Newspaper Page Text
'TPIALS of the NEEDEMS
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RESOLVED- THAT CHARITY GENERALLY BEGINS
WHEN THE LIVER AND BOWELS ARE RIGHT.
Kunycn’s l*aw Paw Pills coax the liver
into activity by gentle methods. They do
noc scour, gripe or weaken. They are a
tonic to the stomach, liver and nerves; *
Invigorate Instead of weaken. They en¬
rich the blood and enable the stomach to
get ali the nourishment from food that if
put into It. These pills contain no calo¬
mel; they are soothing, healing and stim¬
ulating. For sale by all druggists in 10c
»nd 25c sixes. If you need medical ad¬
vice, write Monyon’s Doctors. They will
advise to the best of their ability abso¬
lutely free of Charge. MUNYON’S, Si*
and Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.
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B uy “Batile Axe” Shoes
x^oo<s<>ooc<>o<>o<i<>o<>ooo<>oc<x<.
The man who is most exigent of
others should take the cure himselt,
as he is likely to be the least reli¬
able of all.
IMPORTANT HOTEL CHANGE.
Peachtree Inn Now Open to Touriete,
Commercial Men and Transients.
Atlanta, Ga __An Important change
in one of Atlanta’s hotels was made
recently when beautiful Peachtree
Inn passed into the control of Mr.
Robert D. Edwards as lessee and
manager. This is a modern family
and tourist hotel, situated on beauti¬
ful Peachtree, the most fashionable
thoroughfare in the city, where the
guests can enjoy all the comforts of
home life, away from the smoke and
noise of the business center where
the other large hotels are located.
Mr. Edwards has thrown open his
hotel to tourists and transients, and
many commercial men and visitors
who expect to remain several days In
the city are availing themselves ol
the privilege of stopping at this pop-,
uiar hostelry, where they are thrown
with a select home-like circle of the
best class of people.
The Inn has 140 guest rooms, equip¬
ped with steam heat and electric
light, with 40 private bath rooms, and
is furnished throughout with all the
modern hotel conveniences. It is con¬
ducted on the American plan with
rates of $2.00 per day and up. A
special rate is given by the week.
Mr. Edwards is thoroughly over¬
hauling the hotel throughout, install¬
ing new art squares, new furniture, re-
calcimining aud painting throughout.
The Inn contains a large, handsome
ball room and fine orchestra, which
is open to the guests and their friends.
When you visit Atlanta alone, or
with your wife or other members ol
your family, you will find it a pleas¬
ure to stop at the Peachtree Inn,
where Mr. Edwards will be glad to
entertain you, with the very best of
everything, Electric cars pass <L-
rectly in front of the hotel, afford¬
ing easy access to all the theaters,
churches and the shopping districts at
all hours. Any further information de¬
sired will be furnished by addressing
Robert D. Edwards, 391 Peachtree
street, Atlanta, Ga.
At the Railway Station.
Has the two-thirty train gone?’
“Yes, ma’am; five minutes ago.”
“When’s next train?”
"Four fifteen, ma’am.”
“Thank goodness, I’m in time!”
—Lippincott’s.
Buy "Battle Axe” Shoes.
The grub who fancies himself a
butterfly exploits his limitations at
the first flight.
WELL KIDNEYS KEEP THE BODY
WELL.
When the kidneys do their duty
the blood Is filtered clear of uric acid
and other waste. Weak kidneys do
not filter off all the
\btryPkiurt bad matter. This 1*
yells a Story" the cause of rheu¬
matic pains, back¬
ache and urinary dis-
orders, Doan’s Kid-
ney Pills cure weak
i< kidneys.
Henry J. Brown,
53 Columbus St.,
Charleston, S. C.,
says: "For two year*
1 suffered with my
kidneys. Rheumatic
pains drove me near¬
ly frantic. My limbs
swelled. Nothing
helped me until I be-
gan using Doan’*
Kidney _____ had
Pills, and by that time I
nearly given up hope. They brought
me quick relief and a final cure."
