Crawfordville advocate. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 189?-1???, July 24, 1896, Image 3

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The Uninhabited Earth. While engaged in the hunt for the north pole and the exploration of Af rioa it is generally overlooked that no¬ body has yet traversed Australia from east to west. At the London Geo¬ graphical congress Air. Logan Lobley read an interesting paper showing what portions of the earth remained unex¬ plored, and according to him the ex¬ tent ot^ these is 20,000,000 square miles; 5,000,000 square miles in Af¬ rica, 2,000,000 in Australia, 2,000,000 in America, 2,000,000 in Asia and 400,000 in islands in the Pacific are absolutely unknown. Besides in the nrtic regions there are 3,500,000 and in the antartie regions 5,300,000 square miles that are unexplored, but which, being uninhabitable, are of scientific rather thau of practical interest.— Philadelphia Inquirer. Travel with a Friend Who will protect you from those enemies— nausea, indigestion, malaria and the sickness produced by locking on the waves, and some- l time-, by inland travel ng over the rough beds ot ill laid railroad-. Such a friend is Hos telter’s Stomach Hitters. Ocean mariners, yachtsmen, ami commercial testily and theatrical agents tourists to the protective potency of rheumatism, thiseltectives-afeguard, which conquers al¬ to nervousness and biliousness. thm t fevget that the summer hotel veranda . the happy hunting is ground of the most nter tless gossips on eart h. Bey fl. CO -worth DobWnj Floating--Ber*» 8e*f> of your trrocer, send wrappers to Dobbins Soap Mf’g Co., Philadelphia, Pa. They -will send you frea oi chaTire, postage paid, a Worcester Pocket Dic¬ tionary, 293 pages, bound in cloth, profusely il¬ lustrated Offer good until August 1st only. No matter how fast a good wheel may go, it is always tired. “Put mo down as a warm friend of Tf.tter INE. 1 have a child three yearn old who lias been afflicted from its birth with the worst case of eczema I ever saw, it being one mass of sores from its feet lo its crown. It has been treated by nine of tile most eminent physicians slightest in this and adjoining States with¬ out tho benefit. Several months ago vve commenced the use of Tetteiune on the child, and to-day, thank God and the manu¬ facturers or Tettebine, the child is cured. My wife and I will ever feel grateful to you for sending ns this blessing.” Yours truly. Oil AS. A. Cambell, Druggist, 1 box by mail 1 )al!ax N, C, for 50c. in stamps. J. T. Shuptiune, Savannah, Ga. Neuvk FITS‘-topped Hestoukh. tree So by tits Du. after Ki, first ink's <4 heat day’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2,00 trial bot¬ tle tree. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St.. Piiila., Pa. Mrs. Winslow’s Sdothii^cr Syrup for children teething* softens tlie gums, reduces inflamma¬ tion, allays pain.ciires wind colic. 25c. a bottle. Pino's Cure is a wonderful Cough medicine. •—Mrs. \V. Pick put. Van Sielen and Blake Aves., Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 20, ’94. St. Vitus’ Dance. One bottle Dr. Fenner’s Speciilc cures. Circular, Fredonia, N. Y. If afflicted Eve-water.Driiirirists wi I h sore ayes use sel Dr. Isaac Thomp¬ bottle. son's 1 at 25c per Results prove Hood’s Sarsaparilla the best blood purifier,appetizer and nerve tonic. In fact J Sarsaparilla Is the OneTrue Blood Purifier. AU druggists. $1 Hood’s Pills cure all Liver Ills. Zocents. Immense Fortune in Trees. The timber wealth of the United States gives a yearly product of over a billion dollars, or twice the value of the entire output of all tho mines put together—gold, silver, coal, iron, cop¬ per, zinc and ihe rest. This is a re¬ source worth keeping, and yet we are cutting into our capital at the fearful rate of 75 per cent, each year, as only about 25 per cent, of the timber mar¬ ket is represented by new growth. An for losses from the fires that are started by locomotives, cattlemen, berry pick¬ ers, hunters and incendiaries, it gives a sufficient idea of what they cost us to be told by the forestry commissioner of Pennsylvania that his state alone probably suffers to the extent of $30, 000,000 annually from this one cause. Not only tho trees are lost iu these mighty conflagrations; the vegetable mold, which would supply fertility to the soil for future agricultural pur¬ poses, or food for tlie roots of a second growth of forest, is burnt, and the first step is taken on that easy descent to a landslide or. flood bed.