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tempes \\te^\i\re^ ose fe ass\st xosit?y U?OT. groper T\cu.ns\vm?a\, CALIFORNIA Fie SYRUP COU SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS ?wsacaanr-tfEOULAn PRJCC ?O* PEO ?OTrtr so. 4-m CAPUD1NE CURES COLDS and GRIPP \%??,Z?. Believes the aches and feverishness. Canf?n? ti? AcstauUU? Hyjwcrisy is t?? homage that vice ' ?pays ito virtue.-Bochefouesn?d. ?ample -treatment RSD 0MM Pile and Fistula Car? and Book tent by mail FRCC. fflEACO.. DEPT. B. * MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. (PILES A clear bargain^ a. dear friend, filiara. Rheumatism Prescription. -?Gamsiderable discussion is ?being -tirased among the ?medica! fraternity by the increased -use of whiskey for rtrcinrrtatism. It is sm almost infalli ble .cure when mixed with ?certain other ingredients and taken ?pjragaer ?y.- The following is the form?t?:: "One ounce of Toris compound .and or e ounce of syrup Sarsaparilla toom pouBd. Add one-half pint of ^ood wJiiskey. Take in tablespoonful doses befone each meal sind before ?retir wt-" .": ; This is said to produce almost jm mod?ate results. rnjnrious is the gift that taSaes away freedom.-Italian. Mia.WmsIovr's Soothing: Syrup for Childreu tat&hing,softens tliegum*. reduces ?nflarurn? tioa, allana jvu n, c ure? \v iud coi i c. 25c a bottle Mattresses filled with paper . ane osed by German soldiers. Distemper '-*?? all :'te forms, among nil aqea of horses H arni' deg?, cured and others tn tb? nate i atable prevented from baring the disease 5 with Spoon's Distemper Cure. Every bot I ?ie guaranteed. Orer 500,000 ?bottle* sold I burt year. (JO and $1.00. Good druggist*. y, ct send to manufacturers. Agenta wanted. ?rs-SEritc for free book. Spohc Med. ?o" I Spue Contagiosa Diacauea. Goshen, Ind. t -: Lak? Erie 5s the richest ibody . of i water in the world in fish Many Children Are SldLtSj. j?other Gray's Sweet Powders for ?Children, need by Mother Gray, a name in Children's *3toe^ew York,cnre Summer Complaint, ?venahness, Headache^StomachTroubles, " /Tetr?uug Diaordereand Destroy Worms. At' all JDrog gists', 25c. ?ample mailed FKEE. Addnes* Alien S.-Ghosted, Le Boy, 2?. Y. Aaa mle, the modern battleship is pnt of'date after fifteen years. Tien cored in 3D minute* by Woofford't SanitaryLotion Neverfail*. At druggist*. I and time against the world. f?ir Walter Scott. Files Cored In 6 to 14 Days. PSTO Ointment is guaranteed to,cure any ca?? o? Itching, Blina, Bleeding or Protrud inj; Pilca ia 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. Whom fortune favors the world favors.-German. The Favorite. Millions of sufferlag eyes have , found in Dr. Mitchell's faxnons salve A re l blessing. Reject the offer of any dealer to sell a drug for your *v?, Dr. Mitchell's Bye Salve ls a slmp:e, healthy remedy to be applied to tbe lids. It cures .without entering t^eeye. Sold everywhere. Price 25c. It must be tough to be roasted bj Congress.-New York Globe. Strong drug cathartics simply, aggravate the sondrtiwi-the.trne remedy for consci ', nation and liver trouble is found in Gard eic [Tea, the m?d Herb laxative. . Idleness covers a man with' rags. ierrnan. ._ Praises Tetterine for Eczema. "Have been troubled witn. eczema on (tho face for nearly two years, and a few l'application* of Tetterine ana the use of I "littcrine Soap ha* entirely cured me. 1 {cannot say too much for Its praise, as it done mora than my physician did." Urs. S. A. Haskins, Myriclcs, Mass. Toiterlne cures Eczema, Tetter, Ring Worm, Ground Itch, itching Piles. In fant* ?. Sore Head, Pimples. Bolls. Rough Scaly Patches on the Face, Old Itching Sores, Dandruff. Cankered Scalp. Bun ions. Corns, Chilblains and every form of Skin Disease. Tetterine 50c; Tetterine Soap ftc. Tour drug-fiat, or by mall from **? manufacturer, The Shuptrine Co., wannah. Ga. He was bom on St. Galpert's night, [(fcbjec days before luck.