Newspapers / The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, … / Nov. 27, 1904, edition 1 / Page 20
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CHAIILOTTE DAILY , OBSEUVEB, 'HOVEIIBER, 27, ICOi. WVi PITITT f"-t Ihat wsy." The heaqs of Hung - .UAaMlV ki.kj $xUJ , vnl-A jM,n .MUirlir . every day on thf Uiict - Ymr v; Mandarin's' eecutton ground but tf a tsptlvs outlaw hap- peita to wear nana upon i.nn - . . ...... . . .-Uk. fc Han. O-Y IXYO YAXQ TIMS. o of a Wounded Japanese r TtH fariah lHff -Wounded itant No Longer Ilnenile r.l Imliilorctice of Um Man it Bmndl boowt. , Corre$ondence of. The New v Evening l'ost. , , , the kaoliang,' t- that 1 ' tl! rth jts burden s O grain . too like tasseiea corn, is beinJ aratlrd town. Price rose till H sterns ) -vv on recent battlefields. On "- f,mparutlvely in expensive city. So halUefleld it stand in rows. 'Qjgreat is the demoralisation that Mr tn rjku se viunipn, w nnia-uire nearer here man in japan. Bnw- n he t In Japanese employ, th Man darin fears to touth him. ' If the pty t-f Uao yir has a bias. It la In favor of the Itussian. Ana why. and the cause la thus explained: Spooflc Russian- man wantee fox spirt. He no ask price. Be aay, 'I lake,' and pay what merchant man say. Rus-trta-man, he no care for money. What he wnntee buy." That made times brisk In the ancient . wermg euck8tn any design or ..mm that wtu serve to cov-r ur ; earthworks, and sentries, or assist i t-tealthy Infantry, reconnoitring, or i lose the approach of the enemy. The intse farmers hasten to cut It aa the ,niea dictate, glad to be able to save nie -of .. thlr'rOP ' Children; no bigger than blade of the skins with the wool on cost JI.50 each; beaver for a pair of gloves, IX.50; rud linings for great-coata, rnaile of the del icate breasts of foxes, cost t"0; lynx skins, 3o; a woman's sleeve Jacket cf fos breasts, beautiful of course, but -$36: dogskins (tamed and crossed Si berian wolf), $12 for a sufficient num ber to make a sleeping ba: the fur of ilk. m-earlnsr nothing but a pigtail ,.. mi nlrelv matched ami wn their backs and a narrow blue pretty enough and large enough for a ron depending from the neck In frwi.lW41Ban., opera coat, $6t to $S0. For a. ve help with the sickle; and so oOttwn next to tne mountains, where i te elderly women, who have hitherto )u are obtained, these are inflated 'en ao fearful Of showing themselves! r(w. ail(j lne lavish Kussians are re ntal it appeared there were no women Lponslble. c- in Manchuria. Strong as any peasants s re tftesei women, delicately as lhey tJOlXG TO TUE WORLD'S FAIR, i Hive on the tiny feet which the men; luive made thero bind centuries so they; fji president's Flint Journey of would never run awav. Many Among the looile He Will One of them. In the plain before Liao. Jo to His .Mother s Birthplace in Yang, came upon prostrate Japanese; (jeorgta and lake a Speech on tlie Jtavo (juostion. soldier. H looked dead, dui ne m jiierely la last faint. It xvas twelve days subsequent to the end of the battle- Ihe searching parties had not found him. New recruits passing on I'htt'itao Tribune. Missouri having gone for Roosevelt, the President is going to Missouri. Come and are tlie greatest expose their way to supply the vacant plnces tloll tne WOrld has ever sei n." said a at the front were called. They got committee consisting of Mayor Holla ; their first glimpse of what a battle may wells, of St. Louis; W. H. Thompson mean to an individual. land Corwin H. Spencer, of the extosl- WAR AND THE XNDIVIDVAU I company, to hi in ut the White House The unconscious soldier had been to-night. . struck In the thigh by one bullet, and! The President allcr some nine ngui one tibia had been shattered by anoth er, Tha recrulu saw the attempts he had made to bandage and diess his wound With the "first aid" material. hieh every soldier carries: ihey saw Ing announced that they could "show him" on Saturday, November 26. He said he could remain only that day, but the officials figure that he will be so impressed with the magnitude of the the wrapping brown with dried blood. fair that he will tarry with them yet JBent and broken millet wunin reacn.a nine wane muxer. Fhowed how he had fed himself during the twelve days of his painful Isolation, jlo had eaten he tasaela of grain at the top by pumng them down to his mouth, i Uthausting one spot, he had only to drag himself a foot or two to be among plenty again. It was want of water, of course, which tortured him most and which Anally took his senses