The Brunswick daily news. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1903-1906, November 18, 1903, Image 3

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ar, Forking. BACKACHE. Backache is a forerunner and one of the most common symp toms of kidney trouble and womb displacement. ■BEAD MISS BOLLMAN'B EXPERIENCE. , e time ago I was in a very weak condition, my work made me "n7u Ua . and m >' bac “ached frightfully ollthe time, and 1 had terrible head acaes. p?;i? , 1 J her P°K? bottl ° Lydia “ ms Vegetable Com pound for me, and it seemed to strengthen my bock and help me at |once, and I did not get so tired as _ Delore. 1 continued to take it, and it broua'ht health and strength to me, *n* I want to thank you for the it has done me.” —Miss Kate Boixman, 142nd St. & Wales Ave., , Cit y- -moo forfeit if original of <ae*u# htttr proving genulnenevs cannot be proo'uoej. Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound cures because it iar the greatest known remedy for kidney und womb troubles. Every woman who is puzzled about her condition should writo to Mrs. Pinkham nt Lynn, Mass., and tell her all. The Manchester of Africa. The recent extension of British au thority over certain districts of North ern Nigeria has drawn public attention to that prosperous and fertile country. Hano, the metropolis of that rart of Africa, is a place of 100,000 inhabit ants and its people are Industrious and well-to-do. They are the cloth makers of the country, growing and 'spinning the cotton, dyeing It with indigo or scarlet and then Weaving it into cloth. But all this work is done by hand, there not being a single factory in that whole region. Much morocco leather comes from Hano, too, all of it being tanned and pre pared by workmen at, home. Many a man has acquired a repute tlon for generosity by spending bor rowed money. ever made. A hundred mlllioDs year. Every Illness arising from a disordered stomach is relieved or cured by their use. So common is it that diseases originate from the stomach It may lie safely as serted there is uo condition of il) health that will not be benefited or cured by the occasional use of Ripans Tabulcs. Physicians know them and speak highly of them. All druggists sell them. The five-cent package is enough for an ordinary occasion, and flte Family Bottle, sixty cents, contains a household supply for a year. Otic generally gives relief within twenty minutes. " Bilious? Dizzy? Headache? Pain back, of your eyes? It’s your liver! Use Ayer’s Pills. Gently laxative; all vegetable. Sold for 60 years. Want your moustache or beard a beautiful brown or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM’S DYE I nm CTB. OP DRUGGISTS OR It T HAI.L ft TO.. WaAIIPA. w n. TUIANE LMVERSiiy of LA. NEW ORLEANS. Full courses in Languages, Sciences, EnKiQCcriutf, Law, Medicine. Splendid de partment for women lit Newcomb College. Tulane makes leaders in all vocations. Its facilities for instruction In Engineering are unsurpassed. Unexcelled opportunities for the study of Sugar Chemistry. Many schol arships in tho Academic department. Ex penses low. Board and accommodations In dormitories at low rates. Opportunities alTorded academic students for self-help. No worthy boy, if needy, shall bo turned, away from its doors. Next session begins October Ist. Send for Catalogue. Address THE BKGISTItAIt, Gibson Had. HOWARD"COLLEGE Alabama Organized and chartered 1811. Offers thorough instruction in History, English and Public Kpeuki. g, Mathematics, Ancient and Modem Languages, Mental and Moral Sciences, Physics, Cli inistry and Tiology. Very best moral and religious influences* Well equipped gymnasium, with llist-class instructor. Military training. Faculty for 1903-1904 increased; new and elegantly furnish ’d domitory ready in Sep tember. Three members of facul y room and board on the campus For informa* tion and catalogue, address E. P Hogan, A P. Montague, Birmingham. East Lake. ATLANTA COLLEGE Of PHARMACY. Free Dispensary, only college in the U. 8. op erating a arug store. Demand for graduates greater than we can supply. Address DR. GEO. F. FAYNIC, Whitehall# Atlanta, Ga. Heat Eruptions Disordered Stomachs ft frjajljl Aching Heads iIPV /SE promptly relieved by this grand old remedy. THE TARRANT CO., GOc ’ nnd ® ,,o ° SI Jay St., Sew York. At Druggintt or by waif. Ta CURtBWHII ALL ELSE FAILS. Q Beet Cough Syrup. Taste* Good. Use gj In time. Sold by druggists. lc .V,"uie Thompson* Eyo Walor ( loi\_ Toe 1 Uses of Water in Baking Pastry. It is useful to know when baking pies, either fruit or meat, by placing (he pie in a tin with a little cold water it will save the syrup or gravy from boiling out, but, do not let the water dry up. A little tvater sprinkled on top of fruit pies, and a little dry, fine sugar next, will give the pastry a pretty brown appearance. How to Copy Mission Furniture. A clever imitation of the popular Mission furniture designs may be ob tained by a dull green stain applied carefully to old splint-bottomed chairs and settles. Any person who is skil ful with the saw and hammer can easily produce odd little tables or book stands, their square shaping be ing very easy of execution. Oxidized gilt or silver nails give the necessary finishing tcuch.—New York Press. For the Sofa Pillow. An attractive addition to the sofa pillow corps is one covered with fish net lace. A piece about 1C inches square is required for tihe cover. Twd or more harmonizing or contrasting shades of satin bebe ribbon are wov en in and out of the meshes, the en tire cover being decorated in this man ner. Grayish blue and pale yellow makes a pretty combination for a pil low of this sort. A ruffle of lace bor dered with ribbon w-oven in a design corresponding to the top constitutes the finish. The ruffle is lined with silk the same shade as is used for the back. —Brooklyn Eagle. To Cleanse Swansdown. Tacit the strips firmly to a piece of white muslin or calico. Make a lather of soap jelly and water in which you can comfortably bear your hand —a heaped tablespoonful to a gallon—add a teaspoomful of liquid ammonia. Put the swansdown into this, leave for a few minutes, souse up and down, and without wringing put into a sec ond lot of stids prepared in the same way, and souse up and down. If it does not look clean, use a third lot of suds. Rinse in two lots of clear warm w ater and hang in the wind to dry, giv ing it an occasional shake. When dry rip it from the muslin, and rub gently between your hands to soften. New Wall Papers. For nurseries and the sleeping and living rooms used by children the English pictorial effects continue in vogue and grow more refined and in teresting with each year’s output. The Kate Greenaway designs still hold, their own, and Mother Goose illus trations, with a generous supply... gf as *i • • The plain - half tone cartridge pa pers. in yellow, gray, blue, terracot ta or sage green, make the best back grounds for pictures, statuary and bric-a-brac. Large patterned papers are best for halls and bed rooms, w-here ornaments upon the walls may be dispensed with. For dens the quaint Paisley shawl designs that come from France are much in favor, and the most exquisite ly tinted floral papers are also sup plied from this source. In the pictorial line delightfully soft color effects come in pastoral scenes and legend ary figures, very different from the crisp, clean tones of the English Mother Goose achievements. * * * Anew bathroom paper from Ger. many showing the prow' of a yacht ana a wind blown old salt in comfortable tones of light sepia and old blue is In constantly growing demand. Green parrots and pink roses are another German combination which, strange to say, has proved a favorite and most effective under certain conditions.— Philadelphia Telegraph. Recipes. Strawberry Sherbet—Mash and rub through a sieve one quart of berries; add juice of one lemon, one pint of water and sugar enough to make very sweet; turn into the freezer and freeze to a mush. Eggless Muffins —Take a pint of buttermilk, half a teaspoonful of soda, two or three tablespoonfuls of sour cream, if you have it, pinch of salt and enough Hour to make a rather thick batter. Bake in well-buttered gem pans in quick oven. Whipped Cream and Fruit Pudding —Whip o.ne cup of thick cream until stiff; beat the white of one egg to a stiff froth; add one-third cup of pow dered sugar; add tills to the whipped cieam, and beat in half a cup of fresh berries; put between layers of sponge cake. Steamed Rhubarb —Wash and cut in inch pieces, without peeling; put