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B. B. B. SENT FBZE' Cores Eczema. Itching; Humors, Scabs, | Carbuncles, IMmplcs, Ktc. Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) is a certain and sure cure ?orEczema, Itching Skin, Humors, Scabs, Scales, watery Blisters, i Pirnp'es, Aching Bones or Joints. Boils, 1 Carbuncles, Prickling Pain in the Skin. Old Eating Sores, Ulcers. Scrofula, Superal- , ing Swellings, Blood Poison, Cancer and all ; Blood Diseases. Botanic Blood Balm cures the worst and most deep-seated casts by enriching, purifying and vitalizing theblood. ; thereby giving a healthy blood supply to the sk>n; heals every sore and gives the rich glow of health to the skin. Druggist* $1 per large bottle. To prove it cure? Blood Balm sent free by writing Blood Balm Co., 12 Mitchell St.. Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice also sent in sealed letter. B. B. B. sent at oacc prepaid. The first cotton mill in the United States was established at Beverly. Mass.. in 17ST. It was designed to manufacture cord and bed ticking. The outcome of a courtship often depends upon the income Earliest Knsslan Millet. Will you be shore of bay? If so, plane :: plenty of this prodigally prolific millet. 5 to 8 tons of rieh hay per "acre. Price, 50 lbs.. $1.90; 100 lbs.. ?3.00; low freights. John A. ISaizer iseeu co., .La crosse, >?it. jv Common sense isn't nearly so common r.a < it sounds. FITS permanently cured. Xo fits or nervousness after first day's use oi Dr. Kline's Grea. XerveRestorer.tr 2 triul bottle and treatisefre? Dr. K. H. Kline, Ltd.. 'jill ArchSt., Puiia., P.;. About 1000 fishing boats engaged arounci , the British coast are named Mary Each package of Putnam Fadeless Dye colors more goods than any other dye and colors them better too. Sold by all druggists The number of sheep in Australia today is given as about ST.dOl'.GOO Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infaiiiolo medicine for coughs and colds.? \. \\*. Namukl, Ocean Grove, X. J., Feb. 17. 1'JOo. It's peculiar that the chap who is weakminded is generally headstrong. Hit oewat, S. C. Jles r*. Bovkin. Cnrmcr & Co.. Wholesale Drugclets, Baltimore, Md. Gentlemen.?I bev?< quite a demand for 'Bovltin's Worm Killer." It Is the best vermifuge I can get. A armer bought a bottle ..... ? t?.tr n-M.L-a JfhVC OllO dl.Se tO llil chiM: cauie in next du> with a chew cli- w jar 111'ed with worm!1; the ro.-?l; of pne dose, fciuce iben nil whnt it. W. J. Davis. The manufacturing industries of the south are multiplying rapidly. So. 13. I?eafnes? Cannot tie Cured by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it Is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing wil! be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but ai: inflamed condition of the mucous surface. We will give One Hundred Dollars for auy ease of Deafness (caused by catarrh! tha: cannot be cured by Hail's Catarrh Cure. Circulars sent free. F.J.Cheney ? Co.,Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists. 75c. Hall's "Family Pills are the best. ?i n : I Coughed| " I had a most stubborn cough S for many years. It deprived me g of sleep and I grew very thin. I fi Ithen tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, I and was quickly cured." j) R. N. Mann, Fall Mills, Tenn. | Sixty years of cures ? and such testimony as the | above have taught us what 8 Ayer's Cherry Pectoral B will do. : ! We know it's the great- s est cough remedy ever | made. And you will say 1 (so, too, after you try it. I There's cure in every drop. I Three sizes: 25c., 50c., SI. AH dniQlrts. | Consult year doctor. If be says take it, I then do as be says. If he tell* you not U to take it. then don't take it. He knows. C Leave it with him. We are wUllnc. .f J. C. AVER CO.. Lowell. Mass. H m nns. sewy?tyi m hwww?t-3 to the acre at less cost, means more money. More Potash in the Cotton fertilizer improves the soil; increases yield?larger profits. Send for oar book (free) explaining how to get these results. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. DB. TALMAQK5 SERMON SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE SY THE NOTED DIVINE. SuhiTl: Tlir He?i?