OCR Text |
Show CAUGHT BY THE BY PE-RU-N- A. We UNO mark the lowly place where he was We try to dream the dreame that tarred hla nights When the rude path that ran beside the FOR LA GRIPPE. SUFFERED TWELVE YEARS FROM AFTER EFFECTS OF LA GRIPPE. Robt L. Madison, A. M., Principal of Cullowhee High School, Painter, N. C., Mr. Victor Patneaudo, 328 Madison MEDICINE writes: "Peruna Is the most effective St, Topeka, Kan., writes: medicine that I have ever tried for la Twelve years ago I had a severe grippe. It also cured my wife of nasal attack of la grippe and I never really catarrh. Her condition at one time recovered my health until two years was such that she could not at night ago. I began using Peruna and It breathe through her nostrils. built up my strength bo that In a couple of months I was able to go to work LA GRIPPE AND SYSTEMIC CATARRH. Mrs. Jennie W. Gilmore, Box 44, again." PNEUMONIA FOLLOWED LA GRIPPE. White Oak, Ind. Ter., writes: Mr. T. Barnecott, West Aylmer, On"Six years ago I had la grippe, followed by systemlo catar.h. The only tario, Can., writes: Last winter I was 111 with pneuthing I used was Peruna and Manalln, monia after having la grippe. I took In the been I health better and have last three years than for years be- Peruna for two months, when I became quite well." fore." -- A TONIC ATTER LA GRIPPE. Mrs. Jane Gift, Athens, Ohio, writes: Mrs. Cbas. E. Wells, Sr., Delaware, "Six years ago I had la grippe very bad. My husband bought me a bottle Ohio, writes: After a severe attack of Peruna. I was soon able to do my of la grippe, I took Peruna and found work." it a very good tonic." A f- NOW THE RADIUM BLONDE. New Type of Girl Seems to Have 8prung Up Lately. "She's a radium blonde," remarked the man in the tan derby. "What's that?" asked the curious man. Haven't you noticed," queried the other, "with all this (talk about the passing of the blonde, that a new type of blonde girl has sort of sprung up lately? It's the tawny kind, sort of red gold, yellow all over. Tho Radium Blonde has hair that Is neither red nor gold When she wears green or brown or red, her hair looks red, but when she wears white or black it looks golden. She has eyes of the same puzzling description, tiger-yelloHer skin Isn't light and It Isnt dark, but there's a dull glow in her cheeks. Altogether she looks like a faint sunrise or a tiger. And she has alt the fascinating ways and the dangerous disposition of the tiger. She seems possessed of the red headed girl's temper and deviltry and of the gentle purring femininity of the golden blonde. I call her the Radium Blonde because she's a comparatively new discovery of mine, and because she's so much rarer than the plain New York Press. "golden girl. MIX ThflS AT HOME. Valuable Prescription Which Anyone Can Easily Prepare. The Popes Mistake. The late pope was once giving an when his audience, attendants, through some oversight, neglected to Introduce by name a very stout the throne. lady who approached The pope, however, took the situation for granted. "Vous etes une bonne mere do famine chretlenna, " he asked gently. In a horrified whisper an attendant Intimated that the lady was unmarried. The pope, with a smothered, gasp sat back in his chair, turned his face away and laughed. He composed himself, however, so quick ly that the lady, whose knowledge of French was not particularly good, never realized his holiness' faux pas. n'est-ce-pas!- y ro-re- Couldn't Lost Him. Yolk wholesale A blu N w home not long ugn stinted a certain drummer on the rend, giving him .l)0 for trnvel'cg s Two wels insM-snd nothing was hoaid finiM him, Finally, tho house becoming lu uiler,i, telegraphed the lleihiei.ent .IS r.iliiov s ' No alcohol, nitrogen, tnutcrlal fur gun 'mill juu ainea yuit Colton and smokeless powder, can be left et -- .! I ' i iim?" secured In paying quantities. It U In a 11:'' -- l iV .'u answer came, rsl I muled that on an area of land proV-g .'en- - i i 'he i.'th. Have ducing a bale nf cotton at least one dr tan i.i i .'. m. f:duddltlonal. An ' ton of si nibs can he gathered. kiln W. I, I - la, lUi'Olt B, ahis t before-breakfa- st ped. y, Correspond inf Recalls M mentous Event Which Ushered In a New Historic Era in America A Memorab e Message. It was a little after one oclock the outgoing and Incoming presidents, arm in arm, entered the to capltol, proceeding immediadetly the presidents room, whence they emerged In a few minutes preceded by the marshal of the district. Judges of the supreme court, and sergeant-at-arms- , and followed by the senators, diplomatic corps, heads of departments, governors of states and others, an'd made their way to a small wooden pavilion, unde which Mr. Lincoln stood while he delivered his memorable message. Chief Justice Taney, old, shriveled to the bone, with a face like parchment, muffled in his silken robes, sat In front of the array of judges. Close by stood Douglas, so near In fact that Mr. Lincoln, finding no place on or under the small reading table provided for him on which to deposit his hat, handed It over to his mighty rival, who held It