Richmond Palladium (Daily), 11 February 1899 — Page 2
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RICHMOND DAILY PALLADIUM, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY II. 1899-
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THE EXCaLENCE OF SYEUP CF FIGS due not only to t.. vrtrinality and simplicity of the combinii.?r- nt also to the care anil skill with whic-l it is manufactured by scientific processes knowutothe Cai.ifokn:a Fio Sybcp Co. only, ani we wUh to imp vsh upon all the importance of purposing the true aud original remeJy.Si As the y enuiue Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the Cai.ifokma Fio Syhcp Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will i.voht one in avoiding- the worthless imitations manufactured by other paries. The high ktanding1 of the CamyoB.xiA. Fia Stkcp Co. with the medical profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Fijs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company guaranty of the excel Ieuee of its realy. It is far ia advance of all othr laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weakening them, and it rioca not grij.e nor nauMrate. I n order to get i U bencCcial tffe ts, please remember the uarao of Jte Company ( CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP Ca AM r It AM CISCO, Cm!. Richmond Palladium. published ry eealng (Sunday excepted) by BuarAoa fliokingeb. On!tmu1 ill Haio Ht. o Tenth Telephone o. 1'. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 11. 1-19. TKKMS OF U330lPt kjT: One yer by mall, postage paid - ' 00 Ok mouth " " " - -2' O ie week., by carrier - .0" Overheated imaginations are at a premium now. 8olomon in all his glory was not as weather-wise an the ground hoz. Oar boys in Cuba must be hBppy now when they read about the weather here. Brig. Gen. Otis is a newspaper man. Hence he knocked the fjrm" of AguiualdVs army into 'pi." Pittsburg takes the red ribbon en weather report. It is the only place where "heirs' ears are dropping off." Now is a grand opportunity for Christian Scientist to demonstrate that people only imagine that they are cold. It the impression shoulJ get out that the -uinisters would give their congregations a pretty good doe of "shoel" tomorrow the churches would, be crowded. This February has broken its unenviable record for cold and disagreeable weather. The present zeio spell has been the longest the ''fever month" has ever given us in this latitude. The Chicago Tribune makes this frigid suggestion: "Now would be a poo? time for Congressman Henry U Johnson to visit his constituents in Indiana. He would get a cold reception anyway, and at present the temrertnre seems to have reached just about the p-oper degree of frigidity to express the sentiments of Johnson's constituents toward Johnson." It was stated in some papers that Senator Binkley voted in favor of a new hospital for the insane to be located at Columbus. Thi is a mistake. Mr. Binkley spoke in favor of additional facilities for earing for the in sane, but he is not in favor of building new asylum. His idea is, and it is the correct one, to make additional room for them at the institutions the state already has. That would, of coarse, be the most economical arrangement. Tomorrow will be the birthday anniversary of Abraham Lincoln. He wa born in Hardin county, Kentucky, February 12, 1S09. He lived in Indiana from 1816 to 1S30 and then moved with his parents to Illinois. After serving fonr terms in the Illinois legislature he was in 1846 elected to congress from the Springfield district, beating Rev. Peter Cartwright. tbe famous Methodist preacher. In 185S he was a candidate for the United States senate and held the celebrated joint debate with Stephen A. Douglas, which, though it did not secure him a seat in the senate, made him a reputation that secured for him the Republican nomination for the Presidency at the Chicago convention of lSt0. In November of that year he was elected President of the United States. On September 22, 1S62, and January 1, 1S63, be issued the emancipation proclamations affecting all slaves within rebellious territory. June S, 1S64, he was renominated for the Presidency and was re elected the following November, receiving 212 electoral votes to General McCIellan's 21. He was inaugurated for his second term March 4, IS fio, and on the 14 h of the following April was assassinated by Wilkes Booth in Ford's theater, Washington. Is it a burn? Use Dr. Thomas' Eelectrie Oil. A eutf Use Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil. At your druggist.
