The weekly bulletin. (Florin, Penn'a.) 1901-1912, July 23, 1902, Image 3

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    PRODUCING DYNAMITE.
Band Dunes of Indiana Devoted to the
Explosive,
In the midst of a stretch of desolate
gand dunes in Lake county, Ind.,
scarcely more than thirty miles from
Chicago, is a spot which might well
\ | be the Mecca of the anarchist. Every-
rs
3
S
ic !
rs,
€;
ical
bbs,
rs;
l.a-.
bns,
ler
rad-
htric
fer,
ead,
Sed-
amin
Her-
racto
nery,
Lindley,
n Hoffman, Pitts-
ellogg, Robesonia,
ons, rairfield, $12; John
, Nittany, $10; David B.
lo, $10; Chas. W. Shupps,
, $17; James Penrod, Brad-
Ellis Baker, Montoursville,
J. Phillips, Tioga, $8; Chas.
in, Sabula, $12; Jacob Meese,
$12; Thomas Burns, Ju-
nas Alexander, Pittsburg,
E. Keen, Dubois, $12;
fhan, Indiana, $17; Edward
ton Hamilton, $12; John W,
stown, $8; John H. Love,
$12: Robert Beer, Erie, $8;
Pay, Oil City, $12; Wm. A.
New Castle, $8; George Wis-
Illy. $10; Alice Reynolds, Pitts-
minor of Thomas D. Wcody,
88; Mary E. Taylor. South
Hannah M. Sheppard,
Reid, Rose Point,
nald, McKeesport,
ns, Worthington,
rodes Mills, $12.
ba ember of the
sterdam, Hol-
form a combi-
n of the leading
t high grade lu-
rasion of Ameri-
urope-is entirely
pion of American
intjens says that
nly American ma-
n oil with which to
ight train, contain-
| 1f at Eddystone,
ashed into the
seven or eight
¢s. Charles
pd.
of the
Good
htion
vania,
Ovdwein’s- kpll
delegates were
Pleman, of Philadel-
kd John Dixon, of
pecretary.
orth and family, of Wy-
narow escape from cre-
ey owe their lives to the
ng of one of their horses,
ened them. Their home,
Bre, warehouse and barn
and the family had barely
e in their night clothes.
ird time Emory Dull, a
h the Pennsylvania Rail-
in Harrisburg, was run
lly hurt.
school teachers of Sale
p, Fayette county, have
fike for higher wages by
heir applications for po-
wu. The teachers are
: of this they pay
ard.
the old James
ownship, on
stice of
at meas-
back of
rtle ever
n jail at
or water
rested in
ment with
fairs. He
Jd and is
himself to
ashington,
the operat-
{ospital, in
1000. Mrs.
pe late Thos.
Hent of the
mpany, and
ja, heard a
his house at
norning, and
rying to get
out into the
Leven-year-nld
shed. An in-
he child while
1e third story,
shed below, a
She was awak-
njured.
reiner, on the
red snd robbed
§, a resident of
ears, was found
3 years old.
ason is opening
season owing to
of the past three
h employed at the
Brristown, is in a
as the result of a
a vat at the works
Wood and Extract
Worris Maris opened
d was fatally scalded.
been formed with M.
ork, as president, to
tilize valuable depos-
ently discovered on
Columbia.
will be responsi-
of chestnuts,
fall, In some
ocusts liter-
ing and de-
where is sand—sand in beaches, hil-
locks, ridges, and hills—and out of
these drifting, shifting heaps rises
smoke from the stacks of one of the
largest plants in the country devoted
to the manufacture of dynamite.
It is a plague spot to those who look
upon it from afar, but to those whose
duty takes them into mixing houses,
nitrators, acid works, packhouses and
magazines in the plant of nearly five
hundred acres it is a place where
wages are good, where employment
Is steady, and where—even through
the atmosphere of unceasing watch-
fulness and care—the spirit of gossip
and laughter and song may find its
vent.
But watchfulness and care on the
part of men have not sufficed to re-
assure the builders of such a plant
for profit. Each building is separated
from the others by wide spaces, in
which sand embankments have been
heaped as a further precaution against
a possible explosion in one building
communicating itself to another. Sev-
eral tramway lines connect these
structures, however, making the wide
distances of small consequence in the
matter of time. The whole plant is
heated by steam and lighted by elec-
tricity, thus minimizing the dangers
of fire, and, with these general precau-
tions the studied carefulness of em-
ployes in every department of the
work is the price of safety in this
ever-menacing occupation of dyna-
mite making.
As might readily be conceived, the
machinery adapted to the manufac-
ture of dynamite, nitroglycerine is per-
fection. It has grown by steps almost
as cautious as those by which the
chemist has come to a knowledge of
what will happen when he mixes two
substances in a mortar. In the early
days of chemistry the stroke of a pes-
tle in a mortar has sent a laboratory
up in smoke or blown it to fragments
for idle winds. Today a chamical
laboratory is a good fire risk, and the
time may come when even a factory
making dynamite will be allowed a
gite in a city block. That time has
not yet come, however.
Nobel discovered dynamite in 1867—
a discovery, however, which simply
made nitro-glycerine portable with
comparative safety ad capable of
being exploded in a dry state. A box
of dynamite may be thrown from any
height or may sustain a violent shock
without explosion. It is much safer
than gunpowder when all possible

