Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, September 06, 1905, Image 4
reflections of a
the ?
an than a
o ry
takes to ena
man to
H ^^Bo ?I no
use
the to
honest lie need the nionWhen
We
rn it* ii ?? am uiu, inu mil woriu is uu
VOIlUg.
Itf-' i lining with song wo loft unsung?
Our laughter lifting on another's tongue.
When wo ire olfl. there t:? no lovely thing
That i<aU: not youth, that totnlea not of
the spring
Of that keen dawn, that now no dark can
bring.
Allen to Mnytlmo. whither shall wo turn?
Net i! w< tin Year's antlphotial to loarn?
Fared we not where Its purple torches
turn?
In the world's matin have we yet no
song?
f~. not the old-time melody as strong?
LH> only c. hoes to the heart belong?
When we are old . . . Love, love a dream
it Is!
The sum; u r's song, th* Illimitable bliss.
The flame the flower, Is love's, is ours. Is
this . . .
?Virg.nia Woodward Cloud, In Juno
Reader.
Fickleness of Woman.
Gray?"Hollo. Smith, old hoy! And
bo you are married, eh?"
Smith?"That's what the parson told
me."
Gray?"And, of course, you are happy?"
i
Smith?"Weil, I don't know about |
that. To tell the plain, unvarnished |
truth, I'm just a little bit disappoint- ,
Ed."
Gray?"I'm sorry to hear that.
What's the trouble?"
Smith?"Well, you see. during the
courtship stunt she used to tell me <
how *t romionsly she loved me, but we
had no sooner got spliced than she (
pave up her $10 a week job as typewriter
thumper. That goes to show 1
how much you can bnnk on a woman's !
Jnvo." 1
On Your Knees, Court Said.
Fourteen-yearold Joseph Porter of .
f>5 Willow avenue, Hoboken. wns ur- j
raigncd before Recorder Stanton recently
for running away from home.
"I just hopped a freight train to go 1
up me road, ne saiil. "L didn't know 1
i had gone so far, and then I was \
afraid to go home." .
His mother told the recorder that j
1 he hoy had no reason to leave home.
She said she took good care of him. '
"(let down on your knees." said the
recorder to the runaway, "and don't !
you g? t up until your mother has for- '
given you." i
Ho vas on his knees five minutes (
before his mother said the word. Then i
the recorder told him to go home and (
stay there.?New York Times.
SOME IDEA OF ITIS WEALTH. )
I lost (showing him around) ? |
Twenty five years ago. when the man (
that owns this block of buildings
came lo town, ho hadn't a hundred ,
dollars in the world
due t ? And now?
IN . t?An 1 now? Rv George, sir, '
lie could afford to hold the job of am- '
b:.. 1'T to Great Britain!?Chicago '
Tribune. i
1
OFFERING NO CHALLENGES. ,
"Do you claim that the world owes ,
you a living?" j
' answered Meandering Mike. t
"Do man dat goes around claimin' ;
makes himself unpopular. I'm satisged
to git my livin' whether it's owin* 1
to me or not."?Washington Star.
It j., . to see the good points of
the n ; ii "U a pedestal. i
A teiml tender lias a snap when lie
thought. -lli,
OUST THE DEMON.
/? ? Willi 1 oiiftJi
Thorn is snmctldng fairly demoniacal
in tho way ooffoo sometimes wfoaks
its (iendish malice on those who use it.
A intl.v writing from Calif, says:
"My husband and 1. both lovers of
coffee, suffered for some time from a
very annoying form of nervousness,
accompanied by most frightful headaches.
in my own case there was
eventually developed some sort of affection
of the serves leading from the
spine to the head.
"1 was unable to hold my bead up
straight, the tension of the nerves
drew it to one side, causing me the
most intense pain. We got no relief
from medicine, and were puzzled as to
what caused the trouble, till a friend
suggested that possibly the eotTee we
drank had something to d> with it. and
fltlvislful tliot u'ii nnlf ? n *<! ? *? I
turn Coffee.
