>
VOL. XIII.
waYnews gi
Russians Reported as Being on the'
Run
Tokio, By Cable.?The JaJpane.se
army swept tlio Russians from Kin
Chow Friday morning, and in a des- '
perate attack stormed the almost
Impregnable position of the Russians i
on Nnushan Hill, west of Talien Wan. ;
The battle raged In tlte hills all !
through the night, and fragmentary
telegrams from the Japanese headquarhra
report that the engagement. ,
is still '.n progress, and that the Jap- l
tuu-se are still pursuing the Russians !
siiiii!) trom Nnushan and the head of
Tali<>nwan bay. The Russians had '
made e laborate preparations to cheek
the Japanese movement south on the '
l.iau Tung peninsula, toward Port Ar- J
thttr.
Tltey had fortified the high ground i(
on the shore of Talienwan bay. their j
works extending to tho east' and the i
west. The extreme Russian right was J ,
at ilushangtao, and the extreme left j
at Kanshan Mill. The hill was the |
strongest part of the line; a series of
batteries, strongly emplacod. crowded i
its crest, while title pits extended
around its sides. Mines had been '
l)lncp<? 'fiwor litivvti mi t hiwc hill iiml ,
around tin' base on ilio northern anil
easjern sides wore stretched wellmade
wire entanglements. Another j
line of defenses, aiso protecter (
with wire emanglements. extended I
from Yen Chia Tutig, near the head of
Tullenwan hay. due north of Lluchia j ,
Tien, which lies south of. Kin C'hou. ;
A strong Russian force was posted at ;
Kin C'hou. It consisted of infantry ; '
and artillery.
The Japanese first occupied the line
of hills to the east of Kin Cliou. Their
position formed an almost perfect |
right angle. showing its southern front |
to Talitn Wan, and its western front '
to Kin Chott. Chin l.l Chan village
was the apex of this angle: the ex- (
trcTno right of the Japanese line rest- ;
ed at Chen Cita Tien, which is almost | i
due norlh of Chin la Chan, while the
extreme le': was at Chaitsuho. a vil- ' '
iage ihio c.tsi of Chin Li Chan. Rack
of this angle the attacking force assent
b I oil in complete security.
The Russia!!:; apparently attempted
to draw Jcpam>ve attack las' Saturday
for their batteries opened fire slowly
on the enemy -on that day. The Japanese.
-how v. or, refused to be drawn
into an attack until the positions of .
the Russians, their guns and their
strength hail been fully developed. I
To ihis end the Japanese began a se- 1
cleg of careful manoeuvres, their officers
working their way close enough ! <
to the Russian position to draw the j
enemy's fire. They thus secured frag- ! t
mcnts of sheila for the purpose of ' 1
ascertaining the ealibre of the Russian j
guns. They discovered that the bat- j <
teries on Nansban hill included four i ;
howitzers ?>l" about fifteen eentimes | |
calibre. ten old-style cannon of be- j
tween nine and fifteen centimes cal- .
iltre, and two quick-firing guns of \
twelve eentimes calibre. The Japan- !
ese also discovered a number of large j
emplacements, but they did not learn ! .
the number of guns contained therein.
These emplacements faced to the
north and east.
Cost Many Lives.
Tokio, Special?Revised figures show
that til non-commissioned officers and '
37< blue jackets wore killed and drown- ,
rd; seven officers, 13 non-commissioned ]
officers and 7ifl lillie tnelrr>?< I 1
wounded, and 12 blue jackets seriously j
wounded, in the sinking of the Japan- I '
esc battleship Hatsucse by the mine nt j
Port Arthur on May 15. Two hundred > :
Russian Cavalry Routed.
Tokio, By Cable.?(ien. Kuroki rejorts
that on Wednesday afternoon, !
1ur ng the battle at To-Pu, the enemy's I
'avalry took up a position at Pa Ton i
Jti. The Japanese thereupon attacked <
ind routed tlieni. Natives report that ?
three of the enemy were killed and t
ightcen wounded. During the afternoon
a.patrol captured one officer and ?
>ne private.
Mortgage Sale of Lumber.
