The Lee County journal. (Leesburg, Ga.) 1904-19??, April 22, 1904, Image 6

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A | v n o ~,,;~,~) . e ‘*% % z “Py 9 %R A .r’ : . s 1& ': m""tfil ‘ i . . BNt B 0 VT SR e o A "' R P §o o (W e i 0 R"‘ R T bit \"vf i i':‘vlg ‘ f"f'{"af_ : 'l“‘s}\' !v\t‘ - vluw}“l‘ P S . it G o \\\* WTR e '&\ flo.: GOt S ) "v," {7 .“ ; G‘fi{\"i ”"“f;',,"‘"; \ ..." ;;'f' ‘..0 ! /.0 ‘.'.u.‘?x;m" k R oy . * § "‘: . W e f A : Rg J § 747 k -Ei Bl %, \ eyt 0 ; Lied (SRS A%t - SAR i \;f"’ A ‘%‘3; § '; "-::'.';-_i. ,f; / ‘“1;"?."51:."5 '.":'::,‘;7? [{,fi‘\#' § A ! Lt &t . To be a successful wife, to retain the love and admiration of her husband should be a woman'’s constant study. Mrs. Brown and 1 - ® Mrs. Potts tell their stories for the benefit of all wives and mothers. " HIAB Mnrs. Pingmaum:— Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com roun will make every mother well, strong, healthy and happy. I dragged hrough nine years of miserable existence, worn out with pain and weariness. I then noticed a statement of a woman troubled as I was, and the wonderful results she had had from your Vegetable Compound, and decided to try what it wonld do for me, and used it for three months. At the end of that time I was a different woman, the nelghbors remarked it, and my husband fell in love with me all over again. [t seemed like a new existence. I had been suf lorin! with inflammatiom and falling of the womb, but gour medicine eured that and budlt u% my entire system, till I was indeed like a new woman. — Bincerely yours, Mns. Cuas. F. BRowN, 21 Cedar Terrace, Hot Springs, Ark., Vice President Mothers™ Club.” Suffering women should not fail to profit by Mrs. Brown’s ex errncoa; fust as surely as she was cured of the trowbles enumer %te in her letter, just so surely will Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ompound cure other women who suffer from womb troubles, Mmflammation of the ovaries kldneg troubles, nervous excltabillt¥ sndmnervous prostration. Read the story of Mrs. Potts to a i moshers: — LIS A L 5Vi "PR v ,‘ : ; “".\-,. N ‘ .6 STI 30 8N : A, " PR AN o 8 £t ey ,;p . s " o, ! : il R SR T%\*@’_‘:‘fl', *l " }"“'thf" £ P hAS oy 3 LA R & sl i RS a 0 one fhiahy XAT Dt A SRR R e A Sl TN e o‘# :,;S.‘?m iy \%’ d "Q{,',‘,_% phi 2 g 5,*. Sy $ Poa oy *.t.’,‘,;,gh . Y ) YaNE s . S ’vv\‘“j":‘!::,-"\i-';f; . - S 0 M :_L i ¥ '.R’:H; ':\‘-.-;;'_‘l‘ PR s eG SR ? it f‘-’: N g & ".:)::S'»;:‘:""‘lj'::’:;:‘:{;“‘ N bR ERe Y £RN e R o #A"‘i\ o P A ALy ERRERACR SN R SR SR oLR e RN W L S > - Oy SecEßßagt )1 f (/[ 1 S R o L b ¥ SRR ) iAI (¥R iNy M IR AT T ey ' I LR '\‘\"._llé;;;\“. ,\.fi.i: A/ SRR A £1 A 5 = A “‘tf“.’ B ol FL R 5 ¢ RS Ep) . MSSERE TN Soaty S v ~,\,),‘\,s“‘\"\. “(_ RV A (. iOO 2ty GO RS R \ SR s A R T B 5 E TR D 1 R N O / S S 'A_-;‘.‘. y RN g .*uly;::?:;.\h i ham, Lynn, Mass,, and you will be advised free of charge. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has-cured and 1s curing thousands gfecases of female troubles — curing them inexpensively and absolutely. member this when you go to your druggist. Insist upon getting Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. ELECTRIC FLUID. The great pain extractor; cures rheumatism, neuralgia, colie, cramps and all aches and pain. Nothing like it. Try a bottle. Save doctor’s bills. Ask your druggist to get it, or send to 7Y W. C. HUGHEN, Atlanta, Ga. Agents wanted,; big pay. b CURED N Gives ey Quick J ) Relief. M Removes all swelling in Bto2o days; effects a permanent cure in 30to 6o days. Trialtreatment \/ | given free. Nothingcan be fairer ebiad Y Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons Specialists, Box B Atianta, da. o “ DEAR MRS, PivgEAM : — During the early art of my married life I was very delicate Fn health. Ihad two misgarriages, and both my husband and I felt very badly as we were anxious to have children. A neighbor who had been using Lydia E. ankham's Vegetable Compound advised me to try it, and I decided to do so. I soon felt that my appetite was increasing, the headaches gradually decreased and finally disagpeufied, and my qenoral health improved. felt as if new blood coursed through my veins, the sluggish tired feelin q disappeared, and I be came strong and well. “IVVithin a yoar after I became the mother of astrong healthy child, the goy of our home. You certainly have a splendid remedy, and I wish every mother knew of it.