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At this season of the year and daring this ie.-o weather those of ua who have "oeen there" caa keenly appreciate the following lines from Whittier's Saow-Bjund: j A night drew on. ami. from the crest Of wooded koolls tbat ridired tbe went. The duo. s inow-blowo traveler. Hank From sltrht biaatu the mothering bank. We pile 1. with earn, oar nliftuly stack Of wood against the chimney-back -The oaken log. green, hi a-, and thick. And on It top the toot back-stick ; The knotty foremick laid apart. And filled between with carious art Tbe rairired brash: then, hovering near. We watched the ftrat red blaze appear. Heard the sharp crackle, cau-at the irleam On whitewashed wall and sacg-iog; beam. L'otll tbe old, rude-furnished room j Burst, flower-like, into rosy bloom. Shot In from all the world without. We sat tbe clem-wintred hearth about. Content to let the north-wind roar j In baffled rage at pane and door, J While tbe red logs before os beat ; The f rost-Une back with tropic heat. And ever, when a louder blast Shook beam and rafter as It passed. The merrier up Its roaring draught The treat throat of the chimney laughed. The house-dog on bis paws outspread! Ijild to the fire his drowsy head. Tbe cat's dark silhouette on the wall A couchant tiger's seemed to fail; And. for tbe winter flresije meet. Between the andirons' straddling feet.! The mug of cider simmered stow. The apples sputtered in a row. And, close at hand, tbe basket ood With nuts from brown October's wood. What matter how tbe night behtred? What matter how the north-wind raved? Blow high, blow low, not all is snow Could quench our heartb-fl -e's ruddy glow. O Time and Change! - with hair as gray As was my sire's that winter day. How strange it seems, with s-- much gone Of life and love, to still live on! Parsnip Complexion It doeB cot require an expert to detect the at fferer from kidney trouble. The hdlow cheeks, tbe sunken ejes, the dark, puffy circles uadtr the eyes, tbe sallow parsnip-coJored ornpleiion indicates it. A physician would ask if you had rheumatism, a dull pain or ache ia the back or over the hips, stomach trouble, desire to urinate often, or a burning, ecalding in passim; it, if after passing there is an unsatisfied feeling as if it must be at once repeated, or if ih urine has a brick dust deposit or stioujr odor. When these symptoms are present no time should ba lost in removing the cause D.-lay may leal t(snrave), catarrh of the bladder, iiiflammatiot!, causing stoppnge, and sometimes rcq-iirires th. drawiog of the nrine with inatramtLt-, or may run luto Brighl's disease, the mobt dangerous stage of kidney trou ble. Dr. Kilm-r's Swamp-Root, the great discovery of the eminent kidney and bhulder specialist, is a positive remedy for such (lipase. (ts refutation is world-wide and it is so easy to get at any drug store that no one need stiffar any length of time for want of it. However, if yon prefer to first test its wonderful merits, mention the Richmond Daily Palladium and write to Dr. Kilmer & Co., B:ngbm ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle and bok telling all aboit it, both sent absolute! free by mail. - COSTS NO MORE Co Go Edft vi Washington Over Pennsylvania Lines Than it does to make the trip to Philadelphia and Nt?w York over the direct Pennsylvapi Route through Harris-: burg and Lancaster. Tickets via ' vVashington are good for ten days' st d over at the National Capita', and at Philadelphia an additional tendiys' stop-over may be erjoed by holders of txkets to New York whether they read via Washington or over direct route. For special information regarding fares, time of through trains, etc., please apply to local representatives ot the Pennsylvania Lines, or address W. W. Richardson, District Pas senger Agent, Indianf.polis, Ind. The Ravegts cf Grip. That modern scoorage, the grip, poisons the air with its fatal germs, so that no home 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 the head, catarrhal symptoms and a stubborn cough you may know you have the grip, and that you need Dr. King's New Discovery. It will promptly cure the worst con ph. heal the inflamed membranes, kill the disease germs and prevent the dreaded after effects of the malady. Price 50 cents and $1 00 Money back if not cured. A