The Newnan weekly news. (Newnan, Ga.) 189?-1906, April 28, 1905, Image 3

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My Breath. Shortness of Breath Is One of the Com monest Signs of Heart Disease, Notwithstanding; what many physic ians »ay, heart disease can be cured. Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure has per manently restored to health many thousands who had found no relief In the medicines (nllopnthlc or homoeo pathic) of regular practicing physicians. It has proved Itself unique In tho his tory of medlclno, by being so uniformly successful in curing those diseases. Nearly always, one of tho first signs of trouble Is shortness of breath. Wheth er It comes ns a result of walking or running up stairs, or of other exercises. If the heart Is unable to meet this extra •demand upon its pumping powers—there Is something wrong with It. The very best thing you can do, Is to take Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure. It will go to tho foundation of tho trou ble, and make a permanent euro by strengthening and renewing tho nerves. “1 know thnt Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure Is a great remedy. For n number of years 1 suffered from shortness of breath, smothering spells, and pains In my left side. For months at a time I would bo unable to lie on my left side, and If 1 lay tlat on my hack would nearly smother. A friend ndvised using Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure, which I did with good results. I began to lmprovo at once, and after taking several bottles of the Heart Cure the pains in my side and other symptoms vanished. I am now entirely well. All those dreadful smothering spells are a thing of tho past."—F. P. DRAKE, Middletown, O. If the first bottle does not help you, the druggist will refund your money. TlTJTlTI Writo to us for Free Trial ivJljJSi Package of Dr. Miles’ Antl- *>aln Pills, tho New Scientific Remedy for Tain. Also Symptom Blank. Our Specialist will diagnose your case, tell you what Is wrong, and how to right It, Free. Dlt. MILES MEDICAL CO., LABORATORIES, ELKHART, IND. i with the help of a large wall-map of only by great effort, rid ot its entire t AT 1 I )V 11' 11 r U ]?()1)1 Iv Jerusalem on the platform for his own load, and stooping down, a camel may * use, and small diagrams of the city go. When our Lord commended the printed for and placed iu the hands of giving a eup of cold water, not merely I the members of the Convention where- water, lie alluded to one’s taking the ' with to follow him; in which he showed trouble to go to the place where water flint the investigator must start from was carefully cooled by evaporation in THIS PIONEER THIEF DID HIS WORK SILENTLY AND WELL. Till 1|>I»1 111- attaches and work out from these bases of certainty to a careful study of points of doubtful location; that the springs, valleys and bills are all loeatable, by Scripture designations compared with 11 mil Win <• I HU Mil I, the points to which little or no doubt one of the porous jars used lor that pur pose. Such are some of the things in the land lighting the Book. Suggestion: Our southern fanners might learn something to their protit from the way in which Palestinian the city and its surroundings, ns also the farmers live; not in isolated homes very nature and location of the wnlls scattered here and there through the and gates of Jerusalem; and thnt one country anil exposing their wives and might unhesitatingly believe that the daughters to possible outrage ol iutru- Mosqlie of Omar occupies the very site dors, but in homes built up in settlo- of the temples of Herod and Solomon; incuts as protection by night as well as that tlie Quarries of Solomon seem by day and near enough to their lands to Harrell, for he was one el the n i .v early settlers In that reglen, and he 111- ■ That Si ll AVnH 1? i>»i i-ri-ii. l,» l 11n* < rii Omni lot n ( Ini|t to I Captains of Industry have come out of the west as well as the east. And the great San Joaquin valley of Cali fornia lias produced Us quota. One of the best known of these men was Jas per Harrell, who bad Ids borne la Tu lare county, but whose