in a double boiler with one cupful of sugar to one pint of the cut rhubarb; cook until soft; do not stir it. If the rhu barb is very sour, pour boiling water over it; let stand five minutes and drain; add the sugar and steam it. Tomato and Tapioca Soup—Put a pint of strained tomato into the soup kettle, add half a tablespoonfn! of beef extract, a tablespoonful of but ter, three dessertspoonfuls of fine ta pioca and three cups of hot water, season to taste with salt and paprica. Cook for a quarter of au hour and serve with tiny croutons. Stuffed Onions —Pee! onions; par boil 10 minutes in boiling salted water enough to cover; turn upside down to cool; remove most of the centre; fill cavities w'ith equal parts of finely chopped cooked cfiieken, stale soft bread crumbs and the finely chopped onion that was removed; season with salt and pepper and moisten with cream or melted butter; put them in a shallow buttered baking pan; sprink le with buttered crumbs and bake In a moderate oven until the onions are soft; serve on a hot platter. (NCLOSURE OF STONEHENGE. Speculation as to the Meaning of the Megaliths. We may not know exactly what Stonehenge originally was; but we are all convinced that it was either a place of worship, a place where rites thought to be pleasing to some higher power were performed, or a place of burial for the illustrious dead, or a place of tribal meeting, perhaps for the crown ing of kings, or, as is very probable, a place used for more than one of these purposes. It is also quite cer tain that of its kind it was a place of the highest importance. It may be regarded as the Westminster Ab bey of some tribe or race which in the neolithic - age spread over the south of England. Obviously. It must have been a place of resort for a whole nation of people—the one place of all others to which public highways would lead. No one would suggest that a street leading to the doors ot Westminster Abbey was not a public highway because it stopped there. It seems to be equally absurd io say that a road is not a public road because it stops at Stonehenge. No doubt changes of race, changes of faith, changes in the distribution of popula tion, might have relegated Stonehenge to obscurity, and might have led to such a disuse of the ways leading to it as to have amounted to practical destruction. But it happens not to have been so. So remarkable was Stonehenge that when it ceased to he used for worship, meeting or sepul ture, it became a wonder in itself, and continued to be a place of resort, from one motive o-r another, throughout the centuries. Indeed, it is not quite clear that there has not been something in the nature of a continuing rite per formed at Stonehenge from ago to age. Popular traditions cling strangely about these megaliths. In Brittany, to the present day, weird customs, obviously unconnected with Christian worship, though some times adopted and blessed by the priests, are observed before many a prehistoric stone. At Stonehenge there is, and has been beyond living memory, an assembly of persons on the longest day of the year to se the sun rise over the top of the Friar’s Heel and strike the altar stone. The modern view of Stonehenge is that it was s temple of the sun; if so, this gathering on June 21 is obviously a remnant of sun worship. Can there be any better reason for the existence of roads than that they lead to a place so remarkable that year by year it brings people many miles to take part in a gathering the origin and signifi cance of which have passed into ob livion? Is it not idle, in the face of such facts, to suggest that there can not be a public right of wsy to Stone henge because its stones were placed there by man and may be removed by man? Asa matter of fact, they are older than anything else in the nature of a building which the British Isles can show. Removable they may be, iJttt ceni> uries have seen them standing in the place, and centuries have * T n Ihem f *>“> ■ *T of resort' ° f Stonehenge saw LC~| \jpA a great city; they saw it. deserted; they saw its buildings fall to pieces; they have seen it for centuries a mere series of concentric earthworks; they have seen the new city of Salisbury (now old, as British cities go) rise mushroomlike in its stead. If any structure of man can claim perma nence, it is Stonehenge. If the public character of a road depended in any degree upon the permanence of the ob ject to which it leads (as a matter of law, it does not), assuredly no place could lay as god a claim to be a worthy terminus of a public road as Stone henge.