The Lee County journal. (Leesburg, Ga.) 1904-19??, October 28, 1904, Image 7

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o (e - B LRI N AT @ — AN R A 69 : ) SR SR S ‘{ U Y) 20 I Nagmn e N FIBROID TUMORS CURED. Mrs. Hayes’ First Letter Appeal ing to i,irs. Pinkham for lgg‘ip 3 *“ DEAR MBS, PINKHAM :~—l have been under Boston doctors’ treatment for a long time without any relief. They tell me I have a fibroid tumor. I can not Bit down withont great pain, and the soreness extends up my siine. I have be_arin%-(down, pains. both back and front. My abdomen is swollen, sand I have had flowing spells for three years. My apgetite is notfood. I can not walk or be on my feet for any length.of time. : “The symptoms of Fibroid Tumor siven in your little book accurately escribe my case, so I write to you for advice.” — (BSigned) Mrs. E. F. gln*ms, | 252 Dudley St. (Roxbury), Boston, Mass. ; Mrs. Hayes” Second Letter: “DeAr MRS, PINKHAM : — Sometime ago I wrote to you deseribing my symp toms and: asked yonr advice. You re plied, and I followed all {Om direc tions carefully, and to-day I am a well woman, g “The use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound entirely ex pelied the tumor and strengthened my whole system. I can walk miles now. “Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound is worth five dol lars'a drop. I advise all women who are afflicted with tumors or female trouble of any kind to giveita faithful trial.” — (Signed) Mrs. E. F. HAYEs, 252 Dudley St. (Roxbury), Boston, Mass. - §BOOO forfeit if original'c}y above letters proving genulneness cannot be produced SUCCESSORS TO y AVERY & McMILLAN, 81-58 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga . ~ALL KINDS OF— , i | MACHINERY et e—— B , ] i /Ax.\ 'fivf:/,-,_}_ 2 WS {bl l’(‘\“ //‘&\ ‘ K LA .08l e~ Qflb//‘l" stk "';?"‘/4‘1"‘?'.3"’ ’ . Bds A _,.:—-,«-bl‘&: ;._ # 4 Reliable Frick Engines, Bollers, ail Sizes. Wheat Separators, \J ‘- 9 : et o 18R D _ s N R oL ] Bg, & e el Me G el i;. ,_‘v % ~ * ;' X BEST IMPROVED SAW MiILL ON-EARTH. Large Engines and Boilers supplied promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills, Clreular Saws,Baw Teeth,Patent Dogs, Bteam Governors, Full |ine Engines & t Mlill Supplies, Send for free Cata'ogue | —_— e WORLD'S FAIR ST. LOUIS. | ——— s Louisville and Nashville Rallroad. i It you are golng to the World’s Fair you | want the best rcute. The L. &N. Is ihog shortest, quickest and best line. Three trains daily. ‘Through Pullman Sleeping | QOars and Diniug Cars. Low Rats ’l‘iolmtul gold daily. Get rates from your locsl agent ’ and ask for tickets via L. &N. Storovea ' Arrowep AT MAMMOTH OAVE. l All kinds of informatfon furnished on ap- | plication to J. G. HOLLENBECK, Digt. Pass. Agont, Atlanta, Ge. [- - A New Preparation. { A new method of employing ra ~dlum in medicine has recently been ~discovered by a Russian physiclan; ‘Dr. E. 8. London, and consists of using cotton wool which has been submitted to the action of the ra dium emanation. Dr. Loadon, as the result of the series of experiments, has reached the conclusion that the effects ¢f the radium emanation and of the direct actiom <f the radium are. the same, consisting of an in flammation on th 2 skin and the de struction of life. He subjected a ‘number of substances, including _cork, paraffin, paper and cotton woal, to radium emanation, and found that they would produce inflammatory _effects on the skin. - The wool, owing to its spongy nature, seemed to ab ‘sorb the largest quantity of the ra ‘dium emanation, and consequently ~was the most radioactive. Accord ingly, Dr. London carried on further experiments with wool so treated, which he found was most convenient for easy distributicn over the body and ready applidation at any desired point. - The “emanated” wool, when packed in hermetically sealed jars or-other containing vessels, loses its radioactivity very slowly, and can be sent to apy distance desired.—Har per’'s Weekly. : Kruger's View of Australians. A story told in sporting circles of the late President Kruger during the early days of the South African war shows the simpleity of the old Boer leader, according to the New Haven Palladium. When the first Austra lian contingent arrived at Cape Town Mr. Kruger is said to have asked General Joubert if he Lknew any thing about these Australians. I only know that 11 of them once beat All England.” . “Good Heavens!” cried the Presi dent, “we are lost! Thirteen thou sand of them have just landed.” MUTUAL SACRIFICE. The Maid—When two people are really in love they are each anxious to make some great sacrifice to prove their devotion. The Bachelor—That explains it. The Maid—Explains what? The Bachelor—The origin of ma riage.