Newspaper Page Text
piiicli Prince of Swindlers.
if .. er p Police Have ‘‘Count De Toulouse-Lautrec”
Russian Officer Was Arrested in New
vVk and Many European Cities—Siberian
Kx-Convict, He Sought to Rule Bulgaria
Count Cle Toulouse-Lautrec,
T bß . several countries as a
arrested recently at
i* Bdler ’return, charged with cash-
AntwerP- 1 •- RS> He protested
in g arre st on the ground that
ga ins ' !;" American citizen and dis-
papers issued in
] )!a - jr was found on investiga-
I l!in01 t he had been released but
ti° n ;f v fronl Siberia. He has been
f^o „ for fraud in halt the civil
l;;countrles of the world.
iiaS Krasmus Savine is perhaps
notorious swindler now liv
iß ”' jautrec because of a marriage
he sa ys took place between his
wllK ! f general in the Russian im-
and a Countess of the
pe C- house of Toulouse-Lautrec,
u! was born in Russia in 1 855. Un-
H the name of Savine he held a
dPr li( ssion in the Russian Imperial
COl1l !d He was of an excellent fam
vh’nnrl had a considerable fortune.
\t one time he seemed to be on the
■j to high honors. He fought gal
[ t! 7 in the war of 1876 between
ia and Turkey and received three
lands at Plevna. After the war,
loiterer, he fe into evil wa y s - He
ame entangled in Nihilistic plots
nd " I, e took to gambling. Some
•hereabout ISBO his entire fortune
was dissipated, and he was obliged to
res ign from the army.
With the equipment of a handsome
presence, an unusually complete edu
ion and a wide and influential ac
quaintance, he started for Paris and
h?an his career as a swindler. His
apartments became the headquarters
for the most reckless gamblers of the
capital and Savine was successful in
clucking them. Soon afterward, he
worked his way into the secret diplo
matic service of four Governments at
the same time, selling the military
secrets of the each to the other three.
About this time he married Mile.
Ciemence Vervoort. This lady ap
plied for a divorce from him in 1902
on the ground that he had deceived
her at the time of their marriage by
pretending to be the Count de Tou
louse-Lautrec. Tire French courts
upheld the plea, and the French
scions of the old house of Toulouse-
Lautrec indignantly repudiated Sa
▼in a . He, however, insists with an
earnestness that is not simulated that
he is the head of the Prussian branch
ot the family, which was established
at the time of the French Revolution.
Driven from Paris at last, Savine
made his way to. Bulgaria just after
the deposition of Prince Alexander,
when Stambuloff was ruling the coun
try as dictator. With a beautiful
and clever woman named Madeleine
he had been doing several cities of
Europe, including Monte Carlo, and
in 18S6 he found himself with her ill
Venice. According to his own story
of the events which followed, Savine
became friendly with Don Carlos, the
Spanish pretender, and the latter sug
gested that Savine make a try for the
Bulgarian throne.
With a retinue wardrobed through
the kindness of Don Carlos, Savine
and Madeleine started for Sofia, and
won arrangements were made with
Stambuloff for the carrying out of
Savine’s desires. The “count” then
*ent to Constantinople to secure the
approval of the Sultan and while
there was arrested at the request of
MW LAW WILL
PROTECT timber. -
Louisiana Would Prevent Cutting
ot i i’sss Less Than Twelve
Inches in Diameter.
the Legislature of Louisiana
Passes the forestry law proposed by
t!l ® Governor of that State, and said
0 ‘*ave the support of the largest tim
-61 ov, 'hers, it will be the most ad
. step yet taken by any State
timber cutting on private
f the terms of the proposed
tlie cutting of trees under
inches in diameter, four feet
le Si’ound, will not be per
.!'l' ’’ The law does not apply to
°' e w h° i n good faith w r ish to clear
0 e uiru ' for agricultural purposes,
' vil ° n ed the timber on the
£ lor roads or ditches, or in the
0l an owner or tenant who uses
lyoui f or domestic purposes.