— Nineteenth Century. A Solemn Reflection. “If we are not careful,” said the ama teur statesman, “we will see a condi tion as appalling as that of ancient Home.” "I can stand it,” said the profession al politician, “if we don’t repeat the events of modern Servia.”—Washing ton Star. NOTICE OF INTENTION TO INTRO DUCE IN THE LEGISLATURE A bill providing for elections in certain counties in reference to the establishment of dispensaries in said counties. When the legislature reassembles a bill vwlll be Introduced into that body in refer ence to an election looking to the oatabllsli ment of a dispensary or UfsDensarles in cer tain counties of tills state. The bill requires that in certain counties an election shall bo held as to whether municipal corporations In said counties shall hare authority to buy and aell spirttotiP, vinous, and malt liquors; pro vides that the voters at said election snail vote “For Dispensary” or “Against Dispen sary;” declares the result and effect of said election; defines tlis terra “Dispensary,” as used In this act; provides that In those coun' ties in which at tho election aforesaid a ma jority of the votes are cast “For Dispen sary,” the municipal corporations in said counties, or some of said corporations, shall have authority to establish, maintain and op erate dispensaries, and In and through such dispensaries to buy And soil spirltous, vinous ana malt liquors; prohibits and punishes the selling of liquors or Intoxicating drinks In said counties by any other person or In any other way than by and through such munici pal corporations acting through their dispen saries; end further regulates the sale of li quors in said counties. Tho foregoing Is the general purport of the bill. The bill applies to all the counties of the state except those in which the sale of li quor is prohibited by a luw that is applica ble to the whole county, and except those also In which the municipal corporation at the county site Is authorized or directed to buy and sell liquors. county Is affected by the bill. July 27, 1003. Very respoctfully, FRANK 8. MOODY, Chairman, from state at large. JAB. K. WEBB, from state at large. JAB. E. MITCHELL, from Ist Con. Dlst J. P. WOOD, from 2d Con. Dlst. J. L. DEAN, from 3d Con. Dlst. W. A. DAVIS, from 4Hi Con. Dlst. C- W. THOMPSON, from 6th Con. Dlst. L. B. MUSCJUOVE, from Oth Con. Dlst. W. 8. FORMAN, from 7th Con. I)lst. R. K. PETTITS, from Bth Con. L>!st. T. M. DAVIDSON, from 9th Con. Dlst. State Dispensary Executive Committee. Two million dollars will be spent in the widening of the Chicago river be tween i.ake and Van Buren streets. The work will occupy two years, and a channel 200 feet wide and 22 feet deep will he the result. When the appeal for help for the persecuted Jews in Kishineff was made in New York city, the Chinese gave a benefit performance in the Chinese theater and raised nearly S3OO. As Shakespeare might have said, one touch of abuse makes the aJion races kin. THH BRUNSWICK DAILY NEWS. THE YELLOWSTONE CANON. First impression a Confused Sense of Bigness and Barbaric Color. Imagine, if you can—hut you never can—a mighty cleft in the level earth a third of a mile wide, Its brink sharp, precipitous, reaching over twelve hun dred feet downward, sometimes al most perpendicular, sometimes banked with huge heaps of talus or butteress ed with spindling pinnacles and towers often surmounted with eaglo nests, and all painted, glowing with the rich est color —vast patches of yellow and orange, streakings of red and blue. With hero a towering abutment all of fed, and there another all of yellow. At the bottom flows the gleaming green fiver, amt at the top the dark green forest reaches to the canon edge. and sometimes, even, rugge.l and gnarled pines, the vanguard of the wood, venture over the precipice, to find footing on some ledge, or to hang, half dislodged, with angular dead arms reaching out into the mtghlr depths, u resting place for eor.i’lsfe eagle or hawk. The sides of