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."s fcoHKODOSE KWKGLSOM OF OUR NAVY Recommends Pe-ru-ns- -Other Pro mlnen? Men Testify. Commodore Somerville Nicholson, of the United States Navy, in a letter from 1837 R St., N. W., Washington, D. C., says: "Your. Peruna has been and is now used by s? m?ny of ray friends and ac quaintances as ?'sure cure for catarrh that I am convinced of its curative qualities, and I unhesitatingly .recom mend lt to all persons suffering from that complaint."-S. Nicholson. TheJiighest men jn our nation have given 'Peruna ,a strong endorsement. Men of all classes and stations are equally represented. If you do not derive prompt and sat isfactory results from the use of Pe runh, write at" once to 'Dr. Hartman, giving "a full statement pf your case, and he will be.pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. . Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium- Columbus, O. Ask Your Druggist for a free Peruna Almanac for 1904. So. 4. WOMEN DECIDE A WAGER. Incumbrancc of Skirts Shown by Prac? tlcal Proof. Two women well known in Vienna were recently walking beside Lake Geneva, discussing the latest fash ions; when one of them suddenly re marked that she wished she was not obliged to wear a skirt, as she would very much .like to bathe then and there in the cool lake. A warm argu ment followed, one maintaining that a petticoat would not prove an en cumbrance in the water and the other insisting that no woman who wore either a petticoat or corsets could swim or even keep afloat for more than a few minutes. As neither j would give way to the other, they,, "filially resolveu to test the matter* practically, and conse quently, after making a small wager, they plunged into the lake. As they were dressed.in the height of fashion "their appearance in the water caused a sensation among a crowd of tour ists who were on the bank, and at once the cry arose that they intended to commit suicide. A minute or two later half a dozen boats were on the way to rescue, them, but the ladies laughingly said that they required no assistance, and to show that ther were in no danger they swam out a little way and then returned to the shore. ,. Theebine who had maintained that a wdman's dress was no encumbrance in the wMer then candidly admitted that she was mistaken, and vowed that In future whenever she visited the lake she would dispense with her corsets.-New York Herald. I Pitchforks at an Election. Extraordinary scenes occurred at the counting of votes during a muni cipal election at Florenzac, near Mont pellier, France. It was stated that the presiding of ficer and two of the assessors had ex tracted ballot papers and placed them In their pockets. Upon tho fraud be ing denounced by the opposition, several hundred peasants, armed with pitchforks and other weapons, at tempted to break into the ? school room wherej the counting was going on, and threatened to lynch the offi cials, concerned. It took 100 gendarmes all their time to repel the. infuriated crowd, and several tlmefc ?they had to charge with drawn sworda.' - , ' BRAVE FIGHT FOR LIBERTY. Russian Count's Vain Efforts to Es cape Secret Police. The career of the Russian Count Nicholas Savin, who was arrested at | Hamburg a few days ago on the in- | formation of the Russian secret police, reads like a page of fiction. Several times previously the count, by most reckless courage, had escaped from his prison exile in Siberia, where ha had been sent for committing forgery, and each time he was recaptured and extradited from the country where he was found. His last flight, which has just ended in hi:? arrest at Hamburg, has given the Russian police ten years' trouble. Thc count got away from Siberia in 1S93. and succeeded in reaching the United States. For five years he lived undiscovered in Chi cago, earning his living at various times as wp.it.er. billiard-marker, cab man and tram.conductor. In 1SS8 he volunteered for the war. and fought ewith great distinction with the Amer ican troops against Spain. Afterwards he went to Spain as the representa tive of an American expert house. The Russian secret police were meanwhile making an incessant search and re cently they located him in Spain. When the count discovered that his identit . was known he boarded a steamei ~l Lisbon, bound for Ham burg. Detectives booked passages by the same vessel, and on arrival at Hamburg persuaded the German au thorities to seize the count. He will be taken back to Siberia after the' extradition formalities. The count, who is 44 years of age, is the husband of the French Countess Lantrec de Toulouse. Curious Prediction. Nostradamus, who lived some cen turies -ago, is well known on account of his curious predictions, and now his admirers claim thai in ene of his celebrated quatrains he clearly fore told the exact date of the death of Leo XIII. In this quatrain, as M. Henri Don chet, a French occultist points out, Nostradamus predicted that during the twentieth century a pope would die on the same day that "a hairy star" vanished from tho sky. M. Douchet maintains that Nostrad amus had a comet in mind when he wrote, and that the prediction has been literally fulfilled, since the Eo relli comet, which was discovered at the observatory of Marseilles, van ished from the sky on the very day of Pone Leo's death.