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V? * ta ef a mixture of oU ud M ft dust prmatlv* kar* Im the naatr ol IMS a eofttlaf of tar vm tried oa Mfn different lM|tha of road. After careful Investigation during a period of twelve months. It woo found that dost and mud had wholly disappear ed and the coat of maintenance had been reduced. The tar forms an elas tic shin, which deadens the soond of traffic and reduces the resistance. It appears that the tarring method In K)tcs no greater outlay thaa that Cor aoatlng with oil. ? Long Confined as Leper. A remarkable story which has late ly attracted great sympathy la Cape Colony. Is that of a man named Aproo* hie. who. after having been confined on Robben Island for eight years as a person suspected of baring leprosy, was recently allowed to return to his family as non-afflicted. He was for merly a shipwrecked sailor who took a farm at the Cape, married and pros pered exceedingly. Mosquito bites were mistaken for leprosy by a field* ooraet. who sent him to Robben Island. He returned home broken In spirit snd financially ruined, his prop erty baring been sold for the upkeep of his children. Cst Nurses Squirrels. A Joplln (Mo.) dispatch to the Chi cago Inter-Ocean states: William Williams, a farmer living south of Avllls. near this city, hss a cat that nurses a litter of squirrels. Four young fox squirrels w\ere taken to the house recently from the nest where they were found, although thy family cat had a litter of kittens, she exhibits mother!y fondness for the squirrels, and makes regular trips back and forth from the house to the barn, and licks and nurses the squir dels as tenderly as she does her kit tens. MAO TO GIVE. UP. Swflrniwd AfnnlM Worn Kldnty DUordm Vntll Cured by Ueon'i Kidney PUU. George W. Runoff, of 11)53 North Eleventh street, Philadelphia, Pa., a man of good repu tation aod stand Ing, writes: "F1t? years ago I was suffering so with my oa_k and kid neys that I often had to lay off. The kidney secre tions were un natural, my legs and stomach wars swollen, and I bad no appetite. When doctors failed to help me I begun using Doan'a Kid ney Pills ond improved until my back wag strong and my appetite returned. During the four years since 1 stopped using them I have enjoyed excellent health. The cure was permanent." (Signed) GEORCE W. RENOFF. A TRIAL FREE?Address Foster Mil burn Co., Buffalo, N. T. For sale by all dealers. Price, 00 cents. Bugs Pressed Into Cakes. That quostionable epicurean tld> bit; the snail, has a rival in Mexico In s species of bugs known popularly as "water boatmen." The6e aquatio Inaccts aro gathered In larg* num bers on the large lakes near the city of Mexlo?, and when dried are much prized aa an article of diet by the na tives. The Immense numbers in which they are found on these lakes Is indicated by the fact that they are nov being gathered extensively for export, for use as bird and fish foods, at a price of less than 10 cents a pound. A food much relished by trout la made by passing the dry "water boatmen" through a coffee mill, grinding them as finely as desired, after which scalding water Is poured over them to softon them. They are then mixed with 20 per cent, of mush, producing what Is stated by the Bu reau of Fisheries to be the best food for small fish that has been discover ed during their many vt ex perience in this lino of work. Caged birds, it Is asserted, are equally fond of this aquatic tld-blt There can be no rest as long aa you resist Him. So. 88. The letter of Miss Merkley, whose picture is printed above, proves beyond question that thousands of cases off inflamma tion of the ovaries and womb are annually cured by the use of Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. "Drab Mm. Pt*kiiam Gradual Ion of strength and nerve force told me something was radically wrong with me. I had severe shooting pains through the polvlc organs, cramps and extreme irritation compelled me to seek medical advice. The doctor said that I had ovarian trouble and ulcera* tton, and advised an operation. I tftronglv objected to this and decided to try tydlft E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. I soon found that my judgment was correct, and that all the good things said about this medl elno wcro true, and day by day I felt less pain and increased appetite. The ulceration soon hralcd, and the other complications disappeared, and in eleven weeks I was onco more strong and vigorous and porfectly well. " My heartiest thanks are sent to yon for the great good you have done ?e.M? Sincerely yours, Miss M aroawct M r niu.it t, 27ft Third St, Milwaukee, Wis.?