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Miss M. Csrtledge gives some
helpful advice to young girls.
Her fetter is but one of thou- i
sands which prove that nothing
is so helpful to young girls who
are just arriving at the period of
womanhood as Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound.
'll Dear Mrs. Ptnkham : — I cannot
praise Lydia E. Pinklmm’.s Vege
table Compound too highly, for it
is the only medicine I ever tried which
cured me. I suffered much from my
first menstrual period, I felt so weak
and dizzy at times 1 could not pursue
xny studies with the usual interest.
My thoughts became sluggish, 1 had
headaches, backaches and sinking
spells, also pains in the back and low f er
limbs. In fact, I was sick all over.
4 4 Finally, after many other remedies
had been tried, we were advised to get
Lydia E. Plnkham’s Vegetable
Compound, and I am pleased to say
that after taking it only two weeks, a
wonderful change for the better took
place, and in a short time I was in
perfect health. I felt buoyant, full of
life, and found all work a pastime. I
am indeed glad to tell my experience
with Lydia E. Pinkliam’s Vege
table Compound, for it made a dif
ferent girl of me. Yours very truly,
Ml 8 R M. Cabtledgk, 533 Whitehall St.,
Atlanta, Ga, ” — $5000 forfeit if original c 1
•above letter proving genuine ness cannot be produced.
CHANCE TO GET EVEN.
Dr. Ketchum—By jove! Those cab
companies certainly know how to
charge.
His Wife—Never mind, dear! It's
lucky that the president of the com
pany is a patient of yours.—Brooklyn
Life.
IT COSTS ONE OENT
Write us a postal card , tor a free , sample , of
\STUART’S GIN AND BUCHU.
Wo cheerfully send it to all sufferers of Kid
ney, Liver, Heart. Bladder and Blood diseases
«n request. directions I? will do all that we claim for it.
Full with sample sent. Mention
this paper. Address STL ART DRUG M’F’G.
CO.. 28 Wall Street, ATLANTA, GA.
‘ALL 51611$ FAIL IN A DRY TIME
Hit m Of THE FISH NEVER FAILS
IN A WET TIME.
\ | Remember this when .you buy Wet
f Wither Clothing and look for the
rajd name TOWER on the buttons,
This sign and this name have stood
for the 5EST during sixty-seve»
* .years of increasing sales,
tf jour dealer will not supply you write for
free catalogue of black or yellow water
proof oiled coats, slickers, suits, hats, and
iSsorse goods for all kinds of wet work.
|A. ’ROSTON. J. TOW1R 1 U.S.A. CO., .SIGNI THE
MAS ., g
(TCWhR | TORONTO. CAN. CANADIAN ,UM!TID. CO..
!■■■■■■
SUCCESSORS to
AVERY & McMILLAN,
Bl-53 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga
—ALL kinds of—
MACHINERY
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yT'-'w
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A* d
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Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all
Sizes. Wheat Separators.
A
ft ti
life mm
■VliwSi v|"*
BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EAR III.
Large Engines and Boilers supplied
promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills,
Circular Saws.Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs.
“Steam Governors. Full line Engines &
Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue.
pi-oved Cireu |
lar Saw Hpctilin-ffi Mills,
«Sear, jwith Simultaneous!Set Hccc-s Universal Work*a Loc Ken id ms. the Hea fid
Mcoek-Kin^r Variable wo%k.-’ art 1 umpx-B
Mamifaettnod i-,y tiioH
sAi,bn!u O I
>i't *v
KOREA TO HELP JAPANESE
Soldiers of Hermit Kingdom Ordered
to Join Troops of Japan Now
in the Field.
Wiju Port Opened to For- j
eign Trader-Uncle 5am
inquires Into Con=
duct of Americans
at Chemulpo.
Advices from Seoul, the capital ot
Korea state that the Korean
I
government has decided to order !
the Korean troops to join the Japan
osce in the held.
