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| AlllllMAnBIBAHiA idKIN I UK I UKtS And every Distressing Irritation of the 5kin and 5calp Instantly . Relieved by a Bath with And a single anointing with CUTICURA, the great skin cure and purest of emollients. This treatment, when followed in severe cases by mild doses of CUTICURA RESOLVENT, to cool ; and cleanse the blood, is the most speedy, permanent, and economical cure for torturing, disfiguring. ftchinc. burninc. bleedin?. scalv. crusted, and I~ O' " " O' O' o? / / - # - pimply skin and scalp humors with loss of hair r ever compounded. Millions of Women T TSE CUTIQJRA SOAP, assisted by Cuticura Ointment, ^ for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, -for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and chafings, in the form of baths for annoying irritations and inflammations, or too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and many sanative antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women and mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. No amount of persuasion can induce those who have once used these great skin purifiers and beauttffcy to use any others. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties derived from CUTICURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the most refreshing of flower odors. No other medicated soap ever compounded is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all 1 it.- i-'t-x L.iL ..J ? U. t?. )[ purposes ox uk wwcv, uaux, <uiw uoixi y # iuw u wuuuiu sn ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE, viz- TWENTY-FIVE CENTS, the BEST and complexion soap, the BEST toilet and BEST baby soap in the world* Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humor* ?^ Consisting of cottcdkx Soap (25c.), to cleanse the skin of crusts and AlVimilia acalefc and soften the thickened cuticle, Cuticura Oiktmbnt (50c.), Ill 11*1117| to Instantly allay itching, inflammation, and irritation, and soothe ana lUIIVKUII heal, and Cctxcttha Resolvent (50c.). to cool and cleanse the blood. fr . A snfols 8*t la often sufficient to cure the most torturing, disfiguring, TUE OCT CI 1C itching, bnrning, and scaly akin, scalp, and blood humors, with lota of I nC Ok I ? |fix9 hair, when all else fidls. Sold throughout the world. I ? || a| aL|i 0 n*mnan.. I Malsby & Company, . I *Wt?a a daring statement, but Sal. L 39 s. Broad St.. Atlanta, Oa. ;?3^5L<>S-3 Engines and Boilers ' WB??s ^owin*' Steam Water Heaters, Steam Pompi and Billion Dollar Craaa. Onstat <urr?l oftbeage, figga I Penbertny Injectors. | 12 Jong of hamper ^ C h*ley^D3fc^p*A)P*Ioiil,eteWortjitl<L?eg*e**t ' T - Tv,"1'' ii and Dealers In SAW MILLS, Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machinery and Grain Separators. ? 1 a sin SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and NPIH L V Jl Locks, Knight's Patent Doers, Birdsall Saw l> IV 111 ill P J RfjH FPR. Mill and Engine Repairs, Gorernors, Grate r DVIhblXUi Bars and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price Tank,. Stacks, Stand Pipes and Sheet-Iron Work; Snaftlng, Pullers, Gearing, Boies, ??? W ms?'l?nlng tnis pape.. t Hangers, etc. Mill Castings. ? ?, _ _ ,J|L ... L__ JJ1 . OTCas: every day; work 200 hands. MCfltlOO thlS Paper fir 1801 LOMBARD IRON WORKS & SUPPLY CO ' __ Q Best Cough Syrup. Pastes Ooo^" Use 0| u3 1? time. 8old by druggists. JSf Use CERTAIN 87M&B | ||good goSds poles'| f! tim/BSMm&tmmimsms&sm Better Highways Desired. THE desire for better American highways has expressed itself more or less vigorously for i many years. A general sen- j timent that the roads should be ma- | terially improved has long prevailed in the North and East and in some of the States, as in New Jersey, there has . been a continuous and in some degree j successful effort on the part of asso- j ciations and officials to bring the farm- j ers to an understanding of the value , of good roads. Not until the League i nf A Wtiouldiaii t'/Mmmil o v > -' ? iuvi mru IUI unu a ou-r ; ordinate organization, however, did the work assume a definite, national character, and even then cycling interests were exclusively represented by this movement. A little later the Department of Agriculture undertook sys- 1 tematically the education of the farmers into full appreciation of the econ- ' omy of better highways. Then good road organizations