Newspaper Page Text
SATURDAY, MAY 20, 1899.
THE SUNNY SOUTH.
NEWS NOTES.
A sugar refinery with a daily capacity
of 600 barrels is being erected ad Mem
phis, Tenn.
The Hercules Ventilated Barrel com
pany have increased their plant at Mobile,
Ala., by 1,000 barrels daily.
A canning factory is being erected at
Oak Grove, Ky . to utilize the fruits and
vegetables growing so prolifically in that
section.
The Solomon Wise Refinery company,
with a capital stock of $100,000, is erecting
a sugar refinery with a daily capacity of
300 Ions at Abbeville. La.
The new wharves for the Mallory line
at Galveston. Tex., are each 1,000 feet in
length, one being 173 feet wide, the other
130 feet in width.
The city of Galveston has become an
important point for banana shipments,
and it is understood a regular line of
steamers will run between Galveston and
•Central America.
The Utica Desk company, of Utica, X.
V.. have organized a branch at Knoxville,
Tenn., with $100,000 special capital, and
have secured a location for the branch
factory at Knoxville.
Two of the steamships under construc
tion for the Morgan line to ply between
New York and New Orleans were launch
ed last month and are among the largest
and finest steamers ever constructed in
this country.
The American Packer says that more
than $5,ono.09t) has been invested in the
canning industry in the past four months.
The total pack of tomatoes in the United
States and Canada was 3.797.806 cases in
189$. In 1897 it was 4,149.141 cases. In 1898
the pack for the United States was 5.^
652.349 ca'ses, as compared with 3,964,353 for
1897.
The Texas and Pacific railway turned
out of tlte shops at Marshallville, Tex.,
last week engine Xo. 19. This engine is
the companion of Xo. 116. that pulls pas
sengers on the X. O. P. division. This en
gine, like Xo. 116. was built, entire, at
the shops in this city, and is pronounced
a perfect engine in every detail, reflecting
great credit upon what the Dallas Xews
urged—a diversification of industry. The
Texas and Pacific railway has four other
engines in the course of construction.—
Dallas News.
We find on our table a handsome new
monthly. The Illustrated and General
Xarrator, issued by the passenger de
partment of the I. & G. X. R ,R. of Texas.
(Think of it, an air line railway over 825
miles in length entirely within the bor
ders of a single state.) We find this pub
lication replete with interesting and in
structive information relative to the won
derful resources and opportunities offered
by the section through which the road
passes. Our readers will find it a good
investment to send address and stamp for
a copy to D. J. Price, general passenger
agent, Palestine, Tex. Xothing tends so
much to educate the people and develop
a country as does an ably and intelligent
ly edited paper as is The Illustrator and
General Narrator.
Crop reports from the Louisiana fruit
belt indicate that the outlook is quite
promising. Judging from present appear
ances the fruit crop will be abundant.
Pear trees are set with fruit sufficient to
make a large crop, and some of the fruit
is as large as hazelnuts. Plum trees and
mulberry trees are full. Blackberries and
dewberries give promise of a good crop.
It was thought that peaches were entire
ly done up, but they have rallied and the
indications now are that there will be
a fair crop. Figs and oranges got the
worst of it. The orange trees were pret
ty generally killed. Young fig trees were
killed to the ground, and the new growth
of ihc large trees met the same fate, and
no new growth is as yet putting forth.
The daily shipment of vegetables from
the Manatee, Fla., wharf is greater than
ever before in the history of the town.
The firm of Wyman & Rogers last season
shipped over 1,000 crates of cucumbers
trom three acres; this season they have
eight acres planted to cucumbers. They
are shipping over one hundred crates per
day at from $3 to $7 per crate. The suc
cess of these men last season so encour
aged the people of this town and vicinity
that every acre of cleared land in the
Manatee hammock has been planted to
some kind of vegetables, principally to
matoes and cucumbers. The abundant
yield and the prospect for a good market
have put the growers In better spirits
Ilian ever before.
Two hundred head of sheep and more
than that many hogs were driven from
Manatee to Titusville, Fla., last week
to bo shipped to Cuba.
