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'1 97;;’.‘
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edby Lyc iaE.Pinkham’s
1&‘ ‘:%-vw J: "
etable Compound
R T
¥ Mich.—* I suffered terri
e by from female ills,
including inflam
mation and conges
\ & tion, for several
Y years. My doctor
. % said there was no
S d hope for me but an
' Lt operation. I began
W R taking Lydia E.
WAB Pinkham's Vegeta-
I ble Compound, and
. a I can now say I am
*% a well woman.” -
Sl EMMA DRAPER.
L Allother Operation Avoided.
aaGhicago, 111, —-“1 want women to
know “.athat wonderful medicine.
. Lydia'E. F nkham’s Vegetable Com-
L poundihas done for me. Two of the
LResiEectors in Chicago said I would
SIS lEa not have an operation, and
1 neve thought of seeing a well day
sagain. I hada small tumor and female
L Uroubles so that I suffered day and
Ight ™A friend recommended Lydia
;fij&;g----: m’s Vegetable Compound,
sand it.made me a well woman.” —Mrs.
CALVENA SPERLING, 11° Langdon St.,
X oy S). he
% fi’;}‘; éll. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
L pound, made from roots and herbs,
b 8 proved te be the most successful
premedy for curing the worst forms of
(femal® ills, including displacements,
“inflammation, fibroid tumors, irregm.
* larities, periodic pains, backache, bear
h_‘f* own feeling, flatulency, indiges.
~ij;;,;;,£‘f’fl d nervous prostration. It costs
buk & trifle to try it, and the resuit
has Been worth millions to many
L!. e 'Women. :
f B X
z}i}'.g,f'-l'cag not measure the sun, I
Lcan ‘enjoy the sunlight —Joseph
. = u’;fffi““,‘{.;-\_ fil»*\w~‘«A~.
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S (oo N LTV 28 G
TR A 02P g
L'L or free booklet on treatin ng of SLOC& @l
Poattry. MQ? by Smlt}lgn Phvsioians- THR
SMOUTHERN ,BTOCK ‘FOU 00.. ATLANTA, GA.
rOn Rainy Days
" A Fish Brand Slicker
. will keep you dry
' And give you full valuo in
; qomrort and long wear
ik $3.00
& A QUARANTEED WATERPROOF
;;?”,»‘w by first-class Retailers the country
. oven. Bcnd for our Free Uatalogue
A.Jd. TOWER CO.
Qotw 8. A. ;‘OWERS:
TOWER CANADIAN CO., Ld. 20‘5
. Tomonvo, Canaoa &gflw
¥
g
:‘! ve been using Cascarets for In
‘somnia, with which I have been afflicted
for twenty years, and I can say that Cas
rets have glven me more relief than any
ofher remedy I have ever tried. I shall
‘@sinly recommend them to my friends
- , all that they are represented.’’
B o Thos. Gillard, Elgin, 111.
1 Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good.
£ Good. Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe.
i .10, 25¢c, 50c. Never sold inbulk. The gen
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4 “ All Druggists, 25 Cents
- ‘A"?,";“‘ o ""'——
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4 ” Steven’s Hammeiless double barrel sls 85
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TTRS IR TUE . (7. T R Yly L g R C 1 A B o R aam Yt a . e T SRS
Tribulation= of the Aviation Era.
bulations of the Aviation Era.
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. .. =Cartoon by Berryman, in the Washington Star.
U. S ALONE CAN SAVE STARVING FLOOD VICTIMS---
- MEXICO GANNOT SUCCOR ITS 19,000 SURVIVORS
Plea for Assistance Lomes From Republic Across Our Border--Women and
: Chitdren in - Infand. Towns Greatest Sufferers--Number of
Dead Now Placed as High as 15,800,
San Antoaio, Texas.—Messages re:
ceived here indicate .Fgt },g ';1"&;11’01'- ;
sent. to the State ‘Departin g‘f“‘ ron
Monterey, Mexico, relatiye to the suf%;]
sering there is no# an éxdgieration of”
the real conditions. The latest re
ports puts the number “of * dead as
high asg 35,000 and the number of]
sufferers and homeless fully,as many,
There is a gieat deal of réliel work.
to accomplish in Northern .Mexico.