began to appear here and there without particular reference to either the agrcultural or the cycling interests, and the movement received n.i additional impetus when the automobile began to be adopted for general use. Now for the first time all these factors for road improvement have been assembled into a single organization, capable, if rightly directed, of concentrating the sentiment in favor of this leforni and pro ducing practical results. Jt was formed at Chicago under the name of the Xa- , tional Good Roads Association, and !f. j is designed to represent the various j national, industrial, transportation. ! wheelmen and automobile associations of the country, which are working to the eDd of better roads. This list Indicates what a force is. available for the reform. It doubtless represents several million people directly and many other millions indirectly. The wheelmen are not so numerous as formerly, perhaps, and it may be that the automobilists have not yet grown sufficiently In numbers to make good the deficiency due to the falling off in the wheel's popularity. But the . -mill In I H U LUCIU15 ulC CU1UC31 auu iiui the aggregate increase in the near future. Meanwhile the farmers have attained to a better understanding of their own interests than ever before and are rapidly learning the value of a smooth, hai ?. highway and of broad tires. State laws are being enacted, and although Federal laws may be impossible of adequate enforcement, even if passed, the national influence is being increasingly exerted toward the attainment of a system of highways in all parts of the country which will bear comparison with those of Europe. It is easy to understand why the good roads movement has been so slow in this country. Only a few score of years ago much of the land was in wilderness, many of the cities were on the frontier and the farms were mere clearings in the forest. Even later came the period when the railroads were a novelty, competing with stage coaches, rumbling and laboring through the mire of the pioneer's dilapidated turnpike. When the railroad was perfected and the stage coach was abandoned in the main the thought of the people was turned for a time from the subject of roads. It was necessary only to get goods to the railroad station to insure a speedier journey than ever before. It required another evolution to point the moral that there was perhaps even greater economy in the perfection of the comparatively short haul from the farm to the railroad. The Civil War did much to retard appreciation of this truth, and meanwhile the farmer became accustomed to his surroundings and was slow to adopt new methods. The function of this new organization is to accelerate the sentiment which has been produced out of these untoward conditions. With all our mechanical advancement during the century now closing there remains for the twentieth certury th's fundamental work of providing decent pathways of internal commerce.- Washington Star. A Century Behind the Times. Aroused bv his discovery of the quality of Chicago streets, Mr. Patullo addressed the recent good roads convention in Chicago as follows: "What surprises me is that, while the United States is undergoing a wonderful development and is taking the steel and iron business away from England ana Germany, where it has been specialized for years, you are only just now thinking if you will be able to emerge from the semi-barbarism of poor roads. In your c._ntry and in mine they are no better than they were a century ago. I am satisfied that if one-half or one-third of the subventions given to railroads had been spent on rural highways the farmer and the business man would be better off than they are to-day. "I believe that it is to the rural higuways of the country that you must look to get away f -^m the extortions of railroads. Improved vehicles, steam and electric, which before long will traverse all our highways, will enable you to compete with the railroads and where the rates are too high bring them to terms by carrying your own produce to market." Extension of Good Roads. Martin Dodge, Director of the Office of Road Inquiry, of the Department of Agriculture, and W. H. Moore, President of the interstate Good Koaa and Improvement Association, have arrived in Chicago after an extended tour of the West in the interests of good roads and other internal