Newspapers / The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, … / Sept. 26, 1907, edition 1 / Page 4
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, Proverbs and Phrases. ' ' " " xuc gieui ana me nine ii;ive neeu of ach other. Shakespeare... - ,, . . - . Successful guilt is tlie Wne of so- ciety. Syrus.. There is nothing worse for mortals than a vagaboM life. ftotner. - : Love of money is the disease which renders us most pitiful and groveling. Jjonginus. j t. .4 Old age is, as it were, the altar oj.' ills; we may see them all faking ' ref uge in it. Marcus Aurelius. A MISSOURI WOMAN Tells a Story t jTnjk'ttllp-ttjin Mrs. J. D. Johnson of fitt-l Wpst trioVman s ri,.ni. . I "Following an operation -two yeas 1 ago, dropsy set in, and my left side was so swollen the-doptor said ho cwOuIdjhavje to tap s out ' -'the water; There was 'jnstant-i pam ana "a-., gnrgrvng eensatiort ..'around my heart, anil J .Could not raise my arm 'abbver my head. The kid ney action was disor dered and passages of the- secret ion 3 too frequent. On the advice of -.ray. husband I began using Doan's Kidney Pills- Stnre rising'- two ROies " mf . trouble has not rosupeari- Thie i wonderful, after suffering two years." Sold by all dealers. 50cents a box. Foster-Mirbarn Co.. Buffalo. N. Y. The roail leading to -justice-is tins safest. Hesiod. :'; ". FIFTE&IYEARS OF ECZEMA. ... - " Terrible ; lulling Prevented Sleep HandsvArtns, and Legs Affected .' Cored Inr fl Days by Cuticura. "I had eczema nearly fifteen yenrs. Tht. affected parts were' my hjpis, arms and' legs. They were the wotst..in the winter time and were always itchy.? and . I could not keep from scratching-them, f ..had to keep both hands 'fca&dtged -all the time, and at night 1 tfTwli'.'have to scratch through the bandageavai. the itching was so severe, and at timet: I "would hafe-.tO" tear everything off my hands to scratch the skin. Jt-cwld not .rest or sleep,- I had several physicians treat me", but they could not give iue-.iwfTBnnent eure, nor; even -could they stop the itching. After using the Cuticura Soap, oner Dox Cuticm-a' Oint ment and two bottles Cuticura Resolvent for about sis days, the itching had ceased, and nov the soVes have disappeared and 1 never-felt bctt.cr.inm' Me than I do now. Edward Wore!!, Band 30th, U."S. Infantry, Fort Crook, Nebraska." Rewords and punishment are tho basis of good -vsrrtaaeiit- Xepos. FITS.St. Vitus'Danre:JJprvons Diseasesper manentlycuredTy"Ur? Kline's Hreat Xervo i Kestorer. f- trial Dottle ana treatise irce. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St. Phila., Pa. There are countless1 "roads oa sides to the, erav. Cicero. all Mrs. Winpiow'B Soothing Syrup for Children allays paip, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle In Mars. They tell us there, are people up in Mars 7 - - What verc happy people thcr.mtist be! ";: ; " - " ; For in a habitation: mitf, the. stars From various vexations.; they'd, be free. - ;:t ' ; :'- " For the chances are that trusts are quite unknown, -i.-. , ..... .. And that ;3ife insurance socks no gruesome gains; The octopus .bos left tbem quite alone Since they, use canals instead of railway trains. From tariff 'talk no doubt they ars exempt, And maybe they escape the prob lem play ..,".'' The campaign oKaj,hr,.-does not attempt To steal some other fellow's boom away. ; -.-v- - - The trolley does not spider-web a town";- ' " There is nocall for dodgiiig moto cars ;"' No "Wall, street sends their value up or down "' ' ' ,' Thev must be very happy up in Mara! Jealousy Did It. "How did an American come to ba nominated in this ward?" "It was a compromise. The Czechs Copts, Kurds, Croatians and Brong lish couldn't fix upon a candidate among themselves."'- : Ro".l-39-'07. . A Sardonic Satisfaction. "You enjoy going to the theatre 1" "Yes," answered Mr. Meekton. "But don't care much for musical plays." "No. What I enjoy is to take Hen rietta where there is a whole lot of conversatipn--gaiit on in which she can,t say a word. ' ' No lonper-.-let. us be- talking here nor put off the-work God has intrust ed to our hands. Homer. .;. ... TUTS THE "GINGER" IX.- V-iV The Kind of Food Usd by Athlete. A former college athlete, one of the long distance runners,' began" to To"4.' his power of endurance, . His-expes. ience with a change in foo3 is inter-, esting. - ...... :. "While I; was: in training on the track athletic team my daily 'joss'; became a task.t.until after J was put on Grape-Nuts food Tor two meals a day. After using tfee-rFood f or' twTodxrtjf. weeks I felt lilw-ernerflan. My; di gestion was perfect,- nerves steady and I was full of eaergy. : "I trained for the mile and ; the' half-mile runs, (those events which require so much, endurance) and then the long daily "'jogs," Wbfrtf Dfoe'. had been such i, task, were cUpned ff with ease. 1 -won both, events. C" "The Grape-Xut8Tood. ufc: me in perfect condition and. 