away, .After reviving at the hospital, he spoke of holding his mouth open to catch rain, of setting his cup for it, of making hollow with a piece of khaki, and of lapping dew from blades of the kaoliang In the morning. Tes, his shat tered shin had ached; but lack of water to wet hit tongue, that made him think lie must die. There are worse sights In the kaoli ang.; It gives one a shudder to see a flock of rooks settling and clrcjlng, and t ha tall-down way In which pariah dogs cousins of the Siberian wolf- emerge, upon the pains as you ar? rio- lng along needs no Interpretation. In the busy days of burial, muny Kussians were not placed very deep. Once In a while you see a uniform containing u few bones, beside a violated grave. The other" day, as the attaches were being shown the positions the first army fought forf the whole party surprised a dog tugging hard at something. It ran, leaping; and there lay a poor Cos aack. Wholly uncovered, with one trous r torn away, revealing well, soldier ing la not merely a parade through -waving flags and cheering friends, sing ing dear eongs of country under beau tiful camp-fires, nor even all shooting and getting decently shot. Another episode, which, however, 1 cannot describe at first hand, was this -which comes through Gen. Fuji, of the Kurokl army: Several wounded men lay on a hillside after a night charge. Six were Japanese and seven were Russian. They aw one another, and crept to gether and stretched themselves side by aide to keep warm. One Russian, whose hurt was in the arm, offered to steal dowB the hill to water and till all the canteen. He had gone only a little The Invitation alao wan extended to the cabinet officers, and It Is expected several of them will accompany the President. President Hoosevelf told (he commit tee, jokingly, that he was sorry the landslide In Missouri overwhelmed his old friend, Senator Cockrell. The President's journey to St. Units will be in the nature of a "triumphal procession, and it is said it .will be a first of many such journeys through out the country. His trip to 'St. Ixmls will be ati especial recognition of the fact that Missouri gives him her elect oral vote and will send a Republican to the United States Senate for the first time in three decades. He will-go to stimulate this affectionate leaning t0" werd republicanism. f He will depart by one route and re turn by another, in one or the other direction he will pass through West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, the four States whicn rendered"' him so much honor at the polls. He will-shake every hand he can reach, and make a personal response to every salutation. This Journey will bo the President's first thankful acknowledgment to the people who have given him the largest popular vote ever cast ror a presiden tial candidate. He is determined to know the people better, to mingle with them. He Is yeaolyed particularly to get closer to the people of the once solid riouth. s President Roosevelt will Invade the South with arms wide open.- He will vfalt his mother's birthplace. He will go into Georgia, which he regards as the State most hostile to his negro policy. He will make a speech explain ing to the Southern peoplo- exactly what his attitude s on the race ques tion. He will declare he never sought to establish race equality, and that he does not consider this opssible or de sirable. He will assert that his only Idea Is to recognize manhood wherever it is found, either white or black, and that he seeks to elevate the manhood In the negro. He believes mien action win e COL. MUSBY'S DEEDS I W,K). ; ntco better feeling between the -Who could not- distinguish his uniform Another Russian volunteered. He got safety out of sight but he never re turned... The Japanese got him. The rest of the men could not walk, so all lay quietly In one group, enemies no longer.