improvements. Director Dodge and Mr. Moore are well pleased at the success of their Western tour. They covered more than 17,000 miles, visiting all the principal Western cities, and held goodroads conventions in Topeka, Omaha. Sioux Falls, Boise City. Spokane, Seattle. Tacoma, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Denver: and formed State and district organizations of the In- j terstate Good-Road and Improvement! Association in each of those cities. The Mark of Genius. A stage-struck aspirant approached an actor-manager lately. "Well," asked the gent of the fur- ' lined coat, "what 'er your qualifications?" : "Oh," replied the youth, meditatively, "I don't know, quite; but," iie added quickly, "I can go long time without food." The manager saw that the youth had the root of the matter in him, and 'he was engaged.?Topical Times. SECOND CENTURY GCSPEt.. German Egyptologists Examining an I::- 1 terestlng Papyrus. An interesting papyrus is now bong examined at the Strasburg Library. It was purchased in a fragmentary condition from Cairo merchants early in I SOD and has already proved of the tirst importance. According to German Egyptologists and theological savants the fragments are pages of a missing Gospel which was rejected as tincanonical in the third century hut was widely accepted in the second. The papyrus dates from the fifth century, hut the character of the Greek words which are textuallv reproduced proves that the original mannscrim belongs to the second century. A feature is the very close connection apparently existing between it and the Login of Christ, the recovery of which three years ago caused a sensation. It is suggested that both are practically ?ni?/v mnnnenvint nnmoiv JMHt'JS wi nit" ^aiur uiuiiuf\?<|ji. .....n.,., "The Version the Gospel According to the Egyptians." As to the result of five years' work, another fine papyrus roll ;u the British Museum has just been published. ;t was written between 70 and SO A. D., and is a oolhction of folk legends current in Egypt at that tin: . The hero of the stories is Siosiris, on of Kliamnas. Priest of Memphis. Many of the passages suggest that it is an adaption of the story of Christ as told by His disciples, and if so, it is certainly the earliest record known, being less than twenty years after the introduction of Christianity into Egypt by St. Mark in C>7 A. D. Siosiris was a miraculous child. His mother's name was revealed to his father in a dream in which these words were spoken to him: "His name shall be Siosiris, for he shall do mnnj marvels in Egypt." He is described as being great, big and strong. He went to school, rivalled the scribe who taught and began to talk to the scribes in the House of Life. All the land wondered at him, saying: "Behold the hoy who reached twelve years of age and there was no scribe in Memphis who could equal him in reading, writing and magic." Siosiris takes his father to Hades, where the cycles of the Land of Death are described. Here. also, are many stories of Jewish-Christian origin; for example, the story of the rich man and Lazarus. The doctrine of future punishment, not found in Egyptian rituals, is here clearly stated. Later is an account of a contest between Siosiris and the magicians of Ethiopia, which is strangely reminiscent of the story of Moses. One magician says: "Cast my spell upon Egypt and cause the people to pass three days and nights without seeing light." Even the story of Moses and the bullrushes is given. One magician rebukes the other as follows: "Art thou not Hor, the son of Negress, whom I saved in the reeds of Ra?" WORDS OF WISDOM. Conduct is three-fourths of life. It takes only one to end a quarrel. Every noble work is at first impossible. The best hearts are always the bravest. t It matters not how a man dies, bat how he lives. Wealth is not his that has it, but his that enjoys it. ' Confidence's a plant of slow growth in an aged bosom. Increased means and increased leisure are the two civilizers of man. Economy is half the battle of life; it is not so hard to earn money as to spend it well. The reason most people are poor is because they spend their money Defore they get it. . There is nothing settled in manners, but the laws of behavior yield to the energy of the individual It is not what he has, nor even what he does, which expresses directly the worth of a man, but what he is. He who