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^ HUSBAND TiRFn nc scrum rllUHV VI VkklllU HER SUFFERi Procured Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which made His Wife a Well Woman. Middletown, Pa. ?"I had headache, backache and auch awful bearing down pains that I could not be on my feet at times and I had organic inflammation so badly that I was not able to do my work. 1 could not get a good ineal for my husband and one rVlild Mv rwiirrliKora <!i.l 1 they thought my suffering was terrible. | " My husband got tired of seeing mo suffer and one night went to the drug store and got me a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and told me I must take it. I can't tell you all I suffered and I can't tell you all that your medicine has done for me. I was greatly benefited from the first and it has made me a well woman. I can do all my housework and even helped some of my friends as well. I think it is a wonderful help to all suffering women. 1 have got several to take it after seeing what it has done for me."?Mrs. Emma Espenshade, 219 East Main St., Middletown, Pa. The Pinkham record is a proud and honorable one. It is a record of constant victory over the obstinate ills of woman ?ills that deal out despair. It is an established fact that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has restored health to thousands of such suffering women. Why don't you try it if you f/ need such a medicine? If you want special advice writo to LjdlaE. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held In strict confidence. AMERICAN IDEA. The American?What's your lather's business? The Englishman?My-aw-fathaw-has- 1 aw-no business. The American?Then what's his graft. In the Day of the Billionaire. A brilliant New York lawyer said at a dinner at the Lotus Club apropos Of certain trust magnates: "Thanks to watered stock?and watered stock is criminal abroad?these men are indeed rich beyond the dreams of avarice. "If the watering of stock is allowed to keep on we'll hear our billlouuires talking like this some day: " 'Hullo! There goes Jones in his H: 300 horsepower car. Do you know him?' ".'Do I know him! I)o I know Jones! Why. man nlive. Jones and T were struggling young millionaires together!'"?New York Times. I ! Usually when a girl meets a man she likes on the street by accident it Isn't an accident at all. Ready Cooked Meals are rapidly growing in popular favor. Post Toasties iV. served either with cream or good milk, or preserved fruit, malee* a meet /4??sV? "I K*- 'f> """ for breakfast, dinner, or supThese delicious toasted flaky bits of white corn have a de'icate taste that is very pleasing at this time of year. Post Toasties are economical, make less work for the busy housewife and please everyone at the table. fi "The Memory Lingers" Sold by Grocer* everywhere | Poitnm Cereal Co., Ltd., I Battle Creek, Mich. ; V;1! ^ \ * STEAMER Dl Ill a recent blinding Hnowstorm t In the "ships' graveyard." JuBt west c the revenue cutter Mohawk, which wc Writer Reveals Fiendish Acts Committed by Turks. Bulgar Soldiers, Maddened by Treatment of Their Countrymen, Show Moslem Troops?Women Are Horribly Mutilated. Kabaktcha Village, near Tchatalja. ?Owing partly to the fear of bloody vengeance to coine for the horrors of this war, partly to more natural causes, great migratory changes are taking place in that rich eastern section of Turkey In Europe through which tho Bulgars swept on their hurricane utnrm ~ -.-u- r"' 1 ... w I V I111LI11J4X. 1UUUKU from all uppearances the old regime of murder, mutilation and Injustice will Boon be forever ended, the fearstruck Turkish population is moving southward again toward Asia Minor, whence It came, while the Bulgar peasants of the Tchatalja district are Ueelng as nervously north. Amid these scenes of exodus, one Is led to think It may yet not be too late to bring some order in the Balkan racial chaos. Meanwhile, the Turks have waged tho present conflict In their old style ?burning, violating, mnssacring. Almost at the Bulgarian frontier the utroclous tale begins. Well, the moment the war was declaied the Turks began to loot and burn the Bulgar villages. But as the stern soldiers from the north pressed down, w'lnnlng victory after victory, the Turkish population, perhaps rightly