'gave VjV; my 'ginger.' Not only was niy "physical condition made nerfect. and rnvweieht luticaseu, uui my iuina was rcaae clear and vigorous - eo that I could get out my studies In ah'duOaj'f .'.lbe" time f ormerl;.requlred - Now mst all of the university wen use rjftpfcS; Nuts, for they have Jearned Its value; but I think my. te8jlmQny,wilf. ndt" be amiss and may perhaps help some one to learn how the best results can b.: obtained." .... - There's a reasc-ixfOf th.e'.'.efeci "tot Grape-Nuts food on fcb,e-;hunia- body and brain. The.'cerfaeremen'ts.'rL wheat and barley' are selected with special refeteHce"to" -thKr :towe'f for i i . . . . - rebuilding the brain and nerve ;een- tres. The 'ptf&iits;Xteviirkting- auu Buieuiiucauy- prepaEeu; -.-so .as tor make it easy pt-A iestitmrj Tly; pliy Bical and mental results are so appar ent after two or three weeks' use as to produce a profound impression. Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a reason," 'he PupJF Subject: The Cliurch and Amuse ;" inents. - ' Brooklyn, N. Y. Preaching at the Ixying- Square - Presbyterian Church. Hamburg avenue and Weirfield street, on the above theme, the Bey. Ira Weromell . Henderson, pastor, took as his text 1 John 2: IT,. f The .world asseth away, and.-T th last thereof; but he that doeth the will of God.abideth foreyer." He said: - Hacniness is a universal human wide human characteristic. The loncins of living souls for that which ministers to the satisfaction of the noblest and most lasting of human iieeds and . desires is natural. God created us to'be happy. ;KWe were not men did we not search for joy. Je hovalr meant us to' live in the pos session and - exercise of all that Is peaceful and joyous andlovable. It would be strange, if -we"'diTTt seek to. possess them. We are foolish if we do not use them. ,. ' Not otherwise pleasure, or the sat isfaction of lesser human desires and human needs, is a universal human craving. As we long for those things -that. are eternally and finally satis fying, so do we Ions; for those things that-are oi immediate and of contem poraneous value-. , And this craving is natural. The: desire, is - divinely granted.- It is uot strange that - we want pleasure. - v- ' , Rut happiness and pJeasure are not necessarily to be'fotmd in that fand we shall "Ireliberately circumscribe:! the application -of thei word) whlcK- we call amusement. Happiness naajf; be' far from the heart that is amgeeC; Many a soul that is seared and heayj', with sorrow has been amusedv :: JJU t amusement brings such soul BCKabid ing- Joy and ministers -;Bdflbajtaf of solace to heal their wounds.-'.; Pleas ure is not amusemenirjPipri -a man may find . much plejsure'atside of that which in the 'Common- use and acceptation of ,thec"term-vts.: called amusement. . Happiness -JSt matter, at : the basei"". of sub jecti vei'satisf ac tion;., Happiriess. ltf centrally a con cern of the soul. Pleasure may con serve happiness. "But a man may be well pleaded ad yet not )JjapiyjLfcnen 1 .am Persuaded that the fathers A man may be amused and find pleas ure in the amusement. But a man may be superlatively -unhappy-thoush his face may be -forcedtov"smileff through the power of amusement. For amusement is. a diversion, a dissipation, an indication of inward discontent.: Happiness indicates con tentment. The desire to be amused is very nearly always an indication of the Incapacity of a man to achieve happiness! The church expresses happiness in the terms of eternity, of divinity, of conscience. The happiness of man is, in the mind of the Church of Jesus Christ and in the light of His truth, dependent upon its perdura bility, its divineness, upon the clarity of the conscience of the man who possesses it. In the conception of the church happiness is eternal, it i the gift of God and a force that propels man nearer to God; it can not be enjoyed eiceot the conscience of men are void of the consciousness of their unworthiness before God. A man is not really happy unless his soul is satisfied in an eternal fashion, unless he has the joy and peace that are the gift of God unto those who love Him and who keep His command ments as his innermost possession, unless his mind and heart are certi fied of his personal acceptability be fore God. The church expresses righteous and worthy pleasure in th terms of the conservation of that which is eternal, the promotion of that which is divine, the satisfaction of duty. Any pleasure that does not augment happiness is unworthy. That is to say, that if our pleasures militate against our growth in that which is eternal and divine, if they dull our consciousness of the imperatives of the Almighty that are law and life to the human soul, they are unright eous. - Now, the Church measures amuse ments by these same standards. She asks us what our amusements do to afford us a larger vision of the eter nities, to increase our