The Florence daily times. [volume] (Florence, S.C.) 1894-1925, September 16, 1898, Image 3
$'•
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■••■ty la Btoo4 Dm*.
Clean blood mean* a clean skin. Vo
■•autjr without it. CWareU, Candy Cathar-
«c clean your blood and keep it clean, by
■ttmng up the lazy liver and driving all im-
C ntiea from the body. Kegin to-day to
nish pimples, boils, blotches, blackhead*
•pa that tickly bilioua complexion by taking
Caacarets.-beauty for ten cents. All drug*
guta, aatisfaction guaranteed. 10c, 2Jc, 50c.
When n giil is up la arms the young man
In the ca.-e scen.s to enjoy it.
LiOB&ro'.opirk Leaf M SmahlngTo' aero
?JSi d ?v. ,m,lv,1 i ed J or P llrlt T *id flavor. Made
ir^n h *, pure6t ’ ripciitand sweetest Tobacco.
It will please you. 1 ry it
Happy are they who lock before they
marry, and overlook afterward.
- I
Cura Constipation Forever.
Tske Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or Bu
If C O. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money.
Even a small patch of ground should be
properly sowed. go. 36
n,n ® outof ten cases of Cholera Infan-
I?™ ““d, bowel Disorders that prove faUl
irom ordinary r.evlectand subsequent treat
ment, the timely use of DR. MOFB'KTVX
TEETHiaa (1EKTHINO POWDERS) would
have saved the child.
Nothing enhances the value of a thing os
the difficulty in obtaining it.
Wo-To-Bue for Fifty Ceuta.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 60c, U. All druggist*
As an ear-trumpet, the average woman is
not a success.
w,MV Wlns A ow> -’ oothl u^byrup for children
in?’ • 0,ten9 t h® gums, reducing Inflama-
tlon,allays pmu.cures wind colic. 35c. a botta.
Pimples
Are the danger signals of impure blood.
They show that the vital blood Is In
bad condition, that health Is In danger of
•wreck. Clear the track by taking Hood's
Sarsaparilla and the blood will be made
pure, complexion fair and healthy, and
life’s journey pleasant and successfik.
Hood’s®;?,*!.
Is America’s Greatest Medicine. |l;slx for $5.
Hood’s Pills cure Indigestion, biliousness.
Corn Diet Makes Tall Mea.
The proof that corn bread diet makes
bigger men physically can be found
in the rural districts of Indiana, Illi
nois and Kentucky, where hominy and
corn bread constitutes the staff of life.
A table In any of the rural districts In
those states on which there is no dish
prepared from corn Is a curiosity, and
In those states men who fall below the
stature of five feet are dwarfs. Six
feet Is the regulation size, and men
who tower considerably above thla
bight are accepted by the inhabitants
as a matter of course.
Of course, climatic influence must be
considered when stature Is under dis
cussion. but the food forms the basis
of calculation. It is generally accepted
Sy men who have given this subject
thought that the six-footers of Indi
ana, Illinois and Kentucky ns a rule
were brought up on hominy or corn
bread as the main food supply. If the
crowned heads of Europe could but be
convinced that corn bread will result
in a nation of six-footers, the Ameri
can farmer would hardly be able to
raise corn enough to supply the Euro
pean markets.—Cincinnati Tiines-Star.
YOUNG AT SIXTY.
Serene comfort and happiness in ad
vanced years are realized by compara*
tively few women.
Their hard lives, their liability to se
rious troubles on account of their pecu
liar organism and their profound igno
rance concerning themselves, all com
bine to shorten the period of usefulness
and fill their later years with suffering.
Mrs. Pinkham has done much to make
•women strong. She has given advice
to many that has shown them how to
guard against disease and retain vigor
ous health in old age. From every cor
ner of the earth there is constantly com
ing the most convincing statements
from women, showing the efficacy of
Lydia E. Finkham’s Vegetable Com
pound in overcoming female ills. Here
is a letter from Mrs. J. C. Orms, of 230
Horner St., Johnstown, Pa., which is
earnest and straight to the point:
“ Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—I feel it my
duty to tell all suffering women that I
think your remedies are wonderful. I
had trouble with my head, dizzy spells
and hot flashes. Feet and hands were
cold, was very nervous, could not sleep
well, had kidney trouble, pain in
ovaries and congestion of the womb.