carefully till the address was finished. Mr. Lincolns voice was clear and penetrating, and was distinctly beard far and near among the assembled multitudes, which preserved unbroken silence from the beginning to ths end. Lincoln spent the early morning hours In his rooms at Willard's, and I remember that among his callers were David Davis, Thurlow Weed, Leonard Swett, Ward Larnon, with many others not now clear in memory. The procession began to move about 11 o'clock, but It was an hour and a half before Buchanan appeared, having been delayed at the capitol In signing bills. Borne ol which, It Is said, got his signature after hi3 term of office had actually expired. When all was ready Senators Baket and Pierce took seats In the carriage fronting the two presidents, Buchanan looking old, gray and haggard; Lincoln dark and firm, and wearing a mournful and anxious expression ol countenance Thus accompanied they set forth on their historic ride to the Around the carriage were capitol. mounted guards and a flying squadron of newspaper correspondents, the lat-ter keeping as near to It as possible, 'one of the artists of an Illustrated paper making a sketch of the scene as he went along. There was a desert .cloud of dust along the avenue Llvt Of all the musical curlosltle thJ Nature has produced lately one of th) oddest Is a man with a piano In Jl lungs. On the Pacific coast there i,1 a man by the name of Pearson, W native state Is said to, be Arkansas but he now resides In a small Wajt. Mil r ' P lnatm-men- Be willing to start anew If fail. The experience you have will count yw hxd to-da- ' was looking everywhere for a piece of paper upon which to write a wonderful thought which has just come to me, and you drop down like an angel from heaven? In a Pinch, Use ALLENS FOOT-EASA powder. It cures painful, smart- aptly White Lead and Linseed Oil need no argument, no advertising to maintain them- selves as the best and most economical paint yet known to man. Thediflicultyhss been for the buyer to be always sure of the purity of the white lead and oiL We have registered the trade mark of the .Dutch Boy painter to be the final proof of quality, gen uineness and purity to paint buyers When this trade mark everywhere. appears on the keg, you con be sore that the contents is Pure Whits Lead made by the Old Dutch Process. Henry Clay and Lew Wallace. a personality ones seen never to be 'forgotten. Tall, slender, graceful, he had besides the air majestic which kings affect, Imagining it exclusive property. Throughout Mr. Clays performance my eyes scarcely left his countenance, which, as he proceeded, sank from sight until, by the familiar optical illusions, nothing of it remained but the mouth, and that kept enlarging and widening until It seemed an elastic link holding the ears together. Indeed, at this late writing, my one distinct recollection of the man and his speech is the mouth and Its capacity for Infinite distension. Autobiography of Lew Wallace. Young Poet (to creditor who presents a bill Oh, how good of you! I lutBcien Made Safe Mr. Clay was of j oinnot jlacill Paint Buying SEND FOR BOOK "A Talk nn Paint." lw valuable inform Uua on Uw paint aubjvct. i rvo upon taquaM, NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY in ttkickrver of the foltom ing ettteo i$ nearest gant New York. Boston. Ctofelunt, Buffalo. Uinrinniti, C'hLruro, kH. Lnot lswta lima, lot dipbin (John T.IammI A Oil Co.) burgh (Nation! Handy. rU SICK HEADACHE Positively cored kj these Little Pills. CARTER'S They also relieve tress from Dyspepsia. OlTTLE and Too Heirtj Eating: A perfect re edy for Dizziness, Karnes Drowsiness, B ad Tost in ths Month. Coats! Tongue, Pxla In the si TORPID LIVER. The IVER I I ing, nervous feet and Ingrowing nails. I It 8 the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Makes new shoes easy. A certain cure for sweating feet. Sold by all druggists, 23c. Trial package, Bowels. Purely Vegetable. FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le regulate ths SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SUALLFRICtl Roy. N. Y. !S Genuins Must Bear A Man of High Principle. Scotsman up for the week end (who has been asked by his friend to go to a music hall.) Na, na, man! D'ye no ken I never visit A music hall on th Saturday for fear I should laugh in th kirk on th' Sawbath? London Opinion. , PILF IKED PAZO IMN'I'MKM-- ttu Ildar IMA TO 1 Fac-Sim- Signature ila REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. RAYS. lo enro on rax (iitranumt Hitiid. Ilipodinir or Prmrudin Cilfa ill or inuuer retuiiiled. Ole. READERS thing advertised in column ihould Insist upon having whai they os tor, refuting 4J substi tutu or imitation. ft After Sketches frnm Harper' Weekly It's a waste of time to cut the aca man who Is insult quaintance of proof. March. Hit. Then a great cheer arose and ran like riding the blustering March winds, a wave along the avenue, carrying and It sometimes seemed to hide the which was likewise flying over the wires in every direction that the Inauguration had been successfully accomplished, and that