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AGAMES OF GENIUSES.
THEIR BRAIN CELLS CO ON STRIKE
WHEN IMPOSED UPON.
Ur«at 4 Authority Discusses an Impor¬
tant Problem—Hallucinations That
Great Men Have Harbored—Why Does
* Man Do Very Queer Things?
V BY WILLIAM A. HAMMOND,
i human brain-cell is a little oc
t, Q«s, with power to move the tiny
tefftacles with which it is provided—
to stretch them out, or to withdraw
them at will. Upon this fact rests
newest revelation in the science
mind. #t
»*CWhy is does a man act queerly when
he intoxicated?
k* Why is a man absent-minded on oc¬
casions?
h Why, in rare instances, does a man
forget all of his past life, being
to begin again as a new individual?
A" Why does and a man sometimes insane-— become
violently dangerously a
raving maniac?
a# A solution of these problems, so
long deemed hopelessly puzzling, has
at last been worked out, and a very
satisfactory exposition of the subject
is given by Dr. Ira Van Gieson in a
volume just published by the Patho¬
logical Institute, of the New York
State hospitals.
A human brain-cell, as described
by Dr. Van Giesou, is a simple bit of
nerve-substance, from one end
which spring a number of tentacles,
while from another part arises an arm
different from these and of
length. The long arm is for
mitting impressions from one
of the brain system to another.
example, a given “octopus”
its long arm so as to touch the
tacles or short arms of a second
topus; the latter in its turn
contact with a third, and so on.
a message is conveyed and the
gets its news.
The entire brain is a congeries
these cells, groups of which are
ganized into systems by what
called “association fibers.” In their
turn the systems are arranged in com
munities, the communities in clusters,
and the clusters in constellations.
long as the mind apparatus is in
healthy condition, each little
pus” attends to its business
and there is no trouble; but
tunately, civilized man abuses
brain in various ways, though
ially with overwork and alcohol,
jnental disturbances frequently
sult. These disturbances are
consequences of rebellion on the
of the octopuses, which have a way
quitting business when they are
treated beyond a certain point.
You see, the octopus has power
withdraw, as well as to extend,
tentacles or shorter arms, and in
way it is able to throw itself “out
circuit.” As a matter of fact,
action is not taken by a single
cell, but by whole groups together.
The cells are so linked by
and habit that they can operate
as members of assemblages, and
withdrawal of one individual
business signifies a “strike” by
large number. The object of
strike is simply to avoid overwork,
jfend iiaustion; the action it taken that is a the signal cells of
means
not afford to give up any more
Here you have an illustration
what sometimes happens to the
cessful merchant who works
hours out of every twenty-four at
ing up the dollars. One day
thing goes wrong; his
chine does not seem to work
and ideas do not flow easily. No
tention being paid to the matter,
nomena of this kind become more
quent, and at length there comes
breakdown. A group, or perhaps
system, of brain-cells has given
work and thrown itself out of
refusing to transmit messages.
merchant goes to a sanitarium for
while, and, if careful of himself,
may recover.
The discovery of this tendency
withdraw from business on the part
the brain-cell under certain
tions has thrown a flood of light
a host of mental phenomena. A
on the head may deprive a man
»his education, taking away from
all memory of his past career, so
he has to begin to live over again in
new world. The cause is simply
the associations between
groups of cells have been broken up.
Manifestations of violent mania
due, in some cases at all events,
the withdrav al of the higher
of cells which dominate and
the lower parts of the nervous system.
Thus the subconscious mind,
ordinarily is held in abeyance,
its normal control and advances
the foreground, responding to
stimulus with a storm of
ment.
Brain-cells of the highest order
found in the upper brain, where
intellect proper is supposed to
located. Here, as Dr. Van
says, the associations of the
octopuses are comparatively
and their relations change
In fact, they are in a state of
ual flux, and hence the play of
mind, the infinite variety of
and reasoning. This condition
affairs, indeed, is essential to
elevated type of intelligence; a
person does not have this
mind-play, due to the making
breaking of relations between
cells. Of course, this is not the
reason for the mental superiority
the clever man. The brain octopuses,
like the octopuses of the ocean,
in their qualities, and thus we
varying degrees of talent in
individuals.
