The Middleburgh post. (Middleburgh, Snyder Co., Pa.) 1883-1916, August 14, 1902, Image 6

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Church Papers and Societies Taken
to Task by Archbishop Ireland.
POPE TO SOLVE FRIAR QUESTION
Archbishop Said Some People Are Born
ts Clamor, ard Insisted That They i
Should Do It In Their Own Name,
and Not In That of the Church.
St. Paul. A;ig. 4. Archbishop Ire
land, preaching yesterday morning li
the cathedral, faiU: "The Apostle 1'au!
gives this counsel, 'not to be more
wise than it behooveta to be wise, but
to be wise unto sobriety, and according
as God hath divided to every one the
measure of faith.' In the mind of ttfe
.apostle, thins most excellent, if made
use of in undue measure and without
proper regard to circumstances, of time
and place, change into things perilous
and hurtful. And this is undoubtedly
what is happening in the case of the
fiery zeal in defense of Catholic inter
ests, which seems to be coveting an
explosion at the present time among
certain classes of American Catholics.
The interests of the church, it is said,
are made to surfer at the bands of the
government in its newly acquired de
pendencies, and the call to arms is
sounded from the icstriims of Catholic
societies and through the columns of
Catholic papers, to the perturbation of
the whole Catlioli.: body, and. Indeed,
of the whole country.
"As to matters in the Philippine
Islands, we can not discuss them. They
.are for thAtime being put beyond our
reach, since they are the subject of
negotinl icins between the government
of America and the sovereign pontiff.
To take at the present such matters in
to our own hands would be to mistrust
the wisdom and the food will of the
sovereign pontiff, and of this loyal
Catholics should not be capable. The
logic of the situation in presence of
strange complications for church and
state, arising from a change of sover
eignty in the Philippine Islands point
ed to a mutual conference between the
head of the church and a representa
tive of the state as the proper an( dig
nified way to a final and peaceful solu
tion. Leo XIII. saw this; Theodore
Roosevelt saw this. I.eo took the Ini
tiative, proposed the conference and
asked the government to expose frank
ly and thoroughly Its views. The pres
ident and his advisers accepted the pro
posal. What more could have been
done by the administration to prove Its
good will and sense of justice? If the
administration had refused to send a
representative to ftnme, verily what
clamorinps there would have been; and
now when it has sent a representative
to Home ami agrees to the further pro
posal of the Vatican to transfer nego
tiations to Manila, clamorings are still
rMsed. Well some people are born to
clamor; and privilege ito clamor must
be allowed to them. Tint we shall in
sist that they shall clamor In their
own name and not in the name of the
church, and for our own part we shall
hold our souls in peace, leaving church
interests in the Philippines to one who
understands them at least as well as
we do, and who will be as wise in dis
posing of them as we could well hopt
to Le-l.ro X ill.
CARDINAL GOTTI MAY BE POPE
Elevation of New Prefect of Propagan
da Considered Sure.
Rome, Aug. 4 Cardinal (Intti's ul
timate elevation to the Papacy i? con
eidered almost assured by the mani
festation of confidence in him by se
lecting him from among apparently
more powerful rivals for the influen
tial office of prefect of the propaganda
in succession to Cardinal Ledoehowskl.
Cardinal Cortl will be persona prat,-,
to the American helrarchy. Cardinal
l-edocliowslil's sympathies were natur
ally with the Teutonic and Slav ele
rr.eiitr. in thn Catholic Church, and he
rover quite nr-preeiated to the full the
potency Mie American factor.
rf., - ; L WHITTCAPPERS
tt.-. e. --rrc- Until He Was Al
' ' rt t,'rc5"scious.
