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-'"' " ' ' .. . ? > ' '. V ;- -> .;: jfc>: ;j. : . >' ' ' J ' ' y< " ' V-'* ' ;. THE "DISCOVERER Of Lydia E. Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound, the Great Woman's Remedy for Woman's Ills. t LYDIA E. PINKHAM y. No other medicine for Woman's ills in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female illnesses or such . hosts of grateful friends as has Lydia E. Pinkhnm's Vegetable Compound. % For more than 30 years it has been curing all forms of Female Complaints, t Inflammation and Ulceration, and consequent Spinal Weakness. It has cured more cases of Backache and Local Weaknesses than any other one remedy. It dissolves and expels tumors in an early stage of development. Irregularities and periodical pains, Weakness of the Stomach, Indigestion, ' Bloating, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debility quickly yield to it; lso deranged organs, causing pain, dragging sensations and backache. Under all circumstances it acts in harmony with the female system. It removes that wearing feeling, extreme lassitude, "don't care" and : 4*want-to-be-left-alone" feeling, excitability, irritability, nervousness, dizziness, faintness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy or the "blues". These re indications of Female Weakness, or some derangement of the organs, v ; ?vivu *1.:- ?oc woii P.hrnnip. Kidnev ComDlaints and . Wij lull bills UiCUlblUC buira ttu < v<> ??- ? ^ _ # ?.' ; / Backache, of either sex. | Those women who refuse to accept anything* else are rewarded a hundred ~V . thousand times, for they get what they want?a cure. Sold by Druggists everywhere. Refuse all substitutes. To learn the ideals of a past gen- IN LQW esteem. ?ration study cemetery epitaphs. "Lent me a hundred, old man." II, UTTERLY WORN OUT. "nfpafyou C per cent. interestVitality Sapped by Years of Suffering "Sa-V- lt 1 thought yt?,U Afve : ' i. With Kidney Tronble. cent- of the Palpal, I d let you ha\e W - ' t* XT - 1 the money."?Courier-Journal. Capt. J. W. Hogun, former post toaster of Indianola, now living at ? _ ? V - / Tovac FTTS,St.Vitns'Dance:Nervous Diseases per >.. . Aust.n, iexas, manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve ?f writes: "I was Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free, jfcr VK afflicted for years Dr. H. B. Kline. Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila.. Pa. f ; W with pains across jt jS eaSy to convince a man thai ; vfiif ttie loins aacl he is better than his neighbor. P ' ''iH- the hiPs and | 'Pi- shoulders. I had t r headache also m ^ To Cure a Cold in One Day vLS f ard Tifir- laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. | f j3?L/| \ a ^eu.^1=5ia. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. W. s ' 7 right eye, E.W. Grove's signature is on each box. 25a. if I T / ^ from pain, was ' Cf little use to Pleasure itself is not so expensivt ? 'me for yir3. The constant flow of as the cost of setting over it. ?rine kept my system depleted, caus- | < ing nervous chills and night sweats. ! Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children After trying seven different climates 1 teething.softensthegums,reducesinflamma.1, and using ail kinds of medicine I had j "on, allays pain,cures wind colic. Sica bottk cue good forcuns to hear of Doan's U'latrerj" *s ouiy a cnucisia in ian Kidney Pills. This remedy has cured guage that hides its bitterness. me. I am as well to-day as I was It twenty years ago, and my eyesight is ?? ???? |fe perfect." SCALY ERUPTION ON BODY. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a w: n box. Foster-Milburn Co., Euffalo, Doctors and Remedies Fruitless?Suf.N. Y. ' fered 10 Years?Completely Cured ^ The number of foreigners in Cblna by Three Boxes of . is estimated at 46.000. "When 1 was about nine years old small . sores appeared on each of my lower limbs. A HICKS' 1 scratched them with a brass pin, and i aRmMk ^ a DT7T>TfeIlT shortly afterwards both of those limbs bev/\rV/UiWb came so sore that 1 could scarcely walk, ' i immediately cokes AVhen 1 had been suffering for about a tf L. HEADACHES month the sores began to heal, but small, ^ jL~1L. 1 y. POLD5 scaly eruptions appeared where the sores y XfBfaPf |?BB rCft U | had been. From that time onward I was in o to 12 hooks j by such severe itching that, until to**3* 106 ** Dresi*? ! 