Those who have been led to believe that
Florida will not grow and prosper with
out the production of oranges are wide
of the mark. The orange industry for
many years has been but a small factor
In the aggregate whole of Florida's re
sources. The fact is that the resources of
that state have but just commenced to be
developed. The Lakeland Sun truly says
that "Florida is not all glitter.’-’ It bears
acquaintance. Us industries and advant
ages will stand investigation. Its pros
pects are based upon substantial re
sources. Its future commercial greatness
can at once be comprehended by a glimpse
at its favored geographical location, its
present and prospective transportation
facilities by land and water, the resources
of its soil, the undeveloped riches of its
phosphate mines, its fishes, its lumber in
terests, its stock-raising interests.
The Seaboard Air Line in addition to
the libraries it operates for the benefit of
the residents along its route, believes al
so in libraries for its employes and has
fitted tip spacious, inviting apartments in
its office building at Portsmotuth. Va„
for this purpose. The library is well
stocked with books of general as well as
technical information, and also a good
supply of periodicals. Another room is
fitted tip to give practical information in
the use of air brakes.
Augustus Mellier. of Philadelphia, one
of the directors and chief promoters of
the new railroad enterprise, to be built
by the Atlantic Seaboard company, writes
concerning it as follows: “The southern
terminus of this road will he at some
point in South Carolina, on the Atlantic
coast, and its northern terminus at Golds
boro, X. C. \Ve commence the construc
tion work on the portion of the road be
tween Lumherton. N. and Marion. S.
C. tVe intend using 60-pound rails, and
all material used will bo first-class. The
Atlantic Seaboard company. Bourse build
ing. will have entire charge of the con
struction work.” At Goldsboro the road
will connect with the Atlantic and North
Carolina, also the Atlantic Coast Line,
while at Marion it meets another division
of the coast line.
Ocala, Fla., truck growers continue
hauling their product to market. Duffy,
a prosperous colored farmer, has been
getting returns for his bean shipments at
$2.75 and $2.50 a crate, and he is supremely
happy.
Dr. Fakes has forty men digging Irish
potatoes and is getting off a ear a day.
The town council of Anthony, appre
ciating the trade of farmers and truck
ers. is. through the efforts of the Hon.
A. P. Basken. a member of the council,
constructing a hard road from the
depot to Mr. Basken's farm, a mile dis
tant. for the purpose of moving the wa
termelon crop of Mr. Basken and those
of his neighbors, constituting hundreds
of acres and carloads on carloads of
melons. The crop promises well, and
many growers have made sales of. their
1 melon c»op for delivery u' a certain
day in June, the 10th. mostly.
CATHARTIC
STATE OF OHIO. City of Toledo, Lu
cas County.—ss.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is
the senior partner of the firm of F. J.
Cheney & Co., doing business in the city
of Toledo, county and state aforesaid, and
that said lirm will nay the sum of ONE
HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and ev
ery case of Catarrh that cannot he cured
by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in
my presence, this 6th day of December,
A. D. 1886.
(Seal) A. YV. GLEASON,
Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
and acts directly on the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system. Send for testi-
monials, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
GOLD IN MADISON COUNTY.
A large gold deposit has been discovered
in Madison county. Georgia, several miles
from Danielsville. on the Broad river. The
property on which this mine is located
belonged to Mr. Thomas Bailey, hut has
been sold by him to Mr. W. E. Sudlow, an
Englishman, who is now preparing to
operate it. This property consists of 630
acres and it is said to contain an abund
ance of gold. Mr. Sudlow, a few days
since, worked over a piece of ground,
about ono-tenth of an acre, and panned
out by the crudest process $100 worth of
gold. Mr. Sudlow has had much exper
ience and is satisfied that he has struck
a rich find. On this property is a splen
did water power, a fall of forty feet on
the Broad river, which will easily furnish
more than enough power than will lie
necessary to move all the machinery for
operating the mine.
ANY PERSON
Wishing to know the truth In regard to
their health should not fall to send for a
valuable and new 64-page Booklet which
will be sent FREE for a short time to
those who mention this paper. This book
Is published by the celebrated physicians
and specialists—Dr. Hathaway & Co., of
22V& S. Broad street, Atlanta, Ga., whom
TRUCKING IN SOUTH CAROLINA
The secretary of agriculture returned to
Washington recently from a visit to South
Carolina, where he has studied the condi
tions of agriculture and truck gardening
along the coast, the manufacturing in
dustries. the tea culture, the agricultural
college of South Carolina and other mut
ters of interest.
