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IT, "I suppose you feel the usual regre at not having further improved youi opportunities as- a student," said tin ^oung man Just out of college, "Yes," answered the hollow-chestec Cuan, with a-slight cough. "I kind oi wish I had paid less attention to books an'I more to foot ball and rowing." Washington Star. PLEASING PART OF IT. "Gertrude is always talking about her lineage. Wonder what about her family tree," "Don't know so much about tho tree, but the leaves amounted to a big for tune for her ancestors." - Denver News, World to End This Year. This is the recent decision of one of the prominent societies of the world, but the exact day has not yet been'fixed upon, and while there are very few people who believo this prediction, there are thousands of och ers who not only believe, but know that Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is the best med icine to cure dyspepsia, indigestion, consti pation, biliousness or liver and kidney troubles. A fair trial will certainly con vince you of its value. A Sneer. "I have given the best yoi16 of my life to the service of my countiy." Bald th" statesman, leaninc back lu his luxurious chair. "Olren!" eoboed th?? visitor irom tho old homo. "W*y, Ulli, all the io.ks down our way say you soli' 'eus,'" WHAT IS OVARITIS? A dull, throbbing pain, accompanied by a ser.se of tenderness and heat low down in the side, w'.th an occasional shooting pain, indicates iuflamru.ition. On examination it will be found that the region of pain shows some swell ing. This is the first stage of ovaritis, inflammation of the ovary. If the roof of your house leaks, my sister, you have it fixed at once ; why not pay the same respect to your own body ? You need not, you ought not to let yourself go, when one of your own sex ne ds out the helping hand to you, and will advise j-ou without monej*. and without price. Write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., and tell her all your symp toms. Her experience in treating fe male ills is greater than any other living person. Following is a letter from a woman who is thankful for avoiding a terrible operation. "I was suffering to such an extent from ovarian trouble that my physi cian thought an operation would be necessary. "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound having been recommended to me, I decided to try it. After using Beveral bottles I found that I was cured. My entire system was toned _pT>._jmd. I suffered nq^ore_wrth_my_ ovaries,"-Mas.' AJTXA ASTON, Troy, Mo. P i A Rummage Sale Incident If one has anything around the t house one wants to get rid of, the F i proper thing to do is to send it to a 3 rummage sale. There is a perfect j craze just now for this form of enter l j tainment or charity, whichever it may t, be, for all rummage sales are not alike, i This true story proceeds from a recent . sale held for a church fund. An enthusiastic young woman at tended the sale and returned from it in great glee. "Wait until you see what I've ' ; found," she announced to her mother; i "Just what we have been looking for in I every attic and antique shop for years. II knew we'd get it some day, and now I you won't laugh at rummage sales any more." "What is it?" asked the dear old lady. "It's a mate to thct antique candle stick you've had so long and never :ould match." She proudly unwrapped ? the bundle. "There ! isn't that per fect?" "It is Indeed," replied her mother, a queer little smile playing about her face. "In fact, it is the same. I got tired of having it around the house, and sent it to the rummage sale to get rid of it."-New York Mail and Ex press. Analytical Portraiture. The idea of combining many pic tures in one composite photograph, so as to get a type face, was brought out nearly twenty years ?.go by Fran cia Galton, F. It. S.. who has now de vised the opposite plan of analytical portraiture in which it is sought to record what is individual in the ex pression by combining different photo graphs of the snme face. Two por traits, for example, may show a man -with normal expression and when he is smiling. On placing n carefully made positive of one picture on a neg ative of the other, details common to both are. obliterated, and tho result is that only the smile is left. When the process is fully worked out, it is ex pected to give physiologists and ar tists an important means of analyzing expression. From the portrait men tioned, it has been learned already that the smile is an act involving the whole face, and not. as we have been led to believe, simply a few muscles around the mouth. American Coal Superior. According to a statement in a Berliu journal, tes s have been recently made in Germany of coal from the West Virginia fields and it is claimed that the result shows that the quality is superior to the best Welsh coal for gas producing. It is believed that this will be one reason for the importation of American soft coal in larger quan tities to Germany within the next year._ All goods are alike to PUTNAM FADELESS DTES, as they color all Ubers at un;: boiling. Sold by all druggists. New Coal-shipping Itecord. Tho shipment ol' coal from Baltimore fo" foreign protd In January ap-sreR-ited fi?.li?) 