trial bottle free at A. G. Luken & Co. MARDI CRAS RATES. Low Fares to New Orleans, Birmingham and Mobile via Pennsylvania Lines. For the Mardi Gras at New Orleans, La., and Birmingham and Mobile, Ala., excursion tickets to those points will be sold via Pennsylvania Lines February 6th to 13th, inslasiv. Ttie festivities occur February 13;h to 14th at each place. Tickets will be good on return trip for continuous passage leaving New Orleans, Mobile or Birmington. as the case may be, not later than Ftbruary 2Sth, allowing plenty of time for sight-seeing jaunts through the south. For information about rates, time of trains, apply to nearest Pennsylvania Line Ticket Agent. Grip's Ravages Doomed. So much misery at.d so many deaths have been caused by the grip, that everyone should know what a wonderful remedy for this malady is found in Dr. King's New Discovery. That distressing stubborn cough, that inflames your throat, robs you of sleep, wekens your system and paves the way for consumption is qsiekly stopped by this matchless cure. If you have ehills and fever, pains in the bacg of the head, soreness in bones and muscles, sore throat and that cough that grips your throat like a vice, you need Dr. King's New Discovery to cure your grip, and prevent pneumonia or consumption. Price 50 cts. and $ 1 Op Money back if not cured. A trial bottle free at A. G. Luken & Co., drug store. The words of praise bestowed upon Hood's SarsapariDa by those who have taken to prove the merit of the medicine. Q
THE WOODS POLICE.
THE WORK AND THE WAYS OF THE GAMEKEEPERS. Men Who Vrteh Again l alawfnl Kilting of Animals In Our Ittwl TrarU Tm Friendly vr leetweea Thrnt sm! ton IOuMe,-A.p,...rP,r.ck,. There are two kinds of backwoodsmen whom tbe traveller, or tourist, meets when he enters the wilds the guide, who makes his living by conducting camping parties, and the gamekeepers or wilderness police. Of the latter the majority have been guir.s. The advent of the gamekeeper began with the adoption of lams for the preservation of animal life in the forests He corresponds closely to the foresters of Kurope. being empowered by law to protect such game within his district as comes under the prohibitory act. His position is more difficult, however, than that of his fellow official in the Oid World; his "territory is larger, his associations with those upon whom be must keep a watch closer, and his isolation from civilization more marked. To be a gamekeeper, just in his dealings with his fellow woodsmen, requires nerve and shrewdness; the guides must be met on their own ground in a country witlT which they are familiar. To circumvent them is no small undertaking, nor do the laws ( which make the backwoods constable necessary allow him too wide a scope in his operations. A well-known game constable got upon the track of a camping party which he had reason to believe were shooting deer out of season. Coming upon their camp he found the cook engaged in roasting a fat haunch of venison. A complaint was entered against the party, but when the case came to a trial the lawyer for the defence asked the gamekeeper if he could swear that the roasted meat was, not lamb, or a leg of veal. The constable knew that no lamb or veal was to be found in that part of the woods where the party had made its camp, but he could not swear It had not been brought in with th campers. Ninety-nine chances out of a hundred were that the meat was venison, but the defendants got off on the one remaining point. It is the gamekeepers' busy season during the months of June, July and the early part of August. He must be ever on the alert for law breakers. His territory may include tens of square miles covered by the unbroken wilderness. He must make his journeys on foot, fording streams, if he finds no boat at hand, sleeping where night overtakes him, often trusting to the good nature of the guides to provide himself with a dinner, supper or breaXfast. Such a lite makes a good soldier, and to it is added a native cunning acquired by long months of practice. Being of the guides, it is difficult for: a stranger to the wilderness to distinguish him from those whom it is liis business to watch. In appearance he is as picturesque as his native wilds; he carries everywhere with him the atmosphere of the woods in which he lives, he is bronzed, rough