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ANOTHER WOMAN CURED : > - . a . nkham's :npound I have been a c u' after" t^re? months' use of them."?Mrs. S. A. Williams, R. F. D. No. 14, Box 39, Gardiner, Me. No woman should submit to a surgi cal operation, which may mean death, until she has given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made exclusively from roots and herbs, a fair trial. This famous medicine for womeD has for thirty years proved to be tho most valuable "tonic and renewer of the female organism. Women residing in almost every city and town in the United States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia i E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It cures female ills, and creates radi-! ant, buoyant female health. If you are ill. for your own sake as wel" as those you love, give it a trial. Mrs. Pinkbain. at Lvnn. Mnss invites all sick women to write her for advice. Her advice is free, and always helpful. Jealousy is a secret avowal of oui inferioriy.?Mnssillon. AN INTERESTING PAINT TEST. There is a very simple and inter- I esting chemical test by which to de- I tect Impurity in paint materials. Thousands and thousands of people j all over the country are making this test. It is a 6ure way to safeguard gainst the many adulterated white leada which aro on the market. Any ono can make tho test?all that is needed is a simple little Instrument which can be had free by writing National Lead Company. 1003 Trinity Building, New York, and askipg for 1 Houseowners" Painting Outfit No. 49. I The Outfit alsAf- Includes a boojt of ! colcp* schemes for exterior or interior painting, or both if you wt^i. and a sdt q* specifications. No houseowner should make any arrangements for ] painting till ho gets this outfit. One can't expect a satisfactof# painting job without pure white lead. There is a way to make sure you're getting a pure white lead?without testing it. See that tho keg bears i Votlnna 1 T oorl ? ' uvuu wui|;aiXJ o 1UI11UU9 Dutch Boy Painter trademark, which is a positive guarantee of purity. Your j dealer probably has this white lead, j If not let National Lead Company [ know. Shoot f.tlly as it Hies.?Pope. Itch cureo ji S' ininutco by Woolfordli Sanitary lye*'"" V?w At drtunriata. We never know the worth of water till the well is dry.?German. Certainty, Convenience, Economy. Never has there been known a case where Mitchell's Eye Salve has not given notable relief. A pure, harmless salve for application to the surface of the eyelids; the simplest of ! methods with wonderful results. The price, 2b cents, places It within reach of all. Druggia.- sell It. If you wish to reach the highest, begin at the lowest.?Syrus. Those who keep Hnmlins YViwird Oil in the house do not have to buy any other remedv for sore throat. No other remedy will cure this trouble so quicklv or so surely. Remember this It is better to hend than break. For COLDS and GRIP. hick s (.spotixi is we nest remedy? [ relieves the aching and feverishness?cures the Cold and restores normal conditions. It's ! liquid?effects Immediately. 10c., 25c. and 60c.. at drug stores. This Trade-mark Eliminates All in the purchase of paint materials. It is an absolute For your own protection, see that it is on the side of every lce,g of white lead /ifi y NATIONAL l(AD COMPANY 1102 Trinity lui'dlnr. Ktw Tort ' * P^Cures 1 pneumonia r / ? I Rice's Goose Grease Hut- i DlPt ment la made of pure ' r> iroose prea?e land other I !r reln?rtl?! "rental recoy- < r ' nlted for fenerations at i 11*11'K Invaluable for Pnaumo1 nta. Colds,Grip,etc. Try 1 Rice's Goose Grease Liniment For thoao ailments?-It relieves speedily and cure* permanently. 