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Miss Rose Kenncssy, well
fcaown as a poetess and elocu
tionist, of Lexington, Ky., tells
tiow she was cured of uterine
inflammation and ovaritis by the
use of Lydia E. Pinkhain’s Vege
table Compound.
'** Dear Mrs. Pink ham :— For years I
enjoyed the best of health and thought
that I would always do so. I attended
part ies and receptions thinly clad, and
would be suddenly chilled, but I did
mot, think of the results. I caught a
bad cold eighteen months ago while
menstruating, and this caused inflam
mation of the womb and congested
«wrarios. I suffered excruciating pains
and kept getting worse. My attention
van called to your Vegetable Com
pound and the wonderful cures it had
performed, and I made up my mind to
try it for two months aril see what it
would do for me. W5thin one month I
felt much better, and at the close of the
second I was entirely well.
«■ 1 have advised a number of my
lady friends bo use i •i s;,i r;ii -‘-nr r
themselves as well i u.i’r-d V.'iLh ' ;3
results as I was. M Sc, r i: : . i;A
Hkssi’SKST, 41G tt r» o-t i\. uexing-
4 fixt, Ky- $5900 fnr‘- .*(* - rii/ircl of a' iw let
tbtr pnivini nrrviin>'n*x* r-- no# h*
'VANISHED 1 »' 1TIGF..
■W»:o is that?” askfd Hi bantam.
"That, M replied the bra. * min. : is the
farrwviTS goose that lays t. gold-'h
"Well, she needn’t put on t rs. At
«.-urrent market quotations the ken
*Bat lays the plain old-fashioned egg
w quite as valuable.”—Washington
Star.
BOBBY.
Bobby—Grandma, do your glasses
magrwify ?
Grandma—Yes, dear.
Bobby—Well, when you cut off my
cake will you please take them off?—
Harper’s Bazar.
Americans write about forty letters
a year, and that average equals forty
per rent, of all the letters written in
Site world.
#100 Keivaril. SilOO.
*Fh« readers of this paper will be pleased to
fmarn that there is at .least one dreaded dis
*men that science has been able to cure in ail
Sis stages!, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
€luc is the only positive cure now known to
thfs> medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con
ft&itutionai disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall 's CatarrhCure is taken* nter
wafiJy, acting directly upon the blood and mu
< sans surfaces of the system, thereby de&l roy
ingthe foundation of the disease, and gi ving
patient strength by building up the con
s«»fcuifon and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much faith in
it*curative powers that they offer One ilun
clrwl Dollars for any case that it fails to cura.
Seatl for list of testimonials. Address
F. J. Cheney <t Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
'Sake Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
Steam launches with glass bottoms
are now at the service of those who
wish to view the marine growth about
datalina Island, Cal.
Gorlland county has 19 granges,
with 1.C00 membership, The most
of them have been organized for
more than 25 years. The Pomona
-r'
’
. vz _ m. r
■
........ iW
emit !V\>
e * e
- VJfeiGlSl
Tfit- flavor of TOBACCO may be in
jured by the use of stable and rank
organic manures.
RL
in the Covin of sulphate produces yield. an
improved flavor and a good
Tobacco must have Potash.
TKir tittle book. “Tobacco Culture.” con
much valuable information, and every
V aofetoco sro-ver can obtain a copy iree of
charge by writing for it.
GERMAN KALI WORKS
ySi^m York— 11 # Xai>nuu Street, or
Atlanta, Go.—CSiD So. Broad St
L y Removes all swelling in
**’ A [ days; iii to effects 6o days. a permanent Trial
r 50 free. Nothinacau be
given D-. II. M. Orea >’$ Sons.
rrnJ'" Wr.te
Sjwib)* a, B Atmina,
■anaegaag xgj^ign g si
HOT PROTEST
FROM
Bristow Report Raises Regular
Whiriwind of Wrath
DENOUNCED IN CONGRESS
Members of Both Senate and House
are R led at Imputations of
Wrong-Doing.
A Washington special says: That
an investigation of the postoffice de
partment by the house of represen
tatives will resuit from the publication
of the report involving members of
congress in that connection, was indi
cated by every expression possible
short of a vote in that body Wednes
day. With a whirlwind of protest the
report was taken up by indignant
members, their personal connection
with it explained and epithets hurled
at Fourth Assistant Postmaster Gen
eral Bristow.