clad, and withall good natured, and, with few exceptions, goes about his work honestly. His reputation for fair dealing goes far to make him a successful official; the guides will try to fool him, but tiiy know. Uiai man and i4nd,ertand he means to treat them square-" ly. But if the gamekeeper seeks to gain his ends through treachery and underhand dealings, he had better give up his job and seek other fields; the guides may be as cunning as he, and innumerable are the tricks played upon him. The Klrhest Nation). Michael G. Mulha.l. the noted Bngliah statistician, is clearly of the opinion that no other nation compares with ours in all the essential elements that go to make up aggregate wealth. He also notes the fact that while the most European countries have attained theii growth, the United States is apparently on th threshold of an industrial development which it has never dreamed of before. United States Oreat Britain France Germany Russia ..$81,750 000.000 . . 59.030 J00.000 47.954-.000.000 .. 40,26.,000,000 .. 32.15.000,000 Austria 22,560,000.000 Italy 1500,000,000 Spain 11.300,000,000 These computations are based upon values as shown by real estate records, buildings, merchandise and railways as well as the circulating medium in each nation.As will be seen, our wealth is more than seven times greater than that of Spain, double that of Germany, two and a half time? greater than that of Russia, nearly double that of France, equal to the combined wealth of Russia, Italy, Austria and Spain, and $22,720,000,000 larger than that of Great Britain. Politician and? Motormaa. A member of the Ohio Legislature named Cox is handling a motormah's crank on a Columbia street railway. Soon after the adjournment of the Legislature Mr. Cox sought employment with the car company and is now working the regulation number of trips per diem that all his brother motormen make, for which he gets $2.50 a day. His legislative term is not out till January 1, 1900. but whether he will hold on to the street car job till then or not, no one but himself knows. He is on the Democratic side of the House and occupied a very respectable status mor.g his colleagues. In his home i county Mr. Cox has been a school teacher. Justice of the peace and postmaster. No American cat can equal the Chl?es tomtom for nsise. Mardlsrras At New Orleans and Mobile. Qa?en & Crescent route liattted trains, equipped with elegance, rnnnine on fat time. One fare round trip tickets from Cincinnati and dorth on sale daily, February 6 to 13. good until February 23 to return. Alo Birmingham, A a., on same dates. W. C. Rinearson, General Pasemrer , Ageat, Cincinnati. O. asy to Take asy to Operate Ar features pect:!iar to Hood's Pills. Small tn size, iasrek-ss, efficient, thorough. A or man said : " You nereV know yoa have tafcets a pill rill it is all over." 25c. C. I. Hood & Co, Proprietors. Lowell, Mass. Pills The only pills to take wita Hood's Sajawuri2a
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Vhen the thildren get their feet wet and take cold give them a hot foot bath, a bowl of hot drink, a dose of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and put them to bed. The chances are they will be all right in the morning. Continue the Cherry Pectoral a few days, until all cough has disappeared. Old coughs are also cured; we mean the couchs of bron
chitis, weak throats and irritable lungs. Even tbe bard coughs of consumption are always made easy and frequently cured by the continued use of Every doctor knows that wild cherry bark is the best remedy known to medical science for soothing and healing inflamed throats and lungs. Put ono of Dr. Aye r s Cherry Pectoral Plasters . over your tuhgs 4cfVteaFM We sow bars some of the most emi neut physicians in tbe Lnud iMatvi. Vnusaal opportunities and lvn! ei jktienre eminently tit tirem fnr civ:i;k y u nielical sdvice. W rite roo.y all the n,rtiului In tout rase. Aidre.. I"" J. C. AVER, Lowell. Maas. J AiciH to fienary. Sleep on a very low pillow or none at all.. Sleeping on a flat Iwtl will help to give straight, firmly-poised shoulders. AValk from one to three miles every day in broad-soled shoes and loost. clothing, leaving cares at bom. You may find them when you return, or they will have fled entirely. Walk with the limits sviiirinjr from the