In an interview the secretary said that
South Carolina is making rapid progress
in all these directions. The farmers are
learning how to take better care of their
soil; how to fertilize and cultivate It with
more profit The diversification of crops
has not extended so far as it should or
so far as it soon will. The department of
agriculture, for the past wo years, has
been conducting nation-wide experiments
to ascertain whether the people of the
United States can produce their own su
gar from their own beets. The matter
has gone so far that the secretary has no
doubt whatever of the success of the in
dustry. About a score of mills were run
ning last fall, another score Is being built
and in time complete success will come
and the $100,000,000 now paid out for sugar
will be saved and kept at home.
The secretary is also sure now that the
people of the latitude of South Carolina
can produce all the tea needed by the
American people, just as he was sure,
two years ago, that the sugar needed for
home consumption could be produced
front the sugar beat independent of all
other sources.
AN EXCELLENT COMBINATION.
A SUCCESSFUL ENTERPRISE
RASED ON MERIT.
A
The Importance of Informing the
Public of the Value of an Arti
cle Through the Leading
Newspapers.
The few remedies which have attained
to world-wide fame, as truly beneficial
in effect and giving satisfaction to mil
lions of people everywhere, are the pro
ducts of the knowledge of the most emi
nent physicians, and presented in the
form most acceptable to the human sys
tem by the skill of the world’s great
chemists; and one of the most successful
examples is the Syrup of Figs, manufac
tured by the California Fig Syrup 'Co.
Unlike a host of imitations and cheap
substitutes. Syrup of Figs is permanent
ly beneficial in its effects, and therefore
lives and promotes good health, while in
ferior preparations are being cast aside
and forgotten. In olden times if a rem
edy gave temporary relief to individuals
here and there, it was thought good; but
now-a-days a laxative remedy must give
satisfaction to all. If you have never
used Syrup of Figs, give it a trial, and you
will be pleased with it. and will recom
mend it to your friends or to any who
suffer from constipation, or from over
feeding. or from colds, headaches, bilious
ness or other ills resulting from an innac-
tive condition of* the kidneys, liver and
bowels.
In the process of manufacturing the
pleasant family laxative made by the
California Fig Syrup Co., and named
Syrup of Figs, tigs are used, as they are
pleasant to the taste; but the medicinal
properties of the remedy are obtained
from an excellent combination of plants
known to he medicinally laxative and to
act most beneficially. As the true and
original remedy, named Syrup of Figs, is
manufactured by the California Fig
Syrup Co., only, a knowledge of that fact
will assist in avoiding the worthless imi
tations manufactured by other parties.
THE SUGAR INDUSTRY.
The Department of Agriculture
Will Foster Its Production.
We pay for sugar annually (says Secre.
tary Wilson, of the national department,
of agriculture) something like $100X00,000
to foreign countries, where the conditions
,9re no mnjje f.i vocable /he
(ban here at home. Enough factories
have been built and operated, as a result
of our experiments, to indicate that along
the upper parallels of our country, from
Xew York to California, and down into
Xew Mexico, sugar can be successfully
grown. Wc have entered vigorously upon
the introduction of valuable new plants
from foreign countries, with the object
of introducing them into the life zones
similar to the condition from which they
sprang. We have received ten tons of rice
seed that will improve, we think, the rice
grown in the lower Mississippi valley. Be
tween the limited belt along our northern
coast, where the ribbon cane is grown,
and the belt where we have a sugar beet,
there is a belt where neither the ribbon
cane nor the sugar beet, as far as learned,
can be successfully cultivated. The de
partment is considering what might be
done for the people in this great region,
and has been developing a sorghum cane
with a high per cent of saccharine mat
ter. During a visit to Georgia lately I
learned that the state grows over 600.000
tons of co*»on seed in a year. I made an
estimate of the amount of nitrogenous
matter necessary lor the rations of the
400,000 fat steers which the United States
ships abroad annually, and found that
with the addition of some carbonaceous
matter, the state of Georgia, through its
cotton seed, could have fattened every
steer sent across the Atlantic. It occurred
to me that this carbonaceous matter, to
balance the cotton seed ration, might be
found in the bagass.e of the sorghum
plant, after the saccharine matter is ex
tracted, or it might be found in the
sorghum plant entire, without extracting
the sugar contents. With this object in
view the department has been sending out
high heredity sorghum seed to those
states in order that the farmer might
make his own sugar if he desired, or that
capitalists might invest in sugar making,
which is entirely practicable, or that
feeders might have carbonaceous nutri
ments to add to the nitrogenous cotton
seed ration.
