Lancaster enterprise. [volume] (Lancaster, S.C.) 1891-1905, July 16, 1902, Image 3
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A Medicine lor
Old People.
Rev. Geo. Gay, Greenwich, Kas, is
past 83 years of arre, s*ct he says: "I
am enjoying excellent health for a man
of my age, due-cntircly to the rejuvenating
influences of I)r. Miles' Nervine.
It brings sleep and rest when nothing
else will, and gives strength and vitality
even to one of my old age."
"I am an old soldier," writes Mr. Geo.
Watson, of Newton, la., "and I have
been a great sufferer from nervousness, I
vertigo and spinal trouble. Have spent I
considerable mnni-? ?"'i;";? 1
doctors, but with little benefit. 1 was
so bad my mind showed signs of weakness.
I began taking Dr. Mites' Nervine,
and I know it saved my life."
i Mue?* Nervine
Saved me from the insane asylum,"
Mrs. A. M. Heifner, of Jerico
Springs, Mo., writes. "I was so nervous
that I could scarcely control myy
self, could not sleep nor rest, would even
forget the names of my own children at
times. I commenced using Dr. Miles'
Nervine and it helped me from the
first, and now I am perfectly well."
Sold by all Druggtate en Quarantae.
Dr. Miles Medical Co.. Elkhart. Ind.
I I
Mount Etna Hailroad.
The circular railway which
passes around Mount Etna is
interesting on count of the geological
conditions encountered in
its construction as well as the nature
of the country which it passes
through. In many points of the
route the surface consits of layers
of lava, and more than twenty-two
miles of cutting had to be
made across the lava, whtch is
hard as granite. In this way the
line, which is only 70 miles long,
required no les?<than four years
to exeente. The road leaves the*
station of Borgo and mounts first
if across a r??rir?n r?f ?- ?
T -r, ~~ 'Dietation,
among vineyards, wheat
fields and orange orchards, but it
enters an arid and treelss portion,
and runs between hillocks of lava
until it reaches a fertile strip at
Belparao, a district which suffered
greatly from the eruption of
1669. The road again passei
through the small town of Misterbianco,
which was destroyed by
the small eruption, and reaches
Paterno, with Jits minature volcanoes,
which throw out salt mud,
and its ferruginous spriugs. Farther
on is Aderno, which has a
watorfall and a river, two things
which are quite rare in Sicily.
Then the route passes through
Bronte, which has boeu often
I threatened with destruction by
lava, and was especially in danger
in 1832 and 1843. The last *ta-1
^ tion is Giarre- Kiposto' from
^ which is it easy to reach Messina
or Catania. This road will be ,
very much nppeciated by tourists
and will also serve as an I
outlet for the products of tins'
populous region.
You Huom tVlml Yon Arc Tokln
When you take Grove's Tasteless Chiil
Tonic because the formula is plainly
printed on every hott le showing that
it is simply iron and Quinine in a
tasteless form No cure, no pay. r>Oc.
C urcijoijted love drove a young
mau to co in tint suicide in a .
j?M? . ,' (ire hotel. If transpired
4U^A 1 t ? - ' 1 . . .1 ' ' 1
iiif.L rif nan jiKrtfl n mile girl in1
the ft t 4 , <"hoo=n one of 1 v(;
pieoen f paper which ho banded !
^ iter. On oiit) wrts written "J ifo' i
^ on the other Death."'
*'1 ??? tl?r> t '.niKli Woil:* of i
llio Cold.
la.xal i ve l.roino-Qiiinir.e tablet* cure
n cold oue day. No cure, uo paj |
Ihrloeai sentH.
%
i
Too Kind-Hearted.
There is a young woman in
this city whose benevolent dispoistion
received a severer shock
last Sunday evening. She was at
church and sat directly behind a
tall, well dressed stranger, with a
raveling hanging iu his collar.
i Reing one of those generous
hearted, whole settled girls who
grow up to be motherly old ladies,
a friend to everybody in town, she
thought how glad she would ho if '
I I
jfiomo kind hearted girl would do
as much if her father were to go
j to church with a raveling hanging
down his back, so when the
audience rose for the hymn she
concluded to pick it oil'
Carefully raising her hand, she
j gave a little twitch, but it was
longer than she supposed, and a|
foot or. more appeared. 8etting
her teeth, she gave a pull and
about a yard of that horrible
thread hung down his back. This
waB getting erabarasoing, but determined,
flhe gave it another
yank nnd discovered that Bhe was
unraveling his undershirt.
