Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 July 1896 — Page 7
Still Another.
“Send ;way, quick!" exclaimed the Spanish general in great excitement. “What has happened?” asked the correspondent. “Another Spanish victory. One of the guards has just beat an insurgent prisoner three straight games of seven up.” —Washington Star.
WOMEN DISCOURAGED. 800 D AND SUFFICIENT REASONS FOR THE BLUES. Doctori Fail to Understand Symptoms That Aro Danger Signals. A marked trait in woman's character is to place implicit confidence in her physician. A man must work entirely from theairy in the treatment of female diseases, 'or unfortunately cts based in actual e, belong' male sex Many wosvho periically suf- • with attacks of faintness, dizziness, extreme lassitude, n’t care” or want-to-:be-left-alone feeling, do not at first realize that these are the infallible symptoms of womb trouble and the forerunners of great Buffering. Soon they grow to feel that the doctor does not understand their case. Then they remember that “a woman best understands a woman’s ills,” and turn to Mrs. Pinkham. The following letter is but one positive illustration of this fact:— “Four years ago I began to suffer with great weakness of the generative organs. My !- womb was prolapsed; I suffered J with continual ft A backache and all S the other pains that accompany IflS \ that weakness. I .r V/J tried doctor after 22/ doctor, had operations. The 7 I final operation s/f / I L I after which I /I . ■ became a total , / ZKjai wreck, was I scraping of the womb. A friend, one day, recommended to my husband your Compound. He bought me a bottle. The relief I experienced after taking it, was wonderful. I continued its use, and I am glad to say my recovery is a perfect surprise to everybody that knows me.”—Mrs. B. Bluhm, 4940 San Francisco Ave., St. Louis. Mo.
A Radway’s Jy fW Ready K Relief. }long friend! -I It is Ibe only 711 A PAINREM(zk - J EDYtbattnrJ —7<i3's'“ , ’dy stops he most —J J excruciating -X*” .r —ft allays O-—'"■"’t tJ ——“'l Ji IJ intiiimtnaI 3 (I 3 tion, and £ ill U °ures cou- * 11' I gestfon. t-11 ''ir' '• Internally a tesspoonful in water will in a few minntcscure Cramps, Bpasuis. Sour Stomach. Heartburn,Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, Summer Complaint, Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency and all interna) peins. There is not a remedial agent in the world that, will cure fever and ague and all oilier malarious, bilious and other fevers, (aider! by JIADWAY’S PILLS), so quickly as BADWAY’S BEADY BELIEF. Price 50 cents per bottle. Sold bv Druggists. BADWAY £ CO., New York. o Removes Tan, Pimples, Frock*3 Moth Patches, Rush and Bkia diseases, and every blem E< 2 S on beauty, and ZT&ldefles detection. It S H to -Jh U\x Bhas stood the test of W. WOT years, and is so M Vy WCZf Harmless we taste it L’a® X 3 O’/ to be sure it is propw © I '*•-£ I ni *de. Accept •j 25 no counterfeit of “ . l/ / alnd’ar name. Dr. e> liik r ( L-A. Sayietwld toa Ajf \r Wi \ lady of haut-ton \ 1 & Patient): “As you VZyWTP r< 1 \ ladies will use them, / ) I \ I recommend *Gou/X*t> yfclk J&V ‘Jx v 1 raud’s Cream’ as the I / / leant harmful of all i X I 11 L the Skin preparaB X VL .»**v tions.” For sale by all Druggists and Fancy-Goods Deal.miarthe United Plates; Can anas and Europe. FERD. T. lIOPKINS, prop'r, 37 Great J.nes Street, N. T. Drink If IRES Rootbeer when, 1 hot; when you!re thirsty ; when callers come. At any and all times drink HIRES Rootbeer. only by The Chsrlee 1. Hire, Co.. Philadelphia A 250- package makes 5 r.iion. IB "rafin Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use IgH IM in time. -Sold by druggists.
Pill Clothes, • ~The good pill has a good coat. The pill coat serves two purposes; it protects ths ,pill, enabling it to retain all its remedial Value, and it the taste for the palate. Some pill coats are too heavy they will not dissolve iji the stomach, and the pills they cover, ‘pass through the system as harmless as a bread pellet. Other coats are too light, and pdlmit the speedy deterioration of the pill. After 30 years exposure, Ayer's Sugar Coated Pills have been found as effective as if just fresh from the laboratory. It’s a good pill with a good coat. Ask your druggist for Ayer’s Cathartic Pills. More pill particulars la Ayer’s Curebook, Joo pages. Sent free. J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass.