fell 't- Ulll!jerman will be required to
j ea llb toes in a way to cause the
lei, ( ‘ amu £ e to young timber, and the
Prtv' muat not he left where its
en V' ' I‘will 1 ‘ w ill invite fire or otherwise
E n„ dil * ei ' le small trees. The pen
pro,. l(i Thed for violations of the
for law is a fine of $25 to SIOO
toav ’ ' °® ense > and imprisonment
cut w-r added ; E ach tree wrongfully
Th 1 ’ c ' ons titute a separate offense.
offeiif!° P ° Se(i law not only delimits
sets nam3s penalties, but also
Is th ' 1 ttle reas °ns why such ala
18 fought advisable.
and l m!;i IS becomin S scarce, it says,
ed. n °t to be needlessly wast
vrith it 1 1 destruction will carry
Wood if Gr evil s besides dearth of
erosion U WiU cause destruction, soil
drou.h, ? d increase floods and
People rrt the damage of the whole
1 N4rt.li&r Cin . down tlle Proposed law
Wstru*n Bays .’. l)ecause they assist in
* g disastrous tornadoes*
the Russian authorities and hustled
to St. Petersburg. Of Savine and
Madeleine, Stambuloff said in his
memoirs:
“There was in Europe at one time
an association much more dreadful
than that of the Thirteen celebrated
by Balzac, for the Sbcret of it was
never discovered, and it was com
posed entirely of two individuals, a
man and a woman.
“imagine two beings full of genius,
witty to the tips of their fingernails,
knowing everything, able to describe
everything, disabused from every
thing. believing in nothing, having
neither God nor soul nor conscience,
learning, speaking all languages,
young in spite of Methuselah’s ex
perience.
“Suppose that, united by an in
comparable admiration, these two
beings should have given themselves
to each other unreservedly, and you
will comprehend what must have been
the invincible strength of these two
accomplices. ”
The Russians having got hold of
Savine, made short work of sending
him to He served a term at
hard labor at Tomsk and at its close
in 188 4 was sent to Vladivostok as a
colonist. Thence he escaped into
Korea and took ship for San Fran
cisco. where he posed as a contractor
for the Trans-Siberian Railroad.
In. 1895 he beat his way to Chicago,
and there he soon arrested for
larceny. He wriggled out .of that and
came to New York, wiiere he was ar
rested. charged with a
Tenderloin cabby. The Russian Con
sul-General made a statement in
which he denounced the “count” as
an imposter, and the count challenged
the Consul-General to a duel as soon
as he should be released.
He was acquitted in General Ses
sions. The Consul-General laughed
at his challenge and in 1900 he was
again arrested in Chicago on a charge
of circulating $500,000 worth of
fraudulent Cuban war bonds. His
wife was with him at the time. The
arrest was made at the request of the
Canadian police. He was taken to
Montreal and sentenced to five years
in a penitentiary.
Ke was released on parole,
swindled a number of people by an
other stock and bond deal and was
nabbed in New York in December,
1901. just as he was taking a steamer
for France. He had no ticket, and
only S3B in his clothes when arrested.
His wife had returned to France
while he was in the Canadian peniten
tiary. The Canadian Government had
had enough of him and didn’t apply
for his extradition, so he was re
leased.
In 1903 he was arrested in Lisbon
and again turned over to the Russian
authorities, against the protest of
Germany, which wanted him for a
number of frauds in that country.
He was started off for Siberia again
for writing letters to various people
from the Emperor William down, es
caped, and in 1905 was arrested at
Bremen and taken back to Russia.
At this time he had $50,000 in his
possession. He was sent to Siberia
for a third time, but again escaped.
Savine attributes the greater part
of his troubles with the police of
Europe and America to persecution
on the part of Russian agents because
of his attempt to be chosen Prince of
Bulgaria.—New York Sun.
The Supreme Court of Maine re
cently ruled that that State may law
fully restrict the clearing of privately
owned forest land if the public would
be injured by such clearing. Louis
iana’s proposed law goes still further
in the "same direction and follows the
lines of the opinion rendered by the
Maine Supreme Court. It is worthy
of note that the two States which are
first to take this advanced stand in
forest protection are 1500 miles anart
and have forests not at all alik£ in
character, different soils, climates
with few points in common, crops of
wholly different kinds, geography and
topography of opposite extremes, yet
each realizes the immense importance
of its forests and how essential their
protection is to the continued pros
perity of its people.
Moose Ducked the Hunters.