25c-At all Druggists and Dcalcrs-25c GOBSE GREASE CQMPANT,01*"^080' HAFTING, PULLEYS, BELTS UMUn KM WMttJUWWTt. U. GARDEN, FAR ggglsUGCE 1131 Try It Out. Practical experiments by individual farmers are of more value to the grower than any analysis of the crop or- soil. Moreover, the growth of plants depends more upon the soil and its mechanical condition and upon the feeding habits of the plants than upon the chemical composioiu of tho plant. ?American Cultivator. Keep Fowls Up. When the fattening season arrives, according to an experienced goose raisor, keeps the fowls shut away from bathing water, ami feed barloymeal, cornmeal and beef scraps and son o chopped celery. Keep them in a subdued light for three or four woeks. when they can be lei out for a couple of days to enjoy the use of a pond. Then return to clean quarters, and feed 011 barlcymeal and mills, and chopped celery, for two or three days, letting them go twenty-four hours before killing.?Farmers' Home Journal. Icc Crsam Added. Some of the creameries find a source of extra income in making ice cream for the wholesale trade during the warm season. Creameries have certain special advantages for the business which should enable them to meet all competition. They have unlimited supplies of milk and cream at butter prices. They can pick up eggs at wholesale rates at the time when they arc cheapest, and store the eggs in the leu house. Every creamery nas piem.y 01 ico lor freezing and packing the ico cream, and is fitted with machinery, which could be used to ran the freezers. Where several large towns could be supplied, business would be brisk all through the summer months,?a time when the butter markot is rather unsatisfactory.?American Cultivator. What the Soli Needs. A farmer does not need to have a scientific education to understand the needs of the soil. About the only elements that can bo lacking aro phosphorus. nitrogen ahd potash. Phosphorus is tho olomont that brings plants to maturity ami forms the seed. It makes the t^s of corn and heads of wheat 11 ft with plump, ripo grain. Nitrogen gives color to the plant and promotes u*pld grovflh. When the plant gr;?w3 rarlk and dark greun, and keeps cn growing but doesn't baturc and fill, it lacks phosphorus. Soft straw or stalk denotes a deficiency in potasu. 1 ui3 iorm or pmiu tocr.i snouiu be used whore straw or stalk lacks gloss and stiffness. Generally clay soils contain sufficient potash, but are nearly always short on phosphorus and nitrogen. Black soils, on the other hand, are often lacking in potash and phosphorus, but contain large supplies of nitrogen. Sandy soils are frequently snort on all three elements.? E. D. K., In Ildiana Farmer. Percentage of Fat In Milk. For some unaccountable reason rich milk Is much sought after while milk containing a smaller amount of cream is not wanted. The fact is, milk with a low percentage of cream Is more digestible and, therefotc , a better food for tho average person. The stomach of the pigs Is more like the human stomach than that of any other domestic animal, and we know that we can kill a pig by feeding It cream. Human milk is not rich in fat, probably 3 1-2 percent would como near the average, and all will agree that nature provides what is best for us. Is It not time that city ordinances should contain other ordinances than the amount of fat the milk contains? Old milk, no matter what Its fat contents, is positively dangerous. But a dealer can supply his customers with milk a week old so long as it is not sour and no one objects. Dirty milk is partially guarded against by examinations for bacteria, but few cities pay strict attention to It There is very little stable inspection. Cows may be covered with manure and they may be milked by dirty men, but the consumer apparently cares very little for he makes no effort to correct the evil. So long as consumers are so indifferent, they must put up with the kind of milk they are getting; they can have beiter if they want it.?Epitomtst. Eggs For Hatching. In order to secure good hatches and 6trong, lifeful chicks, good fresh eggs are a prime requisite. The breeding stock is, of course, the foundation. Degenerate, pampered, inbred stock vmiliub uv> CAJ7CV IVU IU [/iUUIIUU IllttllV batchable eggs. Neither can hens that have to roost out on the trees, on fences, or in a shabby hen house. A poor hen house is really as bad as no hen house at all. Any building through which the cold wind may blow, or rain and snow enter, or which gets so cold in the winter that the combs on tl.