| conditlons of Aigment and storage
are considered.
In the beginning
made by saturating wood DiPey
dust or charcoal with nitro glyce .
Later it was found that yieselquhr,
a silicious earth, spongy and com-
absorption. It absorbs larger quanti-
ties of the liquid and holds it against
evaporation. In this form dynamite
freezes easily, and it hardens past
working at 42 degrees; on being
warmed to 60 degrees or above, how-
ever, it regaing its full force. In
small quantities it may be burned
without danger; in large bulk, how-
ever, it is likely to explode whila
burning. To explode it special deton.
ating caps are used in the cartridges.
Pioneer Street Bootblacks.
“The first public street bootblack
that I ever saw worked on lower
Broadway in New York city in 1857,”
explained a Pension Office clerk. “I
resided in New York city at that time
and knew the .boy well. His name
was Reddy Walsh. He generally was
to be found near the Astor House.
All of the hotels had a staff of boot-
blacks then much larger than they do
now, for muddy or very muddy
streets in New York are things of the
past. There was plenty of work for
them, however. Reddy was a charac-
ter in his way, but it was not long
before hé had opposition, and inside
of a year there were hundreds of
street ‘bootblacks in downtown New
York.
“l came to Washington with the
Seventh New York Regiment at the
breaking out of the Civil War, early
in 1861, and with the regiment came
two or three of these bootblacks.
They were packed into the baggage
cars and came as baggage. The boys
remained here, and as soon as the
men in our regiment learned that it
was the proper thing for the soldiers
to look after their own boots, for
shoes were not much worn then, the
bootblacks drifted away from the regi-
ment and went to work on the streets.
They made their headquarters gener-
ally near the old Willard. They
were, I understand, the first street
bootblacks ever seen on the streets
of Washington. As there was more
mud than anything else on the streets
then, it was not long before they had
hundreds of followers. At one time
during the war fifty bootblacks could
be seen on the avenue in a distance of
four or five blocks.”—Washington
Star.
A Modern Street Sprinkler.
The most up-to-date thing in the
way of street spricklers is in use on
the streets of Colorado Springs, Col.
Here there is ne:essitv for sprinkling
the streets all the year round, and as
the avenues are all unusually wide
the proposition has always been a dif-
ficult one and a matter of serious ex-
pense. Ln electrical sprinkler has
been recently put to work and its per-
formances seem marvelous as com-
pared with the machines which are