"Wo followed Ids advice, and from
i tho day that wo began to ttso Postuiu
t wo both began to Improvo, and in n
cry short Unto both of us won? ontlrely
rollovod. Tho norvos boon me
* toady once more, tho hoadaeho*
?"-rt:-od. tho muscles tn tho back of my
nook relaxed, my head straightened
up and the dreadful pain that had so
punished me while I used the old kind
the
the cofTco,
every the
mor beverage. And
to
o
to do the
^H^m^^^Hoc." Name given
Po?tnm
the
coffee drinker the old drug
A CHOLERA SCARE
American Seaport Towns Seriously
Menaced By the Plague
11 GETS HOLD IN GERMAN PORTS
Plague Record Stands at 51 Cases
and 19 Deaths, Two Cases Existing
at Hamburg, But the Greatest
Danger to American Ports is Believed
to Lie in the Austrian Port
of Trieste.
Berlin. By Cable.?Dr. Noeht, harbor
physician at Hamburg, in reply to inquiries
made by the press concerning
cholera, telegraphs as follows:
"The transhipment of Russian emigrants
having been suspended at Hamburg.
further cholera infection is improbable.
"The room companion of the first
i ase lias a light attack, but otherwise
all the emigrants are healthy.
"Three emigrants due to sail last
Thursday on the steamer Moltke. (for
N'ew York.) were landed and sine"
lr.cn have been under medical observation.
All are* healthy. The drinking
water and the sanitary ai range*
rr.rnts here are faultless, and consequently
an epidemic is unlikely.
"Single instance, naturally, in spite
;?f the greatest care, cannot always he
prevent* d. lmt no danger exists for sea
traffic. 1 am convinced that all the
means for opposing the cholera are in
use. We are going to meet the future
with tranquility and we hold that
\mcricans have no grounds for disquietude.
"NOCHT."
The opinion is expressed in Berlin
that the United States seaboard has
more to fear from emigrants shipping
it Trieste than from German ports
is cholera is already in Austria Poland.
The record stands at 51 cholera cases
md lb deaths, a steady increase and a
high percentage of mortality. The
most uneasy news for America is that
i second case exists at Hamburg. It
was officially reported that a laborer in
3t. George's Hospital where the Russian
emigrant died, lias cholera, hut It
is added that the seizure is of a mil leuform
than the previous ones. Two of
Llio other fresh eases are in oast Prussia,
indicating that the infected area
ins widened. The imperial health office,
as shown by the statement made, is
roufldent tint it has the disease ia
I... -..I ml.. .
i.u?m. i m- -nihi recently report oil victims
are ntnoni; the Russian rivernicn
In quarantine. Professor Adolph Kafa,
Prof. Koch's stu cursor as head of the
Institute of Infectious Diseases, has
gone to the infected district to direct
the measures to eon tine t the disease.
The Institute of infectious Diseases
will be open all night examining secretions
taken from the digestive tubes
)f persons who have died under cir-umstauces
suggesting cholera. From
lime to time couriers arrive from
tome port of Germany with portions of
todies done up hermetically.
The Minister of the Interior has issued
an order covering all Prussia, reiniring
physicians immeliately after
the death of nnv suspected patient to
send a messenger with sections of tlte
ilmentary canal to tlte institute of
Infectious Diseases for thiough examination.
Gets Lower Duty.
Mexico City. Special ? In consequence
ef a treaty recently made between
French and Mexico, the former country
'a now imposing the minimum duty on
Mexico eofTee shlpred ' up a .Mexican
to a French nort. Cviui-ij nf mf
fee to France show a considerable increase
at very good prices.
New Casses in Mississippi.
Jackson, Miss.. Special.?Surgeon
Wasilin reports three new eases of yellow
fever at Gulp:> t and states that
the situation is well in hand along the
Onlf coast. I)r. Labanon report one case
of fever at Pearllngton, near the Louisiana
line, ami has taken charge a3
State health officer. Three new suspicious
eases are under observnti ?n at
Vlcksburg.
Peppered the Br:de^r*or.',
Richmond, Va.. Special.?John linker
was shot and painfully wounded in
the left shoulder with a shotgun bv
W. \f. Mason, at I ..across. Va.. Sunday
afternoon. He wet to Mmon's to be
married to Miss I.ula A. Hirris, who
was living: at Ma; It la .sr: \ Mason
hn:l notified Kinker that he would
kill him if he came on to his yard. On
Klnker enterlnn tlie yard. Mason fired
on him twice, as above stated. Klnker
was subsequently married to Mi-: Ha-'
r'a and is doir.3 ?- 11. Mason is under
arrest.
