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Railroad Engineer Testifies to Benefits Received From ^ Remedies. ^ TTIEKE Is no more responsible position on earth than that of a railroad engineer. On his steady nerves, clear brain, bright eyo and perfect self command, depend the safety of the train and tho lives of Its passengers. Dr. Miles' Nervine and other remedies aro especially adapted to keeping the nerves sloarly, tho brain clear and the mental faculties unimpaired. Engineer F. W. McCoy, formerly of 1323 Broadway, Council Bluffs, but now residing at 3111 Ilumboldt St., Denver, writes that he ' suffered for years from constipation, causing sick, nervous and bilious beadachcs and was fully restored to health by Dr. Miles* Nerve A Liver Wis- I heartily recommend Dr. Miles' lit medics OMR* Df ^>K aro sold by all drug-B^ * f gists under a positivemllOS guarantee, flr.t bottle 5$$emediesl benefits or money ro-lfe * Rofftoro funded. Uo<.U on Uis-kL eases of tho heart unci Hoolth % nerves free. Address, t.t Lilt. R11LE3 MEDICAL CO.. Elkhart, Ind. jews mm to inn nimm. i Tho 7innict r onrrrneo limn!. 11w t,iuiiioi wnjjii/oo vjiiam mously Adopts Dr. Herzl's Scheme. MESSAGE TO THE SULTAN. llis Majesty Thanked tor the Privilege Enjoyed by Hebrews Within His Empire. Hasle, Switzerland. Aug. 30? Tim delegates to the Zionist Congress to day unanimously adopted with great enthusiast^ the pro gramme for re establishing the Hebrews in Palestine, with publicly recognized rights. A dispatch was sent to the Sultan of Turkey, thanking His Majesty for the privileges enjoyed by the * Hebrews in his empire. i )r. Theodor llerzl, t ho so-called New Moses" is the originator of tlioschenu to pun-haso Palestine and resettle the Hebrews there, y He has been elected President and Dr !NT:i\ Nordau Vice 1'resilient of the < Congress. eWe shall first send out an exploring expedition." Dr. Ilerzl said to day, "equipped with all the modern resources of science which will thoroughly overhaul the land from one end to the other, before it is colonized, and establish telephonic and telegraphic communication with the base as it advances. The old methods of colonization will not do there. "It was in Paris, three years ago,while I was correspondent of a Vienna paper, that 1 first hit on the idea. I had no hopes then of ever realizing it, but on my return to Austria 1 was very much like the man with the Anaconda in a bo\- who wassuprised to find } that it had gjown out of all proportion to if? surroundings. "My plan i- simple enough. >\ o must obtain tin.' sovereignty over Palestine?our nuvor-to-boforgotten, historical homo. At w the head ot the niovemont will ho two groat and powerful agents? the Society of Jews and the J? ,v ish Company. The first named will be a political organization and spread the Jewish progranda. The latter will be a limited liability company, under English laws, having its headquarters in London, and u capital, of, say, a mil lion of marks. Its task will be to to discharge all the financial obligations of the retiring .lews and regulate the economic conditions in the new country. "At lirst we shall send only unskilled labor?