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-_ LUCKPORT JOURNAL WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 1808. P e By Terrible Iteking Enzoma-~Face sud Head a Sole to Hig Hand and Logs> Seraich Until He Bisd Ti ferer Immedfately Relieved und § omonen ENTIRELY CUREP I\ 2 MONTHS BY CHUTICH int \y 6 3 ians thy At Pear & As UF hen ie y om Satter sas throe Ohl, cecemuappetiosb an bro Faes, Vedi tet Lnow wie! is Nib: $% yoof b Peat urrlor wha tried hia fos throe months. 'them he wis bad that ht ord wor net dite bin ore 4 fors d nck bis ons locked a tors pol tif, i6 Anedt her He said cire iths {octarod there four racatlis, C: hever guy better kif, Toon c faal lees thet hud] bis coms oop flor ; and as fop his mtecping, we ¢Cotdd ra think of it, thr poor Tite fellow mute i feyed no feeribly. First I ted Itis hrouge oto the erib to Keep bim from ece at ching, bat whon it got so bad £ tied Lim in a shaw! or he world ceratch him ub . Whon he win severest wes fried a sot oP thee Crible Gorn thes fhrit application oof ( tho «loop apd rest Wol, Ja «as work be sures were, foun but F. sayed re cad it, would frei ne w sod Cnticurn for two fuenths. thep } doa clear and white faces, [Kow |- soo yours and seven groutin aid io : das nevor had ecsewit apain. A fe } this letter will help sotme who are an- uc from ekin dmease. Every moth who has a baby. cuiforing with -* Tsegse ahortld just try tim a nothing better, _ Mrs, Loria Beck ~ \. D.8, San Antomc, Tes. OX A siogle set of CutHeura Tremeate aften sufficient to etre torturines, ile suring. itching, bnenifig, ond sealy ations, and | from infaney to ans, when @@ ether eroeces fail, Compnte: Fixte PR DHnIDP bo Hho they Mhin. » nrib a PH oT CRecoli i Puny the wal “M BEBE & aoflos 9 Stat t4 of € it Informal Froment fop Core Ointmint 6 Chit}, op wut Matted 1reG, Ogtiont Booble 60K Efdn Imran asin - ike i> T alks. By CDWIN A. NYE | Copyrishhs DS, by divin A. Myo, v : A WOMANS WAL | \Loam to yistinme of conmumnpton, to y phbysichoan say, Induced by driuk end drums. | Pom ubstudenced of my friecyuds nud living on the charity of a effty, loma alone. I aim in the (Fepthc of despair, | hate! | Me tafof Abit we cin outer ati? 1 \ \Eno late \tew!\ | \Bow the deipairius wall vines in uy earaf | My young life Is spent. All ny hopes ure withered. I cimnot turn hack. - I€ is too late- too lated\ ; The ery of agony 1s not taken from t novel - It In a chapter from mal lifo, he wall of a onee frmous getvess, | Whore bos In tt i fearful waruiug, | And you de not weed to read this hoop little seriwonet to fiud it Iow- Wi‘l‘v‘“ | It may not be s of the way to om haster this suracrt to the woman of trl who do jnat becinning to take an dri becitio® who thitks (tus needs it or beeguse sho is tired it bine of disconfoged of who takos a frisk fust for \Lin\ of because her 'set\ does this thiups, iE «tlle this editorial might lead yon o again the wall of the poor wo- nat aad burn into your sout the con- elouangss of the irtemedial evil of the oc of drug potions and drink sthau» tikiiza | Boeauso students: of gocial conditfons ay tho drink enitom and the drug abit among women are alarmingly on E6 1: net strange that a woman hould contract an appetite for sting» ints. | 'the habit 1s not more absor- ict than the nate hablt, Lspectaily ro thuso womer tempted who keep to hours and foduligo In gocigh dist» atfons, | Unit they are not thore tegnpt« t thin the poor women drud=e whee trating tos spent in cogseless toll or he of poverty or of ignorance of of hase, Nevertheloftes The cubse Is the came npon cm of womdt, \for at the list it bit ”gig; HM: A repent und stingoth ike an dei\ tds alan truce thot the effect of Hq too late} Ye eaunot on r ov drags habliGrally Used Is sworged O¥ef h' Teip me onle fop gt corpte og! dre effects woman. Het Prep toathititics ore tis mots endlc far- ter, the tine edse of her hecvor sents the mere easily bluutel. (F ouhee do 191, she mag bide hop tow hn | eod cencet in of o shofered rac of ilfmease tike het to a erture cad. - 17 che is poor, Iminf{fs jeti rty (drive her to suldde or pov tes y hsd her to setaething ware, volt