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# ' ' ??? I Am Running A First Class Market. I have also a nioc line of Groceries. ?I also have a? FIRST CLASS RESTAURANT. Ruben Jones' Plant Fender Fresh Fish twice a week. Polite attention to all. .1 i t _ l am paying tne nignesi price for good Deef cattle and all other country produce. All persona Indebted to the firm of BAILSY A SEXTON will please settle the same with me at once, H. G. BAILEY. HERE... YOU ARE J. T. NEXTOW Is Headquarters for Heavy and Fancy Groceries Fruits and Vegetables FRESH BREAD Always on Hand. I am the Housekeeper's Friend. If you want to know where to get i what you need let me tell you. L. D. SMITH has moved to the Old Dispensary where you can get everything you want in the line of Vegetables and Fruits. Canned Goods of all descriptions. Sixteen to 18 pounds of Sugar for a dollar. Bacon 7 cents per pound. Hams 11 to 12$c. per yound. Rice and Ilominy. Arbuckle's Coffee, 7 packages to the dollar. Good Green Coffee, 7 to 10 pounds to the dollar. Give me a call aud see what I have. L. D. SMITH, Leader of Low Pricow. _ rDR. J. E. GARNER, PHYSICIAN AND SURdEON. Will practice medicine in all of its branches. Office in front of Court House; itesidence on souui street. Phone No. 95. 4?8m. F. M. FAKR, GEO. MUNRO President. Cashier. Merchants' & Planters' National ^BANK,v OF UNION, S. O, >l < ?e | I ? Capital Stock ? $00,000 Surplus 50,00C Stockholders' Liabilities 60,000 Total $170,000 Oflicers?F. M. Fan-, President; A. II Foster, Vice President; George Munro Cashier; J. I). Arthur, Assistant Cashier Directors?W. H. Wallace, A. G. Itice, Wm. Jefferies, T. C. Duncan, ,J. A. Fant, J. T. Douglas, E. P. McKissicl , A, II. Foster. we solicit your business. S. Means Beaty, Attorney at Law. Office Over Duke's Drug Store. 7. J. FRED McLURE, attorney at law. Will practice in all courts. Office corner Main and Judgment, streets. ST 11.1. AFTKIt Itl'TLKIt. Slotiewull ( :ii)i|i, of I'll-a-H ( o-iili iiiiiiitiiiy in-noliitimiM. Stone"all t'uuip, Confederate Veterans of Portsmouth, Va., lias declared itself as lieing iineoiuproinis111c]y opposed to the Duller hill, which contemplates the pensioning of soldiers of the late confederacy by the general go\01 n lien i, mu'l'iinn ill 11 meeting resolutions to 4tint ? HVot. TO INSPECT ('AMI'S UKKKI.Y. Swrolnry \Iijit III To Kt'i'|i solilirrh I II f ' ?IM | Ill-Hit ||, Profiting liy tin- experience of tlie recent war, Secretary Alitor has issui'il stringent regulations for the .sanitary | inspection each Saturday of all military camps, including regimental, brigade and division hospitals. A special medical inspection also is ordered on the last Saturday of each month. Similar inspections will he made on the last <lay of eaoh month of all military posts and general hoapitals. THIRTEEN PASSENGERS DEAD FltltiHTFUL HEAD-ON COLLISION ON LE1IIOH VALLEY UOAD. TRAIN ORDERS WERE MISSREAD. Two Knrln?ti Pr^ah Into Knoll Other and Telescope Tenders and Passenger Cars?Wreck Wae Complete. By a head-on collision between two passenger trains on the Lehigh Valley railway at West Dunellen, N. J., at 12:47 p. m., Monday, thirteen persons were killed and over twenty-five injured. The dead are: Martin Keenan, W. H. Hinkel, Jacob Hesler, H. E. Weikell, Frank Ficher, William H. Leader, Frank Markel, Theodore Koehn, Abner S. Keifer, William II. Markel, Tames Jarvis and two women who are still to be identitied. West Dunellen is three miles from Boundbrook, and about thirty miles from Now York city. At the spot where the disaster occurred there is a sharp curve in the Lehigh Valley tracks, and a steep cutting, but tho accident was due, in the first place, to some trrrible mistake in train orders, and in the second place to another accident that occurred at Boundbrook earlier in the day. Tho scenes which accompanied tho collision, sufferings of the injured and the panic that reigned among the 400 passengers were well nigh indescribable. Tho bio )d-staiued wreck of j tangled and twisted iron and wood j bore witness to the truth c.f the gen-#| oral verdict of railroad men?thijt it ( was ohe of tho worst collisions in recent years. Train No. '20, which left Shumokin, Pa., at 7 a. m., was so heavy with human freight that it had to be broken into three sections. Tho first two sections arrived at Boundbrook and switched over to the other track, switched back at New Market and reached New York in safety. Tho third section of this train was almost. an hour late. Its seven cars, crowded j with 400 excursionists, most of them from Mount 'Carmel ntid Shumokin, | Mnhoney City, Ha/.eltou, Ashland