“The Bristow report was conceived
in iniquity, born in sin and has trav
eled its course until it has struck the
public of the United States as a great
attack upon a body of men as free
from wrong doing, corruption, crime
and irregularity as any equal number
of men on the face of the earth. >> Th j s
was the parting shot of Represent ab
Grosvenor, of Ohio, in paying his
hte to the report.
«i That document is the production
of a liar and a scoundrel,” shouted
Representative Hill, of Connecticut, on
making an explanation of his connec
tion with certain leases. He added
that he should vote to investigate him
self and also the fourth assistant
postmaster general.
Overstreet Defends Members.
“Theie h nothing in any of it to
impugn hny improper motive or con
duct upon any u. -fiber of the house,”
was the expression f Chairman Over
street, cf he commid e who combat
ted the idea of ar- investigation.
Mr. \yiiliams, the democratic leader,
1 urged a complete investigation the
ex
wbo* ^office department and ie
ceivc-u 'Jj? hearty applause of both
sides of tBe 'bc^SK^ud the galleries,
which h ^,.|U Ied a ring the discussion,
it whfiS®^ gPbeen j^md that the two
hours allotted to the
subW wasll going to be near
enough |lme t( he personal explana
tlons wliibh mi Irs were demanding
the right to make, and a motion to ex
tend rfie debate until 4 o'clock Thurs
i day aftij jfDn was -carried with vim.
Mr. Sept proposed a postpone
ment JI e discussion until Monday
in order to give'the members more
time. Mr. Hay, of Virginia; Mr. Fin
ley, 0 f South Carolina, and others op
posed postponement.
Mr. Hepburn, republican, of Iowa,
said that an investigation of the post
oiiiefc department would not elicit any
facts not brought out by the commit
tee report.
“I say «n investigation would elicit
further fact^and that these facts have
■ been suppressed,” retorted William
Adder SicUV amid loud applause trom
I the floor and galleries.
As to the Hay resolution, Mr. Wil
liams said it did not touch the ques
tion “that somebody at the postoffice
department has somehow included m
the report the name of man after man
in the house of representatives and m
the senate guilty of apparent wron a nr t
guilty of no violation of any law,
j guilty of no moral obliquity, guilty o f
nothing that bears even the tinge ot
criminality.” “What was the motive
of it?” he vigorously inquired. “Wasn’t
it to give the congress notice that the
department held something over con
gress and that congress had better let
the department alone?” he inquired,
his words be'ng drowned by applause
from both sides.
Mr. Cooper, of Wisconsin, declared
that President Roosevelt had directed,
the prosecution of members of his
own party.
Mr. Moon, of Tennessee, facing the
republican side, said:
These thieves being yours and not
ours, it is for you, not us, to say if
they shall have your protection. y»
POISONED SELF AND WHOLE FAMILY.
German Officer, in Fit of Melancholy,
Author of Horrible Crime.
Lieutenant Carl Beseke (retired),
citizen of Berlin, Germany, after
long and steady decay of fortune,
his fast money Tuesday and gave
splendid dinner in honor of his
old daughter’s birthday. Beseke
poisoned his wife, daughter, two
respectively 12 and 16 years old,
dets at the military academy, and him
self with cyanide of potassium,
he seemingly inserted in the mouth
each in the form of a pill after
had gone into a drunken sleep.
itfMia
I EMPRESS EUGENIE’S JEWEL3
How They Were Carried Through Irv
dia and Sold to a Native Prince.
The story of the Servian jewels
must recall to the ex-Empress Eu
j genie her own experiences w-hen the
1 waves first began to dash about her
throne. She determined to sell the
greater part of her jewels in hope to
I do something to save the dynasty.
Publiciity had to be avoided, and a
market was not to be found in Eu
i rope, newly thrilled by the horrors
I of Sedan. The Empress looked to
the East for a market. An English
| man was on his way home for a holi
day. A telegram at Bombay awaited
him from one of the greatest Eur^*
j pean financial houses and informed
j him of the determination of the Em
press. The difficulty had been to find
J a man with sufficient influence to be
able to approach the princes of In
dia in secret with a view to selling
them the jewels. Not less hard was
i it to lay hands on the man who had
moral strength sufficient to carry with
j 1 j m surr 3 ptitiously hundreds of thou
san( j s of pounds’ worth of jewels in
lands where the Queen’s writ did not
run, and where the protection of the
constable is not immediately avail
able.
i
j Every cara had been taken to in
sure secrecy. The jewels had been
taken to pieces; the gems removed
j from “jointed” their to admit settings; of their the latter
j holding
and bein^ worn around the waist of
■ their bearer in a belt of soft leather.
