Newspaper Page Text
IN BED THIRTY-NINE YEARS.
* H..ithy
fcbl© statement was a spinster and
F^Und Tei |i ™* m0 e k k «Pt th ; W h DeV wor.l, °T
Tn bed d sle mol w .^r^ft rt> Cl ^ 1 8 . > 0 ’ f ' ,lrS ^'T old
»hen he •
B r; T'T:;:"-
lore for?in She in l s.l tne th^f r best of health and . , there , ,e '
WM no seeming reason why she should
But Milt s^onclnTed^h she concluded that t "T she would re
^nclmwth i f W8B rlLr: r
hutno nuuior h ner whim wuim. no she stayed
bed and her meals were taken to her.;
upstai™ is‘T" 1H1 81 ' f ", H ‘ a/ ‘ 1
there Thou '
if.../*.. «ii i l mnn\t i | 1 -. j
mnnwin roo n in n a lower floor, where sh"
could watch the front door and the ‘
v«rd Hho h».T a V r ''
ranged so that I,,,,,,' ,,, ' 7i
tran.m trance to to ran tho house and l the entire;
yard, and she was thus able h!,« t„ | i ., i
what was going h on U«, * hearing be :
came hear abnormally i acute, and she could
noises that were inaudible to I
other residents of th» house
Her mother and father died and -am! „b,
still remained in bed She be
owner of the amall estate an-i
managed it with skill nml ind Son > ■ ♦
but. but she she adhered adhered to to her her determination deterr I
Of remaining in heil. She died last |
week at. tho ago of seventy-seven.
The doctors who held tbo autopsy said
that her lunge and heart were sound,
and that had she lived the usual life
fifteen she would have longer. been good for ten or j
years 8I10 ate HHual
meals all of the forty years, took no
medicine, ami there was no nr™" I
change in her constitution nuti) a few
mouths before her death New York
World. I
Fish as Food.
T -, I8U 0 i, 18 . re B«rded , , , by (,. Sir Henry ,,
Thompson as in many cases a prefer-
able food to meat. In Food mid Feed-
iug he thus expresses his views on the
eubject:
“For the sedentary man, whatever
liis calling in life, whose engagements
permit only just that moderate
amount of muscular exercise which is
in all circumstances essential to
health; for a great proportion of
women whose habits Mostly arc not,
and often cannot be active, the nutri¬
tive elements afforded by fish admir¬
body’s ably supply an important" part of the
wants. Tho moderate amount
of flesh-forming materia! present in
fish, and in a form which entails little
labor on the digestive organs (for
most persons eat less fish than meat),
and the facility with which fish may
be associated with other elements—
some fatty matters, with cereals and
vegetables, as well as fruits- place it
in the first, rank of foods in that mixed
dietary which is so suitable to tin >. < •
who lead more or less the kind of life
referred to. I by no means say that it
should supersede the use of meat alto-
gather, although it may do sometimes
with advantage—a point only to he
determined in each individual instance
after some observation and expert
mpnt. For ill all cases it is to be re-
.membered that no man who has hab¬
itually eaten meat two or three times
daily can at once exchange it for fish
j and cereals or vegetables without some
discomfort, to say the least. All radi-
cal direction, changes in diet, even in the right
made. reqniro to bo gradually
The stomach conforms slowly
when long accustomed to deal with
highly nitrogenized animal food, to
the task of deriving from unaceus-
tomed materials the support neces-
sary to the body.”
The Location.
“Where was the prince wounded?”
asked the friend of one of tho seconds
in a political duel.
“Where was he wounded?” repeated
the second absently, as he looked up
from a mass of manuscript, “If I am
not mistaken, it was about the hogin¬
ning of the last paragraph in the sec-
ond column.”—Washington Star.
Do wr Need UIr Muscle*
By no means. I'crsons of lioivui™n imlM fro
quemly possess a minimum of somilno \l*-or.
amt oiliil n. loss onUurHnoo than very small
Heat rl«nr means (Im nl.tlUy lu m.-rsi
ami slecji well, ami m perform » Vwi*„mii,li>
amount of dally physical and mnnuil btboi-
without unnatural lati^uo. It ia be ... llKM . n
course of llostt'ttor's iStoiimuh Bit torn tumbles
the enfeebh'ti (iyapoptlc to rrsuint' the allot * o«l
activity of every day life, ns well to parti« 1
pate . without ... discomfort in its
It is such pre-eminently enjoyments, that
a useful medicine.
••I can't part aim that,” rat.l the lwl.1 hca.lc.l
man as he put- tho comb hack in his pocket.
For Whooping rougl l. riso's ('tiro Is ft 81K*.
cotwful remedy.—M. V. DfBTKU, t»r Thrv>on \ V e
Brooklyn, N. V.. Nov. H,'!»t.
nniiiii/fnswfc im 81 mu Anti-Jag Mi* inaryplcus
U I I || it I V ■ |H I Im |% cure fop the drink habit.
C Write RenoV» Cheninnl
Fail xnlotwmtiou (In plain wrapper) otaileU free.
40 Men amt women wanted to e.-taldUhl {7,**“*
•ifcocies to sell guaraatred Colorado Gat.! Ma-
MILLIONS Stuck, keasonattlecotHBi!»5i<ms. For ititnrtn.*.
tton, atldrr-ts. HKN A. BLOCK. Mm alter
A YIAR Colorado Mininr Sunk Fichan^c.
