The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, November 21, 1901, Image 4
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ONE MAN'S LUCK.
?tetrad Into a Junior Partnership by i,
Chance Cust of Wind.
"Speaking oi taking in partners,"
. ? said a downtown business man, "our
junior was, you might say, blown in on
? U3, and I saw him started in our direction,
though I had no idea of it at the
^ time.
"Going downtown one summer !
morning on a Ninth avenue elevated
train, I saw sitting opposite to me a
young man who caught my fancy, a
substantial, earnest, straightforwardlooking
chap, whose looks I liked first
rate. He was reading a paper; and j
presently he tore off from tins'' paper j
an advertisement leaf that he didn't ,
want and threw it out of the window, j
or tried to, for as a matter of fact it j
di<?ji't go out. A gust of wind with
just the right twist to it came along j
at just that moment and blew the pa*
per back, to fall on a vacant seat next !
to him.
"And as it fell something in It caught
his eye, and he picked up that part \
which he had just been trying to throw
away and began earnestly to read it. ;
and ended up by folding it carefully
and putting it in his pocket.
"About four minutes after Td got in
here this morning this same young man ;
walks in and applies for a place that we j
had been waiting for somebody to fill.
Our advertisement for a man for it was
in that paper which I had seen this
young man try to throw away, and !
which a gust of wind by one chance ;
in a million or more, had blown back :
upon him and in such a manner as to j
fix his attention.
fc "As a matter of fact I hadn't liked i
the young man's act of throwing the
paper out of an elevated car window;
a paper floating down and around as ,
that would do might frighten horses '
and lead to no end of trouble and lots
of damage, but no one man thinks
about everything, and he'd learn better
War--'-" _i a:, T I ?... j ~ i
auuui mis, i Knew, anu su as a manci
of fact I took this young man on the j
spot, on my first impressions of him. !
He far more than made good and in :
due course of time he came into his '
junior partnership, literally and truly !
gg?>V- blown into it. i
"Sort o' qujer, eh?"?New York
Sun.
MOUNTAIN MOTORING.
Mountain motoring does not seem |
to be a promising form of locomotion, j
but the restless mountaineer has im- j
pressed into his service the new vehi- j
cle. Two French tourists have climbed
the great St. Bernard in an automo- ;
bile, being the first to do so. and the
Grand Duke Nicholas has just com- i
pleted a tour in the Caucasus in a mo- |
tor car. His route lay over the Goder i
Pass, which is 7,000 feet high.?Coun- i
try Life.
MR. SMITH.
"Smith is the meanest man on earth." !
jpjpfe "What's his latest?" J'
"His neighbors' children were play- j
ing at keeping store in their back yards :
and Smith bought out their business tor :
ten pins and split up the counters tor
kindling wood."?Indianapolis Sun.
?
Passing of the Cable Car*
A few years ago the cable system was con- j
sidered the best, but since the invention of j
the trolley, the cable i* being rapidly dis- j
placed. Experts now claim that compressed i
air will eventually be the car power of the
future. In all lines of industry improvements
are constantly being made, but in medicine
Hoetetter's Stomach Bitters still holds the
_l?ad, because it is impossible to make a better !
t ?medicine for indigestion, dyspepsia, belching ;
c;.' - or biliousness. Be sure to try it.
It is the opinion of entirely too many j
people that the word "friend" means one i
who will lend his money.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh
- That Contain Jlcrcnry*
as mercury will surely destroy the senso of
smell and completely derange the whole sys- |
tem when entering it through tho mucous :
surfaces. Such articles should never be used ;
exceDt on ore3CriDtk>n3 from renutable nhv- !
siciana, as the damage they Trill do is ten fold |
to the good you can possibly derive from them, j
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. |
Cheney A Co., Toledo, 0., contains no mercury,
and is taken internally, acting directly
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the
system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be
sure to get the genuine. It is taken internal?&V-;
ly, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J.
Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
?*Sold by Druggists ; price, 75c. per bottle.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Among the 282 medical journals published
in the United States twenty-eight
are devoted exclusively to hygiene.
Thirty minutes is all the time required to
dye with Put>*am Fadeless Dtes. Sold by ;
all druggists.
