I 1 VOL. XXVIII, -No 40 SIW BIRR, CBAVKR COUNTY. S . , Tl'ES AT, AUGUST 1 5 19l5 -FIU.S v SECTION. 28th TEAR TEX -BOSS" COTTON MESS J SIMPLEST, STKONGEST, BEST THi MURRAY GIMNIMQ SvtTIM SIM, FteStr, CantltiiMft, Etc. OIBBB MACH INERT CO. CelttmbU. S. C. ;,". NEW YORK HARBOR. Inu of. tke Wondera of ThU Tul Cronileil Port To present to the mlud an easily con jured picture of New York harbor one might make tlie comparison of tUe up turned right hand, with the long, straight forefinger for the lower stretch of the Hudson, with the thumb, Joint turned out, standing for the bent East river and the palm of the hand repre senting upper New York bay , The three together make up the harbor of New York. AS Hudson river shelters most of the north Atlantic liners while in port, so does Gust river harbor those that go to make up the truly' foreign fleets. Here they are, pier after pier of them the steamers that go. to the far countries. Mind the roll Braail, Ar gentina, Chile, Peru, west coast of Af rica, Australia, ' India, China, Japan 1 And hark again to the call of the ports Bio Janeiro, Buenos Ayres, Valpa . raiso, St. Paul de Loanda. Cape Town, Tamatave, Sydney, Singapore, Hong : kong, Yokohama! And the strange stuff of their cargoes! Rubber from the'Amacon swamps see the naked In dlans tapping the trees and the slimy reptiles in the shadowy ooze; horn and tallow from the pampas mark the cen taur-like vaquero - and his whirling riata; gold dust, ivory, palm oil from . the west coast Dreams for you there! Palm oil and gold dust aud Ivory; ele- ohauts and sacrificial fires and trains of captive slaves; hemp, tea, silks and smuggled opium and do not believe 1 that opium is not smuggled into New York harbor to thla day. You think of all that, and your Imagination flames The gentlemen In the pilot houses are not always in placid moods. Wild eyed men glare out from pilot houses aloft, like eag'.cs from their eyrios, and pass the time of day. Bays one: "WJiero a f think you're going? Back, wHI yonT And the other: "Back? Me back? "You? Yes, you, you slop eyed, slack mouthed, spine, twisted fresh water goob, you square headed, fatherless" And so on, detailing Irremediable flaws In the genealogy, after which both back down aud avert the Impending colli- sion. James B. Connolly In Harper's j Magatlne.',. -.: A PAINTER'S DREAM. Pse'a Storr of the Sleen Vlnloa of , t Sir Godfrey Kneller. I dreamed I was dead, said the paint er. Before me 1 saw a door and treat number of people about it. As I drew uearer I could distinguish St. 'Peter by his keys with some other of the apostles. They were admitting the people as they came nest tJ the door. As the first after my coming up op croached for admittance St. Peter asked his name and then his religion, "I am a Roman Catholic," replied the spirit "Go in then," Rays St Peter? "and sit down in those seats on the right hand." The next was a Presbyterian He was admitted, too, after the usual questions nud ordered to sit dowu on the seat opposite the other. , My turn came next, and as I ap proached St. Teter very civilly asked me my name. , 4 said It was 'Kneller. I bad no sooner said so than St' Luke, who was standing Just by, turned to ward me and said, with a great deal of earnestness, "What, the famous Sir Godfrey Kneller of England?" "Tho very same, sir." says I, "at your serv ice." On this St. Luke embraced me and made a great many compliments on the art we both of uj bud followed In this world aud entered so far into the subject that he seemed almost to tare forgotten the business for which I came thither. At last, however, he recollected himself and said: "I beg your pardon. Sir Godfrey. I was so much taken up with the pleasure of conversing with you. But, apropos, j.iay, sir, what religion may you be of?" "Why, truly, sir," says I, "I am of no religion." "Oh, b!i" says he, "you will be so good then as to go in find take your seut wuere you pieuse. Pope.' - : ' . J Orlulu of tho Derby. ' The twelfth Earl of Derby Is un known to the reader of the ordinary history book. Lovers of art know hlio vaguely as the pt.er who uiairicd the pretty and popular actress Eliza Far rea, whom the young l.awreuco palnt i so brilliantly. But the earl yearly Us Ms revenge wheu all the world aud Lis vi.'e Cock to Epsom to see the race far tlie Derby stakes, Tor that race, In .its Institution In 17S0, was named aft er the Jovlul young peer who was one cf t'-e leading patrons of the Georgian t . Londou Standard. BOTH SIDES QUIET Neither Liquor Nor Temperance Fac- tions Talking on Election Results Evening Times te be 8 Pages and; Have I AsioclaUd PrsM Rsports. Corporation . Commlulon and Clerks es Junktl. Ths Mountain District Crowdtd. Many Yellow Fsvsr Rsfugsss. Raleigh, Aug. 12. The number of convicts now in the penitentiary, here is only 107, of "which 17 are women, seven of the later being . white. ' The total number of State convicts is or y 700. The very rainy weather which has prevailed every day this week has given much trouble to thebrick-n a 1 .g plant, this being the principal occupa tion of the convicts , within the pris on. ,.