The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, April 30, 1903, Image 4

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x\ - r* I ????? " For 25 years I have never 1 missed taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla I every spring, it cleanses my P blood, makes me feel strong, and I | does me good in every way."? ? j | John P. Kodnette, Brooklyn, N.Y. H I Pure and rich blood | I carries new life to every | I part of the body. You $ 1 are invigorated, refreshed. | I You feel anxious to be | 1 active. You become strong, | I steady,courageous. That's S what Ayer's Sarsaparilla | | I will do for you. g j r $1.00 a bottle. All drejjists. fe . E Ask your doctor wbat'he thinkT'of'Ayer"3' M B SarHapar.ila. He knows all about this gTand y ! g old family mediolne. Follow his adrico and B i K wc will 1>? satisfied. H ' . J. c. ATKH CO., LOWOil, -IMS. u ? HIS COMPLAINT. I am a baby, eleven months old, and! nearly worn out already. Please let! me alone. I am not a prodigy, except on the extent that, not having anything to say I don't talk. Two big persons claim to be my parents?why can't they let it go at that? I have never denied the charge. I haven't much data to go by, but 1 do think I am either a magician, a learned pig, or a virtuoso. I don't hanker for applause; so, it will be an appreciated favor if you won't put me through any parlor tricks. If I have my wealthy old Uncle j Ezra's nose, congratulate Uncle Ezra, I but don't blame me. I may be a kleptomaniac, for all I know, but I can't help it. Don't rattle rattles at me?they rattle me. Don-'t goo-goo and ootsiekootsie at me. I can't understand it any better than I can the English lan The pain I have Is not In my stomach, but in my neck. I don't want to be entertained or mystified or medicated or applaused. And, If you don't want me to grow up to be a hypochondriac, { a stamp-collector, an awful example, j a pingpong enthusiast, or a misanthrope, you just lemme be!?May r* . . Smart Set. If by any chance the Detective j Bureau officials get hold of Talbot Smith's story, "A Perfect Disappear-1 ance," which is one of the features in : Ainslee's for May, they will be likely j to congratulate themselves on having an explanation to offer for their many unsolved murder mysteries. It's not a bad explanation, and they ought to j ' -- welcome it. THOSE WOMEN. Miss Passe?A new beauty formula says that if a woman believes and i thinks with the whole strength of her mind that she is beautiful, the result will be that she will become as beautiful as she thinks she is. Miss Pert?But you have disproved that theory, haven't you, dear??Hous- J ton Post. B? . 1 . - " ? Miss Agnes' Mille | to young women at { ' Menstrual Period ? t suffering and remove Lydia E. Pinkham's "To Young Women:?I suffe rhea (painful periods), so much so knew it meant three or four davs this was due to an inflamed conditio by repeated and neglected colds. "If youn^ girls only realized I this critical time, much suffering w for Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetal medicine which helped me any. W take it, I noticed a marked improvi the time of my next monthly period ably. I kept up the treatment, and ^ another person since. I am in perfect added 12 pounds to my weight, mj happy."?Miss Agnes Miller, 25 rni? ^ ot rtlri\AOC XilU XliUUtlllJ UiV.anvxvuvv health. Anything- unusual at and proper attention. Fifty tho that Lydia E. Pinkham's Yeget struation and makes those peric READ WHAT MISS " Dear 3 ham's Vegel fitted me. I trouble was p ^IllF mont^ 1 fSf ?^ 11111 severe bearin ' f3? ps^f men. Jji /p medicine. I 1201 6th Str( (Mill1/1H$ f is anytli i J j>| W j I fl/c? no^ un(iersta . -mi, Mass., her advice is free a n5.,voman who asks for it. K .*^re<han one hundred tliousa 1 ' ni~r *ck sisters? SfeflOn lORFtZST if v:a cnnnot f^rthxr ^ w4?ir ti"vw tOctiiuoi?i?ls, wliicli wi;i :? < - I.vtii: CURE BLCOL) POISON. CANCSP. Aching llonep. Shifting Tains, Itching Skin, Timii'es, Tntlns; Soi-ep, Etc. If you have Pimples or Offensive Eruptions, Splotches, or Copper-Colored Eruptions, or rash 0:1 the skin, Festering Swellings, Glands Swollen, Ulcers on any part of the body, old Sores, Boils, Carbuncles, Pains and Aches in Bones or Joints, Hair 1 | or Eyebrows falling out, persistent Sore ] Mouth, Gums or Throat, then you have Blood Poison. Take Botanic Blood Balm } .