sur wiil warnins in faat ory, \Too lute: too tx A Gortoin Guro for Acting Fock mhumko sour nhoog Aon's Fonts Cey th posuder Tt cairn Wirral Aeta; Awen tig. Mawolten fort, ' ind Wie, Fone ir LBH Address, Alien 1 Olin tead, & Ortieara det C Curing Poap, Gher ta | with one veils, \Yes sir\ and g. Bee \—\ , N 2D all came about through Nanny's visiiug her cousins, the Tysons, L ohe Fourth of July, The Tysons lived op a firm about thirty miles from the city where Nauny Hved. Mr. Loa, Nanuy's futher, bad seit out to 'he farm in advance of Nanny's going in of fireworks and a pa- het fire balloon striped in red, white ard ; It was a moment of absorbing inter- I“ 1 to rl the children when Thad Ty- fom, the cousin, held the batloon in, while Ngvny npplicdt a match to 'T spore hausing by @light wire be- s>o tl the epet wouth, Then as the spirits of wine with which the sponge wos saturated ignit- «i ad the baffteon, filling with the cur- row of beated afs, besaut to bulge and twuy Nanay quickly tied to the wire wsop in cord besting this inseription: 4p. on. Jily 4, 19 der of this In Hoon please report moders Where dt falls? vay Lon, Mury, Entie: Annie, Thad, reetye, Paul, Wurd and Thomas Tyron, Word'; Station, Pennington County, Vt. 'The biloon rose gently, with a sway- ing motion, itmost vertically. At a theight of sree or four Imndrcd feet It wit by a southerly enrrent and \y. xfill rising, until it faded th a more speck, lingered a mo- ment all but in- tisibleand fnal- ly quite disap- peared, Thore, Nan- ny, you see it is making straight for Wouldn't it be funuy if you } should find it on your own roof when you get home?\ said Thad. In the fun and' excitement of fireworks after sipper the chil- dieu forgot temporarily their Interest in the fate of the balloon, It was Yonwoakened the nost morning, how» trex, whet a good natured furmer, who Introduced Iwrmelf as Cyrus Arnold, vaing Info the barn whore they were playing, \L ant lookin' for Miss Nanty Ler and it raft o' the Tyson funily,\ he said, pulling a eard from his pocket. \Do they live on this farin?\ Rocogniziug the card, the children ou e! paves HAD HLD Thk DALLUONX 1B. asted eagerly, \Did you find our bal- loon't\ \Why. yees that is, yey, I found part of it. It was haugin' on a bush elie by whore I Lift a Inystack a fow days before, The curious thins both it Is the haystack's gone.\ - Mr. Arnold's eyes twinkled. \The haystack is gone?\ echool Nan- ny, with a bewildered ait \How did that happen?\ \I dowt exactly know, hut I kind of suspletin thal &. burned downs. Fhere's a heap of Wack ashes vicht where it stoot. An' this fore ecard was Inmain® by the wite to the bis'h I was spealiur' about,\ Mrt. Arneld replied, pursing Lis moutl, Gy this time the older chiffdiren began to understimt what bid Litpoened. | \An' wirit's suerte.\ the went on, \I kind of suspfcdon that that thing got It afins,\ \What was the valte of the hay?\ asked Thad, who had been roasting a rake while the mevr was talking, | *About 8,0 'The wast of it frit wan the widdor Laue's stack, an' she waut» od to soli It an' day in her supply of sinter epft@wood. | Her lowd adjoins nine, an' Lent hos hoy to hind of beled Tra or, Keep tht tor poot to Fire it doze. Its a for the oli \Well\ said Nanny, \I did the mis- | chis?, and Ti have to pry for it, but PH have to write heme for the money,\ \Sop thot Poot polos to do?\ gaff Thad. \We casst ail of ts beat our shave of this foos o Gniy I'm a'rsid there bart more thin £97 in out bank jush mow. Fo cchnt's fo bo done?\ \How 6° yerr Prisog boys are Ag enough to fate huy *?\ Mr. Arpoid astiod, \VH of tr excepting Hiltle Tom,\ satd Tlual. «Well, tow, ton hore. You all come the city. | afifi? Trank 11 -Iweet t 1908 BY TRANKRIWAET \There's four hundred million blue berrles on the mountain side just back of the widder Lane's place. They never were ripe so early before, and there never wore so many of 'em. They're worth 12 cents a quart in New York city, I guess the widder's too Feeble to pick auy for market this sea- ton,. What do ye say?\ Mr. Arnold suggested. \That would just be fun!