Richmond Palladium (Daily), 27 January 1899 — Page 2
RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM. FRIDAY. JANUARY 27. I899.
One Large Scar Is AH That Remains of Great I Scrofula Sores
Neighbors Could Not Bear to Look Upon Her A Crand, Complete Cure by Hood's Sarsaparilla After Others Failed. "I waa taken with neuralgia in my head and eyes. Not long after this,' j scrofula sore appeared on my left c little, extending from my upper lip to my eye. Other aores came on my neck and on my right arm and on of my limbs. They wtre very troublesome and painful and soon became great running -sorest My face looked fo bad that some of my neighbors could not bear to look at me and adviaed r..e to wear a bandage, bat I feared tbLt would irritate t ho sore and make it worse. Bo I t ? ,t ' s Could Hot Hide tha Sores. ' My niece, y:'..o was familial with a case similar to ir.. .e, which had been cared by Hood's Sarsaparilla, urged me to try it. Finally I was persuaded to do so, and in short time I saw it was helping me. The sores began to heal and the neuralgia in my head was better. In a few months the sores on my arms and limbs all healed; tbode on my neck gradually disappeared and now they are ail gone. I have never had any symptom of scrofula since. O.ie large scar on my right arm is all the sin that remains of my terrible affliction. The neuralgia is also cured."
Mas. J. M. Hatch, Etna, New Hampshire.
Sarsa-parilla
Is the bet in fact the One True Tilixxl Purifler. Hnivl' Pill a ar" the only plus to take
' long aa bo inanity and society are conj stitnted aa they are now there will be itl-mated and unhappy marriages. So Iocs aa men become criminals and ( drunkards an J brutal after marriage j there will be suits for divorce, and there are no present indications .that the sons of Adam are improving in these respects.
Com sis
G3oocFs
Richmond Palladium.
nbllabed ry availing (Sunday scttl) by evzTAcm ar flickinofr
, Ode N tt and I 9J4 Main St. ar Tentt Telapbonef NoTlC"
FKIDAY, JANUARY 27,l 9 TKBM8 O80B BIPT Uf- i r una year br mall, pottage paid .' ai 00 On month - " .1 onaweak, by aanter J-y - '
'Mayor Taggart of Indianapolis u expected home Joday from, bis sad mieeion to the Gulf of Mtxico io st arch of his daughter who was lost on the ill fated yacht Paul Jones. Mr. and Mrs! Taggart have the profound sympathy of this community.
Why should President McKinley be bulldozed into announcing- his'pnrpcse
wit an card to the Philippines? The only put pose he has in the premises at present is the ratification of the treaty.
which will-place the whole question
where it herocira, in the hands of congress. While coogresa has been (ilue
over the uuebtion oi ratuying toe peace treaty wo national convections, that of the manufacturers at Cincinnati and : of the stock dealers at Denver,
rc presenting two of the largest business interests in this country, have de
clared emphatically and unanitncusl; in favor of prompt ratification.
- V Every Republican paper in the state, that retired to the subj ct at all, denoui c?d IInry U Jobnsc n' performance in the house yesterday. The Indianapalis Journal says of it:
'The speech of Hon. Henry V. Johnson might almost be characterized
as sound and fury signifying coining
When Mr. Johnson said 1 propose fc arlessly, without regard t its tffect
on m v bersonal fortunes, to make
rolea for liberty.' he played to the
galleries. 1 His public career will end
- on the 4th of March next, and lis per sonal fortunes, so far as politics at
concerned, are nil. It was egot m for
him to refer to the subject."
Mr. Johnson's only endorsers in the state are the Indianapolis Sentinal ard
its ilk. ... "
' AftDISOX P. RrSSELL. A New York correspondent of the Los Argeles (Cal.) Daily Times, writing of Henry J a reef William D.
