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t Beflections of a Batchelor. There will be Home people in the f tront seats in Heaven whom you I would not admit to your pews here. i What you get out of the Bible tot day depends an how much of the Bi1 hie you put out into iho world yes| taxday. I Some complain that they were forc1 od to go to church, but you never I heard any complaining that they \ver? I oompelletl to. go to Heaven.' J A DANGEROUS PRACTICE. (turning Off Paint Makes Insurance Void. It seefcis that considerable danger to property exists In the practice of burning off old paint before re-palntIng. The Question has long been a subject of debate in the technical Journals, and now house-holders and the newspapers have begun to discuss It. Those et us who. with trembling, i have watched the painters blow a ?.r. Mnat fi-nm 1 I 4 1 j wui ?.avu tauiyo o??uidi our houses. and have looked sadly at the aire of our painting bill becauaa of the Uuio wasted on this preliminary work, are Interested in the investigation by the Grcenflold (Mass.) Gaxette and Courier, which gives considerable space to the reasons for the practice, questions its necessity and suggests ways to prevent the risk of burning down one's house in order to get the old paint off. It says: "There is a good deal of discussion among house-holders as to the desirability in painting houses, of burning off the old paint, a practico that has grown very common of late in Qreonfleld and elsewhere. Insurance men are strongly opposed to this method. It makes void Insurance policies for fires caused in this manner. Several houses in Greenfield have gotten afire as the result of this method, and in some places houses hare burned uj a result. "It Is undoubtedly true that when a house has been painted over and over again there comes to be an accumulation of paint in bunches. If new paint is put 011 top of these accumulations it is almost sure to blister. To buru it off is the quickest and cheapest und perhaps the surest method of getting rid of this old paint." The Gatclto and Courier quotes certain old patrons to the effect that accumulations of paint are unnecessary. Those* old-timers lay tho blame partly on tho painter who fails to brush bis paint lu well, partly on the custom of painting in damp weather or not allowing sufficient time for drying between coals, and partly to tho use of adulterated paints instead of old-fashioned linseed oil and pure white lead. The paper says: "Many of tho older house-holders ay that if euro is taken :it all these points, it is absolutely unnecessary to have paint burned off. They advise that people who have houses painted should buy their own materials. snd to have them put on by the day, so as to be euro to get good load and oil. Of course the burning off of paint gr .utly icc-eaaes the cost of the Job." Thft t rrtllW? arnev. where have wuh paint la pretty well sum mod up by our contemporary, and the causoc are about the same every- | where. By far the moat frequent cause of the necessity for the dangerous practice of burning old paint Is tho U96 of poor material. The oil should ho * '.ro linseed and the white lead should c rent white lead. Tho latter is mo.e often tampered with Chan the oil. Ka-thy substances, and pulverized rock and quartz, arc frequently used an cheapeners, to the great detriment of the paint.. Patntera rarely adulterate white lsad themselves and lliey very seldom tis? ready prepared paints?the moBt frequent causes of paint trouble. But they do often buy adulterated white lead because the property owner lnalsts on a low p?ico and the painter has to economize somewhere. Tho suggestion is thcreforo a good one that the property owner Investigate tho subject a little, lind ojt tho narue of some reliable brand of white lead, and soo that the keg is marked with that braud. Tho linseed oil is more difficult to ho sure of. us it is usually sold In hulk when tho quantity is small; but reliable makers of Unseed oil can he learned on Inquiry and, if your deRler Is reliable, you will get what you want. Pure white load and linseed oil ars so nec?sjary to good paint that the little trouble necessary to get thera well repays the house owner in dollar p. ar>tl ?