\ cried Nan- uy, overjoyed. The other girls thought so too. It was unanimously agreed that the pros- poct of going off ten miles into a strange neighborhood was in itself most alluring and that it would he a pleasure to repay the widow threefold, if possible, for the loss they had un- wiltingly caused ler. It was a ques- tion whether it would be equally pleas- mnt for the young hay harvesters, but, us the boys professed to regard lightly the hardships in store for them, that objection was quickly overruied. Accordingly at 3 o'clock the next morning a great wagon lined with straw took up its load of cight Tysons, one Lea and five Elliots-children from in adjoining farm who had begged to join the party. They reached Farmer Arnold's place soon after 5 o'clock. Alt wished to visit the scone of the conflagration first of all. The frag- ment of the balloon mentioned by Mr. Arnold still clung to a thorn bush. Nanuy glanced at it casually. Then she gave a slight exclamation of sw prise, for through one of the white gores of tissue paper she saw writing, in lead pencil. One corner of the paper was turned forward, showing plainly four words, \This balloon came down\- Eagerly she pulled the paper from the clinging thorns, turned it and reas aloud: This balloon came down on the Brom- ley farm at 4:22 p. m., July 4, and was again sent up by John Blair, assisted by- There followed a list of twenty-four ndines of girls, boys, young men and others who appeared to be their eld- CPs. \This is interesting,\ said Thad, scanning the list. .A Immorous smile overspresd his countenance. \I haven't the slightest idea who all these people are, but how would it do for us folks to go homie aud let Mir. Arnold send over to. the Brotuley farm for his bar- vesters and berry pickers? I don't see that this affair concerns us particu- larly,\ 'The sugsestion was received with a {storm of indignant protest, the smaller Tysons in particular raising such an ontery of remonstrance that the chick ens pecking and scratching in an old henkotuse near by ran distractedly and noi=ily in all directions,. \Ill tell you what we'll do,\ said Mw, Arnold, who had come out from the house to Invite the party to break- fast aml who was told what had been disgovered, \we'll drive over to Brom- ley's, sinfe the case an' get them to Join in with us. Those folks are Brom- ley's summer boarders. I guess we van give them all a job. 'The widder won't mind if they clean out the blue- berry pateh,\ 'This proposition was received with enthusiastn. The Bromley house stood at the foot of the mountains. When the wagon drove up, the guests, having apparent- ly just breakfasted, were seated on the verandt et maging in hanimooks. i was geciled thii i should act as spokesman for the visitors. Great was the astonishment and con- sternation of the audience as Thad Zacks doy with ioy stoves, mat TB g reBithit Wit Hout Ps to sity. da mole -, i Thon TH tmm the yer shot 1 brve bad over to the viddes, What dy yout say fo tharyt \aux #4 loam Cols C' afd Tlio Ves + told his story. good naturedly, however, nof one ques- tioning the justice of the widow Lane's rlaim on each one for indemnity. By the time Thad had finished a little speech, in which he set forth at length the widow's extremity, as previously revealed to him by Mr. Arnold, there was a shout of enthusiasm. A proposition to take up a collection for the widow's relief was laid on the fable. Some one offered a resolution Jo the effect that nothing short of ac- tual service in the widow's berry patch should be regarded as a proper token of regard for hor rights and feelings. This was adopted by a unanimous vote. The outcome of it all was that with- in fifteen minutes two spring wagons, und children, were being driven to- ward Farmer Arnold's place, following Thad's leadership. 'They had gone about a mile and were passing another house with ve- rundas filed with ladies and children when a young lady in the wagon next behind Thad's called to him: \This is the place. Why don't you stop?\ She mo- hand toward the house. Thad looked back, perplexed. \Oh no,\ he said, starting on again. \It's a good three miles from here.