The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, October 24, 1901, Image 4
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I SUCCESS OF LITTLE MEN
* VALUABLE CCODS PUT UP IN
SMALL PACKAGES."
Secretary fiage Think* the lMiy*Ioa-ly
Small Man Ha* an /.?lvantat;e in Tublie
Life ? There Are Very 1 c\v Giant* j
Among 1 ho?e in National A ITiir*. |
"I sometimes think the physically j
small man has an advantage in public
life." said Secretary of the Treas- !
ury Lyman J. Gage to one of his assistants.
who claimed that short stature
was a handicap in the race of life.
"There is a glamour or romance about
the little fellow who succeeds, con?
\ tinued the secretary, "that attracts at^
tention and gives him a reputation.
On the whole I believe the man of
diminutive size is more effective than
^ the physically perfect man of impos*
ing presence. The little fellow is more
aggressive and self assertive because
/ he has not the adventitious aid of bod*
ily beauty snd favor. There are lots
" of big little men in pubic life and history
abounds in small celebrities."
This statement was made partly to
w encourage Assistant Secretary Ailes,
~ who is disposed *o regard an imposing
presence as necessary to full success !
and who sometimes regrets that his ;
live feet cannot be stretched half a
cubit But the secretary's long experience
convinces him that bodily
height, breadth and depth do not insure
success in life. He has observed
ihat spirit and ability bring the man
cf small physical size into prominence.
It rnav be that Secretary* Gage, in
eulogizing the small man, had in mind,
3 an illustration of what the little
allows can do the record of Mr. James J
\L Eckels, who was a fellow-townswm
man of Mr. Gage and comptroller of |
!he currency under President Cleveland.
Shortly after Mr. Eckels assumed
office in the treasury he was
nvited to deliver a lecture before one
r[ the law classes in Columbia univerjity.
He was not recognized when
1 e repaired to the hall and modestly
'ook a back seat, where he was the
object of some curious scrutiny on the
part of the students, who supposed
him to be a young interlope;?a
stranger who had simply wandered
into the classroom.
The professor in charge that even"ag
expressed regret that the speaker
for the occasion, Comptroller Eckels,
had not put in an appearance. The
stranger in the back row arose and announced
that he was Mr. Eckels. All
eyes were then riveted upon the slight,
boyish figure and youthful face, inno
cent of beard. Disappointment was
written on every face, including that
of the professor, but when the "boy,"
as he appeared, reached the platform
and began his masterly address, disappointment
gave way to enthusiasm,
and one of the biggest brains in President
Cleveland's administration received
a public introduction.
The physical giant is not met with
very frequently in national affairs,
now that Thomas B. Reed of Maine
has retired from public life. Outside
of the supreme court, where master
minds are carried in giant bodies by
such men of Justices Gray. Harlan
* and White, few of the controlling spirits
who are leaving an impress on
history are above medium height or
weight, and many of the most prominent
are far below the average sized
iiidix. hj * cii. iac ou^i cmc luiu i 10 yic- |
sided over by a man small in stature j
and slight of figure Melville W. Fuller,
chief justice of the United States
supreme court, is a pygmy compared
with Associate Justice Gray, who sits
at his immediate left on the bench,
Justice McKenna, the latest appointee
to the bench, is small in stature.
Measured by ordinary standards the
president of the United States is a
small man physically, but there is no
doubt of his having achieved great
success and having won a high place
in the history of the country and of
the world.
He is hardly up to what is called
medium height He has associated
with him a number of big little men.
Hon. John Hay, secretary of state,
ex-ambassador to England and known
all the world over as a poet and author,
started in life with the supposed
handicap of a slight body and undersized
figure. Secretary of the Navy
Long is below the standard height,
and Postmaster-General Smith is hardly
up to the medium line. The present
attorney-general. Mr. Philander C.
Knox, cannot boast of many inches,
- but his success where mentality is
potent was long ago achieved.
- President McKinley's last Republican
predecessor, the late General Harrison,
was familiarly known as "'Little
Ben." He had large men in his
cabinet, but never showed to disadvantage,
even alongside the talented
jtsiaane, wno was aoove me average
eize and of very graceful and imposing
presence.