—Chicago News. Rocks, The man of substance was proud to be mentioned in connection with go high an office, but he would not be a candidate. “This rock,” he exclaimed, pointing to a great granite bowlder, “shall fly from its firm base as soon as mine—-" Here the committee of notification withdrew, perceiving that their mis sion was hopeless.—Puck. 2 Beware of Olntments For Catarrii That Contain Mercary, asmeroury will surely destroy the sense o! smell and completely derange the wholesys tem when entering it through the muocous surfaces. Sucharticlesshould never beused except on prescriptions from reputable phy sicians, as the damage they will do is ten to{d to the fi)od you c¢an possibly derive from them, Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufaetured: by F. J. Cheney & Co,, Toledo, 0., contains no merecury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucoussurfaces ofthesystem., Inbuying Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine, It is taken in ternally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J.Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold by Druglgists; price, 75¢. per bottle. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation, Labor-Saving Hand Organs, Labor-saving devices have got to the hand organs at last, says the New York Sun. In one of the latest, in stead of the organ man turning the crank, he presses a button. The music plays on till he releases his finger. The music is sweeter than that of other or- | gans and it can be heard blocks away. | 1,000 lenand Women to Try $6.00 Worth of Samples Free, Send no money. Only send your name ic W. C. HUGHEN. Atlanta, Ga. % PN g YTAS B I Y 5T & = fi.;\t!h’:’s - i > USE OF GASOLINE. Gasoline is most efficacious as @ cleansing agent when it is warmed by being set into vessel of hot water. which has, of course, b:en removed from the stove. It is useful also to soap the article to be clcansed, usiag the gasoline just as if it were water. A FOLDING CHAFING DISH. By all means take a folding chafing dish along in the trunk. The space actually occupied by the dish is ali it will need, as the legs and -other etceteras all pack inside it. Lots of dainties can be concocted, given one of these useful things, and they come in especially handy for people intend ~mg to spend a vacation in the moua tains where cooking conveniences are absent from the coltages. CABBAGE AND ONIONS. ~ To avoid disagreeable odor caused by cooking cabbage, chop or shred as for slaw and let stand in cold water for fifteen minutes. Drain, cover with boiling water and cook ten or fifteen | minutes, when it should be tecader. ' Drain, add milk, thicken with a iittle flour or cornstarch, season to taste {with salt pepper and butter. This gives a delicate flavor, and the odor { is .scarcely perceptible. . .Onioas pre t,pared in this way, after boiling, may he creamed, or browned in butter or | cooking-oil. BAKED ICE CREAM. The French call baked ice cream by the more elegant name of meringue glace. It is only an ordinary ice cream, covered completely with a meringue. Make about a quart of sim ple vanilla or caramel cream, and when it is formed into a smooth mould in tae freezer and stiff enough to keep | its shape perfectly. turn it out on a | high fruit dish of china, one with a standard. An ordinary dish, or plat ter, will not do, because the bottom of the dish, where the ice cream rests, '} must not touch the oven suaelf.- If it | does the heat will peacrate and melt l the cream. When the cream is turned ' out 0n to the dish cover it thickly with | a meringue made of the whites of six or seven e€ggs, and six tablespoonfuls of powdercd sugar. Care should be taken that every particle of tic cream ifs completely covered with the mer ingue, and this work should bz done fn a very cold place, so that the cream will have no place to meit, There should be 'no place about the meringue where the heat of the oven can get through to the cream. Put the dish in an oven, which should be hot ennough to brown the meringue suffi ciently in five minutes. It chonid be oaly slightly browned. Whites of eggs are perfect noa-conductors of heat, aad if cgre is taken the crcam itself will come from the oven per fectiy firm and cold, as it was when taken from the freezer. It should be served immediately. Thisz good old rule makes an interesting novelty af children’s parties, for children are al ways particularly delighted over the idea