The port of Wiju has been opened to
foreign trade. The limitation to be j
placed ou trade and other Incidental
matters will be passed on later. This ■
action necessitates a harbor, so Yens- °
ampho i
has been decided upon. I
MARSHALL ACTED WISELY.
A Washington special says: With- j
out waiting from any suggestion from I
St. Petersburg though that has since ,
come, and more three days ago, the
navy department cables to Captain
Marshall, of the United States steamer
Vicksburg at Chemulpo, requesting an
explanation of the facts connected
with the reported refusal on h:s part
to take aboard his ship sailors from j
the Russian war ship sunk by the Jap- j
anese. I
No answer has yet been received, so
^ iat the United States government is j
not in a position to make the expla j
nation w-hich St. Petersnurg seems j
to wish. From their knowledge of the
United States naval regulations and
| from the comprehensive press reports
| as to what did occur at Chemulpo, the
naval officials in Washington have not
the slightest hesitation in giving a & their
; unqualified approval of the course pur
\ sued by Captain Marshall,
In the first place it is understood
that it was not a matter cf saving
life. It is doubtful whether, if the
| men were drowning, an American war
| ship could aid them before they had
; surrendered, without violating inter
j national these law. who It is in believed boats could that
men were
have landed and only refrained from
; doing so because they feared to bo
j ! town. captured by the Japanese soldiers in
Had Captain Marshall received them
aboard the Vicksburg, he must have
taken them in as prisoners, for that
was the status accorded them by the
Freneh and British naval officers pres-
1 ent. Therefore, as the Russian sail
ors would have been practically Ja
pan’s prisoners in either case, wheth
S e r they landed or whether they board
ed the Vicksburg, the American cap
tain is regarded as justifiable in de
j dining to receive them.
Touching the Russian complaint that
Captain Marshal did not join with the
| °Hier foreign captains m protesting
I a &ainst Hie Japanese attack on the
; ^ aria S and the Korietz, in a neutral
| harbor, it is declared at the navy de
partment that the officer would certain
ly not be upheld by his department in
| medding in such a matter.
It is the first time that either the
! navy or state department has oeen se
riously ask?d to oblige a foreign power
j edly to observe stated neutrality, and it is point
that it was Russia’s busi-
1 noss to look to Korea for redress if
! that country had not maintained the
neutrality of its ports.
Later in the day the navy depart
ment received a cablegram from Com
mander Marshall, of the Vicksburg,
sat ing that he was among the first to
Oder assistance to the Russian sailors
aboard the Variag and Korietz. The
, cablegram is badly garbled and the
i of
ficials have not ITeen able to fully
I translate it.
FAKE MASCOT OF THE RUSSIANS.
„ Srcred , . Image „ Brought . r Forth .. . to Attempt 4.4 .
Hoodoo” of Japanese.
; The most sacred image in Russia
has been sent to St. Petersburg, and
it will be taken later to the Far East,
with the army, says a dispatch from
Moscow.
This image is a representation of
the virgin appearing to Saint Sergius,
and is always kept at the Troltzko
monast-ffry. It is about one foot
squ3.i’ 0 find ... -s covered , .... precious __. _
stones. The image has a remarkable
history, it accompanied Alexis, Pe
ter the Great and Alexander I on all
Japs Fail to Bottle Up
Russian Fleet in Har
bor at Port Arthur.
Muscovite Editor
is Riled.
A special from Tokio, Japan, says:
Vice Admiral Togo’s attempt to bottle
up the Russian fleet at Port Arthur by
sinking a fleet of stone-laden mercnant
steamers in the mouth ot the harbor
evidently failed, though the venture
caused no loss of life and tne vessels
lost were not of a great value.