Ohio Girl Who Paints Signs.
Women artists who paint landscapes or anything else upon canvas for house decoration are common enough, but Miss Edna Waymack, of Cleveland, is the only woman in the country who makes it her business to do all sorts of outdoor advertising work, such as painting upon barn sides, sign boards, roofs of houses and the like. She is not afraid of scaffold or ladder and will scale a rope ladder up a mountain side and will work there at her trade for hours at a time if her contract calls for it She is fearless in that way, and enjoys her work to a great extent. She engaged with a tobacco company several days ago and entered upon her con-
tract, when, with rule, pencil, brushes and bucket, she assumed command of the side of a brick building at the corner of Prospect and Hickox streets and commenced her work. It was a funny sight, and during the day hundreds of people stopped and discussed her situation. She gave the onlookers not the slightest attention, but continued her work in a purely businesslike manner until 5:30 o'clock, when she surveyed the result Of her day’s labor and made ready to return to her hotel. Iler working costume consists of a serviceable skirt, a jumper of blue cloth and a cap which she manages to pull well down over her face in order to keep off sunburn. Her mittens conceal a pair of dainty hands and feet which are incased in patent leather boots coraspond in neatness. Miss Waymack began upon her sign painting career more than three years ago and has traveled over a great deal of the western country with her uncle, who is also a sign painter. Miss Waymack’s home is Bellefontaine, Ohio.
Current Condensations.
It’s a iong lane that has no turning, but it may turn in the wrong direction. Stains on linen can be removed by rubbing them persistently with salt and lemon juice. Mr. Goschen, the secretary of war, has followed Mr. Balfour's example and taken to the bicycle. Mr. Swinburne has in the press a larger and more important poem than any he has published for some years. Mr. Balfour is an intensely indolent man. He so arranges his work tiiat he can lie abed until noon at least live days out of the seven. Ah aerolite which recently fell In Australia Had a spot in one side nearly twelve inches in diameter 'which was composed of pure copper. What time Dr. Jameson does not spend at Bow street, he appears to be occupied in refusing proposals of marriage which reach him-by mail. The first counterfeit •greenback (series of 1802) was .made at Lawrence, Ind., by Eet£ tl.» criminally Johnseu Withers. Paderewski has commissioned the brothers De Iteszke to buy him a Polish estate on the line’between Cracow and Warsaw, and here the great pianist proposes to build a chateau. Of every 1.'006 clergymen between the ages of 45 and 65 only 15.93 die an nually; but of every 1,000 doctors between the ages of 45 and 65, no fewer i than 28.03, it is said, die every year, i Slate pencils are now manufactured lof bone. They are not likely, however. to meet with approval of the small boy, as they- are uhbfeakable, and. still worse,'- noiseless. The peculiar and delightfully shrill, musical screech of the old-fashloiied Slate pencil is naturally a great'sßliree of amusement to the young. Tiie Cuban rebels have adopted a novel way of setting fire to sugar cane fields. A small piece of phosphorus coated with wax is fastened to a snake's tail and the creature let loose to make its way among the cane. The sun melts the wax and ignites tiie phosphorus and the business is done. Military protection or other efforts are claimed to be unavailing in the face of such a formidable' foe.
KILLED ON THE FARM.
A STARTLING RECORD OF TERRIBLE CASUALTIES. Dangers Attending Life on a Farm teem Greater than Those Surrounding Work on the Kailroad or in a Powder Mill. Die in the Hayfield. Fatalities, mishaps mid odd incidents have always seemed to attend unduly the gathering of the hay crop, says a western New York correspondent of the New Y'ork Sun, but tbby seem to have been unusually numerous in their occurrence this season. Following is the record of the hayfield in this respect for but little more tha-n a week in Chautauqua and adjacent counties-alone: Bussell Waterhouse, aged 77, a loading farmer of Arkwright, County, was helping his son Thomas in the hayfield. They were loading hay. The elder Wateraouse stood ou the top of the load, distributing the hay as his son pitched it up. A thunder storm was coming np, ano this was the last loud to be hauled in. Suddenly a terrific dap of thunder broke so sharp and near that it frightened the horses. They sprang forward, jerking the wagon so that Farmer Waterhouse was thrown from the load to the ground. Ho struck on his head. His neck was broken and he died instantly. Farmer Thomas Reynolds needed help one day last week to gather a field of hay before it was damaged by a coming storm, ou his farm at Sullivan, I’a. Some mqn were engaged, on another part of his fprm in a job of sawing with a portable sawmill. He sent his son to request the men to suspend, their work at the mill and hasten down to’iielp with the hay. One of the operators at the mill, Fred; Holcomb, aged 21, In his htitTy td respond; to the call, stumbled and fell in front of
DIGGING IN THE RUINS AT KAMAISHI.