* hens will freeze, will insure you in each and every case that it will require onry a very small basket to carry the eggs that the hens will lay, and more than this, not half of the eggs will be fertile and those that are fertile will contain only weak germs M and CROPS STEONS O DATE fe LTURIST fSJ^ : which wiil probably die during incuba- ' tion or produce weak chicks. Vigor ' and vitality are essential In the par- < eat bird, otherwise many chicks will j < die in the shell, no matter how care- ' fully the ogg3 are incubated. < The sooner eggs are set after be- 1 ing laid, the bettor; but ct:ong germs 1 can be held for two or three weeks if i r.v.vv>?u Iiuiii but reuib IUUI WOUIU ' 1 produce evaporation, and kept in n I temperature that Is not too warm, say | \ from forty-five to sixty degrees. The ( eggs should be turned frequently dur- ^ ing this time to prevent the yolk fiom , settling to one side or sticking to the shell. ?ggs laid during freezing weather ! should be gathered while they are still ! warm, or at least before they have j had a chance to chill, and care should , ' bo taken that they do not chill. Wash ( 1 all dirty eggs before setting them, os- . peclally duck eggs which are usually j ' covered with dirt. Discard all eggs j 1 with chalky shells?they are not prop- | ' erly llnished and are too porous; also i ' all ill-shaped and all very large or j 1 very small o-jgs. as irregularities of ! < this kind are often hereditary and < should not be perpetuated.?R. 13. Satv do, in the Epitomist. \ The Tendril on the Vine. ' 1 i How many vineyardsists ever took ; the trouble to examine the growing ' J habit of the tendrils on graps vines-' j 1 We do not know much about it per- ] 1 sonally for like most other growers j ' we would never take the time to oh- | < serve sueh things but still we have ' 1 discovered a few peculiarities, in all ! plants of the grapevine family the ten- ; i dril is not in the axil of the leaf, but j < opposite to the leaf. It could, there- [ fore, scarcely be called a modified j branch in the sense that we take it to : be. The tendril is really the whole \ ' axis or leading shoot and when it i aborts into a tendril the axillary bud, ! which in most speclos of plants would I become a branch or braachlet, as- ' sumes the duty of leadership. In many ' species of plants there are two axiilary i buds, one above the other, the one j being called the normal, the other the ; supra-axillary. Usually in species with 1 supro axillary buds only one devel- j ops. One remains dormant for all time. In some species the upper bud starts j to form the branch, in others the low- I er, hut. whichever is the active oile, it J is uniform through the whole species. ? In the grapevine family it would stem j to be the upper of the two bads. An- j other interesting consideration is that I in some species of the grapevine lam- | by the process of reducing the lead- j ing shoot to a tendril only occurs at i every other node or every third node, j In other plants the rule would seem to j be from every other one. Why there should be these lapses is not quite | clear. Another very interesting point i is the tendrils usually coil in one di- ' rectlon until they find something upon ' which to cling when the twirl is turned j in the oposite direction. In many eas- j es. the tendril twists without having caught a helping hand. This may of j ten be seen in vigorous growing grape- \ vines. So far as we know no attempt ? has been made to explain what seems ? to be a vagary in this ease.?Prof. W, ( S. Thornber, in Western Farmer. t t Farm Notes. i Get posted on silos and making si- I lage; and if enough cows are kept to i justify it, by all means plant a silage i crop and have a silo ready to receive it. A bad smelling dairy barn shows t that something is wrong. There will c be plenty, though, who will laugh at i the idea of a dairy barn not smelling f to high heaven. Begin to cut down a cow's rations when it is desired th^t she go dry; and feed her so that it can be said she is well fed without being fattened while she is dry. To develop a dairy heifer into 1 something really good, do not hesitate c to feed it well the first two years. It ( will be a better feeder thereafter if fed well when young. Do uot delay about starting to breed ^ up the herd. It will take two years | before results are got, and every year f that the delay in starting continues makes one more year. c If a number of calves are to be fed, d see that every one gets the feed it a ought to have. Do not have any ar- ^ ranvemont that will enable the laree f ones to ?