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iE - ; JADIE ROBINSON. . _ Pretty Girl Suffered From Nercousne&f ^ ?^t^Telvic~CaUirrh^I^und'<?uio!i f . : Belief tn o few Days. ~ wm 11 . ft 'NERVOUSNESS ANO WEAXNFSS CURED BY PE-J r. {? Miss Sadie Robinson, i Rand street, Mal den, Maso., writes: i "Perunawas recommended to roe about .. year ago as an excellent remedy for the troubles peculiar to. our sex, and as I found .that all tbat was said, of this medicine was true, I am pleased to endorse-it. I "I began to use lt about seven months a io tor weakness and nerv? owtnesH, caused from overwork anil sleeplessness, and found that In a few dauH I begin to grow sirona, mu appetite inevsas'd and I began io sleep belter, contfquently my nerv ousness passed away and thc weak ness in the pelvic or.,ans soon dis appeared and 1 have been well and strong ever since. " , Address Dr. S. B. Hartman. President of .The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0., ?for freo medical advice. All correspond ence strictly confidential. **X here ?uffered with piles for thirty-six yean. Oae year ?jo ia et April 1 began takln* Cascarais *sr constipation. In tho conree of a week ] noticed tte piles beran to disappear and at the end of six T??k? thor aid not trouble as at all. Cascnreta ?.redose wonders for inc. 1 am entirely cn red and SMl Uk?a Dtvau." Gooree Kzyder, .Napoleon, Q. Pte***n?, Palatable. Potent. Tatt?Good. Do Ooo?, Serer Sleken. Weaken or Gripe. 10c. 25c. Mc. Never jwd ta balk. Tbs eenuine tablet stamped CCU Snanateed to care or yonr money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chica;o or N.Y. 533 MMU?LSALE. TEN gfllLUON BOXES Sharps and Flats. The harbor of Spezia, Italy, is to be improved bydredgingand the construc tion of additional wharfs, involving an expenditure of over $200,000. The religion that "makes a man too .good for common people is born of the Jit. A Nf tr Mnemonic. ;A Vienna society has beeu fo/ined to ;*id ;persons with short memories. A card is issued, upon which the purchas er writes the date of nh engagement and posts to the society's office. By <he first post on the day of Iiis en gagement the card is received by the purchaser. STATT OP OHIO, Crrr or TOLEDO, ? LUCAS COVST?.. j:"* : - FH?NK J. CHENEY make oath t'nat he I*. . senior partner ot the firm ot i\ J. CHENE r & Co., doln?* business in ino'-City ot Toledo,^ County and State aforesaid, and thar, sail firm will pay the'sum of OSE SO-DUE; > DOL LABs ior eaon and nvery case ^F.-CATAUUH ? that cannot be curedhy the use~or HALL'S * CATABBB CUBE. PEASK J. CHEN EV. j~ Sworn to before me and subscribed in my j I . - A ? presence, this Ctn day o? De3em 4 BEAL. . ber, A. D., 183U. A.W. uLEASON, j - v~ .Notary Tallie.? Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, aa J acts directly on the blood and mucous sar-' faces ot tne system. ?Send for testimonials'; two. P. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, 0.. j Sold by ali Druggists, 75e. . Take Hall's Family Pills ior constipation. ' Kaiser Adopts British Motto. :. The ?irman Emperor has ordered from a Berlin firm-a quanti ly of pri vate notepaper stamped with the Im perial eagle surrounded by the ribb?u ?f. the Order of the Garter (of which he is a Knight}, with its motto, "Hon! soit qui mal.y pense." ,-_ . FITS oermanpntlvcure'l. "Vo flto or nervous** ? ness after flrst day's use of Dr. KILacU Great NerveEest orer, h 2 tri al bottlcand treatise freo Dr.B.fl. KLINE,Ltd., C31 Arch St., Pliila., Pa. In Quito 'every, one "uncovers to a flash'ol' lightning. JamsurePiso'sCurs forCousuniption saved tty lifo three years ago.-"VlasrTHoaiAs Ron KUB,Maple St.. NorwIe\N.y.:Feh"; 17,190J "* > The life of a bicycle, if regularly used, ia fear years. Pride makes the cross a crushing weight / So. 48. CURE YOUR KIDNEYS. When the Back Aches and Bladder Tronblto Sel In. Get at the Cause. : Don't make the mistake of believing back ache and bladder ills to bp local ailments. Get at the cause and cure thc? kidneys. Use "Obitn's - Kidney F viiich have ci. thousands. Captain S. D. H Hunter, of Eu gine No. 14. Pitts-., burg Pa.. Eirp Department, and residing at 272.) Wylie avenue, says: ; "It was three years ago that I used Dos n's Kidney Pills for au attack of kidney trouble that was mostly bacL ?ehe,-and they fixed me up fine. There .JtV^nfr' mistake about that, and if I should ever be troubled again*I would j?et them first thing, as 1 know what ttey are.? ;'For pale by air dealers. Price 50 .?sots. Foster-Milburu Co.. Buffalo, .N. Y. The News of the Day. 1 London's burial grounds within the * county., total 680 acres, or an area larger than the city of London, whih without the county there are 1,374 : acresy 1,008 acres of which contain 'no'Bodiesi at present. London's eenie . "teries^ cover three square mues, near .'Jy'two'of which are unused at present :$cr burial purposes. x sontain?d-?n article on the '.darwinian theory of "evolution, a Hus Biarr.ArchbishcD has oppressed tie :{p?"0rjd4B?