The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, December 21, 1905, Image 7

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"the s a man rer said. 3 hitting with an opremember, he ar manufacturer jrals. Mr. Ziegler irer was Jibe a cerv .. ailed his clerk up before hit, .ay and said: " 'That lady who just went out? didn't I tyear her a*k you tor freao laid eggs?' " 'Yes, sir,' the clerk answered. "'And you said- we hand't any?' 'Yes, sir; that is correct:' "The -grocer, purple with rage, yelled: / " 'Didntfyou sea me lay those eggs myself on*the counter cot ten minutes ago? You are discharged, you "aiendacibui scoundrel, and see that you don't look to me for a referent o, either.'"?New York Tribune. Heaven is going to i?e a hot place for some cold-blooded people. P. j7. gxkwk'fl Son**, o* Atlanta. g?., ire tbeonlysucee*?fiil V>rop*v Sreclall*t.? in the 3jrld. Sea their liberal offer in ndvertlsesnt in another column of this naner. St. Petersburg is to have a school of ricnlture for women only. Piso's Curefor Oonsumot'on is an infallible reach'une for oouch* and cold*.?N. W, Smoel. Ocemfrrovc. V. .1.. Feb. 17, 1901. The London County Council now u*es "motor repair wagons. Itch cared in .TO minutes by Wool ford's Sanitary Lo'ion; neror fails. Sold hv ^ r T5r5g|ri.sta. Mail orders promptly filled by Dr. Detchon, CiawforOsvillo, Ind. ft. It is estimated that 70.000 people iiill themselves annual'y in Enrone. ? % Hon'* Thl? ? We offei;One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh tint cannot be cured l>y s Hall's Catarrh Cure. Y. J. Cn*J?KY kjCo,. Toledo. O. * We, the undersigned, hav- known F. J. \^mChenev fnr the last 15 years, and believe him honorable in all business transae1 financially able to carry out any ns made by their firm. Tauax, Wholesale Druggists, ToO. >, Kisnak k Maxvis, Wholesale gists. Toledo, O. lat&rrh Cure is taken internally, act.lvuoon the.blood and mucuoussur hie system. Testimonial* sent free. . per bottle. Sold by all Druggists, all's Fambv Tills foe constipation. Jalal, Uunched in England on >er 30, i? the mcst powerful n the world. "* o<J, Skin l'loublm, Cancer. UIooq Greatest Blood Purifier Kree. KIa/w4 ic im no ra thin . Jt or Iu? of humors, if you hav? blood poison, c *^<5, carlmnoies, eating sores, ,ecA>fula, ftvJia, itching, risings and lnm|>s, cabby, pimply *kfn. bone patns, c&tarrLi, rheumatism, or any blood or skin disease, take Btxaiic BloodBaim (B. B. B.) accord.? lug to directions. Soon all sores heal, aches and paln9 stop, the blood Ls made Juure 'and rich, leaving the skin free from | every eruption, and giving the rich glow of f perfect health to the skin. At the same time, B. p. b. improves the digestion, cures i dyspepsia, strengthens weak kidneys. Just n the medicine for old people, as it giv< s H Jhcm new, vigorous blood. Druggists, pi1 Tper kftco bottle, with directions for home euro, nam pie free and prepaid by writiug Blood Balm Co., Atlanta. Ga. Describe trouble ah,d special free medical advice also ent in sealed letter. B. B. B. is especially advised for chronic, deep-seated cases of Impure blood and skin disease, and cures aitpr all else fails. ^ , 'VVj - ^Dr. Sigurd Ibsen. Pr Slgdrd Ibsen, son of the noted dramatist, is prominent in the rtovettent which recently culminated in the secession of Norway from Swed A. -- TV- THoen is th? constant and L ?? *" ??- ? I \ close associate of Fritbjoy Nansen, % explorer and scientist, in these , .troublesofee days. **% StVEN YcAfta AQU . Rochester ClieuaUt Koontl m Singularly JCdreetive Jledieine. William A. Franklin, of the Franklin ^g^Palmer Chemical Co., Rochester, N. " _ J "Seven v^ars ago 0*\ 11 was suffeiing very j * JL , 1 mucii ^through the ' I ^ailllre of tbo kidneys to eliminate |(M^pK|^J^he nric a,cid from back was very lame MB?z3bS and ached if I over-jejerted tnyself in the least degree. At i timet I was weighed down with a feeling of languor and depression and suf/Leered continually from annoying irregI nlarltlM ?f tha kiiln?T RftProtlnriR. I I procured a box of Doan'a Kidney Pllls% and began using tbeni. I found prompt relief from tbe aching and lameness in my back, and by tbe time I bad taken three boxes 1 was cured of all lrregularitfe?." Sold by all dealers; 50 ceuts a box. Foster-MI!burn Co., Buffalo, X. Y. The great Question is not wheiher you are having peace, but whether you are making progress. So. 51. THE MAN f&J~ BEHIND THE SAW Humsj work if It's an Atkins. I Tbe keen. clean euttiDg edge I and perfect taper of tbe V/ S31 $ujc make it jyq eas y *JM -loa BtandtoT" .. * S I are oieer rotn oeumu j?v. Tbe originator of el, the finest crucible 4. lx?