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SEVEN YEARS ? OF MISERY How Mrs. Bethune was Re stored to Health by Lydia 1 E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. Sikeston, Mo. ? "For seven years I j Buffered everything. I was in bed for four or five days at a time every month, and so weak I could hardly walk. I had cramps, backache and headache, and was so nervous and weak that I dreaded to see anyone or have anyone move in the room. The doc tors gave me medi cine to ease me at UIUSC UUiCO^ CU1V4 OttiU wmw A w have tin operation. I would not listen to that, and when a friend of my husband's told him about Lydi? E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound and what it had done for his wife, I was willing to take it. Now I look the picture of health and feel like it, too. I can do all my own house work, work in the garden and entertain company and enjoy them, and can walk as far as any ordinary woman, any day in the week. I wish I could talk to every suffering woman and girl, and tell them what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me."?Mrs. Dema Bethune, Sikeston, Mo. Remember, th9 remedy which did this was Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable " * compound. It has helped thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, Inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irreg ularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing down feeling, indigestion, and nervous prostration, after all other means have failed. Why don't you try it? /t\ If Alll VO and High Grade nUUAnu Finishing. Mail lyTprv."* ? * w orders given Spe ftrillV* cl&l Attention. Prices reasonable. fclEe? Service prompt. Send for Price List. L1S5HACS ART STORE, CHARLE3T0X, B. C. yfAHTCn ACFHTQ to sell onr CIGARS. nMn I kll Hat.ll I w no experlonce noces **ry. Can easily maketSO.OO per week. GILLESPIE CIGAR CO., YORK, PA. W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 28-1912. The germ of suspicion Is often fatal to the microbe of love. Important It Is that the blood be kept pare. Garfield Tea Is big enough for the Job. J Some men find it cheaper to stay married than to pay alimony. Burduco Llvar Powder Nature's Remedy: is purely vegetable As a cathartic, its action is easy, mild and effectual. No griping, no nausea, makes a sweet breath and pretty com plexion. Teaches the liver to act Sold by all medicine dealers, 25c. Hope Eternal. Every new day and night of Joy or sorrow is a new ground, a new con secration, for the love that is nour isaea uy JIltJlliUiieB tvs wen a a ? George Eliot. AN APT SCHOLAR. Mrs. Beacon Streete?I'm glad your uncle left you some money, but please, Norah, don't call It a legacy. Say llmbacy. It is very Improper to say leg; always say limb! Norah?Yls, ma'am, an' Bhall I warrum oop thot limb o' mutton for dinner, or will yez hov It cowld? GOOD NIGHT'S SLEEP No Medicine So Beneficial to Brain and Nerves. Lying awake nights makes It hard to keep awake and do things in day time. To take "tonics and stimulants" under such circumstances is like set ting the house on fire to see if you can put it out The right kind of food promotes re freshing sleep at night and a wide , awake individual during the day. A lady changed from her old way of ; eating Grape-Nuts, and says: "For about three years I had been 1 a great sufferer from indigestion, j After trying several kinds of medicine. f the doctor would ask me to drop off potatoes, then meat, and bo on, but In a few days that craving, gnawing feel ing would start up, and I would vomit everything I ate and drank. "When I started on Grape-Nuts, vom iting stopped, and the bloated feeling which was so distressing disappeared entirely. "My mother was very much bothered with diarrhoea before commencing the Grape-Nuts, because her stomach was so weak she could not digest her food. I Since using Grape-Nuts food she is well, and says she don't think she could do without it. "It is a great brain restorer and nerve builder, for I can sleep as sound and undisturbed after a supper of Grape-Nuts as in the old days when I could not realize what they meant by a 'bad stomacjThere is no medi cine so beneficial to nerves and brain as a good night's sleep, such as you can enjoy after eating Grape-Nuts." Kama given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Look