pressible, was the best agent for this |

more or less familiar to all. The use
of the arm on one side of the ma-
chine is dispensed with entirely and
the water is thrown from both sides
at one fime, and by the use of an elec-
trical sprayer it is not only broken
up into very fine particles but is
thrown a great distance. The tank
capacity is 2,600 gallons, and the ve-
hicle is propelled by two 60 horse: |
power motors. The sprinkling heads '
are in the centre of the car on each
side, and the water is forced from
these by two individual force pumps
operated by a 30 horse power motor
and a street 120 feet wide can be wat-
ered from curb to curb. The amount
of water thrown and the distance is
under complete control at all times.—
Scientific American.
HINTS FOR LITERARY PEOPLE.
Ex-
A German Publisher's Rather
pressive Views,
The Author, of London, publishes
the following “literary hints for the
wealthy and cultivated,” which, it
says, were taken from a German pub-
lisher’s advertisements:
A gentleman does not give his
daughter a dowry of from five to fifty
thousand pounds and forget to pro-
vide her with a bookcase.
A gentleman does not have a full
wine cellar and empty book shelves.
A gentleman does not use eau-de-
cologne and read greasy volumes from
a circulating library.
A gentleman does not borrow good
works which he is in a position to
buy.
A gentleman does not talk about the
latest literature when he is acquainted
only with what has been said of it
by the reviewers.
A gentleman does not cut books
with his fingers, even after having
washed his hands.
A gentleman does not possess a box
of carpenter's tools, but no paper
knife.
A gentleman does not receive books
for review and give them away or
sell them without opening them.
A gentleman does nur make pres-
ents only of things which are entirely
without intellectual value.
A gentleman does not send to hig
bookseller for a parcel of books on
approval, and after having read them,
return them, saying that none of them
suit him.
A gentleman does not buy only
sixpenny cheap editions.
A gentleman does not depend for
his reading upon the daily journals
and illustrated weeklies.
New England Monuments.
New England's coast will soon be
studded with memorials of its discov-
erers and explorers and settlers. To
the massive Pilgrim monument at Ply-
mouth and the imposing Miles Stan-
ituinTent Dexbury, rumen
rincetown, where i
buched American shore,
assured, after some years of agita ;
But it has been decided to erect an-
other Pilgrim monument at Eastham,
also on Cape Cod, not many miles
from Provincetown. And in the first
week of the present month the corner-
stone of a monument to Bartholomew
Gosnold was laid on Cuttyhunk, the
outermost of the Elizabeth Islands,
on the south coast of Massachusetts,
between Vineyard Sound and Buzzards
Bay. Here Gosnold, with thirty-two
other Englishmen, landed on the 25th
of May, 1602, and a few days later de-
cided to found an English settlement.
He gave up, however, before the end
of June, and went back to England
with a store of recollections which,
with the help of imagination, were
made into a readable narrative. The
memorial will consist of a shaft, sixty
feet high, of the rough native stone,
having a suitably inscribed bronze
tablet, and built on the littie island
where Gosnold constructed his rude
house, in the centre of a pond on
Cuttyhunk.—Harper’'s Weekly.
A Boundary Discussion.
The location of the 100 parallel of
longitude, which forms the boundary
line between Texas and Oklahoma,
has been the cause of much discus-
sion during the past two decades, says
the St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Washington University has bcen
particularly interested in the dispute,
as its observatory has been used
as a base, and also two persons from
this university have made determina-
tions at different points on the line.
In 1891 Professor H. S. Pritchett lo-
cated the line near Childress, Tex., at
the instance of the State of Texas. In
1889, Mr. John J. Lichter located a
monument at Higgins, Tex., for Aus-
tin capitalists. As none of this work
since the original location of the line
in 1859 by Jones and Brown has been
done under the direction of the Fed:
eral Government, and in order to set
at rest controversies that have arisen
the United States General Land Of-
fice has decided to establish a monu-
ment at the intersection of the 100th
meridian with the Red River.
Bought a Live Chicken.
“I quit wondering about things sev-
eral years ago, after I had established
business over here,” says a retailer in
Greenwich street. “There are more
funny things happen in this old street
than in any other in New York, I do
believe. But I saw a new osne a few
days ago. A woman came in and
bought a live chicken. Then she
asked me for a paper bag. I gave :t
to her and she dropped in the bird,
grabbed the bag by the top and car-
died away her purchase. Judging from
her manner, I suppose it was nothing
new to her, but it was the first time
I ever saw a paper bag put to that
use. However, as I said, this is Grecen-
wich street.”—New York Commercial
Advertiser. :