i Yhc Englishman put on the belt,
armed himself with a trusty revolver,
engaged a trusty awf set
-9rth on hIs miS3ion - ^ or three at-tltlia
| * lver wanr The ^ ersc ^ respoMiofUty over road, rail of %nd his
-
I trust, the tl constant <laagerj?f
: ? ry ’ th ® dlfficulty .J f ' U * P< f ms °*u 4 *
| t o ' ldll At"last ^
| succc , ssfuL xho j 3W( o 3 ware 30
a _ rince who % theip prope^of'a tl r^ mnrr
for that they
distressed W* <**’4
have bosn Do-eA.kJ'|l®L ti e
matter
but tae iaal .• Bf ; k;har Ted t.h e un -
certaking^ an
courage a kdliii, wortp
conditions hich ’merit A’gril a
story or’commerci i
j regard of enterpris^ personaS» >?$'■
; exciting k to
make popular not —St.
-
James Gazette.
■
NOT IN' PINING.
Jones—That’s my boy, Tommy. Best
football player in the high school
makes forty-yard runs every game
he plays.
Smith—What’s he looking so
t* grouchy” about?
Jones—Oh, his mohter wants him
to run an errand probably.—Judge.
ICarliest .. , _
, 4 Green ^ Onions, „
The rru John t i A. ac! balzer >eej - , o C«x. t L,v
Wis., 'always have sorvijjdriv * iley $\v. some'-’
thine valuable. This year offer
among their new moner making vegetables
an Earliest (Ireen Eating Onion. It is m
winner, Mr. Farmer and Gardener!
JUST SEND THIS NOTICE AND tfiC.
and they will send you theii big plant and
seed catalog, together with enough s. d to
grow solid Cabbages, | i-
1.000 fine,
2.000 delicious Carrots.
2.000 Blanching, nutty Celery, ¥
2.000 rich, hntterv Lettuce,
| 1.000 splendid Onions. Radishes.
1.000 rare, luscious
1.000 gloriously brilliant Flowers.
In all over 10,000 plants^—this great effpr
is made to get you to test their warranted
vegetable seeds and
ALT, FOR BUT IOC. TORTAGE.
providing you will return this notice, and
if vou will send them 20c. in postage, th^v
will add to the above a package of the fa
mous Berliner Cauliflower. fA.C.L.]
As a rule the man who isn’t afraid to
stand up for his rights imagines that he
has a right D> anything lm wants.
Mrs. WIdsIow’s SoothingSvrupfO'ro'hildren
teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma
tion allays pain,cureswind eolie. 25e. abottle
I In the production of lumber California
now holds second place among the States.
Salzer’s Earlleet Cane.
Another new thing. Gan be cut six
times during a season and sprouts again
with lightning rapidity. Next to Saber's
Teosinte it will make more green fodder
than anything else, cheap as dirt and grows
everywhere.
Of Salzer’s Renovator Grass Mixture,
just the thing for dying out pastures and
meadow, Mr. E. Rappold, East Park, Ga.,
writes, “I sowed Salzer’s Grass Mixture
on soil ‘so poor two men could not raise a
fuss on it,’ and in forty-one days after
sowing I had the grandest stand of grass
in the county. Salzer’s Grass Mixtures
enrollt barrels quickly and produce Seed enormously. ■ >
100,000 choice Potatoes.
salzer’s new NATIONAL OATS.
Here is a winner, a prodigy, a marvel,
enormously prolific, strong, healthy, vigor
ous, producing in thirty States from 150
to 300 bu. per acre. You had best sow a
j lot of it, Mr. Farmer, in 1904, and in the
fall sell it to your neighbors at $1 a bu.
for seed. [A.C.L.l
The port of New Chwang, at tire mouth
of the Liao River, is the. greatest beaa
market in the world.
! I do not believe Piso's Cure for Consump
Boa hi vs aoequai for cougos and colds.—J ohn
| F.Boykk, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1900.
J City It during cost $318,366,047 1903. to run New York
-1
; You can fio your dyeing in half an
hour with Putnam Kadki.kss Dyes.
Liverpool has closed one-third of its sa
loons during the last ten years.
4
k l
PORT ARTHUR
IMPREGNABLE
Again Japs Shell Stronghold With
out Much Damage,
AMMUNITION IS WASTED
j
i
Mikado's MeD are Determined, How
ever, to lake ihe Fort--Details of
Viadivostock Bombardment.