(B.B.B.) Soon all Sores, Pimples and Erup- ] tions will heal perfectly. Aches and Pains cease, Swellings subside and a perfect,never ' to return cure made. B.B.B. cures Can- j ccrs of all kinds, Suppurating Swellings, i Eating Sores, Ugly Ulcers, after all else 1 fails, healing the sores perfectly. If you j have a persistent pimple, wart, swollen glands, shooting, stinging pains, take Blood > Balm and they will disappear before they develop into Cancer. Druggists, ?1 per large bottle, including complete directions for home cure. Sample free by writing Blood Balm Co., 19 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice sent in sealed letter. The eve is most sensitive to green colors. Two boys, aged fourteen and fifteen, recently committed suicide in Berlin with the same revolver. , The Higher Culture. ' "So nice to meet you! I have Just /? >? r cum*3 irum JUS, IIU S tea. "Oh, did you go? I had a card, but I never think of attending." * "Well, I felt it a sort of Christian obligation don't you know? Poor thing, she makes such an effort." ^ "And such an appearance! Do tell me, was it the old torquoise tea gown ? I've heard so much about?" "The same. But it was disguised, this time, with chiffon and bows. Of course, we all recognized it." "And was the tea as bad as they say it always is?" "Oh, I never tasto it! I take the cup enthusiastically and exclaim, 'What delicious tea you make!' I stay ten minutes, chatting right and left to every one, and then I tell her I have spent a most delightful hour." "In fact you do the whole duty of woman?" "I do. I'm on my way now to my class for the Culture of Higher Ideals." 1 "Do you feel it helpful?" 1 "Oh, I am like a different being. I c can feel that my life is daily broaden- 5 ed and enobled by the?the lofty 1 thoughts and?Fortunately, you are not 5 obliged to mix with the women you < meet there, but tho lecturer is a per- ( feet delight." 1 "How charming-" I "Yes. He's so handsome that you i never care what he says. I really 1 don't listen. The charm is just to sit 1 and look at him. Do join!" ' "Oh, I will. We all need these up- f lifting influences."?Town Topics. j i INITIALS. I Enrolling OScer?What is your \ no mo 9 Recruit?Owen Espy Casey. Enrolling Officer (with evident irritation)?Shoot a few of those initials! 0. N. S. P. K. C. what??Chicago Tribune. OSCULATORY. "Well, I like that," said the maid, with an assumption of vast dignity after she had lured the lad on to kiss her. "I don't mind it, either," said he, "let's have another.?"New York Sun. r, of Chicago, speaks >out dangers of the ; iow to avoid pain and ! ; the cause by using Vegetable Compound. \s ? red for six years with dysmenorthat I dreaded every month, as I of intense pain. The doctor said m of the uterine appendages caused low dangerous it is to take cold at ould be spared them. Thank God >!o Compound, that was the only 'ithin three wee lis after I started to sinent in my general health, and at I the pain had diminished considerlvos cured a month later. I am like health, my eyes are brighter, I have ' color is good, and I feel light and Potomac Ave., Chicago, 111. ts the condition of a woman's that time should have prompt usand letters from women prove able Compound regulates men)ds painless. LESDBECK SAYS: Irs. Pixkham : ? Lydia E. Pinkable Compound lias greatly benewill tell you how I suffered. My lainfnl menstruation. I felt as each t>y that I was getting worse. I had g-down pains m my back and abdo:1 advised me to try Mrs. Pinkham's did so and am now free from all ;ny periods." ? Jessie C. Lindbeck, jet, Pockford, 111. IE ADVICE TO WOMEN, ember, every woman is cordially o write to Mrs. Pinkham if there ng about her symptoms she does nd. Mrs. Pinkliam's address is ,nd cheerfully given to every ailer advice lias restored to health ad women. Why don't you try itli vrodn^et])*> original letters and signatures of vi> s'.io'r a!?solu?e yenuinoncss. t V.. I'inkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass* ?f? rmttme "THERE IS These verses were written by J. L. MeC'reerVj an Iowa editor, .and were first published m Arthur's Home Magazine of July, 1863. Shortly after this the Farmers' Advocate, published in Chicago, printed r.n article written by Eugene Bulmer, who saw fit to attach the poem to the end of it. A Wisconsin editor clipped the poetry and credited it to E. Bu.mcr. Another editor thought "m" should be "w" and credited it to E. Bulwcr, and in time E. Bulwer was transformed ?nto Edward Bulwer, Lord Lytton. After a chase of nearly twentylive years Mr. McCreerv was able to catch up with the lie and nail it fast. He is now ividcly known as the author. Ihere is no death! the stars go down Tn rico lmrtn enmr> r\tYior clinrn ' ,\nd bright in heaven's jeweled crown i They shine forevermore. rhcre is no death! the forest leaves Convert to life the viewless air; Die rocks disorganize to feed 'lhe hungry moss they bear. Fhere is no death! the dust we tread Shall change beneath the summer showera, ; ro golden grain, or mellow fruit Or rainbow-tinted flowers. * rhere is no death! the leaves may fall, The flowers may fade and pass away?* rhey only wait through wintry hours, The warm, sweet breath of May. rhere is no death! the choicest gifts That heaven hath kindly lent to earth \re ever first to seek again The country of their oirth. \nd all things that for growth or joy Are worthy of our love or care, iVhosc loss has left us desolate, Are safely garnered there. ["hough life become a desert waste, We know its fairest, sweetest flowers, Auvu*"J. KL'.