'tons, malclnir n now monthly record. 'J he coal weill to teu dlOVront countries. Happiness cannot ho bought, but ono of the icreat hindrances to it? attainment can be removed by Adams' Pepsin Tutti Frutti. Can't Hide lt. .indee flicks, of Mincapoil", being In London, inquired his way of H. policeman. ? "You're from Hanierica""1 '"Yes.slr." _-_ ".YOU can't Ido tho haccont. Capt. H. H. Thomson Advises the Ose of Dr. Greene's temira* Tiiis Wonderful Body Builder and Strength Re storer Should Be Used Now, CAPT. H. H. THOMSON OF MINNEAPOLIS FIRE DEPT. No occupation in the world requires more perfect nerve force and physical strength than is demanded of its members by a modern fire department. The members of this branch of the public service must be ready at all hours of the day or night, and in all degrees of heat, cold or exposure, to answer the call of the public, and protect life and property. At all times they must have bodily strength and a clear brain. Without this we would never hear of the wonderful feats of bravery and rescue performed by them. Nothing in the world will build up strength like Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy. Captain Thomson's strong statement, which we publish herewith, carries weight, and is echoed everywhere by those who rely on Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, when disease attacks them, or they get run down in health which is BO easy at this season of the year. There is no medicine in the world which will ward off attacks of the fatal grip, which is now so prevalent, and there is nothing which will drivo It away so quickly or reinvigorate the body as well after the grip, as this famous remedy. Captain Thomson, whose address is 2406 Lincoln St., North East, Minneapolis, Minn., says : ? I am a great believer in the wonderful curative powers of Dr. Greene's Nervura Blood and Nerve Remedy. It has been used in my house for years as a body builder, strength restorer and general family medicine. It never fails to give beneficial results. It strengthens the nerves and purifies the blood. As a health builder, I believe there is no medicine equal to Dr. Greene's Nervura Blood and Nerve Remedy." Remember that Dr. Greene's Nervura Blood and Nerve Remedy is the pre scription of a regular physician, Dr. Greene, who can be consulted absolutely free of charge either by mail or calling at his office, 35 W. 14th St., New York City. Consultation is absolutely free of charge. If you cannot call upon him at his office, write him a lotter, telling all about your case, and you can be treated just as well at home a> if you called is person. Remember bis advice if Absolutely free, \ What If? tho Dalry Type? The most profitable dairy cow is one that bas no tendency to put on :.esu has a good appetite and a large stomach, indicating great consuming and assimilating capacity. A cow with this conformation is said to be of tie true dairy type. Wheat Clinfl* as a Mulch. Wheat chaff as a mulch may seed the land with wheat, which will be sure to grow in spring when the mulch is removed. Strawberries should be mulched with straw or leaves, using cornstalks to hold the straw. Planing mill shavings are ex cellent if they can be obtained. liest Foils for Sheep. Sheep will not thrive on all kinds of soils. Some breeds are very active and will thrive in large flocks, but the large mutton breeds require good pas turage, and will not give satisfactory results if compelled to work over large areas for all they get. All sheep should have dry soils. Foct rot will always occur in a flock that is kept constantly on wet lands. Kale a? Food for Stock. The thousand-headed kale is a va riety that is highly esteemed in Eng land as food for stock. It forces lambs as rapidly as does rape, and it is claimed that it never causes jases in tho stomach of an animal. The seeds are planted early, or the plants may be started in a hotbed for an carly supply, being transplanted as soon as the season opens. It is termed thousand-headed kale because the stalk supports a large number of small heads. In this country the Essex rape is