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In Your interest.
IPsMres* Mil you are In need of the Keeley Treatment.
either ol the following:
Keeley Institpi*, 1418 Madison ave
The Baltimore, Md. street. N.
Keeley Institute. 905 F,
W. Washington, D. 0.
Tbs Keeley Institute Greensboro, N. C.
Your correspondence will bo confidential.
Very Truly Yours,
i The Keeley Institute of N. C.
i
Rubber Necks.
Mrs. Church—I believe that new hat
Mrs. Pughe's has turned her head,
Church—Not nearly so much as it has
Wtfcer women's.—Up To Date.
apomng ior a jPTgnt,
"And so Miss Gillmau declined your
■offer* of marriage?"
“Yes; l can’t understand why she did
SSL”
“You can’t? My dear sir, let me
jkbtii-;s' your hand. I used to think that
no man was entirely free from vanity,
tmt at last I have found one who is."
“What do you moan?”
“You say you can’t understand why
sfie refused you, therefore it is clear
4fsat you never stand before the mirror
and look at yourself.”
Four thousand United States pension
<ms now live in foreign countries. They
«Iraw $000,000 annually.
Comfort Costs 50 Coots.
Irritating, aggravating, agonizing Tetter, Hc
ftbtna. Ringworm and nil other itching skin dis
«»W8 aro quickly cured By tho use of Tettorino.
"5?. soothing, cooling, healing. Costs 50 cents a
post paid—bringscemlort atonce. Address
J, T. 5> hup trine, Savannah, Ga.
New Illustrated Literature.
Tlsc Passenger Department of the Se.ahoard
Air Line has j sfc issu d two new illustrated
feooks one entitled “Education in the South,”
giving a full a .dcomulcte list and description
the Scho Is, Coil ges and Universities
4*ioog the Seaboard Air Line; the Seaboard .other Air en¬
titled “Winter Excursions v a and illus
Line,” in sketches wh ch appears descript, ve Winter
trated of tne numerous
Tonrist Duints rt ached via the Seaboard Air
IjlJM'L convenient feature of this
l»i.ok, An exceptionally the arrangement ursion.rates
is principal -• ex- Florida, lexas,
xkarJ routes to the show
Mexico and California Resorts which
«s»aside a ole reduction in to.al rates, espe
daily-to Southern P nes, N. C., the famous
Winter Health Resort, which was so w 11
jpati* niz d last e ison. _ , ,
Copies of these o msean b * secured hr nd
siriftsfeing f. J. Ander o », General Pas enger
Agent, Port-month, Va., enclosing five cents
stamps to cover postage.
How’* Till* T
We offer Ono Hundred Dollars Reward for
aoiv case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Bait’s Catarrh Cure. & Co., Toledo, O.
I’. .T. CHF..VEY
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che¬
ney for the last 15 year.-, and believe him per¬
fectly honorable iu all business transactions
a»d financially able to carry out any obliga
tioa Wbst& inade, by their Wholesale firm. Druggists,Toledo,
Thu ax,
Walking, Kin-nan & Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act¬
ing directly upon the blood and mucous free. sur¬
faces of the system. Testimonials sent
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Hail’s Family Pills arc the best.
f'The Rev. Mr. Rappaport, Kobolom forty-two Synagogue, years
old. Rabbi of the B’nai
In, New Haven, Conn., died it few days ago
<tl blood poisoning caused by a cut on tho
middle finger of his right hand, with a
kalfe used in slaughtering cattle.
To Cure a Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative llromo Quinine Tablets. All
J3rn&gist3 refund money it it fails to cure. 25c.
‘ Tito report oi the New Jersey State Board
el Assessors shows that the taxes assessed
sEJtis year against railroads and other cor
Derations amounted to $2,180,549.37.
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervoos
wess after first day’s use of Dr. Kline s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise frte
I>r. K. H. Kline, Lt l.. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
' Tho Slavs aro taking kindly to a Social
fctie nropaganda in Austria, whioh may
tend to further complicate matters in that
country.
