Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 198, 15 August 1906 — Page 7
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Che Kind You Ilavo Always in use for over 30 years,
All Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA
' Castoria is a harmless ' u-bstitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Irops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and ISowels, giving healthy and natural sleep The Children's Panacea The Mother'i Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the
The KM You toe Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TMC CtNTftUM OOM.ANV, T MUMIAf ITMIT, NCW VORR CITY.
Double Stamps, Wednesday the 15th I Goods for less money than any store in Richmond and S. & H. Double Stamps. i 19 lbs. Granulated, 20 lbs A or 21 lbs C. Sugar for $1. l Gold Medal Flour, best on earth, 70c; $2.75 oer cwt. 3 Excello or 3 Lincoln Oats for 25c. j 6 lbs Navy Beans for 25c. i Fine, Pure Home Made Preserves, 10c lb i Home grown Potatoes, 90c bushel. j Hood's Leader Coffee. 10c pound. ! Hood's Fancy Blend Coffee and 23 Stamps for 25c. 1 lb Gun Powder, Imperial or G. H. Tea, for 60c, and .? stamps. I Clearance Sale now on in our Dry Goods Department. I Don't fail to see our 4-cent lawns, Apron Ginghams and I Calicos. Commence Tuesday evening 6 o'clock. Closes f Wednesday evening 6 o'clock. f Thursday Morning, August 16,1906. I HdOD'S MODELDEPARTMENT STORE Trading Stamps with All Purchases. Free Delivery. New Phone j 1079; Old Phone 13R. Store Open Tuesday, Friday and f! Saturday Evenings. 41 1-4 13 Main Street.
A Woman's Health
too sacred to be experimented with. For her peculiar and
air
ts only medicines of known composition and which conTSircotics, or other harhiful or habit-forming drugs
alec
. ifchiployfc?W The one medicine which fulfills all these requirejs Pr.. Pierce's Favorite Prescription a remedy with a record of
over forty years of cures to recommend it ; a remedy, the makers of
J yhich print Us formula on every hottle-wranner, and attest its complete
ness and correctness under oath; a
an's delicate constitution by an educatedphvsician an experienced specialist in woman's diseases; a remedy, every ingredient of which has received the written endorsement of the most eminent medical writers of all the several schools of practice for the cure of woman's peculiar diseases; a. rejaajy which has more bona-fide cures to its credit than any Other sold by druggists for woman's special requirements. It-is not given away in the form of "trial bottles " to be experimented with, but is sold at a fair price by all dealers in medicines.
Delicate, weak, nervous women 6hould especially shun the use of alcoholic medicines which, from their stimulating and exhilerating effects may seem, for a time, to do good, but which from the inevitable effects of the alcohol in shrinking up the red corpuscles of the blood arc sure to do great an( lasting harm in the Jong run. besides they beget a craving for stimulants which is most deplorable. Only invigorating and nerve strengthening effects can follow the use of this famous medicine for women. It can not possibly do harm in any state or condition of the system. It has been carefully adapted to woman's needs by an experienced physician a specialist in their diseases. It makes weak women strong and sick women well. If a woman has bearing down, or dragging pains, low down in the abdomen, or pelvis, backache, frequent headaches, dizzy or fainting spells, is nervous and easily startled, has gnawing feeling in stomach, sees imagy floating specks, or spots before her eyes, has melancholia, or "blues," or a weakening disagreeable drain from pelvic organs, she "can make no mistake bj resorting to the use of Pr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It will invigorate and tone up the whole system and especially the pelvic organs. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Perscription is a scientific medicine, carefully devised by an experienced and skillful physician, and adapted to woman's delicate syBtom. It is made of native American medicinal roots and is perfectly harmless In its effects in any condition of the female system. As a powerful invigorating tonic," Favorite Prescription" imparts strength to the whole system and to the organs distinctly jferuiniiie in particular. For over-wotted, "worn-out," run-down," debilitated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, "shop-girls," house-keepers, nursing mothers, and.