Premier Hazen, who returned
home after a canoeing trip on the
Tobique River with Surveyor-General
Grimmer and members of their fami
lies, tells an exciting moose story.
One night Mr. Grimmer, Miss
Grimmer, Miss Hazen and two guides
were in a canoe w r ith a lantern pad
dling around to catch sight of a
moose. Jii the shallow water they
passed a big bull. The light was so
placed that he could not see the ca
noe. Some one changed the position
of the lantern, and it flashed in the
animal’s eye. Frightened, it sprang
for shore, with the result that its
fore feet landed in the canoe and the
moose brushed against the Surveyor-
General. Another hound and the
moose w r as over them and the canoe
sank with all hands in the water. It
was shallow, so there was nothing
worse than a ducking.—St. John Cor
respondence Toronto Globe.
The tunnel through the backbone
of the Cordilleras that will connect
Valparaiso with Buenos Ayres is pro
gressing rapidly. Work is pushed
day aipl night. At the present rate
it will be opened in 1910.
g* THREE IIIS LIMIT.
"I want you to wndte a play for me
immediately.”
“I can’t do it until I get rid of some
of my present contracts,” declared
the successful dramatist. “I already
write on a typewriter with each hand
find dictate with my mouth.” —Wash-
ington Herald.
To Drive Out Malaria and Ilaild U|
the System
Take the Old Standard Qrovk’s Ta.st*-
lkss Chill, Tqkic. Yon know what yon
are taking. The formula is plainly printed
on every bottle, showing it is simply Qui
nine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the
most effectual form. For grown people
and children. 50c
The man who waits for something
to turn up, usually finds himself
crushed under it when it does turn.
CUIIES ALL ITCHING ERUPTIONS.
Glencoe, Md., Nov. 21st, 1907: ‘d have had
eczema on my hands for 12 years, and huve
tried everything. I have been using tet
fcigned, Mrs. M. Harvey. Tetterine is the
surest, safest, speediest cure for eczema
and all other skin diseases. Sold by drug*-
gists or sent by mail for 50c. by J. T. Bhup
trine, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
WHAT WAS NEEDED FOR DINNER
Mrs. Gra,mercy—What do we need
for dinner?
Bridget— Shure, Mum, Oi tripped
over the rug an’ we need a new set
of dishes. —Puck.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's
Sanitary Lotion Never fails. At druggists.
A NEW BRANCH.
Tramp—l’m looking for a job at me
trade, mum.
Housekeeper—Well, w T hat is your
trade?
Tramp—Dentistry, mum. Me spe
cialty is insertin’ teeth in minoe pies.
—Boston Transcript.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
with local applications, as they can
not reach the seat of the disease. Ca
tarrh is a blood or constitutional disease,
and in order to cure it you must take inter
nal remedies. Hail’s Catarrh Cure is taken
internally, and acts directly on the blood
and mucous surfaces. Hah Catarrh Cure
is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed
by one of the best physicians in this coun
try for years and is a regular prescription.
It is composed of the best tonics known,
combined with the best blood purifiers, act
ing directly on the mucous surfaces, ihe
perfect combination of the two ingredients
is what produces such wonderful results in
curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials free.
F. J Cheney & Cos., Props., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, price 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
ON HER GUARD.
"You see,” said the professor, “the
science of chemistry depends on thu
discovery of certain affinities —”
“Pardon me,” interrupted Mis;
Prym, “I trust the conversation can
proceed without drifting into scandal.”
—Washington Star.
ONE KIDNEY GONE,
But Cured After Doctors Said There
Was No Hope.
Sylvanus O. Verrill, Milford, Me ,
says: “Five years ago a bad Injury
t paralyzed me and
affected my kid
neys. My back
hurt me
and the urine was
badly disordered.
Doctors said my
right kidney was
practically dead.
They said I could
never walk again.
I read of Doan’s Kidney Pills and be
gan using them. One box made me
stronger and freer from pain. I kept
on using them, and in three months
was able to get out on crutches, and
the kidneys were acting better. I im
proved rapidly, discarded the crutches
and to the wonder of my friends was
soon completely cured.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Cos., Buffalo, N. Y.
REAL EVIDENCE.
“I see that an English duke, by a
series of imaginary bets, has demon
strated that you can’t beat, a gaming
table.”
