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NOVEMBER AILMENTS
THEIR PREVENTION AND CURE.
November is the month of falling tem¬
peratures, Over all the temperate r egions
the hot weather has passed and the first
rigors bulk of winter of civilized have appeared. located As the
great nations is in
the Temperate Zones, the effect of chang¬
The Human System question ing seasons of is the a
Most Adjust Itself highest When impor¬
to Changing Tem¬ tance. weather begins the
peratures. to change from
when eool nights succeed warm hot nights, to when cold,
•clear, the human cold body days follow riot, sultry days,
•changed condition must adjust itself to this
The perspiration or perish.
incident to warm
■weather has been checked. This detains
within the system r lomonouH material*
which have he re to f ore found escape
through Most the perspiration.
of the poisonous materials re¬
tained in the system by the checked per¬
spiration if at all, find through their way toe out kidneys. of the bodv, This
throws upon the kidneys extra labor.
They become charged and overloaded
with the poisonous excretory materials.
This ha* a tendency to inflame the kid¬
‘kidneys neys. producing and functional diseases of the
sometimes Bright’s Disease.
Perunn acts upon the skin by stimulat¬
ing the emunctory glands and ducts, thus
terials preventing which the detention of poisonous ma¬
should pass out. Reruns in
vigorates fulfill the their kidneys and encourages them
to function hi apite of the
and discouragements of cold weather.
Benina is a com¬ Pe-ru-na
bination of well- is aWorld
tried harmless Rcnowned Rem¬
remedies that edy For Climatic
have stood the
test of time. Disease.
Many of these used
remedies have been by doctors and
by the people in Europe and America for
* hundred years.
Purlins lias been used by Dr. Hartman
in bis private practice for many years
witli notable results. Its eHioucy has been
proven by decades of use by thousands of
people and has been substantiated over and
over by many thousands of home*.
HELP IS OFFERED TO
WORTHY
YOUNG PEOPLE
#* arnestiy limited roqueot their all young poroono, education, no
■matter ho vr inoana or
«wtio dcMire a thorough buaineff* training
and m od position, to write at once for on*
<ikeat n alp-hate upper. Success, independ¬
ence and probable Fortune guaranteed. Don’t
tlKLAY—WRITE TO-DAY.
Ga.-AIh. Run. College, Macon.Ga.
NECESSARY LIMITATIONS.
Physician—I would suggest a diet.
Patient—Well, it will have to be
something that agrees with the cook.
--
Deafness Cannot. Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach
tne diseased portion oe the ear. There is
by •only one wav to cure deafness, Deafness and that is
constitutional remedies, is
■caused by an inflamed condition of the
mucous When this lining tube of the inflamed Eustachian have Tube.
is you a
rumbling when it sound or imperfect closed, Deafness nearing, and
result, and is entirely unless the inflammation is the be
can
taken out and this tube restored to its
normal condition, hearing will be destroyed
by forever; Catarrh, nine cases out of ten are caused
which is nothing but an in¬
flamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will gn e One Hundred Doll; ra for
•any that case of Neatness (caused Halls by catarrh)
cannot he cured by Catarrh
Ouro. Send for circulars free.
F. J. Ciiexby & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 73c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
The test of greatness is the ability to
bravely the loss of what was
precious.
BABY’S AWFUL HUMOR.
3TI>ln Skin Formed Over llody anti Under
It Was Watery ltliiud—Cnretl In One
Week by Cutlcura liemedles.
"When my litt'- girl baby \va« on#
week old »he uad a skin disease A thin
skin formed over her body and under it
w»* watery blood, and who she was
washed it would burst and break. She was
in that condition fer - eeks, and 1 tried
everything I could think of, but nothing
slid her any good. When *bc was three
months old 1 took her to San A-tonio to
aee a doctor, bu tile doctor we wanted
to see v _j not .. home, so my s.ster gave
me a :akc of Cuticura Heap ttd half a
box of Cuticura Ointment, and told tne
to use them, whieft 1 d d in time. 1 used
uhem t iree times, and the humor began to
ffade, and in tne week the i as sounc’ and
twcll, and it has never returned mice.
X think every mother should keep the’
Uuticura Remedies in the house. Mrs. !!.•
Aaron, Beutou, Texas, uly 3, 1935 "
Some men can never help another
meddling.
