Newspaper Page Text
THE WIDE WORLD.
GENERAL TELEGRAPHIC AND
CABLE CULLINGS
Of Brief Items of Interest From
Various Sources.
The United States steamer, Marion,
has sailed for Bellring sea.
Sixteen hundred miners in the Peoria,
111., district, struck Friday.
The strike of omnibus employes at
Berlin ended Friday. The men accepted
the company’s terms.
The next meeting of the National Edi
torial association will be at St. P.. 1
Minn., on July 14th.
A London cablegram of Tuesday says:
Rev. Charles 11. Spurgeon is critically ill
with little hope of recovery.
The influenza is raging in the province
of Toledo, Spain, 'there are TOO cases
at Mora and 300 at Orgaz.
Early Sunday morning the Park thea
ter at St. Paul, Minn., caught tire, and
was entirely consumed. Loss, $35,000.
In a fight Monday with Indians in
Mogave desert, California. John Powers
and Sam E. Gun were killed. Two In
dians were also slain.
The press mill of Moosic powder mill
at Jeremyn, Pa., exploded Monday
morning, killing John Louty and Philip
Forkel, employes.
The Marie Lane Express, in its weekly
review of the British grain trade, says
English wheats were 0 pence lower and
foreign 1 shilling lower.
The injunction against the payment of
the sugar trust divideud, in New York,
was vacated Friday, owiug to the faulty
allegation on which papers were granted.
The president, by proclamation, lias
ordered that the national flag be dis
played at half mast upon public build
ings of the United States on the day of
Hannibal Hamlin's funeral.
On the morning of the Fourth at Chi
cago, a Northwest railroad freight train
ran into a street car at Dearborn street.
Of the six wounded, two are dead and
one is dying. The accident was caused
by the absence of the flagman.
The Equal Rights league and variou s
other colored organizations held a meet"
ing in Washington Tuesday and passed
resolutions towards an exhibit at the
world’s fair, showing the progress of
their race since emancipation.
A cablegram from Berne, Switzerland,
says: While a party of soldiers were
practicing the construction of a pontoon
bridge across Aar river, near Soleure
Sunday, the structure upon which they
were at work capsized and eighteen of
the party drowned.
A London cablegram of Sunday says:
Mr. Spurgeon has experienced a sudden
increase of kidney congestion, accompa
nied by nausea, drowsiness and prostra
tion. Mr. Spurgeon’s physicians say
the patient is in a most dangerous condi
tion, and that the utmost care is required.
A telegram was received at the de
partment Vf justice Tuesday from United
States Marshal Gard, at San Diego, Cal.,
asking instructions as to his course in
regard to the seized Chilian steamer
Itata. .The acting attorney general tele
• graphed United States Attorney Cole,
at San Diego, to libel the vessel at once
and turn her over to the United States
marshal by due process of law.
A London cablegram says: Mr. Wil-
L liam Henry Gladstone, eldest son of
■ Right Hon. William Ewart Gladstone,
r the great English statesman, died Satur
day morning. The deceased was born at
Hawarden, Flintshire, in 1840; educated
at Christ Church, Oxford; entered parlia
ment in 1865, representing Chester from
1868 to 1880, and subsequently repre
sented Worcestershire.
The monument erected as a testimonial
from the letter carriers of the country to
the late Congressman .Samuel S. Cox,
who was a great friend of the postofiice
employes, and who rendered them great
service during his political career, was
formally unveiled at New York, Satur
day, with appropriate ceremonies. The
statute is of bronze, and stands in the
Astor place. It represents subscriptions
from eveiy state in the union.
Frederick Douglass, United Slate 5
minister to Ilnyti, arrived in New York
city Friday morning oq.tlie royal Dutch
mail ship Prinz William 111, and his re
turn to this country is said to be a prac
tical recall, although disguised by r
leave of absence. He says that he will
not return. The party consisted ol
Dguglass, his wife and secretary
of the legation, Bassett. This comprise
the entire United States legation at
Hayti.
