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About The Barnesville news-gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 189?-1941 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1904)
A Woman’s Wealth. Paine’s Celery Compound GIVES VIGOR AND STRENGTH TO DEBILITATED AND RUN DOWN WOMEN. ll is maintained by many distinguished writer* that the greatra of ai at ion depends ni< b upon the physical condition of its tuncri. The general conditions which con (finite to health ami long life, arc those which do not imply a mid and unequal exhaustion of those powers > ihich life is maintained. While we assert t. the women of our larul stand peerless for Ix’auty and the virtues that aiakc them lovalde, we cannot hide the fact (hat there arc thousands in our midst who, owing to overwork, worry, household cares, ami an unequal exhaustion of life |>ower, have become weak, nervous, sleepless, and debili tated. We bring to the attention of all weary, dcqKinrtint, hopeless, and sickly women earth’s great rescuer and health Isiilder, lame’s Celery Compound. Thousands of healthy women around us owe their present vigor, activity, and robustness to I'ainc’s Celery Compound. Mrs. Stephen Smith, St. l aul, Minn., tells how she was snatched from the grave; she says:— “ I had a bad attack of la grip|>e litis sprite and was at death’s door, ami no one evet rx|>ectcd me to recover. 1 was so weak that as soon as they brought me out of one faint 1 was m another. 1 could not tak. any nourishment, and doctors’ medicines did me no good. A friend advised my husband to get me a Untie of Paine’i Celery Cornjiound, vrfiirh he did, but liad no faith in it. 'file second day after taking the Coni|x>und, 1 began to get real hungry and took an interest in things. I had everything that money and loving care could supply, and with that and Paine’s Cilery Coni|x>und, I am now doing my own work, while three months ago I was almost in the grave. 1 know that i owe my hralth and strength to Paine’s Celery Com pound, and shall alway recommend it.” NO NEED OF THE M ll HANDS WITH Diamond Dyes They are easy to use, and are nude for home use and home economy. Diamond Dyes never disappoint and will make the old clothes look new. 50 different colors. Direction book and itt dyod xamploa in*. DIAMOND DYES, Burlington, VI. Sliktliik the Hrllr*ro€>m. The shaving of lh<* bridegroom on Ills wedding day Ik a Bulgarian custom which, handed down from pre-Chris Mnti days, is Mill observed with due formality, especially in country dis trieth. While the barber is at his task a dancing crowd of young folks surrounds hint and the bridegroom. As the lutter's tinir is cut the snipping* mv carefully collected by some of the girls for preservation In one of the bride's chests. The barber, when his work is done, receives a small white linen elolh as a present and also a trilling sum of money from each person there. Then the bridegroom kisses the Iwtnds of the girls, washes his face and dons bis wedding dress, which must first lie carefully weighed three times by one of the boys. llluliluntl Muk'shtru. A few years ago aeeommoUu lions in the highlands of Scotland were very primitive. It is related that the young Duchess of Gordon, on inquiring how the late duchess managed toentertaln so much company nt Kltirara. where there seemed no room, was told by the butler that for weeks at a time he had slept on the top of the kitchen dresser. A niece and two other yonug ladies were known to have slept hi the duchess' bedfootu, which probably was not large, for they wore seat out to wash in the neighliorlng brook. Miss Maedonell of Glengarry, who told this, said also that there was a waterfall near Ochtortyre which the late Sir William Murray ami his brothers used as their shower bath I'rfMH la Drawing*. Creases in drawings, engravings, etc., may be leveled out bj following these Instructions: Fasten the engraving or drawing by drawing pins on a board, face downwind, on a sheet of paper; on the back place another sheet of paper which retains a very slight quantity of moisture. Over tbts place ttaunel or blotting paper, and. taking a hot iron, pass it carefully over the part where the creases have been made until they disappear and then submit the draw lngs or engravings to presMtre between printer's glazed Imards Papa Old Too. is iny son Frederick. Mr. Fo* B>ck. said Mr. Glanders proudly. In Ptroducing bis live-year-old law to bis taller "Well, Frederick," said the caller. "do yftu obey your mamma V" "Yes, sir,” replied Frederick prompt ly, "and so docs papa.” Out of Harm's Way. He—Why does this theater have Its orchestra concealed'; She—Why? Just wait until you hear It play, tarrrlila. He Was that you I Visaed in the conservatory last night? \ “About what time was ltV— lJfe VORACIOUS CANARIES. Avprllle of .i Hint Mu eh Greater 111 nn