University of South Carolina Libraries
- - ^ngp * ' Hartaarts mtuV. mm li iW^ nint ,?. ?., cczcxa crura. J. r. l!u'.r?.l. Atlmta, OL,-ttni "1 tuffarod a;oay W.tli a a <var* case of oeaema. Triad Mx d.d*?r-nt re middles au I VV In daapatr. wlan a no.^hbor told ma to r-y Miuptilna's Tsrraatya. After usta* *J worth of * our 7amaiys and soap I am completely cured. 1 eauaot iay too much in it* pralfco." '1 arranrsta at druralsta or by tr.all jJo. fo*i> St*o. J. T. UuvrzMiHX. l/ept. A, Uovaaa&h. Oa. You triny retire an oltl horse after long service without its resting much, hut it is another thing to retire nn automobile. Micks' l'a;?udlue Cure* Headache, V> hrtliar lr~m cold*. h??t. atomnou or nervous troubles. No A"C?tanilid or tla:ip-erou? il.ttjrs. It's li?(ni<l autl.aota un-mv 0lately. Trial L? ttio lUr. Lb**, alar ancoa St.Vc. and .Vic., st nil dl*uci;ibt*. The best cure for 'druukennes-'s is while sober to see n drunken ma.i.? Chinese. OXK K1DNKY GONK, Hut Cuntl After port or* Haiti There \Vnti No llopc. SylvtnijR o. Vorrlll. Mllfnrd. Me . 6i:s; "Five ycara *30 a bad Injury t paralyzed m? and effected my kldhurt mi! terribly, and th4 urine was lectors said my fy, light kidney was never walk again. 1 read of Ooan's Kidney Pills nml began using them. One box mndo me stronger nnd freer from pain. ' kept on using theru. and In three months was able to get out on crutches, nnd the kidneys were acting better. I improved rapidly, discarded the crutches and to the wonder or my friends was soon completely cured." Sold by nil dealers r>0 rents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., HufTalo. N. Y. GIRLS TO STUDY JOURNALISM. i A Mascr.chusetts Girls' Collosc Establishes the Fir3t Schocl of Journalism in Such a:i Institution. Northampton, Mass., Special.--If j the present crop of cob-pipe smoking, cussing, booze-fi^hting, blue-pencil I tilinnw " > ? 1 ' ?... j,.. .. % ?? ^wiiu* unw, I morning; to find themselves minus thoir jobs, and 'm> editorial chairs J in the newspaper offices of the con:.- i try filled by beautiful young; garlics in ! dircctoire gowns and "merry widow" ] hats, the aforesaid masculine journa- | lists may blame Smith College. ForSmith has eKtablishcd a School of J Journalism?the first of its kind in J the world to be opened by a college | exclusively devoted to the education of the fair se::. The work is not intended to deal with any of the theories of journalism hut is devoted to giving the students a little practical training in the requirements of newspaper writing. The students themselves refer to ",t as the "newspaper course," and most of those taking it arc either doing this? kind of work "on the side" while still at college, or expect to {jo ^ into it after graduation. The course opened this fall with n I study of the types of newspapers and newspaper style. Beginning with the most conservative, the students have been directed to write articles suitable for them. The course is extremely popular among the so-enlled "literary lights" of the senior class. The Nown of the Day. The girl with a scrawny neck naturally thinks decollete gowns bad taste. So. 47-'08 .It's herd for a busy man to be truthful, for lie is happiest when lying. liul for the mistakes made by great men, history would be awfully uninteresting, The United State a produces 20.704,12S barrels of unit, each of 2S0 pounds, in 1907, leading the world in tho industry. On the occasion of the Into jubilee of the town of AYilhelmburj; in Govmany, the burgermeister received a telegram. signed by all the unmarried girls of the place, advising him to get married, and Baying that none of the undersigned hod any objection to becoming his wife, VTWARli BTART dfter Changing From Coffee to Uoe- 1 turn, Many a '.(dented person Is kept back because of the Interference of coffee with the Uourletmcct of the body. This Is especially so with thoac whoso nerves are very sensitive, as Is often tho case with talenied persons. There Is a simple, easy way to got rid of coffee evils, and a Tenn. lady's experience along these lines is worth considering. She says: "Almost front the beginning of the use or coffee It hurt my stomach. 