The Brunswick daily news. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1903-1906, September 27, 1903, Image 7

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.Sunday #orntn6: BUSY HOUSEWIVES. Pe-ru-na a Prompt and Permanent lor Nmousness. \ ; g„ys7' L 1,111 Larmel '. Stoughton, Wis., x ‘T°F years 1 suffered with ner trouble and stomach disorders un itl it seemed that there was nothing to me but a buudle of nerves. “I was very irritable, could not sleep, rest or compose myself, and was cer tainly unat to take care of n household. nJi°* 0 \ n “ ve tonicS ami P ||ls without benefit. \\ lien I began taking Peruna I grew steadily better, my nerves grew stronger, my rest was no longer fitful, and to-day I consider myself in perfect health and strength. “My recovery was slow but sure, but L^ l ??. V ?;', 0, ,V Ui(l was rewarded by per fect health. —Mrs. Lulu Larmer. Mrs. Anna B, Fleharty, recent Super intendent of tlie W. C. T. U. headquar iteis at Galesburg, ill., was for ten .years one of the leading women there. ■Her husband, when living, was first MWtfident of the Nebraska Wesleyan •Wuversity at Lincoln, Neb. In a letter written from 401 Sixty seventh street, W, Chicago, 111., she says: “I would not be without Peruna for ten times its cost,”—Mrs. Anna B. Fie barty. V and Beauty,” a book written oy l)r. Hartman, on the phases of ca tarrh peculiar to women, will be sent free by The Peruna Medicine Cos.. Co lumbus, Ohio. Peking, written Pekin in United States government publications since 1897, is to get back its “g.” If current developments tuay be taken as indica tion, the ancient capital of China may yet be written Pekingsky, facetiously remarks the New York World. ost desirable “Once tried a/wat/s used Tsed by American BOc nH|l 91* at Druggists. Physicians 6ioce 1844. Ihe Tarrant Cos., New York Do You Want Your Money TO KAHN * 7% INTEREST PElt ANNUM t r Write rac for particulars of a safe, secure Invest inent paying seven per cent, on amounts of one hundred dollars or more. Bank reference.B. W, M. HOKE, York, Penca. RIPANS Tabules Doctors find A good prescription For mankind. The B-cent packet Is enough fot an ordinary occasion. The family bottle {price CO cents) contains a supply lor a year. WORMS *'l write to let yon know how I appreciate your CJaHcarote. I commenced taking them last Novem ber and took two ten cent boxes and nassed a tape worm 14 ft. long. Then I commenced taking thorn again and Wednesday, April 4th, I passed another tape worm 28 ft. long and over a thousand small worms. Previous to my taking Casearets I didn't know l had a tape-worm. 1 always had a small •ppetlbe. ,f ♦Yin, F, Brown, 184 Franklin St., Brooklyn, N. Y. f The Bowels mmmm CANOY CATHARTIC Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, 10c, 25c, 50c. Never •old in bnlk. The genuino tablet stamped CU C. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. Sterling Remedy Cos., Chicago or N.Y. 594 ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES Avery & Company * SUCCESSOR TO avery & mcmillan, 81-53 South Forsyth Bt., Atlanta, Oft. —ALL KINDS OF— MACHINERY Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all Sires. What Separators. JEST IMPROVED Large Engines and Boilers supplied promptly. SHngi, Mills, Corn Mills, Circular Saws, Saw Teeth, Patent Dogs, Steam Governors. Full line Engines * Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue. Hft N PCD CIRED WITHOUT CUTTING, I.HnULTI A New Vegetable Remedy. 4/Cure Guaranteed in Every Case Treated. NATIONAL CANCEIt MEDICINE COMPANY, Austell Building, Atlanta, Ga. Am. 26, 1903. PISO’S CURE' FOR 25 ITS | CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. Beet Cough Syrup. Tatca Good. Use j In time. Bold by druggists. CONSUMPTION AH Planter* Were Architects. Very few of the old houses of the South, except some of the old Geor gian houses of Charleston, which be long to an earlier period than the white-columned houses of the early nineteenth century, have elaborately ■decorated interiors.- Except In the ■sea coast cities of the South, skilled labor waa rare and architects Were almost unknown. The great majority of planters, therefore, were compelled to Import their architectural designs or draw them themselves. Most of them preferred to do the latter las Thomas Jefferson preferred to draw his own plans for Montieello) and to oversee personally the construction of the houses. With this end in view; almost all men of means in the South prior to the Civil War were students of architec ture and ready purchasers of such architectural plates as were published from time to time. To this day heavy volumes on Oreek architecture—tech nical works that only students would care to own—are to be found as fea tures Of such old family libraries as are stilt preserved throughout the South.