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? SOCIAL LEADER OF KANSAS CITY Attributes Her .Excellent Health to Pe-ru-na, MRS. W. H. SIMMONS. .XiTRS. .W-.-'H. SIMMONS, 1119 E. 8th JAL St., Kansas City, Mo., member of the 'National Annuity Association, writes:-' . "My health tras excellent until about a year ago, when I had s complete collapse from overdoing socially, not getting the Droper rest, and too many late suppers. My stomach waa in. a dreadful condition, and my nerves all unstrung. "I was advised by a friend to try Pa runa, and eventually I bought a bottler 1 took it and then another, and kept using it for three months. 44At the end-of that time my health was restored, my nerves co longer troubled me, and I felt -nyself once more ;.nd able to assume my social position. I c^'tainly feel that Peruna is deserving of praise. " .There- are many reasons- why society women break down, why their nery. os ?ystems fail, why they have systemic or pelvic, catarrh. Indeed, they are especially liable to these ailments. No wonder they require the protection of Peruna. It ls their shield and safeguard. Peruna is sold by your local drug gist. Buy a bottle today. "YAGER'S HANDY HEADACHE TABLETS Stop it-why will you suffer with Headache, Neuralgia, or Nervous ness? Especially when so simple, sure, safe and convenient a cure is within your reach. Make note of the name of these tablets and get a bottle at once, and have relief-they never disappoint. If your dealer does not have them, send to us direct by mail. Don't fail to try Yager's Handy Headache Tablets. PRICE TEN CENTS. Sold by all Dealers .and Druqglsts, or mailed on reselpt ct price by tho makers. GILBERT BROS. 6. CO. 9-13 N. Howard St BALTIMORE, MD. SlffiMIffloTTffiSOllTH HOGLESS LARD % US GOV^?WTrlNSI?ECTION msramra-canDim-coJ ??Bona ?SB???B. nae a??HBBBBais ~Sr So. 16-'07. HICKS' &\\AM Sfi CURES ALL ACHES And Nervousness Trial bolus 10c At dru* sion* When the calf gets a fortune he expects to be called Mr. Bull.-Ger man. BABY WASTED TO SKELETON. In Torments With Terrible Sores on Face and Body-Tore at Flesh -Cured by Cntlcura, "My little son, when about a.year and : a hali old, began' to have sores' come out on his face. They began to come on his arma, then on other parts of his body, and then one came on his chest, worse than the others. Still he grew woree. At the end of about a year and a half of suffering he grew bo bad I had'to tie his hands in cloths at night to keep him from scratch ing the cores and tearing the flesh. He got to be a mere skeleton and was hardly able to walk. I sent to the drug store and got a cake of Cut?eura Soap and a box of Cuti- J eura Ointment, and at the end of about two months the sores were all well. He has never had any sores of any kind since, and I can sincerely say that only for the Crticura Remedies my precious" child would have died from those terrible sores. I used only one cake of Soap and about three boxes of Ointment. "Mrs. Egbert Sheldon. R. P. D., No.l, Woodville, Conn., April 22, 1905." Impartial vigor and example are the best means of government.--Chi nese, j ?? i . i A TERRIBLE EXPERIENCE. How a Veteran Was Saved the Ampu tation o? a Limb. B. Frank Doremus, veteran, of Roosevelt Ave., Indianapolis, Ind., says: "I had been showing symptoms of kidney trouble from the time I was mus tered out of the ar my, but in all my life I never suffered as ia 2897. Headaches, dizziness and sleep lessness, first, and then dropsy. I waa - weak and helpless, having, run down from 180 to 1-5 pounds: T was having terrible pain in the kidneys, and the .secretions passed almost involuntarily. My left leg swelled until it was 34 inches aro?id, and the - doctor tapped it night and morning until 1 could no longer stand lt, and then he advised amputation. I refused, and began . using . Dean's Kidney Pills. The swelling - subsided gradually, the urine became natural and all my pains and-aches disappeared. I have been -well now for nine years' since using Doaa's Kidney Pills." For saie by all dealers. 