In congress the little men often attract
the most attention. Within the
past quarter of a century many statesmen
of insignificant bodily stature
have.made their names known from I
? one end of the land to the other. Less ,
than a decade ago few men were more j
prominent than the doughty little j
Democratic leader, William L. Wil- I
son, afterward postmas*er-general. j
When the tariff bill bearing his name j
passed the house he was caught up and
carried on the shoulders of enthusiastic
colleagues, among them William J. j
Bryan. His feather weight made this ;
demonstration easy. There are those j
in congress who still remember dimin- j
ntive Alexander Hamilton Stephens of
Georgia, whose great intellect made j
him one of the south's greatest men. !
Today in the house the homely old !
adage that "valuable goods are put up j
in small packages" is verified when i
Representative John Dalzel' of Penn- ;
sylvania, or "Uncle Joe" Cannon of
Illinois appear on the floor. The great
leaders in congress are not usually
nf Anal- Annrmsr nthpr hisr littlp
men may be noted Admiral Dewey
and General Fred Funston. both of
whom have made considerable noise ;
In the world. Then there is "Little i
Joe" Wheeler. United States Treas- i
urer Roberts is so short that when
/ he sits in an ordinary office chair his
feet do not touch the floor. The list |
might be extended indefinitely to prove
that towering form and broad shoul- j
ders are not essential to success.?Sat- j
tirday Evening Post.
Hi* Want* Were Few.
"What'll you have?" she asked severely
at the breakfast table, for he j
had been out late the night before and
she had not yet forgiven him.
"I think." he replied, meekly, "that
I would appreciate a genial smile and i
a pleasant word about as much as any- j
thing."
The average cost of the body of a
modern long electric car is $2000; the
average cost of a set of double trucks
foi* such a car is $G90, and the average
cost of the motor is $1500. making the
total cost of the car $4100.
"THAT OTHER TERRI3LE DI3EAS3.H
A Stimulus to Mctlic:il Men In the Hattle
with Cnnvi'r.
The tragic ending of the tragic life
of the Empress Frederick has gi .*en
| a new meaning to the pathetic appeal
j which King Edward made the other
! day to English medical men to spare
no effort to combat "that other terrible
disease?cancer." Sir James Paget,
the famous English physician,
once declared that "every one would
have cancer if only he lived long
enough," and that must, I suppose, be
accepted as a fact; but it is evident
from the medical comments of the
week that there is no ground for asserting
that the disease is on the increase
in this country. An English
physician who speaks with authority
assures me on the contrary that although
the essential nature of the disease
has so far baffled research, considerable
progress can bo recorded
during the past tv?*o decades. In some
notes he has sent me he says:
"Just as in the case of consumption,
cancer was believed to be mainly
due to some inherited fault of constitution,
and it need hardly be said that
this hypothesis engendered a despairing
frame of mind in the practitioner
as well as the patient. The present
general belief throughout the British
medical profession, in support of which
numerous facts might be adduced, is
that the disease is at first entirely local
or limited, and in all probability
the result of the growth of some specific
micro-organism. The constitution
may possibly have some influence
?it is a question of relative suitability
of soil and seed?but it would not appear
to be nearly so important a factor
as in some other parasitic diseases, tuberculosis,
for example. The conclusion
follows that if the disease is recognized
early enough, and is in some
accessible part from which it can be
removed freely by tne surgeon, there
should be a fair chance that it may
never recur; and modern improvements
in diagnosis and methods of operation
have actually accomplished
this in large numbers of cases. If,
however, precious time is wasted by
hesitating and temporizing, or by submitting
to the treatment of quacks,
the malignant growth not only decoys
the part it has first attacked,
zut particles are carried to neighboring
glands or to internal organs, just
as the seeds of a noxious weed may
be scattered over the whole garden.
"Assuming this view to be correct,
the directions in which improvement
may be looked for are two?in the
first place, the recognition of the parasite;
and secondly, as is now being
done in the case of tuberculosis,
> .11
plague, maiaria ana many oiner uiscasos,
the attainment of knowledge
concerning its life history and the
conditions which favor its growth. Until
lately the real nature of all these
disorders was unknown, although physicians
suspected the existence of morbific
germs long before it was possible
to see these under a microscope or cultivate
them in a test tube; but, thanks
to improvements in the instruments
and methods of the laboratory, the advances
in the sister sciences of chemistry
and biology, and the brilliant
discoveries of certain investigators, we
are now no longer dependent on mere
theories, which have aided us so little
in the past"
When Lincoln'* Wtr? Fnlled III* Tlnlr
Mrs. H. A. Baldwin, an old lady now
living in Los Angeles who was a close
neighbor of the Lincolns in Springfield.