—Mrs. Thaddeus liorton, in the House Beautiful. A Great Man Worsted. In an interesting case where Rufus Choate and Daniel Webster were both retained by a Boston shipping house. Mr. Choate examined the witnesses. He had before him In the witness-box • one of the ship owners, whom he wish ed to confuse, and Consequently he began by asking a long and Complex question. George Fraheis Train, who tells ths story, says this question wound all round the case and straggled through every street in BostOU. “You say,” asserted Choate, “that you did so and so, that you went to such and such a place; after this you did so and so, and then thus and so.” But the man was an Irishman of per fect nerve and unshaken coolness. Mr. Choate went on coiling Up his question and tying knots in it; and when he had quite finished, the wit ness merely looked at him, and said, calmly: “Mr. Choate, will yez be afther re pating that again.” The bench and the spectators roar ed. Mr. Choate was worsted. Yet ho won his case. FITS permanently cured.No (Its or nervous ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Groat Nerveßestorer.f atrial bottle and treatlsef reo Dr. B. H. iti. ink, Ltd., 981 Archßt., Phlla.,Pa Peat has about half of the heating power oi coal and double that of wood, Ladles Can Wear Shoes One size smaller after using Allen’s Foot- Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aehing feet, ingrowing nails, corns anil bunions. At all druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Don’t ac cept any substitute. Trial paekago Farit by mail. Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y, Canada’s exports and imports have al most doubled in six years. There are about 30,000 automobiles in use in the United States. Plso’s Cure for Consumption Is an Infallible medicine for coughs and colds,—N> W, Samuel, Ooean Grove, N. J„ Feb. 17,1900, Many a woman whose diamonds aro paste is stuck up. Dyspepsia and Indigestion Cured free of cost. Thousands cured daily. Send only 2-cent stamp for full information. Hoyle & Cos., Atlanta, Ga. Consumption claims 6000 persons a year in Ohio. Magnets as Cranes, The immense steel plates, some of which weigh as much as twelve tons, are now hanlled by electromagnets. The form of the magnet i3 usually rectangular, and It presents a flat surface to the plates to be lifted. A magnet weighing 300 pounds will lift four and a half tons. The magnet Is operated by current from a dynamo. For the heaviest plates several of them are used simultaneously. In sixty-five Berlin schools the chil dren are taught how to take care of potted plants. His First Dress Suit. "The first time I ever put on a dress suit,” said ex-Gov. Scofield, "was at the reception and ball which followed In the evening of the day that I was inaugurated. I remember that we had to stand on a little platform, raised a few Inches from the, floor, while the crowd passed along and shook hands with Mrs. Scofield and myself. “I weighed just ninety-six pounds at that time, and was as thin as a match. Mrs. Scofield is a fleshy wo man, and as I looked at her during a lull in the procession and then sized up my own diminutive anatomy I whis pered to her: “Martha, we must look like the liv ing skeleton and the fat woman In the dime museum to these people.” “That settled Mrs. Scofield for the balance of the evening, and to save herself she could not get rid of the ripples of mirth that would sweep over her face and break out into peals of laughter as the ridiculousness of the situation appealed to her.” —Mil- waukee Sentinel. Gray ? “My hair was falling out and turning gray very fast. But your Hair Vigor stopped the falling and restored the natural color.”—Mrs. E. Z. Benomme, Cohoes, N. Y. It’s impossible for you not to look old, with the color of seventy years in your hair! Perhaps you are seventy, and you like your gray hair! If not, use Ayer’s Hair Vigor. In less than a month your gray hair will have all the dark, rich color of youth. SI.OO a bottle. All druggists. If your druggist cannot supply you, send us one dollar and we will express you a bottle. lie sure and give the name ot your nearest express office. Address. J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Maas. .ZfrCTS. IN EVERY WALK OF LIFE. testimony and learn liow It can ho doue. A. A. Boyce, a farmer, living three and a half miles from Trenton, Mo., says: “A severe cold settled 111 my kid neys and developed so quickly that l was obliged to lay off work oil account of the aching lit my back find sides. For a time I was unable to walk at all, and every makeshift 1 tried and all the medicine I took had not the slightest effect. My back continued to grow weaker until I was unfit for anything. Mrs. Boyce noticed Doan's Kidney Pills advertised as a sure cure for just such conditions, and one day when in Trenton she brought a box home from Obas: A. Foster's driig store. 