Newspaper Page Text
The Hratltude or a Thinker.
“Tour reflections do yon great cred¬
it, Mr. Brainby."
“Thank heavens!” sighed Brainby,
“I can get credit for something. Ah,
my dear friend, 1 would you were a
grocer.*—Judge.
Hill* or Faro In » a«lilnii«i>lo Itoctonrant*.
The quo*tlon haw hcch mooted over and
SStSHSSsS prc*tmni hat
1 b not an improvement. intrf-'tnf Many rook!fig t
their lion our <|u«*tlon»
roaiaa, barbaric. I his \* nn open tho
but mi bill of tart* pivsent* nltumumin to
dyspeptic, but tin y, Uk« the bilious m«-
larloun «ml person* w ith weak kidney*, can
be cured by 11 oatetier's Htornach Hitters.
According.to the *tato auditor of North Car-
SggggggSfi*
To ( urc n fold in One Day.
Take I.uMtivo Uromo Q.dnlnu Tablet*. All
Druggists refund money if It f«U»toour». SUc.
The River .Ionian distance make* the greatest almost dr-
si-ciit. in tho shortest of any
sirvain
ismufy la ntoad Deep.
neon l.lnod means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. * 'uscarcta, (,'and-y Cathar*
«c clean your Idood and keep it clean, all by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving im-
purities banish from the body. blotches, Begin blackhead*. to day to
pimples, klv l.iiimii lioila, complexion hy taking
• r.d that sc
(’ascaroU, bonuty guuruntcui, for ten ceniH. 10c, All 60c. drug-
gists, aatisfactiun kOc,
Sever iiimh y SV.r. ni* eld la atlll In circula¬
tion In sonic parti, of Spain.
I.VimA'i o'. '*1*1.1. f .ea f ’' Sinolilnc Tobf.i ca
do.-*- not make <■ v < ry . non Hi n- : ivect a. « rose,
l.ui . (Oiji-* "iidahty nlkl." docs glvo every
one n mostdcliahtful smoke. Try It.
A folding hed must Lo pulled clown hofore
It can he done up.
} # ^0 /&A I
m\\ ^ m
Uncle
Sam fy
Says: Jv'-u
This !* r c
Jo i t
America's
Greatest
Medicine.
It will
Shit pen
Your Appetite,
l^urliy and
Vitalize Your Biocd, Gveiccrre That
Tired T eeling. Get s bottle of
Hood's Sarsapari.U and bc-gm to
take It 'TODAY, and realize the gieat
good It is sure to do you
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
In Amerioa'e u via tost Modi ulna. AH drujtjciat*
».«>. .« beginning u> honor h.r
Siberian explorers. A statue is to lie
erected at Chabarowsk on the Amur
•» »» .to
lu It 148, from tho Kiwi - Kolyma to
tho Hirer Anadyr, thua Bailing through
Behring Strait for tho first time, and
proving that Asia was separated from
America, Jt is proposed, moreover, to
change tho name of tlio East Cape into
Cape Deehnew, ■which will ptolmbly be
objected to by geographers.
Aluminum has been adopted official¬
ly us the material out of which the fol¬
lowing equipment* shall be made for
the French Army: Canteen, individual
plate or bowl, boiling pot and bow! for
u mesa of four men. In ISIU flvo hun¬
dred set8 were put on trim, and in tho
Madagascar campaign a much larger
number, with satisfactory results. The
French price of aluminum at last ac-
counts was “li cents a pound.
SINGULAR STATEMENT.
From Mrs. Rank to Mrs. Piukhnm.
The following letter to Mrs. Pink-
liniti , from » JSlr.s. JSl. Hank, No. L,.tr>4
Ekust Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia,
Pa., is a remarkable statemeut of re-
liof from utter discouragement. 8ho
says:
“ I never can find words with which
* V'Si* a n..k-
hams vegetable Compound bus done
forme,
“Seme years ago I had womb trouble
and doctored for a long time, uot see-
Kig* any improvement. At times I
would foci well euough, uu.l other
times was miserable So it went on
\inlil last October, 1 felt soinetliiuff
terrible creeping over me, 1 knew not
what, but kept getting worse. 1 euu
hardly explain my feelings at that
time. I was so depressed in spirits
that I did not wish to live, although I
had everything to live for. Had liys-
teria, was very nervous; eoul.l not
sleep aud was not safe to be left
alone.