-that is,the very poorest, who will make tho land arable. They will lay out streets, build bridges and railroads, regulate rivers and lay down telegraphs according to plans prepared at headquarters. Their work will bring trade, their trade the market, and the market will cause new settlers to llock to the country. Everybody will go there > im i4ui.i111 \ yii ins or iut own l'lSK, but ever under the watchful eye and protection of the organization. k,I think we shall find Palestine at our disposal sooner than we expected. Last year I went to Constantinople and had two long conferences with the Grand Vizier, to whom I pointed out that the key to the preservation of I Turkey lay in the solution of the Jewish question. That the Sultan has taken no unfavorable view of] my proposal was proved by his having decorated inc. "Turkey's nuances are disorganized, and she will never get a penny from Greece. She is in a state of constitutional decomposition, and threatens the health of the whole of F.urope. Kither sanitary remedies must he applied or she must be removed. "Tlio Jews, in exchange for lV'iltKtiitn 1 * C..1 , ? ? II<I i v^uuuv in** nui* tan's finances and pmvent disir.to,m*ation, while lor Kuropc wo should form a now outpost, against Asiatic barbarism and a guard of honor to hold intact the sacred shrines of the ('hristians. We can alTord to piny a waiting game,and | either take over ralestiao from| the Muropean Congress called to-1 gether to divide the spoils of (lis integrated Turkey, or look out for for another land, such as Argentina, and say, 'Your /ion is there!' * ! am not in favor of anything savoring of the Ptopian element i and the Socialist's dream. Per sonally I incline to a democratic I monnrchy,and very inucli of what is best in English institutions. Hut the .lews in their new country will know'tiotiiiim of the misery of their European surround ings." A HOISEIIOW) REMEDY. And it never fails to cure j Rheumatism, t'wtsrrh, I'impleoJ Blotches, and all diseases arising ' from impure blood, is Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) Thou-j sands endorse it as the best rem-! edy ever oiFered to mankind. The thousands of cures performed by this remedy aro almost miraculous. Try it, only $1.00 per large bottle. A PHYSICIAN'S KVIDKNCK?AN IIONKST DOCTOR. Although a practitioner of near I twenty years, my mother inlluI enced me to procure Botanic. j Blood Halm. H. It. IF, for her.! She had been contined to hor bed | several months with Rheumatism, j which had stubbornly resisted all ! the usual romedies. Within twen-! 1 ty-four liours after commencing , R. H. H. 1 observed marked re! lief. She has just commenced her third bottle, and is nearly as active as evor. and has been in the front yard with "rake in hand," cleaning up. Iler improvement is truly wonderful and immensely gratifying. C. II. Montoomkry, Rl. 1)., .Jacksonville, Fla. For sale by Druggists. WHEN CHICAGO IS WIPED <>l,T III WAVES. Startling Prediction oi' Professor Gilbert, of the P. S. Government Geological Survey. Tho drowning end total wi])ing out by floods of the second great city in the I'nited States is a catastrophe 1 ho prospect of which may well appall the mind. Yet that is what is going to happen to Chicago hofore long, if < Joverti merit scientists are to be believed. Professor G. K. Gilbert, of the I'nited States Geological Survey is the author of this astonishing Prediction, in which lie is upheld y l)r. Spencer and other omi nent geologists. The essence of the whole matter lies in the fact that the entire region of the Great Lakes is undergoing a change. It is gradually tilting up at the northeast and down at the southwest. Thus the country north of Lake Huron is rising, while that about Chicago is sinking. Consequently the waters of the lakes are retreating from the northeast shores and encroaching upon the southwest coasts. The city of Chicago is built on a smooth plain, a little above the high water lev<d of Lake Michigan. It is so slightly above this level that the margin of safety is a narrow one. Every ten years the mean level of the lake rises I