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> - - . - _ - f ^. * CURE BLOOD POISON, CANCER. Aching Bones, Shifting Pains, Itching Skin, Pluaples, Bating Sores, Etc. If you have Pimples or Offensive Erup- j tions, Splotches, or Copper-Colored Eruptions, or rash on the skin, Festering Swellings, Glands Swollen, Ulcers on any part of the body, old Sores, Boils, Carbuncles, Pains and Aches ia Bones or Joints, Hair or Eyebrows falling out, persistent Sore Mouth, Gums or Throat, then you have Blood Poison. Take Botanic Blood Balm (B.B.B.) Soon all Sores, Pimples and Erup- j tions will heal perfectly. Achea and Pains cease, Swellings subside and a perfect, never to return cure made. B.B.B. cures Cancers of all kinds, Suppurating Swellings, Eating Sores, Ugly Ulcers, after all else fails, healing the sores perfectly. If j you have a persistent pimple, wart, swollen glands, shooting, 6tinging pains, take Blood Balm and they will disappear before they j develop fftto Cancer. Druggists, $1 per \ larse fettle, including complete directions \ ~ 35 for home cure. Sample free by writing j Blood Bal\i Co., 55 Balm Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical i advice^ent in -sealed letter. Porcelain gives employment to ; 20,000 persons in Japan. j \Bad Coughs ) ? "I had a bad cough for six ? weeks and could find no relief 1| until I tried Ayer's Cherry Pecto- . g ral< Onfy one-fourth of the bottle p cured me." / . . : | L. Hawn, Newington, Ont. | Neglected colds always 2 lead to something serious. I They, run into chronic ? bronchitis, pneumonia, | asthma, or consumption. 3 Don't wait, but take g ? Ayer's Cherry Pectoral 8 I just as soon as your cough 1 1 Hfegins. A few doses will 8 vtah An @ : V CU1C yuu UlCU. M ft Three sixes: 25c.. 5?c., SI. All drajxtsti, g L Consult your doctor. If be says take it, I Ak then do u he says. If be tella you not 1^^? to take it. then don't take it. Ho knows. H ' Leave H with him. We are willing. 2 U?vJ#X/V Vr Rtllroad Fare Paid 500 FBS? Courses Offered. ! Botrd st Cost* V^rlto Ouick G?OHGiA*ALAEAMA BUSlif ESS COLLEGE. Kacofl,Ga. ^ I s i i _ ^ I cartridges and shot shells { S are made in the largest and f m 5 best equipped ammunition I ? | faptory in the world. | r I AMMUNITION f W. 8 of CJ. M. C. make is now [ - l r \ accepiea oy snoo&era as y 8 "'the worlds standard" for I I It shoots areil ?n any gun. * | p Tour dealer sells it. | ^ Th ?Union M ? t? 11 i ? ^ ^ CAPUDiNEr CURES ALL HEAPACffiS cSacX on br*tn orb** 10c,Sc*cd50c^^>tyei (Liquid.; \ ? =======^^"* Tr-rvcVDTXm TRACK. XVOJC#A - "Won't yon bay? another biscnit? b - ??ked the hostess. ~ ,SOi {hank you," she replied; "real ?s x aon,?t kxio-w now many I havi F* "j ?-iten already*" ...... Said little Robbie, eagerly pT ,. "' "you've ate seven. I've been coum Ing."?Town and Country. fe. ANOTHER ODD THING. "And there is another strange thin I have observed," remarked the age I ' philosopher, stroking his long wbt1 -Jjeard. -th0 f "There is?" askt>-^ interest* " listener. "What is it?" "That the coming man Is alwa; one who has got there."?Judge. TRANSLATED. "I heard her boasting that her dl |U " ner party -was a success from the t ginning, and ended with the greate k 'eclaw' What's eclaw anyway?" p_ ?-loaert, < Philad elphiaT Wifd-? dreamed last night that ! was In ? store that was Just full o: the loveliest bonnets, and? Husbahd (hastily)?But that wai , only a dream, my dear. Wife?knew It was before I wok< up, because you brought me one.? Phipadelphia Press. A VOICE FROM THE PULPIT. Rev. Jacob D. Van Doren, of 57 Sixth street. Fond Du Lac, Wis., Presbyterian clergyman, says: "I had attacks of kidney disorK ^ ~ Jgj ders which kept me in the house for days at a iTTsJfnlf time? unable to do any fr.jraBgMMM thing. What I suffered can hardly be told. 4?Complications set in, ; j the particulars of i ubw-h which i wui do pieasea to give in a personal ;g^T?jljgfe interview to any one who requires information This 1 can c011" seientiously say, Doan's Kidney Pills caused a ^ general improvement in my health. They brought great relief by lessening the pain and correcting the action of the kidney secretions." Doan's Kluney Pills for sale by all dealers. Price, 50 cents, Foster-Milbum Co., Buffalo, N. TL - _ MOTHER'S WJ A circle pure and golden Upon my mother's hand, Iler wedding ring is worn and thin? A plain and simple band. Simple and plain as virtue, For years it has withstood The burden and the moil, as life Bears out her years or good. O jnav the future A woman's help: To wear so long ar That simple gold ?Aloysius Coil, in G rcOTUOTUOTUOTOTUOTOTtf U 2 A tr $ 2 . II A-L Pr 1 fi-^L ' ,L ? SaaaQaaaaaaaaaaQaaafl J*OiS. BS. DELMAR'S voice broke * TTTT k abruptly in the middle of a 2 M 2 sentence, for the play seemed suddenly transformed