1
F 7 = i U- I p v 10 4 THE PENSACOLA JOURNAL SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 21 1909 FREE TO YOUMY SISTER Fraa f Van from end Womans Every Sstw lam a woman I know womans snffeciaxs 4 I have found the cure X will mail free of any cbar my home treat went with full instructions to any sufferer from + womxac ailments I want to teU aB wen sboct s this cure you my rederfor yourself your daughter i your mother or your sister I want to tell you how w i to cure yourselves at home without the help of a I J < k I doctor Men cannot understand women sufferings What wo women know from experience we know < c r I better than any doctor know that ray home treat- ment > k la a safe and sure euro for Leticacrheea or f e Whitish discharges Ulcerattoa Displacement or u f f FaHlnr of the Womb Profuse Scanty or Patof z I Periods Uterine or Ovarian Tumors or Growths V alw pains In the head back and bowels bearing + down feelings nervousness creeping feeling up p the spine snelaacholy desire to cry hot Sashes w weariness kidney and bladder troubles where 4 caused by weaknesses peculiar to our sex F I want to send you a complete tea days treat W < i Kent entirely free to prove to you that you rnn cure v yourself at home easily quickly and surely Re- member that It will cost you nothlnr to give the teeetaeent 8 complete trial and if shernM wish to continue it will cost you only about 12 cents a week or less than two cents a day It will not interfere with your work or occupation Just seed ate year nsmr and address tell me how you suffer if yoa with and I will send you the treatment rotS your case entirely free in plain wrapper by return mail I will also send you free of cost my book WOMANS OWN MEDICAL ADVISER with explanatory illustrations showing why women Buffer and how they can easily CUt themselves at home Every woman should have it and learn to think for herself Then when the doctor szyxYoi must have an operation yoa can decide for yourself Thousands of women have cured themselves with my home remedy It cures all aid er young To Mothers of Daughters I will explain a simple home treatment which speedily- and eSeetually cures Ieucorrhoea Green Sickness and Painful or Irregular Menstruation in Young Plumpness and health always results from ita use Wherever yoa live leas refer you to ladies of your own locality who know and will gladly ten any bs ee that this Hene Treatment really cures all womens diseases and makes women well strong plump an1 robust Just send me your address and the free ten days treatment is yours also the Write today aa you nay not see this offer agin Addr- csMlstM SUMMERS BXH South Bend Ind us A r I Who Said Old Teachers I Were All Played Out Editor Pensacola Journal Some of my friends said 30 years ago that I was too old to teach school cOw I propose to bring out some stub- born facts that will prove the fallacy ot that assertion There was once a teacher In tIe city of Boston who began teaching when he was 20 years old and died at the age of 94 having taught 74 years I have no doubt the children In those days were taught perfect obedience to the will of their parents and were therefore easy to control at school But to return to my subject I am positively certain that my teaching abilities are better now than at any pat time of my career as a teacher extending over a period of 59 years- I believe God Intended every man and Woman to have a sane mind and to improve with time and experience till they become superannuated With the exception of my recollec p tion of proper names I honestly be- lieve ¬ I am better Intellectually than- I was 35 years ago Mr Editor I can bring forth an ¬ other argument in defense of my posi ¬ tion that man Improves by study and practice Twentyfive or 30 years ago- I was paid as much as 100 per hour for playing the fiddle Lately I have received as high as 100 per minute- for like work Our best teachers are our oldest teachers a great many people to the contrary notwithstanding I hope to see the day when every old faithful teacher will be retired with a pensiOn sufficient to keep him or her In ease and comfort the few remaining years- of his or her life When they reach heaven which they surely will it can be truly said These are they that have come up through much tribula ¬ tions I E ALLEN 75c On The Dollar for anysuit pattern in our stock25 1 I per cent off the regular price during i I the life of this sale Th aA uy someofoi naiid m finds us 1oiOfl somest patterns and we must move l them at once JUui IliduKsgiylngSuIts ow and save the 25 per cent i 2500 Suits 1875 3000 Suits 2250 4000 Suits 3000 t Tailored To Taste nothingreserved Overcoats too PRICKETT PERSOH Brent GARDNER Incorporated FRANK B GARDNER Manager ALL HOUSEHOLDEMERGENCIES i I- Ouinhcr AN HOUR saved in summoning the plumber by telephone may save the price of several years of service- It certainly saves a lot of discomfort and worry The Bell Telephone keeps the household in- constant touch with all the resources of civilization- and is instantly available in any emergency It also keeps the household in constant touch with the broader outside world by means of the Long Distance Service of the Bell System- Are YOU a subscriber A SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE TELEGRAPH COMPANY p b Every Bell Telephone is the Center of the System to- l i I November Magazines I About Gov Gilchrist Florida Democrats will be interested- in a fine article on Gov Gilchrist which appears In the November num- ber ¬ of the National Monthly of which Chairman Norman E Mack of the Democratic national committee is tho editor and publisher and which is now the recognized Democratic home nagazine of the United States Two prominent New Yorkers are among the notable contributors to he November number oE the National Monthly They are Hon Edward M ahepard who writes on Political Parties and Mrs Donald McLean honorary presidentgeneral of the Daughters of the American Revolu ¬ tion who contributes an Interesting article which every woman should read Mrs McLean is not suffragist and her many years in club life have but inspired her to stir women up to a greater appreciation of their homes and their knitting Mrs Mc ¬ Leans article in fact is an extraordi- nary ¬ one in this era when so many other women with whom she had been prominently associated in club life for years are advocating votes for wo men It is the second of a series of twelve articles which Mrs McLean is writing for the National Monthly Another noted club woman Esther Chaddock Davenport has an excellent article in the November number of the National Monthly on The Growth- of the Womens Club Idea and it is illustrated with pictures of some of the forempst club women of the coun- try ¬ Is Woman a Servant- In the main the position of wo ¬ man is curiously like that of the serv- ant ¬ in the house says Inez Haynes Gillmore in Success Magazine A servant with good wages and a gen ¬ erous allowance of afternoons and evenings out a servant carefully nursed when she is ill and attended- by the masters own physician a serv- ant ¬ who is sure always of generous tips when there is extra work and of a carefully alnecured old age Like- a servant however it is to her inter ¬ est to spy on the master to discover his weaknesses and to play upon them In some respects it is a pleas ¬ ant position although it is always an uncertain one For from her birth- to her death her welfare depends- not on herself tout on a man her father or ibrother or guardian first her husband second her son last Luck always controls her destiny Though the wheel of chance may set her in a pleasant place today there is al ways the dread on her of a weeks notice the possibility of the crowded vista of the employment agency to ¬ morrow Her duties ranging over a limit ¬ ed arc of human endeavor made for a cheap versatility rather than as in the case of men for the development of special gifts Her working hours and her wages are arbitrarily fixed by men Her habits are settled by men H H l 1r 1ictu to cultivate her mind As Her c11ieC control of man is through her senses she thinks almost entirely with her- S emotions l fircWBeparture in Magazines- The greatest departure in magazine literature within the Jats two decades has been made by the publishers ol The Popular Magazine The circula ¬ tion of The Popular has been growing I rapidly month after month and re ¬ cently its readers requested and even demanded that the magazine be issu ¬ ed twice a month The publishers have acceded to the demand and two Issues of the magazine are now on sale each monthone on the tenth and one on the 25th This is the first 01 the big magazines to break away from the onceamonth policy and it looks- as if the venture wero going to be a huge success The Popular publishes the kind of fiction the people want I Western stories college stories de ¬ tective stories and stories of adven- ture in all lands This is a field that The Popular has made peculiarly its own and so long as It continues to print this class of fiction there is no reason to doubt that the twiceamonth Idea will foe as succcessful as the monthly issue has been However dar- ing the twiceamonth scheme seem- I to be it is surely not too ibig for the j biggest magazine in u America Slavery in Mexico I Some astounding statements are made by John Kenneth Turner in the November American Magazine writ ¬ ing under the title of Barbarous Mexico a country he has visited for- a period of two years to collect the data which he has embodied in to his remarkable series of articles Of a certain phase of the deportation of the Yaqui Indians by the Mexican govern- ment Mr Turner says The secret which lies at the roots- of the whole Yaqui affair was revealed to me and the whole matter summed up In a few words by a colonel in the Mexican army in one of tho most re- markable interviews which r obtained during my entire trip to Mexico For the past four years this offi ¬ cer has been one of those in immedi- ate charge of transporting all the Yaqui exiles to Yucatan I was for ¬ tunate enough to take passage on the same steamer with him returninr from Progresso to Vera Cruz He I- ra stout comfortable talkative old campigner of aboutsbtP years The steamship people put us in the same stateroom and as the colonel had some government passes which he hoped to sell me we were soon on the most confidental terms 1 In the past three and