certainty of the reality and of our self-possession of divinity, to draw us into correct relationships with God. By these standards we have a right to meas ure our amusements and by these judgments they must stand or fall. If they can meet these tests they may remain steadfast and they will. If they: cannot be justified by them or squared to them they will fall and they ought to. For life is short. Time advances. Opportunities come &nd go. .There is much to be done. We must do it. - We have little time to waste. Our efforts must tend, be they little or momentous, to the en largement of humanity's comprehen sion of those things that are eternal and divine. If happiness lies in the achievement of these graces we have stipulated then we ought to be about the Master's business. No country in the world needs the white light of publicity and philos ophy and of uncommon sense to glare upon jts amusements more., than America. For we are amusement crasy. Our -catch-penny, tinseled, gaudy summer, places of amusement evidence of our ampsement fever. Our': theatres afe jammed with peo ple' who want not to be compelled to h-thjak or Ito. be brought face to faco with reproductions- of real life m miniature. . They go largely to be amused.; ; par "amusements are almost .wholly superficial.'". They minister to tfae--ned9rof--tHe mind that is momentarily- "surfeited, -to the jaded spirit. : .TheyT.Xre strictly temporal. They -are -very nearly always inex pressitfly cbeap-. and- tawdry when we eif t them .to -the: -bottom. They are unrelated; 4o duty; For they are pTimarny intended to aid. us to forget Of oar multitudes of amusements we , shall consider, four: the card table, the - dane the theatre, the t racetrack. VAnd tfiey are '.taken for ;J- COSslderaMon, not -because they are per se ,evjv;j)ut. Because iney nave become' peryerted, because it a the mMsJcfntertalnmentfor the mightyj; 'majority -of our population, becau'sfl 'th'eT& .is ' wlder,.difrerence cf opinion-' a' to.::their "'"morality ind propriety Jul 'the; hands of jChris Ian men- ahdbmeV crr.'.of anybody else to-day- ahd -under present social con ditions;; 1 ;" . . ' ' ':. ' '-: ;' It is ; "scarcely, necessary for me to say; that-a-pack, of cards in itself 13 not evil. It 1s far from my purpose tq..'iiisinuate..: that .either the dance, tbek-'theatre or : the.,race is, under proper and normal conditions, wick ed, k They become so, however, when -men ..control - them. It is far from My -in'tentton to assert that 'these forms of amusement are Incapable of proper, use and tiat-the host of moral, well-meaning- Christian people who indulge in them are not perfectly sin cere.., -I have seen card games that ' were. -harmless, and horse-races that ver.a above reproach, and theatrical .performances that,, with a little ref ormation, could have been immacu 1ate7 fltid dances in which it was per fectly, safe for young men and women to glide through the mazes of the -waf'ti? But on-the other hand. I am painfully conscious that I became disgusted with cards because of the profanity, the unbridled vulgarity, the total incapacity for self-control, the trickery, the dishonesty, of those who'played. the game. The question ableness of most of the performances upon the American stage make it necessary for even a grown man -who . possesses any remnants of self-re spect to secure a theatrical Baedeker before he attempts; to go to see a show. I have seen so many pure. gentle, lovely girls (not in dance-, -halls, but at the dances of approved and conventional society of the best type) locked 4o. the embraces of lech-? crous; villainous ' men "whom' they - would not allow within a yard of them.Jn;the jseclusictn and privacy of their own parlors, that T have passed ' from wonder to disgust. Any one who has ever taken a good, honest, long look at the class of men who fre quent the racetracks of a metropollr tan district will be convinced,' If he never was before, that-the average of the devotees of the turf go to the", track leasUof ail "to "see the "ponies run.'l, 1 .gambling was disallowed, by law at the tracks half . the racing as sociations of the country would so out of business. , ; " All tnese amusements are supplied in some measure by church people. All of 'them have been so perverted that ' they have become stumbling blocks to human souls. : For they have; led many a man over the brink of wretchedness into the depths of despair.: . And these men? have inot infrequently fallen into the meshes of iniquity because of the ostensibly harmless pastimes of Christian men and women. As an obsession it is paltry for mo to say that they are wholly evil. . For we are agreed that when they5 are al lowed to dominate a life they are of the devil. The question is, shall the Church sanction them or shall she ban them? Let us look them over one by one. When did a game of cards minister to the enlargement of our conscious- rn'ess at that which is divine and eter nal.' 