When you buy
WET
WEATHER T r/A /
CLOTHING &
you want ' /
protection complete a- NT /
These and service. and long many // 1J\X
other combined good points ,
are m /
TOWER'S /
FISM BRAND
OILED CLOTHING /
You can’t afford other / J j
to bqy any
i ! o
•Xj mwta TCXWt* cjsssao.a*# t* *0%T0* co A Cj-fllo £
TOaost? CAN —W
___
An inclination to be constip¬ of
ated is a common symptom
the American people. 1 his is
due to indigestion, and indiges- of
non comes from indiscretion
diet, Let foods be daily eaten
like
D? PRICES
WHEAT FLAKE CELERY
FOOD
and there would be no constip¬
ation. iO cents a package .
For Sals by all 6roc#r»
INDICTS PROMOTER
Millionaire Fitzgerald Must
Answer Fraud Charge.
ACCOUNTING IS WANTED
Alleged That He Promoted Town of
St. George, in Georgia, and Failed
to Make Showing for 535,CC0
of the Profits.
Philander H. Fitzgerald, miUlion
aiie pension attorney, colonization or
ganizer, publisher of the American
Tribune, an old soldier paper, and
real estate dealer, was indicted at
Indianapolis, Thursday, by the federal
grand jury on the charge of using
the mails to defraud. Two indictments,
both of the same general tenor, were
returned against him, both in con¬
nection with a colonizing scheme in
Georgia. Fitzgerald went to the fede¬
ral building on heanng of the indict¬
ment and gave bond in the sum of
84,000 to appear in answer to the
charges.
Fitzgerald began his career in In¬
dianapolis an a pension attorney noon
after the war, and has done an enor¬
mous business laying the foundation of
lus immense fortune out of the 810
fees that he received for obtaining
pensions. Soon after he began as a
pension attorney, he inaugurated ’Hie
American Tribune, a monthly paper,
which he sent free to former soldiers
and in which he recorded tfie pensions
granted and kept the veterans posted
on all matters relating to pensions and
laws.
Several years ago he advertised a
colonization scheme open only to vet¬
erans of the war of the rebellion. He
had purchased a large tract of land in
the state of Texas and organized a
company in which lie asked the ex¬
soldiers to take stock.
The Texas project did not pan out
well, and he organized the 1904 Colony
Company and advertised it in his pa¬
per. He professed to have purchased
a large tract of land at a site which
he called St. George, Gu., and which
was to be laid out. in building and
residence lots and farms from 5 to
165 acres.
The payment of $10 entitled a per¬
son to one share of stock or a resi¬
dence lot; $20 gave him a business lot,
or two shares of stock; $50 would
entitle a person to 5 acres, and so on
for as much as any cared to take. It
is charged that Fitzgerald did not in¬
corporate the company; that he got In
about $70,000 on his scheme and spent
about $35,000 in platting the town,
building a postoflice and making other
Improvements; that he has not divided
the surplus, as he promised; that he
did not appoint a board of governors,
“but did unlawfully and feloniously
convert all of said profits to his own
use.”
The alleged plat of land on which
St. George is situated is on the Geor¬
gia Southern and Florida railway, be¬
tween Valdosta and Jacksonville, Fla.
Mr. Fitzgerald charges the suits are
the result of spite work.
AFTER HUNDRED YEARS
Body of Wilson is Taken Up and Re
Burled at Philadelphia.
At Philadelphia Thursday In the
presence of'a distinguished company,
which included a member of President
Roosevelt's cabinet, justice of the su¬
preme court of the United States, the
governor of Pensylvanla and other clt
t'/ens, the body of Janies Wilson, one
of the great figures in the American
revolution, which lay in a North Car¬
olina grave for one hundred and eight
years, was placed by the side of that
of his wife in the burial ground of
historic Christ church.
PRESIDENT LEAVES PORTO RICO
Departs from Ponce on Louisiana for
Hampton Roads.
The navy department was advised
Thursday that the battleship Louisi¬
ana, with President Roosevelt aboard,
and convoyed by the battleships Wash¬
ington and Tennessee, sailed from
Ponce, Porto Rico, early in the day
tor Hampton Roads.
PfcARY ARRIVES AT SYDNEY.
Disembarks from the Weather-Beaten
Roosevelt and Joins Wife.
Flying the flag of the United States,
which had been placed nearer the
pole than any other national standard,
and weather-beaten and disabled, tire
Pearj Arctic steamer Roosevelt arriv¬
ed at Sydney, C. B.. Friday, under
sail and steam after sixteen months
vain effort to reach the pole.