th# .fanon, being not of solid rock, but of crumbling, soft formation, have fur nished plastic material for the sculp turing of water and wind, which have tooled them into a thousand fantastic forms. One’s eye traces out gigantic castles, huge dog forms, bird forms, titanic faces —all adding to the awful Impressiveness of the place. For miles the canon stretches north ward from the lower falls. From numerous well guarded outlooks the spectator, grasping hard upon the railing lest the dizziness of these heights unnerve him, may behold a hundred varied views of the grandeur, looking either toward the falls, which seem to till the canon-end like a splen did white column of marble, or off to the northward, where the stupendous gorge widens out, loses some of Its coloring, admits more of the forest, and finally disappears among rugged mountains. Everywhere the view is one that places the seal of awed silence upon the lips; it never pallß, never grows old. One soon sees ail too much of geyser and paint pot; of this, never. At first the sensation of savage im mensity Is so overpowering that the spectator gathers only a confused sense of the bigness and barbaric color’ but when ho has made the peril ous descent to the canon bottom be low the falls, when he has seen the wonder from every point of view, he begins to grasp a larger part of the whole scene, to form a picture which will remain with him.—From R. S. Baker’s “ A Place of Marvels” in the Century. SHIPS LIKE FEET. This Foolish Order Was the Death blow of the Chinese Navy. Of the navy of one of the oldest of old countries, China, very little is known. That China was once much interested in sea affairs is, however, certain. It Is said, that long before any other people, the Chinese knew Btone, and even If the mariner’s com pass was not invented by them, their knowledge of the magnet was certainly sufficient to aid them in navigating their ships, and helped to extend their trading, and probably their battles, into strange waters. So the Chinese were bold voyagers ages ago. On their cruisers’ bows was painted an eye to denote watchfulness; and red, a sacred color to them, was displayed In strips of cloth which decorated the various parts of their ship. Chinese Enterprise on the sea unfor tunately received a death blow from one of their own weak and self loving monarchs, who forbade his subjects to cruise in waters outside of the China Sea, for fear they should learn in their travels any ideas which might lead them to rebel against his tyran nical government. He also ordered, vain and unwise man that he was, that all vessels should be made in the shape of his imperial foot! Alas, poor ships! this strange shape de stroyed all seaworthy qualities, and any ambition in the direction of a Chinese navy was for the time ex tinguished.—From "Some Ancient Fleets” in St. Nicholas. Sorting Coin With Sieve. Tlie coins collected by the London county council train conductors are sorted out in a novel way at the end of each day. After the money is given up by the conductors It is placed in boxes and taken in vans to the cen tral office, where it is counted by lady clerks. Tinve-savlng appliances are used wherever possible, one of these being a “silver riddle.” Four or five frames are placed on top of each oilier and a given quantity of mixed silver Ik emptied on to tho topmost. Shake the latter, and all the coins except the half-crowns disappear through the wire net arrangement on to the frame below. Shake from No. 2 and everything goes through except the florins, and the coins are eventu ally exhausted down to the threepenny pieces. There are IHSOO automobiles in New Fork and New .Jersey. At least half of the wheezy, consumptive, tubercu lous tilings ought to Im* hauling fodder to horses, avers Victor Smith, In the New York Press. A good automobile is a Joy, a bad one a cloy. But we cannot expect to arrive at perfection in anything in five years. The prog ress of the manufacture of the motor car is nearly as rapid as the progress of America. There never was anything to equal it. Many a man has acquired a reputa tion for generosity by spending bor rowed money. Planlalion Chill Cure is Guaranleed To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why not try it? Price 50c. BLUSHING. Analysis