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ffemeDiitiep
The real heroines of every day are in our homes. Frequently, how¬
ever, it is a mistaken and useless heroism.
>• Women seem to listen to every rail of duty except the supreme
one that tell i them to guard their health. How much harder the daily
tasks lx*,com.: when some derangement of the female organs makes
every movement j £ and keeps the nervous system unstrung? weakness
Irritability takes ti £ placo < of happiness and amiability: and
e- co of health and strength. As long as they
can drag themselves around, women continue to work and suffering perform
their household duties. They have been led to lielievc that
is necessary because they are women. What a mistake 1
The use of Lydia 10. Pinkhmn’s Vegetable Compound will banish
pain and restore happiness. Don’t resort to strong stimulants or nar¬
cotics when this great strengthening, healing remedy for women i3
always within reach.
A, I'UIOE MEDICAL ADVICE TO WOMEN.
If there is anything in your ease about which yon would llko
special advice, write freely to llrs. IMukhutn. No mail will sec
your letter. Sim can surely help you, for no person In Aincrlea
has such a w (do experience In treating female Ills as she lias had.
Shelias helped hundreds of thousands of women back to health.
Her address Is Lynn, Mass., and her advice Is free. You are very
foolish if yon do not accept her kind invitation.
For proof read the .symptoms, suffering and cure
recited In the following letters:
r Pinkiiam I wish to to the great benefit I
“Dear Mrs. : — express you Pink ham’s Vege¬
hare derived from your ad v loo and the use of Lydia E. form and
table Compound. My trouble wai female weakness In its worst
I was in a very bad condition. I could not perform my household duties, my
back ached, I was extremely nervous, and I could not eat or sleep, of and the
boaring-down pains were terrible. My husband spent hundreds dollars
to get me well, and nil thy medicine that the doctors prescribed failed to do me
any good; l resorted health, to blit an operation I suffered which the after physician it than I said did was before; necessary 1 hud
to restore me to more
hemorrhages of the womb that nothing could seem to stop.
“ I noticed one of your advertisements and wrote you for advice, I re-
Ceived your reply and carefully followed all instructions. I immediately
began to get stronger, and in two weeks was about the house. I took eight
bottles of Lydia K. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and remedies continued and
following your advice, and to-day I am a well woman. Your
help are a Godsend to suffering women, and I cannot And words to thank
you for what you have done for inc.” — Mrs. Lottie V. Naylor, 1328 N. J.
I Are., N.W., Washington, I). C.
“Dear Mrs. Pinkiiam :—I write to tell you what Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound lias done for me.
V 1 was suffering with falliu g of the womb and could Vegetable hardly drag about, C«mp*
but after taking five bottles of Lydia E. Plnkhani’s
pound 1 was completely cured. 1 am now a well woman nnd able to do all
my work. the world.”—M
“I think your medicine one of the best remedies in rs.
J. M. Lee, 141 Lyndal Ht., Newcastle, Pa.
“Dear Mas. Pink hah : —Lydia E. Phil, ham’s Vegetable Com¬
pound has done a great deal for me. I suffered so much from fslling of the
womb and nil the troubles connected with it. 1 doctored for years with
doctors’and other remedies but received only temporary relief.
’* I began taking your medicine, and had not taken it .long before I was
feeling better. My husband said that I should keep right on taking it as long
as it gave mo relief from my suffering, as 1 could not expect to be cured by
one or two bottles. I did so and nm now able to be on my feet and work
hard ait day, and go to bed and rest at night. Thanks to your Vegetable mother’s Com¬
pound I am certainly grateful for the relief it gave me. It is the I feel tired
great friend. I would not be without it in my house, for when
or out of sorts I tnke n few doses and feel all right.
“I would recommend your medicine to nil tired mothers, and especially
to those suffering ns I was.” — Mrs. K. F. Chambers, Wen net, Neb.
$5000 above FORFEIT tclliuoniaU, If w« which eammt will forthwith hjdls prove JK. their pmduon 1‘lllklmm absolute the original Medicine annulnoiwit. loiters Co., snd I..rnn, signature*of Muss.