Bought, and which has beeu has home the slrnature of
- and has been made under his perffly J)r sonal supervision since its infancy.
i Signature of remedy devised and adapted to worn feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription i''lie greatest earthly boon, being u .Equaled as an appetizing cordial afd restorative tonic. As a soothing and Ftrengthening nervine "Favorite Prescription" is unequaled and is invaluable in allaying and subduingTiervous excitability, irritabilitv, nervous exhaustion, nervous prostration, ufuralgia, hysteria, gpasnis, St.Vitus's dance, and other distressing, nervous syrtfptoms commonly attendant upvn functional and organic disease of theiterus It induces refreshing sleep and ntjieyes mental anxietv and des pondency. No woman suffering from any of the above symptoms can afford to accept any secret nostrum or medicine of unknown composition, as a substitute for a medicine like Dr. Tierce's Favorite Prescription, which is of knows composition and has a record of over forty years of cures and sells more largely to-day than ever before. Its makers withhold no secrets from their patients, believing open publicity to be the very best guaranty of merit. Dr. Pierce invites all suffering women to consult him by letter free of charge. All letters of consultation are held as strictly private and sacredly confidential and all answers are returned in plain, sealed envelopes. Address: Dr. R. V. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, X. Y. Dr. Pierce's Fleasant Pellets cure constipation. Constipation is the cause of many diseases. Cure the cause and you cure the disease. One " Pellet " is a gentle laxative, and two a mild cathartic. Druggists sell them, and nothing is "just as good." They are the original Little Liver Pills first put up bv old Dr. Pierce over 40 years ago. ilnch imitated, but never equaled. They are tiny sugar-coated granules easy to take as candy. Dr. Pierce's great thousand-page illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser will be sent free, paper-bound, for 21 one-cent stamps, or cloth-bound for 31 stamps. Address Dr. Pierce aa above.
DECIDE TO WIPE ODT PULAJANES
Extermination of Pugnacious , Natives on Island of Leyte Agreed Upon A MILITARY CONFERENCE GOVERNOR IDE AND GENERALS WOOD AND LEE GET SUPPORT OF THE LOYAL NATIVE OFFICIALS IN THEIR WORK. Publishers' Fressl Manila, u. 1 uovtrnor Ide returner! to Manila after a conference at Taclohan, island of Leyte, Aug. 12, with Major General Wood, Brigadier General Lee, Governor Deveyra, 15 presidentes and Colonel Taylor of the constabulary. The presidents promised to support the American authorities and to furnish information leading to the extermination of the Pulajanes. There are various causes for the present conditions of Pulajanisra in the island of Leyte, dating back to Spanish times. The disarming of the municipal police by Governor Deveyra, his political opponents assert, caused the recent disturbances. It is declared that had the late First Lieutenant John F. James of the Eighth infantry possessed the correct in formation he would not. have gone out with a small force Aug. U. The fight occurred in the darkness and the troops were the victims of a bolo rush of superior numbers, during which their rifles were of no use. The bodies of Lieutenant James, Contract Surgeon Calvin D. Snyder, Privata William J. Gillick and Mathies Zeeck have been buried at Tacloban. Governor Ide has decided to appoint a commission consisting of Governor Deveyra, Brigadier General Iee, Colonel Taylor and three presidentes to visit the disaffected districts and hold meetings of the town councils to impress the people with the necessity of co-operation and support in exterminating the Pulajanes. The outlaw band numbers about 100, and is being greatly increased by the leaders forcing peaceful farmers to participate in raids, threatening them with death i! they refused. These recruits are armed with bolos. The real Pulajanes do not trust them with the guns. TO FIGHT THE RATE BILL A RAILROAD CONFERENCE Attorneys of Roads and Officials by the Score Gather at Atlantic City to Decide on What Course They Will Pursue. Publishers' PrcssJ Atlantic City, N. J.,' Aug. 14. There are rumors here of a coming railroad conference to consider a fight to be made against the railroad rate bill. Nearly 100 lawyers, known to represent raUroad interests, arrived