&$ . was a c?od deal of a vjnP?? liscoveresof the Atkins ring process was like wive a miu of geniu*. ? are hijh-class workmen behind titers of their craft, whose skill and 'kcoansbip have helped to toake the le .Mark aa assurance of quality as be Govenueui uuy stamp, all types and sizes of haws, but ide?the best. iva, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor c., are sold by all good hardware talogue cu request. sTfllNS CO. CO., Inc. iaw Manufacturers ia the World. Executive Oficee. ietSaaapolia Indiana New Tork, Chicago. MtnneapolU, (Or*on;, Seattle, ban Vraadaco. i, Atlanta and Toronto, (Canada). M I lubahtntea-lnsat oo lite Atkaa Brand J GOOD DEALERS OZLEY'S ION ELIXIR -A srit* cube ror? PATION, BILIOUSNESS order* of the Stomach mad SOc. a bottle ut drug store#. ncTHREFluTNDREir /II I MEl'OXD-HAXD HLL TYPEWRITERS (FrontTen Dollars Up. woia^if drained. Write for YTON & COMPANY. Jms*. V . ?A. . ' < 4N .ELOQUENT SlAlDAY SERMON CT < B SHOP C- c. Mc:AE5E. j I Subject: God'H Llttie Ones. | ^ ( Brooklyn, X. Y.?Bishop C. C. Mc- 1 Cabe preached in the Hanson Place ] M. E. Church Sunday morning. The Rev. Charles E. Locke, the pastor, con- ] ducted the service. Bishop McCabe 1 chose for his subject "God's Little 3 Ones." and preached from the text Isaiah lx:22: "And a little one shall | become a thousand and a small one a j strong nation. I. the Lord, hath sakl it. In his time." He said: There are two thoughts that claim our attention as we study this text. One is the kiud of workers God chooses ! to do His greatest work in this world? . < a At-_ ! V. 1 ^ 1 tue mile oues; ana. secouu. me ihjssiuhj , rapidity with which God's work ruav i go forward in this tforld. God chooses the lowly to do His great work. The history of the world never yet ' lias been fairly written. We know ! what the great have done, we know what kings and emperors and generals ' and philosophers and poets and inven- , tors have done, but the Macauley has 't not yet arisen to trace out in history \ what God's little ones have done, yet j the history of the world cannot be fairly written without telling the story ] of their lives, because they have done ; so much for the world, and what oth- \ ers have done would have been in j vain had it not been for what God's little ones have accomplished. He ' chose the lowly. "God hath respect j unto the lowly, but the proud He knoweth afar off." He loveg the lowly ' heart that trusts in Him. What an j impediment to Christian work is pride! We cannot build up a strong Christian character without humility. Hit- ( | miHty comes from the Lat-u word "hu' ntus." which means "the ground" ? ( J the ground 011 which to build a strong j Christian character. Its corner stone and foundation stone must be humility, . and if the cha. cter lack that grace. ! it will not stand the test of time and { temptation; but. with humility, the Christian character may be built up j with a symmetry and uoiversalness , that will endure through life and eter- j nity. What do you think of this pas- t sage? "I, the high and lofty one that { inhabiteth eternity. 