has a thousand friends has not one to spare, and he who has one enemy shall meet him ^everywhere. A feverish ambition to accumulate a fortune, which may be called our national distemper, Is incompatible with peace of mind. Deceit and falsehood, whatever conveniences they may for a time promise or produce, are in the sum of life, obstacles to happiness. A sentiment is a conviction which has been worked over in the heat of emotion, and then laid away in the mind to shape action when occasion calls and there is no time to think. Facts About Tired Eyes. t\? t n r>rrnn1np?it En??listl i/lt UUllUUf u Q physician, says there is a popular notion that it is much more dangerous to tire the eyes by use than it is to tire any other organ of the body. It is not necessarily injurious to the legs or the arms or the brain to become tired, for proper rest may restore all these to their normal condition. The same is true in regard to the eyes. Proofreaders, sewing women and mechanics, who use their eyes for a. long time upon near objects, must of necessity weary the muscles that adjust the eye to vision; but if the weariness is compensated for by rest at proi.exintervals there will be no harm done to the eyes, for they are so constructed that they can bear maximum fatigue as well as other parts of the body. Education would cease, all mechanical work would soon have an end if the eyes of our school children ando? certain kinds of workmen were never tired. Byes are never overworked, even if they feel very tired when the task is done, if their natural power and freshness return after the proper intervals of rest during the day and sleep at nighr. Gutier-Snipe. The word snipe, as expressive of contempt with an intimation of priggishness, or pettiness, especially impertinence, was very common in Philadelphia as far back as 1S35, as I can well recall my indignation when called by it. There can be 110 question that it came into use from the German schnipp or schnippisch?snappish, pert, saucy. "Gutter-snipe" began to ap pear in newspapers some years later. It would, however, be curious to ascertain whether the term does not exist in some form in old provincial English. "Gutter" was very naturally added from its association with mud. It was generally believed in New England, and I dare say elsewhere, that the snipe lived by sucking mud.? Charles Godfrey Eeland, in Notes and Queries. It's All Salmon. Japan gets dog salmon from Alaska: Chicago gets "cat" salmon from Eouis iana?and neither knows the differ New Orleans Times-Demo. *7^. I THE CHANGE OF LIFE I Is the most important period in & woman's existence. Owing to modern methods of living, not one woman in a thousand approaches this perfectly natural change without experiencing a train of very annoying and sometimes painful symptoms. Those dreadful hot Hashes, sending the blood surging to the heart until it seems ready to burst, and the faint feeling that follows, sometimes with chills, as if the heart were going to stop for good, are symptoms of a danj gerous, nervous trouble. Those hot i Hashes are just so many calls from nature for help. The nerves are cryMr.S. Jmonn Noble. | ing out for assistance. The cry should be heeded in time. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was prepared to meet the needs of woman's system at this trying period of her life. *lt builc^s up the weakened nervous - 1 J ^ 4-r\ nacQ 6vStem, ana euauics t? nuiuau w that grand change triumphantly. . "I was a very sick woman, caused by Change of Life. I suffered with hot flushes, and fainting spells. I was afraid to go on the street, my head and hack troubled me so. I was entirely cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."?Mrs. Jeiojib Noble, 5010 Keyset* St., Germantown, Pa. Russian Language in Trade. When every progressive young German is doing his utmost to acquire a thorough knowledge of some other language than his own it seems a waste of time for the Englishman to learn German with an idea to making money. Instead, he should learn Russian. Russian is not only the official language, but the actual medium of communication throughout the empire that extends from the Baltic to the Yellow Sea. Years ago on the Moscow exchange one might transact business as readily in German as in Russian; now the native merchants, even those who know German, require some special inducement to speak it and