In "addition -to ‘the” extremely heavy.
toll of lives collecied, to say nothing
of the immense prooevty damage;
hundreds of:square miles upon which
‘there oncée stood happy eommninities
have been swept clear of both houses
and crops. For the surviyors theve is
nothing left io 'do but esiend « hand
in aquest of alms. |
In conseguence of the wide area as- |
fected the Mexican Government is
called upon to shoulder a burden for
which it is not prepared jnst at this
juncture. The Government has been
heroic in its efforts to relieve partial
ly the distress which is now greater
in the outlying sections rather than
in the cities which have rajl connce
tion. £ Sk o
Anguish Greatest in Towns.
~ It is in these smaller places from
which the survivors must come on
foot that the anguish ig the gieatest.
Both women and children are starv
ing. Many have died while awaiting
the relief ‘which the father, husband
or brother set out to procure. !
For these peonle only the simplest:
kind of food will suffice. The Mexi--
caus will-find a great déal-of nourishz4
~ OUR EXPORTS NOW ARE $486,000,000,000.
That's the Tota. For the. Lastfil3o Yéérs, Réporlts the Bureau of ,Siatiéi.‘ea
- «Manufacturers’ Bm S.h‘avvj(e'-ft%teai#y lflpfeés’e‘ Shown in the i -
Share They Tg!s‘e”.“i)n “gxrig'qrts‘;-._‘-lr'ah and Steel Records. :
Wwashington, D. C.—The exports
of American manufactures for the
120 years from 1789 to 1909./accord
ing to a report just made publie by
the Bureau of Statistics of the De
partment of! Commerce and Labor.
amounted to $12,000,000,000. Of
this amount two-thirds werc cxported
within the’last twenty years, and one--
half, or $6,000,000,000, within the
past eleven: vears 'of the present de
cade. . > » seo e . \ .
The total egports of merchandise
from ‘1789 to date anfounted to $46,-
000,000,000, of which 26 per cent.
were manufactures. Steady .increase
has been shown in thé- share which.
manufactures form of our exports.|
from 6.5 per cent. i the&lbcggg Mfl();'g‘;:l
1799, to 37.6 per cent. in the decadg?
ending with 1909. .. *. : .
Iron and ‘steel produects! were:not:
recorded until 1790, when'-g;"‘e»‘valu&':
BRIDE POISONED ON HER WEDDING NIGHT.
Dies ATier Two Weeks,;f-Agony---H;:sband .-%z'z‘t;.sted
' and Held Without Bail.
Parkersburg,” W* Va.—A girl of
fourteen years, a bride of fourteen
days, was murdered, poisoned by her
bridegroom, is the charge on which
J. E. Sayre, of Richmond County, Va.,
wag . arrested .here. She was Miss
Blanche Wright,
The allegation is that Sayre gave
the deadly bi-chloride of mercury to
his bride, with whom he eloped two
weeks ago. He is said ;to have been
under the influerce of lifuor and net
to have-intended to poisgn her. ;;‘
The child-wife, the daughter of a
minister, died here in a hospital after
Borrible sulloring lasting ta wosls.-
‘ment in the dried or “navy’ Dbean,
and flour and meal do a ‘great deal to
wabd supplying them with sustenanoce.
Mexican = Consular representatives
here and in other points of the State
‘have issued appeals to relieve the suf-,
sering. " - . :
A number of the Texas railroads
and.- the express conipanies have
agreed to carry free such supplies as
may be sent to the relief committee
at Monterey, which is now most active
in distributing food to those places
where help is most needed and which
can be reached by railroad or over
land transportation, '
S3OOO Raised by Women.
In this city alone more than SSOOO
was hurriedly raised by public sub
scription. 'Women -of the city gath
ered supplies. both clothing and food,
and rushed several cars to the border
and into the capital of Northern Mex-~
ico as soon as railway transportation
was restored.
