Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, August 03, 1899, Image 3

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    "Do Not Grasp attheShadow
and Lose the Substance."
Many people acre but shadows of theit
former selves, due to neglect health*
Look out for the blood, the fountain of
life, the actual substance; keep that pure
by regular use of Hood's Sarsaparilla and
robust health will be the result• Be sure
to get only Hood's, because
A Newfoundland dog made a deter
mined and successful attempt at sui
cide the other day in the lake in front
of Lincoln Park, Chicago.
Ask Your Dealer for Allcu's Foot Fuse,
A powder to shake into your shoes; rests
the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen,
Bore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet
and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease
makes new or tight shoes easy. At all drug
gists and %hoes stores, 25 eta. Sample mailed
FREE. Adr's Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y.
Progress of the Telephone.
Mr. W. H. Preece, president of th#
British Institution of Civil Engineers,
In a recent address, said that speech i r
now practically possible between an>
two postofflces In the United King
dom. Theoretically it is possible to
talk between London and every capital
in Europe, and the British postoffice
authorities are considering the sub
mersion of special telephone cables to
Belgium, Holland and Germany.
Kducate Your Boweta With Oueareta.
Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever.
Soc, 250. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money.
THE TOWER OF LONDON,
toeklng Up a Quaint and Anelent
Ceremony.
The main guardhouse at the Tower,
which has Just been pulled down, was
hard by the Bloody Tower. It Is at
this spot, says the London Graphic,
that the quaint and ancient ceremony
of locking up tho tower Is nightly per
formed, as It has been for centuries. A
few minutes before 11 o'clock the head
warder, or yeoman porter, as he Is
properly styled, clothed In a red cloak,
carrying a portentous bunch of keyß,
and accompanied by another warder
carrying a lantern, appears in front of
the main guardhouse and roars out,
"Escort, keys!" The sergeant turns
out with some of the men, and follows
the yeoman to the outer gate, the whole
party being challenged by all the sen
tries with "Who goes there?" and the
answer is simply "Keys." The gates
being locked the keys are brought back
to the main guard. Here the sentry
•tamps and roars out, "Who goes
there?"
"Keys," Is the reply.
"Whose keys?"
"Queen Victoria's keys."
"Advance, Queen Victoria's keys.
And all's well.
"God bless Queen Victoria!" cries
the yeoman porter.
"Amen," responds the main guard.
"Present arms!" cries the officer on
duty, and amid the rattle of the salute
he kisses the hilt of his sword. The
yeoman porter marches off with the
keys and deposits them In the lieuten
ant's lodgings, and from that time
throughout the livelong night you can
only circulate within the tower pro
•olnots If you know the countersign.
John WBH Ready.
In these days of proposed interna
tional alliances It Is Interesting to read
of the little difficulty in which a Chi
cago newsboy found himself Involved,
and how he extricated himself there
from. He had wandered over Into one
of the "foreign quarters," on the west
aide, where one can hear almost every
language except our vernacular, and
lie was set upon by two or three boys.
He defended himself bravely and was
holding hts own fairly well, until the
two or three were Joined by as many
xnore. and then tho battle began to go
against him. "Say!" be yelled to a
group of boys watching the fight from
the sidewalk, "is there an English boy
4n the crowd?" "Yes." shouted a
atockily built urchin of about his own
size. "Come yere, then!" panted the
young American, laying about him
■with all his might, "an' we'll clean
out the hull gang!" And they did.
Miss Lockheart's
LETTER TO MRS. PINKHAM.
[LETTER TO EEL TINEHAU NO. 67,104]
" I cannot express my gratitude to
you for the good that Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound has done
tor me. I have taken five bottles of
the Compound and two boxes of Liver
Pills and feel better In every respect.
I had suffered for years with dropsy;
-the veins in my limbs burst, caused
from the pressure of the water. I had
the worst kind of kidney trouble, faint
ing spells, and I could not stand long
at a time. I also had female weakness
and the doctor said there was a tumor
in my left aide. The pains I had to
•tana were something dreadful. A
friend handed me a little book of yours,
o I got your medicine and it has saved
my life. I felt better from the first
bottle. The bloating and the tumors
fcav* all gone and I do not suffer any
pain. lam still using the Vegetable
Compound and hope others may find
relief as I have done from its use."—
Hiss N. J. LOCKHEAUT, BOX 16, ELIZA
BETH, Pa.