13y the time I was fifteen I was almost a nervous wreck, nerves all unrtrung, no strength to cudure the most trivial thing, either work or fun. "There was scarcely anything I eould est that would agree with me. The little t did eat soemrd to give me more trouoio tuan it v.-ar, worth, i finally quit coffee ond drank hot water, hut there was so little food I could digest. 1 was literally starving; was so weal: I could not sit up long at n time. "It was then a friend brought nie o hot cup of Postum. 1 drank part of it and after un hour I felt as though 1 had had something to eat ? felt strengthened. That was about five years ago. and after continuing Postum In pl&co of coffee and gradually getting stronger, to-day I can eat and digest anything 1 want, walk as much as I want. My nerves arc steady. "I boliavo the first thing that did mo any good and gave me an upward start, was Postum, and I use it altogether now Instead of coffee." "There's a Reason." < Name given by Postum Co., Rattle Creek, Mich. Rend "The Road tc Wellvllle," In pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appear* from time to time. They are fmotne, true, and full ol hsr^OiawM^ . ? - w* * * | OUR. SCHOOLS i * ' IJr I'mr. V."iu.iam H. Hand. j* ** University of Sooth Carolina. T * * Pnpor Ntunber Ten. 1 WtiO IS RESPONSIBLEf Who is responsible for our ill-equipped high schools, with-' their short int'iTicient courses of study, their lack of teachers to do the work, and the relatively small number of pupils there ? The answer is, the superintendents cn! principals, the people, and the eollogrs. The superintendents and princijKils are right iv looked 1o by tiie people for leadership in bnil ling up the high schools. They are largely responsible for the educational ideas of their communities, and the attitude of the people toward high schools. If the sourse of study is overcrowded with -uujevin or ik Brrappy 111 us material, thev alone are responsible. Many a high Rchcc) without a map, a chart, a globe, rv any other necessary apparatus, mi slit have at least a few such thin?* bougnt with the money spent on so-called commencements, baccalaureate addresses, invitations, programs. rule hcoks, etc. Moreover, many 11 boy and many a girl not in the high school would be, it' they had only a few encouraging: words spoken to them. It is to be feared that the public high school teacher is not always miiriful of the pupils who are out of school hut ought to be in school. Finally, many a high school :s running in a rut. because the principal is running in one. The people are emphatically to bluuie for not supporting their high school;. Tlie.v put neither their money nor their children in them. Throughout the State, in places easily pointed out. are high schools scarcely worthy of the name, but which might be made within live years to rank high, if the people in those places were only willing to use a little common sense business sagacity. Why a sensible man will refuse to help his home school by patronizing it. but instead will help to maintain one away lrom home l>\ sending bis children there, is one of the strange things in life. Ik gets 110 better advantages for hi< own children, and refuses t<> help his neighbor at home who is uncl)l.* to send his children from home. Heme the home high school lags. It costs todnv $'2~?0 to send a pupil a year to school away from home. Why will four men thoroughly familiar with the laws of business co-operation take their sons and daughters l'loiu their own high school, to send them nw.vy at an expense of $1,000 a yoarf Why will they not put even half that money in the home school, thereby keeping their money and their children at home, and at the same time when the children need parental attention Anderson, one of the four places last year with a four-year public high school, has hn l to abandon its lltli grade, although 12 of her last year's 10th grade are off at college. Five from the 1 titli grade and seven from iiu' "m!i graoe are at folli'?c! These 24 pupils air costing the people of Anderson $(5,000 this year; this year Anderson is paying her entire high school teaching force less than $4.000. Ninety-Six added the lltli erode this year, kept ."