of eating an ice cream that has been haked. The thought of the con tradiction of terms pleases them more than any superiority of flavor. HOUSEWIFE HINTS. Most of the high grade pressed glass now on the market is so nicely got up that it can be given the bril liancy of cut-glass with a trifling ex ertion. A weekly cleaning with cas tile soap suds, followed with powder, then a daily rubbing with chamois, is | all that is necessary. ’ A bolt of cheese cloth should be as | essential a feature of the young house- i keeper’s menage as the bolt of home- | spun linen was of grandmother’s. , Nothing makes better dusters; it | serves as glass and china toweling, and i is an ideal fabric for the dish cloth. i The woman who either from choice ! T mecemty 1s ner own: “mald” cam. make dishwashing as beneficial to her: “ands as a manicure treatment.. None ‘but the very best toflet soap should be Ised and the water but lukewarm. he scalding which the dishes after ward require can be done without yroximity of her hands, as this is the only thing that makes them red. A pointed brush is the only one with which tufted furniture ecan be properly cared for. To attempt to do without it i 3 the most extravagant aconomy, since moths delight in tak ‘ng up their abode in the little nests of dust which can not be dislodged by a round ¢nd brugh or whisk broom. An “emergency bag” is in reality a colleaticn ¢f compartments which the mother of a young family will do well to keep where it can be got at readily. In one all the soft woran-out linen handkerchiefs should be tucked. An-. “other may contain absorbent cotton, | RECIPES. - Banana Shortcake—Make a rich biscuit crust, bake in jelly cake { tins not too thick layers. When done, split opem with forks and butter while } hot, three layers being enough for one cake. The two bottom layers and one top make the best shape. Take about three good-gized thoroughly ripe ba nanas and shred finely with a fork. Spread a layer of the fruit on the crust, adding the least bit of salt, and sprinkle well " with powdered sugar. ' Add the next layer in.the same way. 'On the last one spread fruit very thickly, well mixed with sugar, so as ; to- form a sort of icing. Serve with soft custard flavored with vanilla. - Chow Chow.—Half a peck green tomatoes, two laige heads of cabbage, Pfiftee‘n good-sized onions, twenty-five cucumbers, one pint horse-radish, half ’fa. pound mustard seed (white), one ounce celery seed, one ounce tur l meric, half a teacupful ground black ~pepper. Cut the tomatoes, cucum bers, onjons and cabbage small, and pack, them in salt for one night. In the moiraing drain the salt off, and lay them in vinegar and water for a day or two, then drain them again. Boil the spices in half a- gallon of vinegar, ' with three pounds brown sugar, and pour it over while hot, Repeat this ’ for three days, then mix five ounces i musiard. and half a pint of the best salad oil. Add two quarts more of vinegar when the pickle is coid, ~“his is good to eat in two mcaths. . ~ Chocolate Ice Cream. —One quar iter squere of chocolate, one table _spoonful of sugar, one tablespconful of boiling water, one-third cupful of thin cresm, a few grains of salt and two drors of vanilla. Melt chocolate in small saucepan placed over hot water, ajdd sugar and bhoiling water gradually, stirring constantly. Pour on slow.y the cream, add salt and vanilla, {hen freeze. Raspb:rry Ice.—Three tablespoon ful of sugar, one cupful cf raspber ries, on:*third cupful f water, one teaspooniul of lemon juice. Sprinkle raspberrizs with sugar, cover and let stand oile. hour; then mash and squeeze through cheesecloth to ex press as ‘much juice as possible. Add lemon juice and freeze. Strawberry ice is made in the same way as rasp berry, ice, the quantity of sugar de pending tpon the acidity of the fruit. Huckleberry Loaf Cake—Sift two cupsfuls of flour with two heaping teaspoonful of baking powder and ¢ quarter teaspoonful of salt. Cream a cupful of butter with two ~upfuls of powdered sugar, stir in the heaten yo.ks of four eggs, a half pint of sweet milk, a half teaspoonful each of powdered nutmeg and cinnamon, and the stiffened ‘whites of the four eggs added alternately with the sifted flour. ILaast of all stir in lightly a qguart of huckleberries thickly dredgea with flour. Turn into a greased mould with a funnel in the center and bake. The dehased condition of the peo ple of Russia is shown by their ac ceptance as “mercies’ of the Czar of the rights which a people worthy of freedom ~would take without asking » his leave declares the Brooklyn Eagle.