-llt? ?f Ad?mfIr? e Uti?t All (io Thiougli Some Kind of u 'ilintillin; l'r?cc*H For Oar Owu Cood ?Triutnpli Aflcr Misfortune. WASHINGTON, 1). C? Frota a process famiiiar to the larmer Dr. Tairnage draw* lessons of consolation and encouragement for people in sorrow and adversity. The test is Isaiah sxviii, 27, 2?: "For the fitches are noc thrashed with a thrashing instrument, neither is a cart wheel turned about upon the eutnmin. hut the litcaes are beaten out with a staff and the cummin with a rod. Bread coru in bruised because lie will not ever be thrashing it." Misfortunes o. various kinds come upon various people, and in all times the great need of ninety-uine people out of a hundred is solace. Loo.;, then, to this ncglee:cci allegory < f ir.y text. There arc three kinds of seed mentioned? fitches. cum nun end torn. Of the wo all know. But it may bo well to state that the fitches and the cummin were small seeds, like the caraway or tlie chickpea. When these grains or herbs, were to he thrashed they were thrown on the floor, and the workmen vrou'd come around with stall or rod or flail and beat then: un. ti! the seed would be .separated, but tvnen the corn was t.> be tivashcd that was thrown on the lloo.v and the men would fasten horses or o::ea t:> a cart, with iron dented wheels; that care would be drawn i;round the trfra-iiin;; floor, and so tne work won id he accomplished. Different kinds of thrashing in- different products. ' ! he fitches were not thrashed with a thrashing instrument* neither is a cart, wheel turned about upon the cummin, hut the fitches arc beaten out with a staff and the cummin with a rod., Kread com is bruised because he will uoi ever be thrashing it." The great thought thai the text presses upon our sou.s is tint we all go through some hind of thrashing process. The fact tiiiit you may he devour.,; your life to honorable and noble unrpv.-cs will not win yon [ any escape. Wilbo .force, tlie Christian emarcipator. wno in b:> day derisively called "'lector Cent.iell." 'Ihomas Jlabingto.i Macaulcy, the advocate of all that was good, long before he became the most conspicuous historian of his bay, was caricatured in one of the quarterly reviews t "llabbletongue Maoatuay." Norman McT.cod. the great friend of the Scotch poor, was industriously maligned in ail niu.w!., although on tne cry when lie was carried out to his burial a workman stood and loMced at the funeral procession and said. "If he had done nothing for anybody more than he has done for l.to, lie would shine .is the scars forever and ever." ATI the small wits of London hid their fling kt 'oiin Wesley, the father of Methodism, li such men could not escape the maligning of the world, neither can you cxjtect to get. rid ox the sharp, keen stroke of the tribuium. All who will live godly in Christ .lesus must suffer persecution. Besides that, there tic uie sicknesses and the bankruptcies and the irritations and the disappointments which are ever putting a r. nlnnj trt vmtr lins Those wrinkles on your fare .are heiroglyphics which, if deciphered, would make out a thrilling story oi trouble. The footstep of the rabbit is seen the next rooming on the snow, p.nd on the white hairs of the aged are the footprints showing where swift trouble alighted. Even amid the joys ard hilarities of life trouble will sometimes break in. As when the peonle were assembled in the Charitytown theatre during the Revolutionary i War. and while they were witnessing a farce and the audience was in great gratulation the guns cf an advancing army were heard and the audience broke up wild panic and ran tor their lives, so oftentimes while you arc sealed amid the joys at.d festivities of this world you hear the cannonade of sonic great disaster. All the fitches and the cummin a-,d the corn must come down o:i the thrashing floor and be pounded. My subject, in the first place, teaches us thu it is no compliment to us if wc escape great trial. The fitches and the cummin on one thrashing floor might look i over to the corn on another thrashing floor and say: "Look at that poor, miserable, bruised corn! We Lave only been a little pounded, but that has been almost destroyed." Well, the