Illinois, gives the following personal
recollection of Lincoln in Leslie's
Monthly.
"While Mr. Lincoln was living in
Springfield, a judge of the city, who
was one of the leading and most influential
citizens of the place, had occasion
to nail uDon him. Mr. Lincoln
was not over particular in his matter
of dress, and was also careless in hia
manners. The judge was ushered into
the parlor, where he found Mr. Lincoln
sprawled out across a couple of chairs,
reclining at his ease. The judge was
asked to be seated, and, without
changing his position in the least, Mr
Lineoln entered into conversation with
his visitor.
"While the two were talking Mrs.
Lincoln entered the room. She was, of
course, greatly embarrassed at Mr.
Lincoln's offi'-hand manner of entertaining
his caller, and stepping up
behind her husband she grasped him
by the hair and twitched his head
about at the same time looking at him
reprovingly.
"Mr. Lincoln apparently did not
notice the rebuke. He simply looked
up at his wife, then across to the
judge, and, without rising, said:?
"' Little Mary, allow me to intro^^
Til /I crr\ CJa.O n/1.
U UL'tJ ) UU lu 111 j 11 icuu, u uvrauuSo.'
"It will be remembered that Mrs.
Lincoln's maiden name was Mary
Todd, and that she was very short in
stature."
ristysronnd? for Children.
All day long the playgrounds are j
crowded with children. As there is always
some one present to look after
them moihers have learned that it is
the best place to send them, and the
baby, too. goes along to spend the day.
It is a great sight to see the little ones
working in the low sand beds. There
are pails and shovels, and there are
wheelbarrows and various tools to
lighten this play labor. In imagination
they have days at the seashore.
The teacher is the one to furnish incentive
to these imaginative visits.
The sand, which is renewed two or
three times every season, is kept in a
wholesome condition. The merry-goround
is always a centre of wonder
and amusement. There is a May pole
for May parties, and the latter are as
popular in August as in May. Through
the swings and other amusements
many lessons in regard for others are
taught, and a promise in relation to relinquishing
an attraction is as sacred
as a bond. Thousands of children were
ministered to in these playgrounds
last summer, and the city of New York
expended $20,000 during the months of
July and August in this particular
line in connection with its vacation
schools?Haryot Holt Cahoon, in the
Woman's Home Companion.
IJrcipe* for Happinei*.
Happiness is not to be procured like
hardbake in a solid lump; it is composed
of inumerable small items. The
recipes for its acquisition are simple
and therefore we ignore them. Love
in marriage, fidelity in friendship, affection
between parent and children,
courtesy in intercourse, devotion to
duty and perfect sincerity in every
relation of life?those are the ingredients
of a happy life. In the quest
for happiness one could not do better j
than put into practice the precepts of :
the great Persian: "Taking the first
step with the good thought, the second
with the good word and the third
step with the good deed. I entered I
paradise."?From Sarah Grand's London
Lecture.
The Enemies of the Lobsters.
Everything that swims is an enemy to
the little embryo lobster, inducting "him
self?for the larger ones rat the little
ones in most wanton fashion. The little
fiy lobsters shed their shells seventeen
times <on the average during the first j
year of their existence. After they axe
five years old they shed them four times
a year.
The range of the lobster is about 12000
miles, from the straits of Belle Tie on
the north of Cape Hatteras on the south,
and fifty miles out to sea. It wast long
a mooted question whether the;' -went up 1
and down the roast, like shad, mackerel. '
blue tich. cm., or whether they remained
stationary like the oyster and clam.
This was settled by fhe fish commis.-ion
in a very curious and interesting j
way. They attached a zinc tag .to :a llctt j
of thcin at various points, and ret them i
free. These lags were numbered, and a |
record kept of them in -p. book. Fishermen
were given a pri.re iT they wxrald
return them to the commission 'bv inail
with a statement as to where and when
found. Bv the*e means it was soon discovered
that they travel hack and forth I
out to sea. instead of np and down th<
coast.
A Trarm in Trouble.
"I had an old barn in a field half
a mile from the house," said a Nassau |
farmer the other day, "and it was a j
camping place fcr tramps. One night j
this last summer there was a big tliun- j
der storm, and I felt pretty sure that a i
bolt hit the old barn. I didn't turn out :
'till morning, however, and then I saw ;
the barn had been burned. As I wan- !
dcred down there I came across a tramp i
in a fence corner. He was looking dazed i
and done up. and when I asked him ;
what had happened he slowly explained: i
"Why, this thing is going to make
me lots of trouble."