O-v-n lf:. Ky.. Auk. WWHHair
ii.iv, i - r.iriurr living near Yelvlng
ton in Hi : n'lntv. was taken from hif
home m i::!.iriii"ht Sunday, bound to
tree an.l bea:en with a blac ksnake whir,
until hp was almost unconscious frorr
loss of bU il. Over 75 lashes were ad
minister' l and there are more than S(
wounds from two inches to a foot longj
on bis face ami body. The bark wai
worn from the tree where the ropei
which bound the unfortunate mac
touched it and the whip left marks on
the tree as if It had been cut with a
knife. Dod well's wife and daughter at
tempted to go to his rescue but wen
prevented by the members of the mob
The cause for the whipping is no)
known.
Preacher Without Pay.
Baltimore. Md., Aug. 5. There took
place at Hancock, Md., yesterday the
funeral of Rev. Jacob Weller, an asod
Dunk ard preacher, who had been pas
tor of one church in the village foi
more than 40 years, during which tirat
he never acepted a salary or other
compensation, and never took up a
collf-rtion on Sunday. He married
more couples and baptized more pv
;,;e than ary other Dunkard minister
He was i.u orator of unusual gifts
Among his " ntrloitles, It is sail
he never wore a fravat In his life.
I'iion'e IIIk I.o.i.
In the experimenting with the
magnetic i-xtrui-tlon of metal from
low-graiie ore Thomas K'lixm has
rpein 12,0V',"''' within a few years,
oiily to fit.d tit last that his plat t is
worthless for the work aid he will
Lave to build uboUier.
EXAMPLE FOR BOYS.
, It -Is Found in the Career of Prof r
S. P. Brooks. j
Koit from Sertloa llaad oa Railroad
to I'ullrae I'ruldriil by Ills Un a
tudnnori and to mm en li
able AnibllUia,
From the jnisition of section hand
on a railroad, where he worked with
a t-paile, earning tjj cents a day, to the
head of un educational institution of
unquestioned standing, is the novel
rite made by S. P. Ilrooks, who has
just been elected to the presidency of
liaylor university at Waco, Tex.
Karly in his life, while he was toil
intr early and lute on the roadbed of the
Santa Fe railroad, Ilrooks made up his
mind that he was not cut out for u
section hand and set out to fit him
self for something better. It never
occurred to him thut his efforts would
result any other way than successfully,
and with this confidence and determin
ation he set out to make the most of his
limited opportunities. He is now 4.
jears old, and the predominating
ambition of his life was realized when
he was selected to preside over Hay
lor university. It wn there that lie
tirst atteuded college, and it was large
ly through the influence of the faculty
that he was enabled to continue the
course and complete his educntion.
Less than 20 years ago Urooks wan
n member of n section g'ang and, as
inigiit be expected when his subsequent
career is taken into account, he was
one of the liest "hands" on the road.
Whatever he undertook lie did well.
With his foreman he was popular.
He was upright, industrious, honest
and conscientious in his work, yet he
was not liked by the other hands be
cause he saved his small earnings and
engaged in no pastimes of question
able propriety. During the noon hour,
when his fellow-workmen were swap
ping yarns or playing cards, young
1 '.rooks usually sought a shady pot
under some friendlv tree, and here
mOF. S. P. BROOKS.
(College PrtsMrnt Who IttRar. Life as
Sicliiii llanii.)
gave himself over to study or rend
ing. In the section-house at night,
and when prevented by the weather
from work on the roadbed, he gave his
undivided attention to such books as
lie was able to lay his hands on or
buy with the money lie saved out of
his earnings. Kven the other section
men gradually came to realize that
this indust rious young fellow was dif
ferent from the rest of them, and their
dislike for him finally grew into toler
ation, and then dccpadniiration. The
unambitious laborers began to utilize
him as a sort of bureau of useful in
formation, lie was also their supreme
court, to whom all questions debated
by the gang were referred for final
lit-cision.
He worked for the Santa Fe railroad
between (ialveston and P.renbam for ,i
year or more, and during all this time
the foreman was never compelled to
charge him for an hour of lost time.
