Thomasville times-enterprise and South Georgia progress. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1904-1905, September 30, 1904, Image 5

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oWo R'z sold' i• r Lta5 THAN •• CENTS* W*ft* «aaK» If .< lag. Cat this a4.oatanilavadtOMor bigr No. lit CAUloftM frsa," and it wll ENORMOUS SIZE. BIGG •vtr 100.000 iui«»utni,tnf 10.01 veloqsly low MM tanking policy fsl portuonU tally rvprvtonlsq. cinch L t low*r than ever bstora. Now an* and tola la tfto Urge st otoro la Hm took very umII. MARC* AU OTHI WHAT BELONGS TO »•, or if you aver do OURS I! ORDER I woMMoao illy explained; 6* Unrcr than over .THIS BOW WIU.MSEXT; —- DMTAUSBI raff f6 PAGES—YOUR PAGES QUICKER SHIPMENT chandlM la amatinta for grantor than sN athsr atoll aroor Havana tiMtwtt ana wa Neva factories saa waraOaaaaa for lansodiata ■pipmant Snath. Norm. Cast ana Meat wecaa ship you rooOa tutu* quwker Ikon aay atbar hooaa. U yoa asad your Offer to hi. aoMMMorwhoroyoaliTa.yoii will sat roar *ooda Injatta faw aaya. uaaally lea than aan-ha W tna time If tits* to gst (***» tram oOier haaaaa, and on a irrnat m*nf roods yoa orlerfrom ac yoa will have leee tkaa ana-oatf tha frtoght cktnoirav wculd li. mv If VM Witeret fr. m u* on else. for If V«U Order CO rEm-oiiRF^wMiiir^^^ m «rS tayoar www or»axaapoaxatxwre-»r—r — •— SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO., Chicago, 111* To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it? Price 90c. TIMES-ENTBRfWSB; THOMASVTL LB. SEPTEMBER SO, llOi . , - ---- r~»ri — ■* «•*«»* «*••« a ««o u* perfect Lcwui, .a. i* j buoyant, full of life, and found all work a pastime. I am indeed glad to tell my experience with Lydia E. Pinklmm’s Vegetable Compound, for it made a different girl of me. Yours very truly, Jffiss M. Cartledoe, 633 WhitehaU St., Atlanta, Ga ” At such a time, the grandest aid to nature In Lydia E. Pink- nam i Vegetable Compound* It prepares the young system for the necessary changes, and Is the surest and most reliable cure tor woman’s Ills of every nature. Mrs. Pinkham invites all voung women who are 111 to write her lor free advice. Address, -Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. firs. Estes, of New York City, says: , pisxnAM!—I to you because I believe all young girls how my back used to ache from the bending over I 1 would feef aa though l would have to scream out from the pain, and the aittl'ng still made me ao terribly tired and weak, and my bead throbbed like an engine. I never could eat after work, I was ao worn out. Then 1 was Irregular, and had auch frightful cramps every mouth they would simply double me up withpaln, and inking and lie down. But Lydia E. Plnk- n&m s Vegetable Compound changed me Into a strong, well woman. Yours very truly, Mas. Martha Ebtm, 513 West 123th St, N. Y. City.** No other female medicine In the world bos received such wide spread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of female troubles cured. 8old by druggists everywhere. Kefuse all substitutions. Remember every woman Is cordially In vited to write to Mrs. Pinkham. If there Is anything about her symptoms she does not understand. Mrs. Plnkh&ars address is Lynn, Mass. 0P non FORFEIT W wooanaptfonhwith produce tbooriginal letter*sadslgostaroaof Ahllllll frwmonlals, which will prove tbolr absolute eenalneneti*. OuUUU Lydia E. riukmun Med. Co., Lynn, Hass. V -HJ business. Bnortuaud and iype- wri tin* College, Loutavllle, *y.,open thewhole year, student* can enter any time. Catalog free. WORLD’S FAIR »T. LOUIS. .Ulsvpio and Nashville Railroad. t you are going to tho World's Fair you nt the beet route. Tho L. A N. Is tlje jrtcat, quickest and best line. Three Ins