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PROVE DOAN'S Those who doubt, who think beca us no good, who feel discouraged, thc of Dean's Kidney Pills. The wond ? Aching backs arc cased. Hip, back, and loin pains overcome. Swelling of tho 1 limbs and dropsy signs vanish They correct urine with brick dust sedi- ? meat, high colored, excessive, pain in pass- t tag, dribbling, frequency, bed wetting. r Donn's Kidney Pills dissolve and remove t calculi and gravel. Relieve heart palpita- ? tion, sleeplessness, headache, nervousness. I . SALEM, IND., Feb. 5,1003.-"Ireceived ? thc trial package of Doan's Kidney Pills j and I must confess they did mc wonderful > j good. It seems strange to say that I had tried several kinds of kidney medicines i without doing me any good. I had back- j ache, pain in my bladder and scalding j urine, and thc sample package sout mc Stopped it all in a few days, and with thc j package I am now using from our drug j store I expect to bo cured permanently. It j is wonderful, but sure and certain the med- j icine docs its work. I wns in constant j misery until I commenced tho usc of j Boan'? Kidney Pills. "-CIIAS. Ii COOK, j P. 0. Box 90, Salem, Washington Co., 111. j Largest Elephant Traps. An order for two large elephant traps was recently received from South Africa by an English firm at the little town of Wednesfield, which appears to bc the home of the spring trap trade. The traps furnished on this order are claimed to be the larg est ever made. They have jaws which open three feet square. Each jaw is supplied with notched teeth..and, in addition, three and a half-inch spikes are fixed in the jaws alternately on the two sides, and about four inches apart The jaws themselves are of heavy bar. iron, and the halt plate is about two feet square. The springs are very powerful, and require tho pressure of 300 poounds to adjust them for setting. It ls estimated that the striking power and grip of the jaws is likely to prove sufficient to drive the spikes into any part of cither elephant, rhi-iocerous, hippo potamus or other big g'.une which may be caught in its jaws. ( CARE OF DAIRY UTENSILS. Milk absorbs oder from the moment it is drawn from the cow until the I time it is churned. Whenever milk f reaches the temperature of 100 it is 1 claimed to be in an active state of s decomposition. Eut, while milk is 1 *?a"s?ly affected by outside influences, < the adherents to strict rules of clean- ' liness will greatly aid the dairyman '. to avoid the changes that often oe- ] cur. Cooling the milk renders the germs inactive, and prevents decompo- 1 eitiorf for a while, but it should not be overlooked that milk absorbs odors very rapidly when cool. Exposure to odors, gases or volatile matter of any kind should, therefore, be avoided, and every utensil used in the dairy should be scalded with boiling water and j ' thoroughly scoured. 1 Mrs. Frances Stafford, of 243 E. 114th St., N.Y. City, adds her tes timony to the hundreds of thou sands on Mrs. Pinkham's files. . . When. Lydia E. Pinkham's Reme dies were first introduced skeptics all over thc country frowned upon their curative claims, but as year after year has rolled by and* tho little group of women who had been cured by the new discovery has since grown into a yost army of hundreds of thousands, doubts and skepticisms have been swept away ac by a mighty flood, until to-day thc great good that Lydia. E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and her other medicines are doing among thc women of America ia attracting the attention of many of our leading scientists, physicians and thinking people. Merit alone could win such fame ; wise, therefore, is the woman who for a cure relies upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Implying a Distinction. "Mr. Hittit, you live in a prohibition State, do you not?" "I reside in one, sir, but I live in a etate of entire freedom as to-cer tainly, I will join you with pleasure." 4f Sooth Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga. Portablo and Stationary Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY Complete line carried in stock for IMMEDIA TE shipment. Best Macblnory, Lowest Prices and Best Terms. Write us for catalogue, prices, etc., before buying. I BUY BRAINS ! Agents panted for "The ?Tevr York Eventa? News." tue Dollar-A-Year Daily. Easy to get snbscr.ptiorjs. I K"t -in myself lo 15 minutes. Keep posted I Latest mira's, fashions, stories, politics, otc. Joseph Howard, Jr., the most famous Nnwepapor map in America, writes exclusively for us in New York, "Howard's Colutr.n" alone is worth nvro than the entire price of the paper. Only one dollar per DROPSY 10 DA?S' TEEATttEIfl" FREE. Have na'lo Diopry and Its com plications a spocialty for twonty years v/ith tho most wondorful success. Ha70carcdmanythou3 and cttsss, D3.a.n.oszs?'s sous, Box ti Atlanta, fia. S?3???S Thompson's Eye Wafer Genuin ? FREE -HELP. e other Kidney Remedies do them1 y profit most by the Free Trial rous results stamp Doan merit. Boura BURTONVILLE., III. 7 Feb. "8, .003.