60 cents a box. Foattr*Milbnr* Co., Buffalo. Y. Terrible Arraignmen and Mrs. Thc . - ?, ?? ? -. ' ... -! TRIAL NEARING ITS END Jury is Ordered Locked Up Until Trial Ends and in View of This Justice Fitzgerald's Charge is Ex pected as Soon as the District At torney Concludes, the Case Prob ably Reaching, the Twelve Late iii the Evening-Delmas Makes Strik ing Appeal to Sympathies of the ? Jurors, Basing Argument Solely on .Story of Evelyn Thaw, Denouncing Her Mother in the Bitterest Terms and Dealing With White in the . Most Scathing Terms. New York, Special-The tria? of Harry K Thaw, charged with the murder of Stanford White, is nearing the ^end. Attorney Delphin M. Del ma*, the California advocate, Monday afternoon began his closing address to the jury and after he had spoken for more, than two hours and a half, an adjournment was taken until Tuesday "morning. Mr. Delmas ex* pected to conclude before the lunch eon hour is reached. District Attor ney Jerome will make the closing ad dress" of the trial on Wednesday, and? Thaw's fate should he in the hands of the jury, by Wednesday evening. Justice Fitzgerald ordered the jury locked up until the end of the trial. . In view of this, the judge's charge to the jury undoubtedly will be deliver ed immediately, the district attorney concludes. The latter says his speech will occupy not more than three or four hours. Declaring he would not base his plea upon the "unwritten law" be cause his client found ample protec tion in the written statutes of the State of New York, Mr. Delmas marte a striking appeal to the sympathies of the jurors and so far as he pro gressed the subject ^f Thaw's insani ty at the time he committed the homi cide was not even hinted at. Mr. Delmas based his argument solely upon the story of Evelyn Nes bit Thaw. With flushed cheeks, but dry eyes, that young woman heard : her life history repeated to the men who are to judge her husband and bowed her head as her mother was denounced in the bitterest terms and tones the eloquent lawyer could com mand. "Even a beast protects its young," he declared with scornful emphases, "but this unnatural mother deserted her daughter in this city of millions to be betrayed by a false friend, to be lured into a gilded palace and there left the victim of a gray haired man, wounded, bleeding and devoured." Mr. Delmas went with great detail into the life Evelyn Nesbit had led up to the meeting with Harry Thaw. In all of his remarks he referred to her as "this child," for he said she was. to-day. f He told of Thaw's great love for her and his effort to rescue her from "the clutches of Stanford White," whose achievements in his profession, the attorney declared, were an aggravation of his crime. . Mr. Delmas before beginning hi* -attack on Evelyn Thaw's mother poured, out a torrent of denunciation upon, the architect who became - the victim of Thaw's pistol. He accused him bf the "crime of rape," and then declared that President Roosevelt had Harriman Unable to Appear. New York, Special.-E: H. Harri mon was unable to appear in police court to ettsify against Frank W. Hill, his former secretary, who is under arrest charged with makiog public the ' now famous Harriman Webster letter, and the hearing whieh had been set for Monday was adjourn ed until next Saturday. Hill's bail was reduced from $2,500 to $1,000. Current Events. At a special meeting of the Roose velt Republican Club a Hamilton county, Ohio, resolutions were passed endorsing the Roosevelt administra tion and pledging support to the can didacy of William H. Taft for the presidency in 1908.' Demurrers filed by the New York Central and Pennsylvania Railroads against the indictments charging them with . granting concessions to I the Standard Oil Company by an ar \ rangement in violation of the Elkins act are overruled in the decision handed down by Judge Hazel in the States Court. The Southern Pacific Railroad? has announced, through its general sup I perintendent, that union men may expect no promotion. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., will not give up his Bible class. The circuit court of Taylor county, West Virginia, has confirmed the ac tion of the lower court in naming G. H. A .Kunst, of Grafton, receiver for the personal estate of the late Adol phus Armstrong, who left a $500,000 estate. He bonded in $100,000. New York Has $1,500,000 Fire. New York, Special.