> pupils out of last year's 10th grade. sent 9 out of the same tirade to college, and pays two high school teachers this year $1,:J60. These nine pupils, with one from the 9th grade, at college, will tliis yiar cost the people of that town more than thev are spending on their entire school from the lirst grade up. The people of Pendleton, Seneca. Union, Woodruff and numbers of other planes are impoverishing their high schools in the same way. What is the tioablef The people are still blinded by that fundamental error? that the function of the high school is to prepare students for college. Nine-tenths of the pupils who tinish the 7th grade never see the doors of n college. True, in addition to the subjects necessary to college entrance wo have added to the traditional course a large number of side-dishes, m> to speak. These side-dishes arc nothing but relishes, to bo tasted occasionally. The people and the principals have put no meaty courses parnil -I to that single one which loads straight to the college door. The people ljv their own ovt-sightedness and unwillingness to learn stand ami see their own strong rind sturdv Rons step out of the school room at the ctrl of the flth grade, because tlnsc | sens novo found that their parents and leathers have pat nothing in the j high school except nourishment fcr i thr? college candidate. Is the reader beginning to see whurein the college* are responsible for the unsatisfactory high school conditions? Every college in South CniTlinn. State, denominational, and private. ! > doing high si'heol work in its roll eye ionrses. This statement needs no proof: the high schools are not doing the work, and it must In lone i;t the colleges, if done at all Formerly, and not so 1 nig ago. ill colleges were all bat helpless in thi matter?they had to take the raw unprepared material or (lose tliei; deors against depriving boys and girb unable to get the proper preparation 1 have already argued that the big' schools ?re not yet ready to turn's! properly prepared students to fin ollcges. The lines of demarealioi between high schorl terrifrvv a !<! (< I lege tcvitoiv can not be deliaitelv li\ ed. yet with us pert to the age of h* pupil and lo a majority of tin* s.ili w?,.tu ..f : .1,1 ... .-mil , IIHUIVC I IIIITC IS ill reodv oonskUmble unity of opinion. Taking into careful consideration t he actual conditions which exist, lot the ?ol)ege act u reasonable number of high school unit# (not grammar school units) as the minimum required for entrance. A standard tbrec\*or.r high school ought to do 12 unit? f work. Since most of onr high chools arc thrcc-vcnr schools, tltn' tan.dard ought not to be unreason ible. (A standard of venrs canne Sa set up; every one knows that th tenth grade is not definite as to what is accomplished; besides, some schools run nine mouths, seme eight, ciul a few only seven.) First, let each college make its utranoo requirements definite?let its standard bo high or low, as it chooses, but let it be definite. Second, let the college live up to its published claim. Colleges cannot be uniform in standards, pcihaps there is no need for I such uniformity, hut all can bo honest in these standards. After all. it is a question of morals, and if a college should stan i lor anything it should stand for unswerving rectitude. It is just as reprehensible lor a college as a body corporate to advertise 011 standard and act on another, as it would I) - for one of its professois to promise one thing and do another. The popular mind lias come to look upon the published entrance requirements of ?oiicges as fakes. W'tli a college catalogue hefore yqu giving it" entrance requirements in Iv.iglish, Mathematics, Latin and History, at a standard which the avcraga svhcol of ten grades is failing to reach, and you know it, your uiiud iu likely to bo disturbed when you know tTvat the same college is taking pupil.V "from Pth grades, and occasionally frtm Sili grades. What ere the facts? With fnil\ twenty hiph schools yet to hear from T have the naniTs of 154 pupils who have entered college this session fiom t'tli {Trades, and liti pupils from Sth {jrades. These students reported as entering the preparatory depar nient of a college, were of course not inc lude !. Kverv colli ire in the State, and several outside, are reported as shnnn?r the sjioiis. It is hard t > reconcile fuse cold tads v.'itli the constant wail of the colleges for heller prepared students, an 1 with the perennial a-nio MH cnients ahout having raised statdaris. If a eol!? {?: after ten or twcl.c years of standard-rtisinjr is canvassing ' r !"h prude pupils. and taking Sth srrad s ones, what must the standard have bun when ii bepan raisinp! The evil genius v.hic-li dominates our colleges is {Treed for numbers. lh?ar!