Chew Star Tobacco—Tho Beat.
Smoke Sledge Cigarettes.
" Secretory Gago reported to the Senate,
fat response to a resolution, that there were
*is» supernumerary employes in his depart¬
ment.
f Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
jfeethiiiK, softens the gums, reducing inflama- bottle.
Yicia,allays pain,cures wind colic, 35c. a
* could not get along wi hout Pifio’s Cure
toe Consumption. It always cur-s.—Mr-. E. C.
Vi,.v :,T(!Needham, M is*., October 22,1891.
ofiihi and
AU other b'ood
Diseases are promptly
And Permanently Cured
By Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
If you suffer from
Any form of Blood
A Disorder, you should
A Take Hood’s and
Only Hood’s.
Ati. U.-No. 52-’ 97.
cures" Where AiLlLSE fails/ Use
Best in Cough time. Syrup. Tastes Good. CTS
Sold by druggists*
A i
can be driven in or driven out. Ayer’s Sarsa¬
parilla drives disease out of the blood. Many
medicines suppress disease — cover it but don’t
cure it. Ayer's Sarsaparilla cures all diseases
%
originating in impure blood.
••ELDER" SAM PRYOR.
He’s Been Preaching for 81 Year#, and
Shows No Signs of Stopping.
Born In the eighteenth century, sixty
years a slave, fifty years the husband
of a slave woman, thirty-four years the
husband of a free woman who was
once a slave, and elghty-one years a
preacher of the Gospel. These are
some of tho experiences which one
man, and only one man In the world,
has undergone. That man Is “Elder”
Bam Pryor, who lives In Limestone
County, Alabama, about twenty-five
miles from Huntsville.
Elder Sam, or “Uncle Sam,” as he la
affectionately called by his “white
folks,” was born in Albemarle County,
Virginia, Jan. 1, 1795. His first master
A
& ST'
jKEn iiMai
Pffi fSp91|I wm - V
“ELDER” SAM PRYOR.
vvas Capt. John II. Harris, who served
in the Revolutionary war. His young
mistress, Isabella, married Capt. Luke
Pryor, a lawyer of Athens, Ala., who
still lives at mat place, and is between
80 and 00 years of age. Sam was given
to her upon the occasion of her mar¬
riage, and thus became a Pryor.
Elder Sam lives upon the Pryor place
and is a great favorite with the fam¬
ily. lie has been preaching the Gospel
over eighty-one years, and is a Baptist
missionary. When asked how he came
to be a preacher, he said that lie re¬
ceived a call from the Uonl eighty-one
years ago the second Sunday of last
May.
“But how did you know that you
were called?”
“When God converts a man lie knows
it,” was the reply, “and when he calls
a man to preach the Gospel he knows
\tr
The old man continued: “God wants
religion dat de water can’t squench and
do fire can’t squench; jes like ef you
put down dat hat an’ hit go through de
tire an’ come out jes’ like it is—ain’t
burnt up—dat’s a hat. Dat's de way
God wants a Christian to be.”
FIRST WOMAN UP SKAGUAY.
Mrs. M. A. Hammel Broke Up Her
Home to Follow Her Husband.
Accompanied by her husband, Mrs,
M. A. Hammel of New- Whatcom,
Wash., was the first woman over the
»V
A “5T/
S'—
J
;-vs
jgajip gjp J IbIIBE
--V
iOlffii yfeslf
mi
MRS. H. A. HAMMEL.
Skaguay trail and over White pass.
The couple sold their home and all their
furniture to get money to go to tha
Klondike.
FIELDS OF ADVENTURE.
THRILUNC INCIDENTS AND DARING
DEEDS ON LAND AND SEA.
A Snake Nearly Thirty Feet Long Kills a
Valuable Performing Pony and IEadly
Injures a Man In Philadelphia—A In¬
ver's Encounter With a Fierce Shark.