hips, like a pendulum; and to this keop the weight of the body forward on the balls of the feet. This is the secret of a graceful stage carriage. Take a morning sponge bath with ns much regularity as you eat your dinner.. Io not retire in a bedroom in which the gas has leen burning for hours. Tut out the light, throw open the windows as wide ns jiossilile and get pure oxygen lefore retiring. Then leave the window so that there is circulation of good air all night long. llegular hours for sleeping and for eating are the best means of keeping perfect health. A dentist on looking ; nt a fit-rn telh found no envitiea Jji HIT -Xha salr'nl .la.auriiFiw Cllntr ii that?" He replied that she had proij ably been sleeping regularly. eigl hours a night, and jokingly added tbM there Is a science in "teeth reading quite as real as palmistry. I'aper Weights. A paper weight that is beautiful is made by artistically arranging tiny soashells and mosses together and putting them beneath glass. These glasses can be bought either oval or square, and they magnify whatever is put beneath them. Take your glass and cut a piece or cardboard the size of the hollow in the glass, and onto this cardboard arrange as neatly as possible the tiny sprays of moss and si.ell flowers. Have your variety of the smallest shells handy, also a candle and beeswax, and bandle yonr shells with tweezers, and put tne coarser end of it in the flame of the candle, Just long enough for it to get warm, then have your wax made into little round wads, put the shells into this while they are warm, and when they are cold they will rest perfectly solid. With the little roseleaf shells you can put these leaves in one at a time, until you have a perfect little flower. The cardboard is covered with little, shell flowers, and pretty ends of mosses are put into the glass, and the bottom J covered with felt. This is beautiful, i and makes a useful paper weight as well. John I.. Might Have Been a Baseballlst. It is not generally known that John L. Sullivan came within an ace of being a professional ballplayer instead of a prize fighter. The ex-champion himself is authority for this statement. He told of his close call to baseball fame to a gathering of friends the other day while discussing the nation- j al game. Sullivan has always been an admirer of baseball, and there are few old stars he does not know all about. He can talk about tbe points of play, and goes bac; to the Whites, John ! Morrow, the Dorgans, Al Spalding folonel McVey. John Ward and all the old-timers. "1 was on the point of being a Cincinnati Red. A little thing changed me," said John L. T was offered a salary of $1,800 a season to play with the Cincinnati team. I was a good ballplayer, and then I thought seriously of taking it when another thing came np that made me determined to follow the life of a pugilist. I was Just then starting out as a boxer. I Save an entertainment, and my list of ti.e receipts was not far from $l.soo. I It came so easy that I said: 4Wbat is ' .d- good of working a whole season for $1,800 when you can put on the gloves and knock out that much coin in fifteen minutesT That marie me shake baseball as a means of making a living, but I have never lost my intertst in the game." Livsd in Cs(, Capt. Preyfns is not the only man so nnfortnnate as to he shut up in a cag-. At the Castle of Tlessis lex Tours oae is shown a dark and gloomy place under a stairway, where they tell u Cardinal La Blane spent twelve years in an iron cage so constructed that he could neither stand nor Iw fn itHe had the singular good fortune ne probably would question the adjective of undergoing a punishment unique in history. In Copenhagen about 1740 there was living an Englishman who had spent rleren years in a cage. He was a gentletftan of Lancashire Jn the service of Charles XII. of Sweden, and was arrested for some alleged act of treason. He escaped from prison, took refuge .n Hamburg, where he was safe, but imprudently ventured back, was again arrested and this time, for greater safe ty, was put In an iron cage and stayed there eleven years, when h was removed to a prison room. He had not been 01 any of the time, was quite cLeerful, wrote a volume of ajreedotes. tamed a mouse for amusement and tamed a mouse for amusement and never loat hi hope of ultimate release.
