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fallen By fha Wayside. Most liquor would improve, wit) age if men would let it. Time" will teh-but gossipers man ago to tell it first. : The form of agreement and Itu convention or parties over-rulo th? Mms. Anna Gould has postponed her departure/for the United States At present I live in hope, but the issue is in tho hand of the gods. Finder. If .there is any one thing that a woman dreads more than another it is a surgical operation. /"We can state without fear of a contradiction that there are hun dreds, yes^^thousands, of operations peTformea upon women in our hos pitals which are entirely unneces sary arad many have been avoflfcd by LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VE6ET?BLE COMPOUND For proof of this statement read the following letters. Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingmaa, Kansas, -writes to Mrs. Pinkham: " For eight yeirs I suffered from th? j most severe form of female troubles and was told that an operation was ray only '. hope of.recovery. I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it has saved my life and made me a well woman." . Mrs. Arthur R. House, of Church Road, !Moorestown. ?. J., writes : "I feel it "is my duty to let people know what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege ? table Compound has done for me. I . suffered from female troubles, and last Mcrch my physician decidea that an operation was necessary. My husband objected, and urged me to try Lydia - E.. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, * und to-day I am well and strong." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink :hanfs Vegetable Compound, made . 4rom roots and herbs, has beerj. the .Btandard^remedy for female ills, " and has positively cured thousands of : "Women who have been troubled with 'displacements, inflammation, ulcera 4?on, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, and backache. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She bas guided thousands toi health. Address, Lynn, Mass? Cheshire, Cheese for Paris. The first Cheshire cheese ever tak en by a winning French horse will soon be on'Its way across the chan nel. -By the victory ~f Kuerido la .the Cheater Cup recently " M. Caillault ?'. secures a cheese weighing. 128 pounds. A ^special "lad" from the stable* will accompany the cheese to Paris to see ' that lt does not run away. * . . * The point arises, is a "trophy" ex . empt from duty and octroi, or if lt \ is not will the authorities make that an excuse for keeping the cheese la quarantine.-London Express. . ; "Wo must regard with profound satls " faction the decision of the Supreme -Court of the United States-though* \we regret to see that one Justice dis sented-to the effect that any State may^ constitutionally enact a law pro hibltlng the use cf the national flag for advertising purposes, Insists the Now York Tribune, lt is as sounfl in morals and in patriotism aa it is ia laWr_ No kind of poultry excels the duck ?' bi rapid growth and. the small lamont -of care lt- needs. The Ob jection often raised against them, that they are nuisances on the farm, ? ls true only when they are not fenced out of where they are not wanted. By careful planning a man In Jer > eey may marry a newTwlfe every two years without legal penalty, notes the New York American. Jersey justice is not relentless; lt recognizes that bigamy is its own -punishment. Blue are the hills that are far from ns.-Irish. _So. 15- '08. THEY GROW Good Humor and Cheerfulness from Bight Food. Cheerfulness is like sunlight It dispels- the clouds from the mind aa sunlight ?bases away the shadows of jOJffht. - ' The good humored , man can pick up and carry off a load that the man with a grouch wouldn't attempt to lift Anything that Interferes with good health is apt to keep cheerfulness and good humor in the background. A Washington lady found that letting coffee alone made things bright for her. -She writes: ^*Four years ago I was practically given up by my doctor and was not expected to live long. My nervous system was in a bad condition. "But I was young and did not want to ?le, so I began to look about for the cause of my chronic trouble. I used to have nervous spells which would exhaust me and after each spell it would take me days before I could sit up In a chair. "I became convinced my trouble was caused by coffee. I decided to stop it and bought Some Postum. "The first cup, which I m?de ac cording to directions, had a soothing effect on my nerves and I liked the taste. Fora time I nearly lived on Postum and ate little food besides. I am to-day a healthy woman. ?"My family and relatives wonder if I am the same person I was four years ago, when I could do no work on account of nervousness. Now I am doing my own housework, take care of two babies-one, twenty, the other two months old. I am sp busy that I hardly get time to write a letter, yet 1 do it all with the.cheer fulness and good humor that comes from enjoying good health. "i tell my, friends it ls to Postum I owe my life to-day." