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j? PROVE DOAN'f Those who doubt, who think becau< no good, who feel discouraged, th( of Doan's Kidney Pills. The worn Aching backs are cased. Ilip, back, and J loin pair.s overcome. Swelling of tho i limbs and dropsy signs vanish. They correct urine with brick dust sedi-;1 ment, high colored, excessive, pam in pass- 1 ing, dribbling, frequency, bed wetting. J: Dean's Kidney Pills dissolve and remove j; calculi and gravel. Relieve heart palpita- j tion, sleeplessness, headache, nervousness. ! Sai-esi, Ind., Feb. 5, 1903.?" I received the trial package of Doan's Kidney Pills and I must confess they did me wonderful j good. It seems strange to say that I had j tried several kinds of kidney medicines ! without doing me any good. I had back- ; ache, pain in my bladder and scalding j urine, and the sample package sent mo j stopped it all in a few days, and with the j package I am "how using from our drug j store I expect to bo cured permanently. It i is wonderful, but sure and certain the med- j icine does its work. I was in constant j misery until I commenced the use of j Doan's Kidney Pills.Chas. R. Cook, i P. 0. Box 90, Salem, Washington Co., 111. ; I Largest Elephant Traps. An order for two large elephant traps was recentiy received from South Africa by an English firm at the little town of Wednesfleld, which appears to be the home of the springtrap trade. The traps furnished on this order are claimed to be the largest ever made. They have jaws which open three feet square. Each jaw is supplied with notched teeth, and, in addition, three and a half-inch spikes are fixed in the jaws alternately on the two sides, and about four inches apart. The jaws themselves are of heavy bar iron, and the bait plate is about two feet square. The springs ,are very powerful, and require the pressure of 300 poounds to adjust them for setting. It is estimated that the striking power and grip of the jaws is likely to prove sufficient to j drive the spikes into 8nv part of j either elephant, rhinocerous, hippo- | potamus or other big game which may be caught in its jaws. , CARE OF DAIRY UTENSILS. Milk absorbs odor from the moment It is drawn from the cow until the time it is churned. Whenever milk reaches the temperature of 100 it is claimed to be in an active state of decomposition. But, while milk is ; easily affected by outside influences, j " the adherents to strict rules of clean liness will greatly aid the dairyman to avoid the changes that often occur. Cooling the milk renders the germs inactive, and prevents decomposition for a while, but it should not be overlooked that milk absorbs odors very rapidly when cool. Exposure to odors, gases or volatile matter of any kind should, therefore, be avoided, and every utensil used in the dairy should be scalded with boiling water and thoroughly scoured. THE PiNKHAM CURES iTTMCTHQ GREAT ATTESTIOJ A105G THMHG W0ME5. < Mrs. Frances Stafford^ of 243 E. i 114th St., N.Y. City, adds her tes- i timony to the hundreds of thou- I sands on Mrs. Pinkham's files, j When Lydia E. Pinkham's Reme- ! dies were first introduced skeptics 1 all over the country frowned upon their curative claims, but as year : after year has rolled by and the i little group of women who had been j cured by the new discovery has 1 since grown into a vast army of ] hundreds of thousands, doubts and 1 skepticisms have been swept away ; as by a mighty flood, until to-day ; the great good that Lydia E. 3 Pinkham's V egetable Compound j and her other medicines are doing ( among the women of America is : attracting the attention of many of , our leading scientists, physicians and thinking people. ( Merit alone could win such fame; wise, therefore, is the woman who 1 for a cure relies upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Implying a Distinction. "Mr. Hittit, you live* in a prohibition state, do you not?" "I reside in one, sir, but I live in a state of entire freedom as to?cer* * * ? * ?1,1 nlAopiirn " tainiy, i Will JUIU > U U. nuu i/icoouk. Malsby & Co. 41 South Forsjth St., Atlanta, 6a. Portable and Stationary Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY Complete line carried in stock for