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ABOUT THE APPLE, i IT IS THE MOST EXTENSIVELY USFD 1 OF ALL THE FRUITS.
Has FlgV in History aad ! a Many Vlrtps-A English I trsnss; Which ls ares a rail W her the f rnit Cans From Oriclnally. The. apple Is the most used of all the fruits grown. It is world renowned-, and has figured In history and the lives of most nations since the earliest record. Poets and philosophers have told of It. and mythology has endowed it with wonderful virtues. The golden fruit of Hesperus was an apple; also the famous tree of knowledge bore apples. It was an apple which Eve ate and offered to Adam, and the fruit in the garden guarded by tbe dragon which Hercules finally overpowered were apples. Apples were falrled in all the myths and were believed to have many wonderful powers, such as conferring immortality, and were reserved by the gods as a special food for those who felt themselves growing old. As a relic of this old reverence for apples, the farmers of -Ievonshlre. In England, still keep up the custom of "saluting the apples" in the spring to insure a full crop. This ceremony consists of the farmers going out under the tree and pouring part of a wassail bowl of cider on the roots of the tree, hanging a bit of the toast (which is in the bowb on the branches, w hile the farmer and his men dance slowly around the tree, singing Uie following: Here's to thee, old apple tree. Whence thou may'st bud, and whence thou may'st blow. And whence thou may'st bear apples enow. Hats full, caps fulL Bushels and sacks full! Huzza' The appie is a native of all temperate climates, and alrhough most of the kinds cultivated in this couutry are from seed brought from some part of Europe ,ihe trees have so adapted themselves to our soil as oftentimes to bear better in this couutry than in their original nomes. It is a very hardy and somewhat slow bearing tree, but very long lived. In many cases trees will live and bear tor a century, and when well cared for even longer. Naturally, the apple tree bears well only every other year. This, however, is remedied by helps given to the fruit by the farmer, so that the tree is able ,by means of extra fertilizing and careful pruning, to overcome the debility caused Dy put- ' ting so m-ich strength in the crop, and, unless climatic changes interfere, each year is a full bearing one in good orchards. Young trees are raised from seed, the pulp of the cider mills being sent to the nurseries for this purpose. The seedlings grow unhindered for a year, when they pre sorted ana transplanted in the nursery. After this they a-e grafted and left to grow for at least another year efo-e being put out in the orchard. Then they are set out in rows aoout forty feet apart, where they will continue to grow slowly and bear good crops until oiu age or some blight desi oys them. The custom of planting apple trees in rows originated with the ancient Itomans, and lias been followed by all farmers since that time. Almost any kind of soil will suffice for the npple. but thrives best in a strong, sandy loam and in a moderate climate. The apple is popular on account of Its variety of uses and its adaptability for use as a food, both raw and cooked, and the kinds most in demand are thos that can Le eaten either of these WaVi. A few apples ripen early in the Sommer m&tti iu Uui early fait months, but the majority of the crop reaches maturity during the months of October and November, and even later in the season. These winter apples are picked when full grown and colored, being allowed to stay on the trees as long as the frosts will permit without doing injury to them; when they are packed and sent to market. Many are reserved for drying, this part of tbe apple consumption being larger than would appear from the small quantities used in our markets. The dried apple is shipped all over the world, ad when cooked n'ikes a very palatable dish, especially in those climates where the fresh fruit will not keep. Many crops in whole regions are used by the driers, and large plants are established to carry on this industry. South America and other southern countries are the chief market for apples thus prepared, although a large part of each year's crop is consumed in our own Southern