\ Then the young lady looked per- plexed in turu. \This isn'tfair! Don't you intend to ask the Cur- tis party to pay, too?\ she asked. \The party?\ Thad re- peated. \sSTOP STOP, Youre LADMIESE! \Of course. Didn't they have as much to do with this affair as we had?\ demanded half a dozen voices in concert. \I'm sure I don't know,\ said Thad. \Why dear me, haven't you thsir names?\ asked the young lady. \No I haven't, How many were there?! _ 0 0C white stripe but one to our strips. names.\ . Thad reeled in his seat The chil- dren, huddled in the straw behind him, burst into a shout of laugliter, while those in the wagons following craned their necks, regarding them in silent amazement. -* \Ali right,\ said Thad, recovering his self possession. \So much the better. We need this Curtis party. Will some of you who lave been introduced {please go and stir them out? Don't let any escape. And, say, tell them to | bring along a peck or two of hard boiled eggs and doughnuts or we'll ; have to get up another berrying party fto pay Farmer Arnold for our din- i ners.\ Amid much laughter and shouting ithe Curtis party was duly \stirred lout\ Xo one of them would admit , having inscribed his or her name on i the balloon roster, so it was demanded as a compromise measure that all should go. To this they all agreed. When the procession again started I five more wagons had been added to it. news of the affair had W throughout the: neighborhood, | 8 w when at last the merry party racked the Arnold farm half-a dozen keote wagons and buggies loaded with young people brought up the rear. Ninety-one persons, children and all, went into the widow Lane's berry patch that morning. When Farmer Arnold made up his load of berries for shipment that even- ing he counted nine heaping bushels and various smaller measures. Mean- while a committee of three giris had been appointed to present to the widow Lane a certain porcelain jar, carefully sealed. When, a moment later, the widow opened it and poured the contents into a pan she opened her eyes in amaze- mert, ejaculating, \My land alive!\ For, following the quart of berries which half filled the pan, came tum- tling and clinking a' shower of com- iimes, quarters and half dollars.. Stu- peficd with amazement, she stared at the glittering pile, then seized her cane and hobbled to the open door. \top stop, young ladics, and let me- But her volee was too feeble to reach the fleeing party, already a hun- f dred yards down the sloping pasture, + fluttering their handkerchiefs gayly aud shouting loaded with young ladies, gentlemen tioned with her. Curtis \You haven't! They were on the next There must have been at least forty The Day of Days A Fourth of July Poom By PETER McARTHUR, [Copyright, 1908, by Peter McArthur.] drum and burst the gun! M a k e the screaming roe kets blaze! your holi- days in one make the Fourth _ a day of days! Roll To Let rejovicing hearts recall; Let hero days your pride arouse- Thanksgiving, Labor day and all. Celebrate your country whole- Those who live and those who died. Let the martial music roll; Let your bosoms. swell with pride. Fling your banmers to the breeze; Celebrate the breeze that blows With greetings from your bounding seas, Burning sands and arctic snows. Celebrate the land of health, . Where Freedom's flag is never furled- L/and of flowers and fertile wealth, Promised land of all the world. FLING YOUR BANNERS TO TH REEZE, Celebrate the home of men, Swift and fearless, strong and free; Cheer for what it is, and then Cheer for what it yet shall be. Celebrate a land of hope __ Where reward. attends on toil; Where valley, plain and mountain slope Yieid the faithful golden spoil Of fruitful fields and cities proud, Of armies skilled to peaceful ways,. Cheer, and let your cheer be loud; Sing your grandest songs of praise. Sound the trumpet; beat the drum; Let the thun- 8 .. drous can- Ci , . non roar; NY Let no echo now CA . be dumb; _- Wake them all - from shore to shore. Let the startled n ations hedr, Those who love and who hate. Take no heed though some may sneer; Turn things loose and celebrate. HCW THE FOURTH HELPED. Big Victories Won on the Nation's Natal Day. . Big events of history have helped Uncle Ham several times in celebrating the Fourth of July. 