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich, Read "The Road to WellvlUe," in pkgs. "There's a *^ea STRIKE Of MINERS Many Thousands. Quit Work Pending Settlement LITTLE INVOLVED IN DISPUTE ^ Indications Dp Not, Hoover, Point to a Prolonged Strike, aa the Dif ferences Between the Hi?era and Operators Are Slight; But Som? Political By-Play in the Minsrs' Organization and Other Local Dif ferences Keep Contending Fac ! tions Apart, i Indianapolis, Ind., ? Special-Two hundred and fifty- thousand pickf dropped from the hanfeof as many bituminous coal miners of the Unit ed States Tuesday evening, not to be used again Until a wage settlement has been reached and a scale adopted between tho members Of the United Mine Workers of America and the coal operators of the - various fields Wednesday morning there were 260, 000 men idle. The situation, however, does not indicate a prolonged strike. An open winter and ?industrial de pression .have loft a large stock, of I coal on hand and the differences be tween miners and operators are very slight. It is practically agreed that the present wage scale;" will con tined, but some polities in connec tion with-1 the change in the national officers of the miners,; oi?anization, and local differences between opera tors and miners have resulted in tem porary suspension from work until s new wage scale is agreed to either bv districts or individual mmes The Unit Systjan. Until two years ago the bituminous coal mining wage of the country was based upon^the agreement reached in. the central competitive field con sisting of Illinois, Ohio? Indiana and western Pennsylvania, and consider ed as a unit. This unifc system was broken two years ago Twben Presi dent Mitchell signed a scale with Pittsburg operators, who agreed te pay the scale denmanded after opera tors of the other three; States had refused and the miners won theit fight. Operators signed 'the seale in dividually throughout the country. Since that time the'miners have tried to get back the unit rule, or ihter-State agreement, but operators of western Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Illinois, after negotiations lasting all the past winter, have refused to meet in inter-State convention with 'the miners. As a last resort President Mitchell called the miners in^hational convention und district. settlements were authorized with. the present wage scale as a minimum. Failing to agree by district miners were au thorized to sign the present scalejvitb operators individually. Vice President Lewis, who will succeed President Mitchell, is en deavoring to ^revive the inter-State unit rule. In the meantime district joint meeting are being held in thf various States. No Trouble in Tennessee. Nashville, Tenn., Special.-The sit uation in the coal fields of Tennessee is quiet and relations betwean ope rators and miners are entirely har monious. The miners are worked cn the "open shop" plan and the wage scale is said to bet satisfactory. John P. Williams, president of the Bon Ail Coal and Iron Company, Taid that ht anticipated no friction in the Ten nessee district; that conditions were eminently satisfactory and that the men were entirely satisfied and cheer ful AU Iowa Kines to dose. Des Moines, Iowa, Special.-Every coal mine in the State of Iowa will close. Not one of 30 or 35 mines in the State will be worked Wednesday. The shut-down pending the settle ment between operators and miners will last at least 30 days. For th? past month the mining companies and large consumers of the State have been storing up coal in preparation for the Shut-down. Sea Wall at Tybee Island May Bo .Destroyed. \ Savannah, Ga., Special'-The sea wall recently completed at Tybee is land to protect the Fort Sereven res ervation from the encroachments of the w?ter in is a fair way to bc de stroyed. Tuesday's high tide under mined and destroyed eleven of the sixteen foot sections. It ,is said the plan of construction, was faulty. Th? wall cost $50,000 and is 4,000 feet long. i Two Boys Killed By Falling Walls. Provincetown, Mass., Special. While inside the shaky walls of the half-burned Centenary Methodist Episcopal Church late Monday in search of firewood, two boys were killed by the collapse of a portion of the ruins and a man wag serious ly injured. The boys were Joseph Oliver and Joseph Holmes, lt is believed that Prada will recover. No one else was hun. 800 Men Cut Off From J?. ?V W. Shops. Roanoke, Va., Special.-?Eight hun dred men were discharged from the Roanoke shops of the Norfolk & Western Railway Tuesday. ? The shops under normal conditions employ 2,000 men. A notice was posted that in the future the shops wi!h work full time with tho-reduced force. For the past three months only half time has been made. Every department in the shops is affected by; the cut. To Settle Big Question. . Syracuse, N. Y., Special.