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yon : WILL YIELD To Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound BloomdalGj Ohio. "I suffered from terrible headaches, pains in my back !A i , i TTiand right side, ana was tired all the time and nervous. I could not sleep, and every month I could hardly stand the pain. .Lydia Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound re stored me to health again and mada me feel like a new wo man. I hope this letter will induce other women to avail themselves of this valuable medicine." Mrs. E. M. .Frederick, Bloomdale, Ohio. Backache is a symptom of female weakness or derangement. If you liave backache don't neglect it. To ?et permanent relief you must reach he root of the trouble. Nothing we know of will do this so safely and surely as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. Cure the cause of these dis tressing aches and pains and you will Jbecome well and strong. The great volume of unsolicited tes timony constantly pouring in proves conclusively that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made fromroota and herbs, has restored health to thou .sands of women. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound will help you, write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for advice. Your letter will be absolutely confidential, and the 'advice free. "Cures Constipation, Diarrhoea, Convulsions, "Colic, Sour Stomach, etc. It Destroys Worms, Allays Feverishness and Colds. It Aids Diges tion. It Makes Tkktijino Easy, Promotes Cheer tulaesf and Produces Natural Sleep. CREO-FORM LIQUID (Concentrated) For Correcting all Unsanitary Conditions. Insecticide, Germicide, Disinfectant, Deodorant Soluble in Water in any Proportion, Emitting an Agreeable Odor. Kills Chicken Mites, Lice, Fleas, Cures Sorehead, Mange, Wounds. Prepared by PUROZONE SANATORY CO., ATLANTA, GEORGIA. Purozone Creo-Form Liquid is an Infallible and dependable remedy for the destruction of Mites, Lice, Fleaa . and all Vermin. It cures Sorehead, Mange, Scab, and heals Collar Galls, 'Cuts, Sores, and keeps the flies away. Creo-Form greatly enhances the .health and comfort of both animal and fowl, and should be in every .home where they are kept. It is sol uble in water in any proportion one ounce to a gallon of water being the usual solution makes it very eco nominal. Pints 50c. Quarts $1.00. Special prices on quantity. Rowdies I Dn gets it by highway men Tens .of thousands by Bad Bowls No dlf iferenco. Constipation and dead liver i make the whole system sick Every , body knows it-CASCARETS regulate care Bowel and liver troubles by simply doing nature's work until you get well- Millions use CASCAKt.12, Ure saver i 883 DAISY FLY KILLER eSJSSS UfJ TiT inn clean, om- 7AjiiIil tal. convenient, cheap. tal. convenient, cheap. jLpiU or tip " wflt toll Or rarer Cuannteert eflecttv". Ot aa 4tlm - " prtd tor 20 CMrtl. HAS. OLD SOKE. - vissDeKalbAm.' Bnpura.a.iri :Buy1attle Axe" Shoes - affllrtrd j. i lit .r-sr-.TYi 3 sSMhffm Thompson'sEyeWater IN" THE r UBLIG EYE. ' Wis oAW ix k -;t: . aL.. , J J ALBERT SPALDING, A FAMOUS AMERICAN VIOLINIST. There must be something in sport- , fourteen he took the first prize ot uk ing blood that produces the musical j Bologna Conservatoire, and finished temperament when the two most tal ented of young American musicians, Geraldine Farrar and Albert Spald ing, are both the children of famous baseball players. The distinguished soprano is the daughter of Sid. C. Farrar, long a member of the Phila delphia Nationals, and the greatest of American violin virtuosos is the son of Al. G. Spalding, whose ca reer and fame are too well known for repetition here. Mr. Spalding 'is a violinist of the most extraordinary technical powers. He has a beautiful sensuous tone, great warmth of conception, joined with a comprehensive mentality which enables him to put these quali ties to the best use. Spalding has in his artistic make up that which appeals to both lay man and professional; his warm, singing, soulful tone will always please a miscellaneous audience, while his mastery of the violin, his sterling musicianship and his exqui site taste in all things pertaining to interpretation must win the admira tion of connoisseurs. Spalding's technique is highly developed; it is fluent, it is reliable and clean cut. What makes Spalding's art partic ularly attractive are the above men tioned qualities of his round, noble, ringing tone, which recalls Wil helmj's, and a temperament