- in the morning they were found by a patrol, and cared for in the same hospital. . . . After Liao Tang battle one missed thp numerous curling smokes which here tofore had risen from a fighting piao that had been won. One missed also those tandem couples of soldiers bearing- between them on a pole a heavy box or ashes. There were so many dead here, and it took so long to tind them, that only officers were inciner ated, ?! The ash of the hard part of their throats was preserved and shipped back to be burled In Japan; but the men of common rank had to be buried in quick ly dug trenches holding sixty or eighty rach. OUTWARD NATIVE INDIFFER-ENCB. k- The attitude of the natives has th neutral character of Indifference. They carry wounded Russians as they carry wounded Japanese, and both as they would carry logs or pails of water, suspended from shoulder poles. It is only because the "No. 1 Japanese Man," aa they term the highest alien authori ty, has fixed prices that they do not charge their yellow brothers .is much a they charged the Russians. When field Marshal Oyama sent 1,000 yen to be -'distributed among the natives wounded.iby shells which fell in the city, and 1,900 er. more to the Scotch North and South. In u word, Theodore Roosevelt hence forth will devote all his tremendous en ergies to become the patriarchal, al most the pastoral, head of the people, and not political President. So hereafter during his incumbency In office he will deal in a more marked way with the people at first hand. He will mingle with the masses, learn their necessities, their desires and their ambitions. He will ignore the recom mendations of politicians and- the be hests of party organizations. He will appoint to Federal office only such men as are acceptable to the people, and in his selections for office he may not be influenced by Senators. Repre sentatives or by any leaders. This determination follows and hangs on the pledge which Mr. Roosevelt vol untarily gave last Tuesday night when he said: "The wise custom which limits the President to two' terms regards the substance and not the form, and under no circumstances will I bp a candidate or accept another nomination." I-'lugidng th Kncni). Youth's Companion. The agent for "The Modern World of Music," hesitated at the foot of the driveway ami glanced nctin at the bright red flag which fluttered from the front porch. "Coming up or ain't ye"" called a loud voice, as a tall figure rose from a chair on the porch and turned toward the stranger. "Are you going to have an auction or hae you scarlet fever or snmeihioir missionary's hospital, which cared oc uj-ins, an was well. Three tlm-s 'heuvctty waa lightly looted; first, by . ie retiring and reckless Russians; . hen: by; the soldiers of the Mandarin; 'icn by the In-rushing Japanese. B one wa: there looting such as you ight fancy from the term. Some furs om this shop, all the beer that could - carried from that, all the chickens at ; could be caught anywhere, 1 counting to very little. The Chinese saw no difference of cat meat in the few hour they suffer ! from i these changing dominations. n the - Hunghutze those lawless : ser are pro-Russian where Rus i controls,; and pro-Japanese where an fontrol-lf It pay,. Below here ' offered their fighting strength to invading troop. Not accepted as rs, these bandit served as scouts, : r direction of Japanese officers, one r. As far south asPulantlen they i mly were sentries at official door s. They are on duty about Shusau H'lls now r . A scout, their method of gaining ln ; tion I: to enter Russian lines. friendliness, tell tall stories of v t array of the enemy couth of (ountles number of great guns. by way of the mountains, they i ! he Japanese lines. elvV th H rtsucs, situation and extent of i ks. disposition or strength, etc i e, "do not go here big fort," not go there nany cannon," very faat this way" and very iaint any auction, that s certain sure, bawled the voice from the porch, "and 1 don't reckon it's scarlet fever either: leastways the doctor ain't said so. Come up. won't ye?" l guess not to-day." called the book agent, and he sided on un the road. The man on the porch resumed his seat and looked affectionately at the small red flag. "Living outside the villaae as we do I don't know how we'd manage without mat nitie nag. he remaiked to the summer boarder. S "It comes Dundy more wavs than one. Folks are aptN to be kind' ' winded after they've cllm' up the hill, and In times past we've had , agents for one thing or another setting on this piay. zarette hours nt a time. Put I most gen'ally hear of 'em In the village the day before, and since the Iceman give me that little flag I haven't had a mite of trouble. "I gur-f riow I'll take her in; the ice man d ,'t gen'lly come by on Thurs days, n yet of course he might take a notion; but If he don't get along by this tiros o' day I am apt to give him up. ti.