Temporary disjunctions of
higher cells are accountable for
phenomena of absent-mindedness.
man is so absorbed in the
of one subject that he is
of what is going on around him,
rST’sJSRT^S first to in dis
brain-cells are act a
orderly fashion when a person takes
too much to drink, so that he behaves
queerly and talks absurdly, unlike his
usual self. The effect of the alcohol
going further, the cells in those
patches of the brain which control the
muscular movements are affected, and
the man staggers. Finally, when the
dose is very large, the octopuses give
up work en masse for the time being,
and the victim sleeps like one dead.
If enough of the poison is takeD, the
brain-cells are paralyzed for good,
and the unfortunate dies.
There is some relation, as yet un¬
discovered, between extraordinary ac¬
tivity of mind and insanity; hence the
statement, unquestionably true, that
“great wit to madness nearly is al¬
lied.” It cannot be denied that gen¬
iuses are apt to exhibit symptoms of
mental alienation, and their children
are usually inferior in intelligence to
those of average men. Examples are
easily furnished to illustrate the prop¬
osition:
Martin Luther had hallucinations.
Edgar A. Poe showed symptoms ol in¬
sanity. epileptic.
Peter the Great was an
Julius Cmsar was an epileptic. suicidal
Raphael was afflicted with
mania.
Walter Scott had visions.
Pascal in early youth was thrown into a
passion by the sight of water. imagined him¬
Richelieu, on occasions,
self a horse.
Goethe, on at least one occasion, encoun¬
tered a phantasm of himself.
Cromwell was a hypochondriac, and had
visions.
J. J. Rousseau was a melancholy mad¬
man.
Jean D’Arc had visions.
Mahomet was an epileptic and received
messages from God.
Mozart died of cerebral hydropsy. she
Chopin abandoned his wife because
offered to another man the seat he wanted.
Mme. de Stael was fearful of the cold of
the tomb, and commanded that her dead
body be wrapped inherited in furs. insanity, and
Dean Swift was
himself not a little mad.
Shelley, called by his friends “Mad Shel
lev,” had hallucinations. ,
Charles Lamb went crazy.
The great Dr. Johnson was a hypochon¬
driac, and had hallucinations of hearing.
Coleridge was a morbid maniac.
Milton was of a morbid temperament,
nearly approaching insanity. MaDy of the
modern ideas as to bell are formed on the
descriptions involved by his diseased imag¬
ination.
Byron was visited by ghosts.
Certain kinds of dementia have come
to be associated with certain classes
of people. Paresis, almost unknown
in women, is the typical insanity of
speculators. Usually it seems to be
due to overstrain of the nervous sys¬
tem, attributable to the excitement of
gambling combined with habitual
stimulation by alcohol, to which op¬
erators in this line commonly resort
for its “bracing” effect. Paresis is
one of the most rapid of all brain dis¬
eases in its progress, and is always
fatal, the extreme limit of survival
being four years. I well remember a
case in New York City, where experts
in my own profession declared me
wrong in my diagnosis of the com¬
plaint of a jmtient whom I p>ut down
as a victim of paresis. Being unable
to convince them that I was right, I
■fold them that if the man was not
dead within four years, I would burn
my medical diploma and confess that
I knew nothing about my business.
The patient died just four years and
one day later, so that I lost the hazard,
but my professional brethren let me
off with a dinner, which I was very
willing to pay for, inasmuch as I was
proved to have been correct.
Society women are especially liable
to melancholia, and old maids arc
very much more subject to mental
aberrations than married women.
The stealing of woman’s shoes is a
form of craziness so highly specialized
that the Germans give it a name of its
own— ‘ ‘f rauenschustenhlmonomanie. ”
Fear of being shut in anywhere is an¬
other species of insanity, and victims
of another kind have such a dread of
uncleanliness that they spend all of
their time in the bath, if permitted.
This last disease I was the first to
identify, and to it I gave the name of
“mysophobia.” little; quality
Bulk counts for the
is the thing of importance, and there¬
for it is a mistake to attribute infer¬
iority to woman’s brain as compared
to man’s, merely on the ground that
it -weighs eight ounces less. She is a
smaller creature and hence the lesser
weight of her cerebral equipment. It
should be remembered, furthermore,
that the brain is not the sole organ of
mind; much of our thinking is done
with the spinal cord and with the
ganglia which are distributed all
through the body. — Detroit Free
Press.