business trans actions carried him all ever the state and Into ether states as well. No one bad a wider acquaintance limn Mr. identified surely, and that Gordon’s go out niul work them each day without Calvary and the garden tomb close by mental worry tor the safety of tho loved have every probability in their favor; ones at home meanwhile. There are etc., etc. i that ill all cases the explorer i many other advantages about, this svs- should study tho places with his Bible tom, too; for example, it would not only in his hand. 1,6 better for tho schooling of the oliil- c. “Characteristic Observances „f dreu of tl.eir homes, but a higher grade Orientals Conference," conducted by Rev. Dr. Glios’n-el-Howie, of Mt. Leb anon, Syria, in which he alluded to the custom of salting new-born babies,with out which a child might be subjected orally grew up with the valley, lie was mi exceedingly popular man, and this was probably one reason why lie nour ished as a rancher and stockman and amassed a goodly fortune before the close of tlie nineteenth century. He handled large herds of cuttle and was a dealer In and grower of bay and bar ley to such an extent thnt lie came to be familiarly nicknamed ’’Barley" Har rell. One bright spring day long before the Southern Pacific railroad wound Tlu> Mnanlc Flooring of tlie Ilnirt, The northern portion of the Colorado desert Is paved with the most wonder ful pebbles in the world. In many parts so exquisitely laid as to defy success ful Imitation by the most skilled worker in mosaic Hoofing. ’1 hose pebbles are made of porphyry, agates, earnellan, quart/., crystals, garnets, chrysolite and other such beautiful materials. They are packed together so that tho surface composed of them Is like a Hour, and they look ns If pressed Into It with a roller. As a rule, they are of nearly uniform size, and each one Is polished brilliantly, as If ollbd and rub bed. Most of them are perfect spheres, and the reded Ion from them of the sun’s rays is gorgeous beyond descrip tion. Much convex surface gives back a ray of light, and the ground for miles seems ns If literally paved with gems. Thus tin* whole surface of the plain Is a combination of myriads of rolloctors, each pebble being so highly polished that It Is like a mirror, and It Is believed that the lakes of the desert mirage are produced by this means. The pebbles are polished by the loose sand which Is blown hither and thither. Land of Promise (TO AND FROM) By Rev. C. O’N. Maktindale. ARTICLE XXXVII TURKEY' [Continued] (22). PALESTINE: The World’s Fourth Sunday School Con vention at Jerusalem. ON of teaching capacity could bo gOttUN than is now tho case itt sparsely settled rural districts. Besides, it would stop tlie tide from tlie oouutry to the town and city, which at present is a growing later to the taunt that ho was not well j volume, and working detrimentally to | l() or4) „| i o»I double line track up and salted, that being regarded as a disgrace, die interests of the country at large. over the Teliucliapl mountains from the and. asking tho wometf of Jerusalem if (3) 1,1 die afternoon a devotional great valley Into the Mojave desert they salted their babies, then said ho 1 meeting was hold on that, place of sacred Mr. Harrell mid Ills father-In-law start- had been thoroughly salted at birth, in j memory, the Mount of Olives; at which e.l from their home In 1 uhire comity fact had been nickledto keep him sweet Dr. John Bancroft Devins,of New York, to lU, e on horseback to Los Angt s, a laot naa oeeu piCKiea to Keep nun sweer, distance of 250 miles at least. But and hence was well-preserved, reference presided, nnd the prayer-hymn, gm>h lengtliy j ouraL , y „ W ore no t Infre- being made to this custom in God’s re-! Josns, as Thou wilt! sung in autumn-1 uen( j v undertaken by stockmen and buko to Jerusalem in E/.ok. 1(1:4. Ho * sive praise to that Blessed Saviour who merchants In those anleralIroiul days showed by citation of a recent case that | in the Garden of Gothsemano not lar | a California. The two men stopped even to this day a wrj ing is not valid if away bad onco offered to His Father tho overnight wherever twilight caught it bears not the inn of the seal on | prayer, "Not My will, but Thine bo | them, for tho country was almost un- emn’s finoer rinir however the writing I done?" Whon permission to hold tho ; Inhabited. may be attested by witnesses. He lifted ! mooting had been petitioned of the an- p One "WJ" «."