SUMMER TIME APPROACHES.
Have you thought where you are going
this summer? No! Well, before it is too
late let us call your attention to Salt
Lake City—the inland city by the sea.
The late Colonel Cockerill once said to
the readers of The Cosmopolitan: "There
are three quaint and unique cities on the
continent, Quebec, St. Augustine and Salt
Lake,!’ and to this he might have truth
fully added, and Salt Lake is the most
quaint and unique of them ail.
To the visitor it is all that Colonel
Cockerill describes it.
To the summer resorter it offers sea
bathing in great Salt Lake, a mile above
sea level and in the very heart of the
Rocky mountains: all the curative prop
erties of Hot Springs, Sulphur Springs,
etc.; a delightful, temperate climate with
cool nights; a walk or drive through the
canons and parks; a glimpse of all that is
beautiful in nature, and all the advant
ages of a city of thrift, enterprise and
commercial supremacy.
The Rio Grande Western Railway
(Great Salt Lake Route) with its Color
ado connections, the Denver and Rio
Grande and Colorado Midland railroads
offer choice of three distinct routes
through the most magnificent scenery in
the world—not excepting the famous
Alps. Those celebrated summer resorts.
Colorado Springs, Manitou, Glenwood
Springs, etc., are located along this route
—and stopovers are permitted.
Low summer excursion rates to Salt
Lake City can be obtained from all the
cities of the Union’.
Before deciding on your summer outing
write for descriptive pamphlets, etc., to
E. Copeland, General Agent. Bedford
building, Chicago, or F. A. Wadleigh, G.
P. A., Salt Lake City.
Five thousand and five hundred pounds
of wool were sold and shipped from
Osteen. Fla., Monday to Sabel Bros.,
Jacksonville.
IN THE GRAPE COUNTRY.
The Attractive Vineyard, Orchard
and Garden Regions Along the
Southern Railway.
Riding through the section traversed by
the Birmingham division of the Southern
railway one is impressed with the number
and extent of vineyards which line the
roadway and give evidence of the atten
tion and care which are given to grape
culture in that part of the country. Es
pecially is this true of that part of the
division in Haralson county, Ga., and
Cleburne county, Ala., extending from
Bremen, Ga., to Fruithurst, Ala., where
the viticulturists count their vines by the
thousands and occupy hundreds of acres
in carrying on a growing line of industry
promising in its returns. The peculiar
adaptability of the soil for the growing
of grapes and fruits is so plainly appar
ent that an enormous acreage has al
ready been given to vineyards and or
chards, a total which will be largely in
creased through the vines and trees
which will be placed upon new ground in
the coming month. Coming from the
west, it is at Fruithurst, Ala., that the
evidences first multiply so rapidly that
one is almost persuaaed from his sur
roundings that lie is in a section like that
celebrated in France and Hungary, where
the winemaker has flourished for gen
erations, instead of in one in which
a new industry has been followed
hut a few seasons. Long lines of trellis
rise terrace-like upon the hillsides, bring
ing into view so prominently the industry
of the residents that it is one always re
tained.
A large number of varieties of grapes
have been successfully grown and experi
mented with, but those for commercial
purposes which are most in favor are the
Niagara, Delaware and Concord. An
average of 680 vines are placed on an acre,
and in full bearing, with proper care,
should yield from 8,00b to 10,000 pounds,
though there are yields reported in ex
cess of these amounts. The quality of
the product is unsurpassed, the grape
possessing a flavor and containing a
greater percentage of sugar than is
shown or equaled in less favored sec
tions. They are good shippers, carry
well, anu in their transportation lose
nothing of their excellence,and are placed
upon the distant markets preserving the
qualities which have given them a wide
reputation.
Chicago, Pittsburg, Philadelphia, New
York and Boston are among the northern
markets which testify to the superiority
of the grapes which reach them from
these vineyards, and it was in the latter
city that the top notch of last season's
prices was reached, one of the cars from
Fruithurst being disposed of for an
amount in the neighborhood of $1,100.
Xew Orleans and the southern cities are
within easy reach.
Fruithurst, Ala., and Tallapoosa and
Bremen, Ga., are the towns about which
the vineyards center. Around Fruit
hurst about 3.000 acres are devoted to
this culture, Tallapoosa contributing the
results from 2.000 acres and Bremen those
from vines which occupy close to 500
acres. Xot all these vineyards are yet
in full bearing.