-One of the grave problems now confronting the country will be finally fettled by a debate between the win4-jammers of Syracuse University and Wesleyan College. The latter will affirm the question: "Resolved, That aside from the question of amending thc constitution, the Federal government should exercise further control over quasi-public corpora ions doing Inter state business. ' THE WORK j)F_ CONGRESS Doings of Our National Law-Makers Day by Day. Serions Charges .'Made Charges of a serious nature against Gifford Pinehot,chief of the Forestery bureau, were made in . the House by Messers. Smith, California, and Mon dell, Wyoming, during the, consider ation of the Agricultural Appropri ation bilL Mr. Smith accused him pf entering into a secret understand ing with the city, of Los Angeles with the view of securing the city valuv able water rights in the Owens Riv er Valley, as against th* interests of private parties haying prior claims. Mr. Mondell detiounced him for, as he eharged, illegally paying the ex penses of forest officials, in* attend ing conventions in the West, in which the government had no part and also of spending government money to boost his bureau in the public news papers. Mr. Pinehot was defended by Mr. Pollard, Nebraska, and Mr. Scott, Kansas. The bill was under discus sion all day and every line relating to .tho forest service was fought over, with the result that many provisions were stricken out. '?j The Agricultural Appropriation Bill. After having undergone many changes, the paragraph of the agri cultural appropriation bill relating to the bureau of forestry, was finally passed by the House of Representa-* tives. Messrs. Mondell, of Wyoming and1 Smith, of California, continued their attacks on the bureau and in this they were supported hy Messrs. Bonynge, of Colorado and Cushman of Washington. These embraced charged that the bureau, had created timber monopolies in favor of ?large corporations, illegally assumed juris diction oVer the water rights belong ing to the Western States, and jug gled with figures in order to obtain large appropriations .from Congress. The work of the bureau was vigor ously defended by-Messrs. Hepburn, of Iowa, and Scott, of Kansas. Considerable time was devoted to discussing a proposition by Mr. Hum phreys, of Missippi, to increase the appropriation for the investigation of soils, which was carried. Correspondence Snbmitted. The long expected correspondence between America and Venezuela re specting pending American claims against ths latter country was sub mitted to the Senate and is almost .'ertain to create a profound impres sion. It will be difficult to digest the vast mass of material which Sec retary Root has placed before Con gress, but even a cursory inspection of the documents' makes it evident that the negotiations have reached a critical phase. The President's reali zation pf that fact is shown by his transmission of the matter to the Senate without any comment, regard ing the correspondence and especial ly Scretary Root's strong presentation of the American case, aa sufficient to instantly enlist the attention of Con ! ?ress. : AH the correspondence and docu ments were referred to the Senate committee on foreign relations: Those members- of thc committee who have already familiarized them selves with the situation have arrang ed tentattively a programme which consists of three propositions as fol lows : A Tentative Programme. Place a prohibitive tariff on Ven ezuelan coffee, the exports of which constitute 45 per cent, of the entire Venezuelan foreign trade and 90 per cent, of the coffee is taken by tho United States.^ , Exclude all importations of asphalt from Lake Bermudez," the product of which has been taken almost entirely by the United States. Authorize the President to exercise the general power invested in him to take whatever steps he may consider necessary to treat with Venezuela in the future. In a letter to Minister Russell on Fphruarv 2Sth, 1907. Secretary Root reviewed the difficulties encountered by the various American claimants and instructed Mr. Russell to demand remedy and redress. The letter con cluded with this statement: Root's Letter Strong. "You are instructed to bring these several causes of complaint to the immediate and serious attention of . the Venezuelan government and to in I sist that the government to which you are accredited shall giye to each and every demand herein set forth imme diate consideration." In issuing ' general instructions to the American minister, Secretary Root said : "You will call the attention of the government of Venezuela to the fact that notwithstanding the long and un broken friendship manifested by the United States for Venezuela ; notwith standing the repeated occasions upon which the United States has interven ed as a friend in need tc relieve Venezeula from disagreeable and dangerous complications with other powers; notwithstanding the patience and consideration which has always characterized the treatment of this government toward? Venezuela the government of Venezuela has within the past few years practically confis cated or destroyed all the substantial property interests of Americans in that country. This has been dont sometimes in accordance with the forms of law and contrary 1 to thc spirit of the law; sometimes without even form of law; by one device or another, with the action of the gov ernment apparently always hostile to American interests, until of the many millions of dollars invested by Ameri-t can citizens in that country practical ly nothing remains." Louisiana Gives Felker 1? Years For Burglary. New Orleans, Special.