<
I
Of 100 units of work done in Great Bri- |
tain thirteen are accomplished by manpower
unaided by machinery.
MRS. H. jT ROBERTS j
Says to All Sick Women: " Give ;
Mrs. Pinkham a Chance, I
Enow She Can Help You as
She Did Me"
" Dear Mrs. Pixkham : The world
praises great reformers; their names I
and fames are in the ears of everybody,
and the public press helps spread the
good tidings. Among them all Lydia
E. Pinkham's name goes to posterity j
MRS. K. F. ROBERTS,
County President of "W. C. T. U., Kansas
City, Mo.
% with a softly breathed blessing from j
Xlie lips Ui. upvu luvuoouuo
?--fcf_women who have been restored to
their families when life hung by a
thread, and by thousands of others
whose weary, aching limbs you have j
** quickened and whose pains you have
J*"' taken away.
441 know whereof I speak, for I have i
v received much valuable benefit myself
9 through the use of Lydia E. Pinkf
ham's Vegetable Compound, and ;
for years I have known dozens of wo- j
^^^men who have suffered with displaceovarian
troubles, ulcerations i
animation who are strong and j
H^^^^well to-day, simply through the use of ,
your Compound."??Mrs. H. F. Roberts, j
1404 McGee St., Kansas City, Mo. ? ]
96000 forfeit if above testimonial Is not genuine. ;
Don't hesitate to write to Mrs. Pink- i
ham. She will understand your case j
perfectly, and will treat you with i
kindness. Eer advice is free, and the
^ address is Lynn, Mass.
Mention this Paper ?J35g*?2gr |
. Til C'JR?SWH?H?ALL ELsTTaJIS. ' Ha !
BHA . m Best Cough Syrnp. Tastes Good. Use PS
B A/ E3 in ttee. f<>!d by dnicgists. Pftf
mm ^n-p-ii"i-riiii-?r-iri^
fS!Thompion's Eye Water
FARM AID GARDEN. I
?>r>^ir^T?7r>r>rx,7ri<,TrS
Th? Value of Straw.
Straw Is valuable on the farm, not
only because it can be used for food,
but also because it can be made to assist
in retaining warmth in the stalls
in winter. If cut in a feed cutter and
used for bedding it will prevent
draughts of air along the floors, and
it can then be swept out with a broom
and mixed with the manure, being a
much better absorbent than if used
uncut.
Loss in. Keeping Inferior Stock.
The farmer reduces the value of his
own labor by keeping inferior stock,
or failing to secure large yields of
crops, as the higher the prices, and the
greater the production, the better the
remuneration for the labor bestowed.
There are periods when the farmer
cannot perform work in the fields, for
which reason he should aim to get his
crops under shelter as soon as possible
in order to do some kinds of work
which can be performed inside the
barn.
A Wire Stretcher.
It often presents a serious difficulty
in building a wire fence to keep the
wire taut while fastening It to the
post. The device illustrated here pre ?*
WIRE STRETCHER.
sents the advantages of cheapness,
simplicity and efficiency. The roller
is made of wood, turning on a stout
iron rod. and is fastened to the post
with a chain and hook. Stretch the
wire by attaching it to the roller and
turning crank, staple firmly and move
the stretcher on several rods, then repeat
the operation. The contrivance
can be made at home easily and cheaply.?The
Epitomist. ; - ?
Bots in Horses.
There are many charges laid against
bots, but it is doubtful if they ever
really merited any of them. The bot
is developed in the stomach of the
horse from the egg of the gadfly,
vrhich is laid by the mature female
somewhere on the skin where the
horse can lick itself handily. The
right side of the equine stomach is
lined with a velvety appearing substance
that secretes the gastric juice,
and to the tougher lining of the left
side the bots attach themselves after
hatching out. They adhere to this
tough lining by two small hooks, but
they are not provided with mouths,
and hence cannot eat. They are nourished
by the absorption of digested
food through their skin.
That shows why there is no truth in
the story that the stomach of the horse
is sometimes eaten through by bots.
They cannot thus destroy the stomach,
for they cannot and do not eat. The
bot adheres to the linine described
through one season, till the following
spring, when in the course of their
growth the hooks let go and the bots
are caried on down through the intestinal
tract until they are voided.
