Newspaper Page Text
OWES
HER
!' LIFE TO
E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Chicapo, 111.—“ I was troubled with
falling and inflammation, and the doc
tors said I could not
I gplt well unless I
had an operation.
knew I could not
stand the strain of
od0 » 80 1 wr ° ta to
mV 'Sj '& jQ, you sometime ago
, *p about my health
Mi and you told me
Mr : l\ w JTW wbat to do. After
taking Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegeta
™'/ / AfrjvflPl!i ble Compound and
/ l■/ flU!ll!l ißlnnA Purifier lam
to-day a well woman.”— Mrs. William:
Ahrens, BSB W. 2lst St., Chicago, 111.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, made from nativo roots and
herbs, contains no narcotics or harm
ful drugs, and to-day bolds the record
for the largest number of actual cures
of female diseases of any similar medi
y cine in the country, and thousands of
voluntary testimonials are on file in
the Pinfeham laboratory at Lynn,
Mass., from women who havo teen
cured from almost every form of
htmale complaints, inflammation, ul
ceration,displacements, fibroid tumors,
Irregularities,periodic pains, backache,
indigestion and nervous prostration.
Every such suffering woman owes it to
herself to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound a trial.
If you would lilro special advice
about your case write a confiden
tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at
Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free,
tod always helpfuL
AVERY & CO.
11-53 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Oa.
MACHINERY
RiUable Frick Engines, Bollsra, ait Sixes,
Wheat Separators.
BESj IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH
Llrga Engine* and Boiler* supplied
promptly. Shingle Mills. Corn Mill*, Clr
|t eular Bawa, Saw Teeth, Patent Doga,
■ Steam Governors. Full line Engine* &
AMill Supplies. Sand for fra* Catalogua.
Blew Madrid"seed'corn
‘ally Helected, extra clean ami pure. Both
ysUow. Put up In even weight Back*.
Car Lots a Specialty.
JafPAr Xflinmm He Co.. Mew Madrid, Mo.
AS IT SEEMED TO HIM.
Critic —Thinks says he always does
his best writing on an empty stom
ach.
Reader —H’m! It reads more like
an empty head.
Made Him Ridiculous.
Joseph Leiter, in an interview on
his yacht Chantecler, said, with a
smile:
"Please quote me accurately. In an
Interview, you know, the slightest in
accuracy can make a man ridiculous.
It is like the Frenchman, who thought
he had a very fair knowledge of Eng
lish, nevertheless, said to a father:
‘“Aha! You son, he resemble you.
A chip off the old blockhead, hein?’”
—Exchange.
“Don’t
Argufy”
A single dish of
Post
Toasties
with sugar and cream tells
the whole story —
“The Memory Lingers”
Postern Cereal Company, Ltd.
Battle Creek, Mich.
COUNT TOLSTOI DEAD
MAN WHO HAS STIRRED THE
WORLD AS NONE SINCE JESUS,
ANSWERS FINAL CALL.
SUFFERED FOR MANY DAYS
Russia, After Persecuting the Famous
Author-Reformer, Mourns His
Death.
Astapova, Russia.—Count Leo Tol
stoi died peacefully. Doctor Makov
elsky and the other attending physi
cians and Countess Tolstoi were at
his side when the end came. Several
of the physicians were greatly over
come by the approaching death of
Russia's great writer
Tolstoi, accompanied only by Doctor
Makovelsky, left his home at Yasnaya
Poliana for the purpose of ending his
days in solitiude to which ne more
and more inclined during his later
years. His pilgrimage led him to the
monastery at Shamardino, in the prov
ince of Kaluga, where he remained as
the guest of his sister, Marie, who is
a nun in the cloister.
Learning that his retreat had been
discovered, he insisted upon proceed
ing on his journey to the Caucasus,
where he hoped to spend his last days
close to the Tolstoian colony, on the
shores of the Black sea. But, during
the railroad journey, he was over
come with exhaustion and cold, and
Doctor Makovelsy was compelled to
have him transferred to the flag sta
tion at Astapova, where he was made
as comfortable as possible in the rude
wooden building.