*Aimanac, Cfaariedlftatiivorcesrand;; Saloons Are Closely 'Linked BUXTON HOT AFTER BISHOP POTO Winston Deputy at the Episcopal Con vention Attempts to -Bring Up: th? Liquor Question in Con neerin With the Debate on Divorce and Yield? Only to the Time Limit of the Ses sion. _.___ Boston, Special.r-A marked division of sentiment regarding the proposa] to prevent the re-marriage of the in nocent party to a divcrce-during the !Jfc of the former partner developed at today's; session of the House of Deputies of the Episcopal - General Convention. The house, sitting as a committee; of tho.whole/discussed the issur all' day, and many vehement ad dresses, were m?.de on both sides. Several prominent delegates ex pressed thc opinion that in view of. the great difference of opinion tba presenfc.^jnfereiT ce would liol'-" act on the matter, but-would, like its pre decessor, refer the problem .to the next triennial convention. A commotion was caused by John. C. Buxton, of Winston/' N. C., who attempted; to ? link the-divorce evil with the liquor, question.. Mr. Buxton i's the deputy who, on the opening day of . the convention, attempted to read a resolution cen suring Bishop . Henry C. Potter, -of" New York,' for opening the subway saloon. In his remarks he express ed the opinion that it would be better, for the church to curb the liquor traf-. fie before changing the canons on di vorce. . Continuing, he was saying:. "If, in stead of a high official of ihe church, lending his influence to the dedication of saloons-" when he was interrupt ed by;appoint of order. Mr. Buxton* was admonished by >the chairman. Still he attempted to make some fur?< th er reference, indIrectlyv.tQ"the sub way tavern, but was promptly called to order by the chairman. The time ii mit of the morning session ? expired before Mr. Buxton, c^uld. continue. James McC?nn'?Hr''cf;'N?w":0irlean8 opposed the. adoption-of the new can on, in? a dramatic speech. "In' Ced's name," he declared, "how can a church legislate to take away the pain of innocence? What right has any one, to change the. meaning of the" words in St. Matthew's Gospel? Where is the man to expound away the written word of the Son ,cf God himself?.'" Rev. T. J. Beard, of Birmingham, Ala., was opposed to the adoption of the proposed canon because it com promised tho church as a teacher. George Foster Peabodv, of Brook lyn, thought that all additions 3hould be voted down. The debate was put over. The Houso of Bishops presented the Archbisop of Canterbury with a silver loving cup.- The English pri mate wiil leave the.city, for New Yorfc : tomorrow *and"wHr sal? "for England ; cn. Monday.. ...... ... . t The resignaticn ,-of .Bishop Thomas I A. Jamggar, of Southern Ohio, was . received and accepted by the Hous* of Bishops,--andris -co-adjutor, Righi Rev;riioya' vuicepCoecomes bishop of . the diocese. Wood Alcohol Kilts 16. . New York. Special.-When .Herman Sachs, dijed in- Roosevelt Hospital, 20 minutes after he had been admitted,...> another death was added to the long I list of. fatalities which -Coroner Scho-. : 1er believes were caused"b3y-vthe u?e ( of wood alcoinl in-the whiskey sold in the^ saloon, ct ?ud?lph Fritsche. -, There are now! sixteen.Meaths on this iisC^Sa'Cbis wats^aefWd^with violent abdomens.], pains, thia afternoon. Cor oner.- Scholes- w>f? .notifled,^nd a bur- .. ried investigation showed that the stricken man fcaij "b??K^diinking whis key bought at FiHtcne's '""saloon just before the : police took possession of ?i?lplac?/' '-~'?~y.V:-':.'>'"..-. ": '--O. ?'Apprehehsion'ai .St." P?t?rsburg. ""St. Petersburg, By Cable.-r'It is now midnight on'the battlefield below Muk- ? deni and~th?.'"faaru?? tb?t^ceive news ? that.jLhe Russians achieved.decisive re- 1 su?s''in'-wVdn??d?y!a; . fight - north of ' Yentai, coupled, with, -tbe-Tokio report ] that Field :']^sh??:,tjylma"'.is gaining ' ground..<;auses- m?rejsedj apprehension. ) Crane Succeed Hoar. Boston," Special-Governor John .L. Bate? appointedformer 'Governor Wi ( Murray Crane,?of Dalton, Tjnited States *' Senator to'filf^the unexpired term of ! Senator. George" F. Hoar? recently de- - ceased-; Mr^Cwane has informed Gov- 1 ernor Bates .that .he will accept He is 1 ene of the largest paper manufacturers 1 in the State and has been prominent in 1 State politics for a score of years. In ' 1S97 he $as elected Lieutenant Gover- ' norland -?n^ig?O" became ' Governor. ?? which office he held tor three years. Mr. Crane is a personal friend of President J Roosevelt. . . Still Fighting Stubbornly.. MoS??n",' By "Cable:-Stubborn fight ing is still in progress. , th is being the , third day of thi?^engage'ment. It is Im- t possible at thi?jtime to,:say what has j been accomplished. Hospita! trains are j continually arriving from the soutl : The wounded are being -.sent, further , trortl?. A dressing station has been es tablished on the railway platform here, J where nurses and surgeons give prompt l attention to the most urgent cases be- ] Tor the trains proceed. . 1 Battling Hard "Near Yentai. \ ' St. Petersburg.