The Darlington herald. (Darlington, S.C.) 1890-1895, March 02, 1894, Image 3
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the min in i sneer.
An Incident of the Lincoln Tragedy
Never Before Published.
[From the New York Evening Post.]
On the night of the assassination
of President Lincoln, and a short
time before that tragedy took place,
a horse and buggy were driven rap
idly out of the alley back of Ford’s
Theater, turning down Tenth street
to the avenue, and then disappeared,
going easteily towards the capitol.
A few moments later the greatest
crime ever committed in America
paralyzed for a moment the audience
and held the whole country spell
bound with horror. Booth’s leap to
the stage, his dramatic speech, and
remarkable escape passed like a
dream before the audience. But
then came the awakeniug, aud fast
upon the heels of the assassin came
the vengeance of an outraged people.
Who the assassins were, how many
were involved in the plot, how large
its ramifications, were unknown.
Every clue was seized upon, eyery
person over whom hung the slight
est suspicion, was immediately ar
rested. A reign of terror followed
among all the Southern sympathizers
in the city and the country round.
For the people in their anger were
not very particular who suffered for
the crime, provided the principals
were caught and punished.
The disappearance of that horse
and buggy a short time before the
tragedy'was^soon brought to light,
and was eagerly seized upon as a
clue that might lead to importaut
results. Several companies of cav
alry were immediately ordered to
follow and overtake the buggy, to
arrest the driver, and bring him
back to the old Capitol prison. They
t(ok up the trail at Pennsylvania
avenue, and followed it through the
eastern part of the city until they
came to the old Washington Pike,
and then to Bladensburg where they
were told by the guard that a man
in a buggy had passed a short time
before. They put spurs to their
horses and followed the pike for a
long distance, besides scouring the
by-roads of all the surrounding
country. But not a trace could they
find of the man in the buggy; he
bad disappeared, and though every
effort was made to unravel the disap
pearance, the government authorities
were never able to do so. Time
passed. The trials for the assassina
tion were over, public interest died
down, and the incident was forgotten
amid the stirring events that soon
followed.
It vwis my good fortune a short
.time ago to come across an explana
tion of this incident; in fact, it was
explained to me by the man in the
buggy. 1 h id receiyed a cordial in
vitation from an old gentleman who
lived about fifteen miles off iu the
upper part of Prince George’s couu-
ty, to join iu a fox hunt, which was
to take place during Christmas week.
It was to be the event of the season,
as everybody had plenty of time at
that season of the year. It was one
of those delightful winter days
which are so common in Maryland,
just cold enough to keep the ground
from being too soft, and yet warm
enough to make riding pleasant
without being o< ..urdened with a
heavy coat. The country was low
and rolling, covered with woods,
which have taken the place of old
worn-out tobacco patches, and great
dark brown fields, stretching away
on either side, brightened occasion
ally by the light brown of the sedge
grass, which waved and rustled in
the breeze, almost like fields of
rijxmed wheat.
As I rode up to Mr. M.’s house, I
was greeted by the combined rush
and chorus of his pack of fox
hounds, whose noisy welcome takes
the place of door-bells in the homes
of Southern Maryland. A noted
Confederate scout once told me that,
when he was scouting through this
pait of Maryland during the war,
he always felt safe when he rode up
to a house if he was greeted by fox
hounds, as it was invariably a sign
that the owner was a Southern sym
pathizer, most of the fox-hunting
gentry being of that persuasion.
The house itself was one of those
great square, red brick houses, with
a long wide porch in front, so com
mon in this part of Maryland, set in
the usual cluster of old oaks and
elms, with the negro quarters ami
' the stables several hundred yards
distant in the rear. It bad been
built in the latter part of the lust
century, when the planters made
enonnons fortunes from tobacco,
which, howeyer, so impoverished the
soil as to make it almost worthless
in a great many instances.