-New York Herald The Prince and the Painter. Swan, the animal painter, was re cently introduced to the Prince of Wales. The poet Swinburne made the introduction. "Allow me," he said, "to present tc your Highness John Macallan Swan, of Acacia Road." "Mr. Swan," said the Prince, 'i am delighted to inaice your acquaint ance. I was always very fond of ani mals." ALL DONE OUT. Veteran Joshua Heller, of 70? Soul!) Walnut street, Urbana, 111., says: "In the fall of I860 after taking Donn's Kidney Pills I testl 5ed that they had relieved me of kid aey trouble, de posed of a lame back with prwu lcross my loins and beneath tho shoul ler blades. Dur ng the internal ivhieli has elapsed [ have had occasion :o resort to Donn': "Cidney Pills when '. noticed warnings )f nu attack. On ?ach and every occasiou the results ob ainr-d were just as satisfactory ?is vhon the pills were first brought to my lotice. I just as emphatically eudorsc lie preparation to-day as 1 did over rwo years ago." Fostof-Milburu Co., Buffalo. N. Y., )roprietors. Fer sale by all druggists. ?rice 30 cuts per box. ? Good Shot for a Boy. A boy in Bernis, Me., shot a blue ?eron on the wing at a distance of :,000 feet one day last week. ?i.OOO.OOO Italiana i? France. There are 2,000,000 italians in France, chiefly engaged in artistic, edu cative or laboring pursuits. Most ot them ave found iu tiie eastern, espe cially in thc southeastern departments, but they are scaiiered all through tue country. -On thc other baud, there are only 10,000 French in Italy.-London Globe. Catarrh Cannot He Cur?.l With LOCAL A?PLICATIOXH as they (Niau ot reaoh the .-seat of the disease. Catarro i - a blood or constitutional disease, aud in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Curo is Laken internally, arni acts directly on the blood :uidmr.?oussurtaj<i Hall's Catarrh Cure is no: a quack medicine. It was prescribed by. ene ot tho bes: physi cians" itt this country ior vw Overwork and Worry. To eat a grape a minute for an hour at a time, and to repeat this perform ance three or four times a day, eating very little else meantime but dry bread, may seem a monotonous way cf spending the time. This treatment works wonders for thin, nervous anae mic people whose digestions have got out of order from worrying or over work. It is no mere quack prescrip tion, but a form of cure recognized and advised by many well known phy sicians. Grapes are, perhaps, the most digestible of any fruit in existence. New York News, A warm bath with a handful Of sea salt in it is about as restful as a nap. Paddle in it until it cools, dry with a rcugh towel, put ort fresh stockings , iiave a chance of shoes. If one could take the time in the middle of the day to change the stockings for a fresh pair we would not hear so much about cold feet or rheumatism. It is said that the nervousness is kept out of thc Celestial Empire by the use of sofl soied shoes. The hard soles worn by the Anglo-Saxon race are the cause, in a measure of the extreme nervous temperament. Aside from the daily bath the feet should have their own particular bath at least three times a week. Her fresh complexion and sparkling eyes, one woman declares, arc due in a great measure to her very carefully kept feet.-Pittsburg Dis patch. Women- Auronauta Record. Miss Houlton has just beaten Mme. Sauniere's long distance record for women aeronauts. Mme. Sauniere recently flo?ted from St. Cloud to Bayreuth, Bavaria, a dis tance of about 450 miles in an air line. Miss Moulton left the Aero club grounds in St. Cloud at 5 p. m. last Tuesday, accompanied by Count Cas tillon de St. Victor, and descended at noon tho next day near Breslau, Prus sian Silesia, a distance of 675 miles in r, straight cours?. Santos Dumont, fresh from enthusi astic r?ception in Brazil, has promptly taken up his old work. He is parti cularly occupying himself at present with his passenger baloon No. 10. Captain Yon Corvhi, Count Henry de La Vaulx and M. Chardonnel have just visited Santos Dumont's aero drome. Von Corvin. who is in charge of thc ballooning department of the Austro-Hungarian army, under Arch duke Leopold Salvator, was much im pressed with the technical features of Santos Dumont's new "A?ronef" (air ship), and says the archduke wants to be present at the first ascent of No. 10 -Chicago Inter-Ocean.. College Girls' Athletics. President Eliot of Harvard does not believe that women can indulge much in- athletics without injuring them selves, and condemns boating, putting tho shot and such violent forms of ex ertion for women. "Women will never compete with men's colleges in athletics." he said recently. "1 see absolutely no possi bility of that ever taking place. The women do not seek competition, and it would he of no benefit to them. Wom ec were not originally intended for such violent exercise as man. and some of the things that they go into must strain them. For women to put the shot is preposterous. "There may be women living who arc made in such a strange and un natural way that it is not lnjuriou', for thc-m to put the shot, but (for the ma jority of women it would be enough to hurt them for life. Boating also is bad for women. Women's colleges do not have crews to any great extent, hut the women who do go into it will no< last long in their athletic life. Women's athletics are a good thing in moderation, but for them to try to do all that their brothers do is a mistake. They will only hurt themselves in the attempt." When to Shake Hands. When to shake hands, and when only to bow, either on being intro duced cr on first meeting afterward, perplex many people. Anxious to do right, not to be either too familiar Care of the ?eei eme of the pre-tiest. It betokens cheerfulness and animation, charac teristics which are far too rare among girls of today. What girls should guard against, however, is the boister I otis laugh which is apt to distort the features and grate on the nerves. It generally creates the impression that it is tco loud and long to be genuine. Feminine Footwear1! Daintiness and grace are the fe?; tures of the shoes and slippers that maid and matron will wear on "occa sions" during the gay season; Wheth er for dancing or simply for afternoon teag and receptions the high-heeled? very high indeed, shoes seem to b? the Ihing that shoe makers beguile their fair customers into wearing. For the meet part these are strapped and many of them have huge rosettes of: fluffy maline or flat ones of panne vel; vet just at the tip of the arching in step. Then, too, stiff, quaint rosettes of satin sometimes are perched wher? the shoe is tied. Slipper and shoe this year match the gown in tone, and the hose is also always cf the same hue. In the foot gear a little choice is permitted the fair one. for the shoe may be of kid( silk or satin, one being as fashionable as the other. These may be plain or studded with pearls, jet or steel, ac cording to fancy. A great favorite with the young woman of today is the strapped shoe, many wearing those strapped from the instep away down to the edge of the toe. The footwear provided for the wee ones by fond mammas is just as dainty ae these made fer the older people. Great care for an artistic finish is given to babies' shoes. White buckskin Bhoes are especially fashion able for the little tots who do not know the meaning of the word. For the man baby smooth pale russet is considered the thing that adds to his manikin toilette.-New York Ameri can. Same ?rv Any Age. "When I was young Ave bad a proper respect for our parents," is an expres sion with which we are all familiar and if one were in the least inclined to take a gloomy view of things the parental pessimist might seem to be developing at air alarming rate, but "There's nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so," and if girls are being perpetual ly told that freedom is their rightful position, that they ought not to have more restrictions than their brothers, that mothers want "managing" and "training." and all the rest of it, what wonder if they begin to fancy them selves always right and their elders always wrong; and, again, when moth ers and fathers are having it perpet<-; nally dinned in their ears that the pre sent system of education makes girls selfish and insolent, that most girls are unmanageable nowadaj's, they, too. come to believe a large portion of it, and, seeing through these lenses the faults that are common to ali girls in all ages, imagine the present gen eration to be the worst on record. Doubtless we do err in our preseut lax system of dealing with young peo ple, who, like young animals, need discipline, and. when they come to. years of discretion, are always grate ful for having had it. But the spirit of camaraderie which ought to exist between. a:girl and her mother, the rev erent love which the former should have for the latter, and the unselfish devotion and pardonable pride which the mother should show in her daugh ter, are not to be produced by encour aging girls to air their "grievances" and parents to blame their children. This sort of thing does not make home life sweet, nor does it tend to aid do mestic peace.