here and there are a score or more of railroad officials here. Great se crccy is being maintained over the reports of the meeting and at the hotel, where the delegation of lawyers arrived with a battalion of stenographers tmd clerks, all information, as well as the names of the newcomers, was refused. It is said that any meeting held will be in secret. Lynching Threatened. Newcastle, Pa., Aug. 14. Justice ol Feace William Duff, SO, a well known farmer, is dead from the effects of a gunshot wound received in an altercation with four Italians. The foreigners were shooting birds on Squire Duff's farm, and when ordered off the property one of the Italians shot him in the head. He was found in the field by his son, who accused Dominick Ferrone with the assault. Feeling runs high and there are fears of lynching in case Ferrone is caught. Bandit Threatens Prince. Londonn, Aug. 14. A dispatch to a news agency from Vienna says that it is reported that Yanne Sandausky, the Macedonian leader, who was a member of the brigand band which in 1001 captured Miss Helen M. Stone, the American missionary, and hel-I her until ransomed, has hidden himself in the Bistritza forest surrounding Prince Ferdinand's villa with the object of killing the prince. The villa is strongly guarded and the prince seldom leaves it. Octogenarian Slashes Throat. Middletown. O., Aug. 14. Margaret Daker, SO, lies at her home, near Lesourdsville, in a precarious condition, as a result of two attempts at suicide. She cut the right side of her throat with a butcher knife, barely missing the jugular vein, and later while ht: nurse was out of the room, she seized another knife and hacked the left side. She is insane. Bryan Fails to See President. Paris, Aug. 14. It was expected that Mr. Bryan would see President Fallieres. but the foreign office sent him a most courteous note, saying that the president deeply regretted that fact that Mr. Bryan's "stay in Paris was so short that it did not permit time for M. Fallieres to return from Ramboillet in order to receive such a distinguished citizen. Burglars Fire Village. Center, Mich., Aug. 14. After robbing the general store of J. A. Rutter, burglars set fire to the building and attempted to destroy the village. The Ullage was saved through hard work Af a bucket brigade of 100 men, who succeeded 'in checking -the flames.
WILL VISIT AUSTRALIA
ANOTHER TRIP BY BRYAN Great Commoner Will Leave After the November Election for Trip to New Zealand and Australia to Study Conditions There. iPuLiishers' Pressj Paris, Aug. 14. William J. Bryan confirms the report from Melbourne that he intends to visit Australia. He says he will stavt immediately after the November election, sailing from San Francisco and making a tour of New Zealand, as well as Australia. He will be gone 10 weeks and travel alone. His itinerary is not yet definitely decided upon. Dynamite Outrage. Dubuque, la., Aug. 14. Some one placed dynamite on the front steps of the Dubuque club building, and an explosion followed, wrecking one of the pillars at the entrance and many windows. This is the second outrage of the kind In two months. No one was hurt. After Oklahoma Roads. Guthrie, Okla., Aug. 14. W. O. Cromwell, attorney general of Oklahoma, has begun his investigation of railroads in Oklahoma, at the suggestion of Governor Frantz, to ascertain whether any road has violated its charter by discriminating in freight rates. Storm In Alabama. Birmingham, Ala., Aug. 14. The Birmingham district was visited by a rainstorm of large volume, and a continuous crash of thunder and lightning almost an hour caused consider able alarm. The rainfall amounted to 2.45 inches. Streets were flooded. EDITORIAL FLINGS. We have noticed that any reporter can take his typewriter and show large profits in farming. Topeka Capital. We warned Stoessel not to return to Russia. We have warned the czar to run. Now, if he insists on remaining and losing out he can't blame us. Chicago Hecord-IIerald. A man in Camden, N. J., got a postal card which had been mailed to him in that city twenty years before. The postal service may be slow In New Jersey, but Just think how sure it is. New York Press. A farmer must not touch a deer, no matter how much it may be trampling and devouring his crops. He may, however, drive it out of his fields if ho can do so without hurting Its feelings. Boston Transcript. Boston does not seem to