-TV.m'* ? mSBSBBaat ij /IN OCEfl! i ^ J "attic With a ijj I mnmr > south t IX (lie dim and-stuffy recesses of the fo'c's'le of the Beluga a silent, sullen company of men of all shades of color sat at their -1.30 a. m. jreakfast. Some munched stolidly at flocks of fat pork and flinty biscuit, )thers just drank alleged coffee and ;moked. And they were the majority, or few there are who, after a night of ;!cep, especially in such an atmosphere, 'an rise and begin the morning meal and such a meal) in five minutes. But hose who did not eat concealed their jortlons about their persons, usually II the breasts of "jumpers," for there was never more than enough to go ound. Suddenly, with a voice like that of a xantlc buli, came the expected comnand, "Now. 'way boats, there." It vas immediately followed by a stnmiede, each lhan struggling to be first :p the narrow ladder, each man dreadug the sure and painful position of the ast. Reaching the deck, the rushing )and divided itself in four, one part to ?ach boat, where it hung gleaming :peetrally against the violet sky. None ?ast a glimpse upward or around, for lone had time or thought to spare. Yet lie scene was entirely worthy of man's iest notice. The dally miracle of dawn tlways is?but here! The ship lay moionless, anchored apparently upon a alee of transparent ink, in whose st!?l lepths strange gleam ings occasionally lightened its mystery of utter darkless. Around rose the solemn tree-clad lllls of Ilnpai, now in deepest shadow. Vway to the south, southeast and east he way out to the broad besom of the ." aciflc la; clearly open between the everal islands, and although from the wo former quarters there was as yet 10 lightening of the deep velvety pur>le of the night, there was a something emotely like the opening of a door eading from a dark hall into the clear ilr; a little draught of freshness seemed ;tealing in from thence. But from the iast there came through that gap a luivering throb of opal-tinted light, ust rippling along the horizon and ouching the still waters that lay beween it and us with-the suggestion of dory to come, the first heart beat of hat sweet day before which the mod>st stars paled and vanished. And iverhead the returning legion of flying - ? - ?- 1 ! ?1. :oxes, rresn rrom mcir long mgui? raid among tlio fruit trees, passed like iquadrons of dark spirits hastening pack to their native gloom at the adrent of light, and occasionally from :heir midst came a wail wringing the mart like a sudden terror. To mos* of us all this was but suggested, hardly realized; yet we moved tvitk utmost quiet, unconsciously falling in with our environment. And when the rattle of a block, the sharp click of an oar on a gunwale, or a boarse oath broke the sacred peace of the moment, an involuntary "Hush!" rose to the lips. Ten minutes a'ter our ippearance on deck we were all in our places and, with the steady, splashless stroke of trained whaling oarsmen, were silently gliding toward the portals of the day. As the oars rose and fell they lifted overflowing chalices of emeralds, and as the sweet dark crept away great lakes of ever changing color, of infinite and Indescribable variety, stol^ over the placid surface of the quiet sea. A cool breath crept from the dawn point to meet us; It kissed our heated necks, put fresh vigor into our strokes, freshened, strengthened, until at a ringing shout of command we flung our oars with one accord and prepared to make sail. Is it of any use, I wonder, trying to describe the scene that greeted us as we did so? I fear not, where so many master hands have failed, so let me say simply that the pass ahead, leading seaward, was aflood with molten ruby, amethyst and opal, with a background of flaming gold, before which the shrinking eyes closed. "And the glory of the Lord was revealed." Ha, ha! how raptur-! +Vir, lUnn/l cn clrnrfisll UUOiJ iuu k/iVUu, wv J courses through our reins as the boats, birdlike, skim over the sparkling waves on the lightsome way to windward. But the business of the day needs remembering. We are out after whales, and unto him who can first report the presence of one, afterward caught, shall be given $10. So a keen lookout is kept for a while, until the wonderful beauty of the scene obtains the sway over our minds again, and the boats glide swiftly along the steep shores of the outermost island. "Ah-blow-w-w-w-w!" almost in a whisper and several hands are pointed to where, against the dark green of the cliffs, yet in shadow, three vapory spirals of varying heights show clearly. But what can three mean? Two of them we can account for?the broad, bushy one and the tiny jet only four or five feet high. The third, however closely associated with the other two, and of great height, puzzles us?does not delay us, though, for with paddles unshipped