Newspaper Page Text
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A BYRD’S EYE VIEW
The fol>wing which appeared
in a Gloucester, Mass., paper,
would indicate that Jerry is
now having his inning : “ This
is to give notice that my wife,
who left my house without suf
ficient cause, lias returned and
is glad to get bat k again, and
will leave again in a hurry. Jer
ry Amero.”
000
A Spana h general said to a
New’ York Herald correspondent
that he felt no humiliation iit
surrendering to an American
army. “You people,” he said,
“are Brave and generous foes.
We can yield to you without
disgrace, but we would rather
have left our bones in Cuba than
to have ma lo terms with the
native Cubans.”
000
“Throughout the south the
negro is drawing the color line
in politics, and it is becoming
more and more evident that the
members o that race regard the
republican party as their own
Individual property. White men
ara showing up less bud less in
their conventions as the years
roll by,” observes the Albany
Herald.
000
Theremai k of Rev. Sam Jones
in his lectur here in the spring
that “the • i u try will be greatly
benelitted <• this war, if the
right me the front,”
seems to b prov uin the exper
ience of N w Orleans. The chief
of police of :'iat c y says there
has never been a more peaceful
era in New Orleans than since
the war bt hi.
000
Georgs D v y has shown him
self to be t ■ .blest tn in of Ameri
ca today. ;! i.-i wher a single in
cautious word or ad might bring
*boui warfare between all the n#,
tions of the world, yet he has held
his own firmly without saying or
doing one thing which other na
tions could hold against him,
—Amsricus Herald.
000
No woman who marries an old
soldier now will be entitled to a
pension after he dies. The old
soldier with a comfortable pension
has furnished inducements for
many a designing woman to wed,
especially so under ths law recent
ly inforce, and his death did not
stop the pension. But all is chang
ed under a new law which went in
to effect the first of July and the
veteran who gets married now will
have the satisfaction of knowing
that he furnishes all the attrac
tions.
000
A special to the Louisville commer
cial from Jacksonville, Fla., says:
‘‘lt is understood that Lee .is sla
ted forthe governor generalship of
Cuba, and the times arrives he and
his corps will go forward. An in
timate friend of Lee stated that
Lee was in full accord with the
plans of the Government.
000
The following notice has been
tacked up in the postoffice at St.
Johnsburg, Vt.. by a citizen of
Benson, who seems to be in se
rious trouble : “Lost—is There
Any one that can tell where my
wife Is and Little Girl is. If so
Please rite and send Full Ad
dress and I will do the fair thing.
Address all letters C. L, Mon
ger, Benson, Vt.”
000
A Denver court has issued an
injunction restraining a Denver
man from talking to his divorced
wife,
000
Prof. Mulhall estimates the
wealth of the I nited States at
$Bl 750,000.000. Spain can see!
that when it comes to the ques
tion of the “sinews of war” she
is not in it. .
000
A Brighton, England, young
man has killed himself because
his wife made fun of him for
kissing the servant girl.
o c o
Sam Jones believes that Bryan
will get to heaven, but doubts
if he will ever get to the white
house.
000
Though Wesley was never
rich and never had a large salary
he managed to give away over
$200,000 during his life. He
founded in England an enter
prise for loaning poor people
small sums to tide them over
transient difficulties. A cobbler,
who received a loan of S2O from
this fund, was able to show
Wesley before the latter’s death
that the profits of his business
were $150,000 per year.
Blood Poison.
Cwatagtoua Skiod Poison has been ap
propriately called the curse of mankind.
It it the oae 4i*?a«e that physicians can
not cure; their mercurial and potash
remedies oaiy bottle up the poison in
the • yet eta, to aurely break forth in a
more viruleat form, resulting in a total
wreck of the Ovtlem.
Mr. Freak B. Martin, a prominent
foweier at Pensylvania Ave.. Wash
ington,D.C.,says:
1 was for a long
~ Tn time under treat
■ meat of two of
Sb? L the best physi
fo ciaus of this city,
SK' f »rA • i for a severe case
g of blood poison,
zEß’Sg’’ but my condition
grew worse all
jtek pfei- while, not-
wjfngk' r- Iw withstanding the
■iWr'T *vfa;agfsct that they
07 rae three
»Raw /|/ ,4“ hundred dollars.
My mouth was
filled with anting sores; my tongue was
alm oat eaten away, so that for three
months I was unable to taste any eel id
food. My hair was coining out rapidly,
and I was in a horiible fix. I had tried
various treatments, and was nearly dis
couragwd, when a friend recommended
B.S.S. After T had taken four bottles, I
Lewan to get better, and when I had
finished eighteen bottles, I was cured
saund and well, my skin was without a
blemish, and I have had no return of
the disease. SJLS.saved me from a life
©f misery.’• S.S.S. {guaranteed purely
vegetable) will cure any case of blood
poison. Books on thedisease
and its treat- xv'v
meat. mailed L <4
free by Swift Wk
Specific Co., a
Atlanta, G*. Q&fiF
CHEAP RATES.
