Newspaper Page Text
a
Cl 1 Know r.
si 111 Eg I
How much thev sutler when nervous,
weak , and , tired. ,. j
Nervous prostration is a lingering,
racking, living death to those afflicted,
though wholly incomprohensiblQ to
others. The cause -of this condition
is impure and insufficient Blood.
Make the blood pure, give it vitality
and it will properly feed the nerves
and make them strong. Hood’s Bar
saparilla cures nervousness because it
acts directly upon the blood, making
it rich and pure and endowing it with
vitality and strength-giving power. No
other medicine has suoh a reoord of
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Makes Pure Blood.
Singing to Absent Audiences.
Away out in the extreme northwest¬
ern part of Chicago, Silas Leachman
puts in four or five hours every day
singing at the top of his lungs, though
not a soul is in hearing, but his wife.
When he gets tired of singing he varies
the proceedings by preaching a negro
sermon, or gives an imitation of an
Irish wake, and altogether conducts
himself in a way that would lead the
neighbors to consider him a fit subject
for a lunatic asylum—if there were any
neighbors, but there are not. No one
ever goes out there to hear him sing,
and yet he is getting rich at it. He
earns something over $50 every day,
though he never sees one of his audi¬
tors.
Mr. Leachman sings for phonographs
and, as he has a monopoly of the busi¬
ness in the west, he contrives to keep
busy and has even been heard to ex¬
press a wish that he were twins. He
has better protection in his monopoly
than a copyright or an injunction or
unlimited legal talent could afford.
Nature gave him the peculiar qualities
that enablo him to reproduce his voice
perfectly on the wax cylinders.—
Chicago Tribune.
Magistrate— If you were there for no
dishonest purpose, why were you in
your stockinged feet?
\n Burglar—I heal'd there was sickness
the house, your worship.
PfO0
; V-.v
mm
a
« &
f*t% ■im ............. m V /■ &
©ISTE/
Both a® method f d molts when
Byrup and refreshing of Figs is taken the ; it is and pleasant
to taste, acts
gently Liver and yet piomptly Bowels, cleanses on the Ividneys, the
effectually, dispels colds, head- sy3
tem
aches and fevers and cures habitual
only constipation. remedy Syrup kind of Figs is tho
of its ever pro
duceb, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy nrid •loreeqh'e substances its
to all and have made it tho most
popular remedy known
Cent "bottles by all leldTng ^ drug
gists. Any a reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
Wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAtJ FItANCiSCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE, KY. UEVJ YORK. N Y.
•k HIGHEST AWARD*
WORLD’S FAIR.
'ir Ml
“T-& 1 fVl if A /\ A V f
"i^RANtiKir iFf |V ^ ^ |y|
15 A
^ y J j £ BEST
PREPARED
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
if JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. *
* q nj '
j'ro/. i. h SMI LU, Principal of the
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE of KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY
MEr3AlI World’* 0 Columbian AKi3 Expo*?tion, DIPLOMA for fiyutem
Bv tbe and iiusSnettr, Education, etc.
of Book-keeping Cou:>e $1)0. incluctne tuition, hooka
vo complete *■ Busiuess ioout
board. PhotiOzraphT, Type Wruing an*. Trlesrapby tausU.
Address. W. B. SMITH, I^exiuston,
°n 1 !
®®3cieJ A L R •tFJkfSflir. 011 "*u
^isYo^'B^Vore^a’ravI s d
Yo5Sm1jciS T | j
FREE A LifV S hnliirtliip >n
any dep irtment this is to be giveu
entirely free summer to
one boy and gir! in every
county of thU date. Appy
prompty to tieoruia Itn«*i
®ii( o!lege, Macon, Ga.
- * Cough ijrup. TaeUfflGood. use
in time - .1 by hr ugg.Bts.
cures. Thousands write that they suf
lered intensely with nervousness and
were cured by this great medicine.