Doubt Cast on Story.
Fernandlna, Fla., '{Special.?The two
men from the ill-fated shin Peconlc,
which they say sank near this shore
lar.t Sunday, are still here, and, in
obedience to orders received from New
Yro!:, from the vessel's owners, will
ton and several thousand dollars' worm
until the truth >f their story is fully
established. No bodies have yet washed
ashore and no wrcekapo from the
*. -ssol has been 3een.
FEVER IS UNDER BETTER CONTROL
New Orleans Situation Continues to
Improve?Priest Goes to Patterson
to Avert Italians' Threatened Riot
?Work of Salting Gutters Pushed
in the City.
New Oleans, Special.?Official report
to 6 p. ni.:
New oases, 29; total to date, 2,024.
Deaths. :! total ilonih oc?
New foci, 11.
Cases under treatment. 305.
Cases discharged, 1,432.
For the first time In over a month
the number of new eases was in the
twenties. With only three deaths, comciilman
E. T. Dunn is alco on the list,
the feeling of confidence that the fever
is being wiped out is growing. Among
I the new cases is that of Captain 11. F.
Clayton, U. S. A., the quartermaster in
charge of tins department. City Councilman
E. T. Dunn is also on ?ne list
Of tlm deaths, one occurred at the
emregency hospital.
The country situation is improving
sonic what, though the discovery of new
foci cures some little anxiety.
The situation at Patterson where it
van feared tin ignorant Italians contemplated
trouble has de\cloped nothing
new. No overt art has been committed.
and it is believed that danger
is over. Father Widman. the Jesuit
priesi went there Sunday ami met the
citizens and a number of hading Italians
and proposes to make a perrsonal
canvass of the town, to talk to every
Italian, and convince him of the good
intentions of the health authorities.
A heavy downpour of rain prevented
the mass-meeting which it was proposed
to hold here today.
Today nearly all of the dirt carts
were use.l in the work of salting the
gutters. It has been found that since
the mesquictus have been deprived of
their favorite breeding places, the
stagnant gutters on cross streets are
filled with wiggle-tails, so special efforts
are being made to render these
unsuitable. Over a thousand tons of
suit have been used so far and the
work will continue.
There is much interest in the case
of Dr. Philip llerge. the physician
who was arrested late Sunday night
on the charge of failing to renort three
cases of yellowvfever. He was paroled
l>y ilu> inspector, but will have io
answer to the charge Monday morning
before the second recorder. He
says that he reported the cases by
mail, but the Marine Hospital Service
has no record of them.
There lias been a recrudescence at
Talltilah. in Madison parish, not far
from Vicksburg. three cases- having
been diagnosed by Dr. Krauss, of the
Marine Hospital Service.
A report from Ix?eville, under date
of September 1. shows that there have
been 312 cases there so far. and 20
deaths, with 115 cases under treatment.
To End Oil Inquiry.
Birmingham. Special.?H. M. neck,
of this city who is representing minority
stockholders of the United Oil and
1 and Company, of Columbus, (la.,
s.ates that the final hearing in the inve:
ligation proceedings against the of111
of the company is to he given
in Columbus, (la., on September 7. A
trmpcrarj injunction has been in force
si.ic last fall which restrains the
| majority stockholders from disposing
?,/ the company's properties at MokiI
trie . . t alifornia, in the liakersfield
dirstrj t. The Associated Oil Company,
whi h is the largest prroducer in
Call.'orpin, now operrates wells which
oil daily and the compnniespra oer
turn ont about |.000 to 1,5oo barrels of
oil daily and the officers of the Associated
Company arc the majority
uorkkoiih i":; in the United Oil and Land
Conii any.
No 3;)rcr.d of Disease at Notches.
Nut a?. Miss.. Special.- This is the
fifth r. y since the promulgation of the
report of yellow fever in Natchez, since
whIMi thee no new cases have been re portcd.
All of the patients are doing
well, the fc ver being of an exceedingly
mild tyyc. Kifty-threr volunteers made
a h( to house canvass and reported
vc:y liit't si '..ncss.