fearing vengeance in kind from the men who found their blood kin wronged and slain Huh# n?.i aet off on a frantic migration to Constantinople, where they arrived In the pitiable state already known to the world. Of such Turks as stayed behind the Bulgars felt forced to kill some. Others they put to work with the army transports, still others they left in peace, their villages intact. Just as one finds also Hulgar villages intact?where the Turks did not have time to do a thorough Job. "We expected," said a Bulgar officer with whom I talked at Tchatalja. "to find a rich and plenteous country as we neared Constantinople. We found instead?what you see, nothing! Hardly a living being! Utter devastation!" I met an old Bulgarian woman near Tchorlu who was the first Red Cross nurse upon the ground after the terrible destruction at Lule Burgas. She said that on her way to the field hospital she was Bent to the succor of a Greek village where the Turks had scattered ruin. Unlock your western ears now, and hear the truth. She found young girls lying naked by the roadside nearly dead. She found children stricken down by careless sabers. A housewife had been murdered as shs kneaded her bread, the dough 8tl 11 on her hands. And in a bloody Hack the Turks had gathered? women's breasts! It la not difficult to verify such stories. They are common knowledge here. The liulgar peasant has no Imagination. He tells what he sees. 1 will give one more example'. According to the Mohammedan religion. pork Is unclean and Is forbidden. For a Turk to kill a pig Ih thus considered a special insult to a Christian. The advancing Bulgnrs found many pigs shot down or stabbed In farm yards The Itulgars began the war In a humane spirit, as Buch terms go in war time. Hut not a soldier In that army of 400,000 is Ignorant now of certain fiendish evidence his comrades have witnessed. In the fighting at Tchatalja, thi Hulgars, having advanced during the day, were frequently obliged to retire at night, loavlng their wounded on the field. When the next day's fortunes brought them again over the same ground they found only stripped bodies griesomely hacked, while the officers' corpses had been mutilated In a wnv on mnoh mnro " ? -w ? ?ww u.-fsuouuft mail anything I have hitherto mentioned that I cannot even write of It. I think even kindly people in their tranquil homes across the world in America will understand the reason now, when I add that should the war continue, no more Turkish wounded will be sent north to be nursed In Vulgar hosplt'?i , .. H. - .v . RIVEN ASHORE IN BLIN r \- ^f<4?.?nll* . f**" v'*!!^~ ? * lliyaiMMW?u?HM?1MMilMiriMiMrM>-iMiril IWMBWWI? he banana steamer Nicholas Cuueo, witl ?f Point lx>okout, Long Island. The phot >nt to the aid of the life savers of Ix>ng Srocities als. While the Bulgurs pass hereafter there will be no Turkish wounded. Doubtless there are many good Turks. No one who has seen the pale and delicate faces of the Moslem worn1 an refugees can look on them without pity. But tho basic fact remains: Tho ways of the Turk are not the ways of Europe. FINDS MYSTERY OF THE DEEP Steamer Discovers Bark but Fate of Captain and Crew Is Like I That of Celeste's. Newport NewB, Va.?Another mystery of the deep, virtually paralleling | the disappearance of the crew of the j schooner Marie CeleBte years ago, came to port with the UrltiBh tank steamer Roumanian. The Marie Celeste was found at sea with a pot boiling In the galley. Its captain's papers on the cabin table and every Indication that men were aboard within a few hours of Its discovery. Nothing, however, ever was heard of the skipper or crew. The story of the Norwegian bark Remittent, with a crew of six. Is equally strange. The Roumanian sighted the Remittent drifting near tho Azores and took it In tow. The boat's deck planks, once holystoned to a glistening white, bore the marks of many feet, but there was no one aboard and nothing to explain the disappearance of the master and crew. In the cabin the lockfast places were undisturbed; charts and papers were secure. In the breaker there was fresh water; salt Junk and biscuits were In the Btores. A mainsail and two jibs were snugly furled and lifeboats swung In the davits. !? A 1 AA * * ^ in a Kmc iw mues on mpe nenry. i Captain Claridge