-Jftre early Monday destroyed the combined car barn^and power plant of the New :York City Railway Companv, cover 'ing the greater part of the block ^bounded | by Lenox avenue, 147th :street and Seventh avenue. The loss :will reach a million and a half A>1 :lars. More than 300 cars burned and the plautr except for the electiical de partment was destroyed. At Staunton a special grand jury "met and indicted John Walker, a ne gro, charged with attempt to crimi nally assault Mrs. H. M. Pairtar, wife'of the Baltimore and Ohio rail way ticket agent at that place. At the annual meeting of the Nor folk and Portsmouth Belt Line Rail Toad Company officers were elected a3 follows: President, W. A. Patton, <f Johnson, of Roanoke, Va.; treasurer, Caldwell Hardy, of Norfolk; secre tary, 0. J. Derousze, of Philadelphia ; general (?otandi, Thomas H. Wilcox, of Norfolk. it of Stanford White ?w's Mother said in a message to Congress that such a crime should be visited with death. This was one of the sugges tions which Thaw himself made to his counsel for his summing up speech-one of the suggestions which played so important a part in the pro ceedings before the lunacy commis sion. / Mr. Delmas declared that God heard the cry of the fated child upon which Stanford White had fixed his gaze and had determined should? oe his. He quoted from Scripture that "he who afflicts a fatherless child shall perish/' and declared that Providence had sent Thaw to avenge the wrong. The attorney declared that Thaw was his wife's only protector-that he came into her life when she was on the downward* path, told her that no matter what the world thought of her she was to him an angel. He took her to be his wife, ready to share the burdens that a mother had helped to place upon her daughter. I Mr. Delmas accused Mrs. Nesbit of having lived upon the wages of her daughter's ruin. He sought to pic ture to the jury what he termed the sinister surroundings in which the girl had been reared andi in doing so he mercilessly attacked the mother. Mr. Delmas rose to the highest point of his address when he told the jury that the girl's mother W3S the one who had furnished District Attorney J?r?me with the arrows with which to wound the daughter on cross-ex amination - a cross-examination which lie declared would live long iu the annals of criminal histroy, but which left the girl's story unshaken in all its essential details. That Evelyn Nesbit's story was true and! was told to Harry Thaw formed the subject of argument for more than an hour. Mr. Delmas de clared the only evidence the district attorney had to bring against the girl was the "misscalled affidavit" pro cured by Abraham Hun?mel. Speak ing of Hummel Mr. Delmas again drew haviiy upon his .bitterest invec tive declaring that it would require more than the word of a perjured man to send Harry Thaw to an ig nominous death. Mr. Delmas:then gave a resume of Evelyn Nesbit's life from her birth in 1884 to the time she met Stanford White. Continuing, he said: \ "Brave and courageous, we" find this child of 15 or 16 years of age, rushing in the day time from studio to studio, earning $16 to $18 a week, and at night appearing upon the boards and earning an equal salary. "At this time we find a man whose hair was tinged with gray, who had an excellent wife and an accomplished son, fixing his eyes upon the fated child and determining to ma.ke ker his. To win her he had none of the graces or principles of the honor able suitor. He introduced himself to her family in the guise of an in fluential friend. He won his way into the confidence "of the mother and established himself in a parental andi protecting attitude in the family, and when his footing was sure he per suaded the mother to absent herself from the city, assuring her that the child would he safe in his hands and telling her how fortunate it was that there was such a protector to watch over her. In one of those dena fitted up with ali the beauty and taste which this man of genius possessed; into one of these dens this child was lured and found herself alone with this man, old enough to he her father, the man who was her protector. . A Mistrial Ordered. Wilmington, Special.-After being out 56 hours, and three times having notified the court that it was impos sible for them to reach a verdict, a jurior was drawn and a mistrial was had in the case of Lonnie Snipes, charged with the killing of W. L. Wil liams in this city last September. It is learned on high authority that the jury stood ll to 1 for acquital. By Wire and Cable. The strike of longshoremen at Nor folk has tied up shipping. An effort is being made to induce Prof. Andrew M. Saule to reconsider his resignation as director of the Vir ginia Experiment Station. The threatened strike of the train men and conductors on Western rail roads was averted by arbitration. Bishop James N. Fitzgerald, of the Methodist Episcopal Church, died af pleurisy al; Hongkong. Andrew Carnegie and 27 other fa mous Pittsburgers were guests of honor at a banquet in that city . A striker was shot by shipyard guards at Lorain, Ohio. T. 0. Bullock, special master ap pointed by the United States Court, began at Romney, W. Va., the final hearing of the evidence in the case