in pkgs. for the famous little book, "The Road to Wellville." Ever rend the above letter? A new one nppenm from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of hnmu Interest. HISTORY OF PANAMA Spaniards in 15th Century Land* ! ed at Site of Canai. Tales of Rich Gold Deposits Were Re sponsible for Many Adventurers Leaving Home to Seek the El Dorado In the New World. _____ Colon, Panama.?It was lust for gold 1 that brought the Spaniards to America J in the fifteenth century. It was the j same lust that led them to make many | darlnc trins nf pynlnration info the ! Interior. An expedition set out from j the island of Haiti one day in the year 1513. When the vessel was well out to the sea, and the wooded shores of the island had grown dim in the distance, the adventurers were amaz to hear muffled shouting from the hold and a noise of knocking. The sound was coming from one of a num ber of great casks, supposed to con tain dried beef, and when the noisy cask was discovered and the end knocked off, a well-built young man, j clad in the velvet garments gentlefolk i wore at that time, sprang out. Sev- I eral of the adventurers recognized I him as Vasco Nunezele Balboa, a j young man known to many of the col onists of Haiti. Balboa explained that he had chosen this way of coming aboard because his creditors were watching him so closely that he knew they would never have permitted him to leave the Island openly, but would have caused him to be seized and cast into debt- i ors' prison. The destination of this party of ad venture was Darien, near the site of the Panama canal. No man knew what lay across the Isthmus, and in deed most Spaniards believed at that time that the West Indies were Islands off the coast of Asia. When the vessel which Balboa had boarded so unceremoniously reached ! the mainland of Central America members of the little Spanish colony already there refused to allow the captain of the vessel to come ashore, for he had an evil reputatiop. The other men, however, went ashore un der the leadership of Balboa and at j once began a trip of exploration. Bal- I boa made an alliance with a powerful Indian chief who ruled that portion , of the land, and married the chief's daughter. At the wedding feast the : Indians brought rich gifts of slaves ; %nd gold, and were amazed to see | Tower of the Castle of the Old City of Panama. how the eyes of the Spaniards glit tered at sight of the yellow metal and how they quarreled over It At once Balboa fitted up an expedi tion to cross the mountains to the land of gold. With him he took 200 men and a pack of savage dogs, which should attack unfriendly Indians. Balboa called the new ocean the o^.Q horanoo ho U'aq lnnltintT toward the south when first he saw it. But he and his followers, though they had discovered a new ocean, failed to find the land of gold for which they had set out. He then re turned to Darien and sent word to j the Spanish king of the great discov- I ery which he had made. Then he j caused for small ships to be taken : apart and carried across the moun tains, believing that somewhere on tho other side of the new ocean lay the El Dorado. These vessels were set up again and launched, the first European ships to dip keel In the great South 6ea. But before Balboa had equipped them fully and put out to sea his ene mies, hurrying across the isthmus, captured him, accusing him of plots against the king. There was no evi dence of any such plotting on Balobo's part, but those were lawless times, | and the men of Darien were Jealous of Balboa. In less than 24 hours he was tried, found guilty, condemned to dei th and beheaded. HAVE MARITAL MIX-UP AT 75 Georgia Veteran Who Marries OI> Sweetheart Technically Becomes a Bigamist. Savannah, Ga.?Firm in the belief that the statute of limitations had run oui ana nunuieu uib iirsi uiarnagB In Georgia forty years ago, Peter K. Thompson, seventy-flve years old, mar ried a second time here. His bride was Mrs. An? Colenla Wllsoni 6lxty elght years old. They had known each other in youth. Thompson disappeared after the war and did not return until last win ter. His first wife, believing him dead, had remarried, so he decided to marry again. His former sweetheart was twice a widow. He told the min ister who performed the ceremony that his first