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MRS. MANGES ESCAPES OPERATION * ?????????. How She Was Saved From Surgeon's Knife by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Mogadore, Ohio.?' 'The first two years X was married 1 suffered so much from female troubles ana : I heRrinrr Hnwn nniri. ^ I could not 8tan(^ on my feet pi^F long enough todo my 1-?V*5* work. Tho doctor ||gfi 5$| said I would have to ^j>:- \ - M&i undergo an opera^ ^ f|p tion, but my husband : >" wanted me to try ^1)0^1' Eydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com i II, rHiii., 11 yi i I p0unj first. I took threo bottles and it made me well and strong and I avoided a dreadful operation. I now have two fine healthy children, and I cannot say too much about whatLydiaE.Pinkham'sVegetableComKiund has done for me." ?Mrs. Lee anges, R. F. D. 10, Mogadore, Ohio. Why will women take chances with ^ an operation or drag out a sickly, halfhearted existence,missing three-fourths of the joy of living, when they can lind health in Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound ? For thirty years it has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has restored tho health of thousands of women who have been troubled with such ailments as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irregularities, etc. If you want special advice write to I,Tii!n K. Plnkhnm Ta /onnll drntial) Lynn, sjass. Your letter Trill be opened* read and answered by a woman and held In strict confidence. Ml? II III Will II 111 IUI Sprains, Bruises I Stiff Muscles! are quickly relieved by Sloan's B Liniment. Lay it on ? no rub- M j bing. Try it. AnVla Sprain and Dislocated Hip. | "I sprained my ankle and <li->locatrd B my hip by fulling out of n third siory H win ow. Went on crotches f. r four B montlm. Then I started to use your I liniment. according to directions I 6 must cny It is helping me wonderfully. B We will never he without Sloan'* IJni mcnt nnymore."?i-W Jo/uuon, Imuvu* Suuu*,. N. Y. SLOANS LINIMENTI i Kills Pain | Splendid for Sprains. B fell and sprained my nrm n week B md was in terrible pain. I could B se my hand or nrm until I applied Mniinrnt. I shall never l? with- B hot lie of Sloan's l.iniineut."?B . yvrut^ur, IJmiUtlh, A. J. ' A Fine for Stiffnasa. vj nan's liniment hns done more I Uian anything I have ever tried in joint*. i Kid niy hand hurt bo 2 badly that I had to stop work right In Eg the tnisi est time of the year. 1 thought at first that I would have to have my I hand taken otr. lint I got a bottle of E .Josh's I.iniment nnd cured my hand." B K ? U'iiu>n H'htrlmr, Mut/U, Ala. 3 At all Dealer*. 25c. H 50c. and $1.00 ' I free, instructive ^ B book on ho rue a, r R J cattle, hogs and B EAuaica* 'WTO LS.SlOAN.loc. I MOVING PICTURES Machinex, Supplied, Curtalim ami M.V AcceMtiorieii, Folding Chair - $6 do*., 'iflur Opera Chairs $1 eaolt. O.im Making Outflte,Oxone, Lime*. Ether. Every vQft IT thlujc used In the Moving Picture M lluMlnOHM. A few second hand inachines perfect condition very cheap. Advice and Information Kludly furnished free Motion Picture Canter of Atlanta. Inc.. 66 Walton SI. 'TfcaNatloaFlstareDcparlmaatStoraentia Worltf) Atlanta.Ca. STOMACH SUFFERERS Gallstone Victims f# nalna In Ill.tKt UMa Unnk T'n/la. Shoulder*. 1*11 of Htotuurh Colic. Omit. Stoiiincli froublv liulluesilon. Hick 11 endue ho. l>l??y Hpclla. Narvotiane**. Had Color. Hluca. Costlvcntws, Yellow Jaundice. Torpid I.Ivor. Appcndlottla or Oallatonoa. Mind today ET E3 CT Ea for our l.tVHIl - OAI.I, BooK I I* C. E. Mis oat Rsnedr Co.. Dept. 587.219 S Dearborn St .CMcagc HAIRRBALSAM A toilet preparation of merit, lielpe to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. Mc. and >1.00at l>rum;ltt?. nil CO Eczema,Chafing,Cuts,Bruises, I'll \ Durnc Immediate relief. TeatluiuI 8 1 I II OUI lid nlnla fttrnlahcd. Price :1b and ^c~ Cum Halve Co., Baltimore. Mil Beat Cou?h Syiup. Taataa Qood. ITaa 13 la tlma. Sold by Drurctet*. JSj /.l:VJ.IIM!l.*l!|.?j.