The Savannah morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1900-current, September 13, 1900, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

| I y* your blood is your life it behooves you to keep it pure. That person who goes through the world without regu- in*k a kan §k ITI 8 B ■ * ar ty purityinjg his blood gets an affliction. Nine ailments out of ten have their origin in thin, impoverished blood. And to }tt em pt to remejy them by preparations recommended especially for them is to lose sight of their cause, and the relief is U n mav'rhpiimatf-m omlme s! l , rnay be prepared that will relieve eczema, but this ailment will have another outbreak. Dyspepsia may find temporary relief in certain rem n: L ! scrofula - cancer, erysipelas and women troubles, but the final cure only comes when the blood is purified. Pure blood builds up the constitution. n org a ns so that food becomes nutritious and dyspepsia will disappear. Pure blood is clear of all acid from which rheumatism gets its start. Pure ‘ P s K |ves risc t° cancer, eczema and scrofula. Pure blood disposes of the causes of a thousand petty diseases that render you uncomfortable and unhappy. Graybeard Is the PUREST BLOOD PURIFIER Made. ai cured Cancer. U .a cured E,*rm. j. 4a cured Rheumatism, li up cured Catarrh, li > 4 cured Dyipnwia. ji .1 you. thee were not trill.ng all „ but ©very one an ailment which (fc, r had failed to cure. ~ beard I* made of freah herb*, blee. K h .i.d berrle* It contain* no mercury i.ifh For eradicating W ami dep ,, ,ii ailment* a* bancar. Catarrh. Eexe g, theumatlam. Dype|v*ia. It haa no on earth You want nothing el*n to Try nothing else Nothing e!a lo ary In Greybeard you have every , to build you up and malt- you rtrou* , an your dl*ea*e It will cVueh out j, !t*a*e. It will leave you a* you were 5.: the ailment *etaed you., i .i If nothing a hundredth part aa , C.raybcard to <lo this Thee** I* „ ; g made like Oraybeard—none ever . i be. It w one of the great Invention* fc : the world. Catarrh of Stomach .k< Gray heard and know it help* me c „ . than anything I can get 1 have ea rn rt of the monuinh ar.d can't find any- to relieve me but Greybeard '•EUNICE FOUNT*'V. •'l*eesvl..c. Ind.” A Drummer Cured. \\r J M Brown. many year* * drum* t- Rat svlll*. Ark . wrlt<“: "I hav* i—. • .U.*hl for a long tlmr with rhnjma t...m in in my and Joint* Whrn I **t I rould not g* up without fipro •k* groat puln When I utood on my *n\ length of tlm# I wan compeliM •<*.< •iown and oven oven got no relief . ■ *i rltg fht ailment Hit reiiol ♦ gan the uee of Omvb*arl a few a miiu* and am plea*o<| to way that !'•' ’ iru all right Nothing over gave ine I *: but Graybeard. A Conductor Cured. 'itracted cold u few year* ago work in oi Ihe bridge gong over In Alabama t 4 i .i- laid u|> with rheumatism I tried • many remedies all of which seemed . t> -ve me some, but none cured me / ’me good o* far w they wrem. but th-v .ltd rot go far enough ■ .rd cured m before I had taken ;n a. much a* of other retrodlee Wm W McDANIRLs. C. R R Conductor. Get GRAYBEARD at Drugstores- Or write SPACE PENETRATORS. A l*H<l’oKD KTHFJt UMII* IKIOKKU l oil THU INKXIWA. I"r Travel llftnern flu* I’lanrta. I'oAotliilily of llimiiik •*'ri*nla I*l v •** hi Mnr->ri Khlnu Miirhlarß. FrAm iho Washington Btr. will man ovonfually travel to Thl* question the Star rorre *>- i -m yesterday hrod at Prof. Elmer bn- .if the (.i(ph laboratory. p iiUI professor throw up his hand*, but M-rioualy. profeaaor, they tell t . you have recently made some ex- I- mints throwing new light on this iroM- m." • y do. do they? That Is interesting when 1 got my machine In running I will take you along with mo on * trip. Then you will have plenty ®f n it for your paper. Hot day. Isn't U?*' i • wsiwiper man saw that he would Meal up to the point by gradual i* do you think of Count Zeppelin's rshlp? IBooks as If wo all would be r • i ing the air pretty soon, doesn't It. > It does. Aerial navigation will ho i Meal means of travel within ten It will replace all present modes *' 1 a sportation.* It will turn the whole Into n * Ingle neighborhood I)ls w 111 he practically annihilated, will no longer l*e any necessity f° r id* or bridges, because aerial trans- Mon will ho ’extremely cheap, eco il <nd far safer than any other form iv.