Their subsequent growth to the matured
gadfly need not be detailed.
Then the female lays her eggs again,
and the round goes on as before. No
medicine that can be given the horse
will kill the bots. Anything that can
get through their skins will first destroy
the stomach of the horse.
So nothing can be done to get rid of
bots, and no fear need be entertained
that they are going to do any great
damage to the horse. Nature does not
plan to destroy in such tremendous degree
as would ensue If the bots could
eat the lining of the horse's stomach.
They may interfere somewhat with
digestion, if present in enormous numbers,
but in that way only, and the
writer can say with all truth that he
never knew any serious case of equine
illness due solely to bots.?The Horseman.
Silo Experiences of Great Valne.
We have been putting up ensilage
for the last fifteen years, and have
experimented considerably during that
time, both in raising the crops and
putting them up. We use about eight
quarts of seed per acre. This makes
the stalks about eisrht inches anart in
row, with rows three and one-third
feet wide. Nearly every stalk will
produce one well grown ear. We find
by using that amount we can get more
weight of stalks than by using more
seed. We have used as high as two
bushels per acre, but seeded less each
year, until we reached eight quarts.
This amount we think about right,
and have used it for the last five years.
We use any variety of corn that will
mature in Northern New Jersey.
We commence to fill the silo as soon
as the most forward ears begin to pit,
or if flint corn is grown, as soon as it
begins to glaze. The bulk of the crop
will be in the dough state. If a large
crop is to be siloed would commence
earlier, or the last will be past its best
before the jcb is finished. We cut in
half-inch pieces, using a six-horse pow(r
engine. I would, however, recommend
an eight-horse power. It is
necessary to run with about 100
pounds of steam with the small engine,
while the same work will be
done with the larger engine with
eighty pounds or less. One man is
kept in the pit to keep it level and
well tramped, especially around the
outside and corners. It requires three
teams and eight men to keep things
going to the best advantage. One
team and man with the corn harvpstpr
to do the cutting, two men to load in
the field, two men and two teams with
three wagons to haul, and two men at
cutter. "With this force we filled our
pits in less than seven days last year.
We have two pits, 14x14x23 feet deep,
two 14x16x20 feet deep, holding about
250 tons of silage.
We have never found it necessary to
use any water on the corn while filling.
After the pits are full we let
them settle about two days, then covei
with any old trash on hand, such as
chaff or cut straw. We have found
the best covering to be grass. We
usually have the second crop of grass
about the time the pits are filled, and
cover with this about one foot deep,
being careful to tramp well around
edges and corners. If chaff or cut
straw is used it is best to use enough
water to thoroughly dampen it. The
water with the steam from the silage
will help form a coat of mold over the
top in a few days, which keeps out the
air.?L. R. Roe, in Orange Judd Earner.
-
11 LOTS OF MAN-EATING SHARKS.
Captain Ferguson, of Charleston,Has Kept
i a Record of Their Ravages Near There.
| Captain William C. Ferguson, of
; Charleston. S. C., believes in the theory
that sharks usually found in
North Atlantic waters will attack live
men. and he has kept a record extending
back to 1S40 to show that his
theory is correct. Captain Ferguson
read in the New York Suu recently
that a New York skipper had said
that there were no man-eating sharks.
He says that the skipper 'didn't know
'any better.
"There are so many instances of
where Fishermen and others have been
attacked," said Captain Ferguson,
"that it may lead people into danger
by thinking that sharks are harmless.
A pilot boat coming up to the wharf
here in 1840 lost a man overboard.
While the men were trying to rescue
him a shark twenty-five feet long appeared
at the stern. The pilot was
treading water with his chest above
the line. He was seized by the sbark
* ? 1- - ?!
and carried under, a rea sirens in
blood circled the spot where the man
went down.
"A few years later twg young men
from Charleston were capsized while
rowing toward Mount Pleasant. Each
took an oar and was wading ashore
when Charles Chambers, one of the
young men, was attacked by a shark.