Since taking your remedies I am better
every way My head trouble is all
gone, have no pain in ovaries, and am
cured of womb trouble. I can eat and
sleep well and am gaining in flesh. I
consider your medicine the best to bo
had for female troubles.”
The present Mrs. Pinkham’s experi
ence in treating female ills is unpar&l-
lellcd, for years she Worked side by
side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and
for sometime past has had sole charge
of the correspondence department of
her great business, treating by letter
as many as a hundred thousand ailing
womea during a single year.
‘‘Wanted, a young man to be partly
out-of-doors and partly inside a hotel,”
reads a late advertisement In a bush
paper of Australia. A correspondent
feels compelled to ask wbat would
happen when the door was shut.
WE WANT TO BURN
Tk« verdi. "BOCK BILL,” tala jeer memory to Too
will MTor forget them. Ther itood for "BmiiIm"—boot
bafrle*—oot "olop-tr»p," "riffrolT nod—bot bug (let i hoi
STAN Li UP. loo: long, ud on vomatod. "A Util. Higher
la P. loo, B« " M llttlo It don't pay to ran tbo rtok.
Don t pay Mg produ oa cheap work. Boo oar agent la
year town or write «>.
ROCK HILL BUCCY CO., Reck Hill, S. C.
NO SPUCINC THE MAIN BRACE.
Bow Grog Began and How II Was Abol
ished In the United States Navj.
They didn't “splioe the main brace”
on the Nashville when that gallant
gunboat had raced through the sea,
with every human pulse a-beat, and
captured the first prise of the war.
They didn’t splice the main brace on
the Oregon, even if all hands did have
the strain of that seemingly impossible
thing, a running fight with a fleet of
Spanish cruisers.
“Splicing the main brace” is, or
rather need to be, serving an extra
allowance of grog to all hands on a
naval vessel after an engagement.
This explanation is so old that it will
h« news to many in these days. If
things were as they used to be, how
naturally it would have happened that
when the Nashville had captured her
prize and when every heart aboard
was aglow with the success the boat
swain and his mates should have piped
through the ship the order, “All hands
for grog.” At the beginning of any
other war in our history “Grog o!"
would have resounded through the
ship. But—
They’ve raised his pay live cents a day
And stopped his grog forever.
A notable event was the invention
of grog in 1740. According to a
learned article on the subject published
in the United States service by Ad
miral Meade in 1884, the honor is
due to Admiral Vernon, of the Royal
Navy. In bad weather it was his
fashion to wear on deck a grogrom
cloak, from which he acquired among
the men the sobriquet of “Old Grog.”
About the year mentioned, when in
command of the West India station,
jje originated a new and satisfactory
official beverage composed of rum
and water, the serving of which be
gan on his flagship, the Bnrford, and
thence spread. The beverage was
dabbed “grog,” and the word has
lived. .
When our navybegai’ its illustrious
career amid the Revelation liquor
was, of course, as necessary a part of
the supplies as sea bisenit aud potv-
der, and we find Paul Jones, on sail
ing from Portsmouth in 1777, bewail
ing, among other shortages, “only
thirty gallons of rum.”
In 1831 Congress took an advanced
step by providing that all in the
navy who voluntarily relinquished the
spirit ration should be paid six cents
a day. In 1842 the ration was out
down to one gill, but the alternative
of half a pint of wine was added, and
the commutation price was fixed at
three cents.
The first year of the Civil War
bronght a greatly increased naval
force and increased trouble from
strong drink. Moral sentiment had
progressed, too. In July, 1862, Con
gress revolutionized the American
navy by passing the historic law pro
viding:
“That from and after the first day
of September, 1862, the spirit ration
in the navy of the United States shall
forever cease, and thereafter no dis
tilled spirituous liquors shall be ad
mitted on board of vessels of war ex
cept as medical stores, and upon the
order and under the control of the
medical officers of such veesehl, and td*
be used only*fqr medical purposes.