The crisis in Canadian affairs which
followed on Sir John Macdonald’s death
has now reached an end through the ap
pointment of Senator John Joseph Cald
well Abbott as his succe-sor. The new
premier was born 70 years ago at St. An
drews, Quebec. Having been one of Sii
John Macdonald’s most trusted advistrs,
his appointment to the premiership gives*
great satisfaction to the western provin
ces, Ontario and the maritime provinces.
For the piesent at least he will follow the
footprints of his predecessor.
HANNIBAL HAMLIN DIES
While Enjoying a Game at a
Club House. ,
Ex-Vice President Hannibal Hamlin
died at Bangor. Me., Saturday night, at
8:15 o’clock. He was at the Tarritinc
club rooms, playing “pedro,” when his
head fell forward on his chest.
His fri snds gathered arou id him and
he was taken to a lounge and physicians
hurriedly called. No pulse was visible
for an hour, and it was thought they
could not bring him out. Finally he re
vived somewhat and managed to articu
late feebly. The dortors worked over
him faithfully and his family was sent
for. All was done for him in human power,
but failed, and he passed away peacefully
at 8:15 o’clock p. m. He leaves a widow
and two sons —General Charles Hamlin,
a lawyer of Ellswork, and Frank Ham
lin, now living in Chicago. The city
mourns the death of its most distinguish
ed citizen.
You should subscribe for this paper
*ud see what is going on in the world.
SUSPENDED PAYMENT.
A Montgomery Bank Fails for
Half a Million.
Moses Bros.’ bank, at Montgomery,
Ala., suspended payment Monday morn
ing, and all real estate, personal property
and bills of exchange have been included
in the sss gnment to 11. A. Saver, R. B.
Snodgrass and S. M. Levine. They say
their assets will amount to more than
their liabilities. Neither figure can yc-t
be approximately estimated. The failure
is due to the stringency of money. Their
liabilities are said to be about haif a
million dollars. The firm stands very
high for integrity, and few believe
tiiat there is anything ugly about
the suspension. Each individual has in
cluded his home, all real estate and per
sonal property, in the schedule of as
signments. The failure was a blow to
the people of the city. Nearly every la
boring man, clerk and sewing woman in
Montgomery, who was trying to save
money, had deposits in the suspended
bank. Among the depositors are hun
dreds of negroes, who have deposits
ranging from five or ten to fifteen hun
dred of two thousand dollars each.
It is estimated that the amount due
depositors is between $350,000 and
$500,0 .
The embers of the firm have surren
dered everything they poss>ss, personal
and real, without, any claim for exemption
or dower being put in by the wives of
the married members.
WHERE THE MONEY IS.
The failure is a topic of gossip and
wide spread consternation among the peo
ple. It has leaked out that some of the
bankers met a few nights ago offering
their aid in a substantial manner, but the
offer was not accepted, the amount being
but about one hundred thousand dollars,
while the liabilities as estimated are near
if not over half a million. It will take
the trusstees some time to ascertain with
any degree of accuracy the true state of
affairs, there being perhaps over three
thousand positors ranging in sums from
two dollars to many thou c ands.
ANOTHER FAILURE.
A Montgomery dispatch says: E. M.
Strauss & Cos., large furniture dealers
told out Tuesday morning to preferred
creditors. Among the number are Strauss
& Sons, of Jackson, Miss., and Mayer &
Son, of Cincinnati. The firm also ran a
rectifying house, which was sold to the
same parties. Strauss & Cos. owed Muses
Bros., who failed Monday for $20,000.
Ihe purchasing creditors represent at in
debtedness of $45,000.
AND YET ANOTHER.
Another telegram states that the Bank
of Commerce, of Sheffield. Ala., closed
its doors Tuesday morning, having as
signed. The failure was caused by the
failure of Moses Bros.’ bank, in Mont
gomery, as the two banks were closely
ailied. The assets and liabilities are not
known
THE GREAT REUNION
To bo Held at the World’s Fair
in 1893.
A Chicago dispatch of Sunday says:
The Word’s Fair managers and the G. A.
