The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, April 13, 1900, Image 3

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SCROFULA AND ITS CUIIED Johnston's ! QUART B a most \vond: A Grand Old Lady Gl Mrs. Tliankful Orllla Ilurd lives lu Livingston Co., Mlcb. This veneruble : the year 1812, the year of the great \v; York. She came to Michigan in 1810, i too." Afl her faculties are excellently tentive memory, fier mind is full of iui life, of the early days of the State of ; mnrkablc people she has met, and the : ness. But nothing in Iter varied and i velous and worthy of attention than JOHNSTON S SAIISAPAR1LLA. Mr. disposition to scrofula, that terribly do,, and is enrsincr ilio or o, thus of flic (loath angel. Transmitted 3 found in noary every family in one f< W poarance In dreadful running sores, i goitre, or in eruptions of varied forms, may be known as catarrh in the head, and often is, the prime cause or consm Speaking of her case, Mrs. Ilunl sj with a bad skin disease. My arms an( ores, discharging yellow matter. My unsightly iu appearance. My body w.? My eyes were also greatly inflamed nn< much. My blood was in n very bad < at frequent intervals, and I had no apj was in a miserable condition, I had tri< mended, and doctor after doctor had i the state told me I must die of scroful were beginning to form. I at length w; his famous Sarsnpnrilia. 1 tried a boti thing else, as I had no faith in it, ant began to grow better. You can be sure many bottles, ^hit I steadily improve^ sores healed up, all the bad symptoms ( and I have never been troubled with s of 83 years is not a young woman, but since then, and I firmly believe that J( greatest Wood purifier and the best mod scrofula and as a spring medicine." TIi not lok to be more than sixty, and she life was saved by JOUNSTON'S SAKS Micmc3rAr.T r>xiTJGr com: .. i ^ CONNECTICUT ROADS. Extensive Improvement* UckuKIdk Prom Sieiv The state treasury el' Couuectieut has made the tirst payment to the va- | rlous towns which have availed them- \ selves of the road improvement law ( passed hy the last legislature. I The essential features of that statute ore the payment hy the state of threequarters of the rest of Improved roads j in towns with a tax list of $1,000,000 | or less and two-thirds Of the cost in | towns with a tax list of more than $1,000,000. the state not to spend more \ than $17r?.000 in one year nor more . than $4.oOO in any one town annually, the sum of $0,000 a year for slate inspection to e.ome out of the $i7.7,000, ( and a proviso hy which a town may. 1 with the assent of the state highway , commissioner, use the full nnior.ut <,f ( the appropriation for two years. The returns at the ii.gliv.ay eoinniisfll/Mt .?<11 ? I. I - oiuhci o uiim; rwu>? ii i ciw.i i u;i iiic MICee#s of the now law. Out of ION town:* In the state 113 have this year inatlo applications. Out of the $330,000 ap preprinted by the state for two years. -Mr |*13N.IKM>. excluding Inspection expenses. all but $30,000 is exhausted by the npplieations e.f the 113 towns, which will receive from $300 to $ 1,300 each front the state. The law only relates to main roads between towns, and of these it is estimated at the comp W7.B .ftjji I | i i irf'M ! ' ?Si|^v31to|&L SUNK IN THK MUD. lUlsHloner s ottiee that on 300 ntlles 1m^ proveinonts have now .been eoniplet* w; otl since state aid be^an and on several hundred miles more Improvements ore in progress or Immediately projected. During this yenr and next. Including payments by the towns, the outlay under the law, present and prospective, amounts to about $l&l.Olit). in ."It of the 11"? towns gravel roads have been mode or regrading lias been done or is In progress, in some eases preliminary to hardened roads. Under the various laws passed at recent sessions of the state legislature there has been an outlay of about $800,000. and KtS towns out of 108 in the state have availed themselves of the various state aid laws. A very encouraging feature of lids year's statute is the large number of