from jest to earnest and every word of it rose and struck singly at lier heart. The curtain had risen on the second act when a couple passed her, a woman whose flashing, sumptuous beauty attracted the eye irresistibly, in company with the man whom she had loved and honored for five years. So it was true what they said'of him, so true that he flaunted his infatuation openly, in flagrant disregard of the world'* opinion. She sat very still, trying to stifle the furious beating of her heart, which threatened to rise up and choke her. Then Mrs. Downing leaned toward her and said sweetly: "Isn't that Mr. Delmar? He is lucky to be able to get off when he likes. Few men can indulge in matinees. My poor Fred never has an hour of daylight to himself." "Yes, Ned is rather fortunate," answered Mrs. Delmar in a ghastly voice. "He eniovs the leisure, too." "So it seems. Isn't that girl magnificent? You know her, cf course?" At that instant some malevolent fate prompted Mr. Delmar to turn and g.ance over the audience,, which consisted largely of handsomely gowned women, with a few very young men scattered here and there, like sombre moths among a flock of gayly winged butterflies. He met his wife's gaze direct with a look of cool surprise, then bowed gravely and immediately resumed his conversation with the girl beside him, at whose beautiful face many glasses were leveled. Billy Norman, who had strayed in five minutes before the curtain rose on the second act, took in the situation in one comprehensive glance; then he changed his seat to the vacant one beside Mrs. Delmar. "Who is the girl?" Mrs. Downing asked eagerly, j "Isn't* she magnificent!" Billy exclaimed warmly, unconsciously repeating Mrs. Downing's previous remark which bad roused him to action. "She is as clever as she looks, too, isn't she, Mrs. Delmar? But for all thatj sh? couldn't have hit it off as great if it hadn't been for Ned. He put himself * ? ? ?* out a lot to get iicrtue part iuai 91CU vv\4 her upward, all because be happened to know her father. Just like Delfaar. He always finds time and means to boost some other fellotf along. That is a mighty rare trait nowadays," he sighed. "You are a.model wife to permit that ' sort of thing, Mrs. Delmar," said Mrs. Downing, with a hint of iucrednlity. "It Isn't every wife who would be willing to allow her -husband ?to exploit the affairs of such an extraordinarily lovely woman." v ^ "That goes toprovehow enttrelyshe knows her husband,*' said Billy airily. "By the way, Ned brought Miss Eldridge here to-day for the express purpose of introducing her to the English ' playwright who wants to find a star for his new play. Ned happens to have some sort of a pull with the Englishman. When I met Miss Eldridge at your house the other evening/Mrs. Delmar," he went on jauntily, entirely satisfied, according to his lights, in lying to save a friend from the venom of slanderous tongues, "she told me that Burke wouldn't have taken her if it hadnt been for Ned. Both she and her - * * M fiance swear uy i^euum. Mrs. Delmar heard not a word of the play after that Billy filled the cons>versational pauses with airy remarks ^^treqnired no answer, and which satishC^?rs i>ywking's Insistent curiosity conc?>^Qing the beautiful actress in whom Edward Delm&r had evincet a such a substantial interest. "I am going home with you. if ' ; i may," said Billy, as he handed Mrs t- Delmar into her cab and seated him self beside her. "We will drive throug] : the park, wb?jre thatwecP-^k.,. v - uon't feel equal to talking, Billy, ((? | *!ue answered miserably. "For 110 pai j" ticular reason I am dreadfully tired. le suppose I take too little exercise." "Then don't say a word, but liste ;d to me, will you? I want to talk aboi Ned. Please don't feel as though yo pa ought to resent my attitude,'' be adde gently, "for it isn't the least bit dii loyal to bim. I simply waut to hel you both." "Billy, you can't. No one can. Yo are too young to understand, dea t boy." "Yes, I'm young," he admitted cheei fully, "but Fve managed to pack ai 0 awful lot of living into my twenty-si: 5* yeai'?."' Out West fife is different, yoi " wi0^ Things^ :fcPPen so thick tha Vnu've got t*- keep well braced to mee ^^atever romes, and in that way yoi 1 learlri to keep a stiff front. It is lik< f stagg&g. when you're in good trin y?h can knock out a man twice youi i stTength, but if you're in poor shape You're certain to go down. Both yoi i and Ned are out of good running. Yoi . Jack vitality." "I lack evervthine that makes lift worth while, she exclaimed bitterly. "What I should like to know is this: j Are you willing to do the one thing , | that will pull Ned out of the nightmare , | state he's in?" "Billy, that very question shows that | you don't understand in the least." "Oh," said