A Brazilian anaconda twenty-eight
feet long made its escaps from a box
in a local dime museum iu Philadel¬
phia one day recently, and after near¬
ly killing a watohmau wrapped its
coils around a valuable pony and
crushed it to death.
The performing horse and the snake
were part of the attractions at the mu¬
seum. The pony belonged to W, C.
Re her, of New York, who placed a
valuation of $10,000 on him. The an
aconda was imported by the manage¬
ment and arrived from New York in a
box six feat long, which was thought
to be secure. The box was placed in
the corner of a curio hall. The pony
was also shipped from New York. He
was tied to a feed box in the curio
hall. Samuel Mosher is the watch¬
man iu the hall. He was in the cellar
with the other attendants engaged iu
sorting out lumber for au exhibition
platform to be constructed in the
course of the day. The manager sent
him on an errand to the curio hall. He
stayed a long while, but no notice was
taken of this until wild shrieks from
the trick pony and other sounds of
commotion iu the curio hall caused
the attendants in the cellar to drop
their lumber and hasten to the scene.
The spectacle that met them when
they reached the upper floor terrified
them for a moment. Watchman Mos¬
her was stretched on the floor uncon¬
scious, and not far away from him the
handsome trick pony Bucephalus was
wound iu tho coils of the serpent.
Blood was oozing from the pony's nos¬
trils and every vestige of life was
squeezed out of him.
Watchman Mosher was dragged to a
place of safety, aud a hasty examina¬
tion showed that he was not dead. He
was hurried to the Hahnemann
Hospital, where the physicians found
two rib.3 fractured. It is not known
whether he has any other serious in¬
juries beyond shock from fright.
At the hospital Mosher revived and
told the story of the encounter, of
which lie was the only witness. He
said on reaching the curio hall lie was
startled by finding about six feet of
the anaconda's length out on the floor.
A board became loose, and through
this the captive began slowly to work
his way to liberty. The watchman’s
first impulse was to try to force him
back, and lie started to do this alone.
The snake attacked him fiercely, and
in less time than the watchman could
tell it the great folds of the reptile
were entirely free from the box aud
out on the floor. In another instant
the watchman was writhing in them.
He was too terrified at first to give an
alarm, and when he did try, the coils
of the monster were about his chest
crushing him.
The noise whioh summoned the res
cuers was made by the pony. The
actions of the pony were a remarkable
display of auimal intelligence, He
saw the struggling watchman in the
serpent’s coils, and, with shrill neighs,
sprang to his aid, drawing tho feed
box with him. With his sharp hoofs
and his teeth he fiercely attacked the
snake, which slowly unwound its folds
from the helpless watchman, and
turned on its new assailant. It was
not long before the pony’s neighing
was stifled. The monster wound its
clasp around the brave little animal’s
body, and with methodical slowness
broke bone after bone in its ribs.
The men who rushed to tho scene
and saved the watchman’s life were
afraid to attack the boa or to go near
it except with weapons to destroy it.
The serpent hissed at them and darted
its tongue out. It was evidently pre¬
pared for another attack and to seize
a third victim. Tat McGlinehy, one
of the attendants, who is an old plains¬
man, suggested to lasso the snake’s
head. This plan was adopted aud his
head securing was firmly secured. The problem
of the rest of tho body was
less easy to solve, but tho tail was se¬
cured in some way after it uncoiled
from the pony’s body, and the snake
was dragged to an iron cage with a
heavy screen and securely imprisoned.
This pony slayer is nearly thirty feet
long.
A Shark Cripples a Diver.
Andrew Cameron, a deep sea diver,
formerly employed by the English
Government, was a passenger on the
steamer Yucatan which arrived in
New York from Havana and Yera
Cruz.
Cameron was sent to Yera Cruz
several months ago by Pearson & Co.,
an iimgusa firm of dock builders who
had a contract to build a bulkhead in
Vera Cruz harbor. While making a
submarine examination he had an ad
venture eighty feet below the surface
of the water with a ten-foot man-eating
shark, as a result of which he will be
a cripple for life, beingpartly paralyzed
iu liis right leg.
