Newspaper Page Text
STATE OF DADE NEWS.
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY.
B. T. BROCK
PROPRIETOR.
DIRECTORY.
OadeSuperiorOourt meets 3rd Mondaysin
March and September.
County Court (n ontbly term) meets 2nd
Monday in each months.
Quarterly term on tirst Wednesday after 2nd
Monday in February, May. August, and No
vember. W. U. Jacoway Judge. and .T, G
Hale, County Solicitor,
Justice Court for Trenton District meets
2nd Saturday in each month.
CountyOffickrs.-.T. A. Cureton, Ordinary
S.J. Allison.' Clerk Superior Court; Robert
Carter, SherilT; C, A. R- yan, Tax Collector;
I). 11, Rogers, Tax Receiver; J. W. Woods
Treasurer; W. G. Morrison, Surveyor.
Methodist Church 2nd and 4th Sundays in
ei.ch months, preaching by Rev. J. F. Hash.
Prayer meeting every Thursday night.
Baptist Church, suiphur Springs 2nd Sun
day and Saturday bclore in each month. Ris
ing Fawn 4th Sunday and Satuiday night be
fore. Preaching by Rev. W, L, Jones,
• The weekly STATE OF DADE
NEWS delivered at any point in
the United States by mail
One year SI.OO
Six months . ; . , 50
Three months . 25
WJ 1-!-'"' ""
ADVERTISING RATES.
Ins. || lwk || lmo. || limes. timos. || lyr.
ail 1.00 |l 2.25 II 4.50 I! 7.00 IjJLI.OO
*““3|| 1.50 ii 325 II 6.50 || 11.00 ]| 16.00
4|| 1.75 |l 4.00 || 7.50 j| 12.50 || 21.00
)4C || 2.00 || 4-50 || fi.so " |1 14JW1 || 27.50
KC I! 4.00 || 15.7 H 25'00 || 25.80 |l 52*50
lcol.ll 7.00 || 15.00* || 30.00 I! 55.00 II 10/0 00
A Volunteer in Cuba,
All the building® of this asylum
bore evidence of extreme old age
and the relief for the eye was when
one looked upon the square on
■which all the buildings faced.
Here almost every variety of the
choicest flowers known even to
Cuba, grew in all luxury.
It was the Cuban wife of the
American , who had cared for these
flowers. Upon the north side of
the square stood a small cathedral
which has a history known to all
in that section of the country.
Father was poeeseed of some
means , and about 200 years ago lie
Vrmron fVi o ornnhnn nf tbr 1 1 11 ] u
-* VUU ' A V V , • Oil
ihedral. Thejstory is that he la
bored for months in laying the
brick and morter with his own |
hands, assisting a few other la-j
borers. Finally the edifice was!
completed and in one corner of it
was a little room about 7x9 feet,
reserved by the good old father for
himself.
Upon two trestle benches, rested
two plank of*.he breadth of about
sixteen inches.
For nearly forty years, rhe man
of God slept upon those two bare
plank with only a brick for a pil
low, doing penance for some sin
committed in his early days. About
the year 1739 ne died upon that
rough bed and his remains were i
laid away in a vault underneath J
the chapel.
* Ihe fcuperintendant who was
showing us around, Jed us to the
door of this little room and there
we saw that little Jt>ecl just as the
old priest left it one hundred and
sixty years ago. There was the
same brick pillow in its place, but
underneath a glass cover, and
treasured more highly than if it
had been of gold. Upon one side
of the wall, a memorial tablet
briefly tells the visitor that here
dwelt Father for 39 \ e i rs.
J| Inside the chapei, a larger mar
ble tablet tells the story of the good
man’s life, and as 7 stood in front
of it I could hut feel that I was
“tramping upon Holy ground-”
world produces few such
examples of utter abandonment of I
all thiotre earthly.