realize that in making slighting remarks about the leading industries of other American cities she la calling attention to her two ball teams, concerning which the less said the better for Boston. Chicago Inter Ocean. NEW YORK. Did you ever stop to think what sort of water washes the shores of New York city? Daily 488,000,000 gallons of sewage go into it. The New York clearing house, with about $92,000,000,000 In annual clearings, does more than twice as much business as all the other clearing houses in the United States. New York Is the only city in the world that has three life saving stations within its borders. There is one near the village of Itockaway, one on Coney Island and one at the west end of Itockaway Beach. "Money" is the basis of more talk In New York city than any other dozen subjects. During one hour in a car, on the street, In two shops and one office seventy-three conversations, and elxty-four of them Involving money, were counted. New York Herald, Down Helovr. "That fellow Pecksniff certainly has got his fiancee hypnotized. She thinks he's too good for this world." "And she's right. The proper place for him is a certain locality in the next world." Catholic Standard and Times. Wlie Willie. Caller Your sister expects me to stay to supper, doesn't she. Willie? Willie Sure, and she said If you stayed as long as you did last night she thought she would ask you to stay to breakfast. Cincinnati Enquirer. He Knew the Mnle. Seeing that the mule had kicked one of the farm hands into the air, the old man shouted to the rest of them: "Don't be standin' dar lookln' up In de elements: Go home en fix de funeral!" Atlanta Constitution. Irresistible. Summer Hotel Proprietor Gad! We never had so many men guests before. D'you suppose it was my advertisement of fine air that brought 'em? His Partner No; my advertisement of fine heiresses. Puck. . In So Mood to Agrree. "Do you believe that intense heat Is a factor In future punishment?" "My friend," was the pathetic rejoinder, "isn't the present bad enough without worrying about the future?" Washington Star. Oh Contradictory Woman 1 "Don't you dare to kiss me, sir!" she exclaimed as she thought she detected symptoms of an effort in that line. "I don't dare," he replied. "Then why don't you?" she asked. Pick-Me-Up. Xot Very Encoaraglng, 'I hear your boss expects to raise your salary this month." "So he says, but he hasn't succeeded In raising ail of last month's yet." New York Life. Their Romance. "Let's see; wasn't there a romance connected with their courtship?" "Yes; the one be told her about bis rut wealth."
DAMES AND DAUGHTERS.
Mrs. Emmons Blaine has offered to supply free readers to the children In the Chicago public schools. Lady Durand, wife of the British ambassador to this country, has a "Dickens room" in her Washington home. Lady Curzon was the only American girl whom the queen of England ever saluted with the royal kiss on either cheek; furthermore, she was the only woman of the United States who was ever admitted to the queen's bedroom. The woman editor of the Brown alumni catalogue had the almost impossible task of tracing 9,000 careers, but she succeeded. Miss Mary Drew Vaughn, the editor or keeper of the graduate records, is herself a graduate of Brown. Mrs. Herbert II. D. Teirce, wife of the new minister to Norway, is very anxious to be of as much help to her husband as possible and with that end in view has learned the language of that country, studying with Mme. Hauge, wife of the minister from Norway. Mrs. Fairbanks, wife of the vice president, declares thut she does not possess nerves. It seems as if this assertion is correct, for she seems to have an iron endurance, and she attributes her fortitude, mental or physical, to the fact that she never allowed herself to worry over anything, great or trivial. Miss Giulia Morosini, daughter of Giovanni Morosini, banker and former partner of Jay Gould, spends more than $100,000 a year on her clothes and contends that one can do so without actually realizing It. Miss Morosini has not only achieved the distinction of being the most famous woman whip in the world, but famous for her wonderful gowns. TRAIN AND TRACK. In Spain every important train is accompauied by two members of the civil guard, who pompously patrol the platform at every stopping place. Los Angeles will furnish much of the capital for a new railroad in Calaveras county