He fought the shark, but was seized
and went down below the water. No
trace of his body was ever found. In
the same year while sailing off the
Battery another young man upset
his boat while trying to fight a shark
which was following it. His body (
was never recovered. Months later
his watch was found in a shark's belly. ,
Another case is known in which a ,
young man who wa9 sitting in a row- ]
boat, dipping his hand into the water, ]
had it bitten off by a shark which
suddenly rose from the water.
"There was so much interest in ;
shark lore that a sailor, who said he ,
was not afraid of sharks, undertook to (
sjvim to Castle Pinckney, and he en- 1
countered a sea monster on the way. ;
He never returned, nor was his body j
recovered. In 1883 a steamboat off the
coast of South Carolina sighted a bal- <
loon ^descending. The balloon failed <
to land and came across the beach, ]
dragging the aeronaut into the water. 1
With a great splashing a school of 1
sharks leaped out of the water and
caught the aeronaut. :
"In 1853 Captain George Jacob J
Hanscheldt, a native of Charleston, <
was knocked overboard from a vessel 1
at Fernandina bar. A large shark, i
which had been following the vessel,
disappeared, and a stream of blood '
which floated to the surface of the 1
water gave unmistakable evidence that
Hanscheldt had been killed- Just (
before he fell overboard Hanscheldt '
had seen the shark. T hope you are <
not after me, old boy,' he said, and !
those were the last words he ever ut- ''
tered.
"I know of other instances where 1
men have been attacked while try- J
ing to escape from sharks. The proof *
seems to be clear and conclusive, and ?
people who do not believe in the man
eaters had best stay out of their
reach."
i
WORDS OF WISDOM.
The dead never disagree.
You will live up to what you love. t
Revenge is sweet only when fore- <
gone. ]
Humility is the best proof of true ]
dignity. I
Affectation narks the absence or
affection. i
No race can be truly rich without j
righteousness.
Personality is a greater power in 3
education than precept. \
Liberty is the life of law and law
the preserver of liberty. 1
To widen your life without deepen- <
ing it is only to weaken it.
oome methods of raising money are \
most successful in lowering manhood. j
The purity of our motives deter- ,
mines our motive power in the world. ^
He who cannot rule his own appe- (
tite is unfitted to run his neighbor's
affairs.
It is of less importance to push the
trolley car along than to get the en- ; J
gine started in the power-house. j 5
The lives of others will be none the ;
sweeter for your attempt to absorb *
all the sourness in the universe.?
Ram's Horn.
As Told by the Births.
Some differences between the boroughs
of Manhattan and Brooklyn appear
in the official returns of the
Health Department.
Thus in the last quarter reported by *
the board, there were 144 births of 1
/\P Am !m> nornntoorn nf 4
V.U11UJLC11 UI JL^UJUCUiiau w- ? whom
143 were born in New York J
County and only one in Brooklyn. In i
the same period there were 187 births ' <
of children of Swedish parents, and i
of these 103 were in Brooklyn and
only eighty-four in New York County. ,
There were 1465 children born of Aus- ,
trian parents in New York?Hungar- i
ians, Poles or Germans?and of these :
1352 were born in New York County
and only 112 in Brooklyn. The same
disparity in favor of New York Coun- (
ty is to be seen in the case of the {
children of Irish, Italian and Russian 1
parentage.
But the number of children born of
Scotch parentage, as wrell as of Swiss, '
Danish, Norwegian and Finn parent- *
age, is as large in Brooklyn as in New 1
York County, and the children of Can- j
acian parentage nearly as large.
Brooklyn retains as a borough its 1
distinction of having the largest num- ;
her of births of children of American 1
parentage. It is the most truly Ameri-""1
can of the live boroughs which constitute
the present city cf New York.
Manhattan is the most cosmopolitan. <
?New York Sun.
ino ircwer 01 ?* eaitn. <
Little Francis, win has three brothers
but ho sister, got the part of the
chicken containing the wishbone the
other evening, and after dinner he discussed
the subject of wishes with his
father. <
"S;posing," he said, "that you got a
wishbone and could make just one
wish that would come true, and I
wanted a little baby sister and a pony
and a million dollars, which would
ycu wish for?" ,
"Well, let me see," his father answered.
"It seems to me that It
would be best to wish for the baby
sister, because I might be able to make
a million dollars in some way, and
then, of course, I could buy the pony
for you."
