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Nobility Recommends Nervine. The above portrait is that of Countess Mogelstud, of Chicago, 111., whose gratitude for the benefit received from the use of Dr. Miles' Nervine prompted her to make this statement: " It affords me great pleasure to add my testimony to the very eacellent merits of Dr. Miles'Nervine. Although I am past 80 years of age I find it ^ soothes the tirea brain, quiets the irritated nerves and insures restful sleep. I never feel contented without a bottle of H in the house." Gratefully yours, Christiana Mar/a, j Countess Mogelstud. MUe?* Nervine is a nerve tonic and strengtht builder that starts right in re1 storing health iknmealately. Ssld hy all Draff let*. Da. Mitoe Medical C*., Kikiiart, Ini. a rock-ribbed Democratic speech, eXnORintr th? ininniinna nnlintr /vf ? J p 1? the administration now in power in the Philippines and how ex pansiou as represented by the Louisiana purchase differs from the imperialistic policy of the Republicans of today. His record is public ; the people of his district know what he has done and, therefore, asks reelection, feeling confident that with his experience their interest will be better advanced in the future. MR. J. W. FLOYD came next. Born and reared in , this county, he is no stranger f hero. He deplored the waste of the public money. Slavery and taxes have always been the great est questions ever before the public. The former has been settled by the sword ; the latter | is the all-absorbing question of the hour. He favors the building and control of the Isthmian Canal by the United States, without the participation of any other nation. He promised that if elected he will bring no disgrace upon the State, which has so often honored him. TIIE HON. T. J. STRAIT. With him it was a case of "I told you so." Poor "Johnnie" McLaurin came in for a full share of his denunciation, lie was and is opposed to the whole Cuban business. Cuba is free today only ^ in name. She is controlled by the Piatt bill. The Declaration of Independence has been torn into shreds and to day the Gov't ernment is in mid-ocean without a compass. His hands were tied when in Congress and he could do nothing, but now that the country has come to its senses and McLaurin has been relegated to the Republican party, where he always belonged, he believes At.- A i lit. r mar ne couiu no 01 great service to hia State, which he has always loved. lie favors turning the islands over to the Filipinos. We need men in Congress who can listen as well as speak. Those who liston well think a great deal and vote right always make the best Congressmen. He promises to make a warm campaign. HON. W. 11. WILSON came last. Ho was at the disadvantage of being a stranger before a Kcrsliaw audience. He only * outlined how ho proposed to tight out this campaign and that, toe, to win. He believes in practical politics and he is in this campaign ^ for result?, not recreation. He believes that he can do his state material service in congress and, standing on his record, which has always represented all that is true, manly and honorable. He & thought it would not be souud business policy on the part of our government to relinquish every- '] thing in the Philippines ; that a coal station should at least be given us for all that we have expended for them. v At 3.45 the meeting adjourned. I ,. h You Know What You Arc Taking a When yon take Grove's Tasteless Chill n Tonic because the formula is plainly j, printed on every bottle showing that it is simply iron and Quinine in a U tasteless form. No (Jure, No pay. 60c. v , . b The Age of Fishes \ At the meeting of the Royal g society last night Mr. J. Stuart Thomson made public by exhibits o a discovery of great consequen- f ces to the fish supply of the t country, lie has ascertained that, a as in the case of the bark of f some trees, the ages of many fish " furnished with scales ean be b determined by tne markings of ii this protective armor. The scales t show, when closely examined, a t series of parallel eccentric lines t which indicate successive incre- c ments of growth, and a trust- v worthy record is thus automatical r ly kept hysical of development. \ But that would still leave the age v question largely conjectural did a not Mr. Thomson add a supple- t mentary discovery which removes all difficulty. He finds that the p lines of growth are more widely v separated during the warm season n than during the cold season, a and by taking the two together s each year's record is completed, b and it becomes practicable to ii determine at any time the number years the subject under ex e amination has lived. It would be c difficult to overestimate the value e of this scientific discovery to our ii fishing industries, both ripartian b and maritime. For the future o there should not be much dificulty in judging the period required q for youug fry to reach maturity, a Up to the present, size has been a the only criterion, and that, at o best, is no better than a rule of t thumb method. But we may safely s anticipate tnat tne leaa thus given by Mr. Thomson will be e followed by fresh additions to v our knowledge of fish.?London li Globe. e ...... \ Is Life Worth Living? C Then don't neglect a cough or cold, especial- O ly when only twenty-five cents will buy a bottle of Gooch's Mexican Syrup. It la so soothing, and ho many consumptives have been mads urell by its use. Head some of Its testi- 11 menials on the wrapper around each bottle that prove this remedy more auro for deep- O seated colds, habitual coughing and even consumption, than any othor remedy known to P physicians, many of whom recommend and prescrib it whore less efficacious remedies tail, t . ? . a Volcano Kilunea. 