The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, February 21, 1907, Image 6

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THREE EPOC I AW g'. f MRS. ELVA BARBER EDWARDS There are three critical stages in a -woman'? life which leave their mark in her career. The first of these stages is womanhood, or the change from a -care free girl to budding womanhood. The second is motherhood, and the third is Change of Life. Perils surround each of these stages, smd most of the misery that comes to women through ill health dates k " -from one or another of these important crises. Women should remember that Lydia ; 15. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made from native roots and herbs has : carried thousands of young girls over the critical period of puberty, has prepared mothers for childbirth, and in later years carried them safely ' through the change of life more suc5kv. -cessfully than any other remedy in the world. Thousands of testimonials -from grateful persons, two of which ?,re here published, substantiate this iact beyond contradiction. Mrs. George Walters of Woodlawn, |111. writes i Dear Mrs. Pinkham "I it mv duty to tell vou of the eood PXydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound 3has done mo in preparing for childbirth. | ( After suffering and losing my children a iriend advised me to try j*our valuable medicine, and the result was that I had very little inconvenience, a quick recovery and During its long record of mor< f~- actual cures, entitles Lydia E. Pin t - the respect and confidence of ever |vLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Co S' ?I now nrep,*ed to flh orders for my Celebrated | - CABBAGE PLANTS in any quantity desired. EARLY JERSEY WAKEFIELD?Earl iest and beat I h . we header, small type. rvr CHARLESTON WAKEFIELD?About ten days later ' <hna Early. Jersey's, also a sure header of tine size. pp Prices f. o. b. here, pa Lp 800 for 81.00. 1,039 to 5,003 at 81.50 pa Special prices oa larger Quantify*. All or lerj ship?1 t CHAS. M. GIBSON ?-? CABBAGE Plan VwrwVhWk and all kinds of garden plants. ' plau ts, grown in the opeu air at VnncgS^irJf seeds or the moat reliable set* " our cn on sand acre farm. I will give us 60 per cent lew thai $1.50 i^r thousand large tot $l.t ffof'biMeggetu., S?C. The"?: <fe*s established an Experimental fetation on our Tarn <Aalij Cabbages. The result* or these experiment* l Yours respectfully K. H fjob Pr # IS NEXT TO NEWSPAPE f * THE BEST ADVERT |. '# We have been v? securing the serv \ best and most ei 5 ers in the state, , A to execute Job P J r description in a # Thp r1 ass of wor ^ us is acknowledg |f. ^ and the prices tb ^ printers anywher I Siiwvivii - mr* ' r |j and plants unfertilized and in co 9 This and other interesting experime S Culture" and "Profitable Farming" 9 by experts, and full of valuable sugj 9 better and bigger crops and larger | .1 GERMAN ! New York?93 Nassau Street. or 9??M?MBBMQBBaMHIlBIIWnillMJMlPI'm C i. :hs in "i oman's life MRS. GEORGE WALTERS 1 as healthy a child as can l>e founcl anywhere < Lydia E. Pifikham's Verge table Compound is a blessing to all expectant mothers." 1 Mrs, Elva Barber Edwards, of 1 Cathlamet, Wash., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? 'T want to tell you bow Lydia E. PinkirafrafoKla pA?r?iVMinrl Aft ma I AIC* J U C> V VyVUI^A/UUU VXlt i 1CV4 1'4V | . through the critical period of the Change of Life without any trouble whatever, also cured me of a very severe female weakness, ] I cannot say enough in praise of what your medicine has done for me/' * , ' What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ' Compound did for Mrs. Walters and 2 Mrs. Edwards it will do for other wo- < men in their condition. Every suf- . fering woman in the United States is asked to accept the following invitation. It is free, will bring you health anc^may save your life, " < Mrs. Pinkham's Invitation to Women. Women suffering from any form of J female weakuess are invited to '< promptly communicate with Mrs. ] Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the ( symptoms given, the trouble may be located and the quickest and surest way of recovery advised. Out of her ' vast volume of experience in treating 1 female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably ( has the very knowledge that wiil > help your case. Her advice is free and helpful. 