-"I received tho trial package of Doan's Kidney's Pills and have bought cveral boxes of my druggist They hnvo lone mc much good. I was hardly ablo o do any work until I began taking them ; low I can work all day and my back doe3 lot get thc least bit tired." BIRD GRAY. FREE-70 FSAKE YOU A FRIEND. rosTBB-MimcEX Co.. BuiTalo, N. T.. Pleaso send mo bj- mall, without charge, trial box Doaa's Kidney Pills. Post-office--.--. State._._. (Cut out coupon cn dot:, a Unca and mall to Kcstcr-ilillrarn Co.. bullala, K. Y.) Medical Advice Free-Strictly Confidential. Telegraph Facts. Every day that a telegraph operator works at three minutes before" ll there ls only ono man in the whole country from San Francisco to New York that ls privileged to use his key. That man ls the operator at Washington: In" those three minutes every key 13 open and all operators walt for th-^o minutes' ticking which tells them tho correct time. From th^t ticking ever? telegraph company's clock is set There aro at leas; 20,000 operators at work. Taking three minutes from every one of them equals 60,000 minutes idled away every day. It would take one man 125 years to do the listening' of all these men for those few minutes. At the rate of $50 a month, and working for the required -umber of years, this man would re ceive $75,000. This is -what the com panies pay to their men a year for lust listening.-Boston Journal. IURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH. 3.B.B. Cures Dcep-Soatcd Casos Especially -To Prove It l?. l?. B. Sent Tree. These diseases, with aches and pains in jones, joints and back, agonizing pains in ihoulder blades, bands, fingers, anr.3 and egs crippled by rheumatism, lumbago, sci itica, or neuralgia; hawking, spitting, nose jlecding, ringing in thc ears, sick stomach, lcafness, noise's in the head, bad teeth, thin hot blood, all run dowu feeling of catan h tro sure sighs of an awful poisoned condi Lion of the blood. Take Botanic Blood Calm (B.B.B.) Soon ail aches and pains stop, the poison is destroyed and a real permanent cure is made of thc worst rheu matism or foulest catarrh. Thousands of cases cured by taking B.B.B. It strength ens weak kidneys and improves diges tion. Druggists, ?1 per large bottle. Sam ple free by writing BLOOD BALM Co., 18 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical ad vice sent in sealed letter. The man who says he feels a friendly in terest in our affairs is a good bit of a nuis ance. _ "men-, ix uruitta"jui- V? Dil, with the aid cf the membranous *[ urfaces of the roots, with their root airs, which later greatly increase ie surface connection of the plant ith the water cf the soil. Large j ?antitios of water thus taken la by ! : ie plants are "breathed out" into the ; , r through the leaves and the amount I , enormous, field crops consuming 200 , 500 pounds of water for each pound } dry matter the plants add to their 1 vn weight in growing. The roohl , field crops are much longer, much \ ore numerous, spread farther and ! ? inctrato into tho soil to greater ! ? ?pths than many Horsens realize. I j here the upper portion of thc earth | ? often too dry fer the plant to feed ! I me crops send their deepest roots j i wnward from four to six feet or I ? )re, though the greater number of : j Dts are In the upper 13 inches bf ! il. Tho richest portion of the soil j I d tho part in which the plants pre- j ft ? to feed, if sufficient moisture is ; k ?sont, is the lower half or two rds of the furrow slices. With ?atcr depth the plant = feed with f. ire difficulty. While the deepest g >ts procure some food their chief c( iction is to bring the water from j" ;p in tho earth when the supply j aj ir the surface is short. Clover j D( ids its roo?ts deeper than corn or ' cc eat, and alfalfa goes deeper than ? ca vcr. but as the plant food is sought ! efl ir tho surface the objects should be ? th lave the moisture there so as to aid I jn plants to procure soluble food.