Newspapers / The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, … / Oct. 8, 1908, edition 1 / Page 4
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of Fallen By the Wayside. The ash borrows poison from the viper. Latin. Fools rush in where angels 'Sear to tread. Pope. A mind wite vacant is a mind dis tressed. Cowper. He gives twice who gives quickly. Goldsmith. Fifteen acres of lumber yards were burned at Saco and Biddeford, Maine. If things were done twice, all would be wise. German. Start at the Bottom. Two boys left home with just enough money to take them through college, after which they must de pend entirely upon their own efforts. They attacked the collegiate problems successfully, passed to graduation, received their diplomas from the fac ulty, also, commendatory letters to a large ship-building firm with which they desired employment. Ushered into the waiting room of the head of the firm the first was given an au dience. He presented his letters. "What can you do," said the man of millions. "I would like some sort of a clerk ship." "Well sir, I will take your name and address; and if we have anything of the kind open will correspond with you. ' ' As he passed out, he said to his companion, "You can go in and 'leave your address.'" The other presented himself and his papers. "What can j'ou do I" was asked. "I can do anything that a green hand can do," was the reply. The magnate touched a bell which called a superintendent. "We want a man to sort scrap iron," replied the superintendent. And the college student went to sorting scrap-iron. One week passed, and the presi dent asked, "How is the new man getting on?" "Oh," said the boss, "he did his work so well, and never watched the clock, that I put him over the gang." In one year the man had reached the head of the department, and an r.dvisory position with the manage ment, at a salary represented by four figures, while his whilom friend was still out of employment and seeking a position. The Simple Expert. "You sav this is fine tobacco land?" "The best in the world." "Indeed! Pray how many boxes of cisrars will it grow to the acre?" In Self-Defense. lie ceased to use the hateful weed To please his wife, but then He wore so very large a grouch She made him start again. You never knew a man until have started him talking upon subject of his pet enemy. you the HAD ECZEMA 15 TEARS. Mr. ThomAs Thompson, of Clarbsvllle, Ga.. writs, under date of April 23, U07: "I suffered 18 years with tormentlaff eczema; bad the best dootors to proscribe; but noth ing did me sny good until I got tbttebiub. It oared in 3. I am so thankful." Thousands of others can testify to similar cures. Tbttibix e is sold by druggists cr teat by mall for 50o. by J. T. Shuftbiicb, Dept. A, Savannah. Ga. It . is the gentle mind that makes the gentleman. So. 41-'08 Hicks' Capcdine Cures Headache, ether from colds, heat, stomach or jjgrvous trouuies. jn o Accetanlim or dan KeFus S8 I'8 liquid nd acts imme uijttely. Trial bottle 10c. Regular sizes ior. aad 50c., at all druggists. 4 Pert Paragraphs. most of he men who have comfortable lable attempt is far g to be ashamed of. Uhe. it is wise'tt as no kick e dealing with a mule e to it that said mule ming. -II j-OU xpeet to have to borrow 1 are at money, letter borrow it before you it is easier to do so. reed it; Whe we get home and take stock e triggers, blisters, burns and diuys we are inclined to be slad to t hi link it is over Xjfjieer that your next door neisrhbor phoiiid think you are a mean, inter fering wretch when you tell her that little Johnnie has a fire under the I'ront porch. The man who tells a secret to a wo man isn't foolish, but just diplomatic and crafty. It is his way of announc ing it to the world. Lots of girls are as mild as milk find as sweet as honey and still they may have the tabasco sauce up their fOeeve. Many a hobo would make a good Emperor, but the distressing thing about it is that there is more eall for I arrest hands in this country than far emperors. "Some men," said Uncle Eben, 'ain't satisfied to quit when dey's rione bought a gold brick, but keeps nnvin' storae-fi on it an' holdin' it fur a rise." Washington Star. NO GUSKER But Tells Fficts About Postmri. "We have used Postum for the last eight years," writes a Wis. lady, "and drink it three times a day. We rever tire of it. "For several years I could Bcarcely ?at anything on account of dyspepsia, bloating after meals, palpitation, nick headache in fact was in such misery and distress I tried living on hot wat er and toast for nearly a year. - "I had quit coffee, the cause of my trouble, and was using hot water, but this was not nourishing. "Hearing of Postum I began drink ing it and my ailments disappeared, and now I can eat anything I want without trouble. "My parents and husband had about the same experience. Mother would often suffer after eating, while yet drinking coffee. My husband waa a great coffee drinker and suffered from indigestion and headache. "After he stopped coffee and began Postum both ailments left him. He will not drink anything else now, and . we have it threefimes a day. I could write more, but am no gusher only state plain facts." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Rea son." Ever read the above letter? A new one appeari from time to time, The; ra genuine, true, And full of hnaw Merest. MARCH Of SCIENCE The President Addresses the Tuberculosis Congress PRAISES GREAT ACHIEVEMENTS Great Meeting of Scientists Adjourns to Assemble Next at Eome Presi dent Speaks. Washington, D. C, Special. The International Tuberculosis Congress, which has been in session here closed Saturday to meet next in Eome. One of the most pleasant surpirses of the closing scenes of the congress was the appearance for the first time during its proceedings of President Roosevelt. In a characteristic address President Roosevelt paid a notable tribute to the assemblage of so many scientists of intcnational reputation. The President spoke in part as fol lows : "It is difficult for us to realize the extraor-dinary changes, the extraordi nary progress, in certain lines of so cial endeavor during the last two or three generations; and in no other manifestation of human activity have the changes been quito so far-reaching as in the ability to grapple with disease. It is not so very long, measuring time by history, since the attitude of man towards a disease such as that of consumption was one of helpless acquiescence in what he considered to be the mandates of a supernatural power. It is but a short time since even the most gifted members of the medical profession knew as little as any layman of the real cause of a disease like this, and therefore necessarily of the remedies to be invoked to overcome it. "Take, for instance, the work that the United States government is now doing in Panama. The Isthmus of Panama, which was a by-word for fatal disease, has become well-nigh a sanatorium; and it has become o because the investigations of certain medical men which enabled them to find out the real causes of certain diseases, especially yellow fever and malarial fever, and to take measures to overcome them. The older doc tors here when they were medical students would have treated the sug gestion of regarding mosquitos as the prime source of diseaes like that as a sub.icet ot mirth, lliese ntrerlv unexpected results have followed pa tient laborious, dangerous and extra ordinary skillful work that has en abled the cause of the disease to be found and the diseases themselves to be combattcd with extraordinary suc cess. "At this moment in the middle of the great continent of Avfrica there is a peculiarly fatal and terrible disease the sleeping sickness, a disease whie'i if it hnd been known to our ancestors in the middle ages wonld have been spoken of as the black death was spoken of in the middle ages as a scourge of Go:l, possibly as something connected with a comet, or some sim ilar explanation would have been ad vanced. We all know that it is due to the carrying of a small and deadly blood parasite by a species of biting fly. "And the chance to control that disease lies in the work of just such men as, and indeed, of some of the men who, are assembled here. Yo:i who have come here, however, have come to eomhat not a scourge confin- ! ed to the tropics, but what is on th-i whole the most terrible scourge of the people throughout the world. But a few years asro hardlv an intelligent effort was made or could be made to war against this peculiarly deadly enemy of the human race. The chance successfully to conduct that war a- rose when the greatest experts in the medical world turned their train ed intelligence to the task. It re mains for them to find out just what can be done. "I feel that no gathering could take place fraught with greater hope for the welfare of the people at large than this. I thank you all. men and women of this country, and you, our guests, tor what you have done and are doing. On behalf of the nation I greet you, and I hope you will un derstand how much we have appre ciated your coming here. " Tennessean's Brutal Crime. Bristol, Tenn., Special. A special from Johnson City says: L. A. Bay- less, a magistrate attacked his brother-in-law, Berney Bayless, while the latter was asleep in bed at his home in this city and almost literally chop ped his head off with an axe. He then attacked Bayless' wife, fatally wounding her. " Turning the weapon upon his own wife, who was in the house, he struck her several blows. inflicting probably fatal injuries Kayiess was arrested and hair an hour later was found dead in his cell having hanged himself. Yotmg Man Killed at Oil MilL Vienna, Ga., Special. Millard Sheppard, the night foreman at the Vienna Cotton Oil