University of South Carolina Libraries
RECORD OF ? SREAT McOtCINE A Prominent Cincinnati Woman Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Completely Cured Her. The great good Lydia E. PJnkham's Vegetable Compound is doing among the women of America is attracting the attention of many of our leading scientists, and thinking people gener ally? . The following letter is only one of many thousands which are on file in the Pinkham office, and po to prove beyond question that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound must be a remedy of great merit, otherwise it could not produce such marvelous re sults among sick and ailing women. ... Bear Mrs. Pin kb am: u About nine months ago I ivas a great suf ferer with -womb* trouble, which caused me severe pain extreme nervousness and fre quent headaches, from, which the doctor failed to relieve me. I-tried Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, and within a short time felt better, and after taking five bottles of it I was entirely cured. I therefore heartily recommend your Compound as a splendid uterine tonic. It makes the monthly periods regular and without pain ; and what a blessing it is to find such a remedy after so many doctors fail to help you. I am pleased to recommend it to all suffering women." Mrs. Sara Wilson, 31 East 3d Street, Cincin nati, Ohio. If you have suppressed or painful menstruation, weakness of the stom ach, indigestion, bloating, leucorrboa, flooding, nervous prostration, dizzi ness, faintness, " don't-care " and " want-to-be-left-alone " feeling, ex citability, backache or the blues, these are sure indications of female weak ness, some derangement of the uterus or ovarian trouble. In such cases there is one tried and true remedy-Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. VERY FEW, IF ANY, CIGARS SOLD AT 5 CENTS. COST AS MUCH TO MANUFACT URE. OR.COST THE DEALER AS MUCH AS fifi IF THE DEALER TRIES TO SELL' YOU SOME OTHER ASK YOURSELF WHY? BALD MEN'S HAIR CUTS. Less Hair a Man Has, the Ofter**. Does He Havs lt Trimmed. finally induced" to ta?lr^e'reni^?ied: "I've noticed one peculiarity about my customers that I could never quite ex \ plain. The less hair a man has the more attention he pays to it. . "There's a real estate agent who comes in here nearly every week for a hair cut, and if- I shave hiin clean from the back o? his collar to his fore heai you'd never know that I'd touched him. He's got a short, light-colored fringe that plays around the rim of his hat, like the soft, fluffy fringe you see on those shawls the women wear over their .shoulders, but you'd think to hear him, that he could braid it and do it up in coils. Wants me to be par ticular and trim it close on the neck and around the ears. "I humor him, of course. Iy take a handful of somebody else's hair and sprinkle it cn the cloth I put on him, and then Isnip the air gently for 10 or 15 minutes.and make a great ado HE-whisk him off. Nine out of every ten of thc ba.d heads are that way, but men who've got plenty of hair will keep away from here un?i! they look like the edges of an oldiashioned hayloft. It's curious.." and, as I said, I never could account for it."-Providence Journal It takes rough tools to remove the rust from our hearts. ' So. 12. A sharp bargain makes a deep wound ' in the one who gets it. THE SIMPLE LIFE Ways That Are Pleasant and Paths That Are Peace* L. - j It ls the simple life that gives length x>t days, serenity of mind and body and tranquility of soul. Simple hopes and ambitions, bounded hy the desire to do good to one's neigh bors, simple pleasures, habits, food aDd drink. Men die long before their time be cause they try to cfowd too much into -their experiences-they climb too high and fall too hurd. A wise woman :writes of the good that a simple diet has done her: have been using Grape-Nuts for about six months. I began rather sparingly, until I acquired such a lik ing for it that for the last tbree'montlis I have depended upon it almost en tirely for my diet, eating nothing else ."whatever but Grape-Nuts for break-' fast and supper, and 1 believe I could eat it for dinner with fruit a ud be sat isfied without other food, and feel much better and have more strength to do my housework. "When 1 began the ose of Grape Nuts I was thiu and weak, my muscles were so soft that I was not able to do any work. I weighed only 10S pounds. Nothing that I ate did me any good. I was going down hill rapidly, was ner vous and miserable, with no ambition .for anything. My condition improved rapidly ,.;a??e? I .began to eat Grape Nuts f?qcr. It made me feel like a new woman; ?