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THE SANDERSVILLE HERALD.
PERUNA A TONIC OF
GREAT USEFULNESS.
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HON. R. 8. THARIN.
j Hon. R. 8. Tharin, Attorney at Law and
^counsel for Anti-Trust League, writes from
.Pennsylvania Ave., N. WWashington,
T). (J., ns follows:
“Having used Peruna ft>r catarrhal
dlHorrfcrs, I am able to testify to its
jgroat remedial excellence and do not hesi
tate to give it tny emphatic endorsement
and earnest recommendation to all por-
'•ons affected by that disorder. It is also o
1 ton to orgrea t uncftil ncx». >'
i Mr. T. Harnecott, West Aylmer. On-
jtArio, Can., writes: "Last winter I was
III with pneumonia after having la
|firippr. 1 took Peruna for two months.
i*rhen 1 became quite wall. I also induced
|a voting lady who was all run down
ana confined to the house, to take Peruna,
and after taking Peruna lor three mouths
■he is able to follow her trade of tailoring.
LXo«n recommend Peruna for all sucu
N*ho are ill and require a tonic."
Pe-ru-na Tablets.
Some people prefer to take tablets,
xather than to take medicine in a fluid
form. Such people can obtain Peruna
tablets, which represent the solid medicinal
ingredients of Peruna. Each tablet is
equivalent to one average dose of Peruna.
Charity Doga.
Waterloo Jack, the famous black
retriever at Waterloo station, which
has collected $5,000 for the railway
orphanages. Is one of the many dogs
which have done similar excellent
work in the cause of charity.
For many a year Tim. an Airedale
terrier, trotted from train to train at
Paddington. Inviting donations for
the Railway Servants’ Widows and
Orphans’ Fund. On five occasions
Queen Victoria placed a sovereign
in Tim’s box; Mr. W. W. Astor gave
him a $1,000 check, and before he
j qualified for post mortem fame in a
i glass case Tim had collected over
$4,000.
Leo, the "hospital dog of Cork,”
is credited with having raised thous
ands of pounds for a local women’s
and children’s hospital; a cot In the
Great Northern Hospital owes its en-
i dowment largely to the exertions of
Schnapsie, a dachshund, and a Bristol
shopkeeper has, or had recently, a
I most intelligent dog, which has col-
1 lected over 2,000 coins for a chil
dren’s hospital.
Nor must we overlook ntnong ca
nine philanthropists Bournemouth
Nell, Gyp of Southampton and Ken
sington Duke, the last of whom not
only collected but gave charity en
tertainments of a clever and amus
ing kind.—Tit-Bits.
VARIOUS OPINIONS
Are Expressed By Democrats
Anent Statement of Bryan.
FAR FROM UNANIMOUS
Hardest Knock is Given by Editor Wat-
terson, Who Hopes Nebraskan
Will Stand Aside for
Others.
WAR TO THE VERY HILT
To Bo Waged by Labor Federation
Against Edict of National Manufac
turers’ Association.
Why Steel?
It might be possible to build sky-
scrapers of stone or brick to the same
height as the steel structures, but
such building would be no safer.
They would be vastly more expensive
find would take very much longer to
put up. Then again, the lower walls
of a stone structure would have to
be so very thick that there would be
but little room left on the lower floors
or space for winnows. The only ques
tion which remains is how long these
buildings of steel will stand. Tho
walls do not matter, for even if they
(iA.-ALA. BUSINESS COLLEGE
MACON, GA.
Haw Management Hast Expert Faculty
|FINEST POSITIONS ’ ‘AMERICA'S BEST’
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE
For the future, that Georgia liorso
who broko Into a letter-box and ate
a lot of love-letters, avers the Rich
mond Tlmes-Dispatch, will doubtless
think better of hay.
f VETERAN OF THREE AVARS.
A Pioneer of Colorado and Nebraska.