-'.-.lv-w--'':':.y:.' ".".'' ThercJs relatively very little talk about the proposed election here on the bar room question. . Both sides con tinue to talk as if they were confident Mr. N. Broughton said today that there were three points to be considered re garding the 'petition for the holding of an election on licensed saloons, this being the only issue presented by the petition. The first is that the petition must be very carefully examined and purged of the names, of the persons who were not in Raleigh at the time it was carried around, itbeing stated that the names of persona are on it who have not been in Raleigh in many months, second that this petition con tains the names of a number of persons who cannot read nor write, and to whose signatures there is no witness, third, that the registration books must be purged, in order to ascertain the names of persons who have died ard re moved, since the total number of names on the petition must be a required pro portion of the number of the registra tion books, in order to insure a call for an election- Next Monday the Evening imesw'll begin the publication of the Associated Press reports, and will appear in eight page form, having put in a new press and other machinery. , The Corporation Commission and their clerks leftftoday for Richmond and thence goeswestward over the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway, and from St. Louis to Deadwook, S. D. State Auditor Dixon was at Roxboro today and delivered an address. He continues to be in a very great demand as a speaker, It is now thought that J. H. Camden the young Vwginian, who fell from the roof of the agricultural building at the A. & m. College yesterday after noon, and who is now in a hospital here, will recover. His escape from death is certainly remarkable. He fell about 45 feet, landing on a heap of brick-bats. Mr. Ebbs of Madison county, who came here yesterday to see, Governor Glenn, stated that there never were before so many people in the North Carolina mountains, the greater num ber being refugees from the yellow fever district. He says the hotels everywhere are well filled, as also the boarding houses and the country houses u M no ion v h mm 1IUU TROT OR GALLOP r A Perfect Wall Coating: Combines Cleanliness nd Durability Any one oan brush It on No on can rub It off Plastico is a pure, permanent and porous wall coating, and does not require washing off to renew as do all kalsomines. It is a dry powder, ready for use by adding cold water and can be easily brushed on by any one. Made in white and fourteen fashionable tints. Sample card free. - - . .. AXTMCALSCMIXE CO. 6RAN0 RAPIDS. MICH For Sale in New Bern Smaliwood. by fc. HENRY HUDCON. even in the most retired locations, are eagerly sought for. He thinks that the movement will be of great value t6 that section., News came today of tee continued improvewent of General Jaa B. Glenn; Drivate Secretary to Governor Glenn who had a severe attack of acute indi- Borm Ho Dao Know . here and Died : Ko On Kov. How. Hudson must have been at least forty when he died, but nothing is known of bis life before the last four years of it A certain Henry Herdson, or Hudson, alderman of London and one of the fouuders of the Siuscovy company, has been suggested as his grandfather, and the relationship is the more likely be cause it is certain that some of his name , and kin were interested in the company. It may have been upon their recommendation that he was first ap pointed to the command of a ship in the company's service in 1007. Of his early training and previous voyages nothing is known. The beginning of his history is as mysterious as its end. 1. was born no one knows where, and he died no one knows how. ' He comes into our knowledge on the quarter deck of a ship bound for the pole; he goes out of it in a crazy boat manned by elRht sick men, and so fades away into the dim haze, that hangs about the desolate