The Lincoln home journal. (Lincolnton, GA.) 189?-19??, January 06, 1898, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

"CompJalut Is made tiuu the roads running out. of Washington are in poor condition. Why should not the Na¬ tional capital be t.tae centre of good road®, and all streets and highways in the District of Columbia be so built 2 #d cared for that they would be of interest to innumerable visitors, and perpetual object-lessons? “Doc* your wile ooject to year stny log out so late of sights?” “A little; but what really ntHmm hr,r wrath is for me to como hoi ut quietly that she doesn’t know when I got in.”— Indian auolis Journal. New Paper for Stamps. Arrangements have been madeTiy the Treasury Department with the New York and Pennsylvania Company, the present contractors for the paper upon which internal revenue stamps are - printed, by which all paper hereafter to be manufactured by the company for the internal revenue office shall eon¬ tain a uniform water mark. The sheets upon which stamps are to be printed will hereafter, when held up the long way, contain a water marking which shall read from left to right across the width of the sheet as follows: “U. S. t. 11.” Mutual Interest. “So that young man wants to marry you?” said Mabel’s father. “Yes,” was the reply. “Do you knotv what his salary is?” “No. But it’s an awfully strange co¬ Incidence.” “What do you mean?” “Herbert asked me the very same question about you.”—Washington Star. Dews on Land and Soa. Dews are less abundant on islands than on ships in midocean. Seamen can, therefore, tell when they are near¬ ing land by reason of the smaller de¬ posit of dew on the vessel. Cure Corns With Physic. There is more Catarrh in this section of tho country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed, to be incurable. For a great many years doctors local pronounced it a and local by disease constantly and prescribed failing to remedies, pronounced cure with local treatment, it in¬ curable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore reqn* ires constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh O ure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the onlv constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on m the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. ■ They offer one hundred dollars for any case Kit fails to cure. Send for circulars and testi ■monials. Address F.J. Cheney* Co.,Toledo, O. mL H Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. m Ex-President Harrison pays taxes in In Ktianapolis ■eand on one hundred and live thou f dollars’ worth of property, which is about twenty-five thousand dollars less than ex-President Cleveland’* tax valua¬ tion. To Cure a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 23c. General Simon Bolivar Buckner, who ran for Vice-President on the gold Democrat ttichet -Lq 1896., has published an appeal to gold Democrats to maintain thoir organi eation. , Fits permanently cured. No fits or ne rvous t Hess a iter first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s G reat Nerve Restorer. S2 trial bottle and treatise free Dr. R, H. Kline, Ltd..931 Arch St.l Phila., Pa. W r e think Piso’s Cure for Consumption is the only medicine for Coughs. Jennie Pinck I ARD, Springfield Ills., Oet. 1, 1894. I" Charles L. HoisteiD, of Indianapolis, who ■has iator been mentioned for United States Sen from Indiana, is a post and lives with Karnes Whitcomb Riley. Chew Star Tobacco—The Best. Smoke Sledge Cigarettes. ViamaJiel Bradford, who wanks to bo Governor of Massachusetts, is now Govern¬ or of the Society of Maytiower Descend i fints. I* |tion.allays pain.cures wind colic, 25c. a bottle. *T * Was Nervous a . ffro ubied with Her Stomach | I Could Not Sleep-Hood’s troubled Cured. with “About a year ago I was rny stomach and could not eat. I wa L nervous and could not sleep at night. I grew very thin. I began taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla and am now well and strong, and owe it all to Hood’s Sarsaparilla.” Mart Peters. 90 South Union Street, Rochester, N. Y. Remember K ■ Hood’s Sarsaparilla the best-The Ons Tnio Blood Purifier. Hood’S Pills are the favorate cathartic. ~ 57 n. U.