“ Indeed, I thought I would lose my
mmd. No ouo knows what I endured.
“1 continued this way until the last
o. F.b„,. 7 , when
testimonial of a lady whoso case was
similar to mine, and who had been
cured by Lydia E. l’inkhams a Vegeta-
• •
,, ble Compound. ,, 1 , determined , to try it,
and felt better after the first dose. I
continued taking it, and to-dav am a
,„„n weU woman, and , can say from .■
lieart, I hank (uk! for my
such a medi-
ci»e.”’t
Mrs. Pinkham invites all suffering
women to write to her nt Lynn, Mass,,
for advice. All such letters are seen
and answered by women onlv.
OPIUM find cured. 10 X>«»pt. to Liquor 20 A, l>r. <tnvs. Lebanon* .t. Habit L.Stephens, No curfd jmy Ohio. lili in
Pi SO’SGCUR
CUI-tS :T WHtKt ill [LSI VAILS.
Bc*t <'^UKh TftslwUood. _
Syrup.
In tlto^ bv
CONS UMPTJON?
hams»;
,l; 5.225 .—- cys. _. \I
SIXTT-F1VE THOUSAND MEN ARE
NOW READY FOR BATTLE.
ORDERS AFFECTING VOLUNTEERS.
A I,l*t of Vnrlou* Pivl»lon» of Troop* and
I ho l*olnt» of Concentration for
Knell I* lllvun Out,
___
tered ju # '
1'he following . order . has , been issued. . .
“With the approval of the secretary of
wnr Hie following ^ assignment i 1 of
' i
ordered . , . by the , general
troops is major
commanding tlio army:
]f CoJtniN, Adjutant General.
1 » ( a “»P ,, H .. * J J omRH * ,,i ( h,c ** i
arnauga. On. — Arkansas, two regiments
infantry; ’ Colorado, two troops cavalry;
“ 1 ’ tlir ." ,, ‘, e regiments hi, infantry, one
battery light 1 artillery, , ol.e , regiment . ,, t
cavalry; Indiana, threw rc^imcnin in-
fan try, two batteries artillery; Iowa,
infftiilry; .............
regiment infantry; Kentucky, two teg-
iroeulH infantry, two troojis cavalry; Mary-
Maine, ’ one regiment n infantry; v
land, , , regiment . , infaniij, . ,
one .
Massachusetts, one regiment
iufantrv; Michigan, two regiments in-
fantry; , , Minnesota, , two , regiments _ . , „ i. in*
faiitry; Mtssissipjn, one regiment m-
fantry; Missouri, three regiments in-
fantry,ono V battery •* light artillery; ■ ' Mon-
tana, four troop* . cavalry , ;Nol»rasku, , one
regiment infantry, New Hampshire,
one regiment infantry; New Jersey,
one rigituent infantiy, New Ymk, t six
regime,its infantry, two troops cav-
airy; Ohio, four regiments infantry,
f,,. lour lr batteries oanerit-s iigni light ai nrtillerv iinery, eight eigne
troops cavalry; Pennsylvania, seven
regiments infantry, three batteries
light artillery; V Houth Carolina, one
rognnenl . infantry, . . _ . rr l » v mioPBeo, a two
regiments infnnliy; Utah, two troojis
cavalry; Vermont, ono regiment in-
fantry; West Virginia, one regiment
infiinlry; Wiftconmn, two regiments
infantry; Wyoming, one troop cavalry;
District, of Columbia, one regiment in-
fnntry; North Dakota, two troops euv-
ftlry;'Soiith Dakota, five troops cav-
airy; Idaho, one troop euvalry; No-
vmlrt, one troop cavalry,
Totals, fifty-throe regiments infant-
ry, eleven light, batteries artillery,
one regiment anil thirly troops of
cavalry,
To Man Francisco, California-—Two
regiments infantry, two batteries
,„ Bi .
meut infantry; Kansas, one regiment
infantry; Minnesota, one regiment
intotrj; .............. r„ K in,„nt in-
j fantry; Nebraska, one regiment m-
1 fantry;Oregon, one regiment infantry;
j “*.'>• 'Vyoiumpr, ono 1*««U» oatuuion «*k» infiuitiy,
Pakota, two hutlalious iufautry;
' S, " ltl1 Ibikota, one regiment infantry;
fiUho.two bat I alums infantry.
lo Key West—Massachusetts, one
regiment infantry.
