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HBhisli the Navy?
|pieutenant IW.’tiou of a bill restoring
|Kiry general invites
into the discrimina -
Brmfuie j|||®ongress against seems the so persist- If
navy. a
bant general, why not a vice ad
. and if, as reported, this great
ll honor is to be held open for the
| most distinguished in Iaad oper
' why should an equal incentive
b given the sea officers entrusted
me fortunes of the fleet ?
When One Faints.
HRemember Bom that fainting proceeds
a disturbance of the circulation,
By means oi which the blood is drawn
suddenly from the head. The first
thing ! to do is to lower the fainting
person to the floor In such a position
that the head is lower than the rest
of the body. . Loosen the clothing
across the chest and at the throat.
Bathe the face and temples with cold
water in which a little cologne water
or aromatic vinegar has been used, and
use smelling salts. It is a serious mis¬
take to prop up the head with pillows
or administer alcoholic stimulants.—
The Bouquet.
Origin of the Word “Bachelor.”
Few words have a more curious defi¬
nition than “bachelor.” Originally it
meant students who had taken their
degrees. Successful students were
crowned with laurel leaves, the Latin If
word for which is “baecalaureus.
These students were not allowed to
marry, for fear the duties of husband
and father should interfere with ibeir
literary pursuits. So finally “bacca¬
laureate,” or “bachelor,” got its pres¬
ent significance.
Don’t Tobacco Sjpt and Smoko Yonr 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. AU druggists, 50c or $1. Cure guaran¬
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Ca, Chicago or New York,
A little spirits of camphor put in the water
will prevent the face from looking greasy iu
hot weather- So. 27.
I Have
No Stomach
Said a jolly man of 40, of almost alder
manic rotundity, '“since taking Hood’s
Sarsaparilla.” What he meant was that
this grand digestive tonic had so com¬
pletely cured all distress and disagreeable
dyspeptic symptoms that he lived, ate
and slept in comfort. You may be put into
this delightful condition if you will take
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
America’s Greatest Medicine.
DYSPEPSIA
“ For six years I was a victim of dys¬
pepsia in its worst form. 1 could eat nothing
mU k-tqfe-t, 1 and at times my stomach would
not retain and digest even that. Last March I
began taking •CASCARETS and since then I I
have steadily improved, until I am as well as
ever was in my life.”
David H. Mlkphv. Newark. O.
—
MS Jp CATHARTIC ^
TRADE MAR it REOISTCRED
Potent. Taste Good. Do
eaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c, 50c.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ■ • •
S(crllofC'K«mc4y Company, Chicago, Montreal, Sew York. 311
M0-T0-SA0
CIN
BRISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, &c,,
FOR ANY MAKE OF GIN.
ENGINES, BOILERS AND PRESSES
And Repairs for same. Shafting, Pulleys,
Belting. Injectors, Pipes, Valves and Fittings.
LOMBARD IRON WORKS & SUPPLE CO,
AUGUSTA, GA.
o a PATS
E M THE
s FRAYT
BEST SCALES- LEAST MONEY
JONES OF BINGHAMTON N. Y.
EDUCATIONAL.
AllL'iista. 6a. Actual busin.Bs, No text
books. Short time. Cheap board Bond for cxtuloiro^
ftHARLOTTE UOLLEGE, COMMERCIAL *
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
No Vacations—volitions Guaranteed—Catalogue for pocket calculator. Free
Send 25 cents in stamps
TRINITY GOLLEGE
I Offers full courses in English Language and Lit
-erature, Ancient and Modern Languages, History*
Sociology, Mathematics, admitted Philosophy, all Bible. Law and
Commerce. Women to courses of study.
The largest endowed Institution of learning in the
State. $ _ 10.00
Board from Tuition SO.50 S5O.00 to Y per month
a ear.
Next session opens September?. 1898. For Catalogue
address JOHN C. KILGO. Durham. IV. i\
DAVIDSON COLLEGE I
DAVIDSON, N, C.