Leaving the little c and, we
waiKeu 4..x0 the Suj eimtendaot's j
office for a drink of water before
leaving. As we passed out at the
door we were met by the wife of
the leper. Upon a tin waiter she
had several small bunches of some
of her most beautiful flowers,
which she beggeUus to accept, tell
p.ii g the 'interpreter to thank us
l'r.aui lor our kindness to her hue-
i band . We each accepted a portion
! of the flowers and should it Vie pos
sible for me to forget what I sow
that day, a little bunch of wither
ed flowers will bring to my mind
memories of my visit to the asy
lum at Puerto Principe.
As we drove back to our hotel
lor dinner, a kind of gloom seemed
to have fallen ovei all in our little
party.
The American visitor will find
much in Puerto Principe to inter
est him.
Among the* historic old build
ings, he should visit, the Supreme
court build ng, in the wails of
which was settled alL.eontroversies
arising, not only in Cuba, but in
all the Spanish-American colonies.
St. Sebastian’s Cathedral, the
erection of which comtae:ed over
one hundred years ago, and which
is yet incomplete , although cost
ing hundreds of thousands of doll
ars, is a beautiful work of art.
At present a portion of it is used
as a museum, something on the or
der of the Smithsonian Institute,
in which the visitor could spend a
day without growing weary.
Agremonte Plaza will also inter
est one and especially ifheshould
go there on a beautiful moonlight
night when a concert is going on .
If one desires a glimpse of the
different lypfes of Cuban beauty, it
will be found assembled at this
great piazza.
In the afternoon of our second
day. we commenced a round of the
shops in an effort to gather curios
for our families and friends at
home. Going into a jewelry store ,
we found the proprietor and all his
clerks gathered around a little
light haired American woman wl *
was trying to make some pui chases.
A badge upon her shoulder told
us that she was a sister or wife of
some officer in the Bth cavalry.
She soon left off her efforts to
make a purchase and came up io
us saying: “Gentlemen, I see you
are from the 3d Ga., and in my
husband's brigade. As I Lave
been here longer than you let me
advise you. when you visit these
shops to never pay vvnat you are
a.Aced for any article. Offer them
j one-third —leave the store if you
Ido not get it and call again the
i
next daj'. It will be ready for
yuii.” With this f he little larty
oid us good day and left .the store.
HiMfUi* ¥il
rmßMrw^"tzmam gnseasxi
| Did you ever try to dodge the
] rain-dropy ? Did net succeed
j very well, d? 4 you ? St’s just
as useless to try to escape from
the germs ol consumption, You
can’t do it. They are about &so
on every hand and we are con-
taking them into our
lungs.
Then why don’t we all have
this disease ? Simply because
these germs cannot gain a fcGt°
held in a strong throat and
lungs. !t’s when these are
weak that the germs master.
The body must be well supplied
with fat. The danger corars
when the fcHcod is poor and the
body is thin. If your cough doc?
not yield : and your throat and
lungs lee! raw and £ore, you
should not delay another day.
Take
Sf
F? ?p 111 ® f 4T& IT]
o 2 Cod-Liver GiS with Hype phos
phites at once, it wlls hcrJ rho
Inflamed membranes and grcsT':'
strengthen them as well. 11 o
digestion becomes st onger, the
appetite better end the weight:
increases. The whole body c
cocncs well fortified arid tuc
germs o'i co~?iV" ::-iio3S ca.-.: net
gain a foothold.
It’s this nourishing, sustain
ing and strengthening pt wo.
cf SCOTT'S EMULSION ti.-r.l
has made it cf suck value ‘r
oil wasting and exhaust!::.?
diseases.
soc. and fx.ee, ?il dru ; njts.
SCQTT 5c BOWNE* Ch.;.. w • k
Gilbert-Pickle Wedding
On Wednesday evening Dec, Clh
at Ihe Methodist church iu the
oresence of several hundred guest c ,
Miss Alice Pickle was united in
marriage to Walter Ilawrence Gil
bert .