Peary went ashore almost immedi¬
ately after the steamer came to an¬
chor and joined Mrs. Peary, who has
teen in Sydney for two weeks, wait¬
ing for her husband’s return.
A MAJORITY OF FIFTY-EIGHT
For Republicans in House of
tatives, is Official Report
The first official printed report on
the membership of the house of
sentatives of the sixtieth congress
just been issued by the clerk of
house.
The republicans are shown to
a majority of 5S. The republican
bership is 222 and the
membership is 164.
HIGHER WAG I? GRANTED
i To 30,000 Cotton Mill Operatives in
Fall P.iver—Threatened Strike and
Demands Were Granted.
The great army of cotton mill em¬
ployees in Fall River, Mass., have won
! a latt,e for an increase in wages ’ aad
j SO,ODD operatives will come under a
scale Riving them 10 per cent more
than the present rate.
The granting of the advance by the
manufacturers prevented a strike, the
workmen having voted to stop work
in all mills if the new schedule was
not accepted.
M. C. D. Borden, an independent
j co ^ otl manufacturer, employing 5,000
operatives, took ihe lead in meeting
the demands of the mill hand3 by an¬
nouncing that ihe scale of wages in
his mills would J>e raised 10 per cent.
No demand had been made upon the
proprietor of Fall River iron works
mills, and his action practically forc¬
ed the other mill manufacturers to
grant the increase.
The new pay scale affects seventy
corporations operating ninety-two
mills, besides the iron works plant.
The manufacturers associations agree
ment to pay the increase is for a pe
ried of six months, but provision is
made for extending it.
Between November, 1S03, and July,
1904, the Fail River operatives suf¬
fered reductions aggregating 23 1-2
per cent. Last spring a part of the cut
was restored, and in view of the con¬
tinued prosperous business condition,
the operatives demanded a complete
resumption .of the 1903 scale.
It is considered probable that, ’other
cotton mills ultimately will be benefit¬
ed by the determined stand taken by
the Fall Rivor unions.
RAWLINGS SHOWS DREAD.
Old Man Says Conference Knocked
Out His Last Ray of Hope.
As the day lor the execution of
J. G. Rawlings at Valdosta, Ua., ap¬
proaches. the old man shows unmis¬
takable signs of dread, though he has
professed nil along to be anxious for
that day to arrive. The announcement
that his attorney would not make any
further effort in his behalf threw a
damper over his hopes, and Friday
evening he sent t\n urgent message
to Rev M. A. Morgan, local Method¬
ist minister, asking him to come to
the jail. Mr. Morgan, responded very
promptly, supposing that Raw ling*
wanted uome spiritual advice or com
fort.
“I just want to tell you,” said Rawl¬
ings to Ihe minister, when the latte.
reached the cell in which the con¬
demned man was confined, “that the
way things are going now my Dtood
will be upon Hie hands of the South
Georgia Conference, which is to meet
here, if the preachers hadn’t petition
eci the governor to respite Alf Moore
and me so that both would be hanged
on the same day after the conference,
the chances are that the nigger would
have said something on the gallows
that would have saved me. As it is,
the members of the conference have
wlpod away every ray of hope 1
had.”
MERGER OF THREE COMPANIES
Effected by Stockholders at Meeting
Held in Norfolk, Va.
The Norfolk and Southern Railway
company Is to be the title of the va¬
rious eastern North Carolina and Vir¬
ginia railway lines with terminals in
Norfolk, Va. This was decided Fri¬
day when the stockholders of the Nor¬
folk and Southern Railroad company,
the Virginia Coast Ratlioad company
and the John L. Roper Lumber com¬
pany met and effected the merger of
the three companies.
GUILTY IN PEONAGE CASES.
Verdict of Jury at Pensacola, After
Five Hours’ Deliberation.
The jury at Pensacola, Fla., in the
famous peonage cases, at 11 o’clock,
Friday night, returned a verdict of
guilty against W. 8. Harlan, manager
of the Jackson Lumber company, C. 0.
Hilton and S. F. Huggins, who wero
charged with conspiracy to commit
peonage.
The jury deliberated five hours be
ore reaching a verdict
TURKEYS ARE -FLYING HIGH."
Eitds *cr Thanksgiving Dinners May
Reach 35 to 40 Cents Per Poun>!.
A New York dispatch says: Tur¬
keys for thanksgiving dinners may
reach 35 to 40 cents per pound this
year. Dealers agree tha- the toothsome
bird will be more expensive than in
previous years, as they ear. place no
reliance in the supply. The wholesale
price has reached 21 cents, and the
retail price is much higher.