- j ?j ladelphia Record. W' foi gk th. foi Vu tw " I had a terrible cold and could ? | Coi lardly breathe. I then tried Aver's Cherry Pectoral, and it gave me im uediate relief." W. C. Layton, SideU, 111. ?B-BB IS How will your cough >e tonight? Worse, prob ibly. For it's first a cold, ? hen a cough, then bron chitis or pneumonia, and t last consumption, boughs always tend lownward. Stop this lownward tendency by aking Ayer's Cherry Pec oral. Three sizes: 25c. SOc,"SI. All druggists. Consult your doctor. If ho says tnko it, ou do as he says. If he tell* you not take it, thea don't take it. He knows. ?ve it with hhn. -Wu aro TTllllnpr. J. C. ATE II CO.. Lowell, Mass. ?olds Cured ?Grippe and Neuralgia Banished and BY THU CSK OF new ?a J?. 10,25 and COc. at Di us Stores. DrngflsU e stamped C C C. Sever sold in balle ware of the dealer who tries to sell "something jost as good." the 1 "JJ "do am "E thiuj herc " "N "Tl who "I what pie 1 OVERPETTED PETS. Docs and Cits Spoiled by Appetite Tor Unnatural Tidbit*. rosslbly thc dog world might afford P better specimen of a living skeleton than the one in the kennel next to the door of a boarding pince for animals, but it would take a day's journey to 2nd him. "What makes him so thin?" was asked of the attendant. "Ile won't cat." was thc reply. "Timi ls, he won't cat hospital food. He's been spoiled. Lots of dogs and cats that are brought here rave been spoiled. Their owners think it a sign of high breeding to cultivate an appe tite for a peculiar and unnatural diet. They traiu animals to eat all kinds of food that they would never touch of their own volition. This emaciated fellow has been taught to like fruit. He is particularly fond of pears, bur in case he can't get them, ponchos, apples and bananas are a fairly satisfactory substituto. Unfortunately, his present ailment makes a fruit diet extremely dangerous, and since he is deprived of his favorite food he is literally starving himself to death." The attendant passed on to a neigh boring cage and poked his finger sportively into the side of a large gray cat that "meowed" plaintively in re sponse to his cheery "Hello, there. Caesar." Thc cat had such a healthy, wholesome appearance that the visitor inquired what meat he was fed upon. '.Humph!" said thc attendant, "you've missed it there. He doesn't feed upon meat. He's a vegetarian. Ile likes onions better than anything else, unless it's melons. A good many cats like melons, and most of them arc also partial to raw asparagus. The fact is, you might run through a list of all the dishes that find a place on nay up-to-date menu and you will find that some of our patients have acquired a taste for thom. This epicurean appe tite may denote aristocratic tendencies on thc part of my boarders, but 1 don't approve of it. Most of these acquired tastes are a perversion of the natural animal appetite, and it is likely to prove harmful in the end. The trick is pretty expensive for us fellows that run cat-and-dog hoarding houses, and I'd like to put a stop to it."-New York Times. Excessive r.cadln&. A Chicago newspaper says that "among the contagious diseases of the age excessive and sterile reading must bc enumerated." It takes thc matter seriously, even solemnly. "The world," it avers, "has gone mad over books. They have taken the place of every other fetich." Hardly as bad as that, wc think; but there is a good deal of truth in the averment. Because thc fetich worshiper is found among men whose boast is that they never read fl book, and there are even those who make a fetich out of that peculiarity. However, it may bo doubtful if a large share of the reading of the day is of real benefit to thc reader. Much of what passes for reading is not reading; it is merely vacuous, glancing along the page. Y?*e see people take up rt magazine, for example, a magazine filled with reading of interest and -.u TP,, Vnn tlmin skim, skim. of their minds. -ftenrHng I?KP tn WU is intemperate-the producer o? men tal stupefaction at the eud. Th ore nrc patrons of tho fred public library and of tho circulating libraries in this city who read with the same excited assiduity that the. victim of alcoholic habits follows his norning and noon and evening drams indthe habit comes to about the same :hing in the end. They pour novel ifter novel into what passes for their )rains, and get out of tho process the rterilization of whatever mind they lo have. This is one phase of tho read ng habit, and a very palpable phase; ortunately, it ls not the ouly ono. sTew Bedford Standard. america From a Shopper's