— No. 50—’97) piso’s FAILS7 CURES WHERE ALL ELSE Good. Use Best Cough Syrup. Tastes in time. Sold by r 2'5?“ v.\ | Ayer’s For asthma, bronchitis, croup, or whooping cough, there is no remedy so sure and so safe as Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. This standard remedy for coughs, colds, and all diseases of the throat and lungs, is now put up in half size bottles at half price, 50c. Cherry Pectoral WOMEN IN BULL RINGS, Three Females Who Butcher Bulls to Amucs the Spaniards. American women would find it diffi¬ cult to Imagine one of their sex in tha arena where bulls are butchered 'to make a Spanish holiday, but such there are. Three pets of the bull-ring in Spain are women—one a Spaniard, the other two Germans. Donna Piedros, the Spaniard, is a matador, the other* are toreadors. It is the duty of Donna Piedros to finish the fierce brute aftef it has been tormented and wounded by the others. She is a handsome woman of 23, and has been in the bull-ring since she was 17. When first she made known her intention of entering the arena there was a howl of protest, but she persisted, and when she made her first appearance she was , showered with flowers. Since then she has been in the ring once every month, and' on several occasions has been more or loss Injured. Great danger is incurred by matadors when giving the quietus to a bull, because the savage brute gener¬ ally makes a last desperate rally. In this way Donna Piedros has been face to face with death more than once. Her two competitors are the Pretel sisters, Lola and Angelica. Pretty blondes, scarcely out of their teens, they are brilliant and daring riders. Their exploits in the bull-rings have been the themes of Spanish poets, they are the pets of the populace, and for their achievements in the arena they receive great financial reward. They were originally circus riders. Their manager, being struck with their equestrian ability, determined to make bull-fighters of them. He took them to Seville, where there is a school de¬ voted to the fine art of killing a bull. \ A * M m & !i 4 is <1 iS-. /■ 'it SPANISH WOMAN BULL FIGHTER. There the two girls killed a stuffed bull three or four times a day until, finally they were allowed to practice on a live bull. From that day they were gradu¬ ated to the ring proper, and quickly won renown by their daring. Donna Piedros wears a divided skirt when in the ring, while the Pretel sis¬ ters wear the regulation man’s bull¬ fighting costume. The former does all her work on foot, while the latter two ride horses. --- The Litcnoss or Ulirlst. It is not merely by watching the life ; of Christ as illustrated by Ilis actions, or His principles set forth by His words, that we gain likeness to Him. There Is a strange power in personality to affect other fidturts. The child grows to he like one whom he constantly watches. He rnay or may not make a conscious effort for that likeness, hut the likeness comes. People of larger niaturer,.more independent de yelopment, are often strangely drawn by constant contact into likeness to one mother, without so much as a thought of the process. John says: “We shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as lie is.” What we need here It) see Christ—see Him, not merely as He- was, but as He is, and we shall find the like¬ ness taking hold upon us and fashion¬ ing us into itself. Londoners cultivate what Is called “week-end holidays.” They comprise starting away with a grip on Friday to some congenial spot on the coast and remaining until the following Mon¬ day or Tuesday. Every Englishman takes in addition a three-weeks’ vaca¬ tion every year. It must be confessed that the Briton is better versed than the American in the firt of vesting. A woman is almost as promt of hei mourning clothes as she is of her wed ing clothes. PRICES OF WILD ANIMALS. 7 jj ecen t Quotations From Sealers Who Supply Menageries. “What does an animal like that cost?” This question, Superintendent Ste¬ phen says, is asked oftener than any other by people visiting the Zoo. How old the* animal is, what it feeds on, would it harm a person who went into its cage, is it a bad fighter, does it breed in captivity?