T'-h b Exnlcdes in Crowd.
eicn.v Special. A bomb cxplod?
' v. t!i terrific force Sunday afternoon
on the marine parade, which was
thronged with holiday makerrs. A
panic ensued and the air was rent with
shtic-Un and groans of the victims, who
nurn'. 'red 21. ineluiiing one woman,
killed rn i five persons mortally wounded.
The bomb was conical In shape
end wan revered with cement. The
prrp; trator of the outrage is unknown.
i)nf witnees states that early this
V. \ t mini* ?1 on *" ! *
nna nvrn m lll'|ll IMI II
homi) nt the foot of a tree, while an
'cor v 'sine. i.. that the homh was pine
. ! at the foot of a tree this afternoon
and tint the man who was seen to
rlare it there was injured
Case in Indian Territory
Little Rock. Ark.. Special.? Major
ncneral 'V. H. liayr.es. commanding
th ri;r.n?as militia, which is furnishing
the guards to enforce the State
cuarintlni, was officially informed today
of the existence of a case of yellow
fever nt Mayesville. I. T.. and Immediately
gave orders to the guards to
tighten the quarantine. Mississippi
and Louisiana. Florida and Atlanta.
c.:v. have been declared infected terrliory
:y the State hoard of health.
CUTICURA GROWS HAIR
Icalp CUkrail of Dandrnfl and flair Re>
to r*<l bjr One Box of Caticura and
One Cake of Cnlltva Soap.
A. W. Tnlt, of Independence, Va., writing
under date ot Sept. 15, 1904, tays: *"l
liove had tailing hair and dundrufl inr
twelve years and cou'.d get nothing to help
me. Finally 1 bought one box of Cutieur.t
Ointment and one cake of Cuticura Soap,
and they claarcd my sculp of the dnndruif
and stopped the hair tailing. Now my
hair is growing as well as ever. 1 highly
prize Cuticura Soap as a toilet soup.
(Signed) A. \V. Talt, Independence, Vu."
A Fellow-FeeJing Kinship.
Mutual difficulties not infrequently
precipitate love between those who
are mutually in trouble. An amusing |
instance 01 now tnkuig: a wrong train
won a wife for a young suitor is told
under the above caption by Francis
Lynde in the September Lippcncott *s
Magazine. Mr. l.ynde's work is well
thought of by those who are fond of a
rapidly moving short story.
VHP I.onKinnn & Marlines I'nltit.
Don't pay $1.50 a gallon for linseed oil,
which you do in ready-tor-use naint.
Buy oil fresh from the barrel at 01 cents
p'-r gallon, and irix it with Longman <Sc
Martinez L. <!t M. faint.
It makes paint cost about $1.20 per I
gallon.
lames S. Barron. President Manchester
Cotton Mills. l!ock J till. S. (J., writes:
"In ls?:t I painted my residence with h. &
M. It looks better than a great many
houses painted three years ago."
So'l everywhere and by I.oncman &
M artinez. New York. Paint Makers tor
Kitty Years.
A sensible man never has any spare
time to attend to other people's business
unless he is hired for the purpose.
FITSp^rmanontly cured. No fits or nervousness
after first day's use of L?r. Kline's Croat
NerveBestorer, {Atrial bottlennd treatise fre.j
Dr. It. ii. Kline, Ltd..931 Arch St.. Phtla.,!'?.
(Jrcnt Britain is barely holding her own
in trade with Argentina.
MrsAYinslow's.So ithingSyrup for Children
teething,soften tlm gums.reduces intlnmma- 1
tiou,allays pulu.curoswiud colic, d.'c.a bottle \
In IVi.'i .Inp.ui ii.id ?ti*.> 107.iV-> tons of j
merchant steamships.
I'lso's t'ure for < Consumption is an infalliblo ;
modii'iue (or coughs and cohls.?N. \V
Samcel, Ocean it rove, N. I'eli. 17, 190J
The population ot Bangkok is estimated
at 500,900 souls.
The Rrpilt Antiseptic.
Sloan's l.iniment, tor all nios.piito bites.
It k.lls yellow fever and malaria germs.
Two thousands vessels ot all descriptions
disappear every year.