Remember the name—Doan’s. Sold
by all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Buffalo, N. Y. 60 cents a box.
The man who wants to be alone
ought to get out, because nine times
out of ten he is in the way and
doesn’t know it.
* Great Library and Its Modest Giver
Milan has Just been celebrating the
three-hundreth anniversary of the
opening of her library, the famous
Blblloteca Ambrosiana, ■which was
founded <by -Cardinal Federico Bor-
rotneo, nephew of St. Charles of that
name. There are many bigggr, li¬
braries than this, though its 250,000
volumes make It of at least respect¬
able size, but there la none In the
world that possesses more precious
books and manuscripts. There, for
Instance, is the Codex Atlantic's o?
Leonardo da Vinci; there is Galileo’s
book on the "Wise Man," with the
letter he wrote to the cardinal in
presenting It, and there Is a letter
In the dainty hand of Lucrezla
Borgia, written to the historian Bern-
bo and inclosing a lock of her golden
hair tied with a black ribbon. ,
Cardinal Borromeo scoured the
whole world for books. His agents
were Venetian sea captains, Genoese
merchants, the diplomats of all na- !
tions in all lands. In the eight years i
from 1601 to 1600 he collected from
Europe, Asia and Africa more than
thirty thousand books, manuscripts,
papyri and parchments, and presented
them to the city of which he was
archbishop. Not only this, but he
built the library and hired Raphael,
Titian, Leonardo da Vinci. Luini and
other great artists to decorate it.
And when he opened the library he
wrote a guide to it and to its treas¬
ures, in which he showed himself a
discerning art critic and an intelli¬
gent lover of hooks.
But so unlike 'the modem giver of
libraries was Cardinal Borromeo that
he did not place his own name above
the door, but that of St. Ambrose,
who had preceded him by many cen-
turies in the diocese of Milan. New
York World.
cent sort.
The fool and his money sometimes
stick until he is sailed hence.
DA1NT I nllll I LIUI\ IflK
UOY WHITES
For the Great Benefit that Car-
dui, the Woman’s Tonic,
Was to Her When Sick.
Paint Lick, Ky.—”1 suffered so
much from womanly trouble,” writes
Mrs. Mary Freeman, of Paint Lick,
Ky., before I commenced to take Car-
dui.
“I was so weak from it that I was
down on my back nearly all the time.
“I have taken three bottles of Car-
dui and it has done me more good
than any medicine I ever took in my
life.
“I can’t possibly praise it too highly,
it has done so much for me and I will
do all I can to help you, for I think
it is the only medicine on earth that
will cure female troubles.”
You need not be afraid to try Car-
dui, for in so doing you are making
no new experiment in drug dosing or
in tablets of concentrated mineral in¬
gredients.
Cardui as a medicine, as a tonic for
weak, tired, worn-out women, is time-
tested, safe, reliable, ft has helped
others and should certainly help you.
Composed of gentle-acting, herb in¬
gredients, its action is mild and natur¬
al and it has no bad after-effects, as
have many of the powerful drugs,
sometimes recommended.
Try it.
N. B.—Wr 1 '* t-: T.ai*'-s' Advisory
Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga.,
Tenn., for Special Instructions, and'64-
page book, ‘‘Home Treatment for Wo¬
men,” sent in plain wrapper, on request.
Insomnia
“I have been using Cascarets for In-
aomnia, with which and I I have been th^Cas- aj^icted
for twenty years, can relief say
carets have given me more than pfshall any
other remedy I have ever tried.
certainly recommend them to my friends
os being all that they Gillard, are represented.” Elgin, /III.
Thos.
Pleasant, Palatable. Potent, Taste Good.
Do Good. Never Sicken.Weaken or Gripe.
10c, 25c, 50c. Never sold in bulk. The gen¬
uine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to
care or your money back. 924
>C<?OOC<XXXXXXXXXXXX>C><XXXXX>i: Axe”
IKOattle Shoes
Don’t judge his income by his
clothes—many men look most pros¬
perous when nearest broke. Ask his
tailor .