dally. Through Pullman Sleeping rs and Dining Cars. Low Rate Tickets d dally. Oet rates from your local agent 1 ask for tickets via L. A N. Stopotm lowed AT MAMMOTH CAVE. 01 kinds of Information furnished on ap- catlon to J. G. HOLLENBECK, DUt. Pass. Agent, Atlanta, Go. f\ANVILLE Military Institute, Dati'dille, Virginia. A HIGH GRADE PREPARATORY SCHOOL fer BOYS. UNBROKEN HEALTH RECORD. » EXPERIENCED TEACHERS. FULL ACA DEMIC sad BUSINESS COURSES. For Cad*. log. Terms, etc., address daring Summer, BOX 600. EDINBURG. VIRGINIA. U£k3?ir2Si Thompson’s Eye Votir Reflection. «f a ‘Bachelor. Most people who eet out to reform public forget to do It to them- solve, first. - It take, a pan to look for baking powder in the water cooler and tho butter In tbo kitchen oven. The time a woman h crazy to go Into bnelnesa Is when she adds a column of figures four times and gets only three resulta. . ' It makes a woman proud of her hus band. In a kind of ashamed way. to havo her husband know how to button the children up the.back. Honest Indians Miss M. Cartledge gives some helpful advice to young girls. Her letter is but one of thousands which prove that nothing is so. helpful to young girls who are just arriving at the period of womanhood as Lydia E. Pinfskam’s Vegetable Compound. “ D -« Mm. -PjnRiiam:—I cannot praise Lydia E. Plnkotn’s Si*#®**™* too highly, for it is tho only medicine I ever I"suffered much from my first menstrual period, an( l at times I could not pursue my studies with Wlr3 a in ^ rc . st ;. My thoughts became sluggish. I had headaches, SfrT 1 ? 8 and sinking spells, also pains in the back and lower limbs, xn VmL I was sick all over. t “ Finally, after many other remedies had been tried, wo were ad- Yhe Red Men of Northern Cin.d. Have a High Code of Honor. The honesty of tin woods Indian— that Is, the Indian of Northern Can ada— ja of a very high order. The eenso of mine and thine la strongly forced by the exigencies of the North Wood* life. A man la alwayi on the move, It U Impossible for him to transpoit tall bis goods. The lmnle- inents of winter are a burden lie Bum mer. Tho return jouriley from dis tant shores must bo provided for bv food stations. The solution of those needs' la the cache. And tho cache la not a literal term at all. It conceals nothing. Rather does It hold aloft In long-legged prom. Tnonce, for the Inspection of all who pass, what the awn«r ha, seen fit to leave behind; A heavy platform high bndufch from- the ground to frustrate the investigations of animals Is all that Is required. Visual concealment Is unnecessary, because In the North country a cache Is sacred. On It may depend the life of a man. He who leaves provisions must And thorn on his return, for ho may reach them starring, end the length of bis out- journey may depend on his certainty of relief at this point on his In-Jour- ney. So men passing touch not on [ his board, for some day they may be In tbo. same case, and a precedent la a bad thing. Thus In parts of the wildest coutt tries of Northern Canada 1 have un expectedly Come upon a birch canoe hanging upside down betweed two trees, or a whole bunch of snowshoes' depending beneath the fans of a spruce, or a tangle of stoel traps thrust Into tho crevice of a tree root, or a supply of pork and flour swathed like an Egyptian mummy lying In state on a high bier. Those things we havo passod by reverently aa sym bols of a people's trust In Its kind. Tbo same sort of honesty bolds In regard to smaller things. I have never hesitated to leave In my camp firearms, fishing rods, utensils Valu able from a woods point of now, even n watch or money. Not only hare I never lost anything In that manner, but onco an Indian lad followed