Howells. and other literary celebrities.
has something to say of A. P. Russell, who has a large circle of frie.ds here, and, as ttated in these columns sometime since, bad conferred upon him by tbe Ohio university the distinguished academic title of D jctor of Literature. Mr. BasselJ, by the way, before he became a confirmed bachelor, was a great beau and was suppose! at one timet) be deeply smitten with the charms of a haadsome Centerville girl. Bat here is what the New York cor
respondent says; :
"Some twenty years aeo American
readers received what they very generally accounted a most gracious gift in a book called "Library Notes." It was one of those books that selected
and connected up for tbem in a relish
ing way a great wealth of the good
things that had been spoken or writ
tm. In succeeding years other book of the same kind, "A Club of One," "In a Club Corner," and so on, came
from tbe same author. From one and all it was manifest that they could bave been written only by a man who bad traversed pretty nearly
the 'whole field of polite literature, and had traversed it observantly and fondly; and many a reader of them, I do not doubt, envied the writer the delightful days and nights which
they fancied rnrst have been his lot.
its iaucy, n it occurred, was very
.lose to tbe fact. .It baa fallen to few
men in this work-a day world to have
fo long a stretch of good reading as
has been allotted to Addison P. lias
sell, th author in question, and today, t a ripe age, he is etill in the full en
joyment of his life-long pleasure.
J his has not been, however, a mere
stroke of good fortune. . Mr. Kusseil got tbe thing he particularly delighted in "by striving for it, and carefully shaping his life to that end. He begun
life .as a printer m tho.oflie of a coun
try newspaper In time he became the editor, and perhaps , the ptoprbtor of
each a newspaper; and thu led by easy 6t' pj to his taking some part
in politics, ard 'achieving finally
tie effiee of seerttirv of the state
of Ohio. At the conclusion of his
term he was appointed financial agent of the state of Ohio, resident in New
York City. Thi was a, f peoial ofiBce long since rerdered unnecessary by
new nnanciai arrangements and machinery, and abolished.. It was rather
profitable to the incumbent, and the
nrderstandiDg of his friends is that by
nilmg it Air. Kussell was able to lay by the capital which has aaffieed him ever
ince Bis . way or-hre-aas Iwnva
been very simple, and even -
one: hm kmd the good fortune itrm
out early what he wanted, arf the
character to keep it when he got it.
Yet he has cot bon 6imply a man ot the study. He is a large, ruddy, cleanshaven man of striking presence, with
a fine old-fashioned courtesy nd a
teal gift in conversation, and in the days when he went more from home
than he does now. he was a distinct
social and intellectual influf nee through
a focsideriible section of country. The
same t tH lence of good reading that
enriches his books also appears in his
talV, but mver pedantic a' I y orooptes
siveh ; all tends to good tetluwrnip
and pure enteitainment. Thus,
brough many years, he has been
pleasure and inspiration to his per
sonal friends, as wtllas to the pub
lic, and his life ought to afford him
great satisfaction in the contempla
tion."
means pain, darter and
possible death for some wives. For others it means practical Iv no discomfort at all. There is no reason w hy childbirth should be a period of pain and dread. Several months before a woman become a mother she should prepare fcerself for -the critical ordeaL There is a preparation made which is intended for this purpose alone. The name of ' this wonderful preparation ia
GRIP'S GRASP. 1 FASTENS ITS DEADLY CLUTCH UPON MILLIONS.
Mother's Friend.
wk
It is a liniment to be applied extern ally.
it relaxes tbe muscles and relieves the distension, to every organ concerned in childbirth, and takes away all danger and nearly all suffering. Best results follow if the remedy is used during tbe whole period of pregnancy. It is the only remedy of the kind in the world that ia endorsed by physicians. il per bottle at aU drug stores, or sent by mail on receipt of price. Fefjs Boo kb con.
taining invaluable information for all women, will be sent to any addrees upon application to Tbe Bdfl: Ktgaiatnr Ca, Atlaala. Ba
: PIE SOCIAL. BMaaaswaBBwaaasB " -
A Pleasant Event at tbs North A
Street Friends' Met ting House Last Nigh.
. There wig a very enjoyable social by tbe young people at the north A street Friends' meeting house last
night, following the business meeting
The young people's even's at that meeting house are always larcely at
tended, because if there are any people there who are not young they have not found it out themselves pnd no one cares to break the news to them. The eyent last evening was called a pie social. The ladies each brought a pie,
and the gentlemen were sent to the table to select a pie from those as yet
uneelt cted rnd tbe baker of it had to
sit down and help him eat it, whila the man told a story. A cumber of excellent pies were eaten and some splendid stories told. Th evening passed off very pleasantly indeed, as such events at that place always do.