the saw. Before he could regain his feet or the bystanders could aid him he was cut to pieces by the saw, his head, an arm, and both legs being severed from his body. Two fatal accidents occurred on the Brush farm, near Darien Centre. John Schrader, the hired man. fell from a load of hay with his pitchfork in his hand. In some way he fell on the tines, which passed entirely through his body, lie lived but a short time. Before the news of this casualty reached the owner of the farm he was mowing bay in his orchard with a mowing machine. His 12-year-o'd son was near by. Farmer Brush called to him to come and hold np the low-hang-ing bough of a tree so he could drive under it. The boy held it. up, but stood so close that as the machine passed him the knives an that end of the cutter bar struck him. cutting off both his feet at the ankle. He died three hours later. Ethel Rice, aged 9, was watching her brother. John, run a mowing machine iu a field near the house. John stopped the horses where she stood, dismounted from the machine, and told Ethel to hand him the wrench, which lay near. The little girl got the wrench, and stepi>ed up near the machine, getting between the cutting forks, and handed it to her brother. As lie was reaching for it the horses started. 'l'he quickly shifting knives caught the child and cut off both her legs near the knees. • , : ‘ At Bedford. Pa., on Thursday, Joseph Bell, aged 73. Was at work in his hay field. Levi Shay was driving by and stopped to talk to Farmer Bell, who walked over to the fence. "Might better let your hay rot down in the field.” said Shay. “It won’t bring $3 a ton the way this country is being run.” "Three dollars a ton!” exclaimed Farm'er Bell, excitedly. "Why, that would drive us to the poorhouse.” "Certainly it would, and it will,” declared Shay. Farmer Bell stood with a disturbed look on his face a moment, staggered forward and fell heavily to the ground. Shay, supposing Bell nad fainted from effects of the heat, jumped from his wagon to help him, but the farmer was dead.
Awful Work of Yellow Jackets. George Ring, a hired man on the farm, of William Smith, his father-in-law, near Alton, was riding a hiowing machine one day last week, when one of the horses stepped in a yellow jacket’s nest. Instantly the irritable occupants of the nest came out in a swarm anud slung the horses, which, frenzied with the pain of the poisonous stingers, ran away. Ring was thrown from his seat on the mower, and although he fortunately fell out of the way of the knives, he struck a spot where a patch of elder brush had lieen cut. at the edge of the field, leaving stiff, sharp butts standing. When-other men working in the tield hurried to his aid they found him impaled on the stubbles, one having been forced through the fleshy part of bis left thigh and one through his right shoulder, One: ear was torn from bis head, his lower jaw. was broken, and his body badly lacerated by the jagged elder stubble. The full extent of Ring's injuries was not known nor Could -he be extricated from hi/ awful situ.aUpn for ten minutes after th'o nwivhlt- of' the men. A horde of yej'ow jackets Wliich followed him as he was thrown from the machine, were stinging hint fiercely on* every bit of, flesh exposed, and had to be fought away and killed before life men could rescue the unfortunate Ring, who was unconscious and uttering heart-rending cries of agony. His rescuers were terribly stung by the yej'.ow jackets la-fore they eotlld get Ring away. He was carried to the farm house. It is thought that, not withstanding his frightful! injuries, ’le will recover. '• - The frenzied liorses. craxel by the stinging of the yellow- jackets, dashe.i madly across the field and in among a group of young chestnut' trees.- There the mowing machine was sin-ashed to pieces. Along the <dge of the field opposite the one where Riitg was thrown and ten feet below it runs l hitler creek. The horses, freed from the machine, ran straight for that side of the field,, and plunged down the steep bank into the creek. The waler is wide and deep at that
•pot. and. handleapped by their harnevx and being bitched together, both bones were drowned. It is probable that they would have had to be killed at any rate, for they had been blinded by the stinging of the yellow jackets, and their bodies were swollen to an immense size by the poison.