preferred, and it has .been tested in all section?, especially as food for sheep.' Changing Sceil. There is yet much to be learned about the matter of increasing crops by obtaining seed from other sections than that where it is to be planted. At the Iowa Experiment station they obtained potatoes from Canada and planted them by the side of seed grown upon their own soil, from the seventh crop of that variety grown there. They obtained 754 bushels per acre from the Canada seed, and 109 bushels from the home grown seed. Yet the results are not always that way even with potatoes. It may be said that generally home grown pota toes do not produce as much as seed grown farther north, but it is not an invariable rule, and some successful growers would not trust their crop to seed which they had not grown and saved themselves, and say that when they have tried it home grown seed has always produced the best crop. The results of one experiment do not prove a case, and we need more, with a thorough knowledge of how the crop was grown, and seed selected In each case. We need to know if forc ing a crop to grow and mature in a shorter time, either by a richer soil or cooler climate, or both, will make the seed more prolific.-The Cultivator. Tau andJTrjellhies J^I^ We often see a blooming house plant with beauty marred if not ruined by the old tin can in which it grew, or the dirty rag or twine string which ties it fast to a splinter or piece of stick which serves as a trellis. Many plant enthusiasts declare that they have better results with the tin cans than with the regular clay pots. This may be true, and the cans can be transformed into ornamental vessels, combining cheapness with beauty. Jardineres are too much of a luxury for the average housewife to own more than a pair. By getting a supply of crepe paper the cans can all be transformed into dainty jardineres. Cut the paper in strips with enough to extend from the top of the can, and around it. Then tie some bright col ored cord about the can, one piece an inch from the top. By running the bottom of the paper between the thumb and finger and stretching it, it will flare out. By pulling out the paper midway between the cords, stretching it, and creasing it, the full ness in the middle will be made. The top is finished like the bottom. This is not ?expensive and is certainly an improvement over the old rusty cans. Where a plant is of such a nature that it requires a support of some kind, get someone to make a ladder of smooth wood and paint it white, brown or green. Fasten the plant to it with some colored twine, in har mony with the color of thc plant, pot or frame. This is much better than picking up a broken branch and tying up tho plant with a carpet rag. For me, the prettiest flower loses its charm if treated in this way.-Maud Steinway, in Agricultural Epitomist. Tho Woo I of Our Stock. There is a common saying that we live by our blood and on it, and if .the blood is impure our systems starve! If too rich we break ont in disease and suffer, but if just right at all times we enjoy perfect health. This is so true that physicians try to get at the root of all diseases by purifying and feeding thc blood. If this is kept in good condition and in healthy circu lation most diseases will be thrown off and the system thereby will be saved many sufferings. A good deal if not all this practical wisdom is applicable to the live stock which we raise on our farms-the cows, pigs, sheep and poultry. The blood is the all essential constituent that makes good or bad animals. Let that get out of order and then the door is thrown open for all sorts of physical disorders. There is hardly a disease that cannot be traced back directly or indirectly to the blood. Even the colds which the animals suf fer with would never have been con tracted had the blood been all right. If the blood had been pure, rich and in good circulation the animals would have been able to throw the cold off, or never to have taken it at all. Consequently, we need to pay a lit tle attention in the winter time to feeding for blood, and for seeing that it is all right. Richness of blood sometimes . means impurity, and that is not to be desired any more than impoverished blood. Animals that are shut up in close winter quarters and fed heavily on rich foods will inva riably have thick, sluggish blood which may cause fevers and other troubles. Swine cholera owes its ori gin to feverish., thick and sluggish blood. When turned out in the clover lot, they keep their blood cooled off. and they rarely suffer from cholera. We cannot afford to feed our stock with too highly concentrated food In winter unless we can give thorn dally exercise sufficient to counteract the effect of this and feed th ra also with roots, vegetables and c'.hsr green things. If we do, trouble will foP.OT/ sooner or later, and then tho mischief is done. It is much easier to upset the system of an animal than to cor rect it and bring it back to a stats of good health. The danger confront ing us now at this season is that of heavy feeding with not. sufficient va riety cither of food or exercise. Neither can be neglected, and a good stack of roots is an excellent tiling to begin the winter with for daily feeding.