1 will dwell in the high and holy places with him also j that is of a contrite and humble spirit." God chooses as His associates the . humble and the contrite. j Our i..onl carried on His work after I ( the same plan. He chose the humble I and lowlv workers and sent them out | to preach His gospel. And one day ' they came back to Him surprised and delighted with their experience, and they said: ".Master, even the devils J are subject to us in Thy name." and , it is written that at that time Jesus ' J rejoiced in smlrit and said: "Fatlier. I } thank Thee because Thou hast hidden . these things from the wise and pru- , dent %nd hast revealed them unto ] babes. Even so. Father, lor so it , secmeth good in Thy sight." I aul un- ' derstood this well when be wrote to * the Corinthians: "Not may wise men * after the flesh, not many mighty, not j many noble are called: but Hod hath ( chosen the foolish things of the world i to confound the wise, and God hath j chosen the weak things of the world , to confound the things which are j mighty, and the base things of the world and things which are despised ( hath God chosen; yea. and things which are not to bring to naught ; things that are. that no flesh should j glory in His presence." How low He gets it down! That iias always been j God's plan, even before the time when ? the babe caiup to the manger in Both- i lehrm. Jesus born in Bethlehem in ( Judea?that little, lowly one was God's answer to the world's .cry for help j and light. It was a little added weak- ? ness to that we had already, poverty 1 added to the poverty we had already: ^ it was an infant's wail added to what . Paul calls the "groan of creation." j That was God's way of answering J man. I will just call your attention to the j possible rapidty with which the king- j doni of God can grow m this V.orld. "a ( little one becoming a thousand." That is a tremendous rate of gr.iu; it seems j as if it could not be so. We say . Isaiah was a ]K)ot: a mystical man and ^ exaggerated sometimes, but this is 110 ^ exageration. It has often been the case. Yea. a small one has become a e nation in the history of the onward V march of the kingdom of Jesus Christ. ^ our Lord. 1 believe that God wants His kingdom to grow rapidly, and I ^ think that was the spirit of Jesus t when He told His disciples the para- r ble of the talents. On another occtt- x sion He gave them another parable of t the rich man who before going away t gave each of his servant a pouud and t on his returu required his own with j usury. One man said: "Lord. Thv popud hath gained ten pounds." That ^ was a big percentage of interest. And <, another said: "Lord, Thy pound hath j, gained five pounds." That was a good , per.-outage, ai.d Jesus %r.id: "The kingdom of heaven is htce that." That 1 is the way invested lives may grow: j that is the way life, no matter how t humble, may grow: that is consecra- , tion. That is the teaching of these two x parables. Now these are commercial figures. s Let us take them into the light and \ try to understand them. In the para- t ble the master speaks of three rates of gain. When the man who had fiye talents brought five more he was I worth 1<K> per vent, to his master, ami | .< he who bud two ami brought two | more was also worth 100 per cent, to < his master, but when the man who had I only one pound brought live pounds ( more he was worth otto per rent, to c his master, and the man whose one 1 pound had gained ten pounds was t worth 10(>0 per cent, to his master; and Jesus_sald: "The kingdom of heaven Is like that.** All those rates of gain are possible in the kingdom of heaven. We cannot receive it right off. I-et us try to comprehend the Master's mean- 8 lug. Six per cent.?we know ail about I that?will do wonders if we will only t give it a little time. t In 1(J20 the island of Manhattan was j bought by the white man from the In- , dians for $24. which is r.n insigniti- . cant sum. Yes, but put it out at inter- _ est a" six per cent, and Add interest to interest and let it grow for 2S5 c years and how much would you have * then? The $24 would then lav? in- f creased to $102,000,000. r.nd that is tL? f way the kingdom, of heaven "Jght to < grotf. And if you keep that money 1 out at interest for 450 years it will ] | be able to buy Manhattan Island with x all there is on it. ana tiieu mere win . be enough left to buy every State in the Union, and then there will still be 1 enough left to buy Great Britain. And if left out at interest for 500 years there would be enough to buy the I nited States. England and Germany, t And the Master said: '"The kingdom k of heaven is like that." and that is the a way it ought to grow, and that is the j way it would grow if we would simply j keep the idea of the power and compound spiritual interest of the church 1 of God. If you kept out the $2^ with . * - V ? ntadded interest for (*>> y< i would wreck the world. Six per nt! That is entirely too small a'rate )f gain to suit my soul. What docs it meali? It means this: That here is he church oft 100 members instrumental in the conversion of six .