Another thing said of him is that he
never lost or broke a tool or imple
ment of any kind, and his spade was
not only always in place, but was as
bright as a dollar and as sharp as it
is necessary for a spude to be. While
young Ilrooks was laboring on the
railroad he was constantly looking
forward to the time when lie would
be financially able to enter college.
At the end of a year's service he had
saved enough money for one year in
liaylor university, which he entered.
His disposition and habits, his evident
determination to make the most of
etery opportunity, attracted the atten
tion of President 1!. ('. lluiicon, the
founder of liaylor ii the flays when
Texas was a republic, and who re
trained at the head of the school until
it had grown to be the chief sectarian
institution of learning in the south
west. He talked with the young man.
and learned of his ambitions, and an
arrangement was made by which
Ilrooks was enabled to get through his
second session at the school.
After graduating ut liaylor univer
sity Prof. P.rooks was a member of the
faculty until two years ago, when he
entered Harvard to take a post-pradu
ate course.
Prof. Ilrooks now ranks ensily
among the ripest sc holars in the west
He is a fine speaker, and has won dis
tinction as a lecturer. He speaks
rapidly, enunciates distinctly and ges
ticulates with grace- and force. Ik
is easy arid dignified, and his eloquence
al times is impassioned. There is n
grc-e i f self fi.rgi tftibiess and enr-rii-stress
In 1 is style that causes his
audience to lose sight of the man en
tirely und become completely absorbed
in tli presentation of his theme.
Prof. Ilrooks will take charge of
the institution at the close of the pres-
ent term.
j a marvelous machibe.
rowtrlil Davlea far , ricklae Tp
Oeeaa Cable freaa la Briar '
- tha.
A truly wonderful piece of median
ism is the "picking-up" machine used
in all grappling and ' cable-hoisting
operations in cable laying. - It is a
powerful variety of the steam-winch
family, but also a roost aristocratic
and elaborate member, fitted with
gear-changing- clutches, patent brakes
und other ingenious appliances. To
give some idea of its capabilities in
dry figures, it can at slow speed lift
S3 tons ut a rate of one mile per
hour, or ut fast speed ten knots at
the rate of four miles per hour.
Moreover, it can be quickly altered
and adapted to changing circum
stances in speed or lifting weight,
nay Lippineot t's.
All being made ready, the Mg grap
nel, attached to 700 or. 800 fathoms
of chain and rope, is passed over the
bow-sheave, or pulley, aud as soon as
it reaches bottom the ship is scut
slowly ahead. Hack and forward
across the path of the cable, as point
ed out by the friendly marking
buoys, we steam. Several times the
grapnel catches something, only to
lose its hold again probably an in
equality upon the bottom, although
a bosun't mate mumbles "mermnid's
grottoes" but at last comes a steady
strain. Every soul on board hangs
over the bow, watching the grimy
grapnel rope come steadily up and
over the well-oiled pulley. At length
the grapnel itself appears, holding
tight on to the truant.
CYCLES OF SUN SPOTS.
Fresh Intere-t r.ent to the Snbject
ly Hecent Earthquakes and
Volcanic Eruptions.
Since 1851, when the existence of a
sun spot cycle of about 11', years was
discovered, many attempts have been
made to discover a relation between
the sun spots and the atmospheric
changes in our earth. Violent storms,
floods, periods o"f drought and of fam
ine, cold years, warm years, and many
such variations of weather have all
been supposed to owe their origin to
the sun spots. Hut the relation which
Sir Norman Loekycr appears to have
discovered between sun spot cycles and
the tremendous upheavals of the earth
which we term earthquakes and vol
canoes, lends a fresh interest to this
fascinating study, says Golden Penny.
The matter certainly deserves very
full investigation. Incidentally, the
rviernl character of the weather in
, spring of the year seems to favor
the existence of a 35 years cycle of
weather. Thut is, three times one cycle
of sun spots. The year 1867 was just
after the sun spot minimum, and 1902
is also just after the minimum. It was
n cold spring in 1867, and a bitterly
cold month of May. The summer was
very wet. and it. was followed by a
stormy winter, with little frost, and a
very warm spring and summer In 1868.