*ved. (Strive to make the world better TYNEit'S DYSPEPSIA KKMEDY. Many Have Dyspepsia and Don't Know It. Do you belch up wind? Taste your foo.l after rating? See specks before i i your eyes? Are you \ pale and haggard? sjjKj^-, \ Doea your heart * J&fy'ib jL flutter? Are you ?/. ^ rtlzty? Do you have palna in aide or hark? Risings or /? J) pimples on the skin? Are you lowp5tV<?7 spirited? Is thoro a eour taste? Breath bad? Headache? Weak kidneys? Bilious? Constipated? Are you nervous? If so, you have Dyspepsia, and it is a dangerous condition. To cure, take Tyner's L Dyspepsia Itoniedy. It is made for k Just such trouble# ami symptoms. ^ Tyner's Dyspepsia ileiuedy removes ^k acids from the stomach, strengthens weak stomachs and cures the worst Dyspepsia. or Indigestion. Druggists or by express iit) centu a bottle. Money refunded IT it falls to cure. Afedl'-al ^^^k Advice ut;d circular frae by writing to Truer Remedy Co., Augusts. Ga. I V KILLED IN EXPLOSION 12 Lives Lost and 200 More or Less Injured A CAR OF DYNAMITE BLOWS UP Whether Because of Fools Shooting at Mark on Dangerous Car or Because a Car Loaded With Iron Was Switched Against It, 20,000 Pounds of Hi^h Explosives Work Havoc at Jellico, Tenn. Jellico, Tenn., Special.-?Twelve lives were* snuffed out, scores of persons hurt and property damage estimated at probably .$300,000 was done here Friday morning at 8 o'clock when a car load of dynamite, standing in a track near the Southern depot!, exploded with, a report that was heard for 20 miles, shattering build- | ings in the business section of the town und breaking nearly every piece of glass within ;i radius of one mile of the scene. The dead are: George Atkins, aged .'JO, lineman for the East Tennessee Telephone Company. John Cook, aged 50, ear inspector for the Southern Railway. Waller Rodgers, aged 28, clerk for United Cold Storage Warehouse, cut to pieces and almost unrecognizable. John Gordon, colored, aged 150. James Sharp, colored. William Lovette, aged 12. Ida Kayne, aged 3 years. James Reynolds, John Iloeh, son of J. M. Cook. Joseph Sellers, engineer on Louisville & Nashville. Oik; body remains unidentified, making the total dead at noon, 12. There is hare possibility that other bodies may he recovered from the ruins of buildings, hut this is hardly probable. Two Theories of Explosion. The freight ear, one of the Pennsylvania's lines, contained 450 boxes of 20,000 pounds of high explosives consigned to the Rand Powder Company, of Clearfield. Tenn. Two causes are assigned for the explosion. One is that three persons were shooting at a mark on the ear and that a bullet entered the ear and caused the explosion. The other is that while the ear was standing on a side track a car load of pig iron was switched against it and that the force of the jar caused the explosion. People here are divided as to the theories, some going so far as to say that they actually saw the men firing at the (Till Willi II I'll It*. Young Man Shot to Death. Spencer, X. C., Special.?Cr. C. Wliitaker, a Southern Railway flagman, of Pilot Mountain, was shot and instantly killed here by P. F. 1 !? drick, a Southern Railway conductor, of this place. The killing occurred in a storo in the center of town where Whitaker was making a purchase, and it is stated that no words passed between the two men before the shooting began. Alleged attention of Whitaker to Hedriek's wife is supposed to be the cause of the tragedy. Big Gain in Business. New Haven. Special?It is estimated that a yearly loss of nearly three quarters of a million of dollars to the New York. N?w Haven and Hartford railroad as the result of reducing passenger rates to two cents per mile, has already been turned into actual gain in gross receipts through the increase volume of business. Coal trallie receipts to date indicate not only tlillt the nstimntpH 1 > .!,< ?.? overcome lmt there will he an actual gain over the other vr.nrs, Georgia Preacher a Suicide. Macon, (3a., Special.?A special to The Telegraph from Ihipont, Gn., says: Rev. Frank Cornelius, a Baje tist minister, near Dupont, was shot through the head while reading on his front ]torch. Jlis family rushed to his assistance. It was thought he was assinaletd, but indications are that lie committed suicide. Current Events. <* Tt is estimated that thousands lives were lost in the typhoon at Hong Kong, while property