The Republic of Mexico also came
with a hurried response to the first
stories of distress. It is not suffi
cient, although .the Mexican people
were ag liberal as finances and condi
tions would permit. For this the peo
ple of Monterey made grateful ac
knowledgment, but the need of suc
cor is still great. TUnless the United
States, which has always been ‘“‘liber
al to those in distress,” rushes to the
assistance of her near and good neigh
bor across the horder, the increase in
the number of dead and the extent of
the suffering in the flooded district
-will be frightful to behold. L
‘of these exports amounted to $117,-
‘OOO. The million-dollar mark was
not passed until 1840, and from that
‘time forward -a steady increase was
-shown in manufactures of steel. Last
.year a grand total of nearly $200,-
000,000 of manufactures of steel ex
ported was reached. / '
The total value of manufactures
exported dquring 1908 was $750,000,-
000. Of this amount Europe re
ceived approximately one-half, or
$368,000,000; North '~ America,
'$189,000,000; South America, $71,-
750,000; Asia, $71,700,000; Oceana,
$40,000,000, and Africa, $10,000,-
000, Of the amount sent to Europe
's97,ooo,ooo‘was éopper, $55,000,000
‘mineral oil, $47,000,000 manufac
‘tures of iron and, steel, ;539,000,000
mahufactures’ of wood,: $17,000,000
‘naval stores, and $14,000,000 agrie
‘cultural implements. -, )
It was on the wedding night of
the young couple that the young wife
was poisoned. The girl’s parents ob
jected to Sayre’s attention because of
bis alleged intemperance. They
eloped to this city and stopped at a
local hotel.
The young woman instantly became
deathly sick, and her husband is said
to have left the hotel. The father
was summored, and the husband was
not allowéd to see his wife. For two
weeks.she lived in mortal agony and
then died. B
When it was learned that Sayre
was tg leave town his arrest followed.
First Session Opens October 5, 1909
New building; New Equly-mvfit: eentrally located; strong Faculty and ample WHITE
elinfo. Write for attractive announcement. Address
DR, CLARENCK L, STOLKS, Rogistrar, 427 Austell Ballding, Aflantl,._q..
3
* X
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A\ SR, />
YUY
ARG
EGGS FOR HATCHING.
The eggs that are to be placed iln
the inenbator or under the hen should
be gathercd as soon as possible af
ter they are laid. If they are aliowed
to ‘become chilléd it is probable that
if the germ is not killed outright,
it will be s 0 weakened that the chiek
will never pe abie to get out of the
shell. It i¥ vot always possible to
set the eggs the same day they are
laid, and during the time of collect
ing they should be stored in a cellar
of about 60 demrees Fahrenheit.. /If
the. air of the room is very dry a few
pans of wvater should be set in the
room, otherwisze there will be rapid
eveporation from the eggs. About
two weeks is as long as it is safe
to keep them from setting, anq in
sure - good strong chicks, but the
fresher the eggs are—that is, the
sooner they are placed under the hen
c¢r in the incubator after being laid,
the better. The eggs should be turn
ed every day while in storage. Where
the hens are all running together,
only the very finest shaped eggs
should be used for incubating pur
poses. Abnormally large eggs, under
sized eggs or those sharply pointed,
or any which.doe not appear normal,
should be discarded.
AND SILENCE ENSUED. - %
A meddlesome womai, riding in a
tramoar, began sneering at a young
mother's awkwardness with her baby.
“1 declare,” she snorted, “a woman
ought never to have a baby until she
knows how to hold it ~ ~ - "¢
“Nor a tongue either,” quietly re
sponded the Yyoung mother.—New
“York Journal.
The Tennis Champion Says
MAY SUTTON
Tells Amecrican Girls How To Be
H'ealthy and Graceful.
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal
Don’t drink coffee.
Don’t drink tea. . _
Don’t exercisg too much. .
These three don’ts constitute the
advice of Miss May Sutton, champion
woman tennis player of the world, to
girls who would go in seriously and
svstematically for athletics.
Eat what you want.
Take long walks. i
Get all:the fresh air you can.
These are the three rules Miss Sut
ton lays down for girls who desire
merely to be strong and healthy.
The little champion recently ap
peared on courts in San Francisco in
a series of exhibition matches. It
had been reported that she was not in
the bést of health, but she gave no. in
dication of having ‘‘gone back,” play
ing ‘her strorig game that made ‘her
world’s champidn, with her same old
dash and accuracy. : i
~ At'the'closesof the series Miss Sut
ton wase asked to tell what system of
training she had found most effective
and what, in her opinion, is the best
form of exercise and diet for the av
erage American girl. Inpartshesaid:
“While I advocate hearty
eating, I cannot say too much
against the use of tea or coffee.
They are nerve destroyers and
no one can be healthy who
persists in their use. ,
‘“Too much exercise is as bad as too
little. © Walking is the best exercise
there is. Karly each morning, after
F_,rinking a glass of hot water, dressed
n’ loose clothing, I walk for nearly
an hour.