SAILORS IN BOSTON.
Yachting la One of the Foremost
rieasares and Pastimes of
the Hub.
Who sails boats around Host on?
Why, everyone! says W. J. Hender
son, in Atlantic. From the "Adams
Hoys," the smartest yacht racers of
the east, down to the Marblehead
street boy, everyone takes pride in
his skill in getting the best work out
of some sort of a sailing boat. Those
who do not sail talk about it, and on
a summer day in the drowsy at
mosphere of a Host on club, or in the
shadow of some tall pile in Washing
ton street, you shall hear more rac
ing seaman's lore than anywhere else
in this country except on the cruis
ing ground of the Hocking Chair
fleet ut the Larehmont Yacht club.
Hoston's claim to be the hub of the
universe may be disputed perhaps
when you consider the steel industry
or the unimportant matter of freight
tonnage; but when you come to talk
about sailing, you must admit that
Boston is .the greatest yachting port
in this country. Even the little chil
dren there know the history of the
America's cup, and the public school
boy can sail a dyy with a leg-of-mutton
sail for driving power and an oar
for steering gear.
PIGEONS CARRY DISEASE.
Ohio Health Authorities Sasneet the
Birds of Caaslna; a Srarlrt
Fever Epidemic,
An epidemic of scarlet fever, start
ing in Cincinnati, has spread in the
last few weeks through a number of
towns in Ohio, anil the health au
thorities, after taking extraordinary
precautions to confine the d.sease
within the limit of its first ravages,
were puzzled to understand the means
by which it was carried elsewhere,
states the Chicago Tribune.
They made an investigation and
have now come to the conclusign
that much of the contagion was
spread by tame pigeons and doves
which carried the germs from place
to place.
The evidence on which this theory
is based is that scarlet fever spread
under strict quarantine from a house
on the roof of which there was a
large pigeon cote. The only live
stock about the house not quaran
tined was the pigeons, which flew
about the neighborhood.
If they didn't carry the disease
germs the authorities don't know
how the fever was spread.
Nourishing- Halloas.
Gold .prospector in Alaska say
they can go farther and accomplish
more hard work on rln anrl
---- VBVVU
Uiuu on uny other ration.
rAK1G THE THRONE
Ia Great Britain a Lot of Rid Tap
Is Retired.
Farnsalltlea to De Goae Throask
With la Case of a Jew Saverrlsa
I Met! leva! t'aslosas of
I'rovlatuat loa.
Even though the heir and successor
cf a liritish sovereign may be sitting
at the bedside of thut sovereign when
death comes, as was the case at the
death of Queen Victoria, the new ruler
is sot officially notified of the fact
that he has succeeded to the thrune
until the announcement is made to
him by the lord chamberlain. This is
the first step taken wbena liritish ruler
I dies.
At the earliest possible moment the
privy council conxenes, the members
of that body resign and are immedi
ately reappointed and resworn. At
their first meeting as advisers of the
new sovereign the members of the
cabinet formally give up their seals
of office, whereupon they also are re
sworn to their respective depart
ments. Hot h houses of parliament meet and
the announcement of the death of the
sovereign and the accession of his or
her uccekor is. followed by each
memuer or tiowh bouses, beginning
with the royal dukes in the house of
lords, taking t"re oath of allegiance
to the new ruler. Thus, while the
ministry, consisting of the lenders of
the political party in power resigns
being immediately reappointed no
election for members of the house of
commons is called, and the business of
the country is not interrupted.
At the first, meeting of the privy
council the new sovereign chooses the
title by which he or she shall lie know n,
and takes the oath of allegiance be
fore receiving those of his or her coun
cilors. This royal oath practically is
a promise to rule according to the let
ter and spirit of the constitution ami
en acknowledgment of fidelity to the
THE PRINCE OP WALES.
(Heir Apparent to the Throne of Great
Hrltuin.)