on- ehalfHarms C j carrtsmre certainly fine I gaTe a friend one when the was treating htm for cancer ot the stomach The next morning he passed four pieces a tape worm He then got a box and in three days he passed a t werm 45 feet long It was Mr Matt Freck of Millenburc Dauphin Co Pa I am a Casca rets I use them myseltaud find them beneficial for most anv disease caused impure blood Chas S ondouIcwutonPa Mifflin Co Pleasant Palatable Potrut Taste Good Do Good sever SteicenWeakcn or Gripe JOe ZSc SOc Never sold in bulk The genu¬ ine tablet stamped CC C Guaranteed to UfO or your aoser back 82J p years he told me I have delivered just fifteen thousand seven hundret Yaquis in Yucatandelivered mind you for you must remember that th government never allows me enough expense money to feed them properly- and from ten to twenty per cent die on the journey These Yaquis he said sell in Yucatan for 65 apiece men women and children Who gets the money Well 10 goes to me for my services The rest is turned over to the secre ¬ tary of war This however is only- a drop in the ibuCket for I know this to be a fact that every foot of land every building every cow every bur ¬ ro everything left ibehind the Ya quis when they are carried away by the soldiers is appropriated for his private use by the official in authority of the locality from which they have been removed- So according to this man who has himself made at least 157000 out of the business the Yaquis are being de ¬ ported for the money there is in it first the money from the appropria- tion of their property second the money from the sales of their bodies He declared to me that the deporta tions would never stop until the last possible dollar bad been squeezed out of the business- The Social Life of Pittsburgh Socially Pittsburgh may be likened- to a huge pie with upper and lower crust aplenty ibut a noticeable lack of what the good housewife realizes is the chief feature of her culinary tri- umph the filling The top crust is extremely light and therefore has va- rious elevations or excrescences Sticking to the under side of this up per crust you will find many traces ot what was once Pittsburghs social fill- ing or middle class Their connection- is a bit precarious almost perilous- but they manage somehow to stick for below through a great space they see the under crust absorbing- that part of the filling which failed- to rise and cling to the upper crust- In no other city of America will you find the words middle class regard- ed as a term of contumely In no oth ¬ er American city will you see so many individuals drawing comfortable sal ¬ aries and yet regarding life as a hope less sort of game hardly worth the playing Pittsburghers have reduced- the art of being pessimistic to a scienceFrom Womans Home Com panion for Xovmebre The Appetite of Eskimos New York November 20The ques ¬ tion of the amount of food needed to sustain life in the Arctic regions was heatedly discussed in the polar dis ¬ pute Mr Harry Whitney who spent- a year shooting within the Arctic cir- cle ¬ gives an idea in an article in The Outing Magazine for December of what the Eskimo can do when he tries He says- I shall never forget the feast that those Eskimos tad when we next seven imra oiib i tftft1alooln etful of dried walrus meat prepared by Dr Cook for dog food tok and two large cups of tea and four biscuits per man A good part- of the seal and all the hare meat they ate raw like hungry dogs I trained my camera upon them but Eskimos have a decided objection to being photographed while they eat and out of respect to their wishes I desisted The Tragedy of OldMaidhood- But thisthis is the tragic part of being an old maid You find men of your own age basking in the smiles- of pretty girls of eighteen or so with never a glance in your direction And those who seem attracted to you are old beaus of hoary head and tottering- step callow youths who arc too young for the eighteenyearolds to notice who fall in love with you vio- lently ¬ and hint darkly at running away with you as soon as they nave saved up enough money AndoIl more dangerous than all the rest those dear men a fewonly a few years older than yourself married to careless extravugant thoughtless- wives who live the butterfly life and crave the attentions of other men any men men save those who belong- to them These men plodding away I in the harness to earn money for the I Paquin gowns and Lewis hats and starving for sympathy and love and companionship realizing too late that they and all their sacrifices are taken- as a matter of course by their wives craving the love for which they have been cheated into paying the great price and finding that it is only coun ¬ terfeitand pleading oh so eloquent- ly with their poor starved hearts in their voices for friendship and under standing and camaraderiefor all that you may give and all that they may take f Oh how we hate these smug young matrons in their new frocks their dreams of hats and their narrow bands of gold upon the third finger Ve could manage the frocks and the millinery perhaps but the other I Ah could we And would we if we could Amy Lyman Phillips Ju December Smart Set Not the Right Atmosphere Mrs AskitDo