Ice floes. .V"''".''';: ''': - The four -voyages of .Hudson of which we have record were not directed to absolutely unknown waters, hut the observations made by his precursors were so untrustworthy "that they, were of little service except to mislead him. The object of bis first voyage In the service of the Muscovy company was to discover the pole and to sail across it to the 4slands Sf Spicery or Cathay," and on April 10, 1007, he, with Jhn Hudson; hiS sou, sixteen years old, aud the ten men who made up the crew of the Hopeful, took the sacrament to gether at St Ethelburga's, in Bishops- gate, . "purposing to go to sea four days after." In the following year Hudson sailed again, still in the serv ice of the company. They reached the Lofoden isles in a month and rounded the North cape on June 1. A fortnight later they ' encountered one of thos'e wonders of the deep which the seamen of that time were so often privileged to witness and describe on June 13. "One of our company, looking over board,- saw a mermaid. Calling up some of the company to see her, one more came up, and by that time sho wus close to the ship's side, looking earnestly on the men. A little after a sea came up and overturned her. Prom the navel upward her back and breasts were like a woman (as they say that saw, her); her body was as big Wfcal Do Fish Do, and the Seala Invert find Woruinf Here Is u problem for people with' t-lhu'p ye.': A we all know, a horse when , walking or trotting advances only T2 leg of eatli pair at a time, but when galloping 'lifts both fore feet to gether nud thou both hind feet. ' Now, the q ijstion Is bow other animals man age il. s matter. , The birds, of course, flap hjth wings' .'together, but which birds ruu'aud which, hop? We humau beings "trot" when we walk and "gal lop" when we swim that is, If we are t..5li;g the plain breast stroke. The dog, however, "trots" for both. Js'ow, do 'the amphibious animals the seals, ot ters and the rest swim like men or like other four footed creatures? , v Thou there are the fish. One would rather expect that, as they move their tailK from side to side, they would flap altentiitcW with- t Dn3, whl;4i'. nrn their hnnds and feet. Who an tell frlietlKT thev do or not ana whether all lir-h ut ail times follow one rule? By the way; how does a frog use Its 'hand:;?" ' ; ; ?. . '-. ' The ;;ivat niuUftmist E. Ray Lanke- ster lms pointed out that, while the 1b:unnd legs,". Such as. our common gnuj- wo -ni, advance two feet or a pair toarMhcrfc tins ceuttpeds. which are much like thorn,, do exactly the opposite, and the swimming worms al30 alternate the stroke of each pair of raddles. I doubt if many people can tell on which sys tem the c:itcii!llar manages Its dozen or no logs 'or whether the adult Insect walks, trots, paces or gallops on its six. Hov doe-! tho spider use eight? " V ; ..Altogether thl.i is a large field for, ob servation, a field, too, where any one may discover new facts as yet unit corded, and tlnu add to the store or knowledge. St. Nicholas. CORRECT ATTIRE. lie Who DveKRe la Good Taut Shown That Ha Ucpect Himself. When our country was In the log cnl.in sfcge of It3 growth correct dress wr.s not hekl in high regard, and obvl ou.dy so. The stout hearted pioneers were too biv-iy hewing -paths arid blaa-h:-f trail.? to cultivate lire's finer side. Theirs was the rough work of field and camp, of hammer and saw. But times, men and manners have changed, and-u new conception of dress has sprung up. V. Yojiupc men especially rec o;mfce t':e direct relation of correct dross l:i business and social prefer ment. The well dressed man carries hiff Introduction with him he Is mas- WONDERFUL CURE OF SORE HANDS Cy Cutlcura After tho Most Awful Suffering Ever Experienced , EIGHT DOCTORS And Many Remedies Failed ' to do a Cent's Worth of Good I was troubled with sore hands, so ore that when I would put them in water the pain would nearly set me crazy, the skin would peel off and the flesh would get hard and break. There would be blood flowing from at least fifty places on each hand. Words could never tell the suffering I endured for three years- I tried everything, but could get no relief. I tried at least eight different doctors, but none did me any good, as my hands were as bad when I got through doctoring as when I began. , I also tried many remedies, ; but none of them ever did me one cent's worth of good. I was discour aged and-heart-sore. I would feel so bad mornings, to think I had to go to work and stand the pain