- By Cable-General , Salfharon". telegraphing confirms tb? reports of the Yentai, where the . heights were alternately held by the Russians and Japanese. I General Danieloff, who oiiceeeded : Ccneralp Trousseff and Ramanoff in < .omroand of the Sixth Siberiaa Rifles Division, was wounded in the leg, but ild not relinquish his command. The 1 esses are not stated, atid according to i the latest advices the battle Is contin- 1 Ung, todays News of the Day. ' ? The heading and stave mill at Burke ville, Va., was partially burned. j In Campbell county a mob wrecked .? the tents in which Seventh-Day Ad- ( ventists were holding meetings. ... In Portsmouth a negro fastened hil j little son In his home and then set fie? j to, the. bujldinz. Th? toy was burnec j t?. oXC>J -' : Jil't . The.Ancient and.Honorable.Arliller3.j 1 q&$03toj' are being hospitably ente*, r tein-d to piorjfoik. " J south Carolina Institutes Proceedings Against Railroad HANY WITNESSES ON TUE STAND South Carolina Railroad Commission Takes Evidence at Columbia-Gov ernor Heyward . Appoints New Treasurer for Lee County. Columbia, S. C., Special.-A hearing ,vas had before thc railroad commis don Tuesday in the matter of the louble wreck on the 9th of September it Catawba bridge on thc Seaboard, *ben a number of lives were lost by eason of the passenger train leaving he bridge, shortly after midnight, and i freight train following ?0 minutes ater, falling In on the wreckage. On ;he part of the railroad, the witnesses ivere examined hy Mr. J. L. Glenn, of Tb ester, district attorngy for the Sea ward, and Chairman Garr?s conducting ;he examination for the State. Among ;he spectators was Mr. John Earle, of greenville, commissioner-elect. Com missioner Caughman's report was read, n which he pointed out the possible :ause bf the wreck being the breaking >f .the bolt, retaining, the front trucks }t the passenger engine. In this-broken jolt he had detected an old crack.. He liso Icriticised the road for having the ?econd train run so close as to render ts . flagging impossible. He thought a speed;of 40 miles an hour too great for his bridge., In reply, to this, General Superinten lent Huger read his.report of the accl ient to President Barr, in which he .Uncovered''that the catastrophe was probably due to a rail being unspiked, ;he retaining bars of the next rail :>eing found unbroken and .'their bolts iiscovered. in good condition nearby, n the circumstances there was no time ;offlag thc second train and for that .eason it was impossible ,to prevent the j iouble wreck. The physical condition of Jae bridge, which was only two years ild, was perfect, as was ?dmitted, and | Vir. Huger would not hesitate, to run a passenger train over such a bridge at a ate of 60 miles an hour. These witnesses were sworn for the .ailroa'd: B. F. Luther, master me .hanic; A. L. Monroe, inspector of en gines; James Durkin, inspector of nddges; General Superintendent . Hu-1 ;er; R. F. West, conductor on wrecked I passenger train; Pink Carpenter, col- . ired, flagman; G. H. Meares, engineer; T. C. Link and J. J. Duncan, of freight :rew; P. K. Sanders, train master. The witnesses for the State were < Commissioner Cough man and two citi ons of Reddy, a station neir the scene f the accident,- R. W. Patton and T. i ?. Geddys. . The testimony was all one -way and . je railroad people had no difficulty in ..roving that the accident was probably lue to a rail being unspiked. Disinter red witnesses testified that they ound angle bars and bolts untapped ind unbroken on the ground just be? leath the first break lu the trestle, hat the threads, in the holts were un broken and that a number of u' >nt ?pikes were found near the same t*pot.. Gasoline Engine Explodes. Asheville, Special.-A gasoline en? ?ine "used in pumping water at the residence herc of President R. ' S. Howland, of tho Atlantic and North ?aroiina Railroad, exploded Tuesday Afternoon, painfully, injuring an ?ni-' ploy? named Garner about tho hands i^d.acma, Mr. Howland said tonight Lhat he did not know whether at was .arelessn'ess on the part of the em ploye or a defect in thc. engine that caused thc explosion. . C?rner was ?iven medical attention, and It is "not '.bought that his hurts will result seriously, - it is-said that a heavy woolen shirt wpm by.Garner was re sponsfiblo for his comparatively .slight injuries; that otherwise his "clothing would have probably ignited and he would have'been .bumed to death. Russian Fleet to Leave. Copenhagen, By Cable-The Associ iled Pies3 learns from an excellent ;ource that the Russian Baltic fleet will eave Libau October 14 and pass brough Danish waters Ocvtoher 16. r?igb-Russian -naval officers haye-ar .ivod"ueW'and: will investigate;-* the. Danish waters before tho passage of ;he fleet. T - Mr. Davis on Campaign. ~ * Chimboirland; Md.,. ^Special.