$8000 forfait If original of ?Hn lottot troolna oonulnontu cannot bo n- ?iini QflLDRHPfS DBPARTHB8TT. THE TALE OF POLLY WOGG. Oh. a pollywot lived in ? little glass tank. With a goldfish or two and a snail; And his body was fat and covered with But oeaported a monstrous long tail. He wriggled and twisted the livelong day. And grew, this fat polly wog; But never once did it enter his bead That he was akin to a frog. Along in hi# sides, down next to his tail. He had a bad feeling one day, And before the next morning two legs bad appeared, To help him along on his way. With his gills disappearing, he couldn't breathe well, And two more funnv legs came to light; He stretched them all out and wiggled his toes, And tried to make believe 'twas alt right. Four lega and a tail for one pollywog Seemed so funnv he wanted to laugh; And then one night he happened to see That his tail was shorter by hslf. And it faded away?a little cach day? Till hardly a bit could ho sec; Then it all disappeared, and pollywog found A gay little froggy was he! Then eomebody put him in a little tin pail And carried him down to the brook; And all that I've told you you may see for yourself If you'll juat take the trouble to look. . ?Clara E. At wood, in Youth's Companion. A ROBIN'S NEST. Here on the farm, nests, birds and eggs are very plentiful. You may hear the birds' sweet little voices about all day long, especially after a thunder shower, when they seem glad to hop all about, singing and chirping awny so pleasantly. One cannot help but enjoy it as tliey go about their work or play. Birds bottle?that. In other word?, there might be a ?mash-up?use a tin canie> ter, or something of that kind, instead of the bottle. But the use of the bottle makes the HOW THE TRICK LOOKS. feat decidedly more interesting:, from the very fact that a smash-up is possi ble. Xhe use of a tin vessel, therefore, would be too tame ;o suit most boys. Now, if you will follow our direc tions closely, you may succeed in the feat, and bring the bottle out safe and whole. First, bend the head forward until the chin rests on the breast; then bal ance the bottle In its place, on the crown of the head. Be sure to do the beginning well, and the rest will be easier than it looks. PICTURE PUZZLE. FIND THE TWO ATTENDANTS OF Till: PRINCES. " ?Mirror and Farmer. are so tauie bore that a pair of robins bave gone to work and boldly built tlielr nest directly under the laundry platform, where the noise of the laun dry machinery twice out of the seven days of a week lias failed to frighten them away. They are only scared from their nest by passersby who go a little too close to their much coveted nest so as to make then feel unsafe, on which occasion they will !!v off a short distance to seme :ici; hboring tree, and thrro tney wiii v!iii'i> ;;nd hrp about very er.citedly with that true parent's devotion to their children, till they think that you arc at quite a respectable dlstr.r.cc, then they will again fly to the nost ami young. Now let ua turn to see how and of what their nest Is ir.adc. They ar range their nest in scrt of layers which consists of in;id, clriig, srnss, l.crso halr, hay and rags. It is fourteen inches ia circumference and is plas tered with mud to the cir.o of the build ing. In this nest a few weeks ago the robins laid four little pale blue eggs. Soon after t"ne3c cjyga hatched into featheiicss little birds. Ycu can lie down on the laundry platform and peep through