1 fol lowed the directions carefully when taking them and I must say I was more than surprised and much more gratified to notice the back ache dis appearing gradually until It finally stopped.” A Free Tar At. of this great kidney medicine which cured Mr. Boyce will be mailed on application to auy part of the United States. Address Fosier- Milburn Do., Buffalo, N. Y For sale by all druggists, price 50 cents per box. A NURSERY IN THIBET. Rock-a-by-Babylsm In This Little Known Country. Our first meeting with the Sifans presented many ludicrous features, writes W. C. Jameson Read in Col lier’s Weekly. We were plunging through the gloom of the forest when our ears were assailed with a con course of yells which echoed through the supernatural silence with ghostly weirdness. In this forbidding wilder ness we had not looked for signs of human habitation, so hastily arrang ing ourselves In position we prepared ourselves for what seemed an Inevit able hostile attack. Long and anxious ly we waited the onslaught of our sup posed hidden assailants, when again the peace-disturbing sound echoed al most, it seemed, over our very heals. Glancing upward, the mystery was soon explained, for in the lower branches of the tree We could descry numerous small bundles, each too large for an eyry and too small for a windfall. Both my kiansi and Gharlkauese es cort, with their superstitious natures roused by these ghost-like sounds, visibly paled beneath their dusky skins, and gazed furtively round in order to seek means of escape from this enchanted spot. Even I was not a little puzzled and awed, until peering more closely I became aware of the f&ct the disturbing elements which had caused us so much concern arose from the fact that we had unwittingly stumbled upon an aboriginal nursery, and that the weird and ghostlike sounds emanated from several hungry and lusty-lunged infants. Then the solemn stillness was broken by our hearty laughter. The Sifans and Gharikatises, as If to make amends for their credulous fears, making the woods ring with their forced guffaws. The Sifan Thibetans, as we subse quently learned, place their children in skin cradles and hang the3e from the trees In the forests near their vil lages for two reasons—the first from a belief that they will be instructed by the deities; the second, that their full existence may not be endangered by the abominable flilth and squalor of the settled regions. Several times In the day they are visited by their mothers, who provide them with food and remain with them during the night, and In this forest home the child remains until it is two or three years old, and has grown strong and healthy enough to stand th* rigora of hardship and disease. Heroic Treatment. To take a bath at Tifli3 is to court a wonderful experience. Abundant springs of water, strongly impregnated with the sulphureted hydrogen, supply the building, and In its vaulted cham bers, far below the street, there is no sound but the splash of the fountain and the rolling echo of one’s own voice. Henry Norman glve3 a de scription of the masseur who presides over the bath and makes its most ec centric feature. "He I3 a Persian, who speaks but a word or two of Russian. His head is shaved, a rag is twisted round his waist, and his feet are dyed orange. “First he rub3 you, and then sud denly, as you lie face downward on the marble slab, he Is upon your back, his feet dug into your spine, his hands grasping your shoulders to increase the pressure. Slowly, with skillful appreciation of every muscle, his feet grind up and down your back. They encircle your neck; they are on your head. “Then he vaults lightly off. and in a moment, from a linen bag filled with soap, he has squeezed clouds of per fumed bubbles, and you are hidden in them from head to foot as com pletely as if you had fallen into a snow-drift. You are not absolutely bruised, but you are clean." It was shown at the Brooklyn navy yard the other morning that the gov ernment’s plan of having the band play while the men were coaling a warship is most efficacious. While lively two steps and marches were played the blue-jackets worked like beavers to fill the bunkers of the supply-ship Buf falo. One of the officers suggested that it would not be a bad idea for private corporations to cheer their men on in their work by hiring music, if nothing more than one of the little street bands, to keep up their