--Henry, ff. Davis,.Democratic vice presidential candidato, has made a flying start on bis whirlwind campaign through Maryland and West .Virginia, - Leav- ? lng Baltimore .Tuesday morning on i special train over the.; Baltimore & Ohio Railroad,- he'has made an even iozeu speeches, arranged the details af every meeting, introduced his corps of campaigners,- to the audiences in all the. West Virginia towns visited, bas struck out vigorously on State issues, done the jgreater part of the lalking and is the freshest from fa tigue of ?ny member of the party. < ^ News by Wire._ . . Tho imported stallion Meddler, of he stud :pf ;the late William.C. Whit ley, was sold Tuesday night at Mad son Square Garden, New York, to Matthew Corbett for $51,000. Bedouin, ridden by Shaw, won the "tancho del Paso stakes-at Morris Park. Pasadena was second, Cair ;drm third. The time was 1:09%. 3edouin broke in front and makin* :hc pace, won by a head. Miscellaneous Matters. A number of new plays were pro duced in New York and other cities. Court-martial trials in the army de creased nearly 20 per cent, last year. John Alexander Dowle, the "first, ligh priest on earth," in a "sermon" at 2ion eulogized Roosevelt and' denounc Jd Parker and the Democrats as the 'scrum of the earth." Henry C. Erick was elected a direct or of the Reading Company and of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Ton Company. The death is announced of Mn?. John Angeli, who sued for a share of the rf.ta te of the late Jay Gould, alleging ;he was his widow. Roheit J. Wynne, First Assistant ?ostmaster-General, was. appointed to lUcceed the late Henry C. Payne as a Cabinet member. Perhaps the moet remarkable old nan in the world is stationed at Fort: 3t. George, Calcutta, India. His name s Saikali Imamudda, regimental chap ?in to the IS Eh Nativa Bengal infan cy'.- He is J 30 -years old,.'and Etil] eads without spectacles. ; Secretary Hay and the Chinese Min ster win draft ? new and more liberal ?b?nese exclusion treaty.. -- . THE APPLE CURE. In these days of indigestion, r "-pt fever aud couget>tion, ; ?a A new and plearaut remedy has lataljM ? 0 oom** to light; k ''Tis a cure-all pure and pimplo, J The verv li'te>t wrinkle Just eat a big 1 oaud apple uud you'll bo all rigLt. Then.goodby to inflammation, To pain and u oeratiou; The:-verinii orin appendix will bo for gotten quite; Throw away your pills galore. You won't need them auy more. Just eat a big rouud apple and you'll be all right. If swear words rise ard ciioke you, If au awful thirst come.? o'er you And you cai m?t Und the keyhole iu the middle of the night, This will bring thc peace of mind , After which you long have pine - Just eat a big rouud apple uud you'll be .. all ri?ht. Thcu goodby to palpitation, To germs, and amputation. The vur^eous and the specialists >re ir. a divadiul plight; ' Throw away your pills galore, You won't ni-f d them auy more; w Just eat a bi^ round appie aud you'll ben ali right. If you're feeling pe.?simistio In a way that's realistic If eyeryth.ng is going wroug and things look mack as night; If you're iii in mind or body. Do not stick to an old hobby '.ust eat a big round apple and vou'U be . all right. Then goo doy to all narcotics, r . To tonics and hypnotics, u ;. The medk-al profession will soon be" lost to sigUl; Throw away your pills galoroT" ' j You won t need them auy-more;: .You eat a big ruuud apple aud you'll be all right.. ... . . -New'York Sun. "Is he rich?"'"Rich! Wby, man, he owns a seat in the" United States sen ate!" -Town and Country.- .. - - . He-I wish I had money enough'to travel, I wouldn't be ' here: .' She Wouldn't that be delightful.-Puck "I doubt if you know the difference between grand opera and cornie opera." "Oil, but I do.. Grand oper? is comic."'-Puck. Sparticus-Does that fountain pen of yours leak that way all that, time? Smarlicus-No, only when .1 have ink in it.-Baltimore American. Visitor-I've bought ycu a.few choc olates. But I suppose you always have a quantity of sweets? Ethel No, I don't. I eat 'em all.-Punch. Hcax-"Why do you spend so much time ?.over the advertising pages of the magazines? " Jcax-? like'to read the cereal stories.-Philadelphia Ledger. ' "An umpire'd make ? poor walking delegate, wouldn't he?" Don't' seo why." "He's always calling off. strikes.'.'-Cincinnati Commercial- Tri bune, i . "Yes, sir, Charley says Miss DeWitt made a perfect monkey out of him. ' "Has he thanked her yet for the im provement she brought about?"-New rleans Timei-Democrat. His Sphere-He-Dcu't . you.. r know that i'm a fatalist? I believe that wh?t is to-be will bc. She-Well, i'm quite sure, Chollyj that .you'll, never do'any thing to"prevent it-Puck." "Tom-And is she pretty?, Jack Yes; figuratively* speaking."' '.Toni What do-you mean by that? J?ck^-f" She has a' bank"?ocounti that Is rather prepossessing:-Cbicag? Baily News. "I suppose'you have 'made It a rule in politics never to fcrget a friend." "There's no danger of that," answered Senator Sorghum. "If a man. has dene anything friendly for you in politics he never lets you forget it"-Wash ington Star. "You are a newspaper man,, are you not?." asked. the physician. "Yes." " ''Well, I think that ' yon1 have fallen' into sedentary habits. You must be "mor? active. "Th?t'is impossible. You see I am a war . correspondent." Cleveland Leader. '?.' .. "Tee! bee! giggled Miss I Passay, "Mr. Guschley tells me that l'inspire all the love sonnets he writes." "Yes?"' remarked Miss Pepprey. "I noticed all the ideas in .his sonnets were old and no.t by any means pret ty."