the crack; In the boards right into the nest, which Is directly under these boards, and If you have patience you can cee tbo very Interest ing sight of tlio mother bl;\l feeding her younj. An toon as the you lg ones hear the mother's wings Li utter tbey will open thst' tittle mouths In the cutest way Iruucnnl le, and cry to tb-lr mother to feet", tue.i, \\ lilch she readily Uccs with the worm which she fcas gone and hunted i:p for them. The robli? are now aLcrt half fledged and they o' covrse slowly but svrcly begin to see, and their wings a id feathers to grow. The mother robin Lcstows all her attention on her young, which are growing fast, and will very coon be flying as their parent;; do, end will aloo have g.i!:ied the beautiful breast cf red and bluish black wings their parents have. These ar> fart developing In their young bodies. ' Ilobiis are one of na ture's beauties, and we should cer tainly treat them as such.?Charles l<\ S , in B. F. I. Hccord. Ur AND DOWN. Hero we have the picture of a boy with a bottle standing 0:1 the back of bis head. You will say, perhaps, that you can easily perform that little feat, and we do not doubt that you can. Hut this is only the first step In the amus ing task that we arc going to set for you. We want you, tf yon please, to bal ance a bottle on the back of your bead, and then to stoop down and pick up a silver quarter from the floor with your lips and rise again, all without letting the bottle fall or touching it with your hand. If you think the experiment might bo fatal to the Integrity of the Kend the knees gently, coming to the floor on one knee. Then lower the hands to the Moor, and thus supported, pu.di the feet gradually ami slowly b? k ur.lll the face is able to reach tho qr-.rter. ltesmning the first position is merely going through those movements in re \erse order. Slow, steady, even, care ful movement is the secret of success in the feat.?Mail and Express. i:lilt FIP.ST EXTTRIENCE. A small bey, aged live, had a step mother who was young and nervous. She had never had experience with children, and tlie small boy's slightest ailment, tor.rred her into a panic. Crmo threatened one day, and the doctor was sent for in wild haste. As tlie doctor entered the room, the child raised his head frrm his pillow and croaked hoarsely, in apology for the hasty s uiiuons: "You nir.st excuse her, doctor, this is tlie first tine she's ever been a mother."?Lippincott's Magazine. Ktnrceon Itftre In Oregon IVnlori. A sturgeon weighing 37r? pounds was caplv.red by a 'gill net fisherman near Astoria a few days ago and sold for ?2C. It has been less than twenty years sir.es sti rgoons of that size were al most unsalable, and thousands of poi nds of the big flsh have been car ried off to the Portland docks for fer tiliser, after the consignees had re fused to pay the stcamb?at freight on them. Tho prodigal waste of these fish a few years ago, when their value was not appreciated, hr.s depleted the sup ply to sucli an extent that they are now ahnoot extinct. It requires nearly as mtie'j time to produce a 370 pound sturgeon as it does to produce a six foot saw log. and tho time Is approaching when the big saw log. like* the big sturgeon, wlil pass out of existence, with nothing grow ing up to take its place.?1'ortlaud Oregon ia n. Tlifi M>"f?n?nu of Orange Hlnnnnn. The orange tree is regarded as a prinee among trees and the emblem of genius. A peculiarity of this tree ia that it bears fruit and flowers at the same time. Its leaves are evergreen, and as It grows older It grows in beau ty and fruitfulness. It blossoms filling the air with Its fragrance. It Is. in deed. a fit emblem of marriage promise and hopes. The orange trees Is considered typi cal of love because, though Its fruit 1* golden and its flavor and scent de licious, Its rind is bitter, ami as every one knows Whtf has experi**ncr?^ i . t'u pld's dart causes pain. The f?.