Only the women who have suffered
with female troubles can fully appre
ciate the gratitude of those who baV")
been restored to health.
Mrs. Plnkham responds quickly and
without charge to all letters from suffer
ing women. Her address is Lynn, Mass.
THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE.
STORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE
FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS.
Numerically Correct— Built For Ba*tnf*a
—Not. to lie Cornered—lt Would lie
Quite Undesirable—No Oflenxe Aieuut
A Joke on the Goat, Ktc., Etc.
The fair Euphemia Brown Is 1,
And quickly 2 the church she hies,
\Yi 3 sou for the hasty act
Be I her ardent lover's eyes;
"If 5 to meet your irate jm,
I fear 'twill make me <*>," snid he,
"Unless this 7 ly plan of yours
Should culmin 8 auspiciously.
Oh, Fate, be but in this be 9.
10 nothing more from thee!"
TSuilt For Engines*.
Traveler—"Are the mosquitoes
thick around here'.'"
i Suburbanite—"No. Long and
slim." —Life.
i Result of Mature Consideration.
Miss Peachblow—"Was your mar
riage to old Moneybags tlie result of
love at first Bight?"
Mrs. Moneybags—"No; of second
thought."—Kansas City Independent.
It Would Bo t.ulte Undesirable.
"Do you suppose the time will ever
i come when womeu will serve oa the
jury?"
i "I hope not. There are too many
disagreements now."—Detroit Free
Press.
Not to lie Cornered.
1 The Optimist—"Come, now, yon
will have to admit that you enjoy the
warm weather."
The Pessimist "'M—well it
brings mosquitoes."—lndiauapolis
Journal.
A Way to Get Them.
1 Her Mother—"Don't fret about
diamonds, child. How can you ex
, peet everything with a good hus
i band?"
; She—"Bother the husband!" —Jew-
, elers' Weekly.
A Jeke on the Goat.
"I say, Jimmie, come down—going
to have an awful lot of fun."
I "W'at?"
1 "We've fed the goat with the big
bath sponge, and now we're goiu' to
let 'im drink."—Tit-Bits.
No Oftenne Meant.
Customer—"l want to get a note
| book. Something that I can carry in
j my pocket to jot down my ideas
jin "
Clerk—"Ob; you want something
very small, then?"— Harlem Life.
1 If He Had His Way.
' Wife (at breakfast) —"I want to do !
7 i some shopping to-day, dear, if the
i weather is favorable. What are the
forecasts?"
Husband (consulting the paper)—
"Rain, hail, thunder and lightning."
A Sad ISeality.
Jack'Tar—(in whirlpool)—" And to
think that I use to give money to get
a ride on a merry-go-round."—New
York Journal.
Thought More of Hie Clothe*.
An artist gave his last work to a
porter to convey to the Academy.
"Be careful," said he, "the picture
is scarcely dry."
"Oh, never mind," exclaimed the
porter; "my clothes are old."—Golden
Penny.
A Graduate.
First Pickpocket—"How's Jimmy
getting on in de biz?"
Second Pickpocket—"Pretty fair.
He's been so successful in finding
men's pockets that the gang is think
ing of letting him tackle women's
pockets."—Chicago News.
Wherein Wealth Htm No Pull.
Yes, her hat was certainly lovely,
though it had cost but $18.13; quite as
lovely as that Smith woman's, which
had cost nearly a hundred.
"But the Smiths are able to own a
more conspicuous pew iu church than
we are," faltered the husband.
"Well, they can't come iu any later
than we can, I guess!" she exclaimed,
radiantly,—Detroit Journal.
A Shocked Expert.
Expert (engaged in examining the
accounts of the late Bustail Bank) —
"X nearly fainted with surprise to
day. Never received Buch a shook in
my life."
Depositor (tremulously)—" What was
it?"
Expert—"Some of the stock on which
the bank officers loaned money tc
themselves was good."—New York
Weekly.
A Theory.
"How were the pyramids raised?"
asked the man who is always trying
to impress his wife. "How did they
manage to lift those immense structures
which stand to-day as monuments of
infinite toil?"
