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on Ciuoked. Pttlc Ptt?l had always toefc laught by M? ttftlfcer that Ood bad infclio him and that lie ought to bo thankful that ko bad boon made n porfoct; eyes, ?am, toot, hands and aft complete Hk? mother had bought a now cook stove and PaulU waR ?a.amlnipg It |Jt? lifted the reservoir lid and looked Ik. Tboro waa bis pl<*ure, aa nature! as life, In the water, but ho waa wore fcr troubled, wblle looking at If. Wbea msked, by hla mother, what the trow ble waa, he aa!4; -r?~~~*~ "JDod might o* made me persect, b?A be put my bead on trooked." A WRy Judge. At an aaelEe oourt, according to fere London Times, a Juror claimed ?* ?mptlon from serving on the groand V that ho mm deaf. The Judge feeM a converaatlou with the clerk of ar raigns mi fke subject, and tiren, turn* lag to (be man, at whom b? looked In tently, be asked In a whisper: "Are you rwry <deaf?" "Very," was the un guarded reply, ' "So I perceive," wu -the rejoinder of the ^udge, "but not whUqwr <leaf. You had better go Into the box. The wlt'neea shall speak low.**?<Case and Comment. For fOLDI m?4 Ultir m<fkS' CArumxa in the beta remedy?p? Ueve* the aching ?u<1 feverlsbueiMt rurt* tt*a Skg <an<t restore* iu?rm?l conditions. It's u IS effect* Immediately. 10c., 86c., and Wo. 4mif at tore*. Whore They All Happan, "^1'heard of a remarkable adventure With a boa constrictor." "Where did It happen"?" *?At ft cafe table." * ? Dr. Pierce** Pleasant Pellet* first pnt tip 410 year* ago. 'Ihey regulate and invigor ate, stomach, liver and bowel*. Sugar coated tiuy granules t 11 . L 1"" " To Take for a Headache. "What do you take tor a headache?" "Liquor, the night bofore."?Toledo IBlado. If your *kin is marred by pimple# and lltver mark*, take Garfield Tea. It will iregulate the liver, cleanse the system and 'purify th? blood. Riches. Knlcker-?lirowan counts hlB ^wealth ifn seven figures. Bocker?Perpendicularly. YOU NEVER SAW CHICKENS GROW IF YOU ffi&VB HOT USB* Park & Pollard Gritless-Chick and Orowing Peed Money badk if reaulta ar? not iWtter >tbiQ<w? claim i Dover, Del., March 7, lOil. Park A Pollard Co. Gentlemen: U .put 24 chtitt? In ono of your iLulliby Broodera "three and a ball weeks ago. Have (edit hern on your Grltles&*Chlck and Grow In a Feeds and they-are all doing fine. I cannot itwomtnend the combination too hlch&> .Bincerely, W T. Rlmnnn. THE PARK & POLLARD CO. DRY-MASH MAKE 8 JTHEM LAY OR BUST When mms are scarce and hiftryou need our X>ry-Maih to produce tbem. When .are cheap you need our pry-Mash to got a .large . yield and keep ooatxdown. ^ Tell your dealer ho can get P^k & .Pollard feeda ? Gie money telle kind?FOR YOflJ from the following (distributes*: ' I. M. ??ltMy>t e?w Unfit, Va. '1 T. Ikkmcd, fc. Item C<-JtcraMik, Sa. The Park A iPollard Tsar .'Book an4 Almanac>oontalns more boiled down facts about poultry than any $1.04 book published. It Is tr? for the asking. Wrlte usfor It to-day. Please mention giamearf your dealer. THE PARK A POLLARD CO. 108 Canal titcaat, Boston, Mass. I# Affl IV A ?n0 High Qnftt K BIIImK \ Fiulahlng. Mail ?? W W orders glren Hpe cl?l Attention. Price* treasonable. S?rTlc? prompt. Bend far Price List L4MM4W AH fWOHE. CiUmJUTOII, ft. C EVERYTHING 1FOTOGRAFIC IProfettslon&l flrticihtng f*>r itmKt?uw by mall. A|?nU for Kenya* Porta bleTake-Doatn Uouota. Write tqdAjr for literature. Aaba Bureau Foto Advertising, Atlanta^?a. and Wrighttvtlleteach.N. 0. Charlotte Directory Typewriter Supplies Largest stock ai ribboois, cartoon, ofl and 'other accessories to be found in the South. Orders filled same day recenned. J. L Cray (on It Co., Charlotte, N. C. TYPtWRITEfiS-TYPEWBITERS Write me your -wantfe -for any klnfl of brand new, nnond hand or rib u it* typewriter. Have the Dtfravat atock ta*3eruUnaa. A* selling high cim? rebuilt NoM *n<l JNo. 7 Roanlngtona ?t $20 to Htf>. AlROM>]Unpplt?e,(ribbon*,carbon papers, a??, etc.) (nBll kluda of typewriters. JONES?The TypewHr Man?Blggeit Oeater In Caroline*. CharlotSL North Carolina. Hat* tyf?ewrlter^Bpm U each, a p. STIFF PIAlOS are sold^^^V from factory tome. & ' ? It's thfl 1? to buy b<^^^(rS ; THE COST! 6 West ^ - Gharii C. H. W!LM< " mm t /W/MJ or OLJW 0MOLL//VO3 IMPORTANT recommsndOJUons to the Smithsonian Institution aro made toy Jesse Walter Pewkes re gurdlng the treatment Of the na tional reserve created la northern ( Arizona toy order of former President I Roosevelt under the name the Na-' vaho National Monument, In "which; many Important prehistoric ruins are! to he found. Dr. Fewkes w<as seat tby' the bureau of American ?fthnoiogy to examiae these dwellings of 'the ancients, and his preliminary report, which is now being published, 'sug gests: Thai. 