Protestant form of the Christian re
ligion. in these days it is followed by a
promise to maintain in its privileges
the church of Scotland, where a form
of the Presbyterian faith, ami not the
Episcopal denomination, is "the
church by law established."
The formal proclamation of the new
king is worded by the members of the
privy council, w ho, "wit h one voice and
consent, of tongue anil heart, declare
and proclaim the high and mighty
prince, etc. This proclamation is
given to the earl marshal, the chief of
the herald's college, for promulga
tion. In London the medieval custom of
proclaiming the accession not only in
such public places as Trafalgar square
and the Hoyal Exchange but also
within the limits of "the city" proper
(the peculiar domain of the lord may
or) is maintained.
On the occasion of the ascension of
King Edward VII. the delegation from
the herald's college consisted of three
kings at arms, four heralds and eight
pursuivants, dressed in magnificent ccs
umes. These, accompanied by a de
tachment of the roynl horse guards,
marched to Temple Par and formally
demanded admission within the pre
cincts of the city.
The barrier, consisting of a silken
rope in place of the ancient gate, was
removed and the contingent was met
by one almost as brilliant, consisting
of the city marshal, the city remem
brancer, mace bearers, trumpeters,
etc., who conducted the visitors to
where the lord mayor and sheriffs, in
full robes, awaited them in their state
carriages. The proclamation was read
and the city officials replied that they
also, "with one voice and consent of
tongue," pledged their allegiance.
Why Knrs Sometimes nsrn,
. "When our ears do glow and tingle
aome do talk of its in our absence,"
said Pliny, and though over l,900years
have elapsed since his day the rarne
superstition still holds good. Shakes
peare refers to it in "Much Ado About
Nothing" when he makes Heatrice say
to Ursula and Hero, who had been
speaking of her: "What fire is in mine
ears?" The burning of the ears is
itippoed to be due to the ngency of
guardian angels, who touch the left
ear if the talk be favorable, nnd the
right if it be otherw ise, in order that
their charges may lie encouraged or
ivanied, as the case may be.
Arnhs Free from llrinlnehev,
Headaches rarely assail the Bedouin
Arabs. They are nearly all small eat
ers,, and six or seven dates soaked in
melted butter, with a very small quan
tity of coarse flour or thre or rVmr
tableepoonful of boiled rice, serve
man a whole day.
BACTERIA IN DIGESTION.
elaatiae Expcrlaieals with t'hlek
as Shaw Their Prcieset la
Xeeessary ta Xatrltioa.
The results of experiments with
chickens to determine the effect of in
testinal bacteria upon the prwen of
digestion are reported by Prof. Schot
telius in a recent number of the Ar
chiv fur Hygiene, and reproduced by
the Staats Zeitung, says the Literary
Digest. Chickens were kept iu cuget
from which all bacteria were carefully
excluded and were supplied with food
equally free from bacteria. They ate
ravenuusly and almost continually and
evidently digested their food well, yet
not only did they not fatten, but they
steadily decreased in weight and
strength.
Another series of experiments gave
direct and positive proof that the pres
ence of intestinal bacteria is necessary
to nutrition. Chickens which had been
hatched and raised in a sterilized en
vironment, receiving only germ-free
food, thrived for a week, and then
began to decline in weight and
strength. Then they were divided into
tw-o groups, one of which was fed on
sterilized food, the other on food con
taining bacteria. All of the first
group died fn a few days, the others
improved rapiflly and soon were in
distinguishable from chickens that had
run free in the poultry yard. Mme.
Metchnikoffhas obtained analogous re
sults with tadpoles which, fed for a
time with germ-free food, attained an
average weight of 25 milligrams and
an average length of 15.5 millimeters,
while other tadpoles, fed for the same
period on ordinary food, had an av
erage weight of 142 milligrams and an
average length of 20.5 millimeters.
BARING OF FEET AT WORSHIP.