I was met by Mr. M., a striking
looking man, six feet in height, with
a magnificent head and a long white
beard. He had been through many
adventures when a young man, and
during the period of the war, when
he had many narrow escapes in for
warding despatches and assisting
scouts through the lines. Once, for
instance, the government was very
anxious to capture a well-known
scout, who was at that time iu Balti
more. The scout escaped and made
his way to Mr. M.’s house, where he
lay hid for the night. Next day
there happened to be a primary
meeting at Bladensburg, where a
very large force of Union troops
were stationed. The people gener
ally went to the primaries in the
morning and returned in the even
ing after having a jollification. Mr.
M. took advantage of this, went to
the primaries in the morning with
this scout, took a drink with the
provost marshal, passed out on the
other side of Bladensburg with some
friends returniug to their homes in
the lower part of the county, and
reached Piscataway in safety. Here
the scout hid with some friends until
he could cross the Potomac, which
was not difficult, and there was a
great deal of blockade-ruuning done
in that quiet little country town,
overlooked on account of its insig
nificance.
It is needless to say that I was
welcomed in the true Maryland
style. Aft;r dinner we were as
sembled round a large open fire,
which sent a glow through the old
hall. The fireplace was so large
that, instead of cutting the cord-
wood in half, as is usually the case,
they used it just as it came from
tl e woods, four feet long. The hall
itself extended through the house
irom frout to rear, and was the
favorite loafing-place of two or
three old hounds, who had been
famous in the bunting-field iu their
youth. We had been talking about
narrow escapes iu the hunting-field,
when Mr. M. said:
“Have I ever told you how I came
near being hung for the murder of
Lincoln ?”
A chorus of noes and a demand
for the story brought the following
account:
“On the day that Lincoln was
murdered, I had driven into town
and put up my horse at the stables
of Dr. , an old friend of mine,
immediately in the rear of Ford’s
Theatre. It was rather late when I
returned to get my horse, after at
tending to the business I was on.
Indeed, I afterwards learned, it was
a very short time before Lincoln was
killed. As 1 drove out of the alley
l uoticed a horse standing behind
the theater, no doubt the one on
which Booth escaped. I drove down
the avenue and dually succeeded in
passing both the Washington pickets
and those at Bladensburg, the last
line of the defences of Washington.
A short distance out of Bladensburg
the country becomes heavily wooded,
and continues so until you reach my
place. Instead of running in a
straight line the pike makes a kind
of curve, but there is a road, a kind
of cut-xff, which saves a consider
able distance to those who know of
its existence. I had just turned into
this road, and had gotten under the
shadow of the trees, when I heard
the clanking of the sabres of a body
of cavalry coming rapidly down the
pike. I stopped my horse to let
them pass without hearing me, be
cause cavalrymen in those times
very often fired aud then cried,
‘Halt.’ The whole neighborhood
was kno.wu to have very strong
Southern feelings, and a dead rebel
more or less did not amount to
much. 1 had the same experience
twice again, as I crossed by-roads,
but each time I was fortunate enough
to hear the cavalry coming, aud so
‘laid low.’
‘T, of course, knew something
was wrong—exactly what I had no
idea. There was no danger of
Southern raids, as the sun of the
South had just gone down behind
the hills at Appomattox, and what
had started a large body of Union
cavalry racing through the country
roads was more than 1 could ac
count for, not dreaming for an in
stant that they were after me. 1
finally reached home without meet
ing any more cavalry. Next morn
ing, while we were at breakfast, a
negro boy named Tom came to the
door, with a scared look ou his face.
“ ‘What’s the matter, Ton’
“Mars Abe was shot last night
down in Washington.’
“ ‘Shot! impossible.’
“ ‘ ’Deed, though, it’s true, Mars
William.’
“Just then I heard somebody ri !e
rapidly up to the house, and looking
out of the window, 1 aaw a neighbor
of ours.
- “ ‘Have you heard the news ?’ he
asked.
“ ‘No.’
“‘Lincoln was killed last.night by
Booth, at Ford’s Theatre.’
