Image provided by: Eugene Water & Electric Board; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1899-1904 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1902)
•- jlOÎiÉï TRCU3LE CURED. JL Packing Up, T Lnckit—Why are you packing up| everything' | Mrs. I.ockit — We must hurry and get out of town, or people will not 1 tlnuk we have g- ne to the coruuatiou— Exchange. INIONS 01 GREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS Emigration to Canada. M. J. DANI.F.Y. «r. .M J. Danley, Treasurer of thz Rsb»c.* Lodg«. I- °- F" writes ,roui eq First St. Minneapolis, Minn.: W11S afflieteil f'<r *ev‘‘ra* '’ears with kidney trouble which became quite seri- L. and cans •'• "ie r"»"'»1«at,1‘' anxiety. ¡•cent hundreds of dollars try Ing to be .Ld but nothing gave me any per manent relief until I tried Peruna. It .75k less than three months and only en bottles to effect a permanent cure, but they were worth more than as many hundred dollars to me. I am fully re- .t .rd to health, know neither ache nor Jn »ml enjoy life.’’-Mrs. M. J. D*n,e’r- . . , . This experience has been repeated Mny times. We hear of such cases neatly every day. Mrs. Danley had catarrh of the kid- As soon as «he took the right rem edy she made a quick recovery. A Prominent Southern Lady’s Letter. Miss Laura Hopkins, of Washington, D.C., niece of lion. E. O. Hopkins. 0Jto( the largest iron manufacturers of Birmingham, Ala., writes the following letter commending Peruna. She says: -I can cheerfully recommend Peru- iu for indigestion and stomach trouble and asagood tonic.”—Laura Hopkins. Peruna cures catarrh wherever locate-!. Peruna is a specific for the catarrhal derangements of women. Address The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus Ohio, for fret- look on catarrh wiitten by Dr. S. B. Haitman. An Unfortunate Croesus. "The very rich have their troubles, too.” “Of coarse they do. I’ve got a multi millionaire uncle who has writer’s cramp the worst wav” "How did he get it?” "Signing checks”—Cleveland Blain Dealer. Losing Opportunities. The automobile had broken down and the cnauffeur was busy trying to dis cover the trouble. The impatient owner of the machine at last broke out: "Hurry up, Felix! There are a lot of people crossing the street that we are missing!” WEATHERWISE IS THE MAN WHO WEARS .ffi.WATEiPtOOF OILED CLOTHING ' A raputatlon *xtanding over 3i*ty-3ix y»&rs and our guarant»» ar» back, of •v»ry oarmont bearing th» ' -SIGN OP THE FISH. Thar» ar» many imitation» Be sur» of the name 0WER on th» button* ON MLb EVERYWHERE. M A.J.TOWEB CO. BOSTON. MASI Mitchell Wagon, city hydrant. The city of Chicago ren • d a bill for $<15, the cost of a new ■i.' lrsnt. A few day* following Couimis- stourr of Public Work* Blocki received a reply. The Burlington road held that the ratio of the scrap iron should be deducted from the bill—that scrap iron was worth two cents a pound. Deputy Ceatmiasiouer Brennan figured that a hydrant sold for ' ■rap iron w.oild bring aboat $1.87. S . this amount waa deducted from the bill. You would scarcely expect a great cor poration to l>e so particular about th* pennies. Hut watching the pennies makes dividends possible. Big concerns pay high salaries to men who can save more than their salaries by keeping an eye on the little leaks, (treat industrial enterprises are conducted with success by making their entire profits from the utilisation of what was formerly waste. lake care of the pennies. The dollars will take care of themselves.” Individ uals as well as corporations must learn this lesson. Most men fail because they have never learned the old fashioned les son of economy. There is a big differ ence between stinginess and economy. 1'he manager of a business who can make the distinction, the manager who can run the line between thriftiness and niggard liness is the manager who succeeds, A large volume of business on a ■nail nut- gin of profit with somebody to look after the leakagi^-that is modern business.