-It is not probable that Thomas J. Felker will bo turned over to the officers of Norfolk, Va., who say that Felker knowns something concerning the murder of a young man of Rome, Ga.,' at Norfolk last fall. Felker was sentenced to. 15 years in" the Louisi ana penitentiary for burglary. Expelled From New Orleans' Cottor Exchange. New Orleans, Special. - Erncsti Gussoni and Luigi Castello, compos ingthe firm of Gussoni & Co., cottor brokers and exporters, were expellee from the New Orleans colton ex change. The expulsion was announc ed publicly ?nd officially on the flooi of the exchange. The firm has beer among the most prominent of the cot ton exporting firms in this country. j BEGINNING TO SS -Cartoon 1 NO CALL FOR BUSINESS PES^l ? / INTERSTATE COMMISSIONER C ArjD GIVES OUT ENCC Declares That Reports Show Un Mora Per Mile Than in Last Deprsssion is C Washington, D. C..-Some remarks about conditions in the railroad world which were contained in an in terview with James J. Hill in New York brought out a response from Franklin K. Lane, a member or the Interstate Commerce Commission. Here Is part of Mr. L-ane's statement: "The whole world ha3 a great ad miration for Mr. Hill, but I do wish he would not be so lugubrious. Jim Dumps has not yet superseded the' optimistlo Uncle Sam a3 the typical American. A year ago Mr.. Hill said that the railroads had failed to meet the-traffic necessities of the country that there had been a steady increase in business which tho railroads had not met and that it would be neCes sary to Invest $5,500,000,000 in pro viding equipment, double tracks and terminals to handle the business of the country properly. And now be cause for .two or three months the railroads have been able to handle more business than was offered them we are met on all hands with the cry that the country is-going to the bow bows. "What is the necessity for painting the picture blacker than it is? Does lt arise out of the fact that Congress ls in session, or that there ls a Presi dential election Impending? Is a man an enemy of the railroads be cause he refuses to believe every old woman's tale that comes out of Wall Street? -I.do not understand the rea son why at the time when railroad credit should be upheld those who ought to be most interested in sup porting that credit are lending their RAILROADS NEED 300,00 Americans Preferred tn Work Admit They See Many Slki Chicago.-The"unemployed," who are congesting the cities, subsisting upon chanty and menacing the peace of various communities, if they really want workman find lt with the rail roads of the United States at once. This ls the opinion expressed nere by leading railroad men. The wages range from $1.50 to $2.50 a day, in cluding good board and transporta tion. Within the next sixty days the railroads must find 300,000 men to repair roads, bridges, furbish up sag ging tracks, build extensions and man the shops. The ravages of the win ter months have left much work tn be done,- and lt must be done speed ily, for the railway managers admit they see many signs of improving business and must have their lines and equipment'In condition to. care for it. Americans will have the prefer ence. Heretofore it has been impos sible to get Americans as laborers, PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT Will Not Enforce the "Commo Pending: Suprer Washington, D. C.-The Govern ment will not prosecute railroads for failure to comply with the "commod ity clause" of the railroad law pend ing a decision of the Supreme Court. That decision has been arrived at, it is understood, after careful consid eration by the President, and he has accordingly directed the Department of Justice to bring a test case as soon as possible after May 1, the day when becomes effective the law forbidding any railroad to transport any article or commodity (other than timber) manufactured, mined or produced by such road, or in which it is directly or indirectly Interested. Thus any railroad that owns coal mines would be'liable to prosecution should it carry its own coal to mar ket. The decision of the President fol lows the recent, decision of the West Ch i caso Police <7hief Exonerated For Shooting Anarchist Assailant. Chicago.