corn, if it had lips, would .in?vp- and r.iv: '"Do vol! know the rearou you have not been as much pounded as I have? It is because you are not of ko , much worth as 1 am. If you v.ere, you would be as severely run over." Yet there arc men who suppose they arc the Lord's favorites simply because their barns am full and their bank account is flush and there are no funerals in the house. It may be because thev arc fitches and cummin, while down at the end of the lar.e the j>oor widow may be the Lord's corn. You are hut little pounded because you are hue little worth and she bruised and ! ground because she is the best part of the harvest. The heft of the thrashing machine is according to the value of the grain. If you have rot been much thrashed in life, perhaps there is not much to thrash! If you have rot been much shaken of trouble, perhaps it is because there is , going to he a very small yield. When there arc plenty of blackberries, the gatherers eo out with large baskets, but whui the drought has almost consumed i the fruit, then a quart measure will do as well. It took the venomous snake on Paul's hand, and the pounding of I.in with stones I until he was taken up for dead, and the j jamming against him of prison gates, and the Ephesian vociferation, and the ankles skinned by the painful stocks, and the foundering of the Alexandrian corn ship, and the beheading stroke rf the Human ; sheriff to bring Paul to his proper development. It was not because Robert Moffat and T,adv Rachel Russell and Frederick Ober ! Jin were worse than other people that they . had to suffer. It was because they were ; better, and God wanted to make them I best. By the carelessness of the thrashing you may always conclude the value of the grain. Next, nv text teaches us that God prc>; portions onr trials to what we can bear? the staff for the fitches, the rod for the j cummin, the iron wheel for the corn. ! Sometimes people in great trouble say, "Oh, I can't bear it!" But you did bear it. God would not have sent it upon you if ; He had not known that you could bear it. You trembled and you swooned, but you got through. God will not take from your | eye3 one tear too many nor from your lungs one sigh too deen nor from your temples one throb too sharp. The perplexities of your earthly business have not in them one tangle too intricate. You sometimes feel as if our world were full of bludgeons flying haphazard. Oh, no; thgy are thrashing instruments that (Sod just suits to your ca?'. T!i:re is not a dollar bad debts on your ledger or a disappointment abou. goods that you expected to e;o up, but that have gone down, or a | swindle oi your business partner or a trick on the part of llio.se who are in the same kind of merchandise that you are. but Clod intended to overrule for your immortal Ixstp. "Oh," you say, "there is no need talking that way to rnc. I don't like to be cheated and outraged." Neither does the corn like the corn thrasher, but after it has been thrashed and winnowed it has a treat deal belter opinion oi winnowing mills aud corn thrashers. They never cry in heaven because thev have nothing to cry about. There are no tears of bereavement, for you shall have your friends ail round about you. There arc no tears of poverty because each ore sits at the King's table and has his own chariot of salvation and free access to the wardrobe where princes get tlieir array. K * ' ? ? I..I. f lir.r.1 -"O nft -\ \J WrtIA ??l ci\.vU\or, J"i wiwv. * " pneumonias in tne air and no niaiari.il exhalations from the robing - i\ e: of life and 1:0 crutch for the lame limb atul :iu splint fir the broken arm. hut. *hv |iu:-cs tltvobhip*; with t.hc health o;' ?;ic cixrr.al Clod in ;t clsmwe like out*.tunc uefo: * the b'o?M?nij fall or our gorjeons October before tlsc leaves scatter. In (..at land the so-.'s v.i'l ml:; over the dificreiit modes of lhr?shin;;. Oh. the ?.tory of the staff tha* s!roc!: the iitrlira r.nd the rod tha. beat the emimin and the iron wheel the.; vvn? ivet l!.' eorn! Daniel will describe lite lions aftd Jonah leviathian and l'.iul the elniwoad whips with which he was scourged, and fv.e wili u!i how aromatic Kden was the day she left