1 became accustomed to it, I would scratch Jf-= . ... v ~g*r i the sores until the blood began to How. I I rrnl V A \ni ItA I | V ! ^is would stop the itching for a few 5 I ifflT IX W IVI I I 11 days, but scaly would appear again LJ rl' t kJlA II lilllJijU and the itching would accompany them. , After 1 suffered abov.t ten years 1 made a f ATH AND ^UlNfil F MAHHINFa renewed effort to effect a cure. The erup w AMRADn AUGUSTA, hands. Thc^ best doctor in my native " L,VJiTlD/KlvLJj GA. county advised me to use arsenic in small coses and a salve. 1 then used to bathe the sores in a mixture which gave aimost , intolerable pain. In addition 1 used othc MK 9 aj j remedies, such as iodine, sulphur, zinc yjj nj^QTlpV J figg salve, 's Salve, Ointment, and . ME ^ mm af T wio AAwfiniiiillr rri\*inor Cri7riA vpm. v ?HH |R9 iU xacu x ?? uo wuvtMuitii^ i w4Mv OB ? -LiuLJLii SB ' ^ a *air tiaa1' nevcr usine less than one LrCTnOIl JullAir figf ; or two bores or bottles. All this was Hix :.M| 6j6 ! fruitless. Finally mv hair began to fall ;S The | out r.nd 1 was raoidlv becoming bald. 1 m MealSommerMedicine H | Kr&ZrJZZ E? ~ *s , IS i everything else, 1 thought 1 would try ? SourCStomach^Headache. Colic! B Cut!cura Umtmcnt> navinS Previously used H Disordered Liver and Kidneys, and {SB Cnticura boap and being pleased with it. teg keeps the svstem in perfect con- IKi After using three Lores 1 was completely 99 dition by regulating the bowels. BPl cured, and my hair was restored, after H Ba| fourteen y?ars of suffering and an expenXOIICS Up the System 858 diture of at least $50 to $60 in vaini." en ... .. Kfn i ?.cavoring to lind a cure. 1 shall be glad M Summer. SJZ to? tal^entle Kg j to te to any one who may he interested i^H in action, but thorough in results. Kjjl | In. cure. B. .Hiram Mattingly, \ erfflB 50c. and $1.00 at drug stores. MH million, b. Dak., Aug. IS, 1906." -onb dose convinces." JB rpjle jj^ie man's short-cut to im1 mortality is through attacking great M STIFFNESS, STITCHES, LAMENESS, CRAMP, | | TWISTS AND TWITCHES, ALL DECAMP WHEN I vnu a ddi v g I Mi JACOBS Jl | f%!L I ? OLD-MONK-CURE ? 5SB 25 AND SO CENTS ? (SAME AS LYNCHING Tillman Lambasts Rocseveit Anent Brownsville Affair, WIELDS HIS PITCHFORK Carolina Senator, in Sensational Ha* rangue, Holds President Responsible for Outrage Which He Later Punished. "The president's action in dismissing these men v;as nothing more nor less than lynching." This was only one of many bitter exclamations made by Senator Tillman in a speech on the floor of the senate Saturday afterncon on the Brownsville affair. It was regarded as the most violent address ever delivered by the South Carolinian before that body. In a voice heavy with emotion, he charged President Roosevelt with having revived the race issue and with bringing about conditions more threatening than those cf 1861. "The president is primarily more responsible than any other man for the position the negroes, in the South and out of it, have taken on the question of negro rights," he declared. "He gave recognition to Booker T. Washington in a social way. He did it knowingly, flying in the face of the feelings of caste among 17,000,000 white people in the South, and against the same feeling of - two-thirds of the people of the North. "He does not understand the negro or the deep and vital character of the issues involved. He made a mess of it in the first instance in the Booker Washington case, and has made a worse -mess of it in the | Brownsville case." Senator Tillman spoke with unusual emphasis and reminded his hearers of the old days when he received his title of "pitchfork." After quoting the president's Brownsville message, in which the president declared that each man should be dealt with on his merits as a man and not have his conduct Judg* , ed because of his color, Mr. Tillman , shouted: "Is President Roosevelt ready to act upon this theory and have his children marry men and women of the other races? , "Would he accept as a daughterin-law a Chinese, a Malay, an Indian or a negro in accord with the doct trine laid down in his message? "We all know he would not, and while 'fine words butter no parsnips,' words like his are a source of incalculable evil, coming from that high source." Discussing the Brownsville case, he } said: - - Ml _A I "There is no douot 01 me guiu. oi i some of