“It Hashed upon me in an instaut,
the meaning of all that cavalry
swarming through the country the
right before, and I came to thereon -
elusion that I was the man they
were after. You can depend upon
it, I kept pretty quiet. I did not
care about feeling the uoose around
my neck like Mrs. Surratt, whom 1
knew well, or languishing on the
Dry Tortugas like my friend Dr.
Mndd. There was enough evidence
against me to hang half a dozen
men iu the then state of public
opinion a few years later when 1
happened to meea an officer of the
United States army, who told me
incidentally that^ he had ridden
through this part of the country ou
the night of Lincoln’s murder,
looking-for one of the conspirators
who had escaped iu a buggy, though
they had ridden after him as far as
Elkridge, sonu thirty miles from
Washington.”
About tiirls.
An old astrological prediction
gives the character of a girl accord-!
ing to the month she was born iu as
follows:
If a girl is born in January she
will be a prudent housewife, given
to melancholy, but good tempered
and fond of fine clothes; if in Feb
ruary an affectionate wife and tender
mother aud devoted to dress; if in
March, a frivolous chatter box,
somewhat given to quarreling, and a
connoisseur in gowns aud bonnets;
if in April, inconstant, not very in
telligent, but likely to be good look
ing and studious of fashion plates;
if iu May, handsome, amiable and
given to style iu dress; if iu June,
impetuous, will marry early, be friv
olous and like dressy clothes; if in
July, possibly handsome, but with a
sulky temper and a peuchant for
gay attire; if iu August, amiable
ami practical, likely to marry rich
aud dress strikingly; in September,
discreet, affable, much liked and a
fashionable dresser; if in October,
pretty and coquetisl', and devoted to
attractive gorniture; if in Novem
ber, liberal, kind, of a mild disposi
tion, ami an admirer of stylish dress; 1
: f in December, well-pi ©portioned,
fond of novelty, extravagant and a
-tudent of dress.
A Warning ta Romantic Maidens.
[From Pennsylvania <frit.]
The marriage of Miss Cora Fel-j
lows to a Sioux Indian, known asj
Chaska, was the newspaper sensa-l
tion of three years ago. Miss Fel-:
lows was the heroine in print for
several weeks, and her romance was'
read from one end of the cquntry to 1
the other, and she was regarded
with something akin to adoration tor
her devotion to her redskinned lover,
whom she proposed to lift to the
plane of civilization she had attain
ed. In these few, brief years the
picture has changed, the romance
shorn of its glamour, and the once
lovelorn maiden now finds herself
the deserted wife of a worthless,
abusive husband, and the mother of
two half 1 reed children. Chaska,
instead of being elevated by the
companionship of this bright woman,
eloped with a squaw of his tribe,
and with whom he is now living in
Sioux squalor and filth. It would
be a pity if the fate of this unhappy
woman will not sene as a warning
to sentimental women against ro
mantic matches, especially against
unnatural mixed marriages.
Choice as to Taste of Kisses.
The three-years-oW boy of an edi
tor has a negress for a nurse. She
is black and ugly as to facial fea
tures, but seraphic as to disposition,
and loves her charge with the affec
tion peculiar to her race. She had
never been able to persuade him to
kiss her, aud the little chap would
1 never give a reason for withholding
the osculation. Finally, one day
last week, he succumbed to the
pleadings of the nurse, and yielded
the kiss. Immediately after it was
given, he ran to his mother, crying:
“I kithed Betty, and her don’t taste
good.”
Young Housewife: “Aud then I
want you to send up a peck of Irish
potatoes.” Grocer: “Yes, mum.”
Y’oung Housewife: “I myself prefer
United States potatoes, but we’re
going to have gentlemen from Dub
lin to dinner, and I want everything
to be in keeping.”
How do you expect the people to
hear the news of your community if
vou fail to send it to The IIeua ed ?
MUTILATED AiO:;EY.
HOW DAMAGED CURRENCY IS RE
DEEMED BY THE GOVERNMENT.
VFomlers Worked by Mrs. Brown, tlio
Trennury Expert In Washington—\ Few
Chscm In Whirli Bills Were Apparently
Hopelessly Uestroyeil.