-Philadelphia Press. -I The Elder Miss Spinster (appearing; at the back, door)-Tell me,jny good; man, are you the person'who called her?'lasf'week? . Knlghir-cf the Road You. don't mean jthe bloke what you give the "omade pie to? No. mum, I ain't 'im. 'E left me 'is ole' togs whenj 'e pegged out, that's all.-Judge. "You ca?-i fool all the people part of the time, and part of the people alli of the t?me^.biit^y.?u .can't fool the peo ple, all o?.tne:timV?": declares the street; craton:- 4lYdtt tan- if; you -Bell canta loupes," chuckles a man who is go ing toward thc bank with the last inf stallment of bis summer receipts."-^ Judge. Eminent Specialist-Yes, madame! your husband is suffering from tempo rary aberration, dut to overwork. Ita quite a commcn occurrence. Wife-f Yes; he insists that he's a millionaire: Eminent Specialist-And wants tp^pay !| me a couple ?f .hundred pounds for my advice. We'll have to humor him, you know."-Pick-Me-Up. A Swaying Pillar. The Church of St. Nicaise, in the city of Rheims, is surrounded .with pillars. When a certain bell in the tower is rung the top of. one pillar sways to the extent of seven inches on each side, although the'bas?is im movable, and the stones are so firmly cemented as to seam like a solid p.'ece of masonry. Notwithstanding that each of the four bells is about the same distance from the trembling pil lar, none of . the others, has the slight est effect on it. . Painless Dentistry Among the Chinese When a Chinaman wants; to have a tooth 'drawn he feels no nervous ap prehension of pain, for the. excellent reason that he knows his dentist wilj not inflict any. The latter simply rubs a secret powder over the tooth. After "about five minutes'the patient sneezes and the tooth falls out Many attempts '.ave been made by.Euro peans to get some. of this, mysterious powder, but no one has yet succeeded, -Lahore (India) Tribune. , . ??r Energy. . At a recent meeting of the Insti tute pf Mechanical .Engineers in Lon don, -Eng.," the members who visited America recently related their exp?ri ences. What struck them, most forc ibly over here'was "the .spirited man ner in whir'i machinery was laid.down to cope with enormous outputs, and the energy with which every one worked, whether h? w?re manager ot workman," < ? ? ? MRS. CECELIA STOWE, Orator, Entre N. IB Club. 176 Warren Avenir, CnicAGO. III., Oct. 22,1902. ?f.? For nearly four years 1 Buffered ..from ovarian troubles. The doc toir insisted on an operation as the only:.w,ay to get wen." 1, bow aver, .strongly objected to aa operation. .My husband fel? disheartened aa ,'well aa J, for home with a sick "woman- ia ? disconsolate place at .'beat.' ' A'-friend]v druggist advised -liim-.to #?t a -bottle-of Wino of Cardui for me to try, abd he didm I began to i m prove i n a f e w days an d ray recovery wa3 very rapid. With in eighteen weeks 1 was another being. . Mrs. Stowe's letter .shows every woman Kjw a home is saddened by .female weakr.es and how completely . Wine : of Cardui eurea that sick ness and brings health and happi ness again. Do not go on suffer ing. Go to your druggist today and secure a $1.00 bottle of Wine of Cardui. NEWS THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY Paragraphs of Minor Imnortanc Gathered From Many Sources. Through the South, Richmond, Va., was selected for the Episcopal General Convention of 1907 by the convention in Boston. Senator-elect Rayner, of Maryland, opened the Democratic campaign in Delaware with a vigorous speech at .Wilmington. * Representatives of tbs Mormon Church of Utah are negotiating for the purchase of a tract of 300,000 acres of land in the State of Tabasco, Mexico. Confederate veterans pf Texas cele brated on Sunday the eighty-sixth birthday of Judge John H. Reagan, the only survivor of the Confederate Cabi net ? C. J. Cassimus, a wealthy retired fruit dealer, was run over and killed by. a street car in North Montgomery Wednesday. Eye-witnesses say the man deliberately walked upon thc h-acks. Tho body was horribly man* gled. .j At the request of the Governor o? -Virginia,- Colonel Charles A. Dempsey, United States array, retired, has been ?ordered to Richmond for duty with the organized militia of that State for.a .period of 4 years, ?nicos sooner reliev ed. . A dispatch from Mexico City says: Louis Mazzantine, the noted Spanish jjt?ll-flghtery and his brother, Thomas, will soon arrive here, where they will give one of their last performances. Louis intends leaving the profession after returning to Spain shortly to kill bis last bull in honor of the Queen. At Chapel Hill, N. C., Wednesday thc one hundred and ninth anniversary of the opening of the State University was celebrated. Dr. Venable of the Univer sity, reported the institution in excel lent'condition and then introduced the orator of the day, Dr. C. Alphonso Smith, who delivered an address on '"The Literature of the South." A special'from Montgomery, Alaba ma, says: Attorney General Wilson has filed impeachment proceedings with the Supreme Court against Sheriff A. D. Rodgers, of Madison county. He is