| When the workman can live ■ 1 hundred miles from the worksnop re and go home to lunch he will see rowded cities gradually spread out ho country The millions now spent ■ ole and bridges will go to beautify • .irth's natural landscape The • <>( houses will he transformed Into •.r porrh-llko vestibules for the of aerial vehicles, nnd a light will ■ 'turning on the housetop to guide il pilgrim The great aerial hUh < f travel will be along the lines th*- great cities. Hill and monn ' ’ will become important sites for • s But aerial navigation Is to ompltshed by a machine such as • ver before been suggested to the t.Hn. Nine I t* tut el y seen this new machine ti -ne of the comrlvnuera —such * i envelopes, flapping wings, dvro -1 • >x plosive motors, propeliars, air or let—which have figured In airs HI fat ‘ •* The invMttion Is ns yet i and is being c losely guarded. The n< is now capable of propelling it r my speed ui%fo Win feet per fec it *n rise slowly from the groun I *n then support Itself In the air i* moving. I have seen it start from this motionless position in move Itself gradually forwat l. * taut nnd then slowly settle down h ground. It was capable of lift* i bar Its own weljght. 1* *'• • ngar of falling and was not nf • v eurrenla of wind It wa sioi ! ( >d -heap. t‘ii*ve that this machine solves the ni of aerial navigation. In one test • • led it (he sfferd of one mile in s|< * -half ae‘onls. or a tittle over nt>" minute. It went two and a half ’* a sir light line toward a cliff. ' It struck, ft peed* greater than J* l *' n hour would he too high for pr> purposev, of course. The friction Letter from Texas. Ballinger. Tex . Jan th "I thought I would write you what your wonderful Uraybeard haa done for me I bad catarrh of the head about 36 yearn, and ruff, red a great deal I have tried many kinds of roedhtec* and have be.n treated by doctora. though all of them fail ed to cure me And I bring ao old and my diaeaae ao chronic, 1 didn't think there wa* any medicine that would cure me But more than I year* ago I had very plain aymptom* of cancer on my noee and face and derided to try Graybeard not thinking that II would cure my catarrh a* well a* <bncer I bought li bottle* from Mr Pierce, and leaa than • cured me Th! ha* been more than 2 year* aero now and no eytnptome of the old dUeoeee have appeared I con pralne Graybeard for what It ha* done for roe Peraona need never think they arn 100 old for Grey beard to cure them I am now 71. "MRS RHODA DEAN." Graybeard Cured Him. *'l would here aay for the benefit of the public', that I we* troubled with rheutne ti*m In my hip* for three month*, and aa I handled Graybeard I concluded to give it a trial 1 look two bottle* and a half and wa* cured. I do believe It to be a great medicine "Alao Slater D*Loach took It for paraly sis and It helped her •urprUlnglv • Rev A H STRICKLAND. "Kaaterllng, Ga.“ Eczema. Do you know when you have nrtema? Do you Itch? Is your skin rough? In warm weather does this stinging eenoatton Increase' When you scratch do large blis ters and sore* form* Do they torment you when you work** F>scma Is an outbreak of bad blood A person afflicted with erxema cannot take undue exercise without aggravating the Itching, or g*i warm tn bed without feel ing on fire The blood is aflame wi*> the peculiar potaon that creates the disease and calls for a powerful alterative to re move It Nothing short of a MED ICatff win a ompiish a cut*. Eczema. UliyMtt, Ala.. Mav 1 I haw tried your Graybeard and know for a truth that It 1. effectual It dan) me of ecxetna and a aevere at tack of Indigestion. I do not hesitate to rmoimmi It. AU who try It here will not be without It B A JARRKEU ■>f the air would hem a |(**enger com partment to an unbearable degree. hot tinny (loin* That Way. "The general shape of thl* nrw ma chine i that of two lonx-drawn-out cone* |.:n c.l bacr to buar. A mode! wolßbiiK but eleven ounce lately a.cended to th-* etiormou. htgrht of eleven mile*, a* wa authenth illy recorded by an aneroid ba rnmeter placed Inskle. Thl* war far ntuve any high! ever heretofore reached by nuehanlcal device. Yet the (tislri ment came down within one furlong of the epot from which It war *<nt up. With a similar device I am going to make measurement* of the upper air. Inehle of li I am going 10 pul In.trument* which w!U mewsure temperature and mol.ture aial another whirl) will bring .town *am plr* ut Ihe ntmoephere found at *uch enormou* hlgb(*. There .ample, will he teeted here In ihe laboratory. I propoee to u*e the inelrument at night, attaching a device which will .how a light during descent and thu* mark Ihe path of the drop I will thus be ble to locate the machine when It return* to earth.” "Hut. professor, what I* to prevent a more powerful machine, built on these line*, from venturing out Into the open *pace between the planet*, even to Mars?" The professor raised