SIXTY SECOND YEAR BEGINS SEFT. 8, 1898.
Eleren Professors aud Instructors.
Three Charges for Degrees.
Ample Cabinets and Laboratories.
Location Healthful and Beautiful.
Gymnasium Complete.
„ Teems Reasonable.
SEX® FOB A C.VT.1LCGH:.
J. B, SHEARER ! * - PRESIDENT
AGRICULTURAL TOPICS
Preventing Smut in Oats.
The 1897 experiments iu preventing
smut conducted by the New York ex¬
periment station at Geneva, showed
that sprinkling the seed with a one
per cent. Solution of either lysol or
formalin entirely prevented the smut.
When the seed was sprinkled sulphide with a
solution of potassium smut appeared. a very
small percentage of
In some tests in soaking the seed it
was found that 3-10 of one per cent.
' solution of lysol prevented smut when
the seed was soaked one hour, and
2-10 of one per cent, solution of forma¬
lin one hour prevented any smut. the
None of the treatments injured
seed in the least,—American itgricul
turist.
Tin Can Irrigation in Hardens.
Owing to the scalding of the plants
or the baking of the ground, surface
application of water during the hot,
dry season is often injurious rather
than beneficial. By thoroughly sat¬
urating the subsoil, leaving the dry
surface to act as a mulch, the plants
get the full benefit of all water ap¬
plied, without harm. This can be
done by digging a miniature reservoir
a foot or so from the plant hill, and
with a long, straight rod opening an
underground passage to the roots of
the plant. A much better plan, how¬
ever, is to take old tin cans that can
be picked up in any quantity in all
rubbish piles or dumping grounds,
and perforating their sides near the
bottom in a number of places, set one
in the ground a few inches from the
hill to be watered. Fill with water
and the roots of the plant will do the
rest. Often the rootlets enter
through the perforations and form a
mat in the bottom of the cans. This
plan is especially adapted to vines of
all kinds.—J. L. Irwin, in New Eng¬
land Homestead.
Permanent Pasture Fields.
We prefer permanent pasture fields
for various reasons. We do not pas¬
ture our cultivated grounds at any
time. Tlie cattle become attached to
these habitual pasturages and never
attempt to break out. These contin¬
ual pasture fields do not have to be
renewed, as their blue grass is indi¬
genous to the soil ami renews its
wasted rootlets spontaneously, aud
the grass is so nearly a perfect ration
that but little grain is necessary to
keep a herd of cows in heavy flow of
milk. Last spring several cows on
such pasture made good tests, rang¬
ing from fourteen pounds to sixteen
pounds eight and one-half ounces of
butter in seven days. Much of this
output was due to the care and feed
of the tyinter before, a combination of
a careful German—clover hay, well
kept stover, and a carefully balanced
ration of grain fed regularly. Grass
is naturally the food of the cow, and,
of course, the nearer she can be kept
to it the year i;dund the better she
seems to do-for the feed and care ex¬
pended on her.—The Epitomist.
Clay Floor For Dairy Cows.
Where one uses the ordinary stan¬
chion for fastening dairy cows we
doubt whether the clay floor can be
improved upon. A trough behind the
cows is provided for the excrement.
On the hard, level clay floor that
reaches from stanchion to gutter or
trough, a wide plank is placed par¬
allel to the trough, and close up to it,
to csjteh what manurial matter fails to
reach the trough. This is done as a
protection to the clay, for the useful¬
ness, perfection and durability of a
clay floor depends upon its being kept
dry. In making the floor, the moist
clay should he well pounded in order
to harden and solidify it, aud the floor
should he permitted to thoroughly dry
before it is put to use, and kept dry.
To no class oi live stock does any
kind of floor seem so acceptable
as that of earth—nature’s floor;
and if the earth is of the right kind
and treated in the right way in making
the floor, it will usually prove the best
floor of any and the least costly.