' ASKED ROBBERS
HELD UP TRAIN
Engineer Ordered to Stop at Muzzle of
a Revolver,
BANDITS DYNAMITED TWO SAFES.
The Bandits Mounted Horses and Disap-
peared in the Ravines that Lead Into Mare
shall Pass. The Sheriff at Salida and Sher.
itfs of Adjoining Countles and a Dozen
Posses Are in Pursuit,
Salida, Col. (Special).—A report was
received here shcrtly before noon to the
effect that the Denver and Rio Grande
narrow gauge passenger train, which
left here during the night, was held up
and robbed by several men near Sar-
gents west of Marshall Pass.
The robbery occurred at 8.50 o'clock
at Chester, Col, 250 miles west of Den-
ver. The engineer was compelled at the
point of a revolver to stop the train by
masked men, who had climbed over the
tender. Two safes in the express car
were blown open but it is asserted by
officers of the Rio Grande Express Com-
pany that the robbers failed to secure
any plunder from the safes.
The passengers were compelled to
alight from the cars and line up along-
side the tracks in the canyon, and they
were relieved of all their money and
valuables. Many of the passengers
threw away their money, watches and
jewelry among the rocks before the rob-
bers searched them. There were many
tourists among the “passengers, and
while it is not known how much the
robbers secured, it is presumed that the
losses were heavy.
The train was the westbound narrow
gauge passenger. The cars, as usual at
this season, were all filled. There were
four robbers. The scene of the robbery
is in a wild, mountainous country at the.
foot of Marshall Pass on the west slope.
The bandits mounted horses and dis-
appeared in the ravines that lead into
Marshall Pass. The sheriff at Salida and
sheriffs of adjoining counties and a
dozen posses are in pursuit.
BOERS LOST 3,700 MEN.
Had 75000 ia the Army and 32,000 Were
Prisoners.
Pretoria (By Cable).—Accordin~ *
an estimate of the Red Crou.s iucuiny
depot, which fulfilled the functions of
a casualty bureau for the Boer forces,
the total losses of the Boers during the
war were 3,700 men killed or died of
wounds and 32,000 made prisoners of
war, of whom 700 died. The Boer
forces in the field numbered about 75,-
000.
The curator of the former Boer Gov-
ernment’s official papers has handed over
to the British all documents, including
confidential reports, giving a complete
history of Mr. Kruger's relations with
foreign powers. | 3 Rtas
I'here is some uneasint.. ucre regard-
ing the attitude of the Basutos. In
consequence of supposed treachery dur-
ing the war, Joel, onc of their prominent
chiefs, has been summoned to Maseru,
capital of a military district of Basuto-
land, to stand trial on the charge of high
treason.
The paramount chief Lerothodi is
likely to support Joel in the event of the
latter’s refusal to obey the summons.
Troops have been dispatched to the fron-
tier. -
KILLED THE WHOLE FAMILY.
Portland Man Shoots His Wife, Her Parents
und a Boarder.
Portland, Ore. (Special.)—A. ‘LL.
Belding, a bartender, has shot and kill-
ed his wife, his mother-in-law, and
Frank Woodward, an inmate of his
house, and fatally wounded IL. Me-
Croskey, his fatherzin-law.
Belding married the daughter of the
McCroskeys, eight years ago, but has
not lived with his wife for some time.
He was jealous of Woodward, whom he
suspected of being intimate with Mrs.
Belding.
Going to the McCroskey home Beld-
ing gained admittance, and meeting
Woodwa-d in the hallesay drew a revol-
ver in each hand, exclaiming, “You
first,” and fired. Woodward fell to the
floor fatally wounded. * Mrs. Belding
rushed upon her husband and was shot ' §
down by the infuriated man. Then the
parents of Mrs. Belding came to the
hallway and were both shot.
Dyaamite in Jail
St. Joseph, Mo. (Special).—Sherift
Spencer summoned a large force of
guards and armed them heavily, in the
expectation that 2 sccond attempt would
be mpde to blow up the county jail and
liberate many desperate criminals.
Enough dynamite was stolen from a rock
quarry to blow up half the town, a con-
siderable part of w lich was discovered
to have been smi igled into the jail.
Sheriff Spencer seit his family away.
No stranger is permitted to approach
within 50 feet of the building.
Fatal Mistake of “Bad Men.”
Davenport, Towa (Special).—Christo-
pher Leonidas and nis son,” long-haired
medicine men, wearing sharpshooter
medals and heavily armed. boarded the
Diamond Jo steamer Dubuque at Rock
Island. Ill, and attempted to take pos-