Sjrnirs Buitdinc. Denver. Colorado.
TKLKUKAi'HY B.4S.„ Buftinvs* SITKKIOK OOK KKKPIXU, College. A SiiOHTHANP l>\ LouiaviUe, WTAGI’s'. ASP Ky. j
Bwtutifol Catalogue Free. i
The Blue and the Gray.
Both men and "women aro apt to foel a littlo
blue, whan tho gray hairs begin to show. It’s
a very natural feeling. In tho normal condition
of things gray hairs belong to advanced age.
They havo no business whitening the head of
man or woman, who has not begun to go
down the slope of life. As a flatter of fact,
the hair turns gray regardless of ago, or of
life’s seasons ; sometimes it is whitened by
sickness, but more often from lack of care.
When the hair fades or turns gray there’s no
need to resort to hair dyes. The normal color
of the hair is restored and retained by tho use of
Ayer’s Hair Vigor.
Ayer’s Curt book, “a story of cures told by the cuted.”
too pager, free. J. c. Ayer Co., bmvefl, Mass.
INCURABLE DISEASES.
"KT Rg SE 1 -
n ' 1 <Ar,iaD ’ ssl<I the .armor to a
Wh0t9tb6talk0tthi9 commu
.£ Woodmn of lelt South
Harmlton Jfa.IlBon Co N Y to
do fanner ™ hl^ty who H 8^^™ well known and stand, “
i htgh ho^hood. y thi neigh-
'
On tho following day the newspaper man
: '’nh.xl on Mr. Woodman in his comfortuble,
j "ItwhMZSwVbnght' of writing
an account for tho newspaper., myself”
said Mr. Woodma®, ‘ but as I am not no-
^'« all UdoM fthttSTyt
„
I am fifty-nine years old. I contracted
a|r«t“nTs*vewcol“ Vomo^^rtlon hcatofl!
fr-Mii i.-f*i>ornlji^ovfr iofisteij Mv father
to wn.v make ?i farmer strong m i thattbeoiily do way
mo was to plenty of bard
work. Wb.m, however, ho saw me Imlrrfcas
In ).c.<l for id* long months iudp, without bi-lnc
able to move except with he changed
children J. J > ,? ii [Y* 11,1, should not bo after made believed to do men’., that
w ” rk - My growth was stopped am'on bv sum,r-
•"«. »»‘l »<>o not think I Inch taller
than that day, forty- flvo years ago. Uur-
Im> tho forty years ensuing after my mis-
fortune, 1 was attended by seven doctor,
1 .. .....*'-<i temporary rdluf at times, from
Sitlon [T’l* ThT5^HrtSrol*S*tSS2 tr ™ tmr ' n , t ’ hut a |wl ‘ys re-
f?»*nticmeii wan that l was incurable, and
hmblghM n J!Jh r ‘v r, >ul<l do wan w.tfa^amlly^Mv to ease my condition.
wife ............ lias had ..... ' y deny
all tho dnidgory of nursing
ami waiting upon mo, ami tho burden has
Iwn Indeed fianl to hoar.
•‘Without hopo from physicians I _ began
to take Dr. Williams' PinkTills, wliieh was
L“,'" hWdy recommended by my friends. X took
I WTor r “i than T f had »ineo r I W wuh ^ first afflicted.
I took these pjj]g according to directions’
UTi ^ wle-a tho box was nearly gone I went
si
iluH Fitch, who likewise was a great suffer-
<,r from rheumatism. The doctor and I or-
ocred several boxen of I’lnk I’ills in part-
unrshlp, °hsa!o. he from that time keeping them
Well, I continued to take them
; for tbo next three
years and steadily improved, gaining Qosh
' utl ‘l strength, until two years ago I was
! t° 'j 1 »'’'>ntinu« them', and now am as
ai)j<; DO a led a man or my years as you will
find. I ought to tell you that after I or¬
dered the first box of pills tho physician
who was then attending mo came in and I
told him what t was doing. lie said l was
very foolish, that they would surely Injure
wo, and it was his duty to tell mo co. l
told the doctor that l might, us well die. as
to drag out a miserable existence, and so
notwithstanding to take the his warnings, continued
not n)0o pills. Thank God the doctor
was to (lissvndo mo, for to them l
now nscribe nil tho comfort and happiness
I have in this world. I have recommended
them to hundreds of people since I wan
cured, and in every case they havo been
i ofTecfivo, not only in rhvnmntlftm hut in
numerous other disorders, especially im¬
poverishment of tho blood, heart trouble
and kidney disease.
”1 certify the above statement to bo true,
and if necessary will swear to tho same be¬
fore a Notary Public.”
william Woodman.
When Mr. Woodman had signed and de¬
livered the ahovo paper to tbo reporter, ho
:-aid: ‘if J were you I would go ami call on
Mr. Amos Jaqunys, at Columbus Centre, to
whom I r • ‘omrueuded J)r. Williams’ Pink
Pills for aggravated kidney disease. Ifo is
11 ” w in ) > ” r f” , 4 health, I have no doubt, ho
' Dr. Williams' Plait i’ills contain all the
elements nc •cssary to glvo new life and
r i ( 'lmcsB to the Woodand restore shattered
he had wn^ms’ -
Modlelno Company, tlchoncotndy, N. 1’., for
60 '• 1'orboXj or six boxes for ta'.BO.