The redemption division of the troas-
iry department is one of the most inter
filing of its branches. It is here that
mutilated money comes for identifica
tion. and the form in which it comes
tells to the chief of the division many a
romance and many a tale of woe. There
is much that is humorous and much
that is pathetic in Mrs. Brown’s public
experience. That experience range* over
nearly eighteen years now. and in that
time millions of dollars have passed
through her hands, most of it in such
condition us to lie beyond identification
by ordinary means.
There is hardly any way you can think
of in which money is not mutilated or
partly destroyed. Men light their ci
gars with it when they are drunk; rats
gnaw it into tatters, and fire crisps it
into brown ashes. Whenever there is a
sudden cold snap at the beginning of
winter the redemption division has a
perfect harvest of mutilated money. One
of the favorite hiding places which wom
en have for their savings is the oven.
When a cold day comes the woman
probably forgets all about the money,
(miUls a fire in the stove and oooks the
tills to what is known in the cookbook
as a "rich brown.”
An interesting case is that of a woman
living near Hamilton, O., who was
burned to death. She had a pocketbook
with her containing seventy dollars.
Her children sent the pocketbook with
its charred contents to the treasury do
partment, aud Mrs. Brown picked out
the seventy dollars and identified it. A
great deal of the money that comes in £
partly burned. Wherever a part of the
burned money can he identified and a
satisfactory affidavit is furnished as to
the facts the government restores the
amount to the owner. But if a note is
entirely destroyed the government is just
so mneb ahead.
Much of the money which comes in for
redemption has been damaged in rail
road wrecks. When a car is burned in a
railroad wreck no attempt is made by
the express company to remove the
money from the safe. The safe is sent
direct to the treasury department and
opened there. The money is usually in
a‘ pretty badly charred condition. It is
taken out, and the treasury experts go
over it and identify as much of it as can
he recognized. Two years ago a pack
age containing $22,000 was taken from a
wreck near St. Louis, and all of the
money was identified and restored to its
owners.
A favorite hiding place for money with
men who have no faith in banks is in
their cellars. A Philadelphia man sent
$280 which ho had buried iu a tin box
under his cellar floor. When he took up
the box ho found the money mildewed
and rotten. The package as it came
into Mrs. Brown’s hands looked like a
bancli of tobacco loaves. It was almost
impossible to distinguish the character
of the notes with the naked eye. Mrs.
Brown was picking apart the pieces hi.
by bit and arranging them on slips of
brown paper cut to the size of a dollar
bill. Site said that sho expected to iden
tify the wholo of it.
One man sent in some time ago forty-
two dollars which had been taken from
the stomach of a goat. The goat was not
worth forty-two dollars, so ho was sacri
ficed. The identification of this money
was not a very nice task, hut it was com
paratively an easy one. When Mrs.
Brown dropped the sticky mass into a
basin of water the bills came apart and
wore very easily identified. This is not
the only goat case which has come to the
redemption division, and it has happened
that even cows and pigs have been sacri
ficed to recover money which they had
swallowed. There is ouo case on record
whera a baby swallowed some bank
notes, and an emetic saved the money
and possibly the baby. Babies do not
o'ten swallow an entiro hill, but many
alfida’ its aro received accompaning por
tions of bills which say that the missing
portions were swallowed by babies and
"therefore wholly destroyed.”
Usually when mutilated money is sent
in for redemption the owner h;uj a close
if not perfect idea of the amount which
is represented, but one old German in
the west sent in some years ago what he
claimed to bo the remains of $. , i,000, and
after a long, long investigation Mrs.
Brown fully identified $7,100 in tho
package. A secret serviA agent was
sent out to investigate the case, but he
could discover nothing that would throw
light upon tho mystery, and so the in’°-
tako was charged up to the old man’s
stupidity, and the department sent $7,100
to him.
Tho redemption division receives very
frequently pieces torn from hills, ac
companied by affidavits saying that the
remainder of the notes lias been destroy
ed by mice. But the experts of the
treasury department can tell in a minute
whether a piece has been torn off or eaten
off, and these petty frauds are never suc
cessful.