— Scribner's Magazine. A MOTHERS DUTY. Your daughters are the most pre¬ cious legacy possible in this life. The responsibility for them, and their future, is largely with you. The mysterious change that develops the thoughtful woman from tlie thoughtless girl, should find you on the watch day and night. As you care for their physical well¬ being, so will the woman fel-vj be, and so will her children be also. : jO Lydia E. Pinkhain’s '' ) “ Vegetable / geega £ / & - r t i I V\i Compound” is the sure reliance in this hour of trial. Thousands have found it the never-failing power to correct ail irregularities and start the woman on the aea of life with that physical health all should have. . Womb difficulties, displacements and The horrors cannot exist iu company with Lydia E. Finkham a \ egetabie ■Compound. CHAPEL CARS. THE PROJECT OK A TELEGRAPH OPERATOR IN ARIZONA. Missionary Work by Railroad Among Mining (tamps ami Cattle Ranges —Tlie Interior Arrangement of the Gospel Cars. s OME quick Wheeler, Globe, eight Ariz., young was years close sent man, ago a down bright, E. the G. to border upon lino between the United States aud Mexico, to take charge of a tele graph office. The town is the center of a gold and silver mining region, and on Sundays and holidays was thronged with miners from thirty to forty miles around, while the long rows of saloons, dance halls and gam¬ bling hells did a land-office business. Murders and robberies were common occurrences. Mr. Wheeler had come from a family of stanch Baptists, liv ing ....... oack in Albany County, - i New v 1 \r mk, i and, unlike a large majority o the young men amid tho excitement ot a mining region, retained his religious zeal. During the two years that Air. Wheeler lived on the southern border of Arizona he made numerous efforts to establish a permanent pastorate there, but none was successful. Then an idea came to him. It was to have a railroad car built with a chapel in it, so that it might be hauled from one mining town to another, for all mining communities soon have a rail¬ road built to them when they get to be at all prosperous. Mr. Wheeler made careful drawings of the car ho had in mind, mapped out routes that such a car might make in the Terri¬ tories, and studied tho scherno from every point ol view. A year later ho went back to New York and, with the help of tho foremost Baptist clergy¬ men of New York and Philadelphia, laid his plans for missionary work iu the far West before the rich members of the evangelical churches. John D. Bockefeller liked the idea and gave him $5000 toward the chapel car scheme, and his daughter, Mrs. Strong, of Chicago, gave $2000 more. The late George W. Childs, of Phila¬ delphia, gave $1000 for Bibles and literature to be carried in the car and distributed in tho homes of Western pioneers. A fund of $4000 was raised among a dozen Baptists in Dr. Arrnit nge’s Church iu New York for main¬ taining the chapel car. When the car was finished all the Western and transcontinental railroad companies gave Mr. Wheeler free permission to attach the car to any regular freight [or passenger train at any time (on twenty-four hours’ ngv tice) when travel was to be made from town to town, or when repairs were necessary at railroad shops. The car was named “Evangel.” It has now been in operation nearly six years, and has traveled in every railroad locality—in many localities s scor^of times—from Mexico to British Colum¬ bia and from the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific. Mr. Wheeler was killed in a railroad accident last year,but in his administration of the car over 1(100 persons declared themselves converted to'Christianity in the “Evangel.” The first work of reclaiming sinners was along the line of the Southern Pacific Railroad from El Paso, Tex • j to Yama, Ariz. The church on wheels drexv a vast number of people, who probably could not have been induced to attend worship in a common build¬ ing. The chapel car stayed at