The bu ilding-up powers of Hood's Sar
saparilla are wonderful. Even a few
doses &r© sufhoiout to cre&to an appe
tite, and from that time on its heal
mg, purifying, strengthening effeots
are plainly felt. The nerves become
stronger, the sleep becomes natural and
refreshing, the hands and limbs become
steady, and soon life seem to go on
without effort,” and perfect health
is restored. Suoh is tho work which
Hood's Sarsaparilla is doing for him
dreds of women today.
Micro-Organisms in the Air.
To tho unassisted eye the prefence
of even any solid particles in the air
is, as a rule, entirely invisible. We
say this is so as a rule, for there are
circumstances when the solid particles
in the air are rendered visible. Every
one iB aware of the appearance of a
stream of sunlight, introduced through
a slit or hole in the shutter of a dark¬
ened room. Under such circumstances
the air through which the sunlight
passes is seen to be full of minjite dust
particles, yet “gay motes” which are
thus seen to “people tho sunbeam”
constitute, after all, only a very in¬
significant fraction of the total num¬
ber the air contains, for thousands of
them are far too minute to be visible
to the naked eye. Among these latter
are the germs.
It is only indeed with the aid of our
most powerful microscopes that we are
enabled to discern these latter and
i’ 01 '! 11 any estimate of their size. Many
of them are less than the one twenty
thousandth of an inch. In the words
of Professor Percy F. Frankland, one
of our first experts on this subject,
“400,000,000 of these organisms could
be spread over one square inch in a
single layer. Thus wo could have a
population 100 times as great as that
of London settled on an area of a sin
gle square inch without any complaint
of overcrowding, and giving to each
individual organism, not throe acres,
which certain politicians tell us are
necessary for the individual man, but
one four hundred-millionth of a square
inch, which is quite adequate for a
citizen in the commonwealth of micro
organisms.”— Gentleman's Magazine,
Valuable Postage Stamps.
Persons who have , , , be
old letters „ they received . ,1? m al the '-7 South
during the war might do well to look
thorn over. The Confederate govern
ment authorized the issue and use of
local postage stamps, and nearly every
city in the bouth, at one time, had its
own stamp. Many thousands of these
were used, but so rare are they now
tbat the Y bnu S ver y bl S b P rlc f
JZ <“ ST? ZTT‘iLT.£
they will bring may be gathered from
the report of a sale which occurred
recently at the rooms of the Phibidel
phia society, New York. Confederate
stamps sold as follows: Athens, Ga.,
&40; four varieties of the Baton
Rouge, La., 5-cent., $41, $77 and $30,
respectively; Macon, Ga., two varie
ties, $2 for and $03.50 Mobile and 2-cent, $191; black, Lenoir, $41..i0. Js.
ROe 8 on thcs ® curiosities will
1,robably increase . m val * e - rbey
are ft leai 1 ^ y be y° n( ^ tbe icacnof every
^
A Dog and Parrot Story.
Wffliam Winpenny, of Queen lane,
was, until a few days ago, the owner
b ^ ( wbi ch he had purch- ‘
a8ed 0 leantJ several yeft 8ago .
The bird was u vorit able household
, , ■ ll d enjoyed.” liberties 8 that no
other parrot ev«. Its con
slant chatter amused the members of
the family, especially at meal time,
when Polly was regularly placed at
the table, receiving the choicest tid
bits for her meals. A few days ago
Polly died and was reverently buried
in the yard with a little headstone to
mark the grave. The next day’s din
ner was a mournful one for the family,
wistfu i fcyo> surmising that something
was wrong. The instinct of the brute
solved the problem, and, without more
ado, he went into the garden, dug up
the parrot and, carrying it into the
dining-room, deposited it in its accus¬
tomed place .—Philadelphia Record.
Papa Cut it Out.
Daughter—Did you find out what it
was papa cat out of the paper?
Mother—Yes; I bought another copy.
I’ve read it all through, but I can’t see
anything wrong about it. It’s an arti
ele on the healthfulness of housework.