Reading as a Mental Stimulus.
An oiniiiont French critic said in a
led uni recently in Now York that
“to distrust what we like ia the first
requisite of progress in art and in
life.” He <li<l not mean that hooks
that art? disagreeable are the only
hooks worth reading, But lie did
mean thnt a book which opens up a
new field of knowledge, a new outlook
dp on literature or life, is not at first
likely to give the pleasure that comes
’rom one which simply reflects tho
old familiar ideas of which wo sav
C( that nnplaoently, “How good and truo
is, for I’ve felt it or said it my-
mlf." A book that pats yon on tho
head or heart all the time is apt to he
little more than a reflection of your
>wn narrow experience, and you will
not learn anything from it. A book
that makes one feel ignorant is as
mortifying to one’s pride ns n superior
person. “Drook” in Ladies’ Home
journal.
"Bicvclo Catarrh.”
It would occasionally seem ns if
physicians devote much of their time
to hunting up reasons why maukiud
should give up the wheel Long ago
it was the bicycle hump, then the bi¬
cycle face, these being followed by
the bicycle voice and other equally
serious troubles, all of which havo
been laughed to scorn by devotees ol
the wheel. Now comes a medical per*
soil of Philadelphia with the alarming
information that bicycle catarrh i*
among tho perils that must be faced
;? s j ,o t" m id ° who ° i8 - u, °
V^UftkovtoWH Ofth'H; ,
A Juvenile Philosopher.
“Did you cry when your mother put
tho mustard plaster on you?” asked
one small boy.”
“Not a bit.”
“How did you keep from it?”
“I shut my eyes and made believe I
was in swimming and had struck a
sea-nettle.” Washington Star.
........ I "JH"”'" L "" ,u
,
FARMERS ARE REJOICING.
^ _
"* Tiroc »' ,, -™"* r »‘’« Ann,M
; Tra ' u> ,Wmo " ^ and fi*.
| nreiFrom Commissioner*.
__
! Z „ Times-Demoorat
18 •„ ont wltl » ltfi »»nn«l trade edition
and contains a summary of the crop
; conditions in the south reported 1 offi
Cla ■ " o y fr0m . tbe ,, 7”°”" . Btates b J tho
; of
I cormmHsltmere agriculture. The
re P or ^ s » r o by telegraph made on a
September 1st basis, and tho condi- 1
turns .. the whole . ,
on are more cncourag-
°
% o ,, ,f y . been
‘ mv « m many
years.
no iho reports . confirm „ tho statement
that there was a heavier leaner acreage
planted i , , than ,, ever before in the south,
N v,.t °‘ on,y 18 tLe ti aMon .. ^reage 8 , per
cent larger, but corn is 12 per cent
T*’ '"'l 1 ra,,ft - ric,i - P otatoes tobacco
^y >
ftn< * IH ar every crop grown. The
southern farmers were determined to
' ,0 ftli ,,! 7 00,l,< | themselves
on a good, sound financial basis again.
They planted more food crops than
usual, so as to reduce their expenses.
Virginia cut down its tobacco acreage
somewhat because of a decrease in the
foreign demand, and planted the land
in wheat—a fortunate change, for
wheat has boomed in price, and the
state will profit by it..
North Carolina is enthusiastic over
its prospects which aro the best, since
188i). ft, planted more land in cotton
than usual this year, and was reward¬
ed with a prolific crop, so that the
yield will bo tho largest ever raised in
tho “Old North State.”
»■”>>>■ .........
■She also increased her acreage pi cot-
’r a '!v '/ 8C T y ' 0 <1 nuH °
u not only G tbe largest crop ever grown
in the state, but the largest by 75,000
Georgia will ... pass the ,. „ 1.100,000 bale
limit in cotton, will raise the best
wheat crop in years, one of the best
from corn crops freeing the state entirely
dependence on the west. There
*' P e y ° f ^° ! ’ * lorQ l 11 N”
r ^ m - « thlS - ?: uar ani1 Commission-
’
or Nesbitt predicts that the farmers
1 1,0 hl JPPy «!'<l contented” if they
only get . a fair price for their cotton.
Honda s cotton crop is below tho
average, and so is corn, but the oat
crop is the largest in acreage and the
heaviest for many years. Sugar cane
and rice are both doing well, and to-
bacco is 40 per cent ahead of last year
and of lino quality. Oranges will yield
close on to 300,000 boxes this season,
having recovered from most of the
losses from the last freeze.
In Alabama the cotton crop has re-
cently doing deteriorated, hgt the others are
well. Wheat is the best in
years, and ?o are potatoes, Corn is
above the average; hay very good, and
will supply all the local demand; oats
aro tine, and tobacco, with an increas-
od acreage, will yield better. The
fruit crops are above the average.
Mississippi will do well with her
crops this year in spite of the overflow
of tho Yazoo Delta. The overflowed
lands were replanted, but the crop is
naturally late.
Louisiana cotton, particularly in the
northern part of the state, deteriorated
during August in consequence of the
drought. The other crops promise
well. Corn will bo greater than the
big yield of last year.
Texas makes a less favorable report
than tho other states, for the rains
camo too late there to benefit the cot¬
ton much.