Arri’tigi' Mun". When an old fasfliioned hostess urges h r guests to eat. alter the con ventional manner ol showing hospi tality and remarks, "Why, you haven't the appetite of a bird,” she really speaks the truth, though she does not intend to. The average man, if he had a bird's appetite, would devour from thirty to thirty-one isiunds of food a day, which wotrid Ik; a tax on the larder of his hostess. Recent experiments have proved that the average bird manages to eat about one-fifth of his own weight daily with ease, if be etui get so much food, and In a wild state, though the hied has to hunt for his daily provender, lie is eat ing a large part of the time during the day and manages to get his full ra tions. The smaller the bird the more vora cious seems to lie Its appetite and its power of absorption. A Gorman scientist recently kept it canary under observation for a month. The little creature weighed only six teen grams, Imt In lire course of the month it managed to cat 512 grams weight of food that is. about thirty two times its own weight. The hind must therefore have eaten its own weight in food every day. An ordinary man with a canary’s ap petite would consume 150 pounds of food a day. Rut the canary is an ov’rctne case. The ordinary till'd, in good health, will be satisfied with one-fifth of its weight a day by way of fowl. Answers. I.tinf British l.ll<-rx. I have in my possession, w rites a con trihutor, a notice bearing date Oct. 17. 1820, inviting persons to lake part in the Inst state lottery which was held in this country, says a writer in the Imn don Chronicle. This Invitation is a very elnlsiralc affair. It is printed in green and yellow. At the top are the royal arms, while below, in the center of the paper, Is the announcement: "Positive! fly order of the lords of his majesty’s treasury, on Wednesday next. JKtli October, lotteries close for ever In this kingdom. Six prly.es ol £.'s<i.ti(tn will tie distributed oil that day us the parting gills of Fortune.” The advertisement concludes with a foot note to the effect that Sivewright is aelling lottery shares and tickets at 37 Corn 111 11. I.oiulou. This man Sivc wrlght was a well known stock anti share broker of the day, who made a specialty ol lottery tickets. He was very fond of attracting clients by the publication of doggerel verses, mostly of tile Simplest character, of which the following is n fair example: Then gallop on gu.vly; The fault Js your own If you don't get *1 good shr Before It's all gone. One of Japnn’M Jevrel*. The great attraction of Kamakura and one of Ibe jewels of Japan is the Daibutsu, or great bronze Ibiddlm We approach it through a tree lined ave nue and get tin 1 first anti best view of It at a distance of some lit Hi feet. It is a sitting figure, HI feet 7 inches high, 1)7 feet " Inches in circumference. The face Is 8 feet 5 inches long ami from ear to ear 17 feet t> inches wide. The eyes, which are pure gold, ore nearly two feet long. The circumference of the thumb is three fet. These ligures give some idea of the size, and the fig ure is elevated on a stone platform Home twelve to fifteen feet above the person approaching it. Hut no descrip tioii can convoy an idea of the majesty of the face. It is Unit gently forward as if in brooding contemplation of the Infinite. It represents perfect peace the repose of the attained Nirvana. t* % ortuiMM In riolurr rrmum, Some splendid picture frames may lie seen every year at the Hoy a I academy exhibit ion. hut the finest and costliest frame ever made for a picture was that which incloses the "Virgin and Child" In Milan cathedral. It is made of ham mered gold, with an inner molding of lapis lazuli. The corners of this vain able frame have hearts designed in large pearls and precious stones. Some fdeu of Its value may he gained when It is stated (hut tin' frame is eight feet long and six feet side. Its estimated worth Is t-0.000. One of the pictures in the Vatican at Home is in a frame studded with jewels. The picture is a valuable one. hut the frame nearly equals the value of the painting. t'llltt l'ol*fi. With proper care a (lag irilc ought to last u great mil ny* yen is in spite of the incessant exposure to the elements. Of course the best preservative of wood is paint, and a man who has a ttiigstatf which has cost him n good sum of money should see that It is pa in red at least once every twelve months. Flag poles generally rot at the bottom drat and then have to lie taken down to pre vent them front falling of their own weight. Her altlTitril Tsai*. "How is your daughter getting on with her music?" “Very well," answered Mr. t’uturox. "Slie has got along so far that when I ask her Vo play auy thing I like she looks haughty and says. ‘The idea!' ” Washington Star. Tfa* UJnlkifp. First Scor \\ hat sort of meeuister hue ye goleu. tioordie? Second Scot - We seldom get a glint o' him. Six day* o' th' week he’s ,en vees'ble. ami on the seventh he's ln compiTlieus'bte.