of the Influences That Cause One to Turn Red. Blushing is not an art, neither is it a sign of ill breeding, says the St. James Gazette, as some unkind people maintain. The fact is. It is Just as natural for some persons to blush as it Is for others to turn pale. The same laws of nature which govern the one rule the other. The capillaries, or small blood vessels, which connect the arteries and veins of the body form, particularly over the cheek, a network so fine that It is necessary to emotions. Sudden horror, remorse or them. Ordinarily the blood passes through these Vessels in normal quan tities, leaving only the natural com plexion. But when some sudden emo tion takes possession of the heart Its action increases and an electric thrill Instantly leaps to the cheeks. The thrill in noting moro than the rush of blood through the invisible capilla rles Just beneath the delicate trans parent surface of the skin. The causes that bring about tills condition in the circulating system arc called mental stimuli They consist of Joy, anger, shame and many other emtlons. Sudden horror, romorso or fear, on the contrary, influence the nerves which control the blood ves sels, and tho face becomes white. Blushing and pallor result. from the sudden action of the mind on the nerv ous system. 80, If the mind lie fore warned and prepared for emotions, both habits can at least be overcome. But when tho nervous sytem Is highly strung it would be a lifelong if not a futile tank to endeavor to effect a per fect cure. It is the sensitive nervous girl who blushes oasiiy, while the girl stolid by nature, or who by conven tional education has her nerves under perfect control, seldom blushes. FITS permanently onred. No lltnor nervous* ness niter lirst day’s use of l>r. Kline’s Great NeryeltestOrer.tVtrlul bottle and treatisefree Ur. It. H. Klin it, Ltd. , Hbl Areh Ht., Phlla.,Pn Some fellows can no more keen out of debt than other fellows can help failing in love. Mrs.Wlaslow's SoothlnqSyrup for ohtldrea teettdng,soften the gums, reduces Inflamma tion, nlluyspajn,cures wind colic.2sc. übottlo Death overtakes us all, and then comes the undertaker. lam sure Plso's Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.— Mas. Thomas Ilos iuns, Maple Ht., Norwich, N. y.,Feb. 17, I'JOJ. All men may be born equal, but only a few get to the top. Indigestion and l>yspc|isla Cured free of charge. Send 2-cent stamp for treatment. Hoyle 4. Cos., Atlanta, Ga. Much time is spent in envying others the happiness which they do not possess Just Saved From Starvation. When, in 1801, Miss Balfour was vis iting tlic West of Ireland and studying tlie condition of the people, she asked one of them how they were getting on in a particular village. “Arrab, miss, sure and if it wasn't for tho famine we’d be shtarvlng.”—John Bull. Btati of Onto, OtTT of Toledo, I Lucas County. i **’ FraiVk J. Oulnky matcd"T>Rtli that ho is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney 4 Cos., doing business in tho City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of one hundred dol lars for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be curod by tho use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney. tiwurn to before me and subscribed in my ..—•— . presence, this 6thday of Dooember, | seal. JA. D., left;. A. W. Gleason, ' —. — ’ Notary Public. Hab’sCatarrh Oiiro is taken Internally, and acts directly oil the Idood and mucous sur faces of the system. Send for testimonials, free, F. J. Cheney A Cos , Toledo, G. Hold by all Druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. Homo IVnple. There are some whose use in the world It would he ng hard to de fine as the uses of pieces of parsley draped around meal: on the table.—At chison Globe. l*iy-I)ay Friends. A man has a lot more friends on his pay day than he lias on theirs.