Macon, Ga.. Special.?In the United
States Court a consent order was j
!>;:sf ?d, under which the receiver of tho 1
iled Cypress Dumber Company may sell :
fjvar three million feet of lumber at tho f
company's plant upon which a lien is i
Maimed by Receiver Albertson, of the (
First National Bank, under a mortgage
executed by the lumber company to the
C. Plant's Son Bank for an aggregate *
if $114,000. to secure loans made by t
them to the company, which mortgage f
was transferred to the First National 1
Bank. It is provided in the order that f
ill of the funds arising from the sale I
sti^h lumber, or any part of the 1
Mime, shall be deposited and held as a s
irparate fund subject to the lien. t
\
u. ^ ' r
ORT
]
YEN IN FULL
and thirty-five non-commissioned officers
and men lost their iivos on the
cruiser Yoshino, which was rammed
and sunk by the cruiser Kasuga. The
Navy Department has not received a
detailed report or the two disasters.
SENATOR QUAY DEAD
Chronic Gastritis Which First Attacked
Him a Year Ago, the Cause
of His Death.
Beaver, I'a.. Special.?Col. Matthew
Stanley Quay, senior Senator front
I cnnsylvania, passed peacefully into
death, at 2:48 Saturday afternoon, after
an illness which had been more or less
persistent for the past year, which took'
a turn for the worse ten days ago and
which the doctors diagnosed as chronic
gastritis.
The funeral will be held at 2 o'clock
nn the afternoon of Tuesday, May .list,
and the remains will be interred in the
historic family burial plot in Beaver
ovuirvvi j .
Senator Quay's illness began about a
year ago. It was a recurrence of the
i rouble that beset him during the lat- j
ier part of l'JOO and the early days of
January, 1901, when he was under- j
I'.oing the strain of a desperate fight for ,
lo-election to the Senate.
These Will Attend Funeral.
Washington, Special.?The following
Se nators have been selected by President
Pro Tempore Frye to attend tht
funeral of the late Senator M. S. Quay;
Penrose. Frye, Allison, Alilrich, Alger,
ftullinger, Elkins. Hansbrough, Stewjrt,
Piatt, of New York; Allen, Foriiker,
Mitchell, German, Daniel. Teller,
Dullois, Cockrell, Tillman, Hlackburn
tnd McLaughlin.
President Wires Sympathy.
Washington. Special. ? President
Roosevelt, immediately on learning of j
I he death of Senator Quay, wired th?
following to Mrs. Quay:
Mrs. M. A. Quay, Beaver. Pa.
"Accept my profound sympathy, of- j
ticial and personal. Through my term J
is President. Senator Quay lias been
iny staunch and loyal friend. 1 had
hoped to the last that he would, by
sheer courage, pull through his illness.
Again accept my sympathy.
(Signed t.
"THEODORE ROSSEVELT."
News of the Day. !
Ton minors wore suffooatod at Wll- ;
liainstown, Pa.
I
Groat damage was done at Yazoo
City, Miss., by tiro.
Democratic State conventions wore
hold in Ohio, Alabama and Tennessee, j
The assignment of bishops was made
by the General Conference of the
Methodist. Episcopal Church tNorthern)
it I.os Angeles, Cal.
The General Assemblies of the
Southern. Northern and Cumberland .
Presbyterian Churches continued their j
leiiiterations at Mobile, Buffalo and I
Dallas, respectively.
The Congressional Merchant Marine
Commission, which has hren sitting in
Mew York, will soon hold a session in
Baltimore.
The coal inquiry was continued be'ore
the Inter-State Commerce Commission.
The Federation of Women's Clubs !
'looted officers for-the coming year and j
uljourned at St. Louis.
The Civic Federation took steps to
irbitrate the freight handlers' strike in
Mew York.
The Japanese having failed to capture
Dalny are unable to prosecute the
dege of Port Arthur effectively.
Admiral Togo's fleet, it is announced,
bombarded Port Arthur an
hour Tuesday.
Thn I.'r>rnon a-J" '
. !>>! . un I^IU|)CIU1 uuun ?I[MH?S1lion
to taxes for rebuilding his palace.
French socialists are actively urging
i separation of church and State.
Liberal Gains in Belgium.
Brussels. Special.?In the elections
Sunday for the retiring Senators and
Deputies the Lil>erals gained considerably
in votes, hut won few seats, not
Miough to seriously reduce the Cathilic-government
majority. These are'
he lirst Uberal gains during 20 years.
The Liberals anticipate the overthrow
>f the government in the elections of
1900.
Quarantine Still in Force.