session. Mate Dan Croom ot ad kill-
ed both when the boat was in front of
Davenport. The bodies were taken off
here. The boat officers were held. At
the inquest Mate Dan Green was acquit-
ted by the coroner’s jury on the ground
of self-defense.
Street Duel In Missouri Town.
Mexico, Mo. (Special).—Rhodes Clay,
representative in the Missouri Assem-
bly and recently nominated for a sec-
ond term, is dead as the result of pistol |
wounds inflicted by C. A. Barnes, a
young attorney. Five shots were fired
during the fight, which took place in '
front of the postoffice, Clay being shot
through the breast and Barnes having
his wrist shattered by a ball from his
opponent's revolver. | The shooting grew.
out of business transactions involving
the pri. .ipals, ®
s
> About the Age of a Small Loy.
“How old is that child?” asked the
conductor,
“} + old do you think?” returned
the n
“Over. the half-fare age, I should
say,” said the conductor.
“Don’t seem to me so,
woman.
“Well, you ought to know.”
“Yes,” thoughtfully. “I suppose I
ought, but I forgot to ask. He ain't
my child, you know, an’ I'm jest takin’
him along as a favor to his ma.”
“How old are®™you, Jchnny?”
manded the conductor,
“Dunno,” answered the boy.
“Well, madam, I'll have to charge
for him,” announced the conductor.
“If you can't or won't tell me”
“His age ain't any of my business,”
broke in the woman. “It's yours, an’
if you make a mistake, I'll sue your old
road for damages. 1 ain't got but
mighty little money with me, an’ if you
make me pay an’ I run short an’ git in
trouble, an’ his ma tells me he's under
half-fare age when I see her, I'll make
your old rcad pay good for it. You
advertise what you'll do an’ if you don't
do it”
“If you'll say he’s under age,” suggest-
ed the cenductor, “I'll take your word
for it.”
“I ain't sayin’ a thing. It's for you
to say, an’ I'm jest warnin’ you that
you better not make any mistake, for
his ma'll know, an’ if you take money
that I need it'll go mighty hard with
you if you're wrong.”
“But you ought to know.”
“Why? Your road don’t pay me for
knowin’; it pays you. But I'm not
goin’ to raise a rumpus. I'm jest
warnin’ you. How much?”
The conductor scratched his head
thoughtfully.
“Wait till I come back this way,” he
said.
He didn’t come back that way until
she got off the train.
’
retorted the
de-
Dome-tic I'liss,
Meeker—Did you tell the cook that
I kicked about the roast at dinner last
night?
Mrs. Meeker—Yes.
Meeker—What did she say?
Mrs. Meeker—She said I might in-
forin you with her compliments that
there was no string tied to you, and if
her cooking did not suit you, it was up
to you to take your meals elsewhere.
A Bargain,
Mark Antony had just joined his
force in battle with Octavius. When the
news was. carried to Cleopatra, the fair
2 was heard to murmur:
n, wht a lovely bargain!”
A bargain?” inquired one of her gen-
erals,
. “Yes, indeed,” she replied; “it’s go-
ing to be a case of Mark down.”
Tadies Can Wear Shoes
ne size smaller after using Allen's ¥oot-
Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight
ornewshoes easy, Curesswollen, hot, sweat-
ing, aching feet, ingrowing nailg, corns and
bunions. At all druggists and shoe stores,
25c. Trial package FREE by mail. Address
Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
A German report shows that the num
ber of cases of cancer has greatly increased
during the last decade.
FITS perman ently cured.No fits or nervous.
ness after first day’s use oi Px Kline's Great
NerveRestorer. $2trial bottle and treatisefree
Dr. BR. H. KLixE, Ltd., 981 Arch St., Phila, Pa.
Nebraska was one of the first States te
recognize the importance of keeping reli-
able records of the flow of its streams.
S. K. Coburn, Mgr. Clarie Scott, writes: “1
i find Hall’s Catarrh Cure a valuable remedy.”
Druggists sell it, 75c.
The increased importation in France ot
American cornmeal is due chiefly to its
use for fattening geese.
Mrs. Winslow's Scothing Syrup for children
teething, soften the gums, reducesinflamma-
tlonalavs pain cures wind colic. 25¢e. a bottle
The mortality from accidents in railway
employes was reduced thirty-five per cent.
last year by improved coupling devices.
Pigo’s Cure is the best medicine we ever use.l
for all affections of throat and lungs. — War,
0. ExpsLEY, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900.
The mortality in smallpox epidemics usu
ally ranges from twenty to t irty-five pe:
cent. of the cases.
Long air