States. Then the cider mills absorb a part of the crop, usually the smaller, uneven shaped fruit being sent there, with the sour varieties which of late years do not find as ready a market among the fruit sold for eating purposes. New Bnrelar Alarm. Professor Colman has invented a new burglar alarm system, in which Hertzian waves are employed in the place of the ordinary conductors now used. In this invention the connecting conductors are dispensed with, and a transmitter is provided in the prfcv tected structure, which is thrown into operatiou immediately upon any tampering with the protecting barrier. A series of vibrations in then produced, capable of transmission through the intervening medium to actuate a cohering receiver at the alarm station. The receiver thereupon closes the local alarm circuit, causing the bell to produce a signal until it is stopped. A ( ompisiton Bean iner. Hot milk is the newest panacea for all complexion ills. If the face be wrinkled, shallow, freckled or otherwise afflicted, hot milk, says the enthusiast over this new remedy, will produce a cure. Converts declare that the face after being washed with hot milk at night, feels wonderfully refreshed, while the skin soon becomes very white and soft. They also claim that a generous quantity of milk poured into the bath is positively magical in removing fatigue. Thrrs Types nf Women. The average height of the Frenchwoman is 5 feet, 1 inch. The American women are nearly 2 inches taller, and the women of tlrent Britain in. taller than their American sisters. An Honest Mi i efsr La Grippe. J George W. Waitt of South Gardiner, Me., says: "1 have had the wtrst cough, cold, chills and grip and have taken lots of trash of no account tut profit to the vender. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is tbe only thincrthat has done any (rood whatever. I btve used one 50-eent to'tle and the chills, cold and grip have all left me. I eongratulate the manufacturers of an h nest medicine " For aale by A. G. Luken & Co. Does Coffee Agree With You? If not, drink Grain-0 made from pure trains. A ldv writes: "The first time I made Grain-O I did not like it but after using it one week nothing would ind ace me to go back to coffee." It nourishes and feeds the mfm. The ehiidren csn drink it freely with great benefit. It is the j strengthening substance of pnre t A , m grains, uti a pacsiure toaay xrom your grocer, follow the directions in J snaV,in ah en j4 Sn aar ( T 1 V ah aA am iIaIias LU OAIUI, tsVUUl JUU 1U iaa xj em UCaVtGl J Ann unci he<hfcl tibial bTrT frvr d d 2& j ' '
Tne Wonderful Results Obtainsd in the Case of Sunt; Davidson.
Now. bat is pript Can it b- avoided or prevented? And can it be cur df Grip is characterized by a continued fever, by a tendency to ir.H tm mat ion of the ruetnb anes of the digestive a d often the respiratory tracts, by pain in the musclec, and ly debility. The grip in individual cases varies fro pi a slight indisposition to severe foitns wi h grave symptoms these variations depending wholly upon tbe health, age. temperament or nervous condition of the person. Those predisposed to rheumatism suffer grett pain in the rxmcles; ptrsons of nervous temperament become lowspirited, often have hysteria, and, if not closely watched, have been known to commit micide. Several canes of this sort have been reported this n o ith in the newspspers. Headatnsis a constant syenpton. The bowels are generally consiipated. V h t'ever form the disease takes there is i jvariably extreme protration Tie danger to persons in preious healthful condition is slight It bas h- en absolutely proven that there is o ie rertsin preventive of serious casei" of crip; ar d that there is one remedy tor persons sufE ring with it, or beginning to bd cjnvelescent from its at'ack. The une xnror-Ied public de rxand for Paine's ceLry com pouLd dniicg the last two month tOOCQdjJfl. GAP, ITISHEItE THKRE, FAERY WHERE. Today Yiu Are W.ll; Tomorrow You Miy be II ; Next Day Death May Stare yon in the Face It is a DaDgerons Disease Prom ft Attention Is Imperative. The great danger from LGrippe is not so much in the severity of the acute attack, for comparatively few deaths occur from simple grip, but in the terrible after effects whit n so fre quently