University of South Carolina Libraries
r r , A Moor's Madness. SI Mohammed ben Moussa. the giant Koor. sent as the chief of the Moroe?n Mission to Queen Victoria's jublnever reached London, having gone Band in Paris on his way there, and then having been sent home. His madness took a very <iueer form. He ^ thought he was Montjarret. the chief " utrider who precedes the President of the French Republic on state occaEne, and insisted on being dreseed livery, with riding breeches and :h boots. Anima'a and the Weather. Many naturalists insist that animals y htTe a special sense which enables j them to foresee approaching changes in j the weather and conduct themselves TX Wcordlngly. Hens, ducks and geese \ ?e well known to make preparations r rain, and hour* before the change la ^ apparent to human beings these creaTtres may be seen oiling and dressing their plumage. Pigs frequently preaare a shelter for themselves before a flfeorm; a pig earn ing a mouthful of 'atraw Is to the farmer a sure sign of tain. Dogs and horses exhibit unusual lassitude before rain, and the cat washa tag ber face la, among housewives, a certain sign. The croaking of the "rain crow" is considered. In the country districts, as an Indication of bad weather, while eveu ants and bees, when rain Is api?roachlng. seek their homes, the former retiring to their hcles and closing the entrance, while the latter hurry to j their hives as though conscious that i danger was In the air. The common Impression that the gor-1 artiment is coiumg so surer is a mistake. The coinage of silver Is still continued. although by the repeal of the purchasing clause of the Sherman act Ao bullion Ls now purchased by the government for use in coinage, there being on hand Novem!>er 1. 18l>3. the euornous stock of 140,699.832.67 ounces. t*' The first thing the women will do when they get Into power will be to enact a law compelling a man to love only one woman at a time. Her Dread of Fire, An English exchange says that Sarah "Bernhardt has always had a morbid dread of fire, and that this has led her to direct that all her stage dresses hall be made of fireproof material. It is reported that a society has been 1 formed in the East composed exclusively of college men. whose object is to ecure laws providing for the elcctrocuSnn nf Mlntc InniitlKc dflfnrmwt ph!1 ?' . ? dren and old people. It is to be hoped > that the ignorant will not take this society as an evidence of what college anally does for young men. ? Keep on Scratching. y THg c\ep-T into the bone ?nd the Tett?r will *" only be the worse. 'there's nlv one way to P treat an irrita ed. disc skin. Coo the it a- Kill the k-Tms > ? cause the trouble and I heal it up. sound and strong. Qplr o e thins ' In the world will do this?T? tierine. It's ."?> , cent-a box at drugst res <>r p - tpaid for 30 cents in stamps by J. T. Shuptria'., fcavan- i nah, Ga. Stat* or Ohio. Oitt or Toledo, > i \ Lccasoountt. ? . . Frank J. Chlmt makes oath that he is the - nior partner of the firm of F. J. I H> K*T c , IO?^d"in(cbusine9?intbet*ityofToledo,('ount> and State aforesaid, and the t said firm will pa> the nm of one ucm>rii> dollars for eaci and every case of catarvb that cannot b< cared by the use of t ali.X C at a rkh c re. Frank j. < hknet. - * . Sworn to before me and subscribed in m \ -?a? i presence, this 0th day of December -? seal <- A D. Ufck. A. W. Glkaso.N. t ?f?* \ S< - at y Pubic. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts dlr ctly on the blood and mucous surface of the system. Send for testimonials, free. 1 F. J. hev et & CO., Toledo, O. i Sold by Druggists. 75c. ?( Hall's t amil v Pills are the beat Mr*. Wins'ow's Soothing Syrup forchildren tee tiling, softens the gums, reducing intlam.ttton.allay.* pain,cures wind colic, So. a bottle. , Fitspe-manentlv cured. Xo fit* or nervous- i ncss after first day's u*.* of Dr. Kline's Great Serve Restorer. $2 trial bottle an.l treatise f r.