we urge the progress of our craft toward those vast unconscious mammals so pleasantly sojourning in the shade. We are abreast of them, helms are put up, and all four boats bear down upon tbem witti the swoop -raOTTEsf NO DEATH." Transplanted into paradise Adorn immortal bowers. The voice of birdlike melody That we have missed and mourned so lonj Now mingles with the angel choir In everlasting song. There >s no death! although we grieve When beautiful, familiar forms That we have learned to love are torn Fro.n our embracing arms? Although with bowed and breaking hear^ With sable garb and silent tread, We bear their senseless dust to rest, . We say that they are "dead"?They are not dead! they have but passed Beyond the mists that blind us here, Into the new and larger life Of that serencr sphere. They have but dropped their robe of clay To put their shining raiment on; They have not wandered far away? ) They are not "lost" or "gone." Though disenthralled and glorified, " They still are here and love as vet; The dear ones they have left behind They never can forget. And sometimes, when our hearts grow faint Amid temptations fierce and deep, Or when the wildly raging waves Of grief or passion sweep? We feci upon our fevered brow Their gentle touch, their breath of balm, Xheir arms enfold us, and our hearts Grow comforted and calm. And ever near us, though unseen, The dear, immortal spirits tread? For all the boundless universe Is L:fe;?there are no dead! H FiQHT. i; -jT g Whale in the j| Seas. J "r^r' ' | of gigantic hawks. When but a ship's, length away, sails are rolled up as if automatically. Noiseless as fish we glide into the shadow and?strike. What an awful uproar breaks up that sweet solitude; the shoutings of excited men, the furious struggles of wounded leviathans, whose mighty tail strokes reverberate in hollow thunder along the echoing cliffs. The heretofore placid sea hisses and boils, and the boats toss as in a maelstrom. What can be amiss? Not thus is the humpback mother wont to meet an attack unless her youngling is injured. Ah, that is it, surely. Her calf must be dead, and, if so, then heads must needs be cool and hands skilful or there will be many numbers lost from our good ship's messes. Two boats disappeared to windward in a smother of spray, and we who remain dimly imagine in some disinterested fashion what manner of humpback they may be fast to. But not for long, for suddenly toward us comes rushing a faintly outlined black mass piled high with snowy foam, and we must needs exert every muscle to avoid that terrible onslaught. We do just succeed?the mighty one passes, and disappears. Oh, for some shelter, if only a shallow reef! But there is none. Crash! and like an earthquake shock come the maddened mother's flukes against the side of the other boat, hurling her and her disintegrated contents far shoreward. Never again will that boat molest a whale. And also, oh, ' sorrow .and shame! never again will Hallett Whislow, best, brightest, bravest of harpooners, see the blessed sun rise. ITis neck is broken. Now, while she is venting her fury upon the floating fragments let us escape. But there are our shipmates, and as swiftly as our shaking limbs allow we pick them up, expecting every moment to go even nc fVtPv -wont?nnrl thpn? The next few minutes passed like some liidoous nightmare, frantic, jointwrenching endeavors to keep out of the way of the monster bent upon our destruction, and sudden eruptions, upheavals of the sea, so close to us that destruction seemed impossible of avoidance. And all this time, wherever we went in the turmoil, we never lost sight of the calf whale. As if to cal.4 our crime continually to remembrance it kept us company, tossing helplessly upon the tormented waters. At last? and although I feel sure that half an hour had not passed, yet the time seemed interminable?we found ourselves, almost exhausted, close to the rocks, where an overhanging ledge, thickly clothed with drooping branches, jutted out above deep water, but only about three feet above the surface. With one last flash of energy we all sprang for shelter, scrambled like monkeys into the tangle of the trees, just as the unbreathed parent rushed at our deserted boat and crushed it into matchwood, returning again and again -L- D ?i._ ...,4.11 +1./,^ TTTSM.SV O 1 ? lO THU iragiucuis uum uirj ntic himost ground into splinters. All the while we hung precariously, fearfully, just above the terrible tumult, possessed with the idea that even here we were hardly safe from so redoubtable a foe. And th(n into the blazing sunshine, which had now crept up to our refuge, there sprang the other whale, towing behind him the two surviving boats, still uninjured. Upon our almost benumbed brains fell a deeper fear. Were we about to witness the destruction of all that little company, so swiftly nearing this place of utmost danger? No I long suspense, for