-my ^muscles got solid, my figure,^o^ded''-out, my weight in creased to* 120 pounds in a few-weeks, my nerves grew steady and my mind better and clearer. My friends teli me they haven't seen me look so well for years. . "? consider Grape-Nuts ilie best food on the market, and shall nevei>go back to meats and white bread " again." Name~ given by Postum Co., Battle Creek. Mich. Th ere's a i ea son. Look in ejicl?pkg. for the mile hook. "The Hoad to WeUyijJe,* SPOKE TO MOTHERS President Roosevelt Made a Vigorous and Wholesome Address THE GLORY OF TRUE MOTHERHOOD In an Address Before a National Gath ering the President Emphasizes the Prime Importance of a Wholesome Home Life to the Perpetuity of the Nation and the Happiness of the In* dividual. Washington, Special.-An address by President Roosevelt was the feature of the evening session of the National Congress of Mothers, now holding its tri-ennial convention at the Metropoli tan M. E. church. There was an im mense attendance. The President was formally introduced to the audience by Mra^ Frederick Schoff, of Philadelphia, the president of the congress. He read his speech, but occasionally interjected some extemporaneous remarks to em phasize a point. The President spoke as follows: "In our modern industrial civilization there are many and grave dangers to Counterbalance the splendors and the triumphs, lt is not a good thing to see cities grow at disproportionate speed relatively to the country; for the small land owners, the men who own their little homes, and therefore to a very large extent the men who till farms, the men of the soil, have hitherto made the foundation of lasting national life in every State; and if the foundation becomes either too weak or too narrow, the superstructure, no matter how at tractive, is in imminent danger of fall ing. "But far more important than th? question of the occupation of our citi zens is the question of how their family life is conducted. No matter what that occupation may be, as long as there is a real home and as long as those who make up that home do their duty to one another, to their neighbors and to the State, it is of minor consequence whether the man's trade is plied in the county or the city, whether it calls for the work of the hands or for the work of the head. "But the nation is in a bad way if there is no real home, if the family is not of the right-kind; if the man is nqt^a- good husband and father, if he is'brutal or cowardly or selfish, if the woman has lost her sense of duty, if she is sunk in vapid self-indulgence or has let her nature be twisted so that she prefers a sterile pseudo-intellectu ality to that great and beautiful devel opment of character which comes only to those whose lives know the fullness of duty done, of effort made and self sacrifice undergone. . HOME LIFE ALL-IMPORTANT. 'Tn the last analysis the welfare of the State depends absolutely upon whether or not the average family, the average man and woman and their chil dren, represent the kind of citizen ship fit for the foundation of a great nation; and if we fail to appreciate this we fail to appreciate the root mor ality upon .which all healthy civiliza tion is based. "No piled-up wealth, no splendor of material growth, no brilliance of artis tic development, will permanently avail any people unless its home life is healthy, unless the average pian pos sesses honesty, .cour-ager-ct^pTOir^ense, and decency^ainless he works hard and Is willing at need to fight hard; and unless the average woman is a good > wife, a good mother, able and willing to perform the first and greatest duty of womanhood, able and willing to bear, and to bring up as they should be brought up, healthy children, sound in body, mind and character, and nu merous enough so that the race will increase and not decrease. . DIVISION OF LABOR BY SEX. "Thre are certain old truths which will be true as long as the world en dures, and which no amount of prog ress can alter. One of these is thc truth that the primary duty of the husband is to be the home maker, the bread-winner for his wife and children, and that the primary duty of the wo man Is to be the helpmeet, the house wife and mother. The woman should have ample educational advantages; but save in exceptional cases the man must be, and she need not be. and gen erally ought not to be trained for a life long career as the family bread-win ner; and, therefore, after a certain point the training of the two must normally be different because the duties of the two are normally different. Thia does not mean inequality of function, -but it does mean that normally there must be dissimilarity of function. On the whole, I think the duty of the wo man the more important, tne more difficult, and the more honorable of the two; on the whole I respect the woman who does her-duty even more tha,n I respect the man who does his. WOMAN'S WORK THE NOBLER. "No ord'uary work done by a man !s either as hard or responsible as the work of a woman who is bringing up a family of small children; for upon her time and strength demands are made not only every hour of the day but often every hour of the night. She may have tJ get up night after night to take care of a sick child, and yet must by day continue to do all her household duties as well; and if the family means are scant she must usual ly enjoy even her rare holidays taking her whole brood of children with her. The birth pangs make all- men the debtors of all women. Above all our sympathy and regard are due to the struggling wives among those whom Abraham Lincoln called the plain peo ple, and whom he so loved and trusted; for the lives of these women are often led on the lonely heights of quiet, self sacrificing heroism. "Just as the happiest and most hon orable and most useful task that can be set any man is to earn enough for the support of his wife and family, for the bringing up and starting in life of his children so the most important, the most honorable and desirable task whicn can De set any woman is to De a good wise mother in a home marked by self respect and mutual forbear ance, by willingness to perform duly, and by refusal to sink into self-indul gence or avoid that which entails ef fort and self-sacrafice. Of course there are exceptional men and exceptional women who can do arid ought to do much more than this, who can lead and ought to lead great careers of out side usefulness in addition to-not as substitutes for-their borne work; but I am not speaking of exceptions; I am speaking of the primary dutie:;, I am speaking of the primary citizen, the average men and women who make up the nation. Treaty Likely to Fail. Washington, Special.-The discussion of the Dominican treaty, in the legis lative session of the Senate Tuesday, resulted in the drawing of party lines. The Democrats who have been reported as likely to support the treaty will re turn to the fold, it is said, and on both sides of the chamber it is admitted there is little prospect that the conven tion will be ratified. The Republicans have been depending on some Demo cratic support and have counted as zertaln the votes of Senators McEnery ind Foster, of Louisiana, and Clarke, if Arkansas, , DECISION IN LIBEL CASE (tate Supreme Court Hsnds Down Im * portant Opinion. Columbia, Special.-An important de rision ?iras handed down in the Super ior Court involving libel suits of $10, ?00 each against The Charleston News lind Courier and The Charleston Post Dy Augustus M. Flood, who was re ferred to in both publications as a 'colored man," in their mention of his mit against - the Charleston Street Railway. The decision is against the newspapers and the cases go back to Charleston for the assessment of such lamages as a jury may see fit. Tho reference to Flood as a colored man was an error which the one paper fell Into by reason of the other's lack of iiligence, and both papers promptly tpologized when the mistake was called to their attention, in the com plaint Mr. Flood alleges that the refer ence to him as a colored man damaged his social and business position to the extent of $10,000 in each case. The defendants demurred on the ground that under the fourteenth and fifteenth imendments to the Federal constitution to Defer to a man as a negro is nor libelous per se and that to refer to a white man as a negro when he is not a negro is an apparent mistake which can do him no harm. The Supreme court reserves this position and holds that in spite of the Federal cons ti tu fton it is libelous per se to refer to a white man as a negro, inasmuch as thc iaws of this State forbid social equality by its jim crow car laws, its laws against miscegenation and otherwise. The decision in the newspaper case is written by Chief Justice Pope and it is very exhaustive. Among the par allel cases referred to is one in which a reporter referred to a white man aa a "cultured gentleman," the "intelligent compositor "set it up" "colored gentle man," and the proofreader changed it to "negro." The Supreme Court says: "The only question presented by this appeal is, 'Is it libelous per se to pub lish a white man as a negro?' Tc call a white mau a negro affects the social status of any white man so re ferred to." Authorities are quoted on this point and the court continues: "When we stop to think of the racial distinction subsisting between the white man and the black man, it must be apparent that to impute the con dition of a negro to a white man would affect his, the white man's, so cial statils, and in case any on6 pub lished a white man to be a negro, it would not only be galling to his pi ide." but would tend to interfere seriously with the social relation of the white man with his fellow white