From and after the first day of Sep
tember next there shall be allowed
and paid to each person in the navy
now entitled to the spirit ration five
cents per day in commutation and lien
thereof, which shall be in addition to
the present pay.”
And since that day there has been
no grog in the United States Navy.
Insanity in Great Britain.
Theje are to-day 6526 more certified
lunatics in this country than there
were two years ago. That i thd
startling statement contained is the
annual report of the Commissionnrs in
Lunacy which was presented to Perlia-
ment. We do not forget that ita has
been officially pointed out that l th«
Yecent apparent increase in the num
ber of lunatics is accounted for by
greater strietuess of regulation lead
ing to larger numbers of patients
being drawn into the Commissioners’
net. But we find it very difficult to
believe that these swarms of lunatics
are anything like entirely accounted
for by the sweep of the net The
meaning of the figures will be more
clearly realized when we point out
that, as there are 102,000 persons (in
England and Wales only) who are of
ficially certified to be insane, more
than five per cent, has been added to
their number in the last two years.
There is now one lunatic to
every 80S sane people, which
strikes us ns a dreadfully large
proportion, and really does sug
gest that there is something in the
ngtion that the rush and worry of
modern life are peculiarly favorable
to the production of insanity.—St.
James’s Gazette.
A New Device In Guns.
The tremendous havoc wrought by
Admiral Dewey’s guns at Manilla
shows the capabilities of modern ord
nance. Machine guns, rapid-fire can
non and great 1000-pounders,
mounted on disappearing cartridges,
all are part of the necessary equip
ment of a first-class battleship of the
latest type. An electric gun for coast
defense purposes has been lately de
vised; if successful, it will throw a
steady stream of explosive bombs and
give neither report nor smoke to show
its location. The gnu will be a sort
of cnmnlative magnet; that is, as the
projectile passes along the tube it
successively closes new circuits and
thus acquires a velocity which will
carry it several miles. The advantage
of a contrivance like this is that it
wonid protect the bomb without the
sudden shock of a powder explosion,
and thus remove the danger of burst
ing the gnn.—Gnnton’s Magazine.
It seems that no previous Prince of
Wales has been a grandfather.
SAN JUAN’S FORTIFICATIONS
Merre Castle Dates Fmatbe Time of Ponce
De Leon.
In the Century there Is a richly 11-
hutr&ted article on ‘The Island of
Porto Rico,’’ written by Mr. Frederick
A. Ober. Writing of the fortifications
of San Juan, Mr. Ober aays:
Morro Castle dates from Ponce de
Leon’s time, but the Morro as It
stands to-day was completed in 1584.
The faro stands here, with a first-class
light, and within the Morro’s' walls
are buildings of a email military town
-quarters for troops, a c*apel, bake
house, and guard-room, with dungeons
down by the sea and underneath. This
Is the citadel, the initial point of the
line of circumvallatlon, composed of
connected bestlons, castles, and fort-
alezas, running from west to east, to
the Castle San Cristobal, thence north
to the ocean.
The oldest portion of the line Is at
the southwest angle, and Is ealled the
’’Fortaleza,” the platform 6f which
supports the captain-general’s palace,
and was built In 1540. The sea-wall
to the north is pierced by the gateway
of San Juan, which affords entrance to
tie glacis of San^Fellpe del Morro, be
tween the palace and semi-bastion of
San Augustine. Turning Southwardly
from the Fortaleza, we note the bas
tion of La Palma, and the semi-bastion
of San Justo, in the curtain between
which two is the arched entrance from
the Marina, or outside ward, to the in
tramural city, and known as the
Puerta de Espana. Beyond it, to the
east, are the bastions of San Pedro
and Santiago, the latter in the east
ern wall, the middle part of which Is
pierced by the landward gate called
the Puerta de Santiago, protected by
a ravelin of the same name. Ihe fort
ress San Cristobal, though sometimes
called a castle, Is In reality an ampli
fication of the fortifications facing
east, or landward, and extends from
the bay on the south northward to the
•cean.