enthusi asm. The deepest grave won’t always hide a family skeleton. THE BRUNSWICK DAILY NEWS. BIG REDWOODS DOOMED AMERICA'S TALLEST TREES FALL TO LUMBERMAN'S AXE. Chance fdh Second Growth—lnvestiga tion by bureau of Forestry Shows That Young Shoots May Be Easily Grown and the Race Preserved. What is to be done for the redwoods of the Pacific Coast is a question that has not only agitated California, but is of sentimental concern to the whole nation. The Bureau of Forestry, at tacking the problem in a thoroughly practical spirit, has worked out con clusions that should appeal as reason able at once to the lumbermen, who cut redwood on account of its cotnmer ctial value, and to those who wish this ancient and marvelous type of tree growth preserved. The results of this study are given in a bulletin by R. T. Fisher, recently is sued by the department of Agriculture. The redwood forests are, in point of merchantable yield, probably the dens est on earth, many stands yielding 150,- 000 board feet to the acre; and redwood logging represents the highest develop ment of the lumbering business that has ever been attained on the Pacific coast.. The total supply of redwood is estimated to be 75,000,000,000 feet. The amount cut in 1900 was 360,000,000 feet, with a value of $3,645,G08. Although only one-tenth of the forests of the United States is owned by lumbermen, according to the last census, one-fifth of the redwood is in their hands, and the stands they own are the handsom est and most valuable in the redwood belt. Seems Doomed to Extinction. Ever since the SpalA’ards began to cut redwood along San Francisco Bay the range of its growth has been dim inishing; it now occupies an area of about 2000 square miles. During the last 50 years several hundred thousand acres of timber have been cut over, and the good lands put into cultivation or turned into pasture. As year by year the redwood forests have dwindled, it has come to be pretty generally be lieved that the tree is doomed to ex tinction. The popular idea that the redwood has no chance of survival is not well founded. The studies of the Bureau of Forestry have proved that possibilities of anew growth of redwood after the old trees have been removed are ex cellent. Given half a chance, the red wood reproduces itself by sprouts with astonishing vigor. Measurements taken by the bureau on cut-over land shows that in 30 years, in a fair soil and a dense stand, trees will be grown 10 inches in diameter, 80 feet high, yield ing 2000 feet board measure to the acre. Hope for Future Growth. Realizing that the fate of the old trees cannot be stayed, the Bureau of Forestry, instead of wasting itself in attempts to check the cutting, confined itself to proving that it is worth while to the lumbermen to do less damage to the young trees in logging virgin red wood lands, and to hold such lands for a second crop. The study made con cerns itself with young second growth rather than with mature trees; with timbered areas rather than with the virgin forest. Where attention was given the old forests and methods of lubering, it was only that a better knowledge might be gained of second growth and how to deal with it. The redwood of California belongs to a genus of which the big tree is the only other species now alive. Both are allied to the cypress, and their lumber is often called by the same name, but they are botanicaliy distinct from each other. They do not even occupy the same situations. The big tree occurs in scattered bodies on the west slopes of the Sierra Nevada, while the redwood forms dense forests on the west slopes of the Coast Range. Tallest American Tree. The redwood grows to a greater height than any other American tree, but in girth and in age it is exceeded by the big trees of the Sierras. On the slopes 225 feet is about its maxi mum height and 30 feet its greatest diameter, while on the flats, under bet the conditions, it grows to bo 350 foot high, with a diameter of 20 feet. Most of the redwood cut is from 400 to SOO years old. After the tree has passed the ogo of 500 years, it usually begins to die down from the top and to fall off in growth. The oldest redwood found during the bureau's investigation had begun life 1373 years ago. The bark of the tree offers such a remarkable resistance to fire that Ex cept, under great heat it is not com bustible. It is of a reddish-gray color, fibrous in texture, and gives to full grown redwoods, a fliiled appearance. Moisture available for the roots is the first need of the redwood, as any hilly tract of forest, will show. Wherever a small gully, or bench, or basin is so placed as to receive an un common amount of seepage, or where ever a creek