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I ' Dark Hair “ I have used Ayer’s Hair Vigor for a great many years, and al though 1 am past eighty years of Ige, yet I have not a gray hair in ^iy head.” Geo. Yellott, Towson, Md. We mean all that rich, dark color your hair used to have. If it’s gray now, no matter.; for Ayer’s Hair Vigor always re veres color to gray hair. Sometimes it makes the hair grow very heavy and long; and it stops falling of the hair, too. $1.00 a bottle. All druolsts. If your dniRRist cannot supply you, ■end us one dollar and we wir express you a bottle. Be sure and give the name of your nearest express office. .Address, J. C. A YEK CO.. Lowell, Mass. EATTLE OF BALLOTS IN MANY STATES KcCift lan Ddlcats Seth Low In Greater New York. PLURALITY OF OVER 63,617. HURET’S IMPRESSIONS. 'French Critic Says American l.oversi Are Much Too Cold. American lovers are cold. This is the newest discovery of .lules Huret, the Parisian newspaper writer, now sojourning in America, says the Paris correspondent of the New York World. He doubts that all marriages are for love and not for the bride’s dot. as is claimed, lie lias seen too many •exceptions, in any case, he thinks that .Americans will finally discover, what the Europeans have already learned, that if silver does not arouse love it at .least aids much in the enjoying of it. Mr. Huret notes that it is a ditlicult imatter to distinguish dances hi Amer ica because of the coldness in their manner toward each other. Their im passibility astounds him. The French, he says, may not love more than the Americans, but at least their love is more in evidence. “American girls,” the critic finds, '‘care too much for quantity in dress. Observe the huge bouquets of violets at $10 a bunch that they wear glued to their belts. These flowers in nowise improve the contour of their figure, but they do not consult aesthetics in this fashion, but run after quantity.” Among the curious types Mr. Huret has found two which ryirticularly struck him. One is an old busiuess man of eighty-seven who could hardly walk, hut had himself carried down- ! town every day for the pleasure of ! breathing the busy ulr of that quarter, j The other is a chorus girl of Weber A ' Fields’ company, who had a bed cur tain made of all the champagne corks : that have popped at different suppers 1 she has attended, each carefully label led with the date of its “pop.” After a few somewhat uncompli- ; ''mentary observations on American cooking in general he remarks that American buckwheat cakes are “a do- J licious poem of the cuisine” and that American grape fruit is par excellence These two things compensated him for much under the stars and stripes re gime. The liest Remedy for Croup. (From the Atchison, Kan., Daily GloLe.l This is the season when the woman who knows the best remedies for croup is in demand in every neigh borhood. One of the most terrible things in the world is to bo awakened in the middle of the night by a whoop ! Sweeping Democratic Victory in Goth am—Results of the Election In the Other Cities and Town^—Johnson Defeated by Herrick In Ohio. Now York city is carried by McClel- ; lan (Hem.) by 70,000 plurality. Maryland goes Democratic by 7,000 | plurality. Johnson (Hem.), of Ohio, is badly ! beaten by Herrick (Rep.), whose plu- j rality is 125,000. Beckham (Dem.) wins by a good j majority in Kentucky. Nebraska goes Republican by 10,- OUb majority. i The Republicans win out in Iowa, ! Pennsylvania and Colorado by their usual majorities. Massachusetts goes Republican, while Rhode Island elects a Democrat ic governor. New Jersey goes Republican by the biggest majority in years. New York, Nov. 4.—George B. Mc Clellan (Dem.) will he the next mayor of Greater New York, having defeat ed Mayor Seth Ijow for re-election by a plurality of 63,617, complete unoffi cial returns having been received £rom every election district in the city. By the same returns Comptroller Edward M. Grout, and Charles F. Fornes, pres ident of tiie board of aldermen, run ning^ for re-election on the Democrat ic ticket, though elected two years ago as Fusionist, defeated their Fu sion opponents by 66,790 and 64,973 plurality respectively, Comptroller Grout leading the city ticket. This sweeping Deanoeratic victory was accomplished for tho Democratic city and borough tickets in four and five boroughs of the municipality, only Richmond borough (Staten Island) giv ing J>ow a plurality and electing Fu sion borough officers. J. Edward I Swanstrom (Fusion) who, it was j thought hist night might be elected I president of the Brooklyn borough, j j was defeated by Martin W. Littleton, ! tho Democratic candidate, by 4 