marriage had been an nulled through the statute of limita tions. The solicitor general of the superior court says while Thompson apparently had committed bigamy, he would not be proceeded against un less some one comes forward to prose cute the case. GOTHAM CHURCH IS RICHEST Trinity In Manhattan, N. Y., Said to Have $75,000,000 Invested in Property. New York:?Interest has always been evinced in the workings of Trin ity church, in Manhattan, New York; that church, whose spire marks the heart of the greatest financial district on the continent, though it no longer can show above the surrounding ^ buildings; that church under whose i eaves rest the forms of the most dis- 1 tlnguished of statesmen and citizens of earlier days, occupying ground that is worth almost inestimable sums, yet safe from the encroachments of the business world, One need not go to Europe to find ? wealthy churches, for in all the world Wall Street, Old Trinity In Distance. Trinity Is the richest Christian church. Richer, indeed, than many of the great corporations of the land which have been stamped as predatory \ institutions. < Heretofore it has been said of Trin- ( ity that, its invariable policy was "ad- 1 dition, division and silence," but since Dr. William T. Manning became the ] rector of the church things have < changed. Dr. Manning maintains that ( there is a legitimate public Interest in 1 the details of the wealth and manage- i ment of the institution. Otherwise we < wouldn't know that Trinity's wealth amounts to $75,000,000. i Of course this isn't all In churches, i chapels and cemeteries, though prob ably such property would bring $45, 000,000 in open market. The church and its neighboring cemetery together with St Paul's chapel a little distant on Nassau street are put down on the city's rolls as valued at $20,500,000, exempt of course, from taxation. St. Agnes cost $1,900,000. Interces sion cost $600,000. Both of these prop erties, as well as many others which are unproductive because used for re ligious purposes, are owned by Trin ity. It is upon these many plots and I structures that, taking tne city's own estimation of the value, the estimate of an unproductive wealth of $45,000,- ' 000 is made. ' Recently Dr. Manning had the hold- ] ings of Trinity announced In its nine chapels; and the figures revealed that the city assesses the property 'which Is held for Investment at $15,000,000. 1 This assessment is scarcely two-thirds 1 of the real value of the property. In 1 addition there Is enough other produc- * tive property to bring the total of $30,- 1 000,000. 1 , 1 NEWSGIRL HAS A ROMANCE ] i Married to Wealthy Man Who Bought , a Book of Her In New York Hotel. ( < New York.?When Nan Corrigan. , - *? - * J I until a iew uayu agu u^wogiu ai mo ( Hotel Vanderbilt periodical stand, sold the first book to young Frank M. Bates of Attleboro, Mass., there bud ded the romance which culminated In their marriage at Danielson, Conn. The wooing, though of short duration, Is said to have been complicated by the attentions of a wealthy Buffalo widower, who had met Miss Corrigan while she was employed last year at the Hotel Belmont. When the news girl took up her place behind the stand at the new ho tel last January the Buffalo .man fol lowed, but he soon loSt prestige after the appearance of Mr. Bates. Monday evening the former newsglrl packed her trousseau and quietly slipped away from her home without telling anyone anything about It. Frank M. Gates Is widely known in New England, where he has been making free use of a large fortune left him by his father, Joseph M. i Bates, a manufacturer of Jewelry at ; Attleboro. He had been married 1 twice before. < Burglary As a Rest Cure. Danville, Pa.?To break Into a 1 house simply to find a good place for ( rest Is a Danville novelty. Daniel ] Miller and Edward Kingston, under 1 the Influence of liquor, arrived at the former's boardlnghouse, kept by George Swank, and were refused ad mittance. They talked the matter over, then made their way to a house near by, tho owner of which la out of town ! with his family, and coolly forced an entrance and went to bed. Late at night their act was dis covered and the police were notified. They found the two fast asleep, and in their possession a revolver and a bottle of whisky. Turk Blows Up