— St. Louis Chronicle. Can American emigrants be “asalml- lated to institutions and type* of ,->»•- r.r2.n<‘n,’rlnfirior ,h'”’ of lht'ir “»”'■• and. that la a question raised by th, ’ t Louis Globe-Democrat in ref. rence to the American emigration to the era province of British America H ts very much to be doubted whether the m,'tutious and types of government will, h tile American emigrant w tin.I iu ( anada will impm* him as at all In- ferior to those of hia own country. He certainly will find that they guarantee quite as large a liberty a* those of bi, native land, and that the monarchical de- mem w^hieh is supposed to he injected in- to the < anadian government by it* nomi nal relation* to the British Crown u. »o far as it* practical influence .n the affairs of the Government is concerned, a legal fiction. Nevertheless it is quite possible that any large American emi gration to the Northwestern British prov inces might prove a disturbing political factor. Not because the Americans w mhl be at all discontented with the political institutions of the country, which in some respects are freer and better ordered than our own, but because they would add a new impulse to the growth of the opinion that the interests of that region would be greatly promoted by annexa tion to the I nited Staff s if annexation shall prove to be the only means of ie- moving the obstacles to free commer cial intercourse. At present sentiment I of loyalty to the Briti/h Crown is so strong among th»- British Canadians that the motives of self-interest which prompt their occasional consideration of the ben efits of closer relations with the United States are held in abeyance. But this sentiment would probably be gradually weakened by a large infusion of the American element in the population of Northwestern Canada. So that although Canadian experience heretofore has I een that American immigrants very readily assimilate with their Canadian cousins and adapt themselves to Canadiap insti tutions, they have heretofore been known in Canada rather as transient visitors than permanent settlers, and the latter at least have been too few in number to have any particular infiuence on Cana dian politics. But if they get to going to Canada in large numbers they are like ly to precipitate problems which Cana dian statesmen desire above all things to avoid, or at least to postpone. St. Paul Pioneer Press. Men with Smull Capital. It has been objected by some that tech nical education should not be fostered with public funds because the fields for its employment are being rapidly pre- I empted by the trusts and gigantic com binations of capital in manufacturing nnd other productive technical industries. Frequently we are told that the man who has only skill and small capital is being put out of the way of business and mecess by the overshadowing combines. Yet it should be plain to any observer that there are hundreds of profitable tech nical industries that the trusts have not captured and. in the natHie of things, could not consolidate nnd control. The 1 profit to be made front them in any given locality is too small to engage the cu- ■ pidity of a trust and yet is sufficient to amply repay the enterprise and industry 1 3f a small operator. Now inventions are ¡creating new industries almost daily and I In the exploiting of these tile man with technical education and small capital finds plentiful opportunitie» for steady occupation and satisfactory returns. We find from the census that in 18911 there were 9.977 manufacturing estab lishments in the city of Chicago. There were 19.203 in 1900, or an increase of nearly 1<X) per cent. But the average amount of capital to the establishment was 2«> per cent less in 1900 than in 1890. which shows that plenty of men found chances to invest their brains, skill and small capital in good miterprises. The trusts do not own all tlf.se nearly twenty thousand factories in Chi ago. nor the majority in St. Louis, Cincinnati or Atlanta. The truth is that the argument for giving varied technical instruction to the youth of the land was never stronger than to-day.—Atlanta Constitution. Railroad leather a Lesson. ORIGIN OF JOHN W. GATES. Bost on Earth — Agents Everywuera 53&$3i2fi SHOES »o* . • 1« Douglas alioes ar* the stan dard of th« worM. Thia Is the reason U Douglas makes and sells more "¡en s fid oo alMj *3.50 shoe* than any ''••r two manufacturers. W. L. DOUCLAS S4 SHOES CANNOT be excelled . — ll.IM.S2B li.34«X s»v Zme-.s» iMPei Ke* » cT. I0“'' f"»"* •»« Ca'f. O^f tor ' * Ctrv* ' •« ••«»ms F>st f „|„r F.relet. Met. ^•■ti** ! Th. » whim h... w Dora:»» , nun* tad prico «tapped cn bottom. 4jr wwm /. 