The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, May 16, 1907, Image 6

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KIDNEY TROUBLE Suffered Two Tears?Relieved in Three \ Months. M" R. C. B. FIZER, Mt. Sterling, Ky., writes: Ihav? suffered with kidney an bladder trouble for ten years i*ast. "Last March I commenced using Peruna 'and continued for three months. I have Bot used it since, nor have I felt a pain. / "I believe that 1 am well and 1 therefore give my highest commendation to the ivo niialirips of Peruna." g* . . Pe-ru-na For Kidney Trouble. ! Mrs. Geo. II. Simser, Grant, Ontario, | jCan., writes: |J "I had not 1 m well for about four ! wears. I had kiztney trouble, and, in fact. felt badly nearly all the time. "This summer I got so very bad I thought 1 would try Peruna, so I wrote I Ito you and began at once to take Peruna Ana Manalin. J "I took only two bottles of Peruna and ;?ne of Manalin, and now 1 feel better than J have for some time, i "I feel that Peruna and Manalin cured ij .'me and made a different woman of me altogether. I bless the day I picked u^> the 1 'little book and read of your Peruna." W. It is the business of the kidneys to Tentove from the blood all poisonous i jtiwiZerfa Zs. They must be active all the j .time, else the system suffers. There are ; times when they need a little assistance. J ri Peruna is exactly this sort of a remedy, j lit has saved many people from disaster by j ^rendering the kidneys service at a time j when thev were not able to bear their own j Ig-fenrdens. ' > L- t The Cargo of the Lyonesse. I y The steamer Lyonesse left Scllly 'yesterday with forty-eight tons of I ^'flowers- for various markets, a record r: 'consignment?Ixmdon Graphic. fTTS,StVitus'Dance:Nervons Diseases permanently cored by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. m:? TJ M1 Philfl... Pa. I UX. n. a. n 11no, uu.,^ui ^ ?, . |'1 It's so much easier to tell a lie than < < It is to make people believe it. >r Spring always brings into special favor Nature's blood purifier, Garfield Tea. It is pv made wholly of clean, sweet Herbs. 'It .purifies the blood, cleanses the svstem, clears the complexion, eradicates disease t mud promotes Good Health. For young H and old. When a tall man is broke that's the 1 long and short of it. if DOES YOUR BACK ACHE? Profit by the Experience of One Who I' Has Found Relief. James R. Kfceler, retired farmer, of Fenner St., Cazenbvia, X. Y., says: ''About fifteen years ago I suffered ^H|.v with my back and an^ used many rem^ j&refe&a'v relief- Beginning with Doan's Kidney j *r0!U t^ie ?rst bo::' ??' ;' an?f fwo boxes reVsStC*?/ - stored me to good, g>- sound condition. My wife and many of my friends have used Doan's KidBey Pills with good results and I can ; earnestly recommend them." I* ~; Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. {p^' Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, n. . THE LIMIT, jo Knicker?What do you conceive to be the greatest fury of the elements? p Bocker?A brainstorm at sea.?New PI* Tork Sun. i ... 'Itch cured iu 30 minutes by Woolford's {Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. A bachelor is a man who has learned to profit by the experience of his fellows. gjffh HICKS' HH CAPUDINE i r^k" \ immediately curxs 9 I HEADACHES v ?^feBrealu u?> COEDS w6tolj hours ?^j- . Sod* 10c ti Drefisa WET? You may be able to if ' ; along without a r f}V | j (<1 I ' >O^V ^w?sS? W, WATERPROOF SUIT s\\ V OR SLlCftLK \ JL 1 can y?u *?f j THESE GARMENTS ARE II Jl Gl'ARANTEEQ WATERFROOF If JJ UGHT- COMFORTABLE-DURABLE UJ? LOW IN PRICE .SOLO BY ALL RELIABLE DEALERS c. j ro?,;K CO 33S-ON v !? A M TOWfR .ivtO'lN CO L'MifCC 'JWJCW . T mi ? P?, v ... IRRESISTIBLE INDUCEMENT. Knicker?Does your wife listen to reason? Bocker?I think she would if it was pn a party line.?New ork Sun. . Dogs of the St. Bernard strain tracked out a number of the people f buried under a snowslide at Gejsen ger, Norway, in which 13 persons perIshed. The animals dragged several d the victims to places o: safety. ??a?iwiia?im??a????g THE POPCORN BELT. One County in Iowa Produces Hal# the Country's Supply. Nearly half of the popcorn consumed in the United States is raised in the small county of Sac. in the northwestern portion of Iowa. There it has been found that the soil is particularly adapted to its cuiivation. Before the shows and the street corner merchants took it up. the hot buttered popcorn wasn't very much in demand. Its cultivation was restricted to a few stalks oil the farm that met the home demand. A small quantity might be bought at ih?