-Dutch. Ul RE?S0R WHY Rhsttmaclde cures rheumatism to stay I cured. Rheumatism ls an internal dis " ease and requires an Internal treatment. [Jtheumaclde strikes the root of the dls laa&e and removes its cause. Rheumaclde j liniment stops the pam while you are " 'nj the Internal medicine. Bheuma ls put up in tablet and liquid form, .ts sold by druggists at. 25c. 50c and per bottle. Liniment, 25c. a bottle wm Colic Due to Corn. j When corn chop alone is fed to a horse it often produces stomach indi- | gestion, and b'ioating, which in . the | horse is a very serious form of Indi- j geBtion or coli?:. \ The reason that corn chop produces this condition. is owing to the fact j that it lies compactly in the Btomach. ! The stomach juices cannot thorough ly permeate it to digest the nutrients, and. as a Tesult. unnatural fermenta tion takes placa,. The.gas causes dis tention of tho stomach^wall, and stomach or gastric colic is the Tesult. This is a serious form of colic be cause of the peculiar arrangement of the stomach. The horse cannot vomit or belch gas unless the walls be so greatly distended that there is a mod ification or stretching of the part of the stomach at the point where, the esopTagus enters it, and consequently there is great danger of rupturing the walls of .the stomach with a fatal termination. During the past summer oats have been very high and many horse own ers have resorted to corn chop as a moro -economical teed. Tf the corn chop "be. fed with bran or cut hay then there will usually be no ill effects, be cause the material win not lie com pactly tu the stomach, and BB a result the stomach juices can get at all parts of the feed and digest it thoroughly. Many will not Teed wheat bran, claiming that It Is or poor feed value. The fact is that lt contains more pro tein or muscle building substance than ^oats, and when mixed with corn or cora chop, in proper .proportions, makes a' weil balanced, "heavy feed. The frequency o? .gastric colic among horses has Increased with the feeding of corn chop since the high price of oats. ? . An Arrangement For Storing Shelled Corn. Storage for shelled corn ls a condi tion that does not have to he provided for ia some sections; bat, as it seems to be rapidly coming to the front in others, B. H. Mitchell sends to Coun try Gentleman the accompanying Il lustration of an arrangement to meet this need, submitting it lor what lt may be worth. ; As may be seen. It Is a hin with a Bin For Shelled Corn. slanting floor, having cracks perhaps an eighth of an inch in width, divided into compartments by hollow parti tions. A trough. A, makes it con venient to shovel up the corn. The partition B, the end C and the sides D and E should also We slats an eighth of an inch apart. The divisions E could be made of two-inch furring strips nailed on both sides of the same for battens. The width of each compartment would have to be determined by ex periment, but probably eight inches would be about right. Of course, the depth and height would be a matter of convenience. < "KAI the Grade Bull!" In Tennessee they have a dairy as sociation, a live organization worthy of the men who have made "Tennes see Jerseys" synonymous with qual ity the land over. This association has entered on a campaign to improve the general av erage of the dairy cattle in that State, and the slogan of this campaign is. "Kill the Grade Bull!" The Tennessee dairyman realizes, as every farmer in all the South should realize, that there can be no decided or permanent improvement of live stock so long as sires of mongrel ancestry are allowed to reproduce themselves. . There are in that State hundreds of cows- that have produced from' fourteen up to twenty or more pounds I of butter per week-these are the daughters of pure bred bulls with long lines of high-producing ancestry back of them. i There are also thousands of cows that do not make butter enough for their keeping-these are almost in variably tho daughters of grade or scrub bulls. The campaign. Is for better and more profitable cows-but the only sure way to get good cows is to get Going to Inauguration. Norfolk, Special.-Virginia will be well represented at the inauguration of President-Elect Taft, by both mil itary and civic organizations. It was officially announced at brigade head quarters that the First and Second Regiments of State Infantry, the Nor folk Light Artillery Blues, and the Coast Artillery will participate in the inaugural parade. The Fourth Regiment also may attend. 25 Dead From Mine Disaster Sunday. Zeigler, llb; Special.-The recovery of five additional bodies from the. Zeigler Colliery where an explosion o'curred Sunday raises the death list to 25. Two miners are still miss ing. They were known to have been in the mine. The disaster is the sec ond in nine months. Girl's Murderer Pays Penalty. Trenton, N. J., Special.