2.V. erfr*. Ilins. CMhhkf 'm- w L DOtOLAS. BROCK TON. MAS*. NSUMPTION Made Fortune by Legitimate Business Qualities, Juilxment and Industry. Mr. Gate» Is now '•>* most spectacu lar figure In the tiunncial landscape. Wall street, "that roaring furnace fed with life aud hope,” is gazing at him In open mouthed wonder. There Is a bolilni'ss alx»ut him that all admire. The story of his rise Is an Interesting one, and so far as it shows bow legiti mate success in business Is achieved, a profltable one. One of his earliest busl ness positions was that of traveling salesman, and the rise of bls income from a modest salary to an almost fab ulous amount. Is an account, not of suc cessful speculation, but of the results of common seuse and bard work As a young man. Gates was selling hardware for Isaac L. Elwood, when barbed wire was just beginning to be used for fencing; and be erected the first corral In 'he State of Texas He soon decided that there was more money to be made in the manufacture of wire than by selling It on a salary, and with some friends bought three barbed wire machine* and started a factory on a total Investment of less proved very than $8.000. The T... business ----- -------- protable and they sool >n started another Here they made so small factory much money that they declared dlvl dends of atrout 30 per cent per week, Gates seemed to lie the entire working force, He traveled, sold the w Ire. came back. Invoiced It. billed it. painted It, marketed It. and collected the money As be was doing all the work, be final ly arranged to buy out all the partners but a Mr Clifford, lie and ClifiTbril In corporate-1 the "8 mtbern Wire Com pany" and so he preed from one en 1 terprfae Into another, always *ol«rg Ing tb* field nf hl* activities. EARLY RISING. ’« • ' A few years men. bankers, iroker« great e»tabl «I lent*. < lid t The between ten and thrs Bun tell« u* that the men. » b» •** ,j/UB work York being Church Entertainment. The prediction lately made by a minis ter in one of the Western . itiea —Chicago, we believe—to the effect that the only way in which it would soon i>e I’.tsaible to maintain an interest in c uirch work would t>e by means of "the continuous vaudeville." startled a great many eon- servatlv* church goer*, and possibly •hocked some of them, However. the stream of tendency aeeuis to have »et rather strongly in the direction of a ful fillment of this prophecy. Billiards, ping pong. hops, amateur theatricals, secular concerts, legerdemaiu. charades, socia bles, fairs, supi>era, primarily for pur poses of revenue, music of doubtful sa creduesa—if there la a dividing line be tween the sacred and secular in music; all of these hare come to be recognixed as adjuncts of more or less value lu church work. The underlying ides seems to be to make the church an attractive social club, and thus bring within its sphere of influence many wbo value a church connection at the outset chiefly for the social opportunities It offers. It would be difficult to find a serious objection to this view of so much of the work of a church as may properly be considered sec ular. There may he a line w hich It would be dangerous to cross, but where it Ilea would probably lx> as difficult to define Cdrelessneva in Behavior. • « is the Alaskan boundary.—New York The traditional freedom and natural- Times. np«s of American social relations have a These Need Imouragement. charm and a value when under proper The person who really need* the atten training they are made to promote in both boys and girls mutual respect and unaf tion of the school commencement speak fected mode >ty. Doubtless, too, that nn- ers Is the man who has passed hia college chaperoned companionship of young peo days and has found to hia dismay that ple which ho shocks foreigners results sheer force of c.rcunistiincea has crowded for the most part in virtuous affections him inti a rut. This is the Individual and happy marriages. But this is some whose mind has stopped growing and who thing far different from the license and fancied that his education was “com disregard of decorum which is becoming pleted" when he left his high school or alarmingly prevalent, not among the low academy or co.lege. Very likely some er orders in the social scale, but in fam misguided professor assured him at the ilies which are considered intelligent and time that his education would prove In well bred. The manners of young men valuable to him. He looks back and have degenerated. They will act and fails to see where it has advanced him speak in the presence of women iu a way materially. He baa