Cement and plank floors prove objec¬
tionable in many respects to both
stock and stock owners.—Edwin Mont¬
gomery.
Potatoes on Mucky Soil.
Mucky soil, because it is usually
dark colored, is always thought to be
rich. This may or may not be the
fact, according to what the vegetable
mould is that makes the muck. It is
more often due to an excess of water,
which has chilled the soil aud has
prevented the mould from decaying
still farther and becoming carbonic
acid gas and ash. So, because the
soil is black and mucky, it is not cer¬
tain that it is good for potatoes. Most
mucky soils need potash to enable
them to grow the best potatoes. ■ Veg¬
etable matter in the soil may make a
great growth of stalks aud leaves, and
if the leaves be kept uninjured, this
will make a large growth of potatoes,
and of good quality also, But if some
potash is added to this muck it will
cause it to decay quicker and furnish
still more plant food. The potatoes
ou mucky laud have one advantage, iu
that the soil does not dry out so
quickly as if it were sand or gravel.
And as the vines are apt to be strong¬
er, the attacks of the potato beetle
are less injurious. It is all impor¬
tant, since the potato beetle has to be
fought, that the vines be made to
grow as fast as possible. The beetle
is wise enough to choose the poorest
and thinnest vines to lay her eggs ou,
while a strong, vigorous vine beside,
it may not' receive any of her eggs.
In a wet time the stronger potato
vines hold the moisture longer, aud
the rain drowns out and destroys
many of the eggs.—Boston Cultivator.
Miss Margaret Long, a “daughter
of the Navy,” has recently matricu¬
lated in the senior class of the medical
department ,pf the Johns Hopkins
University. She expects ultimately
to practice medicine in Boston
CLIMATE OF MANILA. (
What Untie Sam’s Troops Must Stand in
That Torrid Region.
"1 am womiering in these days, when
Uncle Sam is about sending troops
from the Pacific coast to the Philip¬
pines, what the American boys will
think of the climate oyer there. With
the possible exception of some parts
Of interior India and Arabia, I doubt
if there is any hotter climate than that
of Manila. The islands reach within
four degrees of the equator. The tem¬
perature is not so very high, but the
humidity is. The most extreme care
must constantly be exercised to keep
one's physical condition properly toned
all summer long. The hottest days in
the year are in May and June. For¬
tunately a breeze usually springs up in
the early evening, and that tempers
the atmosphere so that one can get
some sleep if he is properly fixed for
it, when midnight comes. The mean
temperature at the Philippines is 7i!
degrees. In November the weather
cools and then for weeks at a time
along the seacoasts it is about as near
perfection as anyone can imagine. Tc
call the months of December, January
and February there winter is a mock¬
ery. For seven months in the year,
from April to October, no one but the
poorest laborer goes out of doors, un¬
less compelled to do so, between 8 in
the morning and 4 in the afternoon.
Iu Manila the whole population rises
at -1 and 5 a. m. and gets the work oi
the day out of the way before 8 o’clock.
The houses are opened, servants clean
up, ^merchants do their business and
i he school children are busy with their
eachers. Even the civil and military
officers attend to most of their duties
between 4 and Sim. Then when old
Sol begins to shoot his darts down
upon the country more perpendicular¬
ly the whole population go into their
house of stand and wood with heavy
roofs of tiles and a sort of asphaltum
found in that country, and stay there
until sundown. It is a land of siestas.
Every one who can sleeps there all
day long, and slumber is there reduced
to a science. Hammocks abound and
couches of bamboo are in every home,
hotel, club, and leafing place. The ser¬
vants are trained to keep their masters
and mistresses comfortable by bringing
them iced drinks or a tray of smoking
material whenever they awaken after
it nap. All "buildings are erected with
the idea of keeping the heat out as
much as possible. Business is sus¬
pended all day long; even, the men at
the wharves quit work for six or seven
hours when the sun is highest
“At sundown Manila wakes up.