3 than thirty years its long list of ] Lkham's Vegetable Compound to . 7 fair minded person. mpound Makes Sick Women Well. \ . i age Plants!i SUCCESSION?Bert known row heading variety of largo flat cabbage, later than Charleston Wakefield. ? These plants are from the very best tested seeds and ; grown in the open air and will stand severe cold without injury. All orders are filled from the same beds ( that I am using for my extensive cabbage farms. Satisfaction guaranteed. ? { 4 1 irked in light boxes: 1 r M. 5,003 to 10,000 at SI.25 per M. 11 C. 0. D. when not accompanied by remittance. j |# Young's Island, S. C, i its, CELERY Plants gSE3| < Can now furnish all kinds of cabbage mftf&vEM ( id will stand great cold. Grown from BKr*r!Sfiyi ' lsmeu. We use the same plants on M ( 'lauts carefully counted and properly ill jg ;. Lettuce, Onion and Beet plants, same RY'flH ||l ( 1 ? rates promised, which .when effective S\M | IJ fm i merchandise rates. Prices: Small lots NcW, fufl i DO to $1.25 per thousand. K. O. B. Meg- fl?iL jtafl ne Cucumber Seed (50 cents per pound. MWh 1 nlted States Agricultural Department * as, to test all kinds of vegetables, espc- 1 ve will be pleased to give you atanvflme. , . BUTCH COMPANY. ME6GETT8, 9. C J inting :r advertising. # riSING IN THE WORLD. ? j irv fortunate in r ices of one of the J , uperienced print- J md are now able 5 ; rinting of every J 11 leading styles. ^ 1 k turned out by r < ed to be the finest J ! te lowest of $ny ? jf These illustrations j show the variations in size ^ between a strong, vigorous cot? ton plant?the result of fertilization with 'otash 1 nsequence suffering from Cotton Blight, rnts are described in our books,"Cotton i ?free to any one interested. Written \ festions which, followed out, will insure j profits. Write for them to-day. f KALI WORKS I j J . > . % i 1 M ' ? . - ; ; ' , ' % IS WITH CONGRESS To Settle Jap School Muddle in San Francisco. PRESIDENT PAVES WAY White Schools to Be Opened to the Japs if National Lawmakers Pass Immigration Bill With an Exclusion Clause Attached. A Washington special says: The Japanese school Controversy is settled, in so far as President Roosevelt, Mayor Schmitz and the members of the San Francisco school board are concerned. An amicable adjustment of the question now rests with congress. If the amendment to the immi- i gration bill, proposed by Secretary Root, excluding foreigners who use | their passports to secure admission to the United States "to the detriment of labor conditions in this country," is accepted by tnq senate and bouse, and the immigration bill is passed at this session of congress, the San Francisco board of education will rescind its order establishing the oriental schools unless the Japanese government agrees to a proposition Cor separate schools, which will proride equal facilities for the Japanese children. QMimU? an/I hlc assistant^ AUHJ U4 MV41M4AI.C MUV4 . nad a conference "with the president at the white house Wednesday afternoon, and Mr. Roosevelt was assured that the amendment to the immigration bill was entirely satisfactory to them. Secretary Root participated in the conference, and made a report m his negotiations with the republican leaders in congress and the Japanese ambassador. While Mayor Schmitz and the members of the school board are still lopeful that Viscount Aoki, the Japinese ambassador, will agree to separate schools in California, they stand tvilling to rescind the order establishing t.he oriental schools, and again adnit Japanese children to the white schools. Mayor Schmitz pointed out tc Fresdent Roosevelt and Secretary Root .ha. advantages that will be gained by ;he Japanese children if the oriental schools are maintained and expressed l willingness to givfe the Japanese ?qual educational facilities to those jiven to the white children or san francisco. It the Japanese government will igiee to this proposition, the school )oard will establish a sufficient number of oriental schools to accommolate the Japanese, and will give the ihildren individual instruction. May>r Schmitz says that the Japanese nake greater prgores sin oriental schools than they do in the white schools, and that in the mixed school ;he Japanese only retard the progress )f