forgotten most of that would not have been tolerated a gen the facta he learned save a few vague eration ago. and young women who are generalization*, lie would be at a loss unquestionably without evil intent will to extract the square root of any number conduct themselves as no woman could of four figures; he could not construe a have done a few years ago without seri Latin sentence or conjugate a Latin verb to gave bis life; physics, chemistry, math ous damage to her reputation. There is evidently need of a revival of ematics all are sealed book» to him. the unfashionable art of bringing up chil That he decides to put these things be dren. Boys and girls are growing up to hind hint, concludes that his time for be lawless. Lacking respect for author education is past nnd puts aside with ity and conventions, they easily lose re sullen resignation all future opportuni spect for the virtues which authority and ties for learning is not at all surprising.— conventions seek to guard. Laxity in Chicago News. homes and schools, contact under unfa Prowpett of longevity. vorable conditions of young men and Timid people and pessimists are Inclin women in business life, the rush, self ed to fear that the progress of invention ishness and bad manners of our crowded is increasing the dangers of accident and shops and public conveyances, streets, disease to such an extent that human life all tend to the destruction of that good must necessarily be shortened. This fear breeding which commands respect and appears to lie groundless. Collected sta nurtures modesty.—New York Tribune. tistics show that the average duration of liunian life is steadily increasing. Some Hydrophobia Scare*. interesting and striking facts along this There is no special hy drophobia season. line are presented in a recent re¡xirt of In the hot mouth» dogs suffer from In- the Chicago tniaril of health. The aver tense heat aud are liable to heat stroke, age duration of lite has increased lu a especially if they be uuable to obtain third of a century from fourteen years water. No doubt the so-called rabid to more tlian thirty-one years. Exclusive dogs are often the victims of other dis- of suicides, deaths from violence have de orders; but the germs of ralries are to creased <1.3 per cent. Deaths front rail more active and general in summer Ilian way and car accidents have decreased in winter. Although this fact ha* been more than 5 per cent. Since the partial presented to the public repeatedly, every abolition of railways on grade and the dog which is not plainly iu good health introduction of fenders on cars, six years in July and August is pursued to its ago, deaths from this source have de er «used 12.0 per cent. Sau Francisco death by police and public. It is almost certain that the popular Argonaut. fallacies about mad dogs and hydrophobia Marriage Not a i I ailure. have killed more persons tlian lias hydro phobia itself, Fairly sensible persons Is marriage a failure? The answer Is when bitten by a cross dog often iteconte in tile wide-staring eyes of that dimpled panic stricken and die in great agony bundle iu the cradle. 1 Marriage a fail- after exhibiting many of the alleged tire? Ask that young mother as she symptoms of hydrophobia, although the croons over her firstborn. Ask the white dog in each case may have been free of faced little woman in black over there rabies. A typical instance was that of a as she kisses the cheeks of her stalwart Chicago woman whose malady was diag son. and send* him into the world to con nosed i>y two doctors ns hydrophobia quer. “All is lost but you, Mary,” chokes After her death tile dog which bit her out the gray-bearded victim of a busi was hunted up and was found to be en- ness collapse. An arm steals about hia tirely well. Intelligent people in rvery neck, and a wrinkled hand strokes his community should stoutly combat every brow, and the sweetest lips he ever know inad dog scare. Instead of hiving an tl- whisper words of soulful sympathy and leged mad dog shot they should «hut him courage In his ear. Ask him sieiut mar ut> until it shall lie determined whether riage. Cincinnati Post. A few weeks ago one of the engines of the Chicago. Burlington and Quincy Knll- road jumped the track and demolished a Beraus« it is made of the best material possible to buy. The manufacturers absolutely pay i> loLSnarcPni nhnvo the market price of best iraiivs of wagon timber for the privilege of cui- iinR over and skimming off the cream of tlia wagon stock, which la carried for .1 to 5 years be« k>re making up. which means an investmentiu *‘**1 stock of nearly one million dollars. l i t’HELL Wagons are unsurpassed for quality, proportion, finish, strength aud Hgu» running. Wi,v—take chances on any other? W ’ -not get the hesf-A M 1 rCHKEU M/r <;/»•//, £•«?