Attention, Confederate Veteran*!
Atlanta. Birmingham and Atlantic Rail¬
road will sell round trip tickets at low rates
to Mobile, Ala and return, for the Annual
, Confederate Veterans.
Reunion, United will
April 26 th-28th, 1910. Ticket agents W.
cheerfully furnish all information. H.
Lxabt, General Passenger Agent, Atlanta, j
Ga,
“Th, ay ° . ■ . e , r ... |
^ e thU 7f , ^. a f ter ^ji the
travel 1 that—P---------- nassed m-er it *
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething,softens thegumR,reducestnttamma-
Only tailor,
man by the the clothes j
discerning judge him by
his wife wears.
to A please “-air™ her sss
he swears every time she buys s
now dress.
Fortune Telling
Does not take into consideration the one essential to wom¬
an’s happiness—womanly health.
The woman who negleets her health is neglecting the
very foundation of all good fortune. For without health
love loses its lustre and gold is but dross.
Womanly health when lost or impaired may generally be
regained by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription.
This Prescription has, tor over pain-wracked tip years,
been curing delicate, weak,
women, by the hundreds of thousands
and this too In the privacy of their homes pr
without their having to submit to Indeli¬
cate Questionings and offensively repug¬
nant examinations.
Sick women are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter free.
All correspondence held as sacredly confidential. Address World’s Dispensary
Medical Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y.
Dh. Pierce’s Great Family Doctor Boor, The People’s Common Senso
Medical Adviser, newly revised up-to-date edition—1000 pages, answers in
Plain English hosts of delicate questions which every woman, single or married,
ought to know about. Sent free, in piain wrapper to any address on receipt of
21 one-cent stamps to cover mailing only, or in cloth binding for 31 stamps.
Be kind to the man who thinks
he is your enemy, and you disarm
him completely.
Mother Many Children Are Sickly.
dren, used Gray’s Sweet Powders for Chil-
asr“i“Xho^" by Mother ,iih Gray, a nurse in !
Teething Disorders and s Destroy c,,r &Sis Worms,
At nil Druggists’, 25c. Sample mailed FitF.E. !
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. .
Citizens Drove Hard Bargain. i
Chatham square, now one of the
busiest points on the lower Hast
side, had a bad (beginning. A giant
negro who was a sort of king of ten
superannuated slaves, was allowed to
settle there, each of his subjects be¬
ing required to pay a fat hog and a
score of bushels of grain every year
for the privilege of living there, a
p ar f. 0 f kh e agreement being that
their children should remain slaveB.
; —--
Piles in 6 to 14 days or monev refunded. 60c
Natural Mixup
A little while since, Pasadena wa»
j very much excited over the question
i of municipal water, one of the phases
0l ^e situation being the stand
“So™ of
j Edwin, aged five, had taken a lot
It in, and his association of ideas
was not at all illogical when asked.
a little later, if he could tell the
name of the mayor, he very promptly
replied; “Oh, yes; it is Mr. Reser-
voir.”—Los Angeles Times.
Buy “Battle axe” Shoes .
Substitute for Gold.
In France a substitute of tgold has
been afforded by combining 94 parts
of copper and six parts of antimony
and adding a little magnesium car¬
bonate to increase the weight. It is
said that this alloy can he drawn,
wrought and soldered much like true
gold, and that it also receives and
retains a golden polish, it is worth
about 25 cents a pound.
Free to Our Readers.
Write Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago,
for 48-page illustrated Eye Book Free
Write all about Your Eye Trouble and
they tion will advise as to the Proper Applica¬
of the Murine Eye Remedies in Your
Special Case. Your Druggist will tell you
that Murine Relieves Sore Eyes, Strength¬
ens Eye Pain, Weak and Eyes, Doesn’t Smart, Soothes
sells for 50c. Try It in Your
Ey esand in Baby s Eyes, for Scaly Eyelids
and Granulation.