filled with youthful freshness. Albert Spalding was born in Chi cago in 1888, and began his studies at an early age with Professor Chiti in Florence, where he lived in the winter, studying in the summer in his own country with the Spanish master, Professor J. Bultrago. When he was RACE SUBCIDE GOOD FORM. ' :::::: Applicant For Position "No, mum, I don't know nothing about chll !dren; :up to now I've always worked In the best families, where they don't have none." Illustrated Bits. . mL . i his studies in Paris with Lefort. Making a Paper Aeroplane. A very interesting and Instructive top aeroplane can be made as shown in the accompanying illustrations. A sheet of paper is first folded, Fig. 1, then the corners on one end are doubled over. Fig. 2, and the whole piece finished up and held together with a paper clip as in Fig. 3. The paper clip to be used should be lik' 0 a rj F"3 A Folding the Pape the one shown in Fig. 4, writes J. H. Crawford, in Popular Mechanics. If one of these clips is not at hand, form a piece of wire in the same shape, as it will be needed for balancing pur poses as well as for holding the paper together. Grasp the aeroplane be tween the thumb and forefinger at the place marked A in Fig. 3, keep ing the paper as level as possible and throwing it as you would a dart. The aeroplane will make an easy and graceful flight in a room where no air will strike it. In 300 balloon ascensions there is, on an average, one fatal accident. PILOT AND "DIUJMMEU" ix numsn commons. Census Shows Wide Range of Popular Representation In New Parliament. The oft-askeil and much debated question as to whether the British House of Commons is more represen tative than the American House of Representatives is answered by the following census of the new Com mons, taken for private reasons by Lewis Appleton, of Old Queen street, Westminster, and furnished by him for publication. It has been com pared with the official records and found correct. Bankers nnd financiers W Lawyers I'm Hrewers, rlintillers and wine merchants.. 13 Builders, architects and mirvcyors 8 ('ivil and mining engineers 11 Coal mine owners and dealers 7 Commercial travelers 1 Diplomatists oiid Government offieinUt. . 8 Directors of public service corporations.. 12 Real estate, accountants and auctioneers 7 Farmers 13 Land owners fijl Tron founders and merchants 13 Manufacturers and spinners CI Doctors 0 Clergymen 3 Automobile makers nnd dealers. 2 Newspaper owners nnd journalists 28 Peers' sons and brothers 45 Art dealers 1 Pilots 1 Printers, booksellers and authors 8 Professors, schoolmasters nnd tutors.... 14 Railway and naval contractors 3 Secretaries (stenographers) 10 Ship owners and builders. . 12 Stockbrokers 4 Military oilicers 44 Naval officers 2 By the foregoing census it appears the House of Commons is like the American Congress, a popular place for lawyers. The English legislative body, though, is strongly represen tative of a number of trades and pro fessions not markedly present in the lower House in Washington, notably storekeners, farmers, teachers, mili tary and government officials, doc tors, literary men and clergymen. Peers' sons and brothers, too, are in a class by themselves, inasmuch aa there are few men of leisure in Con gress who could be compared with them. The American Senate is almost en tirely made up of lawyers and cap tains of industry, whereas the Brit ish House of Lords is almost entirely made up of men of leisure. WISE WORDS. A contented heart is a cash register full of gold coin. A literary editor knows that the whole world is trying to do "fancy work." Typewriters tell no tales, but an uncommunicative stenographer would be a curiosity. If lots of people were portioned out the kind of cake they deserve life would give them sponge cake. A man who has money to throw at the birds can hardly see the sky for the flocks that hover over him. The famous shot heard round the world is a toy pistol report compared to the modern chorus girl's kiss. Opportunity, like repartee, hath a feminine way of ringing her bells when she turns the corner out of sight. Beauty may be only skin deep, but the ugly, old ( world Is appreciative enough to adore even attractive veneering. A woman when she puts hir money in a bank has the same feeling as when she leaves her best friend In the graveyard. ' Consider the ways of the diligent man, my son; ho standeth in the presence of princes. 