<!i.go is emblematic of gratitude as well as of genius and love.?Philadelphia Inquir er. A British visitor to this country sot long since was quoted as saying that ho estimated tbo character and quality of tbo people laqpaly )>y the news papers. ? fairly accurate estimate may be made In thiawaj. no doubt, but could not come from inspection of the papers which In all probability fell Into the hands of this Englishman. He would naturally sss the prominent metropolitan papers, and at furthest only the leading onts of the smaller cities. From the'character of these he could draw certain correct inferences aa to the people for whom they were printed. He would know, first, and moat distinctly, that these people were full of enterprise and energy, and were ready for any commercial undertaking, however vaat; he would learn that they were generous In a large way, some what boastful, rsther careless, Indi vldually. of their public obligations, but on the whole having rsther a high standard by which to measure public men. These and numerous other con clusions he could draw from the papers that would in all likelihood fall Into his hands, but unless he made a study of the country press he would miss a view of these same people quite nec essary to a proper understanding and estimate of them. The metropolitan papers deal with afTalrs of general Interest?foreign and national events, politics, matters relat ing to public men. news that concerns many classes of readers, etc.; the papers of small towns and villages deal with matters of another sort; they are in close touch with their readers and treat of local and personal affairs. Politics and outside news may have place In* their columns, too, but merely in sn Incidental way. It Is the local record that gives them interest and character and makes them valua ble and delightful. In a community where everybody knows everybody else there is a nat ural and perfectly proper Interest in knowing that Uncle Jake Snyder is having his barn painted, that 8am Sweeney is having trouble with his eyes, that Parmer Johnson has raised the biggest tomatoes ever seen in the region, that John Jones visited his "best girl" on Sunday night, and so on, and so on, and so on. It is not love of trivial detail or petty gossip, but nn outgrowth of neighborly and kindly feelings that calls for a recital of these things. To an outsider the personal comments may at times seem overly familiar, but with the free give-and take of a small community thoy are not so considered by the persons con cerned, but are regarded rather as fam ily pleasantries. It is through these papers, indeed, that glimpses are to be 1 had of the best family life of the eoun- , try, the dinners, the picnics, the re unions. the gayeties, as well as the ' more serious phases. The relations of i the people to each other are discern- i ible. One who reads between the lines 1 of those records of local happenings and doings can see the simplicity, the open-hearted hospitality, the kindliness : of the men nnd women who are men- ! tioned from time to time; their pur- j suits, their ambitions, and. alas, also, 1 their sorrows are made clear. Many a man long resident of a city ' takes regularly the lltHo paper pub- ' lished in his old home and reads it 1 eagerly, thus keeping in touch with his former associates; but even the 1 stranger of sympathetic mind and n de gree of insight finds a charm in such ' papers that more pretentious sheets 1 cannot possess. They bring him into 1 e!nse relations with the people who. 1 above all others, are representative j Americans and who make the country what it is.?Indianapolis Journal. My Oriental Ormauatker. My Japanese dressmaker that came 1 to the house wore a long blue col ton ! kimona and wooden clogs that he 1 flipped off bis feet ai the door of my 1 room. He brought with him the clum- 1 siest pair of shears nnd a little hand ! sewing machine that was an undouht- i cd patriarch among machines. He rest ed in a chair, but squatted with his ! feet under him. set the machine on nn- 1 other in front of him, and seemed hap- ! piost and least concerned with the [ tilings of this life when he was grind ing