-William Conway, in Ameri can Cultivator. Tn ki ns Coin poa! te Milk Pi m;>>?. The modern creamery and cheese factory uses the Babcock test for de termining thc richness of the milk de livered by each natron. The most common and satisfactory method of paying for the milk according to its test is to take a small sample of each lot of milk every day. pour this into a covered glass jar containing a small amount of some preservative and at the end of a week or ten days test this composite sample. The essential fea tures of the process are given in the following directions: Provide a pint or quart jar or bot tle for each patron. ' Label each bottle with a number, giving the same num ber to a patron on the milk recording sheet. Composite test sample bottles made for this purpose with a tin cover and numbered brass tag wired to the neck of each bottle can be obtained of creamery supply firms. These sam ple bottles should be placed on shelves within easy reach of the weigh can, and protected from the light. A preservative is put into each clean bottle to keep the milk from souring, until testing day. Pulverized potassium bichromate, corrosive sub limate, borax or preservaline can be used for this purpose. Some of these preservatives are put in tablet form, each tablet containing the necessary amount to use in one sample. After each lot of milk is poured into the factory weigh can, a small amount of it is dipped from the can and poured into the proper sample bottle. These samples arc usually taken with a small one ounce tin dipper, a samp ling tube, or from a drip in the con ductor spout. Each lot of milk sampled must be sweet, containing no clots, lumps or curdled milk4 or small butter gran-' ules. The sample should be taken just as soon as the milk is weighed, and while it is evenly mixed. Con tinue adding a sample of each patron's milk to his particular jar every time he delivers milk for a week of ten days, then test this composite sample. The composite sample jars should be kept covered to prevent loss by evap oration, and in a cool dark place. Every time a new portion of milk ia added to the jar it should be given a horizontal rotary motion to mix the cream already formed in the jar with the milk, and to rinse off the cream sticking to its side. Unless this is done every time fresh portions of milk are added to the jar the cream on the milk becomes lumpy and sticks in patches to the side of the jar, thus making it nearly impossible to even ly distribute this cream through the entire sample. Composite samples having patches ot dried cream on the inside of the -???-*lm cixml*-gi_fjirf-lfl^JNP?. .or L ignorance on the part of the operator, j The test of the composite sample ? takes the place of a separate daily j test and gives accurate information regarding the average quality of the milk delivered by ca<.h patron during the period of sampling. The weight of butter fat which each patron brought to the factory in his milk dur ing this time is obtained by multiply- j ing thc total weight of milk delivered during thc sampling period by the test of the composite sample, divided by 100.-Report of Wisconsin Experi ment Station. Hight Thousand Yours ARTO. It may be safely said, to quote Prof essor Petrie, the famous egyptologlst, that there has never been a greater extension of the knowledge of man's past history in any decade than the discoveries of the last five years in Egypt have unfolded. In a recent in formal address at a general meeting of the Egypt exploration fund, Prof essor Petrie gave a brief account of our present knowledge of "prehistoric history," and of thc latest work of Abydos, where the tombs of the first dynasty kings, who ruled Egypt some where between 5000 and 6000 B. C., were found. He said: "Step by step mysterious ages which no man ever hoped to know again are being grad ually laid bare before us. The Homer ic age stands revealed as being but the decadence of a greater glory which dazzled us at Tiryns, at My cenae and still more at Knossos. And how great a mystery has always clung to the beginnings of old Egypt. And now from the royal