There is an opening of the heavy hoard
window blinds and an exodus of peo¬
ple from their homes. Even the trees
and shrubbery shake off their jhw.-i
ness. The merchants open their heavy
store doors, and the streets suddenly
start to life. The principal meal of the
day is served at about (5 o’clock, and’
with the rich Spanish it is a ceremo¬
nious affair. Thereafter the whole
population goes out for a walk. Eifen
ing calls are made upon friends And
the plazas are at their gayest. The
cock fights take place in the evening;
the old theatre is always crowded at
night—especia lly Sund ay nights.”
“My friend,” said the kindly old gen¬
tleman who likes to make acquaint¬
ances while traveling, “you should fol¬
low ray example. I strive to learn
something new every day.” “No,” was
the answer of the quiet young man;
“that may do in your line of business;
but if you were doing a vaudeville turn
with me, you’d realize that audiences
seem disappointed if they don’t get
what they have been taught to expect.”
—Washington Star.
BELIEF FROM PAIN*
Women Everywhere Express their
Gratitude to Mrs. Pinkham.
firs. T. A. WALDEN, Cibson, Gs., writes:
“Dear Mrs. Pinkham: —Before tak¬
ing’ your medicine, life was a burden
to me. I never saw a well day. At
my monthly period I suffered untold
misery, and a great deal of the time I
was troubled with a severe pain in my
side. Before finishing the first bottle
of your Vegetable Compound I could
tell it was doing me good. I continued
its use, also used the Liver Bills and
Sanative Wash, and have been greatly
helped. I would like to have you use
my letter for the benefit of others.”
nrs. FLORENCE A. WOLFE, 515 Hulberry
St., Lancaster, Ohio, writes:
“ Dear Mrs. Pinkham: —For two
years I was troubled with what the
local physicians told me was inflamma¬
tion of the womb. Every month I suf¬
fered terribly. I had taken enough
medicine from the doctors to cure any¬
one, but obtained relief for a short
time only. At last I concluded to write
to you in regard to my case, aud can
say that by following your advice I am
now pefectly well.”
Hrs. W. R. BATES, riansfield, La., writs,;
“ Before writing to you I suffered
dreadfully from painful menstrua¬
tion, leucorrhoea and sore feeling in
the lower part of the bowels. Now my
friends want to know what makes me
look so well. I do not hesitate one min¬
ute in telling them what has brought
about this great change. I cannot
praise Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound enough. It is the grea test
remedy of the age.”
DR. MOFFETT’S Teetmxa (TEETHING
POWDERS) legitimate is not a Patent Medicine hut a
Physicians remedy who that used many distinguished
havo and seen its good
result, recommend, and why will you delay
giving teething it when it will savo the life of your
babe? Teethina acts promptly in
Aiding restoring Digestion, baby to Regulating health and the strength, Dowels and and
making teething easy.
Mrs. Winslow’s Spothing Syrup for children
te thing, softens p»in,cures the gums, reducing infiama’
loo, allays wind code. 25c. a bottle’
I am entirely cured of hemorrhage ot Hunts
by Pi? o’a Cure Bethany, for Consumption.—L Mo., January 5,133t. ouisa
Lixoaman,
THE BUSY S9UTI*
War Has Not Injured Business In the
Atlantic and Gulf States.
Southern Industrially and commeroialy is the
section of the country ex¬
tremely busy, soys the Southern Pro¬
gress for July. When war with Spain
was first declared and it was known
'that the centre of operation would be
in Cuban waters there was some ner¬
vousness felt by Southern business
men lest one of its effects should be a
stagnation of trade. But this has pass¬
ed off. Manufacturing establishments
there, especially in iron and cottons,
have an abundance of orders and are
working overtime to good 'advantage.