"I don't know," answered his wife.
"Maybe the fact that there werjn'tany
pyramids as yet to tempt men ;o sit on
the door step and ask questions, when
they might be at work, had something
to do with it."—Washington Star.
COERCING A RELUCTANT HEN.
At First She Was Averse to Raising: a
Brood; Now She's "Setting:" All Right.
In Missouri lives a boy who likes
pets. He began with a pair of pig
eons that he got in a trade for a dog
that he traded a knife for. His par
ents allowed him to keep the pigeons
•until they multiplied so that there
were pigeons all over the place. Then
he sold the pigeons and bought a goat
that ate the clothes off the line every
Monday. |He was compelled to dis
pose of it, and traded it for a pair of
game chickens. In a week there
wasn't a rooster left in the neighbor
hood; the game rooster had killed
them all. His father took the game
chickens for a ride one night and lost
them three miles out in the country.
Three days later he brought them
home, but he never told any one how
he got them. And so he fought for
his pets one by one; his dog was lost,
his lamb stolen, his rabbits ran away.
He has come down one old hen.
Recently he bought a "settin' " of
eggs. A "settin'" of eggs is as
many as a motherly hen can hatch
into chicks. He had made up his
mind that his hen was lonely
and needed company, and what so
companionable as a batch of little
chicks to scratch for? The hen, how
ever, had different views, and didn't
want to sit on the eggs. But he was
not a boy to be stumped by a hen—
he had borne too mauy losses al
ready.
He put the eggs in a box, in which
he had made a nest of hay. Then he
planted the indignant hen on them,
put a board in which he had bored a
lot of air holes over her and left her
to come to terms. That night his
big brother kicked off the box and set
the hen free. The next morning the
boy put her back, and put some
bricks on the board, for he thought
she had raised the board and released
herself. The brother kicked both
bricks and board off that night. The
boy replaced hen and board again,
and again they were kicked off. Then
he got a board and made a hole in it
for the hen to poke her head through,
and nailed the board to the box.
Once a day he takes the board off and
chases the hen around the yard for
exercise, and twice a day he carries
food and water to her.
What's the use of trying to discour
age a boy like that?
Using Petroleum For Fuel.
Speaking of oil reminds me tliat all
tlie locomotives on tlie Santa Fe Rail
road in California are run with
petroleum for fuel. Tlie supply comes
from a big petroleum ranch near
Fullerton, where there are twelve
wells yielding an average of 400 bar
rels a day. Altogether there are fifty
two locomotives on the California
division fitted with oil burners, and
they have not only proved eminently
successful, but cost no more than
coal burners. A ton of oil will carry
them twice as many miles as a ton of
coal and haul tlie same load. Coal is
worth $7 a ton and oil about the same
price.
The petroleum output in Southern
California now amounts to about 45,-
000 barrels a day, and it is all con
sumed upon the Pacific coast. It was
discovered about ten years ago, and
has been in use for about five years.
A tank stesmer runs regularly between
Santa Barbara and San Francisco,
carrying refined petroleum to the lat
ter market. The Southern Pacific
runs its local trams by oil, and it is
also consumed as fuel in several
manufacturing establishments in this
section. There is no'smoke and no
cinders. The looomotive tenders on
the Santa Fe Road are big tanks, and
the engineer feeds the fire with a key.
—Chicago Record.
Casslni antl tlie Antique Coin.
Comte Cassini, Russian Ambassador
to the United States, 13 a brilliant wit
and a man of many-sided culture. His
peculiarities were brought into prom
inence, in Washington, on one occa
sion when a banker,more distinguished
for commercial genius than far anti
quarian knowledge, produced what he
claimed were ancient Egyptian coins.
He descanted upon one of them, wind
ing up with the remark: "This was
made so long ago that even the plaoe
of its creation is forgotten."
Cassini sighed as he remarked, 1 'Yes,
1 must be getting to be a very old man,
for I remember the little shop in Bir
mingham where the manufacturer used
to turn them out at three shillings and
sixpence a dozen."—Saturday Even
ing Post.
A President's Grave Unmarked.