He—Then you regrof our engage¬
ment, do you?
She—Oh, no; but 1 an glad It is no
worse.—September Smart Sot.
I never see my rector’s eyes—
Ho hides their light divine;
For, when he prays, he shuts his own.
And. when ho preaches, mine!
—-0. M. Fergess. In September Smart
Set.
FREE STUART’S
CINaml BUCHU
To all who suffer, or to the frlemte of those
who Blood suffer with Kidney, sample Uver. bottle Heart, Bladder Stuart's
or Disease, a of
tlln and Buohu.the great southern Kidney nnd
Diver Medicine, will ho sent absolutely fraeot
cost Mention thta paper. Address STUART
DRUG M'KG CO., at.Wall St., Atlanta, Gu.
Dizzu? poor?*/
Appetite Bowels
constipated? -V Tongue r* coated?
Head , It , S your liver!
acncr
Ayer’s Pills are liver pills, all
viMTf>tnhlr> vcguauiu *ixty sold far j.r. Ayerco..
Want your moustache or beard
a beautiful brown or rich black? Use
BUCKINGHAM'S DYE
; nrn ™ »*»• * <‘0.. y. H.
-
«
I
M CURES Sick Headache
M AND DIZZINESS.
10, W anti flOt*. nt Drugstores.
II w M rt CURED
lirfllH?!# o * G iv
Ft III Bill Rr A Xf H Quick
B# 8 w JS Relief.
‘
d.”!eiiects „ in ’30 _ _„ <k> days. ap"rmi!"u Tria ,, It , cum
J to neat merit
igiven free. Nt»tHinp.caii Ik* fairer
Wntc Dr.H.H. lirecM'sSonj.
___Specialists, Bo* b Atlanta, Ga.
------------------- ~ ---------
Prevents
1 Bilious Attacks
by keeping the
stomarli rimn
V end liver active.
v>- &Oo. and $1.00
• ’ " AtDru t< t.-,ott-ym»utum
JHE _ TARRANT CO. (Bus- Est. 18 },) New York.
ATLANTA ati a ait a COLLEGE nm i ror
Physicia ns ^ S urgeon s
Finest laboratories in Uw* South Clinical
aavantages unsurpassed, Faculty of fourteen
ami twenty e assistants.
KeasbniibJe Write f«ir eataiojjue.
. ». REXDHlt'K, Dt an, Atlanta, (ia
I CTS. CL m
5 ■WcSrf£SF IU time. Rftld DSC v>
hr dM'mr'.'.td
2 consumption ■ us
"FOR HIS HEALTH.”
"Poor fellow! His doctor tells him
the only thing that, will cure him ia a
course of mud baths, and he can't af¬
ford to go to the mud springs.”
'Hut surely he can go Into politics
and let. the ntud come to him.”—Phila¬
delphia Press. „
VALUE OF HIS OPINION.
"Do you think It's going to rain?"
she asked.
“Oh, I'm 8111*6 it's not,” he replied,
"Then I'll take my umbrella," she
answered, with decision.—Chicago
Post.
"The American Husband" Is a much-
written and talked about individual;
It is unlikely that ho will ever cease
to be it subject of Interest, not only
as a future possibility, but also as an
actual reality. It la not often, how-
(hat he has the good fortune to
h «f' in .' hc la ' ,or C T ^ 7 im T
rial a critic as Gertrude , Atherton, * who,
j n Ainslee’s for September, lias made
a sympathetic review of his virtues
and defects. American husbands ami
wives should read it, and take it :o
heart.
FITS permanently cured. No lltsor nervous-
ness after (irst day's use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. Slit rial bottle and treatlsefree
Dr. It. It. Kune, Ltd., fiSi Arch St., l'htla,,Pa
It must be fine to be so rich that you
don’t have to keep up appearances.