PUTNAM
< ) r Mil' IIM.-Ii f|ln;lii!Mi|cr I.'i I- tl nil
salts. Ail m i < I v T l m l i. | M | i.t i. i. i .
Shakespeare and Hiawatha.
An American schoolboy has written
an essay on the "Merchant of Venice."
full of original matter. This is his.
view of Portia: "Portia was a hind
anil true-hearted young lady; she war.
very good-natured, especially to some I
of her gentleman friends, when those
young men was going to choose their
coffins." Rut the gem of the artiele
relates to Shakespeare himself. "The
story was written by Shakespeare,
who married Hiawatha. He was horn
in Venice, where he and the merchant j
shot arrows of the same fly when I
hoys. It was here that h<> learned to '
season mercy with justice." Anne I
Hathaway turned into Hiawatha is a |
really interesting ease of derangement.
?London Chronicle.
A WOMAN'S SUf-FERINGS.
Wenk, Irregular, Ituekml With I'uln*?
Mmle Well unit 3U i'uiiiiilit Heavier.
Mrs. E. \V. Wright, of 1 T'J Main St..
Haverhill. Mass., says: "In 1S'.)S l
was suffering so with sharp pains in |
fN the small of the ;
baek ami had siii-h
Itjig frequent dizzy
spells that ! eouid
f "" scarcely get about
the house. The
mr ? urinary passages
were also onito ie
r",-r!,h;r- Mom,i|5f
nJ 'W! r periods wore m>
I'ji ?i i st res slug i
dreaded their approach. This was my !
condition for four years. Dona's Kidney
l'ills helped ino right nwny when
i began with them, and throe boxo>
cured ine permanently."
Foster-Milburu Co., Buffalo. N. Y.
For sale by all dealers. Price, Go
ecuts fter box.
Pointed Paragraphs.
True love is founded on (ho rock
ol reverence.
Men never realize the jovs of labor
until pay day.
More coin grows in crooked lows
than in straight ones.
No. Alonz.o, a man doesn't i eeessarily
work because be has a job.
It's tough when a man has to give
up good iiionex for a tough steak.
Kggs. like num. are often broke, but
unlike men. they are never loo fresh.
Smatmh th&uuBfk
cents whim ah us?' A,l4-l Bl. Ea^
in tlnin. Sii'il l?v iiriu'?<i-t.i. fill I
for .n "lump* we wnlilli
If _ I'AUK UuoK KI'IHIC Iho riiwrA'iicc
I I " IT.ii-llcai i'oultrjr llaiKr?uji
t L f mi uinuleiir. liui .1 mnii workiiii
f T lor iiu>Uri uii-J wnu hihiik
||>eni?. it it-iu-liu? i??w to ln>tiv>
I '.ml 1 lire I'lneaaoa; r'wsl lorri*,!
^V??j!?' l?r KulWrnlnic whicn K>\vl<. .
1 I tare i.jr im-?~iiiiK-; evcrylliliiK r*
1 1 <4Ui>'??- lor i.ioillalOe I'ouitry ran V
IUK. HOOK 1*1' III.I.w || | > ii
I I'll, 1.11 l<*guiirJ Mi'cui. .\??? V?rk.
> ^ 7 ^ \
%
THE IDE
Shapes the Destiny of j
Healthy Woman Cam
Seven-eighths of the ^ ?
men in this world marry
a woman because she is j:
beautiful in their eyes? j:. 1
because she lias the quali- i: Q
ties whieh inspire admira- 1 fl ff'tion,
respect and love. J:: 3
There is a beauty in |:; C iV:
health which is ir??re at- , '5 i'-'
tractive to men than mero , 11Q
regularity of featnrn Bffliattitfv'
The influence of women {fflft
glorious in the possession DljC ip':
of perfect phj'sical health fitflj
upon men and upon the Ptpjj MyPsyj
civilization of the world Kftf ;?
could never be measured. PJHJ
Because of them men have rax ' % y
attained the very heights "
of ambition; because of Btn ; ' . ''.j,:
them even thrones have K? ^
been established and de- i': T,
stroyed. Kg
What a diss ppointnient, EH
then, to seu the fair young Pt^ ^
wife's beauty fading away firj jr ' ~.
before n yer.r passes over nrv y fWir?
her head ! A sickly, half- tJ5
dead-and-alive woman, Btj // -Lfjwjr?
especially when she is &0
the mother of a family, B?t .? \ vl;
is a damper to nil joyous- j . \
ne?s in the home, and a FUAlka V-t
drag upon her husband. ?fj| _ _
The cost of n wife's con- gii /VISJ. .?&<
slant illness is n serious y .
drain upon the funds of a i m
household, and too often all the doctoring
does no good.