Company, was caught in a belt at the mill earlv Saturday morning and instantly kill ed. The body was badly mangled one arm being torn from the frame and nearly every bone being broken. Young Sheppard was a member of prominent Doolev county family and had a large cirela of friends here. Cost of Thaw Trial. New York, Special. The total cost to New York county of the proseeu tion of Harry K. Thaw for the shoot ing of Stanford White has been $5-1,- 837, according to papers submitted by District Attorney Jerome to Justice Mills at Newburgh. The purpose of Mr. Jerome's application to Justice Mills was to have the approaching trial on the question of Thaw's meni al condition transferred from West Chester to Nnv York county. Reduced Revenue Prevented Improve ments. Atlanta, Ga., Special. Lincoln Greene, freight traffic manager of the Southern Railway, was on the stand at the freight hearing before the In terstate Commerce Commission Wed nesday afternoon. He declared that. his road had to forego many contem plated improvements because of re- riueecl revenue. He submitted lenir ny statements relating to the com pany ' business. RUSHING THE CONSUMPTION COSTS Startling Statistics Brought Out at the Tuberculosis Congress by Professor Fisher, of Yale. Washington, D. C. Professor Irv ing Fisher, of Yale University, read a paper before the International Con gress on Tuberculosis which created a decided sensation. Professor Fisher's paper was on "The Cost of Tubercu losis," and he made the startling an nouncement that the great white plague costs in hard cash over one billion dollars a year. He estimated that consumption kills 138,000 persons every year in the United States. This is equal, he said, to the deaths from typhoid fever, diphtheria, appendicitis, men ingitis, diabetes, smallpox and cancer all put together. Then again, he said, it generally takes three years to die, during which time the poor victim can earn little or nothing. "Five million people. now living in the United States are doomed to fill consumDtives' graves unless some thing can be done to prevent it," de clared Professor Fisher. "As each death means anxiety and grief for a whole family, I estimate that there will be over twenty million persons rendered miserable by these deaths." The scourge, he said, picks out its victims when tbey are young men and young women, at the very time of life 3125 COAL MINERS LOST LIVES. R;cords Show 1907 Was the Worst Year in History of Industry. Washington, D. C. Accidents in , coal mines of the United States h;fi ing the last calendar year resulted in the death of 3125 men, and injury to 5316 more, according to statistics just made public by the Geological Survey. The death record among. the coal miners during the year was greater by 1033 than in 1906, and is said to have been the worst year in the history of the coal mining indus try. -The figures do not represent the full extent of the disasters, as re ports were not received from certain States having no mine inspectors, w00t Virginia ronnrtPd tht heaviestAof risnrh mfp in 1907. 12.35 ner thou- sand employes, and this State also showed the lowest production for each life lost 65,96 9 tons. New Mexico stood next on the list with a death rate of 11.45 and a production of 77,332 tons for each life lost. Ala bama was third, with a death rate of 7.2 per thousand and a production of BIYER FIGHTS Thirty Feet Under Water in San Francisco, Cal. Wrapped in the tentacles of a giant devil fish, Martin Lund, a diver employed by the Coast Wrecking Company, fought for his life in the hold of the wrecked steamer Pomona, which lies in thirty feet of water in Fort Ross Cove off the Marin County coast. The devil fish had evidently entered the vessel's hold during the night. Lund had been at work some time before he was attacked. A giant ten tacle four inches in diameter first gripped or.e leg. ' Before Lund real ized what was happening another en circled his thigh. The diver began to chop at the rub ber-like bonds and at the same time gave the hoisting signal to the barge above. Two more tentacles squirmed MERCURY FOUND BY SURGEON TO CURE TUBERCULOSIS Washington, D. C. Physicians and the laity will be greatly interested in the result of a series of experiments made by the navy surgeons recently, through which they believe they have demonstrated that mercury is a spe cific for tuberculosis. The Govern ment Bureau of Medicine and Surg ery has published the reports of Med ical Director C. T. Hibbett and Sur geon Barton Leigh Wright. Surgeon Wright, who is the origin ator of the treatment, says he discov ered the efficacy of the drug by acci dent. He was treating a case which required mercury. The patient was tubercular as well. To the surgeon's astonishment the tubercular lesions began to heal. The mercury is administered by in Rain Storm Uncovers Rich Placer Pockets of Gold. San Bernardino, Cal. Jacob