*e Dr. R. H. Kline. Lt t.. 93; Ar. h St.. Phila.. Pa. ( I Piso's Cure for Consumption relieves the moat obstinate coughs Rev. D. Bi'Chmvkl* lkr, Lex.ngton, Mo., February 24,1S*?. ( IMPURE BLOOD fi ody Covered With Eruptions, but Hood's j , Has Cured. , "My body was covered with eruptions caused by impure blood. I began taking 1 ( Hood's Sarss par ilia and it entirely cared me. It has done so mnch for me that I reeotnmend it to anyone troubled with , impure blood." S. J. Turp, Maryland, X. Y. i Hood's 2sthe beat? in fact the One t rue Blood Purifier. Dill* are the only pills to take MNM S rlllS With Hood's Sarsaparilla? 8. H. U. Ko. 42.-97. m f-lirti AIL LLii rAlLS. *-J I M Brsi < Jimtj sjrap. Taxea Good. CwN I In liffli1. | ^ 4 A A f li A j Ay( h i < pills stand without a riv i medicine. They cure sic! ^ constipation, and keep the In many homes no me < Dr. J. C. Ayer's Pil k ! 4 ' xTTTTTTTT V ?? a* .? wwm. "Lots and Cords" of Replies From Ministers to Ellerbe's Circular, 1 . THE LAW IS BEING TESTED. The Governor Thinklng|About Handling the Vexing Problem lu Ills Annual Message. % I The Columbia State, of the 13th, j says: Governor Ellerbe is receiving "lots and cords" of replies to the circular he recently issued to the ministers of the State asking for their views in regard to the liquor problem, but the Governor is not making the copies of tbe documents public, xne mans con- . tain many replies. Many of the minis- | ters are expressing their views in an ex- j haustivg manner. One minister, after j using all the space on tie blank, sent the Oovemor along with it a printed j copy of a sermon he recently delivered : dealing with the liquor problem. It is j needless to remark that he was a total | prohibitionist Governor F.llerbe states that he was , somewhat surprised to eee that a num- | ber of the ministers were advocating the high license system under the restrictions imposed* by the State constitution. He laughed at the criticisms of the press as to his issuing the ministerial circular, and remarked that thus far no one had succeeded in divining bis real purpose of sending the circu- j 1? i- Ai TT- :_i; ?Y,.t iv w uie oiiuiBiers. xio lutuuawu iu??^ the puri?ose would appear in the course" of time. It is pretty thoroughly settled now that the present status of the State's liquor business, so far as original package stores are concerned, will be maintained until the general assembly meets. This being so, and Governor Ellerbe having had nearly a year's experience watching the operation of the dispensary as it siands, the chief executive has already begun to look about him for the data that he will use in his aunual message to the general assembly. He proposes to deal with the dispensary law and the liquor situation in general in a very complete manner. The nature of his analysis of the liquor situation in South Carolina is being awaited with some degree of interest. The dispensary law has now been pretty thoroughly tested. It is no longer regarded as an experiment, and the general opinion is that the legislature this year will have to deal with the situation very cvefully. What the result win t>e no one can ioreieu. DIVORCED IX SOUTH CAROLINA. Remarkable Defense of a Fatrfieldlan Arrested for Bigamy. A story comes from Kershaw county to the effect that Magistrate Sutton of that county had revised the South Carolina prohibitory law against granting a divorce and has granted a Fairfield county man divorce from his wife upon the alleged grounds that his wife had deserted the complainant for a i>eriod of nine years This alleged ruling of the magistrate was brought to light through the arrest U|on the charge of bigamy, of the mau who enjoys the rare privilege of having been granted a divorce in South Carolina. It a- ?ars that he remarried reoently and upon being arrested for bigamy set *1 U^ I up lue Uf luuse luut uc unu uccu gi j?u wu a divorce by Magistrate Sutton.?The Register. A commission has been issued by the Secretary of State to the Dillon Ranking and Wholesale Grocery company, which will do business at Dillon on a capital of $?