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ALLIANCE JTALKS.
NEWS OF THE ORDER AND
ITS MEMBERS
Reform Press Comment and Items of
Interest to Alllancemeu Everywhere.
The Louisiana State Alliance has ex
pelled nine members of the legislature be
cause they voted for the Lottery. Hur
rah for Louisianaj
*
* * .
Borne of the papers countmue to refer
to the “Alliance split.” These papers
hud letter look for leaks and “splits” in
other directions. The Alliance split is
not their property, even if there had been
a split.
♦
* *
Legislation in the interest of the farm
ers cannot be class legislation. They
constitute a majority of the population
and whatever shall be ‘done for the ma
jority cannot be for a class. A class
must be the minority, in the sense in
which class legislation is used. —Alli-
ance Herald.
*
*
The Nashville Toiler is right when it
says: “It is only a matter of time when
the great mass, the rank and file of
American citizens, will rise and in one
voice demand the disarming of plutocra
cy. The tide of reform has set in and it
may be temporarily diverted, but perma
nently impeded, never.”
*
* *
THE CHEAT DIFFERENCE.
Plain Talk gets off the following
about the difference in interest under the
present system, and what it would be in
certain cases if the Sub-Treasury was in
operation:
The Sub-Treasury plan may be “im
practical;” but suppose, for instance,
that the farmers of Union county were
only compelled to pay 2 per cent, on
the $50,000 they borrowed during the
thirty days between October 14th aud
November 14th. The interest on $50,-
000 for one year at 2 per cent would
equal SI,OOO. The probability is that
under the present plan this money costs
them an average of 12 per cent. The in
terest on $50,000 at 12 per cent for one
year is $0,000; and the difference be
tween the subtreasury plan and the pres
ent plan is the difference between SI,OOO
and SO,OOO. In other words the
farmer would save $5,000 a year by ihe
adoption of the subtreasury and land
loan plan. Would this not be a very
practical method of increasing the pros
perity of the farmer?
WHAT A PREACHER SAYS.
We clip the following from the New
York Herald of recent date. It is inter
esting reading, coming as it does from a
noted divine:
The Rev. Thomas Dixon had some
thing to say for the Farmer’s Alliance in
his remaka preceeding his sermon in As
sociation Hall. He said that it was by
no means sure that the recent election
had proved a death blow to the Alliance —
“this nameless hobgoblin with hayseed
in its hair.” “The simple truth is,” he
said, “that all this talk about the death
of the Farmer’s Alliance and Industrial
Union is cheap partisan twaddle. Its life
was not involved in the fight. It was
not seriously affected by these elections
because it is primarily a moral, not a
political movement. The movement
is in its last analysis a religious
movement and finds its basis on the
religious natures of the millions of
under piasses who compose its rank and
file. Jjgt a single one of the problems
that birth to this movement has been
met as yet. They have not even been
given a hearing. They hdve been hooted
out of court by the hired assassins of
thought in the older parties, who fight not
for principle but for office. In spite of
good crops, gambling in the bread of a
starving world still holds its carnival of
hell on the floor of your exchanges.
Conservatives may hoot and pooh! and
bahl but the movement is one of the
restless power. You had as well try to
sweep back the sea with a goose’s tail
feather as to try to stop it with the pen
of ridicule. You had as well try to dam
Niagara with an anathema.”
*
* *
THEY VIOLATE THE BANKING LAW.
The Plain Talk, of South Dakota, has
the following article in regard to the
national banking business:
The national banking law was passed
for the purpose of furnishing means
through which the people could be sup
plied with currency. The banks were
intende 1 to be banks of issue merely.
The officers are forbidden by law to use
the money in speculation. They can
only loan it out, and the loans cannot
be made on real estate or chattels, for
this would afford a means by which the
currency might go out of the active
channels of business on long time loans.
The bank currency was intended for
short discounts, and with a view of keep
ing money actively in circulation the
banking law requires that the bankers
shall take only personal security on loans
of money. But this the banks do not do.
They do not loan money, as banks, if that
can be avoided. Go into any national
bank to borrow money and in nine cases
out of ten the note you give will not be
drawn in favor of the bank, but to some
of the officers of the bank; and by this
device a chattel mortgage will be taken
and you will pay 12 per cent interest or
more for your “accommodation,”
instead of the straight ten per
cent permitted by the national
bank act. In this manner the law is
evaded and purpose defeated. But when
the cheap demagogues who contend that
“national banks don’t pay,” begin to
produce figures to prove their assertions,
they invariably pretend that the banks
only get 10 per cent, for their money.