Monterey, Mexico, Special.?Notwithstanding
the quarantine recently estabislied
by the State of Texas against all
Mexican points has been lifted, it is
itill in force against. Monterey. This
s due to the fact that the Texas authorities
had received word to the efect
that a case of yellow fever existed
it Tampico, and they refused to lift
he embargo against Monterey unless a
inarantine should be put on against
Tampico. Gen. Reyes, upen inquiry,
!tatcs there is no yellow fever at Tam>ico,
and states further that he will not
>e justified in placing a quarantine
igainst that city. This is the sltuason
as it now stands.
V \
i
OU T MILL. S. C., WE)
I NEWS THROUGHOUT Tilt COUNTRY
?
Paragraphs of Minor Importance
Gathered From Many Sources.
Through the South.
W. II. Boggs, of Shafter, W. Va.,
plowed up a jar cotaining $105 in silver.
Mrs. Anna Snyder, of Berkeley county,
West Virginia, died at the age of
100 years.
Frank Sharp. oC Richmond, was serl- \
ously shot while, it is alleged, he was '
cobbing hen roosts,
j Incense has been refused to the last
| two Mann law "social clubs" in Newport
News.
Fire destroyed a mattress factory and
I three stores in Norfolk, causing a loss
Of $so,ooo.
I
The Presbyterian General Assemblies j
continued their session in Mobile, Ala.. I
and Buffalo, N. Y.
Prof. P. C. I-.co.ry is to be a candidate
against Mayor Cutchin, of Roanoke, i
who has just been renominated by the
Democrats.
Dr. liowrad, after a protracted visit
to the South and Mexico, takes a '
gloomy view of the boll-weevil and
yellow fever situation.
Kev. Dr. Luther R. Wilson, of Baltimore.
and Rev. I)r. William Hurt, of
Rome, Italy* were elected bishops by
the Methodist Episcopal General Conference
at Ia?s Angeles.
| Gen. Frederick Funs ton explained bis
swimming of the Bag Bag river April
I 2*1, is;?9. and tho Rio Grande the next
| fay.
Tennessee Prohibitionists went on
record as opposing Gen. Nelson A.
Miles as a Presidential candidate be
cause of his record in the war.
I ' !
Wshington Happenings.
Secretary Hay lias decided that, notwithstanding
Belgian capitalists' interests
in it. the United States will protect
th'* Canton-Hankow Railway, in
China, as an American enterprise.
Agricultural Department figures give
$4,300,000,000 as a conservative estimate
of the value of United States farm products
exclusive of those fed to live !
stock in 1903.
The Republic of Panama will try to |
invest $0,000,000 of the $10,000,000 received
from the United States in mortgages
on New York property.
Commander Peary expects to take j
with him to Greenland in July a party
of consumptives who, it is thought, will
profit by the Arctic air treatment.
Of the 926 delegates thus far elected
to the Republican National Convention
<iis are absolutely pledged to President
Roosevelt.
In the North.
The Hearst supporters seem to have
lost in Ohio.
The General Conference of the Methodist
Protestant Church began its
quadrennial session in Washington and
elected Rev. l)r. F. T. Tagg president.
llnable to end the deadlock on the '
gubernatorial nomination the Illinois
Republican State convention adjourned
until May 31.
Governor Peabody, of Colorado, says
the strike there is ended.
The Inter-Statc. Commerce Commission
continued its hearing on the differential
question.
A large quantity of jewelry, believed
to have been taken from the
ollln of "I^ady Mary" Livingston.
on the Livingston estate below
Hudson. N. Y., has been found by
the police in a raid upon a "growler
gang" in Albany.
Seven persons were killed, five fatally
injured. 12 to 15 others hurt and 2
are missing in an explosion in a torpedo
and fireworks factory at Findlay,
Ohio.
Howard Gould has sued the architect
of his place. Castle Gould, for $30,000 I
for delay in his work on the plans.
It was reported that President Roosevelt
wants General Porter, ambassador
to Prance, to run for Governor of
New York on the Republican ticket.
Foreign Affairs.
Cossacks under General Rennenkainpl'f
drove back the Japanese column
which had been threatening Mukden.
Russian officials say that the recent
Japanese naval disasters restore the
equality of the fleets.
Vigorous action is being taken to
punish 'he bandits who kidnapped Ion
Perdlcr.ris and Cromwell Varley in
Morocco.
The second anniversary of Cuban
independence was celebrated.
Twenty-three persons were drowned
in the wreck of the steamer Turret at
St. Paul's Island, Cape Breton.
r-L J
UNKSDAY. JINK I, 1!?
liCPOT AT SANTl'C BURNED
Flrcbuj Caught Red-Handed and !m?
mediately Lauded in Jail.