To Now Orleans—Louisiana, ono
regiment „ infantiy ... r. two regi* •
inents infantry; New Mexico, four
1 1 oops cavalry; Arizona, olio troop
......
Imliun leiritory, two troops cu\ ally,
'J o Mobile—Alabama, one regiment
of infantry. ‘
,,, 111 Department , , t ,, ommumlers , Ala-
bamn, ouo regiment, one battalion;
two battalions infantry,
two heavy batteries two ; battalions UftiiiHiona
liglit Imtiery; ( onneetieut, ouo regi-
men! infantry, one light battery, two
heavy ; batteries; Delaware, one regi-
l mfantry, . . , Georgia, ,, . regiment ,
| n,!1| one
infantry, two light batteries.
To Tybee Louisiana one regiment
infantrv' 4 Maine ’ one heavy 1 imttoiv lU \ l ' ’
•
Maryland, . . two battalions; Mnssaehu-
setts, one regiment imtie infantry; one regi-
ment heavy y; Mississippi, 11 one
lopfimont iiifiuitiv, . »Toisoy ,
r ono
regiment infantry; New York, three
regiments infantry; North Carolina,one
regiment,one battalion infantry; Penn-
sylvama,four regiments infantry; Iliree
troops cavalry; Ithoile Island, one reg-
Battalion i»«"‘ Iwltolry; infantry; Htolk one battery heavy ......
artillery; Texas, one regiment infantry;
ono regiment cavalry; Washington, one
regiment infantiy.
*^ ushiu^tiMi, *). ('. Illinois, ,
two regiment* infantry; Indiana, ono
reginio.it infantry; Kansas, one regi-
men* infnnti>, Kentuek>, ono
ment infantry; Massachusetts, ono
regiment infantry; Michigan, one regi-
ment- infantry; Missouri, two regi-
tueufs infantry; Now Jersey, one regi-
ment infantry; New York, two regi-
ment 3 infantry; Ohi.o, two regiments,
oue battalion infantry; Peqnsylviuiin, ■
four battalions infantry; Tennessee,
one battalion infantry; Virginia, ono
|,at,lll ' ou t“Lintvy.
1 c) Jampn, I'la. —Florida, ^ ono regi-
ment iufantrv; Georgia, one regiment
Illinoi*. .... i„.
bintt}, Iowa, ouo regunout iufantrv;
Michigan, one regiment infantry; ‘ New
York, one regiment infantrv; . North
c motma, one regiment ; Ohio, two
regiments infantry; Virginia, two reg-
iments infantrv; Wisconsin, one regi-
ment infantry. int.nt... * °
*
______ _
A i ’pi* iiiau 11 y in.i iii lo .if |;i> ll.
F.xpre** For I* llul.Ue .1 lly Mn*l....l lien of
55,009 >'.*r t ub*, Ala.
The Alabama Great Southern pass- ’
i iigeiti ..... ... am u as held ill up | by live men
neart uba.Ala., at 10 o’clock Saturday
flight.
The men were masked and were evi-
old hands at the business. The
express car was robbed of $’>,000. Ex-
I SooO vs as taken. TT' A j>osse with *???•„“? blood-
hopmuj ware put on their trail.
I’Al.MAUk’S SERMON.
THE GREAT DIVINE’S SUNDAY
DISfOURSE.
Tin* rhoiee of a Wife—From h Itiullc
llllile Heono In I>rim n a Prartlrnl and
IiiNpit-lrig r.cHNim For All Cl(i„t»c» of
I'eo|»fe—The Ciilllnjf For .special Work.