Francis sat solemnly thinking the
matter over for awhile, and then said:
"Oh, well, wish for the million dol- j
lars. If we have that we can hire thfr '
doctor to keep on coming till he brings
a little sister, anyway."?Chicago Rec- j
ord-Herald. j
J
BIRDS AND BUTTERFLIE"
The New Jewelry Takes These Forms
and Pretty They Are.
Birds and butterflies are the quite
new models for most of the dainty
bits of jewelry that give the cachet of
smartness to elaborate gowns this season
in London. Happily, also, they
occur in such varied designs and so
many degrees of quality that women
who habitually ride in the 'buses can
wear them quite as well as those who
recline in the elegant victorias of
-u
n,>u?,' x x trmups me uirus are a
little more sought after than the butterflies.
In fact, it seems that nobody
is anybody In London who doesn't
wear as an ornament a small bird of
some sort. Few there are, indeed, of
the feathered tribe that have escaped
imitation.
Even the ungainly body of the young
snipe is set up in tiny rose diamonds
to serve as a catch pin about an inch
long. The English pheasant with long
tail feathers is a favored and graceful
design in precious stones. Lyre birds
are reserved for the hair, and behind
their spread tails are placed high, soft
aigrettes. These birds are made both
In Thinestones and in diamonds and
cost, therefore, upward from $15 to
almost a king's ransom. Two, three
or five dainty little swallows crossing
on the wing a parallel bar is not exactly
a new design, but it now is certainly
having a second wave of popularity,
while small peacocks, altogether new,
are among the most gorgeous of the
bird ornaments. When not made up
of stones these are done in exquisite
enamel, each eye of the magnificent
tail being wonderfully true to life.
Ducks are not forgotten in this reign
ing passion for birds. Nearly always,
however, they are made of enamel on
either gold or silver, their highly colored
necks and heads gleaming in the
light most brilliantly. Pouter and fantail
pigeons are among the very attractive
and quaint of the new designs.
With the butterflies also there is
much variety in the style of make-up,
and while the handsomest ones are
costly, there are others very pretty
that come within the range of nearly
all. But always, it must be remembered,
that it takes a certain type of
woman, a light flower-like looking
creature, to wear well a butterfly.
Almost every woman, on the contrary,
can find some bird that suits her personality.
A fetching wray to wear any
of these ornaments is as clasps for
some of the numerous chains which
are hung about the neck.
Chains, Indeed, instead of being
about ready to be laid on the shelf,
are apparently increasing their hold
on the heart of womankind, old and
young. It would be difficult to assert
just what, that is at all feasible, is not
being hung on them. The present fad
Is to attach at their ends a little mir*or
cleverly disguised. The uninitiated
thinks that he sees an enameled water
HItt o Knonflfnl flonr /Id He Q IflrtrD
liljt a ucauiliui JLtVUl UV AiUf VTA. U> AV4& ^
four-leaf clover dangling about its fair
owner's neck. This fanciful floral design,
however, pushes open like a locket
and displays underneath a bit of
looking glass just large enough for a
basty peep. On another jingling e"nd
is a small round box of either gold or
silver. It harbors a tiny powder puff,
and a touch of newness is a goodsized
piece of pink coral set in its top.
[n traveling, especially, these recherche
knick-knacks find a field of usefulness
in helping their wearers to keep
:idy and preventable.
Along with chains are strings of
beads, both fine and coarse, and of
every conceivable color and quality.
Sometimes at their ends they are
anished with two quaint little tassels.
So abundantly are these gaily colored
beads seen in London and at the gay
catering places as to suggest a barbaric
age or the North American Iniians.?Washington
Star.
y
A Novel Watch Charm.
A tiny owl with jeweled eyes is the
latest watch charm and has displaced
in popularity the gold and coral pigs,
:urtles and other favorites of past seasons.
.White promises to continue popular
throughout the winter.
Black suede gloves, as well as white,
ire now in vogue. Every tint of gray
is popular.
The new French tailor gowns consist
of long basque coats, with plain,
slightly trained skirts.
The dressy type of separate waists
ill show the necktie finish, which consists
of a tie and stock corresponding
with the waist in color but differing in
material.