-fui "2e cr,tt-" he smoothed ,t tn flas tenderly as he took It in to toe house. fjoulsvine Courier-Journal. !lerdy"Wahta,:un wuli not te." w jna"tmy)."l wish my wife A mil oV" caa eU ? oi mln DKXUKS CRUELTY TO PRISONERS Urn Confederate Chieftain Replies to (iio- llastcaci Charges Never . Knot Culfl'U Soulier Captured by 111 ilea During Uw War- Uw - Warm lYioiKla Among Men Who Were IU prisoner J Vwty Years Ago -.Never tnkiiMl In Word Nor Deed. ' Washtnjrton Pat. , Col. John S. Alosby, the noted Confed erate gu errilla, chieftian, has made pub He a lcf.er wiilch contributes an Inter esting captr to civil war history, as particularly ivlating to the Mosby com nand. Its operation and general con duct, and i designed to defend that oody against charges of inhuman treat ment toward Afosby'a prisoners among ihe Federal lorceg. The letter is written to Frank P. Moss, of Bu Siun, Mass., a Union veter an who wtjs captured by Mosby lo Fairfax coulty. Va.t October 13. 1863. During the Oram! Army encampment in Boston las! summer, c'ol. Mosby re ceived an IiiTltatlon from Mr. Moss and Capt. Bai-lop, of Brookllne, Mass., both of whom! are his warm persona) friends, IuvltiiK him to attend a Union veterans' banquet to be held there. When this inviiati'jii was made public Mr, Kdward Campbell, of Uniontown, Pa., another Union veteran, wrote u let ter to Mr. Mofb Inclosing another at tacking Col. Monly's conduct during the civil war. Mr. .Moss transmitted this letter to Col. MonJiy, who hug replied as folKnvs: "My Dear .Sir: Your letter of the 4th InHtatit was forwurded to me at War lemon, Va , where I was spending a few days. With it was inclosed a letter from Mr. Edwaru Campbell, of Union-, town, Pa., who says 'tha I have a very excellent friend lure i.ao served In West Virginia during the war who holds an opinion of Mosby which 1 do not share. My fri.?nd, Capt. Hustead. declares thai (Jen. Mosby (1 never was a general) deliberately shot one of his, Hustead's men. after ilosby's men had captured him. "Cupl. Hustead no doubt believes what he says, but he is speaking from, hearsay If he had been a prisoner and saw the shooting, 1 can see no reason why he would not huv been shot too. The rules of Judicial procedure require a criminal charge to be sufficiently defi nite to give reasonable notice to a par ty of the time und the- place where the alleged offense was committed. NO W1TNKSS ACA1NST -HIM. "You observe that I am not informed of either; but 1 can pjead In general terms that I never myself, nor did 1 ever know any one of my men, having been guilty of any such atrocity. It 1 had been guilty of this cold-blooded murder, then 1 could jUBt as easily have murdered several thousand prisoners that I took in the war. There are many of these men now living and not one has ever appeared as a witness against me. Some of the best friends I have had since the war were my prisoners during tlie war. I had a great many collisions, with the Second Massuchu sells and the First Vermont Cavalry. In oae affair with the Second Massachu setts we captured Maj. Forbes, of Bos ton, and 6H of his men. The Forbes family are my warm friends; they gave me a dinner at Parker's a few years ago. Among the guests were Dr. Oliver W-iulell Holmes, James Russell Lniwell and Mr. Justice Holmes. Gov. Grout, of ermoiit, was an officer of the First Vermont Cavalry. He was wounded and captured by me. I met hirn a few years ago in Washington. If any one wants to know how I treated my pris oners let him ask Gov. Grviut, Gen Wells now dead belonged to the same regiment. He was my prisoner and my friend. I have received cards of invi tatlon to the weddings of two of his children. "When I was appointed by President Hayes consul at Hong Kong, Gen. Wells wrote a letter to Senator Kdniunds ask ing him to vote for my confirmation. Senator Proctor, whose general (Stough- ton) 1 captured at Fairfax Court House, called on President Roosevelt to urge my appointment in the Department of Justice. In the campaign of 1864 In the Shenandoah Valley, the war records show the activity of my command against Sheridan; but in all the reports and correspondence you cannot find a complaint from any officer of the vlola? tion by me. or by my men, of any of the usages of war. Gen. Sheridan knew all about my character as a soldier He published his memoirs, and while he has a good deal to say about the an noyance we gave him, he makes no complaint against me or my men. "You observe that Mr. Campbell says that Capt. Hustead served In West irginia. If 1 would condescend to rest my defense on an alibi, I could easily piove it. as my command did not oper ate in West Virginia, except In a small strip of the counties of Berkely and Jefferson, bordering on the Shenandoah river. The valley pike