But the fact is that there is not a bank
in South Dakota that makes a practice of
making discounts at straight 10 per cent.,
and there is not one note in ten drawn in
the name of the bank. The national
banks are constant and willful law vio
lators, and the record of the national
bank failures ought to be a warning to all
sensible men that these institutions are
very unsale as places of deposit.
*
A *
HOLD YOUR COTTON .
During the late lession of the Supreme
Council of the National Farmers’ Al-
liance and Industrial Union the follow
ing resolution was offered, and unani
mously adopted:
Resolved, That a committee consisting
of one delegate from each cotton State be
appointed to take under consideration
and if possible formulate some plan by
which the world’s greatest producers of
the South’s greatest staple, cotton, may
be able to some extent at least to regulate
qu.iuiiiy, consumption and market*
ing time and price of said crop.
By motion the committee was made a
standing one to make a final report at the
next annual meeting.
Several resolutions relative to tcreage,
maiketing, etc., were intioduced by L,
F. Livingston, of Georgia; R. F. Rogers,
of Florida, and others. The committee
made a partial report by offering as u
substitute the following resolutions:
Whereas, The cotton growers of the
Bouth are greatly oppressed because of
the depressed price of the raw material,
cause and, in a measure, from combines and
speculations in futures, but mainly from
an unjust, oppressive and discriminating
financial system and a high protective
tariff on manufactured cotton materials;
and whereas, it is now alleged by specu
lators and combines that overproduction
is the prime cause of depression in
prices, when in fact we have reason to
know that the cause is not overproduc
tion, but underconsumption caused by
inability to buy icsulting from advanced
prices of manufactured articles of cot
ton and other causes as stated above;
and whereas, it has been recommended
1 y members of the Farmers’ Alliance in
several States In the cotton belt that
the acreage be decreased one-third by
the growers, and knowing, as we
do, that the price of the raw material
cannot be affected by the loyal Alliance
men alone of the many thousand growers
decreasing their acreage, while, in fact,
the effort to thus reduce the quantity
would actuate thousands of growers to
increase their acreage in cotton; there
fore, as one of the remedies to secure an
advanced price in raw cotton material by
cheapening the manufactured profiucts,
and thereby increase the ability of the
masses to cousume; be it
Resolved, That the National Farmers’
Alliance and Industrial Union, represent
ting the best interests of the pro
ducers and consumers of America alike,
do respectfully ask that Congress entirely
relieve manufactured articles of cotton
from any tariff duty whatever, and place
the same on the free list of American
products.
Resolved, That a copy of these resolu
tions be certified to the speaker of the
house of representatives and president of
the senate of the fifty-second congress of
America, duly attested by the president
aud secretary of the National Farmers’
Alliance and Industrial Union under seal
M
KJk Oll|Jll>UlC bUUUUI,
Marion Butler, chairman, North Caro
lina; W. D. G. Gibbs, Mississippi; 11.
D. Greer, Tennessee; S. M. Adams, Ala
bama; R. F. Rogers, Florida; L. P.
Featherston, Arkansas; T. A. Clayton,
Louisiana; Harry Tracy, Texas; D. P.
Duncan, South Carolina; G. M Lorden,
Missouri; L. F. Livingston, Georgia.
A further report of the committee is as
follows:
Resolved, That, being in possession of
facts that are thoroughly reliable which
warrant us in a belief that a false esti
mate has been purposely made of the
present crop of cotton, we feel safe in
guaranteeing better prices if cotton can
be held for sixty days.
A BOSTON BROKER
It was Who Threw the Bomb at Itussell
Sage.