“I arrived in Yera Cruz,” he said,
•‘and went to work immediately. Be
fore making my first descent I asked
some Mexican fishermen if there were
any sharks in the harbor and was told
there were a few small ones, but that
they were not man-eaters. No one
had ever heard of any deep sea sharks
coming into the harbor.
“Satisfied with this information I
began my work of diving regularly
every day and had been working for
about six weeks carefully, examining
the work on the bulkheads. During
that time I saw a few small sharks
which I frightened away by striking
my hammer against the columns.
“I made a dive October 10, and had
been working about an hour at a depth
of about eighty feet when I saw a dark
shadow over my helmet. Surely, I
thought, that cannot be the shadow of
my boat at this depth? Then I saw
the object move, and saw I was within
two feet of a large, man-eating shark.
I reached for my knife, which has a
blade eighteen inches long, and as the
shark swam over me, almost touching
my helmet, I stabbed him in the
throat, cutting a deep gash.
‘ ‘For a moment tho big fish remained
perfectly still, as if stunned: then he
began to lash furiously and the water
became crimson with his blood. I
hugged the piles of the bulkhead as
closely a3 I could to get away from the
fish. I could not move, owing to the
heavy weight attached to my shoes.
The shark swam straight for me and
rammed me, head on, in the right leg.
Luckily it was a glancing blow, and
although the shock tore away the
heavy ‘incelsioa’ cloth of which my
diving costume was made, and almost
wrenohed my leg off, there were no
bones broken.
“The shark turned on his back and
again came at me with wide-open
mouth. I managed to move aside and
stabbed him, and he moved rapidly to
the surface.
“I had signaled to my attendant on
the boat to ba pulled up, but the at¬
tendants afterward told me they were
busily engaged at the time in adjust¬
ing the apparatus and did not notice
my signal. I probably owe my life to
that fact, for if while lighting the
shark I had been pulled away from
my position I would surely havo lost
my legs.
“The occupants of the boat saw tho
shark come to the surface dead, and
immediately pulled me up. That
saved my life, for I was too weak to
send a signal and my clothes were full
of water, which came through the rent
made bv 3 the shark ‘ ' T am now ° "oin" °
to , England „ for an operation. , . ,,
Cameron claims to holds tne world s
record for deep-sea diviug,
gone 200 feet below the surface at
Loch Craig, in Scotland, on April 16,
to rescue an engineer and fireman
Who were drowned in an accident
similar to the recent one on the Now
Y„k Central at Omaone.
A Train’s Race With a Waterspout.
Tuesday afternoon there was a race
run between a passenger train on the
Inter-oceanic and a waterspout. Tho
race was declared a draw, as the train
escaped from the immediate effects of
the waterspout, which burst against
the crest of a mountain, but the im
mease volume of water poured down
the mountain side, along the roadbed,
and finally caught up with the train
and inundated it so that the passen
gers had to be taken off in handcars.
T« of rn. uoiqu. T
are highly intei estmg. It ^as the
daily passenger tram from Puebla to
this city and a large number of pas¬
sengers were aboard, About 4.30
o’clock the sky became suddenly cov¬
ered with masses of black clouds. Au
inky waterspout cnlebra, as it is called
by reason of its resemblance to a
wtithing serpent, hung from, the
heavens and advanced rapidly . in the
track of the moving train. There was
great excitement among the passen
gers. The people in the third-class
coach, who had the best view of the
phenomenon, went down on their
knees in prayers for deliverance.
One lauy had a nervous attack and
fainted. When the engineer learned
of ike panic aboard his train he de¬
cided to show the cnlebra his heels.
Then began the prettiest race on rec¬
ord, -with the lives of a load of passen¬
gers as the stakes. Up grade, down
grade, around sharp curves, across
bridges and over the levels flew that
passenger train, with the waterspout
just behind and gaining just a little.