-
Milestone^ on tho Rond
That leads to health are marked in the mem*
ory of those who, at regular stages anil per
biary of nature in to-r effo t- to throw prUlTJ/- off tLe
biifout^ take 0 tho bfe la C on t k p&^3“*^
vounei> ienitmant medicine r departure when th s
is report d to for their
eradicat’on.__
Try to make somebody happy and see what
comes of it.
Dr. Kilmer’s > w a m p - R o ot earo-*
aII Pamphlet Kidney and Bladder troubles.
and Consultation fr**e.
Laboratory Biu£r;iarntA>ri. N'. Y.
It F hard for liars to make their stories
hamr together.
Whon Vou feme to Uer»H*e
that your corns are gone, and no pain, how
grateful you feel. The wor* of Hinderconn. 15c
rEOPLE WHO EAT CLAY.
A PRACTICE WHICH PREVAILS IN
MANY PARTS OF THE WORLD.
Various Peoples Have Wanted the
Karth When They Were Hungry
—A Ceremonial and a Necessity.
A 4 MONO sions which things the for must some extraordinary eating be people reckoned uncommon exhibit that pas¬
for eating earth or clay. Of this
practice, which would appear to have
once prevailed all over the world,
numerous examples are cited by Cap¬
tain J. G. Bourke, United States
Army, in the ninth annual report of
the Bureau of Ethnology. In some
places the custom has degenerated
into a ceremonial, while in others the
eating of this strange food still pre¬
vails as a kind of necessity to the
lives of those who are addicted to it.
The Mexican devotees picked up a
fiieco of clay in the Temple of Tez
eatlipoca and ate it with tho greatest
reverence, and also ate a piece of
earth in swearing by tho sun and
earth. But the use of clay by the
Mexicans was not merely a matter of
ceremony, for it seems to have been
an esculent in common use. Edible
earth was sold openly in the markets
of Mexico, and appears in tho list of
foods given by Gormara.
Cabeza do Vaca says that the In¬
dians of Florida ate clay, and that the
natives offered him many mosquito
beans, which they ate mixed with
earth. Venegas asserts that the In¬
dians of California ate earth. Tho
traditions of the Indians of San Juan
Capistrano and vicinity show that they
had fed upon a kind of clay, which
they often used upon their heads by
way of ornament. The Tatu Indians
of California, according to Powers,
mix red earth into their acorn bread
to make the latter sweet and cause it
to go further. Sir John Franklin re¬
lates that the'banks of the Mackenzie
Iiiver contains layers of a kind of
unctuous mud, which tho Tinneh In¬
dians use as food during the seasons
0 f famine, and even at other times
chow as an amusoment. It lias a
milky taste and the flavor is not dis
agreeable. The Apache and Navajo
branches of tho Athabascan family of
North American Indians are not un¬
acquainted with the use of clay as a
comestible, although among tho
former it is now rarely used, and
among the latter is employed only as
n condiment to reliove the bitterness
j of the taste to the wild potato. In the
same manner it is known to both the
Zuni and the Tusavan.
In South America, likewise, the
1 eating of clay prevails among the
Indians on the bauks of tho Orinoco,
throughout Brazil and on the mouu
tains of Bolivia and Porn.
In Western Africa the natives of
Guinea have long been known to eat
a yellowish earth called and'taste by them
llml the flavor of
vhioh is very agre eable to them and
SiV id to cause them no inconvenience,
Some addict themselves so excessively
to the use of it that it becomes to
tIiom a real necessity, and no punish
!ncnt is sufficient to restrain them
f rom the practice of consuming it.