NOT A TATTOO ARTIST.
"Have you ever written on an
empty stomach?” asked the mere
man.
"Sir,” exclaimed the literary p©D
son, “I am a poet, not a tattoo art¬
ist!”—Boston Post.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and
invigorate stomach, liver and bowels.
Sugar-coated, tiny granules. Easy to take
ss candy.
Kind of Bottle for Him.
An agent come into our sanctum
yestiddy tryin’ to sell us a bottle tbet
be claimed would keep anything we
put into it fer 72 hours, but it was
a fraud, we could open it without a
corkscrew even; th’ bottle thet keeps
anythin’ in our neighborhood fer 72
hours has gotter be made outen
armor plate an’ closed with a time
I lock—Alkali Eye.
______ thoroughly
f-rm/ Davis' rainWlerwhen ach-
! nibbed in relieves strain*, sprains, or
| ing joints, whatever may be the cause,
A girl who aspires to being awfully
simple suceeds generally in being sim¬
ply awful.
For HKADACHE-Hleks* CAPPDIVI
Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or
Nervous Troubles, Capudlue will relieve you.
I It’s liquid- pleasant to take—acts lmmedt-
! ately. Try it, 10c., 25c. and 60c. at draff
•to.ea
First Physician; “So, yofl’ve lost
Rogers as a jatient. Didn’t he re-
spond to your treatment?”
Second Physician; "Yes, but
to my dunning letters.”—Lippincott’s.
Don’t Marry in a Hurry.
Matrimony is a serious matter and has
its sorrows as well as joys. If you are well, sick!
happiness ^hraltrX^rhe^matiaKnd will be yours; if vou are
ail the "index
blood diseases take Rhcumaeide. Rhen-
maeide is a powerful blood purifier. It
sweeps all poisons out of the system and
makes >ou feel well all over. Put ui> in 1
liquid form, also tablets. Tablets by mail, Md! j
25c. Bobbitt Chemical Co., Baltimore,
- ■
___ MONOPOLY.
1 Want a IlCen8e to marr >' the best
-
gir i in the world,” said the young
man.
"Sure,’ commented the clerk, “that | |
makM tl(rteen Ucm ur
that girl this season. Puck. j
..’JL'-J You Look Prematurely Old
Soldiers' Care of Their Feet.
In our army more care is taken of
the feet than any other part of a
man’s body. Your trained, profes¬
sional soldier knows that if his feet
are sound, dry and warm his hands
will be steady and his head clear.
If he has to sleep in a swamp he will
use his blankets an'd other equip¬
ment to proteot his feet, though his
body may be soaking in rain or
mud. Anywhere and everywhere. .
winter or summer, the disciplined sol-
dier who is going to sleep, for his
night’s rest or for an afternoon nap
throws some covering over his legs
from the knees down, in our army
colds are rare.—New York Press.
i • Sapient.
The ablest Celtic scholar living Is
a Scandinavian, the next a German,
But all this merely proves that his-
tory is in the habit of returning, peri¬
odically, to ancient pathways.
Fair, Fat and Tide-y.
A Kansan eat on the bench at At¬
lantic City watching a fair and fat
bather disporting herself in the
surf. He knew nothing of tides, and
he anl no t notice that each succeed-
».«•»«•«•*>•" * «•
feet. At last an extra big wave wash-
e( ] over his shoe tops.
“Hey, there!” he yelled at the fair,
fat (bather. “Quit yer jumpin’ up and
down! D’ye want to drown me? -
Wonderful Statistics.
■When it is considered tha the percentage
of deaths from consumption Is 91 per thou¬
sand against G3 per thousand of any other
malady, how Important to guard against Cherokee a
slight cold by taking Taylor's
Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein, the
tested medictue for coughs, colds and con¬
sumption, whooping cough, 50c. croup.
At druggists, 25.*. and
Teamster’s Punishment Earned.
