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Relieves Seriou. of Cht Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin Coi rects Condition That Seemed Hopeless. After suffering from chronic const pation until she was so run down sh was unable to do any kind of worl Miss H. A. Frees, 209 Adams St., Daj ton, Ohio, obtained a bottle of D Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin and used with such gratifying results that sh continued the treatment and has wrii ten to Dr. Caldwell that her conditio is again normal, and that she wanl to recommend Syrup Pepsin to everj one who suffers with constipation. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is combination of simple laxative herb with pepsin, gentle in its action an free from griping or other pain c discomfort. It contains no opiate c narontl/t rl ???1 n vtrl ? ? ? ? -? uiu^, auu, wiuic itciniK real ily on the most stubborn case of ir active bowels, is absolutely safe fc the tiniest babe, so that it is tb ideal family laxative and should b kept on hand in every household fc use when needed. Dr. Caldwell's! Syrup! Pepsin cost only fifty cents a bottle and is sold i drug stores everywhere. To avoid irr I I|j " " j/b ^ J|L Refresl ^1 /?' > I rr7rriT77TrrnT7T7|jP^^^J^j| 'inuiminumi ifkheri ^^^^miiiiiiiiiii'iiiinnMiii iBMIUiUIUm J Has advanced t( | per ton laid do !! that we have c | $5.00 to $5.50 \ Si will deliver eve | them within th? * RESPEC Union loo I No. 666 Thia it a prescription prepared eapeciall lor MALARIA o* CHILLS A FEVEF Five or aiz doaea will break any caae, ax if taken then aa a tonic the Fever will n< return. It acta on the liver better thr Calomel and doe# not fripe or rick en. 21 : aSSl*:.'.. . ? Case "onic Constipatior ,r 1- itations and ineffective substitutes bi >r sure you get Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep ie sin. See tliat a facsimile of Dr. Cald >e well's signature and his portrait ap >r pear on the yellow carton in whicl the bottle is packed. A trial bottle :s free of charge, can be obtained ty n writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 45! l- Washington St., Monticello, Illinois. Him III m hhhimTTt^Ti I I IM'MIIIII'IMI' ll?INI|() ????????? ^ I a i .Lite~oaver after shopping \ n get your Chero-Cola ottle-Through a Straw" (a Fountains and other iment Stands. Everybody knows it by its name i Kit iidii iimiiu iiim??n>m??>????! iini^ n-Cola)! y I sTb ?\ I 1 - 1 ii/) liimm HI ill iTim|<ijiih luitHHiniiu'iy A L-. ) more than $6.00 : wn. If every one | ontracted coal at \ vill be patient we ? :ry pound of it to ; next 30 days. | :tfully j * & Fuel Co. Whenever Yon Need a General Tool Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tastelea ly chill Tonic la equally valuable aa I. General Tonic because It contains th id well known tonic properties of QUI NIN] ot and IRON. It acta on the Liver, Drive in out Malaria, Rn riches the Blood an ?c Builds np the Whole System. 50 centi A RECORD VOYAGE I When the Savannah Crossed the Atlantic to England. CAUSED A REAL SENSATION. 'She Was the First Steamship to Dare the Hazardous Trip, and Thia Exhibition of Yankee Ingenuity Aroused the Wonder of All Europe. The honor of (lrst navigating the sea with a steamer belongs to an Amer lean, Colonel John Stevens of New i York. Transatlantic steam navigation | was long discussed before any one com j blnlng suQlclent skill with courage ami a spirit of adventure made the bold j attempt. The London Times In Its Issue of [ _ May 11, 181!), thus announced the ex pected event: "Great Kxnorlmmit?A ! 1 new steam vessel of .'