R. men of Chicago, and the best business
men of the city, heartily approve of the
scheme for a grand reunion of the blue
and gray at the World’s Fair in ’93, and
will assist in the matter. A committee,
consisting of the leading ex-soldiers ot
the G. A. R., were selected to have
charge of the work at Chicago, and a
like committee will assist them, com
posed of the ex-Confederate soldiers liv
ing in Chicago. They are all well-known
business men. The reunion is now r an
assured success, and the old veterans of the
North and South, who faced each other
on so many battlefields, will meet in
peaceful reunion, to talk over their old
battles and attend the world’s fair to
gether. On May 30, 1893, there will be
a grand union memorial service held,
and the blue and gray will decorate with
fiowers the graves of the 0,000 confeder
ate soldiers buried at Oakwood cemetery,
Chicago, and the graves of the union
soldiers buried there. There will be a
national committee who will assist the
committee at Chiesgo in th ; s reunion.
Tents will be furnished by the govern
ment to camp in, and the old boys
who wore the blue and the gray can
go into camp by states, and have
one good time together before
they pitch their tents beyond the silent
river. There are hundreds all over the
land who wore the blue and gray, the
best men both north and south, who are
offering their services to make this the
greatest reunion ever held on American
soil. A mass meeting of the survivors
will be held during tf;e encampment of
the Grand Army of the Republic at De
troit, Mich , to boom this reunion. All
true soldiers who wore the blue or the
gray are invited to this meeting and to
the grand reunion at Chicago in 1893.
A TERRIBLE CYCLONE
Visits Baton Rouge—Ten Con
victs Killed Outright.
A terrible cyclone struck Baton Rouge,
Louisiana’s capital, a little after 6 o’clock
Monday morning, passing from southeast
to northwest. It'entered the city at Garig
brickyard, passed up through Catfish
town, and struck a hill just to the east of
John Johnson's residence. lis path con
tinued in a northeasterly direction, cross
ing North Boulevard a hundred yards to
the east of the governor's mansion. It
then went nort.h, striking the penitentiary
building and J. A. D< ugherty’s residenc e
on North street, and thence beyond the
city. The cyclone was 300 yards wide,
and ricoehetted along its course like a
cannon ball, devastating as it went. In
the city no one was killed, though several
persons were s riously injured.
CONVICTS KILLED.
The state penitentiary was partially
wrecked. Ten convicts are killed and
thirty-five injured. Five of these are
dangerously. Following'is a list of the
dead : Whites—lsaac McClelland, of Cal
casin; J. A. Waggoner, of Claiborne;
Fred Gage, of Ouachita; James Van
Metter, of Natchitoches; John Gibson
and William Willow, of New Orleans.
Gibson was or.e of the Maly murderers.
Colored—Nathan Chancy, of Kart Felici
ana; Henry Calestin, of New Orleans;
Beauregard Harden, of Bossier; Edward
Buckner, of Caddo.
Thoughtful Squibs.
The first snow flake of winter how
significint—and the first white hair!
Life is a long course of mutual educa
tion which ends but with the grave.
The prayers of a lover are more im
perious than the menaces of the whole
world.
Above all things always speak the
truth; your word must be your bond
through life.
Lying is the basis of all evil. After
one year of absolute truth crime would
disappear.
Some people spend their vacation in
worrying over the business they left be
hind them.
Justice is a little short-sighted, per
haps, but frequently has an eye to the
main chance.
You just bring a couple of little quar
rels into your home and they’ll breed like
sparrows.
It is so easy to fancy one’s self right
that self-condemnation is about as scarce
as dodo’s eggs.
Doubt is brain fog and it sometimes
takes all the rays of the sun of experience
to disperse it.
She was regal, she was haughty, she
was highborn and distinguished; and,
like the rest of us, she was clay.
Every incomplete work is a monument
to human folly. Whatever is worth be
ginning is worth completing.
Don’t compare a girl’s cheek to the
down on a peach if you want to be com
plimentary. If there is anything dis
agreeable to get on your lips, it is peach
down.
A Very Strange Fact.
It is a very strange fact that a great many
people, of sound judgment otherwise, do not
give their eyesight proper care until it is too
late.