Shakespeare's Great Words ' to Men. Probably no words of Shakespeare
have so impressed weak men as those
well known lines: "Cans't thou not
minister to a mind diseased, raza out
theroubOa,th hnin. tnil with
In a speech in the h"use yesterday
General Orosvenor stated the case ex
actly when he declared:
"But for the course of evi nts here, beginning before the conc'usion of the
lat campaign, there would today be
peace and co operation in the 1 huip
pines. 1 he expressions of those who
were opposing the administration encouraged the resistence ot "Agmnaldo
, and his gang st Ilouo, while here in
this capital Agonc Ho was insultingly demanding of the President that he
define his position. He had seen a let ter from Dewey read in Nw York i
few days sgo in which Dewey said it
the treaty was ratified and the ic?ur
e. gents were taught that theywere not supported by a great party u the United States there would oe an end
of strife. rni oeace would be ettab
'lished." .
Accord ng to tbe annual report oi the Inditna bureau cf statistics, just
issued, ttere were 25,043 mMriage licenses issued and 4 2,!?y6 divorces granted in tbe state the past year Ths number of men imprisoned duricg the year was 23.1SS and the number of women I.t'30." Making due allowance , for the gallantry of courts ard janes
this last iu m is unm'stakable evidence that won en as a class are about twenty, times better than men. Yet, in abvUt nine divorce cases out of ten women are the plaintiffs, which indicates plainly that they are the greatest suffenrs from unfortunate 'marriages. This fact should be burn in mind by the framers of divoice laws. -While wbt may be dign ted at "loose" divorce laws should not be tolerated, - the fact should not be lost . sight of that divorce laws which are practically prohibitory are ca'calattd to work injustice and cruelty to the innocent and better puties in divorce suits. To refute th s proposition it is asserted that such divorce laws would remedy , tbe matter' by preyentirg unhappy
marriages. This would perhaps be the case to some extent, but it would cot by any rcears be a cure-E.lI. So
The Rsvsqss of Grfp.
That modern scoarage, trie gtip
poisons tb air with its fatal germs, so
that no come is safe from its ravage
but multitudes have found a sure protection against this dangerous malady
in Dr. King's New Discovery. When
you feel a soreness in your bones and muscles, have chills and fever, with sore throat, pain in the beck of tbe
head, catarrhal symptoms and a stub
born cough jon.inay know yoa have I he grip, and that you need Dr. King's New Discovery. It will promptly eure
the worst cough, heal the lcflamed
membranes, kill the disease germs and prevent the dreaded after effects of
the malady. Price 50 cents and 1 00 Money back if noCcured. A trial bot
tie free at A. G. Luken & Co.
which so weighs upon tbe heart f" This thrilling ret plaintive cry finds an echo in tbj heart of every weak, enervated, nerve exhausted and vigorless
man, who, through ignorance of consequences, has brought himself to a
condition of nervous and pnysicai debiLty. Modern medical sc:ence has
indted provided the antidote," and the discoveries of a great physician have placed within reach of every weak
and erring man tae wonderful strength giving, v'talizing and invigorating remedies which will restore him
again to stiojg, vigorous and powerful
manhood. We refer to the marvelous
medicines oE Dr. Greene, of 148 State St., Chicago, 111., one of whose discoveries, known as Dr. Greene's Nervura,
has made his name famous throughout the world, and whose discoveries of
wonderful restorative medicines for
weakened and nerve-exhausted men
give hope of perfect and complete
manhood to every suffering man Dr.
Greene can be consulted free ot charge,
p r. oaally or by letter, and yuu can use those grand remedies and be cured
ut home, without the loss. of time and expense of a trip to the "city. By all
means write to Dr. Greene and get his
advice about your case. It will cost
you nothing and may result in mak;ng
a new man of you.
REAL ESTATE
To Ba Assessed in the Spricg. But
3ot by the County -Assessor as
Has Bteu Erroneously Given
Out.