Her discomfiture was so paiiffulj
that chloroform would not
have alleviated her sufferings nor
a pint of powder hidden her i
blushes when the gentleman turned
with an inquiring look to see
what was tickling his neck. I
Don't Fall To Try This. '
Whenever an honest trial is '
given te Electric Bitters for any 1
trouble it is recommended for a 1
permanent cure will 6urely be j
effected. It never fails to tone (
the stomach, regulate the kidneys
and bowels, stimulate the liver, '
invigorate the nerves and purify (
the blood. It's a wonderful tonic i
for run-down systems. Electric i
Hitters positively cures Kidney
and Liver Troubles, Stomach
Disorders, Nervourness, Sleeplessness,
Rheumatism, Neuralgia,
and expels Malaria. Satisfaction
guaranteed by Crawford Bros,
and J. F. Mackey Co. Only 50
cents.
Subsidence of the Texan Oil
Wells.
Oil has now ceased to flow
spontaneously from the wells of
Beaumont, but the refiners are
not thereby in auy way disturbed,
There is plenty of oil left in the
fields, but it will be necessary to
force it from the ground. The
startling flowing of oil which
greeted the man who maH? fho
first strike was due primarily to
the enormous pressure of the gas
confiued in the same subterranean f
chamber with the oil. Since the 1
chamber was penetrated the gas (
began to escape and the llow of (
oil subside. Instead of natural gas (
pressure it will be necessary to 5
use artificial air presseure. (
?Scientific American. (
Cures Mood I'oiaoii, Cancer, I'lctrs,
Cczeinn, lHc., Treatment j 1
free. | j
If you have offensive pimples!,
or eruptions, ulcers on any part'.
' of the body, aching boneR or J
j >i tits, falling hair, mucous pa toll- 4
os, swollen glands, sore lips, eat- j t
| ing, festering sores, sharp, gnaw - j i
| ing pains, then yon sutler from|(
i serious biood poison or the begin'ningof
deadly cancer. U is a|
juangerous eonditiou.bui you may , '
bo permanently curt ! '>< Viking !
| Botanic Blood Balm (B 15. I'?.) | i
made especially t/> cure the worst!;
blond disease". !t heals everv'
! sore or ulcer, "top all aches and
j un and reduces nil etvolllugs.
1 Botanic Blood Balm enron nil
U 'tbgnnut ' lood '*? rJH'h o" ?
I oczHipn scabs and scale pimples, j
running Horoa, carbuncles, acrof- !
! uIh, otc. imperially advised for all j ,
r -unatt < a cr lhai have reached
the second or third stage, Drug ,
g:st,-<) Trial treatment free by I i
| writing I)r Dillam, li 11-5 Mitchell'i
St , Atlanta < la. Describe trouble 1
land tree medical ndvico given, i
| Medicine sent at once prepaid. |i
A During Investigation of Mont
Peleo.
Interesting reports come to ub
from Martiuque. Prof. Anglo
L'eilprin, president of the Philadelphia
Geogrfcphiea! Society,
who has made two ascents of
Mont l'elee, has just made known
the results of his investigations.
Several important discoveries
have been made which throwlight
of nature of the eruption,
and which expose many of the
wild exaggerations that always
follow a terrible catastrophe. The
first ascent of the mountain Wi?s
made on May 31, and the second
on.Jumi 1. On the first expodi
tion, when the edge of the old
crater was reached, the party was!
overtaken bv a thundpratnrm i
Clouds of rain and steam from)
the volcano so completely enveloped
them that they were able
to see only a few feet. Further
progress was impossible, for on
account of the electrical disturbances
their compass refused to
work, varying as much as twenty
decrees to the eastward With
great difficulty they groped their
way down the steep ridpe, slipping
at every step ; for the rain
Boaked ashes afforded a precarious
footing and threatened to
hurl them down the yawning
gulfs at each side. The terrific
detonations heard were supposed
to be of volcanic and not electrical
orign, for when the JLiiver
Fallaise was reached it was found
to be filled with steam aud mud
indicating a fresh volcanic disturbance.