of P. W. Reherd, receiver, against the Coal and Iron Company, involving more than $250,000. P. W. Reherd is receiver for the construction com pany which built the coal and iron railroad and suit is a reBult of dis agreement over the settlement. The Suit of Attorney Daniell Cole men, administrator of George W. H. Stapleford, against the Standard Oil Company for $10,000 damages, has been removed from thc court of Law and Chancery of Norfolk to the Unit ed States Circuit court at Norfolk. Stapleford was killed by an electric current while at work in the Standard Oil warehouse. The man who is believed to have murderd Mrs. Gentry, in Chicago, more than a year ago was identified in New York and confessed. J. D. Shadbolt, a chauffeur 30 years aid was recently convicted at Nor folk of the murder of Milton Brown, a negro, and sentenced to ll years in the penitentiary. He was convicted of murder in the second degree. He insanity in mitigation of the offense. Word was received at Clarksburg, W.Va.,that Howard Smith, of Clarks burg, had been killed at Grand Junc tion, Col. He came from prominent family, but delighted to rove the country. He was a brother-in-law of ?x-Sanator Stuart F. Reed, of Clfirks bnrv. Bo yoUJ&?l weak, tired, despondent, btv? frequent headaches, coated tongue, bitter or bad taste lu morning, "heart burn," belching of gas, acid risings in throat after eating, stomach gnaw or burn, foul -breath, dizzy spells, poor or variable appetite, nausea at times and kindred symptoms? If yoTN^ra any considerable number of the^atovesHiDtoms you are suffering froraN^liou3na$svtopId liver with indi* <estton\>rJ?CTDetWiM Dr. pierce's Golden Marfil Djv^Yflrv ft made OP of the ra?tC vaitiabl? medicinal principles known to medical science for the pe/mn flgpt cure of >uch abnormal condliions^ lt is & most efficient liver lnvlgorator.ltomach tonic, bowel regulator and nerve strengthener. Th?"'Golden Medical Discovery " is not a patent medicine or secret nostrum, a full list of its ingredients being printed on its bottle-wrapper and attested under oath. A glanco at its formula will show that it contains no alcohol, os harmful habit-forming drugs. It is a fluid extract made with pure, triple-refined glycerine, of proper strength, from the roots of the following native American forest plants, viz., Golden Seal root, Stone root, Black Cherrybark, Queen's root, Bloodroot, an* Mandrake root The following: leading medical authorities, among a host ot others, extol the foregoing roots for the cure of just such ailments as tho aboresymptoms indicate: Prof.E. Bartholom. M. D.. of Jefferson Med. College. Phila: Prof. H. C. Wood. M. D..ot Unlv.of Pa,; Prof.Er'.win M. Hale. M. D., of Hahnemann Med, Colleze. Chicago; Prof. John King-. M. D.. Author of American Dispensator]': Prof. Jno. M. Scud* der. M. D., Author of Specific Medicines; Prof. Laurence Johnson, M. D., Med. Dept Unir, of N. Y.: Prof. Finley Elllngwood. M. D.. Author, of Materia Medica and Prof. in Bennett Medl-? cal' Colleen. Chicago. Send name and ad-! dress on Pus 1 Card to Dr. K. V. Pierce. Buf falo. N, Y.. d receive free booklet sri vine extracta frc /ritines of all the above medi cal authors many others endorsing. In the strongest p ie terms, each and every in gredient of h ?Golden Medical Discov ery ! ls com t Dr. Pierce easant Pellets regulate and Invigorate % ch, liver and bowels. They maybe use conjunction with "Golden Medical DIJCO ry " if bowels are much con stipated. Tao.- re tiny and sugar-coated. Of languages which so widely diffei among themselves as to be incompre hensible without particular study tho number readily exceeds l.OOO. Garfield Tea, which is guaranteed under the Pure Food and Drugs Act,-is the best remedy for constipation, sick-headache and indigestion, lt purifies the blood and cleanses the system. Use con inmost change the stamp of nature.-Shakespeare. How to Open a Can of Salmon. To open a can of Argo Red Salmon properly, lay the can on its side, in sert the can opener at the seam, then stand the can on end, and pressing the top firmly down, work the can opener around the top, removing the entire top. The Argo will then come out in one solid piece. A new girl in town wears heels as high as the ideals of a graduate. Atchison Globe. Every can of Argo Red Salmon contains one pound net. It is always guaranteed to be full weight. A little rain stills a great wind. French. '_ For constipation, biliousness, liver dis turbances and diseases resulting from im pure blood, take Nature's remedy, Gar field Tea. lt ia made wholly of health-giv ing Herb?. Prudence supplies the want of every good.