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10 BOER SYMPATHY
er Resolutions In the Senate
Fail of Adoption.
m WAS FORTY TO TWENTY-SIX
p ,coii, or Georgia, Ma<le Strong
** DI * to pj £a _St. Louis Gets Expo
sition Fund*.
special says: A few
’., n tes before adjournment Tuesday
Senate concurred in the civil ap
ropriation hill an amendment appro-
ilfiff ?5, 000,000 for the Louisiana
purchase exposition to be held in St.
L ais in 1903, the condition being
10,000,000 in addition be raised
tv the exposition authorities. The
jniecdment was offered by Mr. Cock
* jj 0 { Missouri, and was adopted
without debate. Because an amend
ed offered by him subsequently was
•triden out on a point of order, Mr.
of New Hampshire, moved
to reconsider the St. Louis fair amend
ment and the motion is now pending,
br will not be adopted.
The Teller resolution expressing
svmpathy for the Boers was referred
to the committee on foreign relations
tv a vote of 40 to 26.
Mr. Fairbanks, of Indiana, endeav
ored to secure consideration of the bill
providing for the extradition of crim
icsls from the United States to Cuba,
but Mr. Allison declined to lay aside
the appropriation bill for that pur
pose.
The house bill permitting the con
struction of a dam across New river in
Grayson county, Virginia, was passed.
Mr. Daniel, of Virginia, presented
the credentials of his colleague,
Thomas Martin, as Senator from Vir
ginia for the term of six years begin
ning March 4, 1901.
The Teller resolution was then laid
before the senate and Mr. Bacon, of
Georgia, addressed the senate.
No senator could fail, he thought,
to sympathize with the Boers—such
senators, at least, as are devoted to lib
erty and free government. This is a
case of two weak reprrblics engaged in
a struggle for life with the greatest
empire in the world; of 25,000 or
30,000 plain farmers m a death strug
gle with an army of 250,000 men. The
pending resolution was, in his opinion,
conservative, proper and not in any
way violative of international law.
Mr. Eacon read an extract from a
memorial presenteil to the house of
representatives on January 19tli, 1820,
relative to the war then pending be
tween Greece and Turkey, and dis
cussed the banquet given to Kossuth
in the old National hotel, in Washing-
on the 7th of January, 1852.
■ }'T, Davis, cba ; rman of the ccm
imtiee on foreign relations, moved
that the resolution be referred to the
committee on foreigu relations. Til©
request was agreed to as follows:
Yeas—Aldrich, Allison, Bard, Bev
eridge, Burrows, Carter, Clark, Cul
,ora; Deboe, Depew, Elkins, Fair
banks, Foraktr, Foster, Gallinger,
hansbrough, Hawley, Kyle, Lindsay,
0 ge, Mcßride, McComas, McCum
er > McMillan, Penrose, Perkius, Pet-
I latt of Connecticut, Platt of
Jew York, Proctor, Quarles, Ross,
-Cot t, Sewell, Shoup, Simon, Stew
r i 1 hurston, Wetmore, Wolcott—4o.
i ays—Allen, Bacon, Bate, Butler,
Chandler, Clay, Cockrell,
Daniel, Hale,'Harris, Heit
r , oar J(ju es of Arkansas, Ken
p,, . lor y> Martin, MasoD, Money,
Wtigrew, Rawlins, Teller, Tillman,
Tb %, Turner-26.
isideration of the sundry civil
•fV "pnation bill was resumed. A pro
tabhsl to the Secticii io es
pi ' s ‘‘ na tionul quarantine stations in
‘oa that no station should be lo-
W e ,. nearer than five miles to Key
CHASE ASSASSIN.
"icaltg III* Vpnje.ince on a South
Carolina Farmer.
in W^ S a °° ‘Yobu Boyd, a farmer
qarrel 3?° n C ° Ulity ’ S ’ <?’ bad a
y ~ a negro on his place and
, U T nnd whipped him. Bovd
*as Tues^a > a, 'ght when lie
*i n ,i" the bullet piercing the
blood g V 9 ' A crowd of men with
Started at oncq on the
. the murderer,
CONFEDERATE battle flags
*' r B Returned To Southern States
Through Action of Congress.
A special to The Chicago Times
'■l from Washington says:
in the G. A. R. encampment
Lvf m rt>s id en t McKinley may
be pleasure of returning to the
u ‘ a Btatcs the Confederate battle
- now in the war department.”