for ten hours, I often felt like giving up my position. Before I started to work I would have to wrap every finger up sep- . arately, so as to try and keep them joft, and then wear gloves over the . rags to keep the grease from getting on my work. At night I would have to wear gloves ; in fact, I had to wear 1 . , , . , . ' . . , , . gloves au me umc, out tuuukb to ntttlnra ttiaf- la all Mrr tinu, : ; lURfcD r'JK 5UC X " After doctoring -for three years, and spending much money,' a 50c. box of Cuticura Ointment ended all my sufferings. It's been two years since I used any,, and I don't know what sore hands are now, and never lost: a day's work while using Cuti cura Ointment." . . . ; ;- THOMAS A. CLANCY, 310'N, Montgomery St.; Trenton, N.J. Sold throughout tho world. Cutlcura R.soWent, AOo. flu turni of ChovolMc Coated litis, rc. per vial of 60), Ointment, Mu., 8.ap, 23. i-otuu Drug Cfwu. Cora, Bttor, Sole Proprietors. . , jjrSepd lot" The Ureal Sklu Book. - I M n4 . -Til - i HAPPY MOTHER . . WaUTBmroo, Inn, May 14, 1UUS. Before ay rMby wu born I wm In treat tnlaery. I m iuatable to ba about but Just M aoon aa I began to take Wine ol Cardui, which . , i a . n - T . .1 , ... ..U ut ter. In tact I (eel that 11 it bad not been for thil medicine 1 would not have been atroni out mat oougb to live tbrongb childbirth. wm maaa coaiparai medicioe for four i Wina of Gardm l two tuonttia afterward. bight? of Wise of Cardui and I am glad to cn- dnroa it. . Taruauiuia, Tonne Haiaon'a Club. id jour .. r came, took it apeak too ' Wine of Cardui is a powerful tonic which acts on the generative organs of - women, regulating menstruation and giv incr tone and streiitrth to the organs which jn.nn.itn nr1 waaVncai ham aifpeted. - It cures nineteen out -of every twenty cases of bearing-down pains or ovarian trouble r Wine of Cardui cures barrenness and aids the mother in conserving her strength for the ordeal of childbirth. After that event the Wine prevent dangerous flooding and helps mothers to 2uick recovery. Wine of Cardui is the one medicine a mother wuld use before and after childbirth. All druggists sell $1.00 bottles Wine of Cardui. as one of us; her skin very white, and long hair hanging down behind, of color, black. In her going down they saw her, tail, which was like the tail of a porpoise aud speckled like a mack erel. . Their names that saw her wore ThomaB Hllles and Robert Kayner." ' The only really Incredible part of tho Rtorv is that no more than two men ter of himself mid of the situation, lie coimm n(l:i the 'rewpeet of others be cause ne shows that he re.ipects him Ii '13 tmo th:it there are some men of wealth and position, who slur their clothes and even some whs feign to sc?rj- tho -nicotic of dross. The hab its (f n. - careless youth have left their Iinpiiut on such men, mid It i3 quite cprtu'n that -their disdain of dress nUij'-.l. no n.nrt In their success and detracts measurably from their enjoy ment of It, for, after nil, the ripest fruit of surt-ewi is the esteem of one's fellows, nud who can esteem the slov eaT : In tidkins. to a man one's atteu- Uun pa Inrnlly -roves to his clothes, his hair,- l:is teeth 'nud bl3 fliigcr Dandruff on tho ''.shoulder, stains on tho "waistcoat and unshaven face, un tidy hair, crensesf in the cant, a soiled collar.' n mugged cravnt. proclaim In trumpet tones that a man lacks the trutiat refinement respect of self. Success, - Forced Liberality. ;it Is not often miserliness gets such a straightforward rebuke as in the case quoted by the Montclalr Times.. In the early days of primitive Metbod isnt there traveled in England an ec centric minister named Neale. who was famous for his plain talking. On one occasion he was preaching missionary sermons at a village so noted for Its small collections that he determined to pass the plate himself. On his round he eaine to a farnier who was, us Mr. Neale well knew, tho richest ma i l:i the place. This Individ ual placed n iienny on the plate. Mr. Neale stopped immediately and said in a loud voice: ; ... ' .. , "Take your ponny out, man, take It out! Don't vo;i see you've covered up nails. rnllP in iHircr'n Ktxnence?" The' rebuke .was effectual, and a much more valuable coin was placed oh the plate. " ... to look at her.W. J, mlllan'B Magazine. Fletcher In Mae- gestion day before yesterday, to which I thought it worth while to go ou deck he is subject It was at nrst stated that it was a third attack of ppoplexy, but members of the General's family! felt reasonably sure that It was