The church was beaiui fully anE
artistically decorated with white
chrysanthemums, potted plants
and cedar, and the marriage was
the prettiest nuptial rite ever sol
emnized at this place.
Promptly at 7 o’clock the soft
strains of Mendelssohn’s march
played by Miss Maude Nichols, Die
bridal party entered the church
and took their places in front of
the chancel.
The bride and groom stood un
der an arch, from which a horse
shoe of white chrysanthemums,
supposed to be an omen of “good
luck” and future happiness, was
suspended .
Rev. J. H. Glazener, the grand
father of the bride, performed the
ceremony that united the lives of
these two young people, in a very
impressive manner.
The bride was becomingly at
tired in a handsome gray cloth
suit with white trimmings and hat
to match, and carried a boquet of
vvhlte chrysanthemunis.
Misses Maud Fricks, May \\ ebb,
Annie Riordan and Emma Pickle
and Messrs. Glenn Nichols, Gra
ham Hale, Herbert Gilbert and
Emerson White attended the bride
and Messrs. R. P. Tatum, A. P.
Fricks, J. L. White and Dr, D. S.
Middleton acted as ushers.
The bridesmaids all wore hand
some visiting costumes, with hats
to match, and cariied white chrys
anthemums. An informal recep
tion was given at the home of the
bride , complimentary to the bri
dal party —Mrs. Gilbert is the sec
ond daughter of Mr. and Mrs Wil
liam F. Pickle and is a sweet and
is a sweet and amiab'e young lady’,
and it is a source of regret to her
many friends heie that she will
make her home at Chattanooga
where Mr. Gilbert is engaged in
business.
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert received!
many handsome presents, and muiy j
felicitations and good wishes tor a)
long, prosperous and happy life.
A liUkSAW IXVIiAUOIs.
The editor of the Avl.a> sas L>.)//., s>r,w
invited iho Filipinos to become Ameri
canized in lhe fotlowiiig appeal.
"You don’t- know a 1 hut a grand tiling
joii ate missing by not wanting I<> be
come citizens of Ups grand oouu try of
ours. There isn’t anything like it tra
der the sun. You ought l > send a dele
guii'ut oyer lure to see ns--this land of
the fjee—land of churches and 100,000
saloons; Bible*, iotjs and guns, houses
of prayer and I’qensed houses of prosti
tution; millionaires, paupers, theologi
ans and thieves; lit ertines and liars;
Christians and chain gangs, politicians
and poverty, schools and scalawags,
trusts and tramps, virtue and yice.
•‘A 1 >nd where you eau get a good
Bible for 15 cents and a bad drink of
whiskey for 5 cents, where sonic men
make sausage out. of their wives aud
some want to eat the:" raw, where we
make bologna sausage out rf cogs, can
ned beef out of horses and sick cows,
and corpses out of those who eat it,
v\ here we have a congress of 400 men lo
make laws anti a supreme court of nine
men to set them aside, where newspa
pers aie suppressed for telliug the truth
and made rich for telling a lie, where
professors draw their convictions from
the saiuo source they do their salaries,
where ministers are paid $26,000 a year
to dodge the devil and tietle the ears
of the wealthy', where business coasists
in getting property in anyway that
won’t lard you in the penitentiary,
where trusts hold you up and poverty
ho;ds you down, where men yote for
what they do not want for fear they
will not get v.'hat they want by voting
for i;, where women wear false hair and
men dock their horses’ tails, where the
P'diiical who puller has displaced the
vatri ti ■ statesman; whera imu vote
for a thiugoneday and cuss it .hit days:
w here we have prayers on the floof of
om capitoi and whiskey in the
cel. '. : v.'bcre we sit on the safety valve
. of cn,l -T a °d puli -vide open the throt
tle of cmi eienee: where gold is a sub
stance, the odo thing sought for, and
God i4 * waste basket foi our better
thoug.its and good resolutions;
" r “ we pay $15.00': for a dog and
lo cents a dozen to a poor woman.
for limiting shirts; where we teach
untutored Indians from the Bible
and fill them with whisky; where
we put a man in jail for stealing a
loaf of bread and in congress for
stealing a railroad.