The train entered a canyon, turned
a curve, and at the same moment tho
chasing culebra came to grief high up
the mountain side. The water poured
down the slope in raging torrents,
and as the train emerged from the
other side of the gorge a vast sheet of
water, bearing trees, rocks and all
kinds of debris on its bosom, threat¬
ened to engulf it. Wider the engineer
threw the throttle, endeavoring to es¬
cape this new danger, and all would
have been safe, but another sharp
curve intervened and the engine
jumped the track. The engineer saw
the danger and reversed the lever and
appind the brakes The engine
rolled down the embankment, but the
rest of the train, including the tender,
remained on the track.
The next moment the mass of water
struck the now stationary train and
flooded it to the level of the platforms.
The passengers aud crew were help¬
less to do more than look out to see
what had become of the engineer and
fireman, supposing them killed. But
they both scrambled, or rather swam,
out of the window of the overturned
cab and clambered back on the train.
This happened in the vicinity of
.San Antonio Capulalpam, State of
Tlaxcala. A relief train was dispatched
to a point as noav as it could get, and
the passengers and crew of the ship¬
wrecked train were transported in
hand cars and brought on to Mexico,
arriving here only four and one-han
hours late, and with an experience
which none of them will ever live lonr
enough to forget, and which, had it
not been for the presence of mind of a
nervy engineer, none of them would,
in all probability, have lived fea re¬
member.—Mexican Herald.
Peculiar Device Asainst Fire. ^
The Theater Fraucais at. Paris has
a peculiar device to insure the great¬
est possible safety for the audience.
Not only can the scene be separated
from tbe audience by a hermetically
closing steel curtain, but the roof of
the scene can bo uncovered at a mo¬
ment’s notice, so that a draught of «*/>r
is produced, which carries away the
smoke and noxious gases produced in
the fire. These, it is said, constit ute),
the grestest danger to the audieiice (
often rendering escape, quite impossv
ble. It is on the scene that the fir«
usually breaks out v —~------__, v
_
No. 208.
This quar-
1 I ter-sawid
oak writing pol¬
desk is
W ished like a
piano. It
has a 9-inch
beveled
piste and glass
1”, in top a
L below. deep drawer Ar¬
■i
ts, French to tic legs;
Bf alsoflnis-bed
! In mahogany.
$3.95
is our spec¬
ial price for
this $10 desk.
We (Mailorders will mail filled promptly.) free of all
charges, 11; anyone, Special Cata¬
oar new pace
logue, containing Stoves Fiiriiiture. Draperies, Mirrors,
Lamps, Ueddmsr, Crockery, Baby
Pictures, Refrigerators,
< arriag'S. etc. T is 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
satnp'es aro wanted, mail us 8c. In
s amps. There is no reason why you
should pav your local dealer 60 per
cent, profit when you can buy from
the mill. Drop a lino now to tho
nioney-savo s.
JULIUS HINES & SON,
Baltimore, Md.
Please mention this paper.
A Blessing in Disguise.
The Montgomery Advertiser says:
“The Selma Times, usually very cheer¬
ful, gets blue and says that ‘with 5-cent
cotton and dollar wheat staring us in
tho face the vear 1898 does not look
hopeful to the South.’
“Of course, the situation is going to
work some hardships, but the bulk of
them will coma from the lack of lioine
raised food supplies rather than the
low price of cotton. Those farmers who
have ralsed P ,ent Y of brea<1 alltl meat
are not lying awake nights worrying
over 5-cent cotton or ways of getting
a i 0U g next year,
“Looking at the situation from what
we believe the true standpoint, the low
price of cotton and the liigh_ price of
bread constitue a most hopeful outlook
for this section The disadvantages
and discomforts of the present aro the
SSWSffi&'S^SS
going to make the mistake next year
they have just made. They are not
going to plant the earth in cotton on
the hazardous speculation of making a
crop, getting a fine price and using
14 to my bread and meat, wx i. they
Hving°at\ome and have^ome cotton as
a sllrp i us crol ,
“if cotton would stay at 5 cents for
five years in succession it would be the
greatest blessing conceiva I to the
South. It would educate our people
on t °f their bad habits of all cotton
a ?‘ l mabe the farmers money
£»* «• hero, The
f u ^ It is a blessing- in di guise.”