2,129 j plurality in spite of Littleton’s attl- i tude in opposition to the city ticket. | McClellan’s total vote forfmayor was 314,906, to 251,289 for Low. William S. Devery, Independent can-, dldate for mayor, polled only j2,9: votes in the entire city, getting 2,67 , of these in Manhattan and the Bronx, 226 in Brooklyn, 38 in Queens and none in Richmond. pMo return* today Indicate that th<! J plurality of Herrick, Republican, over Johnson. Democrat, will exceed for gov- J ernor 125,000, but that tho rest of the Republican state ticket will not have j so large a plurality. As tho Republic- | ans not only carried the doubtful coun ties ami districts, hut also some that were conceded to the Democrats, the majority on joint ballot in the legis lature for the re-election of Senator Hanna is now placed at 90 out of a j total membership in both 1 "mches of I 143, almost three times as many as | two years ago, when the RepublicEftisf had what was considered an unprece- | dented majority of 35 on joint ballot for the re-election of Senator Foraker. Senator Hanna had only one majority on joint ballot six years ago, and as he was the issue in this campaign, t result is generally commented on more as a Hanna victory than anything else. Chairman Dick, of the Republican party, says: “Hanna’s personality did it.” More complete legislative returns show that the Republicans have over three-fourths in each branch for the re vision of the new municipal code on which Mayor Johnson made an issue. The senate stands 28 Republicans, -I Democrats—majority 25. The house stands 90 Republicans, 20 Democrats-— majority 70. The majority on joint ballot for United States Senator is 95, or four times the total Democrat ic membership. The constitutiona. amendments for all counties to have separate legislative representation, for the veto power and for single liability on stock were adopted and probably the one on taxation, hut not the one for the classification of cities. TWO CABLE GARS GliLJTDE IN FOG One Person Is Killed and Others Are Injured. FOUR ARE, PERHAPS, FATALLY. SAMUEL PARKS RESIGNS, During a Dense Fog In Kansas City Car Heavily Laden With Passengers Crashes Into Another With Terrific Force and Fatal Results. Kansas City, Nov. 4.—A demse fog and slippery track caused the collision of two cable cars today, resulting in the death of one person ami the Injury of 19 others, tour perhaps fatally. The dead: Miss Emma Homer, a clerk, Kansas City, Kans. Most of the injured were working girls. The train heavily laden wk. passengers, had reached Summit street, four blocks east of the top ot the Twelfth street viaduct. At Sum mit street the first car had stopped to let off a passenger when the gripman lost his grip on the cables and ti.< train started back. A heavy fog made it impossible to see a block ahead and indescribable confusion en sued, many passengers on the rear 1 Famous Walking Delegate to Sereve Sentence in Sing Sing. New York, Nov. 4.—Samuel Parks, I from his cell in the city prison, is | s-aid to have announeed that lie will i resign as walking delegate and as a ! member of the Housesmiths and ; Bridge-men's union at its jneeting Fri- 1 day night. He says he Is out of tfie labor movement forever and declares j he will not appeal from his conviction in the extortion cases for which he ! recently was tried. He is eager to j serve his prison term and is not seek- . ing bail. “I am done. Nothing can save me from Sing Sing. If I did |get a new I trial I would be convicted as regularly as I came up before a jury. I am not ashamed of my labor career; I thought l was right and followed my best judg ment. “I have but one regret, and that is for my wife. She is prostrated over my troubles.” Get the ATost Out cf Year Food You don]t. and can’t if your stomach is weak. A weak stomach does not di gest all that is ordinarily taken into it. It gets tired easily, and what it fails to digest is wasted. Among the signs of a weak stomach are uneasiness after eating, fits of ner vous head: i hr, and disagreeable belch- ing. •*I have taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla at different times for stomach troubles, and a run flown condition of the system, and have been greatly benefited by its use. I would not be without it in my family. I am trou bled especially in summer with weak stom ach and nausea and find Hood’s Sarsaparilla invaluable.” K. 15. Hickman, W.Cbester, Pa. Hood's Sarsaparilla and Pills Strengthen and tone the stomach and the whole digestive system. ROXBURGHE’S ESTATE. FEDERATION WOMEN’S CLUBS. Seventh Annual Convention Being Held at Cartersville. Oartersville. Ga., Nov. 4.