damage amounts to millions. Retiring Uovcmor-f3eneral Ide and his successor in the Philippines, General Smith, were the guests of honoi at a dinner given in Manilla. Customs dork No. 4 at Buenos Ayres was burned, the damage being more than $1,000,U00. Armenians burned four Tartar villages and massacred many inhabitants in the Causeasus. The Mongolia is Floated. Honolulu, By Cable.?The steamer Mongolia, which went ashore on Mid- ! way J>Inn<i, was floated. She is expected to reach here under her own steam. The Mongolia'* passenger* have not yet arrived here. The agents here of the 1'aeilie Mail Steamship Company think thtft the Mongolia has sustained little damage. B ?.*v - s % _:& ) .7 . Y 7 * \ ^ MR S E ST H E W M. MiLNER. box 3"21, DeCratf, UlitJ. Dr. S. It. artmun. Columbus, Ohio. Dear Sir: ? I was h terrible nu/l'err r from pelvic weak neks and had headache continuously. I was not able lo do my housework for myself and husband. I wrole you and described my condition as nearly u.s possible. You recommended I'eruna. I took four bottles oi it and was completely cured. I think I'eruna a uumiriy 111 mruiriiiff anu nave reccui i mended it to uiy friends, with the ver> best of remits. Father M. Milner. | Very tew ot the great multitude of worn en who have b?cn relieved of some pelvic disease or weakness by l'eruna ever consent to give a testimonial to be read by the public. There are. however, a few courageous, elf-sacrificing women who will for the sake of their sulTerin ; sisters allow their cures to be published Mrs. Milner is one of these. In her for her restoration to health she j? -j: is willing, that the i A GRATEFUL * women ol the-whole LETTER TO world shouhf knocV DR.HART MAN >? A chrome inva_! . 1 lid brought back to hrulth is no tonsil matter. Words are inadequate to express complete gratitude. Pcruna is sold by your local druggists, l'uv a bottle to-dav. W. L. DOUGLAS *3.50&*3.00 Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD W.LDouglas $4 Gilt Edgo cannotboequalledatanjpricfl/^^ W. I.. IteuKlat' .Tot?- / etc Ku \ Miiil Home Is Uie incut I S ' ?jn) I roiut'lutr In ihl* country I fc> i ffjj 1 | Sendfor Cntnloq I A LITpb^I^. ! Hon'i Shoes, $S to 91.SO. Bo ye* Shoes, $3 to $1.lift. Woraoii'ii Kho?*. K4.00 to Si,SO. Mtu*< a' dt Chlldreu'n Shoes. $2,145 to Sl.OO. Try XV. I,. UoucIhs Women'*, Mt?ce? and j Children's shoes; for style, lit BUtl wear they excel other lunUos. If I could take you into my large factories at Brockton, Mass.,and show you how carefully W.L, Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other make. Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L. Douglas shoes, tils name and price Is stamped j on the bottom, which protects you against high prices and interior shoes. Take no xubxth j f life. Ask your dealer fur W. 1.. Douglas shoes ; end insist upon having them. Fa\t Color ?,ielat* tinea : I he it will not wear brunt/. Write for Illustrated Catalog ol l-'all Stvlcs. W. I.. DOt.Kll.AS. Dept. 15, Brockton.'Mans. V/Aruuirae I P* f" Jf* It act* in>nvdt?t?ly? Ijj > 1 fc, you fuel it* *fWt* to It nilnnlrt. You don't INDIGESTION and ':'.';1: I APIMTV " 'k to know It* rood. It euro* HulUI I I H KA 1> A<11 KM ALSO by removing tb* c?u**. IDceul*. When Poiaoren oy Ivy. The leaves of poison ivy otter change to beautiful tone* of yellow and red In the Fall and are sources of great temptation to anyone who is out hunting Autumn decoration. Poison ivy has three leaflets, and Virginia creeper has five. The former has white berries and the latter purp'.r. All the drugs in the world are of no use in preventing a had case of poisoning unless one begins to do something as soon as the telltale ltehinp begins. When the pustules break open, one is almost sure to be in for three days or a week of suffering. It is well to have a little bottle of extract of grindella in the house ab the time. Rub It on the affected parts every tlve minutes nr.til the trouble is averted, and be sure to lose no time in beginning.?Argus. ft Unprotected Man. The fact is that if we examine our selves well wo must mnk ourselves, without vanity, among tlio most un protected, the most naked, the mos" fragile, the most brittle and flacclc beings in creatjon. Compare us, fc? instance, with the Insect, so formid ably equipped for- attack and ao fan tastically armour cased! (.'on template among others the ant, upon which you may heap ten or twenty thou sane times t.hc weight of its body wjthou' apparently inconveniencing It. Con aider the o ckchafer. the '.eo?t robust of the beetles, and weigh what It It able to carry before the rings of iti abdomen crack or the casings of it! forcwlnga yield. As for the -reals tance of the stag beetle, it. la, so t< apeak, unlimited.