— London Mail. Savin* Himself Trixblr, Slit I saw you. sir, with that horrid widow, and 1 shall send back your presents at ouee. He—Don't send them to me—send \hem to the widow.—Town Topics. K AR E NKW'~‘ Aiife/FTE THURSDAY JANUARY 7 lb I A PLAGIARIST. The Sort of Thief That Charles llrailr Pronounced Himself. The novelists who aspire toward ab solute originality of plot might think once in awhile of the sources from which certain masters drew their in spiration and of the calmness with which those great workers picked up Whatever would serve them at their trade. Charles lieailc depended on the newspapers as the living record of life as it is. One day In the week he de voted to his scrapbooks. Passing eveuts seemed lo him of vital importance, and the result of his collating appeared in novels whose "purpose'’ told. In “Never Too Late to .Mend” he ex posed the cruelties practiced in the prisons before the reform was success ful; in "Hard Cash” he attacked the abases of private lunatic asylums; in “Put Yourself In His Place” he opened on trade unions. He was a modern ei'U; sader. One day he found in a newspa per certain strictures on this manner of work. His rage was instant and vio lent. “Plagiarist!” he roared, crushing the paper. "Of course I am a plagiarist. Shakespeare was a plagiarist. Moliere was a plagiarist. Wo all plagiarize—all except those idiots who are too asinine lo profit by the works of their supe riors. Surely every blockhead out of a lunatic asylum (except those idiots) must know tjmt since Homer's time all Authors have parodied his incidents and para pitta--•"d his sentiments. .Mo liere took bis it where lie found it. The thief of ui. thieves was Hie War wickshire thief.' who stole right and left from everybody. Rut. then, lie 'found things lead and left them gold.' That's the s|-t of thief I am.’’—Youth's Companion. lit in In 01,1. Fiscalitis is a disease that flourished in Bngluml as far hack as the four teenth century, only the tax that was then imposed upon foreign goods was a broken head to the maker of them. When Wat Tyler's people entered Southwark in 1371 their auger was so great against the Flemish weavers and other workers that they made tin* pro nunciation of “bread and cheese” a test of the holiest home worker, and who ever failed to pass it was deemed a Fleming and put to death. A century later Glide’s Kentishmen had for one of their cries. “The foreigners forestall the market, and so Englishmen want and starve!” About 1585 Ragland was called the Asylum Christi, so many were the for eign weavers, brewers, silk workers and jewelers who settled there, and a popular saying in Henry VIII.’s reign. “The French teach us how to make hats and how to take them off,” shows the importance of foreign made goods at that time. London Standard. < unnla In. Knuland. Canals In England date Track to an early period, for the Romans built two in Lincolnshire tbe Foss dike, forty miles long and still navigable, and tbe Cuer dike. The first British made ca nal was constructed in 1 Kit by Henry I. and joined tbe Trent to the William. It was toward the end of the eight eenth century that the greatest amount of energy was expended in the building of canals, mainly due to the Duke of Bridgewater and the sl*ill of his eu gin, st, James Brindley. In the last decade of that century a canal mania raged. Consumption Salt pork is a famous old fashioned remedy tor con sumption. “ Hat plenty of pork, was the advice to the consumptive and 100 years ago. Salt pork is good if a man can stomach it. The idea behind it is that fat is the food tlie consumptive needs most. Scott’s Emulsion is the mod ern method ot Iced iny tat to the consumptive. Pork i* too roup.li tor sensitive stomachs. Scott’s Emulsion is the most refined ot fats, especially prepared tor easy digestion. feeding him tat in this wav, which is often the only wav, is halt the battle, hut Scott’s Emulsion does more than that. There is some thing about the combination of cod liver oil and hypophos phites in Scott’s Emulsion that puts new life into the weak parts and has a special action on the diseased lungs. , A sample will be H sent free upon request. sure that tV* picture in the *orro ot a iaivl is on the wrapper ot " f\v bottle ot Emulsion you buy. 50c. and st; all druggists OBSOLETE TERMS. Some Bis Words That Have Been , CoDHivnetl lo Oblivion. The number of obsolete words that are to b ■ found in a complete diction ary of the English language is c -n- and erably larger than the people have any idea of. The following letter, written by an alleged poet to an editor win. had treated Iris poetry with derision, furnishes some idea of them: “Sir—You have behaved like an ini petiginous scrogie like those who. envious of any moral celsitudo. curr.f their uuglicity to the height of croatin syiuposically the fecund words which my polyinnthic genius uses with übci ity to abligate the tongues of the week less! Sir, you have crassly parodied my own pet words, though they were traugrams! "1 will not eoascervate reproaches. 