—-Delegatos ^ to the seventh annual meeting of the Georgia Federation of Women’s Clubs are arriving for their meeting. The women of the local club have made admirable arrangements for en- 1 platforms jumping and escaping with, tertaining their guests and assuring but slight injuries. them a pleasant time. When the train reached the top of The Music Club will the viaduct, it was going at a rate ol speed of perhaps 30 miles an hour. Two blocks away, midway the down incline, another heavily laden train for the first time, have representation in the fed eration, which is regarded as an im portant feature of the meeting. was making its way upward. Johnson’s County Goes Republican. The fog was so dense that neither Cleveland, Ohio, Nov. 4.—Complete cr ew could see the other and mot un returns from all the precincts in this, m the runaway train was within a few duyahoga county, including the city f ee t of the second train did those on sf Cleveland, give Herrick (Rep.), for i at ter realize any danger, governor, 45,169; Johnson (Dem.), 36,- The cars came together with terrific 649; Herrick's majority, 8,526. The force, throwing the passengers in victory of the Republicans in this every direction. Several of the in- ;ity and county is most decisive and sweeping recorded in man/ years, not a single Democrat being elected throughout the entire ticket. The Republicans elect a solid delegation of four state senators and ten repre sentatives on the legislative ticket, by pluralities ranging from 4 to 6,000. Jured were thrown clear of the viaduct railing and falling 20 feet to the rail way yards below sustained injuries more or less serious. VERDICT REACHED. Case With DEMOCRATS ELECT GOVERNOR. Republicans Capture Balance of State Offices in Rhode Island. Providence, R. I., Nov. 4.—The Dem ocrats succeeded in re-electing Gcf/er nor L. F. C. Garvin, although by a reduced plurality, but the oher state officers went to the Republicans and that party will also have a working majority in the legislature. Garvin’s of Midshipmen Charged Haz ing at Annapolis. Annapolis, Md., Nov. 4.—A verdict has been reached by the courtmartial sitting at the naval academy in one j Traffic on Psarl River. Jackson, Miss,, Nov. 4.—There prom ises to be considerable commerce on Pearl river during the winter and spring season. For many years traf fic ou this stream has been neglect©]. I but last year two small steamboats were placed in service and handled large quantities of cotton seed a' cotton from interior points. TMs year a new boat, the Dixie, will be placed in service from Jackson to Car thage and a new boat will ply the low er river trade between Columbia and Jackson. The boat trade cannot com mence. however, until the fall rains advr.nce the stage of the stream. Wages Increased. New York. Nov. 4.—A decision has been reached in the matter of labor of the three eases of midshipmen who disputes between the Amalgamated are charged wih hazing. It fs that! of John H. Ix)fland, of Oskaloosa, Iowa. The finding will not be made public | until it has received the approval o i the secretary cf the navy. Loveland was charged with causing Midshipman W. W. Lawrence, of Colo- Facta About Floor* ('untie, Minn Gror- let’s Future Home. Miss May Goelet, the fiancee of the Duke of Roxburghe, will be on historic ground when she places her dainty foot upon the 60.500 acres of the duke in the heart of Roxburghshire, in Eng land, say» the New York Press. Though not his birthplace, this county is the land of Sir Walter Scott. Pos sibly her great love for the Waverley novels romantically inclined Miss Goe- fet toward the young man whose an cestors were friends of the famous nov elist. The original spelling was Rox burgh. The town which gave the county its name is still so spelled. Celebrated battles wore fought near Floors castle, the peculiar name of the scat of the Dukes of Roxburghe, and none was more bloody than that of An- enun Moor. Here it was that Lilliard, a Scottish maiden, did prodigies of valor. Some of the Goelet millions will make Floors castle as fine as the Van derbilt millions have made Blenheim. The renowned old cockroach-cobweb hall will readily absorb about $7,000,- 000 before it gets into condition for the heiress. Floors has long been cele brated for its gardens and conserva tories, the best kept up places of tbelr kind in Scotland. The castle is very old. As far back as 1460, when it was held by the English, King James II. nf Seotland laid siege to It, and was blown to pieeos by the bursting of a cannon. The very spot on which the king died is pointed out to visitors. Street Railway employes ami the street railway companies of San Fran cisco, after several months, investiga tion by the arbitration <\> ;; J -> Oscar S. Straus as re r \ > • V* justice of the demands of the employes that last summer threatened to tie up JUST WHAT YOU NEED. CliHmberlaln'n Stomach Tablet n. and Liver WARFIELD WINS. Elected by Good Majority for Gover nor of Maryland. Baltmiore, Nov. 4.