Tho present season is declared in
Arkansas to be the most bountiful evor
known in that state, Cotton was
hardly an average, lmt Arkansas has
of Into diversified its products, instead
of concentrating its efforts on cotton.
Crops have been good in Tenncsee
except in the western portion of the
state. The wheat crop is heavier,
larger and of finer quality than ever
before. Tobacco is extra good; sorgh-
um is n wonder, and so are pens and
millet. Fruit, however, with the ex-
ception of apples, is a failure, and the
live stock interests are suffering.
SOUTHERN CONVICT QUESTION
Will It., I>i*< us»(.<l At u ('niiv.'ntlon To Bo
Ili'ld In Nashville.
A convention lias been called to
meet in Nashville, Tenn., September
28 and 29, for the purpose of taking
into consideration the disposition of
eouviets in the southern states. All
of the southern states have been asked
to send delegates to this convention.
Among other things that will be dis-
posed of will be the practicability of
working the rornis of the several states
with the state convicts, aud the estab-
lishment of a seed farin conv’icts whorp
short term women will be
Wo
WILL SMASH CONVICT LEASES.
dovvvHor Atkln*oa Has Xew Plan for the
l’urpose.
Governor Atkinson, of Georgia, lias
a plan to break up tho private convict
camps of the state, and in a short timo
,,0 ° illegally ... detained iu
them will be returned to jail, if tbe
county authorities do not of their own
accord in the meantime take the pris-
oners auay and put them in county
chaingangs.
This will he accomplished by Con¬
tempt proceedings against officers who
failed to execute the sentences of the
i
BOILER EXPLODED.
Two Children Killed nnd Electric Licht
'
vinnt Demolished.
Ot.. ......trie light plan.
owmM by Byer Bros. & Co., valued at
$14,000, was completely demolished !
by the bursting of the boiler from
some unknown cause Sunday evening.
Two girls, aged five and nine years, ;
were killed outright, and two boys, i
four and twelve years, seriouslv
The ‘ V " Me tb ° ci ' iUlreU ° f M ° S ' 6
Byers.
TWO (US EXPLOSIONS
the mmm homes of neighbors burned scarred
and with br oken bones. Four build-
” lg8 occupying a block of the town are
l \™
(,f the stx . dead , nothing hut charred i 1
an(l blackened hones remain. Two of
he dead are still unidentified, there
being no way of identification except
by listing those who remain
The business part of the town took
fire and the largest buildings were de-
s^oyed. The city of Indianapolis engines
™ and <ff doctors. « «* M* -4 sent
The first explosion occurred in a
drug store from an unknown cause. ;
Five men were working there and tbe I
^nilding was set on fire. Across the
street was the Odd Fellows’ lel,OTVf ’ liall nn on-
uerneath , 1 ,,.V which was a grocery store.
Seeing that the fire was spreading, ;
twenty “ men were removing the stock
,.<■ groceries __■ when , a crushing , . explo- ,
»ion occurred in the store. The walls |
were blown out and the miner 11 floor
fell n.u in m on on the tnc men men. I
The fire spread from the Odd Fel-
haIi and the drug store, leaving
™ 1DS »• every direction. Five build- |
were on fire at once, and were
doomed before ___| help could be attempt- j
BRUIS itnvtv av 0> mutcuvurTv PROSPERITY. |
He Say* p„iiti< ; » Nothing To Do with j ;
the Better Time.
The St. Louis Post Dispatch prints j
a letter from W. J. Bryan, the first
uttorance after three months of travel I
and observation during tho return of
prosperity. Among other things he
Ba yf=
Wheat, , has risen , because the for¬
eign crop has been exceedingly short, i
‘‘The fact that silver and wheat
have parted company will cause no
dismay to those who understand that
auxussw? “Nothing "*"■
can better disclose the !
weakness of the republican position
than the joy manifested by the repub-
I leans over events for which their ad-
ministration and their polities are in
no wise responsible,
“If the republicans desire to claim
credit for the high price of wheat they
must assume the responsibility for the
famine in India.
“1 great rise in price should be fol-
lowed by a rise of wages.”
Mr. Bryan says that the joy over
the increase of money from wheat is
evident that we have too little money;
that if the farmers are benefltted by
tho rise in one of their products, how
much better would it be if the rise
was universal; that the price of wheat
will fall when tho foreign demandbe-
comes normal, and that the present
spasmodic rise will aid rather than in¬
jure the cause of bimetallism,
| B Vl) FOR U KTfrFUT.
Damaging Testimony Against Chicago
tSaiisage Maker.
Saturday was a bad day for the de¬
fense in the Luotgert murder trial at
Chicago, wherein Lnetgert is charged
with the murder of his wife.
The strongest evidence which has
Y e * ; been given against him was
brought out, and some of it was dam-
ll 8 in n-
The witness who gave the strongest
evidence against the sausage maker
was Alvs. Christian Feldt, a widow,
with whom the prosecution alleges
Lnetgert was infatuated, and to whom
it is claimed he has written a number
of love letters since he has been co li¬
iiticd in jail, Mrs. Feldt said that on
various occasions Lnetgert said to her
that he did not care for his wife, and
once said that he thought more of the
domestic in the house than of Airs.
Lnetgert.
He also said that he had many quar¬
rels with his wife, and when Mrs.
Feldt asked him why he did not secure
a divorce, he said thnt as soon as his
financial troubles were over, he would
settle with her. He repeated this sev-
ela ^ times, and called his wife a car-
and other names.