and Pottsvil'le, l'h. The party was traveling under the auspices of the business men's excursion. an annual event which many patronize for a three days' visit to New York. Their train switched over at llouudbrook and proceded, like the preceding sections, 011 the west hound track. Meanwhile there had been waiting at New Market u local train that plies regularly between New York and Poundbrook. Owing to the traffic all going on one track, it was almost an hour late. At last the train dispatcher at South Plaintield gave it permission to go. Just before reaching West Dunellen Engineer Rick slowed his train down, because he stops for passengers if there are any. Martin Rreunan, the signal man. threw up his arms and waved them, as if to say there were no passengers, so the local put on steam and headed round the curve, going at about twenty-live miles an hour. There were only four passengers on the local. In the enh of the excursion train was James Pendergrast, the engineer, with his fireman, George Cheshire. They saw the local as it started 011 the curve. With shrieking whistle and brakes grinding sparks from the wheels, the excursion train bore down to what seemed certain destruction. The two engines, from which both crews had jumped, came together with an awful crash. The local engine turned a complete somersault and came crashing down beside its now demolished obstruction. Rut its career was not ended before it had jammed the tender of the excursion train almost entirely through the iirst car r....... sn ...i,:., ti.a ...... .... was left of it, rolled over, carrying with it the imbedded tender, the fragments of a dozen bodies and the imprisoned wounded. It was in the first ear of the exfnrsion train that all the deaths and most of the casualties occurred. The other ears, though their occupants weie badly shaken, staid on the track and were in condition to be hauled off. CONFLICT IS IMMINENT. Information From Knu I i-li Mouse In Mitnllii Ih Not Itt'iiMoiiiint;. A T.ondon dispatch says: A representative of the Associated Cress learns that the Filipino junta of I'aris has received a telegram from the Filipino agent at Hong Kong dated Saturday, and saving: "Fiirht with Americans unavoidable. Wo are not the aggressors." A telegram from an Knglish house at Manila also says the situation is very strained, and that there is much anxiety there. The dispatch also contained news from Iloilo, the substance of which was tha* the American troops had not yet lunded FOI'K PKOI'LK KII.I.I l>. Ilml Wreck on llie I'nloii Pacific ul Siinnl Station, NrbriakH. Four deaths ami injury to seven people were caused by a wreck on tho Union. Paeille at Sunal, fifteen miles east, of Sidney, Neb., Monday morning. The dead are: Kngineer J)ell Homier, Fireman John C. Coleman, young woman supposed to be Miss Myrtle Armstrong,of Pnxtou, fyeb., and an unknown old man. SENATE DEMANDED INSTRUCTION! Given to Paris Peace Commlaalonera B; President McKinlej. A Washington special says: Th< resolution introduced, Thursday, b; Mr. Hoar calling upon the president if not in his judgment incompatibl with the pnblio interest, to commnni cute to the Henate the instructions h< had given the commissioners who ne gotiated the treaty of Paris, the cor respoudence which had passod be tween him and the department of stat and the commissioners and the report made by the commissioners either t( him or to the department of state, wa laid before the senate early iu th session Friday. Mr. Davis, one of the oommission ers, and chairman of the committee oi foreign relations, moved that the re?o lution he referred to that committee Mr. Hoar: "Mi1. President, I objec to such a reference of the resolution It seems to me that the senate ongh to have the information called for b; the resolution, if in the judgment o the president it would be proper t< communicate it. I hope the motioi will be defeated." Mr. Davis: "I hope the motion wil prevail." After a little debate in which Mr Hoar, Mr. White, California, and Mr Allen, Nebraska, brought out tlio fac that the call on the president for iufor mution was not maudatory, and Mr. Da vis said that not to refer the resolu tion to the committee in charge of tin matter would be unprecedented. Th latter invoked the rules of the senati and had the doors closed for au exocu tire session. . . J Til tlin aonrftf. lAnriclof ivo anoainn a the senate the proceedings continue! on the same lines as in the open ses sion, the senate finally agreeing with out a division to the resolution calling for the instructions. At 12:35 p.m. the senate,reconvene* in open session, and Mr. Piatt, Con