Treasurer Nebeker has a five dollai
kill in his office made of sixteen pieces
cut from five dollar notes matched so
nicely that the ordinary eye would not
detect the fraud. This composite note
yvas sent in by a hank clerk in New
York. Tho treasury experts detected
the fraud immediately, and of course the
bogus note was not redeemed.—Wash
ington Cor. New York Press.
11, K. Li.
iJy ) k .CS i-J
w ii jL ctjkji:
Summer Complaints. Dyspepsia, Stom-
aeh Troubles of Every Kimt, Uheu-
matism. Neuralgia amt all disorders
of the Kidneys aud Mood.
tested and phoved fok years.
Jgrry, Miss., Apiil 21, 189:;.
We have been using l>r. King's
ROYAL GERM KTEUit for several
years in our family, and have recom
mended it to many olbers. It lias
always done what is claimed for it, ns
far as Hied, and I regard it as the best
medicine we l.a\e ever had in our
family. Mrs. J. B. liulhert
February 22, 189 >.
My wife had been a great sufferer from
catarrh for several years, and had tried a
great many remedies without relief
One bottle of GERMETEUR gave her
relief, and with every bottle used there is
marked improvement, and we are ex
perimenting a permanent cure. She inis
gained 2tt pounds since commencing
GERMETEUR. I was troubled with
indigestion and insomnia. 'Two bott’es
of GERMETEUR made a new man o!
me. My appetite is good and my sleep
sound and refreshing.
Rev.J. H. S’purlin,
Pastor Kiist Baptist I hureli,
Sturgis, Ky.
Price; $1. 00; 6 bottles for j5.<j0.
Free information,
KIND’S MIYAL DERMETKTR CO.
Atlanta, Ga!
When You Sneeze
Cough, Choke, and Gasp
for Breath,
KKM KTKUU PILIjS cure ccusti
tiiiiui' 0 pilln 2*» cent*.
FIRE! FIRE!
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among them, the. Liverpool
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the ^Etna, of Hartford, the
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Prompt attention to business and satis
faction guaranteed.
F. E. HOKMEXT.
DARLINGTON, 8. C.
. BEWARE!
•v* p: fog.
xfif V D Mav be a Serious Symptom
Ain’s Oiisrrj P&torcl
“ Licit Spring, I was taken down with La Grippe. At times I was
completely prostrated, and so ditacalt was my breathing that my breast
seemed as if confined in an iron cage. I procured a bottle of AYER'S
Cherry Pectoral, and no sooner had I began taking it than relief
followed. 1 could not believe that tho effect would be so rapid and tho
cure so complete. It is truly a wonderful medicine.”—\Y. II. Williams,
Crook City, S. 1'.
,T. T. Cooke, Publisher, Yfiaynrsborough, Ya., writes: “I have used
AYER’S Cherry Pectoral for coughs and colds for years, and am never
without a bottle hi my house. It is superior to any other.”
“'8 Cherry
Prepared by r>r. J. (’. Ayer ,c Co., Lowell, Mass.
Prompt to Act, Sure to Cure ,
for Enfarsts and Ghiicircn.
‘TaMo.’! a is so well adapted to children that I Ca*torla run*? Colic. Constipation,
f rccammeuil it as superior loci, j prescription I SouriiiomRt.ii, Diarrhn-a Krur.ation,
mown to me.” n. A. Aaca n, M. D„ j g’vc.s Klos-i., and p. oa.ote- dl-
*U So. Oxford Ct., Lrooklyn, N. Y. | Without injurious medication.
Tub Centaur Company, 77 Murray Street, N. Y.
gazasE
DARLINGTON
—All kinds of—
Marble Monuments,
Tablets, and
Grave Stones
furnished on short notice, and as cheap
,h» can be purchased elsewhere.
SST* Designs and prices furnished on
application.