IMMEDIA TE shipment. Best Machinery, Lowest Prices and Best Terms. Write us for catalogue, prices, etc., before buying. I BUY BRAINS! A?r<-nts wanted for "The New York Evening News," the Dollar-A-Year Daily. Easy to get subscr.ptlons. I got 4.' myself In 15 minutes. Keep posted! Latest | markets, fashions, stories, politics, etc. Joseph Howard. Jr., the most famous Newspaper man in j America, writes exclusively for us in New York, "Howard's Colun n" alone is worth m ire than the J entire price of the paper. Only one dollar per year for u Metropolitan Daily Newspaper. Address WALTER SCOTT, Editor and Proprietor, New York Evening News, 1ST Broadway, New York. j DROPSY! fe W 10 0ArS' TfiEATMWT FREE* Lj jh) Have mado Dropsy and ita con- ! OMph y plication3 a specialty for twenty ; j year3with tho most wonderful i JT, t sncoess. Ea70 cured many thous- ' /Aw. and cases. 13. a. a. assars boss, Box b Atlanta, Ga. I Thompson's Eyo Walor j 5 FREE HELP. ;e other Kidney Remedies do them iy profit most by the Free Trial Irons results stamp Doan merit. South Bartonviule., III., Feb. 3, 1903.?"I received the trial package of Doan's Kidney's Fills and have bought several boxes of my druggist. They have done mo much.good. I "was hardly ablo to do any work until I began taking them; now I can work all day and my back docs not get the least bit tired." Bird Gray. FREE ?TO WAKE YOU A FRIEND. -Pais, (jllll Fosteh-JIilpurn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y., Please send r.io by mail, without charge, ; trial box Doan's Kidney l*il!s. j Post-office Stat? (Cut out coupon on dotted lines and mall to Foster-Slilburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.) Medical Advice Free ?Strictly Confidential. lesegrapn rcms. Every day that a telegraph operator works at three minutes before 11 there is only one man in the whole country from San Francisco to New York that is privileged to use his key. That man is the operator at Washington. In those three minutes every Key i3 open and all operators wait for three minutes' ticking which tells them the correct time. From that ticking everj telegraph company's clock is set. There are at leas: 20,00D operators at work. Taking three minutes fromevery one of them equals 60,000 minute3 idled away every day. It would take one man 125 years to do the listening of all these men for those few minutes. At the rate of $50 a month, and working for the required number of years, this man would receive $75,000. This is what the companies pay to their men a year for Just listening.?Boston Journal. CURES RHEUMATISM AND CATARRH. B.B.B. Cures Deep-Seateil Cases Especially ?To Prove It 11. 11. B. Sent Tree. These diseases, with aches and pains in bones, joints and back, agonizing pains in shoulder blades, hands, lingers, arms and legs crippled by rheumatism, lumbago, sciatica, or neuralgia; hawking, spitting, nose bleeding, ringing in the ears, sick stomach, deafness, noises in the head, bad teeth, thin hot blood, all run down feeling of catarrh are sure signs of an awful poisoned condition of the blood. Take Botanic Blood Balm (B.B.B.) Soon all aches and pains stop, the poison is destroyed and a real permanent cure is made of the worst rheumatism or foulest catarrh. Thousands of cases cured by taking B.B.B. It strengthens weak kidneys and improves digestion. Druggists, $1 per large bottle. Sample free by writing Blood Balm Co., 18 Mitchell St., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble ; and free medical advice sent in sealed letter. J The man ivho says he feels a friendly interest in our affairs is a good bit of a nuisance. SOIL MOISTURE. The long period of drought nearly jvery year have caused many of the ?xperiment stations to examine closey into the matter of soil moisture. The time has come, owing to forest Iestroetfoirr''tf^ soil moisture is the most importanTTEItf^:an be considered in relation to farmng. The plant derives its food supsly through the agency of the water vhich it drinks in or absorbs from the soil, with the aid of the membranous surfaces of the roots, with their root lairs, which later greatly increase ;he surface connection of the plant vith the water of the soil. Larg^-" luantities of water thus t?ifc?nrnby he plantsaj^jas^^tKeTout'' into the tir'^tH^ghihe leaves and the amount <?