‘g'.-ove nil cariieHt plea for the arrest of changes thorities of the Russian Church on going on, tlmt. the Holy City and the j Olivet, the saintly response had been, | Holy Land may be preserved intact for j "Why not, do we not worship tho same the confirmation of tlie Biblo and tlm Christ?" In tlie ooiirso of the service study of future generations. Ho olosed that genial white-haired saint, Dr. by putting before tho body for discus- Richard Glover, London, spoke ol sion the signifloent query: "Ought the j "Christ’s Tears,” amongst other things movement toward Westernism in Syria! declaring: "A tearless life is a loveless and Palestine to be arrested, in order to life. If wo have any sorrow, lot us be- oonserve for Biblo students the light- take ourselves to I he tears of Jesus, ami giving customs of the Holy Land?” Uhere get graoo nnd strength.” Along with Dr. Howie was his bright- («) In tho evening "The Organised j faced daughter, Ruby, a girl of about Sunday School Work” was the theme ! fourteen years, who had been baptized of discussion, presented by picked work ers representing different countries: o. Tho Rev. Frank Johnson, editor of the Sunday School Chronicle of London, gave a bright outlook ns to tho century’s organized Sunday school work in Great Britain, and said secretaries of tho Lon don Sunday School Union were on the eve of going to America to study Sun day school methods as pursued there, b. Mrs. Mary Foster llrynet - , that 1 the day before in tlie Convention tent. d. "Customs of Syria ns II Ins trn ting SECOND DAY’S SESSIONS ON the Biblo,” set forth by Rev. George W. MONDAY, APRIL 181’H Mnckic, D. D., of Buyrout, Syria, in a (1) In the morning, after music nnd way that nmnzed us with the great devotions, tlie Convention, on the Re- wealth of tho subject. Ho told us where i port of its Nominating Committee, the peculiarly dextrous art of winnow- unanitnonsly elected Mr. K. K. War- ing tlie chaff from tho wheat can be seen reu, of Three Oaks, Michigan, our great at this day in Lebanon, separating by I and inspiring leader, president of the | the friction rather than by the blow of n 1 do Convention, and George W. Bailey, M. pestle the kernel from the chaff without D., of Philadelphia, its former faithful injury to the kernel. He described the and efficient treasurer, chairman of the rolling of tho enormous burden (sofa International Sunday School Executive Committee; v,Hi Editor W. J. Somul- rotli, of St. Louis, that indefatigable worker for tho cause, as enrollment sec retary. While the singing on Sabbath was conducted by Rev. F. S. Jacobs, of New York, on Monday it was led by tlie English musical director, Mr. E. C. Car ter; in either instaiioe with marked ef ficiency. After settlement of some othor business the attention of tho forenoon was devoted to “Studies of the Laud” iloug the following lines: • a. “The Geographical and Historical 3asis of Divine Revelation,” presented >y the Rev. J. Munro Gibson, of Lou- lou, in which he oalled attention to vliat the laud stands for and its place in evelation ; that the central place is giv- u tlie Laud of tlie Book not merely in uuday school maps, but on old secular laps uuil in a Gennau classical map and then; that while the country is oom- iratively small it is not in a corner, it the center of tlie world’s history as ell, the rocky ridge of a mighty em- re the only and magnificent rostrum . am which to reacli the world with tlie ord of God; that the revelation of id is not speculation nor mythology r legend but undeniable fact inter- • iven witti oilier facts of history; that i laud with lti mountains, livers, miliar in tho Orient),upon the shoulders of the burclen-bearer, (wliilo kneeling to receive it) by two of his friends, who also help him to his feet and steady him at the start; thus adding meaning to