Glasses not suited to your eyes will injure
your sight. Remember this.
Mr. A. K. Hawk.es, whose name is known all
over the civilized world as an optician and
manufacturer of Crystallized Lenses, has
established a factory at 19 Decatur Street,
Atlanta, Ga., where occulists’ prescriptions
will be promptly filled and the trade supplied.
All druggists and merchants keep a stock on
hand, as they have learned that it pays to keep
the best.
The time spent in mourning for the dead
might be used in making the living happy.
—j
For impure or thin Blood, Weakness, Ma
laria, Neuralgia, Indigestion, and Biliousness,
take Brown’s Iron Bitters—it gives strength,
making o'.d persons feel young—and young
persons strong; pleasant to take.
All men are alike in one particular: the
most humble believe there is a kick coming to
him.
The Teachers’ Route to'Toronto
Is via the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton
Railroad from Cincinnati. A rate of one fare
for the round trip has been made by the Cin
cinnati, Hamilton & Dayton Railroad and its
connections to Toronto and return on account
of the National Educational Association meet
ing to be held in that city duly 14,15,16 and 17.
The C., H. & D.. the only line running direct
from Cincinnati to Detroit, is the through car
link between the South and North and
with sleeping cars on all night trains and chair
cars on day trains; it invites the patronage of
all teachers and their friends who want to go
to the meeting comfortably and expeditious
ly Ask your local agent for tickets via Cin
cinnati and the C., H. &D. For rate and full
information address any agent of the C., H. &
D, or B. O. McCormick, General Passenger
and Ticket Agent, Cincinnati, O.
Dearness Can’t be Cured
By local applications, as they cannot reach the
diseased portion or ear. There js only one
way to cure deafneilfcind that is by constitu
tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in
flamed condition of the mucous lining of the
Eustachian Tube. When this tnbe gets in
flamed you have a rumbling sound er imper
fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed
deafness is the result, and unless the inflam
mation can be takeout and this tube re
stored to its normal (RBdition, hearing will be
destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are
caused# catarrh, which is nothing but an in-
of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that we
cannot cure by taking Hall’s Catarrh Cure,
bend for circulars, free.
F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, O.
bold by druggist sl .7s cents.
Van Winkle Ginand Machinery Cos., Atlan
ta, Ga., manufacture Cotton Gins, Feeders,
Condensers, Presses, Cotton-Seed Oi! Mills, Ice
A aebinery, Shafting, Pulleys, Tanks, Pumps,
Wind-Mills, Etc. Write for prices and disc’ts.
Played Out
How often this and similar expressions are hear t
from tired, overworked women, and weary, anx
ious men, who do not know where to And relief
For that intense weariness so common and so dis
couraging we earnestly recommend Hood’s Sarsa
parllla. It Is not a stimulant, but a true tonic
gradually building up all the weak organs In such a
way as to be of lasting benefit. A fair trial will con
vince you of Its merits.
N. B. Be sure to get
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by ail druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Lowell, Mass.
100 Doses One Dollar
“August
Flower”
Mr. Lorenzo F. Sleeper is very
well known to the citizens of Apple
ton, Me., and neighborhood. He
says: “ Eight years ago I was taken
“ sick, and suffered as no one but a
“ dyspeptic can. I then began tak
“ ing August Flower. At that time
“I was a great sufferer. Every -
‘ ‘ thing I ate distressed me so that I
“had to throw it up. Then in a
“ few moments that horrid distress
“ would come on and I would have
“to eat and suffer
For that “again. I took a
“ little of your med-
Horrid “icine, and felt much
Stomach “better, and after
“ taking a little more
Feeling. “ August Flower my
“Dyspepsia disap
peared, and since that time 1
“ have never had the first sign of it.
“lean eat anything without the
“least fear of distress. I wish all
“that are afflicted with that terrible
“disease or the troubles caused by
“it would try August Flower, as I
‘ 1 am satisfied there is no medicine
“equal to it.” @
AS H ABOUT E: Tenness-e’* FINE
HI ■ CLIMATE and Great Resocbcks in
RS 8_ ■_ KNOXVYLLKt SENTINEL; dally 1 mo.,
mm —5O e.; weekly 1 year, SI; samples sc.
