Funding for the digitization of this title was provided by R.J. Taylor, Jr. Foundation.
About The Morgan monitor. (Morgan, Ga.) 1896-???? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 16, 1899)
Jo Reciprocity. "Hopkins is the meanest man on iarth.”. “Why?” “I rode down town vrith him this morning and let him tell me all about his sufferings with the grip, but when I began to tell mine he got off the car. —Chicago Record. Aged Woman Hides a Bicycle. Probably County the oldest Ksse^, living bicyclist- is a woman In JEnpland. apod 93, who Is an adept rider sod whoi sprlgntli- cess is astonisbiuir Mop t people could enjoy health until vary old n ge if twr olnh<* l&ok propi r precautions to pHIvont diseases dices- Uve Hostel organs by tailing an Occ«S;ofial {t f tors Stomach Blit* rs. Even after dys pepsla. Indigestion, biliousness and const!pn tlon have aecured a foothold and h#* orae chronic, the Bitters will afft^d speedy relief. Out of 297,000 people of Bordeaux, France. 3S.864 frs assisted by charitnble societies. “Better Be Wise Than Rich. >> ^- Vftse*ptople also rich are ’when they know a perfect fnm -,11 annoying • dtS- j- easesof r the , blood , kidneys, , tivcr ana j f f It T , ts Hood's Sarsaparilla ' , which IS , perfect r . its , action. , It in so ftegvtales the entire s tern as to bring vigorous heM. It never disappoints, Coitfe - •' For 42 years 1 had goitre, or swellings on tny neck, which was dis¬ couraging and troublesome. Rheumatism also annoyed me. Hood's Sarsaparilla cured me-coropletely and the swelline has entirely dfcappeard. previous A lady in Michigan saw Hoods my wi* entfrely testimonial and used arvi cured of the same ron e<thanked me for recommend- ln« it." Mbs. Anna SrniEBLAND, 4(Ai bovcl Street. Kalamazoo, Mich. Poor HealthHad poor health for years, pain, iu shoulders, back ami hips, C r,V,: nt and no appetite. Used Hoods Sarsaparilla, gained strength and can work hard all day; eat heartily and sleep well. 3 took It be- cause it helped, my husband.' Mas. Ei.tziBrrB J. (iirt-ri.s. Moose lake. Minn. Makes Weak Strong “I would give *5 h bottle fur Hood's Sarsaparilla if I . not pet it for less. It is the best It makes the w» J strong.” ALflfen A. Jaonow, Douglaslown, N. Y. (} focd S SaUajm'iifffi Mvfr ‘ilia, non irritating and Ui take with H.n.<l « S.ii imp.trUU, m»t ♦mry of Three Man Csges. JOl* a finifffilng'touch'to tlw* rebolltl- ifi'gof the La rube i tus Church lu Muii- ster, Westphalia, the three “man- high” Iron cages that hung from its groat tower since 1C37 have been hoisted anew to a height of 325 feet In accordance with the sentence of the ancient Bishop's Court: “And there, on the highest point In Munsterland, they shall hang for ever and ever, as a warning to evil-doers from now on till Judgment day.” These -cages were both the prisons and coffins of tbe renounced Anabap¬ tists, John Van Leyden, self styled “King of the Universe,” his Chancel¬ lor, Kretchtng, und Ills Governor and Lord High Executioner, Kntppordol- ltng. The cages just hoisted were re¬ made from the originals, when the latter were taken down a year ago to allow of the rebuilding of the tower. They were then in a dilapidated con¬ dition. rust having eaten away part of the framework. The new cages, al¬ though strict copies of tho original, are aomewhat smaller, but they con¬ tain the hooks and fetlocks wiRi which th£lr unfortunate tenants wore bound and 'tortured while being car¬ ried around Westphalia to lie exhibit¬ ed to the public and tortured by such persons ss eared to pay the fees ex¬ acted for the privilege. It cost a penny to stick a dagger into one of the (loomed men’s logs, while for three pence the King might be burned with a hot poker. In the cage*, when they were taken down, were two skulls, a broken and a battered leg bone and odd pieces of ribs and fingeiv. One of the skulls waa Identified ns that of the King by an Iron crown fattened to the head by spike*. Tho instruments of 'torture, including rusty daggers, big nails and pincers, were lu good state of preset' ration. OF fMlTAT^dul'J^ THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but