mo- some miles after the morning’s start to restore to mo a half dozen trout linos I had accidentally left behind. Mr. McDonald, of Dmnswlck House, onco discussed with mo tho system of credits carried on by the Hudson Bay Company with the trappers. Each family receives an advance of goods to tho valuo of |200, with tho under standing that thb debt Is to bo paid from the season’s catch. "I should think you would lose a good deal,” I said. "Nothing could bo csster than for an Indian to take bis $200 worth and disappear In tho woods. You’d never bo able to find him." Mr. MacDonald’s reply struck me, for the man had twenty years’ trading experience. "I have never,” said he, "hi a long woods life, known but ono Indian liar.’’—Stewart Edward White, In tho Outlook. Eye Strain and Ill-Health. Is "ore strain" the chief physical foe of gonlus? ' In his new volumo of "Biographic Clinics” Dr. Gould makes further in quiries Into the maladies of men of genius. He Is mors than ever con vinced that Carlyle, Huxley, Darwin and other great men owed tbolr Ill- health solely to eye strain. To this he attributes “mlgrtlno” and "brain fag” and all the disorder ed dlgostlons and huge depressions and remorses of the special children of genius. "Melancholy, morbidity and despair are tho confessed results of ’mi graine.’ ’’ In fourteen patients— most of the great literary figures of tho nineteenth century—ho finds "headache. Insomnia, biliousness, sick headache, nervousness, Indescrlbablo suffering, Inability to do literary work without producing these symptoms. Dr. Gould pleads for scientific spec tacles as the only, remedy for an over strung civilisation. "One of the greatest of European men, with a splendid equipment, physical and In tellectual—Nietzsche,” ho says, ”wus finally driven Into Insanity simply be cause he had not a scientific pair of spectacles.” A Use for Reindeer Hair. The attention of textile manufact urers has been attracted by a recent report of the United States Consul Qeuoral at Frankfort, Germany, sot ting forth the adaptability of relndoer hair or wool for the manufacture cf textile fabrics. The Laplanders have long used It for the manufacture of a coarse blanket, but Its peculiar prop erties arc, It Is thought, especially suitable for use In bathing suits. The hair of tbo .reindeer Is not bel low throughout like that of moit other animals, but Is partitioned off Into innumerable small compartments filled with compressed air. The walls cf these compartments are so tough that they are not broken up In tho process of manufacture, so that a cloth of reindeer wool consists of 1 millions of little pcckete of condensed 1 air surrounded by an Impervious cov ering. This cloth Is practically water- i '‘proof, as well os exceedingly buoyant. \ —Philadelphia Record. brandmother at Thirty-four: "The wife of a Brooklyn Alderman has just had the rare experience of {rooming a grandmother at thlrty- aix.’’ The above paragraph, which appear ed lu The Express recently, has pro vided an Instant challenge from a lady who Uvea near Brighton. "Is this unusual T” she asks. “I was married at fifteen. I had a daughtefi tat tlxteeri. She married at seventeen efid she had a child hear)/ a year afterward. "Therefore I was a grandmother at thirty-four. I had four children be fore I was twenty-one, and have had none since. Now I am forty-two. My girls are all grown np, so we are like five slaters, and as happy as Queens. "Three of my daughters are mar ried; and I have two grandson*; "i could not resist the challenge Implied In your paragraph, seeing that I could so distinctly go one better than tho American grandmother." Our correspondent’s achievement Is heroic. But she will