If a woman finds her energies are.
flagging, and that everything t ires her,
dark shadows appear under her eyes,
her sleep is disturbed by horrible
dreams; if she lwi3 backache, liendr.cht.s,
hearing-down paius, nervousness.
whites, irregularities, or despondency.
she should take means to build
her system up at. once by a tonic with
specific powers, such us Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
This great "remedy for women lias
done more in the way of restoring1
health to the women of America than]
all other medicines put together. It is
the safeguard of woman's health.
Following we publish, by request, a
letter from a young wife.
Mrs. Iiessie Ainslcy of till South 10th
Street, Tacotna, Wash., writes :
Dear Mrs. Pinkhn.ni:?
" Ever since my child was born T have suffered,
as 1 hope few women ever have, with
inflammation, female weakness, bearing-down !
pains, baekaeho and wretched headaches. It j
affected my stciii.-e-h so that 1 could not en- I
jov my muals, and half my time was spent ]
ui lied. I
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Co.td
Tade l e
< i i i ; < i. ii. i: i i >.i i < li i - ?:v. u ?i i* i ott
< 1 i > . \ i f; III Jn < Inlin 1 i \> 11 1 \ , 1 < li mn
w i N c
Spi'^r 3 "NUBLACK" 3 L
The "Nublack" i
cood in construct
I ana sure primer,
? tilG ^est brands
P7I favorite among h
black powder si
mmm uniform sb.ootinj
anc^ strength 1
PV'W] ALL DEAL?
Positive, Gomparstive, Superlative.
" I have used one of your Fish Brand
Slickcra for five years, and now want
a new one, also one for a friend. I
would net be without one for twice the
cos:. They are jest as far ahead of a
common coat ar. a common or.s is
ahead of nothing."
(Nail, i-n *tr;iH.-ation.)
KlfltlEXT WARD TOI.D'S FAIR. 1M1.
j De sura you eion't ttet ono of the common
kind?this is the ^rftWTlha.
I mark of oxcel'.enco. ?
A. J. TOWER CO.,
BOSTON, U.S.A.
TOWER CANADIAN CO., Limited,
TOacriTO, CAIIADA. 352
Makers of Yict Weather Clothing <2 Hats.
their sex, uscd^as a doucho is marvelously succ.-siiul.
Th'jrouctly cleanses, kills disease germs,
.-ivyj uiscuaigiM, nrais iniiamrnarion anil ljcal I
*oreE9ss, cures leucoirncca and nasal catarrh.
I'.ixtiie is in p .wrier hum tn be dneiohcd in pure
a.iter, and is far more cleansing, healing, gcimiciaal
and economical than liquid antiseptics for ail
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, fiO certs a box.
Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free,
rut R. Paxton Company Boston, Maso
Ifcorcpson's Eye Wataf
S~*HICK?JVS1
you i nnitot r.pend years an<l do
buy tin knowledge required i?>
cent . You want them to pay I
them an a diversion. In order to handle
tnitiK about intm. To meet this want \v >f
a prnetieal poultry raiser for (Only 'J'
a ntaa wito put all his mind, and tinv. u
en rah.lng -not as a pastime, but lis a but
ty-tlve years' nnrk. you can s cc many <
t earn dollars for yon. The point Is. that
l'oultry Yard as soon as it appeal a. and i<
teach you. It tells how to <) art an I ut
fattening; which Fowls to save for I re.
you should know on this suhi- t to iu.k
Cve cents in svanips. liUC'ii PUB.' ' alii Ji
XL WIFE
f
IVlen?The Influence of a
not Be Overestimated.
"Lyilin. E. Pinkham's Vep>tAble Compound
made 1110 n well woman, :in<l I fool so grateful
that 1 am Rind to write and tell von of
my marvelous recovery. It. brought tue
health, new lifo and vitality."