-John Man tezannsa, the murderer of a 13-year old girl, was executed here on Tues day. He went to his death calmly. fCE AB??TT SIF?ED FARMING uiiiiittiiiiiuniiiiiiiniitom rid of the poor bulls-"Kill the Grade Bull." In thiB campaign the dairymen of every State and every community every man, in fact, who wants better cattle for any purpose-should help, and the very best campaign slogan to be had ls the one our Tennessee friends have adopted. If you want to have better cattle in your locality join in, and let's all help "Kill the Grade Bull."-Progres sive Farmer. Grass Seeding. The results I have gotten during the ' past three years from sowing grass seed along with cowpeas have ! been so satisfactory that I feel I shall ! be doing good to all interested by glv > lng details. J I have been seeding, daring the ! first two weeks in June, both the cowpeas and grass seed at the sam3 time-oriee going over the ground j with wheat drill, Have put in five pecks OT peas and the usual quantity of grass seed, with grass seeding at tachment. The graBS has'invariably matte ? perfect ""catch." and has lived ander'the peas and flourished XaT better than if it had been sown alone. The pea hay has been cut off in September, and the grass was then well rooted and matted on the ground. Th6 cultivation of the land in June sprouted the surface we?d seed, and the. weeds were necessarily removed from the land along with the pea hay. Before frost and freezes came the grass "had such good root that It stood the winter better, and ?n the spring the growth of grass was much earlier. The strength and root of the grass tended to give it a rrnmlng start on .weeds. The results have uniformly shown cleaner hay* and a larger yield than ?ver befor? harvested from the same fields. . la June, 1907, T sowed one-half of a certain field in this way, ,and in September following I sowed the oth er "half of this field In rye and grass. The same fertilizer was -used in both Instances, i. e.. 200 pounds each of raw hone and fourteen per cent, acid phosphate. I cut this season, early in Jnly, about two tons per acre of very clean hay from the portion sown with peas. The portion sown in Sep tember with rye will not yield any hay until next year (lSOS). Thus ? saved one working ot the land, got one year's crop of grass extra, and made hay of extra clean quality by ' sowing the peas and grass simultan eously In June. For the three months period from June to Septem ber the grass gave me one year's extra growth over the Tesult from seeding rye and grass in September. I personally advised many of my friends to try this method last year. They hav? all reported the system as In every way satisfactory. - W. T.' Townes, Culpeper County. Va., in Southern Planter. Success With Poultry? Note that success with poultry does . not mean merely the ability to hatch and raise chickens, but that winter eggs should he the source of much of the profit from the business; also, that as early as spring and all along through the summer one should have in mind that an effort will be made to get eggs In winter. Starting a hen or a pullet (preferably a pullet) into winter under conditions that enable ? her to lay winter eggs' cannot be ac complished If that Idea is ignored till winter arrives. Develop and select the winter layers full early. Crimson Cloven Continue to sow crimson clover with wheat, oats and rye on all land that ls not to be put Into oats or wheat that can be got ready so as to have a winter cover on it. Hairy vetch may take the place of the crim son clover In this mixture if desired, and should do so up to the end of October. Sow twelve or fifteen pounds of the clover seed or twenty pounds of the vetch seed with three pecks bf the grain mixed in equal ! parts. Protection Against Mites. Many say that mites will not stay i on roosts of cedar or sassafras wood, but my own experience doss not lead me to believe that such is the case. Scantling of 2x4's that have been j planed smooth on every side and edge and laid down on the wide side is a j very practical roost. Its smoothness ! does not leave good breeding places for mites, and since thero are no ? rough places, the roosts can be easily ' treated with coal oil or some of the commercial mite killers. Trap Crop of Wheat. If Hessian fly has troubled the wheat in your section this year sow a trap crop of wheat at once on the land intended to be sown in wheat. This crop need only be on a strip o? a yard or two wide across the field. The flies will deposit their eggs on this early sown wheat, and this can then be plowed down, and the eggs and flies be destroyed, and thus large ly avoid injury another year. I Seyere Earthquake. ? Bellingham, Wash., Special-Re ports from San Juan Islands states that . Monday's earthquake shock was severe there. Buildings were dam aged to considerable extent, but no casualties reported. 