- Maurice Matter lir.ck iu IiOndcn Daily Mall. It the eyes do not admire, the heart will not desire.?From the Italia*. i ap v 1W?T' If THE ONLY TR J OVER 17.000 VICTIMS OF .,iE % TRBATWP*^ ..^ursed by G g lotto, xwueigh, Greensboro, Reid: * We cure the LIQUOR HABI1 fi positive guarantee of a permai * These are no "Home Cure" t fi ' has all conveniences. For i I THE McKAINM kakkSliKkXkXSMitkhkkSiX^hhM PUTNAM Color mora irocilabrlirhtrr and tartar color* t Inn ?o? Oyaaay iraruiatit without r.oeuui apart v> rltaloi tr Bits of Brightness. i lie?How women do oaekle when a lot of them get together, don't ( they / She?Well, what of it When a lot j of men got. together, all they do is to crow.?Detroit Free Press. Magistrate Were you ever arrested before? I till the Bite?Wnz. I ever arrested hi! four? Not oil your life. It always took six or more fur to run nie i ?i. :i..,?..1..L: . i 111. I II IlitlU'l I III Ii'. I IVSS. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup fur Children teet liiiEf.si-ttrnsthegums.reilMicsinflauiiiui- ' tion. allays pain,cures wind colic, 2ficu laittlo . j Teaching a Girl to Run an Auto. Scenic a good. easy-going machine with an active and up-to-date sparkcr, and having placed the girl tirrnly by your side, where you can secure a strong hold in cases ot' emergency, proceed to a lonely, unfrequented road where you will he uninterrupted. ! it' the girl display* any signs of nervousness, do your host to soothe l er. There are a nuniher of ways to j do Iliis. Take her hand in yours and pat it gently. Speak to her in low. soft tones. If absolutely necessary place her head upon your shoulder and count one hipuircd. If not effective, repeat in one minute. Now she may take the wheel,, advance the sparker and throw in the clutch. It. will then be your turn to grow nervous. While the girl is clutcing the machine you clutch the girl. It will the* he time to rest. I This should not take any longer than the rest of the afternoon. Hy the time you have got so von can kiss the girl without getting nervous, she ought to he aide to run i uic mat nine.? iittn ala^son m tlie I October I teliuealor. A Unique Figure. A unique and peturesquo figure has passed wt.h the death of Russell Sago, Ohc- last of the group conspicuous in Wall s-'rect during the civil wrr and the succeeding exciting era of railway building, railways wrecking, railway merging and astounding h-gal ami financial battles for railway control. remarks the New York Herald. The frugal habits acquired when ho worked for four dollars a month were retained after he had acquired millions, and made hira the subject of | many g< od n a tared pleasantries. Mr. Sage never denied himself anything he wanted, but liis wants were few. and, possessed oT enormous wealth, with his cultivated and estimable wife be led a life which was an example of domesticated and placid simplicity ind contributed to proinng his years far beyond the traditional three score and ten. Mother (ti> Tommy. who has just said his prayers)- Tommy, you fur- j got tu ask the l/iril to take care of your luiby sister. Tommy- No, 1 didn't ma. i'il take care of her myself. I.ife. TIIK WAY OTT Change of I-oou lirouglit nueccs* anu | Happiness. An ambitious but. delicate girl, after failing to go through school on account of nervousness and hysteria, found in Grape-Nuts the only thing that seemed to build her up and furn'sh her ihe peace of healrh. ' From infancy," she says, "I have not been strong. Being ambitious to learn at any cost 1 flnaiiy got to the High School, but soon had to abandon :ny studies on account of nervous prost cation and hysteria. "My food did not agree with mc, I grew thin and despondent. I could not enjoy the simplest social affair for 1 suffered constantly from ueryousness in spite of all sorts of medicine*. "This wr' ched condition continued until 1 was twenty-five, when