>,000, divided into 500 shares. The cotton mills in Spartanburg county have stopped paying an advance of ten cents per hundred for cotton over Spartanburg city. There is talk in Charleston of establishing another line of steamers-this time with Nassau. Four hundred pupils are enrolled at Converse College. Sumter's Daughters of the Confederacy are the first in the State to desire a charter for their chapter. They have applied to the Secretary of State for a charter; their chapter is k no wn as Chap ter "Dick" Anderson, No. 75. Mr. J. P. Turner, of Florence county, has on his place one litter of 17 pigs, and two calves of exactlv the same age whose mother is oue ancl the same animal. -* #>? Col. John P. Thomas, in a letter to (rov. Ellerbe, accepts the office of Confederate historian, vice H. L, Farley, deceased. A A A J a s/JL iS si as a reliable family ^ c headache, biliousness, f 4 i body in perfect health. ^ dicine is used except < Is. i YTTYfffT rniim. Johnson vs, Stokes?The Contest From the 7th Congress District SENATOR TILLMAN'S CONDITION Lexington County Fair?Clreenvtlle's Tax on 4,0. I*." Store#?Vance is Confident?To Conic South. A special to the Register from Washington says the briefs of both the contestant and con :estee have been filed in ' ' * * - - t T _ 1 te contested election case 01 oouumuu vs. Stokes from the seventh congressional district of South Carolina, which is composed of the whole of the counties of Lexington, Sumter and Orangeburg and a part only of the counties of Berkeley, Richland and Colleton. The attorneys who representT. B.Johnston, the contestant, are VV. F. Myers, a negro who lives in Colleton, J. H. Fordham, a negro from Orangeburg, J. C. Whittaker. a negro from Sumter, John H. Ostendorf, a white Republican of Charleston, and J. L. Mitchell, whose antecedents and color are not attainable at this end of the line. /The returns show that of the ballots deposited in the various boxes Stokes received 9,035 and Johnston only I,342, giviug the former a majority of 6,723 or about six to one. But Johnston s contention is mat s',u^? iegai voters went to tbo |*>lls and desired to vote for him, whose ballots were rejected, and hence he claims that he would thus have had 2,302 more than Stokes. There is n uew turn in the original package business in Greenville Last week a special u** ting of cit v council was held and the ordinance passed a few dayago was adopted. The provisions of the new ordinance require $100 to be paid in advance and a graduated scale is adopted from $2,000 up to $13,000. The limit is $500 on any amount of liquor sold. J. E. Payne, F. M. Simmons and M. Flatan, the largest dealers, will comply with the ordinance and make the advance payment as required. The payment will be made under protest A number of the smaller dealers have emplojed Blythe & Blythe as attorneys and propose to contest the right of the city to impose the tax. The city authorities are determined to test the matter and will proceed to execute the ordinance. At Anderson in the case of L. L. Vaughan, representing Blumentha! Bickart, original package men, was continued. No irregularity is charged in this instance. It is a square is me whether cr not liquor can be soli in original packages. Judge Buchanan is understood to hold that it is nonsense " - M A J- _U_* to say tnac a non-resiueiu mu uu ?u? a citizen cannot do; thatnnder the first clause of the dispensary act the sale of liquor is prohibited, except as pro-vided in that act. That the exception is the provision for sale by dispensers. If the salo by dispensers "is unconstitutional then we have prohibition. The State of the l."ith says: Mr. L. A. Wittkowsky and several other gentlemen came over from Camden to present to the governor strong petitions asking him to commute the death sentence of a negro in that county who is to be hanged on the 22nd iust, hn.viug been convicted of rai?e. The victim was a 16-year-old ; colored girl, and she signs the petition J asking that the death sentence be commuted to life imnrisonmentin the State penitentiary. There appears to be considerable doubt as to the man's guilt. Gov. EUerbe has taken the petitions under advisement Colonel Vance, dispensary commis