lost the RemittentNo other ship has reported It since. The Remittent was commanded by Captain Torgersen and sailed from Rio Grande do Sul Oct. 25 for Liverpool. THIEF BETRAYED BY A PATCH Seattle Woman Recognizes Handiwork She Put on Trcusers and Bandit Is Taken. Seattle. Wash.?Recognition last week by Mrs. William J. Mayorlck of a patch she had placed on the leg of her husband's trouber~ resulted In the arrest of two men and the recovery from the home of one of them a wagonload of articles stolen from Seattle homes. Charles Castro, from whose home the articles were recov- j ered, was wearing the clothes, and sat opposite Mrs. Mayorlck In a street car. When she questioned his right to the clothes he abused her and men passengers took him into custody and i ! delivered him at police headquarters. Mayoriek's name was written on a * pocket lining. The other man arrested Is Toney Donlo. who waa found in Castro's home. The police say he Ih a mem ber of a "black hand" organization that has been terrorizing Seattle Italians and that he is wanted in Idaho to answer criminal charges. ODD FACTS ABOUT HEREDITY ! Color-Blindness Descends from Male to Female, or Vice Versa. Declares London Professor. London.?Lecturing at the Royal Institute on "Heredity of Sex." l'rof. Hateson relates some curious facts which have been discovered as a re| suit of examining several generations of a family in which color blindness appeared. A color-blind womnn, he said. Is ' very rarely found and she always is 1 a daughter of a color-blind man. Her | sons and daughters would be normal. | her son's families would be normal, 1 ! but if her daughter had sons, they would be found to be normal and I color-blind in eonnl nnmhuro A curious anomaly with reference 1 I to color-blindness appeared In twins, i i They were girls, exactly alike in ap- I pearance. but one was color-blind and 1 the other was not. No explanation of i this exception had been found. Prof. I Bateson said there is a popular be- 1 lief that sons In certain respects took ] after mothers and daughters after < fathers. Within a reasonable range < of speculation this Is true, he said. i X J DING STORM "1 i a crew of thirty, was driven ashore ograph shows the wrecked vessel and Reach. WOMAN WRITES VOTE POEM Verse May Aid Gladys Hinckley to Win Inez Milholland'a Laurels; Male Imbecile Hunted. Washington.?Miss Inez Mllhollaud. you had better watch out. Miss Gladys Hinckley, Miss Mllholland's closest rival for the title of the most "beautiful American suffragist." haH enlisted poetry to her aid In the contest. She writes It herself. It 1s Miss Gladys Hinckiev. nil about votes for women, and doctrines of that cause. Speaking to her sister suffragists, Miss Hinckley sayB: 'Dream no more of a Guinevere, Dr Lady Alice Vere de Vere. Times have changed, and now the women v. Militant rise, demanding rights. Man is not on the defensive, For he force has. and might makes right." In arguing for the cause, she says }f the suffrage tenets: 'Help the shop girls keep to honor. Change the code so badly balanced, [f you think our role domestic, Let our office be domestic; [Mvlc cleansing, gutter cleaning. Let us dust and sweep the cities. Woman's sphere can be domestic, !n politics for all the nation. Let us try. and if we blunder Help us, for you long have hurt us 7hivalry of noblest order. Slow can grow If men and women Stand together, understanding. PRISON FOR LAZY MOTHER London Husband Says There Is Nothing the Matter With His StayAbed Wife. London?How to deal with a woman who persistently stayed In bed was a problem presented to the ICxeter magistrates when Margaret Whatley appeared on an adjourned charge of neglecting her two children. The husband said that his wife went to bed on I>ecember 26. and he had not seen her up until Bhe came to the court. It had been suggested-that he Bhould leave her starve. As far as he know, there was nothing the matter with her. The magistrates sent the woman to prison for four months at hard labor, specially requesting the medical officer and chaplain to look after her in the hope that regular discipline would restore her. Dream Reveals Dual Marriage. New York.?Charles Grellet, a restaurant-keeper. who asked for annulment of his marriage on the ground that his wife had another