These fortifications In their present
shape were projected In 1630, and vir
tually finished between 1635 and 1641;
but San Cristobal and the outworks
were not completed until the compar
atively modern date of 1771. The east
ern advanced works consist of two
lines of batteries, protected by a deep
moat; of the small fort at San An
tonio at the bridge of that name; and
at the extreme eastern end of the Islet
a still smaller fort, San Geronlmo,
which defends the bridge of Boqueron.
Power of Powder.
“Velocity and pressure,” explained
the powder mijl superintendent, “are
the two main requisites In proving
powder. The government is very spe
cific in Its contracts. It demands that
when fired under service conditions, in
the gun for which It Is Intended, pow
der must give to the projectile a muz
zle velocity of at least a certain num
ber of feet per second without pro
ducing a pressure of more than a
certain number of tons to the square
Inch. For modern guns the velocity
required varies from 2,000 to
In a second, and the pressurq
lowed to exceed fifteen to
square inch. In some of our guiis of
the present day the amount of energy
stgred up in the powder charge Is so
tremendous as to be almost incredible.
The limit of energy upon the projec
tile cannot be estimated, so vast are
the possibilities.
“For example. I may cite the Ore
gon’s thirteen-inch rifles. Five hun
dred and fifty pounds of powder In
these guns Impart to an 1,100-pound
shot a velocity of 2,100 feet per sec
ond. and the energy of the projectile
is nearly 34,000 foot tons. This power
Is sufficient to lift such a vessel as the
Oiegon, eight feet out of the water.—
San Francisco Call.
BAILEY-LEBBY GO. £
*********
AVER Engines and Boilers,
AULTMAN A TAYLOR Threshers.
“MONI. OR’’ rustless Grain Separators,
Gins. Presses, Corn and Cane Mills,
ENGLEBURG Rice Huller and Polisher.
DE LOACH Saw Mills,
Leather & Rubber Belting. Lacing,
Packings, Pipe, Iron Fittings, In*
lectors. Pulleys, Shafting, Hand
Pumps and General Supplies.
CHARLESTON, - - S. C.
Try our B-L Co. Antl-Fiictlon Babbitt Metal
SAW MILLS.
V ^
The bath can be made dn exhilarating
pleasure by the use of Ivory Soap. U cleanses
the pores of all impurities, leaving the skin
soft, smooth, ruddy and healthy. Ivory Soap is
made of pure, vegetable oils. The lather forms
readily and abundantly.
IT FLOATS.
own^M. IM. v Twemfot * (foabb (V. eiwfoMa
Heroes of War.
From the Chicago Timet-BcralA.
The feeling of admiration tor heroes of
war seems to be Innate In the human heart,
and Is brought to the surface as the oppor-
tuu ty and object for such hero worship
presents Itself.
Among those who proved their heroism
during our Civil War was A. Schlffeneder,
of 161 8edg-
wick street,
Chicago. He
Is an Austrian
by birth,came
to America at
the age of
twenty and
soon became
an American
dti z e n. He
was living in
Milwaukee
when the call
for volun
teers came,
early In 1862,
and he
The Effect of Wind on Lake*.
Attention has been called to the very
remarkable effect of the wind on vari
ous inland bodies of water. It is not
unusual for the residents in towns ou
the shores of lakes to be greatly In
convenienced, provided a heavy wind
blowing on shore continues for any
length of time. In the Baltic Sea the
le”el has been altered for upwards of
eight feet Sometimes the water la
blown out of a channel, leaving it al
most dry. In one Instance a depres
sion of six feet occurred on one side
of a body of water with a correspond
ing rise of six feet on the other. Lake
Erie has been known to alter Its level
n distance of fifteen feet on account
•f heavy winds, and Lake Michigan
was at one time the subject of con
siderable interest from the saufe cause.
The wind was heavy and continuous
and plied the water up on one side,
while the other was so low that peo
ple walked out upon rocks where In
the memory of man no feet had ever
trodden.—New York Ledger.
M«ssHs»bs< SoMkc YoarMIB Away.
Tj> quit tobacco easily and forever, beme*
tie. fait of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
o, the wonder-worker, that makes weak mea
—.All dragglate, SOo or It. Cure guaroa-
Bookle* end sample free. Address
Remedy Oa, Chicago or Mow York
Probably prise fighters dell some hard
blows because ihty are uaturally hard
blowers.