Matthias Campbell, veteran of the
'Civil War and two Indian wars, and
a pioneer of Colo
rado, now living at
218 East Nebraska
street, Blair, Neb.,
says: "I had such
pains In my back for
a long time that I
could not turn in
bed, and at times
there was an almost
total stoppage of the
urine. My wife and I have both used
Doan’s Kidney Pills for what doctors
diagnosed as advanced kidney trou
bles, and both of us have been com
pletely cuied."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
The Chicago professor who declared
that there are no humorists In thlB
Country, thereby provided an opening
Cor one, retorts the New York Com
mercial.
Avery & Company
# SUCCESSORS TO
AVERY & McMILLAN,
■1.08 Booth Forsyth St., AtUoUt, Os
—ALL KINDS OF—
MACHINERY
A Chicago dispatch says; 'Expres
sions of opinion on Bryan’s announce
ment that he will accept the presiden
tial nomination are contained in the fol
lowing dispatches from prominent dem
ocratic newspapers and politicians:
Clark Howell, Atlanta Constitution:
"If the party cannot win next year with
Bryan It would win with no other
man.”
Editor American, Nashville: “If he
Is nominated ho will be defeated. The
south should continue to organize for
the purpose of nominating a southern
democrat.”
Editor of the News and Courier,
Charleston, S. C.: "He would be the
weakest candidate the convention could
name. lie can t be elected if he Is
nominated.”
Editor Age-Herald, Birmingham:
“Standing squarely on his platform,
he cannot be defeated.”
Norman E. Mack, Buffalo: "In my
mind he Is the strongest man the dem
ocrats could name.”
Colonel Henry Watterson, in giving
tho Associated Press his opinion,
declared that he had labored with Mr.
Bryan to havo him decline the nomi
nation and to quit his “dog in the ipan-
ger” attitude. Colonel Watterson real-
should crack or fall away, they could
readily be replaced, for it Is the steel j i ze d that Bryan had It In his power
frame that carries the weight of the ; t0 demand the leadership of the dem-
floors and their contents. And It
chances that even this question has
been answered, if at frightful cost, by
the skyscrapers which survived the
great Are in Baltimore and the earth
quake at San Francisco.—From Fran
ces Arnold Collins’s “The Building of
a ‘Sky-scraper’ ’’ in St. Nicholas.
FITS, St. Vi tuo’ Dan c,e: N or veils Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld„»:il Arch,St.. Phila., Pa.
There's something about the ap
proach of a presidential campaign,
notes the New Haven Register, which
seems to have a miraculous effect on
political dry bones.
Mrs. Winslow’s 8oothing Syrup for Children
t oethi ng, softens thegums, roducesinflnmma-
tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 35c a bottle
EXPLAINED.
Father—Why, Tommy! what’s hap-
poned to that bottle of seltzer? It’s
only half full.
Tommy—I met a cat. dad.—St
Louis Times.
The Memphis Commercial-Appeal
admits that an elastic currency that
will flip a few shekels into our purse
might not be objectionable.
Money doesn’t make the man, urges
the Chicago News, but a little thing
like that doesn’t worry the man who
makes the money.
Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet
Gum and Mullen is Nature's great reme
dy—cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Con
sumption, uad all throat and lung troubles.
At druggists, 25o., 60c:. and #1.10 per bottle.
ocratic party in 1908 or “defeat any
other candidate by knifing him as he
did Parker.”
Bryan’s acceptance is no more than
he expected, however, greatly as he re
gretted the action, because he thought
Bryan could no longer create enthusi
asm as lie had done before the peopie
too many times.
Asked about the assertion, often
made as to who the next president
would be, Roosevelt or Bryan, Colonel
Watterson said that the nomination of
Roosevelt was all Bryan supporters
wanted, because they could then go to
the people on the third term slogan.
Bryan could carry New England in
such a campaign, he thought. Roose
velt, by such au act, would Mexicanize
this government, holding himself as
greater than Washington.
As for himself, much as he disliked
to do so, Colonel Watterson would
vote for Bryan against Roosevelt in
such a dilemma, lie believed, how
ever, that Roosevelt would decline an
other nomination, as he had nothing
to gain and the republican party had
many men of presidential calibre. He
mentioned especially Taft, Hughes
and Crane of Massachusetts. He said
Senator Crane would l/iake a strong
man on the argument that New Eng
land had not had a president for a
long time.