! Union. Special.?l.ee Carter. a negro.
was arrested and placed in jail on
a charge of having burned or had
part in robbing and burning the Southern
depot at Santue Friday night. It
is said that Carter loft here at 0.05 for
Santue. Saturday morning Mr. Win.
Nelson, the night operator at the
Southern here, as soon as he found
oat that the negro had gone to Santue
started walking down the railroad
and met him several miles below the
city and arrested him. Carter lives 1
at Monarch Cotton mills, and after being
arrested admitted .that he got up
about 1 o'clock and went down in that
section of the country. The burning
and robbing occurred between 12 and
1 o'clock. As to how much money was
taken and the total loss l?y lire could
not be learned, as the telegraph office
was in the dej ot as well as the Southern
expiess office. On account of it
being In the dead of the night it. is
said very little, if anything, was saved.
For several weeks past robberies
o? different classes have been committed
in Santiu and community. The
Inst was when some one broke into
the store of Mr. Ia B. Jeter, taking
about $50 or $100 worth of goods, .lust
a little further down, at Carlisle, the
store of Mr. K. IV Bailey was broken
Into and many goods taken.
Negro Was Fatally Wounded.
Union. Special.?At 2 o'clock Satur- I
day afternoon at Meals Shoals one negro
was fatally wounded while picking
out some rock and another may die.
Previously dynamite had beo?? use 1 to
blow up the rock and dirt hut on this
occasion one of the sticks failed to
discharge and while thes" negroes
were picking the point of the picks
struck the dynamite, exploding it directly
in the faces of the two pickers. !
The head and face of one wfis badly
mangled and there is no possible
chance for his recovery, hut it is said
there is some hope for the other. The
names of the wounded negroes could
not be learned but they were from
Columbia. The gentlen an who gave
the story said lie had a very narrow
escape himself, being only about 10
feet away, lie was one of the bosses
and was overseeing th<j work.
Palmetto Briefs
The State Democratic executive com- I
r.iittce held a meeting in Columbia
Thursday. It was decided that there
should be no county to county canvass
where candidates have no opposition.
It was also settled that the campaign
should open on June 21st.. When it
came to the nomination of the presidential
electors the following nominations
were made for electors at largeT.
J. Cunningham of Chester, George [
Johnstone of Newberry. I). S. Header- j
son of Aiken. On the first, ballot Mr.
Cunningham was elected and there was
a tip between the other two candidates.
Mr. Henderson's name was withdrawn
and tlie election of Mr. Johnstone was
made unanimous. The following electors
were named from the congressional
districts: M. I'. Howell of Colleton.
P W. Crouch of Saluda. !U II. WatKins
of Anderson. W. T. Jeter of Union,
W. M. Shannon of Camden. Olin Raw
yer of Georgetown. A. W. Summers ol
Orangeburg.
An interesting case was brought tip
ir chambers before Chief Justice Pope
last week. This was the case of VV. S.
Mason vs. Hampton county and C. J.
Cray as county supervisor. The plaintiff
as tenant on a farm, brought an action
against the defendants, the county of
Hampton and the supervisor of Hampton
county, for damages to his crop in
opening a public road over the land of
bis landlord, anil applied to the chief
jcstice for an injunction restraining tho
county authorities from working and
operating said public road. The application
for injunction raises interesting
and Important questions as to the powers
of the county authorities and the
rights of minors under the statute regulating
proceedings for condemning
private lands for public uses.
A special From Chester to rno Columbia
State says: "Two more soldiers of
the 'thin pray line of Confederates
have joined the silent majority.' J. H.
Ashford, aped 73 years, died on 22nd
Inst., and William Carter, f.S years old,
died on the same date. Both of them
served through the war. and both were
wounded during the battle of Seven
Pines."
The State hoard of equalization met
on the 31st inst. and revised the factory
taxation and the hoard of railroad assessors
meets on June 3rd for the purpose
of going through the railway assessments.
Both of these boards will
hold second meetings in order to hear
any complaints which may ho made.
Did Not Travel or> Sunday.
Mobile. Ala.. Special.?Although the
Ocneral Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church adjourned sine die Saturday
night, those members who found it impossible
to reach their homes by midnight
Saturday will reanain in Mobile
until Monday, as the Assembly is on
record as opposing traveling on Runday.