Benson, Deming, Maricopa, Tombstone, and Globe for weeks, and everybody, miners, stage drivers, cow punchers, saloon keepers, faro dealers, monte men, and all-around tough men went night after night to hear the “Light¬ ning Parson,” as Mr. Wheeler was known in the Territories because of his dual occupation of preacher and telegraph operator. A book of thrill¬ ing tales might be written of the work of Mr. Wheeler and his wife in the hardest towns in Arizona and New Mexico. From Arizona the car went to lonely hamlets in the San Joaquin Yalley and along the coast in Cali¬ fornia, xvberevor there was railroad communication. Then it went to Ore¬ gon. The practicability and usefulness of the chapel car “Evangel” had been demonstrated by that time, and the' American Baptist Publication Society took in hand the building and equip¬ ping of two more chapel cars on Mr. Wheeler’s plans. The funds were con¬ tributed by wealthy business men in New England and New York City. Andrew Carnegie, who had recently been on a tour of ^lie Pacific coast and had seen the work tho “Evangel” opened and its missionaries were doing, his purse for the new cars, So since 1893 there have been three new cars. The “Evangel” has been kept in the missionary field, along the lines of the Northern Pacific, the “Emanuel” has been employed routes! along the Union and Central Pacific and the “Judson” has been utilized by a partv ot young men on the West ern branches of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Itailroad svftem. In the last two years a fourth chapel car, the “Hope,” has been used for services among railroad men at important transfer and repair shop stations in California, Oregon and Southwest Ter ritories. Funds have now been col lected for a fifth chapel car for use in the western hamlets of Texas, the Indian Territory and Kansas, where there are Christian people who have no places of religious worship. The chapel cars are all alike in general arrangement. They are 70 feet long, 10 feet wide and 14 feet high. Each has a seating caoomty of 120, and twenty or thirty more may have seats in the aisles when there is demand. The cars have cost, with ail equipinents, some $10,000. The in terior is finished in light polished oak end bird’s-eye maple, The ouapei part lias a narrow aisle tunning through the middle of the ear, and wide Font* of hard wood, Entrance i R ihvdhgh a door at tho car platform, an - i through a iitlle vestibule. V the further end of tho chap 1 is a raised platform, on which is an organ built especially for the place and purpose. Close by is a bronze lectern, and on the wall are maps, charts and illuminated Bible lessons. Iu the racks above are all manner of religious but non-sectarian literature, tracts, little Bibles, lesson leaves* and newspapers for distribution. Back of the chapel nnd separated from it bv an oak partition is the library and sit¬ ting room of the people in charge of the car. A library like that of the average Sunday-school teacher is'iitted iu the walls ami arranged on revolviug book shelves. There is au abundance of magazines and illustrated weekly newspapers. In towns where tho car stays for a fortnight, or more these books and periodicals form a circulat¬ ing library. They are lout to families away J out on the desolate plains and in * 1 aud among tho moun th West anil aU the chapel car missionaries say their iuilueuce for good is most incalculable, Tho missionaries have found hundreds of families living in sod houses and more huts in the Territories who came from homes of refinement and means in tho Eastern States, anu had seen none ol the periodical literature for years. Beyond the library and sittiug room is a little kitchen, furnished with a range, cupboard and cooking utensils. Still further are a lavatory and water cooler. Beds may lie let down from the sides of the library like the upper berths in a common sleeping car. The cell.:* tor the provisions of the mis¬ sionaries is beneath the car. On tho roof of tho car is a great gong, that is rung aa a call to service, and xvliilo there is worship going on in the coach the Stars and Stripes aro raised from the platform as a signal to engineers of passing locomotives to make as lit¬ tle noise as possible. When the chapel car is brought