-Juvenal. FITS, St. Vit?s'Dance ?Nervons Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. ?2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. To Be Fat: Drink Chocolate. In an obscure but picturesque little village of far off Germany there ia a place' called the "Chocolat* Cure," where thin people go to become stout. The patients eat and drink cocoa and chocolate all the time while they rest, admtTe the scenery, gossip and grow fatter every day. The true secret of the great success of the treatment ls the happy way chocolate has of fattening Just the right places, set tling in the hands, the arms, the neck and the shoulders, making the fair patient prettier and plumper all the time. The really effective part of this cure may be tried at home by any persevering woman, and the med!, cine ls so palatable and the method so simple that there is actually, lt eeeme. no reason why all should not fae of Just the desired weight- l>a THE LATEST STRAW. "John," said the woman (with nine chapeaux, "I got another new hat to day." "My dear!" expostulated her hus band, "that is the last straw." "I know lt," she said; "just from Paris."-Life. "You have only got to make peo ple think a thing ls stolen and you can ?ell anything in Birmingham," said a prisoner named Leng at the Birming ham, Alabama, Police Court. He had been doing a big business in bottles of burnt sugar and <water, which he said waa whiskey-stolen. ROMANTIC DEVONSHIRE The Land Made Famous by Philpott** Novels. Philpotts has made us familiar with romantic Devonshire, in his fas cinating novels, "The River," "Chil dren of the Mist," etc. The charac ters are very human; the people there drink coffee with the same results as elsewhere. A writer at Rock House,. Orchard Hill, Bideford, North Dovon, statGB: "For 30 years I drank coffee for breakfast and dinner but some 6 years ago I found that it was produc ing indigestion and heart-burn, and was making me restless at night. These symptoms were followed by brain fag and a sluggish mental con dition. ' "When ^realized this, 1 made up my mind that to quit drinking coffee and having read of Postum, I con cluded to try lt. I had lt carefully made, according to directions, and found to my agreeable surprise at the end of a week, that I no longer suf fered from either indigestion, heart ' burn, or brain fag, and that I could ! drink lt at night and secure restful and refreshing sleep. [ "Since that time we .have entirely i discontinued the use of the old kind of coffee, growing fonder and fonder of Postum as time goes on. My di gestive organs certainly do their work much better now than before, a re sult due to Postum Food Coffee, I am satisfied. "As a table beverage we find (for all the members of my family use lt) that when properly made lt ls most refreshing and agreeable, of delicious flavour and aroma. Vigilance is, however, necessary to secure this, for unlesB the servants are watched they are likely to neglect the thorough boiling which it must have in order to extract the goodness from the cereal." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in ykga. "Theie'B a reason." YOUR GRANDMOTHER USED-IT. But She Xever Had Sulphur In Such Convenient Form as This. 1 Your grandmother used Sulphur as her favorite household remedy, and so did her grandmother. Sulphur has been curing skin and blood diseases for a hundred years. But in the old days they had to take powdered sulphur. Now Hancock's Liquid Sulphur gives it to you in the best possible form and you get the full benefit. Hancock's Liquid Sulphur and Ointment quickly cure Eczema, Tetter, Salt Rheum and all Skin Diseases. It cured an ugly ulcer for Mrs. Ann W. Willett, of Wash ington, D. C., in three days. Taken internally, it purifies the blood and clears the complexion. Your druggist sells it. Sulphur Booklet Lee, il you write Han cock Liquid Sulphur Company. Baltimore. Calamity is virtue 's opportunity.-. Senaca. So. 16-'07. Argo Red Salmon is the fish that made Alaska valuable to the United States. We lessen our wants jy lessening our desires.