neetieut, secured the adoption of i resolution calling upon the secretary of the interior for information con eerning the cutting of dead and fallei timber on the Chippewa Indian reser ration in Minnesota. Mr. Cnffcry, Louisiana, then ad dressed the senate on the joint resoln tion offered by Mr. West, Missouri declaring that under the eonstitutioi of the United States 110 power is givei to acquire territory to be held an* governed permanently as colonies. Mr. Cattery's speech was a constitu ional argument in support of the doc larations of the resolution. He da dared that the resolution went to th very root of the question of the powe of the United States to establish per manently governments in territorie fur distant from oiir own lauds. II t>r<miiK*>il lie sn;?d to instilnto an in quiry int.o the tyusio principles of th powers of this government. EXPLOSION KILLS NINE. A Kit; Holier llnrstn ami IMayn llavoc Wit anil l'ropcrly. A London dispatch says; A hi hoiler, while being tested in Hewitt' shipbuilding yard at Harking, burs Friday and the superintendent o engineers and eight men were killed About forty wero injured, sum fatally. The bodies of the dead wer frightfully mutilated. A lad wa found dead MOO yards from the seen of the disaster. A number of men an boys are missing. The territie force of the cxplosio; may be judged from the fact that on of the huge plates of the boiler piling ed through a building a quarter of mile distant and that debris wa hurled hundreds of yards in all direo tions. The factory itself,- which cov ered several acres, was practical 1, razed and all the dwellings and shop in its immediate vicinity wero to al intents and purposes wrecked am windows were shattered a mile awn and 'telegraph and telephone wire were blown down on all sides. Distressing scenes wore witnesse among the mothers, wives and othe relatives of the employees. OKI)bits WKItK MIStONSTItlKl). Sa-mtliifc Santiago I'uiiiIh to Havana Wji H'rini; Construction. A Washington dispatch says: Titer lias been no change in the origim ord-r issued hy the war departmen for the regulation of the customs i Cuba. Any modi Heat ion made by th Havana authorities therefor in favor < Santiago was nothing more than a r< currenee to a proper construction c that order. ( ItlTH A I. SITUATION ADMITTK1 AVu-liinctnn Ofllcial.4 Aialoimly Annilir l)i'Vrlo|ini)'lll In l'liili|i|iin<*H. A groat deal of rctieeneo is exhil ited at the war department relative t the state of all airs at Tloilo. It is a< initted that (Jeneral Otis has roporte to the departnieiit the facts that wei reported to liiin hy (Senerul Miller.In all that can he gathered a.s to the natui of the ceiiiinuiiicatinn is that it goes I confirm the press dispatches as to tl attitude of 'he insurgents. There are excellent reasons why tl ofTicials at the war department shoul at this stage inantaiii secrecy as to tl instructions governing the moveinei i f troops in the Philippines. AIMII'STA M I l.hs KKSt'MK. Alioiit Two II iiikI reil Milking llperatlrlift n rn 1'u W ink The Augusta cotton mills rang tlio l>ells Monday morning and opeiu their doors to the strikers. About hundred went to <vork in the King an Sibley mills each, and they kept sue part of the mill as could be operate by these running all day. It is hope more of the strikers will eventually r turn to work. ; MEETIN6 OF CUBAN GENERALS 9 V TO CONSIDER THE PRESENT POSI* TION OF THE CUBAN ARMY. A : EX-GOV. EVRNS MAYOR OE HAVANA 9 life'* Army Camp Inspected?Generals Wmld, Butler and Clous Leave Is) 8 land For the United Slates, e A special from Havana says: Twon* ty-flve Cuban genernls and chiefs met 1 at Mariano Saturday to consider the position of the Cuban army, t A document was drawn up for dispatch to General Rodriguez, asking k him to call a general meeting of offif cers to take action first, upon the need d of a sum of money to onablo the offi? cers and privates of the army to make a new start in life; and, secondly, with 1 regard to the lack of respect shown to til A f^iilinn nffipArw hv tli a nonnla nf Cuba and the Americans. The latter matter has special reference to the re" fusal of the municipal police to salute General Sanguilly and other officers. The meeting Saturday resulted in a ' three hours' talk, criticizing hut not 0 unfriendly to the Americans, and no 0 disposition was shown to assume an 0 attitude of protest or opposition. On the contrary, a willingness to disband was expressed, provided money was , forthcoming to give the men compos1 ing the Cuban army a new start. As one of those present put the case: "As the United States collects the ? island