men; and to protect the white man from such publication it is necessary to bring such a charge to an issue quickly." lu Strauder vs. West Virginia, the court held that these amendments, twelfth, fourteenth and fifteenth, vere designed to accord members of the ne gro race the same protection in lifo, liberty and property which was already enjoyed by the whitt> race, and no where does the court in that state re fer to the social relations of each race. The statute law of this State forbids the association of the two races, in such a way it excludes the negro from white society and vice versa. By the miscegenation statutes, the inter marriage of the two races is forbidden and made a crime. Railroads are re nuired to furnish separate coaches for the two races. White children and colored children are forbidden to at tend the same school. Various opin ions are quoted to show that publish ing a white man as a negro has been held to be libelous by various court:/. The court then quotes the language of the three amendments to the-con .rtitution of theJUjjKgd-StJrteS'feferred .toandarjg^s^that it must be appar ent fronT consulting the texts that there is not the slightest reference to the social condition of the two races. "All take pleasure," it is stated in tho opinion, "in bowing to the authority of the United States in regard to ihese amendments, but we would be very far from admitting that the so ;ial distinction subsisting oetween the two races has been in any wise affect ed." In concluding the court holds* "We. therefore, hold that these .hree amendments to the Federal con ititution have not destroyed the law if this State, which makes the pub ication of a white man as a negro mything but libel. The judgment of ibis court is that hte judgment of the Circuit Court be reversed when it sus .ained the demurrer in this case and he action is remanded to the Circuit 3ourt for such other proceedings ns nay be in accordance with law." Chester's Monument. Chester, Special-The Chester Chap ar, United Daughters of the Confed .racy, at their meeting last week, ar ranged the programme for thc exer cises of . laying the corner stone of the Confederate monument here on the llth of April. Judge William H. (frawley, of Charleston, a native of Chester, will deliver the principal ad dress. Rev. Dr. J. S. Clifton, of Drangeburg, also a Chester county man. has been invited to attend and make an address in the afternoon. Tudge Frawley was a member of the ??ixth Regiment, South Carolina Infan try; Dr; Clifton of the First Regiment of cavalry. Street Railway' in Operation. Anderson, Special.-The street rail way system has been completed and ?ars are now running on all the lines. The work began several months ago tnd has been pushed forward steadily tince then as well as conditions would .ermit. The system is an excellent me, and the traffic has been exceeding y encouraging to the company. Thc ines reach all the cotton mills with me exception. It is probable that now ines will be built during the summer. -Purned on Wagon. Greenville, Special.-Five bales of cotton belonging to J. C. Roe, of Trav eler's Rest, wore burned on a wagon in the country road a few miles from the city. The staple was almost a complete loss. The theory is advanced that the cotton was set on fire from a cigar which was being smoked by one of the parties who helped load the cotton, or by matches being drop ped in the wagon, which mirht have ignited by friction caused by the jolt ing of the wagon. Passed Forged Check. Newport News, Va., Special.-John Rodgers, alias John Roddey, who 1ms been acting as stewart at the Newport Naval Hospital, was arrested on tho charge of passing a forged check on the German Savings Bank, of Memphis, Tenn. The man was arrested on a I minor warrant, and the police recog nized him from a description sent out from Memphis. The Copeland Lumber and Ginning Company, of Carter's Crossing, Dar lington county, was given a commis sion. Capitalization. $3,000. Rojestvensky Recalled. Washington, Special.-There is high authority for the statement that the Russian Second Pacific squadron has been recalled by the Russian govern ment. While not regarded as a re sign of peace, the recall of Admiral Rojestvensky's squadron, in the opin ion of European chancellors, is regard ed as a hopeful sign that peace is at I hand. 213 South Prior Street, ATLANTA, GA., March 21,1903.' I suffered for four months with extreme nervousness and lassitude. I had a sinking feeling in my' stomach -which no medicine seemed to relieve, and losing my appetito I became weak and lost my vital ity. In three weeks I lost fourteen pounds of flesh and felt that I must find speedy relief to regain my health. Having heard Wine of Cardui praised by several of my' friends, I sent for a bottle and was certainly very pleased with 'the results. "Within three days my j appetite returned and my stomach troubled me no more. I. could digest my food without difficulty and thc nervousness gradually diminished. Nature performed her functions without difficulty and I am once moro a happy and well woman. , OLIVE JOSEPH, Ircas. Atlanta Friday Night Clnb. Secure a Dollar Bottle of Wioe o? Cardui Today.' MANY DIE IN FIRE Nineteen Charred Bodies Tell Grim Story of Death ROASTED IN A TENEMENT HOUSE More Than 40 Others Were Injured, and Only a Few of the Sleeping In mates of the Building, Which is on the New York East Side, Escaped Unhurt. New York, Special.