Newspaper Page Text
Diplomacy Failed.
“I always mean to come to yon* for
advice,” said the moek little woman.
'‘You never tell me wrofig.”
“What is it?” askod tho young hus
band, unconsciously straightening up
with a proud sense of masculine supe
riority. advise to get
“Would you mo my
new coat iu brown or dark blue?”
As it was the first time he had heard
of the proposed garment he had to
take time to consider .—Indianapolis
Journal.
Obstructions In n Great Harbor
Are less easily removed than obstructions of
the bowels are by Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters,
infinitely more effectual than violent pur
gatives, and which never gripes, convulses
and weakens as they do. The Bitters also
removes malarial and rheumatic complaint-,
biliousness, sick headache, nervousness fair and
dyspep-ia. Give this deserving re medy a
trial and expect the best and most complete
results. _
We are ourselves threatened when calamity
affects our neighbors.
_
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root cures
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y.
It is a plea-ure incomparable ground of truth. to always
stand on the vantage
In a recant article on Coffee and Cocoa, the
eminent German Chemist, Professor Stutaor,
of the Dutch process of preparing
(Scoa iocesh by the addition in Germany of potash, in which and ammo- of the
5Ai«r common “The only roeutt of these
S^oessee added, says: make the liquid appear turbid
’{gTheeve is to without effecting
of the consumer, the Cocoa substances. This
areal solution of the of
artificial manipulation for purpose so
■ therefore, less in
called solubility is, and always more takes or plaoe at
anired by deception, pleasant tart*, useful action
cost of purity, The treatment of Cocoa
and aromatic flavor. is entirely objection
bv «?,n, anch chemical means treated with potash
Oaooa or
ammonia . would . be entirely unsalable but for
theamuAementwy addition of artificial flavors
Siven which a poor the substitute air is offered for the to the aroma con
out Into Breakfast Cocoa made
gnraer ’’ The delicious Dorchester. Mass.,
by Walter Baker A Co., of
taabsolutely pure and soluble. Bo che mic a l s,
•er dyus, or artificial flavors are used in it.
Deafness cannot be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There is only one
way to cure Deafness, and that is by constitu
tional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an in
flamed condition of the mucous lining of tho
Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in
flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper
fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed
Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam
mation can be taken out and this tube re
stored to its normal condition, hearing will be
destroyed forever; nine cases out ten are
caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in
flamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can
not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for
circulars, free. _ Toledo, O.
F. J. Cheney – Co.,
{3?“Sold by Druggists, 75c.
The Best Men Coining to the Front.
Splendid business opportunities are offered
men and women of the highest and best char
acter to represent B. F. Johnson – Co., of
Richmond, Va. No capital needed. Even
spare time may be used to good advantage. It
will be worth your while to write to them.
“An Ounce
of prevention is worth a pound of cure." Ri
pans Tabules do not weigh an ounce but they
contain many pounds of good. One tabule
gives relief. Try for yourself the next time
you have a h eadache or bilious att ack.
Karl’s Clover Root, the great blood purifier,
gives freshness and clearness to the complex- $1.
ion and cures constipation, 25 cts., 50 cts.,
I have found Piso’s Cure for Consumption
an unfailing medicine.—F. R. Lotz, 13J5Scott
St., Covington, Ky., Oct. 1, 1894.
Mr-. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Had Hip Disease
He was treated at the Children’s Hospital,
Bfifiton, and when he eame home had SKV
0
of?
John Boyle
RUNNING SORBS on hia^eg. Could
■ot step. We have been giving him Hood’s
Sarsaparilla a year, and he oan walk, run,
•lid ploy as lively as any boy. He has no
•ores and is the PICTURE OF
HEALTH. John C. Bqyi.e, Ware, Mast.
Hood’s**^ Cures
Hood’s Pills do not purge, pain or gripe.
7 TO
ECONOMIZE
LIFE
IVe must keep up the supply This of
force needed by done the system.
can only be by Nutrition.
Nutrition and good digestion are
synonymous.
RIP AN S
TABULES
Should be taken immediately de
when there in any digestive
rangement manifest. remedy
for They DYSPEPSIA, are the sovereign CONSTIPA
TION, BIL OUSNE8S, and all
disorders of Stomach, Liver and
Bowels.
ONE TABULE
GIVES RELIEF.
A N. D Two, ’95.
TIIE BRAVOS OF NEW JAPAN
AN ORGANIZED BAND OF PROFES
SIONAL THUGS.
The Soshi Are Like No Other Men on
the Face of the Globe—Body
guards for Statesmen.