A sensational dispatch was sent out
from Boston, Mass., Friday, to the effect
that Henry L. Norcross, a note broker,
doing business at 12 Pearl street, Boston,
has not been seen at his office since the
middle of the week, and other occupants
of his residence say that he was killed in
a railroad accideat about that time. New
York detectives were in the city trying
to identify the missing man as the mys
terious bomb thrower in Russell Sage’s
office. The detectives brought with
them a trouser button and portions of
the trousers worn by the bomb thrower,
as well as a piece of his coat and por
tion of his underclothing. These were
taken to Norcross’ residence and the
underclothing positively identified by
Mrs. Norcross as belonging to her hus
band. On the trousers of the dead man
were buttons bearing the print, “Brooks,
Tailor, Boston.” Pieces of clothing were
taken to Brooks’s store. There it was pos
itively stated that the firm had made for
Henry L. Norcross, a coat of the cloth
presented and also a pair of trousers of the
same cloth as the other piece furnished by
the detective. The button was also iden
tified as a peculiar oneused by this tailor
ing house. Henry L. Norcross has not
been seen in the city since the day before
on which the life of Russell Sage was
threatened. He was about twenty-eight
or twenty-nine years of age.
WILL JUBILATE.
Speaker Crisp’s Visit Home will be
Made a State Affair.
A dispatch from Americus, Ua , says:
The committee of citizens, appointed at
the mass meeting Tuesday night to ar
range for a munster demonstration in
honor of Judge Crisp,on his visit home
during the holidays, met Friday and ap
pointed a finance committee who will go
actively to work to prepare on a grand
scale for the jubilee. It is intended to
make the occasion one for the participa
tion of the whole state, and invitations
will be sent out in all directions for prom
inent Georgians to be present, as well as
the masses of the democracy of the dis
trict whose votes have made Crisp’s po
litical fortune. The matter is in the
hands of an able and enthusiastic com
mittee, and Americus expects to make
the demonstration the occasion of her
history.
Revolutionary Relics.
W. H. Hostetter of Jamestown, Ind.,
possesses a sword and well-preserved
coat worn by Major John Byrd when he
was killed at the battle of Kings
Mountain, S. C., October 9, 1780. The
coat was made of blue cloth and is em
blazoned with bufi' tiimmings and is of
the long-tailed, claw-hammer variety. It
is a highly' prized heirloom. Mujor Byrd
was a soldier under General Greene. —■
iSt. Louis Republic.
Rkowii’b Iron Hi iters Dyspepsia,Mala
ria. Biliousness and General Debility. Gives
Strength, aids tonct the nerves—
creates appetite. The best tonic for Nursing
Mothers, weak women and chil Iren.
Adi but one item to the store of knowledge
of the world and you will he immortalized.
Deafness Can’t bo Cured
By local applications, as they cannot reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There is only one
way to cure deafness, aud that is by constitu
tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in
flamed condition of the mucous lining of the
Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in
flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper
fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed
deafness is the result, and unless the inflam
mation can bj taken out and this tube re
stored to its normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever; nine cases out or ten are
caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in
flamed condition 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.
Sold by Druggists, 76c.
FITS stopped free by Dn. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer- No Fits after first day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial
bottle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phlla., Pa-
Dr. Swan’s Pastii.es f are female weaknesses;
his T-Tablet s cure chronic constipation.- Sam
ples free. Dr. Swan, Beaver Dam, Wis.
Malaria
I* believed to be caused by poisonous miasms arising
from low marshy land, or from decaying vegetable
matter, and which, breathed into the lungs, enter
and poison the blood. If a healthy condition of the
blood is maintained by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
one is much less liable to malaria, and Hood’s Sarsa
parilla has cured many severe cases of this distress
ing affection even in the advanced stages when the
terrible chills and fever prevailed. Try it.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; sir for |5. Prepared only
by C. I. HCOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
Hood’s Pills.—For the liver and bowels, act eas
ily yet promptly and efficiently. Price, 25c.
Advice to Women
If you would protect yourself
from Painful, Profuse, "Scanty,
Suppressed or Irregular Men
struation you must use
IbRADFIELD’S
FEMALE 1
REGULATOR |
Cartersvtll.e, April 28,1888.
This will certify that two members of my
Immediate family, after having suffered for
years from Menstrual Irregularity,
being treated without benefit by physicians,
were at length oompletely cured by one bottle
of Bradfield’s Female Regulator. Its
effect is truly wonderful. J. W. Strange.
Book to ” WOMAN ” mailed FREE, which contains
valuable Information on all female diseases.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO..
ATLANTA, GA.
_IVB SALE liY ALL DSUOGISTS.
Vile cod-liver oil has lost
its vileness in Scott’s Emul
sion and gained a good deal
in efficiency.
It is broken up into tiny
drops which are covered witn
glycerine, just as quinine in
pills is with sugar
or gelatine. You do not get
the taste at all.