runs south from M utinsburg about 20 miles west of Harper's Ferry to Staunton. Va., in u parallel line to the Blue Ridge. Our operations in the Shenandoah Valley were in the country lined east of the volley like, and iieYer extended Into West Virginia. MTRDKR A MORAL IMPOSSIBILITY. "Hut I do not rely on the plea of the physical impossibility of my having o.uc Mien a aeea, out on tlio moral impopsiriiiity of it. No man can truth "in say mat 1 ever did an unkind .11 l or spoke an unkind word to a pris oner. This is not the first time that sue.i a crime has been imputed to mc and located in West Virginia. A few years ago I was introduced in Wash ington to a innn from West Virginia by - iiieii.i no loin me that the man had once been my prisoner. I asked him "hen and where I captured him; he s. id in ISM or 1862 at a certain place in West Virginia. 1 told him that at that time I was a private In th-ittrsi Virginia Cavalry, with my regiment in eastern Virginia, and that 1 had never neen within a hundred miles in my life of the place where he said he was cap tured. The fellow was a Methodist preacher, who had called to get my rr end to take him to the Pension Office ne aantea to be put on the pension rolls. He had told rny friend that I had tieated him with great cruelty, and that he would thrash W hen I exposed the fraud, he went off ai a uotinie-quick. "t'apt. Hustead's report Is slnmlir an echo of the mythical stories thai were ioio. nnoui me in the war that will some day be published as an appendix to the 'Arabian Nights." " fC7 YOU R 5 ? &RiUI LG G 1ST ' -FOR"".". ; 1 OFAMMJ0 Willi Wine of Cardui on sale st every drug store; any woman can secure relief from the distressing pain of female weakness. With this great woman tonic painful period and bearing down pains can be avoided. Who would suffer unnecessary menstrual pain? " i Wine of Cardui cure menstrual disorder in nineteen case out of every twenty, and no woman who ha suffered from this ailment has ever taken Wine of Cardui without securing great benefit, even when her trouble was complicated with more serious weakness. , Wine of Cardui has cured all manner of female weakness for three-quarters of a century, and a woman who has tried it has confidence in it she will use no other because she knows Wine of Cardui cures. Ask your Druggist for Wine of Cardui and be sure he gives it to you. Wine of Cardui costs but $1.00 a bottle. It is within the rech of every woman. It brings positive relief, where the treatment of the best specialists fails and a specialist's treatment is expensive. Wine of Cardui is a cheap treatment cheap because the cure is quick and certain. If you are trying other treatment and have failed to secure relief, Wine of Cardui is the medicine you should take,. L Freeman, Ixd., March 2, 1904. I have been suffering since last summer with change of life. I have doctored for it but found no relief until I commenced taking Wine or Cardui and Thedford's Black-Draught. Before I commenced taking them I had to hire my washing done and now I can work all day and never tire. I think Wine of Cardui a blessing to woman. I cannot praise it too highly. u I wish all the suffering women would use the medicine and get well. MRS. KATE VANDEVENTER. . """"""""",,l"l""Si""Wl""lll THE SIBERIAN RAILWAY. It Is Ilclng Draught Into .Condition to Meet Heavy Demands Upon It. London Times. on the straight; but a radical cure la now being sought by building nsw sid ings on the opposite side of the line to the old ones, of length sufficient to accommodate a train, or even two From accounts we have received from ! "liln- 01 w icngin. i nese -sidings are uuuui iweniy nines ayari un i.ne a traveler who within the last month average, and to facilitate their con- passed over the whole of the Siberian j Htructlon the points to form their June Railway from Mukden to European j Hons with thv existing lines are being Russi are at present engaged in what Is noth- i ,. L. 1 :. . .u... .,11 It appears that the Russians j . " ,, "a ,ilot i lug itss than properly completing the construction of the line and bringing it into n condition nt to carry the heavy trul'f.c with which it now has to cope. ylt the time it was opened, although many Hue permanent bridges wers erected over the larger rivers, many ot the smaller bridges and culverts were) merely temporary structures of wood, which further were placed slightly out of alignment, so that the permanent bridges, to be erected afterwards, should, afford a straight run. The work of