'Or when did It increase our sense f responsibility to the world or God?. ; Or when did the theatre or the t dance or the race? Seachingly. ."honestly ! The truth is that the more we ar aware of divinity -and eternity;--the more exalted our conception of the demands. of conscience,' the" less-'we need these things and have time for them. We find cur happiness else where; ..we secure our pleasure through . unquestionable channels. "Ve neither care nor need - to be amused. When I know that amuse ments are stultifying the spiritual efficiency of the people of God,, when I see the flagrant perversions of the amusements of the day that exist, were right to condemn these things ttith no uncertain sound. And I am further convinced that it fs not only the duty of the Church to denounce them, but also to transform and purify them. I am certain that it is onr duty to divert the energies of the multitude from following their cheap amusements to the service of Almighty God rHE SUNDAY SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON C03I MKXTS FOR SKPT. 29 BY TUB REV. I. W. HENDERSON. , . .A . Review of the Lessons From July 7 to September 22, Inclusive Golden Text, Ps. 103 : 8 All Epitome Helpful to Students. July 7. 1. The charm of Israel's history lies in its humanness. 2. Israel sighing for slavery. 3. The wonderful providence of God. 4. Israel in the wilderness only an example. 5. Israel's experience has pro found spiritual significance. 6. We are all human like Israel. July 14. 1. The ten -commandments eter nal. 2. The first eomimandment. 3. The second commandment. 4. The third commandment. 5. The fourth commandment. July 21. -. , 1. The fifth commandment. 5 2. The sixth commandment. 3. The seventh commandment. 4. The eighth commandment. 5. The ninth commandment. 6. The tenth commandment July 2S. 1. Moses on the mount pleading for Israel. 2. The golden calf a lesson and a warning to America. 3. God's providence has' made America possible. 4. Some would seem to lay it to men. - . 5. 6. 7. God America, has a golden calf. It Is not a dream calf. America needs to recognize August 4. . 1. The tabernacle.' 2. The place of meeting. 3. The tabernacle holy. 4. A clean priesthood. 5. God's presence. 6. Men as tabernacles. August 11.- 1. The drunkenness of Nadab and Abihu. ... 2. Liquor a snare. ' t . 3. To be let alone. " ' 1 v 4. Nothing gained by its use. 5. The liquor traffic should be abolished.; - August 18. 1. The fact of sin. 2. Confession of sin 3. Forgiveness of sin" 4. Forgetting of sin. August 25; 1. The preparation. 2. Israel prepared. 3. Hobab invited. 4. The invitation of the church. September :1. 1. Israel's attempt to enter Canaan a failure. 2. God allows the spies to be sent. 3. The spies report. 4. The land was what God de clared it to be. 6. Two men saw success. 7. We should be like Joshua and Caleb. , . : -. September 8. 1. Doubting Israel is confounded. 2. The brazen serpent is suggps tive. .".' 3. Results of sin bring Israel to her senses. 4. Salvation was simply effective. 5. So is Christ's salvation to-day! 6. Israel and we make a mistake to progress without God. . -September 15. . 1. Moses' address a masterpiece. 2. Book of Deuteronomy majestic 3. Love for God. 4. Teaching children. - ,. , H.. God's gifts.' ' 1 September ,22. .. -.. ; : 1- Moses' death pathetic. 2. Death sad but joyous. - 3. God's promise fulfilled. : ' 4. Moses work finished. - -. 5. Joshua billed. v ; 6. Moses' exemplary manhood, - r Big Steamship is Burned. London, By Cable. The Japanese un.uiijoi..j imxu mam is ourning at Clung Kiang. Many of the crew an,J. passengers are missing and most -of them are probably dead, according to a dispatch to the Lloyds. The 'num ber of dead is estimated at one huu dred. It is your motive that gives moral value to your money. In Grief MINOR MATTERS OF INTEREST- Joshua Harrisonwho was sentenc ed to !2fr years .imprisonment ; fojkid napping little Kenneth tieasiey, snoi and killed himself in a hotel-at $jpf' fn'.k. Va.. on learning that the Norln CarolinaV Supreme Court had refused to grant a new taal m his case. Commutation of the sentence of a Paris "murderer from death to impris onment gave rise to large street ac- mohst rations. .' ' A nW for "fnrardin" milk at jits soiu-Wwasvmade by Dr. -Henry L. C5ort of Newark af- the milk congress . in Brussels. Four fresh-, cases of cholera .occur red in StV Petersburg three- 'proving fatal; r . . t The Social Democratic, Congresj- pened at Essen, Germany. A new telephone line of CO instru ments will soon be in operation inth& Torthcrn Neckband will extend' from Qak Grove and Colonial Beach to Fredericksburg, Val ; The new service will include points on both the Rap pahannock and Potomac rivers. The tomato crop in the section sur rounding Fredericksburg, Va., is the largest and best for. many years.. The canning factory of Robert Bros., of Baltimore located ere is being; work ed to its full capacity. Capt. Henry Fitzhugh a conductor it the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac; railroad will move to Fred ericksburg, Va. Thomas D. Dix who was 'injured by falling beneath ear at the Potomac yards having his right leg mangled died at the Alexandria Hospital as. the result of his injuries. ; He was 30 years old and had resided in Al exandria all his life. A coal mine on Paint creek near Charleston, W.