That there will be a war to the knife
between the American Federation ol
Labor aiul tho National Association of
Manufacturers was evidenced Tuesday
at the session of the federation In Nor
folk, Va.
The federation already has taken the
aggressive by looking to the establish
ment of a fund to fight the manufac
turers through its executive council.
The allegation'is that undue pressure
Is being brought to bear by the manu
facturers of the country against or
ganized labor, to the detriment of the
latter. The manufacturers combat
this.
Iu a statement by the federation,
Janies Van Cleave, president of tho
National Association of Mannfactureus,
Maintains that the object of the asso
ciation is to put labor organizations
on a basis whereby they may be held
responsible for their contracts, and
Instances tho pending court proceed
ings In New York of tho Typothetae
against the pressmen for the recovery
of damages caused by the alleged
breaking of contracts by the press
men.
On the issue made by Mr. Gompers,
in seeking funds to fight the suit
brought by Mr. Van Cleave, as presi
dent of the Buck Stove and Range com
pany of St. Louis against President
Gompers and the federation’s exccu
tive council, tho association comes out
flntfootod with the statement Hint it
"will light the boycott and the black
list to a finish.”
During the day the federation took
aggressive steps toward the establish
ment of a universal eight-hour work
ing day in America, and began action
looking to ways and means for the rais
ing of a tremendous fund to fight the
present war that its executive council
reported had been begun through the
Manufacturers’ Association, with an
available fund of $1,500,000 on hand
by the latter against organized labor,
with particular aim by the manufac
turers’ association against the efforts
of the American Federation of T-abor
of the conditions of the working class*
es and “wealth producers” of the coun
try.
The federation authorized President
Gompers to appoint special committees
for the consideration of both of these
questions, the committees to report
during the present sessions.
EXTREME PENALTY GIVEN.
Weeds of Great Value.
New Zealand flax is one of a num
ber of wild weeds that yield their
gatherers great wealth. This flax,
the strongest known, grows wild in
marshes. When it is cultivated It
dwindles and its fibers become brittle
and valueless. '
Indian hemp grows wild, and out
of It hasheesh, or keef, is made. Keef
looks like flakes of chopped straw.
It is smoked In a pipe; it is eaten on
liver; it is drunk in water. It pro
duces an Intense, a delirious happi
ness; and among Orientals it is al
most as highly prized as beer and
whisky with us.
The best nutmegs are the wild ones.
They grow throughout the Malay
Archipelago.
But the most valuable weed of all
these wild growths is the seaweed.
Tho nitrate bed3 of South America,
which yield something like $G5,000,000
a year, are nothing but beds of sea
weed decomposed.
New York leads all other States in
water power, representing, in 1905,
44SJ35 horse power.
STRIKE ON AT LOUISVILLE.
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any ca.se of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly honorable in all business
transactions and financially aide to carry
out any obligations mnde by his firm.
Waldino, Kinnan & Marvin, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, O. .
Hall’s Catarrh (hire is taken internally, aet-
ingdirectly upon the blood and mucuoussur
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free,
l’rice, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall’s Family Fills for constipation.
WHERE MEMORY FAILS.
“Money talks.”
For Second Time in Seven Months
Street Car Men Go Out.
For the second time In seven months,
Louisville, Ky., is suffering from a
street car strike, the 850 union em
ployees of the Louisville Railway com
pany having walked out shortly after
midnight Thursday night. The first
day of the strike, however, was not
marked by anything approaching the
disorder that attended the strike last
April, and when the partial service
furnished during the day was discon
tinued at nightfall only twenty arrests
had been made, virtually all of them
for "disorderly conduct,” which
charges covered mainly the throwing
of an occasional brick or jeering at the
non-union men.
The company operates on a normal
base between six and seven hundred
cars. It was announced by the officials
that when service was suspended Fri
day evening they had forty cars run
ning. Only a dozen cars or so were
running during the morning, and only
a few passengers were carried during
the day. The service was suspended
at nightfall in order to givo the police
a rest, the entire force having been
on duty for over twenty-four hours.