I became interested in the letters of those w'lio had cases like tniue ind ve'iin wt>r<> betnir cured hv entitle Grapu-Nhts "I hail kittle faith l>ut. procured a hox and after the first dish I ox- I perienoed a peculiar satisfied feeling that I had never gained from any ordinary food. I slept and rested botler that night and in a few days began to grow stronger. "I had a new feeling of peace and restftilness. In a few weeks, to my great joy. the headaches and nervousness left me and life became bright and hopeful. I resumed n\y studies ar.d later taught ten months with ease?of course using GrapeNuts every day. It is now four years sinco I began to use Grape-Nuts, 1 atn the mistress of a happy hoiue and the old weakness has never returned." Name given by Postum Co., Guttle Creek, Mich. "There*# a reason." Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. , . i J IHVX9 itBSStSI9Vt1llllllllttllB^ Fitment which LIQUOR AND MORPHINE HABITS HAVI overnors, Suprome Court Judges and tl iville, and of Western Cities where kn P in Three days, and administer the 1 aent core within a reasonable time, reatments, but are administered in our endorsements and testimonials address, i THREE-DAY LIQ REIDSVILLE, N. C. FADELE oth?r Dtirliv i?.-k?Te col.it' nII tilMtr*. They'd; ( ln.okl?i-Uu?tu L'ja, Ulomli autl Hlx Color*, .fill III ? i|Trn AiiawH*. at (I) pMaoneoi iwr. iMf .l M I f- I I Indian blood vlio ?r? not UtUu Mil I I? Li m* with euy i nb?. (V) ol ui?n who n the Keiler* aro>y rr (S) the iiMitor.) k>n or >-uc* aolilitra ?>r aa lor* now NAl'UAN BICEIOKD. W??hlu?ttm, D.C. ~ So. 39-'06. " Hardly any siian with a wife can afford any tuore exlravauanoe. SORES FhOM HEAD 10 FOOT. Covered With Crusted Sculy Krzruia WSrn One Month Old?On red by Oil intra nt r.x|irinr of Xt.-tO, "When 1 was otic month old 1 wan taken with eczema. After being under the treattneuI oi two doctor# for one month, and >10 improvement, my mother vva? advised by a druggist to try Cuticura Soap and Ointment. 1 watt one eriist of *oro.? from head to foot. My mother could brur.h the scales ufl my body, and my linger and toe nail# fell. After using six CHkes of Cutieura Soap and about, as much Cuticnra Ointment 1 was completely cured. 1 am now seventeen years old. afid my skin has not n sear. I am still finding wonders in Cuticitra; after washing a fever I lister two days it vv.ts completely gone. Your (aitieura (riettd. Mi-t Kola t'lawcoelc, .Mark&vtllc, i.?.. (Vt. 21. taoj.'ileum in love is five* purls pet unities and live parts ^iotrles. PITsl ViC..^IVi?,.o. NT............. fli. .......... ....... nianently cured by Dr. Klini-H Urciti Nervo Restorer. *2 trial Iwttle and treatise free. Or. II. It. Kline. lal.tttl Arch St ., Phila., l a. Damaged. Diner (who has been light in;.r with very t<?n*rli steak)- "Look here, mister, you'll luive to hiinir in.e sottielllitijf else. I eati'l taekle this.'' Waiter (alter eareiul examination of the article)---*' I *m very sorry, sir; hut 1 ean't take it buck; you've bent it." Reflections of a Batchelor. As often as not a girl picks out a hushainl by the way lie waltzes. li' a girl has a good tlgure, she knows it just as well as you do, lint you won't hurt yourself with her to toll her so. A comfort about being cross-eyed is a man can look at a pretty girl without her wanting; to yell l'or th'u police. j rI /J/V A I 1>X(/V MaKa Unhappy Homes ? Both Husband and Ci of* Mothers Have Bee Prostration and Made A norvona, irritable mother, often on j the viT((i' of hysterics, is unlit to cure for children : it ruins n. child's di?r><ivi. ! tion anil reacts upon herself. The j trouble between chi'.dj-en and their! mothers too often is due to the faet j that the mother has ,v>mc female weakness, and she is entirely unfit to bear the strain upon her nerves t hat govern- { ing children involves; it is impossible for her to do anything1 calmly. The ills of women art like a firebrand upon the nerves, consequently nineteenths of the nervous prostration, nervous despondency. " the blues," sleeplessness. and nervous irritability of women arise from some derangement of the female organism. Do you experience fits of depression with restlessness, alternating with extreme irritability? A re your spirits easily affected, so that one ininnte you laugh, and the next minuts