L. Thoraason, of San Bernardino, was prospecting among the old Mexican placers near Hesperia when he was overtaken by a furious storm; which forced him to seek shelter. After a quarter of an inch of rain had fallen in less than one hour, throwing the canyons into roaring torrents, Thom ason returned to his work. When the water subsided he found scores of rich placer pockets, and within a few hours panned cut $10,000 in gold. Women in the Day's News. Boston has a woman pickpocket aged seventy-two. Miss Palmer, daughter of General W. .T. Palmer, has adopted nursing as a career in London. The will of Jsne Blauvelt, who left money to the First Reformed Church at Yonkers, N. Y., has been contested by relatives on the ground of "undue influence." Attacked in her home by a man who triad to chloroform her, Mrs. George Hudson, No. 315 East 201st street, New York City, repulsed him wi-fh tt -broop1- Mrs. Ruth"Bryan Leavitt, daughter of W. J. Bryan, has written a play for Miss Mary Mannering. Mrs. II. T. Norwood, eighty years old, a granddaughter cf Francis Scott Key, has become the centre of social activity at the Hotel Martha Washing ton, New York City. The death of the banker MorosinI, in New York City, revealed the fact that his youngest daughter, disfigured ; for life by a savage dog, had for years ' been sscluded in his home. Dean Russell, of the University cf : Wisconsin, has selected Mrs, Scott j Purancl to lead the movement for . effecting pure milk leRifiatiotti i , ........ .... SCRAP HERO. rjftasa. the Indianapolis News. US A BILLION A YEAR. when they are beginning to earn money. The minimum co3t of doc tors' bills, nursing, medicines and loss of earnings amount to over $2400 in each case, while the earning power which might have been if death had not come brings the total cost to at least $8000 for each individual. If this sum is multiplied by the 138,000 deaths, the cost, it is seen, is bigger than the immense sum of $1,000,000,000. Professor Fisher es timated that over half this cost falls upon the victims themselves, but. the cost to others than the consumptive is over $440,000,000 a year. As a matter of self-defense, he averred, it would be worth while to the community in order to save mere ly a quarter of the lives now lost by consumption to invest $5,500,000, 000. At present only a fraction of one per cent, of this sum is being used to fight the disease. Professor Fisher expressed his be lief that isolation hospitals for in curable consumptives are the best in vestment of all, because in this way the most dangerous consumptives are prevented from spreading the disease by careless spitting in their homes and neighborhood- 92,535 tons for each life lost. Mis souri had trie lowest death rate, head ing the roll of honor with .95 and 499,742 tons of coal mined for each life lost. Statistics do not bear out the pop ular idea that most mine disasters result from explosions. Of the total number reported during the last year, 947 deaths and 343 injuries resulted from gas and dust explosions, and 201 deaths and 416 injuries were caused bv powder explosions. The chief cguse of death amor g the miners, the import explains, was due to the falling mine roofs and coal. Such disas terscaiised 1122 deaths and 2141 injuries. ! E. W. Parker, chief statistician of the survey, asserts that much benefit will result from the action of Con gress in appropriating $15 0,000 to in vestigate mine disasters and take steps to decrease the number of ac cidents each year. DEVIL FISH. Hold of Wreck When AttackeJ. out of the darkness and one twined about his neck. As the efforts of th men on the surface to comply with his signal threatened to pull his hel met off, Lund was forced to signal them to stop. With only his left arm free he hacked at the tentacles until they were partially crippled, but he was being drawn toward the fish when he saw the outline of the body. Plung ing toward it he drove his knife with all his force into the head, repeating the blow until he had slashed it into sections. In its death throes the oc topus tightened its tentacles until the diver was almost crushed in-its em brace. Lund Anally cut himself free and was brought to the surface fainting. jection into the muscular tissue In order to avoid digestive derangement. Dr. Wright says: "I am convinced," he adds, "that in mercury we have a specific for tu berculosis, and that the only question remaining is how long a time will be required to effect a cure. We follow the well established rules of treat ment during the administration of the drug open air, rest, proper food in abundance, sanitation, personal hy giene ana selection ot climate. Surgeon-General Rixey declines to com ment on the tests. Of course it is not claimed by Dr. W right that the new treatment will restore the lost lung tissue, but where there is enough lung tissue to support me he believes