*at what the small ones ought ? to have. It costs no more for feeding or attending to a well-bred sire than it does for a scrub, the only difference being in the first cost; and the wellbred sire will soon make up the difference and much more. Do not let temporary set-backs breed permanent discouragement. Find out what the cause of the trouble was, and remove the cause. No clime has eternal sunshine and no business, dairying* included, has success continually. I)o not expect to get rid of all the poor blood by using a pure-bred sire for a single year. The average will be greatly improved, but the improvement will be only started by the first use of lhe good sire.?From "Drops of Dairy CTeam'," in the Progressive Farmer. I NOW HE KNOWS. Solution of a Mystery that Bothered I the Middle Aged Men in Hio Youth. "When I was a boy," said the midlie aged man, "we used to come irross a pear tree occasionally that tiad poar3 so hard you couldn't bite cm. Maybe you've seen 'em. "They were a chunky built pear almost spherical in shujie. a very dark green, almost black in color and of ibout the same specific gravity as ?ast iron. You threw one of those l>ears against a rock and it might :hip the rock but it would have no >fToct on the pear. These pears lever got rii>e; they always remained of just that same hnrdness. There svere no apples that we could not Site into, but those hard pears were proof even against the teeth of our i'onth. "I used to wonder sometimes why those pears grew, what they were for and what became of them. Now I know. 1 came across some yesterday preserved. "There they were in the dish, two pieces of one pear, two hemispheres jf pear, looking strangely familiar tvlien. in my mind I had re-construct?d them to make one pen-, snd wh-' i lifter barely escaping shooting the piece I tried out of the dish onto the table in my repeated endeavors o penetrate it: when. 1 say, 1 had finally managed to shave a sliver off tills piece ] felt morally cer tin. m l alien I had tasted it any lingering ^ aouir. ! nueiit have lia 1 was romov- k ?d: it was tasteless. They were be- I yond a'l question the same oM i pears. fc "Hnli!n< and steaming lied soften- T ?d thrm a little on tli<> surface, hut I ant much, and despite ail treatment | Lliey still remained as tliey had < vcr ij been, without taste. Tliey were the L [iears. all riqht?the petrified pears t nf our youth, and while we couldn't r ?at them we smiled as we thnunht fc we hail solved at last that ions stand- ? np mystery of what they did with t ?hrni?they can 'em."?New York f Sun. MIXTXr, CATTIjE r.REEDS. There is a Rood deal of force in Che following, on the subject of crossInr broods, by a corn spondont of the llroedors" (Tarmtto. Ho savs: Tho tendency of the American far- j mer in the past has boon to hybridize ill his far.n animals. Even bis hens ill became a mixture after a year or two. Especially has this been the oase with farmers in tin- Eastern States. Those win had Jersey rows tiavo crossed and re ross'ul with Hoj;toin l<Yesi \n bulls until they have pot neither one or tho other, and ?o:re of thorn come very near to %othing Some Tarmevs seemed to think they could nitwit the Almighty bv crossing tho I Jersey with the Kolstein and so g^t | the large flow of the llolstein with the rich milk of the Jersey. The difference bet worn the two 'breeds is too (treat. Natui^' was shocked and dumtounded. The result has been in many eases tho small yield of tho Jersey coupled with the poor quality >f the Holstein. There Is a vast difference between i pood llolstein and a poor one both n quality and quantity of milk. Jor:oys also differ very much in regard o quantity of milk. A herd of lirsf. %lass Jersey cows is as good as a ;old mine to a farmer who knows how to handle them by judicious selection. The same can bo sai.l of tho Holstein. The breeder of Holstein cattle is quite ipt to condemn the Jersey cow, an l J>o Jersey breeder is apt to condemn he Holstein. There are noble spoclnons In each brood, and the breeders, >0.? ...1? 