Waited For Their American Deliverers.
“Here is an incident,” says a trav¬
eler who has just returned from Porto
Itieo, “showing that the people of
Porto Bico have long been watching
and waiting for some one to deliver
them from the power of ^pain: Years
before the Spanish-American War was
dreamed of a statue of Columbus was
unveiled at Mayaguez. The Spanish
colors surroundered the figure, and in
pulling them aside the emblem caught
on the extended hand of the statue
and was torn in twain. The people
took it as an omen signifying that the
descendants of Columbus would one
day rend the hated flag and free the
islanders from their bondage. They
regard Americans as descendants of
Columbus, and thus the sign proved
true.”
His Antecedents Were Immaterial.
Max O’Rell relates that while he
was teaching an English school a lady
wrote to the head-master. “Dear
Sir: It is our intention to place our
boy under your care, but before doing
so we would like to know what the
social standard of your school is.” To
which the head-master replied: “Dear
Madam: So long as your boy behaves
well and his fees are paid regularly,
no inquiry will be made about his an¬
tecedents.”—The Argonaut.
and ’ingrowing Nails. Allen’s
jjg EE ' A( jr’s Alien S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N.
_____
—Shelby, N. C., is building a *200,000
ton mill,
Scanty la Blooa ne«f.
Clean blood mean* a dean akin. Ito
and dnv.ng all >y
etirring up the lazy liver im
and that sickly bilious complexion byte All drug* kin*
Cascarete,—beauty for ten cents.
gists, satisfaction guaranteed; 10c, Joe, ow#
—There was a scarcity of frost bite
at the hospitals yesterday.
Wo-TwBao Ior Fifty Cent*.
Queen Victoria’s New Yacht.
The new yacht which is being built
for the use of Queen Victoria promises
to be the most magnificent vessel of its
kind ever constructed. Everything
which can conduce in any way to the
comfort and convenience of the vener¬
able Queen, has been included in the
general design, one interesting excep¬
tional feature being a complete system
of elevators. The yacht has also been
designed to afford better accommoda¬
tion for long residence on board than
is to be found on the Victoria and A1-
bert.
Her Majesty is not troubling herself
very much with the exact details of the
decoration and arrangement, having
given merely an indefinite outline of
her wishes. It is expected that the
boat wdll he ready for launching short¬
ly. The speed will considerably exceed
that of the present royal yacht, though
whether the substitution of propeliors
for paddles will conduce to equal stead¬
iness at sea remains to be seen. Ac¬
cording to present arrangements the
yacht will be ready to carry the Queen
across the channel when she goes
abroad next spring—London News.
In China as Well as Many Parts
of America the mulberry is highly and valued for
curing constipation, headache liver com¬
plaint Wintersmtth’s “Mulberry Pills” con
taining the concentrated active principle of
the mulberry is the best laxative and liver
medicine yet known. To prove it a sample
size box is mailed to any address on receipt of
a 2 c$nt stamp to pay postage. Addr et.
Arthur Petek & Co., Louisville, Ky.
—The wise piokpocket takes things as
finds them.
State of Ohio, Lucas City County, 00 Toledo, \ f
Frank?.). Cheney makes oath that he .
1
senior partner of the firm o? J. F. CHEN:
Co.,doin< business In the City 0 ? 1 oledo,C
ty and State atoresaid, and that said firm
pay the sum of one hCTndiied dollars
eich and every case of catarrh that car
bo Cured by the use of Hall’s Catai
Cure. Frank J. Chenb
Sworn to before me and subscribed in
: j presence, D. 1886. this 5th day W. of GLEASO& ? ecem. 1
SEAL r I A. A.
Notary PtiblJ
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acts directly on the blood and mucous
faces of tho system, ilend for testimoq
free. F. J, Cheney & Co., Toledo,
Sold by Family Druggists, Pills 75c. the best.
Hall’s are
—Nazareth, Pa., is soon to have a i
ley line. f
Fite permanently cured. No flte or nervl
“pees after first day’s us© of Dr. Kline’s treatise Gfj
Jtferve Restorer. $2trial bottle and l
Dr. R. H. Kline. Ltd.. 931 Arch St.. Phila..