husband from whom she had not been divorced, said that he knew nothing of the alleged duplicity until he dreamed he round her walking In the streets of Paris with another man whom she called husband. lTpon awakening ha questioned her and he claims she admlttPd th A tnith Af Hroa m V . ^x , - ' ? > ?5 i f 9 '< \ The more a man knows the easier It is to keep his face shut. ITCH Riltortd in 30 Minute*. Wool fori'* Snultnry Lotion for all kind* of eontatflous Itch. At DrutfglstM. AUr. It isn't half as far from virtue to vice as it is from vice to virtue. PILES CTRED IN 6 TO 14 DATS Your druggial will refund money If PAZO OINT. MKNT fulls to cure any case of Itohlntf, Blind, Bleeding or l'rotrudlng Files in (lo 14days. bUc Some people are as unpopular as a last year's popular song. Constipation causes and seriously aggravates many diseases. It Is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pellets. Tiny sugar-coated granules. Adv. Ever notice how eager one doctor is not to boast of the ability of anj other? DOKS YOITR IIP.An ACHE? Try Hicks' CAPUD1NK. Ifs ll.|tild ?pleasant to tnke?effects luitnctllntr?irood to prevent ; Slok llenilnehea and Ncrvoiisdleailncbes also. Your money Pack If not nut isfltsl. 10o..25e. ami I f-Oc. at medlciuc stores. AO v. No, Indeed. "Ladles are beginning to smoke fig' arettes, aren't they?" "No, Indeed." "Hut I am sure I saw a woman smoking one yesterday!" "Hut you said ladles." A Confession. Startled by convincing evidence that they were the victims of serious kid1 ney and bladder trouble, numbers of I prominent people confess they have found relief by using KURIN Kidney and Bladder Pills. For sale by all medical dealers at 25c. Burwell & ; Dunn Co., Mfrs.,, Charlotte, N. C. Adv. When the Sun Will Die. It may be said unqualifiedly that (he sun, like every other thing con! nected with the present order, will finally cease to be what it is today. The time will most surely come when the sun will have ceased to throw oft light and heat. Long before that happens, .however, the earth and other planets will have become "dead worlds" like the moon?no life of. any sort upon then). It has been rnlf-n luted that the buii will cease to throwout its heat somewhere about seven million of years from now. Queen Victoria Detested Tobacco. The number of smoking rooms now distributed over Windsor castle would considerably astonish Queen Victoria could she but see them. Her late majesty could never bring herself | to do more than tolerate the weed in any form, and the smoking room was always relegated to a very distant purt of her various residences. Nor I were the guests permitted to solace themselves with a quiet smoke In their own apartments, as on their arrival they were specially warned not [ to do so. GOOD TIME. 1 M If! Ms. ] Tess?Oh! no, Tom, dear, you | mustn't ask papa tonight. He lost a j whole lot of money in stocks today, i Tom?Just the right time then. He | won't have nerve enough to lecture ( me about the care of money. GOOD NATURED AGAIN Good Humor Returns With Change to Proper Food. ~~~~ i ; "For many years I was a constant sufTerer from indigestion and nervousness, amounting almost to prostration," writes a Montana man. "My blood was impoverished, the vision was blurred and weak, with j moving spots before my eyes. This was a steady daily condition. I grew ill- j : tempered, and eventually got so nervous I could not keep my books posted, nor handle accounts satisfactorily. ' 1 can't describe my sufferings. "Nothing 1 ate agreed with ine, till one day 1 happened to' notice GrapeNuts In a grocery store, and bought a package out of curiosity to know what it was. "1 liked the food from the very first, eating it with cream, and now I buy It by the case and use it daily, j I soon found tha* Grape-Npts food was supplying brain and nerve force as nothing in the drug line ever had done or could do. "It wasn't long before I was re1 stored to health, comfort and happiness. "Through the use of Grape-Nuts food my digestion has bpen restored, my nerves are steady once more, my eyesight is good again, my mental faculties are clear and acute, and I have become : o good-natured that my friends are truly astonished at the change. I feel younger and better than I have for 20 j?ng. i-tu amount or money would 1 Induce