out from the shadow of our cliff sprang the vengeful mother to meet her spouse and finish her great work of retribution. But as she came we saw the bull whale slacken speed, saw the two boats spread out fanwise behind him, saw the cow rush between them fully exposed. A puff of white smoke, and presently a tiny report as of a revolver shot. Then for a few moments our view was obscured by tumbling waves raised by the two monsters in their flurry, the one of death, the other of escape. And ou.t of that boiling vortex emerged our two boats, still uninjured, a large black mass floating between them in utter immobility, while far to the windward a tall jet as of steam from a high pressure wastepipe showed where the agile bull was making his utmost speed from the place of death. And in deepest silence and sorrow we distributed ourselves among the rescuing boats and prepared to tow to the ship our hardly won prize.?London Spectator. A Jest of Fortune. Here is one of the merry jests Fortune likes to play upon mankind: A drayman got seven hundred shares oi Calumet stock and kept It until it was worth over half a million dollars, meanwhile continuing calmly to drive his dray. The man whose genius and industry discovered the mine, created its organization and launched it upon its wonderful career had 27,0S2 shares and could not keep any of them. He found himself reduced to poverty,when a single month's dividends on his former holdings would have made him rich.?From "Romances of the World's Great Mines," in the Cosmopolitan. HABIT OF LYING. . Ways In Which Prevarication May Be Developed. How does one become a liar? That Is to say, how docs the child discover a lie and habitually make use of it? ' We can admit that at the beginning there is absolute sincerity. The child through all its first years neither lies nor dissimulates. Its sentiments, its desires, translate themselves into words and into acts. Its body is tho^ constant and perfect expression of its inmost being. Such Is the starting point?sincerity, absolute transparency. There is a multitude of little"lies tolerated which we treat as paidonable. We tell the domestic to say wo are not at home when we are; we compliment people to their faces and criticise them when they are gone; we say we are happy to see some one and directly after speak of having been annoyed. No more is necessary. The example has been given.' We lie to the child himself; we are pressed by his many embarrassing questions and in order to free ourselves *rom the embarrassment reply with what is frequently a falsehood. Some fine day he discovers the truth, and the evil is done. The gravest ease is when the child is taken as an accomplice in a lie, or when his mother tells him, "Above all, do noi tell this to your papa." This is the ruin of morality. The third stage is the first encounter of the child with society?the first shock with social life. The child who telis all lie knows, sees and hears, all that he would bc-tter have left unsaid, is called the "enfant terrible." His parents do not tell him to lie, but they tell him it is net necessary to tell all he thinks. This is extremely serious, as it teaches the child that he cannot show himself as he is. This is the revelation of the lie obligatory. Above all, among his comrades he is naive? expresses all his joys, pains, desires ?they make sport of him?nay, worse, they abuse his confidence; the hopes, projects which he has confided to them he some day sees used against him. Thus the impossibility of living without lying is revealed to him Society excuses certain forms of lying which are inspired by a feeling of politeness, modesty, shame. The child becomes a liar because all tha world about him lies. The distinction between the liar and the mqn of sincerity is only relative. There are in reality only two categories? tttVi r\ / ?!->>"? U'ifh UiUOU n liU vvuvv/uv VUVU1K.V. . the lies exacted by social life am? those who have habituated themselves to lying more than society wishes?to lie because of some personal interest. An important cause in the develop ment of lying In children Is the employment of excessive and ill advised punishment. The child who becomes a liar is the one who lives in perpetual terror of reproaches, humiliation or strokes. The lie for him is a supreme resoune.?Chicago Tribune. Women and the Food Supply. Manufacturers appeal to housewives by overy advertising channel practicable to "ask your grocer," or "send us the name of your grocer," for articles newly put upon the market, it being a recognized fact that though grocers are always ready to order anything asked for, it is not easy tn awaken the housewife's interest in anything out of the beaten track of "staples." The manufacturers do appeal directly to housewives is an acknowledgment that they?housewives ?actually control the food supply .question. How could it be otherwise? What the housewife is willing