tlie loving command, "Roll tliy burden upon the Lord!” He illustrated sin having its heel upon the neck of the viotim by the shepherd’s mode of punishing unruly sheep; throwing it to the ground and plncing on its neck the heel of his san dal from which projeot sharp nails; hence tho figure of "putting the heel on tho neok of the enemy” to indicate his torture. See how luminous the follow ing allusions are; The wolf scatters the sheep, catches one and holds on or drags until the sheep is breathless and its mi of scrubby ouk ittul brush. Their horses were staked out to graze, and after u monger meal around the camp fire the two men iirriinguil their lied for the night. Mr. Harrell liiul around him n strong, wide buckskin belt In which he carried $1,000 In gold coin. With this lie intended purchasing a number of entile rated us feeders, and these would then be driven back Into the valley and prepared for the mar kets. rnhiickllng bis heavy money belt, lie threw it on the ground under his saddle, which he always used as a pillow In camping out. Sweetly and soundly the two men slept, with no thought of harm or hint of danger. When mnrnlng.qumc lliey arose early, Imilt a lire, cooked and nlo llielr break fast with a relish and then brought up their horses to lie Huddled and bridled. When Mr. lliirrell'plcked up Ills saddle lie stared at the hare ground and whis tled sharply. ! “Where In Lucifer Is that licit and my money?" he exclaimed. Sure enough, It had disappeared. The dilions and successes of the Sunday ,'camping ground nnd every nrllele on It Wonderful Fronton. A curious effect of the wear and tear to which the earth’s crust Is ever being subjected Is exhibited In the sin gularly capped pinnacles existing on South river, In the Wasatch moun tains, In Utah. There are hundreds of these slender pillars, ranging In height from 40 to 400 feet, most of them crowned by large caps of stones. They are not works of human art, as might lie Imagined, but are the memorial monuments of the hill from which they have been, out by tho action of air and water. Those pinnacles alone re main of many square tulles of solid rocks, which have been washed away to a depth of some 400 feet. Tho greater hardness of the surface has caused It. to resist corrosion more than the underlying rock, thus leaving huge nips of stone perched high In air on the points of their columns. One dou ble column, capped by a single stone, forms a natural bridge both unique nnd picturesque. voted lover of the work ill America ami Mexico, strikingly set forth the con- school in the United States. o. Rev. Richard Burges, India, pre sented tlie grunt work of the India Sun day Soliool Union, a field of tremendous scope,reaching "from the Indian Ocean to Slum Status in Burmali, and from the snow-capped Himalayas to the burning equator.” In the year 1902 there was a gain of over 60,000 beyond the preceding year in India's entire Sunday school membership of almost 1160,000. d. Tho Rev. J. P. McNaighton, Smyrna, exhibited tho work in Turkey. In all tho Christian mission schools there wo have not only a Sunday school, bat also a daily Bible soliool, the Interna tional Lessons being employed as sup plements to tho daily study. There American missionaries have played a great part in translating thu Word of Till* Flrut Friction Matches. The first really practicable friction matches were mnde by nn English apothecary mimed Walker In 1S’_’7. lit coated splints of cardboard with mil plmr nnd tipped them with n mixture of sulphide of antimony, chlorate of potash nnd gum. Each box, bidding eighty-four mulches and sold for shilling, contained also a folded pie of glass paper, which was to he pressed together while (he mutch was drawn through It. Three years later another liigenlotisqiorson limned Jones In Lon | don patented the Idon of making ii small roll of paper, soaked with clilo rale of potash illlil sugar nl one end, ; with n thin glass globule filled with strong sulphuric add attached nl the same point. When Hie sulphuric add was liberated by pinching tlie globule It acted upon the chlorate of potash mid sugar so us to produce fire. strength