one elbow, a* If warding off something thrown at him Then he leaned hack In hi* rhalr. wheeled It around and looked out the laboratory window. "One cannot reach Mara." said he. "hy any exitaing method of night, utilising at mosphere a* an nld to propulsion or buoyancy. When we were school hoy* we were taught lhat Ihe enrlh'* layer of atmosphere wn* hut forty-eight miles deep. li h*s been recently estimated lhat It I* more than four time* that depth It prohablv extend* 2f*> mile* a hove our head* Above It there prob ably ore some lighter gases which wilt not mix with air. “It would be Impossible to travel to the plnnet* In balloon* or In devlres using propellers, aeroplane* or dapping wing* Once above Ihe earth's atmosphere there would be nothing t buoy a balloon up and nothing against which wing*, pro peller* or aeroplane* could act. niant projectile* sent up hy explosive force would be out of the question. Too much energy would he required to project them The greatest possible explosive force put hack of the best adapted projectile would send It hardly to the roof of our at mo*ph*r*. Spare llriseen I’laneta la \siltshlr. “Between the planets we rtnd only ether, about 4he nature of which there I* much difference of opinion, (tome ex periments which I have made In vacuums prove to me that, contrary to the ac cepted doctrine, ether Is not entirely fric tion)*** It 1* composed '4 particle* mnny billions of time* smallsr than atoms. These are of such a nature than no or dinary body meets with any resistance In passing through them. "These experiment* prove that # ma chine cun be m*!e to propel itaelf where there I* no air Hurh devices, therefore could traverse the open spa.W between the planet*. How? Through the other space between the planets there are stream* of electric and light wave* Against either of these two systems of wave* other set* of waves srttttcially made hy a machine. ~n t>e forced In such a way a* to cause resistance and propel Ihe machine along 1 hove devices by which I have proven this I have proven that the raya given off Py a magnet may he ncied upon by ixht in such manner a* to rotate the magnet. This 1* direct proof of the lion of one mi of waves upon another. The electric and light waves, always com mg from the sun, penetrate the ether In every direction. At any place lu the THE MORNING NEWS: THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 111. 1000. a ** Oue netMt t*ia *o *aowev acwgaa a e loans ®L<mm & EOBMJILIEVp * WHOLESALE - • • Fruits, Produce, Groceries, Jobbers* MB COMMISSION MERCHANTS. 19 WCST MITCHCLL STRUT y y • Ukf r-*4 ih,^ fUspass Drug Cd., Od&r Sir*:• i *i Tor thr** years t suffered greet pain end annoyance free * iaterrh end Bleed Poison end found no reecdy that would relieve *o. ORAYKLARL, was recoeaended to no end three bottles mde a nsw sen of sm I actually weigh 20 pound* core, end my health is more vigorous than for ysare. Z think it la the greeteet remedy that X ever eaw. Tour* /truly, Minister Cured. Dear Friends—l suffered more or less all the time for ten years with rheuma tism. trying many remedies, but falling to perfect a permanent cure Bo I expected to live ihe balance of my day* In pain. But I began taking Graybeard. not ex pecting to be cured of rheumsilxm. but hope to be mired of letter on hanJs and neck And when I had only taken 3 botllea all my rheumatism was gone That was nearly a year ago and I have not had a pain from that cause since The tetter on my neck and ears disappeared, my gener al health has been heller, and I weigh pounds more than I did before iking It. No doubt Oraybeard will do all that ia claimed for It. 8. H. WHATLEY, Atlanta. Oa. ether reaction against them may be had tn any direction. Mw*t Take Air Along. "It woukl thus he Impossible lo con struct a machine capable of propelling it self through ether In any direction at enormous spied*, nnd one able to generate a* It goes along wave* that will thus re act upon other waves In the ether. A* lo how far beyond the earth's atmosphere man could travel In auch a machine I woukl not like to say. He would, of course, have to take with him a supply of air for breathing |irpo*er. "I will go so far as to say that even though there were no ether In the space between the plane!