SI.00 Itla hOO-Voond Steel ltnnge Offer.
tf you can use the best big 800-pounil steel
range made In the world, and are willing to
have it placed in your own home on three
months' free trial,’ just out tills notion Chi¬ out
and send it to Beaus, Roebuck ,V Oo.,
cago. nnd big'picture you will receive tree by return and
mail a of the steel range
many other cooking and heating wonderful stoves; 1.00 yon
will also rooetvo the most *
steel range offer, un offer that places he home the
host steel range or heating stove in 1
of any family; such an offer that no family
111 toe ' R, 'd. no matter what their oiroutn-
stances may be, or how small their Income,
»°ed b » *** cooking or heating
stove made.
lw owl . htt* reputation . . tor .« . .
ft
and yet he always looks on the dark side
of things.
MrA.Wlmslow'sSoothlagTyrupfor o’ittJrix
’SSXSSSOXtS^£!SS& -----r~
A mail is not necessarily a nnt»cr because
lie rvfu»»» to pay compliments.
1 iso sCurotgtho best medicine we ever used
lorull atlootloas ot throat and lungs. —W u.
O. Esdslei, Vanburen. lnd., Kcb. it). 1903.
Borne people never get busy until there
is nothing left to lie done.
«»•
A capacity for harJ work is usually a
man s most valuable asset,
A Clear Case.
Madge—Why does she ai last own
up that they are in love?
Marjorie—She had to. They sat pn
the sand yesterday, am! never noticed
the tide coming in until they were
drenched.—September Smart Set.
Household
jVg atters
I!c<1kI<'U<I With ltrawrr*.
An evidence that furniture manu¬
facturers accept the necessity for econ¬
omy of space In most city living Is
noted, says Harper’s Haxar, In some
bedsteads recently seen. These are
fitted with drawers lit each end ex¬
tending across the width. They are
entirely Inclosed, and are thus pro-
Holed from the dust, and will hold
bodices, a fluffy bon, or some daintily-
trimmed hat that demands space from
all encroachment.
A Hollyhock Jar.
A new and pleasing hit of Itockwood
pottery 1ms Hk dicoratton overlaid with
a "changeable” glaze, which blurn the
oiitltnes of the flowers until you ap¬
pear to view them through a Scotch
mist. Hut the beauly of the design Is
only enhanced thereby, ns Jt is In the
blurred sprigs of (lowers you see on
chine pompadour silks. Iu tills case
the red and white hollyhock lias been
chosen tor decorating it dark brown
pottery vase. The misty outline of
the flowers is more beautiful than it
would |ie if lhey stood out In linrd
and exact contours.
To WH**l. KHI Glovra.
hirst, get the kind that will wash
Then wash them right. Don’t imagine
that any old way will do. The wash-
aide kid can In* cleaned. But tHoy de¬
mand that it lie done properly. The
glove must first be soaked for half nu
hour or more in a lather of tephl soap
and water, then washed on the hand
In a fresh lather, and finally rinsed
and squeezed gently with a towel, so
that when taken from the hand it is
not dripping wet and dries quickly.
’These economical gloves can he had in
kid or suede and in pretty shades of
heaver and gray as well ns iu white.
ICngllsli Pic Crust.
The KiigHsh cnok has a knack of
keeping her pie crust crisp and delicate,
instead of growing soaked and soggy,
as i Iu* American crust Is apt to ho.
The crust is prepared in the American
style, hut instead of lining a pan or
dish as we do they cover the bottom
ami outside of the dish or pan, prick¬
ing the crust closely to prevent the
formation of blisters. Thou a layer-
cake pan is covered with a sheet of
crust, and botli are baked a delicate
brown. When finished the pie pan is
removed from its cover of crust, ami
the latter is tilled with stewed or
sliced and sugared fruit. The piece
baked in the layer pan is used as a lid.
Meat filling can he used also.—New
York Journal.
To Kill HI a Log Fire.
To build a successful log tire is not
the easiest undertaking and requires
more patience and skill than Is usually
expended upon it. The following sug¬
gestions may lighten the task for the
inexperienced: Crush up loosely In the
hands a double sheet of newspaper.