to a town it is run upon a side track near the station, and tho sounding gong and the uncommon appearance of the car itself soon advertise the fact that meetings are to be held there. In nearly every community tlie interest in the car nnd the fact that there will be religious worship in it are sufficient iu themselves to draw audiences that not only pack the chapel, but also stand up all about the outside of the car. Whenever a struggling village is visited which lias a few people, once members of churches and having a de¬ sire to establish a church there, they use the car as a nucleus for tho forma¬ tion of a now church society. When tlio cur moves onto another town the evangelical homo missionary organiza¬ tions in the East are informed of this new field for a young pastor, and some ono is sent there to found n new con¬ gregation. In this way the original chapel ear, tho “Evangel,” has been tlie means of starting some sixty church organizations and as many more Sunday-schools in tho last six years. In tho distribution of Chris¬ tian literature, the four cars have put over 2SU0 Bibles into homes where there was none, aud has given soveral times that number to miners, cowboys, plainsmen, and railroad laborers, who said they bad no Bibles. Besides, there have been tens of thousands of tracta, leaflets, and Sunday-school les¬ sons distributed with discrimination throughout tho regiou west of the Rocky Mountains. Savage Telegraphy. By what occult means do barbarians transmit news with almost the rapidity of lightning? Again and again has this puzzled tho advance forces ol civilization, In tho Soudan where tho world’s interest centres now; with the Indians, on tho western frontiers of tho United 'States; among the Esquimaux of Alaska—in fact, with savages in nearly every quarter of the globe, the facility with which in¬ formation is spread far and wide is marvelous. Only with the utmost difficulty has the Intelligence Department of the British array learned of the move¬ ments of the Dervishes. The Egypt¬ ians, and the other native allies of tho English army seem not to havo been possessors of the Dervishes’ secret mode*. On tho other hand Mahometans everywhere were informed of the ad¬ vance up the Nile of the Angio-Egypt ian army. No more pilgrims are going to Mecca; hut all are flocking to tho green standard of tho Khalifa. ‘ Long before thetidings of the Caster massacre reached Fort Abraham Lin cc 511 . tlj e Sioux had spread it among their brethern o‘f the northwest. The scouts in Crook’s column to the south knew oE Et ia a da 7 or two > auii tko8e Gibbon, farther northwest, were not ]olJ ” without tho information, Terry’s Crow scouts told their chief t,j e next dav, and the story was dis credited. Two days later when Terry reached the battlefield, he found his scouts had not exaggerated, In Alaska several years ago, a naval lieutenant on exploration ran short of provisions. Ho pushed on towards a settlement, reducing rations every hour. When he reached tuere he found the inhabitants had provided against coming, and bad a bounteous store awaiting him. Ihe people iu the vil ja g>* were of a different tribe from tllOSe through whose domain he had P‘ “ se3 » and 80 far as he could learn, were not in communication with them, Diamonds Made to Order. M. Moissan, the renowned French metallurgist, especially famous for having produced artificial diamonds jn the electric furnace, has been ap pointed by the Paris Bar bonne, or university, to represent it at the cen uncial at Princeton University this summer. lOlULAtt St'ILIN'CE, A pair of “crocodile shears” was re¬ rently sot up in Pittsburg that can cut ldates of any siz ■ 1 > inches thick or a bar four inches square. According to recent- experiments by Weber the normal temperature or the incandescent electric lamp is between 1505 degrees and 1585 degress. The great telescope which is to be constructed for the Paris Exposition ot 1900 will bring the man in the moon within thirty-eight miles of mother earth. The Brofct Ttnpid Transit Bicycle Hallway is expected to develop a speed of two hundred miles an hour, The invention is the work of Colonel George P. Brott, formerly of New Or leans. The Important work ot joining the survey of India with that of Europe, by