'one of the largest two dllff dwellings In the Navalio national Monument, either Betatmkin or Kit slel, be excavated, repaired and pre served as a "type ruts" tto illus trate 'the prehistoric culture of 'the aborigines of this section <Jt Arizona. | Thnt this work be supplemented by excavation and repair ctf Inscription House, an ancient cUfT twilling In West Canyon. , That one or more of the .ruins in Wetft Canyon be added to the 'Nuvalio National Monument and ft>o perma nently protected by the gowornmeut. Dr. Fewkes describes In detail the three routes by which the <cllff dwell ings may bo reached, tells Where wa ter rpay be had for men and horseB and'outlines improvements that would mako the road more paiBsabk: 'for tour ists. Find an Instructive Specimen. One of the moBt instructive speci mens collected In the -Navaho Nation al Monument was found by W. B. Douglas In a ruin designated as Crftdle Houee. This object te a oradlo made of basketware, open ?ft one end and continued at th| opposite end into a bipott extension to serve for the legs. It is. decorated on the outside with an srchntic geometric ornamentation. This specimen may be regarded .as one of the finest examples of prehistoric basketry from the southwest; more over, with one exception. It is the only known cradle of this form. A pair of Infani'B sandals found mdCh the cradle leavee no doubt as to its use. while the dharacter and symbolism of tthe decoration refer it to the ancient cliff house culture. The design suggests that Which characterises certain speci mens ?of the well-known iblack-and' white 'pottery found in tho San Juan drainage. Evidences erf long iuse and repair ^appear, especially on one side.j Unforbunately the specimen, although entire when found, later was '.hsoken across its middle. The einly other known cradle of this type wns brought to the attention of ethnologists by Dr. W. J. McGee when in charge, of the anthropological ,ex hibit at tthe St. Louis exposition. Thia was found in San Juan county, Utah. "The IS'a vaho National Monument," writes Dr. Fewkes, "contains two kinds of iruins, cliff dwellings and pueblos. -The architecture of the cliff dwellings Is characteristic, their wails being constructed of Btone or adobe 'built against, rarely free from, ver tical faces of the cliff. Two Types of Ktvas. "There arc two types of klvas, one circular and subterranean, allied to those of the Mesa Verde; tho other rectangular, above ground, entered from the sides. "Vhe masonry of these northern ruins Is rude, resembling that of mod ern Walpi. The component stones are neither dressed mor smoothed, but the walls ore sometimes plastered. There Is a great similarity In archRecture. No round towers relieve the monotony ar impart plctureBqueness to the build ings. Tho walls erf ruined pueblos in tthis regla>n and the ceramic remains closely resemble those at Black Falls, tjn the Little Colorado. A prominent fwture of the walls Is a Jacal construc tion In wMch mud is plastered ou wattling between upright poles. The ends of many of these supports project high above the ground, constituting a characteristic feature of tho ruins. .This method of wall construction fs unknown at Black Falls or at Walpt. but still survives In modified form in one or moro Oraibi kivas and in one at least of the Mesa Verde ruins. "Naturally the questions one asks in regard to these ruins are; Why did inhabitants build these cliffs? Who were theancient Inhabitants? When were these dwellings inhabited and desert cdf' ?LsAf.: .t\ "It is oommonly believed that the caves were chosen for habitation be cause they could be better defended thta;; villages In the open. The ancients ?hos* this regtos for their homes on account of th* constant wa ter supply.. the week and"the patches of laid In the valley that dould be cultivated. This was a de sirable place for their farms. Had there been no eaves In the cliffs they would probably have built habitation* in the open plain *el0w. May Have Beeh Harssssd. "They may have been harassed by