-Pittsburg Dispatch. ? Fashion Notes. Pastel blue is a new and fashionable color. Brocade silks are back v? iavor. In deed, flowereu patterns are obtaining even among the velvets. Chiffon velvet is the elegant fabric for dinner .?^owns. When the color is shaded^ into three tones it is most fashionable. White cloth is one of the prettiest fabrics for the reception gown, espe if it is relieved with embroidery sertions of some contracting tint. shades of velvet made up in resque style with deep pointed [cuffs, lace collar, deep-jeweled , on long flowing and graceful are much favored for house ?this season. latest and smartest stuffs for gowns are all of the transpar jtind, being of lace, chiffon, chii te, etc. Liberty satin, crepe de crepe de Paris, all in delicate [ngs, and elaborately garnitured [lace and embroidery, are also in Malcolm's Partiality for Eggs. h this day, the day of our wed I shall eat nothing but eggs, for [s through an egg that I won my ' said George Malcolm, of Clove as he ordered a dinner which fsted of eggs in every style and liption known to the chef of a lgo hotel. Diave said that it was because of fcg that I first found the woman |has become my wife," he con ic!, with a glance at Mrs. Mal "and I will tell you how it oc Jd. Just one year ago I arriveJ licago and registered a* the Wel >n hotel while making a pleasure in the Lake region. The first ' that I ordered was an egg, and Iceiving it I found in dainty pen Bines on the shell, 'Rose Edmond, feen, 0.' I wrote to her the fol fc night, and today she is my I he added. "That is why I am fc-tial to eggs. Can anybody Lue?" PMalcolm admitted that she had li her name upon the egg, but he 1'ttle thought at the time ld win her a husband. "It was packiug eggs to be sent to Chi she said, "that I thought it be fun to write my name on one m and see if I would ever hesr vhere it was sent"-Milwaukee isin. TO MEET IN ST. LOUIS, Selection for the Meeting Place of the Democratic Convention COMMITTEE SPRINGS SURPRISE, It Was Generally Conceded That Chicago Would Be Chosen, But St. Louis.Won the Victory. Washington, Special-The Demo cratic national committee furnished a surprise, selecting St. Louis as the place for the national convention of 1904. The date fixed for the conven tion was Wednesday, July 6, at 12 o'clock. Previous to the meeting of the committee is seemed a foregone conclusion that Chicago would be the selceted place of meeting, but politi cal extlngencies entered into the sit uation and a majority of the commit tee voted for St. Louis. For some hours previous to the meeting there was talk in the corrodors and among Democratic leaders that the conven tion in Chicago might be subject to the influence of a strong movement and a strong newspaper influence in favor of some particular candidate. ,Mr.Knapp, of the St. Louis Republic, hinted at this in a speech by saying that the convention, if held at St. Louis, would be welcomed by an ab solutely fair press. The committee meeting caused con siderable discussion of politics and the claims of various candidates were advocated by their partisians, but nothing favoring* any candidate ap peared in the committee proceedings. William J. Bryan, when the commit tee had concluded its labors, appeared but his viait was without any appar ent political significance. He did not come to the hotel until after the com mittee had about concluded its busi ness. He was warmly greeted by the members of the committee and invit ed a number of times by members to call on them at their hotels. The committee was called to order by Chairman James K. Jones, of Ark ansas, promptly at 12 o'clock. As the members took their seats they faced a raised platform back of which was an elaborate festoon of flags, surroun ding a large portrait of Andrew Jack son. The sessions were executive. 'Rolla Wells presented the claims of St. Louis. A written proposal was offered to the committoe with a guarantee of $40,000 and the use cf the Coliseum, a fire-proof building with a seating capacityy cf 12,000. The Business Men's Leagie guaranteed hotel ac comodations. There were two rolls to select the city. On the first St. Louis received 23 votes, Chicago 20 and New York 6. On the second ballot St. Louis re ceived 23 and Chicago 21. The date was fixed as July 6th, on motion of Col. J-. M. Guffey, of Pittsburg. . Russian Troops Hoving. Pekin, By Cable.