Money May Succeed George.
^ special from Jackson, Miss., says:
Governor . McLaurin may not name
11 successor to Senator George for
some weeks, but when he does it
seems sure that, ho will appoint Sena¬
tor-elect. Money.
GEORGI A MARBLE PREFERRED.
It Will Ho Used In Building Minnesota’s
New Capitol.
A dispatch from St* Paul says: Af-
* el several weeks’ consideration, the
ne "’ on P ito l commissioners have award-
e< ^ '' le contract for a superstructure
ne ' v Minnesota statehouse to
! ho Bn«ev-Ryan company, of St. Paul,
for deciding on St. Cloud
grnmte for the basement and Georgia
omrble for the rest of the superstrue-
Lire, exeeptiug the dome.
The contractors from all over the
MOONSBINER CONFESSES.
He Will Now Aid In Capturing Other
Murderers of Deputies.
A . v Little Bock dispatch John T ,
Church, old says:
an moonshiner, was cap-
tured in the mountains Thursday.
He made a full confession aud prom-
,ses to ail1 »« the capture of others im-
P>>eat«.I m the murder of Captain Tav-
" m a ’ "r>r’7- nu 1 nn< 01 ‘ e P a T e 1 ’ r0( 8 ' ecde uflr d. 1 <1
This warned him that any attempt at
treachery would be paid with his life.
_
INDIAXA BANK FAILS
Anil n Hank Examiner Plareil In Chnrm
ltv lwi«
W^StSZAST-iSSSS the The failure eomnir of >11 .r f n 3 .
tho First National bank ftUK '
of Greensburg lud J
It has a capital of $100,000 and on
July 25th the deposits were $84,000 i
Examiner Packard has been b.str.w '
ed to take charge
This is the tw f ,, .
eii U) th<3 '-'O'oplroller for some Ume
PENSION PAYMENTS HEAVY.
“* ~
nnMm
months of the present fiscal year from
jw* $23 964.49, Jjall and customs ttere houses have was been only ex-
349 fla 378.20 o™ onT® for pensions, ™ ° or nearly five
“^lion ted m our collars custom more houses. than was collec-
The treasury department in its bud-
get calls attention to the large pension
payments and accounts for the great
deficit by this means. The deficit for
«»• last month was 814,351,794.01.
The deficit for the fiscal year was
about $25,000,000. The receipts from
customs have only been $0,986,702.84,
a little more than one-third as much
as the eustoms receipts of last month,
^ ie decrease is, of course, due to
ifi 0 natural cessation of imports
lowing lowing the me l.cavv neavy and ana anticipatory anticioatorv im im-
portations during July, when
Uingley bill was still pending in con-
g™ 8 *-
The internal revenue receipts were
^ or ^ month $11,198,194, or more
than two millinn uuum dollars uvinu s less mss than man the ue
l>fexpenditures "'nich wore $13,391,000. for The this receipts month,
from customs this month were less
than halt the rmount required to pay
Pensions. The government expended
the m P ntb ^ ,\ he raih ‘
tary and - naval establishments tne sum
of $16,004,000. This includes the
?wYf dent down TfTi to the chaiin ff omen °“ the all P re81 oier '
’federJ^'Sicialw "neiv
P > * U fi ’ri river tod harb« b
- ents auJ a11 )ubll , 1 - , bull -,v tb
m l HOTen } l ° n Bs
8
__
HESTER’S COTTON REPORT.
Secretary of Cotton Exchange Gives Eig-
«res lor the Fast Fear,
Secretary’ Hester’s New Orleans cot-
ton exchange . annnnl , report was issued
Friday. Mr. Hester puts the average
commercial value of the crop at $36.76
Rf »ale, agamst $41.09 last year and
$30 m 1894-96, and the total value
$•>21,92.),000, against $294,046,000 last
year, neai ly $28,000,000 more than for
the same period last year. The past
ciop cost growers less than any yet
produced. The total spindles in the
south is 3,851,991, an increase of 168
753. The total number of mills is
482, an increase of seven.
Mr. Hester says that, while the sea¬
son had not been favorablo to American
mills final results indicate that the ex-
tent ot the depression lias been decid-
edly overstated in the public prints
and otherwise, ilie takings north and
south during the past year, practically
all have been consumed, have been ex-
ceeded but twice in the previous seven
years. The mills of the north hare
worked up as much cotton, while those
south used 138,000 bales more than
last year. Imports of foreign cotton
amounted to the equivalent of 106,000
last week. Of this 771,001 is Ameri¬
can, against 803,000 last week. The
total visible stock shows a decrease
compared with last year of 383.000.
WILL FIGHT IT OUT.
D’Armitt Says His Company Will Stand
Firm.
A . T) 1 ittsburg .,, , (iiseatch 3- . i Tlie set- .
tlemeilt of says: I
the coal strike on the basis
ot e tllO proposition ... now under T consul-
cratlon at the Columbus conference
Will have no effect upon the future ac-
tion of the Now York and Cleveland
Gas Coal Company, according to the
statement of President DeArmitt.
Said he:
“Even if the great bituminous coal
strike is settled in every state and dis-
trict involved, and all the strikers re-
turn to work pending arbitration on a
new price, the miners of tho Now York
and Cleveland Oas Coal company still
have to fight it out with the company
and return to work to carry out the
contract legally signed and accepted
by the strikers.”