correctly fixing the ditlorcnce ot time between tho observatory of Madras and Greenwich, has jest been completed. The experiments of M. Moifisau with tho electric furnace have led, it is stated, to the discovery of an impor taut substance, in flic shape of a com pound ot boracie acid ami carbon, which will even out diamond. Professor Ramsay is seeking tho constituents of helium, and the evi¬ dence that it is a mixture is quite strong. The density of the gus from cleveite is 2.2; from samarskite, 2.12; from broggerite, 2.18, and from fergu somite, '2.14 ; while considerable spec¬ troscopic differences have been ob¬ served and a difference in color is per¬ ceptible to the unaided eye. It is claimed that paper sails aro meeting with considerable favor. They are considerably cheaper thau canvas sails, and, owing to a special treat¬ ment, aro make as soft, Uoxible and untearable as the original article. There are few articles which offer a greater field for ingenuity than singular that of paper. One of the most inventions is a stovo made from paper. * In tlib West a uovol use of tho phon¬ ograph lias been made to guard against “accidents to machinery. It has been found that when machinery is running properly the noiso it makes has a reg¬ ular r.Mhm, aud if anything goes wrong there is a change noticeable to an export. Trouble with the machin¬ ery in a plant among the mountains of California lias been diagonosed by recording tho racket*raade in a phono¬ graph aud sending it to New York, where an engineer listening to it was able tojiell precisoly where the trou¬ ble lay. Kills Whales by Electricity. That tho field for tho application of electricity is practically unlimited is ftgaiu demonstatod by a seafaring man, who proposes to go out and kill whales *with it. The .alt had so much faith in his scheme bniJSu that he engaged an electrician to dynamo that would generate au alteanating dlnamo current of 10,000 volts. That slap, ho will have rigged up in his and then he will sail away to the north to capturo tho whalo in a ftn-di nieclo manner. Captain Charles W. Horslioll, of Halifax, owner aud commander of the whalin g ship Rosalie, is tho man who intend 1 to wipe out the customs and traditions of tho whaling industry with a small xviro and a largo dynamo. As to Jibe method of application, (the captain explained it to a New York writer as follows: “I am going to place the dynamo on tho whaler and not put it iu operation until the whaling grounds aro reached. On board I will have a big reel ol heavily insulated wire. “Tho reel will bo placed in the smaller boat, in which we go out to meet tho whale. Wo shall have sev¬ eral thousand feet of wire on tho red. One end will bo connected with tho dynamo. At tho other end, which will be in the smaller boat, will bo a hard rubber stick about four feet iu length. The wiro will run through that stick, so that it may bo handled easily and safely. “At the end of tho stick will ba at¬ tached a piece of metal twenty-four inches long and one inch in diameter. The point of that needle will be sharp, so as to penetrate tho llesh of tho whale easily. “Tho hard rubber stick and tho big needle will be used just as we use tho harpoon to-day. When near tho big fish, as near as wo get in the old way, the karpoouer will throw the electric barb. “At the time there will be a current of 10,000 volts running through the wire. When the jioint of the needle strikes the whale a currrent connec¬ tion will lie formed with tho dynamo and the whale will get the full shook of the high voltage aud ho dead in tho traction of a second."—Boston Globe. Eighty'-Year-Old Triplets. Tho death in Pennsylvania of one of the remarkable triplets has occurred, aud the aged trio, who have lived al¬ most eighey-two years, are now sojia rated. Mrs. Amos Barndt, who resided in Marlborough Township, expired Friday, says the Baltimore American of a late date. Bhe was a daughter of the Rev. George Keller, deceased, and was the first of the triplets to die. The survivors are Tobias aud Jesse Keller. Her age was eighty-one years eleven months and nine days. She was the mother of sixteen children, ten of whom survive. Stone .'oh!. A German inventor has hit upon a method of putting stone soles on boots and shoes. He