In link cuff buttons plain ones of
mother-of-pearl banded with diamonds
or diamonds and rubies are effective
designs. Opals and diamonds are also
used for cuff buttons.
Buckles, large and small, of gold in
different colors and new art notions,
or of diamonds in designs copied from
the artistic days of the fifteenth Louis,
are as popular as ever.
A new style of note paper is called
Carrara, and is veined like the marble
for which It is named. The latest note
sheets are long and narrow and fit into
an envelope by doubling in the centre.
Brilliant and effective are the buttons
of this season. Imitation opals,
amethysts and sapphires are set
around with rhinestones and are so
beautifully made as to appear like the
genuine stones.
Cloth and silk bands, invisibly hs.ndsewn
to the gown instead of the usual
stitching, form a new variety of trimming.
Another feature is that of trimming
the usual silk bands with rows
:>f very narrow silk braid.
Baby cloaks have many of them
rnthpr dppn Aflnps this TPflr. and a
satin cord or piping is an- almost universal
finish for a plain edge or as the
heading of a ruffle or lace. The backs
of the small coats are rather full, some
obtaining the fulness from an inverted
pleat and others from box pleats.
Fur is to be seen used in many ways
this year, and in fine narrow bands
trims many handsome gowns. The
narrow bands are more serviceable in
many ways, for they are not too heavy
for the house, while broad bands of
fur are not suitable for anything but
outdoor wear. The fur when used
around the skirt is placed on the very
edge. Sable is used with excellent effect
in this way, and is one of .'the
most serviceable of furs.
RATS AND THE DOG.
Gentleman (indignantly)?When I
bought this dog you said he was splendid
for rats. Why, he won't touch them.
Dog Dealer?Well, ain't that splendid
for rats??Tit-Bits.
a
c
Look at the Labels 1
Every package of cocoa or chocolate
put out by Walter Baker & Co. bears
the well known trade-mark of the s
chocolate girl, and the place of manu- j,
facture, "Dorchester, Mass." Housekeepers
are advised to examine their g
purchases, and make sure that other j
goods have not been substituted. They j.
received three gold medals from the
Pan-American exposition.
A Bucolic Monarch.
The King of Greece delights in taking
recreation in the fields. He can '
plow, cut and bind corn, milk cows,
.niil in chnvi nnnhl nt n niru-h kepn fl
farm going single-banded. '
Odd Things to Lose.
When people gather greatly together
there are sure to be things lost, says the i
Paris Messenger. The Betheny review,
on the occasion of the visit of the Czar, (
was no exception to the rule. Xo sooner <
was the review ended than a huge quan- \
tity of articles of all kinds was picked up \
by the authorities and placed in the
keeping of the officers at Reims. The
collection is of the oddest. Something
of everything is included; many things,
evidently, will never be claimed; old urn- j
brellas, empty bags and empty purses;
there was also a corset Then there <
were again two handsome stem-winding j
watches. 1
There is another side to the question. 1
People have sent in a description of 1
things lost. One is of a splendid sword
scabbard, belonging to an Algerian Caid,
which was in chiseled silver. What
complicates things is that the scabbard t
was found and claimed. The chagrin of 1
the dusky African may be imagined. In J
any case he has offered a handsome re-j
ward to him who returns his scabbard. '
AN ANSWER TO KEEP A CHAP J
AWAKE.
He?You will have to go a long way <
before you will meet any one who loves
you more than I. ,
She?Well, I'm willing to.?Life.
NOV. 30'
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FIRST FEARS ALLAYED.
Suddenly a pale, agitated woman appeared
before the genial landlord.
"Sir," she exclaimed, "there are
trange noises in my room. I am
fraid a burglar lies hidden in the
loset."
'"Fie upon you, madam!" quoth the
ar.diord, merrily.
' "Tis no burglar. 'lis merely the
pirit of a drummer who cut his throat
a your room thirty years ago."
Whereupon the woman, abashed at
;iving way to idle fears, thanked the
andlord, and returned calmly to her
ied.?Indianapolis Sun.
- i
1
\N EXPRESSION THAT HURT.
'"Have I got the 'pleasing expression'
-on want?" asked Mr. Grubbins.