-onls to Christ In t* year. I would not be satisfied with that rate at all. One hunired per cent, is the least rate of gain that any Christian church ought to think worthy of the kingdom of <!od, The beiis of the millennium would bp ringing before we uied if we only svouhl keep our soul winning for a few rears. It is not difficult to win a soul, t have been trying to work out this irohlem for years?trying to l?o worth something for Jesus. One night 1 arrived at New Haven. Conn., and took i hack at midnight to the house where I was to stay. When the hackinan isked for his fare I dropped a quarter nto his hand, and, grasping it. said: nio-hr ?ii-' T hone to meet vou n glory some day." He jumped ou the f?ox. whirled lu's horse around, and was gone. I did not expert to see him retain. \way after midnight my host knocked u my chamber door and said: "A lackman is here, acting queerly. lie >.ays lie wants to see you and has g.'.t to see you to-night." I said: "Let !iini come in." I arose and threw a =bawl over me. and i:i came a great stalwart hacknian with his whip in lis hand and tears running down his hecks and he said: "If I meet you in ;lory I have got to turn around, for 1 mi not going that way. I have come o ask you to pray for me. I could not keep away." What a joy it was to iray for that man! He went out comforted by Hod's holy spirit, and I brieve. I was worth 100 per cent, to my Master that night. The ;ossiblc rrowth of the kingdom is what I am :nlking about. In I860, when the war was over. I >vas on a train going from Lancaster. Jhio. and saw a drunken soldier sitting iy himself. Nobody would sit by a lrunken soldier, but that is the very kind of man I like to sit by. I sat low 11 by him and by and by stole my trm gently around his neck and whiskered to him: "Comrade, when are >*ou going to give your heart to Jesus 'brlst and bo a Christian':" He ooked embarrassed and got up and went to another part of the train, i thought I had offended hint. 1 weat hat night to preach in the little town )f Putnam, where I once was pastor, ind there sat that man and his sister jesideMiim. We had a glorious meetng that night. I did not see him igain lor thirty-tive years, but one tight I was auout to speak to the Jraii'l Army in the old Dutch Church in Fifth avenue. There were lSOii ioldicrs there. A splendid looking nan came down the aisle and I said tn t g?ntl?m?n: "Who is that man?" ind he said: "That is Colonel Iladley, he head of the St. Bartholomew Mis;ion. He lias been instrumental in danting titty-four rescue missions in his country." I went down, and said: 'Brother Iladley. I aui glad to see :ou. I have heard about your work. >ut I never saw you before." "Oh. yes rou have," he replied. "Thirty-tive rears ago I was sitting ott^i train and rou came and sat down by me and van ted to kfcow when I was going to i? a Christian and give my heart to iod. I never got over that question. L'ott have seen me efore." 1 believe t is possible for every Christian to rain over 100 per cent, for our blessed Lord every year. There are souls that are worth n housnnd per cent. There wis that mine woman In tup Kpworth Kector.v vith her nineteen children. Do you aiovr slip adopted live orphans heolfn'r Mliou llPr insbaud was a preacher. < Laughter), surely the invested life of Susanna kVcsIey was worth mere tuan 1000 per ear. Tli? bishop then reviewed at some ength the progress of Methodism dure the tii^i conference in 17711. parieularly in Ohio. He then spoke of the vork In Rus&ia. where there are now :.00(),000 converts, and liberty to worship according to conscience, and hen said: There will come a time when (lod 3iin?olf will get in a hurry and when le will say, '"The earth has wept