University of South Carolina Libraries
DR. CURRY PLEADS FOR THE CHILDREN He Alakes An Interesting Talk to i Georgia Legislators. HE GOES TO THE POINT Says Disfranchise Voters Who Cannot Head Their Ballot. Dr. J. L. M. Curry, the agent of the Peabody fund, addressed the general assembly of Georgia at noon Friday on the subject of education. The two houses had convened in joint session for the purpose. A committee from the two bodies escorted the speaker in, who was accompanied by Governor Candler, State School Commissioner Glenn and others. Dr. Cnrry said that the proudest boast of Georgia should be made of her state school commissioner, who "was one the best iu the entire country. He represented no corporation. "While the lobbyist were abroad, no one had engaged the members in be' , half of the children of the state. He came to plead for these and for all of them. "What are you going to do with the poorer class of children?" he asked. "How are you going to educate them to make usefull citizens of them, and how many are handicapped by their unfavorable environments?" The wealth of Georgia is not altogether in material things, he said, but is more in these children who are in the homes of those who sent the lawmakers here to enact laws for them. There was a waste of brain power in the state. "Georgia has double the territory of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and yet Massachusetts in invention, in science, in literature is far ahead of this state in the education of her children. There they have a nine mouths' schooL term, while here we have three or four. The average school attendance here is two or three years, while there it is seven years. Massa/ hnoAtt.e rrivoR for fV?A pdnofttiftn of a child, while Georgia only gives $2 per child. >>. * -' ' Horace Mann did more for this country than Daniel Webter,. yet Massachusetts erected a monumen to both. Man gave that state its admiral school system. Isn't a Georgia child as good as a Massachusetts child, and isn't there as much latent talent in your children to be developed? "The state can educate all the children at half the price that the churoh or individuals can educate one-fourth of the children. "Talk about the paramount issue! I have been through many of these crisis, and yet we are still going on. The confederate constitution is the most perfect instrument in the world regarding political wisdom. It provided that the president should hold six years and be ineligible for re- , election. Exalted citizenship is the remedy for the evils of governmental partnerships in private affairs in vogue in our country today. i "Every school in the land should , have industrial education:" Dr. Curry favored the disfranchisement of any voter who could not read the ballot he put in the box, be he white or black. Some one had said that this was an inherent right. This is an absurdity stuffed down the throrts of the people K- " M 1 J A _ "oi tnis country, ana is aone simpiy 10 justify negro suffrage. He was going to speak his mind and not those of the members, and he expected to say some things that would not be relished by his aaditors. "The Republican party, to punish . the south, gave the balance of power to the negroes of Louisiana, Missis^ . sippi and South Carolina by enfranV ehising them and disfranchising many of the whites and then they establishr * ed the Freed man's bureau. > "Some people say the negro is in| capable of education. If they will go with him to Spilman seminary, where everything is a neat as a pin, and which in charge of such godly women, if they do not think the negroes there capable of some degree of education they should go to their homes on the backs of jackasses." "Shall Georgia settle this educational problem for herself," he said, "or shall it be left to others. We must uplift the . negro or he will drag ' us down. such races can occupy thereto e? territory .without frici tion and rt"is ouf duty to provide for ] these." < "It all depends on the legislature as i to the future progress of the state. Is ] educational legislation of this session to be generous and full, or. niggardly < and hurtful? j "Georgia's children should be en^ . abled to compete with any in the i e land, and it is due the members to ] vote their convictions irrespective of i g their constituents, as the consciousness of duty well done would be their highest reward." , < CAN LEVY SPECIAL TAX. Georgia' Supreme Court Renders a | Highly Important Decision. The supreme, court of Georgia has rendered a "highly important