In Eastern Asia a similar practice
?Zd“o,"
ftnd Sarnarang, Labillardiere saw
small, square, reddish cakes of earth
sold in the village for the puroo.se of
being eaten. These wero found by
Ehrenberg (be to consist, ior the most
par f } G f remains of microscopic
ari i ma l s and plants which had lived
aud been deposited in fresh water,
Some of the Japanese, too, are nd
dieted to the practice of eating earth,
Dr _ Love, some tjmo a go, published
an analysis of a clay which is eaten to
considerable extent by the Ainas; it
7 if ™ lley t . of gray^in Tsl ? onal 'color (fat-earth
t light
J>o wuil the me day' ciay fragments ii.i 0 ui^uim oTthe oi im. IpaTuf you oi
fiome P lant fo ( tbo aromatl ° prmciplo
it contains. They r eat tho earth be
cause they think it contains some ben
efieial substance, not because it is a
neeos.it, with tl,cot. The, l.evo met.t
an(1 abundance or vegetable food.
?°up. lbe cla faeveral J 18 <; aten pounds \ n are tU< \ boiled fo , rr ? with °{ a
bly roots in a small quantity of water,
ai)d afterward 8trftlne<b The Aiuos
pronounce the soup very palatable. 4 ,
In Runjut 4 alley, Sikkim _
m uio
Himalayas, a red clay occurs which
* he f atlve8 cbe ' v - especially as a cure
jt ls fitated tbat a klad oi oal ' th > ' ,ound ;
ed , and mlxed with tbe root the “men®
(a species of Haemadorurn), is eaten
by the natives of West Australia.
In Northern Europe, especially in
the remote northern parts of Sweden,
a kind of earth known by the name of
“bread meal” is yearly consumed by
hundreds of cartloads, it is said. A
similar earth is commonly mixed with
bread in Finland. In both these cases
the earth employed consists for the
most part of the empty shells of minute
infusoria in which there cannot exist
arj y ordinary nourishment.
Homo of tLe Siberian tribes when
they travel carry a small bag of their
native earth, the taste of which thev
suppose will preserve them from ail
the evils of a for . Weare t
that the Tunguses of Siberia eat a clay
called “ rock narrow,” which they
use mixed with marrow. Near the
Ural Mountains powdered gypsum,
commonly called “rock meal,” is some¬
times mixed with bread. The Juka
biri of Northeastern Siberia have an
earth of a sweetish and rather a etrin
gent taste, to which they ascribe a
variety of sanitary properties when
eaten.
In North Germany, on various oc
easions where famine or necessity has
urged it (as in long protracted sieges
of fortified places), a substahee called
“mountain meal,’’ similar to that, used
in Sweden and Finland, has been em¬
ployed as a means of staying hunger.
WISE WORDS.
Melody is the moonlight of music.
Working for glory is ambitious
egotism.
Gray hairs are an honor most men
do not seek.
True art is getting tho beautiful
out of nature.
A crust of bread paid for is better
than pie on credit.
A woman without jealousy is like a
ball without elasticity.
Negligence looks at tho battlefield,
then makes its arrows.
Happiness is ever found by thoso
who seek it on the run.
Tho man who talks lovo glibly
doesn’t know wliat it is.
The birds with the brightest feathers
do not sing the sweetest.
It is a rare man who will not abuse
his partner or employer.
Tho fiunneier is the man who gets
the better of the bargain.
Tho thoroughly independent man is
more respected than loved.
Somo people arc never at hoiiie until
they are away from home.
We ought to have a good deal of
charity for worthless people.
Tho fish which escapes from tho
hook seems always tho largest-.
Cupid is treated as a guest until ho
becomes a member of tho family.
The flowers tell their story in fra¬
grance, as tho birds toll theirs in song.
Tho evil men do lives after them,
but it is not recorded oil their tomb¬
stones.
Politics makes strange bed-fellows
who have to lie awake watching one
another.
It is a groat deal easier to criticise
a person for doing something than to
do it yourself.
Tho coming woman is she who will
care more for an idea than for a hus¬
band. But will she ever come?
Colonial Houses In Pennsylvania.
Bucks County is full of old Colonial
mansions which still stand as monu¬
ments of the stirring times of long
ago, and as mute testimonials to tho
caieful building of our forefathers.
In upper Wakefield is still standing
the mansion first occupied by Samuel
Merrick and built by bun in 1774.