<eriormous, field crops consuming 200 :o 500 pounds of water for each pound dry matter the plants add to their )wn weight in growing. The roots af field crops are much longer, much more numerous, spread farther and penetrate into the soil to greater depths than many' persons realize. Where the upper portion of the earth Is often too dry for the plant to feed some crops send their deepest roots downward' from four to six feet or more, though the greater number of roots are in the upper 18 inches of soil. The richest portion of the soil and the part in which the plants prefer to feed, if sufficient moisture is present, is the lower half or two thirds of the furrow slices. With greater depth the plants feed with more difficulty. While the deepest roots procure some food their chief function is to bring- the water from Jeep in the earth when the supply near the surface is short. Clover sends its rooots deeper than corn or wheat, and alfalfa goes deeper than clover, but as the plant food is sought near the surface the objects should be to have the moisture there so as to aid ! the plants to procure soluble food.? Philadelphia Record. Colds ! " I had a terrible cold and could | hardly breathe.-1 then tried Ayer's | Cherry Pectoral, and it gave me im- I mediate relief." g W. C. Layton, Sidell, 111. | I How will your cougn g j be tonight? Worse, prob- 8 ably. For it's first a cold, j then a cough, then bron- ! chitis or pneumonia, and J at last consumption, i ! Coughs always tend j downward. Stop this downward tendency by i taking Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Three sizes: 25c., 50c.,'$1. All druggists. S Consult your doctor. If ho savs take it, g then do as ho 6ays. If ho tells you not fl t to take it. then don't take it. He knows. 9 BiWe It with him. We are willing. 3 ^ ^7 J. c. aYER co.. Lowell, Mass. | StTTtr n+O+C+C+C+O+O+O+C+O+G+O+C* I Colds Cured 4 LaGrlppe and Neuralgia Banished 9 BY THE ISE OF j IGAPUBINE \ 10, 25 and 50c. at Ding Stores. Genuine stamped C C C. Never sold in bnlk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell "something just as good." < OVERPETTED PETS. Dogs and Cats Spoiled by .Appetite For i Unnatural Tidbirs. ! Possibly the dog world might afford ! a better specimen of a living skeleton than the one in the kennel next to the door of a boarding place for animals, but it would take a day's journey to find him. "What makes him so thin?" was asked of the attendant. "He won't eat," was the reply. "Thai is, lie won't eat hospital food. He's been spoiled. Lots of dogs and cats that are brought here have been spoiled. Their owners think it a sign of high breeding to cultivate an appetite for a peculiar and unnatural diet. They train animals to eat all kinds of food that they would never touch of their own volition. This emaciated fellow has been taught to like fruit, lie is particularly fond of pears, bur in case he can't get them, peaches, apples and bananas are a fairly satisfactory substitute. Unfortunately, bis present ailment makes a fruit diet extremely dangerous, and since he is deprived of his favorite food lie is literally starving himself to death." The attendant passed on to a neighboring cage and poked his finger sportively into tile sine 01 a jiu-gi* gui.* cat that "meowed" plaintively in response to his cheery "Hello, there, Caesar." The cat had such a healthy, wholesome appearance that the visitor inquired what meat he was fed upon. "Humph!" said the attendant, "you've missed it there. He doesn't feed upon meat. He's a vegetarian. He likes onions better than anything else, unless it's melons. A good many cats like melons, and most of them are also partial to raw asparagus. The fact is, you might run through a list of all the dishes that find a place on any up-to-date menu and you will find that some of our patients have acquired a taste for them. This epicurean appetite may denote aristocratic tendencies cn the part of my boarders, but I don't approve of it. Most of these acquired tastes are a perversion of the natural animal appetite, and It is likely to prove harmful in the end. Tne trick is pretty expensive for us fellows that run cat-and-dog boarding houses, and I'd like to put a stop to it."