1 Observe the methods of the diplomat; he sits right along up beside them! Xew York xelegram. Tin Corsets Draw Kolt. A pair of corsets, made of tin stays, came near causing the death of Mary Taylor, the nine-year-old daugh ter of John P. Taylor, a farmer liv ing several miles south of Petersburg, Ind. During an electrical storm the child crawled beneath the rear porch at her home, looking for a hen's nest, and while there lightning struck the house, partially wrecking it, but Injuring none but the little girl in her hiding place. The child was taken from under the house, unconscious from serious burns. Her mother, in undressing her, found the child had on rudely constructed corsets, which had been made of tin taken from the sides of told cans. The metal had been mashed into shape and covered with cloth by the child. One of the stays contained 'a small hole and the tin was meltc The child recovered. Some Style. Sam Sunflower "Pete Green am gittln' mighty tony in his invitations dese days." Bill Blackberry "How's dat?" Sam Sunflower "Why, Pete killed dat old rooster he had foh last five yeahs ei den invited de parson to a 'chanticleer dinner' on Sunday." Chicago News. Send postal for Free 1'iM'kage of Pastine. Better and more economical than liquid antiseptics vno All. TOILET USES. m bin':! Gives one a sweet breath ; clean, white, germ-free teeth antiscptically clean mouth and throat purifies the breath after smoking dispels all aisagreeaDie perspiration and body odors-mucn ap- trl kir rlnintv women. A QUICK remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. A PvtinA nnwfier dia- r ii'" . . - solved in a glass of not water m.Lre a riftliuhtful antiseptic so lution, possessing extraordinary cleansing, germicidal ana neai- nn nufff. an A aluolutelv harm- Us. Try a Sample. 50c a large box at druggists or by mail. THS PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mas FiLDFULY DEPRAVITY. The professor regarded with an eye of suspicion the small yellow cube the waiter had brought him. "I take thee," he murmured, "for butter-or worse." Chicago Tribune. Excursion Hates V.a Atlanta lSlrmli.ffhain Si Atlantic Kulroad. Bedueod rates have been authorized on the following occasions: BruMwick, Oa, Hunday School Congress Meetings, June 9-12, 1910, Cordole, Ga.. Annual Convention, li. X. P. U. of Georgia, June 21-23. 1910. Savannah, Ga., Annual session Imperial Order Bed Men, June 13-10, 1910 Athens, Bummer School University ot Georgia, June 27-July 2'Jth. 1910 Athens, Ga., Grand Lodge K. of F., Col ored July 12-15, 1910. Ticket agents will furnish full informa tlon. ijBUT' General Passenger Agent, Atlanta. Ga. Llmburger and Law. "Technically," said Judge Wells to William Rung In the Municipal Court, "you had the right on your side. However, you chqpe a form of cruel and unusual punishment that cannot be tolerated by this court. I'll have to fine you $1." It appeared from the evidence that Mr. Rung, who is a stereotyper, sat down to luncheon with Edward Sni der, a fellow-employe. The piece de resistance of Rung's luncheon con sisted of llmburger cheeBe, and Sni der, who regards himself as some thing of a wag, had made certain remarks about the cheese, reflect ing particularly on Its odor. There upon Mr. Rung smeared a piece of the cheese over the humorous Sni der's countenance. "This," said Rung, as he. stepped up to pay his fine, "is the kind of liiRtlce that smells to heaven." "That will be about all from you," said the court bailiff. "Cheese it!" Chicago Record-Herald. Diamonds. The diamond Is pure carbon and the hardest substance in nature. It burns. In a temperature of 800 centigrade producing carbonic acid. All dia monds are not equally hard, and there is sometimes a varying degree of hardness in different parts of a large diamond. Some diamonds glow in a dark room; some are fluorescent, ap pearing milky in sunlight. Diamonds, are of many colors pure white, yel low, Jet black, dark brown, light cin namon, green, blue, pink and orange, the diamonds of each mine having a distinctive character. An expert can usually tell the mine by examining the stone. Most of the diamonds of today come from tho famous Klmber ley and De Beers mines, in South Africa. Post Toasties with strawberries and cream. A delightful combination that strongly appeals to the appetite. The crisp, fluffy bits have a distinctive flavour and are ready to serve from the package without cooking Convenient, Appetizing, Healthful food. "The Memory Lingers" Popular pkg. 10c. Family size 15c.' - POSTUM CEREAL CO., Ltd.. Battle Creek, Mich. FREE i f wtlh weak swoa, us