_ ‘‘Athletics should receive some at
tentjon t;x;o'g; every girl. If her time
précludes-the playing of fennis or golf
she should take long walks in the
open air, both before the morning
and evening meal, throwing the head
and shoulders back and taking long,
deep draughts of that which money
cannot buy but is in reach of the poor
as well as the rich—pure air.
‘“Pure air and a moderate amount
of exercise I cannot too strongly im
press upon girls as being the only se
cret of health and grace. Medicine
for that out-of-sorts feeling may cause
girls to imagine they feel all right,
but what they really need is more
fresh air and not quite so much sit
ting around the house in tight-fitting
clothes as a great many of them do.”
- Miss Sutton is declared by physi
cians to be a perfect athlete. Tennis
experts declared that every movement
{s “a picture.”’ —Lexington (Ky.) Leader,
Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Crgek, Mich., U. S. A,
For ' ' Pink Lye, Epizootic
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' Chemists and N IN '
SPOHN ME“IEAL cno‘ Baoter'ologalats‘ !iu}“th lkn" “OSOAO
When trouble goes to sleep don’t
et the alarm clock.
Don't let that cough rack your system
and maybe run into something serious!
Allen's Lung Balsamggwill eheck it.
. An Imnerial Spiritualist. ‘
The Czar is by no means what
can be called deeply read, but he
takes a great delight in literature
of the lighter kind, and he is credit
ed with the remark: “Were I not—
well,"what. i am—l should .be the
greatest. “hookworm in the world.”
One of ‘his most - curious “hobbies—
and get” perhaps -not. curious when
one . congidatsk his ewémfi%wmg
temperament—3s fHe study:of vceult:'
ism. ile loves to get hold of #pir
ithal mediums and elairvoyants, and
he is very superstitious in many
ways. Some time ago a certain spir
itualist was established at the court,
and it was rumored that the Czar
and this man used frequently to ar
range seances together. A weird story
used to be told during the late Rus
so-Japanese war to the effect that a
diver told the Czar that having dived
to the bottom of the sea, he beheld
‘he ill-fateq Admiral Makharoff stand
ng on his sunken battleship with a
halo round his head. “Tell the
('zar,” said the apparition, “that Rus
zia will soon be victorious."--"“M. A.
o e
A COMMERCIAL HSBJECTION.
“My son,” sald the father, solemn
-Iy, “I am sorry I must use the rod,
but it ig my duty.”
- “But ‘dad,” objected the clever son,
“I have heard you say often you don't
approve of duty on hides.'"—Balti
more American.®
“Don’t . Drink Coffec® L 3
~ “Don't Drink Tea\
““Don’t Exercise Too Much”
Very easy when you know how
much more satisfactory
15, as a morning cup.
A hot, steaming cup of Postum
is as invigorating and bracing as
coffee. But instead of caffeine
wrecked nerves, headaches and
heart trotibles that overtake the
coffee drinker, Postum furnishes
a liquid food which strengthens
head and body.
A ten days’ trial of well-made
Postum (boiled 15 minutes) con
vinces.
““There’s a Reason.”
WONDERED WHY
Found the Answer Was ‘‘Coffee."”
Many pale, sickly persons wonder
for years why they have to suffer so,
and eventually discover that the drug
-— caffeine—in coffee is the main
cause of the trouble.
“1 was always very fond of coffee
and drank it every day. 1 never had
much flesh and often wondered why I
was always go pale, thin and weak.
“About five years agé my health
completely broke down and I was ¢on
fined to my bed.. My stomach wasg in
such . condition 'that. .1 could, hardly
take sufficient dourishment’ to sustain
life. T i R N
- “During this time 1 was drinking
coffee, didn’t think: I could do with
outdt,.’ s.. ' s S
A ftor awhife f i énibitorghe .cons
clusion that coffeer was hurting me,
and decided to give it up and try
Postum. I didn’t like the taste of it
at first, but when it was made right—-
boiled until dark and rich—ll soon be
came very fond of it. :
“In one week I began to feel bet
ter. I could eat more and sleep bet
ter. My sick headaches were leas fre
quent; and within five months I
looked and felt like a new being,
headache spells entirely gone.
““My health continued to iméprove
and to-day I am well and strong,
weigh 148 lbs. I attribute my pres
ent health to the life-giving qualities
of Postum.” ,‘
‘““There’s a Reason.” /
Read, ‘“The Road to Wellville,” 1n
pkgs, L g