-Authentic infor mation has reached the legations here that two divisions of Russian troops are coming by the Caribbean Railroad. A Russian force has occupied the term inus of the new branch of the Shan Hai Kwan-New Chang Railroad. The Uarmhius is twelve miles northwest ot Ne.w Chwang and will be an important stragetic point in the event of war. The foreigners al New Chwang, fear ing the town may become the scene of hostlities in case of war, on account of thc presence there of a Russian gar rison, are urging the officials to main tain the neutrality of New Chwang. asserting that business will bc serious ly impaired and adding that as the Russian occupation is not recognized by China or by the Powers, the gov ernments have ground for action. The Japanese mail steamer leaving Ching Wan Tao Tuesday carried the fam ilies of many Japanese ministers of New Chwang. To Div.dd Sciiool funds. Augusta, Ga., Special-State Repre sentative Kelly, of Glascock county, today announced to the Herald his intention of introducing at the next session of tho Stato Legislature a bill providing for the ealing of a State constitutional convention, for the pur pose of dividing the school tax so that the .white population of the State pro vide only for the education of whites, putting the negro on his own re sources as far as^ education is con cerned. The convention will also be requested to revise pension laws so aa to eliminate frauds. Weyman Received. City of Mexico, Special.-Surgeon General Weyman, of the marine hos pital service, was received here Mon day by President Diaz. General Wey man Ia here to confer with the su perior board of health relative to the establishment of* a permanent code of laws and regulations, whereby Mexico may be bound herafter to maintain and enforce i'or thc interest and protec tion of both nations such rules, wheth er quarantine or otherwise, as will pro tect the health conditions of both countries. Congressman 5int to Jail. New York, Special.-Cen grossman Edmund Driggs, of Brooklyn, was sentenced Tuesday to imprisonment of one day in Raymond street jail and to pay a fine of $10.000. Driggs was convicted of accepting money while a Congressman-elect for securing a gov ernment contract for the purpose of automatic fasteners of the Brandt Dent Company, for the Pestofflce De partment. There will be no appeal. (News in ??rir? J. C. Wilcox, fermer store-keeper of the Southern Railway at Birmingham, was arrested on an indictment return j ed by the grand jury charging grand larceny of brass and other materials : belonging to tho Southern Railway. I valued at S3S.OO0. I A bobsled laden with fifteen young ? persons was hit by a trolley car in j Newark. N. J.. Tuesday evening. All I on the big sled were ni.ve or less iu j jared. Eight were seriously hun Of i these Ave were taken to hospitals and : three went home. The London Truth cannot imagine why the Duke of Roxburghe sbouid be looked on as a fortune hunter. As he i -married an American girl, we are quite ? prepared to believe that he married ; from love. But, after all, the fact that j his own fortune is very great is hard ly a sufficient defense against the charge of fortune hunting. Although an English duke could afford to marry any one, it happens that he never docs marry any one who does not possess a large fortune. The suspicion of for ' tune hunting is not entirely baseless. MRS. COL. GRESHAM BY THE DOCTORS. PerunaSaved HerLife It was catarrh of the lungs sci common in the winter months.] rnXJEVfilEMSCOLL Miss Jennie Driscoll, 870 Putnam Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: ''If people knew how efficient Peruna was in the cure of ca tarrh, they would not hesitate to try it. 1 have all the faith in the world in it as it cured me, and I have never known of a case when the person was not cured, in a short time. " Jennie Driscoll. * MV.s. Col. K. J. Gresham, Treasurer Daughters of the Confederacy and Presi dent Hemden Village Improvement Society, writes the following letter from Herndcn, Fairfax Co., Va.: Hernden, Va. The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio: Gentlemen-xnnot speak too highly of the value of Peruna. 1 believe that I owe my life to its wonderful merits. 1 suffered with catarrh of thc head anti Lungs in tts worst form, until the doctors fairly gave me up, and 1 despaired of ever getting well again. "1 noticed your advertisement and the splendid testimonials given by the people who had been cured by Peruna, and determined to try a bottle. I felt but little better, but used a second and third bottle and kept on improving slowly. "lt took six bottles to cure me, bul they were worth a King's ran som to mc. 1 talk Peruna to all my friends and am a true believer in its worth."-Mrs.