Ti^e party reached
kcier, caked with mud and much
liappointed. However, oa the
lext mornincr Pr?f 11 ~; l - -: - I
J. iv/1. i^CllpllU
ieas ready for another eucouuter
vith Mont I'elee. We cannot
jut admire the bravery and devotion
of thie man who, with his
'ollowers, twice climbed the
mgry volcano and who once, by
i suddeh flash during the lift
n the clouds of vapor, reached
the very lip of the crater, from
srhich point stones could be
iropped into the white house
mass,200 feet below. Standing on
the very brink of the crater, he
ivas witness of a most aw^il, yet
ascinating scene. As was to be
ixpected, the principal output of
.he crater wrb steam, and but for
i favorable shift in the vapor
douds the party could not have
nade the valuable observations
that they did. So far as known,
iteam is always found in volcaioes,
and seems to be the main
;ause of the eruption. Scientists!
iivide volcanoes into two class I
?s : The quiet, characterized by ]
i tlow of lava, and the explosive,
jharacterized by the blowing
>ut of fragments. Prof. Heilprin
dates postively that no lava has
lowed from the crater of Mont'
L'elee. < >ne of the main character-1
sties of the explosive volcano is I
vhat is called the "cinder-cone.''I
I'hia is formed of material which |
lrops back, around the oriiicel
rom which it was thrown, formng
a cone. Prof. Heilprin, how-'
>ver, states that no such cone!
vas found in thi" volcano. What
,1*9? taken to be a cinder-cone j
proved to be but a pile of ejected i
rock* with no central vent Of'
course, in tlie present condition',
>t Mont I'elee it is impossible,
c state obpolutelv hat there i10
cinder-cono, for it wa? impos-1
u'do t*? ? do ' n onb* about 200;
Feet, and it is believed that the
;rator is much do,.-par than th?s.
[? h tp> *, the new rater appears
like a gash in a mountain, ttin-1
nintc north and south and expun- j
ling into a b( ,\!. 1 ho lissui c ?una,
tranpverselv to the old rrater, and
appear to bn r nearly ritted t' o
mountain. In too lirst reports ofj
A
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A'.l
I
i I -. j
1% ^ flFiTmn / .pSiiUIRlij
1
II AVcgctable Preparation For As
, similalingtheFoodanclRcgula- i J
tmg the Stoinuehs and Bowels of j ,
:-F.|
I Promotes Digcstion.Cheorful-!
! nessand Rest.Contains nejtlier i
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. . ?
Not Narcotic.
: |
/Attpr 'if f/M ItrSM-tl EL 11TCHEH -KV
/\?nUu. S~J -
Mx Smna * \
luxAftU War- I jjL
Aramr W * I
/toemnt - /
AwfcMu^Ui * I ss
fltmfttd
\'uifar I fpl
UoUrry/^n Htnxr. / jtaJ
A perfect Remedy forOonstipa
lion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea ig
Worms .(Convulsions,Feverish |f,
E ncss and Loss of Sleep. vCj
Far Simile Signature oT
XKW YORK.