sioner, stijs the shipments now are very large and are almost op to the usual amount. He thinks there is no doubt about his ability to continue to { turn money into the treasury, and if he does he has no doubts, about the permanency of the institution. He doesn't believe the Legislature has any intention of abolishing the system.?The Register. Oliver Brumbels, white, was killed near Galavan, Marion county, by United States Marshal Hubbard. Brumbies was a desperate character and said he wonld not be arrested alive and when Hubbard went to make the arrest he was fired on,the ball passing through his hat Hubbard returned the fire with fatal result. At Killmns, Richland county, John Grain of late has been too attentive to Henry Willford'swife, and on returning home he fouud Grain in his house and he emptied the content) of his doublebarrel shot gun at him, one load taking effect in the leg, the other in his side. The side wound is fatal. Willford has escaped. Senator Tillman is still confined to his room at the residence of Mr. J. W. Bunch in Columbia. It is stated that his condition is about the same as when he arrived in the city. He is being given thorough treatment by his pby\fve Tillman :s with the Sen ator. ?The State. The Lexington county fair association has been permanently organized and various committees appointed, and officers and committees have gone actively to work making preparations to hold the first annual county lair on the 27th and 2Sth of this month. A large party of New England cotton mill men are to visit Columbia the latter part of this month to inspecWthe waterpower of the Colombia Water Company with a view of moving their mills South. At Greenville H. H. Ely, a negro preacher, while acting as peacemaker between Will Davis and another colored man, was shot through the hand. Davis was in the act of firing at his antagonist when Ely grasped the pistol The bullet passed entirely through the palm. The all-negro cotton mill, which is to be built in Columbia, is assuming shape as an organization. Mr. Manteith, the promoter, has iust returned from the North, where he met with great success. I CURIOUS FACTS. , The average walking pace of a healthy man or woman is said to be : seventy-five steps a minute. The screw of au Atlantic liner re, volves something like 030,000 times I between Liverpool and New York. ! There are something like 40,000 public schools in Japan. The buildings are comfortable, and education is com! pulsory. , | ' The finest opal of modern times l?e- 1 longed to the Empress Josephine. It i was called "The Bnrnmg of Troy." , : Its fate is unknown, as it disappeared | when the Allies entered Paris. I The ".Prisoner ot (jmiion uni not ! suffer in the cause of liberty. He was a troublesome rogue sent to prison for mischief-making. anil spent his term ; there in making indecent verses, i After several unsuccessful attempts and three years' labor the uuparalleled feat of cutting a ring out of a single diamoud has been accomplished by the patience and skill of M. Antoine, one I of the best-known lapidaries of AntI werp. The ring is about six-eights of an ilch in diameter. The stock of Bank of England notes j which are paid in five years tills 13,400 boxes, which, if placed side by side, 1 would reach over two miles. H the : notes themselves were placed in a pile | they would reach to a hight of five ' miles. They weigh ninety tons and 1 represent ?6,750,000,000, Thf> rwpAn contains several fish which 1 clothe ami adorn themselves. The most conspicuous of them is the antan- I narius, a sm ill fish frequenting the Sar- j gasso Sea which literally clothes itself with seaweed, fastening the pieces together with sticky, gelatinous strings, , and then, a? it were, holding the gar- j ment on with its fore fins. With one exception the Governors of all the States receive a definite salary, without the addition of fees or , perquisites. The exception is the Governor of Oregon, who gets $1500 cash and some extras. His is the ' smallest salary paid any Governor of an American State, except the Governor of