- store, but ! it was high in price and the sales were few. The breakfast food manufacturers are now the largest consumers of pop - * ' . [ corn in the market. Nearly nu>r 01 vne j ready to serve l'oods have a consider* ! able percentage of popcorn. One brand is practically all popcorn. The popcorn belt is invaded each spring by the agents of Chicago and New York firms, which contract with the raiser to take over his entire crop. This method of handling the harvest makes the grower an assured market a remunerative price, and for several years the average price has been SO ctnts a hundred pounds. The average yield is about :>>oo pounds to the acre, the corn requires less care and watchfulness than the Indian variety, and even c:i hundreddollar land there is good profit in it ?more than in wheat, corn or oats. An Iowa athourity says that the to- J tal yield of Sac and Ida counties, v.-hi Hi mm arise the not) corn belt, will | 'reach 15.000.000 pounds, and if it I were a!! popped before being shipped j it would require 2000 tram loads of j 20 cars each. Popcorn has the advantage of other members of the corn fcm;:y in that ir always ripens before the early frost can get a chance at it. and the drought does not hurt it much. The job of picking and husking is not a pleasant j one. owing to the sharpness- of the grain ends, but cxperr pickers can j make $5 a day. at the usual rate of j 15 cents a hundred pounds. The discovery of the Iowa popcorn belt came about by accident. About j 23 years ago an eccentric Yankee, who { had located in Sac county, near Odebolt, decided to break away from the old traditions, arid instead of diversifying his crops to plant them to one thing only. He tried wheat one year j and failed to make any money. For j two years thereafter he planted all of j his 200 acres to potatoes, and every body laughed. When a few years la- j ter he planted it all to popcorn a big j shout of merriment went up, but when in the fall the Yankee marketed his entire crop at a big profit nobody even smiled. The next year a neighbor followed his example. Colton. the first popcorn man. bought his crop in the ground and that year had more popcorn than any 10 men in the United States. He had the market cornered, and he got the price he named. Then he tried to beat the Chicago board of trade and dropped out of sight. His j neighbors gradually took up the idea, ?' 4?'*>" v.rt,. orot vi/->y> rprnrns for ! j aim luua.i iuc^ .v.?.? __ j their trouble.?New York Sun. i "Man With the Twisted Lip" in Real , j Life. I I j A curious parallel in real life to the i Sherlock Holmes episode of "The Man ' With the Twisted I dp." which attract- | j ed much attention a couple of years ago, j was recalled at Penge Petty Sessions ' i when Cecil Browne de Smith was sumj moned by his wife on the ground that I he had deserted her and neglected to J pay for her maintenance. In 1904,1 said Mrs. de Smith's solicitor, the de- j j fendant lived in Norwood with his j 1 wife and child and went "to the city" j ! daily. It was eventually discovered by ; the police that on arrival at London j Bridge he would change his good j clothes for rags, and pretending to be I paralyzed obtain considerable sums from the charitable under cover of selling matches. He was arrested and sentenced to three months hard labor j j for fraud.?London Tribune. A Church From One Tree. A large Baptist church that stands * Pil oninvs in me cny ui o?una nuou, uiM ^ the distinction of having been constructed entirely from a single tree. Of course that includes the woodwork of the structure. The tree from which the timbers, lumber and shingles were cut was a giant California redwood. A considerable quantity of the lumber was left over after the building was completed. The building has a spire seventy feet high, an audience room capable of seating three hundred, a parlor.capable of seating eighty, a pastor's I study fourteen by twenty feet, a vestibule and toilet room. The building is thirty-five by eighty feet. - There are not many buildings in the country all the timber of which came from a single tree. ?Technical World. "Chaos" cf "Gas." I In connection with the terrible pro I ' phecies of disaster made when ga.I came in for street lighting a hundrec | years ago. it is curious to recall t/iai J the word "gas" itself Stands foi "chaos." It was invented by the Belgian chemist Van Helmont (.357710441. "Gas" sounding a good dea more like "chaos," it seems in Dutch and Flemish than it dees in English It was not the gas of modern commerce than Van Helmcat was thinking of, ii need scarcely be said. By "gas" ht meant a rarefied spirit of water, which he believed to be a