-Nineteen per sons were burned to death in a fire which destroyed the five-story house, 1,005 Allen street, early Friday. More than 40 were injured and only a few of the sleeping inmates escaped un hurt. Several of those who perished were roasted to death in plain view of thousands in the streets. Coroner Goldenkrane declared after an inves tigation that he had reason to believe thc blaze was the work of an incen diary. He issued subpoenas for Che fire marshal, tenement house and building Inspector and health and police officials to appear before him at the inquest Thursday. The fire started in the basement and spread with frightful rapidity to the roof. The victims were- caught in traps of flames, the halls and exits being rendered impassable in a few minutes after the blaze started. The building was one of the usual tenement and the disaster was the worst in the his tory of the East Side. The district attorney's office has begun an investi-, gation to place the blame for the great loss of life. Chief Croker, of the fire department, asserts that the police and the tenement house departments are to blame for the violations of the fire escape law. The tenement house de partment officials, however, say that the blame is on the shoulders of the fire commissioner. Of the nineteen dead, three bodies, these of a boy and two girls remain unidentified. Crowded fire escapes in the rear of the tenement house were largely re sponsible for so many deaths and in juries among its population, which ap proached 200 souls. The scenes were heartrending. The fire started in the basement, occupied by Isaac Davis, his wife and three children. When Davis reached his home early this morning and wer i into his store on the same floor he saw a kerosene lamp in the r?ar explode. He awoke his wife and both tried to put out the flaming lamp but without success. A policeman who heard the cry of alarm rushed to the scene and every effort was made to arouse the sleeping people. Meantime the flames had spread with startling rapid ity and the occupants of the upper floors awoke to find themselves con fronted by a wall of flames on nearly every side. Panic-stricken people rushed to the fire escapes only to find them literred with rubbish. On some of the escapes the rubibsh was so closely packed that it became impos sible to pass certain points and men, women and children stood literally roasting to death as the flames reared through windows around them. One of the escapes was manned by Police man John J. Down, who had run a plank across to the window of an ad joining building. He rescued nearly a dozen persons, but finally fell 20 feet to the paved yard and shattered his shoulder. Dozens of people were taken rrom the crowded fire escapes and up per windows. By this time the building was a-furnace and the rescues were effected in many cases only through heroic efforts of the firemen.' Lieu tenant Bonner, son of the former chief, descended the now red hot fire escapes five times. Four times he brought down % woman or a child in his arms. The fifth time he was descending with an unconscious woman but staggared and was barely saved from death. Once Bonner rescued a little girl from a window where she-tetood surrounded by flames. She pleaded with him to leave her on the escape and go in after her little brother whom she said . had fallen unconscious. . Bonner jumped into what looked like a furnace, found the hoy and saved him. Total Dead 111. Birmingham, Ala., 'Special:--With the removal of the last four bodies from the Virginia mine, the total fatalities from the awful explosion of February 20 was swelled to lil. The recovery of the bodies has been a slow ?nd difficult task. The fund which was raised for the relief of the widows and orphans left by the disaster reached nearly $30,000, and this is being dis tributed among them in the form of semi-monthly allowance by a commit tee of prominent ministers in the Bir mingham district. NEVER HAD A CHANCE. "Whai is the- greatest speech that Congress ever developed?" "I ne greatest speech," said the statesman with the disappointed look, "was never delivered. I wrote U my self."