1' 0 Honolulu, June 6, via San ^ Francisco, June 13?Thevolcano Kilena on Hawaii has broken j loose again according to a report t received today by steamer. S Flames and smoke are raised * above the crater. The outbreak c took place June 3 and lip to the u time of the last reports from * llawnu. ilatoil yesterday, it was j still continuing. The outbreak has j been foreshadowed for many days v bv an increase over normal vol- fl umo of smoke coining from the crater. Tliere also have been Rlieht earthquakes. No eruption of lava or ashes have taken place. There in inorr Catarrh in thin section of the ^ Country than all other diseases put together, g and until the last few yearn was supposed to be Incurahh For a Kroat many years doctors H pronounced It a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to ' euro with loc ti treatment, pronounced It In- r curable. Solonoc has proven catarrh t<> be a * con lltutlonal Ols-aso, and therefore re<yulrrs t constitutional treatment Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co , j Toledo, (Milo, Is the only constitutional cure ? on the market It Is taken Internally In doses from 10 drops to a te.ispoonfid It acts directly fl on the blood anil mucous surfaces of the sys- , tem. Thoy offer one hundred dollars for any t case It falls to cure. Send for circulars and e testimonials Address, F. .1 CHl'.MKV & CO., Toledo, O. fl ' Sold by DrujfirlstA. 75a . . Hall's Family i'llla are the boat ' IISTAKES ABOUT VOLCANOES. Phoy Do Not Emit Smoke or Ashes. Some of the accounts of the olcanio outburst in the West ndies hRve been marked by a igh degree of accuracy as well s much descriptive power. A lumber of words and phrases, owever, that are very commonly sed in popular descriptions of olcanic phenomena might better >e avoided because they are ikely to couvey a false impresion. Wo havfi mnf K f~ ?1 - _ . ? wvu tva v a a ill pit? f the great outpouring of ashes rom Mount Pelee which covered he land to a considerable depth nd were wafted by the winds ar out over the sea. The trem volcanic ashes" is unfortunate tecause it is apt to convey the dea that the so-called ashes are he residue of combustion, while hey consist of the finer paricles of the ejected matter and nay more properly be called olcanio dust. Aligeologists iow disapprove of the expression folconic ashes, as the matter to rhich the term is applied is not ishes and an incorectidea is given 0 many readers. We gave also read of smoke touring from the craters of the olcanoes in eruption. There is 10 doubt that it looks like smoke ; great deal of it appears to be moke of the most intensely lack, bituminous variety, but it 1 steam that is escaping. Sometimes this steam, illuminj i ' * ~ a dj tne bud, is as white as any loud ; at other times when it is scaping with great violence and n larger volume it may be as ilack as ink or appear in various ther colon. The color is due to the vast juantities of dust or stones that re shot into the air with the team. It was not the difTusion f smoke, but of dust from Karkaoa, that gave ns onr beautiful unsets for many months. Some accounts, also nave spokn of flames shooting up from the olcano. The word "flame" is ikely to have been applied more orrectly in describing the recent ?eat Indies eruptions than in the ase of many other volcanic ntbursts. When we read of "burning lountains" or of llames pouring ut of craters the cause of the henomenon in many cases is he rejection on the steam clouds bove the crater of the molten ava beneath. At Pelee, howver, there hae been no outpourng of lava,according to the geolo ;iete ; in his writings on this subect, Prof. Israel O. Russell says hat Foupue, at the eruption of iantorin in 1first established he existence of true volcanic lames due principally to the ombustion ot free hydrogen ; ilspheretted hydrogen may also >e emitted and being intlamma>le,sometimes hurnswith a bluish lame. Prof. Russell says that n these cases of combustion rory little actual burning iccompanies volcanic eruptions | md is of minor importance as a >art of the spectacle witnessed. How to AtoUI Trouble. Now is the time to provide ourself and family with a bottle >f Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera ind Diarrhoea Remedy. It is ilmost certain to bo needed beore the summer is over, and if irocurod now mav save von a rip to town in the night or in 'our busiest season. It is overyvhere admitted to be the most uccessful medicine in use for >oweI complaints, both for chilIren and adult?. No family can tfTord to be without it. For saW >y J. F. Mackey Co. /> " Tho Kind You Have Always ! in uso for over 30 years, All Counterfeits/ Imitations Experiments that trlilo wit Infants and Children?Expi What is C Castoria is a harmless sub goric, I>rops and Soothing contains neither Opium, M substance. Its age is its gi and allays Feverishness. Ii Colic. It relieves Teething and Flatulency. It assimil Stomach and Bowels, givin Tho Chili* ren's Punoppji?TM GENUINE CAS" The Kind You Ha In Use For Q TMf OCNTAUN OOMP*NY. TT M Whore Life Insnrance Money Goes. The life companies doing business in New York State paid about one hundred and seventytive million dollars to their insured members during the year 1901, of which over one hundred millions was paid under policies maturing by death, and over seventy millions to living policy noiaers. llie 11 rat sum went to families of men who died?in many cases prematurely,?and the second was in large part the accumulations on policies long in force, and was finally paid to men who were advanced in life. If one looks over life and considers at what periods money will be most needed, he will say? first, when one is a child and cannot earn money, and when much depends upon home surroundings and school privileges; and, sec ond. when one is old and infirm and is no louger able to compete in the struggle withyounger men. In the case of women, one would add to these two periods a third, widowhood with children on her hands. During these two periods for males and three for females, the prospect of getting on without money for some source betides one's owu earnings is simply des perate. These are the three periods for which Life Insurance provides. It is instructive to note that the large proportion of benefits of policy-holders arises under policies maturing by death. It is instructive because the average man feels so that he will live beyond the period when his family will need Life Insurance. It is well to be hopeful ; but it is not wise to shut ouo'h eyes to the fact of life as other men have found them. We never have personal experience on this point until it is too late to profit by it. All our experience is with life; and we live through epidemics and accidents, anil endure all the wear and tear of life?until we die. If we were going to bo wise at all with respect to death we Lmust be wise before it coiues; i/#^^re going to make any ^Vsdom iu the way of Bought* ami which has been has borno the signature of las been made under his persupervision since its infancy* irno one to deceive you in this* and ** Just-as-good * arc but ii and endanger the health of srience against Experiment* ;astoria stituto for Castor Oil, ParcSyrups. It is Pleasant. It [orphino nor otlicr Narcotic larantee. It destroys Worms t cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Troubles, cures Constipation ates tlie Food, regulates the g healthy and natural slcen. Iio Mother's Friend. rORIA ALWAYS Signature of ,Ye Always Bought >ver 30 Years. UNMV tTRKCT. NEW VONR CfTY. Life Insurance, we must do it when death seems afar oft. But the men who live and keep up their life policies do aImo6ta? well as those wo die insured? many seem to prefer that result. TL a i iuwj gei great sausraction (luring the years the insurance is in force, in the thought that their wives and children will be provided for in case they die prematurely ; and if these live long they get the benefit themselves. They could not have the same satisfaction in saving money in any ether way, and often they would not save it at all unless they save it in this way. So that, whether a life insurance policy provides money for a widow and her children, or accumulates money for the insured in this old age, the money comes to some one at a most opportune time?a time when its value is very great. You cannot invest money in any other way and have it come back so in the nick of time as it does when invested in a life policy?say an Accumulation Policy in the New York Life, dlie tO VOUMAlf tirontr years hence. That is if you live twenty years ! If you do nc t.some one will probably need the insurance money.?N.Y.News Letter. Cures Eczema and Itching Humors Through the Blood.?Costs Nothing to Try. B B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm) is a certain and suro euro for eczema, itching skin, humors, scabs, scales, wRtery blisters,, pimples, aching bones or joints, boila carbuncles, prickling pain in the skin, old eating sores, ul1 cers, etc. Botanic Blood Balm cures tlie worst and most deep seated cases by enriching, puri, fying and vitalizing the blood, thereby giving a healthy blood supply to the skin. Othor reme'jdios may relieve, but B. B. B. j actually cures, heals every sore. I nnd gives the ricli growth of i health to the skin, making the ] glow of health to the skin, making tlie blood red and nourishing. Especially advised for old, ob1 atinate oases. Druggist, $1. Trfal i treatment free and prepaid bv I writing Dr. Gilliam 213 MitcUel St.. Atlanta, Ga. Deacribe trouble and freo medical advice given i