Ti xt: “Now Moses kept the (lock of
Jethro, hi* KKudus father Iu-law, tlio priest of
MMIan." III., I.
In flu* south.-astern part of Arabia a man
|* fitting by a Will. It Is tlie arid country
and wutar in fienno, ho that a w 11 Is of
groat value, and flonka and horilfl aro
driven vip*t distances to have their thirst
slacked. Jethro, a Mldlanito sheik and
priest, was so fortunate as to have seven
the watering. them They lower the plashing bucket#
and then pull up, the water
ori the stone* and c'dlllng their feet, and
the I roughs are filled. Who Is that man
out there, f iltlng unconcerned and looking
on? Why do.- lie not come and help the
women in this hard work of drawing water?
But no sooner hav the dry Ups and punt-
Ing nostrils of the ducks'begun to com well a
little in the brimming trough of the
than some rough Bedouin shepherds break
in upon the scene and with clubs and
•‘houts drive lemk the animals that wem
drinkln-f and aiYr.ght these atrls until
" V f 'V”’,- "T 1 ' ,,r "' k ? or th f SB m -
munm-m.l shepherds are driven to the ,
tron^hn, tuUIng t.io idticus of tho other
'•
S'X'&iLltt.'lX?
nation, mi l all the gallantry of his nature
is nr..us I, It is Moses who naturally had
» nul'ik temper, anyhow, as he domon-
strated on one oacasiou when tio Fawnn
Egyptian oppressing an Israelite and gave
the Egyptian a sudden clip and burled him
In the sand, and as lie showed afterward
when lie broke all the Ten Commandments
(lt , )V shattering the two granite slabs
wlilnh' the law was written. But the In*
justice of this treatment of the seven girls
j-m liim ..n (ire with wrath, and lm takes
this slieplierd hy the throat, and pushes
another shepherd till ho falls over the
trough, and alms a stunning blow between
the eyes of another, as lie cries “Begone.
vou villains!” and ho hoots and roars at
the .sheep nml cattlo and camels of these
Invaders and drives them Hack; and hav*
ing cleared ths place of the desperadoes,
,H ' th ” ot 1,1,3 Mldlanito
p |„. lk to gather their flonks together unj
) jr |„g thorn again to the watering,
The fact that it took the seven daughters
to drive the Hocks to the well implies that
f ft<*v woro immenso flocks, aud that hop
fathop was u rr,an of wealth, What wan
tlm use of glpporah’s slm homoaning havo reclined herself
witli work win,a might
on the hillside near tier father’s tent, nn<)
plucked buttercups, and dreamed out ro¬
mances, and sighed Idly to tho winds, and
wept over imaginary songs to the brooks,
No, she knew that work was honorable,
and that every girl ought to luive some¬
thing to do, and so sho starts with and tha
bleating and lowing and bellowing
n e| g Id a g droves to the well for tho watering,
Around every home there are flocks and
droves of cares and anxieties, and every
daughter of the family, though there bo
sewui, ought to bn doing her part to taka
care of the flocks. In many households,
not only is Zippornh, but all her sisters,
without practical and useful employments,
Many of them are waiting for fortunate
and prosperous matrimonial alliance, but
and =•
her of father proposal Jethro's sheep accepted; camels
will make that will be
caramels, tho two nothings will start on
tlio road of life together, every step more
Then* Is quostlou that ©very father niici
mot hor ought Vo ivak tho daughter at brook-
fast or ten table and that alt the .laugh.
other: ‘‘What would you°do If the family
fortune should fail, if sickness should
prostrate the breadwinner, if tlio flocks of
Jothvo should bo destroyed by a sudden ex-
ouraion of wolvos ana boars ami hyenas
from tho mountain? What would you do
for a living? Gould you support yourself?
Can you take euro of an invalid mother or
to a prosperous family, “(km you cook a
dinner if the servants should make a strike
for higher wages and leave thnt morning?”