*, such a machine would pro|ie] Itself through absolutely empty space. This seem* Impossible, but we liavo Involved here ihe same principle as thal hy which the smallest imrllcle will propel Itself Ihrouah an absolute vacuum There Is reason to believe lhat the smallest possible portions of materiel substance* are callable of moving through spare which Is absolutely empty. "That lravel between the planets may be IMieslble In the future doee not, therefore, seem Inconceivable. Hut until It le real ise.) It I* difficult for me to conceive of any mclh.st of communicating with lh- Inhabitant* of other planets. There would be extreme difficulty In establishing such a signal code as might he mutually under stood. It would first he necessary to take a trip to Ihe particular planet with which communication Is dcatred." looklna for Hraln Wire*. "Will II he possible to detect human life on Mars, for Instance, before such a trip is made?" "Btber waves are probably given olt by the minds of Ihe Martians. If there are such people. If such wavs* are given off they probably reach earth, and I have no doubt lhat eiher wave# given off by our busy, boiling brains penetrate to Mar* Yes. through the millions of mile* which separate ua. "In our brain cell* thsre are occurring constant chemical change* corresponding to our every thought. During these chem ical change* certain atoms must of course be put In motion. White atoms ar* In mo tion they are constantly producing ether waves These waves go out In every di rection. They penetrate thrmigh our layer of up|ter atmosphere and lose their*elves tn spate. • Now. suppose that after studying ether waves more and more carefully we a' lasi learn how to distinguish those caused by chemical motion* of hr.itn cell* Irom those produced by other motion* Then sUPtlose we have a means of collecting all of Ihe ether waves coming from Mars or any other planet. If afier close exami nation we tind brain waves among them— brain wave* comparable lo those given off by our own mental aclllvliy— will we not nave dlatvvered that there are upon Ihl* distant planet being* who have mental activity? • But young man. you are taking me ton far out Into the unknown Take care, or we will both be beyond our depth*." MEAT t AUER AtPIW STOW. I hlef Terror of Tunoel t'onalrwrllnn In fb* HtMiniNln*. From the New York Tribune. What makes th* Blmplon tunnel chiefly Interesting both to engineer* and the un tntated I* not the fact that It will he th* kJogeM thing of ll* kind tn the world, but Ihe employment of iwdtcally new method* In It* .obstruction These were adopted, moreover, for a reason thal few would ever think of Cutting . hole through granite Is not now to serious * difficulty as dealing with tb heat that la encoun- Picture of Health. “Oraybaard did mo mof> food than any thing I *v*r tonic in my life. I **a troubled with lndi*e*ftun. hortn* of breath, and wax given a great deal of medicine by my doctor, but It did me no good ! mw Gray beard advertlMwf and bought It. and It cured me I hen to gain flexh and weigh twenty pound* more than ! did a ahort time ago MRS J O BROWN. *‘ls7 lore afreet. Montgomery, Ala.** Sound and Well. "I had congtsllon of th* stomach—acute Indigestion Last August when 1 was so Lad off. I heard of Graybeard and gH my daughter and son-in-law to send for the medicine for me It did me more good than all the doctor* .and I continued tfs use until now. I am sound and well. I an* truly thankful for the discovery of •> great and wonderful a medicine "MßS AIAROARET A OUVE, Ml Pella. Tenn. -SI a Bottle--6 Bottles, $5. to Respess Drug Cos., Props., Savannah, Gai tersd tn a mountain tunnel when It has attained a certain length. Il I* well known that Ihe air /mw* cool er with ascent tXimlloriy. the air grows warmer as one descend*, and If. Instead of going down from a level surface, as In the copper mines of letke Superior, oft. simply pushes ahead horlaooially Into n mountain a mile or so below Its < rest the temporal tire will be observed lo rise In Ihe same manner. During the eonstrucllon of Ihe Mobto Cents tunnel a maximum of *5 degree* Fahrenheit was experienced, and In the Bt. Got hard XT. It Is estimated lhat for something like six miles of Ihe Hlmplon tunnel Ihe tack, when first laid liare. will show a temperaturea>f 104 While Ihe 81 Got hard tunnel was n lug cut no less than sot lives were lost among the workmen, most ol them Indirectly. In consequence of this hem After engaging for hours In vigorous physical toll Inside the tun nel the men would go out Into the Alpine coolness, take told and die. Its Vtethnds fleet eeary. Hut If auch result* followed th* con struction of Ihe 81. Golbard tunnel, what might be expected of temperatures fifteen or twenty degree* higher for a much longer distance? Il was this consideration which gave rise lo whal Is Ihe most Im portanr Innovation in Ihe Blmp4on tunnel. Improvements there will be. of eourse. In methods