-A Coroner's jury de clared' Chief of Police 'George M. Shippy- and- J. F. Foley, his driver, tb have been justified in killing La zarus Averbuch, the young Russian, who attacked the Chief in his home recently. More than a score of witnesses were examined, chief among whom were Olga Averbuch, sister of the dead man; Chief Shippy himself, his son, Harry, who is recovering from a serious wound in the chest. - . Feminine Notes. Paderewski's wife recently paid $7500 for four live chickens. Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish is said to be New . York's best woman bridge player. King Victor Emmanuel expressed the wish that Miss Elkins should have ho dowry. Mrs. Sage granted an appeal of little girls and gave back a house she had bought of their father. The craze on the part of American women for marriage with titled for eigners is causing amazement in England. Count and Countess Szechenyl have arrived in Vienna. Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney was ono of the prize winners at the annual ex hibition of the Architectural League of New York at the Academy of Fine Arts. Miss Botha, sister of General Botbe, now Prime Minister of the Transvaal, has been married Ju Lon don-to R. C. Hawkin, secretary to the Eighty Club. Many Statss promised to send lep resentatives to the dinner in honor of Mrs. Humphrey Ward, in Kew York City, and to further the dill dren'i playground movement. =E HIS WAY OUT >y De Mar, in the Philadelphia Record. HPS FRANKLIN t?. LANE -- m ?ALLS MR. HILL "JIM DUMPS' )URAGING STATISTICS. a Railroads to Bo Earning Much Presidential Year;--Thinks inly Temporary. influence to breaking it down. "Let us see what these figure show," said Mr. Lane. "The average ''monthly receipts from freight and passenger traffic for each mlle of the 225,000 miles of railroad in the Uni ted States reporting to this commis sion for th3 first seven months of this fiscal year were $980, which ls $180 per mlle per month more than the average for the fiscal year ended July 1, IS05, the year of the last Presidential election, which was cer tainly not regarded as a poor year in the railroad or industrial world. The net revenue from traffic allowing for all operating expenses, including in creased wages and cost of material in the fiscal year ending in 1908, ls $37 per mlle per month greater than In the year 1904-05. The net monthly revenue for this fiscal year is thu? far $7 less per mlle than for the pre ceding year 1906-07, which may he taken as high water mark thus far io the history of the United States." ... The interview which drew the above comment ls as follows: New York City.-James J. Hill, who bas arrived in this city, says ol .business conditions: "While I cannot permit myself to be too optimistic, 1 am trying dot to be pessimistic. The general recovery in business which hfls been predicted has not yet mani fested itself to any remarkable de gree, and it ls not to be expected that It should. The prevailing, conditions were not brought about overnight; they are the result of events of many months, and a revival will no doubl be correspondingly gradual." 0 MEN FOR REPAIR WORK of Extending? Lines-Managers ns of Improving Business. because they were engaged in more profitable employment and work more to their liking. Furthermore, they do not care to associate with the motley gangs that usually go to make up the repair squads. Now that many men are out of employment lt la hoped by railroads to get a larger percentage of Americans, who admit tedly are the best workmen in the world. Formerly forty per cent, ol the laborers employed- In the spring work were Italians on roads between the seaboard and the Rocky Mount ains. West of the mountains, espe cially on the Hill lines, Japanese were employed. In the southwest Mexicans, Indians and Italians pre dominate, but everywhere there have been many Greeks, Slavs, Poles, Huns and other nationalities. Because ol the financial stringency many thou sands of these have departed for Eu I rope. Now it is hoped to get the 1 work done by Americans. EASES UP ON RAILROADS dity Clause" Part of Rate Law rte Court Action. ern Maryland, a Gould coal road, tc go into the hands of receivers. Thal action, it was announced, was forced on it by the commodity clause of the rate law, which, bearing as lt did ca the road's prospective earning capac ity, affected Its borrowing capacity. The President, it is stated, has nc desire to add to the embarrassments which surround the railroads in' theil efforts to comply with the law, and as the question of the validity of the "commodity clause" has been criti cised by competent legal opinion il was thought best for all interests in? volved that a prompt determination of the question by the Supreme Court should be sought. It is understood that the railroads have given assur ance to the Government that if the courts decide against them they will Immediately and in good faith com ply with the law. Tolanders Going Home Because of * . Itcdnction of Wages in Cotton Mills. Springfield, Mass. - A wholesale exodus of