one inch, and the margin becomes that much less('loso l>y Chicago there is ah -.v divide separating the basin ol Lake Michigan from the valley of j Illinois liiver. This divido is so that a drainage canal is actually being cut through it now for the purpo " of carrying the water of Lake Michigan to the Illinois liiver. The di-charges thus oh tainod will ho a mere anfiepation of nature, for the tilting ot the lake would ccomplish the same result without artificial aid he fore long. Live cent uries hence I he water of the lakes will pass ovei the divide through an old channel which was made originally by the outlet of the glacial lake. Then will begin in earnest the great topographical change which is to destroy Chicago. The hod of the old channel aforesaid is about eight feet above the mean level of Lake Michigan an I live feet above it a In he; t level. Live i?i > - ' ' nunureu years nonce the lake | will reach the |>:xs^ at its high 'stage-. are! at noli times the l.1l;e water will go over the divide into the valley of the Illinois. One thousand vonrs from now this will occur when the lake is at its ordinary height, and a mighty river will commence to he formed, carrying some of the water of the lakes into the Illinois River. Only twenty centuries hence one half of all the water discharged from Lakes Michigan, Huron and Liic will pass off by this new southwestern outlet, the other half going by the eastern outlet at Hull'alo. A good while before that time arrives the city of Chicago will he submerged, the mighty discharge ill I In* I ol'm. cU'iiniirnir I 1??. ... ...^ v.., r,,,*,, | '1II(H U1VI nil city. In fact, the great, city once so famous for stockyards, canned provisions and speculative e'ntcr prises,will l>c permanently under water. < >110 can imagine its tall est buildings ot iron and granite MADE (VIE A !VIAN M\JAX TAKLF.TS POSITIVELY CURE A J.T. AYrvrnts I)lsran* /??Failiag Memory, lmpotoucy, Sleeplebnnoss, etc.. cnu*??<l by Mi'i -'j or r'' or I'.wnMm und I ii 1 i ,erotica*. TTiru tjtticklij in<l nunly roatoru Lo*t Vitality in old or young. nud fit a tunn fomtudy, ?>u*-i nr ** or marring*, i'rovorit insanity uud Consumption if I wmu iu uuiA. Their urn *how* iromcdinto improve*, t ir.ont and ofTocts n CL'ltE where nil other fuil InRiot upon having the genuino Ajax Tablets. Thoy hiivo curod thomandsnrl will euro you. We giva apott* itivs written guarantee to effect a euro CA A7C , eachcnseor refund tho money. l ricoiwUli#?i^r mcum) or nir pkgM (fall treatment) for H60. Ily cr.nil, in plain wrapper. utmii r?>coiptof price. < ircular AJAX REMEDY CO., '"JEJST,?* For sale in Lancaster, S. by J. F. Mackey & Co. uplifting their topmost stories out of t he lloorl, while sailboats and even good sized vessels navi gate above the streets which once roared with the busy traffic of a metropolis. As the time goes on the discharge of waters in that direction will become greater and greater, owing to the grogressive tilting of the lakes, and 2,500 years from now nearly all of them will go that way, the Niagra River becoming merely an intermittent stream and flowing only at seasons. Look five centuries further ahead and you will find the Niagara River run wholly dry. .The tremendous cataract, which lias so long hold a reputation as one of the wonders of the world, will have disappeared, and its sole memorial will he a precipice blocking a gloomy canyon through 1 which no stream flowf any longer. Meanwhile the river at. Chicago will have attained a volume equal to that of the Niagara River to day, hut, the country being so Hat, its waters will he spread fiver a wide extent of territory. It