of drilling, blasting and re moving the Irartured rock, but the chief novelty ha* been planned for the sole purpose of abating the Intenae heal lhat would naturally be encountered. The other great mountain tunnels of the world, even when designed to accom modate two railway tracks, are alngla. The Blmj*ion tunnel will really lie a pair of parallel passageway* whose renters are fWiy-ttve feet nine Inches apart. Each will afford room for only one track. At Interval, of 30" meters <S* feet), as the Workmen advance, they will rut small ernes tunnel* lo connect the rivaln one*. These opening* will be t loead with doors, all except lhat which at any particular lime happen* lo be ihe one farthest In. It will then be |>*elbl*, by forcing air In through ihe other, to establish a line cir culation For that portion of ihe head ing which ts beyond the last door a sup ply of air will b. furnished through a ten inch pipe by hydraulic blowers. The air will he artltu tally cooled hy a water spray before being pumped Into the lunnel Al ready thl* sysom l* In operation ai Ihe FOUthertt. or Dalian, end. bui for the present a different plan has been em ployed at the northern end. Areuutolatlon* ol Fool Hn When a lunnel of this kind ha* been flnlahed It slowly tools off Inside. The temperature Ht* middle of the Mont *- me tunnel I* now aloui or tw degree# Fahrenheit and 111 the 81 Golhard tunnel between 73 and It and It remain* auludan ttally stationary Ihe year tound A Ilk* Improvement may be expected lo occur In ■he Simplon lunnel. but more speedily tnau In the other Instance# on account of the plan Just described -Btlll. even after the heat ha* been dls poaed of. other evil# hav# been experienc ed In the past It ha* been deemed too costly to rut vertical h *ft* from the tun nel io to* upper sir tor ventilating pur pa** Accordingly there hn* been a die iresetng accumulation of smoke and foul gape* from lb* locomotives. The produrt* of combustion are Imprisoned near the middle of the tunnel, because there lo an up grade from each and lo promote drain age Therk I* a lunnel In the Apemunee. between Bologna and Florence, In which for a long lime passenger* and trainmen suffered greallv from thl* rnus*. On one o< i aelon. when one of the crowned he id* of Europe wa* riding through Ihl* tunnel, the engineer and Itremsn huth became un conscious At legth an engineer o! Bolog na, Signor Bactardo. proposed to try g big Dyspepsia. Dioattnr after eating arvf a fitting of weight In th* ntomarh are <ty|W|)l a ■ymptoma—rruciaiionr of ga--t'!i Mom a*h. hrariburii, vertigo, all com* aiong Sour ttocnach, hradarhr*. general drprra- Flon and great nrrvoua condition follow Wa h*ar women aay lhat thry cannot alrrp, and that thay f**rl light-headed a* If at time* they mint fall. We hear men mjt that they cannot work The tuma h la out of gear, they are reatiea* and ner vous and form the habit of drinking. Thl* 1# dvapep.ki— It can be rar**d Oraybeard ia a *af# rem#dv for fhla ailment It make* food nuirttknj* and trnth*n nnd Invigorate* th dlgeatlvo organa by purifying tha blood. Don't heaitnte to take It. ventlloilnic fan at one nd of the tunnel. Within a f**w minute* he reduced th* tern |>erature 3ft degree** and r-x|fl|ed the *mok< aml vapor Sim- thl* gratifying re*u|t Huit attained the *y*tem hit* barn installed at two other place* In Italy nnd In the HI Gothnrd tunnel. Prepnratlonn are now l>elng mad*- for Ilf Introduction to Mont <>nl tunnel. lilac Koalnrerlna In tlie %lpn. There ore now three greni englneerinr work* of thie ohurnoter in the Alps Th*? Mont rente tunnel, begun In IHS7 and tln tehed In li7*. If eight mile* long and co# lir.on.irt* ft rune from Kranre to Italy, near a ntraight line drawn from Lyotu to Turin The Got hard tunnel. Id mile* long. tvo started in WO nnd completed ten yenri* biter. It war designed to opati up a abort route from Bavaria to lm -bardy. !If aituate*! tn Southern Hwltier land and emerge* into region that 11#'* Itetween lake* Magglore nnd Como The Ariberg tunnel lira entirely in the Aus trian Tyrol, and la only four nniea long. It wa* begun In Ifloo ami flnlhel pi IKM The Simplon tunnel la meant to ahorten the route from Pari* to Milan forty-eight mile*. Ita projected path la 12.2 k mil** long oml rro**e* from Hwitserland Into Italy unmit thirty-five mile* to the eoutii went of St Golhard nnd a grant lOU mile-4 in a bee-line eaat of Geneva The north ern termlnu* U the village of Brief, at the head of the Rhone. The gout hern end will he near laeil. on a tributary of thn Tore, win*'/* emptlea Into Lake M igglore on the wext. The cnfraetor* nr** to re ceive about |l2.