“Come io us. Fillies; we’ve got
the grandest aggregation of good
.and.had.things,, soil..things .and
hard things, all sizes and varieties
and colors, ever exhibited under
the tent. We've got more guns,
Bibles and whisky than any’ two
shows on earth.”—Ex.
Gen. John B. Gordon, of Georgia,
now and for the past ten years
commander-in-chief of the confed
erate veterans of America, made a
declaration on the ;>iim ques
tion Wednesday. He said: “My
sympathies go out to the men who
are lighting under Ihe stars and
stripes wherever they are and I am
not in favor of pulling the flag
down. 1 guess that, shows where I
stand.”—Ex.
<B>-
The spirit of a Nopoiean seems
to he directing the military affairs
of the Boers.
—
The “anti-war party in England
says: “Let’s settle with the Boers
now —then our government,”
In this country, the anti-war
crowd says: “Let’s help Aguinal
do lick our government,”
Bryan may have to give The pop
ulists of Nebraska, a a
few United 'States' Senators, Su
preme court Judges &0 to get them
to vote for him for President “next
time,” but if looks now as if he had
done enough to tie the knot.
CITATION NOTICE.
GEORGIA, Dado County.
To the voters of the 974th Dist.,
G. M. of Dade county. Notice is
hereby given that a petition has
been filed with me. petitioning for
an election in said Dis'rict upon
the question of fence or no fence
under the provisions of the .Code
of Georgia of 1895. Sections 1772
to 1880 inclusive, and other sec
tions of the Code pertaining to the
no fence law, ami unless good
causv is . now i Lo the contrary on
or before December 22d 1899, an
election will be ordered for said
District in accordance with said
petition. Th.s November 23, 1899
J. A. Cureton, Ordinary.
> DMINI-'i HA TRiX’ SALE.
GKOUGJ V, Dade oM'iit;.
lii )>i! i sun vv of un tu-tlta- from the <• art cf
*<>i.iitciry of suni nounfy, I will, as tdnur.is
trHii'ix of t’na etnte Ol K. li. Davis, iute of
sain comity, dccpuse<i, expose for sale to tl c
highest bidder, ii!ctp thr court house dcor, in
the town of Trenton, on the llrs > Tuesday in
January, lituti. within the l*-jfs-.l hours of sale,
the r’es- ribeil rent estate lately be
lonliinjr to said deceased, to wit All tiios
tracts ol' land cl.iiaied, owned ot pocn|>it‘ti by
s.til deceased, lyinjt on Sand Mount in in said
cottony, near ( ole City and consisting of on
hundred acres mote or let-, being P of w hat
is known as the Dr. Davis mountain place,
and consisting of part: of lots Nos. !H and 50 in
the ltkli Dist and 4th Section of said state and
county. Sold lor purpose of payment oi
debts and distribute n among the heirs of said
deceased. Terms ot sale cash. This Dec. 7th
1899. Mrs. Sarah Davis. HitniinistiMtril ,
ot the estateol K. ii, Davis, deceased.
GUAitDE AN ’ BA LE.
GEORGIA, Dade county.
In pursuance of an order from the court ol
Ordinary of said county, I will, as Gimdean
| ot the person anil properly of S. H. Morrison,
1 expose for sale to the highest bidder before
j the court house door in the town ot Trent n,
said state and county, on the tirst Tuesday in
January, ltKid, the following desciinei. real
estate belonging to the said S, H. Morrison
[ estate to wit. I.ot ot land No. 13 in the I‘Jth
District and 4th Section of Dade county, l.or
! gia. Sold for the purpose of the payment of
debts. Terms ol sale rash. This Nov. Oth,
lftOO— W. G. Morrison, Guardean.
7 /candterfri'i 0 ’-'cover'-'.