{no tons has been | * built In New York for the express pur ; i pose of carrying passengers across the j Atlantic. She is to come to Liverpool I direct." ? On the very day that this brief j notice appeared the vessel referred to j was visited by the president of the ! United States and suit and made a | short trial trip previous to her depar ture on the hazardous voyage. This steamer, named the Savannah, the flrst that crossed any of the oceans, was built at the city of New York by Francis FIcket for Daniel Oodd. She was launched on the 23d of August 1818. She could carry only seventyfive tons of coal and twenty-five cords of wood. The Savannah sailed from the eliy of Savannah, Ga., on the 25th of May, 1810, bound for St. Petersburg, via Liverpool. She reached the latter port on the 20th of June, having used steam eighteen days out of the twentysix. and thus demonstrated the feasibility of transatlantic steam navigation. ___ As the Savannah approached Cape Clear, on the southern coast of Ireland, and smoko was seen to issue from her. It was at first supposed that a sailing Hou vessel was on fire, and one of the king's st cutters was dispatched to her relief. But great was their wonder nt their Inability, with all sail in a fast vessel. T to come up with a ship under bare inqi poles. After several shots were fired fere from the cutter the engine was stop- alco ped and the surprise of her crew at "Vii the mistake they had made, as well tral as their curiosity to see the singular "Af Yankee craft, can be easily imagined, desi They asked permission to go on board upp, and were much gratified by the Inspec- yeas tlon of this "naval novelty." Upon ap- lie ] proaclilng Liverpool hundreds of peo- mou pie came off in boats to see the Savan- tucl nab. On approaching the city the ship-- T ping piers and roofs of houses were "bei thronged with persons cheering the ad- titix venturous craft. Several naval officers, antj noblemen and merchants from Lon- yea don came down to visit the boat and cner were very curious to ascertain her cajj speed, destination and other partlcu- cerj lars. it t During the sojourn of the Savannah bro1 at Liverpool the British public re- was garded the boat with suspicion, and the __ f newspapers of the day suggested the jjeei idea that "this sfenm operation may wj(jl be in some manner connected with the g^ ambitious views of the United States." nan One journal recalling the fact that vcrj Jerome Bonaparte had offered n large reward to any one who would sue- j*. y cood In rescuing his brother Napoleon ^ from St. Helena, surmised that I lie ^ Savannah had this undertaking in vlpw- tise The Savannah remained twenty five days at Liverpool and sailed for St. Be- ^ v tersburg on July 23. "getting under way with steam" and "a large fleet of vessels In company." The boat touched ?r A en route at Copenhagen, where it ex- ,? ? cited great curiosity, and also at Stock- ~.en holm, where she was visited bv the "8n royal family. ^av _ On the Mh of September the steamer " left Stockholm. On the Oth she reached sPe< Kronstndt, bavins used steam the 'n? whole passage, and a few days later nat< reached St. Petersburg. coni Here the vessel was visited by the orgi Russian lord high admiral. Marcils de thai Travys, and other distinguished mill- in 1 tnry and naval officers, who also tested of e her superior qualities by a trip to Kron "be< stadt The Savannah remained at St. due Petersburg until Oct. 10 and then set the sail on her homeward voyage "In com- can pany with about eight sail of shipping " ing She arrived at Snvnnnah on Tuesday. Nov 80. and shortly afterward was taken to the navy yard at Washington The subsequent history of the Savannah can be told in a few words. On ac- All count of the great fire In Savuunah her ai owners were compelled to sell her, and she was purchased to run as a packet 0 between tlint city and New York. ?f 1 whither she was bound when she was lost on the south side of Long Island.? ilj? Philadelphia Press. acj? Job1 Securing Prisoner. this A sheriff, annoy *1 by the crowd the which follows when a prisoner Is taken stes along a public thoroughfare handcuffed vioi to a policeman, devised a simple way T of handcuffing a prisoner so that he can be taken through a crowd without every one being aware that he Is une really In shackles. Instead of locking a(jv the prisoner to the officer, the prisoner avo Is handcuffed to a heavily laden suit- all case, which he Is required to carry, estl s The suitcase Is filled with bricks and c weighs from twenty to fifty pounds. D mnking escape very difficult.?Detroit o Free Press. \ a Ne< e He Is sometimes slave who should be Col N ffiaster and sometimes master who f)ui j should be slave.?Cicero. k ten * ? N\V> 