1 >>- *?- - --1??- ? uur men \> in / iwiuuii- nit* Hiii in a is. am esponsible for so unany poor ones. It 's the result of carelessness. lack of ludigment. taste and discrimination. The Shorthorns are rapidly coming :o the front and the milking strain if this breed will doubtless supplant nany of the mongrel Jerseys and Hok ftedns that now occupy the land. NOT DRUGS ~ Food Did It. C After using laxative and cathartic ti nediclnes from childhood a case of ? ihronlc and apparently Incurable con- M tlpation yielded to the scientific food, Irape-Nuts, In a few days. u "From early childhood I suffered " vlth such terrible constipation that I > :ad to use laxatives continuously, gong from one drug to another and suf- ]? ering more or less all the time. "A prominent physician whom I onsulted told mo tho muscles of the \ llgestlve organs were partially partlyzed and could not perform their ] vork without help of some kind, so I ^ lavo tried at different times about 0 ivery laxative and cathartic known, I t >ut found no help that was at all per- % nanent. I had finally become dls:ouraged and had given my case up is hopeless when I began to use the ' >re-dlgested food, Grape-Nuts. , "Although I had not expected this < ood to help my trouble, to ray great urprlse Grape-Nuts digested lmmcdl- c itely from the first, and In a few days V was convlncod that this was just X vhat my system needed. "The bowels performed their func- i'i Ions regularly and I am now com- ;i| >letely and permanently cured of this i|> iwful trouble. ]i| "Truly the powor of scientific food ij> nu6t be unlimited." "There's a Rea- |i| ion." iji Read "The Road to Wellvllle," In jij ?kgs. iji Ever read the above letter? A X new one appears from time to time. 7 rhey are genuine, tfuc, and full oi Q human interest. v 1 A Rural Telephone \ /t??V? ' should be installed in ' /^'^\ /? ,1..- Ion.. .. ? very B?f> 3A \ / ' ^arrTlcr 111 l'iC South, because : ' I'H^I |^Wy M ! / It keeps you in touch with the \J: mS doctor. It enables you to watch ^<L3b&^ the market. It brings you closer to your friends. It runs your errands. It protects your home. Electric "Bell" Telephones "Best6 Our Free Bulletin No. 101 on How to Build Rural Telephone Lines tells how you and your neighbors can, by cutting y??ur own pole*. -ccure 'ill the rest of the material necessary t<. build the ;r;i best system at a cost of about one-half bale of mtton each. Cut out this advertisement, write your name and address <>n the margin, and mail A /??L |H at once to our nearest house, so that v.e e..n V send you a copy of the bulletin. >4s WESTERN S-UEeOT-RIO 00?vT\=V\.f*i?fX Snutkira Otflmn Kcrthcm aij V:;-?-rr. Ctflcst SOJlkini otficei Thp worM.roMn., ,n) |irilH Atnnt> Kan-?? City ihr-,. nnn..'i,iir.. O !g ... C: > .::nnti IVrSnm.-ih 4 O'.C 000 V7*.frn n>ctr'.i T?..;-u?at? ,, ,. . . . . It. UM? in M' li ". I -i - t....lay. t . ' _ Saint Lout* _ . _ . o i . i .> . < i _ no I Sural T? ipi?#ts ft By^claJt? Y.*rfc S . .. m-u-co In li tana poll* Hnvantuli vA* f^sjxmssiass&i^zj^^Liu. u\ j | Women Sutler ? j ui much needless pain when they delay us in re f'nrdnipfl for their female troubles, C.'ardui has been f< mi l to jSj y relieve heachielie. backache, pain in the side and diz-S] ft* ziness, arising from deranged organs. It do<.? inore!-w than relieve,?if used persistently,?many Lave writ- jya ^ten to say that it cured tlicm. ^ g |m gill 1?| p m wm Meap Yea ^ Wrs. Maxwell Johnson. Tampa. Fla., writes: "Cardni our~l k mo after doctors and everything eke had failed. I had lnvn > .?II._: - % E? ing with numb spells ever since 1 was 1G years old. One d,:y I decided to take Cardui. I have now taken .r> hottl?-s and I say ? P that it has cured me. I advise ail suixeriMg women to give Cardui y J?> a long and fair trial." i vi> Mrs. Johnson suffered years. ITave you? Do you v.LI. to? g Hi But why sulFcr at all? Take Cardui. Give if a fair trial. y AT AXiL DRUG STQRES ' ;. rftrcllTf, |.ut? ( ?