VICTIMS OF THE SEA.
Thirty Thousand People Drowned by the Tidal Wave in Japan. Thirty thousand souls hurried to eternity; thirty thousand lives blotted out iu five minutes; probably the same nnmber of emaciated sufferers stalking hungryeyed about the ruins of their former homes—that, briefly, is the story ot the great wave that swept up from the sea and engulfed (he coast of the island of Yexo, Japan. Following is the summary of the results »f the disaster: Iwate— 25,413 deaths. 1,244 wounded. 5,030 houses svsept deaths. 505 wounded. GtSM houses swept away or destroyed. Aomori—346 deaths, 243 wounded, 454 houses swept away or destabyed. Totals—2B.4l6 deaths, 1.w2 wounded. 6.202 houses swept away or destroyed. Of various tjjwus and villages that were visited by Tfio calamity Kamaishi and Taro suffered 1 most. In the former 4,700 ont of 6.557 iicnple were drowned, while iu the latter 2,656%ut of 3,747 were killed. It was shortly before 8 o’clock on the night of Monday, June 15; that dwellers near the coast lihftM a strange sound that came out from the sea, swelling on the calm evening air. The dreaded tsunami (sea wave) was not altogether new to some of those who were so soon to become its victims. But it is asserted that the people were exceedingly slow to realize the immensity of the danger that threatened them. "Tsunami!" cried a terrorstricken fisherman, and "Tsunalni!” passed the echoing wail swiftly from man to man until the silent fishing hamlets rang with the cry. Mad with terror that lent speed to their flying fpet, the dwellers
forsook their frail, thatched huts, anl lushed for the bluffs topping the sleeping villages. Some of the first to floe gained places of safety, saw the pliosphorescent waters clamor and toss timliers and human beings almost at their feet, and beard them sullenly retreat with their ghastly burden. Others caught by the sen and beaten most cruelly by the debris which it bore on its crest were yet left behind when it withdrew. But by far the most were swallowed up and their,poor bodies are now only being thrown buck on land. The town of Kiimaisnl, situated a few miles from the iron mines of that name, was almost wiped out, only n few houses standing on high ground liehiml the town being spared, in this town 4,700 persons, out of a total population of (1.557, lost their lives; 500 were injured; 1,080 out of 1,213 houses were destroyed. Taro was a village ot 2.500 population. Three hundred persons escaped from the catastrophe. At this point the wave appears to have been most destructive; some of the survivors declare it to have been eighty f<>et high, and the marks left on the rising grounds show it to have been
SHIZUKAW AFTER THE WAVE PASSED OVER IT.
of such a height that it is a marvel any human beings survive. The loss of life would have been greater, but for the fact that over a hundred of the Taro fishermen were nt sea and knew nnughtof the disaster till they returned. Owing to the destruction of the telegraph lines along the coast it wns not till late next morning that news of the catastrophe began to spread, and for three days it was all but impossible to afford official uid’fo the survivors. Meanwhile the ''weather find grown warmer. Decomposition of - th? bodies had set in and it began to be a dreadful experience to venture in the vicinity of those spots where formerly there had been human habitations. Bnt, worse than the awful scenes to which one could never become accustomed, in passing near the ruined house's was the spectacle of groups of swollen onee-hninan forms rocking to and fro on the sea almost within reach of the shore, while on the beach itself other similar awful objects were rolled over and over in rows by each succeeding wave as it reached the strand. There can be no exaggeration of this frightful calamity or of the never-to-bo forgotten scenes that have followed and are yet coming in its wake. It has been found extremely
RUINS IN ODACHI.
difficult to secure laborers to assist in loeating.opeeovering and decently interring the dead. and the gravest- fears are entertained that disease will be bred b." the presence of so ninny decaying bodies. ft would be idle to discuss the causes of this extraordinary visitation. It may have originated in some tremendous volcanic outburst far away in the Pacific ocean, or it may have been caused by n displacement of the ocean bed on the hither edge of the Tuscarora Deep, which wns discovered by Admiral Belknap in the Tuscarora, and stretches a mighty abyss, tire and one-third miles deep, off the .Japan coast. Sea waves have invaded Japan before, but never with such disas-
trout result*. It is well within the memory of those still alive that in 1854 the harbor of Shimoda was visited by three huge waves, which destroyed mauy live* and much shipping, leaving the Knssiau frigate Diana a total wreck. Moreover, in 1892, a small wave which fortunately wrought little destruction, was experienced iu parts of the very regions that have now been devastated. The Emperor and Empress promptly gave 14,UtM> yen. to be devoted to the relief ».f the sufferers, and foreigners and Japanese are subscribing to fnyds started for a similar purpose.