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for child
tefcthlug.softens the gums, reducing infia
lion, allays pnln,cures wind colic Sac a ocpi
PI so’* Cure is the medicine to brea
children’s Coughs and Colds.—Mrs. IS]
Blunt, Sprague, Wash., March 8, 1894.
_It's safe to assume that a good all-’ri
fellow is certain to be square.
To Cure Constipation Forever#
—Cold facts are not often brought to
in a heated argument.____
Educate Tour Bowels With Cascaret*.
Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever.
10c, 25c. If C. C- C. fail, druggists refund money.
—As usual, the thermometer keeps
with the ti mes.
_
Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke four Life Away,
To quit tobacoO easily and forever, be mag¬
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To
Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50c or SI. Cure guaran¬
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York,
—General Weyler, at Madrid, has
himself a Federalist Republican.^
Why Do You Scratch?
When you can cure yourself for fifty cents?
All skin diseases such as tetter, salt rheum,
ringworm, eczema, etc., can be surely cured by
an ointment called Tettertne. Any number of
testimonials shown for the asking. Nothing
else is as good. Unless your druggist has it,
rend 50c. in stamps to the manufacturer, J. T.
Snuptrlne, Savannah. Ga.. ior a box postpaid.
—Electric cabs have now been
in Berlin.
4 4 For the Sake of Fun
Mischief is Done. ”
A vast amount of mischief is done, too,
because people neglect to keep their blood
pure. It appears in eruptions, dyspepsia,
indigestion, nervousness, kidney diseases,
and other ailments. Hood's Sarsaparilla
cures all diseases promoted by impure
blood or low state of the system.
Never Disappoin t ±
North and South are joined In the
material of the national capitol. The
central building is constructed of Vir¬
ginia sandstone, painted white, The
extensions are of Massachusetts mar¬
ble, and twenty-four columns of
grand central portico are monoliths
Virginia sandstone thirty feet
and one hundred columns cf the
tension porticos are of Maryland
ble.
is § PI a nTaLio n C hill- C u re i s G uara Bleed i i -■
To cur >r money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it / Price due.
'
/iegjU elts
r
Is your breath bad? Then your
best friends turn their beads aside.
A bad breath means a bad liver.
Ayer’s Pills are Jiver pills. They cure
constipation, biliousness. dyspdpSia,
sick headache. 25c. All druggiSts.
Want your moustache or beard a beautiful
brown or rich black ? Then-use
BUCKINGHAM’S DYE MS™
80_ct>. Of Dnuqoi*t9, oh_H. p. Hall A Co._na*huas N. H.
CONSTIPATION
“I have gone 14 days at a time without a
movement or the bowels, not being able to
move them except by using hot water injeevionet
Chronic constipation for seven years placed me in
this terrible condition; during that time 1 did ev¬
erything I heard of but never found CASCARET8. any rellefi such I
was my case until I began using
now have from one to three passages a clay, and if I
was rich I would give 1100.00 tot each movement; It
is such a relief. ’ Avuigu L. Hunt,
1689 Russell St., Detroit, Mich.
(aaaoeto TRADE CANDV MAfm REGISTERED
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do
Good, Never Sicken, W eaken, or Gripe, 10c, 20c, 50c.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, Mcjatres#, New York. 822
/Barters ink
l Is what the largest and best
school systems use.
Send your name and addres:
postal, ill C*i
_
NS
15 up
Ifao- the
lion guaranteed. Addresa
M, P. MOLLER i
Manufacturer, Md.
Hagerstown, - -
College of Dentistry.
DKNTAL DEPARTMENT
Atlanta College of Physicians and Surgeon*
Oldest College in State. Thirteenth An¬
nual Session opens Oct. 3; closes Auri il 30th.
Those contemplating the study of De ntistry
should write for catalogue.
Address S. W. FOSTER, Dean.
62-63 Inman Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
Carnegie Calf i
Wears Like Steel. A
Men’s Boys’ $2.50 $1.75 fi| |H
Little Youths’ Gents’ $1.50 $1.35 j| M
*Red Seal H
Cartons. II
J. I ORR SHOE COMP AM,
ATLANTA, GA.
PISO’S CURE
CURES _ WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. ^ Use
la time. Sold by druggists.
CONSUMPTION
[2:635
missing links.