-V, has been burning for 43 years. , The (Loop and Lookout . Railroad "was incorporated with $100,000 capi tal stock.. .- , -. . . -..'' '.;" Calvin Barties was found beaten and unconscious in his buggy several-. fhouTS- f left - having-- received. -r4iii! month's .salary. . A. xolorcd, woiaau died after beins overcome by gas and remaining un conscious 1S.0 hours ... . " ... Separate" - movements 'have beeu: aunched. to purchase and preserve the ''Jeff" Davis and Le. homes.. ' Twenty-four lives were lost in a wreck oil the Boston and Maine near Cannaan, N. II., due to a mistake in a train dispatcher's office." . The Chicago Tribune 's New Eng land straw ballot among Republicans shows Taft.-and Hughes overwhelm ingly in the lead. .Dr. Harry Friedenwald at a meet ing of Zionists scored a man supposed to be Jacob H. Schiff for his antago nistic attitude toward Zionists. Ex-President Cleveland is reported to be taking daily drives accompanied by a nurse whenever the weather per mits. ; ..'- ,. ,, ... Fin-man J. Stout who rose from brakeman to general manager of .the Lake. Shore Electric road in Toledo is- dead. Tho National Association of Manufacturers- has given -out a statement denying that its . $o00,00Q f und . is , in tended to cnisti' 'laboifu'ttlonsT" " Local option is to be the chief issue in thcDeleware election. ; .A - movement . is. -on foot inNorth Carolina to overthrow the Democratic party. .. - ; - Mrs. Cassie L. Chad wick the woman who obtained -a,.' million - or ' more by fraud and is serving a term in prison became blind during a nervous attack. -Mrs. ""Mary ' 'Mv Flagler 'widow of Gen. D. W. Flagler is dead. - The home of the Philadelphia Eagles was destroyed by fire. Serious difficulties are splitting the Inland Waterways Commission. i, According to a decision in the Tos ton Supremo Court, II. II. Rogers' oi the Standard Oil Companv is too ill to appear in the $30,000,000 suit brought against him. On her next westward trip the LnS itania is likely to be pitted against the French liner La Provence. f '. ' Philadelphia Baptists have raised more than $100,000 for church exten sion and missionary work. Italians fatallv : wounded a mine boss and his sister in an attack in spired by a grudge and. two of flie as sailants were shot dead by the dying man. . Encouraging 'reports of the grow I h ot Odd Fellowship are-made by tin Grand Sire and Grand Secretary. The Odessa outrages have been re sumed two Jews beinr killed and many wounded. Pope Pius X. has issued an . ency clical against "modernism." . The Dominican Congress has eni powered its President to act on the $20,000,000 loan. : ; Postmaster-General Mye stated that he would reeommend to Congress the establishment of a postal savings system- stamping machines and other .postal, reforms. . . : . President Gompcrs of the Federa tion will issue an appeal for assist ance for the striking telegraphers. . . Edward H. Strobe! has been pro moted by the King of Siam. The Agricultural Department 's re port showed a decrease in European crops. 'Thfrfinest gaSeTyet-"in-"the'iI'cGraw Va., has just been struck. It is lo cated,j6n the Hugh Evans' farm, on land leased by: Col. John T. MeGraw. The well- was down about 2,000 feet and had struck the Gordon sand only about six feet -when the gas rushed forth in great volumes. Taft is the Man. ..New. York, ..Special. One of tlit guests of WcsideOt Koosevelt is quor,- J ed lis '."saying thaf the President is sti" nrraly octormnfod not to accept n t' other nominatioj.T;;The statement i added that possibly his enemies misrhi do Fomethinp: to induce him to rur again but not otherwise, Koosevelt i quoted as saying that lie regards Tafl as the leading candidate but he rec ognize the growth of the. Hughe.