marauders, but ft must be born6 in Id great number* at any ouo time. De XeiiBo wan not the primary motive rthat led th?l sedentary people of thla canyon to utilise the caverns for shel ter. Again, the Inroads of enemies never led to the abandonment of these great cliff houses, Jit we can Impute valor in an/ appreciable-degree to the inhabitantj^^F&ncy, ;for instance, the difficulty, of, rather, (improbability, of a number of uoma&lc warriors great enough to drive <ii?t the population of Kitslel, making; tbelr way up Cataract canyon and besieging the pueblo. Such an approach would have bapn impna. slble. Marauders might have raided the KUsiel curnftelds, but they could not have dislodged the Inhabitants. \JSven If thtjy lmd succeeded in cap turing one houwe, 'but little would have been gained, as !t was a custom of the Pueblos to keep enough food in store to last more Chan a year. In this con nection the question is pertinent While hostile* were besieging Kit slel how could 'they subsist during any length off timd? Only with the ut most difficulty, <even with aid of ropes and ladders, 'can one now gain access to soma of Xheae ruins. How could marauding parties have entered them If the Inhabitants were hostile? The cliff dwellings were constructed part ly for defense, but mainly for the shelter afforded by the overhanging cllfr, and the 'cause of their desertion wnB not duB *o much to predatory enemies as failure of crops or the dis appearance 'the water supply. "The writer does not regard these rulnH as of frreat antiquity; some of .the evidence '.indieutes that they are of later time. Features in their archi tecture show -resemblances derived from other (regions. Ruins Ntft of Great Antiquity. "The Navahoes ascribe the build ings to anchmt people and say that the ruined houses existed before their own advent 'in' the 'country, but this was not necessarily 'long ago. Such evidence as "has beeii gathered sup ports Hopi legends that the inhabi tants were undent Hopi, belonging to the Flute, Hivn and Snake families. "There Is no evidence that cliff house architecture develqped in these canyons, and irude structures older than these have been found In this region. Whoewter the builders of these structures were, they inrought their craft with them. The adaption of the deflector in the rectangular ceremo nlai-rooms called klhus implies the derivation of these rooms from cir cular kiva8, and all Indications are that the ancient Inhabitants came from higher up San Juan river. "Many of the ruins In Canyon de Chelly, situated east of Laguna creek, show marked evidence of being mod ern, and they la turn are no<t bo old as those of the Mesa Verde. If the rultw become older as we go <up the river the conclusion 1b logical that the migration of the San Juan culture was down the river from east to west, rather than in the opposite direction. The scanty traditions known to the author isupport the belief in a migra tion from east to west, although tkere were exceptional tuatances of clan movements in the opposite direction. Th.t general trend of migration would indicate that the ancestral home off the Snake and Flute peoplo was la Colorado and New Mexico." Too Much Geography. Not long ago Representative "Billy" Hughes of New Jersey, wis in Wash ington showing a party of hie constitu ents the sights of the capital. In the group was a provincial old lady, who seemed obsessed with the idea that New Tork and New Jersey made up most of the United States, and got out all the IsW8. In the corridors of the war depart ment, the party ran across a tall, tawny-halrcd man. "Who is that?" queried the old lady. ?"That's Rartlett of Nevada." explain ed Hughes. "Congressman Hartlett." "Good gracious!" she said. You have "em from everywhere, don't you?" Fr+?ndly Tip. Saplelgh?Would you?er?advlBe me to?er? marry a beautiful girl or a sensible girl? Hammertley?I'm ' afraid you'll never be able to marry either, old man. Sapletgfc?Why not? Ilamnseraley?Well, a beautiful girl could do better and a sensible girl would know totter. V ' r v ? r j i It Lingered. "It took that racing automobile twenty minutes to paaa thla house." "Impossible!" "Pact. I could hear It ten mltttotea It got heri^nd I could ?meU tutea after It paased.M ?. "" ily ? Success. daughter hat* & fine presents no fight" - t Sliced Dried Beef Ol<| Hickory Smoked 'Highest Quality