constituent of al. bodies. But the word found favor, and the great history it has achieved ir science and practical life makes i! quite the most triumphant invented word on record?London Chronicle. i Cultivate Regular Habits. There can be no question that men of regular habits are healthier, happier. live longer and do more than those who obey caprice and impulse. The adoption of hygienic habits saves the nervous system an enormous amount of friction and waste. It preserves vitality. Regularity economizes not only physical stamina, but time as well. . The man who knows no system in the details of his life, who exhausts nature at the instance of a passing whim, who drinks and smokes to excess, who wastes the talents bestowed upon him. is the one who must sooner or later fall a victim to disease. Regularity with moderation in all .things should be the j motto of life, and it should be remembered that regularity does not necessarily-preclude the enjoyment of variety. A certain amount of variety prevents man from becoming a mere machine, but variety should not in with thnsA resrular habits of life which are necessary to the maintenance of health.?Pittsburg Press. Its Origin Unknown. What is the origin of the "'cock and bull" story? It is the despair of all those who seek to explain this fine old crusted slang of long ago which has managed to persist into present speech, just as we may imagine our present 23 will puzzle a later genera* tion. Brewer, in his "Phrase and Fable." explains it is a corruption of a "concocted and bully story." Evidently recognizing that this is scarcely satisfactory, he prosecuted his researches into bygone religions, dragged up Xergal from the Phoenicians in the representation of a rooster and from the Egyptian Osiris, typified b5 a bull. From all of which disquisitions it is as clear as may be that no one really knows anything about the story of a cock and a bull. The French have a precisely similar expression in coga-l'ane, and equally they do not know its origin.?New York Sun. SULPHUR BRINGS HEALTH. Purifies the Blood and Clears Up the Complexion. Everybody needs to take Sulphur at this season. Nothing like it to purify the blood, clear up the complexion and remove "that tired feeling." But the only way to take it is in liquid form. Hancock's Liquid Sulphur taken internally is the best Spring tonic. Applied externally Hancock's Liquid Sulphur quickly cures Eczema, Tetter, and all Skin Diseases. Hancock's, the only Liquid Sulphur Ointment, removes Pimples, Blackheads and Sores, and gives a beautiful soft, velvety skin. Your druggist sells it. It cured Edward D. Herring, of Frederick, Md., of a bad case of Eczema, and he "writes: "My face is as smooth as an infant's." All-about-Sulphur Booklet free, if you write Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore. Emperor William's only grandson, Prince William Frederick Francis Joseph Chrisitian Olaf,, has been photographed in his imperial cradle. Americans have a. special interest in this budding monarch because he was born July 4. Deafness Cannot Be Cored bylocal applications as theycannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed j Deafness is the result, and unless the intiamI mation can be taken out and this tube rej stored to its. normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten . 'are caused by catarrh, which is nothiugbutan inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness 1 caused bycatarrh) that cannot be curedby Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for I V'iCI 1 d^ 3 11 CC? <i W * VX1JD*11 ?< X W WV?^ A xz* 1 Sold by Druggists, 75c. / | Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation, j Mahomet's Dove. The prophet Mahomet was a great I man, in his way, but, like nearly all f the priests of ancient times, he was ! not above practicing tricks to gain i and held the confidence of his followI ers. You have all hear of his dove, j which would sit on his shoulder and ' peem to be talking in his ear. Ma j hornet claimed- that the Holy Ghost ' took the form of the bird to give him j Inspiration, but the truth is that the i wily prophet had taught the dove to j -eat wheat out of his ear.?Chicago j News. 4 Unavoidable. ; There was some confusion as to ; which side of the street cars should ; stop. j "Let us make it a rule," said the ; motorman, "to notice on which sido the people are waiting, and then stop j at the other." i "But suppose there are people on j both sides?" ventured one less hardI end in experience. "Oh, as to that," replied the in* j structcr, "of course, it's impossible ! not to oblige somebody once in a I ? J