<!.. t (III. ejl'lv U>C m J. u * . J* Prescribed and endorsed f>J ^ '. physicians. ^ "".j^ CHILDREN LICK THE SP03T ^ E. - B U 5 D V/CAR3 I j J&A i-AuviAi! '< <). I He-%: ;*!':-"'i _'- f-^L--nv - ^ \'?J| Do You Feel Run ?1 JSfa r hffijjf Down? ll|!yfc^L km If so, you arc an easy victim of j} \ / ifffe?- :tj.. M! ?j disease. You can avoid danger 4--* ." ,A'V1* ~ >tOf if you build up your system with the natural strength-giver? ~^T; Jli/'. JLJ'hJ' \J '$3,00 skoes 350^1 DR.D.JAYNES f|4 00 ] The Heascn ! Mali* tnd Sell Sere J!en's $3.00 :u?d ond * 3.5Q Shn*4 Than Ar.y Oinrr M hP?.'3durtf mA\TTn innn^rmTTrin f^ oa la bocatiM I give th? w**r.: thetroeutof th* TONIC VERMIFUGE "<-* ne?teesiri'#-* o^anirUi ?f trained ox- t ^ tz 00 pert# and skilled e*ofjr *l?rr ta lut country. Tboa*U?ct?cr. r.f the Ic.th. in f . .r iij: r ofth-shoe, which helps yonr body do its own g? MM?'b?v'? building up. It pits the whole diges- ! Boyr ~7*? !;r!Lh ti ve systera in a perfect conrtition. | n;; J wh> iiwy hoM ?b?u t: tfir. tai ?.-ij ion*?e i\cguu.L^ iuc btoil'.acr., lITipArij lie*/ I ii3<0Q I '*' * v > ?I - m Mart , rigor and health to the tissues. | Khoe* fnr'Rverv Mev,.'T.} t^ 'fumllV v r_ . t .. I cien, Hoys. \Vi>?>i<n. >! < . u-.d Chililreiu X OUT I>TUgglU La* It. l-nrbkl.1 l>y *]>rr.-. PAHTIflU ? N'"" Kenuiii.- witn.iii TV. I. Mot-sriaa Tl.tn r -?J 7 C ' v"wllU1 c II ai'-l |-r *<?'-,pci! >.-i J uo st-et, <^ccna _JOC Iv.t Oaior Er?l?:? l>? > .xu'i'ivo'.y C?t-.lo.ao Multd Tr?? W. L.U0U0LA8. t?t SPASK STP.tirr. BKOCXTOM. MAS?. ) TCN CURED 'tf.aa.'-* 80 ?'-0-: - . __ IR. DAVID'S SANATIVE WASH Isyuaran- | ^ , seil to cure any ease of Itch In half hour If /'y ccrsxrrsJ-- dtLSEIK^ sed according to directions. Show this to per- ? jW __ jna having Itch. If your doe hus Scratches or /By .4^3 lange David's Sanative Wij!i will cure him Mgr t Mm Price 50c a Hottl*. It CfJinothc malit*<I. Vv ?/ ellvered at your nearest express office -'res __ _ _ __ _ _ . _ ? ss-ritev^c...v- TOILET ANTISEP1I8 t NOTHING LIKE !T FOR * ALD NORTH STATE 01 NTMENT j -|"|JP TriTTU f>ax,^RC excel? eny dentifrice II Will cure your Piles Edema. Erys;i>- > I RL I tL I 51 in cleansing. whitening and Ulcers "on the Eyeball. OranufaTed Lid's, i removing tartar from the teeth, besides destroying Sore Throat. Oolda. Rheum attain and ) all germs of decay and disease which ordinary Appendicitis. Corn; liunions and Ingrow- ) tooth preparations cannot do- ^ linr Truv Vallu A ab - ' " OLD NOkTli SIAfE OIN1 MEM CO . $ TUF EMlflHTU P***"118 ?0 ^outh^ ^ ___ / J nt IYjUU ! n wa:h disinfects the mouth end throat, purifies the breath, and kills the germs ii niii i i ii?laiaiMisaaM which collect in the mouth, causing tore throat. K */f w 7a gfl U H fl W iR fc 111~x bad toeth, bad breath, grippe, and much stcknea. ^^3L^jL5-3c-S^L5LS>i fi iM*J I ii f Vlie pyrQ when inflamed, tired, ccIm _ _ a B Ht hlhv and burn, may be instantM Restores Gray Hair to Noiural Color tciicvej .ncj urenmhened by Paxtir.e. I NIMOvaa dandruff ANC? SCURF tcucvea ana strer.gincnca oy r axiinc. j ivg nvigurntei and prevent* the bair from fallinc off PATASRU Pontine will destroy the gerng * For sat* a* Orussiats, cr bam oiraet n? UA I MniBll that cause catarrh, heal the kw XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia ({animation and stop the discharge. It is a suit Mm u f~ *?? ; *.?*?. ?.!. ,??. *.nd ter remedy (or uterine catarrh. " Pax tine is a hcnnlesc yet powerful 1 germicide,disinfe<!tant and dcodorlrcr. JBv THELEXINC^^ l^lit5k?5EJy3S! 9 KICHMOUD, VIRUIMA. & roR ,.LI ,T??uo.torcssoc. pTfl I ?^rfgm^ B LARGE SAMPLE FREE! | THE PAXTON TOILET CO.. B08T0N. MAS*. flMMyW IjBKsGjL v) iM CUBE. Removes alt ?vr??ui?. Cortjjl H^S||^BM*Mp*|(iSH|IMBS^S& t\VjLSBb ' I? ?*r?ai? and r?rm?cni Gm a Ml i6 ^a^K3?. - ? ? d.?. Ai dr?Mi?\; or, tend to m far it. V CIom to th? Oopota. Pott Office. Capitol* , mi si on . s*?d i^r <mr rm w<*. Jl i^uwo. Wholesale tad Retail Mellon* it . i^^^XWUr L '*' ** Cnh A<vW. ? EVERYTHING FIRST-CLASt < '/. WELLS MEDICINE COR ? RATES REAAO?<4?I F" I* - LiiMAk>*? MOQOMOCQQQOMO "OCtf ;? r ? nl ,JH ....