An article in the Ladies' Home
Journal, entitled "Where Our Presi
dents Are Buried," recalls the fact that
four of the first five of our Chief Ex
ecutives sleep in the soil of Old Vir
ginia. The article says that the
grave of President John Tyler, at
Richmond, Virginia, is absolutely un
marked—even by a small headstone.
Visitors to Hollywood Cemetery are
shown a scarcely perceptible mound,
over which a magnolia tree spreads its
shade in summer, as the resting-plaoe
of our tenth President. Tho burial
places of all the others are marked
with monuments or tombs, except
those of the two Adamses, who are
buried under the portico of the First
Church at Quincy, Mass.
Cure For the Blue, at Dew'. Fond.
Pastures are getting fine. Cattle,
horses and stock of all kinds are fat
and sleek. With plenty of good, cold
buttermilk, rich sweet milk and fresh
butter, with plenty of nice fish just
from the pond, we also have decided
that life is worth living, and that the
rich folks do not get all the good
things. If you are gloomy and the
world is not going right with you, dig
yon some bait, get your hook, come
to Dew's Pond, pull out a few of
those trout aud you are permanently
cured.—Calhoun (Ga.) Times.
PUZZLE DEPARTMENT. ??
********* vexxwaaetoK
Tb9 solutions to these puzzles will ap
pear in a succeeding issue.
133.—Six Decapitations.
1. Behead terror and leave part of
tlio head.
2. Belated, and leave age.
J3. Eutire, and leave an opening.
4. Laud, and leave spherical.
5. Sombre, and leave an ancient
boat.
G. Recompensed, and leave help.
134.—A Diamond.
I. A consonant. 2. A article of
furniture. 3. A fruit, 4. A point.
5. A letter.
135—A Charade.
"First" does purify or cleanse,
The meaning is not dense.
"Second" when you eonl buy
Its weight is what you try.
"Whole" a general known to all,
Or it you prefer a city cail.
130.—A liletufrraui.
Whole I am a collection or quan
tity of matter, change my head and I
become successively to grasp, to ex
pel, a producer of fire, and a fasten
ing.
ANSWERS TO fIit:VIOL'S PUZZLES.
129.—Qualities of Flowers—
Foxglove, Larkspur, Monkshood,
Lady Slipper.
130.—A Diamond—
O
DEN
DAE E D
CEBV E K A
NEEDY
DRY
A
131.—Six Buried Cities-
Genoa, Liege, Venice, Manila, lien
ares, Rotterdam.
132.—Idaho.
THE FEATHER BUSINESS.
Most of the Millions of Pounds Used
Come From Clilmi.
The fierce fire in a feather foundry
which took place recently at Newark,
N. J., called attention to the fact that
a large business is done in feathers,
and that the fluffy, bulky article is an
important item in the commercial
world.
"Of course," said a large importer
of feathers and down, "most people
know that feathers are not made; that
they are simply gathered off the live
birds for the market; but there are
not many people who know that'nearly
the whole supply, which amounts to
several million pounds a year in this
country, comes here from China via
Germany. In China the feathers aro
gathered by small dealers and com
mission merchants through the coun
try, and the stock finds its way finally
to Hong Kong, where the large pack
ing and cleaning establishments are
situated. Some fenlhers are made
ready for the consumer there, but the
largest part of the product is sent
'raw' to Europe, where the dusting
and renovating take place. One of the
largest plants in Europe is in Prague,
where the factories of the concern
whioh had the loss in Newark are lo
cated."
The duty on raw feathers is fifteen
per otnt., and fifty per cent, on the
manufactured or cleaned article, and
in order to save a part of the extra
thirty-five per cent., factories have
been established here. The raw ma
terial comes to the United fctate- in
bales, which have been reduced in
size by hydraulic pressure and con
tain about 400 pounds each.
Feathers which remain in Europe
are used to a great extent for feather
beds, but of the material which comes
to this country the largest part is
used for pillows and cushions.