-boom. KIDNEYTROUBLE Buffered Ten Tears Relieved In Threa - : . . Months. ' , . Mil. C. B. FIZKR. Mt. Sterling, Ky., writes:. "I have suffered with Hidney and other trouble fov ten years past. - "Last March I commenced using lJeruna ahd continued for three months. I have not used it since, nor have I felt a pain. "I believe that I am well and I therefore give my highest commendation to the cura tive qualities of Pcruna." Pc-ru-na For Kidney Trouble. Mrs. Geo. II. Simser, Grant, Ontario, Can., writes: . "I had not been well for about f our years. I tui-d kiOney trouble, a nd, in fact, felt badly nearly all the time. "This summer I got bo very bail I thought I would try Peruna, so I wrote to you and began at once to take I'cruna and Manalin. . "1 took only two bottles of Peruna and one of Manalin, and now 1 feel better than I nave tor some time. "I fed that Peruna and Manalin cured me and made a different woman of me al together. I bless the day 1 picked up the little book and read of your Peruna. " It Is the business of the kidneys to remove from, the blood all poisonous materials. They must be active all the time, else the system suffers. There are times' when they need a little assistance. Peruna is exactly this sort of a remedy. It lias saved many people from disaster by rendering the kidneys Service at a time when they were not able to bear their own burdens. ' : " Peruna is sold by your local drug gist. Buy a bottle today. After Close ; Inspection. The mountain peak, The groves of qine, ' - At ten per week Were' Very fine. The mountain view was grand to see. But home looks pretty good to inc. The ocean spray, The rare salt breeze, At two per day -Were quite the cheese, ; I liked to walcb the billows foam,' Still, thing's look pretty good at home ; Ever Notice. The doctor business seems to extra good at the health resorts. be 6A.ALa. BUSINESS COLLEGE MACON, GA. H Hew Management Mod Ltpert Faculty M FINESI-POSmOSS . "AMERICA'S BEST" M WRITE FOR CATALOGUE fl THE COTTOX PRESS, that has bct n rsod all orcr the cotton lection for the past quarter cf a century, we Citn fwrnlBh t complere as shown. or.si:p,ly liMns -em! aH- flxtureb complete with i riiiteiT iunnictions and cut-) for those tnt v.-ani t b-.i'lrt the wooa won rhemaelve?. Write xo iv Fit lira. co. Chottauooiia, Tenn. i - nil . . rTJirffiJiaT?Tir--" " "- 1 mr-- r -.v-m. " " ' ' SicK'Women ' iTou should know, if you suffer from any of the pains due to womanly trouble,: that it is possible to be relieved or cured by the use of Cardui. Fifty years, and over, of unexampled success, in the treatment of female, ailments, has demonstra ted what Cardui can do, for others,, since, in that time, it has benefited over a million women. " . ''Cardui has cured me," writes Mrs. Chas. "Will iams; of Willow Shoals, Ky., "and I praise it above all other medicines. . "Before I began to use i'I was almost dead. .1 had suffered for five, 5) years, with 3 1 t4 This Iiupercal Business. .. , Caesar tlnice - refused a kinkly crown, and that ended it." ; -"Whet pre: ;-ov, driving at obw-J "Roosevelt! has to enter a fresh de nial every weeks' .;. . . AT Relief. -' VI believe I prefer the concert sin ger t iTThe opra! ic variety. ' ' "Why?" "The concert singer s not expect ed, to make gestures." TO BUILD UP PASTURES. Q. C. Watson of the Pennsylvania College ot Agriculture says: How to increase the productiveness of run down pastures Is a question that is confronting many farmers in the Mid dle and Eastern States. v nen we con sider the cause of the unprofitable condition cf these pastures we cease to wonder that they are not remunera tive. Much land in the United States has been cleared of timber that ought never to have been cleared land that Is worth more to produce timber than anything else. This land has been wholly cleared of forests and either seeded artificially or permitted to be come seeded naturally to such grasses and other plants as would maintain themselves under the existing condi tions. These grasses grew more or less luxuriantly for a time, but finally the soil becomes so exhausted that they are now wholly unsatisfactory. The question now is how to restore the fertility of which the soil has been robbed. The land must be made more fertile through the application of plant food cr the growth of leguminous crops, or both. If tho land is not to be plowed but to remain in grass un doubtedly the owner should seed the land with clovers and grasses early in the spring. A mixture of whito clover, alsike and red clover would undoubtedly be better than either alone. With these may be mixed timothy and June grass. It is prob able that nature will seed the land to June grass, but some assistance will hWp to make a good turf sooner than if left to nature. A thorough har rowing with a spike-tocth harrow be fore the seeding would be most bene ficial. Immediately after seeding ap ply a top dressing of barn manure. The manure thus applied will not only furnish plant food for the grass that is already cn the land and the young seeding but it will form a mulch to protect the young plants and will ma terially help them to become thorough ly established. If the land is not limed this may be applied as tne top dressing some time during the Fall preceding the Spring seeding. Hewho has a good nest finds good friends. Portugese. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. We, the undcraigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry cut any obligations m.