> of tiustecs. faculties, a:nl the | pMple are all uncle: the niaaie spell, i There is no objecticn whatever to numbers in the colli u s. if their presence is not he uirlit with a price. The constant cry is. "Send 11- more .tn-j den's; make room tor mot students; 1 look at the students beimr I it: nrd aw;iv IT0111 the college doors." The pubiic I mind ia iis hysterical moments fails i to a rasp the signilioanee ? ' the plainest facts. 1'c.r instance, tlm colh c::'oilmen! in South ("niolina last year was more than one-third tin high si I c ol enrollment. What i- the - jTliiti-alien of this fad .' Agai 1. \\ thic p ( c !l uc had this year !,t)-!7 applieants for admission, ffjtt w. re a ' nitt 'ei; .">*27 were rel'usecl, President Inlin.-on rcpoits that fully ;H>i* ol hose refused were not prepared to ntc r Winthiop at all. ( I .orison !md MI7! r.pphrations for admission. 1-^ \ere admit 1 !; "2 hi were refused, "rosi 'rut Mi ll i'| 01! that '2(t'i apph- i ants failed c;i aecouut of examinaii!!. The other ccdlrr: hav 1 snni! 1 experiences. The cry should lie <ir !>. :;or !uvi11 : ! < ols > ;i r pulton-' <<d. fvminded. Will Ec Extra Session. .. Washington. Special.?That a special session of the Sixty-first Congress will he callcil scon after the 4th ol March to take up the matter of tariff revision, became positively known Sunday when William 11. Tatt President-! I ct. after spending I tie day at the Wldte lions' as the gu of President liooscv.lt. state ; that he intended to call the special s. ss:on to dim t as soon afte his inauguration as would he reasonable. Jar. arc' IZvz. Eryan to Vi:A IlzxiC Tzi:. Tnn.pi. n?.. Speeial. In a lute to President T. ). Blown, of th State Fair Association. William ,1 j Bryan has accepted an invitation !< ! visit Tampa during the fair. M: and M:.s. Bryan will at rive in Tamp the latter part of January, going i< Cuba for a shr.it visit and returnin will spend at l ast a week in Tamp: j Preparations are being made J'o ! Bryan day at the fair. Crop Values for 1C03 Eigher Than in Previous Ycare. Washington. Special.?The Depart-; i ment of Agriculture issued a preliminary estimate of the pioduotion o! the principal crops of tho United States showing that corn, wheat, o.ttf i and eight other crops, representing, approximately 70 per end of th< value of all farm crops this yeor aggregate about 3 per e?nt. grcalci then a year ago and 2.4 per cent greater than the average for the past five veers. FFVE"^ Free Safety Razor With e /ery order for three or 4 3-4 gallons of our "Korking Korn" 3 gallons, $5.95 12 quarts, - $6.45 4 3-4 gals., $8.45 16 quarts,T- $8.95 "This is a High-Class Old Cori Express charges prepaid an good. Our shipping house is which gives us the best and qi money order with order and v A. Hatke & Co.) Dist P. O. Box 37'. jEstablis 1 THE NEWS IN BRIEF -! Items of Interest Gathered By | Wire and Cable ' GLEANINGS FRCM DAY TO DAY Live Items Covering Events of More 1 cr Less Interest at Home and I Abroad. * I * Forcini Affairs. The German city of Flaucn was , shaken by an earthquake. A steamer was wrecked on a Japanese island with a loss of 150 lives. Vietorien Sartioy, the famous French playwright, died after a long illness. Cubans will vote for President and other olliceis under the restored republic next Saturday. Rumor of further procrastination in the present awkward German situation caused indignation. While J. L. Morgan, ol' Marion. X. i C., hunted his eloping daughter in Paris she was married to W. P. Craig, .a clerk, in London. 