For five days he had lain there,
suffering first from bronchitis and
later from inflammation of the lungs.
Specialists were called from Mos
cow and other places, but, notwith
standing their efforts, the heart of the
great Russian responded but feebly
Count Lyof Nikolaivitch Tolstoi, us
ually called Count Leo Tolstoi, nov
elist and social reformer, was born on
August 28, 18288, at Yasnaya Poliana,
in the province of Tula, Russia. When
23 years old TolAoi entered the army
and served in tile Caucasus and in
the defense of Sebastopol against, the
British and French allied forces." He
first made a reputation in literature
by a series of vivid sketches written
from Sebastopol, and when he left the
army soon after the Crimean war he
devoted himself entirely to literature.
Tolstoi wrote much on education,
and published a number of short sto
ries and reminiscences of childhood
and youth, but of recent years he had
devoted himself to religious teaching.
He made "return not evil” the key
stone of the Christian faith, and in
sisted that the literal interpretation ot
the Sermon on the Mount was the
only rule of the Christian life.
LIQUOR SALE RESTRICTED.
Tennessee's Four-Mile Law Declared
Constitutional.
Knoxville, Tenn.—The state supreme
court held the four-mile law enacted
by the legislature of Tennessee in
1909 to be constitutional. It restricts
the sale of liquor in Tennessee, both
by wholesale and retail.
Judge W. D. Beard dissented, hold
ing that the law was constitutional
only with respect to restricting retail
ing of liquor, but does not affect whole
saling
The decision was in the case of the
state vs. J. W. Kelly & Co., Hamilton
county, and the question involved
whether or not the holding of the
court below should be sustained, the
lower court having quashed the in
dictment and the state appealed to
the supreme court
CALL TO DEMOCRATS.
Conference to Prepare Plans for 1912
Campaign.
Washington.—A national Democrat
ic conference to pave the way for the
campaign of 1912 will he held in Wash
ington on January 9, a call having
been issued for a meeting of repre
sentative Democrats in thd Raleigh ho
tel, under the auspices of the National
Democratig League of clubs. The call
was issued by President W. C. Liller
of of Indianapolis. The league cor
responds to the League of Republican
clubs which John Hayes Hammond re
vived in tfie interest of President Taft.
French Premier Assaulted.
Paris, France.—National ceremonies
in the Tuilleries garden in connection
with the dedication of a statue erect
ed to the memory of Jules Ferry, the
French statesman, were marked by
an assault upon Premier Briand, who,
while walking with President Fal
lieres, was struck twice on the face
by a royalist. T he premier was not
seriously hurt. The vast crowd which
had gathered in the garden set upon
the premier’s assailant, and only de
termined intervention by the guards
saved him from being beaten to death.
Augusta Claims 41,295 People.
Augusta, Ga. —The population of
the city of Augusta Is 41,295, accord
ing to the count taken by 300 volun
teer enumerators, Composed of all
classes of people, including many of
the most wealthy and prominent busi
ness men. This compares against the
official count of 37,286, sent out by
the census bureau, and 39,441, as the
official census ten years ago. The
city’s count shows that the Federal
enumerators missed 3,469 people. Ev
ery ward in the city shows an increase
over the Federal report
WEAK, SICK
PALEFACES
Will Be Interested In This Sugges
tion From the Pen of a
South Carolina
Lady.
Gramling, S. C.—“l was so weak,”
Writes Mrs. Lula Walden, of this
place, "when I began taking Cardui,
that it tired me to walk just a little.
Now I do all the sewing, cooking,
washing and general housework, for
my family of nine, and have not been
in bed a day.
“I was almost a skeleton, but now I
weigh 160 pounds, and am still gain
ing. I think Cardui the greatest rem
edy for women on earth.”
You ladies, who have pale faces,
sallow complexions, and tired, worn
out expressions, need a tonic.
The tonic you need is Cardui, the
woman’s tonic.