-Labernus. Argo Red Salmon can he served on any table. It, can be served as lt comes from the can, or prepared in many palatable dishes. PARISIAN FANCIES. It ifl certainly a season of pretty lress belongings and a season when one must have pretty articles or give up the attempt to be well gowned. The French teach us very nice ideas In this respect, for they have a way of purchasing beautiful little idditlons to the wardrobe to be pre served and used year after year. For one thing every French woman has this sea-son a handsome metal purse which hangs from the wrist by a metal chain. Metal bags come large md flat, and lined with white kid. They are in gilt, silver and gun metal, and they are fastened with a gold clasp which is set with a turquoise matrix or with some other pretty stone of the semi-precious variety. This little gold chain bag is carried all winter with all kinds of fur, and can be used for one's small belong ings where one could not possibly carry one's purse. SPINACH. To prepare spinach for six persons ?(rash and pick a peck. Put in a sauce? pan of boiling water with a handful of salt. When tender strain the leaveB in a colander and pour water on them. Make a wad of the leaves, put it on a flat plate, and over the wad another plate, and press out as much water as possible. Then in a wooden bowl or on a flat and clean kitchen board chop the spinach fine. This may be put aside until required for the table. Then put butter the size of an egg in a saucepan, and when it is hot, but not even golden, add the spinach, and sante them over a mod erate fire, taking care to stir all the time. In five minutes aidid pepper and salt and a little cream or milk. Re duce until the vegetable is firm enough to be molded into a mound. Garnish with triangles of bread fried brown in butter, or hard-boiled eggs cut in quarters or eighths.-Ameri can Cultivator. SELF-CONFESSED LIAR. Slangey-Yes,- I tramped through Switzerland once. Newitt-Come off! You never did. Slangey--Sure I did; on the level. Newitt-That proves you're lying. It's simply impossible to tramp through Switzerland on the level. Catholic Standard and Times. ------ - Deafness Cannot Be Cured by 1 ocal appli ca ti ons as th e yean D ot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness is caused byan inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed yon have a rambling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken ont and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases ont of ten are caused bycatarrh, which is nothingbntan inflamed condition of the macona surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deaf nes9 ( caused bycatarrh) thatoan not be curedby Hall's Oatarrh Core. Send for circulars free. F.J.OHEireY&Co.,Toledo,0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. It is less to suffer punishment than to deserve it.-Ovid. NEW PER Wick Blue Flame is unequaled. It gives qu heat is nighly concentrate in two. Made in three stove warranted. If not er's write to our nearest The all-rouni Made of brass throughout and b Perfectly constructed; absolutel in light-giving power; an ornai Every lamp warranted. If not dealer's, write to our nearest ag< STANDARD OIL COMP AT (INCORPORATED) It Builds Force KILLS LIKE LIGHTNING HOYT Deadly Rheumatism of the Heart Comes On. Those pains you feel when you first arise in the morning-aching pains in the joints, shooting paiuB in the muscles-are signs of warning. They are danger signals, evi dences of a deep-seated trouble tnat if not removed may affect the entire Bystem and cause chronic disease, or if the cause is not removed, they may develop suddenly into the deadly Rheumatism of the Heart, which kills like lightning. Better get rid of the cause at once. Rheumatism and its kindred diseases are caused by the accumulation of poisonous acids in the blood. Rubbing with ods or liniments will not cure it; it is an internal disease, and can be conquered only by an internal remedy. There is just one com plete cure-Rheumacide. Rheumacide neu tralizes the poisonous acids, sweeps ail the dangerous germs out of the mood and "makes you well all over." Rheumacide cures because it is the only remedy that "gets at the joints from the inside." J?r. W. R. Hughes, of Atkins, Va., writes: "Four bottles of Rheumacide have en tirely cured me of a !ong standing case of Rheumatism, and grer.tly improved my general health. I was a total wreck, hav ing had rheumatism for twenty years. 1 spent several weeks anti much money try ing specialists in New York, but Rheuma cide is the only cure I have found. When 1 began to use it 1 weighed 140 pounds. Now 1 weigh ISO pounds, my normal weight." _ No one ever repented of having held his tongue.-Italian. Itch cured in 80 minutes by Woolforda Sanitary Lotion. Never tails, At druggist*, You may believe anything that is good of a greatful man.