“Huh! I’ve proven that many a
time with real money.”—Washington
Herald.
TO IFI Pimples* Itching Humors, Rheumatism, Blood
II m Poison, Eczema, Bone Pains, dH,
PrWflr Ejsg&r ,—r-fTaf 8.8 B. (Botanic Blood Balm is the only Blood remedy that kill the poison in
Kjp: jG the blood and then purifies it—sending a flood of pure rich blood direct to th akin ugir ’g
fiAx&£\ mirface, Bones Joints and whereve th disease is ocaced. In this way all Sores, ijwx
m.m fr-dO Ulcers Pimples, Eruptions are healed an-* cure< pains and aches of Rheumatism
fsfLJre in gn pisglP M M .cease, swellings subside. B. B. B completely changes the body into clean*, healthy j
Wtf'lCr at) w T-xzrxsrw H B\ w 'condition, giving the skin the rich of perfect health. B. 11 B. cures thfßFr?wsYTy' J
funno Thonimh the Klnnri I worst old cases. Try it. 91 OO per large bottle at Drug Stores with directionsTETSw. J
lures IIH uuyil lIIG DiUUU J for home cure. SAMPLE by writing BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga. V—*
/|?§\THE j. r. WATKMDICAL CO.
/ ’ V \ ———WINONA. MINNESOTA.
I M rW“S .7 1 .. . lllfvi'ent Articles Household Remedies, Flavoring
r in Kinds. Toilet Prep,.rations. Fine Soaps, Etc.
> Canvassers Wanted in Every County.
B esT PROPOSITION E*££ O ffered AGENTS
S Dropsy 1
Removes all swelling in 8 to 20
days; effects a permanent cure
in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment ,
given free. Nothingcan.be fairer
Write Dr. H. H. Green s Sons,
Specialists. Box b Atlanta. Gr
The best medicine for all ills is a
cheerful mind.
Finish.
(Mars was in great consternation. A
huge black bulk was observed to be
falling through space.
“What in the name of Saturn’s rings
do you call that?” asked Mars of Ve
nus. “Is it another moon cast on
by the earth?”
“No,” replied Venus, “that is the
battleship Dreadnaught the Seven
teenth The last nation eclipsed an
the other nations by building a bat
tleship so big it toppled off the ocean
and tumbled into space.”— Philade ••
phia Record.
TOWER’S FISH BRAND
WATERPROOF
OILED CLOTHING
looks belter-wears longer -I/ft J
and gives more
bodily comfort rvf 'r¥ //j
becouse cut on / <'
large patterns, yet v
costs no more than \u\
rhe just as good j
Ms‘miCKEßs’399l^\l
SOLD EVERYWHERE \ |||jr
Every garment WE/?*- 3§! /
bearing the ° bat
sign of the fish j | . j *
waterproof catalog friz
A J TOWCR CO BOSTON U s A
TRAGEDY IN REAL LIFE.
She forgot to mention him in her will
Did his unforgiving elderly aunt.
He had kept her house while slid
went abroad,
And forgot to water the mbbei
plant.—Chicago Tribune.
A Cure for Hog c holera.
Hog Cholera or Swine Plague as it
is sometimes called is a highly con
tagious disorder.
When a hog shows any symptoms of
this disease, he should be isolated at
once and the pen fumigate-d in order
to save the other hogs if possible.
Mix one part Sloan’s Liniment with
two parts milk in a bottle and give
every sick hog a tablespoonful of this
mixture night and morning for three
days. Sloan’s Liniment is a power
ful antiseptic, kiils the disease germs,
soothes all inflammation and acts as
a tonic to the animal.
A. J. McCarthy of Idaville, Ind.,
says:—“My hogs had hog cholera
three days before we got Sloan s
Liniment, w T hich was recommended to
me by a neighbor who was using it
with success. I have used it now for
three days and my hogs are almost
well. One hog died before I got the
Liniment, but I have not lost any
since.”
Mr. G. W. Balsbaugh of Peru, Ind.,
writes: —“I had four pigs that were
coughing and were not doing well. I
gave them some of Sloan’s Liniment
and they got better at once.”
Sloan’s book on Horses, Cattle,
Hogs and Poultry sent free. Address
Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass.