In spite of all perils, visionary and real, Abraham Lincoln wa- - president of the United States, nnd a new historic era had been ushered In. I stood within a few yards of President Lincoln when he delivered his first Inaugural address from tin east portico of the capltol in Washington, writes a veteran newspaper man. I was a newspaper corresKnd-en- t and had come with him front his home In Springfield to recount for the Incidents of his journey, Washington looked on the day as a momentous one, and was not free from a sense of peril. No previous Inauguration day had been so ushered In, The senate rat all the night previous, not adjourning till after daylight, Crittenden, Douglas, Trumbull, Wig-fal- l and Wado thundering against each other In their final debate, which, after all, was not loud enough to keep all their colleugues awake, us many of- them lay stretched out on the senulorlul sofas, snoring s drowsy The town wns accompaniment. by sunrl-- e, with crowds g:ith"ring at all points from the Wl He House to tha Capltol. testimony my-pap- - n-- ilr entire procession from view. Lincoln and the Bible. Mr. Lincoln, as I saw him every morning. In the carpet slippers he wore In the house snd the black clothes no tailor could make really fit his gaunt bony frame, was a homely enough figure. The routine of hla life was simple, too; It would have seemed a trend mill to most of us. He wns au early riser; when I came on duty, at eight In the morning, he was often already dressed and reading In the libiary. And the book? We have all heard of tho president's fondness for Shakespeare, how he Infuriated Secretary Stanton by reading Hamlet while they were waiting for returns from Gettysburg; we know, too, how he kept cabinet meetings wait Ing while he read them the lutest o Petroleum V, Nnshy's witticisms. It was tho Bible which t saw him reading while must of the household still slept. William II. ('took, In Harper's Magazine. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sjrnp. for chlldra taetblnt, niton ihozuna, million Kcobouio. Un-Min'- s Spi-lnm- nn Vng w Too bnd that most good eating Is bad for one. ITT Cal k luirw J4C pwlwl Mil4 RO XOx f Mam ttMM KluetiKofail) MYJ.MtftlHj w Mpu, Ktivwiuf 11 an S, nj 4'altinff not llaaaa.a. Those who believe in use quality P7 (f? B A EC W G UW POWDER I! 25 ounces for 25 cents Made from pure, carefully tested materials. Makes all baking healthful. Why pay more for inferior Punchs Tribute to Lincoln. Punch's fine tribute to Abraham Lincoln! You lay a wreath on murdered hler!"i whose author In his "History of ship vcrila-Punch" lo Shirley Brooks, It now , entiled to lorn Taylor, 2 lngton town, who can, without an. ("it: undue effort, send forth remarkabl, melodies which sound like the num, tpelter iqU6& of a piano with a melodeon accoa panlment. ST&J This lung piano, as It has beei prw termed by the owner, is partly a Jr wr ! a Pearson has cultivated of Nature, but 2! the pse of the extraordinary Sflftb very carefully and thoroughly until now he Is able to play several or c8 familiar tunes with wonderful expre, sion and technique. Friends of Pe son say that hts services are Invaluable when church fairs,' bazaars ant country entertainments are on bant Bilerea He makes an excellent barker, aa( his tuneful voice penetrates the ft thermost corner of a meeting house ori tent. He says that other people could perfect themselves in the same i complishment If they tried it and pra tlced it regularly. Of Interest to Women. Every woman naturally should be healthy and strong, but a great many women, unfortunately, are not, owing to the unnatural condition of the lives we lead. Headache, backache and a general tired condition are prevalent and to amongst the women of relieve these conditions women rush to the druggists for a bottle of some preparation supposed to be particularly for them, and containing nobody knows what. If they would just get a box of Brandrcth's Pills, and take them regularly every night for a time, all their trouble would disappear, as these pills regulate the organs of the feminine system. The same dose always has the same effect, no matter how long they are used. Brandreth's pills have been In use for over a century, and are for sale everywhere, plain or sugar-coate- Newspaper f Paper from Cotton Stalks. thanks to a invention, to manufacture paper from the fiber of tho cotton stalk. It Is asserted that all grades of paper, from the best form of linen to the I'vwcnt grade, can be manufactured from cotton stalks. In addition to this, a variety of by products, such as boulevard who patronize A certain milkman missed his familiar ring, says the Kansas City Star. It was late In the morning when he finally made the rounds. And the women scolded. IH have to take milk from somebody else! one irate housewife snap- not through Grief's mist We look of tears, Not through glamour of nearness to the Greek Emigration Increasing. Information received by the government from various Greek provinces that the emigration to America Is Increasing. A committee of depu-tiehas bevn appointed to look