?New York Times. Excessive Refuting. A Chicago nawspaper says that "among the contagious diseases of the ago excessive and sterile reading must bo enumerated." It takes the matter seriously, even solemnly. "The world," it avers, "has gone mad over books. They have taken the place of every other fetich." Hardly as bad as that, we think; but there is a good deal of truth in the averment. Because the fetich worshiper is found among men whose boast is that they never read a book, and there are even those who make a fetich out of that peculiarity. However, it may be doubtful if a large share of the reading of the day Is of real benefit to the reader. Much of i- -31 what passes tor reading is hoe rcuumg, it is merely vacuous glancing along the page. We see people take up a magazine, for example, a magazine filled with reading of Interest and worth, and we see them skim, skim, skim; here a stop at the title of an article, there a pause at a picture, now and then a slowing up at a page. The magazine is put down with the remark that it is strange how easily such a "bulky pamphlet-can be read so quickly. Books go in something the same way? Here is the book skimmers' library, with its patrons trying to keep up with its output of two, three, five, n dozen books in a week, and calling the race with the printers cultivation of their minds. Heading like, that is iiitrrniiin itr thr^pi^fififii ijn Finn tal stupg?i?*ifcifnt the end. There ""patrons of the free public library and of the circulating libraries in this city who read with the same excited assiduity that the victim of alcoholic habits follows his morning and noon and evening drains? and the habit comes to about the same thing in the end. They pour novel after novel into what passes for their brains, and get out of the process the sterilization of whatever mind they do have. This is one phase of the reading habit, and a very palpable phase; fortunately, it is not the only one. ISew JtJeclioru sranaaru. America From a Shopper's Viewpoint. Mrs. M. E. Leicester Addis, an English "woman, commends the following American articles in her paper on "English Wives and American Housekeeping" in Lippincott: "I can widely proclaim that all the graniteware utensils in my kitchen (not crockery, which is very cheap iD England) and many conveniences for cooking were specially chosen in America; and that our bath-towels, pillow and bolster-slips, and sheets, also bought new In the States, have the commendation of mv laundress because 'they dr.Vj so quickly and are easily handled.' I would also buy there all my cotton goods, as cheaper in style and quality, also blouses, and all sorts of cotton or silk clothing where tit, cut, and style are of value. I should also choose to bargain there for variety and style in silverware and glass, although I could not claim that they cost less. I even sent to America for a box of Christmas presents last year, and though the carriage cost me two dollars and fifty cents I felt truly compensated in the pleasure expressed is to beauty and novelty." The Ruling Passion. A good woman was dying; a woman who had been a true wife and a good mother; a woman with but one weakness?a love for gossip. Although her time on earth was short she was critically watching the attending physician and nurse, as they talked in subdued whispers of the result which their united skill had been powerless to avert. In response to the summons of the dying woman her husband approached her and bent low to catch the words which he expected to be words of love. ^v,o. +nvr?o/i bor pvps from which AgUJU Slit; iuiuvu m.. v,, , tlie light was fast fading, upon the doctor and the nurse, as she said faintly: "Do you suppose they are engaged?" These words were her last.?New York Times. One of the Sign*. The member of Congress was a new one in Washington. After he had finished his dinner at the restaurant the waiter brought him pie for dessert, and there was a knife with it. The new member looked at the pie and at the knife. "Major," he said to his companion, "do you think that waiter suspects I am a Western Congressman?" "Hardly. How should he know anything about it? You were never in here before, were you?" "No." "Then how in thunder does he know who you are?" "I don't know. But if he doesn't, what did he bring that knife with the pie for?"