The hypophosphites of
lime and their tonic
effort to that of the half-di
gesfsd cod-liver oil.
Let us send you a book on
careful living —free.
Scott & Bowks, Chemists, 131 South sth Avenue,
New York.
Your druggist keeps Scott’s Emulsion of cod-liver
fill—all druggists everywhere do. fl.
m
BeAUTYof PoLI SHrr
saying Labor. Cleanliness.
Durabiluy&Cheapness. Uiequalled.
No Odor When Heated.
* THE SMALLEST PILL IN THE WORLD!
XUTT’S
► tiny liver pills <
have all the virtues of the larger ones; g
P equally effective; purely vegetable, f
Exact size shown in this border.
WOODBURY’S FACIAL SOAP.
l ' or the SU| t and i'otmpltxlsn. Re-
Milt of 20 rears’ experience. J For sale
/ at Druggists or by mall, (Oe. bampl#
/ Cake and 128 and. book oti Dermatology
"Sfc&wl and Beauty,Tlllug.]; on Skin, Scalp,
Hr fly*]**.. ijCjWS Nervous and Blood disease and their
17 1 L ™ treatment, sent sealed for 10*.; also
I DISFIGUREMENTS like BIRTII BARKS,
. x Male*, Wart*. India Ink and Powtles
Earkft, Sears, Pitting*, Redness of Nose, So*
A perAunua Hair, Tlniples, ke., removed.
" JOHN 11. WOOD HURT. I)E UH ATO LOGICAL
INSTITUTE, 126 Wort 42nd*Street, N. Y. City. Consultation
free, at offloa nr bv letter. Agent wanted in each place.
SSO REWARDS!
bacco than PURE HAVANA Cutting. In the
filler, of our DON’T brand of ctgara.
M M H t| 9£3ia buy a 10 cent Cigar when you
Bfep sua I can get as good a one for O
cent*. Many smokers now
HMII I use K/\M T to Prefer
ence to 10 cent cigars. UU 11 J
W. B. ELLIS A CO., I
WINSTON. NORTH CAROLINA.
$$ ft M ■■ tfA.fnU Wanted everywhere
m y PS r I *° loau ON If EA I. EH
■ TATE, on anew plan, and to
TO secure applications lor our sav
■ ABII lugs certificates. MUTUAL IN-
I I IMSW " VESTMENT COMPANY, 412 Nlc
——— B ..Wi ■ diet Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn.
mil H BBS "id Whiskey Habits
® gS ’M hi 8 SjtEl'-irvd at home with
aH wr ill 9EB out pain. Book of par
rn m B B w BTI titulars sent FREE.
HU B.M.WOOLLEY,M.I>,
WAtlanta. Office 104>. Whitehall St
KANSAS FARMS
good prices. Farms for sale at bargains. List free
CHAB. R. WOOUaEY, Osborne, Kan.
PIANOS— Highest grade, equals |9OO Upright Oran*
Plan os, sold wholesale, direct irom factory, $164.50 up,
uasn; magnificent, largo octaves, finest tone, three
Pedals, Steel patents, guaranteed 7 yrs. Highest World’s
Awards. Est. 2ft yrs.; 26,000 in use : 6 acres in plant. Write,
eat. ANTISELL PLANO 00., Matawam. New Jersey.
Vf AfiAC STUDY, lioox-K exping, Bust nans Pttrwm,
MUiflu penmanship. Arithmetic, Short-hand,
1A Thoroughly Taught by >IA IL. Circulars free.
Bryant’s College. 459 Main St.. Buffalo. N.Y*
No Pension. No Feo.
I inifC'VANTED. Easywork. CoodSalary.
ltw Send stamp. M. K. Cos.. 80. Bend, Ind.
THE WIDE WORLD.
GENERAL TELEGRAPHIC AND
CABLE CULLINGS
Of Brief Items of Interest From
Various Sources.
The situation in Rio Janeiro, according
to Thursday’s dispatches, continues criti
cal.
Telegrams of Thursday report that
there are 25,000 cases of influenza in
Odessa.
Report of tho ravages of influenza in
various parts of Europe are being con
stantly received.
An order was issued Monday ordering
all telegraphers on the Pacific system of
the Southern Pacific road to strike.