Polanders to Europe will follow the ten per cent;; reduction in wages In the Chlcopee and Holyoke cotton mills. Seventy-five per cent, of the 4500 operatives are Polish. Steamship agents stated ?that the.? . have sold all the steerage and second cabin accommodations at their dispo* sal in outgoing liners for six weeks to come. Four days' work a week at I reduced wages, the workmen assert, j will not pay the cost of living. ^ Jottings About Sports. Of late yachtsmen have wondered why the public doss not take as Jive i ly interest in the sport afloat as it did a few years back. Coach Courtney, of the Corneil .Varsity crew, has discovered a new 'Varsity rowing star in E. A. Stevens, a junior in the College of Law. New Orleans papers annouuee the beginning of a campaign to abolish horse racing in Louisiana. The names of many well known men In that city are signed; to a petition now being circulated for presentation to the Leg igjature^ Otis W. Howard, of New York City, won the Cornell championship in fencing in the annual fencing and wrestling championship matches. Chicago clinched the title of East ern and Western college basketball champions by defeating the Univer sity of Pennsylvania basketball team. Spanish yachtsmen are becoming greatly intereste;! in the proposed ocean races from Taloa to the Canary Islands over the course Columbus sailed. Andrew Carnefila contributed $500 ' (o the American Olympic fund. Check I for that sum was received by Casper I Whitney, president or the American i committee. Common. Sense- Condensed. He who considers only the letter of an instrument goes but skin deep in to the 'meaning. A man ceases to be tho- whole thing after taking unto himself a better half. The eighth wonder is how well so many shiftless people manage to get along so well. . The man who has the courage to tell theTtruth usually has'tho bravely to defend it. RAISED FROM A SICK BED After Being an Invalid Wtth Kidney Disorders For Many Years. John Armstrong, Cloverport, Ky., Baye: If was an invalid with kidney complaints for many years and cannot tell what agony I en dured from backache. My limbs were swol len twice natu-.Ml size and my sight was weakening. The kidney secretions were discolored and had a sediment. When I wished to eat my wife had to raise me up in bed. Physicians were unable to help me and I was going down fast when I began using Dean's Kidney Pilla. After a short time I felt a great improvement and am now as strong and healthy as a man could be. I give Doan's Kidney Pills all the credit for it." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. FoBter-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. * HAPPY THOUGHT. Mrs. Knicker-Henry, why did you leave your shoes on the stairs last night? Knicker (dazed, but Inspired)-Eng lish cushtom, m'dear; left 'em to be blacked.-Puck. Hov,*ti This? We offer One Hundred Dollars I? eward for any case oi Catarrh that cannot bc cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure* V. J. CHEX.CY & Co., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in oil business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WALDfiiQ? JCl??I?AN k MARVIN, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mueuoussur? faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. lake Hall's Family Pills for constipation. The net result ls tha't while Con gress has power to legislate over in terstate business, the rights of em 'ployes in local branches must be safe guarded by the legislatures, maintains the New York World. CAPUDIN /F*& B I 15> (C ^ 11 remoT tb? canne. tLj9 SJ? IrlC IE?.2) soothes tho nerves ned 5^ H P <tmT- relleyea tho aches and Foverlah COLDS AND GRIPPE-, a headache* nod Nenrnlpla also. Ko bsd effect?, loc, 22c and Mo bottles. (LIQUID.* There is nothing that makes the or dinary man feel better and be meaner than to give an order and'have it ob sepuiously obeyed. TETTERI VE-A RELIABLE CUBE. TETTKBIXK is a suro, sato acd speedy cure for eczema, tetter, skin and nealp diseases and icohlng piles. Endorsad by physicians; praised by thousands who have used it. Fragrant, soothing, antiseptic 60o. at druggists or by mall from J. T. S ncr roi XE , Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. Making the Pawnshops Useful. "I didn't pawn the things because I needed the money," said the well dressed woman. "I put them there for safe keeping. For several years .I have been storing my furs in a pawnshop during the Summer. Since they wore so well taken care of there I concluded to trust the pawnbroker with my jewelry this season. Last ? year the warehouse where I had the things stored was broken into and I lost two rings and a bracelet. , "A pawnshop is about the . safest place on earth to keep things in. It ls hard enough for people to get their own stuff out sometimes, but it la almost impossible for anybody elsa to get it. Also it ls cheaper than a safety deposit vault, so for that com binatlon of reasons I have become a pawnshop patron."