An Assoeiatd Brass dispatch says:
The Japanese fleet appeared off Pori
j Arthur harbor at miumght Wednes
| day night and bombarded the city in
■ termittently until 8 o’cIock
morning.
I The Russians replied to the Japan
ese fire. A message from the signal
station at 11 o’clock p. m., announced
the appearance of a Japanese squad
ron on the horizon. Fifty minutes lat
er the shore , ... batteries . opened , fire „ on
i the Japanese vessels. A gale sprang
| *
U P ail( * the attacking fleet soon with
i ^ rew -
j A dispatch from _ Tokio, v Japan, says:
j Vice Admiral Kamimura, reporting the
’ bombardment of Viadivostock on
, March 6, says the attack commenced
j at 10 minutes of z in the afternoon,
and the firing was kept up about forty
(
minutes. He believes the bombard
i to ent w-as elective and demoralizing
| to KnySian the enemy. forts did On this reply occasion Jap- the
j not to the
ar^ ?3 fire. Japanese cruisers subse
reconnoitered several adjacent
on the coast, but found no trace
t ^ e - ,nemy -
The report of vice Admiral Ka "
mimura ’ ' vho commands the second
Ja ^? eSe sq,1 f droa ' says:
Am wa reached the
enirancf i .:*^vlafiivostook on the
111 * °f througa a frozen
! S6a ’, 1 he were not seen
0utside the harboi¥ ‘'^’ approached
■
| the batteries on the nQtheast coast
i^from^a j ’ poi'nt beyonu th orange of the
me jk on the Balzaf»promontory
a lll» ( 'w ! ^ ^&rous w|er harbo^affij strait. M %r bombari
I = «: ty minutes,
, frot» NjjStS’clock afternoon,
w I keP i , the bombard
•W 04*1*1 a
c »*Ted «& Pr.derable damage.
i.g'm k rs&Were s#' fi, but the land bat
tMT^ did not repiv to our fire. Black
; sip&ke was observed at the east en
I trance to the harbor about 5 o’clock
and was thought to be from the ene
my’s ships, but this smoke gradually
disappeared.
A I On the mbralng of March 7 we re
ccnnoitered America bay and Strelok
jbay, QacM but gav/ nothing unusual. We ap
, edS'--Cb.o fiiisri entrance to Vladi
" i
, at hoot; The _ . ships
enemy s ° v °
^visible . . and batteries did
were ; . oe
riot fire. We turned toward Possiet
; bay.«tt not seeing ' the enemy ’ re
tired
s'
CllAvIc life fS GE0FSS4MGH COURT,
Associate Justice Tyrne Resigns and is
Succeeded bv Jutf#? SVW Evans.
Judge Beverly u. EAmns, of San
dersville, judge of the middle Georgia
circuit, becomes an associate justice
cf the supreme court of Georgia on
April 1 next by appointment of Gov
ernor Terrell, succeeding Associate
Justice Henry G. Turner, who tender
i ed his resignation to Governor Ter
rell Thursday, taking effect on the
date named.
The resignation of Justice Turner
and the appointment of Judge Evans
came as a decided surprise to the en
tire state.
Justice Turner has been on the su
preme bench only about eight months,
and could have had the remainder of
the unexpired term of the late Jus
tice Samuel Lumpkin without opposi
tion—a period of four years mor« from
January 1 next. He is known to have
been highly pleased with the associa
tions and with the work.
Meeting of Russian and Jap Scouts.
Russian and Japanese mounted
scouts met north of Ping Yang Thurs
day, says a cable dispatch from Tokio.
After a brief engagement the Russians
retreated. No casualties are reported
on either side.
WANT MILLIONS LOST BY TRUST.
Annual Report is Given Out by United
States Steel Corporation.
The second annual report of the
United States Steel Corporation, dated
March 1, was issued at New York Sat
urday. The statement is a volumin
ous one.
It shows that net earnings for the
year after deducting expenditures fo*
maintenance and interests on bonJs
and fixed charges of su .sidiary com
panies were $109,171,152, compared
with $133,308,763 in 1902.
The balance of net earnings for 1903
are $83,675,786, as against $108,534.-
374 in 1902.
f
A BAFFLING CASE.
| j Naggsby—And what would you S3'
if I were to tell you that mv y w 'fe an
I had been married ten years,
had had out first quarrel and
nieht? oaly last
Wages by—I might recommend SO"
form of treatment for loss of mem.
and I might tell what r?
you I ren
thought, if weren’t ?
; you in such ro
foundedly good condition.—Baltic ore
American.