There is also an active demand for
coal. Money is being freely circulated,
with consequent benefit to both whole¬
sale and retail stores. The presence of
the United States troops, moreover,
tends to create a large consumption of
food supplies, some of which arc se¬
cured from Southern merchants, be¬
sides the expenditure of money in other
directions by those who are waiting
orders to move to the front. Farmers
are also sharing in the general pros¬
perity of the South. The high prices
of grain and provisions are accom¬
panied by better values for other farm
products. Fresh vegetables are worth
considerably more money now than a
year ago, and Southern farmors are
fortunate in having diversified their
crops recently, undertaking the cul¬
ture of such fruits and vegetables as
were formerly supplied to our markets
only from the more northern section
of the country. The activity at the
industrial centres also tends to in¬
crease the demand for farm products,
so that one way and another there is
immediate reason for congratulations
to the busy South.
A Guardsman’s Trouble.
— ... **>:-V.,tV journal. -
From the Detroit (Mich.)
The promptness with which the National
Guard of the different states responded to
President McKinley’s call for troops at the
beginning of the war with Spain made the
whole country proud of its citizen soldiers.
In Detroit there are few guardsmen more
popular and efficient
than Max E. Davies,
first sergeant of Co. IS.
He has been a resi¬ K a
dent of Detroit for the ’ m
past six years, and his
home is at 416 Third
Avenue. For four years
the he was well connected known whole- with /j T
sale drug house of Far- ‘
rand, Williams & Clark, »»
in the capacity of book¬
keeper.
“I have charged up
many thousaud orders
for Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for Palo People,” II ( ^
said Mr. Davies, “but The First _y. Sergeant.
never knew their worth
until I used them for the cure of chronic
dyspepsia. For two years I suffered aud
doctored for that aggravating trouble but
could only be helped temporarily.
“I think dyspepsia is one of the most
stubborn of ailments, and there is scarcely
a clerk or office man but what is more or
less a victim. Some days I could eat any¬
thing, while at other times I would be starv¬
ing. Those distressed pains would force
me to quit work.
“I tried the hot-water treatment thor¬
oughly, have but it did not affect my case. I
tried many advertised remedies but
they would help only for a time. A friend
of mine recommended Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for Tate People, but I did not think
much of them.
“I finally was induced to try the pills and
commenced using them. After taking a
few doses I found much relief. I do not
remember how many boxes of the pills I
used, but I used them until the old trouble
Stopped. I know they will cure dyspepsia
Of the worst form and I am pleased to re
iommend them.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by all
Jeaters, or will be sent post paid on receipt
If price, 50 cents a box or six boxes for
£2.50, by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medioine
Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
At sea level an object 100 feet high is visi¬
ble a fit Wo over thirteen miles. If 500 feet
it is visible nearly thirty miles.
Beauty Is Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar¬
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, all by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving im¬
purities from the body. Begin blackheads, to-day to
banish and pimples, sickly bilious boils, complexion blotches, taking
that by
Cascarets,—beauty gists, satisfaction guaranteed, for ten cents. All 50c. drug¬
10c, 25c,
The odor of onions may be removed by
eating a sprig of parsley.
No-To-Btc for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 50c, SI. All druggists.
A'strong solution of borax, applied twice a
day will cure ringworms.
, Blood Poison.
First, Second or Third Stages. B, Cured to stay
cured—no relapse—by using B. B. All drug¬
gists. Large bottle $1.00. Cures Old Running
Sores, Mucous Patches,-Copper Colored Spots,
Pimples, Ulcers aud Painful Swellings. An old
vrell-tried remedy. Send for book. Blood
Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga.
A leading physician sav3 that pepper is
deadly poison to the system.
Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation refund forever.
10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists money.
The proportion of blind people in the
world is 800 to every 1,000,000, or one in
1,250.
After a Chinese Wedding.
On the day following a Chinese wed¬
ding, at least in certain provinces, the
bride’s youngest brother goes to in¬
quire after her and to take a present
from her mother of a bottle of hair
oil. This is a custom so ancient that
no ones knows the origin thereof. No
further communications take place be¬
tween the bride and her family for
three months, when her mother sends
a sedan chair and an invitation to visit
her. If there has been neither a birth
nor a death in her husband’s or in her
mother’s house for 100 days she goes
and makes a short stay at her old
home. This visit over, she cannot see
her mother again until after her first
child is born, and not then should the
child be a girl. Even then if there
has been a death in either family the
visit cannot be made, and there have
been many instances where a mother
and daughter living very near each
other have not met for years.—Boston
Post.