Cardui is Lhe ideal tonic for women,
because its ingredients are specifical
ly adapted for women’s needs. They
help to give needed strength and vi
tality to the worn-out womanly frame.
Being a vegetable medicine, contain
ing no minerals or habit-forming drugs
of any kind, Cardui acts in a natural
way, and is perfectly harmless and
safe for young and old.
In the past 50 years over a million
ladies have been benefited by this
standard woman’s remedy. Why not
you?
Please Try Cardui.
N. B Write to: Ladles’ Advisory Dept.,
Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga,
Tenn., for Special Instructions, and 64-
page book, "Home Treatment for Wom
en,” sent In plain wrapper on request.
Not a Bad Chap After All.
Hawks—Oh, well, Jones Isn’t such
a bad fellow, after all.
Taylor—What makes you say that?
"Well, he wouldn’t lend me the $lO
I asked him for, hut he didn’t take
advantage of the opportunity to give
mo good advice.”
ANOTHER BUMP FOR GENIUS.
CotterO
The Amateur Poet —Whatever I do,
I do with my whole soul.
His Wife (sadly)—l know you do,
dear, but it would be such a helper
you’d give it up and do things tf th
your hands. m
STOMACH MISERY VANISHES
Indigestion, Gas, Sourness and Dys
pepsia Go and Your Stomach Feels
Fine in Five Minutes.
If your meals don’t tempt you, or
what little you do eat seems to fill
you, or lays like a lump of lead In
your stomach, or if you have heart
burn or a sick, sour, upset or gassy
stomach, that is a sign of Indigestion.
Ask your Pharmacist for a 50-cent
case of Pape’s Diapepsin and take a
little Just as soon as you can. There
will be no sour risings, no belching
of undigested food mixed with acid,
no stomach gas or heartburn, fullness
or heavy feeling in the stomach, Nau
sea, Debilitating Headaches, Dizzi
ness or Intestinal griping. This will
all go, and besides, there will be no
undigested food left over in the stom
ach to poison your breath with nause
ous odors.
Pape’s Diapepsin is certain cure for
out-of-ordgr stomachs, because it pre
vents fermentation and takes hold of
your food and digests it just the same
as if your stomach wasn’t there.
Relief in five minutes from all stom
ach misery is waiting for you at any
drug store here in town.
These large 50-cent cases of Pape’s
Diapepsin contain more than sufficient
to thoroughly cure any case of Dys
pepsia, Indigestion, Gastritis or any
other stomach disturbance.
Not a Solitary Exception.
Professor —Astrology teaches that a
girl born in January will be prudent,
good-tempered and fond of dress; in
April, Inconstant and fond of —
Hostess —In what months are girls
born who are not fond of dress?
Professor —In none, madam.
TO DBIVE OCT MALARIA
AND BCtLD CP THE SYSTEM
Take tbe Old Standard GBOVH'S TASTUI.ESS
CHILL TONIC- You know what you are taking.
The formula is plainly printed on every bottle,
showing it la simply OuJnlne and Iron in a taat>-
lesa form. The Ouir.fne drives oat tbe malaria
and tne Iron builds up tbe system. Bold by all
dealers for 80 years. Price 60 oenta.
The days of chivalry are not past. A
lady entered our office the other day
and we took our feet off the desk.
You Look Prematurely OM
Because of those ugly, grtzzly, gray hairs. Use “LA CREOLE” HAIR RESTORER. PRICE. SI,OO. retail.
PUT ’EM TO SLEEP.
■ a.
Novelist —When I’m writing a novel,
I lose considerable sleep over it.
Critic —Oh! well, what’s your loss is
your readers’ gain.
DISTEMPER
In all its forms among all ages of horses,
as well as dogs, cured and others in same
stable prevented from having the disease
with SPOHN’S DISTEMPER CURE.
Every bottle guaranteed. Over 600,000
bottles sold last year $.50 and SI.OO. Any
good druggist, or send to manufacturers.
Agents wanted. Spohn Medical Co., Spec.
Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
Penitent.
Irate Father —Wretch! I saw you
stealing kisses from my daughter.
Young Man —-I admit it. but I am
quite willing to give them back to
her.
For HEADAOHII—lllck*' OAPUDINI!
Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or
Nervous Troubles, Capudine will relieve you.
It’s liquid—pleasant to take -acts immedi
ately. Try it. 10c., 25c., and 50 cents ut drug
Btores.
At the County Fair.
Visitor —And so that is what they
call the wild horse of Patagonia.
What do you feed it?
Zoo Attendant —Wild oats.
UNSIGHTLY COMPLEXIONS
The constant use of Cuticura Soap,
assisted by Cuticura Ointment, for
toilet, bath and nursery purposes not
only preserves, purifies, and beautifies
the skin, scalp, hair and hands, and
prevents inflammation, irritation and
clogging of the pores, the common
cause of pimples, blackheads, redness
and roughness, yellow, oily, mothy and
other unwholesome conditions of the
complexion and skin. All who delight
in a clear skin, soft, white hands, a
clean, wholesome scalp and live, glossy
hair, will find Cuticura Soap most suc
cessful in realizing every expectation.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment are ad
mirably adapted to preserve the
health of the skin and scalp of In
fants and children, and to prevent
minor blemishes or inherited skin hu
mors becoming chronic, and may be
used from the hour of birth. Cuticura
Remedies are sold throughout the civ
ilized world. Send to Potter Drug &
Chem. Corp., sole proprietors, Boston,
for their free Cuticura book, 32 pages
of invaluable advice on care and treat
ment of the skin, scalp and hair.
A bachelor girls’ club is an associa
tion of women who think they are
more likely to get husbands by pro
tending not to want them.
Women seem to live faster than
men. Many a man has lived to flirt
with the daughter of the woman he
came near marrying.
Pneumonia and Consumption are al
ways preceded by an ordinary cold. Ham
lins Wizard Oil rubbed into the chest
draws out the inflammation, breaks up
the cold and prevents all serious trouble.
Every time a man is mistaken for a
deer it counts one for the deer, who is
very well satisfied.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate
and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels.
Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take
as candy.
How would you like an unbossed and
lobbyless legislature for a change?
A ROOSEVELT’S GREAT BOOK
r wHki “African Game Trails”
Needed—a man in every place
* frjTj f to Bell this famous n»-w book.
* igWrT.- ■ Bring it to tbe families In
-flfflyggr/ your locality We give you
.i&SflraibVWV- Br//\ n, onopolr of field and high
i mil r \ commission. Take this great
Tkt' J/l \ chance. Write for pros pectus
BSfJ'jSc (iV V ' Charles Scribner’s Sons
£4f I V K 1S» (B. S.) Fifth N.w York
CETASAWMILL
from Lombard Iron Works, Augus
ta, Ga. Make money sawing neigh-
Bor's timber when gin engine is idle
after the crops are laid by.
Twin Extravagances. *
“I don’t suppose there is anything
gets out of date quicker than ’a wom
an’s hat?”
“Unless it is a baflSeship.
What Murine Eye Remedv Does to the
Bye* Is to Refresh. (Cleanse, Strengthen and Stimu
late Healthful Circulation. Promoting Normal
Condition/! Try Murine in your Byes.
It isn’t every ball player who can
make a hit on the stage.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle.
Good luck likes to visit people who
are not expecting it.
When You Think
Of the pain which many women experience with every
month it makes the gentleness and kindness always
eted with womanhood seem to be almost a miracle.
While in general no woman rebels against what she re
gards as a natural necessity there is no woman who would
not gladly be free from this recurring period of pain.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription makes
weak women strong and sick women
well, and Gives them freedom from pain,
it establishes regularity, subdues inflam »
nation, heals ulceration and cures fe«
male weakness.
Sick women are invited to consult us by letter, free.