Five shlps w8re ■> re l> are « vlce
Admiral Togo for r.ie attempted block
ade. . _ Four are reported . , to . . have , been
sunk, but the fate of the fifth < is un
known s-o far. It is presumed that it
withdrew with the other Japanese ves
sels. The five vessels were filled with
gtone so as to make the obstruction
permanent and were manned by volun
merchant crew's, It was impoesi
se j ec t naval officers and sailors
on account of their great rivalry to
participate in the daring venture
Accompanied by four battle ships,
nine cruisers and numerous vessels of
torpedo flotula, the s*one-laden
steamers reached Port Arthur on Wed
nesday. While the fleet was engaging
the shore batteries the steamers made
a dash for the mou th of the harbor
directly under the Russian guns.
Details of the attack have not been
received, but it is evident that the
Russians’ fire sank the steamers be
fore they touched the points planned
for their foundering by the Japanese
It is said that all of Die crews of the
four vessels escaped in boats.
RUSSIAN EDITOR PUZZLED.
The Associated Press Representative
at St. Petersburg cable's The following:
The Novoe Vremya publishes a long
leading article regarding the relations
existing between the United States
and Russia.
In considering the unfriendly mani
festations against the latter in the
United States the Novoe Vremya ar
gues distinction must be made be; ween
the people and the government, and if
attributes the agitation in the press to
a campaign engineered by the Jews,
who, it has been said, even talk ot
| building a battleship for the mikado.
Ths paper insists, however, that the
traditional friendship for Russia oecu
pies a firm position in the American
j mind and heart and that the people
jj cannot really prefer the Japanese to the
Russians, who never have harmed
them. The Novoe Vremya, on the
j other hand, contends that without rea
; son the Washington government has
j been unfriendly and compares the most
brilliant feat of the state department,
| the telegraphic ratification of the Chi
' neie—open port treaty—to the telo
, graphic marriages which, it says, seme
times are practiced in America.
j “But it is idle,” the article goes on,
“to talk now of sending United con
suls to Manchuria. Unsatisfied with
his success, Secretary Hay undertook
to secure the neutralisation, the invio
lability of the administration and the
entity of China. Diplomatists, lexi
cographers and publicists being in
doubt as to what all this meant, Sec
retary Hay kindly announced that he
did not care to have his proposal de
fined fn detail. The article con
eludes:
"The American government has tak
en a position which ill accords with
the former good relations with Russia,
and we are convinced that the conduct
of the United States government ship
j Vicksburg in refusing to protect and
receive drowning Russians will not
meet with wide sympathy in America.”
TREATY NOW READY FOR SIGNATURES.
n President .. Hes S.gned „ Papers Providing
for Ultimate Ratificctions.
President Roosevelt Thursday signed
, the ratifications to be exchanged ba
tween the United Stales and the re
public of Panama on the isthmian ca
nal treaty. The exchanges will be
made at the state department between
Secretary Ilay for the United States
and Mr. Bunau Varilla, the minister of
Panama. The president himself does
i not si§n treaty.
3
Subsequently a proclamation will
be issued by the president announcing
the conclusion of the convention
putting * it into effect.
4
doctor s tali, in lin J6. *7
Practicing 1 Physicians recognize the unfailing reliability of Doan’s Kidney
Pills by prescribing them for Backache, Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Di $•
orders—a tribute won by no other Proprietary Medicine. Four cases cited
from “Notes of HisPractice,” by Dr. Lelaud Williamson, of 1’orkt.mn, Ark
Yorktown, Ark., Mar. 1, 1004.
Fostlt’.-Milbxex Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
G’-ntlvmen :— I have been engaged in the practice of medicine in thi is see
tlon lor ten years. This is a very sickly climate, on the Bayou Banholom ew,
near the Arkansas Kiver, It is particularly malarious and miasmatic: we
meet with many and various abnormal conditions of the human family
prominent among the cases in which I have been called upon to prescribe is
kidney disease. Many of these disorders manifest themselves by pains in ti ue
back, often extending to other parts of the body; sometimes headache is
present, caused by uraemic or chronic uric acid poisoning, soreness in region
of kidneys, cloudy, thickened and foul-smelling urine, discharges of pus or
corruption; inflammation of the kidneys, extending to the bladder, is caused
by excess of uric acid and decomposition of the urine. Hemorrhage is some
times met with, caused by high state of inflammation or congestion.