the victim can be saved, Kansas Mastodon Tusk Crumpled When Fonnd. Concordia, Kan. A laree ivorv tusk', seven inches in diameter, was found near here in a bed of clay. The find was made by Frederick Dutton, who was canoeing in. the river. The tusk crumpled into small pieces when iaicen out, Dut parts of it were brought here, and Mr. Dutton will make a further search for the skele ton of the mastodon, which is believed to be buried in the bed of silt and clay, lears ago the lower jaw of a mastodon was found m this district. The World of Sport. Sixty-four yachts started in the fall regatta of the Larchmont Club. The Dixie If. won the mile cham pionship for motor boats, showing great speed. J. Campbell Thompson's four-in nana iroitea a mile in 3.50 in a coaching jace at Syracuse. Charles M. Daniels broke the Amer ican record for swimming 330 and 44 0 yards across tidal water. "Tom" Nicholson, of St. Andrew's, won the national sod quoitmg cham pionship of America at Van Cortlandt Park The United States Marine Corns rifle team won the Cruikshank trophy in the annual shooting tournament at Sea Girt, N. J. Sir Thomas Lipton says he is not trying to force the hand of the N. Y Y. C. as regards a challenge for the America's Cup. John J. Eller made a new world's record for the 220 yards' low hurdles around a turn in the senior champion ships of the A. A. U. - An agreement has been reached between the Automobile Club of Ar.isrica and the American AutomO' id!? Association for the control of The Wheat Field, Take a look at the wheat field that has been brought up to perfection, as it stands. Yellow as gold, with the sheen of the sea, billowing from sky line to sky-line like an ocean of gold, where the wind touches the rippling wave crests with the tread of invisi ble feet. In California, in Oregon, in Washington, in Dakota, in the Ca nadian Northwest, you may "ride all dav on horseback through the wheat fields without a break in the flow of yellow heavy-headed grain. No fence lines. No meadow lands. No shade trees. No knobs and knolls and hills and hollows of grass or black earth through. From dawn till dark, from sunrise in a burst of fiery splendor over the prairie horizon to sundown when the crimson thing hangs like a huge shield of blood in the haze of a heat twilight you may ride with naught to break the view between you and the horizon but wheat wheat. It is like the gold fields. It goes to your head. You grow dizzy looking at it. You rub your eyes. Is it a mirage? Billowing yellow waves seem to be breasting the very sky. You look up. The sky is there all right with the black mote of a mead ow lark sailing the azure sea. He drops liquid notes of sheer mellow musie down on your head, does that meadow lark and that gives you back your perspective, your sense of amaz ing reality. You are literally, ab solutely, really, in the midst of a sea of living gold. It is yon -nd not Hie lark that is the mote. You begin to feel as if your special 'mote might be a beam that would get lost in in finity if you staid there long; and -o you ride on and on and some mere on and by and bye come out of : lie league-long, fenceless fields with on odor in your nostrils that isn't exactly like incense it's too fugitive, too fine, too sublimal of earth. It is aromatic, a sort of attar of roses, the imprisoned fragrance of the bil lions upon billions of wheat flowers shut up in the glumes of the heavy headed grain there. And that's the odor of the wheat From "Harvest ing the Wheat," by Agnes C. Laut in The Outing Magazine for October. Insignificant Work. Big men do big things, but how many big things are big failures. The biagest ship that ever was built was no profit to anybody until it was sold and broken up tor old junk. Many i little ship during the same time had made good voyages, and brought profit to its owner. A man writes a big book; he is a great man, but few people ever read his book, yet it is learned and bulky, and perpetu ates the man's fame through genera tions. Another man writes a little letter, a pamphlet, an epistle, which can be read in an hour, carried in the poeket, copied in a little while, sent through the mails, or printed on a few pages, and that little pamphlet is translated into hundreds of lan guages, scattered by millions in ev ery quarter of the globe. Paul, chained to a soldier in his hired house at Rome, wrote no big books. A dozen pages would contain the largest tratise he ever wrote, and yet the thoughts there embodied and the truths there declared, live through all ages and go to the ends of the earth. A seed is a. little thing but in it there is the promise of a waving harvest through all the years to come. A granite monument is a great thing, but it has no advance ment, no promise, no growth. . Let the man who does little things wait on God, who can make little things great, and accomplish his own purpose of grace