"The ordinary pillow," said a man
ufacturer, "eats up seventy-five per
cent, of the supply, and the rest goes
to miscellaneous bedding, and the
down whioh is selected from the
feathers and comes, in some instances,
already selected, is used for fancy
cushions of the better grade and for
bed covers. Feather beds, the old
fashioned article, which corns here
from Germany and Ireland, are going
out ef date rapidly, and even the East
Siders make pillows of their beds
after they have been in the country a
few years. New York is no place for
feather beds, anyway, even if the peo
ple wanted tbem. In apartments like
those in the old-fashioned New Eug"
land homes a mountain of feathers
may be housed, but in flats, which
are so small that the occupants must
use condensed milk, the feather bed
can have no place."
On the Wrong; Man.
Bret Ilarto is so frequently compli
mented as the author of "Little
Breeches," that he is almost as sorry
it was ever written as is Colonel John
Hay, who would prefer his fame to
rest on more ambitious work. A
gushing lady, who prided herself upon
her literary tastes, said to him once:
"My dear Mr. Harte, lam so delighted
to meet you. I have read everything
you ever wrote, but of ail your dialect
verse there is none that compares to
your 'Little Breeches.'" "I qnite
agree with you, madam," said Mr.
Harte, "but you have put the little
breeches on the wrong man."—The
Argonaut.
One-Cent Carfare In Italy.
Electric power has been introduced
on all the street railway lines in Milan,
Italy, and the directors have tried the
experiment of reducing the fare from
the equivalent of two cents to one
daring the rush hours—7 to 9 a. m.
The effect was a gain of fifty per cent,
over previous receipts for that period
of time, three passengers being car
ried at one cent for every one carried
at two cents. The innovation will be
made permanent.
A Legacy of Pretense.
Just one hundred years ago the Man
hattan Company of New York was In
corporated by Aaron Burr. Its osten
sible purpose was to supply the city
with water. Its real purpose was to
open a bank. The reason for the con
cealment was because there was a pop
ular prejudice against banks. A tank
was built, hollow logs laid for pipes,
and water was distributed until 1840.
In order to keep its charter, this great
banking company, which still exists,
Is today obliged to pump water from
its ancient tank. A pitcherful is al
ways in evidence at its annual meet
ings, and a committee solemnly re
ports that no applications for water
have been refused. The story has its
humorous side, but It illustrates the
legacy of pretense and useless effort
which roundabout methods always en
tail. Aaron Burr's mode of seeking one
object under cover of another has
many followers, but in politics or so
ciety or in individual relations it can
never be commended and seldom ex
cused.
A Tale of the First Napoleon.
From the Weekly Telegraph: In the
days of the first empire the Paris stu
dents formed a cabal against the dram
atist Lemercier. One first night the
disturbance was reported to Napoleon,
who gave orders for a second represen
tation. The students still hissed. The
emperor got excited. "Play it again,"
he said, "and I will go and see it." This
time all seemed well. In the third
act it struck his majesty to look out of
his box, and the quiet was explained.
Every head in the audience was cov
ered with an immense nightcap drawn
over the ears, and each head was nod
ding. Napoleon bur t out laughing.
The piece was not picked again.
Two hundred men have refused to
work at cleaning Brooklyn streets be
cause they did not wish to wear the
"white wings" uniform. They were
hired under the new system, and all of
them are Americans. They say they
will not clean the streets until the
Legislature changes the law that com
pels them to wear the white wings.
"We are men," they say, "not mon
keys."
Beatify 1m Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
itirring up the lazy liver and driving all im
purities from the body. Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, K)c, 25c, 50c.
There can be no doubt that the most
obliging postmaster in the State of
Missouri lives at Bethel. He recently
put a telephone in his office and an
nounced tjjat for the benefit of those
out-of-town patrons who are connected
by wire and who may desire it he will
open their letters and will read the
contents to them over the 'phone.
To Gore Constipation Forever*
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c.
tf C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money.