There needs to be peaceful, yet radical
revolution among most of the prosperous
liomes of America, l>y which the elegant
do-nothings may be transformed into prac-
t,oal do-somethtngs. Let useless women
go to work and gather the flocks. Come,
JRpporah, in this Jet me of introduce you to Moses,
Nos call Moses that Clod has a
£*'at Hu luid mommy. promised Foqr the .udivuraneo hundred years of tho before oo-
time pressed Israelites struck the of hour, Egypt, and Tho clock .d
has now Moses
is called to tha work of rescue, Four hum
dred years is a very long time, but you see
Hod can remember a promise four hundred
years ns well us you can remember four
hundred minutes.
No ono realizes how groat ho is for goo.l
or for evil. There are branchings out and
roboumin, a ml rovorbonitions, anil olab-
orations ot Influence that onu not be osti-
mated. The ility or ouo hundred years of
mhHfrm Tlie'flap of'the wing of^tlm dm
strovlug angel that smote tho Egyptian
oppressors, tho wash of the Bad Sea over
And things oeoflr in your life and iu
mine that wo can not account for. They
may be the echoes of wlmt was promised
Oil. Notice, the pVoUn.gaUon ofVbe divine meimVryi
also tlmt Moses was eighty years
pf age when bo got this call to become tho
ho lived pffi tho n^oTherVH?
yearn had in wilderness of
Arabia. Nevertheless, lie undertook the
work, and if we want.to know whether he
• on'gy ptia^taskmastew,'and tho'splim!
*>red .'harlot wheels strewn on tho beach of
tlio lied Sea. and the timbrels which Miriam
u,'V e£v, g;aJneuu.iep 1USSeit 0VCr auJ
Still further^ watch this spectacle ot
genuine courage. No wonder wheuMoses
^wittered the rude* shepherd*, he wot. /.ip-
whether Urn cattle cd tlmscwm daughter*
of Jethro wore driven from (ho troughs bv
the rude herdsmen? w.l’lltSSiSISA'i?.?! Sousa of justice tired
£Sf, others 1 ® righted. All tho timo
at wells
of comfort, at wells of joy, literature at wells of re-
BgBm. and at wells of there are
outrages practiced, tho wrong herds get-
tiug tho first water. Those who have the
previous right come in last, if they come
511 nt a11 - Thank God, wo have here and
there a strong man to set things right! 1
am so glad tlmt when God has an especial
work compltehlt. to do, Ho has some ouo ready to ue-
still another, see lu this call of Moses
that if Ho God has auy especial There work for Egypt you
to do will help you. wore
nnd Arabia aud the Palestine with their
cr0 ' va « d populatiou. but the man the Lord
wanted was at the southern point of the
triangle of Arabia, aud He picks him right
put, the shepherd who kept tho flock of
Jethro, his father-in-law. the priest and
sheik. So God will not And it luird to take
you out from the sixteen hundred millions
of the human race if He wants you for auy-
thing J^snssf^ssufssi especial.
stories compared vriili the biography ot
Moses!
M*rrl*|e and I o*f«»lty.
Ah to tho question of marriage, U*
Registrar-General for Scotland publish¬
ed some tables of statistics In 1807 to
prove that married men live longer
than the unmarried. Scientific critics
In England and other countries, how¬
ever, have questioned the accuracy of
these tables, not holding that they
were deliberately and of intention
false, hut that the experiment was not
conducted on fair or just principles.
Thbse contestants may have been
bachelors of centenarian proclivities,
and having a reputation to sustain,
they would naturally examine a mar¬
ried man’s fables with close and scru¬
tinizing suspicion. For, ray the oppo¬
nents of this theory, if a man lives
longer by reason of marrying one wife,
could not he then double his age or
bis chances of longevity by marrying
two? Perhaps wives are to be taken,
however, like those of Henry VIII. of
England, only one at a time, though
he had six and then did not live to be
a centenarian. The reasons given by
old people for their long length of
years are often seemingly absurd. The
Scientific American of December lti,
1 SDH, had an account of Miss Eliza
Work, of Henrietta, New York, who
was within six weeks of being 100
years old. “The reason that I have
lived so long is that 1 have never
drunk tea nor coffee, and, above all,
never got married, and 1 have always
been hearty and healthly, too.” At
the age of 01 she traveled alone to her
native place in Vermont. She has al¬
ways been a hard worker-, never had
occasion to use glasses, and her teeth
are of original growth. Her brother
lived, she stated, to be 101, and sh9
thought he would havo lived much
longer bad he never married. He drank
tea and coffee, too. People who drink
such things, Miss Work thought, and
then aggravate the case by getting
married, ought not to expect to live
long. And yet, Miss Work, being her¬
self a centenarian, knows, perhaps, al¬
most as much about the case as physi¬
cians.—William Kinnear, in North
American Review,
An Ancient Custom.