Burglary no longer pays In London.
The i*olice reports for last year show
that the whole fraternity of burglars
earned only $96,000 last year.
Mow’s This,
an,
Ha
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward ttm
a a!l’^OaU«h t CW th ‘ t c * n not **• cured b J
W« F '«i- C ?5? ,T i A C ? > Toledo, O.
wisr
Jedo
Wali
—;-.'y able to carry out any
in (mule by toelr firm. 1
-Jo'Ohio A *’ ' VbolMalu Druggists, To-
•Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally
sates.’ “sss
'Yo think Plso’s Cure for Consumption Is
the only medicine for Coughs. Jknnib Pinck-
abd, Springfield. 111a, Oct. 1, 1894.
FOR SALE!
If you need a saw mill, any size, writ#
me before buying elsewhere. I have
tbe most complete line of mills of any
dealer or manufacturer In the South.
CORN MILLS.
Very highest grade Stones, at unusual
ly low prices.
WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY,
Planers. Moulders, Edgers Re-Saw*
Band Saws, Laths, eta
ENGINES AND BOILERS,
Talbott nod Liddell.
Engleberg Rice Huller .la stock, quick
delivery, low prices.
V. C. BADHAM,
No. 1826 Main Si, Columbia, S. 0.
MACHINERY^
Engines, Boilers. Ulus, Elevators. Harvest
ing Machinery, Wood-working Machinery,
*aw. Grist and Cane Mills, Cotton and Hay
Presses, Rice Huller* Wind Mills and Tank*
Leather and Rubber Belting, Packings, Pipe
and Pipe Fittings, Shafting and Pulley*
Supplies of all kinds.
The Celebrated KagleOottAuGIn. The
Improved Murray Ginning Syatem
Large Stoek. Prompt Shipments. Reliable
Goods at Low Pricea
W. H. 6IBBGS & GO.,
Com ChariStt**N?C'! COLUMBIA, S. C.
AT FACTORY PRICES.
Rfe Pianos & Organs
Can be obtained direct from the factor;
and freight paid. I represent the builders o
the most reputable makes of both Planoaant
Organ*, hence will save you money. Fo
terms, price*, etc., address
M. A. MALONE, - Columbia, S. C
PIANOS and ORGANS.
N D I a»k comparison in quality, price
• Da and terms.
»•€ M. A. MALONE.
EVERY MAN HIS OWN DOGTOj
m
To Cure a Cold in Oue Day.
Take Laxative Bromo quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money if it falls to cure. 25c.
Boarding-houso beefsteak is apt to be rare
be< ause one seldom gets It.
iv Bowels With Caeearets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
10c. 26c. If CCC. fail, druggists refund i
en-
Ue received a wound.
Company A, of the Twenty-sixth
lent eyr
promptly
listed in Cl ■
Wisconsin Volunteers. In the Army of the
Potomac our hero saw much fighting, cam
paigning in the Shenandoah Valley.
In the first day’s fighting at the battle of
Gettysburg, Schlffeneder received a
wound In the right side, which afterward
caused him much trouble. With a portion
of his regiment he was captured and im
prisoned at Bell Island and Andenonvllle,
and afterward exchanged. He returned to
his regiment, which was transferred to the
army of General Sherman, and marched
with him through Georgia to the sea.
In this campaign Mr. Scniffeneder’s old
wound began to trouble him and he was
sent to the hospital and then home. He
had also contracted catarrh of tbe stomach
and found no relief for years.
“I happened to read an account of Dr.
Williams’Pink Pills for Pule People about
a year ago,” he said, “and thought that
they might be good tor my trouble. I con
cluded to try them. I bought one box and
began to take them according to directions.
They gave me great relief. After finishing
that box I bought another, and when I bad
taken the pills I felt that I was cared. I
recovered my appetite and ate heartily. I
can testify to the good the pills did me.”
Mr. Schlffeneder Is a prominent Grand
Army man In Chicago, whither he moved
some years ago with his family.