—New York Press Hope must be elastic. It springs eternal In the human breast. A man in Maine recently shipped to Ixmdon 200 barrels of “cattails," tlie well-known marsh weed. Tho weed seems to have no commercial valuo in this country, but the demand for it is constantly increasing in England. Over there they use the downy floss of the head for tilling fine sofa-pillows and cushions. Tlie question naturally arises, why It should not be used for (hat purpose here? Ice Caves. The news of the discovery of an iro rave in Pocahontas County, Va., is re markable only in that, it is south of Mason and Dixon’s line. Such caves are fairly frequent in the Middle States. One of the best known is near Stockbridge, Mass., In tlie famed Berk shire country, at a point where tho Housatcnic River runs for some miles east and west.. A steep slope on tho southern banks holds a cavern where the sun never shines, but where winter rain collects and turns to ice. A similar cave Is a point of popular interest in the upper An Sable Lake in the Adirondacks. The ice lasts in it all summer, and, as it is near the shore, boating parties frequently clamber in upon it and shiver luxu riously. Almost any fair day a cold mist blows from the cave off upon the water, where the cold trickle from the cave meets the lake And. of course, the trout fishing just, there is— preserved. The Virginia man is said to be mar keting his ice. Ho could make more money by leaving it alone and charg ing 10 cents a head admission. —New York World. FREE PROOF FORBIDS DOUBT. Qainbs, Pa., August 3, 1003. “ I received your sample of Doan's Kidney pills and since have taken two boxes, and I can vuthfuliy say they are as good a* they r recommended to ho. When I began taking them I could not bend my back enough to pick upa stick of wood-sometimes could not walk or move my foot had two doctors but did not pet relief. I saw vourud., and got a trial box and have taken two besides, and 1 am able to do u very hard day'll work. Doun’s Kidney. Pills are a God* scud to Immunity.”—Mrs. Ella A. Mattison, Gaines, l*u., Box lbfi The great fame of Doan’s Kidney l’ills is won by tho wondrous ..ovurcflk. fro trial l„ demonstrate surprising Aching backs are cased. Hip. hack, and loin pains overcome. Swelling of tho limbs, dropsy 'violin, and rhoumattc pains vanish. They oornx-t irino with brick dust sediment, high colored, pein in passing, dribbling, frequency, bed waning. Doan's Kidney I'ills remove calculi and gravel, Believe heart palpitation, nics-plfHsnrHs, headache, nei vousuess, di/.Aincss. ,f 'V CATHARYIO GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel troubles, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, palDs after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness. When your bowels don’t movo regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. It chronic ailments and long yearn of suffering. No matter whnt nils you, start taking CASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stay well until you get your bowels right Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under übsolute guarantee to cure or money refunded. The genuine tablet stnmped CC C. * a’ever aold in hulk. Sample and booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. 50a iwro————— THE MILNER & KETTIG CO. Machinery, Engines and Boilers, j* Saw Mills, “Porcupine” Dry Kilns. CONUNDRUMS. Why are your nose and cliln always at variance? Because words are con tinually passing between them. Why are tho stars tho best astrono mers? Because? they have studied (studded) tho heavens since the crea tion. What trees flourish best upon the hearth? Ashes. Why need a schoolmaster whose scholars are leaving him never fear losing them all? Because he has al ways a pupil in his eye. Why should a little man never mar ry a bouncing widow? Because ho would bo called “the widow’s mite.” What is the longest word in the dictionary? Rubber, because you can stretch it. Don’t Marry in Haste. Again and again the question Is asked, “Are long or short engagements boat?” The answer obviously Is that (he longer Die wooing the more thor oughly will the •mail and woman know each other, and therefore* tlie better is their chance of knowing whether they will likely pull together happily in the double harness of matrimony, says Home Notes. Of course, there is such a thing as going to extremes, and a too protracted eoiirtship be comes a weariness to both man and maid. A happy medium may be struck in most things, and in court ship a year or so will generally In considered right. In that time the lovers may surely know whether they are suited to each other. Mr. Carnegie recently said in an ad dress to a British audience, while