is spent, and then finishes Ilia bloody work. Oriental head-dress and' God "imo * the ^dmi'ems "'familiar' to* the iuvesture are important too. While vve , cllildren throughout the Turkish empire; throw down our hats; the Orienta a - t | le Jerusalem Convention was re- ways treats his head-coveriiig with re-1 gftrdea a8 a valuab i 0 0g(jut for breaking- speot, Tlie flowing Eastern garment is down harriers between religious bodies, very simple in its make-up, without any e The orownillg ttddreH8 of tllB 0VeI1 . complexity at all. Ihe parse is often j however,was by America's splendid merely a sewed place in a long girdle Sunday gc j l00 i representative, Mr. Mar- whicli is bound over the purse part for i(m Lawrei)C(ii Tolud0| Ohio, on "Uliild- its proteotiou. ilio prophet s question,. | lood the Hope of the World,” in which “Who hath believed our report? and to | j 10 0 i 0 q Uea tly portrayed from experi- wliom is the arm of the Lord revealed? | euoe t j iat t j lu c |,ji d ,j U suh hud set in the refers to the figure ol Jehovah baring m j dfJ t has remained in the midst to this His arm in preparation for the vigorous da y ) aud w ill there remain so long us .ins and fields, and customs, is u accomplishing of His purposes; Just as < t , )e world Btandfl . I)0 i ut ed to the Sunday Duger testimony to the truth ot revela- the Oriental woman throws back for her 8chool as thu strategic strength ot the 7 than even its actuul ruins; that our work her large flowing sleeves, and fas- ohnstiau Church, furnishing 8!) out of gion is not a matter of natural evolu j tens them back ot' her neck. Well might eyery 10( , additioUH to eliuroli member- 1, but ot' Divine manifestation for i the prophet complain that though Jeho- B hip; and pled that the children be given •ation of man; that the results of vah’s preparations are so evident, yet no [jie best, the best in buildings, in equip- laeologieul exploration in Egypt as one is concerned enough to notice the j a teaching, and the best incur Palestine tally exactly with the revealed arm. Tlie Jewish couple sits B y U:j j )tt n,y and love and effort, that they plural records;that while the moun- j under a prepared canopy, and this is the mtty be gaved aad traiaud tor tll0 Borv ice b and rivers of other countries may bridegroom’s chamber: "Rejoiceth as a of God amoag , aea rf those of Palestine, this land with bridegroom coming out of his chamber,” | atiouul life aud steady light through Psa. 19:6. An Oriental needle has no est days is beyond comparison, her eye or slot; it is more correct to say rising to heights of spiritual vision needling the thread than threading tlie tamed by those of any other nation; needle. It is a slmme and offense to sew rearing a standard, the standard of a button on a cotton or woolen garment 56 pages, 76 illustrations. De- Jross, over all lauds therefrom, the | with linen thread. The sower goes forth SC ribes California and the route 1 of Christ running through all his- tosow because he lives in a village tor j there. Chicago, Milwaukee and that to the question, ’Can any protection from robbers. Travelling pa y j p ac]fic a()(J Soulh _ thing come out of Nazareth?” he through the land, it is common to see • d reply, "No,but Jesus Christ came vust fields with no house in sight; und ; ern 1 acihc Line. God!”’ nnd that to any discontent- as the sun is setting you see many farm- ivellers in the Holy Land lie should ers with their plows on their donkeys, ] anc ] Limited. Leaves Union to preach from the text, "What oxen, or camels wending their way from p assen g e |- Station, Chicago, 6:05 VP f,nr for to see’” tlmt because of tlie fields to little settlements up on the , , . ,. yt out ior to bee. umu m ( | a , J y < Arrives ban Francisco things no one bad reason to go mountainsides. lliey may separute in . disappointed but the rather the day but when night comes they go the third day in time for Dinner aliened and confirmed in the teach- to their respective settlements. Much California bcok sent for 6 cuita f tiie Book and the Christ, salt in Palestine is impure, mixed with postage. F. A. Miller, General •‘Jerusalem in Old Testament other things the chemical strength de- p asgen ger Agent, Chicago, or VV. presented by Prof. L. B. Patou, '.dines, then it> has lost its savor, and is g Howel | 8l ]3 roau artford Theological Seminary, only fit to be cast out. A little gate or ' 0 *' , (in Jerusalem as director of tlie door cut in a large gate to use after the * orl£ * can School of Oriental Study and large gate is closed for the night is called — .