is. ar.d John ]Jo',c : wili '.ell of the smait o' the flame and Elijah ot the licrv team that wheeled him up the slcv steeps and Clinst of the numbness and ifie paroxysms and hemorrhages of the awful crucifixion. There they are before the throne ot C.'o.'l ?on one e7ev.itTon all those who were struck of the rod. on the highest elevation and ainid the highest altiludcs of heaven all those who were under the wheel, lie will not ever be thrashing it. fs there not enough salve in this text to make a plaster large enough to heal all your wounds? When a child i? hurt, the mother is veiy apt to say to it. ".Now. it will roon feel better." And that is what i.ou says \yd m Jie rn nossais an oar i;aable in the hush of this great promise. "Weeping may endure lor a night, but joy cometh in the morning." You may leave your pocket handkerchief sopping v.et with tears on your death jnllow. but >oa will go up absolutely sorrpwiess. They v.*ill wear black, you will wear white; cyprey's for there, palms for you. You will sav. *"r It possible that I am here? Is this Am I so pure now I will never do anything wrong? Am 1 so well that I will never he sick ag.vn? Are there companionships so l'rti that tncy will never again bo broken? is that Mtrv? Is that John? Ts that my loved one 1 put away into darkness? Can it be that these are the faces of those who lay so wan and emaciated in the back room that atvfui aight dying? Oh. how radiant they arc. 4T*ook at them! How radiant they arc! Why, how unlike this place is from What I thought when I left the world below. Ministers drew pictures of this land, hut how tatnc compared with the reality! Tucy told mo on earih that death was sunset. Nc, no! It is sunrise! Glorious sunrise! J see the light now purpling the hills. ar.d the clouds flame with the coming day." Then the gates of heaven will be opened. and the entranced soul, with the acutene.-s and power of the celestial vision, will look thousands of miles down unon the bannered procession, a river oi shimmering .'(Vendor, and will cry out. "Who arc thty?"' And the angel of Cod. standing c'ose by, will say. "Do yon not know who they are;" "Xo," says the entranced soul. "I cannot cues* who they are." The angel will sav, "I will tell von, then, who they are. These are they who came out of gicat tribulation, or thrashing, and their robes washed and made white in the hi cod of the lcirb." Would that I could administer sane o( these drops of celestial anodyne to these nervous and excited souls. If you would take enough of it. it would cure all yon pangs. The thought that you are going to get through with this after awhile, all this sorrow and all this trouble. We shall have a great many grand dnvs in heaven, but I will tell you which will be the grandest day ol all the million ages of heaven. You say. "Arc you sure you can tell me?" Yes. 1 can. It will be the day we get there. Some say heaven is err owing more glorious. I supoosc it is. but T do not care much about that. Heaven no'.v is good enough for me. History has no more gratulatory scene than the breaking in of the English army upon Lueknow, India. A few weeks before a massacre had occurred at Cawnuur, and 2G0 women and children had been put in a room. Then five professional butchers went in and slew them. Then the bodies of the slain were taken out and thrown into a well. As the English army came into Cawnnui they went into the room, ar.d oh. what l horrid scene! Sword stiokes on the wall rear the "cor, showing that the poor things had crouched when tncy ditd, and they saw also that the floor was ankle deep in blood. The soldiers walked on their heels across it. lest their shoes be submerged of the caruage. And on that floor of b'ood there were flowing locks of hair and fragments of dresses. Out in Lueknow they had heard of the massacre, and the women were waiting tor the same awful death, waiting amid anguish Iimimn waiur.g in pain aru sianat.u1. uui waiting heroically, when, one day. Havelock and Outram and Yor?nan and Sir David Baird and Peel, the heroes of the English army?huzza for them!?broke in on that horrid scene, and while yet the guns were sounding, and while cheers were issuing from the