1 In tlio South. Dr. John S. Lupton, the pioneer fruit grower of Winchester, is dead. P?nvs under 1(5 smoking cigarettes in Honaker, Wise county,' Vu., will be lined tflO. James Grant was found dead in the road near Abingdon, Va., having apparently been murdered. In a tight following tlie olee ion at Ilurrirans Creek. Buchanan county. ! a judge's nose was broken. J)r. W. S. Gregory who is accused of attempting to assault a patient, will he put on trial in Koanok.-. The Maryland Psychiatric Society, for ihe study of nervous diseases was organize I at the Sheppj'.rd and Kiioeli Pratt Hospital. After failing to commit suicide Th.ome.s Clarence asked a Norfolk judge to send him to the electric chair. National Affairs. The Government board has decided to test a new signal invention for an- 1 tomatie control of trains. The lions1 Committee wiil iv^xt begin public hearings on the propos. ed bill to revise the tariff. President Kooscvelt made public a , letter in which lie denounces the attempt in the campaign to drag into! polities the religion;; belief of Mr. Tuft. Miscellaneous. Nat ('. Goodwin and lain a Goodrich were married. A Cambridge professor found in Mcxiio a tribe of Indians living in an absolutely primitive state. The New York Psvchical Society has offered a reward of $5,000 for any real communication with spirits. The general committee on foro.gn missions of the Methodist Kpiseopal Church appropriated $1,000,000 for ( missions. Chares W. Morse, hanker, was sentenced to 15 years in the penitentiary. Alfred 11. Curtis, the ex-bank presi- | dent, being released. A civic exhibit will bo :i feature of ; the annual meeting o ft he National j Municipal League ami the American j Civic Association in Philadelphia. President Compels, of the Fedcra- j t'on of Labor, faces a hard tight at } the annual convention on account of his course in the national campaign. As a result, it is believed, of the letters written bv Mrs. Peter C. Ilnins. Jr.. to her husband there lias been a big shake-up among the officers at Fort Hamilton. The United States Circuit Court at Chicago issued a temporary order enjoining the rate reduction on Missouri river traffic made bv the Interstate Commerce Commission. Chancellor Day, of Syracuse University. declared Mr. Taft to he a great piece of ballast, which can be depended on to keep the country ' straight. New Yoik had its first s;:o?v flurry of the scaaon. NO PUNSTER. The nost::n boy b.ibv oontemptu* flusly rejected the alphabet blocks that some misguided Western relative had rrr.* him ns n present. "Of all the Intellectual diversions." j ho exclaimed, "playing on words Is 1 absolutely and unquestionably the most trivial."?Chicago Tribune. ARS OLD!" Free Watch Fob I < ! will. every order for one or | j , two gallons of our I ( "Korking Korn" 1 gallon, $2.45 4 quarts, $2.60 I 2 gallons, $4.70 8 quarts, $4.95 I i 24 pin!?, or 48 half pints, $6.70 i Whiskey, Yellow and Mellow." d losses and breakage made next door to express office, jickcst shipping facilities. Send rrite for big price li^t. illers f Richmond, - Va. bed 1867 t 800-806 East Carv Street ' t % The General Demand &f the Well-Informed of the World has xlways been for a simple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physicians could sanction for family use because its component part3 are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial in efi'cct, acceptable to the system and gentle, yet prompt, in action. # In supplying that demand with its excellent. combination of Syrup of Tigs and F.lixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies Dn the merits of the laxative for its remarkable success. That is one of many reasons why Svrup of Fig3 and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the Well-informed. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine?manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leuding druggists. Prico fifty cents per bottle. When will is right, law is ban- j islicd.?Danish. IIIrks' Cnpudlnc Cures Women's Monthly 1'nins, backache. Nervousness, a in I llendnche. It's Liquid. Effects nmne (Lately. Prescribed by physicians with best results. 