Viewpoint. Mrs. M. E. Leicester Addis, an Eng sh woman, commends the following imericau articles Ju her paper on English Wives and American House eeping" in LIppincott: "I can widely proclaim that all the raniteware utensils in my kitchen lot crockery, which is very cheap io nglau?) and many conveniences for ?oking were specially chosen in Amer a; and that our bath-towels, pillow id bolster-slips, and sheets, also night new in the States, have the immeudation of my laurldress be muse 'they dry. so quickly and are ;sily handled.' I would also buy ere all my cotton goods, as cheapci style and quality, also blouses, and I sorts of cotton or silk cloting here fit, cut, and style are of valu?! should also choose to bargain there r variety and style in silverware and iss, although I could not claim that ey cost less. I even sent to America t a box of Christmas presents last ar, and though tho carriage cost me o dollars and fifty cents I felt truly npensated in the pleasure expressed to beauty and novelty." The Ruling Passion. L good woman was dying; a woman 0 had boon a true wife and a good ther; a woman with but one weak is-a love for gossip. lthough her time on earth was short ; was critically watching the ai ding physician and nurse, as they :ed in subdued whispers of thc re t which their united skill had been corless to avert. 1 response to the summons of the ng woman her husband approached and bent low to catch the words ;ch he expected to be words of love, lin sue turned her eyes, from which light was fast fading, upon tho doc and the nurse, as she said faintly: i you suppose they are engaged?" l?ese words were her last.-New k Times. i I I fJ i b P r s u si tl tl 1 Ci tl tl ai 01 ct ai th Pi w Ul WI C?? mi in thi tin op to cai in: Co Us] wa Ch Fr? thr I str; bili ma ab con tag bril T Un: moi pro SllOl amt id io is d thin nett Ono of the Signs. ie member of Congress was a now in Washington. After he had fiu d his dinner at the restaurant the ?ind :cr brought him pic for dessert, help there was a knife with it. The unti member looked at the pic and at less knife. has rajor," he said to his companion, ban, you think that waiter suspects I be I a Western Congressman?" cent ardly. How should ho know any- men : about it? You were never in .'inti before, were you?" shou o." are L-en how in thunder loos he know ?tes you are?" all, ? don't know. But if he doesn't, shou did he bring that knife with tho j of si or?"-New York Times. ..... ! mia Valuable Testimony. Good roads reduce the wear and tear on horses, harness and vehicles, ac cording to the testimony that follows: General Stone-Ono farmer, when I asked him how he was getting on pay ing his taxes for new roads, replied: "I save more on repairs on my wagons and harness than the whole amount of mv tax on good roads." Charles L. Andrews, Moorestown, N. J.-The stone roads have every ad vantage over thc dirt roads. They are much easier on horses. They are a saving of liorsellesh, saving of time, and, as "time is money," consequently a saving of money. Charles S. Athetson, Magnolia/N. J. -I am part owner and operate a farm of two hundred acres near the line of thc recently completed "White Horse" telford road. I consider this road one of the greatest public benefits ever conferred upon the people of this local ity. At a distance of eight miles it brings us nearly an hour nearer mar ket. It enables us' to dispense with one team. Our teams are in better condition and require less feed and at tention in doing thc same amount of carting. We make a daily saying of one cent a horse per mile. Thomas J. Beans, Moorestown, N. J. -When a farmer liviug alongside a stone road sends out his team with a load they do not seem to pull the load; it just rolls along, and they accom pany it. William Jones, Medford, N. J.-I live iifteeu miles from Philadelphia, and a great feature of my business is the growing of truck for that market. At present I am five miles from a stone road, nnd I am obliged to put four horses to my truck wagon and send two men with it until they reach the stone road; then the leading team is taken off and ono man brings it back home, and the other settles back in his gig top and goes to sleep, as there is no danger of a loaded team leaving thc stone road-bed until city pavements are reached. . j Treatment of Roads Tl*UU Gas Tar. Y>rhile roads in tho United States have been treated with crude oil to lay the dust and render them compact, In Italy the same end has been attained by using gas tar, and the experiments which have been made seem to be quite successful. M. G. Bimini, the district engineer at Lugo, near Bavenna, has published an account of the application of gas tar to some sections of the pub lic road in that locality. He uses it in two different places on the provin cial route near Lugo, where thc circu lation is very active. The first portion treated measures forty feet long and ten feet wide and the second 750 feet long and thirteen feet wide. In spite of the prolonged dryness the results of this treatment have exceeded the ex pectations, and the surface of the road i.