The trees in tne streets of Paris,
France, are looked after by a puhlh:
official AD'''' ,,4 tRd solely fer that ‘pur
VJOS*.
A Joke os s Chicago Doctor.
Dr. Charles Gatehell, of Chicago, is
not telling this story. The reason Is
that he Is too deeply concerned. But
the story is a true one.
Dr. (latcbcll is a batcbelor, and for
that reason his embarrassment is
greater than It otherwise would he.
When he and other members of the
medical profession started from Chi
cago to attend the national homoe-
pathlc convention in Omaha, they oc
cupied a sleeper. Dr. Gatehell was
assigned to lower six, and being tired,
retired at an early hour. When the
train arrived at Galesburg the car was
set out to wait for a train following,
some of the physicians desiring to go
later from Galesburg.
That even!: g there was a wedding
In high life at Galesburg, add of
course the usual amount of ribbon dec
orating aud rice throwing. Some of
the bridal p::rtv ascertained that the
contracting j ar • '■ad engaged sec
tion six in a sleeper, aud they deter
mined to decorate It up. By mistake
they got into the wrong car. Dr.
Gatehell was peacefully sleeping and
alone in the car. The decorators set
to work, and in a short space of time
had the seel‘on nicely decorated with
ribbons and dowers. Then they hid to
await the coming of the groom and
bride, first sending out a spy to report
their arrival.
Presently the spy sneaked out and
reported that Mr. and Mrs. Blanks
were in their car, which was down
the track a short distance. But the
decorators ’:new nothing of this. They
rushed inl » (he car tney had first vis
ited, pulled the curtains of section six
aside, and before the astonished doc-
ton could protest he found himself bur
ied beneath an avalitothe of rice, old
shoes and flowers.
When Dr. Gatehell recovered rrom
the awful shock to his bachelor nerves
he began to talk. He talked earnestly
and well, but the merry crowd fled
before he could finish his rather tor
rid speech.—The Omaha World-Her
ald.
_ ••••••♦••••**
.’rom the greatest crop ever grown In the
South. ’I hree varieties: Fulcaster, a bearded
wheat Red May and White Clausen, both
. smooth or beardless. Wheat Is now verv free
; from cockle seed and broken grain, being far
j TOP®rlor to the usual run of seed wheal. We
i will, however, reclean the wheat when do-
: 5~&i!KSK&a«iB4!S15' '
I grain there may be In It Wheat as It n., w
, price S1.00 per bushel, recleaned wheat $1.15
per bushel. These prices are both on oars at
: Charlotte, including tacks. Each sack con-
; tains two bushels, hend In your orders at
; once if you wish to secure the host seed wheat
1 on the market. Terms: Cosh with order.
Charlotte Oil & Fertilizer Co.,
or Fred Oliver, CHARLOTTE, N. C.
WILL IT CURE RISINGS? YES.
■ Have Been Selling
Mrs. Jos PsrsoiTs Rtmtdy
for the past five year* have found l* to he a aood
seller and have never had a single cuc'imer to say
the
anything avaln-t It, but all speak of It In highest
terms. I tried It myself, also my wits and ehtld. for
rlslngic and found Immediate relief. , take pleasure
In ree'mmendlnK It. Kespectfully. K. C. Kakm i l.
Aulander, N. C., May 22. ISv?.
Ty ANTED-Case of bad health that RIP-ANB
»» will not benefit Hend tots, to Ripens Chernies!
Co., NewYork, for 10 samples and loop testimonials.
ByJ. Hamilton Ayer* A. ■..K.D.
This la a moat VeluaMe Book
for the Household, tnachteg es ir
does th* east ly-d 1st tngnls'
Symptoms of dlftermt Dues
the Causes end Moons of :
venting such PI sages, and w
Mlmplest Kemedleswhioh will al
leviate or cure. t
— —KMou
every-day Kngllah, and la free
from tbe technical terms which
render most Doctor Kooks so
valueless to the generality of
readers. Thl* Book le in.
tended in be el (service In
Ike Family, vnd Is so worUc<!
to s. readily understood by ail
ONLY «0 cte. POMTPA1D.