"What thing?" I asked.
"This old barn. There was nine of j
us in there when the lightning struck, !
and as I was the only one who got out '
I suppose I'll have to hang around here
and attend the funerals of the other
eight."?Brooklyn Citizen.
The New Fire Net
Recently adopted by one of the metropolitan i
fire departments bas proven a wonderful sue- j
ees6 as c. life saver. Every one takes special i
interest in any invention that will rave or i
nrnl/ino TKiic ic t>?p rfjurm Rorranvnpn.
pie have bten praising the merits of Hostetter's
Siornaeh Bitters du-irig the past fifty
years. I; cures dyspepsia, indigestion. biliousness,
nervou n^ss, and liver and kidney j
troubles. Many physicians prescribe end rec- j
mmend it. Do not 'ail to try it.
The man who ge's mto a peck of trouble i
is in a measure to be pitied.
Best For the Bowels.
No matter what ails you, headache to a i
cancer, you will never get well until your
bowels are pnt right. Cascabkts help nature, i
ci;re yon without a gripe or pain, produce
easy natural movements, cost you just 10
cents to start getting your health back. -Cascaksts
Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up >
in metal bores, every tablet has C. C. C. I
stamped on it. Beware of imitations.
It's funny that when people say a nan j
was bested they mean that he was worsted. [
FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervousness
after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great !
Nerve Restorer. "?2 trial bottle and treatise free
Dr. R. H. Klise. Ltd.. 931 Arch St.. Fbila. Pa. [
An Austrian thaler is only good for its
silver value?namely, about fifty cents.
Mrs. Window's Soothing Gyrup for children j
teothing, soften the gums, reduces inflammation,allays
pain, cures wind colic. 2oe a bottle
About 300,000 geese are annually brought ;
from Russia to Saxony.
Making headway?knitting the neck of j
a sweater.
I do not believe Piso's Cure for Consump- I
tion has an equal for coughs and colds.?John
F. Botek, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1900.
The man who's daft on fishing might be I
classed as an angler-maniac.
MISS LAURA HOWARD, |
___
President South End Ladies' |
Golf Club, Chicago, Cured by j
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound After the Best Doctors
Had Failed To Help Her,
i
41 Dear Mrs. Pixkham : ?I can thank j
you for perfect health to-day. Life
looked so dark to me a year or two j
ago. I had constant pains, my limbs
swelled, I had dizzy spells, and never
MISS LAURA HOWARD, CHICAGO,
knew one day how I would feel the i
next. I was nervous and had no appetite,
neither could I sleep soundly
nights. Lyclia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, used in con- j
junction with your Sanative Wash, did j
more for me than all the medicines i
and the skill of the doctors. For eight i
months 1 have enjoyed perfect health, j
I verilj' believe that most of the doc- ,
tors are guessing and experimenting j
when they try to cure a. woman with
an assortment of complications, such as
mine ; but you do not guess. How I j
wish all suffering women could only \
know of your remedy ; there would be j
less suffering I know."?Laura Howard,
113 Newberry Ave., Chicago, 111.
?$5000 forfeit if above testimonial Is not genuine.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all women
who are ill to write her for i
advice. Address Lynn, Mass.,
giving full particulars.
$2,500 ooIN GOLD GIVEN?AWAY j
to our agents besides regular coramis- j
sior.s, for selling our splendid ;-ue holiday
|-OoIvS for 2001. No blv; pUes to a few, but
overv r.peiu yets a share. Hteen years' business
record back of this offer. Handsome
sample case outfit only A5 cents, delivered.
Order outfl and secure choice cf territory at
once. Address i). K1.1T1IKRPUB.CO., I
Atlanta, Ga. j
/ business, . tiui'iliaiid and Telegraph
College, Louisville, Ivy., open the whole
year. Students can enter any time. Catalog free.
LUMBER WANTED.
Wanted Maple and Beech Lumber. .
Address Box 693, Atlanta, Ga.
USEES OF FARM AND MILL MACHINERY
Subscribe For FOKEST & FIELI>
at sight. It Is published in their interest at
Atlanta, Ga . monthly. Only 25c per year. !