ulso to the care und skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the California Fig Svitt-r Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured bv the Califokma Fig Svnui- Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations manufactured by other par¬ ties. The high standing of the Cax. 1 - forsja Fig Syhvp Co. with the medi¬ cal profession, and the satisfaction which the gi^uine Syrup of Figs has given to miliums of families, makes the name of flic Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts ou the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken- ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the name of the Company — CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAX FRANCISCO, Cut. f <008VILLAS. Kx. run yohk. n.z. FISO’S. CURt^rOR io lime,* s'v Mhrdr ■* CONSU ?. t ] IH BOARD REPORTS _ CRITICISES ARMY OFFICERS IN' STRONG TERMS. DOCUMENT IS GIVEN PUBLICITY, Contain# About Si*ty-Fiv» Thousand Words and Very Interesting To the General Public. The report submitted to tbe -presi- dent by tbe commissson appointed by him to investigate tbe conduct of tbe war department in the war with Spain, was made public Saturday night. The report is a nuanimons one, nil the members of the commission having signed it except Colonel Sexton, whoife death occurred February 4th. At its close it says; • “ft-is with profound regret that the commission reports 1 that during T its hiter session Colonel Jaincfl A. hexton " ftR P revented l, y sickness from being present, and on the 4th day of Febru- ary our beloved colleague closed an honorable and active life." The report is a voluminous docu- ment, containing about 05,000 words, £ ICJlSC" ll furnished to tbe press for its conve- nipnee. This abstract in part says: "The commission organized on Hep- tember 21th, electing General Gren- ville M. Dodge president, Hon. Charles T Denby . , vice president ., and Mr. Richard „ Weightman secretary General James Beaver was designated to conduct the examination of witnesses, Lieut,en- atlt Colonel F. B. Jones, chief quar- terroaster of volunteers, was detailed p y tl ,e war department as disbursing "mror »"«' , Major ,, Stephen ... , C. ,, Mills, U. 8 . A., was appointed by the president as recorder . ‘On Monday,the 2fith of September the commission convened in regular session. Arrangements were made to admit to the rooms six journalists, three of them representing the three established press associations. Having only two rooms at their disposal, the commission could not throw these open to the public indiscriminately. All the newspapers in the country, however, lmd access, through the press associations, to the examination of witnesses, and the American people were served, in respect of the proceed¬ ings of the commission, exactly ns they are served in all other matters of public interest from day to day. “Among the first nets of the com mission was to, ask the. secretary of war, the adjutant general, the quarter- matter general, the commissary gen¬ eral and the surgeon general to trans¬ mit all the s complaints received by them touching the administration of their respective departments. This request was promptly complied with, amt from that time forth alt com¬ plaints were forwarded to the commis¬ j sion immediately on their receipt'at | the war department. “In further pursuance of % this pre¬ paratory measure, the comnjissinp, on September 27tli, made public invita¬ tion, through the press to all of persons having knowledge or belief any of¬ ficial wrong or dereliction to submit their statements in writing, accom- by such collateral proof or in¬ formation as might be at tlioi” dis¬ posal. In tho report General Miles is blamed for not making known his dis^ covth-ies in Porto Rico. General Breckinridge, inspector general of.the United Slates army, comes in for strong criticism for his work. NAStl VILLK OUT OF. COAL. A Serious Sltuntion Kolloved Only By Action of ltiil 1 road h. Nashville, Tonn., exporionoed a coal famine Thursday and Friday aud the situation would have been exceeding¬ ly serum but for the fact that the railroads