The las quarter cf a century records
many wonderful discoveries in medicine,
but none that have accomplished more for
humanity than that sterling old household
remedy, Browns' it-m Bitters. It seems to
contain the very elements of good health,
and neither mar, woman or child can take
it without deriving the greatest benefit.
! Browns' Iron Bitters is sold iw all dealers.
Quick! v .■ '-ured. OU* FIE TV2 WHEN TXTZUTZ
OBTAINED. Send in .dal, sketch or j hoto. with i
description for free rt^or/ as to patentabilitv. 48-FA Oil j
h'A> T D-BG0& FRl’t. Contains r-for r.c53 and full I
information FOR COPY 0? UF- SPECIAL 1
OFFSE It is the m • t liberal rroj* s-fEsev. • made by j
: fifttent A-.:.>rßor r aa! 17,11 Y VJVE IriTOR BBoF2.fi i
READ IT before appljia* for pat*ut. Adurosa : j
H.S.WILLSONXCOJ
PATE MT LA RS,
:.02. , '.WASHINGTON, DC.!
g§fu £\
£ ■" r ' r ' ffihl
■aiKPS: 7 * . iifePrla
fZ- V.
' <£,*: U-, ' : • ■
o mA t •.
. , - ,-•
..V ; .. Y '-4
K : / , 4 % /;! /jfUi
i lock 8a Ycssr B&m* •?
s
ft Do you sce eparkunr eyes, a heaHihy, g
•3 tinted skin, a e?/cet expre vmoh and a ;;race- g
f] fui form ? These attractions axo the result |!
lof good health. If they are absent, there j
jsi is nearly al vr - 8 some disorder of * le dis
gj tinctl? fc vr/n -a organa present. V. filthy y
r* nicr.i fmai orgius mean health and beauty j
I everywhere. “
\ Mlgm -f
k V al&k •'<■*? .v * t.:i- 30 4 u
ij i|
(j maker, worn 2ll beautiful and healthy. |
|lt strikes at the root of all their H
“trouble. There is no menstrual clia-1
1 order, ache or pain which it will not [j
i cure. It is for the budding girl, the a
i busy wife and the matron approaching 0
| the change of life. At every trying |
£ crisis in a woman’s life it brings 3
I health, strength and happiness, ft
S costs sl. co of medicine dealers.
9 For advice in eases requiring special |
I directions, address, giving symptoms, ®
| “The Ladies’ Advisory Department/’ 9
k The Chattanooga Medicine Cos., Chat- $
jUanooga, Tcan. (. f
MRS. BOZI fA ' i >f . Uo, 1
| 'iesii, ofsru s—“l v.-a ti ablcd at monthly B
y intervals w.cii terrible [ .ins in an, in-.-.a -ne f
B back, feet have been entirely relieved by Wine I
S o£ Cardui.* g
R j-s I c-5.-•>--5 wtio can think
sV(lisidU'*~Hn Elfca
Protect your ideas: they may brlot; yta wealth.
Writs. JOHN WKLDEKBtJRN ft C-:./) .1 tent Attor-
Doys, V.asiiinitto.i- ./. c •' their oiter
And list ot two liuud fous wanted
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yonr Life
Avray.
If yon want to quit tobacco usifig easily
and forever, be made w. il, strong, magnetic,
full of new life and vigor, take Ko-To-Bae,
the wonder-worker that makcß weak men
strong. Many gain ten pounds in ten days.
Over 400,000 cured. Euy No-To-Bae from
your own druceist, who will guarantee a
cure. Booklet and sample icuiieci free. Ad.
Sterling Remedy Cos., Chicago or Kew York.
’ ■+,
* A O TV o fj
A\t. ii _ u
C„ a j /t st
.tTfcTTf (EtitTl 'Ws.pi.OYU g—i **iQ\£3k
'kjr GL Vjr —t .a. v,,. jfi A Y*. ’I V' O
Ar.yone who p- r.dd cnc dollar for a year’s subscription to the At
lanta. Semi-Weekly Journal can get f.-ostp?.iti one pound of the cele
brated African nimblc s Cotton bcect without charge.