-Spanish. the W? is to learn as to the r ers of medicinal agents, the uniform quality and ; known to physicians and Co., by reason of its corn its product has attained to is accorded to successful a Company has become a gu 1 appeal to the Well-Inforr cess and creditable stand enjoy good health, with i living with all the term i of recreation, of enjoyrnei to that end and the use of as in many instances a s proper time, the Californ: truthfully the subject and the appoval of physicians ? of the excellence of the cor ture, which is known to th< This valuable reme Syrup of Figs-and has family laxatives, and as i known to physicians and laxatives, we have adopte Senna-as more fully di cailed for by the shorter n; note, when purchasing, t! plainly printed on the fro Figs-or by the full name Elixir of Senna - is the oi Co. and the same heretof satisfaction to millions, the United States in orig is fifty cents per bottle. Every bottle is sold Secretary of Agriculture, ; misbranded within the me C?LIFC Louisvilles Ky. PUTNAM Color more goods brighter and faster colors iban any c dye any garment without ripping apart. Write lor A Kentucky Congressman says the Wall street man is a bull today, a bear tomorrow, but always a hog. That man will not be called to AU the chair of hi?h finance zoology in a tainted-money college, prophesies the New York American. Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo, Argo. Providence for the most part sets us on a level.-Spectator. It means the hottest and cleanest flame produced by any stove. This is the flame the New Perfection Oil Stove ?ives the instant a ghted match is ap plied-no delay, no trouble, no soot, no dirt. For cooking, the ick results because its d. Cuts fuel-expense sizes. Every at your deal agency. is the best Tljj lamp for 1 household use. eautifully nickeled, y safe; unexcelled nent to any room, at your mcy. ?Y MMMBHaagMMBMSHMBaB What is medicine for? But one medicine will medicines act on different another to the spine, Wine Win has proven so efficacious i Mrs. Wm. Turner, of Bartonv without relief. My back and head I took Wine of Cardul and nov I ai > BACKACHE AND PONDENDY WM wm MISS LENA NAGEL A Are both symptoms of organic de rangement, and nature's warning to women of a trouble which wiil soon er or later declare itself. How often do we hear worn en say, "It seems as though my bael: would break." Yet they continue to drag along and suffer with aches in the small of the back, pain low down in the side, dragging sensations, nerv ousness and no ambition. They do not realize that the back is the main-spring of woman's organ ism and quickly indicates by aching a diseased condition of the feminine organs or kidneys, and that aches and pains will continue until the cause is removed. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made from native roots and herbs has been for many years the moat successful remedy in such cases. Ko other medicine has such a record of cures of feminine ills. . Miss LenaNagel, of 117 Morgan St., Buffalo, N. Y., writes:- "Iwas completely worn out and on the verge of nervous prostration. My back ached all the time. I had dreadful periods of pain, was subject to fits of crying and extreme nervousness, and was always weak aud tired. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound completely cured me.'* Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cures Female Complaint?, such as Backache. Falling and Displacements, and-di Organic Diseases. Dissolves and expels Tumors at an early stage, lt strengthens and tones tho Stomach. Cures Headache and Indigestion and invigorates the whole feminine system. Mrs, Pinkham's Standing invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited .to', write Mrs Pinkham, Lynn, Mass, ncr advice is free. ??aaM?BH???a?PBaaBg?gaaBBg3Bsm .portant Duties of Physicians Ml. dative standing and reliability of the leading manufactur as the most eminent physicians are the most careful as to perfect purity of remedies prescribed, by them, and it is well the Well-informed generally that the California Fig Syrup set methods and perfect equipment and the ethical character of 1 the high standing in scientific and commercial circlet' which .nd reliable houses only, and, therefore, that the name of the larantee of the excellence of its remedy. 