Ut the back log be tlip largest in the
fireplace and possibly of green wood,
as this kind takes longer to burn out,
and the draughts and fires are strong¬
est at the back. Let the log He lightly
against the wall; if a split log, turn
tlie Inside toward the front.
Three logs are sufficient to start, a
lire, two below nnd one on top. The
ashes from the first two or three fires
should he left on the hearth, for this
serves as a good bed for keeping the
embers hot. The wood that is used
should be mixed, green and dry, nnd
of the harder varieties, such us oak,
cedar, pine.—American Queen.
srasK- KLyiXvM-. : -'-I
Potnto Cakes-To one cupful of well-
washed . potatoes . . add , _ one cupful of .
Hour, two level teaspoonfuls of baking
powder, a plucil of salt and enough
milk to make a dough to roll out; toss
on a floured hoard, roll half an Inch
thick, eut in squares or oblong pieces;
lay them in n buttered pan and hake
twenty minutes; remove from the oven,
split and butter; if currants are liked
add one cupful of them to the flour
and potato.
Preserved Citron—Cut a citron melon
into long strips. Remove tlic skin and
inside pulp, thou eut Into half-inch
cubes. Put tlse citron in a steamer and
let it cook until tender enough to pierce
with a straw. Make a syrup from one
cup of water to a pound of sugar, add
to it two lemons, sliced very flue. When
it lias boiled for a few minutes, drop
into it the steamer citron cubes and
let them cook till transparent. Seal in
on ns.
Cherry forte—Make a dough with
oue-qunrter pound of lard, one-quarter
pound of butter, four tablespoons of
sugar, two teaspoons of cinnamon,
yolks of two eggs, one-half pound of
flour, one-half a teaspoon of baking
powder. Line a form with this dough.
Straiuthe juice from a quart of canned
cherries. Place the cherries on the dough
with a few chopped almonds. Pour
over them a custard made of four
yolks and whites beaten separately,
three-quarters of a cup of sugar, one-
lialf cup of sour cream. Bake In a
moderate oven forty-five minutes.
These tortou arc delicious. German
cooks make a great variety of them.
Tliey are very nice to serve at high
teas or at an luformal company
luncheon.
S trawl terry Preserves -Measure fine
large honks after hulling them. To
each quart of berries allow a quart of
line, white sugar. Put the fruit and
tlie sugar in a preserving kettle in al-
tcruale layers. Let the berries and
sugar stand over night. In the morn-
, tug cook slow l>. "without storing un-
Ill tlie liquid is clear and the fruit soft.
Skim thoroughly and pack iu jars.
Heat the jars by filling them with
water and putting them hi a large pan
also filled with water; then stand the
an on the range and let the water heat
?lowly. By this means all danger of
racking will he avoided. Fill the hot
iars with the preserves to the very
brim; then screw on the tops loosely
tud let stand until 00 W. When cold
tighten tlie tops and store iu a cool
closet.
Taking Care of the Pennies.
A new and very convincing way to
demonstrate to boys and girls that it
they will take care of the pennies the \
dollara will take care of thcmiielves
has recently been "discovered by the
pupils of one of the public schools in
Washington, D. C., the national capt-
t.tl. These young people, acting tinder
the direction of their principal, have
started a school savings bank, which
Is conducted In every way Just iike the
great institutions Where their fathers
place their money for safe keeping. ; j
The principal makes himself response
hie for the safekeeping of the funds,
and at the close of each day’s business
deposits the daily receipt In one of
the city’s ordinary commercial hank¬
ing Institutions.—From "A School Sav¬
ings Hank" In the September St. Nich¬
olas.
The Blacksnake’s Call.