Or every 300 gallons of illuminating i oil used in the world, fifty-four gallons are produced in the United States. COMPARATIVE. Knicker?Yes. that is Cleopatra's I I needle. j Bocker?Great Scott! I wouldn't want to encounter her hatpin.?New j York Sun. t For a Greedy Mind. ! j Our indefatigable reporter says that I a certain Corean sent his steward to I a certain place "and uttered them to counterfeit -the paper -monev on a greedy mind." PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Sermons might be more interesting if you could talk back. Farming is pretty good fun unless you make your living at it. The reason a girl smiles is because you will think she means it. When a man isn't ashamed to speak of his work as a job it's a good one. A man is apt to get awful lonesome if he resolves to keep only good company. One of the reasons for a man's being proud of his brains is that nobody else is. A good way to make the furnace burn well is to have a warm speil of weather. People are awful rich when they aren't afraid to go to a wedding in a street car. There is nobedv you can hate as much as the fellow who is smarter j than you are. The best way for a woman to preserve her ideals about a man is not to marry him. The small pay in government offices seems to go a good deal further than any other kind. It makes a girl mad to call her a young thing at IS as it does not to when she is 28. It would take a lot ot money to make a woman think she had enough for anything but clothes. Money is a very useful thing not to have in your pocket when anybody tries to borrow from you. A woman has to be born a good many years before a man to admit she is as old as he when they are grown i up. After a girl has been engaged twice she doesn't consider it necessary to tie up her love letters in baby blue ribbon. A nice thing about living in a boarding house is you don't have to I make believe you like what you get to eat in the way you do at home. There are mighty few people in the world who think they are having a good time unless it has to do with something useless and frivolous.? From "Reflections of a Bachelor," in the New York Press. Deed of a Gallant Nobody. It is not always the information carried by the recognized aides-de-camp' \o and from the commanding officer in battle which is of highest value. There was a supreme moment during the battle of Waterloo when the Duke of Wellington was left absolutely alone?and that not when he was running the risk of capture by sailing through the enemy's lines. It simply meant that every galloper had gone his way, each with his message. At this moment a stranger rode up to the Duke and quietly asked: "Can I be cf any use, sir?" The Duke took, one glance at him, and unhesitatingly answered: "Yes, take this pencil note to the commanding officer," pointing to a regiment in the heat of battle. The stranger took the note and galloped away with it, through the thick of the fight. He delivered it, but what * * A - ? ? ? ? ? YfnAnfC Tha Happened to llllil iiu man nuv/no. xuv | Duke always declared that to be one of the most gallant deeds that had ever come under his notice. It was done without prospect' of acknowledgment or reward, and neither attended its successful accomplishment.?London Evening Standard. j Magazine for the Blind. The Ziegler Magazine for the Blind, the first publication of its kind in this country, and the second one in the world, has just come from the press. It is now being sent to the sightless j thousands in America through the benevolence of Mrs. William Ziegler, widow of the backer of several arctic expeditions, who has donated the ! funds to carry out the enterprise. 'It j is estimated that the cost of the magazine to Mrs. Ziegler will be $70,000 a year. It is more bulky than the ordinary publication, and is twelve by thirteen inches, comprises fifty sheets and weighs almost one pound. The sheets are printed only on one side. They are very thick, since the characters consisting of raised dots and dashes have first to be made on a metal plate and then reproduced on i the paper. The Braille system or type i is used.?New York World. ! Reproof Came Home to Roost. Professor Starr was accusing woman of barbarism. "An,d she is not only barbarous?she is illogical and inconsistent." he exclaimed. "I was walking in the country one day with a young woman. In a grove we came upon a boy about to shin uj? a tree. There was a nest in the tree, and from a certain angle it was posI sible to see in it three eggs. " 'You wicked little boy,' said my cr -npanion. 