-- i.nnnnm vcrv hard and compact, so ?tpon"?"larger scale1;1"' " "'- ?uu-'?^.,*? A Government Road For rieht Vehiclse. An enthusiastic automobilist has re cently revived a proposition which ivas advocated a century ago, but has ain dormant for many years. It is "or a Government road from New York 0 Chicago, and possibly to the Pacific. Chis road ls to be suitable for bicycles, intomobiles and light carriages. As )halt is spoken of as the most suitable lavement for the rubber-tired vehicles, file main road would be through the oost thickly settled sections, with ranch roads leading to important oints in the neighborhood of the oute. The proposition at first seems, ays an exchange, great and the cost nsurmouutablc, but when it is con idcred what the combined efforts of |i JO various cities benefited could do, io proposition seems more feasible, he great work which has been ac jmplishcd by the bicycle riders of n's country for the improvement of ie highways ia certainly wonderful, id shows what is possible when tho ?ergies of a large number are con- ' ?itraff'd toward the same end. Such ] 1 enterprise would not encroach upon j ie business of any company, since itt ?rpose would be entirely Identifie Ith ibo new industry. ) _ -- . il Build inc; a National Highway. tn seeking to raise money and seem*, ?uence lo construct a National high lni 2y, the American Automobile Assc asl ttion Is undertaking a work whic. ?its the support of every sportsma, the the country. That all may join i ty ? effort it is proposed by the associe u to reduce its dues to $1, and t en its ranks to all those quallfld join, and to forthwith institute*! C01 mpaign for the purpose of supp?t- plu j the bill which will be introducodn wo ngress this session for the esta- ^41 liment of a trans-continental hig> me 7, starting at Boston and reachlg wo icago by the lake cities, and Sn mcisco by the old overland roue T ough Utah. JT lore is an object that does not E- bo i let or confine, its value to autono- Pr0 ists. It appals to practically evey ?JJ n, for those who do not own a hore, euri icyclc or an antoine bile, are at lest conj cerned with thc industrial advm- 5,on? cs that such on undertaking woild Toi lg- the here is no movement making in te ir0E ?ted States of more value, or me gyS? re needed, tuan that for road rn- any vcincnt. and _ Co., I Cr .Scicr,4o and Eating. j, re are ever willing to eat what ive uki, providtog it is palatable, butno A core syucrasies ot taste. Therefore it mut of science will overcome ?he , elightful to know that many of ihe J? gs we crave are just the things.ive Non J. The scientists tell us that tea Dr-; coffee are int only harmless, ?nit A ful, if wc don't begin to drink tijera tclei I we are thirty, and if we don't pay jil than thirty cents a pound. Coffee teetl recently escaped from the la|ter tlon' for a very good brand may liow So bought fer less than twentydive wori s. Another important point to/re- j? iber is that it' we would live ling lion prosper neither coffee nor tea 'v1* ld be drunk unless tho grounds it removed within at least ten ijiin- vinci after making. Coffee, if boiled at ?. should be boiled quickly, but1 tea jpj? ld never boiled. A certain amount ?g?r is necessary to keep the hu- tA system amiable. .._ ._ _^ ? iE_ - \_ HIS FALL. ? Hei entered the car with an air dis f tingue, F^rom his shimmering hoots to his [ glittering tile In make-up and manner BO truly au fait He was openly scanned as a study In style. With calmness found only in men ol the world. He stood while he tendered his fare with fine grace, Then the car gave a lurch and, alas! he was hurled Over seventeen persons and fell on his face. - New York Times. Cocking by Cold. 