Billy in a relieved voice, : "if yoif feel that way you'll win all right. I know that Ned has let himself ! go off inexcusably, but I am very sure he is still worth saving at a big cost, j I have watche.1 you both pretty closely, and know just how the case stands, i Ned is unbearably tired of the hollow life he's leading, for, truthfully speaking, it isn't worth that," with a crisp snap of his brown fingers. "That man is deathly sick of soft living; tired of the eternal sameness of the gilded pri son you've forced him into. His great, rough, splendid strength is petrifying j for the want of use. You think, be! cause of certain lapses of propriety or ! morals, or whatever you may call j Ned's indiscretions, that you are the ' injured one. whereas you are really to blame for the whole misfortune. You a big, splendid fellow out of his ADDING RING. \ 'Tis worn by toil and trouble ] And fingers clasped to pray, Till now 'tis but a golden thread? Her wedding ring to-day. s Pure as the troth it plighted, It shall not break or part, But wear as noble love should wear, ! True gold unto the heart. give me ing hand id faithfully en band! iood Housekeeping. TOTOTOTOU UOTOTCTOTtJ TT XS U jod-tids * I r; ======== tr ? rightful sphere of healthy, wholesome work and. loaded him in your narrow, stilted society life, where he couldn't stretch hand or foot at will, and fed him on cloying sweets till his whole nature revolved and became mawkish?" "Is it kind or just to taunt me with his weakness?" she asked chokingly.. "Truth is sometimes discourteous and even cruel, but always just Is your love for Ned big enough to sacrifice your personal inclinations and instincts? Can you go home to-night and greet him as a comrade?as his best friend, and listen to his confession without one word or look of reproach? If so, give him back his frbedom. Send him away for a year, or two, or live, years, to win back his moral health and strength and power. He'll do it if you start him right Is he worth, say, five years of separation and waiting?" Mrs. Delmar's hand closed spasmodically over Billy's. "Don't uphold any falsa hopes," she said huskily. "It is too late-^the poison has gone too deep . to be remedied. While he loves that woman?" "Loves her!" Billy repeated in wholesome scorn. "Don't you see that she stands to him only for his one diversion from the deadly monotony with which society through you has cursed his existence? She interests and sways him by her amazing vitality. She is to him what a spar is to a drowning man. Give him a better craft and let him fight his way out of deep water. Will j. yon-take my advice?" "Billy, God is my witness that 1 | would do anything to save him from j rum. jtsiu i leci so neipiess, so uewn-1 | dered." "I know. Everything looks out of focus. Try my way. Make him tell you everything, and try' to listen as justly as if every word did not strike at your own heart. Then send liim away west, south, north, anywhere that he can work out his own salvation." >. "I will, Billy, God helping me." "You'll never regret it, never." "What if he shouldn't come home?" she asked, with a new terror in her voice. "He knows now that I saw him .TFiti her." ? "Then you must find him, wherever he is, and go to him. Remember, this day is the flood tide of events." Mrs. Delmar delayed dinner half an hour beyond the usual time, then she ordered her carriage and drove to the club where he sometimes put up during her absence. As the servant answered her ring she heard a voice say sharply, "Banks, I can see no one." She passed the nonplussed man and went directly to the room where Ned's voice came from. In the midst of a set of traveling paraphernalia stood yoting man with a pale, harassed faee< and weary, discontented-eyes, who started When lie* saw her and squared himself as if for battle. Laura Delmar closed the door and leaned back against it. "Where are you going, Ned?" she asked in a voice that struggled vainly to be calm. "I do/i't know," he answered, with r1<-iTcrcw1 nHctinn^v thnt irave his face a c sinister fiardness. "To some remote country where I- will never hear nor see anything that I have ever seen or heard here/' She w$nt over to him and put both hands on his,shoulder. "Tell me everything, Ned; please, just as you would to a comrade, a man whom you love and trust your best friend in the world, for i am that still with all my i heart I will listen understandingly i and without one thought of blame. Only let me help you." } Ned drew back instinctively, but her 1 hands tightened their hold. "You wouldn't understand," he muttered. I "I would! I want only your confii. donee. I know that things have gone i- terribly wrong between us, and that I li have been blind and unreasonable, but -4r-?to forgive that and rj -prove to you