\Col. E. J. Gresham. A PLAIN TALK On a Plain Subject in Plain Language. Tlie comins winter will cause at leu??r one-half of the women to have catarrh, colds, coughs, pneumonia or consumption. thousands oE women will lose their lives and tens of thous KEEP PERUNA TS THE HOUSE. I will be one of the unfortunate ones. Lit ' tie or no risk need be run if Peruna ia kept in the house, and at the first appearance of any symptom of catarrh taken as di rected on the bottle. Peruna is a safeguard, is a preventative, a specific, is a cure for all cases of catarrh, acute and chronic, coughs, colds, consump tion, etc. If you do not receive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a ful statement of your case and ne will be ands will acquire some chronic ailment from which they will pleased to give you his valuable adrice never recover. gratis. Unless you take thc neces-| " Address Dr. Hartman. President of sary precautions, the chances j The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, are that you (who read this) Ohio?. _ Not Big for the West. In Colorado the Denver Union water company, at a distance of abo .t fifty miles from Denver, is constructing a dam which will be 227 feet V$ height and form a barrier to a reservoir of an area of S74 acres, containing 26,000, 000,000 gallons. Big figures, these! Nev,* York Tribune. IT. IT. GREEN'S SONS, ot Atlanta, (ra., are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in tho. world, (ice their liberal oiler in advertise ment in another column of this paper. Thc world will forgive a man almost any thing except failure. In Etninons County, Dakota. We can sell you 1G0 acres fine land. You can break 100 acres this spring, sow it to Salzer's Flax and reap enough to pay for your land, etc., having a linc farm free the first year. Have 10 audi pieces for sale. Jchn A. Balzer Se.d Co.. I/..CL.] La Crosse, Wis. The secret of popularity is always to re member what io forget. JUNE TINT BOTTER COLOR makes top of the market butter. Ail things i.-oaie to those who stop wait ing and go after them. Piso's Cure for C< >vsumption is an infallible medicino xor coughs and colds.-N. W. SAMCEI.. Ooeau Grovo. N. J.. Feb. 17, 1900. Slate of First-class Quality. Manager Pike secured a slab twenty-four inches square the other day which was taken out of one of the state quarries at Northfield, Vt, in 1869. The piece was sawed -and planed when quarried mid left on the ground1. During these thirty-five years it has Leon exposed to the frosts and snows of winter and the hot suns and rains of summer under the most trying conditions. When the stone was cleaned lt showed up as bright and in as good condition as when first taken from the quarry. Moose Track North. According to observers in the Adi rondack woods, at least three moose have been seen, recently, working their way north into Canada, and it is inferred that the attempt to stock the north woods with them will fail, and that moose placed there will take the same trail to Canada that was taken by their ancestors seveut3'-five years ago. Impossible to Square Circle. No circle can be squared because 3.14159, which is the ratio of the cir cumference to the diameter, is not a square. Too Heavy a Weight. A correspondent writes to the Lon don Country Life: "Many years ago one man bet another that he could not move an ordinary brick tied to the end of a cord two or three mile", long, I forget which. A straight and level road just outside Chichester was selected for tho trial; the brick was not moved and thc man lost his bet for a large amount. It was stated by some one present that the brick, al though weighing only about seven pounds, would, from a distance of twe or three miles, represent a dead weight of nearly a ton." The lazy man would rather sit down and hope than go after a certainty. Quit Coughing-. Why cough,, when for 25c. and this notice you pet 2o dose9 of an absolutely guar anteed cough cure in tablet form, postpaid. Dr. Skirvin Co., J"a Crosse, Wis. [A.C.L.] A woman will forgive a man anything except his refusal to ask forgiveness. Wonderful Statistics. When it is considered that thc percent age of deaths from consumption is 91 per thousand against 63 per thousand of any other malady, how important to guard against a slight cold. Taylor's Chero kee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein is the great medicine for coughs, colds and consumption. At druggists, 23c, 50c. and ?1.00 a bottle. A woman's idea of a compliment ia to name her baby after a rich relation. No watter what your preferences are about a rifle, some one of the "eight different Winchester models will suit you. Winchester Ri Hes are made in calibers suita ble for shooting any game, from rabbits to grizzly bears, and in many styles and weights. Whichever model you; select, you can count on its being well made and finished, reliable in action and a strong, accurate shooter. FREE: Oar 160-paqe illustrated cauloqzc. WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. NEW HAVEN, CONI ^s'jwmtjAwmiR^-? ??? BB-- -a-?ra HST FOR THE BOWELS V" J CANDY CATHARTIC GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel troubles, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad blood, wind ou tho stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness. When your bowels don't novo regularly you oxe Bick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together. It starts chronic ailments and long years of suffering. No matter what ails you, start taking CA8CARETB today, for you will never get well and stay well until ycu get your bowels right Take our advice, start with Cascareis today under absolute guarantee to cure or money refunded. The genuine tablet stamped C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample and booklet free. Addr?M Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. 