The new tariff bill introduced in the
chamber of deputies at Lisbon, Monday,is
strongly protectionist in character.
The new commercial treaties between
Austria-Hungary and Switzerland, and
Germany and Switzerland, were signed
Thursday.
Advices of Thursday from Gautemala
state that President Barillas recently de
clared that he was not a candidate for
re-election.
The Portsea Island Building Society,
of London, suspended Monday. The
estimated securities held by the society
amount in value to $700,000.
Advices received Thursday from Ath
ens, Greece, are to the effect that King
George is ill with smallpox, instead of
chicken pox, as first announced.
The amount of silver offered for sale to
the treasury department Monday was
726,000 ounces, and the amount pur
chased 250,000 ounces at 96 cents.
A dispatch of Sunday from Madrid,
Spain, says: The Epoca confirms the an
nouncement that the loan of $50,000,000
has been arranged, to be issued on the
30th instant.
Sunday’s dispatches from Berlin say
that the Scientific Journal Lichtstrahlen
has been seized for commenting unfavor
ably upon the emperor’s recent remark:
“Suprema lex voluntas regis.”
The best part of the business section and
about twenty-five dwellings were de
stroyed by fire at Ardmore, Ind., Thurs
day morning. The losses aggregate
$100,000; insurance $50,000.
A cablegram of Thursday says: The
French bark Leonore, Captain Bernard,
which sailed from Coosaw, S. C., Nov.
3d, for Swansea, has been wrecked off
Mumbleshead and the crew was drowned.
The town of Pinos Altos, N. M., was
burned Thursday morning with the ex
ception of two stores. No water was ac
cessible. The fire is believed to be in
cendiary. It started in an unoccupied
frame building in the center of the town.
A London cablegram of Thursday says:
The gales and floods have so weakened
and undermined the ancient and massive
walls by which the gieater portion of the
city of Chester is enclosed that portions
of the old Roman structure have sub
sided.
A Washington telegram of Thursday
says: While the exact destination of the
cruiser Ban Francisco, now fitting out at
San Francisco, cannot be officially ascer
tained, it is generally understood at the
navy department that she is going to
Honolulu.
A cablegram of Sunday from Brussells
is to the effect that the congregation of
Mongolian missions at Ghent has receiv
ed news confirming the report that 500
native Christians have been massacred at
Patou district, and that all the Europeans
there escaped.
A cablegram of Sunday from London
states that the advisory board of the Vir
ginia state debt bondholders have de
clined to recommend that the holders ac
cept the American committee’s scheme
for the settlement of the claims against
Virginia.
A Cincinnati dispatch says: Articles
of incorporation of the Tobacco Growers’
Association were left for record in the
county clerk’s office at Covington Satur
day moruing. The incorporators are W.
L. Scott, W. L. Piper and S. E. Hamp
ton, and the capital stock, $50,000.
A cablegram of Sunday from St.
Petersburg, says: The Russian police
officials claim to have unearthed a for
midable conspiracy to force the granting
of a national constitution. Within the
past few days many persons have been
arrested on the charge of being implica
ted in the plot.
The London Telegraph’s correspondent
at St. Petersburg Buys: Influenza has
assumed alarming forms here. Some pa
tients become mad and rush wildly
through the streets in violent paroxysms,
then have fever and utter prostration,
often followed by death. In other eases
there are typhoid developments.
A cablegram of Thursday from London
says: Up to date fourteen of the under
writers taking risks at Loyd’s have with
drawn from business, giving as their
reason their inability to stand the losses
they have incurred through the recent
disasters caused by the phenominally
severe gales which have recently swept
over the Atlantic and along the British
and Irish coasts.
Dispatches of Thursday from Tucson,
Arizona, state that there is not a tele
graph operator or station agent along the
line of the Southern Pacific from Tucson
to Yuma and in other directions, and
but four between Tucson city and
El Paso. A strike has been declared.
The reason for it is a general refusal to
obey the order requiring them to take an
oath not to join any telegraph organiza
tion.
A New York dispateh says; Reports
were published Saturday morning that
the head of the man who exploded the
dynamite bomb in Russell Sage’s office,
has been identified as Henry L. Norcross,
Of Somerville, Mars. It is stated a friend
pi bis visited the morgue and identified
the head as that of Norcross. The father
and mother of Henry L. Norcross are
how fully convinced that their son was
the man whose insane act in the office of
Russell Sage resulted in his own death.