/• d Xavar Oe* Tot Hand. Seattle. bpokaii* he has rabica, This would often secure lierions who may have been bitten against death from fright. Philadelphia Record. degenerate sons of hard-working fath ers. are inakii'g a great change in tlie matter of Ixiurw, beg lining the day earlier. The business day lias thus Iteeti lengthened, n t for the |>a <! un derlings, w hose hours have always l»een from e g! t or nine until five or six. but for the men corn great transactions in mere*. Not long ago the il i*a <1 of a great house in the lower end of New York City was asked when lie could be seen the next day. "I'll l>e at my desk nt seven thirty In the morning." be answered. ••There Is u« need to get down so early." anld the other. "My regular hour.” replied the great merchant; "1 am there at that time six days In the week.” Thia merchant 1» In a bua.nea* In which quotations from European mar kets are Important to his other bouses tn the West, anil he Is getting quota tions on the wires while others sleep. The vice president of a Wall Street bank la at bl* desk at half past eight every 'Lav. The president of a Broad way bank reach** his desk at nine In the morning As he Ilves tip the Hud- aoti. be has to rise at six. On* inan said that «• ttlng to work at eight was tb the greatest h*lp In th* world. He gi»< well started on bit day by nine, where«» a few years ago. when h* used to arrive at bis office lat*. there seamed to b* n< morning left In which to accomplish anything worth while. "Then, too." h* added. "I ; vlgorating morning air. Ry get to my office I have hearv ihind* •Ing and have had th* early iw of I have met not a few In tb' health. h tend Is to ln«p rit n ar.” ----- y— t attle Are ><»< Sxi'V <*•- la an iutn-l . tl n to a re< •nt 1bull# rroda of b «*ef 1rattle tl»e broad statemeliit is made that prior to tb* discovery of America t . •. were •here. no cattle In tb* »srvtvni b»1 us Is On one of bis vo'VSget C'd c►f d^> «aid to have tirona niestlc anlrn from captiv 9 The Kimi Y oh Have Always lloiiKht han borne the nij;iia- ture of dill«. II. Fletcher, nnd has been made under hl* personal mipervialon for over 30 year*. Allow no one to deceive you in tills. Counterfeit*, Iinitatlonx and “ «Tust-aa-pood ” are but Experiment*, and endanger tlio health of Children—Experience against Expcriim-nU What is CASTORIA Cnxtoria f» a harnilea* NiibHtltute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, IFrop* ami Soothing Nyrtip». It ix l’leaoant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other NarcotiO aiibHtance. IK age lit it« guarantee, it deHtroy« Worm* nnd allay* FevcriRhnemz. It cure« Diarrlnra ami Wind Colle, it relieve!* Teething Trouble*, cure* CoiiHtlpation ami Flatulency. It aaaiiiillate* the Fond, regulates tlio Mtomach and howcla, giving healthy ami miturul sleep. The Children’s Panacea The Mother’ll I rieml. The Kind You Have Always Bought Boars the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES BISHOP SCOTT ACADEMY Fvtllacd, Orejón. Fon mied 147 A Write for Illnstraltd Catalogna ARTHUR C. NEWILL, Principa! PORTLAND. OKF.GON SO« St. Helen's School for Girls. ALL DRUGGISTS, Thirty third year Con»Hi<w1iousbaild- Inif'* Modern equipment. Academle and <• ere preparatory roti rats. Hpe- < ml rnnr«eR in rnu«lr and art. Ilins. tratr*1 catalornq. All departments will rvopen Neptemi»er It MliM FJ.KAyoK TE RBF.TT», Prlnelp<|. CANDY CATHARTIC SWEETEN THE STOMACH Columbia University | i i i Boarding School for T ri »| Finest Miiiatlon on Farlite < osat Ke- mienl Faculty largest Indoor ooll«« athletic net I In the world. Over halt an acre under an arched root Catalogues Free. PURELY VEGETABLE • LIVER TONIC Addreea REV. M. A. QUINLAN. C. S. C. University Park, Oregon MILD BUT SURE i.. '***•• e/ezize ♦-♦•o-e a»o/e»*.o<er*re **#*•■• BOON FOR MOTHERS lurch entertainment the non!es announced: will sing *Ob! That I ke a dove, for theta ay and be at rewt.' ce tile minister" TLe pri ■ if I Tty often dep« a*, uuon the humor of IM judge. “ My mother waa