you intend to have an Italian garden on your place Mrs Newrich No Im afraid I could never get used to that garlic smellDecember Smart Set FLORIDA 0E01P- Is TO GET BUSYRE- PUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEE TO HOLD MEETING- IN JACKSONVILLE DEC 11 CANDIDATES OF 1908 ARE PAR TICULARLY INVITED TO AT ¬ TEND 1 Those laboring udP tlM ImpteSsiob- I i The Hygenic Bedroom TITIl 1 i Contains a ±± ThtjI SANITAIRE- BED I t Guaranteed By Us For Ten Years Sell from 500 to 2500Y- OU BUY a Sanitaire Bed guaranteed for 10 years for the same you pay for an unknown unguaranteed bed The 10 years guarantee protects youand the Sanitaire Bed will last- a lifetime Sanitaire Beds harmonize with any bedroom they are beautiful in design and finish The finish is durablehard as flint impossible to chip off Snowy White the symbol of purity and cleanliness and Sanitaire Gold with the appearance of a brass bedat a small frac tion of the priceare both deservedly popular A large variety of other combinations Sanitaire Beds are dust and germ proofthere is no spot where dust can lodge or germs breed Dust Proof and Germ ProofSa- nitaire Beds are cast practically in one piecewith all joints welded together so that the finest dust cannot work in Construction- extra strong so side rails will never slip nor the posts get out of plumb Remember Our Guarantee Protects YouM- ade in a large variety of finishes to harmonize with any bed room all sizes single double and modern twin beds Any prospective- bed purchaser should not miss this opportunity Call at our store see- the beds and we will explain the guarantee Phone 105 S- Palafox 1553 I r A Zelius Son Phone 157 504 South Palafox St Butcher and Green Grocer- A full line of Fresh Meats Country Pro ¬ duce Poultry Eggs etc Special attention giv- en ¬ to ships trade Prompt Delivery Pensacola Fla CITY TAXES Discounts Interest and Penalties Discounts 2 per cent if paid in October 1 per O MU If paid in Xovembe 1 per cent If paid In December January net Interest Added i per cent K paid in February 1vz per cent If paid in March 2U per cent if paM In April 3 per cent if paid In May I 33 per cent if paid before June 1 Interest and Penalties Ad 13 per cent June 15 to July 1 I HY per cent July 1 to Aug 1 16U per cent Au 1 1 to Sept 1 Advertised for sale in September Statements may be obtained at time by calling at office in city hJ Under the law no more statements wt he mailed J C WHITINGT- ax Collector City of Pensacola that the Republican organization a Florida is napping are mistaken fol the organization is very much alive tQ the interests of the party in Florida- as will be evidenced by a call for a meeting of the Republican state cen- tral ¬ committee which will convene in Jacksonville Tuesday Dec 11 tor the purpose of transacting any and all business that may properly come be ¬ fore the committee says an exchange The Republican party of Florida- at least that arm of the party which has the balance of powerhas been weeded own to a few of the most In- fluential ¬ the majority Republican piei eaters and it is remarkable the in- fluence ¬ this crowd wields among the national leaders- To this convention the chairmen antI secretaries of the various district coralHftte the Republican candidates j r A GREAT DISTINCTION IN PLUMBING JOBS u x cn jx u a1 UIIIDn hor is a decidedly distinctive tone of quality and metft in the kind of work we do- An old firm established reputation for satis faction or money back ahd efficient skilled workmen I enable us to claim highest class of service Sewer J connecting our strongest claim to a bid on your work CHAS A BORN 15 Wt Garden Street Phone 325 New and Relay Rails We make a specialty of both and are prepared to supply your requirements promptly METZGER BROTHERSMo- bile A- lL e LZI1 T X e g st p 23L Y Quick MoneyMaking Interesting School of Telegraphy Regular Telegraph Operator In charge mlnship Typewritln SpelUn by competent teach ra LetterWriting and fie mcrc1al and RaIlway Office Practice with good on road Threemonths StudentB go from the C wr direct to and room at 15 a month Enter now 5 Life Scholarship 5 t 0 Board Tampa Fla I TO THE FARMERS- Until added Until a further flntclau notice our gin will start up every Thursday We have charge of an experienced grist mill to our plant and with gin and grist mill In man we guarantee entire satisfaction We cotton cotton seed and corn buy McVOY CO Cantonment Fla General Merchandise Cotton Fertilizers all kinds of farm Guppnea 4 Ir congress candidates for state of > e and legates to the national con ntion of 100S are urgently invited kI the call urges all members of the 3te central committee to be on hand the meeting or to send proxies onSidera Interest fa being manl red in politics by the Republicans tftughout the state The leaders an ttate a good attendance in Decem b n Henry S Chubb t register of tb nitedStat s laud office is chair ¬ j p man of the Florida Republican stati J r central committee Hon Shieldt Warren rpcJver of the United Stater land office Is chairman or the execu tire committee of the Third district A lot of old newspapers tied up in neat bundles for sale 5c a bundle at The Jour naloffice SUBSCRIBE FORTI1EJO RN rp