48 Below Zero. Mirrill, Wis., Special.-The gov ernment thermometer here registered 48 below zero on Tuesday. Chinese Government Admonished by Diplomats. " Peking., Special.-The diplo matic corps has made a strong col lective representation to the Chinese government concerning thc board of communications having usurped full control of the Peking Telegraph office, which the' Chinese government in 1901 agreed should be under for eign superintendence. The British consul warns emigrants against going to Chili unless assured of a business connection. TJw. Depopulation., of France. i Jrhe.. depopulation .df France 'pro ceed's at;an..amazuig..,rater.Lasfc- year's ,vital .statistics show a reduction in tlie birth rate even below the figures of 1006, vybile there is an augmenta tion of deaths. There were 32,878 less births in the entire country in 190t" than- in the preceding year and 13,693. more deaths. There were actually an excess of 19,920 deaths over births. M 1906 the'ratio of births was 215 .to 10,000 of population; last year it fell to 207. The falling off toyok place'in. 82 departments; only five Seine-Inferieure, Saon?-et-Loire, Bou ches-duRhonc, Pas de Calais and Meurthe-et-Moselle, showed an in crease, and that only slight. The de cline of births in outlying regions-; of intense rusticity is a most alarming feature, and it is evident east and west ,north arid south. For instance, La Dordogne in the soutbwest .shows a decrease of ,1,434 births; Finist?re in the northwest, 1,067; Ardeche in the southeast, 971. On the whole the southern provinces show the tendencv in the most marked degree and those on the Swiss and German frontier the least, but no part of the country is free from it. The excess of deaths manifests itself in 55 departments, that of the Seine-virtually Paris 'being .the greatest, with 3,316. The population of France showed from 1901 to 1905, inclusive, an av erage increase of 18 a year for each 10,000 inhabitants. This dropped in 1906 to seven; last year it changed to a decrease of five in 10,000. In the Provincial and Gascon provinces of the south the excess of deaths is most marked, coming next after Paris. In the department of Lot, on the upper Garonne, there were 143 births to 244 deaths in a population of perhaps 215,000, which has been declining steadily since 1890, when it had nearlv 260,000 people. This is race suicide with a vengence.-New York Sun. Send Babies to West. There were sixty-seven of them and sixty-seven different varieties. They were hables, from 2 years up to 5, aP colors, shapes, sizes and previous conditions of servitude. Little waifs they were, the discard of New. York, out in search of a home far from the center of sor rows and woes that they were born Into. On the way to St. Paul from New Fork a special car with these babies passed through Milwaukee. With the children there were several sis ters of charity and two trained nurses. The Home Finding Society of New York is sending them West to deal them out Into goorL- homes among the farmers near St. Paul. When the conductor came out of the car there was a suspicion of moisture in his eyes. "I won't go through there again," be said.. "They're all happy, and all that, but it's so pitiful. They ail wanted to shake hands wHh me and caught hold of. my hand and looked up at me and smiled as I passed. I suppose they are taught to do lt 'There are all kinds, and they are Just as sweet as most babier 'Sfifir It's a shame that they will never know a real mother and father." The sisters made the babies' beds r,y piscine boards across from seat to scat, for the special car was not a sleeping ear. Several babies were piled into one "bed." The one car accommodated the sixty-seven, be sides the nurses and sisters. Long pieces of sheeting were stretched across the tops of the seats to cover the "beds" and keep out the cinders and dust.-Milwaukee Special to N. Y. World. Breezy Items. Deep-lying sediments of the ocean are often exceptionally rich in radium. Just because a man lives like a lord is no sign that he isn't as mean as the devil.