starving, dying people on the one side and from the travel worn and powder blackened soldiers on the other, right there, in front of the king's palace, there wm such a scene of handshaking and embracing and boisterous joy as would utterly contound the pen of the poet and the pencil of the painter. And no wonder, when these emaciated women, who had suffered so heroically for Christ's sake, inarched out from their incarceration, one wounded English soldier got up in his fatigue and wounds and leaned against the wall and threw his cap up and shouted, "Three cheers, my boys, for the brave women!" Yes, that was an exciting scene. But a gladder and more triumphant scene will it be when you come up into heaven from the conflicts and incarceration of this world, streaming with the wounds of battle, and wan with hunger, and while the hosts of God are heering their great hosanna you will strike hands of congratulation -and eternal deliverance in the presence oi the throne. On that night there will be bonfires on every hill of heaven, and there will be a candle in every window. Ah. no! I forget, I forget. They will have no need of the candle or o:: sun. for the Lord (tod giveth them light, and they shall rei^n for- j ever and ever. Hail, hail, sons nni daughters of the Lord God Almighty! I (Copyright, lfoj, L. KloP-ca. r ' r > . Tetterine In Texas. I i "I enclose 50e. iu stamp?. Mail me one or < | two boxes of Tetterlne, whatever the price; j | it's all right ? does ^be Avork." ? Wm. j [ Sohwarz, Gainesville, Texfts. 60?. a box by mail from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Gk.. ] , if your druggist don't keep it. j The flower of the family is often the j latest to rise. j Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy Cures Indi; gestion and Dyspepsia. At "Druggists, 60?. i It is possible to ste&i a penny and still ; be in a cent. Messrs, I. M. and D. F. Powell, prominent merchants In Columbus couDty. N. C., wrote us that Rev. T. C F.'oyd gave his child one j dose of "Boyklu's Worm Killer" aud the re- j 6ult was 367 worms. Ho wishes all Interested know It. Noraatter what ails you, headache to a cancer, you will never ge: well until your bowels are put right. Cascabets help nature, cure : you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Cascaeets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on ; it. Beware o! imitations. ! Dr. It H Edmunds, one of the best known | physicians UDd farmers In South Carolina, j writes us that "A negro girl 10 years old, I near him, took two or three doses of Dr. I Boykiu's Worm Killer and pos ed SC6 : worms." WHERE DOCTORS FAIL ToCnre Woman's His, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- j Sound Succeeds. Mrs. Pauline j udson Writes: 1 i "Dear Mrs. Pi n kham :?Soon after i | my marriage two years a go I found j myself in constant pain. The doctor 1 said my womb was turned, and this caused the pain with considerable inflammation. lie prescribed for me for MRS. PAULINE JUDSON, Secretary of Schcnncrlioni Golf Club, Brooklyn, New York, four months, when my husband became impatient because I grew worse instead of better, and in speaking to the drug- j gist he aid vised him to get Lydia E. | Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash. How 1 wish I : had taken that at first; it would havo | saved me weeks of suffering. It took ! three long months to restore me, but it is a happy relief, and we arc both most grateful to you. Your Compound ! has brought joy to our home and ! , health to me."?Mrs. Pauline Judson, 1 47 Iloyt Street, Brooklyn. N. Y. ? $5000 forfeit If about testimonial It rot genuine. 1 I It would seem by this statement that women would save time and much sickness if they i would get Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once, and also write to Mrs. Pinkham ! at Lynn, Moss., for special ad- ; vice. It is freo r?nd always helps. miwwiiiiimm 1 hihh?hii'u n THE PLAIN WOMAN become* a popular one if . she ! correctly dratwd. i ROYAL WORCESTER AND I BON TON CORSETS I ADD GRACE TO TIIE FIGURE. | V STRAIGHT FRONT. , j A &k your dealer for them. j ; If Iir does not keep thein, i*; j he trill order for you. : Royal Worcester Corset Co. ?j WORCESTER, MASS. ; The superb new city and port of I Dalny (Tallenwan.) the eastern tsr-N minu3 of the Siberian Railway, which I Russia expects to become the most important of all the European settlements of the far East, will be opened \ to general commercial business during , the month. /% f \ Write to B. \V. I1AWKINS, m E. M I Nona, Georgia, for history and desrlptlve circular of ft| ins txi-UA PKocirrc I ? 