*i.oou in payment. #'- though thl* amouni will be varied by for felta for failure to complete or premium* for completion in advance of the appo inted time The contract call* for doing the work In five ami m half year*, and over eighteen month* of the tlm have now elaped. ROMAN* OK % PAWMHHOP. I’athetlr ftfnrle* That Clualer Around the I nredeemrd I’lrdaie*. From the Chicago Tribune Few place* in the city have greater fa*- clnatton for the crowd* who lounge the atreeta than the window* of tha pawn * hop*, piled full a* they are of all rminner of merchandlue In endlexa a**orttnent And there are few place* In the city where more romance la found, or in which aceneg from tragic life dramie are enacted, than there Name po wna hop a—tragic nut all, for many are hu mo roue a* well. In fact, the grene* that can la* witm **"* 1 tn the -hop* are a* varied um the article* which are put in pawn one, of the window* of a Clark *tr*et hop the other day war *urround*d by a crowd of imereaded apec tator* gaging at a bit of Jewelry which formed the renter of n window dlftplay It wa* u golden heart ahnpei luoach. brl Him with emerald* and pearl* Surrounded with r m'ecelUineoug eollmlon of falee teeih. plntoh* man*k>- Hna. and other objecte. It appared at range ly out of place. *Tt haa a <urloua hlatory." aakt the ehop-keeper when queetloned about It. “Rometime* I get Intereated In Jewela.and 1 dM tn thle one, o I rauaed Inquiry to m* made, and found out nearly all ab.ut it. It le Ihe center of one ol the atrang rut true romance* 1 know. It wa* an af fair that began In a public achool —a boy and a girl afTalr The girl waa the da ugh i. r of a wealthy man, and the boy waa pretty well flxed himaelf He got to go ing the wrong way. however, and got down pretty low. *o that hie people all threw him off He kept on adding, and ut laat wee caught In an opium Joint W>wn near Twentieth and IMae arreetv, where he waa cooking opium for hegtn about a* low a Job aa a white man can get down to. He seemed absolutely Rheumatism. RhaumaOsm originates from s*tswa arid in th* and Impure* blood 1 1 alidckp (IlfTfrent parts of the hotly It la worn*-times saatsd m th* mu*c*s. time* in the* puna aurrounding the joint*, and ii'm-iimin in ths Jo4nta—h#or. Ih i!*w** muscular and articular rheumatism. When in ths hip*. It I* call'd actatlc rhsu vnattsm. ahrn in the* mus< W• of the* hu V lumbago Often wh*n onr g*'*aa to rlwr from alt ting or stooping th tuiMen • atohlrg ia note vara that they *>nw timas cry out In putn. The f*i mlist j4ttia r# Mtnetlmrs swollen without at first, rauflr.g ary pirtftculir pain This symptom is sufficient The- all nient Is gsttmg n start on you This Is ths lime* to take QtyO heard The safest cure* for rheumatism la a thorough Nisid cleansing Greybeard Is a known specific for rheu matlrm It checks the formation of a> id. dissolve* the acid daposlt and produces a normal and rk*h flow of blood I>on t heal* tats to ask for It A Boy Cured. Mr* Hill rwatdtag at lOU, W Mltcholl nreei, Atlanta, gave Grayt>eard to h**r son who was forrnl to stop work on account of ti severe attack of rhpumatlrro, ami It cured him sound and well. Lost Use of His Arm ,# Binc* taking Graybeard I have rffilnhl use of mv arm which mas he by rheunaitli.ru. \V. C. KLKNNIKKN, “Kingston. Tea. You Get Strong. Everybody who take* Oraybeard tella u* they get tranger TU? eut more and It dor* not rniik*' them lck Thl* la the ae cret of the ctiratlve power* of Oraybeard. The Aral thing It dor* I* to make you go to eating You will ret more than you have oitm In month#, and you wIII find It will not hurt you a* It ured eo when yon ate heartily By making you eat It make* you airociger It mak* you atroQger a* the new blood and br>ne and tlaaue begin to become part and parcel f ycwi, nnd if you are afflicted with m-sem* yor* will !lnl It grad'Milly dlaapprar Th aaatc way with rhrumatlam, caturrh. dyaiepeia. cancer. In short, Ortayheard make* you atronger than your dlaeaaa and ctuahe* out your dlanaae. ... Graybeard Did It. "l.lk* all other* who are *o unfortunai# a* to hsronw a pr*y to InAlg-'-dioo n<l b.,w,1 Iroubt-*. I irlrat various madtclnaa and a number of th* h**t doctor* to treat my r*M. hut found only l.mior*ry rsllrf until (iraybraid wa* tliacavctvd- Thu owd- om Then the girl Iward ulsnu him nguln II sems that *hc was moved chiefly hy Ihe thought thsl * Itoy ah* hat been so liilnrsM#,| In could not l>c lefi In such a situation. Anyway, she sent for him and talked fo him, and had him sent 10 a xonliarlom Ai la*i he wa* dlschirgel a* cured, and was realty quite a different fellow He declared hlm*elf entirely tn love with hi* henefarire**, mu h to her dial res* Bhi wanted him *<> lake hold In tiiiHlnes* and make a man of himself, hill he protested thal he couldn't gel 01, hero, as everybody knew III* record This wa* Just at the close of the B|a.nl#h war, ami tie said there wa* money to t- made In (*Mha If he could gel there, Bbe had • notigh t<> get him there, but not enough lo atari him In any enterprlsn afier he arrived, no ahr came down here with him xml they |>awned this brooch 1 gava .hem t-*M on II II * a beautiful thing. "Well. Ih* fellow before he went away prole*l.