'Cooking meat by cold instead of by heat," said a wholesale butcher up:own, "Is the odd experiment that mj firm has recently been trying, I sum?se you are aware that the effect of intense cold is much like that of fin. You know that, if your finger is 'rozen the injured tissues take on preisely the same condition that they woild if thc finger hod been roasted. W?l, that is the basis wc went to wok on, our motive being the idea th? with our ice-making plant and all It vould be cheaper, in our canning de patment, to freeze our meat than to co;k it So far, in our experiments, w? have had good success. We have swmltted thc meat to a temperature ofminus 33 degrees Fahrenheit, and thn have packed it in cans. It has sbwn all the appearance of half coked meat; it has been impossible totell the frozen and the half-cooked br.nds apart. So far, too, it' has kept w?l. But whether it will keep as wll and as long as the meat treated w.h fire wc do not yet know, as our eoerlments have not continued a Efficient length of time. We will sre about an eighth of a cent a pund on tinned meats if we succeed ^substituting cold heat in their prep arion."-Philadelphia Record. Soap and Civilization In Guam. Tho inhabitants of Guam are being ? tpidly civilized and may soon claim ? Emission as an American State into ? ?ur glorious Union. The evidence? j i the early part of last year some- I }dy shipped $500 wortn of soap to ? 1e island as a speculation. The gen- j fe Guamitcs were so delighted that < tey Immediately called for more, and i October 6,000 pounds were shipped, ?iat will probably be the monthly ?1er from the island. When a Guam 'dy takes to soap the level of clviliza on is raised the world over.. She ls j D longer content with the elaborate I jstume of ncso-ring, bracelet and gar- ? ir. She wants thc comforts and lux- ?j Ties of New York. Beginning with j jap she will soon aspire to the fash- j nable. And, of course, the Guam I mtleman will do likewise in his man Jj .shion. Soap and civilization-the I mcrican occupation has borne fruit. .St Louis Post-Dispatch. .;>V ii is pure. It is gentle. It is pleasant. It is efficacious. It is not expensive. It is good for childre It is excellent for lac It is convenient for t It is perfectly safe ut It is used by million' It stands highest, as If you use it you hav produces. The Sensa' 'on. 'Doesn't lt give you a terrible feel j when you run over a man?" they ted him. 'Yes, if he's a large man," replied i automcbilist. "It gives me a pr?t rought jolt sometimes." rhere are, In the United States, ac ding to the last census 12G women mbers, 45 women plasterers, 167 men bricklayers and stonemasons, . women paper hangers, 1,759 wo n painters and glaziers and 545 men carpenters and joiners. hero ls moro Catarrh In this section of the ntrythan all other diseases put together, until tho last fow years was supposed to acurablo. For a groat many years doctors aounced it a local diseaso and prescribed il remedies, and by constantly falling to 3 with local treatment, pronounced it in iblo. Science) has proven Catarrh to bo a stilutlonal disease and theref oro reauires ?titutional troatment. Hall's Catarrh o, manufactur?e" by F. J. Chenoy <fc Co., ;do, O., ls the only constitutional euro on market. It is taken Interna Hy in dosos a 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts dlrect Q tho blood and mucous surfaces of tho cm. They oiTcr ono hundred dollars for caso it falls to cure. Send for circulars testimonials. Address F. J. CUENET & Toledo, O. ?ld by Druggists, 75c. ill's Family Pills aro tho best. n explorer doesn't have to be a sor r in order to discover the source of a r, _ CS permanently curod.No fits or norvous after first day^s uso of Dr. Klino's Great rohestorcr. 62 trinl bottloand trcntiso f roe 13.H. KLINE, Ltd., 'J31 ArchSt.,Fhlla.,Pa. ring on the finger is worth two on the ihone. ^.?Winslow's SoothingSyrup for children jing.soiton tho gums, reduces Inflamma allays pain,euros wind colic. 26c. abottlo m<! inca work their way up in the: d by working other peopfe. lo not boliovo PIso's Curo for Consump has an equal for coughs and colds-JOH? 3YEE, Trinity Springs, Ind., Fob. 15, VJOO. doesn't take much argument to con ? a girl that she is pretty. ) muss or failures made with PUTNAM ELESS DYES. isn't every hero who has sense enough ay up on his pedestal. g this a b lng Thc and imp Ii son cow star witl to t com ahei wldi F. I A T ta Tc rem* free from age If vinc< you it bc a mi It corni the read bram and offed cure. Mr write lng t nie I "Am using Howe "Smo cured If : get fi write ton S Peruna is Congress, by Go Majors. Captains, Clergymen, many t?ons, and thousands members of nors, Consuls. Generals, 1 Physicians. Hospitals and public institut upon thousands of those in Cherokee Remedy ci Sweet Gum and Muilein SSSyfiS r^nr+lin Cf\\Ac> ? ?si????nr>P> ?t!1 Throat and Lun?