small country towns which have begun highway improvement, and the sum of $o0,000 of the state appropriation still left will be given. Ilrst, to the towns not yet applying and. secondly, to the towns wlilch have t>ot asked for more than $.">00. The secondary effects of tjie law In improving roads am! awakening communities in the state to the Importance of better highways have been very great, uot a few towns spending much larger sums than usual outside ! of the law and one town spending $30.0<X). In regrading roads also much j money has been spent effectively and a j laid evil In the. old Connecticut high- ' ways considerably abated. There Is complaint that some of the i towns do not keep the stato aid roads j In proper repair, as provided for under ( tlio law. and that Important bra cell of j the statute remains to be tested. In such cases the law provides that the state can make thu repairs and the town must pay for them. The eager- j ness to take advantage of tin* existing law for state aid is indicated by the | fact tlmt of the 11"? towns apply in? nil ' did so within a period of six weeks. j (Never near more than one kinu 01 , trouble at a time. Some people bear three kinds?all they have bad, nil they ^ )iare pow and all they export to hav? L 1. 1 1 He that worries blaisel'* s'.f* (be dread of possible Jv will never be at rest.?J .Linsou. I I AWFUL HORRORS BY Sarsaparilla OTTLES, KKFUL CURE, vc* Her Experience. the benutil'ul village of Brighton, md highly respected lady was boru la lr, iu Ilebron. Washingtcu Co., New the year of "Tippecanoe and Tyler preserved, and possessing a very releresting reminiscences of her early Michigan and the interesting and redirring events of which she was a witmanifold recollections are more marare her experiences in the use of ?. llurd inherited a tendency and predruetivc blood taint which has cursed Hi iM.uivii'i, inuti^uuiis inure Ui? vie* from generation to generation, It is inn or another. It may make its ap11 unsightly swellings in the neck or Attacking the mucous membrane, it or developing in the lungs It may .be, nption. lys: "I was troubled for many years 1 limbs would break out in a mass of neck began to swell and became very is covered with scrofulous eruptions.. I weakened, and they pained me very condition and my head ached severely letite. I had sores also in my cars. I h1 every remedy that had been rceom'ailcd. One of the best physicians in ous consumption, as internal abcesr.es is told of Dr. Johnston, of Detroit, and !e, more as an experiment than any1 greatly to my agreeable surprise, I > I kept on taking it. I took a great 1 until I became entirely well. All the lisappenred. I gained perfect health, icrofula since. Of course an old lady I have bad remarkably good health MIXSTO.VS S A It S A PAR 1L.L A Is the licino in the wide world, both for lis remarkably interesting old lady did repeated several times, "I believe ray IAPAUILLA." -Tsc, xj.TiTnoit, mxczz. A LONG SIEGE. riint of ftltiraltnr IlrenUn tlip Record of Miidcrn Times. Although by no means the most ten! l)le. Use last siege of (Jibralfar, when tlie Iioek was held by a British garrison under (Jeneral Klliot against the comhined efforts of the Spaniards and French from July o, 177!), to Nov. 'JO. 17S1, holds the record as the longest Important siege of modern times. The fnet that every now and again the gar rison were able to add to their provisions by successful sorties kept them from succumbing to hunger, but scurvy claimed nearly 1.000 victims. I-'or weeks together over tJ.000 'shells were thrown into the town dally. A curious point about this siege is that tlie governor of (.libra I tar. after having done every tiling lie could think of to strengthen the fortifications, issued a proclamation calling on any of tlie gar rison who had any schemes <o propose to call on him with them, as lie did uot wish the Itoek to fall when liy listening lint a few minutes to a private Individ ual it iniglit lie saved. By holding the fortress of Plevna during the ltusso-Turklsh war from Sept. 7. 