follow it. When th nerves have been proitreted by the bu y little grip germs aid the whole system is in a relaxeu nd ongasted tuditi;3, it requires t Jt lit 'e nleet r indis-jie-tion to brit x on oronjhitis, neam:n or qiick m-umotica. tjrtify tie systen with Dr. Mile- Net vine ard Irip w U pas. yet by But if you tve it, or are aufit -iae 'roaa its after c fects, tnere is netting that will help yen so qu:ck!y and so surely back to benltb ano strength as Dr. Miles' Nervine and Tonie. M H. G. Co'-de-, 4 Market street, Charleston, S. C, wiites: "The after effects of the grip rendered me a weak, nervous, prostrate invalid, and 1 be came seriously alarmed. 1 tried numerous tonics, compounds and other remedies for the upbuild ng of a shat tered nervous system, but without benefit, until a friend advUed Dr. Miles' Nervine an. with the result that today I am a new is.?? u 1 of vigor and strength, entire'v i cored to health ano lj ce r v these wonderful reiLec.es. t jui heartily recommend them to everyone suffering general detiiuiv ;m any cause, knowing f nl" w uey wut uttd ic them new life, new nap, new heltn. and strength. All druggistr uthon; ed tr eell Dr.Miles' rexea:es witn p cif ve gtiarantee firrt t -tle will Ltsat cr mertey ref under. Be sui3 r?z vet it. M'lee" remedies. Tnkr. -citing el- e. Write us aboct y?c nettles nl a-.'-mer-ta and we wilt give vci it 3 hcoast adviie of a trailed spe",t atfc- lutalv freeBook on hear and ceive- .-ent fiee. Dr. Mile. MediuktC. F; en art, lad.
E CURED IF
I and the pre prietars of this remedy Wave never known so great a call for it has bpen due to its use by thousands of people for whom it has been prescribed by intelligent physicians, to restore the patient's vitality, to purify the blood of the enervating poi'oi. to restore the nervous system to hea'tby a-ti n and to rtrengthen the vital orgnns. A perscn will continue to suffer from the evil effects of grip for many months unless be attacks toa disease by gettirg rid of the nonatural, nn healthy poisons in the system, supplyj ire the body with new blood, arous ! ing the ha!fhy act-on of the kidnevs, liver and digestive or- ' gn. ud nourishing and np building the over f xerted and debilitated nervous syt-tem. A'l this aDd jnet tl is Paice's ee!ey compound will do. In tbe multitude of cases where it has been used, it has never failed. A case well known in Chicago is cited. Mr. Frank E. Davidson, who is one of the most brilliant and best known engineers in the world, bad jut finished the plans for the great intercepting sewer system of Chicago, which is to divert tbe entire sewerage of the city from lake Michigan, thrt uih tbe famous Chicago drainage canal, and down the Mississippi. Superindent Dav.dsou had worked for months on this tehtme. He was well nigh exhausted and took to his r is
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jbed with n attck of the grip. I After a while the disrate not having left him, he was advued to try Paine's celf ry compound. He was soon back at his Mice in the department of public works, a well man, artl fort with wrote a letter to the proprietors of the remedy, in which he says: "I bad bren told Ly friends of the wonderful results obtained by them from the nse of Paine's celery compound. After my f evere attack of the grip I determined to try it. 1 have already found that my friends' reports
were cot at all exaggerated, and I. wish to jiin mofct chetifully with them in reroitimending the remedy to others." Hundreds of giateful letters have been written to the proprietors of Paice's celery compound since the appearance of the grip this year, tellinjf of the pet feet recovei ies it has fleeced. The letters come from men and women of many conditions. Few pet sons are so poor they cannot afford to have this great remedy constantly in the house, and none are so piosperous that for their health's sake thiy can afford to be without it. When so many men and women whose words catry the utmost weight in the communities in which they live testify as tbev do to
the great bent fit they bbve received from Paine's celery compound, there can be no hesitancy in trying it. A single trial is the tett which ia confidently invi'ed. sV A V Kf V V HISTORY ft contemporary events. BROTHERS t W V w ML, J