I found myself somewhat muddy
»nd breathing a little hard; but 1 was
not wholly chagrined. I had never
even kn6wn of the habit before. Since
then I have seen one other snake do
It, and I think 1 have heard the,sound
three or four times. It is almost in-
descrlbable. The jaws were closed
as it was made, not even the throat
moving, that I could see. The air
seemed to he blown violently through I
the nostrils, though sounding as if
driven through the teeth—a shrilling
hiss, fine and piercing, which one not
so much hears a.) feels—feels it crisp-
ing cold along his nerves. It may seem
strange, but I believe this whistle
is a mating call. Even the forked
tongue (or maybe nose) of a snake
grows vocal wdth love. If only the
Sphinx had not a heart of stone! No
matter about its lips; with a heart to
know the “spring running" we should
have heard its story long ago. Per¬
haps, after all, the college sophomore
was not mixing hts observations and
Sunday school memories when he
wrote, describing the dawn of a spring
morning (I quote from his essay):
"Beneath mo in the water the little
fishes darted about the boat; above
the little birds twittered in the
branches; while off on a sunny log in
the pond the soft, sibilant croak of
the mud turtle was heard on the
shore.” mud
If we could happen upon the
turtle mad with love, I am sure we
should find that he had a voice—a
“soft, sibilant croak,” who knows?—
L. Sharp, in the National.
SIMPLY FORCED TO IT.
"I’ve found out why Snobbore is
bo conceited. IIo told me himself.”
"He did? Well, that's refreshing.”
“Yes; he said he spent half his life
trying to make people think well of
him—without success. Then he de¬
cided that the only way to get a thing
done Is to do it yourself.”
HIS OBJECTIONS.
“You used to say she was like a
Dresden doll,” said Harry Bluelace.
“Too much so,” spoke Gussle Gunn.
“How could that bs?"
"Why, she cried ‘Mamma’ every time
she was squeezed.”—Chicago News.
Teacher* Get a Year Off.
Successful teachers of Chicago
schools who wish to continue their
studies In colleges, universities, etc.,
now may be granted leave of absence
for the period of one year, under the
authority of the superintendent of the
schools.—New York Commercial Ad¬
vertiser.
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollar* Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot bo cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, F. O. J.
We, tho undersigned, bavo known
Cbenoy for the last 15 yeara, and believe him
perfectly honorable in all business transac¬
tions and flnnnfitally able to carry out any
obligation?! mado by tlieir firm.
West A Tnuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
o. Wholesale
Waldino, Kinsax & Mahyin,
Druggists, Toledo, O. internally,act-
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken
•" R d i r f‘ ly u P? n ^e blood and mucous eur-
iaues of the system. Testimonials sent free,
j> r tco, 75c. por bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Hall’s Family Pills nra tho best,
Largest Bottle In the World,
T1)e lnrgest g]uss i, 0 ttle ever blow#
lms rcce „tiy been made for exhibition
llt tlic st Ij0U : s Exposition. It hold
j forty-five gallons, and required forty
I pouud8 of mo itcu glass, drawn the end from of
* jjj e furnace and shaped on
a huge blowing pipe,
_________
PUZZLED.
"What are you thinking so hard
about?” she asked.
“It is said,” replied the amateur
scientist, "that Nature permits noth¬
ing to go to waste, that there is a
purpose for everything she has given
us. I was just trying to figure out why
, there is dark meat on the chicken.”—
: Chicago Reeord-IIerald.
!--
NOT A SUCCESS.
Lowe Comedy—Hamm made hla
■ debut in vaudeville last night.
, Hi Tragedy—Yes. It was a mono-
i logue, wasn’t it?
1 I.owe Comedy—Not exactly. Hamm
I intended it to be, but the audience
i chimed in with a few choice remarks
! before he got fairly started.—Philadel¬
phia Press.
i J. J. Bell whose hook, ‘Wee M ic-
P 1 cegor, is meeting with so much stic-
66ss ' 1,88 a K°°d story in Ainslee’s fer
September, entitled "t-irst Love." It
I <ios, ribes, of course, the as waxing one may gath-
or D'om Hs title, and wau-
lr| i- °f one of the indispositions of ado-
i lescence, which seems to be as neces-
j sary as mumps or measles arc 10
childhood. As is to be expected,
Bel1 hai totos his subject with the ease
I and grace of a master.
| Must Get One or the Other.