A Beautiful Sight.
A Detroit philosopher says that ab¬
solute confidence and trust between
man and wife is the most beautiful
tbing in the world to observe, and then
lle goes on t0 state that the most per
f ect illustration of it can be had by
watching the expression on the faces
of a m< ., n an( i bis better half when she
arr j ves a t the depot from her summer
trip purposely one day earlier than she
telegraphed she would arrive, and
Q n ,i s him there watching to see if she
came in.
Child Sent by Post.
A novel parcel for delivery by express
post was recently handed in at a Bir¬
mingham postoffice: A workingman,
who had been out of town w’itli his
3-year-oUl child, arrived at Birmingham
in time to reach his place of business,
but not in sufficient time to take his
child home. He therefore walked into
the nearest postoffice aud tendered the
youngster as an express parcel. The
authorities, under the rule regulating
the delivery of live animals, accepted
the child and delivered it at a charge of
ninepence.—St. James’ Gazette,
COLD-BREAKERS WILL
CURE
YOUR
COLD
In $ to 13 hours. 25G. ft BOX at Druggists or
THE COLD-BREAKER (fO.,
AIKEN, SOUTH CAROLINA.
r ° r @.9_____ ____
Br83C!l-L0ad8r Re-QrtfKigS
Guns and Rifles from 82 io $50.
voters, 70 cts, up.. Knives, Razors,^
save 25 per cent. 490 W. Main Si.
ALEX. L. SEMPLE & CO. lOBISViUE, gV.vgl
It Looks “Queer."
Smith—Do you know that our Gov
trnment encourages counterfeiting?
Jones—Why, of course not. What do
you mean?
Smith—Well, anyway, it employs a
lot of Congressman to pass bad bills.
J c=> T ! « ca
con , Tobacco and Sniiff'^ippl'UT Habit*
pernnin'utly cured by HAR “ LESS HOME
TB -,atL Vr SVVr^ b
D Bulldln*, l>H. Chicago. Hi. .
Room 4 Isabella
T. JOSEPH’S LIVER RE6ULAT0F
I THE Drandsta BEST and ON Merchants. THE MARKET. Mut’d by
I.- All GBR-iTLE CO- Cliatlanooxa, Tenn.
A Gm»t Rotnoriy riIficov«>r«d. Seud for a FREE
~ S N. U. No. 52.-97."
B rAlbulw ATE MTQ Inventors’ Guide free. EDGAR TATE
& CO. Patent Solicicors.245B'way l N. i'.
i
a
Want to learn all about a Horse? How to pick out a good one? Know
imperfections and so guard against fraud? Detect disease and effect a cure
when same is possible? Tell the age by the teeth? What to call the
parte of the animal? How to shoe a Horae properly? All this and off
valuable information can be obtained by reading our 100-PAGE ILLAS
TKAl’ED HORSE BOOK, which we will forward, postpaid, on receipt of
only 25 Cents in Stamps.
Book Publishing House, ;
134 Leonard Street, « - New Yoris Pit 4
EVERY MAN
HIS OWN
DOCTOR!
for the Household, teaching u it
doe* the ea&ily-dUiiaguisned
Symptom* the e; different Dlaease*,
Caiue* and Mean* of Pre¬
Simplest venting «uch Disease*, and the i
Remedies which will al¬
leviate or cure.
598 Pages, Profusely Illustrated.
The Book is written in plain
from every-day English, and is free
the technical terms which
render most Doctor Books so
valueless to the generality of '>Li
readers. Till* Book is in¬
tended to be ol service in : \
the Family, nd Is bo worded
as to t>e readily understood by all .1
ONLY «tl ots. POSTPAID.