'The pivotal bat- tles in two wars have been fought im- mediately preceding the nation's birth- day. During the war between the states the surrender of Vicksburg took place on thrt date, 1863. In the same year the battle of Gettysburg was fought on the 1st, 2d and 3d of July, the news of Lee's defeat reaching the country on the glorious Fourth. The naval battle of Santiago, in 1898, which broke the backbone of Spain's resist ance to the TUuited States in the war for the liberation and pacification of Cuba, occurred July 3. All was over except the shouting, which was heard throughout the United States on the Fourth of July. So far as the naval engagement off Santiago harbor was concerned, the re- sultant shouting throughout the United States was all but universal, only one American being killed in that fight, which utterly destroyed Spain's fieet of warships and brought the war to a triumphant close. In the cases of Get- tysburg and Vicksburg there was mourning in many households both north and south. Particularly was this true as a result of Gettysburg, where so many thousands of brave men fell General Lee, with a great army, had invaded Peunsylvania, intending a raid northward. He was met by Gen- eral Meade's opposing hosts at Gettys- burg and sent back to the south after three days of fighting as desperate and heroic as history records. General Lee had hoped by his raid into the north to cause the withdrawal of a considerable part of General Grant's forces which had been besicging the Confederate stronghold of Vicksburg. on the Mississippi, for six months. The defeat of Lee and the surrender of | Vicksburg by General Pemberton thus made a double victory for the Union and a double disaster for the Confed- eracy. * The fall of Vicksburg opened the Mississippi river to the Union gur boats, so that, in Lincoln's phrase, its waters \ran unvexed to the sea.\ It may be said that the issues decid- ed at Vicksburg and Gettysburg, an- nounced to the nation on the Fourth of July, 1863, practically determined the salvation of the American Union. ro ore ~: those, Thé Km; d You Have Always Bought, and which has been. in uso for over 80 years, has borne the signature of ' _ and has been made under his pere sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. t All Counfiérféifié, Imitations and \ JFust-as-good\ are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Fufants and Children-Experience against Experiment. | - What is CASTORIA Cifioria, is a bormless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- goric, Drops ti1 Soothing It is Pleasant. It Syrups. contrins » Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys W orms and allays Fev: sishness. It cures Diarrhoea and. ngh Colic; It-reliev; ; Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency, It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach.and J,..wels, giving healthy and natural sleep, The-Clhildren's Panacea-The Mother's Friend, \k cenums: CAST Bears the * o < P The Kind You Have RIA airways Signature of Mays In Use For Over 80 Years. THE CCNTAUR Company, T7 MURRAY STREET, New vorktity. lam still being o ik Migs b -l - NEW LOCATION Main agd Locust St., over Corner Store Wa'tsé over | OLD LOCATION °- _ Y. H. Upson's, and my name is MY NEW OFFICE IS 1908 used there. In every respect, and spared in getting the your :comfort. save Instriments . A LOOK WILL CONVINCE YOU are clean, sterilized and well cared for. 'expense has not been best of everything. for + THE SUN-A PUZZLE, $e See Only the Outer Shells of the ~- Great Blazing Orb. The great ball of fire which we call the sun is mot rénlly the sun. No one has ever Sgen the sun. A series of concentric shells envelops a nucleus of which 'we how absolutely nothing ex- cept that if must be almost infinitely hotter tham the fiercest furnace and that it mus6 amount to more than nine- tenths of tlie-solar mass. That nucleus is thg real sun, forever hidden fropt us. 'Th€U@termost of the enveloping Shells is About 5,000 miles thick and is called the chromosphere. 