— ancerelx gours, Mgs. ANNA Porrs, 510 Park Ave., Ho prings, Ark.” If vou feel that there is anything at all unusual or puzzling aboutg’our case, or if you wish confldential advice of the most experienced, write to Mrs. Pink- THE AMATEUR ARTIST. Amateur—This is my latest attempt at a landscape. May I ask you what you think of the perspective? Artist—The perspective is its strong point. The further away you stand the better it looks.—Chicago Tribune. G(ANG THE ROUNDS. Miranda—l accepted Mr. Mashleigh last night, and he is going to get the engagement ring today. Muriel—Oh, he already has it. I returned to him this morning the one he gave me.—Life, L Waterproof Cloth. It has usually been <“hought that rubber was about the only substance which would render 7’ oth waterproof, althcugh oil silk is coated with an other one, a prepsration of linseed oil. However, “showerproof” cloth is known as that which repels water very largely awrd yet remains porous, appearing in 41l respects like ordi nary wetable cloth. The methods of treatment of such cloth are often trade secrels, and even the patent specifications do not divulge all that must be done to achieve a satisfactory result, “Petroleum,” a German periodical, says that the oil to which that paper owes its name is one of the most suc cessful showerproof preparations. It says that the only reliable shower proof is obtained by impregnating the cloth outside and in with a fine film of waxes. Paraffin wax is the staple, but, owing to its low melting point it is not fit for use alone. The compo sition used is so alloyed with other waxes and chemicals that at the boil ing point of water the wax stands firm. A rather elaborate preparatory form must be gone through, and after the wax has been applied a finishing process is required. The interesting fact remains that it is petroleum that keeps out,the wet. In tailors’ win dows in Germany many aquatic dis plays hav2 been arranged to show that cloths caa mysteriously be made to exhibit the power of the duck’s back. Wool, cutton, silk, linen, velvets, braids and even sails, awnings and tent cloths are thus wrapped in an invisible t:lm of rock oil. Whales and Codfish Scarce. The appearance of a real whale anywhere along the North Atlantic coast is an event these days. Like the buffalo or bison of the Western plains the whale is almost extinct. It is no longer profitable to send out ships, and the result is that whale bone has practically vanished. Many satisfactory substitutes for whale ocil and whalebone have recently been put on the market. Another popular denizen of the sea which is no longer sought is the codfish. The scarcity of cod liver oil, a great tonic for per spons with weak lungs, is owing not to the fact that fewer codfish are caught, but that the fish have little or no livers any more. This is thought to be caused by lack of sufficient nourishment, as the tiny sea creatures on which the cod feed are disappear ing from the Norwegian waters. The livers of the fish, when caught, are found to be shriveled badly and in some cases totally lacking. Where formerly it took about fifteen thou sand cod to make a barrel of cod liver oil, it now requires at least forty thou sands. : A Collie Dog's Strategy. A remarkable addition to the list of stories indicating animal intelli gence comes from Ithaca, New York, the seat of Cornell University. A col lie belouging to Prof. W. F. Durand and a bull terrier belonging to Dr. L. Coville had long been enemies, and had fought many battles, in which the terrier was usually vietorious. On January Bth the foes met again near the edge of the Fall Creek Gorge, where the precipice drops 100 feet vertically. The collie, finding itself overmastered, ran to the verge of the cliff. 