PATENTS Sia-ii’srrfl
™ 40-pase bosk Ire*.
AN ALLIANCE MANIFESTO
Which is intended to Raise the
Price of Wheat.
A Chicago dispatch of Tuesday says:
The Farmers’ Alliance is about to un
dertake the experiment of organizing the
farmers of the country upon a scheme of
compelling the payment of corner prices
for the 1891 wheat crop. An official
manifesto has been prepared with great
secrecy and will be placed in the hands
of every member of the Farmers’ Alii
ance, calling upon him to withhold
a part or all of his wheat and inducing
his friends and J neighbors to do the
same until such a time as the necessities
of consumers at home and abroad
will force the payment of prices satisfac
tory to the producers. The various
farmers’ organizations have a member
ship of nearly six million, and all of
them are expected to fall in line With the
Alliance, and to induce others not mem
bers of any of the societies to do the
same. The circular is practically of the
relative force of an order from Gompers
and Powderly for a neral labor stiike,
the farmers being drilled up to an appre
ciation of the overwhelming ad
vantages of co-operation, The cir
cular is lengthy and sets forth with
elaborate statistical detail the fact that
the fanjiers of America have been
skinned out of $300,000,000 in three
years through the machinations of the
short sellers, that Europe has the short
est wheat and rye crop of the cemury,
and that conditions are providential
for a trust. The farmers are directed
to resolve that a minimum price
of $1.35 in New York is moderate
and conservative, and that they pledge
themselves not to market their wheat at
lower prices and then only sparingly and
under the direction of state commit
tees constituted lor the purpose of keep
ing posted as to supply and demand, and
strong reasons ate urged for the belief
that this policy will soon elevate prices to
the desired limit. The move is likened
to a strike with the difference that the
workingmen lose mopey every day the.
strike lasts while the farmer makes money,
and that the outcome is always doubt
ful with the workingmen while in this in
stance with the farmer it is certain. In
the body of the circular is a letter from
Professor G. B. Dodge, government sta
tistician, estimating the crop of 1891 at
seventy-five to one hundred million
bashels, under the “absurd” 600,000,000
bushel bear estimate with a possibility of
125,000,000 bushels less. This is Dodge’s
first estimate of the crop. The circular
is decidedly sensational in its signifi
cance.
BUSINESS OUTLOOK
As Reported by Dun & Co.’s
Mercantile Agency.
Dun & Co.’s review of trade for week
ended July 4, says: Dependence on the
crops is the reliance for renewed activity
in business and an improvement in the
monetary situation, and the crop pros
pects are still very satisfactory. General
rains in the wheat and cotton-growing
regions have given much encouragement.
The course of the market favors an early
heavy movement in breadstuffs. The
money market appears a little less easy,
with stringency at a few southern points.
There is less anxiety than of late about
gold exports, and there is a prevailing
confidence in the speedy recovery and
expansion of trade. The iron market is
dull, and while prices are gen
erally a shade stronger than in
May, a vague fear of the future check
purchasers. Structural and plate i.on
are fairly active, but of rails no sales are
noted, and shipments for the half year
are placed at 440,000 tons, against 775,-
000 last year. Coal has been advanced
by dealers, but independent operators
make no change. Business failures for
the week number for the United States,
210, and for Canada, 27, or a totd of
237, as compared with 234 last week,and
253 the week previous to the last. For
the corresponding week last year the
failures vw 190
A TALE OF WOE
That Comes from Central Amer
ica-Starving Laborers.
A Washington dispatch of Sunday
says: W. E. Sims, consul at. Colon,
writes to the state department officially as
follows:
“I wish to call attention to the condi
tions of Americans who come to Central
and South America in search of work.