Apparently it pays not to be cruel
to horses out In Chicago. A teamster
who admitted abandoning his horses
for six hours on a recent stormy day
was fined $50 by a magistrate. The
humane society prosecuted the case
vigorously and promised to report
the matter to the driver’s employers.
Presumably he will lose bis job, as
he was unable to pay the fine and
will have to serve a jail term.
Not an Inch of Eealtliy Skin Left.
“My little bo»; a boy of five, broke
out with an itching raBh. Three doc¬
tors prescribed for him, but he kept
getting worse until we qould not dress
him any more. They finally advised
me to try a certain medical college,
but its treatment did no good. At
the time 1 was induced to try Cuti-
cura he was so bad that I had to cut
his hair off and put the Cuticura Oint¬
ment on him on bandages, as it was
impossible to touch him with the bare
hand. There was not one square inch
of skin on his whole body that was
not affected. He was one mass of
sores. The bandages used to stick to
his skin and in removing them it used
to take the skin off with them, and
the screams from the poor child were
heartbreatyng. I began to think that
he would never get well, but after the
second application of Cuticura Oint¬
ment I began to see signs of improve¬
ment, and with the third and fourth
applications the sores commenced to
dry up. His skin peeled off twenty
times, but it finally yielded to the
treatment. Now I can say that be is
entirely cured, and a stronger and
healthier boy you never saw than
he is to-day, twelve years or more
since the cure was effected. Robert
Wattam, 114 8 Forty-eighth St., Chi¬
cago, Ill., Oct. 9, 1909.”
His Trade Mark.
“I wish you didn’t have such a
flat and plebeian nose, papa,” said
th® aristocratic young daughter . . of ,
the plain old merchant. “That’s the
mark of the grindstone, my dear,” re¬
plied the plodding old man.
'Don’t Risk Your Life
By neglecting Constipation. It leads to
autotoxemia. There is just one Nature’s right Rem¬ rem¬
edy for Constipation, that is
edy (NR tablets). It’s different from all
others because it is thorough, it corrects
the entire digestive system and the kid¬
neys, cures and Dyspepsia and Take Rheumatism. to¬
It’s easy sure to act. one
night—you’ll feel better in the morning.
Get a 25c. Box. All Druggists. The A. H.
Lewis Medicine Co., St. Louis, Mo.
. Quite Sufficient,
"What evidence will be offered in
support of his plea of insanity?”
“His love-letters.”—Lippincott’s.
Buy "Battle Axe” Shoes.
The Big Fellows and Other Fellows.
The excessive mortality of over¬
weights has been published by life in¬
surance statisticians, and the phe¬
nomenon must be considered in foot¬
ball discussions. It is now a proved
(fact that the men who are barred
from the game are the ones who live
the longest, and though mere length
of life is no criterion of its useful¬
ness, yet it is a fair assumption that
the longest lived are the most vigor¬
ous and therefore the best brain
workers.
mos T ^ f @ money C °" egeS on the the stl^ents " s P endi who ^ will the
£lve the least returns. Every now
and then some ingenious fallow pub-
ill llshes statistics . .. showing , . that . Stu-
dents able to take part in sports out-
live those too defective to take part
at all, as thougl^that needed numeri-
cal proof.
The new statistics show that the
healthy underweights excluded from
football ^ are fitter ^ for ' survival “ in
AmMi o e „. e|gMs
teams.—American Medicine.
IT REALLY WA9.
The Powder Manufacturer—Fancy
fid Tom, of all people, going into th«
i.Hnpowder shed with a lighted can-
die. I should have thought that would
be the last thing he’d do.
The Workman—Which, properly
speakin’ It were sir.—Boston Post
practical Christianity,
"On behalf of the sewing circle of
th)s rhnrr h,’’ said the pastor at . th#
.i lls i 0 n of the morning service, "1
OOIH congregation for
(le3lre to thank the
r)7 buttons placed in the contribution
box durin( , the past month. If now
the philanthroplcally Inclined donor*
of these objects will put a half-dozen
undershirts and three pa' ■ of other'
strictly secular garments on the plat#
newt Sunday morning, so that w#
have something to sew t.hos*
may shall be additionally
buttons on, we Weekly.
grateful."—Harper’s
3 XHL
3 'tiutcL?