“What Is your idea of helping the
farmer?”
“Well,” answered Senator Sorghum,
“the first and most important thing
is to give him some good advice about
how to vote.” —Washington Star.
Farquhar
Engines, Corn Shelters,
Boilers, Cotton Planters,
Saw Mills, Stocks,
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS GENERALLY.
Send for free catalogue.
A. B. Farquhar Cos., Ltd., York, Fa.
W. L. Douglas makes and sells more and
men's 53.00 and 93.50 shoes than any
other manufacturer in the world, be
cause they hold tlielr shape, fit better,
and wear longer than any other make.
Shoes at All Prices, for Every Member of the
Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses 4 Children
W.L.Douglas $4.00 and $5.00 GiltEdga Shoes cauaot
be equalled at any price. W. L. Douglas $2.50 and
$2.00 shoes are the best in the world
Fast Color Eyelets Vsed Exclusively.
89" Take IV o Muiitititiite. VV. L. Douglas
name and price is stamped on bottom. Sold
everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any
part of the world. Catalogue free.
W. L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spark St., Brockton, Mass.
Malaria Makes Pal® Sickly Children
The Old Standard GROVE’S TASTELESS CHIL/L, TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up the
system. You know what you are taking. v Tke formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it
is simply Qpinine and Iron in a tasteless, and the most effectual form. - For adults and children. 50c.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10c-. package colors all fibers. They dye in cold WRtei better than any other dye. You
dv e anjr garment without ripping apart. Write for free booklet—How to Uye, Bleacn and Mix Colors. AIOMMiE DRUG CO., Quincy, lllinoi*
lghing Spells ||l
smptly relieved by a sin
se of Piso’s Cure. The
r use of this famous re- gWfsf
will relieve the worit
>f coughs, colds, hoarse- KggH
tan ness, bronchitis, asthma and dis-
Igcs eases of the throat and lungs. Bgg
Absolutely free from harmful e’&H
drugs ana opiates. For half a
century tlie household remedy
At all druggists’, 25 cts.
ftfOTTO.
Giotto, dipping his pencil In red
paint and using his elbow as a pivot,
had just drawn a perfect circle.
“See his fine Italian hand*” ex
claimed the enthusiastic bystanders.
Thereafter, as we learn from the
cyclopedias, Giotto, moved in the
most exclusive art circles, —Chicago
Tribune.
DOUBLE THE PROBLEM.
“I don't know whether to take up
an airship cr a submarine,” said the
amateur inventor.
“Try the airship.” advised a friend.
“All you have to do is to get it up:
it is bound to come down. Now, c-.e
submarine you have to get down and
then get it up again.”—Houston
Chronicle.
, CONSTIPATION AND Bit IOUSNES*.
Constipation sends poisonous matter
bounding through the body. Dull headache,
Sour Stomach, Feted Breath, Bleared Eyes,
Loss of Energy and Appetite are the surest
signs of the affliction. Young's Liter Pills
positively cure constipation. They awaken
the sluggish liver to better action, cleanse
the bowels, strengthen the weakened parts,
induce appetite and aid digestion. Price
25 cents from your dealer or direct from
the laboratory. FreG sample by mail to any
address. J. J£. Young, Jb., Waycross. fta
No killings are made by those who
aim too high, observes the Dallas
News.
SEVERE BLEEDING HEMORRHOIDS,
Soros, and Itching Eczema—Doctor
Thought an Operation Necessary
—Cuticura’s Efficacy Proven.
“I am now eighty years old. and three
years ago 1 was taken with an attack of
piles ( hemorrhoids), bleeding and protrud
ing. The doctor said the only help for me
was to go to a hospital and be operated on.
I tried several remedies for months but did
not get much help. During this time sores
appeared which chanced to a terrible itch
ing eczema. Then I began to use Cuticura
Soap. Ointment, and Pills, iniecting a
quantity of Cuticura Ointment with a Cuti
cura Suppository Syringe. Jt took a moulh
of this treatment to get me in a fairly
healthy state and then I treated myself
once a day for three months and, after
that, once or twice a week. The treat -
ments I tried took a lot of money, and it
is fortunate that T used Cuticura. .T. IT.