5?3 heals all inflammation of the mucous membrane wnerever located. In local treatment of female ills Pax tine is invaluable. Used as a douche it is a revelation in cleansing and healing power ; it kills all disease germs which cause inflammation and discharges. Thousands of letters from women prove that it is thc greatest cure for leucor rhuea ever discovered. Paxtine never fails to eyre pelvic catarrh, nasal catarrh, sore throat, sore mouth and sore eyes, because these diseases are all caused by inflammation of the mucous membrane. For cleansing, wh itening and pre serving tho teeth wo challenge the world to produce Ivs equal. Physicians and specialists' everywhere prescribe and endorse Paxtine, andthou sandsof testimoniallettersproveits value. At druggists, or sent postpaid 50 cts. A large trial package and book of Instructions absolutely free. "Write The B. Paxton Co., Dept. 25 Boston, Mags. Cotton Must Have Potash is an essential plant food which must be added as a fertilizer or the soil will become ex hausted, as is true of so many < fields. We have books giving valuable de. tails about fertiliz ers. We will send them free to any farmer who asks us for them. GERMAN KALI WORKS, Xew York-88 N?f mu ?(rec'., or Allan tn, tia. - - 2?J.J So. Bra&d St. CAPSICUM VASELINE (PUT UP IX COLLAPSIBLE TUBES) A substitute t orand superior to must ard or any other plaster, and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curatlvequalitiesof thlsarticloare wonder ful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve headache and sciatica. Wo recom mend it aa the best and safest external counter-irritant kan wu, also asan external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach andallrheamatlc,neuralgicandgoutycum plaints. A trial will provo what we claim iori t, and it wll 1 be found to be invaluable in the household.Manypeoplcsay"itlsthc bestof all of your preparations." Price is cts.. at all druggists or other dealers, or Ly ?j sendiugthlsamonnttonsln postage stain M I wo willsendyouatubebymail. Iso article j should be accepted hythe public unless tho 1 same carries our label, as otherwi se 11 i s no t 1 genuine. CHESEBROUGH AtFd. CO.. 17 Stato Street. NEW SORE CITT. CURED Gives Quicftj flelief. Removes all swelling in 8 to :T days ; effects a permanent car J in 30 to 60 days.-Trial treatment, given free. Nothingcan be faire* Write Dr. H. H. Greon's Sons. SDeclallsts. Box B Atlanta. Gc Tho DcLoach Patent Variable Friction Feet* Saw Mill with 4 h. p. cuts 3,000 feet pei dayl AIT sizes and prices to suit Debouch Shingle Mills, Edgers, Trimmers, Planers ; Corn and Uubr Mills. Water Wheels, 1/ith Mills, Wood Saws. Our handsome new Catalog will interest rou. DcLoach Mill Mfg. Co.. Box S34, Atlanta, Ga SHOT GUN * SHELLS are found on every American farm where there is a live boy. New Club loaded with black powder. Witro Club and Arrow loaded w'th any smokeless powder. They are ?Duck Killers." Catalogue free. The Union Metallic Cartridge Co. BRIDGEPORT, CONN. ^ - ^ Agency. 313 Broadway, New York. 1 Largest growers of Pkg-, 100. Oz., 20c Vegetable Sass's In the World. Cur Prices rango fron 6C cents lo $1.6 0 per pound, and no better seed is found on earth. How to grow 1,200 babels Ocions je: acre with each ounce order. Catalog ?e, fer pottage. John A. Salzer Seed Go.,LA WIS. CROUCH Maible and Granite Co. -MAXCTA ETCHERS OK MONUMENTS, Vaults, Statuary, Headstone*, etc., in any Granite or Marble. Death Masks a Specialty. (?lp-Mentlon this gaper.) ATLANTA, GA. ?SAWMILLS _ _SSSH Our Latest Im- !g| proved Circu lar Saw Milts, with Hege'? Universal LopBeams.Rectilin ear. Simultaneous Set Works and thc Hea oock-King Variable Feed Works are unex oelled for ACCURACY, SIMPLICITY, DURABII ITT Ayn BASK or OPERATION. Write for full Bj deiorlptlve olrculars. Manufactured by the BJ SALEM IRON WORKS.Wlngtor-Salent ,W.C.M TOBACCO iJRE A n??-Baccol?ne w# guarantee to cure the tobacco Habit In any form. Treutm.ti: EAST, SATT., sr HE A VD AOBKEABLE. ^ ou take no chane, s. Xo Core XeFny. Allcorrvs pondence ?trlctly cunfldeu Ual.Addres* The Er.J.S. Hill Anti - Baccollne Co., Oreeavdle.Ill.,noxai,7. So. 4. so's e CCBIS WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. I Boat Cough ayron. Tastes Good. " la tuna. 80M by flrnggua.