charged with neglect of duty in not protecting the negro, Homnce Maples, who was lynched in Huntsville, on thc night of September 7th. The hearing has been set for November 21th. Washington Happenings. . The War Department has just receiv ed the report.of the Chiclcamauga and Chattanooga National Park Commis sion' submitted for the commission by General H. V. Boynton, chairman. The .commissioners state that during the year monuments were erected and dedi cated by'th? States of Maryland, Ohio and Pennsylvania. day . -. In the North. Senator Fairbanks spent the speaking at points in Nebraska. Ex-President Cleveland will preside and make a speech at a general Demo cratic mass-meeting in Carnegie Hall. New' York, October 21. . "Frank De Peyster Hall, a wea?thy member of a prominent New York ?family, committed suicide as a resu'.t ?cf Ph?rges of disgraceful practices 'made against him. Thirty-three persons were killed anf many injured by a collision between a passenger train and a freight on thc iMlssouri Pacific railroad near Warrens .burg. Missouri. . . At St. Louis Wednesday night. Grant Eby, of New York, who holds the championship medal, defeated Benja .min E. Brumby, of Atlanta, Ga., in thc third championship pool tourney game the score being 125 to 27. Eby's play ing was . brillfant throughout, while 'Brumby had several hard luck breaks when his turn came to play. Foreign Affairs. At least 15 persons were killed by falling walls at Santiago, Chile. Jews desiring to emigrate from Rus sla were granted reduced railway rate* .within thc empire. iii Earl Grey advises that a conference of Englishmen and Americans be held tj deal with the race problem in South Africa. It is expected in St. Petersburg that General Kuropatkin's advance will be strongly resisted by the Japanese in a few days. The opening session of the October term of the United States Supreme Court was of four minutes' duration. The Dowager Empress of China ha? ,:giyen a sum of money for Die astau lishment of an institution for teacli ing medicine, the management to "be confided to thc missionaries. . . Tho . Mexican government has np -pointed Cayotano Romero, once am bassador in Washington, to bo comm' general at Nev* York, succeeding Dr Navarro. Mr. Romero is now consul at San Francisco, DENI?O BURIAL tN SIBERIA* Body of an Unfortunate te Shipped Thousands of MUe9. The unidentified body of a tann killed on the Trans-Siberian Railroad near Tomsk last summer is still un buried. He vas believed to have come ii om Irkutsk, whither the body was sent, only to bc returned to Tomsk by the police. Once more lt was sent to Irkutsk and once more returned by the police as being unknown in that town. Innumerable telegrams were -sent and replied! to, no town would receive the body, Which was sent hither and thither by railway, always being re turned to Tomsk. At last it was of fered to the Anatomical Museum at Tomsk, where it was preserved for nine months, co one daring to dissect lt without permission from the higher government. Now ithe museum is bf;i-|- rebuilt and the body has been once more banded over to the Tomsk police. They again revise to bury it without the documents without which nothing can be done in Russia, and the un happy body, which is said to have al readj traveled over 11,000 miles, h once more upon its uuending travels, Ways of the Orient. There is nothing very remarkable In the report from Japan that a move ment is on foot, supported by mans eminent men, to found a church pro Christian in character, but independ eat in its lines. Wheii Buddhism na disestablished and disendowed in tht early '70s cl last c-.itury, owing tc the momentary ascendency of Shiuto which is merely vague ancestor anc nature worship, it was prophesied bj acute foreign ^ observers that japai would either adopt Christianity or be come frankly materialistic. It wil not be owing to any lack of energy 01 tho part of European and America: missionaries if the former course ii discarded. Here is one forecast pub lished fourteen, years ago: "To mak< all Japan Christian by edict som< ilne morning is nut on the program o the Japanese statesman of the hour But that something of ihe kind shoub happen within the next twenty yean is not nearly so unlikely as man] things that have actually happened ii this land of realized improbabilities.' DOCTORS MOVE GIRL'S HEART Organ Restored to Normal Conditlor Though Shifted Six linches. Annie Riley, a 13-ycar-old daughtei of James Riley of Dickson City, Pa. became ill with pleurisy about a yeal ago. The family physic'm found thc whole left side of tbe child's bcdyovei the lungs bloated. He removed th/ matter aud the girl began to get well Soon, however, a second gathering appeared, which decayed inc ribs or tho left side. During :ais> second, ill ness the girl's heart- moved over tc the right side some six inches fron Its proper position. " . The girl was taken to a hospital where physicians found It necessary io remove four whole ribs and part? ol four others. The physicians restored thc heart tr its natural position, but the operation loft the child weak and for two weeks she was in a dangerous posi tion, but now it is believed she will recover. Three Strikes. The old adage that "ligntning never strikes twice in the same place" has often been disproved. Hare is an in stance In point: In jhe_summer.,of 1?S4 the farmhouse of Henry Astell in Chemung County, N. Y., was struck by lightning three times in one day. First it split the chimney from top to bottom, ruined stove ind pipe and bored several holes in the floor. An hour la.er a "bolt" struck the sam-; house and tore a milk bench, upon which several cans of milk were set ting, all to pieces. The same evening a third flash entered the roof and tore the legs from a bedstead.