—such asked questions tha* about as these are not niore once where the cost is asked about a hundred times. Bat that’s the Amer ican of it. The annual confidential quotation of prices of “Zoo animals” was received from the world’s princi¬ pal and greatest animal mart, Ham¬ burg, Germany, £oo, recently, by the Cin¬ cinnati anil in view of the fact just stated its leading features will prove of interest, and the more espe¬ cially since figures of this kind are rar ely got hold of by the press or public. confidential quotations Among these are the following, they being net: Female Indian elephant, six feet high, trained to do several'tricks, car¬ ries six people in saddle, $1500; female elephant, five feet six inches high, no tricks, $1300; young, fresh imported male elephants, four to five feet high, from Burmah, $1000; females, $1100; zebras, 5 years old, per pair, $2000, and both broke to drive in single or double harness; eight months’ old zebra, male, $150, and female, three months old $350; Nubian wild ass, 6 years old, $200; wild asses from the Russian steppes, per pair, $900; dou¬ ble humped camels, per pair, $500; llamas, 4 years old, per pair, $250; Axis deer from India, per pair; $200; Sika deer from Japan, per pair, $120; waterbuck antelopes, 2 years old (country not given), per pair, $750: Bengal tigers, male) 6 years old, fe¬ male, 3 years old, per pair, $1750; Bengal tigers, female, 3 years old, each $750; Nubian lions, 6 years old, per pair, $1500; Nubian lions, 2 1-2 years old, per pair, $1000; and 1 1-4 years old, $600; female jaguars, 18 months old, each $525; pumas 3 years old, per pair, $300; Indian leopards, male, $175 each; striped hyenas, each $75; Russian wolves, each, $100; young polar bears,per pair, $450; po¬ lar bears, 18 months old, $650; and fully grown, $1000 per pair; young Russian bears, $150; African and In¬ dian porcupines, each $40; male kanga¬ roo, $125; beaver rats, $30 per pair; maleourang outang,7 years old,$1500. —Cincinnati Enquirer. OLD MINES REDISCOVERED, Paintings and Carvings Antidating Jo¬ seph—Jason’s Golden Fleece. Gold was probably the first metal observed and collected, because of the instinctive understanding of its in¬ trinsic value. About it superstitions grew, religious and ceremonious rites, and strange crimes were committed for its possession in the days when it was believed that it was of such stuff that the sun itself was made and the halls of Valhalla paved. Rock paint¬ ings and carvings in Egyptian tombs earlier than the days of Joseph indi¬ cate the operation of washing aurife¬ rous sand, and a subsequent melting in furnaces by the aid of blowpipes. Less than twenty years ago the old mines of Nubia, so graphically de¬ scribed by Diodorous, were rediscov¬ ered on the shores of the Red sea, to¬ gether with a line of ancient wells across the desert; the underground workings where ore veins had been followed with the pick, the rude cup¬ eling furnaces for assaying, picks, oil lamps, stone mills, mortars and pes¬ tles, inclined washing-tables of stone, crucibles, and retorting furnaces of burned tile, by which the entire pro cess could be traced. Here slaves and hapless prisoners of war ex¬ changed their life-blood for glittering dust to fill the treasuries of their cap¬ tors. In India and Asia Minor the powdered ore was washed down over smooth sloping rocks, and gold caught in the fleeces of sheepskins sunk in the street, It was literally a golden fleece that Jason brought back from the Caucasus. Farther north, aud following the eastern foothills of Mount Ararat to the southern slojies of the Ural moun¬ tains in Russian Siberia, where last year millions were taken out of the old mines, the ancient Scythians broke up rock and gravel with copper imple¬ ments, scraped out the glittering dust and nuggets with the fangs of wild boars, and through this region miners of today know that one of the chief dangers to be avoided are the Scythian pits, 60 feet deep in the gravel, and shaped like a well. The remains of thousands of small furnaces of burned clay testify to the long period over which the workings of the mines ex¬ tended.