|t.tfev' THICK, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girls! Beautify Your Hair! Make It Soft, Fluffy and Luxuriant?Try the Moist Cloth. Try as you will, after an application i of Danderine, you cannot find a single 1 truce of dandruff or fulling huir and your sculp will not itch, but what will i please you most, will be after a fewweeks' use, when you see new hair, j line and downy at first?yes?but really new hair?growing all over tho scalp. A little Danderine immediately doubles the beauty of your hair. NodifTer- 1 l ence how dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it ' through your hair, taking one small ; , strand at. a time. The effect is immediate and amazing?your hair will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an incomparable luster, softness and luxurl- | | anre, the beauty and shimmer of truo i linir lipnlth Get a 25 cont bottle of Knowlton'a j ! Dandorine from any store and prove j that your hair Is :is pretty and soft j as any?that It has been neglected or I injured by careless treatment?that's i all. Adv." AROSE TO THE EMERGENCY j How Engineer Proved Worthy of His Position When the Occasion Came to Try Him. The engineer of a Chicago suburban j train showed the other day that a cool i and experienced head is equal toalmost j any emergency. A . ide rod had brok- ! ! en, and with every revolution of the 1 j wheels, was demolishing the cab and | the mechunism by which the engine is | operated. He was able to shut off thu , power, but the airbrake control had been destroyed, and the train went dashing on. Having done all that mortal could do with the apparatus that was left intact, he left the cab, climbec^ over the coal in the tender and swung down on the platform of the llrst car. There, reaching for the air cord, he brought the train to a | stop in a few hundred feet. If he had I whistled for brakes the train crew | might not have responded in us little I tiuie as it took him to do the thing I himself. SKIN TROUBLE ITCHED BADLY i (llenns P. O., Va.?"My baby's trouj bio began with an iteliing and then ' a little bump would come and : could not rest day or night. The trouI bio affected her whole body. The i bumps festered and caine to a head and the corruption looked like thick matter, kind of a yellow color. The sores itched so badly until it seemed to mo she would scratch herself to pieces and then a sore would form and her clothes would slick to her body and pull off the little scab. In some places sho would scratch and irritate the sores until they seemed to be large. Sho was affected about a year. "I wrote for a sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment. 1 bathed her body in warm water and Cuticura Soap and then 1 applied the Cuticura Ointment, and they afforded relief after twice using. I bought some inoro Cuticura Soap and Ointment and inside of two weeks she was cured." ; (Signed) Mrs. J. R. Greggs, Nov. 21, j 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with I12-p. Skin Cook. Address |M?stcard "Cuticura, Dept. D, Hoston."?Adv. How Famous Hymn Was Written. As Tennyson's nurse was sitting one | day at his bedside, sharing to a de- | gree the general anxiety about tlio ! patient, she said to him suddenly: "You have written a great many : poems, sir, but I have never heard anybody say that there is a hymn i among them nil. I wish, sir, you ! would write a hymn while you are lying on your sick bed. It might help and comfort many a poor sufferer." Tho next morning, when the nurse had taken her quiet place at the bed- i side, the poet handed her a scrap of paper, saying: "Hero is the hymn you wished me to write." She took it from his hands with ox- 1 i nressions of irrnfnfnl tlionlifl ! proved to be ' Crossing the Mar," the poem that was sung in Westminster abbey at Tennyson's funeral, and which has toschod so many hearts. Obeying His Doctor. CMbbs?Wonder why Rlchleigh when ho puts up at a hotel always takes a single room? Dibbs?His doctor told him he must nvoid suites. For SUMMER HEADACHES Tllcks' CAPUDINK Is the host remedy? no mutter what rauseq them?whether from the heat, sitting In draughts, feverish condition, etc, 10<\. 25c and COc per bottle ut medicine stores. Adv. The South Africa oxen are clad In "trousers" to ward off the ravages of the tsetse fly. Mrs. Wlnslow'a Soothing Syrup for Children teethlug, softens the gums, reduces Inflammation,allay h pain,cures wind co.ir.25c a bollle.Mv "An author is a man who lives on the royalties he expects." Rore TCycs, < ranulntcd Fyellda itud f-tlr? promptly healed with Komau Ujre Halsn ut. Adr. It won't help to make a long fac6 when you nre short. _ v* y _ HIGH HUSB What Bi % J WILL the million-dollar estate that Robert Wilson Goelet Is offering to his beautiful wife win her back to him? The members of fashionable society in this country are wondering whether "Mobby" Goelet's latest bid for his wife's favor will prove successful in the contest between her desire for freedom and an artistic career and Hobby's desire for her to return to him as