-.de by his firm. ALD15G, lilSKAN' & AlAKVlX, Iftle- rale Druggist?, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act-ingdirecth- upon the bleed and uiiicuous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. . Domestic Amenities. "I dreamed last night that you wore nagging me for a new fall hat.,' ."So that's why j-ou were growling m your sleep." CuM8ERLANQ-EVER8EAR!N8 1007 KECORO APRIL 20 TO JULY 4TH. A Varrel of Ksantr. Size ut.l I e-t Ha t NOW. plunt KAB IjT u-J have bcrrina IO Weoinnert Spring. Send for now oauuazue and booklet aHn ... 1... . 1 ... T8ECUM3fi?US0 SDRSEfilES, wmcHgsTBg, TBinr. -s - jr J- a v u 4 Side and Centre Crank Engines LARGE STOCK LOMBARD fcinjiy, Ecachine and CoHet Works sni Sufi'j Stent AUGUSTA. GA. AW MILLS LATH AND SHINGLE MACHINES, SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND jASO LI N E ENGINES. Try LOMBARD, AUC$STA CURED RemoTet til cwalling In 8 to as dtys ; effect permanent cur In 30 to 6odars. Trial treatment grven tree. Kotnmgcsn dc tairer write nr. a. n. ureen s aani. actellstt. boi e Atlanta. On. PUTNA Color more roods hriehter and faster colors than any can dye any garment without ripping apart. "Write flf' Tkt'SSc. In stamp wa Mod a tai PAGE BOOK glvliis the experleuoe Of a practical foaltry itateoruol an amateur, but a roau working for dotl&ra and centA-Kturlog 4 years, it teaches how to Detect and Cor Diseascn eed torOmr- alGO for Fattening; wnich Kowla ta Eave for llreedlnR: ererrtbiua ra qu)te for proiiuijle Poultry rat inar. BOtfii. IMJUI.ISIilM4 to, 131 Leon a -4 stroot, Mr varn. I A1 " V v Li ght S uroDsv'''" Bl UpWJ Relief. M U MLfl MA !7-a I. I Tur Overwhelming Proof that Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound sueoeeas. One of the greatest triumphs of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound is the conquering of woman's dread enemy Tumor, . The growth of a tumor is so in sidious that freqv.ently its presence is wholly unsuspected until it is well advanced. Bo called "wandering- pains" may come from its early stages or the presence of danger may be made manifest by excessive monthly periods accompanied by unusual pain, from the abdomen through the groin and thigh. If you have mysterious pains, if there are indications of inflammation or displacements, secure a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots and herbs, right away and begin its use. The following letters should con Tince every suffering woman of its irtue, and that it actually does onquer tumors. Mrs. May Fry, of 836 W. Colfax Ave , South Eend, lnd., writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham : "I take great pleasure in writ ing to thank you for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. I also took the Blood Purifier in alternate doses with the Compound. Your medicine removed a cyst tumor of four years' growth, which three of the best physicians declared I had. They had said that only an operation could help me. I am very thankful that I followed a friends advice and took your medicine. It has made me a strong and well woman and I shall recommend it as long as I live." Mrs. E. F. Hayes, of 26 EugglesSt., Boston, Mass., writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham : 'I have been under different doctors' treatment for a long time without relief. They told me I had a fibroid tumor, my abdomen was swollen and I suffered with great pain. I wrote to you for advice, yon replied and I followed your directions carefully and today I am a well women. Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ex pelled the tumor and strengthened my whole system." Mrs. Perry Eycrs, of Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, writes : mm a r.:. .. .. -:i.'-r -." .'M A Bumper Wheat Crop,, : : To produce a "bumper" wheat cron. it is absolutely necessary Sia that you supply to your land one or more of the three elements of plant Sjfrt food vrhich your soil so badly needs : phosphoric ccid, nitrogen (or ammonia) and potash. The liberal use of '' -; Virgjnia'CaroSlna Fertilfzers, (sav rob to too pond3 to the acre) will meet this deficiency. You ' know the highest grades are always yields. I hese fertilizers cn account 01 the phosphoric acid they con tain, promote the growth and development of the grain and hastens maturity ; the nitrogen or ammonia of which they are a part, increases the growth of leaves and stalk and its potash gives strength to the stalk and assists in the development of the grain. . . ' . So use Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers and greatly "Increase your yields per acre." Don't buy any substitute brand, vrhich some dealer may tell you "Is just as good' If he cannot supply you, write us : direct for the goods and tell us your dealer's name. VIRGINIA-CAROLINA CHEMICAL COMPANY, : SALES OITICES: . Richmond, Va. Durham, N. C. Charleston, S. C. Atlanta, Savannah, Ga. Memphis, 93.00 & $3.50 SHOES mm, gtfSSHOES FOR EVERY MEMBER OF -T.ir THE FAMILY. AT ALL PRIOE3. $gs fifSSt (To snjr one who can prove: IV. L. itp&:Z99B'UM DcustB3 tloas not rnaAa K sett ITVir"Bxr!l )mora Ken's 93 & 9S.BO aimtss tr&GrtsWaxr ts ( Hihci any ath&p maniffac( ror. THE RKASON W. L. Douglas shoes arc worn nymore pcni'le In all walks of life than any other muUe, is becauso "f their csnellnt stylo, essy-fitfing, anil Fnpsrior wearing qnalitios. Tho selootioii of the'leathcrs and other materials for oi:U pai i of the shoo, and every detail of tha n-inkhig is looked after 1-y the moft corapletonrganizatlon of supfrintondentsforenienaii'l skillc-Hi ghopmakers, who receive the highest wr.ccs paid in tiio shoe industry, and whose workmanship cnimot be -x.