the white children. Another conference will be held at he white house, and in the meantime President Roosevelt hopes to be able :g give Mayor Scbmitz and his asscciites assurance that the immigration nil, including the exclusion amendnent, will be passed at this session >f congress. The only thing that will prevent in amicable settlement of the whole luestion will be the unwillingness of jdhgress to pass the immigration bilk Fhis, it can be stated, on ibe highest official authority, is no;v the only >ossible hitch that can be encounter?d in the negotiations. RAILROADING PENSION BILLS. senate Passes , Them at Rate of Fifteen for Each Minute. The senate Wednesday night broke ill records by passing bills at the rate of fifteen a minute for one hour md six minutes. The bills were penLion bills on the calendar to which :here were no objections. The number passed was 991, and during the procedure Senator McCumber was the ;nly senator on the floor. Vice Presilent Fairbanks presided. JAPS DON'T APPROVE ACTION. Fhey 1 Are Sore Over Agreement Reached on School Question. A Tokio special says: No official >t?p has yet been taken looking to i settlement of the California sltuaion. in accordance with the agreenent reached between President Roosevelt and the San Francisco auhorities. but should it be effected >n that basis, the government must je prepared for violent attacks. The authorities are assuming a calm ind resolute attitude, however, and t is . believed a settlement on this ine is not entirely hopeless. INSURES HARRY THAW'S LIFE. -ondon Company Agrees to Pay Total Loss if Prisoner is Executed. A London dispatch published in \'ew York Friday says: Lloyds has added to its many oddnsurances, one on Thaw's life, agreeng to pay as a total loss if the prisoner is executed. The premium is hirty guineas per cent. The amount mderwritten is not .divulged. . .A . . * ^ y?' i Stuffing Him. "I have heard," said the stranger, "that when a train stops here the conductor calls out 'St Joe! Fifteen minutes for getting married!' It that so?" "Bless you, no," responded the St. Joe man. "That's the way it used to he, but there's so imicli lake competition now that they hold the trains until the boats have gone. Souvenir postcards? Yes, sir. Millions of 'em in those showcases over there.CATCHING BIRDS IN NETS. Method Employed Along the Coast Lands of England. In various parts of the country flight nets are used on certain parts of the coast for taking birds during the night-time, but those at Friskney, on the Wash, in Lincolnshire, have become famous on aocount of their size and the quantity of bird3 that are taken in them. , Hti this narticular Dortion of the coast, says the London Daily Graphic, the tide goes out for a very long way. Next to the big sea bank, 'which pre- j i vents the surrounding country from I being flooded, there is a large marsh I intersected with dykes, amd covered I with glass wort, which is locally ! known as samphire; next to this i3 i a big stretch of sand, and following this is a vast mud flat, famous for its cockles. There are several men there who work flight nets?George Bray, the old wildfowler, has four* Nof the longest, consisting of eleven lengths, each length of net being thirty-six yards long and about six feet deep, made of fine, strong black cotton twine, with a mesh six inches square. Along the top and bottom of the net runs a thin strong cord to attach it to a strong ash pole, which is placed at every thirty-seven yards distance. [ The lower running cord is attached to the pole about two feet from the ground, so that here is plenty of slack. If it were placed at its full stretch the birds in striking would often be thrown back and escape, instead of being curled up in a hopeless tangle. The best time to catch the wildfowl is on what are known as the "darks," that is, dark, stormy nights with high tides and the wind blowing north and northeast. Quiet moonlight nights are bad, as the birds, flying low, see the net and avoid the snare by rising over the top of It. Of course with so large a mesh many small birds pass through without being caught, and, being of thin twine, often when a large bunch of duck or geese strike it they go clean through it, leaving nothing but a big rent in the net and a few feathers to tell the tale. The writer has seen