1877. to Doc. 10 against tin* pick of the Russian army the Turkish garrison, under Osuian I'aslia. aecom plisheel the impossible. according to both military and medical experts; for not only did they defy the besieging force when it numbered nearly f>0 to 1 against them, but they lived for 12 weeks practically without food. Yet on Dec. 10. after having eaten their last grain of rye. they sallied out and pluekily tried to cut their way through the Russians. ?London Mail. The illyitcfy of l.ndy Myron. \V. E. Henley writes vigorously of Lady Ilyron in The I'nll Mall Magazine. In the end they were married by special license; a year and n fortnight after the wedding Lady Ryron left her husband never to return to him. ami the great heart of the public rose iu ilie occasion. t\ untie lepuuuiiIng lier groom! A young mother fleeing the embrace of her firstborn's father! Obviously she?young. Innocent, high principled, above all. virtuous? was the victim. By specifying nothing and So suggesting the unspeakable, she captured the general imagination and set it working to her sole advantage. "lie is completely lost in the opinion of the world." and "I look upon him as given up to every worthless excess for the rest of Ids life;" thus Miss CSodfrey to her friend, Thomas Moore, and. condemning on hearsay and in advance, the poor soul did hut follow her ladyship's suggested lead. She bad but to refrain front speaking indeed, and one of the strongest, bravest spirits of our century was expelled Ids country. And none knew wliv sill' <11(1 If nor lmw And vvliv stir did it remains a mystery even till this day. A Dealrntilc Drntli. Children get queer associations of Ideas In their heads at times. A little lad on Capitol hill has a playmate of his own age in the son of a poor neighbor. The son of toil visited Ids richer friend the other day wearing a gorgeous red tie. The son of wealth eyed the tie enviously for awhile and then asked Benny where he got it. "My mamma dyed it for nie for ft hiithdny present," lisped Benny. After Benny went home Ilex played listlessly about for a time nml then leaned on Ills mother's knee, thoughtfully studying the pictures In the lire. "Mnininn," he said llnally, "Benny's tie was awful pretty, wasn't It?" "Yes, dear." "Mamma, won't you kill me a tie like Benny's when I get a birthday?"? Washington Star. Why He Dniititrd llor. "Belinda rays her photograph was taken when she wasn't looking, hut 1 don't believe It." "Why don't you?" "Bhe lias her head on one side and her eyes rolled up."?India an poll* ,Tnnrw?|U HE WENT UP HIGHER HOW A GOVERNMENT CLERK SECURED LEAVE OF ABSENCE. After tirttliiK the "Itojnl Word" from tlie Secretary of 111m Depnrtnient He Had Kua With the IJIvlHlon Chief. Who Had Turned Dotrn. "Tlie quest iou of sick and annual leave," saitl a clerk in an up town tic- , partuieut to a reporter, "is one of the utmost importance to government ' clerks and is one of their most precious | privileges. I will tell you of an oe- ( curreuce in my department whicli will . interest fellow clerks especially. "A clerk in my division put in an application for a few days' leave in ( the usual form iu writing, to he O. K.'d by the chief of division and sent on its ( wnv tn llllt rtlilnf "f II"' .Inn...., ment. Not hearing from it and the ' time approaching for his departure he went to his chief and said: " 'Mr. , how about my nppllca- , tion?' . " 'Here it is on my desk. I liave not sent it up. It is too early in the year to apply for that length of time, important business or uot. You eanuot be spared.' "My friend, who is a little fellow and a diplomat, grasped the situation at once. It happened that lie had a personal acquaintance with the secretary, one of those rare instances where a cabinet ofheer has a personal acquaintance wltli one of bis own clerks. They had met outside of the department, for the little fellow is a member of an influential family in the secretary's own district. "He bowed and withdrew, but instead of going back to his desk he jnade