■■■• •ch in Palestine during 1903-’04), tlie eye or needle’s eye, through which jcu in x-aiesuue uum 5 1, j -• Real service is > vi r ser vniry. (To be continued.) BOOK CN CALIFORNIA were carefully searched, nnd then ev ery foot of ground within a wide cir cuit was minutely gone over, hut not a sign of any belt or money was found. Neither could any tracks of either mun or animal be seen. It was a mystery ivliut hud become of tlmt money licit, for they were many, many miles from any human habitation, and no one had passed lliem on the trail for days. Giving up the search with reluctance, the two men went on south to the end of their Journey, but they did not buy any cattle. About thirteen months later Mr. Har rell and another of Ills live stock friends made the hiiiiio horseback trip again. They camped not far from the place where the buckskin belt had been lost on tho previous Journey. “Right over yonder," said Mr. Har rell, showing his friend, "Is where I lost $1,(500 In gold when I went through here about 11 year ago. I’d like to know what became of tbut pile." “Let’s go over and look around there again Just for fun," suggested his friend. They did so, and, strange to relate, they accidentally stumbled right over the very spot where the money had been dropped. For over twelve months thnt heap of twenty dollar gold pieces Imd been kissed by tho grasH and flow ers, wept upon by the rain and dew, winked at by tlm stars, smiled at by the moon, inflamed by tlie sun and fan ned by the breezes, yet there they were, apparently unchanged In the least. Though the money had mysteriously disappeared, It was almost as strangely recovered. All of it was found but two twenty dollar pieces. Here is tho explanation: A hungry coyote had passed by the sleeping (rev eler and had sniffed around till it found the buckskin belt. This was seized and carried off to a safe distance before the animal stopped to chew up the buck skin. On the way two of the coins had dropped from thu belt, but Hie rest of the gold held in place 1111 It was torn from Its recesses as the sharp toothed hungry coyote devoured Ills stolen tid bit.—Kan Francisco Chronicle. ■ ■■ Ataaa Peniston’s Drug Store Grime s Spring Medicine. Urmia's Kidney anil Bnoknoht Ultra. Ornnn's Gough Guru. ('nine’s Ucndnclio Relief. Uranu's Uliolera and Diarrhoea Mixture. Urnne's Family Liniment. Uranu's Eo/.enm Cure. Urnne's Liver Powders. Urnne's File Salve. ('rune’s I aver Fills. Urnne’s Female Relief. Iliese ere Mention! I’repere- tinns end ere Sold end Ker.om- nicmlctl el L Peniston’s Drug Store. The Publisher’s Claims Sustained Tin* Ctan<ln Fnlilo. Sovornl Hporh's of |iihim?1h hnvo nj>- • piirntiis for producing sounds slinllnr I to Hint of the grasshopper or modlflca- j tlons of It. Of a different typo Is tlmt | with which tlie cicadas are endowed. | Only the males or tills family are sing ers, for which the Greek poets called them happy because their females were dumb. With tho undents a cicada sit- | ting on ti harp was tho symbol of mu- 1 slo, A pretty fable tells of the con test between two clthnrn players, In which the curious event happened thnt when one of the contestants broke a . , , 1,1m tlm huger nail sovenir requirements Of a string a singing cicada sprang on Ills g 0nora t| on which ilniumida morn of popular lmn> nnd helped him out so that he philological knowlodgo than any gonoratlon 1 that tho world has ovur contained. gained tho prize. it in perhaea noedlou to add that we rofer- to th» illiitlunary In our Judicial work aa of tho highest uutliorlty In omiuruoy of ileHnt- tlou; anil that. In tho futuraaa In the paat it United States Court of Claims Tho I’lilillshi'i-a or Wcbslcr'a International Dictionary allego thnt It "Is, In filet,tho |«)pu - lur Unahrlilgi'il thoroughly riMMlItodlnevory ■ lidail,und vastly enriched In every part, with, thu piii'iniHo of iidaptlng It to moot tho lurger mid snvurur ruiiulroiuunta ol' unuther genora- tlon." Wo urn nl’ the opinion (hat this allegation niiml olnnrly and nuiniratoly dvaorllma tho work Hint law I icon ncciinipllflhed and tho namlt tlml has Is-iui rciudmil. Tho Dictionary, iw It now at nulls, law lawn thoroughly re- 1 nl 11 oil In every ilotull, law boon oorrootod In overy part, anil Is admirably adapted to meet tlm lurger mid auvoror requirements of a generation which dimimida more of popular The Wsrlil of Trnile. "Yesterday I bought,” writes a corre spondent, "soine black Jet buttons, and when I got home I found on tho card, ’Best Austrillluu Make.’ 1 took a pen cil to write In my account book. I found it bail 'U. S. A.’ upon It. I sharpened the point, nnd on the sharp ener was ‘New York.’ I got out a match to light the lamp, nnd on tho box was ‘Made In Sweden.' I lit the lamp nnd found on It, ’Made In Bnvn- rln,’ niul so on and so on."—London Telegraph. The Ideal Saddle Horne. 'Hie Ideal saddle horse is from fif teen to sixteen hands high, short back- j ed and well coupled. It lias thill, high withers, a long, well arched neck and a long, keen ear well set on the head. Tho tall should be set high on the j rump, and the rump Itself should be somewhat sloping. Tlie horse should have besides flat, sinewy bones In Its legs and a medium sized foot.—Gaun try Life I11 America. will be tlm source of constant reference. CIIAHI.ES O. MOTT, Oklsf JtutlM.li . I.A WHENCE WELDON. *> I.AWHENCE WELDON, JOHN DAVIS. STANTON J. PEELtitL C1IAKLKH II, IIOWItT. < V7w nhowi refer* to WKWiTEli'S 1 DICTIONARY- GRAND PRIZE 4 INTERNATIONAL THE (the highest nwsrd) was given to the IntenMht tlonul ut tlm World’a Fair, Bt. Imuls. GET THE LATEST AND BEST You vrill he interested in our ejieclmen jiuuch, sent free. G.&C. MERRIAM CO., t PUBLISHERS, L SPRINGFIELD, MASS. ...White Barber Shop... C. T. BAILEY, Proprietor. Only first-class white bar- bers employed. Prompt, re liable, courteous attention Chinn’s Goose Stnmp. In China the goose Is the symbol of peace, and the picture of a goose ap pears on some postage stamps. It Is This is the route of The Over-! «•“* »«»foro Christ the ruler of what is now China sent a messenger Into a foreign land. He never returned and was supposed to have been killed. One day a wild goose Is said to have flown into the ruler’s castle, and beneath Its wing was a note from the messenger, who told of his trip and the trouble he was experiencing. An army was sent to rescue him from bis captors, and ever since the goose has been accepted as a sacred bird among Ghinamen. This is the story which goes with Uie goose on the Chinese stumps, i Cntlcrxtooil III. IJualnena. Fashionable Tailor Go front at once. Two young clerks there after suits. New Man (whispering)—I’m waiting on it millionaire. "Leave him and attend to the clerks. These millionaires don’t buy new clothes once In Uve years, und SCI’VICC glVOll all CUStom- A clerk Is good for u fresh suit every , three months."-New York Weekly. Cl’S, at tllO USlial prices. We The Difficulty. bavotlic o111 y electric rnas- Mr. Rooke—I hope you didn’t believe what they said about me. Miss nuiid—i sage machine in the I make It a point never to believe more than half I bear. Mr. Rooke—But the ) Cxivo it a trial ; trouble Is you women generally believe the wrong half. it city, does the work perfectly. New riuyniulY*. - Mother—Tommy, I don’t like to have you play with boys who are bad. Tom- Friphtful Suffering Relieved, my—But Ihe good boys are no good, ; Suffering frightfully from the viru* ma/nma.—Chicago News. lent poisons of undigestible food, O G. Grayson, of Lula,Miss., took Dr. King’ New Life Pills, "with the result,” he 1 writes, "that I was cured.” All stom ach and bowel disorders give way to their tonic, laxative properties. 26c at J. T. Reese’s and Dr. Paul Penuiston’s drug store, guaranteed. Chronic Cnne. “Has your wife complained very long?” asked the doctor. “Ever since we were married,” re plied Meekly sadly.