This mansion, which rests upon the
southern slopo of a small liiHook
known as Jericho Ilill, formed tho
headquarters of General Greene in
December, 1776, and from this spot
he began his march with the army
against the Hessians at Trenton, on
tho memorable Christmas Day of that
year. Across two fields to tho west
from tike Merrick mansion is tho Keith
house, 1 where Washington had his
headquarters from December 14 to
December *25, and over Jericho Hill
to the^orth is the old Chapman rem
denoe, where General Kriox and Alex¬
ander Hamilton wero quartered dur¬
ing the same period. Resides tho
Keith house, Washington had his
headquarters in three other dwellings
in the county ; the Harris house,Now
towu ; the Barclay house, Morrisville,
and the Moland house near Hartsville,
on the Neshaminy Creek. In tho lat
ter house Lafayette first reported for
duty in tho Continental Army, and
under its roof first took his seat at tho
council board.—Philadelphia Record.
Organs on the Ocean.
When the steamships Bt. Louis and
St. Paul of tho American line are
ready for service tho passengers will
l)o greeted witli an innovation wliiou
will 4 take the form of a magnificent °
pipe organ on oaeh fitup, and eacu
vessel will be accompanied b.y a profes
sional organist, ihe will instruments have fourteen will
be unique. Each
stops, with all the modern appliances
for operating registers without touch
ing the knobs. The organ will PC
cupy an elevated space, arched into
the dining Haloon. The arch is to bo
filled with decorated speaking pipes
and a fan of trumpets will surmount
the whole. Rrass will be substituted
for iron to provide against damp air
anti tut) woodwork Ol tho liistruniont
will have a heavy coating of shellac.
The keyboard of tho instrument will
be entirely removed from tbe organ
proper and placed thirty feet distant
on the 'level of the saloon deck. To
operate the organ from this distance
electric action will be used, which
has been perfected to such a degree
that a single storage cell of two volts
tension is sufficient to operate it with
absolute certainty.—San Francisco
Examiner.
Enormous Locomotives.
Tho two largest locomotives in
America are said to bo thoso lately
built for the Southern Pacific Railway
Company. The dimensions of the two
new locomotives are enormous. They
are equipped with four pairs of drivers,
fii'ty-one inches in diameter, on which
there rests a weight of 140,000 pounds,
The total weight of either one of tbe
engines, without the tender, is 100,
ODD pounds, and the total weight with
the tender loaded with water and fuel
and iu working order, is
The boilers are Beventy-two
inches in diameter, large enough for a
full grown man to stand erect inside.
^ he steam cylinders are twenty-two
niche;, in diameter, . and , give . a twenty- ,
six inch stroke.—New York Telegram.
Plants Have Intelligence.
Plants often exhibit something very
much .e intelligence. If a bucket
of water during a dry season be placed
a few inches from a growing pumpkin
or melon vine, the latter will turn
from its course, and in a day or two
will get one of its leaves in the water,
—New York Dispatch.
Highest of all in leavening strength. Latest 0. S. Gov. Food Report.
€5
J &
h If I A
p. iz
ABSOLUTELY PSD S 3 E
Economy requires that in every receipt calling
for baking powder the Royal shall be used. It
will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter,
of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL 8T., NEW YORK.
Tho Central Park Monkeys.
“There are twelve varieties of nion
keys in Central park, Now York city—
thirty-two monkeys altogether,” said
Keeper Cook. Nubian baboon.
“My favorite is a
He always trios to help mo swoop his
cage in tho mornings, and lights to got
tho broom away from me. I give him
a rap over the head and then ho pre¬
tends that lie’s angry. Rut it’s only a
bluff. Ho wouldn’t hurt anybody.
Ho knows I keep apples in my pocket
and ho knows which pocket they are
in, too, and gets them when lie can.