Day laoor here is cheap. Fifty cents in
Columbian silver (35 cents gold) is the
regular daily wages. Americans cannot
live on it, and, not being acclimated,
cannot do the work required. Every day
American citizens come to me to be sent
home. They are not seamen, and I have
to'rely on the kindness of masters of
American vessels to send the
pqor fellows home. The Nicaragua
canal has lured many of these
poor people here, and. now they are adrift
barefoot, nearly naked and starving in
Central and South America, dependent
on the consideration of Americau consuls
to provide them means to get back home.
Some poor fellows who were sick and
unable to work their passage back have
doubtless died in the swamps. I hope
the emigration of laborers from the
United States lo this country can be
checked, us there is no room for them,
and death alone awaits them here.”
FIRE IN COLUMBUS
Destroys SIOO,OOO Worth of
Property.
Columbus, Ga., was visited by the
biggest conflagration in the history of the
city Friday night. About half past 8
o’clock fire broke out in the drying room
of W. T. Harvey & Co’s, lumber yard,
corner First avenue and Twelfth street,,
and spread with fearful rapidity. A
strong breeze prevailed at the time.
There were over twenty-five thousand
dollars worth of lumber in the yard, and
was completely destroyed. The fire
swept the entire block, including P. S.
Crane’s grocery store, 1 Dolan’s wheel
wright shop, Miller's hair store on
Twelfth street. Thomas Gilbert’s fine
residence on Second avenue, the factory
boarding house and several other build
ings on First avenue. The portion of
the city ourned is near the river. The
total loss will probably amount to SIOO,-
000 with one-third insurance.
The Invention of Ink.
The ink first used probably was some
natural animal pigment, such as the black
fluid obtained from the various species of
cuttlefish, says Chambers’ Journal, but
the limited supply of this material soon
led to the use of a mechanical mixture of
water, gum and lampblack, and the
characters were paiuted, rather than
written, by means of a broad-pointed
reed. As ink of this simple nature was
easily removed from the surface of the
parchment by the mere application of
moisture, it was early found necessary to
contrive some means of forming a more
durable ink, and lor this purpose the ex
pedient was adopted of treating the mix
ture with some substance, such as vine
gar, of the nature of a mordant, which
would penetrate the parchment written
upon and form an ink not liable to fade.
A chemical dye, consisting of an infu
sion of galls, with sulphate of irou, was
alter ward used, as from its vitreous na
ture it bit into the medium employed,
but a compound vegetable ink contain
ing a good deal of carbon pigment was
subsequently adopted, and was very gen
erally employed down to the middle ages.
With ink of this sort the best and most
aacient manu-cripts which have been
preserved to us were written, and the
separate leaves, after being allowed to
dry slowly, were bound together in
volumes. Pliny and Vitruvius, as well
ias other writers, give recipes for the
manufacture of inks.
For Dyspepsia, Indigestion, and Stomach
. disorders, use Brown’s Iron Bitters. The
Best Tonic, it rebuilds the system, cleans Ihe
Blood and st rengthens the muscles. A splen
did tonic for weak and debilitated persons.
A man’s opinion of raople is as much a test
of his character as peoples’ opinion of him.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son’s Eye-water-Druggists sell at2sc per bottle.
FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great
Verve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and 9? trial
fettle free. Dr. liline. 981 Arch St.. Phila., P.
OISTIS ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasiug to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 60c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
■ubstitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. WFIV YORK. N Y
DONALD KENNEDY
Of Rexbury, Mass., says
Kennedy’s Medical Discovery
cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep-
Seated Ulcers of 40 years’
standing, Inward Tumors, and
every Disease of the Skin, ex
cept Thunder Humor, and
Cancer that has taken root.
Price, $1.50. Sold by every
Druggist in the United States
and Canada,
JJIGCJk for diarrhea,
W "S DYSENTERY,
ADd a " mm
Stomach Troubles.
IT IS A CURL
iC 8 I® 'nHL.PM * TRE BEST THING FOR
ft TEETHING - CHILDREN ’
(fT xaff, J§§Nef ill || 1 Ask your Druggist or Merchant for
9rn mm? B It, and take no substitute. :
§pk9 ll is such a dread disease, its effects so loathsome, ita
H _ Muk Sj'sli & iff” SPST results so sure and fatal, that it is sometimes
av B Til wKr 808 H thought not in good form to write or talk about it.