House. Pottsvllle, Pa.?John Turk of Tuscarora was informed that a vio- 1 lent shock would exterminate the bed- 1 bugs which recently have be'en bother- 1 lng his sleep. Taking the advice at face value Turk secured a quantity of dynamite, placed It under the bed and exploded it. The shock exterminated ] the insects, also the bed and the 1 house in which the bed once was. ' When Turk came to he was sitting in < the middle of the road. Z#Eit men Hbmet VERY occupation lifts itself ____ with the enlarging life of her vho practices it The occupation that vlll not do that, no woman really has a "ight to occupy herself about VHAT TO DO WITH LEFTOVER BITS OF CHEESE. Cheese Is such a valuable food and is 10 particularly good In combination vith starchy foods, and those lacking ats and flavor, that it should be found nore often upon our tables. When buying cheese it is bes'? not ;o get it in too large quantities, as it irys and molds. To keep it from mold ng, wrap it in a cloth -wrung out of vinegar. Grate all the small pieces )efore they get too dry and keep them n a jar with a tight cover. In cooking cheese it is well to re nember that overheating it make# it ndlgestible. When possible, add the :heese to a hot dish only long enough :o melt it A tablespoonful of theese "iii flounr a rHch and not even a scrap should be thrown away. Butter crackers and sprinkle with jrated cheese and a dash of cayenne, ilace in a hot oven and serve when :he cheese is melted. Cheese Shell Filled With Cabbage. ?Boil until tender a small head of foung cabbage. Drain, chop and sea son well. There should be about two mpfuls. Put It in an empty edam or pineapple cheese shell, in alternate ayers, with one cup of white sauce. Beat in the oven until the sauce hub bies; this will give the cabbage a lelicate cheese flavor. Boiled maea onl or rice may be substituted for the :heeBe if preferred. Cheese Macaroons.?Spread Macj. -oons together wifh any tart Jelly and press together with a layer of snappy :heese between. ~ **' ? ^ ? T'o It a 11M. (Jream oncese v/nib^ia<?n>a? ? sweetened crackers. If not crisp set :hem in the oven for a few moments. 3preak with plum or currant Jelly and irop a teaspoonful of cream cheese in the center of each cracker. Cheese Balls.?Add a dash of ta basco sauce to cream cheese, a plp^ )f salt, paprika to make it pink, :ream to make a paste. Form lino balls and roll in finely chopped black ivalnuts. Serve on lettuce with French Iresslng. Pack cream cheese, well seasoned, Into red or green peppers; then serve lut in slices. Very pretty. H T'S as easy now for the heart JL to be true A.8 the grass to be green and the sky to be blue; Tls the natural way of living. FOOD FROM THE CHAFING DISH. The chafing dish is like seasonable neather, always seasonable, and may se used to regale a theater or a porch party equally entertaining. rhe empty spit. Ne'er cherished wit; Ml 'nerva loves tb-t larder. For a really enjoyable dish nothing Lt nicer than frogs' legs. Clean and LHm a dozen of the hind legs; season A poem every flower Is And every leaf a Une. BrltH salt, pepper una ron in crumuo, ?gg, then crumbs again and saute In Sutter. Cook only a few at a time, as tBey should be well browned In the tot blazer. Serve with Sauce Tartare. rhls Is mayonnaise dressing with ca pers, parsley, olives and pickles and r half a small greun onion added, all topped fine. Scrambled eggs with cheese Is a combination easily prepared in the :haflng dish. Scramble the eggs and add lust before serving four table 3poonfuls of grated cheese. Sicilian Omelet*?Beat three eggs slightly, add a teaspoonful of sugar and a pinch of salt. Butter the sides of the blazer, turn in the omelet and :oob. Turn on to the platter and serve with Sicilian sauce. Beat half a cup of heavy cream, add a tablespoonful of powdered sugar, and a tablespoon ful of melted currant Jelly, and one and a half tablespoonfuls of powdered macaroons. Smothered Mushrooms.?Prepare a cup of fresh mushrooms. Melt three tablespoonfuls of butter, add the mushrooms, sprinkle with salt, paprika and cook slowly for ten minutes. Dredge with one and a half table spoonfuls of flour and add half a cup of chicken stock. As soon as heated add two eggs slightly beaten and a grating of nutmeg. Be sure that the flour is cooked before adding the eggs. Chicken a