troubled with consumption for many years. At last she was given up to die. Then zh* tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and was speedily cured ” D. P. Jolly, Avoca, N. Y. CATARRH Iicn-I*eekcd Sparrows. Female sparrow* nre especially tyr annical toward their partners, tupicial- ly nt nest-bulldlng time, when they frequently attack their husbands tierce ly on account of tliefr laalneaa. At mi' li times the female voice can always l>e detected. liotli louder and simpler than that of her mate, in she peeks and tousles him. until he tieats nu Ig- iioniln oils retreat Hen blackbird* and thrushes are often very overliear- Ing amj even sp teful toward their mates when their bouse* are In course <>f construction. Every now and then we see a picture of an actress wbo looks as If «be was reluwl too high There ought to be a liw Against ptetograptara making «HBe! e beads SO far t*aek Mother Then and Now. Mrs Growttlle—The idea of your call No matter how hard ing me a goose. When you were court Settled. ing me you said I was an angel. your cough or how long sank*—lla«*n't von ami that neigh Grosella — Well, suppose I did? you have had it, Ayer’s " liât is the use of twitting a man boring farmer settled your differences Cherry Pectoral is the ab ut the lies he told three years ago? yet? Farmer Akers—No; but our lawyers —Chicago News. best thing you can take. have settled. It’s too risky to wait Mothers will tna Mr». A’tnslow's Booth Jenks—Settled? How? inc Syrup the best remedy to use tor then until you have consump Farmer Akers—On our farm*.— Shiluren during the teetbing period. Catholic Standard. tion. If you are coughing Didn't Harmonize. today, get a bottle of I>on’t Get Foot «ora*I Got Foot Fane. "Haven't you tea l that lovely new It i* a certain cure for sweating, callouaand Cherry Pectoral at once. novel?" asked the first summer girl. hot. ttred. aching feet Make» ttvw or tight Tfcrw «lit« Ik.. Me., SI. 411 "No" reidied the other, "The only shoes easy. Try it tod at Sold by all Druggi-’' Price .‘V Ih'tTi accept a substitute Sample edition of it 1 ve seen lias a horrid wtit FKEE. AddrcNM Allen d. Oluisted, LeKuy yellow cover that doesn’t act ord with N. Y. any of my gowns.” — Philadelphia Beat Bia Wife. Brees. Mrs. Crintaonbrak—You say he l»'«t l ull W eight Coffee. his wife with a club? Discounted. Some coffee roaatei s think It neces Mr. Crimsonbeak— Several club*. First American Boy—My papa lives sary to put water on their coffees when Mre. Cri nmoiilieak—The mon-ter. like a prince. they roast them. We don’t think BO. Mr. ('riniaonlieak — Oh. I don’t know se oi.d American Boy—That’s noth rhe result is that when you buy our You see, he ls«at her at golf.— Yonkers ing. My papa lives like the president Monopole Mocha and Java coffee Statesman. of n trust.—Ih-troit Free Press. don’t pay (or any water weight, all coffee—and better than any other you have used. You’ll think so if you know good coffee when you drink it. Sold in one and one-half pound car tons. if your dealer doesn’t handle -........................ ............................ Monopole groceries, send us his name The treatment of - Catarrh with antiseptic and . Wadhams A Kerr Bro*., Portland, Ore. astringent washes, lotions, salves, medicated tobacco and cigarettes or any external or local application, is The Appropriate Vehkle. just as senseless as would tie kindling a tire on top of “She aeema to lie a stickler for doing the pot to make it boil. True, these give temporary everything appropriately.” relict, but the cavities and passages of the head and the “1 should say to, she alwaya does bronchial tubes soon fill up again with mucua. bei marketing in a basket phaeton.— Taking cold is the first step towaids Catarrh, for it Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. checks perspiration, and the poisonous acids and vapors which should pass off through the skin, are Automobile for Doctor. thrown back upon the mucous membrane or inner skin, The largest automobile in the world producing inflammation and excessive flow of mucus, is being conetiucted for a I'araian doc much of which is absorbed into the blood, ami through the circulation tor. In it, accompanied by two medical reaches every part of the system, involving the Stomach, Kidne ys and other students, he inten ’a to make a trip parts of the body When the disease assume* the dry lot in, the breath around the world. It will have two becomes exceedingly foul, blinding headache* are frequent, the eves reel, Bleeping apartment«, a large work hearing affected and a constant ringing in the ears. No tcmeely that ilex.