-Mid dletown Times. A Growing Evil. Tho practice of giving away trans fers by passengers has come to bc such an evil that the Metropolitan Street Railway Company has d?cid?e to see if it cannot have enforced thal section of the city ordinance, provide ing for universal transfers, which makes t a misdemeanor to sell, give away or exchange transfers, and makes such act punishable by a fine of from $5 tj ?1CU on conviction ir the Police Court. Odds and Ends. The longest ears of corn on exhibi tion in tho Palace of Agriculture at (he World's Fair were raised within tho corporate limits of St. Louis, and are displayed in the Missouri exhibit James Adams, of Wellston, yesterday sent to Superintendent Matt. W. Hall three ears of yellow field corn, two ol which were 17 inches long, while thc other lacked but a. fraction of an inch of that length. A number of boys ride many miles ?very day on their donkeys to attend .lie Gordon College at Khartoum. SAFEST FOOD Ia Any Time or Trouble ls Gi'.iv.?-N'nfi, Food to rebuild tlio strength and thai is pre digested must be selected wher. one is convalescent. At this time there is nothing so valuable as Grape-Nuts for the reason that this food is all nourishment and is also all digestible nourishment. A woman who used il says: "Some time ago I was very ill wit! typhoid fever, so ill everyone though I would die, oven myself. It left mc so weak I could not_ properly digesl food of any kind and I also had mud bowel trouble which left me a weak helpless wreck. "I needed uourisbment as badly as anyone could, but none of the tonic; !ielped mc until I finally tried Grape Xuts food morning and evening. This aot only supplied food that I though delicious as could be but it also muds I ne perfectly well and strong again sc I can do all my housework, sleep well can eat anything without any trace o: bowel trouble and for that reason aloin '.?rnpe-Nuts food is worth its weight ii I gold." Name given by Postum Co/ Ualtle Creek, Mich. Typhoid fever like some other dis eases attacks thc bowelsand frequent!] sets up bleeding and makes them foi months incapable ol' digesting tin starches and therefore pre ?igestee Grape-Nuts is invaluable for the wei known reason that in Grape-Nuts al! ihe starches have been transformed .'uto grape sugar. This means that tht first stage of digestion has been me ?.hanl?ally accomplished in Grape-Nut! food at the factories and therefore any one, no matter how weak thc storaa-h can handle it and grow strong, for al tho nourishment is still there. Thew's a sound reason and IQ day? trial Spoxfffe - - - Mrs. Haskell. Worthy Vice Templar, Inde pendent Order Good Templars, of Silver Lake, Mass., tells of her cure by the use of Lydia E* Pinkham's Vegetable CbmpouncL " DEAS MUS. PECKHAM : Four years ago I was nearly dead with inflam mation and ulceration. I endured daily untold agony, and life was a burden to me. I had used medicines and washes internally and externally until I made up my mind that there was no relief for mc. Calling at the home of a friend, I noticed a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. My friend endorsed it highly and I decided to give it a trial to.sce ii it would help me. It took patience and perseverance for I was in bad condition, and I used Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for nearly five months before ? was cured, but what a change, from despair to happiness, from misery to the delightful exhilarating feeling health always brings. I would not change back for a thousand dollars, and your Vegetable Compound is a grand medicine. "I wish every sick woman would try it and be convinced." - Mus. IDA. HASKELL, Silver Lake, Mass. Worthy Vice Templar, Independent Order of Good Templars. When a medicine has been successful in more thaa a million cases, is it justice to yourself to say, without trying it, "I do not believe it would help mc " ? Surely you cannot wish to remain weale, and sick and dis jcouraged, exhausted with each day's work. You have some derangement of the feminine organism, and Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will help you just as surely as it has others. 