tombs of Abydos we have seen and handled this sum mer the drinking bowls and furniture of the kings of the first dynasty; even the property of Menes himself, the first king of united Egypt. Never be fore, indeed, has so remote a period been brought completely before us as it has been by the work this year at Abydos." Thought Ho Grn?ped tho Idea. In the fifth grade of a grammar school not many miles from the state house, thc following story was read by the teacher, and the class told to write it from memory: "A farmer planted a field of corn and placed a net over it, as a protection from the birds. Next morning he found a number of j crar.es and a stock caught in the net. The stork begged the farmer to re lease him, saying: 'I am a bird of ex cellent character. ' The farmer laughed and said: 'You were caught in the com pany of these robbers, and with them you must die.' " Great stress was laid upon the word "character," the teacher explaining that a boy, girl or bird found in bad company showed great lack of charac ter. The following is a copy of one of the" papers actually produced and handed in by one of thc pupils, a boy of ll: "A farmer went out in the farm one day and he saw character and between them was a stork. "He caught the stork and the char acter. The stork begged the farmer to set him free. But the farmer said you were in there company and you must die with them. "The stork said he was not like character. I am bird of freedom." Boston Transcript. Possibly the reason why the Japan ese are so progressive Is because they aro so cleanly. Public baths are pro vided on every street. Japaneso work men bathe once or twice every day, 1 t u Where Artificial Limbs Are Made. An artificial limb factory is rather a grewsome place. Appliances for every variety of crippled leg or arm are there; legs for hip, knee and anklo amputations, for deformities, arms, hands, fingers, toes. In one room web bing and leather are being made into supports and straps to fasten around the shoulder or waist, or, as ls often done in a woman's case, to the corset. Socks to be worn on the artificial feet are also made in this room. Next door ls the wood shop, where willow and basswood, carefully seasoned, are carv ed Into the contours of natural limbs, every log and arm being different in form, size and character from al! others, because each is moulded aftei a special model, to suit the person who is to wear it. Further on, these wood en moulds are covered with tightly ctretched rawhide, which gives lateral strength, and this rawhide receives an enamel coating. In another room rub ber is being vulcanized and moulded Jnto feet and hands which are covered with calfskin. The sponge rubber used is lighter than wood, and absolutely odorless. It ls covered with water proof enamel and no change of temper ature less than 280 degrees can affect it. In the last stage of the process the leg or arm is set up. the parts put to gether and the springs and straps ad justed.-New York Sun. j To Preach in Dutch cr in English. The members of the Central Re formed Church of Sioux Centre. Iowa, have been engngod in a bitter legal and soclnl controversy as to whether their pastor should preach his sermons in Dutch or in English. One faction in the church applied recently for an injunction to restrain him from preaching in Dutch. The application .vms dented, the Judge being of opin idD. that he lacked jurisdiction. The stjme faction then tried to gnin the dfslred result by bringing a suit based ol the theory that the pastor was re quired by his contract to preach all his sermons in English. Tho result of t?is latter action is not known. I,_ " , Bishop Potter's supposed gout wns found to be inflammation arisiug from suerai broken bones. The welcome discovery was made by the X-rays of Roentgen. J How's Thin? -f< o offer One Hundred Dollars Heward for nlj case of Catarrh that cannot he curod by mlt'e Catarrh ( ure. li. F. J. CB KN RT * Co.. Prop"!.. Toledo. O. ffte, tbe undetslj:ned. have known F J.Che nir for the last 15 years, and bellera him re .. idly honorable In nil business transactions aid financially tibio to carry out any obllga tjm mad?? by their firm. VEST & TRCAX, >\ holeeale Druggists, Toledo, (Ohio. VALPINE . KINXAV .te MARTIN, Wholesale Drug ?lsts, Toledo. Uhin. [all's Catarrh cure ls taken internnlly. act lirdlrectly uj.cn the bloud ?nd mu ons s?r taos of tho erstem, Price. "Sc. por bottle. Sold bf all Diuu'ii*ts. Testimonials tree. Sail's Family Tills are the best. ?Nature Needs lstanco only. Many of ino '"ABOS of seri us ess could ' - checked at onro with a doso of Lp.ii Orchard Water, taken In time. I !.o not belI?ro Piso s Cure for