-* room, and four big tanks for storing oil. not reach the polluted blood caa cure Catarrh. S. S S expels from the circulation all offensive matter, and when neb. pure Wanted to Sample Him. blood is again coursing through the body the mucous membranes become healthy ami the’ skin “Do yon take this man for lietter or active, all the disagreeable, painful symptoms elisap- for worse?” asked the parson of , and a permanent, thorough cure is effected, widow who was taking unto herself ■egetable blood purifier does not derange the 3. "Only time can tell,” replied Stomach and digestion, but the appe tite- and ge neral he alth tapidlv improve female whose wisdom was born of perience. "1 can’t give you the infor under its touic effects. Write us about your case ami get the best medical mation asked for until I have had him advice free. Book on blexxl and skin diseases sent on application. THE. SWirr aPKCiriC CO.. Atlanta. Ca. for a few weeks." Imp' ■. lions of cattle was the means of establishing the famous native cat tie herds of the West Indies and Mex ico and the long horned herds of Texas. I'b ■ wild horses of the plains were sim ilarly founded. Intoxicating Ite*ns. Among the peasant* of Southern Italy. Sicily and Harllnla a curloua malady ba« l>**n notlc*<l by physician*, which la cat sod by eating l>eana One of tlie mu*t r«-: i-kable effect* of th* malady I» a • pt» les <>f Intoxication ra sembllng th nt produced by alcoholic drink. In some '«sea portions predls- po*ed to the mal.-i ly are seized with symptoms of Intoxication If they pnaa a field where tin i>ean plant is In flow- er. the odor . lie aufflc ng to affect them. W fist t nsh.h W HI Dr». A report In a Mlaaourl |>ai>*r I* quot ed by th* Chlct go Chronicle as an ex smtile of what queer tricks the Sag rili play on one who INHcrsnt, Cholly—May Gabble fella me you Mid Guesie Gayboy and I would never find any girls to marry ua lie- ause we are too fastidious, Miaj Pepperey — There was a slight misunderstanding there. 1 said you were "two fast idiots.”— Philadelphia Press. < CURE "" ( CURE < J CONSTIPATION TRE A ATI ■» r. ■. V. NEVER SOLD IN BULK L JJmSve any bad t«In the m ith. lear- Ing the bretth iw**t and perfumed It It a plratur» tn tak** th*m. and they art liked esp«- laliy by » h'idren. sweeten the stm* < h by eleartlng the mouth, throat and f nd channel. That meant, they stop undlgewt^ food from souring In the itomdrh prevent ate form ing In the bowels and kill disease rrmt of any kind that breed and feed In the en tire 8) etem are purely vegetable and contain no mer curial or other mineral polio» They con sist of the lateet di»< ov» rles In medicine, arid form a combination of remedies un equaled to make th* blood pur* end rich and make clean skin and beautiful com plexion. tore the etom < h and bowtie • the lasy liver They do not merely soft» fl the stools and reuse their discharge, but strengthen "he bowel« and put tl • m Inta lively, healthy condition, making their ac tion natural never grip nor gripe. They act quietly, pne- Itlvefy and rrr«r - suae any klr i of uncom fortable fee ng T iken regularly th» y make the liver act regularly ard naturally as It ehould They keep the sew. r«ge of the t dy properly muv.r.g and k»-*p th* system clean. Increase the fl w of milk In i trvlr < moth ers If th* mother eats a tablet, it makes her milk mildly purgitlv* and has a mild but certain effect on th* baby In Ibis way they are the only «afe laxative for the nursing Infant taken patiently, persistently will core any form <>r constlpatIon r.o matter how old or now often other remedies have fared They are absolutely guaranteed to cure «r.y case, or purchase money will be cheerfUdy re funded. enet lhc. 2fic. 6Ar « box Rsmplee **nt fren for th* «•king *h no testinjoniale but •••11 «’aerarete on their merit order ab solute auarantee to cure Buy ard try a bog to day, or write us for free aamp *s and bonblet iMrioa era a u vo aswsot co., cw » thw •* nsw roes. UnA iDfT satH h* Baid t* aav r-ader of th s piper who will r* HLW MAD pool to ua any attempt of sub«’ utioa. or someth tag tust at good” when Casca reti art ctlled tat itt"fMT“V tinner "M“ taacà wwcAa gmvu .L ÀJ cafitt^ondeM coah^tsüAh -a.xxxw sa IO w