NEW GEORGIA POSTOFFICES.
A Washington dispatch says: Fourth-
class postoffices have been established
at the following towns in Georgia:
May, Haralson county.
Bollo, Screven county.
Paulina, Harris county.
Townsville, Meriwether county.
The postoffice at Catoosa Springs
has been ordered abolished.
A NE1V TURKISH MINISTER.
Bifnat Key NVill Represent That Country
at Washington.
Advices from Constantinople state
that Eifaat Bey, until recently conn ~ j
c >)° r °f tt> e Turkish embassy in Lon-
don, has been appointed Turkish min-
' s l er at Washington in succession to
Mustapha Tahsin Bey.
FIFFTXr rFEEING fbdw FROM CHOLERA. rumm .
ti.c s,om S c Sabi Columbia.” t» i;„ «„-(„» ,
.
T + • , ,, . ,, tirfiafol .
ffre ng for thph livea fr mi
SETH LOW ACUEl’TS. |
He Is Willing; Contest !
to For Mayoralty ot
Greater New York. !
A dispatch states that President I
Seth Low, of Columbia university, !
has accep tcd the nomination of the
0itizens - Union for mayor of Greater
New York. j
He was officially notified of his nom
inatiou bT a g , 10< ,; al mesKeu „ er of th
Citizens’Union Tn his reply Presi-
dent Low stated that he would soon
prepare a letter formally accepting.
WOODFORD MEETS TETUAN.
Spanish Papers Protest Against Our Min-
inter's Mi salon.
Advices ,• front . ban ,, Sebastian ,, , state , ,
Hiat General Woodford and the duke
t * ..... ^
’ “ 9 ed " e8,1ft -T ft! ’“
arranged the date for the t presentation
Tu General Woodford’s cre dentials to
A* 1 th e newspapers of f Madrid Ar i t pnb- ,
llsl > strong protests against the mis-
f ' 011 of General Woodford, thus cans-
Unit^'Btat^ agRiU8t th< '
A Lucky Klondike Woman.
4rs5s£
1 mm ° v
, • , , , Lundry-womau^n 14 u
as a
r)awson city When the news of the
Klondike discoveries of gold reached
th , >t plaoe P she J : oi ned a paTt [ y of cattle-
'
men> aad wellt at once G th e nev dig .
gings. She staked out a claim as soon
a3 s h e eo t there ’shei, and it turned out to
i,» , #250,000.' M ,irl nns now worth at
last Mrs. Willis has a hus-
band living in Tacoma HeisabJaek-
Bmith and n preat Ls snfferer from rheu .
matism . It hi , inability to work
that ,l caused her to start out, for the
go aiDil]g country, resolved to re-
turn rich or not at all. Incidentally
she has the fame of introducing the
fi rs t “boiled shirt” among the Yukon
m rfv ; nPrq She nairl P f R2 50 for the t liov •*
of starch with n which v- she v starched i , it
and $4 a day and board to the Indian
3 nuaw who was her first assistant in
tho laundry, , ,
In Honor of Betsy Ross,
A . memorial . , in . , honor of r t? Betsy
Boss> who made the flrst American
rt f ]las Iong been lacking, and the
pa riotic public will undoubtedly join
heartily in the movement which is
now inaugurated by the Patriotic Sons
of America and the Junior Order
United American Mechanics to erect
such a memorial, patriots all over the
country being requested to lend theii
a j ( j an j support to the plan. This
^° n0r t0 t 1 i e “ emo 7 ot theg0 °f dam€
v™* , f appropriate, and ,
1 airnaount t Park would be a fitting
place in which to place the proposed
memoriaL As the kmtl of memorial
has not yet been determined upon, a
suggestion is not out of order. "Why
do not tlxese patriotic societies raise o
fund and purchase the house in which
the first American flag was made and
have it removed to some appropriate-
spot in the park? No im ,re fitting
honor could be paid the memory of
Betsy Rosg than the preservation oJ
her old homestead for all future gen¬
erations. A valuable historical edi-
g C0j in which the whole nation is in¬
ferested, would be saved from
destruction at the same time by this
plan.—Philadelphia North American,
Life Tsn’t Worth Living
to one who suffers the maddening agony of
Eczema, Tetter and such irritating, itching skin
diseases. Every roughness of tho skin from
simple chap to Tetter and Ringworm even of
longstanding is completely, quickly and surely
cured by Tottorine. Is comfort worth 50 cents
Sor^lfWco Shuptriuo, Savannah, Ga. 0 L T s »^^
IIo—“I she-^WbeTeirmy last yearV^a.hmg suit?”
am using it for a pen-wiper!”
A Vrose Poem.
EE-M. Medicated Smoking Tobacco
And Cigarettes
Are absolute remedies for Catarrh,
Hay Fever, Asthma and Colds;
Besides a delightful smoko.
Ladles as well as men, use these goods.
No opium or other harmful drug
Used In their manufacture.
EE-M. is used and recommended
By some of the best citizens
Of this country.
If your dealer does not keep EE-M.
Send 13c. for package of tobacco
And 6c. for package of cigarettes,
Direct to the EE-M. Company,
Atlanta, Ga.,
And you will receive goods by mall.