—At 8 o’clock this morning returns from 254 precincts of the 308 In Baltimore city have heen T , lle le , ad ; nf! • N! >» routurd and show a majority of 4,842 p “ r , t . a “ li awtuoket all sent Bomo for IMwIn Warfield, Democratic can Cr ;; ic d ,$f g * t '° nS J? “ e le 8 islat “ re dldate for governor ' M, ' s ' " ,nthm|1 Chanler. a prominent It is quite certain that the returns of Ne " port , a ? c ‘ et (- has , from the 54 precincts will increase S? ? l °, f T' . ar '' this lead. Complete returus have! T,le ele<!tl<> ” M< ' lted much lnlerest not been received from any one of the 32 Maryland counties, but the returns received indicate that there will be a Democratic majority of 2,000 in the counties and that Warfield’s plurality in the city and county probably reach 7,000. The Democrats in 'Baltimore plurality in 146 out of 152 election dis- rad>o, to stand on his head and com-1 the San Frwancisco traffic. The ver- tricts is 1,035. The other Republic- polling Midshipman Churchill Humph- an candidates on the state ticket re- reys, of Kentucky, to undergo a sys- ceived pluralities averaging about 1 tem of vigorous physical exercise. 2,000. The senate will stand 26 Re | The case of Midshipman Earl ’ publicnns and 16 Democrats and the j Chaffee, of Rhinelander, Wis., is now house 36 Republicans and 33 Demo- being tried. diet is said to favor an increase of from 5 to 10 per cent in the wages of the employes, while he refused to recommend any change In or shorten ing of the hours of work. WRECK IN SOUTH CAROLINA. GOV. BATES RE-ELECTED. Massachusetts Goes Republican by the Usual Majority. Boston, Nov. 4.—‘With the exception of the falling off of the Socialist vote Local Passenger Train Collides with Work Train—Fireman Killed. Charlotte, N. C., Nov. 4.—Local pas senger train No. 23 from Charlesfte to Chester, S. C., on the Southern, thi« morning ran into a work train near Chester. The negro fireman on the passenger train was killed, and several of th< passengers were badly shaken up. Chinese Farmer In Mississippi. Jackson, Miss., Nov. 4.—Claiborne county has the honor of claiming the only Chinese farmer In Mississippi. His name is Quong Thomas, and the almond-eyed Celestial runs a farm of 100 acres near Port Gibson, where he cultivates a fine variety of cotton, all of which is shipped to the Orient. Thomas has been quite successful and within the past few years has accu mulated a snug account in the savings bank. When you feel dull » g. When you have no appetite. When you have a bad taate in the mouth. When your liver is torpid. 1 When your bowels are constipated. When you have a headache. When you feel bilious. They will improve your appetite, cleanse and invigorate your stomach, and regulate your liver and bowels. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Cherokee Drug Co; L. D. Allison— Cowuens. Women teach us repose, civility and dignity.—Voltaire. Heaven has nothing more tender than a woman’s heart when it is the abode of pity.—Luther. the election in Massachusetts yester- from one of the children. The croup j elect their entire local ticket” inclml <lay Very near]y I >arallel0 d that of last remedies are almost as sure to be lost, in case of croup, as a revolver is sure to be lost in the case of burglars. There used to be an old-fashioned remedy for croup, known as hive syrup and lolu, but some modern mothers say that Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is better, and does not cost so much, ft causes the patient to “throw up the phlegm” quicker, and gives relief in a shorter time. Give this remedy as soon as the croupy cough appears and it will pre vent the attack. It never fails and is pleasant and safe to take. For sale by Cherokee Drug Co; L. D. Allison—Cowpens. ing three supreme court judges, three orphan’s court judges, court clerks and sheriff. Chief Judge McSherry, of the court of appeals, is re-elected. The Dem ocrats have elected a substantial ma jority of the legislature, thus insuring a Democratic successor to Unite:! States Senator McComas. The unprecedented delay in count ing the returns is due to the extraor dinarily large size of the ticket, an to the election which requires voters to mark a cross opposite each named voted for. IN KENTUCKY. year. Governor John L. Bates was re-elected by the Republicans by a plurality of 35,899 over Colonel Wil Ham A. Gaston, in a total vote only slightly under that of 1902, when Bates won by 37,120 plurality. The vote for the leading candidates yesterday was: Bates, 199,393; Gas ton, 166.544—both gaining about 3,000 over last year, hut as the Socialist dropped from 33,628 to a little more than 25,000, and that for the Prohibi- i tion and Socialist Labor candidates ! remained about the same, the total : vote for all candidates fell just short 1 of that of last year, the largest in the i history of the state. Dropped Dead at Polling Placs. New York, Nov. 4.