1 will educe u veil over the atramental ingratitude which lias chamfered even my indiseerptible heart. I am silent on focillation which my eoadju v ancy must have given when I offered to become your fantor and adminicle. I will not speak of the lippitude. the oblepsy you have shown in exacerbat ing me, one whose genius you should have approached with mental discal reation. So 1 tell you. without super vacaneous words, nothing will render ignoseihle your conduct, to me. "1 warn you that I would vollicate your nose if I thought that any moral diarthrosis thereby could be performed —if i thought I should not impignorate my reputation. Go, tacbygrapbic scro gie, hand with your crass, inquinate fnntoryd liraw oblccfations from the thought If you can of having synchron ic,-illy lost the existimntion of the great-* i st poet since Milton.” And yet all these words are to be found in tin. 1 dictionary.—Tit-Bits. * The Ilriilal Veil. The origin of the bridal veil is a dis puted question that will probably never be settled. Some see in it nothing more than a milliner’s substitute for the usual Mowing tresses which half concealed and half revealed a bride’s beauty as she knelt at the altar. This opinion is countenanced by the fact that Elizabeth Stuart was not thought to require an artificial veil, as nature had given her an affluence of hair. Others see its origin in the veil of the Hebrews’ marriage ceremony or the yellow “flammoum” of old Roman brides. A third source is the old “care cloth” of the Anglo-Saxons, a square vestment held over both bride and bridegroom till they received the nuptial benedic tion. So runs the use of the church of Sarum and the Hereford missal. Lastly, it has been held to be merely an amplification of tbe coif which medi an'll 1 brides wore between the garland and their liair. Margaret Tudor wore this under her coronet on her marriage to the king of Scotland. Evolution 0/ the Iletl. Bedstead originally meant "the bed place.” The truckle bed was the first advance on the bench, and then the tester suspended from the roof. Then eume in the Arabian bed—a name per haps derived from the crusades. Tlie four poster came from Austria in the fifteenth century. The late Queen Vic toria always carried her bedstead about with her, and so did the nobles in the middle ages. The coverlid or counter point. wh* lice comes counterpane, was often splendidly embroidered. Yet the beds at this time were often only sacks of straw. Feather beds came from France in the fourteenth century, but straw was in general use long after. Blankets of wool were not introduced by Blanket of Bristol, who made them, for the word, in the sense of a coarse Svoolen fabric, existed before. Very Abenti>iii>fled. The celebrated German historian Theodor Mommsen was the most nb sentuiiuded of men. Once while going from Berlin to Ohurlottenburg, a half hour's journey, the trolley ear in which he rode went off the track. The rest of the passengers took another cur and went ahead, and the stranded vehicle was abandoned till help could be found. Mommsen remained reading his hook. An hour or two later the sound of jacks, levers, derricks, etc., aroused him. Hisiug from his seat, he went to the door and, with the most complete unconcern imaginable, remarked, "1 suppose we have come to a standstill! Tlie Polite Hermann. We Germans are not only the most polite, but also the most ceremonious people in the world. Without ceremony it is not possible for ns to present a friend, to take a seat in a restaurant or to drink or even to utter a siugle word. Consequently a people like the British, which ignores and utterly disregards these customs, must appear to us a herd of lubbers. Frankfurter /.pitting. A 1.1 nt* of Action. “You see." said Hie young lawyer, "uiy client is accused of bigamy, and he's guilty: so I hardly know how to defend him." "Why. that's easy," said flic old law yer. "Defend him on the ground of insanity and get a few henpecked hus bands on the jury." I’uek. [ liar For Worry. Sin*- Why do you look so worried. Bertie? Did papa object? Bertie—No. But he said; “It's ail right. You’ll soon find out it's useless to object when Nell is set ou anything.” In* Hatton*. Archie See how I am run after. All these are invitations. Friend flood gracious! All , invita tions? Invitations to what? Archie -To call and settle accounts. An economical way of disposing of stale bread is by eating it. It saves doctors' bills. Detroit Free Press. JT BLACK m W W —WEED Has Cured Thousands of Men. Women