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound? We can
furnish positive proof that it has made many remarkable
cures after all other means had failed.
Women who are suffering with some form of female
illness should consider this.
As such evidence read these two unsolicited testimonial
letters. We guarantee they are genuine and honest state¬
ments of facts.
Cresson, Pa.—“ Five years ago I had a had fall, and hurt
myself Inwardly. I was under a doctor’s care for nine weeks,
and when I stopped I grew worse again. I sent for a bottle of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, took it as directed,
and now I am a stout, hearty woman.”—Mrs. Ella E. Alkey,
Cresson, Pa.
Baird, Wash. —“A year ago I was side with kidney and
bladder troubles and female weakness. The doctors gave me
up. All they could do was to just let me go as easily as possible.
I was advised by friends to take Lydia E. Plnkliam’s Vegetable
Compound and Blood Purifier. I am completely cured of my
ills, and I am nearly sixty years old.”—Mrs. Sarah Leighton*.
Baird, Wash.
Evidence like the above is abundant showing that the
derangements of the female organism which breed all kinds
of miserable feelings and which ordinaiy practice Lydia does not E_ t
cure, are the very disorders that give way to
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. i
Women who are afflicted with similaf troubles, after
reading two such letters as the above, should be encouraged
to try this wonderfully helpful remedy. i
For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable £ m
Compound has been the standard remedy for /
female ills. No sick woman does medicine. justice to fi
herself who will not try this famous ]
Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and I
has thousands of cures to its credit.
90 Myign Wff Mrs. to write Pinkham her invites for advice. all sick She women has (! \
guided thousands Address Mrs. to health Pinkham, free Lynn, of charge, Mass. u EPJNKHaI 1
LYCJA
SULPHUR HANCOCK
SULPHUR COMPOUND
rA. LIQUID. < ?p k t " ,B “' ^ A “ ykl “ ErUPtl ° aS S trcat’meifi MlO® MSS.**?
Ano^U -
OINTMENT. LiRfiE JAR. 50c. SMALT, 25c. A MAGIC WONDER for Hemorrhoids. Pli«A. .Sore*
Swellings. Inflamed or chafed Parts. Burns. Bruises. Sprains, etc.
M.V y °U h u e g ^ booklet Sulphur
If your L ealer can’t aupply you, sent by Mali or Express, prepaid, Write for on
A Certain Cure for Sore.v^eak & Inflamed Eyes.
MITCHELLS * SALVE 1
MAKES THE USE OF DRUGS UNNECESSARY. Price, 25 tppis.Drugg/sts.
ST
MR. GINNER!
Have you ever seen the LUMMUS
fata AIR BLAST Si SYSTEM?
Do you want to increase your profits
and at the same time lessen your labor?
We have spent 40 years perfecting a
gin system that would meet the actual
o requirements, and now we’ve got it.
$ Your will name brinir and you address full information. on a post card
17 gf F. H. LUMMUS SONS CO., Columbus, Ga.
Exaggerated ego is often mistaken
for self-reliance.
Only One “Bromo Quinine,”
That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look
for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the
World o ver to Cur e a Cold in One Day. 26o
There’s been many a slip this win¬
ter twixt down town and home.
1
For COLDS and GRIP,
, ?''*'• Co*d .£* PUD restore!! ' NI normaTconditions ls , th « bes ‘ remedy-
the and CU
te uld ttect immediately, lFi
«*.. r® —* *, me., 25c. and
When a man offers to pay you in
« 11
UY BATTLE AXE SHOE
Gas lighting has recently been
boomed in Japan, and some ten new
companies are to be floated.
Half of the world’s production
nickel comes from the United State*!
ft afflicted Thompscn’s EyeWater
with weak
o-lt'd. one