—Modern Machinery. A MOTHER’S DEFENSE. Cat and Rattlesnake Fight Desperately— Cat Gains Victory. William Adams, whose home is near Wilbur, Ore., beard a tremendous hissing aud rattling at the rear door of his home not long since. He knew that a rattlesnake was doing the busi¬ ness, but the other sounds confused him. Thinking some of his children might be in danger he ran to the door. The rattler was there all right, but there were no children, But there, militant, were three kittens of the favorite house cat and their mother. The four were entertaining themselves and each other in a fi#Jit with the rat¬ tler, the mother, oif course, doing most of the fighting. For a while there were movements that would have bested a kinetoseope. The old cat bad tackled the snake by the throat in such a manner as to pre¬ vent him striking his fangs into her back, and the snake was making a powerful wiggle and squirm to get free. Its tail lashed the air like a whip, and its black fangs shot in and out like three-pronged lighting on a small scale and in different color. But kitty’s fur was up, and she was using her feline agility and quickness for all it was worth, so that the snake’s venom went out into the air or settled in the earth. Once or twice the rattler got free, and swift as an eel made straight for the little ones, but the old mother cat was too quick for the snake. She grabbed the creature by the back, about eight inches below the head, and stopped its course. the Finally, as if to put a stop to struggle, the cat changed her grip, sank her teeth into the round body close to the head and held them there. The rattler soon bowed liis head, dou¬ bled up his back, squirmed in intri¬ cate curves too many to de¬ scribe and gave up the fight. A few minutes later it lay dead, the head nearly severed from the body. Naval Offlvers as Farmer*. “Naval officers always settle in the country when they can,” remarked a prominent naval officer to a Washing¬ ton Star reporter. “During their active careers, that is, during the time they are at sea, they are neces¬ sarily cramped for room, and while some of them on tho large modern ships have elegant and sumptuous quarters, there is necessarily a limit to it. This thing grows on a man to such an extent that the first thing he does when he is retired, and in hun¬ dreds of cases long before retirement, he hunts up and locates on a farm. Three of the admirals of the retired list, headed by Admiral Ammen, are the owners of farms in the immediate locality of Washington, and any num¬ ber of other officers are similarly pro¬ vided for, though their farms are not so extensive. They seem to want stretching room, and it will be noticed that when they do locate they secure big places. Their minds run into stock and chicken raising. The offi¬ cers of the Marine Corps have been noted for years as the owners of the speediest horses owned or driven about Washington, and they have been always prominent in connection with our racing associations and organiza¬ tions. Naval officers have been sim¬ ilarly prominent. It is different with army officers. Their ambition seems to be for nice houses in the cities. The naval officers’ ideas all run to¬ ward the country. I don’t like to give names, but I could give dozens of illustrations to prove what I say, if it were necessary. Take a look at the incoming cars from any of the subur¬ ban places around Washington any morning, and there will be sufficient proof of what Isay.” A Curious Pocket Piece. A Union Pacific engineer lias a fashion of making unique pocket pieces for his friends. He runs a passenger engine west, and when oiling previ OUS to a run he drops a nickle five cent piece into the brass oil cup on the crosshead of the piston rod. His run is 300 miles. When he reaches his destination he unscrews the top of the oil cup and takes the nickle out. It has been metamorphosed into a curious little button with an evenly turned rim, within which, on the one side is the countersunk head of Liberty, divested of her stars, and on the other side a V and the wreath. The edge of the crown is as perfect as if had been pounded on an anvil by an expert silversmith. The perfection of this is due to the even vibration the