There is no class of diseases a doctor is called oftener to treat than the
variety of kidney diseases, in many of which the patient will have chills or
rigors, followed by fever, a result of the kidneys failing to eliminate the uric
acid poison from the system. Such cases require the kidneys restored to
their natural functions, then the poison and foreign substances are removed
shock to tile nervous system averted and natural health restored.
I have, for some time, been usirvg Doan’s Kidney Bilks m these many
manifestations and with uniform success, curing most eases, I can further
say that even in hopeless cases where they have waited too long, Doan’s
Kidney Pills afford much relief and prolong life. I can recommend the pills
In conditions of excessive or deficient secretion of urine, as also in coma
lescenee from swamp-fever and malarial attacks, as verified by the following
eases in my practice.
CASE 1. CASE S.
Thos. Orell, Bear, .irk., age 60. Brown Eaks, Wynne, Ark., age
Pain in back for several weeks, 2 h Had severe ease of malarial
then chills, irregular sc/aetimes, hoemataria or swamp fever. Gave
severe rigors followed by fever. necessary liver medicine, ealomel
Gave good purgative of calomel and and padoph, and morph.-sulph., to
padopn, and Doan’s Kidney Pills. relieve pain, and ordered D oan’s
After taking four boxes of the pills, Pills for the high state of conges
patient of up and enjoyinggoodhealth tion and inflammation of the kid
for one his age. neys. Recovery resulted in two
weeks. Prescribed' Doan’s Kidney
CASE 2. Pills, to be costiriued until the kid
Mr.s. Smith, Tarry, Ark., age ney* and all were thoroughly strengthened
29, mother of four children. Had pain in back subsided.
female complaint and kidney CASE 4.
trouble, manifest by pain i» back
and urineirrejpular; sometimes very Elijah Elliott, Tarry., Ark.,
clear, changing'to cloudy, and with age 34. Pain in back and legs and
much sediment on standing in headache. Uric-acid poisoning. Pre
chamber. Gave local treatment for scribed Doan’s Kidney Pills After
j female complaint and prescribed taking several boxes pain subsided
Doan’s Pills; after using six boxes —urine became normal, or natural,
she regards herself as cured. and patient abl<- to resume kis work.
These are a few of the typical cases In which I have used Doan’s Kidney
Pills. In a great many instances I use them alone with curative results,
while with some others indicated, remedies are associated.
I believe that by the judicious use of Doan’s Pills many serious compli
cations are arrested and many hopeless and incurable cases of Bright’s disease
prevented.
I have often found that one box of the pills is all that is required to effect
a cure, but in some cases I continue their use until all symptoms are entirely
absent and the cure effectual and permanent. Yours truly,
Bladder A free Specific trial *f this be tfreat obtained Kidney and ad
dressing Foster-Milburn can Go., Baifalo, by
N. Y. The regular size is 30 cents per
box. If not. for sale by your druggist
®r dealer, win be sent by mail, charges Yorktown, Auk.
A onrece p* 01 price-
Newspaper Titles.
The multiplicity ot newspapers has
not given rise to many new titles. The
old names are used over and over
again. There are seven newspaper
titles each of which has over 100 ad
j herents in the United Kingdom. x\d
vertlser is the favorite; there are 160
newspapers of that description. Times
comes next with 150; News, with 149;
i 1 Gazette, with 128; Chronicle, with 120;
Herald, with 119, and Journal, with
104. The Expresses, Guardians and
Observers muster over fifty each.