—---
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Doll us Howard for
any ca e of Catarrh that cannot b; cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
r . J. CffRffTBY & CO., P. ops., loledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F.J.Che-
and financially able to curry out any obliga-
,P h Drnaafs^ Toledo,
°-
Dn^'tsyroledo, AnV ' f< ' WboWsa '°
ohia
Hall s Catarrh lime is taken in'.emally, d <‘t-
bj^np.iutKists. Bold
g Testtmimials free,
HaU 81 ^ llls are the ^
Pits permanently cured. Ao fits or nervous-
KttXrbTJar Hijne, Ltd.. 931 Arch
st., Phiia., Pa.
AN OPEN LETTER
From Miss Sachner, of Columbus,
O., to Ailing Women.
To all women who are ill:—It af¬
fords me great pleasure to tell you of
the benefit 1 have derived from tak-
ing Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound. I can hardly find words to
express my gratitude for the boon
given to suffering women in that ex¬
cellent remedy. Before taking the
Compound U
I was thin,
sallow,and
nervous. I
was trou¬
bled with
leucor-
rhoea, and
my men¬
strual pe¬
riods were
very irreg¬ )r
ular. I rmfi
tnedthreephy- , . . ..
Ti'Ti and ffrad " ally pr f v "'" rKC
’
xu a J c ar ago I was advised by a
fncntl . , , to try Mrs. I mkham
sSanative
i'm^ and Y egetable Compound which
attribute the same to your wonderful
remedies. I cannot find words to ex-
press what a Godsend they have been
to me.
Whenever I begin to feel nervous a nd
U1 ’ 1 know 1 have a never-failing phy-
sician at hand. It would afford me
P loas ’ Jrc to know that my words had
directed some suffering sister to health
and strength through those most ex-
cellent remedies.—Miss May Sacuneb,
S4SE. Rich St., Columbus, O.
1APLE SYRDP l>y your 8tovo fess a new in in kitchen a a i to pro¬ few on
cost of , 2o cts. and sells $1 minutes at a
at per gallon.
“Have tried this syrup and find it excellent.”—
Gov. Roar. L Taylor, Nashville, Tenn.
Send •land got tbe recipe; or *S and I will
h'"« semi Dictionary of twenty thousand re
covnrlna all departments of Inquiry.
U " ' "lotsui
i x ich M„, ri ,
MONEY GIVEN AWAY
■ * * IS NOT APPRECIATED.
HIT.....
Whoa you can iKsiSSS earn it
.v K «.
Gaiblm^, Atlanta, Ga.
OLD SORES
THE FRAUD ENJOINED. $50,«
Editor t o t Oeeroe — Th© Famous
OOQ 'frade*marU Oise Dcplddl-i. r.
Simmons SfeUidno Company, St.
Fhilad^ipkia. I.ouis, Wefeaisi J. If. Zeilia a COj|
Republic, July 4,1S93.J - * /,
[From St. Louis :
M The Supremo C nurt of Tor>n68Beo on Juno 80
cidea thamoat important trade*n3arls case that l as
ever bo n tried in thst Stats and one of tho laTgc&t
over tried in tho Union, affirming and enlarging the
opinion of tho court below. The court he d; of
1. That Dr. M. A. Simmons, the predecessor
complainant, by extensive advertising of his Hcdl« ceift-
brated remedy known a$ “Simmons Liver
cins,'” mr,do it a standard remedy J. H, for liver & difeaBB* Co. of
long pn r to the acquisiUoa by Zeilin
‘J. That tha assignor of J. IT. Zeflfn & Co., throuiifi
whom they claimed tho right to make tho fraudulent
packages enjoined, never derived any liilofrom A. Q.
Simmons to make tho medicine nor to us© his nauis
or picture, and that such use therefore by Zeilin enjoined. Sc Co. is a
fraud upon tho public, and is Jtt«
ft. Thai Zeilin & Co, purposely, fraudulently complainant's
fceiea tiieir medicine in imitation of
medicine to unfairly appropriate the trade of the
Simmons Medicine Company, and tho executionOl
this fraudulent purpose and act i3 enjoined.
4. Enjoined Zeilin & Co. from using their com¬
petitor's trade-name, trade-marks, public or and symbols, unfairly or
Imitations thereof, to deceive tho
appropriato to themselves the trade of the G„ F,
Bimraons Medicine Co. deceiving
6. Enjoined Zeilin Co., public from by labeling their a^d
practicing a frau 1 upon tbo
packages in imitation of the wrappers and trade¬
marks of the complzin&ut.
6. Enjoined of tho Zeilin medicine & Co. from th© manuractur# ‘’Sim¬
and sale under tho name of
mons Liver Medicine,’' or “Dr. Simmons Simmons,” Liver
Mmlicine,” or ** Liver Medicine by A. Q. in
and from using tho picture c£ A. Q. Simmons
connection therewith.
7. Enjoined Zeilin & Co., thefr aas{gnoe8, agents
and employes from deceiving and practicing a fra d
upon the public by tho sale of packages thus falsely
labeled, either upon orders or calls for the genuin®
“ Simmons Liver Medicine * ’ of complainant, or
la any package thus falsely labeled.
8. Tho court elated that it was tho purpose of th®
court to entirely destroy the fraudulently labelod
packages above described, and cause their removal
from tho market, and ordered Zeilin & Co. tod-:liver
to tho e'erk to bo destroyed, all cuts, dies, electro¬
types, engravings ami other paraphernalia used in
impressing either of the above names or tho picture
Of A. Q. SimmoD3.