-r
CUT-PRICE CARPET SAIL S
Owing- to an 1
overproduction '
of Carpets, we
have made great;
reductions for
a short time
only. &
Our Carpet Catalogue and Special Kgs
uppleiuent, and all both in pertaining hand-painted
(9§| colors, matter to ifis
this extraordinary sale, will be mailed
any one free. This is an opportunity
rig; lag not to this bo sale, neglected. Dur- Car
we sew «
) K& pets free, furnish wadded
m - lining free and pay freight, H y [\Pi
on all orders of 19 & over.
ICO-puge Cata¬ o
everything logue of Furniture and
necessary for IT
housefurnishing mailed—it’s is now Y,
m ready to be
free. r -
fe: M buysamade-to-yourmeas- S7.45
uroAll-Wool CheviotSult,
t&. oxpressage prepaid to
your station. Catalogue
and samples free. Ad¬
dress (exactly as below).
JULIUS HINES l SON, g
m Depi. 310 BALTIMORE, MID. fBl;
The Spanish Pretender’s Opportunity.
It is an interesting bit of history
that Don Carlos, the Spanish pretend¬
er, might have been King of Spain if
be had been willing to abate his claim
to rule as an absolute monarch. The
present Prime Minister, Sagasta, went
to him in 1SG8 and offered him the
crown on the condition that he would
sign a constitution and be a limited
monarch. He was then hut nineteen
years of age, but he replied Iijse a true
Bourbon: “I will sign nothing. f When
I come to my thronl will rule my
land as I and the ministers I choose
see fit.” He still holds the same rigid
notions of what true kingship is. For
that reason he is likely to die un¬
crowned.—Baltimore Sun.
To Cure a Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 2oc.
Italy produces annually 70,000,000 gallons
of olive oil, the market value of which is
about $120,000,000.
Lyon*Co’s “Pick Leaf” Smoking Tobacco
Is tho best for Pipe and hand-made Cigarette
smoking^ Rich, ripe, mellow, fragrant. Beats
A drop of oil of cloves on a piece of cot¬
ton applied to the tooth will cure tooth¬
ache.
E. A. Rood, Toledo, Ohio, says: “Hall’s Ca¬
tarrh Cure cured my wife of catarrh fifteen
years ago and she has had no return of it. It's
a sure cure.” Sold by Druggists, 75.
Careful measurements prove that the
average curvature of the earth is 6.99
inches to the statute mile.
Fite permanently first day’s cured. of No Dr. fits Kline’s or nervous¬ Groat
ness al ter use
Nerve P.estorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free
Dh. it, H. Kline, Ltd., Wl Arch St., Phila,-Pa.
Tho highest price ever paid for a poem wa
6,000 golden crowns, paid to Sannazaro by
the citizens of Venice for his eulogy on their
city—a poem of six lines.
tu
<y
m
Mi Ik 2 •vis*
m
f'MlTAT! if* 1 ■ lit/
THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP ©F FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination, but also
to the care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
known to the California Fig Syrup
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
by the California Fig Syrup 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 Cali¬
fornia Fig Syrup Co. with the medi¬
cal profession, and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Figs has
given to millions of families, makes
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy. It is
far in advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on 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.
8 AN FRANCISCO, Cal.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. NEW YORK, N. Y.
Bevel-Gear
Chai n less
MAKE HILL CLIMBINC EASY.
Columbia A
Chain Wheels, $75
Hartfords, . . 50 i
Vedettes, $40 & 35
POPE IVIFG. CO.,
Hartford,
Conn.