a short cut up the corridors toward the secretary's room. Just as he was approaching the lot tor's private oflice entrance the secretary, in company with a couple of gentlemen, came { otlfc Observing the clerk and his anx- f ions, inquiring face, lie paused, shook him cordially by the hand and exclaimed to-his companions: "'Senator, here is a bright little fellow from my state who is the father of the biggest, cherubic faced baby yon ever saw and the husband of the happiest of wife mothers. Look at him 1.1 1. if ti --- * ** iniiNii. uen, wunis mo maiicr nowr i " 'Why, I want to pro away on busi- j ness for a fortnight. and'? r " 'Well. you little rascal, why don't , jou {?o? I'll let you?only be sure t<-? ( come back aud don't get lost on the , cars.' ( "The secretary's hearty laugh. In j which the others joined, echoed in the , marble tessellated corridors, and they j passed on. The 'royal word' had been ?, given. , "That evening at quarter to 4?he | left it until last minute purposely?he , went to his chief. It was his turn to rub It in. . " 'Mr. ,' he said quietly, 'have you , scut up my leave*;' j "'I have not,' replied the chief short- | ly. 'I disposed of that question this ( morning.' " 'I thought that the secretary grant- , ed leave In this department. 1 was , not aware that chiefs of division pos- ; sessed that authority.' It was war now. Iloth looked each other uullinch- , ingly In the eye. Then the chief began | to smell a little otlicial mouse ami re- | sorted to browbeating, as Is not un- ( usual under similar circumstances. " 'You are Impertinent'? " '1 beg your pardon,' quickly Interrupted the clerk, 'for a chief to say ! to a clerk that he is Impertinent Im- j putes a charge against him. I request > that you withdraw that remark. It is ' no linpertlneuce for a clerk to state a j rule of the department to his chief, ' more especially when he appears to have forgotten it or Is unaware of Its existence. The secretary, and lie alone. WWU*IJ 51 Iiuia wi t'S 4tJ/|lllUl' tions for leave In nil departments of the government. 1 have never before henrd this authority questioned'? " 'I don't question It,' hastily Inter- I Jected the chief, to whose nose the official mousy smell was each moment becoming more acute. 1 " T?y not submitting my application ( to those whose province it is to decide t such questions you certainly do ques- y tlon it ami exceed your authority. Ap- t proved or disapproved by you. they and not you pass on it linally, and, j furthermore, you know it.' ( " '1 will send it up tomorrow,' said 1 the chief as he climbed down from his ( high horse as gracefully as the occa- i sion admitted. 'Let me see, you wish j to go'? I " 'Take your time,' replied my < 1 friend pleasantly. 'It is already grant- 1 ed. I have the secretary's personal 1 permission to go provided I do not get ; lost ou the ears. 1 start tomorrow, ; 1 nud I will try not tc get lost. Oood, by.'"?Washington Star. ? Gems Ilnve Orrcnnlo l.lfe. Scientists frequently remind us that gems possess life?organic life. Everybody knows that opals and pearls grow^dull when worn by invalids, and ; It has been lately proved that rubles and the turquoise show the same sensibility. Pearls are most delicate and lose color and brilliancy nn.l actually die. . Itings and pins should not be worn by invalids, because the Invisible emanations of disease peuetratc tlie r microscopic interstices of the gem and t kill its life.?Philadelphia Press. i ' ; Proof. I 1 Madge?But don't you really believe that Ida is engaged? | May?No; I'm sure she Isn't. 1 asked her If there was any truth In the re, port, and she refused to say a word.? Harper's Bazar. Wigs were In vogue In Itomc toward the end of the republic, and so well made that Ovid says, "Nobody could tall if any one else's hair was real or IN T l-l F QlirSAR RI1CU tlnple Snrrrr fluking? Tli? Modrrn l'rucvuitrs ami I'roilcct, . Though tons of maple sugar arc made, for the most part ia New York lud Vermont, there are prolialdy many people living mi farms throughout