'The terrier followed, and, ac cording to eye-witnesses, the collie circled about until, seizing an oppor tunity, it deliberately pushed its en emy over the edge. The terrier was dashed to death on the rocks below, and the victor, after peering down at the bedy of his fallen foe, trotted away with head and tail aloft. The philanthropy of some men con sists of giving a dollar to charity and spending ten to advertise the fact, In the Baltic Bea there are more wrecks than in any other place in the wordd. CONCERNED. : “This year,” said Mr. Biggleson, “we are going to save up at least one third of my income.” “Have you decided yet what people are to go without their pay?” his wife asked. OVER THE BREAKFAST TABLH. “Rubber is going up.” . “Good enough; I hope it will get so high that butchers can't afford to put #t in the beefsteaks.”—Cincinnati Commerclal-Tribune. FITS permanently cured, No fits ornervous. pess after first day’s ussof Dr, Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer.:2trial bottleand treatiseiree Dr.R. H. Kuing, Ltd., 931 Areh Bt., Phila., Pa Reciprocity is the art of exchanging something you don’t want for something you do. Mrs, Winslow’s Soothing Syrup forehildren {eething, soften the gums, reducesinflamma tion allays pain,cureswind colie. 25¢. abottle What a jolly old worid this would be if all men practised what they preach! oOld Sofas, Backs of Chairs, etc., can be dyed with Pur~xam FaDELESS DYES. Love may intoxicate a man, but marriage sobers him, I do not belleve Pizo’s Cure for Consumpe tion has anequal for coughs and colds.—JoEN F.Boyer, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb, 15, 1900, Two often cease to be company after they are made one, A Lighting and Water. "~ s It is practically impossible to causeé an electric spark of high electrometive force to leap from one surface of a liquid to another. ¥or this reason it is rare that lightning strikes the surface of water. v : How’s This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. Crexey & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F.J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transac tions and financiaily able to carry out any obligations made‘l%y their firm. WesT & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, To ledo, O, WaLpive, Kixyax & MarviNy, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing direotly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, Tbe. Yer bottle. Sold by all Druggists. ‘Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation Has Right tb Pray for Japan, At least one man in Missouri piously, prays that victory may perch on the banner of the Jap in the war now be ing wvaged. This is Colonel John So bieski, of Richmond, lineal heir of King John Sobieskl, of Poland. o WOMEN BREAK DOWN, Sometimes women drift into a con dition of “half invalid.” Continual’ languor-—all tired out, run down, back- L DO"Q ache, nerves shattered, g e»f"‘*’;‘ KID'?,‘NS headache, terrible pain, ’Na‘ffi P|u§Y no appetite, poor diges »adh{CUßE tion. Inninecasesout of /@ 8%, B ten it's because the kid g 6 neys fail to do their work B ACHWG of filtering the poisonous i BACKS system waste from the Lo (" Dlood. The kidneys are g .;;fj;;g’m weak and need the R V»‘.,;5~ strengthening help of e Doan’s Kidney Pills. s Read how these pills ) repair a weakened phy- R SRR sical condition when R ; this condition is caused by sick kidneys. Mrs. Sadie Mettles, of 394 W. 4th Ave,, Columbus, Ohio, says: “Prior to the year 1898 I suffered comsiderably from backache, pain in the head, lan guor and depression and weakness of the action of the kidneys. The pain was always worse in the morning and I felt miserable. I was induced to pro. cure a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills and I began their use. They proved prompt and effective. They cured me, and there bas' been no return of the trouble since taking them. I owe all the credit to Doan’s Kidney Pills.” A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney medicine which cured Mrs. Mettles will be mailed on application to any part of the United States. Address Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N, Y. For sale by all druggists, price 50 geuts s