long liough. There has been enough war. liotigh trouble," ami wiien ne win lasteu 0:1 the kingdom ami bring it juickly. I think He will hasten when vp hasten. Oh. brothers, let us hurry villi the gospel: After an urgent appeal for increased luhscriptions to missionary work, Bisiop McC'abe concluded his sermon as 'ollows: Brothers, your children will see this vorld converted. In a great meeting he other day we sent this message to Theodore Itoosevelt: "We are looking o you to bring about a movement for miversal arbitration." I find tweny-one nations have asked him to take he initiative, and your children will ive to see the day when war will he 10 more..and wliAi that happens we, vho have believed it all the time, will my. "I told you so." There are two kinds of aith, one that believes before t thing happens, and the other after. iVhat ..Hid haw yoi.V I thank Cod 1 iclieve it now before it happens. 1 icliove the whole earth i> going to ha onvoried. The lime is coming when io man will have to say to his neigh>or. "Know the Lord." And the time s coming when "the glory of the Lord hall till the earth as the waters cover he sea." May He hasten it in Ilis ime. All Light. The di-Tcrenco between receiving 'hp spirit and being tyied with the Spirit s.a difference not of a kind, but of a legree. In one case the light of leaven has reached the dark chamber. Usturbing night, but leaving some loop shadows. In the other, that light las filled the whole chamber and made very corner light.?William Arthur. Arthur Duffey to Race No More. Arthur F. Duffey has stated posiively rtiat he has mn his last race md will never again be seen In a mblic sprint contest. If the Georgeown man is firm in his intention o quit athletics for all time, then the while has seen the last or the lorerest American sprinter and for a loDg >eriod the fleetest, man in all the vorld. He Is the only amateur to ac omplish a feat considered impossible -that of running 100 yards in 9 3-5 seconds. But at the annual track and ield meet of the Intercollegiate Asso:iation of Amateur Athletics ol \:nerica held at Berkeley Oval in 1902 Duffey proved equal to the task, and tncler atmospheric, starting and tim ng conditions that were unquestiontble. The president of a West Virginia miversity has been burned in offlgy >y the students because his rulings is to the brutality of the game abolshed football. Our "young barbarans at play," it seems, must not be nterfered with, admonishes the New fork JrlUune. * 1 i . ' * \ > ? * T 'i.mv' . ' 1"HOT-ilH"l'OFF!l fiCFORItS [ Lead Many Unwary Investors into Quicksands of Financial Ruin. > In these days of frenzied finance, and the limelight of Investigation on insurance corporations, the ordinary ( public is amazed over the disclosure of how millions are carelessly handled 1 by the heads of large institutions, supposed to be safe and conservative. One fuct levealed by these disclos. ures, is that the men connected with such institutions, have gotten beyonu the days of small capital, and deal with such which rival Uicle Sam's treasury, through which, if successful, they will realize large profits. How sadly in comparison do the "investors" in many manufacturing enterprises appear, when judged lrom the standpoint of "knowing what you do," and nowhere is this more patent than with the investor that is constantly sinking funds in the many mushroom coffin factdries that appear, and then after a spasm "disappear, ei'her through a "shut down" or through the sheriff. Did the loss but extend only to these | "investors" it would be but the usual result, of not "looking before you leap ed," but what of the creditors, and frequently the amounts advanced "by "localities'' paid to stimulate the* -?.w town industries, and often the w: es due to workmen. - \ The prevailing opinion in the p? ,c mind that the manufacturing p undertakers' goods returns tremendous profits, is no doubt stimulated by ex; perience had with the undertaker, but in the manufacturing of funeral supplies, the question becomos quite a different proposition, for supply and demand, pure and simple, regulates > the price, as it does in all