thaH can be a better friend than " I have been a wife/' "Tell you, Laura!" he echoed, In I awed amazement. "Do you mean that? It sounds so unreal, so impossible from n you!" it "Only trust me," she pleaded, u Then, because he was all wearied out d with the long losing struggle, and bes cause the marvel of her changed attip tude compelled obedience, he told her the weary story of his downfall, of the u surfeit of affluenee, the discontent* and ir unbearable ennui of unaccustomed wealth and its hollow vanities; of how r- he had longed for the old free, useful, a striving life, with its simple pleasures, s and lastly of h? infatuation for the j woman who s*>od to him for all that t he had misses of personal achievement, t "I have been horribly slack and neg1 Hgent of my duties toward you, Lau2 ra," he-said contritely, "but the life you l led repelled me. It stifled me. . I i? earned unable to draw a dcen breath i in your presence. Your people affected i me still more harrowingly; they seem i so vapid, so useless. Yet I couldn't pull away from the hateful surround? ings bees user having married a rich woman, I owed it to her to at least try : to adjust myself to her manner of liv; ing. Laura, if you really mean that ( you want to be just, you must try to understand about Miss Eldridge, too. She is so vital, so masterful! She made her way by climbing, in utter disregard of your little idols of traditions and public opinion. She is different from the vast horde of puppets one meets, and for that reason I allowed myself to be attracted by her. As for loving her?I would not care if I should never see her again!" "Poor Ned!" said the listener gently, with an uncontrollable catch in her voice. "If I had been wiser and we had understood each other, better so much of all .this suffering could have been averted. But it is not too Jate to make amends. You must not go off on an aimless quest. I have thought of another plan. Why can't you go down to the mines in Arizona and work there for a yqar or so, work as hard as you wish, with the day laborers, if you like?" , I Ned subsided suddenly into a near: by chair, A faint, incredulous smUe I / ighted his haggard face to a fleeting semblance of the old, care-free, buoymt youth that she had loved so dearly. "To think of leaving it all honortbly," he murmured, "and that you should be the one to suggest this thing! it doesn't seem quite true yet." "What shall you do?" he asked, after i sentient pause. "Probably go to Europe with mother and May," she answered with forced cheerfulness. "Would that please you best, Laura?" "Oh, I dare say I shall manage to get some pleasure of it. You will write me often, won't you, Ned?" "Very often." he answered heartily. "Don't think that I won't miss you, Laura?" "Will you, Ned? But not half as much as I shall miss you." For the space of ten long heartbeats they looked into each other's eyes silently. .Then Laura suddenly took a step toward him with outstretched hands. "Ned, won't you take me, too?" ?n n thnt hrnn!?ht fl sue U1CU ill a ivivv a _ glow to his face. "Take you?" he echoed. "Laura, do ton know what that would mean to you? "Would you be willing to live in the wilderness, to sleep out under the starry sky, and to cook our primitive meals week after week with those little white hands that have never known one stroke of labor?" "Yes, yes, all that, only to be happy ?with you! To see you growing back to the old sunny, buoyant fellow that made life so sweet to me when first I knew you. Edward, that would be all my heart's $esire of happiness." **?*??* Billy Xorman, sitting in his club window the next afternoon, received the following note, which seemed to have been Written in great haste and under rather damp circumstances, for the ink was blotched in one er two places, but he made out to read it all without much trouble. "I know I can't make you understand everything just now, because I haven't nil nircolf if- {q gfi 1 UUtV IX'iliiZii'u k an uuj ov *4. aw -? credibly joyful. Ned is going to the mines in Arizona to work from dawn till dusk and live in that great, untrammeled wilderness until he swings back to the starting point'. He is as happy as a boy?but not half as happy as I, for I am going with him. "Billy, you are the wisest, dearest friend I ever knew, and I love you from the sacredest depths of my grateful heart. LAURA." ?New York Times. ARTIFICIAL PEARLS. The Chinese Have For Centuries Kce.i Adept at Making Imitations. The Chinese were the tirst to make artificial pearls. They were at it centuries ago. Some of the Chinese artificial pearls used to be very deceiving. The French caught the idea from the Chinese, and nowadays they make % wonderfully fine imitation of the genu^ | iue-nrticle. Fearl making in Chinirim j confined to two villages in the northern part of the province of Cliih-Kian&. In the months of May and June large quantities of mussels are brought in baskets from a lake thirty miles distant* and the biggest of them are selected for the operation that is to be performed. Into the shell of each mollustfeare introduced jgmall objects, which it f intended the bivalve shall coat with'the pearly substance it secretes. Sometimes little balls of earth are used.