A P'Htst'l of tbi >v -l clar.t • t:c-fifth of . o acre, and with
proper attention should yield enough to plant a crop.
by the Georgia
Station and a bulletin recently issued by Director Red
ding 1 allows that tno African Limbless Cotton produced 70 pounds
more per acre the-t any o her vo •' :y. and 161 pounds mere per acre
than the average of thirty leading varieties. '
€> The African Limbless Cotton produced 780 pounds of lint per acra,
which is nearly four times the average or. the farms of the South.
Tlii.t sd-.0-.vs ;mt !>*• h tYrtilization aud thorough culture will do
fvita these e:-; ;t. ettc S. and, Tiie value of the product, counting’ cotton
at S cents and ... 13 cent .a : ushd, was over $45 per acre. The
cost of fertilize r -j u -ed was $4.77 per acre.
The Journal cicvs not guarantee results, but the result of the test
at the Experiment Station makes it worth a farmer's while to test
ixicsc seed wiien lie cmi gjet tliem for ■iiotliiiig’*
The Jourti. Invi- vt y 6 ICDYvS OF THE WORLD TWICE A
about the farm,
the household < rile topics, etc., and every southern farmer
should have the paper.
You don’t have t > wait a week for the news, but get it twice as
often as you do in the weeklies, which charge the same price.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
Send for a sample copy. Address,
THE JOURNAL, Atlanta, Ga. .
A Promtste.st ytdolan.
z, promme.cL Now Aotn piiysic;a.i
in discussirg the merits of Kipans
r i..h lies v. ith a bt :v ; er X. D. said:
“ Several years ago 1 a.-’ertod tliat
if ona wished to Locoine a yhllca
thopist, aad do a beueiieent deed—
one tint woui i help the whole hu
man race—nothing could be Letter
than to procure the Roosevelt ;u> : -
pital prescription, vikick is th. Iciis
of ihs Ripans Taimlcs, r.au canao ifc to
lie put vp m tho for: i of a. ketchup
and distributed amtug tho poor.”
Tho largest retail ck-ug store ia
America u t:mt 01 & Cos.
on Broadway sa New York Lviv.
A reporter who went there to loam
]iow Ripans Tub
ules ware selling
bought a five-c ent
carton and asked:
‘‘ Do >ou have
muchc all for
these?”
He was referred
to agontleman who
proved to ho tho
head of the depart
ment. Het-'u"' :
"The sale ec ;.'nans Ta’culee is
constant a:,d is irc*'i t. ing, due
especiallytotht ii.i’uentia! chavscter
of-thetesfci nortial : -i the daily press,
snd grovviug out of those, through
the recommendation of friend to
friend. Sat.sfai t;on vrifi*, th -ia is
T9rv crenural. \ \ \\?.v, otico tiiov ore
begun I notice licit a permanent
customer for is made. This, i
believe, is tlurough their intrinsic
merit, which .istho bona lido
djaracterof the advtit isir.g. I think
them special!v useful in the general
run of stomach troubl -s.”
A r rvr r . pr.-Vet c< * ,U tin T‘ vy. pa’ TANARUS/' ,T 'i r*uack.-> : jr> a paper carton pi*?*) la now
f cv i .’• . , , v, • - 'll h . ; :i. intendo<J ior tho ioor and th®
*. • be had by mail by sending forlp*
: ; ' York—or aainrlecarton
- - #' ’ :ii ms Mr. r; 'o y.• .bo had of semo groeers, general
at rofcttv rs, nhtrp a.-. - ~.T : t same liquor etort-duoi l urber shops. One gives relief.
/foKFEDSESTB
wVeterar
NASHVILLE, IcNN.
OFFICTAT.LY REPRESENTS 1
—United Confederate Veterans,
Unit : Daughters of the Confederacy*
The Sons, and other Organizations.