coin has been sub jeeted to. The motion of the piston is horizontal, and it travels forty-eight inches, back and forth, with every revolution of the wheels. The interior of the oil cup is round and the edges of the nickel as it travels back and forth in the oil, striking the sides of the cup, are turned over and pounded into perfect roundness, Sometimes a nickle is left in the cup during the round trip, or 600 miles. When taken out it is a nickle bullet, a perfect polished sphere. Who discove, ed this unique method of turning the edges of a nickel is not known, but many engineers know of it. — Tacoma (Wash.) Ledger. for Water. m A Test There is urgent need of a simple and reliable test for ascertaining the purity of water. An analytical chem¬ ist gives the following directions, which are readily understood, and can be applied by any person of average intelligence. “Fill a clean bottle three-fourths full of the water to be tested, and dissolve in the water half a teaspoonful of the purest sugar-loaf, or granulated will answer, cork the bottle, and place it in a warm spot for two days; if at the end of this period the water becomes cloudy or milky, it is unfit for household use. If on the other hand it remains clear and fresh looking, the probabilities are that it is at least approximately pure and ilt for all domestic purposes. Practical Dovemaking. Lovemaking in the Western metro¬ polis, according to the Chicago News. “I’m a plain,' everyday business man,” said Meritt, “and I am nothing if not practical. Miss Wisely, will you be my wife?” “I admire your frankness, Mr. Meritt,” replied the fair object of his affections, “because I am inclined to be rather matter of fact myself. How much are you worth?” Remarkable Surgery. Dr. Carri, an eminent physician of the City of Mexico, has recently per¬ formed a surgical operation declared to be without a parallel. Namely, h<j successfully saved the life of a man who had the larger carotid artery, on the aide of the neck, completely sev¬ ered. The patient lost a large amount of blood, but bas now recovered en¬ tirely. No. 203. - This quar i I tev-sawed writing oak pot H m desk is r ished like It a ffl piano. 9-inch W 'V y beveled has a m n glass Be' plate and a IgC in top drawer Stfi inL deep Ar K«U. below. ----Vll—*A tistio legs; BET French finished 1 also in mahogany. ill $3.95 ia our spec¬ i- ial price for this $10 desk. (Mailorders filled promptly ) ail Wo will mail anyone, Special free or Cata¬ charges, our new 112 pauo logue. containing Furniture, Draperies, Damps, Stove", Crockery, Mirrors, Pictures, lleddiDg, Kefrigerators. Baby Carriages, etc. This is the most com¬ plete book ever-published, and we pay all postage. Our lithographed Carpet Ca'alogue, showing carpets in colors, is also yours lor the asking. If carpet in samples are wanted mail us 8c. stamps. stamps. There is no reason wliy you should shou pay your local dealer 60 per cent, profit when you can buy from the mill. Drop a line now to the moaey-saveis. JULIUS HINES & SON, Baltimore, Md. Please mention this paper. Suits the Tailors. Felix Fame's tailors made a good thing out of the St. Petersburg visit. It rained every hour of the President’s stay in Russia, and consequently his eight dress suits and twelve silk hats were all ruined. When the reception at Dunkirk was given M. Faure on his return home he had to wear a “pressed suit,” but that did not so much matter, for there again it also rained in tor¬ ments. As ho always is the pink of ele¬ gance, this continued annoyance must have been as hard to bear as for some fine lady out in a downpour, minus an umbrella and no money for a cab. Revival of Old Jewelry. The old style jewelry is coming into fashion again. Women are haunting the old curio shops, trying to find the beautiful old cameos like those worn by their mothers and grandmothers years ago. The old-fashioned setting is rarely changed, the quaintly carved and twisted gold being considered ex¬ tremely beautiful. Tlio old brooches and rings are especially sought for, and bring remarkable prices when found. Tlie man who whistles seldom swears; it is the people who are com¬ pelled to listen to him that do the swearing. IIow to Wash With Care. Hard water, strong lye, or inferior laundry Boap are responsible for the yellow clothes seen in many households. To wash properly, fill a tub nearly full of hot water, put the white clothes in first, rub with Ivory Soap, scald, rinse and starch. When dry, sprinkle and fold down over night and iron carefully. Eliza R. Parker. -c- fruit. Trees and Vines become hardier, and their products bet¬ ter colored and better flavored when liberally treated with fertilizers containing at least io% actual Potash FREE An illustrated book which tells what Potash is, and how it .....