Agents wanted. Sample copies Free.
HOnDQV NE W DISCOVERY; givei
(lir jtv i c9 8 quick relief and cures worst
fi-ta. l'.ook of testimonials and 11) days' treatment
Free. Dr. B. B. GBEEN'8SONS. Box B. Atlanta. 0*. ;
use clbtjub^sy cube, gf
"Th* Sauce that m?ileiVt?tP?istfli?Mi^ j
McELHENNY'S TABASCO.:
sozodqnt for :h? teeth 25c |
SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY
There is to be a rival to margarine
as a substitute for butter, according
to the British Consul-General at Marseilles.
He says it is to be called
"vegetaline," and is nothing else than
the oil extracted from coprah (dried
cocoanut); refined, and with all smell
and taste neutralized, it becomes like
sweet lard.
A London paper announces that thesum
of $7,500 has been placed at the'
disposal of Professors Haeckel, Conrad
and Fraas, of Jena. Halle anc.
Stuttgart, respectively, as a prize tor
the best work on the theme "What do
we learn from the principles of the
theory of heredity in reference to the
inner political development and legis
lation of States?" Manuscripts must
be in German and are to be delivered
to Professor Haekel not later than
Dee. 1, 1902.
At the Hodbarrow Mines, at Miilom,
cn the Cumberland coast. England,
work is being carried out to enable
mining to proceed still further imder
the sea. The company's first tease
only extended to ordinary high-wfter
mark on the south. Through the ta:>
face caving in when ore was extract id,
it was necessary to leave a barrier of
360 feet wide, to protect the mines, as
the sea would otherwise have filled
the hollows on the surface and eventually
have flooded the mine. This
barrier was uliimately found to contain
over 5,000,000 tons of ore. A second
sea wall going beyond the older
one has been commenced.
The wholesale slaughter of kangaroos
for their valuable hides _has resulted
in the practical extinction of
these remarkable animals except in
the remoter regions of Australia, and
most visitors make their only experience
of the continent's typical quadrupeds
in the zoological gardens of the
principal cities. In the "back blocks,"
as the interior parts of Australia are
'~T1??n+ill +/-\ lio found in
i. 'liieu, iiicj* cue oiiu iu ._
considerable numbers, and afford ex- I
citing sport to the hunter. The tribe
of Australian kangaroos includes, besides
these animals proper, a constantly
dwindling succession of related species?wallaroos,
wallabies, paddymeloos,
and so on, ending with the dimin- ,
utive and dainty kangaroo rat.
Everybody has observed the habit j
that some insects have of hovering or j
dancing on the air, generally in a
group, with every manifestation of
enjoyment. There is a species of twowinged
flies that are particularly fend
of this sport, for sport it undoubtedly
is. They assemble in some spot sheltered
from the wind, and indulge in
their dance for hours at a time. Their
motions consist of alternate rising and
falling in periods of a few seconds,
and over a distance varying from one
foot to four. They become ?0 much
interested in the dance that they cannot
be scattered. If disturbed for a
moment they at once reassemble, and
continue the sport as if nothing had
interfered with them. Much has been
written about this habit, but the naturalists
agree, we believe, in considering
it real play.
According to a paper recently read
by Dr. Aron before the Berlin Medical
society the inhalation of oxygen for
the relief and cure of certain lung and
heart affections, in which it is comrrinnlv
rproir-mended. is of little value.
The atmosphere, he said, contained a
sufficient proportion of oxygen to saturate
the haemoglobin of the blood,
and as the haemoglobin when saturated
was, of course, unable to absorb
more oxygen inhalations of oxygen
were evidently useless. He
had found that the results of practical
experience were in accordance
with these views. The few instances
in which the oxygen seemed beneficial
were cases of dyspnoae (difficulty in
breathing), in cardiac and pulmonary
diseases, but the improvement was
maintained only while the inhalations
were actually in progress. In
the treatment of apparent death from
drowning- artificial respiration was
just as efficacious. In poisoning by
carbolic, oxide and in rarefied air,
where the amount of available oxygen
was less than the normal, the admin- j
Istration of oxygen was desirable. j
.Apoi>lrrv and Krain Worker*.
Tho ntimhpr of deaths from apo
plexy daily among prominent business
men is a matter for comment. It almost
appears that the disease has a
special predilection for brain workers
who have passed the life meridian.