10c.. 25c.. and*50c.. nt drug stores. A new broom sweeps clean, hut, alas, it slays n new broom such a little while. A Cure for Hog Cholera. Hog Cholera or Swine Plague as It Is sometimes called is a highly contagious disorder. When a hog shows any symptoms of this disease, ho : hould be isolated at unco and the pen fumigated in order io save the otuer hogs if possible. Mix one part Sloan s I.iuiuient with tv.o parts miliv in a bottle and give every sick hog a tablespoon!ul of this mixture nignt and lnoniing tor three uays. ?loei? s i.iuiiuent is a power- ( iai antiseptic, Iviil> tin tin-ease germs, . oothis uii inllaininati an ami uots as a tunic to tbi: annual. A. J. McCarthy of Idaville, Iud., :ays:?"My uogs had hog cholera three davs before we got Sloan's i.immeut, whicn was roc munended to | i.:c by a neighbor who was using it with success. 1 have used it now for three days and my hogs are almost well. One hog died before I got the i.ininuut, hut 1 have not lost any t ir.ee." Mr. G. \V. I'alsliaugh of Pern, Intl.. writes:?"I had four pigs that were toughing and were not doing well. I . ave them roino of Sloan's Liniment and they got better at once." Sloan s book cn Horses, Cattle, Hog.; and Poultry sent free. Address Or. Earl S. Slyn. Boston, .Mass. Pert Paragraphs. The man who makes a great ileal nl his I'ailutes doesn't make much < 1 a success. Wofnen don't have to swear to show how mad they are. There are other ways. The eloeks in some households softer so much ft tun congestion of ilit* face that il scents impossible for any members of the household ever to be mi time. Catarrh Cannot He Cured Willi i.ooai. AflM.ications.na thev nintiot rem h the sent nl the d isp'ii?e ('iitiirrh i- ? tilood or cviiist it ut loiml di-case. n11.1 in order *11 rlire it con must inke inlerii.il lemeili. s 11.ill m i .Hiu rh Cute is taken intern.11!v. uikI aet* directly on the hlood anil mucous surface. Units Cnturrh One ts not h quack medicine. It wis pre?cril>?i l?v one oi t!ie >est physicians lit this country tor icais. and is n regular piewript ion It is composed ot the f>est tonics Known.eonthineil with 'he opsi stood oiirihets. actina itire<-tl> on the mucous suriiires. I'lie ported cotiilnu.ii ion it the two uiitredients is what produce* siicti wonderful results in curing eatairti. fu'Od tor testimonial*. tico. t- CttK.VKY & Ct?.. Prop*.. l olcdo.U. >old liv dniugtfcts, price. T.'.c. J ake llall's T-anulv Pills lor constipation. . Tallen Ey the Wayside. A smooth river washes away its banks.?Servian. Cold is proved with fire; friendship in need.?Danish. Out of a great evil comes a great good.?Italian. Kindness and courtesy need elbow room and are smothered to death in i crowd. (iond Thing to Know. Those who traverse tho glknU t> 1 a 1 (iu of tho West anil Inhabit tho , i-aml blown regions ot Texas, liucl 'tally need for a rellabio eye salvo i They never drug the eye. but Gliuply ' apply oxtcrnally tho staple, D.- i Mitchell's lOye Salve. This Salve Is ! *old everywhere. Prlco UGc. Industry is the parent to sucocss and the success belongs to tho man who wons the industry. Cures Through the Mood ; fmm'm M 1 The Old Stc.ndc.rd GROVE'S ' m system. Yen knov/ what you c: ^ is simply Quinine and Iron in a 1 f\ ff If ?S. T A or? r \J ? NAM moreCr*w1? brlffhtor unit fus.cr color'. !:ij'i a.iy < mii Jany KaruiNil without iippuu ujiuri. Wr.to Coughing Speile |?? ?:j promptly relloveJ by a ?ir,. gal gledose olPiso't Cure. The regular uee of this famous remeoy will relieve the worst r#i| form of coughs, colds, hoarse- CvHj r.stt, htonelmls, asthma and dieeases of the throat end lunge. Sgl Absolutely free from harmtul Wi"3 druse ana opiates. For hall a tVJB century the household remedy y**5 tn millions of homes. At all dr * rcists*, 25 cte. ?