came to the rescue. A num¬ ber of big manufactories were com¬ pelled to close down. Hundreds of families were out of coal, and owing to the intense cold and consequent suffering fire engine bouses were ordered thrown open to the public and the recommendation was made that churches bo heated up aud likewise opened. lU’IUED IN SNOW SLIDE. Kleven Doilies Uvcovered, While Thirteen Are Still Missing. A dispatch from Silver Plume, Col., snys: Two mighty snow-slides oom- billing into one swept down Cherokee gulch at 8 o’clock Sunday morning, carrying away a dozen or more mine bni! Jiug« t cabins and machinery and causing great loss of life and damage to mine property. How many dead bodies lie in this great mass of snow and debris will not lu> kn ivn before spriug. Eight bodies are now at the morgue, two more nro know u to be lost aud Hire* have been taken out alive. MAYS FROM THE KLONDIKE, Many Gold Seeker* Are Stampeding to New Dl**triets. Advices from Dawson City state that there ’s little news from the Klon-hkc e’nims as yet this yea’'. The •uumptnh'S to the new districts aVe of f' equeut occurrence, ltut no important <lis -overiis are reported. Many river boats now fast in the ice will probably be crushed when tin- haw comes. CONTENTION OFFICERS ELECTED. Opneml Daniel Butterfield, of New York, lw .Mnde 1*resident. The National Military convention at Tampa, Fla., was organized YVetfnes- day morning by tbe election of the following officers: Presjdent—-General Daniel Butter- tit-id. of Now York. Y'ice Pic si Je ut—General F. M. tho»v U^ase, Dypr, of Michigan; of Rhode Colonel Island, .T. arid Au- Governor John Q. Underwood.of Ken- tneky. of Secretary—Captain James Y. Wilson, Florida. IN ICY GRASP OF BLIZZARD ; _ COLD WAVE DOES GREAT DAM- ACE OVER RIDE SECTION. j MINT LOW RECORDS ARE - I The Fruit Section of deorcta Suffer* Be- j verely—Some Interesting Itcporti From Various Points j The blizzard did great damage in many sections of Georgia. Experienced fruit growers areunan- j imously of the opinion that practically fruit in the middle tier of ! , counties, except plums, have been killed by the severe cold. Some ^row- ers say at least two-thirds of the peach cr °P wflR ruined before the present spell came. ! Major M. J. Hatcher, who is large- ly interested in peach culture in Ma- con county, voices the belief of other growers. Ho snys he floes not see how it is possible for any of the peach crop to escape destruction. He quotes : Messrs. Rnmph, Moore and other J day, large before growers, the having said cold, on that last Fri- ; present two- thirds of the crop had been killed and "El"' ^SZ U I nothing but total destruction BOW, I Truck farms are regarded as almost, if j not entirely a total loss, A Nashville, Tenn., dispatch says: | The situation as to eon! in Nashville . , , Monday was ns bad ns any day since the famous famine developed. While! considerable coal was delivered Sun¬ day, the receipts were comparatively small Monday, and one-tenth of the demand could not be filled. Long lines of people took their turn at every coal yard, and more coal was sold to people who brought wagons than was delivered by dealers. People who could not get wagons brought sacks, and many men carried coal home on street cars and in buggies. Several more manufactories closed down Monday, including the publish¬ ing house of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, which finished out the day by burning old records and other books. A Columbia, S. C., special says: South Carolina, particularly its capi¬ tal city, is feeling the effect of the blizzard very keenly. Tlio snow is eleven and a half inches deep, the heaviest ever had here, save in Febru- ary, 1884, when it was 11.8 inches, All previous temperature records have*- been.broken. All records for. ^ low temperature • .........• in Arkansas hava-jbeeiwijrokjB rnary 12, 1890, will bo WHfeffYeo up in the memory of the "tildest tant for years to come. MHvitMord at-Stow Orleans.