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)NTAG(OUS BLOOD POISON o ises king of all diseases Contagious Blood Poison rightfully belongs the name King of all It is the most powerful of all human ailments—corrupting every ^fthe body and wrecking and ruinirg the lives of those unfortunate °Vi to contract it. When the first sign appears in the for: 1 i f an insig u to comrau. it■ -6“ “rr1-"1 111 *■” • > * ju oi.-'g t sore or ulcer, few persons realize that the deadly virus has cattred Tood- hut so potent is the poison that one drop will vitiate and p< '.lute and healthiest blooil. and in a short time the degrading and hor urcs , • *—ft, ..i„ ... The mouth and throat ulcerate, the glands symptoms begin to appear. T p neck and groins swell, the hair and eye-brows fall out copper-colored grc appear on the body, and in the latter stages of the disease the poison Jorks down and destroys the bor.es. No other di- - is so highly •oUS| and many have contracted it and suffered its awfulconsequences fh a'friendly hand-shake, handling the clothing of one affli ct 1 with of B n tiers, drinking from the same vessel. S. S. S The Kin e only cure for Contagious Bio. 1 Poison. It goe down into the cir ion and forces out every particle of the virus. It i nature’s antidote for this peculiar poison, and cures the dis ase I 'u its stages, and cures it permanently. P Vtev.. S. S. S. does not hide or env r up anv cf the ^ • out in future years, but so eom W% WSW ® • pletelv eradicates it from the blood that no signs FLY VEGETABLE, are ever seen again. S SS is purely vegetable. tUI we offer f: ooo for proof that it contains a par of mineral of any kind. Book with instructions for home treatment t<Steal advice you desire will be furnished bv our physicians AnAHTA, any m RKANSAS STATE NEWS j a New Departure. Sunday schools of I^ittle Itock lanning a very interesting de re frum their regular methods will serve to interest the buai men of the city In the work of Sunday schools. It is proposed all the Sunday school children of ity shall engage in an egg hunt, day to be selected by the differ chools. It is hoped that the an lurnber to take part in this hunt reach 7,tx)o. one thousand china will be pnrcliiLsed for these chil to search for and will t>e given p finders, as souvenirs of the oc A Laudable Enterprise. n I). F. Sutherland of Texas, a *r of the liar since 1884. and |er of the United Charities of tea, is engaged in the work of citing the building of a national irliim at Eureka Springs for sick and overworked women, i school for homeless children. Institution to have a capacity of each. He donated $10,000 to Dines, and all arrangements hare made as to sites. Skimming Station. S. Vandusen. manager of the part creamery, has put in a ninp station at Ulm, wiiich will it in operation at once. He will re cream from that place daily, ays it is cheaper for customers e hand separators and ship the a to him where they an* near [press office than it is to haul it creamery Frenzied Finance. ? receiver of the defunct Smi Banl; and Trust Company of Smith, after an Investigation of ff.iirs of the institution, reports nub ♦i.'iw'i in assets were avail tor ii>< in paying the detits of the Tbi schedules sliow $."ith'T>. sets, lint this amount was made worth!. .- noti'3 and ot.li r water il« i Tin hank at Its (test perl ; -aid to h:iV( only possessed a nindred dollar of actual capital. Injured While Logging. ill'- sujierinirndlng Hie pulling ui*j log uni id the river S \V. in. i' v r 'f tile Northern Ohio ■ 'ag' i •.! 111. i mi Parkin, was Uf'!;- InJ'i: ill., t flying hook nt “'1 to n i ex His right leg was ‘•red t t' l • tin- bone h ■ iM ?n into . \ '-mvs, and intern Juii- -| Making Good Progress. . , ' Ku ■' government denion i,,ri fan \:>-Tt, lias just coin '1 : it inspection of the ilif t fnrii ill U. stale Unit arc he Mnducti.] under government di 'ii lie rcjsirLs conditions prom 11 ;1 ii" isi ( -.os tin plowing bier ci irnploted and the fanners ' ;i'i\ n hiii planting corn to Reduce Acreage, a lie tine of the Ixienst drove "'rs ' nloii the following was ,Mi I! - I-I'd, That we K«'|i the ■ lire down to tell acres and 1 tli In is, , and we earnestly 'st union men and other farmers * rale with ns in onr effort to end. the Leslie Extension. Kb' if way for the extension of l-euis end North Arkansas Railroad from L- slip has been secur ed over much of the route between Leslie and Heber, and it is understood that actual construction work will be gin in the next few weeks. For Electric Railway. An electric line from Hardy to Mel bourne. by way of Ash Flat and Franklin, a distance of 4' miles, is almost an assured fact. About $17, 000 has been subscribed and actual work will soon commence Killing at Brinkley. Will Mitchell, alias "Red,” shot and killed Charles Madison, at Brinkley, a few days ago The trouble is said tr> have occurred over money matters. Both of the men are negroes The slayer is still at large. Paralysis Causes Death. Abe Mayer, of the firm of Mayer k Wolf, who has been in business for thirty years at the same location in Fort Smith, was stricken with paraly sis. causing death, several days ago Murder and Suicide. 