The expense of establishing a vineyard
of course varies, but it is estimated where*
timbered land has to be cleared and pre
pared $40 per acre will cover all costs, in
cluding- purchase price, and place 680
vines. Seven and one half dollars per
acre is the cost nt cultivation and care
the first year, $10.50 the second, and $12.50
the third and succeeding years. On this
basis, and including $23, the cost of trellis,
the expense, where no part of the work
is home by the owner, would be kept
within $100 per acre, this being an outside
figure to time of full hearing. This
(.nutjut represents the total outlay where
aor-4^ fined and no work contributed
the purchaser, and of course does not
obtain when the owner of the land gives
his own time and attention to the plant
ing, cultivation and care of his own vines.
Though grapes are shipped In car lots
by freight and in tons by express, the
b ilk of the crop is used in wine-making
at the point at which grown, several
companies carrying on its manufacture
in addition to the growers who operate
their own presses.
Four miles east of Tallapoosa there is a
colony of fifty families of Hungarians,
whose experience was gained in the well
known Tokay district in their native
country, who here find in soil and climate
the conditions under which the great rep
utation was made by the wine-makers of
far-away Austria, and who expect to
maintain that reputation in their new lo
cation. They have about 700 acres of
land, two-thirds of which is in vines.
J hey set the roots more closely than
their American brethren and have more
vines to the acre, cultivating them in the
manner peculiar to the fatherland. Each
grower is his own wine-maker.
But grapes, though the principal care
of the land owners under view, have not
operated to the exclusion of the other va-
BUSINESS CHANGE.
(Continued from Page One.)
aid of the patented "tab" cards follow up
enquiries and eliminate non-profitable
names. The saving in reduplication alone
pays for the list. The customers’ list,
which keeps together and yet separate the
real and prospective customers, also by
means of “tabs” furnishes a list classified
for circularizing, and a list by which one
salesman can take up the business where
another left off. The National Magazine
uses this system for its advertising and
circulation accounts. The subscription
department of publications have been
able to do away with the books which re
quired athletes to handle and now have
two lists on one where they can find the
desired information in a small fraction
of the time they could find it on the
books. There is yet to be found the bus
iness to which the card system cannot be
profitably applied. The tendency of the
times is toward combination and central
ization. which implies the accomplish
ment of greater results with less expendi
ture of power. The card system is a par
adox in its simplicity and comprehensive
completeness. It is a constant ticker
from which you get information at a
glance. It is always up to date and of
personal value. It is a catalogue of events
and an encyclopedia of knowledge with
special reference to your work or bii'-i-
ness, and seems to accumulate essential
information automatically.
It is difficult for those accustomed and
involved with the routine of everyday
work to improve their methods to any
great extent. A few suggestions from
someone who is giving his time to study
such improvements with the advantages
of constantly receiving and accumulating
valuable ideas from successful business
men. might be worth considerable money
and time to the busy man who will give a
few moments' consideration and send for
a catalogue or a representative of the li
brary bureau, who can soon tell you what
is required and in that way save you
time, annoyance and expense.
The factory, where millions of cards are
cut to size, ruled, perforated and printed,
is indeed a study. The aggressive up-to-
date spirit prevails here as in all the oth
er details. The self-feeding cylinder job
presses: the self-feeding card cutters; the
whole plan, policy and purpose, secures
the best results at the most economical
rates. A complete system of cards for
the Warner's Library of the World's Best
Literature is being printed, which will be
of great value to any library or private
individual owning these books, and this
is furnished in duplicate at slight cost
comparatively.
THOUSANDS HAVE KIDNEY
TROUBLE AND DON'T KNOW IT
Swamp-Root, The Great Kidney Restorative and Healer.
ITS
MARVELOUS SUCCESS IN ALL KIDNEY,
BLADDER AND URIC ACID TROUBLES.
To Prove the Wonderful Merits of This New Discovery,
Every "Sunny South’" Reader May Have a Sample
Bottle Sent Absolutely Free by Mail.
What your kidneys need is a gentle, healing, tonic influence,
that will soothe their irritability and gently regulate them.
The only thing that will do this is Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the
ideal Kidney Restorative.
It used to be considered that only urinary troubles were to be
traced to the kidneys, but now’ modern science proves that nearly all
constitutional diseases have their beginning in the disorder of these
useful organs.