to use the manufacturer supplies; what she refuses to use finds no market. There is the food situation in a nutshell! If woman would but recognize its whole significance there would be no more question of food adulterations, fraudulent methods or inferior products. The grocer stands ready to command the out put of the manufacturer; and the manufacturer stands ready to meet all demands laid upon him; "my lady's" apathy alone stands in the way of perfect living.?Ella Morris Kretschmar in Good Housekeeping. TOO HASTY. "Yes," said the Proud Papa, "my boy always does exactly what I tell him " "Oh, back up!" jeered the Bold Bachelor. "You bragging fathers make me weary." "?not to do," concluded the Proud Papa, unmoved. "You shouldn't be so quick at drawing conclusions, Bach!"?Cincinnati Tribune. it's bard to bear. Thousands of aching backs have been relieved and cured. People are learning that backache pains come from disordered kidneys, that Doan's Kidney Pills cure every kidney ill, cure bladder troubles, urinary derangements, dropsy, diabetes, Rright's disease. Read this testimony to the merit of the greatest of kidney specifics. J. W. Walls, Superintendent of Streets of Lebanon, Ivy., living on East Main street, in that city, says: "With my nightly rest broken, owing to irregularities of the kidneys, suffering intensely from severe pains in the small of my back and through the kidneys, and annoyed by painful passages of abnormal secretions, life was anything but pleasant for me. No amount "AiUvfid fliie r-nnditinn find U1 UUtlUltll^ 1TJH.H.U IJJIH UV..V. for the reason that nothing seemed to give me even temporary relief I became about discouraged. One day I noticed in the newspapers the case of a man who was afllicted as I was and was cured 15y the use of Doan's Kidney Pills. Ilis words of praise for this remedy were so sincere that on the strength of his statement I went to the Hugh Murrey Drug Co.'s store and got a box. I found that the medicine was exactly as powerful a kidney remedy as represented. I experienced quick and lasting relief. Doan's Kidney Pills will prove a blessing to all sufferers from kidney disorders who will give them a fair trial." A Free Trial of this great kidney medicine, which cured Mr. Walls, will be mailed to any part of the United States on application. Address FosterMilburn Co., Buffalo, X. Y. For sale by all druggists, price 50 cents per box What He Gets Out of It. Detroit Free Prcs:: Mr. Clevelanis certainly having all the fun tha comes from keeping everybody guess ing. PROMINENT PIT ROBERTS 'X VVV vw% vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvwwvvwv J | $ Robert It* Roberta, M. D., Wash- J j 5 ington. D. C.. writes: < : j ? *'Through my own experience j ! >as well at that of many of my * j > friends and acquaintances who* i $ have been en red or relieved of ca- * j \ tarrh by the use of Hart man's < ; ^ Reruna, 1 can confidently rcc- $ I *ommctid it to those suffering* | * from such disorders, and have no < j * hesitation in prescribing it to my $ j $ pat tents. "--Robert R. Roberts. $ | .vwwvvvvvvx vvwvwvvvvwwwvww j A CONSTANTLY increasing number of J i\ physicians prescribe Reruna in their j regular practice. It has proven its merits i so thoroughly that even the doctors have overcome* their prejudice against so-called j patent medicines and recommend it to ! their patients. j Reruna occupies a unique position in I medical science. It is the only internal I A*^?an-.?A ooforrK romo^tr IrvxAftm tn f}ip in V IUIV, vavni i ii AVU1VU/ AMV ft ?' .... medical profession to-day." Catarrh, as : everyone will admit, is tne cause of onei half the diseases which afflict mankind. ! Catarrh and catarrhal diseases afflict onei half of the people of United States. F. II. Brand, M. D., of Mokena, 111., uses Tcruna in his practice. The following case is an example of the success he has through the use of Peruna for catarrh. l)r. Brand says: "Mrs. 'C.,' age 28, had been a sufferer from catarrh for the past seven years; could not hear plain and had watery eyes. She carne to me almost a physical wreck. She had tried the Copeland cures and various other so-called . specialists, and had derived no benefit j from them. She told me she did not 1 A NOTABLE LOCALITY. ' "Are there any historic spots In this Vicinity?" queried the tourist. "Well, mum, right over there by that tree Bill Jorkins once had a pile of coal that weighed purty nigh two tons."?Bryan's Commoner. FITS permanently cnred.No 11 ta or nervousness after flrat day's use of Dr. Kline's Great KerroEestorer.$2trialbottleand treatise free ! Dr. R.H.Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phlla.,Pa. The beauty about diplomacy is that it i enables both sides to claim a victory. | Ucware of Ointments For Catarrh That Contain Merenry, | r.s mercury will surely destroy the sense ol smell and completely derange the whole sys. tem when entering it through the mucous : surfaces. Such articles should never be used ; except on prescriptions from reputable phvI sicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold 11 to the good you can possibly derive from ! them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, 0M contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure to got the genuine. It is taken internally, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney A Co. Testimonials free. ?y\SoId by Druggists; price, 75c. perbottlo. Hall's Family Pills are the best. A new kind of lightning?vortex lightning?has been photographed in Switzerland. H. H. Gbeen's Sons, of Atlanta, Ga., are ' 1 " - ? 1 ? ?? ? ? ?- ? ? t mmm LVaaIa 14 in f Ufl liie ouiy aueeessiui uivyoy opcuaus? w kuv | world. See their liberal offer in advertisement in another column of this paper. The bald-headed man realizes that there is plenty of room at the top. You can't blow your own horn unless you are able to raise the wind." Fiso's Cure cannot be too higblyspckenot as a cough cure.?J. W. O'Bbiin, 822 Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,1900. Some men are naturally absent-minded, and others forget judiciously. i Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not stain the hands or spot the kettle, except green ' , and purple. There is more fun in the world than . most of us have any idea of. Coronation medals made of gun metal j have been presented by King Edward to t.he household police at Windsor Castle. IDONT : GETWElf^S' \ASK YOUfi DEALEB FOB Tht 5LICK&R MADE FAMOUS 6Y A PEPOTATION ! ^EMENDING OVED MODE THAN^ ; J ,, l HALF A CENTUPY. _ % Ptv TOWER'S'jarments and. \*?\Yt hats are made of the beat //ArV y"\ A \ materials in black or yellow n I 4 \ I ' for all kinds of wet work. >' ' ' SATISFACTION 15 GUARANTIED ? YOU 5TK3 TO ^owerjcanaikan i apudine ! X^__y Cures Nervousness AND NERVOUS HEADACHE. 10, 25 and 50c. at Drugttores. o SICUNTPRBSCB Dr. M. G. Gee, o 11 Pe-ru-na is ' " . f l^ oL^ * want to spend any more money on medicines unless I could assure her relief. twvvxvvvwwvf "I put her on Pe* f runa aI,<* ^er * * *? come back in 5 *f two weeks. The et\ f J fects were wonder ) 1^ ew f iuj. j ne can-aown * J <w CT * look she bad when * | / . fjk t 1 first saw her had \ ^?r an(* a pm'^e i ir^^ar^K J adorned her face. ' ?^j^3rW"^ t She told me slie ? $ *e'c a different ? woman, her hearing t'Vfggmffifry[wfmr- i was improved and $ ^n&T '1%'JJr < her eyes did not > F. H. Brand. M. D. ' trouble her any .wvwvvwvvvvw^' more. "This is only one case of the many I have treated with your valuable medicine."? F. H. Brand, M. D. Catarrh may invade any organ of the body; may destroy any function of the body. It* most commonly attacks the head, nose and throat, but thousands upon thousands of cases of catarrh of the lungs, (cartridges and shot shells, i are made in the largest and \ best equipped ammunition | (factory in the world. | AMMUNITION f I of (J. M. G. make is now fi accepted by shooters as | "the worlds standard" for 8 it shoots weil ;n any gun. | Tour dealer tells it. | I The Union Metallio g Cartridge Co. | Bridgeport, - Conn, g tS?- Drafftot. Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in bnflc. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell r WGIve the name of this paper when writing to advertisers- (At. 18. '03) L, DOUGLAS Band $3.88 Shoes KM You can save from 83.00 to 85.00 yearly rearing W. L. Douglas S3.50 or 83 Shoes. ley arc just as good In every way as those that liavo been costing von from ?4.C0 to $5.00. The immense sale of "\V. L. Douglas shoes proree fek their superiority over all other makes. Sold by retail shoe dealers everywhere. * wpSfc. The genuine have name and price \ stamped on the bottom. Take no 'lith /A substitute. Fast Color Ei/tUts used. .ft. W. L. Douglas 8-1 (Jilt Edge Dine cannot be equalled at any price. W. L. Dowrlas makes and sells more xricn'e r Goodyear welt (hand-sewed process 1 shoes than any o'her manufacturer in the world. (HOC nnnDsufsril "id be paid to anyone wbo qhCOjUUU nCWfllQ can disprove this statement Made of the best imported ana American leathers. "something just as good." fi A ft! pro CURED WITHOUT CUTIING UHiauLii * New Vegetable Remedy Piles. Fistula and Sores I Core Guaranteed in Every Case Treated [ NATIONAL CANCER MEDICINE COMPANY Austell Building, Atlanta, Ga. Tfj CURES WHERE ALL ELSEF AILS. " y Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use W In time. Sold by druggists. gf J,<frT I Uncle Sam Game Fast selling noTeltv. Agents wanted. Sendl?o. fo sample 8HEPARD, 139 Hoyt Street, Buffalo, N. Y aJmsS HEKH Established 1876. The Donglaa aeeret proeeaa of tanning the bottom aolei prodaeea more flexible ?od longer wearing leathei than ?oy ether (annexe. The late* have more tbse don. bled the peat fonr year*, which pro re* Ua anperiorUr 1899 Sales: #58,203,S?:{.21 1903 Sales: 8o, 034,340.00 v vPs I il IBE PE-RP-NA. f San Francisco, Says i of Especial BeneWomen." stomach, kidneys, bladder and other pclvio organs have been cured by Peruna. 