FULL BINS FOR FARMERS.
Country's Corn Crop Promises to Equal that of Last Year. Information regarding the growing corn crop has been received at the De IKirtment of Agriculture in Washington. There is every indication now that the crop of the country will equal the enormous crop of last year, which was 2.151.130.000 bushels. That was the largest crop the United States has produced for mauy years. The crop of 1804 had only l-cen 1,212,000,000 bushels, and it was but a trifle more in 1803 and 1802. In ISOI it reached beyond 2,000,000,000 bnshe's. The extent of the corn crop of the United States this year is about 1,000,(XMI acres less than it was last year. Then it was 82,000.000 acres. In 1894 it was only "ti. 000.000. The average acreage in the principal corn Ktates is reported as follows for the two years: 180 ft. 1895. Ohio 1(111 104 Mh-hignu toil .100 Indiana 103 104 Illinois ~!(« ]ofi low* 97 108 Missouri 99 107 Kansas 105 117 Nebraska 102 107 Texas Kt 112 Tennessee 04 ]O7 Kentucky 07 102 The, official method of the Government for communicating the state of growing crops to the public is to take a basis of 11X1 ns a reasonable standard of excellence. Averages in excess are exceptionally good, and averages below 100 become less encouraging the lower they go. With this explanation the statements of the officials of the Agricultural 'Department become plain to those outside the Board of Trade. The. reports received justify the fidlowing estimates of the average condition of the .crop in the leading corn States, which are given alongside the averages for July, 1895: ISM. 1895. Ohio loti 91 Michigan .., Kai til Indiana lib 95 Illinois PH 92 lowa 94 105 Kentucky 97 9(1 Missouri Hl 1011 Kansas 102 104 Nebraska ..103 95 Texas 93 118 Tennessee 90 98 For the entire country the present average is 112.4, against 99.3 in July; 1895. The condition of the entire cron of winter wheat throughout the United Stiite-i is 75. G. against (15.8 in July, 18'15, distributed as follows: 189(1. 1895. Now York 70 78 Pennsylvania 70 88 Kentucky (14 85 Ohio M co •Michigan 73 09 Indiana (Id 52 Illinois 80 50 Missouri 75 (J 8 Kansas 75 42 California 100 82 Oregon 95 95 Washington 100 93 The reports received by tin* d(>|Mirtment in a general way on till crops iirb 1 , ciYeohrnging. This ought to be a prosperous year for fanners in most sections of the country, unless some great calamity befalls the harvest. Generally poor condition of fruit throughout the cotintry is announced in the agricultural report. Apples declined in condition fropi 71 to (14.0 during June. The peach erdp promises to be of medium proportions. During' Hie flSot month n fall of IXU aiulpls has taken place, leaving the gencthil average n<hv 51.8.
LINCOLN'S OVATION TO BRYAN.
Bia Demonstration in Hi* Home Town —Reception nt the State House. Amidst nn upronr ot booming cannon, pealing church bells, sereamhig steam
whistles nnd the shouts of 20,000 people, Wm. J. Bryan, the Democratic iioniinee for President, entered Lincoln, the capital city of .Nebraska, his home. It was an ovation the like of which the people of that part of the country never before witnosed. Half the people of the city, men, women and children, were nt the depot to welcome him home. It was n nonpartisan reception, for both Democrats nnd Republicans participated In it. The Mayor ot the city, the City Council and distinguished citizens of every political belief were at the train. As fur as the eye could reach were thronged streets, crowded windows nnd enthusiastie shooters on the roofs of the houses. There were'bands of music, men carrying banners with mottoes complimentary Io the Democratic leader ami flags and bunting bung from the fronts of the biisliiess houses nnd dwellings. Even the newsboys crying the evening papers wore Brynn caps nnd tliousands of js-ople blew tin horns or rang cow bells. When the reception was over Mr. Bryan went to n platform erected at the north end of ‘.he State House, where he addressed what is said to have been the largest congregation of people ever assembled in Lincoln.
Told in a Few Lines .