- Sucil pollers are maue ui ujuu from the bottom of water courses,' dried and powdered with the juice or the seeds of the camphor tree. To place these nuclei inside of the mussels is a process of 110 little difficulty. The shell is opened with a small instrument of mother-of-pearl, the mantle of the anTiftariS"gr btiy hired and the Juliets are laid beneath tLw?. mantle. The shellis then periudtted tb close. Finally the moilnsks are deposited hi canal? or pools. They are placed fire or six inches apart, at depths of from two to five fee? iffldra of from 5000 to 50,000. t In November they are lifted and opened. The anhnals, are renipved. from the shells and the pellets ar? detached with a sharp knife. By this time fhey^are fastened' tightly to? the inner surface of the shells and h are be, come covered with** dHbJW amcM, Next a little hole is cut in each pearl at the-point where it has beeaattaehed to the shell of the mussel. Through this openi^ the-earfli whl^icou^tMse^ pearl is tlJL fiHed with pelted yettow. rosin, and^the orifice Is artfully covered with a piece of mother-of-pearl. The pearls thus formed are flat on the bottom .and In shape are somewhat more than hemispheres. They have much of the lustre and beauty of the real gems, and are sold so cheaply as to be procurable by all who care to pos MM O SGSS Ulflll. i ut',> iuc cuji'iuj vu ?.v > considerable extent by jewelers, who set them in tiaras and ornaments for women. Qneerly 'Named Slrecte. English towns are entering into a sort of newspaper competition for supremacy in curious names, having taken our Saturday's paragraph as a .direct challenge. Thus, one correspondent presses the claim of Leicester. ."One of the numerous ancient roads," he writes, "which radiate from the centre of the town is spert: 'Gallow Tree-gate,' which popular use has shortened in pronunciation to 'GaJ-treegate.' A series of streets round what was once, a fortified inclosure bears the name of 'The Newark.' The most curious of all is simply termed, 'The Holy Bones,' a title which bears an added strangeness when displayed on a very modern cast iron tablet." ; Hull, too, has a small but well-known thoKOughfare which bears the extraordinary name of "The Land of Green Ginger," for what reason we cannot tell. Yarmouth has a street which is curiously named "Conge." But here there is a suggested explanation. It is said that the name was originally "Conge," and that it commemorates the spot whence Nelson once left his native shores. But London must not be out of the contest. Even within * * * * ----- nail OL our U ?V II IIUUCLiiaio uutvv may be found "Hanging Sword alley." with the name proudly blazoned for the recognition of all who coine to find it after reading "The Tale of Twc Cities."?London Chronicle. Selium's Qualities. The discovery of a new metal called selium is attributed to M. Edward Mollard, a Frenchman. The discoverer asserts that sellum costs only onetwelfth as much as aluminum, and is lighter and stronger. It does not rust, and is, therefore, suitable for shipbuilding. for the manufacture of pipes, etc. It is asserted also that it is capable of taking a fine polish resembling nickel. Its hardness is not quite equal to that of iron, but is greater than that of lead or zinc. Its strength is said to be greater than that of iron, but less than that of steel. Sir Arthur Fairburn, a deaf n:ite, is the only holder of an hereditary tike I in Eugland so aGictedi ' * i - c i. A PROMINENT SHE 0 LaFountafn Sri * :? * i* # \^VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVkVMA^VVVVVVVVVV? | Mrs. Hattie La Fountain, Treas. Prot i Ohio, writes from Galion, 0., as follows: S "Alter my /trst child teas bom J 5 bearing down pain 8 accompanied b | my health was ruined for life, andi J when a friend tras visiting me she J tfone for her when she suffered wllh | ? band procured a boille the same en I according to directions. Before the ? icell, and you certainly have one gi J also ad vised my friends to use it A* *'V??????VWWV?VVW%VI<>??V?VWVW^ Secretary Woman's State Federation fays: "Pe-ru-na Does More Than is Claimed For It.'1 Mrs. Julia M. Brown, Secretary of the Woman's State Federation of California, writes from 131% Fifth St., Los Angeles, Cal., as follows: "I i have never known of any patent medicine which did what it professed to -do except Peruna. This