7 firs. Tillie Hart, of Larimore, N. D., says: " DEAR MRS. PIXKHAM: I might have been spared many months of suffering and pain if I had known of the efficacy of Lydia E. Pink hana's Vegetalwc Compound a few months sooner, for I tried many remedies without Ard ing anything which helped mc before I trier aa Vegetable Compound. I dreaded the approach of the menstrual period every month, as it meant much suffering and pain. Some months the flow vvas very scanty and others it was pro fuse, but after I had used thc Compound for. two months I became regular and natural, and so I continued until I felt perfectly well, and the parts were strengthened to perform the work without assistance and pain. I am like a differ ent woman now, where before I did not care to live, and I am pleased to testify as to the good your Vegetable . Compound has done for me." Sincerely yours. MRS. TILLIE HART, Larimore.N.D, Be it, therefore, believed by all women who -are iii that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound is tho medicine they should take. It has stood the test of time, and it has hundreds of thousands of cures to its credit. Women should consider it unwise to use any other medicine. 'Srs. Pinkham, whose.address is Lynn, Muss, will answer cheerfully and without cost all letters addressed to her by sick women. Perhaps she has Just the knowledge that will heip your case - t?y her to-day - it costs nothiug. DRS. ?ENTHHEN, WE CAN CURE Y? ?? 20 years of successful practice is n pretty good record, Don't yon' think? OUR SPECIALTY IS CUKINS "TO STAY CURED" Diseases Peculiar to Men: Consultation and Examination Free. Write or call. All correspondence treated confidential. LEATHERMAN & BENTLEY, Cor. Marietta and Forsyth Stn., Atlanta, Ga. What a Bird Likes. Birds like a little sunshine-too much is fatal. A bird aftsr bathing may be hung for fifteen minutes in the sunshine lo dry his feathers, but should not remain longer, says House hold Animals. Do not hang birds iu a window. All windows are draughty. Do not per mit a draught from an open window to strike your bird. Do not allow the temperature of tho room where the bird is kept to drop suddenly. Permit your bird to go to rest at dusk,, keeping it cut of a lighted room. Keep canaries In a temperature of 85 to 70 degrees. Never make a quick move about a bird or move it suddenly. mn ?llOTESJ ?ITO? .yew pNbfa riMB mt,? Gk?mn$. The tot .TiUfiekiMta wirtaen/jnd : '''/??..ven eminence heve rade TOWERS $?m Gab and flab fc.?- uj thc world over TNy wt ira?ein bb? cr" j?llc.vfo? '.'I wadi cf wt work. ir?o'crycferKnt burlvithc 5IGN0T THE PISH o o.'arantcedto ?ivejcl ?.'?tica All reiicl1'. 'kilto sell thea A.J.?0WK CO,B0?T0H.MA5S,OiA. BBB oom exuaiu nemo. on. ' ! F?R'VOUH' ? ..COMPLEXION Wtt&k FRECKLE CUSE . . . - J-??>P CuARANTciD rc* rRtoccs. TIM. SUNBURN. H.0TH. KMPtfS"" CHAPS. SO*-A BOX. TRIAL 25 JJ<.VVlLSON.aCOj^nR?i>-. . \ CHARLESTON.' S. C. X ? ^tOftt \ fOfl SALE AT ?LL PJUG STO^tS/ AfTtJi ?LIX?iL BABERS The Quick and Sure Cure fer MALARIA. CHILLS. FEVER ANO LA GRIPPE. it is e po wer 'ul ionic and app*t*xer * Witt cure tbav tired rechne Pains In Back. Mnibs end henri, ls a Dun ly vest-tab c couipo-nd, and emolir STo Quinine or Amenle. I'rcpan-d by KLOCZEVfSKI A. CO., Washington, D. C. CURED Gi"sa Quick Relief. Removes all swelling in Sto?O days ; effects a permanent cure in joto co days. Trial treatment given free. Nothingcan be faire? Write Dr. H. H. n-eon'a Sons. Snptlalitls. Box n Ailenta. GS CURES Whthi Alt tLbE FAlLb, Befit Cough Syrup, l'aates Jood. Use In tima Hold br drues! - ts. ? A "Sncress" Training School. Golde; Collego is a Busine? and Shorthand Schorn that make- a specialty of training its stn^cnv for"Bl'?'s:ESSi>UC<.E-.S." 129 grad uates with two firm*. Srm i nt? from G'eor? iriu to New Vor;. Write/or cataloyue. Address: Goldoy College, Box ?A-UU, Wjiuiin^ton, Del. LONARCH STU Mr PULLER. Will pull 'i-fo'U slump \vitn>ut !ielp. Guaranteed to stand art-ala of ??O.OOa ll s. Catalne-"e an--' <*is f-nnnts artdreis- MONARCH GRUBBER CO., Lone Tree, Ia. >0. 43. KffS?t?? Thompson's Eye Wats? - TO FARMERS AND POULTRYMEN! - HICK E NS EARN MONEY \e??s AA A V?\.A/JI ? unless you understand them-and know how to cater to their requirements, and you cannot spend years and dollars learning by experience, so you must bay the knoivletlge required by others. We offer this to you for oqly 25 cents. You want them to pay their own way even If you merely keep them as a diversion. In order to haiiule Fowls judiciously, you must know some tning about them. To meet this want weare selling a book giving the experience of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 25c.) twenty-five years. It .was wrltlen-by a man who put all his mind, and time,,and money to making a success of Chick en raising-not as a pastime, but as a busln?ss-^?nd if you .will profit by his twen ty-tivc years' work, you can save many^htcks annually, and make your Fowls cam dollars for you. The point ls, taat you must be sure.to detect trouble In tba poultry Yard as soon as it appears, and know how to remedy lt. This book will teach you. It tells how to detect and cure disease: ;o feed for eggs and also tor fattening; which Fowls to save for breeding purposes; and everything, indeed, Sou should know on this subjoct to make lt profitable. Sent postpaid for twenty? v? canta in starapo. BOOK PUBWSHIN5 H0?S& 134 leonid at. NfwYorkClty