the soldiers as being respon- I i sible for the outrage at Brownsville, hut it is contrary to the fundamental ' principles of liberty and of English ' and American law that the innocent should suffer because of the sins of the guilty. In this case 167 men have been punished while not more than twenty have ever been charged with participation in the crime. "The troops never should have been sent to Brownsville. It was done against the protests of one senator and members of congress from that district and done in the face of the record of the Twenty-Fifth Infantry." In his conclusion, speaking of the amalgamation of the races, the sena | tor said: i "In Cuba the color line has been obliterated and miscegenation is in full blast. At the North, the same conditions exist and a large number of mulattoe.s and quadroons with white blood in their veins, who have migrated there, are the leaders in the doctrine of absolute social equality. encouraged as they have been and are now being by the president of the United States. "The Southern white men and women who have for forty years resist ed in every possible way the doctrine of the equality of the races are just as resolved now as they have always been not to submit to it, or its results. "The conditions are growing worse and more aggravated every day. Race antagonism increases in intensity. Are tilings to drift until dire tragedies multiply cn every hand and blood shall flow like water? Is the statesmanship of our time inadequate to cope with this question just as the statesmanship of 1SG0 failed to prevent the dire catastrophe of civil war "That war was fought to settle the race question, but forty years after its termination, we find conditions ; more threatening in some of their respects than they were in 1S<51." "WATftB PAN PV MUST ANSWER An Investigation Resolution Passed In Texas Legislature. A resolution providing for a sweeping investigation of the conduct of United States Senator J. W. Bailey was introduced in the Texas house of representatives at Austin Wednesday. It is signed by twenty-eight members i of the legislature. Senator Bailey's term expires on March 4. - - ? * :. ^ \ :. /. I THE NAVY'S COSTLY BUNTING. Each Ship Carries 250 Flags?-The Total Expense is $60,000 a Year. Stowed away on every ship of the United States Navy, from tugboat to 10,000 ton battleship, is a' bundle of flags, shoulder high and about fifteen feet long. About half the lot is composed of foreign flags, which are encased in thick paper bags, with the name of the country stencilled on the end of the bag. Th9 remainder, including those for ordinary use, aire not wrapped, but tied in round bundles and lettered. The pile contains 250 flags, the regulation number each ship must carry. The making of this number of flags costs the United States $60,000 a year, of which $43,000 is paid for material alone. Each ship has fortythree foreign flags on board constantly. These flags are twenty-five feet long and thirteen feet wide. With these on board the ship is prepared to meot and show the proper courtesies which naval etiquette demands to all nations whose high officials should come aboard or whose waters the vessel should enter while on a cruise. As a ship's quota of flags is renewed every three years, it is no small job to keep enough flags on hand, and to this end Uncle Sam keeps a large flag making establishment running at full blast the year round at the Brooklyn navy yard. Here there are nearly one hundred skilled needle-women working every day of the year, except Sundays and holidays, cutting the vari-colored hunting into strips and sewing and stitching them together in their proper place. The most difficult part of the work is the making of the foreign flags, for some of them, be it known, are fearfully and wonderfully made. Take, for example, the flag of San Salvador. In the back is a belching volcano, ?- -A*- U. 1rt.ro OTV-1 white pouring iortn ius ?ua ? ?