11. K. Garraway, a truck farmer liv ing four miles west of Hot Springs, killed his wife and shot Klizabeth Scbmale, a servant girl, through the arm. and then killed himself, a few days ago Insurance Fees. The State auditor reports that the insurance fees received up to last Saturday, on the first quarter of the year 1900 amount to $00,030.80, as compared with a total of $48,020.78., lor the entire first quarter of 1905. t*ew Railroad For Warren. Warren is celebrating the assured pcospect of a connection with the Rook Island's new Haskell branch. Ground has been secured, und materi al is arriving for the depot and track age of the Warren and Ouachita Val ley railroad. For Parcels Post. Resolutions declaring in favor of a parcels post system in the United States were passed without a dissent ing voice at the recent meeting of the Independence CVnintv Farmer’s Union at Jamestown. Both Eyes Shot Out. Gee Me} field wae shot twice, each hall entering a dllTerPTrt eye, at Ills home at Hot Spriufgs a short time ago. Mayfield, who is a ruigru, had long been separat'd from his wife, and on malting attempts to enter the house occupied by the woman and her niece, his advances were repulsed in the above mentioned fashion, it is thought that Mayfield will die Italian Town on the Boom. Construction work Is being pushed on a thres-story building, whlcli, when completed, will be used as a con vent at Tonltown, the nourishing Italian settlement In Washington county. It is also announced tliat Father Bund Ini has purchased a tract of land embracing some So acres ad jacent to Tonltown, on which lime stone quarries are to 1m opened and a lime kiln put in operation Fruit Crop Condition. The Commissioner of Agriculture of Arkansas, believes that the present cold wave will cause much damage hi some fruits in various parts of the state If the cold is general, as shown by press dispatches, hi* believes that the peach crop throughout the north western part of the state will t>e dam aged to a groat extent. The apples, are probaldjr m>t seriously damuged. Was in Earnest. Betty Thomas, a negross residing at Little Rock, shot her husband and accidently wounded their ten-year-old «on, a few days ago. The husband of the woman had just given her a thrashing and ejected her from their dwelling. The negress has been ex onerated by trial, as the shooting seems to have been done after ample provocation. Number of Persons Arrested. The police of Hot Springs raided a residence of that place, a few days ago, and arrested seven pe<rple. It is thought that the raid will tend to lessen the robberies etc., that have been terrorizing the town, a«s several known criminals were secured. Talk of New Railroad. It is said that the prospects of the earlj building of the railroad between Van Buren and White Sulphur Springs are very bright at present. The Van Buren stockholders are confident that some definite steps towards the build iug of tlie road will be taken soon. A Man of Education. The body of a tramp sign writer, was found at Hoxie a few days ago The dead man was a highly educated individual, and was said to have for merly been a school teacher. The man's name is unknown. School Bonds Sold. The Clarendon Public School Board recently sold $22,*>u0, worth of school bonds at par to a Chicago firm. ThP Board will now proceed with the erec tion of a new school building for Clar endon. Young Lady Hurt. Miss FVld. a young lady employed in a dry goods store at Prairie Grove, ran a brass r in in her finger, while tagging goods. 'The injured finger swelled to an alarming size and blood poisoning is feared. Appeals the Case. J D. Rose, who was convicted at Marshall and sentenced to the peni tentiary for two years for uttering a forged instrument, is now out on a Se,1"1" bond pending an appeal to the Supreme Court. Three Visits a Week. The resid- nee (if a preacher, resid ing at Hot Springs, was entered by burglars three times hist week. Out i f the three trips, the thieves se cured valuables to the amount of $140. Accidently Shot Himself. N. P. Brewer, a farmer, acci- atlv shot himself, at his home near Rowell several days ago. Brewer was killing hogs at the time, when his gun went off causing deatft immediately. Miner Seriously Injured. F. Werstein. a shot lighter in a mine near Midland, was badly hurt some days ago. A premature discharge of a blast caught the miner exposed, and resulted in his being badly mangled. Negroes Rob a Farmer. A young white fanner, living near Texarkana was held up and robbed by two negroes some days ago. The des peradoes secured nearly $100 in cash, and have not yet been apprehended. 