la Relne.?Cream two tablespoonfuls of butter and add the polks of three hard-cooked eggs, rub bed to a paste. Soak one-fourth of a cup of cracker crumbs in the same amount of milk and add the egg mix Lure. Pour on gradually one cup of chicken stock, then add a cup of finely cut cooked chicken. Season with salt, paprika and celery salt Senile on boast Next She'll Be Bride Groom. How far is this sex equality going, anyhow? In an English paper the fol lowing ad appeared the other day: "LADY desires post as groom, thor oughly experienced in management and care of borses, riding and driving, also in caravanlng and camp life." Labor Still Supreme. Science has accomplished a lot of new things with water power and air power, but hasn't Improved on man power. Nothing so far, in the history of humanity, has been discovered as an acceptable substitute for honest, steady labor.?Herbert Kaufman. 8ymptom 8eldom 8een. A dietary expert declares there la no such thing as brain food. Even if there is such a thing, few show symp toms of being overfed.?Providence Journal. By IRWIN M. HOWE, Official Si BILL DINEEN'S WHEN baseball fans see the ? stroll to the plate, mask and and admire. When they see nallng a "strike," well may other days. It was that san Dlneen Imperishable fame and won a t This great pitcher played the role greatest renown as a slab artist was i the national agreement In In 1903. In hero, pitched his teammates to vlctorj William Dineen. Victor of three games of the series. Dineen never faltered In the greai though his very H*e depended upon tl by his matchless hurling, played like batted the borne club In the lead 3 to Only four hits had been made off Dine As Clarke came to bat In the nln a hit. That Inning held their last hop< outdrop curve that baffled the Pirate skier to Dougherty. Tommy Leach lift With two down in the last half of 1 lay between the Pirates and defeat. T] They rooted in vain. Outguessed, out ment, the greatest batsman of the Pi toward the bench in token of defeat, tl hoarse and then dispersed for the seas and Bill Dineen had completed one of t had won a world's flag for Boston. ... By IRWIN M. HOWE, Official Si HOW TOM McCART] IF IN a moment of mild curiosity, a or big minor league games in th whose hair shows a sprinkling of best outfielders he ever saw, the aforesaid spectator. It certainly w is of recent origin. No automobile winn be named. The silver haired one m stocky, quiet party, who had most ami field; a man who possessed a keen e; was modestly reluctant in acknowlec occasional gibe. " x In short, he would hardly think ol tlons than Tom McCarthy. McCarthj Nichols, Duffy, Long and Company, wh succession that Boston came to be kn< of other cities gave up hope and used the Bostons came to town, as they wc animals. ? Now and then some upstart organl ver, and for a time the champions w broke out In the early weeks of the ses In 1893 rne .fQuaueipuia teuui uuuci 1 a very serious attack. As the season lies, until numbers of the Quaker fans be broken and Philadelphia win a peni less, rushed swiftly in to extreme loft < ber 30, and as the sound of a fierce 1! died out, and the ball was seen to s< was dispelled and the Quakers woke 1 It was none too soon. The sluggi Ptrong argument. They had already s "Kid" Nichols, and the bases were fu hit the ball. The loss of the game w the flag, as the season had only a few it. Boston's next pennant was won in In spite of the shameless desecrai | ton fans repair to the South End grou ! ball?and as they recall the familiar e j field is fair to look upon. (Copyright, 1912, bj MODESTY OF CHAS. COMISKEY Refuses to Accept American League Pennant From Crowd of Admir ing Baseball Fans. / President Comiskey of the White Sox refused to accept the American League pennant a few days ago when it was presented to him by a crowd of admiring friends. A large delegation of fans, In a heated state, surrounded the boss of the Sox and beseeched him to accept the flag for the cur rent season. "I do not know whether we'll win the flag or not," said Mr. Comlskey, with becoming modesty. ."It's too early yet. And. anyway, I want to wait till 'Cal' gets home and see what he has to say about the team. Everything looks fine now. 