In the hurry of business turn aside impatiently from any one who addresses them in any other tongue than that they themselves habitually use. In the near future a knowledge of Russian will be worth more to the mere commercial than any two continental languages, for "Russia Is a new America." it To a young man who adds to a knowledge of Russian practical experience in any staple Industry, Russia offers a promising career. More theoretical knowledge is not enough; this Is taught, and well taught in the special universities; St. Petersburg alone turns out some hundreds of efficient "technologs" every year. Practical work in any of the textile, engineering, or the chemical industries Is not so readily obtainable in Russia, and a capable Englishman is sure of an engagement at a wage double that he TtrrtniH roroivo at home.?Pearson's Weekly. A Butefu! Story. When a young man, the late Marquis of Bute, while strolling through i wood in the neighborhood of Rothesay, was accosted by a little Cocknej tourist, who told him he was glad t< ' see a civilized human being nt last AI the natives he had met were, he re marked, like a pack of wild beasts "But maybe, cockalorum," continued the tourist, deceived by the patriclar youth's accent, "you're an Englishman like me?" "No, I'm a Bute man," replied the Marquis. "Then, where on earth were you tamed?" inquired the Cockney, in astonishment The Juvenile head of the house of Bute pu: of a very fierce expression, and; raising menacingly a cudgel he was carrying roared: "Who said I was tamed!" Tin alarmed Londoner uttered not anotbei word, but turned and ran for dear lif< in the direction of Rothesay.?Laudoi Chronicle. TO SECURE ICE IN WINTER. A novel way of securing Ice lfi winter is practiced by a New Jersey farmer. He had several vessels made of sheet iron, one foot cube. He fills the vessels with water and permits it to freeze. On mo>rately cold days he freezes a few inc*-*' of waCir at a time, adding more until the vessel is full of ice. The vessels are set in hot water for a moment or more and the cube of ice falls cu' when the vessel is turned upside down. The ice is packed in a smaly ice house, the blocks close together, and covered with sawdust. - --xl X-,1 XV ?X X>1A n/u,nl a it 19 C8UU1111CU iubi uac {jcv^fic ui England spend about $1,250,000 a day in furniture moving. Happiness cannot be bought, but one of the great hindrances to its attainment can be removed by Adams' Pepsin Tutti Frutti. Extra Dry. Bobbs-I liked that champagne at Nobbs' dinner. Dobbs?Was it dry? Bobbs-- Not as dry as I was. 1o Cure a Cold In One Day. ! Take I.axativr'Bromo Quinink Tablets. All druggists refund the money If It fails to care. I \V. Gkovb's signature is on each box. 'Sic. ?: Standing Up For Him. Swipesy de Newsboy-Say, d'you know dere | ain't no sich f oiler as Sam a CRus? Muggsy de Bootblack (of the Walfa' Misjion)?Uoy ain't hoy? I'll show ye! Biff! Best For the Bowels. No matter what ails you, headache to a cancer, yuu win ijitbi kbl wen umu juui j howels are put right. Cascabbts help nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, I produce easy natural movements, cost you tust 10 cents to start getting your health mole. Cascabets Candy CAthartlo, the I genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tab* let has C.C.C. stamped on it. Beware of Imitations. * One of Those Crednlous Chaps. "WhM kind of a man Is John Smith?" "t'h, l^'s the kind tha: thinks he can hold on i to his umbrella by having his namo eDgraved | on the handle." WBtBEBESSu FARMERS SHOULD TAKE REST. In the long run farmers would accomplish more work, make a gain in every way and live longer If they would take more rest Many farmers have the Idea that In order to accomplish a day's work It Is necessary to rise at 4 o'clock in the morning, end work as long as It is possible to see. This method Is wearing on man and beast, and experience has shown that no more is accomplished than lu twothirds that time when the body Is well rested. There are harvest seasons when it is necessary to put In long hours in order to save crops from possible rains, but In the long run farmers would accomplish more and feel better If they limited their field Work to nine or ten hours per day, Instead of sixteen hours, as some try to make It. With modem farm machinery twice as much work can be done In a day as could have been done 