From Republican Traveler, Arkansas City,
Kan.
Pilgrimages to some shrine of St, Vitus
to cure the disease known ns 8t. Vitus’ j
dance are no longer made. The modern
way of treating this affliction is within
rnaali of every household, ua la shown by
the experience ot Karl A. Wagner, tha
elevon-year-old son ot George Wagner, of
515 9th St,, Arkansas City, Kan. Tho fath¬
er telle the story ua follows:
“Over n year ago,” be says, “Karl was
taken with St, Vitus’ dance and continued
to grow worse during live months ho was
under a physician's care. His tongue be¬
came paralyzed and we could not under¬
stand ft word lie said, lie became very
thin, lost the use of his right log and
soemod doomed to become u hopeless in¬
valid. Wo had about given up hope when
I)r, Williams’ Pink Pills for Tale People
wore recommended to my wife by a lady
whose daughter had bouu cured of a simi¬
lar affliction by the pills, and
“I bought a box of them at once soon
noticed a 0
change for
the bettor in
Kart’s con- '
d i t i o n. I r-7
I whs pleased bought bo tlmt well / \ ■m ef A
more o t V
them, and s*- 1
when he had a
taken five k h
boxes the
disease dis¬
appeared. A Hopeless invalid.
“That was six mouths ago and there has
boon no return of the disease. The euro was
effectual and permanent, and I feel satisfied
that no other medlolne could havo pro¬
duced so mnrvolous a result. Wo feel re¬
joiced over tho restoration of our son, aud
cannot help but feel that Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills medicine for Palo Pooplo the aro market.” the most re¬
markable on proved
No discovery of modern times has
such a blessing to mankind as Dr. Will¬
iams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. Acting
directly on the blood and nerves, invigor¬
ating the body, regulating the functions,
they restore the strength anil health in tho
exhausted patient when every effort of the
physician proves unavailing.
These pills aro sold In boxes at 50 cents a
box or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had
of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr.
Williams’ Medicino Co., Schenectady, N.Y.
Says All Exchange.
“Hans Anderson of Brooklyn, N.
1’., was shot in the head forty-live
years ago, and last week lie coughed
up a bullet.” It is wonderful how long
it takes some people to get anything
through their heads.—Boston Tran¬
script.
At one time Spain offered to soil
to France, not Cuba alone, but Porto
Rico and the Philippines for about
000,000. And she didn’t need money
a bit more urgently then than she
does now. In other words, Spanish
honor has not always been absolutely
free from the touch of mercenary con¬
siderations.
Comfort Costs 50 Cents.
Irritating, aggravating, agonizing Tetter,
Eczema, Ringworm quickly and all other itching skin
dS-eases aro cured by the use of Tet-
terine. It is soothing, cooling, healing. Costs
50 cents a box. postpaid- brings comfort at
once. Address J. T. Suuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
A map of has Jerusalem found in iu mosaic, Palestine. over 1,500
years old, been
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Gog carets Candy Cathartic. lOo or 25c.
If _ G. (3. O. fail
to cure, druggists refund money.
Married men always have more buttons
off tliuir olothes than bachelors.
ness Fits after permanently tlrst day's cured. use of No Dr. fit* Kline's or nervous¬ Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free
Dii. K. H. Kline. Ltd.. 881 Arch St.. Phila.. Pa'
Dy spni'siA, Indigestion and all Stomach
troubles cured hy Taber's Pepsin Compound.
Sample Co., bottle Savannah. mailed Ga. free. Write Dr. Taber
Mfg.
Piso’s Cure is a wonderful Cough medicine.