'are you going up there to r- ; that nest?' " 'I am,' the boy replied. '"How can Vou?' she exclaimed; 'think how the mother will grieve over the loss of her eggs.' " 'Oh, she won't care,' said the boy. 'She's up there in your hat.' "?Argonaut. Coal Dealer's Chivalry. Senator Tillman was attacking an offender who had pleaded a hypocritical and false excuse, i "Why," he cried, "the man is worse than that rich coal dealer who said to his weight clerk during a blizzard: " 'Jim, make that ton of coal for Mrs. Smith 250 pounds short. She is a poor, delicate widow, and she will have to carry all of it up two steep flights o? stairs. I don't want her to overtax her strength.' "?Washington Star. 9 1 Womanhood i u ^ The greatest menace to woman's ' I rangement of the feminine organs. ; ' Si Many thousands of women have 'ill&il&lj? , H realized this too late to save their ^Nj?j B health, barely in time to save their fiiUffS "N ^ lives' fcHS \ . - ;% To be a successful wife, to retain K fcgfSft \ the love and admiration of her hus- >;lp|aj& band, should be a woman's constant If a woman finds that her cnergiesarc flagging, tliat she gets easily tired, dark shadows appear under ^ her eyes, she has backache, headache, bearing-down sensations, ner- jAISK vousness. irregularities or the MjpaMjaWB "blues." she should start at once to. build up her system by a tonic with specific powers, such as ' ILydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound the great woman's remedy for woman's ills, made only of roots and herbs. It cures Female Complaints, such as Dragging Sensations, Weak Back, Falling and Displacements. Inflammation and Ulceration, and all Organic Diseases, and is invaluable in the Change of Life. It dissolves / y? and Expels Tumors at an early stage. Subdues Faintness. Nervous ? ' ^ Prostration, Exhaustion, and strengthens and tones the Stomacn. inures 1 Headache. General Debility, Indigestion, and invigorates the whole I fl female sysem. It is an excellent remedy for derangements of the I I Kidneys in either sex. B I Use A : NEW PERFECI10N l I Wick Blue Flame Oil Cook-Stove : 1| Because it's econom- ^ ~J Because it saves 1 ^jjj^ W "cncc AM PYAMPI P llLtlXI^ U fill Uiumtiia mm ^ ^ ,T]r- 1 bulletin, compiled in ftTfrr Our Free Book, "Profitable Farming" I which gives authentic and authoritative accounts of experiments and ft actual results of practical and scientific farming. It is invaluable to fl the farmer who is anxious to improve his products and who is work- . /. ^ ing.for a wider margin of profits. Send for it to-day. B GERMAN KALI WORKS K New York, 93 Nassau St., or Atlanta, Ga., 1224 Candler Bids ;*?? A fool can,rattle a wise man quicki SIMDARD oFTHE SOVni |i er thaa another wise maa can ' 5! 1 Jf 73G E. Ashley Street, Jacksonville, Fla? % (g/, WTSSk "gBfe, ^ 1?/" ' Aprl1 2~' 190T* i J 1 ^\ ?4S | g IIB * -,ave ^een usi?? Dr. 3Iozlev*s Lemon ! |Mjll ofya sJSSjF Sv F.iixir in my family for the past seventeen ' B -ve,ir3' Hm* no,: hesitate to say that I find wIlft /ww ymm gri "nothing equal to it for Indigestion, Sick ^ MfffiSlfl ife I ' Headache and Constipation, I cheerfully v '' J IlvMWiww1 j recommend it to any who .are in need of a p x I -feRYYft Tonic and Liver Regulator. It Is pleasant 1 ^5? to take and every member of our family \ S takes it in preference to any other raediT 2 US.GOVERNMENT-INSPECTION 2 Cine, and we would feel at a loss without a lj i bottle of Lemon Elixir in our home. simsoimra-mN-oiL-coJ: ui:siyo_H- gee ?iNEV^ia-S^'mH-Ah.iTONB.'QgmS I; There are numerous toll gates,on .-J-1 smiiflMaasBiiiiaiiiisiP the road to success.*' '4. ^ CRESCENT ANTISEPTIC 1 .Mi GREATEST HEALER KNOWN TO SCIENCE.. ^BB Non Poisonous, Non Irritating. Allays Inflammation and stops . gjk pain from any cause. As strong as carbolic acid and as harmless as} R.-j 8weer milk. Cures burns instantly; cures old and chronic sores; \iS/ -J~ cures sores and inflammation from any cause on man or beast. _ For fowls?cures cholera, sore head and roup. Satisfaction positively For Sale by all Flrst-C-^ Oea^rs. Mfgd. by CRESCENT CHEMICAL CO., Ft. Worth, Texas GUARANTEED JlL Buggies, Runabouts- and Surreys SHIPPED DIRECT FROM FACTORY TO YOU PRICE 840. At Wholesale Prices We have vehicles from 83a.so up We Guarantee Safe Delivery to Your Freight Station, TEN DAY FREE TRIAL OUR TWELVE MONTHS GUARANTEE COVERS EACH AND EVERY PART. It is to your advantage to investigate the merits of our vehicles before buying elsewhere. Send for our 1807, completely illustrated, Free Catalogue, which fully explains how we a? r?? from 820.00 to 840.CO on the purchase of a HIGH-GRADE BUGGY, RUN ? ? p* ABOUT or SL'KBEY. malsby, shipp & 90 ATLANTA, GA? 41 S. FORSYTH ST., X . \