—Dr. E. C. Angell, | 81 years of age, who had practiced medicine in New York 40 years, an. was well known as a writer for med ! cal magazines, dropped dead at h polling place in Brooklyn as he was about to take his ballot to the ho:. Ho had heen a Republican partisan since the formation of the party and told his family before leaving home that he intended to scratch his ticket | for the first time in 50 years and vote for Comptroller Grout. People who never miss an oppor tunity to talk seldom have anything Returns Give Governor Beckham a to say. Majority of 26,500. ]»uisville, Ky., Nov. 4.—Returns re- a Remarkable cane. : coi\ed trom 83 counties, a number of One of the most remarkable cases j w ^* c h ar o incomplete, give Governor of a cold, deep-seated on the lungs, Beckham, Democratic candidate for causing pneumonia, is that of Mrs. governor, a majority of 26,500. Gertrude E. Fenner, Marion, Ind , j Those figures, however, do not in- who was entirely cured by the use of dicato his real majority, for the rea- One Minute Cough Cure. She says: | s °n that most of the 36 counties re- “Tbe coughing and straining so weak- maining to be-heard from are normai- ened me that I ran down in weight Republican. Seven of these coun- from 148 to 92 pounds. I tried a ties are in the eleventh district and □umber of remedies to no avail until each will give a majority jof 800 or more. Many of the other counties are mountain counties in remote sections, and it may be two or three days be fore complete unofficial returns are obtained. On the other hand, Bee! ham’s majority in the 83 counties heard from will probably be swelled by the missing precincts when they are supplied. Roughly speaking, ) order to attain the 18,000 or more ma jority expected on the final count, hi lead In the 83 counties mentioned should be increased to 30,000. The 36 counties remaining will probably re duce this by about 10,000. LONDON COMMENT. Twenty-seventh Annual Meeting. Cincinnati, Nov. 4.—The twenty-sev enth meeting of the American Hu mane association convened here. Mrs. M. T. Armor, of Cincinnati, president ( of the Ohio society, presided at the''thrown out of employment at Welch, TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. Dr. A. R. Tjovc, the North Carolina Baptist minister who wrote a book on “Heaven and Hell,” which he af terwards withdrew from publication, is in doubt as to the orthodox opinion on hell. According to the decision of th« Mississippi supreme court, the pres ence of an unnaturalized foreigner on a jury does not serve to invalidiatfl the verdict when attorneys file no pro test during the trial. J. Bishop killed his wife in I^ouis ville and narrowly missed holng lynch ed by a mob. He was saved at the point of pistols by officers whom h« had tried to shoot. Five thousand miners have been Tammany’s Regret Is Expressed at Victory. London, Nov. 4.—Such comment as the afternoon papers make on the re opening exercises. The annual ad dress of the president, Hon. James M. W. ‘Va., by the shutting down of the plant of the United States Coal and Brown, of Toledo, O., and the report Coke company. of the secretary. Sidney Richmond Ta bor, of Lake Forest, 111., and the treas I used One Minute Cough Cure Four bottles of this wonderful remedy cured me entirely of the cough, strengthened my lungs and restored me to my normal weight, health and strength.” Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. There is a woman at the beginning of all great things.—Lamartine, A Policeman's Teatlmony. J. N. Patterson, night policeman Nashua, la., writes, “Last winter r had a bad oold ou my lungs and tried at least a half dozen advertised oougb medicines and bad treatment from two physioiaus without getting any benefit. A friend recommended Foley's Honey and Tar and two- thirds of a bottle cured me. I con sider it the greatest oougb and lung medicine in the world.” Cherokee Drag Co. suit of the election Tuesday in New urer ’ Walter Butler, of Chicago, occu- York expresses regret at Tammany’!" pled the mo ' rn,in 8 session. IN OHIO. Plurality of Herrick Over Johnson Wil! Exceed 125,000. Columbus, O., Nov 4.