What I.vdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound did for Mrs. Ainslcy it will
do for every woman who is in poor
health and ailing.
Its benefits begin when its use begins.
It gives strength and vigor from the
start, unci surely makes sick women
well and robust.
Uemoiiiber T.ydia K. Pinkham's Vegetahle
Compound holds the record for
the greatest number of actual cures of
woman's ills. This fact, is attested to
by the thousnnds of letters from grateful
women which are on file in the
Pinkhnm laboratory Merit alone can
produce such results.
Women should remember that a eure
for all female diseases actually exists,
and that cure is I.ydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound. Take no substitute.
If you have symptoms you don't
understand write to Mrs. Piukham,
Lynn, Mass., for special advice?it is
free and always helpful.
ound Succeeds Where Others Fail.
SS DYES
' i-I'tnlly -.1 ir lUt.'x I !.> "iv" n rfo t rr-Mix
Color,. AtONltor OHI O CO Union vill*. Mo
H E S ? E R
ACK POWDER SHELLS j$
s a grand good shell. It is A
ion, primed with a quick B
and carefully loaded with 9
F powder and shot. It is a |
untpr<5 n t\ d nt K ....?r r&
tells on account of its g
I, evenness of pattern
:o withstand reloading. j|
i R S SELL T H E M|
So. 36.
W, L. Douglas
s3= &s3'^? SHOES a
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Llr.e
cannot too equalled atany prldo.
"j\T .1II1 y 0. 1 X7H.
W.L.TJOUOLAS MAKES AND SELLS
MORE MEM'S $3. SO SHOES THAN
ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER.
^151 nnn REWARD to anyor.o who can
yi'vi'JUU disprove this statement.
W. L. l>r?njjla? $3.50 shoes bnve by their excellent
style, easy fitting, ur.d superior wearing
qu ilitlcs, fichiev ed t'.ie lurcest rale of any S3.SO
ihoe In the world. They are Just or good as
those that cost you 55.00 to $7.00? the only
dlllcrenre is tli'-price. If I could take you into
my factory at Brockton, Mass., tlic Inrgeit In
the world under one roof making men's fine
slioes, and show you the care with which every
pair of Douglas shoes Is made, you would realize
why VV. I.. Douglas }.1.50 shoes ore the best
shoes produceJ In the world.
If I could show you the difference between the
shoes made In in'y factory and those of other
makes, you would understand why DuukIus
5.1.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold
their shnpe, fit better, wear longer,'and ore of
rrrenter Intrinsic value than any other $3.50
shoe on the market to-day.
IV. L. Onuq/.is Strong Mat fo Shew.* for
Man. 5 2.SO, 52.(IV. Boys' School A
Cross Shoaa.52.tiO, 52. 51.75,51.BO
CAUTION. ? Insist upon having W.LDoaj.
lis slioos. r.ilto no substitute. None genuine
' without his name and |>. ire stum pod on bottom.
WANTKD, A shoe dealer incvery town where
W. L. Douglas Shoes nro not sold. Full lino of
atnpb'j set free for Inspoetion u|>on request.
Fast Color ?-jeltts used; thry will not usar bras''/
| Wrlto for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Sfvles.
IV. L.DOl'tiLAs. Itio. Ulor, 11=. ..
N MONEY If you *,v<! trtcm m-ip.
uunLi You cannot thl!1
unl-s.-i yon understand them ami know
how to en tor to th"tr rouulrcjnf'nts. ami
liars U'urnlng by exnerlenee, so you mu-it
ollvus. Wo offer this to you for only 26
llielr own way oven If you merely keep
Fowls jtalU'iously, you must know rtume
are s lino, a nook giving the rxauriencd
? two' *y live years. It was written hy
iv<l moay to m iking n suco> sh of Chlckitness?and
if you will proilt by his t*von'hitks
annually, and make your Fowls
you must bo sure to detect trouble In the
Li >v hi v to remedy It. This hook will
rj'.s. to teed for i'fjKs and also for
Jin* purposes; and everything, in (toed,
:t proi',ta'-'o. Sent postpaid for twanty*-i
llOL'JK, 124 Leonard St., New YorkClty