-elloi. If I could tiike you into my l:irje factiiries at Brockton. Ma.-s., and show you how carafnllv W. V. Donghis shoes are made, you would thon understand why they hold tbeir.fdia.ps, tit belter, wear longer and are of greater value taan any fily 94 .OO and So.Oa Gilt Etivs Shoea asttnot Sip equaiiBG ew W'l,Zr!L CAUTION! The Renuino have V. L. JJouglas r.auio and pric.ostami.tMl on boltom.. lako No Substitute. Ask your dealer for W.U ttoujlaa shoes, it lie ulmh ji-.., direct to factory. Shoes sent evory where by mail. Catalog free. W.L.Douglai. Brocuton, Masu So. VTV A W. W-' A A Bry m& other dye. One 10c. nackacre colors all fibers. They for free booklet How to ye, blcaoa and Mix Colors. female trouble, experienced deatn ly pains, every month. I had doctors ' from different places, but none of them did me any good, and I ran down to 97 pounds. , . "At last I wrote you for advice and began to tae Cardui. In three mnntbs T wss like a new woman. . I MRS. C: WILLIAMS continued to wiiiow shoais, Ky. wpifrh . txDVVi T4fzr Write for Free FOR LADIES liTWrnfiy-Tm-nr - TO FARMERS AND poULTRYMEN! - - . m w- r T t T'r 1 tril'A til Am hrtln JLt (T fj S " . j spend yeiira and lllir th lrnn)Mir rmllired them as a d '.'erSionV In order to litindle thins abot them. To meet thi,. want ire i.r.7.. ... .'r:r. -j iauenin ?hich"Fos you cannot or a practical poultry raiser lor (uair..-"'' in mikine i a man who init all his rnitid, and tifna, ajfd on u wfli en ralslnK-not as a pastime, but asa UHSir.ezs-and it sou nut. ty-nve years' work, you can save many . earn dollars for you. The point is, tnat you rnuj toaorjja Dear Mrs. Pinkham : had a fibroid tumor and that J would have to operated upon. I wrote to , you for advice, which i foUowed care fully and took Lydia E. Pinkham a, Vectable Compound. I am not only cured of the tumor but otner lemaiu troubles and can do aumy owu-w-.-..fter eiirht vears of suffering. Mrs. Si J. Barber, of Scott, N. Y.J writes : " : . .. "Sometime ago L wrote you for adviee abouta tumor which the doctors ' 4.1 rniil(1--huve to be removed. Instead J took Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound actt 10 uay am well wumau. - "..! . '1 Mrs. M. M. V unit, v auuw 5 writes: : Dear Mrs. Pinkham : "I had a tumor and Lydia E. fink ham's Vegetable Compound removed it for me after two doctors had given me up. I was sick four years before I recommend Lvaia E Pinkham s v eget- 4D1C Lompounn lar mm ucm . Such testimony as above is con vincing evidence that Jj.yaia I 1IIK ham's Vegetable Compound stands without a peer as a remedy for Tumor Growths as well as other distressing ills of women, and such symptoms as Bearing-down Sensations, Displace ments, Irregularities and Bnckache, etc. Women should remember that it is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound that is curing so many women Don't forget to insist upon it when some druggist asks you to accept something else which he calls "just as good." Mrs. Pfoknatn's Invitation to Woraca. ' Women suffering iVom any form of female weakness are invited to to Pinkham ' Lvnn. Mass . for advice. She is the Mrs. Pinkham who has been advising sick women free of charge for more than twenty years, and before that she 'assisted her mother-in-law, Lydia E. Pink , . - mi i. 11 -' ham in advising. 1uusMn.-11.rajn.11.111j well qualified to guide Kick women back to health.. cheaper, as they produce greater " Baltimore, Md. "Norfolk, Va. Ga. ' Montgomery, Ala. - Tenn. Shrevepcft, La. .ouierannite. S3 - '07. 4 . , W G?- - " " ' v dye in cold water better than anv otner aye. 100. 1br3. aiO.MtOE OKVU k'O.. Qniitcy. Illinois. improve and now J am 67 1-2 uounds more, than . r Yrr.MA Tf nn npftd Aom M-pasre kwx w VV" " "i TVo!v In EAR.N MUritl Vo , cannot do thTi nnloss you undwFtaiid them. and know , tw to tiioir rcaulrements, and- jio-a i,.rninr bv exporience, so you must dollars aarnui? i v fAr n ,t .by - OtncrS. - v uuu i.. ; ott li TJiiit rivlne the exDerienca areseiling sbrf;' 'ntg i success of Chlck-pt-Qftt-by his twen mtike your Fowls detect trouble In tha it. ' This book will i rHense: to feed lor eggs nna also tor S tSr 3 mi ! i a I IT .. j
The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 26, 1907, edition 1
4
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