Afro r0 f lnent mem bers of the Grand
pi a , •’ Gf Republic have in hand a
co- 0 Retire the authorization of
•aiT A S / 0r tile return °f fbese flags,
the n lB ao P e< i both houses* will pass
ad, ,/ CfSßar y joint resolution before
Mfotijf
VWom&n
' Rost ami h&fp for weary
women are found in Lydia
Em Finkhatn’s Vegetable
Compound* it makes wo~
men strong and healthy to
bear their burdens, and
overcomes those fils to
which women are subject
because they are women*
| Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound jj
is known frost’s coast to
coast* it has erred more
sick women than any
ether medicine* Its
friends aro everywhere
and they are constantly
writing thankful Setters
which appear In this
paper* '
If you ore puzzled write
for Pinkham’s ad
vice * Her address is
Lynn, fiflstss* She will
charge yoss nothing and
she has restored a million
women to health*
The Dawes Mare.
The Fittsfield (Mass.) Journal re
ports a remarkable instance of animal
sagacity. As the Instance occurred in
a well known locality and ie vouched
for by local authorities, it must be ac
cepted a a true. The story concerns an
old mare, formerly the property of ex-
Senator Dawes, but now belonging to
a stable In Pittsfield. The “Dawes
mare,” as she Is called, is used on the
station baggage wagon.
One icy day recently the old mare
fell twice in the course of the fore
noon's work. At noon she was unhar
nessed and sent to the stall for her
feed. She is never hitched. At 1
o’clock, when It was time for another
trip to the station, she was not In the
stable, and no trace of her was found
until about 3 o’clock, when she walked
In unattended, and took her place in
the stall, as if nothing had happened.
Then It was noticed that she had
been newly shod. Inquiry disclosed
the fact that the sagacious animal, af
ter eating her dinner, had gone to the
blacksmith’s shop and waited licr turn.
Supposing that some stable hand had
sent her in there the blacksmith sharp
shod her.
The name of the Dawes mare de
serves a place in the annals of cquiny
intelligence as that of a horse who
Knew What to do and did it.
Great Britain loses more than $50,-
000,OuO worth of property annually by
fire.
I)o Your Fret Aclio and Burn?
Shake into yourshoes Allen’s Foot-Ease, a
powder for the feet. It makes tight or new
shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Bunions,
Swollen, Ilot, Smarting and Sweating Feet
and Ingrowing Nails. Sold by fill druggists
and shoo stores, 25 ets. Sample sent FREE.
Address A ien S. Olmsted, LeP.oy, N. Y.
Trouble Ahead.
Mrs. Peck—You know very wel\ Henry,
tliHt I’m a woman of few words.
Henry—True, my dess; but the tew are
shame; ully overworked. —Chicago I\ews.
The Best Prescription for Clilllx
and Fever Is a bottle of Ghovk'3 Tasteless
Chill Tonic. It Is simply iron and quinine la
p tfisieless form. N'o cure —no pay. Price 50c.
Not Quite budef "Way.
Maud— Weil, summer ist eally here, isn't ii?
Nellie—We- eb, I’ve only been engaged
three times so far! —New Y ork ' orl .
Piso’sCure for Cos.. su.nptLn i Ad infill*
1.10 medicine for conghs an I o>!iF.—N, W<
Samuel. Ocean Grove. N. Fob. 17, lik’d.
inwmnMHranMaMnubvpwnuwiia i nicia
The eye ought not to be drugged
except under the special’
care of a physician,
Mitchell s Eye Salve
r
makes the
use of pungent drugs unnec
essary and saves you from all
the inconvenience and danger
of that painful treatment.
Price 25 cents. All druggists.
HALL & RUCKEL,
Nev York. 1848. London -
Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed
1 To Cure, or Money Refunded brYourMeicHant.'-oWhy W°T,VH
. .. . o 1
Skirts for Summer Weir.
Women who have delighted in the
tight-fitting skirts, with no fullness in
either the back or the front, may as
well make up their minds at once to
be sadly disappointed in the most ultra
summer modes. For the tight-fitting
skirt is no longer deemed elegant.
Yokes, shirred, tucked and smocked,
are ihe limited effect of tightness. In
fact, even when a yoke is used it of
ten runs only to the back, or rather
sides of the back, where gathers are
introduced. Skirts are very full and
long at the hem and are not tied back.