flows by, there the trees are suro to be largest, VJule moisture of the soil affects the development of the redwood, moisture of (he atmos phere regulates its distribution. The limits of the sea fogs are just about the limits of the tree. The fogs, unless scat tered by winds, flow inland among the mountains. Western exposures receive most of the mist they carry, except those higher ridges above their reach, which support, in consequence, only a scattering growth of redwood. The tree's vitality is so great, it en dures so many vicissitudes and suffers from so many accidents in the centuries of its existence, that the grain of its wood becomes uneven in proportion as its life has been eventful. The wood fibers formed under different, rates of growth sometimes get up a tension so great that when the log is sawed the wood splits with a loud report. The seed of the redwood will not germinate in shaded places: the" small seedling demands plenty of light,. The crown is almost as thin and open as that of a larch, another sign that, the tree is not naturally tolerant of shade. In a mixed stand the redwood's branches die off more rapidly than those of its companions, and the crown bends eagerly to places where the light enters the forest canopy. But in 4-pit of these signs of its sensitiveness iu light, the redwood forms one of the. densest forests that grow. The reason for this Is that the stand ma'ntaincd chiefly by sn-ksring from old trees. Supported and nour ished by full-grown roots and stem3, young trees grow under shade that would kill the small seeding. The sprout will endure an astonishing amount of shade. In stands of second growth, so dense that not a ray of sun light can enter, saplings 6 or 8 feet high are to be found growing from stumps, bare of branch or foliage ex cept for a few inches of pale green crown at the top. In very dark, damp places in the virgin forest one may find clumps of shoots as white as sprouts from a potato. Wood Has Many Uses. Redwood possesses qualities which fit it for many uses. In color it shades from light cherry to dark mahogany. It is easily worked, takes a beautiful pol ish, and is one of the most durable of the coniferous woods of California. It resists decay so well that trees which have been lain 500 years in the forest have been sent to the mill and sawed into lumber. The wood is without resin, and offers a strong resistance to fire, as the record of fires in San Fran cisco, where it is much used, indicate. Insects seldom injure it, because of an acid element it contains. In sea water, however, the marine teredo eats off redwood piling as readily as other Um ber. A RIDE ON A CAMEL. Plucky Woman Traveler Descrlnes the Experience. It was in western Australia. Water was scarce and the long journey to the mines had been rendered unsafe for man and beast by the failure of the water supply. It was decided to make the experiment of importing camels and native drivers from Afri ca. Large numbers of men were at the mines and the hauling of provisions was necessary to avert a famine. Thus it was that the camel displaced the ox as the king of the highway. When I concluded to tako the trip to the mines in the caravan, a minister who was interested in the welfare of the miners, decided to go at the same time, and volunteered to act as my escort. The truth is, the good man had never traveled by camel and he was anxious to try the experience. So one fine morning the camel and his two drivers stopped ah my door. That awful beast! 1 am sure the camel was the last thing the Lord made, and, well, he has never been finished. The owner seemed to understand him. In a few well-chosen words he commanded the camel to kneel. The animal obliged, taking his own time. As we ap proached he sniffed and growled, and turning his long neck emphasized his interest in us by making a sudden dive at the preacher. The driver did not swear. There are no “swear words” in his language, and he could not speak English, so he relieved his feelings by kicking the came!. When the creature was finally calmed, the reverend brother took liis place in the saddle. I mentally thanked the fates that had decreed it “good form” for the gentleman (o mount first and occupy the front section of the sad dle. I fully realized that It is some times safe to hide behind a preacher. The driver fashioned one of his knees to form a mount for me, from which I sprang into the saddle, and when at ease he gave the marching orders. A camel has but one joint in his front legs and two in the back. Whefi he begins to get up no creature on earth but a camel could do such stupid things. He straightens oitt his hack legs first, leaving that part of his body high in