1 |1| < Best of all. Will I I w make three bales per acre. kD?isno?sW | So. 13. SSiHE' SS'lESMCT.?SSE.,.'nT-r Write for prl. se. JESSE MARDM 1.,, s rhsri*. 8t.. $1 fin fnr t I It yon csnnot make lloo for I U U IU r * I. every $ 1 you pay us fcr tesrhin? ron, we'll refund yonr money. Send lor tacts C. C. KITTEB. Fulton Hill. B.chinond, V.. : Beet Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Uee H i In time. Sold br druggists. Ki S Capudine^ a Headaches, B LaQrippe, Colds, etc. S Money back If Itfai:*. l!A*o.AU Dra;Stoi*? i! BKCT>i^ii?iare>.Kwai?ai?wga RHMMS 1 had been troubled a year, off and on, with constipation, biliousness and sick headaches. One day n <r\*nA inp whnt the trouble was. When I told him he recommended Ripans Tabules. That evening 1 got a box, and after the second box I began to feel so much relief that 1 kept on with them. 1 have Ripans Tabules always in the house now and carry a package of them in my pocket. At druggists. The Five-Cent packet is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, CO cents, contains a supply for a year. I The Kenalffli // 1 haveW.L. pa.me^a^rid 'Notki- in.remit <y sabs it: taUeitbneZ * I308gw^<8.;og r*!f?. 18,K>~80?,18.J Paira. 19^jzrl,5(>^72olMrg. Buslnota Mere Ttuvi Doubled In Four Yean. THE REASONS s W. L. Douglas mskM and sells more men's $3.00 and 83.50 shoe* than any other two maruftcturors in tiio world. W. Ij. Douglas $3.00 and $0.f.f) fho placed side by sldo with 83.00 and $0.00 shoes ot other iii.Aos, are found to be j::st as good. They will outwear two pairs of ordinary 83-00 and S3 JO shoes. Hade of Iho best teatbsn, Incltidlr.rj Patent Corona Kid, Corona Celt, and national Knnoaroo. I fact Color Kreloie sad A'waji Elirk H?t? twd. K W. U Douglas fi.OO "Gilt Ed to Line" {] cannot bo equalled at any pries. II Snoc* l>y mull 23r. extra. Cntnlorfrre. H XV. J- Dooclua. Br"CHP"'i^iaHbLc(| x ftlfl&irVMAL)E EASILY m II If r i AND RAPii>LY. Ill V S t b 0 We want men with energy and gilt; will giro them ? situation In which " ' they can make mone< rapidly?the labor being light nnd omplo m<nt the > ear around, li requ.res no capital or great education. Soma of our best salesmen arc country boys. Profit quick and sure. Writ- at otn'e for particular*. liCLM.INn PUB. CO , n.s-r Ul'dg, .'.t.anta, G*. McALLfcN S BUSINESS COLLEGE, Successful School. Xo ma'arla. Catalogue free. HD ADCV NEW DIF COVERT; cms uJ *, \Jr WV qniek rs'tef and cures sons cuu Book of totimonia e and 10 day*-treatwx* Free. Dr H. H. Ohflllt S BChE. Sox I), At cats. Qs* r^oiiirair^ A It li a fact that Sailer's vegetable and flower -U, seeds are found In more gardens I M and on more farms than miy other WB1 in America. There is reason for this, jd We own and operate over Uuo acres for "3JI A Uw production of our choice seed*. In fla order to Induce you to try tliem /JRI w^reate U* following ucpreo- WBj ^"T'Vi For 16 Gents Postpaid fifa ^ I I i / tO IMi ?f rsrnt hMtw rafUta, Ul J [ I l*?afall?eal earliest aeloaa, l/> T IS sarU |ltri?w Iwalwi, MB "* r \ 13 pMrUu letlaco uittCw, flH J, t ltapleeSM ^sat serta, HD / Si raeyaoaslj Weatlf al Sower seats, 4MB A to all ISO kinds poaMeeiy furnishing tfl M bushels of charming Powell and /JTM lots and lots of cboico vegetables. /iW M together with our great catalogue/VI t? M telling all about Teoainte and fea %HCB H Oat and Hrotnus and Spelts, onion Bl _ teed at SOe. a pound, etc., all only WmO -KA^Tv. for lflc. in stamps. Write to-day. 4M M/\\m ?OHN A. SAL2ER SEED CO- V HAass's Galls SADDLE JT on>ctir Morts or Male qalekw cured with Dr. Daniel*' <*yl| Cure. All Dea ere. or cent W mall with Dr. I anlelabook,"L>ta? ea-ee of Horeee. ? nfctle. theennd Swine and How to Treat Them.' Ufaat ecelptof 25 centa. A r Sianlford St.. BOSIXW, HIMThompson'! Eye Vajhir .r.xCA*