remedy does Siftuch more than it claima, and while I ' ^have jnever advocated any medicine I feel The Stealing of Cattle. IPne source of immense trouble to thei cattleman has been the calf thief. Many a large "outfit" has gone out of business on account of the "rustler." Where cow herders have to ride the range for fifty or seventy-five miles they are likely to be forestalled in ^branding a calf by some vigilant rustleir, whose little mountain ranch is near the usual grazing place of a bunch of cattle. Or very possibly the puncher for the big 3C ranch has cfiught and branded the calf with its pnoper mark; and whe&-^many I months later he rldes^oe-^a yearling branded BOB he has no means of JfomgJfog that the owner of the latter brand has deftly touched, up the 3C Sa running iron by the artistic Dn of two strokes and an added It may be stated parenthein passing that more than one "outfit" of today got its start entirely from the "rustled" cattle. In the more arid Southwest rustling Is not so common because most of the wajib& is pumped and cattle get into : thfe habit of coming home often . to ;-diinfe and can be watched more closetrah&t even there it is a factor of o"%f$ght importance.?Leslie's Monthly. 1 ^7. : ^ The Qldest Ferry. ^%"haps the oldest ferry in the world file cross-channel service from Ca; lai s&to Dover. It has been in existi eQce for more than twenty centuries, - an# the vessels which have been engaged in it iuVude every variety of shipping, from Caesar's high-peaked galleys, propelled by banks of oars, to the new turbine steamer. Catarrh Cannot lie Cared With locajf applications us they cainaot reach, the seat pt taj aisj-vj-?. uatarcii i? a uiwd or'con>tir^itional dUciwc, and in.orde: to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on '.lie blood and mucous surface Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quaek medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purrders, acciug directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination ot the two ingredients is what produces such WQnderful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. P. J. Chexey <fc Co., Props., Tc 'edo, 0. Sold by druggists, price, *5c. # Hall's Family rills are tho best. The growth of the nails is more rapid .in children than in adults, and slowest in the aged. It goes on more rapidly in summer than in winter. Mrs. Leland Stanford is said to carry a larger amount of insurance than any other woman in the world. Her policies amount to more than $1,000,000. DIDN'T DARE. "Why don't you try to ,demonstrate to your constituents that you a:j capable of an unselfish action?" "My dear sir," answered Senator Sorghum, "if these people who have known me for years were to find me doing something in which I had no apparent interest they'd get suspicious and decide that I was engaged in a deep and diabolical plot."?Washington Star. _??_?????? KEEPING UP THE RECORD. Traveller (to the ferryman crossing the river)?Has any one ever been lost In this stream? Boatman?No sir. Some professor was drowned here last spring, but they , found him again after looking for two weeks.?Pearson's Weekly. THE REAL THING. "How can you tell, papa, when people are way up in society?" j "When their diamonds are genuine, and their manners are not."?Life. To ouroi or ir yv CHURCH WORK WES HER LIFE r- *; I I i I Ptescwmom %?%i ** ~** %%%%|%i%%%%^ ected Home Circle and Catholic Ladies of \ # r suffered for several months with J j/ dreadful headaches. I was afraid $ elt very downcast about it. One day# told me of 1'eruna and what it had g \ irregular menstruation. My hue- g suing and 1 hsgan to take It dally 1 first bottle was used 1 wis entin ly ^ rateful woman's blessing. 1 have g AIBS. H ATT IE LA FOUNTAIN. J j that it is but justice to speak a good word for it because I have found it to be such a rare exception. "X have known several women who were little better than physical wrecks, mothers who dragged out a miserable, painful existence. but'were made well and strong througn the Use of Peruna. I have known of cases of'chronic catarrh which were cured in a short time, when a dozen different remedies had been experimented with and without good results. I use it myself when I feel nervous and . worn out, and I have, always found that the results i were most satisfactory." r j. - : JULIA M. BROWN. ...? 1 .5 \ t roLcia n. so. ei jgEYOU" ?MNew I (Vn rv.fi "Vt New Subscriber OK. . sis? si 0m tr B ' Uuki* _ ?. Jw ?tfk?s H curouc 'I fist rated Am llwlniH . ^ ?u*?l THE, YO fbrU * AafhUi gomm ? QHIHIIHHBHi ptrtntm. una mm mMA U?*? 5vJL of' ftrocfc perfume*, Ww# .rl"l or 4 **?M oac* . *1 Vl*4? ? )?; Mtt'dH nuke w?jr*r.fca> f _*?d orrWit. ? A?*i? in"v? ?fcw<^ **? ^ tuilfciMW tavud *3 (be 42 , hwdrthpe s ^)is? ?