com paring their country to ours: “Your rate of increase In population must soon begin to diminish. You are al ready full up. We are only beginning. We have plenty of territory entirely unexplored, where tin*re, will some day be a great population. Your colonies are not increasing. Australia moms full. It Is a men* rind around an empty Inferior. South Africa is not a white man’s country, and your government's policy of enc ouraging emigration there, especially of women, is almost a crime.” In Now York city, at the lowest pos able overage, 500,000 people live in rooms which ought to be considered absolutely uninhabitable, dark und without any window of ventilation. Gray Hair wiitWYßaatjMmwMWStMas “I have used Ayer’s Hair Visor for over thirty years. It has kept my scalp free from dandruff and has prevented toy hair from turn in); Kray.”—Mrs. I’. A. Soule, Billings, Mont. There is this peculiar thing about Ayer’s Hair Vigor—it is a hair food, not a dye. Your hair does not suddenly turn black, look dead and lifeless. Butgraduallytheold color comes back, —all the rich, dark color it used to have. The hairstops falling, too. $1.09 a bottle. All drujuiits. If your druggist cannot supply you, aond*u.H ono dollar :• mi wo will express you a liotflc. Ito nuns and givo tho name of your nearest ex pres* olfice. Address, .!.< . AYER CO., Dowell, Mass. SO C- -1 s ' K SV ?A.\t U- \ ikswws Cl'ViVl.TsV ./ NAME...— STATE F<>r free trial box, mail thin coupon to Foster Mi!hum , bntljlo, N V If aoove Hpaco is insufficient, write a.l>lrn.s on **• pa rat* hlip. Wrecked by a Venetian Shell. The Athenian Parthenon, the most beautiful building in the world, was wrecked by a Venetian shell in 1687. F“ reTT^^l TO WOMEN A Largo Trial Package of Inflammation, Soreness, I’elTlo Calarrli cannot exist with IU ■ •••tine Hi VliK 1 -- 1 Ka n rt-velaiiou In i-umhinel cleunvlnir und lieulliiK power. U kills all disease germs. In local treatment of female ills It is invaluable. Heals Inflammation and cures nil discharges. Never fiiiln lo cun* Nasal Catarrh. Cures ollciisivo perspiration of nun pits and feet. Cures Note Throat, Non* Mouth anil Sore Eyes. A iz loot It |i*wlcr nothing; t‘|imla it. Removes Tartar, Hardens tlie Cuuih and whitens tho teeth, make* a bad I treat 1 1 street and nKieenhle. '■*hnilNitn<l n*l ##••* fi-ni women prove I It id i t is t lie Ki'eutesl euro for l.eticnrrlioeo ever ll*eoverrl. e Imve yet, to hear of the lii-kt earn- It fnllel lo rare. To prove all thin we will mail a largo trial package with book of Instructions absolutely free. This is not a tiny sample, but enough to convince anyone. A I dnijiulits wr sCNI poMlpaltl by •••, SO •(m. large hot. Hatifa'Llon guaranteed. 'l'tie IR. I*n ilwn 4 hept. i., |(<lou, M an*. BROMO SELTZER CURES AL.lv Headaches 1 o CENTS - - EVERYWHERE KJ-eleV Morphinism, Alcoholism, M -#•/* Tobaooo Habit, and til W Neurasthenia readily yield to tha Kettlav treatment. Coneapondeuoa confidential. Wipe foi pamphlet. Deli phone 49S Realty jjnatituto. 2720 Ava. D, Birmingham, AL*. Pi Dropsy! j Ketnovi s all swelling in Btoau ' f days ; effects a |*erinanent,cure ''V in 30 to days. Trial treatment jO*. given free. Not hingcan hr fairer V WT iie Dr. 11. H. Green’s Son, Specialists. Bo* Atlanta, C l **- SOFT, SILKY HAIR nones when you isk Carpenter’s OX MARROW POMADE (BEWAUK OK IMITATIONS > mm h into •<> •!;> thore’itrhly onro a wools ;m lif will work w<i*l ••!'-*. Keeps the hair from j.il'M, tGi' .in.! .Mires dandruff, too. Better than any hair oil or tonic- PRICE. 25 CENTS, At your druggist's, or by mail. Address. CARPKNI BR & CO., Louisville, Ky. Galkhiutro,lll.,March3l, 11103.—“ The. sample of Doan'B Kidney Pills came to hand. J al i ” got ono BO cent box from our druggist, and lam thankful to say the pain across the small of my back disappeared like a snow bank * M l l ,t sun. Doan's Pills reach tlie spot.” Elmer Warfxl. Cambria, Wyo.—“ Previous to taking tho sample of Doan s Kidney Pills 1 could scarcely hold mv urine. Now I <ju. sleep ail night and rarely have to get up. and that aching across my back, a little above my hips, U gone.'' JiiAC W. Stevens, Cambria, Wyo, BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA. Engine Lathes, Milling > Machines, Upright Drills, Steam Pumps, Boilers, Etc.