There were 1!!>3 new cnsea Of' cholera in Egypt in two days mid II3S deaths from that disease, including those of three British soldier* uj. Wady-Halfa.,. Janies Grillin, 12 yearn old, stetGhcd and killed hjs IG-year-old .brother, 11 one pit Griffin, with a pocketknife at New York during a quarrel over the posifession of a baseball mask. , A rumor is curve,nt in railroad c:r--Mos that Collis I*. Huntington and the Southern Pacific people have a hand in the new government of the Oregon Rail-, way and Navigation Company. An expert counterfeiter is now in the city lockup nt St. Paul. His rgal Maine is Richard .Munroe, alias ('buries Smith, alias "Whiskers,” a reformed ex-convict, who has iieen for some mouths under the eye of Hastings H. Hart, secretary of the Minnesota State Board of Corrcct'.ons and Charities. Mrs. Louise Foltz, wife of Richard D. Foltz, committed suicide tit -Newcastle, Pa., by taking laudanum, Mr. Foltz then made a desperate attempt to kill himself. but was prevented. Mrs. Foltz was a sister of James J. Davidson. Republican candidate for Congress. Her brother married a daughter of Senator <iuajr.
Travel with a Friend
Wuo will protect you from those enemies—tufise*. tniflgestlcm. malar 14 and the sickness produced by rocking on the wave*, and aomeUme* by Inland traveling over the rough beds of 111-laid railroads. Such a frieud is Hostetter's Stomach Bitters. Ocean mariners. yachtsmen, commercial and theatrical agents and tourists testify to the protective potency of this effective safeguard, which conquers also aheumaUsm, uervousueas and biliousness.
Peculiar Butterfly Colors.
In India there Is a species of butterfly in which the male has the left wing yellow and the right wing red. The rolors on the temale are vice versa. Marriage License Clerk. Salmonson. of Chicago. Issued license No.. 250,000 the other day, which indicates the marriage of half a million of Chicagoans during a period of twenty-five years.
Homeseekers’ Excursions South.
On the 15th and ICth of June, also July 6,7, 20 and 21, and several dates during August, September and October, the Chicago and Eastern Illinois Railroad will »ell first-class round-trip tickets, good 31 days from date of aale, for one fare, plus $2.00, for the round trip, to all poiuts iu Florida and the South. Tracks, trains, time all the best. For further information address C. W. Humphrey, N. I‘. A., St, Paul, Minn. City ticket office, 182 Clark street, or C. L. Slone, G. P. & T. A., Chicago. Country roads in China are never bounded by fences, but are entirely undefined. While the farmer has the right to plow up any road passing through h's land, drivers of vehicles have au equal right, and they exercise IL to traverse any part of the country at large.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
I* a constitutional cure. Price 70 cents. Provide abundantly for Intellectual ns wplbnsirhyslcnl wants, for the soul is the red! man or woman. Dye for the Whisker* can be applied when nt home, and is uniformly successful in coloring a brown or black. Hence its great popularity. Scientists predict that 100 years hence there will be no such thing as uu Incurable disease. Pino's Cure for Consumption ha* been a godsend to me.—Wm. B. McClellau. Chester, Fla,, Sept. 17, 1895. Who overcomes by force hath overcome but half His foe.
Best Itesiilts prove Hood's Sarsaparilla the best blood purifier, appetizer and nerve tonic, iu fact Hoods Sarsaparilla Il the Ono Trim Blood Purifier. Alldniffghts. sl. Hood’s Pills curs an Uver in-.. 25 vents.