EXACT COPY or WRAPPCR Iff
h?-, -aft/
the eruptiou statements were
made that the mountain had been |
reduced to one-third its original ,
height. This is now shown to be ,
utterly untrue, for from number ]
of observations taken with an
aneroid barometer it was found |
that the height of the mountain ,
had remained unaltered and that
no important topographical
changes had taken place. The
exaggerated reports may have had
their origin in the fact that a
denae cloud of steam normally (
covers the top of the mountain,
which might lead to the supposition
that the mountain was mnch
reduced in height. From the
investigations made, Prof. Heil- ]
prin considers violent eruptions I
improbable. Mont Pelee has I
freed itself of interior pressure, 1
and while small disturbances
may continue to occur, they will (
probably decrease in frequency J
and power. However, no one can i
prophesy with certainty on sub- '
jects of this sort. Volcanic action
is very little understood; new ,
and unexpected phenomena are ]
continually occuring. The explos- ;
ion of llaming gases is unpreced- '
ented, so far as known, and was
probably the main cause of the
terrible loss of life. The electrical 1
phenomena were also new, (
though they probably did not play '
an important part in the de-11
etruction of the city. Specimens 11
collected by Prof. lieilprin nhnwjl
that the lightning bolts werej1
ama!! and votv intense, penetia-l'
1111 the walla of the houses. .No 1
other volcauo was ever ho rapid 1
in action, and never before has
finch a loss of life resulted direct- j
ly from a volcanic eruption.
?Scientific American.
I;
Won't ? olio v. Ail tit-*' Alt?r I'uj'j 1
lu? t or it. 1 .
In a rcc in article a prominent
physiriar? "av . "I' is next to . j..
-?il?i ? f'>r t'lt* v!iy-'"t'iti ti> ;'f' li. '
tii'iitn to carry out any |?ri'
. our.-v hygiene or il it* I to the - to ail - i
i>?f extent , lie li>\ hut one r.\s.,ri : fi,
li a' i 'j.'ie ' ru/ trei'tv of." '' tie i. ,
;
t ijifil ion, tl<H most iinn! ami cym'"1
oh1 aj . :tt? 1. , . !. Ctianil.i'riai n'n )
St 'OH''! .V l.'v'r 'ffli. iioli,*. (>< ; ,
l?v con-ftj?afion as ' >*>? t??jve 'tie'
ho we Is tr a natural arot healthy on-1
(1 t' .n r ! hj t J Mat key A. .
Co I I
\
P|ITP|I|
For Infants and Childre 11.
Ths Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the 1 *
Signature/%?
a W
v LV
rtf X Use
Lr For Over
*
Thirty Years
CAST0R1A
THI CtNTAtin COMMNV. Nf? OfTt,
The art of making malleable
glass, which has been well unierstood
by the Kgyptians, but
which has been for centuries lostl
have been rediscovered by Louis
Kauffeld, of Richmond, lnd., so
the daily press savs. Mr. Kauffeld
is a lamp chimney maker,
and haa for years tried to devise
a chimney that would withstand
excessive heat. The new process,
it is stated, renders possible the
making of cooking vessels out of
glass.
The Name Old Mtory.
J. A. Kelley relates an experience
similar to that which has
happened in almost every neighborhood
in the United States and
has been told and retold by thoujands
of others. He says : ''Last,
iummer I had an attack of dysentery
and purchased a bottle of
Uhamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy, which I used
according to directions and with
sntirely satisfactory results. The
trouble was controlled much
quicker than former attacks
when I used other remedies."
Mr. Kelly is a well-known citisen
of Henderson, N. C. For sale
by J. F. Mackey & Co.
Edward Everett llale bases his
plea for pensions for old beopie
mi the following conditions : First,
to persons who have never permanently
abandonend their naLive
State ; second, to those who
nave paid taxes since reaching
manhood ; third, to persons so or
So years old. l>r. liale thinks $100
i year would keep old folks from
I he poor house.
Saves a Woman's Life.
To have given up would hav?
meant death for Mrs. Lois ( ragp,
of l>*?icuontei, Alar-s. Lor years
ho had endured on. id misery
i
ahstinate cough. mi i?> >'. "ho
writes, 1 could m I'Cf breathe
tnd sonietimot t >un : r d sneak.
till . im. ?? !* U11 ! I ill W *> i L- i ' -i
11 I I I m n i i k, . . 111 i. ,N 0 >' i 11 #
\ oi y Itii ' on*- Jiipi.t (i c i1
i'\ im! l''i!t -r^r*
From Cough#, OoUlw, fliroat and
. 1
reinetiy, tor il never diHHppoititft.
L; iim js guar tiiteoii l.\ < lnwior.t
?: .J. a
i'ricc .">(>e iitiil .fl.wo iriftl bottlrt
I ree.