There are forty-eight Standards and
5 only thirty-eight Telegraphs.—Ex.
ot So Xao,
On an average five editors a week are
sent to prison in Germany for the
crime of lose majeste. Taking corn, i
cord wood and potatoes for subscrip
tions, in the United States, isn’t so bad, '
j after all,
, Deafness Cannot Ue Cured
by local applications as they cannot reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There is only one
way to cure deafness, and that is by consti
tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an
Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of
the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in
flamed you have a rumblingsound or imper
fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed
Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam
mation can be taken out and this tube re
stored to its normal condition, hearing will
be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten
are caused by catarrh .which is nothing but an
inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by eatarrh)thp,t can
not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for
circulars free. l f . J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c. i
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
An Astonishing Comparison.
If the newspapers circulated in the
United States in a year were printed,
j in book form they would make 4,U00,
000,000 121no. volumes.
i IN NO DANGER.
Naggsby—'They t&ll me that a little
learning is a dangerous thing.
Waggsby—Never mind. You’re still
a long way.back of the danger line.—
Baltimcre American.
SOMETHING LEFT.
First Financier—'We are going to
cut the dividend on “Hcop stock.”
Second Financier— Why, I had no
idea that you had disposed of it all.—
Brooklyn Life.
1 HIS BREACH OF PROMISE.
Lawyer—So you Wcant to sue your
j husband for breach of promise?
j Client—Yes, sir. He promised me
a 3 ealsldn coat, and all he gave me
: was an imitation. Detroit Free Press.
BARNYARD WISDOM.
Said the' rooster in the barnyard
To the rooster on the vane:
I’m a mighty knowing fellow
At predicting when ’twill rain.
I For I cast ray eye upon you
And observe which way it blows.
Then I rouse tile farmer’s family
With my most sagacious crows.”
So, to gain a reputation,
And to quaff of fortune's cup.
You will find the plan a good one—
Have a friend that's higher up.
Elaine McLandburga Wilson, in
Life.
HANDICAPPED.
Dorothy—Penelope is a frightfully
fluent talker; I couldn’t get a word
in edgewise.
Theodore—Oh, that was only be
cause you let her get the first start.—
L*if9,
HARD LUCK.
t * Poor Miss Pscadds! They say she
drew a blank in the matrimonial lot
tery. < >
“Worse than that. She drew an as
sessment. She had to pay his debts.”
—Chicago Tribune,
An important Industry.
American newspapers every year
pay in wages $50,000,000 and receive
$80,500,000 for subscriptions and $95,
000,000 for advertisements.
FITS permanently cured. No fite or nervous
ness after first day's use of Py. Kline s Great
NervcPestorer. -tZ ti ialbottleand treatiselreo
Dr. K. H. Kune,L td., 131 Arch bt.. Pbiin.,Fti
The number of elephants in the world i*
fast decreasing.
The l T . 8. Dppt. of Agriculture
C : ves to Saizer’s Gats its heartiest en
aorseir.ent. b’alzer's New National Oats
yielded -in 1003 from ISO to 303 bu. ntx
acre in 30 different States, and you, Mr.
Farmer, can beat this in 1904, if you will.
Saizer’s s_eds are pedigree seeds, bred up
through careful selection to big yields.
Per Acre.
FaTzer’s Beardless Barley yielded (21 bu.
Salzer's Home Builder Corn.... gOO bu.
Speltz and Mncarftmi Wheat.... 80 bu.
Saizer’s Victoria Rape.......... 60.000 lbs.
SaberN^Teosinte, Xr’7Wio'n the fodder ‘’ 160.900 lbs
s Do'liar‘Grass 50.KW lbs.
Sa’zer's Pedigree Potatoes ...... 1,000 bu.
Now «uch yields nay and you can have
them, Mr. Farmer, in 1994.
SEND 10e. IN ST A MI’S
snd this notice to the John A. Salzer Seed
Co., La Crosse. AVis.. and you will get the ,r
big catalog and lots of farm seed samp.es
free. [A.C.L.]
The petroleum wells of Russia average
900 feet; those of the United Stales 500
feet.
'