tiling the farmer sella I* low. Who Mr o c *®h' low to him ? Wc have repeatedly refused ’VBA /mfCTEcZw ,a “nd. tlietefore. defeated windmil! combi- wk nations, oud have, since 'Hg, reduced the coat of W4A gay ® wind power to oue-BlXlh what it was. Wfl Mw a fcrygj | jsß<' 1 V "’ '‘dieva in low prices, high grades IM H ® lu * >»•«<’ No one know* the Hf 5 UTtZkHroS be ’ l P" n 'P °r prices until he knows MN RE £ 'foWaKKilMsL-ZlfiSOAgH W?*L ■ Sitffi EMU Quit. We make r.lifllt hand end long Ifiß'" power stroke pumps, with best seam- ju U*L - dSWCTliSwxTOWjkvwßllw, brx* 4 tube cylinder, lower than \ 'MyjWrAaaßhwJMy Iron ones-a 114 116 lu-h at It , > I.JIM Wii -t- iffn “Wini yourdeuler. Buy none oilier Aermotor price* anil jflff 'BA *■. (iMtiWwilk NWP goods ere always best. Through gratitude, and '-r. “'OUfrir® makers, end are safest to Jaalwiib. thn world lias given us more th** Jt*H I' ll windmill biisinuas. We have eo branch houses— .jfiKr ÜB4r you ' W,lu >M kssullfully lltu«tr»t«.l ;iu*mtdMimn»n»mnni I I -“Fl " iLJvj/ ! I* l' W - 1 W MmMl - . flWßAWiiil K-JMhmb ™ counter f ' | a Cut Down Expenses*” * ! PLUG W 1 A woman knows what a Bargain | | really is. She knows better than a man. i j 0 BATTLE AX ”is selected every tinje H 1 by wives who buy tobacco for their huS- | « 1 bands. They select it because it is an honest bargain. It is the biggest in size, the smallest in price, and the best in quality. The 5 cent piece is almost as large as the ] 1 10 cent piece of other high grade brands. ! S A P O LIO ■ 'I ' - r '- ■ . ' . IS LIKE A GOOD TEMPER, “IT SHEDS A BRIGHTNESS EVERYWHERE.”
Buy *1 worth Dobbins Ftaoilng B m Snap M rrocer. srad wrappers to Dobbins roap Mfr. Cw. P** sdelpbis. I-O. im-y will send you. fr.-e •>{ cnarge. *«dk paid, a Worcester Pocket D ctlonary. 29*> paces, cu<hbouud; pruiiuely Illustrated. Offer good till Aug. 1 M ra. Window'll Sootwixo Sraur for (Vilutrwm teetuin*: soitena the siuna, reauceu loflimtusrisa, allara paiu. cures wind colic, s cents a botUe.
Gladness Comes With a better understanding of th* transient nature of the many physical ills which vanish before proper efforts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts—rightly directed. There is comfort in. the knowledge that so many forms of sickness are not due to any actual disease, but simply to a constipated condition of the system, which the pleasant family laxative, Hyrupof Figs, promptly removes. That is why it is the only remedy with millions of families, aud u* everywhere esteemed so highly by all who value good health. Its lienefleiai effects ure due to the fact, that it is the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness, without debilitating the organs on which it acta. It is therefore all important, in order to get ita beneficial effects, to note when you purchase, that you have the genuine article, which is manufactured by the California Fig Syrnp Co. only, and sold by all reputable druggists. If in the enjoyment of good health, and the system is regular, then laxatives or other remedies uro not needed. If afflicted with any actual disease, on* may be commended to the most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxative, then one should have the la-st, and with the well-informed everywhere, Syrnp of Figs stands highest and is most iurgely used and gives moat general satisfaction.
THE MIDDLE SOUTH An Ilhurtrated Monthly Jonrpal 91! th t tu< 1 >«i\eloi’inpnt of the Middle bouvn, UMTiilMnuelv ilhmtratod. Mubsuription per year. All about the meat Middle South—Hh it- inducumente to the Hotuexeoker, OFFKH K.XTKAOKDIN A ICY in order tn introduce it in every Northern eommuuirv interrN*.e*< in the Routh, wo will vend it one > nar for only *46 rente to each ot the liret twenty rutiiex received from auv poetofthw. Htibscribo quloM • uno iitulied. Middle Routh Pub. ('*>., • otnervillt®. Tenn, PATENTS. TRADEMARKS, Ezumbikllon and advice as to PHiouublllu "t Inswatlona. Seud lor iNVKNTOns’ (Hnoit, oh How to (Hr a P4TBBT. I'strl.ik ((’Farrell, VVasliiuvlon. I(.U, JOHN W.moWKIR, |]lELHlSelWlll W ushiuaton, D.4L ■ Zyrslu iMt war, HadJudlcutUiguUuus, ally (dusk ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■fl.'harlui t. wu. Mais nOIIIKI Itablt Cured. Mt. tli’lftlT. Thousands Hr Him ™«ml. cheap-nt nml ixwt curs. Fmkk'ihiUi l UIII Al- slats ease. I)K,,M*Kui, l quliiC). Mtcii. e. n. i). j ~ 30-»» YXTHEN WttfTING TO AI>vkItTIHEHM ” pl< n<w any you saw tho udvertUauwo* Iu thia paper.