mixes a water¬ proof glue vhtii a suitable quantity of clean quartz sand arid spreads it over the leather -ole used ah a foundation. These quartz so.es are -aid to be very flexible uu<: practically indestruc¬ tible. Wonderful Things That Are Near. Plying is solved. The principle is known. A mechanical expedient, is all that is non needed to make it success¬ ful. Practical (light is today not more than live or ten years oft. A glowworm makes light with about °" 1 ’ three-hundredth part of the force n^d in ordinary artificial light. When know how to make light as cheap, street and homes will be as light as day for a mere fraction of what light costs. Plus is near. Vacuum illumination without incandescence is already in full operation,and in a year or two should out down the price of light to a sixth of its current cost, aud in livoor ton years light in a city may tie, like water, turned on iu every house at will. Compressed air has long been known t G bo tho best way, theoretically, to B tora force for use in transportation, There is no wusto and no deterioration, Tho need is a cheap aud efficient motor to apply compressed air to city trans¬ portation. If this can be done, first tho trolly polos and wires will come down, next tho horseless, air-oom pressed motor carriages will do all the W( ,rk of tho city delivery, When those changes come tho only ,,so for gas will bo for cooking—if this is not done by electricity. Factories, also, before many years, will bo run by transmitted electric power. This has begun to be done and iu live or leu years will be completed, and the factory fire and boiler will be a thing of tho past. The city of tho future, and no very distant future, will have no trolley Julies or wires and no horses, All movements will bo on rails by silent air motors or by horseless carriages equally silent. All pavements will be asphalt. Unlimited light will bo as cheap as unlimited water is today. No coal will be delivered ot private houses and no ashes taken from them, With no burse, no coal and no ashes, street dust and dirt will be reduced to a minimum. With no factory tires and no kitchen or furnace fires, tho air will bo as pure in tho city as in tho country. Trees will have a chance. Houses will bo warmed and lighted on easily and cheaply us they are now sup¬ plied with water. A city will be a pretty nico place to livo in when the first twenty years of tho twentieth century are passed.— Philadelphia Press. Perfectly Safe. Mamma—I don’t like tho idea of that young Harris hanging around .Tunny so much. Ho hasn’t a cent ex¬ cept ins little salary 1 apa—lou uuedii t worry. TUoy aro both too busy talking about bicy¬ cles to have any time for love-making. —Indianapolis Journal. How Old are You? You need not answer the question, madam, for in your casso age is not counted by years. It will always be truo that “a woman is as old ns she looks." Nothing nets tho seal of ago so deeply upon woman’s beauty as gray hair. It is natural, theroforo, that every woman is anxious to proserve her hair in all its original abundance and bounty; or, that being denied tho crowning gift of boautiful hair, she longs to possess it. Nothing is easier than to attain to this gift or to preservo it, if alroady possessed. Ayer's Hair Vigor restores gray or faded hair to its original color. It does this by simply aiding nature, by supplying tho nutrition necessary to health and growth. There is no better preparation for the hair than AYER’S HAIR VIGOR. Drink HIRES Rootbecr \when you're hot; when you're thirsty ; when callers come. At any and all times drink HIRES Rootbeer. yin.n* only b j Tht Charl«* K. Ilinn Bold Co., *?er/where. Philadelphia* A pecker make* £• *»llone. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT* Tulane University of Louisiana. Its mlvanta^G* lor pra -lica) Instruction, bolli in ajnp'c laboratories an<i abundant hospital materials arc im»-<pial<‘d. Free access D uiven to the frr<*at Charity Hospital with 7M heds ami 30,000 patients annually- -ido Special instruc¬ tion is iriven daily at the bed of the sick. The gcxi session hcglns October 15th, 1&90. For cat-iloi/iio and information address 1'iof. S. E. MIAILLE, M. !