Consnmptl n hts an equal for coughs nnd colds -JOHN P. BYER, Trinity Springs, Ind , Feb. IS, 19(0. \ Same Old Oner. ?on-Say. meiner. I think grandfather Is ks iii his mental faculties, pother-On! What makes you think so? fon-Why, ho t ld me this morning ho nerer sw a colder day than this In all his Ute. A "RIGID" WHEEL. Mr. Longbow-I had a nasty misha last week; broke the rear wheel of m machine when I was twenty miles fro) home. Mr. Gully Bell-How did you gc back? Mr. Longbow-Fortunately I wa close to a railway station, so I went t the buffet and got a mlncepic; I got blacksmith to drill a hole in the mid die, and we fitted it on the machin in the place of the broken wheel Pick-Me-Up. HAD LEARNED IT. Mrs. Gallagher-Rumors fly, don' .hey, Missis Flannigan 1 Mrs. Flannigan-Indade they do awnly this week wan left me widou payin' his rint.-Columbus (Ohio State Journal. liest For the Bowel*, Ko matter what alls you, headache lo cancer, you will never get well until you bowtls are put right. C-AscAnirrj hel| nature, curd you without agripe or pain produoe oasy natural movements, cost yoi j'u?t 10 cents to star: getting your heal11 Lack. CASCACKTS Cundy Cathartic, tin genuine, put up In metal boxes, every lnL let has C.C.C. stamped on lt. liowaro c notation?. Portnhlo Cottages. Machine miido portable houses f< r dwelling! will probably become more commonly used a: people become acquainted with their ndvnn tapps and ns mum aciurers ol lumber be<-om< siiflh-lently liucreatrd tu engage In their p o ductton. C'irter's Tik has the largest srleof any ink in tho world because it is the best ink that eau bo mado. A r. <i Papa. "I think papa ls dreadful." sobbed llttlf Ihrccyear-oid Margin, who had Just been cns Used by her fa'her. '-Was he ibo utily mn you could ger. mamma?" Wanted-At Once ! Traveling salesmen with or WithO'lt Otperlence 800 CO ?nd ex.j)ciiB-8 For part?cula ? write l'ocnhoiuiie 'tobneco Works, Bedford City, Va. Cotton Ulli For Americas. A proposition h?s been made to establish n 8U0.0X) cotton nilli at Atnerl us. (Ja .provideJ the citizens will subscribe S-IO.OUO. Dr. Bull's Cough Curcf a coufh or cold at once, i Conquers croup, bronchitis, , grippe and consumption. 35c. Every cotton planter should write forourvaluable illustrated pamphlet, " Cotton Culture." (t is sent free. Send name r.nd address to 3ER.MAN KALI WORKS, 03 Nassau St., N. Y. lention this Paper7'^g^JJ'"' Mineral T.aiatfva Water, orovided bv nature ner?cli ?rd dis- ? Mineral Laxative "Water, provided by nature cer?cli ?rd dis covered more than 30 years ago and now used by every nation in the world. Recommended by over one thousand of the most famous physicians, from whom we hive testimonials, as the safest and best Natural Laxative "Water known to medical 'dence. Its Action is Speedy, Sure and Qeni!e. It never gripes. Every Druggist aud General Wholesale Grocer Sells lt. BO!/for the full name, RI IIP Label with AOl\ "Hunyadi J?noB." DLUL Eed Centre Panel. Sole Importer, Firm o? Andreas Saxtebner, 130 Fulton St., N. Y. ? FREE I WINCHESTER^ master 1 J ? . g SHOTGUNS % Factorj loaded g g Our loo page ? Md . shotgun shells, O ~ illustrated cata-g FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS* ?NEWRIVAL," g ? the winning combination in the field or at 6 "LEADER,"and ti g the trap. AH dealers sell them. g " REPEATER." g g WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS Co. g A trial wm prove g 2 rn*m*m g ,8o WZBCHMSTKArs., NEW UAVSK, CONN. ? their superiority, g . o oe logue. A LUXURY WITHIN THE REACl LIND MAI gs me tc not afford to Know wilt Know win Uncover whether you Watch our naxt advertisement. or some ch that has bee ing materials, in order to hide imperte package ! ls a lion's head on it ? LIO SM C of purity and strength. Try it once. In every package of LION CO PF EE you will find list. No housekeeper, in fact, no woman, man, toy or girl will i which will contribute to their happiness, comfort and convenient, simply cutting- out a certain number of Lion Heads from the v packages (which is the only form In which this excellent coffe Red, Rough Hands, Itching, Burning Palms, and Painful Finger Ends. Soak the hands on retiring in a strong, hot, creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAR Dry, and anoint freely with CUTICURA, the great skin cure and purest of emollients. Wear, during the night, old, loose kid gloves, with the finger ends cut off and air holes cut in the palms. Foi* red, rough, chapped hands, dry, fissured, itching, feverish palms, with shapeless nails and painful finger ends, this treatment is simply wonderful, and points to a speedy cure of the most distress ing cases when physicians and all