his wife. it all depends, says society, on how ardent her desire to go on with her painting and how deep and wide the chasm between them has grown during the four months that Mrs. Goelet has maintained a separate establishment at Newport. During these months her husband, loving her dearly and yearning to go with her. has divided his time between his Canadian camp and the new estate lie is developing near Goshen, N. Y., always planning new ways of lavishing money on the girl he married. On one side in this interesting contest is the husband offering his wares in the warmest tones of love, says the Washington l'ost. "Take all I have, oh, my beloved. Here are my ducats, 35,000,000 of them; here is my Newport mansion; my house on Fifth avenue; my opera box, and all the jewels of the Goelet family. All this 1 offer you if you will but give up your art and return to me." Mut the obdurate wife, whose soul yearns to express itself in high art rather than love, looks from her latest canvas and says: "Away with your wealth! Away with your temptations! I feel within me the desire to become a great artist. 1 gave up my career to marry you. I have given you two children, and have been a gracious hostess for yon Mut now 1 must have freedom. I must be left to fultill ray own destiny." The present unhappy stale of affairs is not of recent growth; it is. in a way. tin* logical outcome of the marBeauty and the Beast. riage of these two young people, which took place nine years ago. And to understand it fully it is necessary to dip a bit into ancient social history. Nine years ago Elsie Whelen, daughter of the lute Henry Whelen. of Philadelphia. was the most noted beauty belle in the Newport colony, as well as in Philadelphia. Her beauty was i as well known in England and on the continent as in this country. She was besought by suitors of all kinds and degrees. With her great beauty and HIT IIIIIUIU Ull'U MIC lit I iUIHIIlOIl, sill' j lacked l>ut the one thing needful, in ! the worldly eyes of her'mother and ' her friends, and that was wealth A woman in society has. when placed as Klsie Whelen was placed, hut one way to acquire wealth, and that is to marry it. Her own desires did not run toward the possession ot great wealth, but her mother was keenly alive to the high financial value her world placed on such beauty and charm as her younger daughter possessed, and she made up her mind the year that Klsie came out that she should marry the richest bachelor so ciety had to offer--Robert Ooelet, son of the late Ogden (loelet, of New York Tremendously in Love. Mrs Whelen did not have a free field, but in the end the prize fell t? Klsie, fo? ,vie sitnp?e reason that young Goelet was tremendously in love with her. He knew that hei jm \ r p i km rofeA 000.000. ^farria^e mother was forcing the match, and also that the beautiful Klsie was very much in Jove with another man whose name also was Hobby; but, in spite of all, he persisted In his suit, and at last the much-beleaguered girl said ! yes. Three times between the announcement of the engagement and the day of the wedding Miss Whelen broke her engagement (giving as her reason ; each time her desire to become an ari tist), but renewed it under the urgings of her mother and her lover. The wedding took place at a little church outside of Philadelphia?St. Martin's-in-the-Field. Thousands of curious folk Hocked to the place and surrounded the bride on her way to and from the church door. Peanut venders and lemonade sellers ranged J themselves along the roadway, adding the last circus touch to the affair. The old-time love story would end here: "Thus they married and lived happily ever after." Hut ?hese are modern times and this is a modern story of domestic life, where the real tale begins after the wedding ceremony. The young husband, so very much h. love, began lavishing his wealth on his bride as soon as the honeymoon began. He apparently realized that, as it was his millions which won her in the tlrst place, it would be his millions that would keep her. And he alI so realized that lie must kill the specter of the other Hobby and her love j for art. In Europe he deluged her with gifts - jewels that made his sister, the l Duchess of lloxburghe, look at him I with consternation, llis expenditures were so large that his mother t^t constrained to rebuke him; but to all : criticism he said: I "My millions are my own to do as I please with, and if it pleases me to shower them on my bride, that is my affair." Hut It was a diUicult honeymoon, for ! every time the bride looked "pensive i her husband would say to himself: "Ha! ha! The artistic teraperainent is working again. I must tly to the jeweler's or hll is lost." This acute phas<? passed after a few mouths, and for two or three years the millionaire husband felt secure; but, to be on the safe side, ho continued to lavish jewels and checks on his wife. Her dress allowance was practically unlimited. Said one Newport matron to her one day: "My dear Mrs. (loelet, do tell me how you manage your dress I allowance. I am always overdrawing mine." And Mrs. (loelet replied: "Dress allowance! 