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e ! e W R TR N e
Our money winning books,
written by men who know, tell
you all about
They are needed by every man
who owns a field and a plow, and
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of them.
They arefree. Send postal card,
CERMAN KALI WORKS
New York--98 Nassau Street,
Atlanta, Ga-g—l;wfé Ro. Broud St
* ® ® @
Of Torturing, Disfiguring
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Every child born into the
world with an inherited or
early developed tendency to
torturing, disfiguring humors
of the Skin and Scalp, becomes
an object of the most ténder
solicitude, not only because of
its suffering, but because of the
dreadful fear that the disfigu
ration is to be lifelong and mar
its future happiness and prose
perity. Hence it becomes the
duty of mothers of such affiict
ed children to acquaint them
selves with the best, the
purest, and most effective
treatment available, viz.: the
CUTICURA Treatment, con
sisting of warm baths with
CUTICURA Soap, and gentle
anointings with CUTICURA
Ointment, the great Skin Cure.
Cures made in childhood are
speedy, permanent and eco
nomical.
mgo, . Rervant 8 (13 o o Chosjte Coted
Roace Or. 1 Birie,§ Bos de 3 Take s Bonarn i o
st fot ok b Cute Torincsns. Dldrering
Bumors from Infancy to Ags.”
The Japanese Proverb. ;
“Roses have thorns” and Walls
have ears” are as common in the Jap- i
anese speech as in our own. We say
“More haste lest speed,” but the Jap
anese phrase it. “If in a hurry go
round.” In this countiry we very of
ten remark that “Accidents will hap
pen in the best-regulated families.”
The Japs, on the other hand, with an
eye to the picturesque, vitalize it, so
to speak, in their “Even a monkey
scmetimes falls from a tree.” One of
our useful English sayings is, “Those
who play with edged tools must ex
pect to cut their fingers.” In express
ing a similar thought the Jap goes
us one better so far as picturesque
ness is concerned. He says, “If you
keep tigers vou are likely to have
trouble.” One of our standard maxims
is to the effect that “Oil and water
won’t mix.” The Japs have not im
proved on this. “You can’t rivet a
nail in a custard” is their way of put
ting it. “The lotus springs from the
mud” is their poetical expression of
the common thought that “Out of evil
good may come.”
What could be more suggestive and
at the same time so poetic as their
“Scattering a fog with a fan?” When
a Jap undertakes the impossible his
neighbors do not scoff at him or mock
him. They simply say that he is
“Building bridges to the clouds,” or
that he is “Dipping up the ocean with
2 shell.” Failure in such a country
must be as delightful as success in our
more material land. “Thine own heart
makes the world” is worthy of Emer
son or Browning.—Rochester Post-
Express.
French Grace Darling.
The French Grace Darling—other
wise Rose Here, the fisherwoman—
becomes not less heroic as later and
fuller accounts of her exploits at Ush
ant reveal the extent of her daring
and bravery.
i She was gathering shelifish on the
;rocks near the Pyramide du Runion,
'when out of the fog she heard des
pairing cries, and looking seaward
perceived a boat containing fourteen
men which was drifting wildly at the
mercy of the strong currents among a
mass of dangerous reefs.
The occupants of the boat, afraid to
throw themselves into the sea on ac
count of the swift tide, plied their
oars with the courage of despair and
shouted at the top of their voices for
assistance.
Rose ran down to the foot of the
cliffs, and without losing a moment
plunged into the boiling surf, dressed
as she was, and ,swam to the boat.
Climbing on board., she reassured
the sailors as best she could, for she
speaks little French, and then, taking
her place at the rudder, steered the
boat with marvelous adroitness past
dangerous reefs to Pen-ar-Rock, dis
tant about two hours by rowing from
the Pyramide du Runion.
Rose Here is so poor that the Brit
ish consul at Brest has started a sub
scription for her. But she is obvi
ously rich in somethinzg more valua
ble than money.
A Rich Gold Strike.
One of the strikes of gold quartz
lately made in British Columbia con
gists of a veritable network of ore.
The United States consul at Rossland
says that when a sample as large as
a cocoanut is broken up the fragments
are held together by the network of
gold running through the rock. The
prospectors who found this vein broke
off a piece of rock from a ledge on
Poplar creek and the gold held the
particles together as in a chain. The
ore is very rich, some of it yielding
thousands of dollars to the ton.