probably not be astonished to find. In spite of the ob vious surprise of her question, that she has very few competitors In Eng land; Tho lady was married tat fifteen. Now, in all England at the time of the last census there were only thirty wives of that ago. This Is not conclu sive, of course. If the census were taken annually. It might show thirty wives at the ac* of fifteen every year. Against that, however, Is to be sot the extreme Improbability of Juvenile marriage extending to tho second gen eration. It no more follows that the daughter of a girl of soventeon will horaolf he a mother at seventeen than It follows that tho first bom of a woman of forty will not be a mother until she Is forty herself. Such records as that of the lady In the vicinity of Brighton are more Common In countries like Australis, whore young girls maturo Into women white still very young. In India a woman who was not a grandmothor until she was thirty-six would be re garded as an eccentricity. Two In every five of tho female population of India are married before they are fifteen.—London Express. •TWOULD BE AN ACCIDENT. "I can’t tell whether I’ll get any vacation this summer. Fvo been fig uring on a railroad accident lately." "You mean figured ‘In’ a railroad accident?" "No, ’on’; I’ve been figuring on that rallrosd stock of mine paying a divi dend."—Philadelphia Press. Decorating the den. Margaret—I’m awfully tired of thin old 10 cent plaster bust of that Illus trious poet—wLTsl's ’;1 l.i name? Catharine—So am I; let’s paint him red.—Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. FITS nsrmanontly cur*-!. Nofllsornoivoir. uses after first day s use of Dr. Kllno’s Grcc- Nerv*llestorer, *2trial bolt Is audtrestlsaton Dr. lt.U.Kuss.l.td.. MIA-ch -tt„ l’tdlt., I’;. Automobile wntctinj carts ate used i > Paris. ( j co not believe 1’Iso’h Cure for Consumi- llonbss enenusi for congiis nod colds.—Join- y.Uoixs, Trinity Hprlngs, lud„ Cub. 15,133‘. Tho heliotrope ts recommended aa a fever cure. SECRET IS OUT. Teachor—“NSw cen you toll mo why tho Puritans came to this coun try?" Small Member of History Class—”1 can, teacher. Tlioy came to purify tholr blood.’’—Cinclhnatl Commercial- Tribune. Fall River, Mass., still holds Its place as tbo leading center of the production of print cloths In this country, although It is hard phessed by several competitors In tho North and In tho South. fftmmtnttmtmttm BOTANIC liBLOOD BALM Th« Orett Remedy for tho tpeedy and permanent cure of Scrofula, Kheuma- ti«m, Catarrh, Ulcers, Ecrcino, Sores. Erup tions, Weaknrse, Nervousness, and all BLOOD AKD SKIN DISEASES. It it by far the best building up Tonic ar.fl Rlood Purifier ever offered to the world. It makes new. rich blood, inpam renewed vi tality, anu potxcstc* almost miraculous healin* properties. Wrllo for Book of Won derful Cum, sent trso on ippllc&tlon. II not kept by your local drur.uut, toad $i.oo for a large Dottle, or $5.00 for m bottles, and medicine will be tent, freight paid, by BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga. WET WEATHER: WISDOM! \ Jv• THE'ORIGINAL (31 . \ ^owEe^ SLiCKEH BLACK CR YELLOW [WILL KEEP YOU DRY NOTHING ELSE WILL TAKt NO SUBSTITUTES CATAUlOUCS MCC ILL LSfIC Off OARMCKTS ANO NATO. A. J, TOWER CO..OOOTO*, MAM., U.C.A. TOWKA CAMAOtAW CO., LTD,, TOAOWTO, CANADA. FROM MlSfcRV TO HEALTH* A Prominent Club Woman of 6ttj Write* tb Thank Doan'* Kidney Vllfr rot a Quick Coro; Miss Nellie Davis, of 1210 Michigan avenue, Kansas City, Mo., sdcWy leader and club woman, writes: -I cannot say too much in praise of Doan’s Kidney Pills; for they ef- n complete In n very time when I was suffering from kidney troubles brought on by e cold; I had kevere pnlns in tbs bock and sick headaches, and felt miserable' all over. A few boxes of Doan's Kid ney Pills mode mo n well woman, without an ache or pain, and I feel Compelled to recommend tills reliable remedy.’