— n ■ should be used, is sent free to all applicants. Send your address. GERMAN KALI WORKS, ,3 Nassau St., New York, COLD-BREAKERS WILL CURE YOUR COLD In 8 to 12 hours. 25G, fl BOX at Druggists or THE C0LD-BBEAKER CO. J AIKEN, - SOUTH CAROLINA. OSBORNE’S udmedd L <Reu€ae booK>- Augusta. Short Ga. time. Actual Cheap business. hoard- Send No text u for catalogue. S BFIUM,MORPHINE,WHISKEY,CO- 3 Snuff-Dipping: nIs#/ ca n \ Tobacco anti Habits permanently cured by HABV1UKSS IlOMK TR EATME.Vn'. My book, DR. contalni"R HOFFMAN, full lnfor mation, inalled free. i , R oom 4 Isabella Building, Chicago, III. H'ErKvl i are Properly. Rcpre m O 3 Bwll^a si toft smt .Wealth* Can be I* w gold. Are Assignable. ui INVENT improvements in tools, implements, household articles, etc. Write F. 8. APPEE MAN) Patent Lawyer, Warder Bldg., ash ington*J), F ree circular aud advice._Low fees. S T. JOSEPH’S LIVER REGULATOR THE BEST ON THE MARKET. All Druggists aud Merchants. Mnf’d by L. GERs-TLE & CO- Chattanooga, Term. 0 R. MAKER’S Great Vegetable BLOOD & LIVER GURE. Guaranteed for Rheumatism, Scrofula. Syphilis, Con¬ stipation & Indigestion. Manufactured by LOOKOUT MEDICINE GO., Greenville, Tenn. S N. U. No. 50.—97. UfKY V? PAY MORE. 100 quinine Pill*, suaran teed to contain 2 grains of pure iOOin quinine each, 40 cts. by mallor30t)for $l.Put up a package. Semi ottnapsor PO.order. J.F.Powell.Waukegan, ID ib -—Tl- Money is Chickens If You >i m To keep them, but it is wrong to let the poor thing® Suffer and Die of the various Maladies which afflict then* when in had a majority the of cases a cure could have bee# effected owner possessed a little knowledge, sue# ! =P as can be procured from the One Hundred PageBoek w# mm devoted offer, embracing twenty-five the Practical of Experiences life of conducting a ma# wh$ years to / Poultry Yard as a Business, not as a pastime. As t* living of himself and family depended on it, he ga re tfd subject such attention as only a need of bread willcoaw mand, and the result was a grand success, after h© spent much money and lost hundreds of valuable ohlc^r ens in experimenting. embodied What he learned in all postpaid ibew years is in this book, which teacla^ we &md for Detect Twenty-five and Cure Cents Diseases, in stamps- how to Feed It /oS ^SBgs you and how l» atti9T«erything,indeed, for Fattening, which Fowls to save for Br^SoIne Ptifpos©* subjt©^ you should know on this BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSfh Gl%w 134 Leonard St., N. Y. EVERY MAN ! HIS OWN DOCTOR! By J. Hamilton Ayers, A. Thtls is a most Valuables JJook for the the Household, easlly-distinguisned teaching as it does Symptoms of difterent Diseases, the Causes and Means of Pre¬ venting Mich Diseases, and the Simplest Remedies which will al¬ leviate or cure. 's' 59b P ages, Book Profusely Illustrated. The ? is written in plain every-day English, and is free from the technical terms which render most Doctor Books so valueless readers. tended l lie Family, readily to This to be the and understood ol Book generality is Service so worded is by in- all in of of , [dA-* _ ^ A Hi i2S<\ as to Oe / s OM, V CO ctR. POSTPAID. ( 1/ !/ Postage Stamps Taken. ’ i Not only does this Book eon tain fio muc Ii Information Rein live oO Disease, but very proper¬ ly gives a Complete Analysis of every thing pertaining to Cot urir ship. Marriage and “1 the Prod tiou and Hearing of Hoalihy Enmilies.togeth He.npes ami Prescriptions, Ex¬ planations of Botanical Practice, ,&c Correct use of Ordinary Herbs COMIM.KTK Index. BOOK Leonard PUB. HOUSE, 134 St.,N.