When, however, a method of absolute and permanent cure for cancer without the use of
knife or plaster has been discovered, and after years of trial most thoroughly tested, the
require D Hfl A M CMTI V
sattSMysrmlllAliEW I L.Y
sible. MASON’svegetable Cancer Cure is the greatest triumph of theage. No cutting, nochlo
roform or ether, nor does the cancer ever return. Send for book containing full particulars
of treatment. Testimonials of living cures and other ■ ■ ffAA B®
information. Dr &B 6OTT M. MASON, Chatham, N.Y. UUKLU.
TDJSO'S REMEDY F(K CATARRH.—Best. Easiest to use,
ttgia ■*- Cheapest. Relief is immediate. A cure is certain. For jsj&h
H Cold 111 the Head it lias no equal. MSB
CATAR R H
It is an Ointment, oi which a small particle is applied to the
nostrils. Price, GOc. Sold by druggists or sent by mail.
Address. E. X. Hazeltine. Warren. Pa.
rpOVAIGUT 1
On the move
—Liver, Stomach, and Bowels,
after Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant
Pellets have done their work.
It’s a healthy movement, too
—a natural one. The organs
are not forced into activity
one day, to sink back into a
worse state the next They’re
cleansed and regulated—mild
ly and quietly, without wrench
ing or griping. One tiny,
sugar-coated Pellet is all that’s
needed as a gentle laxative;
three to four act as a cathar
tic. They’re the smallest,
cheapest, the easiest to take.
Sick Headache, Bilious Head
ache, Constipation, Indigestion,
Bilious Attacks, and all de
rangements of the Liver,
Stomach a/ and Bowels are
promptly relieved and cured.
To the Indian Territory we have shipped a
good many of our watches. It is a fact that
the people out there know a good thing when
they see it—and wherever one of our watches
goes, it makes such a reputation for itself that
other orders are sure to follow.
In this way the demand for the “Stevens
Watch” comes from every part of the south
and west, they are the strongest, simplest, and
most accurate watches in the market, and,
considering quality, the lowest price. See the
Stevens \\ .itch before buying. J. P. Stevens
& Bro., 47 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga. Send
for catalogue.
KING COTTON
Buy or sell your Cotton on JONES
Cotton Scale.
SJ I I NOT CHEAPEST BUT BEST.
H H 9 For terms address
HbJ s||JJONES OF BINGHAMTON,
W BINGHAMTON. N. Y.
Smith’s
Worm Oil
For Worms
IS A SAFE AND SURE REMEDY.
Sold Everywhere. 2S Cents.
“RFfi pYpjj tobacco
IUI h IS TIIB MUST ter
a Mild, Sweet CHEW. N<. HEARTBURN n
HEADACHE Send 10 cents in Stamps fora .5.4.U
--PLH.it your dealer does not KEEP IT. TAYLOR
BROS’., Manufactubebs, Winston, N. C.
practical
COLLEGE. Richmond, Vk. £|£S!nSS£* ,t> '*
B 1 Maud Whiskey Habits
2# Skip P s H rtsjgjra cured at home wnh-
K*s§ E 0 if ilh fffigSlcut pain, Book of par
t&jb Eg fi | JUf in ticulars sent FREE.
gS Jffriirrr ——tS H.M.WOOLLEY.M.D.
Atlanta. Ga. Office Whitehall St
ft I nil Wf.ax, Nervous, Wretched mortals gel
wsl■ IK well and keep well. Health Helper
w.w S tells how. 80 cts. a year. Sample copy
free. Dr. .1. H. DY E. Editor. Buffalo. N. Y.
PENSIONS— Due all SOLDIERS! H dis
abled. Fee for increase. 26 year* experience .
White fob Laws A. W. McCORiIIIGK Sc
SONS, Washington, D. C. & Cincinnati. O.
PFNSmN No Pension. No Fee.
rblVOlUll JOSEPH 11. HUNTER,
11—1—nil. rn . w WASHINGTON, - D. C.
A. N. U % Twenty-eight, '9l