*l undying love for the girl, ami she declares! thal shr didn't want It. out thnt she wanted lo see him moke a man or him*. If. and would always help him nnd ihluk well of him. and all that ll>- went to Havana and mode a pretty good urtke. gelling work with a planter amt putting hi* money into come land Ih.t wn* going cheap. The planter took t fancy to him and a little Inter look a fancy to the planter's daughter. He didn't writ*- norm- anything .ihotii 11. out they came up here on their wadding trip. He haul told the little <*uban all about hts reformation, and she warped to th.ink the Chicago girl, so they called on her. Toe next day the girl came tlown here, amt told me h* wouldn't ever want the jewel and I might sell It. I go*** she didn't ever want a reminder of the affair." In the .era.- tgnlnst which Ihe shop keeper wa leaning * he apoke were iwo or three tray* of ring*, one of which was tilled with aelllalr**. "Hr* are more ro mance*," he said, turning to them "All engagement rings Home of them brought In by ih* troys and some by the girls, though I can't see why a girl should pawn iii eogngement ring, un.es* she amt W„,le tlx It up beforehand to use Hi money for furniture nnd gel tha ring out laler There ar* rings worth IS there, and ot least tare worth a bundled time* that sum. The next tray I* full of we l itlng rings. which could doubtless tell many strange tales If they could speak." Just then o negro entered Ihe shop and called (or a watch that wu* It, tha win dow "How much?" he asked. "Ten do.tars." "What's it worth?" "Six Th* colored man looked the watch over nrefiilly, awl then laid II down mid went out. "There's ts curious trait about the col ored people." said the ktepar. “They have become *>■ uswl to pawning thing* lhat they never seem to contemplalt perma nent ownership of anything They a-k how much It Is worth when they buy |t. meaning how much they can gel when they pawn It again, and that la the pri mary elaanetit. In determining whether they will purchase It or not " In another <aae tn the shop were many watehea. of all sorts, ft im a delicate and ocst.y lady's chronometer to a hlg, braat heunri turnip. There was a whole row of open-faced time pieces, each wl- h a girl's faca pho ograMhd on the dial There was nothing i-o Indies!* thnt a deatre to get rid of the face had anything to do with the pawning of the watch, but such, the s> nprnati said, was probably th* nasa. “I never but once," said he. "knew a man to Insist on removing the face and taking It away with him. In that rasa II wa* a p.,pet-mounted photograph He took It out of the back of the case and put It aw.iv In vest focket *’ ilnsarle*. "Vatican boxer." and other aril a off IgnMlcance In tha fat both fattb—evtn crucifix#* tn many styles, and Catarrh. Ths mouth, throat, post-nasal eavWp bronchial tutwa and air cells of the lungi arc lined with 4 network of dwlkste tloeW vcesela When the blood Is pure fhw hlooiA ve*>self are healthy and vlgor ooa and esutk* mucus which lubrbwtaa ths all pawsagsa ar.d protect* them from ths ef fect* of cold. du*|, sic When the blool | Impure, these vessel* by reason of their delicate structure, art unable to carry It They become clogged and hones results catarrh Graybeard purl flea ihe blood Invigorate* these small bkod vessel* and enehtei them to disthargs the foul Mod and rs stores health Catarrh will not eslst when ths bluud h purs. Ugly Ulcers. Dear Frlonda— I have bean *utrrlrg R year* with an uL-er on my ankle. Bom*, time* in be.l eometime* on cruirhe* I UHd ttne.lle of my own ntl falling t make n eure I (tilled In .Itffarefit phyai .lain TLev all wM thai th*y iouM roe, me, but foutnl It to be of a .tubborn no* lure anti talletl 1 Haw flray'xartl Averti*e<i anti I bough, four botHee of tt. two buxr* of III* pilla one bos of the ointment It cured me wall And I have one Uitlk left I *ay that I am well—not nearly well hot entirely well It ha* been over twelve month* and no aymptome liav* returned I hot— the auffarltig will do ae 1 have n*e 11. hove faith in ll and be rured Mr* JANE OKOROE. Rockvale. TerUi. I Pine Ivin* manufactured by friend* * nvlne and knowing II to he mude from puss I nvalerl.it of Ihe for. *t. was Induced lo gtvs Ila trial 1 need It six w—ks a cording ra .lire-(Ions anil at th“ end of tire tlmo I fell as well aa I ever did. "O A H.IETT, Ex-Alderman. Butler, Oa.