20 years ago, yet many are not satisfied and count a day's labor the space between daylight and dark. It is this everlasting grind and drudgery that Is driving many country hoys to the city. Good management will accomplish more than long hours of work without system or method.? Farm, Field and Fireside. ? j Gambling Resorts In Switzerland. ; One need not travel to Monte Carle , of other gambling resorts to be re; lieved of any superfluous cash, foi there are dozens of places lii Switzerland, known by the name of kursaals, where a "customer" will be accommodated. Although the play is limited by the law, highest stakes are winked at, and one's losses?for one invariably loses, with an 8 to 1 chance against him at the race-horse game?may easily ran into four figures during the evening. Some sensational facts have come tc light concerning thekursaal in Geneva, which is one of the best of its kind in Switzerland. The proprietor lately ,'ni'ormed a correspondent that he could not possibly afford to run his theatre and side shows and engage well know: artistes at a huge salary unless he could recoup himself from the taking* of the gaming tables.?London Dallj Mall. The Xow Cap Defender, Now being built, is confidently expected to bo the fastest sailing vessel ever built. Ibconstruction is being kept a secret, but it 1 whispered that it will easily hold the cup America is rapidly comiDg to the front. A good example of this is in that famous household remedy, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, which has defended health for half a century past. It holds the record for the cure oT dyspepsia, indigestion, constipation, nervouiaes4,bilioumo3sand la grippe. Of Coarse. He lived on the fat of'the land ? A natural thins, to be sure ? When the circumstance* you understind: lie cond .cted aa ami-fat cure. lite Itest Prescription for Chills end Fever Is a bottle of (inOVK's TaSTBI.kss t HIM.Tonic. It Is Simply iron and quinine in n tfttuelfsn toriu. No cure?no paw Price ?*:. The Me-ry-Go-Konn<l. The noises of the street I lovo?'tis natural, you se* When other men hive business that males business lor me. Millions Use Carter's Ink which is sure proof of Its excellent quality. Is made chemically accurate. There.ore the best. A Failure In Quantity. "Ma, I loueht ycu some candy down town." "That wr.s kind, Tommle. Where Is It?" "Well, ma. 1 was so ioug comlu' home on the cars that It dldu'; last till I got here." Statt: or Ohio. City or Toi?edo, i Lucas County- t * * Frank J. Cheney makes oAth that he is the I -enior partner of the firm of F. .1. Chunky <fe Co.. doinjc business in the City of Toledo. County And State aforesaid, and thatsaid firm will nay ihesnmofONE hundred DOLLARSfor each and every case of catarrh that cannot b?j cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my f???) presence, this 6th day of December, < sea l.V A. D. 1886. A. W. GleaSON. (/?.?') Xotary Public. Hall's Catairb rnre is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. V. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills aro the best Plao's Cure canuot be too highly spoken of as a cough cure.?j. w. O'Brien, 322 Third Ave., N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 8, 190Q. Pointing the Way Out. "What do you think Miss Popklns did when I stayed late last night?" "Whu?" "She got up and huu; an 'Exit' placard on the parlor door." Cures Asthma Do you know what it is to have the asthma? Or have you ever seen one suffer with it ? The hard struggle for air, the spasmodic breathing, the nights spent in the chair, all tell a story of terrible suffering. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral certainly cures asthma; also Krnnrhifuc hoarseness. weak lungs, whooping-cough, croup, winter coughs, night coughs, and hard colds. Tbree sizes: 25c., 50c., $1.00. ' ? If your druggist cannot supply yon. s?nd us one dollar and we will express a large bottle to you. all charges prepaid. Be >nre and jrfye us your nearest express office. Address, J. C. ATZB Co* Lowell. Mass. Crows to Bis Used in Warfare. According to a Berlin correspondent, a modest little society in Germany is apparently pinning its faith to the crow, in succession to the almost universally used pigeon, as a carrier of war news. The pigeon fly experiments which Germany carried out on British soil some time ago?sending huge crates of birds to Dover for the purpose?were not wholly successful, bad weather preventing many of the birds from reaching their quarters again, and many were shot by persons in search of dinner. It is claimed leiui truth that very few people would shoot crows for food, and that when liberated from a beleaguered place the enemy would be more likely to allow them to fly past unmolested and unsuspected than would be the case with pigeons. BHiSaSBZHafliS - .'