- ' At New Orleans tbe mercury went to 7 Sunday night, being eight de¬ grees lower than previous records, The ground was covered with sleet audLstiow. On account of severe ’weather the Proteus display and ball was postponed. Tho Bex reception, however, took place Monday and all the carnival features except Proteus svjpl be carried out na usual. A Vicksburg, Miss., dispatch Says: This section i% experiencing the cold¬ est weather ever known. The ther¬ mometer reached oue degree below zero Sunday morning. The river is frozen for 20(1 feet from the shore and nil river cruft is tied lip bytho iee. Routing ice is passing in the channel 'continuously. For tho first time in its history Waco,.. Texas,tMid Vicinity experienced weather. showed Hnnday morning Monday t-h«.mpve,iw-y 7 belovvAauil mormr’g'' 3 below. Oats arc mined and wheat so seriously in jured as I'd'amount to destruction. Fruit crop is not, injured. The Brazos river is frozen from bank to bank. DENIAL FROM AGUINALDO. A^onclllo MiikcH Public a Pablcjjram Ke- * ocivctl From IIig Chief. A dispatch from Montreal, Out., says: Agoneillo, the Filipino commis¬ sioner, in an interview Monday night, gave an unqualified contradiction to the cablegram from General Otis, in which it is stated that ho (Agoneillo) telegraphed advising Agninaldo to drive tho Americans out before re-en¬ forcements arrived. MAR VI GRAS POSTPONED. Carnival In Kirmingham Goes Over to I ml o fin ate Date. A Birmingham, Ala., dispatch says: Since Sunday morning tho weather in Birmingham has been unprecedented, and the thermometer went lower than ever before in the history of the city. The mnrdi gras festivals were post¬ poned indefinitely on account of the extremely cold weather. Many hund¬ red people were in the city and had to mjike 1 lie best of the situation. A ooid famine is ou, and it is an- nonneed tliat several large iron fur- | naces will have to bank tires on ac¬ count of inability to got tho fuel. FILIFINDS UUUN TOWN. ! They Feared American* Were Preparing 1 or a Dom'mrdmoiit. A Manila dispatch says: Tho lift- lives, fearing tho Americana wore about to make an attack on or bom- brtfit the town of San Roque, set fire to it Thursday. The town was com- | V l,se ‘^ bamboo htits anti was fic- j stroyoj. worth their Telegraph weight operators are now j in gold, and the members of the signal ootps are work- J ing night aud day. • BARLEY “NOT (UJILTY.” Cleared of the Charge oT Murdcrinfi; Tliomas M. Adams. J : A dispatch from Cnsseta, Ga., says: W. H. Bagley has been cleared of tho j charge of murder. After being out j three the hours following the jury verdict iu the case brought o’clock in at 7;J0 i Driijay night: the juiyf'Stiil “YVe, the defendint pot guilty.” Monday Cnsseta, Thatriid ” began at and edettinned ail the sfeelr. From ^tart to finish if was a legal battle iu which every point was sharply con- tested by the lawyers on both sides. T HE the ills Some main of women derangement cause conspire of most of against of the the generative domestic unhappiness harmony. organs in the i 3 household. The husband can’t understand these troubles. The male WOMAN'S PECULIAR ILLS these serious of ills of women Failure for a kgj ll^rvh *** quarter a century. Mh secure proper advice should not r -r excuse the women of to-day, for / m&*d the wisest counsel can be had without Pinkham charge. for it. Write Her address to Mrs. | 9 is Lynn, Mass. I .X V Among the multitude of wo- VMm men helped by Mrs. Pinkham --'If mmll Mi and by Lydia E. Pinkham’s im King, Vegetable Sabina, Compound, Ohio. She is Mrs. writes: Joseph Wga j|5| c?v- kindly "Dear allow Mrs. Pinkham—W the ill you* ||f| m me pleasure of ex- ggjj ||| m pressing my gratitude for the wonder- Sp *35 ful relief I have experienced by taking 1 ■^ - Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound. I suffered for a long time m ‘ ' with falling of the womb, and those terrible bearing-down pains, and it w seemed as though my back would never stop aching; also had leucorrhoea, dull headaches, could not sleep, was weak and life burden I doctored ’ was a to me. : for several years, but it did no good. m My husband wanted me to try your V medicine, and I am so thankful that I did. I have taken four bottles of the Compound