Newspaper Page Text
2
AILING WOMEN
How Many Perfectly Well Women
Do You Know?
eTmiller MR^wTfTfoßD^^^
... , . n »• «it Mrs W. S. Ford of 1938 Lansdowne
“I am not feeling very well,’ ‘I °* * Md writes .
am so nervous it seems as though I ®t., Ualtimore, JVI .
should fly.” “My back aches as though Dear Mrs. Pinkham;— • .
7T ‘For four years my hfe was a misery to
it would break. ma j suffered from irregularities, sup-
How often do you he Jr these signi- pression, terrible dragging sensations and
Scant expressions from women extreme nervousness I bad given up all
r , , (i, an c nPa b; hope of ever being well again when Lydia
friends. More than likely you speak E * PinlthMrn ' a Vegetable Compound was
the same words yourself, and there recommended. It cured my weakness and
is a cause. made me well and strong.”
More than thirty years ago Lydia Miss Grace E. Miller, of 1213 Michi-
E. Pinkham of Lynn, Mass, discovered gan st Buffalo, N. Y. writes:
the source of nearly all the suffering Deftr Mnj pinkham
endured by her sex. ‘Womans Ills, “I was in a very bad condition of health
these two words are full of more generally; irritable, cross, backache and
misery to women than any other two suffered from a feminine weakness. Lydia
words that can be found in the E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound cured
English language. Sudden fainting, nie after all otjier medicines had failed,
depression of spirits, reluctance to What Lydia E. Pinkham s Vege
go anywhere, backaches, headaches, table Compound did for Mrs. Ford and
nervousness, ’ sleeplessness, bearing- Miss Miller it will do for other women
down sensations, displacements and in like condition. Every suffering
irregularities are the bane of woman's woman in the United States is asked
existence to accept the following invitation. It
' The same woman who discovered is free, will bring you health and may
the cause of all this misery also saTe your life.
tam" er v‘4effi a £omS»4 MUmA Invitation to Women.
from native roots and herbs holds Women suffering from any form of
the record for a greater number of f ema lo weakness are invited to
absolute cures of female ills than any promptly communicate with Mrs.
other one remedy the world has ever pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the
known and it is the greatest blessing symptoms given, the trouble may be
which ever came into the lives of located and the quickest and surest
suffering women. way of recovery advised. Out of her
Don’t trv to endure, but cure the vast volume of experience in treating
cause of all your suffering. Lydia E. female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound at has the very knowledge that Will
once removes such troubles. The help your case. Her advice is frM
following letters prove this : and always helpful.
STANDARD OIL SEEKS
TO HAVE TINE ANNULED
Twenty-Five Reasons To
Submit to Court.
i
CHICAGO, ILK. October 22.—(Spec
ial) —Plans for the tremendous effort
that will be made by attorneys of the
Standard Oil Company to have the
$29,340,000 fine imposed by Judge
Landis wiped out by the LTnited States
circuit court of appeals have been
disclosed.
Twenty-five main points, each one
of which the attorneys will argue, is
sufficient to have the record breaking
fine declared void, will be advanced
when the case comes t otrial in Janu
ary.
Standard’s Argument
The principal arguments will be:
1. That the government attorneys
failed to inform the defense of the
Alton immunity agreement,
2. That the Elkins act under which
the conviction was secured was un
constitutional.
3. That as the , Hepburn act was
passed before indictments were re
turned prosecution under the provis
ions of the Elkins law were illegal.
4. That Judge Landis did not com
pute the number of violations cor
rectly.
5. That certain evidence should not
have been admitted.
6. That the Standard Oil Com
pany accepted the rate in question
with the understanding that they were
authorized rates.
Other Cases Affected
In attacking the constitutionality of
the Elkins act and in contending that
the pa: sage of the Hepburn law made
it unlawful to prosecute for violations
of the repeated Elkins measure, th<
Standard attorneys hope in the event
of a favorable decision to furnish a
basis for freeing the company from
numerous other suits pending.'
It will be contended that Judge
Landis failed to compute the number
of violations correctly. Instead of
"rch shipment constituting a viola
tion, the defense will claim that either
the number of settlement between
the company and the railroads else
the number of times the rate was
granted should be the only things
considered.
In the one case the number of vio
lations would be about 300, while in
the other it would be reduced to only
three. Convictions was secured in
1,462 violations.
A Criminal Attack,
on an inoffensive citizen is frequent
ly made in that apparently useless
little tube called the “appendix.” It’s
generally the result of protracted con
stipation, following liver torpor. Dr.