To keep them down firmly weights aro
sewed in the foundation. One model
shows fullness at each side of a nar
row front breadth. Some of the skirts
are shirred down in a point, others are
shirred only twice straight around.
Most of the skirts are gored, but there
are skirts made of straight widths,
shirred and tucked into the waist line.
A skirt stitched in small tucks all
around the upper portion, except di
rectly in front, is modish. A skirt
with a yoke, possibly of lace, is gath
ered quite full all around, while a
similar model Is laid in shallow plaits
about the front and gathered in the
back. Cloth skirts are made quite
plain in the front, but all of the latest
models have some fullness In the back,
and they are not confined in any one
plait, but several In quite a broad ef
fect. Many of the thin skirts are so
full that they suggest hoops. Thin
fabrics are shirred about the hips or
tucked. A charming model is lined in
inch tucks at the front and back,
which run to the line of the knee,
where they fly out nnd muffle about
the feet. In the backs are gathers.
Some of the importers suggest that
before the summer lias gone rutiled
and frilled skirts will be in vogue.
An Effort to Explain.
A gentleman who had engaged an
Intelligent French maid was at work
in his library at one end of his house,
when it struck him, from certain
sounds, that something must be wrong
in the drawing-room, at the other end
of the house. So he rang his bell,
and the maid came.
“What are those cries that I seem
to hear in the direction of the draw
ing-room, Marie?” he asked.
“I do not precisely know, monsieur.”
sho answered. “At one time I sink it
is madame who sing, and at anozzer
time I am sure it is ze cat and ze dog
who fight, monsieur!”
Are You Itchy?
If so, something is wrong with yonr
skin. Ask your druggist for Tetterine,
and you can euro yourself without a
doctor for 50 cents. Any skin disease,
ringworm, eczema, salt rheum, etc. Or
send 50 cents in stamps for box prepaid
to J. T. Shnptrine, Savannah, Ga. Try
a box.
EXTENSIVE HAIR CUT.
Some Porly Thousand Sheep Being Shorn
at New Brighton, Mian.
Nineteen professional sheep shearers
have begun shearing 40,000 sheep at
New Brighton. The task will keep
them busy for over a month. The men
use specially designed power instru
ments and they will each draw from
$7 to $lO per day.
T’ne trusting sheep are enticed into
pens where they are at the mercy of
the shearers who are paid by the piece
and consequently work with all pos
sible speed. The up-to-date shearing
Instrument operates on the same plan
as a barber’s hair clipper, and makes
a clean sweep of several inches in Its
trips back and forth across the body
of a sheep. The most skillful shearers
work the clippers along the body of
the animal with great dexterity and
as they proceed the wool falls Away
In a solid bunch as thought the animal
had been skinned instead of shorn.
wVn the clipper lias finished It#
work the wool lies on the floor in a
bundle, the naked and indignant sheep
scampers away, and a man with a
hand-car goes up and down the long
row of operators and gathers up the
wool, takes it to the packing room,
where it is tramped down into large
burlap bags, which, when filled weigh
about 335 pounds each.
The men arc paid from < to 9 cents
per head for the sheep sheared, and
125 Is a good day’s work, although
there are men who claim to ha\e
wsheared ns many as 250 sheep in a
day. When the 40,000 now at New
Brighton have all been deprived of
their wool the band of shearers will
move on westward, the most Industri
ous of them finally ending up in Ne
vada and California, where there are
single ranches with as many as 300,-
000 sheep belonging to one man. From
there they wiil come up through the
south to Minneapolis, whence they will
start out to cover the circuit again
next March.— Minneapolis Journal.
P-fk a p 9 you have already discovered that
/ P OW^CfS Wr,S^CS CUf2
[. tkse eruptions on your face.
They may cover up and sup
)*Vpress, hut they cannot re
move. Rashes, boils, salt-fheum,
ig|p|p / shingles, hives, eczema, tetter, etc.,
ut surface indications of a deeper
trouble. And
(F/ That’s
Y Bad Blood
The question for you now is, how to make bar! blood
good blood: bow to get fid of all these impurities in youf
system. Everybody knows the answer, — a perfect Sarsa
parilla. No ordinary Sarsaparilla, Suck as you can buy et
almost any store, will answer; it must be a perfect one.
There is suck a Sarsaparilla, and it differs widely in every
way from all other Ssrsaparillas.