and 2 Children. BLACK ' WEED WRITE for free sample. Havre You Kidney Trouble. or CatarrK? Read what people say that have bee Gn Aug . west Kla Ueiitletneri tfe&neflPof the afflicted I wtlh in^S lng slatemeni tn regalo to Black W eed. it, possession 1 made every effort loget relief but failed until 1 nee den tally , me i in pos:session of a bottle of Black Weed The relief obtained from its use wns so I ?reat nerore naif the first bottle had been used that 1 putasideallotbeTmedlcinMnnUaninow sound and well, having been cured completely b J " rk Black Weed lias time I had an aggravated ease of Catarrh of the bead and throat. < completely cured this and my heud is as clear as a bell. Respectful:ijj o' urs. No. 6 Engine House . ‘ ‘ BLACK WEED will bring back the flush of health and vigor. Mrs. L. A. Finley,of Atlanta, Ga., writes under date of Aug. 21,1903, as follows, Black Weed Med Cos . Atlanta Ga . . *..iHrtlmniiii#UM Gentlemen . 1 can freely testify to tbe wonderful WflU.ler veU I from lie uw of vous Black Weed Tonic ' was a constant ~TL he ~civen anew 'ntsJnct I began the urh of your medicine. 1 feel tbt* I hay „*'i' LA i ‘-iso on life. 1 can recommend It to all sufferers of female troubles and weak nesses Write our Medical Department for free advice and we will send you our book on Blood and Skin Diseases free. v Ask your druggletH for BLACK WKEI> or send P O Orderor Southern hv pre** Order to ub for SI.OO for one bottle*. $5 00for six bottle^. AuORFSS ALL COMMUNICATIONS TO BLACK WEED MEDICINE CO., Atlanta, Ga. A SHORT ANSWER. The Reply That Bismarck Made to an Ad in iruble Speech. 1 like to think of old Bismarck as he sat by the window that opens on tbe windy park of Friedrichsrub in an old gray shooting .jacket,* a rug over bis knees, a pipe in his hand, simple as a north German farmer, this man who bad almost held Europe in fee. A little while before this February day be had been deposed from power. All the world knew that the old lion was sulking in his den in no amiable mood toward tbe young emperor who had turned him out of doors. It was known that his memoirs were written and that iris correspondence was set in order. A New York publisher thought he might secure the papers in which Bismarck had told the real story of the birth of the German empire—that strange story of craft and heroism, lit tleness and grandeur. It was on this mission that I sailed for Hamburg. 1 had two letters for Bismarck. One was from a negligible ambassador. Tbe other had been given me by a Ger man statesman of some note wifh whom in other days I had been a stu dent in the University of JeDa. My friend bad been a familiar of Bis marck’s household and bespoke me a kindly hearing. 1 sent the letters on from Hamburg and followed the next day. On the table at his elhoxv as he sat by the window 1 noticed my letters. Tbe valet who had placed a chair for me tool* his stand by tbe door. I said what 1 had to say. It was (permit me to affirm it) an admirable speech. For ten days and nights I had rehearsed it as I paced the deck of Hit* stormy liner, so in tolerable German I declaimed it It was dignified; it was diplomatic. When I had finished Bismarck took the pipe from iiis lips, said “Neiii’’ and put (he pipe back again. ’Twns the shortest answer l ever had in my life, i waited for a moment. The old man smoked and stared out into the park. I got up and bowed. 1 had rehearsed that bow and did not in tend to waste it. I bowed to his old hairless head, the flabby yellow jowls and big mustache, to the old gray jacket and tbe pipe. It was like sa laaming to a stone wail. Then tbe valet led me out. In tbe park I re gained my senses.—Vance Thompson in Success. For Over Sixty Vears. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has been used for over sixty years by millions, of mothers for their children while teething with per fect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for diarrhoea. It will re lieve tlie poor little sufferer im mediately. Sold by druggists in every part of the world at 25 cents a bottle He sure ask to for Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing syrup, and take no other kind. A FAMOUS PERFUME. Drlicioua Attar of lloarji I* ChlfJ/ Mmli- In HulKKrin. The far famed otto (or uTlari of loses is chiefly made in Bulgaria. Kasanlik is the center of the rose growing coun try. lied roses only are used in mak ing the perfume, but white roses, which grow more freely, form the hedges of the fields. The trees, which grow tt> a great beiglii. are separated by paths nine feet in width to allow the oxen and plow to pass. The perfume is obtained uot only from the petals, but also from the stalks and leaves. These give a peculiar scent, which adds greatly to the delicacy of the perfume of the petals. October, April and June are the mouths for planting branches of the old