':Yes, sir," replied the photographer :
'I think that will do very well."
"Then hurry up, please. It hurts my
ace."?Tit-Bits.
Beet For the Bowele.
No matter what ails you, headache to a
eancer, you will never get well until your
bowels are put right. Cascabets help nature,
:ure you without a gripe or pain, produce
?asy natural movements, cost you just 10
:ent8 to start getting your health back. CasCARKT8
Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up
in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C.
stamped on it. Beware of imitations.
A woman may not be musical and still
be always harping on something.
Brooklyn, N.Y., Nov.15.?A medical authority
says: "There is hardly a family anywhere
in which Garfield Tea does not often take the
place of the Family Physician, for practically
Jveryone suffers at times from disorders of
itomach, liver, kidneys or bowels. Certainly,
from no other medicine can such good results
)6 obtained. This Herb remedy makes people
.veil and thus greatly increases their capacity
for enjoying life; it is good for young and old."
A fellow may have a turning point in
his life without being a crank.
fits permanently cured. No fits ornervouficss
after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
tferve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free
Dr. R. H. Klise, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila. Pa.
The fellow with a bank account ia his
5wn cash drawer.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
.eething, soften the gums, reduces inflammation,allays
pain, cares wL.d colic. 25c a bottle
Sunday is the day of strength; the others
are week days.
Piso's Cure cannot bo too highly spoken of
as a conch cure.?J. W. O'Bbiex. 322 Third
Avenue,If., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900.
^TbB
ii I FR
i "ST
sfKMOB
r "GOOD
^ "IEHNESSI
* HOBBY S
BOOT
DlOPtACI
ft
WD ^ jnw if H wag
- GRANGE
If Granger Tw/stTa&s being egu
*. E. Rice, Greenville,'1
f^ross Bow>" m Spear 1
?Master Workman," ?
? Jolly Tar," "Standard ]
tune," " Razor," "Ole Var
B TAOSMAY.BB ASSORTED
Our new i
CATALOGUE (
jtock
i F0R
3 111? include"many articles not s)
71M most attractive List of Presents
f/W be sent by mail on receipt of pos
* (Catalogue will be ready for m
. ; H
Oar offer of Presents tor Tags
CO!
Write your name and addret
'containing Tags, and send them i
' c..
Eft
tot
A CONSIDERATE FATHER-IN
LAW.
'"Yes," said Mr. Cumrox; "I hav
given my daughters every advantage."
| "I suppose they are very highly cul
tured."
"I should say so."
''And they will be liberally dowered.
; Yes, sir. When I think of the wa
a man who marries one of those girl
will be criticised in his grammar an
deportment, it strikes me that he ougl
to be dealt with in the most generoti
sp: rit."?JVash ington Star.
? AF /\/Y
we eay k. k. eake and under
^P0611' Guarante?
I Cyadt/mnd/
200 FREE SCHOLARSHIPS. BOARD A
COST. Write Quiet to OA.-ALA.
BUSINESS COLLEGE. MACON, OA.
USERS OF FARM AND MILL MACIIINER
Subscribe For FOllEST & FIELD
at sight. It Is puolislied in their Interest i
i Atlanta, Ga , monthly. Only 25c per yea
! Agents wanted. Sample copies Free.
HANDSOME AMERICAN LADY,indep?n
dently rich, wants good, honest husband. Ad
ilress Mr*. E., 87 Market at., Chicago, 111
Geld Medal at Buffalo Exposition.
i McILHENNY'S TABASCi
V ?UNK
wmmi
SS'S-ss-'S-gfeA
ueBi
9 W. 1, Douglas 84.00 "^1 n||(w
B Gilt Edge Line Cannot Be * N?y
B Equaled At Any Price. 1
I For Mora Than a Quarter of a %
d Century the reputation of W. L. vsMBB
I Douglas $3.00 and $SJ0 shoes for vEsSRR
I style, comfort and wear has ex- wbBHmt':
ceiled all other makes sold at theso
prices. This excellent reputation
has been won by merit alone. W. L.
I Douglas shoes have to glvo better sat- ^^8
H isfactlon than other $3.00 and $3.10
shoes because his reputation for the best $
I and |3A0 shoes must be maintained.