A Cnstom That la RrllKlnusIr ol-
rrved Anions; the Frequent
era of the- Sloaquea.
The India Hiijdus and Mussulmans
alike wear both sandals and shoes
(slippers), nnd the latter boots also.
The sandul (the word is Persian) was
evidently the original covering for the
feet over all southern nnd eastern Asia,
while the shoe was probably intro
duced into India by the Persians, Af
ghans and Mo(n)gols, together with the
"tip-titled" (Hittite and Etruscan)
boot, says the Athanaeum. Hoth are
usually made In India of leather, but
never of pigskin, nnd while the shoes
are always colored red or yellow the
boots are generally brightly parti
colored, both among the upper classes
being also richly embroidered in gold
and silver and variegated silk thread
and with bangles, bugles nnd seed
pearls, after the manner of the an
cient Tersian boots represented on
Greek vases. Hut of however rare nnd
oostly elaboration the invariable rule
Is to remove them after entering a
private house, just when stepping onto
the mat or carpet on which the visitor
takes his seat. They must be cast off
the right boot or shoe first before
the worshiper enters a temple or
mosque, and it is still regarded as an
absolute profanation to nttempt to
enter either fully shod. Hut the do
mestic habit arose out of its obvious
propriety, nnd the religious ritual of
"the shoes of the faithful." now and
forcenturiespast observed throughout
Islam, can lie demonstrated to have
been dictated by. if indeed it be not di
rectly derived from, the universal so
cial etiquette of the east.
GERMLES3 SCH00LB00KS.
rrernntlons Tnken In Suit Lake Cltr
Aitnlnat Sirrnl of Dlaenae
Anions; Children.
A new ordinance has been adopted
in Salt Lake Citv with the idea nf
preventing the disseminating of scar
let lever ami diphtheria germs among
school children, says a recent report
from that city.
Hoth diseases have recently been
epidemic among the children in the
city and the board of health derided
that the germs traveled in the school
liooks and other things carried by
the pupils. The result has been the
passage of an ordinnnce which is
probably more stringent than any
other of the kind ever adopted by
any municipality.
It provides tha none of the school
books shall be covered with any ma
teriulother than paper. In all schools
in which there is a free distribution
of books such bjoks, after hanng
once been used, must be recovered
nnil thoroughly disinfected bv th
board of health.
A student once having received a
book shall keen it as, lone na that
book is necessary for his studies.
It is unlawful for the schools to
collect pencils, sponges or other aiv
tides used by the students for the
purpose of redistributing them to
other students.
A violation of any provision of the
ordinance Is punishable by a fine of
$25.
Disraeli's Satire.
This is what Disraeli wrote at the
time of Queen Victoria's coronation,
and some mny feel the same way
now: "I must give up going to the
coronation, as nil the members of
pnrlinmcnt must be. in court dresses
or uniforms, and I can't afford in
buy any. I console myself with the
conviction tnnt to get up nt seven
o'clock, to sit dressed like a flunkv In
Westminster abbey for seven or
eight hours, and to listen to a ser
mon by the bishop of London nre
treats which can toe missed with for
titude."
IIIk l'"- for a Tooth.
A Russian opera slsger who had
five front teeth knocked out in a rail
way accident has been awnrded com
pensation in the shape of $20,000,
TASTE HI FUNNY ST0r3
Tkaaa Which Ar. Rsral,,,
htlada 1m KKM-4,. T
ar Tsl
car ta Others,
It is sometimes hard to cra .
between that which is hnn,
story and that which tonchr,d J
ouSTr near the domain ...! t
,-. " ,. . " '"'gatii.
literary dinner eiven reeenti. .
this difference in tastes tw,-fc?
Intn vitu . i -- V. m.:
who has a record for artistic ind
- - - luiu nuote
orous, sincere.