the United States who have no more clear idea of how maple sugar is made than they have of the product ion of elect rieity. says a writer in Farm and Fireside, from whoso description of the process the following items and illustrations are reprodtiecd: The sugar maple is so called on account of the sugar contained in the mp. The person with no experience -an hardly tell tlie difference between It and water, as it is clear and sparkling and lias hut a faint taste of sugar. There is just about enough sugar to make it a little sickish. In the fall the greater part of the sap goes from the trunk and branches into the roots, where, buried deep in the L THIIKK MKTIIons OF COLI.KCTIN'G SAP. ground, it will not lie chilled. In the qtring, beginning in the hitter part of [February or first of March, according is the season is forward or backward, the sap begins to ascend tlto body of the tree, the greater part in the outer layers of the tree. Kecttrin;; this sap ts it ascends and boiling it down con>titutes the work of maple sugar maleng. The fust thing is to got the sap. In lie early days before.the hit and brace m oblique notch was cut into the tree icar the ground, and from this wound lie sap would of course How. Then unler the lower corner of this wound a utrved hole wide from one side of the roe to the other, but narrow up and lawn, was made with a "gouge," and nto this was driven a short wooden qiout ef the same shape, which caught he sail it* It dropped from the cut, and litis carried it to short wooden troughs undo hy digging out basswood blocks. \fter the hit and lirace came into use i Iiole was bored into the tree, and a ;otnul spout made from a piece of sumac -JTroni which the pith lutd been burned out was driven into the bole to ;onvcy the sap to (lie trough. Next tlie wooden bucket came into use. Hy driving a nail into the tree unlet' the spoilt the bucket could be liung my where on the tree. In the days of boiling in kettles color was tlie last thing aimed at in ntakng maple sugar, which was a dull lack when I'mished. Sweetness was he main consideration, and there was ... ? v. Sppplf AY KIT AUK HOT I.I NO I'l.ACK OK TODAY. 10 incentive lo keep out the ilirt and inders, for hlack sugar was just as sweet, and sugar tighter than oHooohtfe ivns looked ui>on as having heen adulerated. The next improvement was the large an placed upon an arch made of stone IT hl'lck. Ationf <!u> ?;imo llnw ffin UK-hots enmc Into use. A little later lie metallic spout was invented. This s now of such shape that it tills hut .4 una 11 portion of the hole bored in the* roe, but is held so firmly that the buek?t is supported by it. it allows sap to low from the outer layers of the tree ivhere there is the greatest amount of ?np, and that wlilc-li makes the whitest mgn r. A few sugar makers have their plant 5o arranged Ihnt the sap, or simp, does not touch wood after (lie sau Innroo llie tree. .At the present time color is in important factor in the value of maple sugar, and as wood tends to ?olor it wooden utensils of all kinds. Iiavo been discarded as far as possible, rhe maple sugar now made is of a iglit straw color. Any darker than hat will not command the highest it'ice. ami if lighter adulteration with 'eiined sugar is suspected. i in- s;iit is gntnereu i'i :i tana noiuing ibont three barrels placed 011 a low sled with wide runners. ltonds are tiade through 1 ho sugnr hush so the rntlicriug tank cnu l>c driven near nil lite trees. Tim Other Rifle o 1 nroem Corn. Art the phenomenal price of broom can will attract many to enter Into this industry, it may ho well to recall *r.me <if the leas roseate facts about it. I'o.