-Washington Star. Free Cure for Rheu matism, Bone Pain anti Eczema Botanic blood Bala (U. B. B.) cures the worst cases of Rheumatism, bone pains, swollen muscles and joints, by purifying the blood. Thousands of cases cured by B. B. B. after all other treatments failed. Price Si.oo per large bottle at dmr stores, with complete directions for home treatment. Larce sample free by writing Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta. Ga. PUTNAM Color moro goods brighter and faster colors than any tan dyo any garment without ripping apart. Write (J JIPI* -Better -Bigg The labor is as harvest a poor cr When you can so si ?yields per acre" and r-'<0w quality of tobacco by i W Virgmia-C Fertili; why not use them this season ? cannot accomplish the same as tr C. Love, of Tinkling, Va., says "J co, I do not feel I can say enough tobacco that brings me more mont I can get I have tried many otht yours. I believe Virginia-Carolin on>h.e market for tobacco." Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers cor grade materials than any other bra They will increase the yield per texture and quality of the tobacco get a better price per pound than Much valuable information on tobacco Ihe new Virginia-Carolina YearBookoi to ask your fertilizer dealer for a copy, sales office and one will be sent you fie Virginia-Carolina Chemi Richmond, Va. Norfolk, Va. Columbia, S. C. Atlanta, Ga. Savannah, Ca. Montgomery, Ala. Memphlt, Tenn. Shrererxrt, La. Proverbs and Phrases. Two ministers in the Japanese Cab inet resigned. , He who doeth iniquity shall not have equity. A woman at Stcubeuville gave birth lo quintuplets. Ignorance ceases to be bliss when you begin to realize it. How small a doctor's pills are when compared with his bills. If it costs money to bc popular, (hen popularity is not worth what it HOW TO APPLY PAINT. Greatest care should b? taken when ! fluting buildings or Implements which are exposed to the weather, to have the paint applied properly. No excellence of material can make up for carelessness or application, any more than care In applying It can make poor paint wear .well. The surface to be painted shouid . be dry and scraped and sandpapered hard and smooth. Pure white lead 1 should be, mixed with pure linseed oil, fresh for the job, and should be well brushed out, not flowed on thick, j . When painting ls done in thi? manner ! my side. Treatment ron it into ray lepr, with National Lead Company's pure 1 which then sWC!lsd nn<I Jir-wn to break out Here and There. A Canadian suffering from cancef' at Tenino, Wash.,, killed his wife, three children and himself. You can nag a.man into purgatory easier than you can pray him into heaven. N Dr. Emil G. Hirsch, at Sinai Tem ple, in Chicago, declared Germany lo be a menace to thc peace of thc world* A green winter makes a fat church? yard.-Old Saying. . HIS SKIN TROUBLES CURE?. First lind Itching Ra<ii-TTtn?aWraj Lnier With J??ood-Poison in Tvz Helled on Cuticnra Kcmcflir?. "About twelve ov fiflern years p?rf t-ui?? a breaking-nut. mri it ilr-bc:!, nnd rlunif *& badly that I rculd r.ot barn any penne be* ?-auFe of it. Tliree doctors did not heJn me. Then I used come Ciit?crri Soap. Culieani Ointment, and Curura.Resolvent and be gan'lo get belter right nw/- T'ney cur?! nie and 1 liavc not been bothered wilu llie itching sine?, in nwonnt tn nnyt:iirtjr. About two years ago I Ind-In grippe niiol pneumonia which left me willi n pain ira white lead (trade marked with "The Dutch Boy Painter") there ls every chance that the job will be eatisfac-: tory. White lead ls capable of abac- 1 lute test for purity. National Lead Company, Woodbridge Building, New j York, will send a testing outfit free ' to any one interested. I ' -,- i Usage is the bes,t interpreter of j tilings. _.' ANTIDOTE FOIt SKIN DISEASES That's what TZTTERISE is; ?hi it Is more. It ls an absolute cure for eczema, letter, ringworm, aryslpelas and all other itching cutaneous diseases. In aggravated case3 ,j Of these afflictions Its euros have boon phe- I fS>^ nomenal. It gives instant relief and effocts j permanent cures. 50c. at druggists or by maU from J. T. SHUPXBIXE, Dept. A, Ha vannah, Ga. The doctor was afrai?! it would ltira to Wood-poison.. J used his medicine but it did no good, then I x??ct lb? Cn Ileura Remedies three lime* ai"! cured Ike break* . in?-out on mv le?. J. V. Heesen, Hilan, Mo., May 13,'l907." ^ " The express mention of one thing implies the exclusion of another. Men enjoy doing anything don't have to do for a living. they FITS, St. Vitua'Dancc :Nervoos Disease?? per? manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Kera Restorer. S2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. E. Kline, Ld.,031 Arch St., Phila., Pa, Forbearance is one of the virtues our enemies do not possess. If You Suflei' From Asthma or Bronchitis get immediate relief by using Brown's Bronchial Troches. Contain no harmful drugs. No man will criticize your singin' as long as you sing his praise. Garfield Tea cannot but commend itself lo those desiring a laxative at once .imple, pure, mild, potent and health-giving, lt is made of Herbs. All drug ?tores. I stem Ef fect olds and ilsa A acKes duo to Constipation; acts frilly as lally; Dispels Acts naturally, a Laxative, f Best fcrMen^men and thilav rea-youno an 4 GU To ?et itsT3eneficial Effects ?lwoys Luv tlie Genuine which has ?he.