I W. L Douglas 83.00 and 83J50 she
are made of the same high-grade leal
ers used in 85.00 and 86.00 shoe* a
I are just as good in every way.
J ererywhers. Catalog O Free.
ACCO
OM
AR"
taif ^
iiipir i
IiUIIIV ^
Mi
PUN NOlf
ilDSIEOK" J
i a ni/H J
jAurv i
tut*
KtHMEf g
RTWISf \
'alto one of others mentioned. BL
r "hjorse Shoe," "J. T.r"
Head," 41 Old Honesty,?'
Sickly," 44 Brandywine,"
Vavy," ? Planet," 44 Nep- sP
giny," 4 H
IN fECURINQ PRESENTS, Eg
illustrated R
\r nncccfaTcf
/r rjKcacnio
1902
aown here. It "will "contain the
ever'offered for .Tags, and wilU
tag??'two cents,
ailing about January 13^1902.)
> S #v
= ?1
i will expire Nov. 30th.1902.
tfTINENTAjf TOBACCO COMPANY. ^
- " 1
9 plainly on outside of packages v.?r^
and requests for Presents to'
Hy.-BROWN.
424flFoIso hi" A ve. ^
Louis. Mo.
.:. . ' . - -" .... .>
' ... " ' . :: ..
' - .'
*
mmbbbm????????rnrn^mmmm \
"
. $900 TO $1500 A YEAR
We want intelligent Men and Women as
e Traveling Representatives cr Local Managers;
salary $900 to $1500 a year and all expenses,
according to experience and ability. We also
[. want loci?l representatives: salary $9 to $i* a
week and commissxon, depending upon the time
devoted. Send stamp for full particulars and
tate position prefered. Address, Dept. B.
tt THE BELL COMPANY. Philadelphia. Pa. .
1 AgHMAJWCJEVER .!
= ^^^^^FREETOIAJLMmfi
" I AOORtSS UR.IAM./3 tJ40- 5T~ N.Y. CITT
HvOGUESS NEEDED.
When you weigh on a Jones 800 Lb. Seal#
PRICE $8.00. FULL PARTICULARS.
I JONES (HE PATS THE FREIGHT.)
T BLVGHAMTO.V, N. Y.
at graph College, Louisville, Ky., open the whole
r. year. Students can er*ter any time. Catalog free.
- HDADQVNEWdiscovery;stves
UKvrO I nuiek rilM ud earn wont
caiM. Book of teetuaaoiels *nd 10 day** trrataseat
Free. Or. X. H. exrxx't BOMB. Era I. AtUau.ee.
i teEEBTMHgtroE.8
>N#MADE#
^O^HO?Si?|
?l\2H
Safe f : The standard has always I' .
A been placed to high that the
\ -War t a wearer receives more value for fl
&&& $ K M his money in the Vf. L. Douglas
|gfe-: -'// Afes. a fs.00 and ftw shoes than ho can
HaS-fr: /jfiBlL M get elsewhere. W. LTDonglas
makes and sells more >U0 and
sh0 8 thAn anT 0 tvo I
V wvj/ //.Trw''w iu0iiuiav.iui?i9 IU uio nviiUf gi
aW#/# 7 AST COLOR XTELET8 TT8ZD.
I&iisft vpon fcaviafW. ZbDcngteafeOM
.^r with zuun* and price rUzqwd
on bottom. Shoes sent any- Jjfc-Ja v
where on receipt of price JpQtf
kOO and 25 cents additional for car- J?+rm
rinse. Toko measurements of
loot as shown: state style de* >#8. ^>2^?:3|
J?8 sired: size and width yf> Xt-i9 B
fi" usually worn; plain ujtfw 1A- . . .\V-B fl
na or cap too; heavy,
medium or light soles* &>' ^ 9.
5SS5!n55S5^SSSMr!^5!5?5^??'
neon, a
Tags
19Q2.
CSP1J
>0 TAGS* auuunmtcarrpuem^
n B' Ptl
Li W 9
l# X*CU'MU*t' 90 TAOS,
**0 mw? osr.
?*/ mtAtuft^
w^\/)"'c*tl ****".
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