All correspondence strictly private and sacredly con-
fidential. Write without fear and without fee to World’s Dispensary Med
ical Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. '
If you want a book that tells all about woman’s diseases, and how to euro
them at home, send 31 one-cent stamps to pay cost of wrapping and mailing
only, and we will send you a free copy of Dr. Pierce’s great thousand - pago
illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser revised, up-to-date edition, in
handsome French cloth binding.
/imm' The Great Duck and Goose 9
Gun That Has No Rival for B
Bagging the Limit.
|T m Remington Autoloading Shotgun —absorbs tbe re- J 8
JjMt coil—easy on the shoulder. The recoil ejects the I
empty, throws a loaded shell in place, and cocks B
H the B un » to *b®tune °f shots—three to stop the B
M cripples. Your trigger finger does it all—never a B
lost motion at the time when quickness counts.
"Came Laws for 1910” mailed free .
THE REMINGTON ARMS CO. §f
Agency: 299 Broadway, Now YorkCityKjji
Dry Your Clothes on a Wet Washday
With a New Perfection Oil Heater
XT- -’■S-tiV—-=^.
It gives fust as much heat as you desire. It is safe, odorless 1
and smokeless.
It has an automatic-locking flame spreader, which
prevents the wick from being turned high enough to smoke, and i
Is easy to remove and drop back, so the wick can be quickly
cleaned. Burner body or gallery cannot become wedged, (be
cause of a new device in construction, and can always be easily
unscrewed for rewicking.
An indicator shows the amount of oil in the font. Filler-cap does not need \
to be screwed down, but is put in like a cork in a bottle, and is attached to tha
font by a chain. Finished in Japan or nickel, strong and durable, well-made, built
tor service and yet light and ornamental. It has a cool handle and a damper topy /
Dealers Everywhere, if not at yours, write for descriptive circular
-H,,, to the nearest agency of the
Standard Oil Company yV
r (Incorporated) ™ ak
EUREKA ' Harness
■I B ntirAft soft as a glove
HARNESS *® u s hasawir e
mimihvv black as a coal
Sold by Daalora Everywhere
J ||| STANDARD OIL COMPANY
B M 3 (Incorporated)
W. L. DOUGLAS/~\
*3 *3.50 & ‘4 SHOES &womln mi's-?
BoywShoes, $2.00, $2.50 & $3.00. Best in the World gjfa ,
W. L.Doutrlam s3.aO, $3.50 and $4.00 ahoem i D° T l™ Wil
arm positively the beat made and moat pop- I i ze that n 9
ular anoaa for tho nrfca In America, and arm I my B hoes < J
tha moat oconomfoal mhoam for you to buy, | have
Btandard for over 30 years, that I make and sell more $3.00, $3.60 and
$4.00 shoes than any other manufacturer In the U.S., and that DOLLAR A.
FOR DOLLAR, I GUARANTEE MY SHOES to hold theirsliape, look WWi' /jV
and fit better, and wear longer than any other $3.00, $3.60 or $4 .00 shoes Ski wry i y.jgsW
CoUntß, ** as ma< *° m y flhoes THE LEADEKS
You win be pleaaed when you buy my shoes because of the p Presort
fit and appearance, and when it comes time for you to purchase 1M „ W* L*
another pair, you will be more than pleased because the last DouqIo&
ones wore so well, and gave you so much comfort. * Shot Cx
CAUTION!
n*me and price ■tamped on the bottom. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE
If your dealer cannot supply you with W. L Douglas Shoe#, write for Mall Order Catalog.
W. la. liOC&LAS. 140 Soark St.. Urocklon, Mau. f
T Jlfpifni
JT
When clothes can’t be hung;
outside, and must be dried in a
room or cellar, the New Perfection
Oil Heater quickly does the work.
of sun and air. You can hang up
the wet clothes, light your Perfec- j
tion Oil Heater, open the damper |
top, and the heat rises and J
dries the clothes.
Do not put off washing to
await a sunny day in order to avoid 1
mildew. Dry your washing any,!
day with hot air from a
pERFECTICIM
Smokeless i
Absolutely smokeless and odorless