7 HE away a terially class war from of with disturbed men Japan, China who for have is the a taking time, Gov- ma
ernment, writes Frank G. Carpenter
in the New York Press. I refer to the
Soshi. These are like no other men
on the face of the globe. They are a
kind of cross between an anarchist
and a political striker, and though
they exist in nearly every part of the
Empire, I have never seen them de
scribed in letters of travel. They are
a peculiar feature of the modern Japan,
and are the product of the old feudal
system married to the modern civili
zation. Japan, you know, Europe was twenty- dur
five years ago much like
ing the Middle Ages.
The Daimios, or nobles of the coun
try, owned the greater part of the
land, and each had a number of sol
diers or Samurai about him. These
Samurai were all soldiers, and the
Daimio was expected to support them.
When the revolution came and the
Daimios gave up their estates these
men were out of a job. They took up
with different branches of trade. A
large number went into the army.
Springing from it, however, are
these bands of Soshi, who are young
men, many of whom are ready to sell
themselves and their swords to the
highest bidder. Every politician has
a number of them connected with
him, and every political meeting is
filled with them. They carry sword
canes, and during elections the papers
are full of the attacks of one band of
Soshi upon another, and of statement
as to how one prominent man, accom
panied by his Soshi, was met by an
other statesman with his Soshi, and
how the two fought the matter out on
the street.
These Soshi are numbered by thou
sands, and it is surprising how well
they are organized. Outside of those
who are attached to the politicians
there are bands or societies of them
who work together for their mutual
benefit, and who are, in fact, bands of
thugs, assassins, blackmailers and
strikers. Some of them give their ser
vices for their food and clothes, and
for two or three dollars a day they will
do anything. If they are arrested you
are expected to pay them for the time
they stay in prison, and to send a few
luxuries now and then to the jail. They
are not at all fond of foreigners, and
they form a large part of the anti
foreign element of the country.
The action of the Government to
ward these people has shown that it is
afraid of them. They have carried on
their workjopenly; a signboard was re
cently stuck up in one of the main
business parts of Tokio which read
“Soshi provided here. Terms mod
erate for the day or month.” Among
the men who have shown much nerve
in the matter are our American Minis
ter and the Rev. Clay MaeCauley, the
head of a school in Tokio and a Uni
tarian minister of great prominence in
Japan. For some reason or other the
Soshi became incensed at Dr. MacCau
ley, and they warned him that he must
give up his school. They told him
that he would be mobbed if he did not,
and they made all preparations to
carry out their threat. Dr. MacCau
ley went to the American Minister*
Mr. Dun, and told him the situation.
Mr. Dun was very indignant, and
he at once went to the foreign office
and told the Secretary of State that
the Government was responsible and that for
keeping the Soshi in order,
he proposed to drive, with Dr. Mae
Cauley, in the Legation carriage,
down to the school on the day fixed
for the mob, and if they were insulted
or attacked in any way the American
Government would hold the Japanese The
Government responsible for it.
Japanese officials at once took the mat
ter in hand and the Soshi were put
down upon this oocasion. The streets
leading to the school were lined with
police and the result was that Dr.
MaeCauley and the American Minister
parsed through unarmed and unmo
lested by even a look.
I asked a number of prominent men
of Japan, including Count Ito, whence
the Soshi came, and I was told that
they were in most cases disaffected and
unsuccessful students. Thousands of
young Japanese have been studying
professions, and there are hundreds
upon hundreds of lawyers and doctors
more than are needed. The Govern
ment places are all overcrowded, and
the universities have been turning out
their graduates by the hundreds a
year. Tho brightest students have
been picked out by the Government
and sent abroad to finish their educa
tions. When they have come back
they have been given positions, and
those who were not so fortunate have
bad to stay out. The “outs” have
banded together, and they formed
these organizations, which are, to a
oertain extent, insurrectionary in their
tendencies. They would be a bad ele
ment in case of a revolution. J’hey
have been growing in numbers rapidly
up to the time of the present war.
This will probably carry off a good
many of them.
SCHLEY COUNTY NEWS.
Keeping Young.
American women might learn an ad
vantageous lesson of their French sis
ters in the art of keeping young. But
it is no recipe for cosmetics, that they
would require. First of all, French
dames do not worry, or, if they do,
they conceal the fact admirably. They
are apparently on the crest of the
wave of good fortune perpetually.
Next, and almost equally important,
they decline to hurry. They take life
moderately, perform their duties with
out haste aud linger over their pleas
ures. And in theso two simple rules
lies a mine of wealth for her who’ is
wise enough to appropriate it.— Cin
cinnati Gazette.
The Greatest medical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS.,
Has discovered in one of our corn
mon pasture weeds a remedy that
cures every kind of Humor, from
the worst Scrofula down to a com
mon Pimple. Send fob Book.
Dunbarton, Ohio, Dec. 24 , 1894 .