The visiting ministers supplied tho
Protestant pulpits of the city Sunday.
01.
!had a fatal fire]
| Town of Greenwood, South Carolina,
Suffers Severe Loss
l
MRS. ANME MOSELY A VICTIM I
I She Was Burned to Death in the Cen- >
tral Hotel, of Which She Was Pro- J
prietor. and Where the Fire Origi- !
' nated.
Greenwood. S. C., Special.?Fully
! one-half the business portion of Green!
wood was wiped out bv lire between 3
I
oral ft o clock Wednesday morning. and
; Mrs. Annie Mosely burned to death.
The tire is supposed to have origi*
j tinted in the kitchen of the Central
! Hotel. The Uames were first, seen by an
i engineer of the Charleston & Western
I Carolina, who gave the alarm with the
j v.'histlo. Although roused. Mrs. Mose'
ley, proprietor of the liotH, was so
overcome with fright that she refused
to Jump. She was ovorvome by tlie
flames and was burred before it was
possible to rescue her. tier charred remains
were found this morning. The |
total property loss is estimated at not j
less than $ir?:t.OOO, with not over |
000 insurance, if so much. Contracts are
| now being made to rebuild.
The First National Hank building
which was totally destroyed, issued
handbills by sunrise, announcing that
it would be opetied for business by the
usual hour, 0 o'clock. All the bank's
books and papers were saved.
Mrs. Mosley's two children, who were
visiting in Anderson, arrived at noon
Their father, while constable, was shot
here five years ago. and this makes the i
mother's horrible death doubly sad. i
The burned district embraced eighteen !
stores: Spinel Bros., National Bank,
Greenwood Hardware Co., J. W. i
Fp'olcs, A. F. llagan, New York Ba- :
xaar, I).- J. Raborne, M. Swltzer, I. j
Switr.er, Palmetto Grocery, Western '
Meat Market. 12. Borgerro, Lloyd's res- j
ratlinnt, i'. r. Cuhiasure, jeweler; .1.
I. Chiploy, bicycles. guns, etc. llis repair
department was the ilnest in the
upper State; A. M. MeD. Singleton,
grocer; Auld Bros., dry goods; Lesser,
dry goods; Mrs. A. J. Sproles, millinery;
Western Union Telegraph office;
Hlnton. grocery; J. S. Chiploy & Co.,
cotton; Raker & Xieholls. Insurance,
and many other stocks badly damaged
by water and removing. The work of
rebuilding will begin soon, improvements
will be made in placing new ,
stores. Many merchants are ordering |
goods by wire. | ,
; 1
Tyner and Barrett Acquitted. ,
Washington, Special.?Within twen? I
ty-two minutes of the retirement of |
tho jury in the case of .lames M. | 1
Tvner and Harrison J. Barrett, tried 1
on charges of conspiracy in connon- ,
tioii with their duties as law olllcers |
of 'he Postoillce Department, a verdict
of not guilty was returned. The ,
throng which filled the court room \
throughout tho arguments to tho jury , 1
hardlv had time to leave the building *
befor tho Jury was hack and the
foreman announced that a verdict had
been reached.
Arrested While in the Pulpit.
Ocala, Fla., Special.? Rev. J. A.
Boyd, a negro preacher, was arrested
by a deputy United States marshal
Wednesday night, at Orange Lake, ,
noftP tltisx nlnco vvIoIa i
- - JIII I J I 1 L
preaching to a largo congrogatlon.
Ho Ik charged with robbing tlie
United States mm:, l?v cutting open a
mail pouch and appropriating the contents,
the punch having been lost by
a mail carrier.
Will Send Minister to Pekin.
Mexico City. Special. Diplomatic relations
will so op be fully established
between Mexico and China. The Chinese
ministet .at Washington will arrive
here shortly and present his credentials
as minister to this republic,
and on leaving here will place a diplomat
already In the city In charge of
the Chinese legatl >n. while Mexico wil.
send a minister to Pekin.
Ten Miners Suffocated by Gas From
A Locomotive.
Wllkosbarre, Pn , Special. ? Ten
men were suffocated by gas from a
small locomotive in a mine near Williamsburg.
Fifty n hers were brought
out unconscious, but will recover.
The d"ad Inclnde Michael Golden, the
general inside foreman.
The Carwin Not Loat.
Soattlo, Wash., Special.?The steam
er Cottage City from Lynn canal reports
passing the Nome steamer Corwln
011 May 21 between Ketch,..an
and Wrangel Narrows. This disproves
the report that the Corwln wae lost I
on the Vanoouver coast.