1 have none. 1 have never been able to spend my income during any year since mv marriage." I When young Ooelet vowed in the I wedding service that with all his worldly goods he did his wife endow, lie ev{ idently meant it. Two children were i born; the last is now two years of age. On the birth of this second child the happy husband gave his wife a new pearl necklace that cost over $100,000. ! And now, explains a close friend of | both the young people, for the first time a gift failed to please the wife. J "Elsie just picked it up, looked at ii, ana saia, i wouia so much rather | liave a studio lilted up with the money that cost." '"Ye gods!' cried the husband. 'Has that ghost not been completely laid?' ""No," replied the mother of his son and heir. It is very much alive. , 1 am more determined than ever to I paint a great picture, and 1 shall : turn m> library into a studio as soon j as I can.' I i " I>o you not love your children, if i you do not love me?' sadly asked her generous husband, i | "'How do I know what and whom 1 love? 1 feel that there is something within me driving me to art. I must express myself on canvas. And what ? right have you to kill this instinct? t As for my children, of course 1 love i them. That is but natural. Hut ! any woman can have children and love ?. vn ... ? V-< ? < . t .' V them. It 1m the genius among women who can palut pictures, and I know that I am cut out to do a great picture.' " Was there ever a more trying poHl iiuii iut any uusoanu.' lniugs weui from bad to worse after this Bcore. but the crucial moment was reached in June, when Mrs. Goelet arrived In Newport without her husband, but with a grim determination to pursue high art at all costs. Hut just before this the husband, whose millions had been devoted to making the girl happy whom be had wed, sprang a surprise on her. It was as though he was making the one last effort to keep her. He Invited her to motor with him out in the country. When they were near Goshen he slowed down the car, and, pointing to a superb view of hill and valley, with lovely woodland and meadows, he said: Offers Her $1,000,000 Home. ' Here, my dear. Does this beautiful view appeal to you ? T>oesn't it make your soul throb with joy just to look at it?" "Yes, it is very pretty; but 1 cannot see any picture in it." "It is nil a picture to me," replied her husband. "And because it is, I bought it for you. All this view is yours. Here I will build a house that will *1 hah non if - ?m i * ?* ? iuoi f i,uuw,uuu ii )'uu win uui give up your desire to be an artist." "Your millions no longer have the power to kill my artistic temperament. Oh. 1 could live in a hut so long as 1 have a brush and paints!" This episode made very clear to the husband that nothing he had to otler would now afreet his wife. Sadly ho returned to New York, and shortly afterward his wife and children went to Newport. They have been there all summer, and rumor has it that Mrs. Goelet will keep her residence in that town all winter. In July Mr. tloelet went to his Canadian camp. As a last desperate appeal to his beautiful wife he sent her several salmon that he had caught with his own hands, but she could not be won even with salmon any more than with pearls. All summer, while her friends have been making a great effort to kill her interest in art. and while her mother has been urging her anew to think of the value of the wealth she seems to be throwing aside, the would-be artist How Mrs. "Bobby" Drew James Hazen Hyde, Our Famous Expatriate. has been painting steadily uuder the tutelage of a well-known artist. She uses the studio belonging to Henry Clews, Jr.. who has been in Paris, and every engagement she has made has been contingent upon the progress of her great painting. No one knows what the subject is? whether it is a portruit, a landscape, or a real life study. The Crews studio is secluded from general