decision 1 affecting the right of cities to levy a special tax on street railway companies. v . The case;was that of the Savannah, i Thunderbolt abd Isle of Hope railway vs. mayor and aldermen of the city of * Savannah,, before Judge Falligant, in the Chatham superior court. The city of Savannah levied a tax of $100 per mile on the street railway above mentioned, or ?l,d00 for us id miles of track. The company refused to pay and the matter was carried before the superior court of Chatham, which heJft that the tax could be collected. The supreme court affirms Judge Falligant^^J makes it possible for all municipaditids of ^Georgia to levy a special tax on street railways. CZAR IN A BAD WAY. Report Current That He Is Threatened With Lung Trouble. It was rumored in St. Petersburg Friday that Emperor Nicholas is threated with lunjg complications which, if they exist, **outd materially diminish his chance pi recovery. Inflammation of the lung is a common complication of typhoid ii? Russia. Thus far there is no official confirmation. A diagnosis of the czar's malady, says a dispatch received in Paris from St. Petersburg to The Siecle, shows that he has typhoidic enteritis. His brain is affected and his intellectual powers are endangered. I, ATTEMPTED BRIBERY.] Governor Longino, of Mississippi, ! Caused Arrest of Prominent Contractor. In Jackson. Miss., Saturday niglit J. E. Gibson, a prominent contractor from Logansport, Tnd., was arrested on the charge of attempting to bribe Governor Longino and secure his assistance in capturing the contract for the new $1,000,000 capitol building. The arrest was made at the instance of Governor Longino. Immediately after the alleged attempt at bribery occurred he emerged from his private office trembling with excitement, exclaiming: "You have struck the wrong man; T can't be bought." and directed his private secretary to send for the chief of police to take Gibson into custody. Gibson was arrested a few mtnutes later at the Edwards house and unceremoniously bundled off to jail. An hour later he was given a preliminary hearing before Judge Fitzgerald and admitted to bail in the sum of $5,000. At the hearing of the testimony Governor Longino stated that he had received two visits from Gibson. During the first visit he stated that a combination had been formed among St. Louis and Chicago contractors to capture the state house contract, and he intended to fight their scheme, but would not give away details when the governor asked *for facts. At the second visit, which occurred Saturday morning, so Governor Longino states, Gibson offered him any sum of money he might ask for his assistance in captnring the contract, insinuating that the price of materials could be changed so that both would be able to make a considerable amount cut of the deal, ' BIRMINGHAM PRINTERS OUT. They Make New Scale Which Employers Won't Accept. All the union printers in the job printing offices in Birmingham, Ala., went out on strike Friday morning. The strike was inaugurated for the purpose of enforcing the scale recently adopted by Typographical Union No. 104, -nd which the proprietors of the job offices refused to pay. The new scale calls for a minimum of $18 per week. The old scale's minimum was $16, but no printing office in Birmingham had paid less than $16.50, and this was generally regarded as the minimum. The printers made some concessions, so far as the daily newspapers are concerned, from their original demands, and they now expect that the newspapers will adopt their scale. The printing offices affected by the strike are Roberts & Son, Leslie Printing Company, Dispatch Printing Company, American Newspaper Union, Birmingham Courier and City Paper Company. SULTAN 15 OBSTINATE. Still Refuses an Exequatur to Our Consul at harpoot. A dispatch from Constantinople says: United States Charge d'Affaires Griscome called upon Tewfik Pasha, minister for foreign affairs to urge a settlement of the difficulty in relation to the granting of an exequatur to Dr. Thomas H. Norton, who some time ago was appointed by President McKinley to establish- a consulate at Harpoot. The porte, however, is firm in its refusal to grant the request for an exequatur. <In regard to the above a Washington special says: The Turkish authorities having refused to grant an eaequatur to Dr. Thomas H. Norton, to act as United States consul at Harpoot, the indications point to some retaliatory measures on the part of our government in the near future. IN QUIESCENT STATE. Administration Is Calmly Awaiting