other busti ness, with the exception that "the demands cannot be stimulated, by either style, product, or price, "rather Time," alone controls, i Here is where the over zealous capitalist or community allow promoters, or patriotism to impose upon their credulity, in accepting statements which will not bear the "light of investigation." but through ignorance of conditions, subscribe and put up their | cash, only to get wise after it is too late. Statistics show that there are onehundred and ninctv-fivij casket manufacturing and jobbing plants in the United States, of which 163 are manfacturers of varying capacities, while i 19 'manufacture approximately 375.006 coffns and caskets annually. 30 manufacture 300,000. 114 manufacture G12.OOo, or a total of 1.347,000 coffins and caskets, manufactured Annually in the , United States, all of which must be ' consumed through the ordinary de- j mand ol mortality, but what is the > demand? In the mortality abstract ot j the twelfth census, table number 94, / we find that the total deaths from j all causes in the registration area of the United States was 512,609 for twelve months, but this registration area was only 33 per cent of the con tinental territory of the Unite' States. In part I. of the final repoit cn vital statistics, page VII. ths fliyJ computation shows a death rate in the United States of 16.3 per 1,000. and while this is considered excessive, but assuming it to be correct, it wiil show approximately only 1.238,000 deaths per year in this country includ ing paupers. Now what, of the 109,000 coffins and caskets produced annually in excess of the demand which the public can not be induced to purchase by the Pte cf any of the ordinary mediums used to stimulate trade as practiced in oiher lines of business? Unquestionably it is a case of over-supply, which can not be disposed of., an.l the surplus is more than double the Quantity stated, for there is no provision in the estimate for pauper coffins. which are not made In the regular coffin factories, whereas the number of deaths include paupers, nnd thus the fate of nine out of every ten ne\% coffin plants is clearly written, even before the stock is subscribed, to say nothing of the failure of the old ones. It sometimes happens that a new plant of this kind, afterhard struggle, succeeds in surviving some of the older ones, but the Sffhie amount of capital and energy invested fuce #, hi'*- lino of business tvnuln'L si'ch great tisk of failure, whil- f its iu the event of success huSn?-fffoven to he less than any other cluss ol y business. The records show that the ^^rage per cent of profit ,"u the casket manufacturing business by houses which , have been in business for a number of years, and equipped with the best facilities for turning out their work at the smallest per cent, runs from 5 to S per cent, while several, if not the majority of them can do no bet* ter than break even, anil in a number of instances close down, or are closed out in a few years. SAINIT :is cons: est authorities be the best-know cotton blight. "Yellow Leaf E Leaf Blight" are tf erished soil, which Our 90-page b< ture," is full of pra - mation, and is free AAdnm, OSKXAfl BfW T?k-4t Vwu troot ? or . *" ' . 1 '* V*1 .fl.- - n-g The government statistics of 1900 shows that in that year $13,585,162.00 of capital was invested in thf casket manufacturing business, and the value of the product was $13,952,308.00 at a cost of $10,022,S29.00 for material and wages, or a gain of only 28 per cent over the amount expended. Now deduct from this the 20 to 25 per cent necessary for the cost of selling. Incidental and sundry expenses and it can be readily seen that the profits will be small if any. Since these figures were tabulated raw material and labor have both advanced considerably with no advance in the finished' product, which makes the small margin between the cost of production and the amount realized for the finished goods likely to disgp pexr altogether. A good filling for sandwiches fs made by mixing finely chopped pecan nuts with Chutney. DON'T MISS THIS. A Core For Slomirh Trouble?A ?few Metbo.l. by