The Southern R’y operates 8
daily trains between Rome and
Chattanooga, by which parties
can leave Rome in the morning,
•pend the day in Chattanooga
and return home same evening.
The schedule between these
points is as follows. Leave Rome
1 :00 a. m. arrive Cadttanooga
4 :15 a. m. ; leave Rome 10 :35
arrive Chattanooga 1: GO p.m. •
leave Rome G :25 a. n|. arrive
Chattanooga 8 :50 p. in There
is also a local train leaving Rome
3:50 p. m. going by tlje way of
Cohutta and Cleveland and ar
rives Chattanooga 7:20 p. m.
Returning, trains leavd Chatta
nooga 6 :30 a. m. arrive Rome
9: 00 a. m. ; leave Chattanooga
8 :10 p. in. arrive Roni- 5 :35 p.
m. ; leave Chattanooga 10 :10 p.
arrive Rome 1 :44 a. lit. Pull
man sleeping cars on all trains.
For further information call
on C. Harrison, C. T. A.
B Adl
BREATH
•• I have b4»cn wafinu (’AWhIR liTTfi and as
a mild and effective laxative tbevhn simply wow
tyrfal. My daughter anti 1 wen beti i red with
atak stomach and our breath wu,i rjbad. Aftoj
tahlnc a few d<*cs of Cas■ ur; ’- v| Lave Improved
wonderfully. 'They ai j a i -oat h.'l in the family.”
WILHEIJMI.NA NAf-'L.
11JT Kibtaukouao St., ciicdtuuti, Ohio.
. -Jy CANDY I
> CATHAR-rii .
TKW&wmo
TH AOk ASAKH W-J’SWP
Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. ?Mte Good. ix>
*ood, Nurar yictea. Wvuken. or ir:jx- lbc.2uc.sUa.
... CURE CONSTIP ISOM. ...
t-crMuc Wsmcdj Cowipany. Ckicnrti 1 < .rv j|. ksu Jlfe
t-G-TA-RAl* SoJ<l and auarcued by all Orne-
RU a IU a oAU gHttto <’T. icrro banco Habft
b rv./fzj with you whAdJver y* I •
■ rvo-ALfiiag tobacco habit, Is-; 1-■,
.oiovsj the der-tre for tobar . e .~
ft nervoug dl^V* s * s < xpO;« inc; ,
purifier t-ho Lii ■ 1 . ■
vorea loet manhood. r
ikas vou -
u health, aervc^c^Ekf.t <>. • 6 >■»:.<□ >Joy
• i - C.'igw
vt-wk. 1 V-..ur i’A • a'-.r.
H@ ■ i^®«*“*** t *l tghi. ir.. . j ...» < Z K v. lui.
.■ w vrHl, pot L-r jr,;fntiy Our
fJ, •,’*O‘! ..»>.• .<* 4"
I auaranle- 4loom . -c > •’iur.d xaoru/
OterUMS Beiuedj €1 Iq . Mwr.;rea>« Jte*’ lorf,
.
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j <— -~ a c EL‘.l u- —. - : *->c-aj
Tonic ft s ™ Bi®|
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If A POSITIVE CUr:E Sa I
S DYSPEPSIA, KAUHIA H
I CHILLS P 1 FtiER. Gii.tP, •' ■
S BILIOUSNESS, SICK-HELLYL # ’ I
n CONSTIPATION 's I' ■
U GENEBAL DEBILITY. J ’is - - ■ 13
PRICE 50 / / tm! j
II AT ALL Z' Will K«ep your ; IS
J DRUGGISTS. Zf.'.-'' ■ ’ e* >< Condition. Jk
I!
“ rasSl'
I I. /iJVSii p-LLS aj CENTS.
Purely Vegetable. 'Vut ,< ••• - Piles. Sl:kH«w®a ; * d ' i |
Dynnensia. 50,.-,. I.
;U
c z?
“ $3.00 A MONTH “
rtr this nerety nominal fee any sufferer from aoy Chrooto ZTE
aline es treatDiwnt that has gained a world-wide ruyirtafl—
healing and ourative pawers. Cases that have beeo
bepeteM are quickly and radically cared ti beaiA o*.
Cowden gives every case his personal attuiiflO j
Thousands cured. His specialties art;
fihrae, Stomach, Deafness,
Throat, Bowels, Consumption, Catarh*
Langs, Blood, Rheumatism, Ob®a*J»
Skin Diseases.
VIGORTNETeE«3
An ahnolate specific fpr JF E /E H I W
(A LI W* i
Either of these remedies will be sent upon receipt of $2.00. Thdr
Is little short of miraculous. ..uiHm.
Send for Symptom blanks and fall information regarding
All inquiries cheerfully answered. Consultation Free. Don ' ,el
escape tt may never occur again. Address. -
?i. M. COWDEN, M. D., 71513th St., N. W.,