3.000 Acres Sold. A big real estate deal was closed by a Pine Bluff real estate firm and an Iowa firm by which the latter secured 3,0i}0 acres of Grant Count) timber lands a few days ago. It is said that a large saw mill and other lum ber plant will he established by the new owners. The First Conviction. The first conviction under the new anti drumming law, resulted In Dr. Rider of Hot Springs being fined $100 and having his license to practice re voked. The ease has been appealed. Church Meeting Announced. A meeting of representatives of tho Christian churches of northwest Ar kansas will be held in the First Chris tian church of Fayetteville on Tues day. April 3rd. The i resident nf the Southern Cot ton Association, Arkansas Division has issued a bulletin to the farmers of the state, urging: them to reduce t tie acreage of cotton for the coming season. HONGKONG’S ROCKEFELLER Simple Business Habits of One ol th* Richest of Asia’s Mer chants. They have multimillionaires In China and some of them live the sim ple life notwithstanding their wealth. / rwoent maga/ina article gives a A POWERFUL Kidney... Medicine Cures Quickly and Permanently Accept no substitute. Insist on having the genuine PRICKLY ASH BITTIRS with the large figure 3 in red on the front label SOLO EVERYWHERE - PRICE $1.00 £Vt Striking feature of the richest China man In Hong Kong—one of the rich est merchants In Asia He owns steamship Hues, sugar refluerles, quar ries and what not; the offices of hla elerks are fitted up with typewriters, roller-top desks, Index cabinets and all the paraphernalia of an up-to-date business, yet he himself retains his old-fashioned habits. But says the article: “tn a little back room, about the size of a New York boarding house hall bedroom, In one of the oldest and largest commercial houses In Hong Kong, and in all Asia, works an old, bright-eyed celestial. He Is tall and j bony, and his long, lean fingers are tipped with pointed, well kept nails ; protruding an inch or more beyond the i flesh. His head is high and bald, A few scattering hairs bristle from hU upper lip. A ‘pig-tail, (of the finest quality obtainable) hangs <lowii liis back. His lips are thin and his mouth is straight, tint not hard. His whole expression is kindly if not beaming when he looks up. He wears a plain gown of good but not elegnnt text ure There is nothing to Indicate dis tinction in his appearance He sits on a high stool In front of a high old fashioned desk, such as bookkeepers use who have to move about fr^ly while at work. Tn one hand the long fingers grasp a brush-pen, which speeds with llghtninglike rapidity ! over the p:>ge« of n ureat hook, his other hand the while manipulating the beads of an abacus ” PRINTS BY ELECTRIC LIGHT Postal Cards Turned Out Automat ically by New Photographic Device. A novel electric apparatus has been brought out in Belgium for producing photographic prints. It applies to bro mide prints, which are made by artifi cial light, cud is especially useful fot turning out such prints in the shape ot postal cards, producing the latter auto matically and in quantities. The operation of the apparatus is simple. An automatic device applies the paper iroin a roH or magazine against the negative, then an incandes cent lamp is turned on for a time, which has lieen previously adjusted once for U1 in the case of a given neg ative. After the exposure the lamp Is turned off and the paj>er is removed from the negative and goes into a dark box, then a fresh piece of paper is ap plied and so on. The apparatus is set so as to give a certain number of prints from a given negative and each printing operation causes a ratchet wheel to advance one point. At the end of the printing an electric bell is rung by the ratchet de vice. By means of a rhe«»suit the time of the exiioaure can be adjusted trom one to 200 seconds. The whole is op erated by k battery of four small ac cumulators. ELECTRIC LIQUID HEATER. Recent Invention That Can Be Used for Various Household Purposes. Eventually electricity will be used for practically all purposes, luxuries as well as necessities. Among the for mer class is