I FITS permanently-cured. No fits nr nerve
! ness after }testorer.*2 first day's use of Dr. Kline's ulf r° H 41
Nerve trial bottleand treat
Dr. It. IT. Kli ne. Ltd .. 931 Arch St., Phila p
The 15,000 convicts in England cost
I 000,000 every year.
80 Bushel* Macaroni "Wheat I'er Acre
Introduced tremendous by the U. S. Dept, of a*
It is a cropper. vieMin»
, lands, good land such SO bu. per found acre, in and Mont.. on drv V;3
as are wifi THaho
the Dakotas, Colo., etc., it yield from a
JJUna'^Grieyllnd^BromurTnemis Billion Do”ar Grass, makes an an ‘ if l
and fatten hogs it possible
grow and cattle wherever
soil is found.
JUST SENT* 10c. ANT) TJTTR NOTICE
to the John A. Salzer Sml Co.. La Crow
i i Wig., ibis and Wheat they will and send other you farm free a sam' j
m seeds, to
. H-ether with their great catalog ,i nn „
?100 .00 to nnv wide-awake farmer. [A.CLi
w j t j 1 themselves to he seriously injured m
j ! an ordinary !ovc affair,
rr»e\ii
It Is the only cure for Swollen, Rmartin?
Tired, Aching, Hot. Swentim? Feet,Corns ami
Bunions. Ask for Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder
to be shaken into the shoes. Cures while von
walk. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores 25e
Don’t accept any substitute. Sample sent
Free. Address,Allen 8. Olmsted, Lefioy.N.Y
Many a man would be glad if his wife
would talk to herself.
An Unliinely Death.
An untimely death so often follows neg
lect of slight cough or cold. If Taylor's
Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mul
lein is taken in time it will prevent anv
evil results. It cures coughs, colds and
consumption.
At druggists, 2oe., 50c. and $1.00 a bottle.
Respect for the man who is a better
financier thalffi&u than yourself doesn't indicate
would be willing to let him run
your business.
h TWO OF THEM.
| May I ask.’ inquired the Melancholy |
| Ftranger, “what is your pursuit, in
life?”
“It depends.” replied Subbubs,
upon whether I’m going or coming.
It’s the 7:48 train in the morning, and
tlh-e 6:12 at night.”—Philadelphia
Press.
| j Grange has $700 in the treasury.
j The Albany Pomona Grange has
chosen as its legislative committ
! Mrs. John Houghtaling and John H r
ber, of Selkirk, W. L. Coughtry, and
Minard DeFreest, of Slingerlands,
and E. II. Chapman, of Albany.
PRIVACY.
Briggs—Tc ere go the Swathers.
They are very exclusive, I believe.
Griggs—Yes; they travel in a pr:
! va to car private cauriages and pri
vate yachts.
a I see. Everything about them is
private except their lives.” Life.
A BEGINNING. r
He—We must economize, Suppose,
darling, that, you try your hand at
making your own clothes.
She—oh. George, dear, I never’could ' j U
do that! Suppose I begin by trying
to make yours?- ■New Yorker.
RESTORED TO HEALTH.
Many weak, suffering women do not
know that their kidneys are sick.
Backache tells of sick kidneys, and so
do urinary disorders.
5 Sick kidneys make bad
# blood, and bad blood S
makes bad digestion,*
It heart palpitation, diz
zy headaches, nervous- sci- | I /
ness, sleeplessness,
atica, rheumatic j
and constant defies*
sion.
Can’t be restored to
health until the kid
neys are cured. Read
how one woman was
restored by using
Doan’s Kidney Pills:
! Mrs. H. A. Van
Siclde, fill 6th Ave., S. W., Roa toke,
Va., says: “Kidney trouble was heredi
tary In our family, and I had been disease so
continually afflicted with the
that I began to despair of even tempor
, m-y relief. Sometimes I suffered so se
verely that i was confined to my bed.
The aching in my back was intense,
and the kidney disorder caused an ex
ce ss of uric acid in my brood which im
paired my digestion. I was compelled
; t° deny myself of many of the little
delicacies of diet. The doctors diag
nosed my 'ase as congestion of the kid
neys. I bail about given up hope when,
I began using Doan’s Kidney Pills, but
I took only a few d-oses when their
curative powers were proven to my
satisfaction. I have never been with
out them hi the house since. •»
Doan's Kidney Pills are sold by a !!
dealers; price, 50 cents, or mailed on
receipt of price by Foster-Milburn Co.,
Buffalo, N. Y. Write for free trial.