-' > Provcrs and Phrases. The cottage is a palace to the popr. i ?French. ' A feast is worth nothing without its conversation.?Irish. A day's pleasure and a year's grief.?Modern Greek, A friend is both a comfort and a treasure.?German. Absence makes the breakfast table more alluding and the home bed seem a heap softer. | Good Ones. No married man ever keeps a I secret in easy reach. When some men think. tlu.it brains seem to ereak so that it just dives you the headache to hear them. People who have no brains are fortunate, indeed, if they enn draw on their bankets for what passes for brains. Meat women are fond of men. but i so many of them are so particular as j to what men. It is extremely trying to he obliged ( to associate with people who always i and invariably would rather not. 1 SEVERE BLEEDING HEMORRHOIDS, Sores, and Itching Kncmn?Doctor I Thought an Operation Necessary t ?Cuticura's Eflirary Proven. "I am row eight? vcir? o!d. and three years ago I was t:;..en *.v.th an attnek of riles (I'^tnnrrhoinsl. bbv iin- and pmtrudinc. The doctor nasi the only help for ic.e >va? to go to ;< hospital and be operated on. V tried seven! .eincdics for uu-nths but did not get much help. 1 living this time sires appeared which chau-od to a terrible itching eczema. Then I began to use Cut sura Soap. Ointment, rod Pdls. injecting a onantltv of Cut ioir-i < i:..?.......i .....t. . mm Suppository Syringe It took a mouth of this trentir.<-nt to got too in \ fnirlv ] healthy ?-t:iti? :,u | tlion I treat -.! tnv?.?1f once :i day for thro* months ami. aft or j that, once i twice a week. The treat- j moots 1 tri" I took a lot of money, ntel it , is fortunate that I use I Cutiourn. .1. If. llcmlet> in, I! ipkint it, N. Y., Apr. 2C, "07." , < A pleasant tliinj; never comes tuo ] soon.?Danish. i Ct'HKK At.I. If' II I N ( 1 It 17 l*TI ON'S. ' Gloneon. Md.. Nov. 2l?t. 1 v?t)7: '1 hnvo hni eozstiia on mv hands f >r li v<* irs. ai 1 have ' trI ? I everytliiuir I tiav i ln> i:i initio ur- 1 TcniNK 4 days and th results an* er.*at." , Signed, Mrs M Harvev. I k r r ki.i s r. i.-tlm Ml rest. safest, speediest euro tor erzoina ' ' and all other skin disoai 's. -old by drug- i ' gist. or s?nt bv mail f ir 5M bv J. 'i-. snrr- < tui.sk, Dept. a. Savannah, Gi. i j I i< i ii < uunst l is iiel ier t linn :t Hunts- ! :i:t 1 hands. ? (hi man. ' Itch cured in ill minutes by Wool ford'a j Sanitary I. ion Never tods At druggist- | (' in rti it a sin twiie an 1 von will! hi11U it allowable. Hebrew. . _____ t (O^ASSTFTE^A,DVEH 1 1 1? . ? N K-.S \ N O ( VI A It IOI <1 ? K. I I MIA I KNr t A I A It till.\ li .11 I.I A I ores | I I sifor? n11?I ( ilat rli I'rtal 11 i-ilu i-i.t bjt lio I 'icq l.'l V I'' M tnneao ?1 '.AllkH?j So: 47-'08. Nothing New or iviysterioua. "ASK votu GRAND. ht&xgjg MOTHER." BlIHiGtifl Kor many iTMieraiions Go.i.?e . . a . ;:a . he n re<?o;rni>? t ? ( a \v ?:i to hi! rem > ti il in* trim tn treat.n,- aad curiae I'neammla Grippe. Rheumatism and N -urn! :i.i. KU'ir'S t?i> i - |J UltE AS tv 1.1 NT M KS r is uiadn f> a pare iro oe crease. ivttli other valuable o.native lugrodtonts s ided 'I ry It 25o \t all llnrrjUts ami Ili-alnvu-tiSe, 20055 GREASE COMPANY, ???,??<? tie-i O Insist on Havlnc . for ' Br. WAK'ihL'i fr-upariition r*t! I be IMninlu r?t l<ftllvU> . a: ll!.l'OUt8t-3. Mcinl lor book, Ui'tiet lor W osiion." I RfcNCU DKUG CO., 30 W, 32d St., N. Y. City, f.MIL'tili ATlttM (>' ** itralilc, iliou-an-l-ruri-il to. |\ll,.l;.Trt! iJ.tl ui.,-1 ... ? (ranter III veil. |>r ten loU. VliTli-n.UU'ii. t lliV> u lull t I'.ii.i I., i-rrii. llld. Hotter yo nbetit than be drowned. ?French. ! To Drive Out Muluriu and iiuild l*p the System Take -the Old Standard Uuovs'h Tast*- , i.kss L'hii.l Toxic. Yoi know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed, on every dottle, allowing it is simply t^uiuineaud Iron iu a tasteless form, aoa the most effectual form. 1 or grows people anu children, oOu. Corruption will never want a protense.?Cato the Ypurigi r, I Mrs Winslow's Sooliiu Sv: , , f'lilidroii loct!iiny.sol'teu> llit-^un. . indu v u .?11 :> i.ujuj a . I "it ia qqbv to cut thongs from other i men 'a leather.?Dutch. ~ "~lMi J. R.WI , 1 ttilho* TO UlflVrent At " K*trml?nll It!ml-. 'i J Car.itcisjsi'j * W U) tear* I!xj BEST PROPOSITI les, Btchin^ Humors, F Poison, *" Eczema, E U.B li. iti..(ume UioodBalm 1 is (lie Biond lie blood and then pur;iies it?genuine ?11 of i>v u face. Bones, Joints, and whtrev;>r tlic diarss.i is leers, l"im;> es. Krupti >rh a e hc.\ r land c-ire I. j-i ease. awe.liners sal side it It It eomt.l -le.y ehan omlltlon, pfving tl.f > kin ' Us rich, r. d li ; ' i <t! mr-1 old en-es. 