and a box of Liver Fills, and can state that if more ladies would only give your medicine a fair trial they would bless the day they saw your advertise¬ ment. My heart is full of gratitude to Mrs. Pinkham for what her medicine has done for me. Tt is worth its weight in gold.” The Rocks are Disintegrating. Speaking of Niagara Falls, The Buf¬ falo Express says: “Men who have for a long time made a study of the recession of the falls have lately seen evidence of the disintegration of the rocks. Not only in the. close vicinity of the falls is this disintregation noticeable, but at various points in the 2 M'ge between the falls and the whirlpool, on the Canadian side, traces of recession are seen. In some places the marks are larger than others. The Canadian banks below the whirlpool also indicate that the river has widen- ed at some of the curves to a small ex¬ tout. One or trwo of tho small islands near tho falls have grown somewhat smaller within Uie last yonr, and there are strong Indications that they may .disappear- • altogether - before’ many rears ;” 1 ' * ‘ . < . u <•"' XI “ 1 * 1 kinds o||pul*»a'.v*j W 1 * A young-trrnrrr named ; Berry; lately 8 tl<®£ J^ltbrbjisinegs, sent in his account to Charles MffttBeAs’-sointewhat'aheattl oT timeV •Whereupon Matthews, .with vigorous wrote him the following note:' “You must be a goose—Berry, to send me your bill—Berry, before it -is dde¬ Berry. Your father, the elder—Berry, would have had more sense. Y’ou may look very black—Berry, and feel very blue—Berry, but I don’t care a straw —Berry, for you and your bill Berry.” i i Ull— Af it was cling/-- only heaftb, we might let it is it cough. One’cold But a J no sooner passes off before [ another comes. But it’s the same old cough all the time. And it’s the same, old story, too. There is first the cold, l \ then the cough, then pneu- i monia or consumption with the m long sickness, and life tremb- ■ ling in the balance. «« i:kia#S3 H . « W m I ■ r.. ' loosens the grasp of your cough. - The congestion of the throat and lungs is removed; all in- ■ flammution is subdued; the parts and the are cough put perfectly at rest It fd drops tissues away. has no diseased on which to hang. g Dr. Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral Plaster draws out inflammation of the lungs. Advice Fees. Remember wo have a Medical Depart- meat. If you have any complaint medical wbut- ever ami tlesive tho best advice you doctor can freely. possibly You obtain, will write receive the a prompt replv. without cost. Address, 1)11. J. C. AYER. Lowell, Mass. i a Mightily Mixed. Things are getting ttF mightily mixed .... up iu At: Michigan, t - Here are ,, the names of four members of tbe legislature of that state: Fleiselmuer Neidermierer, Don’t GbcrdoraereraiuJ and btumpenhauser. you know the clerk dreads a rail?—-Exchange, m 51 SS Yan 'estore those Gray Hairs ■s m m m mi m m Si r • only knows of them theoreti- cally and scientifically, and finds it hard to cure them. But there is cure for them, certain, - practical and ggnt^jBE i sympathetic. Pinkham MgM Mrs. 1 has been wKstiSj A Man oi the World. An observant citizen wh'o has travel¬ ed at home, and abroad said to a re¬ porter: '“One may be a ma'n of the world, and yet never leave Manhattan Island. For instance, my grocer is from Holland, my butcher is a native of Brazil, my druggist hails from A1 sace Lorraine, my newsman is a Bo¬ hemian,’ my barber is from Austria, my haberdasher is from England, my caterer is from Paris, my chef is Ger man, my valet is a Jap, my domestics are Irish and Swede and my coachman is colored. The othei^day I had t£> have a doctor in a hurry and sent for the nearest one. I saw that he was a foreigner, and an intelligent man. He is a Persian and has lived In New York'ten years. In going to my sta- tion I pass an undertaker’s place— funeral director, if you please. I have an idea he will get an Sco't&mSn’ orjl&iLfrom me .it? is a J am im American. 'My partner, is.a native of Bavaria."