?New York Times. - 4^ ' an?>? II ' ??? ' ?mmmmirn* Valuable Testimony. Good roads reduce the wear and tear on horses, harness and vehicles, according to the testimonjr that follows: General Stone?One farmer, when I asked him how he was getting 011 paying his taxes for new roads, replied: "I save more 011 repairs on my wagons and harness than the whole amount of my tax on good roads." Charles L. Andrews, Moorestown, N. J.?The stone roads have every advantage over the dirt roads. They are much easier on horses. They are a saving of iibrsetiesb, saving of time, and, as "time is money," consequently a saving of money. Charles S. Athetson, Magnolia, N. J. ?I am part owner and operate a farm of two hundred acres near the line of the recently completed "White Horse" tell'ord road. I consider this road one of the greatest public benefits ever conferred upon the people of this locality. At a distance of eight miles it brings us nearly an hour nearer mari.-?* t?- nnoWfto tic tn disnense with one team. Our teams are in better condition and require less feed and attention in doing the same amount of carting. We make a daily saving of one cent a horse per mile. Thoaias J. Beans, Moorestown, N. J. ?When a farmer living alongside a stone road sends out his team with a lead they do not seem to pull the load; it just rolls along, and they accompany it. William Jones, Mcdford, N. J.?I live fifteen miles from Philadelphia, and a- great feature of my business is the growing of truck for that market. At present I am five miles from a stone road, and I am obliged to put four horses to my truck wagon and send two men with it until they reach the stone road; then the leading team is taken off and one man brings it back home, and the other settles back in his gig top and goes to sleep, as there is no danger of a loaded team leaving the stone road-bed until city pavements are reached. Treatment of Roads With Gas Tar. While roads in the United States have been treated with crude oil to lay the dust and render them compact, in Italy the same end has been attained by using gas tar, and the experiments which have been made seem to be quite successful. M. G. Rimini, the district engineer at Lugo, near Ravenna, has published an account of the application of gas tar to some sections of the public road in that locality. He uses it in two different places on the provincial route near Lugo, where the circulation is very active. The first portion treated measures forty feet long and ten feet wide and the second 750 feet long and thirteen feet wide. In spite of the prolonged dryness the results of tills treatment have exceeded the expectations, and the surface of the road has become very hard and compact, so that it is difficult to pierce it. There is no dust and the rainwater flftws off without penetrating, and thus there Is no mud formed. The color of the soil * * 1- - J T* oecomes tnat or a very uaru. sauu. u !s not necessary to treat the whole surface of the road, hut. only a band in the middle about twelve feet wide. As to the cost of the treatment it is estimated at only $96 per mile. M. Kimini is making observations of the two sections thus treated it on a larger s?al&f ' A Government Road For Light Vehlclie. An enthusiastic automobilist has recently revived a proposition which was advocated a century ago, but has lain dormant for many years. It is for a Government road from New York to Chicago, and possibly to the Pacific. This road is to be suitable for.bicycles, automobiles and light carriages. Asphalt is spoken of as the most suitable pavement for the rubber-tired vehicles. The main road would be through the most thickly settled sections, with branch roads leading to Important points in the neighborhood of the route. The proposition at first seems, says an exchange, great and the cost unsurmountable, but when it is considered what the combined efforts of the various cities benefited could do, the proposition -seems more feasible. The great work which has been accomplished