.-.v.- >5 T-> iT n forerunner ' of I Insomnia I H ';|3 El nervous pros- mmm m am * I u ^reti?n' wh?1 Wrecks the E ? organism is mwm mmmmammm mmmam B strong enough to stand mm I up under the strain of m y | sleepless nights? It is * MW W"2M~" WW wS Jfc m g plain that nothing in the ? world can possibly take | the place of restful sleep, ? $ yet many try to eke out ||M Fft A "ft 3 an existence without this *##V HrO0IIO 9 1 sustaining power. Their b a j> j nerves are in such a state D CD &fl MP M of tension that sleep is KwmmWm W wli#l ft an impossibility, or at ? ? - mm a a a g best is a series of hideons SV/3KB8 HGOIttlm m dreams. It is not strange that physical and mental 2 weakness, amounting | soon to complete prostration, follows inability to sleep. There it so S let-up to the strain. Vital forces are drawn upon, confirmed invalidm ism results. a The recuperative power of natural sleep is wonderful.' Complete H physical and mental exhaustion gives place, after a few hours of g quiet slumber, to a full renewal of energy. The fatigue of body snd : mind disappears entirely while jS P -all the muscles are strong sad S mm mm m the nerves absolutely <*i?" a iUI*i 9 Sleep is the indication given I by Mature as a guide to human * plans to restore health. It * mvEmrnm. W %0m\l#fl shows that there are inherent K Ml% nlMAn _ ___ r in the wonderful human g FOR THE BLOOD AMD f organism powers of recuperaf l/JCOI/rc tion which must have opporg tunity to assert themselves. ?g LnaaMBfaiiHBMMnaawJ Based on this clear demon* _B 9 stration, Dr. Greene's Nervura BBHB9Q^K9ea9BBHBpnBavnBHB| blood and nerve remedy was li t \ rejfaa*w * l'lAfa constructed by Dr. Greene to Bs* ' ^T\ u *M'Mi few ii ft I helP Mature combat the ills H I Agl'iAamlih) VVil - Rl that attack men and women. II r* Wrf 'jT tl What ho amount of powerful IS rW r( HE! !' *1 druSs could possibly accomI m? it 81 I t / pHsh* caa be successfully and I #&& j itJffjm promptly effected by healthy >/, "Jfi | IIffB' Wood and nerves, the kind of IR.rl'ni^n ^lood which flows in strength* H3 jMj ? i i i Ki| euiujf uuuu w ouj ywtuwu |Ii^^liw|^yijBflBSrfi It- Ui| !| of the body, the condition of - 68 ?* li ^ ? Ml nervcs which permits awak0 Jtf !&??* ? il ned Nature to seize its op* ; ^JbI ' IVrajJ J| ^orttJnity to restore to perfect 1I^^FM?8^Fv1MSs OS? H;' Mrt FLORENCE TAYLOR, * 4 ' ^ CftgrtfamfPlace, Bridgeport, Comb., -, BflfcumS&S&Q lsSS8i I =ii? u "For four years I was troubled |W /,M /fljw p JftHHr iwfMltft B with nerroos debility and hysteria IB ']| JWHa I 1/ jvVV r ;{? gij H5*, I in a most aggravated farm. It caused IH| U traxfijlk j /Y/iV \l f J J5 {. *;? sleeplessness and mental depretirioe. ! \ ?igotfl U >lo{' i - and for months 1 was conhned to jot la \ 1BMw i r ;&fm?r ?& rtiprVjM'' hed. My constitution wasted and I : V/ SS \ 15?-R W tr 'flw ?? ^jsme 'totally lost my appetite I bad many 8*i \ WMy \A ff jcwj ulffii I . doctors^ but^they failed to glee me i S Bh \ VMP s ^ If Ik3? ~ - 35*? fl Greene's Nrnnm blood and nerve ?Hl \H\> to ifl tISi' J ? H* I remedy. I ws* in a terrible coodition ? H \ y'.J. ?50C ffj Mqn IHil when I began its use. and sisBoat * * hB\ 'Til >1 ftl/a ISW i iferj-IB immediately there was a wonderful .' .;'4g; SB \ . 1/ I h/iy/i InrSt;j tKTnj? change came over me. I regained H tank \ \ v * l\y/i UmJSSt 'J; [3n my appetite, the disziceas in my head EA VoJ- 1 tij/n iStsp *p w"! departed: it renewed my interest In . a flv/VVr?''%yh 1 W // ISC Lgflfl I life and made me feel, in fact like ' b M ili/f Iv ^ ff ?0?**^ petaon. ^After^Ukipj^ six 1 ffl lly irl w |j If j bottles did^for me whist hundreds of of \ til f Z it flw iSK H ^ f?*'ledlto^>'n ,,a,oero,,, phyaldsns S V ftjj H ||PP lj Or. Greene's HerI S^fan\ vJi i* IMf thT0* Oemedy I/ ' / I \ ffl Ml Ij Fdl ajmlnmrtlon of these matters >' Ha IT | \l\cv UlWMfdiHll glytn by Pr.