In the first two months of the year,
exports from France amounted to
$135,853,800, a decrease of $642,000 from
last year. Imports during that period
were $155,963,000, an increase of $901,-
400 over 1903. _
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Miss Agnes Miller,”of Chicago, speaks
to young women about dangers of the
o o *
Menstrual Period — how to avoid pain and
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suffering and remove the cause by using
: : ’s Vegetable Co d
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
«To Youne Wouen:—l suffered for six years with dysmenor
rhea (painful periods), so much so. that I dreaded every month, as 1
knew it meant three or four days of intense pain. The doctor said
this was due to an inflamed condition of the uterine appendages caused
by re;ieated and neglected colds. 5
“If young girls only realized how dangerous it 18 to take cold at
this critical time, mach suffering would Le spared them. Thank God
for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, that was the only
medicine which helped me any. Within three weeks after I started to
take it, I noticed a marked improvement in my Agex}er_al' health, and at
the time of my next monthly period the pain had diminished consider
ably. I kept up the treatment, and was cured a month later. lam like
another person since.l am in perfect health, my eyes are brighter, I have
added 12 pounds to my weight, my color is good, and I feel light and
happy.”— Miss Aanxes MiLLER, 26 Potomac Ave., Chicago, IIL
The monthly sickness reflects the condition of a woman’s
health. Anything unusual at that time should have prompt
and proper attention. Fifty thousand letters from women prove
that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound regulates men=
struation and makes those periods painless,
READ WHAT MISS LINDBECK SAYS:
T “Dear Mgrs. PINKHAM : — Lydia E. Pink-
R e ham’s Vegetable Compound has greatlg bene
-0% (f 178 % ~fl' v .
¢ “,\o\\ R fitted me. 1 will tell you how I suffered. MK
(¢ e oS, trouble was painful menstruation. I felt as eac
ST o month went by that 1 was gettm%worse. I had
S~ B severe bearing-down pains In my back and abdo
;\‘ o Q ,“.' \, men. - ; 3 i
A b 7 “ A friend advised me to try Mrs. Pinkham’s
o 8 v f* medicine, I did so and am now free from all
@B~ A pain during my periods.” — Jessie C. LINDEECK,
g 2 »\/ 2 1201 6th Street, Rockford, Il
5 'fi\ = 4‘/ ! y
e o FREE ADVICE TO WOMEN.
? /% , l { /|5 Remember, every woman is cordially
e invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham if there
'l7 { is anything about her symptoms she does
Hoide ) not uncerstand. Mrs. Pinkham’s address is
Lynn, Mass., her advice is free and cheerfully given to every ail
ing woman who asks for it. Her advice has restored to health
more than one hundred thousand women. Why don’t you try
it, my sick sisters?
| it t forthwith produce the original lett 1 signat t
35@0 HORERIT Iwo consp) Sopehiih pooduss Sor oin i AWk oo
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mags,
Sweat, Itch, Blister? ROYAL FCOT WASH cures them. Removes
FEET HURT odors of feet, armpits, etc.: stops chafing. If not at druggists
send 25¢ to EATON DRUG CO., ArLanTa, Ga., for full size, post
paid: sample for 2cstamp. One application proves it- merit. Money back if not satisfled.
shit. STORE FRONTS
(2 T 2 EARZIZIER | For ]l kinds and sizes of Store Bulldtng‘;. -We furnish all materiul enterin
B gSh g| | 3 @ fen into the construction of Store Fronte. Write us about your proposed bulltfi
| _l_ ! ! ! , fuw and state dimensions and st?e%!rontmdwewill send you, FREE OF
i Sl R Jew CHARGE, an elegant Blue Print Plan, and quote you an extremely low
“;‘i;z"jti gezroed) price on one of our popular
oo v I e Beautiful, Everlasting
. i ol > . W 11 the style of 1 t N
l.l{{{“.‘.,d“l‘ gboiti‘_;x:(x)%:g;g ftr;)nnotgerlt: m?. ygn:’:dtm«rst(/}"et:h?“:.egau g S -
e eyt SOUTHERN FOUNDRY CO., Owensboro, Kentucky
i es uss Thompson's Eye Water
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