What more natural ?
The Kidneys filter and purify the blood.
When they don’t your whole body must
suffer.
If you are sick, doctor your kidneys be
cause as soon as they are well they will
help all the other organs to health.
The mild and extraordinary effect of
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kid
ney remedy, is soon realized. It stands
the highest for its wonderful cures of the
most distressing cases and is sold by
druggists in ilftv-cent and one dollar bot
tles. Make a note of the name, SWAMP-
ROOT. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root.
You may have a sample bottle of this
famous kidney remedy sent free by mail,
postpaid, by which you may test its vir
tues for such disorders as kidney, bladder
and uric acid diseases, and urinary
troubles, obliged to pass water frequently
night and day. smarting or irritation in
passing, brickdust or sediment in the
urine, constant headache, backache, lame
back, dizziness, sleeplessness, indigestion,
nervousness, skin trouble, anaemia,
Bright’s disease, -neuralgia, rheumatism,
bloating, irritability, worn-out feeling,lack
of ambition, loss of flesh, sallow com
plexion.
If your water, when allowed to remain
undisturbed in a glass or bottle for twen
ty-four hours, forms a sediment or set
tling or has a cloudy appearance, it is
evidence that your kidneys and bladder
need immediate attention.
Swamp-Root has been tested in so many
ways, in hospital work, in private prac
tice. among the helpless too poor to pur
chase relief, and has proved so success
ful in every case that a special arrange
ment has been made by which all read
ers of The Sunny South, who have not
already tried it. may have a sample hot-
tle sent absolutely free by mail. Also a
book telling more about Swamp-Root and
containing some of the thousands upon
thousands of testimonial letters received
from men and women who owe their
good health, in fact, their very lives, to
the wonderful curative properties of
Swamp-Root. Be sure and mention The
Atlanta Sunny South when sending your
address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham
ton, X. Y.
rh’ties of fruit and the vegetables which
can be profitably grown and for which
there is a demand, and considerable at
tention is now being given to the plant
ing of trees and the putting out of plants,
the fruits of which find good market.
About Bremen and Fruithurst a great
deal of ground is being prepared for
peaches, and hundreds of acres will be
comprised in the new orchards which will
be numbered witli this year’s planting.
Considerable acreage will also be given
to tomatoes at Fruithurst, a recent num-
plant tomatoes to supply the new can
nery which wiil be established there.
Three thousand cans per day will be the
output at first, but the plant will be so
arranged as to easily increase its capac-
itv, and also to add what may be neces
sary for the making of its own cans. A
new concern also for this place is a bas
ket and crate factory to supply the pack
ages needed in the shipment of its fruits
and veg“tables.
her of the local paper showing a list of
fifty-five residents who have agreed to
Solid trains loaded with vegetables and
fruit are daily being started north from
Tampa, Fla., and the Florida cracker
vegetable grower smiles sweetly as he
counts his greenbacks.
THE LINK THAT BINDS.
I
4
Jacksox, Texx., Nov. 28.
I was subject to miscarriage for three year*,
and suffered constantly with backache. I wrote
to you for advice, and after using three bottles
of Wine of Cardui, according to your directions,
I am strong and well, and the mother of a fine
girl baby.
Mrs. E. N. JOWEKS.
‘gKEUtEC* 5
HCa i^ ul
There is no use talking—a baby in the house is the link that binds
husband and wife together. Nothing is sadder than fruitless wedlock.
The prattling and cooing of the little ones offset a thousand times the
occasional worries and trials of life. When a wife is barren, there is a
derangement somewhere in the genital organs, caused by one or more of
those common disorders known as “ female troubles”. Wine of Cardui
is the remedy. It puts the organs of generation in a strong and healthy
condition, fitting the wife for the sacred duty of reproducing het; kind.
During the period of gestation the entire system of the expectant mother
is built up to withstand the ordeal of labor, and when the little one
makes its advent it is lusty and
strong, well-fitted to grow to ma
turity in perfect health. The
mother, too, passes through the
trial with little pain and no dread.
Wine of Cardui is truly a wonder
ful medicine for women.
Large Bottles for $1.00 at Druggists.
WINE OF CARDU
LADIKS' ADVISORY BKMRTMINT.
For advice in cases requiring special
directions, address, giving symptoms.
Ladles' Advisory Dep't, Tfce CHATTANOOGA
medicine CO., Chattanooga, Tenn.