'Cal' is the man I want to give the credit to. He has put so much life into the boys that it looks as If nothing could stop them. The youngsters are right on their toes and are playing as if their lives depended on it. Enthusiasm counts for a whole lot in baseball." Steve O'Neill a Comer. Young Steve ;0'Nelll, of the Cleve land team, Is picked as a comer In the baseball arena. He displays all of the qualities that go to make up a first class backstop and the experts agree that he will cut a big figure before long in the national game. Stetfe is brother of Mike O'Neill, manager of the Utica State League team, and of Jack O'Neill, one of the best catchers of a few years ago. Steve has been out of the game lately with a split finger. * "~.'i U.; latistician of the American Leagon BIG VICTORY stalware figure of Umpire Bill Deneen protector In hand, well may they look him raise that powerful right arm sig they be thrilled with the memory of le right arm that brought the name of vorld's pennant for BoBton. of star in several hurling feats, but bis jalned In the first world's series under this series Depeen dethroned a popular r in an uphill battle and figured as the iron man In the most prolonged post season series under the present peace agreement of the American and Na tional leagues. In the first three games at Boston Deacon Phillippe was lionized by the Pirate forces. He won two games of the series, Dineen taking one, thanks to the wonderful- batting of Pat Dougherty. .Phillippe became a hero when he baffled the Boston players in the next game played at Pittsburg. The cup of joy of the Pirate fans was running over. Then the tide of battle turned. Bos ton, through the effective pitching of Cy Young and Dineen, took three games in a row, giving the Red Sox a slight advantage. . The crisis came on October 12 at v Boston. Jimmy Collins named Dineen as the man of the hour to save the day for the American leaguers. A victory for Pittsburgh In that game would have tied up the series and Given Clarke a chance in the playoff. A victory meant a world's bunting for Boston. Opposed to Dineen in this all Important combat was Philllppe, r t task cut out for him. He pitched as \q outcome. His teammates, encouraged ; a machine. Ferris and Parent had 0 when the ninth Inning rolled around, en. th the Pirate fans rooted frantically for 0 in the last ditch. Dlneen sent up an leader, whose best effort was only a ed a fly to Freeman In right. t the ninth the greta Hans Wagner alone be Pirate partisans hoped against hope, generaled, outwlttd In' this crucial mo rates threw down his feat and walked tie great crowd arose and cheered itself on. The great Wagner had struck out he great pitching feats of all time. He latistician of the American League KY SAVED A FLAG / v i casual spectator at any of the major e country should ask some neighbor silver to name the best, or one of the reply would be likely to surprise the ould if the latter's interest in the game iers, past, present or prospective, would Ight recall a broad shouldered, rather azing speed and Judgment while in the ye, wielded a most powerful bludgeon, Iging cheers, and ignored entirely an anyone who better fitted the speciflca r of Boston. McCarthy of the firm of o won championships so many years in awn as the home of the pennant. Fans to go out to see the champions when >Uia LU A UlVUttgCllC, LU LUXS DViOUfe^ zatlon would be taken with pennant fe ould get gcx)d exercise. This malady Etson, and by July 4 was well spent, but the management of Henry Wright had I advanced the spell grew on the Phil beg^n to believe that precedent would lant. Vain hope. McCarthy, the ruth jenter field on the afternoon of Septem Ine drive from the bat of Pitcher Taylor ettle in Mac's gloved hand, the dream up. ng Phillies had given the home team a icored four runs in the ninth inning ofT II when Taylor, batting for Bob Allen, ould almost certainly have cost Boston days to run. McCarthy's catch saved 1897, and Tom was still on the job. tions of recent years, the faithful Bos nds?one of the nurseries of organized icenes of triumph the green of the old r Joseph B. Bowles.) Chan Blair to Retire. At sixty-eight years of age, Chan Blair, of Pontiac, Mich., has decided to retire from active baseball manage ment Since the Civil war the Vet era has been managing teams and playing in and around Pontiac. with the exception of a year spent in Min