by the bicycle riders of this ronntrv for the improvement of the highways is certainly wonderful, and shows what is possible when the energies of a large number are concentrated toward the same end. Such an enterprise would not encroach upon the business of any company, since its purpose would, be entirely identified with the new industry. Bnlldinc a National niglirray. In seeking to raise money and secure Influence to construct a National highway, the American Automobile Association is undertaking a work which merits the support of every sportsman in the country. That all may join iu the effort it is proposed by the association to reduce its dues to $1, and to open its ranks to all those qualified to join, and to forthwith institute a campaign for the purpose of supporting the bill which will be introduced in Congress this session for the establishment of a trans-continental highway, starting at Boslou and reaching Chicago by the lake cities, and San Francisco by the old overland route through Utah. Here is an object that docs not restrict or confine Its value to automobilists. It appalls to practically every man, for those Vho do not own a horse, a bicycle or an automobile, arc at least concerned with the industrial advantages that such an undertaking would Dring. There is no movement making in the United Stales of more value, or one more needed, than that for road improvement. Scler?$e ana Eating* We are ever willing to eat what we should, providing it is palatable, but 110 amount of science will overcome the idiosyncrasies of taste. Therefore it is delightful to know that many of the. things we crav.-e are just the things we need. The scientists tell us that tea and coffee are not only harmless, hut helpful, if we don't begin to drink them until wc are thirty, and if we don't pay less than thirty cents a pound. Coffee has recently escaped from the latter ban, for a ve?y good brand may now be bought for less than twenty-five cents. Another important point to remember is that if we would live long and prosper neither ccff'ec nor tea should be drunk unless the grounds are removed within at least ten minutes after making. Coffee, if boiled at ail, should be boiled quickly, but tea should never boiled. A certain amount of sugar is necessary to keep the hujn&a system amiable. . .... .r HIS FALL. He entered the car with an air distingue, From his shimmering boots to his glittering tile In make-up and manner so truly au fait? He was openly scanned as a Btudy in style. With calmness found only in men ol the world. He stood while he tendered his fare with fine grace, Then the car gave a lurch and, alas! he was hurled Over seventeen persons and fell on Lis face. ? New York Times. Cocking by Cold. "Cooking meat by cold instead of by heat," said a wholesale butcher uptown, "Is the odd experiment that my firm has recently been trying. I suppose you are aware that the effect of Intense cold is much like that of fire. You know that, if your finger is frozen the injured tissues take on precisely the same condition that they would if tho finger had been roasted. Well, that is the basis we went to work on, our motive being the Idea that with our ice-making plant and all it would be cheaper, in our canning department, to freeze our meat than to cook it. So far, in our experiments, we have had good success. We have submitted the meat to a temperature of minus 33 degrees Fahrenheit, and then have packed it in cans. It has shown all the appearance of halfcooked meat; it has been impossible to tell the frozen and the half-cooked brands apart. So far, too, it has kept well. But whether It will keep as well and as long as the meat treated with fire we do not yet know, as our experiments have not continued a sufficient length of time. We will save about an eighth of a cent a pound on tinned meats if we succeed in substituting cold heat in their preparation."