The X ThtjI i - University of Floridaufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/UF/00/07/59/11/00358/0442.pdf · 4 caused by weaknesses peculiar to our sex ... There was once a teacher In tIe ... Mexican

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F7 = i U-

I

p

v

10 4 THE PENSACOLA JOURNAL SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 21 1909

FREE TO YOUMY SISTER Fraa f Vanfrom

endWomans

Every Sstw

lam a womanI know womans snffeciaxs

4 I have found the cureX will mail free of any cbar my home treat

went with full instructions to any sufferer from+ womxac ailments I want to teU aB wen sboct

s this cure you my rederforyourself your daughteri your mother or your sister I want to tell you how

w i to cure yourselves at home without the help of a IJ < k I doctor Men cannot understand women sufferings

What wo women know from experience we know< c r I better than any doctor know that ray home treat-

ment> k la a safe and sure euro for Leticacrheea orf e Whitish discharges Ulcerattoa Displacement oru f f FaHlnr of the Womb Profuse Scanty or Patofz I Periods Uterine or Ovarian Tumors or Growths

V alw pains In the head back and bowels bearing+ down feelings nervousness creeping feeling up

p the spine snelaacholy desire to cry hot Sashesw weariness kidney and bladder troubles where4 caused by weaknesses peculiar to our sex

F I want to send you a complete tea days treatW < i Kent entirely free to prove to you that you rnn cure

v yourself at home easily quickly and surely Re-member that It will cost you nothlnr to give the

teeetaeent 8 complete trial and if shernM wish to continue it will cost you only about 12 cents aweek or less than two cents a day It will not interfere with your work or occupation Just seedate year nsmr and address tell me how you suffer if yoa with and I will send you the treatmentrotS your case entirely free in plain wrapper by return mail I will also send you free of cost mybook WOMANS OWN MEDICAL ADVISER with explanatory illustrations showing whywomen Buffer and how they can easily CUt themselves at home Every woman should have it andlearn to think for herself Then when the doctor szyxYoi must have an operation yoa candecide for yourself Thousands of women have cured themselves with my home remedy It cures allaid er young To Mothers of Daughters I will explain a simple home treatment which speedily-and eSeetually cures Ieucorrhoea Green Sickness and Painful or Irregular Menstruation in Young

Plumpness and health always results from ita useWherever yoa live leas refer you to ladies of your own locality who know and will gladly ten

any bs ee that this Hene Treatment really cures all womens diseases and makes women wellstrong plump an1 robust Just send me your address and the free ten days treatment is yoursalso the Write today aa you nay not see this offer agin Addr-csMlstM SUMMERS BXH South Bend Ind us A

r

I Who Said Old TeachersI Were All Played OutEditor Pensacola Journal

Some of my friends said 30 yearsago that I was too old to teach schoolcOw I propose to bring out some stub-born facts that will prove the fallacyot that assertion

There was once a teacher In tIecity of Boston who began teachingwhen he was 20 years old and died atthe age of 94 having taught 74 yearsI have no doubt the children In thosedays were taught perfect obedience tothe will of their parents and weretherefore easy to control at school

But to return to my subject I ampositively certain that my teachingabilities are better now than at anypat time of my career as a teacherextending over a period of 59 years-I believe God Intended every man andWoman to have a sane mind and toimprove with time and experience tillthey become superannuated

With the exception of my recollecp

tion of proper names I honestly be-lieve

¬

I am better Intellectually than-I was 35 years ago

Mr Editor I can bring forth an ¬

other argument in defense of my posi¬

tion that man Improves by study andpractice Twentyfive or 30 years ago-I was paid as much as 100 per hourfor playing the fiddle Lately I havereceived as high as 100 per minute-for like work

Our best teachers are our oldestteachers a great many people to thecontrary notwithstanding I hope tosee the day when every old faithfulteacher will be retired with a pensiOnsufficient to keep him or her In easeand comfort the few remaining years-of his or her life When they reachheaven which they surely will it canbe truly said These are they thathave come up through much tribula ¬

tionsI E ALLEN

75c On The Dollarfor anysuit pattern in our stock25 1 Iper cent off the regular price during

i Ithe life of this sale

Th aA uy

someofoi naiid mfinds us 1oiOflsomest patterns and we must move l

them at onceJUui IliduKsgiylngSuIts ow

and save the 25 per cent i

2500 Suits 18753000 Suits 22504000 Suits 3000

t

Tailored To Taste

nothingreserved Overcoats too

PRICKETT PERSOHBrent

GARDNER

IncorporatedFRANK B GARDNER Manager

ALL HOUSEHOLDEMERGENCIES

iI-

Ouinhcr

AN HOUR saved in summoningthe plumber by telephone may

save the price of several years of service-It certainly saves a lot of discomfort and worryThe Bell Telephone keeps the household in-

constant touch with all the resources of civilization-and is instantly available in any emergency

It also keeps the household in constant touchwith the broader outside world by means of theLong Distance Service of the Bell System-

Are YOU a subscriber

A SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONETELEGRAPH COMPANY

p

b Every Bell Telephone is the Center of the System to-

li

I November Magazines I

About Gov GilchristFlorida Democrats will be interested-

in a fine article on Gov Gilchristwhich appears In the November num-ber

¬

of the National Monthly of whichChairman Norman E Mack of theDemocratic national committee is thoeditor and publisher and which is nowthe recognized Democratic homenagazine of the United States

Two prominent New Yorkers areamong the notable contributors tohe November number oE the NationalMonthly They are Hon Edward Mahepard who writes on PoliticalParties and Mrs Donald McLeanhonorary presidentgeneral of theDaughters of the American Revolu ¬

tion who contributes an Interestingarticle which every woman shouldread Mrs McLean is not suffragistand her many years in club life havebut inspired her to stir women upto a greater appreciation of theirhomes and their knitting Mrs Mc¬

Leans article in fact is an extraordi-nary

¬

one in this era when so manyother women with whom she had beenprominently associated in club lifefor years are advocating votes for women It is the second of a series oftwelve articles which Mrs McLean iswriting for the National Monthly

Another noted club woman EstherChaddock Davenport has an excellentarticle in the November number ofthe National Monthly on The Growth-of the Womens Club Idea and it isillustrated with pictures of some ofthe forempst club women of the coun-try

¬

Is Woman a Servant-In the main the position of wo ¬

man is curiously like that of the serv-ant

¬

in the house says Inez HaynesGillmore in Success Magazine Aservant with good wages and a gen¬

erous allowance of afternoons andevenings out a servant carefullynursed when she is ill and attended-by the masters own physician a serv-ant

¬

who is sure always of generoustips when there is extra work and ofa carefully alnecured old age Like-a servant however it is to her inter¬

est to spy on the master to discoverhis weaknesses and to play uponthem In some respects it is a pleas ¬

ant position although it is always anuncertain one For from her birth-to her death her welfare depends-not on herself tout on a man herfather or ibrother or guardian first herhusband second her son last Luckalways controls her destiny Thoughthe wheel of chance may set her ina pleasant place today there is always the dread on her of a weeksnotice the possibility of the crowdedvista of the employment agency to ¬

morrowHer duties ranging over a limit ¬

ed arc of human endeavor made fora cheap versatility rather than as inthe case of men for the developmentof special gifts Her working hoursand her wages are arbitrarily fixed bymen Her habits are settled by menH H l 1r 1ictuto cultivate her mind As Her c11ieC

control of man is through her sensesshe thinks almost entirely with her-

Semotions

l fircWBeparture in Magazines-The greatest departure in magazine

literature within the Jats two decadeshas been made by the publishers olThe Popular Magazine The circula ¬

tion of The Popular has been growingI rapidly month after month and re¬

cently its readers requested and evendemanded that the magazine be issu ¬

ed twice a month The publishershave acceded to the demand and twoIssues of the magazine are now onsale each monthone on the tenth andone on the 25th This is the first 01the big magazines to break away fromthe onceamonth policy and it looks-as if the venture wero going to be ahuge success The Popular publishesthe kind of fiction the people want

I Western stories college stories de ¬

tective stories and stories of adven-ture in all lands This is a field thatThe Popular has made peculiarly itsown and so long as It continues toprint this class of fiction there is noreason to doubt that the twiceamonthIdea will foe as succcessful as themonthly issue has been However dar-ing the twiceamonth scheme seem-

I to be it is surely not too ibig for thej biggest magazine in

uAmerica

Slavery in MexicoI Some astounding statements are

made by John Kenneth Turner in theNovember American Magazine writ ¬

ing under the title of BarbarousMexico a country he has visited for-a period of two years to collect thedata which he has embodied in to hisremarkable series of articles Of acertain phase of the deportation of theYaqui Indians by the Mexican govern-ment Mr Turner says

The secret which lies at the roots-of the whole Yaqui affair was revealedto me and the whole matter summedup In a few words by a colonel in theMexican army in one of tho most re-markable interviews which r obtainedduring my entire trip to Mexico

For the past four years this offi ¬

cer has been one of those in immedi-ate charge of transporting all theYaqui exiles to Yucatan I was for¬

tunate enough to take passage on thesame steamer with him returninrfrom Progresso to Vera Cruz He I-ra stout comfortable talkative oldcampigner of aboutsbtP years Thesteamship people put us in the samestateroom and as the colonel hadsome government passes which hehoped to sell me we were soon onthe most confidental terms

1 In the past three and on-

ehalfHarmsC j carrtsmre certainly fine I gaTe a friendone when the was treating htm for cancerot the stomach The next morning he passedfour pieces a tape worm He then got a boxand in three days he passed a t werm 45 feetlong It was Mr Matt Freck of MillenburcDauphin Co Pa I am a Cascarets I use them myseltaud find them beneficialfor most anv disease caused impure blood

Chas S ondouIcwutonPa Mifflin Co

Pleasant Palatable Potrut Taste GoodDo Good sever SteicenWeakcn or GripeJOe ZSc SOc Never sold in bulk The genu¬

ine tablet stamped C C C Guaranteed toUfO or your aoser back 82J

p

years he told me I have deliveredjust fifteen thousand seven hundretYaquis in Yucatandelivered mindyou for you must remember that thgovernment never allows me enoughexpense money to feed them properly-and from ten to twenty per cent dieon the journey

These Yaquis he said sell inYucatan for 65 apiece men womenand children Who gets the moneyWell 10 goes to me for my servicesThe rest is turned over to the secre ¬

tary of war This however is only-a drop in the ibuCket for I know thisto be a fact that every foot of landevery building every cow every bur ¬

ro everything left ibehind the Yaquis when they are carried away bythe soldiers is appropriated for hisprivate use by the official in authorityof the locality from which they havebeen removed-

So according to this man who hashimself made at least 157000 out ofthe business the Yaquis are being de ¬

ported for the money there is in itfirst the money from the appropria-tion of their property second themoney from the sales of their bodiesHe declared to me that the deportations would never stop until the lastpossible dollar bad been squeezed outof the business-

The Social Life of PittsburghSocially Pittsburgh may be likened-

to a huge pie with upper and lowercrust aplenty ibut a noticeable lack ofwhat the good housewife realizes isthe chief feature of her culinary tri-umph the filling The top crust isextremely light and therefore has va-

rious elevations or excrescencesSticking to the under side of this upper crust you will find many traces otwhat was once Pittsburghs social fill-

ing or middle class Their connection-is a bit precarious almost perilous-but they manage somehow to stickfor below through a great spacethey see the under crust absorbing-that part of the filling which failed-to rise and cling to the upper crust-In no other city of America will youfind the words middle class regard-ed as a term of contumely In no oth ¬

er American city will you see so manyindividuals drawing comfortable sal ¬

aries and yet regarding life as a hopeless sort of game hardly worth theplaying Pittsburghers have reduced-the art of being pessimistic to ascienceFrom Womans Home Companion for Xovmebre

The Appetite of EskimosNew York November 20The ques¬

tion of the amount of food needed tosustain life in the Arctic regions washeatedly discussed in the polar dis ¬

pute Mr Harry Whitney who spent-a year shooting within the Arctic cir-cle

¬

gives an idea in an article in TheOuting Magazine for December ofwhat the Eskimo can do when hetries He says-

I shall never forget the feast thatthose Eskimos tad when we next

seven imra oiib i tftft1aloolnetful of dried walrus meat prepared byDr Cook for dog foodtok and two large cups of tea andfour biscuits per man A good part-of the seal and all the hare meatthey ate raw like hungry dogs Itrained my camera upon them butEskimos have a decided objection tobeing photographed while they eatand out of respect to their wishes Idesisted

The Tragedy of OldMaidhood-But thisthis is the tragic part of

being an old maid You find men ofyour own age basking in the smiles-of pretty girls of eighteen or so withnever a glance in your direction Andthose who seem attracted to you areold beaus of hoary head and tottering-step callow youths who arc tooyoung for the eighteenyearolds tonotice who fall in love with you vio-lently

¬

and hint darkly at runningaway with you as soon as they navesaved up enough money AndoIlmore dangerous than all the restthose dear men a fewonly a fewyears older than yourself married tocareless extravugant thoughtless-wives who live the butterfly life andcrave the attentions of other menany men men save those who belong-to them These men plodding away I

in the harness to earn money for the I

Paquin gowns and Lewis hats andstarving for sympathy and love andcompanionship realizing too late thatthey and all their sacrifices are taken-as a matter of course by their wivescraving the love for which they havebeen cheated into paying the greatprice and finding that it is only coun ¬

terfeitand pleading oh so eloquent-ly with their poor starved hearts intheir voices for friendship and understanding and camaraderiefor allthat you may give and all that theymay take fOh how we hate these smug youngmatrons in their new frocks theirdreams of hats and their narrowbands of gold upon the third fingerVe could manage the frocks and themillinery perhaps but the other I

Ah could we And would we ifwe could Amy Lyman Phillips JuDecember Smart Set

Not the Right AtmosphereMrs AskitDo you intend to have

an Italian garden on your placeMrs Newrich No Im afraid I

could never get used to that garlicsmellDecember Smart Set

FLORIDA 0E01P-

Is TO GET BUSYRE-

PUBLICAN STATE CENTRAL

COMMITTEE TO HOLD MEETING-

IN JACKSONVILLE DEC 11

CANDIDATES OF 1908 ARE PAR

TICULARLY INVITED TO AT¬

TEND 1

Those laboring udP tlM ImpteSsiob-

I

i

The Hygenic Bedroom

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Sanitaire Beds harmonize with any bedroom they are beautiful indesign and finish The finish is durablehard as flint impossible tochip off Snowy White the symbol of purity and cleanliness andSanitaire Gold with the appearance of a brass bedat a small frac

tion of the priceare both deservedly popular A large variety of othercombinations

Sanitaire Beds are dust and germ proofthere is no spot wheredust can lodge or germs breed

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Phone 105 S-

Palafox1553I

r

A Zelius SonPhone 157

504 South Palafox St

Butcher andGreen Grocer-

A full line of FreshMeats Country Pro ¬

duce Poultry Eggs etcSpecial attention giv-

en¬

to ships tradePrompt DeliveryPensacola Fla

CITY TAXESDiscounts Interest and

PenaltiesDiscounts

2 per cent if paid in October1 per O MU If paid in Xovembe1 per cent If paid In DecemberJanuary net

Interest Addedi per cent K paid in February

1vz per cent If paid in March2U per cent if paM In April3 per cent if paid In May I33 per cent if paid before June 1

Interest and Penalties Ad13 per cent June 15 to July 1 IHY per cent July 1 to Aug 116U per cent Au 1 1 to Sept 1Advertised for sale in SeptemberStatements may be obtained attime by calling at office in city hJUnder the law no more statements wthe mailed

J C WHITINGT-ax Collector City of Pensacola

that the Republican organization aFlorida is napping are mistaken folthe organization is very much alive tQthe interests of the party in Florida-as will be evidenced by a call for ameeting of the Republican state cen-tral

¬

committee which will convene inJacksonville Tuesday Dec 11 tor thepurpose of transacting any and allbusiness that may properly come be ¬

fore the committee says an exchangeThe Republican party of Florida-

at least that arm of the party whichhas the balance of powerhas beenweeded own to a few of the most In-fluential

¬

the majority Republican pieieaters and it is remarkable the in-fluence

¬

this crowd wields among thenational leaders-To this convention the chairmen

antI secretaries of the various districtcoralHftte the Republican candidates j

r

A GREAT DISTINCTION IN

PLUMBING JOBSu x cn jx u a1 UIIIDn hor

is a decidedly distinctive tone of quality and metftin the kind of work we do-

An old firm established reputation for satisfaction or money back ahd efficient skilled workmen Ienable us to claim highest class of service Sewer Jconnecting our strongest claim to a bid on your work

CHAS A BORN15 Wt Garden Street Phone 325

New and Relay RailsWe make a specialty of both and are preparedto supply your requirements promptly

METZGER BROTHERSMo-bile A-

lLe LZI1 T X eg st p 23LYQuick MoneyMaking InterestingSchool of TelegraphyRegular Telegraph Operator In chargemlnship Typewritln SpelUn by competent teach raLetterWriting and fiemcrc1al and RaIlway Office Practice with

good on road ThreemonthsStudentB go from the C wr direct to

and room at 15 a month Enter now5 Life Scholarship 5 t 0 Board

Tampa Fla

I

TO THE FARMERS-

Until

addedUntil

a furtherflntclaunotice our gin will start up every Thursday We have

charge of an experiencedgrist mill to our plant and with gin and grist mill Inman we guarantee entire satisfaction Wecotton cotton seed and corn buy

McVOY COCantonment Fla

General Merchandise Cotton Fertilizers all kinds of farm Guppnea4

Ir congress candidates for state of> e and legates to the national conntion of 100S are urgently invited

kI the call urges all members of the3te central committee to be on handthe meeting or to send proxiesonSidera Interest fa being manlred in politics by the Republicanstftughout the state The leaders anttate a good attendance in Decemb

n Henry S Chubb t register oftb nitedStat s laud office is chair¬

j

p

man of the Florida Republican stati Jr central committee Hon ShieldtWarren rpcJver of the United Staterland office Is chairman or the executire committee of the Third districtA lot of old newspapers

tied up in neat bundles forsale 5c a bundle at TheJournalofficeSUBSCRIBE FORTI1EJO RN rp