Donald Kennedy,
Dear Sir:
Last spring La Grip and Bronchitis
took me and for weeks 1 got worse though friend
taking medicine all the time. A
told me of your Medical Discovery, how
it had helped a friend of hers' and I
thought I would try it. 1 have taken two
bottles of Discovery and three bottles
Prairie Weed and I can't begin to tell you
how much better I feel. When I began much to
take your medicine I could not sit up
of any: now I sit up all day and walk
round the house, but I am still hoarse,
—Of course you are—that’s the Humor—
about three more bottles Discovery will
get the last of that out of your system.—
and want your advice about that.
1 thank you with my whole heart
Yours truly. MI OLIVER.
KAO
WALTER BAKER – GO.
The Largest Manufacturers of
PURE, HIGH CRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
On thi. Continent, hare received
HIGHEST AWARDS
from the great
' : ! Industrial and Food
EXPOSITIONS
1 fl v In Europe and America.
'•I
.i Unlike the Dutch Process, no Alka
^ e8 or in ot h er Chemicals their prepanationt. or Dyes ar«
used any of fa
Their delicious BREAKFAST COCOA absolutely
pure aud soluble, and costs less than one cent a cup.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER – CO. DORCHESTER, MASS.
SULLIVAN
4 CRICHTON'S A
fa
and School or Shorthand
The Best and Cheapest Business College in Amerioa.
Four Penmen. Time ehort. Catalogue free- Address
Sullivan A Crichton, Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga.
_
TIxo A*Cf jTAnEAiJL"
ENGINES,
BOILERS,
All ... _ Styles, 4 to 600 h. p.
i \ SMI HILLS
M Variable-t-FRIC- TION FEED
jA J Most Accurate
: Set WEOKS
' jc f | r«au B l* 1811 Receding ®- Quick
_dH J liC N BLOCKS. H EA D
Send for Catalogues Ltd., to York, Pa.
A. B. Farquhar Co.,
HALMSMSiCiievin|6«in eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeAeeeee
J ** Cares and Prevents Rheumatism, Indigestion,
Dyspepsia, Heartburn, Catarrh and Asthma.
V Useful In Malaria and Fevers. Cleanses the
t Teeth and Promotes the Appetite. Sweetens
, the Breath, Cures the Tobecco U *bic Endorsed
•• by the Medical Faculty. Send for 10, 15 or 35
A eent package. Stiver. Stamp t or Postal Note, ■J
f GKO. K. HALM, 140 West Ktb St, New York
DROPSY cured sand Treated B«b.SIm. Fo,ltW,ly with cts** msny T«f,tabl, CTRSn free. Hive thou- pro
nounced hopeless. From first doss symptoms rapidly diseppeer. removed.
tnd in ten aiys at least two-thirds of all symptoms ere FREE.
BOOK of testimonials of miraculous cures sent
mail
«! P u. Ga.
Blood Diseases
such as Scrofula and Anaemia, Skin Eruptions and Pale or
Sallow Complexions, are speedily cured by
Scott's t Emulsion
the Cream of Cod-liver OiL No other rem
edy so quickly and effectively enriches and
i «> '! * purifies the blood and gives nourishment
to the whole system. It is pleasant to take
and easy on the stomach.
Thin, Emaciated Persons and all
suffering health from Wasting Diseases are re
stored to by Scott’s Emulsion.
Be sure you get the bottle with our
TMBCMMS- tjpde-mark on it. Refuse cheap substitutes!
Send for pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. FREE.
Scott A Bowne, N. Y. All drufffiats. 50 cents and SI.
T HE U. S. Government Chemists have
reported, after an examination of the
different brands, that the ROYAL Bak
ing Powder is absolutely pure, greatest
In strength, and superior to all others.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER COMPANY, 106 WALL ftT, NEW-YORK.
FADS OF FAMOUS PEOPLE.
Swift liked to write in bed.
Charlemagne was fond of hunting.
Tamerlane was an expert chess
player.
Buffon’s only amusement was walk
ing.
Bach’s favorite pastime was garden
ing.
Koscoe Conkling was an excellent
amateur boxer.
Danton was the most noted card
player of his day.
Socrates was said to be the ugliest
man of his time.
Queen Victoria, during her youth,
was fond of archery.
Charles II spent much time in his
chemical laboratory.
Fox, the orator, found his greatest
pleasure in gambling.
Emerson declared that he composed
best when walking.
Peter the Great liked to be carried
about in a wheelbarrow.
Hesiod hated women and took no
pains to conceal the fact.
Robespierre was fond of reading po
etry aloud to his friends.
Confucius, it is said, was passionate
ly fond of watermelon seeds.
Themistocles was passionately fond
of dancing aud flute playing.
Nero was fond of music and attained
great proficiency in the art.
Virgil, during the summer season,
filled his house with butterflies.
Vicano could not listen to the sound
of a flute without fainting.
Francis I. was known as the most
skillful jouster of his country.
More’s “Utopia” was written as an
amusement and to divert his friends.
Samuel Richardson wrote his novels
while attired in a full dress suit.