Postage Stamps Token.
hot only does this Book con
tain so much Information Rela
tive vo Disease, but very proper-1
ly gives U Complete Analysis of
everything pertaining to Court. ,
•hip, Marriage and tbe Produo
tlon a id Hearing of Healthy
KarnllleMogeUer with Valuable
Keel pea and Prescriptions, Kg-
planatlons of Botanical Practice,
Correct useol Ordinary Herbs,Ac
CoarutTg Imdkx. i
H«OK PUB. llur'HR, :
134 l.eouurd Ht., N. Y. City
'jt
cars*
W IQ < nsh with order buys this
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Tin But BOOK T%
noiisly Illustrated: price 61 >, free to anybody sending
' two annual subscriptions at 61 each to tbe Overland
j Monthly. BAN FH AN CISCO. Sample Overland, to.
y—- is the most Infectious fils*
Tiieu comes measles.
•saeysar
. «* eiu Ball ysa ISm a ■—--■i -tsi -j.s
wiiStob Clean
NEW DISCOVERY; gives
. __ _ —r t qolok reltaf and euraa worst
— Send tor book oftestliaoniais sad 10 Hays’
treatment Free. Dr.I R MIBB a BOBS. Atlanta Oa
VE
SELL
WATCHES ON TIE.
Address UNION WATCH CO., Winston. N. C.
: STOPPED TKI
Psrmaaently Cirad
iBBBWltw Km
••VWWwllBy W s W VQIt aWsl UY
DR. KLIM’S CREAT
SERVE RESTORER
for sUJfiseeas XX ms ms./Vq.lfollang.
*s«sm saH At. Vises' heoss. kertuor MeJeasksM
when reoat Tad. RtoU to Dr. KUae. Ltd. Bellova*
lasdtna of M edict or. Ml Arch 8t.. PhUadaliAla. Pa.
I X ordering good* or making enquiries of ad
vertisers it will be to your advantage to men-
i:oa thla paper. fco. SB
Lazv Liver
Imtw wJg tronhle* a great deal
with a torpid liver, which produce* constipa
tion^ I found CASCARETS to be all yWclalm
for them, and secured such relief the Bret trial,
that I purchased another supply and was com
pletely cured. I shall only he too clod to rec
ommend Cascarets whenever tbe opportunity
tipreeented.” J.ASMrem y
2620 Susquenonna Are., Philadelphia, Pa.
CANDY
CATHARTIC
SVdcwiefc)
vHaoc
CUBl CONSTIPATION. ...
®*e*lhf Bswsdy Cewpaaf. fWssfa, Maeteaal, lew Task. WO
nq-to-bac
AND EFFECT.
KDUOATIOKTAJL,.
c
ODadmedd cuet
KARLOTTE COMMERCIAL
0LLE6E, UUinoTTl, H. 0.
No Vac*tloiiA—Po«ltlons Guaranteed—Cataloguo Free
wend 29 cenU In itampti for pocket calculator.
Educate for a Situation
We educate you, and then secure a
good position for you, beside* paying
your railroad fare. Bookkeeping,
Shorthand and Telegraphy.
Massey’s
BVBINBBt* COLLEGE,
COLUMBU8, GA.
ftend at once tor Catalogue N&S
YJL-JOLJOLJfLjhcjoovVkLJ
Stsayer’s COLLEC?,
Bid E. Baltimore Mt., Baltimore, Md.
8CH0LIR8HIPI
FP BE* I Vi>r Bright Students. Other
’ v- I Hcholershlps offer,,.1 for wr-
1 vices. All Books Kree.
I K-gular tuition lues lour.
v™, - * Thorough Courses. Short-
B<’«'is.I.lng, Bn Situation
Hsmortod. Mail
Oounss Cheep. 7th Vaur. Write us UMlay.
■AWg TM1H AD.
-PATENTS-
oncasb. oreesy laetalmentn.VOWLEB k
BURNS, Peteot Attorneys, m Broedwey. M. X.
IjOILERfE
And vary LOW PRICES. Largo stock. AIM
PIPE, VAI.VFH and FITTING*. EN
GINES, BOILEUB. MILLS and KKPAIK8.
Lombard IronWorks jfe Supply Oo.>