—New York Sun. His Use for. a Dog. ’ V Tluv atory goes that when Li Hung Cliaiig was in England, an, admfrei sent him a specially fine bull-terrier ..intended to watch over the veterai statesman’s declining years. The fol lowing letter —30 the story goes—was received in acknowledgement: “Mj dear -, While tendering my best thanks for sending me your dog, I beg to say that, -as for myself, I have long since given up the practice of eating dog’s flesh; but my attendants, tc whom I handed the creature, tell m« they: never tasted., anything so nice.- •Your devoted L."—Household Wo-ds ’ -V k ; — A -fij—---- ..EXperfmontS recently.made .in;Paris 'Torty-svven :shojvyLat -per an oent. eleclrlc^.-waggn less' to costs than run ii horse wo goo, and -thirty-two per cent, less than a petroleum motor, U; QjjWn? . 'Vicfcfrla lias • '■seen every ! ihrone’ in tlifi-Rvorld v-ackited *at least once, and some of them several -times. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a-clean skin. No beauty without it. C'asearets, Candy Cathai-- tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving to-day all im¬ purities banish pimples, from tbe boils, body. blotches, Begin blackheads, to and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty gists, satisfaction guaranteed, for ten cents. 25c, All 50c. drug¬ 10c, Tho southern boundary of Canada stretches over fully four thousand miles, along Yvhicii Southern Ontario lias the lati¬ tude of Central Italy, Manitou and Vancou¬ ver that of Central .Germany. To ( me a < old in One Day. Take Laxative Brcmo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it falls to cure. 25c. Rev. Dr. A. B. Simpson, president of the Christian and missionary alliance, reports that over 100 students hive entered the Al¬ liance institute at, Nva-ck. and are preparing for work in foreign fields. Deware of Ointments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury, ns mercury will surely destroy the spnse of smell and completely derange th# whole system when eniertne it Through the mucous surfaces. Snell artic es should never be used except on P’. s r ptions from reputable physicians, ns the damnee they will do is ten fold to th#* good you can peas;bly *nufaetur£d derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh (■a re m by R. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, (),. contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting dreetly upon the blo<-d and mucous surfaces of tu»» system. In buying Hall’s Catarih Cure be sure to get the genuine. It is taken interwillv, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Ph ney&Co. Testimonials free. i■*' ^old by Drugtrists; price, Tim*, per bottle. Hall’s Family Fills are the best. If told tocQsrmk yourhp«d the pawnbroker probably would n’t give you muc h ou it. 5o-To*Bac for Fifty Conti. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak tnen strong, blood pure 60c. 81. All druggists. The bpk^u's boy can in’erest himself in his morning: delivery “roll calls.” Fits permanently cured. No firs or nervous¬ ness ;ifter first, day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise free. Du. K. H. Ki.ink, Ltd.. 931 Area St., Phila., Pa. Dr. Znreiver’ “Monks and Their Decline” has been placed in the index of prohibited bocks by the Vatican. iSSKSEa Oon.anaysjMtin.cnreswind colic. 25o.abottle. I cannot speak too highly of Pi«o’s Cure for i ousumptum —v rs. 1- rank MoBBS,215\V.22d ; St., Noyv \ ork. Oct. 29,1894. j n I ,, ho wise . preacher --:-:—r looks for . most . trouble , i ” l where he tlnffs most t-.iTy. ^ 25c. ; ttc.c.c. mu to cure, drugsists refund money London and Liverpool nre both at the level i of the sea. Glasgow Is thirty feet above it. WHITE SLAVES IN HUNGARY, Peasants Harnessed to the Plow Like Beasts of Burden. Stephen Varkonvi, the leader of the , peasants’ revolution which convulsed ; Hungary during the early months of ! last year, has just been sentenced to one year’s imprisonment for high trea- ! 