Absorption?No Drue*. Do You Belch? It means a diseased Stomach. Are you afflicted with Short Breath. Gas. Sour Eructation?. Heart Pa las, Indigestion^ Dyspepsia. Burning Pains and Load Weight in Pit of Stomach. Acid Stomach, Distended Abdomen. Dizziness. Colic? Bad Breath or Any Other Stomach Torture Let ns send you a box of Mull's AntiBelch Wafers free to convince you that it cur (*. Nothing else like it known. It's sure and very pleasant. Cures by absorption. Harmless. No drugs. Stomach Trouble can't be cured otherwise?so says Medical Science. Dnigc won't do?they eat up the Stomach and make you worse. We know Mull's An Li-Belch Wafers cure ord we want you to know it, hence this offer. Special OyFEU.?The rceular price of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers is 50c. a box. but to introduce it to thousands of sufferers we will send two (21 boxes upon receipt of 75c. and this auverlisem* nt. or we will sand you a free sample for :his coupon. 12225 A FREE BOX. 114 Send this coupon with your name and address and druggist's namr* who does not sell it for a free box of Mull's ' Anti-Beleh Wafers to Mull's Grape Toxic Co.. 328 Third I Ave., Hock Island, 111. o Give Full Atiilre-* and Write Plainly, | Sold ut ail druggists, 50c. per box. Burmah is stirred by the question of offi- ; cial dress. Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullen is Nature's great remedy?Cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, and ail throat and lung troubles. At druggists, 25c., 50c. a^d sU.QO per bottle. Rome has seminaries representing eighty even orders. Pi I fepSdu W cutoc ^ " oooo h each can. a' , 04 so?rr- 1 jf,^ fot mis3 Lillipdd?I car wnl'fl rt t Ar^liin . never of the same : na succession. Miss Ta:/-**J?Wjell, tho' aping. Ann iia ? he mind im < trochlear Varnish iint cJfiT^be V ' right asy th freshly doSy Ir.g in fir\ me time a *.-ith flJVcc; ' tfcen using -.-loth Jo c'caa. ?aint. 1 _1U__^ r ' \,~i I i. s w , idered^fryjthe highin the country to 'n preventiveyof ! ? * Might" and "Rt d le result of irnpov' Kainit cures. :>ok, "Cotton-Cul.ctical cotton inforfor the asking. r KALI VTOMXM, ~ < .Atlanta, Oa.?88# ?. Brca* ttTMt j w-' * ' V f | ^ ^ 'ssssaBsssserrss .I,.iiuu.JW TUMQRSCQNQUEREO SERIOUS OPERATION? AVMKt Unqualified Bnooeas of Lydia X. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound ha the : Case of Mrs. Fannie D. Fox. One of the greatest triumphs of Lydia E. Pink hum's Vegetable Compound is the conquering of woman's dread enemy, Tumor. The growth of a tumor is so sly that i frequently its presence is not suspected until it is far advanced. So-called "wandering pains" may come from its early stages, or the presence of danger may be made manifjjjit by profuse menstruation, accom' anied by unusurl pain, from the ovaries down the groin and thighs. If you have mysterious pains, if there are indications of inflammation or displacement, don't wait for time to confirm your fears and go through the 1 horrors of a hospital operation; secure j Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- j pound right away and begin its use. Mrs. Pinkham. of Lynn. Mass., will give you her advice free of all charge if you will write her about yourself. Your letter will be seen by women only. Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? " I take the liberty to congratulate you on the success I have had with your wonderful medicine. Eighteen mouths ago my monthlies stopped. shortly after I felt so badly that I submitted to a thorough examination by a I physician and was told that I had a tumor I on the uterus and would have to undergo an ] operation. ' Soon after I read one of your advertisements and decided to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. After trviug five bottles as directed the tumor is entirely gone. I have been examined by a phvsicmu and he says I have no signs of a tumor now. It has also brought my month- v lies around once more, and I am entirely * >11."