A plague l.nown as blarkhold is
sweeping the east, killing thousands
of turkeys, and dealers say this will
diminish the supply.
NO FATALITIES OCCURRED
Though Seventeen Passengers Were
Hurt in A. C. L. Train Wreck.
An Atlantic Coast Line passenger
and trail train leaving Wilmington, N.
C., for Charleston at 6 o'clock Satur¬
day morning was wrecked at Belaud,
seven miles from Wilmington, by a
brofcen rail. Seventeen passengers
were injured, but none seriously.
IN THE PUBLIC EYE.
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THE REV. IRA W. HENDERSON.
A PREACHES AMD A WRITER OF READ¬
ABLE SERMONS APPEARS.
The Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson,
whose convincing and readable
weekly sermons are now receiving so
wide a circulation by being published
in hundreds of newspapers through¬
out the United States in the same
way that the late Dr T, De Witt Tal
mage’s memorable discourses were
reproduced, was born in the city of
Brooklyn, N. Y,, on the 2d of March,
1878, the son of Thomas J. and
Grace W. Henderson, lifelong and
widely known residents of that city.
He was educated in the common
schools of his native city and at the
age of eighteen entered Hamilton
College, Clinton' N. Y. While in col¬
lege Mr. Henderson was a prominent
athlete, being one of the fastest
sprinters In the college. He was also
interested in oratorical affairs and in
his sophomore year was a prize
speaker and in his senior year a
prize debater. After graduation from
college Mr. Henderson entered Union
Seminary, from which he graduated
three years later. Mr. Henderson’s
first call was to the pastorate of the
West Avenue Presbyterian Church,
of Buffalo, N. Y. Here he served
with success. The strain of close
work telling on him, Mr. Henderson,
after two years of labor in Buffalo,
resigned. Last May he was called to
the pastorate of the Irving Square
Presbyterian Church of Brooklyn, N.
Y. Here his work is so successful as
to focus him in the public eye. One
of the finest features of the work
done in his parish is a boy’s brigade,
the best in the city of Brooklyn, with
a membership of 137 young men and
boys.
Mr. Henderson is a member of the
Chi Psi fraternity and a Mason.
Three years ago Mr. Henderson
was married to Miss Julia Carman
Gildorsleeve, a descendant of one of
the oldest Long Island families. They
have one child, a son.
Mr. Henderson is a preacher be¬
cause he enjoys the work. To win
souls to Christ and to aid in some
measure in the transformation of so¬
ciety is his one aim and ambition.
Oriental Picturesqueness Doomed.
Picturesqueness in costume is
doomed. Cheap ready-made clothing
will be its undoing. The British rep¬
resentative at Dar-al-Baida says the
Moors of Morocco are taking more
and more to wearing European
clothes in preference to their nation¬
al dress, and that as a consequence
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INSULT ADDED TO INJURY.
Wretched Bov—“Hi. euv’nor! D'yer want anv help’.’’’-—-Punch.
there is a fine opening for ready¬
made clothes for men and women,
provided the colors be bright. It is
possible that adherence to the taste
for vivid hues may save the situation,
but there is danger that the drum¬
mer, in his anxiety to increase trade,
will knock out the tourist business.
Nine-tenths of the attraction that a
visit to Oriental countries has for the
average traveler Is the picturesque
costumes of the inhabitants. If they
are supplanted by European togs, and
nothing but the dirt Is left, it is
doubtful whether the latter will
prove a powerful enough magnet to
draw the tourist. — San Franciscc
Chronicle.
The King's Cup.
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Presented by King Edward VII. to
the New York Yacht Club as a
Perpetual Trophy.
Serious Loss to the Tramp.
Lady Frances Cecil is giving up
Stockton Hall, her beautiful resi¬
dence on the great North road about
midway between Stamford and Grant¬
ham. This will be a serious loss to
tramps, for every one who called at
the hall received a small loaf of
bread, a thick slice of cheese and a
pint of beer. As many as fifty a day
have been known to call.—London
Chronicle.
Not What He Expected.
The visitor from Mars, who hap¬
pened to land in the heart of a great
city, found himself in a scene of ter¬
rifying noise and confusion.