—'More corn- victory. The Pall Mall Gazette says it gives the world a lesson that “purity is not inherent in a Democratic form of gov- ! ernment.’’ The St. James Gazette bitterly as-1 sails Tammany, saying the result “is one which every honest person must deeply lament and proves how power less is true opinion to make its weig felt under the Republican system when It Is confronted by machinery of an unscrupulous organization.” Richard Croker telegraphed as fol lows to the Associated Press: “Wantags, Nov. 4.—I have nothing to say on the result of the election. (Signed) Richard Croker.” Returns Incomplete. Lincoln, Neb., Nov. 4.—Retprne from many precincts In Nebraska are sti Incomplete. The Republican state comimittee has received enough, how ever, to convince them that J\idge Barnes’ plurality of Judge Sullivan wil be about 12,0(K) and tha tthe Republic an candidates fo rregent will run ahead of that showing. New Banks In Mississippi. Jackson, Miss., Nov. 4.—Within the past month six new banking institu tions have been launched In Mississlp pi and the next report of the audi tor’s office on Ixanking Institutions will show a good increase In the amount of capital invested <n this branch of finance. The latest bank to apply for a charter is domiciled at Carthage, to bo known as the Leake county bank, with a capital stock of $30,000. Coasting Steamer Wrecked, i Lisbon, Nov. 4.—The German steam er Guisberg, wrecked near here yester- day in a fog, is not a German mr.i steamer of that name, but a sroall coasting steamer. There were no lives lost. Earthquake Felt In Memphis. Memphis, Tenn., Nov. 4.—A distinct earthquake shock was felt all over Memphis this morning. No daman was done, but in a number of instance! the inmates in high buildings haste.> ed to the streets. x> At Morgan Park. Ills., placards hav« been posted warning all negroes to leave and the negroes are obeying. The action of the whites is due to th« murder of the chief of police. Because his wife laughed at his vain efforts to drive a hog through a gate, Calvin Wade, of Norwich, N.Y., seized a gun and shot her dead. Lieutenant Albert Berber, ordnanca officer of the battleship Maine, fell # from the forward turret of the ship and was killed. Two negroes suspected of shooting a white boy were rescued by a mob bent on lynching them in New JYork city. The Princesa Radziwill has sued the estate of the late Cecil Rhodes for $7,000,000. She claims that she has Rhodes’ written agreement to give her this sum. The independence of the isthmus of Panama has been .proclaimed Three thousand people took part In the secession movement. All the ( ! floors of the army and navy at Pr»n.i ma have been Imprisoned. At Paris the authorities were fomd to storm a barricaded convent In or der to effect a number of Capuchin monks. A Sclentiiic litHcoyery. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure does for the stomach that which it is unable to do for itself, even when but slightly dis ordered or over-loaded. Kodol Dys pepsia Cure supplies the natural juices of digestion and does the work of the stomach, relaxing the nervous tension, while the inflamed muscles of that organ are allowed to rest and heal. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what you eat and enables the stomach and digestive organs to transform all food into rich, red blood. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. Capital is what you have, a capital ist is the one who wants to get it away from you, and capitalization is the way he does it. AuxIouh Moineuta. Some of the most anxious tours of a mother's life are those when the little ones of the household have the croup. There is no other medicine so effective in this terrible malady as Foley’s Honey and Tar. It is a house hold favorite for throat and lung troubles, and as it contains no opi ates or oth«r poisons, it can be safely given. Cherokee Drug Co. The average clergyman knows as much about politics as the average politician knows about piety. Phyniclana Prescribe It. Many broad minded physicians pre scribe Foley’s Honey and Tar, as , they have never found so safe and re liable a remedy for throat and lung troubles as this great medicine. Cherokee Drug Co. - - A handsome woman is a jewel; s goed woman is a treasure.—Lanidi. W. A. Herren, of Finch, Ark., writes, “I wish to report that Foley’s Kidney Cure has cured alterrlble case of kidney and bladder trouble that two doctors had given up.” Chero kee Drug Co. If a woman lost Eden, such as she alone can restore it.—Whittier. There is do cough medicine so popular as Foley’s Houey and Tar. It contains no opiates or poisons and never falls to cure. Cherokee Drug Co. Don't mlmlfy the virtue of other people in trying to magnify yoar own.