Developments In China. The administration has adopted a waiting policy in the matter of Pekin negotiations, says a New York Herald dispatch from Washington. No action has been taken upon Germany's proposal to make the execution of the Boxer leaders a condition precedent to the continuance of negotiations. The president has decided, it is understood, that this matter can well rest until further developments show what tho German and other governzxients propose to do. RICH ZINC DEPOSITS . Pound Near Knoxvllie, Tenn., and Will Be Developed. Another extensive deposit of zinc aas beed found near Knoxville, Tenn., >n the farm of Captain Frank M. Smith. A company has leased the property. Shafts will be sunk 300 feet. The ?re is said to be richer than any found In the Joplin, Mo., district." George Currans, of Mattoona, 111., aas leased extensive zinc properties at Sew Market, Tenn., and will develop t without <1plav. MISS SIMS WRATHY. 3oes Before Conference to Protest Against Exoneration of Rev. Owens. An extremely sensational development came to light in the North Georgia conference before adjournment Monday, when Miss Adele C. Sims, who charged Rev. C. S. Owens with breach of promise, appeared in person to repudiate the action of the committee which exonerated him on the ground that he was mentally irresponsible. Parker Rye NONE PURER, NONE BETTER. ASK FOR_IT AT ALL DISPENSARIES! Quick Collection. "My! What a splendid library your husband lias. Mrs. Flashington. It must have taken h'rn years and years to get all those books together." "Oh, no. We moved iuto a house two years ago that had book shelves built all around one room, and he done It in about three weeks."?Chicago Times-Herald. Siberian Prisons Abolished. Siberia is no longer to bo a penal eolonv. The imperial decree abolishing the former status is the result of the buildiDg of the Trans-Siberian railroad. Nothi ng can compare to the rapid settlement of the vast Siberian plains by the inrushing farmers, unless it be the rapid growth achieved by that famous dyspepsia cure, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. Try it for constipation,indigestion, dyspepsia, "biliousness or flatulency, if you would be well. Steady Company. He?There's no doubt about it. "a man is known by the company ho keeps." She?Not always. If the average man wore really known by his company she d shake hlin right away. Wanted. A traveling salesman iu each southern state; $50 to $60 per mouth and traveling expenses: experience not absolutely necessary. Address Peulcks Tobacco Works Co., Penlcks. Ya. Not the Usual Sort. ' There's one strange thing about this rabbit stew, I've noticed." said the facetious boarder. "W hat's that?" asked Mis. Starvem. "It has a hare in it." The Best Prescription for Chill* and Fever is a bottle of Gkovk's Tastklkss Cbii.lTgnic. -It is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. No cure?no pay. Price .'?Jc. He Knew liettor. Mollle?You have nothing to look forward to. Chollie?Yes, 1 have. I have a wealthy aunt who believes in Christian Science. Best For the Bowels, No matter what alls you, headache to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right. Cascabets help nature, cure you without a gripe or pai?, !>roduce aasy natural movements, cost you ust 10 cants to start getting your health act. CAscABETa Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up In metal boxes, every tablet has (3.C.C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. No Doubt of It. "So there was a real fashionable audience at the muslcale?" "Oh, yes; they kept right on talking through all the music."?Philadelphia Bolletln. 00 YOU FEEL LIKE THIS? Pen Picture for Women. " I am so nervous, there is not a well inch in my whole body. I am so weak at my stomach and have indigestion horribly, and palpitation of the heart, and I am losing flesh. This headache and backache nearly kills me, and yesterday I nearly had hysterics ; there is a weight in the lower part of my bowels bearing down all the time, and pains in my groins and thighs; I cannot sleep, walk, or sit, and I believe I am diseased all over; no one ever suffered as I do." This is a description of thousands of cases which come to Mrs. Pinkham's attention daily. An inflamed anid ulcerated condition of the neck of the womb can produce all of these symp Jgwp;. v VBI va&**{? v.'v it' jss^ ti. /J. Mrs. Johx Williams. toms, and no woman should allow herself to reach such a perfection of misery when there is absolutely no need of it. The subject of our portrait in