I ”1 know the choir master Will give
tfce-er-old Harry,” said the
basso, "if I flunk again on the low C
in my solo."
"Ah!" exclaimed the tenor, "then
1 you're really between the devil and
t j, e , oh?"—Philadelphia Press.
PlanTaTion Chill Cure is Guaranleed
cure, or so
HAPPY WOMEN
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fierce)
Miss Muriel Aimitnge.
s
Female Weakness is Pelvic
Gatarrh.
A’wavs Half Sick Are the Wcmen
Who Have Pelvic Catarrh.
Catarrh of any organ, if allowed to pro¬
gress, will affect the whole body. but Catarrh pel¬
without nervousness is very rare,
vic catarrh and nervousness go hand in
hand. distressing sight
What is so a suffering as a poor, from
half-sick, nervous almost unbearable woman, symptoms of
the many does consider
pelvic catarrh? She not
On a bracket in Edwin Booths
sleeping room at The Players—the
apartment remains as he left It ten
years ago—stands a battered skml,
which the elder Booth, and afterward
his son Edwin, used to soliloquize over
in the fifth act of “Hamlet.” There
is a gruesome story connected with
the coming of this relic into Booth’s
hands, a story wmch Thomas Bailey
Aldrich will tell in the September
Century under the title of “Poor Yo-
rick.”
Economic.
Old Uncle Ben wanted to have Vs
portrait painted, but he did uot ca-e
to pay very much for it.
"Surely that is a very large sum,"
he said when the artist named the
price.
The artist protested and assurri
him that, as portraits went, that wa3
very little to ask.
Uncle Ben hesitated. “Well," ho
said at length, “how much will it be if
I furnish the paint?"—September Lip-
pincott’s.
Romance.
Romance?—Learn ye, that grope in
glooms,
It vivifies the soul,
It is the charming flower that blooms
In life’s left buttonhole.
—George Birdseye, in September Ltp-
pincott.
Most people know what the Njw
York Stock Exchange is like. The Bor-
Iin Bourse is attended by quite two
thousand persons. There is no sale of
seats, and on membership fee,member¬
ship being largely held by companies
and firms. Berlin trading ts quiet ’.q
the point of monotony. These and
other interesting points will be cov¬
ered by William C. Dreher in “Tae
Beilin Bourse” in the September Cen-
tury, for whose article Werner Zehme
has drawn numerous illustrations.
Mother
“My mother was troubled with
consumption for many years. At
last she was given up to die. Then
she tried Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral,
and was speedily cured.”
D. P. Jolly, Avoca, N. Y.
No matter how hard
your cough or how long |
you have had it, Ayer’s the
Cherry Pectoral is
best thing you can take.
j It’s too risky to wait
until you have consump¬
; tion. If you are coughing of
today, get a bottle
Cherry Pectoral at once.
Three sizes: 25c., 50c., $1. All druggists.
Consult your doctor. If he says take it,
then do as he says. If he tells yo u not
to takt. it. then don’t take it. He k: nows.
Leave it with him. We ar CO., willing. Lowell Mass.
J. C. AYER ,
The Watkins “Boy” Hay Press
THE MARVEL OF THE COUNTRY.
.-'Hi
< —I ^
* ^ - «■* .0311
(/)-
Two boys ean operate it (no other power lieed-
e<b and bale the crop rleht in the field at less
us at once for circular No. 27 .
E. E. LOWE CO.. - Atlanta, Georgia.
«r-UOOD AGENTS WANTED.-*1
■ t afflict i
Thank Pe-ru-na foi 4 Their 1
Recovery After Years of
Suffering.
Miss Muriel Armitage. 30 Greenwood
Ave., Detroit, Mich., District Organizer
of the Koval Templara of iemperance,
m a recent letter, says: naturally
“l think U»^t a woman her troubles pun-
shrinks from restored making health Jua meant so
lie, but feel for the sake of
much to me that I duty to
other sufTering women it is my
tell what Keruna has done for me.