That's AYER’S
“The only Sarsaparilla made vr.dcr the personal supervision ol
three graduates; a graduate in pharmacy, a graduate in
chemistry, and a graduate in medicine.”
$l.OO a bottle. Ait druggists.
“I had frequent and most painful boil*. I was treated by a number of phy
sicians, but they did me no good. I Died many kind* of patent medicines, but
without effect; but when I tried Ayer’s Sarsaparilla 1 got hold of the right thing,
> for I was soon completely cured.” — ll. P. Crouse, Attica, N. Y.
KFFP AWAY FROM THE STOP
D°Cg HILL” BUGGIES are “A Little Higher
In in Price, But—” they stand up, look well, and
ff * ' above all, keep away from the shop Only
a dollar or so higher than cheap work. Why not uso
fT them when this is the case?
/*.i Seo our Agont or write direct !H! I&JLa fTOCR < hIU w A,C J
mmwiNCMESTE
WW FACTORY loaded SHOTGUN SHELLSM®
“New Rivsl, 99 “Leader, 99 and e *bfceg3€sS&liQr 9 9
Insist upon having them, ta!ce no others and you will get the best shells that money can buy.
ALL DEALERS KEEP THEM.
A nation’s flag represents its sover
ilgnty, and is prominently displayed in
all army and navy battles. To "strike
the flag” is to lower the national colors
in token of submission to the opposing
forces.
To Cure a Colil In One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund the money if It falls tJ cure.
E. W. Grove’s signature is on each box. 25c.
Cause anil Kfleet.
"What a bore that man lsl”
“He never boree me.”
“Why doesn’t he?”
“Whenever I tee him comlntr I'min a great
hurry tocatch a streetcar.”—Chicago Record.
You Will Never Know
whfct good ink is unlets you use Carter’s. It
costs no more than poor ink. All dealers^
Tommy—Pop, why do singers eat tar drops?
Tommy’s Pop—To give their volets a proper
pitch, 1 suppose,
Mrs. Winslow's Foottdng Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 2oc. a bottle.
FITS permanently cured. Noflts orneryous
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline s °ceat
Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and tr-atise froe.
Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., I hlla., 1 a.
A. M. Priest, Druggist, Shelbyville, lod.,
wavs- "Hall’s Catarrh Cure gives the best or
s itisfaction. Can get plenty of testimonial^
ns it cures every one who takes it. Druggists
soli it, 75c.
Correctly Defined.
Tommy —“Pop, what is a diplomat?”
Tommy’s Pop-—“A diplomat, my
son, is a man who can live with his
mother-in-law without seeking a di
vorce from his wife.’’—Philadelphia
Record.
Good Lock” I’osrdtJ i only tnd loti in lotid cor
load lou More " Good Lack " oold m Booth than all alhci
combiucd Highest l-envcoing rawer. Wbolcaomc and Healthful
Look lot the ' ’ Honan Soon ” on every enn _ _
I <r i-t- *j TO, Southern riaoulacturlof Co-. Rich wood. Vo.
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 & 3.80 SHOES
iSE.Worth $4 to $6 compared \
JW\ with other make;. /
/l \lndoriHMl |jy over f
/?LA| 1,000,000 wearers. OK
j ix The genuine have W. L. r / VJ
■ l [SS Douglas' name and price
TjV'. IjS stamped on bottom, ’lake J *
B U'lsß no E - I ' >4, 'tute claimed to be VT r\/[
M as good. Your dealer *:'■' A.
ffl should keep them Apij.
not, we will send a pair V
Mon receipt of price and 25c. '"*'4.
wi extra for carriage. State kind of leather,
Ust \SfsiM, and width, plain or cap toe. Cat free,
cotatt irons •L 00U6UY3 SHOE CO.. Brockton, Mas*
Wr& Company,
30 8. Broad St., Allauta, Ca.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heater*, Steam l*ninps and.
Penbertby Injectors.
Manufacturers and Dealers In
MILLS,
Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machin
ery and drain Separators.
(“OLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
Locks, Knight's Patent Dog*. Blrdsall Saw
Mill and Engine Kepalrs, Governors, t.rsts
ltars and a full line of MUI Supplies. 1 rlc®
and quality of good* guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentioning thte paper.
UU fIU WitKfc AUtISE/A iL S>.
fa Best < ough Syrup. Tastes Good, Use gg
In time. Bold b drussrist*. El
ipMMMBMgi
Mentioa this Paper'V'iSmiJ^'' 1 !"^