putting in iron spans on concrete piers instead oStheW'trtifiitmiiy bridges Is now being vigorously pushed forward, being rendered nil the more nccissary by the decay which rapidly attacks the soft pine which wc.s orig inally used. Another detail of the equipment to which great attention is belli;; devoted is the cr(tion of water lay them on the ground and put In the fish-plate bolts. Very heavy trains are being run, the minimum load over maafy jiarts of the line being sixty-five trucks, while it rises sometimes to eighty-five or ninety. Traffic is most congested on the Manchurlan section, between Tsitsihar and the Russian frontlet, at Manchuria station; in consequence of the extremt.y heavy gradients there, not only arc the trains shorter, but es pecially powerful engines ure required, und even o the speed uphill la some times i.o more than a walking pace. The train in which our informant trav eled, :.nd which was not passed by any other train, took three und one-half duys in getting from Kharbln to Man churia Station, a distance of 501 or Got) ! miles. This section includes tlie Hing j ngin tunnel, w hich is not bricked and Is very wet, it Is Hunted throughout by i electricity, and watched by guards sta tioned in recesses cut at intervals in UwT for supplying the engines with - ru nil g shea w"Ur' orn''-'!l; lM lone by, n(W bu built at Khal?:u. Ior eans of pumping engines placed iji j '.fete of line, but before cbamoers sunk Mx or seven feet below lhe8't. ,e.e un Sil ,,,, lh(. 11P;ll-est the ground In order to protect the water from freezing, and, as the tops of the engine tenders are some ten feet above the rail level, the water had some times to be raised through a total dis tance of twenty feet or more. These underground pumping stations are now heinj4 replaced at about forty places be tween Chellnbiiisk and Khurbin by brhk water-towers built un to a height of fifty-two feet, so that the engine tenders may be readily filled by gravity. To revent the water from freezing in Un- tanks of these towers, there are pache.i round with oakum and protect d by roughly shaped logs, which .tie aguoi enclosed with u brick wall, the funnel which (antes the smoke and steam from the pumping engine below beii-.c; also carried up through the tanks to assist in maintaining the tempera ture. ' The existing permanent way requires continual attention. The rails are light fifty or sixty pounds and are laid upon transverse wooden sleepers In bnl- lattt. which, for the most part, consists locomotive shoos .were at Kharoln. The congestion of traffic is also very great at Kharbln, owing' to tlicf huge accu mulation of wagons which it Is lniiion Blble to send back to Russia without In terfering with the east- bound traffic; and ir: order o gain some room for shunting and working tne train:;, a loop is being built from a point on tlie Mukden line a lew miles sooth tsf Khar bin to Join the Vladivostok line. The fuel chlelly used on the railway Is wooii, and of this huxe stacks six feet and eight feet high and many yards thick are to be seen at almost every station ahwg the line, whether in w nodd ed or unwooded regions, the quantities stored being apparently sufficient to last ror years. Twelve miles east of Man churia Station . there is a coal mine yielding lignite of very poor duality, but at Mukden itself there is a large stock of coal, some of which has been brought up from Port Arthur, and some from the Yental mines. The engines between Mukden and Kharbln arc fired GOWAN'S PNEUMONIA CURE Cures Throat and Lung Affections. Coughs, Oolds, Sore Thrcxit, Congested Lungs, etc., should be tremcdut oiico as such affections ni-o very liable, if neglected, to develop iutJ Pneumonia or Consumption. Cowan's Pneumonia (Jure Is a safe, speedy and certain oure for all such conditions and tU only kowu reliable remedy for Pneumonia. It Is upplled ex ternally, gives Immediate, relief and effects a prompt mid per manent cure. Sold by all Good Druggists, $1 per bottle Mr. M. M. Ansl.y, T. F. P. A., AtlpnH r'wet Point R. R., Allnnta.Ga., -y: "Ihavcu5Pd Gtjwan's-Pnei-.raor.la Cure in my family and do not UcsilBtn to e&y Hint for couths, colds anil croup, it ha no equal. I would not feel if: without a bulie Lf it uilhin easy reach." VTr. E. H. Lea, Agent So. Its'., Richmond, Va., aayi: "I have tacd Govran'j Pneumonia Cure in my family Vith inos' gratifying results, especially for che.t culdi u.U coughs. I jind it a most excellent remedy.' your druggist cannot supply you, write to re Cowan