?Philadelphia Record. Soap and Civilization in Guam. The Inhabitants of Guam are being rapfdly civilized and may soon claim admission as an American State into our glorious Union. The evidence? In the early part of last year somebody shipped $500 wortn of soap to the island as a speculation. The gentle Guamites were so delighted that they immediately called for more, and in October C.000 pounds were shipped. That will probably be the monthly order from the island. When a Guam lady takes to soap the level of civilization is raised the world over. She is no longer content with the elaborate costume of nose-ring, bracelet and garter. She wants the comforts and luxuries of New York. Beginning jrith soap she will soon aspire to the fashionable. And, of course, the Guam gentleman will do likewise in his man fashion. Soap and civilization?the American occupation has borne fruit ?St. Louis Post-Dispatch. I ?yrt aljhfrfesst ?? J{ I J It is pure, j It is gentle. ^ I It is pleasant. & It is efficacious. I p i It is not expensive | I | It is good for chile I ;vi :j]i It is excellent for %!:: It is convenient fo H II It is perfectly safe * H % I It is used by milli i 11 - $ ' I It stands highest, g [ ' If you use it you 1 Ck 1 produces. I 1 $ r m The Sensation. "Doesn't it give you a terrible feeling when you run over a man?" they asked him. "Ye9, if he's a large man," replied the automobilist. "It gives me a pretty rought jolt sometimes." There are, In the United States, according to the last census 126 women plumbers, 45 women plasterers, 167 women bricklayers and stonemasons, 241 women paper hangers, 1,759 women painters and glaziers and 645 women carpenters and joiners. There Is more Catarrh In this section of the oountry than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors {>ronounced it a local disease and prescribed ocol remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in curaoie, ocieuce utu pju>cu vomnu ?,v ? constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney <fc Co., Toledo, 0., Is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken Interna lly in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts dlreotly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. An explorer doesn't have to be a sorcerer in order to discover the source of a river, FITS permanently cured.No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great KerveRestorer. $2 trial bottleand treatise free Dr. B.H. Kline, Ltd., S31 Arch St., Phlla.,Pa. A ring on the finger is worth two on the telephone. Mrs. Wlnslow's SoothingSyrup for children teething.softonthe gums, reduoes inflamma tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. abottle Sonv: men work their way up in the world by working other people. I do not believe Plso's Cure for Consumpiionhas an equal for coughs and colds?John F. Boyeb, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1900. It doesn't take much argument to convince a girl that she is pretty. No muss or failures made with PuTNAif Fadeless Dyes. It isn't every hero who has sense enough to ?tay up on his pedestal. ^VVV>A^NA^W*/VV\^VVVVVVVVVVVVVVWWV If Peruna is re 1 Congress, by J Majors, Captair <1 Clergymen, mi il tions, and thorn i| I the humbler wi USTtmoh^ wi^ p. of Fids femilylaxativfr % Iren. ladies. r business men. under all circumstances, ons of families the world over, as a laxative, with physicians, lave the best laxative the world STABLE AND TIE-UP. Stables should be always dry, and tills condition you cannot secure with j a basement stable, with a wall forming any part of the side of the stable. The question of stable construction and ventilation is one of the greatest importance. In stable arrangements we want some kind of tie that will keep the cow comfortable, and never the rigid stanchion, and have the cows adjusted with reference to the drop according to their length. We in our stables accomplish this by having the platform ahead of the drop, eighteen inches wider at one end than at the other.? F. H. Converse, in The Cultivator. Samples Mailed Free. A Trial Package of Dr. Blosser's Catarrh Cure Will Be Sent Free to Any Sufferer From Catarrh. To demonstrate the merits of his remedy, Dr. Blosser offers to mail, free of charge, to any one suffering from Catarrh, a three days' trial package of this valuable medicine. If the trial package does not convince you of its curative properties, you will have been at no expense; if it benefits you, you will gladly order a month's treatment at $1.00. It is a harmless, pleasant, vegetable