Finest Flavor Ill ...I.J M1?M UiS at you* A*k for Ubbu't ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE Into Your Www AlWn'# foot? Ku>, llio ?niiarptU lor tbe frrl, II r.JU... |>*iuful, ?woIIm aniarllnf, Uudar, U*r aud tuaUmlli Itkia tliaatli>a of OUIU* ?ttd buullllll. It'* lut cpmfprt ?llarov?ryal fhp ?!?. Allan's Foot ?K*m ut? tt?ht or new shoes ImI May. It hi wrUlt ttlitl for Inf rowing Simla, par ?soinnt, calloua snd ttrail, arlim* f*?t. Wahats v*rr SO.UU'U->tiiiio?UU. Tl< V |TTO?liAY. Bul<l ??or?wli?r?, Mo. i>? riol HH'fnl any aiibaUtute. Bout by m<ul for Wo. In ataiups. CDCC Tit IA I. PACK AUK If KB sent by null. MOTH Kit OKAV'H NWKKT I'0\VI>KHHi, Uis Ixxt madonna for FctmWU, *10117 Otilldrsa. tioiJ by DronUti (ttTsbtft. Trial Paokasa FHKB. AdhUaaa, AM,El* H. oLmBTKD. Ull?y. M. T. WSV SURELY DESERVES A MEDAL Record Act of Bravery That la 8et t? Credit of Intrepid New York Man. The bravest nlan in New York made hiB appearance In a Broadway e&ore last week. He carried an war tiiouh bandbox which contained an enormous hat on which the man want ed, what ho considered an enormous amount of money refunded. The man was pretty ma/1 and while looking for Bome one who had the authority to negotiate tho transaction he talked loud enough for everybody to hear. "My wife bought this hat," lie snld. *?he doesn't need It. She has already "bought three hats this spring. Sbe ?paid $35 for this one. She has never worn it. It just came homo last night. 1 can't afTord to throw all that moatey eway and I want you to take the hat "hack. She wouldn't bfing it down, so i mndertook the Job myself." "By the side of that man Napoleon was a cringing coward," said tho young woman who had made the sale. "?Imagine hiB flouncing into a Parisian nlilllnery shop with a hat that he didn't want Josephine to buy. He couldn't have done.it. Very few men can. Once In a long whilo fcome poor 39ew Yorker with the courage of desperation in his heart returns mer <tiiandise which he cannot afford to buy 'for his wife and hiB audacity up sets 'the whole Btore for a month." (Looking Out for Number One. Sydney had been given some dls eaatded millinery with which to amuse hecstilf. She trimmed a marvelous looking hat, and bo arranged It that a lone tved ostrich plume hung straight down from the frond of the brim, over her fbaiby face. \ *X5ome here, Sydney," said hei mother. "Let me tack that feather baric, ?trt i0f your eyes." ?"Ob, no, mother! I want It that way, so I can see it myself. 'Most always only .other people can see th? feathers on any hats."?Judge. New Fishing Industry. Altoicore Ashing in Nova Scotlan wa ters baa become interesting, but foi financial reasons. These fish frequent ly weigh over 600 pounds and are known as horse mackerel. A numbei were shipped to Boston last season. The average price there Is three and one-half cents per pound. Formerly these fish were considered a nuisanc# to the fishermen. MENTAL ACCURACY Oreatly Improved by Leaving Off Coffee The manager of an extensive cream ery In Wis. states that while a regu lar coffee drinker, he found it Injuri ous to his health and a hindrance to the performance of his bub.ness du ties. "It impaired my digestion, gave me 0 distressing aense of fullness in the region of the stomach, causing a most painful and disquieting palpitation of the heart, and what is worse, it mud dled my mental faculties so as to seri ously Injure my business efficiency. "I finally concluded that something would have to be done. I quit the use of coffee, short off, and began to drink Postum. The cook didn't make it right at first. She didn't boll It long enough, and I did not And it palatable and quit using It and went back to cof fee and to the stomach trouble again. "Then my wife took the matter in hand, and by following the directions on the box, faithfully, she had me drinking Postum for several da/to be for I knew 1L "When I happened to remark that 1 was feeling much better than I had for a long time, Bhe told me that I had been drinking Postum, and that accounted for |t. Now we have no coffee on ourj table. "My digestion has been restored, and with this improvement has come relief from the oppressive aense of fullness and palpitation of the heart that used to bother me so. X note such ? gain in mental strength and fccuto Bess that I cAn attend to my office work with eaae and pleasure and