Some explanation for this may be
made by taking into account the stress
of mental work to which the ambitious
and untiring American so willingly
yields himself. The brain is the last
organ that seemingly feels the strain,
and the ultimate breakdown is usually
more or less sudden.
The latter was particularly the case
in the deatn of Bishop Littlejohn. For
a long time the mine was being prepared
for the final explosion. In a
person of his years, temperate habits,
vital force and persistent mental activity
the gradual wear and tear upon
the blood vessels of the brain directly
invited the ultimate issue. The arterial
supply was evidently quite extensively
involved in the gradual degenerative
process that occurs late in
life. The hemorrhage was consequently
quite extensive, involving the
deeper portions of the centres, tearing
their tissues and overwhelming pain
and consciousness in a quick stroke, j
\Tpianr>hnlv as is the fact, this mode
of death is the best of all that are
caused by apoplexy, and the patient
is spared a life of subsequent misery
and comparative helplessness while
awaiting and dreau.ng an inevitable
ending.
Stem Arch Krhljjc.
A long bridge is under construction
at Luxembourg, over the valley of
Petruffe. This arch will have a span
of 277 feet and a rise of 102 feet. In
comparison, the longest existing stone
arch is that over Cabin John creek, on
the aqueduct near Washington, D. C.
This has a span of 220 feet and a rise
of 57 1-2 feet, and is 101 feet above the
water level in the creek. An arch over
the river Pruth, in Austria, has. a span
of 273 feet and a rise of 59 feet. The
bridge over the river Dec, near Ches- j
ter, Eng., nas a span or zuu ieei.
TIip I)e?i??'?t Nttnral Well.
There is a man in France, M. Marcel
by name, who devotes his time j
and his energies to the exploration of
caverns and ether underground places.
Many of the discoveries that he has j
reported have attracted much attention.
but none more than that of a !
natural well in the department of j
Kautes Aloes, of which he recently j
gave a description. It is the deepest !
cavity of its kind known. He has !
sounded it to a depth of 1017 feet, but j
believes that he has not yet reached !
the bottom. I
Robinson Crusoe.
Where clid Defoe find the name Robinson
Crusoe? His biographers have ail
pointed out that at Mr. Morton's Acad1
emy at Stoke Newington he had one
j Timothy Crusoe for a school-fellow, and
there they have left it It is rather astonishing
to be told by a correspondent
of the Soliere that in St Nicholas Chapel
at King's Lynn he had just found a
tomb inscribed with the name of "Robinson
Crusoe, Upholder, who departed
this life Augu-t 6, 1791, in his sixtysecond
year." No part of England was
more familiar to Dcfoc than East Anglia,
and it now appears that he may
have discovered the name there readymade.
Not that the; Robinson Crusoe
whose grave has just been mentioned
could have supplied him with it, for
"Robinson Crusoe" was published in
1719, just ten years before this worthy
"Upholder" was born.?London Globe.
A RAPID COURSE.
"Dere ain't no doubt about it," said
Meandering Mike, "education pays."
"I 'spose you're speakin' from experience?"
responded Plodding Pete, contemptuously.
"I am. I went t'roo one o' de biggest
colleges in de country; while de students
was asleep."?Washington Star.
J lM0V.30i
** *?rMS*
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E NUT SCT SUVCN PLATSD.
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j $900 TO $1500 A YEAR
We want intelligent Men and Women aa
i Traveling Representatives or Local Managers;
salary $yuo to Hyo a year and all expenses,
according to experience and ability. We also
j want local repretentatives; salary $9 to $15 a
week and commission, depending upon the time
devoted. Send stamp for full particulars and
Mate position prefered. Address, Dept. B.
THK liELL COMPANY. Philadelphia, Pa.
ASTHMA-HAY FEVER
f?CURED BY ^
FREE TRIAL BOTTLE
Address DR.TAFT79 E.I30? ST- N.Y CITY
JgaBsBBBiaaHiaMa
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. fei
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use IJB
in time. Sold by druggists. f#|
S0Z0D0NT Toolb Powder 25c
? *
1% f - k
Misplaced Energy.
A quaint story of a master builder
and a Briti'.'h workman is told ,by a
trade journal. Having heard that the
men did not start work at the proper
time the employer thought he would drop
down about 6.30 one morning and sec.