|ull name oj the Com pany he less money a man makes'the more he has-if he isn't married. Mrs. VVinsiow'sSootbing Byrupror Otilaren Ccething,8oftens 'hegun^redncesinilrinma fcion, allays pain, c. .res wind colic, 25c a bo t tb Beware the geese preaches.-Italian. when the fox Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'* Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggist*. . All acts are presumed to have been rightly and regularly done. CALIFORNIA Tte SYRUP Cd. 5 by whom it is manufactured, printed on the jront of every package. SOLD BYALL LEADING DRUGGISTS one size only, regular price 50*per bottle. MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Oert??D Cirt> for Fevcrlubncifl, da?ftre? 'eerblog* : _ np Cold? - oars. At ?ll Drajnri*}*, Set?. ?lcd FREE. Address. Sw?o?k city. A. S. OLMSTED. Le Roy. N.Y Constipation," IIend Ntomacu Troubles, Tc Trtsorders, and 'De Worms. They Break in 24 hoars. At ?ll Draw. Sam?lo mailed FREE. Add So. 15-'03. Minard's Liniment Mfg. Co. Dear Sirs, -Your Minard's Liniment received and was used to good advantage, and I wish 1 had used it sooner, as it would have saved me lots of pain and also lots of money. With the first application I was able to l?y out " straight jn bcd - what I had not done in seven weeks - as I had been forced to sit on thc side of the bed with my feet resting on the floor. Have used three bottleS*of your liniment, and it has loosened thc cordj sp that I can sleep nights. I was able to go to work this week and the rheumatism has not bothered me any, only on damp days in the mornings, bui will soon work that off. Am a long shoreman, Ioa'ding and unloading foreign ships, and have recom mended Minard's Liniment to several of my fellow-workmen that have the same trouble with stiff joints. The other liniments I used did not seem to take the stiffness out of the cords. Yours truly, C. HOWLAND IQ Bunker Hill St.,* Charlestown, Mass. A special bottle sent free on request. Minard's Liniment Mfg. Co., South Frammgham, Mo3-. , SHOES AT ALL V "PRICES, FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE TAM I LY, MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AK3 CHILDREN. ??3a? W. L. Douglas ma koa and sella moro *K? H*3? men's $2,50,$3.G0 and S3.BOshoes than any other manufacturer tn th? B*S& rf or ld, becauso tlmy hotel tholr "*f?Q shape, flt better, weam tonger, and ?gF1? ara or or eat or value than any other, ***** shoos th the world to-day, W. L Douglas $4 ann $5 "Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Pried 09- CAUTION'. W. I? Douglas name and p:lce ls stamped on bottom, Take Ko Sob..tl tute. Sold br the liest ?hoe dealer? everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to anspart of the world, nins, " Cstalo? freo to any address. W. I.. BOUC trated og freo to any address. W. !.. DOI'CLAS, Ur oe It ton, Sloss. FADELESS BYES other dyo. Ono 10c packago colon ali floors. They 0.yo tn cold water batter than any other dye. Too for free boofclot-How to Dye. Bleach and JUx Color?. .MONROE Ol?VO CO., Quincy. Illinois. DOVE-TAILED PUTTY LOCK SASH No builder can afford to nae tho old I kind when bs can get th? Tatty Lock Sash just as cheap. For salo by iRandall Bros., jjSSf&T great to grow and op as a good one. irely "increase your get a far better^1 ising ' koliim icrs There's no reason why you lousands of others. Mr. V. a producer of fine tobac for your fertilizer. It makes ;y than any other fertilizer :r brands but none equaled a Fertilizers to be the best itain better and higher nds of tobacco fertilizer. acre, and improve the ' you grow, so you can ever before. culture will be found In r Almanac. Don't fail or writo our nearest e. cal Co. fps c 3. C. td. IXE X.-n 3 H.P. Olds GotoUsie-Fara En ' cine Cheap. Wallace Bros.? Norfolk. Va sy CURED Gives Quick Relier. Removes.alf swelling in S to aa days ; effects a permanent cute in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment given free. Nbthlngcan be fairer Write Dr. H. H. Green's Sont. ? Specialists. Box B Atlanta. G> GENTS WANTED! EVERYWHERE TO SELL FOLDING KEW AKI> SK II VICE ABLE. Address "L?" IOS Vu th SC Richmond, Va? Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from un healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, ?oap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin fecting and deodor izing toilet requisite of exceptional ex cellence and econ omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, SO cents, or by moil postpaid. Large Triai Sample WITH "HEALTH AMD DEACTV DOOK BCfiT mt G VhE PAXTON TOILET GO., Boston, Mass.