- ? ? . smoke. On the sides of the mountain is the green foliage and shrubbery. Directly in front is a tranquil sea of sapphire blue. Above the volcano is a rising sun set in a design of overflowing cornucopias, and a diamond, from which the rays are scintillating in every direction. To the right and left of the volcano are draped, in varied design, banners which laboriously try to pattern the Stars and Stripes, and yet not show the plagiarism. Around the whole concatenation is a wreath of cactus lovingly embracing the volcano, while at the top the date of the country's independence i is inscribed. To make a flag of San Salvador cost the Government just $52.50, and when one of these flags is placed on each battleship every three yenrs it can be readily seen that the insignificant little republic to the south of us is really costing the taxpayers of the country more than they would care to admit. Then there is the flag of China, with its long, crawling, mythical hi/wi rod draeron. To make that flag costs tlie Government something like $40. The flag of Costa Rica, with its scenic beauty of mountain and sea, costs $50, nearly as much as the costliest of them all, that of San Salvador. ' The largest flag made by Uncle Sain's flag makers is the United States ensign No. 1, which is thirtysix feet long and nineteen feet wide. It costs $40 to turn out a flag of this style. The President's flag, while not the largest, requires the longest time of any to make, as it takes one woman a whole month to finish it;?Washington Post. THE POPULAR IMPRESSION. "Minnie," said the young man, whose heart was thumping violently, "do you know that everybody?er? says?says?that we?we are engaged?" "I suppose, Harold," she answered, "everybody thinks that?that we ought to be, by this time." After that it wasn't long until everybody knew it.?Chicago Tribune. WILLIAM'S CHANCE. "Two thousan-d women are em' * ? ? * n flo r. ployed In the nousenoia wc man emperor." "Why in the world doesn't he confer a boon upon humanity by explaining how he has solved the servant problem?"?Chicago Record-Herald. Happiness generally comes to the man who never neglects other things to go hunting for it. COSTLY PRESSURE*. Ileart and Xerves Fail on Coffee. A resident of a great Western State puts the case regarding stimulants with a comprehensive brevity that is admirable. He says: "I am 56 years old and have had considerable experience with stimulants. They are all alike?a mortgage on reserved energy at ruinous interest. As the wniD stimulates but does not strengthen the horse, so do stim uia.ms act uyuu cut: uuiuau sjoicui. Feeling this -way, I gave ud coffee and all other stimulants and began the use of Postum Food coffee some months ago. The beneficial results have been apparent from the first. The rheumatism that I used to suffer from has left me, I sleeD sounder, my nerves are steadier and my brain clearer. And I bear testimony also to the food value of Postum?something that is lacking in coffee." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Read "The Road to Wellville," the quaint little ; book in pkgs. i ' . JAPS POSTPONE VISIT. Government Fears to Risk Sending Fleet of Warships to Pacific Coast Because of Agitation. According to a dispatch from Tokio, the Japanese government has decided that on account of anti-Japaneso agitation on the Pacific coast, the training squadron will not visit the Pacific coast, but will go as far as Honolulu only. Members of the California delegation in congress,in discussing Thursday night the decision of the Japanese government, expressed the opinion that San Francisco would have extended a welcome to the fleet. 1 + Kepresentauve rvanu action of the Tokio government mayhave heen on advice of the Japanese consul general at ;San Francisco. "I think," said Mr. Kahn, "that I know the people of California well enough to say that the great masses of population would resent any harm that might be done the mikado's seamen should they visit San Francis, co. While the people of California are opposed to the wholesale importation of Japanese coolies, we respect the rights of the Japanese who are now here, and the training squadron would certainly be as safe in the bay of San Francisco as in a home port." Massano Hanihara, second secretary of the Japanese embassy at Washington, said that Viscount Aoka, the i Japanese ambassador to the United States, has not been officially notified of the Tokio decision not to allow the training squadron to proceed to San Francisco. "The visit of a Japanese fieeV to the Facific coast at this time," said Mr. Hanihara, "might occasion a renewal of the controversy, and as the Japanese government is desirous of maintaininir the nresent cordial rela lions with this government, it has h$en considering for several weeks