Charlemagne was said to be the best
player of checkers of his century.
Cato’s only diversion was drinking,
and he was tond of this diversion.
Thomas Carlisle’s most congenial
recreation was smoking in the garden.
Gladsone is fond of wood-cutting,
and often “rests” himself in this way.
Balzac, when not at work on his
novels, entertained himself sketching.
Henry VIII, of England, had the
reputation of being an inveterate
miser.
Frederick the Great was a musician
and devoted much time to the flute.
Neander, the church historian, wrote
for many years with the same quill.
Ivan, the Terrible, was fond of tor
turing animals and seeing their blood
run.
John Wesley never took any form of
diversion, but utilized every moment.
Shelly was fond of boating, and
finally lost his life in an accident to
his boat.
Dr. Johnson drank immoderate
quantities of tea and kept a pet cat,
Hodge.
Experiments in Georgia
show that the best cotton fertilizer should contain not less than from
3 to 4/. Actual Potash.
Any failures to this crop can be traced to a deficiency of Potash
in the fertilizers used.
We will gladly send you our pamphlets on the Use of Potash.
They are seat free. It will cost you nothing to read them, and they will save you
dollars. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, New York.
Professional Pride.
“Hold up your hands!” said the
train robber.
“Not at this town,” protested the
thick-set passenger. “These people
here are all agin me, an’—”
“Hold ’em up quick 1” was the threat
ening command.
“Now, looky, here, mister, you’ll
have to make allowances fur me. I’m
a professional pugilist, I am. Shoot
if ye must, but I’d rudder die dan put
up me fists widout jawing a while be
forehand.”— Washington Star.
Not Quick Enough.
Stuffer (at the reception)—I think
I shall take Miss Springer down to
SU pper when it’s ready,
Dashaway—I wouldn’t if I were
you.
Stuffer— Why not? impediment
Dashaway—She has an
in her walk .—Brooklyn Life.
Dr. PIERCE’S
Golden Medical
DISCOVERY
Cures Ninety-eight per cent, of all
cases of Consumption, in all Its
Earlier Stages.
Although by many believed to be incura
ble, there is the evidence of hundreds of
living witnesses to the fact that, in all its
earlier stages, consumption is a curable
disease. Not every case, but a large per- 98
centage of cases, and we belit ve, fully Golden
percent, are cured by Dr. Pierce’s
Medical Discovery, even after the disease
has progressed so far as to induce lingering repeated
bleedings from the lungs, severe
cough with copious expectoration (includ
ing tubercular matter), great loss of flesh
and extreme emaciation and weakness.
Do you doubt that hundreds of such cases
reported to us as cured oy “Golden Med
ical Discovery ” were genuine cases of that
dread and fatal disease ? You need not take
our word for it. They have, in nearly every
instance, been so pronounced by the best
and most experienced home physicians,
who have no interest whatever in mis
representing them, and who ■were often
strongly prejudiced and advised against
a trial who of have “Golden been forced Medical to confess Discovery," that
but this
it surpasses, in curative power over
fatal malady, all other medicines with
which they are acquainted. Nasty cod
liver oil and its filthy “emulsions" and
mixtures, had been tried in nearly all these
cases and had either utterly failed to bene
fit, or had only seemed to benefit a little for
a short time. Extract of malt, whiskey,
and various preparations of the tried liypophos- vain.
phites had also been faithfully in
The photographs of a large number of
those cured of consumption, bronchitis,
lingering coughs, asthma, chronic nasal
catarrh and kindred maladies, have been
skillfully reproduced in a book of 160
pages which will be mailed to you, on re
ceipt of address and six cents in stamps.
Address for Book, World’s Dispensary
Medical Association. Buffalo. N. Y.
EAK LIVER
PIUS
-AND —
O'TONIC PELLETS)
TREATMENT for Cwitlpitln BlIlouaoM.
aad
At all (tores,or by meil Me. double double box 1 1 double boaes
■l.M. BROWN MF'U CO.. CO.. 1 New Verb City.
W.L. S3 shoe Douglas BEST.
IS THE
FIT FOB A KINO*
0!*** Wi FRENCH CORDOVAN* A ENAMELLED CALF.
Ik . “ Fine CalfkKangam*
43POLICE ,3 soles;
*2J17- b BQYS'SCH00LSHQEH
•KAJBIES
BROCKTOJi2'i–SS J c
Over One Million People wear the
W. L. Douglas $3 – $4 Shoes
All our shoes aro equally satisfactory
They give the beet velue for the money.
They equal custom ehoee In etyle end fit.
Their prlcee wearing uniform,—stamped qualltiee are unsurpassedI. on sole.
The ere saved other makes.
From $1 to $3 cannot supply over you wo can.
If your dealer
.‘ 5 {75‘
in time. Bold by druggteU.
C C N S U M F ION
-If|‘: