t it .: 31 i m - v i , : ! 1 S 5 y.Ut ; .i P : 1 .1 i ' i;.;f." , i fti;'f I 2 : J t . ' t-.t;T t - (,;yr :! Sj. ;,;.$ il ': : iii..;:? I!-';.:'.' ; :i'?4-: . ; .'- i '.if:'. -- ..v. i ' . ; fill 'lib; 'fS;;: ' .1 i if 4 m. 1: I-, WW 13. i !,. 1 NOVEMBER 'AILMENTS TEiESR PREVEHTIOM ANO CURL Xovember is the mAith of falling tem ppra! i; res. Over all tl)e temi)era(e regions the iict weather has passed and the iirst riaors of winter have appeared. As the great l-u!k of civilized nations is located in the Temperate Zones, the effect of ehang- zz z i inc seasons is a question ot tiie highest impor tance. When the weather begins to change from warm to , oold, Wait Adjust Itself to Changing Tem peratures, when cool nights succeed hot .nights, when dev.--, told days follow hot, sultry days, tli l.;::nan body must adjust itself to this r.;:ed condition or perixh. i'J'hc perspiration incident, to warm weit her has been checked. This detains wit ::tt the system poisonous materials whi: h i:a.ve ! heretofore found escape through the perspiration. itost of the poisonous materials re tahiid;n,th,ei system , by the checked per spiiFion' find' their way out of the body, if ;.i all. through the kidnevs. This throws upon the kidneys extra labor. They become charged and overloaded with tlie 'poisonous excretory materials. This h;-.s a tendency to inflame the kid-not';--. producing functional diseases of the kijir.eys and sometimes Bright 's Disease. ' J'cruna acts upon the skin by stimulat ing t:e emuhctory glands and ducts, thus' preventing the detention of poisonous ma terials which should pass out. Peruna in vipM tites the kidneys and encourages them to fullill their function in spite of the eiiillpxajid discouragements of cold weather. J enma is a com bi.-: ;; t :i , of well- I e-ru-na Is aworld- trid : harmless ; Unowned Rem- rrmcuies mat have . ftood . the tesl of', time. Alf.nv of these edy For Climatic Disease. ' iei)'jlies have been used by doctors and by the people in Europe and Air erica for a hundred years. I'truna. has been used by Dr. Ilartman in his private practice for many years wit a notable results. Its elficaey has been jirovi'ii by decades of use by thousands of I it'.- f lo 3nd has been substantiated over and over by many thousands of homes. : Peruna is sold by your local tlrug jrisis. Buy a bottle today. - So. 18-'06. IS OTTERED TO 'WORTHY VOUNO PEOPLE p arnestly request all jouniy persons, no rustle?- how limited their means or education, vno desire a thorough business training and ffooii position, to write at once for OUR r,,pT itat.f-eate PFEE. Success, indeoend-n-e end probable Fortune guaranteed. Don't E;.4"V WUITk TO-DAY. ii.-AIa. Bus. College, Macon. Go. MEANING OF A KISS. (Scrap Book). The dictionary informs the breath less seeker after f ruth that a kiss is a form of snlution expressed by the contact, with pressure, of the lips wI.1i"-"Udeti;ni.tion, though clear and coiu-isev seems to leave something- to bt veered.-" T 'Jonathan Swift testily remarks: ''Lord! I wonder what fool it was th"atfirsf invented kissing" and inauy more are the disgruntled speeches which have been made by men and wmeii ever jihee the ai t first became known on earth. ,li is probable that every mother's sou 't iis and ' daughter, too has some sort of idea of what a kiss is, in pite of the reticence of the JanJ gi;age? Soions, but it is doubtful if any one ever cloihed the idea more appro priately than the lover who in loTO wrote the epistle from which the fol lowing" extract is taken. It is trans lated from the ?erman. What is a kiss? A kiss is. as it were, a seal expressing our sincere attachment; the pledge of our fu ture union; a dumb, but at the same time audible, language of a living heart; a present, which at the same time it is given-is taken from us; thvi impression of an ardent attachment on an ivory coral press; the striking i io nmis against one anoiuer; a crmson balsam for a love-wounded heart; a sweet bite of the lip; an af feteionate pinching of the mouth; a delicious dish which is eaten with scarlet spoons; a sweetmeat, which does not satisfy hunger; a fruit which is planted and gathered at the same time; the quickest exchange of ques tions and answers o ft wo lovers; the fourth decree of love. General Wood issued a denial of the. report that a Japanese officer had been arrested while sketching the 'Philippine fortifications. A DOCTOR'S TRIALS. He Sometimes Gets Sick Like Other People. Ien doing good to people is hard wo; k if you have too much of it to do. No one knows this better than the liard-working, conscientious family loctor. He has troubles of his own often gets caught in the rain or snow, or loses so much sieep he sometimes sets out of sorts. An overworked Ohio doctor tells his experience: -"About 'three years ago as the re sult of doing two men's work, attend ing a large practice and looking after the details of another business, my health broke down completely, and I w,'as little better than a physical wreck. .' "1 suffered from indigestion and 'constipation, loss of weight and ap petite, .bloating and pain after meals, Ios.3 of,JTOem'6ry and lack of nerve force for continued mental appiica titoflsi i .' f4- ' " I became irritable, easily angered anil dospondent without cause. The heart's action became irrgular and weak, with frequent attacks of palpi tation rt-arins. the first hour or two arferfcretirln'g? '. : '' "Some Grape-Nuts andrtit bananas tans foi my lunch one day and llc-aaea".nie par ticularly. with the re sult. I sot more satisfaction from it than from anything, r had eaten for m6'ntbs, and 6n further investigation restigat and use, adopted Grape-Xuts for my jrtoriiing and evening meals, served UGULlly with cream and a sprinkle of nit.or- sugar.-. - . "My improvement was rapid and : -crniansnt in weight as well as in physical and mental endurance. In a word, I am filled with the joy of Jiving again, and continue the daily use of Grape-Nuts for breakfast and of feu i6: the evening meal. ' "Th' little pamphlet, "The Road to Wellville,' found :n pkgs., is invari ably saved and handed to some needy patient along with the indicated rem edy." Name 'given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. "There's a reason." G OF SCHOOL 81 Fearful Scenes As the flames Break Over Crowded Vesse! LOSS OF LIFE WAS NOT HEAVY Of the 500 Aboard the Algecims at Tculon, France, It is Believed ' Tnzt None Died in Flusaes Had Been Harbor. Vessel- for Years Burning Created, Greatest Alarm TrovLshout City. Toulon. France, By Cable. The Torpedo school ship Algeciras, sta tioned in this harbtu was totally de stroyed by fire" :t a late hour Sunday evening, liierc? wete .oo uicn Board when the fire broke out, but it is believed that' most of them were saved. The Algeciras was a ship of the line and for a number of years she has been doing duty as a harbor ves sel and employed as a torpedo train ing ship. She was of 5.047 tons dis placement and was built in ISo"). The burning of" the school ship created the greatest alarm through out the city. Xews of the fire was first conveyed at about 11 o'clock, by the firing of cannon in the har bor. The peopla hurriedly left the cafes and threatres and rushed to the docks, whence they could see the Algeciras, a mass of flames in the habor. The burning vessel stood out brilliantly in the encircling darkness, and the glare of the flames lit up the other sniping and the coast and wharves. There wasl terrible anxiety con cerning the fate of the .lOO men oa board until the authorities announc ed that everybody had been taken off in boats and saved, with the exemp tion of three. Those m?n did not answer the roll call and it is pre sumed thev were burned to death.. BcoEevelt Was Nearly Wrecked. St. Johns, X. F.. Special. Com mander Peary's Artie steamer Roose velt is reported to have had a terri ble experience while coming south' from Hopedale, Labrador. She had to lie up for 11 days in Battle Har bor, Labrador, which is about -0 miles north of Chateau Bay, on ac count of a hurricane. In Battle Harbor the Roos?velt carried away her heaviest' anchor, and several lines had to be run out to keep her off the rocks. She was short of coal, and it became neces sary to augment this fuel with wood and blubber. A portion of the ship's interior work was dismantled in order to se cure wood. During a blinding snow storm, it is declared the Roosevelt was nearly wrecked on the west coast of Newfoundland. Inland Waterways Meeting. Wilmington, N. C, Special. The Inland Waterway "Association, which was orgaized in Columbia, S. C , several years ago to promote the con struction by the United States of an inland waterway from Norfolk, Va.. to Beaufort Inlet, North Carolina, will meet here Tuesday. The organi zation is composed of representatives from the commercial organizations of Maryland, Virginia, North and South Carolina and Georgia. Their object is to increase the coastwise trade be tween the South Atlantic and North Atlantic ports by avoiding- the dan gers of Capes Hatteras and Lookout. Alabama Policeman Fatally Shot. Decatur, Ala., Special. Policeman J. Lem Jones was shot and fatally wounded at an- early hour Sunday morning by Will Wade. Jones had responded to a call to quiet a dis turbance and arrested Wayne Moore. It is alleged that Wade shot the of ficer in the back. He died several hours later. Wade and Moore are still at large. Eoosevelts Nearing Home. Norfolk, Va., Special. The Nor folk Navy Yard received a wireless communication rom I he battleship Louisiana conveying President Roose velt from Panama. The message for transmission to the bureau of navi gation, "Washington. At S o'clock the Louisiana was 200 miles southeast of Cape Henry. The message - request ed that the converted yacht Mayflow er now anchored at Hampton Roads, meet the Louisiana at 1 o'clock Mon day afternoon off Piney Point in the Chesapeake bay. Cars for Whites and Blacks. Montgomery, Ala., . Special. The ity council has ordered that separ ate cars be provided for whites and ticks, beginning at once. As tha traction company has the only cars now in use, the service will materi- ... ieuucea aS- ne car WUi De 1 usecl fr one. color and next for the 11 V l -i . i , -i other. Pooscvelt's Action Censured. Terrarkaiia, Aik., Special. Rev. E. M. Briggs, D. D., of Palestine, Tex., in addressing the - negro Baptist con vention said the negro has it in his power to become something in this country, and if he fails he will only have himself to blame. Lynching was condemned and President Roosevelt censured by the convention for dis charging the negro troops withoitt trial.s Prof. Knox declared the negro In the futeure will have to look to the South for his friends. BUR APSE QUITS CHURGH Quits His Church on Account of Heresy Trial STILL CLAIMS DEEP REVERENCE Kef uses to Make Cowardly, Retraction of Belief Which Induced Church to Terminate His Ministry In Letter to Bishop Walker He Says, "I am Certain That Ycu Will Be Glad to Acknowledge That I am Not Com pelled to This Action by Anything That E.e2ects Upon My Moral In tegrity or Calls in Question My Faithfulness as a Pattor." Rochester, N. Y., Special. Bow ing to the will of the Church,' but refusing to make a li cowardly retrac tion'' of the belief which induced the Church to terminate his ministry, 4he Rev. Algernon S. Crapsey, rector of St. Andrews church, of Rochester, N. Y., renounced his ministry in the Protestant Episcopal Church in a btter to Bishop Wm: David Walker, of the Western Diocese of New York. In this letter the Rev. Mr. Crapsey, re-a filmed his belief that the "no tion of iho origin of Jesus, that a son of man born without a human father is without confirmation' in history." He also asserts that "When I say of Jesus that he ascended to heaven, I do not mean and cannot mean that with his physical body of flesh, blood and bones, he floated into space and has for two thousand years been ex isting somewhere in the sky, in that very physical body of flesh, blood and bones. Such :rn existence would seem to rae not glorious, but horrible." Declaring"" that he is about to car ry the cas? to the free intelligence and enlightened conscience of the world, he counsels "Then hundreds of clergy and thousands of laymen in the Protestant Episcopal Church, who have reached the same conclu sion'' r.s he has, not to be dismaj'ed and to stay where they are. '"I appeal." he says, "from those ii. places of authority in the Church itself, to the great body of people." He asserted that he does not blame his judges and though he bows to their will and feels that il is final for. him. he says. "I am equally certain that it is not final for the Church. When the great tribunal of free thought has decided this contention, ihe men who administer the Church on ca? tli will eonfoim to this deci-:-ion. Barricaded in a Mine. Linton, Ind.. Special. W. A. Wat son, a merchant of Midland. Ind.. is dying at a hospital, and Louis Shnley, an eed miner, who shot him is at bay in the Tower Hill mine at Mid land. The shooting was the result of a trival puarrel during a game of cards. After shooting Watson, Shnley went to the home of his sister-in-law and forced her to give him $". Shuley then entered the mine, 200 feet deep, armed with a shot gun and plenty of ammunition. A party is guarding them ine. Killed in Dispute Over Board BilL Knoxville, Tenn., Special. John Upton wjis shot and instantly killed near Cumberland Gap, Tenn., by James Herrell. The two men had a dispute over a board bill which Herrell owed him. Herrell claims that Upton was holding him by the throat and threatening to kill him when he pulled his pistol and fired. The ball pierced Upton's heart. Her rell was jailed at Tazewell, failing to give a five thousand dollar bond. Catholic Bishop Dead in Bed. Posn, Prussian Poland, By Cable. Manager Stabledeki, Roman Catho lic archbishop of Posen, who recently had been active in combatting the 'Grerman government's order to teach the children of Poland religion in the German tongue, was found dead in a chair in his study here. His death was caused by heart disease. Virginia Supreme Court Declares 2 Cent Rate Illegal. Richmond, Va., Special. In the Virginia Supreme Court of "Appeals Judge Cardwell hanried down a de cision affirming the decision . of ' the State corporation commission, declar ing the two-cent passenger rate act passed by the Virginia Legislature contrary to the Fourteenth Amend ment of the Constitution of the Unit ed States. The case was a test one involving the requirements that the railroads place on sale 500-mile 2 cent rate books. . . News Notes. A witness in' the trial of Chester Gillette said she heard a scream from the direction where Grace Brown's body was found. Enrico Caruso, the famous tenor, had a hearing on the charge of pinch ing a woman in Central park. In the United States, there are now 25,006 documented merchant vessels of 0,674,969 gross tons. Aged Woman Mr&ered. Shamokin, Pa., Special. With r-3 head horribly batter?d by a club and with her throat black and blue, Mrs. Sarah Klinger, .aged 60 vears, ths widow of a civil war veteran, wa found dead in her home here. The woman lived alone. The authorities have no clue to the murderer, and ar;' not yet able to decide whether th; woman was killed by robbers o' whether her life was taken to aceom plish some other purpose. ' GREAT IN EVERY SENSE. The Charlotte. Observer . as a. Devel oper of Talents as . Well as Re-, .sources. " , ' . .' t -V t The Charlotte, In, Cj, . Observer: lias long been recognized , as.-,av.powerfyil factor : in helping to bring about the development of its State and section- industrially. ." And its , . labors along this line have done much in bringing capital to build up our manufactur ing interests and AaluableJ citizens .'to cast their lpt'amorig us. But the !Ob perver has 'not stopped there! " Like the great, broad-minded 'and ; 'usefnl paper it 'is, it has widened out its! field of ; usefulness and has helped materially in creating a distinctively local' and Southern literature. Some of the brightest literary stars of the present ; period have been discovered and their talents brought out through its columns. Much valuable -historical matter,, heretofore unknown, has been given to the .world .through, the medium of its' immense Sunday is sues. ' For genuine literary merit a single Sunday issue of the Observer goes far and away beyond the current magazines, carrying both quantity and qaujity - to an . extent impossible withhe best of them. In fact, so great is the Observer in its field of a family newspaper that it were difficult to determine whether it, has accomplished the more in .the field of industry or the field of litera ture. Anyway, it stands at the head u ' .... i ; . .. among tjuiuueiu. uaiiies ni every par ticular.' ' ' "! '.' "'''.' Deafness Cannot Be Cared by local applications; as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional ' remedies. Deafness is caused bv an inflamed condition 'of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. AVhen this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed. Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tuba restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing bat an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold bv Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Trade Union Old Age Pensions. It may be doubted whether the public generally are fully aware of what is already being done for the aged by working men through their trade unions and other great self-help organizations. Forty' of the principal trade unions paid in 1904 no less a sum than 267,396 in superannuation benefit. The Aimalgamated Society of Engineers itself is paying more than 100.000 a year to its aged mem bers. All thi3 is in addition to large expenditure on the unemployed which again is no doubt greatly swelled by those who are made wortc--ess through old age. The. Northumb erland and Durham Miners' Perma nent Relief Fund has for many years made provision for its aged members. In 1905 there were 4.591 on the fund, the total amount paid in superannua tion for the year being 60,094. Nine.; teenth' Century. Benares, the sacred city of India, s visited annually by nearly 2,000,' tOO pilgrims. 1 A Lazy Liver May be only a tired liver, or a starved liver. It would bo a stupid as well as savage thing to beat a weary or starved man because he lagged in his work. So in treating the lagging, torpid liver it is a great mistake to lash it with strong drastic drugs. A torpid liver is but an indication of an ill-nourished, enfeebled body whose organs are weary with over work. Start with the stomach and allied organs of digestion and nutrition. . Put them in working order and see how quickly your liyer will become active. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has made many marvelous cures of "liver trouble " by its wonderful control of the organs ot digestion andTiutrition. It re stores the normal activity of the stomach, increases the secretions of the blood-making glands, cleanses the system from poi sonous accumulations, and so relieves the liver of the burdens imposed upon it by the defection of other organs. If you have bitter or bad taste in the morn Ins, poor orrTVi&ble appetite, coated tongue, foul breath, constipated or Irregular bowels, feel weak, easils tired, fispondent, frequent headaches, pain r dlstresato "small of back." pn awing or distressed teeno? In stomach, perhaps nauseaNuifoeKwwlJtf " risings" in throat after eating, and kin&rai symptoms of weak stomach and torpid liro no medi cine will relieve you more promptly or cure yon Tpoi-g rV-manently than Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Perhaps only a part of the above symptoms will be present at one time and yet point to torpid liver or , biliousness and weak stomach. Avoid all" hot bread and biscuits, griddte cakes and other indigestible food and take the "Golden Medical Discovery regularly and stick to Its use until you are vigorous and strong.. , The "Discovery" is non-secret, non-alcoholic, is a glyceric extract of native medici nal roots with a full list of its ingredients printed on each bottle-wrapper and attested under oath. Its ingredients are endorsed and extolled by the most eminent medical writers of the ago and are recommended to cure the diseases for which it is advised. Don't accept a substitute of unknown composition for this non-secret medicine OF KNOWN COMPOSITION. When you buy WEATHER you want . complete protection, arid long service. umer yooa pomr& are combined in TOWER'S Al 1 V OILED CLOTHING icm ccjxt &Jtord ' to buy any othsr toet jToweR co eovroM us a. M-, fOWC CAMAOlAN CO L.TO. ''HI m - n -' CABBAGE Plants! CELEKY Plants! and all kinds of ' trarden plants.Can now furnish all kinds of cabbage plants, rorn In the open air and will stand great cold, urown from mmmm sef-u oi m;i must rensDie seeOREien. we use tne same plants on our thousand acre truck farm. Plants oarefully counted ami properly pack ed t.'elcrr readv lass of Dei; i Lettuce. Onion' and Beet nlann an ; time or earlier. Reduced express rates promised, which, when effectiTe win give us w per erne ies taam mercnfcnaiae rates, trices: fcmiill lots $1.50 per thousand, larp lot $1.(31 to 1.25 per thounnl. F O. B Mea getts, S. C. Arlington White Spine Cucumber Seed fWceuts ienonno - . . , has established an Experimental Station on ourlarms to testail biii of "Potables eoreelally Cabbages. The results of these experiment we wmi i. .i ? jwawanj ; tma-Yours sspecully.-X. II. BABY'S AWFUL HUMOR., Tkim Skin Formed O ver Body and Undr f. It )Vas Watery Blood Cured in One ' . Week toy Catlcura Remedies. "Wheu ray litt'.' girl baby was one week old sae nad a skin disease A thai; skin forme i. over her body and trader it was watery blood, and whe sha was washed it would burst and bre.-k. She was in that condition for --eeksand i tried everything 1 could think of, but nothing did-her any good. '.Vhen she Was three' months old 1 took her to San Artonio to, see, a doctor, ,bu tne doctor" we wanted to see yj not . home, so my sister gave nui'i'i-filri. nf Ciiticum IScaTj'Lnd hail a bor of. Caticura- Ointment, and told m& I . .. . --! -. ' I k I to use them, which l aft in time, x.usea i.hem t '.ree times, and the humor began to fade, and in cne week che ' as sounc' and well ; and ' it has "ever returned tinee. 1 - tiling every mother should keep the Cuticura .Remedies in the house. 'Mrs H. Aaron, Benton, Texas, my 3, 1935.", . Politeness . is benevolence in small t hi nig. Macaulay. The Original Porous Plaster. It's Allcock's, first introduced to the people sixty years ago, and to-day un doubtedly has the largest sale of auy ex ternal remedy millions being sold annu ally throughout the whole civilized world. There have been imitations, to be sure, but never has there been one to even com pare with Allcock's the world's standard external remedy. For a weak back, cold on the chest or any local pain, the result of taking cold or over-strain, there's nothing we know of to compare with this famous plaster. Power goes before talent. -From the Danish. "THE MARRYING SQUIRE." Justice Geo. E. Law, of Brazil, Ind., Has Married 1400 Couples. Justice Geo. E. Law, of Brazil, Ind., has fairly earned the title "The Marrying Squire," by which he is known far and wide, having already mar ried some 1400cou pies. Ten years ago he was Deputy Coun ty Treasurer. "At that time," said Jus tice Law, "I was suf fering from an an noying kidney trou ble. My back ached, my rest was broken at night,' and the passages of the kidney secretions were too frequent and contained sedi ment. Three boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills cured me'in 1897, and for the past nine years 1 have been free from kidney complaint and backache." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. No old age agreeable but that of a wise man. Pythagoras. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle Him that is in possession God helps. From the Italian. FITS, St. Vitns'Dance :Nervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. S3 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa, A north wind has no corn and a poor man no friend. From the Span ish. ' HICKS' GAPUDINE CURES ALL ACHES And Nervousness Trial bottle 10c At rof stores W. L. DOUGLAS 3.50 &$3.00 Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD W.LDouglas $4 Gilt Edge line. cacnotbe equalled at any price , To Shoe Dealers : W. U Douglas' Job bing House ia tht most complete in this country Send for Catalog 8H0ES FOB EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES. Men's Shoes. $S to Sl.SO. Boys' Shoes, $3 . . to $1.05. Women's Shoes. S4.00 to Sl.SO. Kisses' & Children's Shoes. $2.35 to $1.00. Try W. I. Douglas Wpmen's, Misses and Children's shoes ; for style, fit and wear 1 they excel other makes. If I could take you into my large factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other make. . Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L. Douglas shoes, t His name and price is stamped on the bottom, which protects you against high prices and Inferior shoes. Take no substU tute. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes and insist upon having them. . Fast Color yetets used ; they will not wear brassy. Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles. W. U DOUGLAS. Dept. 15. Brockton, Mass. So. 18- '08. f oftn White & Co. LOUISVSLLE, KY. - Eitebllslud 1837 BlgliMt market price paid for rnr FURS and Hides. wA Marlp i mripr I I S finvp.rnmp.nt InsDectinn The Southern Cotton Oil Company If afflicted with weak eyes, use Thompson's Eyeffater BLiTCH COMPAST, MKuifETTS, f jr:-: su v SUGGESTIONS HOW WOMEN MAY .FIND RE,LIE,F. jJ$iiss Net lie Holme $ pXWn f.. armLJJ "While no woman is entirely free from periodical suffering1, it does not seem to be the plan of nature that women should suffer so severely. This is a severe strain on a woman's vitality. When pain exists something is wrong which should be set 'right or it will lead to a serious derangement of the whole female organism. Thousands of women have testified in grateful letters to Mrs. Pinkham that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound overcomes woman's special pains and irregularities. . It provides a safe and sure way of escape from distressing and dangerous weaknesses and