Henderson, Hopkiidon, N. Y.. Apr. 26, *07.”
HAS TO PAD.
“Brevity is the soul of wit.”
“That may be. But a man who
has daily space to fill can’t afford too
many jokes to a column.” —
Post.
Hicks* Capudine Cures Women’s
Monthly Pains, Backache, Nervousness,
and Headache. It’s Liquid. Effects imme
diately. Prescribed by physicians with best
results. 10c.. 25c., and 50c.. at drug stores.
Lucy Was Wise.
Mother —Lucy, did you tell God how
naughty you were last night?
Lucy—No, ma; for I was ashamed
to let it out of the family.—Judge.
PGM iy Tfl oF every
sw Ins I 1 IFa AJt DESCRIP
OUTFtTS ££
formation write W. A. FOWLER,
24 Hurt Street, Atlanta, (ia.
Excellent Opportunities
—For Desirable Locations on the Line of tlie—
ATLANTA, BIRMINGHAM 8 ATLANTIC RAILROAD
TRAVERSING PRODUCTIVE GEORGIA AND ALABAMA.
There is no section in the country offering better op
portunities for farming, manufacturing plants, fruit grow
ing and stock raising.
The A. B. & A. furnishes unsurpassed transportation
facilities, operating from Birmingham and Atlanta to
Brunswick, Thomasville and Waycross, affording through
Brunswick, Steamship freight service on quick schedules
for New York, Boston and other eastern markets.
Should you desire to locate in this 4 ‘Garden Spot of
the South,” it will pay you to communicate with either
of the undersigned.
J. R. ROWLAND, W. H. QUIGG,
Traffic Manager, General Freight Agent,
W. H. LEAHY, General Passenger Agent, Atlanta, Ga.
The University and Commercial School, Abbeville, Ga„
stives individual training preparing students thoroughly for college and university work.
Greatest care given to character building as well as thorough training intellectually
Courses are complete and thorough. French, Greek, Latin and English Literature taught
by able teachers. The Commercial Courses embrace Typewriting, Bookkeeping. Shorthand,
Arithmetic, Correspondence, writing, Banking. Full course in Telegraphy and allied work’
Ample grounds, good board, ten months’ tuition ; all for |l5O. Write for descriptive booklet to
C. M, GORDON, Prin. Commercial Dept JOHN A. MILLER, A, 8,, Superintendent
'i Look for the label. If yon do not
rEIOinTLBII shoes readily, write us
A SURGICAL
opera™t
If there is any one thing that a
woman dreads more than another it
is a surgical operation.
We can state without fear of a
contradiction that there are hun
dreds, yes, thousands, of operation*
performed upon women in our hos~
pitals which are entirely unneces
sary and many have been avoided by
LYDIA E.PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
For proof of this statement read
the following letters.
Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman,.
Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
“ For eight years I suffered from th
most severe form of female troubles and
was told that an operation was my only
hope of recovery. I wrote Mrs. Pinkham
for advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham’*
Vegetable Compound, and it has saved
my life and made me a well woman.”
Mrs. Arthur R. House, of Church.
Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes:
“I feel it is my duty to let people
know w’hat Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
has done for me. I
suffered from female troubles, and last.
March my physician decided that an
operation was necessary. My husband,
objected, and urged me to try Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,
and to-day I am well and strong.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands oi
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, and backache.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick:
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
MV •w DOW TO AIAKK
wMi f I |\| || V money easy.
JLvJL \J XU JtV i Address envelope#
and the money
comes in. Anj r body ran do it. For parti cuiarr
Write Box 317, Clarksville, Tenn.
ANY man can estimate Timber; eas'e-d, quickest and’
“ cheapest method. Send stamp for particular#.
Frank Richardson, 557A4 Williams Ave.. Portland.Or*
HELP Insist on Having:
"or Dr. MARTEL’S Preparation
LA/nsUTCIU C' The Standard Kemody.
VV IVi Cm AT DRUUOI3TB.
Send for book, “Relief lor VV omen.”
* BENCH DRUG CO., 30 W. 32d St., N. Y. City.
now curable; thousands cured; re
ft 11 Lu mil 1101,1 suits speedy;guaran tee given;prico
low. Write quick. The WKIGHT MEL). CO., Peru lad.
(At-47’08)