9. Decrood that Zeilin & Co. pay all tho damages
which havo accrued to complainant by tho sale of
Vnooe fraudulently labeled packages. The damages
claimed by complainant were $.>0,0 0.
10. Decreed that Zeilin & Co. pay all tho costs,
Which being amount of to several thousand dol c lar3, iho record
ono tho largest ever filed ‘ in tho Supreme
Court. ”
Cheap ModJesnc, i
dangerous. As a rula, ‘’cheap medicine" ’ is inert, worthless, or
Jn Zoilin Sc Co.’sanswer to our bill ibey
said the packages enjoined were designed as “cheap
negro mcdicino for tho negroes of the Mississippi
Valley.” Now, as Zeilin & ( o.’a advertisements say,
and their manager sworo, that all tho liver medicine
which they make is made by tho samo formula, is t ia
lid conciusivo evidenco from tho:r sworn testimony
and advertisements, that ail theiivermedicinacman-
otingfrom them is “Cheap Negro Medicine?'* Ques¬
tion: Do tho eick Of Amen ca dosiro “Cheap Negro
Medicine?” Let tho afilicted answer by their
future purchases. established Dr. M. A. Simmons - Liver
Medicine, in 1840, is not “cheap medi¬
cine.” It ia *no cure all,” and Is only recom¬
mended for these indispositi oas caused by inactivity
of tho Liver.
CHRONIC DISEASES
ot all forma
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED.
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Bronchitis, i’alpita-
tion, Indigestion, etc.
CATARRH
of tho Nose, Throat and Lu ngs.
IHSV.ASKS FKCUHAK TO WOMEN.
Prolapsus, Ulcerations, Leucorrhea. etc. Write
for pamphlet, testimonials anfi question blank.
J Hi. S. T. WHITAKER, Specialist,
305.Norcrcss Building, Atlanta, Ga.
“Success”
m liotton...... Seed Huiler
and
Sl§! mmmMmrn Nearly Separator.
donbloa
tbo Valtio
? j of Seed to tho
— Farm or,
All up-to-date Ginners use them becauso the Grow¬
ers give their patronage to such gins, Huiler ia
PRACTICAL, Far full information RELIABLE and GUARANTEED.
Address
S OULE STEAM FEED WORKS, Meridian ,Ufa
FRICK CORUPA^Y
m
RK 1
W
Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Lins, Cotton
Chisel I’resscs, Grain Separators.
Tootli and Solid Saws, Saw Teeth, In¬
spirators, full Injectors, lino of Engine Goods. Repairs and
a Brass
V&~ Send for Catalogue and Prices.
SOUTHERN MANAGERS.
Nos. fll & 53 S. Forsytli St., ATLANTA, GA.
ft»f» WfiSHING..
% ..MACHINE
- • GREATEST IMPROVEMENT
% in WASHERS in 20 \ KARP.
^ PENDULUM
C* Suves o0 per cent, of labor.
if 5jk Sik 'Ky Can ing be operat* ted ing. stand¬ No
V •%. p or sitting, work rk than tha s
mure
91 rocking a cradle.
My ms f gsafjiggA NO
BACK¬
ACHE
■} i i; \ iiaU YfUb this
m' t . 4 aUS! if mnehtno. dealer*
in jortr
m plats
don’t
i
i tkfni
1 , 1 iPi > i> ,'j \KTw n« one and rtta get
U holegnie
«*! rRIfjE.
H. F. BRAMMEfl KFS. GO., Davenport, Iowa.
W Ihs V0UN& FlanUtion
Cotton Seed HULLS&
fi AND SEPARATOR,
The result obtained
from the use of our ma¬
chine has been so very
fint’sfnctorv that we enter upon onr THIRD
SBflSON with a feeling of great confidence.
Our mHchines are durable and thoroughly
effective. The ground kernels ure left in a
line condition for distributing as a fertilizer.
The hulls are valuable food for cattle, De-
senptive pamphlet with testimonials frora
prominent cotton planters throughout the
Southern States, together with s'.tuple of
product, from our machine, will be lonvarded
on application. au™ia.
Coitcn Shin Mmj Co„
Mention this paper when you write.
Tho S25FULLC0U3SES25
complete Shorthand Business Course or the complete
Course for $25, at
WHITE’S BUSINESS COLLEGE,
IT* K. Cain St.. ATLANTA, GA.
Complete Business and .Shorthand Courses Com¬
bined. $7.50 Per Month.
Business practice from the start. Trained
Teachers. Course of study unexcelled. No va¬
cation. Address F. It. AVHITK, Principal.
SAW MILLS,
LIGHT and 11KAVY, and SUPPLIES. 7
•^CHEAPEST AND BEST.I>
Cast every day; work ISO hands.
LOMBARD IRON WORKS
AND SUPPLY COMPANY,
AUGUSTA, GEOKGIA.
Mt OSBORNE’S / /•
mined d eueae
xt p
r CMnlognq
0AN0ER°S5J^™" “Pike BuVWlag, Cluciunatl, OWo, 1
n- ii? Akc toailvor- 97-30
2'5 fifi
Lg] m
next UURl Cough’srnl T^e»Goii’
in time. Sold D»
____ by druseists.
$2353ng A; — l