diseases. The two following letters tell so con vincingly what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will do for women, they cannot fail to bring- hope to thousands of sufferers. Miss Nellie Holmes, of 540 N . Division Street, .Buffalo, N. Y., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: Your medicine is indeed an ideal medicine for women . I suffered misery for years with painful periods, headaches, and bearing-down Eains. I consulted two different physicians ut failed t'o get any relief. A friend from the east advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I did so, and no longer suffer as Idid before. My periods are natural; every ache and pain is gone, and my general health is much improved. I advise all women who suffer to takeXydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound." Mrs. Tillie Hart, of Larimore, N. D., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "I might have been spared many morAs. of suffering and pain had I only known of the efflcacv of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Ask Krs. PlBkham's Advice A Woman JO&IY - For CouokColdX SoreTKroat,SiiffN Rheumatism and Neuralgia At all Dealers Price 25c 50o & HOO Sent Free Cottle, Hogs & Poultry J Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan 615 Albany Sh" Boston. Mass 1TK I SM . m H Ba, POT ASH in the soil puts corn on the stalk and money in the bank The natural process of plant 1 growth is simply one of chemical conversion. Potash, the raw material, is cheap; but when . converted valuable. New York f . 'r 'i -i wrote you ior aavice, writes Lelia Hagood,.,xr of Sylvia, Tenn., 'about'my terrible backache' and 7 monthly pains in my abdomen and shoulders, i 1,1 bH QiiffprpH th naa ianea to relieve me. Wine of Cardui, which at and now I am entirely Cardui saved my life.' . . It is a safe and reliable V diseases, such as peri odical pains, irregulari- A- : a I I V , Ui alll UOWn Sen- I sations, headache, diz ziness, backache, etc. At Every Drug Store in E OF Compound sooner; for I have tried so many remedies without help. . ., "I dreaded the approach of every month as it meant so much pain and suflering for me, but after I had used the Compound two months I became regular and natural and am'' now perfectly well and free from pain. I am very grateful for-what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me." Such testimony should be accepted by all women as convincing evidence' that Lydia E. Pinkham's , Vegetable Compound stands without a' peer as & remedy for all the distressing ills of women. 1 t . The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound" rests 1 upon the I well-earned gratitude -of' ' American 1 women. ' h ' . -t 1 , When women are troubled with pain or irregularities, displacements or ul ceration of the organs, j that .bearing-, down feeling, inflammation, .backache, ' bloating (or flatulency), general debil- ity, indigestion and nervous' prostra-1 ticra. or are beset with such symptoms . as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, ex-, citability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, they should remember there , is one . tried and , true remedy.- Lydia E. Pinkham's , Vegetable Compound at once remove! ' such troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you need the hest ; Don't hesitate to -write to Mrs. . Pinkham if there is anything; about your sickness you do not understand. She will jtreat you with kindness and her advice is , free. No woman ever regretted -writing her and she has helped thousands. , Address Lynn, Mass. . Best Understands a Woman's Ills. by nature into corn, it is J , The use of Potash is', not at 11 mm - JM ' .flilt M fa . l an expense, but an investment..' yi ntir frpp hnnlctct "Plant Food.' ' GERMAN KALI WORKS ' 1 ' 1 ; 93 Nassau Street, or "; I :. AtlsnU, Oa. IZZ4 Candler Building . :;.xrt i- . ' i ' r , .. sj m On your advice I aook 'f ; once relieved my pamsf ; my pan cured. I a in sure.-that -: f ; remedy for all female' FREE ADVICE Write us a letter describing ; all -your symptoms, and we will send yoa ! . Free Advice, in plain sealed envelope. ' Address: Ladies' Advisory Department.' The Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Chatta nooga, Tenn. , JU your symptoms, and we will send yoa ! J f 1.0Q bottles. Try it.' . . ; fci n ; 'in.

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