Five hundred strike breakers arrived
during the day from Chicago and In-
dianapoliB, with two hundred more ex
pected. Adding to these the two hun-
Embezzling Postmaster and Registry
Clerk Hard Hit by Judge.
James M. Ragan, former postmas
ter of Anniston, Alabama, and Frank
Roberts, former registry clerk In the
Anniston postoffice, were carried before
Judge Oscar ft. Hundley in the Uni
ted States district court Tuesday after
noon and, after entering pleas of guil
ty, were sentenced as follows:
Ragan, five years in the Atlanta pen
itentiary and to pay a fine of $43,000;
Roberts, eighteen months in the At-
| lanta penitentiary and to pay a fine
of $4,328. The amount of Ragan’s em
bezzlement was $3,022.81. Roberts’
embezzlement was $184.
Both made short statements and
pleaded for mercy. Judge Humdley
stated in Ragan’s case that since he
has been judge he has never given the
extreme penalty, but that he would
have to do so In this case.
OKLAHOMA NOW ON
MONEY OF MINERS STOLEN.
Wage Checks and Currency Amounting
to $22,000 Missing from Stage Coach.
Checks and currency to the amount
of $22,000, intended to pay the wages
of the Carbon Coal and Coke compa
ny’s miners at Cokedale, Colorado,were
lost or stolen Tuesday while in transit
In a stage from the Lonsdale railroad
station to the camp, a distance of only
two miles. Charles Macomber, driver
of the stage, was arrested on suspi
cion, but he declares he knows nothing
about the theft
New State Admitted to Union
With Simple Ceremony,
TEDDY SIGNS DOCUMENT
Governor Hackell Takes the Oath and
Begins Administration—People
Celebrate Advent Intro
the Union.
INSANITY PLEA THE DEFENSE.
Mrs. Bradley’s Attorney Indicates Line
of Proceedure.
That the defense of Mrs. Bradley
on trial in Washington on the charge
of murdering former United States
Senator Brown would he insanity was
made evident by the preliminary state
ment made to the court Friday by her
attorney, Mr. Hoover.
The prosecution consumed the en
tire forenoon in concluding the exam-
dred non-union employees who did not inatlon of its witnesses iu chief to
go out, the company officials claim prove the facts of the killing and then
they will have almost a full force, and rested Its case,
will givo practically a normal service.
ELECTION DATE IS FIXED.
MONMOUTH COLLEGE BURNS.
Main Building of Big Institution tn
Illinois Reduced to Ashes.
“Except on the witness stand; -tiers degtr d th maln building of Mou
lt says ’I don t remember. ™ mlt h Monmouth' 111., earlv
The tune “Hiawatha” has been pre
scribed for congestion of the liver.
Never mind. Pass along the conges
tion, pleads the New York American.
Montgomery County, Ala., Will Vote on
Booze December 14.
In pursuance of a petition filed by
Fire which is said to have started ’ 25 per cent of the qualified voters, as
from a defect in the flue in the garret required. Probate Judge Gaston Thurs-
day ordered an election in Montgomery
mouth college at Monmouth, 111., early , count y- Alabama, for December 14 to
Thursday morning, causing a loss estl- | determine the question of prohibiting
mated at $40,000. Orvil Dean, a tele- j tiie Eale lic l uor -
phone lineman, was killed by falling j 0f 3 - 6GI voters - 915 wer « recognized
walls. OQ the Ust
A new star, the forty-sixth, was add
ed to tho American flag Saturday by
the admission formally to the union of
the state of Oklahoma. President
Roosevelt at 10:10 a. m. signed the
proclamation admitting the territories
of Oklahoma aud Indian Territory
jointly as one of the American states.
Little formality attended the ceremony
which meant so much to the 1,500,000
people of the two territories. In ap
pending his signature to the proclama
tion, the president used a pen formed
from a quill plucked from the wing of
an American eagle.
The pen will be deposited with the
Oklahoma Historical Society.