< ? b<x'J|^ doauton. ?s<y?vd rwy Ay wf ^ ad btilkL 1 Jo* wiUua tW- Mb Of Fvl. whoa dM ??oGan ear^nc </ /y tvTkdm ^kbeeS afk*di ?*? craft c&frtai fr.%4 rren W?, V BRAVE FELLOW. ? "Yes," said the dentist, "to insu; painless extraction you'll have to itak gas, and that's fifty cents extra." V "Oh!" said the farmer, "I guesslth* ->id way'll be best; never mind* *V ?as." I "You're a brave man." 1 "Oh! it ain't me that's got t|p tooth; it's my wife."?PhlladelphM Ledger. ^ WHAT COULD PAPA DO? Higgins?jWhat do ycu mean bf fighting In the public street? *J Higgins, Jr.?Well, Tommy Sprou! said you were my father. \ Higgins?Well, and ain't I your father? Higgins, Jr.?I suppose so, but a feller don't like to have it thrown at him right out afore folks.?Boston Transcript. PUBLIC SPEAKING. "Oh, I couldn't possibly* take half an hour on that subject!" "Nonsense! Why, you can fill twenty minutes explaining the difficulty of treating so important a subject in so short a time."?Puck. FITSnermanent'y cured. Xo fits* or nervousness after fir >t day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestor0r.$2fcrial bottle and ire itlsefree Dr.R.H. Kline, Ltd., Arch .St., ?lula.,Pa. Bloodhounds are to aid the Berlin, police in the tracking of criminals. i Mrs Winslow's SoothlngSynn for children teething, soften iheguais, reduces inflammation,aliays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. :i bottle The world depends on the United State* for cotton. I do not believe Plso's Cure for Consumptionhasane janitor coughs and colds?John i.BorEB, Trinity Ilprings, Ind.. Feb. 15,190). There are six canais connected with the Thames, which extend altogether 324 miles. Putnam Fadeless Dyes cost but 1C cents per package. I *In Bengal last year there were 38,000 deaths from plague. cnrr STUART'S rntC CSNand buchu To all who suffer, or to the friends of those who suffer with Klaney, Liver, Heart, Bladder or Blood Disease, a sample bottle of Stuart's Gin and Buchu, the great southern Kidney and Liver Medicine, will be sent absolutely free ol cost. Mention this paper. Address STUART DRUG MTG CO.. 28 Wall St.. Atlanta. Ga. ER/SAYS I ii PE-RU-NA. | JEER GREAT FORTUNE j A Woman Saved From Life-Long, Misery and Made Happy and Useful. A woman confined to the house for several years with a chronic female derangement* had finally given up hlTpe of being cured. She had tried physician after physician, and remedy after remedy, without any permanent improvement. Her treatment had cost her husband who was a poor man hundreds of dollars. They had been obliged to denv themselves many comforts of life in order to get money enough to pay the physicians. The woman had become weak, nervous and wretched, and scarcely able to keep out of her bed. Her children were growing up neglected and ragged, because of the want of a mother s care. Her husband wag becoming discouraged and broken down with overwork. Picking up the paper one day she happened to read an item which contained the news that Dr. Hartman would treat such cases free of charge by letter. She immediately wrote the doctor describing her case, and giving him all her symptoms. She soon received a lettlr telling her exactly what to do, and what medicines and appliances to get. She began the treatment (the principal remedy being Peruna) at once, and in a few weeks she was well and strong again, able to do her own work. This offer of free home treatment to women is still open to all who may need the services of this eminent physician. All letters applying for treatment will be promptly answered, and be held strictly confidential. Miss Annie Hoban, Post Pocahontas of Yemassee Council of Red Men (Women's Branch), writes from 872 Eighth Ave., New York: "Three months ago I was troubled with backache and a troublesome heaviness about the stomach. Sleep brought me no rest, for it was a restless sleep. The doctor said my nervous system was out of order, but his prescriptions didn't seem to relieve me. I was told that Peruna was good for building up the nervous system. After using it for two months I know now that it is. I want to sav that it made a new woman of me. The torturing symptoms have all disappeared and I leel myself again. Peruna did me more good than all the other medicines I have taken." ANNIE HOBAN. Miss Mamie Powell, Lake Charles, Louisiana, writes: 1_. t _* il i Tl i sincereiy Deueve mac reruna is woman's best friend, for it has certainly been that to me. I had had headaches, backaches and other aches every month for a long time, but shortly after I b6gan taking Peruna this was a thing of tne past, and I have good reason to be grateful. I take a bottle every spring and fall now. and that keeps my health perfect, and I ; certainly am more robust now than I hgve j been before and am weighing ihbre. * I do } not think any one will be disappointed in j the results obtained from the use of Pe- ; runa." MISS MAMIE POWELL. If you do not derive prompt and satis- j factory results from the use "of Peruna, I write at once to Dr. Eartmim, giving' a full statement of your case, and he will I be pleased to give you his valuable advice ' gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0. 