Vermont, who gets $1500, without any extras. In one of the Canary Islands there is a tree that as evening comes on quite frequently rains down a copious shower of water from its tufted foilage. This forms a pool at the base of the tree, which the natives use as drinking water, it being absolutely pure and fresh. The eaves have innumerable little pores on their margins, anil , through these the water flows. Tl/e distance from Liverpool to Lon- ; don is 201 miles. On each side of the railroad, as far as the eye can reach, j the most beautiful and most splen- ! didly cultivated farms present themselves. But not one foot of the land belongs to those who have thus brought it to such beauty and perfection. It all belongs to six men, who own it because they happen to be the oldest sons of their fathers. I Flowers in the Land of Gold. The ways of the pilgrim to the gold fields of ice-bound Alaska are during i the briefr summer bordered by flowers. This sounds strange, and so do the stories of mosquitoes. Yet Alaska. ' amid its ice and snow clad crags, has flowers and birds and little animals that are not fur bearing. The big flat books that the United States uovern ment has issued about the flora and fauna of Alaska, would read like a modern series of volumes of the travels of Sir John Mandeville, not to say ; Marco Polo, were it not that the sur-1 prising stories are backed up by the convincing evidence of photographs, ( and the assurance of dried, stuffed or preserued specimens in the Smithsonian Museum at Washington. Alpine climbers know the ede?weiss. I the beautiful bell-like flowers,as white j as its environment. In Alaska, the j edelweiss takes on the form of the i chrysanthemum, and often reflects the j nature of the surrounding soil by tak- ; ing up its hues. Iron gives the edge of the petal a deep, dark red, and copper is shown by a greenish tinge. There is a hardy plant that much resembles the verbena, and away upon tile mountain sides men meet a starry flower that they would swear is the daisy they knew so well at home.? New York Journal. A Wonderful Lamp. It is prophesied that present methods of illumination are to be superseded by a lamp nearly perfected by Puluj, of Vienna, one of the earliest experimenters on cathode rays. For fifteen years he has been working upon it. Not only does it generate intense Roentgen rays, but n aiso transforms nearly all of the energy of the electric current into light. Professor Ebert's experiments prove that a single horse power of electric energy would be sufficient to operate 46,000 Puluj lamps. Professor Lodge, head of the department of experimental physics in Universal College, Liverpool, says that "if mechanical energy can be converted entirely into ligat alone one man turning the crank of a suitable machine could generate enough light for a whole city." Puluj claims that his lamp fulfills this condition. The Descent of Hirers. Generally speaking, the slope of the beds of rivers flowing into the Mississippi from the East is, on the average, about three inches per mile. Those entering it from the West have an average descent of about six inches per mile. The average descent per mile of the Missouri after it leaves the mountains is reckoned about a foot; the Des Moines, from its source to its conjunction with the Mississippi, about 7.3 inches. The entire length of the Ohio shows a fall of even five inches. The Mississippi, from the mouth of the Ohio to the uulf, has a fall of about two and a half inches.?Ohio State Journal, Woolfn Ingrain Carpet, SSe. Imported VVlTCtC'arptt, Me. Our en'ire force is working day and nigiit filling orders. You, also, can save 50 to CU per cent, on a carpet by writing for our new Colored Carpet Catal gue which ahows a.i go ds in lithographed colors and with exact distinctness. The t> ok coatayuu nothln*. If you wish quality samples, aend 8c. in stamps. Our new 112 page general catalogue of Furniture, Drapriea, Crockery, Stoves, eta. will be ready alter Nov. l?t. Write for it then, JULIUS HINES A SON, BALTIMORE, l?. Please mention this paper. Pioneering. It