'I rv i' vl oil nar l.irjn butt * >r home cure. SAVIl'I.K rtiKKliyv-i i :i 111,11 rv-"A"."r" ym^rr^rrr^zT7i"^"TTTrr.ir-i lakes Fate Sickly c/ TASTELESS CIIiTJ, TONIC, driv : "2 taking. The f ;r:\-.!n i:-. plainly prii tasteless, end the tno; t Cfcctticl form. TADELi;! >tlt'V .1 <?n,. l . J>1-K.1SO 'T, Ji fllHT*. I hrv !??r fr?o t^/nicij-? ii.iw id I'M*. Itiittv i iu i 3i:s Union ^j ?-? f; fck A hAi.HKTJi f A SURGICAL OPERATION a tvoman dreads more than another it -S a surgical operation. A\"o can state without fear of a ontradietion that there are hunIrcds, yes, thousands, of operations performed upon women in our hospitals which are entirely unnecessary and many have been avoided by, LYDiAE.PIMKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND For proof of this statement mad l... r n : i . . .in- luiiitwiiig icurrs. Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kinsman, Kansas, writrs to Mrs. J'inkham: " l\?r oi-rlit years 1 buttered from Iho nest severe forniof female troubles and vas told that an operation \v:;s my only ipeof recovery. 1 wrote Mrs. l'inkham 'or advice, nv.d tooU I.ydia 10. I'inkhain's ?'c!fctable Compound, and it lias saved ny life and intide me a well woman." Mrs. Arthur If. Hotiso,of Church Itoad, Moor, town. N. .I., writes: " 1 feel it is tny ilnty to let people tnoiv wlilt Idia 10. l'inkliara's Vege:alde Compound lias done for me. I mlTered from female troubles, and last Mareli my plivsieiau decided that an operation was neeessary. My husband iWjeoted, and urced me to try I.ydia 10. 1'inkliani's Vegetable Compound, md to-dav I am well and strong," FACT5 FOR SiCK WOMEN. For thirty yours I.ydia F.. l'inkl'.tin's Vegetable Comi>ound, made from roots and herbs, lias been the standard remedy for female ills, md has posit ivelv on red thonsandsot wonn n whobave been troubled with lisjilueenients, inllunnnation,tilcera:ion, iihroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, and baekaehe. Mrs. l'inklium invites till sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass* /mil ^ ^ mm / ]jy n y\\\A: \km '' \V. i.. i)mii;tn* make* ami npIIi more ^ men'* sK.l.ifi) :tn<l :9S.SO nliim* tlutn i?i?y ullii'l' iiuoitilit.Hirer in: till' world. Ih?i iiiiko lliry linltl t liolr sfiu|>?', tit better, niitl ivenr limber than any oilier lunke. Shr.rj at All Prices, for Every Member of tho Far, y. M*n. Boys. Warren. Mis.esS Children v.* L PonnlalS't 00*:id SS.00 (lilt rdf Uhrwn cannot tc "1 kt anyprt.. W L lK>u,l?? iz 60 and t I OJ kh> . arc the beet In the world /'fii/ Cultii' 1't/rhti / ,< #/ I re!tmivrly. 3J~ I'.ik.' > ? "..ii'.lllMle. IV. I. Iloucla* tit'io- mil jiti ik M?iii|? \ < in Unit,mi. Soil , o lii-i, k,;. rs mt i. i itk'in farioryto any i.:ttI i.t it." """ilit. I' 11.* 1 > 'ii' fr" W.I. lillt'til SS. 157 Spirk St., tirnikton. M*??. ^ * * < ^ ^ ^ ^ : Enjita, linrn Shelters, \ Miters. Calion Mooters, \ : Saw .Mills. Stocks. ; AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS GENERALLY. * * Sonvl for fr. p ."attilogur. . * I A. B. Farqulmr Co.,Ltd., ycrk, Pa. X Dropsy si V t/SSX> Rftnovr* all swelling In 8 to ? ^ days; cilccts a percianrnt cura AI\. a)L in joto <o dave. Trialtreatmanl /V W i?e;l 'Tf"r ' otbirttcan be (aire* &\f;* t>5att^r] v< r.-.r Dr. d. ft. Green's 8on?. y&rjSncclai'ata. 80* o Atlanta. Of |N V !:ir 1 run * mitt Yliiibr;*. t*:u * t..j'llcUo?t am) n . i|.?.i . ? tn. S.M. I f?< i<?rtlo?Ur . 'rank t? h.v t?. J \n lU.vn.a Avo..f'ur|!ai;tl,a>rtt So. -17-'03. ITKINS MEDICAL CO.' )NA, MINNESOTA. Itfli-m tJr>l??rln?1il Rftni-iilo, PlH?oi'lj||' rollt-i frrpnrtltlona. i'lnr ' ..?\>?. Kle. anted in E.>dcry County. icrlrftc*. MH.OOO.OOt) Output. ION ?:?? 0aajgp AGENTS fcheuaratism, Blood Sorce Pains. ' iei . >!v ilia', k. ? t:ie i> son In iVrllCk re, rich blond di: cct to t hr * . tn ^ I' fatcl. In this v 1 v nII re*, T* it; M nl 1' ip.h Ith?un ntl--m /vCV-- U* | 1 -r. !. . . ,ty i :or ran. nltHy JjXmSifu I ' '. th :il 1: It It It ? 1 t'l' I' ' J' j ioD BALM < <> , lot*, <; I rsii s a "i. ; out Mr.!rr:n *: \ huil V; t:p the M atc d on cvcv; , : h Q j r t r* "'*.** ]\ i i! el -C: 1 C' IJ JS & Y E S . w . . r !i i in r .(ye, YoO . ,1U? to11 not < { ().. (Jiiiitfv i.rtuiii^, FOR MEN. | If tt o T" (toai o" yotir 9 wi^o Is t!.:Tirciit from tho fl xntom of your font, it puflhoe tim B out of plfujo. strains the cordp. B ot. 1, ',d lanion^ns. H MU I ! I. e : ato n like