this sketch, Mrs. "Williams of Englishtown, N.J., has been entirely cured of such illness and misery by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and the guiding advice of Mrs. Pinkham of Lynn, Mass. No other medicine has such a record for absolute cures, and no other medi cine is 44 just as good." Women wno want a cure should insist upon getting Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Compound when they ask for it at a store. Anyway, write a letter to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., and tell her all your troubles. Her advice is free. Dr. Bull's Cough Cares a cough or cold at once. f-i Conquers croup, bronchitis. ^Vr| IBB grippe and consumption. 25c. . y ^ * ? | " Every cotton planter should write for our valuable illustrated pamphlet, " Cotton Culture." It is sent free. Send name and address to GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., N. Y. Malsby & Company, 39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Qa. Engines and Boilers Steam Water Heaters, Steam Pumps and Penbertliy Injectors. Manufacturers and Dealers In SAW MILLS, Coru Mills, Feed Mills,Cotton Gin Machinery and Grain Separators. SOLID and INSERTED Saws. Saw Teeth and locks, Knight'* Patent Dogs, Birdsall Saw Mill and Engine Itepairs, Governors, Grate Bars and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue free by mentioning this paper. ENGINES BOILERS. Tanks, Stacks, Stand-Pipes and Sheet-Iron work; Shafting, Palleys, Hearing, Boxes, Hangers, etc. j6?*Cast every day; work 180 hands. LOMBARD IRON WORKS AND SUPPLY COMPANY, Augusta, - - Georgia. U Beat Cough 8yrup. Tastes Good. Use M El in time. 8old by druggists. j ^g-riri-riiTii-fcif-irril^ RAILROAD AT AUCTION. Southern Buys the Louisville, Evansville and St. Louis For Sum of $4,030,000. The Louisville, Evansville and St. Louis railway, commonly called the Air-Line, was bought at public sale at Louisviile, Ky., Thursday, by the Southern railway, at Iluntingburg, Ind.. for $4,030,000. The Southern railway will not assume control of the property until Jauuary 1st. The only bidders were Francis L. Stetson and Victor Morawetz, of New York, representing the banking firm - - * >r f- n? ? 01 J. JL'ierpouc iuorgau a. uu. uuu tuc Southern railway. To pay for the road the new purchasers will immediately issue 810,000,000 worth of Southern railway, Air-Line division, bonds at 4 per cent. In securing the Air-Line the Southern railway gains an entrance to St. Louis, thereby placing it on an equal footing with the Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern, Louisville and Nashville and other roads entering Louisville and the south having terminals at St. Louis. In addition to this new and valuable territory is opened up to the Southern railway in both Indiana and Illinois. CYCLONE IN COLORADO. No Lives Reported Lost But Railroads Suffer Heavy Damages. A special from Denver, Col., says: It is impossible for the railroads to estimate the amount of damage suffered by reason of the wind storm which swept the lines for nearly one hundred miles along tne case 01 tne mouuiaiua Wednesday. The wiies were blown down and trains are moved with great caution in the absence of telegraphic orders, seriously delaying traffic. Many freight cars on the sidings had their tops blown off, station building were damaged more or less all through the storm region and the tracks strewn with wreckage which further retarded the movement of trains. Between Pueblo and Colorado Springs the property loss will be heavy among the ranchmeo. The storm stands without a parallel in many respects. Former severe wind storms have been accompanied with either rain or suow, but in this case it was neither, and the wind carried sand, gravel and small stones similar to the awful sand storms of the desert. POPULIST LEADER PARDONED. By Order of the President W. F. Carter Is Released From Penitentiary. President McKinley has granted a pardon to W. F. Carter, of Georgia, who is serving a two-year sentence in the penitentiary at Columbus, Ohio, for the embezzlement of . postoffice ~ * - * - ? iL ~ funds. Carter was cnairman 01 me state Populist committee of Georgia, and postmaster in a small town and used a portion of the funds for political purposes. A postoffice inspector stepped in one day and found him short. The amount was covered in two hours, but notwithstanding this, he was sent to the penitentiary for two years. Carter is now in the hospital suffering with a complication of diseases, and it is questionable whether he will live