with out making the mistakes that were so annoying to me while I was using coffee. "Postum if tho greatest table drink of tho tlmeti In my humblo estima tion." Namo given by Postum Oo., Battle drool; Mich. Rood tho little hook, "Tho Rood to WolMUerfejgg. Thersr#areason." KTfr wmmm im Aivvv kiwi a mw fi&yth Building Where Sat the First Senate and House. Congress Hall, Philadelphia, as It Is Today and as It Was In 1790? Whsra Washington Was Inaugurated Philadelphia, Pa.?Aftur 16 years of neglect pr of futile attempts to start work, the Philadelphia city govern ment has finally appropriated |6o,?)OU foe the reatoration of Cougress hall, located at Hixth and Chestnut streets, and for the erection of memorial lamps in Independence square. The first of the more recent attempts to restore the historic structure was made iu 18l?3 by the Colonial Dairies, Who spent a groat deal of time and considerable money to place the old senate chamber In the hull iu approxi mately the same condition it was In a century before. The work was com plotod and a reception held to com memorate the work In 1898. And that ended all work on the old budding for another deeade. About eight or nine years ago an other piece of restoration was under taken. The entrance on Sixth street was bricked up to uiuke the exterior of the bullying coincide with its earlier design. This patriotic work was not without its comic aspect, for in brick ing up the entrance the stairway lead' ing to thv restored senate chamber was cut off and ,since 1902 access to Hits historic chamber has been barred to all. Since that time there has been a continual hue and cry to have the old building restored to its pristine condi tion as far as possible and a commit ' Congress Hall, Philadelphia. tee from the Philadelphia chapter of the American Institute of Architects has been collecting tho necessary data from which to base the proposed res toration. The architects literally have had to fee^ their way. They have con sulted historians, old magazines and even an old caricature which contains* the only known view of the Interior of the house of representatives. Walls and partitions have been torn down partially In the hope of gaining knowl edge as to their original construction, but there have been so many changes that the work has been a gigantic puz zle. The architects, however, believe that now they possess data from which it will be possible to reconstruct the Interior of the building as it was when Washington was president. Rack In 1762 Pennsylvania, then a province, acquired the land for the pur pose of erecting there a building In which to hold courts. Not till 1785, after Pennsylvania had become a state, was money appropriated'for the erection of a building, but the actual work was not begun till a later date. In 1787 the lot was enlarged and con victs were put to work excavating. The building was completed In March, 1789. While the building was In course of erection the question of changing the seat of national government came up. New York, Baltimore and Philadelphia were bidders and the latter city strong ly laid before congress the advantages of the new building. With this end In view the building was completed, not as Intended with rooms for courts and civil officers, but with one general room occupying the entire ground floor for the house of representatives, and on the second floor a senate chamber and rooms for the vice-president and other officers. Congress moved to Philadelphia in 1790 and occupied the building, since known as Congress hall, for the next ten years, when the capital was re moved to Washington. After the removal of congress the building for many years was used as a court building, for the district court of Pennsylvania and tho court of com mon pleas. The last court was re moved from the building In 1895 and for a few years thereafter It wns occu pied by part of the law school of the University, of Pennsylvania. The exterior of the bulMing will not need to undergo much change to re store It to what It was In the days of Washington. After the changes are made in the Interior It will be .pre served purely as a historic place of national interest, ? Green for Frpnch 8oldlers. v., Paris.?It Is Announced that the minister for war has dcclded to make an experiment with a new uniform at the September maneuvers. A spe cial committee has chosen a