you fsel > like crying ? Do you feel something like a ball rising in your throst and threatening to choke you ; all the senses perverted, morbidly sensitive to light and sound ; pain in the abdominal region, and between the shoulders; oearing-down pains; nervous dyspepsia and almost continually cross and snappy ? If so. your nerves are in a shattered condition, and you are threatened with nervous prostration Proof is monumental that nothing in the world is better for nervous prostration than Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; thousands and thousands of women can testify to this fact. ilk Mr*. Ptekluurt A4tkx? Woma MAKES GOOD" 11 : BEEN PERMANENTLY CURED J tie officials of Columbia, Char- j own for seventeen years. j MORPHINE treatment under * A ! handsome Sanitarium which * UORCURECO. ] t tit **** aKH?awa?axaa **** xsar* S S DYES v i. tncuJu water oatier rtiau mv <?tH*r '.ye. Yon cau NROt UKL'W COh laUaVilU. .illwcarl. fh Dropsy II y .VGijia* HtmoTfj alf swelling In H to * i day*; effect* a permanent cure yC\ flit la y>to 60 dnvn. Ti ialtreatment fray. Hothlngi-aa be fnlrer VEKTVpBflflK Writ* Dr. H. H. Greet'* Sons, jffStSoadallst*. Bos b Atlanta. On. CASH Fur Tour Home. T?rni. Tlwb?r l.uiidi or ItHklaru 11 J oil <T?nt<|' lik nn.n?J, tin your |ir?|jnrty wItit iu? Co-op r lion trie t>rk. I Ithttr n*?|p Able ? ?M.i 1 |nlt>? L*..0* for ? ?. Aililreu e>.t* SKiWKl.r, Real r.atute UWtt..- N C. A BIBLE PREE l.rltrr illMf?.??iln?ry DllifrliUil.AM K*H AMIiri'l.l rout"!. Ittehmoait. VaThere is no satisfaction keener than being dry / 1 t M?d comfortable - / / CSn '// . when out in the (. jfijRH*n[SK': / hardest storm YOU ARE SURE ,Sk?8vSf^fek WATERPROOF / ' CLOTHING ;>TOr BLACK OR YELLOW L ^^13! IK- On MsJe everywhere t-tTlm sole reliance of the Czar, his nubility and tlx* tnirr-HUoraey is upon tlx- army. If that fail" thfin they a ? pono and Nicholas will be lucky in escape with Ills life, declares the N< w York Aim-ncaii. Tliat the army wt.l fail the ruling class is highly probable. The soldh rs. like tin- sailors, arc for the most part pi a-. tuts- and drafted peasants at Ilia:. Tney have the thoughts, tho foeings. iho prejudices, the interests of tlt< ir class, ami in spile of every preeaiiiioti revolutionary doctrines have been seduleusi!y spread anionic them. Southern progress can almost lie measured, declares the \thwita Constliniou, by the numlier of techuiral schools in the south. Chile was the lirst South American state to build railwa;. s. of which t new lias nearly li.OOO miles. oiis Mothezs TKeir Condition Irritates hildren - How Thousands in Saved From Nervous i Strong and Well. I qiwa<rv | Airs. Cf?cts. F'&rowri | Mrs. Cluster Curry, leader of ? Ladies' Symphony Ori'hf strt, 4? Saratoga Street, Kast. Boston, Maas., writes: Bear Mr*. PiniihAm:? "For *iglit yuns* I wu troubled with **troxuo uervr.uauma mid hysteria. brought .>a by irregiilaritiaa. I could neither eujoy I;fa nor night*: 1 irrva very Irr table, aervona and deapondeut. " Lydia E. Pinhliam's Vegetable Coui)><sin<f wan r?iH>mn.elided and proved <? ba t.h? onlr retnodv that helj*>d me. I have dally unproved in health until 1 am rtirt strong nnJt wall, aud all nervoueneas haa disappeared Mr*. < harles F. Brown. \ ice-Pre?ident of the Mothers' Club. 81 Cedar Terrace. Hot. Springs, Ark., writes Bear Mrs Pltikbam:? " I dragged through ulna yeai* of miaer.?.! _ i.i, " ?i.. ?i vcxiM.r??. until it soemed aft th/ujrh I should ft}'. 1 than notice. 1 a statement >>t a woinau troubled as I was, and tt? wonderful r<wilta ho dari *?*t from l.vdia K. Pin* hem's Vegetable Compound. i aecMad totiiM. 1 did an, and at the end of tlireo months f <ru a different woman Mr iwtrvottsnear w?s all (one, f wm no longer Irritable. and mv tiunhand ."*11 in lorn with mv all over agniti .* Women should rememberthat I.yiJia K. VMolrhaui'* Vegetable'Compound it ttia medicine that holds the record for the greatest number of aclt al c^res ?.f feuiala ill*, and tana no anottitiito. Free Advice lo Women. Mr*. I'inkhnm, dwufbtr.-in-law of l.vdia K. I'iakhatn. 1 vim. Mas*.. ini ite* all eiek wmvitn to mute to her for advice. Mr* I 'iukkatn'c. vast experience with feiuaie f.r??tibl*uenable*her to advise you wisely, and she will charge yim nothing for he- advice. d B*?t Uwferatawto a Wma'i Ma* I - I