1 ** The Ri Coffee and tea disa out the cause?cafTineP( is entirely free from dr wheat, roasted with a 1 delicious and healthful. A change from cofl may help you. "T* "VINEGAR BEES." | isewivoa Warned Against Subance Alleged to Make Vinegar, Beer, Wine, and Kidney Cure. he department is receiving: many lines regarding a substance ofd for sale for making vinegar or holic beverages under the names, negar Bees," "Beer Bees," "Ausian Bees," "California Bees," rican Bees/' and various othelr gnations. These names are being lied, apparently, to a kind of wild ?t or ferment which, as far as can learned, was originated by the intaineers of Tennessee and Ken;y. he primitive process for making es" was to expose to the air a ture of corn meal and molasses il it became impregnated with wild st and other bacteria. The ferlt so produced was employed loy in making a sort of vinegar or ;ain alcoholic solutions, by adding oa mixture of water and either wn sugar or molasses, which then i allowed to work or ferment, he recent inquiries seem to have n stimulated by enterprising indilals and firms fob advertising vinr "bees" under one or more of the les mentioned. Many of these adtisers make extravagant claims for product and ask a faancy price for vhich, the yeast specialists of the artment say, is out of all protion to its original cost or to its lal worth. In some of the adverments which have reached the detment the sellers assert that the stance when mixed with water and asses or sugar will produce beer vine. Other promoter go so far as iay that the fermented mixture is eficial in the treatment of rheumai and kidney trouble, claims which e no foundation in fact. i the opinion of the department's . zialists, a product made by catchyeast and bacteria indiscrimiely from the air may very well tain harmful as well as desirable anisms, and the specialists state t great care should be exercised both the preparation and the use mch a product. In their judgment = es" is not as well suited for proing alcoholic fermentation as is ordinary yeast cake, and they no trecommend it at all for makvinegar. M FF.LICF STANDARD TO BE MAINTAINED, SAY MAKERS Dealer Now Sell Famous Cigars t 5c Straight. In Effect Today. 'wing to the greatly increased cost quality tobaccos, in fact everyig pertaining to high grade cigars, makers of the San Felice cigar, Deisel-Wemmer Company, have anced the_ selling price to the bers and lJealers, and nenceiorin cigar will positively be sold to consumer at 5 cents straight intd of six for a quarter as preisly. he SAN FELICE is national in its >e and character, having justly atled this eminence through its unfilled excellence. To maintain this qualed standard of quality, the ance in question is absolutely unidable. The generous support of men using quality cigars is earny ^esired. !UB-MY-TISM Vill cure your Rheumatism aralgia, Headaches, Cramps, lie, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts and rns. Old Sores, Stings of Insects Antiseptic Anodyne, used inaally and externally. Wee 25c. (p?sttI <,r " g*ht Way Is the Healt gree with a great many peop] -the cumulative drug in both 3STUI ugs or any harmful substa )it of wholesome molasses, am ;ee and tea to Po^tum has h lere's a Reasoi Grocers ever I ifeJ ?S ANYTHING YOU SPORTING E( ^ there is an^ &if line of sporting r&/ : we cnn t suppiy mu J\ to have you nai lack won't last 1 in and see if you ( , pTl h us a'ong the line \ llh ticular sporting R' ii can fit you out < H|> iM tennis, golf, fishi ^!|pi| trapshooting, m ||j ^ Infallible Smoke iifeSBjl i!j 1 Powder which |ji||i|P| loaded shells. It||!i;|Sfe^ The Ui ^ Hardwai ?t v I r * . X i rW^Njt ^ Car Load . Coming Tl Roadsters $371.90 T Delivered at Don't Fail to get one P. B. ODE For Goshen Hill and I hful Way le, and science points l of these beverages. VI nee. It is made of J is pure, nourishing, elped thousands; it i" ywhere sell Postum WANT IN IUIPMENT thing in the of your parhobby. We I rv complete for I ustly famous , \ less Shotgun C-A^///)^ we carry in r. ^Tj I M will help you. ji^ nion ^^fLt re (Co. of Fords his Week ouring Car $386.90 Your Door these New Models LL, Agent Ish Dam Townships