view, and no one can go near enough to peek in without being discovered. ltut all this time this has been in progress the work ou the "Picture Estate," as the Goshen place is called, goes merrily on. The house is built on plans once drawn by Mrs. (Joelet when she was a girl, and used to dream of the kind of a house she wanted some day to have. The grounds are being copied from those of a chateau in France, which Bhe once said were the most lovely in the world. Was there over a mora lavish, a mora devoted husband? "All this 1 give to you. Already have 1 given you houses and lands, jewels, and ducats, liut to all these 1 add this last gift?a thousand acres and more picture land, a house that fulfills your girlish dreams, and a garden that may, if you say so, be the Garden of Eden for me. Do you refuse all this Just for art?" What will the answer fee? Will the bride who was won by millions, who was kept by millions, and who was lost because of these same millions, be re won by them? "Mending Slowly." She?And how Is your bacheloi friend? lie?When I saw him lust he was mending slowly. She?Indeed! I didn't know he'c been ill. lie?He hasn't been; he was sewinf some buttons on his clothes. / . .14 TORTURING TWINGES Much so-called rheumatism is caused by weakened kidneys. When the kidneys fail to clear the blood of uric acid, the acid forms into crystals like bits of broken glass in the muscles, joints and on the nerve casings. Torturing pains dart through the affected part whenever it is moved. By curing the kiducvs, Doan's Kidney Pills have eased thousands of rheumatic cases, lumbago, sciatica, gravel, neuralgia and urinary disorders. A NEW YORK CASE John A. Gould. 74 OU Ttlla a Story" Gatchell St., Buffalo. ^ ''aJBS X. Y.. says: "1 was Vx laid up for two months with lnflam matory rheumatism and was In bed most of the time. My left , A limb swelled one- JWL y' quarter again Its nat- jf Bwy ural size. The swell- *TT" TTbT'^M inn kept getting worso and the pain IB 1 nearly killed me. Two ( doctors failed and then I began using I>onn's Kidney Pills. They cured me." Get Doan's at Any Store. 50c a Box wv a at n ir n m v v UU An ' d "pTLLS " FOSTER-MELBURN CO.. Buffalo. Now York Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver is I right the stomach and bowels are right CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS \ gently but firmly com-^^^WBL===_^3 I>el a lazy liver ADTFD'^ do its duty. Cures Coxv-^KgBSW\ V JTLE stipntion, In-I IVEK digestion, , Headache, and Diatreas After Elating. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature SORE EYES Dr. Salter's Eye Lotion 'i relieves and cures sore and inflamed eyes in 24 to 4S hours. Helps the weak eyed, cures without pain. Ask your druggist or dealer for SALTER'S. Only from Reform Dispensary, U s. Uroad. Atlanta. Georgia We Will Pay You $120.00 / U? distribute religion* literature In jronrcooi i.unity * 1 Sldays' mirk. Kjprrirni'i' nul required Man or woman. Opportunity 'or promotion. Spur -1 lino may bo mill. l?t?r*?tJoi??l Ulki* Pr-ru, >1)11 irrk IL, nilUtifkl* HAD NO COMPLAINT COMING Bad as Entertainment Was, Attendant Had Escaped From a Worse Afflict! ?... It was at the vaudeville. The girl with the excruciating voice had just finished her song. "Just think!" groaned Itrown. to the stranger beside him. "We paid real money to hear that!" "I didn't." was the placid response. "Caine in on a 'comp.'" "Hut you hud to spend carfare to get here, did you not?" asked Brown. "Nope," replied the uncomplaining one. "I live in walking distance." "Hut." persisted Brown desperately, i "at least you hoped to be entertained, i not punished." "No, 1 didn't care," grinned the ' stranger. "I caine to get away from home. My wife is cleaning house."? I Judge. Life's Winnings. At the age of twenty-one a man goes out hunting for a fortune. Along about the time ho is sixty he comes back bringing a house and lot. upon which there is a $1,200 mortgage, and a life insurance policy for $2,000.? Philadelphia ledger. How About It. "I have $f?,ou0 to put into a house." "Then you'd better let the contracts ! for a $2,800 one." f > Breakfast Sunshine Post Toasties and Cream There's a delicious smack in these crisp, appetizing bits of toasted corn that brings brightness and good cheer to many and many a breakfast table. Toasties are untouched by hand in making; and ccme in tightly sealed packages?clean and sweet?ready to eat with cream and sugar. 1 Wholesome Nourishing Easy to Serve i i ; Sold by grocers everywhere. V J