1013. The movement which was inaugurat- ed by Varkonyl was a revolt against the remnants of serfdom which still exist in some parts Of Hungary. Iu rhese districts each peasant is com- pelled to work fifty days In the year for the land owner Without pay. These fifty days of compulsory la- bor are not successive, or at fixed in- tervals, but when the land owner has work . to A be done , he sends a drummer through the village, and every male Inhabitant is obliged to respond to the summons. Thereupon so many men are selected as are required. The land owner al¬ most invariably exacts Jfhis labor iu the summer when the peasant’s time is most valuable to him. In summer the peasant can earn as much as twenty-five cents a day; in winter not more than fourpence or sixpence. In winter the peasants are compelled to act as beaters in the mag¬ ^ nate’s hunts for a wage of two-pea a day. The occupation is a daugetmw one, and tbe time is not coupled in the annual fifty day’s compulsory^ peasants labor, v. The wives of the afe re- quired to sweep and scrub the local manor house once a week witlKmLpay,- ing four men to the plow instead two oxen. Stephen Varkonyl, who Instituted ! the revolt against these degrading con¬ ditions of labor, is a, sort of Hungar¬ ian Wat Tyler. He is the son of poor peasants, was educated Hi the farm¬ yards and graduated in the fields. He is quite a typical liorny-handed son of toil, is physically tall, stoutly built, with plenty of character in hi4 shaggy head, and small eyes with their suggestion of the Mongolian slit, and has that rough kind of natural humor that appeals to the simple peasant mind. Varkonyl, whose power over the ag¬ ricultural population of Iris, country !s unbounded, is one of the most inter¬ esting figures in modern Hungarian life. __ Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To* Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or SI. Cure guaran¬ teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. A church race may be just as ungodly as any horse race. 'at." if:• '** fle'v.: Auxia^d Paralysis Locomotor Can be Curtd. These extreme nervous disorders were tTe&tcd with ' wonderFul success by the dis- coverer oF Dr. Williams'Pink Pills for Pa.le People, previous to his discovery being often ed to the public generally. This remedy is the that, only until known specific in mamy diseases recent years, were pronounced in- curable. Uere is the proof; SS^* , James Crocket, a sturdy old Scotchman living in Detroit. Mich, .it tny\ Montcalm fie §t., was cured of .Locomotor Ataxia by these pills. For l. years has been a chief engineer of one of those big passenger palace v sibility steamers and plying anxiety upon'the great lakes. This is a position of great respon- •* ’* V the causes a great nervous strain. Mr. Crocket says : > v “For fifteen years I^atched the big engines and boilers without a single * .warning accident, and only taken-sick, noticed that I was getting nervous. Suddenly without f I was and was prostrated. I had the best of physi- ciaus bat grew gradually worse. At a council of doctors, they said I had- ^ prostration, and had destroyed nervous my whole nervous system and would never recover. . For three years I was unable to move from my •bed/’ i ' The doctor said I had locomotor ataxia, and would never be able to walk . again. “The • pains indescribable. . and suffering I experienced during those years are almost , - The friends that came to see me bid me good-bye when they l.ett me and I was given up. The doctors said nothing more could be ’ done. My wife kept reading to articles about Dr. Williams’ fqr Pale decided me, Pink Fills i . relief. People. conthiued Vfjc finally to try them. The first box gave me I to use theni for’ about two years befofe I could "et strength not enough iu this to city walk. that I ain nearly kick higher seventy-five years old and there*is a man can or'Walk further than lean and to-day I owe my present good health to Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People for they saved my life .”—Detroit Evening News. The Genuine &re sold only in Like (TO This Add re si the Or.Wiluiams'M totctNE. Company, %chenett6dy, VO Photos of Ancient Vintage. Most of the newspaper pictures of Patti that were dug up, dusted off and printed when she was married to Baron Cedarstrom are evidently photographs taken about the time of her first fare¬ well tour.