various ducks and gulls, woodcock, snipe, plovers, owls and many different species, both large and small, caught in the toils. One has to visit the net at daybreak to take out the spoil, otherwise the gulls and the gxav backed crows make very short work of the poor captives. In netting the ubiquitous and destructive sparrow all that is needed is a special sparrow net, pocketed on two long, thin poles. The ivy on the house sides and walls and the stacks in the farmyards are worked all-over by raising the net as high as possible, clapping it x5n to the wall or stack, and then drawing it gradually downward. The birds, as they are disturbed, fly out into the toils. Several scores of birds may be captured in an evening. Says the Christain Register overwork on the railroads with consequent nervous exhaustion is given as one cause of the congestion of the car supply in the North-west. This also is a cause of the numerous railway accidents. Two explanations are given. One is the greed of railway owners and managers who will not employ men enough to reduce the strain of overwork. The other is the lack of laborers who are willing to earn good wages offered by railway corporations. We believe there is an Increasing tendency to pay good .wages and give employees fair treatment. DREADED TO EAT A Quaker Couple's Experience. How many persons dread to eat their meals, although actually hungry nearly all the time! Nature never intended this should be so, for we are given a thing called appetite that should guide us as to what the system needs at any time and can digest. But we get in a hurry, swallow our food very much as we shovel coal into the furnace, and our sense of appetite becomes unnatural, and per verted. Then we eat the wrong kind of food or eat too much, and there you are?indigestion and its accompanying miseries. A Phila. lady said the other day: "My husband and I have been sick and nervous for 15 or 20 years from drinking coffee ? feverish, indigestion, totally unfit, a good part of the time, for work or pleasure. We actually dreaded to eat our meals. "We tried doctors and patent medicines that counted up into hundreds of dollars, with little if any benefit. "Accidentally, a small package of Postum came into my hands. I made sonm according to directions, with surprising results. We both liked it and have not used any coffee since. VThe dull feeling after meals has left us and we feel better every way. We are so well satisfied with Postum that we recommend it to our friends who have been made sick and nervous and miserable by coffee." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." BARRY GOES TO CUBA. To Succeed Gen. Wint, wniie uuvail, of the Department of the Gulf, Is Sent to Washington. A Washington special says: Because of physical disability, Brigadier General Theodore J. Wint, in command of the army of Cuban pacification, has asked for and been granted three months' leave of ab/ sonce. Brigadier General Thomas H. Barry, assistant chie,? of staff, will at once leave for Cuba to relieve him. General Barry's orders to the command in Cuba, which he will obey, created an important vacancy in the rnmv <rpn#>rnl staff whirh thA nrASi dent has filled by the appointment ot Brigadier General William P. Duvall, in command of the Department of the Gulf, who consequently becomes the principal assistant to Major Generai Boll, chief of general staff. General Duvall will be succeeded in command of the Department of the Gulf by Brigadier Edgerly. The fact that Brigadier General William P. Duvall will be assigned to duty in Washington and will have to leave Atlanta will be a matter of real regret, for since his assignment to Atlanta, General Duvall ha3, through liis uniform courtesy, as well as his recognized ability'as an officer, also made a host of Atlanta friends and admirers. In the department of the gulf, of which he is the head, he is revered and respected by his associates, officers and the enlisted men as scarcely any other commander since the opening of the department. Lately Getferal Duvall has been probainent as the head of the board of the United States army recommending the purchase of a large amount of land, over 32,000 acres, adjoining the Fort Oglethorpe reservation, for the purpose of increasing this from a regimental to a brigade post and also