i^ easily imagined what very important changes in the topog raphv of the region will result. Professor (.filbert's figures are i obtained from observations running back a very considerable ' length of time, most of the data being furnished by the records of ; < Jovernment surveys and by beach marks and water records j showing the height of the lake waters in dilleeront years at various points. If a straight line he drawn through that region lor a distance oi' lUU miles from southwi .it t<> northeast, is is found thai tin* northern end ri^es six inches. This is going on steadily the I crust of the earth being normally I elastic and seeking equilibrium, ' so that if one part rises another J part sinks proportionately. Catarrh Cannot be (hired ' .villi !.' I'M. Al'l'I.K'ATIONS, as they oann >: ' | roach iho seat of the <ii*?-;?s<- Gttwrb is a bt knI <>r constitutional dlsoaso, aud In ortli i ;i ' it you must iiiko internal rcimsi < *. liuw> I Catarrh Cure Is takon tntornally and acta d rrctiy on the blond ami mucous Hurfao-s. Hull's f'ainrrli <'urt- is not u uum k medicim- 1' w..s j prcsorlbod by one of tho best physicians In this It Iscomposed of tin- host tonics known, combined with th" host t>looil purifiers, uctlnr directly on the mucous surface- The i>i elect combination of the two iuirrodlents is what produces such wonderful results In curing Lat.irrt Send for testimonials, free. I". J. C1IKNKY A t'O., Prop*.. Toledo. (> Sold l>y druKitlsts, price 7.V. Hall's Family Pills are the host Totter, Suit-Klicum and Kcwrnit, ' The intense itching nnd smarting inci! th nt to these di-cases is instantly allayed I hy applying Chamberlain's Eye tint] I Skin Ointment. Many very bad cases ! have been permanently enr'-il by it. It \ is equally efficient for itching piles nnd a favorite remedy for sore nipples; chapped hands, chilblains, frost bites ;tnd chronic sore eyes. 25ets. per box. I)r. Caily's Condilion renders, are ilist wll.lt 11 loirs.. Ill-ilia ulu.n ill hml c? edition Tonic, blood purifier and ' vermifuge. They :irc nut food but medicine nnd the best in use to pnt a I horse in prime condition. Price 25 | cents per package. Wanted-An Idea I'rofoot your l?1ons: thoy msv Ih Itik yow wraith. Write JOHN WKOOKIUlfTKN < C > Pulrnt Atn.r , | nryn. WiDtiiliiKtoii. l>. <\, for tlirlr $i.moi t.rltr ?Hcr ariil now I let or one IbouHAud Inventions wnutr<1 Everybody Sny? Ho. Cnscarets Candy Cathartic, the most wonderful medical discovery of the ni,'e, picasi ant and refreshing to the taste, net gently li.(i positively on kidneys, liver nnd bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispel colds, euro headache, fevr, habitual rousttpatIon and biliousness. Pleaso buy and try n box of C. C. C. to-day; 10, M) rents. Mold and guaranteed to cure by all druggists. 'ii.L Uiifc ASTER Graded School. THE NEXT SESSION uF THE huncaster Mradtd School begins September EJth, 1807. The building has boon enlarged recently and the teaching force augmented. W e are now prepared to give especial attention to j)ii|)ils preparing for a college course, or for special classes in a college course. TERMS, reasonable. For further information address A. M? RANKIN, Superintendent. Aug. 17,1897 ? lm. QHIO RIVER AND CHARLESTON RAILWAY CO. PASSKNUKK DEPARTMENT. Iii Effect Wednesday, May 5th IH9*. Norilibouiui. | I Southbound 30 l " .33 ; STATIONS. 32; 12 34 A. W. A.M.jp. M. P.M. P.M P.M. U ou .| 2 0) .Cu uulen. I 0U| 050 ?* ... L**ai\aiu . i ^ .to | fj ]f> f ' . - \V< -tviilo. nuw' ! r? 56 111" . 2 I Ker-'iuw 1-0.')! | 5 30 II WJ 3" li? .all Springs.. 11 .Vj 4 35 II.V.1 . 