else fail. Ii 1 iii ll WAS troubled with hands so sore that when I put them in water the cain would near set me crazy, tils skin would peel off, and the flesh would get nari ana break, then the blood would flow from at least fifty places on each Hand, words never can tell the suffering I endured for three years. I tried at least eight doctors, but my hands were wera: than when I commenced doctoring. I tried every old Granny remedy that was ever thought cf without ene cent s worth of good and could not even get relief. I would feel so badly mornings when I got up, to think that I had to go to werie and stand pain for eight or nine hours, that I often felt V.kz givm* up my jcs, waich was in the bott?n? works of Mr. E. L. Kerns, the kiding bottler of Trenton, N. J., who will vouch for the truth of my sufferings. B?fore I could start to work, I would have to wrap each finger on both hand's, and thea wear gloves, which I hated to do, for when I came to take them off. it would take two hours and the flesh would break and bleed. Some of my friends who had seen my hands would say, "If they had such hands they would have them amputated"? others would say "they would never work/' and mere woixH lum away in disgust. But thanks to CutJcora, ib& greata* of skin cure?, it enies all my sufferings. f Just to think, after doctoring three years, and spending dollar after dollar during taat time, Cuticura cured rae. It has now kcza two yea? since I used it and ? do not know what sore hands are. I never lost a day's work whiie I was using rt or since, and I have been working at 112 same business, and in" acids, etc. THOS. A. CLA?CY, 310 Montgomery St., Trenton, FT. J. Complete External an j Infernal Treafnwnt for Eyer? Kstnorj Consistins of OUHCCRA POKP (?C.), io cleanse the skin of crus:s .-.nd acales, and soften the thickened cuticle, CUTICURA O'ttmcnt (5 e.}, TI?? 0"* f?l OT ??,?eU"t^allay1,!h.in?'ions^raal^3i?ndirritr.tbn.nndBoot;!-!.n'd J, "7, m. uiA B,79U U often *ufI5':i<?a' ?9 cure the mont torturing, di in*-, ^^m^M^tm^MOut?cura Sos? c-tlci derived from CCTCCORA, the jr ami the most refreshing of flower 01 bo compared with lt for preserving hand?. No other foreign or domestic *? ?!of the toTl?V ?tl? and nursery. Thus lt combines In ?fe'f S rtO?ICE" vlK TWEKTV rfvV? CKNTS, the BEST akin and complexi?n soap, ?S?gg toilet and BEST baby soap In ?lio world._ SUNION MADE. ^ThT real worth of W. L. Donato* S3.00 and SjWjO shoes compared with oilier makes ls *>1.00 to So.uo. Our 81.00 Gilt Edge Lino cannot be equalled at any price. "Wo i,:afce :m<l sell more S3.00 arni 63J?0'Shoes than any other two manufacturers In the InltodoUtes. THE IZV VSON noreW.I* nous'.? M sml MJD[,f*2?LSJIsold uAlwsifeerlffitarm T il K V ? ll K TH BEST. Tow d ."' 1\ M k? -p th-m ? ?vc sive one dca'-: exclusive ?ale in euch town. .. . ,\.?tul.-! Insist on l.avii c W. L. Di.ucUs ihoM wita r"ea ron nnvwhere Write for catalogue W?| M SP"?? ,.' ;/?.. We ?. F.i.t <<->.>?. W. 1? ??lila. Min* Co., Eyelet* in ?ll our ?hoc?. ?rockton. MOM. V'S BUFF ?s a good p play. Bul you can pSay St with coffee. you are drinking! it you purchase! your eyes and see are getting MJB H mOOCHXOX?gB 'SALZENS S?EOS . ; /^>WILL MAKE YOU RICH" \?{?f/?f'. Thl? ls ? d*rli>B ?Intentent. bntSal MKB?^ SI?*? seeds best lt out every tlme ?l?Ss; Combination Carn. ?^S? Grt?U?rcoruoi,e*rtli..\r.lpo?lt?Tel7 rejTolnMonUe corn growing BliJlo?'Oollar Crass. , Creaton marvel ofllie . ll tom of h?y per ?ere. F crop (Ix vreclis after sow eap glazed substitute n treated with polish ctions. Look at the OFFEE is the coffee a fully illustrated and descriptive Fail to find in the list some article :e, and which they may have by rrappers of our one pound sealed e is sold). WOOLSON SPICE CO., TOLEDO, OHIO. What ls lt ? Catalojrve tollo. FDR t?cT$T?M?S ?nj NOTICE w. mall Pb+-?V>\ F?mpU?lncludi>.r;?bwT?, ..in ?flB**0 NMIU (?O P? A.) ?*u. 8 >\ <*'?<> i>?i'?i r*r R11?*! - H :i?rUy.Cl"3i?.r?'A) fnlval, et.\ Wori!i|10.we?astJ?t fi John A. Salzcr Seed Co^^CrcMS^ Wis tlntDiSCBt?H^BLJOa: " BIG SEED epf Colleotlon r?H-r, >o moMjr re?,clr?ab idtniin. ??11 , 60 pkg? of oar ie?b ?t 5o each aud wa wr.lMnd70Uoarbl|r$1.6Uco!lcc> ci :?r..i ? TOpUbh MnMr??M' hole? pf 8 olhtr pr?mlu!Tn, tnclu?lnj SHTCI ? flllcil wilek ?ad rall ot elcltu. Wnl< poital?ce?ptlogltl?off?r?t?wew!ll tc - "S ciUlortii. ?ic., by mull. lU/imrt-Car iefJUcimoiuL nj?, j, KINO CO.,Rlchtr<ond,Va I i Our Seeds Aro Northern Grown? rxns^rao V NEW DISCOVERY; 8ITOI I 1 r^f 9\M f jj 1 quick rel Isl ?nd cares worst raws! 1'oolc of testimonial nnd 1 0 days' treatment 1-rrC Dr. H. H. GREEN S SONS. Box E. Atlanta. 0? 88 BO .a ia USE CERTAINS" CURE feit Dves^r^V ati^^ R