Pedestrians were hurrying for their
lives, to escape from being run over
by street cars, automobiles and great
truck wagons. Elevated trains were
thundering overhead. Small boys, in
a high state of excitement, were run¬
ning hither and thither, carrying bun¬
dles of papers that looked as if they
were printed with blood instead of
ink, and yelling at the stop of their
voices:
“Uxtry! Double murder on de nort’
side’ Big steal in de county buildin’!
Tur’ble railroad accident! Many lives
lost! All 'bout de strike! Bloody
riot.”
“Move along there, dang yez!"
growled a stalwart policeman, grab¬
bing him by the collar and giving him
a shove. “Ye’re obsthructin’ the side¬
walk!”
“Creat Jupiter!” muttered the vis¬
itor. “Is this the beautiful, heavenly
planet I have been all my life want¬
ing to live on! I wish I could go
back!”
But his wish was vain. He had
come without a return ticket.—Chi*
cago Tribune.
FITS, St. Vitus’Dance :N ervotis Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline s Great Nerve
Restorer. *3 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St. ■ ? hil»., Pa.
The Lord Mayors Coachman.
The Lord Mayor’s coachman is still
the theme of the Paris papers. “No¬
body who has not seen h;m can im
agine him,” says Le Matin. "He is as
round as an apple, as round as a
bail, or rather, as round as the eairth
Itself. Ke U rosy and chubby of
face, and his body is a formidable
paradox. And this astonishing man
sits enthroned with a wondrous dig¬
nity midway between earth and sky.
His lip is scornful, and he heeds
not the remarks of the crowd. He
sees or hears nothing but his horses.**
—London Standard.
Ignorant of Legal Terms.
Tarantula Tom—“Why did BUI plug
th’ tenderfoot?”
Lava-Bed Pete—"It all come o’
Bill’s distressin’ ignorance o' legal
terms.”
T. T.—“Ilow ’us that?”
L.-B. P.—“Well, Bill owed th’ short¬
horn some money, an’ was sorter slow
about payin’. So the stranger writ
him a letter sayin’: ‘I will draw on
you at sight.’ An’ Bill thought that
meant a gun play, so when he meets
up with the stranger he draws first.
It was a misunderstandin’.”—Cleve¬
land Leader.
RUBBING IT IN.
He—Why did you keep harping all
through the play on that woman who
keeps drumming the same tune over
and over in your apartment house?
Why didn’t you forget it and enjoy
the performance?
She—I didn’t want to. The woman
I was talking about sat right in front
and heard everything 1 said.—Detroit
Free Press.
Englishmen in the Transvaal.
We have never understood why
Englishmen in Pretoria are seeming¬
ly adverse to following the lead set
by other towns, and banding them¬
selves together in the manner of the
Welsh, the Scots, and the Irishmen.
There Is not. for Instance, a branch
of the St. George’s Society nor of the
Sons of England In the capital, and
we believe we are right In saying
that but two branches of these very
excellent institutions exist through
out the Transvaal.
A DOCTOR’S TRIALS.
Ha Sometimes Gets Sick Like Other
People.
Even doing good to people is hard
work if you have too much of it to do.
No one knows this better than the
hard-working, conscientious family
doctor. He has troubles of his own—
often gets caught in the rain or snow,
or loses so much sleep he sometimes
gets out of sorts. An overworked
Ohio doctor tells his experience:
"About three years ago as the re¬
sult of doing two men’s work, attend¬
ing a large practice and looking after
the details of another business, my
health broke down completely, and I
was little better than a physical
wreck.
“I suffered from indigestion and
constipation, loss of weight and ap
petite, bloating and pain after meals,
loss of memory and lack of nerve
force for continued mental applica
tion.
“I became irritable, easily angered
and despondent without cause. 'V’ae
heart’s action became irrgular and
weak, with frequent attacks of palpi¬
tation during the first hour or two
after retiring.
“Some Grape-Nuts and cut bananas
came for my lunch one day and
pleased me particularly with the re¬
sult. I got more satisfaction from it
than from anything I had eaten for
months, and on further investigation
and use, adopted Grape-Nuts for my
morning and evening meals, served
usually with cream and a sprinkle of
salt or sugar.
“My improvement was rapid and
permanent in weight as well as in
physical and mental endurance. In
a word, I am filled with the joy of
living again, and continue the daily
1289 of Grape-Nuts for breakfast and
often for the evening meal.
“The little pamphlet, ‘The Road to
Wellville,’ found in pkgs., is invari¬
ably saved and handed to some needy
patient along with the indicated rem¬
edy.” Name given by Postum Co.,
Battle Creek, Mich. “There’s a rea¬
son.”