the machine with one hand, guid ' ing the work with the other, while his | prehensile toes kept the long breadths of skirt from the floor. Perhaps t'ie beatific condition came with the Buddhistic attitude. Who knows? He wore a curious sort of a thim'oie that was not much larger than a ring on the inside of the middle finger be tween the first and second joints, nnd pushed his needle straight out from hitn, at an angle directly opposite to ours when we sew. He spoke very seldom, almost never asking n question, hut worked stead ily ftt something, somehow. If not di rected otherwise. He never seemed surprised when told tlint his calcula tions were all wrong, and Invariably answered, "Can do," when told that I wished a thing altered.?Laura B. btarr, in Harper's I'nzar. Tim lllxh-Fttliitln' Styl?. The liigh-folutin' style may be fash ionable, says London Truth, but it is not always informing. Miss Eva I'ow **11, lecturi.ig before a lui'les' class up on vocal ism, declared: "If you really want to sing, just o, en your mor.th and let the radi. ting > i.ging soui wih you hurl Itself forth," adding: "If you sing of a dewdrop you must see mentally the glistcnis: beads of ihe meadow: If of a skylark. Imagine your self a bird." At this point nn inquir ing damsel caused the lecture to col lapse by innocently askitg nlmut the '?Honeysuckle and th e Ilee." Was slie <o imagine herself a flower or an in sect'/ "TIi* Woll'n" rhllotophy. | "Temptation is temptation, wlietbcr the man yield or overcome. Fire is ! fanned b.v the wind until It leups up fiercely. Sop ts desire like fire. It is fanned, as by n wind, by sight of the i thing desired, or by n new and luring i description or comprehension of the thing desired. There lies the temp.n tion. It is the wind that fans the de? . sire until it leaps up to mastery. That's temptation. It may not fnn sufficient ly to make the desire overmastering, but In so far ns It fans nt all, that far is it temptation. And. as you say. It may tempt for good as well an for ?vll."?Century* Tbf catalogue of orchids In the Kew Gardens of London describes 220 sped .mens. A method of producing sleep and local anesthesia by means of electric currents has been devised by a French physicist. M. Leduc. Manchester. Englard, sacrifices from ?12.000 to ?15.000 every .year by de clining to have advertisements on its cars, which are operated by the city. An air compressor for dusting and cleaning purposes, shown In operation. Is one of the new mechanical exhibits of interest to women at the World's Fair. The percolatlou of a liquid through a porous solid is much affected by tin* temperature. It has been found that the internal frictiou i; reduced as the temperature rises. In India the power given off by a motor is sometimes expressed in elr phant equivalents, a twenty-two-liorse motor, says Motoring Illustrated, being described as a three-elephant vehicle. A Germau chemist removes the nico tine from tobacco by steeping the leaves In a solution of tannic acid. The tobacco is then treated with a de coction of marjoram to improve its flavor. An international exhibition of small motors and also of machine tools for various Industries was held at Ghen*. with the object of showing how means of production may be Improved with the aid of motive power, especially clcctricity. Two new Ideas in street-car con struction detail originating in Phila delphia ar? -.ubstitutes for the grab handles on the side posts of open cars, consisting of brackets which inclose the space between the back of the seats and the post*, and an entrance guard which slides upon the inside of the posts, and which wheu not in use 1s held under the curtain guards by gravity catches. The new British torpinlo boat de stroyer Waveney belongs to the new class of torpedo boat destroyers, and has been built witli a displacement of r>r?0 tons and equipped with one im pounder and Ave G-pounder quirk-tid ing guns and two 18-incli torpedo tubes. The Waveney has been fitted with engines of 7000 horse-power, sup plied with steam from modified Yar row water-tube boilers, propelling her nt a speed of 2!