Some time ago, when it was stated that Captain T. W. O. B raff et had been appointed to dtfiaestJ trace the
boundaries of the real estate in the
county, in preparation for the spring
appraisement, the FallapR'M stated
also that the qiadrennial assessment r appraist met i .f rtal estate would
be made. It :s sta'ei yesterday by one of the city papers that the appraise
ment wout i be made by hs county
assessor, A G. Coaipton. This :s ia comet, as the apprais ment and as
lessment wiil bff under the direct
supervision of the township assessors,
In this townsh:p tbe work will be in charge of James P. Keid, township assetsor, and will begin within two or
three months.
THE CO! 0 WAVE.
It. Cams AccMdingj to Pr gram.
and Was Odd Etough.
Yesterday morning started in mild enough for April, so mild, in fact, that
the Palladium's weather reportet
s ated tht the weather was so warm
that there was plenty of gaj, a very
remarkable condition indeed. As always Lappens when th) weather re porter comments on the warm weather, it turned cold before the paper was out, and the ait c'.e had to be ''killed" before press time. The weather prediction of the weather clerk yesterdaj by telegraph was that it would be cold, and that a eold wave was coming at once. It caxe, and last night people threw the water out of their pump and left the hydrants running, wbi.e a fire was left burning in the kitchen whether gas was burned by meter or mixer. This morning there was a temperature of S above zero by rational thermometers,' while some ranged from fifteen above to i ro. There is a little snow on the ground, sufficient to protect the wheat toots from the freezing cold ,
jFrom East to West.Northto South,
Everywhere, Evidence of Its Presence ia Plainly Apparent Pbantooi-Like it Svoops Down Upon Its Victims, t Some it
Deals Death, to Others Seme-'
thing Worse Shattered and
Wrecked NervouB Sj stems.
LaGrippe is a much more dangerous
disease than many -have been Jed to
Bupoose. In its first stages it will
yield to proper treatment as readily as
ss any ordinary disorder, but owing to its infections character, innumerable
microbes are deposited and its development into many serious com plica tions is exceedingly rapid and destrae
tive. It leaves the nervous system
shattered and wrecked ; saps the vi
tality and renders its victims easy prey
to pneumonia, nervous prostratim
heart disease, insanity, etc., which
invariably prove fatal later on.
nr. antes' ttestorative Nervine is
the grip's most formidable foe. it
robs it of its terrors. It goes to the
very root of the disease and promptly
drives it out. it builds up the worn
out tissues and fortifies the system
against all depressing after effects.
Mr. j. ji. Allison, D4 Xacoma ave
nue, Indianapolis, Ind., write: A
severe attack of lagrippe shattered my
nervous system with such severity that
at times 1 felt that I would go insane
1 could not sleep, was restless, and my
condition was deplorable. I began to
think that my case was hopeless, but
hearing of Dr. Miles' Nervine I con
eluded to try it, and now I am sat
isfied u saved my life. It brought me
sleep and rest, steadied my nerves and
promptly restored my health. I have
never experienced any after effects and to Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine I
owe my present good health.'
A 11 druggists are authorized b sell
Dr. Miles' Kemedies on a guarantee
that first bottle will benefit or money refunded. Be sure you get Dr. Miles'
Kerned es. Take nothing else. Write
us about your trcubles and ailments and we will give you the honest advice
of a trained specialist absolutely free
Book on heart and nerves sent free.
Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind,
THE KING DRAMATIC COMPANY. The King D.amatic company, which
has won great fame by it perfect pre
sentations of famous scenic melo
dramas, will open its week's engage
ment at tbe Phillips on Monday even
ing by a grand production of Hands-
Across the Sea. This famous play,
wntten by Henry- Pettitt. , author
Haibor Lights, The World other
great successes, is perhaf3 the most noted of all simi'ar plaH- combining,
as it does, richness of lfai vesture with a seriestiof stirring -gating v If
York and 100 niffbta. ta doton, art
still remembered by tl Ke familiar
with the great sucevspes
dramatic world
WOMANLY A sweet woman, the picture of health, speaking with enthusiasm, said," I don't see why you do not send out women to talk to women about the merits of
Pabst Malt Extract, The "Best" Tonic. There are so many women that are run do wn,with nerves shattered, with a lack of vitality, feeling a sort of restless indecision which is an outgrowth
of over-exertion. If you could only get a woman who knows as well as I do how "Best" Tonic will build one - up, and who has enough earnestness to Jell them about .it, you would certainly have largely increased sales. -There is Mrs. , who was as thin as she could be, and her poor little baby, puny and undeveloped. I told her about "Best" Tonic. In three weeks you ought to see the difference. The improvement
is something great; mother and baby
both feel it and show it.