hi quite the custom to speak of the whites who were the first to go among Tn/llon fflhofl f\t thA WAQf flfi "dIo* neera of civilization." The "civilization" was not always of a perfectly civil order. The officials and traders of the old Hudson Bay Company used to claim credit for this rough pioneering. If we may Judge from the records of the company, their work was thorough in Its way, but the way was a hard one. Some entries in the account-books of the company, made more than a hundred years ago, will show how the civilizing was being done. "Dec. 31,1705. Served out a quart of rum per man; the evening spent in Innocent mirth and Jollity. "Jan. 1, 1708. All the Indians drunk about the place; great trouble In keeping order." Two entries of an earlier date, and from a station still farther north, show what were the amenities of Intercourse between the "civiilzeu' and savage races when questions of right and Justice were In the way of settlement The first entry reads: "The Company's cook, a lad of 16, having been carried off by the Esquimau!, three out of a party of six passing Esquimaux were seized as hostages until the return of the boy." , Five years later another brief entry shows how this transaction was finally closed: "Had a row with the three Esquimaux detained. They were shot and their ears pickled In rum and sent on to their tribe, to show them what bad happened." A Massachusetts man who left home a few days ago to walk to the Klondike says he "proposes to take along a pair of snowshoes." He'd better also take along a pair of wooden legs. 3000 BICYCLES V1" J f\\ _ mmtt oe clottd out at one*. I S'MiiUrtl T (ruarant'd. 4jT /K\ fjn/\S14 to SSS M moJ,l< *fA u , . /f\\ jyy.VltoW* Id band whcela H fit M\fJ\ TO^jLJtollJ. Shtpprd to anyone t&? 1 f?n approval without advance P ' f ' /dopoilt Crval fartarvrivarlaf ula ^ lki j ears a Bicrrue W if ?. M. w, Wlli (1? HI la (vl ww nil CSS W a aifh rXikP*-'ta lmtrWjc, tkas. ?HI? at ?C? trn mri^wMMw. Mead Cycle Co.. 136 Avenue P., kkuu. 111. * TRUE. * Rica's Goose Grease Liniment Is lways sold under a guarantee to cure all aches and pains, rheumatism, neuralgia, sprains, bruises and burns. It is also warranted to cure colds, croup, coughs and la grippe quicker than any known remedy. No cure no pay. Sold by all druggists and general stores. Made only by < OOSE GREASE LIMSitPI'l' tu., ukiexmiuku, u. - PATENT CLUSTER SCARF PIN | Heavy Gold IHate. Kul>y Centre. j Surrounded by 8 Fine Brilliants. Sample 15c. D. M. WATKI.xa ? CO, CaTaloccx Fkxx. Providence, R. A. I StJudmedd ^e/^ae Aucueta. (it. Act oat bvinNv No text tf boot*. Short time. Cheap board- Send fat catalog**, nR. w. H. WAKEFIELD, W I# Can be ooaaalted la hit oflloa ln> S/f\S OHARLOTTK, N. C. No. 509 North Tryon Street,. On any week day except Wednesday. His practice la limited to disease* of the EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT,, m am a a a | ? ARCS can bo saved with I 1 If B I ft I MM out their knowledge by Iliill MM Ami Jag the marvrl H I ^m I a ! am cure for tbednnk haul I I I a I* Write Benova Chemical ^ ' Co, M Broadway, N. \ kail lafnraattna (ta. plain wrapper; mailed free DO D1VCD'Q Great Vegetable BLOOD t Hi DMKLn 0 LIVER GUN*. Gu<rantee<; for R eam&tisa, Scrofula, Syp ilia. Constipation A Indigestion. Manur ctured. by Lookout Mpoataia Medicine Company. GREENSVILLE. - - Tfc-VV it, JuSSFS S \MU60UML The Beet on the Market. All Drogtfate and Merchants. MnTd by L OER-TUK A CO-, (kitluooia, lew JTRATEirS C0LLE8E tSXTRStKi' BooUinmBm. CfcMpatt. Situation gumntmn. a N. U.?No, 42?97. GET RICH Quickly. 8*nd for B->ok.*'InTrnHoi Won tod." KAgir lot# k Co.. 344 Broadway. X A HERE Want to Worn all about a Hone? imperfection* and ao guard against ft when same i* possible? Tell the age 1 parte of the animal? How to ahoe a valuable information can be obtains TRATED HORSE BOOK, which w< onlj 2S Cent* in St -.mpa. Book Publi' 134, Leopard fttreet \ t SAW MILLS. 1 If yon need a saw mill, any size, writ* me before buying elsewhere. I hat* the most complete line of milla of any dealer or manufacturer in the Southu CORN MILLS. 