Going up the yard he caught sight of a
joiner standing smoking, with his kit
not even opened. Simply asking his
name, which he found to be Malcolm
Campbell, he called him into the office,
and, handing him four days' pay, ordered
him to leave at once. After see1
ing the man clear of the yard he went
[ up to the foreman and explained that
i h*A made an examole of Malcolm
I *1^ v* ? - - ?
Campbell by paying him off for not
{ starting at the proper time. "Great
I Scott, sir!" ejaculated the foreman,
i "that chap was only lookin' for a job."
| ?Philadelphia Telegraph.
Brooklyn, N. Y., October 22d.?The Garfield
Tea Co., manufacturers of Garfield Tea,
Garfield Headache Powders, Garfield Tea
Syrup, Garfield Relief Plasters, Garfield
j Digestive Tablets and Garfield Lotion, are
now occupying the largo and elegant office
- building and laboratory recently erected by
j tht?u For many years the Garfield Re
inedies have been growing in popularity and
their success is well deserved.
The proper age at which a girl should j
! get married is tne parsonage.
"H | FR<
1
I
I "DRUNHOND
* IBM
"htnpn I
I
4^^^^ J
? Granber TwistTags being equ<
f" E. Rice, Greenville,"
"Cross Bow," "Spear I
"Master Workman," ".
"Jolly Tar," "Standard !
tune," " Razor," "Ole Varj
HQ TAOS MAY BE ASSORTED
Our new i
I CATALOGUE C
Hi ' F0R
Epllf ^nc^u<^c many articles not si
^jjg most attractive List of Presents
jyJJI be sent by mail on receipt of posl
(Catalogue will be ready for m
. Our offer of Presents for Tags
?g COJ
Write your name and addres:
~4 containing Tags, and send them i
^ c.
vp ^ Ii .
IC-B*KR?L
iOT CUM. | |li?il
300 TASi.
Maisby & Company,
41 S. Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga.
Engines and Boilers
*icam Water Heater*, Steam Pumps and
Penberth j Injectors.
Manufacturers and Dealers In
! SAW MILLS,
| Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machin
ery and Grain Separators.
SOLID and 1NSEKTED Saws. Saw Teeth atM
| I ocks, Knight's Patent Dogs, lilrdsall Saw
i 51 ill and Engine ltepairs, Governors, Grate
[ Pars and a lull line of 51111 Supplies. Price
! and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
Iree by mentioning this paper.
i wliSV/^iiTlitmpton't Ey> Wstw
<*
Friends By the Thousand.
Thousands of women owe their health ?o
Dickey's Kema e Tonic. It cures painful and
difficult meustruatloD, weak back, ulceration
of womb, and all female diseases.
The worst of borrowing trouble if that
it entails such a high rate of interest.
It requires no experience to dye with Putsait
Fadeless Dies. Simply boiling your
foods in the dye is all that it necessary. Sold
y all druggists.
When a fellow can't raise a beard he
feels that that if one of the ills that flesh
is hair to.
It would naturally be supposed that a
nose is broke when it hasn't got a scentCatarrh
Cannot Be Cured.
With local applications, as they cannot reach
tho seat of tne disease. Catarrh Is a blood or
constitutional disease, and in order to cure it
you most take internal remedies. Hall's Oa
' -A- A.
tarrh Cure la taken Internally, anaKnwoev
ly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's
Catarrh Cure Is not a quack medicine. It was
prescribed tv cne of the best physicians in
this country for years, and is a regular prescription.
It is composed of the best tonics
known, combined with the best blood purifiers,
acting dlrectlv on the mucous surfaces. The
perfeot combination of the two ingredients is
what produces such wonderful results in curing
catarrh. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. Ohiket & Co., Props., Toledo, 0.
Sold by Druggists, price, 7oc.
Hall's Family Pills arc the best.
.The newest leather seats for hall chairs
are laced with thongs of the same material.
m
I ~
AR" h
rii> |
itrallrf
loor |
JDSIECK ~
IAPK" J
ynwi t iiiiii
SUM
wiri
i/to one of others mentioned. IL.
44 Horse Shoe," 44 J. T.#"
lead," 44 Old Honesty,"
Sickle," 44 Brandywine,"
^avy," 44 Planet," 44Nep?iny."
4 ?
IN SECUIUNO PRESENTS. g T<
llustrated |L
)F PRESENTS
1902
iowb here. It will contain xne
ever offered for Tags, and will t,
tage?two cent9.
ailing about January 1st, 1902.)
will expire Nov. 30th, 1902.