IIllI!!ini!lllll!llll!llllllllllllillllllll!lllillli!IIIIIIDI!l!lll!llII!i!I!lll!IIl!liilIlinr!
STILL SEVER! OA S lOnt
n
go;s r.iER9iiv on.
AN OLD SUBSCRIBER.
t
IKthe melo
Ko Wood.r th. Editor Waa Staaned With Surprise. The country Journalist, having concluded his work of devil, printer, bookkeeper, job printer, reporter, editor, press hand, mailing clerk, solicitor, compositor, and ad solicitor for the day. had sat down to study out what string to pull to get enough money to rreet a note of $14,38 coming due next Saturday, wnen a man he did not know came into the oflVe and sat down without being asked to do so. For a minute he looked around the place and at the presiding spirit of it before he spoke. t "You are," he sai slowly, "the proprietor of this establishment, and it
is a newspaper office?
It is." leplied the wondering editor.
Ana tnis is your nroduct?" he said
noKimg up uie week s issue. "A news
paper?
"Yes."
. , " - " 1 .T T. v.. V..
lie visitor dreamily. "Yes."
xne million-fold multiple of
inougntr' "Yes."
"T rc J. , tiio trnrll'a
-lb Uki
tne geuurmau to me Bret-per or me camel, "what the hutnp on that hiik I s back is for?" "What's it for?" "Yes. of what value is It?" "Well, it's lots of value. The camel wouldn't be no good without it." "Why not?" "Why not? Yer don't suppose people ud pay sixpence to see a camel without a hump, do yer?"
Honev i3eea From tbe Pilionitbs
.The Department of Agr culturejwil!
introduce into this country the reat
honey bees found in the Philippaes.
fhese bees are twice as large as fose
of this country, and prodnci fiw or six times as mu h honey. They pave
extra long tongues, ana can reaehhe
nectar in man flowers that our vatoty cannot. While this move will be of material benefit, it will not belny
more so than Hostetter's StorraclBit-
ters. which reaches ana cures -ftpy
ailments that other remedies fall art
of. Among them may be mentied
dyspepsia, indigestion, biliousfs.
constipation, mlana, wasting li
seaes, and affections of the kick and blood. We especia'ly recompJ
the Bitters to men and women nervous systems are shattered.
j. lie uioiiicr of "public opinion?'
is, said the journalist.'-look in?
Man's daily doings done in ink?" i es."
-tne richest treasures of the preservative of arts?" "Yes."
"The Archimedean lever that moves
iue universe?"
ies, ana by this time the editor
getting ready to escate by the
art
was
window,
ado an ror a dollar a year," said
me visitor, still in that dreamy tone, ns he let his soft blue eye fall over the
page. it s a durn shame." he went on, going uown into his pocket, "here's two dollars, and 1 11 send yon in a cord of. wood and a bushel of apples and four gallons of cider next week." Then he got up and went out without so much as saying "good-by" and the editor gazed stupidly at the two-dollar bill on his knee.
A Drama of To-Iar. iobson What are you cast the new play? Jobson I'm engaged to play torious thief.
Wh H. Fainted. "Say. Weary, there're gettin' so nun h gold on hand in th' l uited States treasury .that th officials is gittin' scared." "You bet it would scare me. too. Why. dern it all. I nearly fainted away last week when I seen a dime lying in th' gutter. YV nat do you sup pose would come over ine if i saw a whole dollar?"
TEXAS' SINGING WELL.
Glraa
Rim
Ont W.Ird Sound and
aad Fall. With tlie Wind. About three miles west of Cedar Bayou. Harris county, Texas is a remarkable well. When it was dug no one can tell, but it has been in exist
ence for more than ISO vears. The well
Those that have attended and have pur
chased are surely happy and contented with
their easy-fitting shoes. Why don't you fall in Jine and take advantage of the low prices of ods and ends cf . .
FINE FOOTWEAR.