When he had finished Ills signature
the president picked up a small blotter,
with which he blotted his name, and,
looking up, proclaimed:
"Oklahoma is a state.”
The signing and the incidents con
nected therewith occupied blit one min
ute, and at their conclusion the pres
ident bowed himself back into his pri
vate office with tho remark:
"Good morning, gentlemen.”
The slight delay from tho original
jilan of having the proclamation signed
at exactly 10 o’clock Is explained sim
ply by the statement that the presi
dent was occupied with his mail up to
tho time lie actually signed the docu
ment. No significance Is attached to
the sixteen minutes delay.
Governor Haskell Inaugurated.
A special from Guthrie, Okla., says:
With Impressive ceremonies befitting
the birth of the new state of Oklahoma,
the oaths of office were administered
to Govenior Charles H. Haskell and
other state officers a few minutes be
fore r.oon Saturday. The oath wa*
given by Leslie NIblack, a newspaper
man. The ceremonies took place on
the steps of the Carnegie library, there
being no state building In Guthrie. Fol
lowing prayer by a clergyman, the
proclamation of President Roosevelt,
admitting Oklahoma and Indian Ter
ritory into the union was read by Chas.
Fitson, secretary of Oklahoma terri
tory.
A band of Cherokee Indians then
played “The Star Spangled Banner.”
Governor Haskell walked forward to
the center of the platform, where he
was met by Mr. NIblack, and took tho
formal oath with uplifted hand. Turn
ing to the crowd that closed in from
every direction, Governor HaskeH deliv
ered the Inaugural address.
Governor Haskell’s speech was vehe
ment. He denounced "the combina
tions that have fattened by unrestrict
ed robbery of our people,” declared
in favor of prison sentences for of
fending corporation officers and an
nounced that tiie liquor prohibition
law wonld be rigidly enforced.
When he had finished the governor
announced the appointment of Robert
L. Owens of Muskogee and Thomas P.
Gore of Lawton as United States sen
ators.
A parade was then formed and march
ed to a park on the outskirts of the
city, where an immense crowd waited
to begin an Indian barbecue, a feature
suggested by Governor Haskell.
In one of the carriages in the parade
were the chiefs of the five civilized
tiibes. with the exception of Maty
Tiger, who was recently seriously in-
jured.
The governor’s first official act was
to order the county attorney at Bart-
lettBvllle to take steps to prevent the
Standard Oil company from complet
ing a natural gas pipe line across the
border to Kansas, it being the policy
of Oklahoma to prevent the exporta
tion of gas.
There being a legal question as to
the hour when prohibition took effect,
whether at noon or midnight, Governor
Haskell ordered that saloons be per
mitted to remain open until midnight.
The retiring officials of Oklahoma
territory took no part in the inaug
uration. Governor Franz was invited,
but declined, owing to personal differ
ences with Governor Haskell. The
other retiring officers were not in
vited because one of them, E. P. Mc
Cabe, deputy territorial auditor, is a
negro, and the new administration
draws the color line sharply.
The great campaign for rat™
,Which the American people arlJ a
engaged the greatest ever underUk
en by any people-ls based on n
Idea that there is a moral ‘f®
which men are bound, says tho mm y
Spoils News, that conscience„,S T
be controlling and that men are r
Bponsiblo for what they do or f n
to do. These truths ought to be
plied to those working on the s|,| e .
reform as well as to those who haw
by their misdeeds, made reform necel
sary. cs ”
He Wasn’t.
The late Bishop James Ne\vbnr„
Fitzgerald, in an address in St Lo I
once declared that sympathy, f ar m S ’
than eloquence or learning made f °
success in the ministry. "Too manv
of us, through lack of sympathy •• h «
Bald, "Bay tho worst, the most lnan
proprlate things. Thus a young Ran
tlst friend of mine, condoling with a
housebreaker in a jail, droned: ’Ah
my friend, let us remember that we
are here today and gone tomorrow’
■You ipay be; I ain’t,’ the housebreak.
er answered shortly.’’—The Sketch.