* Troubles. Thorouphly tested Lyougns, ^oias, iwaunppe ?or m ycar3. An Druggists. 20c, soc UM* 61.00. n. Lies. ?usiness men. ider all circumstances. 5 of families the world over. a laxative, with physicians. e the best laxative the world :ts. nts. IL tuuiuu- - Liich are agreeable and. refreshing to the taste. AU ar?pu?e:-^- -^ All are delicately b1 ended?"" w -. _ AH are skillfully and scientifically comp??rK?erlr Its valu?is due to our method of manufacture and to the orginality and simplicity of the combination. To get its beneficial effects -buy the genuine. Manufactured by . San Francisco, Ca!. Louisville. Ky. New York, N. Y. FOR SALE BY ALL LEAD I NO DRUGGISTS. STABLE AND TIE-UP. ?tables should be always dry, and >. condition you cannot secure with asement stable, with a wall form any part of the side of the stable. 5 question of stable construction ventilation is one of the greatest lortance. 1 stable arrangements we want ie kind of tie that will keep the comfortable, and never the rigid ichion, and have the cows adjusted 1 reference to the drop according heir length. We in our stables ac plish this by having the platform id of the drop, eighteen inches 3r at one end than at the other. ?. Converse, in The Cultivator. Samples Mailed Free. rial Package of Dr. Blosser's Ca rrh Cure Will Be Sent Free to Any Sufferer From Catarrh. ) demonstrate the merits of his ?dy, Dr. Blosser offers to mail, of charge, to any one suffering . Catarrh, a three days' trial pack of this valuable medicine. the trial package does not con ? you of its curative properties, will have been at no expense; if merits you, you will gladly order Dnth's treatment at $1.00. is a harmless, pleasant, vegetable jound, which is smoked In a pipe, medicated smoke, being inhaled, ?es directly the mucous mem 3S lining the head, nose, throat lungs, heals the ulcerated parts, ting a radical and permanent . Joseph Chabot, Kaycee, Wyo., s: "I am free from catarrh, ow o your wonderful remedy." An 3. Young, Camden, N. J., writes: completely cured of catarrh after . your medicine." Mrs. E. M. 1, Water Valley, Miss., writes: king your remedy has entirely me." you wish to try the remedy and all particulars, testimonials, etc., to Dr. i/osser Company, 32 Wal t. Atlanta, Ha. A "White Star" Buggy Can be coolly modo with our Well Augers & Drills Ono maa and ono bes?* WO^rciL W,? aro the only makore ortho Tiffin Wcu Borln? and Bock-DrlimB Machino. -1I- Warronted tho Beat on Earth! Many of oar onotomera moko from ?BO to 04O o day. Book and Ciro ulara FUE E. Address, - LOOMIS MACHINE CO., TIFFIN, OHIO. I PAY SPOT CASH FOR MILITARY BOUNTY issued to soldiers of any war. Also Soldiers' Additional Homestead Rights. Wrlto at once. FRANK H. REG1'?. P.O.Box 148, Denver, Colo. LAND WARRANTS ?L CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. uuntj ii nene MIL CLOE raiLO. Dost Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Uso In time. Bold b " On July 4th we will give, FREE, ono of our "WHITS STAR'1 Top boggle* to the jperaon composing the Kantest number of English words from letters contained In the sentence: "WATCH THE WHITE STAR BU66Y." Anyone who will devote an hour pnch day-to this plensant study can win the buggy. No conditions to comply with except make up the list of words. If this offer ls not understood, any bupiry dealer In your town who hits tho agoncv for the "WHITE STAU" Buggy will give you a copy of the rules. when you have made out your Hst of words Five them to our agent In your town, who will send them to us. '" '. On July 4th we will notify every contestant who the winner ls and number of words that won the "WHITE STAR" Baggy. S3?*ll you write us. enclose postage lor reply. ATLAN1A BUGGY CO., Atlanta. Georgi?. ?WOMAN IN iriEttrius, TENN., will bo Riad to know you. Send lOcta and 10 ninnes of your Flower-loving monds and receive by return mail a beautiful ASPARAGUS SPRENGER!! FERN 1 ?hall be pleased to hear from you. MISS CALLIE WATSON, Tho Southern Woman Florist, MEMPHIS, - TENNESSEE. cwGlve the name of this paper when writing to advertisers- (At. G. 'Orrnft Th? work of a * Ifjft machlni li don? on ?? taint high grad?V^*! standard guaranteed visible Typewriter, ?pal tn any work, with /ree course on stenography tor er - t-, ma chin., cn b. opmitd by tnrono tn a trw dara, ti. OM of doctors, teachers and bastaos* r* ^ For Cliralan iddrtai , RoomP12, ACME TYPEWRITER CO., 10? Falt?n St., Kaw T,(^ I !