the recent invention of a Massachusetts mail—an electric heater for heating and boiling liquids, for cooking and similar purposes. The receptacle can be varied in de- i sign to suit the individual tastes,; either elaborate or simple. Incased in a false bottom of the receptacle is the heating apparatus, the current being supplied from an adjacent lncandee i-eni lamp fixture, through a wire run i,:.t through the handle. Obviously by simply turning on the current the heating apparatus is set in motion, an additional advantage being the ease of carrying the receptacle to any place desired, and limited only by the length if tie wire. Such an apparatus would Iof invaluable use In the sick cham ber or for the infant. Power from City Sewage. "Electrical development challenges prophecy,' writes Edward B. Ellioott In th»* March Technical World Maga zine "Fifteen y< :rs ago a man who predicted that it would lx possible to deliver to Chicago, at the city limits, 31,iMwt horse-power of electrical energy developed by water fxiwer, would have l>een regarded as it foolish dreamer. Vet next November there will be ready for the municipalities In the sanitary district 15,fH ;u horse | tower developed from the drainage canal which carries off all the city sewage—and, after 'he completion of the plant, the rull amount above mentioned—more tnau the city of Chicago and the other mu nicipalities can possibly take " Tall Wireless Mast. A steel tower 400 feet high Is being erected at Machrihanish, on the Kln tyrv (vast of Argyllshire, for the transmission of Marconi signals across the Atlantic. From this tower U will he possible to hold communication with all vessels suitably fitted between Great Britain and North America. One Way of Keeping Count. First. Street Arab- What's than numbers on the motor car for, Jlia* Second Ditto—Why, that’s the rol ler's score. It shows how many tolks he's run >ver ^Stray Stories. isaiOTTON YIELDS are sure to dwindle from year to year unless the soil is kept supplied with a complete fertilizer containing suffi cient Potash. Just how Potash increases cotton crops is shown in our 90-page book, “Cotton Culture.” This book is sent absolutely free ot any cost or obliga tion to any farmer who will write for it Address. GERMAN KALI WORKS. New York—93 Nassau Street. or Atlanta, U».-22H So. Brood Street. incorporated i8a DUDLEY I JONES COMPANY DEALERS IN MACHINERY and Machinery Supplies II Roofing- Material a Specialty. Agents for woven \V re Fence. Lone Star Paint. Lime. Cement, Plaster and Hair CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED * LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS The Prescott Supply & Hdw. Co. bML- Cultivators, Stalk Cutters, Corn and Cotton Planters, Black Land Plows, Avery Plows, Sec tion Harrows and the sand-proof skein Lmstroth Wagon. : : : These goods are the 19< )6 improved implements and wagons We w ar t to call your attention to the Bully Boy and Dutch made Cultivators. These cultivators are riding plows a boy or girl can plow with then'.. <> r v.aiking cultivators are the strongest on the market. We mean tins because we know it is true. We keep our line of Hardware corn} leti We've go; what the other fellow hasn't. THe PRESCOTT SUPPLY (Si HDW. COMPANY mmammaumno"' «gr aw ’T'—'-TTi —- -yam E/.vflftS.j Men Only .s».. ' r.\ % -O I 1*0 At I Overall 1 $1,00 GailDPnt $2.00 Suit W. B. WALLER The Lax-ets Formula ■ bow tbo fenuula which api-curt oa every bo* of l*i to any physician A-.; I. ni :f th'rb h* a briifr modMlun to move the l«>wt*Is !.»!.»► •l-y fently fttiunli Lxx< s an ply prompt Uo force* of Nature free from a grilling at l*iii i*ui up in the form •( >e dj lithium— yliuut a lalr« anil pleasant in " vt olj. yenirolln form, i >ne Lax 't takmi nef .re mortlil cr or. mu Mur Uwtyi brir-vs n-iiet In ft bane. metal cape oftly 5 cervua a box Sold bp Baker Drug Store. MANY AILMENTS ONE CURE Ail of Uu> »i!juaiit« * htat aria* fraui out: IMjf ran hr aurad br dor r«u«Gj I>r »haup > fU sunlit* «urr urfur d.taa*-- rtuit MMa tron wmkiiMM K ibu ic*aj-i uafir** H» MCrok la « hr.at batik Q.n Jtr ■'«* v n«t»«a «*d taqp t• o jviftj A itu/i "■**« ! Mbtk aak •trank t.b !,» m»wjr:«c ka. nanra i««nr thm makaa all n«al irtfa# a.-'. It is t* at !r rvm #B> that eren biutcilllt «o build jp ml if***t ttr iosideurrtnt. Tot Mion'. racouuuandad at Baker Drug Store. Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic has stood the test 25 years. Average Annual Sales over One and a Ha’f Million bottles. Does this record of merit appeal to you ? No Cure. No Pay. 50c* Enclosed with every bottle is a Ten Cent< package of Crovr’s Black Root. Livei^Piik._