There is a Java monkey who used to
ring doorbells and had to be sent here
because bis owner’s neighbors com¬
plained of him so much. Nobody
could stop him. Ho lived somewhere
down town, and no matter how they
tied him up ho would break away and
ring bells, lie can’t ring any bells
now, but he is never quiet.
“Monkeys don’t live long in captiv¬
ity. They all die of lung trouble
sooner or later. Wo have one thut
has been hero years, but that is an ex¬
traordinarily long time. Wo have only
had one monkey born hero that lived.
That was about four years ago, and ho
lived two years. ”
Thoro Was ft Mistake.
“You aver,” said tho block-browed
bandit, “that you are the celebrated
cantatrice, Mdllo. Bqimllkina. Provo
it ami you shall bo free, Never shall
it be fluid that a Cuttawoezanda would
offer an indignity to an opera soprano,
ft is against, all the tenets of tho pro¬
fession.”
“How shall I prove my identity?”
asked tho captive.
“By singing, of course.”
“What! Bing in this envoi No bou
quota, no steam lioat, and hot a emit
in tho box-oflico?Never!”
“Gentlemen,” said tho bandit, “it
is evident that the lady is what she
claims to bo. Escort her to tho nourost
village and set her free. ”
Boston starts into making good
American citizens right front tho pri
mary school room. In one of tho school
districts of 1,000 school children not
rnoro than a dozen came from Ameri
can parents, and hardly two per cent
of thetn k our langUBg0 . !Jut they
nl ho 15 h Americans by-and J
b .y
All or Dinner.
A ft or tlio henrtioit, dinner a dose of Tv n Kit's
D YSI’KI'SI A IlKMKDY will I’OIHOVO 11.11 llllplnilH
ant loolingH, aid di^oKtion, an i Luiltl up far your
lo n.iili. A^ a.u after dinnor tlrink it. is hu
purior to nil oUi'T rainadiuH, ns it. n» Vor disa]>
pointa, iiiimI. For and Halo, Idiivch by DruinfiHts. i«n nppnlito Manufiutturcd lor Ui« nuxt
l.y (’has. O. Tynich, Atlantu, (iu.
( irur IImhIh.
Worldn> . n0B(] f , lettr h#a , U) H0 „ n(1
siaop and K»od di^pHtion; for if hfoknecs
what tl.eny IttH« h.'a|. (J rtok. ;1 |. w,it.
Unit ‘Vjiiucjr /oolintf” HpririR-i (nun hhIi^h
tion. «>?«*»«> I ir-<t you “pooh pooh!” Them you nZyoi grow
Jtn
il^htand k.a-j. you riaht; so you cun oat,sloop
•““» work. Ask tha druifalst for them,
Motiiors Appreciate tiie \v«rM
of ltlea--a Parker’»(kliiaerTonic,withitHrevlvlni{qnal- boon to the Wln trlckcn ao.l
-H n.-rvous,
Mr-, WinHiow*M Soothing Syrup for fhlldrou
lufthlrur, softon.s thotrnmtt, roduows 1 n flam frui¬
tion, Allayn intln, c.nrn* wind colic. Ale. a botth
“Hall's J. < 1 . Catarrh Slmpt-on, Curcj Marquosn, ourod W. Va., says: b«/l
inr* of n very
raff! of oatarrli." DriHf^ints sell if, 76 o.
, haV( , fonn( , <;ur „ foI . (>m . , |rMp u. m
an uufailintr m‘*dioino.' K. H Lot/, 1306 Soott
Cov ington. o 1 . 1 . ism .
>AINT C
Ham m 0057 LES 5 vTHm> nTu EA,NT WI{ Paints Guaranteed 5 year*.
mar
Tbo f Ifcr 1 4 of t Id* aotiih rcin'tlnintf lr» tlo* uur** White Lr-ad as now nmdo. uaiisinu It to
chalk ami wakh off, aro m utia iz *ri in Ifammur J'afntH, Uterclom they wkak ubttkii
anti look OLOKHY rniicli loii'4»*r; b<;«bi**H, Hamniar I'airitCoHTH much less. No labor Jostin
inixintr, no ♦•xp(t;i-Ivf f'olor.i noedod togvt desired hIhuIub, no Turpentine or Dryers, only
pur * Haw Linseed Oil.