Al. work delivered Free on line of C. &
D. Railroad.
Darlington Marble Works,
DARLINGTON, S. C.
mU M. SMITH,
jp#
G iS O HI 0
LURES ALL SKIN
AND
blood mim.
CAUTICTT.—If a dealer oCrra W. L.
Dougins .’••hoe* at a reduced priu*, or say*
he ha.* them without kinme stamped on
bottom, put aim down an a fraud.
w
• ,, . .. J>;j fo
SB fcifr wnfiMkB
tM;
& jlp fPPfl W!*2.03
: II M75
Real Estate Agnet,
FLORENCEST
DARLINGTON, S. €.
Special attention paid to the buy
ing and selling of real estate, collec
tion of rents, &c.
The strictest attention will be paid
to all business entrusted to me.
fikla 1>1k».3», Et-Tiaa, Cbr' i.i : ... .. A;*.-.
I eurlal Ki«on, T-i’.er, is V..» il-vl, -jU.
! 1*. P. P. 1' * nio c'f '! » •:id . ..1 1,! */rel>nt n»'i V*»r,
©Mi ta r-??
ti g upih* ay.uui rapt . ).
Ladles wiioaa swirnu ari f.nH.v.ed usd whose bill 'd !• In
in.p.ir* cor.ditior., doe to p,en«tr.mi Irregularltlci, are
The Matter of Men's Dress.
Tho cad will always out faslfion the
extreme fashions. The swell will ob
serve tho mode in all its niceties and cor
rectness, imparting from time to time
those deft touches of individualism that
award to him premiership.
Tho well dressed man will moderato
the swell’s ideal a trifle, so ns to allay all
suspicion in his own mind that ho is ex
citing the undue scrutiny of his fellows.
The ultra fashionable man will err in
tentionally upon rare occasions—in mak
ing sure of being on the safe side.—
Clothier and Furnisher.
A Celebrated Suicide.
Haydon.tho celebrated historical paint
er and writer, overcome by debt, disap
pointment and ingratitude, laid down
tho brush with which ho was at work
niton his la*t great effort, “Alfred and
tho Trial by Jury,” wrote with a steady
Sand, “Stretch mo no longer upon tills
rough world,” and then with a pistol
shot put an end to his unhappy < xist-
ence.—Dr. C. W. Pilgrim in Popular Sci
ence Monthly,
You Say You Can’t
Quit Tobacco? Then try the Ho c
Tobacco anti Snuff Cure. It is set
ting hundreds free from the filthy
habit. Send one dollar for a tablet
or write to me for descriptive circu
lars and testimonials. You can make
money selling it as 1 give large dis
counts on the dozen. Address,
L. L. PICKETT,
General Agent for So. Ca.,
Columbia, S. C.
P. S.—You can make money work
ing for my paper, “The Soldier.”
j 111 .iVly ke.n-llied tie v^^TtTritOLmTaTTTT
■ cUantinf propert.ua of I'. P. 2'., Prickly Ash, Fota R-.\t
' and Pot ssit.ui.
ssfcffl-*
! JJgjy
.LIPPIiAH I'P.03., Proprietors,
; CrujsU.s, Upraiaa’a block, EAVAE5AS,QA.
. L, Douglas
to* - ^ C* !L C ^ C? BEST IN
the world.
W. L. nOUOLAS Slices are stylish, easy fit-
tin?, n.;tl give hclUr satisf:ction at the prices ad
vertised than an/ other make. Try one pair and
he convinced. The sUmpi::? of W. L. Douglas*
mine and p icconthe bottom, which guarantees
their value, L ives thousands of dollars annually
tsOthose who wetr them. Dealers who push the
s :!e of \V. T,. Douglas Shoes pnin customers,
which helps Jo increase the rales on their full lino
of woodThey ctn a fiord to sell at a less profit,
and w« hclievc yon can Rave money bv buying ill
yo-ir footwear of the dealer advertised below.
Catalogue free upon application. Address,
V/. la. DOUGLdLSf l?rockton, Alaua. Sold bo
For Sal.- by A. T. BROWN.