providing f0r a big maneuver grounds in connection with the Fort Oglethorpe reservation and Chickamanga Park. This purchase recommended was approved by Secretary of War Taft, and is now awaiting the action of congress. Several officers were interviewed regarding General Edgerly, who will head the department of the gulf.Thess stated that he held a most enviable reputation as an army officer, together with a charm of personality such as had won him very many friends, both in military and civil life. BRUTES GET THEIR DESERTS. Two White Men Hung in Kentucky for Criminally Assaulting Girl. . W. R. Fletcher and Guy H. Lyon were hanged iu Russeilville, Ky., at sunrise Frida^ morning for criminalassault committed on Mary E. Glader May 22, 1905. The necks of both were broken by the drop. Each made long talks on the gallows, denying their guilt and declaring that their ?lives had been sworn away by false witnesses. Lyon attempted suicide Thursday night by opening a blood vessel In Me wt arm with a tin si>oon. which had been sharpened. Physicians irt jected nearly a gallon of artificial blood into the man, which revived him, but he was so weak Friday morning that he had to be supported to the scaffoM. % Jim Lyon, a brother of Guy Lyon, 2nd J. H. Sacra were indicted jointly, and when taken to Russellville for trial a mob attacked the jail, and Sacra, in the confusion, escaped, but was shot and severely wounded, and for this reason he was granted a new trial. Jim Lyon turned state's evidence and was sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment. The assault on Mary Glader was committed near Russellville, where the girl and her father, an old German, had stopped for the night x The men forced the girl's father to drink a lot of whiskey, and during a drunken stuper the girl was assaulted. ATLANTA AGAIN WINNER. Gets Next Georgia State Fai rby a Handsome Bonus.. Once* more Atlanta is to get the Georgia state fair. This was decided at the meeting of the executive committee of the Georgia Agricultural Society, held in the city Wednesday. The proposition submitted by the Atlanta Fair Association was a bonus of $2,230 to go to the Georgia Agricultural Society, $8,000 tor premiums and the payment of the $1,821 due on last year's premiums, the committee agreeing that this payment r.eed not be made before January, 1908. TEXAS BARS C. O. D. BOOZE. Governor'Signs Bill Imposing a Tax - of $5,000. The announcement that Governor nt Tovoc hoe s!?npd the Wi A ? *?! w.0..vW bill imposing a tax of $5,000 for each office delivering C. O. D. shipments of liquor in local option districts, has occasioned an order from the state express company's prohibiting the future handling of such merchandise. N v .. . Western Follies In the East . In the East one may be a bachelor and in virtue thereof enjoy the hospi-' tality of a bachelor's married friends indefinitely, but the moment after ths bachelor commits the indiscretion of marriage the Nemesis of tennis and bridge parties overtakes him with the same ruthlessness with which lie prey- V ed for entertainment on those who '3 had married before him. The moral' of the East for young men with econ* omical view3 is?don't marry. The Badge of Honesty i t? nn ftwrv wranner of Doctor Piercers v** ** ' w J *r c : , Golden Medical Discovery because a full list of the ingredients composing it I? ".'A printed there in plain English. Forty years of experience has proven its superior - i0 worth as a blood purifier and invigorating tonic for the cure of stomach disorders "?< and all liver ills. It builds up the run- ? down system as no other tonic can in | which alcohol is used. The active medicinal principles of native, roots, such as Golden Seal and Queen's root, Stone and . | Mandrake root, Blood root and Black Cherry bark are extracted and preserved . by the use of chemically pure, triple- - ^ refined glycerine. Send to Dr. R. V. Pierce at Buffalo, N. Y., for free booklet which quotes extracts from well-recognized medical authorities such as Drs. Barthotow. King, Scudder, Coe, Ellingwood and * t; host of othejg, showing that these roots "if can be dap^nded upon for their curative action in all weak states of the stomach, accomp/piedby indigestion or dyspepsia as well & in/all bilious or liver complaint# ^ and inin/wasting diseases" where theror is losswnesh and gradual running dowxs of tl^strength and system. The "Golden Medical Discovery "make# rich, pure blood and so invigorates ana regulates the stomach, liver and and, through them, the whole svstep^ < Thus all skin affections, blotches,pimple#. Zigs and eruptions as well as scrofulous swel-.V lings and old open running sores or n!ce*? '/*> are cured and healed. In treating old ' running sores, or ulcers, it is well to in- .: sure their healing to apply to them Dr; ' Pierce's All-Healing Salve. If yourdrng gist don't happen to have this Salve stock, send fifty-four cents in postagf?