which will be built from the Southern Pacific station at Burson through Mokelumne hill to the big trees. Matrimonial tickets are supplied by the Canadian Pacific railway to settlers In the Northwest Territory who wish to make a Journey in order to secure a wife. On presenting the return coupon and the marriage certificate the settler is entitled to free transport for his bride. What is said to be the heaviest passenger engine ever built has been delivered to the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern railroad. It weighs 244,700 pounds, of which 170,000 pounds are on the driving wheels. The engine and tender weigh 403,700 pounds, and the capacity for water is 7,800 gallons, while that for coal is fifteen tons. CURRENT COMMENT. Recklessness is a great friend of the American undertaker. Hartford Times. Russia Is getting so used to a new crisis every day that she doesn't even look up from her breakfast. Baltimore Sun. Hasty marriages are so much the order of the day that the formal sort will soon be quite unfashionable. New York Sun. Senator Bacon's proposal that the Congressional Record be printed on cheap paper wlll not strike a popular chord. The paper is the best thing about the Record, and its quality should be maintained. Kansas City Journal. Mr. Carnegie says that when the English speaking races number 300,000,000 they will all be In alliance with each other on International questions. If this prediction Is correct, there Is a big job ahead for Uncle Sam to boss. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. LAW POINTS. A statute requiring fruit packed for shipment to be marked or branded to show the locality of Its growth Is held in ex-Parte Hayden (Cal.). 1 L. R. A. (N. S.), 184, to be unconstitutional because not properly within the police power. A father paying full fare is held in Whitney versus Pere Marquette railway (Mich.), 1 L. R. A. (N. S.), 352, to be entitled to recover for loss of articles of his Infant child, packed and carried with his baggage, although the child paid no fare. A bank purchasing a draft with bill of lading attached, making goods deliverable to order of consignor, Is held in Haas versus Citizens' bank (Ala.), 1 L. R. A. (N. S.), 242, to have assumed the obligation of the seller to deliver the property, according to the contract, to the drawee of the draft. GLEANINGS. About 150,000 persons die every year of tuberculosis in France. Stockholm and Budapest are the towns possessing the best telephonic system in existence. One hundred and fifty-five people are killed by accidents in the streets of London In the course of a year. Underneath the electric light button In the bedrooms in a popular hotel In The Hague are these words: "The electric light dares not be touched." It was admitted by a plahitlff In a Liverpool court the other day that a profit of 95 per cent was not infrequently made on the sale of Imitation Jewelry. Thontchr of Zlm. Papa Are you sure that you and mamma thought of me while you were away? Grace Yes; we heard a man kicking np a great row about his breakfast at the hotel and mamma said, "That's Jnst like papa." Tlt-B!ta. Getting: Ready. Her guest being late for breakfast, the hostess sent the maid to Inquire if he had heard the belL "Ye3, mum; he heard it" announced Bridget, "and I think he's most ready, mum, for I heard him sharpenin his teeth." Brooklyn Life.
KILLED HIS WIFE
THEN FLED TO THE WOODS West Virginian and His Wife Quarrel Over Some Blackberries and He Shoots Her and Then With Weaoon Runs Away. IPublishers' Fressl westoc, W. Va., Aug. m. Lnmm Smith. 45. shot his wife. 40, at Avondale, with a shotgun. The charge entered her breast and probably will prove fatal. They had quarreled over the putting away of some blackberries. Smith took two shotguns and a large quantity of ammunition and fled to the woods. A citizens' committee, headed by the officers of Randolph county with bloodhounds, are hunting through the mountains for him. Will Buy Cotton From Uncle Sam. San Francisco, Aug. 14. Yoshuchi Sakuri has just arrived from Japan in the interests of the cotton merchants of Japan. Speaking of the trade of the United States with Japan, he says that in the next 10 years Japan will get over three-fourths of her cotton from the United States. ' Last year Japan used over 1,000,000 bales of cotton and only one-fourth of that was from the United States. The rest came from