Pimples
- AND—
Blotches
yJRF. EVIDENCE That the blood it
wrong, and that nature is endeav
oring to' throw off the impurities.
No 'JUng is so betufuial in assisting
nature as Swift's Specific (S. S. AT)
It is a simple vegetable compound. Is
harmless to the most delicate child,yet
it forces the poison to the surface and
eliminates it from the blood.
SSH'fr.
T con? ractod a syverc c : k of blood poisoo
that unfilled me lor buEiiicus for four >ears. A
few bottiti* of Swift's Si-eci’tc (S. S. S.) cured
xr>k. J. C. JoNts,City Marsha!,
i diton, Arkansas,
Treatise on T’lood and Sirin Diseases mailed
fofc- Swift oplcibtl Co, Atlanta, Ga.
Gin House Insurance
Your Gin House* Insured in
FIR^T CLASS COMPANIES
At Lowest Rates.
Either for the Ginning Season or
one year. For terms call on
FUNK E. IHENT
10- TOE PUBLIC.
When you arc in the city don’t fail to
call at the Enterprise Hotel Barber Shop.
It is the only first class shop in the city.
Fashionable hair cuts, first class shaves
and the
(jircat Arabian
Efrg Shaiti|HK).
Four polite barbers always ou hand to
wait ou you.
311 NON & HAULER,
Proprietors.
9- 5—8m.
REGULATOR
—Jjr—
The Old Friend
And tho best friend, that never
fails you, is Simmons Liver Regu
lator, (the Bed Z)—that's what
you hear at the mention of this
excellent Liver medicine, and
people should not he persuaded
that anything else will do.
It is the King of Liver Medi
cines ; is hotter than pills, and
takes the place of Quinine and
Calomel. It acts directly on the
Liver, Kidneys and Bowels and
gives new life to the whole sys
tem. This is the medicine you
want. Sold by all Druggists in
Liquid, or in Powder to be taken
dry or made into a tea.
•far
r T7pES Constipation
X' 1 ! INDISESTION DIZZINESS
Eruptions bN’THE^ sK/N.
Beautifies ^CovfPj-ex ion. S
0,50. TOR A CASE IT WILL. NOT_CUBE,_B
An agreeable Laxative anfl Nebvk Tonic.
Bold by Druggists or sent by mall. Z5c.. ooc.
and $1.00 per packarr?. Samples free.
UT/> mr/\ The Favorite TOOTH rOTOIX
JAv IwVr forthoTecthand Breath,kSo.
Captain Sweenvy, i;.S.A.,San Diego,Cal.,
says: “Shiloh’s Catarrh Remedy Is the flrat
medicine I have ever found that would do mo
any good.” Price 60 eta. Sold by Druggists.
I j-F.VICUV PAOKAOiC-SS
la. tie- li\ r.'<l on ,vr 11 pp.r
»». 11. Si CO.,I’ltiheUtlplila, l'»
y- •" x -j r T r.r.i
i r: * ? » f »*“« ;' v r 4 \ «•••• t, i
w ! 11 save you a severe Lump Trouble. It is tto
1 tost Courh Cure and speed Ay cctl eves Coughs,
Croup, Whooping Cough and Drone hi tis, and
is sold on a cmiranteQ. 2*> cts.
J&DVICK TO Wobcsk
If you would protect yourself
from Painful, Profuse, Scanty,
Suppressed or Irregular Men
struation you must use
BRADFiELD’S
FEMALE
REGULATOR
CAHTEnsviLi.s, April M, 18M.
Tula v-lll certify that two memberu of my
Immediate family, after having suffered for
- ins Irom Mcnutrnnt Irregularity,
ing t.'oated without henetltby poynlclans.
Were at li'ni'llioounileliilycurodbyone bottls
of (vi a dfleld’s I'emHle Kogulator. Us
( idt,.1 i: truly wonderful. J. W. Stranob.
Cook to •' WOMAN ’’ molted THEE, whleli eontaltis
roluuble Information on .11 female
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO,
v a n a