It is proposed to build up a diamond
cutting industry in the Kimberly dis
trict, South Africa,by placing an export
duty on the rough stones and paying
bounties on the cut goods,
A New Industry.
Guest—“So you are hurd at work
studying French? What is the object of
that?”
Waiter—“l’ve been offered a steady job
at big pay, over in Paris, if I learn
French before going there.”
Guest—“ Humph 1 There are plenty of
French waiters in Paris.”
Waiter—“ Y-e-s, but you see they can’t
understand French as Americans speak
it.”—New York Weekly.
Time Evens All Things.
Father—“My dear, this seems like a
strange marriage. He is but 18 years old
and vou are 28. When he is 40 you will
be 50.
Daughter—“No, indeed. I’ll still be
28.”
Commendable.
All claims not consistent with the high
character of Syrup of Figs are purposely
avoided by the Cal- Fig Syrup Company. It
acts gently on the kidneys, liver and bowels,
cleansing the system effectually, but it Is not
a cure-all and makes no prctonslons that
every bottle will not substantiate.
The man who cannot respect himself has
one more step to take to fall into the pit.
If your Back Aches, or you r.ro all worn out,
o-ood for nothing. It Is general debility.
Brown's Iron Bitters Will cure you, make you
strong, cleanse your lives, and give a good ap
petite—tones the nerves.
The fear of future evil is in itself the great
est of evils.
The Only One Ever Printed.
CAN VOU FIND THE WORD?
These is a 3 inch display advertisement in
this paper, this week, which has no two words
alike except one word. The same is true of
each new one appearing each week, from The
Dr. Harter Medicine Cos. This house places a
“Crescent'” on everything they make and pub
lish. Look for it, send them the name or the
word and they will return you book, beauti
ful LITHOGRAPHS Or SAMI’LKS FREE.
How About Your Mother.
Scrofula or Kings Evil is the most stubborn of all Skin af
fections, Whether inherited or otherwise, it is a blood disease
and cannot be permanently cured by anything but S. S. S.
A GRATEFUL DAUGHTER.
My Mother waa sorely afflicted with Scrofula for three years and a half?
during that time the glands on her neck burst open in five places. Three of the
openings were small and healed right up, but the other two would fill up and
break open anew, about evoryjtwo weeks, always causing severe pain and often
prostration. She was so reduced in strength, that tonic* and coca wines had to
be generously used to keep her alive. She commenced taking S. S. S., and
Improved from the start, the first bottle gave her an appetite and by the time
■he finished the fourth bottle her neck healed up, she is now entirelly well.
Mbs. E. J. Rowell, Medford, Mass.
Books on Blood and Skin diseases free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, ua.
“German
Syrup”
“ We are six in fam-
A Farmer at ily. We live in a
place where we are
Edom, Texas, gu^ject to v j o i en t
Says: Colds and Lung
Troubles. I have
used German Syrup for six years
successfully for Sore Throat, Cough,
Cold, Hoarseness, Pains in the
Chest and Lungs, and spitting-up
of Blood. I have tried many differ
ent kinds of cough Syrups in my
time, but let me say to anyone want
ing such a medicine —German Syrup
is the best. That has been my ex
perience. If you use it once, you
will go back to it whenever you
need it. It gives total relief and is
a quick cure. My advice to every
one suffering with Lung Troublesis
—Try it. You will soon be con
vinced. In all the families where
your German Syrup
is used we have no John
trouble with tie Frankn „
Lungs at all. It is
the medicine for this . „
Jones.
country. ©
G. G. GREEN. Sole Man’fr.Woodbuiy.N.J.
IS WORTH BLCATARB^oI
SSOO J
TO ANY MAN, F^Y FE^W PA
Woman or Child xf&m
suffering from jcT / yC, PRO
CATARRH
not a
LIQUID or SNUFF. §-|AY‘FEVER
A particle Is applied Into each nostril and is agree
able. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mail.
MLY BROTHERS, 56 Warren Street, New York.
PUT WHIT FREE
I TP, || I* I ■ | Send for sample. Dr.
J ' H ' UYE > Editor, Buffalo, N.Y,
A 100PE2CSKT.viwi.t7i8CASHPriiea
Sliwiio r Cornu. Suu.Bniua MWteiiv..