King’s New Life Pills regulate the
liver, prevent appendicitis, and es
tablish regular habits of the bowels.
?.5c at Eldrdlge Drug Co. ... lmo.
THE AMERICUS DAILY TIMES-UECQRDER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1907
NATURE’S WARNING.
Americas People Must Recognize and
Heed It.
Kidney ills come quietly—myster
iously,
But nature always warns you
through the urine.
Notice the kidney secretions.
Sep if the color is unhealthy—
If there are settlings and sediment,
Passages too frequent, scanty, pain
ful.
It’s time then to use Doan's Kid
ney Pills, ,
To ward off Bright’s disease or
diabetes.
J. H. Thompson, employed by the
cotton compress company and living
at 213 Pine street, Albany, Ga., says:
Doan’s Kidney Pills rid me of a lame
and aching back, and I am therefore
prepared to recommend them very
highly. I had suffered from this com
plaint for some years past. It was a
dull pain right across the small of
my back particularly severe at night,
breaking my rest and robbing me of
sleep. The kidney secretions con
tained a sediment and were very free
and strong-smelling. I used various
kidney remedies but nothing seemed
to do me any good until I got Doan’s
Kidney Pills and used them. They
gave’' me almost immediate relief, and
since using them my back has been
free from pain, my urine contains no
sediment and does not bother me as it
did.”
Plenty more proof life this from
Americus people. Call at Dodson's
Pharmacy and ask what customers
report.
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Millburn Co., Buffalo.
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name—Doan's—and
take no other.
Georgia W. ('. T. lb .
COLUMBUS, GA., October 22
(Special)—Distinguished temperance
workers from other States will take
part in the jubilee convention of the
Georgia Woman’s Christian Temper
ance union Wednesday, in recogni
tion of the valiant and successful
fight made by the anti-saloon forces
of tli ■> state to secure prohibition in
: Georgia. This is the twenty-fifth an
nual convention of the Georgia union.
Do the Right, Tiling
if you have Nasal Catarrh. Get Ely’s
Cream Balm at once. Don’t touch
the catarrh powders and snuffs, for
they contain cocaine. Ely’s Cream
Balm releases the secretions tl
inflame the nasal passages and tin
throat, whereas, medicines made with
mercury merely dry up the secretions
and leave you no better than you were.
In-a word, Ely’s Cream Balm is a real
remedy, not a delusion. All drug
gists, 50 cents, or mailed by Ely
Brothers, 56 Warren street, New York.
PRESIDENT’S TRIBUTE
| TO CONFEDERATE CHIEE
Mention of Jefferson Dav
is Was Well Received.
VICKSBURG, MISS., Oct. 22.
| (Special)—ln his speech here yester
i day President Roosevelt made men
tion of Jefferson Davis in a eompli
i mentary way, paying the first compli
ment of his life to the Confederacy’s
i President.
The speaker was introduced by
i Senator-Elect John Sharp Williams,
| who said:
“You cannot in the history of any
J country, ancient or modern find a
; succession of twenty-five kings, em
! perors or even prime ministers the
! equal in intelligence, culture, cour
j age or character of the twenty-five
J Presidents of this great republic, from
| Washington to Roosevelt, inclusive.
| Os these, I, a southern Bourbon-Demo
| crat, have an American pride and
pleasure in saying that “The last
i is by no means least.”
Southern Hospitality
“It is an honor for you and me,
fellow Mississippians, to meet and
entertain with an old time, full-heart
ed Southern hospitality, the Hon.
j Theodore Roosevelt, an honor flow
| ing at once from his official dignity
! and from his many excellent traits
i of private character.
“He is our chief magistrate, Am
! erican chief magistrate of the reunited
j Dixie Land and Yankee Land, never
so firmly cemented in blood, opinion
and sentiment as they are today.”
j The introduction was received with
j cheers which were renewed when
j President Roosevelt arose. He spoke
i as follows:
President’s Speech.
“It is indeed an honor for me to
be today the guest of Vicksburg and
of Mississippi, and I was inexpressi
bly touched by the greeting over the
great arch of cotton bales which said:
i ‘Mississippi greets the President.’ I
| should not be fit to be President at
all if I did not with all my might and
main, with all my heart and brain,
seek to be in the full sense the Presi
dent of Mississippi, the President of
every State in this Union. I am glad
to be here in this historic city, this
city forever memorable of the con
flicts in which victor and vanquished
alike showed such splendid cour
age, such splendid fealty to the light
as it was given to each. Even be
fore the Civil War Mississippi’s sons
had shown that they knew how to
fight.