“I suffered lor five years with uterine
irregularities, which brought on hysteria
and made me a physical wreck. 1 tneu
doctors from the different schools of
medicine, but without any perceptible despair
change in my condition, in my
l culled on an old nurse, who advised
me to trv IV run a, and promised good rc-
j suits if f would persist and take it regu*
larlv. 1 thought this was the least 1
could do, anil procured a bottle. I knew
as soon as I began taking it tnat it was
affecting me differently from anything tak-
\ 1 had used before, and so 1 kept months, on
it. [ kept this up for six
land steadily gained strength and health.
and when I bad used fifteen bottles I
considered myself entirely cured. I am
a grateful, happy woman to-day, w —Atiss
Muriel Armitage.
| Pcruna cures catarrh of the pelvic or-
gans with the same surety as it cures
catarrh of the head. Peruna has be-
come renowned as a positive cure for
ailments, simply because the ail-
ments are mostly due to catarrh. Ca-
tarrn is the cause of the trouble. Pc-
cures the catarrh. The symptoms
disappear.
sc!f ill enough to go to bed. but she is far
from being able to do her work without
the greatest exhaustion. Tins is a very
common sight, and is almost always due to
pelvic catarrh. foolish for
It is worse than so many
women to suffer year after year with a dis¬
ease that can be permanently cured.
Peruna cures catarrh permanently. It
cures old chronic cases as well as a slight
attack, the only difference being in the
length of time that it should he taken to
effect a cure. derive and satisfac¬
If you do not from the prompt of Peruna. write
results use full
at once to Dr. Hartman, and giving will a pleased state-
nient of your case lie be to
give you his valuable advice President gratis, of The
Address l)r. Hartman.
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio.
,* 3 J The Gffitiine TOWER’5
J POMMEL
I--' SLICKER
%
m HAS AND BEEN SOLD ADVERTISED FOR A
QUARTER OF A CENTURY.
LIKE ALL •
| SEawMOOf 35? CLonmtc.
It fj made of the best
materials, in black or yellow,
fully guaranteed, everywhere and sold by
reliable dealers
STICK TO THl
SIGN OF THF FISH
™”*WSS»*!“ fsiKSfffl
W. L. DOUGLAS
* 3.23 & *3 SHOES UNION MADE.
You can save from $3 to $6 yoarlv $3 by
wearing W. L. Douglas $3.50 or shoes.
that They equal those
have been cost¬ f?
ing you from $4.00
to $5.00. The im- 1 |
insuso Bale of W. L, rm
Douglas their shoes proves
all superiority makes. over n p
other H- 1
Sold by retail shoe B || .
dealers everywhere.
Look tor liamo and «
price Thai on honala* bottom. iu.es Cor¬ \ m
ona Colt lirnres there i* A
v.ilne in Donvlas slid*-*, Sat
Corona is tin* hiuhi'M maile.H
cniilv fat.I,eat her
F't.it Cu/.tr h'vefetn used.
O'-tr $4 Gilt EUgs Linn cannot be equalled at any price.
Catalog Shoes free. by mail, 25 UOtGLAS. rents extra. Hrockton, Illustrated Maas
W. L.
I RipansTabuIesare
i the best dyspepsia
medicine ever made.
Ar JSiP Cy)A of hundred tliem 1)ave millions 136011
sold to toe United
States in a single
year. Every illness
j arising from a disordered stomach is
j relieved or cured by their use. So
common is it that diseases originate
from the stomach it may be safely as¬
serted there is no condition of ill
health that will not be benefited or
cured by the occasional use of Ripans
Tubules. Physicians know them and
speak highly of them. All druggists
sell them. The five-cent package is
enough for an ordinary occasion, and
tile Family Bottle sixty cents, contains
a household supply for a year. One
I generally gives relief within tweDty
i minutes. . .
i
The Great Last anil West Line
I | ACROSS the States entire of Ilffillfliifl
am THE
I
TEXAS T*P PACIFIC
W
RAILWAY W&
NO TROUBLE TO ANSWER QUESTIONS. tc
Thirty-five miles Shortest Route Shreveport Texas—
Dallas. Write for new book on fbke.