long enough to reach home. AFTER THE LYNCHERS. Effort Will Be Made to Prosecute Men Who Burned Negro. A Denver special says: District Attorney McAllister of Colorado Springs has ordered Sheriff Freeman of Lincoln county to proceed against the Trmmhers of the mob who burned Pres ton Porter, Jr., at the stake. The order was issued after correspondence between Governor Thomas and McAllister. Just how the grand jury would be chosen has not yet been decided. The governor insists on a prosecution. Meredith In Old Berth. Captain William Meredith, of Illinois, has been appointed chief of the bureau of engraving and printing. He served as chief of the bureau during the Harrison administration. Receipts From War Revenue Act. The receipts from the war revenue act for the first four months of the present fiscal year were $38,398,956. RATHBONE SOLD OUT. Property of Erstwhile "High Roller" Goes For a Mortgage. The Reilly block, the property of Major E. G. Rathbone, formerly director of posts in Cuba, appraised at 878, 666, and the Campbell block,property of Mrs. Kate C. Miner, Rathbone's sisterin-law, appraised at $66,633, were sold at Hamilton. O., Monday under a decree of foreclosure obtained by W. S. Jones, of New York, to Grace Campbell, the countess Yon Rittberg, of Dresden, Germany, a sister of Mrs. Rathbone. The former block brought $57,500 and the latter $55,500. The Reilly block was the last important holding of Rathbone. COLORADO SPRINGS HIT HARD. Property Losses Resulting From tlu Storm are Enormous. The losses to property from Wed nesdav's storm at Colorado Spring, amounts to 8100,000, divided as follows: Business section of the town, 8-10,000; Colorado Telephono company, $15,000; Electric Power company, $10,000; Western Union, $5,000; Postal Telegraph company, 85,000; Colorado and Philadelphia Reduction works, $10,000; balance scattering. Xo loss of life has been reported. AN EPIDEMIC OF SflALLPOX Greatly Alarms the People of Roane County, Tennessee. A Chattanooga special says: The citizens of Roane county, Tenn., are greatly alarmed over the many cases of smallpox in that vicinity. All along the Cincinnati Southern road in that county there are numerous bad cases and it is daily spreading. At Kingston, which is the county seat of the county, gaurds have been placed out on all roads to prevent any suspects from entering the place, but still a number of cases have shown up there. NEW VANDERBILT HEIRESS. A Biby Girl Is Born to Hr. and Mrs. William K., Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William K. Vanderbilt, Jr., are rejoicing over the birth of a girl who will become heiress to the Vanderbilt millions. Mrs. Vanderbilt, who was Miss Virginia Fair, is at the Vanderbilt residence in New York, ajid, according to all accounts, mother and child are well. . , - - ' -; i . ! a a & a i ^jg jjf& 9 f fl ^ysical attraction is ^j [3 secondary to it. We fl |\ have a book we will ;g |] gladly send you that vt 11 tells just how to care ?1 [1 for the hair. |J || If your hair is too ?? [l luster, 11 ge?? ncx.ii ?l80r \\ Growth* bacomes I |] vigorous and an dan- f| Ji druff is removed/ | 15 It always restores i [ I color to gray or faded ] \\ hair. Retain your / I] youth; don't look old f I td before your time. V "Jj $1.00 a bottle. All druggists. k| C 1 "I have used your Hair "Vigor Wj r j now for about 25 years and I liavo rl / / found it splendid and satisfactory f 9 f M in every way. I believe 1 have I ^ I ^ recommended this Hair Vigor to Yw \ ? hundreds of my friends, ana they Y\ A * all tell the same story. If any- Be 1 ? 3 body wants the best kind of a Hair ! C / Vigor I shall certainly recommend yi j I to them just as strongly as .1 fi l M can that they get a bottle of Ayer's F * t 4 Hair Vigor." I , 1 2 Mrs. N. E. Hamii.tox, \ T Nov. 2S, 1898. Norwich, N. Y. V' | J Write the Doctor. gf ? ? If you don't obtain all tho benefits w 5 u Tou desire from the use of the Vigor, m m K *3 write the Doctor about it. Address, ? FA Dr.. J. C. AYER, * | * Lowell, Mass. f J RECKONING L0NQ1TUDE Observatory Founded by Charles IL Universally Accepted as tbe Initial Meridian. On nearly every map the longitude reads either east or west from Greenwich. In American maps there i3 also given the longitude from Washington, lmt that of Greenwich is of almost universal use. At the International Geodetic Congress, which met at Washington in 1884, Greenwich was recommended for universal adoption as the initial meridian. As a matter of fact, there are no less than eighteen other observatries whose