A paragraph is being much handed
around to the effect that a flour mill at
Warrensburg, Mo., ships its product to
Kansas City in barrels, has it repacked
in sacks, and employs a stranger to
come to Warrensburg and sell it as
hard wheat flour made in Kansas. It
“goes like hot cakes,” and has almost
run the home product out of the mar
j ket.
S
N
E.
with
LES
pglas* Utom.
med
kers
the
keep
lyou
State
toe.
:1
ON CONDITION*.
PRACTICAL
Book-Keeping Taught.
No Text Books Used.
— BY THE —
KNOXVILLE BUSINESS COLLEGE AND SCHOOL
OF SHORTHAND, KNOXVILLE, TENN.
Estab lished 1885 "yyE mive fyletnand forall the^young raen^ women that
ary the college, though lull, could not. supply the demand made on it for young men and
women to take charge of office work. Last week we calls got positions for faster for four than men at $oo.uu supply per
month each, and one young lady. We are nov? Bniinesai having Department men have we combined can all
them. You can enter at any time. In Ihe book-keeping with we the best of the
that is gpod in the new method of teaching the practical field of practical work.__ very
old—thus the student enters at once upon
NO pisq r ace.
Russell Sage Will Die In Full Possession
of His Riches.
“A disgrace to die rich?” asked Bus¬
sell Sage. “Certainly not. Wealthy
persons should use their money to
bless the world—that is my theory. But
If they give It all away early In their
lifetime they will lose their capacity
for doing good.” Mr. Sage was stand¬
ing in his office, with a light brown
overcoat on and a soft felt hat in his
hand as he uttered these philanthropic
opinions, and he declared that he had
been misquoted in reference to Andrew
Carnegie’s utterance. “I believe,” said
Mr. Sage, “that it is my business to
husband my resources as far as possi¬
ble and conserve the great property
and great highways that I have been
instrumental in building up (referring
to the Manhattan and other railroads),
and that I should protect the interests
of the hundreds of people that have put
their savings into these companies sim¬
ply because they thought I would pro¬
tect their interests. If I were to give
away all I have now I could no longer
be connected with these enterprises,
and my power for doing good would be
lost. Yes, I have given a great deal
for charity, and shall continue to do
so, but I must keep the bulk of my for¬
tune in order to protect the invested
interest of others.”
Greatest of Wine Mr-*eta.
There are over 200 brands of wine
produced in France, but more wine is
drunk in England than in France,
and London is the greatest wine mar¬
ket in the world.
Hardly the Right Word.
Codwallader—Funny that a woman
can never throw anything straight
Jenkins (whose wife has red hair)—
H’m, not funny exactly; rather provi¬
dential, isn’t it?
Dr. Ricord’s Essence of Life since 1863 has
been the stand¬
ard, never-failing remedy forall cases of nervous,
mental, physical debility, lose vitality and pre¬
mature decay in both sexes; positive, permanent
cure; full treatment $5, or $1 a bottle; stamp for
Circular. J. JACQUES, Agent, 176 Broadway, N. Y.
WANTED AGENTS for our Cotton
Book ; it begins at Sc. and runs to lie.;
figures the Ifiths and 20ths from 300 to 700
pounds; a $4.00 book lor only 98c. It Bells
like "hot cakes terms liberal. Also for
the Bible Looking Glass. It teaches the
Bible by illustrations; agents Write making from
84.00 to *10.00 per day. to-day.
J. I,. NICHOLS Si CO., Atlanta, Ga.
S3 M O TT’ |g Aids Digestion,
lr& thinA Regulates TEETHIM Makes Bowel Children Teething Troubles of the Auy Relieves Bowels; of Easy. Age. the
TEETHING POWDERS Coats Only 25 Cents.
Ask Your Druggist for ilk
If not kept by druggists mait25 cents to C. J. ItSOR&’KTX, HI. H., ST. LOt-ilS, IffO.
nllTI Ltn C0>0 OflRBOLflTE OP 10D1NB
111 O guaranteed •••POCKET for INHALER. Catarrh,
a cure
W. H, SMITH C0.| BllUalOi N. 1 rrop S. \ I
.1
M ANY a dutiful daughter pays in pain for her mother’s
ignorance or perhaps neglect.
