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Wlih All n Happy New Year.
Happineis that comes with good health la
given to all who use Nature’s gift, Garfield Tea.
This Herb Cura cleanses the system, puriflee
the blood and removes the cause of disease.
Australia has more than 1030 news
papers.
fee advertisement of EE-M Catarrh Cure In
another column the best remedy mado.
It may sound funny, but the load makes
like cargo before the train sta) ‘ts.
ImSßnt royal
M,gS WORCESTER
% ) AND
A BON TON
Jmssm':. corsets
JjL STRAIGHT FRONT
-f T3&W
I /*(&> "fl r Are made in all the latest shapes
fi W Jit and colors. They have no equals,
si l-*/ and no others are “just as good.”
jj Ask your dealer about them.
v) Royal Worcester Corset Cos.
I
WINCHESTER
NEW RIVAL” FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS
outshoot all other black powder shells, because they are mad-j
better and leaded bj ' exact maefrinsry Trfth the standard brands of
powder, shot and w adding. Try them sad you will be convinced.
AJ*L a REPUTABLE DEAbftBS KEEP a THEM
$2000.00 PER DAY
GIVEN AWAY!
VALUABLE IHFOBMATIOH
ia hereby ,a oar Pre ’ aiam Booklet expiring January a, igoa,
EXTENDED FOR THE ENTIRE YEAR OF 1902
(except Present Ho. zag)
PRESENTS Will. BE GIVEN FOR TAOS
delivered to ss daring the year zgoa, taken from the follow
ing brande ot our tobacco:
R. J, ReynoMs 1 8 oz. Strawberry, R, J. R., Schnapps,
Golden Crown, Reynolds’ San Cared, Brown & Bro.’s
Mahogany, Speckled Beauty, Apple Jack, Man's Pride,
M.M- p - H ' & Co.'s Natnral Leaf, Colter
and 0. H, T.
To appreciate oar offer, these facts should be considered -
That wo are giving $?ooo.oo per day for tags, to Ex the mem
ory of chewers on omr trade marks placed on tobaccos, to iden
tify our best efforts to please chewers, and prevent them from
being deceived by imitators.
Full descriptions of Presents offered for our
tags will be furnished upon request to
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
Nice Lixtle Boy.
that apple
you kept the half with a wormhole
for yourself and let sister have the
ly?er half.
t^j^iwiny—Yes; I s'pected the worm
I through to t’other side.
Exposition.
Mellib E C °
B\ca.vise
Its component parts are all wholesome.
It acts gently without unpleasant after-effects.
It is wholly free from objectionable substances.
It contains the laxative principles of plants.
It contains the carminative principles of plants.
It contains wholesome aromatic liquids which are
agreeable and refreshing to the taste.
All are pure.
All are delicately blended.
All are skillfully and scientifically compounded.
Its value is due to our method of manufacture and to
the orginality and simplicity of the combination.
To get its beneficial effects buy the genuine.
Manufactured by
(ALirOßrflA
San Francisco, Cal.
Louisville, Ky. New York, N. Y.
FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS.
m
PRICE, 25c.
R. R. FARE AND UNDEK $5,000
—s Deposit, Guarantee
*OO I'KEB SCHOLAItSHIPS. BOARD AT
COST. Writs Quick to GA.-ALA.
BUSINESS COLLEGE, l ACON, OA.
*lO DAILY handling National Automatic
** at eight. sayier-t are*
lit*, Co.,Room lS.HulLert Block. Cincinnati, o.
The Beet Sugar Industry.
A most important article givt nß
Messrs. Oxnard’s and Cutting’s views
on the beet sugar Industry i n thU
country appeared on the editorial p ag a
of the New York Evening Post of De
cember 12 Inst, and as every hougo.
hold in the lnnd is Interested in sugar
the article will be of universal Interest.
THE HEET. SUGAR INDUSTRY
The Evening Post bids the heartiest
welcome to every American industry
that can stand oa its own bottom and
make its Way without leaning on the
poor rates. Among these self-support
ing industries we are glad to know l 8
the production of beet sugar. At all
events, it was such two years ago. We
publish elsewhere a letter written in
1890, and signed by Mr. Oxnard and
Mr. Cutting, the chiefs of this indus
try on the eastern side of the Rocky
Mountains, showing that this was the
happy condition of the trade at that
time. If parties masquerading as beet
sugar producers are besieging the
President and Congress at this mo
ment, and pretending that they will be
ruined If Cuban sugar is admitted for
six months at half the present rates of
duty their false pretences ought to be
exposed.