meridians are som'etimes used by mapmakers. At one time the assumed meridian of the island of Ferro was accepted as the initial meridian, being exactly 20 degrees west of the meridian of Paris, Ferro, one of the Canary Islands, was the most westerly land known in the days of Ptolemy, and on the discovery of America was the dividing line between the eastern and western hemispheres. The Ferro meridian did not really touch the island, running, in fact, some miles off the east coast. The position fit 20 degrees west of Paris was only assumed. On some maps this meridian is still used as the zero of longitude. In laying out a map the cartographer must start somewhere, so the initial, or zero, meridian of longitude must be, in order to be of the greatest use, from some recognized observatory. The Iioyal Observatory of France was established at Paris, and the work of that tower was so successful that Sir Jonas Moore and Sir Christopher Wren had little difficulty in persuading Charles II. that it would be a good thing, in view of England's growing maritime trade, to establish an observatory for the purpose of determining the longitude at sea, which was, as will be easily appreciated. a pressing necessity. King Charles was told that the first thing required was a more accurate knowledge of the moon and stars. So he founded the Iioyal Observatory at Greenwich on a hill which was formerly the site of the castle of Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, just outside of London. This was in 1675. The building was completed Aug.- 10, 1675, and on Sept. 19 the same year the first observation was made by the astronomer ( royal, John Flamsteed, in whose honor the hill has since been known as Flamsteed's hill. In 225 years there have been only eight astronomers royal. It will be seen by the foregoing that the Greenwich Observatory was primarily founded for the purpose of assisting in the accurate charting of the earth as well as of the heavens. However, its work now Includes many other fields of astronomical research. On every available day photographs of the > sun are taken, and after being measured are carefully stored away for reference. The chronometers used in the British navy are purchased and examined at the observatory, and in connec~ tion with other observatories in various parts of the world the astronomer at Greenwich is engaged at present in making an immense photograph of the heavens. The meridian of Greenwich passes through the transit house. This is in reality the spot from which all modern ; maps start?Philadelphia Ledger. Fountains in the Sea. Several fresh -water fountains are known to exist in the Gulf of Mexico, where vessels have frequently filled their casks with the cold sweet water that comes up like a geyser in the midst of the salt water. The fresh water springs, as the sailors call them, have been known in the gulf for 200 or 300 years. They were discovered by early voyagers and were the salvation of many a mariner whose supply of fresh water ran short while he was becalmed in the doldrums. Some of the fresh water springs are marked upon the charts, but there is so little need of them nowadays by the steamers on the gulf, and the sailing fleet is so small, that no attention is paid to them, and they have passed out of the knowledge of the younger skipper.? Chicago Record. IBB Why the Oyster Crop Falls. It is pointed out that partial failure of the oyster crop In certain years, the diminution in size of oysters on the market and the extinction of many oyster beds that formerly were famous ?the "saddle rocks,'- for instance? have been due to want of material for the production of the oyster shell. The j bods throughout the oyster bolt have j steadily deteriorated of late years, and i in many cases become absolutely j worthless, in.spite of the fact that food has been supplied artificially at great expense and trouble, and wire fences have been used to protect the oysters from the starfish. For this trouble the defilement of the water by ! sewage and waste of various manufacturing establishments has usually | been blamed, sometimes justly, some! times without cause. What the oyster i m ncf h.ovd nr It will nerish. is a full supply of carbonate of lime with which to build its shell. Near the mouth of ! rivers, where carbonate of lime in me[ chanical solution, as it is expressed, I comes down from the hills and plains I of the interior in drainage, the oyster i lias all the material it needs for buildj ing its houses and, at the same time, | ' the inflowing