¢“ About a year ago my hair was
coming out very fast, so I bought
a bottle of Ayer’s Hair Vigor. It
stopped the falling and made m
hair grow very rapidly, until now it
§ is 45 inches in length.”’— Mrs. A.
Boydston, Atchison, Kans.
There’s another hunger
than that of the stomach.
| § Hair hunger, for instance.
I Hungry hairneeds food,
| needs hair vigor— Ayer’s.
This is why we say that
Ayer’s Hair Vigor always
restores color, and makes
§ the hair grow long and
heavy. $.00 a vottie. Al druggists.

If your druggist cannot supply you,
send us one dollar and we will express
8 you a bottle. Be sure and give the name §
li of your nearest express office. Address,
: J. C.AYER CO., Lowell, Mass.
Liver Pills
That’s what you need ; some-
thing to cure your bilious-
ness. You need Ayer’s Pills.



Want your moustache or beard a
beautiful brown ¢ rich black? Use
Buckingham’s Dye
50cts ot druggistsorR P Hai & Co Nashua N =





HAMLINS WIZARD OIL
| SPRAINS £BRUISES
= «
i
PELVIC
Feelings—Pe-ru-na Cures
CATARRH
CAUSES
Palpitation of the Heart, Cold Hands and Feet, Sinking
Catarrh Wherever Located.
Sosssccececstcetecceccceconeceesscessosseccsonsrsesecsctssesetitenrens

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Mrs. X. Schneider, 2409 Thirty-seventh
Place, Chicago, Ill., writes:
“After taking several remedies
without result, I began in January.
1991, to take your valuable remedy,
Peruna, I was a complete wreck.
Had palpitation of the heart, cold
handsand feet, fema'’e weakness, no
appelite, trembling, sinking feeling
nearly all the time, Yow said I was
suffering ci hsystemicca’arrh,and
1 belicve that I received your help in
the nick of time. 1 followed your
dirvectioms carefullyand can say to-
day that I am well again. I cannot
thank you enough for my cure. 1
will always be your debtor. I have
already recommende:l Peruna lo
my friends and neig:brrs and they
all praise it. I wish that all suffer-
ing women would try it. 1 testify
this according to the truth,’’—Mrs.
X. Schneider.
Over half the women have ecatarrh in
English, Classical and Military.
Superior Location. Write for Catalogu
Wom n of N w South Wa'es
The female voter, the female barris-
ter, the female auctioneer, and the fe-
male share-broker have already arrived
at .the Antipodes, and now the lady
juror and the lady magistrate are prom-
ised. Asked whether he intended to
introduce a measure giving women the
right to act as jurors, the Premier of
New South Wales replied:
“I see no reason why women should
not act as jurors.”
“They would take a long time to
come to a decision,” some member in-
terjected.
“That may be,” rejoined the Premier.
“Il believe in women having the same
rights as men, and, so far as I am con-
cerned, I intend that the women of New
South Wales shall have them.”
The Complaint,
“You object to that man because he
used meney to secure your election?”
“No,” answered Senator Sorghum;
“that’s not the point. He didn’t use it;
he wasted it.”
Merrill's Foot Powder.
An absolute cure for all foot troubles.
Guaranteed to stop all odor and excessive
perspiration. Brings red, burning, smarting,
tired and tender feet to a perfectly normal
condition. A superiorioilet article for ladies.
This powder does away with the use of dress
shields. Druggists, or sent direct in hand-
somesprinkle top tin package for 25¢. EDWIN
F. MERRILL. Maker. Woodstock. Vt.
NEW VERSION OF OLD STORY.
Little Italian Boy Declared They Took
Babies Out of Cabbages.
There are almost as many versions
of the stork legend as there are of the
original creation, but one that com-
bines the familiar features of that
pretty fiction with cabbages is certain-
ly unusual.
Such a version was recently told to
an East Side kindergarten teacher by
one of her Italian pupils.
Just before the morning exercises
began she vas sitting at her desk, and
the children were standing in groups
about the room animatedly discussing
their various important affairs, when
sudd-nly the teacher caught the fol-
lowing scrap of their conversation:
“But they are born in cabbages; I
tell you I know they are.”
The speaker was a bright-eyed little
Italian boy, who had for his audience
a little Sicilian girl.
“You don’t believe
teacher?” she queried, turning round.
“Believe wkat, Carlie?” was the in-
quiry.
“Alberto, he say that babies be
born in cabbages.”
“Why, teacher, of course you be-
lieve it, don’t you?”* inquired Alberto
excitedly.
The teacher was rather puzzled.
To say “no” was to shake the child’s
faith in his mother’s pretty fable, so
she temporized.
“I don’t really think I ever heard of
their being,” said she.—New York
Tribune.
Not His Experience.
“No,” said the convict, “there’s
some things in the prayer book I can’t
believe, though I'd like to.”