* .City CACSK clyfi AND EFFECT. CHENS . *«» MONEY i .3.--- IF YOU GIVE THEM HELP. You cannot do this unless you understand thorn amt know how to cater to their requirements; and you cannot spend years and dollars learning by ex¬ perience, so you must buy the knowledge acquired by others. We oTor this to you for only 25 cents. YOU WANT THEM TO PAY THEIR OWN WAY. even if you merely keep them as a diversion. In or* der to handle Fowls judiciously, you must know something about them, To meet this want we are of selling a poetical a book giving poultry th e ex ra SSTSHOnly 25c. twenty-TVe years. J t was written by a man who put all his mind, and time, and money to maki ng; a sue cess business—and of Chicken if raising—not will profit as a pastime, by his twenty-five but as a you Chicks annually, years’ work, you can save many dollars for Tho and make your Fowls earn you. trouble in point is. that you must be able to detect tho Poultry Yard as soou as It appears, and know how to remedy it. This hook will teach you. It tells how to detect ami cure disease; to feed for eggs aud also for fattening; which fowls to save foe breeding purposes; and everything, It indeed, profitable. you should know on this subject to make Sent postpaid for twenty-five cents in stamps. Book Publishing House 134 Leonard St.. N. Y. City. TEXAS HEROES SPEAK PLAINLY. San Antonio, Tex., had writes: In 1862 I Chronic Dysentery and Periodical Con¬ stipation. Dr. M. A# Simmons Diver Medi¬ cine I have cured raised then,and Daugh¬ Miss Julia my Bell, ter, picture I send, whose on It. Some Dealers try to “j * force “Zhilin’s Regu¬ lator” on me, hut I el« ways return it. Profuse Menstruation. Flooding is always an annoying and sofflEi* _ nenstrual discharge is natural, vaginal itrisso grad ial that it is by prevented mixing with from the coagulating, secre- while ions formed. n this disease, clots arc often Vhere there i3 a tendency to costiveness, axative doses of l>r. M. A. Simmons Divor Medicine shonld be taken, and to give tono md strength to the pelvic organs Dr. Sim. nons Squaw Vino Wino should be used :ontinnousiy for weeks, to cSoet a penna sent cure. Dublin, Tex., writes: • -p Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine has saved many lives in -gs, 3 this malarial eoun mr; try. It prevents Bii ions Malarial In¬ termittent Fever It and Congestion. thoroughly cleanses a.: my system without any pain, while the “Zeinn’s “Black Regulator” Draught” and in bowels [ used caused great uneasiness ahead of them md griped. I think it as far ib noonday I s ahead of midnight . iitiated ts cansed^fy'disordered^nerTOna blood, uterine derangements, system, dis¬ placement of womb, completely excessive incapacitates menstrua ion, and often offering women for anything except snffer □g untold agony. For relief back of pain and apply hips. Joths wet with hot water to ’or permanent cure take Vino one tablespoomul Wine before Jr. Siminona Squaw and during •ach meal for three days before he monthly period, and each night during Sim¬ lie period take a dosa of Dr. at. A. mons Liver Medicine, and cure is certain. Keep Vo nr Eyes Open. Some men for taoney we learn are trying to deceive tho public, with a preparation called “Black Draught,” M. telling L. the M. people The “it’s just the is jalse. iame’tas There A. is S. none genuine statement without tho - Dame, Picture and Aatograph of Dr. M. A, iimmons. ^ Double r d|r Breech-Loader 7 —| m Guns and Rifles from $2 to 850. Re-QffllflL r , iKi , OT voivers, 70 cts, up. Knives, Razors, Seines, Tents, Sporting Goods of al! kinds. Send 3c stamps for 75 page Catalogue and V \ p> save 25 per cent. 490 W. Main St. ALEX.L. SEMPLE & CO. lOlbSViUE, Klf. Rice’sQoose * TETJE, Grease iMnen? # Is always sold under a guarantee to cure all aches and pains, rheumatism, neuralgia, sprains, bruises and burns. It is g,l$o warrant ed to euro than colds, croup, coughs e-rad la gripp# quicker Sold any by all known druggists remedy. No cure no pay. and general stores. Made only by GOOSE GREASTS LINIMENT CO., Greensboro. N, Q. SpBEBSgPfc H 'a. A packaged- flrval Rerardy letitspeak Discovered, for itself. fiend fora Postaeeoc. PRrtJ Ill Us « Ills. 0 DK. S. PEKKEY, Lliicago,