and goodness, work ing wonders by means of the feeblest instruments through his matchless wisdom and his powerful love. Chirstian. Practical Jlind. "That patent medicine' works mira cles." "You don't stay." "Vps. Tt, found the rjrorrietor a poor man and left him worth at least a million." Fluctuating Measure. "He is having a peck of trouble." "And in trouble how much is a peck?" "Oh a bushel and a halt or so." acts gentlyyet prompt ly on the bowels, cleanses me system eectu ally, assists one in overcoming habitual constipation permanently. To get its oenejicial ejects buy the Genuine. nanulaciurecl by the JTig Strup Co. SOLD EK LEADING DRUOGiSTS-5p.rB0TrLt B 30 c&n be ptroppefl. Buy sad pn 1 RixirSerina MKAfXESS a m catarrh cube. IN KALES T CATARRHAL. JELLY Cures Deafness and Catarrh. Trial treatment by mail free. REA CO.. Minneapolis. Minn. Who Can Foretell? And who can foretell what fashions for women are yet to come ? At pres ent the tendency is toward as few garments as possible (although this does not in any way diminish the cost of woman's clothes). The lin gerie waist has become a mere cob-1 web; skirts grow more aDDreviaieu b(? macie ro exceed one hundred anu every day. There is said to be a new gty vearS- jn order to attain any silk ' underskirt which will admit of ; gueIl ae tuere must t,e a selection cf being drawn through a fine ring. I varjeties, and they must be grafted Hosiery is thinnest lace, and ladies j njgh up on tough stock. Our father's shoes are pumps of such narro;s j apple trees were grafted in the tops; margin as to scarce conceal their . but tbe appies planted in tiiese days rosy toes. The oldest inhabitants do i flre grafte(j jn the roots. However, say the climate is changing, and that j one mngt not elin? too long to an 01J we never have such cold winters as ; tree j jQve any fine ol(j tree espe we used to fifty years ago. .Ar3jeiall'y an applt treCj but wiien be these things to be taken in conjune- j A usefulness, it is a sin to let it tion, and are women gradually evolv- i cumber tjje ground. Jesus laid down ing toward that form of dress which ! . . horticultural law whcn he obtained in pristine Eden ? From cm.ged the barren fig tree, (i. e., coa "Do Women Dress to Please the demncd it to being cut down). There Men?" bv Louise Cass Evans, in The Bohemian Magazine for October. Deafness Cannot Be Curei bylocal applications as theyeanaot reach th diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness iscaueed by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed you have a rumbling sound orimper fect hearing, and wiieu it is entirely closed Deafness is lhe result, and unless the inflam. mation can be taken oat and this tube re stored to its normal condition, bearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are cansei by catarrh, which is nothingbutan inflamed condition of tho mucous surfaces. We wUlgi'-a One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deaf tess ( caused bycatarrh) that can not be curedby Hall's Or.tarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F.J. Cheney & Oo.,Toledo,0. Sold by Drucrgi8ts. 5c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Miss cr Mr.? "Fighting Bob" Evans, during his last stay in Washington, was one evening a guest at a house where he met a number of the younger set of the Capital. As the admiral was leaving, he chanced to pick up from the floor a very dainty handkerchief, y-I rrnJl li-i f 1 1 n sir, t-T e TI-O O'TO ToI f 1 Tl specting this "trifle light as air. when a rather effeminate-looking young man hastened forward to claim ' it. "Your sister's, no doubt," said ' the admiral as he handed it over. "On, no," said the young man; "it's mine." Evans scrutinized the young man closely. "Would you mind tell ing me what size hair-pins you use?" he asked after a pause. October Lip peneott's. RAISED FROM SICK BED After AH Hope Had Vanished. Mrs. J. H. Bennett, 59 Fountain St., Gardiner, Me., says: "My back usea to irouoie me bo severely that at last I had to give up. I took to my bed and stayed there four months, suffering in tense pain, dizziness, headache and inflam mation of the blad der. Though with out hope, I began using Doan's Kidney .-me ii ' Pills, and In three months was com pletely cured. The trouble fias never returned." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a tiox. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. A burned child dreads the licking he's going to get when dad finds out he has been playing with matches. f E i n ISA . 