prison visitor.
“Well, for instance, where it says:
‘We are here today and gone tomor-
ta’?
Fer Money Goes Farther.
New Extravagant Wife—Now, Jack,
I'm sure I can make money go farther
than you.
Distracted Husband — Great Seott!
How?
New Extravagant Wife—Why I send
to Paris for all my clothes.—Judge.
-
at THE FISHBURNE SCH
Experienced Teachers,
that, do you,
“What, for instance?” inquired the !
000000000000000000000000000000000°
sesne form or another. And yet, probably,
aot a tenth of the women know that their
lisease is catarrh. To distinguish catarrh
of various organs it has been named very
differently.
One woman has dyspepsia, another bron-
chitis, another Bright's disease, another
® liver complaint, another consumption, an-
e other female complaint. These women
¢ would be very much surprised to hear that
s they are all suffering with chronic catarrh.
o But it is so, nevertheless.
: Jach one of these troubles and a great
many more are simply catarrh—that is,
chronicinflatnmation of the mucous lining of
which ever organ is affected. Any internal
remedy that will cure catarrh in one loca-
tion will cure it in any other. This is why
Peruna has become so justly famous in the
cure of female diseases. It cures catarrh
wherever located. Its cures remain. Pe-
runa does not palliate—it cures.
Hon. Joseph B. Crowley, Congressman
from Illinois, writes from Robinson, Il.
the following praise for the great catarrha
tonic Peruna. Congressman Crowley says:
“Mrs. Crowley has taken a number
of bottles of Peruna on account of
nervous troubles. It has proven a
sirong tonic and lasting cure. I can
cheerfully recommend it.’’—J. DB,
Crowley.
A catarrh book sent free by The Peruns
Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio.
If you do not derive prompt and satis.
factory results from the use of Peruna,
write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a
full statement of your case and he will be
pleased to give you his valuable advice
gratis.
Address Dr. Ilartman, President of The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O.
00 900000000000
~

0 Virginia,
Thorough Work,
ce. JAS, A, FISHBURNE, A.B., Principal,
A contractor and nine assistants en-
gaged in building an elevator at Galla-
tin, Tenn., were arrested recently for
working on Sunday.
Ring Worn Routed,
‘‘Send box of Tetterine. It’sthe only thing
that makes any impression on a stubborn
Ring Worm.” —Mrs. Katie Oldham, Mon-
talba, Anderson County, Texas. 50c. by mail
from J.T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga., if your
druggist don’t keep it.
In the English Army now in South
Africa there are said to be about 20,000
Methodist soldiers.

10e BEST. FOR THE BOWELS an
250. ble, Druggliste
Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in bulk.
Beware of the dealer who tries to sell
»
“something just as Rood." 2
CHOLS’
PIEDMONT
CONCENTRATED
Iron and Alum Water.
A Mineral Water Remedy, which is the pro-
duet of the natural water as it comes from
the spring, reduced 160 times by a process
which retains all its medicinal properties,
Cures all Chronic Diseases. Money refunded
if not satisfactory. Write for testimonlals
and other information,
J. M. ECHOLS CO.,
Lynchburg, Va.
I did not know what it was to eat
a good breakfast in the morning.
By noon 1 would become so sick
and have great pain and discomfort.
I got so that I would do witho
eating as long as I could, so as to
avoid the misery. At night I could
not sleep. The doctors said 1 had
nervous indigestion. I heard much
about Ripans Tabules and at last |
thought | would try them. I had
only taken one box when I obtained
relief,


At druggists,
The Five-Cent packet is enough for an
ordinary occasion, The family bottle,
Waynesboro,


60 cents, contains a supply for a year.

EW PENSION LAWS. Act of June 27, 1802 pen-
sions certain survivors and their widows of the In-
dian Wars from 1817 to 1858. We will pay 25.°¢ for
every good Contract Claim under this act. Act of
July 1, 19 2 pensions certain soldiers who had prior
confederate service, also who may be charged with
desertion. No pension no fee. Advice free. For
blanks and full instructions, address the W. H. ¥ills
Pension Agency, Wills Building, 812 Indians Ave.,
Washington, D. C. Twenty years practice in Wash.
ington. Copies of the laws sent for 5 cents.
D RO Fed S NEW DISCOVERY; gives
quick relief and cures worst
cases. Book of testimonia's and 10 dnys* treatment
¥ree. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S BONS, Box B, At anta, Ga




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ABDNERTISE IN THIS
AP&ER., B NU29.
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