merely indigestion. Batter In Bllcea. From time Immemorial In Cambridge, England, the dairymen roll the butter so as to form a long stick weighing a pound, which they sell in slices, as if it wore sausage. In the market the butter merchants do not need to use either weights or scales. A simple glance Is sufficient for these people accustomed to the time honored prac tice. A very neat cut with the knife divides the yard Into halves, quarters or eighths very exactly, and it appears t!iat the customer Is never given snort measure. ' The let Ward. Bobby Is every word in this dic tionary, pal Peekley Oh, no, my child. Every little while a new word romoi lata the laugunge. Bobby What's the latest word, pa? Peekley r our -ma will tell you. She always has the last word. , ;' , Loved and Loat. Nell Love doeau't seem to agree with Maud. She Is thinner by twenty pounds than she ucd to be. Belle Ehc linn loved and lost, ebT Tldea and Storms, When a tempest Is approaching or passing out on the ocean, the tides are noticeably hlghw than usual, as If the water had been driven In a vast wave before the storm. The Influence extends to a great distance from the cyclonic aionn center, so that the possibility ex Ints of foretelling the approach of a dangerous -hurricane by means of In dications furnished by tide gauges sit uated far away from the place then oc cupied by the whirling winds. The fact that the tidal wave outstrips the ad vancing storm shows how extremely sensitive the surface of the sea Is to the changes of pressure brought to bear upon it by the never resting atmos phere. " " Green. Owing to Its derivation the word "green" was originally applied to the color of vegetation, but not to the color of the sea. No application of "green' to the color of the sea Is quoted before Chaucer, but as early as the year 700 It was used for vegetation. The word Is akin to "grass" and "grow,", which verb originally belonged to the vegeta ble world alone. Vegetables "grew,' but animals "waxed." "Green" comas from an Aryan root, "ghnhr," moaning to be greeu or yellow, and "yellow," "gold" and "yolk" come from . that same root. - !lr l;ln ir It Knar For Htm. "The most ditUeult part of a pastor's fluty,-", said, n New York preacher,. "Is the pastoral calls. I have always re membered one of tlie first I ever made, wheu I was a green youth just out of a theological seminary. I had. been called to the bedside 'of a member of my-Miurcii who was wen known tor bis peculiarities and crankiness. After tnlkiuK with him n few minutes I said: "Shall I oiler a short prayer with yon?' ; 'Short or icing. . Use your own Judg- ir.ont,' said he. - 'More nud more embarrassed, I hes itated, and then snld, 'What shall I pray for?' 1 'Exercise your own discretion as to selection of topics,' said he." , A Prelliiilnnrv. Tho minister's wlfo engaged a new servant.' The girl was very rnenaiy with ntntonstnbie, aind one day she lu vlted him to come round to see her. When he came It was washing day. She wcut and fetched him some beer, biscuits and cheese, but Just then a voice called out "Mary, have you got started to wash yet?" : "Yes," said Slary. "What are you doing now?" "Oil, I am Just filling up the copper." London Telegraph. Cloven. From lava, Sumatra, Mauritius, Zan zibar and Guiana come the little brown flower buds of the clove tree. When gnthered the buds are red and are dried by exposure to the smoke of wood Jres and afterward by the rays of the sun. In a very short time they become of a deep brown color. To se cure a monopoly and tlvia keep up the price the Dutch in the seventeenth cen tury destroyed all their clove trees ex cept those in the island of Amboyna. The chief value of cloves lies In their essential oil, which forms about one- sixth of their whole weight. . . Lara Retas Doyr-u want a Sfe and Profitably Investment? MINING STOCK o f a reliable Company, owning and working their own mines, is Safe, Profitable and Permanent The Monarch Mines are in one of the best gold producing districts IN GCLDFIELD Our engineer on the ground reports that the high grade, gold bearing veins running threugh some of the , Richest Mines ever discovered, inj GoldCeld are bound to pass through our properties ! NOW IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY. . '" We are offering our Tally paid and non-assessable ' . ,. STOCK, 1AR VALUE, $100 Per Share FOR 031 LY 10 eta. A SHARE and you may pay for it in monthly instalments. For example, 1,000 Bhares at 10 cents a share is $100. Send if 10 with your