1t is a gaseous fivid;: tinted with ths searlot glare of hydm‘gé'n, and so furi- ously active that it spurts up great tongues of. plowing PWS (prominences) to the heigitt of thousands of miles. Tine was 'when this agitated sen of crimson firé could be seen to advantage only duringgan eclipse. 'Now special in- struments gre used -which enable as tronomers to study it in the full glare of the sup.!! j Beyoud. the chromosphere, far beyoud the promjxjigncesagpnhlges the nebulous pal bin visible ouly during the voudsth.. Moments of a total eclipse, H f t mot more, than seven days in a cen. irk, No one has ever satisfactorily ex plained hows the: highly aitenuated matter émifposing: both the promi nences corona is supported without fqHing Back»futo 'the sun mr» der the 19 of solar gravitation. Now that Arrhenius has essmically applied the eCects of light pressure a solution is | .. > s How \'ffenili it is :o account for such dellsa}> stmemior: as the promt nenees on ihe sun is better compre hended when we fully understand how relentlessly-:powerful is the grip of solar gravitation. > =~ * If the sun were a habitable globe and you cogld transport yourself to its surface, you would find yourself pulled down so: forcibly by. gravitation that you would weigh two tons, assuming that you are an ordinary human being. Your clothiM§ alone would weigh more than a hundred pounds. Baseball could be played in & solar drawing room, for there would be some diffi- culty in throwhig a ball more than thirty feeb ~ 90089 Tennis wotuld be degraded to a form of outdoor piligpong. *~ From these considerations it is plain that gravitation on the Sun would tend to prevent the, formation of any lam- bent pull down to its uprface \Refmnen odin y gore ® sid Arm ita someon Aor ghc c Jngsses of any size-Harper's| BARNUM'S OLD LION. How the Great*\Showman Turned His Death to Account. Among the features of the parades of the Barnum cirens there was for merly one that never failed to attract attention. On the top of one of the wild beast cages lay an enormous lon. He was not confined in any way, and nervous people watching the parade would shudder at the sight avd con- template the terrible possibility of the lion springing into the midst of the crowd. 1 But the venerable old king of beasts bad reached the leonine dotage, and stiffened muscles and \blunted claws rendered him harmless. He was as mill 'as a kifient and in the winter quarters, whore he was allowed to roum at will, sometimes bad to he pro- tected from the onslaughts of irrever- ent and mischievous puppies. . One night be widmdered from the quarters, | In the conrse of his travels he chanced on a barn whore a meek eyed cow wns plizeldly chewing her eud. oA film i. herod the stumbering jungle spill red bi and, with a eras'zuiu blow / the In ao fore paw. the cow was thom lying down beside his viciho. he weut to sleep and dreamed of the time when be was a shaggy little whelp playing with his brothers under the bright sun of his faroff African home. In the morning the owner of the cow, .a stalwart female with the blood of Trish kings in her veing, entered thg barn with milk pail in hand. She W‘ filled with wrath at the sight that me - her gaze, ~ With a keen edged ax in her hand ard grim determination in her eye she fearlessly approached the sleop- ing lion, and when the men sent out to search for him arrived he lay cold in death. Barnum promptly paid for the dead cow and engaged to appear on exhibition \the woman who in mortal combat had slain a Hon.\ Feel languid, weak, run-down? Hoad- ache? [Stomach \off\?-Just a plain case of lazy liver. Burdock Blood [Bitters tones liver and stomach, pro- motes digestion, purifies the blood. mes anp Women, Teo Big < for unnatural discharges inflammations, i irritations or ulcsrations . not $o stricture. \\ . of mucous mombranag. ari Prevents Contagion. Painless, and not Sittin WTHEEVAKSCHENISALDG, gent ox poisonous. ples 0.5 fl Sold by Druggints, B yq or sent in plain € by express,, prepaid, for or 3 bottles 82.75. . Ciscular gonk on a Op! , B (it! f 1 to b days, Gunranteed