We still 1 nvt
have made up of ladies' fine will go at . .
a 1c
h
too many jmaH si.es. We t ( i ht m, probably 75 pair
ocs, sizes 2xt and that
Muacie Times: A coming issof
the High School Helicon will cciid a military page Several il'u.trii.-
are now being made by Artist Ma
ms tor tne issue. Merrill in ami ml
DosiBj for the work.
The Deadlf Gr p
I again abroad in the land The air you breathe may be full of its fatal germ! - Doo,"t neglect tbe ''Grip'' or
you will optu the door to pueuuiocia and foBtuoiption aid invite death. Its sure sign ate chills with fever, headache, . dull heavy pains, oiaeoa discharges frtm the Lose, sore throat and never-let-go tough. Don't wa$te precious time treating this cough with inches, tablets, or poor, cheap syrups. Cure it at ouce with Dr. King's New Ducbvfrjr, the infallible remedy for bronchial ttouoles.' It kills the disease germs, heals the' lungs and prevents the dreaded after effects from the malady Prk-e 50c and $1. Money bark if no, cured. A trial bottle frte at A G. Luken & Co.'s drug store. -
$100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at lea one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that is catarrh. Hall's C'ataxrn Cute is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon tbe blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy ng the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building op the constitution and assisting nature in do ing its work. Ine proprietors have so much faith m its curative pvwers that they cer One Hundred Dollars for any ease that it faila to eure. Send for list of testimonials. F. J. Chin-it & Co., Toledo, Obio. aT"So!J by druggists, 75c.
mm :ra Ciwrt Ian ti m tire Take Castwets Camiv CtBartic 10c or 3e it C C C IaU to core, druggists re f ami nwaej
For La Grippe. Thomas Whitfield & Co., 240 bah avenue, corner Jackson, f one of Chicago's oldest and prominent druggists, recomm Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
grippe, as it not on'.y gives a p
ind complete relief, but also eoii-
cts any tendency of la grippe iult in pneumonia. For sale by Luken & Co., druggists.
Tbey Are Qms to rtny. "I was troubled with sick
tches and was adyised to take Hi
Sarsaparilla. After using six bo
was cured and have bad no sick aches since. I gave Hood's
parula to my little girl for sto
..rouole and it cured her. We c
an erellent medicine." Ida F. Eminger, Woleottville, Ind
niuu nag
that of an Aeolian ha
between the angles of vines 1k!ow. At times the sound seema nnr nn.i
clearer; then again it recedes, as If far
away, and reaches the ear very faintly. These cha
few minutes and with irreat roinilarit
With an east wtixf Mnn-inv 11.0 -....!
in the well gets very low and the mysterious musical sound verv faint. A
strong west wind causes the water to riRe and the sound to increase in volume and clearness.
Hut it is lust lefore a
that the old well nlars tt wii.i...
pranks. Then, for several hours, the
water rises to within a few feet f.r ti.o
t0Rif the weI1 aud emits the weirdest, wildest noises that ever reached hu
man ears. At such times otph h.o
water drawn out with bucket nr.a..a
and walls as if in anguish.
-t tie wen m ntxmt tut fot Hnon a
years asro the land on n:hir.i
located was l(oiitrht Uv Mr Wo
kins, who, not likinc the sounds that
came from the well, cmnlnvui
for In f? fiU "P- They shoveled dirt into
two weeics, out it did not nfr or-t tin a i . . ...
a no I , , ot- water perceptibly.
ami mey inrew up the contract. From the measurements of tbe excavations they had made it was calculated that the well should have been
uue,! up a lime more than twice. The water Is very clear, with a Mulsh tint, and is fairly palatable. No other wells in the nelgbltorhood show
ruin prariKs as are played lv "Singing Well."
Our ruxr
pair, in tums
bargains.
grade ard
of small 'sizes at 98c a wtlts, are exceptional
fe
if
MISSES' SiS
pair of misses
some tan and black. Your
fioice for 98c a pair.
100
fine shoeo.
the
pagans a lesson in
H. Fay Mills tells th
Iobson catching sight of his own pet umbrella) Ah, that will suit von to a "Tf
iiood s r ills are the only pi
tase with Hood's Sarsaparilla.
Be Sure To Demand, and
See That You Cei
BENSOn'S,
stamp - - t : ::::-C2:::: .... ... .... j ...... ,..-. - . . - - .