>% knots an hour. THE ADIRONDACK ELK. Belief Tliut tlio l>e?*r l? Kn?t Uffoniliis Kxtlnct Not True. Deer signs are about as numerous as usual. The talk almut the deer starv ing in grcut numbers last winter is certainly not true in tills section. To day I had a talk with our courteous and evident game protector for Hamil ton County, Mr. Uohert O. Nichols, of Indian Lake, and lie told me that lie traveled his territory last winter on snowshoes a great deal, and late;*, when the snow crust would bear up the deer, he traveled on that. lie saw but very few dead deer?live to seven being the largest number in a long dis tance?wldle in one day In- saw i:?S live deey. His judgment is that game wintered well as a rule. However, he said he could not speak from personal knowledge of the Moose River region, nor of the country around Long Lake west. From both these sections came reports of many deer dead from star vation. If these be true, they merely Indicate a greater abundance of deer in those parts. The elk seem to be thriving here abouts. Recently a baud of .-even were seen in a cow pasture, feeding among the cattle. Some of the residents have a mistaken notion that the elk are driving out the deer. This cannot be, for the elk are too newly Introduced and are as yet too few in numbers to drive out the deer, either by fighting or consuming their food. But anoth er car.se has undoubtedly operated against the deer. This place Is prac tically surrounded by lumber camps, l.iost of which are now in operation their third season. Leaving out of ac count whatever deer arr eatc ?. in these camps, the tendency is for the deer to retire to less disturbed portions of the forest, while the elk. introduced fro:.? seml-doi lcrtient'.Ml herds on private preserves, are less shy of man. T.iis, I think, einlains for this section fie b-ss than usual observance of d-'.r w!iere that cuiditio* exists. Present indications are that the sea t >p will be lighter than usual for the 1 o<eIs, but tli" region maintains #?ts r isurpnsee 1 loveliiirss. ? Correspond ence in Forest r.ud Stream. II Our Rym Wfr?> In Tono. Suppose that oar eye* were attu ie>l to Hie vibrations revealed to us by the bV.cmetre. Instead <?l" seeing the shir* flint we now *oe wo should perceive tl ',?*?> whose 1 iu 111 has long been o:; '.i:iguishf,d. who?e or;:* r.ee tin* metii* o .s oi.- inoucrn physics have enabled us to prove. The sun v.ould appear sur rounded by 11m ctvonu, changing in form and position every Instant, and *.ve should 110 longer l?e obliged to wait f >.* total colipsrs to sitidy this pbenoui e ion. Currents of hot air would be < #;:n* visible like snow squalls and the j.i-'i'Mce of licat would have no more so t.Y 13. >'c?f I'rffim In tit* Tronnfti. A feature oi" siyle said to have boon bnrodticed by the King is to have ihr? creases In the trousers at the side atul leg Roam instead of baek and front. Already a few West End dan dles have adopted tills plnn, but as tlio effect of tliis innovation Is to prdoueo a thicker appearance to the leg. we do oi nntlelpate any general adoption of iills fa'Mon.?Tailor and Cutter. To I'liiy WlthAnt Sronfry, There is a societv in England which * as ns one of its chief objects to strip ? e in oil or n stage of its elaborate seen ry and to retnrn- to the dnyr when the Diay was the thing, and not it* setting. Hiw It M It tm CUitM Ooenty, ta a mm tion which Is rapidly becoming knows through the development of Its oil wells. Is t Tillage called 8?nnty-?li. In the midst of the village Is n water fall. which greeted the eye of the first frontiersman who ?