(kwa>ssrn)SMl, nljh By lUC SriUCiO U1 iiilo ncpiciu vwuuufi f \ where wood Is unattainable and coal ^ so expensive, would maae a long story. v In the very first years hay was most Jr&zJR ' generally burned by the pioneers?hay ^ These twists were made about the' , . size of on ordinary stick of stove wood. To make them rapidly and of the HH^Fm proper tightness to burn?if made too bMK J/rf loose they flicker away, and if toe ;*?>'? j tight will not burn?is in Itself quite an art Any old-timet will take a handful of long hay, give it a couple of ||SgroMHH turns and a twist and throw out the twists with a rapidity that would astonish the beholder. Later came the To produce the best results i hay and straw burner or boilers, be- ^ ing, as the name indicates, large sheet- Vegetable or gTHffl, the iron boilers, the size of an ordinary fertilizer used must cOHtaifl 1 washing boiler, only about twice as i n. - *-? < deep. They were filled with hay or enough PotflSh* For partlC- . : r straw, tightly pressed in, and turned ulars see our pamphlets. We over the fireplace of the cook stove. , , f They gave a good heat, and. as they Sena tnem free. would burn a half hour without re- GERMAN KALI WORKS, filling, were somewhat of an improve- ' 93 Nassau St., New York. ment on the twist. ? mmmmm' Drought continued year after year, CfigC F IF ft TRIG KM T flBH however, until it became a ta^k to TatarsVtu even furnish the hay or straw, or other material, to burn in the boilers. Then |H|^HB||BH8uac55mScrauSm came the inventor, mothered by ne- oe- ttfcpMgr. cessity, with the original idea of burn'* - ' -U1-" .T1 lug "Duaaio CUips, laiwuov _ "cow chips," "prairie gasoline," "na- ^r?t&SS^t^nTOT*cra?'Jr aPSrrS tive coal," etc.?St. Paul Pioneer ^irTmniyi?Tin>fnit?Tnrindr^^^h<H--nffm v Press. ' 8EAR8, ROEBUCK A CO., Chtoa#* , The purest Chinese Is spoken at nBADCY NEW DISCOVERY; at** , ' $ Nanking, and is called "the language of the Mandarins." Free. Dr. h. h. gum's sohs. box a. juu?t*.?*. fB"^!T^ToN^^UI^OlJRSTOMAcI^n^BDlaN& {? fiunyadi Jdnos S 15 A NATURAL LAXATIVE MINERAL WATER. MbEbBl_ m ^ Endorsed and used by the most prominent physicians jyVHW^ / rt in the world as the bast and safest remedy for disP^*>rVv^WtT3? n \ / ordered stomach, biliousness, lirer troubles, gout and rheumatism. HliSiy ^ Cures Constipation! Take one-half glaaaful on arising in the morning and gjgattgMI you will feci the remarkable effects in half an hour. WBBm. V ASKSs^ I LOOKSLSyjfti anmk /\OIY "Hu?yadljano?.,,| Centre PaneL S@BBf 1 Sole Exporter, Firm ef Andres* 5?xleha?r, 130Paltoa5C,N.Y. ^TPfT^fc eTiTaTsH ll Tj 1TI iBlTTiH lUHiiHKiani'imKHfim ' : . - >; [y ^ "' ' N_ . I // j ]1V] STwSTItkKreff^ I I / ' ly^jW1NCHESTE J% FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS^Si |||1 j "MewRival," " Leader," ana "Repeater" i Insiitupoa baring them, taie no others and yon will jet the best ahells that money can fccy.' , i ALL DEALERS KEEP THEM. > NORTH DAKOTA'S FOEL CROP. Another Victim. Angellne (tenderly)?LIstBii, Clauds! The Big Yield of Corn Makes Heating and Youse are my affinity! I feel it in my Cooking an Easy Matter. very gouj! Farmers ih South Dakota have just- Claude?Hully Gee! Wofs AS completed gathering the biggest corn affinity? ! crop ever raised there. Owing to its Angeline ' (fervently)?An affinity. - - ? _ (a a low price ana tne great quantities ciande! O Ciauaei All B1UUIKJ tm grown, many are using it for fuel, w0't ^ got ten cents and la wfflr burning It in both cooking and heat-; { t Wow itj?Puck. lng stoves, especially those living a S long distance from market Hauling a We refund 10c for every paokageof Pro. I big load of corn 20 miles to market xax Fadelms Dtx that fails to give satiaand returning with a small jag of coal faction. Monroe Drug Co., Unionville, Mo. bought therewith makes the grower Sold aU d*u^ist8feel as though he was not paid for hit w mmn labor. Corn makes a very hot Are, Is su twm por?tr, S clean to handle, makes very little lit- Pm told. ter and ashes, all of which commends Bat pnt on heT fl<umoto 1111 tt it for use as a fuel, although it does seem a pity to see the mammoth yellow B ears put Into the stove. In fact, corn Ofm Bill I S COUfiCtt makes so intense a heat that it burns cure* a eoogh or cold at once. ^ out the stoves in a short time, which Is Conquer* croup, bronchitis. SkYftlgl . }& its only drawback as a fuel. A his- grippe consumption, J tory of the various kinds of fuel used " * 11 * >'? n?ao+n?i /utnnfw / fkrj /