—Mrs W. Pickkht, Van Siclen and Blake
Avcs., Brooklyn. N. V., Oct. 26, ISiR.
Scut free, Klondike Map
From Gold Commission's official survey. Ad¬
dress Gardner A Co., Colorado Springs, Colo.
,1. O. Simpson, Marquess. W. Ya„ gays:
“Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very bad
case of catarrh. ” Druggists sell it, 75c.
Tho man who kicks for justice sometimes
gets more of it than he wants.
S»-To-B»e for Fifty Cent*.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure, duc, tl Ail druggists
Tt.e man that makes the least noise isoften
the most dangerous.
.
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No amount of argument can convince the experienced,
honest grocer tiiat any other soap will give his customers
such general satisfaction as Ivory Soap. He knows that
they prefer Ivory Soap to new kinds, of unknown quality.
Ivory Soap v/ill sell because the people .want it, the .
other soaps may look like Ivory, but his customers want
the real thing — they may buy a new soap once to try it,
but they come back again and again for Ivory Soap, and
they insist on having it.
Copyrl^M. ISM, by Tbe P tteUt k Gfittbla Co., CiaeiftMtt
Queen Wilhcimina’s Oaih.
The coronation of the young queen
of Holland will take place, according
to a recently published decree, on Sep-
tember C, 189S. On that day the young
woman, with right hand raised, in the
presence of the states general, will
pledge herself to the following formu-
la, which is a strange contrast to the
oaths administered .o the Russian and
German emperors:
“1 swear to the people of the Neth-
erlaDd to observe and always maintain
the fundamental law. I pledge myself
to defend and preserve with all my
power the independence of the king-
dom, . to , protect , . public ... „ ana , private .. .„ lib-
erty and the rights of all my subjects,
and to employ for the preservation and
advancement of individual and general
prosperity all the means which the
laws place at my disposal, as the due
of an upright queen. And my God aid
me in my work.”
Sells 5,090 Pairs oi Crutches Annually.
A Kansas City dealer in crutches
said: “Crutches are staple articles
with us, and we sea on an average ten
pairs per week, or forty pairs a month.
This, of course, would make 4S0 pairs
in the course of a year. It Is a con¬
servative statement to say that alto¬
gether we sell 1,500 pairs of crutches
annually, and our firm is only one of
several in the city that handles them.
The total sales of crutches annually in
Kansas City would be hard to esti¬
mate, but would say that 5,000 pairs
would not be far from tbe exact num¬
ber."—Kansas City Times.
The silk industry of Russia con¬
sumes raw material to the value of
$7,500,000 yearly.
Don't Tobacco Spit *nd Smoko Tonr l ife Away,
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag¬
netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
ttac, the wonder-worker, thnt makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50o or Ji. Cure guaran¬
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New Nork.
In the whole of Greece there are only 153
newspapers.
Shake Into Your Shoe*
Allan’s Foot-Ease.n powder for the feet. It
ouroipaluful,swollen,nervous,smarting feet
and Instantly takes the sting out of corns
and bunions. It’s the greatest comfort dis¬
covery of the age. Allen’s Foot-Ease make*
tight or new shoes feel easy. It Is a certatn
cure for sweating, callous and Lot, tired,
aching feet. Tr it to-day. Sold by all drug¬
gists and shoe tores, 25 ? Trhd ^ftclta^e
3
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup forchildren
teething, softens the gums, reducesinflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
ST.VITUS’ DANCE, SPASMS and all nerv¬
ous diseases permanently cured by the use of
Dr Kline’s Groat Nerve Restorer. Send for
FRKE $1.00 trial bottle and treatise to Dr.
R. II. Kline, Ltd., 861 Arch Street, Phila., Pa.
In India there is a fly which attack* and
devours large spiders.
Educate Tour Dowel* With Caacnreta.
10c, Candy Cathartic, cure druggists constipation forever.
25c. If C. C. C. fail, refund money.
A kaffir's religion consists mostly in singing
and dancing.