the cotton fields of India and Asia. This cotton is very Inferior to that which comes to Japan from the southern states, and all the fine work is made with cotton from the United States. The other is found to be much coarser and rots easier." On Murder Charge. Brookhaven, Miss., Aug. 14. The trial on a charge of murder of Mrs. Agnes Birdsong, a niece of former Governor Longino of Mississippi, was begun here. Mrs. Birdsong is charged with having shot and killed Dr. Thomas H. Butler of Montlcello, Miss., last November. The cause ci the shooting has thus far remained secret. Mrs. Birdsong, who is a young woman and the mother of two small children, is the wife of a dentist of Monticello. It is alleged that she shot and wounded the physician while in his office, and then, pursuing him out upon a veranda, fired two more bullets into his body. , Goes to England. San Francisco, Aug. 14. - J. C. Stubbs, the traffic director of the Harrlman system in Chicago, has accepted an offer of $70,000 a year from an English railroad corporation to go to London and handle the company's American travel. William Sproule, It is said, will be appointed In his place as traffic director of the Harriman system at a salary of $50,000 a year. Mr. Harriman, it Is said, has Insisted that Mr. Stubbs shall remain with him until the end of the year, to which the English railroad company has consented. Prominent Clergyman. Excelsior Springs, Mo., Aug. 14. Rev. J. V. B. Flack, tha founder of Excelsior Springs, general national secretary of the Christian Union church and editor of the church paper, the Christian Union, died here, aged C6 years. The Rev. Mr. Flack came to Excelsior Springs in 1881, and laid out the town. He was the first person to have the waters of the' springs analyzed. ' ' FOOD ON A WARS H TP. Vast Improvement In Meaa Condi tlona In Recent Yeara. The UnUed States government seems to have solved the culinary problem much nioie satisfactorily than many private individuals, both as to cleanliness and celerity. In the navy, on board the battleship Missouri, for Instance, the cooked part of an ordinary meal for 700 men can be served In four minutes, as is demonstrated every day. The first requisite In the preparation of food on board a man-of-war is cleanliness, and probably none of the managers of the higher class hotels or restaurants lg more rigid In this regard than are those in charge of the general mess on a battleship such as the Missouri. Under the old system, says Paymaster George P. Dyer, U. 8. N., In the "Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute," the gear was not really clean. A man of the lower ratings, too often selected on account of his inability to do anything else, looked after these duties. Ills meager allowance of water served out from the galley was hardly more than lnkewann after carrying it to his mess and putting a few dishes through It. He had then to dry his gear with a towel which, being used for all sorts of odd Jobs, cleaning tables and what not, the most strenuous efforts of the master at arms could not make him keep clean. In February, 1904, a dishwashing machine was Installed on the Missouri and human hands do not now come In contact with the dishes during the process of washing. The soiled ware in wide meshed wire baskets is passed through two waters. The first, which is kept In violent agitation, is made so strong with lye soap or other compound that the grease Is cut from the ware as it Is Immersed. The second water Is kept at boiling beat, and in rinsing dissolves any remaining dirt, besides heating the ware so that when taken from the water it quickly dries Itself through evaporation. By this means the gear is" rendered antlseptlcally clean and the use of dish towels Is avoided. The knives and forks, which will not dry thoroughly by themselves, when taken from the machine are wiped with clean, boiled towels. Among the Imperative galley orders are: No stale food; time all food to be ready at time for serving out. No cold food; serve out all warm dishes hot. Take every precaution to keep Iced dishes aa cold aa poaalble after coming from Icebox. Inspect coffeepots and mess pans and refuse to serve into any but (scrupulously clean ones. . While it is not claimed that anything like perfection has been reached, there has certainly been a striking improvement in mess conditions during' recent years. Nevr-York Tribune..