revenues, we must look to the ^ Surge.... General Sternberg, of the United States army, has inspected 14 Major Gcral Tree's emup ami found 91 P of the 10,000 troops in the command ill. There was, however, not a single 1 ease of yellow fever or smallpox. Major Gsueral Ludlow, military governor of the department of Havana, has chosen John Gary Evans to succeed the Marquis de Estaban, as mayor ? of Havana. I J Major General Brooke will shortly II ; direct the release of all political pris1 1 oners in the island. I Generals Wade and Butler sailed " j Saturday on the steamer Mascot, and General Clous left Saturday night oc the Concho for the United States. r I CZAlt'S INTENTIONS EXPOSED. s ' IiikIokI or Favoring 1>Ipriiiianotit III* AcI lion* are to tlt*? Contrary. - ; The Sebastopol correspondent of e ; The London Times, who has been touring in European Russia for two months to discover if possible some evidence on the part of the Russian government to give effect to the disi, armament proposals of Emperor Xieh| olas. says all his observations were g quite to the contrary. The corres.......1.... * * jM/imi'in PUjn. t "At tho naval dock yards T found if feverish activity. Not a r.ian has been [. | withdrawn from the frontiers. The e ' ministers of w ar and marino have been q inspecting all the important military ,h and naval stations, urging an accelera0 lion of the preparations for defense, d but apparently never mentioning tho ! czar's manifesto, n j "The number of men enrolled in e the army and navy during the months j- of October and November lust were a larger than ever. s "Reinforcements are being sent to the far eavt 11s fast as they can be transported, and all the garrisons y along the frontier increased." 1 (JltOSVi'.XOK OX PROSPERITY. y 1 Ohio Mcnilicru Cihibch Much I.I vol y Tulk "s In tlio Ilo 1144*. The house of representatives was d engaged all day Saturday 011 the legisr lation of the executive appropriation bill ami completed it substantially as reported except for the items for the civil service commission, wlo'ch went over. 14 There were several side debates during the day. Oneof these brought 0 out Mr. (Jrosvenor, of Ohio, in n il speech of an hour on current political it questions. 11 Mr. (Jrosvenor outlined tho platie forms of the two parties, dwelling es>f pecially 011 the low tariff and silver 1- oolicies of the democratic and tho r>ro >f teetive tariff and gold standard policies of the republican party. >. ASSAHKT COMPANY ASSETS. ,j, Prevent I lie Debts mill Property of KmhitrriiHHotl Company. ('reditors of the Assabet Company [0 held a meeting at Ronton, Mass., Fri]. day, and appointed a eominittee to examine the affairs of the corporation. re The assignees reported tlie liabilities at about $1,-100,01)0. The assignees ro have sealed down the assets to what they consider a conservative basis and 10 estimate the quick assets $0X0,000 and the plant, etc., at $1,080,000, total ,o Sli,000,000. 1.1 " wis the general feeling of those ,e present at the meeting that the <1 i III eulties of the corporation would be adiusted without serious loss. OUTLOOK AT FALL RIVER. Cotton Mill* Kuril OvrrTwo I'or Out Hoi Stockholder* the l'H?t Year, A dispatch from I'all River, Mass., ir says: A list of dividends paid by the ''1 local mills during the past year showr 'I an average of '2.22 per cent on a eapi id tal of $23,493,000. 'I' 'J1 he year of 1898 wan a hard one, '<1 notwithstanding the reduction oi >(1 wages in the flint of the year and the e- curtailment later. The presont outlook is, however, bright. HOAR AOAI>'ST EXPANSION. Venerable Senator I>ellvere m Hlfhlr I?torMtlns l)Ucourf?. Monday proved to be an interesting day in the senate, the principal subject under discussion being the constitutional right of the United States to carry into effect the policy of expansion. The leading speaker was Mr. Hoar, republican, of Massachusetts, who delivered a speech in support of the resolution introduced by Mf. Vest, democrat, of Missouri, declaring it tn lia in nnnn.itinn in ilin constitution for this country to acquire foreign territory to be governed permanently as colonies. Mr. Hoar was accorded the unusual compliment of close and undivided attention by his colleagues on the floor and a large audience in the galleries. He maintaiued that it was in violation of the constitution and the declaration of independence, "the great expounder of the constitution," for this country to acquire foreign territory to be held and governed as colonies. Without adverting to the proposed policy of the United States entering upon an expansion of its territory except in a general and indirect manner, Mr. Hoar entered upon a discussion of the constitutional phase* of the question involved in the resolution under consideration, prefacing his argument with a statement of his personal position on tlio subject. "I dislike to differ from the president, whose election I hailed with such personal satisfaction and sncli exulting anticipations for the republic. 