order and 10 a month for 9 months. -. , s. . . -- - - Send for prospectus, mention this paper, and a booklet or facta about Goldfieid will be sent you free, r -. THE MONARCH rilNING AND MILUNC COI1PANY, 262 Washineton Street BOSTON, MASS Trochet's Colchicine Salicylate Capsules. A standard and Infallible cure for RHEUMATISM and GOUT: endorsed by the highest medical authorities of Europe ana America. Dispensed only in spherical capsules, which dis solve in liquids of the stomach without Causing irritation of disagreeable symptoms. Price, $1 per bottle. Sold by druggists. Be sure and get the genuine. WlIAIAMSi an, CO., VUTaLAUD, OHIO, Soldin New Bern by FS Duffy COLCHICINE SALICYLATE The great remedy for norvous prostration and all diseases o' the generativt I organs or enner sex, aucn aa Nervous prostration, t ailing or Ixrat Maunood, Impotency, Nightly Rmtusions, Youibful Errors, Mental Worry, exoessive uaa of Tobacco or Opium, which lead " Consumption and Insanity. With even, 1FTFR IKINR s orcl(ir we euarantoo to oure or refund the money. . Sold at J.00 per tax. m ss.il , e r. 1 boxes (or sj&.OU. ; Good Stage Elocution. It was one of Joseph Jefferson's dis tinctions that he was not otily an advo cate, but an example,- of good stage el ocution. He was, however, an excep tion that proved the rule. The fjrst step toward a better state of affairs Is to convince managers and actors that It Is desirable, ; With the memory of many a bad quarter hour of strained effort to hear what should be appre hended with ease, we respectfully sub mit this word of suggestion. Century. foirs French Periodical Drops Strictly vegetable, perfectly harmless, sure to accomplish DESIRED RESULTS. Greatest known female remedy. Price, $1.50 per bottle. A a nYlfiU Bewareof oonnterfolie and Imitation. Tba genuine l pat up only in paste-board Caps wAUIIUH ton with fao-sluiile aijinature on aide of tba bottle, tbua: ,T -?yj fc Bend rot Clroalar to WILUAJis MkXl. CO., Bole Asenta, Clerelaad, Ohio. ' 3mtC7 Sold by F 8 Dulfy, New Bern, NO f l irtlllil$ M m, M aVaa H at l eafl W W mMmwmS la. Costs Only 25c at Druggists, or mail 25c to C. J. KOFFETT, M. D St Lcsis, L'o. Mother 1 Hesitate no longer, but save the health and life of your child, aa thousands have done, oy giving tnese powoers. . TEETHINA 1 easily given and quickly counteracts and over comes the ell ects of the summer' heat upon teething cbllJrcn. rv Cures Choltra Infar.!-;, Diarrhoea, Dyicnteiy. and the , Bowel Trouble of Children of ) Any Jlge. Aids Dlgettlon, ) Regulitu the Bowels, Strengths ens ths Child and MAKES i TEETHINQ CAST. I Kii Need For Worry, The nusband (on his deathbed)-rMy darling, when I am gone, how will you ever be able to pay the doctor's bills? Tho Wife -Don't worry ' about that, dear. If tho worst comes to the worst, I can marry the doctor, you know. Imaitlnotioa. "Mabel has a nio3t wonderful power of Imagination." "Ueallyt That's the very last thing I should have given her credit for." "Oh, it's quite true, I assure you. She actuitlly fancies that she's good looking." I7 Ilcmembcr that what you believe will depend very much upsm.what you are. Noah TortHr. V ' ; Ita Exact Shade. The elder Dumas once was" wearing the ribbon of a certain order, havhlff ralOTT S recontlv been made a commandant, and an envious friend remarked upou It "My dear fellow," he said, "that cordon la a wretched color!. One would think It was your woolen vest that was showing."; "Oh, no, my dear D'F ," replied Dumas, with a smile, "you're mistaken. It's not a bad color; It Is ex actly the shade of the sour grapes In the fable." . - . k - . Poaalbte. She And tie you think lt prvrMblq fo a man to love two girls at the fia:u timet He-Oh, ye: i rovldctl It Ua't also at the satno place. Philadelphia ledger. ; PBiilYROYAL PILLS Thej overcome Weak ness, Irregularity and omissions, increase vig or and banish "pains of menstruation." They are "LIFE SAVKKS" to grlrls at womanhood, aiding development of organs and body. No known remedy for women equals them. Cannot do harm life becomes a pleasure. $1 10 PKU BOX BY MAIL. Sold Cures a Ccl J b C:i2 Boy, ia'S;: - ( l y. sC.-rr-r. 1 tl t .- - - :::CIIAIJT: If you haven't Red Meat Tobacco in stoclc, write the factory we will EtrTply you direct TO THE CONEUr .!2R: L We ive you our absolute guarantee that each 10c rlwg of Red I.. eat is rm Is cf Letter t,.l,at:co and contains more gooJ s--r.Jj'iiiy chew'. Tqual ; i' -. rnV C'r Iftct' -'cfonv wf; 1 tr ' rr 1 ors; MV-?p"vI 1 "" - a i...,n ly h 'I ' itH iv