1 Very highest grade Stones, at unnaoafr lv low prices. WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY, Pinners. Moulders, Edger-, Be-Sawi, Band Saws, Laths, etc. ENGINES AND BOILERS, Talbott and Liddell. Engieberg Rice Hulier, in etock, quick delirery, low prices. V. C. BADHAM, No. 1336 Mais Sk, Colombia, S. OL . THE BAILEY-LEBBY CO. ?fU?ljyBROjnCEifllilL^. The only machlD* for cleaning rough rioe in one operation. Mill SUPPLIES encines, will ourruco, boilers, saw, corn and cane mills, RUBBER and leather belt INC, Hose, Packings, Pipe Fittings and Braa j Goods. Largest Stock of Supplies Booth, I Lowest Prices. Prompt Shipments. Dl?h trated Catalogue Furnished upon Apptte* tion. Try the B-L Co.'s Anti-PrlctfM Babbitt Metal, the beet for HIGH SPBJD machinery. CHARLESTON, - - S. C. XHK t'MTED STATES GOVEKXMB2VThap adopted the Keeley Treatment In the 8oV dler's Homes and In an Institution for the exclusive use vf the Regular Army. ALCOHOL, OPIUM,' Produce each a diaadto loBNCGO USING t having definite ratfcob ogy. The disease yields easily to tne I)ouhJ? Chloride of Gold Treatment as administered at The Keeley Institute, Greenville, S. G. ^ 1 ,1 ucaneu imurmauuu maticuvu op>?nwivM^ . THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, (OR BOX 87) CREENVILLE, 1,0. The 0\LY Krrlry Initltntc la & C. (HONEY IN CHICKENS. ~ .{ Send 25 oente in stamps for Book. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 134- Leonard Street, - - Now York ALABAMA LADIES Brave os Lions. f Jenifer, Alv, wdtaft .? My Unsbend VII cured of CUlnuaniw by Dr. M. A. It?mom IJrer Mem ; a cine, which I bin -ft "Black Draught/* art , M I think the M. A. O ttt Superior Urt 8 one Package o t il k worth three or lour of either the other kwo Insufficient MearirmUw Is sometimes caused by non-deretofwwwt of the parts, iometimes by obetractioasjA month of vagina, end snmetimee by eoasw* patcd bowel'?, bnt usually reaalta from ade- IBS ?? iti' rilimrfiw TtilA?M. DU1UMU Wuuiuwuv* r > ,? tentsnatnre fromoveroonun*My nnwnsai >1 exposure, soch as fri ght orgtCa ^rost wet. Dr. Simmons Sgnaw Tl? wnaaoiMlBf toe system and cnr^ the Reorder, Jj Dr. K. A. KlmmoM UwMhdwaaCBW , the constipation, IndittMon, j0*y,^R*7 !&Sfl titc, pains in back, hips, head MB Mh which are usually present. ^KSTSk Shcllman. Ga., TtittK T ' \ bavo uocd Dr. M-A. liar M | moos Lirer Medicine 15 t ycars^It cured jBJJ ImbST" onrffi^ . ,'(i >| JttBU Wife of a fwaato ComI JKrik plaint. My two Anal* ?f apEr Sfo'a' CVay^HaTenaed-BlaekDrau^* jEaHR but think Dr. X. A.a?Xw far superior to It Skin and Eyea YeQcwa This disorder finds its direct c ABM hUM , derangement in tho lirer and its aoaw allied glands. The bile. ifntrrd ptphaa^p.. out through tho bowels, has bocn cbsiructe^. and finding no ootlct taron^h itatMBl ncls.has accumulated and bo? CakenJ?. * 9 by the absorbents and ^tribctwl orer' My xs^iSS^ts^Arj/SRat i mcstcf Liver Medicine should be takes rinK an . morning until the roiaytoTlna bMMMt vj desr. Spurn Frauds that court 70a Sr jwr , ,J money. The i niUi ions thai try tatukethw -; 4] piece of the Original Dr. M. A. jBnnwi ,fl| Liver Medicine, while by Interested decisis > "3 old as " the same," are advertised eased r^gj the mm," end yon may be courted aa ~*jA deceived tor your money at the atpanae OS your health. Beware I . *?|j coKKntpoNoncE ixnrnit OM DominiIroa dk.Vali W*a. Rlrbwl. ??. D^MMMELJL SUftMKOT* J V Iraiy aaa ?honlJ bar *b*. beeedfal pMna in l(dlffM?at coiom.HOCK OIt AVE*, at Sl.Otf Bach. MrmdbM. Hlx* * a ? iacliaa, palate* uy band aod eopto&from thaurljrlnal paintin*. oh uad at 990,000. *T?rr faml^r aboold bar* aaa. Don't shut It. Scodmoneyby inaU.poau>fflcaoaAw% or check, at car riak. Moaar returned 1/ Dot sada? factory MANHATTAN KBUSHIXG 6061 Wkm? SVe. Car. ?. ImUway, ,^jj :"|T IS! I How to piek oat a good one? Enow, and? Detect disease and effeet a car* by the teeth? What to call the different Horse properly? All this and other .- ? fd by reading oar 100-PAtiE IliLUS) will forward, postpaid, oi receipt of '/) shing House, , - - New York Cityk