<nt to that part of this State when it was still n part of Virginia. He measured the depth of the fall and found It to be seventy-six feet. The accuracy of the measurement has never been call ed Into question, and the Inhabitants of the town to this day have their malls addressed to "Seventy-six. Ky." The fa1! is of little volume dur ing the summer months, but It Is of great beauty at all times. In the winter It Is a roaring cataract, and Indian Creek frequently goes upon a rampage. The section was a favorite hunting ground of the Indians In the early days, sod the creek derived Its name from the number of spearheads and splkee which are found In the fields around.?Louisville (Ky.) Cour ier-Journal. Mj!I Carried by Re'ndecr Team. The capaclly of tne reindeer for team work is remarkable. His hoofs are very bro^d and do not penetrats the s&->w crusts. His average weight Is about 400 pounds. He will swiftly draw a sled carrying 600 pounds, and with this load can cover thirty, fifty and even nir.e?.y miles a day. Tlio reindeer teams now carry the malls from Kot^ebue to Point Barrow, a distance of (550 mi?es?the mout north arly post route in the world. No food Is carried for the deer. At the end of his Journey, or at any stopping place, he is turned Ioosa, and at once breaks through the snow to the white moss, which serves as food. It costs nothing to feed him As the white settlements increase in the mineral bearing parts of Alaska, and in many places remote from railway and steamboat transportation, the rein deer express will be one of the most Important factory In territorial Ufo. Of Interest in the Home. The wedding breakfast or luncheon is an occasion to bo long remembered. :.ml therefore should present a most at tractive picture. The details of plan ning and preparing the wedding feast are given in an illustrated article in the October Delineator which is very sug gestive In this regard. In the same number are illustrated and described various seasonable fruit confections, and there are also many choice recipes, including Dainty Novelties iu Soup, Delectable Cheese Dishes, a Dozen Lit tle Cakes and a number of preparations lrom a Southern kitchen. A series of notes ou domestic sclencc rounds out the household portion of the magazine. FrrS"erm*nertly<?nred. No nt?ornervous ness llrst da v'i use of Dr. Kline'* Great Nerve Itostoror, initial bottle and treat l*efrM Dr. K.H. Klink, l.td., Wi Arc1* St., Philn., Pa. The number of CliincKe outside oi China is estimated at over 7,640,000. H. G hern's Sons, of Atlanta, Oa., are tlie only siiueeMtful Dropsy Specialist* in the woiiil. Suetiicir liberal offer in advertise ment in another column of this paper. ll:>lland to-day 1ms 250 dnily papers, as compared with only live in 1S40. 1 amsurePUo'sOura forCousumptlonnaved tny life tbreo y?ar< ago.?Mas. Thomas JIob riN?. .Maple St., Morwioh, N.Y., Feb. 17, ltfOO The finest ostrich feathers are produced in Abyssinia. The detection of the false Is often ihe first step toward the discovery of :he true. Positive. Comparative, Superlative " I have usod on* of your Fish Brand Slicker* for five years and now want a new one, alio one for a friend. I would not be without on* for twlc* th* coat. Th*yara Just as far ahead of a common coat as a common on* Is ahead of nothing." (NAME ON APPLICATION) Be sure you don't g*t one of th* com. mon kind? thla Is th? mark of ?xc?ll?nc*. A. J. TOWER CO. BOSTON, U. %. A. TOWER CANADIAN CO., LIMITED TORONTO. CANADA Mahtrt of Wot Woathtr Clothing and Hato at* QUARAH ICED BY A $5,000 BANK DEPOSIT Railroad Fara Paid. 000 PKKK Courses Offered. Board st Cost. Writ* Oulck ?KOMIA-ALABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE.Mac**.**. WE CURE DISEASES Or MEN W? KU I! ante* ? quick ?nl lut ntr our?< in all ?*nr.*s it BPECIFIO BLOOD POI80S, 8TKICTC RE, VARICO CELE. WEAK BACK, PROSTAlie TRO U BLE AND ALL DIS EASE PECULIAR T? VE,\ AI.SO A i,L KEUVOU8, KIDNEY. BLADDVU ANT) 11EC 1AL, LIS ASES AND UUEUM A l'D>M. Imnnrtanl 1 'rs- L^therman Jfc JVuiiey ?IliyUI lam K;u the only up^oln'i- N In Atlanta who treat thoir oast's tucmsi 'vc^. Write " you oannot ca" 1111(1 u?* ill* " ',lc your troublca ami re?wiv?* '?? re turn mall, Lrt*? of charge, our ttl.