1 dislike to differ from so many of my party associates in this chamber, with ! whom I have for so many yearn trod the same pathway. I thank God as my eyes grow dim they look out on a fnirer country, a better people, a brighter future." Mr. Hoar believed, ho said, this country to be a nation?a sovereign nation. He believed congress possessed all the powers necessary to accomplish the great objects the frnmers of the constitution intended should be accomplished. But he denied that it possessed the "astonishing" and "extravagant" powers under the constitution which the senator front Connecticut (Mr. Piatt) attributed to it. Mr. Hoar was inclined to ridicule those who favor expansion and the ratification of the treaty of Paris without amendment. Their arguments, he sai?l, were "three cheers for the Hag; who will dure to lmul it down? Hold onto everything you can get. America has outgrown Americanism." In the course of his appeal to senat- I ors, Mr. Hoar said: "When you raise the flag over the Philippine islands as nu cmhlcm of dominion and acquisi turn, yon tnKe it ?lown troin 1 nuepeiutj enee If all." Mr. Hoar dwelt with emphasis upon the large increase in national expenditure, which policy of expansion advocated by Mr. Piatt would entail placing the amount at ?150,000,000 annually. He argued that the adoption of Mr. Piatt's doctrine would reduce wages, I increase taxation, plnoc an armed sol' dier on the hack of the working man and by the act of the government every American's dignity would be dishonored and his manhood discrowned. In conclusion Mr. Hoar said he j could not agree that the declaration of independence and the constitution are i a failure, and that America is to begin i the twentieth century where Spain beI gun the sixteenth. i KKVKMJE RECEIPTS INCREASE. CollrctlonK of moot II m o llrown to l.itr^o l'roport Ions. The monthly statement of the collections of internal revenue shows that during November 181)8, tho receipts amounted to $'22,404,405 against $10,051),'200 for November, 1807. The , receipts from some of the sources of revenue, with the increase in each case, as compared with November, 1807, arc given as follows: , Spirits, ?0,588,401; increase, $8(50,481. Tobacco, $4,337,018; increase, S1-, . 487,020. Fermented liquors, $4,814,022; in, crease, $2,501,000. For the live months of the fiscal year the receipts aggregated $101,120,583, an increase as compared with the same period in 1807, of $44,341.118. At this, rate of increase the receipts from all internal revenue , sources during the present fiscal year w ill aggregate about $275,000,000. JESSE JAMES INNOCENT. Two To|i<-kii Itoyn Confess To ltnlil>iii<; Missouri I'iieiflc Trutn. The Journal, of Topeka, Kus., prints a sensational story to the effect that two Topeka boys, Setli Rosebrook and Charles Htowell, eighteen yours old each, who were arrested during the fall festival Inst September for holding up a farmer and who were sent to the reformatory, are responsible for the Missouri Pacific hold-up and express robbery near Leeds, Mo., September 'Jdd last. This is the robbery for which ./esse .Tames, Jr., is now under indictment and arrest in Kansas City. NO MASSACUK OF SIWMAKOS. r rric?f<? Arrimol of Inventing Story to Prejudice the Filipino Cmiimo. According to the statements of peo> plo who liave just arrived at Hong i Kong from the island of Halabac, south of the island of Palawan, there is no truth in the report that the Spaniards there have been massncred [ by tho Filipinos. i They say the story is an invention . of the priests to prejudice the Filipino cause. Apprehension. JBnrglar (on trial)?I don't like do looks of dis jar j." Friend?"No; dey looks as if dey ' was prejadioed agin burglary."?Pack. A Double Crop Of Apples. Oa a Ions Island farm la an apple tree which bore two crops of fruit the past year, and the farmers are taking unusual Interest In this peculiarity of nature. Just as much interest has been shown In Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which has the peculiarity of curing dyspepsia. Indigestion, constipation and blood disorders that other renindlea fall to " >uiwuiu w it r nrnij luia, ana It oures whenever a euro la possible. Nearly all akin diseases are supposed to be caused by microscopic insects. Pains and Aches Of Rheumatism Make Countless Thousands 8ufT?r. But this disease Is cured by Hood's 8arsaparllla, which neutralizes the acid In the blood. It you have any symptoms of rheumatism take Hood's BarsaparlUa at once and do not waste time and money on unknown preparations. The merit of Hood's Barsaparilla Is unquestioned and its record of ourea unequalled. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is Amerlca'sGreatestMedlolne for rheumatism Hood's Pills cure all liver ills. ?1 cents. Celestial View e! the Whites. a umnese living near Shanghai is reported by the Sangapore Free Press as saying concerning Europeans: "They certainly do not know how to amuse themselves. You never see them enjoy themselves by sitting upon their ancestors' graves. They jump around and kick balls as if ther were paid to do it. Agnln. you will find them making long tramps into the country: but that Is probably n religious duty, for when they tramp they wave sticks into the air, nobody knows why. They have no sense of dignity, for they may be found walking with women. They even sit down at the same table with women and the latter are s?rve<l lirst." Altruistic Warning. Mistress (kindly)?Jane, I hear you have been seen in the park with my husband. Jano (defiantly)?Yes,ma'am, I have. Mistress (still more kindly) ? Well, Jane, you are a good girl, and 1 dislike to lose you but 1 cannot have any one about the house who keeps bad .company.?Harlem Life. nerVous depression. [A TAI.K WITH MRS. PIKKHAM.] A woman with the blues isn very uncomfortable person. She is illogical, unhappy and frequently hysterical. The condition of the mind known ns " the blues," nearly always, with women, results from diseased organs of generation. It is a source of wonder that in this age of advanced medical science, any person should still believe that mere force of will and determination will overcome depressed spirits and nervousness in women. These troubles are indications of disease. Every woman who doesn't understand her condition should write to Lynn, Mass., to Mrs. l'inkliam for her advice. Her advice is thorough common sense, and is the counsel of a learned woman of great experience. Read the story of Mrs. f. S. Rennktt, Westphalia, Kansas, as told in the folI lowing letter: " 1)kah Mrs. Pixkham:?I hnve suffered for over two years with falling, enlargement and ulceration of the womb, and this spring, being in sueli a weakened condition, caused me to flow for nearly six months. Some time ago, urged by friends, I wrote to you for advice. After using the treatment which you advised for a short time, that terrible flow stopped. " 1 am now gaining strength and flesh, and have better health than I have had for the past ten years. I wish to say to all distressed, suffering women, do not suffer longer, when there is one so kind and willing to aid you." Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound is a woman's remedy for woI man's ills. More than a million women have been benefited by it. PIMPLES "Jly wife liad pimple* on her lace, but she has been taking CASOAKKTS and they have all disappeared. I had been troubled with constipation for .some time, but after tak Ins tho llrst Cascarot 1 have had no trouble ^ with this ailment. Wo cannot s|>rak too highly of f'ascarets." Kuuu W a htm an. 6708 dormantown Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. AM mk CANDY j M <9 CATHARTIC kpjdOMm* tnadb mark neoistereo Pleasant. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. lijc.&Oc ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Btrrllnv Hrmnly I nnpuav, 4 klf .ipo, MoRtrfil, Km York* 3U tin TO RAP Sold and ynnrnntcpd hy all druifNUMU'DAb nisi* to CI'Kt: Tobacco Uublt. B fl A M find Whiskey Habit* H Ul I I H^M cured at home with W Hp fl E I Ml out ;>ain. book of parIII 1 I wl tieulars sent FltKK. ftlHMMMI RM.WOOI.LKY. M l). Atlanta, ?ta. Ofllce 101 N. Prvor St. A XV I.AIIY who can sew can earn good pay ntak Iiik neckwear tor us at home, work all cut sent by inHlleiiv distance. Send inc. for particulars and sealed contract for employment. IIOMK K.MPI.OYlll^TCO . I?? l.fiicoln Street.. HATH. MK. FX DADQYNEW DISCOVERY: ?.ve. VJ * ^Je I C9 f|inek relief and cu-es worst sites. Send for book of testimonials and 1(1 dnvn' treatment Free. Dr.R H OREEN'S RONS Atlanta. Oa llr ANTED-Case of bad health that RIPAN 8 ' ? will not benefit Send f> cts. to Kipans (')iemtcal Co., NewYork, for la samples and lOou testimonials. MENTION THIS PAPER^^ttT; M CURES WHERE ALL tLSEf AILS" U Deet Coosb Syrup. T as lee Good. Use PI LsJ In time. Sold by druggist*. Hrl