uniform Of a greyish-green color as being less consplcuoxis against a French land scape than the red trousers and blue coat now In service. The new unl form will be served out to least a regiment for the experiment Angry Me? Injures M*n, ? '' Duquoin, III.?Ueorgo Oavlns nar rowly escaped being fatally injured If a hoc which attacked him n?ar Me home. The Infuriated animal rushed at him without warning and with hla injurlec^ WELCOMED BY MEN WHO SMOKE PartletiUr men who smoke reAllte how offensive to people of refinement in a strong tobacco breath, and how objectionable to themselves is that , "dark brown taste" iu the mouth I after smoking. Paxtliu* Toilet Antleeptlo Is worth ' Ith weight In gold for this purpose ?lone. Just u little In it glass of water -?rinse the mouth ^nd brush the teeth. The mouth In thoroughly deodorized, the breath becomes pure and sweet and a delightful sense of mouth clean liness replaces that dark brown to bacco taste. Pax tine Is far superior to liquid an tiseptics and Peroxldo for all toilet and hygienic uaea and may be obtain ed at any drug ntore 26 and 60c a box or sent postpaid upon receipt of price by The Paxton Toilet Co., IJoston, Mass. Send for a free sample. ?TILL HAVING FUN WITH HIM. Percy?Weally, Daisy, I dawnced ?o ?twenuoiuly In that last wait? that me head feeU Unlit, doncher know. Daisy?Indeed! I supposed that ?ensatlon waa so common with you thut you had ceased to notice it. Used to It. Thorapeon?Wouldn't you hate to have death staring you In tho face? Johnson?No. If you'd seen my wife's Btare, you'd reallzo (hat death's has no terror to me.?Harper's Hazar. Unless he Is home where ho can rage-before the family about It, a bald headed man will pretend he doesn't know there are such things as flies. (Jnrfirld Tea overcome* constipation. Anyway, there Is nothing monoto nous about the weather. ALCOHOL?3 PER CENT /Vegetable Preparation for As similating the Food and Regula te IhrStosiadis and Bowels of Promotes Digestion,Cheerful* ness and Rest .Con tains neither Opium .Morphine nor Mineral Not Nauc otic Mtff ?TOU DrtAMVUMVm /twyAii S**J ? ?4kAmt ? SmMt ? M* A perfect Remedy TorConsHpai tion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness. and LOSS OF SLEEP facsimile Sigrm^ipc of * cZftffX3?Z< Tkr Centaur Comj^hy,\ NEW Y5RK, uaranteed under the doodad Copy ot Wfippn? Cleanses the System effectually; Diftpels colds and Headache* due to constipation. Best for men, women and children; younq and old. To qet its Beneficial effects, always note the name of the Company California F?g Syrup Co. plainly printed on the front or every package - of the Oenuine HUNTS CURS GUARANTEED For Ich K? At Orufglrt. DEMOLINp Tha only ramady on tha market foi RHEUMATISM OonaUtlng of Intern*! and external treatment. One bottle to be taVrn Internally and on* bottle* for external um, all in on* bo*. IT'S THE COMBINATION THAT DOES THE WORK PrtceTWO DOLLARS,e< praa# obarge* prepaid. MONEY REFUNDED IF YOU ARE HOT ?ATISF^ with the rcault, after ualng the full remedy.. Write for booklet ?nd testimonial* tub nnnoLiNH ooMPANi 1028 Pretbyterlan Building, ? New Y?rk, N. V. > YES If you have two bauds Prof. Q. O, Brauulug will tea?b you. Only, college In V, M. with abopa con DEFIANCE STABOH-.-ftfaaa W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO? 22-1?1l III \ I I I i 111M i LI i Ir. 1,. iW The Kind You Hara. Always Bought f Bears the Signature of Bllpl rrrrr. Vi'fjr.i GASH Chills and Fever Si cause a great deal of distress and suffering. Miss Edna Rutherford, of Douglass ville, Tex., says: "Some years ago, I was caught in the rain, and was taken with dumb chills and fever. 1 suffered more than I can tell. I tried ail the medicines that I thought would do me any good, and[; h four different doctors, buHhey did not help me. At last; tried Thedford's Black-Draught, and I improved wondei fully. Now, 1 feel better than I have in many months ti is a wonderful medicine." ? i mm rl&m Thedford's Black-Drai ;? *> tm T\?; ---. ?- v"' ' . /',*'? ,* has been uniformly successful, during more than when used to relieve chills and fever, in any Is nearly always caused by some form of blood. Thedford's Black-DraughrstrifceS trouble by cleansing and purifying the blc the system to its normal condition elastic friends have written, from i tng of ffielpSkperienee: medicine. They speak : *enoe. W ;?* tot V