*TINENTAL TOBACCO COMPANY. ^
3 plainly on outside of packages
and requests for Presents to \v/ ^
Hy. BROWN, "
424! Folsom Ave.,
5t. Louis, Mo.
^jl. >o
i v^ -vh.wv bunion
SH'
y^AJ.oKv /TTl ^ Canni
? :. ' ? ; ' :4&Sjv6 \' the reputation of W.
iSr* ^ ^ Ifl " ^ ihoes lor style, comf
M$r ^ J. /o. ft Jju F^" all ot her makes solil
for hfs money in t:
I 5*> -^j?\ i"' -V- t3.:<0 shoes than h?
B *3 "?'< \ &TwL>_ Douglas makes and sells r
H b2 -y\?\ any other two manufactnr
I fiP- &&- F,velrt* u?e?i. tr. L. not
Tr> f^KT 1 ofibe same high rrmde lealhi
fetr--. ara jut as good la uery we
'**&?&' / Sold bv o3 Dottfi
ySpj?['^ J, to tcearcrat onr,
v / itoe; heavy,raedlom,
,; W. L. Douglas.:
" ' - -'-fVN ' L. - " ' v
- J "*r- > '***'- -'' .
>?
.
I ?? ?II ?I H HHttl I
LIBBY'S
II Mieee,w| i;
Meat. W I
?? la our mammoth 4
<? kitchen we employ a chef q * 4 *
* | who is an expert in male- ft- J *
< inj mioce pies. He has R!jh. T & \?
?? charge of making all of ite*' <J J ?
Libby's Mince Meat. He '{Hi J I 'J
,, uses the very choicest ma- 1 I ? ?
? terials. He is told to make nSgLJ fl *'
11 the best Mince Meat ever u * *
, sold?and he does. Get a ' *
? package at your grocer's; ' J] '
11 enough for two large pies. "j |
?? You'll never use another kind again. ?
?? Libby's Atlas of the World, with 31 ??
new maps, sire 8xx x inches, sent any- '?
\ | where lor zo cts. in stamps. Our Book* I
? let. "How to Make Good Things to ??
;? Eat," mailed free. |
i: Ubby, McNeill & Libby, i:
II CHICAGO. ::
IllMlt-111 IK- H ) II I .H-i-H nt
Mention this Paper
npa|
nuraa
SB jnH H I mi S
I jg IB ^ r
1902.
335>"-^l I
K KM I Ft "touts: 64 TAOS n
SMtU W' ?W. ^
rtf r-ippr* ser.
" CO CAKr.
t, ^-<Si*SlS
lift M 3?l ?*??*
/v fl M Sl/k"**M0/0UtS
_ ^ I r ' %
I
^^is5a:e53 I"
I
fim?wMmmnii S55S ImmM
:
^????
OES'3 Jill4
Douglai $4 Gilt Edge Line |
)t be Equaled at Any ?nctr^M i|?. I
; t'uio a Quarter of a Coat err M ll
I- Douglas $3.00 and $3.50 # IgS ml
ort and wear has excelled m fugS "??? V
at these prices. This ex-B rvf7 MB
1licen won by merit alone* r'i\ pjf H
ss shoes have to prive bet- Ay
;ion than other $s.fiOand g rSSw^t ! I
eranse his reputation for H ?|jpFj?S*ES AM '
?3.50 shoes must be main-? /J
ird lias always been placed? L M
earer receives more value* i J?
to V/. I- Doujslas $3-00 andBJB v^sg^v- /VBgv #1
can ret elsewhere. IV. LTBAm'::- /JSS^m I
nore $3.00 and SS-M shoes thatiWBlLjK-v$??ajfiy
ers in the world. Fnat<?olwr^i3fi3BSK//yMr 3
1 rl.n f 3 and 53.50 shoes areeade 0
r? n?ed la gi sad $8 shoes, sad 9
jr. : CATALOO FCF.K.- j.
'ox stores in American cities srtlinQ direct ft om/acloneI
profit; mid the best shoe dealers ercrvtehere. 9
i?l*t open hsT>Bf W. L. hoa{!s? shoos with iun . H
id prlre staaiped oa botto*. Shoes Sent t~.y- EAtt^. 1*1
on receipt of price and 25c.~*ddi- JNShI
>nal for carriage. - Take ni'iyj. ^
n-s of foot as shown: state tiylei
'ircd; size and^width I