A Woman's Gratitude "For more .than a year I had been a sufferer, completely broken down. I had not slept but two or three hours any night for Weeks. I had such awful misery in my head, and oh, I was so irritable. I could
ment, and my memory was failing. I realized that I way losing my mind, and I thought! the grave, or worse, the asylum, would be my doom. My doctor said my case waS beyond the reach of medicine. I went to a druggist afid told him my condition, lie recommended Dr. Miles Nervine; he was prfetty suse it would help me. sol boght a bottle. That night I look a table spoonful, anJ ell asleep in a few minutes.Mhe first rest I had in weeks, and oh, I will never forget that sweet sleep while I live. I have continued taking it, and sleep like a baby, and gain rapidly." MRS. VIOLA BARKER, Orange, Texas. Dr. Miles' Nervine I sold by your druggist, who will purantee that the first bottle will benent. If It fails, he will refund your money. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind BAD BREATH "For months I had srr tmabUwIth BIT tnnjK'B.i nd ur,i all kliiiln of mcdllno. Wjr tongue ! been taslly s grcn r. my lirrm! U having! l)d odor. Twtt weok friami iwrnniinrmtf 1' Caacart'ta and aftr uainv thm I tail Uluitly (ill cheerfully aay thai they hare entirely eurejuir. f therefore let jou know that I shall reconiruvnd theru to any one anfferinc from anch tronblrfe" Chas. 11. lialpun.lu IUtngion St., New Jors, N.T Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Ooort.DoOood. Hever bicken. Weaken or Oripe, 10c, tie. Me. KeTer sold in bulk. The (enolne tablet stamped ICC, Guaranteed to cure or your money back. i ' Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. so' ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES' THE HALL OF FAME. M. Delcasse, ex-minister of foreign affairs of France, Intends to rislt the United States soon.. George D. Moulton of Alfred, Me., bas had only nineteen birthdays during bis long life of eighty-two years. He was born Feb. 20, 1824. John D. Rockefeller has promised $250,000 toward the reconstruction of the Y. M. 6. A. building in San Francisco, provided a like sum is raised. Clafence Eddy, the organist, played bis own wedding march in New York city. When he had finished it he walked to the altar and joined his bride. Then they were joined. General Samuel M. Mansfield, lately head of the engineering work of the national government around lioston, has been appointed by Governor Guild of Massachusetts harbor and land commissioner of the state. Mrs. Ida McKlnley has presented to the First Methodist Episcopal church of Canton, O., four memorial windows in honor of the late President McKlnley. A small brans tablet marks the McKlnley pew In the church. Lord Wojvertou is one of fortune favorites. Eighteen years ago he was comparatively a poor man, with an income of a thousand or so. Ills elder brother died unexpectedly, and he succeeded to an estate of more than $2G0,000 a year and a title. Nathan Hawk, a veteran of the Mexican war and the man who in 1843 first brought east news of the California gold discoveries, Is a hale and hearty citizen of Folsom, Cal. lie llvei a few miles from the spot wbera James Marshall dug up the first gold found in the state. Perry Belmont of New York has been elected an honorary member of the French Jockey club. There are only six or seven honorary members of this committee. King Edward hi one of them. Although there are a few American members of the club, no American till now has been admitted to the committee. Mrs. Wilbelmina Paton Fleming, who has boon so successful as a curator of astronomical photographs for Harvard university, bas been elected a member of the Royal Astronomical society of London. She is a native of Dundee, Scotland, and has been connected with the narvard observatory twenty -seven years. SHORT STORIES. Pearls are measured by the grain. Three and one-half grains go to a carat. A mine is being opened on the farm of Alton Illbbs in Hebron, Me., for feldspar and mica. Very fine specimens of the latter have been found. At the village of Locke Mills, Me., there Is no lawyer, minister, justice of the peace or sheriff, and only one constable. The town Is nearly oat of debt. "A well known society matron" of 6t Louis has paid $500 damages for slapping a hotel waitress who had compelled her te sit In an obscure corner of the dining room. Bridgewater, which was set apart from New Mllford, Conn., fifty years ago, will be Invited, nevertheless, to take part fan the celebration of New Mllford's two hnndredth anniversary next year. The Klckapoo Indians, known tha country over as the most persistent wanderers on the western continent, have taken Into their tribal council as a chieftain one of their women, and on her advice they hare renounced allegiance forever to the United States and settled down for all time -In thw mountains 'of Old Mexico.
f r The Dowels XV Campy cathartic