^ It bristles with
««. good points.
J & And the minute they spy dirt they
s rise up and go for it. No matter
'S, PearunE fc- what it’s on—linen, laces, silk,
•woolens, flannel, marble, china,
WASHING glass, wood, metal, or your own
COMPOUND person, Pearline will get the dirt
_
^ TEE GREAT INVENTION off with the least trouble and labor.
« that
/Eui Wm/cor SavihoTou injury ZLiPtmt To The It saves ruinous wear and
Tixrunr,Coion Ot.Hu.-ca. tear that comes from rubbing.
NEW YORK But there’s another point to think
* about important still:
; more
Pearline is absolutely harm
ess to any washable substance or fabric,
Beware Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you.
’‘this is as good as” or "the same as Pearline.” IT'S
FALSE—Teariine is nev»i peddled; if your PTocer sends
yoi an imitation, be honest —send it back % U7 JAMES PYLE, New York.
N. lvatlon Army to Invade China.
Another army is about to invndo
Chinn, but the campaign will be con¬
ducted on different lines from that of
the Japanese. The Salvation army is
going to try to conquer the orient and
bring the millions of Chinese into the
fold of Christianity.
The loader of tho movement is Fong
Foo Sing, a young Chinaman, who is a
member of the Salvation army in San
Francisco, and who is employed ns a
typewriter in tho office of tho War
Cry. Ho said to a reporter: “I ex¬
pect that tho army at the proper time
will send me to China. To go to
China was tho object that really lead
mo to join tho Salvation army. I
wanted to do something for my coun¬
try along army lines. The late war, I
believe, has made China open her
eyes. As a remilt tho way will bo
opened for Christianity, civilization
and other good things.”
Captain Sing expresses himself flu¬
ently in English but uses some ex¬
pressions that are peculiar.
WE
GIVE
AWAY
Absolutely free of cost, for Cl
LiniTEi) Tinn only,
The People’s Common Sense Medical Ad¬
viser, Ily R.V Pierce, M. I)., Chief Consulting Surgical
Z Physician Institute, to the Invalids’ Hotel and
— Buffalo, a book of over i,ooo large
*“ pages and 300 colored and other illustra
q lions, in strong paper covers to any ont
jr sending packing 2i cents in one-cent stamps for
and postage only. Over 680,000
7 C. copies already of this complete Pam binding ily Doctor Book
O sold in cloth at regular
Z? 0 * this price of $1.50. Address: (with stamps and
Coupon) World's Disimcnhauy Mbiv*
O ,CAL Buffalo, Association, No. 663 Main Street
l j 1 N. Y.
McELREES *
>
.WINE / OF CARDUI.
>
♦
l ❖
m t J v . m I V m m I’f m K AUlti
!» -1
m I
| For Fm&ls Diseases.
D TO A VO 11 ) THIS USE
0 N TETTERINE
r\ Tho only pftinloHs and harmloxa
I cijkK f«»r tho wnr»t typo of Ko^oi 7 ,:
’ Tutlwr, Uinjfworm, UKly rotiifh pat Hcalp.
*T <ground on tho fiioo, ciUHtoa
dIoh. itch, from ohnfoH, chapH, poinonoftk. |>tm
PoiMon ivy or
ft l.|jHtan<pH In whorl ALL ITOUKH. Soritf 60 c. in
M or cihIi to J, T, Hhuptrina,
Kavnmiah. <ia. , for one hoi, it your
" • druKKiHt don't koop it.
III WnLL /It I OI. CT NHVV S LMT Klf of yilao u«nt
rmi; i: to roudorri of Wall thin piMM-t*.
Cliitrlt. A. llitldwin t!k f <»., 40 St., K. Y.
A. N. U.... ..........Twmty-one. '0.1.