, I\ TURNER, Gen. Pass. Agt., Dallas, Texas.
K
*
6EST FOR THE BOWELS j
O CANGY
r«y JL OATHAftTie
i\ i
£
I
Rd ■aaa uuwci wuuuica, o|ipciiuiuiuo, uiiiuueijra&, uo« bfid
blood, wind on the omach. bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, indigestion', don’t pimples,
pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness. When your boweU together. move It
regularly you are aick. Constipation kills more peopte than all ether diseases taking
starts chronic ailments and long years of suffering. No matter what ails you, start
CASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stay well until you get your bowels
right Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under absolute guarantee to cure and or
money re funded. The genuine tablet stamped C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample
booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. 5°*
Malsby & Co.
41 Sooth Forsjth SU Atlanta, Qa.
•c*
Portable and Stationary
Engines, Boilers,
Saw Mills
and all kinds of machinery
Complete line carried in itockfor
IMMEDIA TE shipment T»r»a
Sett Machinery, I.owASt Prlcos and D»«t
Write us for catalogue, prices,
etc., before buying.
Beat SAWMILLS Our Latest Im¬
proved Circu¬ Mills,
lar Saw
j- cam0,R< tlu Hea-
car, ______ Simultaneous Variable Set Feed Works Works and are e unex*
cock-Kin^ simplicity. :DV*ABlIe
celled for accuracy, V\ Ht®TOT lUll
ITY AND EASE OF OPERATION- Manufactured by tna
descriptive circulars. WORKS.Winfrtoii-gnlem.N.
SALEM IRON
.r r
i ■ c- - ■'
/ v S5'- \!
: .
;
i swerson’3 •''*1
S' 8R2HiOSEiTZER lip V)
10 CENTS. V'
.X. c
j§3ACBESj IWSAll - jg|
\ &
%
$@§» 8ll
Sold Everywhere.
A-
U'
Straighten Your Hair
v'
m miv m
C5S m s'^
s.
Take the curls out of it, make it soft and glossy
by using
Carpenter’s OX MW W POMADE
(BEWA.UK O? IMITATIONS )
Use a little nno 3 a weak—that is ad that is nec¬
essary- Soft, silky hair and healthy scalp are
the results. Makes the hair grow, too.
PRICE, 25 CENTS.
Day it of your druargist. or send us the price
in stamps.
AaOresa, CARPENTER & CO.,
Louisville, Ky.
c bOIltlieril it. u NOFUiai T It UUlVCrSlty •
HUNTINGDON, ^ TENN.
A. . _ £,» „ DUyiH, nnT „ p ru, , Ut, ricSiacui. '
^nf^fby departments College’
and Universities. Fifteen different
| school land- It ftf-
such. The best review in the nndBpeedy,
fords teaching the best preparation,thorough for other profession.
for or business,Shorthand,Typewriting, any
Telegraphy, Colleges of Science, Liberal Arts, Law, Music,
Oratory, etc., in one of the finest and Aiiost com¬
modious University buildings in the south.
Table b'oard from to $8.00 per month.
Rooms well furnished from forty to if ftity paid cents in
per week. Tuition ten weeks $10.00;
advance for the year 20 per cent, discount. Less
than $100 pays for ail expenses for a school year,
Dormitory and town residences furnish abund¬
ant accommodations. Community in thor¬
ough and loyal co-operation with the Univer¬
sity. Hundreds of schools conducted, and other
positions from of institution. honer filled with honor done by here pupils in
this More work
one year than at others in two, yourself. and thorough Military
work too. Come and see for
department in charge of detailed (West Point)
U. s. officer. Catalogues free. President, La'll term Huntir opens
Sept. 22.1903. Address The ng-
don. Tenn.
Give the name of this paper when
writing to advertisers—(At. 37, 03.)