3(15 1" easunt Hill.. II IT 4-35 I- l'J . H-S Lancaster.... II 22 3 35 I"' I 10 ... Riverside . II <5 2 35 1 . 360 ....Spriio-Uill.... 1053 3"5 -' > I 00 CatiiwhaJunction 1045 1 50 - I". I 10 I?( ssit' lo 35 I lb -Ho 130 . Rock Hi!) .... 110 30 13 55 | 4 T' ... Newport , I'M 10 55 r' -. 4 1 .... '11/ ill | H 47, 10 45 2'1 ' v,,,.;. .. . 1 93.5I to _'(, I shnron I M 20 9 80 ' JO S I'll Hickory Grove i 906 9 35 MSo! .Smyrna 850 o o5 -> ! . ;l(" . IV:.v|-sl l:ip .. H 30 9(31 * 40 | 830 :,,i liinrio . ...| ; IK X45 .1 k jo ?> in Pat'T^or *??> t's; 7 43 x to j 9 10 ^ 50 Shelby i I 30 s 35 9 40 Latfmore ....' 735 1 U50 ... Mooresboro . .. 7 3.') 1000 Henrietta .... 7 10 -III)30 ...Forest City... tlfvi 1050 . ..Rutherfordton.. 6 30 III <)5 Millwood 600 .;il25! . Golden Vnlley.. 535 . J11 35 . . Thermal City.. 530 .j|S X) . .. Glenwood ... 1 505 .,1220 Marion 4 45 If. M . I'M P.M. P .M. A. Mi ' j A. M No. 32lias connection with Southern Kailway at Rock Hill, and with Seaboard Air l.ine. at ( ntawbo Junction. N11.1 34 and 35 will carry passengers. Nok. 11 and 12 have connection at Marion with Southern Railway. All trains will stop on signal at Oakhurst, K gin.C.iskey.-), W Old Point.London.King Creek, and Vain Mountain. SAMUEL HUNT, President, S. B. LltMPKIN, G. P A. | Tourist. Sleeping far Line Between Washington and San Francisco. The Southern Railway and its j connections (the A. ifc W. 1*., L. A N. and Southern Pacific) have 1 inaugurated a Tourist Sleeping Car Line between Washington and San Francisco, via Atlanta, Now Orleans, and Uo Angeles. T!ii > lecpii 2 ir CC '-1- throueh 'without change, leaving Wash1 ington overy Saturday morning j at 11 :!.*?, and is accompanied by a Personal Conductor and Pull| man porter, who go through. The 1 Pullman fare for double berth is j $7.00 from Washington to San Francisco. This service i especially for the 1 convenience of the parties holding ' second-class tickets, though lirst| class tickets are good in the ear. . Further information may be . i ?. :i f _ .. ? o it * o-: i I uutrtiuuu iiiiiii mi \ ouu iIIi. rII way or S<jt; thorn Pari fir apent or 'official, nr from A. .1. I'oston, (ieneral A cent, ">11 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D. P.. or from W. A Ti kk, V. A., So. Kv., Washington, P. 0. TTancasti:ic a 7:fi i;sti:k KA11AVAV. j Hot worn Chester aiul Lancaster. In rlTrct 7.00 n.in Sunday. Kcb. It, 1 HS>7 Ihiifft l-'.m/tf Sitinhn/. I Westbound. Kustbotind.. j No. U No. II. No. 10. No. 1. A. M '!? M |A. M .I*. M. l< u.">| fi Ml I Ar.,..C,h?,j?t<;r. . I.v II oM 7 oft x 5f>| !> Orr'n. .. " II an! ; ;u x t? 5 85 ' KnoK'H .... ' II ?<| 7 30 x .is f> l.s " . M? l)iiniol'fl.. " II Mil * 40 x 251 5 Oft I Rlohburg. " ii ?J 7 ft0 x |.s| i 55, " I tunc tni 1111 " I J ix ,ii I .' i i."> " Ci tlar Shoals " la i.',| x 10 7 55 i I 35 11 ri l.:uvn is x : i 7 3?! I '.V* . i;rapes... " | 12 -t"i M X5 7 ax| | |o Moli i Vs ? r -x )? " ' IS Nil x 15 7 sol ? ?> 1 I.v Lancaster Ar I ??i| x hi A M il' M i !r. M IJ\ M. Train leaving Lancustci at 7;SO a id., >n ' nects at Chester with Southern Hallway v it; south, C. ft L gol i: north ai d G. O. ft N Vos* tlbiili1 unil local tiainx -n?1 nn west. Train leavliur Lancaster at 8*.40 ? m., con wets at Lancaster with o i; A ' from Camill anil i 1 i . 111. x. , , | J ai i.% .ij ttolliK north mil south ami with c A l< north. Tr mi lout in.' Chesh r ui 11 o5 a. in . connects at Chester w itli Southern Hull w ay Iroin Charlotte, also C A I.. ?|in north. Train leaving ChoxTer at 7:05 p m . connects with Southern 11 liviy froti Colunihin. (1. C \ N from Atlanta nn?i C. A I., from l.enolr. I.KiiOY SPRINGS, W If. HARDIN, resident V ice-l'res. nntl Manager. t