Ki
f iii MM
m ■
K'l &
grfg ,
1
LIQUID - PISTOL
....50 CENTS ....
F80TECTI0N OR FUN. »:
Shoots Ammonia,
lognw, oj# ash
«
It IS a weapon wtk'v * Ell ‘
against vicious dogs and* Smm
against thoivesand robbers tramps, and tou !\Jl§■ :
and is
other situations. It does uo^m raalM ,
is perfectly safe to handle; -
smoke; breaks no law and creatfjpl- «"
regrets, as does the ballet pistol J «»
and amply protects, by compel himself^B. linjfr
give undivided attention to Sr
instead of the intended victim.
It is the only real weapon which®
and also makes fun, laughtei and hi
it shoots, not once, but many times apjfl fj
reloading; and will protect by its cH
in time of danger, although loaded
liquid. It does not got out of ordei®
able, handsome and niekle plated. ■
Sent boxed and postpaid by mail wl
directions how to use for 50 cents in
age stamps, postoffice money order 1
press money order. As to our reliabill
fer to E. G. DUNN & CO or BBADSTE.
mercantile agencies.
NEW YOBK UHION SUPPLY COM
135 Leonard St, New- York.
&.M A« m A 1 m
Who is acquainted with the geography of
United States of America, tfrill see by exaii
nation of this map, that the
Seaboard Air Lli
is the great connecting link between the Fast
and the Southwest.
.....
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v j tr '
X
tfoncure
w i-%
fains**
£J6etU*W> W
BirtnipSfiom.
>, «■* iSHt X. ■
w tr..--’.....<->
■*4. teap9
Or '
tr
Its Two Daity Vestibuled and Express Trains
Furnish Quick .a, Attractive arid S.
Schedules between
WEW ’STOE.K, ■
WASHINGTON, EIOHNOND, NGEFOLE, E0ETSKGCT3,
'
EALEiaa, DUEuAK, WILMINGTON, ATHENS. ,
C2AKLGTTE, AEEE7ILL2, ■
«W ORLEANS, MACON, MEMPHI8- MOSf 22R!3»r,
GHATTANQOGA, NASHVILLE, AUGUSTA, PH
TEXAS, !W E XI CO, CAUPpS? A.
TI-XB OSO. A-TLTSI X.2UWEX Fatndajt '"L ’ ’ '
flna Principal Branches traverse the' "
•
FRUIT BELT
of Virginia, the Carolinas and Georgia.
For Tickets, Maps, Folders of or the descriptive Seaboard mat¬ Air
Bine, ter, etc., address apply to any Agent
or
T. J. ANDERSON, Gem-i. Pass*r Agt.,
PORTSMOUTH, VA.
E. ST. JOHN, V. eTmcBEE, H. W, B„ GLOVER,
& Gen’l Mgr. Gen’l Supt. Traffic Mga
1VE
Ilf It- -7* 11
’
"
& id
Hii 111? *
>
| ■ j
■man.
TASTELESS
Els Ihl "I Ebb
TONI
83 JUST AS GOOD FOR AD U
WARRANTED. PR8CE 5(
GALATIA, ILLS., NOV. 16,18
Parts Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo.
Gentlemen:—We sold last year, GOO bottles of
GROVE S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC and have
bought ihree Kroas already this year. business, In all our hard *
perienee of 14 years, in the drug
never sold an article that gave such universal safcl3*
faction as your Tonic. Yours ABNEY. truly, CASH & CO*
•
If afflicted with l Thompson’s Eye Water
sore eyes, use £
T\ ordering goods or making enquiries of a d* *
Xvrrti«crs it will lx So. 27
tion this paper.
H i)(iw and try Quick it. Box Method 300, for Franklin makingyottjjtoM.' GrovejB^f
mattress, t
LI: A— LMTSz"
‘J
ll ”4' —"«"."€
uunlj YVI tnC fiLL tLofc rA’Lb*
Cough Syrup. Tastes Good.
in tiin o._Sold by druggists.