£l-00 a yesr. Tv-o Sampkis, Four Twn-Cer,t Stamp*.
S. A. CUNNINGHAM.
F.. bciai. R; ouction in Club* with, tills Paper.
Who etn thinks
. m .>/ •■ n O/.Pg of some MmUr
~ ' / it , t ... ti-ing to paientf
Mrlng yoa wealth,
.X & C( Patent Attor
ney.. 'v- ... <ttoi\ }.>. v. for their SI.KUO prize oitetf
and list of two hundrad fovontfous v.-antea.
,ir intert stiiiyf books “ Invent-?
ct.- :ielp ” i/u: 1 “How you arc swindled.” (
i Icikl i. rr.v,r>Jl s&otcfl Or fo OCeCI of your ?
in' oniioa or improvement ana we will tell I
.; as *<> whether it is I
bio. Wc make a specialty I
/o applications rejected in other hands, I
) Bib.;--2, ;■ fei mi 9ft ruished. C
,v. CJ’-doUtOJI >
■; PATENT SOLICITORS BX7KB.TS 5
V ri": ,i T.Vchr.-,: FnfrfnHarß. Sraduateß of the c
) ! > :■•••;.- ■' .:ol -.f R .ginrerjig. ltachelcis In t
• 1 , 1 tfnfv retty, llembers#
I Ameri am Water Worts f
. it'.jrhs Apeoo. y
:1 ' ■ '• . bn, Atsoc. Member Can. A
S
; • i WASOTNOTW, D. C. >
SiONTRSAh, Cam. >
Tcttfv, Salt-Ilheutii and IScrcma.
g ,i;:u smarting,inci*
deal t 6hese dieew-co, isinstantiv alinvetS
by applying Chamberlain’s Eye and
Skin Ointment. Many very bad cases
tly cured by it. It
is 0 /.'ally ; Licient for itching piles and
a favorite remedy for sore nipples,
chapped hands, chilblains, frost biteo
and chroni > >rc eyes. 25 cts. per box.
Dr. TatlyN Condition Powders, are
just wli-'.t ’„ hor. -j needs when in bad
condition, Tonic, blood purifier and
vetTiifv. :e. They are not food but
jik iiciue ant! the best in use to put a
1 . iu /.bn--* condition. Price 25
cents per package.
f iE •' uURN AL and NEWS $1,25.
An Elderly Lady.
An el rf truly living at Fordbam
ll*. ",part of Nevr York City,
v. >i who was known to be a warm
■ iir uc.-.r > of Kip-ana Tabules for any
c.. or vev trouble or indigestion,
said 1 who vi red her for
, ■ - ' of learning the partiGU
: her ct.fco: “ t had always
c uplo ' a physician and did so ou
t'. 1 ii had for one, but
t: tin: ,bt .lined na beneficial
:i -1 /'"-r had any faith
in patent r,*.< • h>.-s, brer having seen
Icipans Tabiu<.3 recommended very
j in': he New York Heraldcon
ch,.; ' to gave them a trial, and
£ -..id they wore just wliat my case
ei tV i. I have never employed
a physician dace, and that nsems a
-i p.p. iSv { f^T r
oi./ret I to their mother giving a
t otimonial which should parade her
n.iineimho newspapers, but to do
this the ; : t iady argued : “There
r 1 ases just like mine,
and I : ’ sure I take great pleasure
. ■ •■ .a:i,-!g the Tubules to any
. .'.obelid ns I was. If the telling
a! out my case in the papers enables
-me •■■in r person similarly affected
be as greatlv benefited as I have
:ction.“ Thedaugh
t . h i\v n;r how earnestly she felt
r. out the benefit she had received,
C. eided she was quite right.
Eating off 2 a call.
\ dollar’s worth of
Eip an s Tabules
lasts me a month,
and i would not be
without tiiem now
if it were my last
dollar.At the
time of this inter
view there were
present two daugh
ters who specially