the air. As I rose ma jestically above the preacher and could only with dilllculty keep my seat, a deadly fear name upon me lest I should fail upon him, and thus un wittingly and suddenly end a career of usefulness. My only comfort was that he doubtless was belter prepared for another world just then than I was. When the beast finally gained his foot ing and I became accustomed to the "rock-a-by” motion, the ship of the desert became a most comfortabio means of conveyance. The Five Stages. At 37 she said; “I want a man who is ardent in all of love's ways and whose passionate devotion may never flag. He must ho tall and broad shouldered and handsome, with dark, flashing, soulful eyes, and, if need lie, go to (he ends of the world for my sake.” At 20 she said: “I want a man who Unites the tender sympathy of a wom an with the bravery of a lion. I don’t mind his being a little dissipated, be cause that always adds a charm, lie must he, however, accomplished to tho last degree, and capable of any sacri fice for my sake.” At 25 she said; “I want a man who unites with an engaging personality a complete knowledge of the world, and if, of necessity, he happens to have a past, he must also have a future; a man whom I can look up to, and with whom I can trust myself at all times without the slightest embarrassment." At 30 she said: 'T want a man with money. He can have any other at tributes that a man ought to possess, but he must have money, and the more he has the better I will like it.” At 35 she said: ‘‘l want a man.”— Life. Blood Poisoning. Blood poisoning is now recognized as poisoning by a living organism, whilo ordinary poisoning is by some chem ical substance devoid of life. Blood poisoning took its name before its na ture was properly understood, and it was thought to boa form of ordinary poisoning, but that the blood rather than the “vital principles” was chiefly altaoked. As the stomach can, as a rule, de stroy the life of most organisms, while it can only to a limited extent alter the constitution of chemical poi sons, poisoning iiy iiving organisms, c-r blood poisoning, is far more com mon through wounds than by things eaten, and thus the idea of its being a poisoning of the blood was strength ened. Asa “blood poison" is alive, it can, and often does, go on increasing after iis first indigestion, and the most obvious difference between the two is that blood poisoning generally begins with slight symptoms, and increas es indefinitely, while ordinary poison ing reaches its height almost at, once, PfritratmSk The Ills of Women Act upon the Nerves like a Firebrand. Hio Fetation of woman’s nerves and generative organs is very close; consequently nine tenths of the nervous prostration, nervous despondency, “the blues,” sleeplessness, and nervous irritability of women arise from some derangement of the organism which makes her a woman. Herein we prove conclusively that Lydia E. Piukham’s Vegetable Compound will quickly relieve all this trouble. Details of a Severe Case Cured in Eau Claire, Wis. “Peak Mrs. Pinkiiam:—l have been ailing from female trouble for the past live years. About a mouth ago I was taken with nervous prostra tion, accompanied at certain times before menstruation with fearful head aches. I read one of your books, and finding many testimonials of tho bene ficial effects of Lydia K. Pinklinni’n Vegetaibki Compound, experi enced by lady an lie. re rs, 1 commenced its use and am happy to state that after using a few bottles 1 feel like anew woman, aches and pains all gone. “ I am recommending your medicine to many of my friends, and I assure you that you have iny hearty thanks for your valuable preparation which has done so much good. I trust all suffering women will use your Vegetable Com pound.”— Mrs. Minnie Tiktz, 020 First Ave., Eau Claire, Wis. (May 28, 1001). Nothing will relievo this distressing 1 condition so surely as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound; it soothes, strengthens, heals and tones up the delicate female organism. It is a positive cure for all kinds of female complaints; that hearing down feeling, back ache, displacement of the womb, inflammation of fho ovaries, and is invaluable during the change of life, all of which may help to cause nervous prostration. Read what Mrs. Day says: •* Dear Mrs. Pinkiiam : I will write you a few linen to let you know of tho benefit I have received from taking your remedies. I suffered for a long time with nervous prostration, backache, sick headache, painful menstru ation, pain in the stomach after eating, and constipation. I often thought I wpuld lose my mind. I began to take Lydia K. I*i nk lm m\s Vegetable Compound and was soon feeling like anew woman. 