A mill-owner not long ago issued the
order that the girls in his employ
should not wear laced shoes. The rea
son he gave was that each one's boot
became untied at least five times a
day, and took at least five seconds to
retie. When these 25 seconds were
multiplied by 300 —the number of girls
In his employ—the loss of time was,
he said, too serious to submit to.
piy|
I Thirty f
I* Gray 1
How is this? %
Perhaps sleepless nights
caused it, or grief, or sick- *
ness, or perhaps it was care. jl
No matter what the cause. " I
you cannot wish to look ola fJ
Gray hair is starved hair. S
The hair bulbs have been if
deprived of proper food or
proper nerve force. §1
Agere s
Hair
Vigor
increases the circulation in '
the scalp, gives more power i
to the nerves, supplies miss- !
ing elements to the hair '
bulbs. t
Used according to direc- r
tlons, gray hair begins to ,
i show color in a few days. 1
Soon It has ail the softnesa J
and richness of youth and ;
the color of early life returns. 1
I Would you like our book I
| on the Hair? We will gladly >
J send It to you. t
I Write tnl '
, If you do not obtain all the 4
1 benefits you expected from t
1 the Vigor, write the doctor 111
about it. He may be able to .1
suggest something of value f£
, to you. Address, Dr. J. C. (3
' Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. vf
BE3Si^Ss3B£di3C^9
GOLDEN CROWN
LAMP CHIMNEYS
Are the betd. Ask for them. Cost no more
tlian common chimneys. All dealers.
I'ITTSBIJItO OLABS CO., Allegheny, Pa.
To get the best results you must use the best
materials.
You need expect only poor laundering with poor
soap, but you will find dainty articles that have been
washed with Ivory Soap restored to their original
freshness with unchanged colors.
Nothing that will stand the application of plain
water will be injured by Ivory Soap.
IVORY SOAP IS 99%0 PEP CENT. PURE.
Oddities in Umbrellas.
Many curious umbrellas are made.
One I have seen, says James Gilmer
Speed In Woman's Home Companion,
can be taken apart and put In one's
pocket. The stick Is of wood about an
inch In diameter. The cover can be
turned Inside out and folded Into a
small bundle. By touching a spring ,
the ribs came ofT, straighten out, and
may be placed in the hollow of the
stick, which is then a presentable
walking stick. It is found very con
venient by Its owner, who Is a drum
mer. Another Is still more Ingenious.
The handle is curved, and when a
spring is pressed a pipe flies out. The
ribs are stowed away In the center and
the owner has a walking stick, but in
the center there is also a rapier, which
may be drawn out. Another neat In
vention is a hollow stick which con
tains a camp chair. Three steel sup
ports are pressed out of the top of the
stick, a triangular piece of canvas put
on, and a seat is had which is at least
as comfortable as a bicycle saddle.
All of these strange umbrellas come
from the old world. The umbrella
makers say that Europeans take much
more pride in their umbrellas than
do people in this country. Many little
Jokes sre concealed In the umbrella
handles there. A handle may present
the appearance of the head of a mon
key or a cat or some other animal, and
a secret spring will cause the little
creature to open Its mouth and spurt a
drop of cologne on the beholder.
Sunshine In Europe.
According to a recent report issued
by the French bureau of agriculture,
Spain, and not Italy, should have the
adjective "sunny" placed before It. On
the average, It Is said, Spain enjoys
about 3,000 hours of sunshine a year,
while Italy has 2,300. France has al
most as much sunshine as Italy, her
figures being 2,200. Germany has at
her disposal no more than 1,700 hours;
while England, the land of fogs, has to
get along with 1,400, less than half of
Spain's amount.
Probabilities to Fit,
Wife (at breakfast)—l want to do
eome shopping today, dear, if the
weather Is favorable. What are the
forecasts? Husband (consulting his
paper) —Rain, hall, thunder and light
ning.
It's too much to expect an all-around
politician to be exactly square.
Aon't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Toar Mfe Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be ma?
aettc. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
ttrong. All druggists, GOc or 11. Cure guaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
The population of the South African ,
Republic consists of 63.000 Boers, 87,000
other white, called Uitlanders, and 600,- 1
000 Kaflirs and Zulus. I
Ifo-To-Dae for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 60c, 81. All druggists.
All the 50 incorporators of the Mis
sissippi Cotton Manufacturing Com
pany, just chartered and capitalized at
$250,000, are negroes, and styled the
best-known and most substantial men '
of their race in the State.
H. H. GREEN'S SONS, of Atlanta, Ga., are
the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the
world. See their liberal offer in advertise
ment in another column of this paper.
The Emperor of China has never left
his palace except to pray at the Tem
ple of Heaven.