1 -V THE J. R. WATKINS MEDICAL CO. WINONA. MINNESOTA. i Makes 19 TMBTerrnt Axiracn an aiBai, 'loiiac rrcparauonit x ioe vaapi. aic Canxfassers V anted in E-Very County, 40 "Tears ExMrleme. S3.000.000 Otitvut. BEST PROPOSITION E2 0FFERgD AGENTS American Cotton and Business University and School MILLEDGEVILLE, GA. CC I " I ON' e EOirantee to complete any one with good eyesight in SO dara how to ci-ade. slaaslfr V-y AVAl average, .hin hn and Mil raittnn miIIia nhl.tn nmteet th.malH i- J) . i 'l market. We airo teach how to grade cotton by a Correspondence Course. Our sample rooms under expert cotton men. All sample. Rflfif If FFPIMP. Single and dca.le entry. Bnget aystem. recoi! f.ItS!STe.dTMTBF';2ediBB- irNt: bj bsineea men to be the best CCof- MLROIAL LAW and all LITERARY branches. SHORTHAND, TYPEWRITING, Gregg andJBIectrioV Te'eSrraDnV and Railraarliricr 5ndM l'hr8 ?xperJ Telegraphers and Train Diapatchers. .X. V " onu lauroaomg. Main line Railroad wires. 1 he best equipped school in the south, iipenses reasonable. Write for Catalogue, and state course desired. i- Learn Telegraphy aseureu, wnen National Telegraph Institute, (Dept. A. N.) jffgkS cBiAts LIGHT RUNNING, SIMPLE. DURABLE SIZE, 6 COL. QUARTO GUARANTEED CAPACITY 1000 PER HOUR PUTNAM . v 0. uSuu:r suu lasier colore Kua any otner ave. une luc, paccage colors all libera. n, cau dye any garment without ripping apart. Write tor frw booklet-How to l5ye. Bleach and Sx I .111 IV rnnPO frrtfWIB mint,. . 1 M j , . 01 ViS S??'3 ; i A y II I ul I I?n 7n. a!iIrm ln a Cardui is a purely vegetable extract, of certain medicinal inredi' v ith a specilic, curative influence, on the womanly organs. It is a simnle. harmless, nnn-intn-jrifatine' rpTnArltr ia ,,i n a fn ral ly, and is recommended to If AT wine for womanly pains, dragging feelings, nervousness, and any other form i f dreaotully, but took Cardm and recommend it to all ladies -with female "'; WHITE FOR FREE BOOK 5?S3a'SaaK ESk SJLmmjmr IMM AND TEMPERED VTSSSlkBS. Apple Trees Are Long livers. How can an apple tree grow? I have a few of the trees planted by Sconodoah, the Onieda chief, witn Dominie Kirkland, the missionary, in 1791. These trees, now consid erably over one hundred years of age, still bear an abundance of fruit. The wood is in good condition, notwith standing many years of neglect, lhe average age ol an orcnara, erallv planted and cared for, rarely exceeds fifty years. I am inclined to think tnflt tlie more sturdy sorts can is no room for second-rate stuff in the orchard. E. P. Powell in The Outin Magazine for October. HIS SKIN TROUBLES CURED. First Had Ttclunc Psh Threatened Later With H'ood-Poivnis in T eg Eelied on Cnti'-"ra Reiuciiifs. "About twelve or f!fpfn rears aero T had a breaVine-nut, and it 'iched. .itvI stun? ko badly fiat I ronld not have any rteace l-e-canse of it. Three fWtors c!M not le!n me. Then I used some Cnticura Soap. Cutimra Ointment, and Cutimra Resolvent and be gan to (tet better r'mlit awav. T-ey cured me and I have not been bothered with the itching since, io amount to anything. About two vears ren I had la crippe and pneumonia whK-h left me wiUi a pain in my side. Treatment ran it into mv le?, which then swelled sr. ! besan to break out. The doctor was afraid it would turn to blood-poison. I used his me-fine but it did no pood, than I used tbe Cnticura Remedies three times and cured the ak-ing-out on mv len-. J. F. Hennen, WilaD, Mo., May 13,' 1907." Between being overfed and under fed we seem to be a much distressed and long suffering people. nsw f nnudine Cures Women's jjonthly Pains, Backache, Nervousness, and Headache. It's Liquid. Effects imme- 1 - . 1 i. ;i I I n U.. ...... ..no .1-1 1 h hout diately. Prescribed by physicians with bent resulta. lUc.. 2oc., ana ouc.. ai urug Wise Girl. "It is never too late to mend, my daughter. ' ' "I know a better one, mother." "What is it?" "Never to late.'o get new ones." Io Drive Out Malaria and Build Up the System Take the Old Standard GrovK's Taste less Chlll Tonic. Yoa know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it is simply Qui nine and Iron in a tasteless form, ai,-d the most effectual form. H'or grown people and children, 50a. Its Main Attraction. The children who are growing up will on the past look back And speak about their childhood as The ag,of crackerjack. Mra.Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, eof tens the gums, reduces inl!amm:i t ion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle Matrimonial. Mrs. Visitor Do the girls in your school have any training that will fit them for the duties of a wife ? Miss Vassar Yes. Every graduate from this institution is an authority on fairy tales. A.rtlle: Household Bcaedlai, FlaTVl-Ing of Telegraphy, Consolidated Tonne Men and Ladies of ambition should master Teleoraphy and R. K. Accounting in one of our Institutes. Great scarcity of opera tors. We operate five schools under tiireet supervision of Railway Officials. Main-lice wires in all our schools. Poaitims absolutely competent. " 01 ior u-oara. prospectus free. SIMPLEX PRESS COMPANY, Inventor and Manufacturers of the Simplex Newspaper Press. HAND OR STEAM POWER. 167-189 8. Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga. Those of us who have been advising our readers to patronize home indnstry now have a c banco to show our faith by our works, by patronizing a "home" in dustry that is turning out a product that we believe is equal to tbe best, it not the best thing on the market for our use. The News, Fairburn, Ga., June 5, 1938 FADELESS DYE S ... . . alaria Makes Pale TTSS CHIIX TONIC, drives out Malaria anr build, up the c unking, aiic xuiuiuia is plainly printed on everv bctt', f:iov;ms tasteless' ad most effeual fogn ir Wdies. 50c. , girls and women, of all aees. of uKio a ns) uuttsflBMi. asii.i oi...n-i.i: tBuaKtSdsaSMBiasMsasjal Safety Raz AT LOW PRICE SUPERIOR TO dloI Kn SOLD AT ANY PRICE. VaLa&rQ THE SMALL PEICK is made Possible by naior. xne small urom on esnh . .f . . muv t,"" ifnti irMY Msnr awn tfub. ----- - - i ' v- . . . awsaani irai, im lam ratal 'Twas the verdic t 0f the neigubore , when He'd drawn hi final breath That he lived so strenuous a life He'd lived himself to death. ECZEMA CUBED, J. E. Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says: "1 Buffered agony with a severe case of ecze ma Tried six different remedies and ra? in depair, when a neighbor told me to try Ehuptrlne's tetteeise. Aftor using worth of j our tettemi? and soap I am ooTidetely cured. I cannot say too much tnitaiprftise." Tkttekine at Urujrgists or hv mail 503. Boap 25c. J. T. Shuptbi.ns, Dept. A, SaTannah, Ga.. It is a bad hen that cats at you; house and lays at another's. Dutch. Tho. w!1r is tho ro&insnrinsr oil woman's organism. It quickly calls! orrontinn to tfOUflla 1V flOliinS. II j ' ,. .---. i ; i the body, th.t organism lid Tn oncli rn. tells, with other symptoms, sue a a; 5 nervousness, headache, pains in thev j , . . . - - - ' r aliimtioiis J .V.: . v f (in:; sun' rpnic flt which speedily w :::. vca the can I' and restores the feminine organii jr to a healthy, normal condition .1 LYDiA E.PI!IKHAWI: 1 VEGETABLE S0MP0Li;:?7? Mrs. Will Young, of 6 OjiumivT r Ave., Rockland, Me., says : ': 4 " I was troubled for a long time w; $ f V'-l dreadful backaches and a pain in i ( de, and was miserable in every wa;jv$ doctored until I was discouraged an if thought I would never get well. I rea -what Lydia E. Pinkhain's VegetaM Vt Compound had done for others nd decided to try it; sifter taking thre ij'i bottles I can tru'y ' 1 that I never felt vj f so well in my life. fef Mrs. Augustus J . n, of East Earl, f $ Pa., writes to Mi s. riiikliam: B '"P "I had very severe backaches, and. pressing-down pains. I could not sleep, and had no appetite. Lydia E. Pink- yV, nam s Vegetable (. ompoumt cured me f v and made me feci like a new woman." FACTS FOR SICK WOME V For thirty years Lydia E. Fir ham's Vegetable Compound,," ; -from roots and herbs, has been ... ' , standard remedy for female ills ; and has positively cured thousand:; o. . women who have been troubled with . . displacements, inflammation, uleci"'. tion, fibroid tumors, irregulariti . periodic pains, backache, that be:i ing-down feeling, flatulency, indigo tion,dizziness,or nervous prostrat' . 2 . . Stl Slump Poller Factory Id th wi "fSrS& Guaranteed tot 500 liors pwr iW. ('l.r.ii-'-iia and diaeounla. Aridrwu ' i'Tjg""" mating intir if u dici vunn Z1MMERMANK STEEL CO., Lsna Tre, lowi CURES iroosyii Removes all swelling la 8 to days ; effects a permanent cure in y to 6o da vs. Trial treatment given free. Nothinjtcan be fairtf Write Or. H. H. Green's Sons. 53SBEc!alUt. Box B Atlanta, G V. Ii. DoUrlas mulcts and aplls more men's S3.00 and S3.60 iioos than any other manufacturer in the world, be cause they hold their (hsff, fit better, and wear longer than any oilier make. Shoes at All Prices, for Every Kember of the Family, Men, Beys, Wjmen. M;ses i Children W.L.Dcnglas $4.00 and $3.00 S Ji Ei;e Shots cannot M a.aalled at any priea. W. L Voufla $2. SO and v.uv saoes are the bst in ins worta Fast Color Evelrts !"- F.rHwrivelti. TTake Ao iil(in.:; . v'. I,. Douki.K name ani prire is stamps: on bottom. S-'M everywhere. Shoes maile-l tr::. fa -lory to any part ot the world. Catalog- hi W. L. DOUGLAS, 1S7 Spirk Sr.. l.-orMon. Mats. . oyste Alwat mi:m! papfb mark when wrtllnK a ri vn I : r, aiif In . buying Articles advt-i-iJ ' " il""" f.nee. coin mils take only ill til-M'I K " I from DECLINE ALL SUBSTITUTES ! So. 41-03. .l i . , ,,, nt&n73?T?i , Ulin , t.fiirr dve. loll i'i. O'lincy. Illinois. Blond Tn v: Take kness iTered cisnt and 1 by trail f Tenn. 6 Hes the ereat nmanA forth:, . . . m iare a sum as ir . !EMEAS- 11 1 0mpt 6l ffl ?edneS 1. VSJP i. j 'si .n .' fie Tl to a of , yra , :'gni vre: lilies mil E Jink Jsprw vari orig sehc addi out The 30th EacI inal each poow pome LFed Mon itlaree lnanj I I Th Bow ; Sol jStaffo ?:ond( cer la Frida' Ties, Silled Roc-: us sh srs.
The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 8, 1908, edition 1
4
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