Swift Retribntioa. There was a wicked leer in Slendering Mike's eye as he saw the little girl coming out of the restaurant side
ooor. carrying a small tin pail.
Could ot Shoot. A Hindu looks iitxin the alnn.t.
of an animal with the s,iu
and horror with which he would wit-
l" "' taking or a life of a human being. It would in? well for some of the hunters from our om n .
1,... . j
iuiu Hut-n pasrans
nnmanity. Rev,
-. j ..uun-i nuu einpioven as a decoy for deer a peculiarly construc ted whistle, which closely imitated the voice of a young fawn calling its mother. With his rifle in hand readv for Instant action, he was nn. t Vi...
ing his whistle, when nrtHnir .
i mother leer thrust her head out of the
i-usoes anu looked straight toward lam. There she stood, trembling with fear, yet looking this way and that in search of the little one which she supposed to be in danger. The hunter
pa m 1 .
STROJVG & GARFTETT.r.
fine tan shoes, this xrinter's purchase. 18 pair of
ttaem, sold at $5.00, our sale price. $3.50.
Men's Buff Shoes, lace or
congress, -wide and cnin
toe, 89c a pair.
it," was the
It's our duty to stop
rejoinder.
Before the little girl could turn the
orner the tramp loomed up before ber
nd exclaimed
"I'm sorry, lady, but I couldn't see n
farryin' dat pail any furder. It's aein
le gallantry.
The little girl began to crv. Mik
Hzed the bucket and In a moment had
Ihe bottom of it pointed toward the
lue sky. The effect was volcuni
oam flew in all directions. His on
aculation solved the mystery: i "Soap suds!
The Idea, he exclaimed to his com. ' As looked into those elonnent
rade, of incouraging sich luxuries in e,yeR' anxiously glancing here and de young. " there with maternal fear, my heart
melted. 1 could not shoot." Young deer that have not been chased or fired at by hunters will frequently come very near to unarmed travelers. The writer, while driving along a country road in northern Maine, has had a deer walk lust in advance of the borse for some distance; and It Is well known that wild
uwr oiien come into pastures and feed with the cows. To take advantage of this confidence seems very near to murder.
Men's Shoes,
Black Tici Gomethino
good noT7- $3.00 SEE THEL2.
Kid
a pair.
in Oldsn Times.
And when the restaurant nrr.rriet. n . . .
. - ' i WIINH fl YPr COrt th. ,m.wv4
me out and desired to know why hia
uaren coma not mow soap bubbles tbout being interfered with, the
OtTHS'tim of poetic justice had not a word
GENUfw say.
of
t is the best POROUS PLASTER
Tha aa aaeeavfnl renedr acaiaat CwfiA.
njwmtMila. PnnJk. AllDnnsta. Ot fla.Siitiiij a JooomomCS.,il
1
h
I
yata
Womu'i Way.
llrs, Trigga Oh, deardid yoa ever r of such luck! Mrs. Wac-srsW h
ie me a present of a vase that must e cost at least 30. But that's the
Br it always goea! Bad In. t mne
n you're hard up and .ran least rd to face it,"
Triggs "I don't understand you. should this beautiful rreent
e you talk about bad luck and be
ard npr"
lnggs "WTiy. you dull thinir.
you see that I shall have to give . L. - t . . .
Lueiuiiig au return wmcn will
t least $5 morel
permanently beneficial effects unrf I IntxraOT-
wam aatiafit ;n. 4 . ... I w WW w a
-. v. uiuMeut action; but now that it is generally knowc j that Syrup of Figs wij permenantly , overcome habitual constipation, wellI informed people will not bay other Isiauves. which act for a time, but finally irjnre the system. Buy the get nine, made by tbe California Fig Syrup Co-
Men's Heavy Working Shoes, hig line of them- Prices always the
See Us for Fine Shoes
Tes. 'tis true; Foley's Money and Tar Is the best Congb Me !iire
A. O. L.iiken & Co ard J. L. Adam
Co.
mm
i .1
wucwsa roiues io uose wtto persevere. If yon take Hood's Sarsaparilla
iaunxTuiyana persistently, you will
,i718 UATN fcT.
" C.d Wttawat It. you teQ me, my
sureiy oe Dene n ted. 5