The letter of Messrs. Oxnard and
Cutting was probably written for the
purpose of inducing the farmers of the
Mississippi Valley to go more largely
into the cultivation of beets for the
sugar factories. This was a laudable
motive for telling the truth and show
ing the large profits which awaited
both the beet grower and the manufac
turer If the industry were persever
ingly and intelligently prosecuted. To
this end it was pointed out that farm
ers could clear $65 per acre by culti
vating beets, and might even make
SIOO. But In order to assure the culti
vator that he would not be exposed to
reverses by possible changes in the
tariff, they proceeded to show that tbs
industry stood in no need of protection.
The beet sugar industry, these gen
tlemen say, “stands on as firm a basi*
as any business in the country.” They
point out the fact—a very important
one—that their product comes out as a
finished article, refined and granulated.
It is not, like cane sugar grown in tha
West India Islands, a black and offen
sive paste, .which must be carried in
wagons to the seaboard and thence by
ships to the United States, where, af
ter another handling, it is put through
a costly refinery, and then shipped by
rail to the consumer, who may possi
bly be in Nebraska, alongside a beet
sugar factory, which turns out the re
fined and granulated article at one fell
swoop. Indeed, the advantages of the
producer of beet sugar for supplying
the domestic consumption are very
great. We have no doubt that Messrs.
Oxnard and Cutting are within bounds
when they say that “sugar can be pro
duced here cheaper than It can be in
Europe.” The reasons for this are
that—
“The sugar industry is, after all,
merely an agricultural one. We can
undersell Europe In all other crops,
and sugar is no exception.”
It follows as naturally as the making
of flour from wheat. If we can pro
duce wheat cheaper than Europe, then
naturally we can produce flour cheap
er, as we do.
But the writers of the letter do not
depend upon a-priori reasoning to prove
that they can make sugar at a profit
without tariff protection. They point
to the fact that under the McKinley
tariff of 1890, when sugar was free of
duty, the price of the article was four
cents per pound. Yet a net profit of $3
per ton was made by the beet sugar
factories under those conditions, not
counting any bounty on the home pro
duction of sugar. They boast that
they made this profit while working
under absolute free trade, and they
have a right to be proud of this result
of their skill and industry. Many
beet sugar factories had been started
in bygone years, back in the sixties
and seventies of the nineteenth cen
tury, and Had failed, because the pro
jectors did not understand the busi
ness. Since then great progress has
been made, both here and abroad, in
the cultivation and manipulation of the
beet. What was impossible thirty
years ago is now entirely feasible. The
industry Is already on a solid and en
during basis. There are factories In
the United States, these gentlemen
tell us in tlieir letter, capable of using
350,000 tons of beets per annum at a
profit of $3 per ton, and this would
make a profit of $1,050,000 as the in
come to be earned under absolute free
trade.
It must be plain to readers of thli
letter, signed by the captains of tfcf
beet sugar Industry, that the people I#
Washington who are declaiming
against the temporary measure which
the President of the United States
urges for the relief of the Cuban peo
ple. are either grossly ignorant of the
subject, or nre practising gross decep
tion. The tenable ground for lliem is
to say: “Other people nre having pro
tection that they do not need, and
therefore we ought to have morp than
We need.” This would be consistent
with the letter of Messrs. Oxnard and
Cutting, but nothing else is so.
CURES CATARRH, HAY FEVER.
ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS
AND COLDS.
The EE=M Catarrh Cure
A pleasant smoking preparation whloti i posi
tively cures these diseases Ihe gteaj urP
ienl discovery of tie age Warrsntc j
t atarrh and the only known jkmslUvo rem y
ft r liny Fever —purely vegetable, smokery
tobacco will find this a eatUfactoiy s ■ n _
For persons who do not use ..rrvliig
pound without tobacco Is prepared,
same medical properties and l’F 01 one
results. One Box. ouo "lontb's treatmc .t.tm
Dollar, postage prepaid. hK-M M • '■
57 N. Itroad street, Atlanta. ta.
USERS OF FARM AND MILL MACHINERY
Subscribe For FOIIKST A * IntJn'st at
at sight. It la published In tbelr
Atlanta, Ga , monthly. Only 25; per )
Agents wanted. Sample copies fr
DROPSY
Mention this Taper
|^^icst? Zg h Syrup. TMtMGojjd* l ' Sj!