trees. Weeding, pruning and digging are necessary for three years, when they arc full grown and repay the labor spent upon them by bearing for twenty years. The discovery of the dellriou* attar was quite an accident and took place ! throe eenturies ago. The Persian Prin cess Nour DJibau was strolliiii; through the splendid galleries -of her palace with her betrothed (the Mongolian Prince Djihanguyr) and noticed 111 tlie , rosewater basins about the passages ! an ugly, yellowish oil floating on the 1 surface. Orders were instantly given 1 to remove the unsightly fluid, when it was discovered the perfume was also | removed. Thus the virtue of the essen tial oil was found out. which is still called in Persia "Attsr Djibao." Cult lire nnl Riches. If one-tenth as much attention were devoted to the fools among the middle and working classes as is devoted to the fool sons of the rich, we should be In danger of believing with Carlyle that tbe people are "mostly fools.” It Is true that the culture of the suddenly rich is cruder and narrower than .the culture of those who have had genera tions of wealth and leisure, but culture is relative. The culture of the most cultured classes in the old world is the result of large wealth possessed for generations. Culture is a matter of growth, but it never grows in poverty. The cheapness of the culture of tbe very rich in this country as compared with that of the aristocracy of old countries is simply the difference be tween youth and age. a difference of experience. There is a comparative cheapness in tbe culture, bearing anti manners of tire people of the west as Compared with those of tbe east, and for the same reason. Tbe aristoc racy of the south and of New England have a refinement quite unlike that of the newly made rich in New York and Chicago and the west. They have been longer in tbe making.— Gunton’s Mags zinc- We liave in our shelves many rem edies for constipation and biliousness, but the never-failing, common-sense cure is found only in Ramon’s Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets. This Treat ment cures by relieving the ease of the trouble; the Pink Pill arouses the liver while the Tonic Pellets tone up the organs and insure natural and healthy conditions. Complete Treatment — two medicines —25 doses—full direc tions —25 cts. t lie out Time t'epner Tim. A pepper mill is a piece of silver jot often seen on tables nowadays. Eng- Jish housekeeper, however, still use the pepper mill, and American silver smiths sometimes keep it to meet the demands of old fashioned families win* prefer to grind their own pepper rather than risk the chance of adulteration. The pepper mill dates back to the time when pepper was a scarce commodity and was always ground at the table from the peppercorns. Pepper was so valuable in those days that rents were often'paid in peppercorns, and the high prices they brought were among Uie incentives that induced explorers to brave the dangers of the unknown deep. If a short passage could be dis covered to the Indies, it was agreed by all that a wealth of pepper could be easily brought to Europe. Klliou’H Fmolsilicd Oil Binimiiit. • Is the best Liniment on the market for use in the family or on animals It is very soothing, very penetrating, relieves quickly and hcaisjn aniiicred ibl short time. Try it you will not be disappointed. Large bottle. Price 25 cents. .1. H, Blackburn The Visible ami Invisible. The wisest Indian philosophy has never boggled, like ours, over that silly word “supernatural." The Upnuisbad says, "What isdn the visible exists 1 Iso In the invisible, and -wlmt is in Brabm's world is also here." The ultimate, al beit. unreachable, is as real to the Asi atic mind as rice, and in the Bhag.Wad- Gita Arjnna is actually permitted to behold the embodied infinite. Indeed it Is rather this present existence which India regards as tlie illusion, the nt.tyn. To see‘the stars we must waif, for night, and to live we must die. Nor is it uninteresting to note in Hindoo otau sics how these large ami liappv .sereni ties of oriental view have softened per sonifications of death.—Sir Kdwia Ar nold. RYDALES TONIC A New Scientific Discovery for the BLOOD and NERVES. It purities the blood by eliminating the waste matter and other impurities and by destroying the germs or microbes that infest the b'.ood. It builds up the blood by reconstructing and multiplying the red corpuscles, making the blood rich and re.L It restores and stimulates the nerves, causing a full free How of nerve force throughout the entire nerve system. It speedily cures unstrung nerves, nervous ness, nervous prostration, and alt other diseases ol the nervous system. KYDALES TONIC is sold under a posi tive guarantee. Trial sire SO cents. family sire SI.M MANUFACTURED BV The Radical Remedy Compaay hickory, n. c. 1 Jno. H, Blackburn