Conductor E. D. Loomls, Detroit, Mich.,
•ays: 'The effect of Hall's Catarrh Cure is
wonderful." Write him about it Sold by 1
DruflHete. 75c.
Soothing Syrup for children
■••thing, softens tiie gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic.a bottle.
lose Pino's Cure for Consumption both in
my family and practice.—Dr. G. W. PATTKU
BON, lnkster, Mich., Nov. 5, lt&L
SAPOLIO
Is Like a Good Temper. "It Sheds a
Brightness Everywhere."
INSOMNIA
u l have been using VA SCA HETB for
Insomnia, with which I have been ufllicted for
over twenty years, and I can say that Cuscarett
. have given me more relief than any other remo*
jdy I have ever tried. 1 shall certainly recom
' mend them to my friends as being all they are
represented." Teos. GILLARD, Elgin, 111.
CATHARTIC
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
Pleasant. Palatable, Pctent. Taste Good n
Good, Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe, 10c. 25c Mo!
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Remedy Company. Chicago, Montreal, New York. 315
NO-TO-BAC
SPECULATORS.
Have you lost money honestly through legitimate
Keculatlon or have you been ltobbed? Write as
out the fakes and Swindlers In Wall Street, Chi
cago, Boston, Cincinnati, Pittsburg, Washington,
and other cities. Beware of Kkiu Information Bu
reaus and Agencies. Send lo cents for copy latest
edition ON 'CIIANGK, 16 pages, which gives list
of alleged Bucket Shops and alleged Bankers and
Brokers here and other leading cities. Read about
leader of Big Brokerage concern now a United
States prisoner and in Ludlow St. jail, fur fraudu
lent use of mails.Other swindlers now under arrest
Bucket Shop Keepers recently convicted. Red hot
talk on evils of
E3UOKEET ©HOF=>S.
Bail bonds of the Notorious Bean Gang fixed at
$7600 each. How fools and their money were sep
arated by a Wall St. firm. How member Chicago
Board of Trade worked the publ e. Find out who
you are dealing with. An Exchange membership,
a good Financial rating, tine promises or elaborate
literature is no protection. We know the honest
from the dishonest Brokers. Reports on Brokers
(one report), $2.00. Additional reports, SI.OO. Col
lections of accounts lost through Brokers a Bi>e
cialty. Accounts examined ami investigated. Re
ferences 15 Exchanges ami 600 legitimate Brokers iu
U.S. Correspondence confidential. Write or call.
Address E. 1.. 11 LAKE dL CO., UO liroad
Street. New York.
'•BIG FOUR"
"THESEA LEVEL ROUTE"
NEW YORK,
DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE.
WAGNER SLEEPINC CARS.
DININC CARS.
B. E. INGALLB, WARREN I. LYNOH,
President, Gen. Pass. & Ticket ArL
STOPPED FREE '
Permanently Cured
SB H H Insanity Prevented by
B* ■ ■ mm BR. KLINE'S GREAT
fc P ■ W SERVE RESTORER
Pssidvs rur, for an A'wmi Kwwu, Fxu. KpiUptf,
B !l7Tf\?* 7 Treatiae and $8 trial bottle
free Pit paUaoia, they paying xpr*M cbargMonly
Uit * + ++ ±m
< ► THE JUDGES OF < |
CARTER S INK;;
are the users. More users of it than
t ► any other. Why ? THE BEST I < I
i > Costa YOU no more than the poorest! 4 ,
FIENSION.S^'
"Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau.
Syralu civil war. 15 adjudicating claims, atty eiucu
LIFETF D E W
OUTFIT FHKL SUHEI c. KILLKK. Lk-iJ. BIJ.T. CluiSaO
DROPSYSSS&,
esses. Book of testimonials and I() ilnvn' treatment
Free. Dr. H. H OKEEN'S BONB, Box D, At'aU, Oa.
DHFIIM CURED-Sample bottle. < day.
KIILUITI A MOLYI treatment, pout paid, 10 oenta
"Alhamdib Bxmxdi Co., 246 Greenwich St.. W.Y
I J . N. V. 28 '99
\V A JJ. T ® D - ( 'eseof had health that R-I-P-A-N-8
** will not benefit. Send 6cts.to Ripans Chemical
"" New York, for lOaamplosand 1000tMMmos<si