At flrftt all u.-n M-.lr
beautiful decadent
a f tory. He toM it well. It. impro Jj
was nubtty Miffgrested, airily outliJ
It wai the sort of a storv thn v
one want the windows opened, butuJ
v-i-vd S"V ra. 1111 t T tT" II I ,
The h n reta nt A
Ing degrees of polite appreciating
the man of direct and tincompromitj
views sat and stared in growing,'
lr at the teller. Finally he expri?
his opinion.
ntMiitm i iru tnai. story intJ
mom, ne announcea, clearly, ernpU
u umui num. a maa and jjufj
... J . i v .
plunge into innocuous cnnM.,.-.i
The sympathy of the diners waiul
4l,..U: l.... !l I... "I
...t w ii uui s. mi umr nines rruntg
preservru.
the hostess, who collects littnJ
i i i i . , . . . er
nous, snouui not xane it, lor gramJ
iiiai mt inw oi tne jungle lnfiircs
dred feeling among the royal beasu.
MUCH RAIN HURTS FISHISg,
Ko Ills; Catrhrs of Trout or Dsia
Western Lakes and Strrami
of Late,
Usually long, frequent, and Iim-I
rains throughout the middle westHj
northwest have put back the fishinj
As a general thing proprietors of
sorts on the inland lakes like n.
a "wet spring, as those lakes are mostly
too shallow, and the higher the wattr
the better the fishing. There haahu.
- vi I
too much of a good thing, bowery I
says tne Chicago Inbune.
The floods have washed quantity
of food into the lakes and the bassart
not enger. The trout is. above .n
things, a clean fish, and must have dm
water in order to feel well. When the
strenms are muddied and sand anj
chips are floating down the trout re
treat to t heir hiding nlnces in the iW
er pools and stay there until the n-at
above them clears. 'The bass are nnt
so susceptible, but still dislike t n rnam
much or do much feedinrfn water tkit
is distributed or swollen.
It is the belief that the present sea
son will be better than many of those
past, because the high water now
means full lakes later. In late July
and August -they have been too shal
low, but enough of water has hem
stored up to last them through.
Postmaster
Palmer
of So. Glen Falls, N. Y., des
cribes a condition which thous
ands of men
and women
find identical
with theirs.
Read what he
says, and note
the similarity
of your own
case. Write to
him, enclosing
stamped ad
dressed envel
ope for reply,
and get a per
L. D. Palmer.
sonal corroboration of what is
here given. He says regarding
Dr. Miles'
Heart Cure:
"I suffered agonizing pain in the left
breast and between tnr thoulden from
heart trouble. My heart would palpi
tate, suiter, men skip beats, until I
could no loader lie la bed. Niorht after
night I walked the floor, for to fie down,
would have meant sudden dtath. Mr
coauuon seemed almost nopeiess when
1 bern taking Dr. Miles' Heart Cure.
bat it helped me from the first Later
I took JJr. Miles' Nervine with the
Hetft Cure and the effect was aston
Ubicf . I earnestly implore similar suf
serers 10 give inese remedies a tnai."
Sold by all Drugflats .
on guarantee.
Dr. Miles Medloal Co., Elkhart, Ind.
WINDSOR HOUSE j
W. lit. Bl'TI.F.R, Proprietor
418 Market Si., Harrisburg Pa., 1
(Opposite P. R. R. Depot Entrance) j
Vf'nlled for All Trains-,
Rooms, 25 and SOc. Good Meals, 25c
. Good accommodations. tf
Is signature Is on every box of the genuine j
aiative Bromo-Quininc Tablets ?
remedy that rare a cold In ma day
Agents Wanted
MFROFT. nF.WITTTAI.WAnr, byhla
son, MKV. FRANK DHW1TT TALMAGE and (
associate editors of Christian Herald. Only I
book endorsed by TttlruaR family. Knornions
pront lor ni(eiita who act niilckly. Outfit ten 1
oenta. Write Immedintely Clark (Jo.. UHil I
a -tin mu, rutin., ra. jienllon lb Yon,
fr4t.
3 VTTO
1 H.S17y
1 VtfflSS
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