-Dallas News. The streams of the Himalaya Mountains will soon be engaged in the prosaic work of turning wheels. The public lands vacant and sub ject to settlement in the United States on July 1st last amounted to 774.385,069 acres. The Russian Minister of Finance has declared his intention of assessing a tax on electrical energy which will yield a revenue, it is said ,of about $4,500,000 a year to the treasury. HER MOTHER-IN-LAW Proved a Wise, Good Friend. \ - A young woman out In Ia. found a wise, good friend in her mother-in law, jokes notwithstanding. She writes: "It is two years since we began using Postum in our hou3e. I was greatly troubled with my. stomach, complexion was blotchy and yellow. After meals I often suffered sharp pains and would have to lie down. My mother often told me it was tho coffee I drank at meals. But when I'd quit coffee I'd have a severe head ache. "While visiting my mother-in-law I remarked that she always made such good coffee, and asked her to tell me how. She laughed and told me it was easy to make good 'coffee' when you use Postum. "I began to use Postum as soon as i I got home, and now we have tho same good 'coffee' (Postum) every day, and I have no more trouble. In digestion is a thing of the past, and my complexion has cleared up beau- . tlfully. "My grandmother suffered a peat ? deal with her stomach. Her doctor 3 told her to leave off coffee. She then f took tea, but that wan just as bad. ' "She finally was' Induced to try "I Po3tum, which she has used for over * a year. She traveled during the win ter over the greater part of Iowa, vis iting, something she had not been abla to do fer years. She says she owes her present gcod health to Pos tum." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek. Mich. Read, "The Road to ' ?"/ellville," in pkgs. "There's a Rea- t scn." , Ever read the above letter? Ai ew one appears from time to time. They * are genuine, trne, and fall i>? hnman [ interest. CATARRH ?N HEAD; MR. WM. A. PRES8ER. \fR. WILLIAM A. PRESSER, 1722 IVA Third Ave., Moline, 111., writes: "1 have been suffering from catarrh in the head for the past two months and tried innumerable so-called remedies with out avail. ) No one knows how I have suf fered, not only from the disease itself, but from mortification when in company of j friends or strangers. | "I have used two bottles of your med- J icine for a short time only, and it effected a complete medical cure, and what is better yet, the disease has not returned. ! "T can mo6t emphatically recommend Pe- ! rona to all sufferers from this disease." Read This Experience. Mr. A. Thompson, Box 65, R. R. 1, Mar tel, Ohio, writes: "When I began your treatment my eyes were inflamed, nose teas stopped up half of the time, and \ was sore and scabby. I could not rest at ' night on account of continual hawking ? and spitting. "I had tried several remedies and was ! about to give up, but thought I would try | Peruna. , ! "After I had taker, about one-third of ? bottle I noticed a difference. I am now completely cured, after suffering with catarrh for eighteen years. . j "I think if those who are afflicted with | catarrh would try Peruna they would never regret it." Peruna is manufactured by The Peruna Drug Mfg. Co., Columbus, Ohio. . Ask your Druggist J or a Free Pe runa Almanac for J900. Peruna is sold by your local drag gist. Buy a bottle today. BAD are die forenmnen cf dangerous i you have a cough, you can stop it hoarseness, sore throat, bronchitis soon restore tho irritated throat anc An ideal remedy for children. Eredienb. For half a century the ornes. Even chronic forms of lu RESPOND TC The steam power in use in' the world today is estimated at 120,000, 000-horse power. COULD NOT SHAKE IT OFF. Kidney Trouble Contracted by Thou sands in the Civil War. . James W. Clay, 666 W. Fayette St, Baltimore, Md-, says: ,"I was trou bled with kidney complaint, from- the time of the Civil War. There , was constant pain in the back and head and the kidney secre tions were painful and showed a sedi ment. The first rem edy to help me was Doau's Kidney Pills. Three boxes made a complete cure and during five years past I have had no return of the trouble." Sold by all dealers. 50c. a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. No man knows the weight of an other man's burden.-Pliny. FRIEND SAID TO USE CUTfCURA After Specialist Failed to Cure Her Intense Itching Eczema-Had Been Tortured and Disfigured-Was Soon Cured of Dread Humor, f "I contracted eczema and suffered in tensely for about ten months. At times I thought I would scratch myself to pieces. My face and arms were covered with large red patches, SA that I waa ashamed to go out. I waa advised to go to a doctor who was a specialist in skin diseases, but I re ceived very little relief. I tried every known remedy, with the same resulta. I thought I would never get better until a friend of mine told me to try the Cuticura Remedies. So I tried them, and after four or five applications of Cuticura Ointment I was relieved of my unbearable itching. I used two sets of the Cuticura Remedies, and I am completely cured. Miss Barbara Krai, Highland town, Md., Jan. 9, 1908." Potter Drug ? Ch?ra. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. Telephone companies are endeavor ing to collect part of the telegraph tolls, where the messages are deliver ed by telephone. The telegraph com panies claim that they are entitled to make this use of the instruments r.nd resist payment. How't? This? We offer One Hundred Dollarn Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENET & CO., Toledo J). We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WALDINO, KINKA y & MABVII?, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, O. / Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucuous sur faces of the system. Testimoniale sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. The carob tree grows wild in the Island of Samos, and the fruit serves as a food for cattle. It is also used m mixing with chewing tobacco. The annual production amounts to 3,384, 300 pounds, nine-tenths of which linds its way to Italy and the rest to 3ermanv. Only Ono "Bromo Quinine" That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c Berlin firemen wear a jacket filled ?vith water as a protection against lent. PUTNAM Jolor more gooda brighter and faster colors than any ol an dye any garrnen? frtttWflt ripping apart, Writ? I Women, worn and tir? tonic. That feeling of wes not leave you of itself. . Cardui, that effectual rem weaknesses of women. T tried Cardui and write em benefit it has been to them, -use this reliable, oft-trie Mrs. Eena Hare, of Pierce, '. wrote: "I was a sufferer from pain in my side: and legs, could n "I suffered for years, until rr Cardui. The first bottle gave me : Try Cardui. 'Twill help yon. 'AT ALL DE JOHN WHITE & GO. LOUISVILLE. KY. nruutme ?MT Highest market price paid S.FURS and HIDES Wool oe Commission. TYPEWRITERS M?fcri? Bold, rented, exchanged oTerywhcre. Machine?, new, others oqunl to new sold at a Ki ?Inc of SO to ?0 t*r cent, on manufacturen' price. Cann or monthly payments. Cohered by mme guarantee as manufac turent clTp. Wrl*e for ?rwlmetu of writing and net price?, TYPEWRITER PALES CO.. No. 5 Cortland! St.. Cor. Broadway. New York. So. 4-*09. Api i YOUR PATENT by oar new method. De vi".1 I moustrate lt to the leading capitalists and OLLL manufacturer* at Madison Squnre Garden. New York. Write NATIONAL PATENT * NOVELTY EXHIBITION CO., 102*6-7 Beal Eatate Bldg., Phlla.,Pa COLDS diseases of the throat and longs. S with Piso's Care. If you suffer from iir pains in the longs. Pito s Cure will 1 langs to corma!, healthy condition. Free from opiate* and dangerous m : sovereign remedy in thousand* af its diseases ' 5 PISO'S CUBE Jottings of News. British South Africa imports annu ally over $2,000,000 worth of lumber mainly from the United States and Sweden. The Italian government has outlin ed railroad extensions covering 16 years' work and contemplating a total expenditure of $107,000,000. The Chinese government spent {5100,000 last year toward the assist ance pf Chinese students ^studying abroad. A Swiss lake turns red about every ten years owing to ?He presence of a tiny plant, which is visible only through the miscroscope. Two million dollars will be spent in' improvements on the great steel plant cf the United States Steel Corpora tion at Ensley, Ala. The City of Niagara Falls is rapid ly increasing in population, owing to tlie rapid industrial expansion of that suction of the country. Canada's purchases from the Unit ed States in 1908 amounted to $167, 000,000, while this country imported $75,000,000 worth of Canadian goods. The world's tobacco <?rop amounts to 2,201,000,000 pounds. Of this 1)90, 000,000 pounds are produced in the United States, more than that of any other country. Added to the Long List due to This Famous Remedy,, Camden, N.J.- "lt is with pleasure that I add my testimonial to your already long hst -hoping that it may induce others to avail themselves of this valuable medi cine, LydiaE.Pink ham's vegetable Compound. I suf fered from terrible headaches, pain in my baGk and right side, was tired and nervous, and so weaklcould hardly stand. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound re stored me to health and made me feel like a new person, and it shall always have my praise." -Mrs. W. P. VALENTINE, 902 Lincoln Avenue, Camden, N. J. Gardiner, Me. - " I was a great suf ferer from a female disease. The doc tor said I would have to go to the hospital for an operation, but Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound com Eletely-cured me in three months." - [RS. 8. A. WILLIAMS, E. F. D. No. u, Box 39, Gardiner Me. Because your case is a difficult one, doctors having done you no good, do not continue to suffer without S'virig Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ompound a trial. It surely has cured many cases of female ills, such as in flammation, ulceration, displacements, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, indigestion, dizziness, and ner vous prostration. It costs but a trifle to try it, and the result is worth mil lions to many suffering women. FADELEl Jior dye. One 19e. pacJcoge colors all floors. Thor 1 vf Ires booklet-Uow to yyo, bleuoa and Mix Color V ed from overwork, need a ikness or helplessness will STou should take Wine of iedy for the ailments and housands of women have thusiastically of the great Try it-r^on't experiment d medicine. m's Tonie Fla?, tried Cardui and afterward all sorts of female trouble, had ot sleep, had shortness of breath. I Ly husband insisted on my try: g j relief and now I am almost velLr ' UGr STORES WE SHIP BEST QUALITY FIEtl* AND GARDEN SEEDS DIRECT TO FARMERS AT LOWEST WH?jC? SALE PRICES. WE SELL CLOVERS, GRASSES, SEED OATS, SEED CORN, CASE SEED, MILLET, COW PEAS, SOJA. BEANS, PEANUTS, SEED POTA TOES, CABBAGE PLANTS, POTATO ?nd TOMATO SLIPS, ONION SETS, GARDEN BEANS, GARDEN PEAS, ALL KINDS GARDEN, FIELD AND FLOWER SEEDS, LAND PLASTER. AND FERTILIZERS. WRITE ?? FOR PRICES AND SAMPLES. STATE WHAT YOU WANT NASHVILLE SEED ll 215 Second Avenue. North?. Nashville, Tennr _j. Nothing New or Mysterious. "ASK YOUR GRAND MOTHER." For many pons .-?tiona Goose tire&ao. hw 1 recognised as ft wonderful remodrnf nradftaesy In treating and curing Pneumonia, Grippe. Rheumatism and Neuralgia,. BIOS'S GOOQW ORBASB LINIMENT li mads from pore ga?a* grease, with other Taloa ole eurailTe lns;ia ?Lients added. Try lt. - .-;' 25o-At ail Druggists ?nd Dealer?-Mta. SOOSE GREASE COMPAHI,Ggi^"* rroif ?n?f. " ! * sis?? . Cur.,-? a Ioctl* to please purchaser. All varieties now ready for shipment. Small Jot? Sl.25per"3r?; . lots of 5.0CO or orer at $1.00 per*'*!" and <?;*>clsl. j pricos on laure orders. We give Quieter sod*. ! prompter serries than any otherarowerin SC and we solicit your valued patronage! Wrifa^ for our "BOOKLET" on the growth arjd culti vation of Cabbage, written by Gea Ci SandiL. The GEO. L. SANDS CO..Box5.RantowIes.SjO.. fABBAGfPLANTS We Buy FURS Hides and Wool Feathers, Tallow. Beeswax, Ginseng, Golden Seal,( YeDowRoot), May Apple. Wild Gin j cr. ?tc We an dealers t established in 1856-"Om half a carim? ia Louirrille"-sod can do borter for JOB jim agents or coouniaion mer dian U. Reference, any Bank in LoinmOe. Write for waddy price liii and thipixrig tasa. Ma Sahel 4k Sons? 227 E. Market St. LOUISVILLE. KT. HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOB FURS,HIDES, SKINS Write us for prices rr ship what yon ba' ' at once and we will send you check for ita 1 market value. mmm. ?OLD DOMINION HIDE & FUR CO., 1540 E. Cary St.. R ICH MO * D VA XANTHIN FOR THE Restores Gray Hair to r?atural Color. Be moves Dandruff and Scurf. Invirorates aaftt prevents the Hair from fa lil rc off. For xalar bv Richmond. Lynchburg. Vn.. and Baltimore. Md.. Druggist?or sent direct hy XANTHINE COMPANY. RICHMOND,VA SI per bottle, ftamplebottle SS? by i Circulan ???nt OA Rraual. SHAFTING, PULLEYS, BELTS LOMBfiriD \m ITOKS, ftUGUSTiL CiL Fertilizer MIXING MACHINERY, ANY CAPACITY. I ATLANTA UTILITY WORKS EAST POINT, QA. OATS I Per Salrcr*a catalog, page XS. | ?u-goat growers of 6ced oats, vrlicet, bartosv] fpeltr, corn, po ta toca, grasses and clovtcrs ans. j farm seeda in tho world. Big catalog- free; or. send 10c In stamps and roceire sample of Ba llon Dollar Ornes, yloldtig 10 tana of hay per aero, cats, spelt:, barley, tte-, easily worth $10 of any man's money .*> got a start wrda, and catalog free. Or, send ld? and we add ? sample farm so ed novelty never soca befonvs by you. j SALIER SEED CO., Bax f_ C., La Cress?, W? If n filleted with weak '?yo, use SS BYES ?lya In cold water bettor than any other dye. Toss k MO?1UOE UiiVG CO., OcUncy,