-Washington Star. BIRD'INVESTS WITH POWER. Superstition Connected with Jeweled Toy of England's King. When as a girl Amelie de France, now Queen of Portugal, first visited Windsor Castle, the mystic jeweled bird which was taken from the throne of Tippoo Sahib and presented by the East India Company to George III., was the object of her profoundest ad miration. In fact, it fascinated her ro mantic soul, and Queen Victoria, who had a strong strain of romance in her nature, quite understood her young guest's feeling, - so she ordered the bird to be taken to the princess' apart ment, in order that a sketch might be made of the treasure. The first thing the Queen of Portugal asked for the night she entered the ban queting hall on the King's arm and saw the blaze of the celebrated gold plate upon thc buffet, was this jeweled bird! His majesty Immediately or dered that it should be placed upon the table in front of the Queen, that she might gaze upon it at her leisure. There are many legends woven about that bird. A London journal says the Hindoos call it "Uma," and they say that whoever owns Uma must reign over India. It is supposed to have the gift of locomotion, and it alights upon the head of whosoever it endows with royal power. It is about twelve inches long, and is shaped like a pigeon with an exaggerated tail. Rubies, brilliants, emeralds and pearls are sewn about tie quivering feathers of filagree gold work: it holds a price less ruby in its beak, and an emerald of great size and luster hangs from its breast. The bird shares with the Kohinoor the superstitious regard of the Hindoos. While thc Uma folds its wings in the castle on the Thames, and while the Kohinoor blazes in the English crown, there is nothing else to do but be as good, subjects of King Edward as may be. It is the will of . the gods. "Burned" by Cold. Intense cold, as is well known, burns ?-If we may use the term-like heat If a "drop" of r 'r at a temperature of 180 degrees below zero were placed up on the hand it would have the same effect as would the same quantity of molten steel or lead. Every one who has the care of horses ought to know the pain inflicted by placing a frosted bit in a horse's mouth. It burns like hot iron. Tho World's Postal Employes."1 Germany has 212,000 postal employes, the United States 230.000 and Great Britain ISLOOO. None of the oilier States iu the postal union possesses 100,000 postal employes. France has 81,000; Austria. 7>iJ,000; Russia, uT,0G2, and Japan, 57,9G.?. WOTT'S This? Wo ofter Onu Hundred Dol?an Howard toe any case of Uutarrli tu:it cannot bo curodb/ Hall's Uatarrj. Curo. F. J. CHENET & Co.. Toledo, O. Wo, Ibo undersigned, havo known F.J. Cheney for thc Inst: 1 fe yea?,and behove him perfectly honorablo in all business transac tions aud ttancialiy titilo tu carry out aay obllgatioas mada by thole llr.n. WEST & T.I?AX, lYu?leinlo Druggists, To ledo, O, WALDINO, lt I xx.vs* >% MAttW.'T, Wholesale Druggists, Tolo 15, O. Hall's Gatum Care ii t I'oainturii'illy, isl ing directly upoa tao blool and mucou3iur facosof the 3yste n. Toitiniouials sout frou. Price,75c. per battle. Sold by ?ill Druggist}. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. It ii- not strange that the religion that is soothed all day Sunday should sleep all the -week. He who seeks to liquidate his sor rows in the saloon succeeds in nour ishing his miseries. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveF.estorer,i<2tnal bottlcaad treatise free Dr. E. H. KLIXE, Ltd.,081 Arch St., Phils., Pa. Japan imports wool from many of the European countries. Piso's Cure ls the best medicine we ever used for all affections of throat and lungs.-WK. O. ENDSLK?, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900. London bridge is crossed every day by 220,000 people. Strict but fruitless search was made in the vaults under the Italian Cham ber of Deputies recently, the Speaker having received an anonymous letter stating that the House would be blown up during a certain sitting. A QUICK RECOVERY. A Prominent: Officer of the Keb OCCAS "Writes to Thank Donn's Kidney Pilla For lt. Mrs. C. E. Bumgardner, a local officer of the Rebeccas, of Topeka, Kans., Room 10, S12 Kansas ave nue, writes: "I used Donn's Kidney Pills during the past year for kiduey trouble and kindred ailments. I was suffering from pains in the back and headaches, but found after the use of one box of the remedy that the troubles grad ually disappeared, so that before 1 had fin ished a second pack age I was wei j. I, Ihert'foro. heartily i?h .!;:;...... your remedy." r5i;ine.!i M?S. C. Iv RUMOARDXEIL A Till AL I?'! i [.'.'.'. - Atkin ss Fos lil li ibu rn <'<>.. Uuilalo, X. V. For sale v .