1 iSOt. IWy Ummmm subscription Of who cats oat and sends this slip or the name of this i with41.75 will receive:. .. All the issues of The Companion for the remaining wi The Double Numbers for Thanksgiving, Christmas and The Youth's Companion" Springtime ""Calendar for 1904, in twelve colors and foU. .it mes of The Companion for every uiciuucr vi>^ loan"*u**6lflT\Sample Copies of the Papi tfTH'S COMPANION. BOSTON, MAJ .22 CALIBER. RE |a j Winchester .22 Caliber < ijj&U them to and where you Tf^L ..: tried Winchester make V stamped on the head. T " a k?* than the unreliable I ., . PAD CAIff UV all 1 FT^xEETJcS*^^^ POMMEL SLICKEif , THE WORLD /^//^/MA /'* hi 2 /&//livxyAm, V. SoflBB^SHHi^^? l^'V/^l/w^W^:^e ^oyw^rproc^ LTJ^//fi?/'>/AiiV^*0*^*' 30,^i and tats '!^?wr?zf&AK? foroJIkmds of wet work. ?=7^ //y 77^ it is often imitated but POR J*E emi. ^crqujned.^^ Reuab'P i*aler>. Ml#'* or yellow STCN'VMTO? hsh oTwraSwanco. 5IQN OHj nC Hjn. wnmmajm unx.raown.cM I WO BOI^E. . II ?..n.o in vniiR HAIR I bun LP 111 I vvn Carpenter's 01 IAEIOV POIADE (bkw>bx or nfiTAitow#.) Takes them out ?ndkeepsyonr scalpinsplendid shape into the btr??ln. That's whjr you need It's highly perfumed, too. PR|<?E, 25 CENTS, . . . , At the Drag- Stor6; or mailed on reoelpt of X cet"S In stampe. I Address. CARPENTER & CO., . | f Louisville, Ky. 11 * 1 .11" SM ierchanti f^hy net try 1 '"^aad* * Avery & Company I successors to 9 avery & McMillan, 51-63 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Gt I ?all kinds of? MACHINERY I yLJL * Na./ ft y v Reliable Frlck Engines. Boilers, alt H Sizes. Wheat Separators. fl BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EAKM. J Large Engines and Boilers supplied -^9 promptiyv Shingle Mills, Corn MM* 9 Circular Saws,Saw Teeth,Parent Dogs,- 9 Steam Governors. Full line Engines A v''C Mill Supplies, send for free Cataloyu#. /^ . M liSAWMILLSSSj I B with He^'a Unlveraal Lor Bram?3eefl?t?*B ear. Simultaneous Sec Works and tue h?-| k g cock-King Variable Feed Work* are unea-a -mm celled for aocuaacr, enfPLicirr. nrmaJRirfe .< BrTY ANDun ororx&ATiox. Write for fuUA ?* H descriptive circulars. Manufactured by twa.h g8AL?M IRON' WOP. K8, Wi n g ton -Salem .?.Cj| ' ^ I B W. L. DOUGLAS 1 3.3 s'3 SHOES BE 8 You can me from $3 to $5 yearly by wearing W.L Douglas 3340 9r$$wM. ?'? Our J4 car Shoe* by mall, 26 rtmU extra. m&mSjS*: ft<' Catalog free. IV. L. DOUGLAS. Brock tea, Mag jjfwi Dropsy 1 Ifflfa ?11 1.. St*'** 'r V I days ;^e?ect3 a ptrmintat^ ' ' .M $pe^?S'^Btox; B JUteK W ^ v J - Give the name of this paper wheh f> 1 writing to advertisers?(At44?'3? ANION I 1 ^C/X # S'"*1 J flS r 9': w t M ~ TX* ^ J |||H ,* gj^M ?kj??ta*?(???*H<*" * ? IjUH ";" .'3^B MiaxC "9ilKMb<llt^M j ?J K fl y|B -*9 - Lnrli BO* (*. ??'?dc3VM <* ^ HI IB -B?c, Stafco. i*nt Hp?* ? ? w?>d|llH .7 -*j? J1"1mS2"ijte\rV?t[. IllB ' _ .. Iff JH j&cJtoifc-J-lfS???? ? |UjH 4 - v'-<^H c??'I'M ''^H yj I 'point your gun. Buy the time- s , having the trade-mark u H " I * hey cost only a few cents more - 1 kind, but they are dollars better. & :\ ,M DEALERS EVERYWHERE. I COHSTfPATION 1 'For over nine yoars I suffered with clrrcnfc coo- B eUpation and during this timfc I had to taka am vB injection of warm water once every 24 houra befora B I coold have an action on my bowel*. Happily I S tried Caacarets, and today I am well man. 9 During the nine yeara before I used Caacaret* I fl 8offered untold misery with internal pilea. Thank* -^B to you 1 am free from all that this morninc/roo can. nae this in behalf of (offering humanity." b. F. Fiaher. Hoanoaa, 1U, - i fl BB>jy wy jjBfr ^ OAM0V C ATMARDC Ploatant, Palatable, Potout. Tacto Good. Do float. Nwr81ck?a, WeakoaorGri&e.Me. sse.wo.jRlm . old In bulk. The eonutao tablet atamped CCO. Guaranteed to euro or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.T. fag UMOAl SALE, TBI WLUOj MIES WEOFFERE^Sflte ! at Kiadmmee from now until December SDth. ( Cash, with order. WANTED?20.000 pounds Dressed Cat-Fish daily. Correspondence solicited. * We pay* the Highest Cash Price for Otter Furs, Raceoon Skins and Alligator Hides. Ship us your furs. ' -j W. B. HAKIN5QN CO.. KSaBK, HJL illCIIDtUrE ' ' I" IKC movnniiviM We insure farm dwelling*, barns, country mercantile risks, eUs We can save yon awnt'e commfiwion. Write us for rates, etc. All prudent men carry Ftva '4 Insurance. Agents wanted. PHOENIX ONDIH- > WRITERS, Station D, New York City. ; ^| I1111 It? Price eoc.