>^3? stamps to Dr. E. V. Pierce, Invalids' Bote! - ' 2 and Surgical Institute. Buffalo. N. Y., and'-^'r? a large box of the "All-Healing Salve*" will reach von by return post. You can't afford to accept a secret npsr trum as asubstitute for this non-alcoholic, 7,<? medicine op knows composition, not*;. even though the urgent dealer majr ' -Hi thereby make a little bigger profit. - Dr. Pierco's Pleasant Pelfets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels: % Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to" take as candy, An ounce of push is worth a pound . ; of lucky charms. DON'T DESPAIR. Read the Experience of a Minnesota ^ Woman and Take Heart. If your back aches, and you fort .. sick, languid, weak and miseraMtt ^ 'day after day?don't; fl A worry. Doan's Kid* ney ?llls have cure#7 ;^ ? ^ thousands of women ^0 fejfin the same condition. Mrs. A. Heiman. of.:' - 9BH3 Stillwater, 1S99 and I've beett .'':.-g well since. I used to have such pain in my back that once I fainted. The ' kidney secretions were much dispiv ; dered, and I was so far gone that was thought to be at death's door. ? Since Doan's Kidney Pills cured me I feel as it I had been pulled back from / r J the tomb." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a bo? ' Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Some men find it necessary to re?". vise their list of friends daily. . Deafness Cannot Be Cared bylocal applications as they cannot reach tha, diseased portion of the ear. There is only on# " way to cure deafness, and that is by cons#tutional remedies. Deafness is caused byur hi inflamed condition of the mocons lining o?,v, the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed yon have a rumbling.soundcrimper* ;.>?? feet hearing, and when it & entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam- . mation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, bearing wilt be destroyed forever. Kinecaaes out or xm ??a are caused by catarrh, which is notlringbutasi inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollarafor any case ofDeafness (caused bycntarrh)thatcnnnot be cured by Rail's (Catarrh Cure. Send for , :i circulars free. F.J.Cbxjuc? & Co.,Toledo,O. ' -Y- n 8old by Druggists, 75c. f Take Hall's Family PiUs for cbnstipattpn, The Cleveland man who fainted?^^ while reading a newspaper must hive ? Hi* come across an article that did not describe a typewriter as "a beautiful / young woman," suggests the Wash*. ||| tngton Post. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days. . ''.710 Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any ? case of Itching. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding r:-S; Piles in 6to I4day? or money refunded. 50a gawSfl In London the Salvation Army established a bureau to give advice to those about to commit suicides; The advice, briefly and invariably, tvili be "Don't." Jfoh cured in 30 minutes bv Woolford'f Unitary Lotion; never fiviU. Sold By Druggist*. Mail on.'er* promptly f?lW bv TV. E. Det-chon Med. Co. ,Crawford8vflle,Ind. _____ | Of all men sailor* suffer jnost from rhri* matism. Only One "Bronjo Quinine" That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Sirnilaf* 1 y named remedies sometimes deceive. The. > first and original Cold Tablet is a Whit* X Package, with black and red lettering, and i; bears the signature ot L. W. Grove. 25c. _ -Jm . Says the Detroit News:?"Our. ^ surest guarantee of peace, our surest ^ method of making Japan a faithful M friend, Indeed our only method, is to have a navy, have it as soon as the ships can be turned out, and have it floating in the Pacific, to l which that of no other Power or cbnv r binatlon of Powers on that ocean catt