.FT. ,/S One of the First Symptoms of
Failing Health in a Woman is
NERVOUSNESS Did
you ever think that there is always a
ir cause for this malady? In women Nervous*
i S’ nes* is generally fem the forerunner of some
: . Pamfu rm r / e di8ea8e , such as Whites,
1 Profuse „ or Irregular Menses, etc.
either of which will produce Nervousness
In all of its distressing intensity. If you use
i®r s d— Si m Gerstle’s Female Panacea
■ ;v ,E£ will TRABt (GLF.F.J maun.
yon very soon be cured of Nervous¬
If? ness and all other female troubles aa well
ao^iY J srp|.. a iur^i5 r , « a
I HAVE SUFFERED FOR YEARS
ffiteasare i..dI*.;,™;™* 6T3 ™u»dv.Jod..eniaio*,VF'i;t,]
,
more good than all others. I shail continue their aild 1 ley ^ ^ 0lne
Glenmore, Ga, use
is MRS. Raratt nrvirrKrQ
If your case complicated, write us and we will give vou fhin
formation If he regarding does the keep use it of this medicine. Get it from vmd-rd n
gist. not jERSTLE send us i 81 and ChattLnoora
all charges paid. L. CO.. Tenn ’
_
No Choice.
“Lester, dear,” said Mrs. Ghidings,
anxiously to her husband, “I don't
; jike that cough of yours.” “Fra
sorr y ; ’> replied Giddings, “but it is
, the p est j have.’’--Harper’s Bazar. ■
j _
~
9
§
“I havo been using CASCABETS far
Insomnia, with which I have been afflicted for
over twenty years, and I can-say that Cuscarets
have given me more relief than any other remp-
dy I have ever tried. I shall certainly recom-
mend them to m.v friends as being all. they nre
represented." Tuos. Gillard, Elgin, ill
j candy
j CATHARTIC
TRADE MAR* REOISrSRCO
Good, „Pleasant. Never Sicken. Palatable. Weaken, Potent. Gripe, Taste 10c, Good, £5c, no
or 50e.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Reined; Tampan;, (Jiic.-ipo. Montreal, Kew TortJ’sH
MO-TO-BAG gists Sold and to 1 CI.KE Riiaranteed Tobacco by all Habit. flrjjr-
BUILDERS’^
AND _MILL SUPPLIES
Costings, Steol Weights, Beams,' Tanks. Columns nnd Chttn
nel Bolts, Bods. Towera,
Steel Wfre and Manila' Rope, Hoisting Engine
and Rope Pumps, Hoists. Jacks, Derricks, Crabs, Chain an.
Oreast Every Day. Make Quick Delivery.
LOMBARD IRONWORKS* SUPPLY CO
AUGUSTA, GA
SIP JkY e d**1 iRbt .o do an early friend
, WK Good turn. Hie working part* of XQ
- AMY AERMOTORl : c‘
exchanged
^ FOR A ROLLER
BEARING, zephyr tun.
■-fc£- eveCgomg, everlasting, power-
doubling, UP-TO-DATE '93
MOTOR, 8 FT. FOR S6; 12 ft. fore-12; lC^ft.
for $30. They run like a bicycle, a^id are made like a
watch, mill power. every movable The Aermotor part on r*r. rollers. when Doubles all .other geared mills -fl
stood still, and made the steel windmill business.
THE NEWBEATSTHEOLDASTHK
OLD BEAT THE WOODEN WHEEL. i
On receipt of amount, revved motor (but not wheel ;
or vane) will be sent to replace old ono then to be. i
returned. Offer subject to cancellation at any time, 1
If y«ur old wheel is not aft Aermotor, write for
terms of swap—new for old—to go on old tower . r s
a^You can put it on. Aerusotor Co., Chie&go.^n
SI. Andrews Ci Tea
FOR THE LIVER
Cures Sick Headache, Biliousness. For sale by
dealers. To get free sample package send 2c.
stamp to
ANDREWS MFC. CO.,
BRISTOL,, TEVX,
OPIUM Habit. NEW HOME CURE. Painless. No
DetenUonlrom work. Ouirnntoed! Writ#
DR. PURDY. Houston. f««.
\
25 Users. A Jit 98-2G