-t?:?.?lfi blank. BEST HOME TREATMENT. Cotflta tlon Free. Everything confidential. Drs. Leatherman & Bentley, Cor. Marietta and Forsyth Sta.. ATLANTA, GA. Hours: 8 a. m. to 10 p. m. bunday: 10 to L ACADEMy. for BOYS > *RocK*JWe. Md. IDEAL TRAINING SCHOOL. HOME LIFE. INDIVIDUAL CARE AND INSTRUCTION: FITS FOR UNIVER SITY OR LIFE. ADDRESS. W. P. MASON. U. S. N. A., PRIN. Roanoke college FOR. YOUNG WOMEN. DANVILLE. VIRGINIA. A Srlsct and Limilal College for tho Higher Education of Women. 24 Teachers and Offi cer* ALL SPEl IALISTS. Lut year the moat successful in history of Institution. Ideal hi mi surroundings. Rat-slow for advsntagesoffrred. Scad for < atslogue. JC 0 0 R. E. HATTON. A. M.. PH. D . rrssidcat. ELIXIR BABEK CURES MALARIA. CHILLS and FEVER.. 'BAHKK" I* the oldest. ?urM| an?1 beit remedy In America for mat a<1ltt of malarial nature. lt? n (><*! tlv?iSSL?f,r *alaria. chIll* uutl FKVER. only !HKj. botttt KLOCZEWSKI ? CO.. W..Hi**?n. D for teiUmoulala. CURED 6'" 3? Quck Relief. Dropsy Removes all ?welling in ft to ao day*; effects m perniniient cure in 30to 60 days. Trial treatment given free. Not hinges 11 be fairs' Write Or. H. M. OrMn'i Sons, Sosclalltta. Box W Atlanta. M. A "fincresR" Training School. OoldeT College !? ? Bu?ine*K and Bhnrlhtnd School tlit iinik?* n specJftJt" trnliili ft Itn ?turient* for "HI;SINK.S8 SUCCESS." l2flKra<l nates with two flrmi. StiiiirntH from Ueor itla to New York. Write fur catalogue. ArlrirrH*: Goldejr College, Box iuw, Wilmington, Del. RIPAJfS T ADUtiER m the b#?t dr? |*ps!? ii'itlirine e?f>r made. A hun dred lullilonsof thru btvebeea fold liiaalnvle ji-or. CouettuaUon, heart burn, tick headache, dUztnoM, bad brcaOi.wiiMthrouland every Uli.rw ftrUlDir from ? <li?ortlnr<a itomai'b are rtillevrd or rured by IUpui Tab ula*. One will Keacrallv o-W? iriinf wimm f wr*nty mlnutot. Thu Ave rent package In e itouirh Cur ad ordinary occasion. All druggist* Mil them. - IHMfHtM All tl?I Milt. Boat Couf n Bfrup. TuM Joud. Un In ltm<. Sold by dfga1-" So. 88. NoMor?BllndHort?t^l%^%h^ ?or* IjrM, borrr Co., Iowa City. li.,h?v* ? ?ur* sum BEST FOR THE BOWELS CANDY CATHARTIC* P, 5. CURE for all bjwel trouble*. appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, hndich*, indigestion, irfmpitt, pains a.tcr eating, liver tro?b1e, sallow *Vln and divines*. When your bewrti don't mov* 'r?itt ?to*- Constipation kill* more people than all other diseases together. It a i ailments and lone yean* of suffering. Wo matter what ails you, atart tcl.lr.R .clCA?ET?tod*r./or you will never get well and stay well until you get your bov/cls right, Take our advice, atart with Cascarets today under absolute guaraotee to euro or money refunded. The arenulne tablet stamped C CC. Never sold in bulk. Sample nod poo<let free. Address ff'erllng Remedy Company. Chicago or N-w ymy. 501 iW. L. Douglas MADS? *3.50 SHOES MIN. W. L. Doitfftmm makom mnd mml/m morm mmn'm 5 '.SO mhocm thmn mnjf othr mmnufnrrturmr v In **ortd. Tlierruon W. l? Oonciim Mm** ???? fii?t nr?<"???! M-iH-n m ?iip worm i* prcmiw of thm Myln, <n?y f.ili'M !>i"l Miix'flor wearing (|tmlltle?. If I omjkI Mtowr you t'-* dlllerrnco Vtwrcn tho Knock tiinrir In my factory wtd IIiOM of other tuftt.v? ami flic liluli-Krrxfc Iralliera lined, you would nndcrMund why W. I- I>ongl?* t* V) *lior? r?>?t jn?#n I to iriAKf, why thry hohl their ?Iiai*. "t l?ll?r, \*ri?t longer, I and in of icrraicr InlrliMlr v*lur IMfl IB! othrr ffi.'O mi<>? i> on tli-- tnnrkwt today, ami why th? Milt* loi the ytai ? tMlftig II July 1, l*M, were 96,203,040.00. W. Dntifflia KtiornritfM tlirlr TnltK' try Mutiiplntf t>l? rnrnn ?n:l &,?:?<? on (ht< bottom. Ix>i>k for )t ? Inkc no ?nt*tliute, Hold by Mk* dealer* emywlirr*. fmt lltur /.t/'Ult ?*<?* ircltmrflu. Huporlor In Fit, Comfort tnil Wwr. " / htrrf worn W. Lptmgla* fJ.W iko'l for (hr Inut t-n Irr ytarl With abiotulf iali\faclion. / fn't Ihrm mp> > tor qnri urnr to others roittno front fn.H0 to f'.OK" H. 8. tfcCUE, Drpt. I'olT., U./f. Int. Itrrrnur, /llrhmontl,?*. W. I, Don|lM anfii CoronR Co1tnl?lii In 111* M.'l.ftO ihni'ii. Comnik Colt If con*o?l?d <?? be tnO i;w?l v l'nl?nt liftther tnn<l?. SR*D FOB CATAI.OOCR 0IVIKO fPM IKATIILCTIO- . HOW TO ORpr.R MT MAIL. W. L DOUOLAM, Brockton, MaMb GREATEST SHOE MAKER