Tribute to Jefferson Davis
“It was from Vicksburg that a com
pany of that famous Mississippi regi
ment which won undying renown in
the Mexican war under the gallant
leadership of its colonel, who after
ward became the favorite son, not
only of Mississippi, but of all the
South, Jefferson Davis, came. Think
how fortunate we are as a nation, that
it is possible for the President of
the Nation to come here today, to be
conducted through your national park
by the surviving lieutenant general
of the' Confederate army, and to
feel that every instance of heroism
recorded by the monuments alike to
the Union and Confederate dead on
that battlefield is a subject for just
pride to every citizen of this nation,
no matter where he lives.
NOTABLE MEDICAL DISCOVERY.
Os Special Value to Many Here in
Aniericus.
One of the most notable discover
ies and one that undoubtedly appeals
more than anything else to many peo
ple here in Americus is the combina
tion of stomach remedies in the Mi
o-na treatment. This prescription
has worked wonders, and there is
now no excuse for anyone suffering
with indigestion or weak stomach.
It acts specifically upon the mus
cles of the stomach and bowels,
strengthening and stimulating them
so that they readily take care of the
food that is eaten. It also increases
the flow of gastric juices, thus get
ting from the food the nourishment
that is necessary for health and en
ergy.
The symptoms of indigestion are
numerous, such as distress after eat
ing, flatulence, heart-burn, sick head
ache, dizziness and irritability. These
are all dispelled by a few doses of
| Minona when the trouble is recent,
| but just as surely in long standing
nd chronic cases if the threatment
is followed for a reason 'tie length
of time.
So positive are the good effects fol
lowing the use of Mi-o-na that the
remedy is sold by Dodson’s Pharmacy
under an absolute guarantee to re
fund the money if it should fail to
cure. 16-18-23
A. W. SMITH FURNITURE CO.
v (
T
J
offer the largest, most attractive and varied assortment in each line
they have ever had in stock, embracing Chamber Suits in Mahogany
and Oak. Chiffo-Wadrobes, Odd Dressers, Dressing Tables, Lad
ies’ Desks, Library, Center, Parlor and Dining Tables, Hat Racks,
Sideboards and Buffets Rockers in Oak, Cane and Mahogany.
In leather goods the handsomest Davenports Couches and
Chairs ever shown in the city. Iron Beds and Cribs' Hand Painted
China and odd pieces, as well as decorated and white china, our own
importation, which means best goods for the least money.
Japanese and Bohemian Vases, Cut Glass, stock largest and
best at lowest prices- Window shades, Hanging and Stand Lamps
as well as all House-furnishing Goods.
Os course, Whitney’s Go-Carts, as every one knows that they
are the best.
Call in and see the best stock ever offered in the city and at
prices which will please you.
f A
S
A.W. Smith Furniture Co
Cor. Jackson and Forsyth Sts, Americus, Ga
RICHMOND PAPER
DEFENDS BISHOP
RICHMOND, VA„ October 22.
(Special)—Much discussion resulted
among delegates and visitors to the
triennial convention of the Episcopa
lian Church from the entertainment
at luncheon of Bishop Ferguson, of
Cape Palmas, a negro, by Bishop Pot
ter, of New York, yesterday. No one
found fault with the Bishop of New
York. Yet generally it was deplored
that the luncheon had not been given
in Bishop Potter’s own city.
The News-Leader, of Richmond,
printed an editorial on the subject, in
which it said:
“Let Southern people and newspa
pers refrain carefuly from making
themselves ridiculous.
“From our standpoint we have no
censure. We are convinced that no
offense to racial prejudices was in
tended.
Bishop Ferguson is a man of clean
life and high character, an important
official of his church, doing work for
it where work is needed.
The best position for us in the
South to take is to regard the inci
dent as an incident and put it out
of our minds as quickly as possible.
It is not a precedent or a step tow
ard social equality. The less we say
and think about it the better.”
COURTS INVOKED
TO LOWER PRICE
PITTSBURG, PA., Oct. 22.—(Spec
ial) —Attorney A. E. Anderson today
filed with the clerk of the United
States Circuit Court an amended bill
in equity in the fight being waged
here against the high price of food
stuff and the alleged discrimination
against certain dealers by the vari
ous produce associations throughout
the country.
The new bill is much larger in its
scope than that filed recently by W.
H. Arbour against the Pittsburg Pro
duce Association. By the new bill,
all the persons who were formerly
mentioned as having been placed on
the alleged blacklist of the trade as
sociation have been made complain
ants in the case and many of the
largest fruit growers of the country
together with all tlie railroads lead
ing into Pittsburg are defendants.