* (Signed) NELLIE DAVIS. A TRIAL FREE-Address Foster- Mllburii Co. ( Bnffalo, N Y. For sale by all dealers. Price, St) cents. NOT THE REALISTIC KIND', EITHER. “But,” the publisher complained, ’’the chief characters in your story ore a man and d Woman who go on mak ing love to each other far years and years after they are married.” "Wcli,” the young novelist replied, "you must remember this Is a work- of fiction.’’—<Jhrlstlan Herald. For Your 8crapbook. Debates with clubs of other cities by means of the phonograph Will con stitute the novel experiment to be tried by the Amateur Press Club of Chicago, in which tho plan was orig inated and adopted. By the use at tho phonograph the plan Is to carry an a debate with olther the Philadel phia or St. Louis Club at some date In the near future. PROFITABLE EMPLOYMENT $1,000 TO $10,000 A YEAR SOLICITING FOR MUTUAL LIFE OF NEW YORK. ASSETS $420,000,000. R. F, SHEDDEN, Manager, ATLANTA, GA. Atlanta College of Pharmacy. Greater demand for nnr irrAdnAtM thnn wa can supply. Address, DR. GKO. F. PAYNE, Dean, M Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga. CRIOHTOM*3 \UIUVAN 6 CMC HUM Shorthand Dspt., B. a Orkhten. Boekkatpta# uspL, D. U. Shumaker. CaUIomo free. B. O. Crichton, Prop,, K!mt Bldg., AtUnta, Ga. Monej for the Farmer Who Uses a Woodruff Hay Press, Unmnfintcd. Full Ctrcl# Either Mounted c.„ , r _ r , ...—„. r>< able Stroke, 8 tee f- lined bdp. A strong dura ble press for a medium prldr dealer and buy a press, if hehandlrkthe 'VOODRUFF PRESS. If not* write dtrect'to f—* •* get price*. WOODRUFF HARDWARE CO. WINDER, OA, Malsby & Co. 41 South Finjib SL Atlfist#,<ia. Portable and St»tloi>»ry Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills AND ALL KINDS OP MACHINERY OompUU lint carHhl (li'Btoek/Dr ntUIblA TS <M|tntmt. ,Ml SMhln.rr, Low,.t Price.*** $«• T«s» Write us for calalogiMA^rUM, etc., before buying. saa uot,, b. wltboot ^Kj^.'KK'xtSreV.B.T. Best For | Mi. The Bowels jt PloAAAnt. PalAtahtA. Potent. T**** 0 **^;] safes Ssu."mITmrere oirreaf mrelr tSiST Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or M.Y. mm AHtiUAL SAI5. TEH HILLIOHGOZES Dropsys Removes all .welling le 8 tot QalOk Relief. divM vfiMtVVwtrmSnfnt cure In joto6o d>r>. TrtMtrretmeat .ken (tee. Notltioscnn be f.trec w * Write Or. H. H. BlM.’. M*. > 8fMct.li.tB 8o« B Btl«.ta. de. MEN, WATCH YOUR HEALTH! A New Revelation for Men. We offer something different, better than any other •pMisllstsorjnedioal tastltn tlon ln, ThM?i. no patchwork about our treatment. The cure Is portwt Wo do not treat all disease*; but wo cure thoso wo treat. A prompt, •are cure In all oasre aooopted for treatment. Nothing hutioarey 1 * .SreKSdi ire. Write i! you cannot call and de*orlbe your trouble* and rooeivo by return v n » u i. of charge, our diagnosis blank. Consultation ftea. Doctors Leatherman & Bentley, Cor. Marietta and Forsyth Sts.i ATLAHTAi 6L ’ VINCnE»TE n “LEADER” AND "REPEATER" SHOTGUN SHELLS The proof of the shell is its shooting. Be cause they shoot so well, Winchester Factory Loaded “Leader” and “Repeater” Smoke less Powder Shotgun Shells have won almost every important prlxe shot for In years. Good shots shoot them because they giyo bet ter results, shoot stronger and more uniformly and are more reliable than any other make ALWAYS 8PZOIFY WINOHBSTCfl MARK OF SHELLS Hours 8 a. m. to8p. m. Sunday* 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. GENT CATALOGUE Too NOTHING aiK'tiftWBrss larfiilkintitmiil meet tz&'Vrw&x: —(At37-04)