? Fannie D. Fox, 7 Chestnut Street. | Bradford, Pa. ZTG CURE THEGRfPiifo A If p*vlN 0t DAY Wnil I HASKOEiHiALC*1I lor your : JF. W.Diemt nocking at r Oven Door^j 3 have good luck on baking day if you u ng Powder. There is always just so mi iful, because it never varies in strength, tat makes reliable baking. A good coo d Luck will never go back to the unccrtai iOOD LUI Baking ^ also makes a big difference in th the day the grocer's bill is p; for a pound can?we col gMntVSB purity and quality of Gc ajS^iSyB iarged three times as ir.i V Jon'towlook. the tw*iitiful pr*m , 'mKt, Good I.uclc Hating Powder. Thi* I ?b?rmg with you the saving we make VffMEr carload lota tr> grocer*. Cutout coupm each can. The little gift bank Indde < tratea and describee the article* you ina CO ^urr- back-fanee gossip cloS^t-conv uiion. Ted. 'c M?e r Vlin?'? r> rev 'IboL / '<! treats** fras - fl]Awl'sr. rhil.'i. Pa .y srrf loin of '.lie J Svr"*> fo* /'till,1-an .*< J.redneeeieflr.wimnon' ^?rdeo!i'\2*c.n bottle fit Soain dme r res are permitted to ! sell druis on Sunday. AN AWFUL SKIN HUMOR O-vrred Head, Neck and SlionMer*?Snf, laved Agony For Twenty-Flee Year* Until Cured by Cntieura. "Kor twenty-five years 1 suffered agony from a terrible humor, completely covering ray head, neck and shoulders, discharging matter ot' such offensivencss to sight and smell that 1 became an object of dread. 1 consulted the most able doctors tar ami near, tc no avail. Then 1 got Obtirura, and in a surprisingly short time I was com- I l?.-ie.y emeu, i aavise an niose sunering I r from skin humors to get Cutieur.t and end j a! their misery at once. S. P. Keyes, 14!) | Congress Street, Koston. Mass." J Some men would forget there was f 1 God it' they never had any trouble. j~ : ?1?5??f* i | fco mm AODC for fo<*? JaaU la he?l.he. I ? 90 an jKUKC Mili rlucat*. Address r*viT-L*>a Colour, gnu 8U, XoomCo., JC. C. ' ? f ._j ' 3 nT%"i "^anyactual^^ i photographs of cotton J fields on which no fertiliser* wes# r \ used and plcturee of fields on which f I "other makes" of fertilizers m "\ f used. Results of these crops were i dismal failures There are much Afl V "brighter prospects" ahead for the 1 / progressive farmers of &e South. \ I . Two and three bales to the acre are J L only ordinary yields where / ' / thus escape the boll weeYl'santfatha*; ) damaging insect*. Yon can easily do r | tr.is. a* well aa increase the number 0 t of bo) !s<and their size) on /onr plants / I by plentifully uain* Virgin ia?Caro- f ?5 V Una Fertmzera. Tbia method will V J tremendously "increase your yields V f per acre." Don't be footed into buy- # I ing a substitute. f f Vlry Inla-CaraUaa ChaaricalCa. \ C NorfoUu^aT*' ?' 4,rn \ Durham. N.O. I > ! J Charleston, B.C. ft If Baltimore. Md. M 'ft I Atlanta. Ga. S ft Savannah, Ga. V\ Montgomery. Ala. > M aft Memphis. Tenn. AM lft Shreveport. La. MM II < ^ HD FOR womenJMjJS troubled with ills peculiar to * their sex, used at a douche is marvelodaly tw- f cesefal. Ttorcmghlycleaasej, killsdiseasenoM. stops discharges, heals inflammation 1M hat soreness, cures leuorrbsa tad nasal catarrh. 9 ? Pzraoe is in powder lorm to be dissolved hi pam, r. watet, sad is tv more cleansUg, healing. ntmoMft < . aa^Konomical than liqnid enlist ptics (or ill TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, SO cents a bos. Trial Box ami Desk at Instructions Pna j Tms R. Psxroa Company Coot on. SSsa?' ^ (3 Best Cougii eyrnp. *To*tis Tooll. Oss Q Lrl in time. Sold by draggi*** F>| ifjgfl n-GRIPIHt ' IVAIUUITIU TO cout SOLO, HEADACHE ADD NEUBAUIA. I Or .pine to a dealer who won't Oaaraaton It MO.VEY BACK IP IT DOESN'T CVBA rr.MI.D.. Manufacturer. SvinoAald, Mm ildn't improve the :od Luck if we la mi w? givr with /ffljSSEfo&S s oar method of HV by ftbtpplnc iu Mem* Iff ofauilllu*-' aQ V obtulu. jARKfl ? 0 SICK HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION Promptly anil Per:aaa.iutly O iroJ wid? Crab Orchard Water A centurv'j experience with sueop' h ^silira is tns Dost toeuaiouiai. o<jiu i ?, Iruggists. Crab Orchard Water C#., ? louisvslle, ky. 15 Bropsyif \" flffiri lUMBCWtft all swelling in 8toro "If davi: effertft ft per mam.nl cure /fl\ A ineoto6?<fir?. TriiltWftWeBt ( lK>RW;: ve n free. Nothingcai.tie fair? EMfeCMW* Write Or. H. U. Grew'ft *tt.' S&JP Pi<gftdftlftt?. Cot a AUwta.'