** — Rheumatism. Rheumatic Swelling In tha lags la curad by Graybeard Mrs Joseph Brown of Hutlar. Oa., waa amt- led with rhaumailsm le caused he* graal twin Her elatemtni is lhat her lags •welled to Ul.usual site. Bhe waa not aids to relieve the ailment until she procured Oraybeard. Khr hs now sound and well. Arid In Ihe Mood pr. .luce* rehurn.itl*tn. Nothing Is half so gnod aa Graybeard lor rheumatism t "My Wlfa wa* uffllcied four year* with rheumatism and I waa test able to .find anything to relievo her Bhe took Oray board (ibo.it a month and *-(m.d to be aa well aa ever II cured our llttio son of tho allrn-nt We cannot t raise Gray heard tou muck. 080. BOOTH. - • many richly ornananted were tn the dis play Occupying a prominent place In a window display w** an artificial leg. end Dunking It on either side w.re crutche*. "Man must lie bird up when he pull* his own leg off to get money," rom irked the visitor, hut Ihe proprietor of the es tablishment wits reviy with a correction. "Me'a worse than that- hen dead I didn't know lhat when I look Ihe log. What to do with .vTtlflclal legs, and ca ps - tally with pegs after the wearers are dead I* a problem for tutor people, who re gard the cost of them ns a great expenae. There Is a one-lrgged fellow who (taa solv ed Ihe problem He goes around and buy* them- wherever he can. cheap, and then goes to u pawnshop, represent* the leg aa hi* and gets a larger prtr* on It. Of course one doesn't look .lose when tha poor fellow la really ooedegged -that seems to be evidence of the truth of hla story. Hut I'm careful shout the things since I found him out." Meerschaum pipes, opera glasses, and tranks, doctor* Instrument*, painting*, and *taluary--all were lo he found In lha pawnshop, and each could have added * 111 tie to the volume of tales that could ha written of romance* from Iht* single shop. THE DAM) t|l EXTIOX |> CHINA. Mow the Empire Is Divided and the Imperlnl Tribute Paid. From Ihe l.ondon Fall Mall Oatett*. It Is aim the custom lo consider th* province* situated outside tbe eighteen forming the Kingdom of China proper aa colonic*. Nomina! tribute I* still paid to the Impel iqi Exchequer by Korea, Thi bet, Anna nr. 81am and llurmah Even so recently a* thr. e or four year* ago Ne paul vent an . mha**y to pvy It* quota of Imperial tribute, and waa the guest of th* Emperor to tbe extent of eertatn acre* of r amping out around and th* dally d!a trlbul on of rlee during rife course of * few wi ka' stay round the wall* of the capital. In the vast plain* of Eastern Mongo'!* the nomadic Mongolian tribe* ape tenant* at will of the Fekln Imp-rial authorities. Each man I* considered a soldier, and receive#, the sum of Ua every month In return for thl* largesse the tribe* ar* exp- eted tn he In a post lon to put Into tha Ibid a foiee of eight "banner*" of troops Each "banner ’ should he made up of eighteen comiuinlee, and erh company of seventy horsemen This force, like many other* In China exist* only on paper Of late ynr* the land occupied hy the*# tribe* has been Isrgely encroached on by Ch ne#e agriculturist* who have not been slow la discovering that Ihe ground la fertile. Belwe r Ihe would-h# aettler* and th# easy-geing iribcsmen there ha# aris en the “llm" p*clou* Chlnsae specula tor. Hl* mode of eirrylnx on buslnesa la g nerally a* felow* The celestial act* a* an Intrrimdiary between those of hi* cr-unirytnen anxious to settle and the act* ual tenant* To the former he. In con sideration of a sum paid a* deposit mon ey. undertakes to provide them with a de-trable plot of ground He then turns ht attention to the Mongolian He pre. sent* himself to him ua a m-rrhint ready in aell anything rind everything on credit, also as a money lender He lure* him Ini* debt, and sends him mobev to pay It. When the day of setth-ment come*, he i- Ae men of the plain* that he should make over to him an equivalent In land Tha matter t* dlscuessd hy Ihe chief Irthea m n and concent is obtain- and Th* Chine** agriculturist ruler* Into p r* s-lon Of th# spot vac id <1 by Ih- rov r.g Mongolian, wjvo, parking up hi* trap*, fstn’lv. and cattle, movie fuither Inland, until he again fall* a prey to Hut merchant awl money lends* 7