1 cannot praise it too highly. It does all that it is recommended to do, and more. “I hope that every one who suffers as l did will give Lydia E. Pinkham’a remedies a trial.” Mrs. Marie Day, Elcanora, Pa. (March 25,1001.) Free Medical Advice to Women. Mrs. Pinkiiam invites all women to write to her for advice. You need not he afraid to tell her tho things you could not explain to the doctor —your let ter will he seen only by women and is absolutely con fidential. Mrs. Piiikliam’s vast experience with such troubles enables her to toll you just what is best for you, and she will charge you nothing for her advice. Another Case of Nervous Prostration Cured. “ Dear Mrs. Pinkiiam .‘ Allow me to express to you the benefit I have derived from taking JLydlaK* IMiiklimnN Vpgetalflo Compound, before I started to take it 1 was on the verge of nervous prostration. Could not sleep nights, and 1 suffered dreadfully from iudi gets ton and headache. I heard of Lydia E. Pinkham’s wonderful medicine, and began its use, which immediately restored my health. “1 can heartily recommend it to all suffering women.” Mrs. Bertha E. Deirkins, 25>£ Lapidge St., San Francisco, Cal. (May 21, 1901.) vCfinn FORFEIT If wo cannot forthwith produce tho original letters and signatures of \*IIIIIII aburo testimonials, which will prove their absolute genuinenesfl. vwUUU l.ydia K. Pluklmm Medicine Cos., Lynn, R‘NEW RIVAL” BLACK POWDER SHELLS. It’s the thoroughly modern and scientific system of load ing and the use of only the best materials which make nchester Factory Loaded “New Rival” Shells Rive bet pattern, penetration and more uniform results gener r than any other sheils. The special paper and the Win ■ster patent corrugated head used in making “New ■at” shells give them strength to withstand reloading. SURE TO GET WINCHESTER MAKE OK SHELLS. ' Cooling as a shower on a hot day /f if Hires Jgk V Root beer Iff PoM ivrywrlifTP or by inall /O f|j (ASplij^TOll ■ Is extensively used everywhere ill the ■ world wherever the tnuz/.le lorulef B ■ has given way to the breech loader. B B It is made in the largest mid best B n equipped cartridge factory in ex is- H B This accounts for the uniformity of H H Tell your dealer “U. M. C.” when a ra he asks: “ What kind? ” P The Union Metallic Cartridge Cos. 1 B BRIDGEPORT, GONN. \ Aaeucy, Uli( Broadway* 1 m New York City* N* If* jj -•ass.'jgj*. Removes nil swelling ii, to 20 / days; effects a j < -nnanent cure jb —A in 30 to 60 • t given fr< •• t Mimicaii be t.tircf W > Dr. H. H. Green's Sons, Specialists. Box Atlanta.G** Morphinism, ee i2. Alcoholism, R Tobacco Habit, and wl 541 L# Nmi 1 asthenia r*-ft<llh ylobl to the Kefclej treatment. (’oriespoudence r( nfldential Write for pamphlet. Loll phone 493. K*e e; Institute. 3720 Ave. 1), Birmingham, Ala. QUIN-INDIA c cuT*AV°MALARIA ’’ft! BLOOD HUMOURS Skin Hows, Scalp Humours, Hair Humours, Whether Simple Scrofulous or Hereditary Speedily Cured by Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Fills. Complete External and Internal Treatment, One Dollar. In tho treatment of torturing, dis figuring, Itching, scaly, crusted, pimply, blotchy and scrofulous humours of tho skin, scalp ami blood, with loss of hair* Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tills have been wonderfully successful. Even tho most obstinate of constitutional hu mours, such as bad blood, scrofula, in herited and contagious humours, with loss of hair, grandulur swellings, ulcer ous pitches in tie; throat and mouth, 60 ro eyes, copper-colourcd blotches, as well as boils, carbuncles, scurvy, sties, Shears and sores arising from an im pure or Impoverished condition of tho blood, yield to tho Cuticura Treatment, when all other remedies fail. Ami greater still, if possible, Is tho wonderful record of cures of torturing, disfiguring humours among infants and children. The suffering which Cuticura Remedies have alleviated among the young, and tiie comfort they have af forded worn-out and won i -1 parents, have led to their adoption in countless homes as priceless curatives for the skin and blood. Infantile and birth hu mours, milk crust, sculled head, eczema, rashes and every form of itching, scaly, pimply skin and smilp humours, with loss of hair, of infam y and childhood, are speedily, permanently aid economi cally cured when all <"her remedies suitable for children, r.i.d even the best physicians, fail. Sold ttironphootthe worM. Cuticura J.V■•.'■!vrß*. .TV 'in form <■ Chocolate oat*l I’iM .Z> |i-r vwU <■; >), Oint ment, So'ip, >'c. J 'tpulM: .i.tic>;i. .. I hk.. r **rhon*a •. Faria,s Hue do li 1 aia; I’ofton. I.*i7 Cobrubu* Atl> VoC-r ' i 3!U Chcm. Dorp-. Sol® tT gaud ?* fa* tir*4l Uu'wi Gw*