neapolis when he managed a team of his own there. Chan was a member of the historic Haymakers of Troy be fore the war and played first base. After serving in the war he went to Pontlac and has been a familiar fig ure coaching "Blair's Chiefs" to vic tory. This spring Blair expected to get into the game again, but could not secure suitable grounds, so he decided to quite the game for good. Mike Donlin a Dude. Mike Donlin changes his clothes three times a day, and gives as his excuse that it serves as a charm to j deliver that number of base hits, j Hans Wagner wears the same togs all j day, but he makes base hits just the ! same. Yankees Get No-Hit Pitcher. The New York Americans are re ported to have acquired Pitcher Keat ing of the Lawrence New England league team, who pitched a no-hit, no fun game against Worcester the oth er day. He will join Wolverton's men in September, according to the report. Heine Reeves, Harvard catcher, ac quired a broken leg the other day when his spikes hooked up with the plate as he was sliding home In prac : tice. i Whenever You Use Your Back t,?y Doeta Sharp Picture T?jjt Pain Hit You? Star. . It>8 a BlKn elck kidneys, es pecially if the kidney action if disordered, too, passages scanty or too frequent or off-color. Do not neglect any little kidney ill for the slight troubles run into dropsy, gravel, atone or Bright'a diS6ES6 Use Doan's Kidney Pilis. This good remedy cures bad kidneys. A TYPICAL CASE? T M. Hurler. 815 East Fifth Ay*, Borne, Bays: "Gravel nearly killed me; opiate* were my only relief. The kidney aecmtlon* were scant and my back fairly throbbed wlUj pal a. Doctors dldnx help me and finally I took Doan's Kidney Plua. Hlght boxes cured me and the trouble never returned." Get Doan's at any Drug Store, 50c. a Box Doan's KODAKS B&Btmtn and Ansco films, mailed poet* paid. Mail orders giY?n prompt attention. A -.I-- .All MIm VftH Ifl Aeflf PARSONS o: 244 Kins Street, C co;a.c. gonolnone woek. Wttte for symptom Blank and testimonials. Address DE. PATTERSON, Dropsy Specialist, 446M - Hdgewood Arenue, Atlanta, Georgia ORPHIN Opium,Whiskey and Drag Habits treat ed at home or at Sanitaria subject Free. DR. B. M.W ' T1CT0I urn. Book on Her 8pecial Advantages. James Fullerton Mulrhead In hia book, "The Land of Contrasts," tells of an American girl who was patron izingly praised by an Englishman ior the purity of her English, and who re plied: "Well, I bad special advan tages, inasmuch as an English mis sionary was stationefl near our tribe." ELIXIR BABEK STOPS CHILLS and Is the finest kind of tonic. "Your <Babek' acta like magic; I bay* riven it to numerous people In my par ish who were suffering with chills, ma laria and fever. I recommend It to those, who are sufferers and in need of a good tonic."?Rev. S. Szymanowski, St Stephen's Church, Perth Ambojr, N. J. Elixir Babek, 50 cents, all drugglsta or Klocsewski & Co., Washington, D. Ct Weil Defended. He whose study is among the shad* ows and lights of nature has an un suspected coat of mail defending him, among all the turmoil.?Mrs. Oliphant Why be constipated when you can get Gap. Held Tea st any drug store? It will anlckly re lieve and its benefits will be realized. : / Helpmates and soulmates are not always synanymous. o it s exceptional m uawi and doesn't cost a bit more than ordinary kinds. At All Croctrt Libby, M2NeiIl & Libby Chicago DEMA.JD FOR OUR STUD1 m ^reater t^an SuPI UT * t=! BookkMpi&f, 5iortWd,r Eortixb. No vacation, and night. 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A., Special Teachers' Courses. Excellj athletic field. Total cost per session of nl months (board and fees) 1228. Write foranni catalogue. H. L BRIDGES, Reflilrar. Willlaatburi, Vb Kodak Finishin; Cheapest prices on earth photographic specialists. ] veloping Brownie films 5c,| and 3A ioc. Prints 2c s 4c. Mail your films to KOI FINISHING COMPANY, Dept. F, Greenville, ~ CAN CANCER BE CURED? ITCJ The record of the Kellam Hospital Is without par In history, having cured to stay cured permaneij without tho use of the knife or X-Ray over P cent, of the many hundreds of sufferers from c which it has treated during the past fifteen : We have been endorsed by tbo Senate and , lature of Virginia. TVe Guarantee Our C Phyalolanm trmatmd fro*. KELLAM HOSPITAI 1617 W. Main SI root, Richmond,