The mother suffered and she thinks her daughter
must suffer also. This is true only to a limited extent. No
excessive pain is healthy. Every mother should inform her
__self for her own sake and especially
■ for the sake of her daughter. Write
to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass..
MOTHERS for her advice about all matters,
concerning the ills of the feminina
organs.
Many a young girl’s beauty is wasted by unnecessary pain at
time of menstruation, and many indulgent mothers with
mistaken kindness permit their daughters to grow careless
about physical health.
Miss Carrie M. Lamb, Big Beaver, Mich., writes: “Dear
Mba Pinkham— A year ago I suffered from profuse and
irregular menstruation
and leucorrhosa. My
appetite was variable, M
stomach sour and bowels
were not regular, and
was subject to pains like
colic during menstruation.
I wrote you and began to m
take Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound and
used two packages of
Sanative Wash. Youcan’t
imagine my relief. My
courses health are natural improved.” and W |§?T \
general Jfe^ - \
Mrs. Nannie Adkins, \ V
La “Dear Due, Mo., Mrs. writes: Pinkham— tell P A J ' / I bin]
I feel it my duty to
you of the good your
Vegetable Compound has ^ v
done my daughter. She | i< \
suffered untold at i
agony ; m k
time of menstruation medicine be- [. ___ '•**
fore taking your j
but the Compound has color, and she feels
relieved the pain, given her a better
stronger, and has improved every way. I am very grateful to
you for the benefit she has recoived. It is a great medicine
for young girls.”
THE I COUPEH MARBLE WORKS
I ESTABLISHED 50 YEARS
I59-16J Bank St. - NORFOLK, VA.
LARGEST STOCK IN THE SOUTH.
Low prices quoted on Monuments,
Gravestones, delivered Etc, in Marble Southern or
Granite, at any
point. Write for illustrated Catalog,
No. Li, It is free; and save money.
“*S2raUIttB-UCM Conducted Randolph-Macou College. MUHT Best
equipped in i.y the South. Ranks with best in
United States. Modern conveniences hundred and and thirty appli¬
ances; gymnasium, etc. Two
dollars. Address. E. Sumter Smith. Principal.
Wichita is a typical “boom” town.
Twelve years ago it had a population
of 49,000. Today it has perhaps 25,000,
which is a considerable recovery from
low tide in 1895, when it had less than
19,000, according to estimates based
upon the number of names in the di¬
rectory. In 1886-8, before the boom,
broke, Wichita real estate was selling
at New York prices, and they point out,
lots on the main street that sold foil
$2,500 a front foot for which the own-4
ers would now be glad to get $300 oq
$400. The real estate exchanges i
New York in good times will reach,
about $32,000,000 a year; in Chicago,
in 1892, just before the world’s fair,
the transfers, as shown by the record¬
er’s books, were about $30,000,000, but
at Wichita during the five months pre¬
ceding the collapse in 1888, more tharrif
$35,000,000 in town lots changed hands.
■—Correspondence Chicago Record.
The Danger of City Weeds.
City people are warned by the De¬
partment of Agriculture against weeds
growing in back yards and in vacant
lots. Noxious in themselves, they are
also conducive, the department says,
to the spread of malaria, bay fever,
asthma and other diseases. Their ex
termination is strongly urged, with the
turning of the lots either into chil
drens playgrounds or to tb£
ployed for cultivation as Vegetable
gardens.
■3 Rockville; - Md,
^\V\\VW vv v
„,uuin, FOR BOYS.,**
Its pupils have done well at the Uni.
“versitiea of Virginia, Massachusetts Cornel', Lehigh.
Princeton, and at tile Instl*
Cute of Technology, at Boston. Terms moder.
ate. For Catalogue, address,
W. P. MASON. U. 8. SI. A.. Principal.
{Ww. — Mllllflml fy! 11 H Whtrtci Habit*
B 1 htmS cured at hoae with
K ipi lit 8r 8 e 1V 8 out ticulars P aia sent - Bu >k tree, of pot'
m. li Tetania. B.M.WOOLLET M.D.
k*sv Ga. Office 104 N. Pryo at.
Agents Wanted Dallas,
terms. C. B. Anderson & Co.. 371 Elm 8t.. lex.
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this paper when writing advertisers. So. 34