” Am. T.rrtor/. Dr. Bridgman, fia b’w.j.n.y
A, COLDS.
COUGHS.
HOARSENESS,
> CONSUMPTION
ALL AFFECTIONS OF THE THROAT AND LUNGS,
TAYLOR’S CHEROKEE REMEDY OF
SWEET GUM and MULLEIN
Is the BEST KNOWN REMEDY.
Ask your druggist or merchant for it, and take no substitute,
as nothing else can take its place.
TELEGRAPHY
1 is*)"''
“ Therms something behind it. n
That’s what you think, perhaps,
when you read that the proprietors
of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy offer
SSOO reward for an incurable case
of Catarrh. Rather unusual, you
think, to find the makers of a medi
cine trying to prove that they be
lieve in it, “There must be some
thing back of it! ”
But it’s a plain, square offer, made
in good faith. The only thing that’s
back of it is the Remedy. It cures
Catarrh in the Head. To its mild,
soothing, cleansing and healing
properties, the worst cases yield,
no matter how bad or of how long
standing. It has a record that
goes back for 25 years. It doesn’t
6imply relieve —it perfectly and
permanently cures. With a Rem
edy like this, the proprietors can
make such an offer and mean it.
To be sure there’s risk in it, but
it’s so very small that they are
willing to take it.
You’ve “never heard of anything
like this offer?” True enough.
But then you’ve never heard of
anything like Dr. Sage’s Remedy.
fir LIVER
Ljk PILLS
D0 NOT GRIPE NOB SICKEK.
Sure cure for SICK HEAD
ACHE, impaired digestion, consti
• pation, torpid glamls. They arouse
y vital organs, remove nausea, dis
co ziness. Magical effect on Kid
-* nevs and Dladder. Conquer
5 biliouH nervous dis
£ orders. Establish nat
•< ural Daily Action.
Beautify complexion by purifying
blood. Purely Vegetable.
The dose is nicely adjusted to suit case, as one piil can
never betoo much. Each vial contains 42, carried in vest
pocket, like lead pencil. Business man’s great
convenience. Taken easier than sugar. Bold every
where. All genuine goods bear “Crescent”
Send 2-cent stamp. You get S2 page book with sample.
JHL HARTER MEDICINE CO , St. Louis,
JP
You don’t want comfort. II you m aMi
don't with to look well dressed. Pga jRa
ft you don't want the best, then AtH
you don’t want the Lace Back M
Susp- nder. Your dealer hat it it H f
he it alive. II he itn't he shouldn't Kg WM S§
be your dealer. We will mail a g| /f-1 §3
pair on receipt of SI.OO. None
genuine without the stamp at Mm
Lace Back Suspender Cos., A AA
67 Prince street, M. Y. SV9
DROPSY!!
Positively Cured with Vegetable Remedies
Havtt cured thousan da of cases. Cure patient* pro
nounced hopeless by best physicians. From first dose
symptoms rapidly disappear; in 10 days two thirds of all
symptoms removed. Send for free book of testimonials
of miraculous c ures. IO days’ treatment free by
mail. If you order trial, send lUc. in stamps to pay post
age, DR. H. 11. GREEN SONS* Atlanta, Ga.
FREE—TO MEN.
When you get tired of the “doctors" with their big
prices and quack remedies, write t *.nc and I will seud
send (sealed) rnpra prescription that will quickly
and curtain- TiICC ly cure Lost Power, Wasting
Weakness, Lack of Development, Impotency, Varico
cele, etc., from excesses or other causes. A New
Positive Remedy which cures when everything
else falls. J. I>. HOUSE, Box 9, Albion, Mich.
■H Piao’s Remedy for Catarrh la the
I Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. J
CATARR H
■ Sold by druggists or sent by mail. Mg
60c. E. T. Hazelttne, Warren, Fa. S
m nwijg. a DR. TAFT’S AfTHMALENB
AO I rIIVS f\- |k||DCn ne '' cr fails; send “5 y° u
address, we will mail trial V If iICUBOTTLE g* W% Kf B?
THE DR. I AFT IROS. M.CO..ROCHESTER.R.I. HEB
A.N. U Fifty-one, ’9l.
Thorough, Practical laatructlpn. Gradu
ates a ssittd to ■aT' Catalogu.
FREE. Write to
Brjui & Suiam Calligi,
* LOUISVILLE, iCY.