tide brings it ample | food.?Boston Transcript. A Carious Combat. A traveler in South Africa witnessj ed not long since a singular combat. He was musing one morning, with his eyes on the ground, when he noticed a caterpillar crawling along at a rapid rate. Pursuing him was a host of small black ants. Being quicker In their movements, the ants would catch up with the caterpillar, and one would mount his back and bite him. Pausing, *tne caterpillar would turn his head, and bite and kill his tormentor. After slaughtering a dozen or more of his persecutes, the caterpillar showed signs of fatigue. The ants made a combined attack. Betaking himself to a stalk of grass, the caterpillar climbed up the tree, tail first, followed by the ants. As one approached he seized it in his jaws and threw it off the stalk. The ants, seeing that the caterpillar had too strong a position for them to overcome, resorted to strategy. They began sawing through the grass-stalk. In a few minutes tlie stalk fell ana hundreds of ants pounced upon the fallen caterpillar. He was killed at * once, and the victors marched off In great triumph, leaving the foe's body upon the field. , CURES RHEUMATISM OR CATARRH IN A DAY. TREATMENT FREE. B. B. B. (Botanio Biood Balm) euros the worst cases by draining the poison out of the blood and bones. Aches and pains in the bones or joints, swollen glands, droppings In the throat, hawking, spitting or bad breath, impaired hearing, etc., all disappear promptly and permanently. B. B. B. cures where all else fails. B. B. B. makes blood pure and rich. Druggists, $1. Treatment of B. B. B. sent free by writing Blood Balm Co., 1 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice given until oured. Medicine sent prepaid. 3000 testimonials of cures by B. B. B., so don't give up hope, but try Biood Balm. Women'i Ways. "What foolish creatures women are." "Verv true: a woman can't even let an old love affair die, but keeps poking It up every once'in a while to see If it Is really dead.?Chicago liecord. Good Position. Trustworthy men wanted to travel. Experience not absolutely necessary. For particulars, address Peerless Tob. Wks^ Bedford City, Va. Beyond the Dreams of Conscience. "Clytlo, is this young man you are engaged to well to do?" "Oh, pa. he's rich; he's so rich that he doen't care whether he pays his debts or not.?Indianapolis Journal. To Core a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Broho Quinine Tablets. All drucgists refund the money If It falls to cure. L. \V. (iltOVK's signature is on each box. 23c. "Thank Yon, Sir." The barber's Itch has touched me many a time, But never has it done me any harm. Vo cure It. I have but to pay a dime The barber's Itch is mostly Inhls palm. ? Carter's Ink is used by millions, which is a sure proof of , its quality, bend for free booklet, "In it lings." Address carter's Ink Co., Boston, Mass. Tiiey w> xogetiier. Plobbs?Why la the world have you nicknamed that Boston chiropodist, "Dr. Succotash ?" Slobbs?Why, don't you see? Corn and beans. ?Philadelphia Record. All goods are alike to Putnam Fadeless Dyes.as they color all fibers at one boiling. Sold by all druggists. A Good Cook. Mrs. Gadd?"That new minister ain't much on vlalUn', Is he? ' Mrs. Gabb?"No; I guess maybe his wife Is a purty good cook herself."?New York Weekly* Happine=s cannot.be bought, but one of the great hindrances to its attainment can be removed by Adams' Pepsin Tutti Frutti. Useful. "Say, that hunting dog is no good: I wouldn't have him around." "Yes, you would; we keep him to lend.? : Chicago Record. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by , Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & CO.. Props.. Toledo, O. We, the unde-signed, have known F. J.Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfec 1 y honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. ( West & Truae, w holesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Waldixg, Kuwait & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills .are the best. Pfso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs.?Wm. o. Exdsley, Vanburen, Iud., Feb. 10, 1900. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. Judged By Appearances. Mrs. Leo Hunter?Why are yon so suspicious of Count Vou Squint? He can't help being crosseyed. Mr. Hunter?I know it, but he looks crooked. ?Smart Set. I 3 Speedy, Pr I Acts quicker, ne' A than any laxative knc Its action is marv No remedy will < quickly and with abs< Wf Huny Average Dose: One-half ( T^W Every druggist and genera \)K A Clf 'or ful1 WS. Aon "Hunyadi Jtooe, 1^ Sole lopNtcr: Hna of ANDRI * ' >'+:; ' " ' ' ' '' ' Mrs. Lasher's Remarkable Story?Dr. Greene's Nerrura Cured Her. UBS. FRED. C. LASHER, JR. The case of Mrs. Fred. C. Lasher, Jr., a well-known woman oi WestpoH^ N. Y., is one of the most interesting on record. It is an actual fact that head* aches caused her head to split. " Jb'or thirteen years, "fine says, "? sunerea. uruui lemuio uewwvim a^u* and day, until the bones of my skull opened so that the doctor could lay hit thumb right into the opening on to my brain. Two doctors attended me'and claimed that I was on the verge of insanity. I was under their care &msSb* years, but got no relief. Then I tried Dr. Greene's Nervura blood djrnd nerve remedy, and inside of a year the bones of my head had taken their natural shape again." s That Mrs. Lasher's statements are true is vouched for by reliable men of ' Westport, and by a Justice of the Peace there. Dr. Greene's, Nervura blood and nerve remedy cured Mrs. Lasherwhen all other remedies failed, and it curse . thousands of suffering women every year. If your head aches, if you cannot sleep and are weak and nervous, remember t^iat this"great curative agent, Dr. ' Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, wul make you well and stro&g. ' Dr. Greene's Nervura^ood and nerve remedy is * physlciaflftr ^ ; |, prescription, formulated fromr a discovery after years of invest ? ' ?-m. . ixL ci if- ?- ' ZjSm tion and experiment, ur. ureene, west iim 01., new iun? v is the discoverer. He can be consulted free personally or by letur. ; tster Byl WGUN CATALOGUE FREE Trib aii atoat Winchester Rifles, Stetgm, ud iiwMwSend name and address on a postal now. Don't delay if yon an interested. " '"'. Bsl . WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. 180 WINCHESTER AVENUE - NEW HAVEN, CONN. ||fl BSBSB0BSBSBSBSBSBSBSBB S Cioar Dealers Like S ? to have their regular customers smoke * S Old Virginia Cheroots 2 f because they know that once a man 2 starts smoking them he is "fixed/' g- . ; l|| and that he will have no more trouble J with him trying to satisfy him with M different kinds of Five Cent cigars. J ' - ^ h tl? mill inn Old Vimnii Cheroots smoked this. ? 4 lUtW uuuuiwu ? ? - . , t J| year. Ask your own dealer. Price, 3 for 5 cents. jj I "Suaggs has a queer idea of college life," said one university man to an"Yes; he said yesterday, when I told The real worth of w. ? L. Douglas S3.00 and ML m him to get ready for the cane rush, S3M> shoes compared 9 A that he came to study and not to mix t^b^p#(^akes 14 R^r ^ up in riots."?Pittsburg Chronicle- Oar^GiitEdzeUne gybA m rr . . cannot be equalled at ' 'nl , fr '* ?& Telegraph. any price. Over1,000,- ' ^P*|p f >fc 000 satisfied wearers. ilkdVT Judge?Prisoner, I hope you realize ' how swiftly the wrong-doer is pun- B USE vS^Oat piif ft W._k iwglfr"". %% ished. In six short weeks after your J|fAST crime you stand at the bar of Justice. VvN?^two pain of crXarr Prisoner?Yis, yer honor; me money give out?Chicago Record. tf A Tumultuous Moment. . n. -i^R -?nr hnshand 5S5KB > :>M L/UClUr X III aumu j t-.-i, -n.r-u-r doesn't get enough exercise. sell mow Ss and ^dwHttefir ... ":M _ 1 . other two manufacturers In the C. i ^ Mrs. De Style-Well, hell be exer- The rcpntattw cf jr. iJ ' cised enough when my dressmaker BEST tylei comfort! and Wearia kion] BEST * ^* sends in her bilL - - $ JiOil tioo than othar mahaa bccaoaa JtfyflB - "^0 1 COURSE GIVEN. POSI- cunp OUftC r n r rrioss Guaranteed by oflul expect mo.-o for th?r money onufc. HJr L L $5,OCO deposit. R. R. TARS than they can get elaewhere. f f^k "W. Write quick. THE jEkXm).^ more W.Lboutlai <3 aimmM '. H SB ^L.^LGa-ALA. Bus. COWJW*, ?hoea are aotd than anyotber make la became X2U?X ' i!gg M,con,Ce?s.?. *gf,THE Take no (ub^titatef lahat e to self-supportimg women Without interfering with your mralar duties yon Stata kind of leather, die, and width, ?Wn or w??S CIS can make money by meana of our offer of 8l7,frOO Qvr willit*hm ante MmJtaZ ' ;JM FOR SUBSCRIPTIONS. Send for. fSTwSg W. la. Jttoo^ ??oe XBroekf*,'!^ -jj nlais. ?HU WKLINeATOR, nnA.im . ?f _ waam. Aa.am-a-. ^Jfli _ profitable employment i ! yon can (or think you can) oollott life iaisuha/n<5el omot and Sure, * '? * I R. F. SBEBDEN, Sea Agent, Atliata, fa. :ll rer gripes and obtains belter rami's 9 elous, its effect immediate. y ?a| ATQPUB FB? cure constipation and biliousness so SMI B MB ?>r nnant11Pnradfo iluteiy no discomfort as Mj I B gg ^ adi Janos | / ' '' t . V^_ ^