compound, which is smoked in a pipe, the medicated smoke, being inhaled, reaches directly the mucous membranes lining the head, nose, throat and lungs, heals the ulcerated parts, effecting a radical and permanent cure. Mr. Joseph Chabot, Kajcee, Wyo? writes: "I am free from catarrh, owing to your wonderful remfdy." Annie E. Young, Camden, N. J., writes: "Am completely cured of cjtarrh after using your medicine." A'rs. E. M. Howd, Water Valley, Miss., writes: "Smoking your remedy las entirely cured me." If you wish to try the remedy and get full particulars, tcstinonials, etc., write to Dr. Blosser Compny, 32 Walton St., Atlanta, Ga. - ' }v* '' ' - \ 4 J L _ commended by fit Governors, Cons is, Admirals,Em in iny Hospitals and sands upon thousa ilks of life. irokee Remedy of Sweet C ighs, Colds, L-aGrippe f0'r $>? / BecdM Its Tcompotient partrare&ilrT^hG! It acts gently without unpleasa: It is wholly free from'objection; It contains the laxative principl It contains the carminative prin It contains wholesome aromati< agreeable and refreshing to tl All are pure. All are delicately blended. ? All are skillfully and scientifica ? , Its value is due to our method of the orginality and simplicity < To get its beneficial effects?bt Manufactured (aliforKia pfi San Frnncisco, Lovisville, Ky. FOB SALE BY ALL LEADim RUNNING FOR COVER. THE ORIGINAL /W5/OILED CLOTHING / yf//WtX / (?Aeew?i>a*?rn.LOw) will cover you /4kt. and keep you dry in ' V/It*255#- OK SALE EVERYWWte. r* TAXI KO SOMTITUTIS. AJ.TOWR CO,M3TOK,MAS3l.USJL 102 , TDWift CANADIAN COkliaJW. T030NT0, (ANIBROMO-* SELTZER CURES ALL Headaches 10 CENTS - - EVERYWHERE _ eS25 Every Day Can bo ooafly made with cur Well Augers & Drills One man and on? bono B^^iSsgSSfS&S^ Worroated tko Beat ? EaHbl Kanr ofonrcuatomeramakefrqmi#9toe40ed?^ Book and Circular? x&BS. Addreoa, *TT_ LOOMIS MACHINE CO., TIFFIM, OHia I PAY SPOT CASH FOB MILbouhty LAND WARRANTS issued to soldiers of anr -war. Also Soldiers' Additional Homestead Rights. Write at once. FRANK H. REGER, P.O.Box 148, Denver, Colo. ^ i iri rii iimirrgr ? .... . . i - . tM - jJk members of I:p|jj ;u/s, Generals, I ent Physicians, I public instiium I f nds of those in lj |l| <^v^xz^x/x/^'^X'N^zNzxy>yXi#>yxzxz>z>/Nz>^zs/x/\/x/x^v>yxAyx^^N^ ium and Mullein gSJdy0?^ il at and Long Troubles. Thoroughly tested jars. All Druggists. 2<3c, 60o and 91*00* ? " . j IjV ( V v. i?3 ible substances. . Jj | Les ot plants. niun jm ciples of plants. " tEj 2 liquids which are !' || lly compounded. |J manufacture and to 1 ' 1 of the combination. J jj! || ty the genuine. 5yr# ([ jl New York, N. Y. 1 |l|^ ? DRUGGISTS, V Eli -^8 A "White Star" Buirmf CPCP ? Hl?l? ^ I On July 4tli we will rive, Fbf.e, one of our " WHITE 8TAR" Top Buggies to the person composing the greatest number of English words from letters contained In the sentence: * . ^ "WATCH THE WHITE STAR BUfi6Y.w Anyone who will devote an hour each day to this pleasant study can win the buggy. No conditions to oomply with except make up the list of words. If this offer Is not understood, any buggy v-v dealer In your town who has the agency fot the "WHITS STAR" Buggy will gtve you a copy of the rules. When you have made out your list of words give them to our ageut In your town, who will send them to us. On July 4th we will notify every contestant who the winner Is and number of words that won the "WHITE STAR" Buggy. . t jyil yoa write us. enclose postage for reply. ATLANTA BUSBY CO., Atlanta, Seorili. S3 IN NEnPHIS, TRNN., Will aWM be glad to know you. Send lOcts and # yani 10 names of your Flower-lorinjr * friends^and receive by return mau ^ ASPARAGUS H SPRENGERil FERN | QK|3 1 shall be pleased to hear from jcm, MISS CALLIE WATSON, The Southern Woman Florist, MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE. twelve the name of this paper when writing to advertisers?(At. ?, '03) Tbwork?(i#|A0 nt(hlMlileMMa?taMA| A h Igb grsdt* IU V standard guana Ifl visible Typewriter, ?rui??ay work,w*k jh III free coarse on stenography '<* "? w I w ehla?, caa-ba oprraud by aayoM te a frw <Un, IM>I|< fc? the bh of doctors, tejebers ami business mem* i For Ctmlifi kMrm Boom 912, ACME TYPEWRITER CO., 104 Fallon 8k, Krw Tarfc.