Postage Stamps Taken. I 1 1
'
Not only does this Book con¬ w
tain *o much Information Bela- /
tire uO Disease, but very proper- <£■«£:
Iy give* a Complete Analysis of ££•
everything ship, pertaining to Court¬
tion Marriage aud the Produc¬
and Rearing of Healthy ’i '-r—
Pamllica.togeth RejJpes with Valuable 1
and Prescriptions, Ex¬
planations of Botanical Practice,
Correct use of Ordinary Herba.&o
Complktk Index. w
BOOK PUB. HOUSE, £
134 _
Leonard Sit., N. Y. City CAT7SB
I
sMfSJk sfl 5
IS V- L f f
AND lUmfiOT.
BS On
\ 1 k&J
the dread of the cotton grower,
can be prevented. Trials at
Experiment Stations and the
experience of leading growers
prove positively that
II
is the only remedy.
We will be glad to send, free of charge,
interesting and useful pamphlets which treat
of the matter in detail.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St.. New York.'
ALABAMA TO THE FRONT.
Auuiston, Ala., writes*
gp a Hare been using Dr. BI.
t A.SimmcnsLiverMedi
Kff» eino in It, has my family 12
W^.M years. cured mo
and many others of XndU
W ’ swstion and Dyspepsia.
_ Jf I think there is quite a
"9*" difference in tho strength
i ai|k of it, and •‘Zeilin’s’’ and
‘'Black Draught,’’ Dr. M.
.“mifflll Iggggsi^ SIA. s. L. M. being much
stronger.
During the period Pregnancy. of the
tal state aud physical pregnancy condition of men¬ the
mother facnlties inevitably and essential determine qualities the of important her off¬
spring. If she ia physically wiilbringno well-developed
and suffering; healthy,pregnancy childbirth will he burden and
or comparatively painless, and heroffspi easy login
hcrit robust health and a happy disposition.
But there are very few women who are not
sick and diseased in some way, and who
suffer from various sympathetic disturb¬
ances during pregnancy. and. vomiting Tho and morning
sickness, nausea suppressed other
disturbances can be by using
Dr. Simmons Squaw Vine Wine, which
settles the stomach and gives tone to the
system. The bowels should be regulated
With Dr. hi. A. Simmons Liver Modiolus’.
(g- 5? Jenifer, Ala., writes:
For Indigestion and
xM Uvev Medicine 25
e$f : year*. It cured it J.
SfyfSjlS %*■''•$§ Clark of Cramps in
1 W Stomach, and did
, :,i more far Mrs. M. L.
Clark in Change o*-* P.
Life than the doctors
J •* had I think done it in is four far years. Supe
.... V rior to’ ‘Black Draught’*
rrn or “Zcilin’skegulator.”
Melancholy. aistartenca
Where there exists nervons there frequently
of the sexual organs, is
great pain felt during menstruation; ova*
rian irritation and a so-called “irritable or
Bcnsicive uterus, giving rise to nanifoia
nervonsnnd hysterical symptoms, i ho but
ferer is agitated about trifles and worried
by tho fear that everything will go wrong.
Tho condition is a serious one as it may end
in persistent hypochondria, followed by in*
6 *Quidb be obtained b 7 stirnn
relief may with.Dr. M. A.
Bimmons iating tho digestive Liver Medicine, organs and Ur. llijn
mona Squaw Tine Wine w ill regulate tho
menstrual function by toning op tho tissues
of the nterns. /
s% ' T^TJ Qeose Grease Lini m
Is lways sold under a guarantee Ui> cure all
aclies and pains, rheumatism, neuraigr?JK warratjft
bruises and burns. It Is also
to cm than e colds, croup, known coughs remedy. and No grippe,
any c*#re T
no paj r . Sold by all by draggisfcs and eenf.rai
Made only • OOSIC «IiJfi4SE
LLNIMh NT CO., Gheensboji^, N. C.
OSBORNE'S yy
Soudihedd hQ
Kiki* iigusta- SUort (Ja. time. Aofual Cheap businea-i. boaid. Send Not**?< jf
for k!Sir„iir<raf>