- instance, that it is a crop requiring special Knowledge and tools. Is troubles! me r.iel e? pensive to harvest and thrash, precarious because quickly damaged by unfavorable weather and. at times very low In price. y t I A Forehanded Thinker. "Well, welll It is always the uncxpected that happens. " "it nivcr happens to inc. sor; Oi alwavs expect it." t? Mn'it Snrcnmi), Mr. Snarley?I never was one that wanted to set something for nothing. Mrs. Snarley?Well, that is about what happened when yon married tne. , ?ruck. 11; t-, WIDTH OF GRAVEL ROADS. i" a A Konihvny Too Wide I* n Source of , Ii\ |>oiino. l> In constructing :i gravel road tiic roadbed should lirst lie brought to the ^ proper grade. Ordinnrily :t11 excava- a lion is then made to the depth of eight ha or ten inches, varying in width with the requirements of trallic. For a j farm or farming community the width need not he greater than 1<? or 12 feet. A roadway which is too wide is n o j only useless, but the extra width is a '' positive damage. Any width beyond that needed for tlie trallie is not only F. a waste of money in constructing the road, hut is the cause of a never muling expense in maintaining it. The I\ surface of the road lied should prefer- t, ably have a fall from the center to the ^ sides the same as that to he given the finished road, and should, if possible. ( be thoroughly rolled and consolidated P! until perfectly smooth and linn. *T A layer, not thicker than four inches. < ?] of good gravel should then lie spread evenly over the prepared roadbed. Such material is usually carried upon n road in wheelbarrows or dump carts, and then spread in even layers with 3a rakes, but the latest and best device for this purpose Is a spreading cart. u . If a roller cannot he had. the road is thrown open to trallie until it becomes fairly well consolidated, but it is im- v ' possible to properly consolidate nia- j'1 terials by iiie movement of vehicles j1 over the road, and if this means is pursued constant watchfulness is noeos- to sary to prevent unotiual wear and to [> keep tlie surface smooth and free from vy k, aioney Sunk In >!ml. b: Nearly .S700.000 is being praeticnl'.y g wasted upon our public highways ev- A cry year, as few or no pcrma'.tent im- i, provements are being made. The cry jj from every section is for some system of permanent road building. The state will never reach its richest duvclopinent until tliis problem is solved and ' good roads checker our state in every 'l direction. Our roads are arteries of se commerce, and no pains or expense to should be spared to secure the greatest possible Improvement along these lines. ?Governor Atkinson of West Virginia. aexhiTal xi:wsixoti: ?. Items of Interest Gathered from sc Various Sources. n ^ j These handsome press notices that ^ the Hen. John Hay is receiving from ^ London papers won't circulate well as campaign documents. a The 11 est Kci.icdy for Rheumatism. ' QUICK RFXIEF FROM PAIN. All who iifrt Chamberlain's Pain Ba'ni for rli t.malifm arc delighted a, .vil ? the quit !c relit! from pain which t affords. When speaking of this Mr J). N. Sin'cp. tf Troy, Ohio, says: 'rk no time ago 1 hid a scvcro attack ?f )deuma,l ism in my arm an,! shouK 1 ier. J tried inirruroua remedies hut m rot ro relief until ! was recommended >y M-vsrs. Geo. !F. Persons & Co., ^ Iruggi-dHofthis {dace, to try Chamber- ? aii.'d Pain Balm. They recommor.d- a *d it so highly that I bought a bottle( was ecou relieved of all pain. I 1 aa\e since rcconin.ecded this liniment ^ o many of my friends, who agree villi me (hat it is the heat remedy for muscular rheumatism in the market." For sale by F, C. J);ike, Druggist. Director Merriam has caused a : great llutter <>. Cmigre by notify- ^ ing the members that he wants 1,500 .vi men to operate punching machines a ! t'xis summer, lie says they do far I letter woik than m?- . This, howr. d'-?-a nor nonr-rir Congressmen, who retort that women have no votes f and this is a campaign year. I Test in. oninl from (J hi liu'lniul c I omi8i. er Chainl er.'aiu'a Couth l IvMt.cdy t1 e l? ii lie world for rotehtii V' ' )}'ti rH-*r.A /iiih'.m Sivoiy, f Warring; u, 3iog. m?!. "It h ^ > v d my J lie, the > aving l?r? n . a mnrt\ r tr !> *>x "I it: ? 4 r n\pr tlx >o: ri, b'ing tcvi'; of liio timo confined II h3 bid. f- in ; i. rrw wet I. ' 1.1 !