the advisability of postponing the visit of the fleet to the Pacific coast." Mr. Hanihara stated most positive ly that the question of the fleet or the Japanese seamen being in danger at ! San Francisco had not been considered, or even suggested. TRIAL STOPPED BY LAW. Hargis Case 'n Jackson, Kentucky, Abruptly Ended. The trial of Judge James Hargis j on the charge of participating in the assassination of Dr. B. D. Cox in Jackson, Ky., three years ago, was postponed there Thursday as the result of prohibition issued by the court ct appeals of Kentucky This writ was granted upon the application of Attorney General N. B. Hays and James R. Adams, commonwealth's attorney for the second judicial district. The petitioners allege that special Judge William Carnes of Wiiliamstown, who was appointed by Governor Beckham to try the case of Judge Hargis and others charged with the assassination of Dr. Cox, is conducting the trial in an arbitrary manner and is overstepping the bounds of the law. / The principal objection to Judge Cames is his ruling that temporarily suspended Sheriff Brook Crawford and the naming of Robin Burton as as elisor. The petitioners allege that Judge Carnes has directed the elisor to summon bystanders for the jury, which is in Violation of a statute passed at the last session of the legislature. Judge Carnes said that he thought the writ would be dismissed on a demurrer which he would file when he reached Frankfort. SOLONS SHY AT RAISE. Senators Decide That Salary Question ' Belongs to the House. The senate finance committee refused to take any action upon the question of an increase of 50 per cent in congressional salaries. The measure was brought up and discussed at some length. It was stated that this class of legislation belonged ez clusively. to the house. . FARMERS MINUS MAILS Because They Insisted on Bucking Against Colored Carrier. The trouble over colored postal officials at Indianola and Hattiesburg, Miss., has a parallel in Trigg county, Kentucky, where service on an entire rural route has been discontinued by Washington because' the farmers decline to accept mail from a negro rural earner. W. L. George, the negro- carrier, is out of a job, and farmers for miles are compelled to go to "The Springs" for their mail. COTTON MILLS CLOSE DOWN." Two in North Carolina Financialy Embarrassed and Go to Wall. A flurry was created in Charlotte, N. C., financial circles FridJjj' by the announcement that two big cotton mills, the Vermont ana tne auuuieiu, at Bessemer City, in Gaston county, had gone to the wall. It is understood that immediate application is to be made by creditors to have Caesar Cone, the Greensboro mill magnate appointed receiver. j Do Too Think For YoorsoH ? ' Or. do you open your mouth like * young bird aM gulp down whatever food or medielne makbeoffered you? ,| . * vrv * * * ?t? * > Ws^Aimn Intelligent thinking woman. In need ofteHef from weakness, nervousness pain and suratng, then It means much to V I V?h th*t flnd tjr^ hntw^ medicine f>r wrsfnm compos mo*, a0M by , ^ druggists for the cure of woman's ills. The makers of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Proscription. for the cure of weak, nervous, rundown. over-worked, debilitated, pain-racked women, knowing this medicine to be made up ] \ of Ingredients, every one of which has the , strongest possible indorsement of the leading , j and standard authorities of the several schools of practice, are perfectly willing, and / '>..v? in fact, are only too glad to print, as they da ; the formula, or list of ingredients, of which it Is composed. <? plain English, on every ; [ % bottle-wrapper. * * * * * The formula of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- i ? I scriptton will bear the most critical examiner tion of medical experts, for it contains no / s alcohol, narcotics, harmful, or habit-forming drugs, and no agent enters into it that is not - f highly recommended by the most advanced , | and leading medical teachers and autlior: lties of their ^several schools of practices ^njescaotboritlesreca^^ oT7nnPie??e!sTavorlte Prescription fortB ^jg^rorl^^^^^nedlcln^sadvised^^^" * * * ifc No other medicine for woman's ills has any such professional endorsement as Dr. Pierce's y Favorite Prescription has received, in theunqualified recommendation of each of Its Q several Ingredients by scores of leading medl- . ^ cal men of all the schools of practice. Is . , r ^ such an endorsement not worthy of your consideration? d? ifr it -if? . Jy'tz# A booklet of Ingredients, with numerous authorative profesional endorsements by th a leading medical authorities of this country will be mailed free to any one sending name ^;^? and address with request for same. Addrew : Dr. E. Y. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. RATHER. "All the critics are loud in their nroica r>f rir \Tuck the leader of th# Boston Symphony Orchestra." "With that name, he's in luck." " "To escape a raking."?Louisville , Courier-Journal. How'* This? ./ 'gs&jl&t We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured bf tali's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Chbjtxt 4 Co.; Toledo. Qr ivtW We, the undersigned, have known r. Cheney lor the last 15 years, and bellevehira perfectly honorable in all business traasae~ lions aud financially able to carry out any.-,. obligations made by their firm. J West & Tbuax, Wholesale Druggists, Waldixo, Kixjun & MABVXJT, Wholesstt:^^ Druggists, Toledo, 0. i Hall's CatarraCurel3cakealateraaUy,a3t-: ; . Jngdireotlyuponthebloodandmucuous^urfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free, ^ Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Bail's Family Pills Tor constipation. . ^ The coal companies of India havd -:.v' advanced prices nearly 10 per cent >' within twelve months. .%gig8B Always to Be Depended Upon. When a person gets ud in the morning. - $, with a dull headache and a tired, stretcfea^^^ feeling, it is an almost certain indication^"* Vyl that the liver, or bowels, or both, are de* V; cidedly out of order. At such times Nature, the wisest best of ail doctors, takes this means to Y:-i? give warning that she needs the help and. . .; gentle assistance which can best be ob tamed Irom mat oia i.amiiv remeay, jt?r reth's Pills, which lias been in use over a century. They arc the same fine laxative tome % pill your grandparents used, when docttinr-*3 were few and far between and when peo-. pic had to 1'ave a remedy that could ab- j 8olutely be depended upon. " Brandreth's "Pills can be depended upon -:.f and are sold in every drug and medicies store, cither plain or sugar-coated. Railroad cars for the transportation V:j of live fish in tanks, which arp just^Ip being put into service on the German. lines, have been In use in this couafr?r ^ txs Icr years. - ' Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Day*. T || 9 Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to core aof case of Itchir g.Blina, Bleeding or Protruding "r. Piles in 6 to 14d3ys or money refunded. 50* If a man was not so prone to. frr>XfM there would be no credit in his being:-,,^^ Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolfard%J'v.fa| Sanitary Lotion; never fails. Sold by Draggists. Mail orders promptly filed by Dr. 5a E. Detchon Med.Co., Crawfordsville, Of all men sailors suffer most from rh?o* ?? r-/VPTAV J WUKLU'S W1AVM A new species: first sold last spring; ww planted by 100 different farmers; has pro* duced from 2 to 5 bales per acre; highly pro* / liflc; biff boll, small seed, ffood staple; E. Humphreys, Godwin &Co., Memphis, Teaa? Sold/not Soled. ~'Mi Some new testimony as to the efflciency of Chinese body servants is~. 'yl| furnished by a Philadelphian, who turned from the Philippines^ and who brought a Chinaman who had served him faithfully there as a valet took John but a short time to lesra .; the new ways of his master in this city, the new lingo and some othe^,^ new things, and all went well unttL.^ pf it came to a question of cleaning out a shoe trunk. The master, in looldng '^ l over the stock, picked up a pair ot low shoes that had seen better -fill days. "These you may throw awajr/V;^ he said to John, "and theke (picking: i|g up another pair) I want soled." Nexi'.^jp day John came to his master with 35 cents. "Shoes I sold not much sj good," he said. "Only catch , 35 | cents."?Philadelphia Record > RBSTKAJUNT. "Marvelous man, the President! Err hlbits some new side every day." * "That's what. In the New York ?V~S campaign everybody is calling erery^c.^ body else a liar, and yet he keej#J?;>| out of it."?Courier-Journal. Success is, often prized more cause it brings the praise of the world SI than because of any intrinsic merit ~y'\ of its own. . - i *