>., Doan. ttr I*, o. Drawer 251. NKW OKLKANB, LA EVERY MAN His Own Doctor J II* J. HAMILTON AVJJRN, M. I). A W)0 page lllii-tratol Book, containin'-' valuable information p rlainimt toCiwacei of tie- human system, sliowlne how to treat ami cure with fsimpleot of medicine.. Will he mailed, postpaid, to auy address on receipt o' price, SIXTY CENTS. Address Atlanta Publishing House ’ t Hi Loyd “I., ATLANTA. OA. Plantor’« CUBAN OIL ; swxs Bone Liniment 'srwEhss mafic < arc ; r**~,ii cut,.-, vouiHi-. bru;hor«.-s, rucuinati-m dealer-. ana pas in of Z'Jt cS; Relief for -fiii'i. r '•mnpluint. Mju.h'h - ir'-iD, . New spencer Medicine Co., 1 H 'ii \1. -s k. N. b .... .. Thirty,'!! Best < oujfh fciyrup. Tantea Cse in time. Sold by drtWflsta. f*l law and Longevity. in an address before the St. Louis Law school, Chauncoy M. Depew said: The law promotes longevity. It is because its discipline improves the physical, tho mental and the moral conditions of its practitioner. In other words, it gives him control over him¬ self, and a great philosopher has writ¬ ten that he who could command him¬ self is gronter than he who has cap¬ tured a city. Tho world has been seeking for all time the secret of lon¬ gevity and happiness. If they can bo united, then we retnrn to the conditions of Methuselah and his compatriots. Whether I may live to their age, I know not, but I think I have discovered the secret of Methnsa leh’s happy continuance for nearly 1,000 years upon this planet. Ho stayed hero when he had no steam and no electricity, no steamers upon the river or the ocean propelled by this mighty power, no electric light, no railways spanning the continent, no overhead wires and no cables under tho ocean communicating intelligence around the world, and no trolley lines reducing tho redundant population. He lived, not because ho was free from tho excitements incident to the ago of steam and electricity, but because of the secret which I have discovered, and it is this: Longevity and happi¬ ness depends upon what you put iu your stomach uud what gets iu your mind. Musical Item. Tho minister, Parson Downycouch, was at dinner with tho Ghaflio family. Johnnie spoke np and said : “Can a church whistle?” “Why do you ask, Johnnie?” asked the clergyman, kindly. “Because pa owes $12 back pew rent, and he says ho iB going to lot tho church whistle. ” After tho clergyman had taken his departure, there was a vocal solo by 'Johnnie.—Texas Hitter, IMfl'i-ron t. Angelino—Yes, it is different in courting on tho wheel; the lumps have to bo turned tip instead of down.— Washington Star. Tho Child Enjoys Tho pleasant flavor, gentle action and sooth* Ing effect of Syrup of Figs when in need of a laxative, and if the father or mother be costive or bilious, the most gratifying ramlLa follow its use; ho that it Ih tho boat family remedy known ami every family should have a bottle , Wt form llfoloiiif irlenfiships In three Pays, All)Mrfc Mure i, vVcat I'olo lo, Ohio, Maya: “ila-li’a t’atiUTh Cure aavod my lllo,” YVrito him for particular l Sold by Dru^fcflata, m i® SUFFERING IN SILENCE. Women are the real heroes of the world. Thousands ou thousands of them endure the dragging torture of the ills peculiar to womankind in the silence of _ome. They suffer on and on—weeks, months, years. The story of weakness and torture is written in the drawn features, in the sallow skin, in the list less eyes, in the lines of care and worry on the face. Inborn modesty seals their lips. They prefer pain to humiliation. Custom has made them believe the only hope of relief lies in the exposure of examina tion aud “local treatment. Take ten cases of “female weakness” and in nine of them “local treatment” is unnecessary, There is no reason why modest, sensitive women should sub¬ mit to it. McELREE’S WINE OF CARDUI «..*»*«. <■<««• « jjjjr folly influence healing, strengthening the and of sooth over organs woman ^ “ invigorates and stimulates the whole system. It is almost infallible in curing the peculiar weaknesses, irre gularities and painful after derangements in the privacy of woman. Year year, of home—away from the eyes of every¬ body—it effects cares. WINE OF CAKMII if) soJd for gl.00 • bottle. Dealers In medicine sell it. fit. bottle* uxie'.Ily core tlie worst cases. OPIUM sDd WHISKY hshlti rnreri. Book fent mix. Dr. *. a. nooixir. >iu.ui,