1'eruna is able to cure catarrh w^erever it may be located by its direct action upon the mucous membranes. Catarrh mean? inflamed mucous membranes. Peruna acts at once to cleanse and invigorate the catarrhal condition of the mucous membrane no matter where it may occur in the body. Its action is the same on the mucous lining of the nose as on the mucous lining of the bowels. It cures the catarrhal inflammation wherever it may occur. Dr. R. Robbins, Muskogee, I. T., writes: "l'eruna is the best medicine I know of for cough and to strengthen a weak stomach and to give appetite. Beside prescribing it for catarrh, 1 have ordered it for weak and debilitated people, and have not had a patient but said it helped him. It is an excellent medicine and it fits so many cases. "I have a large practice, and hare A chance to prescribe your Peruna. I hope you may live long to do good to the sick and suffering." v t We sav Peruna cures catarrh. The peoV, - V p.e say l eruaa cures cawum. * men and women a!! over the United ?tatea from Maine to Caiifornia do not hesitate y>j to come out in public print to say that /Peruna is what it is recommended to be, an' internal, systemic catarrh remedy that cures catarrh wherever it may be located.. Dr. M. C. (ice's Experience. * . X i Dr. M. C. Gee is one of the physieiana who endorse Peruna. In a letter written -* .ffJ* from 513 Jones street. San Francisco, CaL he says: "There is a general objection on '"4 the part of the practicing physician to advocate patent medicines. But ichen any one medicine cures hun- deeds of people, it demonstrates its oxen value and does not need the en~ jlorsement of the profession. ?m "Peruna has performed so many wonderful cures in San Francisco ' "'i that lam convinced that It ts a rats?able remedy. 1 have frequently ad+ vlstd Its use for women, as I find It insures regular and painless mm~ 7 struatfon, cures leucorrhoea and tvarian troubles, and builds up the entire system. 1 atso consider it one of the finest catarrh remedies t know of. 1 heartily endorse your medicine.v?11. C. Gee, Id. D. Women are especially liablfc to pelvic catarrh, female weakness as it.is commonly" .'.''-sSgS calied. Especially in the first few weeks. of warm weather dp the disagreeable., : iics symptoms of female weakness make tiiem- sjjjH seives apparent. In .crisp, cold wenther chronic suiferers with pelvic catarrh do not t'eei so persistently the debilitating effects of. the drain upon the system, bur at the jpproncb of summer with its lassitude and tired feelings, the sufferer with pelvic catarrh feeis the need of a strengthening tonic. Pernna is not only the best spring tonic; -_* tor such cases, but if persisted in will effect ; 1 complete cure. Write lor a copy of iio,1*1. -,nrl lto;iiirr/' written especially ~ t i for women by J)r. liartman. If you want ! to read of some cures, also, write for a ^ copy of "Facts and Faces." That will sure* * ||| !v convince you that our claims are valid. If you do not derive prompt an<i satisfactory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. liartman, giving a full statement of your ease and he wiU be pleased to give you his valuable advice r.; gratis. . Address Dr. liartman. President of The <:'v Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. ? Avery & Company SUCCESSORS TO avery & McMillan, 51-03 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga ^ -ALL KINDS OF? Ac MACHINERY Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, ail Sizes. Wheat Separators. Large Engines and Boilers supplied promptly. Shingle Milis, Corn Mills, Circular Saws,Saw Teeth, Patent Dogs, * Steam Governors. Full line' Engines & Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue A "White Star" Buggy || On Jnly 4th we will give, Fair, on* of ?ar "WHITS STAIt" Top Baggl** to the FfWiffl composing the greatest number of .?agi)*h woras from letters contained in the sentences "WATCH THE WHITE STAR BUSBY," Anyone who will devote an hour each dey to : this pleasant study can win the bugg*. No conditions to comply with except make ap the list of words. If this offer is not understood, sr.y bug^y dealer in your town who has the agency fof the "WHITE STAR" Buggy will giTe you a copy of the ruir-s. When you have made out your list of worda give them to our agent in your town, who will send them to us. On July 4th we will notify every contestant who the winner is and number of words that won the "WHITE STAR" Buggy. { E3?"~i! you writs us. enclose postage for reply. ; ATLAN1A BU68Y CO.. Atlaiti. Georgia j ? Dropsy I f Removes ail swelling in 8 to an / days; effects a permanent cure Air' >V in 30 to todays. Trial treatment given free. Nothingcan be fairer - Write Or. H. H. Green's Sons, ^ trTjYBRi- Specialists, Box B Atlanta,tt v \ V W *