-ill dealers. Prien .".lt cents. ALL over the world Peruna is known and used for catarrhal N diseases. Tiie Peruna Girl has *V traveled 'round the globe. Her face is familiar everywhere that civ ilization reaches. Universally Praised. From Africa to Greenland, from Man churia to Patagonia, the face of the Peruna girl is familiar and the praises of Peruna as a catarrh remedy are heard. Successful in North and South. Peruna crossed the Equator several years ago, to find in the Southern Hemisphere thc same triumphant success that lins marked its career in the Northern Hemis phere. A Standard. Peruna is a standard catarrh remedy the world over. It cures catarrh by eradicating it from the system. Permanent Cure. It obviates the necessity of all local treat ment and its relief is ol' permanent char acter. Without a. Peer. No other remedy has so completely dom inated the whole earth as Peruna. In Every Tongue. In all languages its glowing testimonials are written. lu all-climes thc demands for Peruna in crease. DISFIGURED BY ECZEMA "Wonderful Change in a Night-In n Month Tace Waa Clear an liver-Another Cure by Cuticurn. "I had eczema on the face for five months, during which time I was in the care of physicians. My face was so dis figured I could not go out, and it was going from bad to worse. A friend recommended Cuticura. Thc first night after I washed my face with Cuticura Soap, and used Cu ticura Ointment and Resolvent it changed wonderful I) From that day I was able to go ori, and 'n i month thc treatment liad reproved all ;cales and scabs, and my face was as clear as ever. (Signed) T. J. Soth, 317 Stagg Street, Brooklyn, N-. Y." Taylor's C' jrokve Remedy of Sweet Gum find Bluilen is Mal ure's great remedy-Cures Coughs. Colds, Croup and Consumption,and ali throat aud lung troubles. At druggists, "?''-, ?Oc. aud ?1.00 per bottle. >u'll be surprised how cheaply, how quick!; luable premiums by saving the freight ci Get a caa to-day and look over the little ie most liberal premium system in thc wo: ass, valuable articles we offer. Good Luci i ! See the cut below. It is the baking powder of positive pu lg of snowy white, of feathery lightness, o follows it9 use. On account of its su; ideal for quick baking. It costs you it goes farther in quantity than any Good Luck is shown in the fact ti been sold during the present year. Luck. If your grocer hasn't it, se see that you are supplied at once. THE SOUTHERN MFG. CC This has made LION COFFEE 8 Millions of American Homes There is no strop ger proof of m ing popularity. 1 -Quality survh (Sold only in 1 lb. packages. (Save your Lion-heads SOLD BY GROCEI UfA?fcTTE STOCK FARM, J. CROUCH & SON, Pr.or'8. LARGEST 1 G real Hie Heal Hors EVERY The Cum Iii;: li?ti HW amillona nrrlv i - ra 1 ttTins madft. I!I'P.!B ? stallion -v An Extensive Laboratory, To supply this remedy to the whole world | taxes to the utmost one of the best labora tories in the United States. A Word From Australia. Walter H. Woodward, Bomadior Royal Australian Artillery, llobart, Tasmania, writes: "I suffered for several years with a dis tressing condition of the head and throat, caused by continual colds. "My head and nostrils were stopped up most of thc time and there was a dis charge, and my sense of smell was affected badly. "After two weeks' usc of Pemna I found this condition quite changed, and so I con tinued to usc this remarkable medicine for over a month. "I am very glad to say that at the end of that time I was cured and felt in fine health generally, and am pleased to give Peruria my honest endorsement." The trouble with good intentions is that death gets in'ahead of them. A OnarantPcl Cur* For Pl'es. Ttchincr, Blind, Rlecdinc or Protruding Tilos. Drucrcists will refund money If P.-I-?O Ointment fat'1 - "*.-.; in C to 1J days. 50?. Th ..-.?portation of cattle from Mexico t<" Juba is increasing. Mrs. Winslow's SoothIn^Syrnp for.?Mi?i.r??? t^ethim;. soften thogumsi reduces Inflam nia tioa.allays pain.ciircs wind coIic.25e.a bottle. To Turo a Cold Iii One Tiny Tako Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. AU druirrists refund money if it falls to euro, li. AV. Grove's signature is on box. 25c. Petroicum wells have been discovered in Chihuahua, Mexico. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never Pails. Sold by all druggists, $1. Mail orders promptly filled by Dr. E. Dctchon, Crawfordsville, ?nd. ar coupons on Good Luck Premium Booklet you find rid-describes and pictures : coupons are worth dollars Hg \ Powder rity, of absolute certainty, f delicious flavor invariably perior leavening power it is but io cents a pound-and ' other. The excellence of lat 16,145,114 pounds have Insist upou getting Good nd us his name and we'll 1 >., Richmond, Va. >ffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed dust, germs and insects, passing .ougli many hands (some of 3m not over-clean), "blended," u don't know bow or by whom, fit for your use ? Of course you nt. But another story. The green rries, selected by keen dges at the plantation, are illfully roasted at our fae ries, where precautions you ould not dream of are taken secure perfect cleanliness, ivor, strength and uniformity. From the time the coffee leaves 1 factory no hand touches it till is opened in your kitchen. he LEADER OF ALL PACKAGE COFFEES. welcome LION COFFEE daily, erit than continued and increas es all opposition." Lion-hend on every package.) for valuable premiums.) KS EVERYWHERE OOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. OTTERS 111 AMERICA OF THE I German ach=Sta!!ioiis i(- to Cross o? Small .Southern 31..i COLT A IIIf!li -CLASS ON!', rs?- for th?? SIIMJI 1 |:ist importation of v.l !-Vi>. :Vth. Ali Scullions) if .aranti?ed: lib Catalogueoi)H,>??:<*ntion if .our Kountry rittMts. il: CROUCH & :ji >N, Kiishvillc, Tent!. From Hawaii. Prince Jonah Kalanianable, delegate in Congress from Hawaii, writes from Wash ington, D. C., as follows: "I can cheerfully recommend your Pcruna as a very effective remedy for coughs, colds and catarrha! troubles." A Cuban Minister. Senor Quesadaj Cuban Minister to thc United States, writes from Washington, D. C.,'as follows: "Peruna I can recommend as a very good medicine, lt is an excellent strength ening tonic, and is also an eflicacious cure for the almost universal complaint of ca tarrh."-Gonzalo De Quesada. From All Quarters of thc Globe. Wc have on file thousands of testimonials like those given above. We can give our readers only a slight glimpse of the vast number of grateful letters Dr. Hartman is constantly receiving from all quarters of the globe* in behalf of his famous catarrh remedy, Peruna. Around the World "I have used your Fish Brand Slickers for ycara in the Hawaiian Islands and found them the only article that suited. I am j now In this country > / (Africa) and think a great deal of your coats." (NAME ON APPLICATION) mCHESTMIt!) WORLD'S FAIR . 1904. mm The v/orld-wldc reputa tion of Tower's Water proof Oiled Clothing assures the buyer of ? the positive worth of - alt garments bearing this Sign of thc Fish. A. J. TOWER CO., Boston, U. S. A. TOWER CANADIAN CO., LIMITED, .1 Toronto, Canada. V "Hovinr; taken your wondcxfnl "Cascareis" fot three months and Wine entirely enredof stomach, catarrh and dvopiipsiiv. I think a word of praise 1? d!!Oto"Casparets"fortlieirivo!idcrfnl composition. 1 harri taken numerous ?thor so-called remedie? but without avail and I ami that Cascareis relievo more in a day than all tho others 1 have tuleen iron td in a year." _ . , James Mc?uno, ICS Mercer St., Jersey City, N. J. Pleasant, Palatnhle. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken or Griuu. 10c, 2."c, Mc. >.cvor .old in hulk. Tlie comiino tablet stamped OCC. Guaranteed to euro or your money hack. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 593 MUflLS?LE, TEjj M1LUQI1 BOXES mm??M ~ m CORN FIELDS ARE GOLD FIELDS to the farmer who under stands how to feed his crops. Fertilizers for Corn must contain at least 7 per cent, actual Send for our books-they tell why Potash is as necessary to plant life as sun and rain; sent free, if you ask. Write to-day. GERMAN KALI WORKS ' New York-93 Nassau Street, or Atlanta, Ga.-?J? South Broad St. GXe DEMOR.EST Self-Feed SHINGLE Machine. For SPECIAL BARGAIN PRICES Add ess DEMOREST FOUNDRY & MA CHINE WORKS. DEMOREST, GA. rou can mate big money in Shingles on smalloutl&y. - 5WVW H IMI11W BWB BMvWB Moro gardens and tarros aro planted to Saber's Seeds than any other in L. America. There is reason for this. *? ?Vo own over 8,000 acres for the pro duction of our warranted seed?, order to induce you to try them, ivo . make you the follow inp unprc* . cedented offer: fbi? 16 Cants Postpaid . 10O0 Ea ri j. lit A lu m and Lit? Calibajci, 1200C- Fin* Juler Turnip*, 2000 numbing Olrrr, ?000 tilth NUUTUUU;*, 1000 Splendid Unions, JOOO Rare Luici?n. KadliV?, 1000 Glarlooil; Brilliant Flower*. Above reven packages contain snffl cicnt seed to grow l?.OOO plant?, fur nishing: boanda of brilliant flower? and lots and lot* of choleo vega cables, together wiUi our great ?atalog.tellingall about Flowers, Roses, Small Fruits, etc., all for loo in stamps nnd thia notice. Big HO-pa go catalog alone, 4c. JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO, A.O.I.. La Crosse, Wis. I WWI ll ll ?l If afflicted with weak eyt-fj, g Thompson's Eyewater So, Iii. n MFW < AKD THICK. Five cards het.l at H Kfcf? the tips of angers instantly disappear! cards lin nu dlntcly produced ?gain from any placo pprforp-.iT dc'lros. Full tUBtrjiCtlonstent by mall fop $1. Ado,.cs-, .1. H. Vnn nerti uv en, Tuva re*, Fin,,