me to surrender what 1 have j gained through the use of Grape-Nuts food." Name given by Postum Co., I Battle Creek, Mich. "There's a rea- j aon." Read the little book, "The Road to Wellvllle," in pkgs." Kv?r rend (hr above letter! A leu Me appear* from time to time. They i are aenulae. true, aad full of bumai la terra t. Adv. Cough, Cold SoreThroat Sloan's Liniment gives quick relief for cough, cold, hoarseness, sore throat, croup, asthma, hay fever a and bronchitis. J HERE'S PROOF. Mr. AinKitr W.pRicx.of Fredonla, Kan., writes : " We use Sloan's Liniment In tlie family ami tltul it an excellent relief for oolds and hay fever attacks. It stops couxhiug and incoming almost Instantly. SLOANS I LINIMENTS RELIEVED SORE THROAT. Mrs. L. itkkwsr. of Model lo, Fla., vrltMi: " I bought ou<* bottle or your I.iiiimont and it did 111 jhII the good in the world. My thro.it was rcrv sore, and it cured uie of my trouhio." GOOD FOR COLD AND CROUP. j Mr. W. H. Stri.nok, 3721 Elm wood Avenue, Chicago, III., writes: "A little boy next door had croup. I gn*e the mother Sloan'* Liniment to try. She gave him three drops on sugar before going to bed, atul he got up without the croup in the morning." Ptr loo, 2 So,, SOo,, $1,00 Span's | It Pavs 1 _.m to cup 5 Mm/ IIUKKKH, MI I.IS and f??H. ?ht?T are I he?lthifrand render better serr tee. 9 f\ When the hcavycoat that holds the Q m VI ?vt sweetan<! dirt Is removed,ther V M aro more ratUf kept clean, look 1 o-. better get more good from their feel and are letter In every * UJ Insist ou having The Stewart Ball Bearing Clipping Machine ) It turns easier, clips faster and closer and slays sharp longer j . than anv other. dears are all tuu MPs?^ hanl and cut from solid PRVCI I steel !>ar. They are en- < mm so . I closed, protects*! and M u M run In oil: little frlo- w 17% M tlon.little wear Has si* feet of new V ^ stylo easy running flexible shaft aiid tho celebrated Stewart single tension clipping head, highest grade. U.t ut* fr?s? ??or dealer jeverj I machine guaranteed to please. I CHICAGO FLEXIBLE SHAFT CO. I ^ Wellsand Ohio 8ts. CHICAGO, ILL. I Write for complete new catalogue showing world's I largest and most modern line of horse clipping and sheep shearing machines, mailed free on re?iuodt. m # 16 Buggy Harness jA Special Value, $11. SO Complete This Is s strictly first-elans harness, mailt of tha lM*nt grade of leather anil hardware. Hltiul or of>en bridle, heavy single strap lireaet collar and traces, patcut spring tree saddle, good, strong .luoa, nickel or black trimmed. Satiefaction guaranteed or money refunded. Wrtte for catalogue. SCMtLL HARNESS COMPANY 1017-1?-21 RACE STREET. CINCINNATI. OHIO H" gA gA We are headquar I m ters for Heps, Poultry, <gi | *|l ? Fruits, Potatoes anil ? 1 I Vegetables. If you I 1% Ik want a reliable firm and a live house, ship us. We guarantee highest market prices and prompt returns. Quotations sent on application. WOODSON-CRAIG CO.,lnc. C VP MISSION MERCHANTS. It I c h n n d Vs. Salesmen wanted To pell l^adles'and Men'* raincoat* direct from the manufacturer and Importer to the wearer, at a earing of front :t? to 60 percent from regular price*, l iberal comMHiHAtlnn ? f?ticti class proposition without competition. Directions for measuring end other particular* on application. Kridone sis cents In |K>Htag* for samples of materials for soliciting order*. Detroit Rain Coat Co., 52 Monroe Ave., Detroit, Mich. LEARN TELEGRAPHY Thousands of operators needed. Salary I4& CJ0 p.-r month. Write s|inrt>tii)>uri; Nt-rmul of Tvtt>(ra|ihy, Spartanburg, S. C., Dept. A. /I*S S# An I 1# A Mini Iligh Orn<1? A c, a y IJnN X Finishing. Mail "* ** orders given Six*. f-KHL* etui Attention Prices reuHonable. 1,-TKfeijs."-S-rvlee prompt. Send for Price List. l-ASSkAl'S ill blOUk. CilAKJJtSTOS, a. 0. /jfntTYPEWRlTERS Jsr All makes, sold, rented and skilfully 1 i repaired Rented $.*> for 3 uiotilha, y) rent upplles-jti purchase. TtlTrtKITKIl IX lee . Hmm Cln, ?.'> tut gals Street, klrtemi, la, rtpninaM 1 I . . Iltuiutu.Whiskey and Drug Habits treatII i le.l at home or at Sanitarium. Hook on ISSl subject Kree 1>H. It. M.tVOOI.l.K.V, art VICTOR HAXITAKirn. iTUiTi, UKOHtilA Wrr"WFl ? a ?e" ' Itrv?nt4 hair falling. I ^ aiaaii Rt H?l Coach Hprup. TmIm Oood. (In Q la lima BoM bp Dracclat*. Ul