>y F. 1 hi he, iJrrgaj.r. A wcs'cui i-.'ieoti-t li.?s dec-lured j '.line, wttdei n g vis Mual'er feet j eastern ours. 1' in cted i nit lie is *los? i<.'Us ti 11; S r fliec. MMnarjwVT." mmmmrnammammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrn Caught a Dreadful Cold. K- oke, manager for T. M. :t:iii|"8on, n l..r^o importer of fine illinery at M)08 Milwaukee Avenue, tic ig ?, saj ? : "During tho late sere Meat Iter 1 caught a dreadful Id which lie- t me awake at night <i made me unfit to attend to my >rk ale ring the day. One of my Miners was taking Chamberlain's % .cgh Remedy fur a severe cold at at time, which seemed to relieve ber quickly that 1 bought fame /or rayt. It actid like magic aud I bun to improve at once. I nm now '.inly will and feel very pleased to Lv? -_i .?,a u.tnir, rur ?ttie ' F. C. I hike, Druggist. Tho next time it occurs to the imager of a naughty show to adver10 ii by denouncing himself to the ?l:ce, he will probably stop and ink of what may happen if ho bo ken in earnest. A Night of Terror. 'Awful anxiety was felt for tho idow of tl e bravo General Burn* )m of Machine, Mc , when the doors said a ho could not livo till morn* g" writ<e Mrs. S. If. Lincolr, who tended l.c-r that fearful night. "All ought ?- lie must Boon die from liounmuin, but she begged f ir Dr. itig's Nl'.v I): eo '.'t ry, saying it had re t!-am ot.ee stved her life, and i: cured her of Consumption. After .'Co &::>} l! doses she slept easily nil irti i, ?:>d its fun her ihu c mpletil/ e! far." Tliia marvelous raedi0 is gusrant ed to cure all Thrraf, .* s ?n?! Lung Diseases. Ouly 50c. at S 1.(10. Trial bottles freo at Dr. G. l.)u! c's drug store. Speaker 1Itinlet son says that the icsidei.t was heart and soul with m in psis-ing the House bill, ^et e President's friends declare that ! s'ill stands by his plain duty oposisioii. Is it possible that his thocolate eclair" backbone has melG i altogether ? Cold i*tt el or Deutli. "Ti.cic ia but or.e srrall chance to vj your Mb* and that is through an oration," was tho a?fd prospect set lure M rF. I. 1?. Hunt, of Ltiue b.c, Wis., by Ler doctor after duly tryii g to euro her of a fright* 1 case of Biomach trouble hud yellow wi:d ce. I'o didn't count cm the a'vtLo* power tf Electric Bittert c..r : Stomach an.I liv. r troubles, tl she heard of it, took seven b ittlea, at wholly cured, avoided surg-oil's tiife, now weigh ii g inoro ami Jcels liter lhau ever. I.'s positively ; jr "Oped to euro Steuisch, lover i i IC.d:.ey t'.< ithba stud never dis o t^. lb ice )c at Dr. F. C. ?..ko'o drug sd< rc. If iho feeling in regard to Porto ico goes on increasing, Teddy oofevelt may have to accept the coml place on the Kepublican ticket save the party. It would be too id to shelve hint tbi*- way. A Frightful liluiulcr Will olleu causes a horrible burn, aid, cut or bruifec. Bjchlcu's Ar? ica Salve, the lust in the world, will ill tin pain and promptly heal it, urvB oi l eorc?, levtr tores, ulcere, ails, lelous, corn?, all thin eruptions, ant pile cure on timh. Only 25 cts, box. Cure guaranteed. Sold by . C. Duke, druggist. Even if Otis can't catch Aguinahlo, ; can suj>j ros a newspaper now id then. A Monster Devil Fisli Destroying its victim, is a type of onetipation. The power of this urderous malady is felt on organs id nerves aad muscles and brain, hero's no health till it's overcome. >ut Dr. King's New L'fa 1'i.ln a*e a lie and certain cure, lie-l iu the orld f ?r Stomach, E ver, Kidneys < <1 l.? wt'ij. Only 25 cents at Dr. i\ C. 1) iVA Dug S'.oro. J. CLOUGH WALLACE. ATORNEY AT LAW. riwuia i ami ? lip>tar?, Foster lu:ldii:g, opposite Hotel a/ter Jauu* ry 1st. 1890. 11 25-08 iy. Land For Sale. 1 have a few choice building lot* or sa'o. Also a two horse farir, suitable for Prilck fanning, lying < n both Kith * lorporate line?will Bell cheap or ease to good party, lilt L. (5. Y. uno, v i invent rr la prrvve; also |ivi| " J \uH-rUi;?.C M*Yi.lUHT or CESIKNS i r.ii.'fEOIiCV. ri i.ti nii'li !, i'.c'.eii ot I'lioio. # v f r I,. -. im'ic". i i M-i <1%in*. <* 5 BOOK iirJ PATEHT3KftJ5ffit |s'?." a. A. ENOW A co.f 5 rmojit u*vyu* WASH^gtowI, I