—Minneapolis Times. Educate Ton* Bowel, Wltn vlascareti. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever 10c, 25c. it C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money Living to self is death in life; dying to self is life in death. The Potash Question. A thorough study of the sub¬ ject has proven that crop fail¬ ures can be prevented by using fertilizers containing a large percentage of Potash; nc plant r Can ° STOW NvitllOUt Potash We have a little book on the subject o Potash, written by authorities, that wc would like to send to every farmer, free o; cost, if he will only write and ask for it. OERHAN KALI WORKS. 9 i Nassau St., New York. 40 to 60 per cent Saved i Buying Here. * $1-75 ♦ a For this White Enam. ▼ ♦ JKJ^SKJ J| j jj III eled We make Steel them Bedstead. in S4. A I 4 r widths, 48 , 42 * nd inches 3 6 , long; ,nch ▼ 4 pillars, 75 H inch I 4 i inch i filler. - 9 A fe.ooFrdsusad for 81.7.5 i» but one of the f “ofFS“.S’S.|"r neral ▲ C rock- r A v ▼ l try. Mirrors, pictures, Lamps, RQngaMm. V ♦ these goods from high-priced retailers when ? i ♦ y° u d «J} he . ♦ $ uMtemuHtstoai'iiiD**'??ofRu*»,4 Squares, Portieres i and Lace^Lur- 9 I Carpets, Art ~ « 9 Carpets free, furnish limns and « 4 pr ' pay fre ' ght ' # I There ' is not a town or „ village fg ff 4 A in th united States where we ga g a T 4 ♦ are Mexico,'“Bermuda ,:ot s . clli " s - We ^ 1 make 3 lire- ifflB. I Cuba and and f 7 even as fur as Australia South Africa. There is a cause for all this'business.' Why? Baby Carriages Our free catalogues will tell you. $2.70toS50. Address this way, 1 ■) 4 4 Dept. 301. BAI.TIHOKE, HD. K • . BAD BLOOD ,. rASCA npT 9 <R> an eia!n;ed for them foun^ in ^carets. CANDY ’ K ~J¥ CATHARTIC wmomw RE3iSTSRHDig^ TRASH MARK Good, p,ea fe cM.« ... CURS CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Reraed.T Company. Chicago, Montreal, Ken York. 819 FAMOUS WIS 3.50 PANTS UP i AND $15.00 SUITS UP. Send 10c. stamps for Sample Out¬ fit. Agents wanted everywhere. STAR TAILORS, Atlanta, Ga. DROPSYSSSs testimonials and 10 cl vs' treatment cases. Bock of * Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN’S SONS Box D, Atlanta. Ga. l£ sore amteted eyes, wlta use i ; Thompson's Eye Water MENTION THIS PJlPER“ lu ?rr7 -TT Igggp (Si ;'- Mil v ; THE GJRJL.AN fcuWfteT hvA Ujjms Tome nbs / — FARM SEEDS Hah Salter’s Ion Luther, Seeds E.Tror, ar e Warra l' nted to Trodnce. worldvL >&£ growing 2o0 bushels a ., astontohed the by Bi s Pour Oats; J. l'.rcider, 1 MUhioott, YY is., 173 bush, barlev, aud II. Lovejoy, Red Wing. Minn., by growing 3.0 bu.h. Sailer’s corn per acre. If you doubt, write them. YVe wish to gain ItOQ.iOO ucw custoiucrg. _her.ce w ill send on trial 10 DOLLARS WORTH FOR 10c. 10 pUt-sof raro t—m seeds, Knit Bu*h, Rape for Sheep, the DODO Lorn. JJig Four Oats," Beardless Barley, Bromus Inermis—i teliiiiig7toushav peraercondrv I? ‘ Y 8oiln, etc., “ 40o, YY'heat.'' including our mammoth I Itc \ 11 Seed seeds, Catalogue, etc., all mailed u .!ing ou all about receipt our of Farm but J as \ upon lOc. positive, positively worth $10, to cet a A % Rart.100,000bhla.Seod 1’otatoii' A at ^ 1 ,Bl) and up a bbl. O ft 35 pkes earliest vegeta- Please ^ a w ble seeds, ll.ou ^ ^ Catalog .. tM, alr'-ie.Sc, adv. along. No. A0 4^ I i B I i BRiLuire all Kinds niflCHmES and sizes, for «* I l B B drilling wells for house, f 1 B farm, City and Village Water Works, Facto- Irrigation, rles, Ice Plants, Brew- and B ores. Coal H Mineral Prospecting, Oil and -wi 1 Gas, etc Latest and Best: 35 iff ttj years WHAT erperlenee. YOU WANT. WRITE US m mows & NYMAN. Tiffin. Ohio. CATALOGUES OF THOUSANDS OK tr* 1 -J ZV 'V~ ! ff-.A.-V'S! SENT FREE SENT FREE .Truest \..or 1 m.„l )n , he W rrH. A 1 kino* ■ . Books tor Hoyie Amusements, lnclmlintt 100 New mjs Just Plays, Issuot. UtAlogues. Cherades, Mrs. Reciters, Children's nays, Fsfry ■ egro J,r]e: s IV.x Works, SA tiuia. FRENCH, II West _ 22il Street, New York City. ci“ rB 1 st rlant ln the aYzISS DeeatUr8t - AUaDta , Ga. W. E. UaynelMg?: \V A? !, TE ?7 Ca,M ? of ba<i that R I P-A’N S 50 cents per box at &II nr mhil..