Among the concerns named in the
bill as defendants are the Erie Grape
Growers’ Association, National Pro
duce Distributing Company, Califor
nia Fruit Growers’ Exchange, the In
ternational Apple Shippers’ Associa
tion, the Elgin Board of Trade and
John Fite, the Pittsburg agent.
W. H. LASSETER
Contractor and Builder, Estimates
given on
Brick, Wood or Stone Bouses,
Bolton Bros. Store, Lamar St.
A « y le CAJARRH
Ely’s Cream Balm
is quickly absorbed. tK COIDIj
Gives Relief at Once. HF'L-'' £) J
It cleanses, soothes, PW-FEVER
heals and protects ||£s
the diseased mem
brane resulting from ' fw||
Catarrh and drives -.o
away a Cold in the aSP* ’ - v UjEMI
Head quickly, llc-y/iy
stores the Senses of HnT ST &ni9
Taste and Smell. Fall size 50 cts., at Drug
gists or by mail. In liquid form, 75 cents.
Ely Brothers, 56 Warren Street, New York.
q LOOSE-FITTING
“B. Y. D.”
,4 1 f Don’t Suffer in Hot Weather “B
'I u'l V. D.“ Coat Cut Undershirt and
j|i J Knee Length Drawers best and
■HrJ coolest for summer. Delivered to
jvJ any part of the United States upon
an receipt of price
W garment. When ordering give ches
and waist measure In inches.
■ Write Ifor^Ulustrated booklet to
Dept. No, 10. F. CBOSBY FRY CO
393 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
EHAIR R BALSAM
-TJhH Cleanses and beautifies the hair*
?£Sfl Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Faile to Restore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cures scalped iscasea hair falling.
EAST TEXAS
The Land of Great Opportunities
Wonderful Resources and
Amazing Possibilities
For Information a°d Literature
Address Secretary of the
COMMERCIAL CLUB
TYLER. TEXAS.
Fisli Tales
are often exaggerations, but we have
no need of stretching the truth In our
business as
FISH DEALERS
Freshness is an absolutely indis
pensable quality in unsalted or un
smoked fish and we handle none about
which there may be the slightest
doubt. We keep every kind in sea
son from the gamely trout to solid
mullet. And we don’t try to make a
fortune on every pound of fish me sell
pithpr
SHERLOCK & CO.
PHONE No. 32.
The Exposition Route t
NORFOLK
Seaboard
AIR LINE RAILWAI
“These arrivals and departures, I
well as time and connections wit
other companies, are given as infoi
mation and are not guaranteed.” j
Shortest. Line Between Aiwrii
and Savannah.
Passenger Schedules Effective An
ust 12, 1906.
90 Meridian Time. All Trains Daii
Leave Americus for Cor
dele. Rochelle, Abbeville, 12:32 p a
Helena, Lyons, Collins, Sa
vannah Columbia, Rich- 2:20 an
mond, Portsmouth and
points east s:lopa
Leave Americus for Rich
land, Columbus, Atlanta,
Birmingham, Hurtsboro, ga
Montgomery and points
west and northwest 3:08 pia
Arrive in Americus from
Cordele, Rochelle, Abbe- 8:43 a®
yille, Helena, Lyons, Col
lins, Savannah, Columbia, 12:55 a a
Richmond, Portsmouth
and points east. 3:03 pi
Arrive in Americus from
Richland, Columbus, At-
lanta, Birmingham, Hurts- 2 :20 aJ
boro, Montgomery and j
points west and northwest 5:10 P I I
Close connections at Cordele II
all points north and south. At Cl
lumbus for all points east, and I
Montgomery for New Orleans, Moba
and all Texas points and the soul
west and northwest. I
Night trains have through PullnJ
buffet sleepers and coaches betwel
Savannah and Montgomery. I
For further information applf I
H. P. Everett, Agt., Americus, Ga.l
W. P. Scruggs, T. P. A., Savannabj
Chas. F. Stewart, A. G. P. A.,
annah. I
LOANS. I
Farm loans and loans on cil
real estate negotiated at I°l
rates and on easy terms, I
G. R. FXLIS, Americus, GJ
Shoes Repaired!
the standard rule. I use «
the best of sole leather on tl" ■
Special attention given to
childrens shoes. All Wor 1
stitched or taeked if desired. g
JOSEPH M. DUDLEY!
312 Jackson Street, ■
Gap Big 0
dn.ch»r«e*,infl ai rS«
°f ''l not Ml*
PwnloM.» 0I » J
so ’“ ,7‘iU
or lent iu