' r
s
NO. il
(;].i:.\nincs.
Japan has r.Hir. nul<'s of railroad.
Ki 11 ji Kilwanl has become a preat
patron of Irish industries.
Tin- President has reappointed Win.
Jj. l>istin :is SurveyorMeneral of Alaska.
b Tin* whlow of Inventor flreouhouph
has sued for s.",o.ih?u.imm? in Standard
Oil royalties.
The t.overnor of Massachusetts has
signed a hill to stop the corruption of
employes hy hrihe pivinp.
The President and Minister of War.
of lira/.il. have resolved to increase
the uarrisous alone the Peruvian frontier.
A new disease called the preen
plautte lias broken out atnotip the Itussians
uuartered in I'ldnese in.no..^ in
M ukdcii
The keel plates of the H'i.ooO Inn
battleship Vermont were laid at the
Fere River Ship ami Engine Company,
ijniney. Mass.
Heavers are becoming so numerous
In Cascade County. Mont., as to inenaee
farming interests t?y destroying
irrigating dams.
In C A. P>u< kliu. hy removing certain
hones in the no> >. has discovers!
a way of greatly 1/onctit ing, if not curing.
consumptives.
Peter o. Elliott, arrested some
mouths ago in Washington for supposed
intention to kill President Roosevelt.
committed suicide in Minneapolis.
Rielnird II. Taylor, of the United
States Seeret Serviee. lias received a
medal for the courage displayed ou
the Nipsie during the Saiuoun hurricane
of ISS'.i. I
The Kinperor, the Empress an" the
Crown Prince of C.ennany attended
the unveiling of a statue in the Tliiergurteii
representing Emperor William
as a young man.
The Crime Confessed?Two Arrests.
Mobile, Spweial.? Ira and Henry
Patter, brothers, the negroes arrested
for the killing of Askew, had a preliminary
hearing before Justice
Wacker. at Yellow Pine, and were ordered
held without hail. Tiie.v wme
brought to this city Wednesday night,
and lodged in jail hy a deputy ollicer
of the Mobile & Ohio. Ira Carter
confessed that he did the k....ng, saying
i hat his brother Henry handed
Hiui the gun and urged him to shoot.
A Shooting Affair.
Monterery. Mexico, Special. While
Yal Gonzales, a lawyer, and Daniel
Madrigal, a merchant, were conversing
in the Patio of the Iturbide Hotel, Gonzales.
it ts alleged, drew a revolver and
shot Madrigal through the heart. No
cause is assigned for the shooting. Gon
Mimie no aui'nipi 10 escape, and
was taken in charge by tin' authorities.
On "Wednesday 200 houses were dost
roved by tire at Yazoo City. Miss., and
n property loss of several million dollar*.
The Russian battleship Orel sank at
Cronstadt as a result of earelcssness in
leaving her valves open. S'.o has beeu
re-'loated and is undamaged.
It is said that the Sultan contemplates
forcing Armenian villagers to
leave the mountains and live on the
plains, where he ran control them.
Miscellaneous Doings.
T.ow Dockstader. the minstrel, gave
111> to a secret service agent the photographic
tilms which show a man made
up to represent President Roosevelt exLending
Aid to a negro.
fMDS. CECELIA STOWE^^^
Orator, Kntre Noun Olab. S
170 Warren Avenue, jg
Ciiicaoo, 1 i.i,., Oct. 22,1902.
For nearly four years 1 suffered
trom ovarian troubles. The doc- H"
tor on an operation an the I
I only way to pet well. I, however, Bj
strongly objected to an operation. H
I My husband felt disheartened as I
I well as I, for home with a sick H
woman is a disconsolate place at H
I best. A friendly druggist advised H
I him to get a bottle of Wine of H
I Cardui for me to try, and lie did so. I
I I began to improve in a few days and I
my recovery was very rapid, with- Hi
I in eighteen weeks I was another H
I heing. ?
I Mrs. Stowe'a letter shows every H
woman how a home is saddened by H
I female weak nes and bow completely Hj
1 Wine of t'ardui cures that siek- H
I ness and brings health and hamn I
I ness again. Do not go on suffer- H
I inff. Go to your druggist today H
I and secure a $1.00 hottlc of Wine H
I of Cardui. B
| Wl WE<CftHPUI f
Ja
A