'RUTH AND QUALITY ned in every walk of life and are essential to permanent suc ing, therefore we wish to call the attention of all who would ts blessing j, to the fact that it involves the question of right' inplies. With proper knowledge of what is best each hour it, of contemplation and of effort may be made to contribute medicines dispensed with generally to great advantage, but imple, wholesome remedy may be invaluable if taken at the ia Fig Syrup Co. feels that it is alike important to present to supply the one perfect laxative remedy which has won and the world-wide acceptance of the Well-informed because nbination, known to all, and the original method of manufac 2 California Fig Syrup Co. only. :dy has been long and favorably known under the name of attained to wo rid-wi de acceptance as the ,most excellent of its pure laxative principles, obtained from Senna, are well the Well-informed of the world to be the best of natural d the more elaborate name of-Syrup of Figs and Elixir of ascriptive of the remedy, but doubtless it will always be ame of Syrup of Figs-and to get its beneficial effects.always be full name of the Company - California Fig Syrup Co. nt of every package, whether you simply call for-Syrup of -Syrup of Fig0 and Elixir of Senna-as-Syrup of Figs and ie laxative remedy manufactured by the California Fig Syrup ore known by the name - Syrup of Figs - which has given The genuine is for sale by all leading druggists throughout inal packages of one size only, the regular price of which i under the general guarantee of the Company, filed with the at Washington, D. C., that the remedy is not adulterated or :aning of the Food and Drugs Act, June 30th, 1906. IRNI? FIG SYRUP CO. San Francisco, Cal. U S. A. London, England. New York, N. Y. FADELESS DYES nh cv ./ye. Ono 10c. package colors all fiber?. They dye lu cola water better Hmo any other dyet You caa freo booklet-How to Oye, ?loach and Mix Colors. SlUMttOJt OKUU CO.. Uni on ville, Missouri He who has no voice in the volley will have none in the council.-Span ish. Side and Centre Crank Engines LARGESTOCK LOMBARD Fcundiy, Machine and So?er Works and Supp!; Store, AUGUSTA, GA. SH in the soil puts corn on the stalk and money in the bank The natural process of plant growth ls simply one of chemical .conversion: Potash, the raw material, is cheap; but when converted by nature into corn, it is valuable. The use of Potash is not an expense, but an investment. Write to-day for our free booklet "Plant Food." GERMAN KALI WORKS New Yortt-93 Nassau Street, or Atlanta, Qa.-1224 Candler Building W. L. DOUCL? $3.00 AND $3.50 SHOES W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 GILT EDGE SHOES CANNOT GE EQUALLED AT ANY PRICE. SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT All PRICES s Men's Shoes, 85 to Si .50. Boys' Shoes, S3 to SI.25. Women's Shoes, &4 to S1.50. .Mines' & Children's Shoe;*, $2.25 to 81.00. W.L. Douglas shoes ure recognized by expert judges of footwear tobe the best in style, fit and wear produced :n this country. Ea<-L part of the shoo anti every detail of tho making ts looked after and watched over by skilled shoemakers, without regard to timo or cost. If I could take you into my larce factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully \V. L. Douglas .. shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold th ir wear longer, andar? of greater value than anv other makes. ii.??ie. W. L Donata name .ind price I* stamped on the liotiom. which protfvt* Hie wr?r sralrn hiirti Prices and Inferior ano**. Take Ww.KaiimUtute. C?\A hy the hen ?ho* dealer* mnwMw, ?ott Color tyeleU used exclusitelu. Catalog nailed fret. TV. I,. DOUGLAS. Brockton,Bia ? plcto, mo. S7S.00, 34 YEARS SELLING DIRECT Our TeblcUl and hames* taro been told direct iron: our factory to u??r for a third of a cr: tv ry We ship for examtu.itlrn and approral ?ad guarantee saicdeilrory. You ara out nothing ll not satisfied as to stylt, quality and price. We Are The Larrjeat Hanulactnrers In Thc World telUns to the consumer exclusively. We mate SOO styles of Vehicles, 15 styles of Harness. Send for lars?, f reo catolof no. "fweSiSK Elkhart Carriage & Harness Mfjj.Co.. f.^^t^^ttr^ "* Elkhart, Indiana. ' To cure you, if sick, you say. not cure every kind of sickness, because different parts of the body. One medicine goes to the liver, ! of Cardui to the womanly organs. So. that is why e n most cases of womanly disease. Try it. ille, 111., writes: "I suffered for years with female diseases, and doctored would hurt me, and I suffered agony with bearing-down pains. ?t last tn In good health." Sold everywhere, In $1.00 bottles Vrtle today for a free copy of valuable 64-pazs illustrated Book for Women. If you need Medical Advice, describe your symotoms. stating age, and reply will bc sent In plain sealed envelope. Address: Ladles Advisory Dept.. Thc Clia'ftanoosa Medicine Co.. Chattanooga. Tenn.- \