Into the matter, and it Is probable that measures will be adopted to restrict and limit emigration from Greece. It Is estimated that by the end of tho year the number of those who have expatriated themselves will reach 20 000. Hitherto emigration has taken place principally from the Peloponnesus, but It Is now spreading to central Greece, lo Thessaly and the Islands. To the last call for conscripts for tho army In last September not more than half the usual number responded. Stone Foretells Weather. There exists a stone which Is said The following simple home-mad- e unfailingly foretells changes In the mixture is said to readily relieve aud weather. This stone was found In overcome any form of Rheumatism by Finland many years ago by an exforcing the Kldqeys to filter from tho plorer, and has since been watched b blood and system all tho uric acid aud scientists, with great Interest It prepolsonmis waste matter, relieving at sents a white, mottled appearance, In once such symptoms as btukaehe, sunshine, gradually turning from weak kidneys and bladder and blood gray to Muck as a rainstorm apdiseases. The stone Is composed of proaches. In dry Try It, as It doesn't cost much to rlsy, niter and rock salt make, and Is said to bo absolutely wcutleT the salt In the stone Is promharmless to the stomach. inent but when the air Is filled with moisture the salt absorbs the moistGet the following harmless ingredients from any good pharmacy: Fluid ure and turns black, thus forming ths Extract Dandelion, one half ounce; barometer. Compound Kargon, one ounce; ComGeography to Date. pound Syrup of Sarsaparilla, three ouncesi. Mix by shaking well In a hot-tiThe retnlgewusset and Wlnnlplseo-ge- o rivers unite at Franklin, N. H., and take a teaspoonful after each on the estate of the Hon. Warren F, meal and again at bedtime. This simple mixture la said to give Dcnlel. forming the Merrlmnc. Sevprompt relief, and there are very few eral years ago a teacher In a lower rases of Rheumatism and Kidney grade school at Franklin was Instructtroubles It will fall to cure perma- ing a class In the geography of New Hampshire, nnd among other questions nently. asked where the Merrlmnc river had These are all harmless, every-daIts soiiree. A youngster raised hla should and your druggist keep drugs, thmn In the prescription department; hand with great earnestness. "Well. Johnnv," mid tho teacher, If not, have him order them from the wholesale drug houses for you, rather "where It la?1' "Right down hack nf Warren Danthan fail to use this, If you are iels' burn," wn-- i M- - ieply It la now possible, Human Curiosity on the Pacific Coast. A few daya ago people on Linwood Heard Lincoln9 s First Inaugural Address when A PIANO IN HIS LUNQS, None Complained. All right, madam, he said, softly. in his voice made her Something corn great. pause. Grew to a fair broad way which found But down the long, long corridor of years "What made you late?" she demandthe heights; Where stand the sentinels of Fame and ed, still angry. We try to eense the lonely day he knew, Fate, A tear wavered on the milkmans The silences that wrapped about his And now we see him, whom men called eye and trickled slowly down his soul uncouth, cheek. hand beneath the When there came whispers tremulous and wondrous fair Grown "When when I left home, he betrue of Time, Which urged him up and onward to his And know the love of liberty and truth gan. He paused and gulped at something goal. Brings Immortality, and makes sublime. In his throat. dream-filled world of kindly But, 0, this rugged face with kindly eyes Ills was the "When I left," he said, "my baby Wherein a haunting sorrow ever stays! trees; someone would And marvel-reache- s of the prairie lands; Somehow It seems that through the sor- was dying. I knew be angry with me If I didnt come row rise , The brotherhood of fields, and birds, and so I The echoed visions of his other days. bees, Which magnifies the soul that under- That still we may In subtle fancy trace He - could say nothing more. The The light that led him with prophetic stands; woman said, gently; His was the school of unremitting toll gleams "Im sorry. , Whose lessons leave an Impress strong That here we gaze upon the pictured face Next day the milkman failed to aphis lived was a and deep; that who Of' one' boy pear. The second day he was around dreams! His were the thoughts of one close to very early. D. N. W. the sod, We buried her yesterday, was his j j explanation. No one chided him. They understood. Ills baby was dead. Catarrh. -- ' Ths Milkman Was Lata That Day, but Remarkable And of all this, and from all this, he rose Full panoplied, when came his countrys call. to bear Strong-hearte- d and strong-frame- d the woes Which felt on him the bitterest of all. And well he wrought, and wisely well he knew The strain and stress that should he his alone; He did the task long set for him to do This man who caine unfavored and unknown. . born, EFFECTIVE WHEN HIS BABY WAS DYING Tire knowledge of the ones who sow and reap. GRIP-RELEAS- ED - powders? -- .J JAQUE5 MTC. CO. Uilcsgo I |