Medical Co., Durham, N. c. ( fin -r IT'S LIQUID. UR.ES A I, I HEADACHES. The perfect remedy for Oolds, Indigestion. Periodic Pain a , Brain Fag, etc. Prevents Train ' tiausea and Sick Headache. Braces the nerves. It's Harmless. Trial bottle lOo. of black soil, w ithout stone or gravel, j partly by coal and partly by wood. The result Is that subsidences arc fre-, u,lr informant took-twelve days to fluent, notwithstanding that the sleep-' travel from Mukden to Irkutsk, thus rs are placed vnusuullv close togeth-1 traversing about 125 miles a day, In er. Then the soft pine of ' which the eluding the passage of Lake Haiku, sleepers are made quickly rots, the i performed in an old German -paddle-more so since no preservative measures! ooal, built at Stettin, which did not are adopted, and the nerrssitv for fre-!do more than eight knot3. He saw the queiit renewal Is shown bv the heaps of j mllitnry trains rolling round the lake rottioK sleepers that lie along the 'line, i by the new railway. From Irkutsk to Of course, every effort is being madei -V-oscow the trains were taking ten days to in. lease the capacity of the line to cover a distance .vhich normally ! its utmost, one of the great difficul-i (1,ne '' "tx or six a nd one-half d.ij It ties encountered In this respect lies ml mt be lemetnbered, however. I hat the the f :ct that the sidings at places ' west-boi'nd trains were olten kept for where two trains coi'ntr In different dl-! hours i:, Mdii gf-- preference b?iro; n -.t- recti"-s .,,,, cross each other wen- oriit-' ""illy givt a '- '.- ist-i-.--.ii.; tr.' .):. tnally made so short as to be unable toi 'hose l.V.u-r he counte-1 ten or eleven hold the lone trains nolv helntr run. I nally on I lie a veragc (one day thirteen ItLt) .ft) !C V FREEST V CUREFOrt, This difficulty was minimised as much as possible by making th" westward bound trains short enough to go Into the sidings anil allowing east-bound trains, with as many trucks us the en gines could manage, to ruh past them in the tii.ie during which be wai not sleepin,;. s .iy ff-oin six in the lnoiiiin-: till eleven at nisht. The total numb r passing in thl- whole twenty-four hoi r:i must, th:rcfoi .-, have been about sixteen. TELLS ALL ABOUT THE K LIQUOR, OPIUM, MORPHINE, AND OTHER NARCOTIC DRJG DISEASES, THE TOBACCO HABITa NEURASTHENIA OR NFRr rXHAl'KTION. fF INTERC5TED FILl OUT, CUT OUT. AND MAIL t nt l UUHUW ABOVE IT NEVER FAILS. Harris & Buquo, Erin, Tenn.. manu facturers of tlie celebrated Erin Lime have In their employ, in various depart ments of their business, several hun dred men. The firm write to the Drum mond Medicine Co., New York, In great praise of Dr. Drummond's Light ning Remedy for rheumatism, and say that they have cured four cases with It, and -that It has not failed in a single instance. Send (5 to the . Drummond Medicine Co.. and they will ship to your address two large bottles a six mnnth'. treatment by return express. Agents wanted. . i k-..l Obstinate racking coughs that settle on the lungs and may develop into Pneumonia over night are quickly cured by It soothes and heals the inflamed air passages, stops the cough, heals-and strengthens the lungs. FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAII contains no opiates or other harmful drugs, and is safest for children and delicate people, - ' ; -and insist upon having the genuine, as no other remedy Remember the name-FOLEY'S HONEY AMD TAR is so safe or as certain in results. Given Up to Die With Croup. Mrs. P. I. Cordier, of Mannington, Ky writes: "My three-year old girl had a severe case of croup; the doctor said she could not live and I gave her up to die. I went to the store and got a botUe of Foley's Honey and Tar. The first dose gave quick relief and saved her life." Editor Cured of Lung Trouble. W. L. Straub, Editor of St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times, writes: "When coming across the bay from Port Tampa I got wet and caught cold that affected my throat and lungs. I neglected it, thinking I would soon recover, but I kept getting worse, until I bought a bottle of Foley a Honey and Tat, and it cured me completely' - Three sises 25c, 50c, $1.00. ' The SO cent sto contains two and one-half times as much as tho small size and the $1.00 bottle almost sis times aa much. Refuse Substitutes . ' ZZ- SOLD m RECORDED ZZIZZIIZZZ ? H. JORDAN & COMPANY. KV'j f ;'.'S-
The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 27, 1904, edition 1
20
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