Nathan Straus, an Eastern philan
thropist, has established in New York
City a series of milk booths where
pure Bterllizod milk is sold to tho
poor for one cent a bottle. Absolute
antiseptic cleanliness Is required by
him in all branches of the enterprise.
In cleansing the milk bottles he uses
two things—hot water and Borax.
The gllBtenlng bottleB testify to tho
effectiveness of this method.
RED HOT WORK.
MORE BRITISH GOLD SECURED.
United States Buys All Available Yel
low Metal In London.
A London special says: The United
States secured practically the whole
of the 600,000 pounds sterling iu gold
available Monday in the open market
An additional engagement of $500,00C
gold for import was announced. This
makes the total engagements to dat«
$52,330,000.
Joslah Ffynt Tried Coal Passing and
Wasn’t So Sure About Hades.
The chapters of Joslah Flynt’s an-
toblography which are appearing la
Success havo an added Interest since
the death of that rather remarkable
young man. In the current number
ho gives an account of his experi
ences as a coalpasaer on a transat
lantic steamer.
“My watches.” he says, “were four
hours long. They began at 8 o’clock
In the morning and at 4 o'clock in
the nfternoou; the rent of tho time
was mine, excepting when it was my
turn to carry water and help clean
up the mess room.
“The first descent into the fire
room of an ocean liner Is unforget
table. Although hell as a domicile
has long since been given up by me
an a mere theological contrivance use
ful to keep people guessing, going
down that series of ladders into tho
bowels of the old Elbe the heat seem
ed to jump ten degrees a ladder and
made me think that I might have
been mistaken.
"At last the final ladder was reach
ed and we were at thp bottom—the
bottom of everything, was the
thought In more minds than one that
afternoon. The hoad fireman of our
watch immediately called mv atten
tion to a poker, easily an Inch and a
half thick and twenty to thirty feet
long.
“‘Yours!’ he screamed', ‘Tours!’
and he threw open one of the ash
doors of n furnace, pantomiming what
I was to do with the poker.
“I dove for it madly, just barely
raised it from the door and got it
started into the ashes—and then drop
ped none too nratly on top of it.
"Hurry up, you sow pie.’ the fir-
man yelled, and f struggled again
with tho terrible o^-er. finally man
aging to rake out the ashes.”
NATURALLY.
“Tootles Is always talking about
something that ‘'augurs ill’ for some
thing else."
“Yes. He's such a bore.”—Chicago
Record Herald.
A PIONEER EPICURE.
The Prehistoric Man—Stoneaxe has
some mighty queer ideas about eat
ing.
His Neighbor—That’s what. He’s
got some now fangled scheme for
cooking meat in hot water. Doesni
want to eat it raw.—Puck.
SCHOOL TEACHERS
Also Have Things to Learn.
‘‘For many years I have used coffee
and refused to be convinced of its bad
effect upon the human system,’’
writes a veteran school teacher.
“Ten years ago l was obliged to
givo up my much loved work in the
public schools after years of continu
ous labor. 1 bad developed a well
defined case of chronic coffee poison
ing.
“Tho troubles were constipation,
flutterings of tho heart, a thumping
In tho top of my head and various
parts of my body, twitching of my
limbs, shaking of my brad and, at
times after exertion, a general ‘gone
feeling with a toper's desire for very
strong coffee. I was a nervous wreck
for years.
“A short time ego friends came to
visit us and they brought a package
of Postum with them, and urged mo
to try It. I was prejudiced because
some years ago 1 had drunk a cup <>f
weak, tasteless stuff called Postum,
which I did not like at all.
“This time, however, my friend
made the Postum according to direc
tions on the package, and it won me.
Suddenly 1 found myself improving
iu a most decided fashion.
“The odor of boiling coffee no lon
ger tempts me. I am bo greatly bene
fited by Postum that If I continue to
improve as 1 am now, I’ll begin
think I have found the Fountain o
Perpetual Youth. This is no fancy
letter but stubborn facts, which 1 am
glad to make known.”
Name given by Postum Co., BM
Creek, Mich. Read tho book,
Road to Wellvillo,” in pigs. “Thera
|a Reason.'*